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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1883-06-08, Page 5• EN I ' • Who IlaIi.Way SoineWbere, dear friend, upon our pilgrim way , Wo rtecli a plaoe at whien war aus,o awhile •, And hae• werd..gazt aud forward,mro the day l.telue taut carries henee,ita ago& iug: ' fielow no otrotoli 030111110 we oremed at morn, • Tne Streams wo bridged, the orellard'sd4easikui. Above, white teak oe peal( heioli“ un- worn, ,• • Crowned wit li the beauty of etrn'alsnows.;• And much we inarVeL o'er the path, • Tat e'er we deem it tsouleil, rorigh or long, $ineo dale or cliff, oivbrierY thicket Lath. - • Vo -day the grece.ofa reineinbered song. Forgot the toils, the terrors all forgot Only the blessings garnered. 111m. the sheaf, llemato our Wealth, which rust nor stain snail . blot • .Nox inothilespoil:uOr rifle reckless thief, And fearlessly we .sean the years to be - by one_i Steadfast and blythe we hairthem; strong and free Henceforth me walk,to Meet the Settii,g sup. - pear oicie...wayitouge •Sweet friend, hest thou . been there ?• Deo know how soft its pillow to theboad ? Rost breathed its pun) caressiugair ? .llabtdrowned, its dreams? beet there been • : comforted? ' • • • Orif, Wear jr tlielOR band of thy"VOIT,-,t- '• And trustfm for the changes yet neltnown, • • Onee'more that Mayest essay the pilgrim road, Seeure.of noVer faring there alone. MEN AND THEIR HOMES. Domestic Geed •Nature Sorely Tried by c, ` Poky ". Males. • WHAT OUR ..WIVFS ANI) OALIGHTES LIKE. ,t FierOluriou 'Which to.:Ireirleity ' to Miring Anoint. .. , .. ., . • • • Most Married Mimi' if they always knew. , . preciosity what Was . best for them, W004 'addle & point Of getting.eut arid:away ffona their owb reef treei for soine porting. of : 'every day. Among -their *Wi wive wll be , ., found a *er,y. general" 'coutieiiiius Of opinion . :te this .effeet. There, will; be found eyerP ..., Where a. disPiasitiOntio pack off the ',men in . ,... . . , the niorneng and to .bid. them •keep elle of ''': :', ' •• . ,. '' ' ' '._ he VitietAill-towards...."..eirening,_Wheri ik.„-is- . ,'; • • .,:;,, 7 . - assumed that they :will probably :have a _„_. --":7Iitriiiiiiiref -tile- busy iforld-Idlifitig- • ' .. -.• . home, and.. *hoar halgy, Will 'bec aura to !A-A-A,ATAQVIAVA,A*1-A,AAA-A,..k... .tv.,,tiwiri.,,Iy...7., Vaiitielyritiirtat .. ..brilliant and preeoeious; • The general events of.theday will .afford. topics of con • . . . • • .. veisaticin rteire interesting by far then. if ' the whole. hmie, ehold had been., together ) ' .from Morning' ti night. • ,A ' 'very, little '..' inquiry; too, will kat the ..fect„ that Men :about.hopee all da are "eminently apt to • • . be fidgettY andgrumpy ' and interfering, altrigethee ebjectionabie,dn short. , Tole • it; the ca -Se very often, even ' with" poor men of geoios,' Who .are not without their own`werkand interestauthors;' or pal, BOOB, or painters—but it is Partictilarly apt to be BO • with ' the :unemployed, such, for .. instance, as brininess Men who,hriveIetired ... • .. or who are otitof harness for a 'sliort.tinie.• ' . . The spirit of tniechief is. never at. a.losa • for.a job for Paterfamilias' if it catches' him idling and lounging about. neither at Work. nor at play. : It satire up•his' bile andirrita- •' bility; .very likely, -• and incites hina'totthe . reform of donmetic abuses. ' It kindles ,hice . sanitary •tirdeurO.and sends him poking and • .iniiffieg about inconveniently into all the ..6„dd corners Of the ' establishment ; or sets him: about' the:., ourtailinent Of houSekeep • .ing extravagat' ipes ' Or the aniendonent,Of . Various ' unpiethodiciik_ household' .pria. . del:lures, . all Of Which, , however right .and .., . . . preppie tends to distiub &rimed° peace and quietude; and tomake all the feminine 6 • "lien:dims : of the eStahhshinent devoutly • • pray for the when business shall ehall ball the disturber away immediately lifter break: . '.,,fast, and keephim array till towards even. ,-• .;!---:-,- . - ing. Tine, sentingent oftthe feminine mind' • upon the "euhitiot of Men about home is so generally prevalent that one may almost fancy that he detects in it nothing lees than . 4 modern -xesueoitation of • an .. ancient , instinct of the lace. Who•sheAl say that it, hatenot 'dome down to us from times when' no male above theatnl, of childhood would . have dreamed Of staying in the Wigwam all day,but.as,kniatter. of course would turn : out the firdit thing inthe morning to Nilo for JIM or figtkwith hien fresh paint instead • of Day. and ..Martin's pone'', •edid • a Well- , furbished tomahawk instead of a little blaek, office bag? 'Travellers . tell, us that there are .peoples einimg Whom the men nurse -the .13abies-endr;Oebk the food and -do the wash- Ics4,1z442:1R 47--Iaillx,Zn.t24,113,--4WrithIlltairall,r,r4tr: " .,;.- . ., ;,,v;17,,,,f-tiztml,erl,,,41.1,9R:14,0,mair .Z...-allaitaliki • ever attain to civilization, the ladies will be . tonna ' not only exceptionally given' to • ' "gadding abOut,” but will have' a strcing` . instinctive Conviction that it is their duty • to gad about while the gentlemen will probably,' be found . to ' have an almost invincible repugnance to going to •• business, and a particularly 'etrong in. to ',dabble in domestic affairs. If We turn from the middle class of society to "the wdrking than, as it is the custom to dell the lower elites of tonere, this subject of men in relatiOn to the home Will be found to have a ,serious and even ' a sad .•. . aspectLand it imams: likely that to the next generation it may: become a Matter of motnentoue importance: -There are two ' extremes whioh cireiiixistaeoes are very apt ' to -impose upon a very considerable Seotion of the working class. It would coesiderably ' startle nearly good folks who hold strong: ' opinions euthestibjeet of paternal respon- sibility to know how many fathers Of ' families 'there are in London,loe instance, *hose boars Of work are slat% as never to . .permit of their hating anything whatever to' do wipe; their fantilies beyond providing for them. At the otheroaktrome,are those who rarely have a chance of leaving their, dwellings, and .Whoee one or two xoomir constitute their workshop as well as their home. ..' The tendency of- late years has been 'decidedly ,againekthie. The develop, merit and organization of rnainifacturing .• industry during the present century, has - .-tenclulto - • -: - ." -- - • - .; • Vat Tlan Vona orT ot THE HONE „ and to dotty it on in large workshope and es, .factories—not homilies of the tinwhifleronge , • influente Of 'workshop. Igengeti, but heantrige 02 tlie neoessity of employing abeam powee. . • It seep; ty no 'means improbable that the .....-.::_-e. •t.i.•••i.`,3:,.,';j.•••,:,:tlie lintiva-ttill- 1-•.:.• ,,:',1,..,...my' Yklt,, the opposite diabetn and 'that workehop' •, • ••t, PrONS.Hor .6); Ilio,nwi'lltonwsott; • la the 000ree lecture, at the Crystal PAlace 340 witrter, clWeit at considerable:164'th upon the 800itti revolution which he, id cem e'with a good iriatoy ethertewho lieve giveu.coneideretion to the matter, looke for akt the, real* of the full developmeut of the -electric power. Among. Other 10%10 ,he oopteroplated the time.when the heine will , become very :'generally the Beene of the operatiyeer labor.' The ietroduetion of eteam has resulted in the ceneentration of indus, trice. of all kind's at certain centres, -and around those centres populatioee oona7 pelted to gather, , It, has built pp huge fetetories, in which a 'considerable section of .our people havo been obliged to Spend•inoet Of their wakibg existence. The age otsteam has, in feet, been an age'. of vast zndttetrial 'organizations netieetetrilt built up in the ram eal late vicinity of•, --the inctive•-power• The age ot electricity appears likely to undo this. The new agent is more potent than_ iiteediteand oo be distributed. over distances practically utilitnited. The result, in the opinion of Horne excellent jodgee, will eventually be a process of digintegra.. tion, a breaking hp of many of the great' Atenterdel_AK_Id—the_Aiatribution-A---wnx.k. wherever. workmen may choose, to settle. -It is not,dif course, likely that this will invari- ably'and absolutely be the case. Stetk,m has iLicit altogether abolished knell 'esteblish.' meats or•worksblep: hontes,,,and no power can be expected to .abolieh ell large face trifles. Mary tea/nifty:Aeries, of course, involve not prity a inotive,povver butcompli- milted and elaborate Machinery. On the Other hand, there ire ;Many very coMPh- elated and bewildering looking factories which are, in fact, made up of veryetrimple and ineitpenoivo elengents ;and it. seema by no means. improbable thlit 'When Motive pawer can be,; distributed just as Widely aod,easilY as gas"and water, the creation' of. factories. will reoeive ,a • decided cheek, and that meny thousands of. Men who now spend their lives in.;viorkshops at' dietancie front their dVvelliiigs. May by.andbyd.find,: whether for good or `eVikthat of necessity their hotnee must te the centres of their activity.—London Globe,' iRAWIC the qrnli ''.0torfes • • • •*5 "sown East." • s's" •• Half.a.doien railroad me le Were standing by .the union_depatiunch.counter-theother night, waiting for a train,' drinking coffee -aildtellingetories'abont•theic-eXperiensea ritilroacting. An engineer Wsta „makIng rtell-zIreAwtr.-1,44-r-74;,"5"11-riyett—TOW-tstro,FilWAiVi—sifn; siwallowne-Atoe.. ...eda.e.---entertaining-the boys about, a; fast run he :made one day between Milwaukee and La Crosse; when the" old man "was in ehn.rry , to get up 'there bet SCO aboUt.the bridge that was being built: As he was describing how , the engine and two cars fairly blistered the rails between Ponage and CAM)) Douglas, a frightened. looking Man stepped 1 -up :and asked for a cup of 'coffee andsome :doughnuts, and, while • he' was soaking a doughnut in the pegged, hesaid they . didn't know anything about faet running unless they. had been on the penneylvenia load. • ,The men asked . . hint what he knew about fest running, and he turned out BOMO coffee in a sander, blew On it to cool it, swallowed it; and said; • " Well, I.,just•got here from the east and have witnessed railroading that •keooks the socks off anything that ever was. ;We started Out of Jersey city one night at 8 o'clock, and. up.this. side of Philadelphia there was. a wreek ahead of ,11.8, and We side tracked for gix hours,: and when the track. was • cleared we ste.rted., won, sir, that train fleve-fairly flette We didn't realize in the -cat that we were going fast or:any jai, for it was just as smooth es as. apt= of .tkittes emooth,tos,brit ainan . went out on a platform he be, eonid not hireathe. The 'waiter started to bring a huichfrem the hotel oat into the oar I was in, •• and while he crowd the ,-platform .the coffee froze its:stiff as ica,creatig, and:a omen ate it with a spoon. The waiter was afraid to go b Lek into his car, and 'waited, till the train stopped- at a coal ' . "The conductor told . me that. the • train Was going faster than a !millet.'" fie said the engineeroften shot his revolver up the track ahead, and the engine Would overtake the'bullet and flattereit out, against the smoke stack. Did you ever • see a passenger train jump over a freight train, When both were in motion ?" asked the donghtitit man as he filled his empty coffee oup with milk. , • • • / ' ":0h;nyhat are you giving 11B ?" said the eugineet,. as he loosened the leather belt around ° his &emit, .overalle,.. and looked at the man with disgust. • • "Well, you &nil have to believe UV you train ahead of us. •We mune up to it on a straight track, and our engineer signalled to the freight conductor to slcitv up a little, and the conductor tiild us to keep our seats. We had seen the freight train ahead on a Curve, and wondered . how,:our train did not. stop. When the conductor told up to keep our seats I asked what was the matter, and he said were gaingtejump afreight, and if We Moved Around we would jar the cats so they wouldn't be able to hit the track ahead -When we came down. dist then I could feel, the train go into the air,, and hear the Wheels Cirri With no track under them, and in less than ten seconds we began to descend, itoa could hear the. wheels on the • track again, and X looked back end the freight engineer was waving hie hat at us. Whir, there was eio more jar than there is in this room now.. • Of coigne, they wouldn't attempt to jump a freight train on a Curve or in a tunnel." • And the 'matt scratched a match. and lit a cigar -stub he had been keeping. VUT 11: t • . • Stoyyjof the Phenomenal Weather 'that 0, :Followed •11 COW 'Spring 18144 tDurIng a 0014 spring, tufo Whieh itt jusi TIOW drawing -10,41) ,BUCTI people gener'. alIy console th4uselv.es with the reflection that the him will eventually get the victory,' mad that euronier oertaitily come at last, though, WI comiug May be delayed, 'Uncertain •as the .weather is, the general features of the bovine recur with a regii. `iiiritY Which Warrents the -oonlidenee.thus reposed in the tiuneal return of seed -time and harvest e but there are instancee on reoord Whieh even the seasons seem to have lost their oharapterietio features, as if the ordinary laws of meteerology had been ken4Porerily. fillet/ended.. .A...remerke• able case of this kind, and oil° whieh the leng.00ritinued cold weather Of this spring makes partioularlY interesting lust now, is that of the year 1810, which bat been called 'the year without'a summer." A•cominii- nicatiou printed ha the Congregationalist gives the follewingsumniery of, the weather of this retnarliable year : • ----JamittryatadFebruitry were mild.; was cold; April beget,. wenn, but ended in mow and ice. Ice formed an inch thick in xpx; and &Ads Were planted • ever and over itiam till it wadi' tee late to replant. Jane Was the coldest ever known in this latitude ; frost and ice were con:anon. Al- mo.st every green thing was killed; fruit heady destroyed. Snow fell to the depth of ten ibehlrs in Vermont, ceNen J11 Blaine; three in the interior of New York, and alsoin Massachusetts.. There were it lei, warm days. It Wits celled a dry season. But little rain fell. The wird blew Steadily from the north, cold and fierce. Mothers knit extra socks and. mittens for their chil- dren in • the spring and Woodpiles that usually disappeared during he warm spell ia front of the houses Were speedily built up again. Planting and. shivering were. .done together, and the farmers who, worked Out -their taxes on • the. country roads word overcoats and Mittens. In a town in Vermont a fleck of sheep belong!: ing to a farmer had .been!sent as Usual- to their ',pasture, . Oa- the • '1,11.th of ,June heavy snow . fell in 'New England.; • 'The bold was ilitense:: • • ' A fanner •who had a large field of corn in Tewksbury built' fireenround-it_ditnight- to ward off th•efroet ; niany an .• evening he. and -his neighbors iooje_ turns_ yes„toleing them; lie was rewarded with the only eiderable4, dartiviroAvaz,dono74w-- ISCW:fart- leans in donseeitlence • of the rapid s ibie of the Mississippi River. .Fears Were enter- tained that the "sun_wse °poling Off, and throughout New England piceiesi were 'strictly prohibited. July, wasitecoiripanied ' with' 'froet and um. Indian corn was nearly all destroyed, some favorably situated fields ewer:red. August was more cheerless, if possible,. than the summer Months whiah preceded - it. Iee was formed half an inch in thick- ness: .":Inditin corn was so frozen that ,greater Part was cut: down and and 'dried ,for ,fcidder. Almost every green thing was destroyed in this country and . inEnrope. On:the 30th snow fell at Barnet, forty miles from London. . Very little corn ripetic3d itt New Euglalid and the Middle Stetter. ,Fax.- dners,gupplied themselves fronicern pro- duced in 1815 'for seed ..frit.the spring' of 1217. It sold at from $4 to $5 Peri:lubber.' Septemberlarniehed 'shout two 'melte o f the pleasantest weather of the maser!, but in the latter part • of the .montle ioe formed an inoh•thielt. October. had, more than its share of Cold weather. November 'was cold and imovry. December, was com- fortable, and the winter following Wail Mild... Very little vegetation WILE Matured in the Eastern and :Middle States. The gun's rays seemed to be destitute of beet daring the summer, all nature was chid in it sable hue, and men exhibited no little anxietyooncerning, the future of this life. The average price of flour during the year in,the New..Yerfi,laarket was 013 per bar- rel. The average price of wheat in 'Eng. land was 97 • shillings per quarter. Bread riots occurred throughout Great Britain in 1817, in eonsequentie of the high price of the staff of life. . • ' • e 'JO; For the ,ansilv 8 rap -130p* JOVVOLItidiliVi4 14E49104* Tragic Death •of Catty who SatOlireci eirrovii to Mare Others, Where can 'you find it heroine of loftier than the oat Prezio* widow,. Mrs. .1..outea Guedan, wbe wee enffogeted in the Greene street fire yeeterday ? Mrs. Goodall had iuherited from her hu4nind the uijtnu factory of leavesr iu Which „the tire. broke •olit so„ and raged furiously. Upon :toe expire:don of the chemicals, through which the bnilding was .ot puce wrapped in flames, the brave little widow, 70 years of age, made for the 'stairs, rushed up to the eeeond storey,, threw her. eel( eguAnst the door of her workmen's room,ehouted "Fire l" ran up the egoond steirivey through the stilliug smoke, • and upward again •to •the top storey, struggling.' to resent) ,• a mother and her four chileren who 49..a. • qtutrtenr 'there. A workman on the second ' storey caught a• glimpse of her as. ehe' reel up higher to save these helpless ones, hilt -a deuse cloud of black smoke, that rolled up immediately shut her out frem view, and onlpt-erbalfetilled cry reached him from shriveash6.eteraped prough,..,tbe_ivindeve.- i'i*The firemen," says a reporter who tells /the tale, "when they made their 'way up after a. fierce fight with the flames, found Mre. Gueden. dead on the Upper landing, at the door of the people 'she • had tried to _save.' The mother' end four .children, for whose sake slieloet her life, had been out of the house, unbeknown to litirs..,Gueciari, be. fore, the firtotook place, end so Were' away from ' the danger." Praia, Mrs. Gueclan, grand old widow,! What lustresuciha deed as that which she performed Yesterday tbrowe oVer her Welted her death Y. Learning to The greateit diffietiltie to the beginner: is to learn to keepthe Proper position of the body after attaining it. This dtflioulty can only be overcome by usidigtlae• proper. stroke after having placed the body' in the correct position: In the H.80 Of the arms, the Only direction that can be given is to remember that, When the' 'armeare thrust' forward at the beginning of the Woke, such position of the elbows and hands should be taken as will makeibeleest resistance Of the Water.. TO accomplish: this, the ,hande ehould he placed palm' to palm and. the elhows-to-elose together,' starting. them • . from under the :chest. •111—making._...the _Jaffe stroke„ ' our object is to .goti a • :w4=1.1==&-tiotazillyilig,---ilEilii;Pk" hands should be 'sci.'placed.ra to °. 'Produce the greatest resistance upon the Water. To apoomplish this, the palrne6. of the hands should beihrown outward and the plane of the direetion of the)eitreke of the: arms made parallel to the surface of . the water.. The Most important and the most Often de- fective 'Point in'swimming is :the mode of .eeing, 'tbe lege, / It Would 130 Well . for a beginner to observe .the swiretning..".of a irog, for undoubtedly the:, same ,.methed of. singthelegs Should be adopted bY:man'ae itt'displayed', in. the, model switnniing of Ahab amphibian.' • In. analyzing the. stroke of the frog, we notice that there • motion;. ' the whole directiOn. of -.the force • is . a plane exactly•horizontel; and is aceomplished by virtually opening .and: doting the spew be- tween thelineee,offeeiogi the • sole of the ThOt as a resistance -while kicking. and ,piaoing the feet in a position of lead resist. •enee whilereceiverbig. In ecceinplishing the first of . these oonditions,the opening andeloning etthe spaccrbetween the .knees —the knees should be thrown out ; and the obritractien of the legs made ,slowly, in order totause as little resistanee possi- ble' to the headway already attained.. It will be found that, if we ..alternate the Stroke of the arMs and lege by giving pro. vro,i pulaion with one while recovering: With eOlie other, a far More con(144 1).11000 .V0,9 be attained,. andaor long to/Vire:is; it 1`4114).0' found far less fatiguilag.—Poputer '186.(ense Monthly for • . • Never let the tea boil: • Per rough hands, use lemon juice. Strong lye cleans taintedpork barrels. Tepid. milk • and • water clean oilcloth without •soap. • Turpentine applied to a but is 'a . pre- 'Oeuttve of lodkjavr. A hot shovelheld ,Over furniture retrieves -tritIte spot • • .4.,1" iftt;viz.vo• • 00 keep out worms. • A handful of hay in a panful Of, Water neutralizes smell of paint. • To make a carpet look ,fresh, wipe With a damp olotti after Weeping. • In sewing and wiping carpet rags double theni with the right side out • • Claiming tea or\ceffe 'ups with scouring - brick makes theirnoo good as new. Remove ink -stains on Bilk, woollen or 'cotton by saturating with spirits of turpen- tine. r\ Washing pine floor in solution of one pound of copperas dissolved' in one gallon strong lye gores oak color. e. • .Itemove lower pot stain from window *'iino-hyttilbing with fine Wood. ashes and • rinse with Clean water. A peste of equal parte.. of: sifted ashes, olay, and salt and a little water Cements cricks in stoves and °Vane.' 'Iliiitures of two . parts ef glycerine, ono part ammonia, afid 1. little rose water whiten and soften the hands. , Cover. plants with etawspapera before • sweeping. Also pint it little ammonia upon ' them one° a week. . • - Cabbage is made digeritible by first Ellio. ing, and then putting in boiling water, with a pinch of sods and some salt, and boiling just fifteen ,minutes. • Vrirndship'oTiC • The •pricioner ware a friend of mirid," Said the witness in answer tea question of the contemn for the prosecution. • "Do you .desire the court and jury to believe that you are *ell acquainted with him?" •• • " pull say that I am." . ' " are we to understand then by the statement that *eh a friend of yetis ?" "jest this." continued the witness, " Ile borrowed 05 of no .optce and never re- turned it." • , " you 'consider' that an evidence of friendship ?"*.P " I do. If ad'paid it ba§k he would -hue _fl7 'Y3 :tattle. • hornets may be muitiplied indefinitely. , --The nertiden'e tavdrite 'author—Lover. t. ^ ' ' A young gentletnatt in a strauge church gallantly strove to brush a hideous' spider, With shining evil eyes, from the shoulder of a /meg lady who eat next to, him: The youog ladjra turned, laughed, readjusted the spider, which held her lace Bead, and the young man, blushing deeply, looked at his prayer.boekdurieg the remainder of the Bettri00. . • • The ,Spatiarde Must be rinynicallieeeerole, or they'd never have such * proterb" as— A wonian's teals' cog but little but bring reeMuoh.," • • 0 ' 4 . "4. •• Farm randGarden. Aventine Should biont Only by eaiefili lands, Who will, not injure the Planta. There is.nothing better' for laying :114ie• in the spring than maik, after the .orearii has been taken off. Young vines making their first growth sh�uld produce but it .single shoot ; if others start, remove them,arid tip up thestrongest tap, stake. ' Success in gardening depends largely uponlittle things.. As goon as Seeds, are seen breaking the soil a sharp hoe run near the row will 'help them. «° •Zoting.mhinKsamede,,IscIpt*-4.1Lau'd. imaterAtezaredwalm.ft„,m7L-T11L1.,,w---, ,st21,33, ineeots that clught to be deetroyed: • If canker Worm moths have aseended the trees and laid their eggs the weroe) Must be killed by apptying*by indand of it syringe, Paris green stirred in water. ' Cabbage plante raised this spring in hot- beds, or cold frames, must be well hardened by exposure before they are • planted out Seeds for the late oroP are to be sown In wellprepared bed in the tweet ground after the Weather gets well'eettled. •; . It is costOn2ary to eat dearly all the plants in the open ale.,Init many are Much. injured by this practice, especially 1W the hot sun falling upon the pots and scalding the roots. The 'petit should either be plunged in the soil, or a elude of some kind provided.. A correspondent Writes to the American Agriculturist. thus: "11 'one will, when 'the dew is on, sprinkle alittle fine salt on the leaves of any plant he wielsee to killehe will be both surprised and pleseed. at .the result." 13eginningeome yiaara age ?With a few quarts annually, he now ..,thies seine thousands of pomaded salt eta yepi.in killing !wile, While ha injury to the land or Matrons is perceptible. • In -a Salvation Array meeting lield in St, Themes a fete evenings since a ptayer was Offered as folletve: "Nay God blees the reporter. If he is here to -night may he speak the truth :tot once int his life, and ehainci his master, the devil.'" ' The largest steam hammer in Scotland is at Patkhead Vorge, Glasgow: Its weight is 12 tone, audit ,etrikes a blow o several hundred tons. Truth is a to:itch, but a terrible on,e oftentimes so terrible that the natittal Witfi a:bilat1iiriiO3,641tafft tloPifin a it fairly in the face, the atrial:1g Mare might blind , Goethe. .41 4•1401fili, IMO A-llllnliiirr She Vietini, nem the oi 10010 • Old gr. Aliddlerib get tired' of having tli iniechievone . beys'in the neighborhood sneek up, ,auk hie front" deer' bell hallway aerobe) the street end thee rim like " deer for the neareetooener. Su be attached . 'powerful. battery to the Inside knob, made coneeetions with' a zine plate on the door step; and Waited for the boy to 00112e , albai; and close the cirouit. But the. boy had had fun enough for that day, and , cobee.beck for any -Wore. Mr. mid. alocih grew tired waitipg‘ and at last for. , got all about the whole matter. It probably would net have occurred to him again th4t day had ;At the ministernade his pastoral oall that ei,aeraeon. _ The dounpie gave -the • .• • • hell one „Reale, eocleeiastiettl,pull, then : " jumped into the air eo high that , he looked in at, the transom) - Yelled likaa.wild udian, hie hat itiffot .00e6 he fired file Umbrella through it side e and,rverr :4 libievagpPointettraid*BWariatitid-w°714ileintbthe glad voice of ntr.Illiddlerib, who beard the rove buto,ouldn'tdreethbatableadr fairrefir' from a Ode window: "Pull it again will • "Ye) ye,fiat.footed linihorW iMP ,Pull it again, will 76 ?" Byttbe ohdl,roonioeo of w the hodog the Paetek Wits f -returned .to 00a801OneneSs and wrath. bettire MA. dlerib got.down stairs He reluctantly a0- cePtecl the hospitalities of the roo4iohie chest, but said hie Mind : was le too shat- tered as:inflation to Hetet* to any.eigolanso. doh just then. And as be walked stiffly awhY Mr. Middlerib admittedtbat be Wenid have to donble his enbmiription dife'. year, and aberithalf-niade up his MIRA that he would sell two or three 'half grown boys to: a rnedier..1 college to raiki the.extra' 1.ribscrip- Mon. And he would d� it, too, if .10 could catch the boys.' • , .A. TcriiIdc HrIdnI Night. A bridle night expeilenete almost enreees... leg id tragic horrorthat, of the 'bride of Lantritierrnoor,'whioh4lootti said was owee ,:true, tale," is, reported. frOni Bio Grande' del Burneartheilltigrety frontier. A. yotingtariner's marriage . wee postponed on aoisount .of his being; bitten • by ...a dog:. The wound was cauterized, and all „went , vrell. Three reontlislitei.dotitOr,s declared:: all dangerover.-Thelitiarriagataok.-plan . A supper followed, itt d at supper the bride- groom wanotzoed to 61J into gloomy ab- iitricillieueCAtter supper came/401*g. an&-, auoi40#6-6-w,ioltiike!'it !About hour - laterpierodpg screamikoiniti front the bridal ohamlier:'.• The doorWiteiltrst open. On the floor „lay the bride;4till-,-alive,' but teal as thou*, by a • wild beast. ,The; bride;-' groolit;:coveted with blood, and "foaming .at the niouth;'. cowered itt a 4.iloriier;but in a. moment sprang upon'Onecittbe,irien, when a brother i'S:t the bride/Sint _ through his brain..., • . ,Iiolng to Church isa Iltagles0, In going about yeti are', expected. fee everybody except members of the nobility, says it still smirking, whispered :.0"Y‘011,010.ae a td3of :hero% gl*"ontd°OltallailtuereaehnitlYwItetSeeredOltie* fenial ::epeuer expects gratuities. • ' AGA thumb. lie was °Moly Cleve- land Herald. If you ask any favor of a few p�nae if oohnu:e. caeororetur. eepsxlip;dteeittitototit.get, ihoeirdvt4teootruh03tyilw;e,,i/ii.otellauti- illuetrate•thepreYelepaeoftliliaexpectition Twiddlingeilf-orOwn,(62. cents) hisehowit iew. and trier 'dexterously conveye tkpontly into the, eXPecticet 'coin andnigAly withdrew. Presently Pailm of '4*.:,i6opanotor.-w140:,clitte4ed the the womanbrought,6 1144010004414',and . pi:v,set athlrei4i413,,i.rtAttl,067,0, SeabindythlailA ,zhenevideritsintle, " al lig t ,;fd .never gJve less' Exit tleW open h‘:bliitaei• ?of it churoh,.rhea tiiq toast • histhesitlfitypatio given, rather 7 eiijgwati. , ly rePliedibat toa for scafteld.tdign thelmblin,plati,or ..tWoodtaeheiimake,;tbe .beer fe tilizere for all kindefok,fieteeting plants, as thoa Ate destrint07frto „Insects. , The hoitie Stops, irtyell.fliflited‘with;water*, are else e#celient for lower'bedif."1,4,,;;;;i:, •••,i1 ' A philosophersays: " 14vcity' hurl lite in titioh a WaS140aRto'.'show ri'liiniteltpt tor lwiteialy161,114:7,1.i.a.T5,42t'Beroviagle'k.;714.ww4.16th:,.9:. itimwepite.1.,tlazz!Attlariliatity-..".it.),ehli!d, oon t "We dienot live broadly ugb, _Prof. Swing, or Chicago, iuhis unday Bet - mon. yinto 4itwaiyoui poorid th,t • Whj'bitai he nests asitioe7,10iecause they are lit• • :differeripCiny),,pinion. • Steele•-:4(sfolokye *the son k ,iioaybec,o7fiejat.dia•!ionratinenidtigioslitut,,,,,wo somolt oolonel liveup the t(tidetilieil*n bOuntryi:platie and. viiNnirtibkvigari '.fitai With considerableddieseditaciti littl 'that .r.04,- • -• Trio teniki*.• s of hill ietlio 'one now omit tebrili fragriht ' and tipeb the Teeth 14 elou'ising po ern, Audtiafn a lereath ilk° scent tit fi ers. • Tape We get Many letters frolitgligglits ,Stating pleateirt restate" from custe retls of Blklien!, tem- peramelits nt§eftZongitg, Tjno.90 Btageet to qspremon - • - Rirpritied lac w tate diyand pleasantly 'toots. corrects The iteeretioas„ streegtbeirsdigestion troinfilly a 10.estit sample cozivinces Alta of Ite Value.