HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe New Era, 1884-07-04, Page 9'41411r
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J1y1,4104*
" Memo We Wall iter flra•Ot."
"Bwmt NM° M WlatlhOga!B 40tri. and Ask Of
Oldbant
-Q0404 they vioo'd and fend they CC% 1 fitiWi.
in' jack stud
•Bitt time,i were bid tor lass and lad,- and sadly
both confessed
Twee not the thieg to buy the ring before they'd.
limed the nein. •
* (lounge. lad t" 044-Kat1e. *m Zee, we'll have
to welt:
gut thoesh, 113Y dor*, twiMitY Yea; tabot
no oteer mate.'
43tit England wanted. &whey, for mix wu in the
ah*,
And arms more grim were presssd on him than
Eittie'e bonny pair,
:Bo all through Spain. in rough campaign, be
Obiviedbold mosso°,
.4n1 fired hie gun and made hint reit like fait at
Waterloo.
/Wm' When the lade came round her Estie. bade
theta book. ,
ilieral/ girls enow for you to Woo; X Meell
wait for Jadk."
The. gray in Katie's: ringlets with mingled witb
the InnWn, •
'When bump -a -thump an eager otomp camo.
pegging through tile town.
°XV a me, you see,, tome baok," eitid he, "except a
leg or so;
And este and emoul here's twenty pound; eo let
the panion know."'
Jingle; jingle, jingle I set the bells a-ohime.
And health and, bliss to love like tins that
bravely bides its time. .
—rrs&irlt10".Patiobricke, in abed worae.
FAR;111 AND GAADEN. .
tuggestions as to Sutter -making, Orcherd
Culture and Cattle Feituring.
...EARLY HAYING, ADVISABLE.
•
*Good uesseelle ler. _caroms dross Be.
tore it mine Chine to. steed. "
• L
(Qonipilen hy a Practical Agriculturist) "
sireepingilapie syrup.
In reply to the inquiry as. to what will
Amok maple syrup from turning to sugar,
have to IlaY that 1 have made Maple sugar
• ana syrup for the pant twenty years, and
have no trouble an keeping it. -I boil it
down thiek and then put .it • in 'earthen
Jugs end then cork and seal them air tight.
The syrup must be boiled only flint*
enough for table use, and will keep ?Or tort
years. 'I will give one instance whith 00-
• onrred in my own cellar: A two -gallon jug
of syruP remained in there for two 'years,
and I don't know but fine years; and was
. covered with water eix weeks in the spring,
and when we opened it it was just as good'
. as at the time it was settled down.,
• Dauer reciting. • :
The following !suggestions in regard to
peeking butter may prove beriellaial to
thee° interested. The etyle Ofthe package.
'has more to do wall the sale than moat
-shippers are aware of. The tubs should be
well soaked -in hrine before filling, the
-butter packed eolidly, andfilled within bili
an inch of the top of thetnh. Cover the
top with a 'piece of new bleathed cotton
• -soaked in brine, and tucked neatly down at
the edge. In peeking butter and gad* it
.ready for market neatness is indispensable
and, besides that, it lia,ye. Never pack two
colors in the same package:. Light :colored
or streaked butter always Faille hard and at
.low prices. . Use the best fine' salt you ein
get. Tare your tubs muddy. '
Grain in eareharehi.
The reason why grains are objeotionable
dope for orchards is that they do not
receive stifiloientoultivation •to give the
soil the anintint Of 'Stirring during the grow-
ing Reason Which isnecessary to give the
trees the 'greeted benefit. In many
.• localities potatoes are the favorite orop for
young orchards; but it probable that corn
-is generally better, since all the stirring
whioh dae soil received ' hz. growing: thin
-.crop .oftea at a tiMe when It is 'moat
desirable to encourage growth in the trees,
and give them plenty of tinie to ripen their
wood,before winter. -
Ise the Vlorroiv. • •
By the frequent de of the harrow moth'
. labor can be .saved. On . Many soils the'
• yoing grass and Weeds spring up very
, quickly, and if. &Hewed. to • grow to ,a
.moderate height require the cultivator, but
if the harrow be passed over such fields as
• Soon OA the grass began' to appear the
ground am more 'easily. be kept °learn
...Every seed that germinates and is then
destroyed is so much out of the waY;and if
She land be kept fine and loose by frequent
• harrowing the .benefitimparted by deetrue
tien of weeds and grass Will altiebe in;.
creased' by the geed condition of the milt*
dope.• • , •,,
Variety In Pasture.• ' - •
Prof. E. W. Stewart -Writes to the New
_England Paraner "A variety. of food is as
°important in 'pasturing as in stall feeding,
and those pastures having the•greatest
'variety of grasses are the best. Some old
pastures contain a large number of verie
ties, eaoh having its , peculiar qualities of
nutriment, aroma and flavor. Such old
pastures prOdutie the finest 41a:wired beef,
. mutton and milk. Too little care is taken
in reeding for pedal.° to Wed a' auffident
variety, The greater the' Variety: the better
for the thrift of the cattle. In addition to
the standard timothy and Weyer; other
• varieties' are valuable, each as blue grad et
-June grass; flat•stalked blue grass or wire
„grades, roughetalked mettdOw griss, mea-
dow fescue, sheep fesoneto orchard .
,.red top and sweet,seented vernal grass. '
occupation Mr Moles,'
• .
An Indianapolis (Ind.) fruit grower says:
4g Last year I pot twelve mold in itty
etrawberry patch Of five acres to catch the
„grubs, and they did the work. /never hed
a dozen plants injured during the Munnler
either by the grubs or moles. I know son2e
, people do not care for moles on their farms.
but I want them in my strawberry patch"
Plias lain Flowers*
Plant sunflowers everywhere, where you
,oan find a place, &boat the barn or fowl
house. 11 18 well known that thie plant is
especially valuable. for ,ite heath -giving
. qualities. All that is needed ie to press the
seed tinder the mil, and the plants will etre
:for then:wolves,. On the margin Of the
aink drain, neer the out,house or pig sty,
or in the unused ;poi of the poultry yard,
these plapte Will be finite; the plebe of the
?health committee, atid the fall otop of seed
will make a valuable ohmage of diet for the
fowls during the winter and opting.
1, Cid Hay Yearly. '
When hay e us4 for feeding, ani.
,mals on the term iloMethnig besides Oat
-
tit)/ or Weight is to'be• taken inte oentiidera.
tion. The ultimate dijeotref the hey hi to
produce flesh and fett. The grass and
clover Acadia be out ncht With reference to
the greeted Weight of hay, but the greeted
weight of flesh. If hay is bob digested hi
the dome% of the animals that eat it,
nothing 10 prodded brit Manure. Observe.
tions elbow that a.lorgei part Of the hay
made from- matiirit gratis and clover je
wasted. 1119 rejeoted by the animals to
Whith it is fed; or it pude through the
etomath without being digested. AB a
rule, the younger the animals the greater
O is the Moonlit Waded. They ;mein digest
4.64; tomb bar * alt OW nal.
0104 Work IMMO luta melee whieh
there are few in the country at ;present, da
better on the hay madc from MHE1411 draw
in °WM than yells, young cattle and
miloh owl do, During the past !wrier*
the prodtreere of 'beef and mutton hoes
turned 04 Moir eniMele it a much ',moor
ma. Nob was tba proolloe la former Um*.
of VOW furnishes an rgunt in
Weir of early out hay, Obeettet
in the mummer skew thed yo mina.%
refuse to tiel the meture et clover,
timothy and red top. Observations made
In winter ;thew that they decline to eat
there when converted into hay if they call
obtain other kinde et rood. The general
conclusion to be drawn from these obser-
vations is that; grass and clover intended
for young stook should be out sometimes
before the seed matinee and the Ideas
haoome bard, If out at that time the hay
will beoome tender and mitritioug. At the
peried of blossoming moat forage plents
contain the maximum amount Of foliage
which is of the greatest value for food next
to the flower' themselves. Out when nlost
of the blossoms are at their full size, clover
affords hay tbat.itrrelished by all Mode of
stook. Tly diittiug grad and clover quite
earl' ranob of the danger of lodging is
prevented. It is easier to out and aura four
aores of grid or clover that 'stand upright
than one that is lodged. The hay made of
lodged grass and olover is generally of very
poor quality. Contact with the ground
hail caused some of the foliage and blossoms
to become musty, and in tionle omies to be
covered with dirt. The roots of the plants
are likely 50 10 Injured' by having the stalks
that spring from them lodge. Grad and
clever grown on rich land are quite itertain
.to lodge if their cutting is neglected till the
seeds mature. By cutting them early two
Oropo may be harvested from the same
ground. The eecOnd orop will often be ite
large as the- first, and will be of epeoial
value to the young animals. For .formin'g
a good, oompaot sod, frequent cuttings are
very beneficial. This is seen in the treat -
went of lawns. The oftener they are out,
the better is the sod produced. 11 11 is
intended to convert a mead* into a pas -
Uwe 10 18 itdvigable to Moir ill frequently
with a view of making it a firm sod. • When
10 10 expected to harvest :ts crop tit glover
'Ned the first.cutting *should be done early
in theseason. . When all grate andolover
were neeeentrily out with the hantleoythe
two'utowinge of the earn° field involved
much labor. , Now that the work of !prowl-
ing and raking as well as mowingie done
by the aid of machinery tee.amonnt ot
manual labor is greatly reduoed. Up; to
the present 'time the supply of prairie
grass has been" so abundant -that few have
tested its value for hay when out at differ.'
ent stageslor its growth. Some are of the
opinion that it makes very. little difference
at what period of its • growth 10 10 out for
hay. The practice is to delay its cutting
till the clover and tame grasses are secured
• Oilier laurel Notes;
•
Barley le the liest.food for fattening young
geese. .
Cabbages and aanliflowere ;Mould be well
hoed and aultivated,and careful attention
had to destroy the worms. •
: Blackbirds are losing_their "shynees in
ore° parte of Sacitland, and have ceased to
congregate in large flocks. Some .of the
birds have built nests in • the shrubbery of
door -yards, and others ingreen.houses, this
settedn. It is thought M.,,t their presence
in the vieinity of houses wiU be beneficial
indestreying inmate. • ,
Onions 'should be sown early. The
seed shOuld ho Namely more. than pressed
into theedle but the pressureshould be
strong enough. to make the muck quite
A. regent autopsy npim a valuable home
at Bridgeport, Conn., revealed that death
had been oaused by ranee of zinc which he
,had chewed -from the lining of his manger
and swallowed. • , . . •
California breederire
i a. importing Eters-
ford cattle from Australioand New Zealand.
• The aniniale Met less than those obtained
from England, and are reported' to be very
fine specimens: •,
• Tulip* and hyagintbsgif the bulbs arei
not too large, -4 oan safely be left in the
ground for two . years, oovering the lied
with verbenas or amall.rooted bedding.
Mention is made in foreign papers of a
oreamerY where each .horse gets an alio*.
and of buttermilk daily throughout the
year. ' The oaten has been continued
about twelve menthe toad "found to &newer,
in most satisfactory manner."
Boot is one of the most valuable sub.
stances' the gardener can employ . That
•frem obel ie better than that from wood.
It can beremployed as a fertilizer for any
crop, and it hi • not only valuable as s,
manure, but to drive away innate that
attaok cabbage, turnip, jradieh and other
•vegetables. •'
Malaria is frequently carried through
long distances by. the Tunas ; therefore it
is well to &wedeln. whether there. is any
malaria.breeding marsh, or other pesti-
lential locality, in the direction of the pre-
vailing winds.. These may to some extent
be couirteraded by having to pass through
a timbered , country, ea timber has the
property of absorbing or destroying malaria
to a great extentas die borne through by
the winds.
;
A good scareorow May be made by. nue-
pending an old barrel between two posts
in such e way that it will be moved by
every poising breeze. A better way to
frighten away the sagadOus bade is to take
a large bottle, knock off .the bottom and
Impend the top to a slantingpole by means
of twine. P105 short dring to the cork
and Id it bang down' ineicle the .bottle.
This, with 0..nail or two on its, end, will
make a strangeiloise for mod of , the time,
the naila striking the inner surfed of the
bottle.
littepe for the od Pubis.
Now let old maids anxious for husbands,
sddrioh ones, too, rise upend bestir them-
selves. A close study of Swinburne,
Rossetti, Ella Wheeler and other pate of
the fleshy and pessionate, eohool, will en.
able them to use the pro4eitr voaabulary and
style, and e short term prosody will do
the rest. Thee let them put all the love.
eiek longings and maudlin *endemism they
OKI find in sentimental novels and bad
digestion into rhyme, and publish it, even
11 1* has to be paid for at full adverdeing
rates. Soon bachelors all over the land Win
tiPpror quarter' did del into matrimony
to Neaps the deluge of tender verge!, and
so flail the great army of old maida grow
small by degrees and, beautifully lees.-,
Cleveland Loader,
The Queen liae reigned extuitly forty
Devon years to -day.
In the Ines ef 0.T, Tully, thier-English
bank manager, held for extrelition on the
ohiSrge of forgery* at New York, the °bur*
&added yesterday that hie oats purportieg
to ba giving receipts for investments in the
funds of the bank 414 not oneount to fies:.
gery, as lie was in agent of the bank and
acting in the dodge of his duty. Tellywite
therefore disaliariesl. Ho was itemediately
rearrested in * envil suit for reetriery of
the amount of hie pethletions.
• •
••••••••11.••••,..,
CURRghlT TOMS»
• the night before the went dedieedien
Of the MO Mormon Temple at Salt Takka
Rrealdsot Taylor claimed to reorlea a
revelition 41001; 0004 God shit go
eoettpted the Mind* the groundend EHE•
riffee of tin !Sainte. '4)1 was pronottuoad
"good." as at the creation of the World,
the next morning it took the
"Alrtighililn°nhPlir".hirninlel
obneveryse0e,eeirwitrow, door,
pane of glees, eto., pertaining to the Galilee.
This prayer was so " eoraplate and per.
:00:174,,les. a good mint, a4 to " Boo* tO
comprise, everythieg earth end in
heaven,. pertaining in the offering of the
THE lend= Standard Sap ; 4 4 The dea-
fen have made life direst not worth living
with their preestitheis againstite being
• ProMateroly apt ehort. The air is Wen
with germs, the earth vendee pobion, 'the
sixpences we handle pontain the Beads of
zymotio plagues, the very eat that** stroke
may have paesed.from a typhus patient's
bedroom to bear on its fur the inessengetof
death next door. s And now we are told
thatwe smell a Weir° de Dijon at ourperil,.
and that the azalea in our button-hOle may
in the °gorse of half an hour . impart hay
fever to a carriage full el railway travel.
lore."
`Wins families of careless babite 14011
around to_disliover the oinse of the bad
taste of their drinkhig-water they sometimee find strange things. We hayg olit.
selved known of tlie oink waatepipe being
turned direotly into the cietern whith'sup
plied the sink -pump, BO that a very Retreat'
orroulation for the Idtehen Biqa was Pktl*
vided: Luokily the family did not otoll•
mealy use this water. It is not a rate
ocourrenee that ik ratis drowned in a
cistern, but probably that vessel is not
neuelly employed to drown kitteni: This,
however, did happen in a house in Reding,
San, England. Seyetal Mild oases of diph,
theria led, to an investigation and the
°latent was examined. In it were found
She bodiee of several kittens tied together.
IN his article in the Century, President
Eliot strongly disapprovea "the theory
that, for the ...Bake of disCipline, hardness
that is avoidable should be deliberately im-
posed upon boys; as, for /distance, by fore,
mg, a boy to study many tanguages who has
DO gifts that "way, and oan never attain to
any mastery of then, To My 'mind the
only judification of any kind of disaipline,
trarnicg or drill is attamment of the appro.
pride end of that discipline. 'It is a waste
tor aociety and an outrage upon the indi-
vidual, to'make the bey, spend the years
when,he is most teaohable, in a. discipline,
the and of whieh be can never resell, when
he might have spent them in a different
discipline whit% would hive bean rewarded
, by achievemeet." • • .
AN excursion ona:1-nore extended scale,
• even than that in honor of the Nerthern
P.soiffe Railroad's opening hike been planned
•
by the Society.ef Cemineraial Exploration
in Woe. Dias -to enibraoe , the airquiti.
navigation of the Afrioan. continent. Tie'
eicaursioniste will start about September lst
from Genoa, and will go to, Algiers, Ten-,
gier, the 00oligo oeUnHy, the Cape or Good
Hope, Natal, Madagascar, Zanzibar, Aden,
Siren, Alexandria, Tunis, . and back to
• Gems, . arriving about 7Christmas :time.
The ' steamer will traverse, a dieting° of
about fifteen thousand miles, making a stay
of from cine to, .eight days at the various •
ports. It is believed that substantialadvanteges Will result from the oppOrtuni.
ties of tho tOuriste to beodme acquainted
with theNionitneraitil needs if' the Fegioato
viait." ' ' • •
. •
A eisoussiouer whit is dolled telepathy.
was opened by the "Nineteenth Century."
The word. means' reading at a dietance the
iinpulse Of another mind through channels
as yet 'unrecognized. There aretwo forms
Which; teiephatio phenomena are 'held to
asetime: OdOte thot . cif shit& thought
Irwasfertina, or mind reading, under the
metre' 01 solentiflo experiment. ' In a
mesinerio or phy:notio condition, and
indeed, without it, experiments' are•held to
hair(' ahoWn that impressions or -ideas -Can
easily be tranderred from one mind ,tia
another by eh actor will. The emend form,
is that of a sudden, unexpected impresoon
,passing front one•mind to another, as a sett
ruf presentiment °rendition.The writers
treat at alter apparitions ,Of • She dead,.
birt only of She living. , . • '
. • •
: Tan highly important 'question of whit
Mode with baggers and tramps bas; inpart
at least, been answered in 'a prectioalway
. .
:by the newly established oharity inPhila. •
dolphin; known ei The Wayftwere'
Lodge." Men of these alums applying for.
help are given e:supper &insisting of bread
and stewed fruit, after which they are cam-
pelled to divest themselves of „their cloth;
Mg, whioh is than subjeoted. to a processor:
steaining, by means of which any impuri-
ties are thoroughly destroyed. • "While thia
is going on, the men are required to take a
bath.. after which they are furnished with
a clean nighedreserend sent off to bed. In
the Morning they are given a breakfaet of
the' same fare as the supper, and imnie-
diately afterward are sentinto the pirate
• sawand chop wood as an equivalent for the
food and lodging they have received. This
is the test point where the puke grain is
easily sifted from the ohaff. For those who
are found deserving* situations are pro-
oured.ati rapidly ae :pessible, while the
Others are Marched off- at dotibleinioli to.
'the House of porreotioni •
Tim Lord St. Leonardo .who has just
been eententied fer a oriminal assault is
the second Baran, homing &Weeded his
grandfather, who rose -from' theposition
errand boy in a conveyander'e offiee to that
of Lord Chancellor, first of Ireland, than
of England: TheChanoellor's father was
a heirdresser, and the shop 10 Mall open
in Burlington street *here theolder Stigden•
ourled the looks of the nobility and gentry
in the days of George ITI. The Chancellor
died intestate, and family, ainabblea over
rill. property supervened. The diat of the
• Member was Boyle Fenn, one of the
most beautiful Spots on the Themes. EY
some steabunte Boyle Farm did not pass tt;
the went Baron, who was thitiWit on the
world ' with hie title and -a Very wall
income to sustain it. The title, however,
got him a "fib with fortune. In 1876. he
Married ati oflicer's daughter, Mies Dinah.
wood, who had 0500;000 in her cnvu right.
On it he- lived hard, and found himself
Tinkly Bret in the Court Of Thyme, 3204
in the Courtuf Bankruptcy. LI Vebreary,
last year, Lady St, Leonardo obtained a
divorce, With.the andady of her Child, and
AC evidence WM most damaging . to,
him. He has ohne been h Vagrant.
A. new danger bats been &Severed in
itanitary organization. The tibiquititie
bacterium, 'Which proven' 50 bethe gannet
BO Many obscure diethese. .has. been found
by M..Parize, a Prenth savant, to take up
its abode in brick walle. Noticing ettMe
particular mark On the Outside of the Will,
10 Onvitpod a Win oe sod plata& It radar a
latagaltrioil Poway og CM. b9414E4; 511.
Viel44 MU* Waif 10 .how myrinde ot
organism. Moving about With extmordhweel
oniony. It was tin More 'Jugular that
WS rod (140 104 bun comma ingt a layer
04 410 * guirtar 04*n bob thlek krnder
the imprespion that the 10t:4We
might have hien OHPHEfidal daposib, M.
Parise then drilled *hole *Meths vorY oinstre
of the brick, and to his great surprise die-
: covered that the powdered material wee
full of the same living organisms, 1/.11120411
not in ouch large quantities as in the
external layer, To make Imre tint thii
was not an exceptional Molt, be carried on
his experiments 55 various places in the
wells, and always with the same result,
that the brioke were more or lees impreg.
nated with bacteria, which' Appear to
flourish equally well in a brick wall 10 10 o
saucier ot Donis fermenting subetand.
There can be very little doubt that wood,
work is often a source of deligir from the
same cause, a perplexing malarious fever
having been traced by the dootore of Ban
Francisco to contain deaayed foundationa
and weld there, which abound 10 5105 city,
and whit*, when token down, were: found
5o10 swerming with organisms.
About Ifiellstre—Two , Striking Picture..
• Two brothers in Vermont, or strong and
vigorous stook, and giving equal promise of
a long and active' life, married wives ed.
• depending in promise of future notivitY.
They had both chosen the limilthiest of MI
eallinge-farmisg, One of the -brothers
• built his house m an open and sunny epot
where the soil and subsoil were dry ;, shade
trees and embowering plants had a hard
times of it, but the cellar was dry enough
for a powdee magizin.. The house 10 11
its parts was free from every trace of
• dampness and -mold ; there was crisp
• and elastic) feel in the air of the dwelling;
the farmer and all his family had that vigoro
ons elaetioity that reminds one of the spring
and strength of steel; health Mdsprightly
vigor were the rule and sickness the rare
exception. The farmer and his wife;
though past threemore, haft yet the look
and vigor of middle life. The other
brother bails his house in a beautiful shady
• nook where the trees . seemed to stretch
their protecting arms in . benediction
over the modal -hod°. /Springs fed by the
neighboring hills ' burst forth near his
house and others by his barns ; his yard
was always green even in dryeat time, for
the life blood or the hille seemed to burst
out all about him in springs and tiny rivu-
lets. But the ground was always wet, the
'cellar never dry, the walls of the .room
often had a clammy feel, the olothes mil-
dewed in•the-alosets and the bread molded
in the pantry. For a time their vigor
enabled them to bear up against these
depressing influences ; children weruborn
of apparent vigor and promirie,13ut these,
one by one, sank into the arms of the
dreamless twin-brether of sleep under the
tonali of diphtheriaicroup and pneumonia,
and the mother wont into a decline and
died of doneumption before her fiftieth
birthday, and the father, tortured and
crippled by rheumatism,. &haled and
solitary in Abet bewared borne which
elicite the praises of every paseer-by, waits
and hopes for the dawning -of that day
which shall give him baok wife and
children, an unbroken family and an eternal
home. Look on thie piature, thenoe,tbat.
It Was Sent Home. :
A city lady, while out; " shoPping " the
other day, after teasing the Werke beyond
the forebearance limit, pompously ordered
a spiel of thread to be sent to her • house.
-She was surprised and her neighbors were
intensely interested Meetly atter she , had,
edited at home., A tiemmondiey, drawn
. by four horses, prooseded:slinelyiip to her
door. ..On the dray, with bare dors, were
a number of etalwart laberers: They were
holding on vigerouslY to some objeat which
she oould not see. It was a moat puzzling
affair. The neighbors stared: Atter a deal
of whip...tracking and otherimpreseive cere-
monies, the cart Was "backed againet the
dub. :There, reposing calmly; end up, in
the centre of the cart floor, wee the identi.
eal !mail oLthread which she had
• ordered." It seemed to be dining all,
right. With the aid of a ,plank, • it was
finally rolled, barrel -fashion, safety to • the
sidewalk. After a mortal etru,ggle it was
" upended" on•the purchaser's doorstep.
° . He Wanted an gni., Time.. -
• The story 'is 4614. that a young :
nzan-
Wrote to IdeuryWard Beether, commena;
ing himself as piing yety honest and
anxious 50 get on. /lie letter: opined with
the request!"Please get :me an 'easy
situation, where 'my honesty may be' re.
werded." Mr. Beecher gave that young
man someadTice Which probably .eethi'm
thinking. 'It Was to the effeet "Don't be
an editor, if you Would hive • an easy time.'
Do not try the laW. Keep out of the pub..
pit. Avoid sohool-keeping. Let shine all
ships, abuse, shoPri and merehandise.
Abhor polities., Don't precitiee medieine.
Be not a fanner inn a merchant; neither e.
soldier nor a Mild. study. Don't
think. Don't work. None of them are-
they."!...These mediations Mast have sadly
narrowed the aphere of that young Mated
ambiticrn. What WIN there left ?-save
the professional baseball club or the 'polio°
form.
Extraordinory Vase of Wife Poisoning
At Wallailey, bheihfre, England, the
other day, Mrs. Craven Was summoned for
libellfng Mr. Edward Meanie, optician,
'Liverpool and New Brighten, in letters
accusing hire Of "polacining his wife. The
authorship of the letters w'ai admitted, and
Mrs. Craven pleaded that the statements
were true and capable of . being justified.
She waticeminitted for trial at the Assizes,
and appliciation was .then tnede for a
"warrant against Mr. Mortis on the charge
of murdering his wife. Mr. Morris was at
01300 taken into austedy and remanded. 15
It stated that an applioation Win be made
to the Home Seeretary fer leave to Mamma
the body of Mrs. Morrie. . . .
•
Hot irons the West.
Edith -Here is a pretty pee7centitled
"Re aria pi by A4tapide Preator. Who in
'ebit ? e • *
Bfebel-A well-knoWn• You cer
thinly have he,sid of her. •
Edith -Oh 1 of course; but /mean where•
does shelve ? ' '
kilo*: but the is evt.,
dently an delete girl, jade/1g from the
title of that PODIN•
• Edith -=-Why, how does the title indicate
that ihele an modern girl ?.
Xthe1*4Wereehe'ilveliiterng1ri, the title'
Would. nOt len ge and 1."
' Id411h--4ndeed 1 Why, whet'wotild it be
• Mabel --;.:44 Me and Him."
• The hearing in the Hammereley will ease
has been adjourned to October during
Which time Beaky Jones, •who refueed to
aniwer on the steed/will remain in Lud.•
low street jail -
A handsonie granite monument in the
form of a Seder does, IA feet in h8ght,
has been ereeted in Duthie Park, at A.ber-
deen, to oominemoretel the gallant °Maud
of the Gordon Highleuidere in the Egyptian
0111sPalfill•
.11
011itle GAL
Irby atnel et tie Witticism 004 MO 11/14P -Tent
OHM* rer Irisestemeat Nees.
Th000 who WWI thi 0014 444 to OW
mo Plitrt A; the soanomlsisesu.s.og
the Allure an llksby tO dud thirmaelvoi
1/10,01 rehatehent Ian 'hi Vr00k1311 E 194
in a recent eiitcriaL Even g supsreimed
by nisotricity, DB ithiminant, Which hi by
no mean. 00tlaitlo cod gag, will, theta ls
reason to Wide. Motipy elill MOM im-
,portant position in the nittue en a fuel than
it has * the past as an illuminant: Recent
experiments have "hewn it to be trr long
odds the most eftiolenketionomioal a04 oon-
venient of all fuels. To compare the ;net
of cold gas with the cost a the eleotria
light, or even Other finh, is a task as
uneatisfaotory an it is oohs*, because, as
is wellAnowo, the elde of residuerits when
She market Is good is often sufflofent to
defray all the expenses of gaa manufacture,
oncl thus it 'night almost he given away.
Indeed, 01 Many point, outeide of the
great oitiee large quantities or gaaare
tbeewo to the four winds during the lire,
grass of coke manufaoture. There is a
ooke-meking centre in Penneylvonio where,
$t is said, as mug]; an twenty-four mfllion
oubia feet of gas is eaoli diy Perreltted to
escape in smoke'. °Venn' blue recently
been set up which enable the ooke manta°.
turer to make from the bi-produote es good
eighteandle power gm, which, though of
no amount as an illuminant, is .of great
value as a fuel, for it is cheap, requires no
tanking as °eel fuel dem and lemon no dir
and clinkers behind. This fuel gas, it hos
been found, may profitably be Bolds* ten
,cents the thousancUmbia feet. A gareful
estimate shims that math fuel would
cost the. proprietors of a puddling
furnace not . more than throe dol-
lar' a day, the boilers costing
One dollar for the mina tithe; and Ordinary
dwellizige could be furnished with fuel both
for heat and clocking for 10 cents a day.
Wherever gas hag been used as a fuel it.han
even 'outtiefaction. It readily generates an
intense heat, leaves no soot; and requires
little if any attention. For domestio use,
both for hooting and 000lung, it is likely to
prove invaluable. As now made, fuel gas
is charged for at the rate of from 80 to 40
cents per thousand cubic feet. This in a
restaurant, where a range is used, for fif-
teen holm a day, would amount to about
20 cents; a domestio eteve oned by a small
family would consume okay a • few cents%
worth of fuel gee per day. In mislay perte
of the country arrangements for the menu -
facture and distribution of fuel gas are
now being made, notably at Yonkers,
where already its male has *ague. In short,
there is radon to believe that, in the
future, gas as a, idol will prove invaluable as
'well to the small housekeeper as to the
great manufactured..
' A Vase of Solid Blonde.
During last week probably 10,000
among them medical experts, visited Har-
ris' Museum to see the wonderful perform-
ance of the " eleetdo girl," named by her
• manager,Vattio Lee Brice. They saw her
and marvelled ab the phenoMenon. None
of the tetanal men even attempted an ex-
planation. The 10,000 visitors will no
dauht feel a trifle mortified -this morning at
learning that they have been most beauti-
fully taken in' and done 'for by a little
14 -year-old country girl. Mr. Harris,
the proprietor orthe museum,. has.
denouneett the youngeter is a fiend; and
will to -day bries suit against her manager
to recover money' obtained kora him by
false representations. Her perforMancea
have been no exhibitions of any partioular
matotiler or of anY•nneeen power: They
have been older teloks---simply this and
• nothing more. The firet intimation that
times • was no electricity or magnetism
about the girl was when a duple of •gentle.
:nien,..iyho:' with their feet and hands Were
trying to hold a chair down, she ORM
them to move their feet forward on the
chair -rounds. • (They had each
planted a foot lirmitly under the
baok of the . chair, and the
.leverage was too great for the magnetio
lifter.) At another time she 'dealined to
try her strength with rany chair thee did
hothave a good Miff bath. Next Hi was
observed that -in bending and twisting a
hickory *Ai& she always required it to be
green. One of the attaches of the muaeum
haviug noticed' this &eked her to bend and
twist a maimed stick,. and she deoltned,,
and then the attache announced that he
would do any thing she did and More. The
challenge was declined, but the challenger
twisted the stioks and -lifted the heavily.
ballatited chairs aU he time. Anybody
with ordinary musatilta development oan
do the BAWL -Cincinnati Enquirer.
A Telegraphic Peat.' •
A. gentleman of the Western Union Tele.
graph office, Newl'ork, was 'sitting in the
cable -room, when a telegram from Phila.
delphisidestiqed for Paris, came over the
wires. This message, like all others fear
France, was to -go over the cable via Dux-
• bury; Mass. The operator oalled Daxbury
a few times, and thenesid; "-That fellow
is asleep evidently, but the othle mid are
ishvays awake. Pll have to get; one of
them to go and wake. him up.' • So he
stepped to another desk, called Plaiated
Cove, in Newfoundland, and sent ' the
following Metmage " To ,oable operator,
,Duxbury. Please go down and wake up
my own true love." Thiemessagerlaisted
Cove bestened to send across the ocean to
Talentia, inland', which in turn " ruthed"
it to London. Thenee, it was hurried -to
Parie,and still on to the Edelman end of the
French cable at St. Pierre. The operator
there fleshed it back te Derbury. In less
than'tivo Mintiteti by the elookihe message
had woomplished tint jotirney, of some
8,000n:dies by land and sett, as was evi.•
deuced by the clieking of the instrument
on the Duxbiiry desk, which ticked out in a
mann& a little more petulant. "That is a
nice way to do. Go ahead. Tonrown true
love." -2'e Watchman. •
Without Argument.
. He was a young lawyer, and was deliver-
ing his maiden epeeoh. Like moat young
lawyers, he was florid, rhetorical, scatter-
'ing and Weary. For four weary hand he
talked at the mart and the jury, until
everybody felt like lynching him. When
he got throtigh, his opponent, a grizzled,
old profeagional, arose, looked sweetly at
the judge, and Odd: • —
• "Your 130110t, I wilrfollow the example
of My young friend who has jest finished,
aed submit the *case without argument."
Then he eat down, and the silence was
large and oppreesive. •
itierneve Ahanta as Good mis Bleak
Ttirkeya are in deniandaiMeng the vine.
growers of Irrebrot, who Want theni *orange
ha the vineyard and oateh the 0112g8 that
ate now attaoking the vide. They foetid
the turkey an excellent hand at She beel-
ines'. They would hire 131611 and int them
at the work, but a titiffkient force is nob
obtainable Whet needed. But the turkey
dotes the work nearly as well aii a man, and
while adtabing the worms is binning his
Own, fa:et-San :Prat:rite° AIM: -
Next week Prancibigurphy will begin a
series of temperance, meetings in gr.
MoOdyli *borne* in Chicago. - '
IP** 11010100 corms
olafir minielcOoS for Pad .40
,gat
corms au ad ehom One trOnble midi fie
the foot that old Mom wear out, and
another thot they *smug allitin itv Won's
Undoubtedly Ask mot boo aafforog kora -
Wpm. mid 1100 a9b yeti heard of the greah
and only sure oorn cure, Putnenee Fitholows
Oorn Bxtreetor. Thle greet remedy never
feffs fle remove the TOM11 001121—soft. or
hard --44 a few days. No disoongort,
MN spots, but prompt and oertoin Sara.
BoWere cif fiesbelnithag eird sere Pr'odlloing
eubstitutee. llact Putnam's oely. N. C.
Ptheon & 09.,Ringeton, proprs.
The chief attrietion of Wlethestert. Va..
ik the double oemetery in its enburbe. On
one Ode of i. stone will are buried over
seven thormend Union, dead, while oveg
throe thousand ConfederaAe .isoldiere lin MI
the other.
The Bossatienty Line
Between comfort and diecorafort is ofterk
very Blight, Have you rheumatism or
neuralgia? or are you a eufferer frod
obeoure nervous pains? Why differ
longer? You am ;purchase for10 aents a
bottle. .of that king of pain-Rolsozen
thinviumir, or you can get a large bottle for
20 cents. It aura promptly, It is sure,
pleasant to take, and never fails to aura MI •
kinds of pain. Don't wait an hour, but
send to any drug store and get a trial
bottle. Nerviline, the sure pain ewe.
Rate Frawley, agedll, of Stafford, Conn.9
was killed on Friday while trying to.
climb into the window of a school house.
She fell and caught her nook in the sash.
-Repeated requests have induced the
proprietore of Lydia E. PinkharaS Vege-
table Coirtpend to send by mail te yule=
lady conespondeute, large mounted
portrisits of Mrs. Pinkham ; and nOW many
Abgaftebaklionikolo_rned by the familiar9
motherly rue of the Massachusetts wornazt
who has done so much for aU women.
An English company proposes to put a
large amount of capital into Difilikill in the
industry of Preparing *tie arld. other
liber.e for market. An enterprising New
Orleans man is also developing the
itsphaltum. in the Laguna Madre of the
* * *0
▪ - *. 44
*
* r
*8 * * * * **
* * *
ift
e/
* ••
LYDIA E., PIIIKHANIPS
ITECipl'ABLE OOMPOUND*
0* * IS A:POSITIVE CUBE -111.7.1i.
For all ''ttf those Painful 'Complaints on
*,* Weaknesses so common to Our beet * *
* *FEDIALE It0FULATIOS.* * *.
wim. *BEE ExTinEL. T.TnE wbnoT YoBat or
NAIA Cow 14.1ETs.; ALL Ok*AluAti Tnpoarze,ILT
PLAMMATION AND iliosvenow. • PALLtHa 4S*0
PLACENENTS, AND THE 'CONSEQUENT SPINAL WEAN,
NESS, AND • IS PIETiCULAELT ABABTEG, TO/THI
CHANGE eir Lira. • * * • ** m
* IT WILL DISSoLTE .AND EXPEL TUMOID NEON Tax
UTimus IN AMIABLY 01)05 0* DEVELOTMENT. Tins
• TENDENOTTO CANCEROUS IIUMORS THERMS CHECEED
• vEnv alumni:LT ifr Its 084. .* * 0. * * *
* REMOVES FAINTNESS, FLATuiiturit Diarrareza
ALL 0EATING Eon eTimuLANTs, AND BELIEVES WEAR -
/158S OP THE STOMACH. IT mums Ewen:NG, MAD -
ACHE, NERVOUSPROTERATION, GEN -SEAL DEBILITY, ,
DEPRESSION AND /NDIGESTION. * 4; • se- *
*THAT BEELIatitor. BEARING BoTreti CAUSING P, .
' WEIGHT ANL, BAcitAcHE, 10 ALWATB PERMANENTLY
ouRED lir 11*5011. * * * *
, e't
* WILL AT ALL TIMES AND LadlEn ALT. "CiIKIUM.
STANCES ACT IN HARMONY WITH TEM. LAWS 'MUT
.GOTERIT THE' FEMALE SYSTEM. "' * * * *
• i;itiorITE; PURPOSE IS SOLELY roiruri.ronusrasgij
HEALING OP DisEASII AND 'THE BELLEP Op PAHL.
. THAT IT DOES ALL IT CLAIMs TO DO, THOUSANDS 0 •
LADIES CAN GLADLY • TilsTale. -St • * , •
•
* * FOE THIS CURE OP IIIDNEIr COMPLAINTS 1/1
ErrinEn SEX THIS =linty . IS ITNESTRPASSRD.
, .
* LTLGA E. PINE:GAM% VEGETABLE OGEGIOUND 11
prepared tit Lynn, Ness.. Price V. Mx 'bottles !orig.
1W bye!! deuggiats. Bent by nudl, postage paid, in terns
of 'Pills or Lozenges on receipt of price as'above. Mr*. .
Pinkhlutate'"Ouide to Health), will be mailed !mato/my
Lady sending stamp. Letters eopfldentielly Answeled.• '
• No family eibould be without LYDIA B. P
LIVER IDMIN, They cure Constipation, BiliorsgAns
Torpidity Of the) Liver. 25 cents per box. * • 0: 4.
•
0. N. .11.: SI: 84. '
tasr.T11,4111...31:4-44...elarrdr
•.• • ._11.
Ytt,E. ONLY
VEGETABLE
CTIRE
4:rgginsittrini$7,411.,
Loss Of AppOite, •
Indigestion, Sour. StoniaChi-
• Habituol,Costiveneisi
Sick Headache.and Biliousness.
Path, g. per bottlp. Sala by all Dmggitts.
tr—ti
• ...n..Wondollid I Viottabrfull
Tousande of young men arc excialm
Ins the above every dayafter using
0 eti
°Mara the only ignoble PUPAL
Dalt ever Offered to the public. A
trial evill.convinoe theenOsE skeptical.
„Beware 02 bogus imitations. Deaf
•postpaid;in plain wrepperon recolp1
Qfc"ibox. rArigu,Lo, tendonlOnt..
ArTER IMMO. sole Agent forV.d. and Canada.
.
EYE, LAR
AND THROAT.'
•
•
1
R.G. El, RYERSON, L. B.O.P. •
B. E., Lackner On the Eye, Hat And'Abreat
Wedlemi College, Toronto. Getinstand
Moist to the Toronto deneral
annual Assistant Royal louden °Witham% •
Hospital, Moorefield's • and Central' Leedom
Throat and Oar Xlospital, 817 Olumeh,lieent
Toronto.. Artieeial Heinen Byte. • a
• ESTA.BLIBHEID 1868„
tilEsts & 61-.A.T.4,cow
All Made of Um Products lasaulaylvabla
Hiatter Ciebee Myra*. rookly*
oto. P54._)11•• Gmeltesee
iodate sellMed. SS Colborne Street Toronto.
ANTED, LADIEB.OR 'YOUNG
min in .5i14 or oonntryle tabs niee, light • '
and pleasant Welt to their own hem..; *200 SS'
a day easily end quietly made ; work sent by
mall; iio canvassing k stanip. tor: re*
Pf ease eddying RELIABLE MFG. 00.,
his, Penn.
IPLAVM5. were a Mislaid
Ildneation dr Openeeriendlnill
inArlaseitatir war
C env Stith timeline tree •