The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, November 12, 1888, Image 2

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THE DAILY IlEitALl i iLATTSMOUTfl, NEHIiASRA, JUONDAY, NOVKMBLU 12, ls8S.
The Plattsmouth Daily Herald.
KNOTTS BBC8.,
Publishers & Proprietors.
THE rLATTSMOUTII HERALD
It published every evening except Sunday
ami Weekly every Thurttlay morning. Kenm
trJ at the xttomce, I'mili'iiioiiih. Nelr..a
eeoiid-cbui matter. Onire comer of Vine and
FlU'i treet. Telephoue No. W.
TistMs ros DAII.V.
One copy one jear In advance, by mall.. .-SO oo
One cuiiy per month. ty ranter 60
One copy per eclc, by carrier IS
TERMS rOK WEEKLY.
One oopy oue year. In advance
One copy ill niomns, lit advance....
$l no
75
Tiik Chicago police refused the An
archists ycf-terdiy. t parade the htrccts
as an anniversary of the hanging of En
gel, Fischer, Persons ami Spies. This
wns right for it would have been in
decent and uiu ndurablr too. if allowed a
public dt inoii:-t ration in honor of these
inn. Tlie executed Anarchists were
murderer, not martyrs.
Tur.it t: are in Dcudwood. flouring mill
that arc buying h-at to the amount of
two thousand bu-hcls 11 day, and paying
for it at the rate of a dollar a budiel.
ThC-f:!r,l,crs ":U'l ll 111 t'11'1- wagons and
get thclF K.'y thePiu.-- ii fi'y do
uot pay a cnt"fiTtommision, nor arc
their minds harrowed by '-he extortions of
any nil road company, nor have they to
p7 elevatoi charge;. Plowing for win
ter wl.ed will lie curried on in the Mack
Hills region ;.t ti gnat rate in coii.-e-quencc
of the money there U in the home
m irkct. Omaha I tee.
The eastern pipers concur in report
ing an a. tive movement in all depart
ments of trade, and in noting an im
provenunt in niot brunches wnce the
political clouds have lifted. Undoubt
edly nome interests were unfavorably
affected by the uncertainty regarding
the remit of lite election, which b-'ing re
leased from doubt regarding the im
mediate future are alteady resuming full
operations, and it is probable that neaTly
all industries, are lieginning to show the
effect of a renewel of confidence.
Among the incidents indicating this is
the reported resumption of operations in
the Hocking Valley co.d regions an-l
others will come to notice from time
to time. On the whole trade of
the country this year has been good, but
the 1 res-cnt conditions present a con
siderably enlarged movement during
the remainder of the year ana n
preparation for & largely increased
business next year. The opinion in
eastern financial circles is that there will
be uo important change in the treasury
policy, and none that might be r.iad
need cuuue any apprehension, The
money circulation ia forty million dollars
greater than last year, and the heavy
disbursements to bo made by the govr
crnmcnt will still further swell the
amount available to the business of the
country. The prevailing trade condi
lions appear to lie highly reassuring and
the outlook as favorable as could be
desired. Bee.
The New York Timt-t is very unhappy
over the gineral result ot the recent
election. It supported Cleveland for
president and opposed Hill for governor.
It experienced, in consequence, a case of
what gamblers call " whip-saw it
lost at both ends. It is now trying t
blame the Irish voters, and it th'is reli-ve:
itself:
We advise the democratic leaders and
managers to accept it as a sittled but
that hereafter they inuat elect their pre-i
dential candidate wittiout tin: aid of
New York. They ought to set out ii.
future campaigns by putting this tat
into the republican column, and then go
about the task of breaking the republican
line in the wtrt. This must be done be
cause there are about 'J-l.t'OO legil voter?
in this city who do not care a rush who
is presitU-nt so long as they can kn-p
their noses and their friends' noses in tin
puMb: crib. These voters are inostly
Jrishmen. Their leaders are Irishmen,
and the candidates in whose favor they
habitually " sell out" the preidentitd
candidates are Irishmen. They have a
right to prefer the election of their can
didatcs for aldermen, coronors. assembly
men, sheriffs and mayors to the election
of their party's candidate for the presi
dency. Nobody disputes that, but the
democratic managers must understand
that they not only have the right, but
exercise it freely. The republican candi
didate for president always gets mnnj
thousand more votes in this city than the
local candidates of that party, while the
democratic presidential candidate falls
below the aggregate democratic vote.
Moreover, the Irish democratic vote in
tliis city it extraordinarily sensitive to
English opinion. It makes no difference
whether the opinion is forged, whether ii
is obtained by a republican trick, in
whelh.T it i the opinion of an English
idiot. It influence the minds of a grea
many Irishmen in New York, and it in
rlaences their votes, even against their
beliefs and convictions in regard tohom
polit'c?.
TWO DAKOTA8,
The people of Iotli North and South
Dakota want division and admission tis
two states and it will bo the duty of the
next congress to gratify them. It is po
siblc that the present house, at its D. cem
I.r session, accepting the verdict of th-
pcole w express! lat Tuesday, twyl"
, -
pans the division and abinission bill of
the hcnatc.though this is hardly probable,
and of cours" the senate will not accept
any modification or qualification in the
nature of a compromise. Nothing short
of the immediate organization of two
states will do.
The people of Dikot 1 h ive b::cn kept
out of their rights under the constitution
for many years. Either half of the great
territory is fully equipped for statehood,
and the enactment of the necessary legis
lation vesting both with that dignity
will be the first duty of the republican
party when it comes into possession.
Omaha Republican.
Get tins Out Ilaeiall Extra.
Newspaper men and printers may bo In
terested in knowing how baseball extras
are Issued so quickly. The fir.t five innings
aro described i:i detail by the reporters,
who send their copy to tho olfico by mes
senger, or telegraph It if the game is in
another city. The result of the remain
ing four innings they telephone or tele
graph, the latter being done by instan
tiiicous ticker. Whilo the last four
innings aro U-ing played the print era
M-t tho typo, tho form Is stereotyped
and put" 011 the press, und then
everjlmdy wnils for the result 01
tho last "iiiioiig TI10 foreman of t!-orc-.s
renin Mai.d with a mallet in !-:
'und. and before l;i::i lio U ji i.-JkT-es 7
.teel On tii eiViLuf faeh of thcsojoi.
( ;. lVui-e. "A i:i::n f.liouts down star.-s
CLkv.;;o 1. tii:tiI.ii'g up a uie wiin
: b'.i.'v the for;-.;.;.'! stamps the figure
i" u;..ii a Ll:i?:!: i.ithe stereotyped page
. :.t 11 eu'V.c -i the s!e ::t. "Xf.v York I-'."
Vn.-ither blow bU-.:::i th;;t. Two cr thvci.
;:u: a bki-.vs h!:n:'j the totais made by
i !i eb:?. I' pe -;s is instantly started
ipers roil o.itVt tiionte of 40.C0J r.r.
t!;o coi'.riers ; ut .spui-s into t r
ii-si-,, lioys i i"i r'l : r tho city er : . :
i nil i:'.j.!!t tl;;.' i :dl ,-RUie!" .
.' m v. :;;;o:v ta!:- 0:1 l i .-'.s of paper., 1
ei'iven i'.t l.: e.'.!:!uvU speed ter i'l. i:.
.;;i:;t ((!::;: . v In n t:oioef -.:.;;oi
v. :,!;.: i:.--- wealing f t r cuehof tlitni.
!;.ut ('!.: of lhes:o F.poriing extras civ
..'. l in t'hici'.go every evening.
: "onset imes "the ccfrr.-i nj-.jur with biy
1 li::i.:.. The t'h:"ag.s 'tn."or "New
Vi. -torious." etL'." This is dr-v.: by
tv.. :!.! v;e p'utes. Iuouetlie
A line is for a t nie:;.;o victory, in tl.t
? her T r defeat. If t'ao Chieagoa tliance
fj win it is on the first plate that the
rvsroaii stamps tlio result of the last
lining sjid tho total.s.
Whilo one of the three sporting editors
mploycd on a morning paper id reporting
iho bull ganu another is nt tho races,
while tho third is taking earo of other
porting evujits. Sporting editors are r.l
vays oa tho lockout for midnight prize
ghts, and c.9 thesy affidrs cio usually
held secretly and In out -of -tho-way places,
tbey givo reporters no end of cnxiety.
Sometimes a "straight tip" r.3 to where n
right is to be held turns out to bo tx wrong
l ip. I remcmlier one occasion on which a
ivporter of Tho Herald was told, confi
dential! v, where an interesting fight was to
eomo oil. 1-"ive or six other starts told
him, confidentially, that tho fight was to
tako place in C3 many different spots,
many miles apart. Tho young man was
nervous about it, but he didn't lose his
head. He had a reporter sent to each of
the half dozen places, and was lucky
enough to bo at the right one himself.
Walter Wellman's Chicago Letter.
The Costumes of Coretw
But tho colors aro what give tho streets
of Seoul such a quaint holiday appearance.
White or blue predominates, and the
long, flowing gowns, well starched and
ironed, glisten in the sun and blend their
colors together, making a dazzlinsr pict
ure together with the red of the children's
dresses and the occasional bright silk
gown of an official or well to do merchant.
The people mostly dress in imported
white cotton, victoria lawns and silks.
These are thickly padded with cottou for
winter wear, and then present a very
balloon like appearance. Originally they
colored tho cloth as a rule, but now v.hito
is tho prevailing color for the common
people, a custom which is accounted for
by the following tradition: White is the
mourning color and threo years the period
of mourning. Once, during a period of
ten years, thrpo kings died, necessitating
a change 0 raiment by the whole people
each time. It of courso was burdensome,
as a Corean wardrobe is rather extensive
and quite costly. In order, then, to avoid
the clilliculty in the future, tbey decided
to dress altogether in white and bo ready
for the caprice of their kings. Of course,
the wealthy aro riot pbligedto follow this
custom, but may dress as they pje?se.
Cor. San Francisco Chronicle.
let that cold of yours run on. You think
it is a light thing. But it may run into
cntatrh. Or into pneumonia. Or con
sumption. Catarrh is disgusting. pneumonia is
d ingerous. Cons inption is death itselt.
The breathing apparatus must be kept
h althy and clear oi t;ll obstructions and
offensive matter. Otherwise there is
I trouble ahead.
All the diseases of these parts, heart,
nose, throat, bronchial tubes and lungs.
cm be delightfully and entirely cured by
the use of Uoschee's Germnn Syrup. If
ywu don't know this already, thousands
and thousands or people can tell you
They have been cured ly it and know-
how it i.. themselves. liottie only to
cents. Ask any druggist,
Send your job work to the IIeuald
office.
$300 Reward.
"Wc will pay the 8bove reward for any
case of liver complaint, dyspepsia, sick
headache, indigestion, constipation or
costiveness we cunnot cure wit u
West's Vegetable Liytr Pills, when the
directions are strktly complied with."
Thev arc nurelv vegetable, and never
fail to give satisfaction. Large boxes
;outaining 30 sugar coated pills, 25c
For 6ale by all druggists. Beware of
counterfeits and imitations, llie ge
uine manufactured only by John O. We
& Co., 862 W. Madison St. Chicago,and
Sold by W. J. Warrick.
The Daily Hekai.d delivered ' for
15cts. er week.
The standard remedy for liver com
plaint is West's Liver Pills they never
disappoint yon. 30 pills 323c At war
rick's drug store.
MOODS.
Uion a mountain ftutnmlt high.
A trystiug place of earth ami ky.
Three frieaU ooce mUmhJ io aileot awe.
Each contewplatins wl.ut lieitaw.
. One (razing on llii- l.:n-J r.ipe founl
In changing fern 1:1. only wound:
To him it was u m-inury
Of tome majis.tic feyinphouy.
Another in tliM valueHH caught
The ettneuco of a jMiet'i IhouKht
The measure of a noble rhyme
Enduring a vterual time.
The third a 6t ranker to those rtt.
That moved and thrilled his fellows' L carta
llenieinbered with a uanu'li-s dread
The face of one tvlioin ho uiw dead.
-Frank Uempster Sherman ia Lippii.coU'8
THE OLD SETTLER'S YARN.
I tco by the county paper, 'Squiro,"
remarked tho Old Settler, "th't down in
the West Virgiuny woods or up in 'em,
or over in 'em, whichever way them woods
may bo hittiwated thuz plenty o' paint
'ers y it n p'radin' 'rouu' and tieekiu' who
they may dovour somebody. W't o ye
think 'bout it, "Squirt"
"1 huiii't thunk utitbin bont it," re
plied tho "Squire. "An" I don't keer
nuthiu' 'bout it, nutbtr, w'at's more.
Point ers th'ts way down in tho West
Virgiuny woods hain't no good to inc.
Now, if" they was a prancin 'roun in tho
wMds . Poino.'r.'.a. iiiiiero, tiT inowt bo
'sonio met o' speakin' 'bout 'em. Then 1
k'd go out an' tamper with 'em. an' hev
some fun a tioklin' on 'em. Did ye ever
Bee a puiut'er. Major?'
This unexpected query of tho 'Squire's
uiuuo tho Old Settler gasp. Alter tlie
many exploits in chasing and overcoming
punt hers that he had in his time given the
details of to the 'Squire, this query con
veyed to him tho idea that all those tales
had been received by tho 'Squire with a
degree of incredulity that was not flatter
ing to tho relator, liut tho Old Settler
replied to it more in sorrow than iu
cnger.
""Squire," scid ho, "be I to 'spect that
yer recomemb'r'nco is playin' ye tricks, or
be 1 to ketch it frum yer remark th't yer
faith iu the hist'ry o' tho Sugar Swamp
deestrie', ez I hev ben givin ye p'tie'lar
p'ints 011 fer twenty year an better,
hain't nobigger'n a mustard seed?"
"Wull, Major," replied tho 'Squire,
"that's a leadin' question, an' I 'bject to
answerm. I ruout criminate myself, ye
know, ez we sav in tryin' cases. Put l il
uay thla much, Major, an hope it'll content
ye, an' that is th't my recomemb'r'nce
hain't playin' me no tricks, not by a two
gallon jug fulll"
"Yer 'pology is all light, 'Squire," said
the Old Settler blaudly. "I only wanted
to know how ye stood, that's all. Now,
cz I know, I'll perceed an answer j-er
question. Did 1 ever see a painter?
J.Iouutains an' uiountaiua of 'cm, 'Squire!
An' it'd ha' been a rippin' good thing fer
them, I kin tell ye, if they hadn't never a
see me, fer 1 plunked 'em, an' I plunked
'cm, au' I rasseled 'em, an I hustled 'em,
till it got to be so th't it were a tecum
sight to see 'em tryin to git fer safter
pastur's w'en they heerd o' me being in
t ho woods. But a paint'er had to bov his
'larm clock sot so ho k'd git up very 'arly
in the mornio' if ho lost me w en struck
his trail. Me an paint'ers was ol'
'quaiutances in the good ol days o Sugar
Swamp, 'Squire, an it were cause tho
paint'ers couldn't cut my 'quaintance th't
t h' hain't no more on 'em left in this bail
iwick or any other bailiwick o' this degin'
rit couuty. Did ye ever know Coldy
ITardnate. tho oueer chan th't were alius
a shiverin', and the warmer it were the
harder be shiveredT"
"Yes, I know'd him," replied the
"Squire, "or leastways I know'd of him,
an' I never know'd or heerd any ood of
him. nuthcr. Ilis word wa'n't r; : ii b. t
ter'n somo other follis's th't I use: v
an' know yt. Jle wcn ftlhis a J.v:'!;v!a,
paint'ers. foq ic bear hi:a fell it,!'
"Wull, 1 know of Lis ketchbs' -. .1,
an" all of 'cm to wunst, too," i..'.i the
Old Settler- "W'at ha mowt ha jiid
V( rdin' to hisself I can't sw'ar to. bat
about thorn twelve paint'ers I know'd in
divid'aliy an pei-scn'ly an' w'en I know a
thing individ'ally an person'ly, b'gosh, I
know it tol'ably durn sure, an' I hain't
afecrd nor back'ards ia walkin up to the
dough trough an' afiydavyin' toitl"
"I heerd, wuPBt, Biimpin' 'bout Ihem
twelvo paint'prs," said the 'Squire,
an' "
"Ye never heerd it right, then b'gosh, ;
exclaimed the Old Settler, "fer I hain't
never even tol M'riar 'bout it, an' the
nat'ral hist'ry o' them paint'ers hain't
know'd by no one else but me. Coldy
Ilardpate took to shiverin' so arter he had
ketehed an' cooped them paint'ers th't ho
shook the life outen hisself in less'n no
time, en' didn't hev a chanco to tell no
body 'bout it, an' I were the unly one cz
had the secret locked in his chist. I've
kep' it thar ever senco, but now I'm
agointer let it out, 'cause Coldy's mein'ry's
kinder ben sot on, an' I'm agointer show,
b'gosh, th't it can't be sot on ez long ez I
kin haul up hist'ry f'm Sugar Swamp
deestnc'."
"I can't tell yo w'at the natur' o' Ccldy's
system wero fat mado its predomineeria
l'eatur a sort o' pcrpetyal ager, but he
had it, an' it kirn in good play, too, w'en
ho wero rasselin' a b'ar or a paint'er, fer
Coldy were ez strong ez a mulley ox, an'
wen he clutched his b'ar or his paint'er,
an' that ager o" his got to workin', it jist
shook the cverlastin' belix outen 'cm so
quick th"t they hadn't time to wonder w'at
wero nioviu' of 'em. Then ag'in it were a
queer thing th't his shiver never bothered
Coldv in drawin' bead with his rifle, an'
he kTd plunk the bull's eye, or the b'ar's
eye, ev'ry time. An' another queer thing
were th't water seemed to 'feet his shiver,
fer w'enever Coldy'd drink a tumbler o'
water his hand'd shake so th't durn nigh
all the water'd spill put. But contrary
ways an' queerest of all were th't Coldy
k'd fill a tumbler with apple juice chuck
to the top an git it to his mouth without
never losin' a drop.'
"Th uaety be a cur'ous patch o vines
th't growed on one edge o the swamp in
them days, but It didn't grow long arter
its oncommon pisen dispysition were foun'
out. It seemed to be kinder of a relation
o' the cow-cetch weed, an' shed a dust
often it th't tisety look like fog w'en it
took to fly in roun'. Ev'ry summer some
o' the resideuters o' the Sugar Swamp
deestrie d find a hog or two o' theirs, or
a cow, or mebbe a boss or a dog, strag
glin roun' the keutry blinder th'n a hull
family c' bats rolled inter one. Nobody
could get it through 'em what sot this
blindness a goln till one day it plunked
inter my ol' pap's noddle th't it were the
dust oflen that patch o briers, but even
then nobody were 6artin' an nuthin were
did. One day in July, 1833the th day
o July, '33. I think I were edgin 'roun
in the woods lookin fer a leetle shindig
with a b'ar or sumpin', w'en I heerd tho
consarndest catterwaulin' an yeUln over
to'rds the swamp th't ever were heerd In
them woois afore cr er. I rrt!:?i
over that vay. an', peekln through the
bushes, see a Fight ez made me almost
faint. Thar, right amongst them vines,
was a c'lction o' paint'ers o all sizes,
wrigglin' aroun' an' runnln' ag'in one an
other, an' actin' ez if they didn't hev no
idee o' nuthin' but to tumble aroun' in
thar an yell. In a minuto or two tho
hull citiwation were as plain to mo ez a
pine knot torch on a cloudy night.
" (ioshflmightyl" I says to myself,
them paint'ers ban settled the hull busi
ness. They've got inter that patch in
their travels, an' that dust has blinded
'em, sure ez criekets'll squeak!
"I'm gummed, 'Squire, if I wa'n't so
sorry fer them 'leven paint'ers th' was
'leven on 'em I Wero so sorry fer 'em,
'Squire, th't I nct'ly had to blubber like a
calf au look to wondeiin' w'at I k'd do to
help 'era out o' their 'tarnal bad fix. Ez
1 stood thar watchiu' 'em in sorrer, w'at
did I see but a snort in' big paint'er come
a tearin' inter that patch from tho bushes
on t'other side. Ho stood thar a second
or two, au' then nosed 'roun 'mongst them
paint'ers, an' doin' of it, iu a hurry, too.
I tell yo. I k'd see to wunst th't the big
paint'er know'd 'dzae'ly w'at were up with
t'other mis, but, 'Squire, I wa'n't lookin'
fer w'at follered. 1 wa'n't, b'gosh, fer it
wero u lectio tho funniest p'formauco I
ever see, even in tho IS. gar Swamp dee
strie'. W'ilo I wero gazin' at tho on fort -nit
passel o' paint'ers, I see ono of 'cm
ketch the tail of another un in his mouth.
Then a third un ketehed tho first nil's tuil
iu his mouth, nn' 'JG 0t till the Luii "leven
"iiis strung out, holdin' outer one an
other's tails.
" 'W'ut in tho name o' Sam Hill Is a
doin', now?' says I.
"I wa'n't long a findin' out, for tho big
paint'er th't had kim' a tearin in 'mongst
1 'others backed hisself up agin the leader
of the 'leven oufortnit uns in tho line,
und tho leadin' onfortuit un grabbed his
t:al. Ez soon ez he had did that tho big
paint'er started the percession. and w'at
wero ho a doin' of, 'Squire? llavin' his
eyesight all right ho were jist a leadin'
his 'leven blind ci-npa:iions outen that
patch, b'gosh, an' s: ' ir. t hin' ol 'em home!
That were a sight. : wuth travelin'
a good many mii; :- to ::r-e, an' wero so
tcchin' th't tho t .v.rs lui;iblod down my
cheeks bigger'n white beans.
"Beiu cur'ous to seo w'at. mowt be tho
upshot o' this sing'lar p'int in nat'ral
hist'ry, 1 follered along quiet like, an' the
percession marched ez solemn ez u funer'l
through the wood. 1 had follered 'em
mebbe a miied w'en suddenly Coldy Hard
pate, w ho had ben skinniu in tho neigh
borhood for some fun with hi-'i gun. stepped
out from behind a tree. Tho tight o'
tho percession of unfortunit paint'ers
didn't seem to be ez tetchin' to him ez it
were to me. Ho unly looked at it fer a
'.ouplo o' seconds, an' then an idee struck
him. lie up with his gun an' whanged
may. The fust thing 1 see were the
ieadiu paint'er tearin' like a streak o
lightnin' on through the woods, an' with
no more tail to him. th'n. a doe rabbit.
Coldv had f hot it off slick an' clean, an' it
staid i ight In the mouth of tho leadin' one
o' tho 'leven onfortnit paint'ers.
"Tho percession kim to a stop. Coldy
Bteps up an' grabs the tail he had shot off
of t he paint'er cz wero leadin' tho t'other
uns, an' starts ahead, stiddy an' slow.
The percession started arter him, an ho
led the hull o' them 'leven painters straight
to his cabin, whay he knocked 'cm on t he
head, one ' arter t'other, and put au eend
to their onfortnit state. I don't know
wuther it were the suddint way tho idee,
o' getherin" in them paint'ers had fclrv.ck
him, or w'at it were, but jist arter eendin
the mis'ry o' the 'leventh paint'er Coldy
were hit with a shiver th't made the raft
ers in the cabin rattle, an' 'fore ho k'd
gether himsel su' brace apln it, it shook
the brejUh outen him, an'- he passed over
Jurdan."
"Then youH never see him ag'in." re
marked the 'Squire, calmly but positively,
"fer you'll pass in t'other d'rection." Ed.
Mott in New York Sun.
Tlie Ijiuiulrios of Paris.
Taking Paris and the suburbs as pos
sessing a population of 2,500,OCO, and
assuming 40f. a year to bo the laundry
bill of each inhabitant, that would repre
sent a total of 100.000.000.000f. annually
for .the laundry industry the half of
which sum is divided between the city
and tho suburbs. The several monster
hotels have an establishment that they
support in common where 12 tons of
linen can bo handled in a day and by 150
"male" laundry maids.
There are S00 public laundrie3 or la
voirs in Paris, of which 30 are floating
castles on the Seine, and 53 in the sub
urbs, giving employment to 63.15S wo
men and 10.GG3 men the latter aro ex
perts at the smoothing iron, and others
may say with Mantalini, their "life is one
dem'd horrid grind" at the mangle. A
floating wash house pays a river tax of If.
per squaro yard of its bottom per year. It
contains 1&0 places, represents a capital
of 72,000f., nets 41,000f. receipts, the ex
penses being 17.000f. Allowing for ex
tra charges, tho owners make about 23
per cent, on their capital.
Each "place" is let for about 1J francs
per day, though taken by the hour; this
includes hot alkaline water and other et
ceteras. The linen is only washed in
theso establishments; some have drying
lofts, but after being pressed by machin
ery tho linen is placed in a centrifugal
machine and whisked into dryness; some
times it is dried by hot air. Tho duties
accomplished, the linen passes into tho
hands of the makers up. A laundress
earns about 4 francs a day, from G in the
morning till 8 in the evening, less one
hour for breakfast. They and bakers
supply the largest percentage of death
from consumption. Paris Cor. St John's
Globe.
Tbe Age of Trees.
Where the zone test can bo applied, we
know that the age imputed to tbe tree
will not err. in the way of excess. A
clearly marked ring Infallibly denotes a
season's growth. Assuming an unfavor
able season to have resulted in an unusu
ally thin, or perhaps an Indistinguishable
layer, one year's credit will remain unen
tered in tho tree's automatic ledger. On
this basis of computation the following
ages have been strictly verified in Ger
many. In that country, as in Finland
and Sweden, the pine and fir have attained
to from 500 to 700 years. The greatest
ascertained age of the larch (in Uavaria)
is 274 years, while the Bilver fir has
reached 429. The oldest known speci
men of the holm oak (near Aschaffenburg)
numbered 410 years; while in all the com
mon oaks about 820 years old the heart
was beginning to decay.
The maximum ages of other German
trees as found by counting the rings
is as follows: Red beech, 245; ash, 170;
elm, 1C0; birch. 200; aspen, 210, and aider,
143 ye"ars. The lime, beloved of the
fatherland, generally evades this test.
Probably oue of the longest standing of
all, it Is 6e!dom found iu a sound condi
tion at au advanced age. London Stand
ard. '
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