SIOUX COUNTY JOURNAL MB nmiMil, FablUkara. HARRISON, : : NEB. The duke of Devonshire has entered his 82d year in capital health. Algernon Charles Swixbcrve Las been asked to write a poem on the Prince Henry of Battenberg's latest baby. Henri Matthieu, 101 years old. one of Napoleon's veterans, died in a squalid New York tenement a fe days ago. Ma rcxvER, of Vineland, N. J., has eaten an egg every day lor the last half century. Up to date he has pulverized I.ozl dozen. Osf the ground of familiarity with t rencn, the British Minister and the Parisian Minister at Washington are getting quite chummy. bara. Bernhardt, who, has always smoitea cigarettes, has now taken to mild cigars. She remains, as usual, iona or newspaper puffs. The queen of England seldom drinks more than one small glass of wine at dinner, and afterwards takes a few drops of good Scotch whisky. JTEB of the famous English Jurist, Sir Charles Russell, is an abbess In California. She is said to be in every way the intellectual equal of her aistinguished brother. Queen Victoria sat for an hour or two in Hyde Park one day last week. and a correspondent who saw her says sne looks red, small, profusely wriniciea, and not at all amiable. The attempt of Paris milliners to render the corn flower popular is re- nn.t.J V J r i uave lanea, lor ine reason that the corn flower used to be the favorite flower of old Emperor William Of liermany. . In remembrance of her good work for Hindoo women a number of large photographs of Lady Dufferin, done on porcelain and handsomely framed, are being distributed by subscription to most of the hospitals in India, where they will be hung up in the wards. The Value of Short Words. Does the man say he can not write a book or article with little words? Then he is very wrong. If he knows how many little words there are in the speech of this land he would not say that he can not find those small words. And it may be said that these small words have more force than the big words, because the soul of the tongue, or it would be more fit to say tbe speech, is to be found in the short words more than in the long. In this all the men who write on words think as one. ihey feel that the very life of the thing is shown in the short word. There is no long word that will take the place of buzz, bang, rough, smooth keen, blunt, thin. Each of sour, roar, splash, acid, scrape, cough, whiz, these words is like the thing which it sets forth, and so it is more strong and helps the brain iu its work. If one were to try to put a long word ir the place of the short one iu this sense ho would have to write more than one word to reach the same idea. Short words do not drain the strength of the mind. They leave it free to work in other ways. The mind is not able to cope with the thought and the mode of 6peech at the same time. Hence, when we try to use our mind on two themes we find that it loses much of its force. But the chief beauty of the short word placed side by side with the long word is that the short word is known by ev erybody that can read. The long'word is not Known, only those who study can know the long words. If the man who writes does his full duty to the people who read, he will write for the great mans of the people. The man who writes a book, or who writes for any kind of work or anv kind of print, should feel that he teach es as well as writes. Ho should feel that he writes to put ideas into the minds of all. How can the mass of the people get these ideas in shape so that iney can leel their full sense if they can not know them? The idea is not worth the thought Thev can not do do it. Again, lonr words are. weak. Short words are stroiifr. There are some places where a long word shows the idea more than tho short one. I will cite to prove this any place where one seeks to show a largo thought. In that case a long word is much more fit than a short word. To show by the use of a long and a short word: "Stu pendous" brings to the mind a more full idea of the thing shown ihan tho short word "vast," "ma?,iificent" than "grand," "dLseustinsr" than "nast.v." but in most cases it is wiser to use the short word than the loner. The great writers of the language a,u those whose works have the charm of simplicity. 1 i : . t i . ' Detroit Free Press. Capt. Nathaniel H. Falkner of Maine, although he has followed the sea steadily sixty years, for forty of which he has been captain, "never lost a man, never had a man die at sea, flAtTAH Inct , t , ui a pr ur sail, ana never called upon the underwriters cent" for death go on Or miraculous escapes from made by man this deserves to record: When the Cv nesia collided in the St Lawrence the other day James Low, the quarter master of the Cynthia, was in his berth, and when the vessels closed for the second time after the momentary re bound he crept through the gap iu his own vessel into that made in the Poly nesia and thus saved his life. Dr. Emerson, in his recently pub lished diary, relates this: "Henry Thoreau told me as we walked this af ternoon a good story about a boy who went to school with him (Wentworth), who resisted the schoolmaster's com mand that the children should bow to Dr. Heywood and other gentlemen as wiey went, oy. And when Dr. Hey. wooo stood waiting, and cleared his Uiroat with a 'hem!' Wentworth said lou need not hem, doctor, I shan bowH " . James Parvon, the historian, being sued nis opinion of Jackson, in view of Bishop Potter's use of t.h nh Jacksonian vulgarity," when charac terizing the manners of that time, said "Andrew Jackson was one of the most majestic of men. He possessed a nat ural dignity and courtliness which never failed to impress any one who ver saw or met him, Louis Philippe oeciarea Jackson was the most digni fied man, the most thorough gent) man he had ever met" Th Countess de la Torre, who used lo make herself somewhat obnoxioui with her tribe of cats in Kensington, ww Brimming as a small inn at ueraw s Cross with a flock of goats. The noble lady, clad positively after nion oi aneroswoman. in a full cotton skirt and blouse bodice, roams we country with her four-footed friends, sometimes, it is said, even sleeping among them at night In truly r i one nas not deserted berpenohant for cats, of which she hu Ps large number. sk John Brlght's since rest mourners in this country was Edward J1' mulepinner. at Providence, . L White a corporal in a British "fnsm Jnnch fell under the dis- P""ur of a superior officer, a vindlc- M7mf sprig of nobility, who "MH J4 him tried by court-martial iUi?!?1 10 ta inch's wut warned to London and told her MT Bright, who used bis Influence department so success- JKarCr. Bright furnished him the Obtaining hi discharge and I'-ty mmiI came t tfc Journalistic Decency Pavs. If it were true that the viler a journal is, the greater are its chances of securing a large and -profitable cir culation, there would ba good reason to despair of the world. Human so ciety would be utterly rotten, and in an employments scoundrels would have the advantage. But there is not in the world an examDle of a newsnn.- per which has made a largo and per manent success by catering to vicious tastes purely. Tho newspaper of greatest circulation in the world is the Petit Journal of Paris, and it is pub lished in the country which has tho reputation of being most toleranf of literary indecency. Yet there is no paper anywhere which is more careful to preserve a high and pure moral lone. The circumstance that such a journal is demanded by the great body of the French peoole furnishes con vincing proof that French society is sound at the core, despite the talk to the contrary of so manv snrvrfi,.;.,! observers. When Mr. Bonner's Led ger was circulating in this country by the half million weekly it maintained its popularity by preserving a moral tone, which made it resnecterl v teachers of religion generally. The number of vile journals has rlnpm,i rather than increased within recent years, and their aggregate circulatioi is much less than it used to be. Now i one un. ' The Man Who IHsagre?. There are many men in the world who emulate the gentlemau who rose at a meeting and exclaimed. "I don't cire what the motion if, I'm agin it!" They are "agin" anything and every thing. You venture an opinion on every subject, and with "There is where I differ with you he crosses his legs and goes off in a mental ram- j ble as eratic as the a"Ul oi a without a t-iil. A knowledge of the subject under discussion is not necessary; the less he knows about it the more he talks, and as he talks, a thick dark weariness net tles down over his hearers and their fingers twiehed nervously as though longing to grasp the hand-piece of a club and lull the chronic dissenter to rest The man who disagrees with I different you honestly and has solid sense w ith which to back his arguments against you, is an educator and you draw wis dom from him. but the man who always disagrees for the sake of disa greeing, and who can always disagree fluently on either side of a question, bah! He is worse than tho man who always agrees with everybody. The man whose disagreement is chronic, is generally ignorant, and he thinks by disagreeing, to impress those around him with a sense of his wis dom, and therein he fails, for by that course is his ignorance the more glar ingly displayed. His menial status is bound to be found out. as was that of a bov whose employer Ind occasion to leave alone in his office a short time. "Now," said he, "bit down here and keep quiet; don't say a word; if you go to talking, folks will find that you're a fool." The boss had been gone but a short time when two gentlemen en tered, looking around they saw the boy. "Where is Jlr. Blank?" No re ply from the bov. Again, "Where is Mr. Blank?" The boy looked at them but kept silent. Finally one visitor turned to the other and exclaimed "That boy is a fool'." A few seconds later tho man returned and the boy exclaimed, rattier puzzled, '-Boss, they found me out and I did n't say a word." In this case silence did not work extra well, but in most cases it would cover H vist amount of ignorance, if the man who always disagrees would give it a fair chance. Texas Siftings. COLD AND HOT DRINKS. Trio FormertheOnty Ones Used lr a State of Nature. Dr. .arah E. Post discusses th question of cold drinks in tbe current number of the Sanitary Era. Cold w;.ter, she says, apparently stimulates gastrte secretion. It products a tem porary contraction of the blood vessels, kite but this is almost immediately loiiow I ed bv dictation, which persists for a considerable time. On the otuer nana, the application of hot water, while it produces momentary dictation, is followed by contraction. These are familiar facts as applied to the skin, and Dr. 1'ost thinks there is no reason to believe that the effect upon the mu cous membrane of the s:omacb is at all Hence hot waters may ie beneficial in cases or catarrh l ino stomach where the vessels are urinat urally diiated. and contraction is the first step toward cure. Hot water, however, is not harmless, and its use should be regulated by tho advice of a physician. Dr. Post thinks that the indiscreet use of hot drinks may have some relation to the prevalence of American nervousness. ' As to cold drinks, they are the only on used iu the state of nature. Ani mals in winter drink from a hole in the ice, and children do not care for hot drinks i:ntil a t iste for tnem is ac quired. Ices may b found very s. rv iceable in ra-es of worry and coiifusiiei resulting from excess of blood in tho braiu. In such a ease ice-cream, wa- ; tor-ice, up ice-water may be taken to ' advantage. Where there is a detlcien. ; cy of blood iu the brain hot drinks an) beneficial. Summing up Dr. Post reaches tl ... r i .f A WONDERFUL ItClves Birth to Two Limbt and a Calf-The Family Thriving. The farmer's of the township of Tecumseb, in south Simcoe, are great ly interested at present in a sti-auge freak of nature which has taken place in their midst being nothing less than a cow giving birth to two lambs and a C"i'he interesting event occurred on tbe farm of John Henry Carter, lot 4. eighth concession line, Sunday. April 14 and when the news spread abroad so many peopl" wanted to iee tho curiosities that Mr. Carter finally de cided to get rid of them, and diiowd of the cow and her progeny to Isaac M. Cross, an enterprising young farmer of Bondhead. The animals were removed to Totten ham and a few days ago the Toronto Globe was invited to send i:p a man to see the stock and investigate indeend cntly the eorrecttic, of tho story. At a lirst glance the reorter wa rather disappointed in the latnbd, hav ing entertained some vague Idfti on the subject, and hoping to ice a fully develoiKMl calf with the face of a lamb or vice ersa. Itut they appeared to hi uncd urn ted eye to be ordinary Iamb- and nothing' more. Thif was at a !ir-t glance. A si!r.e'iiient careful j examination and comparison w ith other lambs of the same ago showed a marked difference. Those of the uti l.atur.il parentage are larger and coarser, the wool is darker, and in toward the fK-lt it i like the hair on a malteso cat; there is a tuft of hair on tiie breast between the forelegs similar to that of a calf. The legs are hairy and the woo! is slightly streaked with hair. The mouth is dark inside and IwHm Burial " urn 1R In .h J: a "u5 loud waiU. The crying m 1 intervals unlit A-n. . LagQg relative rln . ----- -- -u, ui vtutr Uo up to the time of barm, t?) says a writer in the Journal a J can Folk-Lore, has 'I he Moon and Insomnia. "The most singular case of insomnia of which I ever heard," said a physi cian, "is that of a friend of mine in a neighboring town, a lady of middle age. With the exception of her pecu liar insomnia, she is in robust health, hhe is an uncommonly sound sleeper in the 'dark of the moon,' but as the new moon approaches its first quarter she is attacked with wakefulness. She can sleep only at long intervals during the night, and only a few minutes at a nine, inis Sleeplessness increases -hu w luning oi the moon, and by ... uuie mai s.tage in tho moon's uuurse is reacnea she Is unable to ob win even me slightest slumber. She .ciuaius in a siato of utter wakeful ness until the moon begins to wane, when she eraduallv again, and is able to sleep longer and uuuci b me moon disappears. When the period of dark moon has arrived she resumes her nnimir. i rhis condition has prevailed for more man ien years." New York Sun. How to Stop an Express. Suburban Resident "See here i..t You told me that countrv nla T bought of you was only thirtv-flve minutes from the city." City Agent "Yes. sir. thlrtv.fi,,- minutes by express. You remember when we went out to look at it, the time was thirty-flve minutes exactly ''But, confound it, sir, the express trains don t stop there not one of them, asd the accommnHutinn .i about an hour and a half." lou and I went bv exnre.iw nwi u stopped for us, you know." since " 1 knW' bUt U ha8n,t BtPPed "It Will stop if you hire n m.n your station to buy a through ticket for somewhere. That's the way I did tte day we went out."-N,w York BurniBj of an Historical Ballding. The old bulldlns- at Charlm v C, in which Ixird Cornwall!. .!.,.'., d business while In this countrv. w tuned; by an Incendiary last week. A Cane of Rlieunmf icks. I stopped at a cabin stuck away in the pinu forest, about live or six miles from anywhere to ask for a drink of water, and finding the man in bed with his face all plastered up, I naturally asked if he had met with an accident "Oh, no," replied the wife as she handed me the gourd. "He 'un has done got rheumaticks." "Not rheumatism in the head?'' "Reckon it's mostly thar, sab." "I never heard of such a ease," I continued, as 1 approached the bed. "Howdy, strancer?" said the man as ho sat up. "KheumaUcks like this are pretty common around yere. "Why, man you have been pounded! Both of your eyes are blackened! You don't call that rheumatism, do you?" That's what I dun call it. I had pains and aches and I bought two quarts of moonshine whisky. Sim Payson, back in the woods, he had pains and aches, and him cum over to help drink it ."And you got drunk?" "Reckon we mought," "And had a fight?" "Reckon wo did." "And that's what you call rheuma tism?" 'Stranger, look here," answered the man, as be got one leg out of bed with a, groan, "kin you go fur to deciar' that I d a drank that moonshine firstly if it wasn't to cure rheumaticks? Tho old woman and me hev fiirirered on it.. nH we can't get it to rum out right no other way, and now if you've got a pipe ana tcrlmckor I'll stand fur you agin the hull community till the mule lays down." Detroit Free Press. conclusion mat any dictum wnien - Hrl,(,r am, firn(.(. )Mkiag than that of u,uauweurv ; mai noi uriuas ,-., a j !, ui is frequently thrown good and hot drmks are bad, or the re- f u.r th(, bu,.k ariur ,he m;fner f a verse, is absurd, as both are g'Hju iu j v.t meir pi ace: out mat coir, umm i, a ,M)h ),,,. Thew. physiological requirement while hot i,,,,,,,,,,,., to HnPXH,rU-nd breeder, dnnk has its place in the -.reatinent of (f lli(.,iw.hv, ..j,.,,, to pt.ov pathological eondlt.ons lo which . uUl,lli(.j,v , ,,. ,. regarding . . I,... i '' ""' i their strange birth. I here is a strong rie eoid drinks during the summer wil found conducive, to both healtl eouifoi L I 1. id 'I lie Graduation Dress. And now druweth near the time for the sweet girl graduate to think about gelling her dress reitdy for the most important time in her life, except her wedding dav. f f course, a girl is not judged wholly and at once by her appearance on graduation day; that would bo absurd. His not alone in the richness of the gown, but also in its grace of form, richness of tint and adaptation lo lie; occasion, that the observer discovers beauty and the presence of that subtle charm variously denominated ele gance, style and becomitignew. ( f course, tho graduate wears white, but there are many shades of white; one belongs to the rosy maiden, and another to her paler sister, and one is exactly suited to tbe plump girl and still another to the thin one. Tho maiden of educated taste will resdtly recognize Urn shade best adapted to her style. Of materials auitable for graduating gowns there are many. He. ginning with the most expensive,' there are China erope, surah, silk mull, China silk, bengaline, velontmc uiniuuere, onncrs veiling with 1 snenea borders. ilnxnl of their growing to a large and on tsjlh oi their heads there are dark spots, indicating a potability of horns They are at present as large as ordinary year-old lambs. The cow is an ordinary, common grade rod cow. withoulany pretention to l"siigree. It is kept in tbe next stall Id the lambs, and inuncfies away epiite contentedly. Tin; call, w hich wa born shortly after the lamb-. aNo in the group, but it lias not the slightest claim lo distinc tion, fort ner than the fact that it is brother i the lambs. All four are liea 1 1 by and vigorous-looking. Chica go Times. of a Where Most Hen Fail. How few men there are who can successfully lay and light a fire. There are many who are able to lay it and light it, but the results are usually painful to the patient housewife. She may send her husband to the kitchen in tho morning to start tho fire, feeling confident that she can steal a, half hour more of that comfortable doze which conies only with tv, but it is an even bet that tho smell of burning wood will reach her nostrils sooner or later, and that she will be obliged wearily to uon her garments and grope her way down-stairs to the rescue of her well-meaning but unsue cessfuu other half, who, with his lungs full of the odor of burnt wood and tho smoky tears running down his cheeks is usually found engaged in vainly en deavoring to put life into three sparks with his breath. The only men who are successful in starting fires are tho professional fire builders employed iu the hole, u nnl 41 j:' j , .. ,lcu hub uruinary wan becomes a hotel guest and reposes in a warm couch on a cold morning and sees how easily the hotel fireman does the work ho realizes what a veritable chump he is himselfChicago Her- m- ntlllS VfMilur u-ht. either satin, striped or piain selvedges Henrietta mohair, challU, cotUm mull of Hamburg work, plain Im,ll and a cotton ere on. irimtm. ..n.i lurkish erepalico. which, while in expensive, will, if prettily made up bo as elegant aj any of the richer materials. Jt is a wrinkle;! etii btuff. As to the shades of whit.. i,.i with a clear, white cnmnlnvim'. ,'.. .i with red, may wear becomingly tho tint known as nearl or .v,i,i w ... sho with little or no color should choose ivory or sea-shell white A smooth, glossy fabric should out bo worn by a stout girl, for its glare M. Plurar""--Vankea The Noise of '1 humler. One of the lcst descriptions common natural phenomenon is recently given by M. Uirn, in which he fays that, the sound which is known a-s thunder is duo simply to the fact that the air traversed by an electric hp ark that is, a flash of lightning is sud denly raised to a very high tempera ture, and has its volume, moreover, considerably increased. The column of ga thus suddenly heated and ex panded is sometimes sercral miles long, and as the duration Is not even a millionth of a second it follows that the noise bursts at onec from the whole column, tho lgh for an obcrver In any I one place it commences when the light- I ning is at the least distance. In pre-' cise terms, according to M. Him. the beginning of the thunder clap glvci u j the minimum distance of the lightning t oou ui-j lengui or me thunder clt nl of V mm whiUt Tver in rni.,.l . J chant, but it lo Z.T that character: it i. . ..FPli sion of anguish and grief t1 or cry is lntersper-d with uT, express the relationship bn deceased and the in-ntoa Tbe writer has many Un.es fcC cry of Indian men and m0JV ecu the tears nr. ., 1 .... . . . """a uieir ciJ I here is something truly , . .1 lift up their voic-s in the ws.il It Is far from being like ."'j chant " When the breath ui. of the one dying, tho nearest reiJ such as parent or rhnn v...., 1 sisters, husband or wife, be,!,, J mad zeal to strip themschet 0, , lm.,r Iialr shorn locks about tho firepiap, older married women who liar 1. i n . ' r ""0l1 w bile the vonr.ii- u . . j p, "".ueu pari inch or two Voung ,,. u noJ .... .. uul lQl, 0,d sbenr I helm hir-t "ii pull off thetr l.-wlng and mo(,, and gash the f!eh off their le V tho knee, lengthwise ud .. II 1... 1. 1,.. ..I u. . . . - htti tur- unu UOHS Ire, while tliey wuil and rail upon the j tie young men remove t!i(,jr u mid inni'n. I u .....I ..i ... .. . with a sharp knife until the blood fast from thn wounds. oi(j do not scarify themselves. With every new arrival. nh the i-rson b.i of near kin o- not wauiiiK siaris utresh. Iiy thii ,1 '""'"" u crying, uie excit.ffl(nt grief, and tho pain of Komi relatives become exhausted before lime lor mirial nmves. ami unable ( niMMo a win.ir. NKm . , i .... i , it.rt i . . , lapiaeeu m a ,jt, jHisiuoti lacing the ea.t, ,( dre, in gain (wiiimc, ornainentf are upon the hair and person, and u, - i.4 ii w-i in me manner a-s tne Jlutiga it, the certmol i me sact-e.i jupes. this in, if th ceased lHongi?d to one of tiio (.or owning a sacred pipe, ' (, ..jall keiuiue," a thi m.sle of paiuting called. W done by pu'ming the en! tacereu wuu vermilion; then a bhi line aimui tiie hrealth of th? lj: finger i itmrked acros, the fo, horizontelly and down lutth rheekii meet a lino drawn across th et. thus forming a fwjuare. A ochut 1. naru from tho one aero tho to iienn nn tuns along Urn nowi to ii nouit. I his l-lai k pltn ! muit .a i i . ..... that ' n pn-pareo tat. 31 en. wnai ana cniitiren h"iongms to the Vni hatan (sacii-d pipe owners) gpnlej ir tnoe. wiui a few cxccpUoM. a: pan ited in this manner. Why Cuttle Arc Silted. Why do farmers salt their roll Not every farmer, re mane the Amen can I'a;ryninn, knows why he does i unless it is because) the slock like and then goes on U nv; A momcci thought will how where tho advu; age lies. As soon ms the fixxl enU"f the stetnach. the natural tendency at once for fermentation to bejin, tsi them arises a rontest Iwlwepo this tendency nnd the digestive potreri And, if these powers are vigoroui, U4 tlio process of fermentation it ciiecitfdl givoi us the lenvnh of the eniiimn tr 1 or intercepted, then no bad resist also remarks that when a flash of iitmt- ' ,vi!1 fo"ow' 11)0 f,Kd wi'l digwted. S"- When He 'look tho Hint "Yes, Jennie," siid theyoung lady's beau as he clasped her small hand in his and gazed lovingly into her melt ing eyes, "although I'm in comfortable circumstances now, I've seen tbe day when I ve been hard pressed " "Indeed!" sho said. "Yos. indeed, pretty hard pressed." "I don't remember." oho ...i.u . shy look "of over having been hard pressed. She was a moment ufi,. u . Courier. Not 80 Lucky the Second Time. A man at Belfast. Me., irot . h!r f,.n the other day whllo shingling his barn, but escaped without injury. His son was away at the time, and on his re turn the old gentleman told him about the accident, and in trvin i lu,t. hof 1 happened fell from tbe .vu. tins ume DreaklniraW : i Men are never well "dosIm!" t.j v..- they are lamp ported early in the moralng. Merchant Traia Very Peculiar rop-Corn. A few weeks ago a party of you,, people-threo or four couples, perhws -among whom were a party of medi. P.fll dftlflnnta ..O .1 . 1 V , ' a;"u(;u 1 "pop-corn ciaoio ata icauin? chureb they came n , nmde and carried oJt, thtZ" b should tako away some of the p J in their pockets, since the yom " women were not provide, with s h receptacles. As tho parly stroll . 1 down the street in couples ,ho t ' nine membors of it helped themselves rom the pockets of their c,!,T first of tho young ladles finally bit Z on a fragment which was Ik trem bard and unyielding, ad w hich " l o threw away. Shortly sho found a co I iK i ( "uw, hI1 rcmarlcod: te e d nlntr ktrilr..B j , ; v.ira Kiuun 1, h is not nec essarily from the place struck that the first muse is heard. Again, he points out that a bullet whistles in traversing the air, m that we can. to a certain ex tent, follow its flight, the same thing also happening with a falling meteorite just before striking the earth. The noise actually hoard has been compar ed to the sound produced when mi9 n front of the projectile,, whether bul ct or meteorite, quickly rushes buck U fill the vacuum left in the rear health Clmiigeg Hands. J orty years ago you could count the millionaires of New york on tho in.'rsofnehad, and the posses fli:ilf a milium and a o,ln.. ... III! Ion u-.... r " ..... . "' 'u5tl w the i.v me gn-atest weretiiet, J,,. As tor of thtt frt bv U. " . the Hl,i..t...,, -- "'.) csanu ami - -r, aim tile fmnllU. ' ' "".''nlvy. The and salt will not !o mwdwl. though i nny time this will assist In the prtw of digestion. .Sail keeps food frooi caylng until It can be digwlJ Mt iissimilated. and prolongs tlw Hat to Uiow the digedtive organs tocomptet their work; and if fmxl is takes in f cess, as often hapjwtm when hoc I In pasture, salt given freely will be 4 Hutch njlvnnhun, ,.rl further, g< !l a Iirevenutivo of worms. W'bea H mentation wtn in, the condiu'ons wt favorublo to the existence of worm!! tho intestinal canals, and mF be. engendered by the prow too soquently it should be s rule wia stoclcrnen to keep salt Mlore wcr catllo. or within reach wtwnioej it, and tho cattle will obey the matids of nature and supply tlie tm1 a needed or actually pfw,. y were "t pride themselves e oil They Hieir tlifscetitaert ,.1 . t ..,. ... 'M'. ' "'"lively ... .... .,,, h,lfJ remarked; -Tbi ehartestpop.co,.nIevo,.eJ ureo I boy were parsing m,d,.P ,.n ing, "W by, what is it .n. -e . young man teok it without ,.i mat the medical student who t.L i. 'A ave declined the hose 1'wk down Iron t hundred was speechless with ' iair' The latter recovered in time to xpla ,? gravely, when called upon that i 1 one of the small hones t ih Th .. M fool. He did t add howivoThat pocket a few mom t te " young ladies did not eat. , Z ' i-corn ll,..T Or "'Oliojr Argus, fel -'. the M the pop-corn. One or '1 bou sands. The rlaer-"! can't understand il t really cant. Hm,s V01) eft a - able home In Kurope and camo to t J country because you wante.1 k own landlord, vet Z "..,'d J-'"ir !ijbi,oit;vrdT;r VII If His U..1. Stranger-.an y0 Wi Hit nr.,.lt . . w" with th., v IVII A Mirror of Your Mind. Starting from tho word Washington. write 1W words just as they occur you. a-X the WH-ond word be theo which Wasblnirton naturally WW J ' t 1 WTTR. tit ' ' " 1 " , It itinv m rireBldent. Take tbe f Whiei, t1l ,.,..... Il., vmir IClnd tho sarai manner let the third wordh suggested by the second, thefourta "? tho third nnd so on. Ho careM J tbo third word is not suggested both the first and second. Urop first entirely, and let your Bi.r from tha sMviml alone to tne w tho inere.a W,..i . Ilavlnir wrill.n this list of word . ...111 t " . ... ..!( v , 1. , . will nnvja rttn ii.,..i viiiiiik.1' cneap out very useful mirrer v. -mind. If vou are unable W um mirror, you may discover ? erious defects in your meBfZ cesses. You mav discover tnlf. think along certain lines too fwjw !y. You may discover that you " uing superficial principle "7 much, to the neglect of more loPr nt laws of mind. You will lhu " I . J . , . . , .! .,.l,fl tLAU 1 " niiiu illl 1 11 i" ennmnin. Ilna nt thought more philosophical nature-M 'lbuf Whit In tho Cbautauquan. peenmary im,w,tnee durtag tast eentuty, while others, Z hewuitary claim, ' T n "i me matter of wealth For n,J part tho wealth , Tt "V F ll).e 1 vnains. with ,i" t.Vw h(:r It ! (' imiHirut vol., ..i. .. . UP a now rin of rirh mhMcom 1'om the older J, k m,in- "'ae (;oe U-tu 1J Astorg. Taylor estate and '"any others ar B, .1 . eUlfl ' " into the h,i v'5 f.ft,th at ast me who hair and of for a dinivShm,'.-! u.V. m0le aon t you go west, wh land for nothing f.M your pastoral h..m. 'k to New Arrlval-.-The west iV . to walk, and Eurooe i. , U.m ht swlm."NewTorkTeeily,0 Ur whttthe grows np.lW! tart" I mo .'ftrner iu , "" over ther In Lir,'-kinfhi:wTr,d"8rh,!,mai it. -en - "That feow v w,"ih'. "isde ita gooT m ' on' 1 H" A on a inn,. mftn Wm. of ti0 izz?: ni Un""i by the - w t two llon " flocking to th" All u,a Thi. Ww Public Printer' Mr. ralmer came to Cbi(S" f. 187.1. and was tne managing editor the Inter Ocean up to th tamm 1876. Previous to this he bsd w At. .l- i c.i. UnwlsUir ' bad been member of Congre , the ftos Moines district. M'Vhiesi was appointed postmaster of In 1X77 i1 ... ierl nlffht vesr ' ' ' to the satisfaction of the public ' office of public printer call ,or T, - Order of conscientiousness a well ' high order of cnpDieo - (hj onn particulars Mr. rsim-- " reqnlreraonU. Chicago Inter