The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, January 21, 1892, Image 4

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    OUR FARM DEPARTMENT.
. Beeords of the pact help to sell the
hone of today. It Is quite as well to
piling into the flood of success by
breeding in the fashion as to wait for
something to develope.
John . Maddens 3-year-old, Elec
tioneer, full brother to Express, 251,
by Electioneer, went a quarter on the
Lexington track, last week, in 34
seconds.
Pilot Medium now leads all stallions
of his age. At 22 years old he has to
his credit twenty-nine, with records
tanging from 2:124 to 2:30, among
them two 2-year-olds and rive 3-year
bids.
Guy Wilkes 2:15m. foaled 1S79, is
ire to six trotters and two pacers with
records of 2:20 and better. This showing
lias never been equalled by any horse
of his age in the 2:20 list.
1 Three yearlings out of the live that
have beaten 2:30 trace to the great sire
fetrathmore, The record-holders, Frou
'Frou, 2:25 trotting and Fausta, 2:tl
pacing, through their sire, Sidney; and
Athadon, 2-28, through Ilia dam.
: The latest equine wonder is a colt
that, wbeu only 4 months and 7 days
old trotted a quarter to halter in 41
seconds. This precocious trottes is by
'Governor Stanford (son of Electioneer
'and barnes, by Whipple's Ilirableto
nian,)dam by Kentucky l'rlr.c.
I McKinney is now resting oa his well
learned laurels, lie went through the
season without suffering a dcteat, and
crowned his glorious campaign u re
Hiring with a record of 2:li', which
'is the world's record for a 4-year-old
'stallion. It is Durfee's preseut in
tention to take McKinney east next
jear aud enter hira in the free-for-all
classes. The greatest son of Alcyone
should make a remarkable campaign.
His wonderful staying qualities make
him a dangerous factor in a race with
the best free-for all horses in the laud
Farm Note.
, Use plenty of bedding for the stock.
Flan todo away with all unnecessary
fencing.
' Good grade stock has the advantage
of scrubs in every way.
Blue grass is one of the best seeds
that can be sown for pastorage alone.
There is nothing that so insures des
patch in farm work as good teams
' In feeding the first purposes is to
make the animal do the best that it
will
: The liquids are more valuable than
the solids in the manure: anantre to
,smvelt all
uei seea corn irom some variety mat
has given good results in th section it
4s grow.
When oats or wheat fall down before
they mature, the land needs potash;
apply ashes.
The more thoroughly the work is
planned out ahead, the score curtain
It can be done in season
; Improved breeds of stock have in
creased out wealth and made farming
mora desirable.
Sod land can often be plowed when
it would be entirely too wet to plow
almost any other kind of ground.
Plan to secure good yields. Letter
a less acreage and a larger yield per
aero, than a large acreage and a light
yield.
It is enough to make any human
man's heart ache to note how the
aveiage farmer raises his calves; not
one calf in a hundred has a fair chance
for Itself, says Hoard's Dairyman. The
burning sun on their tender, thin skins
tormented with Hies, given no food
whatever that their baby stomachs
can digest and jwsiinilate, they adver
tise the stupid inhumanity of the
owner
Eggs are nearly universally sold by
the dozen but the variation in their
weight makes this rule an unfair one.
A medium sized egg weighs two
ounces, making the weight of a dozen
of eggs pounds. A dozen of
Minorca eggs weigh over pounds.
When eggs are high a difference of a
half pound in the amount of food is a
considerable item.
Tb Solid u riuidi In Cora.
We all know our common Indian
com and what a quantity of food for
man and beast it furnishes. Take a
large plant of fully matured corn;
make it into a compact shape and
weigh it Then put it into an oven
and dry it thoroughly, as a chemist
would in his drying bath. Now weigh
It again and you will find the weight
of the water it has lost and will be
surprised to note the amount which
- this mature corn contained. Now take
the dried corn plant and burn it slowly
so that no part of the ashes can be
Menu away; continue the burning
util the aches are left perfectly white,
gathering the ashes in a cru
efble for this purpose. We will find
that these whit ashes weigh very
little when compared with the weight
of the great stalks, ear and foliage we
' Wirt has gone with all the rest
aww that we bar but a handful of
aOstP The Are has destroyed it, yoa
nf. IT, weoannnot destroy anything.
teniae only changed the form of
Cetlant The things which made up
C greater nart of the corn still exist,
but they have gone back to the air
from wheuce the pUnt nrst got them.
The pile of ashes in our hand U about
one-twentieth of the original weight
of the dry plant, and in it are the
materials that the plant got from the
soil The nine-tenths that have dis
appeared in the air show bow large a
part of all plants comes from the air.
The ashes are in the mineral part aud
got into the plant by being eompletel y
dissolved in the soil water, which
It took up iu making its growth. W.
F. Massey, in Home and farm.
Good Coring Ham.
After the animal is grown and the
hams cut, the very important question
of curing them must be considered.
Many hams, like cider vinegar, are
spoilt in curing. A good brine for
curing them may be made as follows:
Five pounds of sugar to 100 pounds of
meat, one ounce of saltpetre to 20
pour ds of meat; one ounce of salt to
every pound of meat, and water to
cover ail the hams packed in this brine.
It should be understood that the lower
the temperature the longer it takes to
to cure the hams and iu very cold
winters the temperature in the cellars
for ordinary pork-curing is so slow
that considerable time for the curing
is required. If the hams have been iu
the brine they should be smoked lor
three days, and if cut then, and it is
found that the pickle has not reached
all the way through them, the brine
should be boiled over and skimmed.
Pack the hams away again in a tem
perature of about 40 decrees. They
should then be returned to the smoke-
Louse for a day, but they should not be
hung here until the brine has dried oil
them. A b.tter taste will be given to
them if hung in the smoke-house wet
with the brine. To give them the rich
brown color so well known iu market
hams they should be hung near a
stove for several days and then be
rubbed over thoroughly with cotton
cloth. Fine looking and nicely flavored
ham will thus be secured. American
Cultivator.
W hen more food is taken than can
disposed of healthfully, there is a
double loss; the food is wasted and
the animal is weakened by d isease. Ex.
Farmers who should become prosper
ous should plant alfalfa where it is
scarce, and increase their milk or
feediug herd3. Ex.
Cattle should not be allowed the range
of the farm late in the autumn. It is
bad for the farm and useless to the cat
tle.-Fx.
Fact and Fig-tires
Only one couple tn ll,S0O live to cele
brate their diamond wedding.
Kennebunk, Me, claims the young
est grandfather in the state iu the per
son of David, who is only thirty-six
years of age.
The overseers of Harvard college
have decided that the Australian sys
tern of voting shall be used iu future
elections of members of the board of
overseers.
The name Bridget is from the Celtic,
meaning strength; the name is found in
the French, Spanish aud Italian as well
as the English language; though vary
ing from the common Irish form.
A story from Parkersbujg, W. V, re
lates that recently John Hall, a boy sev
enteen years old, met, attacked and slew
a bear with a small pocket knife, and es
caped himself with only a few slight
scratches.
A large rat committed suicide lately
by leaping from one of the windows in
the Tribune building in Xew York, and
came with a tremendous crash through
the skylight of the Sun composing room
causing great consternation to the com
positors.
Gen. Joubert, commander in-chief in
the Transvaal, said the other day, in an
address on education, that he was eight-
jcu j ears uiu ueiure ne naa seen a
newspaper, and his whole education
had cost less than that of two weeks'
schooling for his youngest child.
A Lincoln county (Oregon) judge has
been severely rebuked by the state su
preme court for reading a newspaper
eating candy and otherwise conducting
nimseii in an unuignined and unbe
coming manner during the progress be
fore him of an important murder trial.
How to Give Niter.
Sweet spirit of niter is one of the
most popular domestic medicines. The
dose for an adult is from one half
to one teaspoonful well diluted with
water. When using it in fevers it
is best to give small doses at long in
tervals, One-half a teaspoonful in a
tumberfulofcold water, drink a little
at a time through the night, will be
more effectivA In
7 OT BUU
fringing on perspiration than a whole
MHiepuuuiui ieii at once. Hall's
Journal of Health.
A "Woman Ileal Estate Dealer.
The only licensed woman real estate
dealer in Washington is Miss Grace
Thomas. A year ago she secured her
first license, and when she had paid the
regular fee of fifty dollars she had a
capital of sixty-fire centa left with
which to begin operations. 8he hA
however, a good business training in
that special line as well as plenty of
mvmyumm, uuu MUM BOa grit. This
year, after paring again the rorern.
meat tithe ah KuTa Zn? iTElAIS
Letter'1 -"l mTWlfffc
TALMACE'S SERMON.
Preached from the ominous words
Jeremiah xiviii., 16: "This year thou
shalt die."
Jeremiah, accustomed to saying bold
things, addresses Hananian in uieae
words. They prove true. In sixty days
Hauaniah had departed this life.
This is the first Sabbath of the year.
It is a time for review and for anticipa
tion, A man must be a genius at
stupidity who does not think now. The
old year died in giving birth to the new,
as the life ot Jane Seymour, the Eng
lish queen, departed w hen that of her
. . ... . 1 Tk. 1 4
son, Edward l, aawueu. juc um
year was a queen. The new shall be a
king. The grave of the one and tlie
cradle of the other are side by side. We
can hardly guess what the child will be
It is only two days old, but I prophesy
for It an eventful future. Year of
mirth aud madness! Year of pageant
and conflagration! It will laugh; it will
sinir: it will groan: it Will die.
The text will probaidy prove true ot'
some of us. The probability is aug
mented by t fact that all of us who
are over 35 ye . a of age have gone be
vondthe averaee of human liie. The
note is more than due. It is only by
sufferance that it is not collected. We
are like a debtor who is taking the
'three days' grace" of the banks. Our,
raceitarted with MM years for a life
time. We read of but one ante-deluvian
youth whose early death disappointed
the hopes of his parents by his dying
at 777 years of age. The world then
may hove been ahe id of what it is now
for men had so long a time in which to
study, and invent, and plan. If an
artist or a phiiosohpher has forty years
for work, he makes great achievements;
but what must the artists and phil
osophers have done who had !KK) years
before them ? In the nearly 2,000 years be
fore the llood, considering the longevity
of the inhabitants, there may have been
nearly .is many people as there are now.
The flood was not a freshet that washed
a few people off a planet, but a disaster
that may have swept away 1,000,000,000.
If the Atlantic ocean, by a lurch of the
earth tonight, should drown this hemi
sphere, and the Pacific ocean, by a sud
den lurch of the earth, should down the
other hemisphere, leaving about as
many beings as could be got in one or
two ocean steamers, it would give you
an idea of what the ancient flood was.
At that time God started the race'
with a shorter allowance of life. Tho
(100 years were hewn down until, iu the
time of Vespasian, a census was taken,
only 124persous were found 100 years
old, and three or four persons 140 years
old. Now a man who has come to 100
years ot age is a curi osity and we go
miles to see him. The vast majority of
the race pass off bef jre twenty years.
The character of our occupations
adds to the probability. Those who
are in the professions are undergoing a
sapping of the brain and nerve fouuda
tions. Literary men in this country
are driven with whip and spur to their
topmost speed. Not one brain-worker
out of a hundred observes any modera
tion. There is something so stimulat
ing in our climate that, if John Brown,
the essayist of Edinburgh, had lived
here he would have broken down at 35
Instead of 55, and Charles Dickens
would have dropped at 40. There is
something in all our occuputious which
predisposes to disease. If we be stout,
to disorders ranging from fever to
apoplexy. If we be frail, to diseases
ranging from consumption to paralysis
Printers rarely reach 50 years. Watch
makers, in marking the time for others,
shorten their own. Chemists breathe
death iu their laboratories, aud potters
absorb paralysis. Painters fall under
their own brush. Foundrymen take
death in with the filings. Shoemakers
pound away their own lives on the last.
Overdriven merchants measure off their
own lives with the yard-stick. Millers
grind their own lives with the grist.
Masons dig their graves with the trowel
And in all our occupations and profes
sions there are the elements of peril.
In view of this, I advise that you
have your temporal matters adjusted.
Do not leave your worldy affairs at the
mercy of administrators. Have your
receipts properly pasted, and your let
ters filed, and your books balanced. If
you have "trust funds," see that they
are rightly deposited and accounted
for. Let no widow or orphan scratch
on your tombstone, "Thisman wronged
me of my inheritadce." Many a man
has died, leaving a competency, whose
property has, through bis own careless
ness, afterward been divided between
the administrators, the surrogate, the
lawyers, and the sheriffs. I charge you
before many days have gone, as far as
possible, have all your worldly matters
made straight, for "this year thou shalt
die."
I advise also that you be busy in
Christian work. How many Sabbaths
in the year? Fifty-two. If the text be
true of you, it does not say at what
Urns you may go, and therefore, it Is
unsafe to count on all of the fifty-two
Sundays. Ar you are as likely to to In
the first half of the year as in the last
half, I think we had better divide the
flfty-twe into halves, and calculate only
twenty-six Sabbaths. Come, Christian
men, Christian men, Christian women,
whatoan you do in twenty-six Sab
bathsf Divide the 886 days Into two
partsiwhat can you do in ltt days'
wuar, py ue way or saving your family
ef-TBjsjaaf te world? You will
in heaven, get over the dtaaenor and
outrage of going into glory, and bavinc
helped none up toll same place.
will be found that many a Sabbath
school teejher has taken Into neaveo
. . . i v ;l llufc mr
her whole class; mai x....
the evangelist, took thousands into
that Doddridge has taken in
hundreds of thousands; that Paul took
iu a hundred million,
in view of the probabilities men
r luiviae all the men and women
...... a .tmitv i o iret ready. If
UUl v J o "
the text be true you have no time to
talk about nonessentials, asking why
f i u Sin rnme into the world; or
whether the book of Jonah is inspired;
or who Mercbisedec was, or what about
v. h.twi If vou are near
I iic r i !. .. , . .
otpmitvassome of you seem to be,
there is no time for anything but the
question. What must I do to be saved ?
n, j.,rnin. man when a nlank is
luc uivniiit'K -
thrown him, stops not to ask what
sawmill made it, or whether it is oak or
cedar oa who threw it. The moment
it is thrown he clutches it. If this
vear you are to die there is no time for
anything but immediately laying hold
on Cod. It is high time to get out of
your sins. You say, "I have committed
no great transgressions." But are you
not aware that your life has been sinful?
The snow comes down on the All
flake by flake, and it is so light you
may hold it on the tip of your finger
without feeling any weight.
Let me announce that Christ, the
Lord, stands ready to save any man
who wants to be saved. He waited
ior you last year, and all your life. He
lias waited for you with blood on his
fcrow, and tears in his eye and two out
stretched mangled bands of love.
You come home some night and find
the mark of mnddy feet on your front
steps. You hasten in aud find au ex
cited group around your child. He
fell into a pond, aud had it not been
for a brave lad, who plunged in and
brought him out, and carried him home
to be resuscitated, you would hive
been childless. You feci that you can
not do enough for the rescuer. You
throw your arms around him. You
offer him any compensation. You say
to him, "Anything that you want shall
be yours. I will never cease to be
grateful." But my Lord Jesus sees
your soul sinking, and attempts to
bring it ashore and you not only refuse
him thanks, but stand on the beach and
say, "Drop tint soul! If I want it saved
1 will save it Tnyself."
A great plague came in Marseilles.
The doctors held a consultation and
decided that a corpse must be dissected
or they would never know how to stop
the plague. A Dr. Guy on said,
"Tomorrow morning I will procede to
a dissection." He made bis will;
prepared for death; went into the
hospital; dissected a body; wrote out
the results of the dissection and died In
twelve hours. Beautiful self-sacrifice
you say. Our Lord Jesus looked out
from heaven and saw a plague-stricken
race. Sin must be dissected. He
made his will giving everything to his
people. He comes down Into the reek
iug hospital of earth. He lays his hand
to work. Under our plague he dies
the healthy for the sick, the pure for
the polluted the innocent for the guilty.
Behold the love! Behold the sacrifice!
Behold the rescue!
Decide, on this first Sabbath of the
year, whether or not you will have
Jesus. He will not stand forever
begging for your love. With some
here his plea ends right speedily. "This
year thou shalt die."
This great salvation of the gospel I
now offer to every man woman and
child. You cannot buy it. You cannot
earn it.
I am coming to the close of my
sermon. I sought for a text appropriate
for the occasion. I thought of taking
one in Job. "My days fly as a weaver's
shuttle;" of a text in the Psalms. "So
teach us to number our days that we
may apply our hearts unto wisdom:"
of the prayer of the vine dresser.
"Lord, let it alone this year also;" but
pressed upon my attention, first of all
and last of all, and above all were the
words "This year thou shalt die
Perhaps it may mean me. Thou in
perfect health now, it does not take
God one week to bring down the
strongest pnysicai constitution. I do
not want to die this year. We have
plans and projects on foot that I want
to see completed; but God knows best
and he has a thousand better men than
I to do the work yet undone. I have a
hope that, not-withstanding all my sins
and wanderings, I shall through the
Infinite mercy of my Savior, come out
at the right place. I have nothing to
brag of by way of Christian experience
but two things I have learned-my
utter helplessness before God, and the
all-abounding grace of the Lord Jesus,
if the text means some of you, my
hearers I do not want you to be caught
unprepared. I would like to nave vou
either through money you have laid up
or a "life Insurance." be able to leave
the world feeling that your family
need not become paupers. But if you
haye done your best and you leave not
one dollar' worth ot estate you may
confidently trust the Lord who hath
promised to care for the widow and
the fatherless. 1 would like to have
your soul tUd out for eternity, so
that If any morning or noon, or evening
r rrT "Q0Jr. oth should
'f8"""1 wyryou
present
but will
But I must tUe this sermon. n"
ii the last January to some who are
You usveeutereu iu ji
not clow It Within these
tit i. ... i it
twelve monttis your eye mu
the lest sleep. Other hands w.ll plant
the Christmas tree and give me ,e
Year's congratulations. M a procla
mation of jov to some, and as a matter
of warning to others I leave in your
ears these five words of one syllable
each, This year thou shalt die!"
The Ptti Hied Foret of A Hum
From the Atlantic A Pacific railroad
it is not hard to rwich one of the great
est of natural curiosities-the pertrilied
forests Arizona. Much the nearest
point is the little station of Hillings,
but there are the scantiest accommoda
tions for the traveller. Only a mile
south of the track, at that point, one
may see a low. dark ridge, marked by a
single cotton-wool tre'. Walking
thither (over a valley so alive with Jack
rabbit that there is some excuse for the
cowboy declaration that "you can walk
clear across ou their backs!") one soon
reaches the northern edge of the forest
which covers hundreds of square mile.
Unless you are more hardened to wond
erful sights than I am, you will almost
fancy yourself in some enchanted spot
Vou seem to stand on the glass of a
gigantic kaleidoscope, over wnose
sparkling surface the sun breaks in in
lininte rainbows. You are ankle deep
in such chips as I'll warrant you never
saw from any other woodpile. nai
do you think of chips from tree-stbat
are mossagate, and amethyst, and smoky
topaz, aidaate of every hue? Such
are the marvellous splinters that cover
the ground for miles here, around the
huge prostrate trunks-some of them
live feet through from which Time's
patient axe has hewn them. I broke a
specimen from the heat of a tre tliere
years ago which had around ine stone
pith a remarkable array of lurge and
exquisite crystals; for on one side of
the specimen which is not so large as
my hand is a beautiful mass of crys
tals of royal purple amethyst, and on
the other an equally beautiful array of
smoky topaz crystals. One can get also
magnificent cross-sections ol a whole
trunk, so thin as to be portable and
showing every vein aud "year-ring,
and even the bark. There is not a chip
iu all those miles which is not worthy
a place, just as it is, in proudest cabinet;
and, when polished, I know no other
rock so splendid, it is one of the hard
est stones in the world, and takes and
keeps an incomparable polish. Charles
F. Luminis, in St. Nicholas.
WOMEN'S DEPART
Will Xot Cross a Fiiueral Cortege
You may get some idea of how wide
spread is the nuperatitious bolief that
'crossing a funeral procession" brings
bad luck. If you will stand any day at
the New York or Brooklyn entrance to
the East river bridge and wait until a
hearse and a long line of carriages ap
pear. You won't nave to wait very
long. So many mourners pass over the
bridge that it is almost entitled to be
called the "Bridge of Sighs." And
when your patieuce is rewarded by the
arrival of the cortege, if you are on
either the Is'ew l'ork or the Brooklyn
side you will observe that, though the
horses are moving slowly and though
there is plenty of room to pass between,
the carriages, many men and women
who have been walking rapidly halt
suddenly aud wait until the last car
riage hai gone by. Some do not stop
but hurry on. Tney are the indifferent
or the ignorant, or the reckless ones.
Xew Vork Herald.
Speed of Ocean Current.
Tlie speed of ocean currents varies a
good deal, and no very definite lnfrom
atioo can be given on the subject It is
true that bottles and other objects have
very often been sot afloat with a view
to obtaining exact data as to the rate
at which different currents flew along,
but it is never possible to tell exactly
how long they have floated about near
the shore with the ebb and flow of the
tide before they have been found. The
greater part of them, indeed, never are
found, often, no doubt, because of the
accumulation of barnacles, which have
caused them to sink. Yankee Blade.
Shoppl ng as a PToieiwion .
Shopping has risen from a pastime
to a profession. It is said tliere are
several tbonsand women In Xew York
city who live ou the percentage allowed
them by the big shops In which they
spend other people's money. In the
rushing season-about holiday time,
and just before the summer exodus
begins some of them make as high as
200 a week. These lucky ones, though,
usually have money of their own.
They watch bargain sales carefully and
manage generally to secure the cream
of them. Then when an order comes
hey are often able to fill it from their
private stock and pocket the comfor,
table difference betwixt the regular and
the bargain prlce.iiew York Sun
Sandwich Island Alphabet
The Sandwich Island alphabet has
12 letteri; the Burmese, 19; Italian, 20;
Bengalees, 81, Hebrew, Syrian, Chaldee
and Samaritan. 22 each: rri. m.
Greek 21; Latin, ; German, Dutch
ad English, M taehi Spanish and
If AraM "i Arabic,
;Peslan and Cowti B-rwTT
: Balan, 41; UwmmtU, BaaWrtt
1
The practice of usin
dangerous and olten ca.isej.2-,'
A saive oi equal part? uf
aalf aft-Ill r.fleil llf-i. Ill nr.
felons.
A good remedy for damp .
four ounces of cologne to half J
of belladonna, the hands tofcJl
in this several times a day.
Xew muslin curtiinsaredist'
from those of last season by
Uhea with a narrower heinstijy
styles in these goods vary as tJ
handkerchiefs.
3
It is believed that sweet oilajj
thing to use iu removing an u ?
the ear. This will int'ingleU
they can be removed by treutj, J.
ing with warm water. 0
In an ol.wtinate case of earis
about the ear with laudanum j i
been warmed by standing
for a few minutes iu warm
cover with CJtton batting.
For chapped hands t ikeoal
half ounces of spermaceti talk
tuhVsnriftnflll fit nil fif ut.it-
. . , .... v c,-
aud itiree-quarters of an
camphor gum. Heat until i
burring consuiiiiir, uHii yK4
molds.
The newest sofa pillotri
cover 'jf India silk iraih-rd
a frill on nil four sides, ui
about with a broad ribbon i
each way, and mndc into .is v
bow iu the centre. A ery g J
yellow pillows ore made in tta .j
style, crossed with a deep oraf
tied In an Km pi re knot ff
I
Tho greatest care is nemsarj-'J
ing venison. Like all gaoiei'.)
3Tn.'.'. very hot The cold ptf
....i. .ii,.,. i., ii... jr
cooked so that It loses all iu,;
becomes dry nud flavorless, i;
digestible as "devil's venison'
according to Jr. Kitchener,
stuffed with teupctiiiy n.i.U.
For a lip salve dissolve i
while sugar in a tcaspooiifs.
water. Let it stand at ti.e li
st ove to simmer slowly
tabluspooniuis of niceolireiL
piece of spermaceti the 7e oh
Add a mere drop of cotliiuea;
matter to turn it injo a lit!
porcelain box kept for the ;
It should be small enough to:,
a few tablespoonful?.
Horn VVtjrk 1
Young w omen of leisure are S
enthusiastic and the most
of amateur workers in thlifi.
crusade of work, because r'-Jj
eage ness and happy um:or&f
they rush in where wiseiw
would hardly dare to go, anife
fashion to applaud their d ;
out regard to results. i
It was formerly the custom
daughter to be the helper ani:
Ion of the mother. Xow the 4"
Is emancipated and the uiotbe
If she is 111 and can afford or,t" ,:
havt a trained nurse to Ut
her, but otherwise there ai,
inducement to protract illMi'j
valescence. '1 here is, in fadJ
the desire for work, a great '.-.?.
real work done at home.-"!1
Her Own Hesources," by Jt&f-
HU DM Kavaral Thlor '
fternoou M.s. ''J
riaduatsof --1
claware, 0-
On Saturday sftern
West, a recent glad
university, ut i.uinrf iir, v.
gunning on her father's Lister
farm, near Uuionville, withte
er's shotgun, bird dog and rob!
The result of her aflenioou i
fourteen quails, three rabb-u
bird dog's tail The latter "
by the premature discliarp
young lady's gun while she "
ing through a wire fence. H
r IU,
triillel 4
le K 1
t of w 4
1.1. it . . J ... ..uIW n
w lui-uuy noieu mm an tjnu"
keeper, with a passion 1 vp?
lure, and writes very pleafi"
when she has time to lnduljt?
In that direction. t .ir.cluustn
fth Will Urn Around UK
Mile. SalnKJmer, a Frw
sixty-four years of agf,
ranks of lady explorers, andg
a tour around the world. W,I
course south of and parallel
equator. Her purpose
data rirrliiir the liftt
the training of children in tb(f;
countries for the ueograpuw
of Paris, tilie takes no 10J
her, and expects to extend
over a period of three veait
already made a voyage v
world, paying her own
Parte Letter. .
Urn, Unaptona t O"
Much regret is felt in I'nf
discovery of the neglected it
Livinntone'a crave in Atria
eten deroid of a headstone,
doner Dr. Ifnnr has be1
t - - -
uonea to sue no 10 un -
luireraente in order to suite" ' 1
thegrav of the woman w ,1
life with the Illustrious cxp j
Baltimore American. :"
f
A new fganliatioii of '
San Frandaeo ttyled U
Daathtata. fcs devoted Utv!
f the need of poor peopj5
Itstrtaa oa aeoodht ot UW.
rall. Thar ire about n
wua ma empom of Christian
laughters with a followm