Nebraska herald. (Plattsmouth, N.T. [Neb.]) 1865-1882, January 30, 1879, Image 1

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    A L I)
V I T T? Tl "fr H A
FT
lfiiiLSHEl) VEUY UIUK.SDAY
AT
FLiATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
OFFICE:
On Vino St.. Onj Block. North of Main,
Corntr of Fifth Street. -
'T CinCi;i,4Tl OP ivv
C AfEULV CiS?( COtXTY.
Term, in Advsnoe:
On.' cnnf, one yr . ....... .81.00
Vie po;'jr, tx month . i oo
.Oat cc;;j, three moeths .60
a i v r: it risi . o .it a t
! " ( I - I '
el'ACK. ; I W.; 2 W.f -'J W.( I 111. .1 111. (1 n.l
i . i r . . . . i i i f.n a . m $! i f iv
8jrb.. 1 .'tl 'iMt' i7fi; a?.'.. 'J SO In Wit i .
::.;.. L" T iKii, 4 i."'; Hi1), '
., . n ; .' i lil (. iS ii i, (..;,:; M. ; .
'icul . Kl.il 1'V 1 in i 1 (r u; t.i j.ici! r
J r.il . . . ! 10 (Kl JKIK. 2I.f !.': -ifl I'UVjr.
JJ7""AH Advertislnst bills due quarterly.
-
'Transient advertisement imi't Ire I -'
for in :'dvain-e.
MJJJ
J
1 I
JNO. A. MACMtJRPHY, Editor.
6i
PERSEVERANCE CONQUERS.
(TERMS: $2.00 a Year.
VOLUME XIV. J-
v.
CrKxfra rojiipn ntthe Ileum. o fr 'i I
.1. Young, at the l'viVoUVu News Jrpt, M .'
Street. - , "
' Jr '
PLATTSMOUTII, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1879.
NUMBER -15.
E
l 'rv A
n
Hi illy 'A
FIRST
National Bank
OF PLATTSMOUTH. NERItASKA,
0roc80OK to
TOOTLE, II.VNN'A A CI.ABK
7oa.v Fitzokrald. .
K t-i. IMtVKT
A. W. W,acc. lll.I.-.
ioNU (X llOVHU.lt
President.
Vice I re-ddent.
Cashier.
Assist 1 Cashier.
i n nana 1 now open lor rmsincH at their
a )w room, corner .Mhiii ard Sixth si cets, and
;r pared to transact a general
BANKING BUSINESS.
tick.
Band. Gold. Government and Local
Securities
BOUGHT AND SOLD.
Pz-rmtU Received and Interest Allow
ed on Time Ctrlijicatts.
DBAFTS JDZ-iy'WZiT,
In anv part of !'ie I'nlt.-il States and
lu all the i'riiK-ir'iil 'l'u'ns and Cities
Of Vurope.
AGK.VTS t tl T3IK
CELEIJTEU
:.: ian Line aD Allan Line
' htka.tiej:.
f' ison wisiimg fj tii'i out tlicirfnends from
L.;i j cau
rvuciiASK TJ'Kv:rs h;om us
7broush to I'lntteuiouth.
VILLIAM HSROLD,
deaitr In
DliY GOODS,
CLOTHS.
BLANKETS'.
FLANNELS,
FURNISHING GOOD..
GROCER I EH OF ALL KINDS..
Ijrge stork tf
BOOTS and SHOES
t lie
CLOSED OUT AT COST
:o:
Notions, QuccnEware,
anJ In fai t cveiythiitg yn can call for In
the line of
General Ivlerciiandk
e.
cash r.viu For: nins and fli:s.
All kinds of coi.ntiy n t'.uce ti.Kt r. in ex
cii.u.go for goods.
SAGE BROTHERS,
lieah rs in
S O "V ZED S
.-t a zi sj -jz
uro., etc., i:t(t.
One lioor E;t of tin
Ne Fost-O
i'l :tsku.
je, l'Iiitl--ini0ul!i,
l'm-.-t'i-a: .. m k. is :n
SUPL'T IRON, ZISC, TIN, Ji HA
ZIER Y. d c. ,r .
Large as-oitnuMit of il.trd ana
COAL STO"V
oft
Wood and Coal Stoves for
HEATING OR COOKING,
AU
iys en Hand.
ivry vr. ticty of T'n
V.oir;. lit
Sli-.et Iron,
an 1 Zinc
t in stcJi.
MAKING AND REPAIRING,
loni n Shf-rt N.itice.
:tevk:: v t:u.vj ir.t nit a xtzd i ri
PtHCEH I.OIV hO'iVS.
O . I ?. XT
BRS.
BEST FARIVIING LANDS
IN NEBRASKA,
roi: SALE BY
IX Xi:illt VH!iA.
Great Advantages to Buyers
IN 1S7T.
Ten Years Credit ut G 2?r cent Interest.
St-r Years ( redit at G jx r cent Interest,
and -0 per cent Discount.
Otrr Liberal IMsronnts For rnsh
Bhrliutei. on Fares Hint Fr'lBliti,
ixn'l rrrminuis lor Irnprove
lueuls. Pamphlet and Map., coi.taicing full partic
ulars w ill be Mailed free to ar.y part of the
world mi application to
LA NO COMMlSSloNKR. B. & M 11. II.
LlNTOI.N NUUKASKA.
A. Scblegel & Bro.,
Manuf.icturrrs of
IFIZSriE CIG-ABS,
And dealers in
FANCY SMOKERS ARTICLE'S, SMOKING
aud CHEWING
T 0 A C C 0 ' S .
fpeoinl PRANKS and size d CIGARS made to
orik' r, aud SAtUfactiou giiarautced. Cigar
uiippini !Hld lor smoking tobacco.
Main St. one dooi west of Saunders House,
FLATTSMOrTH. Nrru. 101v
Excelsior Bsrber Shop.
J. C. BOONE,
Main Street, opposite Saundt-ti UuHe.
3 H A V I N 0 A N O S H A M 1" O O I N G
JCipr.i;.I ;ilti;lltioji given to
CUTTING CHILDREN'S AND LA
DIAH HAIR,
CALL AND SEE I300NE, 0ENTS,
Aad get a b.voue in a
er.
LANDXAND!
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
.. . . j.i.. JicCitr.A,
TiENTIST. and Honvppatbic I'hynieiiin. Of
fice cmer Main and 5th st's., orer IJerold's
stor. Plattsiuouth. eh. aly
, . t. it. wn,o.,
ATTORNEY AT I.AT.'. Vr-AcUm In Saan
dert suirt Vwn Countit-. Ashland, Nebraska.
3,'iinG
It. II. I'.IH1A5I,
ATTORNEY AT LAW. I'lattsiuoiitl). Noli. OT
fire Kront liuuui over t li:iimaii A Smith's
lrui Store. i:;iv
. It. H. LIVit;"4TOV, M. 1)
PH V.IIf-l A.V A- Sl'RGEO.V.
OFFICE HOUK.S. from 10 a. m.. to 2 l. in.
ExaminiuK Jsurnemi for I'. S. J't usiou.
IIt. IV. II. to4.-fllL.IK.i:CIIT.
PRACTISING I'H SH IAX. will attend r ills
at all honrs. nirht or ilay. I'lattiiinutli. Ne
braska. Office in Cliajmian & Smiths lrug
Store. 421y
;i:o. . iiitii.
ATTOTINKY AT I. AW and Ileal Fstaf Bro
ker. Special attfni.n irlven to Collections
and all matters iifn-ctiir.; t it.? title to real -state.
Oflice on 2d floor, over l'ot Olilce. l'lattaniouth,
Nebraska. Mi t.
jai:n K. SlOItltlSOV.
ATTonXEY AT LAW. Will practice in Cass
and adjoining Comities : Riven -if .- i;il pttentlon
to coiU'ctions and alsi iv.cts if title. Oflice with
Ceo. S. Saiith. Fitzerld iliuck, l'lattsmouth,
Nebraska. Kyi
i. H. xvni:::i.F.it & co.
LAW OFFICE. Keal E.-tate, Fire and Life In
surance Aieiits. I'iattsnioutn. Nebraska. Col
lectors, tax-paver. Have a complete abstract
of titles. Huy and sell real estate, negotiate
loans, &c. layi
U V. CM'TTKB..
DENTIST.
riattHmoath. Xebrasks.
Oflice on Main Stree t over Solomon and Na
than's Store. 3ly
SA 31. M. CIIAIMIA.V,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
And Soiii'itur
in Chancery. Office in Fitzger-
id lUock,
Iyl
i'LATTSMofTH, NER.
1. It. WriKF.I.F.It,
K. I. STONR.
V7HEELER & STONE,
ATi'ony Em at law,
IMattticioath Xehraska.
Tonsorial Artist.
PIiATTN.MOlTT!I..-
Place of busiae.ss on J.Lii:i
aml.'.tn streets. Shaiiipc;iii:j
dreu's hir ciiiti;:. etc. etc.
X Kit It AH V.
St.. hetwrpn l:h
Shaving, chil
1'Jly C03niEHCIAL HOTEL,
LINCOLN, NEI5.,
J. J. WHOFF, - - - Proprietor.
The best known and most popular Landlord
in tlu" Slate. Ahv.iy stop at tne Commercial.
LFXHOFF
lorninir I);
L'w Silicon
t
i door
east il
th. Satinderd House.
P the l e-t of
We
kee
Beer, Wines, Liquor
& Cigars.
.l: ii!l Coi!;i;itly on Hand
SAUNDERS
J.S. GRKuORV, -
HOUSE.
- Proprietor
Location Central. Good Sample Eoom..
Every attention paid to gicts. -4.:m3
TT-SMOlTIi. ----- Nrii
Pi
HUB HARD HOUSE.
WOODARP, - - - Pmn.
D.
Good accotiin; 3d.iif:Tis and reasonable charg
es. A "oi! livery kepi m c infection witli t!ie
hoiiKe. Cj t
OCCIDENTAL HOTElL
F HE MONT, NEJJIIAICA.,
FRANK PARCELL - - - - Prop.
Good ro.tnhi, ho'ird. and every thlr.g in
ripplL-pie order. Goto the Occidental r.hen
vou viit Fr-n;o::t. 10rf
PLATTS MOUT H TlILLS.
n.ATTSMOCTH. Nl'H.
V. HZ:S.Si:i., - Iropiictor.
Flour, Corn Jenl iC- Feed
Always on hand and for sale at lowest cash
prices. The Inches! prices paid for Hear n.d
Corn. Parti. uiar attention tiven custom work.
aNO
MACHINE SHOPS!
I'UTIOMOUTH, SEIt.,
RejHiircr of Steam Engines, Boilers
Haw ami Grist Jlillr
CiA AM STEAJI tTTTI-ifi,
rrouglit Iron rijie. Force and Lift Pipes.Steatn
vauuc. raiei - aive governors, ami all
kinds of Brass Engine Fittings,
repaired on sltort notu-e.
FARM M A C H I N E H
F. 31. COX,
MERCHANT TAILOR
Over Solomon & Nat hau's Store, Main St.,
Between 4th aud 5th.
am prepared to do all lusiness i?i my
line at JLitui'j Kates, anel
Satisfaction Guaranteed !
In every instance.
WARRANT A FIT I
Or make no change.
t-Oa!l and examine goods and samples.
Good Motii of trimmings always on hand. 42i:i3
W. D. JONES'
Again takes the
Brick Livery Stable.
TLATTS MOUTH.
NEBRASKA
The ind Bonner Ktables. in I'lattuDiout h are
now leased by Wm. L. .ION ES. and be has on
hand new and handsome accommodations in
Ui shape of
HORDES, CARRIAGES, REGGIES,
and
SADDLE HORSES.
I aui prepared to keep HORSED
FOR SALE ITRADEI
And will
'Train 2nd Ereak Colts
Oh Reasonable Terms.
ALSO HE3EMDEK,
That
at withi'plenty of room Itliat every one
I1 !iVe 111 y "o'". I can pel Farm-rs'
know
stock
.where they will kt,&r, u,y. " " ' "
it.. V "1S "J.1 "'y oil1 l"nus far theirlibe-al-i.?,'
!ollclt tneirra'lfortl. jtiture. atisfled
tna I can accommouate ihHju heller and do
better by theni than everbefore.
3vl
WM. D. JONES.
B. & M. R.R,.Time Table.
Corrected Fridiy, October 18, 173.
KOK OMAHA F'EOMTr.ATTSMOLTII.
leaves 7 ;oo a. m. ArrH t-s 8 '..") a. iu.
" 2 p. u. " 3 :.rKi p. m.
FROM OMAHA I'OK rLATTSMOUTII.
Leaves 9 :W a. m. Arrives 1 1 :"X a. m.
C :00 p. in. 7 :5o p. lu.
FOR THE WEST.
leaves riattsinnul.1i to ;ar a. ra. Arrives Lin
coln, 1 ''lb p. in. ; Arrives Kearney, 'j: j." . in.
Freiglit leaves 3 :00 a. m. Ar. Lincoln 2 :50 p.m.
FKOM THE WEST.
I-eaves Kearnev. 6 ."2 :i. in. Leaves Lincoln
12 :1j p. in. Arrives l'Utt.Mnuiith. 3 Mj p. ni
Freight leaves Lincolu 11 :3) u. in. Arnves
rialtsinouth, 5 ) p. in.
GOING EAST.
Exnres. fi :1" a. in.
I'iisjuger, Grain, each day) 3 :W p. ni., except
Saturday. Evervtliird Saturday a train con
nects ;;t the usual time.
It. V. It. It. Time Tabic.
Taking Effect Mwidij, Xov. 4, 1873.
SOUTHWAKJl.
,Leare Arrives
1 au 8 :2i r-
i 1I.. mil o .r.u ...
Hastings, 7 :25 p. ni. V , a :1- ...
Ited Cloud, lu :3S p. in.
JfORTH WARD.
Arrives
1 Cow'.es 4 :51 a. in.
Leaves
Kcd Cloud, 4 :00a.m
I Uiue Hil,,...r. -Z2 h. in.
I Ayr 0:-j:ia. in.
Hastings.. ..7 3 a. in.
n. &. q.k. u. Tin:: taiils:
W EST W A no.
Express
la l.iani
j 1 2.plil
I 4 5."plil 1
...... 7 40;lil
; 10 ."Ml pill
j 1 4.".uni
. .... ! 4 2"ain
j 7 loam
j I'uani ;
Mail.
10 oopm
1 4..am
5 .f.iain
8 loam
11 Kam
2 l.ipw
5 l.lplll
8 OOpill
Leave Chicago
Meudota
Galeshurg . . .
" I'lirlicgion
" bttumwa
" Chariton
" Creston
Red Oak
Arr.
1'latt.smouth .
EASTWAliO.
Fx press
3 V'iil
b fhlpui
10 .Viplll
12 oiam
3 I'Oam ,
6 joani
8 o-lani
12 1.1pm!
K aopui i
Mail.
.1 suam
R Mam
11 l.'.ain
2 I'l'lil
5 Odpm
R 4i)pi:l
11 i.1pm
3 lfc:iin
7 nOam
Iyive Plattsmouth
Bed Oak
" Creton
" Chariton
Oituniwa
Biiiliugtoii
" Oaleslmrg
Mer.dota
Arriv Chicago
ONLY 27 HOl'F.S TO St. I.OT TS bv the new
HOC IE just opened via MONMOUTH. PCLL
MAN PALACE M.ICKPJNti CAES run from
I'm luitmi loM. lniis without change.
BY LEAVING rLATTSMOUTII AT 3:50 P.
M.. Jim arrive in Sr. LOUIS thetiext eveningat
8 and leaving St. Louis at 8 :'-t a. m . you ar
rive in l'lattsiiiouth :'.ti the next morning.
Coupon Tickets for sale 1'ur all points North,
Souih, Fast anil West-
SAMUEL POWELL.
I). W. HITCHCOCK. Ticket Agent.
Gen. Western Pass. Agent.
J. M. BkchtaL. AgrMit, Plattstoouth.
i z : o i O
CO
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: is
o
fa
bX)
H - - - r - - - ? '. n Z r
-
s
C:
5
V3
V.
I - I I - i i--
y.z-.-t.-U;
'A-
v. z z v. r. - r i
s:
.v .
To Hoosiers in Nebraska.
Former resident of Indi.vil.i now liviuir in
the West, desirinz t obtaiu tho news fium
tlieir old Hoosier Home, wltmild at once sub
scribe lor the beet of all the wei k!y papers.
The Northern Indian ian.
GEN. EF.l'B. WILLIAMS. Editor aud Prop.
Without ailou'.iiTiTKNoicTii.w lxm .mn
is l!i- best weekly paper puh'isii-d within the
li.rd"-s of In.liaii.i. It Is a largi lorty-eoiumii
foiio-the latest i-ith eouoty and e.o-ti num
ber l tilled to repletion with Indiana News.
Editorals on eve: y sulijc-t. Ch..nv Framuents
of Hi.'tory. Seb-cf Sketches, atl l ie tiers from its
own eorrepoiwlonts In the East and Wc-t. '1 lie
icreat size of TH k Nok in Kiev India.max en
ables it to furuii h its readers with a splendid
Continued Story, in addition to its larire rtmoui.t
of Miseelaiifous Reading matter, and it is eon
ceiled by every one to be the bet paper publish
ed in the old Hon.sii:r State. In the first num
ber of tha year 1S79, wiil be commenced a new
storv entitled.
KOXIKj.A TALK OF TIIE HARRISON
CAMPAIGN,
By the Rev. Ed sard KglcMoii, author of "The
Hoosier Selicolmaster.' 'The Circuit Rider."
etc.. tl:e plot of w hich inlaidiir linlinna. and
which will far surpass aiiytale published in a
western Journal.
At the beiiun of the new vearTHK Ixdias
ia.v will print a maniotli Iloiibh iilieet Holiday
Number. hich uiil he the
I.AICCKST l'.MT.K KVElt rHIKTKIHN AMFItlCA,
This double miuiber will he sent to recuiar
uliscrsiberi tlie same n its usual isxue. but sin
gle copies of this special issue will bo Kent on
receipt of ten cent!1.
THE TERMS OF THE INDIANIAN ARE :
Three months (on triaO . SO
Six i non liis j 0,1
One year 2 CO
Addles GUN. REl B. WILLIAMS.
I.MHAMAN BllLIlXi, VA!:JAW, I.M).
33-tf.
You Want I PRICE j YouxWifo S
TMs. Ktuui-tu. WintlIL
r.f 'up tii..ii
PAYIWC INFORMATION?
V Tir West. Knt. South, North. ForevryOwnir
of ralUc, Hiirso. Pliwp. Swfiir- or 11 Kami, b
m Oarilon, ur Villnire I i ; lorevi-rv Housckeeotr-
lur ail llujiund (jiris; jj
OVER 700FINE ENGRAVINGS, S
both I'lt'Ksinir anl InstrnctSve. pi
B All liie uhuvc, aud more, iu ihu .
jAmericanAgriculturist:
J'.'ol. 3j.J Trotn Xne up to post free, pSTO
Only $ I Each, $
to Hub of ten or more.
H. 5 enntfHI. ' f, rl. . 1 fnnlA. 1 K...I. Cln.l.
S uuciiptl.ti.. t'..yx. Sinrli iVuniiM-rs 13 c;'- C
Out i.evinien, post-free, 10c
SPhEVUID PRKXirMS G1VEX 5
p lottioco sending Clnbsof Snbecribers.
JJ Issued in English & German at same Price.
Try It-You'll Like It-It Will PAY. C
5" 1 oeangf: JT-nn i. C
J" Children I company. . lEvervlxxlv!"
Iler Treasures.
I kesp thetn in an old. old box
That Wlllio gave mo years ao.
The time we parted on the rocks
Ills hip lay swinging to and fro,
At waiting In the Lower Bay ;
I thought my heart would break that day I
The picture with the pensive eyes
I Willie s? No, dear, that's young Blake,
WlMtiok the West Toint highest prize ;
He went half crazy for iny sake.
Here are a lot of rhymes he nrote
And here's a button off his coat.
Is this his ring? My dearest May,
I never took a ring from him!
This was a girt from HowardVlay ;
Ju-.t see, the pearls are getting dim.
They say that pear s aie tears what stuff I
The setting looks a lit.lo rough.
He was as handsome as a l'micc
And Jealous ! But he went to Hums
Last Fall. He's never written since.
I used lo visit sit his home
A lovely place beyond F'oit Leo ;
His mother thought tiie world of me !
Oh. no I sent his letters back,
These came to me Iioin Washington.
But look, what a tremendous pack I
He always wrote nie three for one.
I know I used to treat him 111
I'oor Jack ! he loll at ChaucellorsvUIe.
The vignettes nil that lot -are scalps
I took In London, Naples, Nice,
At Paris and among the Alps ;
Tin se Ln-elgn lovers act like geese,
But, dear, they are such handsome men !
We go to France next year, again.
This Is the Doctor's signet ring.
These faded (lowers? Oh, let me soe
Why, what a very curious thing !
Who could, have sent these flowers to me?
Ah ! now I have it Count de Twirl :
He married that fat Croshie girl.
His hair was red. You need not look
8o sadly at that raven tress,
Y"ou know the head that lock forsook ;
You know but you could never guess I
Nor would I tell you for the world.
About whose brow that ringlet curled.
Why won't I tell? Well, partly, child
I5ecau.se you like the man yourself :
But most because don't get so wild I
I have not laid linn on the shelf
He s not a bygone. In a year
I'll tell you all about him. dear.
TRIFLES.
The rino-iny- of the door-bell has a pleas
ant sound to me, mote particularly in my
id!e moods. Like a:i unopened letter.
there is a mystery about it, and one waits
Witli a pleasurable excitement to see who
or what is coiiiinr.
Returning home, oue day, earlier than
uai, I found that iny wife, had 11021c out-:
m l. wiiile idly wahiiiLT her return, tin-
loi r-btll niuyr.
I wa.ted expectant until Mary aniieared
with a note, cojitai;:i,i' a request troui my
ud fr;enl, Georye L , to lide out to
his residence in the country ihe next day,
and to blip"; my wifo with me. I was
Usui h p'eascii, 11. , so much on :iccou..t ol
my neis..re which it might give my
wi:e, but because 1 thought I needed a
'la's i creation, u.'nl, in ti.e loveiy suni-rucr-t:me,
llucouutry has peculiar charms
lor mo.
JJut the next morning everything seen:
?d to go wrong. Alice could not ncuoiu
111 ny me, and I cou.d not get oil" as ear
ly as I wished; consequently, I was fret-
titi and jieevtsli, ami Alice seemed to re
tlect my humor, for s!u never seamed to
be so una'mii.bic.
At length, however, I drove away,
though not-in a very pleasant mood. It
w;ts a lovely day; and as I rode along,
noting the beauiics of tha landscape, my
memory went ba. k unbidden to tho lime
when 1 wooed, and wen my bride. How
I vcly Alice was tlivn! I thought. And
how happy we were! Dut that was long
nf,o. 2o; is it pos-iibie, we hae been
married only three years? And I felt a
sharp p ing, ai i contrasted the past with
thy present, to rliiuk that we couid settle
down into the common-place life we now
1 il.
We had no s'riom trouble; we did not
quarrel; though vhcn I felt cross, or
things did not iuit me, I took no paius to
conceal it, ami olten spoke harshly to
Alice, who sometimes replied in the same
sjnrif, and sometimes w ith tcais. Yet we
were generally good ftiends. Still, the
chirm, the tenderness, ofoureariy love
had imj erccplibiy vanished.
I had become careless about my per
sonal appearance at home, and Alice was
almost equally negligent. Her beautiful
brown hair, -which she used to wear in the
most becoming curls, was not usually
urusiietl plainly behind her ears, unless
she was going out or expected com
pany.
1 dismissed me suiyect with a stgli, as
I drew up at my friend's ga?e, with the
reflection, that it was the same with all
married people must b'- so, in fact; for
now could romance aad sentiment rind
place among 60 many prosy realities?
supposed we were as happy a? anybody;
and yet it was not the kmu ot ufe I had
looked forward to with so many bright
anticipations.
3Iy frit nd greeted me with great cordi-
anty. lu the ha'1 we nut Mrs. It
1 Hiking fre.4i and lovely iu her pink inus!
Hiuppcr, wit.-i ncr J-tty n.ur in taste
I al brants. she reproved me rdavl'ullv
for not bringing my wife with me, chat
ted a iew minutes, and then lhtted away,
wtuie my mend led the way to the li
brary. As we entered the room, I noticed
a vase of bright flowers on the table, im
parting an air of taste and cheerfulness lo
the apartment. I made some remark
about it, to. which my friend responded:
"Yes; I am very fond of flowers, and
tike to see them in the house; ami as I
spend much time here, my wife always
keeps a vase of them on the table as Ion"
s they last.''
After dinner, we walked out into the
grounds, which were quite extensive, and
most tastefully r.rrangcd. There was a
variety ti Rowers in bioc m, and I notkol
,uai l. sehctcd here and there the
Lncfct, until he had a haodsome bouqueL
" reacju-d ihe house, Mrs L
was on the steps. Her husband, still ov
tinuing our conversation, gave her the
flowers, with a smiie; and holding up a
spray of crimson berries, which ho had
broken off, she bent her head while he
laslened it among the dark braids of her
nair.
It was a trilling incident, vet their man
uer arrested my attention. "Had I been
a stranger, I would have pronounced them'
lovers, instead of so bur married people.
All through the day I noticed the same
delicato utientioa and deference in iheir
deportment to each other. There was
nothing of which the most fastidious
guest could complain; yet, while showing
rue tlw most cordial - attention, they did
oot ignore each, other's existence, as mar
ried people too. often seem to do.
I had never before visited my friend at
his country home, and was - very much
pleased with it. I .said so, after dinner,
as we strolled out into tho woods.
"Yes," lie said. "I think it is i.lonasnt-
nn.l l. -,11. J ., '
uv uuutu, -A Denevc i am u con
tented man,
So far, I am not disappoint
ea in lito."
"How long have
you been married,
L I asked.
"Ten years."
"Well," I pursued, "can you tell me
whence is the bright atmosphere that sur
rounds your home. Tell mo how j ou and
your excellent wife manage to retain the
depth of your early love as you seem to
dot I should think the wear ad tear of
life would dim it somewhat. I never be
fore saw a home where my ideal of do
mestic huppiness was realized. It is what
I have dreamed oT, but have not yet been
permitted to enjoy."
My friend smiled, and, pointing to a
thrifty grape-yine climbing over a neat
lattice, aud leaded with fruit, Bid:
"That vino needs careful attention, and
if cared for, it is what you see it; but if
neglected, how soon would it become a
worthless thing! So the love which to
all, at some period, ia the .most precious
thing in life, and which needs so much
care to keep it unimpaired, is generally
neglected. Ah! my dear fellow, it is lit
tle acts trifles that so often estrange
loving hearts. I have always made it a
point to treat my wife with the same
courtesy that characterized my deport
ment in the days of courtship; and while
I am careful not to offend her taste and
little prejudices, I am sure that mine will
be equally respected. Moreover, instead
of treating her as an inferior as a mere
slave, bound to obey my every behest I
realize the fact that siie ia my equal, and
as such, has as much right to a voico in
the management of our daily affairs as I
have.
That night I rode homeward, ponder
ing over what I had seen and heard; and
reviewing the years of our married life, I
was surprised at my own blindness, and
determined, if possible to recall the early
dream. J
The next morning, at breakfast T ntr.M.
ished Alice by a careful toilet, chatted
over the dinner, and after tea invited her
out to take a walk. When she fame down
arrayed in my favorite dress, with her
hair in shining curls, I thought she had
never looked lovelier.
I exerted myself, as of old. to entertnb,
her, and was surprised to finu how quick
ly the evening passed.
1 resolved to test mv friend's thenrv
perfect-, aad the results exceeded mv
most sanguine expectations.
For all the little nameless attentions, bo
gratifying to a woman's heart, and to uni
versally accorded by the lover and neg
lected by the husband. I lind nivse'f re.
paid a thousand fold: and I would advUe
all who are s'ghing over the non-fulfillment
of their early dreams, to go and do
likewise ; remembering that w hat is wcrth
usiDg is worth keeping.
The Teninsula of 3Iount Athos.
The Peninsula of Mount Athos is the
most eastern of those three w hich may be
een on the map extending out like" fin
gets from the coast of Macadonia into
the Ef'can sea. For over J0O veers it has
been a-sort of headquarters for monks of
tho Creek church. At the close of the
twelfth century the peninsula was covered
with oO'J monastic-id institutions, with in
mates recruited from diflerent countries.
The number of monasteries is now twenty-one,
and the monks number 0,000, to
gether with 2,000 laymen, who servo i's
menials. No women arc pertuitnd on
the sacred mount. In the middle of the
sixteenth century, " when Pierre rielion
visited tho monks, he found them lazy,
unclean, and sensual, their intellectual
and religious life fed almost wholly by
oral tradition, not more than a score of
them being able to read or write. Cath
arine II. of Russia, provided for their
support from the treasury of the empire,
and liberal contributions have ever since
flowed from that source: Mount Athos
forever dedicated to the Virgin, being re
gard o I by the Sclavs as a hull-way para
dise between heaven and earth. And the
penisula is described by both ancient and
modern travelers as the most lovely spot
on the face of the globe. It is high and
mountainous, rising saddle-like" from the
shores and forming a rid:e wfuYh, in the
marble peak ot Mount Athos, reaches a
height of 7,000 feet above the level of
the eca. But this huge mass of rock is
cut into by a series of tho most exquisite
ly romantic landscapes, with magnificent
forests of oak and chestnut on the upper
virts, and luxurious plantations of figs,
j.ives aud vires on tho slopes, with per
ennial brooks running through the gar
dens of the valleys, with an opal haze of
sunshine and a shade w hich sue described
va something almost miraculous.
A Ct-'re for S'andei
The following very homely btt. singti
larly instructive lesson is by Si. Phillip
NVri :
A lady presented herself to him one
day accusing herself of being given to
slander. "Do you frequently fall into
this fault? ' inquired the Saint. "Yes, fa
ther, very often,"' replied tho penitent.
"My dear child," said tho Saint, "ycur
fault is great, but tho merry of God is
still gieater; for ycur penance do as fol
lows: Go to the nearest market, pur
chase a chickrn just killed and still cov
ered with feathers; you will then walk to
a certain distance, plucking the bird as
you go along; your walk finished, you
will return to me.
Great was the astonishment of the lady
in receiving so strange a penance; but si-
lencin
human reasoning, she replied,
I-., 1-11 -'1 - I
will obey you, l ather, 1 wid oiey. I
Accord.noly she retired to the market, ,
bought the fowl and set out on her jour-
a y plucking it as she went along as she
had been oidercd.
Ia a shoit time s'.c returned anxious to ,
X. II .." 1 - " '
icu oi ucr exactness in accomp.isiitug
her penance, and desirous to receive
some explanation of one so singular.
Ah. ' sa:d the Saint, "vou have been 1
very fa.thtul to the first part of my orders: ,
now do 1 lie second part, and vou will be
cured. Retrace your stc s; pss through
all the places you have already travers al,
and gather up one byone all the feathers
you have scattered."
Cut, Father," exclaimed the poor wo
man, that is inum.-sihlc. I cast thefeaih-
era carelessly ou every side; the wind car-;
. . - ..... ".. . , i
ned them in diherent direction! hon- run . .i
recover them f
Well, my child." rop
:ed the Saint, ".-o
it is with tour wids of
slander: like the
fer.thciV-whicli the vvintl 'has scattered,
they have bsen-waficd iu many direc-
4t ii i , -r r. i '
I n A . o m yU C:m' G RIld i
it- V .. , , !
History docs not tell if the lady was
lady
ccnvei tetl ; but
quired a Saint
it is probable".-' It" re-
.iiold bo a fool not to Prot by it, 1
. . State Items.
Hebron lias a Library Association,
and has a Library of 209 volumes.
Good for a town of that size.
Tho Hebron Journal goes for the
drunken fellows who came into the of
fice and pied" some of their matter.
The Hebron Journal is publishing a
series of arguments on the subject of
dancing. Should Christians danco?
During the absence of Station Agent
Munson from Seward, leaving the tel
egraph operator D. A. Flinn in charge
of the depot, S211 was stolen from the
money drawer, which Munson found
pried open on hisn. Suspicion
pointed to Flinn, who was arrested and
the money was found on a sill under
the depot building together with a
diary and revolver belonging to Flinn
Several of our merchants have been
hauling their freight from Lincoln
during the past winter, successfully
competing with the railroad. Mr
Fuller yesterday received by team five
barrels of coal oil on which he saved
20 cts. each, or 1.00 on the load, lie
sides it furnishes employment for our
home laborers, and the merchants are
enabled to pay for the hauling out of
their stores. Saline Co. Union.
An exenange nas organized a new
club, and one that should nourish like
a bay tree iu mid winter. The paper
says: " We are about to organize a new
society and this is the pledge we want
everybody to sign: ' u iUi malice to
wards none and charity for all, I, the
gnueisigned, (my own conscience push
ing me,) do promise to pay the printer
the amount I owe him for the paper
I have been taking, and that I will by
all
means
induce others to do like
wise,
An Unique Book.
At the late Paris Exposition the Etoth
ers Salmin, of Padue, exhibited a book
which is topographically unique, being
tho pmallest volume that has been pro
duced uy tne printing press since its in
vention, and the type the most minute
that has ever been'cast. Into iOO pages
five centimetres long and three and one
half centimetres wide a centimetre is
about thirty-n no one-hundredths of an
inch tho whole of Dante's "Divine
Comedy ' is compressed, and, as the edi
tion is of a thousand copies, it will be
Iiossib'.e for as many lovers of curious
ooks who are rich enough to pay the
price to place the microscopic work in
their collections. A writer in the Allge
meine Zeilung has gathered a number of
interesting facts iu regard to the various
editions of the "Divina Commedia" which
have been issued. In all there are about
?j0 of them, the largest being published
at Milan by Mussi in the year lbO'J. It is
in three volumes of the largest folio size,
5d centimetres long and 40 centimetres
wide, and until the appearance of the
Salmin edition the smallest was the Lon
don edition of 1SJ2-23, iu two volumes of
S4 pages in all, the letter-press of which
was sharp and distinct enough to be read
without much difiiculty with the naked
eye. A pocket edition, reasonably clicnp.
was afterward prepaied by RnrbeiA at
r lorence, an.l this must remain the small
est imprint of the "Divina Commcdi'
wnicn can be oi anv practical use, smco, it
is absolutely impossible to read the Sal
min edition w ithout me aidot magni:ying
glasses. The man who set up the work is,
as may readily bo believed, now nearly
biiud.
The Origin of Steam rrlntln?.
It is remarkable that the steam engine
was not called to the aid of the printing
prefs sooner than it was; but it had long
been used in many of the industrial aits
before it became the handmaid to "the
j art preservative of all arts." The first
printing by steam w as on the issue of the
Loudon Times, for November 2t), 1S14.
The improved hand presses of that da
could only strike oil liom two to three
hundred impressions au hour, with on.
man to ink the types aud another to work
the press. At that rate a very large edi
tion of a daily piper was simniv impossi
ble, for one day's work could not be com
pleted beloie tue next day s must begin.
The Times then printed liom three to four
thousand copies daily-, and Mr. John Wal
ter, the proprietor (Uie second of that
name), began a3 early as 1S04 to consider
whether the work might not be expedited
in some way . In that year, Thomas Mar
tyn, a compositor in tha 'limes olliee, got
up a model of a self-acting machine for
working the press, and 'Walter furnished
the inon -y for the continuance of his ex
lieriments. As usual in the tarly history
of labor-saving maohinury, this attempt
met with bi:ter opposition from the work
men, who supposed their craft was in
danger. Marty n was in fear of his life
because of the threats of the pressmen,
and partly on that ac.ount, and partly be
cause Waiter had small capital at the time,
the scheme was given up. As soon, how
ever, as Konit's urnnm-' mat bine uhi in
vented, in 1S14. Walter consented that it
should be tried on the Times; but for fear
of the workmen, the experiment was
made, not in the regular priming oih'cc of
the paper, but in au adjoining building.
Iferi iCnnirr nn I njsi.., 1..,,,...
Uvorkml seprrtlv fr v.ai ,,.!. ......
w-.-w.j .v lv viol IliUUlli ILOf
; ,! ,,rr,-r., o. i.; . '!.
2yth of November everything was rea
for actu:d work on the fiapM"! the i
8ult is tllU3 toM in a biographical sket
ready
re-
rapiucal skekli
of Mr. Walter, which
Times in July, 1S47:
appeared in the
"The night on which the curious ma
chine was first brought into use in its new
abode was o.ie of great anxiety and even
threatened d-stnic ion to ,f, .,,.
i inventions might suspend their employ
incut, Vlesirujiioii to iiim and traps.'
j They were directed to wait for expected
. news from the continent. It was ubout
I six o'clock in the morningwheu Mr. Wal
. ter went into the press room, and aston
ished the occupants by tel.iug them that
tin r tw.t. ........ I ....... i ...-. I 1
Amivo iiih ailCUllV III 111CU OV tieillli:
y
j that if they attempted violence thcie was
' a lorce reauy to suppress it; but that if
they were peaceable their wages should
be continued to every one of them until
. similar employment could be procured.
The promise was no doubt faithfully per-
M l""'"'se vvhb wi i iiuui l.uunu V DCT-
fwrm,5 S Hil he disuibut-
ed several copies tmong them. Thus was
tIlU n.
this most hazardous enteririse undertak
en and successfuliy carried through, and
to'thec
gigantic,
All Abont the Pulse.
Every intelligent person should know
how to ascertain the state of the pulse in
health; then by comparing it with what it
was when he was a. ling he may have some
idea of the case. Parents should know
the healthy pul.-c of each child, as now
and then a person is born with a remark
ably slow or fast pulse, and the very case
in hand may be of that peculiarity. An
infant's pulse is 140; a child of seven
years, about 80; and from twenty to six
ty yrars, it is 70 beats a minute, declining
to 03 at fourscore. A heal hf'ul grow n
person's pulse In-ats 70 times a minute.
There may be good health down to 00;
but if the pulse always exceeds 70, there
isadisen.se. The machine is working it
self out; there is fever and it.llaiiiii:a!i n
somewhere, and the . body ia feeding on
itself as in consumption. When the
pulse is quick, thi.t i-, o' or CO, grad. tally
life reading with decreased chance.-, of cur.
until it reaches 1 10 or 1:20, when death
conies before many days. When tho
pulso is over 70 for mouths, there is a
slight cough, the lungs are alfected.
The "ew Stove.
A fat citizen, having in view the pur
chase of a coal stove, was yesterday stand
ing in front of a hardware store, when a
newsboy halted and respectfully said, "I
s'pose you've s.-en the new stove, the one
that beats 'em all."
"I don't know that I have," was the
calm reply. -
"You orter see it, sir. They are alius
taiUin' 'bout these coal stoves thr.t save
ten per cent of fuel, and now they've ;ot
one."
"Have, eh !"
"Yes'r, I saw this one goin' tho other
day, hot 'nuff to bake an ox,-an' it didn't
burn any coal at ali, not even a pound."
"Is that possible t why, I never heard
of such a thing 1 Didn't burn a.iy coal
at alH" '
"Not an ounce, and it was throwing out
an awful heat."
"Well, that beats me; I don't"- see how
they got the heat."
"They burned wood, sir!" was the hum
ble reply."
The man tried to coax the ooy w ithin
reach, but the lad had to go to the post
office. Free Puns.
Good nntl Bad Men lu a Meat Xarket.
Speaking of groceries, says Eli Perkins
in the Cincinnati Enquirer, reminds me
of a conversation L had with a butcher the
other tiny in University I'.ace.
"Moses Taylor," said tlu butcher, "was
a man 1 liked to have come into mv mar
ket. He was a big, handsome, we.l-ted
man wei'dicd 2u0 and you could sic
choice po:ter-house steaks ia every wiu
of his la -e. Yes. I used to like to li r e
Moses come into my Fhq. Hebro. ght
custom. People would see Iiim staudi.ig
around see his ruddy cheeks and think
my meat did it. But thcie is one man
who brings min to a butcher shop -one
man
"Who is he, Mr. Nooney?" I a.ked.
"Well, it's William M. Evarts. He's so
ank and lean, he looks so bad y fed, his
bones do stick out so, and his skin is so
shriveled up like the skin around that
turtle's head, that lie makes my custoinets
shudder. They look at poor Mr. EvarN
and' snv: 'Poor, half-sarved man!
Nooney 'a meat must be very bad.' No;
I tell you, Mr. Peikins, that Mr. Evarts
isn't the kind of a man to stand around a
butcher's shop. He may be good in his
place he may be a good 'Secretary of
State msy be a iolished man, and all
that; but for a reai attractive sign iu a
meat market, I'd laiher h:.ve Mo.?es Tay-
or. He s trot more meat market btyle
about him more .Jenny sa qua!"
Livingstone's Boyhood.
The boyhood and subscqiu nt life o.'
Livingstone, the missionary explorer of
Africa, illustrates the lines:
'Honor and shame from no condition i!se ;
Act well thy part ; there all the honor lies."
"When David Livingstone was a boy he
was obliged to bo ut the mills by six
o'clock in the morning, and he did not
leave until six o'clock in the evening. It
might be well supposed that the little
factory boy would have been glad to rest
during the short time he was not at work.
But a lad with such a spirit of detennin
at.ou as David possessed was not easily to
be deterred from pursuing the course he
had marked out for himself.
When he received his fir.st week's pay,
he forthwith purchased a faun grammar
with apoition of it, and within a very
short time- joined an evening school.
This school was a very humble one, and
it was partly supported by the owners of
die cotton mills lor the-beiicnt of those
employed by them, the dominie w ho car
ried it on being thus enabled to give iu
struction at a low rate to his pupils.
David now beg in to learn in real earn-
e t, continuing nit; tit niter night to atti un
the school until ten o'clock, and then de
voting two hours sometimes n.ore, un
less his mother prevented l.im by taking
his books avv-y to the pieparation of
the following day's lessons; and so ab
sorbed was he always in his thought tli it
the hard work in which he was regularly
engaged seemed almost to bo lust sight
of by him.
5IerIIc.il I'se or Salt.
In many cases of disordeied stomach a
teaspoonful of salt is a certain cure. In
the violent internal aching termed colic
add a teaspoon IV.l of salt to a pint of cold
water, drink it and go to 'bed; it is one of
the speediest remedies know n. The same
will revive a person who seems a!inort
dead from receiving a very heavy fall,
etc.
In au apoplctic. fit no time should bo
ost in i Km ring down salt water, if stifii-
cient sensibility remains to allow of swal
lowing; it not, the head must be si o;itr d
with cold-water until the sense rot urns,
when salt will completely restore the pa
tient from his lethargy.
In a fit the feet should be placed iu
w arm water, w ith mus'ard added, and the
legs briskly rubbed all bandages removed
from the neck, and a cold apai t.ncnt pro
cured if possible. In mauy ca.-es of bleed
ing at the lung, when orlicr remedies fail
ed. Dr. Hush found two teaspoonful of
salt completely stayed the bloo 1.
In cases of bite liom a mad dog, wash
the part with strong brine for un hour,
then bind on sonv? salt with a rag.
In toothache1, waim stilt and water
held to the part, and lcnewcd twoorthiee
or four times, will relieve in mn.-t cases.
If the gums be eifected, wash the month
wilh brine. If the teeth 1 covered with
tartar, wa.h tw ice ti day with salt and wa
ter. . In swelled neck, wah Ihe part with
brine, and drink it twice a day, also until
cured.
Salt will expel worms, if used in the
food in moderate deirree, and aid dige-
tion, but salt meat
is
ii used I
)on;tstIc
Louisiana Cream Cheese-
-Lomshu, r
cream cheese is easy cnoti
I f ti i. Lr it S f ;
fairly good to eat. Pour "clabber" into s
bag, aud let it drip for two hours, a. i
then empty into cheese mould -t. Tun
out on n plate, and serve with sweet
cream and sugar and giated nutmeg.
Molasses Doughnuts. Take otic cup of
molasses, two-thirds of a cup of milk,
one egg and a f :ecc of butter half. '- I' d
size of an egg, two tcaspooiisfurcrvam P I
tnrtnr ami A' c.,.1.. r"!..-... in ..-i ' t
nutmeg, and use Hour enough to roll J.
Soft GiniAir Bread. Stir well toref
one and a hlf cups molasses, half a cui
butter, oneigg, lalf a spoonful of ging
one icaspoomui soda, dissolved in It
than halt a cup of milk, a little, silt, tin
add three cups of Hour.
Polished Floors. homo persons will
persist iu scrubbing tnd tcouiing pel
ished floors, which is boti silly and inju
rious. Titcv should bo swept with a
broom covered with tlaiiucl, and polished
twice a year.
Cinders in tha Eye; The simplest
method of removing cinders from the rye
is to pass a camel's hair brush dipped iu
water over it. The operation requires no
special skill, and occupies but a minute.
Tea Stains. Tea otains should bo wet
in equal paits ol alcohol and ammonia,
then wash in tepid soap sud. If tho
sjots be very firmly fixed, expose them to ,
the ltimes of burning suli luir.
Barberry Tarts. Barberries mike vcr.Vu..
nice tarts, better than goc'hcrries "i
almost i.s mod as currants. Use an cottnl-
O 1
w eight of sugar and hemes and stew tlu
fruit slowly.
Pan Cakes. Take one cup of milk, one
cup of sugar, oue ''gg, butter half tho
size of an egu', ou' caspooyful of cream
of tartar, one -of soda, and a litt'e nut
meg. Drop into boiling lard.
Plain Cookies. Take oue egg, one amj
a half cups of sugar, half cup of milk, ond
tecs'-oo.-iful of soda, two of ciea-ii of tar
tar, half a cup of butter, and lluur to roll
out.
Berry Cake. Take' one cup of sour
milk, one tc.ipooti:ul of soda, one cup of
mol;:ssi'S, tvo eggs, one half cup of butter,
with i'.our enough to make a batter. Salt.
Doughnuts. On.; pint raised dotigh or
milk bread, knead into a cup of sugar, a
teaspiKinful butter, two eggs and nutmeg.
Let it rise, then fry.
3111k amlChcctfc? Frolmtlou.
I have had occasion to point out iow,
dairying may deplete the soil on which
the cows are fed, that .milk is rich in ni
trogen and mineral constituents. A cow "
that gives the moderate q'lantity of 1,0!'O
lbs. of milk per yenr, would abstiuctfiom .
the boil in her milk alone, 2i lbscf a ':
i;nd 24 lbs of pur nitrogen in the 100 '
lbs of oiis?ine. If tho mil!: were sold '
this would be all lost to the soil; or if "
made into cheese the mineral constitu
ent's well i.s. nitrogen, will be mostly
carried otf in the cheese. The depletion
is much greater in feeding milch cows
than in fattening steers or cattle. If we
a.c to suppose the steer to train an avci-
age of oU0 to 400 pounds live v,u:g!u per
year, and then compare this with tho .
moderate average we have supposed tho
cow to produce in milk, wo find tho steer,
only involves a lo-.s of throe or four lbs.
of mineral constituents and about three
los. of nitrogen. It w ill thus by seen that,
it" the milk be sold, it will involve many
limes us much loss to the Soil as in growth
of tne fatti uir.g tr.cer. Whatever tho
rl. er t at; n.o.e than sullk 'ent to" supply
ti e elements of his prwth, goes back to
ihe 8-iil in the, manure. This explains
th; foundation lor Lie opinion quite prev
alent ill it la-ryn- i more exhausting to
the soil than be f i::i.::ig.
But all daiiying is n t thus exhausting,
lo the soil. (Ji mincicial.y tho mo.-t valu
able element of tin; milk is the cream.
When cream is the. only element of the
milk sold, and all the rest ia fed to pigs or
calves on the farm, it takes little or noth
ing of value in the butter for that con
tains no mineral, no nitrogen it is mere
ly carbon and water which m ly be re
placed from the atmosphere. E. W. Stew -a:L
The School Teacher.
The wild folly that thinks any one can
teach school, must be eliminated from tho
thought and practice of the American
people. There mu.-d be more scholarship,
more lcnruing, more ii: V-llectunl disci
pline, more culture, brcokh, life and
power in Use body of our tcacl.-oxi. Tho
high and gtave ie.-pou'i'.i!ities o.' the pro
fession must have ic::o,rtiHi'.ti and ac
knowledgment. The to ichor's platform
must le attainable only throv.gh gnt'-.i a-j
straight ai.Tl ways is narrow us Ihosu that
lead to the pulpit, the bar, tiif o. r.f tho
physician and the editor' cb-iir, f r thr
science and art of insti ;ieti',:i .Iciiiand t
cnU, ca)acilics, kj.ov.lcdgo s.ud culti.n
as gieat, if ii't grc-tcr ti.:ui uro -x:t u
Ijy any other i aliing in the world. It is
the bcience ol sciences, for it lays Utah-
contribution every le)nrtment of knowl-'
elge and every r- aim of thought. It's initial
atil imperative demand is for what is .
fundamentally es-ential to no other jiio-j
fesion, a knowledge of mental philoso- ,
phy and jisychology. Dealing liom the )
iiist, and always w.th the ititel.cctual and
moral nature; it is impossible to succeed
without a clear comprehension of the con
stitution of the hf.m.ui inicd, the laws of
mental aui moral lile and growth, and
the fix "d conditio:! of healthl il deve'oji
ment and pro rvn. Without 'Jii?, every
teacher be:it.J the air. wotk id random,
and puts at hazard the most precious in
terests of every child under his contiol.
To put the helm of an occa-i fctcaincr
into the bands of one ignoiant of n avia
tion, is w isdoia comji.o -d with coin dot
ting the infe'ectu d and tnori.l training of
chiTdrcn to one ignorant of intellectual
and moral philosophy It is an art to be
learned - tho inopt dirfi tilt b .cause the
conditions au I lactor oi s-, n ,.- n,c in
determiivite n:id ehmiv", omp sred w ith
tho problem of the wi.vund succes -!idJi-
gani. Ht;on, arrangmcnt, con.ioi n.u m
st ic.it on of a largo school, Ih.-t ofcon-6tra.-
ting a pre at buildi-.g or;a:ntingu
great picture is easy. For in the one
case the el mints of kiurt are compara-
tively tangible
and ihteiinirif.'e; iu l.io
other, they are unseen,
unknown and d s-
covcrable. only
by patient and tentative
lion. New ton Batctnau'
elloits. b says
The average human body is made up of
several pails of water, a mass of charcoal
Mitlicieut to cook a good dinner, a quan
tity of hydrogen sutlii ic.it to 1'oat a small
balloon, a piece of iron large '. tmugh to
make a pocket kn.fe, alumpof b"j ' .--us
large enough to make l"i i n m .
boxvs of Ive. ifer matches, :.l ..rU. :, .
oiiioiis of soda, pota.-h, ;i...i. uv.t r.
oxygen, chlorine- -cd t.t.-- . V.
'"4
V
v v
7
'St.
. 1
'Am
1 much.