TEETHED CLOUD CHIEF. X. I..THOJUS. roMWhrr. RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA. LIFE'S ITS AM) IMW.VS. Tho Sslory f Woman XVlui Iln Kxprri-mc-fil IIT Nlinre if Karli. From the St. Louis GIolwDriniK-nit. The alternate sunshine and shade which are incident to wine hninan lives have never been so strikingly illustrated as they are in the ctiso of Mrs. Iollv Iconise Hunter, who has been a South ern belle and heiress; the Jtnnncrc of a Confederate General ; the wife of a noted politician ; the relative of a United .States Senator; the sister-in-law of the (lov ernor of a State; one of the society women of that wonderful and dazzling retinuc'tbnt made Washington City so famous; and Is now a mendicant, aking the charity of the pconlc of this city to give hcrfood anil- .-heller. She is now past the half century mark; but her de meanor marks her as having been a woman of remarkable force of charac ter, and out of the storm marks which misfortunes have made niton her face there are the unmistakable traces of high breeding and intelligence, ami enough left to make one sure that some time in life her beauty was of no mean order. She came to St. Imi1- on the 29th day of last August, and presented hen-el f to Capt. I.iee, who was then Acting Chief of 1'olice. She asked to be screened from publicity, and said all .she de-ircd w:l- a place to lay her head, and a few friends to whom she might go without intrusion and obtain the necessaries of life. Capt. Lee took her ca.-e in hand, and procured a room for her on Wash ington Avenue. He presented her ease to the attention of Mime of the wealthy people of St. Iouis, who never permit ted her to suffer. A few day- ago she conceived the fancy that, her condition would become public, and a-ked ('apt. Lee to obtain a pass for her to Hot Springs, where she has .-ome friends who, it is wid, would have contributed to her wants before this had they known the dire distress upon which she has been hanging. Heforc the war she was the owner of 1,IMK acres of land in Virginia. She was then what the world called a splen did woman. She had the traditions of nobility attached to her family name; she had the finish which true culture anil nobility always evince; she was a woman who had traveled and read, and her mind was a store-house of all that makes true womanhood admirable. It was at this time that .-he was wooed by a dashing young Virginian. She gave him the promise to wed; their love was of a two-fold nature, partaking of the nature of that which makes the sweete-st music in the heart and helps ' the world go round," and that of business. Into hi- hatid.s she entrusted the estate, and was .solicitous for him to relieve her of the care. He did it with a delicacy that excited no unfavorable comment. The war darkened the land. There was a feeling among Southern women in tho-u days which made heroes of their lover.-, ami for a man to hesitate in the matter of duty to his land was to annul every l.iim upon the heart he had made. The young Virginian was not a loiterer. He espoused the cause of the South and at once commenced the organization of a regiment. This regiment iv:is equip ped and sent to .lubal Karl by the wealth of this woman. She gave it every thing, and the man who marched at the head of the column had her heart. It parsed out from before a throng of beauty cheered by song and christened by tears, and went away to battle. In the course of a few mouths its ranks were decimated, and the war was not half over when the organizer was about t he only survivor. He became a Gen eral and was transferred to the Gulf Department. The war w:u over, but the man was changed. His heart had gone down with the tlag he loved, and bv degrees the soldier and gentleman developed into the charlatan. Hy some means which are not given to the chronicler of this "leaf" he ob tained the consent of the woman he loved to dispose of her estate. The money which was the result passed into his hands, ami wild speculations ami filibuster schemes upon his part, coupled with debauchery, .-wept it away before the rightful owner could realize the ruin before her. They never met again. Whether this was a romance of her life from which she gathered thorns, is not known. Hut she lived it through, and very soon after married the Hon. I'hilip Hunter, who was a member of Congress from a Maryland district, it is said, and who died soon after from the bursting of a blood vessel. He was a relative of the Hon. H. M. T. Hunter, Secretary of State in the Kichmond Cabinet. Her husband's estate was not sufficient to meet the demands made by her social position, and she very quickly found herself facing want in the very .shadow of what had so recently been a life of fashion and splendor. Not earing to occonio ilepeiulcnt on her husiiaml s people, she left that .section and went to 2s"evv Orleans. In the summer of 1S78 her daughters were atllieted with the terrible "scourge of the South and died within nine days of each other. She had scarcely with drawn from their graves " when two of her grandchildren died from the same alllictiou. Poverty pres-ed closely upon her in her alllic tions, and she came to St. Louis. There had lived in this city a gentleman named Martin Alexander, whom her mother had adopted when he was a boy. She came here expecting to find him and place her unfortunate condition be fore him. Her first day's search for him brought her the intelligence that he, too, had pacd away from this life, and she found herself alone and penni less in the face of a city of a half-million people. It was the terror of this truth that caused her to seek the advice of Cant. Lee, who was then acting Chief of Police. She is the niece of William Rufus King, who was a United States Senator from Maryland, and a sister-in-law of Gov. Early of North Carolina. She left on the train Friday evening to join her friends at Hot Springs. She says she has had misfortunes enough to drive most women to suicide; but being possessed of remarkable strength of mind she has never given up, and is waiting for the day to come when the last trouble shall cinne to her. Care of Plants Through lhc Winter. In a few days the frost will take pos session of tender plants in the garden, and as many plants can be taken in doors and-with good care made to grow to cheer us through the winter, to rrans plant from the flower-beds to the room we should first cut back the plants and allow them to stand for a few days, then lift and pot in good fresh soil ; water thoroughly, placing them in a shady position, out of the winds for a tew days, then bring them into the room where they are to remain; care should betaken not to water too much ; many plants are injured or killed by water keeping the soil saturated by having saucers under the pots filled with water. A good way ; . A.. ...m. lx1i lllttllti .11 1 l-H". I 1 .v.i. ,f-i.Y..Vr;"-Yi "'A-,;. ; Y...,;, VU, ,:.-Y-, I "1,a" "" !'---"' -"" """ "'j- "P ,. , I Watering should be done only when ..1 . ,n. o.t !, ,v.,tnr fr,le .o jhuuu! mu mi , uu .. ..." 1',' -'"" iiouscworK. Mich- a mother IS the water will go entirely through the worthy of the best artificial le"- wiiich pot. It is well to examine the roots of mechanical science and Christian be plants occasionally by turning the pot nevolencc can provide. Acw J or Sun. over, giving it a genue rap, v im-ii loosens it from the pot, then you can see if it is too dry or too wet If a plant looks .sick, with feeble growth, give it but little water, for un less there arc leaves to evajwiratc mois ture water drowns it. Tender plant-, such as the florists call stove-hou-c plant-, can be grown in rooms by plac ing the pot they are in inside of a larger pot with almut an inch .-pace around it, filling this space with mo--, which will keep the roots warm and prevent drying out. Simla, ferns, begonias and many very tender plants can be grown in this wav. Insects often ruin plants. The mo-t common is a small green llv, which can be destroyed by tobacco smoke or to- baeeo water, or give them a bath in wa - ter :i.s hot as you can hold your liana in for five second.-. Xe.xt to the green llv i-omes the red snider, which is so small it is hard to see it, u-uallv on the under side of the leaves. They seldom attack healthy plants, but, coward-like, wait until plants are sick either It lacing dry or wet, too much shade or too much sun, then thev will begin and draw the I last urop ot sap irom the leaves, wnicn u-ually turn yellow and fall off. To di-lodge thi.spe-t is no small job, but w:ush the plant with warm soap suds uithavery few drops of coal oil in the water, then lemove all dead or .sickly leave- and branches. Stir up the -oil, syringe the foliage frequently, and a. soon a.- 30111- plant begins to grow vig-orou-Iy you will -eeno more of red spi der. Another insect that trouble.- ivies, oleander-, orange--, etc., is the scale. This is ery easily removed with strong soap nils ;"whaleoil .-oap is the best. Then the inely bug will come on your fiich-ia-, begonias and many of the stove-hou-e plants. This pest is best ctcrminatci! b putting your linger on him and mashing. l'lca-o rciuemljer that plants do not want much care, but want it regularh, and a well grown plant is a thing of beauty " which is a joy for ever.".. M. Jordan, in .S7. Louis He jiufiliaiu. One of Lincoln's Stories. There was a certain Mi oiiri regi ment commanded by Gen Fi-k. It was largely composed of tho-e chaps picked up on the levee of St. Iiuis; rough, un couth, ready for alino-t any thing, in a word, but good-hearted fellows. (Jen. Fi-k wa-a pious and good man. He found he wa- the Colonel of the pro-fanc-t regiment in the whole army. Af ter he had been with them long enough to find them out, and thev to find him out, he called them together once and .said : Now, I want to make one prop osition to you. One of the first orders that General Washington issued to hi.s army wa- one again-t profanity. Now, I don't intend to is-ue any order of that kind, lint I intend to let you vote about it. I am the Colonel of this regiment, and I am going lo do all the swearing for it. " Now, will you agree by a vote that you will not swear, but will leave me to do all the swearing?" The boys voted that they would do it, and there was a diminution in the swearing of that regi ment lor -nine time. lint one night there was a Kentucky mule-driver and I can tell 3011 a Kentucky mule-driver can swear some. His six-mule team got stalled ju-t as he was coming up with the General's tents and headquarters' articles, and the stream of profanity that poured out of the mouth of that Kent uck v mule-driver really freighted and burdened the air. After it was all over Fisk called him to his tent. He said to the soldier, " Don't 3011 know that it was agreed by a vote of thu regi ment that I was tu do all the .swearing of the regiment?" " Ves," said the man. " Well, here vou are swearing loud enough to be heard through all the sur rounding camps." "That's all right, Colonel; that's all right," said the man. " I know we voted that wa-, but the swearing had to be done then and you were not there." One day in the lecture-room in Wash ington City, among the winters of 1 Jst 1 and IHiA, Col. Fi-k told that tory in a little lecture. Abraham Lincoln was sitting on one of the front seats with his hand clasped oer his knee, enjoying it veiy much, and laughed at it as he would at any good anecdote. It hap pened that there came to him an unfor tunate old huh, who said she must talk with the President. She told him her son in the Kast, Flinn, who had gone into the 1'iiion Army, when coining near his home had gone off to visit his moth er, or, perhaps his sweetheart, and the army, instead of marching on in the direction he thought it would, took an other route, and he was gone three or four weeks. He was finally arrested as a deserter, convicted and sentenced to be executed. There had been a good deal of that sort of thing. There must I145 no mtrc of this weak-hearted polity. ne loin her stoiy, ami Lincoln says: "There is a good deal in this; give me the papers 3011 have; I .sympathize, with you, and I will take the papers and ask the Secretary of War, Stanton, to look into it, and we will see what we can do for3ou." "Hut," srrys she, "the exe cution takes place next Frida3, and 3011 must give me the pardon now." Why," said Lincoln, "that reminds me of a little story," and then he went on and told her the whole stoiy, and the poor woman stood there while he told the .story 1 have been telling 3011. After cnjoing the story as Lincoln "did, he picked up an old, 3elIow envelope and wrote on it " Let John Thomas be pardoned," and sent it to the War De partment, and the mother was happy. Chicago Times. A Curious Missionary Contribution. Missionaries in the Far We-t and Northwest have a tough time of it. Their pay is small and it reaches them irregularh. Fortunately, some of the rich churches have a practice of making up boxes of clothing and other nec essaries, which are sent at long inter vals, to relieve the wants of missionary families. The ladies generally take pleasure in the preparation of the con tents of the-e boxes. Some sewing-societies are thus kept bus3 all winter. Formerly it was the practice to send clothing at random, trusting to luck for the accuracy with which it might Hap pen to fit the people for whose benefit it was sent. The ludicrous misfits some times made the " missionary " box more ridiculous than acceptable. In latter 3ears it has become eustomaiy for the senders of boxes to write to the mission aries for whom thev are intended and secure information :is to sizes and shapes. 1 The ladies of a wealthy church near I sent a list, and the ladies were startled toiind, among other needs, the mention 1 of a new wooden leg for his wife. She I had been wearing an old one for about j Philadelphia recently wrote to a North-1 -Mi-ires : for it must be tinders western missionary to say that they tn,s estate w:is not only a cattle wouhl like him to 'specify any article's mt -"! :l Sri"M farm. .1. A. which his family specially needed. He 7r- in Hurler's for Xoccml.r. " "-" "I 1 fit if they had tlie leg made here, thev sent the lath the mone3, with sufficient 4 ;iaara to .Fy her expenses from .- -- t ner nome to L hieigo, where she can be accurately fitted. This lady, who is. tin. niti.r.f ;-i.:i.i- i.- ..n i,n. " . "' " "," -"""-" "" ; The most welcome breakfast bell is n. punctual wife. a dozen years, ami it nail become shaky the rollers it parts with its juice, and :is from long service. The joints squeaked seen crushed and apparently- dry after and the springs rattled so that hergoing the operation it is called bagasse." The into church disturbed the solemnity of juice is conveyed to a series of kettles, the place. At first the ladies thought where in due 'time, after being boiled, it that they could not engage in the wood- is crystallized into sugar. A conspicuous en leg business. But on thinkingit over, object, when viewed from a riversteam two or three of them put their heads to- , er, is the huge chimney, apparently gether and resolved to raise a special more than 100 feet high', that stand's subscription. In a single day the3-raised near every sugar-house. The chimnev $150. Fearful of blundering into amis-' is used to burn the bagasse in. Some JERSEY LILY-WELSH ROSE. IVnllrlnrrp of llirTnn lU-lcnlnc I-inlm llrntitlra. (From ih.Vw York HenULJ Mrs. I-ingtry is the daughter of the Dean of Jersey, an island which U fa mous for pretty people, although it hail not before attained the distinction of funii-hing London with the Identity of ficially accepted m such. Her isirly life was pas-ed entirely in theL-le of her birth, and there seemed no reason why she should ever have left it, until one dav an adventurous widower, who had i already taken one wife from .Jersey, , caU,. thither again and carried off Miss ! i ,, ii,,.,,,,, .,,, uu i.-oml. Th-.v rami' to Indon without exciting any great cnihu.Ma.MU or oecoiiung Known 10111:013 memlens of soriety until 1877; then through a concurrence of fortuitous cir cumstances Mrs. I.angtry was seen, ad mired, and invented as a lieautv I3- cer tain amateurs, who immediat'-fy sound ed her prai.es throughout the town. When the town came to look at her it found she was indeed lcautiful She jMvc-ed wonderful eyes of a limpid, traii-parcnt blue, which always- wore a winning expre ion. She was ob-i-rved lo be extremely modest in her dre , very quiet and unassuming in her man ner, and discreet in all her action-. Jealous wa- disarmed, admiration in-crca-ed, and Mrs. Iingtrj became one of tho-e sights of the town which the "Spring Captain " yearn- U m:c and for which country couins make long pilgrimages by railway. ' It seems but yc-tcnt-iy," sin's a recent number of i'unitij Fnir, " when as a bride she ap peared in the park and set ten thousand tongues a-wagging. Since then she ha- . 1 f !.. ... . .. -.... dayed a foremost part m the battle of ife and this bravely and well. Vou are spellbound 113 her ineffable sweetness before 3ou have exchanged hardly a dozen words with her. Kxeiy well bred woman i, of course, free from gnu, but this one is gifted with a delieiou- man ner, simple and sympathetic as that wherewith mentally we endow Mignon, and she talks at once so prettily and so mu-icaUy that 3011 are insensibly im pressed with the idea of her absolute sincerit3. The bright, ringing treble, the light, sprightly step, the happ3 hal cyon view of life, characteristic of girl hood, are still hers. Above all, she is kindness itself incarnate. At Glasgow, where that goes without the saving she was the iwnosure, she astonished the can 113' Scotch by her generous im partiality. The plain and 'tiiiattmcthc partnerelaiincil her hand in the ball room, and he was not refused, though Adonis stood at her elbow awaiting his chance. Lilly-like in every fiber, she has pre-erveif an exalted reputation for womaiih virtue, and this although -he has been Mattered and followed, care ed and made much of, more than any liv ing woman. She has remained, how ever, the same, true to the gentle em blem forever hers, the .Jersey Lilv!" Lady Virginia Sanders i- entitled to the gratitude of London .society for in troducing to it her niece, Miss Fitz patrick, who -ub-equetith married Mr. m 1 1 j la". I S .1 ornwanis west 01 j-uiiiiu t asue. Kulhiii Castle is somewhere in Wales, and therefore evidenth not a fitting abiding place for a bcaut who-e iy it is to be e eiywhere in London. To Igni tion accordingly Mrs. Cornwalli- We-t went, and .-he was greeted 1)3 an admira tion almost suilicient to console her for the most prolonged ab-ence from her Welsh castle. Her face is of that charming and peculiar style of beauty that has always moved mankind more than the most regular featuies. She has a veiy rich complexion, on which an occasional freckle stamps a certificate of fineness, and therel adds to the charm of the general effect. A splendid head of rippling hair, which used to be veiy long until she cut it into bluish curls, clusters fraincwisc about her face, producing an effect which 111:1113 London beauties have -ought to imitate, but which none hasapproached. She is impulsive, original, flaring, and savs upon occasion the .-plight lie-t things, and to her it was given, -ome little time, to throw the whole of a I loyal ball into dismay by an untoward faint ing fit, which was at once elevated to the rank of a social event. She die e generally in a careless and sometime-) in startling fashion. She is small in stature, of an admirable form, and rides, with a certain dash, both to hounds ami in Rotten Kow. Introduction to a Cuttle Ranch. Now the valhy lay behind us, and the foot-hills began to sluit out the range; but Pike's Peak, CU miles off. loomed up as grandly ns ever. Eight miles more were traversed, ami then we turned into a great farm-yard, or corral, and stop ped at a rustic stile. In a few moments I'nele Pete Dotson came up the path from the house, and gave us a cordial greeting. About a quarter of a. century ago this gnvy-bearded veteran, then a hale and vigorous West Virginian, started to drive cattle to California, stopped at Salt Lake, became the United States Marshal for the Territoiy, and was there when Brighain Young was in his glory, and Albert Sidney Johnston wintered the snow. "He left with the troops in 1839," said Mrs. Dotson (a brave, patient wom an, who has shared his fortunes, good anil bad, and crossed the plains at least once by herself), " and came to Denver with a train in 1SG1. Next year we came to the iig liiompsou; then we went to Greenhorn, anil fanned; then we kept a hotel in Pueblo. In 1S04 we were 4 washed out' b3 the Fountain Fontaine qui bouille. A 1103- rode down on a horse without saddle or bridle, only a rope in his mouth, and gave me fifteen minutes' warning. I was sick in bed, but I took the children and ran. Then wo went to the Mudih and lived, and the Indians used to come and visit us; but we were washed out there, too. And, in 1865, we took in this place." Uncle Pete had evidenth' made good use of his knowledge and experience in the choice of his ranch. His domain embraced 9,(XX) acres, 5,000 of which were amble land. The ground sloped gradually from the foot of the range, and the whole of his possessions were under his eve. In a large barn-vard were great granaries and a fine stone stable, which would not be amiss in any city in the United States; and at varying distances on the gentle slope could be s?eon tno Mt"e cabins of the tenants, who "'tivatetl parts of the land "on tood that ranch, Hayes, Hagassc for Paper. s the siiirar-eane is na-seil between - -- s .- x'ears ago I xisited a plantation and said to the proprietor thereof: "Win do 3011 not use the bagasse for paper material, material, His reply mstcati ot burning it up?" was: "I do not know that it could be ,.c.iwm..i - ;nn .u.u..i useo ior lnasui" paj)er. au the plant ers burn the bagasse, and I do as mv ----.. ... r..,,M. wlu loui. father did. I don't know ahout making paper." " I collected some of the bagasse and sent it to a paper manufacturer in St. louis who made paper of it, and wrote to me a letter stating that the bagasse wan an excellent material for u- in pajwr-making, a it hail a gixxl pulp, and a fine and -trotigfilr. I published the result of mv ob-enntion-. hoping ; iree fnmi many of lb wnlvli-. -.-that planter, of" Imii.ian.i would take 1 mon to other c-mntn-s. I ,---, iU illliil.- l kilt' 1IIII.JI IIS..WMI, .,41. , !- .-tead of burning lhc rWu-e can lmle it up and .nd it lo market for paper -lock. Nothing ever came of the suggestion, far a- f know. Lat week I took up a Southern pajx'r and read an article, wherein the writer. .1 a... .., .. .... .. !... :. ?....... ... ..ml m. J who evidently thought he had made a ; di-cmery. declared the value of bairas-e a- an article of commerce, and bv .1 careful estimate showed that the plant- ersfif thi-State could iN - nefitthem - elve - to the extent of million- of dollar an - minllv bv M.Jlin- the w.n.st. r.tne for tia- per -lock. Hut it L- hard to tench old dig new trick-.- Ilaton llvujc lxtU'rto llrwlhjn(S. V.) Kagk. -..--.. - -" - - - -- -- 1 -- The Pizen-t'Iean " Woruau. CJcanlines, i an excellent acquire- nient. It i- so great an acquirement that one does not wonder that the sen- tence " Cleanline-s i- nct to Godli ne " was popularly -npo-ed. for an indefinite period, to In. a quotation from lhc Itible. Clcanline is the chief dis tinction between the tramp and main millionaire-', albeit there have been many millionaire- who could not claim even tin- distinction over the tramp. Kut the -eutence, " Clcanline i next to Godline-s," can not he found in the Itible, nexerthele . Vou can not haw too much Gixlliness, too much temper ance, tio much discretion, Pm much wisdom, but 3011 can haw- too much neatne-s. Then- haw been overneat men. We have met one or two in our time. They always get up in the night to eat, and are enemies of sleep as they are of dirt. Hut they are not -o numer ous nor -o pe-tiferous as the overneat woman. Who ha- not met the overneat wom- an? We do not need to de-cribc her. Hut we will. Kevenge is sweet. She make- her hit-band cxclrange his boots for slipper- on the door -tep. No mat ter how low the thermometer or barom eter, the poor fellow lllll-t fluff hi limits in the porch. Is he wet? He must st:iy on the stoop till he has done drip ping. Consumption? What is that compared to a soiled carpet? The small boy, what a life he leads with -iich a mother! Followed about by a flu-t nan and brii-h and a -folding oiee (the iivperneat woiiiau i- alwju- cro) all of criildhood's fl:i3s, be early run- to a club-room or a beer-saloon", where he can -ce a little rubbi-li and find the lux ury of flirt. We once knew a l.uly of this character who, when lightning providentially struck her house and Killed a servant, swept up the evidenc ing flirt the -hock had di-Iodgcd, before the Coroner could be called. These " pizen-t-lean " women alway hate to have company. " Gue-t- are so iliitv, 3011 know." The parlor is kept dark and unused fi did 3 ear to year. The carpets would fade and du-t 'would ac crue. We. once knew a woman who re fused to open her parlor for the wedding of her daughter. "The street is too ilu-ty," she -aid. She is diist now. Thin opened the parlor for the funeral, and one almost wonder- that -he did not turn owr in her collin. The overneat woman cleans hou-e twice a 3 ear. Twice a year the uncom fortable husband and children are made doubly uncomfortable. The weakness of the lle.-h alone deters her from hoiisc eleaning even 1110011. The overneat woman delights to make people uncom fortable. She is thin, dyspeptic, ha-norve-, i- troubled with dirt on the brain. Dirt on the brain 1- wiy wearing to the constitution, and the Iryperncat woman ncarlv alwju.s dies voiiiig. If -he did not all her householil would. Her hus band always has another chance. This is :i dispcii-ation of Providence. We write with some feeling on this subject, although, thank God, we haw only seen the overneat woman afar off. Hut we have seen the lives of good men embit tered, we have seen boys driven to ruin, and girls einhtied with such a hatred of cleanliness that thev have become wry slattern-, by overneat wiws and mothers. Ah, mother, do you not mind a clut tered lloor, a little gravel or -and on the carpet, a linger mark 011 wall-paper or mirror. The thiy may come when a lit tle dirt spread by baby feet or laid on by busy baby lingers would be the glad dest sight in the world. We :inilen-il -:ul round tlie room, No toy of her- to -lie'left not one .iMitlie otiruliifini IifliimL Hut look' then- is a inlty trace. Faint, luiileiliicd :mil liroken, Ol linger-on the niinor'- face A ileal tlioiih simple token. Ah, friends, how clean -uch dirt i! Triumphs of (he Newspaper. Kvery thing considered, the newspa per is the best and most available of li braries. The one act of cheapness is so strongly in its favor as to overbalance the iiiajorit3 of arguments that can be advanced upon the opposite side. It is within the reach of ever one, no matter how poor, and finds an entrance where books (as a rule) never can; it comes weekly, and is read and loaned until ac tually worn out; can be caught up ifone has but a moment of time, some knowl edge can be gained, and laid down again without detriment to the sense. A sin gle brief item frequently gives what pages of book-bound matter would have to be waded through to learn: for the newspaper 1 the epitome of the entire worm. In the briefest possible space all that is necessan to the correct under standing of the subject is given to such perfection has the art of condensation been brought. The newspaper, with the present facil ities for almost instantly learning what is transpiring in every jMirtion of the habitable globe, is the-'reflection of the hour equally as much as of past ages. Hy it the North and the South, the Ka-t and the West, are brought together. We know of the crashing of the ice and the curling heat of the sun: we are with the flaring explonst seeking for the North Pole: travel through the jungles of Africa: have a bird's-eye view of great battles; sail over every sea; dive with the whale to its fabulous depths: are present in the parliament of nations; listen to the last words of an expiring Pope, and take b3' the hand his suc cessor. A wonderful, concise, most skillfully painted panorama of the affairs of the world is the newspaper: a map of its busy life: a faithful reproduction of all its lights and shadow: :ind at the most nominal co-t: at themere-t ba; itelle to books even in these flays of exceptional cheapness. Week after week the paper comes filled with all that is rare, new, interesting and instructive. It is a his tory of nations in fifty-two volumes; an ever-continued ene3clopa-dia of trade, science, biography, agriculture and the arts ; is the " boiling down " of all books in so minute a form that the mind can grasp at a single glance, and be saved the wading "through ponderous volumes of uninteresting detail to the great saving of time. It is, in fact, the grandest of all circulating libraries, at only a penm fee: the throwing open to thepublie of all the costly and exclusive archives of the world. The newspaper of to-dav is a perfect omnium gatherum. Nothing escapes its notice. Every event of importance is instantly photographed upon its pages. The whispers breathed in every clime are caught and fixed. It is a marvel of intelligence; is the stereo type of every ruind. " We look back in wonder at the days when it was not,aml human intelligence shudders to think of the barbarism and ignorance and sujer stition that would follow the blotting out of this the sun of the solar system. Exchange. TarkUh llamtnam. The Turk are gemr-illy WaHhy amI rout, rheunj.itiMH. nMrniu jum I- fection of the ler ami JlhIu- miI f the rutaweott wrface are juh tmm num. CozvunijKxn i ks- know-, and i men more dreaded th Um plaj-v. and i coii'iderrd inf'tiu lJuU all I clothing wini bv the dcviw-4 k hnr-tj A-ide from the mh nnls:. of ike rli- mate, the ciaanlm. of IJmj p-pi. . through the mtitrr-il cmpJuyioetU of j Turkish Iwthiwg. i jm -iwail hu-l.r m - - curing immunity frm dl.-.-. TW : hammarn- in Cott-laatittoplf, w H j throughout the etiitMrr. fire mt 1 - . . . . dawn. and. a.- the habit of exriy rWaj; prevail-, they are thnwged by U who seek their inigiratig tik". The balh before breakfast - fi-and U be the uio-t Mihttary -utd rength-ni- II L-. in fact, the bV-t ibW rtiirn- j Uon for the duties) of the dn. Vwirr arduous, llv thi- iik-him cliUin4sv, comfort am! contentment are Mi-wrvd. and the duration of life grently hanced. The small iit-t tdacca th- luxurious necessity within the mu-fc every citien. Mohammed mnde nbhitioti a part of religion; hi- follower-, therefor-?, feel u iiicumlN-iit umhi them to eixkov bathm establishment- for the giswl of the pub lic. A- thoe institution- are chn.rtt- ble, no li.xt'fl price L- ileiiiAiubil ; ami it u- lett to the option ot the intllter to con tribute what he choo-e- to the current epeii-c-. Although the-e baths- -4-em to haw existeil from time imncm'rial in the Ka-t, their introduction int thi country mark- little more than a -ingle decatle. The finest baths of the Orient, though more co-th. are h c(fe the thiol tin best American structure. There i much relating to the admtui-lnitioii an well a- the coii-tnictioii of balh- which the Orient might wi-cly learn of the Oc cident. Cleanliness ami health are the pri mary object- -ought in all bathing, and those who have submitted to immc r-iou, fumigation, .steaming, or aiMinitio:i haw only to employ Turkish bath- to find not only that they au but he more agreeably, more comfortably, more ef fectivcly, more luxuriously, but that hitherto they were not clean; that thev belonged to "the great uuwa-heil." Thi.- recalls with new force what wa said of Turkish bathing 1 that di.tin-gui-hed American, F.dwiu Forrest, who declared, with almo-l tiagie empha-i-, " The man who ha not taken a Turk ish bath ha- nevei risen to the moral dignity of being per-oii.dly clean." The greatest offender- agaiu-t eiean linc and intelligence are those who pretend to give Turkish bath- in a -ort of -entiy box, -omctiinc- excluding and sometimes including the head. Only those without brain-can e-eupe ceiebral congestion. It 111:13 be enunciated that an atmo-phere unfit for the head i- oiitit for the body. The skin, a- well a- the lung-, ha- it- part to perform in the function of elimination a- well a- respi ration; and in these boe- the effete element-cwdved from the surface are re tained in contact with tin- body, and as thev can not c-eape they are reabsorbed, rendering benefit as impossible (., in jury i- incitablc. To call thi-Turki-h bathing i- no le-s a libel upon thcTuik than a rcllcction upon the good -en-e of tho-e whose indiscretion permits them to be deceived and injured. -Sanitarian. The Aincrican Career of the Sparrow. The first attempt, as far a- is known, to introduce the common hou-e parrow of Kurope tffur country wa- made by a gentleman named De-blois, in 1'ort laiul, Maine, during the autumn of ls,V; he brought over a few birds from the Continent, and lilierated them in a large garden which wa- -ituated within the ceiitral part of the city. They remained there sheltered and secure under the caw-of a neighboring church through out the winter, and in the following spring -ettled down happily enough to the labor of nc-t-building and rearing their young. Two years later the first pair of these finches were set at liberty near .Madison Square, New York City: the importation was steadily ii-pcalc'd. the bint- being rclea-ed in the Central Park and at Jersey City. Thev were first introduced to ho-ton in lMls b the city government, and to Philadelphia Wy the municipal authorities in iMi'J, and from these small beginnings the hou-e-sparrow has been spread all over this Northern country wherever we haw-a city east of the Kocky Mountain-, and the fluttering Hocks of the robu-t, noi-v little foreigner enliven the streets there of in eveiy direction. Their number are nearly countless. The object at firt for the introduction of the house-sparrow does not seem to have been one of a practical -uggc-tion, hut rather one in the nature of senti ment. Since, however, the attention of the citizens was called to the great nui sance of the exi-tenee of canker and inea-ure worms in the shade tree-of the old cities of the Union, the fact that the house-sparrow would remain with Us all winter, and feed as ener getically tinon the worms as any of our own birds which always, without exception, left for warmer climes even season the thought of practical appli cation took life in encouraging the in troduction of the Kngli-h sparrow as n means of relief more certain than that afforded 1)3 airy or all of our indigenous finches. As soon as this became gener ally understood, the little John Hull was distributed with great indu-tiy all over the country for this purpose; but as ure as it became numerous in any town or city, a spirited oppo-ition sprang up to 11, an'i exists 10-0:13- wiiii more or ie-s vitality in every section where the bird is fairly settled. Whole books have been written pro and con, and naturali-t- haw, waged unrelenting war upon one an other, as thc3" differed in e-timating the value and the services of Vgrgxla tlo mcttiat: but in the judgment of the writer, the entire practical bearing of the controversy has not been fully pre sented b3 either the friends or the foes of the little finch, for it must seem clear enough to those who will follow the line ... ... ... of argument in this article that while the house-sparrow is eminently tit and wonderfully well constituted for life in Northern cities, 3-et it is a sad rowdy and nuisance in the country: while in the former ease it renders admirable service in destroying insect jvsts that disfigure the .-hadv "avenues of city for estry, 3et in the latter field it can not compete with our native birds in ento mological service to man, and having given pKxl reason for dislike on the part of the growers of fruit, tiny are doubly incensed because the law will not allow them to shoot, trap, or de stroy the enemy. Prof. JI. If. EUMt, in fiarjtcr's for XoccmUr. m Tapk-woums in- Kos. Various in stances have leen recorded of the dis covery in hens' eg-gs of minute -peci-mensof the ditoma ovalum. They ap pear like a small speck, the size of a millet seed or a pin head. It is be lieved by helminthologi-ts that the-e will develop into one of the varieties of tape-worm, and it is wi-e, therefore, to take KZ-i hard boiled or otherwise well eookciir A writer in one of the late numbers of Xaturc cite-" several in stances where these parasitic bodie have been found. A Child 10 3-ears old was recently ar rested in Paris for steaiing cat.-. He went around cat-hunting after durk, and his father employtl the 'day following in disponing of the" proceeds to keepers of eating-houses. What they did with them has riot been revealetL r.nn 1 mi i.ikhk. CoK I Uf n-atsk -. H-m-i-V Fr.rT C a jmrii U I Un K-r' m. Kd g?t-nJly ,w in ttW 44-- hi TUy an n4 1t tiiftfWr A : ihr Taptiw r r-t " tli--V t f tK ltr at tlM Imn-t MtfK- ot hrnt. if iwUrue-t. k! 4--W "Mm - Umr h-- WVru tutlta. ifc h.r u i Ulnl to favr lb -. hj !? rnt4: iW Jm-1 fnrim lb tmkI sowr --. -.rthr injUwtMAt'An Mid 4tftnUii my .. nl4-N-4 J lb e-rn.- f MMtfr .-Kj-t be W-ot. w br Uh k-ur- Un ik m r iltaMry imu-i. r-rnc! mv K- obCntte-i hj jtro-H-r tt4troiin t ibm fcrxi!. Strk a brr koaW W s)m4 rcirfrrT n tkr-sr .n- Jir wt-.k, ib 4VnMl p-atw-mrvfolh rl down, btrt w-fcfcmut rv itttc th- bbnmA . atw) be bv bM b-nlRi-l u n. tK4 U bm,r m Un tt'-W hoe! r 'Am, SKtummt -- - Mr mal. Wmi.. Tt Tk.ssi-!.a:vt" J u ib b-aw-n hr prkcmd lbit funrtfc-tfc. tats wtrttt- wtta tiMwetM jnen. -ei-- mi4 r --o. l'c itWAM v. -t- petr kM- iir lf la miJ-Spteib-r , binr lraspimi tW ihrti thiin U v mt until mluvr t n- ; thr r-u hve - tmtt k th- irww um U --eM- e-tnbli-h-l in ir --U "ITk li fidoiiwg of tk- lnvs i pouf p4lTW (if tk tree i-in keltk) titnl tkVy rn W of -erne ti th- ir mo ktM-N 'Vb have l-o-iniie tkKgl with minrrtil nl ter; tbe leaf -iJtlV-. tb.Kigk rtill buy ing, xrr rexllv -f-ren-il fnMt Ike 4rm Tin- bwl- for nuotker rur an ttivlrHl. hihI lb -iH-r ire--' o i-irvuttisiAM-ed uie renoeil, the t'WT i their t Iwuh-- of lou iue the winter uiu-a4l--I mmI f making igrHi- gnwtk the f-ulnj--pnng Durutg kng. fairnlk- - -.in.-. -n a.- liu prum'Mi wan ie-ii in thi- jwrt of tin- ttHintry, ittany Vtnln of lr-e- ae prone to HWike a bUe fll growth. Thi- ha- lillle litue to niAlme. nl genendly jH-ri-H- befrr -prinj Hetter remove wU lr" Itefoi tke lue growth alnrts. in which ra lk toiH.-M cv is effecUwilly t'be;t;iKl.- HttnU SW furkvr. I'lt.witn: Fiki TIm -en-ou for prai rie fire-i- fa-t appnuwhimr, when we may 1 pecl to haw- repented the nmtiot! tale of destruction of projwrty m ac count of iu-iiflirietit tire-j-nard-, r nom at all. for protection. Now ie the tiliM to take iiifu,-uu- to keep nt n dt-l.-inve the destroying element, bv pkiwing about stack- ami biiildiue;- nn.1 remo ing all dead gntj in the iieighUrli-Ml, either b mowing ami hmilitg off, or back-tiring in a e.ilm a , r by the ap plication ot all thee means, until there 1- nothing ct.inlHi-tible within .'t"ard or more of tlie -tack-, dwellings and barn-. Kwry pmirie farmer who neglect- the-e pre aniioiis will he in con stant jropunh of lo-ing hi- oiojMTty by titeoiiaiii ttittih da, until the gra begins to grow next -pnng. A lire HMy come -weeping owr the prairie- at 11113 hour of the night or flay, dev miring eer thing in it- traek. No human ef-foit- will -ullii e to -lay lhc course of the wild llame- if pro-ier niejL-uni lme not been taken in mhance to reipoe all fuel from it-path a, a piooer dttnne fiom farm projiern, orchard- ami grove- of tree-. A small amount of la bor in -ea-on may -me a large amount of propem- in future. - Kati.m Fanner. I.osss iituM Ox Mtrr.r.i'i.xf;. I.tpftr aud book- treating of poultry mention the -milieu death ot fowl- from owr feeiling, and also that le-s ggs are ob tained troin the same cau-n; yet, per haps, no one thing in the whole range of the poultry hu-ine i- -o little cin--idered. A ln-u flying f apoplexy i- a surprise, all the more becau-e -he i- fm ami ha.- been exceptionally healthy ; though, it i-acknowledged, there were not -o many egg- a- weie expected from the breed and the healthv condition of the fowl. The cause of the loss of the hen and the ilecrease of egg- is owing wholly to injudicious feeding. Too much corn and other rich food are gi eii, particularly the corn, Imu more par ticularly 111 -uminer, when it 1- too heat ing a- well a- too rich a- a -oh feed. It should form but a small proportion of the feed in warm weather, to be in creased in winter, but never the -ole feed and fed to the full extent. This difference in the different -ean- i- im portant, as in winter corn can be made a real help toward- -ecuring warmth, a thing -o much needed at thi- -en-ou. I have known large, healtlry hens, of the Hrahma and Black Spanish breeds, lay well during the entire winter confined in an ordinary barn and given a liberal feed composed mostly of corn. I have known quite a number of such casfM. The fowl- were expo-ed to the low tem perature of the eason, but not to draught- of cold air. They were large and vigorous, and capable of generating warmth, which the corn enabled them to do increasingly, keeping upnl-o the condition of tlie luril-. J he -,-tme diet in summer I have known to pro duce fatal re-nlt-. Hetter err in giving scant feed in -iimmer. There may In-le-s egg-, but there are Ies- al-oin over feeding, a- a fat hen t- notorion-Iy an indifferent layer; be-ide-, there 1-. in the la-t ease, the lo of the fowl, in cluding the value of the food -pent uimui it to secure its high condition. To fos. many hens in thi- way, therefore, i- a -even- lo-.-. And tae- arc con.-tantly and frequently occurring, and generally through ignorance the cau-f-i-unknown. Ot cour-e. as -oon as the iau-e 1-un- dertofl, it i- removed, a it le--en- the expen-e and increa-cs the number of egg-, -aving at the -aine time a good fowl. reed, therefore, regularh a. much as is required, avoiding the two extreme- of overfeeding and starving; supplementing grain with animal and vegetable material, avoiding pepper and other condiments in -uuiuier. when they are hurtful. I.e en or omit corn en tirelv, and increase the quantity of wg-ct-iblcs in warm weather. A coling diet should then 1h aimed at. Variety. alo, is de-irable. Huckwhent and wheat screening- make good -olid food for summer, but a greater variety mn3 lie indulged in: it i what a fowl requirc from immemorial habit. - Country Gen tleman. m Concerning the Memory. The Molicnl I'rcx and Cirmlnr givc- -'nii' entertaining stati-ties of memory, 1 fnrmi XI I )et:ilinnv 'I'hi infirr r-i I ", ,. , -. -.-. 01 mankind, .-uen :ls neime. the. Chines-. etc., have more memory titan those of a higher tve of civilization I'rimitive races which were uruuquain:-d with the art of writing had a wonderful memory, and were for age- in the haini of handing down from one generation to another hymns as voluminous a- the Hible. I'rompter- and profe-sors of declamation khovr that women have more memory than men. French women will learn a foreign Iangaag quicker tlian their husband?. Youths have more memory than adults. It U well devel oped in children, attain- its maximum abouithe fourteenth or fifteenth vsar. and then decreases. Feeble indiviilnals of a lymphatic temiierament have mora mem-; ory than the -trong. students wh. obtain J me prize ior memory anu recitation 1 chieliT iX'Iong to the lonner cla.-.s. I'a, ri-ian -tn-Ien.- have al-o Ies miniiirr ! memorv .1 . X. . . t ., . X t- - - t in-iD uui-..IjoTO,e uumum 1 province-. 1 .uk cizxc .ormiuc anu ouier -enroi- : the pupils wtio nave lae tes. memory 1 . .... ... 1 are itoi ine nws iniejugeni. j ne mem- orr is more developei 1 amng the peas-, antry than among eitizen.s. and among J titc M.-sj;v- man among uisr uwy. 1 ne memory remains intact in ill-ea-e- of the left side of the brain, and is much xS.-r in Ik-ww ( tk rffc. - whrh rt nrv b nfrTl l" ti f1-jk W ,, MMt'tk f fcfc term fc tWWl Trim a rhy- J- f rw H tkT.i-tJ -iw--4- 4 4mtbm 4,.n tM ikAa lkjH4 - " Wfr , wl- . .J .... W'ri. 4 Vrr-f UM-Mv. l-HtMk W m .- p-w ' '- --- -' - -' -- , . .- . r -. Aunt, rwwr, da-- tlMUi Mi tk -. I Ik- km l tM"-r. -Im cokl rlMHA Im nartM) SjirJ b- lit" Mrrstj-tk. lt ttm rfMr---4 tk-4 tsMMTlk k fiMd u W f -M-fWMXMl t-iM-Mtwti MMfttlr-aW-kk MdA4 H tlTM "' MV rU c-t-piMtM la tmnUtm wmrrr. mU-kU . lluMwr mMJm t"W Ut I 4M) luMjiiM. t HM t-V-tTT MM. Mr y - kMrW Mft ch if (- Twm, -r . ibmmmm 1A ;W Imm' wpt. tkr mm y " mvumI-mI Xbtu Uam -i. Um Cm M-ttMU4 Kid- A MM rkaMM ( tW Hmuctk of kw RtMfC. It 1 imI1 lkl k n-ukldrti: kte iwilMjrat tk j-wrlet ,s at m futrfcr W mH- 0 Hr wmm, t tkr ua- f la an Klr m. CupUiM iaatailMH n--f la lk Mli-nt-MnM-4 Tvgira lit- ft m kii-kt. j-4-rFwetly frwr UJMC-l. ! -- ! f iM(Mmiilnr HfwMmHk rr -htM U kaawn toiaf--jur kMt-wtaMr w mm4 frtr a-Ukl m rum- HtMtntMt ktr-na, m-4I -1 ilW k bk wiMMja. k iMTAfiiWr WMt4tni Up hm "f ia an mm wwum-w. oK.. b i--rr.l-l k k aatltr-M a U-nae n rlwrM-4 lU II-m KaAV-a, mcing n rau-rat-M iu im mmrm lk-M naw. bMieki H MtMr--M- aal t. tMr efanl It m-4 lialiMirly Mml kntmaeiv .Uia ky la .Watr -- jnu. llM-t www U.IMIl ISM-rrtral UM IB irture ! hem-; Be-l vr, mxvrt aarr iu namk- inlifrue Tk KlHrs. lmrttcuUrlv Ikf ulu. t4- ikM, If i.r br k-vU spijiM," u tfc ciU-l 1 oMovnM. or w mm t iv iMpvtaa in ikeir --ullefnl-, fell imcWi lkir kju-pi. hi- fitt wMtkl W wors tka nay taal UmI pree.'-b-fl klltt, I-Mtl h kae tkr wire men d iktrlr wur4 la mmm f lk nxkl thru ts A pbf.-- im lW upM-iMiair-i, the Cni-tMin' JutV -wtM-d U h M-rU-l hint. 1 1 Rl kcW tsutatwHwl JU into an Hin)Mk in a -fttlry nHMwa ihi lid- of bill- ouiiiHM in ta4 tMitnirr Hi inen were aittM( nil eiUw-r UU1 ur HoinlsL hi- UiM-se -kl ittn WMtk-f hiiM. wiber bn.L.n. jlM1 pk-tol e-Mlv He apparently wm-.hI tk-fMMtT BMrrT Dfnftan knew that mail M-v w-MiUl h- accorded kim. hihI a, tut. Xulu kei. fameil tor their reMj-lh Md ItmWWV, itilvMnceil lo rupture kttn mJiw. k -wka'tl ..im blernlly in e.k kMMI, m xltk kk enrm-His -irt-n-ftk dMtikHl by Ut 4- luir .. lki iu..iihiil Wr,Mi-4l ilu4- KrmU petlMT with a ik--lly -rnk Oa t Uf Hottnded iwen wfienv rU xud ikiUtl H.I- likt the S4HIMfl of bfktM UttttW ( ne cltH'f hii kilk'd Mlriicbt. ami tkr -... --. ...- .. .... -, --.---."- -..-.. -w-- other " uiaiHHtl th.u k- wwst bat m im Si or two The rc- of lb- hual aW w terixr, now lHoiitghly cmhHtsil lk.-il he wa t4 a Mum, Ih1 a dr . TU Mirvivor and life tb'M.1 kiefn Were -Itorlly idler brm-ht in by tvinfref IIH'llts of tlw l1ilMeit. loMMI H baldly ever again .pj-wisl during Ik mntimienee of the war X ("cuius ul llKtiros. Mr. Ioiiard Cnrdnerof Sth Wry. looiitli.a uiis-hatiie, w Imi n-ner IomI hmhi tliHii onhttary m Jen. ling. tb'Voteti tk ino-t of ln lime U iistr'OoruM .U eik--hitious, by mrth4d- with h he Urn tAU-chi hiio-elf, and has alli.-w tsl ik- Attention of the s-ieiitils ut "nmhrtd)end WmmIi ingtoti by the a curacy of hi- cijmijmHj-ti'Hi-, in simc ea-e havinr Hrintei ui and istrtefl ihe emu- in lkie f ' 1 1 11.. . . 1 hi.t year in computing th hmiU of i- ibilttv of th tU WH IHTIH imn-i- - MR tin 'rflt Hl!fi I I-lm filkLM f ti piriiitilii t and of the t run-it at III pbwe on Ikr globe, and the iiu's aHitnde ami xf tmith at the beginning and nt tin end Tin' work tilled a elo-ely bowl Wk of large pajM-r ami over !" pttfTe-', whirh wa- Ixiunil and pnventfMl a a riiriottfly to the publfe libntrv of 1 UiMjT Uaih. o'f which town Mr. t'andier wit- n itaiiw. The libcirv was luiriie! lt yMr, nwd tin Iniok shared the -june fnie, Imm, al though Mr. Oardtier hail no b-r r-e-oid of hi- work, he determined to r place thi- volume, Mtid ha tirnin f-ni-pletif I the fompulr.tioH, and bad U -ub--Uwitiullv ImiuihI bv 'r"m of Ho(ju -. pv -TPt -r-r TT t "TttiP-'-W P-Jl It i- iitMlerlod thai the M f ' fT.n- l r... ..uu.ul .. th" observatory at r-unbrtdge are tU Hpiitn of securing it for the lilrnryt nt only for it value :u it ttmlbeiiiMtieiil work, IhiI h a curWrti- jH-iif-n f work done 13 a meeliatik who never enjoyed special culture. Mr. ('anltp-t-ha- fifferffl to furni-h for the library nt Weymouth a drawing of th t-omin transit of Venn. 1 .--. with tin Uimh of it.- Itegimiitig and eud In that town. Western Tlllr-. The trnveler who jnirners wutttward in our farore-I UihI sb-iikl mxkt np kU ' iinmi ut accept wit nit d'-iHiir ck military or judicial rank and tkin ha mnj be fvinfi-rreil ujon him He may be fjuite -lire, too, thot whin hi brtrrtrih once bien vUled wi-Mt of tha Vli-1 by pn.per anlhority. It will chac to Mm a- hMg xfl Im n-niain- in that rgiHi. I lion I haif liSce," once ri-nftrffl a Scoti-h felkiw-traveUr of the writer, to a friendly group at Denver. ibt; p-o- itvHHm iHU'Kwar-r-i wtikrh I rw-HTit. I'it of Chicago I was ('oiori'd; Mt Chi cago I wa- Major; at Omaha a man calleil im Captain and offeril me din ner for thir-r-lyfiv ctL!" One of tlie group, aftor n enrvfui Mtr vey of the fiu- ami figure Ix-forv kha, the kimlly y.-i keun expre Um. and Utt iron-gray w ht-ker-. repKNl . Vim niu't Colonel wiith a cent. 1 allow that Jedgf'" Ami -deilge" h wl from that tim lorth. .ofKxry cxH.il bint any UmW (4se. Xrw 1 y mmle aeounintancoi. kia.1. lord-, i-tagu-ilriver-. eondneWjr. a t-J this title, until his cmfniiM.n" l--;a U f.el .1-if ;hiy hflil knwn Wrn all ki life in that cajKM-ity. - 7r4' r AV vernier. Tmk Chiengo TrUnnw Iia- jail in aui wi lonowmg ri-xortuatH-r mk-s m orthoirraohv : Oroit u f-. lM.n... ratah-g, -ynagig, anil other wont- ?-ml'- :.... t . i" i . ..... "-- - k. k&rf,LwiMfc- v2nv mmmmw mmmf bl balk ii HM-ilMr fMarttM thMt tmm- H- Wti k mm kk-k rr- ..i; i. -r-u- -win -gi-gne. - int'.. , ... ' L.j.L.1 ih.. uhxtiU,. ,.. ; ..-. . ing 11 program. iioit the -e-simI in in dilemma (dile-ua). Omit the sup-jrllu-o te in rigaret, clique, parpiet, i-. 'Mlet and all stutibir wunh ..U .. . . ' ilefinit in ail it forms wkinHit th final e. thlLs i!,.tirii It- rw. ;.,l.:t I - bh... omi: the tmal 1; in hypocrk, , favorit. al-.. 1tpifHr)x -n. aa.1 a- Io-it -iy n,. in word ending m ' H.nio3." drp w from k-,- Viy . -srntMna ll.i.l'l(.r....J k. . ,r . .......w .. - ,..- , mitim--i t nn--. Omitlh final I- in hvt.rw.--b . 'I . ' VIZ . fttltnii ll..'!,......, .. '. tne fmirth - in t---Aiia (t-ai), itivl other form of the word. Change ph U t in failtOfn. Ltnlristn. nno nllfts forms of the word : ai-o in lniu -J, i al. fe .-"raft. ortr."iif-- r.U.1-.' IT - r - if ,Hi.,n.- r- "' --"-, -. ...-T. til ' rlij. I Ilv "l'i..- ki. i accented aoms of thw ..... . w... -.. vt tiU, , -i clinw. . . T- 1 v.s,.- ,t wimoui nonor in hw own I iKinwholiI iKm - ehold. He -roe? Iiome -ml .lt ' wnai we '.ml at the meeting. whuVf - l ... .-.- " - ----. . mm Jir - . .1. ami ail the Hub- .V look oa in unconceaicd aiimiration. Am! what did . - lories ,k at the m-tuv' Whv j-t this ; In a half-ui;hL - l- LL,?Z ed the mrtion to djoirn. Ho: ho -w-w pnmder of that ga-p. aaI k wt Mm J more effort, than tie gabbiit speaker mrvxnnrr ,V... among them. wMri- or thk noi in.. Im -- -H- m K, ! T -Ibi ii -JtlppM a af m .MiJ) 14 A mrmtt "- t la --mm f a rva- krt-l wtvk m4 Jbtt 'HM M Ik k f ) kr4 l ilia I la tk Npa-I km w)M iv-lf lkfM -I r-aa' I . ai''wNf fW. mm "f" d-)Hlk fMM Mt tk MlfkrP U fclnpi 1- ata '"W . fl."-..iK -si Wp4i Ami " -- M ToNn IpmmmI tM- ,! i mtt atl t tpafM of h j ,k tttf ImA ptfc k h.' -mmt-s aj wfc-pal 4m b lt.4N4-aVf-piwM-l - M tbrm m b T ;' ' xrU.. miimm li a - aW-f-i .. . Ukrt-r M-m-t AiMMJMaMM t M-Jt 4 Mtg-s-r-waJ-s iMMJ -r k apwx.rl n. c, Mi'pll BjaMrf, ' ma kma-! kV Imwmj MHMtl " . mR .f tali fciMt. ? - In irpffij- tk JIMMp l Waapknr -ki Uk- t tk?UMfc taw-K -- a-ilnl lf mtbm wmmth 4 ! . 1 aa llrc m-m-! " kal -n'-4-ai! lain ! 'il b-. v lMt:lha-r ktt M-ffcaM KMtMMW- r-MM-l Mhw mmJ kwfal aftk. t - lkrr-r bt -I. Mat - ik. '-' i tki , vakil J' k I - I rtMtw-4 la iarr mW IumI N- i ! , AcWin. MUk r-- Wt, H, MM JTMytlMPP ( ranU fren tk r- k k 0M tkpMMjr tV Is. in BV.1 H.f Ml iW u ta-Mtte-ftaaV " --T jm& ;- - - -- J, r ", I -rT Tttkl 1I1W'JT mZH l.m . ki '-ai-i.. 1 ilUlllfe. M - tk, i-attrrn I -HltMi.-l. . "- -WW- '-- --- ,csw.w w. ', nrtilrt knta-l tkat fof pOMIxtil ' ,Vpf1 Mt 1 tf V OtMrtl t m-M Mt.Mk .'( 1 krsi , ttfje C"U'. k mm Hb . ( tpak Ikto ww t h ? Iwrt In ifUmrlr Mr. II 1 U J.-Hv .tj la. Dn in fa- jrwMf 1. t. k m kc ' t ,fm4-4 apfc-wi mH t t lt ' 1 nt t n l ikr twftMM - kmih of a-tpt--ar. Tar lti - . . itn kr- la ttlmiiw-tM'f. M ii I fsjavw on lk- U MMtt RSSvst -- 1 mm4 lir-sl. Oa !. !.-'. 1 tMX Utr 1 th t -f aw M L . !. I IK. u k tM J " tk rMr Ik- . l . . na.-k-r . k nr ! , . UIm-.. mm J jfc- kekH-M. oil !.. h 1 ' ' l' j Iwt4 i-fw-"! j " - In aU, 4 ., j Im. ! I l"M fr or la - 'minim . tkr P&rlrtoM a M H t! -1 tk. UtM IkOoMiMf ! 4 k bura-l k-Mi lh wmVi ki Mk Ua r.(tka m lk.i Im tkHM, ifcn k k-tnw mrr r-tun . afr-ter-f-!, iiWn mjmI mJI-i-tnt ikem lhwr U tk m..I 1 ail th infl .HMll - At Ike krnrr mm1 ut tfce le-H iui'i rrte, m-t Mki k HHnU coiMfoMwoi ! aajpet MMt -4.MM!. l !' ! k ' klJi Wl kMltMl H t.tttMt kjMll .. ome I.' im krlMif. tMKi la-- Tktn, eoMMjflrsrltk Ilk- i-' rvH-iriM, -rr foiul ffraal tfMo' rvli. . nH h v ttml arrW-kf-' nH-i. p lier, aai kaifp. wkk k I ir nr-.l uMi Mr, brM(kt hm Miik l 1 hi wowi-rmi i it I ' m fj M-ullMr, M JOM) Wk ! ' )rnlM. ilf'M It l er MaajM! i tk- Mrt-aft-knt mmI prlwatik ' Witk tk aW i-rfcurt- aw TUr at .1 tk' etna tllkn tk-U Ike ei4 u( Ami l-.j ... , ., "1 . i mmiI U ftatl Mrf, ! arw rak I ..l . I a. ..rf alW- A raw Hn lupkffi-4 -r vCkm-kMfi-4 . b a wtv tUaVnlt to ik-obraatM lH, :, 1 -a--lltil mnutwl InuluVi -.njl Ih-I'ik lb lb r-pntar .Nut aid" .Ntipt tnii. Mr. .bkn l.'uia-'y AiUMif Sew f.-k hw MMinil. at I mIia-H-, H-4 day. l. MM- My rkllr lrimg4 tlK Ut lT eity. Am I 4l.nIU lett'' ! ( iM-intti 'mmmrU -uty i 19 rtt MtUM'k-xl l tkl ---- ' 1 m rniane. .hw Irtdar nn from kr cbikihJ. maI. la M.kl. ran- p-rnMi ekarm aai tM-tafK i tHnl, devro-l it talrMt kr rrlt -that drli(kt-il krr ItirmU. mml ft" !r f kbjfk &trMrr twe- rte lip in tepnT-fHUttgr. I lw k k- bn ktr,'l iar- ra4l"tl bmm written muj atorir ut mm nt t mh in rjn'npt hm- r t- t -FmiKm U K-t h pnl.li-t-r by fc l- weat hrrwlf In w frk. I t. 'If-u-rrniiM-d U ail- ar ' tvat Mfrkl 4 lti4-ratttr -. pmng. ankat ai kjopHaJ. krr -f-r t!. MBUMlMtlMj fa jMltk. .V-ril f ' hr Mrit.Ml ! tart Mr. Xhum. mb -at tar hl of tk- wttrttiaff 4v' i-nl f IImtutt B-jkr llf r' tlVMt- Mtltk Mter T-M--, Mt!4fi-t. - 11A I-jMitT, mmi thm aMft vi fc-lf tk jmU ut a acquaint a nKn-wtir -m nay of th ermtbm t Uv . J"i --TMMJT3 tp-lMW. . 1 1. 4- S II ! ail -- ia- nJ"F ta " 'fc t)m M "" A W J -7 "" , Sn--i"hw. A an . laifly tok ba- V mm, w kirk, phamMfk. MrrkMf. Y r-HUw-d by la bsmUt -lr- 4 Vir- t--ity. fwitmA auar tk Um tkr aav MtrtH and latrrM-i f tkr wwJ-Ik f -kntg iaaf-tac-rMB of tkr ina. ' Itreip," m'm tkr m-tmm f tipt e.i-rt-tkn. wki b la-atnt r- au-lmtfkt - a. n. Krrrj oar, oa eatrkaj- tk- ia w-kkrk iImj -a-nr" wfmamr " mtrrr -yiay -aaay" n--ti a : w kk-k. aft--r flu- aVfJU-rratr-a. kr p. - ? -M-i to tar 1 U. J.L. ..( tK 0 ki 1 1-- . . - atuakrr 4 I tift wk t m. n rrtvni. tu efcwed mhuw-t Ilrf aat a Mbt, ( fa-MM-l ia ki- pri-k far la k-arf. , ttfc-r p-rofUri. wiUi whkfc NMw- kd f-r-Lk! U. - wkik pnt bum. ' fnrMkr! Mai; wfcflr art I acfcl ia k-amal kaatrr itk nt ' -tDi--tt.r, l tar rra n-l Urmhrt. . tkr jbtter. !- nbi--t.tl -.! --- rr-lik fnna mm fc- . mm ,"r " hunt if a r-uhmf u-ia mm mr a r -t "n"5Hw w1 ---- IttM Trifl. I M maMIT MBimi ftw-t tir.. Tkr hr w?f--Mrk A th i-'.-t ri5s. I a - Ifc k Krrk-f bttr--. owt irtftm tk -mhmx-. I" ' tiakrr fanvifi-' f-ii--lM-k - ka - -- - Tilt- .J.I .AA iuuhIIMM t" MTv 'tailor MirtM- tnummtmamm m . .... ----. -.w -j-- U -BBBBBBX WW OtW-s Mf JPgMPM W f'V arr Umt V lefce th-nr mt It-m-'i a - I mil M w-nnwi. Im-m me & mwm" i..mi4 a. k j-L.mt. i n n n f BMI M tthtnliMjc - mm 4rio:t --m-frrtif - ' --" '-? rn- skr; tkr-r hat KrM uM o MMUrr urn a -v. W-tw-frr. if trair - 0 - ilrLiii lli'tr fH tbt k m vm al' - --..- '" . Liu U-i-rai rkaiiiMl -nkjr 3M V" i4e --. "-""-1 -- r 1. . Ihr KJ-M htrwm I Ml ia-rh to Vl tar ro- wkkowt eraaaati-pt tkrap. " tke -M wrH m b-n-i fW- ' itk. -j n,r,. i -ul , m.lit- lh hkW -ImH k-j M mmb tkr w-il ltui -l rfiVrf khodl " s4ta. an! i.wr tk. ia a rtrntf - fnu i ill in uli.l tWt "T iar iaekr- id raw. oi-f laanyg w imT. Carniata, zmmbri. fptmmnvr i gmiws a-ar k -pImTNpi wk f-, iv mm ;h gr-aa-i Im.-- A. rr t 1 mroir. I I t i I .'i