s 4' f J THE EED CLOUD CIHTT.v 3L J . "HIP J? l v rntilUhr HD CLOUD, - - "ebraska. Jr ,2TJi? JJOr THAT DIED. Look onhfettrrtly face for Ju-tone mlnnf, ills uraiuca irouk, M duiniy-I..ltoiicJ slifnrn. JUs linn-shut hand, tins favorite plaYtlilpz In it, And ii'll me. mother. -wraVt not hard to loic aiiu mist, mm tmiu my ride Nv little lo that .lied? I,?.y,"nny an'"r1oya tlruraml oliarniiitf. .-.wilier nope, nu mother!, one tlelltfhl, -uji- iiin.tiKn strunc blckn-re. all tear d nnuin' And IIvom a lotiir.lon- lifijinparcntb nlghtl- jinn- wttx cov-wri n pnue; Ami jJ.o. my poor boy died. 5 him roitdns on his wooden chonrcr: I hear him patKix-iiig through the hou-e all tlay; t his jreat Miic eyes irtoir lanro utid lamur, Listening to Htorii. whether gra e r gny. Told at tin: hrixtit lit esldc so durk now, xinee. lie died. Ilut yet 1 often think my hoy It living, As living us my other children nn w hen good iiigiii.--s-i all round am giving, I keep one for him, thougn he is o itor. Can a tnero gnivc divide Jle Inim him, though he died? S-o, while I come and riant it o'er with chi'sio (Nothing hul childish daisies, all year round). I ontinually od'x hand the fliirtaln raises, And I-cmii hear hl merry volce'a sout-d, Anil le;l him at mv Milo My little hoy that died. Autlwr tf ' John Halifax, Cattleman." SYM110LS. Inst a slendiT t-lia!t and a touch of blue Ir. all that I have lor my windows view ; NottiiiiK hut that, yet ho much to mo. M no iiuii'roiin iniiruof the ruat world mjc; Over the iimiIh if the Iioum.h high is the point of a "-plni, a putoh ot hky. There In human ll lux awd lovins W't In t!ioe houses Htandl.iK awim the street; ,ul;l.- ftep and lud oieos blithely jjo Jn tii-lr various way on the walk itnlow; l''t liere, where -n)ikad alone 1 !!, X fan tee but the epirn and i.iteh of hky. I tr no: to lrt my soul complain Tluit the old life run not be mine a sain ; 1 know Unit iJi low ha the dear I.onl eut The loneiinens, weil.nst and banishment; let at times the heart will rebel and cry 1 or more than the i-iie and patch ot skj. V.ut a type of tin- freedom, Joy and ieaco Jn'tmrd lot the sjuni w hen life stiall cease Is that ;;eam ol blue o'er the hoti-crt tall, A si -a of the lleteii ihnt waits for all; ml none eun s i nitelul be as I 1 o the ixiintinir split- and ))Hti'h of skv. C antline 11. Lc Jltnc, in A", i . Jiitlrjiemltnt. THE TWO CLERKS. In Maiket Square, in the pleasant city of Merryport, was a crockeryware store, oer the door of which was a black sign bearing in gilt letters the name of Ilen jamin "Hudson. For imiiiy year.s this vrockor lore had been there, with the great pitcher hanging in front for a sign ; indeed, when Mr. Hudson fit opened the biore, some lorty 3 ears previous, he "was quite a young man, and the .sign 01 er his door was blight and handsome: but now his eyes had grown dim, ami the owner wnsealled " Old Hud.sou" by all the bos ami girls of the city. Mr. Hchjumiif Hudson had grown 1 rich in his business, for he had conduct- j ed it all himself, and taken eat e that nothing should be wasted or lo-t b neglect. Ho had made mistakes, to be 1 sure, as every man will make some blunders during a litetime, but by skill ful management he quickly 1 eeovered from them. Sity-iive years had begun to bend oer Mr. Hudson's shoulder. 1 iintl dim the brightness of his eye, and j he found business more irksome than it j .formerly had been. j 44 1 must have a partner," said he one j day to himself, as he sat before a cheer- ; fuf lire. " 1 must have tome one inter- ! ested in the business who is young and I active, and will take the weight off m ! shoulders, for 1 do not care to do as 1 1 used to." Now, in Mr. Hudson's employ were 1 two x-oting men Herbert I'.ond and Charles Sehmour. They had been with him an equal length of time, 'and had ' performed their duties faithfully and j . jvell. Charles did his work quickly, and J Lad a smart way about him that made people think he was greatly superior to Herbert, who had a more quiet demeauor and accomplished quite as much without making a great stir about it. 4 1 must have Herbert or Charles for a partner," soliloquized Mr. Hudson; 'on which can 1 decide? They both do well enough in the store, but I ought to know something of them out of the store. and 1 am sorry to say that is a j I havH never paid proper attcn- j point lion to. Aiy clerks come hero 111 the and go away at night; whati becomes of them over night I know jiot, and yet I ought to know. Neither 1 f Hiem liave parents in the city: they live in some ot the numerous boarding houses and I hope are steady and wcl behaved. I must see them in their homes, and then decide which shall be my partner." The next day Mr. Hudson ascertained the boarding-places of his clerks, with out letting them know for what purpose, and after supper that evening his wife and daughters were somewhat aston ished to see him go to the hall and put i on his eoat aud hat. 44 Where are you going, papa?" asked ILily, the youngest daughter, who could hardly remember the evening when her lather had not remained at home. 44 I am going to make a call, Lily, on two young rain of my acquiantance ; 1 shall not be long gone," replied Mr. Hudson, and bidding them good-bye im mediately started out. Herbert's boarding-house was the nearer of the two, and here Mr. Hudson stopped first. It was a neat-looking house, in a ver pleasant street. Mrs.'Uuntin, the land lady, opened the door when Mr. Hudson rang. 44 Hoes a young man named Herbert Bond board here?'' 44 He does. Walk in, sir, and I will call him," replied the woman. 44 1 will go to his room, if you will show me where it is," anweied Mr. Hudson; " I presume he is in it?" 44 1 think so; he is seldom out in the evening. - You can step up there if you like, sir; go up two flights, and the first door to the right is the one," replied Mrs. Buntiu. Mr. Hudson puffed up the stairs and knocked with his cane at the designated door. It was opened by Herbert, who looked very much amazed when he saw his employer, and said: WliT Afr TTrwIann ic iyit- tbinir bn matter in the store? Nothing happened t " " .-."--, - ..j """e suv- out ot the way, I hope!" 44 No nothing nothing at all," said Mr. Hudson, walking in and taking a chair. " 1 took a notion to call around and see how you were this evening. Bond expressed himself very glad to see his employer, and while he took hi hat and cane, Mr. Hudson glanced around the room. It was an attic room, with dormer windows; a good fire was burning In an open grate; a book-rack filled with books adorned one side of the room, and the center of the floor "jtss occupied by a table on. which were writing ma- -terials. 41 You look very cozy here, Herbert: but why do you have'an attic room? Are there none you can have below stairs?" 44 O, yes, sir; but this is a dollar a week cheaper, and I have all the more money to send to my father," replied - Hcrbert. 44 Isn'tyour father well off?" inquired Mr. Hudson. :Not very, sir; he used to be pretty rich, but his business was disastrous, and he lost a good deal of money," said Bond. "What do you find to do evening1 ijoca not time hang very heavy r1 , "0, no, idrl 1 have books to read and letters to write. To-nicht I am! writing' home; they want me to make thera a visit, out I write that It . mera a visit, but I write that it H a -,,u L, U. . A(f i fM ii,r ntnnr 01 uic unmnc. nue ibc porter was pretty busy time jtwt now, but when it ' 7njj !Wri t?Jl0rS,rJnRP'r "' ---iWcVlshallosk rou for a few davs of 'J'. .fsud. a """" raan aVtiM5,l.moa ' ffer'a thoughts were evidently ruaaimr absence," aa-wered" HcrterL ' "louphall have it willingly,'' Mid Mr. Iludhon, and then he added. I)oCharle, ever call upon you?" "o. sir. I havQ nke him to Ftv - Jiud.Hon, and then he aildeJ. era! times, but he has tttver called." . .. 4. . . a 1 I--.,. : !?- fill' TIII I IHIU'IIII'II nn it in una "Twenty-five mile., r; rather far to avel every day, and then I can't af- rd the cxpenAj,1' was Herbert's reply. travel toru uie expense, wivs neruen. - n;iu. " Whatu'rae could von reach the store inthcmoniing?" 'l n-P K h " . , "inn you wtiuiu nave iu jeau i what hour in the afternoon?" " At about half-past five, sir." " Not verv bad hours for the business. I'erhajis it can be arranged so that you can live at home, Herbert.7' " 0, I fchould like it fo much if I could. I am m home-ick here in the city!" was the clerk's reply. " Well, I'll look into the matter, Her bert. It seema a pity that one who is so fond of his home can't live there, in these time? of railways and fast travel- a , j re,:' inir, ' .said Air. Hudson, as he aro depart. Herbert thanked him for hw visit, and .said it would please him to have Mr. Hudson call again. The old gentleman descended the stairs well satisfied with the call, and aid to hiinelf : "Now for Charles Sehmour. I hope I i-hall find him as well occupied a.s Herbert I'.ond." The tKarding-huu.-e was reached, the bell ntng, and Mr. Hudson adnilt-, ted. Hie servant s-itd Sehmour was in, i hind u-hered him to the chamber door. Mr. Hudson knocked, and the door , immediately swung wide open, and a i voice exclaimed, " Well, old fellow, got alon- at last, have Mm? We're all ready for you: have got the " Charles Sehmour .stopped here, and his face turned suddenly pale at sewing, instead of one of his boon companions, his venerable employer. It was several seconds before lie could recover his speech. " I beg your pardon, Mr. Hudson, you must excuse me; I expect ed a frieiid this evening, and in the dim light of the entry I thought you were he. Walk in, sir, and sit down." Mr. Hudson entered the room, and was somewhat surprised to see the identical three joting men who had in sulted him on the street: they were smoking cigars, and had their feet ele vated on the bureau, man elpiece and bedstead. Mr. Hudson saw at once that he was in confusion, and Sehmour's ac tions were painful and awkward. 2Cev ertheless, his employer started a con versation, and had been there but a few minutes when a footstep was heard on the stairs; the door opened a little and a bottle of champagne came rolling across the lloor, followed by a round Hutch cheese, a bunch of cigars and two more bottles. Sehmour looked dread fulh distressed, but could do nothing. It was a fourth friend, who had been out after refreshments, and took this facetious mode of introducing them into the chamber. Mr. Hudson "thought it was time for him to go, so he took his leave and rehired to his home. Mr. Hudson was not long making up his mind as. to w hich one of his clerks would make the most faithful and effi cient partner, and in less than a week it was announced in the papers that Her bert P.ond was a member of the firm of lienjamin Hudson & Co. It was a hap py tlay for Herbert, and it was not many ears "before he managed the whole I business himself, and he became a wealthy man. Charles Sehmour knew very well the reason of Mr. Hudson's choice, and he always had to regret having formed such unprofitable acquaintances as were assembled in his room that unluekj' night. William L. Williams. m 1 Three Women in Cotirl, There was a jury trial injustice Alley the other tlay. in which nearly a dozen people living in the Western suburbs were mixed up as plaintiffs, defendants and witnesses. It appeared that Mrs. Blank had borrowed a w:uh-tub of Mrs. Brown, ami while in possession of the borrower a cow knocked the bottom out. After a neighborhood quarrel, suit was brought to recover the amount. Mrs. Blank thereupon put in as an off set that she had nursed the plaintiff for three days and received no pay. 44 Nurse me!" echoed the defendant, 44 why she did nothing while she was there but hog down custard pie and tat tle about the neighbors." 44 Custard pie! And who lent you the sugar, and eggs, and laid to make it!" shrieked the other. His Honor put his foot down and patched up a temporary truce, and the plaintiff look the stand to testify about lending the tub and what it was" worth. She established the value at seventy live cents, and here the defendant boiled over and exclaimed: 44 Seventy-five cents ! Why, both ears and the top hoop were off! " It was the oulv tub she had had since her marriage, and that was ten years ago ! " 44 And I've had to lend it to you even Tuesday all that time!" retorted the plaintiff. His Honor secured silence in the couit, and the defendaut took the staud, and said that her services as nurse were worth at legist two dollars. 44 What ailed the plaintiff?" asked the lawyer. 44 Well, I don't know as I ought to say that her husband struck her with "Don't you dare say that!" inter rupted the plaintiff; "you know that I fell down the cellar stairs! If my hus bond hit me on the head with a'meat platter, as yours did, I !" "I object!" exclaimed both lawyers in chorus. 44 So do ve!" added both females in a breath. His Honor pounded the desk until ev en thing rattled, and then a witness was put on the stand to testify that she saw the tub when it was lent, aud airain when it was damaged. She had scarcely j got started when the defendant, whose witness sue .was, called out: 44 You are not swearing as you agreed to!" 44 Ah! ha! I make a note of that!" ahuckled one of the lawyers. 44 Your Honor, I object," added the other. "And I wouldn't believe the witness under oath!" put in the defendant. "Who wants you to!" squeaked the witness. "If I couldn't come into court with any thing betterthaa a calico dress and a ten-cent lace collar. I wouldn't liold my nose so high ! " "Thi3 is too much. ten times too much, and I want this court-room cleared right out!" said his Honor, and he turned the crowd into the alley. Detroit Free Press. Paint and putty can be taken off glass by wetting the glass several times with a strong solution of soda. Wet the glass often with it till the spots soften and can be washed off, and then polish with alcohol. Ax enterprising Yankee is making a Honolulu directory, and for the first J time the houses are to be numbered. l,OHr,lin,.-hnC.3' inr,n5ml Mr. Und.o-,. " ,JC' anU lntin ""P'i W wwquw- Msat 1H.rfccU- jiz u i-Iiuhjijiuu mii: in una - . . ... i .i .. ..t ... -"-". ""( "- "". -" re hi. iu . f. . It w a very cood Iwarding-hoai-e, , ' .,". ' . ,- tj.. -n. ." n. s a . .ini Mrs Kntitm i -f.rv kind? hut i . . . r . . -. . uvji. inin na.en "" have often wished that f could live at . ' one..,I "! 'ri " "'j p to solw - . homp ." anwerwl Herbert. ! "V" " . ' . V....," . rr.I : .?. " JTrowlnjr rich I "And why can't you? How far is it A ,,,. .. ', , , ., ,. ,, . Wt ,.f ft wan aire ' -, . . nn it in nin rr tirti i mirir n ttii nii. tti i nrni . from here?" aked h'u emolover. i " ". , . . T . . : ... V "" " And et.' - m it -. mn ... . a. r rt . . .. a. nwt TiaiiBr ri iir PECULIARITIES OF LOC0J.OTITES. HoHirrfcmftiJH uu Hnmn-.l th L" "K,L,MNPr; f'rora the Iietrolt Ytvn Irr.J "TV . " He' in the dumps bcaue ep?1 lUe TV tf- i Pon,wa J ' engineer who looked aiiouru any dy ZZ?..- J ' ..iiA 3 nAfnifs" u gf hira . ,..,. , . i i "t-"? f "X! '-i4 " .vm v.m -.. w -" - - 1 1 cj.e ., ! r.n ' rark was or the weight of the train. as readv at the word, held her i ,,. t...,:r'tt .i c. t,..l , .? " ,r," ."riV ! " T ,'" t.i 1.; I he isdowa in lie rouad-bonkj, growf. ' inir and soutterin? and actin- as if ihe sputtcrm wanted to pick afus5 with a gravel-pit." " Any thing out ot gear?" "Not a thing. Shes been looked over twice, and we can't find the least i excuse for her conduct. She'll get over it in a day or two, perhaps. If he don't we'll punish her." "How?" "Tut her before a freight or stock train. 1 've fceen it tried a dozen times, t and it moat always works welL Here .he is now, bright as a new dollar and handsome as a picture, and I'll bet fifty dollars that there isn't the least thing out of order. She's imply sulkinjr, the Mine as a child or .1 woman, aid I krow what PUrted it. Three weeks ago, while on nry mn in with the night express, .she just wanted to lisrht right out for all , she was worth. She took the bit like a running horse, and if I hadn't choked her off .she'd have Iwaten .schedule time bv twentv minutes. She acted mad w!.al, ... . .t.n.1 tn iitr tmi.ar. ittlli. j .e i o re t ubte tbanTha, T.i ... i. :.... ,.r i-w. ci... lost steam, trietl to foam over, choked ner pump-, am wnen l yiucu iu. .s.teamrhed bhde on her dnvers "'' "?"" "-, ":""r"w, '" went right back on me that night, a .d has been sulking around ever sLce." 44 Do all engines do thi?" "Not all, but many of them. Some of em begin to cut up and get on their high heels the first day out of the shop, as if determined to" be ma-ter; while others will be obedient as you please for two or three years and then all at once ' phi you some rusty trick, reopie say that a horse is next to man in point of mtelligei.ee, but I sometimes think the locomotive ought to have that place. We engineers do not look upon them as machines, but almost as companions, and I've known drivers to talk to them by the hour. I feel awfully down in the mouth about mv pet." 44 Is this your first experience with a j sulking engine?" I 44 No; it's my third. Six years ago, when I was running out of Chicago, west, I had ten years added to my age in about two minutes. I had a fine passenger engine, and we were the bust of friends fur over a year. One day when we were booming over the coun try at forty miles an hour, 1 saw a farmer's teim stalled at a highway cro-sing He had a big load of w od on his wagon, and the team was a pair of young h'ir-es. When 1 first caught sight of them they were dancing up aud down and not triingto pull a pound. and the old farmer was on top the load ' and putting on the whip good and strong. Now, I honestly believe that engine wanted to mash" things. She suddenly increased her speed, and when I "reversed and put o.n the air brakes she plunged and kicked and al ill UiAJVlUll llU'i, wv .u.v.. ..w" it most jumped the rails. hen 1 started ' comfort, and as I think of our nigged, up again she was sulking, and I had all ! manly, virtuous, stalwart fathers, jdod I could do to make time. She wa ! ding over this same road from Louisville 4 off " all next trip, but I wouldn't give t in. On the next trip she showed her ' teeth, and they had the gleam of a Ian- tern of death. ' 44 You see, I had orders to side-track j at a certain station for the Atlantic ex- 1 press to pa-s me, and my engine ulked 1 and growled and threw me several inin- utes behind time. There was little time to spare when we reached the station. I had drawn the train about half way off the main track when my engine stopped dead still. Yes, sir stopped dead still, and that without beitor I L'd or a brake applied, and with" i tionoftho. ptirious scenes that are enaet-enou-di to blow off! I w:ls i ed in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. reverse steam dazed for r? a minute, aud the fireman opened his eyes like seeiug a terrible picture. .lust then the Atlantic whistled. 1 jumped down and ran to the pilot, expecting to see a barricade, but the track was clear. I leaped into the cab wheef moved. More vet, bnt she stood and gave ner more steam, oui not a there like a rock! Conductor, brake man and passengers were houtin"- at ' me, and the switenmau uowicd -like a panther. On came the Atlantic, and I tilll .tin tl,?.li m..i fl.k lilj-kc? iuiiuu nil; kiiiv.L.ib wfrv.i . iu jrii?s you, sir, I am in a shiver now at the ! recollection I 44 The Atlantic always passed us on flio tv. lint tleif. iiiirlit shis Imil n rvirtv- of stockholdars aboard who wanted to ! induct their particular religious rites, get off at this station, and she came to heJ 5 through their chants, and all a stop and saved such a railroad slaugh- verj quiet to about a quarter to seven, ter as would put the Ashtabula disaster ! ""-"" those who have the privilege of nowhere. She'd have gone through two , ? ? hour hPa to arnre ,At first sleeping cars slick :ts a bullet. 'There : a11 -- decorum, but presently the new we stood, mv engine growling ad ' coiners begin to hiss and mock. As threatening and I "half-crazed. The their nuners increase, and they be fireman suddenly lit out as if he had col"e tronper they push and crowd, "' a . I ami OCT t-fT. titnn Inrttis tkn t mnfn seenaghost, a mob ol the passengers l swarmed down on me, and I believe I should have taken to the woods if a change hadn't come. All at once No. 40 seemed to rear right up, she made a plunge or two, and away she went like a bolt of lightning, and I had the hard est kind of "work to stop her on the sid ing. "They didn't say 1 was drunk and tliov knew T -vHsn-r nsWn. w thc " suspended me until thev looked the en- gineover. She was in pertect order. ! and they sent her out on the accommo- j dation vith a new driver. AVhat did i she do but bang right into a train at a J station, and that with all steam shut off j and the bar thrown over! Some folks ulJ' nuu ieuue iaK P1-"- m lutJ lssta lnnrh -itns and call it smiers:titon t.nt sion of the lasteomers. If bloodisshed they never lived in an engine cab. Ask any barber if his razor doesn't get 4 off now and then and refuse to shave until laid aside for a rest. Ask any horse trainer if his horse will make the same -- -- ----- - w.... w w. v. rav Ciiuu .w uiuiuuij:; oatnu, utca n ciiu i care and feed are the same. Uunninr , i hnndmS o? I in and out ot JJetroit are locomotives, all built on the same plan, and yet no two are just alike. Out of twenty built in the same shop, by the same gang of men, no two will work the same. One can be bull-dozed, an other must be petted, a third will be faithful, a fourth treacherous, and each one will have her peculiar traits and tricks. I'd no more take out one of these engines without knowing her ce- culiarities than you'd try to jump across that pit. I'd be all in a tremble for fear she'd ditch the whole train. No, sir. They are as near human as ma chinery can be made, and the more human you treat em the better it is for both. Some can be coaxed, some must be punished, some need watching, and ouce in aTvhileyou find one which will dodge danger, keep her time and run herself while you dream of the curly heads tucked up in bed sthonie."- a a Looking-glass fringe is one of the lashionable frunimeries this season. It is a fringe made of beads and covered with quicksilver. Miss Schauniberg, the Philadelphia beauty, has a white silk dress covered with this frin-'-e. Worth made it, Miss S. wore it, and Jenkins wro'te it np. k Ljucj, Laber-ftaTia Aire. So into the midnight train wc climbed, ' and the Iyiiville ami Nahville RaD- t road bor us awav down iato the laad on what l)r. Tnndell U1 about walk- mg, that a wje rronnce had given a : norsv iimr ivi&, so inai ne nugniwaic all he wished, bnt the sanws orerraling s wisdom had jnven a man bat two, and j thea k they conld brad in two direction and thus fit a carrtagfl lazy, labor-saving age," the jrer .-atd. Man u trv- the problem of living and without labor or exertion. of labor-saving machhiery." the -ad paienger put in. there never wa.s an age of greater or more inceant activity." " Teople barn gai," d the tall, thin pxsenger, disregarding the other' statement, " becatie they are too lazy to snuff a candle or fill a lamp." ' Yen," said the paM?ncef with the sandy goatee, " and thev light it with electricity to save the trouble of scratch ing a match." " And it was a lazy man," said the man on the wooden box, " that sat around cold winter mornings, and fhiv ered and .shuddered, and wished h knowed .some way of putting enough coal in the htove to last all day, that finally invented the base-burner. Xo active man would ever have thought of such a thing." " Men ued to take a fair amount of exercise," said the tall, thin pa.senger, " when they had to walk from their homes to their places of bu.sine.ss; but then some ease-loving genius built a .street ear, and now any man who walks three blocks with a nickel in his poeket will not be recognized in good soeiet'." And if he will not wait in the cold half an hour for the car," iaid the man -with the -sample-caies, " he is turned out of the church." t "And even then," said the passenger with the Mindv goatee, "men took a little air ami e.ercie on the street can?. whell lHJir bu-ine-y compelled them to ' j,,, from their own office to other bu.si- ntos houses, l.ut then IMLson invented j the telephone, and now a man goes down to his office in the morning, glues him-elf to a chair and Ls there w hen the I street cars come along to take him to ' supper. If he didn't need them to walk up stairs with, man in this lazy age might trade off his legs for another pair 0f hands." 44 That need not keep him back," said the sad pascng r, " because when he wants to go up stairs he gently but firmly glides into the ele vator." The fat passenger looked at the speaker with a look of approval. - My son," he said, nodding his head, 4 ton are mighty right, he does." Surely, it must be as the passengers decided, the race is degenerating, phvsi- I eally. We take all our exercise pro ' fessionaliy, as the .Japanese hire people to do their dancing for them. We play base ball with salaried nines, we row ' with men who can pull for us without i .iking us away from the counting-room ; when we want to walk some robust fel ' low takes our money anil makes GOO miles in five dajs lor Us. We are a de i generate nice, and hae fallen away ' lrom the high standard of physical vir tue maintained by our fathers. And 1 yet as I lie here in the pleasant palace car of mv friend Pullman, with the jointless blanket folded about me in un yielding plate, and the miniature pil low slipping down my back. I draw the curtain a little aside and look out at the snowy landscape and the glittering starlight, and I stretch mvsell out and snuggle myself up in very excess of to Clarksville, 111 slow-mov stages and lumbering wagons, 1 close my eyes in degenerate content, and say," in sleep3 accents : 44 Dear fathers, virtuous men of iron frame, if that mode of travel suited you. stick to it. This sort of a thing is good enough for me." Ilurdettc, in Uic Bur- i . liny ion Jltnrkcyc. A Curious Custom. An English gentleman who has trav- cIpA in Palestine recently gave a descrip- tie sain wnen von nrst entered the church you would be surprised to see a party of soldiers with their swords by their sides, and their guns stacked within reach. It seemed a sacrilege in such a holy j: ice, and struck one rather un pleasantly; but he soon found out the nect'sMty of it. According to the laws of the country, cverv sect is allowed to worship there, and as it is considered I equauy sac reu ny ooui i. nnsuans anil i Mohammedans, all wish a time for their I mode of worship. The law allows them a.n ",r ejich They commence at six in At that hour those who "" im" 4""o- have the first privilege enter, bringing with them whatever is necessary to "- -. ., mn g iuic and more bold. A few minutes before ; seven thev proceed to more forcible demonstration. Thev think if thev clear out these blasphemers a fc- min-, utes before the time they have done so much good work, w hile the worshipers in the other band think if they can keep possession a few minutes after the time they have done an equally good work. as soiue oi tnese sects use lorcfies, wax, -? ndles, staves, or crooks in their wor-, shlP th,e-v liroceed use them as weap-' 95s of defense, and a free fight ensues. Then conie in the soldiers, who separate tlui combatants by filing in between j them- turning out those whose hour is ' the church is closed for the day. Such scenes are occurring all day long, and the presence of soldiers is absolutely necessary. a William Praxklix, of Salem, -v j j i i -j i . i- y. asiouuuea nis onue oy xeiung erat he did nt -eve that a hus- i uauu ouui 10 nave any secrets irom j his wife, and therefore he" would confess j to her that he had murdered several I men. He assured her that he would kill her and himself if she revealed the matter. The love that she had borne ' for him thereupon changed to loathing, and she soon told the story. Nextj morning the couple were found dead, Franklin having carried out his threat. The medical journals have of late been citing cases of unusually slow pulse. An old gentleman of ninety-six had a pulse of only thirty-six per "min ute a woman aged eighty-three a pulse of twenty-five. A gentleman of thirty- eight years has a pnlse of about forty I per minute, uoweii, the pedestrian, has a normal pulse of forty-eight, which occasionally rose to fifty during his pro longed walks. Dr. Toole's EeaUk Monthly for March. nan Several farmers in Kentucky are working their shorthorn cows. Thev do as much plowing as horses, and feed better for the exercise they have. a a A YOO'G man at Canton, 0., has sued his own mother for 510,000 for damages. She circulated a report that he was drunken and thievish. TXEM TWICS. JVr (larrv l KaUJx CMkrt. I have b ralwar thoroorb-brrd pohry for vral Ttr, n4 t tkiak it t a verr apprtmrikUr bain-w for aar wotaaa of dcllcalc bcAlth. like civjsnl The btIn h bath pWurabl- sad ' parr, 4 a ! H. proSub! I have the Light Hrahnuu Crram Ittjit Tl o joJtrt of ami Tanridgc (Cochin, and abo lb tsar crraia. ace ttraKrtcfol ef jlTrr pure White Bntat.. My lirahtua Ised od, ilt and wtrtat it? to rail and Cochiat are very rtkw and Urge Cut Into ;saH c1k asd tke la a I got mv Partridge Cochin from a (pride orw, brcrdcr In "er Jtrvr. and the Light -Cookie . Talr tw iwajdag rtiffal UrahniAs, a part from Ohio and a part I of gr, ooe capful ef bourr, rr from thi State (Indiana), Of courc , fal tt Kwr crraa, thrrf g. fcr Ja they cot considerable, but wc can not .oottiulf of da ad Hght f cjvaw et purr fowl -lock for a mere ong I urtar. IUxU th l ih the evexat have two peas of Ught Hrahmxs and f and cgar, and tb IatIat x llh the rfcy; one of Partridge Cochin. o a to have Wet ( sjmI rug tile. the eggs pure for Uing, and alo 14, MI I nnnrr I i r- t fife . ,. - --M i-mm m' -- dollar per setting of thirteen, and thr per J.tv ' other dav I old a thorough-bred rooicr for one Joller, At thtsK rates I think the budnesw pay quite well. The way 1 uo is 10 -Aave my eggs very caraioitr, and each kind separately, and kwp them where they will notetcauleil in tbi cxdd nights of pring I or cost I Use soap-boxes, or boxes about that nit 1 put them in convenient, cool place, a little up from the ground, though not too high. I jiprinkle slacked lime ., ., . l 1 1 1 the weather is warm rnough, I place' crrtf.tm.l it. f li. IviiMnv-t tls H'bi. It.f tti. , neat-place 1 put wcll-ma-bed .straw or hay in the box, sprinkling sulphur over the same. 1 find that a " ne-t attended to in this way will not be bothered with lice. Btddv will not b inclined to leave 1 such a nest before her brood U hatched, as is often the ca.se when .-ueh precau tions are neglected. When the brood ! hnlnhi-if I tbiir-i.tr-lilt" rl. -K Iiit t.ir burning the old htraw in it; and then "I renew with lime and freh nest material. The box ia now ready for the next time. , ai? on',-ry enrtoeuw aro pte-ai-ti. in I never it a hen until she remains on hich place wnr to pr.-v.nt it- crack 'the nest after her mates have gone to ; ""f?-, l'aku in a rather bn.k oven fro. roost; and then I know he is in earn- 1 onc ,hour tot0"" and one-ball hour., se ct and means business. And it is quite rdig to the ue of th charlotte an item to know this when one has vnl-! Angel Cake. Tht whilo? of elevoa uable eggs to fit that cost a dollar or ' gg"i n a,d one-half cups of Migur, two. When I have a hen sitting I al-' e cup of llour, one -mall tt-a-iv4mful ways close up the box -o that there will of uronm of tartar, and one luajMuniu. be "no trouble with other hens laving in ' of vamlla. Beat the uhMwD a ufl the nest. I also generdlv mark the 1 froth, then add the .-ugar, Hour and eggs which I put under the'sitting hen, ' 1- tvoring. The MJgar mtut U sifted so if a hen should happen to get a box ' "ee before u-ing, and the llour four open and deposit a stray v, 1 will no- times, adding the cream of tartar More tice it and take it out. I alwavs select Mftiug the Ift-t uiiib. Powdered -ugar the time when the chickens" out-ido should be u-imI. Bake in a ery 1 . have gone to roost to f-ed mv sitting ' oen without iHitteriug the pan Ik u hen. And those that will not'eome off it b done, turn the pan upside down, by them-tlves I lift off carefully. I rusting the corners on -omcthingo that then see if the eggs are all right and the i the air can roach it while cooling nests in a right condition. When I take Coffee: fJet good coffee, and thn a hen off with a brood of young chick- 1 see it ground, or hate it ground in y ur ene, I take a little lard and mix it with j own houc, that you mav be sure that 11 a little sulphur and coal oil, and grea-e the old mother hen on the Iniad, under the wings, and wherever the lice are likely to be found. I grease the little chicks, with pure lard onlv, tho lir-t lime; on the head and under the wings ' iising it sparingly, and then I give them a coop in a dry" sunny place. And if fed right and kept dry they will do well. Never feed with sloppy, mushy stuff, unless you want them to sicken and die I thoroughly scald the meal and mix it moderately thick and dry. I usually fetd the meal warm. A great deal of the time I bake corn-bread for my llock, ' I also save all tho small Ktatoe and potato-peelinrs. The way to do is to cook and mah them, ami then thicken ' with corn-meal or'bran, seasoning with and a half square, and put on piet tn cayen tie or black pepper, and occasion-' to the bowl with odd water a above, ally mixing in a small quantity of slaked ' and you will hardly know the difference lime. I chop onions and turnips fine, ! If too strong add more water, and feed them raw once or twice a week j Mi-rii.mr.u.. milk I have to spare, and plenty of pure, ".4..fc4."-r" -"-- "-.-'-" clean water, with camphor gum oc casionally placed in the water. This will prevent the gapes. I thoroughly clean the coops once every week or two, and sprinkle lime on the bottom and around the coops. If any get droopy which they generally do when their wing feathers are growing, which weak ens them I take the scisors and clip, off the wing feathers and tail, and they will soon revive and be as lively as ever. I treat young turkeys the same way, and find it works like a charm. I notice mv young chickens when about the size of partridges and larger: if they stand around much of the time picking themselves, it is a clear sign of lice I take lard, mashed sulphur and a little coal-oil, and mix them, but am careful not to get this too strong. With this I crease them sparingly on the head, under the winirs. and wherever ' the lice arc liable to harbor. After such trmitmnnt. T 'iliwivj clean tli4 coons ' well, surinklinf in" anil around them, i and thev will be clean of lice. The . .,-. T lime helps to prevent gapes, and chol- j era also. I greased 150 chickens at one time. It was quite a job. but it , paid. Anvone would have said so who could have seen what a nice lot of ' chickens I had in the fall. 1 have win-, dows on the south side of mv poultry- house so as to give them plenty of light . "and sunshine. Light I find is detrimen- J tal to vermin. I also have my roosta ! low for large fowls not over two feet 1 from the lloor. I have my hen-house jfy Imsband l.k ulnM I cleaned once a week. hauls the hen manure to the garden. It , is a No. 1 garden fertilizer and pays largely. I the roosts, plan is to sometime put coal oil on i but a cheaper and surer j build a lire and draw the across the blaze slowly. roost-poles This is sure destruction to the parasites, j and this remedy is within reach of all. ' After the house is cleaned, I throw lime j over the floor and roosts and up the ! sides of the wall. Every two or three j weeks it is a good plan to take sulphur, ! ..,-.. T,.r,nvr.s nnH not tI,om in an old iron iot and set fire to them, .sit ,J '&4-r - S U V.VIOJ ''-'- in the hen-honse, cloe the doors tight, and give it a good fumigating. The smoke will kill all the remaining Iice I always open and air my house well before it is time for the chickens to go to roost. I also treat my coops for my small chickens the same way j3n; when burning sulphur and copperas, be -sixty -iour years caxine waiKea oy nisi careful and "inhale as little smoke as lde a true and loving wife. Mxty possible. The first time I tried this :fonr years! Just think of it in this age plan I became so stiff and sore that I o divorce. Sixty-four years had they could scarely walk for several davs. I ' dwelt under the same sorrows of life; suppose the "inhaling of too much smoke lather mourned over the , coffin r,f was the cause of it. Mrs. P.. JA Lantz. their fi-born i ; together rejoiced in the i in the Cincinnati Enquirer. pruapenty of their sons and daughters, 9 m and now she bas left him alone. No I wonder he forgot. Her loving band A XoMtaia Glass. ? had so long cared for him, for he had Another marvel recently brought to light in the Yellowstone Park of North America is nothing le-3 than a moun tain of obsidian, or volcanic glass. Near the foot of the Beaver Lake, & band of explorers came upon this remarkable mountain, wnicn rises at tnat place in columnar enns ana rounded bosses to many hundreds of feet m altitude from hissing hot springs at the margin of the late. As it was desirable to pass that through the steep glassy barricade.' This they effected by making huge fires t Ctemoje-acsrss and tie Jaee of cbeaJs- on the class to thoroughly heat and ex-, .tFrh-BJ?li!ri M "af ""te reduce " . - j "v j . J "J , r- "-" ! a titaiol cfcara-a-r oae-halX, fees-sue tae pand it, and then dashing the cold wa-1 prudnct 6 j, J a-ah-wctf tte preset tr of the lake against the glassy sar-J i0icrcea-aadcrre nca, bles color to face, SO as to suddenly cool and break it i " -atitr ta yexrro-nL Alfi&ese improve np by shrinkage. "Laxce fragments ; gk&tg&g Sg-JSg. were in this way detached from thej s-Ad bjdrapst,srucersaaap:aral ssan solid sides of the mountain, and broken kcrTrers- up by sledge hammers and picks, not, however, without severe lacerations of j the hands and faces of the men from ! flying splinters- Ia the graml canyon of the Gibson River the explorers also iouau precipices oi jeuow, uiscs anu banded obsidian, hundreds of feet high. The natural glass of these localities Ua3 from time immemorial been dressed bv the Indians to tip their spears and arrows. n a A coxrosrroE over fist. makes money hand HITS roit TKC MOT5(N9L. l Oiejsr ii. T ppr coj. .& w ema. w pfsl J wrp? cwpfni of Sr, ltarwdal Kla. trj5!ials , JV Cake Tike nu.fl .f r . i t m . ii.'f-jwr , rmim. n sitmi iMKwaiii wmm,tuimm , .. fMt, ,.. ..,.,talr.4 MMla, oc lcapoaw rrra4anjir 7 - - rs 1 -- - one of extract wf irtnoa. Hate t tk caktw. ad lay ui tkh av Wit vo cirth. between th- Uven.. . x aarnc cImos. " lrv.lr Tapioca luddutg Tra cttpful af tapkx'A. akrd as inm? or ! t the put In a double aucv-pia. or la a tin "ail rl in aa Jro pot of hot wsr, and cooked till o!t, with thre or foar rup fuls of tutlk. VLeu tbotoughlv dotne. put to a UaxingHltsJi , add thrrsj. or hi .. ...!... .1 . . or -,, , ... ,. -. ,, . tr Grated lemon-perl tnipeTv it rtx much. Hake half an Snir or more Apple Charlotte HuKer a d-j b ikmg-bowl , hn H wkh Una . ( vhuatea broad vhch hare Won iwiatrd in sw eet crwam , nil the uom I to viuhe one inch of the top with sHecd apjft in lavurs, with Intel marrow , ugar an I gratod lemon or orange Jnstl, cxer the t 1!1 "' "hn " '- brwod -oak.4 m rwna: cover I he l,wl che.. h lUi is not half chicory , then measure two cups into a bowl, into which break a frc-h egg, putting in the shell al , thtn adtl n little cold water, just enough t enable you to Mir it to a stiff pave put in n common tin coffee-nt; add aboa: three pints of boiling water, and cmer very closely that the aroma may not e cape; boil quickly, from fie to ten min utes. If you want black cotfee, put l-s boding water, scald your silver coffe pot, ami have a thin strainer of muslin on to keep the lumps from going i'i, it will be clear a-, en-tal, and lit fr a King to drink. If you can not afford u ii.e an eerir every lnornitiir. take the skin u-e an egg every morning, laneine ...... from a salt codti-h, wah and wite it thoroughly, and cut into pieces an me h rorroscrve5Hap-grea.se- Mil a j cask half full of good strong he and j drop all your refuse grease therein; stir ; up the mixture once a week. , I Newly-painted minis are very un ' pleasant for many days but if a handful 1 of hay may be strewn on the llor, ujon ' w hich is sprinkled a little chloride of 1 t lime, after a couple of hours the of- j 1 feiisive smell will have entirely disap- peared. Spots on furniture, from any thing hot or from alcohol, can lie removed by rubbing hard with sweet oil and turpen tine. When the sjots disappear wah in milk-warm soajHptids, dry quickly, and polish by rubbing briskly with chamois skin. To extract mildew from linen, put strong soap and salt on the mildew spots. Keep them moist and exo.-e to the sun. lleiHiat the process several times, the soap The soap ued should be soft. such as is home-made Wood-ashes. from the lye of A good way to get rid of rats is to . - . rcw iKiundLd potash in their noles. The potash gets into their coaU and irritates their skin, and the raw desert . the place. To prevent their dying in , their holes and becoming offensive, poison them bv mixing half a pound of I carbonate of baryte- with a quarter of i a pound of lard. It produces great t thirstr the rats leave their holes to , drink and are unable to return. To keep flannels from shrinking l wash them in a suds made with tepid ' water, avoid rubbing soap on them, rub , them in two waters, rinse in tepid water, am rM r nit t.TfmV"n -i-" ki nH -flAl.i wring out and shake out each article until smooth and hang up immediately j in the sun or wind to dry. If yon wish I to make prints look nicely do not wash them in a suds in which white clothes ' have been washed, but wash, rinse and starch them separately, especially if dark adored, and iron invariably on the wrong side. Wedded Love A Trae Iacident. " -iae me DCU CaSV, Al 44 Make the bed easy, Mr. B.," said . . oW l ncle A0C V? "DU';rtaK:c.r- " -"? i was preparing the coffin for his aged wife. 44 Make the bed soft ami easy for her old bones arc tender and of t. I and a hard bed will hurt them." He . forgot for a moment that old, gray- haired man that she was dead; that! ' the old bones had done aching forever. been the feebler of the two. LnttM death do us part," said the marriage service that had united them so many years ago. Death had parted thna, but the love still survived. Tenderly had b frp" for fwr all th ffar. asd novr tenderly did he watch the making of the last bed of thii still loved wife. , He had bravelv breasted the ftorra of jfe ith her bv his side, but now that , he was gone he could not live, and ia a few- days they laid him by her i-id. Fra itie Qaatcr fl)'. E.J. CaVI-celz of I'ai-Jtlpiix, ut4er dt of Od. 4. Vifi, ccrtlScd to the waaderf si efii- ry of Waraer"s S- Pill u-4 ! removiRg a lirtT ikpew ace Mifc iookrta accuisxeJ irr ckro-iofiipattB asI rcUawikisi. TrcE-nxt Bj lu bjb voa wfll prrwat sssroX ttdi-exreiiareTaiEBclstBeSariiir j Bd feuma-er a---. ItLs said tfeai fosr mSlkra -MkscsJ elFrv xer's Axle Grease were sold la 2379; mad va bcL'eveit. m SzDtne3 RcsitA xltz U, saeq-uled Zm. chlBtlatei. chapped bxsdo, froet bite, etc. Ckw kMt i -r teMrt . H k , tnaAt lflMT-?l rV " -Mis. -.j4i t , (Vvisl t NAVAK4 .fo iiT-feiw' HAIR; etitwo wrt Jiwfw jv tv.(wc a a - . rfot rev t ?-- . fw rvsf . w&. I It.' t t P " WIMI mt MDiw. t tasa i w a wrrx bf'. ifaiw. f jOObwmim tvJUrtl OPIUM. tt.ua t vmm r osaps f m t tvf r t !- jm , (tM v- Kav a 1- s. ovfJatti 4 t , HEALTH AND LIFE." t Htt 1 NWV1M. m.. V ft m Jaw nfcWt 4 sn ". . "WUcT TJ LQptlln.ws murtuiif" T t ttriv- M fa fxjx&urK. Hit. 1 want . C 8. How a I-4 jt.sM.lio. kl itXJi 201 KINiwt.N Lt. te vVJVT1Jv , 25 CENTS -i'rr.r! tk. . - s Ul I. f ... -m CHIl,ltt))u3-;'ii : 1 1 . t.M-;; I B J -TJ BAKERS ,':n5--PH" A thk o-t.v MmrttV . ,. wmt t ,. . , 4 OvmmrttoQ fca t-ss strst V trmftt prv ssh-y H" '- mv,Hj. l US- t IM. trmf -wln-Tal wt VMM - re, r r JW s. thUkjtytf u w l fo4 am.I MrJlrlMr " UrglM II. Mm- Jr I J. s4 llu t1 44 tUWt. !? ll Utrf O.I Willi rwri.lf Mot. K.Vrr' rr I 4 UtnOt lili Tw a tUlfc4r SUlrr' rarefn Mt.rli. -Ik l rt I.U. !-.) trI3.tms-ta, r" 4 1 rMiS I JOHN C. BAKC JL CO., IV!1lpnl. f -r-M -wf-siriffxs7i rafts! t- Ifex-ar it PXH U.IT ltL. s, fKfstrUAt m4 ij .si -nMm. P i j3 kililiKj nrv-Hv X" ts V" Atfr- (VnJ A rrUbtt t.n'f-'rst'sfi 4 tho 1MI Mr rrnwl; in It fl rr Mrtckl's b)w. IlnlM-isv mm 414. Mmrj. Ulrr, ni4i t rlni.17 lllw-.rfc ribwkit:rrU, " Fur Ibe r ;r of ninhrfr. cIl fJT Wmr rr. Ir llUbrlnlnr. B- fur Vr nut of Hrtlll' - lh. MW-T drw. rmll fur TVmrurr'u tr MI4mjr Md l.l.rr i'ntsr. "-WArtNErS Ssfe Remedies are 10W by Drusit.t nd Dealer in Medicine every where. H.H.WirwlCt. frnmririmr, R0CHE8TER, S. T. -4 Trtlll VEGETINE Purifies the Blood, Renovates and Invigorates the Whole System. ITJ KIMCTS.il. rOrrTl Alterative, Tonic, Solvent and Diuretic. tXOirnNK b TBiA rtrirriT trtn lt Jnl of rurfuJli iftlnl -ft, nt Ko-I hr)v "t mnl I, oKrotrtJSj Uutt Ktft rSfdmHt rr.Jtratr t-om Ihnjila mtj titnt -rrfl. rrTulmn. lliimiirTnir., ner, itmrmtt II m mar, Krj-Irl... Hall Mtirnn. , .hlllllr IMr.r.,( nnkr. fAlnturn mt tl ! rl..iulJl di-mwsi tol rt- from impur iUt srlmira. Inflnminalnr-jr an4 t Urmmtr lttieniMnll.ai.lrnrMlxli..iat unit Mnlnnl iriitlaliit.ra,aoa; Ue vZt-Htii,lj fur4 UtrxtfZ Urf.blon4. 1-Y.r t'lrrr. -,ad T.mmtlr- fUiw of 1J. Mkln. Intalr. PlmpUt. ttlalrb.. Kwll.. Irttrr. Mcldh4-l nn HUcwurn, TOr, TIXChrK-r fltl loejATt p-rmusotc-r, Tut fain In tlir Bak. Klftnrj- farm. plain!.. Bratn, frntalr HVskwM., Vrm rnrrliir. ulila j fr33 lafroU tttrraUcn. an4 BW Mw HUtas lag tirnrr)t itrMlltf. tOiCTIXe arbrtimctJrufiatb. eviwi f tb-un rrxuptiltiU. It lnit,-rtr aid trmryrt 1b wjt rffnn tu bpT y trrjriirm orsvrt. lr lnamttv. tarm li rrstm KiA IffSUbl t! U-rfrlk, . jilnrrh. .p'p.la. tfabllnal " lit rnnu, lalpllatlw-t of lh Hmrt. H.l- . rn. 'Ji'j", . . lrriu.nis., 114 4 tirnrrxl f lh ,1fnto Hf.l'in. Bi tn-dtdu. da -.rr dim mn trtreltil!Hin a lint 'nr.fir. it iuus. ?- uri. a urfu- orratw. so -nytwt a euntpAUv pvnrr vrfT Cm mwn -t"B. 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Jl-KtC? tJSftr!?lT2, 9Mk ar f-c--.-' tMKl'-l"""" v. fIMkM5W P""' fl , y i.m-i- imi . w- - 1 i ll" W 1! n AGLNTS WANTr- D! Pft-F 9B V-Himr. MSK 3 rf Ji"-PSI S GRANT AJIODKD B WORLD I. CLENDENEN, M o., Ofricic, Jtoow r. 145 WaaUon 5trol, Chloftiji ? Dr a Kw ni Sciaui: ten 1 rtf SLNO FOK KPFKRXl"t. CASH PAID FOR Scrap Iron & Metals 8T. LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE, XI? SIS . MU Hwt, PAPKR STOCK WAmEMOVftXS. So. ITS to IS? North MlKt JUTWfc. Addrrs.. T. WIIH fin , GRAEFENBERG &k-; YCUKTAttlJ. PII.X.S MALAKIALOISCAftCt, HCAOACHC. 9tLlOU NUS, INOKCSTKM M rCVERS- ThM 1ILL Ten ue th trtm d rettaM mH H & tufUHn It nnne lrom irnefil fwiti rvoun. tia rii ft ll DntrtHH. PERMANCNTLY CUMC KIDNEY DIStASCt, LIVER COMPLAINTS, I "Constipation and Pib. it has wnxro I WONDERFUL If II I I POWER. ama j BCACKX IT ACT 9 THE j rjTKK,TMr nawzi a KI-i IKCYM AT TUCMAXK-rtNC WW H elMMM t iaUawi thn9tafeua Ivumera that a4( in -wrirf vnnmrr ! , So l0Un. an4tte. 09-Jb-r. li. or In hvfT-at'm( Mvra--gi and rmt ieo2rm. 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