I 1 V tr x - i.tt J A ' ' T a - A r? A 4 I hi - THE BED CLOUD CHIEF. - M. L. THOMAS, PvMMter. EED CLOUD, - 'NEBRASKA. AKS WER HIM SOFTLY. ; Anwer lilm softly. You can not know. In lh; depihslMluw, j. How Miarj) was tlic. utrugle, the light lie miule, -a. Kit; the price lir paid. "wc And yielded ltlf wml to tlic tempter power In a hasty hour. Answer lilm wf:lv; for it may I- Ilke the ituni lr-e, 9 "Which tested in many a torm Its trenRth, To Ik rent at length lie frirugglfd full oft, nnd rcnixted well. Though at last he i elL , " - Answ er him foftly, let you lu tried' On your eafcer wide. And fail, a lxI ore you many have done, Who in thought hud won ; Tail. too, ere temptation had ptit lu Xurco In its Kuhtle course. ? Anwer him wiftly; for none enn tell. When the Morxn-cloudw cll, "Wlio-o bark bhall weather Uie tempot, or who-e Its venture ahull loc. Speak gently; the v. eakesf may. stand the gale. The Moulest may falL Jiotton Trat titer. DISAPPOINTED HOPE. She was waiting at the lattice. Where the Miowy plumed cleiuatin Trn.ntltd for her gratis What the breezes cung and frfghcxU j And the dainty tcnderntae- Of the hunleumM on her tre- 1-ft her traced in the care Of the goltfcu morning tide. Tlie linnet were a eoolrig. And the dapjier !ee a-ooing. And the deun were interview ing All the flower cohered fays; While lightly from the dingle. The zephyr, lone and Mngle, Came u to intermingle In the leal -entangled marc. She waits another eoming, '- Her heart it, richen humming, (.,- v Till Middcnly a lninimin;c From the gravel walk aroe, A hope triumphant filled her, And clear the word that thrilled her: " Look hure. you, Jane Matilder Come and knuckle them nr clothe " A. ). fTorld. BRUIGET'S YALESTIXE. The postman nipped sharply on Mrs. O'Donuhue's door (this door'belonged to tle hack room on the third lloor of a tall, narrow, dingy house in along, nar row, darl: street cont-iining many other tall, narrow, dingy houses) St. Val entine's morning. His Kichcl and his left hand were filled with letters and valentines, and in his right hand ho carried a pretty blw-and-gold paper box a little battered, as paper boxes are apt to be when they come by mad tied with a blue fcatin ribbon, and smell ing hke rotes. A young girl wearing a soiled calico dres and shoes down at heel, but with her rough curly hair piled in huge puffs on the top of her head, and a pair of cheap taw dry ear-rings in her ear-, hold ing a torn and crumpled novel in her hand, opened the door. "Miss Bridget O'Donohue?" asked the postman. "That's mesclf," answered the girl. " Then here's a valentine for you," he said, handing her the box; and turn ing quickly, he was down the stairs and out of the house in a twinkling. Mrs. O'Donohue was washing, and the windows of the room were dim with steam. Bridget went to one of them, wiped a couple of panes dry with the skirt of her dress, and opened the box. A howl of delight burst from her lips. " An? what in the worruld is if, Bid dy dear?" cried her mother, rushing from the wash-tub, her arms covered with soap-suds to the elbows. "Kape away! Don't come near it wid the soap'-suds!" screamed her daughter. " It's one of thim Kitty Crowley was a-tellin about last night a valentine. And och! ain't it lovely? Niver sor I the likes before." Mrs. O'Donohue put her arms behind her and looked over her daughter's shoulder. " Bless us and save us!" she nxclaimed: " it makes me think of the fairies. Sure it looks like some of their wornik; it do entirely." " Niver in all me life sor I the like before," repeated Bridget, and 1 don't believe she ever did. It was a beautiful valentine. A sheet of creamy, satiny paper, on which were delicately painted the loveliest white roses and snow-drops and blushing moss-rose buds, and in the center of which was fastened a pretty gold ring, and beneath the ring this verse was written in a plain and hand some hand : I offer roes pure and w hltc Kinhleni of girlhood's, happy tiny. And swvet nio bud- by Cupid plucked To deck Love's ways : And -now-drops Hope's own dainty flow ery That wliipcr you may yet be mine, lear girl with sunny hair and smile My Valentine! These lines Miss O'Donohue spelled out slowly, mispronouncing many of the words, and making sad nonsense of what was rather nonsensical already; but her mother listened with as much delight as though the reading were per fectas, no doubt, she it thought was exclaiming, as her daughter finished, " That bates Tom Moore intirely ! But, Biddy darlint, you haven't sunny hair; vou hair is like" the night." " They mostly put that kind of hair in songs," said" her daughter; "an' 1 wish you wouldn't call me Biddy again. Bridget's bad enough, so it is,'an I'll change me hull name whin I git mar ried, so I will. I wonder who in the wide worruld represinted me wid this beautiful valentine?" Bridget O'Donhue," said her moth er solemnly, at the same time looking at her with admiring eyes, " some young gintleman has fallen dead, in love widyou.an you only three months in this blissid country. An1 1 don't be sur prised at it, for since you put them puffs on the top of your skull, an' 1 bought you thimilligant ear-rings, you look hke a. princess. An sorra a doubt I have but that he'll be wantin to marry you in a year or so 1 was married meself at fif teenan I hope you'll not be desartin ?-our old mother "whin you're a foine ady." " I wouldn't so demane meself," re- Elied Miss Bridget, with a toss of her ead, " if you bees only a washer-woman. I'll buy you a silk dress an a hat wid an oarstrich feather, an a goold watch to wear whin you comes to see me. But you mustn't be comin too often. He mightn't like it." " Shure I'll niver interfare between you an' him, me brave gurril, said her mother. "Mothers-in-law do be doin' that too much, they do; but I'D kape me place, niver fare. An now, Biddy I mane Bridget darlint, your frinds must see this valentine, goold ring an' all, an larn the prospects that has arose before you. But it won't do for you to be runnin about from house till house wid it as though, you'd niver had the like before at all at all." Shure I niver had," said Bridget. "Whist! no nade tellin the same," said her mother. "For all they know, you had. hundreds in the old country. Put on your Ulster an' your new hat, an' go an' ax your frinds here to a tay party. For a tay parry I intend to have at four o'clock tnis very afternoon, an' while you're away, iJl put aside the -washin an' red up the place. An' you'll - Jiave to go -widout the- laee hankerchy I promised you till next month, for the money I've saved must go for the atin' ? ''an' drinking So in a short time "Miss O'Donohue, in-a Pinafore hat sa jauntily on the hack of her head, and a gray Ulster coming down to Iter feet (thereby con cealing the very much soiled calico dress) was knocking at various doors in the house in which she lived, the house next door, the house acmw the way. and a house around the corner, deliver ing verbal Invitation tn her friends to a tea party to take place at her residence that afternoon, all of which invitations, albeit Miss O'Donohue was no great fa vorite, or account of her silly aire, were accepted, with loud expressions of pleasure. "It's Hie birthday party," fehe ex plained to the invited guests. But, Bridget, 1 thought your birth day was last December, just after you como over,' said Kitty Crowley. 'It was," said Bridget; "but me party was postponed for raisons." And at four o'clock precisely a dozen or more young girls, with several of their mothers, grandmothers and aunts, gath ered around Mrs. O'Donohue's hospita ble table, ttnd devoured biscuits, cold ham, pickles, peanuts and cake, and drank vast quantities of lemonade and tea, with much gossiping and giggling. Mrs. O'Donohue thought they never would stop handing her their plates and tumblers and cups; but at last, to her great satisfaction, they did, and the op portunity for which she had been im patiently waiting arrived. And pushing the tea table back against the wall, she called oot, as though the idea had just occurred to her, " Bridget, dear, per haps your frinds would like to see your valentine." "An' did you git a valentine? Ob, you sly thing, to say nothing about it!" said Kitty Crowley." "Is it a comical one?" asked Mary Lee. "Bring it out this minit!" commanded Annie Pheeny. And as Miss O'Donohue pretended to blush and hesitate, all the girls shouted in chorus, "The valentine! the valen tine!" And at last, with an air of great pride and importance, the valentine was pro duced. Its extreme beauty and costli ness for a moment struck the group of girls dumb with astonishment. And then there was another chorus of "Splendid!" "Beautiful!" "Iligant!" "Must have cost tin dollars at the very laMe!" "Who sint it to you, Bridget?" " I ain't sure," said Bridget, with a simper and her favorite toss of the head, " but I mostly thinks I know. A young gintleman wid beautiful black eyes anda big dimant pin, that lives in a iligant house near the baker's. He sits in the windy an' smiles at me ivery day whin I goes for bread." "An' you'll be marrvin' him some fine day, an' forgettin' ail your old com rades," said Kitty Cowley. "I'll not be forgettiti' thim," said Bridget, with emphasis. "But you'll be forsakin' thim?" sug gested A'nnie Pheeny. "Shure nn' I suppose he'd make me," replied Miss O'Donohue. "I'd have to 'j-ociatc wid me own class thin. But I'd spake to ye all whin I met ye," she added, in a patronising manner. "Indade, an' I'm obliged to you for your great condescension," said Annie. "An' so are all the rest of the gur rils, I'm sure," joined in Mrs. Crowley, Kate's mother. " You always thought yourself above them, Bridget, dear, but, faith! I niver could see the differ." " Me child's shuparior style an' beau ty is the differ," announced Mrs. O'Donohue ; " an' so I tell you, Mrs. Crowley, ma'am." "1 don't take in washin' to give shu parior style to me Kate," retorted Mrs. Crowle. "An' no daccnt girl would want 4 stvle ' whin her mother had to find it in the wash-tubs," declared Kate. "But 1 suppose the wash-tubs will be burned whin Biddy "purposely using the ob noxious name" gits the young gintle man, an' lives in the iligant house near the baker's." " Indade an' they will, Kitty Crow ley," said Bridget, her voice trembling ami her ear-rings jingling, " an' ivery thing else belongin' to this low place; an' as for the low, common, jealous folks I've been forced to know here. I'll wash me hands of thim for ivcr and iver." lust then there came a loud knock at the door. "Maybe it's black eyes an' dimant pin comin'"to see his bride," said Mary Lee. " If it is you needn't introduce us, Bid dy, dear." We won't be offended." But no young gentleman met Mrs. 0'Donohuc"s gaze a she threw open the door. The po.-tman confronted her. " I left a valentine in a box here this morning," he said. " You did," replied Mrs. O'Donohue, in a faint voice. "It was a mistake," he went on, hur riedly; " and I've nearly lost my situa tion bn account of it the young fellow that sent it raised such a row in the of fice. It's for Miss Bridget O'Donovan, who lives at the same number in the next street. Being used to bringing letters here, and the names being so -much alike, I mixed things a little!" And, sure enough, there was the di rection on the cover of the box as plain as could be, though Bridget and her mother (the latter for a very good rea sou, however,) had neither of them no ticed it. Mrs. O'Donohue handed the valentine over in perfect silence. But as soon as the postman departed, such a Bable as there was ! " Shure, Biddy, 'twill be too bad if he don't let you 'sociate wid us." -" Don't burn the" wash-tubs yet a while, me dear." ' I thought that ring a little too genteel for anny of me lady's fingers." " Smile at us from the windy of the big house whin we go to the baker's anny how, that's a darlint." " I'll be thankful to yez all if ye'll lave me house this instant, an' niver inter it again," said Mrs. O'Donohue, in a quiet rage. " We're goin ma'am yes, ma'am," said Mrs. Crowley. " Thanks for your intertainment, ma'am. It's plisint to come where there's so much style an' beauty, ma'am, an' where the young lady is goin' to be married to a rich young gintleman, an' wash her hands of all her comrades for iver an' iver, ma'am. Sind for us whin ye have an other valentine to show us, ma'am. Good-avenin' ma'am. Good-avenin', Miss Bridget O'Donohue.' Earpers Weekly. Sometimes spots will accidentally get upon papered walls that deface them badly. If it should be a grease spot, a paste of hot laundry starch made verv thick and spread on, while boiling hot, quite thickly over the surface of the spot, and left till dry, then rubbed off with a soft cloth, will remove all the grease and not deface the paper. An ink spot or other dark stain can be cut out with a sharp pen-knife, pulled off, and a bit of new paper matched and pasted over, which may save the trouble and expense of repapering the whole room. For this purpose always have a piece of paper laid away at the time the papering is first done. When the paper is dingy with smoke, take a quart of wheat bran and tie up in a iliin bag loosely and rub the walls with it quiteliard. Shake up the bran oc casionally, and you will be quite sur prised to see how clean and nice it makes the paper lcok, well paying for me taoor oi cieansmg. Henry James, Jr., has written a novel for the Parisian. It is in the form of letters written from a French pension, by an American girl from Bangor, Me;; an English, girl, a German professor and. a Frenchman. mm The late Prof. De MUle left a novel which is soon to be published -. it is called "A Castle in Spain,' Tfce Far-rite f ImeeU. Koe Wt thorn who hTC traveled oa thelppCTXmaaons can have any idea of the number andTorachyof the "insect tormenU which work their wicked will on the bodies of the unfortunates ex posed to their attacks. The "nancodos," or small sand-flies, form by far the moFt important section. In the villages, round which the forest is cleared away for some distance, the sancudo are gener ally pretty quiet daring the day, except wirere darkne prevails ; there they are ever bu.y, and are a perfect plague. The triumphant note of a ttancudo which has made hU way under your curtain is more annoying than even his bite; and thould you have been careless in getting into bed, and been accompanied by two or three of these blood-suckers, we will defy you to lecp until you have exterminated them. In the forest and on the river the san cudos arealways busy. Men sometimes get into the vessel's top?, and there cov er themelvcs with sacksT notwithstand ing the heat, rather than remain below exposed to their attacks. Fortunately they can not .stand a current of air, and so when under way the vessel is com paratively free from them, but when at anchor these pest are .something awful. To get rid of them is next to impossible. Creosote will keep them off, but the remedy is as bad as the disease. White wash will drive them away, but when dry its power ceases; and the only thing to do is either to cover all exposed part of the body with black pigment a la mode Indicnnc, or else to " grin and bear it." Scarcely less troublesome than the sancudos are the mosquitoes, although they have the negative merit of biting only by day. They are minute creat ures, not much larg'er than a pin's head ; they prefer the backs of the hands to anv other spots for their attacks. But, unlike the sancudo, which, when un disturbed, gorges himself until unable to fly, and becomes an easy pre- to your avenging finger, the mosquito never seem to" take too much to prevent his escape on the slightest apjiearance of dangar, being evidently just as wide awake when full as when empty. Everywhere in long gras lurks the " moquitn," a little red insect so small as to be almost imperceptible, but which fastens on the legs, causing the most intolerable itching. There is a fly which burrows in the skin and deposits an cgf:, both in human beings and animals. This produces a maggot, similar in shape to that of the common blow-fly, but much larger, probably analogous to the Guinea-worm. Then'therc are " chigos," which bur row mostly in the soles of the feet. You feel an intense itching, and on exami nation find a little thing like a pea just under the epidermis: this i the bag containing the young chigos, which must be carefully picked out with the point of a knife, and the cavity left filled with tobacco ash. Huge spiders abound, whose very ap pearance inspires a wholesome dread of a nearer acquaintance, but which are harmless enough if let alone. In fact, on board the steamers, almost every cabin is tenanted by one large spider, whose presence is tolerated on account of his being a deadly foe to cockroaches, which abominable creatures swarm on board. Sometimes he is not visible for a fortnight or more at a time; but he leaves tokens of "having been there," in the shape of the empty husks of cockroaches, from which he has carc fullv abstracted the interior. These spiders have the power of springing upon their pre' from a distance, and some of them are so large and powerful as to kill and devour small birds. In passing through the narrow forest paths it is necessary to be on the look out for the wood-ticks, which are very difficult to get rid of if once firmly at tached; also for the huge black ants, an inch and a half in length, with stings like a hornet's; and the sauba tnt, without sting, but armed with nip pers like a pair ot surgical oone-lor-ceps, which are running about every where. One may sometimes chance upon a column of the dreaded " fire ants," marching in regular military order; and if he does, the only- thing is to bolt at once, for neither man nor beast may withstand the fire-ant and live. When at length the traveler stops to rest, he must take care to ex amine the camping ground to see that neither centipede nor scorpion is there. Frequently both centipedes and scor pions are found on the steamers, intro duced, no doubt, in the wood used for fuel. One dav, while the writer was watching the hands taking wood from canoes longside, from one of the logs pitched on board was dislodged a scor pion, which fell on the naked left arm of a man keeping tally at the gangway. Astonished by his sudden flight through the air, the animal remained perfectly still. The man never moved a muscle, and quietly raising his right hand, flipped it away with his fingers and thumb. It was very neatly and coolly done; and he thus escaped a sting, which he no doubt would have received had he tried to brush it hastily away. Harper's Young Folks. m Saa Mariao. The Republic proper stretches over a territory seventeen miles long and about half that width, and has a popu lation, all told, of about 6,000 people, the capital, where we were, navin about 900 of them. They are governed by a Council of Sixty, which is a close corporation, nominally composed of twenty Princes, twenty of the middle class and twenty of the peasant class ; but in point of fact, as I afterward learned and, indeed, as might be in ferred from the fact that they them selves filled all vacancies, and the peo ple had no more to do with the choice of the members of their Council than of our members of Congress all were nobles, and if you were to address one otherwise than as "nobilissimo," you had better not have addressed him at all. I gathered that the real distinction was that twenty were taken from the landed gentry, twenty from the town gentry and twenty promiscuously from any pjaxt of the territory. This Council, independent of all hu man control from above or below, elects two executive officers, who are called Captains-Regent; it designates all ex ecutive committees, imposes taxes in fact, conducts the Government. When I asked if the people had no elective franchise of any sort, the Count B saiu, "io, none;" Dut tnev may re- spectfullv address the Captains-Regent by petition. If I had known him better I should probably have taken the liberty of saying to the Prince that the privi leges of the people of San Marino re minded me of those which the MinistT Calonne proposed to yield to the Assem bly of Notables near the close of the last century, and whicn were cunningly caricatured by the picture of a minis terial orator addressing a flock of tor keys as follows: -Gentlemen, I have called you to gether to ask you with what sauce you would prefer to be eaten.'1 44 Bat do we not wish to be eaten,1' was the ungracious reply of the honorable birds of freedom in congress assembled. 44 You dodge the question, was the retort of the tmpertarbable minister. The government of this so-called Re public, therefore, Is simply a close cor poration vested with iadeterminable power to fill all vacancies occasioned by death or otherwise. Their Council is eyen less popular ia its composition than a hereditary legislature, because no third power like that of a sovereign, to which the people have access, has any thing to do with filling the vacan- cies that occaioaa!lr occsr is it ranks. Two Exeeniivwi or CaDtaint-Rrircrat. om fat Ha toward am for tfce rural I districts, are ehoaea fev the Council I erery ix month in April and Octo- j oer and mav not be elected lor two conjcativc terms. They may be. how. ever, aBUirrcraenujare, rc-ceccu xiwtr .. , ..-..!. an interval of three rears. Some 6f ti... u.-.i.r.. i. t, i- . five time. Count & told me be had himself been Captain-Regent three I. how- I Rcpab- . pay-1 times. Jt mast be remembered ever, that San Manno is a small ! "I TKri KMMfita niAAffa Tis I another evidence that San Marino ts not I alUfpublic, alter cisatlantic ideas, at Soils compoeU ox coarse ian, wwwiin.oSav. t mb -. " r any rate. thev mav be rich in mineral rlrjtxjnu. , oail. popper, grwutd citrvr aod aHMrr Aly readers arfi doubtless already im-' are", in the aiM-nce of jadicioui treat- pot tb. t--f ta a nA whteh ea be co patient to know something of the army, i meat, a continual source of dUsppolnJ- ercd JhUr, wkh wa hrnm. l- or which for 1.3UU year has dchetl the many larger ami more ; populous territories in Europe. The militarv defence, then, of the Republic of San Murinn U Mmmhtwl to a renilar ' armv-of thiriv men. whn in joioh1 tobealwavs readv to repjnd to the ' calls of honor or o'f patriotism. A po-f j J v JJ lice, consoling of five or six persons, l protects the rjrot)rtv of the territorv . manifold elements of disorder that have I ranul dreat of wuer L&rougn incni, , been so fatal to wj many drna ties and , are incapable of Mipplying moisture laurrlleavc- dfrnembereu jo . . . T . ... and gives peaceful slumbers to its hon- their mechanical defect convcU'd and est burghers. In emergencic the mi- their value many litnr enhanced. Fall litia of the country may be called in aid plowing when there is a clay ubotl of its unconquered "regular legions, within reach U very beneliciml. lcau They have two Judges, who arc, how-1 ii brings up the clay to mingle with the ever, required bv law to Ik taken from sand surface by ibe'action of fronts and without the territory, and are changed rain. A green crop or two turned un cvery three years. But all case of ap- dcr further assists in stiffening Ujo tex peal are decided by the court of cas.xa-1 ture of thj hind, improring its capta tion or review, in the neighboring cities rv action and facilitaiing root action of Bologna, Padua, Turin, or wherever When there i. not a clay Mibil within that tribunal may chance to be sitting ; reach of the plow, the use of lime in .uiuc uuic. iiiutuucuu iu utiimuic them, also, U that of the Italian Gov- ' ed under is advised as one of the mot ,..' .' , ernment. Thev had once some ku , effectual and economical means for the i I o cJcan bra-, ImtuerMj orwaihtl coined, the equivalent in value of our amelioration of the land. ' 7 u ,n "U,V: or whj;.v' lhl cent-my host at the inn gave me two. The successful management and cul- will bnghten it without conritg. t or three of them, but tbey were not i tivation f clav or rtiff land are much nr " he foum! with a u-ulen cloth coined in the Republic. Their number more laborious than the lighter soils. dipped in water. was ven-restricted and thev are rarelv , Clav uoiL. under proper treatment, how- A mall piece of paper or linen to be met with except in the collection' t ever, endure long and vield a great va- i mobtcned with turjentine and pal m. of numismatists. It is certainlv one of riety of crops. Thev are generally 1 the wardrobe or drawer for a inglr the eccentricities which distinguish San adapted to the cereals, make good gnm ' day at a lime, two or three times a year, Marino from all other countries that it and pasture lands and grow fine fraiu. i a preventive against moth. puts its litigation out as some families ' Clay land are deficient in veg- Hardening Candle. Take for four put out their washing and trades exclu-J etable matter and -are there-. paund of candle two ounce of white sively with the currency of foreign fore great! v benefited by nn (or vellow) beeswax. ThoM? who make States. The country which buys and ' application of the same. Lime is alo ' candles will find it a great improvement sells with a currency over which it ha " beneficial to such lands, assisting to , to stoop the wirks In Timewater audailt no control and submits its differences to f remedy their stiffness anl tenacity. Any , peter, and dry them. The flame i foreign tribunals for adjustment, gives j substances which serve a divl-or,re- clearer and thelallow will not run pretty heavy bonds to keep the peace ; venting the adhesion of the particles of In washin" dt-h",iou anil krttle, with 'its neighbors, whatever be the title . earth loth in times of drouth and ex- i a yy', Hf broonmirn with a small quan ' it givas to its form of government. cessive wet are of great Mirvice. j t-,lv ,( soapv prater U hand v and uefil xiie eAwenscj ui men tueiiuueiii. will not ecm large to an American, They never excee X 25,000 francs sav i $."i,0W army, navy, post-office, educa tion, prisons, police, diplomatic serv ice, representation, all included. This revenue is raised out of the profits real- tzed by the Government from the pur- I cnase oi some oou,ouu pounus oi louaeco in the leaf, which it manufactures to sell at a small advance; from the sale of about NX) saeks of salt, and a trifling stamp tax of three cents on notarial, judicial and other legal documents. The health of the Republic is looked after bv one physician and one surgeon J empioyeu y me oiaie, who are requireu to attend and prescribe for all who send for them, but who arc not expected to resent the offer of a gratuity from those who can afford to pay for their advice. These functionaries receive some 500 a year each from the State. The Judges receive the same. San Marino has not only never been afflicted with a news paper, but no printing press has ever stood upon its territory John Jligelow, in IInrpcrt Magazine jor Felinuiry. m A White IS'cgress. The tiracticability of converting a nigger into a white man has usually been placed in very much the same category as that of changing the Ethi opian's skin or effacing the spots from a leopard. It will, therefore, be some what surprising to non-scientific readers to hear of the case of Celine Henry, which was recounted lately to a society of anthropologists by a certain Dr. Smester. This woman, who was a na tive of Haytij and was about thirty-five jears old, began in the year I860 or thereabouts to notice that the color which she had always supposed to be natural to her skin was slowly fading away in many places, and being replaced by a hue resembling that of a white woman. Far from being pleased with tho transformation scene which the fair ies were thus working upon her, she en tirely objected to the proceeding, and took every imaginable step to prevent the completion of a freak of Nature which her enemies might make bold to call experimentum in corporc vili. Doctors were called in, and the na tive sorcerers were all consulted ; but nothing seemed to arrest the progress of the malady, which the astonished negress was at last fain to consider as a disease. For fifteen long years the de tested tin. of the white European encroached steadily upon the frontier lines of the African black, until in 1877 there vras no more o. the original color left than a few spots, Avhich, if all added together, would not as much as cover a man's hand. The affliction which caused so much terror and chagrin to Miss or Mrs. Celine Henry is, however, one which is not unknown to physiolo gists. It is no other than a disease commonly called vitiligo, which is occasionally congenital in the African and other "dark-colored races, and U sometimes developed in an accidental shape in Europeans or white men. The nariie is, of course, derived from the Latin vitulus, a calf, and is meant to express that color which is best known as distinguishing the flesh of these ani mals. It appears to cause no pain whatever, and to have little or no effect upon the general health ; and if the fair Celine, as she mav now most lairlv be called, had not been dominated by an extravagant fear, she would not have had much cause to lament over her conversion from black to white. Lon don Globe. Level-headed Advice. Our farmers and those who live in localities where people can retire at eight and nine o'clock in the evening, the old notion about early rising is still appropriate. But he who is sept up till ten or eleven or twelve o'clock, then rises at five or six, because of the teaching of some old ditty about " early to rise," is com mitting a sin against his own soul. There is not one man in 10,000 who can afford to do without seven or eight hours sleep. All the stuff written about great men who s.eep only three or four hours a night is apocryphal. They have been put on such small allowance occa akaally and prospered ; butao man has ever jet kept healthy in mind and body for a jramber of years with less thaa seven hours sleep. If you can get to bed early, then rise early; if you can not get to bed till late, then rise'late. It may be as proper for one man to rise at eight as it is for another to at five. Let the bell be rung at least thirty minutes before yoar public appearance. Physi cians say that a sudden jump out of bed gives irregular motions to the pulses. It takes hours to get over a too sudden rising. Trov Times. Thk TJte Chief,-Jack, who has figured in recent troubles ia Colorado, is said to be a Mormon, having been educated by-Bishop Heber. ' m Herr Kurth, a Professor at the Uni versity of Liege, has prepared a " Life of Sitting-Bull in 400 pages. s- - - The warmer the stables, the less feed required for the milkers. riKx Trics. TKXxrmtxr or virrxxrxr .vjils. Soil, while natwrallr dependlag for thdr material clement upon tW mxm , .- :u-.l;-l i 4 xrom waica u e i-"-"- , , iu, um f)OM onm xyit tauir uiwh i . . .!.. ,! nr4)t artificial treatment thaa the ori sottrce for their fcrtUky. TSkt are, indeed, few laad of mk ehirartrr a i i- itnUt ! Use ..-" . . .v.- w- nrj4..i xruncxxi ltcsu meat in - wp.. , warce for tielr fcrtUtrr. Than are, :-j I !..., t.1 -lk fkirarlrr a ' M of innllrd fertiliacr: therefore th . Bcccwity for kowh-s vt ike chemical conuitueuu of a 1 in order to know what crot it will b.t grow and what ' mvu tJcmrnt of plant food it renulre. ' menl to thj cuutvaUjr. teey aiw a from below bv capularv auracuon aa - .. arc deficient in the power of aWorbmg moisture or fertilizing gasc from the J tnrwn.H. TVrtihzrra annlied to i ihrUnJt ino' little or no tte be-1 -i . ; cause thcr are not retained. ITte con-. seouencel a failure of crop?, especially in limes ol drouth. These soils, how- ever, with orotxjr managrnicut have eumuueiiuu iui ri;cti"iv iiii ....- nvni uiaiun-c i- r.-m.na..i .n.v.-..j , for clav soils. ithout drainage ea- sonable work can seldom le done in the spring. ftvery farmer knows how- troublesome dav land becomes if run j together and packed after having been plowed .Much needless worn is cau.-eu . g such lands too early in the bv plowm spnng L-..H ..i..-;n r a n n:it fts.sist- i n ii"iii ij iiv -j.-- ance; it adds humus through whatever J bo on the farface, and the , growths mav alternate freezes and thaws of winter break up the inert clods and grind down the soil into a more soluble mass. Cold and unproductive soils which have stag uatiC water sufficiently near the surface to ls reached by the roots of plants re quire to be underdrained. Alluvial soil may be said to have no distinctive character, being composed of successive dejosits, continued through a long period. Thev partake somewhat I of the soil of the country from which j running waters have washed and de l posited them. Alluvial lands, of course, are rich in humus and do not need me assistance of green crops turned under or the application in any form of vege table matter. Thev are generally de ficient in the mineral elements and are j benehteu uv phosphoric aciu, pouisn and other mineral ,l.,.,t.fnol The ' ay Imj said of soils known as veg-1 aolds and containing a large ter i same in etable mo per I rrm. s.f wnlfilt1n vtlttil Loams are soils m which clav anu sand unite, sandv Ioam being those in which the sand predominates and clav loams those in which the proportions of 1 sand and clav are reverse! These must j be treated according as the sand or clav predominates l -. .. . .. ii I ... il If all the crops annually prouuecu up- on one s land soil would annu - -- !... were returned to it the , for Ins purchase, lictorc the marriage allv improve in fertility. he bmh a magnificent dwelling; archi i view it is easy to u'n-' lecture, sculpture, punting, pive of With this fact in derstand that as a part, at least, of each removed plant-food crop is annually equivalent to that contained in the por- j tion of the crop carried off must be re- , nrnn rjirncn on miisi ie re- . turned to the land to gectire it- enduring .,.:i: t i,. i,w. nM.t;..oiK- ,i..m. onstrated over and over again that the roots of all plants, and especially the legumes, have a jower of acting as chemical agents upon the mineral ele ments of the soil in a manner which renders them available as plant-food. This in part explains the desirable ef fects of the cultivation of peas, clover and the like. "ll'UM... LA MrtttnMit ntnnnmliiC fint-O Ili1 down and Slreadv familiar to many farmers are the same everywhere, their application to practice must of neces sity vary with the differing circum stances surrounding individual farmers. Certain practices which give admirable results at the North may fail to be of any avail at the South, and vice vcrea. ilany of these differences farmers mnst learn from experience, thongh much knowledge may be gained by observa tion. The interchange of experiences from all sections of country through journals devoted to the farmers' inter ests, agricultural stations and farmers' clubs can not be too highly prized or encouraged. Every farmer who takes J the trouble to promulgate facts coming into his own line and of general interest is soon rewarded for that trouble by some equally valuable fact, otherwise unknown to him, from another farmer whose opinions were called ouU maybe, bv his own communication. Koc York World. HLMS FOR THE HOUSEHOLD. The Table. Scver put a pud din r that is to be steamed in any thing else than a dry mold. Ham or pork that is too salt should be soaked overnight in sweet milk, or parboiled in the morning in cold water. irryororousiowiy. Many soups are neiier on ine aay iftpr thpr &n mtie. nrovidfJ thev are not warmed over too quickly or left too long over the fire. Tapioca Custard: One teacupful of tapioca dissolved in water overnight: beat three eggs and one cup of sugar to gether, and stir into the tapioca; then add cue quart sweet milk; stir well: bake in pudding-dish until custard thickens. J x --. .r. two cupfuis of sugar, one of butter, one of cider, one of English currants, three eggs, one teaspoonfulof ginger, and one ofsoda. Stir thoroughly, and bake in deep dishea, as quick as may be without scorcamg.. r. r-Vo - Tarn cnnfnl rrf Bncrsr. ob capful of butter, one egg, five cup - lute of akwr, oae cupful ot sour muc, a j teaspooBful of lemon extract, and a tea spooafalof aoda. Knead hard asbis caits, aad roll about a quarter of an inch thick: cut oet with a fancy cooky cutter and bake aside Thev are very good aad look nicely oa the table. AWholesoBe Cake: One pint of raised doagh, like wheat bread dough; Orse teacapful of sugar, oae of butter, three egg3 well beaten, one teaspoonfnl of soda, one cupful of slewed raisins, and half a teasppenfaleachof cloven, .pimento, cinnamon and nutmeg. Eoll the raisins well in Hoar before mixing up. This aiakes a very nice, whole some cake. Let it stand ii a warm place till It i nhr H-i, ! tU with a tiaw fir-. rv. . tv, tk- ,n, .?- .J 4 I rn9re In aa raeM $ 4 ' twlie;r waUrr. a mora a rrfai. Tm m -M- -'-- w fc- --- -r- j i.oalic'e and Ift it tw W at . tntn .,,-, , . i,,.! h ilm tfe --- -- -- --- - uasrof't hoixMntVlxA of eaata tU. TrSlSfeCTS time h fc d. m4 m dry H la ih Min Krra the cuficn-kcn u as air Daroiucuucnwuoe i caama i j- : , , - , ... ... . -T4 .7'a r. h aw na - s Unw H M oeI. atxJ tfo twrt irr ta 16 tisht bt r eorkrd bottU. prwt the atvma rttsd xht coff- h3t brJr ' a'-r -IW a la Mode Tale. a -W 4 , rrmd t.f t-f about nx r elbt r-w&d rw-. pirn? . ?: n" m , rawu3K)!l, IBW MK H WWR, wn and drivd hAmr;rB, .....- .-. . a. . a ir m. ... i rf nwrami. i i.-;f wm water, wtnc aJ ta5r . - thr not eJo-fllr and ite hut if rvm ea ao.1 bake rmW four or firr lKar. ItefttTf Mining, il tablp"i Mtnuig. ikim wme fit off and taie ni? tabl.p.Rl t Soar Mtlone to..-j.r. ful of .a-ar . fry thi vrry darl brtm n. add to the meat, and t tn ajata men taxe meal ot, ".raia tbe&ocv, jxVa.tK? and atft.; aad -Mn with ahul. ; "llllnma. Cool rain watr and da will tak machine oil oet of wahablm good Th water uel ia mtxlng bread , nm be tejiid. If U.wi hot the loavxi w jJi ' be full of bulb. Iron-holder lou)d harw a covor of uhlte cotton cloth made to fit meely, ' and fastened on with button, and n be a it become Mjllnl It can be rweowd, , , , , in cleaning mem irom an otw anu grease, which are objectionable to the dish-cloth. Thi wisps are formed by liii"tln brootn-corti into bundles as i"tnrc s - jr0itm handle, with two stout cords near the coarse ends, which f-rtn a handle. In attempting to remove grease . . -, -, , t . s? .in niiiaKe is ire-menuy maur ui ai.Pying benzine ornpinf iof tunenunc tviiti ;i sxniiiiie oi a j;i. ius iruu in evitablv to spread the grt'a-e. The to spread the greae. stained portion of the garment hoiild be laid flat between two sheet of blotting-paper, and the. upper heet wrll soaked with benzine. In this way, if sufficient time be given, the whole of the fatty matter becomes not only dissolvedbut absorbed by the paper. A .Marrlace for Monej. In New York CIt, a princely man sion was offered for sale a few eats ago, about which hung a ?ad storj". A man of enormous wealth lived to the the age of 00 without marrying, then lie proposed to a beautiful, brilliant voung girl, who belonged to a large put poor familv She hesitated long before accepting mm his habit, morals, jer- " n, wen- all obnoxious to her, for 5 wa &r of J'rp. ?" ?" ,lut for she ". fa4'.1. "M' be the wife of to a millionaire, to go to millionaire, io j; ViirYinTi tn roirrn iiL-r k nrwuin irt fnn Mil ""-" ."-v;; , 1"-: ,-' wherc the had lived on the income of a en-ant-thcse were temptations too ng for her, as they are for Uk many American women. Me married him without a particle of kne or respect;, herself as absolutely for money as , ivir alnrit u-t soli I l!r lii'sttinnil Tin!'! - - ;- -' - i "-,ir D,l K ,l ni 10"" uo,np u a J 4,4J' there was a Chinese room, a l wt' I'tutMtt vLj-k n Il(niln wmm i iioiau itrvMiA ajir i win there r fonvfn'?i!irjp4. nii'ttirn-fallif Xi. vv : --: i n . ?ou,iu,"'1 "l, I"-" the bnde should spend one was that winter in ' "" regal home, and in the spring go to Eurone for a two years visit. Two weeks after the wedding, the bride groom was struck down with paralysis, m wl tsw ftftnrvr ltT nti TtfS M1 H helpless, querulous invalid, nursed by, his wUe. Tho mansion was closed ex- ? cepting in the sick man's apartments, and resembled a gigantic tomb I.y the , terms of his will his wife would inherit "othP h dcrtcd him She re- maincd faithful, therefore, only to find after his death that his estate was as hoi-1 lw a sham as her marriage, and that it was swallowed up in his debts. Not all marriages for money end a dramat ically as this, but they "are as tragic in reality. The voung girl who sells her I life for a price inevitably reaps disap- pomtmcu cut and misery. loiUh . Com- panion The War-ship of the Fatare. The acute German mind ha already perceived the follv of building impreg nnblnariirM. Thftleamed Profl Ioewcr thai has become convinced that instead , of building ship3 which can not be pierced by the guns now in use. we should build ship which would offer the least possible resistance to cannon-balls. He claims that the frigate of the future will be so constrnctedthat the balls of the enemv will pas directly through her without inflicting any damage, and that she will attack her enemy, not with guns, but with torpedoes. Herr Loewenthal selects for the ma- tcrial of his newly-invented war vessel fndl tnbhr of one foot in thicknew. The whole hull to be made of India Vkno ffHNmTfhAf.aJ TwfclsYaEr tVli vkl&r line with a light steel frame. The ves- sel will be driven bv an ordinary steam engine, and will have no mats. At the w a jectiHff wMch Tva nrndtAn n ixt tffiTHL and tbe en- .t i r i.:. .v- (...m Tt ure crew, uiuumi "c utuu.-nw, - be on the lower deck ont of the ran e of shot. ""Then a cannon ball strikes the j India-rubber ship, it will pass directly through it above the heads of the crew. and the noie maoe oy win ia-wiLrj mmwmr r close- Paying aoatteatioa to such fatife1 cTrrovo a 4 attacks, the India-rubber vessel wiUH. K. ailil K35 Mi. steam toward her adversary and explode J her torpedo. The doomed vessel-will j instantly sink, while her elastic destroyer will be driven hundreds of yard back wards bv the recoil following the explo sion. Such a vesel, ?avs the inventor. could easOv destroy all the navies of the world, aad" after her work wa dose she could be made as strong as ever wita ftbe aid of two ox three bottles of cement. 1 ""7 Y&rk Times. A LoysiOJf paper, ia tracmg the mode n which 122 ol the tided faatilies of Esgiaad have required lands, state that scarcely a dozen of the aember got thea by profesaoaal or eomaaermal permits". The writer asserts that aot one-tenth of the 500,000 acre pw sesed by the 122 was axajaired for vaSae received m Mmmtnnl ttmr4. W H- L. Momr. of 3foreal. Cvmu eertl5S 1 PrA. 27. 1S7JL liar &c kad soffered terribiv j Irwa djKisndk, jrad corEpletclr care! Jr I taTtia; Wuracr' SifeBUiers. He -aya- ""3r xppeute xs zdcu. aad I SfWfisarx Iscob Tealeacefna eatrsz "searty meals. Tbese Inters are also ipeciSc tor B tia dfaees. Xit & Krt ft M M.tJ, !.? uu. m.lt ikJ Jti. t Miryi V 4 U st j& r4- .jr j-tlT $? J4 ad xrvrt nw ?. t VtMr ht- -& W frrttrar2$t rrjr4 .; i -. ..--... . .,v ... t" - -jw5si w in ii MUm. Aa. Tt ik- f. V 1 juu ,. . 7" , . ". T f - rrrrf pxXxc tib ft A tie $5y W&? tx j IV m rn fcrtB, DtriUr tef tVils Jtrft C roriar K)ekjaJti. M. t, V. iri.nft rt , -t- . - . k m m fj M t,W U,itlkNV AwMftnnMXM .. . - - t ta .... . at mjt - .-.- , . .,- --. . Hf "aw": i i .i n ua vj. fcig'V tm DtSV rw tW vem -. U OPIUM. Kmm KiMOru CV4. i - -Mfc tstmr Kima. wsrt w B.rt fMt - to M w ,. SNMitl(SnA AaT.t TilHltX4M .Sttt HtnJK tnfn m t)t fmtUi t 4 J. M. U 9nnn Yr. OarAf!iwl. iJUUviM iu.Troa ABIIIIi BlMt Cr- - V" Jt"jtW 1UMU. IM " "" t. i4 rtntm Ik Otf iitwU ijam tm t m m tt N HONEY TO LMMrl;: f f tir v fcad t3 H"- a it CXtoklri-itkU, KrrsitHC SOI . t. tO.ltft AUDIPHONES .-""." 4 Ua tt-tlX MtmM Chart -k.irrf ta q Llf 1" it tii a COMPOUND OXYGEN 1-A-& I,' V I HMI rlli a4Ow t fc t - tTVt'1?I .. . - .! u.i fv&& 11 ilKEl raxlLv jw tin awr. rmvmtum. r lTmTIT:lkU KAaF!aiW7raMluafl(Btai hMtoiUlrk! ait . wf M f lw v rft cm wt b f -tw " TI Urt- tl rfl Or Mt-.KMrr ol W.oUtt M 4 CO. ham ui Crria (w-J4 ttm tit er .! vUtr tf .- la Uw U. K tt IkwilU MT t- i HlntH (trxs.MMtn ' t4HlUt WtU lt,lilliHn mtmtf A .. l J IU iM Mrvrnt. M. Lm . 1 IW mV i rlr .ul HOAtl Cin DnlliMHlHM)N J r Mf (Ttis-lrs Hk w K? t ! 125 TO 140 A DAT mA ru'.r "' " chiMl ACirt LOOM! 4 WVMAN. TIFFIH. Oh. rat! it-r KKvtcv amtUmm. mrmSmtm. Wltl. rVm-nmrkn hc tm rwnl ftnlo M Main tr Ow ,! Ki . Hn-xi'pmfHttUtKi 0lAs orttnta Utfwtffc Llxuwcf UU tmJy waatrrTal t u.$tr mtdrtt U r mwmI v iu kig i.al irit3rtf " romt it n.l M, r-J I r I . HrZultwtrmtmpaT.' UtntnUJ amd nfea.lt IfiUX. Wuiltmprn (UVrr for Cm Utt .l with rhf.U f Um, lUVrr'v lr t 4 Ui r O.t wllb r. m t B4 r krry Bakrv' Tr t'4 IJwr Oil Hfc Ktlrrt of Matt. rortslhTaUerartaU. trtwttttat TuBtbi wrHmTu'tmatcstiiTtuthA trtnutvrruHnttts wnatmP Vegetine Far Lara WHO ARE SUFFERERS. cwenmiTT, o. Hut ts. irrt. H. yzTTK- Imrtr Xtr 1 1 UB rmt U4XI t rW Tf tla Fa Vtkt.sA.n )toi.a.-'. rtii. .-Kl ta 1 Hi wt n MSif lfw w -pUvotJ. 1 wUl Ttrmawtroi Um rtt-. I ooH Mf M uh ttfv-a rij mom', iaAtmt. tt l trttfc U sKacwsrcastt. kjmr r. xbwiih IMMrtTB A rrmtt WniTTK-Ttiirrnr ku 6lrn3J tf cmr f th-u eriUUnu. it UT.rv mkS ctmxtbe U wUfcU trtwrn. fU nyn "' vmc. altar JnftamtoOo cao nA ni ! Una. carr ructU. l tri. & 5 r In Vh Imr trw. M f-t. Vbrr " 4 crcnofUKl mitm V ttitrmn wr rUi. uHrGKllttaU en-. la rfcX U Urmfi f tcaJ vrrmim. H ttM aw USmi la vu totm-- j ( t J Jg j I Vegetine. What is Heeded -Femals Weakness. m xsgra. . sc . t 7i- jJ.'iSttm 1 1 t wa $ir?gt , thustwe. urftats tan ri h -vt l a '"-"""'SS;8" I m. aaaaaxJUi habwt. . t Scrafala. Iittr Caiaiat. Byaaia, sirrra. . iZVTSLrIT cL,Z. TWianiMmnff tti$ arr bma wnai- iacl TBrttRr - , rri I kar Tutr fettl em o murs. I bears? x Klao'ta4e(aU4 Dav W.MU9A. Hrra. fcrfC.lS.im. Vegetifte is UM faf AH Onigrjsts. j. jBiP'W :?il(-ir4 znxL 4m0 -TfcJT- I PB"""I"FH iinmM mmmmmmmm llUabtlliMMnw(M4 I IriH. mall.Wll H lrx. 1 -yUr . 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I r -I ii it mmm, w r diMwi W M rN i.' 4. I. -M " mtut ttArm tv Mmtt r Hi ii ark wk! mmtL, r-a 4 ! lratMi Urvh tr .-(- rftk-. Im. Tk. mm 4 M rorM, am r. a. n uNma. .. Emerson's Anthem Book. . . - t ImI l)lrt HLW I Cr lr ! lt ft tkta r A. it: t m. a IV U I l rrM "". "" ' ilMtl llM8d('WU Ms I EMtar and ilt t H1 nli rti tLwriso vtjx. mi "V HAVE YOU SCCM "WHITE ROBES," TM HHiKa T1 ah M k WW ( m0 wrt!tL4 """. otti Bia4Ni i ttt m rt Kaa k m, fr b U r.fX. J WHITE KOBKM k. .i. . nlu lata tta, kaairta t B fcn, ttht Vvf M trt U JSt tW, tt 4 Minuau 0B na. M Mp w m " tt. y .m. J.;i V. r ,ttl K. TcT V m 1 ili'tmai-r tmtrm tXa Asy t mM. pttn. - tm rfl lr tUVEII HT$M i M.f Um c at. ! c ISBrl.a. t. itt cktjt -. rj. SVaJi-a. ft HI WV itii iliwli "4My jg llMiift.cM m Wmhmm -t.gin. -. ? t-iMia flL! nurzrmxur iJ& m dBH& ThsOniSefTI5dy IItiat acra at tsk aaxs tuu otII WTHE UVER, El THE BOWELS, H MuwtrMwvmm - " II TLU eevAiaM at&newm kem WMisrfal frr U eraUdamr. Bj WWhy Are We Sick ?! B BtrttH v & M$rmt9TftJmk Q&9 iter && r terpit, crT WmprimMMhM&rtar &rfrrt fmMm kUtXtbt40aS tmld b$ mtUk vl iStKf cjxurr, riujiat n ii fr-AaitEx, rxutwKA A TMlff AiaTtKa H BJ MtttMA, H nh erdSfm aeti tftmt 9afufB UWrwtorfgw- 7r-amfJ wmiimM. pB U Wlrr m9t WHfft 4 mrhm f J ATlty &ntf irtO fami.t' MBJ H Whfm4mr unw tttek kAmhm MM Bl Mhjkari yl UMI Vm uneKt yff rj-im iBl 3-4fra.Mifa Mm mm tm, f fiiiaTKaiiwrawKW. "Ttrmmm T .a. ai aTa Il ail