1 fc HOSE, FARM AND GARDES. ' A dressing of nitrate of soda in spring acta wonderfully on young wheat. N. Y. Examiner. To unite broken glass take a small quantity of isinglass and dissolve in spirits of wine, by the aid of heat. This ' will unite broken glass so as to leave the crack nearly imperceptible and is equal to the best glass cement sold at the stores. Exchanqe. Fall-plowed land intended for grass should be seeded as early as niay be and get a good surface. Young grass don't Fikc hot and dry summer weather. The finish of the new sward will 'depend on how much wc harrow and trample the land. There is little fear of our doing too much of that if the soil is rich, for grass of the finer sorts in particular likes a firm soil. Cleveland Leader. A Sure Cure for Bone-felon: Take a pint of common soft soap and stir in it air-slacked lime until it is the consist ency of glazier's putty. Make a leather thimble, fill it with this composition, and insert the linger therein, and change the composition once in two minutes, and a cure is certain. This is a simple remedy for a very painful disease and will be found to be all it claims. Ar. Y. Herald. The seductive rhubarb will soon make its eppearanco in our gardens, and if you like it weil enough to add to it all the sugar that it demands, you can preserve some of it for use next winter; take it while crisp and perfect ly brittle and fresh; steam it so as to do away with unnecessary juice; then when it is tender put it in a porcelain kettle with all the sugar you can afford to use; let this gradually dissolve, add when hot put it away in cans. Chicago Journal. Gentlemen's collars should be quite dry before they are starched. Dip them in warm starch and let them dry again Jwrfccthy. They must then be dipped nto cold water, spread out smoothly on a clean towel and rolled up tightly. If the starch is properly prepared aud the above rules adhered to. the linen will have a fine gloss when ironed. A little gum-arabic and common soda mldcd to the starch gives extreme stiff ness and gloss to collars. The House- bold. The Art of Cookin? Rice. Siu: With your permission. I will answer the question addressed to " F." about cooking rice. As a rice planter, 1 am greatly interested iu everybody's knowing how to cook rice. Wheat and rice arc the only two grains consumed exclusively by man, or nearly so. Of corn, oats, barley, rye. etc, the great bulk (even of that turned into liquor, a avcastic temperance advocate might say) is consumed by beasts. The coun try produces nearly ten bushels, or three hundred quarts, of wheat per capita, and scarcely one quart of rice; yet. in spite of a considerable tariff on rice, the prices per bushel of wheat and vough rice are not far apart usually. In a rice-growing country everybody oats rice, and prefers it to broad. If a stranger conies among us ( not too old ) in a twelvemonth it is likely he will tdiow this preference, and children in variably acquire it. Yet out of a rice country nobody can eat it, except in pudding-:, and the better he loves it the Jess the born and bred rice-eater will huc to do with it there. A "So'th Car'linian" from Georgetown or Beau fort, who eats rice tilways once, and sometimes twice and thrice a day at iiouie, will hardly call for it a second lime at the best hotels of New York or Long liranch. This is strange, but it is still stranger that, even in the in terior of South Carolina and Georgia, Tiee is not eaten largely, while in the upper portions of those States, except by low-eounty families, it is no more o regular article of d el thau it is in Ohio or Illinois. Why Ls this? The explanation is to be found in the cooking, and in that alone. Is it then so hard to cook? By no means. On thecontrary, the cooking is of the very simplest and easiest, so much so that every negro girl of twelve or upward in the ricecouutry can cook it to perfec tion, though possibly she can cook nothing else. In fact, the plantation rice hands cook it very much better thai; you will lind it cooked at the best hotel; in Charleston or Savannah. Now, 1 will tell you how to cook it so there can be, I Think, no mistake. I am fond of camp hunting in t!ie winter fre quently staying out on the river for a week or ten days, and I always carry rice because it is so easy to keep and difficult to injure, under the ordinary conditions of camp life, when a sudden ihower or a leaky boat may ruin your flour at short uotlce. Also, I always carry Ned, a black man, who knows how to cook rice. Many and many a time have I watched him at it by the camp lire; but la-t winter, there having been some discussion of it in the papers, I took occasion one day to observe ,cd with his rice, very closely, watch in hand. Here is just what he did. how he did it, and the actual time, except of the last operation, which is not im- Iiortmt, so you give time enough not ess than half an hour, and better, an hour. First, he poured a pint of rice into a tin pan and picked it over carefully, throwing out any foreign substances. Then he poured into the pan some cold water, washed the rice, poured the water off, and picked the rice again. A second time it was washed and the water poured off Then Ned put the rice into an ordinary two-quart sauce pan, covered it to the depth of a half inch with cold water, stirred in the salt, fitted on the top carefully, and put the saucepan on a quick fire of coals, and wenti to his other work. In just twenty minutes Ned returned to his rice and removed the lid. It was done, but not ?ret ready for the table. There was a ittle water left, which was carefully poured off; the rice was thoroughly stirred from the bottom, not the'ton. tt t a tin plate was laid lightly on the saucepan, and the saucepan set one side lm the hot ashes, where it remained Tvcry slowly steaming one hour, or may- lap two, when the rice was so dry that you might eat it with your fingers, and at the same time thoroughly done, and 6oft through and through. Nonody caa like raw rice, neither ran any one lik it sogged with water by an hour'i boiling and no steaming. AT. Y.Evtn ingosi. The Ridicule f Farmers. The "great dailies," as they admi ringly call themselves, seldom havo much to say of the farmers as such, ex cept when they wih to make up a stcry which affects a great deal of humor. If they wish a man to appear ridiculous, he is painted a3 a fai mer, usually an "old farmer," very illiterate, a bad speller, ungrammatical, very penurious, and dressed in outlandish garb. Or if not an '-old farmer" of this style, he still has the peculiarities of ignorance and awkwardness, and is held up as a typo of what the rural districts produce, a creature of some use, perhaps, par ticularly about election time, but always shown up at a disadvantage in contrast with the highly cultured classes with whom he is brought into contact This is such a common thing that many writer?, who never go into the country and mingle with the better class of farmers, or see them in their conventions or other gatherings, really think that a farmer is a synonym lor illiteracy and awkwardness, just as some people still think the term "Yan kee" implies a gawkish, whittling, lean, garrulous, shrewd, nasal talker, whoso industrial tables lead him into swin- dling living. agencies," or peddling, for a Even a prominent agricultural paper could not illustrate a rural scene some years ago without putting an old couple man and wife in the fore ground, both decrepit, and driving a decrepit old horse hitched to a rickety wagon of fifty j-ears ago, as its idea of what is to be seen in rural localities. It is worth while for reading and re flective fanners to ask themselves why it is that their vocation, more than any other, is the one chosen for caricature? Dickens, in his stories, usually selects individuals from among the low city classes; et he hardly takes them as types, butrathcr as exceptional cases, which they aro. But when wc read a story now of a farmer's eccentricities or awkwardness, there is rarely any pre tense of limitation it is so pointed and fitted out that it conveys the idea that the cli.ss is ridiculous as a whole. In spite of all that education and closer association have done for the ad vancement of farmers as a class, there is still a targe remnant of ill teracy in rural communities, the wisdom of which is sometimes boldly deleuded. It is urged that we are going too fast in the line of schools and education, becauso one direct result is to make farmers' children feel "above their calling." The boys, when they "get an educa tion," go into business "or the profes sions, and the girls put up their nose at the idea of marrying farmers' sons. Such results aie not the natural effects of education, but oftencr than other wise, the result of m sdirectcd home teachings. Some ignorant farmers who, through previous self-denial, or the at tainment of a legacy in middle life, be come able to educate their children are, themselves quite apt to loo1 upon farm ing as uuworthy an ambitious mind, and frequently so express themselves before their children, ami thus poison their minds. Besides, the education given in such cases is usuii'ly super ficial, and not that which develops the mind. When a farmer sees something more than labor in his business finds en oyment in its wondrous transforma tions, and reflects also how far such work is really above that of most other callings in its usefulness to man kind and in its closeness to nature's mysteries, lie will not long consider it as wanting in pleasures. It is igno rance and narrow views that belittle it, and which give a sting to the story-tell-er s ridicule. To remedy the matter is not to rail at the ignorant man. who in most cases is not reached by anything published in the agricultural papers oi books, or ut tered in agricultural gatherings; but to engage somewhat in m ssionary work. The intelligent reader and farmer must himself, in spe "ch and act, encourage everything which aims at the farmer's advancement, and not be a brake to his progress. He should practico the best system of farming with lit regard to prejudice, and never countenance the sil y idea that mental dewlopment can harm the business. He should remem ber that all the drawbacks to its useful ness, and to its intlueucc as a force in the Government of the country, are duo to ignorance and a habit of mental de pendence on others for pol'tieal guid ance. Farmers should be as independ ent in thought and political action as their business fits them to be independ ent of the ordinary hii-mcss troubles of other callings. At present they have little political stand ng as a class. The men sent to our Legislatures have little apprec.ation of what agriculture is or what it needs; but they know that it is a constituency with no coherence, and that it is usually safe to disregard such appeals as come from its foremost men. because of the indifference of the masses behind them. Let me add, however, that by an edu cation I do not mean a long term at school, " finished " at last by a college graduation. That is all well when there is a taste for it and the means to grat ify it, and if there has bceu no "soften ing of the bran'' before going, there will not often be afterward. Educa tion should comprise not only what a farmer specially needs as such, but ev erything that tends to develop him as a man and a citizen. He should be tho Cijual in culture, in speech, in address, of other intelligent men. so that when he associates with them ho is not likely to appear singular from awkwardness of manner, ungrammatical talk or want of capacity to expre-s himself in con versation or on paper, or clearly and tersely in occasional speeches. His dress on the farm, and his complexion, are of little account; but what lie does want and can have is the abilitv to hold hi- ' own in the contests, great or small. entitet": frroqt nr Knntl that come up among free citi7ens. The disrespect in which farming stands among most other classes, is due to a very general lack of self assertion, and that is founded on the consciousness of mental incapacity and the need of tra'n- Ing. In manners, intelligence and gen-! - . eral bearing the farmer should be in distinguishable from other classes, and then he w.ll readily hold his own against them all. But if illiteracy and nncouthness put a mark upon him aud especially if he himselt encourages these as advantages he will be tho football of politicians, aud tand but a slight chance, conipiralively, lor the honors and emoluments of the world. Cor. Country Gentleman. A Choir Anecdote. In tke Century, Rev. Dr. Charlos S. Robinson continues his discussion of Uie annoyances and humors of the musical service in churches, and relates this an ecdote: "Glorious Easter was at hand and great preparations were made in tho rural parish for its celebration; boughs were twined in the arches of the build ing; flowers swung in wreaths overhead and shone in beautiful baskets among the aisles; children had been rehearsing carols. All the town came in on that notable morning. It was a scene never to be forgotten. The m'nister was ra diant; his eyes beamed with delight. But a thought struck him: this audi ence, so happy, so generous, so enthus iastic would they not hear him a mo ment for a stroke of business? After the invocation and the first song, ho surprised them with a propos tion to bring 'Easter offerings' now at once to God's altar, and lift the dear old church out of debt: oh. then there would be a resurrection! The congregation would come up from tinder its great stone into a new life if the' would roll it away! Then the plates went their course, and hearts were touched, and purses were emptied, and the heaps of money lay before the moistened eyes of the relieved pastor as he trcmulouslv thanked a good God for his people's fidelity in re sponse. 'The money is here, I am sure it is,' he exclaimed. 'If there be a little in arrears it can be made up in a day, and now we are ready heartily to go on with the worship of our rien Loru.' So the fixed programme proceeded. A little German had been procured from the metropolis for an annex to the tenor: his solo came in at this cxaet crisis of grateful emotion: he rendered it with a fresh aplomb, though the consonants were awkward: 'An de del sail be raised de del sail be raised an' de det au' de del sail be raised sail bo raised - in de twinkling of an ay-ec !' "Now it is quite sa'e to say that after tho congregation went home, the theme of the day was dissipated, and the iwo events uppermost in everybody's mind were the surprise which the eager min ister had spmng upon the people, and the ridiculous appropriateness ot the de clamatory solo which followed it. On general principles, we have no ob ec t on to the collection of money to dis charge religious obligation, even in di vine service; but it does seem a pitv that a humorous episode should be the chief reminiscence of such a solemn oc casion." Pauperizing Cattle. One of the religious papers, dealing with the sub ect of mission work in the Western States and Territories, draws an illustration from the experience of men who know all about cat le: In New Mexico, Colorado and Wyoming Territory, and all along those lines of longitude, millions of cattle subsist through all the winter seasons on tho native grass without being fed. The catle kings of Wyoming to'.d me when I was laboring there that, from the se verity of some of their winters, they lost from three to five ppr cent, of their cat tle. I asked why they did not keep a supply of hay to help the .vcaklings through. "GiC c them hay and they quit work, and their example tends to demor alize the herd cheaper to let them die." A friend of mine in Nevada, who had a stock ranch, told me once, in the se verity of a hard winter, he bought a stack of hay to tide his weakly cattle through a cold snap. His supply of hay was not at all adequate to the length of the winter season, but would sustain life till the snow should pass away and allowthe cattle access to the grass"; 1 tit, to his great disappointment, all the cat tle admitted to the hay-stack la' down fcy it a soon as they filled themselves 'lhen when hunger returned they would wal'i to the water-trough and drink, and return to the hay-stack and eat. Thus they spent their days till the hay was all devoured, and there, one by ope, they lay down and died. The next winter was also very severe, and my friend saw that he was likely again to loe a large number of cattle, bit, having learned a lesson of wisdom on the distribution of charity, he de termined to adopt a di'Ierent method; so he procured, a supply of hay, but kept it entirely out of sight of the herd, and during the very severe weather, he had each "cowboy ' sling two bundles of hay across his shoulder, and have them haug down fore and aft of his bodv, so as to attract the attention of the cattle, and pass quietly among ; them as they were scattered widely over the plains, and when they found one in a starving condition, just to lay down a l-ttlc hay and pass on. In t at way he did not pauperize, but lie did vitalize and keep his need- cattle to work on the line of self-support He did not lose one that winter. The Care of Callas. Now this, I judge, is the scientific treatment to give the calla. Let it have rest lrom June to September, but do not suffer its rootlets to die or become withered. Look cl isely at a calla root. It is like a cord of flesh, and each deli cate hair is a mouth, through which nourishment is to be drawn for the plant. If the bulb is found stripped of its live, and healthy rootlets when time for repotting comes, then two or three months win be taken in supplying a new network before there will be any extra energy to put into blossoms. Here is seen tho error of the "drying process." It is a waste of strength and time to suffer the roots to become im paired. 'I he method I have employed for years is to place the plots outdoors in their erect position, thus insuring to cm tne watering of the dew and oc- casion.il nuns, no more, uncss there be a lonr drouth, during which they should be sometimes sprinkled. In September the plants, havinsr then one or two short leaves, are repotted, taking j care to preserve alt the neaitny roots unin'ured: regular watering is com- i .. t i , encLU; "vo "T ,l'1,eo "e "-'- a , i.:uusb uui aim ujussuiiii iiiv si-umcu. w'thin a month after repotting. Few oallas, under the "drying p UtWJ will blossom before January or Febru any. Under the plan here advocated. the "resting process,' th y are secured in Uctouer, ami aie prouureu during the longer period in equil plenty and luxiirlancc- I have had thirteen blossoms within twelve-month from a single bulb with but one crown and stalk. Who can show better results than this? I do not permit the younger bulbs to g'ow, but lorce ali the strength of the plant into ono stalk, and am repaid by l.aving my lilies come in pairs, two out of each blossom leaf, one generally showing itself before the other is gone. ith my five pots, of a single stalk each, 1 have had seven blossoms in sght at once, and never less than three. Single stalks grow in greater luxuri ance, producing larger blooms and leaves. By crowding tho pots with m.'ny stalks, more blossoms will be se cured Irom the same space at your win dow, but they will bo of an inferior or der. The true window gardener is not anxious to have so many plants, but strong, and large, and blooming ones. Give me one large calla that blossoms freely rather than a dozen tiny pots. Do not water callas at the bottom; for no matter how warm the water is. it will be cold when it reaches the roots. It is better to use as warm as tho h.tnd will bear, and pour in at the tup, let ting the old and cold water run off at the bottom. The whole pot is then thoroughly warmed through. Use as littlo water as may be, else tho richness ot the earth will be carried off by that which escapes. A little ammonia in the water adds greatly to the vigor and productiveness of the plant A. Y. Independent. Glass Printing-Plate. Many as arc the automatic engraving processes that have been proposed from time to time, and successful as some of them have proved when workeil with a combination of skill and capital, it is not unlikely that many possible, and even practical methods are destined to make their appearance as years roll on. We have now before us the first number of the Australian Graphic, of Novem ber 24, 188:5, published at Sydney, which forcibly illustrates the fact that there is yet another process available other those hitherto in use. Tins .ournal is unique, inasmuch as the whole of its seven full pages of illustration aro printed (with type) from relief blocks on glas, at an ord'nary letter-press machine. To this first issue we are in debted for the following description: "The inventor of the process. Mr. Samuel Henry Croker, formed of Ball ton, Tasmania, but now of Sydney, de voted himself for some years m consid ering how the pictorial press JjCiuld be supplied with a chean, rapid acd dura ble meaus of reproducing drawings. After careful study of current mvthods, and almost incess'mt experiment, he at last rc-olved to take as the basis of a new process the erosive action of liuor ic acid on glass. Var ous metallb snb stances suggested themselves to the in ventor as tne material to be engraved. but were rejected m favor of glass, lor the reason that the fluoric acid has a vertical or deepening ollect only on glass, while in the cae of metals ft has a lateral or undcrm.ning influence as. well. And, in point of co-t, besides. glass has the very great advantage over all other substances of being inex pensive. To adapt the engraved plate to typographical purposes, it has to be mounted on an iron block, the cementing material being one of the registered features of the pnuc-s. Thus iixed. it is 'type-high' and ready for printing from. At first sight gla-s appears too brittle a substance to pass tin ough the print ng-maehinc, but ox j er nient has proved the contrary, and it was not found necessary to carry out the inventor's first intention to print from electrotype ta en of the gtas. Not only has pcrience proved that tho risk of Ira hiring the glass in printing is reduced to a minimum. 1 ut it ha-: also shown that the glass has decided superiority over the boxwood used by wood-engravers, in that it is not affect ed by any var ation of temperature. The liner portions of wood-engraving are sub ect, too, to deterioration through the pressure and damping involved in printing: but the most delicate engrav ing on glass, will appear as viid and exact at ti e last ropy of a large impres sion as at the first.' l'rintimj 1inc. Courtesy in Public Places. It is a lamentable fact that one can hardly enter a horse-ear, or go to any public place without seeing tlagfant d s regardof the rules of good manners, and that, too, not only in people who are not expecied io know better, but often in the behavior of richly dressed women who doubtless call themselves ladies. The error and vulgarisms alluded to are Iremiently coinini ted through thoughtlessness or ignorance, aud those who are guilty of these impro prieties would, doubtless, be surprised and snoeked if they were aware of the estimate laced upon them and their breeding by people who formed thur opinion from some little act. tone or movement which had wholly escaped thcii attention. For example, a richly dress:d woman enters a crowded c:ir. A getit'cman rises and offers her h s seat. She takes it without the slightest sign of gracioiii" : ickuowiedgment Wp immediately sav. mentalv: "Shelias no manners, no courtesy." Si e places a small coin bei ween her teeth or lips, showing her w.nt of delicacy, refine ment, and neatness but without enu merating the disagreeable things often' seen, let us, for the bene.'it of those who may wish to improve, mention a few common rules or good breading which are, alas! too often ignored by those who should know better. It is vulgar to do or say anything that attracts attention. Loud laughing is in very bad taste. Loud conversation while walking with a frend in the street, shopping, or ridiug in a horse- car, disp'av a great want of refinement and of good sen-e. Besides the odious- ness oi making ones sclt conspicuous in tins way, it is reallv dangerous, as no one knows what foul germs of disease concealed in the dust of the streets may blow into the mouth, and. lodging in the warm, moist throat, germinate, givinjr rise to disea-e. if not to death. Iror the sake of health as well as decency, there lore, it is better to keep the mouth shut as much as possible. The aiftne con-dd-, orations will lead a lady to wear a vail. Never talk of personal or pr vate alia rs I in public places: no one knows who may be your listeners. To speak of your own aflairs in public is imprudent anil vulgar: to speak ot your mends atlairs in public is rude and impertinent. The same remark applies to postai cards. The. LousthoUu'' ov 3" TEMPERANCE IN THE SCHOOLS. No more cheering sign of the final :riuinph of Temperance exists than the teal with which Temperance instruc tion in public schools is be ng pushed forward. The belief that something must be done to stop the demand for intoxicants before the supply can bo regulated, has been steacfily growing for rears. It is al-o evident that the de mand must be lessened through the ed ucation of the people in the physiolog i al and moral effect of alcohol. The most obvious and fitting place for such instruction seems to be the public school; obvious, becauso there all classes of children are met, and fitting, because it is the evid"iit duty of the state, both to itself and to its youth, to train upsoojr and law-abiding citizens. A large part of the energy of the Wom an's Chr st ian Temperance Un on. in its national, state ami local capacities, is i now d.rectcd to the introduction of sci intifie Temperance instruction into all schools supported by public money, in tlueucc is brought to i.ear on Legislat ures to make such instruction compul sory in tie schools, and school commit tees are besieged to introduce the study of Temperance as a part of the required curriculum. The result of this work is most cheer ing. In the lirst place, it meets with general favor from the people. Frob ably no clas of Temperance petitions is so generally signed as the petition to the Legislature to make tho study of Physiology and Hygiene, taught with special reference to the effects of stim ulants and narcotics upon the human system, compulsory iu public schools. As a lawyer, not a Temperance advo cate, remarked when a petition was presented to h m: "1 his is what I navo ureameu oi. a ins win iinaiiy soive too vexed ouestion. I-urthermore, the proposition receives favorable consider ation from educators. In normal schools and teachers' institutes the sub ,ect is discussed and generally ap proved. Legislators and school com mit ties treat the sub ect with respect, and usually commend the end to be gained, although sometimes doubting the means. Three successful State campaigns have been organised. Vermont-lias the honor of leading all her sisters in sci entific Temperance instruction, as Maine leads in prohibitory legislation. Iu that State an art was approved a little more than a year ago. requiring instrm tion in the effects of nareotics and stimulants to be given in public schools. New Hampshire followed with a similar act, which went feto opera tion the first of this month. In .Michi gan thorough work among the people was first done. The press was. filled with articles pertinent to the theme; petitions were c rculated a'l over the State; ninny clergymen preached upon the topic; addi esses by the ablest sneakers at command were delivered in all the towns and cities where Senators and Representatives-elect resided: per sonal in tin en e was also brought to bear on such Representatives and Senators before the assembling of the Legisla ture. The State Association of teach ers sent a petit on for the enactment of the law, and likewise the President and many of the Professors at the Universi ty. As a result, the combined opposing vote of both blanches of the Legislature was but fifteen. In nearly all the States scientific Temperance instruction has been in troduced more or less into the schools of various towns. Thirty-six towns in Massachusetts have introduced such in struction, and nearly an equal number in New York. A more rational line l emperanee work was never attempted, nor one which promises such far-reaching re sults. It is making but little noise, but its results are no less effective. The hope of the Temperance cause, as the hope of every other cause, is with the children. Gulden. Jlulc. What Alcohol Docs. 1. Alcohol is a stimulant ?nd a nar- cotic. 2. Alcohol interferes wlth appetite for food. 3. Disgestion is delayed ami made imperfect by alcohol. -i. Disease of the stomach and organs of digestion is caused by alcohol. S. Aloehol unduly hastens the circu lation of the blood, and causes con gestion of the blood vessels. G. Alcohol increases the work of the heart, and thereby exhausts its power. 7. Alcohol so tens the muscular fi bers of the heart, and weakens it by changing the fibers into fat. 8. Alcohol relaxes the small arteries, aud unfits them for their work. ! Alcohol weakens the plasma of the blood, and overcomes its nourishing properties. 10. The corpuscles of the blood are contracted by alcohol, their size and form are changed, and their capacity to supply oxygen, and remove car bonic acid, is 'diminished. 11. Alcohol inter eres with the burn ing of waste-matter in the capillaries, and thus poisons the blood, and pre vents it from feeding the body. 12. Alcohol congests the blood-vessels' of the brain, and causes apoplexy. 13. The substance of the brain is hardened by alcohol, and its thought producing power in'ured. 14. Alcohol collects in the brain, and eanscs paraiysis and death. 15. Alcohol affects the size, shape and color of the cells of the brain, and pro duces insanity. 16. Alcohol absorbs water from the nerves, and paralyzes their actions. 1". Alcohol, by its effects on tho nerves, interferes with and weakens muscular movements. 18. Alcohol diminishes the heat of the body, and makes it sensitive to sever cold. It is not a protection agairst cold. 19. Alcohol affects injuriously men of all tho different temperaments. 2j. Al ohol intoxicates. 21. Alcohol causes delirium-tremens, and leads to other forms of insanity. 22. Alcohol tends to injure the moral sense, aud leads to crime. 23. Appetite for alcoholic liquors may be inherited From a liecent Scltcol Booh by O. M. llrands. There are now seventy-three Tem peraiejc journals in England. Temperance Eeadin Costs Those Use It. Who Do Not To count the cost of mm to the coun try from a dollar-and-centstandpont is toU' the very lowest view of the sub je t "The mother of a ru'ncd son would gladly give ten times what the ruin cost, in money, to have her son re stored to her, and esteem the dollar-and-eest loss as nothing. The wife cursed with a drunken husband would be willing to continue in rags and semi starvation could she have her husband restored as he was before he was drawn into the fatal whirlpool and morally wrecked. But rum has a money side as well as a moral one, and there are those who would consider the money side, though thny cared but little for the other. Rum is tho heaviest burden the peo ple have to bear, and those who do not ue it are compelled to bear iL with those who do. It can be demonstrated f that rum costs the United States more per day than did the support of the ar mies in the rebellion. It costs the coun try directly more than the entire school and religious systems put together. The sum total of its cost foots up more than all other taxes combined It is the one great expanse that outwe'ghs everything olse. The city of Toledo has a population of 70.CO0. It supports 800 dealers in alcoholic stimulants. We take Toledo as an example, the proportion holding good everywhere the tratlie is free or licensed. To support theso SOO places, there mut be paid out annually for liquor tiot less than S2.SCO.000. Go over the figures. Each saloon must average SHI per day; the could not well live on less. They do business every day in the year, at least in this ruin-ridden city, which makes the grand total S2.!)2o"0H) per annum. It is perfectly safe to say that it will not tall below :?2,50U.IJUJ. But the loss docs not stop with tho mere loss of the money. Were the money taken from the people and dropped into the harbor it would be bad enough, but that would be better than to use it as it is beng used. A power for good, when properly used, it be comes a positive curse when it has to be filtered through the gin-mills and beer-shops. It becomes then a positive, aggressive evil. It is not only wasted, but it become the destroyer of those who w:istc it. It not only absorbs the proceeds of labor but it "destroys the power of labor. The workingman whose Saturday n'ght in a beer shop has extended over the Sunday and Sun day night, is in no condition to do work of any kind on Monday. If ho works at all it is by fortifying himself with more rum. under which' he breaks dowc before the week is half through. No drunkard ever does a full week's work; indeed the time conies as certain as the rising of the sun. when work at all is impossible. Tne drunkard is not lazy; rum has made him inclinable- semi starvation accompanies the half-working stage, during which the family suf fers from insufficiency of the necessities of life, and worse follows. In the final stage they have nothing, and their rare is another burden upon the alrcaly rum-robbed communities that harbo'i them. Add to this already too long train ol evils the cost of the police system ami the criminal courts, ninety per cent oL which is chargeable to ruin, and put on top of that the cost of penitentiaries and jails, and somo idea nnv be had ol w at rum costs the people who do not use it No drinking man feeds or clothes his family poperIv, or even ac cumulates enough to build a house. He does not even pay rent promptly, and i never properly housed. The necessi ties of life being impossible for the fam ilies of such, of course the luxuries are as far away as the stars. In such fam ilies there are never books, magazine; or newspapers, and what is worse, ed ucation of the children is generally im possible for want of decent clothing, briuging up thousands in the ignorance that leads to crime. The drunkard of this generation infiicis a curse upon the ne t. We leave out all mention of the woes unnumbered the poor victims of rum have to endure we only call attention to the loss sustained through It by those who are not drunkards. It is the simplest rossiblc financial proposition. Rum absorbs the money that should go to the providing of thc necessities of life, thus robb'ng the trader in those necessities. It destroys the ab'lity to labor, thus robbing the coaimunitv of whatever benefit" that labor would be to it It compels snbei men, who pay taxes, to support poiee, jails, almshouses, penitentiaries, courts and the other adjuncts of our very bad civilization, all made necessary by rum. Toledo lilade. Fog and firo:r. Arthur was walking along the beach with his father one line afternoon. He had been watehiug the bathers bobbing up and down, their red caps or t apping straw hats shining in the water like shoals of buoys in the ocean. Here and there he picked up a cork or a wine bottle, and at last his father pointed out to him a great hulk of a vessel that hat! recently been wrecked. It had on it an immense load of coal several hundred tons. You could now look into it and se p'iles of coal: but no one could get at it, and it would cost more to get it out than it was worth. So at last the coal was sold for eleven do! ars "How did it happen to get wrecked?" asked Arthur. "I asked that question," re plied his father, "of a gentleman with whom I walked to the wreck tho day alter the accident, and I said to him, I suppose it was caused by fog.' He re plied in one word to my question, and that word was 'grog.' So. upon 'nquiry, 1 learned that this was true; that tho crew had been drinking and, of course, with uustcadv heads they could not steer the vessel in a straightforward course. So with many wrecks in life. Men make mistakes that end in ruin, and thev often find that there is more danger in grog than in fog." -Temperance Banner. - Di:. B. W. RtiiakusOX, the eminent scientist, in addressing a meeting in Lon Ion, said that the temperance cause w.U never win i s way itnt 1 all the women in the kingdom and through out the civilized world are embarked is the enterprise of temperance." What Ruin V 1