-_— Recent Legal Decisions, COoLLISION—OCEAN STEAMSHIP AND CANAL Boar—8TERN OUTLOOK ON STEAMER—ToWING BTEAMER. — The steamship Nevada was about to start from New York for Liverpool, on Beptember 27, 1851, Bhe was adver tised to start at 8 o'clock Pp. »., had rung her bells and blown her whistle several times, and her signals for start ing were flying at her mast-head, when at that moment a steam-tug entered the slip with the canal boat Kate Green in tow, which was then fastened te another canal-boat, the C, H. Hart, which was in turn fastened to a gran slevator lying beside the steamship Beotia at the pler, The propeller of the Nevada at once began to revolve, producing a suction and commotion of the water sufficient to cause the Hart to break her fastenings and the Green to swing around under the stern of the Nevada, where she was struck by the prepeller and sunk, much injured, and her cargo destroy- ed. There was no stern lookout on the steamship, The owner of the Green filed a libel against the Nevada and recovered a decree for the dam- ages he had suffered, in the United States Court, Bouthern District of New York, and the owners of the steamship appealed to the Bupreme Court of the United States, which de. cided the case—The Steamship Ne vada vs. Quick—against them. Mr. Justice Bradley, in the opinion, said : “The counsel for the steamship sig. nificantly asks: ‘Is a steamship to be precluded from the use of her own means of locomotion; must she be subjected to the inconvenience and expense of being towed out of the har. bor?’ The ocean steamship is one of the great inventions of the century, and one of the advanced instrumen- talities of modern civilization; but, whilst it may freely exercise its power- ful propeller and sport its leviathan proportions on the ocean or in deep and open waters, it is justly required to observe extraordinary care and watchfulness when surrounded by feebler craft in a crowded harbor; and, under some circumstances and within a limited space, it may be required to dispense with ita own means of locomotion and resort to tewage or other safe and quiet means o! changing its position and effecting its necessary movements. The canal boat was handled with all reasonable care, and if the steamship had had a sufficient lookout at ita stern the eolli- gion would not have happened; it could have been preventied.”’ RAILROAD — DAMAGES FoR NeoT BToPPING TRAIN.—A passenger sued a railway company for the damages he suffered from his inability to take a train at a signal station, the engl- neer and conductor not stopping, or refusing to stop the train. In this case—Morse vi. Duncan, Receiver— Judge Hull, in the United Btates Cir- cuit Court, Southern district of Missis- sippi, gave the petitioner a judgment for $10, his actual outlay from the in- convenience, and directed that as that amount had not been tendered by the Receiver he should also pay the costs. 1t appeared on the trial that the peti- t‘oner had given the signal to stop for himself and other persons: but the conductor and engineer testified that they had looked for it, but that none was given. The Judge said that as the signal was given he must believe that the conductor and engineer did pot take sufficient notice to see it, For such negligence the company ls liable for actual damages only. But if these officers of the road had seen the signal and then willfully disre- garded it, punitive damages might be awarded. TRADE MARKs,—A company had manufactured homeopathic medicines for tweniy years, and had sold a series of thirty-five remedies, put up in bot. tles, having on them labels and wrap- pers bearing the words ‘* Homeopathic Specific,” in connection with certain numbers and references to the dis esses or infirmities to be remedied, as “No, 1. Fever, Congestion, Inflamma- tions,” A person used bottles of about the same size as the company’s, label. ing them conspieuously *‘ Homeopathic Specifics,” and numbering the series from 1 to 40, attaching the complaints to be remedied, The company sued for an infringement and an accounting ~Humphrey’s Specific Homeopathic Medicine Company ve. Wers—in the United States Circuit Court for New Jersey, and applied for a preliminary injunction. Judge Nixon in granting the motion said: ‘1. Mere numbers are never the object of a trade-mark when they are employed to Indicate quality, but they may be when they stand for origin or proprietorship in combination with words or other nu. merals, 2 Boch & combination when first used by ® manufadbarer will se- cure to ham their use, 3. The defend. ant insists that the words ‘Reeves’ im. proved’ before ‘Homeopathic Bpecifics’ take him out of the class of lmitators, 1t is well settled that to establish an infringement of a trade-mark it Is not necessary to show that the imitation is exact in sll particulars, If the re semblance is such as not only to sug- gest an intention to deceive, but is alculated to mislead the public, who thus to injure the sale of the goods of the preprietor of the original device, the injured party is entitled to redress,” CONTRACT FOR BERVIORS—PAY- MENT OUT OF OrRTAIN EARNINGS ~ MoNEY PAYMENT,— An engineer was employed to operate the engines of a company, and it was agreed that he was to be paid out of the first earnings of the machines. He had a settlement with his employers, and they gave bim a due-bill for the amount due, and on this he brought suit, to which the defence was set up that payment only was demandable out of the earnings aforesaid, and that as yet nothing had been earned. Judgment was entered for the plaintiff, and the defendants appealed the case—Harkinson va. Dry Placer Amalgamating Compavy—to the Bupreme Court of Colorado, by which the judgment was affirmed. Judge Stone, in the opinion, said : “The qestion 18 one of practical in- terest not infrequently arising in busi. ness ventures, and we have been at sorue pains in its investigation. The agreement did not expressly limit the payment wholly to the contingency of the machines earning enough to pay for the services rendered, and in the absence of an express limitation it is not to be implied that the engineer agreed to look to the earnings alone for his wages, The condition can only be regarded as indicating an ex- pected time of payment, but not as s sole condition of payment: and asa legal consequence of such an agree- ment the wages would be absolutely due after a reasonable time for fairly testing the use of the machines. What is a reasonable time in all such eases 1s » question for the Court.” RAILROAD—LIABILITY FOR ACT OF BRAKEMAN IN Purrine A TREes- PASSER OFF A TRAIN IN MoTION.—A man who had climbed upon a railway freight car when the train was in motion was removed by a brakeman upon being told by him that he had no ticket. The train was still in mo- tion, and the trespasser in falling off fell through a bridge and was injured. He sued for damages for his injuries, and recovered a judgment. The company appealed the case— Marion va. the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad Company-—to the Supreme Court of Iowa, which re versed the judgment, Judge Adams, in the opinion, said : Is liable for the wrongful sets only when they are committel in the course of his employment, If the conduetor of this train had forced the plaiotiff from it while in motion and Crossing & Dbiidge, the act clearly would, under the evidence of the rules that, too, even If it were shown that he had been expressly Instructed to eject no person from the train while in motion, and especially at a dan gerous place. In one sense the speci fic act would not be in the course of his employment, but his general in- structions to remove trespassers woul i make the company liable. But, in our opinion, a breakman is not em- ployed to put trespassers off a train, and therefore, that the company is not liable here ”’ CONTRACT VERBAL ORDER, —A carriage-maker received a verbal order from the agent of F. to make him a family earriage in six months, the price not to exceed $900. The work was done, but F. refused to pay for it, and suit was brought for it; value $850, and one month's storage. The defendant was defeated and carried the case—Meincke vs. Falk—to the Bupreme Court of Wisconsin, Judge Casasday, in the opinion, said: “It is claimed that as the contract was not in writing, the amount involved being at least $50, it cannot be proven ander the statute of frauds, Thais ques- tion is not without difficalty, and the decisions of the Couris are by no means uniform. A contract for labor and services was not required to be In writing ; and we are of the opinion that this contract can be proved ver bally, as it Is for labor and services, for without a special contract the car riage would never have been manu. factured in the particular manne. shape or condition it was, and there fore, the contract is essentially for special skill, labor or workmanship, and it Is not within the statute of frauds,” ExeMprioN LAWS—JUDGMENT IN Favor oF THE UNITED STATES. The United Siates recovered a judgment against F., and the Marshal levied on his homestead, F, then filed a hill for a perpetual injunction to restrain the Marshal from proceeding unde: the levy, on the ground that the ex: emption bound even the United States, The United States Circuit Court for the Eastern district of Wisow. sin decided In favor of the com- plasinant, and the Marshal appeal. ed the cause to the Bupreme Court of the United Bilaws, wnich af firmed the decree, Mr. Justice Mats thews in the opinion, sald: “Ihe process of the respective States in the enforcing remedies at common law has been adopted by the United Biates through Congressional legislation, There are no other means provided by which an execution on a judg ment recovered in a Federal Court can be enforced, and it necessarily follows that whatever affects or attaches to exscutions of a Biate will be applion- ble to the executions of the Federal Courts. Exemptions from levy and sale prevent the force of the Htate executions, and reduce likewise the power of the Federal wrils.'’ CONTRACT — “GRAIN OPTIONS," — In an action on a promissory mote the maker set up as a defense that it had been given for an option contract in grain, in which it was not intended that the grain should be delivered. On the trial of the case—Murrsy vs, Ocheltree—the plaintiff testifiad that the contract was for a future delivery of grain mn good faith, and the dee fendant that it was an option only, There was no other evidence. The plaintiff was defeated and appealed to the Sapreme Court of Iowa, which de- cided in his favor. Judge Beck, In the opinion, said: '‘The defendant testified to one state of facts and the plaintiff to the contrary. The de- fense must make out that the note which is evidence of a valid obliga- tion 1s illegal, and therefore must pro. duce a preponderance of testi- mony. This has not been done, and the judgment must be reversed. If one of the parties te such a trans- action as this acts in good faith the transaction will be valid; no inten- tion of the other par'y can affect it.” : i Sanitary, Potato Poisoning. — Good Health says everybody ought to be made ae- quainted with the fact that there is danger in the potato as well as in many other kinds of vegetables when unripe or when advancing toward decay. When the potato is not fully ripe, its skin contains a considerable quantity of a dangerous poison known as solanine, Thesame is true when the potato has become old and begun tosrrout. Buch potatoes are wholly unfit for food, and are absolutely dan- gerous, A Few Simple Remedies. —A tea. spoonful of charcoal in half & glass of warm water often relieves a sick head- ache, It absorbs the gases, and re- lieves the distended stomach, pressing against the nerves that extend from the stomach to the head, Casrcoal forms sn unrivalied poul. It is for what is called It is a great disinfectant. invaluable proud flesh. also low dishes around the apartment, and foul water Is also purified by ite use, For bruise: or sprains bathe the cold water until you get ready a decoction of wormwood and vinegar, When the herb is fresh gatherad, pound the leaves, wet with vinegar, and bind on, and when the herb is dry put it in the vinegar, and let it boil a short time, then bathe the bruise with the decoction and bind on the herb, There is nothing better for a cut than powdered resin, Got a few cents’ worth, pound it until it is fine, put it in a cast-off spice box with per forated top, then you can easily sift it on the cut. Pat a soft cloth around the injured member, and wet it with water once in awhile ; it will prevent inflammation or soreness Hoarseness and tickling in the throat are best relieved by a gargle of the white of an egg beaten 10 a froth in halfaglass of warm, sweetened walter, Hiccough can be immediately re- lieved by administering a lump of sugar wel with vinegar, A simple and harmless remedy and preventive for persons suffering from car-sickness is a sheet of writing paper worn next to the person directly over the chest. It is highly recommended and seldom fails, Buy at avy drug store one ounce of eamphorated oil and five cents’ worth of chlorate of potash, and whenever a soreness appears in the throat put the potash in a half tumbler of water and gargle the throat, then rub the neck thoroughly with the camphorated oil at night vefore going to bed, and also pin around the throat a small strip of woolen flannel. This is a cheap and a sure remedy for sore throat, It persons suffering from severe headache would tie a handkerchief tightly around the temples they would find relief by so doing in a very short time, Hemorrhage of the luugs or stomach # promptly checked by small does of salt. The patient should be kept as quiet as poseible, A good remedy for warts or corns: Drop a little vinegar on the wart or corn, cover it immediately with cook- ing sods or saleratus, let it remain te minutes, Repeat several times ad for threedayi anal tas warts and cor will be gone. There is an Adam and a Christ within us ail; a natural and a spirit asl man, whereof the father of our mee and the author of our faith sre the respective emblems, both In the order of their sucoession and the na ture of thelr mission, James Marti eau, The Diamond Rattlesnake, Ordinarlly the jingle of a handful of rings is not an unpleasant sound, but when it happens that these rings are fastened to six or seven feel of serpent as thick as & man’s wrist, and that serpent is armed with the whitest and sharpest of fangs, nearly an Inch in length, with cisterns of liquid poison at the base, the music does not seem cheerful or inspiriting. The snake family are known to have but little regard for the doctrine of mors] sus slon, are apt to be rash in itheir eon- clusions, and hasty in their actions, as well as profoundly Indifferent to ar gument or apology, reason and polite ness being entirely wasted on them. Only distance or brate force suffices to restrain their insane propensity to probe every living thing within reach of those delicate needles of worry, As the ‘'big Indian” among his lesser braves; so is the dismond rattlesnake of the Bouthern Btites among other American serpents, Dressed in a brownish colored cost plaided with lighted lines in diamond-shaped blocks, aud with dignity and {nde pendence stamped on every carve and motion, the sleek, olly-looking rascal glides slowly through “hsmok” and “scrub,” a terror to both man and beast, turning aside for none, nor going out of his way to attack any unless pressed by hunger, which seldom happens in this climate where animal life abounds, As he moves guletly along, his wicked little tyes seem to emit & greenish light and shine with as much brilliancy as the jewels of a finished coquette, Nothing seems to escape his obseryation, and on the slightest movement near him he swings into his fightiog attitude, ralsing his upper jaw and erecting his fangs, which, in» state of repose, lie closely packed in the soft muscles of his mouth. This snake is not as ae- tive as his copperhead cousin of the North, nor so quick to strike, but one blow Is almost always fatal, His fangs are 80 long that they penetrate deep into muscles and veins of his vietim, who has little time for more than a single good.by before closing his eyes forever. The writer has measured these fangs and in one instance found hem seven-eighths of an ineh in length, and though not thicker than & commrn sewing needle, yet perfor- ated wi ha hole through which the greenish-yellow 1!qaid could be forced in considerable quantities, and in the Case above mentioned each of the sacs contained about a teaspoonful. The fangs are only plerosd aboat two- thirds their entire length, and are always double, a smaller pair lying immediately under the others and ready for use in case of sceident to the principal ones, which is a species of acacia. IL was grown from a seed brought from Aus- tralia. The tree is now a sapling some eight feet in height, and it is In full foliage, growing rapidly. It is legn- minous, and very distinctly shows the characteristics of the mimosa, or sensitive plant. Regularly every even- ing, about the time the ‘‘chickens go to the roost,” the tree goes to roost. The leaves fold together, and the ends of the tender twigs coll themselves up like the tail of a well-conditioned pig. After one of the twigs has been stroked or handled, the leaves move uneasily and are in a sort of mild com- motion for a minute or mora. All this was known about the tres, but it is not long since that It was discover. ed that the tree had in it much more life and feeling than it had ever before been credited with. The tree being in quite a small pot, one which it was fast outgrowing, it was thought best to give it one of much larger size, Yesterday afternon the tree was trans ferred to its new quarters, It resent ed the operation of its removal to the best of its ability. Arriving at his residence about the time the tree had been transplanted the gentleman found the house in grand commotion, 0) seking what was up he was told that they had transplanted the (ree#accordide to orders and the operation had “made it very mad.” Hardly had it been placed in its new quarters before the leaves began to stand up in all directions like the hair on the tail of an angry cat, and soon the whole plant was in a quiver. This could have been endured, but as the same time it gave out an odor most pungent and sl just such a smell as is given oii by rattle. snakes and many other kinds of snakes in summer when teased. This odor so filled the house and was so sickening that it was found necessary to epen the doors and windows, It was fully an hour before the plant oalmed down and folded its leaves in peace. It would probably not have given up the fight even then had it not been that its time for going to roost had arrived. + Good deeds ring clear through Bnven ike n bell,—Jean Paul Rick. - Scraps from the Field of Science. Puscher, the Nuremberg chemist, says that paste made of starch, glyeer- Ine and gypsum will masintsin its plasticity and adhesiveness longer than any other cement, Cultivation of the Portugese oyster is recommended in the French official journal on account of the alleged rich ness of that bivalve in lodine, bro- mine and chlorine. The Lancet yields to the belief that the electric light must soon becoms the common illuminating agent, but Insists that some method should be devised to mitigate its Intensity, Montana is said to contain a lerze coal-bearing territory, and it 1s pre dicted by geologists that the Territory has the capacity for being the largest coal producer in the Union, There is reason to believe that the power of the more intractable explo- sives will soon be made simply motive force—at least some of them—judging from some of Herr Beck’s experi ments, Metallic iridium is very hard. It easily cuts or marks steel. It can be cut by a copper disk revolving sat yery high velocity, if the surfaces in coutact sre treated with corundum and cil and the iridium shlieets are very thin, The Scientific American condemns | the use of camp stools and chairs by undertakers who take these seats from house to house, thus disseminating | disease. The carrying around of ice boxes is deprecated for the same res- BOD, Dr. Quesneville stated befire the Boclelte d’Hygiene that he had pre- served water potable for more than three years by adding to if halt a grain of salicylic acid for each quart, It is recommended for use in expedi- tions in warm climates, Japan is keeping tully abreast of Western nations in the introdue- tion of new inventions. Ouae of the | latest signs of this spirit of enterprise is the extensive use of the electric Hght in several of the Government es tablishments at Yokohama, According to an Antwerp pharma. ceutical journal, the best way to ree | move lnk soots is to use a phosphate | of sods, first of all spreading a few | drops of melted suet over the ink spot, | and then washing the substapnee in Appears. a foesil elephant have been found. | and 0.28 metres where they are nar- rowest, The find has caused guite a sensation, and there will likely be a careful excavation made when the winter is over, Papers read before the Academy of Nclences, Paris, go 1 show that the several electrical systems of Jabloch- koff, Jamin and Debrun are now much on a level from an economical point of view. The data from which the re sults were obtained had been collected during the late exhibition of elestrio- ity in the Franch capital, Mr, Routledge held lately at a scien tific meeting that the paper trade was probably the one which turned to im- mediate use more waste products than any other. In it was utilized cotton, flax, hemp and jute waste, and old ropes and canvas rags. In fact, the paper manufacturer could turn to profitable purpose any vegetable fibre, A Provisional Committee, the Pres ident of which is M. Charles Boysset, has been formed for organizing an international exhibition of appliances to insure the safety of railway passen- gers, Itisintended that the aisplay of the various devices will take place some time this year in the Palais de "Industrie, Paris. It ought to do much good to inventors and the pub- lie. Belt manufacturers may find it of interest to know that the experiments of M. Jenatzy, of Brussels, disclose that under uniform loads osoutchoue takes increasing elongations, until it becomes quite twice as long as it was originally, and that then the elonga- tions decrease until rupture ensues. The weight necessary to quadruple the length is three times that under which the length has become double, An automatic electric mechanism, that is designed to announce the ap proach of rallroad trains, has been tried on what is called the Parle Lyon Mediterranean Line. It consists of a box filled with mercury placed under the rail at the required distance from a bell. When a train passes over this box the mercury is so agitated as to form contact with the wire communi. osting with the bell and thus make it ring. An Italian journal recoommends the use of methylaniline violet, also called Hoftman’s purple and Paris violet, for detecting free mineral acids in vine gar. A solution of this dye, although containing but 0.1 per cent. of it, will be changed to an ultramarine blue by -_ very dilute, while organic acids d o not affect the color, A mixture of twenty parts of hard sonp, forty parts of kerosene and one part of fir balsam has been found very effective in destroying losects which damage the orange tree, Profesor CO. V. Riley Is the suthority. Other val uable plants, notably the vine, might be similarly protected by a spray from an application of the same recipe. It can be diluted at will with water, so a3 not to interfere with the consti tution of the plant. A A —————— Incorrect Talking. Though the schoolmaster holds his reception in almost every nook and oruer of the land, there Is a great deal of incorrect {a king, even among edu. cated people, Bishop Clark gives in wie New York Ledger a few speci. mens of the popular errors of speech, in the form of a dialogue between sa cs reless talker and his eritieal friend “Good afternoon, John, How long have you been selling here?” I have been sitling here about an hour, watching to see these men set the stones in my wall.” “It kind of pecrus to me thst the work Is done rather fly.” “Perhaps it is not done quite as welly as it might be.” “I kind of think that word welly sounds odd.” “It is as good a word as ily. But why do you say, ‘It kind of seems, and ‘I kind of think,’ when you might Just as well say, ‘It seems,’ and “I think?” “1'ye got sort of used to talking that way.” ‘“It is a very poor sort of way.” “I never had nobody to learn me any better, “You mean that yon have had no body to tesch you.” “I mm geting tired, and 1 think I will lay down on the grass and resi & epe’l” “You can lie down, but it would be well for you to lay your closk on the “Be you going to stop here for long?” “1 stopped here when I arrived, but ghall not sfay long. Are you going home soon 7 “l be “Why notesy, ‘I am? ‘Be you' and ‘J be’ are very raw and disagree able plirases,’’ “All right, O K ; but the master al. ways e#eys to his scholars, ‘Be you Him and me met at the deacon’s last night.” “What did Aim and you do after you got there 7 “We looked at thems things he has just brought from New York.” “Were then things worth looking at 7” “Tolerable. By the way, the deacon must have guile a fortune,” “What sort of a fortune? Quite inrge or quite small ?” “Quite large, of course.” “Why did you not ssy so?" “My next neighbor bas just put up a fence on eifhcr side of his front y rd.” *I suppose you intend to ssy that he has put up a fence on both sides.” ‘Between you and I""— “Please change that to ‘Between von and me.” You would not say, ‘There is no great difference of opin. fou between you and Ae,’ “I usually say, Aim and me agree pretty wall” “Then you speak very bad English, and you probably ssy, ‘It is me,’ in- stend of ‘It is 1.” “O! eourse 1 do, and so does most of the people that I know. My boy Is just going to school, and as he is a nes beginner I suppose he will appear to be rather green.” “Did you ever hear of any beginner who was not new ?"’ “I wish simply to state’ — “That is, you wish to state’ — “That our mutual friend’ — “Please say our common friend, You would not call him a reciprocal friend ?V “Why do you interrupt me =o often ?" “Because you make so many blun ders,” Two Hounds Kill and Eat =a Horse. Two large hounds belonging to a negro living near New Orleans attack ed a horse that had been turned out te graze. After seizing and throwing him down they satisfied their rapa cious appetites bv eatin their SI of his living carcass. They are almost wild, and have been discov. ered devouring the carcasses of hogs they had killed in the forest. UBSTI TUTE FOR BUTTER —A lady who is a famous housekeeper recom- mends an econominal plan for making cakes without butter, which may be of use to our readers who have a dred of * marjorine.” Take a piece of fan pork, melt it down and strain No through a piece of coarse, thin mus lin; set it swide until itis cold , it ie then white and firm, and may be used like butter in any kind of cake. In pound-oake she assures us it ie delicious, mineral sclds, even when they are