The Fair Sex. The Most Perfect Home I ever saw was a little house into the sweet incense of whose fires went no costly things, A thousand dollars served as a year's living of father, mother and three children, But the mother was a creator of a home, Her relations with her children were the most beautiful I have ever seen. Even the dull, com- monplace man was lifted up and ena- bled to do good work for souls by the atmosphere which this woman created, Every inmate of her house involun- tarily looked into her face for the key- note of the day, aud it always rang clear. From the rosebud or clover-leaf, which in spite of her hard housework she always found to put by our plates at breakfast, down to the story she had on’hand to be read in the evening, there was no intermission of her influence, She has always been and always will be my ideal of a mother, wife and home- maker, If to her quick brain, loving heart and exquisite face had been added the appliances of wider culture, hers would have been absolutely the ideal home, As it was it was the best I have ever seen. — Helen Hunt, Send Girls Out of Doors. How can girls get a chance to live out provide them with opportunities, This industrious with quick feet when sorrow calls to her “Come,” but neve: industri- ous with the tongue, save in saying good words —words that will make “spinster’’ a very crown of glory on the head of her who giveth of her rich store of love and good works, nmin tl A rs Facts and Fancles, Tae ‘“‘cateh’ of cod fish this year has been larger than any previous year, and prices are expected to be very low. Tue production of cotton in the United States, it is now believed, will be fully 1,000,000 bales less than last year. DAkorA wheat crop this year amounts to over 20,000,000 bushels, Joux B. Govan, it is announced, will leave the lecture platform this season. He is perhaps the most effec- tive speaker that has yet appeared on the temperance question, —IRON WATCHES, —Crowther Broth- ers & Co., of Kididerminster, in order to prove the malleability and ductility of their iron, have constructed a watch entirely of iron, which keeps excellent | time, Claudius Saunier, on reporting | this fact in the Revue Chronometrique, | adds: There is nothing new under the | sun. We have a watch upon which is should nomore omit than to provide them with food and clothing, they are generally healthier and strong- er and often more beautiful. After girls get larger they must go out on their own accord, and seek out-of-door amuse- ments. There are many kinds of out- door sports suited to tkem. Archery is one of them ; rowing, riding, skating -and walking are others. There is flow- er culture and® gardening. Some years | ago I published a book called **The | School Garden,’ advocating that every | school should have a piece of ground | where girls and boys could study horti- | culture and agriculture, I am sorry to | i this country, but in France and Ger- many it has become popular, and al- school. Botanizing and all similar out- of-door pursuits should be encouraged. To study botany, geology, a million times as much as to study them in books in the house, lve with them ?—Dr. Dio Lewis. Delightful old Maids. some of the most delightful fron. —Y ork farm, on Chester river, Kent county, Md., owned by 8, Merritt Wile kins, and containing 400 acres, has a peach orchard of 18,000 trees, which | from 1875 have produced 311,500 baskets of fruit, bringing in $103,000. In 1879 | the sales netted $66,000, Tue decision of the Supreme Court | of the United States, declaring the civil | rights act unconstitutional, is unduly effecting our negro population. They will not attain the social distinction | they seek, by any act of Congress nor | | by any decision of the Courts, Personal | | living and personal =orth can only se- | cure them the boon they covet ; and | these will be found stronger than Courts | { or Congress in its attainment, comm A pn Country Roads. Too much cannot be said in favor of | The farmers of | the whole country are deeply interested, Transportation is a part of the cost of | pockets, and a part, also of which they make too little account, If | the difference money cost between | hauling their produce over poor roads ! in “‘old maids.” Undisturbed by husbands or children, they are perfectly willing to assist in bearing less fortunate ones’ woes, and are in constant demand as there will be found a woman "not married ; and because of her many would see that | their roads were kept in proper order. they that some gadlant knight has not claimed this “lady fair and full of grace,” taken her away to make for him a happy home, these strong, kindly natures, who have sufficient strength of mind to refuse all men because their ideal never came, called old maids. The old English “‘spinster’’ seems more appropriate and kindly. And when one thinks of the nephews and nieces cared for, the dainty garments made by industrious and never-tiring hands, the patience with which other peoples joys and serrows are listened to and the pangs of loneli- ness that are quietly endured, then the name becomes honorable, Of course there do exist unmarried women who are not like this, but none of them should be called ‘‘spinster,” because the name itself betokens industry. Not industry in hearing anc retailing petly, worth. less gossip, or in keeping perfect a home in which she is alone in her selfishness, but such industry as seemeth good for @ woman, industry in’ making clothes for the naked and giving homes to the fiomeless, The name spinster is very old, and «arly used in the jurisprudence of Eng- fand and Germany as a means whereby o distinguished unmarried from mar led females. It is supposed that in emote ages it was customary to bury ihe spindle pins with industrious mai- «lens, as in some graves recently disco wered in Suabia these were found. Al. fred, iv his will, distinguishes the men and women as the spear-side and the apindle-side ; while in the Germany of to-day the titles schwert-mazen (sword amembers) and spindle-mazen (spindle members) are not uncommon, Thus the spinster, bearing industry in her name should feel that industry is a duty she owes to the world at large; for living up to one’s title is a para. mount claim. For her there is need to ®e industrious in Junieing itty feeling exist, industrious the needle. that have a decisive The roads the and we are | are companies. The Chicage Railway | Review, commenting upon a paper re- | ap- | showing the importance to commercial undertakings of paved roads leading to railway stations, The Review says: “A well-arranged system of paved or even well-made dirt or gravel roads will some day prove a blessing to this country. And although we are so spread out that the undertaking seems hope less on the score of expense, valuable beginnings can and should be made at once, taking railway stations as centres to work out from, Such a system would aid the growth of the material interests of the country, through rendering pos- sible a wider segregation of manufact- uring industries, the manufactories of which, with good teaming, would not necessarily be upon a line of- railway. Farmers could also till their soil with profit at much greater distances from the rails. © Then, again, the latter would benefit through the independence of climatic conditions in hauMng their produce to shipping points. In this respect, also, would the railways find gain, for they are severely annoyed during wet periods by the inability of shippers to get through the mud to the stations, and the consequent light ship- ments, which are followed after a freeze. up or drying-up with a rush beyond their capacity to handle, In Illinois last season this matter of improving highways was taken up with consider- able enthusiasm, and comittees were appointed, ete., but we fear that little has come of it." While we do not expect any good re- sult from legislative enactments, much good may result from an intelligent | self-interest, which may be developed | by a proper examination of the sub- ject. The loss to the wealth of the country from bad roads is an enormous total, to say nothing of the loss of com- fort.— Philadelphia Record, —— The Cholera, —— B. G. Jennings, F. R. A. B,, writes to the Pall Mall Gazelle, “to call atten- tion to the attack of cholera on southern and western Europe now due. Such visitations come with more regularity than mest people imagine, It is re markable that every attacked on Egypt is followed by an extension to England. Such cholera is not of the true Asiatic type ; it makes its appearance first in the Hadjiz, on the tropic of Caneer, in the neighborhood of Mecca, sometimes the year before, sometimes the same year in which it appears in Egypt. In 1831 it broke out in Mecca, the same year appeared in Egypt, and traveled in a northwest direction to England. In 1837, six years after, it appeared in England again, having started from Hadjiz in 1835, In 1848 eleven years after, it broke out at Mecca, appeared in Egypt, and reached England the same year, In 1854, six years after, it was in England again, having broken out at Mecca two years before, and In 1865, eleven years after, it broke out at Mecca, spread to Egypt, and reached England the same year. In 1871, six years after, it broke out near Mecca, but extended as far as the north In 1882, eleven years after, another attack on Europe fell due. It will be observed that these outbreaks occur every six or eleven years alternately ; a great outbreak { happening every 17 years, as 1831, 1848, { 1865, and 1883. In every instance in which Egypt has been attacked, south ern and western Europe have suffered. some delay in regard but that is a reason for believ- ing that the advance will be rapid. In the other great attacks the cholera has On the 25th of March, 1865, the disease broke out at Mecca; { on the 2d of June it appeared at Alex | anderia, killing 60,000 persons in Egypt in three months ; on the 11th of June, it reached France, and eon the 11th of September it was in It would appear, then, that Arabian diseases differ not Indian, but specificall There are, as I endeavored to show eleven years ago, when [ stated that the next great attack would be in 1883 seven different species, which descend from the atmos. phere at seven different points, situated equally distant from each other along the tropic of Cancer, and move in a northwest direction. The Indian and Arabian streams intersect in England. Asa matter of fact, the Indian, from exhausts itself in Russia and Germany, and in all pro- the 31. when in 18 of it, unless perhaps it be north of England suffered that all cholera can be traced to the Ganges, what is to be said about which commenced last July in Mexico and last January was carrying off by a fearful ravages an immense number of victims ? Before the present year closes I expect to hear that cholera has broken out in every quarter of the globe,” a ———————————— Dreams. A writer in Bow Bells says: Dreams of nuptials are considered to portend a funeral. The extraction of a firm and sound tooth signifies the loss of a near and dear friend ; but if the tooth should be decayed and paipful, this dream promises deliverance from a secret and deadly enemy. If such firmly built things as a house or city appear to be shaken, it it an omen of exile or com- motion in the state. Two candles sig- nify breaches of friendship and dissen- tions. Dreams of hares signify flight ; of dogs. quarrels ; of sheep, wealth, un- less they should be shorn or diseased ; the crowing of a cock denotes vietory, it is an omen that the victory, which was on the eve of being obtained, will be lost, : The rising sun denotes increase of wealth and splendor; the setting sun the contrary. A dream of the full moon is one of very bad omen, for it signifies that immediate misfortunes and decrease of greatness will follow. Dreams of the eclipse of the sun or moon predict an intermission of pros- perity, but that it will again return. Whoever dreams that his hair is pulled, it is a warning that something will hap- pen by which his pride will have a fall, The loss of a hat has at one time been interpreted as an omen of disgrace, at another as protection from some injury ; but the loss of a cloak, &., Is a sure sign that poverty will sucteed wealth, To dream that the pillow is dragged from our bed signifies that something will happen. by which our rest will be disturbed, Whoever dreams that he is tobacco has a warning that he will turn his wealth into smoke. The best omened fancies himself carried gently through the air, for they forrtell increase of dig- To dream that handsome shoes are presented by a friend isa warning of timely flight;bnt if anyone in his sleep searches for boots or shoes without finding, them it fore- tells that when in great danger he will be prevented from escaping. Whoever dreams that some one puts a clown’s cloak on him, or covers his face with flour, a mask, ete., must be cautious lest a more cunning man than himself should deceive him and then laugh at his simplicity. A dream in which a person seems to follow a cross in some public procession is a signification that he will be persecuted on account of his religion, If anyone dreams of a violent knock- ing at his door, or that his ear is pulled, it is a warning of approaching death, If a man dreams that he is dead it is not an vmen of his death, because who- ever dreams that he is dead also dreams that he sees or speaks after his death; but to dream that our curtains are drawn aside by a man lately dead is an intimation of the death of some near relation. A man having dreamt that an egg was buried beneath his bed, went to consult a conjuror, who told him there was a treasure concealed under his bed. The man dug and discovered a quantity of silver, in the middle of which there was gold. He ran in ecstasies to the conjuror, offering some pieces of silver as a reward ; upon which the conjuror said : “Do you give me none of the yolk of the egg ?'’ meaning that he ex. pected some of the gold also. This dream is related by Cicero, **De Divina- tione,” libro primo ; also by Valerius Maximus, The dream of Guntramnus, King of the Franks, is very remarkable, This good king, who was passionately fond of hunting, having one day separated from the whole of his train except one servant, and night coming on while in the midst of a thick wood, he sat down on the bank of a stream, and being ex- tremely weary, fell asleep on the bosom The servant keeping watch, and having his eyes steadfastly of his servant. fixed on the countenance of his master, he saw a very stnall animal of the lizard species issue from the king, and make for the stream, it seemed anxious to pass; servant, stretching out his sword, formed a sort of bridge, over which the reptile passed ; and having atered a whith the then cave at few minutes, and pasaed over the same the remained there a then coming out, bridge, and entered bh of the King, awakening, said that that he had passed over an iron sile, again into mout who just then he bridge, | 1 i i a vast heap of riches. Then the ser nessed, they both entered the cave found there a great treasure, - - The Kitchen. BAagep Quinces.—Quinces baked with the skins on are delicious when served warm, each plate. 1f mashed with a knife the core is easily removed ; then put on a littie batter and plenty of sugar. In process of baking the quince loses the many, and retains a delicate flavor that is excellent, QUINCES AS SWEET PICKLES — Quinces make delicious sweet pickles, Peel them, cut them in quarters, stick two or three whole cloves in each quarter, then steam them until tender, and let them boil for a very few minutes in the vinegar prepared for them; or make the syrup of vinegar, sugar and spices first, and boil the quinces in it till soft ; proceed just as for pickled pears or peaches, only that the quinces being of so tough fibre, need cooking longer. Seal in cans, and they will furnish a good relish in days to come, CRAB-APPLE MARMALADE, — Mar. crab-apple is not to be despised, and for the children’s lunch or for tea with good bread and butter it is looked upon as a luxury. Stew the apples, skins and afl, till they are very soft; mash them adding light brown sugar to your taste, This may be put up in cans or in little earthern jars and sealed for winter use. Marmalade may also be made of nice peach parings, with now and then half a peach left in. This latter dish is not recommended ex- cept when fruit is scarce, and you feel like making the most of every part of it. CAvLIFLOWER. —Cauliflower is par- ticularly good when boiled until tender, changing the water twice and taking care that no scum Is left to discolor it, | i Luxuries. dom A really vicious-looking reptile is that very harmless and eminently edi- ble monstrosity, the terrapin, Properly cooked—as they cook it, for instance, at Augusiine’s in Philadelphia or at the Club at Baltimore—it ranks among the most luxurious of luxuries. Some men, it is true, turn sick at the first taste of it, and refuse to face the dish again, Others worship it on the in- stant, and are fanatics for life. It is always so with very pronounced flavors, | Thus, in India, to eat the *“‘jack’ fruit | is to be held in abomination by your ; neighbors, but some men smuggle it in- to their premises, and, regardless of the fact that the astonishing odor of the huge fruit betrays them, make believe to eat it clandestinely. Others, how. ever, know of his horrible infirmity, and as if he were a cannibal given to the secret consumption of dreadful meats, tell each other that so and so “‘eals jack.”’ Yet the fruit has a cous- in, the lorian, exactly like it in taste, and Burmah goes mad over it when it isin season. Mandalay gives itself up body and soul to the luscious abomina- tion. All official business is stopped. Trade puts on its shutters, The steam- ers will bring no other freizht up the river but dorians, It is the formula of the season if a stranger wishes to see anyone who wishes to not be sen for the servant to reply ; ‘‘Master is eating dorians.’”” This is something more than the ‘‘not at home’ of civilization, It is equivalent to *‘He is saying his prayers’ of the Mohammedans, A man, while eating dorians, must not be disturbed. His privacy is sacred. it is with other strong tastes, will flee from musk as from skunk. Yet half acontinent delights in smearing itself with the perfumeand eat- ing it in food. However, to return to the terrapin, Seen in all its natural hid- armature of native shell, and prickle, and wart, it would be flattering to the poor turtleish thing to say that its appearance was anything less than Yet what miracle does art more benefi- 0 * Boome people a eous loathsome, work more startling or | tion of an odious looki ng reptile into 4 dish that men call “‘terrapin, and It has been a nan risk- ought to call ambrosia 7 that any ving moise] down his throat.” But dare. his courage: what, then shall we say of the Turtle was terrapin was posi- 2 tively reckless, Yet men have the portentous crocodile. It is said to have a slightly musky fla- to be ‘“‘succulent.’— London vor, but The Tobacco Industry. The tobacco industry of this country sup- pose, and a few statistics on the sub- There 7674 establishments engaged in the of tobacco in various Of this total 477 are engaged and smoking tobacco and snuff, 7145 in the manufacture of cigars and cigarettes, and 52 ir steaming tobacco. The total number of people employed, according to the census returns, of whom 55.552 are males above sixteen years, 20.480 females above fifteen years and 11,565 chiidren and youths, The total amount of money paid annu- ally in wages is $25,054,457, or under $3000 each per year. The value of the material used in manufacture ik $65,- 384,407 ; the total value of product, $18. 660166, The largest amount of ma- terial consumed is for chewing and smoking tobacco and snuff, it being $34,807,072. However, the value of the product is only $52,793,056, against $20,577,833 for material, and $63,070, . 575 value of product for cigars and cigarettes, the difference being made up by the amount of money paid in wages | the sum thus paid fer the man- ufacture of chewing tobacco, ete., is $80,419,024 against $18,464,563 for cigars and cigarettes, The amount of taxes paid on tobacco of all kind, including all special taxes for manufacturing, dealing, ete., for the two years, 1882 and 1883, was $50, 496,238.70, Of this total, smoking and chewing tobacco paid the heaviest tax, amounting to $47,170,144.50. Cigars and cigarettes comes next with $35,141, - 067,52 The tobacco industry, however, does not end here ; there is the cultivating part, which is by no means an unim- portant branch of the tobacco industry. Last year there were 040,230 nores planted, which produced 449,880,014 pounds of tobacco, of a value of $43, 372,806 ; Kentucky producing by far the largest proportion, having had 232, people are forms, ‘ i a is S0,080, 163,087,700 pounds, of a value of $14,- 347.016. Virginia came next, with an acreage of 130,663, and a production of 77,048,804 pounds, and a value of v sna $6,071,907. South Carolina was the lowest, only producing 47,528 pounds, of $6,653 in value, The total export of leaf for the sta. tistical year ending June 30, 1883, was 235,628,560 pounds, against 223 665, 980 pounds for 1882 and $19,438 906 in value, against 218 067 721 in 1882, The exports of cigars for the last statistical year amounted in value to $06,801 against $113,717 in 1882, which shows a marked reduction, In manufactured tobacco, however, there is a healthy increase in onr exports, which amounted to $2,555,677 in value, against $2. 246,- ! 602 for the year 188: 2, or an increase of $308,965, —E zehange. Gold Pens. The gold from which the pens are to be made is melted and cast into bars six inches long, about two inches wide and one-quarter inch in thickness, It is then passed between cast steel rolls until it is reduced to about one twelfth of its original thickness. From this sheet, the blanks are cut ad then pointed by heating the gold until the pieces of iri- dosmium selected for that purpose settles into the gold and becomes as strongly attached to it as though it were a part of the same metal. The blank is then reduced in thickneis to about one-third by rolling and hameris £. after which it is cut out in the shape of a pen, stamped, raised or formed, slit, the points ground finally polished. The inside of the nibs are also roughed with a piece of Scotch stone: which operation is termed ‘‘graining,” and the object of whic h is to make the ink flow more readily. The pens are tried and examined offered for sale. RR Behind our Masks. then being before —— If we could only read each other's hearts, we should be kinder to each other. If we knew the woesand bitter- ness and physical annoyances of our neighbors, we should mage allowances for them which we do not now. We go about masked, uttering stereot yped senlments, hiding our heart- ~-pAngs and our headaches as carefully Cali § a8 we and yet we wonder that others do discover them by intuit We light 3 we do not so conceal our sentiments and dislikes, of whi prone to be proud. Often two people sit close together, with in heart, and neither knows it. Either thinks, “I could be fond; but what use of wasting fondness on one who does not care for it?’ and so they part, and go their ways alone. Life is a masquerade, at which few unmask, even unto And though there is need of much maski ing, would to heaven we dared show plainly our real faces; from birth to death. for then some few, at least, would truly love each other, rit dr on eh we are “uy love you’ either their very dearest. - swan A NBC) SITY. —Sun baths cosi nothing and are the most refresh- ing, life-giving baths that one can take, whether sick or well Every housekeeper knows the necessity of give ing her woolens the benefit of the sun from time to time, and especially after a long rainy season, or a long absence of thesun. Many will think of the in- jury their clothes are liable to from dampness, who will never reflect that an occasional exposure of their own bodies to the sunlight is equally neces- sary to their own health. The sun- baths cost nothing, and that is a mis- fortune, for people are still deluded With the idea that those things only can be good or useful which cost money. Let it not be forgotten three of God's most beneficent gifts to man-—three things Lhe most necessary to good health ~sunlight, fresh air and water, are free to all; you can have them in abun dance, without money and without price, if you will, If you would enjoy good health, then see to it than you are supplied with pure air to breathe all the time ; that you bathe for an hour or 80 in the sunlight ; and that you quench your thirst with no other fluid than water, SUNLIGHT — » ~Dress skirts are growing decidedly fuller and wider, and this decided ten- dency to bouffant styles has, as history plainly reveals, been almost invariably the forerunner of erinoline, and crino- line we are to have, unless scores of manufacturers, who have summoned their hitherto idle forces and begun the work anew of making hoop-skirts, have listened to a delusive rumor of their coming popularity. ~Tte cost of stopping a railroad Aralziis/said 50 bo from 40 0 60 conte SAIS.