Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, August 24, 1882, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Attorney-General Hrenster.
In describing the appearance of the
onnsel in the star route oases in Wash
ington, a correspondent I*7l of the
attorney-general:
But the head and front of the trial
and the queerest, oddest, most indesorib.
able individual you will m9et with in a
year's trial, is Benjamin H. Brewster,
the brusque and burned attorney
general. His whole face from his eyes
down is a oioatrix. He was horibly
burned when a five-year-old child in
attempting to resoue a little sister from
the flames, and he is as hide
ously ugly as any "false face"
or caricature you ever rested your
eye upon. He is the observed of all
observers. His costume contributes to
the curiousness of the character before
you. He appears in court dressed in
patent leather pumps, with white gaiter
tops and straps, lavender pants, a
louble-breasted buff vest, a turtle
green cutaway coat, a blue, white-dotted
silk scarf, diamond pin and tall, pointed
collar, the ends of which projeot out
and upward like sleigh-innners. In
stead of cuffs he wears lace ruffles
about his soft, small white hands.
Each hand supports handsome rings.
A tiny gold watch chain sweeps around
in a orescent across his yellow waistcoat
front, and he dries his weeping eye 3
with a snow-white lace kerchief. His
tall, old-fashioned, yellowish beaver bat
has fur on it longer than that of a mal
tese cat. He drives around in a white
and yellow coach, emblazoned with his
coat of arms. These and a bunch of
other eccentricities and idiosyncracies
make up one of the ablest lawyers in
the land and the attorney-general of the
United States. He is of good height,
with a well poised and phrenologi
cally rounded head. His argu
ments are as clean cut and trenchant as
the circle of a Damascus blade in a
giant's hand. His language is chaste
and clear, and cats to tho marrow. His
"insulting" ugliness reminds me of a
speech Tom Marshall made, when under
the influence of liquor, to a man whose
wi eho disliked. Said the Woodford
orator : " Bill, your wife is a blamed
ugly woman." " Well," replied Bill,
flashing up, " that is her privilege."
" Yes," replied Tom, "but she abuses
the privilege." And it looks that way
in Brewster's case. He is said, how
ever, to bo a charming man in conversa
tion and in the social circle.
California Pears.
A San Francisco correspondent writes:
Mr. Mills, the editor of the Sacra
mento Record- Union and the president
of the California Associated Press, dur
ing [a long ride around Sacramento,
took me to see a Saoramento valloy
pear orchard. There are millions of
acres in the valleys of the Sacramento,
San Joaquin, Yuba and Feather rivers,
where splendid crops are raised without
irrigation. There is no rain, but still
the ground is constantly moist from
seepage. The Yuba, Sacramento and
Feather rivers are several feet above
the surrounding farms—caused by the
debris from the hydraulio mines in the
mountains, The levee holds them up
above the farms.
The pear orchard visited has twenty
acres in it. There are 175 trees to the
acre. It is four years old. Last year
the trees paid the owner $2.50 a tree
and nearly $450 per acre. In a few
years each tree will pay $lO. The or
chard ia beautifully cultivated. Not a
weed is to be seen. Every fall the top
of every pear limb is cut off eighteen
inches, to keep the tree down. All
California grapevines are cut down in
the fall to one main stem, with a few
stub limbs at the top. The vines thus
stand alone.
Chinamen do all the work in these
grape and pear orchards. They culti
vate the trees, trim them and piok the
fruit.
Fun In Africa.
I had capital fun—for even in African
traveling we have our hours of ease—
in my attempts to take some photo
graphs of the people. I found this a
matter of the utmost difficulty. At most
places my attempts had proved abortive,
owing to the suspicions and superstitious
notions of the people, who wonld just
as soon have stood at the cannon's
mouth as face the camera. While the in
strument was being erected they usually
gathered around in crowds, open
mon'hed with wonder and ouriosity.
•But no sooner did I slip the blaok cloth
over my head for focussing purposes
than they fled incontinently, and neither
bribery nor oajolery could avail to make
them stand apain. They were always
thoroughly imbued with the idea that
I was working witohcraft, and that my
supposed charming would take some
vital essence out of them. Hence not
a few villages remained absolutely de
serted as long as the camera continued
on its legs.— Good Words,
Frankfort on the-Main, containing a
population o4 abcut 100,000, is said to
be the riohrst oity of its size In the
vided among its inhabitants every man,
woman and child would have, it is said,
20.000 marks, or some $4,000 a piece.
THE FAMILY DOCTOR.
HOT MILK AS A RESTORATIVE.— MiIk
that is heated to much above 100 de
grees Fahrenheit ioses for the time a
degree of its sweetness and its density;
but no one fatigued by over-exertion oi
body and mind, who has ever experienced
the reviving influenoe of a tumbler of
this beverage, heated as hot as it
can be sipped, will willingly forego
a resort to it because of its
having been rendered somewhat less
acceptable to the palate. The prompt
ness with which its cordial influence is
felt is surprising. Some portions of
it indeed seem to be digested
almost immediately; and many who
fanoy they need alcoholio stimulants
when exhausted by labor of brain or
body will find in this simple draught an
equiatlent that shall be abundantly sat.
isfying and more enduring in its effeots.
—Phrenological Journal.
CURES FOR BALDNESS. — The Chemists'
Journal says : Dr. Xavier Landerer, of
Athens, has again been so obliging as
to send us some notes from the cradle
of pharmacy : Numberless remedies for
baldness of French, English, German
and American origin stock our markets,
but none, according to Dr. Landerer,
equal in efficiency the following, which
he has used and prescribed for many
years past. Prepare a tincture of the cups
of the Quercuscegilops, which are known
in oommerce as valonia, and digest with
it powdered cloves and cinnamon.
Make a tincture by digesting tho leaves
of the Laurus apollonis in acid wine,
and mix the two together. Before ap
plying this remedy the skin of the head
should be well washed with a decoction
of saponaria root ( Saponaria levrtnlica),
to cure any exanthema pitliyilatis which
may be present. • Instead of pomatum
or hair oil, laurel oil should be used,
this being the usual hair oil in vogue
among the ladies of the East. Dr.
Landerer calls this remedy for baldness
alexitrichon , or hair preserver.
Utah and the Mormons.
A visitor to Salt Lake City writes in
the Conqrcgationalist as follows : Sev
eral days lately spent by the writer in
Salt Lake have afforded a fresh and in
teresting view of the matter as it ap
pears from this standpoint of the Mor
mon Mecca. At the Sunday service the
tabernacle, which will seat 13,000 when
filled, was not occupied at all in the
galleries, though they were formerly
were filled. The addresses wore shaped
specially for the benefit of the non-
Mormon hearers, of whom there must
have been at least 290 present, seated
in front by themselves as usual.
One of the speakers, the su
perintendent of Mormon schools for
the county, argued at great length the
reasonableness of a new revelation to
Joseph Smith, and both the addresses
had about them a good deal of the
assumption that the doctrines preached
must be true because I, the speaker,
say so. The praying was to a very
large extent similar to that in evangeli
cal churches, though there was once or
twice a more direct supplication that all
the world may be converted to Mor
monism. The (Mormon) men and
women were seated by themselves,
and the babies and little chil
dren, of whom there were a good
number present, cried vigorously, keep
ing up sometimes a sharp competition
with the fihoir. Bread and water are
distributed to the entire congregation
every Sabbath as a communion sorvioe,
those who do the preaching stopping to
allow the announcements and the short
prayers, but going forward 'with their
address while the elements are being
distributed. On Sabbath mornings
Mormon Sabbath-schools are held in all
the ward school houses of the oity, and
the same buildings are used for local
meetings in the evening. Since the
passage of the Edmunds bill
the Mormons are somewhat more
reserved in their intercourse with others,
though heretofore they have done their
trading almost wholly at shops kept by
their own people. The non-Mormon
population of the city is between four
and five thousand, out of twenty thou
sand in all, with a Congregational, Pres
byterian, Methodist and two Episcopal
churches. It is a mistake to suppose
that polygamy, as bad as it is, la the
worst and most dangerous feature of the
Mormon chnroh. The offense is one of
which only about one-tenth part of the
people are guilty. The infallibility ac
corded to the Mormon church and its
priesthood is the thing most to
be feared and hardest to uproot; and
polygamy rests upon this. A lady of
our party meeting a married daughter
of Brigham Young, drew from her the
frank statement that like other women
she should shrink instinotirely from
such a step as her hnsband's taking a
second wife, but added that she should
submit without protest, as the church
requires it. Here is the keynote to this
bondage of polygamy, but oontaot with
the outside world is beginning to be
felt, and polygamy is looked on with
decreasing disfavor among the young
people, as they begin to see how it is
regarded by others.
About $25 000,000 are now given to
foreign missions where but $1,000,000
was given sixty yean ago.
MORAL AND RELIGIOUS.
llow People Die.
Rev. Henry Ward Beeoher in one ol
bis sermons says: "I think the great
majority of people die very mnoh as ■
leaf does. Its snpply of jnioe grows
less and less, and the stem is less and
less nourished, and it gradually re
traots and shrinks within itself, and
hangs on the branoh; and soma day
when the wind blows in very gentle
puffs the leaf is lifted a little and the
connection breaks, and it wavers and
wavers through the air and settles with
out a sound upon the ground. I sup
pose that the majority are as uncon
scious of the phenomenon of dying as
children are of going to sleep; it is so
like it that it is called in Scriptnre 'fall
ing asleep*—only there the figure is
sweetened and made more beautiful, in
that we fall asleep in Jesus, or in His
arms."
Worrying.
Every mortal has burdens and dis
comforts. By picking the burden up
fifty times a day and weighing it, it be
comes no lighter, but rather produces
an increased sense of heaviness. By
worrying over the discomforts they be
come none the more comfortable, but
are harder to endure and give cause for
more and more worry and complaint.
To ignore them may be im
possible. We are not called upon to
do that. But by turning the sunlight
upon them and greeting them with the
merriest laugh we oan raise we oan
lighten them and melt them as cakes
of ice are meltea in the noonday sun,
so that when wo look for them we find
they are gone and wondar who has oar
ried them away. Blessed be the sun
shine that comes with its benediction to
the weary and lightens the burden ol
the heavy heart.
Religious News and Note.
The British people gave 85,310,950
for foreign missions last year.
The Episcopal bishop of Pennsyl*
vania has sailed for Europe, to be absent
three months.
A party of 1,004 French Roman Cath
olics has jußt completed a tour through
tho Holy Land.
Pastor Newman, of the Madison Ave
nue church, New York, has had his
salary raised to 810,009.
The Boston Y. M. O. A. is said to be
the oldest in the United States. It
reoently celebrated its thirty-fir ot birth
day.
The Lutheran Observer says that over
ono thousand ministers have been sent to
America by ten theological institutions
in Germany.
The American Bible sooiety is under
taking the fourth general supply of the
Holy Scriptures throughout this coun
try. The first was in 1829-30, the seo
ond in 1856 and the third in 1866.
Mr. Kimball, the debt extinguisher,
is proving quite successful in Califor
nia, having recently cleared off a debt ol
815,000 on the First Congregational and
one of 820,000 on the First Presbyterian
churches of Oakland.
The Methodist Episcopal chnrohea
North and South unite in a oentenary
conference, which will be held in Bal
timore, December 25, 1884, to celebrate
the famous "Christmas Conference,"
which was held in that oity December
25, 1784.
Tindestak, Alaska,"is a Chiloat vil
lage of sixteen houses and one hnndred
and sixty two people. Each of the
houses cost the Indian owners over a
thousand dollars. Their desire, how
ever, for the Gospel was so great that
the whole population left the village
last October and moved to the new
mission station at Willard, that they
might have school and church privi
leges.
Lovers' Strategy.
The matrimonial aspirations of Lee
Hale and Katie Morgan were opposed
by her parents at Ohattanooga, Tenn.
She was kept so olose a prisoner that
all plans of elopement failed, as she
was not allowod to go beyond the
veranda of the house. At length Hale
made up a party of friends, including a
minister, and approached the house
near enough to signal Katie to come
out. The obliging clergyman had
shortened the marriage ceremony for
this occasion to a few words, and it was
supposed that these could be spoken
before any interruption occurred. The
girl was caught on the veranda by a
big brother, and in escaping from him
fell down the steps, bruising herself
considerably, bnt the ceremony was
successfully performed, amid the cheers
of a multitude.
An Epigram by Emerson.
In London is made publio an epigram
which Emerson wrote in the album of
a well-known firm of photographers to
whom he sat for a photograph daring
his last Eaglish visit. When asked to
write something he readily consented,
and, without hesitation, penned these
words:
" Tlio man who has a thousand frienda
• Haa not a fricn tto spare,
Bnt he who haa ne enemy
i Will meet him ererrwUere."
LADIES' DEPARTMENT.
Derllnrd to be Married.
When a suitor at Mount Vernon, 0.,
received an emphatio no to his proposal
he was about to give up the suit and go
back to his home at Columbus, but the
girl's mother accepted him, appointed
a wedding day, and assured him the
daughter would be ready for the oere
monv. He was there again at the time
fixed, and so were numerous guests,
who found the house deoorated with
flowers and a collation prepared. But
the bride was missing. She was caught
at the railroad station and taken back
home, where she disobeyed her mother's
stern command to stand up and be mar
ried, and the oompany was dismissed.
A Determined Wife.
When Mrs Qutzkow found herself on
the road to Redwood City, California,
her buggy upset, her horse run away,
and her husband disabled by a lamed
leg and a broken arm, she was in a sore
quandary what to do. After a while a
man came driving by, and she begged
him to take herself and husband to
town. He refused, saying he was in
i hurry. Thereupon Mrs. Qutzkow
snatched up her husband's overcoat,
pulled out a revolver, seized the man's
horse by the bit, leveled the shooting
iron at him, and threatened to put him
out of the necessity of ever keeping
another engagement if he did not com
ply with her request. He saw dead
earnestness in her eye, weakened, and
look husband and wife to Redwood City;
and now Mrs. Gutzkow's reputation as
a heroine is firmly established on the
Pacific coast. Her husband is a son of
the popular poet and writer who recent
ly met his death in 'Germany by suffo
cation during a chloral hydrato sleep.
New* and Note* lor Women.
Queen Victoria has grown very gray.
The Princess of Wales and her
daughter takes exercise on the tricycle.
It is proposed to revive the pillory in
England for tho punishment of wife
beaters.
Upon Mrs. Nellie Grant Satoris rests
the responsibility of having made brick
red kid gloves popular in Washington.
Mirs Hannah Reynolds, arrested re
cently in Ireland for conspicuous ad
vocacy of "no rent," was sentenced at
Birr recently to six months imprison
ment on a charge of intimidation.
Mrs. Scott Sexton, of Louisville, Ky.
has instituted, organized and success
fully carried forward a school of elo
cution and oratory, and this snmmer
opens a " summer school" at Fredonia,
N. Y.
At a school district in Lancaster pre
cinct, just east of Lincoln, Neb., as
many women as men attended the an
nual school meeting, and Mrs. Perkey
was elected as a member of the school
board.
The Beaver Oity (Neb.) paper says:
"Ttie woman's suffrage movement is
gaining ground in this part of the State.
Miss Itinkin, the county superintendent
of this oounly, was elected unani
mously."
Mrs. Rebecca Taylor, mother of the
late Bayard Taylor, bas presented to a
dry goods house in Philadelphia a hand
some skein of silk, reeled and spnn with
her own hands, in the eighty-third year
of her age.
In her endeavors to eliminate from
her clothing all products which involve
the death of animals, Mrs. Anne Kings
ford found great difficulty in procuring
vegetable boots, but a London cobbler
succeeded iu making some which look
exactly like leather.
Mile. Lucy de Rothschild, daughter
of Baron Gustavo de Rothschild, was
married recently to M. Leon Lambert,
head of the Brussels house of Roths
child, in tho synagogue of the Rue de
la Viotoire in Paris. She is eighteen
years old, graceful, thoroughly edu
cated and accomplished, and brings her
husband a dowry of 600,060,000 francs,
or 8120,600,000.
Pn.hlon Notes
Very plain skirts are in high favor.
Laces were never more worn than this
summer.
Tinted and colored grenadines are
again worn.
Nile green and lavender are favorite
tints for grenadines.
Wash dresses are almost de rignenr
for children just now.
Jerseys aro much worn for the jackets
of lawn tennis costumes.
Lengthwise tucks aud tucked yokes
are features in bathing suits.
New bathing suits have short sleeves,
and trousers loose at the ankles.
The mandoline is coming in vogue
as the musical instrument of the roa
thetios.
There is as mnoh variety in the fash
ions of bathing suits as in all other
garments.
Making ficelle lace Is among new
fancy work for ladies daring tne snm
mer season.
Oarraokmaoross lace is used upon
fancy round bata of cream-white straw,
also trimmed with white ostrich tips.
The Zonave form of bathing sm't,
combining tha blouse and trousers in
one pieee, is revived.
Pale yellowish pink shades are much
used in fine millinery and for neck rib
bons and bows on white morning
dresses.
Terra-cotta satin dresses, trimmed
with real Spanish laOe, relieved by huge
clusters of "Jaok" roses, are im
ported.
Parisian-laced shoes, with pointed
perforated toes of patent leather on
French kid tops, are rapidly taking the
place of buttoned boots.
Among the rapidly appearing eccen
tricities in fancy jewelry is an ornament
for millinery in the shape of six tiny
birds transfixed on a gilded spit.
The Alpine peasant hat, called the
Montagnard, with broad brim bent
down over the eyes, is to be an exceed
ingly popular head covering for seaside
use.
Striped lawn tennis cottons for the
skirts and whitq lawn tennis cloth for
the aprons are worn with white on
bright wool jerseys for lawn tennis
suits.
Pure wool-mixed cheviots with a dash
of Cayenne red in the woof will be
much employed for traveling dresses
all summer. The facings and cordings
are of red satin.
Muslin round hats, for country wear,
are made of polka-dotted white and ecru
muslins; the trimmings are fanoy
muslin handkerchiefs and artificial
daisies, buttercups and white and pink
Scotch roses.
Black openwork chenille wrapß in the
directoire shape are much worn this
season. They form a rich and elegant
addition to promenade costumes of
moire, foulard or satin, and have all
the becoming effeot of a black velvet
mantle.
White Madras muslin dresses worn by
very young ladies are draped over white
moire and have sashe3 of satin surah.
The illuminated pattern of many colors
on ecru grounds makes very showy
dresses with dark velvet ribbon bows
looping the drapery and also a collar
and cuffs of velvet.
Sitinette and Tarkey red parasols of
lustrous cotton are more appropriate
than silk ones with the ootton dresses
worn in the country. They have bril
liant grounds strewn with large detached
flowers, or with large balls or polka
dots. A bow of the same material is
tied around the natural wood^,handle.
Chicoree or pinked ruches of heavy
silk trim the foot of the cashmere
dresses that aro made for seaside resorts.
Embroidery of the Bame color and
flounces of silk lace are added byway
of further garniture, and there is then
nothing in the whole costume that will
shrink in the moist atmosphere.
The coolest and most becoming morn,
ing gowns are mado of linen lawu in the
Mother Hubbard shape, that is, the full
skirts are shirred on to a tucked, puffed,
or embroidery or lace-trimmed yoke; a
ribbon belt confines the fullness in front
at the waist line, but the demitrained
back falls loose in full Watteau folds
from the shoulder to the tucked or
raffled bottom of the skirt; pretty
shirred and ribbon trimmed pockets and
sleeves finish such gown. 0
Notable Trees.
An oak tree reoently felled at Ohioo,
001., measured eight and a half feet in
diameter at the stump.
A horse chestnut tree on the premises
of Mathias Baser, 328 Washington
street, Boston, was covered with pink
blossoms this season.
Madison countj, Ky., prides itself on
an elm tree, recently cut down, that
measured twenty-five feet around the
body and more than 300 feet around
the top.
On July 4, 1812, Dr. West, of Ches
ter, N. J., stuck into the ground in
front of his door his walking stick. To
day the circumferenoe of the trunk is
seveoteen feet.
A peach tree in the garden of Mrs.
John Arnoy, North Hanover street, Phil
adelphia, had double blossoms almost
as large as the common Jane rose, which
they resemble in a remarkable degree
The tree is ten or fifteen feet high, of
the white freestone variety, and though
not prolifio bears double fruit.
A Mistake.
Anatomically and physiologically it
is a complete mistake to have the heel
of the foot raised from the ground be
yond the level of the palm of the foot.
The moment the hoel is raised the plan
of the arch is deranged, and the elastio,
wave-like motion of the foot impeded.
The aroh always onght to have full
play.— Dr. Foofet Health Monthly,
Robert Bonner has put 8382,000 into
horse flesh sinoe 1850. In that year he
paid 89 000 for the famons team, "Lan
tern and Light." In 1804 "Pocahon
tas," who had a record of 2:26 3-4, was
sold to him for 840,000, "Dexter" ooat
him 815 000, "Edward Everett" 82V
000, "Startle" the same sum, "R iru"
represents 886,000, and hut latest pur
chase is that of "Keene Jim" for 84,000.
Happy LOTS.
( While they eat before the fli%
Nothing more did be dealre^
Than to get a little nigher,
If he oooid;
And hie heart beat high and higher
And her look grew ahy and shyer,
'When he sidled close up by _
As be should.
Then ho ventured to inquire
If her sister, Jane Mariar,
And her mother and her sire,
Wore qnite well ?
And from time to time he'd eye her,
As though he would like to buy her,
And his bashfulness was dire,
For a spell.
Then his husky throat grew dryer
When he told her that the 'Squire
To himself would gladly tie her
If she would;
Might he now go ask her sire?
And he thought he would expire,
When she said, to his desire,
That he could I
—liurlington Hawkey*.
PONGENTJPAfUUBAPHS*
High heals—Doctors' bills.
A toothache is always a pain invest
ment.
Female physioians naturally praotloe
homeopathy.
Mammies are the only well-behaved
persons who are now left in Egypt.
When the poet wrote "the bravest
are the tenderest," he didn't refer to
ball beef.
In trade what artiole is usually con
sidered as occupying the foremost rank?
StroDg batter.
It is a terrible come-down for a man
to fall oat of a balloon and be obliged
to walk home.
A party who has just paid a big doe
tor's bill says he wants to see high heals
go out of fashion.
All flesh is grass, and that's why so
many men nowadays appear to have had
their hair cat by a lawn mower.
It is fan to see the weathei bores*
dodging about*in the vain hope of hit
ting it about onoe or twioe a week.
An advertisement in a Western paper
Bays: "Lost—Two cows; one of them
is a ball." So is the advertisement.
The trapeze performer is a Ligjh
minded man in more ways than one.
He is always above being in the ring.
Simultaneously with the advent of
narrow-gange trousers, the papers are
telling of a great increase in the nombsi
of spindles in the country.
The weather BO hot
I should Bay is not Z
The ploasantest to be bome (
Bat please bear in your mind,
When to ewear you're inclined,
It'a the makin' o' wheat and corn.
Beef is so high that it is now a oom
pliment to be called a coward. Eves
Bullock presses are advancing and
steersmen on river beats are contem
plating a demand for increased pay.
All the newspapers throughout the
country are objecting to the duty on
matches. We always did think that
the stamp on matches was a terrible
thing, especially when a man is in hie
bare feet.
Buffalo Bill has brought suit to ra.
cover $4,000,000 worth of property in
Cleveland, and some one expresses the
hope that, in case he is successful, be
will put aside twenty cents of it and get
his hair cut.
" Now, George, you must divide the
oake honorably with your brother
Charles." "What is honorable, mother?"
'' It means that you must give him the
largest piece." " Then, mother, I'd
rather Charley would divide it."
" Ma, am I all made now ?" said e
little miss of three and a half years old
at the breakfast table the other morn
ing. " Why, dear ?" said the fond
mother. " Because I have had my ears
pierced and was vaccinated yesterday,"
said little Tot.
The "preliminaries" of the occasion
had all been settled. That is, John
had asked Julia, and she had oonsented.
They were sitting on the front veranda
watching for the sable curtain of night
to part and give them just one look at
the new oomet. ' Oh, by the way
Julia," said he. a little nervously, ay
income is— is SBSO now. Do yon think
we could live up to it?" "Why, John,
you precious, 1 can live up to an inooma
twice as big as that all by myself." Tha
farewell kiss that night was a mere me
chanical bit of osonla ion.
"Why are yon like an oil well Kate V
' The lover anted. Replied his iate,
" Because I'm bored ? M "Oh, no, I mesa
Yon give delight with csrens neon."
" Indeed I" she laughed, "I'll ask one, too |
Why like an oil well, sir, are you ? H
" Because I'm deep—in love r" aald ha.
"And I'm"—"A guaher ? Yea," said aha.
" That's very good, bsl, Kate, I find
Like oil, that you are quite refined—
Yon are my flame' that will"—"no doubt
Like yon," abe eaid, "soon be put oat,"
In walked her pa. "Bee here, my eon,
If you are oil let's see yon ruu;
Because, if I 'sirike oil' I might
Give you a start—with iie-mau-ite."
The work of the onltd States fish
commission this year w<ll include the
distribution of about 80,000.009 shad fn
different sections of tha ooboidfc
IniffliiwtMt herring.