Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, December 12, 1878, Image 1

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    El
MI
ALVORD & HITCHCOCK., Publishers.
VOLUME XXXIX.
TERMS OF PERMEATION.
The BRADFORD ItEroirrita Is published eve
Thursiltly morning by W.
.ALVOtal sod J. K.
Two 1/ollirs per animis t to Ad
vance.
4.l7"Adrertislag la all cakes exclusive of sob ,
seriptiou to the paper, •
S"F.O L A I.,:ioTiCEStusertedat TEN CENTS per
tine for ern Insertion, and rrmetyra . porllne for
eZeb solg.lgivmt Insertion.. _ • •
Moe At. IirOMBS. PIFFLES CZNTA
A l) E St EiITS will belnserted according
to Ma to:iurring table of
. rat.e3 b•
4w I 2m I l!na I Om I I
• t inth IF LOO 112.50 0.00 IThlie 1.10.00 1.15.00
, ":: Inents 1 1.30 15 05'
8.00 I 10.00 I tB.OO I MOO
Is- p
.3 Inches 3.50 I .OU 110.00 113.00 I =A* I MOO
4 itiches 3.66 8:50 I 11.00 1 te-ti
corlistil 5.00112.00 16.0 120.60 I 241.G0 115.00
colse= j 10.01 I 20.00 125.00 I 32.0111 —570-.00-175.00
1 column I V.1 . .00 0.0., I 60.00 60.001 . 100.00 160.00
Admitistrainr's and Executors Notices. Olt t
A ad I tor'. Not t Cosiness Cards, Avenues
(per year) tiouiditionii lines 41 each.
Yearly 'advertisers are entitled to quarterly
changes Transient advertisements must be raid
tor, ix mtranec, •
Ali revolutions of assocrattona; communications
id limited or Individual Interest, and melees of
marriages or deaths. exceeding five lines are ebaref
ed TVs utuTS per line.
•he Re.rutgrEtt having a larger circulation than
any other paper In the etinnty. Makka it the best
advertising medium Rihi . ."ortherst Pennsylvania. -'
JOB PRINTING of every kind. In plain and
Taney rotors, done with neatness and dispatch.
ilanditlns. 1134121 M Cards, Pamphlets, lilt'beads.
Statements, &c., or every variety and style. printed
at the shortest notice. The Itkrungtft office Is
*well supi.lied v ith power pusses. a vied assort
ment of new type. anduv. , rything In the printing
line can he-executed In the most artistic manner
:stud at the lowesprates TERMS IN yAiti ABLY.
Ilueness CU&S.
C . S. RUSSELL'S
GENERAL
INSURANCE ARENCY
mi r ze-mcr. rowANDA, PA,.
011AS. - 3L HALL, - •
•
.ATTORNar-AT-LAW • ND desTICE OF rILACE
TOW ANDA, PA.
}'lltL ISSCRANCE IN RELIABLE COMPANIES.
Dlatte i t'Sver Dayton's harness store. 'Not/. 1, '2ll.
INS . I3II.ANCE AGENCY.
following
R.ELIARI/E AND FIRE TRIED
• Irprppantes represented;
VicsitinF..ritaisili,lll.l3lE.3ll•lllCllANTlA,
?larch 16,'74 t i (I. if. BLACK..
V D./PAYNE, M. D.,
• 41.
PIVOICIAN A.SI) Srucr.ON.
Office over MonVanyee Store. (Mei. houritrom 10
Aol'2, x. ‘t.,•oll , llrom I.to 4, r. S'peelat Attention
:glirento tlis , easeß.of the 1 awl
•
W. RY A N•,
COUN'IT KUPERII:TIENDENT.
(Mee laa yiat ur:lak of e:teh month..over Turiier
on's'ltrug Store, Towatuta, Pa.
Towatt.ta, June 20. 1878.
VLSIMIEFI 4t.' SON, •.
1%1
AiTor:NTLYS-AT-L,OV,
T 4) %V A N It A , PA.
I 1.. ELSIAZEF,,
C. EY.:BrEir.
p
P'ItTiA!TS AND LANlseipl,:s
l'Ant,..l to order at any inlet , tont,s.s to 11540.
ttil Paintings Ito-Painted. Ite-Touchcd, or changes
tnade
wot t: done in the Idgite.t 'tityle of tho Art.
~ .1011 ANN ! . VENDER.
Towanda; Pa.. Arrll is, isTs
•-••
ROG:ALSKI, -
_1 •
Etuplop:4 with M. Hem!pitman for the past ft.ur
}ears. 1, 4,4 leave to annonnip to his friends an 4
t fie pup!h generally that he has rum .ted to the
Ata.4 o a irtlre,it Store. VllO tinor south of the First
National flank. and openo4 a shop for. the tepair
e Witt nes. ClOeks..lewetry. &u. AU work war
ranted to give entire satisfaction. (A F4'7B,
AIT .1. YOUNG,
•
ATT"I:NEY.-AT.I.An", ~
; . TOWANDA. PA.
Orfiti" , --.etCtia door sonth ,of the First Nattooal
,et.tolc Math St,, up stairs. '
. - —,— .
ti ' D.' KINNEY,.
kl • . . .
Arimmix-iT-LAw.
0111ce-11 , 4 , .nis tonuerly . ocetiWd by Y. M. e. A
, rjan.3llN.
WILIAANS & ANGLE,
A TTOnNEYS-.11 , L AU'
OF FleE.—Forinerly occuptell by Win. Wat MIS" ; i
Eat.
(art. 17, 17) T. J. ANOLOC.
In=
McPIIESON,
..kTTORNETtAT-LA I W,
TOW A I)A, 1"A.
t Airy .pradj Co.
MASON ei HEAP,
A TTOILNICTS-XT-LAW.
Ton - aad.,. t'a. • ftice over Bartlett Ac Tracy, Main-ea.,
G. F. 1 ASOS. rA9171 .fi 117111.7 R if EAU.
L. HILLIS,
ATTORNEY-AT4..t9r,
TOWANDA, rA.
- ri
4 F. GOFF, . .. .
li. . .
Arroit NET-AT-V. 47, I
41 . 07 doors:ri (doors north or Ward (louse). iti :
wan,, Va. , (Aprt112,1477.
• _ ,•_. .. _
W.
AITI.LAI.,'II.wC?„I.i.Pe.,SIO,Nit-AAT-IsT,lonaallezz,l
.
I ran Innine44 entruttrd to hill care In_tirsulfor i l, 1
tt
Sndivan and Wyoming Counes. - 'o.lllre olth r , .
l'arter.. (ndrl9-74.1 1
71,_.,
L. LAMB,
A TT.O - t \ I:f-AT-L
RR E. PA
tollectiOus pAruptly atteodvd to.
jolly w.
A trOIt‘t , AT J .LAW AND 11. S. COMMISSION,
TOW AN DA. r 4.
iltflee—iStort Side eutpllc. iquare.%
DAT lES & CARNOCIIA-N-,
ArrosNtys.,AT-Likw.
Is:wr 1 $wE Or WA! P 11!417.9E.
TOWANDA, PA.
.
nR. S.. M. WOODBURN, Physi-
Air cl4ll and. 2Zurgeon. 012102 over 0. A. 1212201r2 ,
Crocker: store.
oirt;ol2, May 2. 187.?1.2 4 .
Ap t DILL ' S; CA LIFT,
A T7OI:NSTF-AT-LAIV, -
. N.,.
TOW ANDA, I' A.
Delon in Vicow's Block, first Ncborsoun of the Fleet
Nati. , :,:il bank, upstairs.
i. 4. NI 4141 LI.. lanS-731y) -J. N. CALIF'S'.
GRIDLEY & PAYNg,
AT7( O I:NEY.4-.A7 . -LAW.
F•outh side )ter.•ur Rock (rnetn formerly occupied
by D 2% teA do Carnoehan),
TOWANDA. P.V.
(WM
tp (it IrLEV
3 A3l p WOOD,
trv•tiNix..kr.LAir,
14.1 WAN DA, PA.
111 CIV4-76
a. STREETER,
• 'Arrortxsy•AT•L avr,
TOWANDA. PA,.
ME
OVERTON dr, MERCUR;
• •
ATTORNICrIii-AT•LAIT, ,
•
: • - TOWAI,iDA. P.
&tee nver Mdatanyes Stork tulayan.
ovERTON. RODNEY A. KERCIIII.
WM. MAXWELL,
ATTORNMY-AT•pAM.
TOWANDA, PA...
Otrt,.l c.er Itaytou•s Store,.
12, 1976
pATRICK & FOYLE,
• ATTOILICZYS-AT•LAW,
__ et, • TOWANG/A, PA.
, In Ifeicurs Block.
J
AN • •
DREW WILT,.
•• • •--k
• ATTO ItY4T-LALW.
Ofkro over Cross' Book Store. two Qaors north of
&mug ik Loot Towanda. Ps. ihy be consul A
n German. rAprlll2, 741.]
OVERTON SANDERSON,
_ -- Artwoor,T-AT-1.44w, .
• TOWANDA. PA;
E. Ot7TICTON, IR. - nous F. SionnoisoN.
•
B. KELLY, Dr.rmer.O ffi ce
W• aver M. E. itoseneeld's, Towanda. N.
Teeth Inserted on Gold, Silver, Rabbet, and AI.
=MUM bare. Teeth extracted without WO.
Oct. 3442. : „ •
Du. T. 8.. JOHNSON,
PuirsiciAx Alrtr Souotos.
Oiler oter Dr. Porter k kUiros Drug Stoie.Tcnraudk.
jaul-TW.
1876.
rINIWANDA INSURANCAGENG.Y.
•
•a 31ain qtrest . opporitilke Cour &rim
- W. S. VINCENT, •
MANADEIt.
.sm) nw
FIRST NATIONAL BANK,
TOIWANDA. PA
CAPITAL !AID
SURPLIIS FUND - 110,1041
Thls Cank offers unusual - facilities (nettle trans.
action of a general Makin; buslaesa.
JOS. POWELL, President.
Yeti. 14, WS.
•
EAGLE HOTEL,. 7
(60UTU sID/C PUBLIC nt.WAILE.)
This yremiceown hove too Been thoroughly ten
hovel-ea and repairtul throughout, and the proprie
tor to now prepared to offer thri,h-elase Antonio:lode.
tlines to the public, on the west reagonlble tenon,
• E. A. JENNINGS.
Towanda, Pa, - May S, 1878.
.lIENRY HOUSE,
(ON Tar XVRoPEAN PLAN,)
CORNS:It -VAIN 1 WASHINGTON STREETS
This large, commodious and eleganily,furnished
house has Just been opened to the traveling public-,
The proprietor has spanal neither pains nor expense'
In making Ills hotel .tirsbe'w4s in all - its appoint
ments, and respectfully solicits it share of public
patronage. MEAI.B AT ALL 1101.1{S. Terms
to suit the tiniest Lange stable attached,
•WM. HI Nltl', no Vstt ETOII.
Towanda,,June 7, '7l-tf.
T HE CENTRAL HOTEL,
171.3TE1t, t'A.
The undersigned haying, taken possession
of the al.ove hotel. respectfully sollitts the patron.
age of his old friends and the :public generally.
augl&tf. M. A. FORREST. '
QEELEY'S OYSTEIt•BAY
EUROPEAN HOUSE.--,1 few, doors wattle(
the Means !louse,Board by the day or week on
reasonable terms. arm weals served at all hours
Pr.torr at whoze,tate sod moot - • 'obi *fr.
RE AT BARGAIN
MERe\.IjANT TAYLOR.
oppo f utk. TOW A 1 DA, I! A, •
FAN \iN
97
and • .
• • PANTA LOO \ N \ 5.,.
GOODS JUST ARillyED.
• Tine Cheviots, •
'Woridelbi
Wool Didgonolit
k!! ,
and Ploi
••ONERCOITINGS
In peat variety, mad , to order, at the
~.,
VERY_ LOWEST PRICE.
MATNLASS:i.• r!LOAKINGS,
GENTS FLAISIII,G GOODS,
Cfeb.llB
ll'indrzor Scarp,
Silk Banal:m-14:P,
Colored
So:Tendert?,
Underclothing,
From :o 52 In stu.
tnocl 1-7 S
sa-A it inspection of cur stock will convince. the
stmt fastidious. - •
4. DOUtlllell,
Main Street, Towantla."Pa
Dated Oct. 24, WS, .
FACTS FOR THE'PEOPLE.
TWENTY THOUSAND DOLLARS WORTH
J •
READY-*ADfI CLOTEIING,
July 27,1
GENTS FeRNISIII:NG GOODS.
irats, Caps, &c., &c.
Jan. 1. 1145
TO BE'SOLD AT COST,
\ WEEN7 NOV AND JANUARY ig; 1g79
31., E. ROSENFIELD'S,
As T Intend to make a eltaligecin my huAness.- 1
therefore tiger my entire rt. Ck - AT cos r, 11 inq
Ore largest and brat adL•cr d stock' In northern
l'enneyrrarda.
S. 11..PATNY.
i1y17.73
r' lIIILIACK a RUM :ILL.
Towanda, Pu., B.s. It, MI. latir
= 1 Jaen Cards.
slt o.
N. N. BETTS, Cashier
Hotels.
TOSVAA'DA, PA
Cloth!! g.
OVERCOA UNGs.
at reduced prlc.or
$2O, 0 0 0
• • ,
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-- """ 7- r''L TIIITES - D
1 1 0ehtLi •
THE OLD lOW
Co . little Lwow lost In the heart of the Haden,
What would I not glee to behold °ammo:el
To lobate once again
. the sweet Ineatb of your
roes,
An the stiwrretematts Met elfuthed toiled your
_door— •
To see the neat wludows thrown wide to the tee.
ahtno
The porch where, we sat at the chile of the day. -
Where the weary foot traveler was welcome to rest
Wm, ,
And the beau was never sent empty away.
The wainscotted wells and the Imitated cell.
toga:
To hearth° loud lick of the cluck on the stair.
And to ktsa the dear bending face over the Bible,
That always was laid by my grandmother tehalr I
O blight little garden beside the plantation,
Where the tall lienrs•de•lts' their hlue humus
unfurled, .
And the lawn. wan alive wlth the thrushes aid .
blaetblrda, .
I would you were all I had known of the' world.
My sweet ;Ink wit-cluster: My rare honeysuckle
_ My prim polyanthuses all of a row!
'in a g.srden of dreams I still pass and caress you,
Rut your heauttful selves are forever laid low—
!, •
kor your walls, little house, long ago have been
leveled;
Alpo feet your smooth borders, 0 garden, have
trod;
And those whom I loved are-at rest from their
la
hors, -
Reposing in peace in the bosom of God ;. •
THE OBILDEENI
The affliction t ab, the - children
Yon! Innocent. joyone oneA ; .
Your daughters. with gouts of Autobine ;
Your buoyant and laughing sons.
Look long in their happy tares. .
Drink love front their *ark ht eyes,
For the wonderral - chann or chil.:hood,
Roil soon it eithera and dies :
A few tast•santsbing summers, '
A season or twain of frost,
And you suddenly 'ask, bewildered.
"What to It my heart hath Ite4t
Perchance' yOu see t,y the hearth-stone
Some Juno, stately and pr.,ud,
Or* Liebe, Whose softly ambushed eyes
Finish out from the golden cloud
or Inytsh and btatattul tresses
That, trantehly flnating, stray
O'er the white - of a throat awl is , srth
Mon, !sty thah blossouts 1/ Ray.
perchance you marl their tunthers
1r Dung heroes who spurn the sod .
Wit h the fervor of ant type knighthood
And the air of SI Grecian God.
1.
But where. ad, where are the children,
Your housitold fairies of yore ?
Mart I they are dead, and their grace has fl .4
For ever and evermore.
—Harper's -Magazine far Dtcere .
nicellaurouS.
FOUND AT LAST.
How Harry Flotee Got the School at Cron
berry Gulch.
" iSer, no doubt you have all the
ksrnin' that's required in a school
teacher, but, it wants more that learn
in' to make a man able to teach.
school in Cranberry Gulch. :You'll
soon find that out if yon try. We've
had three who tried it on. One lays
there in the. graveyard ; another Yost
his eye and left ; the ,last one opened
school and left beforer \ poon time for
the benefit of his health. He hasn't
been back since. 'Now you're a slen
der build, and all your learnin' will
only make it worse,'for all our young
folks are ri4ughs and don't stand no
nonsense!" • •
\ This was what one of the trustees
Of the district said to my Mend Her
ry \ ylotee, when -he made application
for the vacant position of teacher
" Let the try. I know. I am slen
der. bui.\ \ l am tough and I have a
strong will s ," said Harry.
...
"Jest as you like. There's the
school-honse;\apd 11l have notice
giVen if
.you want it.done," said the
trustee. . \
" I do," said Harry ; - "and I'll open'
next Monday at nine A. m."
.• The notice was given; and there
.was a good deal of exciteinent in the
gulch and along the . ulia flats.
More than' fifty young pe4le of both
sexes made an excuse to drop into
the tavern to get a sight ac he fel.
low who thought he cenld keep school .
in that district, and Many a contempt
tuous: glance fell on the slender fo 3.
and' you:lful face of ' the would- '
teneher. .
Eight o'clock on 3londay morning
came, and Harry Flotee went down
to the schoolhouse with a key in one
hand and a vali!sc in the other.
" Ready to slope if he finds we're
too much for him," said a cross-eyed,
broad-shouldered fellow of eighteen.
The schoolhouse was unlocked and
the new teacher went to. the desk.
,Some of the yourg folks went in to
'see what he was going to do, though
school" was not called.
Hurry opened his valise and took
out a large twit.. Theo. after trick
ling it around his waist. he pin. three
Colt's navy revoliera there, each of
ai .. barrels. and a boa is knife eighteen
'flaws in the blade.
'• Thunder I He means business!"
muttered the cross-eyed chap.
-The new teacher now took out a
square card about foul - inches each
The complaint that machinerp robs
the lahOrer of his only capital is en
tirely unfounded. Machinery never
lessened the amount of work to be
done, though it has constantly
. chan-
ged the character of the work. The
labor-saving 'machinery emrloyed in
agriculture is almost entirely- the
nrodubt of the inventions of the past
thirty years. In no part of the world
has the introduction of such machine
ry Peen more general or more rapid
than in the grain-growing States . of ,
the West. The result is 'shown in
the census' reports. During the ten
years ending in 1:860, the farm hands
of those. States increased in ntimber;
more than fifty per cent. Daring the;
next ten, in spite of the losses of the
war, the' increase was about thirty
per cent.
.During the same twenty
years, the. population of .the country
as a whole increased only six,ty-seven
per cent. '
, When Walter Runt invented his
the first class. sewing machine in 1838, his wife pro-
Onkysix got up. lie escorted them tested that it would throw all the
TOWANDA, • BRADFORD COUNTY, , PL I THITBSD
to upper seats, and -then be began to
=mine the rest. A Uhisper was
card behind him.' In .a second he
beelen, - revolver in hand.
, "No whiaperint , allowed 'here I " he
•\undered. and fo r e ' an instant his re,,
rarer lay on a level -with - the croas-,
eyed \ boy's head. • "
.6 I'll, not do so any more," gasped
the bully -
" See ynu do not.. Inever.give a
second warping," . said the teacher,
\ ll
and the revol er fell. ~, - •
lt.took two lours to organize .the
classes„,,but w , done, . they 'lwere .
well organized.fteu , came reces,s.
The teacher went. ut, ton, for the
room was crowded and, hot. A' hawk
was circling overhead\high... in- air.
'The teacher drew a 'revol er, and the
next second the hawk cam tumbling
down among the wondering cholera.
- From .that day 'on Barri, kept
school for two year's in Cranerry
Gulch, his salary doubled- after Vie.
grst eparter, - and . his Pupils learn • 1
to love as well as to respect him.
'The revolvers went out of sight with
in a month. - - • ,
- They had found a man ut last who
could keep aehool This is a fact--
Sun Francisco Chronicle.
i•, - -
The London : Times. in a recent is
sue says : The old naturalisf,s thought
generally that the buzzing of insects
,was produced - by the vibrations of
the wing; but they scarcely attempt
ed to analyze - the phenomenon, and
their opinion was abandoned when
Reaumer Showed that • when the
wings are iu - a blow-fly continues to
buzz. Otte* explanations of the
phenomenon. have been advanced by
I
vari us nattfralists. but none of them
are satisfactory.. M. Juusset de Bel
lesme has been making Some investi
gation on'the'stibject,andiafter Woe
big that, previous theories are unsat
isfactory; he describes the results et
his own researches: ' To avoiil confu 7
sion, it should • be distinctly under
s, owl what is meant by buzzing. In
the scientific accept-Won it means to
imitate the sofind.of the humble bee,
which is the type of the .buzzing in
sects. But the humble bee gives out
two very different sounds, which are
in - octavo - of. each other ' a grave
sound when it flies and a sharp sound
when it alights. • We say, then, that
buzzing is the faculty - of inseets to
protluce .two . ,sounds at an octave.
This definition limits' the . piteimme-:
non : to the hynomoptem and the_dip.
sera. Thecoleoptra often produce in'
flying a grave and dull Sound, but.
are 1 powerless •to emit 'the sharp:
sound, and consequently dO not buzz..
There are two or three ascertained
facts which will serer as.guides• in'
the interpretation. of the pile' neine
non. First, it is indisputable that
the grave sound always accompanies
the g reat vibration of* the wings,
which Serve for the translation of the
insect.. It is easily seen -that thiff
sound commences as soon as the
wings begin to move, and if the whigti
be 'cat off it disappears entirely. The
sharp sound is never, on the contra.
.ry, produced during flight; it is only
observed apait -from the great vittra•
tions of the - wings when the. insect,
alights, or when it is held so as to
hinder its. movement, and in that.
case the wing is seen to be animated,
by .a rapid trembling. .It is also pro-:
duced when the, 'wing is entirely. to-'
ken away. - From these two remarks;
we,May draw the conclusion that thel
graVe.sound belongs property to the
wings; that is caused by their great:
amplitude. There is h. re no difilettl-1
ty. AS to the sharp sound, it is cer
tainly. not , produced by -the wings:
since it sureirs the absence hf these]
Yet the wings, participate, in it and
undergo a' particular trembling dur4
ing the production of this sound. .T 0
discoVer the causejt, is necessary to
go back to the mechanism of the
movement of the wine, - It is known
that among nearly, all insects the
muscles which serve forfliglitare not
inserted in the wing itself, but in the,
parts of the' thorax which support it ,
and that it is the movement or,thetie
Which acts on the wing and-makes:it
vibrate. ' The - form of the "thorax
Changes with each Movement of the
wing under the, influence of the con=
traction of the thoracle muscles. The
muscular masses intended for tight
being ‘e.ry powerfikthis vibrato
movement \ of the...thorax is ver • in
tense as May lie proved by 11, ding
one Of these\*nsects between hetn
gees. But .as he vtbriti s are re
peated two. or hree hu, fired times
per Second, they .'ye 'se to a Emil
e:ll sound, which is e sharp note.
In factthe airwip - • isurrounds the
i
-thorax s set in v'mation by th-t, di
rectly, and' wit cut 'the`wing takiag
react in it.. ere are then \ two Ain
ultaneous : • untie, one prod need 'hy
the vibra on of the wings and the
Other the thoracic vibmtiofind
rapid the 1 ter twice as as the f 4 m
n,,,
1 er, nd therefore an octave. Thia 's
1 iy in Alight only a single gray
sound is heard. When the thorax
moves along a sharp sound is prOdu
; ced. This,' M.• de Bellesme believes,
is the only explanation that can thZ.
given of the mode of production of
. the two sounds stitch constitute big
-
zing.
, -
DOES MAMMY BOB.THE iLL
BORER ? • '
TEE BUZZING GE MOT&
aiumEss or .Dtwmwm.
- ' --- - i - • i -
sewing women out of - employ eat, t
and persuaded him; , to . . saw s it.
Howes and Singer ' s and no ed of
other machines, have come since ' then
and yet there is work for. were n to;
do. - Notwithstanding .the•tlm ads.
ottataily machines - in use,' the um
ber cif.persons earnings living w ith
the Sewing machine in this corn ry is
today Much greater in propofti n to •
thalaipidation than was the uti her 1
e i
Of tailors and sewing women, fore
the invention of the machine. , [deli
lf:
a recent pretended labor-loVe ; has
clased With the steam ?figine O 'One
of thetWO-rorat evile that eviir be..
!ell mankind. In noting ita linflu
ence onl fabOr we Must not for i 4o the
20,000 9r more .mechanics err p owed
in Or Owing raiehinetactorie', and
the thousands of other's ent.l ed in
i
mining and making the iron, (t , Wog!
and sawing'the lumber, and ir: trans
porting and preparing these rar ma
terials for the Machines amid their ca
nes; nor the men employed iu mak
ing the machinery used in tits eon
•ruction of sewing machines. and in
thllisporting and selling the finished
prodpct, Counting these, the inven
tion appears . in its true light as'a
great creator of labor; and the aver
age *ag \ es of the persons dirrctly or
indirectly \employed ' by .the .
.sewing
machine is\doubttess four or ill/c,
times that Of \he old time sewers.
- It is:but a littte while since a. met,
repOlitan paper Ofl4gh pink pointed
-to the shoe busiri as furni-hints a
foreiipleillustration Oc the disastrous.
comp •tition of inaehinery with men,.
The truth . is that while Nwithin twen
ty years ' ', not less than:eighty-live per
cent. of the work done oil factor s
boots and - shoes has been turned over
to machinery, there are today more .
men 'at, work . in shoe factories than
then, anti- more than would now be
employed except; for machinery. It
is but tMother illustration or• uie. old
'industrial .pa radori:: \ 'During . t hese
yearsq rapid progress . in invention;
the coat of material has advanced,
rages have nearly doubted, !,1 - 0 the
qualitY of factory beotsami hues
has Wien improved tiventpfive per
cent.; yet the cost of manefacture
has been so much reduced
. by new
and improved machinery that AMer
tean shoes have not only excluded
'the -foreign made from our iliarketi
but - hive successfully hire - hal ;the
markets of the whole world., As a
'natural consequence, marl) rnore
Shops are required. not only in Xew
F:n( o tlarni, but throughout the Middle
!Statete and the West; more w , (rkmen
are employed in shoe factories, high
:er rages are paid, and a gre! t. mut
titudel of • other men are fu •niSlied
with . employment in-tanning the ad
ditional leather used, in pack!ng and
transporting and selling the milli ion
al product, and in 'Making sl. -.mak
ers' machinery and implem.M.s.—
JAMES RiermansoN, in Serib. el.' for
Notealber. .
IN EMERGENCIES. .
•
. 1. Child two years old haf- an at
tack Of croup at• night. DoeLor at a
distatice. What is to be done ?
The child should be itnaw , liately
undressed, andput in a . wane -
bath.
* Then] give an emetic, cornp , -411 of
one part of,antituony wina.to two of
ipecah. The dose is a teaspoonful.
If the antimony is not at hand, - give
warm water, mustard and 'water, or
any other simple emetic ; dry the
chililMnd wrap it in a warm blanket.
2. Hired girl - sprains her ankle, vi
olently.
,First bathe 'n warm water, then
put the white of an egg in a saucer
stir with a piece of alum the size . f .
/
a w:dnut until it, is a .thick ' . l( y;
placd a portion of it on a p* -cc of
lint or tow large enough to c' ver the
spraio. changing it, as o n as it
seems warm or dry; th limb is to.
be kept in a horizonta position by
placing it on a Chair.
3. IBees swarm, d the man who
.
hives them' gets s erely stung in the
face: ,- ( -.
Tbe sting o - a bee is hollow and
barbed and s it, contains poison the
first thing o be done is to remove it.
'Thei par stung should then b , . bathed
in war water and a little ammonia
rub in them. •
. : Some one's nose : •bleeds, and
, nitot be stopped. , .
.
lake a pltig of lint, moisten, dip in
I eqiiiil parts of powdered :dam and
gum arabic, and insert in t l lte nose.
Baibe the forehead in cold water;
The child eats a piece qf bread
on *Welt arsenic bas been pi iced for
killing rats.
giVe plenty \ of warm Wal Cr, new
milk in large quantities, gruel, lin
seed' tfa, foment the bowels. Serape
iron rust off anything, mix wi . l. warm
water, and give' in large dranzhts fre
quently. Never give 'large nitights
of fluid until those givei before have I
been vomited, because the Atinniteh j
will...not. contract properly , ;f filled,
and the oldnct is- to get rig d.. of the
poison as quickly as pOsiblc.
' G. Young lady sits in ;draught and
conies home With a bad sore throat.
\W rap flannel around the throat,
ke out of draughts and . suddenl
Chan es of atmosphere, and every
half r take a pinch of
.ein;iritle. of
pitash,. ace it On the tottqie and I
al Ow it t distiolve in the nu uth. I
Nurse uffers from a whitlow on
bir finger.
Place the w 'flow in watPr as hot
rte can ba Borne, then poultice with
liaseed - meal, taki care t.t mix a
little grease with the oultice, to pre
vent it from
.grliwin hard. Bathe
and poultice morning . a d
Q. Child falls backward \ ii.to a tab
.of boiling water and is-trine seziided.
' Carefully undress the chi, I, lay it
on a bed on its, breast, as . thebeck is I
scalded; be sure, that all oratights
are excluded, then . dust over the parts .
scalded bl-earbonate
ot' aorta, la
muslin (Jeer it, then. make a tent, by.
placing two boxes with a.bcard over
theni in the bed, to prevent the cov
ering from pressing on the scald ;
cover up warmly.
9. 'Mower cuts - driver's legs as he
is. thrown from the
Put a tightliandage aronn the
limb,.above the. cut: slip a cc' un
der it , in the direction or a line drawn
(I,
front the inner part of the kne _ to a
little outside of the grOin. Praw the
edges of the cut • together with, stick
:
tug plaster. I
10. Child bas a bad'
Dip a plug of coltol
ON FROM
QUARTER.
Y MORNING, DECEMBER. 12, 1878.
oil, warm it and- place it in the ear. er's sin or his brother's misfortune
Wrap bp the head and keep out , Frequently prudent men are swept
draughts. I away by imprudent men. Our keen
-11. Youth goes to skate; falls est sorrows, I think, come from our
through the ice
.; brought home in- connection with-those about us.
sensible. ' I
You 'have been beim and entered
Strip the body at,d rub it dry ; . into the household of human life, and
then rub with a warm blanket and you have come into conditions which
plitce it in a warm room. Cleanse imply pain. You are soldiers of the
asvay froth and mucus from - the nose Cross, anti - must take your part of
and mouth. Apply warm bottles, that suffering which belongs to hu
bricks. etc., to the arm pits, between manity.- . The question should not
the thighs and the soles of the feet. be, Whir am I afflicted? - But, How
Rub the surface of the body with the shall I bear my troubles? Sorrow
hand incased in a-warm, dry, worsted lastsiong because we hug it. Look
sock. To restore breathing close the through it and beyond it. Sorrow
nostrils and breathe steadily into the ploughs deep furrows. but God sends
mouth • inflate the lungs till the his angels ' plant' in these furrows
breast he raised-a little, then set, the the seeds of Lverlasting life. By and
nostrils free and press gently on the by, in the land of interpretation. we
breast until signs of life appear. Do shall look back and thank God for
not give up hope for at least three the sorrows that cleansed us, exalted
hours after the accident. us, deified us.
12. Child gets sand in his eye.
Place your ttrefinger on the cheek
bone, having the child before. you.
Then draw up your finger and you
wiil probably -be able to remove it;
but if you cannot get at the sand in
this w .y,- repeat the operation while
you have a • knitting needle laid
against the eyelids; this will turn
the lid inside out, and.then the sand
msy be removed with a silk handker-
thief: "lathe in cold water and ex-
_elude the light ror a day.—Rural
Avetc Yorker. ..
Buffoonery is the corruption of wit
as knavery is of wisdom.
Better suffer Without cause than to
have cause for suffering. .
Better face danger at once than to
always be in fear.
By learning to obey you will know
lio.v to command.
Be mindful of things past and pro
vident of things to come.
By the approval of evil you be
come guilty of it. •
Be' circumspect and' cautious in
wlmtever you undertake.
Begin nothirig until you have eon
sitlered how-it is to be finished.
Beauty without honesty is .like
poison in a box of gold. • .
Be eautious Of believing ill, but
more cautious of reporting it.
Beauty is the. flower, but virtue is
the fruit of l'fe. • • •
\ By entertaining good thoughts you
will keep out evil ones.
Candor and open dealings are the
honor' of man's nature.
Considt not wit!i a fool, for lie can
ntither give nor keep counsel.
, Cherish t;by friend and temperate
ly- adrnonisla thine enemy..
Combat vice\in its first attacks and
you will soon came off conqueror.
Comprehend not few- things in
many words, but many things tale*
words.
an,
harity is friendship in common
no friendship is charity endorsed.
Carnal sins proceed from fullness
of food and emptiness of employ
ment.
Cheerfulness is perfectly consist
ent with piety.
Chide not severely nor punish has
tily.
Clemency is the brightest jewel in
the erciwn. •
:-Command your temper lest it com
mand you. - ' • •
.
A cheerful face. is nearly good
for a patient as healthy weather.
A limp Christian may fall into sin,
but he will not lie - down in it. • -
Men who avoid . female society have
dull pereeptionsrand gross tastes.
The weakest. spot in every, man is
where he thinks himself the wisest.
Men, like books, have at each end
a blank leaf—childhood and old age.
The beauty or the body is for a
day, but the beauty of the soul is fur•
eternity.
He who bath good health is a rich
man and don't know it.
. venturers, not' so-bequeathed that a!
There are endless troubles that Legatee may be expected to pay round
must
ceme Upon men. Not to have iv for the stolen body of the testator.
great grief is, in the
. Scripturea, a though otie may , not, in this life,
sign of not having great manhood. possess much , goods, he may die
It is well that we do not anticipate without being ;.' harassed by the ,
our troubles, but sooner or later the t .ought that rapaCi;.Y Sill persue Ilinti
storm s ill break and none can escape. beyond the grave, • •
Tho-e who have been most exquisite- "The Vanderbilt will case," as it
ly organized. will be-likely to suffer is called, is one of,the great scandals ,
most. Sensibility•increases with the' of the time. The robbery of . the . .
organization of nerve. Those who - grave of A. T. Stewart is one of - the
are coarse in fibre and - dull in fune- most offensive crimes whieli'has ever . :
stion gain a sort, of peace at the ex-
_shocked hunianity • had Vanderbilt
pense of manhood. Suffering goes or Stewart died poor, neither of these
in the direction' of. completeness in shocking revelations of greed, vul
this world. If men are sensitive by Rarity, and cupidity could have been
organization, and 5 are educated_ to made. - Had. these men not left -be
bear one anotlites burdens, they are hind them- the curse of great wealth,
More and ~, moie.open to the assaults the roofs would not have been lifted
- of sorrow. \ Men also suffer more in from-some private homes in . this City
-the proportion in which they illy the helpless dead might have. molder
themselves to : god, althongh this suf- ed into dust without disturbance. it
feting comes in a different way. is not that the dead care, hut that the
- On the other hand, bad men escape living suffer from these postmortem
many sufferings that afflict good , men. 1 turmoils. It is vain for us t.ci project
The law Of suffering.,seems to be. a • our thoughts into the 'vague unseen .
part and parcel of the law of exist- I world and Wonder what the dead man
enee., There is a mystery-yet shunt; knows or thinks of the proeigious
the philosophy of • suffering. It is 1 scandal . which starts up• when his
not our option whether we will or !.grave is covered. 'lt is futile for us
will not antler. It is claimed that if 'to ask how the disembodied spirit
men live in conformity . to the laws oft regards the -rifling of hiS tomb. , But
nature they will escape much sutler- j we who-live are likely to think that
g. Such an 6 . ' if" is an impossibili- ; death would-hare .tor us new terrors
tys for the laws - of nature have not 1 if we could know that the inmost
4 \ .
heetTealed. ' There never has. een-i privacy of our lives should some day
a fun arnental revelation of the lawsbe blazoned in the newspapers,or our
of God, re i
which a 'the condition of fr:iii tenement of clay. when we hive
Perfeetneas. Then it is not easy for duae, with it, should be pilfered,
. a man to \nbey natural laws in aril-' hauled about. and treated as a peen-,
ficial conditns. \ln the complies- liar bointv—offeusive but valuable.
. tions of business, obedience to flaw- It is better_ to die poor than to die
ral laws is not C l 3'. Men must sleep. beset by hOrrible visions of what -has'
when they cacan,i eat, When they happened' to the memory and - the
;• can: Besides, if e. were to obey mortal- remains of rich dead men.. •.,
;
! natural laws perfeedy, he -would- not And it happens, too, that in many
''be'littppy. He is iniii ect to Social instiknees the plots and conspiraces
conditions. He can't d . ge his fatli• against a rich man's estate, whit,h
earache.
wool in olive
BUM FOB ACTION.
PHILOSOPHY OF SORROW,
DESERTED
A briery lane; where wlltl-tikrd sing
AU through the summer day
A beech-tree old, whou branches fling
,Lohg shadows irer the way.
A nest, hunt up fa the rust/lug boughs,
Lined soft with fuowy so green,
A tiny dwelling—a woodland holm:
• With leases for a sheltering sheen.
Three dellcate eggs, that pearl•llk° 110
tteneatli two lonxidli,g wings..
A mate that hovers all watchfd by,
ur sits beside, acid Mugs..
A careless boy, with a pitiless heart,
That cares not for lovely things ;
. A
bird, that rises with timid start; "
On seared and fluttering wing..
A gorrowtut note of plaint and taw -
Riots outou the quiet air,
And the Pearl-like eggs lie crushed below.
On the
lb eech-roots, old and bare.
•
And still, in the boughs of the old beech tree,
"'SIM rustling sprays of green.
The deserted nest, you still ina3: MCO
Peep our front Its verdant screen.
But the bln2 on Its gay and gladsome
•
•turns to the neat no more . •
And the mate that would alt 021 the houghs azi
sing, •
Itt:sumtuer songs ant o'er. • .
' l / 4 ,1 Illlg stiebgth to thy strength by thy dolug,
Thou shalt fan It, nor (310 t by - the way.
and though thou art buslu4 with . sum)) thltiga,
Though tuettlal thy labor way be,
Do thy utmost iu that unit lo all things,
Thou still shalt be noble awl free.
Ea
V6:4 thou love? let It be %Ith full measure ;
' Nor mingle it'll,/ coldness par hate
Of others the Joy of thy pleasure
The passion 'that crowns thy estate.
but
MO
Be to every man illSt ;and to woman
Be gentle, and tender, and tme
.For thine own do thy beat : but fit nu man
Do less than a brother ahould do.
/111
ME
Sullying thy dAys full to number,
In'peace thou strati past , to the grave;
Tueu shalt Ile down and rest thee; and !timber,
Beloved by the g1x...1 and the brave.
—F. om riusley'e ,Itagazine.
DM
took
at-
THE DRAWBACKS OF MORES.
• Some recent occurrences in- this
City point- more strongly than any
homily could to the inconveniences
of possessioni: Perhaps in the mad !
tush for wealth which engages the
iiergies of most men, some will stop
and - bless themselves that they will
leave no riches behind them for heirs
to quarrel over, no estate on which .
hlaek-mait may be levied, no induce-,
went for . graveyards ghouls to dis
turb his poor 'remains when they
have once been buried. For it seems
that the ingenuity of man is-hot ex
nausted in attempts to plunder
estate while he lives. As soon is he
.lies, all sorts -tif , impudent claiments
'4pring up to snatch at the riches
n Bich he no lonaer can defend. Even
in his grave he is not allowed to rest,
literally or figuratively, his memory
is blackened, his foibles are dragged
out and exposed to the public gaze,
and his - body is stolen from its sepul
cure, in hopes of large ransom being
offered for it. We who Are not bur
-doled with great riches may console.
ourselves that we shall not leave
property so vast as to tempt the cu
pidity of . presumptive heirs and .ad-
thicken when he is alive ; to de
fend- lit, are only continuations of
plots and conspiracies , which harass.
etl . him during his lifetime. When he
lived,-is great rieheSs cost him in
numerable anxieties. His house must
need be a. fortress, and his costly de.
lights be partaken of within strong
walls and bolts and bars. He had
reason to suspect the -sineeoty of
everyone who approached . him with
an appearence of friendship. lie saw
the meanest side of human ' nature.
He could not be sure of the disinter
estedness of his own kinsfolk. He.
was surOunded by the machinations .
of- people who regarded him only us
legitimate object of . plunder. He
was deceived by artful tales of sim
ulated distress until he lost confi
dence-in. humanity. He was harass
ed daily with multitudinous schemes
to despoil 'him. If he expanded with
generous affection toward any fellow
being, he found his-
or
. impulse
made merchantable, or jealous people
poisoned him With
_slander again&
his, friends. He was like - a man wa --
ing In the midst of savage thi •t‘
with a precious jeWelln his box r
burdened with the rick, pos r
which all seek to snatch pr
lawfui owner. Yet , where . : *4 '
who would refuse to b et
of great riches ?• • •
•It is sometimes . -sa le
mighty shows }Ewes !
riches in the chars Ae
upon whom He F .
it. happens tla
have . been'
wealth. Ne (
great este
of: great . ; •
those o e
1 ence t e
:mot , e'
tli . '
e t
.l
. that the Al
.timate of -great
? ter of the people.
(stows them: But
many noble men
/endowed with vast
(ertheless'it is true that
. have often been fruitful
i
rischiefs and miseries: :To
its who hold in lovingrever
e memory of al dead .- fa ther or
fer, it seems a 'horrible thing
. a domestic quarrel over a prop
ity should drag to -light the in
tumberable weaknesses Which might
have been laid forever in the grave
with the dead man's — bones. "If a
Man die, shall he live agaiti,.?" 'asks
the.skeptical inquirer. Inttese days, I
though he die, his death does not end
all,-if he leave great possessions be-' ,
hind him. He is not permitted to
rest in the grave, if dissection of his
most secret motives and impulses
can invalidate his last Will and testa
.ment,- or if his worn-out frame can
be .held for ransom. There is no
length of .villiany, no depth of mean
ness, into which melt - Will not go. for
plunder. And though
.the world is
full. of unhappy rich men, wholdo not
know how. live, millions stand ready
to take - theit hard' places. Dives,
looking around upon his vast posses
sions, complains that he cares for all
these4and is only rewarded with food,
clOthing, and lodging. Nevertheless,
the average - man thinks that he, at
least, could manage this estate with
comfort to himself.- Let the nverao r e
w
ma cansider how Dives is pnrsued .l
beyond the grave, and be content.—
N. Y. Time:. . ...
THE SANGUINE BRIDE.
A not unusual kind of a bride is
that sanguine creature who believes
tliat life is now to be•all honney and
butter, and that never • a cloud will
cast - its shadow over the sunny sky.
All is so new—and it will never grow.
old . ! Holiday has come in' perpetui
ty, and there are no more painful les
sons of. duty to learn, and. .no, more
disagreeable tasks o 1 self-suppression
to .fulfill.. Tempers, disputes,:pevv
ishness, anxieties, ' are buried be
neath'the sugar and the almond of
the wedding cake, and life is to be a
fairy tale, Where "they live happily
for ever after," finishes the picture.
All the buttons will keep- sewed to
.the shirts, and there never will be a
pair of socks *to darn If children
come they will he born like so many
little doves, and give nokmore trouble'
thany a covey of cherubs flitting
about the house. . She looks forwaid
to a halcyon spa which not the faint
est ripple is to disturb, and in her
world' blight' and storms are• to be
unknown. Her also we pity, poor .
self-deceiving creature—taking, life
as she does at such a false angle, and
looking'at the dust and ashes .of in
evitabl *decay or sure diSapiMint
ment through spectacles of such de
rose-color. She has .not the
fai test idea that her .husband will
ever cease to be 4 , lter lover, and sue
imagines that the pOetic exaltation of
-the court,shipthe raptures otlioney
. moonareoto continue far into- old
age. Of the sense of reality she is
•
. absolutely destitu• e; and her reason
ing faCtilties are lost for the time•in.
i,
the rain b ow-lined
.cloud of hope and
exultation. Perhaps. her marriage
has taken hei . from an uncongenial
home, and she is elate and full of
. hope in Consequence. She, was in
bonditte to an unloved step-mother;.
she was a governess working h •rd for
small ,:pay and less consideration ;
land tIM love of her husband, the new
; ness and indepindence mid pleasant
ness of her own home have overtime=
,!reti her common Sense—at least for
the time. Reality will waken her up
soon enough: pour Soul! Meanwhile
- we,, who see the fool's paradise in
which she is living, feel sorry for her
and anxious to kiwi how . she will
be:ir Ili& waking which has to come.
i to her as to others--ay as sure as
death has to come to us all.—London
Queep. • -
A COMMENTARY ON BIOHES•
, W hat; a commentary on a life given.
to money making says the Lebanon
Ciiiirfrr, involved in the history of
A. .T. Stewart., one of - the richest
nit-u, so tar as the mere accumulation
of weditli is doncerned, that has ever
lived rind . died in oar country. To
pile up dollars.seemed to be - what. lie
fired for, and in - that he was stiecess- -
ful. Ile never that we have heard
of, wiis given,. to' generous, self
sacrificing dees .in the interest of
humanity. He was a slave to
money-gathering, just as the world
has its thousands of men-struggling
through life at this tithe - with nolligh
er—indeed no other—object in life
than the aeuumltaion. of wealth.
Mr. Stewart seemed to find little en
couragement in what
..a-generous ex-.
penditure from a large fortune
might command, and hundreds of
men with meagre incomes enjoyed
; more of the world's luxuries And
when' the end came,. what could his
. mllious do for him ! . He poised in-
$2 per Annum In\Advance.
into the dark valley of death as poor
as a beggar.- His wealth could d
nothing fur him in his voyage aero.ar
the cold river, But after deat ,if
the rest, and quiet of the re ains
are of any value, the wealth t at he
hoarded in life was a curse/to him.
His carcass - became a ,thing for
thieves to speculate upla'. What a
subject for reflection a c what a re
buke - to poor human ride ! And
then there is Com odore - Vander
bilt. He gave the e ergies of his life
to piling millions pon millions, and
left it to his chi ren, who are show
kg their grat* ude to him for it, by
quarre,ling o er Wand dragging his
name into t e Courts to hold up be
fore. the orld his frailties.. The -
courts a full of. lessicoaspienons
cases, w ere the heirs are quarreling -
over he accumulations of the dead
Path rs. - And it is for this the avari
-0 a money-getter gives] the days
d nights of his life. There are
en in all communitiea who live for -
no other object than? to accumulate
wealth. '1 heir heart's become dead .
to the common feelings of humanity;
they find no pleasures in social inter
course viith their fellows; they lost
all-manly regard for generous deeds;
the Object of their worship is gold.
A temperate desire to accumulate
a moderate competency is most cora--
mendable.. It is what every man
. should strive to do, but in doing that
he is simply trying to get it as a
guaranty for fhture comfort. That
is asery different thing frqui`the ob
iect of him.whO .becomes a slave to f
accumulation, and has no - object in
life but to gat her a mammoth fortune.
It is wise to "he temperate in all" ;
thinge," even in
.the accumulation of
rides. -
.ession
•om its
the man
custodian
FIIA FACT An FACIETIIE,
/ -
_DansEst praying. leads to earnest
in
ENVY no man's Went, but improve thy
com
PEA is best when it yields more Tur
key than war.
A umrot.; is a small:eveuti.which is al.
ways Comming off..
• -
THERE is considerable push in the buSi
',less end Of a tack.
.A - HORSE, unlike a man, is always pre.
pared to meet an oat. -.
- Wno are our business rela t ious,anyhow,
Uncles, aunts, or what.
- TUE modern Shylock ususer-ly takes
great interest in his shavings.
-AL!. honest men will bear watching. It
IS the rascal who cannot stand it.
Wiru some men the great• account of
iiuman lives, is' their' bank account.
Tux-snow - covereth many a dunghill, so
-;.)tli prosperity rotten many a heart.
Be satisfied frOrri - doing well, and
-nee others to talk to you as they will. .
,
Ir others sin towards tig in one respect
unjustly infer that they will in all.
DISCOURAGEMENT getienilly comes from
urselvei, and not from oursuiroundings.
WE are often more agreeable through
:.ur faults than through. our good quali
ties.
KEARN,EIC evidently - 'knows .nothing
aboufeards. Ile , let's the dice take the
AN intellectual pauper his appeared in
ittistoti - who eau bet in ten differant lang.
11111122
WE may joke when we please;, if We -
.are always careful to please when We
joke, •
Paavixd will make us lea* sinning or
uning-will make as leave praying. Which
shall it be.
INDULGE not M anger ; it is-whztting
sword to wound thy own breast or mur
der a friend.. •
RENTS are comeing down—as the tramp
said when he slipped on a bariana-skin.—
Bradford Breeze.
EVIL ministers of goo? things are as
torches—a light to others, a waste to none
but themselves only.
TlftnE is ,this paradox in pride—it
makes some men ridiculous, but prevents
.'theta from becoming se.
"Mr love fur you is as warm ak , St.
Louis," is the way a Michigan lover
writes.—Detroit Frie Preis -
NOT. much can be accomplished by _
waiting. Every successful base-ball player
must make a-big inning.--:TiFilyrene. - -
AT Dijon, France, at the late popular.,
festival, there was upon the, programme
"a donkey race by gentlemen of the
city." • - -
THE people'Who never make enny
mis
ekes nor blunders have all then eceessarys
•.v life, but miss the lusurys.—Jos4 L'ilt
" How greedy you-are !" said one little
girl to another who had taken the ' best
-apple in the dish ,• "I was going to takh
Hat. "
Now tlat crimped hair is becoming
fashionable again, ladies are advised, if
:hey want to get their hair in waves, to
t.tke an ocean bath. -
A PAIR of Sunday Pants and the soft,
vide of a painted stoop don't seem to as
similate with any marked degree of sue
cess.—Elndra Garette. .
A CELEIIRATED philosopher used to say,
"The favors of fortune are like steep
rocks—only eagles and creeping things
mount to the summit.", "
THE dying-machine cannot successfully
wrestle with currents : ano the same may
be said of the small boy if the currents
happen to be green.—New tHiren Beyis
ter.
"Itow is it Miss, you gave your age-to
the census-taker as only twenty-five when
you were born the same year I was, and
I am thirty-nine?" Ah ! you have lived
much faster than I, sir."' •
A i'oUNTßTnewspapersays that a young .
cornetist who took a first prize last week'
"is an artist of the first water." Why.
not say an artist of the first wind? limy
few cornets run by water.
,INntaxs . are in the Er-bit of driving
lififfalos into the Hollingstone river,where
they are drowned and then fished out for,
food. The Rollingatone river gathers no
moss, however.—Graphic.
: - WuF.,141 you see a young man with an
incipient moustache and a clean Piecatlil , -•
ly collar fooling around ,an ice-cream
saloon at"-eights , you may rest assured
there is a little business for Hymen on
hand. -
PROFESSOR David Swing dosen't believe
that the act of card-playing injures the
moral sensibilities. - lt's working six or
seven aces into-the pack that gives Satan
the 'dead weal on players.—Detroit - Press'
Press.
IF yon take one of the new silver dol
lars,
,pour a little • muriatie, acid on the',
figure of thr eagle, and set it out in the
sun for twenty minutes, when yell-comp
to look at it itwill begone. And the tramp
ivho took it will be gone also. '
A LITTLE giil was giving testimony be
fore the court, when the opposing lawyer
put ou a tierce look, and demanded if she •
knew-where liars went. "To the Potter
Cominittee, I guess--that's what papa
says," replied tlte6 sweet - lump of inno
cence.
A connksrosnmcs says': "A friend
of mine went to Hob; to get measured
for a pair of boots. When they came
home they did not fit ; so my, friend called
at Hoby's to - complain, upon which the
'autocrat ' • answered, 'Sir, I undertook
to make you - a pair of 'boots, but not a
' , Air of feet-r' -
- d
NUMBER 28.