FaRM, harden and household. Banner Oara af Ho. Thn principal diet of hogs in snmme should be gTans, rich slop, frnits and vegetables, and some oorn; these, with the worms and insects obtained on rnnere. are amuly snfflcient to snstain a steady growth nntil the cool autumni weatner nets in, wnen a cuei 01 sonna oorn with some slop should be con tinued until they nre fat enough for kill ing or for market. Tins process of taking hogs through the summer applies equal ly to hogs that have been wintered, or to spring pigs, except the pigs should be fed stronger on account of their more rapid growth. Summer is the time to make pork; making it in winter is mnoh like run ning a boat against a wind and tide; it requires too much food to keep np the snnnlv of animal heat. If hoars have plenty of grass in summer, and about half the grain they will eat, they will fatten rapidly, and about three pounds of pork can be made in cold weatner with a hog in a close pen. The grass is oooling and loosening, and counteracts the feverish properties or the grain. Another important consideration in favor of snob, a diet is cost, which is merely nominal as compared with grain alone. Free access to pure water and good shade is essential to comfort and consequent growth and thrift of the pig, The hog delights in a cool, damp locali ty, and is very sensitive to heat and cold, and suffers extremely from expos nre to either. Any unusual exercise will be fatal to a hog that is fat, on a hot day, if it has not free access to water, Hogs are not apt to root when there is plenty of grass on the ground, bnt rings in their noses have many great ad' vantages and by all means should be used. They should be allowed to have all the grass they will eat as early in the spring as possible, and clover and timothy is good for them in winter, Hogs that have run to grass and slop all summer can be shut up in a pen and fed to advantage six weeks or two months, but no longer. A pig should never be allowed to stop growing; in fact, the rule holds good during its entire life. A poor, mangy pig is of no value; close confinement in filth and dirt will check the growth, however generous the feed; bnt if starved at the same time, it will be a mercy to both pigs and owner to send them to the manure pile. Milk is a . very cooling drink, and al most indispensable in raising young pigs, uut very little corn and no corn meal should be fed to young pigs before they are four months old. The effects of corn and raw oorn meal on the oung pigs are these: These pigs will first be costive, then they will scour. Tney will rub against everything they come in contact with, and rub their hair off. Their skin will have a red and dry ap pearance. A dry, black scurf will begin to form on them, and the more of the corn meal that they eat the poorer they will get. The best thing that can be done for a pig in this condition is to give him a thorough washing in warm rain water or sour milk. Sour milk is best. Coarse flour or middlings from rye or wheat, when made into a thin drinkable slop with milk, is the best. feed for young pigs except bread and milk. Bread is good for young pigs be cause it has been leavened. Food has to ferment before it will digest, and if fed to young pigs before fermented, it will overtask his stomach and spoil him. Lettuce is good for young pigs. It will stop the scours on him. The middlings should be put with the milk at night, after the feeding has been done, and night, never allowing the swill tub to get quite empty, always leaving a little in the bottom for yeast. The swill should never be allowed to get stale. Hogs .and pigs treated as here described will grow to satisfaction and prove pro fitable. (?., in Ohio Farmer, Kcclpes. ' Potato Pie. Boil or wash common or sweet potatoes and strain through a fine sieve; to each pint add one and half pints of milk, a little melted butter, two eggs, salt, nutmeg to the taste; bake in one crust, like custard pie. Buttermilk Muffins. One quart buttermilk, two eggs, butter the size of an egg, two flat spoonfals soda mixed in a little water; or one spoonful salerntus, two teaspoonfuls salt, flour to make a thick batter. Bake in rings in a quick oven. To Bottle Bed Currants. Pick them unbroken from the stalks into dry wide-momthed bottles, adding, as you fill, some finely-sifted loaf sugar, so that it may fall on each layer of currants; fill the bottles, rosin in the corks, and keep them in a rack, with the neck downwards. Custard in Cups. Beat three eggs with three tablespoonfuls of sugar and a little nutmeg and salt, add a quart of milk (new is best); pour into your cups and set them into a dish that yon can fill with boiling water, and put them in to the oven to bake. In this way they are much nicer than when cooked out of the water. Green Pka Soup. Four pounds of beef, cnt in small pieces, one-half peck of green peas, one gallon of water. Boil the empty pods of the peas in the water one hour before putting in the beef. Strain them out, add the beef and boil slowly an hour and a half longer. Half an hour before serving add the shelled peas, and twenty minutes later half a cup of rice flour, with salt and pepper. A little chopped parsley is an improvement. After adding the rice flour stir frequently, to prevent scorch ing. Strain into a hot tureen. - Famous Bhubarb Pie. For one large pie, or three deep ones. Take the stalks; cut off the leaves, and rinse in cold water (do not strip off the skin, as it contains mnch of the flavor), cut in half inch lengths, and add from one to three teacups of sugar, according to the acidity of the rhubarb; stir in a large bowl, so that the materials may be well mixed; add one lemon cut up very fine, peeled, and all the juice well squeezed in, one nutmeg grated, one tablespoon f ul of essence of lemon, one good pinch of salt, one tablespoonful of sifted flour, two tablespoonfuls of butter; make a nioe crust, and bake from half to three quarters of an hour; make a slit in the top of your pie, and bake in a deep pan, so that its chief excellence shall not waste by boiling over. Many of the old naturalists entertained the notion that geese were produced from trees. It was supposed that on the banks of a river in the Orcades, a tree grew that produced live geese like fruit. In an old volume printed at Basle, 1650, entitled "Mnnsteri Oosmog raphia," is a curious engraving repre senting the barnacle goose dropping from bursting pods on the tree into the stream beneath, and swimming away. A similar cut is to be found in "Aldro vandus' and at the end of "Gerrard's Herbal." The early navigators and travelers related the most extraordinary stories of this character. . Fashion Notes. Tinted veils are very fashionable. The fashionable faa is of medium size. , Veils cover the whole face this turn i mer. , The "Lavense" overskirt grows in favor. Wide oollars and deep cuffs are much worn. Gray is the color for a mountain or side Bnit. , . - The " Aimee" is a new and favorite style of slipper. . Japanese fans are still the favorites for ordinary use. , , ' Low shoes are worn as much as bnt ton boots this season. . ... , ., Old-fashioned pongee is again used for dresses and wraps. , . Fancy organdie dresses are trimmed with Valenciennes lace. ., , . , One of the novelties in dreBS goods is the " bourrstte batiste.'.' Smyrna lace is ont of favor, and is not seen on any of the late garments. ' " ' " Surplioe barques are worn by matrons; blouse waists oy girls in their teens. -Swiss and mnslin neckties, edged with lace, are worn with neglige costumes. Chambery cambric is one of the prettiest materials for summer dresses. French laces .and grass fringes are the most popular trimmings for all thin ma terials. Kid gloves for evening wear have the wrists finished with plaitings of lace or ribbon. Morning wrappers and Bacqnes are extensively trimmed with colored em broidery. Torchon and Russian laces are very much nsed this summer for trimming white suits. A new pastime for ladies is making curtains of Japanese silk and pasting ngures upon them. Carpets are now made to resemble the raw silk material so mnch in favor for furniture covering. Draperies are made fuller and more flowing, with shorter skirts, than with princess-shaped dresses. Small gilt fringes, strands of gold beads, and feathers tipped with gold are among bonnet trimmings. Young ladies wear for a necklace a band of black velvet to which are at tached tiny tinkling bells. New riding hats are in the shape of a helmet with the back piece lelt off, and look very much like jockey caps. One of the recently imported bonnets has a wreath formed of birds so large that only ten were required to surround he crown. Jet is the fashion again, and has sn perseded clair de lune and every other Kind of bead except gold, steel, silver, and amber. A panache of from three to six, short, slender ostrich tips, bunched together, is usedon bonnets that are to be worn in midsummer. A pretty home dress is of stone colored bourrette, trimmed with kilting of the same, plastron sleeves and bows of olive green faille. Youno Girls' Hats. The Derby hat is the shape choBen for general nse by ladies. This has a stiff high crown that may be either round or square topped, and a narrow brim that curls upward all around. Black or brown chip is most useful for such hats, and the trim ming is a band and binding of wide gal loon, or else folds of black grenadine, with a gray wing or a dark ostrich tip stuck in the left side. or more dressy occasions broad-brimmed chip, Jjeg horn, or rustic straw hats are worn with oddly indented brims, and are trimmed with ribbon or gauze and half wreath of flowers in oolors to suit the dress. Thus a pretty dress of pale blue bunting is worn with a white chip hat trimmed with bluets and daisies; a dress of ecru pongee, made with a wash er- woman over skirt and pleated blonse trimmed with cream-colored gauze and deep red Jacqueminet roses. A white cross barred muslin with pleated yoke blouse and a kilt skirt trimmed with a plaid sash of gray, black, and scarlet bars. The round hat is of white organdy muslin shirred on fine wire, and trimmed with bows of ribbon like the sash. A Dry Goods Palace Car. . A correspondent of the American Manufacturer says: The United States Rolling Stock Company, at their shops in Chicago, are getting up what may be called a new departure. This is a palace dry goods car, to be used on railroads by dealers in dry goods, carrying sam ples along as well as stock to be deliver ed when sold. This car is sixty feet long, not including platforms at each end, or sixty-six feet long over all. It is built as light as possible and yet is strong. The construction of the body is very simple, having only two large windows on each side for lighting purposes, but at each end there is to be a stateroom for the traveling merchants to occupy nights or days, while on the roads. These staterooms are lighted by three small windows each. The inside of the car was not finished for use, so we can not tell just how it is to be arranged, but no doubt convenient for the pur pose. This car has a sub-cellar, as they call it, between the fore and aft trucks, where may be stored large quantities of domestic goods while in transit, and it has what may be called a mansard roof, or donble deck, for light and ventila tion, giving it the appearance of a Bleep ing oar except the finish. This is a new enterprise, and it remains to be seen upon trial if it shall prove a suc cessful one. Spanish Train Robbers, The express which leaves Barcelona at 10:25 P. M. for the French frontier by way of Gerona and Figueras, was stopped the other night a short distance north of the San Andres station, not far from Barcelona, and all the passen gers were stripped of what they had abont them. The brigands who achieved this exploit surprised one of the signal men, and naving gagged him, turned on the danger signal. The engine driver stopped the train, and while the passengers were looking out of the windows to see what was the cause of the stoppage, some fifty men, all armed with daggers and revolvers, clus tered up on the carriage steps and forced their way into the compartments. Money, watches, jewelry, and all other objects of any value had to be de livered up; and in one or two instances, where passengers ' were inclined to be recalcitrant, the robbers placed the muzzles of their revolvers in unpleasant proximity with the persons of the vic tims. After the carriages had been care fully examined they sacked the contents of the luggage van and then disappeared. The train put back to Barcelona, and arrived thpre at about pne in the morn.. " 1S8AIUTT. Tha Rutta raaalatlaa ana ! aasea af . Maaaeaa. . . .. In England and Wales the ratio of in sane to the population is - one to 873; in Massachusetts, one to 423; New York, one td 587; Illinois, one to 8C6; and Iowa, one to 1.101. This shows that the density of population has a tnore or less predisposing enoat, producing, as it decidedly does, a deteriorating influence on the human race, morally and physi cally. The increase in the number of insane" in the State of New York for the past quarter of a century is over 100 per cent., and, according to experts in men tal diseases, this increase is aot tfonunou to any particular sections of the State, but is more or less general. '" " '" - JNo one who has been a oonstant read er of the daily newspapers for the past few years can fail to have been impress ed with the great inci ease in the reports Of suicides,' homicides and the commit ment of alleged lunatics to the different city and county asylums.) While much Of this is directly due to the rapid in crease of " population of. New York and neighboring cities there must be other causes for the disease at work. Increase Of population brings with it overorowd- ing, t diseosa-prouuoing' surroundings, bad sanitary arrangements, , which, by lowering the tone of the people, both in a moral as well as a' physical point of view, directly predisposes the very poor anu miaaung ciassee to mental disease, Dr. iiike, a well-known .London alien- ist, has written 4 a work under the title of "Insanity in Ancient and Modern Life." In this he elaborately investigates the causes of mental dis eases in Great Britain, where the in crease of lunatics has been enormously large during the lost half century. Af ter a careful examination of all the statistics, showing that the number of insane people confined in asylums in England and Scotland at the present time reaches 66,636, Dr. Tuke concludes that the principal causes of mental dis ease at the present time are: First, in toxication, including the action of alco hol and allied stimulants, not only in the individuals taking them to excess, but upon his or her offspring, whose weakness produces degeneracy in the succeeding generation; second, that de fective nourishment, leading as it does to exhaustion and malnutrition of the nervous centers, causes degeneracy of the race, the evidence of which can be seen in large, insufficiently-fed popula tion. Ulosely allied to this, Dr. Tuke considers bad sanitary arrangements and overcrowding in filthy dwellings. Under the third class of causes he con siders moral influences, " partly mixed in character, which excite or depress the emotions profoundly, as a dissolute life, depraved nabits, domestic sorrow or mis ery, commercial speculations and losses. religious excitement, disappointment in love and general overwork. - Under the fourth and last head is considered intellectual strain as a cause of insanity, which he holds to be the least frequent of all causes, if examined alone. An examination of the reports of the prinoipal lunatio asylnms in this coun try, publio and private, confirms to a very great extent the observations of Dr. Tuke made in England. A Girl Vanquishes a Wolf. Five miles from Eureka, Ran., lives a prosperous farmer named Robert Loy, who is engaged in raising sheep. His "boys are all girls," and one of his daughters, Mary Belle - Loy, barely fourteen years of age, is the shepherdess, whose rosy cheeks, sun-burned face and graceful form as she mounts her pony would excite the envy of many city belles and charm the eye of a connois seur in search of a sensitive rose to com plete the latest work of his easel. Some weeks since, while looking after her wool ly wards, she discovered a full-grown wolf of the coyote species and an uncommon ly large one stealthily approaching the flock, when she put her horse to his speed, and the wolf, feeling that his sanitary oondition in that locality was very unsatisfactory, the race and chase commenced, over the hills and prairie, neither showing any indication of fatigue, until he was compelled to consider him self "run down." Now came the "tug of war," and any one who has ever seen a coyote at bay snapping and snarling, holding his position against - a dozen dogs, - can realize her situation as the aggressor. Nothing daunted, however, she unbuckled her bridle rein, and with the ring at the end, and this only, made good her position as mistress of the sit uation, and without alighting from her saddle sue had soon disabled her foe. saved her lambs, and deprived him of at least one toothsome morsel. Then she started out for the nearest neighbor to the battle-ground, nearly two miles distant, for assistance, but found no one at home who could assist her aave anoth er girl, who mounted another pony, and armed only with a dull knife, these two young girls were soon galloping over the prairie to save the scalp, for which the county pays a "royalty when pre sented to the proper oflloer. When they returned, the. principal of this Had Ruling-Hood escapade had partially recov ered, and was moving off. At this junc ture he was again invited to remain. while one girl threw him down and the other proceeded to administer Western justice by searching for his jugular vein with the knife. Such instances of feminine bravery as this are rarely met with, even on the frontier. American Ingenuity at the Exposition. A correspondent writes from Paris The Paris Exposition is the interpreter of the thought, and the orator of the text. Now take some of the work of the hand of American labor as you Bee, and study it in the Paris Exposition, and trace it over the earth. In all the gor geous sections of the more pretentious ancient nations, there is not one that does not partly pay unconscious tribute to American ingenuity. The agricultural implements of England are many of them modelled after American originals. The watchmakers of Geneva admit the suc cessful competition of the New England chronometer. The printed cottons of Manchester yield to the superiority of Massachusetts fabrics, often, sold over British counters to foreign customers. The jewelry of Italy is woven out of the finest fibers of the gold of Nevada, The delicate processes of French refining and metallurgy are conducted with the quicksilver of : California. . American sewing machines are for Bale in all the cities in Europe; American scales are used m.the distant capitals of the Orient. American pianos and parlor 1 melodeons are bought by the humble foreigners, and even by those in good oiroumstancea. who cannot afford the oostly instruments of Paris and London, and even trained experts prefer the former to the best produot of the 'great piano makers of Germany. The cutlers of (Sheffield ad mit the finish of the cheaper aud. better work of American manufacture. . ., An old woman of Durham, Eugland, in 1729 first made table mustard and for years would sot reveal the process, CO-OPEEITITE STORES. Klsa Praaresa at taese f anltatlaai la Kaalaaa. A London correspondent of the New York Tribune has an interesting letter on the system of furnishing supplies by the co-operative stores, and he gives a history of the rise and progress made by these stores, as follows: The happy idea of co-operation for mutual defence and protection occurred to some clever persona engaged in the civil service, and a small club was formed. Indeed, it is said that its beginning was both humble and accidental. . It originated thus: Only a dozen years ago some clerks in the General Post-offloe combined and bought a chest of tea. and they found the saving so great that they pursued their joint stock operations in the pur chase of other articles of daily necessity. Their fellows in the office, finding the advantage, desired to join the company. Ik grew. They totk a little room, and fitted it , up with shelves ' and rustic Counters; a competent and trustworthy man was placed in charge,. and articles of daily household" consumption Were bought at wholesale prices and sold to the members of the company at the small advance whioh would cover the expenses of the shop. . The advantages of the system became more and more patent; the number of those desiring to enter the association rapidly increased, as the knowledge ' of its advantages widened. Then some of the original members seceded from the "General Post-office Supply " and started a com pany on a ,largor scale, establishing themselves in the Haymarket, under the name of the "Civil Supply Association." Thus the exUftnpore shop grew into a warehouse; the one man who conducted the business was multiplied by scores, and then by hundreds of ' shopmen, porters, warehousemen, superintendents of departments, buyers, and managers; there were a board of directors, a secre tary, and chairman. One great ware house expanded into several, within whose spacious limits there were stored goods of every imaginable sort, clothing, groceries, stationery, books, furniture, tobacco, pipes, toys, jewelry, in' short, almost everything fiom a button to a helmet, that any man, woman, child, family, might need, and all to be pur chased at from fifteen to twenty-five, sometimes even fifty, per cent, lower than they could be got from the trades men. The rush for membership, of 1 course, became prodigious. Barristers, BOiiuiwra, uieuicai men, B.trgjriucu, ministers, actors, people of all profes sions, as well as those connected with the civil service in all its branches, sought admission, whioh could be gained by the payment of five shillings ($1.25) a year for membership in token of which you received a card having your name and number upon it. This card has to be shown to every shopman from whom you make a pur chase, and to the cashier, with whom you settle your account on the spot for all purchases are for cash. This card must be renewed every year by the payment of the same sum. The business expanded to such great propurtions that it was found necessary to set a limit to the number of members, and admission into the old or first "Civil Service Stores," as they were called, is now im possible. The business has become so great, has been so admirably, and hon estly administered, that notwithstand ing that the margin of profit upon the wholesale prices for. defraying current expenses, is bo small, I believe a hand some dividend accrues to the members. A ticket of membership in this old or ganization in the Haymarket cannot be got for love or money, and they are con sidered of suoh importance that they are frequently bequeathed in the wills of members. The success of this first en terprise and the restriction of its mem bership, of course, caused the starting of others, and there are now three immense organizations, with several branches in different parts of London, The largest, and now the best one of all. is the "Army and Navy Cooperative Society, in Viotona street, Westmins ter. This association was organized six years ago, and has a place all of its own at the head 01 cooperative associations. The members consist of two classes. shareholders and ticketholders, the lat ter inoluding life members and annual subscribers. The shares are ' of the value of 85 eaoh, and holders of one or more share are entitled to participate . in the profits, to deal at the stores and with the tradesmen connected with the soci ety without any further payment what ever, and to have their purchases from the store delivered free of charge within a certain radius. Life members tickets (one guinea) confer all the privileges of shareholders, except participation in the profits and -management of the society. They will not be transferable. Annual subscribers who pay $1 25 the first year, and sixty cents each subse quent year, enjoy all the privileges possessed by shareholders, except participation in the prohts and manage ment ot the socioty, and to the special advantages as to carriage of parcels. The director, Major McCrea, who" first induced a few officers to join him in this enterprise,' beginning with a capital of 8300.000 in 85 shares, is, in his way, as much astounded at the vast proportions attained in this brief time as the origin ator of the first society, with his chest of tea, is astonished to find that the associ ation of small amounts should have grown into suoh strength, and that he should have developed a truth that had ' escaped the acute perception of governments, and the skill of the economist and phil anthropist. I am told that the balance, sheet of this company is like a triumphant march Last year the directors were able to boast of sales at the rate of 8500,000 month, but that rate has now been much exceeded. During the last half year the sales alone amounted to $3,248,365, and the miscellaneous revenue received from annual tickets and other sources 88.940, so that the total was 83,257,305, whioh shows an increase of 8748,945 over the corresponding period of last year, which, the directors say.' is the largest amount of business which has ever been compassed by a " co-operative.", Ita cash in hand and with its bankers is 8157,340; its Victoria street premises, whioh are large and hand some,' represent 8466,635, and its Qther tenements 8150,000; its stock is worth 8690,870; it holds on deposit order and on interest 8276,130; it has a balance to profit and loss account of 8230,305, and a net profit of 839,270. ' I notice in the report for the last half rear, a special paragraph , that out of the profit, the directors recommend the payment of a dividend at the rate of five per cent, per annum, free of income tax, and that the remainder be carried forward toward the accumulation of a reserve fun! to be in- 1 i i, . . . . vbbwxi in me society a business, 1 am told that what they want are low prices, They do not care for dividends. T( give some idea of the magnitude of the business, I may mention, that excluding orders executed through agents suoh as for beer, coals, mineral waters, etc., and exoluding also parcels taken away by th purchasers themselves, thy mt out from the " Stores " during six months, by their, own carriers and by railway vans, 240,118 packing oases and nek ages, weighing in tne aggregate 000 tons. .j ' Gossip About Snakes."" ' Poisonous snakes may be readily dis tinguished from the harmless kinds by their broadly flattened heads- and pro Iecting jaws, whioh impart to . them a riangular aspect. The majority of the non-poisonous reptile have heads with a norroW eliptioal contour, whioh indi cate at the first glance their character. The bites of the former are not near as fatal as they are generally supposed to be, and quickly-administered doses of Ammonia injected into the flesh wound by means of a syringe, or great quanti ties ot wmsky ana other aioohoiio drinks taken instantly after the accident prove generally sure preventatives against fa tal results. - These remedies, though efficacious against the bite of the moo oasin, rattlesnake and copperhead, of North America, are unavailing in some tropical countries like India, where the violent action of the poison is intensified oy great heat, thus causing annually the death of a great number of people. It muBt be borne in mind, however, that the natives of these countries are in a more or less nude state, and that their bodies are thus exposed in full to the attack of any snake whioh they may chance to encounter. It is instructive to notice that no tropical, travelers, who frequently visit districts infeBted with shakes have fallen victims to them, al though they have made in many in stances the collection of poisonous spe cies a specialty of their avooation. It is erroneous to suppose that snakes will attack man without provocation, and that tbey are capable of making a spring of several feet or even yards. The ar rangement of their interoostcal mus cles does not admit of an extended for ward movement of their body beyond that of rapidly uncoiling themselves to their full length, as anybody may satis fy himself by irritating any of our harm less species when encountered in hol lows of trees, under bark or similar hid ing places where a retreat is not feasi ble. Under these particular circum stances they evince a ready disposition to attack the intruder who ventures to disturb their repose. There is in South Florida a very large species of the rat tlesnake known to naturalists as the crotalua adamanleus, whioh has suffi cient capacity to feed upon animals up to the size of the wild rabbit. It would naturally be supposed that this snake, in order to capture such a wild creature, would possess compensating qualities by being capable of making a quick spring of at least peveral feet. This does not, however, seem to be the case, as exper ienced by an accidental encounter with one of these formidable reptiles, which we found some years ago during an ex pedition to Florida, quietly coiled up in cluster of dense palmetto underbrush, not far from the settlement, near the site of old Fort Capron. We dispensed on this oocasion, contrary to advice, with the gun, which would have offered temptations to forego the experiment of a close encounter, and advanced armed with only a short, stout stick within a few paces of our intended prey to ob serve its behavior. The reptile proved wide awake to the danger of her situa tion by raising slightly her head above the huge coil of her body, which covered a place nearly two feet in diameter, Another forward step decided the criti cal turning-point of the ad venture, whioh ended, not in a quick uncoiling of her six-foot-long body, but a quiet and igno minious gliding away without any sign of offering resistance. A timely aud well-aimed blow then arrested her fur ther progress by breaking the backbone, after which she was dragged helplessly to the open, near the beach, where a out of an ax severed her head, which, well preserved in alcohol, still testifies by its great size the corresponding volume of her frame. A Man of Massive Brow.- A short time ago ' Speth, the Walnut street optician, received an order from a Columbus judge to send him the larg est pair of spectacles he had on hand. fie .pioked ont a pair from an 01a stock, that looked as though they might have been made expressly for Joe Gobs the day following his fight with Tom Allen, and sent them by express to the judge's address. A few days later tho package came back, with an accompanying note saying the frames were altogether too email he couldn't get them ou, and must have the largest size manufactured. He had a head that was a head, and wanted a pair of glasses that could be used for both eyes at the same time, bpeth puz zled over the matter a day or two, and then took out the bow between the glas ses, put in a new one oi double size, and sent the spectacles back to Columbus, confident that he would soon get a com plaint that they were altogether too large, but he was determined'to convince . , i , a . ... . i l tne juugo ne nau Druugim ins worn. 10 the right shop, if he didn't make a cent on the job. Bnt back thev came again, with testy note from the judge that he didn' want any more children's spectacles sent np that way. lie wanted something that a full-grown man could wear, and that. too. without any more nonsense he was in a hurry for the glasses. By this time Mr. Speth had got mad in earnest, and made an empnatic declaration that the goods wouldn t be thrown back on his hands again for the same cause. He then Bet to work and forged a pair of frames specially, big enough to fit a mule, and sent them for ward with a request to notify at once by telegraph if they were too small and he would Bend on his sign. A day or two afterward a Columbus man dropped in and inquired of Speth if he bad yet sent the sign. V Good heavens 1 no 1" said the opti cian. Did he want it ?" ' Well, no." eaid the visitor with queer smile. " The specs were a leetle bit tight, but he thought he could man age to get along with them till he could come down and leave his measure. "Well. I'm stumped." said Speth. " I got up them frames for a joko. What sort of a head does that old judge tote around anyhow ? "Him? Why bless your life, man. he's got a head like a flour barrel, and everybody says that's what made him bow-legged. You just ought to see how small them specs of yours looks when he has 'em on. Blamed if tbey don give him a cramped look that makes fellow fldgetv." eaid the gentleman " they do, honest. It's a pity you didn't spread 'em just a leetle mite more." Cincinnati Breakfast Table, .. When the voice is lost, as is some timea thn nasa from the effects of a oold, a Simula uleasant remedy is furnished bv heatino- un the -white of oue egg. adding the juice of one lemou, and sweetening with white sugar to the taste. Take a tablespoonful from time to time. It has been Kno wo w? eneom ally cure the ailment. I Peruvian Temples of the Sun, ! Of the early history of the Peruvians we have but little knowledge, owing to that barbarian policy exercised by the followers of Oortez and Picarro, in de stroying everything belonging to the tribes whioh they conquered. Like the Mexicans, the Peruvians had advanoed in art, soienoe and learning, under the administration of successive wise rulers, and their State arohives contained writ ten histories of their country, from the dawn of civilization among them, till the period of the conquest. But the superstitious Spaniards committed these works to the flames, because of their heathen origin, and we are" obliged to depend almost exclusively on the trttth of tradition, for the knowledge we pos sess of the history of this people during the Inca dynasty. The most magnifi cent of all the 'Peruvian temples, was that of the sun of Ouzoo. The mode of worship in this temple was similar to .that of Heliopolis in Egpyt, where this great luminary was adored. His golden impge occupied a large portion of one side of the interior of the temple, and before this the worshippers prostrated themselves with rich offerings in their hands, which were reoeived by the at tendant priests. Two or three virgins, selected from the first families in the kingdom, were in oonstant attendance, whose duty it was to make oblations of wine to the burning deity, and ohant hymns of praise to the great Father of Light. (Like other' aborigines of this continent, the Peruvians were nomadic tribes, aud gamed a subsistence by hunting and fishing. Superstitious in the extreme, their objects of worship were as numerous as those of the Egypt ians. Do Yon Diet Much 1 " Do you diet, much this warm weath er?" asked a friend of old Fuzbuz, as he took off his hat and mopped his brow the other day. "Dye it I dye ft !" answered Fuzbuz, running his hand through his hair, and looking at his fingers. " What do you mean, sir ?" "Why, yon look good and hearty, and as for color " Color, color 1 . What is it to yon. sir, whether I dye my hair or not ? Hang it, sir, if I had such an awful looking head of hair . as you ve got, I d dye it sky blue." "Look here, old Fuzzy, what in the deuce are you talking about? I asked you if you dieted, seeing that you were complaining of dyspepsia the other day. and you Begin to rave about hair dye. Dye 1 diet I Oh. ah I I see 1 I didn't understand." " But I do, and find that in your case one must never say dye. ISoston Com mercial Bulletin, Fnrtioward of thirty years Mrs. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP hag been used forohildrea with never failing success. It oorreots acidity of the stomach, relieves wind colio, roculates ine Dowels, cures dysentery and diarrnraa, nether arising from teething or other Cannes. An old and well-tried remedy. 25 cts. a bottle. Hamdt to have in the House. There is nothing like Grace's Halve for the immediate relief and speedy onre of Barns, Soalds, Flesh Wounds, Cuts, Felons, Salt Rheum, TJIoors, Erysipelas, old Sores, &o. 25 cents a box. Sold by druggists generally. OHEW The Celebrated " Matchless " Wood Tag Plug TOBAOOO. The Pionekb Tobaooo Compart, New York, Boston, and Chicago. Perfection In Cookerv. The nearest approach to perfection in articles designed for kitchon nee is that of Doo ov'b Yeant Powder. With very little experience the housewife or cook is alays sure of delicious biscuits, rolls, bread, cake, etc., every time. Parsons' Purgative Pills are a priceless boon to the people of the South and Southwett. They effectually prevent fever and ague and all malarious diseases, and ooxt only 25 cents a box. Burnett's Coooaine is th best and cheapest Hair Dressing in the world. It kills dandrnff, allays irritation, and promotes a vigorous growtn oi tne Hair. The horrors of war are nothing to the hor rors of Neuralgia. Immediate relief may be had by bathing the head with Johnson's Ano dyne Lluirueut and snuffing It up the nostrils. The Greatest Discovery of the Ace is Dr Fobiaa' celebrated Yenetlan Liniment 1 8u rears before the poblio, and warranted to onre Diarrhea, Dysentery, Oolie, and Spasms, taken internally; and Oronp. Chronic Rheumatism, Sore Throats, OnU. Bruises, Old Sores, and Pains in the Limbs, Baok, and Oheat, externally. It has never failed. No family will ever be without it after onoe giving it a fair trial. Prioe. 40 oente. Da. rOBIAS' VKNBTIAN HORSR L1N1MRNT, In Pint Bottles, at One Dollar, la warranted auparior to any ether, or NO PAY, for the core of Oolie Outa, Bruises, Old Sores, etc. Sold by all Drucgiats. Depot 10 Park Place. New York. The markets. ST1W TOBK. DeafOettla H.tlve OTVtA 10l ftxas and. Cherokee.. 07 (A 08M Miioni'ows iauu oo oo Hcit Live OSfco V9S vreesea...... us us Sheep , 07 9 11 Lamb 07 V (4 08 Cotton: Middling HHiA UX riour i western l oooa to unoico. I a 111 SUte: GoodtoOhoice.... 171 a 7 00 Wheats Bed Western ....Ill (4 1 11M No. 1 Milwaukee l is l loia nje: mate. .................. ...... sj a Barley: State , II Q Barley Malt Ml a Oats: Mixed Western...... UVA Oorn: Mixed Western 41 a Day, per evrt. 68 a turaw, per rwt so Bops 78'e 08 ait ......7t's OS Pork: Mess 10 J0 Lard: CltyBteam 07 Pish I Mackerel, No. 1, new 1 00 " No. 1, new 1010 Dry Ood, per cwt. 8 7 Herring. Scaled, ner box.... 18 Petroleum: Crude.. Ot augW Refined, Wool California Fleece. S3 a i oxaa rteene as Australian Fleece....... 88 State XX 88 IJn-i. State H Western : Oholoe 14 ' Western : Good to Prims. It Western: Klrklna.. ...... 0T flheeee; State Factory 16 SUte Skimmed 01 Western OS Eggs: Stats and Pennsylvania.... It BDIUU. Floor. ........... ................... Wheal No. 1 Milwaukee Oorn Mixed............ Data Bye. ..... ............ .m.m .... ..... barley Barley Malt.... ' nauntniu. 8 78 107 41 29 60 70 88 10 61 71 H 63 1 Beef Cattle Extra.. Sheep ... ot a va Mia 0 On nogs vreasea Floor Pennsylvania Extra Wheat Bed Western....... Bye. ., . . . ..... . ..... ...... ... Oorn-i-Yellow ............. . . ........ Mixed............ I uo a 6(0 a lit i la t a to 48 44 '.8 4 a 48 W.i-U4&TCi.,, . ...v..l P6troleum Crude. ....... .08 Wool-rOoloredo .8 a OS BeSaed, is e i e 1K V'i - j Texas.,.. ........ . ,! OaUfornUM.M.,M.. 1 aoaxoa. Beof Oettle. ........... '. Sheep Bogs .. . Floor Wuooosiu and Minnesota..,. Oorn Mixed................... Oats " Wool Ohio and Pennsylvania XX,, . , California Fall ' aaiaBvoa, lusa. Beef Oattla boeep. ; , lj.ni La. ..... . ..... Bug 86 ao 88 Of 06X4 1 06 y a 0H 01H 1 80 a 600 48 - 17 a s 48 a 47 Is a is 06 ita 06 a 09 a 10 08 WATBKTOWa, Beef Oattle foor to OUuice.. 40 Oil 1 00 a 660 Sim Hheep.., a 860 a .a 1 rtl 171 CJ The oboiaeet In the world Importers I SeM r all Ores cists. UtlWd cess , , - 1 JCi AS. prieeLariest Uouiaan, In Asuerio- Write t. UUKUaS Sod J.f S ooEsTSKii P? staple artiole pleaeee everrlMKly-'IWe eoobnnsUy Yeas, far tli.tr ua Mat boot, SlisitoS5S.Ji 3 iaaraaalns 4ents wanted everywhere beet indnoo meats aon't waste time aena xur uiroaier to WBT WUA 4i) yf St.. N. Tf., f. 9. Bos 187, hanww't Tsoriras, ttn oontm and oolde, nun HRVWI.VRKH. Prlee List J- Addrjes t V P O te..trn HM VI trim, runnniw. r. inRNTH il for otloti wloo'd prloM-m OoStinrotd UhminoOo., 88 Warrw St., N, T, 1 , BVMrfl Want Agenta. Bd Stamp. BOOKS, pF.nS-'u.lom rr..ri.,Wi.. i . - I-- - SKI tw. Action na rwrntrmmn seni reo r...iu. o a TS:7,7,E7 r. St.ki;t PAi.KW,Ph.l.dlph ORGAIS retell prtoe MtAtl nriM 80enl . PIANOS A TTY. WuhlDiOn, w. J. AasjA A ftf Anh. A&BtM vTUlted. H . . .... tMmmiAM ST f l"ltarV Torrni and Oatnt Krw. Add.. CLOCKS Bapsrior in dMign. Not qnl. A.k roar Jwlt tot tbm . Anor-8 Oortlmndt St., W. Y $10. $20. $50. $100. IntI jndlolon.l. In Stock. iP fnTEI7f Ml to rftPta lonnne. V POTT Kit imn HeDorU frw. AddroM T. FOl 1 WIWHT A Off.. " in, ait Wll Strew. CTw II.MNOI Farm for.nlr. On",t,F(n? BUM. I0 .ore., nwrlf all prairie. 1?"'! for aithar tillaa. ot atock. Good noildinm, '" orchrd.,liTin water and om timber on the "" neighborhood la eaoellent, eod iohoole and '",Tf near ; situation, 6 mile, from oonntjt .eat, R. R. .tntien. Prioe, f66per aore. Addre Real R.Ute Broker, P. O. Drawer 8336, ( e'-a3. O. Harria, Ottawa. 111a. TELEPHONES For Bn.1nr.a Purposes, onra excel all othera in elemee and olnme ot tone. Illiie). rironl.r A testimonial. lor Ho. Ad dreM TbLBPHOWK Co., Mullet Greek, O.' e a f ft Arlc nnr dar to Amenta NniOltlOtt 2 I U f 3a-3 aellinRoar Fine Art I Outfit Free &S3L S J. H. BUr"FORD'8 SONS, Mannfaotnrlna Pnbltahaf. 141 to I'll r-rnnann nmBDumwu,.,. F.rtabli.hed nearly flfty yeara. : AMKNTM WANTED.-A new, popular, iimnrav ed COMMKJITARY ON THE NEW TES TAMENT, in 8 oonTenient (ootaro) rolnmea, by Rkt. Lymah Abbott, D. D. Send for Deacriptire Olronlar . Sella at iht to Sunday eohool eobo!ar,teaohere,euper IntendenU, Bible atndenta, clergymen, ., of all de nominations. A. 8. Barnes A oo.,Pmlineratnewirore:. HOMES IN THE WEST Excursions to Lincoln. Nebraska, t av- Nmwr Vnrk end N Enalnnit in Third TiirndnT In evrry Month until nrrem JUlVY lttita. Fn're about hnlf rcaalar Knlee. Faat trains and flrat-olK.. accommodation. ...... U- Mn I ' leave TUESDAY. jru.ranteed. For descriptive l-ana uironiare, """;' tion about Ticket, etO;. send address on Postal O.ra to Pl.lIN lllIHt,ail BrimnwaTinri. TRADE MARK. DR. BECKER'S CELEBRATED o7 v Jh is ieye BALSAM "aV La aV 18 A SUP it UURB For INFLAMED. WEAK EYES, STYES and SOCK EYELIDS. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. D 15 POT, 0 BOWERV.M. Y. SENT BY MAIL FOR 8!X GRACE'S SALVE. JoHESVILt.r., Mich., Deo. 7, 1887. Mmirt. finrlf! I mt rou 80 ota. for two boiea of Graoe'a Salve. I narj two and nave nsed tnem on an uioer on mi iwi,wm almoat well. Keapectfullr yours, U. J. VAN NEB.. rioe 5 cents a box at all drnariti.t., or aent bjr mail receipt ol 38 oente. Prepared by MET1I V. WLG oV HO NW, Hit Harrison Are., Boston, Mass. KO WAGON SCALES S50 Five-Tons, delivered, freight paid. No money asked till tested. All iron, brass and ateel. Send for free Circular. JONKS OP BINGHAMTON, Binghsmton, N. Y. Cures Dyspepsia, IndigestioD Sour Stomac. Sick Headache. k .... EVERETT UUUSE, Fronting Union Square- NEW YORK. Finest Location in the City Europe Plan Esstaorsiit Unscrpassel K KRNBHJh 1TK.4 VFtR, Proprietor WHO WANTS A FARM WHERE FARMING PAYS THE BEST? FOR SALE. Acres Rich Farming liANI. well located in Uiub tuT, at from i$'2 10 i$S prr nrn , on eubjr terms of DHjmnt. A.) bo. Oflfl nnf. Acres of Choice Pine 'Send for Illustrated Pamphlet, full ot facta. ad O. III. UAHNKS, Land Connnlwwloiif-r. Lim-inn, iillrli. l I .-in ;ouNTelVoRwVNtr8.aCK MAMAS1F&SCMC0. S6 5 BROADWAY. A.K ! The GREAT REMEDY tor OORPULE 3JIO 33. ALLAN'S ANTI-FAT; ViOQIB Tr 1 S ' !,! ANTI-FAT Is purely vegetable and perfectly harmless. It re ' upon ttte food In the stomach, urevuai lug Its beluw. converted Into fat. Taken in urt-ur-limce with ril. Meltons, It will redoes) a fat yersea from twe to fl. yeuads pr week. " .orpuifnue is uu. only m uik.h iibcii, mi sue . harbinger of others." &i wrote HlppocraU't two thousand years ago, and wltat waf tmo then is nons the lues so Uwlay. Rnlil hv riruirutsts. oi i or sent, by express, npon re eeiptof il-iu. Quarttr-do.cn toa Address, BOTANIC MEDICINE CO., Proprietor; Buffalo, If, W 07 M i A. Bats and Beliablt bubstlWU fur luUl na MX I The only 25 cent AGUE REMEDY IN TBB Won l-.Tr, - VITRES .. I ud all UIUUIAL UIXKtau J rW rSHw spyllosHon. , , BTNU