FIRM, GARDEN ASD HOUSEHOLD. The Parmer' Wife. Up la the morning at the dawn of day, Then hardly time to her Maker to pray. Milking her oowt with a "Oo, bona, oo," Under her feet no grass oan grow. Bnay, so bnay, and thla her song ''The rammer la short, and the winter long." Old in her yonth, often weary of life, Bless her 1 God help her I the farmer'! wife. Ohiokena to feed, raoh a hungry crowd, Calrea to be tended of which she la proud. Bread of the lightest and aweeteat to bake, Batter the golden, and fragrant to make; Honey, like amber, to strain and to clear, Fruit to preserve In its season eaeh year, Cheese to press, and to tnrn eaoh day, Bless her I God bleg her I we sigh, ae we aay. Washing and Ironing to do eaoh week, Hundreds of things that a pen cannot speak) Cook and confectioner, seamstress, la she, Dairymaid, housemaid, and teacher to be, Nurse, and physician, and preacher, at home, City of refuge when erring onea roam. "She hath done what Bhe could," short her life's little day. ' Bless her t God help her I my friends let us pray. Ann L. Jack. Farm Notes. Eighteen cnbio feet of trravel or earth before diggiDg.make twenty-seven cubic ieet wiien aug. Salt, soot and lime, mixed with the manure, make a good fertilizer for celery. Some milkmen use strainer pails and also a oloth stretched over the can, thns straining the milk twice. This double straining of milk is to be recommended. Cleanliness costs but little trouble, and wui auu greatly to tne value of your dairy products, whether yon sell your milk by the can or manufacture it into butter or cheeze. Do not allow ashes of any kind to be wasted. It will pay to haul lenched ashes several miles, when one hns his own team and a laborer at fair wages, Coal nshes, when spread around berry bushes of any sort, or around grape-vines, will aid materially in producing large and fair fruit. Feed your land before it gets poor. Give it all the manure you can make and haul, and it will enrich, you. Starve it by taking off crops continually and re turning nothing ami it will bankrupt you. Feed the land liberally and.it will feed and clothe you. A New York correspondent of the El mira Farmers' Club says he raises one hundred bushels of turnips per acre, in the hill with corn. He does it by man uring the corn in the hill. When half the load of manure is on the wagon he scatters two tablespoonfuls of tnrnip seed over it, and about the same quanti ty when the load is full. The best preventive for worms in cel ery is to mix plenty of salt, soot and lime with the manure that is to be em ployed in trenches. This should be added to the manure some weeks before it is used, during which time it should be turned now and then. The mixture above named also benefit the growth of the celery, which will lift clean and spotless compared with that grown in the ordinary way. Health Uinta. An onnoe of cream-of-tartar in a pint of water drank at intervals is said to be a certain enre for small -pox. Vigorous motion of the jaws as if masticating will stop bleeding at the nose. Tincture of benzoin is highly landed as a simple and most effective dressing for fresh wounds. Its application is much more healing to a recent wound than either water dressings or any form of fat. A thick cream of common whiting and water is excellent for burns or scalds. To Cure a Felon. Prof. H inter, of Berlin, cures bone felon or whitlow by first probing the swelling of the finger, making a small incision where the pain appears greatest. The pain of the operation may be lessened by the local application of ether or inhalation of chloroform. The after treatment is equally simple. The small wound is to be covered with lint and carbolio acid, and bathed morning and evening in tepid water. In a few days it is per fectly healed. Remedy fob Earache. The Journal of Health gives the following: There is scarcely any ache to which children are subject so hard to bear and difficult to cure as the earache. But there is a remedy never known to fail. Take a bit of cotton, put upon it a pinch of black pepper, gather it up and tie it, dip in sweet oil and insert into the ear. Put a flannel bandage over the head to keep it warm. It will give immediate relief. Kemedlea for Insects, David Landreth & Sons, of Philadel phia, give detailed accounts of remedit s for some of tne insects which prove troublesome or destructive in gardens, and more particularly to cabbages, the substance of which we condense: "(1) The greenish-black jumping beetle, a tenth of an inch long, feeding on both cabbages and turnips while young, is kept in check by dusting with sulphur and plaster, or by applying slightly a solution of whale oil soap or tobacco water. Sowing thickly and repeatedly may secure a crop, or by selecting dif ferent localities. (2) The insect which causes the club foot in cabbage may be repelled by lime and wood ashes, but to change to fresh land is better. (3) Wire worms, cut worms and grub worms may be killed by the Blow process of digging around the injured plant for them; but the best way is to give clean land, well cultivated and enriched, with frequent waterings to stimulate growth, which will tend to ensure against these under ground enemies. (4.) The green worms are best cleared from cabbages by hand picking. (5) Plant lice are driven off by whale-oil soap, sulphur, plaster, to bacco water, etc., if applied early, so as not to injure the taste of the cabbages. As a rule for guarding against insects generally, make the ground rich, keep it clean and mellow, cultivate often, and water freely." Lightning travels nearly a million times faster than thunder. The speed of lightning is so great that it would go 480 times round the earth in a minute, whereas the sound of thunder would go scarcely thirteen miles in the same space of time. Thunder will take a second to travel 380 yards, hence a popular method of approximating the distance of a thunder cloud is as follows: Imme diately you see the lightning flash put your hand upon your pulse and count how many times it beats before yon hear the thunder; if it beats six pulsa tions the storm is one mile off, if twelve Dolsations it is two miles off, and so on. In the oase of elderly people five pulsa tions would measure nearly the same period of time as six 10 the case of vonng persons. FOR THE TOtJNU PEOPLE. I'vce Banished Ward. The King of Maoaroons was dressing himself, with the help of bis chamber lain one morning, when to his dismay he found that there was a hole in his Stocking. " Dear me t" Bd llle king, look here t I rmMj taunt get a wife. " " Just what I should have said," re turned the chamberlain, " only I knew your majesty was going to make the same remark." " Good," said the king; but do yon think I could easily find a wife to suit met Ton know I am Vry difficult to please. My queen must be clever and beautiful, and besides which she mnst be able to make gingerbread-nuts, for you know how fond I am bt them; and there is not a person in my kingdom who knows how to make them properly neither too hard nor too soft. The chamberlain was astonished to hear this, and felt rather inclined to laugh, but he answered very properly, "A great king like your majesty must surely be able to find a princess who knows how to make gingerbread-nuts." That very day the king and his minis ter set off to look for a wife for the king, Eaying visits to all the neighbors who ad princesses to dispose of. They oould only hear of three at all likely to suit, and of these three not one could make gingerbread-nuts. The first princess said she oonld make delicious almond-cakes, if they would do. But the king said, " No no noth ing but gingerbread-nuts will do." The second princess turned away very angrily when she was asked the question. But the third, quite the cleverest and prettiest of the three, before the king bad tune to speak, put a question of her own. "Could the king," Bhe asked, -pioy on tne iiarpr if not, she was sorry, really sorry, as she liked the look or nun but sue could not be his wife. one una resolved never to marry Buy man who could not play the harn.rt o tne mug nail to come home without a queen; but as the holes in his stock ings grew larger, he felt that he really must make another effort to find a wife. Go to the first princess and ask her," said he to his chamberlain. I must give np the gingerbread-nuts, I suppose, and be contented with almond cakes." The chamberlain went, and came back with the news that this princess had just married somebody else. Then the king sent him to the second princess; but she had unfortunately just died. And so there was only the harp princess left. In despair, he sent to her; and, to his great joy, Bhe consented to do without the harp, anil to be his wife. So they were married with very great rejoicings, and lived in the greatest hap piness for a whole year. The king had forgotten all about the gingerbread nuts, and the queen all about the harp. One morning, however, the king got out of bed with his left foot first, which made everything go wrong all through the day; and so the king and queen had a quarrel. What it was about they really did not know; but they were both snappish and cross, and determined to have the last word. "You'd better hold jour tongue, and not keep on finding fault with every thing and every body," said the queen at last. " Why, you can't even play the harp." "At any rate," returned the king, " you can't make gingerbread-nuts." For the first time the queen had nothing to say. And, indeed, the mo ment the word harp had passed her lips she was sorry she had said it, and she ran away at . once into her own apart ments, and, throwing herself on the cushions of her sofa, had a good cry. The king, on the other hand, paced up and down the room, rubbing his hands in great glee, " What a good thing for me my wife can't make gingerbread-nuts, otherwise I should not have had a word to answer about the harp," he said. Presently, however, he looked at the portrait of the quet n, which was hang ing on the wall. " Illy poor little wife I I dure say, after all, bhe is sorry to have teased me," he said; " I think I'll go Land sees what she is about. Perhaps she may be crying her pretty eyes out." As it happened, the king and queen each thinking of the other, ran into each other's arms in the great corridor, on which their room b opened; and there they kissed, and made up tueir quarrel, and vowed never to have another. "I tell you what we will do," said the king; " we will banish two words from onr kingdom, under pain of death, and those are harp and " Gingerbread-nuts," interrupted the qneen, laughing low, while she wiped a tear from her cheek. Mr. Bryunt The editor of the on Style. Christian Jntelli- gencer wiote, some fifteen years ago, to the poet Bryant, asking as to the ac quisition of a good English style. The poet answered in a letter, from which we make the f llowing extracts "It seems to me," he says, "that in style we onght first, and above all things, to aim at clearness of expression. An obsenre style is, of course, a bad style. "In writing we should always con sider, not only whether we have ex pressed the thought in a manner which meets our own comprehension, dui whether it will be understood by readers in general "The quality of style next in import ance is attractiveness. It should invite and agreeably detain the reader. To acquire such a style, I know of no other way than to contemplate good models, and consider the observations of able critics. "I would reonrfor this purpose to the elder worthies of our literature to such writers as Jeremy Taylor, and Barrow, and Thomas Fuller whose works are fierfect treasures of the riches of our anguage. Many modern writers have great excellences of style, but few are without some deficiency. "1 aenvea great advantage in my youth from a careful reading of Kame s Elements of Criticism not bo much from the theoretical parts, which I do not esteem very highly, as from observ ing the instances be brings forward of the beauties and faults of distinguished writers. "A very useful direction is" given in Mackintosh's work on the 'Study of the Law.' He advises the student whenever, in any author, he meets with a striking tnrn of phrase or a passage of unusual beauty, not to pass over it cur sorily, but to dwell npon it, read it over and over, and endeavor to impress iU excellence noon the mind. . "I have but one more counsel to give in regard to the formation of a style in composition, and that is, to read the poets the nobler and grander ones of our language. In this way warmth and energy is communicated to the diction aqd a musical now w toe sentences.-' A Gigantic Japanese SUlue. the Philadelphia Pfest says: If there were nothing else to mark the skill, gen ius and artistio .workmanship of the Japanese, the great trone statue of Dia Boots would be sufficient to make their hathe imperishable. Dia Bootes would be worthy of a place among the wonders of the world, equally so with the Colos sus of Rhodes, Cleopatra's Needles or the Sphinx of Egypt. This sacred im age, was not only built of bronee. but the .rlh! Observer, Its base rested on a dais of masonry about five feet in height. The elevation of the body was five jion. or fifty feet; between the edge of the hair of the head and the legs crossed, forty two feet: from knee to knee, seated cross-legged, thirty-six feet, and the circumference of the body was ninety- eight feet. The following were the minor dimensions! Face, eight and a half feet long; oirotalar spot on forehead, one and a half feet in cirenmferenoe; eyes four feet long; eyebrows, four feet two and a half inches; ear, six feet seven inches: nose three feet nine inches vertioal and two feet four inches horizontal measurement; mouth, four feet three and a half inches wide; shaved IKrtion of head on top, called kik kokr.e. two feet four inohes in diameter. The spirally curled locks of hair on the head were nine and a half inches wide and 830 in nnmber. Each thumb measured three feet in circumference. These fig ures will convey some idea of the dimen sions, if not the magnificence, of this almost superhuman exhibition of Japan ese art. The interior of the statue formed a beautiful temple, in whioh gilt images of Buddh st saints, with croziers and glories and other appropri ate objects of worship or reverence. In front and at the foot of the statue was au altar, on which were incense pots and urns, to receive the votive offerings of visitors attracted thither by sentiments of religious fervor or curiosity. Near by was the residence of the priestly custodi ans of the sacred place. Here also were pictures o! the prophet, and refreshing potations of tea were purchasable at low rates. The sconio effect of the im mediate surroundings of the place were in keeping with the statue. The baak grotiud consisted of a mass of gre n and towering trees, the broad way leading np was raised at regular intervals by small steps, and on either side, growing in all the luxuriance of the country, were azaleas and flowering plants. The magnificent statue itself out of this scene of beauty rose in all its magnitude and symmetry of proportions. Before it at a short distance oould be seen the rolling indigo-blue waves of the ocean. The ancient magnificence of Kamaknra was attested by the numerous rums which strew the plains. Here are hun dreds of temples and shrines; the Hachiman gin (temple of Hachiman) a deified hero of thebushi (military) class; several tori (stone portals), supposed to have been the remains .of some sacred vestibule; the Aka bash (Bed Bridge); jMiwoomon (gate oi tne two Kings); a belfry (shinroo), in which was a large bronze bell, made to resound on relig ious occasions by striking with apiece of timber swung on ropes. In this temple, said to have been the oldest in the empire, was the famous stone resorted to by the feminine part of the mikado's subjeots for the property of curing barrenness. In the rear, re ached by a long flight of steps, was a small temnle, in which the renowned Taiko- samo, the first of the Shiogoons, wor shipped the divinities of his country. Words of Wisdom. It is bad to lean against a falling wall Attention to little things is the economy of virtue. Slight small injuries, and they will become none at ail. A good word for a bad one is worth much and costs little. Love s words are written on roe, leaves, but with tears. That of which proud people are often proudest is their pride. Judge not from appearance lest you might err in your judgment. Kindness is the golden chain " by which society is bound together. Great things are not accomplished by dream, but by years of patient study. Hope is a leaf-joy. whioh may be beaten out to a great extension, like gold. He is rich who saves a penny a year ; and he is poor who runs behind a penny a year. It is very foolish for people to put themselves to the trouble of being ill- natured. People look at your six days in the week to see what you mean on the seventh. There is nothing evil but what is within ns : the rest is either natural or accidental. Disdain not your inferior, though poor, since he may be much yourjrape- rior in wisdom. We pass our lives in regretting the past, complaining of tne . present, and indulging lalse hopes of the future. The Last Chinese Porcelain. Edward King writes in the Boston Journal : Three centuries sufficed to com plete the ruin of Chinese porcelain mak ing. The workmen were apparently paralyzed. Their arms lost their cun ning ; secrets of color disappeared. There is a god of porcelains in China; he must feel sad at times. This god was a poor workman in dim ages past, bat a work man of sienal talent, and ever Tear he brought forth some beautiful work which won turn renown, iiut lust as he was at the height of his glory he became so enraged or was so niiea witn despair, because an experiment which he was making in the burning of two vases seemed certain to fail, that he threw himself headlong into his own furnaoe. and be and his talant were speedily lost to the world. His friend, however. brought the story to the ears of the em peror. That potentate expressed his profound grief, but at the same time, having an eye to business, told the friends to rake out the furnace and see if the unhappy artist's experiment had really been unsuccessful. Lo and be hold 1 when this was done there appear ed two vases of such lustrous beauty that all concluded that success had crowned the workman's efforts, and the sorrowing emperor canonized the dead man, and bout him a noble temple. The singing swan is a native of the far, far North, where it is called the "Whistling Swan." Its notes are me lodious, and as whole flocks of them sing while in flight, their high, wild, viol-like musio is often heard at great distances. It visits England and the Scottish Islands during the cold winter months, where it is shot and marketed as game. These song swans are also called " Hoopers." from the resemblance of tbeir note to the cry of "Hoop hoop!" ELECTRIC EELS. tie They Rhabk ' Mm ah Flsh-Plsa , datotinl Mat-blnee, . Those electric- feels in the New York Aquarium are Bnecimens of the real gymnotns, and came per schooner Ma graba, Gapt. George Abbott, from the Amazon river, South America. Their length is almost four feet ; they are thioker in the body than the largest common ell. There are two. and they t tr J smaSTravXg Ss into the more spacious tanks of the Aquarittm, they Were Very restless, and one of the attendants experienced, with out intending it, their electrio power, whioh notwithstanding the faiigue of a long journey, was very reapectible. A sugni toucn of the smooth, slimy body was sufficient to communicate such a severe shock that the man Was complain ing for several hours later of unusual pains in his shoulder and olbows. ihe excitement of the fishes noon beinar placed in their new quarters was very great, xney dashed througn their tanks in all directions, forward and backward ; tried to jump out, and splashed the water all over the neighborhood. It took them a long time to get quiet. A lively yellow perch was put into the tank of one of the eels, a catfish into that of the other. The presence of the strange visitors excited the eels, and they made directly for them, tonohing their bodies in several places with the end of their Dlumn nnnntA. It looked as if they intended to bore into the bodies of the nshes. Both the perch and the catfish palpitated violently at the moment when the eels touched them, exactly like a person who gets a shock from an'elec trio machine when unprepared for it. The perch seemed to have been hit vio lently so that it lost its balance, and with open mouth, swam on its side. Yet it required only a short while for both fishes to recover, and in two or three minutes they were swimming around ap parently as vigorous as before. The eels renewed their attacks, but the result was weaker in both of them, and it real ly seemed as if they were not able to kill the fishes by their mysterious power. The contest continued, and one of the eels gradually got more excited. Instead of merely touching the perch with the end of his snout, it opened its mouth and laid both lip close to the body of the nsn. 'ine electric discharges became more frequent at the same time, and in aoout seventy-nve minutes the perch was dead. The catfish, however, sus tained all the discharges of its deadly companion without any apparent conse quences. An unexpected observation, and whioh we believe has never been mentioned by any naturalist before Dr. Dorner, is the remarkable way in which these eels breathe. As is generally known, the re spiratory movements consist in alternate ly opening and closing the mouth and gill slit, and only when the fishes are in want of air. having had an insufficient supply from the water, they ascend to the surface m order to swallow air from the atmosphere. Only a few fishes, which are remarkable for their large, cellnlated air madder, as, for instance, the gar pike. or the fresh water dogfish, come to the surface regularly in order to inhale and exhale air in the same way that seals and whales do. The dogfish does this abont twice in an hour, the gar pike at much longer intervals, and both fishes, when under the surface, open and close their mouths and gill slits quite regularly, like all other fishes. The electrio eel. however, takes the greatest part of its respiratory air directly from the atmos- pere, at intervals of one or two minutes, sometimes less, sometimes more, but generally not slower than the seal. iSach of the electric eels of the aqua rium comes to the surface, brings the end of its snout into the air, takes a por tion of it, the throat becoming wider. and in the next momtnt it gulps the air down, or lets it escape through one of the gill openings. HometimeB, when resting at the bottom, the eel allows a great quantity of air to escape by a deep notm in the center of the lower law permitting this escape without opening its mouth. In regard to exhalation there is great irregularity sometimes the air escapes through one, sometimes through the other of the gill openings, sometimes through the mouth. The quantity of the outgoing air is also changeable, being sometimes four times greater than at other times; bnt the in haling is quite regular, The electrio eel has two connected air bladders two and a half feet long, and therefore there is no doubt of its acting as a real lung. The length of the blad ders compiises two-thirds of the entire body No doubt the air bladders are of great sr importance in the respiratory functions of the electrio eeis than the gills. This accounts for the fact that the respiratory movements noticed in other fishes for honrs are totally absent in the electrio eels. Several visitors, after watching the creatures a few moments, believed them to be dead until the ascending movement convinced them of their being alive. It is only at long in ter vala that the mouth is slightly opened and closed while in the water, and in these instances the coming to the sur face ceases for a length of time. Per haps the animal sleeps at this time. Its eyes, thongh, are so small it is difficult to tell whether they are open or not. r ir I. 1 1 itw jvtk oun. Sardines. The sardine fisheries Lave supported manv families for fenerations. The chief supply originally came from off Sardinia, whence they take the'? name, but for a long time they were mainly caueht on the coast of Untt-uiy. War dines are usually abundant in French waters in this season, and the catch will be larger than in any previous year. A sardiue fleet consists of vessels from eight to ten tons eaoh, with a crew of from six to twelve persons, and goes six to nine miles irom land, xne uau con sisting of eggs and fish, ont np, is scat tared on the water. The sardines are taken with gill nets. A few are salted on board, but the bulk are oaiiied on shore. Their heads are cut off, and they are well we shed and sprinkled with salt. After drying, they are arranged in frames, in almost perpendiouiar rows, and immersed again and again iu the best boiling olive oil. When sufficient ly oured they are paoked in the small tin boxes by w-men and children, after which men fill the boxes np with fresh oil and solder them tight. The work is not complete, howevor, for before fit for the table the fish require cocking. To this end they are placed in a covered kettle and boiled from half an hour to an hour, according to their size. After dry ing, labelling, and placing in wooden cases they are ready for shipment. The American sardine, or menhaden, is taken in large quantities on the coast of New Jersey and put np In oil. Here's a nice little cieoe of news for the little folka- " A firm in Belleville, I1L, turns out 160.000 gallons of custor oil every year." Some Epitaphs. One at Ockham. in Surrey, on .John Spong, a carpenter, which wonld seem to have been written to order by a sohol ar, is original and unique I " Who many a stnrdy oak had lain along, Felled by Death's surer hatchet, here lid 8 pong. Posts oft be made, yet ne'er a place could get, And lived by railing, ttao' he bad no wit. Old saws he had, altho' no antiquarian, And styles eorrected, yet no grammarian. Long lived he Ockham'a primeat architect; And lasting as bis fame a tomb t' erect, In vain we seek an artist such aa he, Whose pales and gates are for eternity." There is no lack of other artists whose callings have survived them on the tomb stone or tablet. One, for example, is Thomas Chambers, 1765. Of -uok is the Kingdom of Heaven " prefaces the inscription purporting that " Here lio the Remains of Thomas Chambers, Dancing-master, whose genteel address and assiduity in teaching recommended him to all that had the pleasure of his acquaintance." Of Bryan Tnnstall, we are told that he was poor, bnt honest, and " a most expert angler, until Death, envious of his merit, threw out his line, hooked him, and landed him on the 31st of April, 1790." Another is in honor of John Bilbie, clock-maker, aged thirty three: " Bilbie, thy Moveiueuts kept in play For thirty years and more we aay, Thy balance or thy Mainspring's broken, And all thy movements cease to work." The angler and the clock-maker respect ively represent large classes. The former craft suggests a pun on names in a case of a olerio surnamed Ham, (hamns), as well as less metaphorio al lusions to the fisherman's craft: while the latter recalls the elaborate trade epitaph on George Bongleigh, watch maker, as well as one on the much ear lier artist, Thomas Pierce, who died at Berkeley, Gloucestershire, in 1630. It runs as follows: " Here lieth Thomas Fierce, whom no man Yet he in iron, brass and silver wrought. He Jacks and Olooks and Watches (with art) made And mended too, when others' worke did fade. Of Berkeley five tymes Mayor this artist was; And yet this mayor, this ariist was but grasse. wnen nis own watcn waa aown on lue j-,at Dav. He that made Watches had not made a Key To winde it np, but tueleBS it must lie Until be rise againe no more to die I" Akin to these are epitaphs on persons with trade-surnames, such as Anthony Cooke, of Yoxford, who died on Easter Monday, 1613, upon whom, according to his epitaph, came Leane hungrie death, who never pity took. And cawse ye Feaste was ended slew the Cook." Few puns on . names, however, aro better than one on Anne Hillary, of Beaminster, whose obituary panegyrist was no doubt a lawyer: "TiB not because this woman's Virtue dies That the braes tells us ' Here Anne Hillary lies.' Her name's long-loved; she is in this com mended; The poor cry out ' their Hilary Term is ended. ' " London Saturday Review. Mark Twain's Legend of a Musket Mark Twain tells the following story. related by a fellow passenger, who, ban tered about his timidity, said he never had been scared since he had loaded an old Queen Anne musket for his father once, whereupon he gave the following Xou see the old man was trying to learn me to shoot blackbirds and beasts that tore np the young corn and such things, bo that I could be of some use j around the farm, because I wasn't big enough to do much. My gun was a single-barrel rhot-gnn, and the old man carried an old Qneen Anne musket that weighed a ton, made a report like a thunder-clap and kicked like a mule. The old man wanted mo to shoot the old musket some time but I was afraid. One day, thongh, I got her down and took her to the hired man and asked him to load her up, because it was out in the field. Hiram said:' " Do you see those marks on the stock au X and V, on each Bide of the queen's crown ? Well, that means ten balls and five slugs that's her load." But how much powder r " Oh," he says, " it don't matter; put in three or four handfuls." So I loaded her up that way, and it was an awful charge I had sense enough to see that and started ont I leveled her on a good many blackbirds, bnt every time 1 went to pull the trigger I shut my eyes and winked. I was afraid of her kick. Toward sundown l fetched np to the house, and there was the old man waiting on the porch. " Been ont hunting have ye r " Yes, sir," says I. What did vou kill?" "Didn't kill anything, sir; didn't shoot her off was afraid she'd kick." I know blame well she would. " Gimme that gun I" the old man said, as mad as sin. And he took aim at a sapling on the other side of the road, and I began to drop back out of danger, and tho next moment I heard the earthquake and saw the Qneen Anne whirling end over end in the air, and the old man spinning aronnd on one heel, with one leg np and both bands on bis law, and the bark ny- ing from that old sapling like there was hail storm. The old man's shoulder was set back three inohes. his jaws turn' ed black and blue, and he had to lay up for a week. Cholera or nothing else can scare me the way 1 was scared that time How a Town was Taken. A very good stiy is told of the island of Sark. a small island which lies in the English Ghannel. It is said to have been once taken by the French, -who, however, held it only a short time. One morning, a pea?eful-lc3king merchant- ship, bearing a flag of truce, appeared off the island, and. sending off a boat- the officer in command told the .French men that one of the crew, a native of the island. h J died on board, and baa ex pressea a w.-sb t be buriea in ins native soil, and he asked that the deceaseds companions might be allowed to carry out his desire. The Frenchmen politely consent-1, end t -eord'ngiy tne snips crew soon appeare 3, br'nging with them the coffin, which they canied into the little church. They then requested that they might be permuted to periorm their own sei.ioe over the body: and this also was granted, as the English sailors were unarmed, and had therefore gave rise to no apprehensions. No sooner, however, had the Frenoh left the church than tbe coffin, whioh we full of arms and ammnition, was opened and. as the church commanded the town, the island was lasen almost wituoui opposition, It is said that at the time of the Rev olution a German wished to open a tav. era near Philadelphia, and having noth ing for a sign but picture of his old king he placed it on a pole by his door, and the village which sprang np around the tavern is called " Th King of Prus I bia to this day. Don't tell a man yon sweat. It Is vulgar. Inform him that you are being deprived of the saline and oleaginous fluids of your material substance through the exoretories of your pellucid cuticle, with a sensible condensation of moisture npon the superficial exterior. "Stack arms: Pitchforks and rakes." Chicago Journal. Ground arms s Spades and hoes. -Jacksonville (.III.) Journal. Present alms: A donation. iVew York Graphic. Order arms: The rod and switch. Clear the Way ... e For the escape from the system of its waste and debris, which, if retained, would vitiate the bodily fluids and overthrow health. That important ohannffl of exit, the bowels, may be kept permanently free from obstruction a by us ing tne non-griping, penny acting ana agree able catbartio, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which not onlv liberates impurities, but invisr- orates the lining of the intestinal canal when weakened by constipation or the unwise use of violent purgatives, rue atomacn, liver, ana urinary organs are likewise reinforoea and aroused to healthful aotion by this benefloent tonio and corrective, and every organ, fiber, musole and nerve experiences a share of its invigorating inflnenoe. Unobjectionable in flavor, a moat genial and wholesome medioinal stimulant, and owing its efficacy to botanic sources exclusively, it is the remedy beBt ad apted to household use on aooount of Its safety, wide scope and speedy action. Every body knows that so long as there is proud fleBh in a sore or wound, it will not heal The obstacle is speedily removed and the flesh reunited by Hinbt's Gauouc 8alvb, the finest embodiment in existence of that supreme puri fier, carbolio aoid. Its emollient ingredients modify its pungent aoid basis, so that it never cauterizes, stings or scarifies the diseased part. Bores and eruptions of all kinds are cured by it. All Druggists sell lb Medical Stcbekts will be pleased to learn that the Faonlty of the Louisville Hedioal College (Louisville, Ky ,) now gives three com plete conrses of lectures in seventeen months, and ao arrange their prices that a student saves (297 in bis med'eal education, and gains his third course of lectures; all other colleges give in this time only two courses. Beneficiary privileges are limited, we see, to five per cent of the class. Next session begins October 1, 1878. RtndenU should at once apply, as above, iur uaiAiugueB. ,, , , Nutritious Cookery. Nothing is so well calculated to cromote sood health and good humor as light, easily di gested nutritious cookery. With that unrivaled article, Dooley'a Yeast Powder, in the kitchen. elegant, white, light and wholesome bread, roils, DiBCntt, cake of every kind, and corn bread, wastes, mnffins, buckwheat cakes, etc, are always possible in every household. For nnwards of thirtv veara Mrs. WrNRT.OW'R SOOTHING SYRUP has been used for children with never-failing suocess. It oorreots acidity of the stomach, relieves wind oolie, regulates tne xiowels, cures dysentery and diarrbcea. whether arising from t ething or other causes. an oia ana weu-mea remeay. 20 ots. a Dotue. CHEW The Celebrated "Matchless" Wood Tag Plug Tobacco. Tbk Pioneer Tobacco Compart, New York, Boston, and Chicago. Grace's Salve, manufactured by 8eth W. Fowle & Sons, Bonton, is becoming more and more popular every day, and its sales are rap idly increasing. It cures Cnts, Burns, Scalds, Felons, Salt Bheum, Scald Head, Ulcers, Flesh Wounds, Ao. 25 cents a box. By mail 85 cents, We have a list of a thousand country week lies, in which we can insert a one-inch adver tisement one year for two dollars and a quarter a paper, or lor tne same price we can inseri fifty-two readme notices (a new one every week), averaging seven lines each. For list of papers and other particulars address Deals Foster, 10 Spruce Street, New York. The relaxing power of Johnson's Anodyne Liniment is almost miraculous. A gentleman whose leg was bent at tbe knee and stiff tor twenty years had it limbered by its use, and the leg Is now as good as the other. The evil consequences resulting from impure blood are beyond human calculation, so are tne vast sums expended in wortniesa remedies Parsons' Purgative Pills make new rich blood. and taken one a night for three months will change the blood in the entire system. IMPORTANT NOTICE. Farmer", Faro lies and Otbera oan purohase no Rrmedr equal to Dr. TOBIA8 VKNKTI4N LINIMRNT for the euro of nhnlMt-a. Diarrhesa. DraenterT. Oman. Oolie end 8ea- ickneaa, taken in'eraalljr (it ia perfectly barmleaa; aee oath accompanying- each b' ttlw) and externally for Throat, Cute, Burnt, Swellings, Brnises, Mo.quito The VKNKTIAN LIN I M KNT introduced in 1M7, HUBS, uia nore., rains in i.iihiib. hm. "u who... mil nn dim who haa uaed it but continue to do kO. rainy atatioa if it waa Ten Dollar a bottle they would not be without it. Thousands of CertiflcaUM oan be Been at ih. nannt. .nukin. nf it wonderful curative nroDer- tiea. Sold ly tne Lfruaguta at atj cie. vepot i Murray St., new xora. The Markets. BTSW SOBB. Beef Oettle NatlVr........M.... tB lOJf TeXA tDau&Bioses.n. ' m l MllOhOOWS HUU 0U0 Hogs-Llv 04 04 X uresseo...,.,,, .,., us us vq Sheep 0 ) 05V Lamb 08 (j) 10 Cotton Middling 11 X a 11 Flour Western uooa to uuoioe.... s aa din State Fair to unoios m is t wi Bnokwhest per ewt 1 11 a 1 11 Wheat Red Western 1 01 a 1 No. 1 HUwaukes 1 us 0 1 osj. Bye State. 64 a Barley-State M 1 a 1 Barley Malt U a Buckwheat 0 a M Oats Mixed Western 1 a Corn Mixed Western 44 a Hay, perewt 41 a Straw per ewt N v 10 Bops Good to Prime.... 10 a 1J Pork Mess 10 61 a 10 TO Lard Olty Htetm 07)4 a 1X Fish Mackerel, No. 1, new 18 00 a 00 no. a. new........ uu ojii w Dry Ood, per ewt. I CO a I 00 Herring. Bcaled, per oox it a IT Petroleum Crude Ot a0H Beflnsd, Wool OaUfornls Fleeee... X) a 11 91 91 4f 14 91 n Texas Amtrallan State XX... 80 14 Batter State 10 IS Western Choice....... ...... Western Fair to Prime. . .. W estern Firkins xa o a IS & OS s 01 H is 30 OS 01 11 Cheese -Bute Factory...... ........ Btete bAlmmed..... Western OiMA Eggs tsteuid PeiiusvlvaDla...u. 11 a arrrAU. Flour t It a 8 IS wnest ho. l Milwaukee...... 1 10 118 Corn Mixed. ..... 44 8J 84 UH,h,h,HH,imH Ry Barley Barley Melt, a e)e4 ) av rniXAcsxraUA. Beef Oattle Xxtra............., neep...MA .... ....... .. Bogs Dressed, . ...... . Floor Pennsylvania Bxtra...... Wheat Ked Western Bys Oom Yellow............ , txa on ta a OS 8 7S a T 81 st a s a o o a 81 ti .a si 81 (A 81 uxea oste Mixed retroienm ornae...... . .uv Wool Colorado 0W Beflned, 11 ia a w 18 a 8 ai a Texas...... ...... ........ OeUloroia eUUflBVOM, MAM, os a 08 a or a oixa 04 ollMps HOg 888 . lu. 08 TiTIBTOWI. KAM, 0ttU foor to ObotM. w .... ,-...... Fran h ...... 880 1 00 on 880 a too t ra $10 to $iooo f-ssiii. Wall 8t. Btooka makes every month. Book sent Addr BAXTER S&rSSSi f Sai . N. W guarantee fortune, but you c UF 1300 clean eaoh month. Only 88 capital re- . A. It. MOUSE, Hnbbardaton, Mass. PENSIONS ARB PAID every soldier dlasMed In line ot duty, by Aeetdent or otherwise. A lVOCfcb of SAWklnd. lues of VlW tU H.TOI srYtli, UI PTI KK, If but sIlKbt, or 8leiase or LINUM. KOw Vl'V-lnuc-liarge for Wouud, Injur ies or Muuture, gives 87TIIX bounty. I.i.at lsors-e), Ortleere' Aocuunte and all War 4 llii,e settled. KK JKtl'tU (XAlUa HKOfKILU. Mud US rents Iur g Copy of AVota . sm rmaioj".' noiHTY A LtaniAAias, arud eta t Irrulkrs. UK. V. (THXIIlua at D.8. CLAIM AliTSsntl PATENT Box Saw, Wamhlmtuat, (I at 1 BaowWS BaowowiAi. Towrs, for eoiuths anf ld -avr ATOHM AKBR8' Tool, and MstoHJ. Bond tar VVoJli iTlf o r. smith a oo., 33 B'wsr.w.Y. , J M I " ' . n . a ntm eanvaaain for tbe. FirMiaiaj 5iii7..r Time and Ontflt Free. Addreee p. n VIOKlIrlT, AOgnata. "' REUS rtU prim aaiMii AA. PIAaoa (y lit emir w i of. j ATTY, WMhhMrtott, V. -JV .ASK flu bftTsTain. B CLOCKS lifliElf CHAPMAN'S CHOLERA SYRUP tor, (ir..t Ftlls. W. H. Sold ? Ml DrnggliJJ. . MMPI.K, EASY, PnovIT;L. r n rvpRYRODYHISOWN PRINTER Rood So. for huidsom. ctaloaii.. WATIOWAiTrra Oo., PnilidolDblA. r. varam """"""" " r.ii..lninal I'Btnmerrlnl Institute. n.....i R.....U' Hchool. New HTn, y""-." rear. Pip.r.torr to Collar., Sclsntiflo noo or drilling, srmnutiss, ate. Full Information sent on p- plioation. tM.ifal.lnj.fr M ..... .iij .rfl,rf T'VT.I'itS tmA ejror Ml. N rnn k 2 The onoloent m the worm import. I IjiABe prioee-LraeirtOonipnin Amertea staple art-cle-pl."... inoreaaina aa-en Vi I rVi;.-i.. A 117R Fronts in su itnya on ji na g $119, A jndioions inralment in T Stock. (Optione or Pnj.). onen '".-R" hoar.. . roil qeiaii. nu iY ViVTHTi Jtr. rim free. . O., Bankera. o) wail ot'em, i-Q" -.. A M - A A 1 IM. til da to Airenta NnVPltlAS S 1 U S 2AlO iellinnonr Fine Art Illnatrated fm TPtaa "7 ,,? ' mall Oataloaoe A VPU.IJ-I.K A 1 WW appnoauux - H. BUFFORD'8 BON8, Manofaotnring ruoiian-. 141 to 141 Franklin Street, Boaton, Maea. BatabUapoa naarly titty yuara Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sour Stomach. Sick Headache. GRACE'S SALVE. JOHIEIVTLU, Miob., Deo. 87, Vm.-Mturf. )Wm: I rot you (0 ota. for two boiea of Grace'e Salve. I M") bad two and bare naed them on an nicer on my to It ia almoat well. Reapeotfully roan, O. J. VA fOot,and MM. Price 25 cent A box at all drnitirlate, or aeril by mall on receipt oi 3.) cent, rrep re vj r-r. - FO V L.K IV NONM. No Hamaon aw.,i,i.-.. PK0F. BCHEM'S Illustrated HISTOEY OF The War in the East, or eonfhot between Ritrsia and Tubket li tbe IIm book tor livt ogtntt. tlM vwootaro pagea, ena-ra.iopM BaTTLC SccnKB Fortr-8fieB, Oenerala, etc, una ie tne only complete work published. Has no rival. Bella ai tiant. Price HS.OO. Terma unqualed. A omit Won! nl. Addreaa ft. 8. OOOUSPEKD A CO.. New York. $5,0100 ! One of tbe Bonds leaned by the Canada Silver Mining Company ia redeemed eaoh year at 3,UUU oaau. Ooat 8 10 per Bond. For partioulara addreaa immedi ately, enoloiint- ttamp, II. I.llIiAUH, Hecrrlary, LONDON. CANADA. Agente wanted. Paints Ready for Use For Farmers and Manufacturer".. Tk.. .m nnlform In ahade. and the oolor oan always tie matoned. Any one oan paint with them. Tney bare very superior covering propertiea and do not, like the ao-oalUd patmt painu, oontain either water, be'-nne or alkali. Theae painta are in Liquid Form, and are aoid in Gallon Oana and Barrels. Thny are nlo put up in email cana oi one to nre pounas. ni-mi i mui. oard showing different shades. F. W. DEN OB A CO., cor. William and Fulton Sts.. New rork. 1KADR MARK. DR. BECKER'S CULEBHA'IEU EYE BALSAM IH A SUP it CURE For INFLAMED. WEAK crEf. STYES and SOUK KYtti us. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. DKPOT. 6 BOVVBRI, N. V KNT BY MAIL run am MOW TO SIT TM tM In the eeit part r tti. state, g.oon.ooo urn ATssTs. cop. of lb. "Kansae HaelBo Home, at Sail. " eddra,s B. J. Oilmor.. Land. Com'l, H.tlD.. asn.a. BOSTON TRANSCRIPT, Daily and Weekly. Quarto, Z BOSTON, MASS, The Largest. Cheapest and Best Family Newspaper in New Hngland. Edited with epecittl referenoe to the varied tasU-s and requirements of tMe home otrcle. All the foreign and local newa pUDiisuea prompujr. Daily Tranaoript, 9 IO per annum in advance. Wsekly " I " . ' ' , t . tt oopite to one auurvH.r a r" annum in ad.anoe, . SEND FOR AMPLE COPY. FOR $750 Ws will insert one-inch adTsrtisement, thirteen times, in one thousand American weekly new, papers. Advertisement may appear three months svsry week, or every other week six months. fVioaca rr . .... ML St3.l0 to $,0r0W KCLOCICSj V. VKEEPGOO Jr JJ HALF INCH FOR 8)425. VUUK LINK FOR 8880. TIIKEB LINES FOB 9225. For cash payment sntirsly in sdvsnos. fire per 'cent, diaoonnt. Ho sxtrs charge tor making and sending eats. For catalogue of papers and other information address BEALS & FOSTER, 10 Spruce Street, New York- KILLS all the FLIES In a room in TWO HOURS. ioc worth will kill more fliet than io worth of Fry Paper. No dirt, etrsuUs. Sold by Dsvceum EVKAV warns. Botanic Medicine Co.. Buffslo.N. T81U ay