nn JEFFERSQNIAN. H A Bcuotci to politico, fiterrfturc, Agriculture, Science, ittoralitn, curt encral intelligence. VOL. 27. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., MAY 21, 1868. NO. 8. Published by Theodore SchocL TERMS Two dollars a year In advanrr and If nnt pud bf( rc the end of the year, two dollars and fitfy t. will be rhargrd. No piper dKiMniitiued Until I nrrrnidrf sure paid, rxcept at tlie ortfiorj oftlie Editor. , erturmeiiu of nn iuareof(eipt.l line) or n, one or throe lnvrtions SI 50. Earh additional Mvartlon, jO cents. Longer onrs In proportion. JOB peiixtixg, tV ALL KINDS, Cxecuted in the higlirrt ftyle of the Art, ami onthe mot rensoti ible irmi. Drs. JACKSON & BIDLACK, PIIYSK IAXS AND Sl'KUEOXS. D RS. JACKSON & BIDLACK, are prepared to attend promptly 10 an cans of a Professional character. Office Op- April 23, 1867.-tf. IIK9. I. SMITH, Svivgeoii Dentist, Office on Main Street, opposite Judge Stokes' residence, Stroudsburo, Pa. 0O Teeth extracted without pain. August 1, 1S07. .A. Card. The undersigned has opened an office for the purchase and sale of Ileal Estate, ia Fowler B.iildinj, on Main street. Parties having Furms, M ills, Hotels or or her proper ty for sale will find it to their advantage to call on me. I have no ngents. Parties must sec ine personal 'y. GEO. L. WALKER, Real Eatc Agent, Stroudsburg, Pa. C. W. SHIP, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, Ila removed his office and refider.ee to. th buildiijg-, lately occupied ly Win. Davis, Esq., on Main street. Devoting all his time to hi profession he will be prepared to an awerall calls, either day or night, when not professionally engaged, with promptness. 07 Charges reasonable. iQ Stroudrburg, April 11, 1867.-tf. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, AND GENERAL CLAIM Af iENT. STROUDSBURG, PA. Office, one doer delate Fury's Tin e... ! i All claims against the Government prose cuted with dispatch at reduced r.'tes. (tT An af!di!i..r.al bounty of S100 and of $50 procured for Soldiers in the late War, FKEK OF EXTRA CHAKGE. JJ Auguet 1, A. Card. Dr. A. KGEYES JACKSON, Physician and Surgeon, BEGS TO ANNOUNCE Til AT II A V ing returned fr-m Europe, he is now prepireii to rBBi" the active duties of his profession. In ordfT to prevent disappoint ment to person '.iving at a distince who may with cor.sult hii, h will be found at his office etery THURSDAY and SAT URDAY lor con-ultaiion and the perform ance of Stirgicl operations. Dec. l'J, 1-67.-1 t. rtelTritcli! Itcli! SCRATCH! SCRATCH! SCRATCH! USE k'OLLI.viiE AL'S ITiIf k S. LT BIlEDI C1MMLM. No Family t-lioulJ be without this valua ble medicine, fr on the firt ap;e;irance of th disorder on l Ii- wrists, between the fin &.c, a -li2ht applicntiofi of the Oint ment will cure it, and prevent it Lf ing ta ken by other. Warranted to give satisfaction or money refunded. Prepared and -ol 1. wholesale and retail, by W. HOLLINSIIEAD. Stroudsburg, Oct. 31, "07.J Druggist. I,AXT'A, DENTIST. IIai pfrmanently lo-ited him self in Stroudsburg, and moved his office next dooi to Dr. b. Walton, where he is fully prepared to treat the natural teeth, and also to insert incorrup tible artificial teeth on pivot and plate, in tiic latest and most improved nianner. Most persons know the daii ger and folly of trust ing their work to the ignorant au well a the traveling dentist. . It matters not how much experience a person may have, he in liable to have some failures out of a number of cases, and if the dentist lives at a distance it is frequently put ofT until it is too late to wive the tooth or teeth as it mav Le, other wise the inconvenience and trouble of going so far. Jlence the necessity of obtaining the Bervices of a dentist near home. All work warranted. Stroudsburg, March 27, 1802. SI. I. CUUMi.tlCIl, Sign nd Ornamental Painter, at I SHOP ON MAIN STREET,' (npposiie Woolen Mills,) STKOUDSISUKtt, IA., Respectfully announces to the citizens of SirouJfburg and vicinity that he is prepared to attend to all who may fvor him with their patronage, in a prompt aud workman like m.mner. (KtCIIAIRS, FURNITURE, paint fd and repaired. (Feb. 20.-3m. DOT sou Know fli:tt J. II. McCarty is the only Undertaker in Stroudsburg wh-i understand" his business 1 If not, attend a Funeral managed by any other Undertaker in town, and yon will see the proof of lu fact. Sept. 20, '67. CA! YOU TBI.!, WHY IT IS that when any one corned to Strouds burg to buy Furniture, they alway ainquiro (or McCarty'a Furniture Store! Sept. 20. J. THE FRIGHTFUL TORNADO IN TEN NESSEE. THE COUNTRY DESOLATED FOR TWENTY MJLF.S. HOUSES BLOWN DOWN AND INMATES CRUSHED. A NUMBER KILL ED AND WOUNDED. GREAT DESTRUC TION OF PROPERTY. From the Nashville Union, May 8. About six o'clock, on Wednesday after noon, the heaviest storm of the season swept over Tenucssee, varying in streugth and fury in different localities. At Chat tanooga and in the Cumberland Moun tains torrents of rain and hail fell, aeain washing awav the railroad trft.Wnrir t Tantallon, aad leaving hailstones on the i Z u V rVi J V I fill m nil t Of Uncnnn Mnnnlmn trnir u at of the mountains the track of the Nash jr - "vu 3 v ii-j. xu suuic via tut? v u io ville and Chattanooga Railroad is a foot under water, but little or no time has been lost by the trains. The country between the Hillsboro and! Murfreesboro pikes, lying within a ransei of twelve or thirteen miles south of this city, and extending a distance of twenty miles, was desolated by the most destruc tive tnrnadrt known in Tonnocceo ciniii a large portion of Fayette was laid in ruins ,jknW tAat,many,of t,bem have Hhc uSy nearly twenty years ago. Tfie path of the I .hablt. of fiSQDS 'or the purpose of mak- hurricane seemed to be about half a mile in width, and it swept over . the country in a zigzag course, carrying death and destruction wherever its resistless whirl could reach a movable object. Dwelling houses, barns and outhouses of evcrv descrintion were Utt from thr'ia a mound of earth raised fifteen or twen foundations and wrenched to fragments, i L lllmo- nr wnnnilinn. ti. inrr,ntaa a u J rying them beneath the ruins. Roofs and fence boards took flight in every di rection, orchards were laid low, and the proud forest trees were piled one upon another, some of them torn up by the roots, and the strong branches of others clinging to the few that stood against the tempest. The telegraph line along the Nashville and Decatur Railroad was thrown down for some distance, and large oak leave were carried upon the lesser winds as far as the southern streets of Nashville. Deep, rolling thunder and blinding flashes of lightniDg, accompanied by tor t -.. : r. i i j . i. i icuia ui iiiiu, lununci upuu tuc luruauu, and the scene along its route is described; to have been 'n-s grand as it was terribly deructive. The groaning of the great trees clinging to their strong roots, the crash of falling buildings, the whining aud clattering of flying boards and shin gles, mingled with the roar of the tempest as it swept along over hill and hollow and whistled spitefully about the corners of the houses and barns its limited scope barely permitted it to touch, made up a 'confu sion of sounds that would have drowned a moving pendemouium. The first evidences of the tornado were witnessed in the vicinity of the Hills boro' pike, and it is supposed to have risen at no great distance west of that road. Here trees aud fences were thrown down, and as it approached the Franklin pike in an easterly course, it increased to almost tropical fury. Its approach was heralded by a heavy roaring sound, as if an ocean were sweeping onward in its track. Striking the Franklin pike at the third tollgite, two miles beyond Brentwood, the gate house was ia an instant demolished, and portions were fly ing through the air. Mr. Joseph Chum bly (a brother of John Chumbly, City Marshal of Nashville), the tollgate keep er, was instantly killed by falling logs, his wife seriously injured and two of his children were partially bruised in the rubbish ot the chimney. The baby was blown with pieces of the wreck a distance of fifty yards, aud was found mangled and dead when the storm subsided. 'At last accounts the recovery of Mrs. Chumbly and the two surviving children was deem ed doubtful. Fragments of the building' were yesterday picked up half a ' mile from where it had stood. No other dwell ing houses were blown down in the im mediate vicinity, though great havoc was made among the out houses, and trees were everywhere laid low. A negro is reported to . have ; been struck dead by ligbfning,'and a young lady to have near-t ly lost the use of her eyes. At Owen Station, a large tree was blowu across the roof of a house, but little damage result ing to any thing but the roof. Passing on'eattward, the tornado reach ed the Wilson Pike, tearing to pieces the barn of Lsouire Duck Davis, aud latin the root irom Ins bouse, then crossing the road and demolishing a new house belonging to Adam Owen. At least five thousand dollars' worth of Esquire .Da vis' property was destroyed. On the Owen and -Wiustead pike the large two story houso of Mrs. Ilinton Phillips was completely demolished, and part of a chimney falling upon her grand- child inflicted serious but not fatal injuries. Mrs. riiillips was severely injured by property recovered is valued at $400,000, falling timbers, and two other ladies and1 anj 31 r. Cook receives for his services four gentlemen were more or less hurt.! one-fourth of the amount, 100,000. Tht child could cot be found until some j Other suits similar as to claim and title, time after the tornado had passed. The , involving four .times the amount of pro fine orchard of eight acres was entirely -perty, and in which his interest is the destroyed, aud the grove surrounding the; Eame, follow this aud will undoubtedly house was swept to the earth. The house ;De decided in the tame way. His' entire of James EdmoddsoB, in the same vicin-; fee, therefore, in this . case (for all the ity, was blown down, and Mrs. Edtnond-;BUjtg form practically only one case,) will sou severely injured, having a leg broken. ' amount to half a milion dollars a fee At llashboro', on the Nolensville pike, such as but few lawyers have ever earn a negro cabin was blown to pieces and a eJ. colored child killed. Its mother was re-; . ported to be dangerously hurt. Every; The orange crop in Florida will bo im trec in Dr. Edward Pattersou's yard was niense. Lemons are also plenty, some blown down, and fences, orchards and being raised in fhnt locality weighing over fcbadc trees shared the same faC as those two pound. luriner west, large, iramc bouse on this pike, the name of the occupant of which we could not learn, was laid in ruins. On Mill Creek, above Antioeh, the houses of William Kimbro, Thomas Bri ley and William Rrilcy were torn to pieces, and a negro woman and child near ly crushed to death in the wreck of a cabin. Fences and trees were lifted and I thrown about by the mad tempest and desolation spread everywhere in its path. After passing Mill Creek the tornado seemed gradually to lose its force and to narrow down to an almost insignificant current. On reaching the Murfrcesboro pike its fury was well nigh spent, its and I last dash was the lifting of a stable roof on John Leak s place. Mr. Leak's house, fifty yards distant, was not raz6d. It is impossible to estimate the amount of property destroyed, as the distance over which the tornado swept from west to, st was fully twenty miles, and much 01 lue aamaSe nas not ueea rcFortea- rm, ,-Tl Every one has heard of the domestic economy of many of the ant tribe. We . !nS sieves ot some ot their race. We nave i) ear a oi ineir Keeping aphides like cows, and milking them of their sweet honey dew ; but few, perhaps, have ever heard of the agricultural ant. This ant is a native of Texas, and constructs a citv incbe3. from trhe ground, I to avoid the inconvenience of rain, though the struc- ture may be made on dry earth. Round its city it clears the ground for the space of three or four feet. This space is level ed, smoothed, aud freed from every liv ing herb. When this suburban field is prepared, it is sown with a single species of grain-bearing grass. When the crop appears it is carefully weeded. The cul tivated grass grows luxriantly and pro duces a heavy crop of small white, flinty seeds, which under the microscope, very closely resembles ordinary rice. When ripe, it is carefully harvested and carried by the workers, chaff and all, into the granary cells, where it is divested of the chaff and packed away. The chaff is tak en out aou thrown Levond the limits of the paved area. During protracted wet weather, it sometimes happens the provi sion stores become damp, and are liable to sprout and spoil. In thi3 case, on the first fine day, the ants bring out the damp and damaged grain and expose it to the sun till it is dry, when they carry it back and pack away all the sound seed, leav ing those that had sprouted, to waste. Apprehensions of Death Realized. From the Galena 111.) Gazette. A few days since a physician was call ed to see a young man in this county who was sick. He examined the case care fully, felt of the pulse, which appeared strong and almost healthy,- pronounced the case hopeful, and after prescribing was about to depart. The patient request ed the doctor to remain, with the remark that he should be dead iu just ten min utes. The doctor, supposing it to be on ly a whim of the imagination, thought it best not heed it, and left without de lay, with a remark that he would soon be better. As soon as he left, the young man firmly, and in about his usual voice, told a gentleman present to look at his watch and note the time, for in just ten minutes from the time he spoke he should be dead. The friend, wishing, like the physician, to turn his attention from the subject, paid no attention to it, but per formed some other slight attention. Af ter about five minutes more had elapsed, the sick man again spoke to his friend : "Why did you not look at your watch? Five minutes have passed. - I have only five minutes more to live." The friend then looked at his watch and noted the time. In just five minutes the patient was dead. A Englishman was once making some extraordinary statements as to the speed of ahorse which he owned. "My dear sir," said an American bystander, ."that is rather less tharr the' average speed of our roadsters. I live at my country seat, and "when I ride to town in a hurry in the moruiog, my shadow doesn't keep up with me, but generally comes into the store a minute or two after my arrival i f In a m t w mw Iiafca rata little re- stless. and I rode him as hard as hard as 1 couM several times around a large factory, just to take the old Harry out of him. Well, sir, he went so fast that I saw my back before me the whole time, and I was twice in daDger of riding over myself!" Elisha Cook, a lawyer of Ruflalo, has iust nrosccuted to a successful conelu- gion, in California, a lawsuit, in which the General Laws. TVc publish below the law exempting money loaned from taxation, and the law taxing Rank Stock. They are authenti cated copies, and will be found of gene ral interest: A Fupplcment to an act, entitled " An Act to increase the revenues of the commonwealth by taxation of the shares of national banks," approved April 12, 18G7. Section 1. Beit enacted, tCc, That no stock or share of any national bank shall be appraised higher than the cur rent value of said stock in the market where such bank is located; and any stockholder shall have the right of appeal to the auditor general, who shall have the power to adjust such assessment, by inquiring into the value of such stock, and either abate or increase the value of the same as may be just and proper. fcEC. z: luat it shall be the duty of the assessors, after they shall have com pleted their assessment of bank shares, to make return thereof fo the -auditor gene ral, and give public notice of- such valu ation or assessment, by posting one copy of said notice in the banking room, and one copy in the commissioners ofhee of the said county; and if any shareholder shall be dissatisfied withuch valuation, he shall enter his appeal therefrom with in thirty days from the date of putting up Fuch notice. Sec. 3. That the assessors appointed in accordance with the provisions of-the se cond section of the act to which this is a supplement, shall visit and obtain from the banks incorporated by the United States, the list of stockholders, and the number and par value of shares held by each, as directed in said section, and shall proceed to assess-all the shares of said stock, in said banks, at their actual val ue, and make a complete list of the same, with the names of the several stockhold ers, and the number and value of shares of stocks held by each, stating whether the stockholder be resident or non-resident of the county in which the bank is located; which list shall be returned to the commissioners of the city or county in which the bank is located, and a cer tificate thereof transmitted to the auditor general. i Sec. 4. That the taxes assessed under this act shall be a lien upon the shares of stock of said bank from the date of Ievj', and in case of non payment, the shares of defaulting stockholders, with the accrued dividends, shall be subject to attachment, or levy and safe, for non-payment of tax thereon, in like manner as other personal property. Sec. 5. That the third section of the act to which this is a supplement, be and the same is hereby repealed. E LIS II A W. DAVIS, Speaker of the House of Representatives. JAMES L. GRAHAM, Speaker of the Senate. Approved April 2, 1863. JOHN W. GEARY. An Act to promote the improvement of real estate by exempting mortgages and other money securities from taxa tion, except for state purposes, iu cer tain counties in this commonwealth. Section 1. Be it enacted t tCc, That all mortgages, judgments, recognizance and moneys owing upon articles of agree ment for the sale of real estate made and executed after the passage of this act, shall be exempt from all taxation except for state purposes; and that from and af ter the first day of December . next no taxes of any description be assessed or collected except for state purposes, on or from mortgages, judgments, recognizances or moneys owing upon articles of agree ment for the sale of real estate, whether made and executed before or after tho passage of this act: That nothing in this act shall be construed to apply to mort gages, judgments or articles of agreement given by corporations: Provided That this act shall only apply to the counties of Berks, Schuylkill, Luzerne, Clearfield, Al legheny, York, Delaware, Montgomery, Chester, Lancaster, Huntingdon, Fulton, UeJford, Dlair, Lebanon, Clinton, Carbou, Monroe, Lehigh, Mifllin, Westmoreland, Northampton, Juniata, Somerset, Indiana, Green, Elk, Forest, Franklin, Perry Cumberland, Dauphin, Lawrence, Ly coming, Union, Snyder, Erie, Crawford, Rucks, M'Kean, Fayette, Philadelphia, and Mercer. ELJSHA W. DAVIS, Speaker of the Houso of Representatives. JAMES L. GRAHAM, Speaker of the Senate. Approved April 4, 18G3. JOHN W. GEARY. . . Mannro for Potatoes. I will give you a receipt for raising potatoes, that is worth the price of your paper for one year to any farmer that is short of manure. It is as good as the best superphosphate of lime, aud it will not cost half as much I have tried it two years, and I am satisfied that it is good on dry land. Take one cask of lime and slack it with water, and then stair in one bushel of fine salt, and then mix in loam, enough so that it will not become. mortar; it will mako about five barrels. Put in half a pint in a hill, at planting. .Mas sachusetts Farmer. How to Keep Kettles from Rusting Insido. Keep an oyster shell in your tea ket tle, aud it will prevent the formation of a crust on tho inside of it, by attracting the h My particles to itself. Try it. - Whims of Locomotives. There are some curiosities about ma chines which seem to be unaccountable Every user of a sewinjr machine knows that from some unknown reason the ma chine which yesterday performed its work well, so almost enthusiastically, to-day refuses to do more than half of its task, and docs that half in a surly, indifferent manner. So with the other machines. J-ven tho steam engine is subiect these! fits. Is there some occult bond of sympa thy between the operator and his machine. by which the latter is influenced by the mental condition of the former? For it certain that these differences cannot always be attributed to atmospheric or other external influences.- This matter quite harmoniously and truthfully treated in the subjoined extract: lt It is perfectly well known to experi enced practical engineers, that if a dozen different locomotive engines were made at the same time, of the same power, for the same purpose, of like materials, in the same factory, each of these locomotive engines would out with his own peculiar whims, and ways, only ascertainable by experience. One cngiue will take a great deal of coal and water at once; another will not hear to such a thin'r. but will in sist on being coaxed by spadesful and bucketsful. One is disposed to start off, when required, at the top of his speed, auothcr must have a little time to warm at his work, and to get well into it. These peculiarities are so accurately mastered by skillful drivers, that only particular men can persuade engines paticular to do their best. It would seem as if some of these excellent monsters declared, on be ing brought out of the stable, " if it's Smith who is to drive me, I won't go. If it's my friend Stokes, I'm agreeable to any thing." All locomotives are low-spirited in damp and foggy weather. They have a great satisfaction in their work when the air is crisp and frosty. At such a timo they arc very cheerful and brisk, but they strongly object to base and mists. These are points of charac ter on which they arc all united. It is in their peculiarities and varieties of character that they are most remarkable. The railroad company who should con sign all their iocoaiotives to one uniform standard of treatment, without any allow ance for varying shades of character and opinion, would soon fall as much behind hand in the world as those greater gov ernments are, aud ever will be, who pur sue the same course with the finer piece of work fallen man." Chewing Gum. The Philadelphia Ledger says: "Chew ing gum is an article used somewhat ex tensively among your people, and whilst we have no desire to interfere with their tastes, it is perhaps well that they should know what it is made of. The manufac ture of this jrum is carried on chiefly in Massachusetts, and the process has htth - j IUU UWU klUl U ECtlVl. n ' A New En-r- land newspaper however, says that one of the employees of the place having been discharged, he divulged the secret, and it . . . ... then cocs on to tell the process. " Ihe gum ia ni9ilA or corf u in narffl rt oi?r;i arabic, gum tragacenth, a small supply of rosin and fat. The fat used is not lard (that being too expensive), but it is substance expressed from the bodies of hogs, cats, dogs and,other animals found dead in the streets of cities. After the various ingredients arc melted together in a huge kettle, a certain kind of alkali is put in for the purpose of whitening the gum. This alkila is the same that is used by dyers with indigo to give a and permanent blue to flannels." deep How to Get Sleep. This is to many persons a matter of high importance. Nervous persons, who are troubled with wakefulness and excita bility, usually have a strong tendency oft blood on the brain, with cold extremities. The pressure of the blood on the brain keeps it in a stimulated or wakeful state and the pulsations iu the head arc often! painful. Let them rise and chafe t lie j body aud extremities with brush or tow- j a! nr nih smartlv with the hands to rm- moto circulation, and withdraw tha cx- ccssivo amount of blood from tho brain, and they will full asleep in a few mo- ' llic " J Qocior and delight. mcnts. A cold bath, or a sponge bath,! il3 usc SIVCS tho mtJ-l just occupation to and rubbing, or a good run or a rapid j prevent its falhug into reverie or absorb- walk in tho open air. or a "oin- up nudS "ams or mougnt, while every muscia down stairsa fewtimesjustbefore retiring, will aid in equalizing and promote sleep. These rules are simple and easy of appli cation iu the castle or cabin, ond may minister to tho comfort of thousands who would freelv expend money for an ano- dyno to promote "Nature's sweet restorer, balmy sleep." J J The Iowa Falls Sentinel publisher a very 6trangc story about a horse in the nnnhnrn mrt of Franklin countv chanff. . . , - ---j - n? ts color. It says : "Mr. Jiruwn has a four-your oil colt which he prizes every hi-hly. In color ho is naturally a bright bly. In color ho is naturally bay. Mr. Drown say3 that he wcut to his ptable on a reccut Sunday morning, and there stood a pure white horse. He was much astonished when, on examir.a t ion . he found that tho horse was un- doubtedly his own oolt. Mr. Drown pro-'quantity of hooks and eyes. A jury of ceeding to the houso to inform his wife ' tha . neighbors, formally summoned for and children, when they all returned totho occasion, returned an oral verdict the stable, and there stood a coal black that tho unfortunato deceased (cow) had horse, to the astonishment of tho family. probably swallowed a railkmaU or a.wa- Since that time the colt has changed from ; terfall at some poiiod of its aJult life. hhioL' tn hnv. white and sorrel. Thisisa: - ., ; tram'Q storv. but the most perfect proofs' arc bx-jiidht to nuhou it. Snow in the Sierra Nevada. The RuCalo Commercial Advert iter quotes from a letter : "We are now getting ready to open our" line from Cisco to tho Summit (13 miles). The snow on that portion of the track which was laid last fall, averages bout 10 feet in dep.th. We have about 500 Chinamen at work now trenching it oit. and expect to increase the force to 1.000 during the week. We shall, after trenchw- ing it, leave it for a few day3 for the sun' to operate upon, when we shall put one of the large snowplows with eight oC our large engines behind it, and proposa then to make quick work of it. I neyer saw" snow (to speak of) until I came here.- In the valley we are having comfortably warm weather. The flowers are in bios--som in fact flowers are in blossom 'hera all the year round. The plains ia tho base of the mountains are covered with the most lovely wild flowera you ever saw; and are very fragrant ; and yet, within sixty miles, we find snow on an average ten feet deen on the level ! I came iu oFv Ihe road to-day, and while the trains was waiting on a side track, made two of tho-; most beautiful bouquets you can imagine. This is decidedly a great country, and barring the accommodations, a delightful, country for the tourist or pleasure seekv cr." ... Do Not Swallow Grape Seeds. Grape seeds, cherry stones and the lika are insoLuble in any and all of the juices used in the process of digestion ; they must therefore pass from the bocly in tho same state in which they are swallowed. . In their passage along the alimentary can--al they cannot but induce more or less irritation, and if the digestive organs are at all weak they must of necessity eusa great disturbance ; being hard, almofli like stones, they scrape along over . thV delicate mucus membrane which lines tha stomach and bowels, and frequently lodge in the coils of the intestines, or becoma imbedded in the delicate lining and causa ulceration and tumefactions of the bowels,, which may result in death. A friend5- j just tells of a young man who having ea ten a quantity ot grapes, became ill, suf fered intensely, was unable to get relief from any source, and finally died. Ari examination disclosed a large quantity of cherry stones imbedded iu the bowels, to gether with about halfapintof grape seeds, which had completed the work of death. Jlrs. Dr. Jlillcr. Sfcnple Directions for Preserving Furs,- Ladies arc often anxious about keep ing furs free from moths during the sum mer months. Some one advertises to send the requisite information for on dollar. Darkness is all that is necessary. The "milie'r," the eggs from which Do-ha are hatched, only moves ia light ; the metha themselves work in darkness. Hantr the' - furs in a very dark closet, and keep the door shut; keep it always dark, and you can have no trouble. But, as closet doors arc some- times left open, the better way is to enclose the articles loosely in a pa- per, put. iuta in a pniow case, or vran 'J ; around a cloth, and hang it up in a dark closet. Camphor, spices, or perfumes aro of no use. Continual darkness is suffi- aicient. And do not take out the furs in June or July to give them an "aim for even then comcth ths enemy, and it may be that in, fifteen minutes after ex posure, it has deposited a hundred eggs. If you consider an airing indispensable, give tho furs a good switching and put them quickly back. Horace Grcclcy says in his "Recollec- -tions :" , . "The woods are my special department. Whenever I can save a Saturday froui thofarm I try to give a good part of it to my patch of forest. The axe is the heal thiest instrument that a renn ever ban--died, and is essentially so for habitual writers and ether sedentary workers, whose shoulders it throws back, expand- -ing their chests and opening their lungsr - -It every youth and man, from fifteen, to' fifty years old, could wield an axo . two hours per day, dyspepsia would vanish. from the earth, and rheumatism become decidedly feajeo. I am a poor chopper, in the body receives sufficient yet not ex hausting exercise. I wish our boys would learn to love the axo." ; A witness being called to give evi dence in court in a Connecticut, respect- ! jg the loss of a thirt, gave the follow-- o i'Mother said, that Ruth said, that Nell said, that 1 oily told hcr.that sheseea man t.l. 1 .ft . al luai sce a Dy run through tue street wuu- a streaked llannel shirt;, an cuecKer,. . nn't i:. : vucr : nuu yui - j for mother has whipped them a tlni for lying." thousand Caution to Milkmaids.. A man ia Kentucky killed a sick cowt a few days since, iu whose etomach- was found a large brass pin, a hair-pin, "and a The majority for the new CVaslitutioo in 1 1, tue!:ua is 13. Wv.