THE JEFFERSONlAN. JDcuotcfc to politics, Citcraturc, Agriculture, Science, illornlitn, aub (Scncral Intelligence. v. i , t: VOL. 31. STROUDSBURG, .MONROE COUNTY, PA., AUGUST 21, 1873. NO. 15. Published by Theodore Schoch. TERMS Two IUr h year in advance and if not pail &ef're the eml of the year, two dollars and fifty No :ier lisooiUinue I until all arrearages are paid rest a! the o.-rtion ot the Editor. ityA lrertisements of one square of (eight lines) or sue nrse tnterwaas ai an. cacti auuilloual neition, 5 cent. Longer oae in proportion. jon imiikting, OF ALL KINDS, Executed in the hishect style of the Art, an en the tafi reas HMVie leriiis. WILLIAM S. REES, Surveyor, Conveyancer and Eeal Estate Agent. Farms, Timber Lands and Town Lots FOR SALE. Office next door above S. liees' news Depot ami I door lieluw the corner More. March 20, 1873-tf. DR. J. LANTZ, Surccoa anil Mechanical Dentist. Will li.t hi oSm n Xain Street, in the fccoimI wwrv f Or. S. U'rflliui"- krtrk iMiilcliiig. neat I v oppo- nre'tiie MrnndsJmtg none. and We fl.iilerj. hiniM-lf tint ljr eighteen year constant ur-tit-e and the iiioi-t jnic-t and o.irettil altoili -n to ail mailer pertaining l hi profesMon, that he is fully able to rf.iriu all rlioii. in the denial lute in the uiotctieful,tate fit .tnil lll;LUiKr. SikwuI 3-ixrMon to sarins the Natural Teeth : aI.iu to itlte in.-rrli.iu ii( Artificial ferth on Rubber, ;-ilil. ik-r ir (iiituiiiwu Kuutt, and perfect fits 1 it all raM!! iasaatil. M isl persons ka Xiie rK.:rt f.t ly and danger ol en f rui ing llielr work to the inexperienced, orlo lhoj-e living at a litance. April 13, 171. ly D II. J. II. SIIUIjL., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. tlflice lt floor nfewefciniatidsburg House, residence 1st djr above Post Office. Office liours from 9 to 12 A. M., from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 r. M. May 3 '73-ly. D r. uco. IV. jackso.v PHYSICIAN, SURGEON fc ACCOUCHER. In the old office of Ic A. Reeves Jackson, TPidence, corner of Sarah and Franklin street. STROUDSBURG, PA. -August 8, 1 872-1 1'. jR. ii. j. iatti:dso., 0rZRlTIG JND BECIIAHriL DEMIST, nivliig located "in "RartL ftaMurlslmrjr, Pa., an aiounces that he is now prcprred to insert arti ficial teeth in the -most botcliftil and life-like in inner. Also, great atten&tn given to filling am! preserving the natural teeth. Tie! it ex tracted r&Jiout pain by ims of Nitrous Oxide ia. All otWtr yr4c tincidtrat to the profession line in the nnwt JcUJ.fu! iwwi approved style. All work attended -fwnjuly and warranted. Charges reasonable. Patreaage of the public solicited. Office in A. W. Ix)der' new liuilding, op jpoite Analomink House, East Stroudsburg, lt.l July 11, 1873 ly. D K. X. 1,. PECK, .Surg-wn Dentist. Announces ihil&av-in; just returned from Dental CoMegs, he wfulf prepared to make artificial teeth in the ni(K beautiful and Iife ii'ie manner, and to fiW decayed teeth ac cording to the most i-uprcved method. Teeth extracted without pain, when de iriJ, hv the use of Xitroua Oxide Gaa, which i etttitr-ely hxrwleec. Repairing of 'l k.iMrtj iieatiy kjs. All work warranted. Charjej reisonable. Office in J. G. Keller' new Brick build in;, Mai.i S reet, Stroudsbur, Pa. uj 31-lf J AMIS II. WILTOX, Altornej at Law, . Olfi.-e in the building formerly occuiicd 5y I. M. Uurson, and opjwsite the Strouds burg Hank, Main street, iStroudsburg, J'a. jaii i:;-tf V 3u:rica iioti:i.. The fubscrilicr umM inform tlicnublic that lie lias leased the liwe 5rma!ly kejit by Jacob Kneeht, in the IVjrougli of Stroudsburg, Pa., nd having reiiaintcd and refurnished the name, as prepared to entertain all who may patronize bun. Jt is the aim of the proprietor, to furn ah superior ccmtnodations at moderate rates and will pare no pains to promote the com fort of the guests. A liberal hhare of public patnmasre solicited. -April 17, 72-tf. D. L.PISLE. jI PI.I2 IIOL'.SC, HONESDALE, PA. !Mot central ligation ot any Hotel in town. , . . Jl. W. KIPLE & SOX, J 0 Main street Proprietors. -January 9, 1S73. 1)'. IICKAWAXNA IIOL'Si:. J OPPOSITK TIIK DEPOT, East Stroudsburg, Pa. B. J. VAN COTT, Proprietor. The bar contain the choie?t Liqnorn and he table is supplied with the best the market .affords. Charge moderate. fmaT 3 1872-tf. .ilouut Vernon House, 117 and 119 2forth Second St. ABOVE ARCJI, PHILADELPHIA. May 30, 1872- ly. REV. EDWARD A. WILSON'S (of Wil liamsburgh, N. Y.) Recipe for CON SUMPTION and ASTHMA carefully com pounded at HOLLINSHEAD'S DRUG STORE. 07" Medicines Fresh and Pure. ; ov. 21. 1697. W. HOLLINSHEAD. THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONVEN TION. Mackey and Gordan Nominated. Harrisburg, August 13. The Re publican State Convention was called to order at noon to day bj Mr. Lrrett, chair man of the State Central Committee, the hall of the House of Representatives at the time being thronged by the delegates and spectators ol the proceedings. S. II. Miller, of Mercer, was made tem porary chairman. The usual committees were appoiuted, when a recess was taken to hall past two P. M., iu order to allow the committees to meet. The convention again met at half past two o clock, and was called to order by the temporary president. General Campbell, . chairman of the committee on Permanent Organization, named as president of the convention, lion. A. u. Ulmsted of I orter county, with the usual number of vice presidents and secretaries. THE NOMINATION'S. R X . Mackey was nominated for State Treasurer on the 6rst ballot, receiv ing! Id votes. Mr Ileurv. of Cambria. d IS votes. The nomination was made unanimous. Judge Isaac Gordon, of Jefferson coun ty, was nominated for Judge, of the Su pre me Court on the tenth ballot, which resulted Gordon, 77 ; Paxsoa, 48 ; Rut ler, 5. The nomination was then made unauimous. THE RESOLUTIONS. The following are l e resolution, which were unanimously adopted . I he liepublicans of Pennsylvania, in convention assembled, renew their expres eion of couGJencc in and devotion to the principles of Republicanism, and de clare : First. That ihey heartily indorse and re-adopt the Republican National and State platforms ol 1872. cecoud. 1 hat the national administra tion commands their coutinued confid ence, and is entitled, by its promotion of the best interests and prosperity of the ation, to the earnest support of the pco pie. Third. That the administration or Gov ernor llartranft call for our warmest ap probation. During the short time he has been iu the Executive Department he has established a State policy which has just y endeared hi m to the people of this Commonwealth, and has amply justified the confidence we have placed in him. rourth. lhat while earnestly in favcr of constitutional reform, and of such a revision of our State Constitution as will make it an effective instrument in pre venting and punishing the corrupt abuses that have crept under our present system, we demand emphatically and especially that whatever is done or left undone, the main purpose for which the Constitution al Convention was called, the absolute prevention of special legislation, shall be so placed before the people as to secure their separate and decisive expression thereon. Fifth. That the reduction of the State debt from $41,000,000 to $26,000,000 ; the repeal of all State taxes on real estate ; the establishment of schools for the education and support of soldiers' or phans, the maintenance of our excellent and prosperous system of common schools, and the establishment of a policy paying ufl our debt at the rate of 82,000,000 a year, together with the generally flourish ing coudition of our prosperous old Com monwealth, are evidences that the Re publicans during their twelve years of control in Pennsylvania have faithfully aduiinistred her affairs, and that her gov ernment may be safely left in their hands Sixth. That there should be rigid economy in the State and National ad ministrations, and taxes should be reduced in both as rapidly us consistent with good government, the maintenance of the pub lic credit, and the certaio extinguishment of the State and National debts. Seventh. That the public lands belong to the people, and should be sacredly re served for homes for actual settlers, and we pronounce against all further grants of these lands to corporations. Eighth. Thatadequate provision chould be made by law for the protection of per sons engaged in mining and other hazor dou forms of labor. Ninth. That when retrenchment is re quired to lighten the burden of taxation and to continue the reduction of the pub lic debt, an increase of salaries is unwise, and we condemn without reserve voting for or receiving increased pay for services already rendered, whether in State or na tion, and demand that the provisions of the late act of Congress by which salaries were increased should promptly and un conditionally be repealed. Tenth. That we heartily denounce cor ruption, wherever found, and are sincere ly desirous for honest economy and poli tiral purity in all official administrations. T secure this is the duly of every cit izen, and to this end every good man should feel bound not only to participate in polities but to labor actively to see that none but good men secure party appoint ments or nomination. Eleventh. That the practice of loading an appropriation bill esseutial to the sup port of the Government with objection able legiblation in the shape of amend menu toward the close of the session is the prolific source of abuse and fraud up on the people, and its reform is urgently demanded j that as coaitueroe and hciqae industry have both uniformly prospered under a tariff so arranged as to afford both revenue and protection, the present tariff should he left undisturbed ; and, as all tariffs are levied primarily for revenue, it would be a poor Government indeed which could not afforded to arrange its details so as to encourage the growth of home manufactures and the creation of a re muoerative home market for all products of our soil. Twelfth. That order and security in the States lately in rebellion must come through stem enforcement of law enacted to protect life, liberty, and freedom of thought, and cannot be secured by ren dering these just and necessary laws in operative through Executive clemency to unrepentant assassins now undergoing punishment in pursuance of law. Thirteenth. That as during the time the Republican party has been in power it has had to confront graver difficulties and more new and perplexing questions of government than ever were presented to any other party to solve, aud has solv ed them so judiciously aud wisely that the country mderses its decisions and ac cept its work, it is the only organization ... competent to so meet the grave issues that are now constantly arising and so secure the just rights of the whole peo pie. Fourteenth. That we sympathize with every movement to secure for agriculture and labor their due influence, interests and rights, and the Republican party will be their alley in every just ecort to attain their ends. An additional resolution, reported by the Committee, expressing regret at the retirement of Chief Justice Read from the Supreme Bench of the State, was also adopted, as well as a resolution authoriz ing the candidates nominated and the President of the Convention to appoint a chairman ot the state central committee The Convention then adjourned sine die Antiquity of Man Remarkable Dis covery. It has of late been the belief of a large class of men of science that the existence of the human race on the earth dates much further back than was generally supposed, while the followers of Darwin and Lubbock have claimed that the hu man race has been in a constant state ol progression from bar barism and brutish aucestry. Accounts were given of a bu rn in skeltou unearthed by the quarrymen in Meander alley, near the Dussel, at Elbenfeldt, iu Rhenish Piussia. The professors pronounced it to be of great an tiquity, and were of the opiuion that the Neaoder man, whose bones possessed in genaral the same qualities which char acterize the bones of the mammoth found in neighboring districts, and inclosed in the same diluvial loam, lived together with the mammoth and other extinct animals of the drift period. lhe skull was the subject of measure ment and calculation of brain power. Its capacity was found to be about equal to that of the average Polynesian and Hottentot, and while the opinion of geolo gists differed in regard to minor points, all admitted the great antiquity of the skull and bones. A discovery has just been reported in Kansas, which if verified, is far more remarkable than the above de scribed. The Osage Mission (Kansas) Journal says that a human skull was re cently found near that place imbedded in a solid rock, which was broken open by blasting. Dr. J. C. Wcirley, of Osage Mission, compared it with a modern skull which he had in his office, found that it resembled the latter in its general shape, though it was an inch and a quater larg in its greatest diameter, and much better developed in some other particulars. He says of the relic : "It is that of the cranium of the human species, of large size, imbedded in conglomerate rock of the tertiary class, and found several feet beneath the surface. Parts of the frontal, parietal, and occipital bones were carried away by explosion. The piece of rock holding the remains weighs some forty or fifty pounds, with many impres sions of marine shells, and through it ruus a vein of quartz, or within the cranium crystalizcd organic matter; and, by the aid of a microscope, presents a beautiful appearance." If this be a fact, and it seems to bear the impress of truth in the description, neither Lyell nor Hugh Mil ler, nor any of the rest of the subterran ean explorers report anything so strange. The Neander man comes the nearest to it, but the Neanderthal bones were found in loam only two or three feet beneath the surface. This skull ' was discovered in solid rock. If the Kansas discovery be real, it is worthy of a thorough scien tific investigation. Naslicille Union. The Norristown Herald says some of the farmers have threshed the raking of their crop and taken it to market. The quality is said to be very good and the yield heavj. It is stated by some of the farmers that the ratings this year amount to nearly as much as their entire crop last year, thus proving the crop to be an excellent one, a fact which tends tow ards a decline in the price of flour. A delegation of Russian Quakers, who have been hunting a location for a large colony of their people, have determined on locating iu Harvey county, Kansas, aud will return to, Russia at once. The colony they represent is a large, intelligent and wealthy one. The Law of a Wife's Property. BY GAIL HAMILTON. In every case of suffering we instinct ivcly seek the cause, and if we can fasten the blame on some one there is an im mediate sense of relief. If hardship, can be traced to an unjust law, it is no small satisfaction to pound away upon theenorm ity of the existing law, and to work for its repeal. 1 et it is forever aud forever true that individual suffering can never be prevented by general law. We may frame them into a code as just and wide as the human mind can compass, aud still men and womeu will be happy aud miser able according to their own private tem perament, sagacity and character. This should not prevent us from improving laws wherever improvement is needed, but it should prevent us from cxpectin too great results from the improvement ; and we should also remember that, though one person suffers under the law aud be cause of the law, its repeal or modifica tion may work equal suffering on another person. Remembering 'all this, let us glance at the laws of property, as they re late to domestic relations. Statute law, in some of the States at least, gives to the husbaud a right of dower in his wife's estate. She dies, leaving property in real estate inherited from her father, and in no manner ac quired from her husband. Rut he though he cannot sell this property, controls its entire income as long as he lives. The children have no claim upon it whatever during their father's life, and no benefit from it except through his will and pleas ure. He may be an affectionate father, but an inefficient man, and may let their wealth dwindle into iusignificauce through sheer incapacity or indolence, and though his daughter grow up and marry au en ergetic business man, who could rehabili tate her possessions and establish a for tune, he can not touch them unless the father gives consent. The father may marry again a domineering, niggardly and narrow-minded woman, who hoards in her own name the income of the property of her step children, who has not foresight enough to see that a certain expenditure on that property is necessary to keep it from deterioration. Ry this law, there fore, the children are absolutely deprived of any right or control over their own in heritance during their father's life. They are no better off than if nothing had beeu left them. Ol joint property the laws are different in different States. In some, men ure favored ; in one or two, perhaps, women. I think the most common custom is for the man to inherit the whole income of his wife's estate during life, and to be un der obligation to support the children. The wife inherits by law one half, or less, of the personal property, and the income of one third of the real estate during life. The personal property she may dispose of, but the real estate is inalienable, and reverts to the children after her death. The man may make a will, but if he does not leave his wife her "thirds," she can break the will. The wife's will is not valid without the consent-of her husband, j No act of hers can deprive him of his right of drower in her real estate, his life income Jroni her property. lie is in alienably "tenant by courtesy," as the law gingerly puts it. One corrective the law supplies that a certain degree of incapa city or neglect in the father makes it pos sible for both himself and his children to be placed under guardianship. The in equality of footing on which men and wo men are .laced by the action of these laws is not so great as is often supposed He is required to support her children, while his children are not legally throwu upon her, but have separate provisions made for them. Nor is this, as it might at first seem, because a father's love is as sumed to be stronger than a mother's. It is at least, out of respect to the heads of law makers, let us assume that it is because the father is supposed to have a better business capacity, a better under standing of the investment of money, than has the mother. The childrcu cau jut as safely be trusted to her love ; but as she is not generally the business man ager during her husband's life, it is sup posed that she is relieved by having the children's property relegated to another guardian than herself The evil of this is that the family bond is weakened, the dependence of children upon their mother lessened, and, in some cases, her life narrowed. .When there are minor children it is far better that the family should be kept together, and that the mother's influence should be strengthened by her being really as well as nominally the head of the family. She should have not only moral but real pow er. The authority that formerly rested in father and mother should now ccutrc in her. The appropriating power of par liamcnts is a great check on sovereigns. It is good for bovs to kuow lhat their mother holds the purse. If the children are crown up uieu and women at their father's death, it i a crule thing for them to take the property away from their mother. It is by moral right hers as much as her husband's. She has worked as hard as he. Her prudence, pa tience, iodustry, sagacity have contributed as much as is to the family fortunes. Her sufferings, privatioua, self sacrifices have been ironieaeu,rab!y greater that lus. it is often true that the combined labor of both has gathered a sum whose income of itself is only eooagh to furtiuh a com fortable living. If the window could have it iiot j ; I I t. , t t'n juoi. as H was auring tier nusuaua s uie she would be abundantly provided for; but the division allowed by law leaves her an entirely insufficient sum, and she feels immediately cramped aud anxious, while the money which she has hardly earned is carried away by sons and daugh ters. This is unjust and offensive. liar, per's Bazar. The Strangest of Strange Cases. In the thirtieth annual report (for 1872) of the State Lunatic Asylum at Utica, we find a description of the follow ing remarkable case : A woman thirty years of age, single, seatustrcas, with no hereditary tendeucy to insauity, but of a highly nervous and excitable organiza tion, emotional and irregular in fecliog, at times bouyant and lively, and then gloomy and depressed. Her health dur ing early life was delicate, though she suffered from no definite disease. At the age of 20, in April, 18G2, she was seized with pain in the head. It was of short duration, but severe, and during its con tinuance she was delirious. Attacks of the same character, both in the severity of the puin and the mental disturbance, have occurred since at intervals of from one to three months. Her mother says for years she has complained of pain, and pressed her hand on either side of her head, with the exclamation, 4,Oh ! mother, mother, I shall die !" That five years ago she was obliged to call in help, as the patient threatened and intended to take her own life ; that both before and after she began the use of morphia her con duct was peculiar and erratic ; that after the morphia habit was known her con duct for many years preceding was wrongly attributed to this cause. In this condition she was admitted to the institu tion, on the 5th of May, 1871. Now comes the truly mysterious part of the case. Examination revealed scars and ecchymosed spots, covering nearly the i whole of the body which could be reach ed by her own band. It was hard and extremely sensitve to the touch. This condition of swelling and tenderness extended in a narrow ridge to the spine. ror two weeks applications were employ ed, without success, to relieve the pain and tension. At this time, on the 13th of August, the patient in rubbing her hand over the breast discovered an elevat ed poiut, just under the skin, which on pressure gave a pricking sensation, this was cut and a broken needle extracted. On the 15th another needle was removed. The breast was now iuflarued aud ex tremely sensitive. August 28th another needle was taken out. From this time till September 29th one to five needles were removed daily. Dur ing October and November needles, were taken from various parts of the body. The largest number extracted in a nay day was twelve. For the first two months but compara tively little pain was felt in the extrac tion. The skin was thickened, harsh and dry, and almost insensible from prolonged aod distributed use of the injections. Afterward she suffered acutely, and often begged that their removal might be post poned from day to day. No needles were removed during the last two weeks of her life ; 28G were ta ken from her body during life ; eleveu were found in the tissues after death ; three were passed from the rectum dur ing sickness ; making a total of 300 nee dies and pieces. Of this number 24C were whole and fifty-four were parts The patient repeatedly aod persistently denied any kuowledge of having intro duccd them either by the stomach or through the skin. Her mother could throw no light upon the subject. She, however, recalled, the circumstance that the patient purchased at one time ten pa pers of needles, and could account for only two of them. They were not obtained or introduced while in the asylum. She was under strict surveillance, and had no means of obtaining auy number of nee dies, and those removed were all rusted, and bore evidence of having been a long time in the body. The stomach was closely examined after death, and was in a perfectly healthy condition, with no evidence of any previous inflammatory action. The only theory which seems to us at all tenable, is that they were introduced through the skin while she was under the influence of morphia, hypodermicaliy ad ministered, and while suffering from hysteria. That some were lound in posi tions where they could not have been in sorted by the patient can be accounted for by the movements in the tissues, which were observed so often during the life of the patient. Mr. Chang, of North Carolina, was re cently called as a juror on a case in Coutt. The parties who lost the case have filed reasons for a new trial, one of which is that a pcrsou not a member of the jury was present at their deliberations. Mr. Eng was the intruder, and excuses him self on the ground lhat ho wns so attach ed to Chang that he couldn't live a mo ment apart from him. At the Ruffalo races on Saturday the race freo to all was won by Goldsmith's Maid in three straight heats, Americau Girl neeond, Jim Irving distauced. Time 2:20, 2:20, 2:2U- What to do with Old Books and News papers. Not long since a gentleman visiting a charity hospital, remembering that ho had some illustrated papers in his pocket, gave them to an old man there who'could not read. He would have forgotten the circumstance if he had not been remind ed of it by one of the physicians of the institution, whom be met afterward. "He has not yet fiuished studying those pic tures," continued the Doctor, after men tioning the incident. "Do you remember the dull, vacant countenance of the man? You would be surprised now at if sprightliness, and when I spoke to him ot the change, he said . 'Uh, Doctor ! you can't know what a joy these paper have been to me ! I have Iain on this bed week after week ; I have counted again and all the squares iu this counter pane ; I can shut my eyes and put my fiogeron any particular spot in it. I know every speck on the walls of my room. I can tell just how many bricks in the wall of the opposite building can be counted through my window, and I have been so very tired until I got these carers.' " Is not such a result worth the expendi ture of a little trouble, a postage stamp, and a newspaper wrapper 7 Generous hearted people often complain that they can give nothing, because they have no money to bestow ; and yet there arc so many tender charities that require so lit tle money, and sometimes none at all. If travellers would mail books aud jour nals to some charitable institution, instead of lcaviog them scattered about in cars and hotels, the benefit conferred would be out of all proportion to the small amount of trouble requisite. Stay at home readers can take their discarded books to some poor unfortunate they may chance to know, or send them to those who are interested in public charities, that they may dispose of them. Aud even many well invalids (who are generally great readers) will, doubtless, be glad to learu that, although apparently able to do bo little for themselves or any one else, they have this opportunity afforded them of so greatly helping other in invalids, more unfortunate than themselves, to aa enjoyment for which they are too poor to pay. Subscriber's Monthly. A Youth Tortured Most Inhumanely by Two Ruffians. A horrible outrage was perpetrated in Linn township, Warren county, Iowa, on a boy fourteen years of age, by two men named Hart and McKissick. The boy, who was living at McKissick's, was ac cused by them of robbing the two men who slept in the room with him. The boy denied his guilt and threats failed to extort a confession. The two brutes whipped him unmercifully, again and again, until Monday night, when the boy was taken to a well, some ten feet deep, with about five feet of water in it, and with a rope round his neck he was lower ed repeatedly, head foremost, into the water until nearly drowned. The same night he was taken up stairs, in McKis sick's house by McKissick and Hart, and there laid on his face on the floor, his feet bound with a rope passed over the rafters, so as to draw his feet some twenty inches from the floor. His hands were bound behind him and drawn up in the same way to about the same elevation, aud his head lashed to a bed post by a cord from his neck. In this condition he was left until ten o'clock Tuesday, when some neighbors discovered aod released him from his painful position, more dead than alive. The boy had neither food nor water, save wheu ducked iu the well, from Sunday evening until Tuesday noon, McKissick and Hart, who are both men of property, were arrested last week and held to answer for the assault with iutent to inflict great bo lily injury, and were also served with notice in a civil suit for $5,000 damages. The Length of Days. The days of Summer grow longer as wc go Northward, and the days of Winter shorter. At Hamburgh, the longest days has seventeen hours, and the shortest seven. At Stockholm, the longest day has eighteen and a half hours, and the shortest five and a half. At St. Peters burgh, the longest day has nineteen, and the shortest five hours. At Finland, the longest has twenty one and a half, and the shortest two and a half hours. At Wauxlerbus, in Norway, the day last lasts from the twenty second of May to the first of July, the sun not getting below the horizon for the whole time but skim ming along very close to it in the North. At Spitzbergen, the longest day lasts three months and a half. Such a thing as occurred the other day in Leavenworth will be interesting to ail students of chemistry. A lady went to her cellar and brought up what should have been a jug of yeast. Mysterioua transformation ! Wheu she poured out the jug's contents, they proved to be pure whisky! She immediately applied to her husband for scientifio information, but she found that he was aa much amaz ed as herself at the wondciful change. In fact, he thought there must be some thing more than natural about it, and discouraged investigation. He is prob ably thiuking it over, for he has been very Ijw spirited ever since. 1'f