Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, August 18, 1886, Image 4

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THE VAIiCE OF GOLD DUST.
It was not Known to the Earliest Min
ers In California Varied DctIccs
for Adulteration. ' ;.
The value of golddust was not known
to the earliest minors in California.
Marshall ami tlmse who were with him
at the saw-mill nice lad never seen
gold in its virgin state before the dis
. - eoTOrv. The first pold soM at Colonia,
it is said, only brought $8 an ounce, but
it afterward rose to ?1G, at which figure
it remaind for some years, filers and
buyers did not for a long time realize
anv difference in the value of different
dust. "What are you raying for dust
todav?" was the question often asked
by the miners of the dust-buyers. Thus
in those times no more difference was
recognized inthequality of different gold
dust than is to-day recognized in the
quality of different sand or sawdust.
Buyers mixed their dust together as
they sent it to the mint, and iaid an
averaee irice for it alL This was a
very good thing for the miners who had
poor dust and very unfair for those who
had dust of the best quality. After
wards it was found that the dut as it
was taken from the earth varied greatly
in value. Some of it, according to mint
returns, was worth even as low as $0 an
ounce, and some was worth $J0 and
more. This is on account of the fact
that a greater or less amount of baser
metals, sliver, copier, etc., is aiwajs
found in alloy with gold in its natural
state. Gold dust differs as much in ap
pearance as it does in quality. Some of
it is yellow and bright, and some Is dull
In color, dark irreen and black. The
bricht vellow dust is not the best in
quality," as might ordinarily be sup
posed.' Some of the purest gold ever
aimed has been aunosi uum:k in coior.
"There is also no uniformity in the form
or the jwrticles of gold dust. Some is
1 fine and flour-like, some is coarse ana
smoothly worn, and some is rough and
sefapgy." Dust taken from any one
locality in a mining district is always
remarkably uniform in value, color,
and form. This fact enables buyers-
after some experience, to determine im
r&diately from what locality dust Is
mmeu, ana mini is its tuiue. a ir- ni-t
question asked by a buyer is: "AVheir
did you mine this dust?'' Of course, if
it came from a region that has a reputa
tion for producing gold of a good qual
ity tie buyer can atiora to ay a nign
price for it. 1 liere is lime use in wak'
lag misrepreseiitationi.wben answering
this question, for the buver lias almost
as good means of knowing w here the
dust came from as the seller. This
knowledge is of srreat value to the dust-
buyer in the way of protecting himself
against iraua in me way oi counieneit
dust. etc.
Peculiarities in the form of gold taken
from mining districts often gave a name
to the locality. Chunk canyon, Slug
gulch, and Siecinien ravine are ex
amples. A canyon in El Dorado county
is called String canyon. This is said
to be on account of the very singular
farm of the gold dust found m that reg
j ion. Much of it resembles pieces of
wire one and two inches in length, and
some of it as tine as thread.
Observations of the form of their dust
often led miners to make very valuable
discoveries. All gold, as is well known,
originally came from quartz. In its nat
ural state in the quartz it is very irreg
ular in form. Every rich ravine and
canyon had a gold-bearing quarts vein,
whose wearing away by the elements
had loosened the precious metal, to le
washed down by the water among the
gravel and sand. When gold has leen
washed far from its source the attrition
causes it to become fine and smooth.
As the miner approaches the feeding
quartz vein the gold becomes coarser
and more scraggy, till suddenly the pay
gives out entirely. Then it is certain
that a rich quartz ledge is in the vicin
ity, and in this manner veins have been
struck that have yielded many thous
ands of dollars in a few weeks.
Gold-dust buying in the mining towns
was a very profitable business in the
early days of California. What was
called black sand, composed prin ipally
of iron, was always mingled to a greater
or less degree with the dust when it was
brought to the buyer. This had to be
Toljwn out, and often the finest particles
of gold were blown out with it. Thus
in ifti office Nwhere a large quantity of
dust was bought much line gold would
be scattered around the room. The
dustings of a buyer's counter and
sweepings of his floor were often worth
hundreds of dollars a month. Some
times the buyers were susjiected of
cheating in a more illegitimate manner
by slyly appropriating some of the gold
whHe they were shaking it around and
examining it in the blowpans.
Once a miner who believed a buyer
had swindled him got even in a rather
peculiar manner. Jle had a iair of
brass stirrups weighing two pounds.
Every time he sold dust to this buyer
he filed a portion of the stirnijis among
it till he had palmed off the whole of
them for gold dust.
The Chinese have always lieen the
most successful manufactures of coun
terfeit gold dust. Many a lot of brass
or iron filings, plated with gold, has
been sold by them to unsuspecting buy
ers. Of late years this has lieen less
practiced, however, lecause of the fact
that buyers almost invariably test the
dust with acid, or burn it. y subject
ing it to an intense heat the gold is in it
affected, but any other metal that may
Be mingled with it is soon dissipated in
Vapor. A buyer was once purchasing
some dust from a company of Chinese
miners. His balance scales were on an
open counter before them. Suddenly
he noticed that one of the Chinamen
bad slyry touched the balance in which
the dust was to be weighed. Quickly
looking under the bottom of it, he
found some object sticking to it, which
proved to l a small piece of a sticky
substance, like beeswax. It weighed
half an ounce. The wily Chinamen
had intended, of course, after the dust
was weighed, to remove the wax as
deftly as they had put it on. Marks on
the bottom of the balance revealed the
fact that this trick had often lieen suc
cessful. Thus this company, and ter
b&ps others, had gained half an ounce
H the buyer every time they so'd him a.
lot of dust. This trick and others of a
similar character afterward led almost
all buyers to put their balance scales in
glass cases, instead of having them
open on the counter.
In the early days of California life
specie was not plentiful enough for the
needs of trade, and gold dust was used
almost entirely as a medium of ex
change. . The miners carried it in long
buckskin purses. This compiled all
. kinds of business houses and simps to
have scales with which to weigh the
dust ,AVhat little coined money there
was in circulation was eagerly bought
up by the gamblers who, by piling it up
. in their banks, couM make more of a
display with it. thin they could with
the golil dust.
2b polish plate-glass and remove
slight scratches rub the surface gently,
first with a clean pad of fine cotton
wool and afterward with a similar pad
covered over with cotton-velvet which
has been charged with One rouge. The
surface will under this treatment, ac
quire a polish of great brilliancy,
quite free from any scratches. :
The Yellow River, of China, former
ly called the Hoang Ho, is aptly called
China's Sorrow." It will not stay in
the same place. Xine instances are on
record of its having changed its whole
direction. Slips of latitude and longi
tude are common with it Engineers
are now discussing plans to keep it with
in bounds. It is more troublesome than
far own Mississippi.
FARM NOTES.
Feeding Calves. The average boy
of the farm has had plenty of disagree
able experience in the feeding or calves.
Fed trom a pail in the hands of a boy.
the cilf is never properly fed. To feed
one calf and at Ui8 same time keep off
several others as hungry and eager as
only young animals can be, would ho
too much for a man to successfully
cope with, except that he could strike
and kick harder than the boy. " Yet
how large a proportion of the calves
raised are fed in this way? Far more
thin in an nthpr. It is not difficult
however, to make all this work com
paratively easy, wueiuer mere ue umj
three, or four, or twenty, or more calves,
iiavn a. nmner feed in if Dlace and erect
a line of stanchions similar to those for
large cattle, but accomodate to tee size
of the calves. It may be necessary to
make the calves enter these to be fed
for two or three times. They will soon
learn that only here can they get their
r.uvi Thnn. unon the proner call lieing
given, they will eagerly take their
places. W hatever tne vessels iea i rom,
whether of metal or wood, rails or
trniKTtm thev must ba fixed so ttiev can
not be pushed, and they must be kept
perfectly clean ana rresn. vnen me
calves begin to eat grass they should,
within th npit two weeks, be taught
to eat a few oats dally. Thenceforward
the milk ration may be diminished as
. a ii
the grass and grain is increasea, uuv me
dArr.iw nn the one hand and the in
crease on the other must be only as the
paunch of the calf grows. The rennet
or true digestive stomach of the calf is
the larger of the four. In the full
grown animal the paunch is the larg
est, and this increase in the one case
corresponds to the relative decrease in
the other as the animal attains age.
Mowing Around Fences. The
grass beside and in the corners of fences
should be cut ana savea, not omy ue
cause it will come handy next winter,
but for its effect in cutting down weeds
and bushes. Since mowing and reap
ing by machinery have become com
mon it is much more difficult to keep
fences clean from weeds. Stones are
thrown into fence corners to get them
out of the way of the mower and reap
er, and this makes good mowing by the
scythe impossible. A stone is never
cot out of the wav except in the most
temporary and slipshod manner by be
ing thrown into the fence corner. As
the difficulty of keeping tence corners
clean is made apparent farmers snouiu
resolve to take the first leisure time to
remove all obstructions from them.
When thev have done this removing
the fence itself will in many cases be
naturally suggested as the next great
improvement.
The idea that the shade of weeds in
hoed crops saves the soil from drying u p
is not so prevalent as it once was. It is
sometimes urged even now, but only as
a pretext for shirking, and should iauk
with the objections that Solomon puts
in the mouth of the sluggard against
doing necessary work, really based on
his disinclination to do the work re
quired. A weed uprooted serves as a
mulch, but it is not advisable to let It
get large enough for this use. It will
do the soil more good to wary a weed
as soon as large enough to be seen than
to wait for a larger growth. In t he sou
the moisture it has drawn from 14 will
again become arailalve for growing
crops.
Met ii time on every I.irm is spent in
doing small jobs, and if proper conven
iences for these are not furnished the
time wasted is so much clear loss. A
good farmer will try to have stock,
grain, bay and roots, with water, all
under one root, mis enables mm to ao
the work with the least needless labor,
and gives more time for necessary im
provemers. rr.OF. E. "W. Stewart says that sun
flower-seed is a valuable food for stock
if fed properly. Tho best way to feed to
calves is to remove the hulls in & huil-ing-machine
and then boil the meats to
a jelly. It is, in this condition, a good
addition to skimmed milk, sunnower
seed contains 23.6 per cent of oil, while
flaxseed contains 37 per cent The oil
is a mild laxative, and will keep the
coat glossy. Fifty bushels of seed could
be raised from twenty-Bye thousand
plants on an acre.
For growing cucumbers, squashes
or similar plants put old sawdust or
rotten wood about them. Those who
have never tried cucumbers on strong,
bushy stakes like pea-sticks will be sur
prised to note how they enjoy it To
matoes do better trained to stout stakes
than any other way.
Do not spread gas lime directly on
your' land. It is destructive to plant
life unless modified by atmospheric in
fluences. It should first be worked into
compost with old turf, wood mold,
marl or muck. A mass of green vege
table matter, such as weeds, may be
used with it as compost, and it should
not be spread until the whole heap has
been reduced to a fine conditio!'.
Mb. J. A. Watkins, gives the fol
lowing remedy for maggots on sheep.
He says: "I have cured some very hard
cases with kerosene oik Saturate the
sore and wool around it, applying with
a syringe, in order to insert as deeply
as possible. It will kill them instantly
and drive off the flies. I also tried it
with good effect on a sow that was trou
bled with flies."
Cows often chew corn cobs, not for
their nutritive value, bnt for the min
eral they contain, just as they will chew
old bones. In such cases wood ashes,
or, better still, ashes from corncobs,
will be eaten as greedily as salt Ashes
for cows when on green feed corrects
aridity of the stomach, and a few
supplied occasionally will do good.
Don't kill your hens that molt now,
as they will make your early layers,
and also be the most serviceable in win
ter, as they will molt before the cold
weather comes on. Hens that do not
finish molting until late in the season
seldom begin to lay until spring comes
on.
There is one mode of saving bones
which should not be overlooked. It is
to keep a barrel of lye convenient, into
which all the refuse bones should be
dropped. The result Is that phosphate
of potash will be formed, which, unlike
phosphate of line, is soluble in matter,
making one of the most valuable fer
tilizers known.
Hybrid perpetual roses should be
well pruned back, and eld or weak
shoots should be cut out entirely. The
strong shoots should not be left longer
than three or four buds or joints from
the base.
Comet c, 1S80, which was discovered
by Mr. Brooks at Thelps, near Brook
lyn, on the 22d of last month, was a
faint object when detected by him, and
has since become steadily fainter. Its
orbit has been calculated by Dr. S. Op
penheim, of Vienna, from European
and American observations extending
to the end of May, and it appears that
it passed its perihelion on the 3d inst.
at the distance from the sun of 1.43 in
terms of the earth's mean distance. Its
distance from the earth ou the same
scale Is now 0.85, and this has been in
creasing ever since the time of discover?.
FAOKTL.
- - i . t
McCot, : when he cauie to Scott
County, went to wotk for a fanner
named' Ilitt who had a very charming
daughter Emma. A young man whom
Farmer Ilitt had repeatedly driven
from the place continued to come
around, paying his addresses to the
daughter until finally the father, de
spairing of keeping him away by. any
milder means, hired McCoy to thrash
blm every time he came near. Once or
twice, or niy be more, the young man
came, saw the girl, took his thrashing,
and departed. But one day there came
the end of this sort of thing. McCoy,
returning from town, where be had
gone as driver and escort for the daugh
ter, approached the father, saying:
-Well, Mr. Hitt, I've setUed this
business of that young fellow's coming
around here to see Em."
'What do yon mean?" asked the far
mer. "I mean that he won't come any
more, an' you can bet on it"
"Why, Mac, you haven't killed him,
have you?" asked the farmer fearfully.
"No. Better than that"
"What then?"
"I've married Em."
The old farmer flew into a dreadful
rage, but McCoy had the girl.and there
was no getting her away from him, so
Farmer Ilitt like a sensible man, made
the most of it and gave his son-in-law
a piece of land, which he is now tilling,
while "Em" minds the babies like a du
tiful wife.
Miss Birdie McGinnis is one of
the most confirmed flirts in Austin.
She has been engaged to half a dozen
men, and thus far has never married
any of them.
Of late Tom Anjeiry, a dissipated
student of the university of Texas,
has been paying Miss Birdie marked at
tention. A few evenings ago, being in
a secluded place with her, he flopped
down on, his knees and remarked, in an
agonized tone of voice:
"Miss Birdie, I adore you."
"I can't believe you," replied Birdie;
"you men are so fickle and Unreliable,
Your so-called love is a mere passing
whim."
"Oh, no," said Tom; "my love for
you is greater than that of your last
four fellows put together."
Small People in Politics
Speaking of little Miss Breckinridge,
who thought her papa was regarded in
Kentucky as a very smart speaker, re
mluds me of a story I heard of the In
galls children.
"I tell you what, mamma," said the
little son of Congressman , "Idont
like those little Ingalls children so
much as 1 did."
"Why not dear?" said the affection
ale mother.
"They talk so big lately, and they
just look down on me because my pap
is nothing but a Congressman. They
say their papa can just be president of
the United States if be wants to, and
that he has just made the boss speech
in the Senate and everybody says so."
"My dear madam," said widower
Jones to the blushing, blooming widow
W., who had recently buried her elder
ly better-half. "I always thought a
young woman like you, left alone in the
world, with no encumbrances, would
seek the solace of another husband im
mediately; it is the usual way, you
know." "I could not think of it im
mediately," replied the lovely vision In
becoming black and white, "that would
be too soon. I have made up my mind
to wait the proper time and then "
"You need not wait another second,"
replied the ardent woer, "take me now."
The cards are out
Tramp "Sir, a single moment"
Genial Man "Well, my good man?"
Tramp "I will be frank with you.
I am tired of life and have determined
to drink myself to death. 1 have ex
hausted my means and 1 implore you to
furnish the funds to complete my de
struction." G. M. (after a careful survey) "My
good man. 1 regret to say that I have
not f 10.000 to spare."
"Did you read the papers about
seventy-five people in the West being
poisoned by eating ice cream?"he asked
his best girl.
"Oh, yes," she sweetly replied, "but
that doesn't frighten me the least bit
They didn't eat enough of it. If
they had, the poison wouldn't have
hurt them. You know an overdose of
poison never kills. That is why I'm not
afraid of Ice cream. I never stop at
less than three plates."
A boy wrote a composition on the
subject of the Quakers, which he de
scribed as a sect who never quarrelled,
never got into a fight, never clawed
each other, and never jawed back.
The production contained a postscript
in these words: "Fa's a Quaker, but
ma isnt"
Bill Nye is a kind, obliging man.
Some body wrote to him for his auto
graph and received in reply the follow
ing note from the humorist: "Dear
sir, in the absence of my amanuensis
will you kindly excuse me If I write
my autograph myself? Yours, Bill
Nye."
Little Millie (at the dinner table,
to her father, who had given her the
smallest piece of pie on the plate:
"Papa, why is my piece of pie like Eu
rope?" Papa (thoughtfully): "Like Europe?
Indeed, I don't know. Why is it?"
Little Millie: "Because it's the small
est of the grand divisions."
Gus De Smith. "This, Miss Bir
die, is the Holy Family after Raphael."
Miss Birdie "I see the Holy Family,
but where is Raphael?"
Gus "I expect he got away; they
were after him, though.'
Haw Eecrcit "Who goes there?"
Old Veteran "Frlendl"
K.R. "Advance, friend, with the
countersign!"
O. V. "Yorktownl"
K. R "Thanks, old man, TO for
gotten it myself."
Kosciusko MintrnY "I say, Gus,
do you believe in horoscopes?"
Gus DeSmith "No; I believe it Is
all nonsense abcut horoscopes."
Murphy "Well I dont I am satis
fied that all the girls to whom I have
been engaged were born under the in
fluence of the crab, for they all go back
on me."
We can no more judge of the true
value of a man by the impression which
he makes on the public than we can tall
whether the seal was gold or brass by
which the stamp was made.
Ebony can be imitated on wood by
first painting with a 1 per cent., solu
tion of sulphate of copper. When per
fectly dry the wood is painted over
with a liquid consisting of equal weights
of aniline hydro-chloride and spirits of
wine. The blue vitriol acta on the
aniline and forms nlgrosin, a black
which cannot be affected by acids or
alkalies. A lustre can .be added by
coating with simple copal Tarnish.
Tuberculosis and tvnhnid fever arn .Out
Dredominant diseasm and ran no f
death in the French army.
HOUSKHOIJQ.
A physician's daughter thus writes:
Tn tins hniisnhnld rnliimn I rud of SO
many woes In bread-making that It Is
a wonder why no one has yet suggested
on hot I tut in ir other food for bread. Some
of the best physicians now avoid 'sup
pers ana nave op.x. ainners purjiosc
ly to avoid bread and cake. There is
no excuse for bread at breakfast and
dinner, while for supper stewed po
tatoes, with poached eggs or cold meat,
could form the principal part of the
meal, adding son custard, with fruit
and delicate cake; bread is unnecessary.
The children of our family have for
breakfast hominy or oatmeal, with po
tatoes, fruit, delicate meats, with milk,
and perhaps a cracker. For dinner,
meat or chicken, asparagus, potatoes
tnd other healthy vegetables and fruits,
Tith ricefor other simple dessert; while
at supper, potatoes, milk, eggs or cold
chicken, cottage cheese, blanc mange,
with a attle simple cake."
Tackled Tomatoes. Take two
dozen small ripe tomatoes, prick each
one in two or three places, and care
fully preserve the juice that flows from
them; keep it in a covered vessel until
wanted. Put the tomatoes In a deep
earthera jar, and sprinkle a little salt
between each layer. -Place a cover on
the jar and let it remain undisturbed
for three days. On the fourth day re
move the tomatoes from the brine,
wash them thoroughly, and dry them
very carefully. Put them into jars and
add the juice that flowed from them at
first Boll as much vinegar as will en
tirely cover the tomatoes with half an
ounce of pepper, half an ounce of
cloves and a tablespoouful of mustard
seed. The vinegar should be allowed
to get cold, before being poured into
the jars. If desired, some onions cut
into very thin slices, or some celery
finely minced, may be added to the to
matoes. The pickle will be ready to
use in a fortnight The jars must be
tied down and stored in the usual way.
Italian Croquettes. Pound in a
mortar 1 pounds of lean beef, add six
ounces of bread crumbs, wetted and
squeezed dry in a cloth, and three oun
ces of butter, mix well. Then take
one-half ounce each of citron peel finely
minced, of chocolate grated, of pine
kernels, of sugar, and one ounce of
Parmesan cheese grated; add perper,
salt, and the least bit of powdered cin
namon or nutmeg, and mix all thete
ingredients with the meat in the mor
tar, then gradually mix in three or
more eggs, so as to form a compact
paste. Spread a little flour on the table,
put the paste on it and form it Into
balls the size of a Tangerine orange.
Have a saucepan with plenty of lard
boiling hot and fry the balls in this a
couple of minutes, then lay them all in
a sauce pan, pour over them some well-
flavored tomato sauce and let them aim
mer gently about half an hour.
HOW TO CLARIFY EOIT. Just be
fore the soup boils the scum that has
risen to the top during the process of
heating should be carefully removed; a
little cold water poured In will assist the
particles that compose the scum to rise.
After the soup has boiled it should be
strained; this may be repeated, then if
the soup is not as clear as you would
like to have it, mix one egg and its
broken shell with a teacupful of cold
water, then to this add about a teacup
ful of the hot soup, then stir it all Into
the boiling soup; let it boil up well.tben
set the kettle upon the back part of the
stove, and when somewhat cool strain
it
Carrot Soct. Boil some carrots
in salted water; when thoroughly done
drain them and pass them through a
hair sieve; mix the pulp thus obtained
with as much stock as will make it of
the desired consistency; add pepper and
salt and a pinch of sugar. Having
melted about an ounce of butter, mix
it with a tablespoonful of flour, then
gradually add the carrot puree; let it
come to the boil, skim off superfluous
fat and serve with dice of. bread fried
in butter.
Em tress Rice. Boil three table-
spoonfuls of rice, picked and washed
in a pint of milk, with sugar to taste,
and a piece of vanilla; when quite done
put it into a basin to get cold. Make a
custard with a gill of milk and the
yolks of four eggs; when cold mix it
with the rice. Beat up to a froth a gill
of cream, with some sugar and a pinch
of isinglass dissolved in a little water;
mix this very lightly with the rice and
custard ; fill a mould with the mixture
and set it on ice. When moderately
iced turn it out on a disband serve.
Fresh Mackerel. Clean, wash.
wipe inside and out, pepper, salt and
roll in Indian meal or "Wheat Germ
ileal" and fry in hot lard or good drip
ping; drain and serve hot If you wish
a sauce for them add to half a cup of
boiling water the juice of a lemon, a
quarter teaspoonful of mustard and a
tablespoonful of butter rolled in one
of browned flour, salt to liking; boil up
once and serve in a gravy boat.
Beets and Butter Sacce. Take
two Bermuda beets of medium size.
AVash and dry them without breaking
the skin. Boil them for thirty-five min
utes in fast boiling water, slightly salt
ed, which must entirely cover them.
Then scrape off the skin, cut the beets
into slices, and the slices into strips.
Melt an ounce of butter, add to it a
little salt, pepper and teaspoonful of
vinegar. Pour it over the beets and
serve.
A Nice Tea Disk. Make a short
sweetened pie crust, roll thin, and
partly bake in sheets; before it is quite
done take from the oven, cut In rquares
of four inches or so, take up two diag
onal corners and pinch together, which
makes them basket-shaped, now fill
with whipped cream or white of egg, or
both, well sweetened and flavored, and
return to the oven for a few minutes.
Tomato Salad. Peel ripe tomatoes
with a sharp knife, slice crosswise, lay
in a salad bow! and season on the table
with salt, a little sugar, pepper, oil and
vinegar. Keep the tomatoes on ice un
til actually served. They cannot be too
cold. Never loosen the skins by pour
ing boiling water on them.and refrain as
scrupulously from serving them with
the skins on.
Muffins in Tins. Take one cup
of sour milk, one egg, a little shorten
ing, a teaspoonful of bicarbonate of
soda, if the milk is not very soar less
soda will do. Make a thick batter.and
a little salt, and bake in a hot oven. Ir
you cannot obtain sour milk, sweet
milk and baking powder will answer.
To a teacup of sweet milk allow a
heaping teaspoonful of baking powder.
Late Investigations indicate that the
chloropbyl, or green coloring substance
of the leaves, is most liable to pick up
metallic matter absorbed by the roots
of plants. When vines have been man
ured with the sulphate of copper most
of the metal is deposited in the leaves,
merely a trace appearing in the juice of
the grapes. Tea-leaves contain much
iron, doubtless due to the ochreous soil
on which they best grow.
The Medical World has an account of
a patient whose prematurely gray hair
is returning to its original color under
the internal administration of phospho
rixed cod-liver oil.
$exLn ...
"Next!" yelled a Third street barber
oo ho lnnL-od around the room for a new
customer. ' At the call a long-haired
cowboy from the bad lands oi Montana
and a Minneapolis dude came to their
feet and advanced towards the chair.
The dude was a utile aueau anu seaieu
himself, when the cow puncher said he
in a liiin-v nml ordered the dude
up; but he claimed he was m his turn
and didn't come up.
Ijvilr bvar ve nin-lecnred eoiiher,'
howled the Montano tougli, 'if yer dont
vamoose outer tnai cnair m uwn
two shakes of a steer's tail, I'll break
yer up and use yer to plug rat holes
with-'
And the cowboy let off an athletic
laugh that made the barber turn chalky,
but the dude didn't move.
'Did ver hear me murmur!' shouted
the cattleman.
'Aw. yaas. I aw heard sawininmg,
replied the dude.
'Yaas, aw, wal, aw, I'll give jaw just
half a minute to git."
"Wenllv nv lww . renlied his dude-
ship, 'you see I cawn't think of moving
so rapidly. It lsti t natural, you Kiiaw ,
it is wcallytoo warm for such exaw-
cise."
'Aw, it is, aw, wal, I'll jest taker cr
contract to move yer,' and the cow man
iiuirnl river in the ilirectioll of the llillf-
reclining dude, and caught him by the
collar, mo baruer saui no iiiougm.
Dakota threshing machine had moved
in and taken possession for the next five
,.ii.int.w tho. nwlinv,i boot went over
and got mixed with a lot of cosmetics;
a seven-shooter from his Kit got into a
titssel with a hair brush and a lot of
razors, his liair w ;w pounded down into
the cracks of the floor, and the mirror
was spattered with drops of his gore.
hen the uuuo iinisnea, me cow mj
looked as though he had been holding an
eetincr in a slaughter
house, and straightening his nose and
gathering up what was left of his rai
ment, he said lie guessed ne u gooer
in anntlinr Icirtier shon. there Was tOO
mnny ahead of him, and he was in con
siderable of a hurry. The dude, pulling
a handful of the cowboy's hair out of
his pocket and dropping it into the
waste basket, said:
'That will put me in good trim for the
ball game this afternoon.
The anthracite and bituminous fields
of Santa Fe County, New Mexico,
cover 15,000 acres, a large part of which
is underlaid bv four dittinct veins oi
anthracite coal varying from 2 to 4 feet
in width. The coal is said to Le equal
to the best Pennsylvania anthracite.
Cookies. ijeat two eggs m a cup,
add two tablespoons of melted butter,
two tablespoons sour milk; fill the cup
with sugar, half teaspoon of soda,flour
to roll; bake quick; best if kept in a
stone jar.
Jmportanb
When too rjlt or ee Ne Tor City,
baerace txprewage ul f3 eantic H ira, ud t?
TUie Urmad L'ulon liucal, oppualt Unail Coo
Utl Ixpoc
SO elegant Tooms. flttal op at cost of oai
minion dollars, tl aaJ opwvtl par
dar. Eoropean Plan. Elevator. Keataarant
applied wltn ma beat, llunw car), atairaa aul
elevate 1 nUIroad to ail depot. Kamlles can lira
better fur leaa moner at the tirand I'oloa Uowi
Itan at aoj otner nrat-claaa timet In taa cur.
Humility is the pathway to the high
est exaltation.
Tne pttreat, nweeteM an I beat Col Ltrer Oil In
the world, m jnuf actnred from freaH, health J liv
er upon the aeuhore. It la alMololely pare an I
aweeL I'atienia who have once uken It prefer it
to all othera. l'hraictana have decided it aupenoi
to any of the other ol!a In market. Made by Caa
well, Hazard A Co., New York.
CHtrrEDHUrna, face, pimplea and rough aktn
eared by naiof Juniper Tar Soap, mi le by Cav
well. Hazard i Oa, New York.
It is better to die than to live with
out growing better.
Ant man looks like sloven with run
over heels. Lvon'a Heel Stiffners keep
boots atraight, 20c .
Grief ceunts the seconds; happiness
forgets the hours.
To thoroQshly core scrofula, tt is necessary to
strike directly at the root of the evil. This Is ex
actly what Uood's Saraapartlla does, by acting
npon tbt blood, thoronf My cleansing It of all Im
purities, ana leaving n evca a uuufc vi luutui.
in the vital Said.
Early gardening lengthens the grow
ing season, and permits, at times, of
two crops on the same land, as turnips
may follow peas, and time is tnereoy
gamed for putting in late crops.
"Are you going to make a flower
bed here?" said the Brooklyn girl to
her father's gardener. "Yes, miss,
them's the orders." "Why, it'll spoil
our tennis grounds! ' "Can't kelp it.
miss. Your pa says he's bound to have
this plot laid out for horticulture, not
husbandry."
The avaricious man is like the barren,
sandy soil of the desert, which sucks in
all the rain and dews with greediness.
but yields no fruitful herbs or plants
for the benefit of others.
What is taken from you before you
possess it? Your photograph.
A KamarkaMa Car of scrofula.
William S. Baker, of Lewis, Vego Coun
ty, Ind., writes as follows: ''My son was
taken with Scrofula in the tip when only
two years old. We tried several physician
but the boy got no relief from their treat
ment Noticing your SCQVILL'S SAR
SAFAIULLA. AND STILLINOIA, OR
I5LOOI AND LIVER SYBVr, recom
mended so highly, I bought some of it of
you in the year l'i, and continued taking
It till the sores finally healed up. He is
now 21 years of age, and, being satisfied
that your medicine did him so much cood
when he used it, we want to try again in
another case, and write to you to get some
mere.
A French geologist, Mons. DeLap
parent, lately called the attention of the
Paris Geological Society to the effect
gravitation has in heaping up sea-waters
about the land. The continents
are thus all situated at the tops of hills
of water, and in crossing the Atlantic
the ship has first to go down hill, then
to cross a valley, and finally to climb
another hill. The calculation has been
made that in mid-ocean the surface may
be more tlian half a mile (1000 metres)
below the level it would have if the
continents exerted no al traction.
The Dammer bee, of Burmab, makes
a nest in hollow trees from resin col
lected in the forests.
He who seeks fame as an end, is un
worthy to attain it.
Fraxer Axle Urease
The Frsea-r Axle Grease is the best and,
intrinsically, the cheapest. Don't work
your horses to death by using poor axle
grease. Try It
Terfect simplicity of character is the
source of the most profound wisdom.
When you have tried everything else
in creation for that bald head of yours,
you will probably tumble to the fact
that Carboline is the only Hair pro
ducer that will do the work properly
and well.
No learning is valuable that does not
beget higher aspirations and a nobler
Hie,
FITS: An Fits stopped mv. Treatise sod lltrtal
boUieof Dr. Kltoe'aUreat Nerve Restorer free to
Incase. bendioDr.hUme.9al Arch sw rhUaPa,
The man who has made no mistakes
is not in condition to know when he has
succeeded in anything.
If a cough disturb your sleep, take
Fiso's Core for Consumjitioa and rest well.
He who does not Ure to Ood, lives in
vain.
Advice to CnPlT"-
-v .i fifth firstftvmtitomS'
ma ceneral debl.ity. loss of ?Pttte, pallor,
chilly sensations, followed by B:ght-aweata
. ' l ... iuiirH for relief
anould bo taken. Consumption is scrofu
lous disease tl tne lungs; " --
great anU-scrofuI, or bloocl-purlfler nnd
Htrength-restorer.-Dr. Pierce's "(.olden
Medical Discovery." Suertor to coil liver
oil as a nutritive, nnd unsurpassed as a
pectoral. t or weait iuujo,
ft i l:..i.i anVrtions It has no
UltKMi, auu ' ,
equal. Sold by druggists the world over.
For Dr. Pierce's treatise on consumption,
.1 1A ua.raa i wa ilimnt ta Wnrld'a DigD9n-
KUU ivWHWiu
sary Medical Association, C03 Main Street,
liuttalo, r. i.
The first printing done in America
was in the city of Mexico. There were
then 200 printing offices in Europe.
The second press was set up in Lima,
Peru, and the third in Cambridge,
Mass., in 1G39.
T Weaker Sex
are immensely strencthened by the use of
Dr. Ii. V. 1'lerce's "Favorite Prescription.'
which cures all female derangements, and
gives tone to the system. Bold by drug
gists. A witcnl has been obtained by Trof.
A. K. Huntington for improvements m
metallic alloys, the object of which is
to secure strength, elasticity, and close
ness of grain by the addition of a cheap
and easily accessible material. For
this purpose, to the copper or alloy he
adds a small quantity of silicious iron
which may contain a small proportion of
other metals, such 33 manganese, tung
sten, or the like. The mixture is made
while the materials are in a moiten
state a.id as nearly as possible at the
same temperature. As examples of al
loys made according to the invention,
to copper and tin in the usual propor
tion for gun-metal add not more than
two per cent silicious iron; to copper
and zinc in the usual proportion for
brass add not more than five per cent.
silicious iron; in bronzes or brasses
where tin is present besides copper and
zinc, a less proportion of silicious iron
is used than when there is no tin.
Uenerally, when zinc forms part of the
alloy, it is preferred to use silicious
iron containing a proportion of manga
nese. 11 is customary to use ammonia for
the purpose of neutralizing acids that
have accidentally or otherwise destroyed
the color of fabrics. This must be ap
plied immediately or the color is usual
ly Imperfectly restored. After careful
use an application of chloroform will
bring out the colors as bright as ever.
Plush goods and all articles dyed with
aniline colors, faded from exposure to
light, will look as bright as ever after
sponging with chloroform. The com
mercial chloroform will answer the pur
pose very well, and is less expensive
than the puritiod.
TJie investigations of the Trussian
Firedamp Commission have shewn that
many mine explosions attributed to fire
damp or outbursts of gas are really due
to fine coal dust, all kinds of dust ap
pearing to be capable of exploding vio
lently when ignited. The experiments
relative to the inflammability of coal
dust were devised as nearly as possible
in accordance with the conditions pre
vailing in practice, and more than 200
tists were made, explosions occuritg in
every case where an electric spar w; s
produced in a dust cloud.
-laeiit low-ceiled rooms, or ctiUnzs
even with the window tops, it is urged
that such rooms may be more perfectly
ventilated than those with high ceil
ings. The:eaka;e of air winch is al
ways going on keeps the air in motion,
whereas in high-ceiled rooms only the
lower part of the air is moved, and an
inverted lake of foul air is left floating
in the 'space above the window topj.
Moreover the heating of low-ceiled
rooms is accomplished at much less ex
pense than the heating of high-ceiled
rooms.
A new company has been formed for
the extension of submarine cables of
telegraphic communication on the west
coast of Africa and by means of exist
ing cables with Europe. The length of
the cables which will require to be laid
is 3000 nautical miles, for the most part
in water of moderate depth. The cost
will be f 2.000,000.
Scmmeu 5aisac.es for picnic use
are known as Cambridge saasaces.
Take 1 pound of well boiled pork fat
and bam. 1 pound of veal, and 1 pound
of beef suet ; all these should be well
minced, then add 1 pound of bread,
crumbled through a wire sieve, the rind
of half a lemon well chopped, a little
salt, nutmeg and pepper, a ftw sage
leaves ciioped very bne; mix all well
together, make into little rolls or flat
cakes and fry. They should be floured
before cooking.
Many words do not satisfy the soul,
but a good life comforteth the mind.
and a pure conscience giveth great con-
i aence toward uou.
Startling Weakness.
general and nervous debihtv. imnaireil
memory, lack of self-confidence, premature
lose of manly vicor ami powers, are com
mon results of excessive indulgence or
youthful indiscretions and pernicious soli
tary practices. Victims whose manhood
has thus been wrecked should address,
with 10 cents In stamps for larce illustrated
treatise civinz means of perfect cure.
World's lisensary Medical Association,
GJ Main Street ISuffalo N V.
Sarcasm is a bee with a sting and no
honey.
ir you feel as though water was gathering
around the heart (aeart-dropsy) or have heart
rhenmatism, palpitation of the heart with suffoca
tion, sympathetic heart trouble Pr. Kilmer's
Ocian-Wied regulates, correct and cures.
Kindness Is greater than good man
ners. St. Bernard Vegetable Pills.
WnatxTED PrarLT Vitamin..
TDe lient cure for Liver lad lldiut
; I'otnplalnta. CohUtfuom, Headacai
1'izzme. and HthiwiwI. A., a
H.wl Huntier an.1 Munwr HnLotn i
ur .nu-'iiis nrrx Of UW rtt.
ltnird ai4e HUlam theooum.
IT-..JB 3 ectita at unuonaw, or Iw
,,,.:,,: 'ff 1 oiuiK"wii rasa. Acl.lrm
lUariU)I.-.ciCn.l Mnrat. (e fork
a- at. riaul HAH. .?
S5
" r. Sample worth tlA FHF.lt
yuM , xvr.i iiuuur.K, noil j.Mk-Lk
-- nmiii Boot, k? mail FREE. Addna
Dr. WARD A CO.. LOllMAXA, mo.
JONES
'PAYSthe FREIGHT
"" rottmprtotut
t0U tt ilaCMtHTII,
B1.MJHAMTOX. N. T.
FRAZERGARfk
BESTISTUE WORLD U llC AO C
tr Oti U Ocaulaa. Bold Everywhere.
5
w5?
77is production cf electricity to
bleach one ton of calico is calculated by
Watson, at the lowest possible rate, at
i Sd. but would probably cost double
that, while the bleachinz with twenty
five pounds of bleaching powder requir
ed for that purpose, at the price of JL'G
10s per ton, would cost only is. 1 per
ton of calico. Besides, the puttlna
electrodes for a daily turnout of ten
tons bleached goods would cost over
12,000, at the price of 2os per ounce
ofplatma.
It is announced that the Commenda-
tore La.nclani is coming to lecture at
various leading American colleges next
winter. lie is one of the most distin
guished archaeologists in Rome and a
member oi tne LJncx-s, a royat selenit
ic society of Italy thirty-three years
older than the French Academy.
Sriinr occasionally illuminates the
dark spots of our ignorance with such
effulgence as to completely overpower
one. A case in noint is the announce
ment that Southern dentists have dis!
covered that the peculiar whiteness of
the negro's teetn is due to tne excess or
white blood corpuscles.
Thr crpat linrse-car eomnanv of Ber
lin pays the municipality C per cent, of
its gross earnings. 1 he income wmcn
thus accrued to th6 city in 1835 was
1138,720.
Hall's Hair Renewer always gives satis
faction, and Is indorsed by our best physi
cians.
As a stimulant to the stomach, liver, and
bowels, the safest remedy is Ayer's Tills.
Cvll baths are dangerous to the old
or feeble. Warm bath, are relaxing,
and should not be taken in the morn
ing. The morning is the best time for
a cold bath, the evening for a warm
one.
BROWirS
11
BITTERS
OaMaia; IR0X with PVBE TEGET1BL1
T05ICS, alrly eoeialrtritf CIXiSSEs
sad E3 RICH IS THE BVOOO. Owlekeas
taaarUoa of the Uveraad Kidneys. Clears the
eeaipiexlea, Makes the akia aaasota. It eats aot
injure the teeth, eaaae headache, er predareeea-tlpatloa-ALL
OTHER IR05 XEDICHES DO.
Phjmoana and DrassiaUawrywhararacooiawad is.
Mias Ea HamTWAH. ailentora. Pa-, aara:
111 blo.l wmm Uun ml mmurj and I Mcu
vatk and Uaa-ixL Alio uw four bott of
Brown' Iroo bitters 1 am aotir-ly wrtorwl to
twalta and Mnnctn. and chrtuU recoaamrad tt.
Mas M W 8aIi.lS. Pin S- Richmond, Va..
nit: -Mr littifl b..r wa Hiltum trwn a frj
man utuk of blood pou-Bina and uie-cw
not bf-n-mina- him u th. toa-t. I triad Brn i
Irun Bittr. lu b.tl anired hun. alta.iH
hia blood sa in a Wnbl "".I- It certainlj a
(rau tonic and pur-ncK and I twartuj nconun-od a.
I1SIKI. MiVSBSrT.IS S lirwll St.. Trlto.
S J. Mr: "1 uoril Bram'i Imn Bitter, fc Uia
blood mtu the bo-x reaalt.. I cannot wianmnnrt a
ton tusluj m a blood punocr.
Genuine has abnre Trade Mark and cro-aed red tinea
. en wrapper. Take eXbrr. Madeonll bl
BltVW.t tUUatCAL to, BALTIMOILE. MO.
DR. KILMER'S
One ot every five we
meet has some form of
1 Itairt Inscasc, and is i n con
stant danzer of Apoplexy,
tin-. k or Sudden Death I
Tn.a Ittmetly regulates, re
lierea. eom-cta and ernes.
CWITepand at lr. Kilmer.
Mi.,,..,, rm.lwintnn V V
6f3C ItenoVln-lllir7 answered.
. WUWHIIWMtmilIW
$ 5. 00 S.U ST nrwra-bta.
EfS
Cream Ba!m
He .'tre nerer han
dled a catarrh reme
dy thathcu increased
ao rapidly in safes a
Ely's Crenm Buhtt
or Viat Aus 7t'ren
siich universal tut
isaction. C. X.
Criltenton, Hi Ful
ton St., .Veto Tori
CUy.
CatarrH
MS
HAY-FEVER
Anartirleisappliedlntoeir'i nostril and la
able to uas. Price hi rte. hr mail or at drm.-ir.rt.
M-nd for circular. fcIA' BKOTHHU3, DnuicUta,
Owwo. N. Y.
UNMARRIED
jwuJ rKir HUw wtiea nwrr:el. Clival r froo.
P.O.B4xl6. 3Iianooll, 311m.
lor v;iniiisra. uwi i bix
HAM. Att'r. Waaaininoa. IX J.
at
84
Ptwn's Ttemedr for O-arr-i is the
Best, inat to l, ao 1 l neapest.
a
Alfiwl K-r old In tlie TlKid.
lltauiaclie. Hay Fvr. A oti t-euts.
STOPPED FREE
Iman Persons Rtorf
Dr.KLLHS 3 GREAT
NerveRestorer
I lataVBKAHf St NRVE UlSrv- OLpSur
enr fs A -Vrr A 'r, i- ni. hi. fi. r. r:e.
I INFALLIBLE U Uli-ri u l.r?rL i tft aftt
I wi.' d rt t use, TrfiMlnl fitmi txr..c iree r
I hit pat;eaO. thevpiyia,: erprech..rc0t'0. ht.
I twve.l. Sm.t nam-i. P. O- n exrrs; ad ire?, n
.rHutril to Dil.Kt.INc.oit Arrh St..rnilTd-iphs.Pi.
Hart taken th lead I
t:te s;rs i true cUu oi
reiBC'lic. a J lus give
"-tt tiaUwcxaai
UMi
--ILR?HY BR3..
Paris, Tew
6nHN th Uvaf of
th pufcii: ud mmm r&ak
amenr the ItUaltaf ftidfcl
ciac uf th Mom.
A. 1 bMHrrf.
SoM W rJt c Ma
ORGANS:
ful aui LUrflt t. nr-d fiTJ,,
In tb wor.d. Lmw T ' . P
Ttl BV! tea-tit T-
Sirlsie i V. 1
Weaver Orew & Pi.M C3..ve?K
BOOK AGEXTR WASTED for
PLATFORM ECHOES
LIVLNfi T BIT MS rsl BEAM ANO BEAUT,
By John Ii. Gough..
Tfls lastanwnwnlse life werk.behn fall of tannine tates.
- ?."or V 1 "?"- ." 9V- aad eon, lull .c
'Uochter and tesrs. It efl .1 ...u l' eO. T J tl j, -ddeS
be I.ifs sl4 Deslh et Mr. Orach. Rf,, LTMAM IS.
iott. ia A(.u w.t,0.-,t.a sa WonS. aie
e aoe month. sid. Q-VMmt . ... es wa
J.e flre r.rws .nd Pm, Vt.tflr.. Write for ciprvlsrs Si
QREYDOPPEL'Q
u BORAX SOAP V
Cleaaaea, lartnra aasl aaakra elathrw white
aad aweet. Excellent far Bath and Taller.
Fall d bars ealy. Far sale everywhere.
fARQUHAR VIBRATING SEPARATOR.
MMO rod CATALOG; t .
WMsVrfWI
CaaacUv.
Sm 3
skwss,auiititt,iwt.ra
TlTA-nT.TTsJ
Far sswrvw as it afv. - .
rv
X- X 7
a .
4w
1 ve m
-nee-
JW V tin.
m i tl Stmtitt,
I llnss atrial 3ft.
BALLARD saixckt, wfm Am target ttrrr.rs. werii iesw.-i -
m Iri" 't' MARLI! FIRE IBMs CO- Xew Hajrea,
SLOCCCE
Waft rraalM .mliai
Doiit wmat yoar -fMwrr ofTimorni&brrrnt
I Ihinlntal mm mi wi virtn. an.1 Will kca T
TflUlra KARS.
Ask for thFISH hRAKD"
ir-nj ffrdfHpTivv
w,,.,..-
,77 "-""""a Hoc,.
ttneXIH liUal !. . -'"a. rt : I
come, routamw,, ,il I"tiaktJ
T which th. health i. . ? .' J
t-T which ,h. healih
able. Lm ot APP,.j, rajZr
DWP. Detail ws
.riou, a, ot.cn
byandrua.sfPari!!a
iy by t l nu.r ; r' ii ,
1J liCh HOOD ft CiiX
IOO Desna !ea,lu
-Dolar
5t:r--A.,. U.U ITUS'i'
faourand-stream' a. :lilJt.a-. I ej?!x
1 rvf si..'t..
ery dar.
en. nair w-.then -.citir. rr.. 7:'" wiwfci.
FKKU T.H.,yKlTi
r ssie b, 1 ImmtuZ-l Sn! J T
xoana in i t.ts. st K. it m tyr
01 Dear miittciona KeesT,! "a
Of auji one atiin tLe suui
W. L. DOUGLAS
' B-at rsatensl. prv,-,.. Wlj
av-rv a;r sirr.,i... V.:"--"aiB n..w
T-r7 D;r wsrr.i.r..t.
"W.U UOQa. 1.1! ( '
'ail4.-
-www v a 1 HU KLelAV
S.OO 9ho. ,-aais. u, , ,71 f
Ct ;bte itio from
491 w. m. leUn. mim. -( '
TTITTOC'TnirC' IVORY
luuiuiiuii upEiRi iuunnii3
Krealnr Teeth Perfect ... c,., nj
Blair's PijlsSii-
'" rwti, -
jrroMATic a9
Pi at I llIM T.Lt ,
F'-amtyttry, fnat .1.4
TmettM. Ct4
aad W fur all purpH.
ftlBapiw. wuag xj .;.r.
kJ. Farwibar tmm
aaal macewaeyt feat) rail
Saad for I: J eviAv.ax
INCLOSIMQ
Bra w rea
Full PaancuLaas.
BCIN BROS. 4(
MEWARK, H. j.
f O DOI tiRH i:kfe ,vr
I r'''ti.'l.SIltyjl!,-
I Hinwlilliiiwisw. I
I ia.4. Safrielwl swll.rt I
wriair-Me.H. wrtflwfti..
Kisf ;S 100. teit.SMae:
suxrsiMiauj.
,e .w ewe, ,'jit
P
ATENTSSteJ
Hiubik. Patant Liwrw. 'Mnrin a i
I CURE FITS!
Wlnan 1 my i-nre I io n-t &'ntrr,vmjr
tnr a 1 1 me anil tLen ha tzrra ir .ra ; 3fM.t
LtfSV or TALUS SirtE ft-s &
varrajit my irin-Jy tociireULew.nt'ak-jL vita
HHer ha faliel udo raa--n f or w -few.
cim rwrod at -ncr for a . rtmiisf j.r f
my intlhhl rmrlj. (iire Zxpn . f
ltaoiM rru DotHiiur for a mal. 114 1 vi t.
'A O. FARQUHAR, KUawiK Tvi
raw HHI3 150 ETr.nrrs k sPffl.ITl
u ou-.ua i tuuuidd,, AihiaU ijUw. -sf, 1
Bold by Droffrisra or trnt r suQ 00 ffriij
No Rope lo Cut 01 Horses' Minn.
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For sale h Drurgt aaj F1.',!
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KIDDER S PASTILLES. SEuS
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