!. : ; i -. . . . ! , ) ' f . , jr..,,. n , , ,,. . . ., , ., , . 1r " ' " 4 1: t. i -i: J: 4 i 4 1 St' V j. ! ! ;l !: 1 : ! i i 1 ! i t J AGRICULTURAL -p" - U Farmers will alw J 80 long as they allow others .to do their thinking. -, ,if Slovenly -work doesoV pay. See " then that the work of the plough and hoe is done thoroughly. ,. . . In finishing up the cultivation of fields leave the land as level as possible, as it wirffacilitate the gatherings of( the crops, i, U -i; two Ant hrood of erubs from the X U V SJ.OV - w . uotato beetle have made their appear ance, and now is the j time to apply Paiis jrreen. Mix with plaster till it has a ereenish appearance.; Mr. E- E. Hyde, of Staflord, Ct. savB- " Mv Devon cow Gem made 215 ' pounds of butter in a trial of 95 days. From a cross with a shorthorn I have had a cow which madej 19 pounds of butter per week." I; K . h ; To work, to compare and, experiment without fixed . opinions or prejudice. And with the single object' Of discover-, ing a portion of the truthi is the only safe way to establish correct principles. in agriculture. i , Captain Tom Sewejl, Of Lincoln, Neb., is the possessor! of a thorough bred Jersey hsifer, whkchj was calved April 27, 1879, and on the 27th of May, 1880, she dropped her first calf, being one day less than 13 months bid. Mr. Jacob K remer, of the Mansion House, at Watsontown, has a hog of the Poland China breed that measures six feet two inches from the tip of the nose to the tail, eight feet In girth, and weighs 925 pounds. j V. R. McCready's imported Jersey cow Reception, in seven days (five weeks after ct lving) yielded 19J pounds of unsalted butter. Her feed was one quart of dry meal night and morning, and feed from a dry pasture. Hog cholera has broken out in a malignant form among the swine in the vicinity of Oconomowoc, Wis. . A large raiser of hogs In Summit lost nearly one hundred fine; animals in less than three weeks' by thia epi demic. 1 ' ': : I ' ' Two parts quicklime, three- parts soot, ami one part eoarse refuse salts, used as a top dressing, is said to be destruction to (he cut worm. Refuse salt alone, at the rate Of 500 pounds to the acre, iu the fall-will; destroy-the worm. I Horses hate, solitude, and are made, savage by being kept alone, v Goats ought always to be?kepfi in large stables, because they will face fire, and horses will follow them out, though they would not go by themselves. , ..Vt V The production of wheat and barley in" the United States Jwithin the last Hfteeu years has trebled; corn, cotton and tobacco have doubled J oats have increased 140,000,000 bushels ; potatoes nearly doubled, and hay has increased ' more than one-third. . , The successful farmer does not at- tempt too much. He concentrates, and the more he does, .this the greater , are his gains. He' does not expect ,'. large crops from his lands without ' liberal manuring. He recognizes the necessity of constant study and watch . fulness. We have often been assured that three pints of liquid daily was as much as a healthy person should drink if he desired to continue in health, but we have seen a laboring man who would drink ten times that, amount, even if he had to go a quarter of a mile for -. every drink. , 1 1 .r ' '. , , To make a thorough good keeping butter is not a generally known, or at least a practiced art, but if a few can do it and make a butter that will actually keep a year, and still retain its flavor and aroma unimpaired, it is a convincing proof that, other things be ing equal, all may do it. Exports have rapidly increased, as we are all aware, in the past few years. . The total exports of j cereals in 1868 were 139,000,000, and 189,000,000 bushels in 1878. ! In 1868 ' 3 per oent. of the whole product was exported, and 11 per cent, in 1878. The exportations of live stock have increased ten-fold in the last two years. In agriculture, as in everything else, absolute doctrines - are . unfortunate. However specious the arguments for their defence may be, however plausi- ble and positive their advocates may appear, they must be distrusted, es pecially if they lead to the contradic tion of facts which hare been settled by the experience of ages. ' k In the wheat berry the epidermis, seedskin, ginten. 'ceh layer and germ form about 18 per cenk of the entire weight. The remainder, or 82 per cent. , is the largest percentage of flour that can ever bepbtaixted by the most per fect machinery: Ifwe Include -the germ, which some millers say is bene ficial to the flour, though deteriorating its color, several per cent, must be added to the above. . An acre of good pasturage will afford sustenance for from five to eight sheep, keeping them in good condition. But on "account of herbage taken and the closer feeding of the sheep it is believed that three acres of good pasturage will maintain one cow, and in addition, five or six sheep, the sheep choosing plants, the cows would reject and feeding closer upon May-weeds and grasses not eaten by the cow. There is much refuse fat from the kitchen that can be turned to good ac count by feeding to the hens. Of course, where soap is made it will be used in - that way, but it is a question whether nt is not much easier and more profita ble to buy soap and make the hens lay by feeding them with fat. Everything that is not wanted for drippings for - cooking purposes should ; be, boiled up ( with the vegetables for the fowls. :' ' The cultivation of; cotton", which was tried in Calfornia some 'time ago, but abandoned In 1877, is iiow being revived . oil -a large scale under promise of a per manent home market. A thousand acres aye I already been planted in cot- tori: It is claimed that the climate, by reason of its even temperatureis em- lnently fitted for cotton culture, and that the staple raised; will be of greater . nneness and length of fibre.' ; N T akb Good C abb of thb Hoksbb. - ? There is no animal on the farm lhat is so likely to be neglected as the horse. The horse of the city truckman, or of the expressman,' the driving bone and the saddle horse are well cared for, but . the farm hone is too often irregularly fed, and, so far as cleaning i oonoarned, regularly and systematically neglected. It is difficult to obtain a mrea man brought, up on the farm, who thinks there is any necessity lor taking special oare of a horse. Some horses upon the farm are rarely, if ever, properly cleaned, and yet the condition and user fulness jyf the farm norse qeuppa- w much upon tne manner m win onn for as an v other horse. vnen The Romance of Crebillon Pert.r ' i .; . i ' f t n.-Htino' -nlava. and beins tha a- sedate - of playere CwhilWn 4rough upon himself the grave displeasure o his father.! The old greffler of Dijon descended fronty4ong liof lnnkeq U fU likeimifii olhtt daHcnl bied hlmselr by taktofethe naM 6f hia ..... . m J 1 -1 DroDertv : and he felt ma u was aomg brougb ti( u, ... .tJ h. L Lfc"!"' JJ ought not to be allowed to stand over night with the dust drying upon him. A good cleaning is half a rest, and yet how often we seethe farm horse brought out in the morning covered with the accumulated filth of the. night still clinging to him. Under uch condi tions ahorse. is not much more than half a horsei Often, too, he is Irregu larly fed and. indiscreetly watered. A horse at work should have waiter five or six times a day. If he does not drink more . than two or three quarts at a time 'all the better. A hoise .that is kept from water till he will drink two or three pailfuls will be very likely to have his digestive organs and bowels seriously deranged. j - To keep a horse in good ".working condition he should be -fed regularly, .whether at work or idle, in thei stable. He will last many years longer than if, when at work, he is heavily fed, and when'idle neglected." "A.-horse1 on the farm should always be cleaned at least once a day. and when hard at. work both night and, morning. Ifjnot'at work a good : grooming once a day would be sufficient, and when idle good hay might be substituted for grain at the noonday meal, but when at work grain should be given, as he would ob tain more nutrition in half an hour from grain than iu many hours from hay. A hired man who is worthy of his hire will take pride in ministering to the comfort and improving; the ap pearance of the animals be drives. Forest Leaves for Hottbeds. Forest leaves are excellent to riix with hotbed material, and, where practica ble, should be saved for this purpose. They do not' heat so rapidly as stable manure, and in this have an advantage as tempering Its violence, making it last longer and maintaining j a more regular heat. They are excellent materials to put round cold frames to protect half-hardy plants. A board is offence be a writer" of plays. only began . here. , Crebillon cane o know a cerflain drugglst,Tri Whose shop he often jspeat the best part of his day, not,' as might be supposed by admirers of his genjusvalchemy In btrtlnpleasant flirOng wittfthe druggist's dangbAer a lovely girl still in. her teens. He sank! deeply in love and proposed to the druggist's daughter the pretty Charlotte Peaget, 'who as it proved, was not insensible to the blue eye of the poet, so much admired by the ladies of .that day. (Tbe eur-Ptaget was greatly flattered at seeing his child courted by the young dramatist; all was soon settled, and his satisfaction was oomnlete. A far different view of things . was taken by .the old greffler of Dijon. He was as furious as the out raged father of the. stagey What ! druggist's daughter! ;Not content with bringing disgrace on the family name bv' becoming, a playwright, he must needs marry a plebian! There was no soothing the old man. Tohisson's letter announcing the intended mar riage he replied that he would never The marriage proved, a singularly happy one, though the troubles that accompanied it were aometimea very great. The young people lived at first in an obscure' lodging, but; not too small to shelter Creblllon's ready-made family of cats and dogs; for he always had a passion for animals,- ana would pick up such stray ones as he met with during bis walk,. The gentle Char lotte, when these became intolerably numerous, would quietly remonstrate with him ; but, respecting him for his failing, would let him indulge It with out much . ado. Meantime Crebillon had entered on a career of greater suc cess ; his V Electre 'i.met .with, a favor able reception, and his reputation had become established,when one day an old gentleman calfed at his modest abode - Moderately ..thick: wheel of" bras nifty be eat chemically bj drawing line with a solution of mercury. in nitric add. The brass become aa brlbj tls as glass on the 'place -where the line 4 drawn and Is easily, broken off, T' The conversion or Dagaase, taugar cane) into paper stack at home la aw trading cenaiderabl attention In Lou isiana, where there are produced 200,. 000 hogsheads of sugar a year, and the cane for each'hogshead will yield, on ton of paper fibre. " A seormd specimen of the archssop- teryx is on deposit in the Geological Museum at Berlin, with the expecta tion that it will be purchased. It was bought from Its former owner for 15,000 by Herr Siemens, of Berlin, to prevent its being brought to this country- ' - , The Chemiker Zeitwg says that there Filial Piety. is every reason to feax that natural put up the height of the frame boards ?al:?2vand wa and about a foot or more from them, and the leaves filled in between. If the plants aresoniewhat tender the bottom of jhe frame may be filled in a few feet with the' leaves. Much heat is thrown off during the decomposition of the leaves, which, though not enough to keep out a severe -frost yet modifies j somewhat the temperature. Theee leaves, after tney nave been two or three years decaying, make admirable sun ior porting 'ana nowersi in stent eral. ' ":t:.. " P" The Great Southern Comet.4 i An interesting paper has been pub lished by Professor Klinkerfues, of Gottingen, on the great comet discov ered by Dr. Gould, at Cordoba, last February, and its supposed previous appearances. Its object is to point out that the probable indentityl of this comet with those seen in 1843 and 1668 need not be rejected because it does not appear to have been seen, although so conspicuous an object, between those years. So nearly does It approach the sun (within, indeed, about lOOjOOO miles of its surface) that .the resistance to its motion when at perihelion is likely to be sufficient to produce a very consid erable diminution in its periodic time, the case being, in fact, one of resistance from the sun's atmosphere itself, and not merely, as has been conjectured in the case of Encke's comet, from an ethereal medium presumed to exist within the orbits of at least some of the planets. Hence there is nothing ex travagant in the supposition Ithat the resistance of the part of the corona within which the comet passes (many of the prominences which, under the old name of red flames played so im portant a part in the history of the solar eclipses, extend to more than double the distance from the sun 'si surface witldn which the comet comes at peri helion) may be quite sufficient to di minish its period of' revolution from 5 years to 37 years. j Carrying this view still further back. Professor Klinkerfues contends that it is probable the same comet may be identieal with one seen and described by Aristotle in the year B. C. 371, when the philosopher was only thirteen years old and still living in his birth place, Stagira. He considers it likely that whilst the period of Revolution from B. C. 371 to A. D. 1668 was 2,039 years, it was diminished by the resist ance of the sun's atmosphere, first to 175 and then to 37 years : and further, that it has at the late passage through permelion been decreased to 27 yean, so that, if this view be correct, another return of the comet may be expected in the autumn of 1897. received by the wife. -SDharfette, not knowing who he was, answered his in quiries with so much sw set noes o manherfihotigh tEesreroftett tude( that' she-woir thatxungr"a heart. After somewhat puzzling her with his observations on her menage, andsufflc ien Uy manifeeting his surprise and disgust at the presence of so many cats and dogs he at last revealed him self and the purpose of his visit. He was thei3cTgreMerofJ)Qn. As old age had crept oh;him he had begun to regret hs harshness, and now came to forgive and forget Crebillon, and Char lotte accompanied the did' man back to TJHjon where the father, really proud of his illustrious son 'introduced him to his fellow-citizens as the successor to Ra cine. The young couple stayed with him several months indeed, until Crebillon had. almost once more lost his fathei's favor, owing to his extrav agant habits. Crebillon, on his return to Paris, moved into splendid apartments near the Luxembourg ; it is supposed that he wished the world to believe he had inherited a great fortune on his father's death. This . more extravaeant life. however, did not last long, for on the failure pf -his play'" Xerxes " he was compelled to return to his old lodging in the Place Maubert. It is told that in their day of splendor Charlotteoften said with a sigh how happy they were in their first little lodeinsr: and then Crebillon would kiss her, and reply In gentle tones they might yet return to it, and that, perhaps, before . long. They did so not to resume their past happiness, for the shadow of death fol lowed them to the door. , A presenti ment that she should not live long took hold of Charlotte's mind. She ex pressed this to her husband, who en deavored to sooth her, but the only re ply was, " If you are near me at the end I shall fancy I am falling asleep." Herhoreaeritunentwas not ill-founded. One evening, on Crebillon's return home, she flung herself into his arms, saying, f I shall leave you forever to night," and In a few. hours her spirit was Kane. Crebillon never recovered from the blow. He shut himself up for the rest of his days, his only selaee being a son which his wife had left him in the cradle when she did. vanilla will be superseded by: the art! flcial product obtained by the oxidation of oonlferins, and that consequently certain countries of the Continent will be enriched at the expense of Mauri tius and Trinidad. An alloy of rhodium and lead, lately exhibited before the French Academy of Sciences, has the curious . property of exploding .on exposure to heat, aa In being held before a gas flame. IU composition is one-third rhodium and two thirds lead, fused together In a criiicibl e at a h lgh tern perature. . . . Gelotte.l the name of the most valua ble constituent of the substance known in commerce as, China moss. It baa the property of absorbing and solidify ing into a colorless 'and diaphanous Jelly five hundred times IU weight In water, and- U capable .of forming ten times as much jelly by weight as the best animal geUtlne. The Cummontoealth, of Richmond, .Va., publishes the following warning to tobaooo usera : A roan named Weak ley died a few days airx-e in Culpepper county, age 105 years. It Is supposed his death was hastened by the uxe of tobacco, to which he was addicted fot a period eommencing shortly after, the conclusion of the Revolutionary war. The Paris QmsHtutionalisi has betn calculating the average cost of soldiers in, the various European countries. The annual cost of each soldier in the English army is $700. The soldiers of Austria-Hungary cwt $255 each a year. Those of France and Germany $215 each a year. The Italian soldier costs a trifle less than $200 and the Russiaa little over $190. The maintenance of the army cost annually to each head ef the population 6s.'6d. In Italy, 7a. 4d. in Russia, 8s. 6dln Germany, 12k 4d. in France and 12s. 6d. In Great Britain. Soundings of the Niagara River be low the falls have been taken by a party of United SUtes engineers. A line, cast out as near to the falls as they could be approached In a small boat and near to the shore gave 83 feet. ' A belief exists amo&f th';CbJnss that if a father , or mother be seiiouly ill, the most effective way of curios; them Is for one of their own -children to cut a pleceof flesh ootof his own arm or leg and administer a broth made of the flesh U question to the suffering parent. This bat times don, but with sufficient rarity to Insure, aa a rule, the matter being reported to the throne fbr some mark of the Emperor's appoval. The Governor of Hunan recently re ported a case In which a " graduate named Tso ws singularly dlsO ngulahed for filial piety. When very young, his mother became seriously IlL" and be lieving that heaven would prolong bis mother's life by shortening hU (quite a Chinese belief), he refused food, and spent a night in supplicating it to that effect. ' His mother recovered, but some years later, In 1873, sae was at tacked with a fatal dlseane, which' he tried to counteract by booking ber some broth made out of his own fleaii cut from the maacle of hU arm. Unfortu nately, not only did the mother die, but the' brave' son never recovered from bis self-Inflicted wound, and be died In the following year from IU ef fect. The Emperor decreed, him handsome morfoment. The Dragon Fly. A ttSEPl'L AMP I'NAtTBRClATKO INSECT. One of the most beautiful and benefi cial InsecU of, Jthe summer season, and one whose service are lat appreciated by the agricultaralLtt, U theeouitnon dragon fly. There are many varieties, comprising an extensive and beautiful group of large-slsed Insects, rivalling our butterflies In gracefulness of form and brilliancy, of coloring, while they excel them In rapidity. of flight. .Vari ous popular uaines have been givea. them ' In different countries. The French call them "DemoUellea, the Germans"Gauxe FlW'and "Virgins of the Water,? while among the KuglUh they are known aa "Dragon ' Flies," "Horse Btingers," and "Devil's Darn ing Needles." The first of the EnglUh name Is very appropriate to the char acter of the fly, for, among other in sectM.lt fully earns lu title of "Dragon. It Is not a "horse sting r," however can neither bite, sting nor poison, anJ as a "devil's darning needle" doe not sew up the. mouths of those children who are given to romaacing. They are perfectly harmless to man, and can be handled without danger. - The dragon fly belongs to the order "Neuroptera" and the family "Libel lulida?." They have six legs aad four wings. In - average upeclmens the body atUlas the length of an lush and a half or two inches. They are almoat universally dressed In thegayettt colors The body U variously banded with under his ear It U atlU the soaaU of hU face. : ' Jl getter up of dubs--Thslbook "oaa nser. A brings down of eluhe The poUosman. .- j -. . ' W presume It If because tha coral U kind of Cab that it makes tha beat red earring. . . A fix parade, ilk a rainy, day, Is good for a show of hose, they, say. Waterloo 0& w. Boston aspire to become the foun tain of American literature as It U ef baked beans. An electrical girl has bean discovered In Canada. 'Bhe ought to marry a good conductor. - 1 ' - Well, you'll own tnat ah ha a pretty foot, wont you r' "Yea, 111 ad mlt that. But then It never mad half as much of aa Impression on m a the old man's.' Moses was undoubtedly a stock pec ulator, for he began hU career among the "bull" ruahea. Of course everybody knows of a male and female aex, but the papers that come to thU office1 are the Newa-X." We alway bar our suspicions of a man who Invariably takes hU soda from the other side of the fountain. Quinry Modern Argo, We are orring a rbromo now to the woman who doesn't think her baby nicer than any other womau's baby. SteubenvilU Herald. A correspondent asks if a postmaster must be well eduoaUd. ' Certainly, sir; be must assuredly be a man of tetters. - Rhmebeck Ouxttte, ..':: " II ow dare you iwm before me?" aaked a man of his mm recently. " How did Iknow you wanted torus first?" said the spoiled urchin. ' A Telas dog ate up eight doUars worth of postage stem pa and was mailed to that other clime. Br. He was evi dently a mall dog, but not posted. Fast young men do Dot uke uj all their Unit at the pawnbrokers. 'Many of the watches are never redeemed. " Pair o die lost," said aa under taker, when two persons died and his rival got both funerals. SteJet40 Jltmtd. A CallfomU maa tunaslsd under a neighbor's well and stole the bottom and all the water, j " . . Do caU slog chuvrh music? Punt chants they do. , An auctioneer was endeavoring to sell a fowling-piece, and railing to get a bid, a bystander who had read the i papers said, " Blow lo the muul and It will go off." - .. , A rich New Yorker Is so fearful that hU daughter may marry a coachman, lhat he has taken her and started for China. . But he must remember there Is a Cbeh-ln-Chlna, too. " Raising rcnU," remarked the land- wlli.bssssa by Um record that (Mr ultimate soceese U almost a foragoae' concioaion,' 'They hare yet t gaxnaa to pUy. th Providence $0 and tat Cleveland IL Th three victorias orrr the Worcester daring th week brings th Cleveland within on game of la Providsnos, while th nia from Troy U making a rapid adranc toward se curing a more .prominent position. Between now and the end of th season th only Interest win be In the fix Vt between the ProTidence, Cleveland and Troy for second place, Worcester's and Boston's Indifferent pUy leaving then entirely out of the contest. Th record up to August 13th, U: , nrss. ME I Mil f ruH tlscisssiT" Tot! I i a hi a i 4 . a i i t, T! & i i. i Mil. ItJ.A i. i j a! a, i i t q aj U ii2t; & ur.ru TRAP 6HOOT1NO. cUtec or the rajrrnf c uc rxrns' TocawAxr-tT. CC i IWMtbtfrvvltdom.: -Osm'lrn asid tU rWi.t eal dxl 4e tahabttanu Uckkrx.in am payln" aitorsther shun t ifjMpiier aiun. Ijar". . groan v oespsir wbeo If. hot - . growl dhrpUsshtr hea U t eUl If U rain somebody ralsm a row, so" it It's dry somebody els. has a b , sck wtd de powers ahore. Elery r-j headed, one-boss white maa- got de Ideah la bU-WTdu de U.o am Uwa to ed him Umg jVst d o weddsr h waats, no waaUer 'l.--U rest ef d ktntry. Deolet&anp.u bottom, Ubin apdarby wjcsWnJ ,. r Wt fifteen cents wwrf at ri., truck back of hi. Wr. an . hoi or cold or sreC cr dry beaaa , UUd dat ho fsrglU dat any oddt lu his kealry has m out an va, ... pUnted a "Uter. Mo, dan fifty , r. ago I come to decoocluihua dat I u.u. pl up wld sueb ed. let as de 1,. glui me, no matter whed-lrr It Lr... . . Ml chllUUltt oT rheumatics, ma' it . agreai bururnoamy mlud. luir.i ji- ss U r4nea,keepindeu)eiitMi;. la a-l rrpslra' I Vn' kius ur.iU it elmanarks an' dmn The four day spurt at the PsMltnc (ion Club's ground. Belle toe htstlou, Pa closed on Friday with twolalsrest lng eon tests, uo each at bail and pigeoa shooting. The attendance was ful, and the result for several of the prU was ult exciting. . t Pa stim iUcxl'u1 (iaot,- x us, Bl le-' vue. Philadelphia, Aural 12. 14).- Bsil shooting; balls each; is jaid'!'i sl .. The Parts Opera in the Lett Century. lu the 4d Part. )frs Huu. eaMed la the meaorat4e j rar IImsv were firs difrVrettt kind utU, U bat ore 4 which was IndWled It ulte a ingufr butoeoclslure. 'K1 Ue-lrums, (1ccbiUr, aod eauisisea id i nnt SO-l the situation of the ocrupsnu,i..i rist, amok target balls; 1st prlte, Uu In the latervenlag the axiMJUbt 4 ti ll. M: C shells; &1 prise, SS puoad of . sonncu modal kMi. Beside il-. tl,. (. shot sod t pounds of powder; 9d prUe, were the Lalroajr and tLe ru i one year's subscription to vf ad tier. Prires were not then what Mm Stream; 4th prlte, e pounds of ILatard f are nww, and yet the Opera a a s lu poa der. araeSs. Ill its... 1 1 1 1 1 1 s ..... IllltSStlill 1111111-. Itsrds. T. P.umrer..lllll r.H Hor..iiiii IK M. Raffs. J S 1 1 IJsss.Jfll 1 ' IllltSStlill IS H.ysW 111 lllllll.. M WjUhiss Ji I 1 1 I . ..... tJ.Wssstsi jSIII .. S W.M.B.htwJ 11 . S Ureger w first priae, UreeawTd seeund, Hufraer third and Junes fuvirth prixe: ' -- -" i tjevunl niatrh. Pigeon aborting. Prises, 12 pounds powder to first; Ut U. M.?.eartrtdf tosseoad; tSpuunda shot and t fiounds of powder to third. , wry w hlh Wl few uU afford. 11. j books for the senJrl? barJu4 1. g dlsrovered andtheircitrnUsit4tJl ' T t The tJur de d4senl hsd ketUeJtti.,, . vltlcb es4 bun neerly h4i The Dor dXirWas ) r-ai tnid JoKU-. i then his tais wss tss the grand Ih j The PrincMs de lAmbailehad cr.h postolasbst, muicb abe.bad lu with Madsaa de (ienUs lLry hare bee an Itl-sweted ewuptel sr1 . 1 it oust- bet l-VU a ytar. The ju. paid tld), -and Use twn Atatvs-t... I - ty . i m . . vt rsin ug spsrs arraareti m tbeo the qoastioti of djoice, anl -1. ootrtUitod taru. Tb free Ust ss. u-4 quite suspenrtrtl, not It was mtn:;, Island rules. . rich ahadsa of blue, green and yellow. Farther down the stream the line told ! "d wi"g gT A n heauti- offlOO feet, and at the Inclined railway mI Iridescent and metallic reflections. 192 feet. The averag depth of the I The substanoe of the wlngslsadeiicaU swift drift, where the river suddenly network, covered by a thin, transpar- em memorane, combining great sxrengin witn ugninena, wnion ena- becomes narrow with a velocity too great to be measured, was 1S3 feet Immediately below the bridge, where the whirlpool rapids set in, the depth was computed to be 210 feet. On the slopes of Amethyst Moun tain, from 2,000 to 3,000 feet above the river valley, In the Yellowstone Park, are exposed at different levels atlnter vals through the entire height a series of sillclfled trees, many rooted In the po sition in which they grew, and from twenty to thirty feet in height. Borne lying down are oi great aiae, the frag menu measuring eighty-two feet in diameter, and comparable to the giant Bequolas. The series of sandatonea and conglomerates In which the tree are Imbedded are more than 5,000 feet thick, forming a vertical mile fossil foreeU, the woody structure wall pre served ; but where cavities have been formed In the trunks of the rotting wood they are lined with crystals of amethyst and quarts. Mrs. Langtby is no longer called the Jersey Lilly ; society has given her another pet name" The j Amber Witch." She is said to be lovelier than ever, and is gazed at in public'as if she were a queen or a puma donna. At the Atalanta fete, where she wore a gown of old-gold satin, trimmed with shaded poppies, one old lady seated her self opposite the Amber Witch' sUll and deliberately taking out hier opera glasses stared at the famous beauty for an hour. ' j The summer boarding-house keeper should not undertake to give her guests the same kind of food which they get in the city, for 'she has neither the butcher nor th cook who can -supply her wanta. People who go I Into the country expect great, smoking, boun cing pot-plea; with plenty Of juice and with bulbs of crust light as a feather. You cannot give them steaks and chops; roasts' and aaladai such they can get in the, city, if they live in A. r . . m ' . suy Burt ui way at su. x ney want a change, v The landlady In tha country never tailed, except with the most in corrigible grumblers, who knew noth ing about cookery, when she furnished plenty of bread and milk, popples, suc cotash, berry puddings, stewed fruits fruit piss and corn bread and griddle oaks. Popular Science. M. Gautier sUtes that the tanning of Chinese gall is chemically distinct from that found in Aleppo galls.' - The, Lancet suggesU the Health Cure as a remedy for adversity. - Equal quantities (wt.) of glue and tannic aeid, with water enough to dis solve the glue, will make a perfectly Insoluble cement, '' An almost perfect house has been lately disentombed at Pompeii. It is probably the beat preserved of all the Roman dwellings hitherto discovered. The Chilian Times announces the completion of the Canal de la Merced, wmcn nas been twenty-five years In construction and has cost about 1400,- 000. The Auckland Evening Star report the discovery of pearls in Oakley creek, New Zealand, of unusual form and color, and of more than ordinary bril liancy.- ? r .,' ' ;" ""' i i i A .Louisiana correspondent of the Scientific American reports success In growing potatoes on top of the ground in rows two feet apart covered with sawdust six to twelve Inches thick. Five to tlx million' leeches, costing 1.500,000 francs, were used in the hos pitals of Paris yearly from 1829 to 1838, and 187,000 pounds pf blood were drawn annually or 1,496,000 'founds in the eight year. : O i .1 ii V , ! I It is aaid that , one bushel of sugar beets -mixed with nine bushels of in. pies make a cider richer and of superior flavor to that made from apples alone, and which, can be readllv eohvertH inte vinegar. : . r - f Recently 1,250,000 America 'oysters were laid down on the eosst of LJtUs Velt, . from Qravenehoved to Polk hoved, and a company has been formed 7 own i5,w,000 more on the S34imsswig-MoUtaln eosst. . A Trifle ioe-. Wixbucpon. Bhe (whispering): Huahl Take it, darling! Your own bart will teach you to find out IU use. He: Kind, thoughtful girl ! Any dainty U welcome In camp, and . She : Not a word. Papa U waking. Good-bye I (And she was gone.) And when he found she had given him a cat in th basket, hewaxed wroth, for alas I his heart did not teach him that when In camp be should hide a billet under iu collar, and let it loose, whereupon Tom would make his way straight back to his mistress all as they do in Holland, where the cat is the lovers postman. Wy Folk. The Empress Eugenie's return to England was welcomed In a kindly fashion. Princess Beatrice boarded the steamer off Yarmouth from the yacht Alberta; and remained-with th Em press until th'ey reached Southampton. A British knight presented a boquet to Eugenie accompanied by some ex tremely, poor verses written by hi daughter; and the ex-Empress In a very pretty and graceful fashion thanked for their courtesy all the steam ship bfrfdaU who Ead attended her upon her journey. . Kara Claxtox , the salamander act ress, Is booked to appear, at various points In Maine just before the Septem ber election. Things are In so combus- U ble-a. condition in that State at this particular time that it looks Ilka tempt ing. Providence for Kate to go walUlng about there. . Miss Oribwold, the young Ameri can; who Is studying singing in the Parts Conservatoire, and who feeling last year that she deserved a first prixe refused to take the' Inferior " honor awarded her, ha Just received that coveted flrrt prise. The quarrel was smoothed over, as the Conservatoire, It is hinted, did not care to lose so prom hung a puplL Miss Oriswold Is said to be a niece of Bret Harte, and her voice and her face are described aa beautiful. She U said, too, to have an elegant and noble presence, matching the dramatic expression of her tones. " ' asSSSSSSSSM ( , t f Nax Dow, the great toniperanee prophet of Maine, refuses to kneel down and worship the M Idol son" any longer. He Is mad because th Blain peopl mobbed .Ida osnveuUon at Ao- gusts. ble it to fly and dart upon IU prey with the greatest rapidity. The long tail, or "needle," undoubtedly, acts as a rudder U iu steady flight. Th Urge head I provided with two enormous compound eyes, composed of many thousand facets, and their great power of vision U still further laereased by three simple eyes, or ocelli, on the up per portion of the head. The mouth U quite a formidable structure. The up per lip U broad and conceal powerful toothed mandibles, and there are other organ of th mouth armed with strong teeth which enable It to rend and mas ticate IU food. The natural Urm of life of th dragon fly Im about one year. Most of IU exis tence is pawed In the water In. the con dition of larva or pupa, and it InhabtU the air only three or four weeka. When about to complete IU final transforma tion, the pupa climbs up some suitable place near the aurfaoe of the water, at taches Itself firmly to some object, aad In a short time the skin opens along the back, and from th rent there soon appears the perfect dragon fly, who, af ter drying his . isoUl wings, trusU his untried pinions with the fullest confidence to th new element, in which he Uvea but a few short summer days. Tennyson beautifully describe th changes In the "Two Voices :" To-daj I asw is rcoa tj Coon from U walls wssr ss dUl Us. An laasr Isxpslsa rent Lbs veU Of hU old bosk ; from nss4 to tall Cams ost clssr pistes of aspphlrs snail. He dried his wlno ; Use gsast thsy (res' , Throoch crofts sad psatsres wet with dew Allvlncasshofttghtberiew.' ' During IU exUtence of three or four weeks above the waters IU whole life U a oontlnaed good to man. It hawks over pooU and fields and th rough gar dens, decimating swarms of mosqui toes, (Ilea, gnaU and other baneful in sects. . Their rapid flight and enormous range of vision enable them to capture these Insects with ease. They destroy multitudes of moths and millers whose Urvss are injurious to vegetation, while they do not injure any product of th agriculturalist themselves. A few of them shut Into a house, would very soon rid it of files, bugs and mosqui toes. Thsy are perfectly harmless, aad can be handled with Impunity, and are an Interesting subject for study .as there till remains much to be learned of their nataral history. Th dragon fly is widely distributed over all parts of the globe, but few, however exceed la else or. beauty those of our own country. - ItBfoosa . T.lunltavi- . . i . . ui. lonl, a be placed IiU foot against the ' w broader portion of th tramp's 'paaU and assisted him out of doors. Water loo O&eerver. 7Z TT iT r VT: . l ' Thirty 4wo author. ... . Condltfons-J Iv. Urd each by Rhcsl. , . '! n1 another; Fa'rart a third: lo ts rX ait. ! has treated the others rather htrLl. ' I and they are now nobodies. ; Only eight muskal critics were rs abed, but a lady and 'genlletnsn h-t j free aJoiUsloo "ub account of the ii. convenience they suffered frotn tt. National Sports. I I. Jss. Jr l V.M.Bslsaee i w. a w ---? ' w.aasster a yds 7t fU. Jistl sit S I I S I mil j 1 1 1 s asii iiii it i its in i tsees ... .11111 1 1 1 1 aisi Jine i si Wit of the NaUonal Preat. The bee is th hum-bleat creature. A full hand hired man on a drunk. A monarch of the salt Th ahertflr. A promising young maa br chary of hU promises. ' A patriotic cltixen' calls hU frisky dog A-merry-cur. , Breach of contrast Tweed trowrrs which shriak. Beware of dried apple; they lire not wisely, but too swell. ' . ? - A spring opening the keyhole of a watch. Jmnresisasfc Republican, r - Th way to meet a man of doubtful credit U to take no note of him. . Wealthy peopl are Judged by their good will. Oouxmda JBmfrprUm. Who a man get his nose knocked Iarkln, formerly of the Troy, U now pltchtsg for the Albany. t The Pacific Icmgue, of Han Fram U- co, Cai., h- about run IU course. An early dlsbandment 1 expected. Devlin U considered by the Ban Fran cisco press to be the most skillful pitcher that has ever appeared in that city. MeVey.of th defunct Bay City Club of Ban Francisco, ha decided, It L said, to give up playing hall and turn his at tention to farming. Jim White has not been as yet of much benefit to the Cincinnati nine. He bad three errors at right field In a recent game' against the Boston. Murnan has retired frotn the manag-s-ment of the Natlck (Mas.) Club, and b think seriously of leaving the pro fession altogether. Flint, of the Chicago, has been taken from be Mad the bat, owing to sore hands, and placed in right field. Wil liamson baa been filling the position. Sullivan, the crack first t seunsii of the Worcester nine, did not accompany the club on IU Western tour, having been sent, to the city hospital In Wor cester. . Blelaakl, formerly of the Chicago, and one of the prominent members of the Capitol City Club, of Washington, D. C, has permanently retired from the profession The return game between the Yousg America and Rfverton, Clubs, pUyed at Btenton, resulted In another victory for the Young America by a score of IS to 8. . . The Dubuque (Iowa) Club has dis banded. Eden has gone to Indianapo lis; Kent and O'Connor bars signed with a Tepcka (Kansas) nine, and Troy and Callahan have goo to New York. Th Lone Btars, of New Orleans, struck Cincinnati recently a financial wreck. A benefit game waa afterward arranged for them, and enough mooey wa secured to send them home. Alcott, a pUyer who received hi education In Philadelphia, and who ha filled tb pitcher position qulU prom inently for a number of years. Is now pitching for a nine In Blag ham ton, N. Y. Tbe.Worce.ter Club -will be la the League next year. : Richmond, who started out as the phenomenal pitcher, but who has gloriously failed, is node ddsd whether to play any longer thU season. The Worcester nine on their way to Cleveland stopped at Akron, Ohio, and shut out th Akron player by a score of 16 to , Btotey's home run, Irwin's drive for three bags, and two-base hiU by Irwin, Bennett, Creamar and Wood being among the twenty safe hiU made by the Worcester. ' ' Manager Cam me yer, of th Union Ground, Brooklyn, U organlilng a picked team oT professional to repre sent Brooklyn during the remainder of the seasorv The nine will be knowo as the Union of Brooklyn, aad arrangw menU are being made for a series of matches. , . a. , ,V. QUford,UXmanagrof th National of Washington, an hi retirement waa presented by the players with a hanoV some testimonial In which they ex pressed Lb sir hearty appreciation of his services as a manager, and recorded their esteem and aCsctsao fbr him as a thorough genUemaa la priests rJfs. Th championship season U gradual ly drawing to a doss, and, -Vpg a ary liberal estimate against the Chl- oagofajamln the T 1 K a. iurw C. lUglsr 1 1 1 1 e IIS A.ruva iiiu tje T. P. tireger won th first prixe, Dei iher second, Budlh third prise, and Ruffner and Jones divided fourth prise. Opera House being neit done. prima-doonao&ly gt4fl,7ia)rsr.si..l i the chief dancer IIuu that daiw. j was' Yrstris. These figures are n.t.1.-.; j enough, and yet the cksw of a bnll..i ; iwiB exhibited but Ior recei4 KV,ot of wbJrb everythlBK 1. i to be paid. Mr. Oye's treasury is no doubt mar saUeisstory. Strange Edition of the Scrip tures Recently Exhibited in London. A Tight Squeeze. ' "From grave to gay" to tberiM ,.t life and newspapers as well--.. . An InUrestlog eoUectfon of Bible, j VCUm aod Maulli ", .t lk ,. . . . . ! the miller who sometime bad nvt fits. In which be alway lnin.-i hhnself to be th Lord judging ! world. On these ocensfons be ptrfi a psper crown, ssorod s pi. .-i mesi bscs with grant dignity and '--.'i his nstghbors in mtcemmUm. Tbe j. one were always judged, snd ll wer the millers of hU vicinity. 1 1 first on anmrnoaed was Hans t hiui!t "Hans fichmldt, stand oop. Han. i 1 teen your piahness la dat vorldr "I vas a miller, O Lwi : -Yas yua a Joost man T' Veil, eu it vatar vash low, and the pUhnm pad,0 Lort,I sutuetimssdake s ltJ extra dolss." -Veli, Hans, you .I..H go ofer niit I gvtes, already yet." Wi so ha fleet" salon all were tried ax4 iu. medUUty senteneed logo oer U. i!. goats. LastofsllthemlIWtrie-1l.it..-self la the foil wing style : "Jacob M il Ur, stand uop. Jaoub, vat ae -u 4shnessIadatodrrrorld "laa the reign of Queen Eliiahsth - f1"" "V I snppianted by the prnsent ' Jr' "VrtL O. -j A t.-T- , ven de eater vas a U1 kr ai.-l recently exhibited In London, which comprised coplea of all the edi tions that, because of peculiar errors of tbe printers, or from som other reason, have been known by strange aainea. Among the Bibles on exhibition were the following: TA QuUnUrg JSiW. The earliest book known. Priatad from movable metal types, U the Latin Bible Issued by Gutenberg, at Meta, A. D. ItSQ, - TLe Bug 2U. Wa so railed from IU rendering of Paalma xd. 6: ."Afraid of Bug by Nlgbt." Our present ver sion reads, Terror by NIghLw A. D. 1I. The ifreerAe JBiWs. The Oeneva version I that popularly known aa th Breeches Bible, from IU renderlag of GeuesU Ui.7: (making themselvea breeches out of fig leaves.) This traa UUoaof the Scriptures the result ol th labor of tha English exiles at Geneva was the English family Bible during and till authorised version of KlaavJame I J Hoe wmicrs HiUr.Vrocn a re markable typographical error which occur In Matthew v,t. "Blessed are the Place-makers,- Instead of Penoe makera. A. D. liCi Ike TmucU Frueu iu render ing f Jeremiah vlll, SS: "Is there no Trends (Instead of Balsa) la Gtlead ? " A. D. 1468. i The JZoesn Ur. From the same Text, bat translated Ron! a In the Duual vertiosi. A. D. 190a. The He and SXe Bite. Tram the rrspectlr renderiags of Ruth 111, ii ooe reading that "She west Into the rily." The other has It that "He went, - A. D. 1611.:' The irScaed Ue.Trom the fart that the negative has been left oat of the seventh eoenrosadsaent xx. 14.) For which tha prtater fined X300. A.D.131. pishueaei vas bad, I snmedinie tlak--s4ue Isedi exdra (k4"-; lit, . 1a-h I all de vile give dose exdra doles I dor. (After s k9K suse) "V II Jacub Miller,' yon esn ir fer nui J- bep but It vas von tight About th year ls33 a very old Uetnan csllodoa a welt-knowu (in Parisian music publishers and ofTni for sale a oUIectloa of forty bst4.l songs, of which 'be stated he ws H ole asthor. , One of the partners k-t-i through them and recsrnlfd a -. hegianlng "Aliens, KnfanU de U I Ui. "re you aware," be a-kJ. ssXirkmlly, of the old gUeuaa. this aong has been pnUisbeU l-1-t ' that It Is railed La MarsriUW.' su.i ll.l If. . ..rf. 1. T ! - - icxoao , M n,,, hi , . . ..Iwt. . . ft. I t v,rui sw tvmmfvx as I isie. square and half an Inch thick, was J xwnli lL ,UUtnenl tm. " ' published at Absrdeeex. A. D.iTO. iihla ' U- th. beadnn. of the ioth chapter ofiS7" ff1 Hurre,.r Luke, which read aa "The Parable of f T W wer reported, the lnegar," Instead at the Vineyard, tf V A. D. 1117. ... .1 nxJord- 1 Iht estixnaJe H tx- n-i-i. ,." w -T. 1 : ' s admitted that tke nana ber wss uu- - - - 'toanwMiaT Cotton Mather that la a BlU priatad prior to 1702, a Uundrrlngtypografer mad King David exclaim that " prin Un (instead of Prlocss)' .persecuted hlmwlthoeitavauaa. Bee Paaim exit, . Tke MurxUrrtkU-Qocmll4 from an error la tbe sixteenth versa ef the Epistle of Jade, tb word arderers'' aelng used, lastead of mrBanrsTa.' A. D. ll. - . . , Tke Qxxton Memorial iftois. W hotly printed and bound la U houra, but only 100 copies struck off. . A. D. 177, The extosMtve wooieo mills everted by theJspansss Oeesrnaoent nt TokU ar being fitted op with auachtnsry ob Utned from Germane. mmA (Wn rental ping games, It J workmen are salvaged. derraled. When wr take Into aideratlon thb vast fhain of Ukes ab-1 the miles of navigable river wltbts Mlaacnota, It to not. aurprislag that this btsle should become the summer reaort of the great West, aod that lb--eande of locuista ahouid yaariy fln-l their way here seeking rest and rerte. Uoo along the cool and shady shore of these watery rvrnj ArW Chr. 1 diamjtie Journal. . ; Jewel boxes of fine woods or red oorocco areenotrived In all manner of Ingenkwa waya, and the morechote varieties ar provided with one or more drawers. In which especially artictea easy be cemessied. Favorite deed gna are mlalaturecheOs of drawao or aacrilotrsa, parUcnLuly the latter. eti -n f a-