FACTS AND COMMENTS.
PLUCKEffG EXIGKASTS.
An ingenious swindle has lately been
exposed in Liondon. It consists in ar
tistically coloring fish, meat and .game
bo that theT appear to be of the finest
mialitv. and hawkine them abont the
Rtrneta at temntinor prices. A fish thus
prepared, which had passed the Inspec
tion of a wary housekeeiier and an
expert cook, was dropped into the pot
as a salmon of particularly aristocratic
hue and came out a codfisn of the most
plebeian type.
A young woman at a picnic neat Mad
ison. Indiana, was warned by the young
-man with, whom she was walking against
tumbling down the cliffs near them.
Bnt she thoushtlesslr went ahead and
plunged over a precipice of rugged
rocks seventy feet hieh. She was so
lnckvas to miss them all? landing in
the mud face foremost, whence she
was pulled out with no broken bones
and only a slight bruise. She will learn
to listen more attentively to what young
men say to her.
aaaB---a-to--
The laboring classes in Spain have
been for some time past Buffering great
ly because of trie long continued
droueht. Such extremities have been
, reached that the government was forced
' to furnish large amounts of money to
the authorities of Andalusia to be ex
pended in civic cr employment to the
people. The wisdom of this plan In
aiding those actually in want can read-
- ily be see. The government does not
propose to aid its citizens as to encour
age laziness, but only will assist those
who are desirous of employment and
cannot on account of the drought pro
cure it. This is an example of public
. aid such as can be followed by all na
tions without danger.
Immured within the triple walls of
Gdtsohina, and guarded by a host of
sentries, the Czar Alexander IIL still
suffers constantly a nervous terror that
threatens to dethrone his reason. Hav
ing overcome his fears sufficiently to
visit his father's grave on the anniver
sary of his death, he resolved on re
turning to test the effioioncy of his
guards. To his unspeakable horror he
was successful in eluding their vigi
lance, and regained his apartments nn
v seen. It is generally believed in St.
Petersburg that he never will summon,
up courage enough to endure the ordeal
of a public coronation, although 'some
of the ambassadors have rented palaces
in Moscow for the event.
A writer in the Cornhili justly gives
the palm of cheap places to live in to
Belgium and Italy. At Ypres or Ma
lines an ordinary ten-room house may
be had for $100 a year, a good Flemish
cook for $4 a month, and a housemaid
for 3. - Milk, eggs, poultry, fruit and
vegetables are about forty per cent,
cheaper than in American cities. Schools
are cheap and good. Italy is still
cheaper than Belgium to those who
fcnow Italian, but Americans and Eng
lish .must take very good care to ascer
tain what prices really are or they will
be charged tenfold. Bargaining is ab
solutely necessary, and, a? a rule, it is
best to offer at . first one-third of the
price demanded. Borne, Naples, Turin
and Florence should be avoided by
those bent on frugal living.
Oar Canadian neighbors are entitled
to tally one on the score of making
a noise' in tho world, a New York firm
having abetted, by- furnishing to an en
terprising lumber concern of that sec
tion what is, so far as we are aware, the
largest steam whistle on any industrial
establishment in the world. This
whistle, which stands four feet nine
inches high, has a bell twenty inches in
diameter, and is attached to the boiler
by a four-inch connection. It is made
entirely of composition (bronze), and is
highly finished all over. It will re
quire a liberal battery of boilers ta
supply the steam for an extended
i "toot," and the music will undoubtedly
sound charming from a distance. We
heartily sympathize with the hapless
people who live in the particular section
in which this whistle is to be located.
The criminal news of a single week
from all parts of the United States
makes a sad. shewing of boyish deprav
ity. A boy of Belleville, 111., killed
the girl who rejected his addresses on
account of his dissipation. Two Arkan-
" sas boys quarreled over a rabbit hunt,
and one slew the other with an ax. A
St. Louis boy stabbed the playmate
who teased him for his ignorance of
English. A West Virginia boy shot his
rival in his girl's affections. A Vir
ginia boy confesses the poisoning of
. two persons. A Texas boy shot a little
girl because she refused to put down a
pail when he ordered her to. A Kansas
boy is on trial for intentionally drown
ing a playfellow. Two Wisconsin boys
maltreated a child nearly to death.
Three boys pleaded guilty to highway
robbery in Chicago. An Iowa boy is a
-a r- rm .
iprger. a Jtiissouti rxy set nre to a
house. A New Mexico boy shot a baby.
A Colorado horse thief is aged eight
years, and none of the other criminals
mentioned was over sixteen.
A New York doctor who had a patient
wno was aimcted with nervous prostra
tion, catarrh and indigestion, and at last
had become a confirmed invalid and
had kept his bed a larger part of the
time, discovered that the trouble was
caused by a defective construction of
the eyes. After medical treatment and
the use of proper glasses he recovered.
uther oases of nervous trouble, irrita
bility and lack of tutrition were cured
by the use of glasses. ; Of 150 cases of
neuralgia, epilepsy, hysteria, stomach,
juaney ana spinal trouoies the disturb
. ance was traced to disturbances in the
eyes. He has taken observations for
many years before announcing his dis
covery. These diseases arise from lack
of consideration in the vision; that is to
say, both of the eyes do not see the ob
ject looked at from exactly the same
angle, producing irritation cf . the
organs. This is remedied either by
glasses or by straining the necessary
muscles of the eye. One case of epi
lepsy and sleeplessness was oured by
. severing the muscle. Prominent phy
sicians of New York, although believ
ing that he carries his theory too far,
are inclined to admit that he has dis
covered a new and important fact in
physiology.
A Tonehinjr Incident.
A child's soul in the act of grand
endurance passing out at the pressure
of his mother's kiss is a noble subject.
Says a Western exchange :
A ten-year-old boy, whose legs were
recently cut off by a train of cars at
Dubuque, Iowa, was too plucky to make
any fuss over the incident. When the
little fellow was taken home his lees
. im mt . .O
uuugump, put ne aid not complain.
AOt a tear stood in his eyes, but the
tender look he gave to those who stood
by his side told plainly that he was
suffering great agony; After the doc
tor had dressed his wounds he called
his parents, sisters and brothers to his
bedside, kissed one and all, and left a
tear upon their cheeks. A second tim
he called his mother to his side, placed
his arms about her neck, and said :
Mother, I am going to die in a few
minutes. Please forgive mer for not
minding you."
with this the little fellow fell back.
uu u mo juutuer saia, xes, my
darling," and took another look at bis
lace, sne found him beyond all pain.
Paris has
Nefarloaa Trick Practice By tmiira"
ltannera Ou.trae Aroand laaua
Garden, New York.
Three dollars and fifty cents were
recently charged an emigrant in a gro
cery at the Battery, lNew xora, ior a
loaf of bread and a pound of sausage.
A runner who took the innocent cus
tomer to the place shared with the
swindling shopkeeper the profits of the
extortionate charge. Thirty dollars
were not lonor since paid by a seoond
emigrant, freshly over, in a grocery
neat the former one, for a few small
parcels of crackers, cheese and other
articles of food. While the emigrant
counted out the money, which was
nearly all he had, the runner who had
inveigled him into the place stoie two
bills from his pocketbook.
"You can have no idea," remarked a
reputable business man, whose office is
at the Battery, "how tneso poor ana
honest emigrants are swindled by the
runners, grocers and hotel keepers. To
my personal knowledge three oi tne
emigrant runners are professional swin
dlers. They not only prey upon tnese
guileless people in New York, but fre
quently take the same train with them
and follow them out into the country.
Often they return with large sums cf
money. Eow it has been obtained you
may vaguely surmise, une oi teem nas
been convicted of frauds, for which he
ought to have got fifteen years in the
penitentiary at least All are regularly
licensed, dress well, and look respect
able. Occasionally one is 'broken,' but
you may soon see him at his nefarious
work of swindling again, restored
through corrupt political influence.
"A common triok with the runners is
to get a lot of excited and hurried emi
grants, on the point of taking a train
for the West, into an emigrant grocery,
tell them that there is not a single sta
tion between New York and Chicago, a
distance of a thousand miles, and adjure
them to buy enough food for a week's
iournev. They do so. The shopkeeper
gives them short weights, goods lor tne
most part worthless, and charges them
unheard of prices. Liard cheese they
sell to them for eighteen and twenty
cents a pound. Sausage made out of
refuse meat unwholesome and unfit to
eat, they often oharge thema dollar a
pound for. Loaves of stale bread
bought by the barrel at bakeries for four
cents a piece they sell to them at
twenty-five- cents apiece, and some-'
timesv more. Much of this stuff the
emigrants are obliged to throw out of
the car windows, as uneatable. They
use the hard, dry bread only.
"The hotel keepers inveigle emigrant
families who have no money into their
taverns, and on one pretext and another
keep them, giving them almost nothing
to eat, until their bill amounts to a sum
sufficient to enable them to seizo their
baggage. Then they turn them adrift,
to be sent, perhaps, as paupers to Ward's
Island. A trick is played on the Ger
man emigrants by all these people in
the counting of money. Forinstanoe,they
eay to the emigrant that the price of some
article, or the amount of some bill, is a
dollar, or so many dollars. The emi
grant does not know what a dollar is
and inquires. They answer that a
dollar is one hundred cents. Now
in German money it takes four hun
dred cent3 to ' make a dollar.
so that one hundred cents in their
money is really but twenty-five cents of
ours. The German emigrant pays one
hundred cents in our money, ignorantly
supposing that he is counting out but a
quarter in so doing. Thcis the grocers
sometimes sell a loaf of bread for a
quarter, ' and take a hundred cents of
our money in payment for it.
"The runners have reduced lying to a
fine Art. Their helpless prey know only
of truth and of honesty, having in the
old country seen nothing else, and are
easily imposed upon by their misstate
ments and their various artfully-disguised
methods ef robbery."'
A New York Prsss reporter, disguised
as a runner, by the aid of a Bowery neck
tie and a paste diamond pin, entered one
of the stores alluded to above with a
friend, who, in turn, was disguised by a
German cap and an old suit of clothes.
The seeming runner winked at the shop
keeper and drew him to one side.
You re a new man?" said the gro
cer.
Yes: I just got my license to-day:
How much per cent, will you give?'
"Forty per cent, on all above the
regular profit."
"x want fifty per cent."
" I can't do it."
"I'll take him to another store, then.
That's the regular profit."
" We pay the old men that. But if
we make a good thing out of him Til
do it-
Then followed a series of attempts at
intimidation and virtual robbery on the
part of the "runner" and the shop
keeper, of which the alleged emigrant
was to be the victim. He was cajoled,
threatened and lied to, but all to no
purpose. He remained so strangely
stupid that nothing could be done with
him.
"I will try to fix him," said the
runner," as he at length left with the
"emigrant."
I shall only give you twenty five
per cent, hereafter," said the grocer.
At the lunch stand in Castle Garden
they sell cigars for five cents a piece to
the emigrants which a Mulberry street
Italian would blush to dispose of at two
tor a cent, and which it ought to be a
misdemeanor to sell. The petty officials
oi the railway companies around the!
Garden treat the emigrants as if they
were cattle.
POK THE FIRM ASD H0XE.
Troubl with Batiar.
Butter is one of the "most complicated
products ; its quality depends upon a
great variety of conditions the cow,
the food, the air of the stable, the wa
ter, the milk pails, pans, and the plaoe
where the milk is set besides many
other things. When cream becomes
covered with a sort of pimples all over
the surface, with here and there yellow
ish or reddish dots or spots upon it, it
is attacked by a speoies of mildew or
fungus, which very soon spreads all
tfcmueh it This spoils the flavor of
the butter. From some troublesome
and careful experiments the past win
ter the writer is convinced that this is
caused by too much dampness in the
milk-room or cellar and the presence of
germs of mildew. The first was cor
rected by puttttg some fresh lime in
the milk-room, which absorbed the ex
cess of moisture, and by burning sul
phur in it to disinfect it and destroy
the milder germs. By burning sulphur,
Bulphurous acid is produced, and this
is a very active antiseptio and destruct
ive of all kinds of molds, mildews and
ferments. It would also be well to
look closely to the water drank by the
cows.
Aiparnga Caliare.
Asparagus beds planted in the old
way become matted with roots or
crowded by accidental seedlings so as
to become either unproductive, or, if
productive, the canes are ridiculously
email. This may be remedied by cut
ting out alternate belts through the bed
one foot in width, taking out all plants
from one belt and leaving them in the
next The -trenches cut through the
bed should then be filled with humus
and manure, thoroughly mixed to
gether, and a liberal dressing of
manure worked into the soil on
the belt itself. A very common mis
take made by gardeners is in having
too little earth above the crowns of the
plants. T here should be from four to
six inches of rich loam above the crown
o that the canes will be bleached for
at least four inches before reaching the
surface of the soil Plant an occasional
crown in a well-enriched plot in the
flower garden. The early canes can be
cut for the table, and later ones will
make a very ornamental cluster duting
the summer and fall. The old plan of
planting in compact beds has now been
superseded by the row system, in which
plants are set every two feet by six
feet Asparagus, like all other falad
plants, must grow rapidly to be good
and tender. Hence very rich soil is a
necessary requisite to successful aspara
gus culture. Boston Transcript.
liar for Fuel.
A correspondent in the Prairie
Farmer, writing from Bogers Park, 111.,
who cla ims to have had experience in
bay burning, suggests experiments for
the preparation of hay a s fuel and ex
presses a firm conviction that grass
treated aco ording to his directions may
be transformed into a m ass closely re
sembling coal in all essentials.
. This correspondent suggests two ex
periments for the preparation of hay
for fuel. First, pressing green hay fresh
from the scythe into bales as for ship
ping. Press as solid ly as possible, and
cover at onoe with dry straw and earth
where the bales will be kept tree from
water, same as a pot ato pit or coal pit,
leaving no air hole. After a few weeks
when done heating, remove the bales
and let them dry in the sun. In a few
days, according to this correspondent's
belief, they will be fit for fuel and almost
as solid as coal.
The second mode consists in filling a
compartment of any build or tight pen
or box with green hay, undried, but
free from dew or rain. Make the pile
as high as possible, cover the top with
boards, . planks or straw and put on
weights of stones or sand to afford
compression. Let it remain undis
turbed for a few weeks, then expose to
the air and sun to expel moisture, and.
to quote from the correspondent, "there
will be as near an approach to vegeta
ble coal as it will be easy to obtain."
The points to be observed in prepar
ing hay for fuel in the manner described
are : First, exclusion of air during the
heating process ; second, weighting the
pile to make as much pressure as possi
ble ; third, giving the air and sun free
access to the pile after a few weeks to
dry out the little moisture remaining
around the sides. When dry enough
for the store the mass is to be cut with
a hay-knife or crosscut saw and kindled
in cubes as coal.
i cultivated In the same manner, but they
should never be planted near each
other.
One acre of land well prepared and
well tilled produce more than two
which received only the same amount
of labor used on one.
Do not throw away the"' young beeta
that you thin out of the rows. Tope
and roots make a delicious sort .of
greens and are healthy.
Self-interest demands that a farmer
should raise nearly all he consume,
which will enable him to pay cash for
all he is compelled to buy.
Do not turn the manure in too deep,
but we believe in turning it under the
surface as soon aa it is put upon the
field. Especially is this true for potato
land.
Ladies do not like to cut back rose
bushes or pinch back other plants.
Farmers are afraid to pinch back vines
or berry canes. Pinch back tomato
plants and spread them.
Every one understands that those
hens which are most marked by patience
and gentleness are the best fitted for
incubation. Choose a hen in this re
spect for her stolidity and want of live
liness. The Germantown Telegraph recom
mends keepers of fowls to grow sun
flowers in the out-of-the-way places for
the seeds, which are excellent for the
poultry. And it might have added that
the plant is a good protection against
malaria.
A New England man affirms' that if
you take a balky horse from the wagon,
and with one man at his head and an
other at his tail, whirl him around in
the smallest possible circle, until he is
dizzy, he will be cured of balkinesa. At
least he will be after two applications
of the remedy.
Clover seed may be sown on fall
seeded fields of rye, wheat or grasf,
and the surface hart owed with a light,
fine tooth harrow, or rolled with an
iron roller, or both, as the character of
the soil may demand. If the surfsoe is
light and dull of cracks and the soil
moist most of the seed falling into the
cracks will germinate and grow.
The London Live Stock Journal gives
two methods of starting a balky horse
" 1. Tire your steed out by remaining
perfectly quiet until he starts of bis,
own accord. 2. When a horse refuses
to draw at all, put him in a cart in
shed and keep him there until he
walks out In one instance the obsti
sate on was thirty-six hours in the
shafts before he gave in."
.The Hon. Gaorge Geddee mentioned
at a recent meeting of the Onondaga
(N. Y.) Fanners' club that one of his
fields, to which no barnyard manure
had been applied for seventy years, and
which formerly had a bad reputation,
is kept fertile by clover and plaster
alone, and that the late John Stanton
Gould onoe spoke of its crop of timothy
as the largest he had ever seen.
The best treatment for a mare in foal
is to give her moderate exercise daily,
care being taken against over-exertion.
The food should be good clover and
timothy hay, well cut and salted,
ground oats, and a bran mash mixed
with potatoes or other roots. Feed
some corn or meal, but not too much,
in order to guard against milk fever.
See that the colt promptly relieves the
udder soon as possible alter birth.
Mistaken Kindness.
Mormon wagons took sunflowers alona
with them on their way to Utah, and
Iowa farmers have had a hard. time
fighting the pest A single Scotch
thistle planted in Victoria the Scotch
men there had a congratulatory dinner
over it twenty years ago has covered
tens of thousands of acres and been, the
destruction of farms. The scattered
grain emptied from the bags of Gar
man troop ships in the Bevolution
knocked millions off the value of our
grain crop for all time to come by bring-
ng tne Hessian ny. A careless man set
out a French grape-cutting a few years
ago with phylloxera on it, and the pest
is now sprinkled along the Paoifio coast,
creeping inland. - Its ravages in France
have cost . $400,000,000. A man with a
taste for peppery greens planted water
cress in Mew Zealand, and the little
plant has spread so that .the local leg
islature has to appropriate a round sum
yearly to improve the water-cresB out
oi existence and the water courses. A
kindly, misguided man brought over to
JNew xots. a basketful of sparrows not
twenty years ago, and the little wretches
have already driven half our song birds
into the woods. In South America the
same thing was done, and the birds are
cleaning out the fruit crop.
Kate aa llatealag.
Early layers are always early sitters,
and those who want broody hens in
January and February, says a corre
spondent of the Journal of Horticulture,
can generally manage it by hatching
early, feeding well in autumn, and
keeping them in warmish quarters t.
induce them to lay. A quiet nest with
a few dummy ggs in it is useful in
such cases. There is no difficulty in
having broody hens from the end of
January onward. It is always best to
allow old hens to sit and settle a few
days before putting the eggs under
them. From the first they should be
in the nest they are going to sit in.
Baskets, boxes or places made' for the
purpose will do. Too much Bpace should
not be given; enough for the hen to
sit comfortably is all that is wanted. If
the entrance to the nest can be closed
so much the better. Some advocate
having the nest on the ground, others
some distance from it; but I have had
as fine hatches from the box nests, four
feet from the ground, as from the level.
The place should be cool, not over
draughty, and the ground should al
ways be moist ' I do not approve of
trusting valuable eggs in woods or out
Bide confined quarters, as foxes are al
ways prowling about Wi'Ji young be
ginners broedy hens are often liable to
be over attended during the time they
are sitting. The less they are dis-
turbed the better. Once a day ours are
fed and watered, and after that they
are never looked at again until the fol
lowing morning. They are fed on grain
only, in connection with this there is an
other question which often leads to
much doubt, and this is as to what time
the hen should remain off the nest
Young pullets will often rush back to
it after being a few minutes off; others
will stay away for an hour or more. In
the one case are the eggs overhatched,
or, in the other, are they sufficiently
so? To the first question we answer,
no ; to the second, yes. So long aa
.they do not remain off more than half
an hour we never feel alarmed, and if
they do go back at the end of the first
five minutes it is just the same. Some
little difference this may probably
make, but I can say it is neither seen
nor felt in practice. As a rule our hens
remain, off their nests about fifteen
minutes.
Reel.
Mtxk Cakes. One pound and half
of flour, two ounces of butter, a pine
of salt and a teaspoonful of baking
powder; roll out the piste thin and di
vide into flat cakes; bake in a quid
oven.
PiKEArpiJi Pie. One large pineappb,
pared and grated, one cup of sugar,
one-half cup of butter, five L eaten eggs,
a little nutmeg ; cream the butter and
sugar. Beat in the egg yolks, add the
pineapple and spice, lastly the whites
of the eggs beaten t a froth. Bake
without upper crust
VKAii Fib. Line a deep tin pan with
a good crust. Parboil the meat and
season high, first cutting it into small
pieces ; nearly fill the pan witfe water
in which the meat was parboiled ;
sprinklo flour over, add a piece of but
ter, and cover with a tolerable thick
crust Chicken pie may be made in the
tame way.
A Bich Tomato Scrp. Take eight
good-sized tomatoes, cat them in half,
put them into a saucepan with a bunch of
sweet herbs and an onion stuck full of
cloves, snxne allspice, whole pepper and
silt Cook them slowly until quite
soft, then strain through a strainer or
hair sieve until the rkins and onions
and herbs only are left behind. Have a
quart of plain stock boiling hot Stir
the tomatoes into it, add the yolks of
two eggs beaten up in a little cold
water. Serve with sippets of toast or
fried bread. -
Nrw Potatoes Fbitd. The smallest
cf new potatoes, about the size of hick
ory nuts, may be cooked in several de
licious ways if you have the patience to
scrape or pare them. Drop them in
cold water as soon as the skin is re
moved, have ready a pan of very hot
dripping, drain the potatoes, dry with
a towel and cook in the hot fat until
you cin pierco them easily with a fork.
If the fat has been of the right temper
ature they will be of a very delicate
brown. Drain in a colander, put them
in a hot dish Uned with a napkin,
sprinkle with pepper, salt and finely
minced parsley. Serve at once.
WISE WORDS.
President Arthur's Letters.
President Arthur, it is stated.' receive.
600 letters every day. Allowing him to
give each letter one minute s time, ten
presidential hours of the twenty-four
are accounted for. A famous English
man of a century ago, who suffered from
the same kind of inundation, used
pleasantly to say that one-third of the
letters he received were answered, that
another third answered themselves, and
that the other third got no. answers of
any (kind. It is to be supposed . that
the President follows the precedent of
the : langlishman, who borrowed his
No
Farm aa. Gardes. Kate
system of farming is complete
Jkhat dispenses with clover as a rotation
crop.
It is asserted that nine-tenths of the
foot and ankle ailments of horses are
traceable to standing on dry plank
floors.
Sow mangles, sugar beets, carrots and
fiarsnips as early as possible, and fit the
and thoroughly before putting la the
seed. '
Dr. Augustus Yoelcker commends the
soiling system and characterizes pastur
ing as a moBt wasteful way of keeping
ttock.
The stoutest heart loses hope unde
repeated defeat
Wit is a merchandise that is sold but
can never be bought
Better bend the neck promptly than
to bruise the forehead.
He who prepoeea to be an author
should first be a student
If the power to do hard work is not
talent, it is the best possible substitute
for it
As any man may be compelled to eat
his words, he should never indulge in
bitter speeches.
There is no strength in exaggeration,
even the truth is weakened by being ex
pressed too strongly.
Excess generally causes reaction, and
prudence a change in the opposite
direction, whether it be in the reasons,
or in individuals, or in governments. -5Men
in responsible situations cannot
like those in private life, be governed
solely by the dictates of their own in
clinations, or by such motives as can
only affect themselves.
man can go into bad company
without suffering for it The homely
old proverb has it very tersely: "A man
can't bite the bottom out of a frying
pan without smutting his nose."
Manners must adorn knowledge and
smooth its way through the world.
Like a great rough diamond, it may do
very well in a closet by way of curiosi
ty, and also for iu intnnuo value.
If honest fame awaits the truly good;
if setting aside the ultimate success
excellence talone is to be considered,
then was his fortune as proud as any to
be found in the records of our ancestry.
Many who seem to be struggling with
adversity are happy; while tome in the
midst of riches are miserable. This ' is
the case when the former bear the pres
sure with constancy, and the latter em
ploy their wealth thoughtlessly.
A HOI'S TERRIBLE CRIJtE.
Harariac Tw Ma-Te Yaataral Mar
rr Lraca.
The murder of two men la Minnesota
by John Tribbette, a boy only fifteen
vears old, revealed a terrible oaae of
youthful depravity. The boy was cap
tured and taken to J ail after makiag a
full confession. About l oeiocK in
the morning about twenty resolute men
broke through the surrounamg crowa
and began to batter In the ouUida door
of the jail, it oaerea uiue reauienoe,
and they were soon inside. About this
time a wagon drove up, and the Impres
sion spread that the boy would be lax en
into the woods around the town and
hung. The lynchers found hard work
in breaking open the door of TribbeUa'
cell; the sounds of the blows upon it
could be heard at a great distance.
Tho crowd kept coming closer and
closer, but were warned hack in menac
ing tones by the lynchers. As the door
yielded to the biowuar.a vicuna was
at their mercy they took hold of him
roughly, when he exclaimed,'
boTs.this is too rough r "You will
think it is rough," was the answer.
He was taken out and the crowd ex
pected to see him put in the wagon,
but the latter was only a blind, and
drove off without him. The lynchers
carried him to the railroad track a few
rods away and began preparations to
finish their terrible work. A ladder
had been provided and was braced up
against a telegraph pole, a rope
was then thrown over one i u
rounds, placed around the neck of
the murderer, and in a few minutes all
was over. No one but the lynchers was
allowed to come near the scene of the
hanging. All others were warned to
keep away and the warning was en
forced by the showing of revolvers.
The history of the life and crime of
John TribbetU reveals the result of
vicious trainings He had been per
mitted to read trashy literature and cul
tivated a naturally depraved disposition.
He had often boasted that he would
make a strike to join the cowboys on the
Eiaius, and, as the sequel shows, the
lack Hills was his objective point His
favorite literature was the life of the
James boys, the Younger brothers, the
life of Billy the Kid, Burton the stage
robber, and when he could not get any
thing more blood curdling would draw
on the Mood and thunder trash with
which Western homes are flooded. The
boy was only fifteen years old, but of
robust development yet looked but
little more mature than his age would
indicate. He was large of frame, but
muscular ; had a most vicious cast of
countenance and an unsteady, wander
ing black eye, but his firm set lips and
square jaw betrayed resolution. The
father and mother of this precious villain
live at Per ham and have the reputation
of being very worthy people.
The following is the story of the
boy's crime : The scene of the murder
was Redeye, in Otter Tail county.
Northwestern Minnesota, on a Sunday.
The victims were Edward Washington,
turveyor of the Minnetonka Mill com
any, late of Bay City. Mich., aged
ubout thirtv-five, and George Feim
backer, aged twenty-three, a Germ.n,
In the employ of Washington, recently
from New York city, and who had been
living in Perham three or four months.
His only relative In this country is a
sister living In New York city. They
left Perham on the previous Thursday,
k tat ing that they were going to look
after heeds. They were supplied
with a tent and camping outfit maps,
plats, etc. On Sunday they stopped
t the house cf John Dornbusch, a
rarmer living near Redeye. They ar
rived there about 10 o'clock, in com-
Kny with John TribbetU, the lynched
y, with whom the deoeaaed had
Ltopped and left a part of their outfit
the day before. TribbetU carried a
double shotgun, which he had borrowed
(hat morning of a neighbor named
Richardson, one barrel of which was
loaded with buckshot and the other
with fine shot TribbetU started off in
the timber, 1 erring the two men at
Dornbuich'e hoUe,where they sUyed to
dinner, leaving there at 1 o clock, and
it t ing that they were going to section
12, which was pine Umber land, carry
ing with them an ax and a revolver,
and each having a silver watch
and fhK They not returning
search was made for them,
and their bodies were found, one on
the following Friday and the other on
Saturday morning, about thirty rods
apart Washington was found with
gunshot wound in the back of his head.
with his pockeU picked, his booU and
hat gone, his maps and plat a lying on
the ground beside him, together with a
pocket eompass. The body ox rerm
backer was found about thirty rods
north of the body of Washington. He
was found to be horribly butchered.
The ground around the body indicated
that he hal made a hard fight with his
assailant His throat was cut and his
skull broken by a savage blow from the
ax.
Young TribbetU made bis appearance
in Perham on Monday, the next day
following the murder, with plenty of
money, which was unusual for him. He
purchased a new suit of elothee, had
his picture taken and exhibited a watoh,
chain and revolver. He offered the
watch to several different parties, stat
ing that he was going West to Mon-
Una and that be would Like to sell
them. He finally sold his watch and
chain and took the train West, as it U
supposed. The testimony before the
coroner's jury disclosed the fact that
the watch and chain and revolver that
were in hU possession were the prop
erty of Washington. He had in his
possession about 15. The hat,
rubbers and stockings worn by
TribbetU were found near the bodies
of the murdered men. Other atrong
circumstances proven point nnmisUka
bly to his guilt. A poat-mortem exami
nation was made by D. Newcomb, cf
iPerham. Four buckshot were found in
the brain and an extensive fracture of
the skull of Washington. The body of
Fermbacker was literally hacked to
pieces; more than twenty cuts, ranging
from the full breadth of the ax down
ward, were found. The skull was
aushed in and even the ribs were cut
through by the ax in the hands of this
human fiend. The remains of Wash
ington were buried by order of the oor
oner and those of Fermbacker by the
Catholio church of - Perham, of which
be was a member.
gUTf.
TV. Franklin Invented a sieve in
1745. Previous to that time there were
stoves la Holland and Germany.
Franklin's store, however, was a greet
improvement on all that bad preceded
it. In 1771 be invented several other
ttoves, one for burning bituminous
ooaL which would consume Us own
smoke, and had a do award draught;
and another, intended for the earn
MrmM. bavins a basket graU or cage.
with movable bars at the top and boN
torn, supported by pivoU at the
eenter. and which, afer being
filled and kindlfd at the top,
eould be inverted, and so bum from
the base. The next inventor cf etovec,
ovens and heating and cocking appa
ratus was Count Bumford.who, between
1785 and 1735, devised several Improve
ment, ell intended to economize fuel
and heat It may be sUted that the
box stove sow ia the Slate nouae at
Richmond, Va., bears dale cf 1770, U
one of the so called Holland stove, and
was probably imported from Eaflsad,
as the e utis ga. though rude, are anter
ior to the American casing of that day.
For cooking purpoeea Coont Romford's
cooking store or range, lined with
fire-brick or soepetone, and with a ven
tilating oven, which had been intro
duced into New York as early as 1738,
snd into Boston about 1?00, were grad
ually co tain g into use, and be '.wren
that time and 1825 there wee, consider
ic a- tha period and the obateclee, con
siderable aetifity ia this branch of
manufacture, which hare been increas
ing annually ever sine.
A XaaTf Bellas Walked 175,200 Mile.
George Fa weett completed in April
last his forty-seventh year of arnoo u
tha r.naliah rjoatrfiSce ae raral
Mr. From 1845 to 1542 be rode
between Sedbergh and adjacent sta
tions, carry ior mails in thU way a total
dWneo67,ie0mile. From 1842 to
18S2 he has walked dally between Bed
bergh and Dent, thus traversing 175.
200 miles. Hie entire travel as poet
nan fooU ud 212 S60 miles, nearly ten
time the duUeo round the earth, and
2. SCO miles further than from the earth
to the moon.
Oastle Garden, New York, has become
a veriUble Tower of Babel, and tber
is probably no plaoe of the same site ia
the world where so many 1 an go res are
heard at the same time.
I Beaartfal VWm
I ar aJ aur t-y tmCmi
l-rentarUM-a, whv Pr. a ror.a
fraacrr?fe ei3 l?aiWy
eflaaiironwtia, ry nw
CI
ealy a
it alt
km amfctliooa amae wees TO
eftae att ye rta. bt a bit" Uae ate
lM;0rtM'fNBl(MbiualJ fc t
fcxtt .
aaiara immJ; for ro toa. b
lor ena'iaWitt eixba iaia
eotJ. tafia, tivta f Vond, UCS
eVaieaa of arv-. aa4 kta4'4 efitetto!
Ue tare ! e. Bvervrrv.
OnmmM a figU Ublaf la a thp i
teu (or eotac Ik aa4 tt ikie we are I
to aaiwfy ewwim.
Dr. rirrtws - ISTeU Cult Be fCit
(aaffr-eeM!)-rrty ite Uood, ily cor
rct 3 dMordVra t4 tbe liver. rAniKfi aa
bewata rj lrrru.
A nm Uaa a WW. eft goes eavey
tbroe baJac U7 doerttd,
Haat Kala.
Claara est ru, tun. .. rk.
Wlsorv ataata. canma. r icaara. tie.
Tie Selaece ef Ltav fcaJfi anstlaa, a
anxii fnrf i.a jvmmw. aui
t4 V ! 1U iava&eV praacrvUo,
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wa y pw r- r. . m
IraAa aa t- 1 r- inam i u.
1
AMatrr. wa am t i aai na
antntkM ttmr a4 mtma.
Atcxjam. artviuauatet we arraa-are
Ubvra wnmmj ara amp a cv tmm
Kn axi aar a: aw-i. ar -
tm.ilMltowiH) rv?aiiraikMia(
Of sweets lr our reiia. la we rwn
n it wnarwi an nwi, St m pwi
kMbMiMlMaa
m m aa It Ifcat rt l a
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aaura a M ta
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for Uttar
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f Ur. ra-twi a a. T-raaJfa
f whwt Mrcasat Garcia U4
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Waatlral
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CURES
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lkos aae
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DUappelatrd Eatlrrlr.
Mr. W. F. lUihrrinftoe, editor ef the
Sentiael, inlanutd oee of our rrprearela
tivr thftt at tried St Jicoba Oil lor rbev
malum, and found ii all that coo Id t
aaked. The rvmedr cauaad the pais to -tircly
diaapprir Ewsoria (Kan ) New
In sevrntv-flve caee out of every
hundred tbe lower llmbe of human sab
ects aieof unequal length. The in
eauality varies from one-eighth cf aa
A a .
ar ara
-!. at,
lUir til l
at w ),r te
taa imu It rrofrwtrt af aver rWauiaa
aamoff . aJ ty aase iiamnvi A
amiss lo r:t ceil, fenum. y! , -
r Jtcoaa Cut la a aw1 iy
an. barsaaa 4 t pbniA atrrve H rr.
ta. CmtX laavU. a To aaiaa-.
tuM !:. X. Y- ear a ara a
rat MJm 0 rfcmaaalMaa ataay T;
H a4 awe rfctwaieua la J VT
poruoa f fcla fcodf, a rf4 ia ea
Wt vobU h m:lr eaabt o an a art
teuiaana. ll aai :"lia : U T
err. a. aa r 1 a aW wa w
aay trooiii. I aursixw nr rwwr Urir a
. Jroa Oil, ft 1 Imtut aa aoc ial I eraa-
M" to lal natmiy ; aa w awyw
ana H rJets raa!t ". r
t-a ;: u 'ii, aa M a!r
cUiearvl tar U- r iiiee acoa Cv K at aa
ear ro4. t r T "'
tar a4 aay aaa er rot, aa U aaa tw .!
Is mrt mbrn IW-r Wat tnmA M. I C
aay that r Jtnn Cut l a atstaty r,
inch to an inch, the average being ore- 7!! lV"??'?Z H
I Vara fooiid St. Jacobs Oil to be a
csoU iclleai rmdy for rbeaUe
m i . ft,
pin,"ya 1 r. r. iaiatsa, a iiamaae
alrect, rrwrideece. H. I- Ujtto Herald.
A sawmill ia Ceoada, not content
with the racket of iu regular machinery,
has had made at B rid r port the bifgett
steam whistle on record, the dulcet tones
of which will wake up people fifty miles
away.
X Wrar ml a tltlara.
IL IL VTaM 4 Co.: ."-Tow b Kid
ay and Lirar Cure aaa eott4Ul rar4 aa
ef a pa: Dial )Mny (root U, tad 1 a (car
af iL ratara of to daaorJar.
W. P. Drima-T. S roljf A noo
Xjt do oee omloaJ yo wtia Uor, yoe
will tod it aa taausVraUa trW.
tmtif fry yvlMw an ota.b t
watt. Ict rr pvNt a nty w; aw m aa
arwy o4 p rnut ta o vert i
j. I J C ii
.X m. at
"i aa4
i aay
a-.
ia ii i n eiiMi
inf. rntnM
4 (
AS ( nil Will Kay
a Trvelia aroa U Hera aod tl
Bor V of 10O par. ValnaU lo rwl
of bora. IVtUp alaatpa ukre, Sal pw
paid by Nw York Nvffrr 1'atoo, LS0 tTorU
EUrcf, e iota.
Nonuri ivtmiuu tui iwC, VtM out J
prrftMa of baaf cootaiaiac i rmltrm aiOm-
tmimm ami lii anttats vfriw ; ta
valnabl for ladiraaOon. drtrV. eue
praatratio. aod a;l fora-t c4 fuaral daoililr;
alt, la all efabtd coo.lt UotM, -tahT taa
raaall of thoUov ariu KwinUoa. ear
work or arota d vaa, rarUcaiarly if aaalnac
troaa lelaaoeary coaBoUia'a. CtU. litxard
A CO., prDprtoc. Nw Vnrt. KH trr dratf-a.
rrtxaokmrrialhmtnUotvmUx3lmnm epos
thm aaada of ofrU at ta waU cata la
rtilberr'a djatonry CarboUa. a d .Ve
iid txuact of ptml-3m. to eoJy artkle taat
a I -U pro J oca dw hair oa bald baarta
RM-1'KD riOH DEATH,
wm ai 1. c ana. mS limin. Mmm . mm ta t-j
f3 oi V. I at tefcta mm i
am 1 rrra ac-V. I In mi i
a wat cti rtmrA to ay la, la ln I '
uwawytnl. Ta aur t-4 1 W-4 In k my I
He at a a;i -mim t. Aimmmtsmm a let waas i
l-tl I a at r4. I mmm. mm a ft W4 Ok af
DB. WILLIAM nAU.-Sa.LAAM ruBTTJB U IGt
I c4 fcrtt. ht tar tvyr. 1 1 naiinin I a Stat
WW. at to-dAj I trml totw-t -a K Vmnm Immrt tmmX.
t -Tito B V- rrnmrm mmm aat-4 ana tjiiati I
Laatsau: tpa. Wil l UN HALL'S HAt.lA.aa4
tt (MiM roxst mnx ct s t a IUI. t
ra tl.! arlU oaa at-t tmmt Owa a fa
Utrt atwliciait I a toata ata mj ataa.
Payne Automatic EnRlnos,
3
a
u- - r I .ri
a-nt v rnUt aa T. vatww a
ttifaat.
Oawa, rarer. WkVrT'.
, WatM mA II JctVfeta. -
.yBM-BMaa, rbtUHO c I M JKtJ-,
(P rm iaaN Ou . immm-m. Maatr. Tlva.
AtoptofltoUV- ImkmA t7-. rw .
sue ItSltS f Vrr ' ---
. yl- e-t aa-l iaa --.
V J tua i "Am nam thaa X ' tH a
. VU Vr t T"v ataajt a" I f
JOHN HOD OH, Sec-.
TleiiEininitliilCn;-!!
bK to snnouncs to tho pwbtlo
that In order to accommodate Uvo
vreatiy increaeed oiminow inetr
Magnetlo Garment tney haeo re
moved their principal eeleeroome
and oTTIce from CO Fulton St .
Brooklyn. toaSCaet lth U. Wew
Tortt City, where all communica
tion ahould bo oddroseod. and
all chock, draft and P. O. order
bo made payable- -
WILSONIA
.HAGITIC GLGTHIKG GOL.
w
25 EAST Hill SHEET,
flew York City
PA&UIS WL1TI0 fCHTHt
ICTORIAL
HISTORYwniWORLD
r- 1mm fa aa aw!War a i mt aa-
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JLUUL I rm
AND
FRANK
JAMES
EVERY OIMESulTc
tto-aa taHi i it.
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PENSIONS,
THRESHERS.
a, ra l lts a
CUEGIESr.
ONE HILLiOH COPIES SOLD.
pivitL1 iiiEHilS riX&TBODT ri3rrs it I
IIIX&TC0D1 5ttM m
iHssadl aavaaa tse javawaawwaav aaasaaa aavSa, ,aas)piasya
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to. to
Bay a Traaltae aaaa ia
B-ooa of lot ract. Vataatata
8A C'vala -wtll
liana
tn nmty mwmwt of
Itoat rr-4 oy LTl TURS Ml rrACSlUX
11 ttil Wwrt. fctlitt.
I.Lr.V UK A in roODWVr-OaKtoatato
. la Hr-J- aa .-.. rail llraaaa. II
prt'lnli f-r Nrrroto. Iv'Hlil r -i f-ua V to
nnm pr. r e ariwrttoa. th ft.
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THE MaUKETS.
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LTttotoxi. aty i... -'-i u7fc:. W i e7I"T-"M t Z I tut rttir-
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AXLE GREASE
ta la wart flmm -aaaloa.
tw...t..trntr rk mmm .
tw.', toii.o iumiiut
MAKE HENS LAY.
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KHDV THYSELF.ZS
TBI
elL-r
tov 1 1 . i a ur A.ira-1 wa
riDtlT.TIOt.
St a aiitUal traauta aa r ttiit . I Tnmlm, I
a rartonA faotr. tuititw ti-i ta Ka.
to It rm a ml Ii Utoti i
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Tlia imninm in man ta In fVia miin-
Tbe Late Ecllpte ef the Sib.
The scientific joaraals of Europe are
.oat now fall of the results of the ob
servations of the last total eclipae of
the son made ia Egypt by Eat liah and
continental astroaomers, whoee work
has been pretty fully reported by oor
respondents, and has attracted the at
tention of physicists to a degree
only equaled by that performed
by our own observers during the solar
eclipse of 1878. In accordance with
present tendencie in th study of solar
phytic, the astronomers connected
with the Enflis h expedition have given
special attention to tho purpoee of ae
euring accurate photograph of the solar
aisx, tne ajacont seio, ana in cor
ona, and are reported as having bees
particularly successful in these re
epeota. i
All condemned bronze guns have
bera appropriated for monumental pur
pose. There now remain oa hand
fifty of wrought iron, seven hundred
TVnr Ex. hlat rood to fancy
Yt caaanv rood U cootee ! UV
traai-.No. 1 1 l 1 Vi 1 S
Ko. 1 Wlul I l i4
Kto Fuu... l
Barley Two-row-d gtat I'JU
Corn CcrradalVVaU-oaxi " U
Tllow Booibcrn M ti
Oato Whit Plata , CI
Muad Waatare 19
TUj Prim TUnoUiy "1
Hraw So. 1, B 70
Hopa faala, ISSI, cbotca..... 1
rort Ncaa, aw. tor rporl.18 U
lard Otv Ptaaa It el
Reflaod llCS
ratenlenm Ooda
ttafleed
ButterKUU CrcaaMry, flaa..
Hairy
U eatora Im. Creamery
Factor
Ctega Ptat Factory
Vkxttm
Waatera
Eer Stt and I'txnt.
roiatoaaEarly BoaA.Htat.tU
. errraua
Stews -04 to eboioa. .......
Leafaa Wcaawa
Bbe-p W-tara
flora Oood laOvw T"kr..
IToox OrOtoaad K. P.oatt.
Whaal So. L liard Dalai....
Cora No. 9 -Uiad.
Oata No. 1 Mix. Wat
Url7 Two-rowad StaM
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