. . hc permit's Jr8s. L V. & E. T. BLUM, Publishers and Proprietors. TERMS: CASH IN ADVANCE. 0 Copy en ir, .... 7 .". , . . . .tue - " ilx month .78 three -. .......... J A colored man by the name of Robs, who was lately convicted of murder in the fir-t degree and sentenced to be hanged at Brandenburg,' Ky., was granted a new trial on the ground that be had not been convicted by a jury of his peers. There was no colored man on the jury that tried him. - - -- . 1 ' i - - x The tate for realism is extending, observes the Commercial Advertiser. In Nova Scotia the other day three small hoys, under eight years all of them, I ound and gagged another small boy arid proceeded to play "killing pig" so iiuccssfully that they cut his throat fatally to get the proper flow of blood. Lord Wplscley" says that one of the bravest men he ever knew is Lieuienant Oencral Sir Gerald Graham, V. C, who was in chief command at the battle of El Teb, in Africa. Graham is several inches over six feet in height, and rather indolent physically. Many times Wolse lcy has seen him endanger his life rather than take a few extra steps in safety. One 1'afael, a weather-beaten gypsy, lias petitioned the Emperorjf Austria to allow him to be invested with the sovereignty of all gypsies everywhere, oilering to show incontestably hisdesccnt from that Pharaoh who would npt let Israel go, and also, if his petition be grunted, to make the gypsies cease from vagrancy and become serviceable citi zens. . An international congress of nearly five hundred physicians lately in session at Paris was practically unanimous that consumption, or tuberculosis, is contagious- and transmissible between man and beast1. There was unanimity also as to the prime necessity of boiling milk and cooking meat well as a preventive of m nch of the consumption which now a i icts the human race. None of these conclusions arc new, but they derive ad ditional force from the unanimity with which they were declared and accepted as facts well es ablished. Fc ent arrivals from the Hawaiian Islands declare that the Government is insolvent, and that nothing can prevent bankruptcy in the near future. The re form Government, which came into power on the downfall of the Gibson Mini-try, has simply used any coin, in sight to pay current expenses, with no thought of future settlement. The pub lic debt of Hawaii may be put in round numlers at 2,730,000, for which the only security is Crown land3 and Gov ernment buildings at Honolulu, which under forced sale would not realize half this amount. "Five million people upon the.globe are now dependent on the electric cur reut for their daily bresd," so said Mr. W. II. Prcere, at the recent meeting of the British Association held at Bath. Scarcely a week passes," he continued, "without some fresh practical applica tion of its principles, and we seem to be only on the shore of that sea of economy nml beneficence which expands, with every new discovery of the properties of eleitricity, and spreads already beyond the mental grasp of any one single worker," And what is in store beyond for man's research and conquest who thall say? I 'wawwweWBWwBwBWwwaaw Statistic? are not always interesting reeling, observes the New York GrajMr, Jft can any one fail to find cause for rejoicing when he reads the fact that the army of American school children who have rc-umed their studies"numbers ovet ll,0:,0i)().' The latest data .furnished hy the Government shows that there are m a ly lyiO '.00 J scholars enrolled upon the lists of our schools, and that the average daily attendance is fully 11, t!nt,Ouo. Curiously enough the greatest ' progress in this line is evidenced where one would least expect it. The Territory of l akota shows the-most marked in crease in the number of her schools and scholars, and is followed closely by that oft slandered State, Indiana. In New Hampshire, Vermont, ( hio, Nevada and South Carolina there has been a marked l(crcisein the number of schoolchildren enrolled. The central States of .jtho Xoi th are far ahead of all the rest of the 1 "ion, and the Southern States, while maVing rapid advance, still remain, far the rear as to the number of their children attending schools. The New York Independent presents its annual statistical exhibit of the vari ous churches in this country, compiled mostly from official sources. The follow ng is a general summary by denbmina tional groups: A'lventists Kaptists flu-Mian Union. . Congregationalism I'rieinls. German Evange'l. Lutherans ""etmonites Methodists Moravians Sew Jerusa'em... lebytfrians..... ty'Jswpalians.... "''formed. (,man Catholics. ' nitarians t'niversalists.. " . Mln.' l.-V'.'J 8:io l-VM S0,K8 1..VX) 500 MJ4 4,m TOO 500 . 675 500 1,Wi 4,215 H8j 605 4S.25S 28,313 W 108 95 101 13,057 9,rS6 . 4.7ft 3,931 .2,03.5 1,315 . 6,823 5,595 375 488 730. .677 13S.865 94,457 S Com. 10D.441 3,971,6'S.j rib.uoo 457,584 107,903 125,000 987,000 93,00.1 4,690,525) 10,906 - 5,750 1,130,685 446,785 209,523 7,200,000 20,000 37,807 Qtvoitd to Hotifus. &tntar ggriaOtre, fa &rttx jmi gmers! $nftttaBm. Vol. xxxyi. THE MYSTIC SIGN. "Ogorceous poppy, of rich renown, Show us the way to Sleepy Town. Baby must eo he's tired of play; But yet I think we have missed the way." Then tranquilly up and down , "Waved the flower of rich renown, - And softly it seemed to say, "This way this way this way Is the way to Sleepy Town." "0 ripening wheat, all golden brown, Show us the way to Sleepy Town. , How shall we find.where the starlight gleams, On the City of Sleep in the Land of Dreams?" Then soothingly up and down Went the wheat, all golden-brown, And whispering seemed to say, "This way this way this way Is the way to Sleepy Town." O little one, with curly crown, Have you learned the way to Sleepy Town, Where faintest music, and softest light, And sweetest blossoms enchant the night?" Then drowsily up and down ' - Went the beautiful curly crown, While the tired eyes seemed to say,. "This way this way this way Is the way to Sleepy Town." Eudorajs. Bumstead in St. Nicholas. M UMBRELLA'S STORY. K'. ;u V &am for the yea? was 643 I lurches. 4rs .!:..' . wmmumcants. By far the heaviestgain J among the Baptists-1587 churches w lO'i ministers. The Methodists, in their 48,285 churches, 28,313 min cers and 4. em 1; 6e head of the denominations, 'the t;mn Catholics come next, and then prists, Presbyterians, Lutherans ODi5rtgatianali8t and Episcopalian!. BY HARRIE-f LAWSON. Clothed in rags too dilapidated to be called picturesque or even artistic, with broken ribs and warped back-bone, it is no wonder that I lost my head; and all through the abominable taste of Arethusa. and Adolphus, who chose "the King's, highway" and a tricycle on which to murmur sweet nothings instead of the vine-covered porch or summer-house of good old-fashioned times. Adolphus was leaning so much to our side that he appeared to be "all out of drawing," while Arethusa's ear was of the brightest rose-pink and her left dimple in full play ; moreover, she was perfectly uncon scious that the sunbeams 'had undisputed possession of her fair face, and were sure to abuse their advantage by a shower of freckles upon her Grecian nose. In vain the wind tugged at me and I tugged at Adolphus. lie would not be warned, and the result was a mingling of girlish, shrieks and strong masculine language, and a areneral upset condition. ' As for me, I was so completely crushed that had it not been for the hab.t of a lifetime I should never have had the energy to observe and comment isotto voce) as usual : "What fools these mortals be." , Adolphus sprang promptly to his feet, very red, very much mortified, very anxioiis to find somebody or somethin"' to blame besides his own carelessness. And there, peeping out through the big wheels, completely caged, sat Are thusa, looking as sweet and quiet (now that she had found terra, lirma) as a "sucking dove." - "The wretched machine 1 my poor darling : that horrid umbrella ! Are you surevou are not hurt? A screw loose! A hole in the horrid road! I shall never forgive npyself if you are hurt!" ex claimed Adolphus all in a breath. . "But I am not in the least injured," lisped the caged pigeon sweetly, 'and if Ldiad been, it never could have been your fault ; it was just some weak spot in the machine, just an unavoidable ac cident that no one could help." "How sweet it is cf you to say so," cried Adolphus, going to work at mov ing the turned-over tr. cycle; "but I shall not hove a second's peace till I see you on your feet again; then, if you reatlv are unhara ed I cannot be altogether sorry for the accident, for it has shown the exquisite amiability of your dis position in all its periection. I don't believe there is a girl in a thousand, no, nor in the world, that would have borne such a trial without losing her temper." This style of conversation proved so agreeable to both parties concerned that it would doubticss have been indefinitely prolonged, but Adolphus finally moved the wheels and disclosed to the view' of the amiable prisoner the crushed remains of her new heliotrope hat ! Then, indeed, came a change o'er her mobile face; the features sharpened,, a stony glare filled her liquid eyes, there was a perceptible stiffening of the whole frame, and the straightest, stiiiest, taliest up-rising that l ever beheld in my life. When she had finally reached her highest possibility, she inquired in a voice not loud, but as ciear ana co.a as cut glass: "Will as closely as I have, he would have held his tongue, for lie would have seen the two tears just trembling on the wink of Arie's eyelids, and known the trouble was nearly ended; but being only an exasperated man, he said very coldly: "Since that is" your opinion, Miss Ander son, I will release you from all promises to me, as you would hardly care to be tied to a coward for life." "Oh, thanks, very much," responded Arie as sweetly and calmly as if she was accepting a glass of water; "it is very kind of you to think of it," and she busied herself removing a bit of mud from her dress. The sudden change of voice and expression made my head swim (although I had seen the two tears drop), and it evidently did Adolphus, for he looked puzzled, although his tones were still frigid as he inquired: "Do you prefer to walk home, Miss Ander son, or will you trust yourself again to the tricycle and my inefficient hands:" "Oh, I think it would be better to ride since the tricycle is here ; it would seem a pity to get all heated and dusty from the walk, don't, you think?" Then drawing a blue silk handkerchief from her pocket, she tripped up to Adolphus and observed in the most matter-of-fact way possible, "Would you mind, Mr. Kadcliffe, just tying this under my chin; the ends are so short I can't get at them? I am sorry to trouble you, but I'm afraid I shall take cold if I ride with nothing on my head." "Yes, certainly," answered Adolphus, awkwardly, and he tried still more awk-. wardly to tie a kuot under the remark ably pretty chin that was held up for the purpose. The eyelashes were down, so he had an ample opportunity to observe that it was a remarkably pretty chin, with quite an unusually alluring assort ment of dimples around the coiners of the mouth, and somehow, as he looked, the clouds passed away from his face, and holding the blonde head straight to ward him and very firmly by the knot he had succeeded in making, he said gently: "Arie, would you mind looking at me;" "Oh, net the least in the world," was the demure answer, "only the sun hurts my eyes." "Caution is a very excellent trait," he answered dryly, "but I do not know that I ever knew it to develop so sud denly. Ypu might shield your eyes with your hands if you are really afraid of permanent blindness." "Why, surely," cried Arie, "you al ways are so full of resource in an emer gency," and covering both pink palms pinker face, she looked at him SALEM, N. C, THUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1888. BUDGET OF FUN. could change my foreboding that the union would never be a happy one. Promptly on the following morning Adolphus called and hastened with me to the abode of the fair Arethusa, who received me with delight, and expressed her admiration in most eloquent terms, saying: "Just fancy! and how awfully jolly !" (Oh, yes, she was very English in deed!) a great many times in all her choicest tones. This, of course, was very soothing to my feelings, but I was not long allowed to bask in the honeyed words, for picknicking was the order of the day, and I was immedi ately called into requisition and my troubles began. At the first whiff of widd my head made a violent effort to resume his natural position and drag my pretty dress in the dust, an effort which 1 resented and strained every bone to prevent; and in the commotion that en sued there was another hat catastrophe; but this time it was Mr. Kadcliffo who wai the sufferer, and much diversion his antics afforded us. as he ambled and leaped, and scrambled and climbed back and forth on a stone wall in his pursuit of it, and made h mself generally ridiculous in full view of his lady-love, as she stood cool and serene in the rosy shade, which, in my gratitude for hold ing me. firmly aloft, I shed over her in profusion. I am sorry to be obliged to state that his race was enlivened by oc casional breezy expressions, to which Arethusa and I politely closed our ears. "Why, my dear," taid fhe sweetly, when, red and disgusted he rejoined us bearing captive the muddyh.it, "I am afraid so much exercise must have fa tigued you so soon after breakfast." The words were sympathetic enough, but unfortunately there was a full blown twinkle in her eyes utterly at va riance with them, and it was this that Adolphus's quick glanr e took in at once, and to this he respond, d irritably, "Oh, I quite understand ; I daresay you de liberately pushed my hat off with that detestable umbrella for the sake of see ing me make myself ridiculous." "Why, Dolphy! how can you say such things! I'm sure it wss very pietty to see you play with the wall so nicely. I had no idea you were so agi'e'" Dolph's vanity was touched to the quick now. "Oh, I dare say you would have been equally diverted if I had fallen and broken my neck," he returned acridly. "Since that is your opinion,"' mimick ing very successfully his manner of the previous day, "I give you back all prom ises, r.s you would hardlv care to bo bound for life to a murderess !" Then "And all about HUMOROUS 8KETCHR3 FHOM VAitlOUS SOURCES over a with an expression of infantile admira- i she remarked absently iiuu so ongoi ana warm mat it would , a hat, too : ' almost dry a wet umbrella! At all events, Adolphus was not proof against it, and ; a simultaneous burst of laughter broke from them that startled the robins in ; the branches overhead, which suggested to Alolphus that he should secure the perquisites that belonged to the occasion before any further interruption oc curred. This having been satisfactorily ar ranged he asked : "Xow, tell me frankly, Arie, aren't you a little bit ashamed to break your engagement for such a trifle ?" "I?" she exclaimed, "I break an en gagement; who would ever suspect me of such a thing. I've always been taught that man was a dangerous animal and it was dangerous to contradict him when he was in earnest. Besides," she added, still iore meekly, "it might lead to a quarrel." "Well," said Adolphus, highly pleased with this sally, "I suppose I shall be jut fool enough to get you, sphinx as you are," and he Then it was that I appreciated the full meaning of the saying that "two is a company and three is none." for thoso two ungrateful wretches agreed to call poor, inoffensive mt the sour e of all dis agreement, and between them left me without a shred of character, actually deciding to do without my protection for all time. "But we'll keep it to lend to trouble some callers," and with this pleasant prospect before me I was returned to the umbrella stand with a bang! America Magazine. A Woman's Peculiar Malady, ffhere is living in Cleveland, Ohio, a ;lady alnctcd with a peculiar malady , which has puzzled and baffled the entire medical fraternity of this section of the country. Herself the sister of a well known physician, she has been unable to obtain any relief, and has turned in despair from one form of treatment to another without avail. Some years ago, caiefully as if she had been a Dresden "china shepherdess; and thus for the first time his eyes dropped upon me where I lay in the gutter, wonderine 'what -quality of the masculine mind was that which led him to prefer to be made a fool of in this waj ! "That umbrella is past all usefulness," he observed indifferently; "we'll just leave it where it is." But Arethusa did not think so. She wanted me a3 a memento of their first falling out." So I was brought along forthwith and enjoyed the privilege of listening to various plans for my restora tion to strength and beauty, besides a great deal of conversation quite too deli cate to bear pen and ink ! The next morning I was handed over to the tender mercies of an umbrella sur geon, and his face was certainly a study as he examined me. My fractured ribs, my warped backbone, and generally broken ui condition, evidentlv made a be kind enough to tell me, Mr. Kadcliffe I gieai impression upon n.m, tor ad ust what that obiert ir ' Kaaclin.e ing hm glasses he looked searehingly at seated her on the tricycle as j when a young girl, the house in which ' l am sure I don't know," said he with one puzzled look at her than -red aspect, and another atthe object indi-1 ibiuu, going a step nearer as the truth flashed upon him, but unfortunately on the ludicrous side. "Why, Arie," he shouted between peals of laughter, "it's it's your new hat." And crushed, battered and ut terly demolished, he presented it for nearer inspection, which p.oved quite too much for Arie's cool dignity. "You mcantf, unfeeling creature," she burst out, "to spoil my hat, and you had no business to tip that tricycle over. Do you suppose -'I would have risked that hat if 1 had known you were ex perimenting? Oh, yes! it may Le a laughing matter to you, very amusing, doubtless!, but are you aware that that hat came from Paris; not only that, but it was made to order to match my suit, and not till this very morning did I re ceive it!" Long before she had finished, AdoF phus was feeling remarkably limp. " "But Arie but, my clear, " he expostu lated, "you know it was all an accident ; don't, you think you are a little unrea sonable? What is it all about ?'T "I thought I had expla ned with suf ficient clearness what it was all about," with a return of dignity: But a glance at the wrecked splendor freed her tongue again. "I dare say it would give you pleasure, yes, actual pleasure, to see me make a guy of myself by wearing a hat that didn't match this suit 1 but I won't, sir I No! I'll burn the suit first." "Arethusa, don't be a goose, and all about a hat, too!" and Adolphus now looked distressed enough to suit the most exacting fair lady. But not Are thusa, for there were tears in her eyes, and my observation has taught me that those tears must fall before the temper subsides. ' How dare you call me names; I tell you it was a mean, contemptible, cow ardly " "Arethusa," interrupted Adolphus, very deep and very strong, and he did n't look at all limp now, "you are going too far: I shall have to ask you to take that back:',' . V "That I altogether decline to do," replied Arethusa; "it was cowardly to ask me to ride when you did n't know how to manage the machine." Now. if Adolohus had observedfemi- nine nature of the round and rosy kind Adolphm and asked dryly: "You didn't make a m stake1 ani bring the wrong umbrella, did you? This isn't worth mending." "Possibly I'm the best judge of that," with his most lordly air. 'All right, all right, sir; if you don't mind paying; twice as much as you would for a new one, I'm sure I've no objection to put my work on it." And then followed a discussion as to my dress ana e puipments; that was intensely she was stopping at the time was struck ! by lightning. All of the inmates were stunned, and more or less seriously in I jured. This young lady suffered more severely than the other victims. The shock completely paralyzed both her or- gans of speech and motion, and she lay i for days in a most precarious condition. recovery, although slow, was appar ently complete, however, and in a few w eeks the effect of the stroke had en tirely passed away, says the Pittsburg Dixpatch. One day she felt the dread symptom) of paralysis stealing over her, and before j assistance could be summoned the un I fortunate woman was again prostrated, j speechless, and unable to move a muscle . of her body. It was noticed at the time that a heavy thunder storm wai brewing, and that the air was overcharged with electricity. When the storm was ovei ( the patient rapidly recovered, and the next diy was as well as ever, save the nervous shock attending the relapse. j The next thunder storm brought with ' it the same alarming state of affairs, nnd again was the young woman paralyzed, recovering only when the atmosphere was cleared of its overcharge of elec tricity. The fact that the victim's sys tern, rendered sensitive to electrical changes by the frightful shock it had re ceived when she was struck by light ning, was now susceptible to the slightest presence of the subtle fluid, was row aiv parent, and medical science was called into requisition to effect a cure. Al interesting to me, for 1 knew how much ' lemedies proved ineffective, and with depended upon it. If some delicate color were chosen my life would indeed be a gay one, for I should be reserved for full-dress occasions, but, a'as! how soon it would end! as fade I must, and so be thrust aside iuto.some dark corner and forgotten ! So I was thankful enough when Adolphus decided (being of a literary turn) that I should be thoroughly red. "Remember, I want it as soon as possible," were the last directions; and the surgeon, looking alter his retreating back, observed, "a screw loose some where in that head ; cranks are thicker than usual this year." And then he fell upon me, and such a wrenching and pullfng and straightening of ribs never happened to one of my family before, I am ceatain, and I squealed and groaned at every pull; but it was done at last, and then came my dress, which went on comfortably and fitted to a charm, and I should have been quite satisfied if the surgeon had not discovered at the moment , a fact that I tried vainly to hide, namely a crack in my head ! "This is the mischief to y ay," said he; "my crank will make it hot for me if I don't make a better iob than this." And he turned me thoughtfully over and over in ms nanus. "There is no use to try and glue that up; there'll just have to be a new head, and I know where there is the very thing, at my neighbor's, the pawn broker's, on that broken cane that I saw there the other day, that will be just the style to suit my dude customer." I felt this to be a fatal move, for how would the cane head ever accommodate himself to his reversed position in life, and by the time my would-be friend came ambling back I was thoroughly de pressed, although I realized at the first glance that my new head was much handsomer than the old ; and in spite of the fact that we were regularly joined together hj a massive gold ring, nothing everv recurring tnunuer storm the un fortunate woman relapses into a state oi partial or complete paralysis, according to the severity of the storm. Her health has, of course, suffered from the con stant strain put upon her both physically and mentally, but there appears to be no relief from the malady, if it can be termed such. A Trimitivc Mexican Mill. The ordinary Mexican corn-mill is of the pattern that has been in use from time immemorial, sometimes as a hand mill, but turned by a hore, camel, ox or ass when constructed on a larger scale. Livingstone describes, in South Africa, "a mill, such as in Biblical times Sarah used, when told by her lord to do the thing handsomely and in a hurry foi the strangers t. e. : a Dig stone worn quite hollow by the operations rf grind ing. The upper stone is grasped by both hands, and the weight of the body is brought down on it as it is shoved to the lower part" In the Mexican mill the upper stone is large and heavy enough to grind by its own weight the meal for the daily tortUU". The patient, cir cumambulating mule is not muzzled, but he is blindfolded by a pair of singular- looking conical extinguishers, which prevent his being distracted from his work by the sight of the grist he is pul verising. Twos Raised to Tens. Quite a number of silver certificates are in circulation in this city which have been raised from $2 to $10. The two large figures on the back have b.en ob literated and the figure "i" on the face cut out ana a figure "10" inserted, be mg held in place by court plaster. Where the word "two" is spelled out the last two letters are obliterated, leaving only the "t." It fc well calculated to deceive unless the bill is particularly noticsd. An Autumnal Idyl-Then Ton 11 Remember Me A Precaution t ary Measure A Creature of Habit. Etc., Etc ro"?s from the wild rose-trees Upon the grass are falling, . And geese in happy argosies Hy southward, wildlv call.nz. - P?n the top rail of the fenca Thf iuirrels madly chatter. And in the forest, dfep and dense. 1 ne chestnuts gaily patter; ' And Mary Jane will suou commence To make the buckwheat batter. Then Yott'll Remember Me. Restaurant Waiter (to departing cus tomer who has failed to give him the accustomed tip) "You'll not forcet me will you:" ' Miserly Party "No. indeed. I'll write you a letter when I get home." A Precautionary Measure. Enamored Youtl "Your father treat. me with the most distinguished consid eration. The other night he called to me as I was leaving ami reminded me I was lorgetting my umbrella." tweet liirl would evening. ir, and I am fast breaking down, but I have a son who "I surrender," sad the business man, brokenly. "I don't want the blood of three generations on my head. I'll take your entire stock if you quit and call it square." Ckicuqo Tribune. A Mean Trick. Gus Do Smith has been engaged to a number of young ladies, but thus far he has never married any of them. Besides being a gay Lothario, Gus is also a poet. On meeting a friend recently Gus remarked: you hear that I was engaged When are vou "Did again?" "You don't tell me so? going to cet maniedr 'I d du't say that I was going to get married. I am only engaged." "What is the young lady's name?" "Her uame is Lucy. Two other young ladies to whom I was engaged were namea mcy. That s why I eni" .u mil ia-si gin. i can ui on this present Lucy the onnets and love letters I used on the other two. Seer itiny$. NO. 46. UOtSEOLD MATTEES. JOB PRINTING U sapplM with all 1111 inj malarial, a4 U tally praparad to da work wttfc MCATNCM, D lP A TOM, VERY LOWEST PRICES B mm U itvo a a trfel toMUnvttku To Clean Paint Work. A steamboat steward says that house keepers should go to a steamboat for lessons on clean ng paint work. Tha cabin of a steamboat, painted a lear white, is kept quite as if the painter had iust left it, being not only clear, b:t having a beautiful polish. All that is necessary is a little water, a sponge, pure rastite soap, and a smooth cloth for rub bing after the dirt has been washed off with the sponge. The rubbing restores the polish. Many people pa nt every year, whereas if the paint is washed in this way it will show char and with a h:gh polish for four or five years. JYairie I'armcr. A Pointei Reply. After the downfall of Napoleon in ISl'i, the French .ovcrnment became liable for the amount of "V million francs, which was to I e paid over to Allies within three vcars. to reimbunui t t.irl es papa was afraid you : them for the expen-e of the campaign Cnl-?g, f,er lt tue nexl The Pments we:e to be made in lslo i, ',. Iluladel,y,ia lteord. gold, but as the French were unable t A Creature oT liable "Are you going oat r dinar "Yes." "Why do you take that bell Jon fieau oi a wuipf " "i!ecau.sc, you see, I bough. tl.U hore from the street railroad ni.oy and he won't move unhss I ring a bclL" Fiiejiiule LlnlUr. in- Uae Plenty of Apple. Applies are abundant and chesp this year, says the New York WUmm, and there is -no more useful fruit. I aw. Stewed, baked or nrta-rved. thev ara engrigcd j wholesome, toothsome and nutiitious. I he la.l apples are the most juicy and delicious, but do not keep, and for that reason have to be sold cheap. Every (rood sired family should buy a barrel of them at onte for immediate use, and tave them fro.n spoiling by eating thctn up A considerable port'on of ihcm nii.ht alo bt made into kllr bv eorinir , them and boiling sk o and all. eJ m ' pies are best for this purpose, as the color of the skin gives a f.ne rich tint to I the jelly. A liberal allowance of lemon in I j"'ce snouia do aa ied to the apple u ce t ! and an eaual weight at t.uonr anil thn raise the amount in gold, the Allies had I hole boiled iaio a jelly. It isMhe to be satislied withsilyerin payment of cheapest of all jellies and remarkably thj other installment, ig'Kxl when well made, bought apple The people of I'aris were naturally I elly is not nearly so nke, and can seldom very muc h interested, and took no pains ' be relied upon. lt is frtoi.entl nn, irom ine relume or t. a evj-Hiratin-r t-- Not Ode to SiM-cet. First Poetical Aspirant (to second ditto) ".-o yoYfayjou aent off more than a hundred poems and never had one returned V Second P. A. "That's what I said." First I. A. "It's a phenomenal suc cess! I wish I knew the secret." Second P. A. "Well, I've sometime? thought it was because I never enclosed postage stamps." Life, j He Liked to Tin Accurate The farmer's wife ran out to the road and looked up and down. A tramp was shill ing along.when she hailed him. T say, did you see any cows in the corn in that corner lot:" "No, nia'am," he replied as he lifted his hat, "I didn't see any cows in the corn, but I did sea some of the corn go ing into the cows at " But she was off. Li "e. iu. mcir anguisu at having to part with their gold and silver coin. The sib cct was under discussion one day in the salon of Madame de StaeL A voung German olh'cer who was present protc-ted against the Allies being com pelled to take the inferior metal in pay ment. "Vou had better be satisfied," inter rupted Madame de Macl; "we paid tha first installment in gold, the second in silver, and, if pressed too closely, we might pay the third in iron." -Very well, Madame, replied the German officer, calmly!; "you can pay the third in-tallment in iron, if you choose, but if you try it wq will givo you a receipt in full iu lead." Didn't Recognize; the Bimlves. Mr. Byam Kegs (from Kalamazoo, with intense disgust). "Here, waiter, I ordered raw oyters. What on airth are these nasty black st jncs ! Waiter (petrified) "iystahs, sah on do hatl-shell, sah:" Mr. Byam Keggs "HalT-shcll, is it? Ob, git outl I've cat a million canned oysters oiU home, and never ,av a shell on ary onp of them !" f Careful r Ills Mind. Woman (to tramp) "I s'pose you've traveled a good deal in this country?' Tramp- "I know every toot of it, Ma'am, from 1 ortland, Maine, to the Hio Grande." Womair "Don't ye git tired o' travel- ! , Js , , in' sometimes (" dcm?.nde'l- Tramp "Occasionally, Ma'am, I am oppressed with more or less ennui: still, there's nothing l.ke travel, you know, to broaden one's mind." Tne EoJi. Penelope'. Word' or Comfort. ' I Vnn! ...... . i i . .u..urv., . k JUU say sumciulDg to soften the blow?" implored the youn man. "Oh. Thil.p, Thilip! What can I say? It is all over between us." "That doesn't soften it any," rejoined Thilip; "that's what you said befo"rc" ! And the unhappy youth looked mourn ! fully at a ten-dollar volume of poems he i had presented her a few months before, j and heaved a sigh so deep, so pro i found, that it made his shoes i erceptibly tighter. J "Penelope," he continued, "when a young man builds all his hopes on the , promise of a young woman and that young woman deliberately goes back on that promise, it knocks the props, as it were, out from under his hopes, and they cometlown, kerswash! lou may have a perception sometime, Tenelope," he added' with increasing gloom, "of. the feelings of a hum m being standing by a wrecK of this kind and looking at the debris of his own happiness.". x couiun i neip it, rump," she re- pueu, .I 1. 1 1 uc I'viume jausi.eu mat werr ...,v uvt luuuc iur cacu oiner. v e should not be happy together. We"1 "is it because I am a mu2rwumD?"he Two Picture1. In Courtship "What makes the stars so dim to-night?" the usked. "Your eyes are so bright they out shine them," he said, as he tenderly pressed her hand. After M arriage "I wonder how many telegraph poles it would take to reach from here to the moon?" she Baid, musingly. "One, if it was long enough," he snapped; "why can't you talk sense?' tioston Courier. "What Can He Tell Pa? Clara (shyly) "You will have to gain papa's consent first, Mr. Sampson, ere I give you my answer." Mr. Sampson (heart throbbing with hope) "Can I see him at once, dear Clara?-' "I think so, Mr. Sampson; and papa is so absurdly practical, he may ask some foolish questions." . What will he ask? He may want to know how much you are woith, and oh, Mr. Sampson George (and the name dropped so sweetly from her lips) what will you tell him? JSit-ing$. 'Vn Pkilln if S. .XI T it!. l. ; with proper nursing, you would recover 1 from that in time. Neither have I any objection to your personal appearance . your position in society, Nyour hab i its" ! "My habits !" he e'aculated. "I hop not. Penelope Wit hers poon, I never in my life took a drink of anything intox icating, never chewed tobacco, never smoked a cigar, never went to a circus, and never was in a ballroom. I don't drink tea or to Tec, eat peatnuts, chew gum," read novels, swear, gamble, lie, use snuJ. play checkers, sit up late at n'g'lt K to theatres, eat between meals, nor read Amelie Rives. I never kissed a young woman in my life" j "As far as my experience goes," as f serted Penelope, retrospectively. "I can certify that you have not, "Philip," she added, with a glow of tender womanly sympathy on her face, "you asked me to fay something to soften the blow. I think I c an foresee a great future for you. Your habits have fitted you for a shin ing career." "In what capacity, may I ask?" "As a f-JO.i-a-wcek freak in a dime museum. Chicago Tribune. mowing Ijearninjr to Shop. Pretty Miss "Have you any plows?" Jeweler lowst" "Yes, or harrows!" "Harrows?" "Yes. or rakes, or hoes, or machines " "See here, my little miss, you seem to be out of your head, and I don't know but may be I ought to call a doctor or policeman or " 'Oh, mercy me ! Don't do that ! My head is all right. You see, I wanted to go shopping, and as I had not any money ma told me to be careful not to ask for anything the store I went into was likely to have in stock." I'hiUidelpMa Jltcord. Food lor a Lover. He "Amanda, this is the neat little restaurant where I have those delicious lunches I have mentioned to you but could not describe, and this is Tom, the waiter who serves me my favorite dishes so nicely. She "Howsweer, Adolphus." He "What will you order, Amanda? They have birds, oisters, and all the delicacies of the season." She "Your favorite dish, Adolphus, -of course. Waiter, you may fetch Mr. Wigwag's favorite order, which he says you serve so nicely." Waiter "Yes, lady" (giving order) "Draw one in dedark. Boused pigs' feet on de Iron." JVcu Tori Sun. Vegetables or National Importance. The importance of vegetables in the United States, says a writer in the lnde jun mt, has been partially demonstrated in late years by the regular establishment by Congress of the "Section of Vegetable Pathology,'" since, while this section at tends to the diseases bf vines and fruit trees, it also investigates Iho-e of vege tables. A. small appropriation was granted to the 1 epartment of Agricul ture for the support of this section, and those in charge of it have already gath ered a good deal of information as to the po'ato rot in the United States. The Botanical' Division has also published 1,00() copies of the "Circular No. -J," on "Treatment of the potato and tomato for the blight and rot." r- How strange all such Government as sistance wouid have seemed to the Kng 1 sh 300 years ago, when, as Mniles tells us, gardening, "though long practiced by i he monks, had become almost a lost art in England." In 15 ." we are told that a sum eaual , to twenty shillings was paid at Hull for : six caonages and a lew carrots. And a j writer of 1650 tells of an old man who remembered "the first gardener who came into Surrey to plant cabbages and J cauliflowers, and to sow turnips, carrot, ! and parsnips and early peas ; all of j which at that time were great wonders, we having few or none in England but what came Irom Holland or Fiandeers." Vanquished. "You malicious nuisance!" exclaimed tho angry business man, "you have been here every day for the last six months. How many more times do you need to be told that I never buy anything of peddlers ? "I am carrying out the wishes of my late father, sir," said the peddler. "He called on yon 897 times without ever making a sale and then turned the ob over to me. Ie died of a broken heart, America's First riate Glass. There is a window on Tearl street. New Albany, lnd , in which is set the first sheet of pjata glass ever rast in America. It was made in the town by Captain J. B. Ford, the pioneer, manu facturer this side of e-alt water, --ffy the way, how many New Yorkers who look daily through the acres- of translucence lining bur streets know that each of the big sheets is cast while liquid upon a stone or marble table, the excess swept off by machinery, and the future plate, wh le still hot enough to be almost vicid, slid off and taken through no end of ovens and oil baths by way of an nealing, - tab;i-hmenu, that is, the cores, ani skins and wormy appUs. Pick lea. For pickles of all kinds u the best cider vingr ana not an acid, vinegar, so-called. It cannot be too strong, as it is wt-akened when scalded. I n scalded vinegar does not keep well with pickles. eer use a metal vessel in p:cklio; it should be e.ther granite ware or or celain. Pickles should be examined irc rpaently and the soft ones taken .out. If white specks appear in the vinegir drain it off and scald ; add a half teacup of sugar to each gallon and p-mt aga n over the pickles. A few hits of hoite radish or a few cloves addled will improve the flavor. All vegetables pr fruits for pickUng, except for sweet, pickles, should be sound, but not quite ripe. Do not mm Id cucumbers, but soak them in salt and water. Boiled beets can be pcklcd whole, first removing the outer skin, to be sliced when required. Vegetates that require to be boiled or scalded bciore pickling will be whiter if a litt'e lemon or green grape juice is added to the water, as cabbage, cauliflower, white beets or onions. For green vegetables put a little soda in the water to preserve the color. Cure should be taken not to scald too much, or they will be soft and tasteless. Always have the vegetables or fruit perfectly cold before pouring over the vinegar, which should be in all cases very hot. A good average of spices to a quart of pickles is an even teaspoon each of all spice and pfjercornt, one-halt a tea spoon of mustard f-eed. a piece of Jamak-a ginger one inch long and a tablespoon, of ucK cinnamon broken. jJetrvu tree LOVETS SUFFICIENCY. Ti said by the poet, it is better far To love and Inaa. Than never to have loved at alL But I I may not cbooae. For th-rs has come into my Ufa a kva tv fierce, to strong. That I am hetpWw in itagraip, tartans To drift alon At fin I knew not 'twas Love's a I hai Het aail npon. So, Lappy, Cuate-1 on, with half-cloaad rjm. Through thala aivl ran ; What bedM I which way I went, with hint My bnat to cubic? What dangers ha.1 lb unknown aea. It ha Was t-y my sulef I woke to fin I my:f in water? Strang. No lan 1 in i-ht: All things eeral radiant, new. A mighty flood Of rar delight Swept o'er my startle 1 aoal; sba sky, tho waves With z'orj shone. As was reraiVi th? rapturous thrill of lora, TCI than unknown. And now let shadow fa' I. let storms ariaa, On hi dear breast. Shirl loJ an i asf . I lis. wfc.U shelfrinr arms Fold ma to rest. I ha Bitot mmyoixue, it r.olU nodraad far me; His ten lor kiss Sootl.ei all my fears.and nils my happy heart WiU perfect Uim. Frank Lesli'. warm Household Hints. Use a warm knife in cutting oread and the like. A paste of whiting and benzine will remove spots from marble. A salt ham should be soaked over night in plenty of soft water previous to boiling- After wahing a wooden bowl place it where it will dry equally on all sides, away from the stove. Fruit stains on white goods can be re moved by pouring boiling water directly from the kettle over the spots. Hive sirup is good for croup or inflam mation of the lungs, lt must be kept in a cool place, for if it 'sours it is ery poisonous. If you want poached eggs to look par ticularly nice cook each gg in a mu i.n ring placed in the Lottom of a saucepan of boiling water. A creaking hinge can be cured by the use of a black lead pencil of the softest number, the point rubbed into all the crevices of the h nge. Corks may be made air and water tight by keeping them for five minutes under melted paraffine. They must be kept down with a wire screen. For cleaning braa use a thin paste of plate powder, two tablespoon fuls of vine gar, four tablespoonf uls of alcohol. Hub with a piece of flannel; polish with chamois. t-uet should be cooked before it is stale. Bo 1 for two or three hours, then strain through a linen cloth. One-fourth of this fat and three-fourths lard is a good mixture for frying doughnuts. Be very particular about disinfecting the kitchen sink: Washing sola, tw j tablespoonfuls to a gallon of boiling water, makes an excellent wash to iour hot into the sink at after you have I n ished using it. PITH AND POINT.' A leader of men is often a follow her. He was only a fini-hrd gynicast when e fell from the trapeze aud broke his jeek. Very often the "May ir or courtship a answered by the "You must" of matri mony. In teaching a boy dmwing give him tha premises and let h to draw Lis own con tusions. In all the voca' u'ary of quarantine there is no such word as hospitality. Ftcnyins. That bread riot in France was partici pated in by loafers. ll''-ur j CW--Tt Irgraik. When poverty is abolished, what a bard lime eicry one will Lave doing all his own work. In Texas a msn rarely cuts an ac quaintance, bLt a stranger from the East his to be mighty careful. rrs JJu r. . The man who falls out of a balloon realizes the gravity of the situutiou be fore he has dropped five miles l!arp.Tt Jkwir. The difference between being burned out and tired out is that in the format case jou get the insurance, DaanUU liret-x. Tom woodpecker reminds ma of m tailor ' Jack "Why? Because Le bores so with his LilL" A man that marriei a widow is bound to give up smoking and chewing. If she gives up her wcels for him, ha should give up the weed for her. it Lvuia JumorUn The leaflets brown and arariet Art losing all tbeir rrip: branches. (- 1 nef n il I lt.r trnm lh And down tba hnm ziir. While the robin pm ks his ainglet An i coo- to MinH.pp. Old Msn's Darling (imploring) "Tell me the worst, doctor. Belie vo me, I can stand it." Smart Doctor (doubtfully "I don't koow about that. However, nerve yourself, then, madaroe. Your husband Will get welL" bijlingu Too High a Valuation: Customer (to bird fancier) "My wife wants a parrot. AVhat'a the lowest yon will take for that bird:" Bird Fan :ier "Fifty dollars, sir. is rock bottom. P off, you're tried to sell me for twenty 1 A cat market haa been started in Paris which has led tome one to prophesy a unique market re;:ort, running thus: Tabbies, dull; toms, buoyant; kittens, lively; Angoras, depressed; brindled, very brisk; Persians, in great demand: luriuucsacus, iicavy. je Jork i'vl. Impatient Husband "Where .in woi Id h ire you been? I want my din- ft w r . . . . lie --r.icuse me, jonn, but ran uown to the sewing Society at I and to my surprise it didn't wind until e gut. Husband "Vou mean was wound up at five and didn't iuu down till eight. " Su. the n-I five. A Bird Wlthont a Nest. The term night-hawk is commonly ap- Elied to several species, all of which are certain peculiarities. From its curious cry one is called chuck-will'a-widow, this call being uttered so loudly by the bird that it has been heard for nearly a mile. About the middle of March they come back from their winter pilgrimage; and unlike most of the birds, they have no hou-ekeeping to keep them busy, as they build no nests. While the robbins, humming birds, thrushes and others are busily scouring the country for material with w h ch to build their nurseries, thechuck-will's-widow is fast asleep in some out-of-the-way corner, only coming out ia the afternoon and evening to gnthtr its supply of food. When tha tint comes for laying, our seemingly lazy bird selects some secluded spot and deposits her eggs anywhere on the ground, and the very first glimpse, if w 'rt for tunate in finding them at ailexplains why she builds no nest. The eggs are almost the exact color of the surround ings, and so mottled and t rated that only by the merest accident are they dis covered, and when the two little chuck-will's-widows come out they are area more difficult to find than the egg. Being very sleepy little fellows they rarely move, and, though steading with in a few inches of the r, the observer might suppose them to be two old brown leaves or a bunch of moss, so deceiving Is thair mimicry. Squirrel Skins and the Weather. Tacked upon the wall in one corner of my room are three native gray squirrel skins. The ag le chatterers that were once within these svft jackets were shot last October in the Maine woods, and their furs were twined and seat to me at the same time by an enthusiastic sportsman of my acquaintance. The ordinary way in which these skins are preserved ia the country, is by merely tackintr them upon a good broad shingle, sprinkling a little salt ovrr them and then setting aside for a week to dry. For almost a year now have these furs been upon ray wall in toft, pliant and dry condition, as they huild be. ijtst Tuesday, though, when the atmosphere was so excessively sat urated with moisture I found them soak ing wet, with great beads of waUr distrib uted over the surface. Hie salt with which they were permeated, had simply been unable to withstand the humidity in the air, and had,if a consequence, been diftsolved by it. If s juirrel skins prove to be such an accurate register of atmos pheric moisture, it might not be a bad idea for the Signal Sen ice Bureau to adopt them henceforth as standard hy grometers, or at lcat to use them in con nection with their other instruments. My skin, as I write, are in normal con dition again. Arte Jw Finest State Apartments la Earope. r resident Carnot, of France, and Mme. Carnot live at Fonta nebleau this season in the su.te of rooms fitted op by the. Empress Eugenie for her son against his ennvng cf age. They have the use of all the private and state apartments of the ralace, alTof which have been care fully kept in order for the past eighteen years, although the palace has been prac jically deserted. The slate rooms are said to be the finest in Europe. Fob lainebleau was created for the tallest King of hs time, it is said, Francis L, and his height was the unit of measure neat which the architect took ia pitch tag the ceilings and the cross beams of the floor. The cabinet makers d d the sa'nc. and the sofas aad carved chairs, which were just right for Francis, are' aseless for the present reneration. Neither of the Nanolmna rm.M .t in them witheututiag a couple of sVps to. mows upon rfcr-Xvwrra.