idNSTON JOURNAL; PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY KINSTON, LENOIR CO., N. C. Editor and Proprietor. - ElNSTON KINSTON JOURNAL. OURNAI BAXX9 Of ADTXJTTISUt Ci t led J 1C ICcj tC ISC9 -. IMUtO IS OCj MOC TIM lao1 l tseoi xi cc io ccj 71 cot mw H. S. NTJNN, Proprietor. Independent in All Things. SATXS Or SCBSCRIPTIOH One Ter TTRlf3-2.00 FEZl YEAR. Oowtnei lor II 00 aa V Kivrroa ix Jtcmths.. 1 00 Joe, la tWa IrWfe VOL. III. KINSTON, -N.-C, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1881. XO. 28. THfr.tsttii Blanks always on hand. The Burial of Moses. " And he buried him in a valley in the land knoweth of hia sepulcli.T to this -lay. ueui. XUir-6. By Nebo'a lonely mountain, On thia side Jourdan's wave. In a vale in the land of Moab, ' There lies a lonely grave; - But no man dug that wpulcher, Jt.l r-r. man fp.w it vr, I r lift anuria '' ao1 "I'torned the sod, ; And Wd the .d.-ad man; there. That was the grandest funeral Tlit ever panwjd on eartn; But uo man heard the tramping, Or aw the train go forth; Ndirteh-Mdly a the day-light Comet when the night is done, And the criniMon utreak on ocean's cheek Grown into the great nun, NoinelesHly at the upring time Her crown of verdure wavea, Anl all the tree on all the hilla Open their tliounand leaves. Ho, without wjund of munic : Or voieo of them that wept, Kileiitly down from the mountain crown The great procoHHion swept. : Perchance the bald old eagle, On gray lk th-peor'a heights, Out f hit rocky eyrie, v - ' Lookod on the wondrous sight; Terchance the lion, stalking, Still shuns the hallowed spot; For beaut and bird have seen and heard 'That which man knoweth not. Ho when the warrior dieth, Ilia comrades in the war, With arms reversed and muffled drum, Follow the funeral car. They show the banner taken, They tell his battles won, And after him lead his masterless steed. While peals the minute gun. Amid the noblest of the land, Men lay the sage to rest, And give the bard an honored place, With costly marble dressed. In the great minster transept, Where lights like glories fall And the choir tinu and the organ rings Along the emblazoned wall. This was the bravest warrior That ever buckled Bword; This the most gifted poet That ever bresfthed a word ; And never earth's philosopher Tract dT with his golden pen, On the deathless page, truths half o sage As he wrote down for men. And had he not high honors ? The hill side for his pall; To lie in state while angels wait With stars for tapers tall; And the dark rock pines, like tosfeing plumes, ' ' Over hi." bier U) wave; And ( iod's.own hand in that lonely land To lay him in the grave. t In that deep grave, w ithout a name, Whence his uncoflined clay Khali break again - oh, wonderoua thought Ketore the judgment day. And htaud with.glnry wrapped around On the hilU lie never trod, And ;ik ot the strife that won our life With tho incarnate Son of God. Oh, lonely tomb irt Moab's land, Oh, dark Ueth-peor's hill, - Kpeak to these curious hearts of ours, And teach them to be still. God hath His mysteries of grace, Ways that we cannot tell; no hides them deep, like the secret sleep Of Hnu he loved so well. Mrs.' Alexander. sponsibility of the family house-hunt ing. . "A fine idea !" said Mr. Barton. "I might as well be a married, mrt and done with it." " Dear John, do oblige me 1" coaxed his sister. "I'm sure you won't mind a little time and tronble; and I'm dean tired ont, with the baby's teeth ing and little Sammy's neuralgia in the faces" " Very well," said Mr. Barton, purs ing his lips up into whistling shape. " I'll take some sort of a house, or 111 know the reason why. And if you're not suited with it, don't blame me. And he commenced the next day in good earnest, armed with a list of houses which might apparently content a dozen families. - The very first house was a pretty little Philadelphia-brick mansion, on a side street, with a window full of hyacinths, and a sewing-machine singing away in the sitting-room. ! Mrs. Blake was making some pink frocks for her baby, and her friend Miss Daffodil was sitting with her, in a dis habille of work-apron and crimping- pins a pretty, blue-eyed girl, with a thin figure and a gingham suit, bor dered with " rick-rack" tape. " There's the bell !" said Mrs. Blake as she flung the fifth pink frock into her f 1 iend's lap, to be duly finished with button-lilies and buttons. " AY ho can it be at this time of the morning?" said Miss Daffodil, with a terrified glance at the mirror. "Oh, a house-hunter, I suppose!" said Mrs. Blake, in accents of disgust. "Please, ma'am," said Norah, appear ing at this juncture, " a gintleman to see the house." Miss Daffodil jumped up and fled precipitately into the closet. "Don't open this door, Maria, what ever you do !" said she, in a tragic whis per. " Do, not be afraid, dear," said Mrs. Blake.' .' Barton was had just gone to complete the bargain or the little Philadelphia-brick house on Merrimac street. Miss Daffodil didn't go into the TOPICS OF Tll DAT. The highest percentage of Freeby. terian commtmicanta to the population cnina-cioset tins time; she only retired of thirteen leading cities in this country behind the window-curtains. is four rr nt TMi i. She was determined to see what John j The following shows the strength of Barton's wife was like; and Mrs. Blake the Presbyterian church in the cities drew herself up as dimpled little Mrs. referred to: San Francisco, 2.001: Cin Carmichael raa shown into the apart- cinnati, 3,787; Cleveland, 3,131; In ment. dianstjolis. 2.644 : Pittrnrr. vv; . p p a w w m rsi v v w "You are the lady whose husband Newark, N. J., 4,183: Chicago. 4.936: called yesterday," said she "by the St. Louis, 2.C30; Philadelphia, 23,090; name of Barton?" Brooklyn. 10.093: New YnrV " JNot my nusband," said Mrs, Car- Rochester, 3,671: Louisville. 2.790, micnael "only my brother. Barton is the name it's quite correct; but mine is Carmichael." "Ah, indeed!" said Mrs. Blake. "And when may we expect his wife to call!" Mrs. Carmichael laughed. "He hasn't got any wife," said she. " He's an old bachelor." The special correspondent of the London Times thinks that the number of persons killed by the Scio earth quake does not greatlv, if at all, ex ceed 4,000, and that this is possibly too large. In the southern half of the island scarcely a house remains in habitable condition, so that a popula- ("What!" said Jenny Daffodil, be- I il0n of nearly 50,000 persons is camping ind t he curtains.) out in the open air. Throughout the "Did he say he was married?" said I northern portion of the island there Mrs. Carmichael. peated shocks wrenched the houses and " Well, since you ask me the que- frightened the inmates without doing tion," confessed Mrs. Blake, " I don't tnem 7 serious bodily harm, excep remember that he did say so in so many I a vei7 f w instances. employed for thieve and rascal. Thai it is perfectly possible to Uhe raeb in stantaneous picture; without a person knowing it, admits of no reasonable doubt.' roil THE FARM A5D HOXH LOOKING FOR A HOUSE. ' I give it up " said Mrs. Carmichael, , in dospair. . Now it was neither riddle nor conum druni which this voting American house keeper was "giving up." The expres . si'Miwas merely. an index to the despair of her inmost soul ! Khn hail 1 . ..vvn auu.-,c-uuuun" ail aa v 1 1 ii .. . j u me week, all the month in fact ever since tho stony-hearted landlord raised the rent of the desirable family mansion which they already inhabited twenty-live per cent., and made it an 'inevitable necessity to move and ah could find no home for the sole of her root.- And what's to become of us, Tm i uon t know," 8aid Mrs. Car- "1""lu l- A we can't stay here, and e can't liv , .. . u' uu omoreiia m a ueW ana in thU climate caves and wie Tt, . enurely ont of the question mats nonsense, 'wr. Carmichael plenty of houses to be had!" Ihen go and try yourself," said his 5lf with spirit. " I've got my business to attend to ' Mr. Carmichael. "We are always Particularly busy iu the spring of the cIn'tT Ur wholesaI orders. Whv can t John go?" " ( les. John " cm v C.S.,h0n8UOIlh't-"MIs. " It's not so bad a snc-:.. . . Carmichael. "M.J.'r "But what does John my dear," said "As if there weren't piteously. a patronizing RA Ur-rmichaeL you talk, one would imagLTtWK W hunting was a science, Si honse college co, John a f TeH mm what you want, and how mLJ ffordtopayid thSl that is necessary." ' 611 Mrs0 PaSS that Barton- Urs- Carmichael's brother wcigaiy re- The next minute Mr. shown into the room. " Sorry to disturb you, madam," said he, pleasantly, " but I was looking for an eligible house, and the agent has put this one on my list." You are looking for yourself?" said Mrs. Blake, a little dubiously. "Of course," said Mr. Barton, who had been effectually "posted" by his sister. " Our family is small only two children and we're quite particular about a light basement, good plumbing, and water-tight roofs." (" Good gracious I" said Miss Daffodil, among the tea-cups and saucers, "it is John Barton. The base deceiver! to let us all supposes he was an unman ied Dian!" and the rosy color mantled to the very crimping-pins as she remem bered li6w she had let John Barton kiss her at the last picnic, when nobody was looking.) " I suppose," said he, all unconscious of the pretty "prisoner in the china-closet, that I'd better write down a list of the rooms and. things' ,' 4 Yes," said Mrs. Blake, " and then your wife can. come and look for herself. For of course a gentleman can't be ex pected to understand all about these i:4.i i i,i .1 nine uuuaeuuiu duucuici;co. , "Oh, of course not," said Mr. Barton. ("The deep-dyed villian!" thought Miss Daffodil, hysterically clasping her hands.) And the two left the room. Miss Daffodil could hear them over-, head, on the stairs, passing through the hall, and finally the front door closed with a reverberating sound, and Mrs. Blake came back to the sewing machine and pink cambric frocks. Miss Daffodil had by- this time emerged from her prison-cell and stood at the window. "What a very pleasant young gentle man 1 " taid Mrs. Blake. "He ii a miscreant!" cried Miss Daffodil, whirling around, like an opera dancer, on one foot. "Why, Jenny, what's the matter?" said Mrs. Blake, in amazement. " He has been making love to me at church sociables and picnics for three months!" cried Miss Daffodil; "and now he turns out to be a m m married man ! Oh, dear, oh, dear ! is there any bmit to the baseness of man ?" And Jenny Daffodil flung herself, sobbing, on her friend's shoulder. " Don't cry, dear! " said Mrs. Blake, j " Perhaps he didn't mean anything. I Men will flirt, you know." " But he told me he loved me." " Dear, dear ! " said Mrs. Blake. " And he asked me to marry him." " I never heard anything like it in all my life !" said Mrs. Blake, " And he gave me a ring with a little tiny spark of a diamond in it," added Miss Daffodil "Send it back, my dear," said Mrs. Blake, "at once!" Mr. John Barton could hardly credit the evidence of his sen morning when the postman handed bfni tne mysterious . sealed packet which conlainedTthe little engagement ring. "What on earth can have happened?" ne asked himself. Instinctively he turned, to his sister for consolation; but Mrs. Carmichael words. But I somehow took it for granted." " He's engaged to a very sweet young lady," said Mrs. Carmichael. " A Miss Daffodil, whom I have never seen. But just at present he is an old bachelor. And" " What geese we have both been !" cried Mrs. Blake. "Jenny, come out here this minute ! Kiss your sister-in- law that is to be. We have jumped at a conclusion m ithout any premises, and now we must jump back again." So the matter was settled. Miss Daffodil received the diamongring back again, and every one was happy Miss Daffodil in her lover, Mr. Barton in the prospect of a speedy marriage, and Mrs. Carmichael in the eligible house which her brother had secured for her occu pancy. " But if I live to be a hundred years old," says Mr. John Barton, " I'll never go house-hunting again. It's a great deal too riskv !" Here is something from the London Sanitary Record which ought to be re membered by people who are engaged in the work of renovating their dwell-j ings. It is not improbable that many i cases of mysterious illneas, and even of death, may be attributable to the cause indicated or something similar. Danger often lurks under very simple disguises: Many jvkrple .have noticed the dis agreeable odor proceeding from the size and paste of paper-hanging pervading an apartment for some time after the paper has been newly hung. M. Tallin, in tno Ilmis tf Hygiene, reports an in intesting case which has induced him to make some inquiries in this matter. A lady who from time to time came to town to supervise the decoration of her house was three times successively seized with violent sickness and head ache after sleeping in a newly papered room. M. Vallin was struck with the putrefactive odor which pervaded the atmosphere, and after examining into, the matter, came to the conclusion that il pro ceeded from the wall. It was fomnd that a horrible putrefactive odor pro- Hens like to te echaded whea they lay and act ; hence ztesls sheltered (rota the talgsr cxe will be preferred. The neat should not be o formed thai the hea must jump into it, tlnfe this some times shakes the egjr ao violently aJ to" break them. A box ith the bottom and one side out will form a snug neat if put next to a wall and kept well sup plied with freth straw chopped la short length. If rats abound raiie the erst from the floor. Wire tMkct nets are excellent. If hncg oa the walls of the houAe a board should be fixed to the wall near to the basket so that the hea can get quietly into the net withers! jumping in, Tcr nest tnakbjr such material as is inject proof is prtfcraLU. Dried moss is good, alto oat or tab est straw. Barley straw or hay are apt to produce vermin. Change the material of which the seats are made often Hens appreciate clcanline. Do not. however, change the position of the nest, as it disturbs laying hens and they may retaliate by laying no epgs for a day or two. A British parlimentary return has been issued of cases of evictions which have come to the knowledge of the con stabulary in each of the years from 1849 to 1880. In 1849 90,440 persons were ceeded from the sizc-pot, with which evicted, of whom 18,373 were read- the paper-hanger in the next room was mitted. In 1850 the evictions rose to continuing to hang the wall paper, "a? d 104,163, and the readmissions to 30,292. that this size was in a state of putrefac- Since that period the numbers rapidly tive change. On making further in fell till in 1860 they only amounted to quiries, various other cases have come 2,085. They, however, again increased, uader his notice in which illness has and in 1864 9,201 persons were evicted, palpably been produced by the use, by There was again a falling off, and in paper-hangers, of size and pato undcr- 1869 the lowest number was reached, j going or speedily entering on septic Since then there has been a gradual in-1 change; and it is extremely desirable crease, and in 1879 the figures stood at that this should be borne in mind, and. 6,239, and in J8S0 at 10,457, the read- if necessary, a little oil of cloves, aali missions being 663 and 1,021 respect-1 cylic acid, or some other antiseptic ively. The totals from 1849 to 1880 are: agent should be added to the material Evicted, 90,107 families, 460,5i0 per- which they use for this purpose, or, at Xalarr CWfc. A 7ia mU mi Wi2a a (vW w ; fu sU 12 w4 W VUi tvcM lUl tJ.J T- J '.xrU 9 Wr fcers F II i-TT'1 a aU-f Urn ; Akl.Ut llll-wi W1IMJ vwl, Il Jl Bo4 Knit ifw. Aa -iky tM rtSkJt' frm9 t W3 TW tit tM ila U p rrXGEIT PAElCRAm.'. M Well, wife, yr-a cat asy X rrtx oatractc4 td taUn." M Ko, air, yea rafrally expaaJM then. It is cow brlirred that the elecsar gsriae factories put hair la their goods, thus rendering it raore dirJt t4 d tectioa than ever. Coffee county, Teca., Is belt aetileJ up try eairanU from Masqat haset is. Of coarse thej caoit find good groaads upon which to settle. TUrt U m cim t ls'tf awW ftXl lrll, Cat ftm frtwr ctur, TLrr k tM 144, m9mr mill &nU Dal Ut s MfttU X"j iWr. An elethaot's extmaitW are fialihsl Linseed meal is cot only nutritious food for cattle, but also regulates the system and loosens the coat. The crops that do best oa rather stiff soil are potatoes, onions, celery, late such will often produce good eariy w J cads that U cabbage. I Bsxrri cow utm wm 1 . . . I whether he It goUf forward or back lid one pre or cigui jgu3a oi i dallr. and with moderate work, a vounr. I hearty horae will consume tea pounds When a taaa l-erirs to go dowa-hUl of har. If a laxe horse he may rat t ca everythitg grrad for the fifteen pounds. He shouLMave all he oreurn, aays a paUoop Lr, w ao taai vill Mt rlrn 1 have added that when he tri to clis In )Mt;nff th fhthe ectlvvhtt&UrrtTjizgtTT lot Us " o " OO w WW sons; readmitted, 21,34U xamilies, lib, 359 persons. Anise. Anise grows wild in Egypt, in Syria. Palestine and all parts of tho Levana but the Romans considered the Egyp tian and Cretan anise to be the best, especially for medicinal purposes. The product of Southern Europe i3 now looked upon with favor. Among the ancients anise seems to have been common pot-herb in every garden Although it is less used in medicine by the moderns than by the ancients, it still retains its former reputation as an excellent stomachic, particularly for delicate women and young children. The Romans chewed it in order to-keep up an agreeable moisture in the mouth, and to sweeten the breath, while some Orientals still do the same. Some of the Persian poets have sung the agreea ble qualities of the anise, and a modern" street ballad of Rome compares the slender grace of a young girl to the anise- - Anise is an annual plant growing to the height of one foot, carries a white flower, and blodms from June till August. The seeds are imported and used in large quantities on account of their aromatic and carminative proper ties. . The distilled plant, when used in blossom, yields a sweeter and more grateful tincture than can be obtained from the seeds. Anise is extensively employed by the confectioner for the purpose of flavoring comfits and cor dials. The anise-seed cordial of the shops is a compound of alcohol, anise seed and angelica. The oil is obtained by distillation from the seeds, and though habitually mixed with a great many cattle medicines, and regarded by the farmers of former generations as one of the most potent of drugs, it performs scarcely any other office than the com municating of an agreeable fragrance. The Chinese cultivate it for the season ing of dishes ; and the Japanese employ bundles and garlands of it in the cere monies of their heathenish superstition Its appearance, when out of flower, , as well as when; in bloom, is decidedly ornamental. A Lively Donkey. There is a hostler in a livery stable at Easton, Pa., that will remember Tony Denier's donkey for some time to come. The stalls were all full when the com pany arrived, and the day hostler placed the little animal in the harness-room and forgot to tell John, the night hostler, about it when he came on duty. About 3 o'clock in the morning John went into the harness-room on an errand, without taking a lantern along, and stepped on the hind foot of the donkey, which was lying down. The Turk awoke, and there was a sound of revelry by night, though just what took place will never be quite dear,' as .the donkey can't tell and the hostler won't But for an hour or more John was busy putting horse liniment on his shins, and no doubt it was one of those instances where the donkey seemed to stutter with his hind feet. JitwwJfces Sim. Young women who are contemplating elopement and undoubtedly there are a great number of them should reflect a little upon the troubles which came to New York girl who adopted this romantic way of getting married. She got desperately in love with a beautiful mustache and a handsome diamond pin with a young man attachment, and any rate, care should be'takca to aroid these disagreeable consequences of carelessness which are only too com mon. THE FAMILY DOCTOK. All experience goes to show that people are far more liable to contract disease or contagious fevers on an empty than with a fall stomach. Quinine is declared to be an antidote I i r 1. 1 will. made arrangements to marry him. As or r8 "B". " W fatW lmVrr UA foil J W, miSniS Of CUUUrtU IU IWUIO ur.ilU, . , .... . , , . is better to "catch" it whenever it is wim me Deauinui xnings inai nau ias-1 .... . ., cinated her. she was compelled to elope. llllD& to -ngl11- To removo irecaies: licmon juice, one That was five or six months ago. The mustache and the diamond pin are just as handsome as they ever were, but the young man attachment has since aban doned the young woman and caned her father in a most outrageous way. She is satisfied that another time she will try a less romantic way of getting mar ried. ounce; quarter of a drachm of powdered borax and one drachm of sugar. Mix them, and let them stsnd till ready for use, then rub it on the face occasion allv. i The strongest and hardiest women d- not wear stays. They have never formed the habit. Those who have, find it necessity not because they really need them, but simply becauso they think they do. I Professor Bouchut mentions some ex- the smaller the air-chamber. This can be see at the broad end of the egg if it be held up against a strong light in a dark room. Stale eggs hare a mottled ocraaioo, too. - What," said tether, - is thai la- vincible powrr that pcrrtls the wicked can from slecpie and caace hira to I ..... a . gratUh look about them. A cew-UiJ tcs about njoa Ms pillow, ana wlsi egg will alwsys give a feeling of warmth should he do to utoj tltat r Vkb if the tongue Is rreasM to the lanreend. rHb all unJentaaJicg?- "rwrp i v i i u the hole ia the Eiuito-Ur was the " - fc,- -v. k . I . , , m . 1 Wrrr txsl four ft wida srrma his car- 1T " " ,Un nn fin idd- of which rUl rr foot ct ih cU I How to trala torsaloe. Is (he rsh- f Jnn. th. rrund IrrlM and iect cf aa agricaltaral dauitica. It ' o i : . ... . . . .i. .i...v ... I la trf rnonrti. All vera tars 10 uo u rmjLcu raoota, j ium iuf i uwti niiw i - tKmlrM and fnrmM a r-w I a tOCJO dL-LaW iUlf ia COtTpasy, The use of the electric light on ocean steamers is one of the most valuable, to which the new method of illumination can be put; and the public will be glad periments he has made going to show to know that the experiment, as tried that the milky juice of the fig-tree ou iuu vi lucumoDU on ner lasi nnmp a dicresuve nower. lie 110 IS' w m voyage from Queenstown to New York, observed that when some of his prepara- was a perfect success. It was not alono tion was mixed with animal tissue, it in replacing the dim oil lamps in the preserved it from decay for a long time. main saloon that tne electric light The Medical Preu refers to this fact, in proved valuable and useful, but in fur- connection with Professsor Billroth rushing illumination for dark and com- case of cancer of the breast, which was paratively inaccessible places, where it I Bo excessively foul smelling that all his is dangerous to carry an open lamp, and deoderizers failed, but on applying a where very little can be seen with any poultice made of dried figs cooked in of the ordinary styles of open lamp, milk, the previously unbearable odor The Detroit Free Press believes the lake steamers will have to follow in the wake of the ocean steamers, and when all these and the railway tunnels per haps the cars as well are fully illu was entirely done away witlu Certainly the remedy is worth trying. Is to cah the tlaf-a cct cf U. It fsy look a little leedf tt a while afwr. l-t of trsitii rill Irbr it to its pulp la a hurry. The Tabarrw Habit wltt TTossem. Dr. Hammond, the well kaowa New York i bysidan, aid ia reply Uin porter's quenlkm: ' It Is true that Amervaa wotaea Co Urgely uxs tobacco. Ia fact, ty alwsys hare. American ladies cf Afri can 'descent la the soith Lave always moked their r'p and thetr white slater do not aluirtbr di-dsla the Pine and dirTS-' Cot here at the north taaay ladiee have, la Imitaiica cf Caban, Mexican, South American, Bj. Uh. French and evta ZctX Uke to the ue cf dgarttU, U their serf great detriment." Why taore so than to mea I dent think m ar cfta it jared by the moderate us of tclcco la stack ing. Bot the fetsab 1-ody Is fco tsore Loar Cauc Beat tosttber two cur adar4ed to the ns cf tclvcco thaa t-e li!li tnnr nn unt run Imttr. (l:rM I (Tr.ila -.?nd ta ta taallteaalk. It eggs and threw teaspoons baking pow-1 casccuraJria, headache, dyspepsia. der. Add a cup of sweet milk and then j rhitatioa f the heart, gad worse ct gradually beat ia three heaping cope f I ruins the complex ka aad Uisonltrs flour. Sprinkle a little powdrel sngar I tKe teeth. I sav aothisg slt the over the top of the cake before baking, health, bat I thiak, r-eve rthf !, that Som Mitx Cakjl Beat toffetheroae all will acree that tU stale dor of to- tied. The celt sc&aca a similar proct was pursued, and thus a movable traw. berry bed was created. At the end of three years the original plants were ex hausted and dug up, though the bed annually grows wider without renewal or transplanting. In a recent address on the subject of corn. Professor Deal remarked that the topmost ear was best for seed; cf two fields, one planted with sd taken at random and the other 'elected ia the Celd, the Utter yielded as much again a the former. Manure and cultlTstion may bo thrown away oa poor ed. Th lest time to cultivate corn is lforo planting. A shallow cultivation wsa recommended. Twenty-three ear of corn can be prodnce-l from one kernel; by proper cultivation and the nw of the Inst seed as high as twenty-fire ear. Smut is a great damage to corn, am) tnntty corn is very injurious to cattle. cup sugar, half cap butter and one egg. Add one cup of soar milk with one evta teaspoon of soda stirred Into it. Then add two cups of sifted flour, a half cup A Curious Experiment, A correspondent, writing from New minated the traveling public will begin York .thte foUowing curious ex- of . t. to realize how great a bless in cr the 1'""" -M ence uy a smau parry oi genuemen electric light is. What troth there may be in an item running its course in the French prints no one can say, but it is said that in the leading banking houses in Europe what is called a detective camera is to be used. A man of suspicious appearance makes his way up to the cashier's coun ter and presents a letter of credit or a draft. The clerk, when the man's face is full front toward him, touches a little button. Presto, a concealed camera is brought into play, the sensitive plate is exposed, and in an instant the man's photograph is taken. Further than this, this wonderful detective camera is to play another role. The head of the house leaves his business and con fides it to his clerks. Some of the clerks go to sleep, or smoke cigars, or skylark, or do other things not exactly in keeping with their calling, and off starts a aeries of plates, worked by clock-work, and every action oft the clerks durincr a series of hours is re- corded. There might be eves a plei ing, though rather compromising, use qt this mechanical camera. With such an, instrument all the handsomest women at a soiree might be photographed without their knowledge, and gall en of beauties be at any one's command. Let it be hoped, however, that this camera, if it is to be used, will coly be casually assembled at the house oi a friend: The heaviest man in the room. who happened to be our host, the Rev. Mr. , wss put lying down on three chairs, his head on one and his body and feet on the other two.' Then five PaastxT ajtd Lrxo Ha rex. Wash a handful of rarsley and mince it ap finely with the pulp and rind of a lemon; melt a pat of butter ia a saucepan, mix with a tablcpoonfal of flour, add the minced parsley and lemon, sufficient broth or stock to make the eaace, a of us each put two fingers under him, Pun few capers; one taking the head, another the feet and so on, and at a given signal all took a long breath and lifted to gether. To our amazement we lifted a man weighing 200 pounds, two? feet from the chair, with no more effort than if he had been a bag of feath ers. Two of the " lifters" were young stir over the Cre, aad wnea partly cooked add, off the fire, the yolks of two eggs beaten op. Coax Socr. Cover the trimmings and bones from the shoulder of veal with one quart of cold wster ; add aa onion, sliced, a small carrot or part cf one. and some parsley. Simmer for two hours sad straia. barco coming fron a woman's caoath Is worse thaa the same am 11 exhaled by a man. As to chewisg la zara aad its aaalogua, dipping la women, aothirg can be filthier, sad I know that both are prod active f diseases f the aer- vous system." "Bat, doctor, does to ts.oiizg at m m a - t cease diseasre ox u nervou ryucs u . taen as well as la women 1 " Certainly it does, if indslged la to excess. B at then tara's txrrxrxM rjsUzx are not so impressionable as wooea's, and hcac a maa can do saaay thisgs with impunity, or even benefit, which would be la possible for a wotaaa to do without great risk. Aad besides it doee not make much difference to a zaaa if his complexion Is a little sallow, his eyes lotteries, lis body shrivtled aad his skia rough, whereas the thirds ent, and am After we had repeated the experiment several times marked weights were brought in, and tne inters were asked to estimate about how much strain they had felt when lifting the Rev. Mr. . One person, after trying different weights, estimated it at two pounds, another three, etc Two han- There thould be'aCre very important to a wotaaa." that you are aa admirer o si A -s M I area ponnas GumDaxea amom an pw- Draw to the back f the range sons would give forty pounds to eaca, or ctea, first adding a tahb not an easy weight for a woman to Lit, ced parsley. Put and no one but aa athlete would at- ' Aru tempt to lift forty pounds with two fin- fa aU. po, a the soup. eers, IMS experiment, may oe urea as i any time when five or six persons are Always put your best foot forward, no present, and will afford foodfor reflec- -natter If It Is somewhat bungling aad tion, I possesses a larcr.ve cora. ladies, and I Jtnow all me persons pre- " . . . rJ - .: I near IT a quax vi uruw. m&uumi can of com ia a quart of water. Wash through a fine colander that will not allow the skins of the kernels to pass through. Return the aaacepaa to the fire, zaelt ia it a large tablepooaf al of butter and mix with two tablerpooa'als of flour ; add, gradually stirring while, the corn palp and then the veal Yes- It UthegTvateat gaflawtrmaa caa hate, for it not only aveaas esthete enjoyment for all that look at her, but It xaeaas a healthy mind and aheallhy body; aad then the zaears accessary to prracrrs baty srs the vrry cr.es r-rors-sary to keep the taiad aad body ia scuad health." Belgiaxa promises to beeosae the grtit Indastrial teacher cf Europe, llary f oreiguers art now attending her schools. She has fiTty-cirs technical sch'.t, thirty -two industrial schools aad a higher cocarcial school -all recti tir z tzzls aanually frcm the Ut

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