TELEGRAPHIC TOPICS.
EYENTS OP IMPORTANCE FLASHED
OYER THE WIRES. "
Mexican Bandits Create & Reign of
" Terror Ou tho ltio Grande.
A reign of terror exists in tho up river
border counties of Texas, between Edinburg
' and Roma, tho result oZ the shocking depre-
: dations of Mexican bandits. Since the.abduc
tion of Senor Barara, whose f rieuda had to
pay 41,500 ransom, almost every merchant
has received threatening letters ordering pay-
ment of heavy sums on, the penalty of ab
duction and torture. The wealthy never
travel without a heavy guard. The border
Sheriffs, who are poorly paid, are doing what
they can with their Deputies, to hunt the rob
bers dovn, and a small force of rangers has
been sent by Governor Ross to Bio Grande
City, but it is feared that the whole force is
not strong enough to round the bandits up in
such a long extent ., of wild , bottom
end wooden country. . District Judge
. J. C. Russell, who is a large ranch owner
in Stair County, acknowledged that the civil
authorities were unable to cope with the
matter. - In the meantime the bandits are
continuing their work. On Monday, at high,
noon, they entered the Havana Ranch, in Hi
dalgo County , a place of about 500 inhabitants,
surrounded the store of MagJileno Flores,
drove the occupants out, and robbed the
place of every bit of goods it contained.
They then tore off the doors, smashed
the windows, and threatened to . re
turn and sack and burn . every house
in the place. - The band numbered twenty
one men. The day before another party of
bandits, about twenty strong, attacked the
Attasosca Ranch, on "the San Juan river, a
f e miles ; above Camargo, - Mexico, ; and
sacked the place, abusing and outraging the
people. Tney were pursued by Mexican
cavalry under Captain Lamadrido, and
Plasuelas, a leader, and another bandit were
secured. Plasuelas was executed at Camargo,
and the other will suffer the same fate.
Lamadride, an active officer has at
his command . all the men that ; be
wants, and gets a step ' in rank :' for
every bandit captured. President Dia3
has ordered that the severest measures be
used to put down banditage on the border,
and General Velain, in command of this
military d fst-riet, is anxious to co-operate with
the American authorities, aud drive out and
eliminate these pests. The State authorities
of Tamaulipas are very lukewarm. Their
party newspapers openly attack Velain for
causing the capture of Lorenzo Vela, a noted
bandit, and the murderer of Sheriff Martin,
of Stair County, who was sent to the fortress
of San Juan de Ulloa, at Vera Cruz, and are
trying to excite a sentiment among the
people in f avor of the wretches and against
the party of law and order. . .
A Man Kilts his Wife, Child,
and
iiroiner-in-iiaw. : : v
Mrs. Mary Bruner, the mother of Mrs.
Charles B. Brownfield, called about 10 a. m.
the other day at the house of her daughter in
jLxmisvijje, &.y. ro one answered the door
bell, and she went to the window, raised it
and pushed back the shutters. In the middle
of the doorway 1 between the room
occupied by her daughter and husband and
little daughter of eight or ten years, and the
room occupied by William Bruner, a
brother of Mrs. Brownfield, was the body of
Charles Brownfield, suspended by a strap at
tached to the linteL On a bed in a dark (nr.
ner lay the body of "William F. Bruner with
his throat cut On another bed were the
forms of his wife and child, age nine, their
hands were almost severed from their
bodies. Beneath BrownfieldV feet lay the
razor with which the murders had been com
mitted. On the bureau in the parlor lav a
letter written by Brownfield, acknowledging
himself as the triple murderer, and declaring
that gambling had been his ruin. He wal
twenty-seven years old.
Damage Done by Hunters.
A dispatch frtwn Portia, Ark., says: "The
woods for ten miles around have been on fire
tor four days. Cotton fields have been burned
c-orn cribs, barns, dwelling houses and -fields
ruined. The woods are bare, stock is comin
out for shelter and some being run out on act
count of the fire. Unless rain should
come the damage will be widespread."
A dispatch from Anna. HL, says: "For
some days disastrous fires have -been rarina
in the hill lands, the woods and bottom lands
of this region and in the swamps across the
"ver,m Cape Girardeau County, Mo. The
long drouth has made everything as dry as
tinder, and rain is fervently prayed for."
Hanged for Murder. 7
Tuck Agee was hanged in tho inclosure of
Z of, a (Iiy ) P on Friday. On
hep. 33, 18fc6, Agee murdered his brother-in-law,
James Faulkner, during a quarrel about
the ownership of two dozen roasting ears.
On the same day Henry Robinson (colored)
was hanged at Union Springs, Ala. In May
last he murdered an aged colored man who
troubiyOUnR aUd Was 016 cauS3 o the
Precautions Against Cholera. '
vSS nmioner Nichols. of New
ork, has called upon Secretarv F.Miu ,
Washing TZi ra!rctn
pftrS tir aou5 interview in re-
twl?, !-adoptlon of measures to protect
the Atlantic, norta aramd: rrrS
vessels It io rrij . .
infecver8
compelled to return
they came . .
arrival in America and
to the country whence
YELLOW FEVER.
San ford, Fla. Quarantined and
- - Trains Running Into the .:
' Stations.
No
Two deaths from fever under suspicious
circumstances in Sanford induced the Duval
County Board of Health to send Dr. Daniel,
a yellow fever expert, down, there on a
special train to ascertain the facts and report
them.. Dn Daniel returned and made official
: report to th 3 Board of Health, in which he
said that' no reliable diagnosis could " be ob
tained, but added; "There is undoubtedly
room for grave apprehension, under all the
circumstances, and am very sure the au
thorities of Sanford are so impressed in
reg rd to the matter themselves." -, v :
Preferring to err on tho safe side, the
Duval County Board of Health has declared
a rigid quarantine' against Sanford. Trains
will not be allowed to run into the latter
city, but will stop some miles out and be met
there by trains from, Sanford bringing the
mails and through passengers. ' Through
passengers will not be allowed to come to
Jacksonville, but will be transferred at the
junction ontside of-- the city limits to the
roads leading north.- Sanford is 125 miles
from Jacksonville by rail and 200 miles by
river. Th. re are no tears of a spread of the
disease.. . -- -.
HURLED FROM A BALLOON.
The Bag Explodes and the Aeronaut
Falls Upon His Back.
Anton Infantes, an aeronaut, had a trilling
experience at an exhibition of the "Fall of
Pompeii," g-ven at a suburban station on the
West End Ntrrow-Gauge : Railroad, ntar .
St. Louis. One of the features of the show
was to be a balloon ascension with -trapeze
performance by Infantes.- The balloon as-
cended about one hundred feet and then !
. passed over the show-grounds. When about
a block from where the ascent was made it .
became unmanageable and tipped to one side j
and began falling at a rapid rate. Infantes
held to the bar, and' would probably have
: made a safe, decent out ror an explosion
which tore the bag. : . :
The balloon was about thirty feet from
the ground when the explosion occurred and
the aero, aut fell on his back oh a stake
which protruded from the ground , about
twelve inches. .Infantes was unconscious
when the attaches of ; the show reached him
and was bleeding prof usely from the nose
and mouth. Infantes was given restoratives,
and on regaining consciousness utterea some
thing in the Portugese tongue which nobody
present could understand. His injuries are i,
serious, but not considered fatal. " He sas's
that the explosion was due to the fact that
the balloon was not properly inflated. 1
- TELEGRAPHIC SUMMARY.
Eastern and Middle State ;
George J. Kelly, a Boston Globe report
er, was choked to death by a piece of meat
lodging in his throat while eating his supper
in a Cambridge (Mass.) restaurant. ; !.: f , y'l
A vein of coal worth $3,000,000 "has just
been found in South Wilkesbarre, Penn., at
a distance of -1,100 foet below the surface, tha
deepest shaft in Pennsylvania. J: -
.. David Scott, one of - the best known men
in the'New York paper trade, has fled to Can
ada after robbing the firm of which he was a
member, and others, of over $100,003. V: :
j Thomas WaTLlagk, a convict in the penf
tentiary at Caldwell, N. J., was shot dead
by a guard while trying to e-cap?. -. .
Rev. Charles A. Berry, of England, has
been finally chosen to succeed the late Henry
Ward Beechor as pastor of Plymouth Church,
Brooklyn. . y ... .... - -: - . 'y"--y..y
- Twenty-sevejt stilts for -damages have
baen entered by Salvation Army men against
Augusta, Maine, for alleged unjust arrests.
5 ': Southland West. ' I
' ATLagro, Ind., the Rev. Andrew Luce, a
Presbyterian minister, swooned away and
died while the Rev. Mr. Kanouse was offer
ing prayer, o. :---v r -X - -'--i- 3
: The guests at a merry-making in George
C- King's housa, near-Liatnar, La. , were alt
taken violently Bick after supper. ' Six white
persons five men and one woman and one
colored man died, and many others, at last
accounts, were dangerously ill.. : i :
Naval Surgeon George Arthur fell
from a train near Salem, Va., and was in
stantly killed. He was on his way from
Washington to Shelby ville, Tenn., to be mar
ried. . Q: i':ir'y -' 'r-:- '-''
Three; little grandchildren of T.'S. Oliver
were burned to death in Faulkner County,
Ark. The little ones were alonejn a build:
ing at the time. -;. .. ' , r- : ; .
; Three of the condemned Chicago An
archists Spies, Fielden and Schwab after
the refusal of t he United -States. Supreme
Court to grant a writ of error, signed a peti
tion to Governor Oglesby, begg(ng him to
commute their sentence of death, r
i A band of masked men stopped an express
train near Grand Junction, CoL, for over an
hour, and robbed the passengers. ,
'.: Adam Fix, a t by of seventeen, shot him-
self dead: in his father's barn at Cleveland,
Ohio. ! -':,::?v-v,r -r-:-
Commissioner of Agricoxtcrh Cole
man asserts that Brooklyn, New York, and
Baltimore have for forty years been plague
spots from which pleuropneumonia in cattle
"has been spread throughout the country.
During October the public debt was de
creased $ l(,833,t95, leaving the total debt,
less cash in the Treasury, at 61,233,692,701.
Net cash in the Treasury, $56,758,701. y.
: The United States Supreme Court unani
mously denied the petition of the condemned
Chicago Anarchists for a writ of error. . ;
?An attempt was made the other night
either to kill or maim Chief Justice Waite,
of the United States Supreme Court, or to
perpetrate a silly hoax, by sending to his
residence a small box containing what seemed
to be an - infernal machine. . It was sent
through the postoflice. ,
A Washington special says the following
changes will probably occur in the near
future: Secretary Lamar to succeed the late
Justice Woods on tho United States Supreme
Court bench; Postmaster-General Vilas to
succeed Mr. - Lamar as Secretary of the In
terior, and Don M. Dickinson, of ii ichigan,
to become Postmaster-General. .
Mrs. Cleveland has received from " Ja
maica, West Indies, an elaborate, fan, made
at the Women's Self -Help Institution on that
island, of native woods, ferns and flowers. , .
f ::The British Government will prosecute all
persons who took part in the recent midnight
meeting at Woodford, Ireland, at which the
proclamation of the Lord Lieutenant forbid
ding the meeting was burned. - Anions those
to be indicted are two members of Parlia
ment. i . - y
-. ' Foreign.
De Lesseps, projector of the Panama
Canal, says the great ditch will ba formally
opened on February 3, 1890. -
A violent storm has done an immense
amount of damacre to shiDmns alone the
coasts of Great Britain and France. - y. J
The town of Kluzin, in Minsk, Russia, has
been totally destroyed by fire. Three hundred
were lost.-i i; .' ;
- The Irish Prison Board at Dublin directed
that Mr. O'Brien must wear the prison uni
form and be treated in every way as an
ordinary prisoner. i-
Another Nihilist plot has been discovered
in St. Petersburg, and numerous arrests have
beenmade.a - : . . -.-
Sixteen . hundred miners have struck
work in the Beriage district, Belgium, the
wvne of recent fatal rioting.
T; Eighteen Nihilists have . been arrested in
Kiel and Odessa. Russia. ' v
PASSENGERS CRUSHED.
A Street CarStrncfc by a Freight Train
r ; j AY ith Fatal KfTect.
An engine attached to a freight train on
.the Fort Wayne Railroad struck a street cai
at the Federal street crossing, in Allegheny
City, Pa.,' land two passengers who jumped
from the car were caught under the wheelj
of the engine and ground to death. ,
' Their namer John M. Culp, teller of th
Odd Fellows Savings Bank, and Miss Har
riet Weyman, a sister of Weyman Brothers,
the tobacconists. I . . -
The accident was caused by the gateman,
Stewart " Cunningham, raising the safety
gates too soon. It appears that the gates had
be n lowered for a construction train. Aftei
it ' passed : Cuningham, -not noticing th
freight train coming in the opposite direc
tion, raised the gates to allow the street cart
and pedestrians to cross. ' Car No. 23, of the
Manchester line," which was filled with pas
sengers on i their way home, succeeded in
getting nearly over the railroad ; tracks,
when Mr. Culp and Miss Weyman ran out
on the rear platform and jumped off, the
other passengers remaining in the car. i
The engine of the freight train struck the
car and tore off the platform, but did no
other damage. Mr. Culp and Miss Weyman
fell on the tracks, and before the train could
be stoppe 1 they were ground to death under
the wheels of the engine. The other passen
gers were not injured. ; The remains of the
two unfortunates were picked up and 'con
veyed to their homes. '
Mr. Culp was a married man, about
thirty-five years of age. - Miss Weyman waa
forty years i old, The accident created in
tense excitement among the passengers, and
several ladies fainted Cunningham" claims
that he d.d not see the second train in time
to hold the gates do wn. -
GLEANINGS.
Several, Guatemalan revolutionists have
been 6hot. ; j
" A Michigan train ran over a fox- and
kiiled.it the other day. '
Tri-wbxkly public receptions have been
resumed at the White House. -
'A society in Detroit of men sworn not to
swear numbers nearly 1 ,003 persons.
Kansas abounds in natural gas.' There are
113 companies engaged in developing it
Bureaus for furnishing legal advice free
tithn TVTor is t.hA tntpsfc thine in New JVorlr
- The onion crop in the United States is this . er, and that is the exhaustion of the vir
year about threetfourths of an average ci-ip. ; gin fertility of the soil Except m por-
A well defined case of leprosy is reported tions of the older settled States, up to
to have' been discovered in St. Louii by a' the present time farming has been largely
prominent specialist. v : f''2i't of the pioneer order, which means c ear-
It takes 14,800,0)0 callons of oil a year to ins- un the land and cropoinsr itin such a
keep the railways of Great Britain going, and
The trade and shipping of table grapes, in
California, has greatly increased, and it is
safe to estimate it at nearly double that
of last year. ! , . y -. -'y. - . - r ' .
. Sugar-cane in Louisiana, although it has
fallen off somewhat in general condition, is
still the best grown crop - in Louisiana for
many years.; ;,y -..yy.- :yy. v:T . yy ':y:t --.r
A late steamer from San Francisco . for
China took out 300 tons of mining machinery.
and six skilled American miners to aid in
inin 1 HatrAlrknmQnf-. of t.Yt r t. nnn n f.r-v
l The Piedmont Exposition at Atlanta, Ga.,
netted a cash profit of $10,000, besides pay-;
- ing over Slou.OOJ " for th9 buildings and
grounds. On account of this success there
will probably be a World's Fair there ul
1889.
AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OP INTEREST ItEL. ATIVE
i TO P AR5I AND GARDEN.
; ; - Soiling ,vs. Pasturing. .
! Careful trial ha3 satisCed those who
practice toiling that one acre of land,
well tilled, will support a cow a long as
three acres' of. pasture and one acre, of
meadow. A succession of crops must be
town, of course. The first crop to cut
in the spring is winter rye, then follow
medium clover and orchard grass, timo
thv aud a'.sike or nca vine clover, or both,
: oats,: or peas and oats, millet, corn and
I sorghum, lhe latter sowed vei-y thick to
j keep the stalks soft, and if to this sys-
item of soiling was added that of silage,
and the latter used alter tne green grow
ing ;rops were frozen up, and with the
silage a variety of root -crops saved and
used, how much more cheaply would we
carry our stock through the entire year,
(Mmarts Rural World. ... ; " ' -
t Hints About Sheep. f
I have made sheep- raising a study all
my life, and find an the Shropshire just
what is wanted .for a general'; purpose
sheep. , Have crossed them on fine wools
for six years in succession, and produced
lambs that would average 120 pounds at
from ten to eleven : months old, and
which sold for six cents a pound each
year at home market. Micigan Farmer.
- There are probably few men who have
fed sheep for fifteen or twenty years who
can say that they; found them in every
case profitable: and yet more men could
brobablv sav this of sheep - than could
say it of either hogs or cattle. Fat sheep
never advance to the extreme values o
casionally reached by other fat stock
but at the same time they are less apt to
go to an extreme the other way. In fact,
taking a term of years together, no other
stock shows as great uniformity in its
quotations. -The man; who commands
the fleeces and the carcasses : of a nice
bunch of wethers every year finds sheep
feeding profitable. national ctochman.
? One advantage frcm keeping a" few
sheep on the farm is the fact that those
fortunate farmers engaged in the pursuit
have a ! clip : of wool, some fat lambs or
sheep sell at a time when but few other
farm products are ready for the market.
Money is usually most in demand among
farmers during the spring and summer,
for it is then that they : are engaged in
making, the crops to be sold the ensuing
fall and winter. Combining sheep hus
bandry with grain growing, pieces out an
uncomfortable gap in the finances, when
without it the farmer's business would
for a while be all outgo and no income.
Lewiston Journal. I j ;
To those who have noticed how little
mindful sheep are to the severest cold
wcather;when-well feeced, it miy seem
idle to say any thing about protection for
sheep for two months, yet protection is
even more important during the next
two months than it will be in the sub
sequent two. It is not cold weather that
hurts sheep so much as it is wet weather.
Wool is' always injured by getting wetl
and when a sheep, is exposed to a cold
rain, such as we are likely to have an
abundance of during ; the fall months,
and the netce gets filled with: water
'which must be dried out slowly by the
heat of the animal's body, will not only
injure the wool . but give the sheep bad
colds, catarrh, and reduce the vitality of
the sheep to a low ebb. v if goody healthy
lambs are to bp expected it is therefore
quite necessary that the ewes be pro
tected irom storms.: Kural World.
: Farming as a Business.
Farming as a 'business," savs
as a business," says Pro
fessor Gulley, iu Home and Farm, 'is
not what it has been in the past. : It re
quires much more intelligence and skill
to farm successfully now than it did for
merly, and for" a variety of reasons.
"Our : wants have . increased. The
luxuries i of our fathers have "-. become
everday necessities for our comfort. We
feel that we must live better, - dress
better, do more,: work fewer hours, and
we . require more in the way of mental
improvement, accomplishments and the
like. This is as it should be." The
farmer should have and should enjoy all
th.it is within the reach of the merchants
or professional man ; i he is even en
titled to more than the town resident to
make up for the isolation-of life on the
farm.'..-;: '";'':' y. - . ; - . y
"The fact that country people do not
have the advantages of the town people,
that farming at the present time does not
hold out such ' strong inducements to
young men as other occupations, not
only prevents the town bred boy from be
coming a farmer, but it alsodraws a large
Eroportion of the brightest and smartest
oys from the country to the town, and
we have as the result a much larger num
ber of the naturally-gifted, shrewd men
of the country engaged in manufactures,
transforation, trading, etc. j than we find
farming, and it natu: ally follows that
the smarter men secure the larger share of
the proceeds of the industries. ; - -'
Another disadvantage that the farmer
labors under the outcome of greater
ability possessed by men - in pther indus
triesis the fact that improvement in
method of manufa ture,1 trade, transpor
tation and-distribution has been very
much more rapid than in farming. These
industr'e are growing Jaway from - the
production of farmcropdl r -y-y
y.4t T 1 1 ti n rr flo nacf -fi-f txr voora f li a -rnr
of one man to turn raw products into
. manufactured goods and distribute them
to consumers, through tho introduction
of improved m icliincry and application 1
01 scientific discoveries; has increase!
from five to one hundred : or more
times. . We have made no such advance
in growing crops. h ;T ? - ; : - r
i "It is true the introduction of large
implement?, and the j binder and header,
' has increased the capaeity of one man
tenfold in growing and harvesting wheat,
-and haying machinery to ; Dearly; as great
an extent in making; hay; '.but we have
' only increased a man's capacity two or
- three fold in making; corn, while in cot
' ton growing it is probable that,, on-the
average, one man really produces . less,
years ago. , y - : ; . ; . . .
I "There is fctill another factor that is
detrimental to the interests of the farm-
; w,v to nroduce a crop wLh the least
labor, regardless of the exhaustion: aid
j loss of the fertility of the soil, compel-
ttnrr ita nnw in ndnnt. srvmp svstem of fp.r-
( tilization that is necessarily expensive to
make the land produce as much as it did
.' formerly. : - ' r ; Ay:l:-.''"
v"!fo much is said and 'written at the
preseat t ime about monowlies and un just
laws which are oppressing the farmer that
m iny are ;led4 to believe that the con
dition' of 'tie farmer ; m iy be improved
simply' by lez'slation. I: While there miy
hi so nc in u" tice done to : the farmer by
jxnvciftii 1 crp ra ions aiil- lawmakers,
Kt ill Vc must stu ly the underlving i)iiu-
csp:
m of agriculture aud its connection
with other industries and raise it to a par
with those pursuits before the farmer
can secure a just compensation for his
Farm and. Garden Notes;
Do not allow your cattle to drink from
a stagnant pool. " - ?i y-.
The . flocks and herds need weeding.
the same a fields. ..--i
A good season for ditc'hiner, draining:
and digging wel's.
The very best mine for a farmer to in-:
vest in is his farm. . " ' ?
If your chickens have the diarrhoea.
give them boiled sweet milk. h
Rolling upland, with light or gray sub
soil," well drained, is the best for wheat.
Corn cobs make good fuel, and -the
ashes of corn cobs contain stores of
potash.
-r The assertion is "made that potatoes
which grow nearest the surface are most
subject to rot. .- -
Ducks can live with a bath . once a i
week, but they are aquatic enough to
enjoy a dozen a day. .
: According to Dr. T. H. Hoskins the
tomato rot is getting to be about as bad
a disease as the potato rot.
Be sure that your milch. cows have
enough pure, sweet water. ' Else ; the
typhoid fever may admonish you. v
It is claimed that sweet-cream butter,
though better flavored, docs not keep as
well as that from slightly acid cream.
It is charged that the English sparrow
protects the caterpillars by driving away
the native birds that would destroy
them. ' ":y ?i-:y.yJy
."Young" turkeys should only be allowed
to run in fields where' the grass is cut
short, as wet plumage seems to be fatal
to 'them. y.t y- :r:;y ;' Yyiy 'i r:yy--y,-i v.
i Decay ing'vegetables should be thrown
on . the manure pile, and not scattered
about the door yard to befoul the" air in a
hot dry time. ; -; ; . - ' - .
The farmer who sells - the best and
keeps the poorest seeds and animals is on
the right road to the wrong place. Bet
ter "bout face." - - - :
Dutch belted cattle are not as large ae
Holsteins, " but i are' said to rival the
Ayrshires in hardiness, being well calcu
lated for rough lands. T -y ; "
y Cellars require care land attention to
preserve them sweet, pure, and healthy.
btagnant air, slops,, or decaying vegeta
bles will soon vitiat e them. , , ; .
Prominent apiarians advise extracting
the honev from partially . filled sections
at the end of the season, and keei ing the
sections for, use the; next season. . jr.
The use of soil on asparagus is - con
fined to keeping down of weeds ; durins
cutting time. Asparagus is a semi-marine
.t.Kio v.,1 m..K ..it -nriii ;ni-n
.. - . , J.
lc- f -'.
; Thpm ia a brisk " demand and rood
: r . floi, rsf j.u.
F".LC ivl v65, i "l
and geese, and- these fowls are easily
raised. Some deem them more profita
ble than chickens. - . .
When fodder corn is in bloom it coh-
tains but thirteen per cent, of solid mat-
a . nrl . 1 1 1 l 5 i 1 -L
ler. v vv uen lue Kcrueis uegiu 1.0 giaxe 11 1 ly orougnv uouie 10 weut uj uuiuu i tu
nas twenty-five per cent. Don't cut it too a heavy indictment in this 1 month's Coa-
soon, whether lor siloing or soiling.
. -, j- ... - ... -
If a silo is built in a hillside, the South
ern. Cultivator deems the following a good
way to construct it. Plank up inside
with two-inch plank, then a course of
tarred paper, then another plank on the
paper ; all on the inside of tne silo. -
The Southern - Cultivator avers that
smoke is the great secret in the manage
ment of bees. If judicially applied before
a hive is opened and the frames are han
dled with care, there need not beany diffi
culty in performing all necessary opera
tions in bee-keeping.
John M. Stahl, the well-known agri
cultural writer, says: "Ninety-nine of
every hundred farmers get their knowl
edge of and skill in their particular work
by the picking-up process." " He .adds,
however, that very few farmers show
their sons or their laborers how to man
age the details of farm work. "It i3 as
if an apprentice were put in the black
smith or carpenter shop and never
taught." - - j .
A Hot-Wind Day In. Australia
A With strict impartiality it speeds alike
down the hutter's chimney, formed of
old kerosene tins, ; and the Elizabethan
stacka of fashionable suburban man
sions ; - charges up the busy i streets,
"flashes through the 'omnibuses, in at one
widow and out of t the other, like the
clown in the pantomime. ' But not all of
it ! not the six bushels t Shake yourself
and see. Then it spins along the su
burban highways, pounces down on the
scavengers' heaps -of dead leaves and
other odds and ends of" unconsidered
trines,- and they are gone, and their
place knows them no more. Poets seek
ing new tropes and figures v of speech
should try what can be made of an Aus
tralian dust storm. Every window in
the cities is closed, and the heated blast
chafes and howls about the casements in
a frenzy of impotent rage. - Should any
one incautiously turn a street corner par
ticularly sprucely dressed, straightway
it makes for him. The air soon becomes
a combination of atoms as lively -as
aerated waters. The whole surrounding I
f country seems shrouded by au atmos
phere which has been whipped into the
consistency of pea soup. One side of the
street is sometimes as completely hidden
from the other side as , by a November
! fo iQ jndon.
Woe to '- the unlucky
housemaid who has inadvertently left
open a single. Window I, Repentance, in
sackcloth and dust is her condign punish--ment.
And thus the enemy speeds up
and down the day through. The heat is
stifling, but people all seek to close every
avenue of approach. Batten down and
stew is the order of the ; day. Of t wo
evils it is by far the least ; indeed, the
only defense, arfd every port is closed as
n board ship in bad weather. . Should
the demon succeed-in effecting an en
trance he swreps through the hall, rushes
up ; stairs, - and bangs every door like a
maniac; The hotel kitchen is a subject
of special anxiety to the functionaries
concerned, and certain" venders of per
ishable commodities ": close their I Bhops ;
altogether. Murray's Magaiin e. . j iy -y.
Weddings In Colonial Days. ; .
In Mri Sanford's "History of Connec-
ticut," recently issued, is the following
"weddings in early colonial days were
usually celebrated quietly at the home of
the bride.-1 With the increase of wealth
th ere was a marked cha n ge in this re
spect. : Not only were the banns pro
claimed in the church, but a general in
vitation was given from the pulpit to
attend the ceremony. :; Friends - and
neighbora were entertained with a lavish
hospitality at the bride's house. , On the
wedding-day, muskets were fired; and
those who attended the ceremony-marched
in procession to' the bride's home. ;. The
wedding-feasts lasted sometimes for two
or three days. At a grand wedding in
New London, on the day after the mar
riage ninety-two ladles t and gentlemen,
it is said, proceeded to dance ninety-two
jigs, fifty-two. contra dances, vforty-fire
Diiuuets aud serenteen hornpipes.".
.TEMPERANCE.
Thanksgiving Pay.
Our grateful songs in rapture rise"
For blessings from propitious skies, ; - t
: - And mercies daily granted here . .
Where plenty's star-ht banner flies.
Lo, when we dreamed a-cloud was near,
- A bowspanned the bright hemisphere!
For bread the toilers need, not lack '
If at the plough he looks not back'
. And winnews from his thoughts the tares.
He'll find the shekels in his sack,
, And the "love-cup" the favored shares
From hands of angels unawares." ,
From teaming flelds bronzed labor tills i"
Our vaults aud bins an J barns are filled, -
And we are taught to toil and trust, i
Our gift have been like rain distilled '
Upon the "unjust and the just,"
Eringing the fmitage from the dust.
The Benjamin of nations born, "
Our sacks' are filled with golden cornt "
Food fit for continents of kings. . . .. ;
With faces sad and garments torn,
.. We be w not here; our homage brings ;
- Us.tothe Gross, where Mercy clings. - :
We best can show our grateful zeal '
By striving for our brother's weal, "
-. Healing tho wounded heart that bleeds,
And by our labors show we feel J - -:
Another's woes and heed his needs. '
. . Good thoughts are blett when coined in
- deeds. -- - -George
TPL Bungaytin Temperance Advocate.
Dr. nk'in .'ss Abroad. -
When so many less "momentous subjects
are the topics for discussion in internati mal
and colon al congresses, it is gratifying to
learn tha we hare at lengthau,ch a congress
for the consideration xf inebriety, or what
we prefer to call drunkenness. v: Dr. Norman
Kerr deli vered the opening address of the first
meeting at the Westminster Town Kail," ou
the 6th inst. - It is lamentable to find that in
all civilized countries this vice or, as the
Congi-ess prefers to call it. this disease is so
prevalent. The mo t educated nations
Scotland. German v France are as deeply
affected as others; and w hat is sadder still
they ere the most b ameworthy m carrying
the mater ies morbi to uncivilized peoples
which are being demoralized and destroye 1
by drink; Cur-owl colonies are drinking
badly.. Men of authority and medical ex
perience say that" in Australia our fellow-
sumects drink far: beyond ' anything in
this ". country,-.;; and beyond f : their own
Eotations . twenty years ,-ago , Cheva-er-
Max- Froskowetz; tie Proskowmar-
st ortr ; stated i at the ; congress that in
Austria - drunkenness was . increasing
evervwhere on a . dangerous scale. " ur.
Petithan. of Liece, reported alcoholism in-
Belrium to be increasing, with frightful
rapidity. .Everywhere there are temper
ahce reformers and noble men who set a
splendid example of sobriety and self-denial
The leaders of medicine every wheraby their
pathological and other medical studies de-
4- 4UA i - 1. Arn. Kir aWIaI H .
essential organs c-tthe body heart, liver.
kidneys, brain and bladder. What is to be
done against a disease so deep and a voice so
fascin .tins? Dr. T. D. Crothers thinks that
J - 4n the United States the time is not far dis
tant when tho drunkard will be taken from
his home and from the street, and Quaran
tined in special hospitals. The inadequate
liaoituai urunKara s diu or our own country
is about to expire, and a few weak attempts
tat strenethenmg it are to be made But
f these are not radical remedies. Another sug
J gestion at the Congress was that school
1 children should be taueht the effects of
' drink on health and national welfare,
i Thi U to b commended. Mere eeneral
intellieence is not so'much a safeguard as
mierht have been expected. ' Specific infor
mation drilled into the young of all the Euro
pean schools seems louaiy cauea ior. c xne
medical profession can do much. ' Statesmen
and loyal families have a grave responsibili-
1 . 1 i. 1 a t
temporcrj Recicio, entitled "Africa and the
Drink Trade,!' which is F.ad reading for the
countrymen of Livingstone and fotaniey.
.England, Germany especially Germany
ana the United States, the cnief representa
tives of that religion of which Ghann ing said?
'Christianity is the mighty power before
Which intemperance is to fall," are pouring
rum and other spirits into Africa as fast as
their heartless traders can do it, without re
straint from their rulers at home, and against
the piteous cry of the hapless people and chiefs
of the country, who feel that it wilt destroy
them, and that it is a- worse curse than the
slave trade, which our fathers did so much
to exterminate. London Lancet. , y
A Few "Words With Boys About Beer.
Rev. J. M. Van Buren'says in the Youth's
Temjyerance Banner: ; :
"A few days since I was talking with a
gentleman, an invalid, who wanted to know
what to do to get his strength. He thought
that beer must be very strengthening, as it
was made of tarley and had the substance of
the barley in it. He seemed much surprised
when I told him that was not the object in
making beer, to have the substance of the
barley in, it, and that the only purpose for
which the barley was used was to convert the
starch in it into sugar, and ferment this sugar
and make alcohol. This is called glucose, or
grape sugar. All the alcohol used for drink
ing is made in this way.1 Whether the alcohol
is in beer, or wine, or brandy, or whisky, the
only difference is, there is more in brandy
and in whisky than in wine and beer. .
But, you say, how is the starch changed
into sugar? To understand this you must
know that sugar and starch are composed of
the tome elements ; of matter." " There are
oxygen, hydrogen, and carbon,-only in "dif
ferent proportions. - The two elements of
which water is composed oxygen and hydro
gen united with these in starch, change it
into sugar. This is done by sprouting the
barley. Every grain or seed has starch in it ;
that turns into sugar when it sprouts, by ab
sorbing the moisture or water in the ground.
The barley is sprouted for this miroofe. It is
r put in heaps on a floor, kept warm, and wet
1 w in. wmer. iuier u la sprouivu iii u ui im,
' and the sprouts are taken off; it is then
j crushed and fermented in warm water, and
j the sugar is changed into alcohol. - This makes
" beer intoxicating, v The- remainder of : the
j barley is sold to feed cattle. '" ''
But there is something else in beer ; liesides
alcohol and water." There is a large quantity
of hops used,. The substance extracted from
the hops causes beer to produce a "Sleepy feel
ing, and gives it ita bitter taste. " Ilia beer
drinker has two appetites: .one for intoxicat
ing' effects of alcohol, and another for: the
narcotic effects of the hops. If "Tie takes
plenty of it, one makes him drunk, the other
makes him stupid. -. : v , v a.
r As to nutriment, or-anything -to .-give
strength, there is none of that. The little
particles of the barley are separated and set
tied, to make the liquor look clear and fine.
Drinking beer takes away the strength; it
don't give any. Where much is used, as it is
by those engaged in making it, it shortens a
man's life." The Germania Life Insurance
takes off five years, and insures only the best
cases, l hose who dnnKmucn beer look thick
and full; this is called be?r-bloat.. If taken
with sickness thev often die suddeniv.' Thev
have not the, chance of recovery that other
men have. - - --' - -- '
Boys, have nothing to do with beer if you
want to be healthy and strong and live many
years.; If you once get the appetite it won't
be easy to get Tid . of ; it. :It is worse , than
whisky; it causes two appetites, and is more
deadening in its effects on all the functions of
the body.
- The Maine Plan the Best,
. The British Medical iVcss and Circular
comments as follows upon the modern fashion
in Great Britain of honoring brewers and of
making baronets of them: . -While the tem
perance cause is claimed to have been making
gieau Buviuit-es 01 lare years, governments,
np matter what their parti.-ular' political
and to our mind unduJv. cenerons in ennfr-
' ring honors on the princely representatives
Tnere is hardlv a name
which has become familiar from sseing it on
oocties ana cosks. out is now embellished bv
the addition of a title of some sort, though it
is difficult to see- on what grounds." The
Maine plan -of putting the brewers in prison
is a great improvement upon the prevalent
Briwsn usage 01 conrernng tit.es unon tnem.
JSa.ional lempcr.in ce Advocate.
Dr.- Ta 1 m ago, "Sot - Much H Dis niayed
Aditor The Voice: It the Supreme Court
ueciues aganisc us. sne nquor tratac win nna
mac it nas sacuroa ono viciorr too manv
That victory will arou'se the nation. It will
be the death-knell of the liquor power. . '
; ' S - T. De Witt Tajlmage.
: Brooklyn, October ; 22, 1887.
Texas, says the 8af i (Hot, voted about
14u,0U ) good, clean., white ballots in favor 0:
amendment., .This vote was made up, even
accoramg to tne admission . oc its enemies,
from the morality, intelligence an 1 respecta
biuty ot the htate, which, to a minority, is
equivalent to a victory. . v .: -,
HEN WHO TIN.
Hundred Dollars Tarawa
Away
Ills AitaJVVas Success.
A good healthy-body is almost sure to be
sound associated with a e-nrw .miotifv..
A Close Student of bnmn-n Tin turn in rarolV
Jvilhng to place large matters of trust in the
bands Of another until hfl hra sAn tho nna
Whom he is,to trust. He looks for the fresh
health and vigor, the honest, frank counte
nance and manly form, and in fact all that id
attractive in men. He doubts the drsnentie
With SallOW Skim drawn ont fontnaa ih
evident weak and irritable nature. .- He feels
as onacespeare makes Julius Cresar say: -
" Let mo nave men abont me that afe ft; - '-i r
Sleek headed men, and such a sleep o'nlghUf; : ;
Ton Catsius hath a lean and hungry look;
Be thinks too much; such men are dangerous!"'
He does not doubt the honesty of the "poor
Unfortunate, but fears disease of the bodv
will affect the mind, bring misfortune upon
the individual, and loss to himself. . t ; ,
It may be injustice to the weak, but if the
man has not the mental strength, or if he is
wrapped up in "his misery, he cannot take in
the situation of the world, does not see ' that
ideas - are broadening, and that isms and
teacmngs are aavancmgi now can an em
ployer hope for success from such a man?
The dyspeptic look, the wax-like complexion
and sallow Ieature3 show-disease. Tne far-
seeing man notes all these signs, and knows
that the great light of man, the brain, is af
fected, or will be, at no distant day. -yr.
. He discards the poor victim of disease who
goes wearily out into the world. Discouraged.
at last ne ta&es to nis sice bed. He seeks
medical aid. Lacking the feroad ideas of the
Kliccessfui mafl of the worldj he tries the
sahle medical treatment that he has tried
many times before. : The same bigoted coun
sel is sought, the same drugs are administer
ed by the same old f amilv friend that treated
' him months and years before, and his parents
peiortj mm, auu. 111 sucu a way.as drags ouc
nis miserable.; unsuccessiui existence.
J Is he to blame? Why . not? When ho sees
daily, and hears from every side, proclama
tions of-"a remedy known as Warner's safe
cure, which is becoming more popular daily,
hourly; while he is becoming weaker.
Obid, suffered for. nearly . three years with
ayspepsia in its worst torms, having periodi
cal spells of vertigo, fainting and chills. He
wrote over his own signature: "I spent about
all the remedies recommended without suc
cess, until I was induced to try Warner's safe
cure. I used three bottles, have gained
twenty peunas ana teel use a new man."
. ; Such a man as, we - have described, nine
times out of ten, unconsciously to himself or
to his physicianhas a kidney disorder. which
is fast wasting his body and lite. He sees the
. merits of Warner's sate cure at every turn.
and hears it proclaimed from the house tops,
and yet he does not use it, because it is said
by nis miDerai physician that it is not profes
sional, and hot admitted by the code. Mean-
' while the man of the world presses forward.
cares not a fig for this or that school; his aim
. in life is success, and he looks hopefully for
ward to - the world beyond, believing and
trusting in man in this world,and to his faith
lor the world beyond. 5 :
Books in their present form were invented
by AttaJus, King of Pergamus, in 887,
. An Important Arrest. .
The arrest of a suspicions character upon his
eeueral aUDearance.movemerlts or companion-
Khin. without, wait. in - until he has robbed a
t.ra.vnlAr. firp.fi a. house, or murdered a fellow-
mn.-n. i an imnnrtAnt. f anction of a.8hrewd de
tective Even more important is the arrest of
rHuooarf Whiirh. if Tint. (hnf-Vftn'. will bllSTht and
destroy a human life. The frequent oough,loss
of appetite, general languor or debility, pallid
: Bkin and bodily aches and pains, announce the
approach of pulmonary consumption, which is
promptly arrested and permanently cured by
fr. Pinro' "Golden Medical Discovery." Sold
by druggists. - r :
The first iron ore to be discovered in this
country was found in -Virginia in 171a.
. ransnmDtion, Scrofala. CSeneral Debility,
Wastinar Diseases of Children,
Chronic Coughs and Bronchitis, can be cured
by the use of Scott's Emcxsion of Pare Cod
Li Oil with H vpophospb.it es. Prominent
physicians use it and testify to ftsgreatvalne.
t1aU read iha fol'owinjr: I used SCott's
Emulsion for an obatina'e uougn w.ia Hemor
rhage, Ix33 of Appetite, Emaciation, a'eep
lessness, &c All of these have now left, and I
believe your Emulsion has saved a case of
well-developed Consumption." T. J. Fctdlet,
M. Lone fctar, Texas- .
Speak well of your friend; of your enemy
say ncthing. - - --- ..
The Special Oner ""-J
of This Youth's Companion, which we have a
Sublished,includes the admiraOie uouDie ja.011
ay Numbers for Thanksgiving and Christmas,
with colored covers ana ruu-paga ijiuiuito,
twenty pages each. These, with the other week
ly issues to January 1, 1888, will be sent free to
all new subscribers who send $1.75 for a year s
subscription to January, lbtsa. ihb u)pa
IOn has bee a greatly enlarged, is finely illus
trated, and no other weeiuy literary paper
eiyes so much for so low a price.
A wise man is not inquisitive about things
mpsrtinent, - . - .-- ; . -; . .....
' Weak lungs, spitting of blood, consumption
and kindred affections cured without pnysi
for t.raatiRe. With 10 cents in
stamps. World's Dispensary Medical Associa
tion, tt Alain street, xsuuaio, i- x .
Truth is a rock large enough for all to stand
upon. - - - " . ;., .i,
'a Don't Want Relief, Bnt Care,"
Is the exclamation of thousands suffering from
catarrh. To all such we say: Catarrh can bo
cured by Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. It has
been done in thousands of cases; why not in
yours? Your danger is in delay. Enclose a
stamp to vv orici-s uiapensary jvietucai Asauraa
tion, Buffalo, N. Y-, for pamphlet on this dis
ease. . -." " ' r ''- ' "-V"-: -
Judge charitably and act kindly to each
other.-; - V
- ' -' ' Offer Tf.. 171. -
FREE! To Merchants Onxv. A genuine
Meerschaum Smoker's Set (five pieces),in satin
lined plush case. Address at once, R. W. Tan
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' --- Censnmption Surely Cared.
To the Editor: Pleaso inform your readers
that I have a positive remedy for the above
named disease. By its timely use thousands of
hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I
shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy
free to any of your readers who have con
sumption if they will send me their Express
and P. O. address. 1 Respectfully,
T. A. SLOCUM, M.C., 181 Pearl SU N. Y.
Psnglitera. Wives and Mother. :
- Send for Pamphlet ou Female Diseasea, frea
Eecurely scaled. Dr. J. H. Marchisi,Utica,N.Y.
E ota t Glue mends everythingl Broken
China.Giass, Wood. Free Vials at Drugs & Gro
The fall of a leaf Is a whisper to the living.
Catarrh
May affect any portion of the body where the mu
cous membrane is found. . But catarrh of the head Is
by far the most common, and, strange to say, the
most liable to be neglected. It originates in a cold,
or succession of colds, combined with impure blood.
The wonderful success Hood's Sarsaparilla has had
In curing catarrh warrants us la urging all who
Buffer with this disease-to try the peculiar medicine,
tt renovates and invigorates the blood and tones ev
ery organ. . , . .'--'f' " :' '''i-:
"Hood's SarsaparOla cured me of catarrh, soreness
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Gibbons, Hamilton, Ohio. --"-. -.
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- If a gentleman by
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.volunteers to throw
the light of his ex
perience into the
darkened places of
. misery, so that
; others may go and
" do as be has done
and enjoy life, may
it not be reasonably cauea a.ayugnf
As for instance, take tne case 01 captain
Eargent 8. Day, Gloucester, Mass., who
writes April 10, ioa. - ouiu muc s-j
was suffering with rheumatism. I used
small portion of St. Jacobs Oil sud was cured
at once I naveusean lorspriuua ouu
once have known- it to fail. I will never be
without a bottle."- Uaptam- uay aiso re
ceived a circular letter, and in reply nnder
date of July 1, 1887, he says: "i used th
Oil as stated and was permanently cured ot.
rheumatism by its ta." During the inter
vening six years tnere nau oeen u
rence of the pain. Also a letter irom Mr. a..
M. Converse, of the , iy . "
Warren (Mass,)
Herald, dated July :
9, 1887,- as follows::
In response to
yours of i una
would say that in
1880 my wire bad a v
severe attack of
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shoulder and arm,
so that she could
not raise hef hand -
to her head. A few
applications of 8t.
Jacobs Oil cured her . ,
permanently, and she has had no return or
it." Another case is that of Mr. R. B. Ky)e,
Tower Hillj Appomattos county, Va., who
writes, JNovemDer, isso: "Was amicteu ior
several years with -rheumatism and grew
worse all the time. Eminent physicians .
gave no relief; had spasms, and was not ex
pected to live : was ruDDea an over witn os.
Jacobs Oil. The first application relieved,
the second removed the pain, continued use
cured me ; no relapse in five years, and do as
much work as ever.'? These are proofs of the
perfection of the remedv, and, taken in con-
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' 2 Tidies, Hoods, Mittens, etc Ma-
for late reduced price list.
E. Roes & Co., Toledo, O.
Pensions
to Soldiers Heirs. Sendstjnry
for circulars. COL. L. BIN
HAH, Att'y. Washington, D. G.
230
A MONTH. AgmttWanttd. 00 best sell
i..,T.rti'pi in f.h world. 1 ssmDle Frff.
Address JA.Y BRONSON. Detroit, Mich.-
0PIUL1
Morphfno
to 20 aya
Habit Coree la lO
So oav till enrra.
lr. J. Stphca, Lcbanoa, Ohio.
nm apa s e Obtained.' Sena stamp ior
AttH 1 a invflulnn.' Guide. L. Bin
7 HAM, Patent Attorney, W oahingtou. i.
lenrn here and earn
good pay. Situations
i Bro. . .TanesviUeAVis
So
Brewster saieiy rv.-m ni.
uiuco -----V. ir.1.1.- r
Holly, Mich.
PENSION;
i An Increase-may be dne. "Ad
. rtres Mif-o B. Stkvss Co..
GroverBd'g.Washlngfn.D.O
IVORK-i
FOB ALL. $ a week and expeiiite
aid.- ValuaDie outnt ana particular
ree. - P. o. v luive-tti, ahhubw, mo.
r iii ii i ii inn-n i
KERBRAHD FIFTH WHEEL
Improvement. HERBRANI CO.. Fremont, O.
DENSIOXS
I E. H. UEL
to Soldiers and Heirs. Send for clr
..i... Vn rn un'.esa successful.
GEL8TON & CO.. V asUii.ton, D..C.
PAIiTWS' RaMaeM ToUeee, rnn,. Pa. Sltira
Uons turn'shed. Life -c";ir.lai siiip. 940. Wr.te
OLD ts worth $500 per lb. Tettlfs Eye Salvo Is
lateruiocf
BUTCKEU ! irarr-mted
ai:imia Ann new a vjuim i
ntr Mrlle. Beware of imitationi
txado-iimrio X7!ustrtedCctaiojuelrce. A-J.Aowci,Ertonaj.
itm
0 GO RE
FITS:
pra-ii:y cn
I
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1
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