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■t urnr. iri.n wirr..
O' <11 no* >ar har bonnle fare
f« altered by Ili»> .»iu li nt llmr;
Nor Mf hrr form ha* Inst lha imr.
2 ha rnah hlra iritr that mark***! Ila prints.
To tut aha'a falrar, lovrllm now
I ban *rn*n*d wl* Mown o' earlier day*;
rni rhanorfn years have only made
Morn winsome all hrr look* and way*.
W' 1 *o bar volro I Was a'nr a Iona
Mar foil o' lamtrr lorn n n .| trulhr
Malrli ion Ila luualr, If ya can,
. Wl' ■' Ilia KlrrMnna air o' youth 7
Anil Ihrn hnr n'n-hi r gentle a'n—
Whal (Hough Ila laughing light haa fled,
If In Ila calm Mur depth* faro
A lira mi of |M-.va and Joy Inatnad T
Har aunny Incka-yc |hny arc changed,
Ynt at III I Imw In llaie'a Imlmat,
Fort hooch ihn rogue haa aloln lha gold,
I loro, I lora the allrar Iwwl.
What could Imoomn that fair mark brow
l.lkn (hoar amoolh, lustrou* Isind* of while?
'»Ififlvllaldn »lorm»—
(I nod "lilies I—Mr ra. Ii frowning III—
rhnalorina. dear wile, Ilia! l.lra. I.M ihy |.« |
Haro made ihy spirit whiter atlll.
1* limit dldal from a flower before,
Kor spoittvw day a of aunahlnr air oil,
n*o« atnlleet on inr iiaihway now,
he alar that light* a clouded hrarrn.
Whal though the lengthening aliadoaa fall
That allow me near my day'a drrllne,
1 »"».»«• drram no change.
While Ihy dear hand la rlispnl in mine.
Ahl Ihey who name llto women weak
Know not what lliou haal lima In me!
One IMng, only One, <*n know
'be holy alrenclli I're learm-l Irom litre.
All < erea were awrrl, all hurdena light,
All crossea crowns while thou wert night
Ihy lore hath tauchl me how to lire;
Thy gentle amlle ahall leach me how In dir
* FA ItM ANI) HA KUHN.
/jo wat trim run fknv.kh.
Wo congratulate tin* farmers of Mock-
lrnbtirg, North Cnrollim, upmi Clio |im-
Rtwalvo K|>lrit which Jin* l.-.l them to <lo
iiwiiy nml iiIniIInIi fitrrvrr the nlil foiiio.
Inw, the mom. npiirmwlvo, iih It I. m thin
ilny Uin moat iilmunl, of nil the innny
hiinlmin Inlil U|hiii the hroml huek of HL.
rlmiHuro. Slnoo the I’nlroim or llunhnn-
ilry Imvo taught tlm ngrlculturnl min,I
lo think, wo trunt Ii will not he long I*,
fori) tho (itriiion. ,Uncover the tnnnllent
Injunthe ol n Inw which eompelnn mini.
ln‘roro lie i'iih nntei Into the enjoyment of
IiIh |irii|K‘rty, Ui endow hln Inn,I, nt n
flnit cont In ninny enwn «|unl lo Itn viiltio
in C'«nlm|ile, nml nt no nnninil emit
thereafter In repaint ol ton j»or cont. on
thoorlglnnl oiitlny. In the inline of nil
tljnt Ih cquitahlv, why do not do evory-
whom nil tho Mock Ion hurgo redo, comix’l
o\ory man to tako earn of hln own stock,
und thiiH mivo him the far heavier tank
of defending hiaorop from his noigtilxim'
block or tin- vagrant hords of landless
HOtmtUini? Agriculture on tho continent
of huro|Kj Iiiim iiaig since boon flood from
Hie oxjMinaivo tiurdena of such strtic-
J-urca; that ol (Jroat Hritain noon will
Ih*, and wliy not ours? Tho gfxxl iieoplo
ol Mecklenburg aro delighted at what
llioy call tho" No-foiico Law/' and their
local pnjyor sings picunn Lo it ax followx:
." I ho law wont into eflbot in March,
whon the |K*ople were htiay preparing to
plant the proxont crop. Nearly all xuc-
coeded in getting paxturex fenced for the
atock kept on the promises. The law
workx admirably. Tho thought of never
having again to acmtcli your Imiidx with
hrierx ami lliornx and tangle your feet
with graimvIneM while memling your di-
lapidated old fence*, lx taxi goo«l to en
tertain oiio moment without almoxt
ahoutlng for joy. While tlmxo who work
the old plan of fencing their lioldx will Ik-
huxy in winter in making railx, hauling
and Imihiiug them oinhoir era/.y feucex,
‘ Jo
gocnl crop* ax when trained with the
groaUiit proeixion.
ytVH I’KA IIS 1 HOT ATI Off OF CHOI’S.
Hays tho Practical Farmer: " On the
farm connected with tho Cornell Univer
sity (Ithlca, N. Y.) a five year*’ rota
tion hax been adopted, which ix called
the‘five years’ coarse.' The landx in
active cultivation are uxunlly allotted nx
followx: Thlr'y acrcx to graxx and
clover, fifteen acrcx to wheat, fifteen
xerox to corn, fifteen nerex to oat*, two
acrcx to potntoex and three aerex to
xowed corn. The clover field, for in-
xtanoe, will he mowed two yearx. In tho
third year it will be plowed and planted
with corn and potntooH, or wheat. In
the fourth year it will Ik* again devoted
to xome general crop, and in tho fifth
year it will lie sewn with grain and
needed, xo that the xixth year will find it
again a field of clover. Thlx system,
with a jiidicioiix course of fertiliaing, haa
boon found moxt Hiinexxful.”
* TIIB IIOIJNKIIOlin.
hXTTVOB DRKflKfNrj.
Fivo eggx beaten together, a level tca-
xjHKMiful of xalt, xnine of popper, tahle-
xjMxinful each of butter, cream and mixed
inuxtnrd, and half a teacupful of weak
vinegar. Put all Into a tin bucket ami
place it in a vexxel of Ixtiling water, xtir*
ring all the time until it thickcnx. When
cold, add four tahlexjxMtnfiilx of xalnd oil.
Thix drexxing ix nlwi very nice uxed with
xweethreadx —nay three or four pair*,after
they have l»eon cleaned, Imilcd in xalt
and water, and chonpod up. Mix the
awoelbreadx thoroughly with the drexx
ing; place a InhleKpoonftil of thix in the
middle of each leaf, with xmnller leave*
around it. Hcrvo for lunch, dinner
we will Iki xjKMiding tho
jxmt Jinnpx, clover Iota, and fall and win
ter plowing." Our eolemjxirary might
have added that If the fanuerx every
where woo Id adopt thix " No-fonco Law"
the frightful dextruction of our forextx
would eeaxo, our dexcendnntx wived from
a tlmlHjr famine, and the agriculture of
the country relieved from an animal and
unneeexxary tax of xeveral hmidredx of
iiiillioiix ofdollarx.
KIHU'A TIOX h'OH TIIN NA It MICH,
In or,lor lo K lvo llio you nr n him
what might he learned, teacnorx oiignv
«o devote a few hourxeaeli week to teach
ing xciontiflo ediicutinn, ex|x<eially xiich
ax re latex to agriculture. Hhort weekly
botanical and geological exnirxioiixought
to lx* made to the country by the whole
Melmol. Intercxting geological ami eth
nological xpeelmonx are lyhig around oil
every farm in thix country. Every xchool-
liouxo xlioiihl contain a cabinet of m ien-
entitle ciirloxitlox. Tliexe oould bo col-
locUm without any «ix|>onxe. The euhi
netx would excite the curioxlty of the
w’hohirx to know marc about tliexe xub-
jectx. ieacheix that eanaot teach any
more than what they find in xeliool Ixmkx
are not <|Unllflod to tench. Thix .|iialill-
cation ought Ui lie reijuired of every one.
ilm moral eflbcl of teaching xcieuee in
our common Hchoolx would Tie to direct
thcmiudxof the young from immoral
enjoyumntx. C’onxtnnt employment and
a xcientifle education are among the bext
nioralirerx that exixt. To tho end that
w« may know what they are doing in
thin direction in other countliox, 1 will
here at ate wlmt the Oenunna Imvo done
to popularize xcieiultic agrieulturHl cdu-
cation, Jit the lirxt place, Pruxxin low
hmr higher agricultural academies, with
eighty paid pmfcxxorx; forty-one lesser
»vlleges,all connected with model ftirnix;
five xpecial w himlx for tho cultivation of
niemlowH, ami for the acioiitifie xtudv of
irrigation; one xjiecial school for the rec
lamation of swamp lands; two si*oeinl
•chao a for imtiiMrial agriculture; one
school for horsr'-xhoeing; one w-luail for
silk and l>eo ralxing and pisciculture;
twenty agricultural xlatioNx (labora-
. . r . - , - - (InlHira
tones) for experiinentx and for garden
culture; three higher collegwv and twelve
secondary schools in which the culture
«»f the gra|ie-vino ix made a specialty.
All these svhools are connectcrl with
model farinn for the practical education
of st udents. One contaiux two ihouwind
four hundnsi and fifty acres of farming
land, and fourteen thousand seven hun
dred acres of forests. Bavaria, with five
million* ot |HH»ple, 1ms twenty-six agri
cultural colleges, and two hundred and
sixty nine ry*«oemlions for the advance
ment of wnentitle agricultural know
ledge. To-day the Ucriintu empire eon-
tains one hundred and eighty-four agri
cultural colleges, live for horticulture,
seventy-five practical middle w'IuhiIn for
garden culture, sixteen colleges for r,|v-
eial hrattchea, and Itesides an immense
Muiulicr of lnrg»>r and sninller asM*eia-
tions, evening schools for the further ed
ucation ol farmers' youths, lecture
courses, etc.— hr. (,'ith. ‘
nt ti.sixa tiin an ink
Thore is less said about the artificial
methods of training the grape than there
umhI to lie, ami there seems to he a
tendency to revert Iwok to old ancestors
ui (ho wild slate. Instead of training
arms at regular intervals and deciding
.him whore each lmnch of grain's shall
grow lx*foro the wood is macto, the vines
are alloweti to gn>w a limited number of
cane* naturally, with a drooping habit,
f'-'v I'huv* lo tho Irvllis
orslaki. IIiUmh-iim l„ ihock exenaive
Rrowlh of wood, xml tho vinca am more
One ii
x|KK)nfufx of ninnioca; lxiil in Vi farina
lxiiler until clear nx jelly, from t wenty
to thirty minutes; then iuld a small piece
of butter and a cupful of white xugar.
Pare and i|uart4>r apples enough to cover
tho bottom of a baking dish; sprinkle
with white xuirar nml water; hake for
fifteen minutes. Orato nutmeg over the
apples ; pour on the manioea, and hake
until tho npplexaro tender and clear. To
lie eaten cold, with xugar and cream.
HAMI'NKHH.
For damp cloxetx and eiiidK>nrdx which
genornto mildew, a tray fill of quick lime
will l»c found to nlixnrh moisture and ren
der the air pure, hilt of courxe it ix nee-
exsary to renew tho lime from time to
time, ax It lmeomex fully slacked. The
hist remedy will lie found useful in safex
and strong nxnnx, tho damp air of which
acts frei|iientlv moxt injuriously on the
valuable deeds and documents which
they contain.
I'KAGII TAI’IOCA.
Honk half a pint of tapiocnin half a pint
of cold water for aovoral hours. Fill a
baking dlxli nliout half lull nt canned
|icachex, without the xlrup. sprinkle the
j»eachex with sugar, und hake for half an
hour. Add half a pint, of |*caeh xlrup to
the tapioca, some Ixnling water and sugar,
boil until ii Is perfectly dear, jxnir it
over tho peaches, and hake for another
half hour. Hervo with sugar and cream,
when cold.
WATKIWROOP CloTIlH.
A good process for wnter-proofingclotliH
ix to dip them in a solution of sulphate
of nlumtiiu or alum cake, and afterward
in a warm solution of white castllo or
curd soap. Ordinary xonp mny answer
for dark cloths, hut white soap is exxen-
tial in the case of whito or light-colored
goods. Tho olotha are then to l>e rinsed
in clear cold water and allowed to dry,
A PI'I.K GIIARIAnTK.
Pare and chop wane apples fine; butter
an earthenware buking-dlsh; put a layer
of xtale bread crumbs in the l>ottom,
then a layer of apples, then another layer
of oruinhx; sprinkle very thickly with
brown xugar, nutmeg, and pieces of but
ter; keep on »o until tho dixh ix filled,
ending with crumbs; sprinkle over the
top half a cupful of water ; hake, and
eat with rich cream.
KNCJI.IHH MUFFINH.
Make a xpongoover night nx for bread,
nxing nothing hut yeast, flour, a little
Halt, and tepid water. In the morning
heat it up well and pour into mufliu
rings u|K)ii the griddle. Tho hatter
xlmuld bo just stiff enough to drop (not
CTJRKENT OPINION.
Baiu;ock ix still in public life, Presi
dent Grant, and you are responsible for
it.—1‘UUburijh Com.(Jtfji).
Tiif. republican pajH*rx arc nx quiet
sleeping mice over the? election of Mudd
to tii** Maryland senate.
Tllffl country may lie said to lm Htifler-
Ing just now from a triple combination
of disordcrx—llclkttapery, Grantixm, and
Hnheockypop.
Wf. xlmuld think the president would
get tired of having hix blunders defended
on the ground of his ignorance. Yet
thix in the staple argument of bin apolo
gists.—A If tatty A ryu*.
It npiMiarx that tho radical manngt
spent f 1*10.000 of public money to oTect
their candidates in Now York in 1872.
They call xucli an election a ‘‘free ex
prexxion of tho popular will.”
J/RMotwiNti tho rotten xecrotservice,
the NcW York Kx|>rexx declares that the
Democratic representatives of the people
owe to themselves ami their constituent*
the extirpation of this foul blot
g»xxl name of tho country.
Nf.w York Tbirunk: Perhaps it will
not hurt Mr. Blaine any, hut there is a
growing suspicion that he ix working a
little too hard for nomination. There
are a gixxl many people who belict
ought at least to allow the office to
him half way.
TlIK manner in which the notorious
Billings recently obtained his appoint
ment as United Htati's district judge of
Imuixiarm is to Is- investigated. It is
charged that ho paid tFi.000 for " influ
ence. | and a goodly portion of the money
went into lialicock’H jmeket.
Tim beginning of true reform is with
the pooplo themselves. When they prac
tice ax a rule the sale of legislative and
judicial offices to tho highest bidder—
those rich enough and Imxe enough to
pay the moxt—they must reasonably
jH-ct that their representatives will
turn si’ll them.- -San Frauri/u'o /‘oaf
IIai> Thomnx Jefferson or Johm Adams
applied thousands of dollars of a
service fund, appropriated to aid the ad
ministration or justice, to control eler
Hons in which they wore candidates for
re-election to the presidency, they would
have Is en impeached, deposed, and gone
into history as infamous.—Fhiladrlvhia
Time*.
Wi
n Grants|H’akxef axalury -
000 la-ing little enough for the " respon-
Utility and dignity of the |s»sition'’ of
president, he naturally provokes the
flection that Ids immediate predecefr
run) fniiu a s|KHin.
TO MARK OOOO MOLAH8KH.
One pint white ooflbe sugar, one pint
molasscH, one tubles)HH>n(ul vinegar, one
tahlcs|HMmful of butter; cook slowly a
long time untif it "strings” front tho
M|x»#» when dipped up; imur upon a
greased tin pan; then pull it till it 1h>-
comos white.
pitMlot-essors
maintained the res|M)iisil>ility and dignity
of the tsisitlon much U’tU'r than he has
done, although neither received but
000 n year In a time when the cost of
living was much higher than it has been
since.
TiikxiiiiIi administered by Grant to
e republican si’iiatc, in his veto of the
salary hill, must amuse that Nsly very
much, lie tells the senator*, |»oiiit blank,
that he knows better Ilian they do " the
wishes and judgment of the great major
ity of those who indirectly pay all the
salaries and other expenses of the gov
ornmont.” Perhaps lie docs; hut ho lias
certainly given very f.-w indications of
Hitch knowledge in tho post.
Upon testimony which it ixiiuptssi
hie to discredit, and which it would
seem to Is* equally im|xwxiblo to iui|
Gen. Grant has Is’en s<|iiarcly convicted
of robbing the people's treasury to coi
rupt the people with thvir sUden mono
—a heinous oflbnxe in morals and a big!
crime against the laws, of which, as clue,
magixtrate of a great nation of jK-ftpIo, he
t«s»k the highest of human obligations to
olH>y, execute ami defend. — Omaha
llcrahf,
Howkvkii the United States senate
may finally determine the i| nest ion of its
jurisdiction in the Belknap impeach
incut trial, it was ill-advised f.» r Mr
Belknap to plead a lack of jurisdiction
He is disgraced l»efore his own |*oop|.
m»w, nml, if innocent, the only opportu
nity nflbrdo.t him for vimlicntion is it.
this very impeachment trial against
which lie has so foolishly pmlestud
fAKK.
One cup brown sugar, om
lnxH«'n, ono lmlf cup each butte
one cup cold 00floe, two eg|
nl'X Inril,
., , ■ -KKfS OHO tAl>lu
s|HM*ntul cinnamon, one of cloves, one o
ftmtod nutmeg, ono Uhlespoonful sotlnj
me pound each currants and raisins.
JRt.t.Y KOI,lit.
Thrt'o egg*, one cup of sugar, one tea-
painful ot cream tartar, one-half tea
spoonful of soda, ono cup of Hour ; innir
it thin into a baking min ; hake slowly;
spread jelly over it, amt mil it up. Wrap
' a cjoth. 1
•M 1 MUM'S WITHOUT K(i(ls.
One cup of lard or butter, two cups of
sugar, one-half tcu*|iooufu! of soda, one
a»|Hxinftil cream tartar, one cup milk;
•ur enough to roll; flavor to t:wt<>; roli
d hake in tins in a hot oven.
K(H) K1H8KS,
Beat tho whites of four egus, then put
in gradually a (toum! of ptilverixml sugar,
s«’a.-on with a sjhkui ful of ex tract of lemon.
Prop small quantities in letter paper, ami
Imke in a quick oven.
count NO TKA.
The Housokeo|»cr says: Thore is more
to l>e learned alnmt jHUtring tea and oof.
* than most ladles are willing to Us
e- It those dectH'tious are made at
the table, which is hv tar the W*t way.
they require experience, judgment ami
«re brought on the
imle, it still requires judg*
apportion them that they
shall prove sufficient in quant it v for the
family party, and that the elder mem
bers shall have the stronger ciijv*. Oftvn
jx'mms jxmr out tea who, not being at
Tint organs of the other side are in
high glee ever the tact that seven of the
ap|x»intcea of the present house have
been discharged lor aiusc. This is taken
as a sign of great corruption in the
democracy. It is the opjiosito. Under
democratic authority had men are made
to retire as fast, as they are found out.
Under republican sway they are kept in
office In defiance of public sentiment and
petted until the very last, and are then
dismissed with friendly pats on their
shoulders, with letters of vindication in
their |H»ekets.— 7Yoy 1'rre.t.
It is a commendable caution that
Grant disidavs when lie speaks of those
"ho “indirectly pay the salaries and
other 0X|>enseH of the government " It
is "indirectly” that the people pay, and
it is foitunate for Grant and his admin
istration they do. Had they been called
upon to pay directly during the first
•our years ol Grant’s administration they
would have had so clear a conception of
the extravagance and corruption going
on that there would have been quite as
violent objection to a second term as
ther? has been to a third.
Tiif ex-attorney-general is in a fair way
to come to grief in more wavs than one.
Evidence has Ihh’ii given Ix'forc one of
the houee committees that, while Unite*!
States attorney general, Mr. Williams
aided in procuring a surveying contract
worth $10,000 for a party who had stij»-
ulated to pay a former law partner ol Mr.
Williams the stun of $2,000. Mr. Wil
liams apitcnrs to have been a party to the
contract, and lH'rsonally present when it
was made. The money was paid then in
part. In other words, the attorney-gen
eral of the United States helped to have
a surveying contract awurdou, not upon
merit, but in consideration of the pay
ment of a largo sum id’ money to his po'r-
«nt No
Carolina. In Virginia, Georgia, Ten
nessee, Kentucky, Alabama and Texas,
there is really no republican party
worthy of the name of a party. It is
routed and disorganized, and can not be
brought into a canvass. In Louisiana,
Mississippi and Florida there ixn remnant
resting on f,ho old Carpet-bag basis of
public plunder, but that will Ik? |»er-
manently scattered in Novcmlxir. Hotlth
Carolina is hopelessly controlled by the
thieves and plunderers who have ruled
her no long. North Carolina, however, is
essentially doubtful. Both parties claim
her, hut neither can foretell what her
vote will be.”
Jewish Vitality,
The Jews are the healthiest and long
est-lived people on the face of the earth.
Their immunity ftom diseases of all
forms is rcmnrxnhle. Even the great
epidemics pass them by with the infliction
Uf a much lighter sCotirgc than falls upon
ether races. It is declared that the
cholera never chose one of them for its
victim, and, in fact, the deaths from this
malady have been so few as almost to
bear out the assertion. Suicide is seldom
practiced among them. It has been com
puted, from statistics returned in certain
provinces of Austria and Germany, that,
in a population of 1,000,000, the propor
tion of suicides between the Jews nnd
the mixed white race* was as one to four.
From data carefully studied, Mayer
ascertained tha!, in Furth, the projior-
tion of Jewish eiiildrofi who die between
the ages of one nnd live years is ten [>er
rent., nnd of Christian children of the
sainoage it in fourteen percent. M. Neu-
villo, calculating from the statistics of
Frankfort, shows even a greater vitality
existing among the children of the Jews.
He also finds from his data that the aver
age duration of the life of tho Jews is
ty eight years and nine months, while
the Christian it is thirty-six years and
eleven month*. In the total of all ages,
half of tho Jews born roach the age of
fifty-three year* nnd one month, whilst
half the Christians bom attain the age of
thirty-six yearsonly. One-fourth of the
Jewish isipulation Ii
HoyAl (Jdtifj WATUltm AHl» CHAINS
—A wonderful and Useful intention.-—The
(ienevn Koyal (fold Watch Company have
appointed nagendorph A Co., Jewelers, sole
agents in the United Mutes for tne sale of
their Wntches and Chains. They with confi
dence nml pleasure recommend these Watch
es to their old customers nnd the public gen
erally. They do not hesitate to pronounce
them the cheapest and best Watches Hint are
for aale to-day in the world. The worka are
purely Wwlss. slid ail Jeweler! that are nc-
(uiniuted with Wnteh rnori inenta know that
tne Geneva Wntches are the finest nnd most
reliable time-nieces that have yet been man
ufactured. The Watches are all incased ill
Koyal (fold, a MihsUm-C wiiii-h lias the exart
color of jeweler’s gold. It always retains its
brilliancy; it will stand the test
ept by weigh
itli lighter thn
Gold is about one-tenth lighter than Yirgi
Gold. We would not be surprised if, with!
ten years, more than oiie-linlf of the jewelry
then manufactured will be made nf Koyal
Gold. Millions of dollars' worth of Watches
and JeWelrV wer« inauufnrtured of Koyal
Gold, and sold even to the leading jewelers of
Europe, before the secret of this composition
was niude nubile. Koyal (fold answers every
purpose of genuine gold exrept for coin,and
it seems to ns to he a great extravagance to
use Virgin (fold when tills eomnusitlon an-
every purpose. The Koyal Gold
fully equal in appearance to the
. . .. Thelf
.—„— well ns
•M2. r » Watch; their ||x is equal in appear
nnce to a $1.V) Wnteh; their Watch will
k«P «
Watch** ¥
finest 'Watches made of
$!(• Wnteh, in every respect, looks
ried hy some of the wealthiest men in thi
country and Europe, and they would not .
change them for any other. It certainly
wicked extravagance fora person to pay I
or three hundred dollars for a watch, unless
they have more money than they know what
DARD
Boots and Shoe* STi
OKI? HfSOLUTE' -
ant wi.rk: hundred* now i-n
w«st»<l.li N.L*»*ll,lttl*.Pi
() Mtl I »>y (J J. < '»p*vl ell *!«,., I‘ties litre. CuNa.
S200fo n °lil Wlehi n 'suV»ena* rU^it-W
\\T A NTKP AUKNrs, Sample snd out (It (re
IT Better thaS m i l A. < •" t trs A «'<• . <’hlrs*i
& dsf St fmine Aaenti wanted, (hilflt A term*
5)|/free. Ad‘ ^ ** "
Sot I* ""ft.,'•!ii','. , ,*
sntxT^.T,
4fm-. AdilreM TSuS A •'♦» . Aufnata, Maine.
«.t «M«ftT»:iCI».
WE-'
|T0 ADEN 18.;
A FORTUNE jg£)£ ASgtg
LANP i4 WARRAN T S
OPIUM
-ugh( «l htghret
ilo with, when they i
i, or even less, that w|
and Ire equally
$77 p
A HAH rKF.n to Am fits.
Thor
mull friend.— (
nil nwarv that the first cup is tho
nnd that the tea gruws stronger iu*
. “ proem!, bestow the ixxireet cup upon
tlu> greatest stranger and give the strong-
est to a very young member of the fain san
B.V who would have Kvit Iwttcr without not
tjvt of equal j left
■hould pour a minority
Ivrtck, in-1 intimidation
Where
ngth tire wanted you >
little into each, and then
In referring to the Davenport inward-
n»'*s, the Hartford Times says : “If the
administration was really desirous to pre
vent fraud, what an excellent opportuni
ty was aflbrded nearer home. Vhiladol-
phia is notoriously, the worst citv in the
union in respect to intimidation, violence
and fraud in elections. That city is vir
tually under the rule of rowdies and bill
ing for days Itefore an election, and on
election day radical rotators and hired
bummers, under protection of the parti
san police, have full swing. There is
eh doubt that if Philadelphia
.. \ _ . I
verting the orde
and
fill them
id the i
rength will l*o ap|K»rtioncsl 20,0t'H)
Thii
well understood
ex|*erience«l jwntrer
fnv expression an anti-radical
mid Ik? assured. But fraud,
-1 violence do their work,
uaker city is alwavs g^vxl for
ical majority, and if the conn-
districts are not doing ■
eased majority ’
ell.
be had
tea waits tall all the cutvsof theiMmiviuv for the asking. Philadelphia presents
are returned to her lteforv site fills anv a i grand field for political reform,
wcond time, that all may share alike.*
XonoiiY hut a fool would lav aside all
caution and undertake to go through thin
worKl like » l»ml. fri«ki.,K his lail! but : go.,,1 union
nolwdy but a rogue would lea
AnF.n a "complete reeonnolasance of
• tolitical outlook,” a New York
•arid corresjxmdcnt says: •• With a
j democratic candidate of fair rcconl, a
mjuvoui a nuruowotll.t i » . one who has never
ipidon than he was actually oblijed to. i ^
h |Kimilatinn live iwyond seventy-
ears, but the same j>rojH>rtion of the
Christian jNipulatiuu live ‘only lioyond
fifty-nine years and ten months. The
official returns of Prussia give the Jews
rlality of 1.(51 per cent,, and the
whole kingdom 2.02 |»or cent. While tho
Jews double their numbers in forty-one
and one-half years, others require a
period of fifty-one years. In 18-l‘J the
w'’* in Prussia one death far every forty
s, and one death for every thirty-two
of the remaining population.
Commenting U|xm these statistics,
which are brought together by Dr. Rich
ardson in" Diseases of Modern Life,” that
author nxeribe* the high vitality of the
Jews to their aobor way nf living. " The
lowdrinkslem than his‘oven (Jiristian;’
he takes, a* u rule, IwIter food ; lie marries
arlier; he renrs the children he has
hmuglit into tho world with greater
iK-rsonal care; ho tends the aged more
thoughtfully ; he takes better care of
his |Ks»r ; and lie takes gorsl earn of him-
self. He (loo* not ls>uxt of to-morrow,
hut ho provides for it; und ho hold* te
naciously to ali he gets. To our Saxon
eyes anti Celtic eye* he carries these vir
tues too fnr; hut thereby he wins, l»e-
OomCB jsiwerftil, ami scorning boisterous
mirth and passion, is comparatively
* PM”
It is a fact in the history of the
Jewish race that they nowhere have paid
especial attention to tho development of
physical rapacity. They do not front
choice enter n military life, they estab
lish no public games, aro not given to
athletic exercises, and pursue no definite
means for attaining great corporeal
strength and stature. Asa people they
do not roach a high physical atandanl,
and still their vitality is greater than
that of any other civilised race. In up
plying these facts to the question of the
effects nf severe physical exorcise, Dr.
Richardson remarks: • It would Ik? im-
|stssihle, and, in truth, unnecessary, t«»
enforce any stronger argument as to the
negative,value of excessive physical ex
ertion in sustaining the vital power of a
In the course of centuries the
most powerful nations have died out,
and empires of perfect physical lteuuty
anti chivalric fume have passed away.
But, through 'all these vicissitudes, one
race, cultivating none of the so called
nthleticund heron-qualities and following
•tone of the exercises popularized as
hardy,’ ‘invigorating,’ Inis held its irre
pressible own, to remain a mere nunter-
pcoplo, in its totality, than over ; a
people still presenting a’ntore tenacious
life than its neighlNirs, and showing, as it
lieved of the cruel restraint long
forced on it, the continuance also of
mental force and of commanding genius
in art, in letters, in |Kditicx, in com
merce and in science.—Chicago Trjantr.
Glut of Silver Coin In San Francisco.
The .Sin Francisco Gall says: By what ; lr, »‘
ap|Hars to l*e general consent, the public I ,l "'
have ceased to take trade thdlnrs for ! ""' r
more than ninety cent*. From this ' i’ m *
time hilxtrers should not bo paid with j ‘
trade dollars, and we presume the coin
will cease to circulate, precisely a* green•
hacks, for more than their actual value.
For tho past few weeks loss has Wen in
curred by merchants, mechanics and or
dinary laborers, from the heavy discount
oi^ this species of silver coin, and it is
well that the public have refused by
common consent to take it.
It is probable that within the next few
weeks onlinary silver coin on this coast
will go in thn same way as have trade
dollars. An evening newspajmr contem
porary, in its commercial column, says:
"'l ratio dollars were sold to-day tit
ninety cents apiece in gold, l'.verybody
has ctmcedcd that they would come to
this, but few expected the result would
l*o nttnined so soon. The avarage price
of refined silver is twelve per cent, dis
count. There is still a slight profit in
coining it into trade dollars, but the
margin is so small that it must necessa
rily diminish the amount of coinage.
“ Business men here are tired of wait
ing for congressional relief, and are
adopting various nt ensures for self-pro
tection. No uniformity of action has
l*ecn ndo)*t«d, and it is doubtful if it can
l*o secured. But essentially the same
result is reached in different ways. That
result for the present means ninety cents
for trade dollars and ninety-two cents for
half dollars. Congress niav debate the
subject tor weeks to come, as it has for
weeks past; may increase the legal ten
der limit for silver to $20, $- r s), or SI00,
but there is one thine congress cann
lo—it cannot annul the laws of trade
A «• f.nti.kma n in Paris paid a visit
the other day to a lady, iu whose parlor
he saw a jx»rtrait of a lovely woman of,
say five and twenty. Upon the entrance
of the lady, her visitor asked her if the
picture was a family portrait, and w
told that it represented her dec«
daughter. " Has it been long since _ ..
lost her?” ask oil the gentleman. “ Alas,
sir!” repUixl the lady, “she diet! just
after her birth, and l had a portrait
painted to represent her as she would
have appeared if site had lived until
now.”
tonr iliflien-nt »lylos nnJ »
Watches, ranging from $1(1 to $22, nnd four
diflVrcfit "trie* of Wdii-N’ miuI (Jriit*’ \Sntrl
Uhaina. They are sold for $2, $1, $»i, ami $■
each. They have the appi-anuin- of a chain
Hint is worth from $«».'» to $100. No Jewelei
t«-ll them from piiri- gold except l>y
weight. Mngondorjili A send Koyal Gob'
ie» and Chains to any purl of the Unite. 1
by Express, C. O. |» with inatrnrtiom
to the Express Agent to allow the goods t<
be examined before paying one cent on them
nml if tin* consigner is n
the goods, he need not m oire the
We understand that hundreds of |l
Watches and Chains have
above terms, and not one of tliem has item
•Jectrd. Keports from all parts of the
$25 e $50 PER DAT
CAN ACTUALLY tC HADE WITH THE
ZWellAuaer
OPIUM
A UK NTs W A NTKie MMaltand A .
PICTORIAL BIBLES.
satisfied with
WE MEAN IT!
And are prepared to d.-monatratc the fact.
OUR AUOBR8 are operated entirely hy
HOUSE POWER, and will bore at the rata
of HO FEET FEU HOUR. They bore
3 TO 6 FEET IN DIAMETER,
And ANY DKPTII REQUIRED. They will
bore la
AH htaSs of Earth, Hen Mend and
Llinr.i.inr, llliumlnona Sloas
(Ml, SlaU Mild llsrd|>sn
And wcMAKR the REST of WELLS la
QUICKSAND.
GOOD ACTIVE AOENTB Wasted In
every Btel* aad County In the Unltnl State*.
SendAronr Illustrated Catalogue, terms,
j^rire*. Ac^^^iroving oux adTcrtlermonte
vmmimwLimii
BLOOM FI ELD, DAVIS CO., IOWA.
w^ot paper you saw
...I.. ...W I ** KW OaLEANS.—Dctui
* , .Unary to strict goo.1 »>*>!!
deceased > diinc to *nict ie« n »id.u
tuhlilling. lT'v.d!
LANE & BODLEVS
T2H-HORSE FARM EI5IS2.
AWARDED GRAND PREMIUM OF
$10000 IN GOLD S10 -S25 ',i
ANN [ B rt. til ' ^WANTED ■ ■■
ELIZA *V'
YCuNG.I c
> all Shoe Dealer*.
John aud Water £
Rurroao'
S5toS2Q fre*. T *ST
.1 (or Cbrotno Otah
i lhe»ilrrill.»»«-