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PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING.
BY REDWINE & ESTES.
TEEMS : -Si A-Year, in Advance.
OFFICE
Up stairs iu Candler Hall building, north-west corner
Public Square.
Agent* for The Eagle.
J. M. Bih. Blairsville, Ga.; J. D. Howabo, Hi was*
•ee, Ga. • W. M. Handebro** Haysvlllo, N. C-
KiT The above Darned gentlemen are authorized to
maae collections, receive and receipt for subscription
to The Eagle office. *
GENERAL DIRECTORY.
Hon. George D. Rice. Judge 8. ('.Western Circuit.
Emory Speer, Solicitor, Athens, Ga. * **
COUNTY OFFICERS.
J. B. M. Winburn, Ordinary.
J. L. Waters, Sheriff.
J. J. Mayne, Clerk Superior Court.
N. B. Clark, Tax Collector.
J. 8. Simmons, Tax Receiver.
V. Whelchel, Surveyor.
Edward Lowry, Coroner.
Samuel Lesser, Treasurer.
FRATERNAL RECORD.
Allecfiavy Rotal Arch Chapter meet? on the Sec
ond and Fourth Tuesday evenings in each month.
J. T. Wilson, Sec’y. A. W. Caldwell, If. P.
Gainesville Lodge, No. 219 A.\ F.-. M.\, meets
on the First and Third Tuesday evening in the month
W. A. Brown, Sec’y. J. E. Rkdwimk, W. M.
Air-Line Lodge, No. G 4, I. O. O. F., meets every |
Friday evening.
C. A. Lille, Sec. W. H. Harrison, N. G.
Gainesville Grange, No. 34d, meets on the Third
Saturday and First Tuesday in each month, at one
clock, p. m. J. E. Rkdwibe, Master.
E. D. Cheshire, Sec.
Morning Star Lodge, No. 313, 1.0. G.T., meets ev
ry Friday evening.
w. S. Piclbell. W. S. Jno. T. Wilson, W. C. T.
North-Eastern Star Lodge, No. 385 I. O. G. TANARUS.,
meets every Ist and 3d Saturdav evenings, a* Antioch
Church. F. S. Hudson, W. C, T.
W. E. Bolding, W. 8.
THE FOST OFFICE.
Office opens from 8, a. m., until 12>£, p. in., and
from lKf P- m., until 5, p. m. Sundays from 9 until
10 a. m. Atlanta Mail elosea at sp. m.
M. R. ARCHER, P.M.
RAILROAD GUIDE.
SCHEDULE OF THE
Atlanta & Richmond Air-Line R. R.
LIGHTNING EXPRESS—THROUGH PASSENGER.
Pass, train going East, j Pass, train going West,
Leave Atlanta.... 7.30 pm! Leave N C It It J’nG.lo a m
Arrive Goodwin’s 8.06 “ Arrive Charlotte....o.2l **
“ DoravilJe.. 8.19 “ “ Garaba1d1.,..6.59 “
“ Norcross... 8.32 “ “ Ga5t0nia....7.24 “
“ Duluth 8.40 “ King’s M’t’nH.o7 “
“ Suwaneo ... 9.01 j * Black’s 8.47“
“ Buford.... 9.17 “ | “ Gaffney's.. .9.13 “
Flo’ryßr’ch 9.37 “ \ •• Cowpens.. ..9.46 “
" GaineavillelO.o2 “ “ Hpart’burg.lo.l6 *,
“ Bell ton 10.38 “ “ Wei ford... 10.53 “
•• Longview..lo.ss “ “ Greer’s... .11.19 •
" Mt. Airy ...11.13 ** Greenville..ll.srt •*
“ Toccoa 12.01 ami “ Easley 12,38 pm
" Westm’st’r 12.57 “ ; “ Central 1.20 “
“ Sen’ca C’ty 1.24 “ “ Ben’a City. ..2.20 •
*• Central 2.04“ | “ Westminßt’r2.4B •
“ Easley 2.40 “ j * Toccoa 3.43 “
“ Greenville..3.l9 “ | '• Mr. Airy 4.20“
“ Greer’s 3.57 “I “ Bellton 5.05 “
“ Wellford... .4.18 “ “ Gainesville..s 44
“ Spartauburg4.sl “ “ Flowery 8.. .0.10 “
“ Cowpens 5.18“ I “ Buford 029 “
“ Gaffney's.. .5.49 “ j “ Suwannee....o.4B “
" Black’s 0,10 “ “ Duluth 704 “
“ King’s Mt’nO.s2 “ i “ Norcross... .7.19 “
“ Gastonia.... 7.28 “ j “ Doravllle. ...7.52 “
“ Garabaldi....7.s2 *• “ Goodwin’s...B.o4 “
“ Charlotte.... 8.24 “ “ Atlanta 8.45“
“ NCIt It J’nß.3o “
JOHN B. PECK,
Master of Transportation.
Professional and Business Cards.
I.TSTKS & BOYD,
Gainesville, Kail Cos., Ga.
C 1 J. WELLBORN,
>• Blairsville, Union Cos., Oa.
SAMUEL C. DUNLAP,
Attorney at law, Gainesville , aa.
Office in the building of Prater A Stringer, S.
W. Corner Publio Square. aprfitf. J
W. K. WILLIAMS,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, I
. Clcwhind, Wkiln Cos., will j.cut.ttco in the
Courts of the Western Circuit, and givo prompt atten
tion to all biiKiuess entrusted to his care.
June 12, 1874-tf
WIER BOY D,
Attorney at law, Dahiamega, an.
1 will Practice in the enmities of Lumpkin,
Dawson, Gilmer, Fannin, Union and Townseomities
in the Blue Ridge Cireuit; ami Hall, White and
Rabun in the Western Circuit.
May 1,1874-tf.
b. r. won <md,
Attorney at law, Homer . Ga.
Will execute promptly, alt business entrusted
to his care. March 21,1874-ly. *
JAMBS A. SuTT,
Attorney at law & land agent. BinirmUc
Ga. Prompt attention given to ail business
entrusted to his care. , june 2,1871-tf
BEV, A. MARTIN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, Dahlonega , Ga.
July 21,1871-tf
S. Iv. ( IIIUSTOIMIEB, “
Attorney at taw. mmsux, Ga.
Will oxocuto promptly ail business entrusted to
his care. novltitt
J. J. KIMSEY,
Attorney at law, Muwsce, aa .,
Will givo special attention to all business en
trusted to his care.
May 9, 1873-tf.
THOMAS F. GREER,
4 ttorney at law, and solicitor in
iY_ Equity and Bankruptcy, Etlijay , Ga. Will prac
tice in the State Courts, and iii the District amt Cir
cuit Courts of the U. S., in Atlanta, Ga.
June 20,1873-tf
•P. F. LANGSTON^
ATTORNEY AT LAW, Gainesville, Georgia.
Jan. 1, 1875-1 y
JOHN T. OSBORN,
A TTORNEY-AT-LAW, Elbcrton, Ga —Will practice
/Y in the comities of the Northern Circuit, Banks,
Franklin and Habersham of the Western Circuit; will
give special at entiou to all claims entrusted to his
care. Jan. 29, 1875-ly.
J. J. TURNBULL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, Homer , Ga —Will practice
in all the counties composing the Western Cir
cuit. Prompt attention given to ail claims entrusted
to his care.
Jan. 1, 1875-ly.
BANK
OF
HANKH & IIUOTHEU,
IV. E. Corner Public Square,
Gainesville, .... Georgia.
/D OLD, Sliver, Exclxmge and Gold Dust bought aud
VI Hold; collections made; deposits received: ap
proved paper discounted. Interest will be paid on
deposits, if left for a specified time.
sep22tf tw
.T. Mi OWEN,
DKALF.U IN
Dry Goods, Groceries. Hardware, anl
General merchandise,
BBLjtjTO.TSr. G-JV.
HE sells Goods cheap for CASH, arid furnishes tho :
traveling public with a good, square meal at liis
Hotel ou living terms. Call ou him. [apr 18-tf.
JORDAN & PERKINS,
46 Whitehall Str.i Atlanta.
I >ENTISTS.
Üb'Oii'v “New York Store,”*in front of Dr. liapo s
Denial Depot. uovfiwly
Riclimond House.
—AT THE DEPOT —
GAIXKSVILI.B, - - GEORGIA.
171 ARE THE BEST IN THE COUNTRY. Rooms elc
. gaut and comfortable. Attentive servants and
reasonable charges. HUNT .V BRO.
novwCuitwlt
J. If. & T. A. DANIEL,
WHOLESALE ami Retail Dealers to
3D 1*37" G-OOdS,
Groceries, Hardware, Crockery, Hats, Caps, Bools,
Shoos, &c.
COODS DELIVERED
To city customers, free of charge. Nor side of the
Public Square, Gainesville, Ga.
Jan. 22. U.
The Gainesville Eagle.
DeVOted to yolitfcota, rv< W* of tlie Day, Tlie Farm Interests, Home Matters., and Olioioe Miscellany.
VOL IX.
MISCELLANEOUS.
IVliat is bevel ness ’
It is not in pearl powder, nor in
golden hair-dye, nor in jewelry. It
cannot be got in a bottle or a box. It
is pleasant, to be handsome; but all
beauty is not in prettiness. There is
a higher beauty that makes us love
people tenderly. Eyes, nose, hair, or
skin never did that yet; though it is
pleasant to sec fine features. What
you are will make your face ever for
you in llio end, whether nature has
made it plain or pretty. Good people
I are never ill-looking. 'Whatever their
faces may be, an amiable expression
atones for all. If they ean be cheerful
also no one will love them file less be
cause their features are not regular,
or because they are too fat, or too thin,
too pale, or too dark. Cultivation of
the mind adds another charm to their
faces, and, on the whole, if any girl is
desirous of being liked by many and
loved by the one, it is more in her
power than she may believe to accom
plish that, object. Cosmetics will not
accomplish it, however. Neither will
tine dress, though a woman that does
not dress becomingly wrongs herself.
Forced smiles and affected amiability
will be of no avail; but if she can man
age to feel kindly to everybody, not to
be jealous, not to be cross, to be hap
py if possible, and to encourage con
tentment, then something will come
into her face that will outlast youth’s
roses, and gain her not only a hus
band but a life-long lover.
Disobedient Children.
“Have you seen my Tommy ?” asked
Mrs. one Satuiday just before diu
ner-time. “He has not been in the
kitchen sinco morning.”
At the dinner table she was asked if
she had found him.
“No; but I presume he is playing
with some of bis school-acquaintancos;
he will bo around by and by. I am
not concerned at all about his doing
any thing wrong, for ho is afraid of
going to jail?”
Sitting at the table was a little child
who never in her life had been whipped
or threatened with punishment, yet
who was perfectly obedient, truthful,
confiding, dutiful; who lmd no fears of
scoldings or of jails! who could outrun
that boy, tire out half a dozen like him
at play, outwork him in the house or
out of doors, always overflowing with
fun and laughter. No wonder she
smiled her ludicrous best, at the idea
of a boy being afraid to do wrong lest
ho he sent off to jail!
But tlie mother did not see the serio
comicai expression on the face and in
the eyes of the little gill, and after a
few minutes she respnieiLilie conver
sation.
“Tommy goes to school quite steady,
now, she said, “hut there was one time
last summer when he did not go a
single day for three weeks, and I sup
posed he was in school every day ! Ho
would come to his dinner regularly,
and I never suspected he was deceiv
ing me.”
“How could he for so long a time?”
was asked.
“I was so busy I never thought
about liim or his school, supposing
everything wan all right.; but one Sat
urday I asked him why ho did not
bring bis book homo and show me bow
be was getting along? ‘I will some
time,’ was bis reply. The next Satur
day I asked him again. He said,
‘Mother, I havn’d any book. I bavn’t
been to school for ever so long! ’ I
never was more astonished in my life!
I went at onco to his guardian, and
he told mo unless ho went to school
steady, lie should send him to the
House of Correction. He’s been a
better boy since.”
i Subsequently, however, he ran away,
, and it took miles of travel to find him !
I Some would blame that boy for be
' coming vicious!
j Acusti.m a bright, active, ambitious
I child like him to live upon sweet-meats,
pastry, highly seasoned dishes; allow
him to drink tea and coffee at every
meal; then deny him the joys of a true
home-life and the warmth of a mother’s
love; teach him to be deceitful if not
to lie outright; and is it any wonder
that “Tommy don’t go”—right ?
llonics or (Senilis.
Genius is no aristocrat.' Slie does
not seek marble palaces or turreted
castles to dwell with king or noble;
but loves rather to linger in the hum
ble borne of the peasant, among the
unknown and lowly. Of course, there
are exceptions to this, as to every
other rule, and many of tho rich ami
titled have become famous, but gene
rally the favorites of genius are those
who have no long line of ancestors to
look back upon with pride, no coffers
whoso golden contents are never ex
hausted.
One of tho trials, coming hand in
hand with the successes which ever
attend men and women of genius, is
the curiosity of tho world. Their pri
vate life must he fully unfolded to the
public gaze, and they, patiently or not,
must submit to the rude scrutiny.—
This curiosity, to some extent, belongs
to every one; we all have a desire to
know what Shakespeare did when a
hoy, what he said and how lie acted;
if .Milton was happy in his home life;
if Mozart ever quarreled; if Michael
Angelo ate and drank like other men;
aud a thousand similar questions pre
sent themselves to every mind while
thinking of the lives of the great and
famous.
We should not seek to raise the veil
which shields a home from envious
outsiders; but since it has been al
ready uplifted, there surely can be no
impropriety in taking a peep beneath.
In an old-fashioned country village
among the hills of Yorkshire stands a
quiet parsonage, whore dwelt the au
thor t>f “Jane Eyre.” The house Is oi
, gray stoue, strongly roofed with flags,
in order to Resist the winds which
, sweep lifeecnlyt across tho moorlands.—
The church is on one side, the school
i house on the othsr, while the purple
j moors stretch far away beyond. Un
der the windows of the parsonage
grew a few plants, hardy ones, for
such only could enduro the cold and
rigorous climate.
In this dreary and desolate place
lived, wrote and died that woman of
true genius, Charlotte Bronte. The
bad roads cut off all communication
with the surrounding country, and all
the intellect and education of the
Bronte family were far superio: to
their neighbors; their lives, one might
say were bounded by the home circle.
Their father spending all of his time
in bis study, and the mother an inval
id confined to her room, the brother
and sisters early learned to depend on
themselves. After the death of her
mother ami two elder children, Char
lotte supplied their place to her young
sisters, and the cares incident upon
such a position caused her to become
old and thoughtful beyond her years.
Such were the home and circumstances
of “Cnrrer Bell,” and both had their
influence upon her works and charac
ter. The bleak, cold winds infused
some of their own vigor and strength
into her writings, the purple heath
some of its fragrance and beauty; her
isolated position, so unusual for a
young girl, gave her an originality and
freedom of thought that made her fa
mous. Yet, when we think of her
small circle of acquaintances, her in
teresting and desolate surroundings,
it seems truly wonderful that one thus
situated should have given to the
world works of such thrilling interest
and power as “Jane Eyre,” “Villette,”
and ‘ Shirley.”
The homo of Mrs. Browning, one of
the world’s favorite poets, was in Eng
land, but more beloved than her na
tive soil was the land under Italia’s
sunny skies. For Italy’s freedom she
wrote and prayed, and it is truly filing
that the last, homo of this “soul of fire
enclosed in a shell of pearl” should be
in beautiful Florence.
“Where olive orchards gleam arid quiver
Along the bunks of Arno’s river,”
she now sleeps, with tho bright Etrus
can roses bending over lier, and the
3weet music of the golden river to sing
her requiom.
A clay-built c-.bin in Ayrshire was
the birthplace of Scotland’s greatist
poet., Robert Burns. Ho was a simple
peasant boy, but nevertheless, genius
had endowed him with that immortal
fire which few possess. He deserted
tho plow for the pen, and the Scottish
rustic became the renowned poet. His
fame, however, brought him no pros
perity ; feasted and flattered for a
time, he was soon neglected and for
gotten, and died in obscurity and pov
erty.
That genius is not always so fickle
and cruel to her favorites, is shown by
the life of Washington Irving. His
last days were spent,'in his beautiful
residence, Sunnyside, on the banks of
the Hudson, where tho
“Soil is rich with fauey’s gold,
And stirring memories of old,”
and around which cluster historical
stories and romantic legends.
There seems to bo ringing in our
cars the familiar strains of “Home,
sweet Home,” aud wo think of its au
thor, who never experienced tho de
lights and comforts of which he sings,
never knew what it was to have a
home, A wanderer all his life, lie
died at last in a foreign land; but we
wish that all men aud women of genius
be their homes in poverty or wealth,
so live that it could be said of them as
of John Howard Payne:
“True, when thy gentle spirit fled
To realms beyond the azure dome,
With arms outstretched, God's augel said,
Welcome to Heaven’s ‘Home, sweet Home.”
Summer Complaint.
The time ot year has come when
adults and children will have diarrheea.
I say will have it, because they will
live so badly as to have it. If they
wish not to have it, it is not difficult to
avoid it. I will give them the follow
ing formula, to keep it oil', and will
guarantee that it will prove effective
in every instance if thoroughly fol
lowed :
FOR ADULTS.
Ist. Whatever your calling, do not
begin your day’s work till sunrise, and
bo sure to quit at or before sundown
—working harder before 3 i*. m., than
after that hour.
2nd. Eat no salt meat, and fresh
meat but once a day, and this always
at breakfast.
3rd. Let all green vegetables, except
peas and beans, alone.
4th. Eat plentifully of ripe small
fruits, more at dinner or supper than
at breakfast
sth. UK but little butter—and this
as free from salt as possible and have
it relishable, and persistently avoid
’spices.
lith. Drink no spirituous liquors in
any form, aud if tea aud coffee are to
be drunk let either be used only at
breakfast. Tho bowels can be kept
vastly healthier without either of these
beverages.
7th. If costiveuess is a habit, tepid
water injections are far better than
any purgatives. Take these when the
stomach is full because one’s bowels
are much more apt to Vie active when
tho stomach being full presses from
above downwards than when it is
empty.
Bill. Keep the skin clean by at least
tri-weekly ablutions.
!)tk. Eat very light suppers—none,
at all would be far better, once used
to two meals a day; and let your food
be of unleavened bread aud skimmed
milk with fruit.
FOR CHILDREN.
1. Feed no meat, nor butter, nor
salt if you can induce them cheerfully
to go without the latter; the value of
salt is greatly over-estimated, the in
juriousness of it very much under-esti
mated, as regards children.
2. Keep them on unleavened bread,
ripe fruits, cream and sugar, aud good
fresh milk.
3. Keep away ail vegetables but peas,
beans, and old (not new) potatoes, and
not much of these. Bread and milk
and ripe small fruits constitute a
healthy aud nutritious diet for children.
GAINESVILLE, GA., FELD AY MOENING, MAY 14, 1875.
That ‘“Miserable Bread.”
Good wheat bread is said to be the
staff of life, which is as emphatically
true as the saying that poor bread,
sour, bread, soggy bread and bread of
any other quality in which the element
of “good” does not preponderate is
one of death’s surely fatal weapons.
Sour aud unhealthy bread of any sort
sends to premature graves more vic
tims who have dragged out a miserable
existence than war, peatilence and
famine. We can look to the days of
boyhood, to the period of youth, early
manhood and maturity and call up im
mense numbers of friends and associ
ates who sickened from no other cause
than the slowly operating and fatal
influence of unwholesome bread, and
who died for want of good bread. Un
told numbers of our most estimable
citizens scarcely know what good bread
is, and a much larger number still who
esteem themselves as makers of good
bread never have known how to make
good bread, even when they are sup
plied with the best of flour.
Wife and the writer once went to
visit a distinguished author and au
thoress, his wife, who had written a
book on domestic economy. Notwith
standing all the excellences of the book
it lacked the simple direction to enable
one to make good bread. This author
ess supervised her own domestic af
fairs and always made her own bread,
which her friends and neighbors aver
red was always sour. When we paid
them a visit the bread was so unwhole
some that it was exceedingly difficult
to eat a small piece. Soon after we
commenced keeping house, a lady
cousiu, who was noted for making
soggy and sour bread, reproved wife
for “fussing so much with dough.” She
averred that she “couldn’t afford to
spend so much time fussing with the
dough. She worked at her dough only
when no other duties required her at
tention.” We were wont to visit them
periodically for twenty years, and we
were always treated with that same
sour, soggy and unwholesome bread.
Those friends were laid in their graves
long, long ago. They were built to live
ft hundred years, and had it not been
for this insidious influence of bad bread
they might have been alive to-day.
If the Hour is of prime quality, eve
rything will depend on manipulation
and management. For thirty years
past wife has made our own bread, and
during all that period not a single loaf
of poor bread has been produced. Our
servaut cook will take flour of the
choicest brand and produce bread that
will give an alligator the dyspepsia.
Wife will take tho same sort of flour,
the same domestic appliances, and
bring out the beautiful, almost snowy
white and spongy wheaten loaf which
is a delightful luxury. Our kitchen
servant will maflago the golden cream
from the milk of our one thousand dol
lar cow, and produce butter -that ap
pears more like lard than any other
substance. Wife will manage the
creatn the next week, and in the same
pantry, tho same pans, the same
churn, butter-bowl and ladle, bring out
as beautiful gilt-edged butter as can be
found in tlie market. These facts go
to prove that certain stereotyped prac
tices in making bread will spoil flour,
of the best quality, for human food.
The best recipe for making good
bread is to find some person who nev
er makes a poor loaf. Then let the
learner go to his or her place and take
lessons in tho peculiar, careful and dis
creet manipulations and management,
of the flour and dough until she can
produce bread that is fit to be called
the start' of life.” If it required six
months to learn the lesson, let the task
be completed.
ffakiui; friends.
Friendship is a combination of affec
tion and confidence. It extends from
the common attachments of masterand
servant to tlie highest order of human
reverence. The secret of making friends
is a gift of nature. With some, it re
quires months and years to become
acquainted, while others are bound by
a bond of sympathy that often lasts a
lifetime.
It has been urged by many that, to
some, tho marriage relation is loss
sacred than tho liner feelings of pure
friendship, and that the latter reaches
even higher than happy marriage. Bo
this as it may, there is always room
for each in connection with the other,
ami few are so selfish as to hope for a
monopoly of all tho is pure and lovable.
Kindred experiences of people
thrown together under peculiar cir
cumstances often lead to enduring
friendship. At such times, it only needs
confidence to cement the affections of
a whole company together. “For,”
says Chesterfield, “they who tell all,and
they who tell nothing, will alike never
be trusted.”
I’m ily in Itoys ns well as (fills.
The Aay some people have of talk
ing and thinking that boys do not
need to be treated as gently and con
siderately as girls, is productive of
wide-spread mischief. If we treat our
children as if they were honest, truth
ful, pure-minded, in all our intercourse,
wo appeal to their highest feelings, if
we expect nothing which is not res
pectful and noble of them, wo shall
keep a high standard before them.—
We should, in look and word, carry
1 ourselves so they will feel sure we have
no thought or suspicion of anything
low or mean. We do this in our treat
ment, of tho girls; and is not that one
reason why they are purer and nobler,
because they are shielded from wrong,
so hedged in from things that are
vile.
Boys are spoken of, aud to, as if they
were expected to bo rude and uuman
: nerly. I notice even Sunday School
superintendents speak harshly and se
verely to the boys, when the girls are
whispering and making quite as much
noise, and no notiee is taken of it.—
Would it be so, think you, if the mo
thers were superintendents, instead of
the fathers? I think not. Mothers
have, as keen a sense of justice toward
their boys as toward their girls. The
se JX~ : justice in small boys is hurt
hv Li treatment; but soon they learn
to behind the feel-
is no use trying to behave
well, nobody expects it of boys. Thus
little by little the standard of excel
lenee and delicacy which they have,
until they have got beyond childhood,
is marrdd and destroyed. Even mo
thers contort themselves by saying:
“Boys must come in contact with the
world, “meaning with other boys and
men, wm have had their best impulses
bluirteiiand seared by just this same
process* until to be manly does not
imply jd-1 that is grand, noble and true
iu a htfttan being.
The standard of manliness in heroes
and'poSis is not the one we find as we
mix and mingle in this busy world—
exceptions there are enough to prove
the class not extinct.
How many thousand hearts have
ached, find are aching, because their
idols are all broken. This ought not
so to b*. Men should be as pure, as
clean, as noble and high-toned as wo
men. There is no way to make them
so except to begin with boys. As long
as boys must go to an unclean closet
in aids of our academies, aud are
shut out of all our best places, and
treated as if they were culprits, that
long Liey will be just what they are;
which' is largely the result of their
training. Until a different course is
shall have bad boys and
bad inen. If society was anxious to
have tuem bad, it could not devise a
surer way of doing it. Make the stan
dard for the boys as high as for the
gills. If this could be done for fifty
years. M the mdleninm would dawn upon
the world —[Sirs. O. F. Sl’Cune.
A hood Appetite.
Ascertain seasons, as in spring and
summer, the appetite of even the most
robn.it is apt to fail, and the relish for
meats and heavy food to wane. This
is all right enough, for animal diet in
warm weather heats the blood, tends
to headaches, and is generally un
wholesome unless sparingly used. On
the other hand, fresh vegetables, ber
ries, fruit and bread are cooling, cor
rective aud what the palate most
craves, Don’t be afraid to go without
meat for a mouth or so, and, if you
like il, live purely on vegetable regi-
We warrant that you will lose
no more strength than is common to
the time, and you will not suffer pro
tracted heat as when dining on the
regulation roast.
Many persons regard a hearty desire
for food as something unrefined, indel
icate, and to bo constantly discour
aged. That is a greater or more harm
ful mistake than that of coaxing the
Appetite. It is just as necessary for
who works only with his
hr !>(■• Uanf .and mutton as for
who labors solely with hands.
That stomach and the brain are twins;
tho former being the elder, and having
prior right to care. Let that, be well
provided for, and it will sustain its
brother.
The people who strive to check a
wholesome and natural appetite are
the people who regard dinner merely
as a feed, not the centre of an agreea
ble social custom and as the domestic
event of tho day. We are sorry for
them, as they must regard eating at all
a prosaic duty, obligatory on them,
because they have a bias in favor of
living. We all ktiow that we must
eat to live; but we by no means live
to eat simply because we enjoy what
we eat.. We are not gormands because
we relish chops nor are we invalids
because we want strawberries.
A good appetite is a good thing, but
not if it is to be worried by urging or
by neglect.
The Value of Health.
Horace Mann says somewhere: I am
certain I could have performed twice
the labor, both better and with greater
ease to myself, had I known as much
of'tlie laws of health and life at twen
ty-one as Ido now. In college I was
taught all about the motions of the
planets, as carefully as though they
would have been in danger of getting
off the track if I had not known how
to trace their orbits; but about my own
organization and the conditions indis
pensable to the healthful functions of
my own body, I was left in profound
ignorance. Nothing could be more
preposterous. I ought to have begun
at home, and taken the stars when it
should come their turn. Tho conse
quence was, I broke down at the be
ginning of my second college year, and
have never had a well day since. What
ever labor I have since been able to do,
I have done it all on credit instead of
capital—a most ruinous way, either in
regard to health or money. For the
last twenty-five years, so far as it re
gards health, I have been put from day
to day, on my good beflavior; and dur
ing the whole of tiffs period, as an Hi
bernian would Ray, if I had lived as
other folks do for a month, I should
have died in a fortnight.
Food.
An intelligent sea captain sailing out
of New Bedford says:
I have made several voyages to St.
Petersburg, in Russia. The people of
Russia generally subsist, for the "most
part, on coarse black rye bread and
garlic. Tbo bread is exceedingly
coarse, sometimes containing almost
whole grains, and it is very hard and
dry r . I have often hired men to labor
for me in Russia, which they could do
from sixteen to eighteen hours,and find
themselves, for eight cents a day, the
sun shining there sometimes twenty
hours a day. They would come on
board in the morning with a piece of
their black bread, weighing about a
pound, and a bunch of garlic as big as
one’s list. This was all their nourish
ment for the day of sixteen or eighteen
hours’ labor. They were astonishingly
powerful and active and endured se
vere and protracted labor far beyond
any of my men. Some of these men
were eighty and ninety years old, and
yet these old men would do more work
than any of tlie midale-aged men be
longing to my ship.
The Mysteries of the Human Throat.
Dr. Frederick Fieber, of Vienna, like
the little boy with his drum, not con
tent with enjoying the melody of Mad
ame Pauling Lucca, has made a close
scrutiny of the throat whence tho sweet
sounds issue, and publishes the result
of his investigations. The mechanical
apparatus which is the instrument of
the mental faculty, appears in the Mad
ame Lucca’s case to bo beautifully per
fect, the result to some extent, pet haps,
of congenital fitness, but also doubt
less, partly of the scientific training
to which the young artist has been sub
jected in early youth. Examined un
der the laryingroscope, the larynx ap
pears small and well shaped, its several
parts being marvelously developed and
perfect. The true strings are pure
snow white and possess none of the
bluish tinge common among women.
Although shorter than usual among
vocalists they are stronger in propor
tion and amply provided with muscle.
V hen at rest they are partly screened
by the false strings; but Dr. Fieber,
who watched Madame Lucca’s throat
through his instrument while she was
singing, noticed that as soon as a tone
was struck, they displayed themselves
in their full breadth and strength.
The aid given by a suitable form of
mouth to the production of vocal mu
sic is a novel and interesting point
brought out by Dr. Fieber. On being
admitted to a view of the artiste’s
mouth he was at once struck with the
spaciousness and symmetry of its hol
lowness, the otherwise perfect symmet
ry being impaired only by the absence
of a tonsil, which had been removed,
as well as with the vigor with which
every tone produced raised the “sail”
of the palate Dr. Lieber is of the
opinion that the natural conformation
of her mouth accounts in a large meas
ure for the wonderful power Madame
Lucca possesses of raising and drop
her voice alternately. The sound
waves are naturally strengthened in
so favorably shaped a space, while the
muscles of the palate appeared to have
acquired exceptional strength and
pliability by long practice.
f'olomon’s Song.
Popkius is a moral young man. We
call him young because he is not old.
He is also a very proper man, and a
regular attendant at church. He owns
property by inheritance, and pa s lib
erally toward the support of his min
ister. Popkius is musical. He has a
tine piano, a violin, a flute, a French
horn, a cornet, and one of Stepan
fetchit’s best parlor organs. He does
not profess to be a professor—only an
amateur. He parts his hair in the
middle, wears kids, and never appears
in company but in the latest fashion.
Toward the middle of a Monday
forenoon not long since, Popkins en
tered Ditson’s music store, and ad
dressed one of the attendants in wait
ing:
“Aw—have you got Solomon’s
Song ?”
“What, sir?’’ asked the clerk, think
ing that perhaps he had not heard
aright.
“Solomon’s Song. ”
“N-no,” the clerk answered, with
some hesitation; “I don’t thing I have
heard of such a piece of music.”
“Aw —vewy likely;” said Popkins,
tightening the wrist of his kid upon
the right hand; “It may not be out
yet. Our minister spoke of it yester
day as a divine affair—a production of
genius and beauty. I would like to
see it.”
The clerk, with an effort, maintained
his gravity until the amateur had de
parted, and then there was a burst up
and down the whole house.
Victor Hugo anil Woman’s Rights.
Victor Hugo has taken his stand in
favor of woman's rights. In a recent
letter to the French Society* for tho
Amelioration of the Position of Wo
men, he said that all the efforts of his
life had been to secure a better lot for
women, and added: “Man has been
the problem of the eighteen ceDturv,
women is the problem of the nine
teenth; and to say woman is to say
child, that is to say the future. The
question thus put appears in all its
gravity. It is in its solution that lies
the supreme social appeasal. Woman
can do all for man—nothing for her
self. The laws are impodent to make
her so feeble when she is so powerful.
Let us recognize that feebleness and
protect it; let us recognize that power
and direct it. There lies the duty of
man; there lies also his interest. Ido
not tire of saying the problem is put;
it must be solved. Whoever hears a
part of the privileges. Half of the hu
man race is outside equality; it mast
be made to re-enter. It will be one
of the great glories of our great centu
ry to give the rights of the women as a
counterbalance to the rights of the
man—that is to say, to put laws in
equilibrium with the customs.”
The Toledo Blade tells a story of a
married pair who set out on their
wedding trip from that city, with the
understanding that ou their return
they should board in a hotel. When
they got back the husband suggested
that before going to the hotel they
should call upon a friend of his. They
were accordingly taken to a neat
dwelling, where a servant ushered
them into a pleasantly furnished par
lor, with a fire burning in the grate,
and everything cosy and homelike.—
The wife sat down, and the husband
said he would go into an inner room
to look for the gentleman of the house.
He came back shortly alone, and the
lady of the house was also not forth
coming. The young wife wondered
at her husband, and thereupon the
husband informed her that the house
was hers. This surprise party is rep
resented as having been exceedingly
pleasant.
There are trees in Wisconsin so tall
that it takes two men and a boy to
look to the top of them. One looks
till he gets tired, anil another com-
I mences where he left off.
A weather man in New Haven has
been searching among the records for
a colder winter than the past has been.
He announces that 1741 was colder,
and we will not dispute his word, as
we do not have a distinct remembrance
of that soason. However, it is on re
cord that in 1741 the whole country
was covered with snow as early as No
vember 9, and that when April came
the fences still were covered with it.
It is stated in the annals of Lynn,
Mass., that “Francis Lewis, the signer
of the Declaration of Independence,
drove his horse from New York to
Barnstable the whole length of Long
Island Sonnd, on the ice.” The ice
extended into the sound as far as could
be seen from the town of New Lon
don. And as late as July 17 there
was snow in a mass nearly four feet
thick in the town of Ipswich, Mass.
We suppose if there had been any
“Glorious Fourth” that year, the boys
would have fired snow-balls instead of
Chinese crackers.
Speaking of spiders, Professor E. S.
Morse says:
“Only the female spiders spin webs.
They own all the real estate, and the
males have to live avagabond life un
der stones aud other obscure hiding
places. If they come about the liousr
so often as to bore the ruling sex,
they are mercilessly killed aud eaten.
The spider’s skin is unyielding as tho
shells of lobsters and crabs, and is
shed from time to time in the same
way, to accommodate the animal’s
growth. If you poke uver the rubbish
in a female spider’s back yard, among
her cast-off corsets you will find the
jackets of the males who have paid for
their sociality with their lives—tro
phies of her barbarism as truly as
scalps show the savage nature of the
red man.
All the people in a Paris house were
startled one night by a tremendous
noise made in an upper apartment.—
Rushing to tho doors, they saw a man
coming down four steps at a time. He
was arrested, half dead with fear. He
was a thief, had made his way in with
a false koy, and feeling his way about
the apartments from room to room to
find valuables, bad como upon some
strange, soft, movable, upright thing
in the middle of a room Ho felt of it,
passed his hand higher and higher,
and felt a face cold as ice. Frighten
ed, eager to escape, he could not find
his way to the door, anil in his flight
upset every article of furniture in the
apartment. Then they all w'ent up
stairs, and found tho tenant of the
fourth floor hanged iu his room.
Whatever there is of terrible, what
ever there is of beautiful in human
events, all that shakes the soul to and
fro and is remembered while thought
and flesh cling together, all these have
their origin from tue pa sions. As it
is only in storms, and when their com
ing water is driven up into the air,
that we catch a sight of the depths of
the sea, it is only in the season of per
turbation that we have a glimpse of
the real internal nature of man. It is
then only that the might of these erup
tions, shaking his frame, dissipate all
the feeble coverings of opinion, and
rend in pieces that cob-web veil with
which fashion hides the feelings of the
heart.—[Sidney Smith.
“Bob, did you ever stop to think,”
said a Michigan Avenue grocer re
cently, as he measured out a half peck
of potatoes, “that these potatoes con
tain sugar, water and starch ?” “No, I
didn’t,” replied the boy; “but I heard
mother say that you put peas an’ beans
in your coffee, an’ ’bout a pint uv wa
ter in ’bout every quart uv milk you
sold.” The subject of natural philoso
phy was dropped right there.—Detroit
Free Press.
Professor Blackie, of Scotland, in a
recent lecture said—“A woman is nat
urally as different from a man as a
flower from a tree; she has more beauty
and more fragrance, but less strength.
She will be fitted for the rough and
thorny walk of the masculine profess
ions when she has got a rough beard,
a brazen front, and hard skin, but not
sooner.”
We can hardly imagine the possible
dignity and value of our lives, unless
we consider their probable bearing ou
other lives. A word of cheer, an act
of passing kindness, a trifling sacrifice,
may be just the help required to give
vitality and permanence to good re
solves, which lead to high endeavor
and to generous action.
Ice two inches thick will support a
man; at a thickness of three inches and
a half it supports a man on horseback;
five inches of ice will support an eighty
pounder cannon; eight inches, a bat
tery of artillery, with carriages and
horses attached; and, finally, ico ten
inches thick will support an army—an
innumerable multitude.
A man may conceal his name, his
age, the circumstances of his life, but
not his character. That is his moral
atmosphere, and is as inseperable from
him as the fragrance of the rose from
the rose itself. In the glance of the
eye, in the tone of the voice, in mien
and gesture, character discloses itself.
We ought in humani'y no more to
despise a man for the misfortunes of
the mind than for tho<o of the body,
when they are such as he cannot help.
Were this thoroughly considered, we
should no more laugh at one for hav
ing his brains cracked than for having
his head broken.
We are sometimes apt to wonder to
see those people proud who have done
the meanest things; whereas a con
sciousness of having done poor things,
and a shame of hearing it, often make
the composition we call pride.
It is not isolated great deeds which
do most to form a character, but small
conterminous acts, touching and blend
ing into one another. The greenness
iof a.field comes not from trees, but
[ blades of grass.
ALL SORTS.
| “A skin game”—the fur dealers.
I A heavy business—importing ele
j phants.
j The fellow who took offence has not
i returnt and it.
ts t ;d interest—money in the waist
-1 coat pocket.
I When a hog roots in a snow bank
i its nose knows snows.
The first thing a man takes to in his
life is bis milk—the is his bier.
He who sins against man may fear
discovery, but he who sins against God
is sure of it.
The barber who dressed the head of
a barrel has been ongaged to curl tho
locks of a canal.
Cakes of toilet soap and two-dollar
suspenders are beginning to reach Ne
braska sufferers.
There is a man is New York so fat
that a child was recently killed by his
shadow falling on it.
In what ship, an 1 iu what capacity,
do young ladies like to engage? iu
court-ship, as mar^-ners.
An Englishman proposes to run
street cars by clock-work. Only two
hands will be required.
Do not be content with swimming
on the surface of divine truth—make
it your element—dive into it.
Success is said, by a western sage,
to greatly depend upon the possession
of three qualities—grit,grip aud gump
tion.
None are so easily acquainted, so
closely knit together, and so much en
deared to one another as real Chris
tians.
NO. 20
Mr. Smith has electrified humaniiy
by the discovery that much sickness
in New Orleans is occasioned by bad
health.
The Richmod wh'g nominates Colc
nel Albert R. Lamar, of Georgia, as a
candidate for Clerk of the House of
Representatives.
It is our nature to rejoiee when all
within and without is undisturbed;
the miracle is to rejoice iu tribulation,
and this miracle is continualiy wrought
as the believer is passing through the
wilderness.
At a recent meeting of a society com
posed of men from the Emerald Isle,
a member made the following motion:
Mr. President—l move ye’s whitewash
the ceiling green, in honor of the old
flag.
An Irish coachman, driving past
some harvest fields during summer,
addressing a smart girl engaged in
sheaving, exclaimed: “Arrah, my darl
ing, I wish I was ia jail for stealing
you.”
When a bank suspends in Kansas,
they take the manager to a neighbor
ing tree, and servo him in the same
manner. “A simple remedy, and we
believe iu its efficacy,” says a local pa
per.
A boy found a pocket-book contain
ing some money, and returned it to its
owner, who gave him a five cent piece.
The boy looked at the coin an instant,
and then handing it reluctantly back,
audibly sighed, as he said, “I cui’t
change it.”
We must glean knowledge by read
ing, but the chaff must be separated
from the wheat by thinking. Knowl
edge is proud that he has learned so
mhch; wisdom is bumble that sho
knows no more.
When we are young we are slavishly
employed in procuring something
whereby we may live comfortably when
we grow old; and when we are old wo
perceive it is too late to live as wo pro
posed.
Flowers of rhetoric in sermons and
serious discourses are like the blue
and red flowers in wheat: pleasing to
those who came only for amusement,
but prejudicial to him who would reap
profit from it.
A boy will learn more true wisdom
iu a public school in a year than by a
private education in five It is not from
masters, but from their equals, that
youth learn a knowledge of the world.
The history of any private family,
however humble, could it be fully rela
ted for five or six generations, would
illustrate the state and progress of so
ciety better than the most elaborate
dissertation.
There are hopes, the blooms of whoso
beauty would be spoiled by the tram
mels of description; too lovely, too
delicate, too sacred for words, they
should be only known through tho
sympathy of hearts.
Over all life broods Poesy, like the
calm blue sky, with its motherly, rebuk
ing face. She is the great reformer,
and where the love of her is strong and
healthy, wickedness and wrong cannot
long pr evail.
The clergy are at present divided in
to three sections; an immense body,
who are ignorant; a small proportion,
! who know and are silent; and a minute
minority, who know and speak accord
ing to their knowledge.
When ambitious men find an open
passage they are rather busy than dan
gerous; and, if well watched in their
proceedings, they will catch themselves
in their own snare, and prepare a way
for their own destruction.
If you devote your time to study,
you will avoid all the irksomeness of
this life; nor will you long for the ap
proach of night, being tired of the day;
nor will you be a burden to yourself,
nor your society insupportable to
others.
Be fearful only of thyself, and stand
in awe of none more than thine own
conscience. There is a Cato in every
mas; a severe censor in his manflers,
and he that reverences this judge
will seldom do anything he need repent
of.
A gun factory in Upper Austria is
making 250,000 rifles for Germany. It
has delivered 180,000, and has received
a further order for 75,000. A Vienna
firm is reported to be executing a Ger
man order for 30,000,000 c irtridges for
delivery in June.
Waterloo, of the St. Louis Republi
can, gives this touching account of
the way in which he came.to be mar
ried :
“She was small footed, but very plump;
lie was large footed, bnt gaunt; and ho’
bad bis boot legs made to fit. H 9
wagered her a pair of gloves that she
couldn’t get his boots ou. She gazed
scornfully at his splay feet and greedily
I accepted. Aud then she tried to get
I the boots on. And then bo didn’t
j have to get the gloves.”