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—TbW '! ’ T ‘ T— — - —T
VOLUM&4
rndenridJ mmxiM* ar rar
nx>u or rom.
telling stones about the pranks they
played in Utah youthful «*d
laughing proudly „saf «ti:-w mtodtocd*.
Bat thia isn’t al safe thing toAx
Old Judge BiMMiWgnil ia tide recast*
tian in ***** eon, egad I</
The old »«<**
be an ‘ l
oext
be W 'IS3F Wm
• over tts* front
Bear th *t tspMFtrw 6pnae«l th. dn*w
■d .telugrxf
prised and am>oydSflij|gt, ttofl Walked
into the entry with oaths upaif Bto Hpa,
and immediately his feet caught * yd
teed across the hall from lie banMWrto
the hat-rack, and it Napped him up and
pulMdte* hsfaiwafc rear <aa top odium.
Ho waa skinned in aevend places, and,
tay KtaMoH.
waa awful mad. He /tarted up-stairs,
and>M U&ft&p m-roae
at the right height caught him suddenly
under tba chtn and throw him backward
down the atom. Thea he started to
crawl ftp-stairw. ami part way up discov
ered nowjw lying oa the stein) aud com
ing from the top. He pulled it, and
hauled a. barrel down upon himself that
down atom again. He
waejoogdy-iieluioua wjth rage aa hexose
to hia fert,tftf >iV«<W«r£ungbfa
to unlpgd ii rjd the cause of all three
oontripagaM being in hia way. Once
moamtee saaeynri to go up, and that tune
sucoae4*c|/ Ou'Meeting Isa kwjof
the stafrejk lh<«Mt he hertd»«faker.
and invQa'tigation showed hia son peep
ing M MJ ehAfcbar and laMgldng.
On hewg faxed fcy the Judge with fixing
thataaptlbe bey owned up. "What |
in faemaaee dt heave* have I done
thakmade ywu daitF* yelled the Judge,
aghaM at tt» boy’s wickedness and cool*
neaa. r *Why, I heard yon say you
played there prank, on (ether.”
"Tee, and he lickedfega like Uaace for
it, juat as Til Ifcl you/’ roared the
infuritWrtdge. f if Tent didn’t eay any
ttogg being licked when you told
the stories,” cried the now frightened
boy. a Jhis o*t»*ate»>ug argument, but
the Jodgs wasn't ua a frame of mind to
appMßtots it The boy’s yells were
heaFddn the real word, and he has re
solvbßj <M soar arhia raw spote get wall,
to rtolf awwy*te some place where they’ll
toll him the whole facta of a case. And
Ttwx Iwmtrt tn tw
careful what he says before that boy.
-Vetc York Mercurv.
CAUSKS vr WAR.
A certain King sent to another King,
saying, ** Bend me a blue pig with a
black tail, or else—”
The other replied, “I have not got
one, aud if I had—”
On this weighty cause they went to
war. After they had exhausted their
armies and resources, and laid waste
their Migdimmrltey 1 qgow to wish to
make jfcaod^b'uT>»efori , ’'tfrfii firMM be
done it was necessary that the insulting
lad|Nfhga that led to tbs trouble should
be explained.
“What edNM yon mean,” asked the
second King of the first, “by saying,
Bend me a blue pig with a black toil, or
“ Why," said the other, “ I meant a
blue color. But what could you mean
by saying, I have not got one, and if I
had—F’
“ Why, of course, if I had I should
have seat it:'*
The explanation was satisfactory, and
the peace was accordingly concluded.
The story of the two Kings ought to
serve sa a lesson to us all. Most of the
quarrels between individuals are quite
aa foolish as the war of the blue pig
with a black tail. _
WIFI RO HVART.
There is a young man studying law in
a Galveston lawyer’s office, and the
young man is not very regular in his
habita. Tbsterday the old lawyer said:
"Whydidn't I see yon in court yes
terday F l '
“ Because I wasn't there, I reckon. I
waa confined to my room with the tooth
wehe," was the response of the incipient
Blackstone.
plenty of time to he after you have
reseed yv»< areim**™ ard hwta 0’
roitenl *
Man pern®* eccrider thmaamves
tbaF «• WF dtttauxu ,
they ooanrel not so much that you may
bream* wise aa that they may be known
a* teacher* of wisdom.
WlwfciiiaSihfew.
o<m jvrwrziM.
tWM tasCAMr Am* .Am* IA. Wm. Bmm.
a <o#te aa* iiuaemtewW teiiqiuim' M 6»«.
wim ■ rfVboa. »fa • ftetSM’. wS s tet w taaßphr,
Asd *M (M M«»r o< u» uw. ton mi*b>
kaawlt.
■*ttoesbi abWd so to raiiOm tto hii Sud< ;
Mat toahowtt
ttevt iboesb u* UMS taoate «e> sotow Isqpr tau s
Tte < M totasd pm. to t» IVWI to
(takaWurtot.toA to Sto tatto
*e*vtan ate e*M to ■■ntofcaare W*sa>. *•
/ -
asm.t«w|giam.*to4>.teca«Mi mmi k m.
AMI tee Onte Ser nates sat Mtea«, art motoM
* ttasftowabtoox
<*'Bto«aasK teUMutok t“ saw AsstoSr towv> ter
"■etetdhtowyoal kareir ksvw ytol! ’ ™ a>.
tovvis abs thoosbt ttey Mid.
esl so vary, vary cross,
TteMßten ter moue. » Ulus l*u>. ter teal s
ite van SySM tbsy mm vm si)
LsktoetStoc toaaai,
WHS to. nto*. sad IM fMlter, sad tte bit to Isos
17CJm«k jj r’pJ*
Ae wxmid not wait Io lUteu Io 4b» aertDoa or
tba pr*y*r, J 1 ’ ** • t
But patuxed down the aUa&t and hurried up
tba atalr,
Jill ate reached her MlUe bureau, aod In a baodboi
oa H
Had hidden aafe from critic'a eye bar faoMab BU*
bonnet
Which proves, my HtUe n Aldan-. that aaah of yoo
Will find
In every fab bath M-vloa bat an aaho of yonr mind;
And the little bead tbaMe filled wife atliy UUia alra
WUk never gt a MiMlaa from earmon ar from
prevent.
nw Dmta.
“Well, my boy,” aaid John’s em
ptoyw, bolding out his hand tor the
“did you get whst I seat /on
TbrF*
’"Xtes, sir,”sstel John; “aad hero i«
the change, but I don't understand iu
The lemons cost cents, and (her,,
ought to bo 22 canto change, aud there's
V-” •
“Jtetet* 4 made a mistake iqjjnga,
yon de money F'
"No, sir; I counted it over in the
half, to be suit it was aB
"Then, perhaps, the ‘felerk made »
uustoke in giving you chstise F
But John shook ius neaa : " rta, sir ;
I counted that, too. Father said we
must always count our change before we
leave a store."
"Then how in the world do you ao
connt for the miaamg & cents ? How do
von expect me to believe such a queer
story as that F'
John’s cheeks were rod, but his vote*
was firm : "T don’t Account twit, kfrr
I can't All I know is that it is so. ”
" Well, it is worth a good deal in this
world to be sure of that How do you
ccount for that 6-cent piece that is hid
!ng inside your coat-sleeve ?”
John looked down quickly and caught
the gh-aming bit q
pleasure. " Here you aaa.?l Itetoltd.
" Now it is all right I couldn't imag
ing what had bacomg #
piece. I knew I had it when I started
.iritfu ihwstore. ”
“There are twe or three things that I
know now,” Mr. Brown aaid, with a sat
isfied air. "I know you have been
taught to count your money in coming
and going, aud to tell the exact truth, ‘
whether it sounds well or not—three
imfsirtant things in an errand boy. I
tiuuk IH try you, young man, withoat
looking any further."
At this John's cheeks grew redder
I than ever. He looked down and up, and
1 finally he aaid, in a low voice : " I think
I ought to tell you tliat I wanted the
: place so badly I almost made up my
mind to say nothing about the change if
■ you didn’t ask me."
“ Exactly,” said Mr. Brown, “and if
you had done it you would have lost
the situation ; that is all. I need a boy
i about me who can be honest over 6
cents, whether he is asked question* or
001*”
.rate.-«a-«A« -
There had been at least three m the
family before this one, which was des
tined to be the greatest fun of all.
Thia waa Nan ’a Tba first ones had
all halongwl to Johnny, and he need to
laugh heartily when he was a very little
fellow to eea how ha could fcighten
great big men with a Jack-in-the-box.
One man, a peddler, who was sitting
I tn IM k*Mk
when Johnny suddenly let Jict
1 pop out st him.
Tncle Edward threw his arm* up into
the air, and grandpa dodged sway into s
ccrnar whauever Johnny ran up to them
, <iih that taimLk State Th*- 0 to th* k*»-
But toe fourth Jack-in-the-box was
Nan's, and aba kept it popping back and
I fortli so cvuitaxitly that m a day or two
.-Osvofed tcitlto Awisstt if'cai&ifcii CmrtyiitA tte SftiAhoorgia.
' <- - -- - - - * - I■. M. to- —■ - . te *I•A 1* r- . > VtoMTa.* w M
HARLEM,' GEOKGIA, TUESDAY, MARCH H. 'BBI
| MR I
te poppel *SM> |ttt*%f’«te
floor.
Then i wMto»r*lM»4h«b ilMur*.
Nan wold antak him, pat him huk an,,
the box y- ay Mwi
then sin Ate
would
room m t
looking ■ ■ fifk.-uAicl;
vtanug K|
At lite Man haahaiL haa ahi.l
Hjxnkxl that psrV-ot-toie ptoy, but John •
ny in a day or aq, invented a new way to
use the little snaK/who io b«
>ui ogre, if you know whst dresdful
thing that is.
First Johnny and Nan would build a
tall. Htnmg tower ot blocks, with }ust a
little low door at the bottom.
This waa to be a prison for the ogre,
whom they Alwin bravely sought out and
cap(uatel} apd, preaaiat < low*
to the floor, they pushed him ' ffirotlfch
the low tower door.
A* soon sa he was in, and their hands
were off. he would spripg uu to ip* full
r heiglit inside the tower; and peer at them
wildly through a crack, but ho couldn't
> i|, t out, oh, no 1
It was snoli fun to play ogrq that the
children did not tire of it for a groat
while, but there came a time when the
iHxir lijtlu Jack wlio hadn't agy box lay
fprlorii mql ut'jloplod among a iQtuX'fiLl
toys. " “’* ’
, C< >uain Ted came in one day ami spud
him there. It is a long lane tbgf.hu no
turning, even for a broken Jack-in- tho
box, and now there waa to be more fun
fhan ever with him.
"Pans hjuu up here, Johnny," said
Tdd, who at the same moment unfolded
a handkerchief, and drew a book toward
FiuuMiK. X.*-* Jf ? /., j
“ What are yon going to do with him?"
asked Johnny, wondenngly, an he
olmyed orders, and Nan left all her dolls
to run and see what was going oh.
Cousin Ted put Jack on his middle
finger, and dressed two of hia other
nngesa in .Aho handkeroimd. aud then
tamgbt before
lhein. ’
The effect waa that of an irresistibly
iroll-faced man making a speech over *
desk. 3 13 ** ' f
Thia is tho speeMi he made, with great
nixldings of his heqil sgii great wavuigs
of hia hands : ** - - te t
. auputeVthetox* »»ri to ote*e,
n*SMMW*rS«Jltei
Wb aaouah h> out* an old nx*n >hu«.
And acrauq All boa t aa>4 ala* 1
With the last Word down he sank out
of sight behind the book.
• Ik was so funny that Johnny and Nau
fairly danced up and down, and laughed
*<l> |MI 4 FIMMW TOIMjAUH I Jl Vu r •
rying in, and then, of course, they had
to laugh, too.
aiATtCS.I VM IL.DKKB AT OMR BIRTH.
A man in Illinois, having sent to a
Washington journal a photograph of
five of hia children who were Ixirn on the
sam>- >Jky t averting that "to man
can show a picture of five,*** the news
l>aper quiets him with the following
HtatisUcs :
“ instances have been found where
children to the number of six, seven,
eight, nine and sometimes sixteen hsva
lives brought forth st one birth. Ths
wilo of Emanuel Oago, a lai Hirer near
VaiisdoJui, was delivered the* 14th of
June, 1799, of five girls. The celebra
ted Taram was brought to bed in the
seventh month, at Argenteuil, near
Pteris, IHbpf July, 1779, of three boys,
each fourteen and a half inches long,
and a girl, thirteen inches. They worn
all baptized, but did not live over twen
ty-four hours. In June, 1799, one
Maria Rim., of Luoena, in AmUlusia,
was successively delivered of sirtecu
lioys, without any girl*. Seven of them
were alive on the 18th of August follow
ing. In 1535 a Muscovite peasant
named James Kyrloff and his wife were
preeeatod to the Empress of Itessia.
This peasant had been twice marritxi,
and waa then 70 years of age. Hu first
wife was brought to bad kwe*ty*one
tunes, namely, tuor times of four chil
dren each tune, seven tunes of three,
and tan tunes of twe. making in all fit
ty-aeven chßdrou who were then alive.
Hu second wife, dho sooompannxl him,
had been delivered seven times—once of
three children, and six times of twins.
Thus he had seventy-two ciuidren by
hia two marrtagee."
* dtakMct*bf Saginaw, Mich.,
baa about ninety-five companies at work,
with an annual capacity ot 2,600,00 b
buahels. The first wall waa sunk only
tweaty-one years ago, and in 1359 th*
Legialatnre encouraged the enterpnse
■wob a booaty ot 10 nsmta • baatesi
all salt manufactured, and an examptica
from taxation for all engaged in the
bwuneaa.
F —■■ i,;..r»-!»H -it- -iRk,T M ' ”
I alll—sagias Has— liggw
sml the todtat frtd T gyyi i
Udy ' Mjwfrg
|th. ; Mians
Btii'* B slmosfML >re|jig |tt*sfl| t >
IthriMlxauH
"*ta***™tedta*»aiaaM*3aMManMas
YtUrefl, and Tartly soon there was a
knock »t her |oer,«nd she flmud khat it
wsalUaehMt Ebe told him to gome in
Ue morning. The lady unlock* her
door in the morning ao the porter sen
come in and build a fire before she gets
up. Bhc hesrd s knock in the morning,
sud supposing it was th* porter, she
said. “ Oome in.” The door opened and
walked Ur. Indian. Bh* took <w
took at fatal the bed
over her head. He aat down on the aide
of the bed and said " How I” Well, she
was *o scared that she didn't know
" How'"-drom Adam.. |Bhe said to him
in the beat Sioux that she could com
mand, “ Please, good Mr. Indian, go
away, until I get up,” but he didn't
seem to be in fi hurvy. He piaked up
pieces of her wearing apparel from the
floor, different articles tlist he didn't
'sacm to Most at)/thing!aboutwbeiM they
wore worn, aud male comment* o*» them
>n thu Sioux tongue. The stockingH
*e m«d to purs .yz*> hw untutored mind
the meet, ffley were theae long, 90 de
gree* in the shade Stockings, and they
wore Ux> much for hu feeble intellect
He hold them up by the toe* and aaid
"Ugh!” The lady trembled and wished
he would go away. He seemed to toko
IgeiU delight in aumuung the hair on
thu bureau, and looked at the lady a*
much us to aay, " Poor girl, some hostile
tpbe hs* tqade war on the pale face and
taken many scalps." Hw cfificHiy w»*
umitied all the crockery, the wash bowl
snd pitcher, but hu was struck the worst
st s corset that he found eu a chair. He
MlMt «t pw* it ea hin***lf, aod waa os-,
handy about it that it occurred to the
lady that he waa not no fresh a delegate
a* he seemed to be. Finally she hap
]>enod to think of the bell, and she rung
it as thougii the house was on fire, and
pretty soon tfaeqxirter cams and invited
die Induui to go down stairs and take a
drink. Tte' lady locked that doer too
quick, and she wff! never leave iFopan
again wheu there are Lodtons to town.
She says her hair, on the tmreau, fairly
turned grar from fright
f A -y * <,
A QOW BtroRTRR.
An exchange remarks : “A good re
porter is always flint cousin to a ffecro
mancer, ar.d can introduce himself to
you in such a genial way that, fc* the
tunc Ix'iug, he *ecm* like year lung-loat
brother, who is anxious to eliowyon the
xtruwlnrry-nterk on his loft arm in
)>roof of ins identity. Ton talk with
liim alxmt the inner secrets of your life
in a profuse sort of way, give him your
opinion about the resumption of specie
I«yment, and, as the conversation flows,
frwly unfold yourself on various other
matter*. He aits u silent and admiring
listener, ruii'onraging you by a nod when
you are hunting for the right word, or
possibly supplying it himself, sod give*
yon the impriwaioo that be wouldn't dia
olomi wiiat you have told him—no, not
for world* cm worlds. Thu next day you
take up the paper, aud, while carelessly
looking over it* columns, *eo your own
name in capitals which seem to your a*
tonished gane as long as Bunker Hill
Monument, Every word you have said
is there. That man with the strawberry
mark on hi* artn was the small end of a
») leaking trumpet through which you
iinconacK >Oaiy lota the whole world all
about yourself. He had ao petMsl or
paper, and didn't evince any desire to
write in shorthand. Ob, no; that is
the clgpijy way in which baftooers
x ork. Hia skill is not in hia finger-tip*,
Imt tn Li* memory. He msencnsed
every word you agid, y»d reproduced it
with porttat aacwaoy. Tfce Worn
pliahed reporter ia a* nearly übiquitou*
as a merely human being ever becomes,
and is lM>guuung to bo regarded ao a
moral restraint in many reepocta npaetoe
to the Deealogu*. A man in Ib* aides
irase irogMweambiyfaoaateabeDaeatagM
and hade the peaces, bat nowadays the
moment a law ia henkon the quick see
of the reporter tale he* the in sail, and
Mo persuasive lip* isrpii you to toil
him all about tt. Ha to an laatnilil
interrogation point * a human oorkaerew,
who get* a deeper bold cu your aseeet
every time he tans round. Hia miattes
ia summed up in th* abort, but tatzMo,
Mniacae, *]J flebk lUttlL’* r
Taoea gift* ar*> *ver th* mass eeeept'
able which tho giver haa made Bromoua.
daw «r Wteran er rar »»air
I gweaa acme o’yea falter* ever heard
o’ the winter o’ 1778, or you’d keep a
leette mum on the woatbar queatum,'*
•aid the old *ettier. who had come down
from Wayne county for a little visit.
“ I’ve knowed acme anortm’ old winters
in my fame, but my gm aiifat hex's ax peri
•ooe in the winter at Tfl beats anything
o’aatao. -i .
“ My gran‘father ware a great hunter
an* Injm kilter. Ho fit in ilu> Revylu
ttou, all Tong the DcTsrar valley. The
winter o’Tf was ter Tie cold. Every
thing in tliese part* was friz up Uglitar'u
a snare drum. Qa one 6* the oddest
days ary graaffather atroek the track o*
acwne lajina on the hills jest above here
He fofaarod ’em, aa'kilted a coa|io oa
'«a*. an' than started bank over the ridge
far hia cabin. My gran'father lived to
ibo 100 yea* Old, ab* to hia dyin’ day he
•tuck to ft that whet I’m goln* to tell
y«u ware ex true as preaebin', an'-1
b1 tore it. He Started book fus hia cabin
cter the ridge. He hadn' gone fur when
h< shot a wolf. H" hadn’t uwehniore'u
fired his ole flintlock when he hoerd ■
yell off to the left, an’ lookin' that way
see a big painter cornin' for. him. Faint
om was a picnic tor the old man, an' b*
rammed flown a big charge o' powder
an' reached fur hi* bullet pooob, when
lo an’ behold ye lit were gone, He lost
it eomewhar in the woods. Figfatin’
painters without bullets wnn't so much
of a ptonic. Besides, the old man liad
got cold while standin' thar, an'he didn't
care to teakto aa ablo-bodiod painter
wtula his hands was sll stiff. The paint
er come a creeptn* up with hia tangs a
shawm’ an' his jaws redde.r’n a round o'
beef an’ his tail a switohin’ like a oow'n
in fly-time. Cold as it were, my gnui -
tather aaid the sweat startixi out on hia
forrid an' rolled down his clieeks big
ger*n boas ohea*nuts. They dropped on
th* ground in big lolls, fur they fnz n
fa*t ex they fall. piled up at hi*
fret, an' the painter kep’ a creepta' up.
"MBMf hit toy gMBTaUAf
{dumb in the top-knot. He grabbed uj>
a han'ful o' the sweat ex were friz m
balla an' poured 'em in hia muakit.
“ ‘lf I kin git these in on that pointer
‘fore they melt,' he thinka to hiaeelf,
* mobbe theyTl settio hia haah '
“ Arter crnamin’ the sweat o' hi* brow
in the muakit, my gran'father biased
away. But the heat o* tlia gun-bar'l had
malted the toe-balls, an' they wpnt opt'n
the gun lUaa.a itMo o' waiter OUi'n a
hoae. But tbe cold TOather wsnn’t fool
in' round there for nothin', an' 'fore thu
stream o’ water had gone three toot it
was friz inter a aolid chunk, an' went
krrplinkarty inter the painter's skull.
But my gran'father said he owed hia
Ufa to natur srter all, fur the charge o’
ice never would a made the painter give
tg> the ghoat, an' it novas vrouM hail no
tdfect on him 'at All only there wasn't
force 'nough to drive it clean through
tas head. Tliat saved my gnmYather
from a chawin’. Th* chunk o* 100
stopped in the skull. The animal heat
melted it, an' 'fore the paurter could re
coapeiateaa' gtt bis weak in an the old
man he died of water on the brain. I
was alius sorry my gran'father didn't
have that painter stuflM an' handed
down to the family," concluded the old
retttor, aa bo adjouraad with the boys
for rsfreahmnnta.
BLACK WALKVT BOR TIHBKB.
The growing demand for black wain nt
for timlier, together with the acfcnowb
edged scarcity of this wood, opens a
road to profltelile planting. There are
so many use* to which walnut wood ia
l>eiag put, such aa its um by eewing
machine and furniture manufactrrrera,
tredfiw easily, and could ftoa »
placed where Ute tree ia wanted. Usu
ally. seedling trees hava first to be rsiahd
in a bed, and then toanaplanted when a
year « two old. But, if the nut* of
walnut be sound, they sprout easily,
sod csss to a hill, ao to speak, will be
sufltetan L Walnut trees grow very fart!
and. blmu plaatoAm
large ttnaa, bearing nute. in ttght or ten
yeaau, Ground should not bo allowed
tetatoabiMl*. B* U ever so poor, three,
is boom ptufl* to bo got out of it by ju
difliCNM of ftrtM.
4*rm
A friend writes Isom tba Oatoredo
mocmtem* tp aay that he has got aa rsv
ennos m a aamam amottg **'Wfitae. and
aat down in <ma of tba gosgeoos gorge*
and oorgad himealf gurmaodistagly.
' TBMMS-e»e* aey A aassas
[. IN A»VANS'*
NUMBER 13.
TO/EET BKCTFXB.
Tb Rmrovn Pnmss-Twa aonoaa of
bi-carbonate of soda, owe dsoohm of
glycerine, one ounce of spermaceti <dnt»
■ant
Faca Waa*.—Two graiaa of ba-ahto
ride of mercury, two grains of an estate of
ammonia, sight ounces of emnbww of
almonds.
Gabs or inn Naha -Brush them
carefully at leant once a day, aoooadmg t ‘
to OM’a work, pushing book the flesh
from the nail, thus avoiding hnag-oails.
Under no circnmstancee bite them, bat
trim with either acissora or penknife
Du not cut the nail* shorter than the
Angara, oc both wul noon have a atubby
apiiearouoo; and claaa them with a
blunt, not sharp, point,
Puiurrwu W» Bmatb. —Foul breath
ia usually caused by an unhealthy atate
of thu-atomaoh or poor teeth. If canned ,
by the flret, the phyaunau ahouta be
oalled upon ; if the latter, apply to the
dentist If from neither, take ehlctute
_pf lime, seven drachma ; gum arebtc,
five drachma; to bo mixed with warn
water to a stiff paste, rolled aud cut into
loaenge*. There will arrest decay in
the teeth and neutrahxu acidity of th*
ytomach, and will also remove all tree*
x>t tobacco from the breath.
Cana or tbs Tnnn.—They should ba
brushed carefully after each meal, and
particularly after supper just before go
ing to bod, a* what pariMee aa may be
left on thu teeth after eating very aoon
dretroy them. Uruahiag the teeth once
a day with pure white enable euap will
keep them clean and white. If you can
u>t remove the tarter tliat mayaasumu
lato by the use of s brnafa, tabs pow
dered pumice atone, and, with a email
stick mail* into a fine bruah at th* and,
rub the teeth caretally with thu pumice
eton*. Onto a month will do far thia,
Imcawte, If practiced too often, it to apt
to destroy thu enamel. *
HaaroaiNo »« Qounior ran Him—
taWhMi tba hear taaaa cri«b4LMll be
stored by bathing th* head to a weak
solution of ammonia—an even teaspoon
ful of carbonate of ammonia to a quart
of water—washing the heed with a areali
mitten and brualnug the hair thoroughly
while wet Bathlag the head in a aicung
solution of rock salt is said to restore
gray hair in some cases. Pour boiling
water on rook salt in th* proportion of
two heaping table-spoonfuls to a quart
of water aud let it stead, before using.
Ammonia, if used too often, make* th*
hair lighter, and, if in a strong eoluison,
burns snd splits the hair.
■>' ruwr.rHH
AFAiOAUSAfS.
Asa vs set tarmsd, enoteot mate ass,
For oua asotbar, Ataiusuarr
NxwarAFus are teachers of disjointed
thinking.— Dr. Huth.
Lnrmr to conscience more than to fa
ta lL»ct.—F. W. RobcrtAon.
Fauaaaoop may have its Lour, but it
fare no future.—Freeaeaoa.
Tns symbol* of the invisible are the
loveliest of wfaat is visible.—Byron.
Life ia so abort that it i* the wont of
stnpiditie* to waste an hour of it.—Gtas
tavc Dure.
It ia a great miatortone not to have
wit enough to speak well, or not
enrmgh judgment to k*cp silent.—Aa
Rruyere,
I‘nuao.x* their own face*,
and it's no more my fault if mine ia a
good one that it fa other people's fault if
tlrnirs is a bad one.— lHekona.
Ko Mam la born lalo tba world vtraaa wort
la uul t*’rn with bln.; tfara U alwaya wgrk,
Shd toMal* wort wHbal, toe A«s<Ab«rCl, I
Aud biMM.I ara U>« horny taa*e of 101 l
-/HHMII.
With malice toward non*, with charity
for all, with flrmuaaa in the right, aa
God gives u* to see til* right, let us
xtrivr to finish the work we have begun.
—LiMidn _ _
TUB BATAL BVOKBT.
It fa maoh easier to get into a quar
rel than to get oat of ft" In the year
1005 some soldfare of tha dftninuin
wrelth of Modena ran away with a buck
et from s public well belonging to th* ’
state of Bologna, This implement might
be worth 1 shilling, but it produced a quar
rel which waa worked into a long and *an
guinary war. Henry, iha Knag at tfar
dl«i* saalsted the Modessreo to keep
posreaion of the bucket, and m one of
th* battta* ha was mad* grteouar. Hi*
father, th* Emperor, ottered * chain of
gold that would encircl* Bologna, which
i* eeveu auto* a nnanpass, tor hia earn'*
rsjzaam, but in rein. After twenty two
yaan* fappriin—wt, h* ptaadaway. Hi*
momneantte aww axtani in ttte ehmeh
ot the Pomimcaas. Thia total baektai*
still exhibited 9 the tart ot *a Otahe
drel of Modena, inoloaed in an iron
sage.