McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Apr 1882, p. 3

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•. •' ' .. iWXM. L^nnfTig FOB A o paper* of 81 the death of the ^B«lbtdu mim&- thiaaio- ••ink Tha Had aT wfestpn WuM i* O* lJriSSSt baadtytshotahs laaVAKTAineocrs Emmo. --Two apooatels of mustard mixed in M*a efcOd with MD it lie** stance. A table-spoo«ifnlof >fcid wa*madaad given IsaaiTtobean in ntantaaeeaa & ttflMAga 300 to in the United States. the (he dxBt ef want, these letters , which would tout nine wh'̂ 'efyiisiwiy €xH tonal apo* Tnifirafl nf Oh»|fc MMttS ol tobacco cm (to of tha noae, throat cient of woman. m*. «•_!«¥ w VB, »nd will hive murdered hia for that the mucous em I* aa Ik clothing ia the rail in at Jq* Ifii immfa have been CWBI #T» DATOWOT.--A preparation of one onnoe of sulphur udxseqavt of water, repeatedly agitated during IH- tenraie ol a few how*, and the head aatur ĵwery morning with the clear Ufoi& trill, m ft few weeka, remove every trace of dapdruff from theacalp, and the hair will soon become aoft and tflUMT. O" "af* • AMMII TO Porno*.--Stir a keeping teaspdonfnlof salt and of mustard, one of each, in a ^BRB of water, and drink atonoa. Bepeat the dose if necessary, To counteract theeffeots, swallow the whitea of two or three eggs, and drink one or two earn of strong ooffee. Drinking sweet oil freely is also highly beneficial In poisoning oases. FOB CHAPFKD HAKINL--THE following formula is recommended by the Medical Brief: Bay rum, two parte; glycerine, two parts; qoinoe-aeed jelly, four parts, A few drops of oil of aoa® or any other perfumery may be added to the bay rum before mixing. The same lotion diluted with rain-water forms an excellent drefcs- ingfor the hair. The jelly is made by adding two drachma of quinoe-seed to 2. pinto of water, boiled down to one pint, filtered hot and allowed to cool. DEATH IN RAW HAM.--It is strange that people will eat raw ham after the many warnings which they hare received that all pork, smoked or not, is liable to contain mcluuee. When pork is proper­ ly oooked, the germ of the parasite is destroyed, and no danger need be appre­ hended. When uncooked and eaten, the eggs, which are lying dormant, become aotive and the parasites multiply with amazing rapidity, and aoon the entire muscular ay.' tern is invaded by them, and the agony of the sufferer is intense, A WRITER in the nineteenth Century says that contagion oonsists of minute solid particles and not gaseous disseminations. If this is true we can readily understand that a person who breathes only through the nose will be much less likely to eatch a contagions disease in a sick-room than would a mouth-breather. Free ventilation, perfect cleanliness and fre­ quent changes of clothing afford the best means of removing the contagious particles given off by the sick persons. IOB FOB TEETHING CHILDREN.--The pain of teething may be almost done away, and the health of the child bene­ fited by giving it fine splinters of ice, picked off with a pin, to melt in its mouth. The fragment is go small that it is but a drop of warm water lief ore it oan be swallowed, and the child has all the coolness for its feverish gums with­ out the slightest injury. The avidity with which the little things taste the oooliog morsel; the instant quiet which suooeeds hours of fretfulness, and the sleep which follows the relief, are the best witnesses to the magic remedy. Ice may be fed to a 3-months' child in this way, each splinter being BO longer than a common pin, for five or sen minutes, the result being that it has swaUowea in that time » teaspoouful of warm lara- tor, which, so far from being a harm, is fftadforit, nod tfcefwoces* peated hourly as often as the fretting fits Irpm teething begin. ™-;. Cruelty to Animals. *- The cruelty of man to the animals that labor for him, afford him pleasure, food, and the materials for his clothing, is of­ ten such as to render it questionable, which is, after all, the inferior beast. The establishment of humane societies in different States, cities and towns, however, is a step toward the protection of dumb animals from human barbarity. The shame is, that these are at all neces­ sary in this boasted century of religious teaching and general intelligence. It is a fact, however, that the invocation of stern law is yet needed to bring many a •human tiger to a sense of what is due even to the brutes he slaughters. The most flagrant outrage . that we have to note in this direction, is afforded at the stock-yards, sear this city. It is the practice of those whose business it is to kill the cattle at the slaughter houses, to spear them with a knife in the neck, just back of the horns. It has been discov­ ered by the offloen of the humane a®- oiety that when the animals era restless and seek to evade the kmfe, ihe mid- dened batohem pierce the «gree*>f *he victims that they may not see tfce ap­ proach of the death-dealing knife. Ar­ rests of these inhuman monsters are be­ ing made, aud the proprietors of the packing houses, to their oredit be it said, are seconding the society in its efforts to put a stop to the horrid practioe. Farm­ ers, and farmers' boys and hired help, who shudder at the facts here presented, are you not guilty of a measure of '«tn- elty. unconsciously, perhaps, toward vour work team, your eowa, and other domestic animals, that you may, as well as'not, avoid ? Kindness and gentleness toward the lower animals, not only en-, noble the master, but they pay ia doUara und Wis, as well--Prairie Parm t̂., . ,V$» •' man who set a trap to already >. oopn dog in it, and aim persists in his designs upon tike mink. . 8am they're finked. v*-*.?** • FISQJUU returns for the year justended show Aa* Great Britain spent in that periodic,511,000 on governmental ex­ penses. The revenue receipt̂ were £1,- 600atx>ve the estimates, wmch would careful fifwing. The was in t̂ e receipts from income-tax, which Increased £105,000. dfiow ',-BMtfcr THI location of publio land in the JTorthwaift by settlers this apring is be- yon& all precedent, Large colonies sre going from the pastern States to Minn- «ot̂ , Nebraska and Dakote to grow up with the counfcry. The acreage under eoltiyation in Dakota this yefj will, it ia aatia&ateA, be fully double that of last. Tim court -room at Dallas, Tex, was 4dJkq|p»ther too small to •gmit alTwho de* to be present in the breach of- prcmiise case of Evans versus Granby, wheai the love-letters of the plaintil! were being' read. A great crowd gathered outside the building, and ft man at a win­ dow obliged them by repeating, in a loud voice, the sentimental sentences as they were uttered in cofirt. Evans was a.JJopular man abont town, and' tltp onoioe passages from bis elRudona 'were"' greeted with cheers. VAnp through the efforts of CoL John^C. Oalhonn,*a son of the famous statesman of that name, a stock com­ pany is going into cotton culture exten­ sively In Chioot Oounty, Ark. The cap­ ital is provided by New England men, and amounts to $1,000,000. Plantations aggregating 83,000 acres have been pur- ohated, along the route of a projeoted railiroad, and bordering the Miosiasippi river. Negro labor will be employed at d^y's wages in cash, and%J r̂b t̂ maohiaary will be put in.,. .• ̂ '--** -.'a- • Two CbtOBOiA lawyers had a personal ttilllotdl̂ ihst January, which ended in one shooting the other in the hand. lUb assaulter was duly indicted and the 'trial was begun last weekjm the Superi­ or Court. After the State had closed its testimony it waa announced that friends of the parties bad effected " a reconcili- it was asked that the matter ^TwMd»awfi turn the court. To this Judge Snead promptly acceded, the two -.persoa® advanced to the front andshook hands in open court amid the applause ty, the spectators, and the eaae was dis- - " W t d - t o w t h e d o c k e k ^ -- l ̂ THB discovery has been made by a New York scientific writer that deadly poison emanates from the zdne lemon squeezers in use in certain bar-rooms. A chemist found considerable citrate of cine in the lemon juice which had been ' depressed by means of one of those ma­ chines, and it is hinted that arsenic, sul­ phate of lead, antimony and, various other unpleasant substances are con­ tained in zino, and oan be set free by the lotion of the lemon juice upon the metal. The mind fails to grasp the great problem thus opened. Think of the frightful mortality which must fol­ low the arrival in a country town of a cir- «us at which lemonade is dispensed and sine lemon squeeaers) used. , to- apinalflSl in 18S1. ttmlarg- inN«w Y<wk--ten twenty-nine of all sorts. Illi- nri show a percentage of is even grater, whifr î O l̂o- radoleada all others in percentage of in- 'CtBaae, botii of daily and woakly iaauee. Oalifornia, Nebtadta, Nevada, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont and Weet Virginia have fallen behind 1881 in the |otal number of perip£eals issued. In Georgia, Maine and Massa chnsetts tite suspensioBH have exactly oonnterbalanoed the new ventures. In every State not mentioned above, and in the Territoriea, there haa been an in­ crease. • **• ; KB., WHJJA* Hons sends to the Londaii Time* an estimate gathered from, the excise returns of the expendi­ ture upon intoxicating liquors during the year 1881 in England. The quantity of beer consumed in 2801 was 564 gallons, the value of which is 1 shilling 6 pence a gallon, ia £72,809,142, against £68,881,673 in 1880. The con­ sumption of British wines and spirits was 28,730,719 gallons, which at W shilliBga a galion, amounts to £2ftJ80/T19, against £28,457,486. In foreign spirits figarea are 8,295,- 265 gallocs at 24 shillings, amounting to £9,954,318, against £10,173,014 in 1880. For wine the figures are 16,644,- 757 'gallons at 18 shillings, amounting to £14,000^281, against £14,267,109 in 1880 ; while the eonsumpton of British wines is estimated at 15,000,00$) gallons, amounting; wk 2 shillings per gallon, to £1,500,000, the same sum as in 1880. The total for 1881 is £127,074,460, again at £122,279,275--an increase of £4,795,185. The consumption of beer shows an increase of 7.3 per oent., and British spirits 0.96 per oent., while for­ eign spirits show a decrease of 2.1 per fcent., and wine 1.8 per cent Taking the percentage of the total, it gives an aggregate increase of 3.9 per cent. Wit3fc regard to the consumption of beer, however, Mr. Hoyle finds, by the avow­ al of the brewing interest itself, that the old computation of its liabilities to the excise for the malt it used waa de­ lusive. Malt waa taxed as if quantity produced fifty-five barrels whieh in truth produced sixty, and, accordingly, the fe&l increase in the drink bilrta only 0.8, instead of 3.9 per cent. • (%U( aad Eif. . In answer* to a correspondent who MBS. MACKBT is reported ̂ «T Mng very indignant at the reports of her daughter's engagement to a Prinoe of the decaying Boorbon line, and > declares with the trne Ameriean ̂ spiflt that if a reigning - monarch MS ilotdd ..̂ opose ̂ -to heî daugh- ler he would bereiasedL EQiO oompl̂ ns ' I6at she is besieged by fortune hunters. '̂.If this goes on I shall have to put a y: notice on the door,** said the wrathful C ̂ lî le lady, teannouncing that, in oon- - . f̂ rmity with American customs, Miss Ibokey. will not have any marriage por- ; , t̂ on." Good for Mrs. Mackey. If her ̂ 4pflghter is a *uce girl there are plenty < reigning monarcha in the, United who would marry her, portion or no portions aid be proud ol a mother- gennine American s ^•z:y ... -•?v wi •t-'.l b-'i "0ook>T county (Ga.) lhaA irtlkWs SS'he was crc ŝin ̂Fiiot river alofie in a small boat when he was sud&enly »t- tafked by a large bull alligator as he vros. about twenty feet froih the ahote. The cireature opened its huge mouthy gashed the water ifito a foam for a second "<or twoj then dashed at the bOatr Seized '•'tt between his jaws and pushed it far- | fteront in the stream. Jere says that s ( he struck the saurian over the head with ̂ paddle, but it' had. no effect what- ever, as the paddle'waa soon broken up mid he had nothing to fight with. Think- i ing of the fact that thesis creatures will hardly ever attack a white object in the water, he divested himself of his outer qlptMng, threw them close to the *ga- tor*s nose, plunged into the water and fja^am ashore, leaving the infuriated ĵ Onster the boat This was also soon poshed to the bank, badly torn by the . alligator, when the man poled his psdts out with a long pole, slipped them on and scooted for home, minus coat, vest aî d hat. lie says it was . ̂ ie closest .j&ayeheevy had in his lite. TI? "THB American Newspaper Directory, îoh will be issued next month by s; G^oî e P. Bowell k Co., of New York, * Wfli oontain tiie names of 10,611 period- writes us for information on the above subject, we have compiled the following information: Eng and Chang were born simultaneously, on the 15th day of April, 1811, and died at the age of sixty three years. They were connected together by a patent ooupler, which entered the tody of eatfh in the region of the vest- pocket, This connecting arrangement necessarily threw them a great deal in each other's society. When they were boys their lives were tendered more or less unhappy by their widely different tastes. Eng was very fond Of sour ap- tia youth, and when-at nig|tt he t bia abuoh witb a large stock of oolic on hand, Chang' had to lie awake and get the benefit. Later in life Ch*ng developed a strange long­ ing for a flowing bowl, while Eng waa a Go< d Templar. When Eng went to the lodge, the worthy outside guard would refnse to let Chang in, because he couldn't give the pass-word, and as Eng couldn't go in and leave Chang in the ante-room, he had to go home and wait till anotheir meeting. Eng was a Mason and Chang was a Knight of Pythias, and they used to give each other away sometimes, and have lots of fun. Eng was a Half-Breed and Chang was a Stal­ wart and that made it bad about attend­ ing caucuHses. Chang joined the Epis­ copal Church and believed in sprinkling, while Eng was a Baptist, and not only got immersed himself, but fixed it so that CUang had Ma sins • washed at the same time. Once in & while Chang would get' an invitation to a private party in a set to which Eng did not be­ long, and then they had to settle the question'by patting. Etruscan nosea on each other as to whether they should go OF reaaain ai IIOBUS. Chang died firat, and Eng died a few hours later as e mat­ ter of courtesy. Eng wak not prepared ̂ to di&ctti regret̂ JJiftMie waa not eon- «ttlteA*by Ohang befora thii important step waa taken, out he said it would save the expense of two funerals, and he wanted tfe do what was right. The lives of these two men were somewhat peculiar mmmj res;*#!*. There were many lit- tie namabpa annoyances to w îch each were Compelled to submit, and which Would not at fimt occur to the student. Fofr instance, Chiang had to get up and £o for the doctor in oompany with Eng whenever Eng's children had the croup; and whfeneverChang's wife thought there was & burglar in the woodshed, Eng had to^petiup in his night-shir ̂and go with 'Ws ' bhjthfcr in search of the villian. They could ride the festive velocipede, and when Chang got biliag drunk, Eng had to tlje jng with hits, asd stay there till the fine was paid. Among the Biaay blessings which eluater about us, and are showered down upon us through life, we are prone to los© Mght of. the fact that with all of our sorrows and disap­ pointments, we are not bora Siameae twins.--Laramie City Boomerang. ,4 - I Oh I Them ttolden 8lipp«n,M \ In Jodge Jameson's court when a comply French maiden took the stand to testify against a man who had stolen her watch it was noticed that the twelve sol- remn jurymen sat with downcast eyes throughout the whole time she was giv­ ing her testimony. Those twenty-tour windows cf the soul were all turned to­ ward the little platform on which the witness-chair stood where two small shapely feet, encased in .the tiniest of French slippers, saucily kicked out from beneath the folds of a very heavy silk skirt and knocked all idea of the testi­ mony out of the usfcH who sat in judg­ ment. 1 he judge looked severe and then pleased as he, too, eyed the pretty feet. The Stele's attorney addressed his question's to the little slippers and the counsel for the tlt-feaae tried to cross- examine them, but gave it up andaighed, "Too may go." The witness stepped down and the spell was broken, but re­ gretting the loss the jBoonael recalled her, and again the little feet kicked out, bringing smiles to ftli face*. Three time® were the pretty feet recalled and three times wus the prisoner at the * ten.--Chicago Inter-Ocean. deadly ous demand far eentiaaantal foasibi who want a txmaa'tariNHa(fr't'ind a paas from the ̂ pfetoBaat This paragraph probably puts the kiboah on about 7ft per cent* of tfcoae whohave written taa. a&fcr. A young ^ad rapUra-growing Terri­ tory m, of oohrae, larĵ tSr populated by men, but thcfjr aTa not a role million­ aires with a bttd oooBfau Moat of them are healftar and • Willi their mwital fac­ ulties. Toat is tha, Mfeon they do not care to import a JbKiiiaaif weak-minded gushers and tor '̂' Mtaia loose upon a thriving municipalify. One soft-«yed ImMtta ̂ 20 haa no doubt bean ignored for tnirtgr years, writes us a poetic epistle whiohoogll to melt a more obdurate heart than oats. It is written on six pages of foolscap in violet ink and blank verse. Every word has an orna­ mental toil on i t , and the t's are crossed with a delicate little htuf line that looks like a Saratoga wfcv* on a ball of butter. Her soul goes out to us in thankful­ ness in a way that baa created a ooolneaa in our family which will take yean to efface. The idea of cookingjprgp red dough­ nuts in hot lard, or wringing out heavy underclothing in.aoap attdaand wringing them oul in the back 1 yard on a oold day; does not seem to occur to her. There af&' Very few households here as yet that are able to keep their own private poet. WeArj to keep up with the onward ma^h of improvement as fast as possible, but ire are most of us still too gross'to give $p our meal and gorge ouraelf on a-stania of cold poem on the half-shell. The day may come when wa will be glad to sacrifice beefsteak for divine afflatus, but it will be,some little time before that period is ranched. The eri&p, dry air hate is such that hunger is the <mi£f atyte of yearn in Wyoming, andagood«Qok cangetfl25. per month, where bilions people would be bothered like sin to get a job at $5 per week. That is the reason we are writing theae terse and perha|Nilittftti)Bnt words. We want to discourage the immigration of a large majority of those who have written na on this subject. They are too fresh and too yearnfnl in their nature. We wanted to do the Territory some good and to encourage a class of women to come to this region who would know enough to construct a buttonhole ou an overcoat so that it wouldn't look like the optie of a eroea-eyad ho*. We wanted to throw out an invitatioa to womankind tooome here and locate but we did not know that such peopll as responded, classed themselves aa,women. We do not consider woman ai dfadge or a slave, aorbes tiie ftap£ of whoal neck the over- riioe of the tyrant, man, is planted. 1 One thousand times nsy! f . , W e look upon women, however, ; aa tiiefm in the great ritenggle of Bfe. Generally ah îs o» omMida^wf 0m strug- "g^a<»4>e »anl taAflattfaa aflmr, ... One thifigf how«vaK£w;iMfiwL There is not such a mad rasa at present tot blank -verse makers as there is for women of sound sense who can make a pie that will not taste like a stove lid veneered with cod-liver oil. --Laramie City Boom- ertmtfi < ' Beaalif - A Mexieaa 8atatatIon» the white mulea pace sedately down the roughly-paved streets the ladies keep a hand ready to make the customary sig» nal of greeting from the carriage windows; to their friends at the windows and bal­ conies of the street. It is an indescriba­ bly fascinating gesture, so swift and sub- 1 •tie, almost like a fleeting expression J across the face. It is made by a quick | . • flutter of the second finger, the hand i 2,* ̂ being raised, palm inward, to a with the eyes. How mnch its charm is enhanced by the beauty of those dark, Southern eyes it half conceals it would »oVa a very stolid observer to decide. It nnrmnd to me exclusively intimate. In Morelia, I believe, it ia kept for one's friends only, but in the capital it is the greeting at a distance between ac­ quaintances. I have awn nothmg pret­ tier in their social custom, except the way the ladies meet and lean their cheeka together, and pat each other sofdy on the back of the shoulder fbotc. v The Beaalifal. The instinct to seek to appear beauti­ ful is universal. Some of ns are obliged to content ourselves with approaching the beautiful oa^y ao far as to become pleasing. None need fall short of this. But whosoever can become beautiful may regard himself divinely called to be beautiful. Beauty and duty chime aa well in substanoe aa in sound The am­ bition to be beantiMis not only right- it is ennobling--it is obligatory. But beware of coasting mere persona! beauty the chief end of life. Mere physical beauty of person wa, recognize and ad­ mire, bnt supreme. Commanding beauty receivea its crown and halo from the radiant soul within. A cultured mind gives charm to the feoe, and a gentle dia- cilpmedand benignant heart shines win- ningly through featnrea which are not of classic mold. Beanty of person then ia BOj4*thiM may be cultivated. Henoe the aspiration to be beautiful ia not a vain onejitaN it do, kind nature wsndd not- have ia l̂snted it in our hearts. Î p notŝ Mk at random when I affirm that women with cultured minds and hearts exoel in beauty those who re- mMn i&nbrant and perverse. From the day whea a cdnrae of intellectual and spuittie! training'begins, you may de­ tect an iaaprovement in personal attrac­ tion. Hoar "vain, then, are rouges and dyes and othft cosmetic inventions! Beauty if not made of paint and powder; it *is the temple'jrtiioh health builds for Ifc pure, bright spirit; or, as St. Clement, of Alexandria.' says: "Beauty is the "roe" flower of* health."--Alexander -££. JR pooent of Frank fiSaiir H t&Ztiti'.M. the guerrBlik dtonld aome day capture Jeflferson City and the Gov­ ernor in il-- CMc<vo SH6«me. WHTIJR the Pond Liquor-Tax bill beat the Republicans in Cincinnati, Toledo and Cleveland, a combination cf trades- unionian, Bourbonbun and Greeubaok- iam defeoW thein 00 part of their ticket in Milwaukee, aad rain-water awamped them in Chicago. There ia nothing which delicate-minded Republicans tly from on election-day like a little rain. A delicate-minded, esthetic Republican, with an umbrella and a wfcterproofo7er- ooat and rubbers ever Maboota would no mora think of venturing out ia damp weather to vote than to walk into the toe*.--Chicago Tribune. IT doesn't speak well far the ultra- temperanice people cf Ohio, if it ia true, aa reported, that many of them took no active part at the reoent city eieotkma ia. that State, where the liquor folka joined the Democrats to puuah the Repub­ licans for having panaod a law taxing the whisky and beer traffic. The tem­ per ancie folka, by bringing a pressure to bear, pushed their bill through the Legislature, and then left their friends in the lurch at the polk. It waa shabby treatment, and the more so because, as the result ai their inactivity at the re­ cent eleotiona, Democrats have been elected to the city offioaa who are virtu­ ally pledged not to enforce the new tem­ perance laws. THB Bourbon prees of Missouri ia equirming at the identification of Jesae James and his robber gang with the Detoocratic j&rty of that State. "Brad- ley's Life of Frank and Jesse James," giving an account of the robbery of the Hot Springs stage-coach in 1874, says: "The leader of the highwaymen now stepped in front of the passengers. 'Are there any Confederate soldiers here?' he asked. Mr. Cramp was the only one who answered. Waiting a moment to see if there were others, he aaid, quietly, •I was one.' The robber eyed him a moment, and then rapidly asked him what was his regiment, who was his Colonel; where waa he in engagements, when did he leave the aervioe, and where did he five. The repliee ware aatiafao- tory, and he received bade hia property --a watch and about $50 in money---with the remark: * We don't want to rob Con­ federate soldiers. Northern men have driven us to outlawry, aad now we in­ tend to make them pay for ik"* THB Hon. Henry Watteraon, of the Louisville Oourier-Joumal, is in Waah- ington writing lettera to his paper. Speaking of the Democratic blunder of putting' the do-nothing, good-ioy-noth- mg alandereir ol Garfield at the head of their Ctoapugn Committee, Henri irritea: "AIBBT where ia th ̂ spirit of eomxawiwdrio gone thatmen ana grown m eateleaa to tlie warmth, ao critical at the virtues, of that great* big-hearted baby of a statesman? How eaayitis to duAort |jf> meaning, the motives of let- tors yiiak "WA" "Var f IV T don't -know *Boe»?y,' a#«9«aTu»ft, and pwhapa for that reason I dont like him. I think his appointment to the jbead of the Damooratio Oonneaaional OomsBiltee waa a folly closely bordering on an outrage, and characteristic of the idiots who represent the Democratic party, perennially, in Oangnsa. The beauty of it is that few of them survive from one Congress to another to tall the tide. Bnt this apart, the effort to foist Gen. Boaeorana' war record upon the Democratic party and to elevate him is consequence as a Democratic nomi­ nee for President--and over the proe- trato and degraded form of the dead Garfield--ia the most unchivaltoua and stupidest political maneuver I ever heard of. 1 remember very well when the Ohio Democrats nominated him for Governor and got for their paina an in­ sult. II anybody is to be token from fee Pacific ooaat(much as I deprecate the idea of admitting political possibilities Into the judiciary) I am for Judge Field, & great man ana a good man---not for Gen. Rosecrans, whom 1 associate and confound with Bragg aa & hero of loet opportunities, laoking the sympathies of civil life and identification with the in­ stincts of the people." IF there is one active AA£ prominent public man in the Democratic party, aays a contemporary, who ia entitled to the confidence and respect of the country that man is ex-Senator Thurman of Ohio. His judgment is warped by his adhe­ rence to the obsolete doctrine of State sovereignty, but his ability and integ­ rity are unquestioned. Perhaps it was his unexoeptionally high standing before the American people as associated with the Democratic party which induced the We jffMpfeitave hasepaM to baragaid. ed as aoreaatidn tohim ttmt hehssafve- fenad to visU'to tMsBnaaaanta of anr baml̂ ̂wrW «pfMd. Madke ilispinad fcl Ijiiwiu PMAI to «all out hit best fttiiil asJi Vr The Coyote's Carping €rf« * The coyote is more siiseeptibTe to musio than most other wild game of the West. He often listens io uis own mel­ ody by the hour, especially toward morning, when he greets the opening day with a soug of peculiarly weird con­ struction. If there can be anything more radically lonesome than the first two or three twitters of a coyote at dawn in the mountains, we do not know what itia. To awake about 4 o'cl9ck and hear a "~1&e Engltsk Language. A fact not gsnerally known, euqA perhaps ̂to « 4§ass of instructors who have jdven the subject thought, is that a jematkailiiB lintnency in the use of English can be attained without̂ a knowledge of even the elementary prin­ ciples of grammar »« taught in books. £3 1 Somfe of twr purest and best writers ! have nevar taken *he trouble to learn so mnch as thejpatc^of speech. One well- known writ%ipw> P»nty erf style and elegance ojF expression would grace the pages of ixty magazine in the country, never gavo a dajpa tuna to the atudy of grammar. Of oourae these are exceptional in- atancaa Jn whiA a native taste for com­ position and a habit of reeding standard authocs, bavo bad naA inflncnce ia iwridhMP nigrihaw Some people will neve* iSmtojritoweUwiih the berted -̂ tagee, WIMOO otbeca seem to fell into a good fans of enpaeaatoa aataraUy. The English language, for aewspaper purposee, is mow esmly maatered by a habit of daily observation and nwpection than by a Study of text books. Use new dictionary will be welcome, but American newspaper will never be bound by it, tiioogh it iriU contain 7,000 pages. St. Ixyuis Republican. MOBB water is admitted to the fdiere from the transpiration at a fooast than from an equal body of water. pianaginff men ot that party to betray him in the Cincinnati Convention, which, after so much wrangling, nominated Hancock lor President. The story of the intrigues against Thurman has re­ cently been told by a Oolumbus corre- npondent of the New Jork limes. Thurman was slaughtered in the bouse of his frieada. The people ot Ohio were for him. The Ohio State Convention in­ structed its delegation to the National Convention to support him, an3> the unit rule has never been disputed in the Democratic party. Popular sentiment in Ohio, party discipline, and every con­ sideration of good faith aad honor re- 3aired that Mr. Thurman should have ie united, hearty aud uncompromising support of the Ohio delegation. He counted upon it and hia Ohio constit­ uents counted upon it confidently. Some waiks before the Cincinnati Con­ vention met some of MR Thormaa'atrue ; friends advised him that intrigues, orig- ! mating in part in GramercyPark, where j Tilden livee, aad in p«t at Onya- <hoga, whieh is P*yners hom«, were organizing to bring divisuHi aad diasen- sios into tiie Ohio WjPtesorttetinn la the cwvention, Mr. TEimaaa woold not credit these reports. He bad too much faith in human nature aad too exalted an opinion of the obligation of friend­ ship to believe them. But they were true, us the result proved. Even before the the Cincinnati Convention assembled the Ohio delegation tietrayed the influ­ ences whieh had been at work upon it, and au angry altercation took place whiehdeeboyed its unity of purpose and rendered it impotent as a feotor in the nomination of rDemocratio candidate for Presid^nti Certain cf the Ohio pot- WhsatiM 8enstseMrr«e4 flathcTUi Inst., ttw BoQas sppropttatkm bQb irtsiah had bssa adtanoad to ii>ate «( SECEOD; J m> | ET^FAGILFT .̂ oTjmSw '̂ aawa, li«s wntowd to thl y*4y MW*|f tbs wont oatlawknown «a thauMOKyNBOI' thusa, and.whilsya Oet ii onShe that otSnt ICtsoa, save to the tact jhat he is a ba&r toat Wonuu% SUs. •OQH. •pp- of Mason: is thesan î of Oov. OrydkM, of Mts. Bob Ford, the yean* and nobis bsro woo has raoderod saeh vakifM* Mrrim to hiaooaatry." Tbii waa ralsd oat of order. Debate cans reviwonof the Oktelasl Oods look up the eti- ttn sssalon in tho Haass, |tes«. Whita, Groofc, Flotki, Kelly, Rttmiey, Horrlngton, Linegar aod Dorf«« making mora or ltM sxteaded r«natk» on the sobieot. Th« 8enate dkt aotUag at tts Mafton on th« 8th inst. beyotid the asoaod reading ot the House Legislative Appft̂ iristioii faiQ, and or- dsring Beuator Wbttiag's Gtaal bill io aUUrd 1 sadiag. In the Hoose, a motM>a offered by Mr. Durfeo providing for a postponwnonitof the ducutMion of thb Criminal Oods bill t6 Wodnesdsy, the 1Mb, was adopted after oea- aidmUi mogdng. Mr. BtratUn preasot- •d the nnoit of the Ooainuttee 00 Osaal and Etver ImprovemetU, wltkph vaa adopted, roeommsnding that 1,000 oopie« of the report of tha tab-oommittcc on the faasi- billty of oeding the Uhooia Miobigan Gania to the Oenwal (Joveruasaty <M reoomraonded by the Oovwnor, be printed. A reeotntioa asking the Qovecuor to famish to the Hoose all the petition*, r^qtieeta .and informatum to hispoanetiion reUteag to the asotertiy for fie- vuion of tbe Criminal Code was Offeied by nc. Chaffee, of Shelby. Mr; GoUiiu opposed the reeotatfonasaniî iitatkm tb|§ tm 0o14ntor lotion on tha table.- A eaU ot thasob revealed tbe absenoe of a qnonun, when a motion to ad* ]ourn was made anil tarried. When tbe Senate ewtveaod ou Monday, the 10th iast., there wete twenty aemhita present The Chaplain and 8soretary performed their fnnotions by rsapeottvely ottaciag prayer aad reading tbe journal, vhareaptm the Benate ad- jooraed anUl Toeeday nMmttsg. Inthe aonea, B!4 befors it was oaued to oidec, two ot tbe Sspresentativea hstd op tbe din^r of that wdy by engaging a fltas-hoU wiwrtle, and immediately UMnaftsr . tha membet̂ who loudly aptdaaded thoaida4>obieta, UMsnsd with proper bnmiiity totbe ptat̂ by lather Hala. Immediately alter gram Mr. Dy «art moved that the oonsideration cf' Chafee's resointKm be postponed, ahd, at ths nfcggestkm of Mr. Biil- Ings, Ossd tits time at Taeaday morning. The mama preVaUed. Mfc tftnonson offoied a bill, whidh went to &s OOmmittee on Canal and Biver ImproreBteut, to provide for the aberioo of the IBinais and ia*%m Canal to tbe United Stl(tea ' The Mft ii an exaot oopyof SMMlorWhitjpg'soaaalhULaiiaai bruie Senate eonmnMa The Senate latin î nropriatiou bOis wSkeread a eeooad tha% aad tha Hones ad}oamati Tlie <H»ly bmln«ri don® or atteeapted at the Senate sertion, on the llth, waf thj offtwngof the foliowuig hy fc'esmtor Lai pkire theJMIOB of the eame." Under the rales the fetplntion was laid over. Mr. Wood, of Kbox, get the floor on th6 opening of toe Hons* and «nlmitted a reaolUtion of cotidotauce with Mr. Petrie, of M«roer, in tbe death of hi* wife. The ruxolu- tion wag adopted by a standing vote. Tlie Chaffee reeolntiaiireqaesting information from the Governor in regard to the necessity ot re­ vising tbe Criminal Code camccnp sgsin on the pending motion to table* Olwiii. of Craw­ ford, asked thU the mattw be post{>oued nntil ohaffee shewed np on his return to tbe oty. After aome UtUe talk Collins, of Cock, withdrew hia iqotion to table, and the farther coiwidera- tumof the reaolntkm was accordingly post­ poned. Mr. Wright, of Da Page, anxiona to aaoertain whether them were enoogh membeia present to para the Senate anpro l̂atton Mila moTSdaeauof tbe House* The oall showed were hM^mme^^aftsr whieh an sdjoora. Mr. Whitin^s-OaaalMB was te spsM m- der in the Senate en the IMh inst. Amm&mm ynendnumts wwrs egarsd aod dtoeamei. It was.ihisUy decided to leeqaenrit the bill snd proposed amendments, with instructions to tab committee fo report it bask the followiag day. &theH0dss, thsspeoiat oidar waatheravis-of ths Criminal Code, sad the eoesttaB Was debated at eonsUemtle Ma speeoh in favof of iwttn, in which he gave the Statement of a noted criminal lawyer thai under the laws of this-8tate It was impossible to bring a criminal to jwttioe who bad ths money to obtain the services of eminent attor­ neys. He saEF M did not believe that a rich criminal who made a vigjorona defense had been sent to the penitentiary in Cook oonnty in the htst tWenty-«v« years. Judge Crook, of Sangamon, spoke in fsv** of taking away the powers of juries to pass, apon law questions, and ho was followed by Mr. Maaa (a law- ver), who, in a' hnsiorons apesch, de- pfored tho " wiokedness" at his profession. He favctted several amendments tothefcrimin*! laws, including ons giiring the State's Attor­ neys the power to saMod iodichnents where technical errors oocbr. without aetodtng tbem baok to the Grand Jury. Mr. Mitebell spoke in favor of refortaing the tew. Mr. Chaffee objected to the reforms sought to f? accom­ plished, and wanted the'laws to iwasni strong eaot̂ h to sbteld the innoeent men charged with <atme from" the proceedings in the Senate, « the 19th inst, were brief and nmntscestiî . Mr. 8n»j derland introdnoed the tire Apportionment bills passed by ths Senate last wihter, and they went to the archives of toe Apportionment Committee. The Canal Ml was reported! Ineii with several anmodmentvand orderedto atliird nadhtt.andtheSMiateadJoarhed. Tbe Hoose nsanSi d-co îo. of them«tter of revising the ecgntae* eodeb Mr. M»*ris, of Hardin, ŝ oke ndefafss of the present law. Speaker Thomw eaQad ma MHchsil to the chair, and/puke IU favor of revising the eoda He sakedif it was sot tros that erime was on the increase in tais State, and if it was not also trne that owtft uttd sue pomsbmeirt wasnot en tbe decrea»? If the oriminsl employed one of Ave or six criminal lawyers, was he not always saved from pnn fchawt? Hp"**--' Tbamas dwelt more particu­ larly upon the manner in whieh Juries an.-<*» and said this theory that a man shah bsttM by a jnry of his psecs tsssoce fnHy mr- riedoot in the murder txiata than in any other. for it is atoays.the effort ofthed fendmg law- M to . gat ^»en upoo the Jury who are Mr. Oowtm defense of the present iw% and patoted in tbe stnmKSSt language the sDeged wrons that wonid be inflicted tmon the peapls iftto PM>- esition to revise t&ecode wss adopted. Mr. Omsxa, of Saline, made an aigmaentativu •pe«!«rto show that those who were nowep » gevudon cf the laws dtt so oa tbe . that ths Jadgss of the tarn ' to indicate the dsfecH of the bwa, aad yet Mat fear ttey had voted .iJk es a wife agaiast an lani- atot te ths law, mm. had been Tun coining CMS jja mentonfoot. Tpx tailor knows hoir to a custoiner. "TOotH hi m f̂hty," is fiha'i. _ _ the«en&>dflntfa£ ' « iT .. .W OWtaar lies the head fhtt lM;'hcCa * hit attntitni'biB.' - >! • 1 »:«, »: • LuABHiiM by rote--tile Sum' ' •H; rotated out of anoffioc î., »» • A suaossicm:isseldem aiiialwl fre I forgwy, thou t̂ he Uteebyik HS -w*. V --Pttneh. S Paixcs BrauKK ia fond: el SOttD. Holhinlf jjt h» 1 J>wamam in lawauitf are 'the same 'aa lard ia rendered-- CHAMPAOHB ia known by I ̂ SN. the oUampŝ ne drinker m kn^wh bj phiz. • . T THB announcement m liSPf gtim arabic waa discovered ;!f age. * -I DANISH butter is the Iniantf Iailiiga4# importation. MMbw.we oan;-ĵ J4 ̂ pat" ELBVATKD ^railroads are owned ,Pt.9 +•<• n H > u o p o l i s t s , w h o w a n t t Q r i ^ e -- " - * heads of the lower olaaaes. . THB differeaioe between a . , boy oonB^na iatha taet that M dog flnda a aoent he doeaa'tafteud it tis« * • •aady.- :••'. ?.• > ,-f '• Qun," aaya Kmc™. ViamBeigy ̂ proyt̂ e common wte, IK * uŝ nl, with ful friend I f TXo, Ammmkgh, a who makes leaves. , torn it weee faint>i half wavaorcaa, meet hwn on WHBN into the hadds of friends don't set 6 and aawbndt, mf*m lir daty--Blot by along * ' /VfM. Scan doubts are oxpteaaed about, auooeaa of the artesian well now kediaGalveaton. 1N» iTtiiaiutrl,' more Uet intothe griundlorWttereaaM ̂ not help getting akngwaU. - ,• AirorHBB iUastration o< the value at advertinngt A gent!ama»; camB. „iyto, t the Qwremt oAce lato.hmt " * WhSh?w£hedbWe ' flfldih'L latot he fouhdthe do ̂Wss sitting Oa ttoa f. .. • = doontepw ." Is THBBB a letter here in envelope tor my wife?" ba Postmaster, whuethe «nea his eyesnuioe theoflfoe look Skia'*" forest Yea. aiir,M answeredt̂ h: master, as he naaded it' out... < ' Jn#» t ouaman tore ltopen at cMfe BI!HSÎ &»» aad.behoid I it waa tbe m. • • :. , ,|s- A* a bigb-apbpdl I eimliw aaked thoaon er bow many 'oWBttea .M'lS'j the boy.i . !cf thfe ulj Da. Houuu«> aaid "the . biasing that a young man poverty." Yea, Doctor, poverty great blessing. It keeps a j from going headlong to ruia, scee other sadly afflicted rkdi ynahigaMlllt: courted and flattered, driviag their .idog ̂> crtba, and faring aumptnousty every he goes in aad partsiea pf an ated lunoh, sad thaî pa hia fta has been aaved fcou saMia tor --Ne/m York • M rova of A* ' A naafbty boj wasssMCww Wttb meeejr focaeeel MM! he dw net ease 1 mean; ha did sot ; Foe on tba way, O He fell aortas* a » Of̂ Tlwmab His istiasr aeee, MsawfM I oouML bwt vdlt asl,..«(ft«aai Against dwaa kiMXBa{Mtmt«MH That 1% I aMaa,fhasfadtwe pahaP As A paaaeager tttfa alt thefltl iced waa* apwnasdwtig-'iJftnaiBrtab .̂na JMMQI ' iBBoOMnBTOp. the track ahe ̂ Baft The traia itoa stopped aall IftM and fireman, with a hi*it m*&Wk+*tkyt proceeded to the ̂ >ot to * ttDiod .tiii bin ihiiiil reached ,the poor »Uwr, a ̂waa . _ aittink np, drinking ottqf t liWiCiaP a smUe of jamoaf wliitial ihlittiisit wreathed Idaooutrtsnaaceaaiaa iahloM|| tiie bottle aad asked,; .ft*j&.,hliu$;fefe (hie) engrne w? t*K mis inhiaglory.-̂ flte*'# S-a. 1 . " » . . f r • • • - . ; « • A • Rldicalom Postaga Stamp Bata ̂ ̂ While merciless aWSd* *' has . been ,0 heaped upon tiie Qameboroagh*ittaM .•-f- talk beck, why dafla notfscme«haiH09% ,* * of that unpopular hakarise apd e^W* *•"•-: thoaeourrea little suteem adenuagj cuiine pates. Never wastheiS'ai looking head-oovering than thia!«aiMl postage stamp of a felt hat; wtdpfcuMMl neither one thing nor t'other;•» Thaifaan ( who mjB it is becoming *ho^4 re«WMto ber Ananias, and canvass hia circle for an honeet t̂ Hnion^--d|aftn% Transcript. •#i •' 1 '• »•••'•<» BOB Htnma was s tag, Imriy negro, | •' aad had long bean aceustoai«d ia Lully the raaideBtacC I\wa Ridgei, atta î eettlemdtatinMiaaoqri Hewaato Matilda Hendoraoui aod alia' trouseean, whiloiieither had ai _ , to boy one.. fhey went to mie store and^ ̂lor OMdit F. It . the merchant, eaaaefttad to trait for A pilr I wlifin j bat be would aot let theaa havea an the gronad that % was aot aa TSmhriaMdaat eriai aatti BoK bat Wright ay iaMaanabla.' oockad a rewBsyar and dawn . -.. would have tha eoraet er MoaaU •- thobfesd, %«t it waa hia own, meoahaattead ̂ atdwat. Oan of tba laiaat theoctM :i (In-- " J * - . . isff i' - - a % ,,»• ̂ 3 HI'. • *1^', • t* av '* *'r' ftSi'lnSR

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