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Sleep, my ehild I the shado fall; 0at darknes reigns o'er and blomn are lost to t te folded ans of nlght - Mhwill soon from loud-Lowers peep, all nature les asleep. Breathe thou softly I Rest is sweet tired hearts and aching foot; o dull care nor toll is thine Nor slun thou blessed chid of mine; Tranqull on thy soft couch rest WTI h dreName-i of Heaven in thy IGreast. Birds are sleepingr; close thine eyes; . Waken V:1th asoturre Greet the mornitng WItthy'smile, And sweet prattle without guile, Seents he sleepin in the flowers; Slumber ill thedaylight hours. Sleept Thy Father guards thy rest; Lay thy head upon His breast; Bater han these arms which hold thee, His 4ear love will firm enfold thee; Higher love than mine shall He Give, beloved one, to thee I Sleep I The waves have longbeen sleeping I Angels o'er thee watch are keeping; O'er us both the pale stars shine With a radianoe half aivine. Slumber, innocent and light, Fall rm Heaven on thee to-night. -Chambers Journal S A Light Diet for Hot Weather. " What shall we cook?" is the cry of the housekeeper (luring the heated terUL Cook no greasy food! Summer do - nauds a light diet, with a basis of sweet efune butter and light, wholesome bread. Commence a meal by slicing up some cucumbers into a doep dish and strew ing pounded tee on then, add a dish of Irambled eggs, some thin slices of boiled ham and another dish of berries, at salad of new beets and lettuce, and I here is a neal, litiht, satisfactorv and -asily digested. It can be varIed by boiled chicken and esealloped tomatoes tor salmon steaks with Saratoga pota toes and a strawberry shortcake for elesert. People who are fond of carrots -an prepare a good dish by boiling new carrots and potatoes together--the car rots need to cook a half hour before the Potatoes are added. Mash thenitogeth er with cream and butter. and eat with Inents. A meat and potato pie is a good sum aer dish. Chip sone sweet roast beef or ve al -mutton is too st rong-into a fine hash, mix it with cold gravy or make a gravy for it; Jill a tin pan half full; add some hot mashed )otatoes iooked for the 1ccasion, imaking a crust >f them to cover the pan to the to); set it :n the oven and bake half an hour, or Until tlwe potatoes are well browneJ and the meat. heated through. New a))les make a good sauce and tielicious boiled dumplings. Make a light rich bisctit dotigh; pnaro and corf! the atpl)les; cut out ronidi of dough an11d Nhape tiei abotit the apple to iaiko al tLverare thictkiss; tie each dunpling teparately i a square of cloti and d ropi Ihem inhto a pot of Ioiilig water which uust not stop boiling uintil t hey are 'cooked, which will 4in half an hour. Eat thiemi hot withbtter anid sugar. Avoid~ lieavy feedling oir (over-t:atinig in Jbot weathecr; drIink lemonadiZI~e lreelv an td I' possiblde eat a leim n wit hs sugar before~ fihe first meal. Use p)lenity of salt in 10ood: take salt bait b'g never bathe with in four hours aftvr eating a hearty I eal, and be scrupuilousldy caroful not I o check persp)irat ioni, and~ eat at regular initervals, amt1( without haste. A L.on (con papersi gives sonme good advice on this point: '"it is aL mistake to eat ijuick ly. Mastication performed in haste must beu imperfect, 'een withI the best of teeth, and due admixture of the aialivarv seere ion wvith the food cannot lake place. When a crude mass of in uidequately cru-hed muscular fiber, or undivided solid material of any descrip tion, is thrown into thie stomaceh, it acta is a mech~]anical irritant, anid sets up a ciondition in the mucous membrane 3:n ng of that organ which greatly im I edes, if it does not altoget her prevent the progress of digestion. When the ))ractiee of eating quickly and tilling the stomach with unprepared food is habitual, the digestive organ is rendiered incapaible of performing its proper functions. Either a much larger qjuantity of food than would be neces gary undi~er natural conditionls is re ciuired, or the system sun'ers from lack of iiourishment. Those animals which were intended to feed hurriedly were either gifted with the power of r'umina tion or providedl with gizzards. Man Is niot so furnished, and it is fauir to assume that he was initendedi to) eaut slowly." lletroit Post and Trilmn)e. -J A Cadaver Wanted. " Now, when you reach Macon you go and see Colonel Blank," they told ble at the Constitution office in Atlanta. 'The Colonel knows everybody for Sniles around, and he'll post you on ev erything." " Thanks." " But he's a pculiar man," continued 'Prady. "You've got to strike him just agt or he won't talk for shucks. He'sI btictly temperate, and yet you must -aea flask along andi ask him to drink. It's an old Southern custom; you know, a~nd while he won't touch a drop, he'll expect to be invited to. You can fillthe 'Bask with water, and he'll never know She difference." When I reached Macon I arranged for a call on the Colonel. I bought a pint tlask at a drugstore, and told the clerk to fill it with something good to soothe asore heel. I didn't ask him what it was, but a sniff or two convinced gie that .sweet oil and tar formed the greater portion. With this bottle in my pocket I entered the Colonel's office and told him who I was and what I wanted. " Yes, sir ; gla~dto seeyou-slt down," he replied, and as soon as he had sealed his letters ho turned and began: " So you want to know what we can raise here, do you. Well, my boy, you ean say everything-everything. We raise wheat, corn, oats, potatoes, yams and-" Just then he looked over to the water cooler and I put in with-. " Say, Colonel, have a drop of some thinggood put up by the best house " Thanks-that's just what I was banerngafter!" he rele,as he held oaut his hand for the fias. lemember, nranIreolflect wa e K eame of the bottle, but there is a whole 5 newspaper staff lai Atlanta who may look npon themselves as doomed men. The IAlonel took his quart daily, and It was a put-up job to get bold of my dead body for a new medical oollege at Sa 1 Vaanuah.-Detroit Free Press. -,Lives of witty men remind us 'tis slot the pun or silly chaff that leaves quotation marks behind us and causes all the world to laugh.-N. .Y. News. Liv9 of sman-s.ouled men remind us thtthey're prone to oritlcism, but the liabit does not blind us to their might~y aggs- ur Cotnet AIUB all the evidenc was in, a Gal ~A ~-fl~ -- qmn (Charl*tte L ands and theHaldas. The climate of the Queen Charlotte Islands is excesslvecly humid, and they are almost everywhere covered with magnificent coniferous trees. Mount ains 4,000 to 5,000 feet high rise In their oentral portion, and they are penetrated on all sides by dark deep tiords with rocky waWs. To the northeast, it is true, a wide stretch of low and nearly l evol couitry occurs, which may some day support a farmimg population; but at the present time its somber woods, filled with dense undergrowth, and barricaded with prostrate trunks in every stage of de cay, offer little to induce either Indian or white to penetrate them. T he liai das, therefore, though cultivating here and there along the shores emai pota to patches, are essentially fishermen. Few paths or trails traverse the inte rior of the-islands, and of these some formerly used when the population was greater are now abandoned. The halibut is found in great abun dance in the vicinity of the islands, and It is more particularly on this fish that the Haidas depend. Their villages are invariably situated along the shore, often on bleak, wave-lashied parts of the coast, but always in )roxinity to pro ductive halibut banks. Journeys are made in canoes alonr the coast. 'ho canoes are skillfullyiollowed from the great cedar-trees of the region, which, after being worked down to a certain small thickness, are steamed and s read by the insertion of cross-pieces till they are made to assume a most gracefil form, and show lines which woul satis fy the most fastidious ship-buiIder. i their larger canoes the IIaidas (o not hesitate to make long voyages on the open sea; and in former days, by their frequent descents on the coast of the mainland, and the facility with which they retreated again to t heir own islands, they rendered themselves more dread ed than any tribe from Vancouver to Sitka. In their mode of life, and the ingenu ity and skill they display in their man ufacture of canoes ndl other artinles, the Haidas do not dif1er e.ssentially from the other tribes inhabiting the northern part of the coast of British Coliunbia and Southern Alaska. In the Queen Charlotte Islands. however, the peculiar style of architectture and art, elsewhere among the India)s of the west coast more or les s prominently exhibitel appears to attain its greatest develop ment. WNhether this may show that to the Iaidas or their anewestors the in troduction of tiis is (dufe. or indicnto merelv that. with (he grea'er isolatioI of these people, I ilc onl I ut iIcreaset niasure of security, the part ienlar ideas of the Indian m;14 were able to body tleinselv es forth uore fipi A we ImIV never know. ''he situa. t n f t l'e islands, and the comp~laratis e infre quency with which they have been' vi-. Ited for many yeairs, ha:Lve at h-avt tenii' ed to preserve int act nmiv feaituisres which h ave alreadly vaniishied from the Customs and umnufacturiies of mioot other tribes. As before stazted t he perm1ianenit vil lages of the Ilaidas are invariably situ ated at the seashore. They 'consist generally of a single long ro( w of hiouseis, with but, a narrow grassy border be tweeni it rnd the beach, on which tlhe canoes of the tribe (for each village constitutes a chlieftainley) are drawn u"'. In it-ont of each house stand(s a symbilol Ical carved post, while other 'earved posts, s~itted irregularly, and ditl'erinr somewhat in form fr'om those proper to the houses, arc generally memiioriah,~ to the dead. Such a village. seen from a little distance of1', the houses andi posts gray with the weather. res5"mlesl a strip of half burned forest wvith dlead " rampikes." T1hie little cloud of smoke from the various fires may, howvever, serve to indicate its true character. George M. Dawson, in H~arpe'r's Magqa wine. Gas andI Electric Lights. There Is no need to jumnp to the ('on elusion, as so many people (lid wvhen the reports of Mr. Edison's inventions first came from America, that gas is a thing of the past and that eectri('ity has already won the battle. No doubt eletrioity is gaining upJon1 its riv!al, but that all electric lights are better than all gas-lights is a proposition that is easily disproved by anyon e who takes a walk at night down H olborn and1( across the viaduct. T1he city authori ties, who, whatever their faults, are readly enough to make experiments for the public service, are trying the Edison incandescent burners on the viaduct and the Siemens improved gas in Holborn. We do not kno w anytning of the relative cost of the two systems, but as far as the light is concerned there is simply no com parison. The gas triumphs all along the line. There are other reasons whi1ch should make pru dont people hesitate before inve..ting in any of the multitudinous electrical com panies wihh which the market is n:,w being flooded--for examplde, there is the question of patents, and the extreme dif flculty of deciding whether one system is not an infringment of another, Tlhere is, again, the question, which only time can decide, of which system or systems are really the best. Still, time will (de cide these points, and though many an unhappy investor may stuffer, the putb lie will benefit, For there are no two opinions about the desirability of finding some substitute for tbs9 foul gas wvhichi we are at present condemned to burni in our houses and buildings. It may be that under the spiur of competit iou~ the chemical advisers of the gas companiiies will discover' some way of mauking~ ihe gas they supply less trying toa the eve andl brain, less ruinous to our hookis, our ceilings, our wvalI-papers, nn id what - ever else comes in c'ontact with its furmes. Tfill that is (10ne, or till elec tricity has come in to help us, many of us have returned to the cand1t lei( andoil lamps of our ancestors in sheer despair. At present, too, an evening in a theatter or a concert-room is an ovening of pen~ ance; for in all the London theaters but two or three there is no adequate ven tilation, so that the combinatien of -gas lamps and crowds make the atmos phere ligplerable. We can not hope that managers anzd architects will ever master the theory of ventilation, bnt we may hope for an alleviation of our suf fering when the electric light is general lyadopted. The one London theater which at present possesses it is a strikir, and welcome exception to the gencraE rule which demands that a p~lace of amusement should be like the (Grotto del Cane at Na plea, or like the Charmiel tunnel when Dr. Slemen's proposed scheme of carbonic acid is In- opera tion-a ple'oe where neither man nor animal oma breathe.--London Times --.A man out West bought a bedstead the wood of which was so gree ha 2 Raisag a Colt. ' koot ii regarded as an Incumbrance, beause he is useless until he arrives at a suitable age for work; but it reall costs very little, compared with h value, to raise a colt. When the period arrives at which the colt can do servtoo, the balance sheet will show in his favor,' for young horses always command good prices If they are sound and well bro en. One of the difliculties in the way is the incumbrance placed on the dam, which interferes with her us3efulness on the farm, especially if the colt is foaled during the early part of the spring. Some farmers have their colts foaled In the fall; but this is open to' two objec tions. In the first place, spring is the natural time, for then the grass Is be ginning to grow, and Nature seems to ave provided that most animals should bring forth their young in a season be yond the reach of severe cold and with sufficient time to grow and be prepared for the following winter. A gain, when a colt is foaled in the fall,lhe must pass through a period of several months' confinement in the sta ble, without exercise, or else be more or less chilled with cold from time to time. Should this happen, the effect of any bad treatment will be afterward mani fested and no amount of attention can again elevate the colt to that degree of hardiness and soundness of body that naturally belongs to a spring colt. Be sides, a colt foaled in the spring will outgrow one foaled in the fall. An ob jection to spring colts may be partially overcome by plowing in the fall, or keeping the brood mares for very light work, with the colts-at liberty to accom pany them always. A colt needs but very little feeding if the pasture is good and there is water running through it. Ile needs then only a small feed of oats at night, no corn; and, if he is given hay, it is not neces sary to give iiim a full ration. What ho will consume from the barn will not be one-third his value when lie is three years old, and if lie is well-bred the gain is greater. When a farmer raises his horses, he knows their disposition, constitution, and capacity. It is the proper way to get good, sound, serviceable horie. on the farm. It should not be overlooked that a colt must be tenderly treated from birth and must be fondled and handled as much as possible. Ile should never hear a harsh word, but should he taught to have confidence in everybody he sees or knows. 'This is an easy matter if his training begins from the time he is a day old. lie can be thus gradually broken without d illculty and will never be trouble soiiC. No such thing as a whip shoul be allowed in a stable that contails a colt. Colts, shiuld not be worked until three years old, and then lightly at first., as they do Inot fully miatutre until they are six years ol, and with some11 breeds' of ho)rses even later. Mlares withI foals at their side should be fed on the richest anid most nourishiingr food .-Pihludlhia 'lh manufacture of sugar from sorghumin ha4 rece'nly received fresh imipetus, owing to the' great number of ex perimenOIts which have beeni mi:it e - eens by which "ood sug~ar could be Iguaranteedl. \Withini the pa4t year there have been at. least four scienittie gentlemen enigagedl in perfeeling ma chinery nnd testing vari ous ways of extracting the juice of the cane ini such a manner as to remove all subI)-tances which have pre'vented Nort hern sorgrhium-growvers from'i being Mlu(t*Pces ful mn years p~ast. Tiwo proc(esses haive been patented, and it is now asserted that a first-class article of merchantable sugar can be made from sorghtin. A practical illustration of the fact wvill be aflordled undoubted(1ly during the pres ent year, and if the objectionable mat ter can be separated from the juice while in course of manufacture, the 'growth of sorghum and thle manufact ure of sugar will eventually become a great industry. Upland clay or sandy soil is better adapted to cane culture than loamy or bot tonm lands. On lowv lands the enne is more prolific, but the uplands muake up in excellence of quality wvhat they lose in quantity. There is nothing dlif ficult in growving cane. Anybody who can successfully grow Indliani corn (can growv sorghum cane, and with impr'oved methods andl machinery the profit on cane growing will be much greater than on cor'n. The cos't of ra'sing an acre of corni Is not far' from eight dol lars, andI as a queist!on of fact the fod (der for ensilage putrp)oe is nmore valu able than ani equal quantity of corn fodder. Small farmer's will raise Caine and at tempt to make their own suga r, biut in this they wvill find no profit. it cannot be long before large centr'al mills are built, where the growers can get their caino gro und, and when these mills are once successfully startecd the adlvocates of sor'ghumn culture look for great re sults.-Un/icago Tribune. Tlhe Woman nh~o (Giggkei. ItI is a sin'~gulari faet 1tt som'te peoplo1 finid it very dlitllinit to be. seriouiS and sol''min in ehtwrcleo and at funirals, andi' at ot hter plhwes on1t occ:si(n,i5 wheni pro lutrvt dliejuns a subdutedi e'xpress..ionI (f counte. Mrshii-v . il Stephe a n lli "ni' ..e Whnve h atnd unr he gts uia siglingtu lit,:nit' brne d-is. hi':.! i. IIin t ln ie , n e,-o111hmaited i,~v he r hshm eti, (' e!,e l i dtphn. printI ie iutrTed i- ic'lafor, has in - o. gP Vt unls'hoFnkhne.h h was.ii ehard litn out. of torin'gii he. fr he tsawy FOme'. hin.. toL'. ecir? ihr r'uibilitis.~ it~' h t :tritt i For av'tlens se, whlirmenrawai unti lethe funera-loer before, you h.. gpies (ur ineasl0 gigglintr. iiaiv " ta lhtik ofili smthing tdoelu STehinki '1 hou mine wo Goti venue toert ref-e to lyoruo that ofe the1 nt petn. Tour bonnet trine wan tia fortially go nar ithn etitrnwhlewearaay He whisl.ered in her ear: "'l he milliner on Austin avenue tohl me to tell you that she could not get your bonnet trimmed in time for you to "La Narseilaise." The story of this grand composition, the national hymn of France, posse3ses thrilling interest. To be brief, It was at Strasbourg, In the last week of April, 1792, that, news of the Austrian declara tion of war having been received, the Mayor, M. Frederick de Dietrich, In vited one of the numerous guests at his table, Rouget de l'Isle, an officer of en gineers, aged thirty-two, to compose a war song for the soldiers about to set out to meet the enemy. The words and music were written during the night, and the song was given to an enthusi astic audience next day by M. Dietrich's niece. The piece was given to band masters of the several regiments in gar rison, and performed in public Sunday, April 29, at the parade on the Place d'Armees. The words and music were printed immediately on a half-sheet guarto by Th. do Dannebach, printer at Strasbourg-a publication which availed Rouget de l'Isle when subsequently his claim of authorship was contested. The song was popular; by the 29th of June it had appeared in the Journal des De partments Meridionaux. It spread to Montpellier, and then to Marseilles, where a copy of the "Chant do guerre do l'armee du Rhin"-to give it its original title-was given to each of the famous band of Marseilles, "who knew how to die." They brought the song to Paris July 30, 1792, where it took the name it has ever since retained. In his book, published in 1796, Rouget do l'Isle calls it "Le chant des combats, vulgvarement 'l'hymne des Marseilles, " and'dedicates it "to the manes of Syl vain Bailey, first Mayor of Paris." The or ginal version was addressed to Mar shal Luckner, and a copy was sent to Gretry at Paris, as the musician records in his "Memoirs.'' It was a particular ly unlucky son-, for, apart from the author's own troubles, his mother died of grief, attributing the horrors of the Reign of Terror to her son's verse, and Mayor Deitrich and Marshal Luckner were guillotined. The "Marseillaise" was first identi fied with the events of the 10th of Au gust; at the feast in imitation of those ordere(d by Lycurgus, October 14, 1792, the seventh stanza was sung by a Cho rus of children. This additional verse was long attributed to Marie-Joseph Chenier, but in 1848 a poet, Louis (lu Bois, put in his claim to the author ship-a claim that long received, but was utterly unfounded. Tho seventh verse was written by a young priest, Antoine Pe -sonneaux, professor of rhetoric at the College of Vienne (Isere).. Vienne was celebrating the feasL of the federation, .July 1.1, 1792; the M ar-eil lais was there on their menmoable mar'h to IP~ri ,, andlt the Profe.-*or wrote the verse fo his puils, who sang~ it with immense effect as a farewell to th'e Marseillais next miorni ng. Lucky for Pecssonnfeaux~ th-9 he wrote it, fo r some months after he was hauled before the revolitionarv tribunal at Lyons, wvhere trials lasted but a minute or so and~ sentence was pronounced in silence. Pesson neaux 's pa:triotismf was adlmitt4'4 but he was a priest. "Who are y'ou P" asked the ,JudIge. "Thle AbbeC Pesonl nea~ux, author of the, last verse of 'La Alarseillaise.'" T''he ,Judre laid his open hand upon the black cloth,gualrds, jailers and citizens mad~e way respect fully, andI t he abbe passedl out, free to go where he would, lHe died in a liitt parish in Duierphiny, Mlarch 9, 13. St. Louis Globc-emKocrat. Rescued from the Grave. "'It sounds like a go~od deal to say, b1a I once knew a man who dtied andl was buried on the overland trail to California, and afterward made his ap pearance in the placer rpinies at Prickly Pear City--and it wasn't his ghos~t either, but himself in the flesh.'" This was the rep)ly wvhich a well-known resi dent of Helena, Montana, made to a reporter who was applying the reminis conce extractor. "In the spring .of '49," continued the citizen, "when the California gold ex citement was at its height, in company with a large party I crossed the plains. A fter getting well under way the cholera broke out among us and several died. Among other dleaths was that of a man named W. H. Clark, of Henry Conunty Alissouri. We buried him near the point where the old Santa Fe trail crossed the Arkansas River. WVe had no coffin, b~ut wrapped him in his blankets, and, inclosing him in a covering or bark stripped fro~m the cottonwood trees, we planted him about seven feet deep in the sand, and piled logs on the grave to keep the wvolves from dtigging him up. 'Ihe naxt morning we moved on. "I remained1 in California until '67, and wvas then attractedl to Montana, by th'e gold excitement. 'In 1868, while'in the diggings at what is known as Mon tana City, I was startled' at meeting Clark, whom, with my own .syes, I had seen buried on the Arkansas River nineteen years before. 'The recognition was mutual, and on my expressing my surprise he related to me that after our own part~y had buried nim andl pLm ceeeed on towardl California a party of Indians came along, and, seelng his newv-made grave, (lug him up for the sake of his blanket and clothing. As he showed signs of life they applied restoratives, andl the result was that he was brought baick to life and huelth. 1Ice lived among thle Indians for years, and! afterward came to Montana. At he time I muet him lie was working for Jerry Emlbry. Tnere is absolte(ly no doubt1$ as to Clark's ident ity, andl he is now.. li ving~ ni Priescott t, Arizona, I h~e-[ hieve."'---lie/cna~ h'~ )l&1-uden. She tndie, 1ood. A woman withI a miarX-1 basket, on her armn and a big h omilnet of flowers in her hand, w.~as wvaiting at the ferry dock when a man of leasant address alpproachedI her andui said: " iadamu, t hat is a very fine nose "Yes. sir." "I thiink it is the finest one I ever saw, aind 1 have been in twventy-seven "Yes, sir'." 'l'There is the pansy hiding itself be hind the rose. According to the lan guage of lIowers, th 1 CPan ov standcs for - Darintg, I (canunot Iive wit hout y ou.' li kewise observe the rosebuol. Th'le langu age of :bn r'osebIud is: ' l'mn look mgw ior a husband.~ Mladam, (10 you unde(rstand~ thle lang~uag~e of flowers?"' "What. is thle language of that tuflip?' 'lThe tulip says, sir, that if you dlon'J stump along with your brazen impu (lde I'!l have you walked into the cooler!'" was her firm reply. l10 Stui ped. -Dctroit Free 1'rc&~. -A man smashed every one of the large plate glass windows of the London office of the Dublin Freets's tJournal some nights ago because, as he said, they had no right to write about En glishmen. -Venice and Amsterdam are the cities of bridges. The first has 450, the last 1800. London has 15. Vienna 20, and Berlin will soon have 50. Altogether the most beautiful and striking bridge In Europe is that over the Moldau at Prague. -It Is found that the mind of Under Secretary Burke's sister, who lived with him, has given way. She has not shed a tear, and sits at the window, exclaim ing at every footfall, "He is coming." It is impossible to divert her thoughts from him. -They pulled down a chimney at the Royal Mint, In Berlin, the other dayp and it occurred to the architect that it might be worth while to analyze the soot still adhering to the inner brnks. The result was that they found four pounds of pure gold, worth a thousand dollars. -Mr. Dijoud, who had previously been convicted eighteen times, and spent thirty-five years in prison, lately set fire to Valence Cathedral, but, the fire being quickly discovered, only $7,000 of damage was done. Ile said he was tired of prisons in France, and wished to end his days in New Caledo nia-twenty years' penal servitude. -The recent solar eclipse calls to mind an incident of Francois Arago, who gained among his simple country neighbors an almost uncanny reputa. tion by his accurate prediction of a total eclipse. Not long afterward he was a candidate for election to the National Assembly, and was elected by an al most unanimous vote of his constituents. The wealth and government influence of the rival candidate created'noimpres sion upon the voters. "No, no," they cried; " we must vote for Arago, for, if we don't, he may get mad and hurl an other eclipse at usI" -The newest fashion in Paris, that of wearing black underclothing, has be coI the furor among t'ho women of the highest aristocracy. The undergar ments, like those of the Eastern odal isques, are composed usually of silk, gcnerally of what is called foulard des Indos. From head to foot the Parisian lady appears, when divested of the outer robe, as just emerging from an ink bath -the stockings of bltck silk, the slip peraf black velvet, the corsets of black satin, and adorned with black lace, and the peltticoats of black surah, filled around tWe bottom with a stiff mousse of black illusion or net. -T'Ihe following clause wvas found in the will of a Yorkshire rector: "Seeing that my daughter Anne has niot availeL herself of my adlvice touching the ob jectionable practice of going a~bout with her arms bare up to the elbows, my wvill is that, should she continue at my death in this violation of the modesty of her sex, all the goods, chattels, money, lam1i-, and all other things that I have devised to her for the maintenance of her future life shall pa~ss to the eldest son of my sister Caroline. Shouild any one, take exception to this as being too severe, Janswer that licenjse in thie dress3 of a roan is a mark of a depraved mit ____ p-One of the neatest bits of tit for tat ~hat we have heard for many a day oe curedon heSouthern Pacifictrith ot her morning. A certain lawvyer of tis city, well Ianowni for his p)owers of re partee, had been down to Salina to try a case. Returning to town the conduct or, one of the new swaggering set im ported from the East, wvas very impe~r tinent in his manner because the lawyer was rather tardy in producing his ticket when called for to be punched for about the twentieth time. Somewhat rutied, the lawyer remarked to a friend next to him, "Thue Southern Pacific shall never see a cent of my money after this." "Going to foot it up and down from now on, eh P" sneered the conductor. "Oh, no," replied the lawyer, quietly ; "in steadl of buying my ticket at the oflme I shall pay my fare to you."-San Fran cer o New's Lctter. Mu. W. A. FORnES, Greenfield, Mass., was cured by St. Jacobs Oil of rheuma tism-Cincinnati Christian Standard. --The "P'rince.as of WVales.". says Lon dIon T', "never l(oked more 'chaem ing than she did at the trooping of the colors. I he was accomnpanied, ats uisuali, by her threce little daLughlters. Th'le Princess appe)ars to have solved t he probllem of eternal Youth. She looks very little older thian she did as a b~ride nineteen years ago. 11er bonnet was al.rfiost covered with gale-green Tau Toledo (0.) Bee says : Col. 3. Dorse Alexander, editor Barnesville (Ga.) News, has been cured of rhenma tism, by the use of St Jacobs Oil. -A man who plunged a knife into the leg and~ arm of his antagonist yesterday in thias city was fined $3 and costs. How much would it have been for using a meat ax, 'Squire ?-Pittslnurghi Tele YOUNo and middle-aged meu suff'ering frenux nervous debility, premiature old age, loss of mem~nory, and kindred syumptomis, should1( send~ three snips for P'art VII of >amph dilets issued by W'orld's Dispenisary 1a ledical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. Unsed (on th dI (irectory canvass the DI)Eennes of Won.ess. Large treatise for three~ stamps. giving jmi':ns5of succeessfulselfi -t reat ment . Adbiress Wonto's D)Ii'PENSARY M iEnicAL AsSi CIATION, iui1lo, IN. Y - ir. L. P'. Stone, a Ilwyer of Pitts recenty byV I '(at ing canned 0( corniedI-beef hash. lit- ought to ha ive kno ( wn het-ter thani to tackl.- it. The ordtinary kind is dIange rous ('uoughi.---Boston P'ost. EpEiepy (Fits) wuccessfully treated. Pami ihlet of part ic uilars onle stamip, address u oniuo' I' )usuz sAnLY MV.DIAi, AssocuA'rox, BuifhIlo, N. Y. "Am I hurtinug you badl ' ~.0 se :i lton~ den'Iti't of a lady1 whose teeth hi o':- lixing;J, and wvho was (emfit ingr hoi ~ble groan us. "Ohli, nlot in th least bimi I love to groan,"' was the reply. - B ,sYi ut (Glbe. "MosS Em,-ay." WILMIINGTON, N. C., Feb. 4, 1881. H. Hi. WARNER & Co.:. S'r8-1 most hear tily recommiendi vour Safe Kidney anid lAYer cure for kid nev and 1iv~r di~n~"a -Dr. McClellan, the famous rifle-shot, gave an old colored man the other day a dollar to hold a target in the bhape of the ashes at the end of a freshly-lighted cigar. The darkey took the do] [ur in his hand and the cigar in his month. McClellan walked back, raised the ritde and shot the ashes from the end. The exploit was repeated successfully, but the old man objected to the third at tempt, saying: "De third time am eder lucky or it am onlucky."-1I. YI. 7rib tte. Titz ladies who sometime since were unanie to go out, having taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, are quite recoverod, and have gone on their way rejoicing. Josu BrrLLmrs says that "A pood doctor is a gentleman to whom we may pay $3 a visit for advising us to eat less and exercise more." Kidney Disease. Pain, Irritation, Retention, Incontinence, Deposits, Gravel, etc. oured by " Buchupaiba." *1. Send for pamphlet to E. L. WaILr, Jersey City, N. J. AN exchange franticall7 asks: " Are blacksmiths who make a livin by forg. mng, or carpenters who do a lIttlo coun terfitting, any worse than men who sell iron and steel for a living ?" Fos dyspepsia, Indigestion depression of evirits and general debility, In their various forms ; also as a preventative against fever and ague and other intermittent fevers, the "Ferro Phosphorated Elixir of Calisay," made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York, and sold by all Druggiss, in the beat tonio; and for patient. recovering from fever or other sickness, it has no equal. Tl ADE MAR GERAN RECO RHEUMATISM, Neur'algia, Sciatiha, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Goat, Quinsy, Sore Throat,S$wel. ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all|other Pains and Aches. rNo Preparation on earth equals Sr JMcx er n. IRemedy. A trial entails bu~t the comparatively trilling outlay of 50O (ents. andl~ every one0 snffering wit i p ain can havo cheap and positivo proof of It. lDirections in Eleven Languages. 1 7 SOLD BY ALL DRUGGIST8 AND uz/ALERS IN MEDICINE, A. VOGELER & Co., Ba~more, Mld., 7. 8. A. f.LEBRATEDS Hostetter's stomach Bitters ezittpates dyspepsia with greater certainty and promptitude than any known rem edy, and is a most genial invigorantk appetir~er and aid to secretion. These are not empty assertilons, as thousands ef our countrymen and women Whis have experienced its effects are aware, but are back ed up by irrefr agable proofs. The Bitters also give a healthy stimulous to the. urinary organs. For sale by all Druiggista and Dealers 'erally. ic BIIR ID E & Co.. Atlantq, Ga., wholestle crockery andi glass ware, will uphold their well established rep utation by selling reliable goods and ei ving to merchants as low prices as can be hid in ainy market. General agents in the United State4 for Lambjeth's Fly Fan. Owner.s of the Gate City Stone Filter. .JONERHORIO, GA., .July 28, 1M82. MI~ss. MCBarnDE & Co.-Gents: I h sve been using~ the CTherry Fruit Evaporator bought of you and after giving it a thorough test, find that the Number Two will dry ten bushels of green peaches per day of t welve houra. ft dries the pesehes nice and( biright and will not h)uvu the fruit. VeryIRespectlully, W. W. WA R!. A'ITENTrfON CIN OWNERM. Scota's Impro'vets Horse-rower. The work of a-ix horses done by three. Can be adjuste-i hy any gin owner In five hours at a cost of $1.50 for nails and lumber. I ositively indisp~ensible to every gin owner. Model and full instructions, with individual right, sent per express prepaid on receipt of price, $10. Send for circulIars. Address CALHOUN & WALKER, Holly 8prings. M iss BE AUTIFUL FEET pn air o our Lad FineFashionable Best Frenc iid T miled to Fan Kiad - l lliiDU T dress upon thel reIt o ,Wnoesale Bot & Shoe INGullS C~3~ .Pers, Louln-ll,y twenyfv ear i med ie have ner fon f,-.-N TOi o. Ima n nrsefervust anyrs povertehed conditioui of the blood, this eeriem rew~ Vases that have bafited some of our incA eminent ph ahI~ vsm~dv. I DresdIribe it in preference to any lr( ThOnly Watch Factory IN THE SOUTH. Patronise a Hom Industry. Bave the md fl. 4 and buy direct fom Send for fllustrat Pxoe List, describ Wg now Improve FACTORY, Ment. 84 whitebaSt, C0 t ATLANTA, Gas SOUTHERN MEDICAL COLLEGE, ATLLIITA, GA. Regula Winter Term begi"s ist week In October, and continues five ifMh". E00PfTAJlaad OLMCAL ADVATAG9 582 CUL. For Circulars or any information, address D. WE. PERIM NISOL80, P. O. Boz e..:De_ _ LANE & BODLEY C(, AWARDED GOLD MEDAL BY THE ATLANTA COTTONY kXrOSITIOg, 011 THEIRl Steam Engine and Saw Mill Nxhibited at Atlanta in 1881. Manufaxourers of 18team Engines, Boilers, Eaw Mill., Gang Edgers. Lath Machines, loit and oke Machinery, 81afting. Ianpers, Pul leys oupl'g, Gearing. Orist and F .our MilU Sed tor Special Circular of our No. 1 Plantrtios Saw Mill, 'whick wo sell for $200. Fpecial attention given to Plantation Ra chinery. Addess.trateL circularu Free. LANE & BODLEY CO., Jyohn & Water ss.. Cincinnati. tA Ild cat.e.a Wae,'l #5. iee,e.n ii a~ --, ~ ~PIigu e if pri..-. .-. .M. - it:enI ... l':' V -r, . - AND NOt NY~n WEAR OU'V. t~chmakere. Byuril. 25cta. CIrculars J. B BIRC d Co. a deS. . 5A M NTH-f N 1SWANTrE--00 beas W)Rscl ngrri ai toworid $225Addressl day 3reams.I. i.-rott. mtr.k AGENTS WANTED FOR THE HISTORY 1E U. So BY ALEXANDER H. STEPHENSs It contains nearly 300 fine portrait- and engrin ofii,'( battltes an d other hbteicaI seemi*, aniu io he st contLi plete an-1! vau able hi.stui y e-veor 1iub lihed . It is ,ohl by stil.cript inn onily, anti A gentis o ewimted in every "munt y. Sen~d for circlaria and ext a ten ei to Agenfts. Adttihes, NayIO1cAr 'lni ;ri2oro., At :kiti,Ga.i STRONG'S PECTORAL PILLS A SURE REMEDY FOD COLDS AND RHEUMATISIW. Ensure healtby appete , good digestion, regutlarity of sont hing and bractnt he nervous ayat ein anit giving vigor and health to everv y dhe of the bo<!y. .//cId by I>ruggists. For Parnphlets addres. P. 0. Box 650l, N. Y. ( ty. Paru.aos' Pasrentive , l maka e Rc tO:mK, and wil!! enrniltely chne the blood ini the -iitire Syi,t-m in thiru- tooths.. Any person who ws sk onei, pill eeach nh~ht 1rot 1 to 12 weeks may be r eil to soiii healt( b , 1 if such a tilingi he posible. bo' re-i:y whe re er? ret0 by mai. f: (Ei le'or stamps. I. .* J.s % aa -w> & 4 0 . Iso.sm, Mase.. MAKE HENS L AY. Am Enlish. Veteriaary 8nrgeon and Chemist, no~ travellagla this eonatry, says that moos of the Horse an~ Cate oerrs meld hre are wrthless trs. He sayl and itwmnesel valuable. Nothing on earth wil tSoh haslay lk. *hridazi't Condition Powders. Dose, weae ent by i br alete stamp.. I. Sd JONIO & e e A, suion, Mass., fermerly Bangor, Me. MOORES BUSINESS UNIVERSITY, Atlanta Gn. Oine of the beet practtie:il ischools 113 the country. Cir culairs maniled FRtE.. P I U O RyE.M.Woolley, Atlanta, 4,. Iteliall evolence given~ an43( referencesh tired H ABUT iaiit ani.id pymyscians C U R E .i un tiii '".Cer. x' Get to Clubs for our cEIn. 11Bl I:D T V.Ai., and seriare a beatiti. "xc;, Roce or Gold Bad Tua Set," of ttaepe bautfuleam .a way ('iI.AI TiF.A!' tha a re being t 1tleed-tiuey are itngeros. in detrIn ental to , lialilisii w p ien. Dena only with reliable The Great Amerana Tea Co., Imlporte'fs, '. 0. Box 519. 31 * 55 V1:-.EY 6T., New York. E NCIlN ES ~ T RU TH IS,"~r. Fe. AN . Ai'1.oi Fit Class Bohoolcefor oung adios. I 'egan t e ud r e. iethy oa tinC. Ael prtiuell Soelecstied Lo ibrry Larg tSlepn Addreuss Ar h MUdCit ry ppliedTtah'. ll Efeen Prce very Cassnabl fo~radoungLtes.necaa tltiont C' roud 2 .a res).o opensl M aton, p. h AWtn~tus M. 1 SMce LTH,h. Dy, M.t *. See'y. N E~ i i~ E N Gi d m L l N C O NSpp l E R V A T O RY~ O F 'li l e RRENADVAONTAGEVLORY RAS ESPENDILR RNIE.TUR. PulserUn Ion, Altlan La, Os........Thlr ty-Two.-'82. TEA ASin atudance.--R15 Million poundv importid lastt ye..r.-Pr'ik-en lowten thant ever.-Agents. wnted~.---Doi't Wiate time .--Send for circukhr. 10 lbs. Good Biackc or J11xed. t'r $1. 10 lbs~. IIu nelck or PRixeud 'for 2. 10 lbs.(Choec Biackor lI xed, for ~3. ' Send for poun.i arnnple I7 ete. extra for pOstago Then get. e p a Club. Citoicest Te-a In thle wo'rlt. l1,nrgest variety.--lrnwu a nverybuodv.- oih :-t Tca Stfrtpht lhut nesis.-Va'ilue for jiioney. COMFORTABLE FEET One pair of our Ladles' Fine, Soft, Water roof Durable Sensible, Front Lace A JYJING edosi""'"ice Whle nBot & hloe A combineatt'mof Pro toxide of Iron, Per ewitsa # Barka nadPhos phoruafn on 'prpaat ion of irms that will not blacken the teeth,ao clan ,acterIst icOf o iro prEep ~aratIons. y practice, and inan expefitce O' anthing to ive the results th at D)1t. H A RTKER's rtion, Fem e D~iseases. yppandni d yhas, in my hands made some wonderftul cures. ra clans hav ytle o.lreat and inconlpr n preparatlois wade. ~n Vise I, such a compound