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About Ochoco review. (Prineville, Crook County, Or.) 1885-1??? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1887)
"N, 4 l " 1' V 1 naffl I j. OCHOCO REVIEW. PRINEVILLE, OREGON. PERSONAL AND LITERARY. Gordon Cummins: likened an Afri- ciin jungle to a forest of fish-hooks re lieved by an occasional patch of pen knives. Mr. Lincoln, who was seldom too liusy to listen to a good story, used to admit that butforthe relaxation pained in this way ho could not have stood tho great strain to which he was subjected. Harper's Bazar. Ex-Chief Justice Greene, of Wash ington Territory, throughout his sev enteen years' service on tho bench, always refused to accept a free pass from any transportation company, lie is said to be tho only official in the Territory who lias had such scruples. Mary Stewart, n negro woman ol Taliaferro County, Ga., lias invented a car coupler that is said to be simple and aboutperfeet. Sho says that the idea canio to her like a dream and she made a model, according to her vision, out of old "oyster cups." Mrs. Stew- Art was tho first slave born to Alex ander II. Steven. A". I". Sun. Miss Mary Tillinghast is one of the ,. most successful anion; the women who kave made a business of decorat ive art "Vkylerbilt ojpe LUajp. frjo.txy fo -ayiuuug a iij una ni tapestry nang ings for his houses. She supplied tiie lewgns for the stained-glass window insf erected in Grace Church, New York, representing Jacob's Dream. As Thaokaray's women characters have been difhemt to understand among a vast number of readers and critics, the following opinion of women from the author mav be read with interest: I am afraid I dou't respect your sex enough, though, he writes to a friend. Yes I do, when they are occupied with loving a,nd sentiment rather than with other business of life." Chicago Times. Sister Mariania Flynn has been ap pointed Superioress of St. Mary's Col lege, Emmittsburg, Md., and Mother Superior of the Sisters of Charity ol the United States, in place of the late Mother Euphemia. Sister Mariania llynn's place as treasurer of the order has been filled by the appointment of Sister Angeline Davis. The new mother Superior is a native of St. Louis. Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen, says the New York Sun, picks up a great deal of material for literary work during! the season, and resorts unblusingly to flirtation in order to get it. At the close of a vacation on the Isle of Shoal he bade good-bye to a young lady with whom he had carried on a flirtation with the words: "I am very glad met you; you have been worth at least 500 to me." Among tho works which have been recently translated into Japanese John Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress. It is hardlv to be wondered at that this wonderful book should have taken hold of the Japanese mind at once. From certain recent reports, made by local missionaries and others, it is gathered that Bunyan's immortal allegory is the most popular book in Japan. Indian- apolis JvumaL RUINS OF CARTHAGE. II HUMOROUS. f Evcrv cat has its night-key. keeps it in its voice. Burlington Fret The latest catch is, "Did you ever ee a cent and a quarter?" Don' I answer too impulsively. Philadelphia ValL 1 -to say that a man s movements are circular instead or rectilinear is out another way of calling him crank. A married man . remarks that the principal difference between a man's hat and a woman's bonnet is about twelve dollars Minneapolis Journal. It is a singular fact, but neverthe. less true, uiat when two young men meet they address each othcrf "How are you, old man?" and that when old fellows meet they say: "My boy. " Why Need We Die! j It Is a very chilly day J When advertisements fail to vaunt I Some cure, to drive sharp pain awuy, I And "1111 a long felt want." A wise man has Just rushed into print to declare that" Jo ti ah was swal lowed by an earthquake. Oh yes; that's reasonable enough; instead of a fish, it was a fissure. Indianapolis Journal. "'Lend me five dollars; I need them very much." "What for?" "I want to pawn my watch." "But vou don't need any money for that." "In deed I do. I must get it from the watchmaker's first." Jewelers' Week- 'Mrs. Hendricks," said Dumloy to the landlady at breakfast, " will you allow me to criticise your coffee?" "Certainly, Mr. Dumley." "It's too Btrong and hot." Then Mrs. Hen dricks beamed upon her boarders, and later, when Dumley said ho was sorry to disappoint her. she told him pleas antly that any time before the first ol the month would do. N. Y. Sun. First Omaha Dame "Are yon still boarding?" Second Omaha Dame "Yes, but it is a great trial. My room is never half attended to." "It isn't?" "No, and the halls are dirty and the parlor always coated wim uuai, aim you can Hardly see through the windows." "Indeed!" "And nothing is ever cooked right; half the things are burnt and the other half nearly raw." " Well I de clare! Why you are almost as badly off as if you kept house and had a girl." A Vial to a Spot Cnvwrod With the Dot) of Three Kmplrea. From tho Bab Kadra, a gate of Tunis, It is a drive of about nine miles to the site of Carthage, and It is a good day's work to see the ruins scattered over a territory three or four miles square. Above ground hardly one stone Is left upon another. Here and there at wide intervals explorers have .dug ditches and uncovered some pieces of tesselatod pavement, or tho floor ami walls and marble basins of some bath Near the sea at the By rsa, the ancient citadel lull of tho runic town, ami also a mile or two inland at tho Arab vil lage El Malka, aro vast cisterns or subterranean reservoirs, series of vaulted tanks of masonry which once held tho city's water supply. An amphitheater, tho outlines of whi may bo traced with difficulty, n theater that is a formless heap of half-buried ruins, great masses of fallen masonry, fragments of walls still m position, hillocks of rubbish, and everywhere the dust of three empires, ami the debris of three Cartilages destroyed in siieces sum the wholu is still a puzzle, to archaeologists and confusion to the mind of tho traveler who goes thither prepared to expend sentiment over the remains of Dido s own town. The church of Uome holds a position of Advantage with reference to the ruins of the city where so many early Christians sntloreil niartynioni. A ruii'ZP . , i... i , . v- -""i or nign iiiusiaiiis net wren me sea ami the wide plain which stretches away to ward Tunis. The earliest Carthage was on these hills, close to tho port; the Wty as it grew reached out upon the plain. Among the most conspicuous objects on tho crest of the coast hills, either from the interior or from the sea as you approach tiolctta, is the great white palace occupied by Cardinal Lavigorio. Near lv is tho vast cathedral which this ainV?.ious ami energetic prelate is carrying toward completion on historic ground. The ancient citadel of Car tlinge, as has been said, is crowned by the Chapel of St. Louis, erected by Louis Philippe in memory of his sainted but unlucky ancestor, who died here of the plague six hundred years ago, dur ing the eighth crusade, while retreating from before tiio walls of Tunis. Here, too, is the College of St. Louis. In tire rich lowlands beneath the hills, on tho side away from the sea, are the palaces and villas ot LI Marsa, the Bey s home. and the houses of many of his high officers of state or arm v. Still higher than the Knman Catholic settlement, however, dominating it from the side of tho hill that is stopped by the Cape Carthage lighthouse, stand the whitest of Moslem villages, the holy town of Sidi Bou Said. It is one of the most picturesque places in the world, and is in other respects interest ing. Curiously enough, many of the Arabs believe that St. Louis died a con vert lo the Mohammedan faith, and that his remains are buried at Sidi Bou Said. The sacrednesa of the village. from whatever cause it may be derived is confirmed bv the residence there of the Sheik el Islam of Tunis. Cor. Bos- Ion Globe. A PEDDLER'S TRICK. CHRISTIAN QETTINQ. The Grave Error of Dividing the World Into Two ClaawM Th "Giver" and tli 'Uettera." Ono of Jean Ingelow's later poems tells the story ot a faithful and earnest young minister who became thorough' ly discouraged because of tho seeming failure of his work among tho very poor. In spite of all ho could do, he appeared to inako little impression up on squalor, drunkenness, sin and death. At length, in real experience and in dreamland vision, he was made to seo that he had seemed to fail be cause he had come to think that the whole world was sharply divided into two classes: those who helped, and those who received help; and that these two classes never 'exchanged members. Ho felt himself a doer and giver, entirely responsible for tho welfare of those ho aided. and, in fact, belonging to a different religious caste. The idea that he could learn, and receive benefit from, poor outcast children orstarving men, never entered his head; nor did ho stop to think that l,:d, and not he, was re sponsible for things when man had done his best. Not until suffering and despondency had cleared his mind, did lie larn that this is a world of mutual helpfulness and instruction, in which wo lL hi as well as teach and receive UmA l-'S'roin others as truly as we give r ' ? - f- Jum younii curate, with his half- acknowledged ideal that lie was re sponsible fur the moral universe, and had no lessons of eourago and trust to learn from his inferiors, was not alone in possessing those notions. A good many excellent people talk about re ligious work, and charitable organiza- tion, and beneficences of all kinds, just as tho curate did. They are so no customed to give out, that the idea of taking in hardly occurs to them, Hence a good part of their well-doing fails of its proper result, and they come angerously oear the sin of giving for some other sake than Christ s. Un consciously the idea of mastery, of proprietorship, of dispensing one's own in one s own wav, steals in upon the sweet and loving charily we are Imhlen to strive for. lho Lord wants nil our lives, strength, money and in terest in our fellows; but when wo have given all, he, and not we, must be re sponsible for the result. With tho vast mid noble increase of religious and pnuanuiropie worn winch has so brightly characterized tho nineteenth century now closing, there has grown all the while this idea of corporal e beneficence, of "aste helpfulness, of the division of the world into great clans of givers and takers. No belit tling of the vast results achieved since this century began is included in one's rellertion upon this thought, but rather the farther uplifting of powers that al ready have done so much good. How can we give all we now give, and more, and yet eliminate every trace of uiicoliscrartWfWisaisin? S.-S. limes. CHEAP CRAYON ATISTS, the WORD TWISTINGS. Influence of Ignorant Twaddle I'pon the Average Human Being. It is to be feared that the commercial morality of the country hawker is not yet above suspicion These men are determined by hook or by crook to dis pose of their wares, and they aro mas ters of the arts of cajolery and finesse. Scores of entertaining and authentic anecdotes might be given to bear out this statement. We subjoin a few: A vendor of cheap spectacles called on an ancient maiden lady and displayed his glittering stock. The lady remarked that she had recently purchased a pair in a neighboring town. . "Do they snit you, ma am.' "les, 1 think so. "It s a serious thing to have spectacles that don't suit; very harmful, very. I've traveled for vears with glasses of all descriptions, and I've known, a lot of mischief done by glasses bought permiscus like. They don't mind a bit what they sell over counters, not they; they never look to see the customer again, likely. Now. I'm on this round regular, an' it stands to reason as I have to Te wonderful careful. Might I have a glance at these spectacles, ma'am?" Impressed by the tone of respectful sympathy, the lady fetched them, and tho hawker, with an assumption of much knowledge, turned them round and round and teSted boUr4-jffl(i glasses and frames. His verdict soon came: "I'm sorry, real sorry for ye, ma'am; je've been deceived. These spectacles are really dangerous; blue steel frames o' this pattern and temper 11 bo sure to injure tho temples. " He began to gather up his pack. "Then what do you recommend?" "Well, ma am, tis a saorilice; but, to oblige ve, I'll exchange a pair for these, if ye please; you'll be safu then." With a littlo more persuasion tho bargain was effected. A week later tho Jadv re appeared at the shop from whence had come the discarded pair of glasses. The new ones had proved utterly use less. She had to return, considerably poorerin pocket, if richer in experience, to those certain, in the hawker's words. to injure her temples." CasscWs Family Magazine. "Mother, why do they call a girl a bride' when she gets married?" "Be cause that's the right name for her then. suppose?" "I'll bet I know." "Weil, why?" "'Cause 'bride' is took from 'bridle and they call her that 'cause then is when she begins to put the bri dle on her husband or 'halter,' Idunno which. Mebby she ought to bo called a halt,' cause she puts a halter on him. Was itabridle or halter you put on pa?" "That'll do bir." A Falling to Which Many Xrrvoua Tublle 8pakcrs Are Subject. "My dear boy," onco asked a head master of a Philistine member of his sixth form, "do you mean to say that you have never heard of that magnifi cent statue of Michael Angelo, by Moses Clergymen seem especially addicted to this habit, perhaps be cause their excessive anxiety lo bo correct readers them nervous, and to those of their congregation who are gifted, fortunately or unfortunately, with a keen sense of the ridiculous, such slips ro excessively, trying from the impropriety of openly testifying appreciation. "Sorrow may endure for a joy, so an Irish clergyman is re ported to have read with tho utmost feeling; "but night cometh in tho morning!" With a transposition of initial letters a new field cf solecism is opened up, in which a living cleric, in other respocts intelligent and ac coniplished, works with an involun tary assiduity th it is most upsetting to his hearers. "My brethren, so ran one of his most startling aim nince ments, "wo nil know what it is to have a half-warmed fish i. e., half- formed wish! in our hearts." With him, -however, the mischief goes fur 1 her, extending to a mutual entangle ment of words which is terrible to con template, lie has been known to speak of "kiiiquoring congs," and on '(WM!ifi;!Vur nwsmor.tblo to his' interlocutor, addressing himself to a gentleman who had intruded upon his seat in church, he politely remarked: "Pardon me, sir. but i think you aro necopowing my pie." Hero we are next door tithe carrying out of tho portmanteau prin ciple, a proximity illustrated by the feats of two other clergymen, ono of whom gave out his text from "the' Colostlo to tho Epissians," while the oilier read "knee of an idol," for "eye of a needle." The rector of an Irish country parish, whoso church the writer has frequently attended, was liable, out of nervousness, to contort and entanglo his words in strange fashion. Thus we have heard him speak of tho "imperfurities" of man, when. It was quite obvious that he could not make up his mind between "imperfections" and "impurities." Sand ended by amalgamating tho two words into one. The Spectator. How Tortraltt Are Daiheil Off and Method! Adopted to Make Manny. "What becomes of tho many artist who fail, oh?" rcponted a rising young artist to tho query of a reporter. "Well, many of them hang on and do hack work all tluilr llvos, Thuy dengen eralo into' the cheap orayoiuu'tist, ami many often dear as niucli as fifty dot lars a week. Hut the gonuiiiu art In st inet is dead and can never be rovivotl by any process known to soleneo. Do they make good crayon portraits? Yes, some of their portraits are excolent, but there is no charaotcristle art nothing abovo niediocrti mechanical excelcnoo. New York ha an army of pastel and crayon artists. The artist on the daily paper who can sketch and originate pnsliiona has far more talent and art instinct than the most success ful crayon-portrait maker. Hut the most successful artist fakir If I may be allowed such a term Is ho who does lifo-si,o portraits from photo graphs by menus of solar printing. The solar printing enlarges the photo graph, and tho mechanical artist dashes off the crayon, thus saving him the labor of drawing the features. It is a quick method, mid enables the busy artist to do mure work. Many photographers havo their pictures made lifo-sizn by crayon artists for 8 apiece. I suppose, though, thut lho, phw.iugraphcr gets mere tluui $X from his customers. Somo of these artists do a largo amount of work, and do it more rapidly than the scenic artist I dnv.iped into tho studio of a success ful cravou artist not lonij ago and found him rushing oil' portraits at a jrroat rato. Ho said he was lit a big hurry to do several portrait and asked me to help him. I told hi m I did not do that kind of work. 'Oh, I don't want you to ilu tho face, just jab in a lo! of clouds in the background, old bov, to clve ma a starter.' I went to work and jabbed' in clouds while my friend was making a face on another canvas. II is a su perior crayon artist and receives the magnificent sum of $2o for eaeli por trait. Hi- liirini; men to do back grounds' and all but the faces he turns them out by wholesale. I known (ier mau crayon artist who does a wonder fully clever portrait, Ufa sio, for $13. He doesn't uso the solar printing plan. Of course there are somi artists o i the IJowory who turn out life-si.o bust por traits at i? I and $"; but these are bad, even from a crayon artist's point of view. Tho best artists rarely go under $15. unless they are doing work wholesale for photograp'iers. Tho Art League frequently graduate first- class crayon artists by simply letting them know that they have no art in stinct above tho mechanical. This in formation saves the student years of useless study. The crayon artist de serves credit for his true niechaiiie.il methods, anil his cheap prices do not Interfere with other artists who aro not mechanical. " Solar printing has brought life-si.o crayon and pastel por traits within tho purview of very limited purses." Ar. Unit ant Ex press. FLORAL TRIBUTES. Garland for Opnnrat lranl'a Tomb I'our- Itiar In from Many Nourrvm. Seeing so many bountiful flowers hoaped upon the tomb of General Grant which I visitod tho other day my curiosity was excited by the question: Where do they all como from? ami do they serve no oilier purpose than to dock the great soldier's resting-place until they die? A fw ilave later, in conversation wllh Colonel I Grant, I learned the sources of lho .garlands, and also that their usefulness outlives their beauty. , lie said: "Oiico every week my mother takes out it large do sign mado of cut flowers. These re main there until she orders the guard to remove them and replace them with the fresh ones sho may send. So that all tho time her selection of flowers is there." The other flowors aro from frieiid-t, then? ' Some are, but tho miijo rily aro from Strang ts. I can say that, daily, without an exception, floral remem brances are recived from all parts ol lho United Slates. We order tliem placed in the vault, where they remain until faded nnd withered." "Who generally scuds tlim?" "Well, they come in all ways; from Qrand Army pests, clubs, societies, school and mission children. Tlion private people, both of this anil oilier cities, send beautiful reinmibranees in floral work. 'They never go to waste. ' Kollclla- lions arrive in numbers daily from p loplo of all classes nnd stations in life, begging for somo memento from Ueneral -Grant's tomb. They ask something, if it be no more than a withered leave or bud. Tho guards aro ontinually promising tho faded flowers to visitors, always providing Mrs. Grant gives permission or has not promised them else whoro." N, Y. Cor. Philadelphia Press. FOURTH-OF-JULY ADVICE, Timely NugKeattona for the Hmarl Young Men or tne i-eriou. The annual celebration of tho Poo laratlon of Indetiendeuco occurring soon, a few suggestions may not bo hi' appropriate at this time. 'Therefore, my son, lot mo warn you ngainst being too Inquisitive. To poor Into tho niUMlo of h, gun whilu your ln is exnerlineiitillir upon the inechiiiilsm at the opposite end of lho weapon may bo quite praiseworthy In n strictly scientilio point of view, but tho practice is likely to un aiit'iiueu. oy painful results. That is to say, mo re sults aro Bomollmea painful; in many eases the effect is altogether painless, but tbov are lastiiiL'. Do not blow into tho smoking mid of n ilrc-cracker, Tho lire-cracker Is lit tle, hut It can blow very much harder than vou. If you are firing a cannon, nnd wish to extract tho greatest possible amount of amusement out of the exercise, in illicit tho person who thumbs the vent to uncover tho hole lit the proper mo ment, and the effect will bo startling. It may remove somo of your members, or even yourself; but then, there is the offset that vou will save a great deal of money that would otherwise he ex pended upon gloves, and thcro Is tho added possibility that your board and clothes will cost you nothing Hence fort It. Tho spirit of 1770, which you havo heard so much about, is not of that brand obtainable . at the saloon. A irea many persons nre not aware of this fact, or at all events they get the two varieties so confounded that ihey make a confoundedly bad appearance and fed confoundedly bad tliu day after. lo not think, because. a young lady acquaintance smiles upon you on this day of days, that she is desperately ill love with you. Ice-cream and soda are extremely palatable to the female taste, and a smile is neither exhaust ing to tho purse (tTie purse of tho sniilcr) nor detrimental to the physical system (unless the smiler assimilate too much of the i. c. and ). Of course, you will not go upon the water in a saii-boat, unless you are wholly unacquainted with the art of navigation. If you know nothing n I ioi 1 1. sailing a boat, you will have a line time, besides getting a nice bath without the trouble of undressing. I should also advise you to cat all the cakes, peanuts and audi other con diments as are dispensed by peripatetic dealers. The proper study of mankind Is man, ami it is, therefore, well to know how much one's stomach will hear. Yon will not forget to buy a whip. Why you should buy one, or what earthly connection there can be be tween a ten-cent whip ami the Due. titration of Independence I am unable to say; but as it seems to be the proper tiling to do, don t forget to ntlpply yourself with a whip. In order to obtain the greatest possi ble results from a lire-cracker, do not throw it in the street (unless a restive horse happens to bo passing); but pro ject it into some hoiiso in process of construction, where shavings are plentiful. You will bo surprised at tho success which will reward your care ana lorethought. liefore entering a crowd, tnko tho precaution to unbutton your coat. Remember that while you are enjoying a holiday, there are people who have to work; ami by adopting the advice offered you can save tho light-lingered gentry no end of trouble. Drink all the ice-water possible. Tho nioro you drink, the more you w crave it, and every body knows that there is no greater pleasure in life than satisfying one (cravings. Of course it may kill you; but what of that? There will be plenty of folks left to can on this world's business after you havo lett it. Make all the nolso you possibly can People might forget vou If you didn't. You will bo much thought of if you inane your environment hideous, IioHtun U'riinsfriil. """ HOW MALT 13 MA 1 Rome Inlern.Mnit I'autu About ant llumtlii Imliiatry.) llullalo manufactures evi nearly seven million btishols almost wholly th product ofCh barley, which, it appears, make , tor gr tilu of malt than its congou this sldo of the border. ThlsY two million bushels In qxcom combined manufacture of )' other American cities, nnd, in, Is not unlikely that wo load (Jv in this industry. Our mu within two million busheli amount used annually In LomlOi, land, by brewing-houses, aiid proportion of thu malt usm! comes from provincial, towns greater number of lho hrewni ilull'alo make their own imUt want It, while the product jiV lut limit-houses is ah shipped Kast, where It IV market in New Kngland Newark, New York, AIS clllcs largely Interested lho inaiiufiM'ture of w stated, consists In tho coirvi tho starch In the barley kef"1 sugar, from which by fommiia potent principle in ale and bee' duced, U'hn process In U c pni'ticiil;ir-s ns nuii'uiX rushes rti'iml little batiks of the Nile." Indued. It la rlaio that Ilia most ancient wns 1 llto the von i Pungent Brevities, Net proceeds Tho liHliornmn'i profits. A howled striko One on a tcn-plu alley. A wordy warfare "The Uattlo of the Hooks." A milk punch A prod administered to refractory cow. t-nlute of the conductor -"How fares it with you?" 1 mills at the niitatorlum nro now gelling along swimmingly. Nililiers lire great siillcrers from cold. They have been known to sleen. under cover, in a hot fire. Detroit Free, Press. Won't Injure His Prospects. Pyrofusiofi, a now substance con tained In nearly all pit and bituminous coals, discovered and brought forward by Prof. I'.iultis F. Keinsch, of Erlaug en, Bavaria, seems, without doubt, to be ouo of tiie i "'vst powerful, effective antiseptics, tha. . preventives of fer meuittlion, of which wo have knowl- Rebuking a Belle, A celebrated Washington belle, whoso attractions Invited such marked attentions from scores of men that the prefix of "Mrs," seemed a dead letter, was "receiving" with another fashion able woman. While dialling she In advertently drew out her handkerchief, and observing a knot in the corner of t, stopped, hesitated, and said: "I vo a knot in tho corner of my handker chief; I must havo put it tliero lo re mind ino of something." Said tho hostess: "Probably to rem i ml you Hint you aro married." IJurper's May. izuic. "Why don't you utir around nnd iret something to do?" was asked of a lazv fellow. 3 "I don't know," was therenlv. "un. L.oa I'... .!.! . ' ' " ..nr. & iii mm, niijicrsillious. "Superstitious! what has supersti tion got to do with it?" "Well, I road somewhere onco (hat every thing comes to him who walls,1 and i don't want to do any thing that will be liable to Injure my prospects." Tid-Hits. Tho Baptist Missionaru Maaazlnn states that, whereas twenty-five years ago there was not a professing Chris Han in the province of Khaiilun", China, now thero aro UOO places where Protestant Christians meet reir'ulnrly on the Sabbath. Tills is tho glorious beginning. m iiii, (in ii j i.e. uitP f :i I.gypjiw( drank an iiitiixloatirg rfrTTor nuulet'oru barley. Hint bsilev one of 'the cereals cultivated b F.gypt.ansls stated authoritative Huron Hiinsen nnd Wilkinson, famous Kgvptohigists. Thu "corn, which appears so freuuf in the Bible, Is a general term iip'iiiod to all cereal" and really means gniiii of all kinds. V hilc It Is hot really ki 'own what the menus were that tho am oils used for extracting the alcoholic nin- ciple fmm the grain, 't Is recorded that malt li(iors were much indulged In by the Greeks and later by Uie Itnijaus. iv whom the secret of thcir'llfaiiTi- facture was In Inn I need Into Gallli and Hritaln. I As to the details of tho process, they are almost Identical In all establish ments. The barley first undergoes what is termed "steeping." This is ilnun in large cistenw bidding any where front one hundred bushels to three hundred and more, depending upon thuetieut of Hum- in the malt-house. Water is poured In on tho barley until itlsicov- ri'd to a depth of six Inches, from tifty to sixty .hour is tho time allowed fur sleeping. After the grain haf Im bibed siitllcieht moisturn the water is run nil', and the barley is turned out in heap on the malt floor, and turned with wooden shovels every few lpiurs until "sweating" U in and th grain begins to germinate. It Is at this oint that the cheiiiioal change tskesjdaee' and the starch la thejiei t- d Into Emptr' Ttr jiw'ed to ciiiiliiAM III elagii readily I'tcog nled by the expert iimlsUrr, when It is brought to a linlsh by placing the mall in the drying-kiln, wlelii it, is kept for a longer or nhnrter tinio according as tho liquor Into In! ale or stout. For stout or jMirtertlio malt Is scoreed to a brownish rolor, while for the amber ides or beer it is permitted to take hut littlo color. Hy its conversion from barley to limit tho grain Increases two or three percent, in bids, while it loses something in weight. When dr.ed it is ready for the brewer or market. Tho value of this city's annual out put of malt for shipment is Jnot less than t!i,(M),(m, and the value of that made and consumed by Hufl'alo brew ers limy he safely estimated at $1,.W0, IKK). This immense industry lias jiiowiv up almost entirely during thu last twenty years, lleforo tho war there was litilu or no malting done hero. Huff ah Courier. loin (ireeii Coiini v. Texan, Is named after a famous pioneer from North Carolina, who did his slime of fighting against Santa Anna ami was honored when Texas secured lior inde pendence, Tom Green County has an area of 12, HDD square miles, anil is larger than the slates of Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Delaware combined. It is a word and blow with the mini who swears because he Imu ,...t,i 3 '' ,'""'' N. 0. Picauune. BILIOUSNESS Is an arTectlon of the IJvor, and can be thoroughly cured by that Onsjit Ketrulator of the Liver and ( Biliary Organs, SIMMONS LIVER. REGULATOR MANtlFACTUHKa BV J. H. ZEJLTN A CO., Philadelphia, Pa. I wan affllotoii firr several yi-am wits ' dlwmieind llvnr.whleh nnulted in a evHro itttnnk of Jaundice. I had a KixMl mtidleal attendance a our ao- Una nirnrdH, who tolled ntlrly t P fcirti me to the enjoyment of J"f former good health. I then tried Ida faverlto areanrlnuon ( oae r mimt renowned phyetrtani f J"1 vllld, Ky., but to lie pnr(K. l upon I wiia iniliieri to tryNln;mn dlto knuelfl thiol Its uao. ami It uW nuiti ly reMtored we to the lull eujoy- lueut of health. A. H. BHIRTjEY, ; Klclraiond, Ky. s headache: Proceeds from Torpid I-iver bmI Im purities or the HtoiniMili. It lan be Invariably enreil by taking I SIMMONS LIVERRE6ULAT0II lot all who milt'or remember thaV f SICK AND NERVOUS HEADACHjiS fan lie prentd hy tiiklnit a ilia" a" " "-'L'l,etc Mvmntiint. Itiillirula lira cimilllK vi mu .a- if T I 'I