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About Ochoco review. (Prineville, Crook County, Or.) 1885-1??? | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1888)
r OLD FATHER DUNDER He Tells a Highly Moral Fairy Story to III! Admiring Ynunf Friends. Vhell, shiMrcn, may pe you like to hear me talk some more? I vhns oanly an ouu jjuicnmans, out u l do you some goot dot vhas all rijiht. I guess I toll you Huoiutt some built boy a feller who vas named Sliacob Hornher- ger. and who lif py dot Black Forest in herniany. Vhas I tell you happened so long ajjo dot my great grandfather vhas a leedle poy. I haf some peoples tell me it vhas a fairy story, but I doan .know. V hell now to pegin : Vonee upon some time a poy named Shaeob llornberger lif by der Mack Forest mit his parents. Dot poy doan' lie und stheal, but he vhas cruel in his mindt If ho sees some odder leedle yoy he likes to hit him mit a club, und if ho sees some leedle jrirl ho likes to pinch her und make her yell so loud us h cannon. Dot vhas a pad preeneiples, snituren. n 3011 uoan nave some mercy nnil sympathv for odder people you vhill some day sthand oop on der gallows to bo hung:. Vliell, to proceed some more, dot poy Shaeob vhas tickled all oafer when ho haf some shanec to bo cruel mit a dumb brute. It vhas his delight to throw s!oiips at some do;s, hunt down eats, t:;:J :::11 off der innocent birds. If ho i ;in' be cruel 1 1 something duringder ht lioau' shioep goot at night. Lots i "opir wikto linn und gill' him goot advice, hut Shaeob vhas no petter. Vhen a poy doan' heod dor words of his parents und fiieads it vhas bad for iim werry badt. He vhas on der plank roadt to destruction, und he dies some awful death. Vhell, one day Shaeob finds a rabbit mit two proken legs, und ho vhas nefer so tieklod pefore. It vhas a shaneo to pe cruel, und he takes oudt his knife to torture dot poor rabbit, A leetle oldt man mit a hump on his pack und one white eyebrow comes oudt of der woods . shus den und says: "Vhas you do, eh; Shaeob? Ton doan' bo cruel to dot poor rabbit, I hope?" "I like to skin him alife!" says Shaeob. 'But if you touch him you shall be punished." Und now, shildren, vhas you suppose dot poy did? Ho jabs dot knife into dot rabbit's eyes und laughs ha! ha! ha! to hear him cry oudt midt pain. Howefer, lie hadt no sooner done dot dan der old man makes two signs like dot und says: "I turn dot poy into a lean, plind wolf, und I bid him go off mit der Black Forest? Dot rabbit vhas all right again!" Und, shildren, shust like you lif, Sha ob pecomes a plind wolf, mit all his ribs plain to be seen, und dot rabbit goes scampering off on four legs, mit his eyes as goot as eafer. Dot wolf howls mit hunger und pain, und vhile he runs he knocks himself oafer lots of times und vhas padly used oop. If he can't see he can't catch something to eat, und in a little time he goes deadt. If you see some rabbit, shildren, you vhill notice how crooked his hindt legs rhtts. Dot vhas because dty vhas pro ken. You notice some specs in his eyes. Dot vhas pecause he vhas cured ') quet k of his blindness. Dot vhas my swy, leedle ones, und I like you to re member it. Der poy who likes to gif pain to some helpless animal vhill come 10 some badt man. It vhas petter dot our hearts vhas always full of pitty and juercv, und dot we vhas always ready mit charity for der unfortunate. Vctruit Free Press. AFTER THE BATTLE. 'The Aspect of Troops at Farads and Dur ri a Fanguinary Conflict. The aspect of troops of all arim of the service is very different in battle from the trim and neat parade appear ance, but nowhere is this difference so marked as in the artillery. It was al ways most interesting to me to watch a battery going into action. The artil lerymen were very careful at all times to be dressed strictly in accordance with regulations, and when a battery took position every cannoneer looked as if he had just prepared himself for inspection. Nothing could be neater and more uniform than their appear ance. But this did not last long. As the fire began to get hot a jacket here . and there would be thrown off; next the collars would go, and often the shirts. The men were soon bathed in perspiration, which they would hastily brush off with their powder-blackened hands, leaving great marks wherever - they touched themselves. When the men began to fall and were carried to the rear by their comrades, blood stains were added to the powder marks, and at wtrise of the fig'ht the artillerymen, 1 so remarkable for their fine appearance at its owning; presented the most hor rible s)!ctacle that cart be imagined. But they soon removed all trace of the . fray, and by the next day were as clean and neat as ever. Colonel J. Ii. (Jon doifo, it ft. Louis Globe-Democrat. A True Mother of Heroes. A lecent application of a West Vir ginian named Brown at tho Pension Office in Washington brought to light the fact that one mother had given six teen sons to the service of 'the Union during the war. She had borne thirty three children in all, of whom twenty were boys, and of these only four did not serve as soldiers in the Union army. Two were killed and fourteen survive. Each of the latter is to-day in receipt of a pension from the Government for disabilities received in the service, and the death of her other soldier sons en titles the mother also to a pension. The case ii an interesting one, not only for the remarkable number of sons of one mother who wore tho blue, but as illustrating how contagious was the war spirit in some families along the line of lire. Chicago News. FITS OF SNEEZING. now they are Canned unit How They May IS Prevented and Cured. The. nasal cavities are everywhere lined with mucous membrane, in which terminate various nerves. To increase the surface of sensitivo membrane, the walls of the cavities are not regular, but two thin bones, covered with mem brane and nerves, swell out from the sides, almost tilling the cavities. These aro called the "turbinated bones," from their top-like shape. The nerves ot smell are mainly in the upper part of the nasal cavities, where they dir reetly connect with tho "olfactory tract of the brain. The nerves over tho lower turbinated bone are wholly devoid of the sense of smell, but when unduly sensitive, give rise to various troublesome ailments hay fever, fits of sneezing, asthma. When thus sensitive and producing these eftects, tho membrane is found to be thickened from chronic congestion of the part, Tim blood-supply to tho nerves is excessive. In sumo persons the sneezing is violent, frequent, and continuous for many months. Some times the tits of sneeing give place to attacks of asthma. Hack, of Germany, is a strong advo cate for the use of the galvano-cautery in all such,, and many allied, cases. Dr. Do Ilaviland Hall, of Kngland, while thinking that too much is claimed for this remedy, savs "that there aro certain neurotic affections, the starting-point of which is the mucous nasal membrane, can not, I think, be denied, and in these cases cure can bo most readily effected by treatment directed to this part. Hack, bv point'ng out that the most ready method of influencing the nutri tion of the mucous membrane of the nose is by the employment of the galvano-cautery, has enabled us to treat successfully and promptly many cases formerly difficult to manajro." Ho also gives an account of signal cases thus cured by himself. The pre vious application of cocaine to the mem brane, renders the operation wholly, or nearly, painless. Dr. Hall says, how ever, that many cases can bo as effectually cured by more simple measures, and he would always have these tried first. Youth's Companion. HARES IN A BATTLE. s Kxtraordlnnry Incident of the Dei perate r'lirht at Wagraui. A singular incident of the battle of Wagrani, between the French and the Austrians, is related by Captain Blaze, of the French Imperial Guard. He says that beside being a great contest ' of nrms, the day was a great hare-hunt. There were 400,000 hunters, half Aus trians and half Flench. The plain was simply covered with hares, which tho long advauce of the two armies had gathered into the narrow space. Every ten steps we started up one of these animals. Frightened by our guns, they ran for their lives, and continued to run until they reached the Austrian lines. There they were none the less terrified, and came rushing back upon us. The Sfddiers were greatly amused by the frantic movements of the hares, and could hardly be restrained from making after them. Finally there was a great Austrian cavalry charge, which, of course, took no account of the hares. The horses plunged in among them, and they rushed in dismay among the ranks of the French soldiers, who, confused by so strange an attack, oegan bayoneting the hares. Other soldiers, not innne diately pressed by the onset of the enemy, caught up the trembling ani mals in their hands. There was that day a great slaughter of men and of hares, and many a shot destined for the enemy struck one of these pooranimals, who doubtless believed that both the great armies had come there expressly Ut hunt them, the hares, instead of to hunt each other. livuth's Companion, ROYAL JUBILEES. How the Pharaohs Celebrated the Annt versaries of Their Coronation. In connection with the ques'ion of jubilees, a correspondent calls to mind the first thirty years jubilee of Amen hetep III., or, as written by the Greeks, Amenophis IIL, Pharaoh of Egypt, which occurred in the thirtieth year of his reign, in or about the year 1470 B. C. The King, it is recorded, sat upon his throne to receive the list of tho tributes from the north and south, ac cording to the taxing of the full Nile at the festival of the thirtieth year. We find that Pharaoh did not only receive tributes and gifts, but that he rewarded those subjects who had faithfully paid their taxes with a necklace, an equiva lent at the present day to receiving a decoration at the hands of the sov ereign. It is also Btated that the people gave more taxes than they were obliged, and then departed to their homes, well contented that the King had shown himself upon his throne, and the tax payers of the south and north had been rewarded. We also find that Kamcses II. celebrated a thirty years' jubilee with great festivities throughout his dominions. His second jubilee took place in the thirty-fourth year, tho third in tho thirty-seventh year, and the fourth in the fortieth year of his reign. Thotmes III. and many other Egyptian Kings had long reigns, but I am not aware that it is recorded that they cele brated their thirty years' jubilee. London Notes and Queries. A Good Breakfast Dish : Cut cold, boiled or b.'vked potatoes into small pieces, add two or three hard-boiled eggs, which have also been cut into bits, a large spoonful of butter, salt, a pinch of cayenne and a large cup of milk. Heat through, being careful in stirring to keep the pieces whole. Qood Cheer. THE SULTAN'S SADDLE. How l'lus IX l'ut Nome Mohammedan IHiiimmtlH to (lood Vse, Tho present Pope has 110 less than four tiaras, the most noted of which was "built ' expressly for Pius IX, al the order of the ex-Queen Isabella oi Spain, in ISM. Although presented ti the Pone at the tune mentioned, it never was worn until tho services ol the proclamation of tho dogma of the Immaculate Conception. Its form is ovoid, with a foundation of silver doth, upon which, piled one above the other, are tin ee crowns, magnificent in bril liant diamonds, and other precious stones and pendant pearls. On tht summit of this ovoid structure is 11 cross made of diamonds, on tho top ol which is perched a globe of .precious stones, supported by a great, deep azure, sparkling sapphires. The crowns resemble ducal crowns en blazon, the pearl ornaments alternating with leal ornaments. The would-be monotony of the lower circle is avoided by golden lines of bands, between which aro lit erally sown, as in a field, emeralds, rubies and pearls. This beautiful piece of headjrear. weisrhs 2 1-4 pounds ami cost only a trifle over 500.000 francs. Now, Pius IX., wanted, on the proc lamation of his favorite ilosrimi, a chalice to go along with his tiara. The Queen of Spain and other Cntlyolie monarchs had neglected that important article in tho service of tho Komaii Catholic Church. But his Holiness was something of an inventor. In the year 1853 Abdul Medjid, tho Turkish Sultao (ho of Crimean war memory), sent Pius IX. an Oriental s-ddle, whoso cloth and leather portions, ex cept tho scat, were studded with pre cious stones, mostly diamonds. Now, the highest expression of tho Turkish Emperor's appreciation of a person, whether an Ambassador or tho Ambas sador's master, is a horse or a saddle. But "tho turbaned Turk," who doubt less had seen old pictures and engrav ings representing the "head of tho Church" in procession on horseback, did not know that since Clement XIV. was thrown from his horse in tho Ro man Forum, tho Pontiffs have ceased equestrian performances. The Sultan's saddle then had no practical or possi ble destination beyond being hung up on a peg within a glass case. However, one day a happy though came to Pius IX He ordered the sad dle to be taken from its peg and the precious stones to be picked out, in or der that they might become the decora tions of a chalico which should equal in beauty, brilliancy and costliness the tiara presented by tho ex-Qucen Isa-i bella. So the Vatican jeweler built ii( a vessel which was enameled over l the deepest blue. On this decji-blus enamel the diamonds were grouped it bouquets, but the real piece do resist ance was a cross made wholly of dia monds that stood out in magnificent relief against tho azure fond. Thil chalice was used on the occasion re ferred to, and tho clerical journals saj that the sight of it "produced a pro found impression." Home Cor. Parti hegister. m TWO KINDS OF MALARIA. The PoUonoun Moral and Spiritual Atuto pht-re Found in Many lloufte. In China, certain districts are sup posed to bo under tho control of de mons, who prohibit their usi for hu man habitations. When foreigners persist in building upon these banned spots, they aro warned that they do il at the risk of life. In most instances the warning proves true, as the super stition concerning the demons is tin Chinese way of expressing tho fact thai the locality is malarious. Many tribes of the North American Indians refuse to live in a wigwam or hut in which there have been two cases of disease 01 a death. Tho district of Qualla, in North Carolina, inhabited by the Cher okces, used to be full of vacant huts, which the innvates had deserted fol this cause. "They are accursed," said the Indians. Like the Chinaman, thej had laid to the charge of their evil spirits the misdeeds of miasma. Modern sanitary scionco is doing much to make clear to us tho mysterj of the malaria, or had air, which haunl certain houses or districts, poisoning life; and we are learning how to exor cise them by drainage, trap, and disin fectants. But there is a moral malum which is to be found in certain houses which no sanitary rules will touch. There are" families who, without a word of complaint, inspire the stranger wilt gloom and discontent. There are oth ers in which envy. and malice rngeliks epidemics. In some, lying is hereditarj in the soul, as scrofula is in some bodies; in others and these are the greatet majority of unfortunate a petty ran it afflicts every member as an ugly rest does certain children. On the contrary. there are homes in which a faith ai pure as sun light, ana cheerfulness, strengthening as the wholesome morn ing air, help and invigorate all wlu enter them. In the spring of the year tho mem bers of every educated family in this country usually examine into tho con dition of the house in which they live, and cause its impurities to be removed and the air cleansed, in order to avoid disease during the year. Why do the not also try to find out what is th spiritual atmosphere of their homeP Is it healthful, or poisonous to those whe enter it? Of 0110 filing they may be certain, that it is the atmosphere, that imperceptible, unconscious influence which, more than any direct teaching, will decide tho character and motives of the children in a family. Youth' t Companion. ' One hundred and sixty millions ol Northern capital has sought investment in the South within the past year. PROGRESS IN COOKERY. Is the Food at Ta-ltay Metier Than That of Fifty, Year Ago? This Is a question which at first it seems difficult to answer. Tho para phernalia of ' housekeeping has 1 ti creased tenfold but we can not say that the Improvement has boon in ratio to this increase. Wo aro not ten fold better- housekeepers than our grand mothers. Tho increased work of the modern house calls for a reti nue of servants whero 0110 or two formerly did the work, or for extra help in smaller households, whero formerly tho work was chiefly done by tho mistress of tho houso. Tho vex ing question of tervieo is continually arising, ami much of tho cooking, which was formerly dono by tho mis tress of tho houso, is now, left to tho unskilled hand of a domestic worker, who is often utterly ignorant of tho primary laws of the kitchen. Our larders of to-day aro so much better supplied with good and wholesome food, our cooking facilities tiro sc much greater, our cooking utensils are so much better, that it must bo a pool cook, indued, who can not set our tables with more wholesome and a greater variety of food. There has been a great advance in me tasi nit.y years fruitami"" "'tables, liien praclj aTly ufiiin the last fifty years in tho supnly oi Tomatoes were knowm Wieywere called "love apples" and were grown for ornamental purposes. So firm rooted was the common boliof that they wore poisonous that it is related, tho two culprits who stolo soinn from the yard of a justico of tho peace and in cidentally tasted one, soon found they were attacked with what they believed to bo tho pains of poison, and hastily canto to confess their theft. The va rieties of sweet corn in uso fifty years ago were littlo better than field corn. The culture of small fruits was un known. There were no strawberries but the wild fruit. Tho improvement in raising and fat tening beef, veal, mutton and lamb is beyond question. The pork fifty years ago was probably better than it is to day, but there has been a steady de crease in tho use of pork as propor tioned to the population. Other meats have taken its place. A minister's wife, who visited a well-to-do par ishioner on tho Hudson river many years ago tells of sitting down to a din ner table on which the solo dish was a huge platter of boiled pork with ap ples, which were boiled w ith the pork and served on the same platter. "1 did my best to eat it." added tho lady, who had been city bred and used to comparatively delicate fare, "but I was careful never to bo caught at dinner-time near that houso afterward." It would be impossible to find so coarse a dish as this on any man's table to day. "The pork would be boiled sep arately and the apples made Into sauce. Whether the poultry of to-day is bet tor than formerly is a question in spite of the many fancy breeds of poultry in marketj. tlur grandmothers took treat care in raising their chickens and capons and paid careful attention to fricassees ttnd pies of chicken which modern cooks may well copy, Canned fruits and vegetables havo added immensely to tho resources of the modern cook. There have been great improvements in tho speed and fineness with which grains are ground. All kinds of meal aro now kiln-dried. so that they' will keep sweet in tho grocer's hands an indefinite time, but the kiln-dried meal is not so sweet as moist meal of old time which had to be piu'chased fresh from tho mill, Flour made by the patent-roller proc ess is not quite so sweet, though it is easier to make good liirht bread of it than of tho old-time flour. We should turn back to somo of the simpler ways of our ancestors in cookery. The de mands of modem society have driven the ladies of the household from the kitchen, and the preparation of food is loft too often in the hands of untu tored servants. "To your saucepans, women of Britain!" exclaimed Susan nah Carter fifty years ago. The same cry goes forth to tho women of our own land if they would have happy homes and strong and healthy fami lies. N. Y. Tribune, REFINED COURTESY. A Treanure Possmned Only by Highly Jlred antl Cultivated Persons. A refined courtesy of manner is one of the works of a highly-bred and cul tivated person. It is the outcome ol a kindly heart and considerate feelings, but it is also something more than this. It is the ease of conscious dignity an t'xpressiiti.lt'Mf' Intellect sure of its own position, and standing without need -of self-assertion or conceit. . It has in it the clement of endurance, for none but those to whom tho minor troubles of life aro trifles Indeed can bo courteous under the mosquitoes' bites of physical and mental annoyances, without outwardly being ruffled and disturbed. It implies the most per fect self-control lest one be thrown from his equipoise by sudden and unlooked-for surprises. And it is in its most perfect form the exotic flower of tho highest civiliza tion, which it lias taken generations of wealth and sterling virtue to produce. It can not bo counterfeited nor repro duced except by inherited growth, or by grafting on wild stock of firm and vig orous liber. But once started in its cultivation it will repay tho most gen erous outlay of timo and rich feeding, helpful alike to botli owner and bo hold or. Christian at Work. He "So you don't care to be mine with all that I havsat my command?" She "That's just tho trouble. I don't want to be under your command." Judge, i THE QUEEN'S MAIDS. " Arduous Ititl of the I.uUlea Who Walt on Kiirlaitl'a NoverelKii, The maids of honor to tho Queen earn every penny of tho 1100 a year which is their stipend for filling a very ilillleult position. While on duty they run not call their souls their own. After breakfast, which they tako in their own rooms, they have to hold themselves in instant readiness to obey the Queen's summons, which comes tho moment Sir Henry Ponsouby quits her Majesty's presence, with tho big red morocco dispatch-box containing his day's work under his arm. After ft brief "Good morning" tho Queen suggest, a littlo rending, and tho dutiful maid addresses herself to the pile of papers wherein tho proper passages for her Majesty's hearing havo already been marked by Sir Henry. Through columns and columns of par liamentary debate, leading articles, and correspondence has the poor lady to intone her dismal way, often having to repeat passages, for the Quceu never leaves a Mibject till sho has thoroughly mustered it, and is not at all sparing iu her commands to "Just read that again, please." Tho maid of honor Is so busy minding her stops and trying to modulate her voice that she has little chance of understanding a tithe of what she is reading, nnd yet the mo ment tho rending is over sho has to rush off and get ready 'or a drivo with her royal mistress, during which she will be expected to make lucid remarks on the topics sho has just rend aloud. After luncheon is the only real timo tho maids of honor have to themselves, and even that is spoilt for them by tho uncertainty as to w hether they will bo .wanted to walk or drivo with the Queen later in tho afternoon. They must stay in theirapartments.for if by chance they rihould be sent for and wero not to be found at tho moment, their life for a day or two would not bo n happy one, so that a stroll in the grounds on their own account is out of the ques tion, till after four o'clock, when, if the Queen has departed on a drive "without them, they know they are freo till six at any rate. On the Queen's return there is more reading aloud, this time of ponderous works on heavy philo sophical subjects, or else tho arranging of sketches, photographs, or, it may be, the charity needle-work is brought out till such timo as her Majesty goes to dress for her nine o'clock dinner, where, to tho relief of tho maid of hon or, she is not expected to bo present. By this timo sho is not infrequently faint for the want of food, fur when not at Court sho would naturally he finish ing dinner at tho hour when it is tho Queen's pleasure to commence it. Young ladies do not, ns a rule, junrp at the post of maid of honor to the Queen till they havo given themselves a fair chance of obtaining an "ostal) lishment," It is not till season after season has been drawn blank that dis consolate ladies have recourse to the dignity, very much minus the leisure, of joining the "Household." It follows that, though by no means in the sere and yellow leaf, tho majority of tho maids of honor aro not in the first blush of budding girlhood. The present senior maid is tho Hon. Harriet Lepel Phipps, a cousin of the Marquis of Normandy. Miss Phipps will never seo her forty fifth birthday again. The Hon Frances Drummoiid, a daughter of Viscount Strathallan, is thirty-nino. Tho lion. Ethel (,'adogan was born in 18M, which puts her credit thirty-throe summers, and tho Hon. Maud Okeover, a niece of Lady Waterpark, is only twenty seven. Boston I'ost. TUBERCULAR WSEASES. Deadly (Jrrmi Contained In New York' Milk and Meat Huppllnt. In regard to tho epidemic of pleuro pneumonia in Westchester County lately several physicians of tho health department have said that tho disease was far less dangerous to a community that tuberculosis, a malady which afflicts many animals and fowls and is readily transmitted to man. There has been a noticeable increase in thu number of deaths from tubercular com plaints particularly from consumption, in this city in lvoont years. In 1H77 of tho 26,203 deaths in tho city, 4,041 wero caused by consumption alone, and there wero about 1,000 deaths from other tubercular diseases. The highest death rate known in this city since the last epidemic was in 1881, when 38,024 persons died. Consumption killed C, 812 that year, and the total number of deaths from tubercular complaints was 6,924. In the following year tho deaths from tubercular diseases numbered 6,870. Last year 7,000 persons died in New York from these complaints, and consumption nlono destroyed 5,477. Tho deaths from nil prevailing con tagious diseases In tho city aro insig nificant in number compared with the loss of life from tubercular disorders. How much tho mortality among chil dren is Increased by such complaints is shown by tho deaths from tubercular meningitis, and tabes meson terica, dis eases which children sometimes inherit from consumptive parents, but often acquire with their food. Health-department records show tho following aths of children from these diseases in four years: In 1879, 1,212; in 1880, 1,2!W: in 1881, l.iOl, and in 1882, 1.535. The deaths of city children from Hindi disorders last year numbered about 2,000. A German surgeon kept a record of autopsies on the bodies of hildren who died in a German hos pital a few years ago, and ho found that thirty-throe per cent, of tho chil dren died from tubercular complaints, l)r. Cyrus Edson, of tho sanitary bu reau believes that much tuberculosis is brought to the city In milk. AT. Y. Tribune, WIT AND WISDOM. -Never cast dirt into that fountain of which thou hast some time drank. Hebrew Proverb. A doctor sent his bill to a widow for "doctoring your husband until h died." Harper's Magazine. Wo complain that our llfo Is short and yot wo throw away much of it, and are weary of many of its parts. Jeremy Taylor. You shall ho none tho worse to morrow for having booh happy to-day. if the day brings 110 action tu shame ib Thaekera;. There is oneiulmlrablo feature about wire fence. Tho patont-mmllolne man can't paint a legend on it in regard to hit liver-cure. Puck. Hereditary gout is a most unjust disease. Tho father has had all the fun and tho son catches most of tho pain iV. O. Picayune. A philosopher says: "Poverty has no back bono. We beg to doubt this. Il is only when poverty comes that t man knows ho has a bnek bono. It Is very difficult for a lady to enter or leave a earringo properly. It requires practice and a carriage. Tho earringo is tho hardest part to ac quire. An exchange refers to a content porary as having changed Its form tosa quarto. He could not probably find Butllcidnt exhilaration in a piut-o. Ah, there-ol When tho Irreligious man goe o tho telcphouo lio usually says "Hollo!" When ho comes away from the tele phone ho is very apt to torn the ex pression around the other way. Sotm, trvillt Journal. Tho Great Master A man of men may matter be. Or mauler of a hnurd of pelf, Hut (tremor power wlelilclh he Who It the manterof hlnmelf. llotlon Oovritr. James Baldwin, A. M., Ph. Is 0110 of the most siieeesful young in structors in tho country. Ho was graduated from Princeton In 188 4. Ho has since then been assistant professor c! mo.l -rii languages at that Institu tion. Ho has just accepted tho chair of metaphysics at the Lake Forest University. Thus Is one moro illustra tion furnished that this Is par excel lcnce. Um a;o of young men. ,TIIH DUST Kidney Liver Medicine HEVEIt KNWN TO FAIL. CURKS all IMaeaaea of the Kidney. I.lver, llladder, and 1'rlnary OraBc Dropiy, Gravel, Dlabetea, II right's Disease, I'alnt In the llaek, I.Mna, or ftldej Itetentlon o Non-Ketentlon of I'rlne, Kervona l)leae. Female Weakneaaea, Kioeaaee, Janndle. KiUouaneaa, Headache. Sour Sttomaek Pyapepala Constipation, and l'llea. HUNT'S REMEDY CURES W1IK ALL OTIIKK MKDIdXIS FAIL, ai It acta directly and at one oa S Klilneyi, Liver and Itowela, natortng them to a healthy action. HUNTS IlKMBDT la a tofe, til re, and poefty euro, and hundred ha been cured by It when phydttani and Meada had given them up to die. De Dot delay, try at once HUNTS REMEDV. Send (or Pamphlet to HUNT'S REMEDY CO., l'rovlilenee, lb I Auk yourdrugirlitforllVNT'SI It KM KM. fake ne othet. Cure Prime Mnjnotf' aUJiheuin-, CtaUca Doctor Knowlos, of New York, writes t I have proncrlbod PAIIDKK S ItKMKDT IL two case of old iiloor of lonif utandlnn;. and thoy honied in a remarkably Bhort time. I alao directed a patient who was mifferlnsr with syph ilis to lino I'A RIIKK'H II KM EUY, and wan iur prtued at the rapid cure. Thomas Gardenow, of Kancas, writes : Send me two more bottloa of PARDEE'S HKMKIiy. I wan unfortunate In oontrHctlns; a loathsome blood dlneaao over a year uro, and tried all tho well-known blood purl (lorn without auocOH. I took, three months aio, Hix Bottles of PAMDKhra RKMBUY. and am entirely cured. I want the two boitlm for a f tond of mine who has grot the s lis, as I know It wlk uroly cure him. X