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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1888)
EUGENE CITY GUARD. &, I CAMPBELL, Proprietor, euoene crry. oreoon. A ubox turtle wa caught in the Eau Claire Rivor in Wisconsin, with the date 1810 cut in the shell on its back. Tut Government it trying lobster culture on the Paci8o Coast. The first Atlantic installment has been an cborod at Santa Cruz. Mrs. Warren, the Colorado Cattle Queen, who is said to be worth $10,' 000,000, is the wife of Bishop Warren, of the Methodic church. The Pone's golden rose goes this year to the Princess Regent of Brazil in honor of the liberation of the slaves throughout the Empire. Tux latest tiling in envelopes is an article which will turn black, blue and red when any inquisitive person at tempt to oyen it by the use of steam or water. Tub new Japanese Minister at Washington served five years it) pris on, and while there translated John Stuart Mill's works on political econ omy into Japanese. The population of Canada is less than that of the Bute of New York, and yet, while New York has a debt of only about $7,000,000, Canada has debt of noarly $210,000,000. Tub soup served in dinfng-cars is made in a manufactory which fills cans at the rate of five thousand a day with mock turtle, chicken, toma to and all other kinds of palatable aoup. On opening an ice-laden car at Cin cinnati a tramp emerged and hurried ly made off. As the car had been locked three days before, it is supposed that he endured the wintry tempera ture all that time. A farmer near Buffalo, Penn while plowing a few days ago, came upon a pot containing nearly $3,000 in gold coin. It is supposed to have been hidden by a miser who lived near the spot ninny years ago, Tub ordinary Chinese girl's do- meaner, when among those not of her own race, is proper to a preciseness, She holds a handkerchief to her face, never smiles, and under no circum lances expresses surprise. Empress Victouia has requested Dr. MacKonzie to preparo for her a true history of tho late Emperor Frederick's illness, in order to correct the Qcrmtin doctors' assertions. It is not known whether the empress will make public the rejiort For the past ton years the owner of a flouring mill at Dubuque has had a sign on his fire-proof safe roading: "No money in here ; please call at the house." It was intended for burglars, and tho other night one called at the house aud secured $1,870. Tub lumber from which the gallows was constructed on which John Brown was execulod is owned by a resident of Harper's Ferry, who is waiting (or sumo relio hunter to come and kike it off his hands. The mod est sum of $1,500 is asked for it. Danikl Wkiistkr used to say that the three most troublesome clients he over had were a young lady who wanted to be married, a married wo man who wanted a divorce and an old maid who did not know what she did want. Aud the lost was tho most troublesome of the lot. A Baptist church in Choctaw County, Ala., is supported entirely from the proceeds of the church farm, a tract of sixteen acres planted in cotton. The land is rented by the church members, and on regular oc casions I hey all get together and give tho ground a thorough tilling freo of charge. It appears that, besides having hhips with no guns, England has cav alrymen with no horses. For exam ple, the Third Regiment of House hold Cavalry has but 800 horses for 1,300 men, aud 17,000 dragoons and huBsars have but 10,000 horses. In Uie German army the usual proportion is 1,000 horses for 700 men. --. ' " r Tit- Ovkr fourteen pounds of ambergris were found floating in the surf at Marblehcad Nock, Mass. At first the fortunate finder was ignorant of the substance's identity, but he mad an analysis, which showed it to be genu ine ambergris. It is worth at the present market quotation about $3,000. TELEGRAPHIC. Ai Epitome if the Principal Ere&ti attracting Pablie btercrt. Now Twenty thousand acies in Douglas county, III, are under water. It is reported that Edison has sold his interest in the phonograph for $1,000,000 to a New York man. Near Farkersburg, W. Va., a boy was mistaken for a ground-hog and fatally shot. Some of the bedding of Arkansas convicts, it la asserted, has not been washed or cleaned in four years. England is having a summer worth mentioning. Snow has been falling this month in the suburbs of London Three million dollars, it is now said, is the extent of the loss by the floods in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Will Houghton was hanged at Winston, N. C., for the murder of negro woman. Edward Deacons, a tramp who had murdered Mrs. Ada Stone because she refused him food, was hanged at Rochester, N. Y. Klinpendorf, Dittman & Co.'s foe tory at Cincinnati, O., was destroyed by fire. Loss, $310,000: insurance, $161,000. Charles II. Wright, of the Detroit postoffice, who has been supposed to have been stealing letters for the past thirteen years, has just been arrested. A sailboat containing four young mon was upset in a squall on the lake opposite Northwood, Minn., and its oc cupants drowned. King Humbert's palace at Rome contains two thousand rooms, but the King and his family occupy only 125 of them. The Mormon hierarchy is said to ay Mr. A. M. Uibson a salary of 10,000 a year to look after the inter ests of Zion at Washington. The department of stats has in formation that incendiary fires at Port-au-Prince destroyed about one fifth of the town including many of the public buildings. The Folsom heirs, one of whom is Mrs. Cleveland, have filed a petition for a partition of their several interests in fifty lots in Omaha, valued at several hundred thousand dollars. A party of fourteen lumbermen were drowned on Mattawan river, Quebec. The lumbermen were drunk and in attempting to run the rapid their canoe was overturned and all hands erished. The boss aligator hunter of Welaka, Fla., is L. A. Morris, he having killed hut week twenty-three good-sized ones, which net with teeth, hide and carcass, about $1 60 each. He also bagged thirty-six small ones. Henry Romas was stabbed to death by Theodore Sutter, at Chicago, 111. The murdered man had been keeping company with butters sister and thereby incurred the displeasure of tuo brother. A collision occurred on the Norfolk A Western road, near Lynchburg, Va., between two freights, killing both en gineers, one fireman and five of the crews. The loss of property is $100, 000. Two photographers who wont out to got a photograph of a wrecked train ou the Burlington road, wcro set upon by a mob ot strikers and severely beaten, luo photographic, instru ments were smashed. A passenger train on the Milwaukee road, struck a cow near Red Wing, Winn., and three cars wont down an embankment W. O. Clark, of Hur ley, Wis., was crushed to death, and iwo iaiues were linurou, one Having a leg broken. Carriages containing a wedding party on the ir way to the preacher's house at Plymouth, Luzerne county, lenn., tho other day, ran over and killed a little girl. The whole party were arrested, and the marriage did not take place. A fatal boiler explosion occurred at the coal shafts of Williams it Moss, near Zion, Ky. David Stone, the en gineer, and Moses Haskin, th i fire man, were killed, and Fred Williams, and Frank Throtl and Alexander Longnecker wore badly scalded. The latter will die. Final preparations for the search for the treasure of tho British ship of- war urauic, sunk near Delaware break water in 1793, are complete, and the expedition will stHrt in a large vessel, with ocean charts, maps and nauti cal instrument. The hulk is believed to contain $2,000,000 in Spanish gold. Mr. Zachar, of Wisconsin, who, on account of a Utile, disagreement with his father, has been going without food for fifty three days, has at last consented to cat something. Living on water, however fat tho animalculae may be, emaciates a man more or less, and Mr. Zachar is considerably skele-tonixed. Bon Dutton, a farm hand, went to the house of John La mon t, three miles east of Bryden, N. Y., and at tempted to kill Lamont and Miss Root, a young woman employed in Lamont's family. Dutton fired one bullet at Lamont, which took effect in his face, and four at the girl, all of which took effect A recent deer hunt near Martin, Tenn., came to a queer end. After the iporUmen had chased the ani.nal for several miles, and the hounds were close to its heels, the frightened ani mal turned suddenly, and, running up to one of the hunters, tucked its head under his arm, as if for prolec'ion. No one h id the heart 'o kill the plead ing animal, aud the hunt was aban doned. o COAST CULLINGS. Devoted Principally to Washington Territory and Califtrala. Leone Deroeto, asred 49, fell off haystack in Clover valley, Nev., and broke bis neck. Ex-Justice of the Peace, William llenly. of Sacramento, Cal., com mitted suicide at the Western hotel, by taking morphine. Lee Sykes alias W. It. Short, sus pected of complicity in the robbery of a stage and the murder el a passen ger in Shasta, county, Cal., was ar rested by Sheriff McCord. G. N. Galloway, a freight brake- man, was thrown from a train at Tucson, Ariz., while making a curve west of the depot. His neck was dislocated, and he died immed iately. A destructive fire occurred in the Hidden Treasure drift mine, at Sunny South, Cal. Two miners, Robert Mc- Kitchnie and John Bowering have been taken out dead, and several ethers were fatally burned. Mrs. P. Dempsey, of Fort Bragg, Cal., forced her two children to drink whisky, and save them no food. The oldest, a boy of 3 years, could not sur vive the shock to his little brain, and died in convulsions. Joseph Martran, an Italian, aged 43, was crushed to death at Los Angeles, Cal., while making an excavation for sewer pipe. Three other men were badly injured internally, and one had a leg broken. The oustom house officers at San Francisco have seized 360 five-tael boxes of smuggled opium on the bark Forest Queen, bound for Hono lulu. The opium arrived on the steamer Parthia from Victoria, and was transferred to the baik. James Leary, stumbled and fell in front of a cable car at San Francisco. Before the gripman could apply the brakes the car passed over the man's leg. He was taken to the receiving hospital, and died from the shock in about an hour. Giovanni Bistano, an Italian, was killed at San Francisco by the caving in of a sewer. The trench, which was eight feet deep, caved in and covered the man with sand. His fellow lab orers succeeded in digging Bistano out, but life was extinct. John Murphy, 13 years old, was drowned in the San Joaquin river, near Stockton, Cal., while bathing. Murphy and another boy had been ducking each other. During the sport Murphy ventured beyond his depth and was carried away by the current Haywood Reed, of Sacramento, Cal., conveyed two small boys across the river in his boat, and on reaching the other side they commenced wading in the water. Both went over a step-off and were draggrd into the current. The younger, aged 0, a son of Wm. Lamphey, was drowned. The Otago, 870 tons, Captain W. Collins, left Seattle with 1381 tons of coal, bound for San Francisco. While three and a half miles north of Point Reyes, she became lost in a heavy fog, aud before the captain could locate her position she was among the break ers, and bad strack. The vessel and cargo are a total loss. , A disastrous fire occurred at Santa Fe, N. M., by which the Catron build ing, containing the opera house, post oilice, Mexican office, a book nd news stand, and an extensive law library and cilices, was destroyed, and several other buildings were badly damaged. The loss aggregate $70,000 ; insurance $10,000. George Grassel and Rhiwold Frye, two coopers, had a light at San Fran cisco, and the former was badly dam aged about the head. He retired to his house, followed by Frye, who at lacked mm wun a cooper s axe and a long knife, burying the knife in his groin and nearly severing Grassel's arm with the axe in an endeavor to reach his head. Charles Jansen, of Los Angeles, Cal., committed suicide in a most shocking manner. He used a double barreled shotgun, and tied u handker chief from the toes of his right foot to tho triggers, so that both barrels were discharged at once, blowing one side of his face and half of his head off and sputtering his brains against the ceil ing of the room, making a most sick ening sight. J. E. Harrison, a policeman, tried to arrest a Spaniard at San Joce, Cal., when the man drew a pistol and shot at the ( flicer three times. One ball nipped a niece out of Harrison's ear, one went through his vest under his left arm and tht other went between bis fingers, breaking a cane in hi? hand. The officer then drew his weapon and began firing. He put three bullets into the Spaniard, one through the body near the heart, one through the bowels and one .through the thigh. The Spaniard died a short time after. At a mass meeting of citizens at San Francisco, a memorial was drawn for presentation to congress setting forth that 9,000 Chinese have txeu lauded on writs of habeas corpus since ISSi, and that the violation of law has been accomplished through the agency of federal courts. The memorial further charges that there are now 4,000 Chinese in San Fran cisco without certificates, who have been landed on writes of habeas cor pus, and who are now out on bail. In conclusion the memorial demands the impeachment and r moral of Lorenzo Sawyer, judge of the United SUU circuit court of the ninth circuit, and George M. Subin, district judge for the district of Nevada. AGRieULTURAL Devoted to the Interests of Farm en and Stockmen. What Bu Made the Money? Have you atopped to inquire what has made the money in farming for the last year or two? It would per hans be easier to tell what has not mode money for in the latter cate gory are to be included our two great est staples, wheat and beef. It is the lesser stapleB that have paid hogs, fat sheep, potatoes, beans, poultry, eggs, and many of the still smaller sources of income on the farm. Corn has been a source of profit to those who have had that grain for sale, and especially the few who can now place it on the market, but the many larm ers who have bought it and fed it to cattle have no very cheerful remarks to make on this score. The average in smaller products, however, has not been bad, and do not forget that the farmer who makes money every year and there are those who do is the one who always has some of these smaller products for sale. The new wheat crop of Australia is estimated at ten bushels per acre, which is a higher average than any at tained in the colony since 1875. Young shade trees should be trimmed into shape the first few years after having them set out. The beauty of a shade tree depends upon the shape given it when young. A bit of freshly burnt charcoal in the water in which Hyacinths, etc., are growing, (in glasses) will keep the water sweet a long time, and prevent the necessity of changing it Late potatoes can be put in on the gronnd formerly occupied by peas The late crop keeps best during win ter. The chief difficulty now is to get good seed. Cut off all diseased limbs from the pear tiees should evidence ot blight appear, and swab the limbs with lin seed oil. Burn the branches taken off and keep the soil stirred. Late corn for fodder can be planted now. bow it thickly in the rows, so as to have the stalks small and tender. Sorghum also makes an excellent fod der crop, and is highly relished by stock. A correspondent at Albion, Me., says "our farmers are the most intelli gent, frugal and industrious in the State. Our town is free from debt and has but three paupers, taxes are low and consequently we have not the Western fever. Melons will now send out shoots, while the eailier kinds will blossom. Do not work them in the hills so as to disturb the roots, but work the ground around them and in front of the shoots. Should weeds or grass appear in the hilU pull them up. Corn endures drought as well as any crop grown, but only when the field is kept clean. A thorough cultivation of the field after a shower is better than a coating of manure, as it pro tects the roots and affords a great sup ply of moisture. The work is easily done under the check-row system. It will soon be time for the hens to molt. Keep the hens that begin to molt early, as they will be ready for winter laying before those that do not molt until lute in the season. Sell off all the extra males and late-hatched chicks. Feed very little corn, and give fresh meat three times a week. All young animals are more easily 8tunt d while they are dependent up on milk as their principal food than at any other time, and for this reason considerably care should be excrcissd to see that a steady growth is main tained. A stunted animal is not de sirable, to say the least. After your first crop of clover is re moved apply 100 pounds of dry-land planter per acre over the field, and it will improve the second growth. On some Boils plaster is a special fertilizer for clover. On light sandy soils a mixture of two parts wood ashes and one part plaster is better. The Ohio Station, having tested nine different kinds of tomatoes, viz:, Acme, Advance, Buist's Bcautv, Liv ingston a Beauty, Cardinal, Climax, Favorite, Mikado, and Perfection, finds that the Cardinal, from Henderson, gave the greatest weight of tomatoe to a given number of plants, and Livingston's Beauty, from Livingston, next. It will cost but little to keep the surface of the ground around young ir es well sprinkled with fine lime. Many insects will avoid the lime, and ou some 6oils the lime will prove bene ficial. An excellent mixture for such purpoees is two parts wood ashes, one part lime, and one part coarse salt. Only a small quantity need be used at each application. This is the season for growing root crops. Beets, parsnips and carrots are uow well advanced, but they re quire clow attention in order to keep he rows clean. After each rain the ground should be cultivated, and if grass has taken hold betwen the plants it will pay to use the hoe. By so doing it the root will be larger, better iu quality, and a fair yield se cured. It should be noticed that when small weds of tender plants, such as purslane, are buried deep in the ground, they will lie dormant until, by the working ol the ground, they are brought quite near the surface, where th- tem rat lire and free access of air favor their sprouting. After the firl liot r they will usually cone up, and should be killed U-fore ihy show more than two or three leaves. After they become an inch or to long it is hrd to kep them iroin going to s-d without lugging them out f the field. MARKET REPORT. Beliable Quotation! Carefully Revised Every Week. WHEAT- Valley, $1 22$1 23 Walla Walla, $1 151 18. BARLEY-Whole, $1 101 12 J ; ground, per ton, 325 O027 60. OATS Milling, 3638c. ; feed, 44 45c. HAY Baled, $18 00. SEED Blue Grass, 14$9l6c.; Tim othy, 9j9l0c.; Red Clover, 1415o. FLOUR Patent Roller, $4 00; Country Brand, $3 75. EGGS Per doz, 20c. BUTTER Fancy roll, per pound, 25c; pickled, 2025c; inferior grade, 10(325:. CHEESE Eastern, 1620c.; Ore gon, 1416c; California, 14Jc. VEGETABLES Beets, psr sack, $1 50 ; cabbage, per lb., 2Jc. ; carrots, persk., $1 25; lettuce, per doz. 20c; onions, $1 00; potatoes, per 100 lbs., 90c.$l; radishes, per doz., 1520c.; rhubarb, per lb., 6c. HONEY In comb, per lb., 18c; strained, 5 gal. tins, per lb. 8 Jc. POULTRY Chickens, per doz., $3 505 50; ducks, per doz., $5 00 7 00; geese, $6 008 00; turkeys, per lb., 120. PROVISIONS Oregon hams, 12Jc per lb.; Eastern, 1313Jc; Eastern breakfast bacon, 12Jc. per lb.1; Oregon 1012c.; Eastern lard, 10lLJc. per lb.; Oregon, 10Jo. GREEN FRUITS Apples, $2 00 2 50; Sicily lemons. $7 509 00; California, $3 50 5 00; Naval oranges $6 00; Riverside, $4 00; Mediterra nean, $4 2a. DRIED FRUITS Sun dried ap ples, 7 Ac per lb. ; machine dried, 10 11c; pitless plums, 13c,; Italian prunes, 10llc. ; peaches, T2J14c; raisins, $z 4UZ ou. WOOL Valley, 1718c; Eastern Oregon. 9loc HIDES Dry beef hides, 810c; culls, 67c; kip and calf, 810o, Murrain, 10 12c ; tallow, 33c. LUMBER Rough, per M, $10 00; edged, per M, $12 00; T. and G, sheathing, per M, $13 00 ; No. 2 floor ing, per M, $18 00; No. 2 ceiling, per M,$i8 00; JNo. 2 rustic, per M, $18 00; clear rough, per M, $20 00 ; clear P. 4 8, per M, $22 50; No. 1 flooring, per M, 22 00; JNo. 1 ceiling, per M. $22 50; No. 1 rustic, per M, $22 50 ; stepping, per M, $25 00; over 12 inches wide, extra, $1 00; lengths 40 to 00, extra, $2 00; lengths 50 to 60. extra, f 4 00; If lath, per M, $2 25; lj lath, per si, $2 50. BEANS Quote small whites, $4 50 ; pinks, $3; bayos, $3; butter, $4 50; Limas, $4 00 per cental. MEAT Beef, wholesale, 3fa3ic, dressed, 6c. ; sheep, 3c ; drcsed, 6c. ; bogs, dressed, 8e.; veal, 78c. COFFEE Quote Salvador, 17c: Uosta Kica, 1820c; Rio, 1820c. Java, 27 Jc. ; Arbuckle's's raasted, 22c, SALT Liverpool grades of fine quoted $18, $19 and $20 for the three sizes ; stock salt, $10. PICKLES Kecs quoted steady at $1 30. SUGAR Prices for barrels : Golden C, 7c; extra C,7Jc; dry granulated, ejc. ; crushed, fine crushed, cube and powdered, 8c. ; extra C, 6c; halves ana boxes, $e. higher. PERSONAL AND LITERARY. Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes pre sented his large and valuable collec tion of moilieal and surgical books to tho Medical Library of Boston. "You should know my wife," Mat thew Arnold once remarked to an ac quaintance; "she has all of my sweet ness and nono of my core ut. "Will Carleton is a tall, vigorous man, who believes in out-doorcxereise, especially walking. Ho is fond of rowing, sailing and horseback riding. Mr. Coiikling's memory was as wond-rful as liia mind was strong. He could repeat win h pages from Sliakes-peai-o and other poets with perfect accuracy and without effort for hours at a time. Elizabeth, of Roumania, is forty fivo years of ago and the most taltinted woman of royal rank in tho world. The Queen, or as she is known in liter ature, "Carmen Sylva," begins her lit erary work at live in the morning. She risoa without disturbing her husband or even hor maid; dresses without as a stance, and lighting a lamp is soon busy w ith her pen. Frank R Stockton, that popular novelist of infinite quaint humors, is held responsible for a most startling innovation in the way of wedding trips, recently introduced in Washing ton. After a certain wedding cere mony, at which Mr. Stockton was present, instead of the young couple going on a wedding trip, the bride's parents were showered with rice and old s'ippers and banished on a two weeks' exile, while the bride and groom were left in possession of the house. The permanent praises of men are often such as they themselves are not permitted to hear. The congratulation of tho day dies away, and even its echo is bawly audible as life nears its end. But if the life have been impressive a growing recognition of it will nmke itself known In the encomiums that shall follow. Xo man should live for praix'8, present or to come; he has his work to do, and that in all. Vniitti Vttfbyltrian. . . rMHAGRApHt wui V'moiet eorrulort Itat nut nt k,.. m ... . ' 1' s moid, UUlKer R J. "What'a the matter?" Carksr two big men are having ..i.""K 4iscussion that I'm afraid It n, T .in " a fight'' Barker (ca.J, igerof that. Tliev'ra v,.V 5 inn uv ra Kmi. . ' ists." Detroit Free Prat. ni A wnmnn tll around and rant about female and demand enmil i-l,rl., UIV & torrent of lmnati,.?,..i """J but when night conies she'll and tremblingly peer under th y thn mutt rIih ltnnu-a in..'. .1 "l,' -Somebody predicts that -nheW nhnnn will onvnlon I.. ' nvprvhnilv will lut n.n.n..n.. , . . "-I The mpssengor boy must ea t hare a groat dal of confide ." jcience, but we don't bellove yct tli -will ever be able to make the mil ger boy go. Boston Pott, -And now the Sunday new.p have formed a trust; ami. m in evitable, have raised their price 1 cent If these greedy amp persist in their fiendish deiK ,' wringing four cents out of the p, of tho toiling maues, in exchn i dollar's worth of reading, the? yct find that even a eirculation-swevt will not save them from bankruptcj , "You don't scorn at all cast dor. by the length of tho sentence the Jul," has given you," said a sympathetic rtandor to the sad-eyed German ti, had just been condemned to twets years of servitude in the State pnV "No," replied the prisoner, wearily, ito not at all it mind. 1 have thirty years the proof-reader on t Germa newspaper been." Somervillt ourw. Dame "You are entirely raistaka as to the ohjoct of the Biiti-kissitu uiety. It is not intended to disconr courtship. No, indeed. The object 3 to break up the practice of allo;:; ministers to kiss brides." Male "O, that's it Are the members tho society engaged young ladies expect shortly to be married?" Dh. "Well, no; tho members are moil" ministers' wives." Omaha Worli "What do you want?" exclaim the woman of the house angrily as sk' faced the tramp at tho kitchen-doo; "Breakfast or work?" "Both, ma'am," said the hungry wayfarer timidly. "En that" said the woman sternly, placit; a biscuit and a piece of steak be!r him, "and you will have both. Tk cheery meal of incenso breathing mm had been prepared by her daughtt. who was teaching a cooking school is the city. Burdette. DECEPTIVE SENSES. Illusion of llortlly Motion lndwrt Through Visual ImpreuloDt The senses are subject to illusions it proportion to the remoteness of the formation that they give from the mediate necessities of the organi-t Touch, the most immediate and H. inferential of the senses, is least subje... to illusions; while sight is so very muci so that the blind often sav they haver advantage over the seeing in being fi from visual illusions. The illusions 1 bodily motion are nMieh nearer to lb of touch than to those of sight, and w they can under certain conditions be. induced through visual impressions. this the writer has recently had t interesting examples. Ho was standi upon the floor of a railroad depot, boards of which were laid with a c siderable open spaeo between them; t'. the shadow of an electric light moving up and down, by the swinj of tho light in the wind. Looking t the floor, it seemed as though the shad" was stationary, and tho lloor bos moving. From this it followed that person on it was moving too. ami writer distinctly felt the swinging sation; in fact his attention vasc!: to tho phenomenon by this feeling : motion. TI10 other observation wi follows: While riding in the ears looking out of tho window, the U and all are seen to move in tlie op direction. If. now. one looks in " ror so situated that it reflects the ing landscape, which, however, ni not be visible excent in the mirror, or has the illusion of moving in the posito to the real direction of mot owing to tho reversal of the uw? "1 the glass. In both those eases an mediate bodilv sensation is mum .... i.,f,.nJ,' throusrh visual sensations. Amtni Analyst. Wonderful Printing Machine- machine which takes in paper at end and turns out completely h'"' books at the other at tho rate 01 copies an hour. There are three t- . iron cylinders, segmental in f"rm each having a diameter of six fee'. $ Wfliffhinir nlmnt. tln-nn tons caCil. one of these are the forms which dot printing in quadruple series, tJ two acting solely as impressiou ders. In combination with the cyli' carrying the printing forms ar" fountains, form anddistribiitingre whilo in combination with the imp-" sion cylinders are novel app,ia" handling (automatically), revis n,. semblinc. folclinar coverinCT na erincthe eomnlete books. Thisren' able contrivance requires eigh' ton, 1 paper, with a corresponding atnou printing ink. and this it tiir books in a single day. and it 11 twelve box-cars, of 30.000 pnJ paeity each, to transfer the outp" a single week. Tins niacnin" in Philadelphia patentee, at w by its inventor . ' . ,- .l...,oIlt I at whose estauiiM"" . . ....1 lllL'2 visitor may see in uaiiv ; 7, operation no less tliin six 01 mammoth machines turning with : prising rapidity and regular") miles of paper into printed ' ' ready for thj perual of the rcad