MISCELLANEOUS). t tin l'4"1 found that a ((nose can a. . . .1 l.er until I he thei i - ., urn - roe to t4 Mow zero. Then net i... uriu j. tar won't save her. Wild duck feather . . I . .1 il,M. i IiiWkC unit . can p " Ui top. uncn 01 aassw mm weigneo Ljjjr.ave pound was picked on a ', ai Winter, Col., recently. Tha ,, set out a few tree a an exnerl- na it' ' tent iweu'j j - - uu ma , oecn bearing for ten year. til It seem that the average New En- . 1. kuuhki'mj til. a flirt,, tn . v im'Uet until the very tlitv that tm ruti - i- 1 j llo hnv reaches lii majority, while in H,e Went tne "oiu rami iei up at the C f about sixteen. Some one should p. , II,. u. -till sliCS I S I1H W ICO time. .... a ... jiL proves the most beneficial to the bo.v. wrltur in me Liverpool .Mercury hinks "the multiplication oi inoatori lm1on is a rcmai iwiuio soci I i e- LkwaMOt They are now almost too umeruus to count ai mis moment ,.,-e twenty recognized houses of nmalic entertainment open nightly.1 . l.tlnn aki n ti ( - V ' filfl lu i,v,l - -The numoO Kanogun, which is now L M. fit H (V)lintV in Wnrihinirtnu J' .. Kn I It . mwji " " .,--- a. ...-linn-. w i ....) ..f ii rivtip ihiyv en i w thai it Hiunities 'the rendezvous r . ii .,. fcVl. A.. " W i..U..i rriilll fill OVi'f I 1 1 1 1 1 i r l M U-itili i lAllimhlmL II ml lit ,.ti rum - f ... tlw.lt Ullllllli llll I.I..U i w. in ili.-ir vear s sunnlv of tUn - . . i -A Buffalo girl got rid of an undft- !t.kiA analtA In un iininiiou.ni H . -.1 '.i om- 1 nu m.m1 tn tha U'hv hiiiiit fniin j'li i 1 r'.'Fi Li tha fuir ri'. ;! t ui-i' who 14 thai uhc would lint, m:irrv him till the conaent of her father. .... .iwt thn vniintr IiiiK'h fut.lutr ,)!..,( -1 , i,rii ftltfl tin. il i . , I , i ,. . , . I . . i TCI f J" -c"mvu - ,, . . 'i t , I fill f Iht II nt till r ! -There ia a sad and discouraged 4 L'-.U., Pn 'Vuiixniir ...... Mu ...... au . - " - j " l Li .. f,... h tnu,. U .. 1 nmurui atumu iui umisiu at a unr- L. ..A Irrvl It ill tii. i Vinnua It M ft I il... 3 .L llH- 1 1 Li. ! I .-If I U...1 lUBSi 1 imIUIU llu C Bin Uli 111 I (MUM. -During the Franco-Prussian war, corporal came to the doctor with . - L! , ,nl.n ... ....lit I tU- rl p. ine QocUn cxaiiiirn'il hint. ii nniuu niiu Dunning iivmii i in i iiii.i- j i J V, I .... rtr...; .. V. TL .nmnaal a.A alii me rcquiBiwj! iui ui iur ino unui s iiu- ISSlUil L(i liiu ut'aiuav uiuiuii iiom Ji- "Can you spell rheumatism, cor- rti. i un urn m , in i K i I 1 .1 lL J t nT l rfi-utfip thiLnlf vnti.11 rt'nlitH ha utin tr. The eornoral wu l,nuiM AtlM..nK ,.( ll... laa 1 ii i ;iriM. i n . : . -A young Frenchman named n ci was rcct' ii v st'iin- cc ar rurm i i j ii imprisonment inr ueiraumng several t - M . . 1 . , . , entitv. lhnnoxt. dav another mnn before the court on a similar Hri'H. Ill' IIIWIHn 1 1 '1 1 mi Ull W I'l'fll !1 bf U H ' ' II 1 U MM. I I lit1 TIlMir K- lnnocent, and that the fraud was rpetratcd by his unknown douhle. iiici.il, ui i iii. til riuin , tail 'll Jl rj uuiiuuii VIJVJ VUll IIWl OIK JIOI " i.rtu tuujr out uii iier, tiyunuugn 5 old hen might sit on thorn by the urn tney would allow. A man can tseton the wash bench, but he could the basin on it, and neither the a tt it a. .. - . .... i. nt' an mi nil . i ( ir s :n u aogwere willing or he might set foot on it. But if he should set on aforesaid tail, or sit his foot there, LT i;i ' :um nn urn iiu t H.r I IUI' i .(...,...... .. "'iu JVU, DUIUilgD 113 11 Msailed by the dog nor the gram- uu. nnstian union. TV , . .... . wvurium siory oi ine iravei or a IW, a letter bearing nearly a dozen . . , .'(!.' 111' . I'll . , I I II iduciVBU Ul 1 . 1 K 1 1111. 1, I W here it has been since it was - mail at oiniLll uier- Me., on March 1. could onlv . nwomi, uut iue syuupsia ui history of some of its travels may Riven thus: March 10, arrived at ... ic-uiuueu lor returu 'ard;Murch 19. received at Chi- Post-oftice; March 19. mailed to " -, .prii o, again maueu Chicago post-office; April 5, re- at WaahinfftCM and forwardad .I,. 18 nO HO It thirty tr. H otn.h a .... 11 UI3LUIU l "ul"l mine prayer was oeing m in the Oconee church the sharp P ' an igniting mateh disturbed ""igregation. Just before the us nri M ii'i.n if f -'u. ii me VdiniL' lnnii no maicn win come lorwara I services and acknowledge iL or it 'a . -1 ..... i ..... . i I.K t ... . i . i viucuwii, we win excuse Dut if he does not there is a man 7 -""so wno wm silt it out, anu "1 COSt him .1 bnv. ..I . in,,;.- i MHII I,I1. 1 lllll- raaicnes at wholesale. ucueaiciion the young man 1 young woman walked forward. the young man said it was the -"'"u wno nafl done the awlu "How did it happen, my sis 'fcked th 1 . . p mmwm ju I1T. I h.A .1 .... , i. J ' me rmrnrn in my uauu rubbing it on the bench, not aot what I was doing, and be ' "new it the thing went off." She cued. Filton (Ky.) mother has fl na the birthda of oh of them '"Bn nr t .... . i , .. i. . n herself bPOAIlAA mho ...nth) not toothache. roroe which a California Dumi wniie imnrinor is eoual to Of ft Umm V.nA ,hoA of Umber. 1cks of tparrowt at Moundt- w. V. . . . engaged m a pitcnea od wk. ., . . - . . HAPPY WARRIED LIFE. a,"'J'' Tr. Mmwte to 11., NMWM f..r Kl. Vr..r.. Mm. Gladstone's carter as wife and mother ha. been points ,0 (or yeu asamiHU-l. The of dund wife on m2 other in all cir cun,.u,nce. ha been noted. The talesman has found In hi, spouse a true helpmate, who .ympathi.ed with h aspirations, with OMMmw in all hi. movements of hi. long life of political activity, ha. looke.1 to the future to bring him success in all his Projects and vindication of his motives An amusing anecdote is told in illus ration of this wifely, unswerving tto, After the late general election, when the appeal to the country had resulted alverselyto Mr. Gladstone. Irish policy, Mrs. Gladstone was found somewhat depressed by a visitor at Huwnrden Gaatit, while the grand old man was serenely at work in his study up stairs. 'Never mind," .aid the visitor, m. path.et.caHy. "There is One above who will bring things righL in His own good time." "Yes. indeod," replied the good lady. -He will bring things right; but he will forget all about his lunch if 1 lon'tmU him down." Mrs. Gladstone nursed all her chil dren herself. She looked after them from Infancy, and cared for them in -very way as if .h-j hud not been the lady of the cn.tle. who was able to command any amount of assistance mat she might require. With their Itttia one. Mr. and lira, Gladstone have always been the most tender and affectionate of parents. Whou out of Office Mr. Gladstone taught his elder children Italian. The girl were edu cated at home by governesses. Knglish. French and German. The boys all went to BtM and aft -rward to Oxford. Blessed herse lf wilh a tierfect constitu tion and Unbroken health, Mrs. Glad stone has watched over her husband with the skill of a iiuree and the vig. UM0s of a guard Un UgeL She knows the limits of her own skill to a hair's breadth, and the moment they are passed she call in the doctor. Norisil only in the maladies of the body in which she has displayed invaluable qualities, She has certainly kept Mr. Gladstone shielded from all the minor worries of life. Mr. Gladstone is fully sensiblo of what he owes to his wife, nor has he made any secret of :he fact that his continuance in public service was de pendent upon the health of his partner in life. Had she broken down and be come an invulid he would have retired from the service of his country. It would have been Impossible, ho felt, to carry on the work of the Government, and, at the same time, to have attended to his duty to his wife, nor could be have stood the si rain if she, who bad been througl out 11s a ministering spirit. Instead of Hiding him, had become a tax upon hi- vitality. The self denial of Mrs. Glad 'ton i is twyond .ill p a: ie. It no doubt s -ems Very da : slinif n id j imposing to be the wife of a prima j minister, or even the wife of the lender 1 of the opposition, but the wife her-elf has a somewhat bard time of iL The absorption of a prima minister in the work of the nation leaves him very lit tio time for domestic intercourse. Mrs. Gladstone has been known to remark that when .I 0 idstoue was in offic 1 in London, during the season, it was iU:te a treat In her to be invited to 11 friend's house to dinner together with her husband. She always then tried to get seated next to him. "when." .h said, "it is at least possible for me to have conversation with my husband: otherwise I see nothing of him." Lou don Letter. THE FIRST MATCH. A ltmiiiLciicn Which Appsall Strung!., to the Seme ui Hie Kltliruloua. A few days ago a gentleman, who is now something over sixty yeaas of age, i .aid to me: "I well remember the :ime when I first saw a match. 1 was then a boy, and was working in ;he barn with my father, when a young man, the son of a neighbor, came in with a box in his hand and said he could now light a tire without borrowing coals or striking a spark with the flint. Opening the box he took out one of the matches, which was three or four inches long and had a yellow looking substance on one end. This end he dipped into a small bottle which came in the box with the matches and contained sulphuric add. 1 ,Vhen the match waa put into the acid it instnntly burnt into 1 blaze. Although young Grant hail mid fourteen shilling, (fl.75) for ids box, which held but fifty matches, he was quite ready to use up one or more of the costly fire-makers in showing father how the wondorf.il invention worked. But father, having a wholesome fear of fire, and looking with some suspicion on any new de parture from established ays. begged Grant, if ho would fool with that stuff to go outside, for he didn t want his barn burned down, adding, -it may be un to SOS that go off. hit it ain t going to do anvbody any good to have fire ideas' easy a-tlial!'" The old gen tleman was mistaken. His son has lived to see the tin- when fire can be made much more e..-ily. end It does people good by :iv:..g time and temper SrhiM the number of tires from the use of matches is comparatively few. Five hundred "parlor' matcbe. can be KSbtfor five eent.; between foy nd tiftv million matches are made Sly dav in the United States, and Jll me country is not yet desi o ed bt ire m spite of the ease with which Wecanmake.ire.-ChristianAdv- colored man living five or .ix sjHm from Americus. Go., caught .ven-foot alligator in a .teel trap set for tbe purpose in Muckalee tree. The trap caught the ugly orute by one toe on bis hind foot and held him se curely. When the negro found that h! had secured hU prixe be notified Ue -bite people, who took he.r guas .d went to the creek. Tbe negro m.untly. in u mmgaturteak. h-i.big t"De0i.u;rS to beef which i pronouced superior w teak any time. MUSCLE AND JUDGMENT. The Two I'rlnie ll.q.nrrnieut. ! tho ! lNtrt'i rr,le. Gold-besting Is a trade of muscle and judgment. There it judgment in know- lng bow to strike the little package oo-j the tone. mute'e in the hammer clock-like rise and fall. The motion Lone of the wrlsL The workman's elbow joint .tiffens. the hammer fall, and rebound, uearly to it starling poinL So. actually, it 1 not the physical effort, it seems, even though the hammers, one for each process, weigh eighteen, twelve, and seven pounds. Kach beater receive, fifty penny weight of gold, rolled from the bar into the form of a crinkly ribbon seven yards long and an inch in width. Cut into 11 pieces thene go Into the "cutch." 'Ihls consists of detached leaves of a vegetable fiber, between each of which Is placed a piece of gold. Slipped into a tightly-fitting pad, ths package is laid on the stone, and the hummer falls again and again, the aim being to drive the weight toward the edges. From the "eutoh" the sheets, then loaves, are picked out with curious boxwood pincers. Handling with lha fingers, especially at the lat ter stages, would be most likely to break the leaf. F.ach leaf is then quar tered by a section of bamboo cine on a little implement known a a "wagon," but in reality a tiny sled. The second pad is the "shoder." It has 7:11 leave, and is t inches square. The force of the blo vs here i. greater. The leave, are beak-n out to the very edge, as they were net before, and the gold oozes 011L These particles are carefully brushed off into au apron at tached to the stone, for the workman must account for evuiy oue of bis fifty pennyweights. In the third piocess thero are three "molds" of 900 "leaves each and live inches square Each mold requires .ome four hours' work. The leaves are now so thin that the slightest mis judgment will produce disastrous re sult. In spite of the heat generated by the blows dampness creeps In be tween the edges. Dryness is positively essential here; so, whenever necessary, the mold is placed In A press not un like au ordinary copying press just taken from an oven. A short pressure liberates the moisture When sufficiently beaten the molds go to girls, who wilh pincers aud "wagon" make up books oi tweuty-five leaves each, three and three-eighth inches square. Kach workman, from his beating of three molds is to till eighty books. That is called a "tail." I For it he receives to. The molds show a total number of 2,700 leaves. Kighty books need but 1,000, For every other book he can fill, perfect leaves only being used, ti csnts Is paid. Thus, if every leaf was perfeel, ho would make 11.75 extra. As the "wagon" cut. the leaves 8j inches square there is a continual waste. This, with the imperfect leaves, is put in with the shoder waste. It is all melted into a "button" and weighed. This must come to 38 penny weights. For the HO books 17 penny weights is allowed, but they may weigh whatever the workman can make them. The thinner the leaf, so long as perfect, the better. Whatever tho waste weighs over 83 pennyweights 1 a penny weight is paid tho workman. For ev ery pennyweight under $1, is deducted. Thus, although the gold is used over again, it takes 50 penny weights to turn out 17. And. again, a man, even though ho turns out an over number of books, may have such shortages in his wastes as to bring his balance on the wrong way. Three boatingsa week is the average number. Thu skilled workman can make S0, and perhaps a little more. The actual number of men employed is .maU. there being only 175 in this city. Most are Englishmen, Gold-boating I is done principally in tho Kast. Bos on and Philadelphia furnishing most of the other workmen. It I. in tho latter city that tho largest shop in the United States is located. A union regulates wages and matters of tho trade. The filing out of a gold-beaters' shop where a number of men are employed Ib a rather expensive matter. Each man's personal outfit Is worth some 2M, the molds alone costing 50 apiece. N. Y. Mail aud Express, Winsomenes. in Women, Do you recollect what your feeling, were immediately after you had spoken the first unkind word to your husband? Did you not feel ashamed and grieved, and yet too proud to odmi t itP That was. i, and ever will be. your evil genius! It is the temper which labors incessantly to destroy your peace, which cheats you with an evil delusion that your husband deserved your an ger, when he really most required your love. If your husband is hasty, your example of patience will chide as well as teach him. Your violence may alien ate his heart, and your neglect impel him U desjieration. Your soothing will redeem him -your softness subdue him: and the good natured twinkle of those eyes, now filling with tears, will make him al 1 your own. Catholic Standard. The phonograph has reached .uob a degree of perfection that gapes and yawns are reproduced by it with great distinctness. At a recent trial given at Mr. Edison's laboratory a meeting between two loverB was recorded, and person, of experience .ay that the kisses were reproduced with tantaliz ing accuracy and fervor. A tired man struck because he bad worked thirty days for a farmer and had been served with ninety mealr of griddle cakes during that time. It is thought that irrigation will be the mean, of doubling tbe popula tion of every Western State and Terri tory within the coming ten year., and that in the EasL where the rainfall Is heavy, but uncertain, irrigation nil, ultimately be resorted to in order to insure greater regularity of crops. Four-tenths of tbe area of the United States, not including Alaska require irrigation. This territory includes part of California. Texas. Kansas. Nebraska Oregon, all of Arizona New Mexico. Utah. Wyoming. Montana and portion, of Iakota and Washington. A PECULIAR INJUST Y. , PUNQENT PARAGRAPH Ha .In f ol Kl.l. fur l heir Nkins li Irenrhl , Mountaineer. There Is no one In the world so Tbe raising of kid for their skins .', pleasant as the woman who knows she a princiuil industry among the French hat a pretty smile. -Boston Post. ttiiiinti.inee.r. and It supplies no small ! It may be deslrablo to live to a par: of their ub,lte:ioo S iftasxts, green old age; hut when you have ai de! eaey of texture and freedom from tained It, please keep away from the b emish are principal facto - in the bunco men. Puck. value of kid skins, and to sc ire these great pa ns are taken. Diet is the prin cipal thing, and mother's milk is wi.at keeps the kid in hrfecl condition for the uses of the glover. As soon a. the young auim tl bt, 'ins to eat grass the value of the sln declines, for with a grass diet its skin Immediately begins to grow coarser and harder in textu-e, and its chief merit vanishes. It is, therefore, kept nlntsjij penned, not only to prevent it ' m eitiug grass, but also to secure Us sltltl from ni lntal Injury from scratc.M. bruise.. , ,. , which are fatal to perfection. .'. e- 1 the kids have reached a certa n agi ,t which the sklus are in the bes r. ili. lion for the use of the glover, tl aj an killed, and the skins are sold to trarol lug havktrs. through whom lltajf reach the great centers of the tanning Indus, try at Annonay, Milbau, Paris and Grenoble. The superior quality of these kid skins, duo to climatic causes, it is that has given Franco tho supremacy in the manufacture of the finest grade, of reul kid gloves-a suiireiiiacv that w.U doubt ess Ik- long maintained, inasmuch u forei..,, ,..,, ,f..t ,,. ,., 1 eral rest content with second-rate skins. unless they maintain agents on the ground, a policy that somo English and American house, have found neces sary. Haberdasher. Five Generation, in One Home. The Elizabeth (N. J. ) Journal, In a notice of thu family of Dr. Hough, of that city, under whoso roof live genor- atlons are living, says: Tho great- great-grandfather of tho baby who .0 recently appoand. reached home a .hort time before tho reporter', arrival. having been at wor , almost every day he works full tlmo. He it in good health and 7M years of age. His wife, the great-great-grand mother, It also enjoying excellent health and It ,.' year. old. The great-grand father 1. 59 years of ago and thegreal-grunduiother 1. 54; the grandfather is 39 years old, and the grandmother 37 years; tho father i. '21 years of age and tho mother 18 years. This long line of living an cestors is all on the child', mother's side, and it Is tho second time there havo been live generation, of the family. When the babe's mother was born she was also tho beginning of a fifth gen efntion, her groal-great-grand mother being alive at the age of K8. Where Cocoanuts Come From. As many a. 17.000,000 to flUXMJ.OOO OOOOOAUta como Into New York City every year, chiefly from Central Amer ica, though they arogrown In nearly all the tropical countries. Those from Snu Bias aro considered the besL They Can hardly be .aid to have a "season," as the import are nearly constant through tho year. A well-grown tree will yield in tho rainy season two mil in three days, and in tho dry season the average is about one in two days. Many aro lost by being blown off by thu high winds before they are ripe. A ripe nut fulls of itself. The nuts nru sorted a. thoy are unloaded from tho vessels, the inspectors being able to determine whether a nut is good ly giving it a single tap Thoy lire then packed in hag of oue hundred each and put into the market Good House keeping. m Will Writing; Become a Lost Art? Will tho coining man write? Not at all. Thero will be no more need of his learning to w rite than of his learning to spin. Writing will havo become ono of the lost arta and a wholly unneces sary art, by thu time the coming man appears. His writing will be done by tho Miionogrnph, which will bo plaood on hi. desk a. pens and ink are now; and whenever he has a .tory, a poem. an ossay or a private letter to lndllo bo will aimnlv tnik into the nhuniiirnmh I and send on the plate which hat I recorded hi. words. Tho teaching of penmanship will be unknown in tho school of the futuro, and writing in iho present fashion will be regnrdod as much among barbaric mothods as we now hold the rude hieroglyphics of the ancients to be. Boston Traveller. Bean's Island, an unlnhtbllod piece of land I ing in Frenchman's Bay, off the coast of Muinu, would bo a para dlse for cats. It Is Infested wilh rats, and how they reached there no one ran telL II is the general supposition that some year, ago a coasting schooner must have been wrecked In the buy, and that it had rat. among the other valuable portion, of its cargo. The ro -k-nts are there by thousands, and they V ,rly swarm over the island. Any 01 who i. not fond of them doe. well in giving tho place a wide berth, for they know no fear and make it interesllnf for visitor.. Much of the island i. low ami lint, and I. so perforated wilh their holes that it resemble, a vast sieve. How they Uvo I. a mystery. No one knows of any fresh water upon the island, so the rats must have been the sole discoverer, of some hidden spring. A young married man of Buent Vista, Ga,, started on his wedding trip. The best man and a friend of the bride accompanied the happy pair. Both la dies were i.eavily veiled, and somehow they got mixed. Friend are slill poking fun at the Benedict who, doubtless, it not as firm a believer in lejtjojaj if was FalstaH. Two lovers visited the same young lady. One evening Jones alone was with her. He said in tender tones, Do you think, Mary, you could leave father and mother, thil pleasant borne with Its ease and comforts, and emi grate to the West with a young lawyer I ho had only bis profession to live on. :id search out a new home where both could be happy?" Dropping her bead on Jones' shoulder, the maid-n softly whispered. "I think I could, Archie." "Well," said Jones, "there's Tom Brown, who's going to emigrate tod wants to get a wife. I'll mention it to.bim." Jack - "What aro you doing, Ma bel?" Mab.'l "Making angel cake; don't you want -ome?'' Jock "No. thanks; I don t want to be au angel." -Puck. A young wife can be a good house keeper without Withering to poll.h up the spare chauge in ber husband's pocket every time she cla-is up the rest of the silver in the house. Som orville Journal. If the E iropean Inventor who has invented a smokeless powder will In vent a smokeless cigarette, his name will bo embalmed in the heart of a grateful world. -Philadelphia Daily News. No man ever talked of his work without saying siiuelhiug about its great mental strain. We suppos - that . raa tha sroodaltoppartitwki it is bruin Ork thai make. him so tired at night. Atchison Globe. Husband. -Wife. I wish you had b.-eu bora with a. goad Judgment as 1. but l Fear you wart not." Wife "You are right Our choice of partners for m 'tbat your judgment is ,"'1 ''' 'ban mine." Brown -"Did yon hear that young Benedict suddenly became deaf on the very day on which he was married?' btobl neon "You uont say so. That shows that there Is a silver lining ta every cloud, no matter how dark it may bo for a time." Texas Sifting. Some women like to be told they are pretty, but tho really pretty ones on t care for ll. I bev have to be told that they are brilliantly Intellectual George Washington s hatchet wouldn't stand a ghost of a show now a-days. - Merchant Traveler, --Professor." said the ostentmlntta young inaii al a reception. --I've heard much talk about the anthropoid apes approaching very closely to human lav ings. Now what In your opinion 1 nearest to a man?'' "You want my cimdid opinion, of course?" "Cer tainly." "Well, I should tay hi undershirt." -Washington Capital. Mr. Jason -"Whj ain't supper randy, I waul to know?" Mrs. Jason "1 was down town and gut caught In tho rain without an umbrella. I had to wait In a .tore until the storm was over." Mr. Jason -"So you did have senso enough to go in out of the rain, eh? Woll, you are not au entire fool." Mrs. Jason "No; only tho better half of ono." Torre Haute Express. HOW "lady friends" do hate ono anot be:-, to be sure! The other day Uvo of an uncertain age who bad not rooantly met were having a chat. "Yaa"aa)d No. 1, --it was my birth day yesterday and my dear papa gave me a ring, its usual. He has always fired me a ring on my birthday over llaca I left school." "Ever since, you left school, darling?'' re echoed No. !f. 'why, what an extraordinarily largo collection of rings you must havo, love, to be sure." HYPNOTISM IN. MEDICINE. lis r.vrh -loatral Istt-iirtants Iteeoi-nlied liy l.s,lit,v Tienllala. Tha experiments made by Dr. Char ol ami his assoeialei have been made the subject of discussion at a congress of scientific men recently held al Pari. Quite a number of reports were rend indicating rtmurkabla success in the iroatmont by hypnotism of diseases ( ti it t bara Often baffled the most expe rienced physicians. 'Two physicians of Amsterdam reported tho results of no less than four Hundred and four teen . uses they had treated by hpno lism. Of these "unit hundred were ful ly cured. In ninety-eight there was a noticeable Improvement, and In only -o only-one wore there no results Fifty-eight cases were not followed. The east; InoJuded organic maladies ol I be nervous syetOQV menial diseases and neuralgia.' I ll lo r physicians re- purled that in the treatment of tho In ' th-y have su It-.1 in some cases, though It was admitted that tho difficulties were far greater than In physical maladies. It seems to have oeeii conceded that there If more ex porl.it io 1 of relief from treatment by bypnOt sm in nervous diseases In their various furiiis than In any others, and even If this bu so It will he a gain to medical -eienee. Hut tin- te.ts are only U yet In their experimental stage, and exactly upon what physiological bails Ihe investigation- of tho mos; distin guished ps eliologists are founded does not yet apM-ur certain. It is curious enough, nevertheless, tint' thoinChods of Mceincr, who was denounced as a charlatan a hundred years ago, but who has hud some strong followers at different time since among the higher Sluts of physicians, to suy nothing of raveling lecturers who were able to Metro! the will of person, wno sub mitted to their treatment It is curi ous, wo repent, that al the end of a eentury Piofiaaor Charcot should come forward public1)' 10 .how thu wonderful power of uicruit-ristn. or hypnotism, us .t has boon called, tlnt-e tbe experi ments of Dr. Baird. of Liverpool, and hat a congress of scientific men should lake up anew a half forgotten subject ind recognize by a long series of experi 111 nts its psychological importance. But if there is good in hypnotism, there s also danger in its use, as Charcot minted 011L If the person hypnotized nay In- mode unconsciously to curry nit the will of the oper itor even to the ,-rp tration of a crime. -Baltimore tea A CMtM ntfiiiW . eM Francisco Is said to enjoy an income from the practice of his profession of 6.00U per u.onlh. He has been in America nearly thirty years, and many Cau casians are among his patients. Near Elmer, Ore., a firmer out lown a fir tret: on bit farm. He got 1 1 if for the hark. From the lumber he built a hu.se 1 lx:.D. x feet high, a shed Litcben a feet wide and 20 f'-et long, a woodshed Hxl and hod 500 boards 6 Inches wide and V feet long. He also cut 834 railroad tins and fifteen cords I wood -all this fi'T. tr-f. RELIGIOUS AND EDUCATIONAL. Tho Primitive Melhodisls held iheir iiri Baileaal qqufareaioi in Pittsburgh, Pa One In twenty of the student in five of the lending government school, in Japan I. a Cbr sllan, but only ono in 1.5IM of the ge.ioral population. The annual re-union of ihe Luther an, of Maryland, West Virginia and Pennsylvania was held the other day at Penmar. Md , I0.WM.1 people present - The soul needs to he cultured as well as Itody and mind. The knowl edge necessary to its development can he learned only in the school of Christ. The Lutheran colleges founded and endowed by the Baltic Germans In tho Baltic pro Tinea Of Livonia huvo. In ae on dun e with the order of the Bussinn tyranny, ceased to exist In looking around for Chrlslian work, do not conclude that It mult be just such a Is done hy -ome one els -. Our Individual ti n I and faculties must be consul ed. ami what our own hands find to do what they are Mpeolallj lilted to do that must indicate our duly. 'The appropriations of the American Baplis: Missionary Union for the year ending March 31 IXilo amounted to MOS.78o.7L Much now work is pro vided (or, and Ihe schedule Is more clearly in aOOOrdMOa with the esti mates from the missionaries than for many years. 'The leaching of subjects relating to public health Is now undertaken at several of the medical schools in Great B I tain, ami .Indents are there pie pared for examination for the several diploma, in Sanitary Science, and for holding the appointment of medical of ficer of health Tho MelhiHlist alliance convention of North Ohio oonfoiM' co. at Us recent session, pledged itself to bring about the union of all the societies within the conference, accepted tho name Ki worth league, and passed resolution looting toward the organization of presiding- 1 el leit district leagues as soon as pos sible. It renews one s h.ipo in the future of American manhood 1 1 lem-n that no inokitig-cnr. we o called for on the train, which bore to Philadelphia the delegates lo tho lain Nitt ona Conven tion of the Sieietles of Christian En deavor. One train Hint contained nearly a thousand delegates, hundred. of ihum young men. had not a single smoker on board, "even In tha bag-gage-car." In the China Inland Mission Hos pital and Dispensary at Chefoo, 5.539 out-pat. enls have been relioved. '.'17 surgical operations performed, '.Mi in patients treated aud brought under iplrttual Induanaea not a few of whom are believed lo have accepted Christ as their Saviour; and all this work is thine at the small cost of 143. One of the most ii-aging signs of thu mission ary work In China is the hold the Gos- pel Is gaining oil the heart of tbowoin- . an. Ono lady ha. from forty to fifty present nt a women s meeting each Sunday. WIT ANJ WISDOM. - A mnn who rises above hUdlscniin. ogomcnt will he only the bolter for,ils adversities. , The way to gain a good reputation I toendttuvor to la- what you desire to appear. Socrates. Man Is not crfert, of course, hut so long a. woman Is ll does not matter much. Soiucrvllln Journal. It I. too hud that tho folk, who bare no money to pay for n nit-al should havo such good appetite. N. Y. Epoch. To finish the moment, to find the journey's end In every step of the road, to Uvu the greatest number of good hours. Is wisdom. Emerson. None aro so seldom found alone and lire so tired of their own company, as those coxcomb who are on beat terms with themselves. Cotton. By adversity are wrought the greatest wo-k of admiration, and all the fair examples of renown out of dis tress and misery a -e grown. Daniel. Wo pari more eaiily with what wo poess lhan with the expectation of what we wish for; and the reason of It I, that what wu expect I always greater than what we enjoy. A busy life, with good principles, strong purposes, and wisdom enough to secure a fair cultivation of the different sides of tho nature. Is one of the most Important factors for securing 11 rlte mid happy old ugn. Once a Week. Ixtt every dawn of morning be to you as the beginning of life, and every setting sun lie to you a its cloo; then let every one of these short live Uvo ll ure record of Home kindly thing done for oilier some goodly strength or knowledge gained for ourselves. Ru tin. Itle-s ngs on tin- man w ho sows the seeds of a happy nature nnd a noble character broad M0t wherever his feet wander, who bus a suille alike for joy and sorrow, a tender word always for a child, a compa-slonnte otUtrnncu for suffering, courtesy for friends and for tranger. encouragement for the despairing, an open heart for nil love for all good word for all. Kurul New Yorker. Cultivate good habits; they tend to make virtue habitual, so that " be comes more easy lo do good than lo give away to sin. 'Thus make pru dence a i.s.l. 1. and reckless profligacy becomes revolting; make sobriety a habit, and intemperance becomes hate ful. Hence ihe necessity for the great est 0 ire and watch'ulnens aguinsl Hit illicit I of any evil habit, for the char acter it ulwayi weakest where il bus once given away. Tfie important discovery has been made that two chemically distinct kind, of sea water are present in the North s-a One U rich In chlorine, tod (Mimes from the Atlantic to the south; the other has less chiorine, and flowt from ihe Arctic Ocean. Machinery eepeclally detlgned for the purpose it employed by shoe blacking manufacturer In grinding and mixing ingredients used in com pounding that useful adjunct to the toilet Tbe boxes are filled by hand, experienced workmen acquiring great dexterity in this particular branch of the business. . , . THE HcHSCHEL FAMILY. Mm, Mitriieii-. njssitaietsmata of Mat rs iiintia IfltronoiuiT. The Utile that Is known of the an cestors of the Herschols I honorabla Abraham. Isaac and Jacob, a the rep resentative of Ihi-eii generations were called, were sound Protestants, in day. when and in place where Protestunt lm was a reproach. Abraham Her- schel, the great great-grandfather of j John, was expeled from Mahron. his ! place of residence. 011 account of bit ffOteetantlam. Isaac, bit son. was a farmer near Lei pa la Jacob, ton of Isaac, declined agricultural puntuits and gave expression to the family apt itude for music by making It his pro fession, by bringing up his sons to the same culling, and by developing mu sical ability In all his ten childrou. Among the sons was the astronomer, Frederick William, who was born at Hanover In 173H, uud enmo 10 England at onc-aiiil-twenty as a professional musician, but caring even more for something else than music metaphys ics. To the end of hit life, when he wu known all over tho world for hit nslronuuiical di-coveries, his chief de light was in metaphysical study and argumentation. Perhaps we may ascribe to this taste, prevailing in tho little household at Slough, tho ten dency of bis scientific Htm, John, to di verge Into metaphysical criticism when ever his theme, or any interruption of il. afford tl occasion In the course of composition. John Herschel win born In tho well known house ut Slough, where stran gers wore by that tlmo coming from furullstnnt lauds to see the wonderful machine by which groat news had al ready descended out of tho sky. Most astronomers come to astrnnmy through matlieinatlcs. or come to matheimillcs through OMtronomy. Tho Herschel were 11 musical family; mil lc was their vocation; science wa their rocrout Ion. Although of Jacob Bonehel'l children Sir William and Caroline are tho only one who aro known to science, It I evident that the taste for science belonged to tho whole family, a Caroline Hontchol In her autobiography sieaks of lying awake uud listening lo discussion, between the father aud the older brother In which the names of Newton, Uilbnltz ami Euler frequently occurred. William Herschel considered hlm self very fortunate when ho was en gaged as musician In an Fjigltah regi ment Growing In reputation ho was appointed organist In a church, studied Italian. Latin and Greek by himaelf, 11111I road mathematical works on music. Thu music led him to mathematics, thence to optic, to as tronomy, to discoveries, to reputa tion. Ho became known to G -orgo III., wn poimlontid, guvo himself wholly to astronomy, wo knighted, ami soon became a member of all tbe learned societies of Europe. Sir William and Sir Johu were re markable for tho variety of their re quirement. Starling with a love of science, they followed whero It led. Into tho trackless regions of space and among remote nebula). Into those tangled ways where metaphysical and mathematical science enm to mingle, touching the margin of that dobatablo land where theology and science moot without recognition, yet keeping, espe cially in Sir John' case, tho equanim ity of the philosopher ami a kindliness of heart which made him tolerant of all uud rendered him beloved as woll us honored by those who know him. Worker in physical science have generally been long-lived, perhaps ho anttea only with length of years can any thing be done in science. Per haps, too, scloutiflc studies are health promoting, for If It 1. hour after hour over books It I. also hour after hour alono with nature. 'The Herschols worked 11 great ninny yours. Sir William HerscheT. papers, published in varlou scloutiflc jour nals, stretch through a period of forty yours. Sir John Herschel' reached through a period of flfty-seveu year about twice the average length of life. Sir William Herschel died at eighty three, Sir John at seventy-eight; and, a If to show that a woman can live aud work even longer than a man, Caroline, the sister of Sir William, died ut ninety-eight -Century. Theory tnd Practice. It It not difficult lo conceive that for many reasons, a man writes much better than he Uvea For, wllhouton torlng Into re lined speculations, It may be shown to bo much easier to design than to perform. A man prtqiosos his schemes of life in a slate of almtrnc tlon and disengagement exempt from thu enticements of hope, the solicita tions of uffcctlon. the Importunities of appetite, or the depressions of fear, and is In tin-sumo stale with him -that teaches upon the land the art of navi gation, to whom the sea Is always smooth und the wind always prosper oua Nothing Is more unjust how ever uncommon, than to charge with hypocrisy him that expresses zeal for I virtue which he neglect to practice; since he may be sincere, con vinced of the advantages of conquer ing hi passions, without having yet obtained the victory; 0 a man may be confident of the advantages of a voy age or a journey, without having courage or Industry to undertake It and may loneetly recommend to others those attempts which he neg lects himself. N Y. 1-edger. -Ourlng some maneuvers of the Germ in cavalry at Greig a woman and her little boy got In front of a regiment of cuirassiers charging In full gallop. The leading officer shouted to her to lie down, and she did. lying upon ber boy. The whole regiment passed over without Injuring her. every horse in whose track the lay having been made to jump over her. A fleet of seventy-five bargee near Mempblt. containing 660.000 bushels of coal, recently suffered from the dep redations of countless myriads of shrimps, which ate out the oakum In the teams of tbe boats, rendering large working force at the pum necessary to keep them from slukin". The boats were lately moved into the current which twepl the little Incum brances off, and tbe leak, stopped. u, mey naa nnisnuu iy dead upon U14 ground.