' :i IH M I, 1 ft. Ift I Q TlfK HPIC Circle. Give Me the People. Some lore tba glow of outward thaw. Same lore mere wraith ami try to win It; The houM to me may lowly be, If 1 but Ilka tha people in It. What's all the gold tbat gllttrra cold. When linked to hard or haughty feeling? Wbit'er we'ra told, the nobler gold la troth of heart and manl y dealing 1 Then let them seek, whoso minds are weak. Mere fashion's smile atd try to win It; The houte to me may lowly be. If I but like the people In it. A lowly roof may give ua proof That lowly flowers are often fairest, And trees, whose bark Is hard and dark, May yield ns fruit and bloom the rarest t There's a worth aa sure 'nrath garments poor. As e'er adorned loftier station; And mlnda as jnat as those we trust Whose claim la but of wealth's creation I Then let them aeek, whose minds aro weak, Here fashion's smile, and try to win It; The house to me may lowly be, If I but like the people In It I The Other Side.oHhe Story. From Pacific Rural Press, , Did I ever ? Messrs. Editors I am heart broken to think that you would publish such a slandor about one of your most devoted read ers; but it, only proves what I hne always affirmed, that men are not to be trusted, be they editors or common people. To think of my husband, Timothy Toodles, Esq., to whom I have been martied over thirty years, getting himself into print. Why, it is ridiculous 1 And to think that I, who was fifty years of age last month, ard never eaw my name in print, pave the day when ToodleS and I were joined together, till death or some woman do us part- to thit.k, I repeat, that should bo so lidicnled in that heartless manner; and adding insult to injury, give it such a name as "A Hen-Peoked IIu band's Soliloquy." Hfln-peoked I The idon ! Why didn't he name it " The trial aud tribu lations of Timothy Toodles, Esq. ?" but no ! That was not high-sounding enough for bim. I will now tell my e-ide of the ttorv: Toodlos kindly remark?, that I follow him from one room to another, until it is too late to go out. And why shouldn't I, pray tell me ? When he does "slip awny" without my knowl edge, (one of his delectable phrases), he never oomes homo until after midnight; uud in an swer to my wifely questionings, replies "That the lodge was later than usual, transacting im portant busineFs." "Lodges" aro veryconve nlent subterfuges, aro they not ? I should like to know why women cannot have "lodges" to visit, when the baby is cross, or the head of the family soolds. Whenever tho fire-toll rings during the night, up Toodles statts, and would rush out bare headed and bare-footed, but I am afraid that ho would get over-heated, and then take cold, or a building might fall on him, or his modesty might be shocked by seeing a woman without her dress. Toodles is a very modest man, and 1 persuade bim to remain at home, parllv by hidiug bis olothes, and partly by having a dreadful toothache. And after all my care, he coolly remarks "That the ro is snob, a thing as bi ing entirely too solicitous." The wretch I to hold mo up to tho derision of tho world. Why 1 My hair is gotting wliitor every day, since that article has appeared in print; but my time will come. As for my turn ing his pockets inside out, what of that? When a kning wlfo once dihcovers n pioluro of a doll-faced girl, carefully wrapped up in tissuo paper in her worse half's pocket, aud ou inquiry, is told that it is n favorite cousin's likeness (Oh I those very convenient cousins), she is very apt to search his pockets regularly; and nlnety-nino wives out of a hundred nnd perhaps tho hundredth nUo would do tha samo thing. Such a looking honae, when I came home I Words cannot do justice to the subject. I defy any woman, who has the spirit of n mouse, to feel pleasant, whon she stumbles over a chair on en tering tho houso, finds the parlor in a state of ohronio contusion, the chairs upset, ourtains lorn, carpot (rulued, oanary bird dead, piano scratched, uncomplimentary remarks written undor the pictures in the album; tho bed-chambers looking as 1( thorn had been a battle fought there; pillows on tho floor; her best hat in tho oornor, looking as if it had been used in a garuo of battle dore nnd shnttle-oock; cigars strewed around the bed and room; bats, coats and boots here, there and everywhere, and a de canter of wino upset on the floor beside a pic ture of a ballet danoer iu an iuipossiblo altitude; tho kitchen so littered up with dirty dishes, novels', bottles of perfnmory, satin vests, curl ing tongs, runsio hooks, broken glass, kid gloves, withered boquets and goodnoBS knows what else. You can imagine my feelings, when I saw all this, aud then rend a note which he h Id fastened to tho broken mirror. "DiunKkT Balit Ann; I am unavoidably compelled to leave home on bnsinoss for about two weeks; but will return at the explratiou of that time, honing to find a pleasant home, and a cheerful wife. You littlo imagine how I have missed you. Your loving Toodlw." Dearoat Bally Ann I Any one would infer from the above, that ho had several other Bally Ann's, and I was the "dearest," Yes I I have no doubt that he missed me, to maka homo "pleasant," Ou a oonspiouous part of my virtuous couch I saw a paper with the article before mentioned heav ily marked with a blue pencil. Like all of Eve's daughters, I have my aharo of curiosity, and I took the paper, aat down on the floor; my favorite easy-chair had one of its ahem limbs brokeu, and commenoed reading. The first two Hues struck ma as being something similar to my case, as, I had gone to visit my mother; but I read on, until the slanders made my face burn I never use rouge aud to give my slowly bristling hair, a chance to stand on end, I threw off my hat, and ttill read on, until I notioed that he would go away on bniineas for about two weeks. That was the last straw I I knew Toodles had written it. A man of bis years fifty-eight next week old enough to have more sense, rushing into ptlut, and making himself conspicuous. I knew now what had befallen my venerable Thomas Oat. No mora his musical "melon" would greet me. I rose in my wrath, with soma difficulty, smoothed my erect hair, left a brief message underneath hie interesting aketoh. "Tour wife awaits you at the; hotel," and I majestically departed, leaving the house in the condition I found it. Two weeks later, Timothy Toodles, Esq., entered my preaeooe, and rushed forward to embrace me, I waved hlu off, and aUrnly said: "Perfidious man, were j ou not ashamed to in vade the sanctity of oar home, and lift tba ear tain to the public view T" He looked bewildered, and than said: "What did you say. 8y Ann t" I gased ecorufuUy at him, and repeating mr question, adding: "I know all; I have read yow delectable effusion holding my pray hair p to the aeorn of tha world; sad, will now eay, that I shall not enter your house, until it la in Us spotlsas order that I left It. I shall remain hare, as you think it is so economical, and yon .- . ah. hllla" . I Mvar saw a man look so oreatlaUeii. He agreed, to verjtaiag, ana urea days law, i my house, arid found everything in order, and new curtains, sew mirror- new carpet, a new canary bird and a beautiful Thomas Cat, which reminds me of my deDarted favorite. I Timothy Toodles, Esq., has been very sub dued since then, as I rewind him of his article, ! only thtee times a day; and thanks to my train ing, I am positive, gentlemen that ha will never trouble yon agaiD, by rushing into print 1 in ttwif tJrliAtilnnai manna au auua) iiuivuivuo ujitMucit r t No'w you have heard my side of the story, do you blame me for my righteous indignation ? San Josd, Jan. 1st, 1875. Naming Babies it is a fearful responsibility to be delegated to name a child which is not your own. So far as my children are concerned, I am never bothered; I just watch them for a few days to catob a leading trait in their character, and then found the name on that. If they are mild tempered and peaoeful. I select some Fuoh name as Placid, Contentment, Harmony or Peace, and if ugly, I saddle 'em with Hurri cane, Tornado, Tom Bayers, Cape Horn or Texas Jaok. Strangers are sometimes amazed to see me go down to the gate, and hear me call out : "Tornado,- Bayers, Cape Horn, John son, Quad, you. and Contentment, Harmony, Sunflower, Burlingnme come in to supper," but 1 run my domestio affairs as suits me best. Mrs. Daiton was over the other-day with her baby. It is a stub-nosed, red-faced rascal, and I hope he'll never be named at' all. She put him into my lap and said: "Now, do give him a name something sweet and handsome and good." The youug scoundrel looked me in the eye for a moment, and then deliberately kicked me five times in the stomach and clawed my nose. I told bis mother that uhe'd better name bim Tarantula, or Centipede, or Cougar, and the picked him up, bugged him, and said that I bad tbe reputation ull over the neighborhood of being n brute. Mrs. Oogber also brought over her offspring tho other evening. It is a girl with red hair, white eyes and largo ear', and she spit at me the moment I took her up spit full in my face, and bowled nnd fought to get hold of my neck tie. "She's such a blesafd, sweet tempered little angel, that you must give her some awful nice name," said tbe mother. I suggested Susie, Be sie, Bella, Dolly, Betsy, Mollif, Snllle, Tillie, and fifty other names, but Mm. Uogber replied that I hadn't any refinement about me, and she said tbe dar ling croaturo was to be named Mirabdl Augus tlno St. Clair Dogber. There's nothing like having a high soundfng name for a child, no matter if his lather bas to work for a dollar a day, nnd his mother goes out wuHhing window. Very often as I come up to dinner I find George Washington Hugo Brown rolling in tho dirt with Thomas Jeffer son Adolf Lo Grand Smith, while Darabel Flo riun Victoria Grunip is drawing a stick up and down the walk by a stiinu. driven by Theodore Jackson Duke Albert Fleming. If those chil dren nail common names I suouleln t care a cent whether they lived or died. .If. Quad. Hapfinfs-iintiii: Family CincLK If a man is so situated that h cannot be hnppy in his fam ily relations, bo will not onjoy happiness at all. Man must cultivate, therefore, nnd look forthit great end of his labors tit home in tbe bosom of his wife, and in the nffoction of his children. Around his on health, in (ho presence of a lov ing family, the husband and father, himself the affectionate head of the household, cannot be otherwise than happy, He has no competition in business there, no opposing candidates for honors no grasping, unscrupulous enomy, who may seek to take advantage of every weak point to injure him and tear from him bis earnings and possessions; but every one near him gives bim preference, is awake to bis interest in evervtnins: they emulate each other in doing him heart-felt honor, and without dissimulation or affectation, sympathize with him in all his sorrows, hopes, joys aud triumphs. His loving intercourse at homo is followed by no remorse, is attended by no dicqulttiug reflection or re gret, te is tuere perfectly at oaso, mny be himself without .reserve, and be sure that no unnloasant occurrence or oonsenuenco can re- suit therefrom. It Is his kincdom. and ho is triumphantly entered beloved by every subjeot. His wife is the hon- your pnmii i u utu uCW ., ored queen of homo; none dispute her benign '" 7 and be good, it seems as if I'd die easier, swayisheruleaby smiles, and the whole fam-. Won ' J?" P'pmise me , my son? And I n i! ' i i.. i l i, i i nromised her. bovs, ond that's what m's me where they pobsess i l-Dr. liyfonl. I n? mea uoiamg my nana, ana i promisea to J " quit (he low business, and go to work. I came " "- " ''down to tel ye, and now you won't see me on An Old Timb Custom. Tbe Babj Ionian She Potomao again. I'vo bought an ax, and am had a law, which was also follow od by the 'going up iu Cana In to winter." Heneti, nu Illyrlan people, and by Herodotus There was n dead silence for a moment, ana thought to be one of their best, which ordained then he said: hat when girls were at a marriageable age they "Well, boys, I'll shake hands with you all wore to repair to a place where the young men around afore I go. Good by, Pete good by, were assembled. They were then sold by tho. Jack, Tom, Jim. I hope ye won't fling any I1V llVri IU UVI 4lV!7. UUU UBl I'D Ut.MMJF UUIV publio oner, who first disposed of tbe most beautiful one. When he had sold her, he put up others, according to Ineir elegroesof beauty. The rich Babylonians were emulous to carry off the finest women, who-were sold to the highest bitlders. But as the young men who were poor'could not aspire to have flue women, they were content to take the ugliest, with the money whioh, was given with them; for wheu the crier had sold the handsomost, he ordered the ugliest of ull tho women to be brought, and inquired it any one wns willing to take her with a smalt sum of money. Thus she became the wife of him who was most easily satisfied, and thus the finest women were sold, and from tbe money which they brought small fortunes were given to the ugliest, and to those who had any bodily deformity. Thk Advantaois of Wintxb Winter makes natious manly by driving men into social uni ties, and obliging them to live with each other, and devise ways for their amusements and in struction. In a mild climato, where there is no necessity for men to dwell under a roof, they wander abroad, andiu a great measure dispenfe with each other's society, so that, although they may have certain amount of cursory en joyment, they are comparatively nulnstructed. But, in a severe climate when tbe cold season shuts men out from the field and they retreat from their ordinary vocations, and the days are short and the the eveniuga are long, the dwell ing becomes a school-house, and there must be conversation and reading. Under snoh ciroum-' stances the family las center of knowledge; and, if there be any leaven In it, a center of Cbriatianlzatlon. ' In the family all the ohlldren serve the father and mother; serve them in love; serve them not in suoh a way as to abolish anything that is in them, bnt in such a way as to enable them, to (urn all their faculties Into tha current1 of a purified and noble affection. They grow up giving and taking, and doing these things tnrough disinterested affection, and being taught to do (hem so. What an education this ial A Yanxib poet thus breaks forth: "Oh I the snore, tba beautiful snore, filling the cham ber trom ceiling to floor I Over the coverlet, under the sheet, from her w dimpled chin down to her pretty feet I Now rising aloft like bee in Jane; nowsunktothe wallofacracktd bassoon I Now, flats like, subsiding, then ris ing saain, is the beautiful snort of Elisabeth Jali ' WILLAMETTE . FARMER. Why "Ugly Sam" Reformed. A Promise to a Dying Molher-A Story thai Touches the Heart. He had been missing from the "Potomao" for several days and Cleveland Tom, Port Hu ron Bill, Tall Chicago and the reat of the boys, who were wont to get drunk with him, could'nt make out what had happened. They hadn't heard that there was a warrant out for him ; had never known of his being sick for a day, and his absence from his old haunts puzzled them. They were in the Hole in the Wall saloon the the other morning, nearly a dozen them, drink ing, smoking and playing cards, when in walked Ugly Sam. Thero was a deep silence, for a moment as they looked at him. Sam had a new hat, had been shaven clean, had on a clean collar and a white shirt, and they didn'tknow him at first. When they saw that it was Ugly Sam they uttered a shout and leaped up. "Cave in tbat bat I " cried one. "Yank that collar off 1 " shouted another. "Let's roll him on the floor I" screamed a third. There was something in his look and bearing which made them hesitate. The whisky red had almost faded from his face, jtnd he looked Bober and dignified. xHU features expressed disgust and contempt as'he looted around the room, and then revealed pity as his eyes fell upon tho red eyes end bloated faces of the crowd before bim, . , ' i $ "Why, what nils ye, Sam ?" inquired Tall (Jnicago, as tney all stood mere. "I've oome down to bid you good by, boysl " he replied removing his hat and drawing a clean handkerchief fron his pocket. "What I Hev yer turned preacher ? " they shouted in chorus. "Bojs yer know I can lick any two of ye, but I hain't on the fight any more, and I've put down the last drop of whisky which is to ever to go into my mouth I I've taken an oath. I'm going to be decent! " "Sam, be you crazy?" asked Port Huron Bill, coming near to him. 'I've come down here to tell ye all about it," answered Sam. "Move the cba'rs back a little and give me room. Yo all know I've been a rough, and more too. I've been a drinker, a fighter, a gambler, and a loafer. I can't lcok back and remember when I've earned an honest dollar. The police hez ohased me around like a wolf, and I've been in jail and the workhouse, and the papers has said tbat Ugly Sam was tbe terror of the Potomac. Ye all know this, boys, but ye didn't know I had an old moth'r." Tho faces of the crowd expressed amazement. "I nt-ver mentioned it to any ye, for I was neglecting her," he went on. "She was a poor old woman, living up there in the alley, and, if the neighbors had not helped her to fuel aud food, Bhb'd have been found dead long ago. I never helped her to a cent did not see her for weeks and weeks, and I used to feelmeun about it. When a feller goes back on bis old mother he's n gettin' purty low, and I know it. Well, she's dead butted jos'erdiy 1 I was up there afore she died. She sent for me by Peti', nnd whon I got there I seen it van nil day with her." "Did she say an; thing ?" asked one of the boys, as Sam be-dtated "That's what ails me now," he went on. "When I went in she reached out her band to mo, and, says she: 'Samuel, I'm going to die. and I know (1 you want to see me afore I passed awny!' I sat down, feeling queer like. She didn't go on nnd say as how I was n loafer, and bad neglected her, nnd all that, but says she: 'Samuel, you'll be all alone when I'm gone. I've tried to be a good mother to you, and have prayed for you hundreds 'o nights, and cried about you till my old heart was sore !' Some of the neighbors bad dropped in, and the women were crying, and I tell you, boys, I felt weak 1" He paused for a moment, and then con tinued: "And the old woman said she'd like to kiss mo afore death came, and tbat broke mo right down. She kept hold of my hand, and by and by she whispered: 'Samuel, you are throwing your life away. You've got it in you to be a , man, if you'll mako up your mind. I hate to llla "d feel that my on y son and the last of our family mny go to the gmiows bricks at me, and I shan't never fling at any of jo. It s a dying promise, ye see, ana ill keep It if it takes a right arm I" The men looked reflectively nt each other after ho hud passed out, and it was a long time before any one spoke. Then Tall Chicago flung his clay pipe into a corner, and Baid: "I'll lick the man who says Ugly Sam's head isn't levil I" "So'll 1 1" repeated the others. Mabbiid Live. Caresses and attention, and all I be pretty follies of love, are for the idle hours and the cloudless sunshine; but tbe silent sweetness of married friendship is that for which men look in dark days, aud the treasure on which they rest. Why cannot women learn reliauoe? they think. Why must they always need to be told again and again that which they already know, and begin to doubt so soon as they oeaBe to hear? This is the first contest of natures in married life, but it is one wherein, it tbe woman ia wise, the will yield without a murmur, and bide her disappointment as care fully aa the Spartau boy bides hts fox. A Whx-obdkbcd home is a paradise on earth No other earthly pleasure is equal to the calm contentment felt at the family fireside. The excitement of even successful business is at. tended with vexation; the enjoyments of travel are associated with fatigue and danger; tho pursuit of fame is distracting; and even the pleasures of knowledge are oombined with bit terness, 'But tbe happiness of the fireside ia unalloyed, A Mush and Mil Bocublb. The Flaocr ville .Democrat aays: Mrs. Kirk wid give a mush and milk sociable in the basement of the Methodist Church, on Friday, Jan. 15th, 1674. Everybody is invited to be in attendance. The ptooeedsarstabe devoted to charitable pur- tWft 1,1 1 Whkk oild people go book to their childhood, whst , things do tbej remember most? what do you remember about your mother that ia gone? Not anything by which she was formally mad known to the world, bat some scene of tenderness, some fragrant sentiment which lin gers in your iaaaginsJuoo. A TBivsxw announces as a fact that he onoe in his Ufe beheld people minding their own .bnskMMi" This remarkable oeoursnee happened at se tbe pessangers being too "sick" to attend to each other's eoncsn. it 1 had The Way American History was once Written. Mr. Bancroft is familiarly charged with writing the History of the Revolution in the 'nte eft of Washmgton and Franklin, , and making themont to be perfect, while be slights or misuses all the inferior actors. This ch. ge has no foundation In truth. He is really very fair, and knows better than bis ciitics do how to make allowance for failure, which could not tut exist in such times. The charge has been mursedbytbe amazement, which naturally grew into indignation, first of individuals and then of tbat indefinite being, "the general public," when they all learned that the even seven years of the American Revolution was not an exceptional period, in which all who went and came were saints, Bolonsand Caesars. By an ingenous system of writng history, under which the Ameiiean youth of the first half of this century were brought up, all defeats were over, all follies forgotten, all cheats forgiven, and one clear suy ei virtue "" back-oround of tbe whole narrative from the -. .fD.nl P.nn'fi rMa till that olOSinC scene when nmld the tears of thousands Wash ington Bheathed bis swora at Annapons. ine curious lad who read sometimes asked meekly when he found how bravelyWayno took Stony Point, how it came into English hands at all. Bat neitber.book nor.teachtr, gave-any answer to such impertinent questions. 'Onward still the Yankoa lion bore, And still the scattered BrltonB fled before." Nothing, therefore, could well be moreamaz ! n o V..AC nf ornrtflnhlldren and creat- irrnndcbildren. as they read the four volumes of Jul, oancroil s ivuvumuuu, muu w uu ux this man blundered, inat tail one sioie, mas nuA. aa in triA nnv nf Prftnre. and vet nllUaUCl Wto a aw J"J - -- -- v another was suoh a confessed fool that nobody trusted mm wun any auiuomy. iu wuiai .1 . n.A.tilH if anrrca Vthinh ITIAn nailed the naa r1.a Pif All rririnn dwindled down into an assembly, of incompetent twaddlers before tne war was eione, nus ueeu pciuttpa, a surprise almost as staitling. But really we do nnf owi tl,o.f iha faiilf. In thiu'view of tbe drama. or of its performers, is to be charged on tho man who puns tne curiam aswe. xi muse people were fools he could not make them leave sensible records behind them. To take him to task is really to ask him to falsify history. His real offence seems to be, not so much that be dUc'ose the imperfeotions of others tbe men who stumbled nnd fell, as that be proves them Bos'on Advertiser. Larok and Small Ears. Largo ears, as has been observed, hear things in general, nnd de note broad comprecensive views and modes of thought; while small ears hear things in parti cular, showing a disposition to individualize, often accompanied by the love of the minute. Large enrs aro usually satisfied with learning the leading facts of a cae, with tbe general principles involved too slrict nn attention to the enumeration of details, especially all repeti tion of the more unimportant, is wearisome to them. People with such ears like generally, and are usuilly fitted to conduct large eUer prises, to receive aud pay out money in large sums; in buying or selling would prefer to leive a margin rather then reduce the quantity of goods of any sort to the exact dimensions of tbe rne.isrre specified, aud in giving would prefer to five with free hind and wlthont too strict a calculation as to the exact amount. Small eirs, on the contrary, desire to know the particulars of n Btoiy asvell as the main facts; take de light often in examining, handling, or con structing tiny specimens of workmanship; are disposed tb be exact with respect to inches nnd ounces in buying or selling, to tbe extent at least of knowing the exact number over or under the stated measure given or received. People with BUth ears would, iu most cases, prefera re tail to a wholesale business. Phrenological Journal. Femalk Education. Canada is becoming well furnished with institutions for the higher education of women. Toronto, Hamilton, London, Brantford, Whitby, nnd Ottawa, in the Province of Ontario, have eaoh large and well conducted ladies' collects. It is now proposed to commenca one in Halifax, to cost fifty or sixty thousand dollars. In the Prov ince of Quebec, where the need of it is more pressing, and where the means are in abun dance, it is hoped that soon the monntain's brow at Montreal may be crowned with its "Trafalgar Institute," a splendid monument to the liberality of its founder, who began by divestiug himself of ten acres cf land, tbe fluent site iu tbe city, worth at leatt $50,000, and who has aho bequeathed a large fortune for its future extension and maintenance; All tbe girls aro becoming vegetarians. They wear turn-up hats. A New Cattle Disease in Jamaica. A correspondent writes to the London Field: A relative in Jamaica writes: "I am in a sea of troubles; the cattle on one of my properties will not get well, and will die. Nobody here has ever seen or heard of anything like it upon any pen (a cattle estate) in the inland. I have lost fully 000, aud am by no means out of tbe wood. The animals waste away until they die; there is no other symptom than that of wasting, and, when opened, the liver is a mass of corruption, and full of big worms. I am well acquainted with the ordinary liver disease of cattle. The present plague dlffe:s from it in tbe beast having no cuugb, and in the old herd of between five and six hundred being affected. Nothing tbat I have tried does any good. The nnnsual quantity of rain which has fallen in the last two months, may have increased the epidemic." Ripened Leaves. Many persons think that when the leaves turn red and yellow in the fall it is because they have been killed by the frost. But a little observation will show that such ia not the case, and that the autumns when the leaves are moBt beautiful, are those in which the frost is the latest. A severe frost kills the leaves at once, and they soon fall, brown and withered. To be brilliant they must ripen naturally, and oar hot Sep tember and October midday suns have prob ably maoh to do with it, tut in England, where the falls are apt to be damp and olondy, the leaves are not so bright, and American artists, who strive to Mint our manlea and rionrooda as they see them, are unjustly accused of over-coionng. jst. A Mam on Long island, famous for hU hogs, was asked what was the secret of his success. He answered: "I always choose s sood- natured pig. Those that when they eat are constantly running! from one trough to another and kuoeking their snouts sgainat the next pig I sell to my neighbors, who' don t know better than to bay sack troublesome snimsis, wnue my contented pigs get fat." Pates Maotactube Upwards of one hun dred flrsae are eaoaced in the manufacture and sale of paper in Philadelphia, the first estab lished in me country oetng tne iiutennouse Mills, where the old Continental paper money was nude. At the present time all oar bank note and fractional currency paper is made by tha old end wealthy firm ot J. M. Wilcox k Co., of that sib. Yoil(Q pOLK3' CoLlJpil. "Prevention. is Better than Cure.'7 I was sitting beside My destined bride, One still, sentimental day; "How I long," said I, "Out to make you cry, And I'd kiss tne bright tears awsy U' Fslr Cecily blnsh'd, Her voice was hnsh'd, I thought she would cry, to be sure; Bat she Usp'd to mi, Fouling prettily) f S "Prevention Is better than cure t" Popping Corn. Isn't it fun to ,pop corn? and when it ig popped isn't it good? Most boys in the country crow a few hills of. DOD-com to furnish them nmusement in the Winter evenings. There is come skill to be used in so simple a thing as popping corn. ) In the first place, the corn, should be well dried) for when too flesh and soft it does not pop well at all. Then a wire popper with a long handle is the best thing to pop it in. 'A very Bmalj handful of corn, only about enough to cover the bottom, is put in the popper'and thereover fastened down. Then we must heat the corn grndually.Jiqldingjt at a distance ftom the odals, and wneri-it-ls"will heated through bring it nearer the ,fire, ,wheu the. popping will begin.' 'Yon 'mutt shake all tha time, and the more. the corn pops the faster you must shake to prevent burning. If tho corn is of a good kind a very1 liMIe will fill the popper when finished. Pop! how the little grains bounce abont as they jump op and put on their snowy night-caps. Look at a popped grain. It does not seem at all like a kernel of corn; it is fairly turned inside out. What makes the corn pop and behave in this way ? Tbe chemist says that the corn contains an oil, and tbat the heat turns this oil into gas, and when the pressure of this gas gels strong enough to burst the grain, pop it goes. Tbat corn con tains oil may be new to you, but there is oil in it, and in sorao kinds of corn a great deal. Sixteen gal ons of oil have been obtained from 100 bushels of grain, and very nice oil too. It hsB but one fault, and that is it ooats too much to get it out of the oorn; while the' mineral oil lasts the petroleum from which they get kero sene it is not likely that we shall feed our lamps with corn oil. When yon hear the grains, go off with a "pop," and a "sput," justremem ber it is the oil that affords you, all the fun, and turns the hard and flinty grains into beautiful masses of corn-starch, not only pleasing to look nt, but wholesome to eat. Americari Agricul turist. Is it Good for the Boys? Boys think tobacco is good at any rate they persist in trying to use it though it makes them ill, as if they thoughtit would prove tobe good. A boy nine years of age was re oently brought in for examination by his mother, and having a twenty-two inch brain, we advised him never to touch tobacco, because it had such a tendency to induce the blood to the brain and keep tbe body lean and little. We remarked that1 if he ever exp'oted to be a full-sized man he must keep c)ear of tobacco as be would' of any other poison. The motherremarked that .she had seen enough of thence of tobacco 'to make her very earnest in traiulng her boy relative to its use. She said her husband nsed tobacoo for ten or more years, beooming lean, billions 'and Bokly;( that when he became so weaki and ilL that he could hardly walk or situp, he would smoke several eegars a day. Finally the doc tors informed him tbnt'he must'qtJlt using' to bacco or go to his grave.' This brought him to his senses, aud he resolved to try the i experi ment. From that day be used tobacco no more and in three months' time he went.from a weight of 130 up to 185 pounds, and became as hardy, healtby and robust a'man'as'conld be seen in a day's ride. That woman 'thinks to bacco is not good for boys, and she is sure it is not good for men. She is determined ithat.her boyB shall be kept from it. If parents could rtalize the extent of the evil resulting from the ueo of tobacco, especially by youth, they would certainly refrain from setting them the bad ex ample. The appetites rofaU tobacco-users are perverted, and they are in an abnormal condi tion ot body and mind. As little Alice was walking around tho garden with her great-aunt,' a maiden lady, she caught eight of, an.;inseqt npon, the footpath, which she immediately ran and crushed with her boot. "Oh, Alice," cried tho "ladj, . "you should cot have done that ! 'Perhaps the poor thing was a mother, and had some littlo ones to provide for." After a few minutes's--consideration ,the child said, "Bat auntie, perhaps it was only a great-aunt." Industbious School Girls, ThaCal. CW rensnya: We know of a school in this county where the large girls go' to the school-house on Saturdays and scrub it out nioelyi and keep everything around tbe building neat iand or derly. Such evidences of goQdtwill and indus try are commendable, and wo hope their teacber will be unliring in his efforts to give them a good education. ' We'll give 11 for tho sight of the boy ten years old who can 'get out of bed in the morn ing and find bis hat and shoes without half an hour's hunt. Salt on Wheat. Borne soils are benefited by an application of alt, but we do not belive there is any efficacy in it to keep wheat from freezing out. Tho rough drainage is the remedy for that. Every one knows, or ought to know, the value of ashes aa a fertilizer. Salt furnishes two of the most important elements of the ashes of plants sodium and chlorine, and hence it will be valu able to lands deficient in these. Every farmer must determine for himself whether his land needs salt or any other substance. Sow fait on alternate strips of yonr wheat, marking where yon sowed and where you (did not, end then observe the difference in the crop next year. Where the constituents of salt are wanting wheat will almost always lodge, even though tbe crop of straw be light. If yon have been troubled with this salt will be useful, though we should prefer to mix it with the manure. Professor Mapes' famous receipt is: One bushel salt, three bushels of marl; let lie under cover four months, and kthen mUi it with one cord of muck. This is no doabt .. valuable mixture for sandy land. Where salt is' sown broadcast do it after the wbest is sown, giving frosa one to five bushels per acre. Mr. Qeddes, of Mew York, in an essay on salt M a manure, comes to these conclusions: "Some sods hats enough of salt, and more added does sa injury. Lands away from the sea coast are greatly ben efited by light applications, bat heavy quanta ties are injurious even' there." Ohio Farmer, Waoon Whsels axd Dbait. Experiments recently msde in England Indicate that wagons are most easily drawn, oa 'all kinds of roads, when tbe fore and bind wheels are of the same eise, and when the pole lies lower than the axle. i i"Jtiiia'riXiwMfl SjlMCBiUia3Pta3Bm,I3 J .,.. -.-