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About Willamette farmer. (Salem, Or.) 1869-1887 | View Entire Issue (March 10, 1876)
3 WILLAMETTE FARMER. mm If IM- U M I Wi 1e Hope Circle. My Neighbor's Baby. AcrofB In my neighbor' window. With Its draplngs of satin and lace, I tte 'neath the flowing ringlets, A baby's Innocent face, Hia feet In crimson slippers. Are tapping the polished glass. And the crowd In the streets look upward, And nod and smile as they pass. Just here In my cottago window, Catching the flics In the sun, With a patched and faded apron, B'ands my own little one. His face is a pure and handsome As the baby's over the way, And he keeps my heart from breaking At my tolling, every day. Sometimes when the day Is ended, And I sit In the dusk to rest, With the face of my sleeping darling Hugged close to my lonely breast, I pray that my neighbor's baby May not catch heaven's rotes all, Hut that some may crown the lorehead Of my loved one, as they fall. And whn I draw tbo stockings From his little weary feet, And kls& the rosy dimples In his limbs, so round and sweet, I think of the dainty garments Some little children near. And that my God withholds them From mine so pure and fair. May God forgive my envy, I knew not what I said; My heart is crushed and troubled, My neighbor's buy is dead I I saw the little coffin As they carried it out to-day; A mother's heart Is breaking In the mansion oer the way. The light is fair in my wImIow; The flowers bloom ti my door; My boy is chasing the suubeams That dance on the cottage floor. The roses or health aro bluomiug On my darling's cheek to-day, Hut the baby is gone from the window Of the mansion over the way. Concerning Hogs. I From Pacific Itural Press "Are you interested in hogs, ma'ani?" said an old farmer to me one day, "because if you are I havo FOiue fine ones in the pen yonder you may like to look at." No, I am cot interested in bogs, but have something to bay about them, and not being mucn of a talker will put it on paper, so people can rend it if they wish, and if they do not care to rend it they can let it alone. Zoology tenches U3 that certain vegetable eating animals were intended as food for man, and some other animals were designed ns scavengers, to dispose of that which would poison the air and render it unfit for human life. Tlie bog evidently belongs to this latler cluss, forihis natural propensities lend him to deour whatever falls in hia way, whether it be dead or live, reptilts, grubs and decayed animal and vcgotablo matter. In certain places hogs have been fattened on the refute of slaughter houses. The fnrmer himself uses hisswinons scavengers, for in his back yard may be iound a receptacle culled the swill barrel, con taining thoir food, which consists us ually of a most extraordinary mixture. Besides the sour milk, which is good, thero may bo found rotten apples, rotten potntoes, moldy bread, spoiled ment, cooked vegetables which have soured, the cleauicgs and scrapings of all sorts of cjaino and fowls, dirty dishwater, drowned Hies, bugs and even dead rats and mice. It is dreadful to mention such things, I feel finite horrified myself at tho idea; but that is not one-tenth or one-hundredth part as bad as it is to eat them after they are turned into p'nj meat, and that is just what people do when ever they eat pork or lard or bacon. The hog is in every respoct a filthy animal, and it is high time his flesh was banished from the tables of civilized people. Science has revealed the fact that pork is liable to be in fected with a certain animnlculae destructive to human lifo, and that it always has a teudenoy to produce scrofula and other impure con ditions of tho blood, Theso statements niav astonish some stoady going farmer who has nlwayH had hog meat in his house, and always expects to, simply be cause his father and grandfather did before him; and we cannot blame the farmer so much, bicauso possibly he is a uiau who rends little aud thinks less; there are a few Mich farmers everywhere, and neither he nor his wife have ever considered what they should do without pork. ' If there was no pork to be had they could fill its place very well with salt beef aud dried beef, salt and smoked fish aud eggs. Several other arti cles could also take the place of lard, aud the family bo ten times better off with regard to health. The principal argument used by lovers of pork in its deleuse is that it usually commauds a high price, showing that u great many people buy it. A parallel case is that of the lowest class of newspapers, whoso columns are filled with police reports, aud the soum gathered from drinkiug and gambling saloons. These papers also command u high price, because there is unfortunately a large class of people whose taste calls for that sort of stimulus; but it does not thereforo follow that this is good and de sirable literature. Aud it can bo only a depraved appetite which leads people to persist iu the use of pork after being euilgfcttiied as to its nature aud effects, L. Men as Lovers, In tho first plaeo, it is an imposition on auy well bred girl to keep hemp later than half-past teu o'clock, when you have the opportunity of seeing her often. It yon always leave her with the wish iu her heart that you had stayed longer, you gain so much. Neer run the risk of wearying her with your presence. Be just as earnest aud straight forward as in your honorable dealing with meu. Impress your friouds with the worthiness and seriousness of your love, so that vulgar aud senseless bantering will appear to them as such. Lovo is religion the supremest happiness, wear it uiauiully and proudly, but holily, Woo a woman bravely. If there is anything hu miliating to a woman, it is to have a lover, whom sbo wishes to honor, weak and vapid, ever J ielding and half afraid of her. She longs to tell him lo "act like a man." The man who conceals or denies his love for fear of being laughed at, is a coward. A loe that has no elstneut of divluity iu it is not love, but pas sion, which, of itself, has nothing ennobling. That was a beautiful inscription ou an engage ment, riug"Kch for the other, aud both for Ood." Scroll Work; The Dccks. Samuol O, Park, of Mark West valley, near Santa llosa, wonders what ails bis duoks, as they are all building their nests iu tree this season, instead of on the ground, as they ought by all precedent to do, fBis will there be only twenty-five letters in the alphabet? When you and I are made one. Pests. Not files nor mosquitoes, although they cause one to feel rather uncomfortable at times but men and women pests are referred to. The in. quititive woman is one specimen. The first time she enters your house (he asks you where you were born, how old you are, how many lovers you have had, what business your hus band is in, what bia income is a year, how much you paid a yard for your carpet, and caps the climax by askinii in a patronizing tone if you compose your articles yourself or copy them out of some book (fact). Pest number two is the growler. The writer has one in ber mind's eye, and, if she were not afraid that you would imagiue it was ber hus band, would describe him (the pest, not the husband). If it is a cold night he growls until she brings him a bottle of hot water and places it at his feet, and soon he is snoring, while sbo gets warm the best way she can. If the baby cries during the night, instead of soothing it and letting his tired wife sleep, he nudges her until she awakes and tells her to tend to (he baby so he can sUep, and she meekly obeys, soothes the crying babe and then creeps softly into bed for fear of disturbing him. If she wants a new dress he growls that he isn't made of money, can't spare more than a dollar or two, and so on, until the feels as if she had com mitted a dreadful sin in asking for what was only ber due. When there is company to dinner, ho growls that the bread is heavy, the meat half done, the potatoes watery, the coffee muddy, and wishes she could cook like his mother used to, and winds up by telling the visitors never to get married; while his wife tries to turn it all off as a joke, but her tearful eyes and quivering lips belie her words. When, on rare occasions, she accomtnnies him to town, he will tell ber to hurry; tell her she don't need any ribbons or laces, and so on, until she is so flurried, that she doesn't know whether she is purchasing ton yards of nm-lin or one, and on reacbiug home discovers that she has forgotten half that she intended to get. It a chair is out of its place, or a speck ot dust is on the table, he growls that he never saw such an untidy house; everything is going to rack aud ruin; no wonder he is poor, with such a slack, careless wife; aud after relieving his mind, he composedly leans back in his com fortable easy chair, throws a handkerchief over his face, und in less than five minutes is fast asleep, while his harsh words rankle in the heart of his wife for many days. Elisa E. Anmony in aural t-'rtss. More Moral Courage Wanted. "I cannot help thinking that if there was a little more individual work, a little more moral courage in tho world to save men, the world would not be so much of a wreck as it is to day. If you saw that a friend, a brother, was taking the wrong course, what would you do ? Would you merely say : ' Dear, dear, doar 1 how painful it is that so many men are going wrong. Just as suro as he continues that course, he is a lost man ; but he will go ; dear, dear, dear 1" Aud when you hear the despair ing cry coming up from tho depths, add, 'I told jou sol' Now what should you do? Should you not lay your hand on him and say : ' My friend, you are going wrong 1' Wu"t if he swears at you 1 Never mind, save him if you can. Many a man has not got so far, gone from your sympathy but that one word kindly Baid in bis ear, ' Sly friend, you are going wrong,' will check him. The difficulty is that we let men go bo far from our sympathy that we cannot reach them. Now it is this individual work that I believe is to reform the world and bring it back to God," Oough. r How to Theat Unexpected Guists. When one of "father's" business friends drives into the yard at about half past eleven, the good wife knows that he will surely stay to dinner. Father is a great story-teller, and he likes to get hold of a new auditor. How aptly comes a frown of dismay and displeasure ou the smooth, fair face ot his helpmeet. What can be done? Work is going on according to tho day's plan in the kitchen; the dinner was ar ranged for none but tho family; the children are coming home from school aud making a clatter; all is bustle and confusion. She feels that the best dishes must be used, and some thing extra cooked for the inopportune guest. Now, good woman, don't do it! Your fine dinner, with its attendant irritation and ''up setting," will tasto no better than what you had prepared. Make no difference iu your plans, but seat your visitor with a smile and easy greeting at jour hospitable board; and he will feel more comfortable and happy than though you gavo him n bauquct. You Bave temper aud tiouble, and gain the enjoyment of giving j our friend a real cosy time. A sensible person knows that farmers do not have six courses upon their table daily, and the whole some, hearty fare, with good nature and hospit able cordiality, will be tinctured with a sweet, domestic sense that is inevitably lost in grand dluners. Smiles ami neatness aro sauce for homely meals. Golden llule. "noiiE, SweltHome." A gentleman named Wall, residing at PhteuixUUe, Pa., has several very fine canary birds, which he has given much attention. One of the birds he has taught to sing "Home, Sweet Homo," clearly and dis tinctly. His modo of instruction is as follows: Ho placed the canary iu tho room whore it could not hear the singing of the other birds, suspended its cage from the ceiling, so that tho bird would see its reflection in a mirror. Be neath the glass he placed a musical box that was regulated to play no other tune but "Home, Sweet Home." Hearing no other sound but this, and believing the music proceeded from the bird it saw iu the mirror, the young canary soon began to catch the notes and finally ac complished what its owner had been laboring lo attaio, that of singing the Bong perfectly. Mr. Wall has been offered and refused $20 for his yellow throated soprano. Ann we Dkoknkiutino, Bayard Taylor says that tbo assertion that woman always held an inferior position to man, is glaringly false, for in aucieut Egypt it is well known that wo men were honored aud respected equally with men. Women ofteu Bat upon the throue and administered the affairs of government. There was also iu Egypt a lofty appreciation of the marriage tie, and the wife's name was often placrnl before that ef her husband, and the sous frequently bore the uames of the mothers in stead of those of tho fathers. It is impossible, he says, to look upon tho statutes of this period, aud not feel what a high degree of cul ture was fairly claimed by the race. The sur gical iuitrameuts are identical with those of the present day, and various household utensils the gome. So it follows that the more woman is equalized with mau Iu the affairs of life, the greater the degree of civilization, Stbekt Dresses are growing longer, and our side-walks will be cleaner. Pull-backs are not so taut, and our maidens don't look so dis tressed. Bonnets flare more than they used to, and there is room for a center-table over the forehead. French heels are revived, and our doctors are studying up treatment of splual diseases. Early Rising a Delusion. For farmers and those living in localities where people can retire at eight or nine o'clock iu the evening, the old notion about early ris ing is still appropriate. But he who is kept up till ten or eleven or twelve o'clock, and then rises at five or six, because of the teachings of some old ditty about "early to rise," is com mitting a sin against God and his own soul. There is not one man in ten thousand who can do without seven or eight hours' sleep. All the stuff written about great men who sleep only three or four hours a night is apocryphal and a lie. They havo been put on such small allow ance occasionally and prospered; but no man ever yet kept healthy in body and mind for a number of years, with less than seven hours' sleep. Americans need more sleep than they are getting. This lack makes them so nervous and the insane asylums so populous. If you can get to bed early, then rise early. If you cannot cct to bed till late, then rise late. It may be as christian for one mau to rise at eight as it is for another to rise at five. We council our readers to get up when they are rested. But let the rousing bell be rung at least thirty minutes before your public appear ance. Physicians say that a sudden jump out of bed gives irregular motion to the pulses. It is barbarous to expect children instantly to land on the center of the floor at the call of the nurse, the thermometer below zero. Give us time after you call us to roll over, gaze at the world full in the face, and look before we leap. Exchange. A Cargo of Music. The Tinfera Abbey, tho other day. left Eng land for New Zealand with one hundred star lings, goldfinches aud thrushes; one hundred bedge-spanows, one hundred and seventy yellow-hammers, and a great multitude of bright plumes and sweet voices. The farmers of New Zealand propose to let them loose, and thus clear the ground of noxious insects. Heavy penalties have been enacted for the protection of these foreign birds. What a grand thing it would be if wo could all have an importation of birds, not only iu our land but also in our dis positions. We want more music and plumes. We have too large an impoitation of crows and owls. Give us a touch of goldfinches. We have enough who know how to croak; let us have more of those who know to sing. Let it be against the law for any one to hunt down the innocent muniments of life. Let the song birds loose in our homes and schools and churches. Be not frightened if some great eagle of a hallelujah flies through the religious assemblies. If the earth is ever to be a type of heaven, it must be a cheerful place. Blessed the man or woman or child who kindles a smile or plants a flower or lets loose a robin. The winged joys of life will eat up the cold creeping sorrows, as partridges devour grass hoppers and linnets kill caterpillars. From the four winds of heaven let there be brigan tines of good cheer, bearing down upon us with a rich cargo of starlings and sparrows. Evangel, Look Oct fob Motiieb Eabth. And now there is more trouble ahead for our planet. Mr. Andrew Wilson, who has been writing pleas antly about the "Abode of the Snow" in Asia, revives an old theory ot some ancient savant that the earth will topple over one of these days and send the oceans sweeping over the continents. It seems that the earth, that is, the portion of it which is not water, some what resembles a huge iceborg which, becom ing topbeavy by the destruction of its sub merged parts, 'thereupon indulges in a summer sault. So, Mr. Wilson thinks, that owing to the greater preponderance of water in the southern hemisphere, the greatest accumula tion of water is around the South Pole; that when the accumulation has reached a certain point, the balance of the earth must be sud denly destroyed the center of sphericity ab ruptly changed from the center of gravity, and the whole earth, almost instanteously, will turn transversely on its axis, move the great oceans, and so produce one of those grand cataclysms which have before now altered the whole face of the globe. Ex, Hand vs. HeadLabou. At a recent distribu tion of prizes at Greeuwich, Mr. Gladstone delivered an eloquent address, in the course of which he Baid that one of tho first results of elementary education was to produce a desire on the part of young persons or their parents to csoape from the necessities of manual labor, and pass into what is called head work. Here they had before them a very important subject. There was far too much eagerness on the part of the working classes to get out of the work ing class into another which was not a working class. The first thing a man ongjit to do was to elevate his vocation. A workman ought to strive to raiso the character of the work he performed, and in doing that he was doing more to raise himself and his family and class than by hurrying out of his pontion. Hand labor was progressively aud rapidly rising, whereas head labor was falling. The ex Premier, in conclusion, urged that what the workingman should aim at was to raise the character of the labor which he was called upon to perform. Childben Stddiino. at Home. The Phila delphia Press complains that children are sent to school when too young, and deprecates the blunder of allowing iliem to bring the school home with them. It says: "When the doors ot the Bchoolhouse close in the afternoon upon the cbildreu they should literally close out from them all that pertains to school until the open ing next morning. A teaoher should be a teacher, not simply a mere hearer of recita tions. Letsons should be learned aud taught at school never at home. The teacher has no light to impose upon parents the most annoy ing part of the work. She has no right to take from the child a single moment of the few hours it has out of school." Pb.isiko the Wobs of Fbiends. There is auolher matter about which we are apt to be unjust in our friendships. We are so sensitive to the charge of over-estimating the value of a friend's work through prejudice, that some times we let a stranger get the better of us iu the expression of appneiation and praise. This is a small and damnable selfishness. Why snouui we not praise ine sermon, tne picture, the story, the poem of our frieud ? How did ' he get to be our friend in the first place ? I Did we not choose him from among teu thou 1 Baud, because of those very qualities which I attract us anew in his art 1Scrtbner, Didn't Want that Kind of Sign. When the new church at Vestal Center, N. Y., was finished on the outside recently, the contractor, to fill the stipulation to put a gilded ballon the steeple, gilded a nearly round gallon jug, aud turning it with the bottom up, placed it upon the spire. The iug, thus placed, did not im press the Vestal Center people as a proper symbol to worship under, so some of them re belled. A William Tell stepped to the front, and from the first crack of his rifle the jug split into fragments and fell off. Embroidery that Is Worth While. There is no such waste of time, money and patience as the woisted work and embroidery to which our ladies give up so much of their leisure. It isn't beautiful, it isn't useful and it stands much in the way or educating the eye aud tho general taste. Of course girls will al ways make slippers and smoking-caps for young men at least I hope so; they enjoy making them, and the young men are not what I take 'em for if they don't enjoy getting them. There is no reason whatever why these things should not be well designed; but they never will be so long asthe girls are so wanting in taste as to put up with the oatterns thev find in the shops. I suppose, however, if the young men and maidens were not so easily pleased, or had a taste of their own, there would be a supply of patterns to meet a more exacting de mand. So long as people are in the infantile state of mind that is pleased with little imps and devils careering over slipper toes, or chas ing one another along a lambrequin, or with loxes neaas ana tain, nuntlng-caps anu whips, or with any out of the whole catalogue we all know so well, not much can be hoped for. But the advice to take up embroidery did not have reference to little love and friendship to kens of the cap and slipper tribe. It was in tended to apply to more serious works, such as coverings for furniture, hangings for doors or walls, and the like. Since things took a turn in England, and the arts of furniture and house decoration began to interest artists and archi tects, and the new doctrine found a sacred poet to father it and save it from sinking into trade and common-place, the arts of embroidery have been inspired with new life, nnd have en listed in their service a number of good talents, who have not only given pleasure to the public but have found pleasure and profit in it for themselves. Some of the ladies belong ing to the families of the house of Morris, Marshall & Co., have distinguished themselves by the beauty and originality of their designs, and no Iobs for the excellence of their work manship; and they have become important members of the business, their work and their tastes having not a little to do with the success of the enterprise. Scribner. A Wife's Love. About ten o'clock last evening an officer of the first police found, crouching in an alley-way off Eudicott street, a woman and three small children, two boys and a girl, aged respectively eight, five and four years. They were lying in one heap, the small est child beneath all the rest, and the mother endeavoring to shelter them all from the bitter cold. Each was scantily clad, and the party jjicBomcu u iuuob piuuuje speciucie in lueir uaii frozen condition. An investigation by the officer revealed the woman's name to be Eliza beth Mclntire, and her age to be twenty-six years. She is the wife of a young man who is very dissolute in his habits, spending all his earnings for rum, and utterly neglecting his family. The woman is also said to be addicted to the use of intoxicating liquors. Seventeen weeks ago this family went to live in a tene ment at No. 107 Endicott street, rented by a man named McAIear. They havo not paid a single cent of lent, and finally the landlord told the woman that ho would give her a room in the house, free of rent, for herself and children, provided she would leave her husband; that he would not have the latter around under any circumstances. This offer the woman posi tively refused to accept, and as a consequence found herself turned out gf doors. Several of the neighbors also offered to care for her and her children if she would leave her husband, but all in vain. Boston Herald. A Practical Test Pboposed. A newspaper controversy has finally arrived at this point: The advocate of spiritualism offers, for $250, to allow his antagonist to shoot a pistol ball through the head or body of whatever or who ever shall appear at the window or door of a cabinet the party agreeing that a face and body shall appear. This is the first practical use of spirits ever invented. The Vowels. There are two words iu the English language that contain all the vowels in regular succession, and if a person is willing to live abstemiously, and not regard this state ment mcetiousiy, be win see what the words are. Norwich Bulletin. Fading Awat. Au exchange says that, what with stocking darners, knitting and sewing nia chines, apple-parers, washers and wringers, woman as a necessity seems to be lading From the earth. What is the difference between the north and south pole? All the difference in the world. Mucilage fob Minerals, Etc. Mr. F. 0. Hill, of the geological museum, Princeton, N. J., writes to the Journal of Pharmacy as follows: "My friend, Professor E. P. Whitfield, of Albany, N. Y., was good enough to give me the following recipe for mucilage to mend fos sils and minerals, and, after several months of experience with it in the museum, I find it so valuable that, with his permission, I send It for the benefit of the readers of your journal: starch j ar White Sugar l 0z. Gum Arabic q dr. Water .....q. s! "Dissolve the gum, add the sugar, and boil until the starch is cooked. Professor Whitfield is in the habit of drying it into sheets, on paper, and re-dissolving when wanted. He does not claim to have originated the recipe, but thinks it is one of the compositions offered to the United States government for gumming stamps. It is certaiuly a very adhesive muci lage, and, owing to the sugar, never becomes brittle; so that it never scales off, as most glues do, from stones or other hard substances. In a geological cabinet it is simply invaluable," Am Cooler. To reduce the temperature in a factory in Paris, recourse was bad to an inex pensive form of air cooler. A thin plate of metal, perforated with holes one-tenth of an inch in diameter, and having a total area equal to one-ninth of the surface of the plate, was set at a slight angle in a tight box. Over this plate a thin sheet of water at a temperature of 55 Ftthr. was allowed to flow steadily, and by means of a power blower air was forced into the box below the plate. By its pressure the air forced its way through the holes in the plate and through the water, and was then led by pipes to all parts of the factory. By this device, the air in the room was reduced to 57" Fahr., or within four degrees of the tempera ture of the water. Oilier experiments gave varying results according to the initial temper ature of the water, but in eaoh case the appar atus reduced the temperature of the current of air to within seven degrees of that of the water. Steam power is required for the blower, and, for the nest results, the supply of water must be abundant and its temperature low. The ap plication of this devioe might, in our warm cli mates, prove of use in pork packing and other industries where a low temperature is desir able, Scribner, The regular annual university boat race be tween Cambridge and Oxford has been fixed for Saturday, Apr? 8th. Yoi)lq Folks' ColJ. Baby-land. Here's something to tell your little ones, and while you read the lines and Tom and Lizzie's little white heads lean on your breast, think of tho many homes where " Baby-land" is an un known world or a silent plat in Lone Mountain: " How many miles to Baby-land?" " Any one can tell; Up one flight, To your right; Please to ring the bell." " What can you see In Baby-land 7 " "Little folks in white Sony heads, Cradle beds, Faces pure and brlghtl " " What do they do in Baby-lacd ? " " Dream and wake and play; Laugh and crow, Shont and grow, Jolly times have they I " " What do they say in Baby-land ? " " Why, tho oddest things; Might as well Try to tell What a birdie sings I" " Who is the queen of Baby-land?" " Mother, kind and sweet; And her love, Born above, Guides the little feet." For Boys and Girls. My little boy wakes early, and delights to creep slily into bed and wake mo with kisses. One morning, coaxing him to lie still nnhilej I fell asleep again. When I awoke he was looking very sadly at me ; perhaps ray closed eyelids had made him think of a neighbor's child he had seen Bleeping the sleep of death. Sighing, he said soltly, " Mamma, what do little boys do when their mammas go to heaven and leave them behind?" My own mother left me so when I was nine years old. While now my boy's anxious face lay close to mine on the pillow, there came over me smothering memories of the lonely days that came after, when she was not there to help me off to school, nor to welcome me home at night those motherless nights, when first a servant put me to bed, "I wish, Hirry, neither you nor any little boy or girl need ever know how hard it is to live without n mother ?" So I baid to the little fellow; but to you older boys and girls I can'c help giving an older wish ; that you who have a mother love her carefully. Be ub good as ever vou can be. and you cannot equal her goodness to you. Girls, be quick to save her steps about the house ; she has taken miles of steps for you be fore you could stand alone. Boys, yon will always be in debt to your mother. Money cannot hire such faithful ser vice as her's has been ; it can hardly be paid for in pure heart-coin, love I A Great Mother to a Great Son. The mother of John Quinoy Adams said, in a letter to him, when bo was only twelve: "I would rather Bee you laid in your grave thrn grow up a profano and graceless boy." Not long before his death, u gentleman said to him: "I have found out who made you." "What do you mean?" asked Mr. Adams. The gentleman reulied: "I havo heen mul. ing the published letters of your mother." "If," this gentleman relates, "I had spoken that dear name to some littla hoy -who had been for weeks away from his mother, his eyes could not have flashed more brightly, nor bis face glowed more quickly, than did the eyes of that venerable old man when I pronounced the name of his mother. He stood up in his peculiar manner nnd said, " 'Yes, sir; nil that is good iu me I owe to my mother,' " A CHILD, when told that Onrl la AVAPi-TOliava asked "In this room?" "Yes." "Tn thn closet?" "Yes." "In the drawers of mi desk?" "Yes. evervwhfirfl. ITo'a in rnnr pocket now." "No, he ain't, though." "And wuy now- j.sutu i am t dot no poltet. ' 'VrtAT Aitl vnn linnry tliot of tn Tona,9" asked the schoolmarm. The boy looked up, aim wuu a grave iook, answered "jjor mew tiny, marml" Aniline Pencils, Copyino Pencils, Etc. These new pencils are announced at the same time both in Paris and Berlin. The French pencils aro made in Paris, according to the hardness, very much like common lead pencils. The materials used are aniline, graphite and kaolin, in different proportions. Made into a paste in cold water, they are pressed through a screen that divides the mass into the slender sticks used iu filling the pencils. When dry the sticks are fitted to the wooden parts, and these are glued together very much in the usual way. They may be used in copying, marking in permanent color and in reproducing writing or designs. In copying, a thin sheet of moistened paper is laid over the letter, design or document, and the lines are traced with the pencils. The action of the water on the aniline gives a deep, fast tracing, resembling ink in color. The German makers also employ ani line in the manufacture of these pencils. On ordinary dry paper they give a well-defined mark that cannot be removed by india rubber. When the paper is dampened with water the markings assume the appearance of ink. These pencils may also be used for copying purposes, as when moistened sheets are laid over the writing, under a slight pressure, they will transfer good impressions that do not blur and that resemble the original in every respect, Scribner. The Enot.trtt cIttivwpt. Thmmm cinn. t,a failbre of the Bessemer swinging cabin steamer uu ine aouoie Keeled uastalia, increased at tention seems to be drawn toward the proposed tUnnpl ns tliA nnlv nvanttnal aa1..41a f ah Anatr channel passage. Some time ago a preliminary "' was, commenced near tne snore on ine COmniPTIPAll nn fh. Prannn oIAa a.Ua .li.nnal The depth of this latter will be 328 feet about " me inuiusi aepm wnicn it is supposed ine tunnel will require. The object of these shafts are to prove by ocular demonstration, in situ, WflAinOr tV. rVOi-llj-tn.Acil fA.mntlnn i .Aiifaln depths agree with the theory of the scientists. tuviiu(j in vciiaiuiy gaining ground turn such a work is needed and will pay as an in- Vestment! and ff iKa .!..-.?-. !-.... j-nm. pleted. should develop the expected facts, the nTftlAt will rA a.,a,Haa.4 ..,..., 1A1 .. Jt l.A nothing will be left but to provide the millions of nounda nfArlinrr MnnlMn n aa. .. V,a idea. This Utter orovision will he a difficult one to realize; bat it is not beyond the possi bilities of a proper combination of English and French financial enterprise. It 1b now IiaIIavajI t,a i-a v.a1a a- a.. r,t losses by the Northampton bank robbery exceed $1,000,000, nearly one-ball being nego-