-ii - . r -- u- j-T.. 'i' Jtr-f - ' t -1 av r-n5 7 '? jtotlt. Feeding Heroes. ho following extracts aro from tbo essay id by John E. Russell, at the Farmors' In- Itate, at Salem : Tho horao has tho smallest Bmach in proportion to his size of any am id. This spaue is completely ullei by four larts of oats and the saliva that goes into stomach with it. Horses are generally rerfed. and not fed often enough. For a Srse with moderate work, six or eight quarts I bruised oats and ten pounds of line hay a V is sufficient. This sinnid be ftd in three feals, and is better if -fed in four. A horse's digestion is very rapid, and there- Ire ho gets hungry sooner than a man. Whin i is hungry he is ineffective, and wears out ery rapidly. Water (ills tho stomach, lowers be temperature and dilutes the gastric juice; herefore a horso should not drink Iminedi lely before catine;. Niither ihould he be latered immediately after eating, because he rill drink too much, and force some of tho Dntents of the stomach into the large intes- Ine, which will causo scouring. Scouring is jtso caused by too rapid eating, which can be jevented by putting hilf a dozen pebbles klf the size of the fist into the manger with he oats. Give onlya moderate drink of water i a horse. A large drink of cold water before driven will have a very quitting effect i a nervous horse. A race-horse always ruus i an empty stomach. Dit;etion progresses aoderately during exercise, if the exercise is pot so violent as to exhaust the power of tho lOrse. I consider bruised oats worth twenty per ent.'moro than whole. They are more com pletely digested. I prefer oats to any other yain for horses. Cracked corn is very good Bnder some circumstances, but I wouldn't use neal or shorts. The diseisc called big head caused by feeding corn. When a horso omes in hot, I would give a moderate feed immediately. If the horso is too tired to eat, '. would take the feed away. A heated horse is a reason against watering, and for feeding, the system is just then in a condition to (begin digestion. A horse will not founder if afed immediately when hot. I prefer dry feed, sunless a horse has some disease of the throat or lungs. I do not consider it worth while to lout hay. I alwajsfeed hay from the floor, then the horses do not get particles in their feyes. New England Farmer. Salt for Animals. Tt is well known that herbivorous animals re fond of common salt, and this is true of wild animals as well as ot those domesticated by man. Carniverous animals, on the other band, either have no liking for salt, or show k positive aversion for it. Cats, for example, rill rarely touch salt meat. The difference is easily explained. The blood of both lasses of animals contain a certain amount of i salts, but the quantity of soda in a vege table diet is not necessarily lets than in one of flesh. A German experimenter, Herr Bunge, has been the first to suggest a plausible solu- of the enigma. A vegetable diet fur nishes twice as much potash as a flesh diet , and it occurred to him that the greater Supply of potash must be attended with a Tater waste 01 soaa. 10 test this theory experimentally he put himself upon a per- festly uniform diet of beef, bread, butter, sugar and a small quantity of salt. Whin, by daily analysis of the urine, he found that the I qnantity of soda and potash excreted had be come constant, ho proceeded to take such a dose of potash of salts during the day as Iwould raise the amount of potash in his diet I to a level with that daily consumed by a l Herbivorous animal. The result was an im- i mediate excretion of chloride of sodium in the orine, the amount being at once increased three-fold. Much potash was, of course, alto passed. The experiment was repeated at vari ous times, employing different salts of potash, in every case producing an immediate excre tion of soda. Bunge believes that this ten dency of potash to produce a great waste of soda in the system is the cause of the ' desire shown by herbivorous animals for com- mon salt. Their vegetable diet is generally very rich : in potash, and they instinctively seek an ad ditional supply of soda. Soda does not seem to be an essential ingredient of plants, but it lis certainly indispensable in the animal econ lemy. In the muscle and in the blood corpus- eles potash is an essential constituent, but in the fluid portion of the blood, potash is injur ' ons, and if injected, even in small doses, pro duce death. Soda salts, on the other hand, an be injected with safety, and their presence in the blood is essential to the continuation f vitil processes. Journal of Chemittry. Sheep (or Bard Times. The past season, characterized, by climatic I extremes, followed as it must necessarily be ley a Winter in which the feeder's resources ; will be heavily taxed to avoid a sacrifice of a portion of his live stock, will serve to give prominence to the claims of the sheep to a ' foremost place in the farm economy. Subsist i iBg through much of the past season on a E meagre supply of grass and water, it is now ready to combat snch vicissitudes as may be yn, store for it with less detnment thsn will nit to any of iU farm-yard companions at may be subjected to like treatment. eh tests of endurance are by no means de- rable in the case if the sheep are far from i conditions by which it should be but- inded where the best results are hoped for, tat the fact that it will successfully withstand f tfcem is just so much to be credited to its flavor. By the rule that a "penny saved is a fiwnny earned" does the ''sheep now make jifjoney for its owner, under circumstances lirkerein other animals would bankrupt him. us it is that the larmer wno can enumerate ong bis live stock a fair proportion of cp, will be enabled to partially recoup elf against the loss to winch be is inev itably subjected in many localities. If those lass fortunately circumstanced will take the lesson homo to themselves, and apply i s teachings to their future policy, much good that is not now apparent to them may be brought out of their preieut adversity. Live stock Journal. European Emigration. There is no more significant symptom of the depressed condition of the working masses of Europe than is afTordcd by the multitudes that are emigrating to North and South Amer ica. Tho enormous cost of modern govern ment, the maiutciianco of v.ist armaments, the unprecedented accumulation of national debt, and the oppressive taxation consequent upon these things which inevitably finds its final incidence upon the working classes and tho farmers these are tho things that aro putting before the masses of tee Eastern con tinent the alternatives of starvation or of emi gration. The nations in which this forcing out pro cess is most corspicuous aro Get many ami Italy, because there the expenses of govern ment range highest in proportion to the earn ings of the people. Tho governments of both countries find tho clllux so serious that they are devijing special methods, for retaining their sufleriog subjects at home. Bismarck seeks to neutralize the popular discontent through assuming socialistic guises, and by providing a special insurance fund for the benefit of tho disabled and the aged poor, and through restoring the protective system under ,the pretense that it will give better employ ment to tho working masses. Italy begins her counteraction of the efflux with official appeals to the fears and tho patriotism of her ignor ant population, leaving remedial measures for future consideration. These appeals, how ever, sufficiently attest the importance tho government attaches to this drain of the best classes of the working population. How far such methods are heeded by tho people may be inferred from the following extract from a reply from tho peasants of Lombardy, one of the richest and most enlightened provinces of Italy, to a ministerial circular advising thorn against emigration: "What do you mean by a nation, Mr. Min ister? Is it a mass of poor wretches ? Then, we, indeed, are the nation. Look at our pale and emaciated faces, our bodies worn out by excessive toil and insiifliueut food. We sow and we harvest wheat, but we never eat white bread. Wo cultivate tho vines, and wo drink no wine. Wo raise cattle, but we eat no meat. We are clothed in rags and live in pestiferous holes. Wo ate cold in Winter- and hungry in Summer. Our boIo article of food i a little Indian corn, which is made dearer by a tax. We are decimated in tho dry dis tricts by burning ievers, and in swampy dis tricts by malarial fevers The end is prema ture death in the poor house or our own huts Yet, despite of all this, yon advise ns, Mr. Minister, not to expatriate ourselves I But, is a land where one cannot earn a living by in creasing toil a fatherland;" These are ominously significant words. It is only necessary to noto the pitiful aspect ot the thousands of Italians who Und at this port to comprehend the spirit of this terribla in dictment. Is it wonderful that Bismarck should detect the symptoms of an underlying Republicanism among the masses of Italy, when monarchy is found to carry with it so much misery? The feeling that inspires theio de-pairing utterances threatens more than mere Republicanism. When tho best of the oppressed classes have left the country, what will remain, whether in Italy or Germany, but a desperation of hunger that will find ex pression in nothing short of a repetition of the times of the French revolution? The signs of the times indicate that affairs aro working rapidly towards such a denouement. Com mercial Bulletin. Lumber of ths Future. The lumber of the future is to be mado of straw. It is to compete with that of the bet ter class, so says the Southern Manufacturer and Builder. It is manufactured into any de sired length, from 12 feet upward and as much as 32 inches in width. The cost is such as to compete with better grades of pine. Samples exhibited hold nails well, are susceptible of h'gh finish and can be polished to any extent desirable. Straw lumber is waterproof and therefore adapted for roofing purposes as well as for interior work. It is susceptible to be ing worked by the ordinary tools of the car penter and is not liable to shrink or sw ell. For finishing it is not required to be as thick as ordinary lumbar, for its tensile strength is about double that of wood. I. MON COVftTY TE4.CHEt' IXSTITtTE. Scsimerville, Oregon, Dec. 29, 1881. Members present : J. F. Outhouse, L. J. Rouse, Frank Collins, M. F, Harlan, L, J. Roe, John Sturgill, John Laramore, J, K. Powell, John McDonald, Aidey Tuttle, Terry Tutte, Lilly Chancey, Allie Rees, Mrs. Belle Horary, J. B. Horney, Mrs. Liughlia, Miss Josie Rumig, Mrs. Cullev, Mr. J. L. Hind man, Mrs. Harlan, T. Olivey, Edward Davis, J. A. Almond. Officers -.' President, Hon. J. T. Outhonse; vice-president, J. B. Horner; secretary, Frank Collins; treasurer, H. R. Tuttle; executive committee, Mrs. Belle Horney, Miss Maggie Walker and Mr. J. L. Hindman. . Mr. William Chatten. leader, and Mrs. S. L. McKenzie, assisted by the choir, afforded excellent music. All the branches, except penmanship, re quired by law to be taught in publie schools,, were ofecussed by different teachers. Every thing, from beginning to end, was subjected to discussjon. Dr. Rinehart, Mr. Blevans, Revs. Davies and Koontz, Mr. Robert Bucknun and others addressed the meeting from time to time. The next Institute will be held in Union City. The teachers presented cane to the Super intending The Superintendent delivered a very excel lent address. He stated teachers should be retained in schools two terms, instead of one, when they were worthy. They should be paid good salaries. They- should prepare themselves for their work. Superintendents should travel districts comprising two or three counties, and many other interesting things. J. B. A Urge nnmber of failures took place in the first week in January, only seven of which, however, were on the Pacific Coast. WILLAMETTE FARMER: PORTLAND, OREGON, JANUARY a 81b AFFA1K. Some few weeks ago, says the Baker City Tribune, an inno man by the name of John Caylor, who had been working in the neigh borhood for a short time, walked into the domicile of Mr. Hull, near Wingvillc,"in this county, and informed' that gentleman that there was to be his future home. Mrs. Hull was sick at the time, and as Caylor could not be persuaded to leave, rather than excite lit r by any disturbance, Mr. Hull submitted to the arrangement and set him to work. Cay lor ni armed with a revolver and could not be persuaded to part with it, daily making tho assertion that ho was pursued, and that whoever attempted to to take him should for feit his life. Mr. Hull and the whole neigh horhol lived in cunstiut fear of the crank and filially on the 21st of December, on tho oath of several citizen, a warrant was issued and placed in tho hands of Sheriff fravillian for his arrest. He rode out with a posse to Hull's place and endeavored to arrest him quittly, but he gave them no opportunity, and afler they left Caylor boosted that "thero was another crowd that was afraid to tackle him I " The fore part of last wet-k Caylor assisted his host in killing hogs, but kept his revolver fast to his side, changing at times fi oni one M'le to the other. Mr Hull sug gested" the idea that the pistol was in his way and that Ca lor had better take it off and place it under hi coat for safe keeping. This Caylor refused to do, saying, "This revolver is my God, and I'll stay with it." The sheriff and his posse remained con cealed for three days in the vicinity of Hull's, waitine for an opportunity to entrap Caylor, and on Friday, the 6th inst., lie informed Mr. Hull tlut he was going to Winvillo to buy som- cartridges, and expected to kill two or three men before he get hack. On his way to the store he passed the sheriff, who allowed him to get a short distance ahead, when he and his deputies stepped forth from their place of concealment, walking toward Ciylor, and the sheriff called on Cayloi to stop, as he wished to talk to him. Caylor wheeled and faced the sheriff, drawing his liVjlverat the same time and firing at tho posse. Thinking to intimidate tho insane man, the sheriff fired his shot gun in the air, and simultaneously Ca lor again fired his, revolver at the sheriff and his aids. It was getting to be interesting to-all concerned about this time, and tho sheriff, after consultation, fired his shot gun at the legs of Caylor, but he, having on a thick overcoat, which protected him, or else because of tho poor marksman-hip of our sheriff, no blood was drawn. In the mean time a revolver bullet aped uncomfortably close to the ears of the two deputies, who were armed, one with a navy revolver, both carryiug balls of the same c.ilire, and botti deputies tired together, the hall from on of the guns taking effect iu Caylor's right hip, passing through the lower part of the abdo-mt-n and lodging underneath the skin on tho Ictt side. Caylor dropped on his knees, but kept pulling the trigger of his revolver. The sheiilf and aids ran to tho wounded man, disarmed him instantly, and sent to this place for physicians. After Caylor was disarmed his fighting propensities oozed out with tho flowing blood, and in a minute or so was very sorry for hat ho had done, begged pardon, etc. Drs. Atwood and Hul scy were soon at the side of the wounded man and did all in their power for him, but their services were in vain for he died about noon on Saturday, the 7th mst. HIGHWAY KOMIEKY. George Simpson, on last Sunday night about 10 o'clock, svys the Oorvallis QaztUe, while traveling home and wheu at the cross roads at the Mountain View s;hool house, about six miles north of this city, two men on horse back drew theii pistels and called for him to throw up his hands, which ho did, while one of the robbers held a pistol on their victim the other dismounted and proceeded to rifle his pockets, takiog therefrom 829 50 in coin and a new silver watch and chain worth about $27. The highwaymen, after obtaining these articles.mounted their steeds and road towards Albany. Uwiealtiiv Virus. Vaccination for the prevention of smallpox, i, of late, being looked upon by many of our citizens with dis favor fiom the great danger thero exists of s erious injury resulting to the person treated from tho use of unhealthy vaccine matter and the great difficulty of procuring such as can be confidently recommended. A case in point is that of a family named Welch who reside some seven miles from this city who are suffering from smallpox, as it is claimed, from the meets of being vaccinated for its prevention. Some doctors are refusing to vaccinate any more for fear of more harm than good being done by the'opoiation, and there seems to be a wide-spread conviction that the benefits of vaccination, 'even when pure, healthy virus is used, are every year growing less. The subject is one of much in terest to medical men, and many diverse opinions are held in regard io the matter. Bad Man Areestkd. Tom Somen alias Harry Grafton, who is under $1,000 bonds for assault with a deadly weapon on E. Sorenson, ,the builder of the steamer Yaquina, was ar rested at 1 o'clock this A. M. at theNicolai house by Joe Day and Officer Barry. He was about to skip the town and Day has been after him for two weeks, but was not able to get at him before. Day received a letter' from the chief of police of Sacramento somettme-ince and a phot"graph of Somers, who is wanted there on a charge of forgery, and also as an escaped convict from the penitentiary at Folsom, where be was serving a second term. There is a reward of (500 offered for his arrest, which Day expects to secure. Fatal Accident. George Burchard, an old resident of Gray's river section, Washing ton Territory, while sailing with his son on Tuesday morning n the Columbia, near Oak Point, was struck on the head by the boom, koooked- overboard and drowned. The boy tried to go to his father's rescue in a skiff, which the were towintr along, but the river being very rongh the skiff was capsized and the young man had to swim to the sail-boat to save his own life. The body of Mr. Burchard had not been recovered at last accounts. His son afterwards proceeded on the steamer Bonita to Astoria to convey the sad intelli gence to relatives who retide at that place. A Rouon TBir. The California, which arrived here on Thursday, on her evening passage np met with some very rongh weather and experienced the most anpleasant trip for two years. A number of heavy seas were shipped, and several of the passengers lost articles of jewelry. Ooe lady lost a valuable gold watch and chain, washed out of her berth, another a gold bracelet, while clinging to the rail, and several others articles of value. Taken altogether, the trip was an ex perience few of the passengers wish to repeat. On Wednesday of last week, in a row in tnnnel No. 2, near The Dalles, A. Bell, the foreman, stabbed Morris A. Hern in the left breast with a pocket knife, inflicting a fright ful wound. 1 a or zorss. ' When I am big I wuTmarrr Kitty ;" lint Kitty slapped ma and ran away, And, while I ept for myself, la pity I mad up mjr mind 1 wentd marry May. For May was gent' a and May via Under, t lJRhty iha put my offer by ; 1 am engaged to Georgia Bender 1'ertiapa 111 take yon If ha ihould die." By and by I mat Jennie B'atchell; Jenn'e wjia thirteen and 1 waa ten; I need to carry her boose and eachel. And made np my mind to marry Jen. But Jennie, her reign wae qnickly over, And Kate, my ooualn, became my fate; I etld : "111 propose, like a briTe, true lover, Ae soon aa eer I graduate." Alael when I took out my e'ean diploma, The darling girl waa aboul to r-tart On her wedding trip with joung Will de Roma. And no one knew of my broken heart I At one-aud-twenty agiin loi.e found me, Bui the angel face ml the meek blue eyes, And the threads of the go'den hair that loed in Went fading baik Into paradise! nrrk I into the hruce Lu, Kate and Harry, With ehont and renmper from school hao con And a girl I never had meant to marry la wife and mother within my home. -Mary ,iwje De Vere. FORMATION OF CLOUDS. Inlrrcallns; Facia In 1'nyslcal Science. Whence comes the rain which forma the) mountain streams? Observation MiablcH you to answer the question. Rain does not come from a clear sky. It comes from clouds. But what are clouds? Is there nothing you nre ac quainted with which they resemblo? You dt -cover at once a likeness between them and tho rondi'iised (.team of a loco motive. At every puff of tho eucuie a cloud is projected into the air. Watch the cloud sharply; you notice that it tirnt forms nt a littlo distance from tint top of tho funnel. Qivo close attention, mid you will sometimes nee n perfectly clear space between the funnel and th cloud. Through Hint clear space the thing which makes the cloud must pass. What, then, is this thing which at om uiouTuiit is tuiuHjMiciit and invisible nul the next moment visiblo as u denhe, upnque cloud ? It is tho fcti'nm or vnpor of water frotr tho boiler. Within the boiler this steam is tramparcnt and imiiible; but i. keep it in this iuvmblo stu o a hen would In required n great as that wit i m tin) boiler. When the vapor mingl. witli tho cold fiiriihoMs flio hot funnel i I'iMhOS to bo vapor. Jivery bit of sttii'. shrinks, when chilled, to a much mo maiuU- pat tick) of water. Tho liqii i jiu.irles thus produced foim a kind o ViUcr-dust of exceeding fineness, whici lo.ds in thenir. This s a cloud. Wfttc 'he cloud-banner from the funnel of n lOomnoUve ; you bee it growing gradur. y lcSs dense. it iin.illy molts away nl :ogither ; and, if jou couliiiiw your oL j.rva'iom, you will not fail to notic Unit the speed of its disappearance de puuls upon the cluu'.iiMor of the dat Iu humid weather the cloud hangs Ion, .md huily in tho uir; iu dry weather ) i.i rapidly licked tip. Whin has becom l ltr It has bii'ii ixconvirted iiu ' no Hvioiblc vap r. Tli.) drier the air, and the hotter th air, tun gt eater is the. amount of clou ttlncli t-mi bo thus dissolved in it. Whu rtvo c oud first forms, its quantity is f.- ji'cat r Ihan tho air is able to muintai in tin mvu-ilile btute. lint as the clou mixes giadually with a larger mass of ai t is more and moro dissolved, and finall, jnuooa a' together from tho condition c i liuely-divnkd liquid into that of trans parent vapor gs. Mnlie tho lid of a kettle air-tight, am permit the steam to issue fium the pipe .i cloud is precipitated in all respec iimilar to that issuing irom the funnel tho locomotive. l'ermit the steam as it issnes from tin pipe to pass through the flame ot a spir (-lamp, the cloud is instantly dissolve, by the hoat, and is not again preeiui 'i.ted. With a special boiler and aspei in) aovzlo, the experiment may bo man more striking, but not moie instructive, than with the kettle. Look to your bedioom wiudous whon tho weather is very oohl outside; thej simetimos -stream with water derivti. ,'i'om the condensation of the aqucom vapor from your own lungs. The win dows of railway carriages in winter show his condensation in a striking manner. Pour cold water into a dry drinking-glasb on n summer's day; the outside surface f the glass becomes instantly dimmed ny the precipitation of moisture. On f. 'arm day you notice no vapor in front of your mouth, but on a cold day you foiin there a little cloud derived fiom ho condensation of the aqueous vapoi irom tho lungs. You may noticoin a ball-room that of tho door und windows rj kept closed, wul the room remains hot, tho air re mains clear ; but when tho doors or win jows aro opened, a dimness is visible, wtused by the precipitation to fog of the iqueous vapor of the ball-room. If tho At-utlirrbe intensely cold, the entrance of fresh air may oven causo snow to fall. 1'iiLs has been observed in Bussian ball rooms, and albo in tho subterranean stable at Er.eroom, when the doors are opened and the cold morning air is per mitted to outer. Even on the driest day this vapor is never absent from the atmosjihero. The vapor diffused through the air ofa room uuiy bo congealed to hoar frost in your presence. This is done by tilling a ves sel with a mixture of pounded ico and sdt, which is condensed and freezes the .iqueous vapor. The surface of tho ves sel is finally coated witii a frozen fur, ro thin that it may be scraped away and formed into a snow-ball. To produce tho cloud, in the case of the locomotive and tho kettle, heat is necessary. By heating the water, we Brst convert it into steam, and then, by oliiiling the steam, we convert it into cloud. Is there any firo in nuture whioh produces the clouds of our atmosphere ? There is, the fire of the sun. Thus, by trncing backward without sny break in the chain of occurrences, our river from its end to its real begin nings, ne roina nt length to the sun. Stay not until you are told of oppor tunities to do good, iuquiro after them. "I don't bo much mind," said Mr, Henpeck, "I don't so much mind a woman's having a mind of ln-r own, ex cept that in such a case sliu Uiiulh takes charge of her buskind'a u'tr," 20, 1818 Indlgcttloa. Vmong our vegetables are thosa con taining sulphur, such as onions, leeks, watercresses, radishes, mustard and cress, etc. Their use. should bo shunned by people of weak digestion. If they are not digested they produce) sulphur etted hydrogen and bad breath and un comfortable distention from that gas. Celery is a salutary vogetablo ; so are some roots. Carrots and parsnips, if thoroughly cooked, will be better digest ed than turnips, as the latter also con tain much sulphur. Steaming thete vegetables is far better than boiling tuem, and prescrvos tho sugar in them. All fibrous materials should bo avoided, le'li as cabbage-stalks, green leaves w ith strong or coarse fibors, green beans with fibrous skins, etc. Whatever is u.-t'd of vegetables must bo thoroughly noil cooked .uid reduced to a pulp wiih' out ln.iug its nutiriHhing proporti.'. oteiiuung, wherever it can be employed, is, theiMoro, better than boiling. Sih-.ds oim only l.o UBod sparingly, mndo ui dainty fiend lettuce, the leaves having been well pioked. Cucumber can li'-ver be enten raw, but, if stored, it is dl Kislible. Of fruits tho berries aro the bust. Strawberries eaten with sugar or i ii.iphomes ore bottir thuu currauth ; i r.uiges are good, eaten without (lie sK.ins ; npph s or ponrs must bo en'i n spiinugly, and aro best stewed with sugar and n little sphe. Oranges oug .t to bo avoided unless eaten witjiout t.ifi pulp ; lemons, however, muy do good il they are made into a lemonade will vwirm water and. sugar. Nuts are en tirely to be dono away with. Of cgo bible beverages wo hue tea, coffee and cocoa to consider. Theio is no doubt thut ten has a refreshing iiifluoiico o.i tho digestive organs, if used moderately and not in too strong an infusion. It a better, howover, not to use it in th morning for a weak digestion, ns it wi 1 i-limulato too soon and rather weake' t.uin strengthen the flow of tho gastrii juice at that time. One oup of t in d y is all that can bo allowed for th (l.i djieptio. Coffee, when well roosted, ih made strengthening in its eficot, 1m it must not be takon too strong, und more than thus, it must not have bco. Oo.led, but only have had tbo iufusuii, taken off. i may hero say that tho roost ing of coffoo leaves, as yet, much to b desired, and that inferior coffees migh' be made moro useful than they aro u they were properly prepared. A pre paration has come under my notice whiel t found most boiuficiid with persons a weak digestion. Tho best brands oi Java or Mocha coffee, mixed with roast ed and ground dandelion root in propor tion of two or one of dandolion to three or four of coffee. This article, if deli cately manufactured, is a most whole Homu mixturo and can be well recom mended. Food and Hialth. Jenny Llnd. ' Where is Jenny Liud now ?" inquired a reporter of P. T. Daroum. "Jenny Lind, or Mrs. Qoldschmidt, is living iu London, near the Buckinglu m I'alace, at u plaoo eallo.l Pimlioo. Wreu I was last in London I met her daugl te at a photographer's the royal photogra phers and she insisted upon my si omg her mother. So I went to see her, und h.ui a very pleasant visit. Her marrirgc was rather romantic. Qoldschmidt is a Jew. They studied music together. When alio came to America sho sent .oi him to come as a pianist, and he used play at her concerts. 'It was her .- rangement, and she paid Iub salary elf. She thought ho was a grand . an, and used al ways to get into one of the private boxes and applaud his pieces. Though she was older than ho, bIio loved him, aim was bound to marry him. He renounced his roligion in order to be htr husband. I guess ho thought it was a comfortable place. Sho must bo worth 31,000,00'!. There was a joke about it at the time. Tho question was, ' Why did he marry Jenny Lind?' and the reply, 'Bocaiihe ho was gold smit.' " , The Fr-uUteueh. Pentateuch is the collective name of the first Ave books of tho Old Testa ment. For centuries tho Pentateuch was generally received, iu the church, ns written by Mosos. Differences in Btyle and apparent repetitions to bo found in different parts of Gonesii, ami the first chapters of Exodus led emi nent critics to suppose that, in the com pilation of tho book, written dociimuils of an earlier date had been made uso ot. Tho Mosaic authorship of tho Penta teuch is defended by many theologians, who hold tliatany other supposition is inconsistent with tho plenary inspiration of the Bible. But some of these writers admit that, USsido tho account of tho death and burial of Moses, some words ond sentences may have been interpo lated at a later period. Other theologi ans hold that tho documentary them; is inconsistent with the divino authority and inspiration of tho writings attrib uted to Moses. Our Slxe. The New York UtralA publishes . interesting outline map of the Unili States on which the areas of tho difl'ei sut European Jstats are laid out, Miif resting at once to the eye the rehill "izo of this country and the countries n, the Old World lying west of Russia and I'urkev. EngUnd is ns luriro as N nrunawiek.Srotland as Nova Hcotia.Ncu 'nundland as Ireland. Franco stictcbe from the northern lioundaryof Maitm to hu western boundary of Ohio, and to ihe southern boundary of Pennsylvania. Germany could be got into the spac hing between the southern boundary of tMiiisylvsnia and New Jersev, the At hintio, ths Ohio river, the Mississippi river, sad the northern boundary of Georgia and South Carolina. Spain i equal in area to South Carolina, Oeor g'a, Alabama and Louisiana. Italy re f-embles Florida, toth in size and har. Austria would rmbrace Lake Michlcan and the (our States letween the lakes and the Mississippi river Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois and Indiana. So that tbo area of the United States east of Vn itui.iu.inik! m-iiltmit ilirApif7hthfl of the Ji.tul urea, is equal to the states of Eu rope, excluding itnssia ami iuio;. A. too old rheumatic lady said to her physician : "Oh, doctor, doctor I I stif fer so much with my hands and feet 1 " "Ba patient, dear madam," be soothiuu ly responded, " you'd sailer m grsatil. ,i more without them." Crape on the Door. "Mi- one hai gone from thin strange world of oure. No nure to (jsther Its tti.irua vrilb. il flnwera, o more to linger wh-re n.mW.us muat fa te, Where on all beauty death' finger are laid! " There's crape on the door 1" A mother going by with her darling involuntarily tightens her grasp of tho littlo hand, as she sees tho banner of death furled so near, and tho boy feels the prcssuro and silys: " What is it, mamma?" " Some one is dead. Willio 1" " What does ' dead1 moan ?" The mother looks about her for an Rn swer to tho child's question. " It means it moons why, Willie, you remember wheu your littlo sister ucd and was cold, nud wo buried hev under the gnu,s " " And then?" queried tho child. " Then she went to heaven." , " Whoio is heaven ?' " It is win rn God is, my dear." "Mamma, who mad.) God ?'' Poor child I h s thoughtless questions get no moro satisllictory nuswers than our researches into an older theology over which we bo vainly agonize, and ho must remain contented with his limited knowledge thnt some one is dead and it is tlio custom to put crape on tho door i custom beautiful in itself, infinitely beautilul if wo look upon the insignia as one of hope and glad aiqnicsconoo in a summons to rest. iM-mo oi o Is rebt'ng from so row and aln, XI iip whete airth conflicts enter not in; O .e more demrted to hraten's bright ehore ; Jin g the be.i eoftiy, there'a crape on the door. Wo do not cap our hands end ery jojmisly, "it is the bsnner of immor iiuit,)." Not Wo start and walk with slow step and bated breath, as tho heavy wave of crape meets our eyes, and wo shudder instinctively in tho bright sun hIiiuo. The green leaves aro coming, the flowers will blonm, the birds will smg, and the heart throb with tho full ness of life. T. ves ha, e the'r time io fall. .V. a flmierK to wither at the north wind And stars to set- hut all Ji it ha-t, all fetsons, for Uilne own, O D Custom has decreed that w thus inform the passer-by that ' pi i sent, and tbo solemn badgo .ill idowy ambassador guards the irom all idlo intrusion. No socU alb, shall th is tho (rtal isits ire. pjid to tho honso thnt slions that nstgn ; no call of ceremony is mado while Unit guest is present ; nor do pio plu linger idly in tho vicinity of tho limso that is thus sot apart from iU neighbors. The somber fall of black arape on tho loor nssures'tis thnt one of mnturo year ins " passed ovor," but for a young por on or a littlo child, white tho emblem if purity is used, but it tells tho saino sul story: Weary with mingling 1 Va bitter and sweet, i ary with pai uns and never to lnoet, Hane ooo hsa gone to the bright golden ehore, ntng the bell aoftly, there's crape on Uie door. At. ituid. There is just m much difference in the manner in which two men open shell oysters as there is in the Way they go to church or walk on the street. Who has. not watched a thorough oyster-opener at an Eastern oyster market, and observed tho tender manner in whioh he takes up tho shell and looks at it, as though it was a friend" of his. He inserts his in strument between the shells m delicate ly as' a dentist will probe an aching tooth, and by a little turn of the wrist your oyster is uncovered and reclining upon the half-shell plump and juicy, in viting you to fire him down your neck. How different it is when an amateur at tempts to open oysters. He commences by getting red in tho face, and knocking off an inoh of tho edge ot the shell, and letting all the juice run ont and sWj down between his fingers. He knookr tome skin off his thumb, and that bleeds, and your heart bleeds for the oyster. Ha iusorts an iron that looks like a sknre book into the shell, then pries ana grunts, the aholl opens and the oyster sticks to both sides of it and splits. He sows off tho mantel-piece that holds the oyster to the shell, and hands jen the half-shell with something on it that looks like scrambled oyster. The dirt Irom the shell .gets on the oyster and it a about as much comfort trying to eat it as it is to eat a hickory nut thai' has been oraoked by laying it down en the s de and mashing it with a hatohet. The oyster opened by an amateur looks ragged and discouraged, and the man who opens it looks about the seme, while the oyster opened by a man who understands his business looks as though it enjoyed' life, and tho man who opens it looks like a thoroughbred who is not ashamed of kis business, and knows he can do it as well as anybody. Tho world is full of men who Jo everything the way an amateur opens oysters. They try to do that for whioh they are not fitted, and it is hard to mako them be lieve they are not doing what they at tempt to do well, but they always act as though thoy wanted to apologize for something being wrong. This oyster business is a little out of season, but you have all noticed how it is. Peckt Sun. EFFECT Of FLOWKltS OS MKALTU. An Italian professor has made some very agreeable medicinal researches, re sulting in the discovery that vegetable perfumes exercise a positively, healthful influence on the atmosphere, converting its oxygen into ozone, and thus increas ing its oxidizing influences. The es sences found to develop the largest quantity of ozone are those of tlie cher ry, laurel, clover, lavender, mint, jam Icr, fennel and bergamot; those that give it in smaller quantities are anise, nutmeg and thyme. The flowers of the narcissus, mignonette, heliotrope and lily ot the valley develop ozone in dose vessels. Flowers destitute of perfume do not develop it, and those which havu slight perfume develop it in small quan tities. Seasoning from these foots, the professor recommends the cultivation of flowers in znashy districts, and in all places infested with animal emanations. The inhabitants of such regions should, hu says, surround heir houses with beds of the most odorous flowers. Tub Bev. Mr. Will is offered the Lord's prayer in the Nevada Bsnate. When ha i mI finished, Doolin leaned ovor to Uutnmoud and remarked: "He stole 'iut prayer, and I'll bat on it. I heard he tame ideas expressed at Eureka at a funeral over two years ago," .