THE COLUSI BIAN. Published Every Frxay, at ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO., OIL, BY . G. ADAMS, Editor and Proprietor Y 1 1 A Published Every Friday, at ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO., OR., BY E. 0. AD Alls, Editor and Proprietor. Subscription Rates: One year, in advance $2 00 Six months, 1 00 Three month. " 50 Advertising Rates : Oae square (10 lines) first inaertioa. . f2 00 Each sabsequa&t fnaextion . . 100 VOL. V. ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA COUNTY, OREGON, MAY 22, 1885. NO. 42. THE COLUMBIAN. COLUMBIAN DAY BY DAY. A little older every day, A little nearer to the close; Nearer the ending of the fray, Nearer the lonr repose. ' o'f.r our head j. a and the rras. And triends will murmur: ."He Is dead," As by our tomb they pass. Nearer the time when we shall cast An anchor ly the myotic shore; And see and feel mud know, at last, Whut we could not before. Ah ! how the years iro rolling: on! How short the step to manhood's prime, How Hion the froldof life is gone Into the vaults of Timel Cincinnati Eiujuirtr. MADAM WHIMS. Her Devices to Conceal the Cruel ties of an Insane Husband. A young girl, who had just arrived, was the center of a group of women on the porch of the old-fashioned hotel in Wildgrapeisle, a little island the medicinal qualities of whose springs, .especially in the case of nervous com plaints, were just beginning to be known, one lovely August evening. "And now," said she, after the usual welcoming speeches and compliment ary remarks about the becomingness of her traveling costume had all been made, "tell me who is here," 'Oh! the old set," answered two or three of her friends together. "With the exception," added two or three more, "of Madam Whims," chorused all the rest. "Madam Whims." repeated the new arrival. "What a very odd name." "Oh! it isn't her real name," ex plained several of the irroup in one voice again. a Her real narue- Suppose one of the partv enlightens me while the others remain silent," in terrupted the girl, laughingly. "It's rather confusing, you know, listening to a chorus on a subject of which the listener happens to be in total ignor ance. You, Maud, used to be a capital story-teller in our school days, and that isn't far enough away for your tongue to have forgotten its cunning, and so suppose you narrate and oblige yours truly. Bell Morrison. "There isn't any story to tell. Bell, my dear, replied the youthful, brighl eyed matron thus singled out. "The case is simply this: A lady is stopping here she came about three weeks ago whose name is Eleanor Halpin, but whom our circle with common consent have dubbed Madame Whims, because, my dear, she really is the whimmiest of whimmen. Pun intended hope you ail see it." "I recognized it at once," said Bell, "having met it many times before, notably in the old verses whic if my memory serves me aright,, run., some what iii this way. "When Eve first wooed with love so kind Her Adam called her wooman; But when she brought him grief and woe. Why, then he called her woeman. Since then the men declare the sex With follies overbrimmin'. And so they've changed the name again. And now they call them whimmen." "Am I to go on, or have you any more verses to repeat?" asked Mistress Maud. "You are to go on, and go on quickly," answered her sprightly friend, "for I haven't had my supper vet and I shall soon be awfully hungry. You said last she was the 'whimmiest of whimmen.' Pray tell me what shapes her whims take?" "Oddities of dress, principally. When we first beheld her, two days after her arrival she had kept .her room in tue interim sne wore a sort of turban, apparently evolved from a large, soft, crimson silk hand kerchief, tilted rather rakishly over the left eve. It was not altogether unbe coming, but it was extremely queer. In a few days the turban was discarded and she appeared in very long, very loose cloves, morn, noon and eve breakfast, lunch and dinner, for nearlv a week. Then she came down with icane. a handsome one, and walked with an affected little limp for another week Then a lace scarf graced her head, tied down over her ears, my dear, with a big bow under her chin. And to-night, warm as it is, she has several yards of white illusion twined around her throat and standing up at the back of her neck in a manner that strongly suggests an Elizabethan ruff." ' hich suggestion of an Elizabethan ruff I suppose I shall have the pleasure of seeing, said Hell, "as each of my lady s vagaries seem to last for several days. But tell me something about herself, "laud. Is she pretty? Is she clever? Is she wife, widow or divorcee? If vife, what kind of a husband has she?" "Well, she is not uglv, rather pretty. in fact, and somewhat clever; so we in fer from what conversation we have had with her, which is very little, for it is one of her whims to have her hus band always at ber side, and you know how hard it is for women to talk to each other when there is a man around. By the by, we also infer from the never-varying brightness of her face that she must be a very happy, very .sweet-tempered woman." "And her husband?" "Oh! yes, I was coming to him. He is a splendid looking fellow (though Kate Dutton, who is given, you know, to finding resemblance to animals in human beings, declares there is a hint of tiger about him), but we are none of us particularly interested in him, because, to tell the truth, my dear, he hasn't shown the slightest interest in any of us." "And how does he appear to regard his wife's whims?" "With extreme indulgence. I see him looking at her peculiarities of dress, sometimes, with the kind of smile with which a fond parent regards the trick of a spoiled child." "Spoiled child, indeed!" here joined in a sharp-nosed, thin-lipped elderly dame who had evidently thus far been holding her tongue with great difficulty. "I have no patience with him. Why don't he make her take off those fal-de-lals (Maud hasn't told you about half of them) and dress like a Christian? I would, mighty quick, if I were he. But as he don't I should think that compan ion of hers Mrs. Gregg who seems to be a sensible person, and to have some influence over her, might prevail upon her not to make a show of herself." "Perhaps she is the sort of woman who can't be prevailed upon," said Bell. "I guess you are right," acquiesced Mistress Maud, with emphasis. "She has a very determined look at times about her mouth, though it is a small and smilling one. And her big, dark gray eves meet your gaze almost defi antly' "Defiantly? Impudently, I call it," resumed the sharp-featured lady, "and I'm sorry for her husband, I am, for altogether. I've no doubt he has a pret ty hard time of it. I'm sure if were a man shouldn't want my wife tag ging 'round after me every step took, especially if I. had a wife like Madam Whims, eternally devisin' ways and means, in spite of her pretended devo tion, of attractin' attention." "That is false!" said a voice from the drawing-room window, and the next moment Mrs. (iregg, a tall, pale wo man, clad in black robes, stepped out upon the porch. "False!" echoed the unlovely spin ster. "Yes, 'false;' and to my mind the time has come when the truth should be told. I can not, in consideration for her, take the dreadful responsibility of keeping my mistress' secret any longer. Ladies, that splendid looking fellow so bound to the side of his wife would, had it not been for her angelic love and devotion, have been long ago the in mate of a lunatic, asylum. Don't be frightened, he has never hurt any one but her. For years he has been subject to insane paroxysms whose fury he vents upon the being he loves best in the world. Once over them he is as sane as you or I. For several weeks past these attacks have been much more frequent than ever before. But no one has suspected them, even in this crowded hotel, for having, as you have already suggested. Miss Dutton. some thing of the tiger about him, it is but a stealthy bound, a noiseless, heavy blow, or two or three received without a murmur and then he sinks into a pro found slumber from which he awakes titterly unconscious of what he has done, to. laugh as you do at his wife's wnims. i nat iantastic turuan con cealed a wound in the left temple: the long gloves covered bruised hands and arms; the scarf was tied about a swollen neck, and the yards of illusion wrapped aronnd her slender throat to-night hide the marks oi cruel ( fingers. "Madam Whims!' Madam Saint, I say! 'lie only hurts me,' she prays, when I threaten disclosure. 'He only hurts me and does not mean to do it, as you well know, Gregg, for he loves me, he loves me dearly and I adore him. What he does in the wretched moments that he is not himself I can bear, but to be parted from him forever oh! That I could not bear.' She came here in the hope, that the waters might do him good, but he has, as I have told you, grown worse, and after to-day's ex perience it would be crime for me to remain silent any longer. 'Give me the name, please, of the best physician in the my God! what was that?' she broke off suddenly to exclaim, as a pistol shot rang out upon the air, and then she fairly Hew back through the drawing-room, out into the hall, and up the stairs that led to her mistress' apartment, followed, almost as swiftly, by the horror-stricken women who had been listening to her story. Throwing open the door oi the sitting-room she entered, leaving the others huddled to gether in the threshold. "Too late! too late!" she cried; "look there." And there on the floor, beside a couch which held the form of his wife, lav the lifeless body of Luke Halpin. "He has killed her in one of his insane mo ments," continued the companion in a shrill, unnatural voice, "and finding her dead on awakening has taken his own life with the pistol I thought I had so carefully hidden from him. And see, see, wringing her -hands while the tears rolled down her cheeks, oh! what a pitiful sight she played Madam Whims' to the last." And pressing silently forward they saw that the dying woman, with some wild idea of hiding the act that had cost her her life, and shielding him who was dearer to her than that life, had with her last strength draped a gauzy shawl over the knife-wound in her breast, but the tell-tale blood had dripped through and stained the white silk dress she wore with spots of vivid red! Margaret Ky tinge, in Detroit Free Press. He Let His Cows For Beans. "If Smith don't keep his cow out of my garden I will kill her. I have shot her side full of beans every night,' but she gets in my garden the next night just the same as if nothing had hap pened. I believe he turns her in my garden." "Of course he does," said Jones, "for I saw him do it." "What the dickens does he.do that for?" "To get you to shoot his cow." "To get me to shoot his cow? What does he want me to shoot his cow for?" "Because he is a Boston man and his cow brings home enough of your beans to support his family. He keeps his boys busy picking the beans out of his cow's hide. Take him over a bushel of beans and his cow won't get in your garden for a week." Paris Deacon. Lately the distance between Lon don and Edinburgh was covered" in three days by a tricycle rider. This feat was surpassed a week later by an other traveler, who accomplished the four hundred miles in two days and nine hours, considerably more than half the distance being traveled in the lirst twenty-four hours. A medical writer in the Lancet Warns all "cycle" riders to beware of large wheels which are accompanied by small saddles. He says that unless a good-sized seat is provided, serious evils may result. Among the victims of cholera at Naples was an old woman aged one hundred and three years. MR. NOX. How a Man Searching fur a Missing Artl cle is Feelingly Described by II U Long Suffering Better Half. Did vou ever see a man search for missin? article? Well, if not, just let o - me tell you how Mr. Nox does it. Mr. Nor generally arises to build fires, leaving me to my morning nap undisturbed that is, if he can remem ber w'lere he put his clothes the pre vious ev ening; if not, I am called upon to tell him where he stood, whence all but him had fled (to bed).- The other morning, after being dreamilv conscious that the '-'blamed shavings were wet," and that the "lid lifter never was in its place, l was broadly awakened to find Mr. Nox going tip and down car bedroom, lamp in hand, his best hat stuck on the extreme back of his head, kicking his slippered feet against every bit of furniture in reach, a dark frown contracting his classic brow, and murder in bis eye. inquired the matter. "Hunting my rubbers" (shortly). "But von don't expect to find them in here on the wall, do you?" seeing him gazing upward. "Course I do. Where else can they be? I've looked everywhere else." I suppress a giggle,which has become chronic and attacks, me whenever Air. Is ox begins a search. I suggest various places in which they might be found; but he "has looked ! here." Back and forth now in one room, then in another warmer waxes his wrath. He "gives the kitten a rough push and looks care fully on the spot of carpet it has occu pied. Suddenly an idea seems to strike him, and holding the lamp high above his head, he rushes into the preserve closet. JNIy mirth subsides. 1 spring up. "O, don't go in there! Your rubbers never, never were in there. Good gracious! Come out!" (raising my voice in command.) "I don t know thev am t. and 1 in going to have them. Do you suppose 1 'm going to milk that cow without my rubbers?" So much talk had awakened the "flower of the family," who starts up and says, speedily: "Saw 'em on the piano las' night." This is too much for me, and I roll over in bed, hugging a pillow ecstati cally over my mouth to suffocate my laughter. When I had recovered I peeped out and found Mr. Nox examin ing the piano first at one end and then at the other. He prepares to take oft the lid, when my indignation gets the better of my discretion, and I angrily demand what he is hunting, anyway. "Why, my rubbers, you blockie, didn't she say they were here?" "O you half wit re! Do you think they could be in fhvre? Stop tearing up things so." He goes into the preserve closet again, goes out, flies into the kitchen and through the pantry. Then I hear the safe door click, wood box and coal hod jingle merrily, the oven doors clang, a pailful of potatoes roll out upon the floor, the ash pan clatters, the sink is explored: I hear him open the clock; then back into the sitting room he tramps. My work basket suffers, sewing machine examined, my work tumbled, I hear the dolls and playthings of the "Flower" dashed upon the floor, then a door bangs and all is silent Mr. Nox has gone out into the untried, "unfeeling cow yard to milk that cow (she gives a whole pint now every morning) without his rubbers. I grieve not; the ground is perfectly dry, I know he is safe from damp feet. - I rise at once and . dress briskly: I know I have no time to lose if I would have my breakfast before ten o'clock. I have not had ocular proof of the result of Mr. Nox's eccentric search ing for lost apparel, in vain. I am perfectly aware of the chaotic state of the house, and am prepared to meet it. I consider myself a heroine, in a small way, to be able' to meet it. I hurry forth to the kitchen; crossing the sitting room I stumble over some object occupying the middle of the floor, and stooping to examine, find the missing rubbers. Texas Sitings. A Modern Oracle. A most satisfactory modern oracle ap pears to have been established at Kair wan, the holy city of Tunis. It consists of a telephone.with an ingenious Arabic speaking French priest at the one end and a number of the credulous faithful at the other. The story is an excellent instance how "they as has brains" al ways find some opportunity for making use of them. The inventor of the ora cle was once a member of a monastery at Avignon. Expelled by an infidel gov ernment, he went to Algeria and turned Trappist, but finding that profession ap parently too narrow for his versafle and energetic nature, he subsequently had the happy thought of turning Moham medan, and combining the furtherance of French political designs with the ex ercise of his new religion. Installed, as a reward for his usefulness, as the keeper of a kourba, or shrine, but find ing the ordinary income oi the omce somewhat inadequate, he has now hit on the happier thought of increasing it by the introduction of a telephone, by which he is enabled from his own room to return prompt and apparently mirac ulous answers to those who come to ask him for Divine guidance. Paris Cor. London Times. The District Attorney of Boston says that ne encounters no such ob stacles in the discharge of his duties as women. No criminal can be so unde serving of sympathy, so completely an outcast, that he has not a mother, wife or sister to plead for him. They are the most persistent lobbyists on earth, he declares; the most unreasonable, and yet the hardest to withstand. They lie in wait for the prosecutor of their loved ones; their audacity would make the adamantine cheek of a Washington claim-broker seem a suffusion of modest blushes; they meet arguments with tears and denials with moan's; and he thinks that, on the whole, justice is oftener de feated by them than by all other causes. L'oston Transcript. A Philadelphia German, who wears a "No. 17" boot, claims to have the largest understanding of any man in the country. DYNAMITE. How the Destructive Exploslre Is Maaa factured. Mr. M. Bennett, a man who has probably handled more dynamite than any other man in the country, tells a reporter some interesting facts con cerning the manufacture and use of this destructive compound : .Dynamite is made of glycerine-oil and nitric acid mixed in sawdust. A boy can make it and there is no law to prevent it, nor is there a law restrict ing the sale of it. You may send your office-hoy or servant-girl for a few pounds- and no questions will be asked. The sale of opium and poisons are re stricted, but dynamite, the greatest ami most terrible destructive engine of the nineteenth century, may be bought by any one at thirty-six cents per pound. The wet sawdust on a saloon floor is so precisely like dynamite that even I could not fell the difference un til I tasted it the glycerine imparts a sweet flavor to it. Dynamite may be made 'out of a hundred and one differ ent things, such as sulphur, saltpeter and brimstone. Generally, however, glycerine and nitric acid, which we call nitro-glycerine, are mixed with such an absorbent as wood-pulp or sawdust; this is done to enable its safe handling and transportation.' The color of dy namite is the color of sawdust, and that of course depends upon the color and nature of the wood. "The word dynamite covers the whole category of explosives, such as giant-powder and nitro-gljcerine. Gun cotton is similar, except that cotton is used as the absorbent instead of saw dust or pulp. "If placed in water it will sink al most as rapidly as lead. I should say, however, that giant-powder is much darker than the other dynamites, for the reason that instead of saw-dust we ase pulverized candle-coal' dust im- ovted from France and very gassy. hnamite is worth from thirty-six cents io seventy-five cents a pound. I hat which is very destructive is worth sixtv cents to seventy-five cents, and is used lor sub-marine blasting and heading tunnels. For what we call a fifty per cent powder, we take fifty pounds of sawdust and add fifty pounds of nitro glycerine oil; and for what we call gela tine, which is very destructive, we take ninety pounds of oil to ten pounds of absorbent, generally sawdust. There is very little, if any, dynamite imported from or exported to Europe for the reason that an idiot can compound it. We do send a fe schooners to old Mexico and to the Republics of South America, but none, is sent from here to England, as a man can make it in his bedroom in a few m-nutes. ror ordi nary purposes dynamite is put up in cartridges eight , inches long and ironi three-quarters of an inch to four inches in diameter. These cartridges are made of heavy brown paper, and when filled the ends are folded and the car tridge dipped in paralline oil to keep it air and water tight. You may place a 'v rr!"i mnn :u nnvil find evdndd t by a blow from a hammer. 1 have known premature blasts to occur where a pick or sledge has struck it inadvertently. It is not used in col lieries, because it would shatter the coal and pulverize it. In stone quar ries, iron mines, and in tunneling it is used daily, and there are thousands of men manufacturing it and tens of thousands hourly handling it. ' I tried o get my life insured two years ago, iut no company would take the risk, end 1 don't know a single man in ray ine who is insured. Less than half an crtnee will throw a sixty-pound ooniu- hcllovcrl,0iM) feet and two pounds will blow a ten-ton rock to atoms. The heaviest blast I ever saw was in a limestone ciuarry in Glendon, Pa., when 8u,(H0 pounds were touched off. A iriend of mine experimented with sev eral things very successfully. On ala job of work he had a very refractory mule which was so stupid that he was about to give it awav, when he thought he would try a few grains of dynamite on the animal. He must have used too much, for nothing more was ever seen of the mule. He used a three-quarter-pound cartridge, which retails at about sixty-five cents. A 4x8 cartridge-cjijn-tains about five and one-quarfer pounds, but the medium size is 1 1-4x8, and t onta'ns about eight ounces. "I might place a pound of common gunpowder on tins carpet, apply at use. and there would only be a flash and mil. but if I placed the same quantity of dynamite tht-re and touched it off it would shatter tlrs room and the entire basement and found ition, for dynamite trikes downward. I'nlike gunpowder. which to forc.blv explode must be con- ined, dynamite may be placed on the Mirtace of the sidew.ilk or in anv un- onuried place, and it is read;-for work. There is one compound, however, that is more terrible than dynamite, because you can imprison more explosive force n given quantities. This is lulminate of mercury, and I tlrnk that it was this agent that was used to blow up the English Houses of Parliament. It looks very much like fine, white flour, and is worth one dollar an ounce. So explo sive is it that aflip of the finger or a tap of your pencil will do the business." "Have you ever been approached pro fessionally by professed dynamiters?" "No, and it wouldn't do them any good if 1 were. I don't believe that O'Donovan llossa himself had anything to do with the recent explosions. He is a blowhard seekin notoriety. I was once shown an internal machine that was made here in Chicago, and a dread ful contrivance it was. For these ma chines they use corrosive acids instead of fuses. as the latter make a tell-tala smoke while the former do not. I saw the machine that the Public Library thief Talbut,or Funk, constructed, and I am satisfied that he is a novice in tha line, because he had removed the pow der and ball from the cartridge, which simply contained a little cap. This was not of sufficient force to explode the dynamite. Doubtless his idea was that when in search of the stolen books any one who would force open the box the nail would let down the cock ar4 cause an explosion which would have killed everybody near it. He had filed away the notch of the trigger to facili tate the explosion. If the powder ard ball had not been removed from the cartridge the man who opened the box would now be in his grave. Chicago Tribune. I SPY! Bill Xye Indulges la Reminiscences of Childhood's Happy Hour. Dear reader, do you remember the boy in your school who did the heavy falling through the ice, and was always about to break his neck, but managed to live through it all? Do you call to mind the youth who never allowed any body else to fall out of a tree and break his collar bone when he could attend to it himself? Every school has to secure the services of such a boy before it can sue ceed, and so our school had one. When I entered the school I saw at a g that the board had neglected to provide itself with a boy whose duty it was to nearly kill himself every few davs in order to Keep up the interest, so l ap plied for the position. I secured it without any trouble whatever. The board understood at once from mv bearing that I would succeed. And I did not betray the trust they had re posed in me. Before the first term was over I had tried to climb two trees at once and been.carried home on a stretcher; been pulled out of the river with my lungs full of water and artificial respiration resorted to; been jerked around over the north half of the county by a frac tious horse whose halter I had tied to my leg, and which leg is now three inches longer than the other, together with various other little eccentricities which I can not at' this moment call to mind. My parents at last got so that along about two o'clock p. m. they would look anxiously out of the win dow and say: " Isn't it about time for the boys to get Ivre with William's re mains? They generally get here before two o'clock. One day live or six of us were play ing 'I spy" around our barn. Every body knows how to play "I spy." One shuts his eyes and counts one hundred, for instance, while the others hide. Then he must find the rest and say "1 spy" so-and-so and touch the "goal" before they do. If anybody beats him to the goal the victim has to "blind" over again. Well, I knew the ground pretty well, and could drop twenty feet out of the barn window and strike on a pile of straw so as to land near the goal, touch it, and let the crowd in free without getting, found out I did this several times and got the blinder, James Bang, pretty mad. After a boy has counted five hundred or six hundred, and worked hard to gather in the crowd, only to get jeered and laughed at by the- boys, he loses his temper. It was so with James Cicero Bang. I knew that he almost hated me, and yet I went on. Finally, in the fifth ballot I saw a good chance to slide down and let the crowd in again as I had done on former occasions. I slipped out of the window and down the side of the barn about two feet, when 1 was detained un avoidably. There was a 'batten" on the barn that was loose at the upper end. 1 think I was wearing mv father s vest on that day, as he was away from home and I frequently wore his clothes when he was absent. Anyhow the vest was too large, and when I slid down that loose board ran up between the vest and my person in. such a wa- as to suspend me about eighteen feet from the ground in a prominent, but very un comfortable, position. I remember it vet quite distinctly. James C. Bang came around where he could see me. He said: "I spy Bill Nye and touch the goal before him." No one came to remove the barn. No one seemed to sympathize with me in my great sorrow and isolation. Every little while James u. isang would come around the corner and sav: "O I see ve. You needn't think you're out of sight up there. I can see vou real plain You better come down and blind. I can see ve up there!" I tried to unbutton my vest and get down there and lick James, but it was of no use. It was a very trying time. I can re member how 1 tried to kick mvself loose, but failed. Sometimes I would kick the .farn and sometimes I would kick a large bole in the horizon. Fi nally I was rescued by a neighbor who said he didn't want to sec a good barn kicked into chaos just to save a long- legged Doy tnat wasn t worth over six bits. It affords me great pleasure to add that while I am looked up to and mad ly loved by every one that does not know me, James C. Bang is the brevet President of a fractured bank, taking a lonely bridal tour by himself in Europe and waiting for the depositors to die of old age. The mills of the gods grind slowly, but they most generally get there with both feet. (Adapted from the French by permission.) Detroit tree Press. ; And That, Too. A Boston man got hold of a West erner the other day in hopes of getting some consolation out of the look of af fairs toward sundown, but the man promptly replied: "I tell you, things have just squatted out our way." "Won't wheal look up a little, eh?" "Not a look." "Any new enterprises?" "Not so much as building a wood shed." "But do the merchantscomplain?" 'I should smile! They even hire folks to help 'em growl." "Isn't the railroad business a little more favorable?" "Yes, they manage to run trains, but that's about all." "Well, there must be some business in the West which holds its own," pr sisted the Bostonian. "How's matri mony?'' "Deader'n Joseph's old boots," was the confidential answer. "A year ago you could have married anything and anybody and counted on six per cent, dividends, but the general depr'ssion has flattened matrimony until a widow worth $20,000 has got to huut a man down with a gun!" Wall Street Xews A man at St. Albans, Vt was heard to remark that he would give twenty cents for a cat. The next morning twenty-two boys were on hand, each expecting to go away twuity cents richer. WEDDINGS. How the Ceremony Was Celebrated la Olden Time. On the Sunday morning the invited guests assembled at the sexton's house (which was generally near the church) and when the morning psalm was being sung the procession set out. First of all walked the fiddlers, playing a festal march; then a swarm of children, young relatives of the bridal pair; next the two bridesmaids, then the bridal couple, and immediately after them the bride-dresser. Then followed the two groomsmen and the rest of the crowd men first, women next, arranged by the groomsmen in a certain order. The procession was so timed that they reached the church just as the psalm ended, and if they came a little early they all waited in the porch until the proper time. So soon as the singing ceased the wedding party entered the church, and walked up the centre aisle, the fiddler meantime playing right joy fully, till they came to the altar, when they turned aside, and stood playing whilst the whole party was arrayed in order before the clergyman, wh stood waiting for them. The wedding cere mony was then celebrated i ccording ta the old Swedish rites. The wedding breakfast was generally laid on three tables set in the form of a horseshoe. The bridal coup'e sat in the place of honor that is, in the middle of the centre table. Next to the bride sat the "bride di;csscr," then the bride maids and the rest of the women. Next the bridegroom sat the clergyman, and then the groomsmen and the men guests. The groomsmen acted as mas ter of the ceremonies, and saw that each one sat in his or her appointed place. Each guest brought knife, fofk and spoon to the feast. The meal over, dancing began, when polka, waltz, min uet ami country dance of all kinds fol lowed in rapid succession. Toward the end of the feast the bride was obliged to dance with each one of the girls, who stood in a ring around her. During this the lads stood ail around with lighted candles. Next the bridegroom danced with all the men, the girls in their turn holding the lighted candles. Then the bride danced with married women, and the married men held the lights, and then the bridegroom danced with the married men, the married women holding the candles. After the dancing was over the guests who lived near went home, while those who lived at a distance stayed the night. Next day by twelve o'clock all assem bled once more to breakfast. The bride was then dressed as a married woman, in a cap bound with black. After breakfast the old folks chatted over things old and new, whilst the young folks amused themselves with ring- dances, etc., " hich, if the weather was fine, were held in the open air.. This went on till supper time. After supper much of the time was spent in singing. Harper's Weekly. HUMOR IN THE FAMILY. One of the Most Valuable Aids to a Happy Home Life. Wood humor is rightly reckoned a- most valuable aid to happy home life. An equally good and useful faculty is a sense of humor, or the capacity to have a little fun along with the humdrum cares and work of life. We all know how it brightens up things generally to have a lively, witty companion, who sees the ridiculous points of things, and who can turn an annoyance into an oc casion for laughter. It is a great deal better to laugh over some domestic mishaps than to cry or scold over them. Many homes and lives are dull because they are allowed to become too deeply impressed with a sense of the cares and responsibilities of life to recognize its bright and especially its mirthful side. Into Mich a household, good but dull, the advent of a witty, humorous friend is like sunshine on a cloudy day. While it is always oppressive to hear persons constantly striving to say witty or funny things, it is comfortable to see what a brightener a little fun is to make an effort to have some at home. It is well to turn off an impatient Jiuestion sometimes, and to regard it rom a humorous point of view instead of becoming irritated about it "Wife, what is the reason I can never find a clean shirt?" exclaimed a good but rather impatient husband, after rum maging all through the wrong drawers. His wife looked at him steadily for a moment, half inclined to be provoked, then with a comical look, she said: "I never could guess conundrums; I give it up. lhen he laughed, and they both laughed, and she went and ot his shirt, and he felt ashamed of himself and kissed her, and she felt happy; so, what might have been an occasion for hard words and unk'nd feelings, be came just the contrary, all through the little vein of humor that cropped out to the surface. Some 'children have a pe culiar fatuity for giving a humorous turn to things when they are reproved It does just as well oftentimes to laugh things off as to. scold them off. Laugh ter is better than tears. Let us have .a little more of it at home. Christian at Work. ' A Boy's Autobiography. Following is the biography of a ten- year-old youngster of this city's public jchool, written by himself: First When and where were you born? Of what descent? Second Where have you lived? Third How have j you spent your life? j" Fourth What remarkable things have happened to you? Fifth What should you like to be come? "I was born in Kansas Citv, Jackson County, Mo., West Central States, U. S. A. ; estern Hemisphere; liiesdaj-, January 13, 187S. j I am Engu.sh descent. 1 have lived in Kansas Ci'. all my life. Once I tumbled down a well, and was fished o-ut wjjth a clothes-line. I fell down steps two or three times, and mashed my fingers ones when I was a little kid. I got in some jam that had Cayaone pepper in it, land it made me dan like a wet hen on a hot brick. "1 want to become an angel." Kan- FINNISH sas City Journal. THERMOMETERS. How They Should Be Exposed la Order to Work Satisfactorily. One of the first, conditions to be re garded is that of securing a good height,, above the ground, on which a consider able diversity of opinion prevails. Much depends upon the immediate conditions of the locality. When this point is de cided upon, a uniform and satisfactory shelter or screen should be provided for the instrument. The height and the screen should be so adjusted that the thermometer shall be free from ground fog, and that access of the air to it should be perfect. The. shelter should shield it from all reflected heat, from all radiation from surrounding objects, as well as from moisture. Many different forms of shelter have been contrived in different countries. In experimenting upon the merits of these devices, a standard of comparison Is found in the swung thermometer, or, as the French call it, the tiermometre fronde, which is a common thermometer attached to a string or wire, and rapidly swung through a circle " whose radius is the length or the string. ine theory of this arrangement is that, as the instrument is rapidly brought in contact with a large mass of air, it must give the temperature of the same, un less the results are vitiated by other causes. From a number of experiments the following conclusions as to the best Imposition of shelters are advanced: When exposed to direct sun-heat they - should be at least thirty-six inches long; with proper precautions the thermom eter "fronde" both dry and wet will give the most correct air temperature and relative humidity; a single louvre shelter is sufficient. The interposition of a second louvre prevents the free access of air, and if ventilation is used it must affect the air which is propelled to the thermometer. For obtaining even approximate relative humidity in calm weat her single louvred shelters are nec essary, and for the best results an In duced air current is essential, especially in the winter in northern countries. When a" window shelter is used there should be a free air-space of from six to twelve inches between the shelter on the north side of the building and the wall. The simplest form of screen . would be four pieces of board ten or twelve inches square, nailed together box-fashionrleaving the bottom and the side toward the window open. I he thermometers, dry and wet, should be placed live inches apart, near the center of this screen, with their bulbs project ing below the plane of the lower edge. Shade may be given, at such times as the sun is shining on the norh side of ' the house, by the adjustment of the window blinds. Chicago Time. WHAT A BLUNDER. DID. How a Compositor's Error Came Near Costing a Man Kls Ufo. In the Youngstown correspondence of an evening cotemporary yesterday was an item to the effect that a well-known -young Pittsburgher dined in that thriv ing j-oung; ,eity yesterday. It was hurriedly sent to the composing-room with a mass of other copy, where the intelligent compositor set it up "died. TI.e city editor. saw the item In the proof and sent a reporter out for an obituary of the deceased. Supposing, of course, that the family were already acquainted with the sad news, the re porter sought the aged father, who sat at his desk in a Smithfield Street office. "Mr said the reporter,- "can you give me any facts about John's death?" "John who?' exclaimed the old gen tleman. "Why, your son, who died at Youngs town yesterday." "My God!" and the old man turned a deathly white and fell from his chair to the floor. He was at once laid on a sofa and a physician summoned. The now thoroughly frightened reporter ran back to the ofhee and told his story. Again the proof was "called down," and with it the copy, when the error was discovered. Again the reporter was hurried out to make an effort to repair the mischief he had done. Of course his second appearance brought great relief to the stricken father, who had partially recovered. He was so broken up by the excitement, however, that he had to be put in a carriage and taken home. The reporter wus so badly rattled by the affair that he had to put on a "sub" for the remainder of the day. Pittsburgh Times. OHIO COLLEGES. The Buckeye State's Great Number of These Institutions of Learning. It is a fact perhaps not generally known that Ohio has more so-called colleges than any other State in the' Union. While Illinois and New York have twenty-eight each and Pennsylva nia twenty-six, no . other State having more than nineteen, Ohio has thirty-five. But it is only in the number of these institutions that the State can boast. Their aggre gate income from the productive funds is but $210,510, and from tuition fees but 8125,382, while the value of all grounds and buildings is but $3,192,840, and the number of volumes in their libraries but 161,302. The number of students, however, in the preparatory collegiate departments compares favor ably with the older States, New York only surpassing Ohio. How much bet ter endowed the colleges of Massachu setts are than those of Ohio may be seen at a glance. With but seven col leges they have -an income from pro ductive funds of $291,812, and receipts from, tmtion of $166,538 and 303,126 volumes in their libraries; but the value of buildings and grounds is only $1, 310,000. The colleges of New York and Pennsylvania are also much better en dowed than those of Ohio, and are vastly richer in libraries and apparatus. Michigan, with only nine colleges, shows up better than Ohio in the pro vision made for their support. Ciwctw nati Commercial Gazette. Canada has a military force oi about 39,000 men, comprising about 750 regulars, 500 mounted police and about 37.740 "active militia.'