f HOME AND FARM. | tue« will meet oft n in one individual. RELIGIOUS AND EDUCATIONAL. V\ icked card-player.« a .Turn that many n —One drop of ca«t t oil placed ob — I here are twenty person» whose CroHftlng th« IiHiiwbe on llorarbHck and game of whist wdl bo played before all warts every div for from ten days t< ( »llinir on OlhtTH to I ollow. In victorious card« fa I nto one hand. gifts to American colleges aggregate two week«, will remove them a id lean- The ver«at le Russian painter Vere- Years will pass b-fore the-e < ealei s in : oier $23,0J0,U MJ. — Tn May, 18S.3, the Baptist Church no mark. — Exchange. scha.in. Ti h * e- Mrlninlng -ketches ot these pictured paper- w 11 get ,u-t the —Gravy ladles of china or granite at Denison, Tex., was destroyed by a ad'Clltme liar ng 'n l.u—o-’J'iirk -11 cards they wish. This illustrates the x clone. Recently the new building on ware have gone out of u«e very largely chaiie s that exist against the coming ot war of 18/7, publis ed in a aerial forn treat writers. It is so easy for some the same lot was almost, if not entirely, A good sized spoon takes the place of a in the Journa’ des D bits, of Baris, ■loment of power to be left out of the ru neunt ot one of tlu m n:nl combination. - The Vanderbilt L'niversiti has been < Irea io Journal. —The th.... . that fowl« and turkey« None of our magazines re t« upon a complimented by the authorities of lh»> many dale- lev 1 episo les of advmitur apano-e Empire, the Mechanical »tut injure tlf grain by rouning through it No newspaper has uniler it a in the career of the younger General mime. > rsonal genius. All in these day- de­ Engineering Depart i ent liav ng re­ i« not t ii". wlii’e the slugs they k II and SkobelelT. This was the swimming of pends u on the gi.od, honest work of coiled an order for model«, sketches, the r dropp ngs made soluble by the the iJamibe on horseback. Let M. persons of la r ability. The g ants, like etc , from thi Imperial University at ra n increa e the crop. — Troy Times. Ver seliagin be h s own n rrator: Jaeaulav. Stuart Mill mid some of the Tokio.— Nashville Am. r ■ an. —Wh t ■ < ake: Two cup« white sugar ••1 was silted in m, tent late one aft­ blench names, aro Want tig. ('astel w, The fault with most of the books and a semt cup of butter mixed to­ ernoon, when I observed several (Is • if S| a n, is a member of the great its d in the sclio Is. particularly of gether. Add the well-beaten wli tos of setes | as ng at a gallop Inquiring school: but neither our country m>r l'nit"d Slates hi- orv. is that they are tivn egg«, one cup -xveet milk, thre wha th s ineniit, I wn- told that the England can poi: t to a great prose too dry and c ronol,>g cal. 'They re- cups s lti'd Hour, in which stir two tea younger Geii'ral >k bt'c.’T hid pro- ma-ter of the present era. semble lists of an mais as compared spoonfuls bak ng powder. Flavor with This dearth does not am unit to a ca­ with stor es and 1 lely descript on • of any thing des'red. - Hoslon Globe. po nd Io 1'oul lumine t mt he should t y Good, fa thful students ami the animals them«elx es. — Indianapolis to sw.in the Danube with Irs whole bri- lamity. -Milk Gravy: But in your spider guile. l he General all ged thnt it was wr t rs are doing the mental work ot Journal. a' out one tab e-poonful of fr e«l meat < mirienth n ceasary to h ive cavalry on -oe'ety. and if what the age wants is re- —A Jewett City sc' ool-teacl.er has a gravy or b'.itter: when hot add nearly It is the other s de of the stream, nuil that it -ults, it is Ii ,v ng its wish. queer method of punishment. After one pint milk: when m lk comes to n was Impossible to wait until the pt li­ mid pleasant to ride in a steamship, Using lhe ••ruler" she compels the boil, add pepper, salt, one heaping tea toon I r of the rights of a class and forbade his compositions of college students, says of tu xv milk, txvo spoonfuls of butter, a hat one year, after leading ! w o or thr e scare up a few volunteers and send living for all tru h and for g neral little salt, and thickened with half a The ph ■ hunilr d comp >sit ons on " rhe Story of spoonful of corn«tareh. This is an ex­ them to him. The Ossetes whom I had wo k n this field of thought. the Tern] est," he found himself ill sue > seen passing were the volunteers in nomenal essayists are all gone, mid we cellent brenkfast dish.— Housewife. must foil w sub ects in Huso years profound ignorance of loth plot and qu stion. —A contemporary says it is easy to character that lie had to read the play “I had my hor e saddled and gal­ rat her than the mimes of the writers get r d of black ants. Op n a hill with loped otT ill til" direction of lhe river. The merit of th" essay or hook, novel or to get himself right again. a hoe. scatter on a ban lful of salt, lhe movements of the Method's' Pri sently I found nssemllid on the poem, is th" allnrcim lit. 'lhe tlu«h of sprinkle on a quart of xvater. and the bank nearly all the officers of the a brilliant name is not to be found in itinerancy do not produce the interreg­ nnt« will leave immediately, A few | I lie wl.ole sky of letters. We must wait num wh eh sum imagine. In three days ago the house was overrun with brigail ■. “A little in advance of the groups until Nature is pleased, in her good­ xxe-ks alter Rev. ('. S. Woodlull'was insects. The corn spomW iit found tin elder Skolxdotl' stood between I.evis ness to s n I us something great.— appointed pastor of St. Paul s Metho­ elexen anthills within two rods of his dist Episcopal Church, Nyack, he h id and Toidouin no, watching his son, David Sw ng, in Chica/o Journal. build ng. After the above application moved h's fam ly in the parsonage and str ppi'd to h s -Ii rt and tron«ers. witli not an ant was to be seen about the v.sited hi« ent re nu mb rsliip of let) h'so oss of commander of the Order of premises. ART IN ORNAMENTS. persons. Christian al II ork. St. (icerge iiro ind h's neck. Michael - The mo t p qml ir lenv-dy in En Dmitrievitch SkobelelT leii| e I on ho se- Originality «if in Sixteenth and — V Vicar of Deptford, Eng., luid for St-venteent h Century Jewelrv. bnck and urged th • huge brownish bay several years bad hi- sermons written gland for the gapes in poultry, and the which is known ste al into the s ream. At first the an­ ( ne of the great charms of the per­ by the wife of a for man in a manu­ most suecesful. is that Some prepared imal res sled, sherd; his ear«, neighed, Honal ornaments o’ the s'xteentli niili factory ot'the phieo, for w hich service as the powder cure, then bravely strm k out sw mm ng. he pil'd nothing, simply promising that poxvder is p'a ed n a bellows, and •event enth centuries is v <1- their ind Fora short time TkololefT remained ,ie wool I remember his sermon-writer xvhen the ehicks or young pheasants are in lhe saddle, localise we could -eo ual tv, almos! each one having some in his will. The other day he d ed, n the coop t is blow i therein, so that h s sh u de s above the water, but special and alias ve desig i embodied ill caving no will, and now the foreman's the air I ecomes charge I with it. and soon we saw noth ng but Irs h ad. I it; for there eem.s in those better days ei ver wile sues for live hundred dol­ the b rds breathe it. They begin to learn d a towards that in order not to to have been no Bii mingliam whence lars *!liiniing in her charge that she sneeze and t ough, and in til's wav are fatigue ii - l orse he had stepped into these th ngs come by the gro s, and one ■had t > selec the sub cats and texts, able to get rid of the worms. It is the r.ver, ami keening hold of the ani­ an I then o it of live family B.bles by much less dangerous than fumigation. mal’s la i swam along bes'de h m. The of the be-t means of improv ng the con­ ,i erent author«, she collected the Flaky S ula B'sctfl: Mix togethor father began to tremble for him ami to ditio.i of that much-enduring race of note«, reference; and authorities, and a quart of very dry Hour, a teaspoonful cry after him n his na«al tones: art-workers, th' working g Jdsin th, set them in order." of baking soils, two of cream of tartar “‘Michn. my little Michael, come s Ive smith and jeweler, would le by all How rapid a progress the women an I a saltspooniul of salt: pass through back' Miclui, M i-i-eha. you will be who cun a To d such luxuries insist ng of the South are making in the matter a sieve, then chop in txvo ounces of hut on nn n livid al design and an in i- of education is we I shown in the Uni- ter or lard, and mix tin ckly with m lk drowne I!’ “ The old man's anx'ety was" pitiful to | viilnal work lie ng produce I for them. xer«ily of Missis-ippi. It ivas but a few to make a very soft dough. Flour the witness. I Th ■ ulterior value of such jewelry years ago that t-i's university was board well, rollout sprinkle with flour, • But J I tie Michael cont lined t > -win i would I e increased far beyond the addi- thrown open to girls but in that time double it over and roll o it aga n; cut w t' out looking back, making steady l tional o tiny a fist re pl red, and as they have fore d themselves to the nto b scuts half an inch thick. Bake tn progress. A few Ossetes had thrown family relic such would be of < ndiiring trout, and this year they won all the a very hot oxen about fifte n minutes.— themselves into the stream, fo'low ng ii terest. Dur.ng th ■ prizes. A voting la ly takes the first Hoslon Hud ,et. tho General, and one of th mi. swim­ refer e I to en n honors, and will consequently !>■ the The Xa' ona> thinks colts ming out a long distance, would cer htm r iro's'e Ind II aledictori in. Toe Scn'or < lass will be are weaned too late. It says: “As a made fo ta nlv have been drowned anil his hor-e ornaments represented by a young lady among the rule colts are weaned too late, in the with hill if about had not been sent to th<' c!a«p of a girdle worn bv a lady of -I eakers. as w ill also the Juniors; 1’hev should have time to his relief. 1 the in ddle class, pantel by an un­ wh le among the competitors for the season. “As for mys If, a> soon a« I arr'ved known artist, now in the Brussel« gal- ■soph"in >re prize declamation is still learn to eat heartily of oth r foo ls before eoitl xx e ither. A colt foaled ill on the mv first ...... movement _...... . -h - to ........ ....... ... was to cry, a'loi ds us a goo I illustration of not her of "the fair sex.”—AT. U. May -liotild be weaned in September, undress In less than two minute- I how simply this can be d no. It is a Times-D. mocrat. xvliieh xv II allow both it and it« dam to was in the water w th my hors a. The ;olil d'sk, chased and set with pearls gn into winter quarlers in better shape creat ire swam a few mo neiits, then mil eoral, and b aring the in tais of th in if lhe xv an ng is postponed unti’ WIT AND WISDOM. turned around and made for shorn in lhe wearer or the donor, and wlm h < Moller or November. If the mare is spi'e of all the blows I could bestow on ¿list ns a girdle composed of twisted I' is a good thing to have a com kept breeding, and has not anything Ids back. The commandant of the iv re and coral. Neither of the sugges- main! of language, but a much better secon I squadron, Astakhv, had nobrt- i on« thus otl'ered belongs In the < «st y thing to have command of one’s e se to do but to bro -d and nurse her colts, she xvill get along if the colt s tor luck than I did. Skobeloff was >r. er of iewelry. and they have been tongue. not xv an al until December; but the no longer any th'ug but a nrposelv chosen for illnst a ion as bo­ l>r. Hammond says that “love an I colt xx-i I not do -o well if put upon fod­ black dot a long way oil’. To ease ng w thin the reach of the many. poetry go hand in hand ” True; and der and hay all of a sud leu at that time our eon e enees we star ed aft. r him in A In n we come to examine lhe i'e-igns the warmer the love ths worse the of year The young th ng should be n boat, drawing horses after us by the of ti e lours de force of the jewe'ers' and po dry.— hia Call, taught to cat before it is weaned.” hr dies and we made otir way toward a goldsmiths' art dep cled by the great It is a wise law in this world that ain e s we ascend a'most to the unat- small is and. It was < illy niter reach­ ------------ « « ►——— ing th s po nt ami gazing at the enor­ lainn Ic a <1 are wonderstrnek at the men may boa-t and co nmiin t es brag FASHIONABLE FURS. 'mt not ling goes for more or less than mous d Hta"co wh'c'i I ad to !>• co««e I evidences < f a wealth almost beyond ;t is worth. Memphis Arolanehe. fief r- r. imh ng the Turk sh shore that ereden e: hough it is to be reim til Wlmt the leaders of Fashion Will Wear Time is always represented carry­ I understo d h >w wi ely my hors ■ I ad tiered that then stocks and s ares w re I urine the I resent Season. acted ii d sohev ng me There was n d mt. that eon ols d d not exist, ami the ing it scythe, and ive suppose he w II There is but little change to note in the shadow of a doubt that I should ead est ¡lives nnmt- of tin so days were continue to carry thi« prim tive agri- liav • b en drowned. But how hap- •ue Ii as could easily bo tinnspo tell ' u tiiral implement until t me shall be lit ■ fashion of flits. The most impor­ | one I it that, not knowing lew to >r consigned to the I.0111- n > n o ver.- Huston Conr er. tant this season is the introduct'on of a aid or Israe itish pawnbroker for swim. I bad thrown inv-elf into the wa­ --‘•■Week? Do I tin iershtandt pelar tie, with long “,-tole” fronts, very- ter behind t ie General? I only know lie nonce . too manv, alas, to find lhe r Gr ek?” said a jolly German. ‘•Veil, much aft« r the style of the eape with that v h n 1 saw f-k bdeffgo in I sa il: dterior destination to be the crucible; I sho 'st can schtnil ■. \ y, ven I vas a 'Drown rather than abandon Inin. ml tiiu« it is those pa'ntcd records of leetle p >v. l.alvayssvim in dot greek very long square ends worn over a bun- d.ed years age. This handsome gar hem lieconie the largest and best field m«ht ndt of dot rider.”—AT. “The elder S obeleff reman"d mo- ment will be worn by a number of lead­ t'onles on the bank, following the little or the study of their suggestions in do- lirapltie. gn preserved to us. Th s is partii n- lilac'; point, scarcely perc ptiblion the I on't was'e life in doubts and ers of fashion, who have brought it surface of the stream. nr y the case with regard to those tears; spend yourself on the work bo­ among the r 1 st of garnered treasure* "I.a'er on we learned that General arger articles, t’m grea'er value of fere you, well assured that the ric t from abroad. There is great style, how­ Michael, after narrowIi es< aping death i h eh led to their mo e fre pieni de­ crfoiniani e of this hour's dut'es will by droanng a bun ¡red times. find truction. sovo wh n th 1 custody of the ii ■ ti c best pr parafoil lor the hours or ever. in the brevity of the back which I splay« the. lournu. e an 1 the rich fabric r aeh"d the opposite bank. And Sko- •Imr h or the fear of sacrileg ■ preserved ages that follow t. ’ Em. rs m. of the dress, and the long ends which, belell was a prince of «xv tu ner« with a hem. The greit piece« of domestic The man who picks up an emp'y date have well n'gh all po ished. and. matchless horse. I li nk what would lock t bo >k on the lirst day of the upon a stalely figure, give an appear­ have b come of the I rigade if Toulon- • eept ng for the n itiee; o' them in tom th num h is called an April fool, ance of unu-ual d 8! net on. In other min a -ceptllig Skobele'l's pi oposit'on, • d nxenlor’es nn I w ills, and the rec- legant garments for more general wear but lhe man who expcc:s to till au r I of them in old p:etiires, we should had Iaimched It s sspiadrons forth into «re surlouts pe sses, Newmarkets and empty pocket-book bv investing his the Danube. How many would have '«■ 'gnornnt of the mnrvo'ous amount of i al -tots long and luxurious, anil in short Tea lied the Turk sh .-I.ore?'' — ehiciyo iri will wh eh the golds m th dro-eod money iu lotteries is a fool all the year wraps which d splav tlm skirts of hand ro mt. — Xorristo th Hera d. lie b illets nnd the high t ib'os ot our Tr.bune. « some costumes, are models in visite —A Subtle Distinction “How are aeket dolman and peler ne shapes, im estors. lortiinately, the pa ntors of I -een vou for an the latter reach ng the waist line only. he pa t ri c >rded them abundantly, a id you ( bar c’ Haien't GREAT WRITERS. " “l’e.l I pon new peter: nes very rich orna if flies' Jean Mub iso holds fo. emo ■ age. WI.a 're you dong now." ■ Hing <‘l;c tniits." “So yon have quit mental clasps ate seen, one at the dace. Art Journa . Tito f’rrNpnt St'Urr h of l!e>tlly Powerful them n irel prof"« ion eh?" “<>. no' throat, another a few inches below it Think« i - I Author«« - ■ ♦ ►——— 1 am still the end-man of t ie troupe." lhe ascendnn v rtf dark furs this season The h'di> Im gh I er rir of recent date, TIRED EYES. — lillsburij't Chronic <- /', .graph. s only in keeping w ¡th the preference in an e sav on the “Aurora Bor a'is," \ Maii.c paper tell« the remarkable for d cp-hue« '»train. story of a mini m that State who “ha« street att re, which w.tli women of re that that phenomenon is somet'mes ab­ People speak about tlio'r eyes being never -e m a railroa I. steamboat, news­ fined and i nit vated tastes has passed be­ sent from the heaven« for twentv or We don t yond a caprice of fashion, and reached a t'red. m an ng that the retina, or seeing paper, clo-k or woman ’ doubt it at all, but we ar.- strongly in­ fixed pr neiple. thirty, or even a hundre I year«. Des Gray and golden ■ort on of the eie, is fatigued, but such clined Io b 1 eve tiiat this is due to the brown furs are about the only ex ept on cartes watched a half-l.fvt ino for this s not the case, its th.1 retila hardly fact of Ids havitrg been boru blind.— to the rule, and those are used as linings «pe lade and lied w tlumt the sig' t. •ver gets t re I. The fatigue is in the I lost on Dost. and Ir minings. Natural lieaver, otter Of late years this northern redness ha« nn r and outer mu«c'e; attached to the — I rien llv Adv cc Gilhooly went to fur and bine fox ma ntain the r ae come qu te frequently, and 's treat da« aired pos lion, an I w II be even more ye ball and th" muscle of aceommo la- nn Austin doctor for advice. “What is a most ord nary event. Th " intellect­ ion. which surrounds the lens of the the matt r with you?’,' “I inn as hungry fash enable th s w nter than ever be- ual world seems usl ns irregular n its b'et« of natural beaver h-d. ns a wolf. I work like a horsn, hut I fore production of phenomenal po rts, ora­ ye. When a n ar obievt is to b- looked can't sleep." “I guess vou had better ca|M> and mu I— are st II in great de- t this muscle relaxes and allows the tors and writi'ls, ami soniet lues pirns .. nature of ____ _ its ___ cost. -re a veterinary surge m." «aid the mand. but otter. by the : iix ■ u« wa'elier« ly offering them I ns to th ckon, increasing its re dm tor. «arc 1st callv. hat do I want « >l-ed mostly tor ban's an I cap-. recti ve power. The inner and to « ■<• him tor? 1 am no veteran.” year alter year a eommo:i, everv-dav The qualitv of silk plush has reached l.sed in cm er- eolleet on of mental w nk rs Noti'iiaz- 'liter illusele arc ■uch a degree of ri lines.« in effect that ng the eye on the oh cot to I e ras Sil tings. ing m nds are i s b'e u-t at thi. date. A New Jersey country paper «ays. t can hard y Is- dist nguished from Is t not -at' to sat that there is not s> lookeil at. th> inner one being espe- “The « al skin, and its elegant appearance ially used when a near ob ect < :s looked in its notice of a local concert now la ng in Am rica a angle great as ha I very much to do w th reduc ng tenor was not in good voice, but. his pro-<‘ wr ierNever wa- th re a larger it It is in the litre • nunc,« •s mo tinned lie w d '-preail «al ■ of tor, it« reallv in hat the fat guo s felt, and relief s so­ ki 1 as an accompanist u on the piano mult Hid ■ of good, «ound th nkers o •xpen- ie co t tcxmpared with the pr'ee unsi tempo ardi by cosi ng 'h * ex e* or wa< much admired." I bis is like the person , men nd won eii, wbo can ex- a'ing nt •ar-di-t-int ob cctsT . Th- usual reply of n Trin tv I’rofessorto an upp'ih i seil1, addel to tsj dim ss of effect pre - well good thongli's; but th re is •i cloaks and as a g rn tore, establ sh not n tlic l nited Sta c« a « ng e great ml cat on of st a n is a r •dness of the • iiuntrv sehoolmarni: ‘1J<> you spea . ng t as the only r a rival to fur. Fu -?" “No madame, in of the eyelid, betoken ng a conge«t- iron h. Mr wr ter I ke Macauiay, or Victor lingo, ri uni n"« will be largely used this d state of the un T surface, hcisiiii - but I dan e the Span -h dance."—-V. F. or I a marl ne. v nter. th > fash'on even invading thi an 'd with some pain. Sometimes tire Host. If th s is tru", «o cm not nfer from all- oo n and my Indy's bondoir,where “Won't yon have another piece of hey ee ta nlv sc m out of place. it th • d cay of mental fmco. but we Weariness Indicates the m ed of gla « ■» I he must fall ba k U|>on that nature »heli r'ghtly adapted to the person, end in pie. Mr. Teatherly ?" asked Bo >hv. lies da n gored sk r.s worn this season bv •ther cases the true rmedi s to mas- pt bly. His mother wa- ent. rta ning contains unknown reasons for the fre many wo nen ha e suggested the u e of i lew friends at dinner an I tile deaser fur I at;ds in narrow rows half wav up quern pre enc s ; nl long abs, n o« of age the eie and its «urioiiiidngs as tat s may lie with the hand wet in cold was lieingd senasvd. “ Tlunka. Bobby. ” these sp r tual auroras, in a Macaule; he skirt, and many will bn thus in sh Featherly replied, “since you are so pio- or a L.iinart ne n any virtues must meet. rater. — He. a d of Hr it th. d. Those narrower bands are an im­ ite about it, 1 tieiimc I wd. taken small «, hoi rsliip. ndiisirv, memory, log c, provement upon the one very deep u e e more ' “ All right'' sa d Bobby. — lhe Atlanta cable oec'S'onallv b i ailtli. language, imagination and the • aggy band which for two winters ; a t iMiner of nttik ng rhythmical m ntenecs. transm ts a proposal to marry, it is "Now. mg rem*mber your promise ru e I a we ghty, cumbaraome and use o i saiil if t w as uecessary to cut a However cduca ed a period may be, it sxpensive. b,.t cheaper than a voi ago.— "-« fin -h to the fool of the dies* skirt V. T. Mail. eeond pi I could have two piecoa."— -A. •au uot fojl cert* u that many vir- Doth I * uvC'C. f SKOBELEFF’S RAILROAD CARS. FEAT. l'i b Hew They *r« Hn(»b<-il »od Oruauieute.l POPLAR 8C|^ n>. tn Wlltl h U|thliilii pli the «real Full man Work«. lhe observstmn, Of show that thexapor an inxtsible state from the „J rias with it in ealm and into the higher region. of ,3 very considerable „upp| electricity. Each minute J tide that goes U? bears it, ,.,-1 of the load. When.|l()». “J visible vapor has thus very high regions of the »¡r '1 invisibility, and is cmule^ 1 ible mist. Numerous partc|J aqueous substance are d„w J gether and grouped intu little vesicles or globul« r1 of theso isthenjaresenoiror.y of electric force, ami n, J watery vesicle, ,,ru and more electricity I, Cuiltt J gathering mist; but each uftij globules is still enveloped bi I of clear air. In a driftin/J ui>t-specks can be (|iw,.r” ,1 along with transparent mt,J tween. 1’lie clear air ,ij around the globules of vapor J as an insulating investment 3 ons its own part of the ai,„ J trical force in each seinir,:'J The cloud is thus not ehj a whole, like a eontinuon, 3 metal, with its electricity SWJ its outer surface, it ¡g|ntZ3 everywhere with tlm force |J posed of a myriad of electrified! each having its own partien-J of the electric force, and ns a center of electrical tn own account. The electrical nt any one instant reside» jn"J surface of a cloud is, ther.-fnJ comparatively small portion1 which is present in the enlirttJ mass. That such is thew»rfl electricity is stored in tbeclj been proved by direct otj When a gold-leaf elcKruJ placed in the midst of a dotij along by the wind, it is seen J strips of gold-leaf continually 1 and collapse as the mass of t'|»| passes along. There is an <3 charge acting in all parts, J charge varies in intensity frJ to place according as there is¡1 or less condensation of the parfl vapor in each particular spot j influence externally exerted I cloud is nevertheless capable J raised to a very intense depie J it is, so to speak, the sum Mill come of the force contained ini numerable internal centers oil It is no uncommon thin’i electrical force emanatingfronl to make itself felt in attraeii« repulsions many miles »way. I resting upon the remote luirij frequently produce pcrceptiU« at distances from which tbtl themselves can not lie seen. J trical cloud hanging a mile aba ground acts inductively nJ ground with considerable I When in summer time thetaJ of the earth's surface is venal ground moist, the air calm aid] clear, very copious supplies fl are steamed up from the gmJ the hot sunshine. Clouds, i] begin at length to gather in] regions of the air out of theaJ AN EARNEST PROTEST. of the supply. The free J which has been carried np] A German ProfesHor DetnandN Stricter Con­ vapor is at first pretty eienl] trol for University Students. through the clouds; but nftf-rij The following is an extract from an the electrical charge becomes! open letter by Prof. Schmoller, one of more intense, a powerful repels] the most influential men in the law is iu the end established ■ '] faculty of the University of Berlin. Its spherules of the mist, and IJ publication has called forth a storm of degree of tension is at last pnfl the outer surface of the cloud,] controversy iu the German newspapers. is enveloped by insulating air] The fact that Germau students fre­ the end the expansive em-rgv] quently spend the first half of their comes strong enough to oeffi university course in idleness is not outburst from the cloud. In] denied, even by those who oppose the of the redundant charge tint] views of the learned professor, and to an observer’s eye asaMj ning issuing from the cloud. ■ their chief argument of defense is that its simplest form, is the these years of idleness make up the lightning is kindled in the stotfl only season of romance in the other­ — Science for All. I wise unbroken life of examinations and position-hunting to which German CAROLINA INDIANS y ouths are doomed. W hat I want to sec done away with Remnant« or » Tribe "Who« «- But Slocks Its Ancient St>« is the officially organized untruth which excites iny indignation everv The Cherokees on the N'*> time I have to carry it into execution: lina reservation are perbap«i every professor twice a year testifies contented of all the tribe«» that dozens of students have been remnants now on the contineat present nt his lectures who he knows have never set foot in liis room. It tire at peace with all has happened repeatedly that students longer practice the arts ofrt guilelessly presented to me Prof. Eek's eral hundred square miles ell pandect« for me to sign, thereby ad­ timbered and finely-watered I mitting that they did not know either set aqiart for their use, ,a Prof. Eek or me by sight. 1 don't want them ample room for huntil to force anybody to hear tedious lec­ and fish being abundant, tures: I've cut manv a lecture myself, ration, if any are disposed I and know well ¿nough that hard the plow. There are nnt« reading and industry in his own stances where they have cWN room are in the end more important, tracts of land, built. romfonM perhaps, to a student than hearing the and produce tobacco, gram * university courses. But I can not per­ toes in large quantities ani "1 suade myself that this industry is to qualitv. But in the main I be found, in the case of those who at­ to hunt; that is, the men M tend no lectures the first two or four labor is performed by ] semesters and calculate from the very Two or three have ventureiit beginning on the ability of a paid ville, a noted summer res»- • coach ' to cram them up for the ex­ and they furnish an llttr:u, J amination. The number of these men, visitors much after the sty > 1 however, is very large among the serpent on the Jersey co» I law -Indents certainly from one-fourth But after all it is Pl:lin J to one-thh’il; and so the question sim­ they are not the brar«. ply is: ( an not a -xstem of marking powerful Indians of lon-J without compulsion, lie employed? To Cherokees were of themse j all industrious students this would be race of men. They were 1 a matter of indifference. Would it not friendsand powerful >n J save the majority of the lower laver of their enemies. They net 1 <>ur future Government officials*from injury, nor did they fork J that “bumming" which must occur Their vengeance if 1 when one wastes from one to three fidelity unconquerable. J years of his life? The academic free­ love, stopped only 1 ,, J dom would not b<. affected in the least is something in their ha* J by this plan, only the right to conceal by their cabin tires or st ■ ■ J laznu—s from parents, guardians and less woods in quest -/T ■ he I mvi-rsity officers would be put an passes spewh. It i« 1,0 J '•nd to. I admit that the earning out «eance or of of such a change would not tie easx hing which stifles bom. J it it ta-ib-emed unworthy the dignii no aim or method. > .3 of a student to be thti« daily eontrohed « no longer brave tu- j let me merely call attention to out with crest-failen look. J great military educational establish object “whose «orry P1 ment«. The officers in the war ecad hia ancient state. 1 iny and in the artillery school, ivh< Courier-Journal. __ '«■. on the average, much older tliai mivenity student«, w|,o aro in Beef shank: Boil -»«ton of offices ami rank, and ar. | meat falls from the ’’J uany of them married men. must dailx and season with salt snst J mt up with having their attendance at 'he liquor down to • I"'".JI ourses of i,i«iructmu marked.- Deri lhe meat. When cvU •*'] sor. A. J. lido Blade. j The ears vary in size anti pattern, according to their service. There are sleepers ami passenger coaches, parlor ears, chair ears, dining cars and the luxuriously equipped private ears. There are also express ears, mail cars, baggage ears and combinations of each of'tlese classes, as mail-baggage-and- express cars or combination mail-and- express cars. The tirst-class passenger couches seat from 62 to 72 persons, the sleepers accommodate 52, the chair ear HI mid the parlor car but 36. The latter are elegantly furnished, and are said to ride easier than any other kind of ears. The sleepers weigh about 80,000 pounds and the other coaches nxerage about 45,000 pounds. The cost of manufacture of a sleeper is $13,000, the dining ears $11,000, the passenger coaches $4,500, and the others average about $3,.>00. I he trucks of the better class of cars for passenger service are txvelve-xvheeled, ami are equipped with double sets of elliptic springs and equalizing springs. The wheels themselves are nearly all furnished by lhe paper car-wheel works, which are adjoining the Pull­ man works and are run by the same steam power. When, in the course of manufacture, the outside of the car is finished an inspector examines it, and if the work thus far is satisfactory lie xvrites upon it the words “O. K. Jack­ up," bv which he means the car is ready to be elevated from the trestles io trucks. It is then taken into an­ other building xvhere it is painted and the inside finished. It is particularly interesting to watch the men working in the mirror depart­ ment. Here a number of men are en­ gaged in cleaning and polishing the glass for the mirrors. Each man as lie does bis part of the work hands the plate to his neighbor, who in turn hands it to the next. The last man who receives the plate hobbles about He holds the upon a wooden leg. glass in one hand and with the other hand he pours out of a bottle upon the plate a liquid which makes a novice in the business wonder why it does not run over the edge of the plate. The liquid is a preparation of silver. When the silver has been precipitated upon the glass the man varnishes it over and the mirror is then complete save plac­ ing it in a frame. The silver-plating rooms are also an interesting feature of the works. All the silver-ware used in the Pullman dining cars or other coaches comes to the company in the form of copper ware. It is then silver- plated. The article to be plated is lirst placed in boiling xvater to heat it and clean it, then in .sulphuric acid to further cleanse it, and is then dipped into a solution of silver. The positive pole of an electric battery is applied to the article anti the negative pole of the same to the silver solution, xvhcnce a connection is formeti and the article becomes electro-plated. The article thus plated is placed upon a machine ami given a rapid rotary motion, and a steel burnisher is applied to it which gives it the highly polished surface which xve see upon our silverware xvhen it is new. —Chicago Mail. i < i 1 Î E Mt 1 Pl MuM otn. PF MuMlN CUS la prepar IV. Lirery C.H LOGAI The 1 Promptl “OR A Str TC Tb« »ul» Brit Flrat. «1 riot door » — Ben^n lin recen one dollar ing a ca«e men have will. “I le! Anil he di< for the Pre 1100,000. —A larg • chimney Mead of (•Ol br.eks, ** t blocks of p made use o carefully ot joined toge The chimt very elastic material qt which so < with the m< ch innev. —Tlie “ti new invent «ris hv the F»ph"; it Etienne tie 1 be devoted The article t •" to be forw other jourm J.' pe in a col lhe block ie graph office messag,« r»ph)ity of tl one thousan' minute, or W'ortls per hi