Stevens Point Daily Journal (Newspaper) - October 6, 1877, Stevens Point, Wisconsin SIMONS Editors and Proprietors VOL 21 Devoted to the Interests of Central Wisconsin and the of Republican STEVENS POINT WISCONSIN SATURDAY OCTOBER 6 1877 A dispatch of the a miii bus in the worst Agricultural work was anil tint crowing it the tide of DID great tv hail turned hut of those whu actual famine would still in of eu condition OSMAN three of the 12th in till of which the Turku demanded the In iic A similar of war last surrendered to the THE Radical Socialist have u the and supporters of The manifesto the immune the of worship tho ex- if the abolition of a army 1 tux for and the of the and the was hy tho and of en thr Mil made to tile made appropriate THE Vienna of the retreat of All to his the Military were on of the of tile autumnal tains There were rumors of and defeats hut came from Turkish anil were regarded to papers the -I tn an extent in the army in nf The dispatches of the had iu and was then ten the foot of the A LAUGK of arms and have at the the distinguished has a of the Turkish position at and it and de- clared that not him but the most stupendous reduce it A from of the ult rajs Suleiman imr his and intruded to into winter there A dispatch of the ult thr had been advanced to and i tie of tions THL troops in Bosnia have ordered to Mostar and to the Servian frontier A prevailed in London on ult that was ing in whose object was the of the A of the 1st re- ferring to the of certain to mediate and that offers of mediation would regarded bj as National in- The who is from hi declares that K thu the solution IT said in London on the 1st that thr movement hi in aid of the Turks bj British IT that persons have died famine 111 India tlie THE NEW striku ill the coal regions of the the meii at an advance of 10 upon former On V A tuts appointed of the suspended Savings Bans of and party returned to Washington on the of the their late trip visited Tennessee Georgia Alabama and and even where and The President has lo defer his visit to Richmond Va until of National issued during ing to the statement of the Comptroller of the lud reached up to the and the indications were that a much larger would be made in October and November to enable the banks to furnish the currency necessary to move the crops to the seaboard TIIK New Jersey State Republican met nt Trenton in the Newell Humiliated fur The minimi the National Republican platform of the rITorU of tho in promoting reconciliation between nil sect font of the country and to secure an administration of the On eminent and pledge a hearty support to every wise measure calculated to recure the lasting union and prosperity of the whole country on the basi equal for all citizens in all congratulate the country upon the progress the resumption of specie demand lie adoption of all sary measures to insure the restoration nf a uniform throughout the world at n not later that now fixed by law etc clr WHILE Anderson at Va on the broke and the doomed man fell to the ground wan again placed on the scaffold declaring vehemently w asi Innocent of the crime although knowing that the murder was to be done A second rope placed around his neck and after being allowed it his own to look once more around him ho was again swung off and died of his not being broken by the fall TBK New York Republican State met at Rochester on the I Ominitlci- on reported in favor of Senator for hail man but the on a motion of the Senator himself by a vote of 211 to 110 continued Mr T C Platt the temporary as permanent President After the Committee on Resolutions had reported Mr I AV Curtis offered as nn amendment a resolution declaring that Mr Haves title to the Presidency is as clear and fect as that of George and heartily commending his efforts lo pacify the correct the evils and abuses in the Civil Service ami tint in the prompt and of this work the President might confidently rely upon the cordial port of the country A sharp debate followed and the resolution was voted down to 295 The platform as adopted expresses the hope fhat the in relation to the Southern States would result in peace Iran and justice and declares that no act of the Republicans ol York conducive lo itn good effect shall be withheld insists purity and in every branch of the public service National mid State asserts that KO or should be subject faj or partisan or In any way with Ms rights or tion a sound currency of win and per convertible into coin and a full lion of payments the time fixed by law opposes any further land grants or subsidies to corporations or etc etc TIIK Wisconsin State Democratic Convention met at Fond du Lac on the The nominations were a Governor lames A Motion LU R E Davis Secretary of State B Hajes State Treasurer John Kingle Attorney eral M Morrison of Public Searing incumbent The resolutions renew the pledge of devotion to the and the Con- with all thereto declare the will of the people was defeated in the late Presidential election hy fraud and tluit militan in- in and controlling elections is of the principles of free demand the property by the Government pay just tion of the of the Government that be that the act repealed and resumption be until the financial condition of the country permits favor the of notes for National Bank currency de- clare to the fostering of lies and demand the reduction of interval 7 per cent as a maximum etc etc SIDNEY Merchants Fanners and Mechanics Savings Bank of Chicago indicted hv a County 111 Grand Jury for and lodged In jail in default of bail The cers and of the Protection Life In- of have also been for the alleged A CAMP ROBINSON Neb telegram of the let tbat there was great ment the different agencies Iu regard to their removal to the Kiver It was thought that removal could nof be without force ON the 1st a call was issued by a Committee of Fifty appointed by belonging to tiie Xew York Union League Club for a mats meeting of Republicans others who approved the Administration of President Haven be held at Cooper Institute ou the of the 10th A Ky telegram of the gives tlie following as the verdict of a in the case of the shooting of a negro hy Hon M White eame by a wound by C M Claj Sunday Sept being given us oath by C M Clay he the only witness we are con- strained to justify said Clay and that it in self-defense It was stated that White attacked Clay because of hib mother's from ice TIIK NEW YOKK Oct ter Wheat 2 cago Spring ait No kee W anil Mixed for tn jold closed 000 THE Savings bank failed on the tlie al Hall boiler of an engine bed to a train of ears on the v killing three men and ral others A race horses were on the train and were killed TilJi New York State Republican Convention plat til the follow ing ticket in on the Secretary of State John C Churchill Comptroller State Treasurer Win 1 Greenville Slate Engineer Howard THE President received a deputation of the Sioux and Arrapahoe Indians from the Ked and Spotted Tail Agencies on the In their speeches the Chiefs demanded wagons cattle farm implements and schools and expressed a desire to become civilized and live like the whites They objected to being removed to the Missouri Kiver country was a fire in Providence R I on the which destroyed business erty valued at TIIK Minnesota State met St Paul on the and Gov and the other j present State The platform adopted I indorses President and demands the re- of silver TIIK State Democratic Convention met at Baltimore on the Thos J Keating was nominated for troller The platform the National Democratic platform of of the action of the National Ad- ministration in its dealings with the States of Louisiana and South Carolina in- sists that the of the Democratic party to subsidies of all kinds shall be carried out by Representatives in Con- gress whose election ib due to thai etc etc Two OF the Union Pacific train Sers were overtaken near Kan on the bv a under the Rocky fountain Detective Association They a aud were both killed in coin was recovered Ox the news was received at Fort Shaw Mont of a between the Perces and a detachment in of the freight at Cow Island on the Shi Tht tight lasted all night the Indians retiring in the morning after having burned fifty tons of Tw o citizens w ere wounded It as thought the Indians were moving toward the British cording to reports at on the Sitting Bull was encamped at Wool Mountain on the Canada side riors late as the 15th Ox the of the denro of a man in Gregoire ill the Province of Can was ind children and a servant perished in the flames Mr was absent and Mrs and a male servant escaped their lives A containing in and stocks to private was recently stolen from the First National Bank of Cortland V loss was not discovered until after- w urd SIDNEY of Ihc and Saunas Hani of has released on bail THE business portion of the Town of Putnam Conn was bunted on morning of ult a loss of the National Hank building and 1 erected hotel were spared A Via of tlie tilt that of in town were down with the and Vi had been sick Four deaths and three new cases had occurred within the preceding hours COL H of St Louis has been appointed United Slates ator lw Gov of Missouri to fill the caused In the death of tin late Senator Bogy to Washington of thr 10th nit information had been received at Brownsville Tcv to the effect that a Mexican force was marching to the Rio Grande lo compel the ties to execute thr Extradition Treaty cal opinion in Mexico was said to oppose the surrender of the late jail raiders On Diaz had become unpopular along the be- cause of his friendly attitude toward the United and it was openly declined that he had denationalized The local authorities nt had declared that would not surrender another Mexican to the Americans THE Social Democrats of Wisconsin State Convention nt Milwaukee on the and nominated Colin M Campbell for Governor A J Brown for Julins of State George Kespert for State Treasurer Edwin for Attorney-General and Prof Eg- for of Public Instruction adopted and the platform of the National party THE statement for shows com bonds outstanding total debt cash in Treasury debt less rash in ury decrease in September THE coinage during September Double eagles trade dimes Total FOUR deaths from yellow-fever curred at Port Royal S..C or tlie ult EAST medium Yorkers 2 closed at at for No c cash seller 2 No cash Mess cash Butter to Faucy Heeves Choice Medium Grades Stock Stock Cattle to Choice to Ml In Districts country children in some tion at so early n age that luring their schooldays there is as a rule only time enough to prepare the mind for the of knowledge to which the reading and experience of later life are constantly adding In other words it is chiefly the power of acquiring in- formation rather than its actual that is gained in the years to which schooling is limited in the absence of any special aptitude or inclination in the scholar this power is developed in reference to any particular branch of in proportion to the amount of attention then bestowed its study It is therefore highly important regard should at that time be paid to those departments of edge an acquaintance with which is likely to be of particular use or profit to the student in his future career Not only is a foundation laid in this way for subsequent acquisitions on these points but there is on lie youthful mind a habit of accumulating information which is the most valuable gift instruction can confer In accordance with this principle special attention should be bestowed in our schools on those studies Inch in the future be exceptionally useful to the majority of the children attending them In many districts this practice has been already partially introduced by teaching German where that is the language of a large portion of the residents in the But the possible advantages from this practice are insignificant in comparison with the certain benefits from early instruction in agricultural science among tho youthful inhabitants of rural districts On the farm there are SHI many ways of utilizing the labor of children that their are generally briefer than those of sters of the same age elsewhere and it is therefore highly important that the instruction given them should be of a practical nature and calculated to teach them a discriminating tion of the drift and meaning of the lessons which experience and tion constantly presenting to the notice of the agriculturist By this means valuable scientific principles enforced ami illustrated by daily rience would be lastingly impressed on tlie retentive minds of childhood while a and capacity would be dered for increasing tho know lodge of these and applying them to ordinary practice on the farm A healthy inter- est in agricultural pursuits would also he awakened among the rising tion which would do more to keep Ihc on the farm and make them and contented there than all the frequent suggestions of the agricultural or the remonstrances of their ents Moreover the drudgery of farm work would be lightened by affording exercise to Hie mind as well as to the body and farming would ere long cease to be a routine of daily toil de- manding little more than the mental habits and capacities of au ignorant Notwithstanding tho excellence of our agricultural schools and colleges experience luus shown that the number of students they can attract is bly small in comparison with that of who might be benefited by instructions What is needed is to exact agricultural knowledge and one of the most efficacious ways to this cud is to introduce tion in agricultural science as a nent feature in the curriculum of our public schools throughout the rural dis- Even if in the future career of some of the scholars the knowledge in this way gained could never be brought into practical use beside rendering their education more liberal the sition of it would be an excellent tal as legitimate an ob- ject of scholastic discipline as the at- of information At the outset the chief difficulty would doubtless be to find teachers who were not totally ignorant with regard to agricultural but the practice once definitely introduced this source of embarrassment would soon cease to for in educational i tors more perhaps than in any other j the supply of competent men is equal to the increase in the emoluments of the er's office amply repaid by the I results would readily produce a I class fully able to impart the needed elementary New i Yorker before com- pany anil quarreling afterward MULTUM 13 TAKVO GOSSIPS are human microscopes They magnify everything within their focus Git EAT contest after two months of married be speaker of the house THE busy housewife the team Of joy tlint fill her streaming And in that show her fears WHS death on IK a man isn't twins when he side then the English guage is a fraud and a failure SPEAKING of the absconding Chicago banker the Brooklyn re- He is uot dead but WHEN the industrious fanner makes souse out of a pig's oars and ham out of his hind legs he is literally making both euds meat How LONG can a man live without asked a professor of a rustic I replied the latte How old are you IP you cut your linger on a piece of the chances are even that you will face grim death Let your wife put up the Press THE trains of new walking dresses are at least ten inches shorter than those now worn and some of more useful autumn materials are made up with so short a skirt as to require no holding up Getting sensible at last THE London Court truth Of all the false pretenses that society none are so productive of humiliation and misery as the keeping up an ance of affluence hen all foundation for it is REMARKS the philosopher of tlie St A woman is never too old to be pelted The older she is th better likes it anil the more she wants of it Of naturally enough sec harder to INDULGENT Husband to dear little wife who has bought some now But my darling will never be able to wear arc Dear Little I kuow 1 can't wear them darling 1 only bought them because they were so cheap Indulgent OLD Du used to say when he could not discover the cause of a man's We'll tn this and we'll try that We'll shoot into tree and if anything falls well and good this is too commonly the case and in your shooting into the tree the first thing that generally falls is the glass is on the wane A lyn man with weak eyes tried blue glass spectacles as a remedy Tlie re- sult was that his already too weak lo be used in ordinary were exposed to a terrible glare and heat which in less than a week destroyed the eyesight of the ferer He is now totally Er- THERE is in every true woman's once wrote Washington Irving a spark of heavenly fire which beams and blazes in the dark hours of sity Wonder how many who have gone down with the hard times have had this sertion practically verified in their sonal and domestic TUB apartments of the two eldest sous of tlie Prince of Wales on Her Majesty's training ship for cadets the Britannia have been lilted up at a cost of nearly but the young Princes hadn't Deen aboard hours before the commonest kind of a live sea sick came and laid them by the heels and emptied enough royalty out of them to stock up half a dozen ordinary TriE is in trouble Not long since a girl threw a bottle containing her name and address into the Ohio River and the bottle be- ing found by a young man tho lady cured a husband The thereupon is seized with a fear that the navigation of the Ohio will be permanently im- It console itself how- ever with the reflection that the bottle trade will revive beyond all precedent Tribune THE corn husks arc thin indicating a mild the woods are full of an unfailing of a long hard winter then arc myriads of spiders mild winter acres of caterpillars hard winter the squirrels are idle and less mild the squirrels are noisy and busy hard winter the goose bone is white and mild and hard the woodchuck gone in mild the stays out hard winter It is indeed only a question of time when tho of weather prognostications will become Bc of the exact AN article referring to the gant prices given by collectors for rare was recently in the London and Their Money Sonic dealers in such stamps write to that journal that do not like to be classed as AVo only collect stamps as others collect old china and out-of-the-way specimens of antiquity They admit that the sion may be a mania but they think that if the editor of tlie Tunes could look over tho collodion we have just ho would pardon the mania from tho interest ho would feel at the sight t it A private tion of recently sold iu Franco for Tlie est price ever paid in England for a similar collection ib believed to be 000 Then were varieties in this the Street Car THE had mado wav to Mr head for when he went out on the street at noon day the world presented a confused ami mazy appearance that fairly startled him It a source of great fort and perplexity to him that his own voice sounded about five blocks away whenever he used it and several times as he made furtive and confident grabs at passing hitching posts to steady self he was amazed to discover that the posts were about three feet and times further than that beyond his reach This shocking abuse of his con- both amazed and disconcerted Mr and he made up his TO ind if he only got home without ing down all the circus agents and Chicago runners in America couldn't get him to take another drop of beer and he would send in his resignation as a member of the Elk Horn Glee Club at the very nest regular meeting Ho hoard the boll in the er toll twelve and as lie looked at the long hill he had to his within him when to his inexpressible joy he aaw the just at the foot of tlie hill It had a long start of him but he was confident he could catch it before it got far up the hill He started a little unsteadily at first but as he crowded on the steam and made better time he steadied up and at last when he struck the double quick he rode on an even keel The weather grew very warm as he ran His breath short as the weather grew warm It seemed to him that he was going to die iu about ten steps more His head swam anil his ej es turned bloodshot He never had seen a jog along so fait lie didn't believe He thought he never would catch it Nothing but the cool restful side up the long hill buoyed him up aud kept him on his feet And as he sweat aud panted along another great joy crept into his heart like a flood of sunlight He wasn't drunk as he had feared For all his faculties were now wide awake and clear and surely no drunken did or ever run so fast and sc long he was doing This thought filled him with happiness and inspired him to re- efforts Thank Heaven he was not drunk And with folt burst of gratitude trembling ou his lips he put on one laat spurt after the caught it at last and reeling from heat ami he caught hold of the hand rail swung himself up on the and in blank hopeless speechless amazement and dismay looked inlo the cool depths ice wagou The unexpected denouement in all probability discouraged Mr ger for when he related tht to us about last ing he told us in strictest confidence by he felsh at th wen found sonly nole ice by And with the last declaration we as meaning a Mr Shaddinger left the saving it was time Hawk-Eye IT is estimated that Oregon will have bushels of wheat to export this j ear PHILADELPHIA dealers are in high spirits over the condition of the fall trade ELIJAH A MORSE of Morse liros the Rising Sun Stove Polish man has been nominated for Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts by party BY a recent invention buttons arc fastened upon cards by machinery in stead of by hand as heretofore One machine do the work of twenty skilled workers A traveler asserts thai the mania for making Egipt a manufacturing country in opposition to Nature which made it agricultural inherited from Ali who was the first to set the example of im- porting costly machinery and to whom the influx of foreigners into Egypt was first due THE secret of the manufacture of tlie magic Japanese mirrors has been dis- covered bv au English He proceeded on the theory that the reflection of the figure from the polished surfaces of the mirror must due to a difference In density in tlie material He accordingly stamped ii figure on a piece of brass and ground down the surface level er each impression taking care how- ever that struck the same tion of the plate each time it was plied The result was that he found at last that tlie figure on the die was re- from the plate although the eye could not observe the change effected in the plate The alloy used b tlie Japanese is composed of copper tin and a small quantity of zinc ACCORDING to the London cost may have a beautiful bronze appearance imparted to it without coating it with any metal or and this by a very simple and inexpensive process The article to be so treated is first cleaned and then coated vitli a uniform film of some vegetable oil this being done it is exposed in a furnace lo the action of a high temperature which however must not be strong enough to carbonize the oil In this way the cost iron absorbs oxygen at the moment the oil is decomposed and there is formed at the surface a thin coat of brown oxide which with great firmness to the metal and will admit of a high polish giving to it all the attractiveness of appearance peculiar to the finest quality of bronze THE experiment which was tried last year of employing carrier pigeons to bring earh intelligence every morning from the fishing ground off the coast of the of the night's labor is again being resorted to this season One of the birds is takon boat in the afternoon and after nets have been hauled on the following morning the pigeon in dispatched with a small piece of parchment tied round its nock containing information as to the extent of the catch Imposition of the boat the direction of tho wind and the prospects of the return journey If there is not wind enough to take boat back or if it is blowing iu an un- favorable direction a request is made for a tug and from tho von sis to the bearings of the craft slit can bo picked up easily by the Most of the when let oil from tho boats circle throe times head and then sweep away toward the land with groat rapidity generally ing at the rate of about a mile per uto LAST autumn while visiting in the north part of the State my father saw a man brushing his faded blinds over with nil in- stead of painting thorn and thinking it a capital idea came home and tried the experiment on his own as the uil was all from them and lie expected to have to paint thorn before winter but although badly the application of one coat of oil brought them back nearly to their original brightness and glossiness If it had been put on in hot weather they would have looked better as it was so cold be- fore he found leisure to do it the oil would not penetrate readily Imt gathered in occasional drops oil the lower edge of the slats and dried Judging from the appearance of ours I should think if one oiled their blinds over in hot sunny weather once every year or two beginning of course fore the color is nibbed be kept looking bright a years without painting and this would make a saving as green is rather expensive and has so little oil in it that it soon and leaves nothing but the color which of course wears off unless more oil is N g farmer ON Wednesday a twenty years of age young arrived fellow in this city from Cedar Springs havine walked as the boys miles his sole object being to see the Ilia is perhaps the most com- plete and thorough case of ever developed We have heard of a widow lady residing in a Utah County settlement who sold her chine and with the proceeds came to this city a couple of years ago and at- tended the circus performance One of the sterner sex recently disposed of a to obtain money with which to treat himself and to the luxury of seeing the spangled knights and of the sawdust arena But our Cedar Springs youth eclipses these individuals ing them entirely in the shade He states that two years ago this summer he walked to tlie city to see the circus but arrived two days after the tents had been struck show with its calico horses tights and thin lemonade had gone hence The joung man has never recovered from the terrible pointment Two long years has he labored and when the news again reached him that the circus was again coming he about him to ascertain the extent of his disposable property The result was that the only article he had that could be sold a grain cradle with which he was earning his living This implement he closed out to a neighbor at a sacrifice receiving only three dollars for it and with that sum he started on foot for this city ar- riving on Wednesday without a cent in his pocket tired and hungry but lant The same evening his awkward gawky appearance attracted the tion of a company of gentlemen in the billiard hall They began quizzing him and ascertained the object of his visit to the metropolis When asked how he expected to get into the circus without money he said he only hoped to see the tents and pictures but he stay on the grounds aud might possibly obtain a glance of the animals and some of the circus people After much sport with the enthusiastic tn man the gentlemen made up a purse of treated him to a mug of beer eyes sparkling with delight while he swallowed the malt then took him to a hotel giving him strict instructions to be early on the circus grounds and remain there ing the day so as to take it all in Yesterday morning the j was the first on Washington Square and he only left it to follow the street procession about He attended both and was fairly wild with delight the entertainment more than equaling his Lake Herald Terrible Experience on a Kaft at Sea HAUDY of the schooner C J Van Name which was wrecked on the way from New York to Aug 3 has just returned to his home in this city He relates the story of a ful experience For thirty-six hours with six companions he drifted about in a terrible sea on a frail raft which was all the time under water and its occupants were menaced constantly by the unwearying attendance of sharks which came so near as to smell of the men and to have their eyes put out by in the hands of the sailors The particulars as narrated by Capt Hardy are as The Van Name was i new vessel built near this city and was laden with coal Her gers were Matilda aged twelve Freddie aged nine and a man who was among the saved At mid- night on Aug 2 when nine days out and 300 miles from shore the schooner began to feel the effects of the gale She was e to under short sail and all was made snug In the all were on deck except the girl rhe Waves were heavy find ominous tlie sky was black the ruin fell rapidly and the wind shrieked Anticipating no danger the lashings of the boat on deck were allowed to At five o'clock three large waves always roll by towering upon the vessel and swept over her with inconceivable speed By the time the second had passed the schooner had keeled over on her side and the water was rushing in through the cabin windows The Steward Walter Gill at the command of the Captain went to get the girl out of the cabin The third wave breached completely over the doomed craft and the Steward was earned away and never seen again ex- cept for a moment by the Mate and all the crew were thrown into the water Iu six minutes from the time tlie first wave struck her the Van Name had despair they failed to attract attention The action of the owner of tie was eloquent He said nothing but taking the shirt from its place put it on and lay carefully down again Throughout all this terrible had been said by anyone Religious themes and the impending peril were alone mentioned After the steamer had passed later IB the dav there eame in sight a sailing vessel But efforts to attract her attention were again vailing Of all the men on the raft the Captain who is about forty was alone over twenty years of age but all bore up wonderfully under the circum- stances In the afternoon the schooner Minnie sailing on the wind came as the rescuer One man had been told to keep watch but in their feverish agony each insisted that his eyesight was the best There was danger of the passing as nothing could be seen of the the flag and the human heads Lungs were however never more verely taxed and the shouts were of good effect although at the last minute there was dauger of the raft breaking up A line was thrown to them but in their eagerness there was danger again as about all stood up and the raft lower with the expectant sharks dangerously near and on the alert However one by one the men got ou board the Capt ry L Burton and were landed at Aspinwall The Captain in ming up the terror of the time spent in mid-ocean You can have no idea of the feelings we had when the went Haven Conn Cor Ar World An John Suuberg of Baltimore communicates the following astonishing story of canine sagacity to the Popular Science A very remarkable case eame under my own observation about two vears ago I was then practicing medici iu Texas One day I was called to see a patient Mrs Wechsler the wife of a German butcher As I entered the hall of the house where she lived I met by a large block dog who under no consideration would let me pass until Mr Wechsler himself came to pacify and assure him all was right The dog then followed us into the sick room and while I was ing the patient the dog was watching all my movements most attentively I noticed I was the dog who did not leave until he had seen me enter my office A few days after this the dog entered my office apparently very uneasy about something The thought struck me at once that perhaps 1 might be so I put on my hat and followed the dog who immediately started for home where 1 found Mrs Wechsler sick in with no one in the house to at- tend her She was surprised at my timely call and when I told her that I had been called by the dog she related to me what was even more astonishing She had suddenly been seized with a violent attack of vomiting fifteen or twenty minutes previously when the dog had picked up an empty tin-pan and placed it beside her bed before running for the doctor This dog who was only eight months old had never received any kind of training It is therefore dent that something like the following train of thought must have passed through his Seeing me examine the patient and prescribe for her he must have conceived the idea that I the proper person to be there when she was sick Having made up his mind on this point the next thing to be done was to find out where I and this he did by accompanying me to my office Seeing her vomit he brought her a tin-pan which he had probably been her use for that purpose and then sot out for my office The dog called for me a number of times afterward but never without tny services were needed He was never told to fetch me but determined self when it was to do so THOSE who Italy and Switzerland what pleasure they hare to the sweet chimes of the they out their music KTO steeps or wooded how pleasurable were the echoes as they died away in the below All along the winding ways through the wild aud beautiful you will now and then by these chimes and the as you discover the source from they come how these bu Is Inhabited t Is this neighboring world the abode of living This question is be- yond the present power of science to answer But would it not be strange beyond expression if a world with land and water and changing seasons and apparently all the conditions required by life our earth that it is evea possible that man could exist upon its surface should roll on through the ages uninhabited and Our earth teems with life in its remotest corner yet some Martial astronomer may at i this moment be wondering what the sunk With her went down the girl I of us and whether is the abode of intelligent beings After the wonders that science has already achieved he would be bold who should and even thing on board except an oar and i piece of scantling Tlie Captain had clung to the backstay but when taken under water loosened his hold say that this problem can never be and came to the surface Tho oar solved Unfortunately we cannot hope within his reach but would not support much from the improvement of lift weight am as ho could not swim j and the increase of their e resigned himself to death shouting power The disturbances lie a farewell to the Mate who was ming near When he came up again produced bv our atmosphere are 0 by every such increase But he hail the good fortune lo j whon the problem of life in a joist and this held him up The J is it rver shall seems safe to say that it will be by the tive study of our near C IV in for October A Carious Los Angeles has had a novel lawsuit joist and tins mm up bov passenger he saw supporting self on two pieces of lumber but the immense waves swept over tho head suffocating him The Mate had two pieces of timber and the sailors had each one piece After great toil the pieces were collected and whon wide and twenty-four feet long On was sure to die So he took this seven men were floated but to the horse to B a keeper mil I will give you five dollars keep it ou the surface they were com to remain on their hands and knoos No sail appeared all day Friday aud Friday night the gave indications I if breaking up the j partially loosened Tho idea of re- pairing this damage was precluded bv the presence of the huge which made their appearance a few minutes after the raft had been constructed not thereafter leave it The raft was so low in the water Unit the monsters were on a level with the men but only was an attack made On that occasion one of the sailors had barely time to save his feet All Friday and Friday night it rained The meii spread handkerchiefs and thus secured moisture to suage their thirst hut had nothing to The position was very irksome but could not be changed for fear of the sharks The oar saved had been raised and to this a shirt was attached to attract attention Saturday ing after fi most agonizing nights ing which all had nearly resigned hope a steamer was wen about mile dis towers containing the hundred feel shore the valley no broad solid roadway to and often built upon a sheer ascent of solid rock hare been Often snch a convent is the only building of any kind you will see for miles sometimes a few little Swiss chalets can be discerned hidden among the thick pines near by m have no carried from upon their much of used in the construction the material con- and said 0 to kill horse for me AU right H So A paid the five lars left in of B and 1 wont wav B could not however 1 nerve to kill the poor animal MI iu his turn B said to C if you will kill this horse for me I will give you five All right said C and C look the horse with him C however did not kill the horse but doctored him and restored him to health A much to surprise one day saw C driving a fine animal which A unmistakably recognized as his for- sick horse A demanded the horse from C C refused to give him up and A brought suit against C to recover possession of the horse The jury de- that C was entitled to the horse We that the case will be pealed to the County An- Cnl Express vents or guided mules up the steep and dangerous The people in these countries know full well what hard work means as their uninteresting soulless faces fy Aud the women there have their rights most unquestionably are cheerfully allowed to do work that generally is supposed to belong to the sterner ses They can plow look after the cattle gather harvests carry heavy loads in baskets upon their backs and even break sfone upon the highways Perhaps because of their hard lives they appreciate all the more the few about them and the as their sweet harmonies ring in their ears at morning and evening may Snd a readier response may touch deeper chords in their hearts than in as with only pleasant surroundings we listen and them as but another pleasure added to the multitude which make our lives so bright and happy Such must have been true of that poor wandering Italian of we have read Above in Italy in the tower of an old and mous monastery was a wonderful set of chimes and from earliest childhood until he was nearing the unknown boundaries of that other world he had listened to their music with unabated joy Indeed they had become sary to his happiness as he discovered when he no heard their glad music in the clear inspiring phere of the morning as the re- sounded long and cheerily or whens as the shadows lengthened on the tain sides and darkness en- the valley his soul was soothed by their soft and A Lord from another clime journeying through that valley had been so impressed by the unusual sweetness of those convent that he stopped over night at one of the quaint but comfortable inns further on and in the morning saddled a mule and ascending the serpentine path after a few hours tance to the monastery By offering a large amount of gold he soon made arrangements witn those in charge to purchase the rare chimes them sent to his f home to add to the choice attractions of liis old baronial castle which stood on a craggy eminence overlooking the Sea It was a sad day to all the peasantry when the morning dawned Without those sweet glad chimes but seemed to mourn their as poor Giovanni Frascati now old He became weary and restless and longed for the peace over his heart as the music of those chimes was wafted to his ears by the mountain breezes longing for what had become U part of his life his very being made him sick and faint and although just where his treasure had been except that it- was on some rocky coast lie determined to leave his native Tillage and journey until he found it again Friends helped him to start this unknown shore hoping that his might be gladdened and he might spend his last days in some quiet spot within the sound of those ioved bells small amount of worldly possessions with ho traveled along slowly m sels through the Mediterranean and the Straits of stopping at French and Spanish towns and ing many months on the way for the familiar chimes as the bells wrung out and echoed over the waters from many a high and rock-bound mit but in vain As months passed on and the in which Frascati sailed was slowly coming into port on the southern shore of Scotland just after a stormy through the Irish Sea he heard lay wearily on a cushioned bench in Use shadow of the sail indistinctly Jirst tho sweet music of those bells and then more and more clearly they sounded out until In a of delight he lifted himself on elbow with a trembling whole frame quickening with joy shouted in Italian The the dear I have found -I have d ell back and The hope of finding them had kopt liim alive during the passed but the repeated ments had worried and Eim and now just as his long was gratified his longings realized with the sweet melody sSl he passed away So may be with us We who have strayed from Paradise the indistinct murmur of whose music still floats through our minds amid all the storms anu of our earthly voyage shall we one day be greeted with those strains ami recognize them ere we one That poor man was very much afflicted by the death of his wife In going to the etery be kept his handkerchief wholf time ft was tant the only vessel that had been i the fact that he wasn't weeping at sighted save one from the time of the t remarked one of those from Sow York Although tures who deprive you of all all the len with tho energy of Paper This may seem a work of super- he remarked as he down to tho front gate and operations on the binges with a feather and a bottle of oil But the critical period is approaching a young man has to be very delicately and just the least little bit of a mav throw The creak might be and this got to stand for two girls wore gene An agriculturalist writes to what he thought be an statement that recently appeared in this column relative to cows giving We to our original ments We never saw thing but ner difference between preach er the awl the church 5s simply O- tor the other erector the