Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, February 24, 1877, Page 10

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/ 19 THE CHICAGO TRIDUNL: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1877 TWELVE PAGES. —— alonal pleces of orfginal poetry, was bought by Lord Houghton for £25 4s. A beautifully- chnsed zold Tocket, including a lock of Byron’s halr when & young man, and another after his death, with bis arjps, crest, and other ornamen- tations, waa' rold'for £10 10s.° A letter from Thomas Campbell to Northcote, In which ho eays: “The Infernal Tlazlitt shall never more _ bo permitted to write for the New Afonthly,” brought &1 10s. A Tetter from Mre. Slddons, hoping to see lier cor- reapondent at the representation of *Tho Pro- voked Husband,” for seats to ecc which sho ia almost torn to pleces, brought £0 108, A long and very peremplory letter from Bir Joshua Teynolds, declining a proposition to engrave A poitrait of Mrs, Siddons, was sold for £9 0s} and two lettora from Leigh Hunt—one to Lady Jolland, and the other to Lord lolland— brought 16 gs. and 15 ge. reapectisely. CATALOGUES OF BOOKS. Mr. F. B, Perking publishes In the American Library Journal a list of the Best Hundred Novels, No two persons would probably agree in the compilation of such a list; yot Mr. Per- Kkine affirms that two people have agreed upon thls tataloguo within four or five ftems, which!s certalnly a remarkable Instance of unanimity of ovinfon. Hadley Bros. & Co., of our city, have pubiishied & nent iittlo cataloguo of books a propriate for a * Library for Young People.” 1t comprises a littlo more than volumes, be- longing to the different departments of Liter- nturs ~ and Beience, and §s sclected with much care,—particular attention being pald to the wholesome tone, and the sim- plc, graceful literary style, of the suthors chosen, Buch listsare very uscful, although nona of them can, In the naturcof {hings, in- clude everybody's favorites. But no onc nceds help In tha selection of hlifn\'nrllel‘ It fs for puggentions regardine books with which oue Ia not familiar, that catalogues arc serviceable. NUSSIAN JUVENILE MORTALITY. The mortality among children in Russia s an appalling fact, which tells eloquently of thelpw rate of civillzation to which the masses have na yotattained. At SBamara, {n Bouthwestern Rua- ala, where land and provisions arc so cheap that the place may be called the Paradlse of the poor mman, It is atated that, of 1,000 children born, B45 die fn the first fivo years, forty in the next five, nineteen Inthe next fve, aud the same nuni- ber bafare 20 years are reached, Thus 433 out of 1,000 children will not live till their 20th birthe day, From atable of ofMcial statistics C:rl« Burnaby quotes tho (ollawlx:fi figures: “Out of m,ou5 Siilaren born, 3,800 dle the first year, 976 {n the sceond, and n the third.” “One of the reasona for this excessive mortality s yrohnbly thic Bamo a3 that which proves so dead- to the Infantile populstion of Iceland, viz.: the extreme rigor of the wintere, which confines the peopls for long months in the closc, foul alr of thelr crowded, filthy Louses. JOTTINGS, Alrendy tho applications for spaco In the In- tornational Exposition to be held in ‘Parls in 1878, number 13,000, Moro than half of thess demands como from Parla. Prince Katscbubey has Jately presented to the Imperial Library at 8. Petorsburg a collection formed by hifs father of 30,000 works, chiefly-on politieal 6efence. Those works In the collection which the library already has will be given to one of the Russian university libaries. . ‘The doors of the Church of Notre Damo In Paris, which aro sald to be master-pleces of an- cient genlpture, are falling to pleces from old nee, They will be taken down and stored In one of 1hy notional muscums, whilo now oncs of oak, With fron mountings, and corvings ex- actly Imitating those of the old duors, will be substituted, - At tho Tate salo of Lhe contents of tlo studio of M. Diaz, ot the tiotel Droust, in Parls, tho sum realized from the caotire colloction of pletures and studles, was francs, Weo note, fu the st of prices brought, that tho Dernferes Larines was sold for 13,100 francs} Les Presents do 'Amour, 10,000: ‘frone e Hetre, 9,400:and the Groupe des Bohomicus dany les Montagaes, 7,200 SPARKS OF SCIENCE. INSE4P LARVZE IN THE HUMAN : BODY. A curlous nccount of the occarrenco of the Tarv of tho Hotfly (Gistride) fn tho celfular membrane of the human body was presented to the Detrolt tmeeting of the Amerlean Association for the Advancement of 8elonco, by Dr. Charles 1L Allen, uf Chicago, Tho victim attucked by the parasite was n boy 10 years ot peee, who had #pent the summer of 1871 at Charlotteaville, fn Prince Edward's lsland, aud wheu thers bad been in the babit of bathing inapond in a pag- ture where a large number of cattlo were graz. fng. Whilo Iits body was exposed- during bathe- fug, tho spectes of Bot-fly whicl tufests cattlo is supposed to lave deposited her eggs bencath g skin, 2 In March, 1872, Dr. Allen was called to attend the boy, who had grown fecblo und thin, and was sulferiug from restlcss mights, occazioned by *sensations of pricking, crawling, and biting," which had been fingeusified duriug the previous ten days, Un examiuation of tho parts thus affected, » . yellowlsh lue was observed, extending -from the left to the right sido of the front body, ~while a less distinct line oxtended up the right front chest to the right sulr-muxiiiary gland, over which the ccliular tissue was puffed out.: Above and behind the right ear was a swelllug tho size of two peas laid wido Ly side. The boy aftirmed that the itehing sensations bad followea the exact courag defined by the dines, and ter- minating in the swelling. On opening the little tumor, 8 light-yellow serum flowed from the wound, and Ly pressurc larva was forced out. ter o second larva was taken from a ling which had developed at 2 point directly over the sping, and an loch or two below the shoulder-blades, . A day or two_after, a third tumor, markiy, 1t8 preseuce by Irritatfng sensations, was found on the top of 1ho bead. * The balr was cut over it, but, tue luclslon belog delayed, the swellly, ‘was fouud ou the following duy to have moved un inch. Larva numberthree was then removed from {t. Some days further on, the hoy sulfered unusually “severe Ireitation in tho lefs wrist, where a fourth swelling was visible, e nclsfon way postponed until the next day, for the purposo of continyed observation, when, at au curly hour fn the morolog, o relicve the mlsery of the child, the lancet was brought into Tequisition. Tho swelllng was now gone froin tho wrist, but o diseolored spot about the loft elbuw betrayed the whereabouts of tho larys, dch was thus drogged forth to the light, Two f the larvw were eent (b Dr. Hagen, of Tarvard Uniyersity, who decluredthenm o sgree with the Opurcs und descriptions given by Dr, Brauer, of Vienna, of the et larval stuteuf a European specivs of the Bot-fly nanied Hypo- derma Diang, The other two lurviv were sent 10 Dr. Brouer, of Viouua, who conlipmed the i of Dr, Hageu that they belonged to the e Hypodernaa Diang, and'were in the Orst. e stuge of larval life, Tu auswer to an inquiry of a prominent phyal- «ian [n Prinee Edward's Jsland, It was sacestain- «d thut twa cases of patlents suffering frum the attack of the Bot-fiy bad been sows yegrs ago seported in tho Islaud, but nelther of them b been observed by wedfeal men, T Tropleal Amtrica lnstanecs of s specles of Bot-8y luyfng ita cgew under the skin of wan have been fro- queutly noted. A question of pecullar lutcrest sitaching to the vuso observed i Chicago relates to the power of_motlan possesscd by the larve of (Satrider, OF the three groups—the gastricule, und caviculie, aud the s ficulw—~lnto which the (Kstridaare divided, the larvas of the irst two ure known to wove b the carly stages of their exiatences hut entowologists — Lave heretofore asserted thut the Jurvs of {he third group, to vhich the Ifypoderma Disns belougs, “have ot thu power of locomotiun, Fhe ¢ireum- stances exbibited fuo the cuse under discussion show without & doubt that the farvme of the Sulenticuke move when disturbed, sud may wander very fur through the celfulur tissud. “The fiest lurva Bud traveled a distauce of thirt; fuclics, utd the fourth at least pix luches. Tty remurked by Dr, Allen that, % Alterthese luryie commenced locomotion they way vaturally Dave become restless from wantof ufr, sinco thelr reepiratory spparatus ls situated l the bind purt of the bady, aud the fucki spot on he top of the ewellivg 'ty evidently the chanuel turough which tha wir may euter the yesplratory organsg.” H MUSICAL MOTHS °AND BUTTER- Flaes, . Mr. F. Buchanan White contributes to Nature by following liat of the specics of Lepidvptera ‘which aré kuowu to vroduce rounds: First ure uoted several species of Vanesy, which produce usoung thut is sumethiug Mo that created by 1bo friction of spnd-paper. The spparstus with which the uotse {s wade L thus desvribed: “Og thy nuder\nulma of the upper wing vue of the nervurea is roughened like a file, and upom this a ralsed nervore on the upper surface of the under wing plays; there is a cirenlar embossot patch of the wing-membrane destitute of scales, which Mr. Bwinton thinks serves to ‘impress the musieal tremora.’ "' © ¥ The Acherontia (Death's-Tlead Moth) has long been known to make n creaking sound, as also Thave several specics of Sefina and Chelonla pu- dica. The uofse which these jnsccts emit—simi- ,Jar to the ticking of & watch~is sall by M. Guence to be produced by ‘‘two tympaniform vealeles situated In the Dectoral reglon, and is much'x,non developed in the male than the fe- male." ‘The Hylaphila émumm emits s twitlering sound, which Mr. Swinton supposes to Le pro- duced by & structure between the thorax and abdomen. Mr, White, who has often observed the sound, says that It resembles 4a continuous sqtieaking, and {s sudible st & distance of ten feet or more. All the specimens which he heard making the sound wera males, and It was pro- duced while they were flying aboul the bushes. “The emisston,” he reinarks, * is quite volun- tary on the lnn of the moth, asspecimens taken In the act of equeaking, and made to fiy afterwards, did not then give out any souml. Careful tlissectlon revealed no structire that appearcd capable of proditeing the noise, except a tympaniform plate situsted at tha base of the hind body.! ‘The Hpylaphtla guercing produces & membran- ous soumd, thought by Mr. Swinton to be made by the wing citching a little horay lateral thoracle plate. Fupreponia inatronula is also capable of emitilng sounds. The Agerona feronla, a Brazillan butterfly, ia Mdded to this Tist by Mr. Darwin, who states, in his * Natural- iab's Vosoge.! that, wiile watehing amale sud female In fiight, he *distinctly heard a eMckin nolse, similar to that produced h’ulwmm wheol passing under a spring catch.” THE ELEPITANT AND LION, 1t 1s related b_\un]. Leveson, in his late work entitled * Bport in Many Lauds, that, in the courso of his hunting cxpeditions in India and Africa, ho las slain 870 bull-clopbants. Tha babits of the game of every sortwhich tiesought wato studied with patient sttention; and, as tho result of long observation of the proceedings of the elephnnt, be gives this summary of the lan- guago of the huge beast: * Elcphants utter four distinct sounds, each of which fs fndfcative of a cortaln meaning. The frst s o shrill-whist- ling nolse, produced by* blowing through tha trunk, which denotes satfsfaction. Tho sccond 18 tha note of alarm or surprise,—a sound mado by the mouth, which may be thus imitated: pr- ruty prorut. The third is the trumpeting nolse they make when lng?. which, when fiwy are very much enraged, and when charging an ae- sallant, changes into a hoarse roar or terrific scream, The fourth sound betokens dissatis- factlon or distress, frequently repeated when separated from tho herd, tired, hungry, orover- I(mdcg,,;nhlul may be thus fmitated: urmph, urmph. Mal. Leveson is confident that the Africanand Aslatic lon are distinct specles, the former of which may be divided Intotwo varictics, and the Intter into three, viz: the yellow-mancd, the black-maned, and the gray Hon. Tho frst of tho African varletica I the lurgest and tnost powerful, whilo the third fsoften scon {n groups of ten or a dozen, hunting In the vast plains ot Central Africa. d[ the continuous roaring made by llons when searching for food In the night, Ma). Leveson saya: *\When a ljon and a lloness are in company, the loness 1s always the first to roar, and thls it the moment of leaviug tho lair. Tha lion alternutes with the loness, and in this maancr they proceed on tile way, rogringevery qlulnl:r of au bour, untll they have approached the douar, or village, which they proposa de- nmllln?; and, when their sppetites are satfafld, they olten aguln recommence rouring, und con- tindo until daylight.” pi EXPLORATIONS, Dr., S8chwelufurth, the African traveler, Is en- gaged at Cafro claborating his enormous botan- feal coliections, ‘The Abbo Durand claimed, in o paper read before the last mceting of the Parls Geograph- 1cal Boclety, that, In the sixtecnth centyry, the Portuguese crossed the African Coytinelit from Congo to Mozamblque, % Dr. V. Poggo, the Afriean exnlorer, who ro- cently returned to Lisbon, reports that he suc ceoded n penctrating the country of King Muats Yambo, in Ceutral Africa, An account of his experience fs awaljed with Interost. Dr, 0. Lentz, the leader of three Germon ex- ploring cxneditlons Into the Ogolve nd Lake reglons, in Centrul Africa, has been forved to return fo Europu with a sliattered coustitution, o voluntary martyr to tho cause of Belence. Prof. Nordenskjold proposesto take command of an expedition {n the easulng year, which will examine the Siberlan coast from the nouth of the Jdenesel to Bebring Straits, The return Journcy wiil be by way of Ching, Indis, and the Buez Conal, ‘Tho Norweglan gcologist, K. Petterson, s planuiug an cxpedition to Spitzbergen fu the comibng summer, for the pm?mw of ‘making a thorouh geological survey of the island, The Government Lias been sollcited to nid In the undertaking. ‘The Duteh expedition to Sumatra under the conduct of Me: J. S8chonw Santroort, aud D . _Beth, embarked at Nicuwediep dan. 18, Sufiicient funda have been subacribed ip sup- port of the enterpriss o enable the parly to snend a year In the 1sland, Tho Diambl region, which fx'sald to abound In valuublo wouds an wmincrals, will reecivo thelr first attention, Col. Gordon, who has been In England for lb few weeks, has recelved an urgent catl from th Kliedlve to roturn to E{u t, He has presented to thy Roya! Geowruphical Boclety o number of valunblo inaps dellncativg the suryeys of Eyna. tonal Afries which have been mado under bis supervision. In them §s for the tirst time clearl made kuown thy connection of the Nita wit tho equatorial lakes. . Among the results of Capt. Peotsow’s ex- [\e(\luuu from Zalsan throurh Daungaria to {uchion, us stated beforothe Russtan Geographl cul Soclety, are the determination of scven s tronomical positions on the lines the measurc. ment of fifteen sunmits of the Thian Shan, aud of the levet of tho snuw-line i this part of the range; a collection of atout 1,000 planta; and uhmll of the tpmns of Buluu-Tokbof, and uchen, : mv. Bchlnkhllweu»Snknulumkr. who has been studyiug the natural history of the Hima. luyus, inakes the followlg report on the com- purative helght of the suow-liwits of tho great Aslatic mountain-choiu and tho Alps of Switzer- land: The lfwalayan raugs shows o snow- Mmit at tho hefeht of 16,600 feet on the northern #lde, and 16,200 feet on tho southorn side. That of the Kuenlen range varics from 15,100 feet on the northern side to 15,500 fect on tho southern side. Tho s&now-limit of the Alps shows an avernge befght of 9,000 feet,~8,000 feet on the nurthern side, und 8,200 feot on the southeru, National committees for tho exploration and clyilizution of Africa have now been estublished in Belgium, Em.'lhunl Germany, Austria, and Ttaly, ” Bolitum hus thus_far contributed, 857, 1othe cuyse, Thu Portugucse, who wero not nvited to tho Brusscls Confercuce, will or. ganize un independent exvedition, i ald of which the Goverument hus grunted $100,000. The English Committeo bas plunned s clubor- ute scheme, which will sho ‘y be made public, The German Conmittee has [dentitied its inter. eta with tho Boglety for African Exploration ut Berlin, which hus been in existence for threa yeurs, an that thne the Soclety has ex- pended $46, Ju support of Dr, Guasfeldi's wunto expedition: $5,000 for Houmeyer, Lex, aud Pogao's expedition to Cassondjic; §5,000 for Dr, Lentz's journey to*the Ogowe; $11,500 for shorter excuralons§ and has now ver 5‘.‘-’!,0‘!) i its treasury, BRIER NOTES, The late Engilih Arctic Expedition collected sixtecn species of binls on the shores of the Pular Basin aud north of 82 degrees North Lati- tude. The credit usked by the French Government for public instructfon fn 1576 waa 89,000,000 frauea; tu 1877 it was 49,000,000; sud for 1873 1t 48 12,000,000, AWriter fn Nature cominunicates tho fact that, In dissecting a number of wild rubblts, be has found o large species of tupe-worm futestingd the mojority of them. - ‘Fbe number of specles of Insecds known v.o Edmlt:s ml:‘ ulh’nnhal ot above 200,000, [u the sl ler of Culsoplera, sbout 50,000 species Tave bevn deecelbady e ‘s he Bulietin of the Royal Hotanleal Socldty of Degiun coutabis an epuineration of the Husvd of the Old World, by Deseglise. Tho total ownber of specles nawed 1 upwards of 400, The severest suow-storm that hay been ex- perienced ju the south of Nurway sluce 1818 preTrs Juuuury. In some localities the bouses were burled under alxtecn fect of suow, —a welght whivh 1any wero unable to sustain, Locomotion wus possible ouly by the usg of FuoW-rboee. The St. Petersburyg Academy of Scieuces cel- ebrated its 150Lh suuual suniyereary Jun, 10, The Ewperor und Royal family were presut st the festival. Count Lutke, the President, gave a Ahort history of the Academy; and the aveat medals of merit were awarded for this year to Prufe, Beilstein and Von Burge. The Emperor of (iermany amd M. Lexseps wers among thuse elected honorary members. At g late meeting of the French Academy of Sclences, M. Dubreufl read a paper on “the spontancous disappearance of & ulsense from whicly the vines of Cyprus have suffered fur seven years, The cause of the malady was the fungus, ofdlum; and ita disappesrance fs at- tributed to the plentiful growth of sumach among the vines, In -F-per lately read befora the Scientific Committee of_the Royat Horticultural Soctety, Mr. Andrew Murray “opposed the theory of ' A descending current of sap in plants at any time ot under “dhy cireumstances. He maintained that no proof lias beeu adilticed of & descent ol sap, and dented the theory of an assimilating process in the leaves, and a tranaference of I thus prepared tothe ponl where growth Is taking place. Mr. Murray conslders that his view is supported hy the results of experiments couducted by Mr, Herbiert Spencer, and verified by Prof. W. R, MeNab, Tlis opinlon s easens tially this: that the ascending sap deposits the wood as it rises, and the surplus water returus to the atruosphere through the leaves. SCHOOL-BOOKS. The Minnesota Plan for Furnishing Teaks for the Yublie Schools at Rensonable Vricea, Bpectal Correspandence of The Tribune, 87, PAuL, Feb, 21.—Minnesota is about cn- tering upon an experiment which will intercat sellers and buyers of school-books fu other tates. The School Text-Book bill, which to- ay had its flual passage in the Legisiature, and which Gov. Pillabury will approve, Is the re- sult of a leclslative movement of threc years ago, started by Henators Lienau sud Donnelly. Thoy. urged that the school-book publishers (Ring) were charging tho people of the United States more than double falr prices forall the books used in the public schools, and Lhat the amount thus unuecessarily taxed upon the poorest people of the conntry ‘was annually not Igss than $2,000,000. Foronce the Scnators named had advanced a pepular {dea. [The fricnds of cheap school-books were wmauy, and nearly every member of the Legis 1atute was willing to concede that it would be profitable and proper for the Stato to make war upon _the Bchool-Book Ring. But the first plan of action advanced Included a Pruponfl.lnn for cstablishing a Stato printing- oflice, which proposition, being generally con- demned, prevented any action' at that time on the school-book question, Last year, however, Lienau and Donnelly, as feaders in the moves went, had the matter referred to a speclal comne mittee, with authority to cmploy an expert to catimate the cost of ‘school-books. The coms mittea selceted Mr. D, Ramaley, on experfenced master-printer of this clt". uvmg' way compatent, and, {nstructed, him to furnish detafled sfate- menis of the cost of sy vl?'lngeuh in 10,000 and 20,000 lots, sixteen of the liest schiool-bouks now {n use {n the State, embracin, for the common schools. These statements, accompanied by nnzmml conclusive proof, showed that the books could be profitably mau- ufactured hero for fess than one-thind the (rade- selling prices. The Cominittee’s report, em- bodying Mr. Ramaley’a statements, Inftucnced the Senato to pass o bill providing for a Com- mission to furnish the inatter of the Looks and for. lemnh' tho contract for priuting, binding, and_distelbuting, But tho bovkscllers an agents of the Book Ring worked upon the House with such success us to defeat the bill in that body, the bl having only come tothe House near the close of'the scsafon, "This year the subject wos again taken up in the Seuuto and a uew DIl drawn, which, belng free from the minor objections ralsed fo the prior schemes, hies now passed both Houses, aud will s0on becomne the lnw of the State. Its pro- vislons are substantially as follows: The con- tract 1s to be made forfliteen years, the bill hay- inz heen passed under guaranty of responsiblo anddealrable parties that they would take tho contraet, The prices, Lo scholdrs, of tho hooks to be furnished nre not to exceed one-half” the trade retull prices of the books now n use, though the bLooks furnished aro to bo equal to the best published, The contractor 1s to furnish tho cnply. nnbducl 10" the approyul of & Commirsfon of three educaiors. The mate ter for the bouks having been uccopted, thecon- tractor Is to make ns good bouks, in respect of pier, printiog, and binding, as those uamed i s colitract. 'Thie Commisaton baving finall fully approved tho books, the method of distrl- butlon will be as foltow: The School-District Clerks are to forward to the Conuty Bupcrintendents cstimates of the number of encli of the scries of hooks which will probably bo required i thofr several districts for onc year, After all tho dis- trict onlers are {n, the County Bupcrin- tendent, having fivst rovised them, fa to forward them to the Stute Buperintendent, who will con- vey them to tho contractor. The latter fa to fill the orders for the several distriets, pack thom in bulk, and forward all the hooks for cach county to its Connty Auditor, with the proper vouchicr, The Coutity Auditor is to vhargo each dintriet with the bouks ardered, aud delivers tha Looks to the several Dlatrict Clerks, whio ure ta scll them to schiotars as needed, at prices flxed in schedules furnished by the State Superine tendent, aud pay the procceds into the district treasurles, “Tho contractor, having fur- nished books ‘to u County grcseulu s voucher, approved by ] tute Buperintendent, to the State Auditor, who thereupon issucs an order upon tho State Tronaur{; payahle from a “revalving fund” created by o State nppropriation of $5),000, and to by malutalued by payments from the countics for the baoks ondered by the County Superf- tendyate,—the countles in turn Lelng velme burged by deducting the amount due from cach disteict frow Its achool-tax fund, ‘Tho bill ncludes & proviston for revision of the books once In eacht five years, it neceasary. Boards of Educution which are working under speclal chiarterd, a8 in 8L Paul,' Mioueapolls, fona, Ked Wing, Rochester, ete., ara not obliged “to use the text-hooks shus provided by the Btate, but 1t 1s believed they will soon it upullum to adopt them. ° Much depends upon the fidelity of the three Comimlisaioners, aud upon tbe dejermination of the contractor to make his accupation pernancnt by providing books which will be cqual toor better thau those provided by tha regular trade, Rumor Tiaa it this cvenlng that un agent of the Book Ring has already offered 850,000 to be secured cantrol of tho contract. This is improbadle, for the State Is mnply protected by the powers re- served by the bill” to the Commlissioners and to the Legialature, Uorgen, e MODERN BIOLOGY. Belence, Theology, Phil Talk of ululL)E! oudly and lohy “hey Bamiy W1r Worls back S forth . thele An"twere 8 mschino, —this mysterious Life, Let them talk as tioy will, with Intemperate zeal Aud futalliar plirasa; still thiey break not tho seal Naturo puts on each) book her geczet contains, Nor can thelrsssurauce uarivet theit chaliw, A complete scries £ In the lily, the rose, the nioss-cove 11 o colae that trowe oh Lebanan s pramils Tl coguettish oliin of Life I Incased— Tho problem of Belng u closuly ewbraced, Through 196 graduate scalo ot lifo snhwate, ¥rom crustaccun wnal] to Monarch of Stste, What mysterions law of heing prosall o fathom, the kew of Philoaophy fails, Bclm:l:mlo.oh wondrous wise, talks gravely do. classifien, her friends to susure; Aud, thouzhi fails (o unlock tho e of peas Sl aares fue victorlots (5) basaer aotun P Ta build up thels plan whers greungut falls, e e nces leatu That thoy Bor thelr resders at o nadersiande They thelr secres divalge, thalr hubby bestrids, Tu complabéancy iudulgy (bole suceetiul pride, Tha thiefr wit Uss liftod manbood {2 the mire Of falth {n & diviue 10 8 BObler siro, Wo m:gnrl:auh all our days, nought as this can ‘Thls interwinate maze of-learning sstute T ot foas L aata () Nor withip, Wlat can u'ef the mystery know, Bpite of Sophlatry'e skili n velling ¥ Shice of reaotute wilk o wibdcr eat Loog as 1. aud air with Fhe b bt Beiove 1 ulot Subree, Cuantss lugus, A Smart Woman, A farner’s wife living near’Gliont, Belgium, ruuzutlfi cuptured a thief while she was In child- bed. fer busband bad lefther during the evens iug 10 fuforw a relative who was to be the god- futber of the wusplulous cvent that bad taken place, IcuvluE ber fucharge of o nurse. Shortly afterward this woman obtulued pernission to return (o her howa to fetch wowething that she ey Sho bad scarcely feft the houss be- fore u waun, with s fuce” Llackened, votered, und, approachivg® the bed 1t the dark, threat: ened to wurder the patlent if sbe uttercd » cry, und deinanded the oty for which hes byusband bud »0ld a cow a few daya before. Pretending touccedo to his demand, she told hiw that be would fud it fu the cellar at the furthee end, In wbaz, concenled behiud astone. ‘Tue wan de- scenided the steps, when she atonce jumped from her bed, shut down the trap-door and bolted it, nnd then calted to her neighbors for assistance. The man was sccured, aud his face being washed, he proved to be the husband of the nurec. et AGRICULTURE, A List of Premiums to Bo Awarded by the Tillnols State Noard Next Winter. The following is a list of premiums to bo awarded by the 1fiinofs State Board of Agricut- ture, at Its meeting In January, 1878t CROPA, at, not Te ctop , not 1 Second beat crop'of rye, not le: e Dest crop of oate, not Jeas than Second beat crop of oats, not le o8 1han one acre, Beat crop of whito bear one-half acre... Second best crop of whi than one-half acre. fataes, not m‘-‘ than onc-hall scre. .. ! less than Best crop of sweet poiaioes, not une-fourth acre, .. 10.00 Second best crop of Icss than one-fuurth 6.00 Best crop of onions, not lel fourth acro..... . 10,00 Second best crop of onlons, not lesa than one-fourth acre .. 56.00 Beet crop timothy liny, nct leas than ten Best crop hemp, Beat crop itax, Ono acre. .. 10.00 Beat crop tobacco, one-hal . 10.00 Ilest crop clover sced, ono acre « 10.00 Heat crop bine graes scad, one acte . 500 Iest crop millct seed, one acra N Hest crop flax sced, one acre . D00 Iest crop castor beans, flvo o 0,00 Hest crop carrots, one-half 5,00 Best crop fleld beats, one-hall +6.00 Uent croj) sugar bects, onc-half acre, to bo olarized Ly a competent chemist, and ho result to be certliled to the Buard, ... 25.00 Deat crop Swedlsh turnins, o alf acre,. 5,00 Dosterop English turnips, onc-half acre... 5.00 NATIVE WINE3, CIDER, AND VINEGAR. Entrics may bo made any tine durlng 1877, and awnrds will be made In January, 1874, Tiest two battlea of Cacawbs wlne, the product of this Stato..eu.seyiee oo Bllvor medal Beat two bottles Norton's Virglnia Seedling wine, the product of this 5 . Sliver medal 4 L product of this State.. .Silver medal Best two bottics Concord wine, the product of this State ..o Sllver medal Best two Lottles of wine, from any va- Hety of grn) Ahe t thls Slate.,.. ... Dest two bof product of this Staty, Rest twa Lottles of vinegn: Uent two Loitles cldor wine, the prod. uctof his &ate, GRAINY, V) 79, £TC, For the best andl largest display of grains, seeds, vegetables, dalry products, ete., - by county, unton, or districtageicnltura) association or cluby or any indIvidual— First premium ., Second premium, Third prominm . ¥or tho best an: ot v "of groan fruits, * wines, cider, vluegar, etc., by county, union, dintrict, oz liorticultural assoclation of club, or _nuy individuai— 50,00 Fitsi preminm, Second premivm 3 ’flflfd mn;llm- . .o 5000 iaplays taking premium wi ropur- 1y 0f bl Dopariient. i YATNS, l?uum may be made uny timo beforo tho 15th of uly, 1878, 'Two lnndred dollats and three gold medals aro appropriated to awards by the Committos op Farms, at e discretion, for excollency In improvement, cultivation, and ' mansgoment. The compotink farms will be classificd vy size loto those of less than 160 acres, those of 160 and less than GO0 acres, and thoso of 500 acreaanid over, * Examinations will be inade during October of 1878, aud tho awards madeas tho January moct- Ing, 3870, ORCHARDS. Entries to be made at any time befora the 1st.of uly, 1877, Hlslll'!znbnrchnnl, not losy than 100 treae omond Dot oo e uat pear orchiard, not less thun 100 trw HeCON BOtur e v iraess ped st peach orchard, not iess than 100 trees .. Hecund best..... Examination twl mi too, and wwards mado by tire iarin “n,m,lv' Januury meeting, NURSERTES. Entrles may bo made any time bofore the 1st of July, 18 Teat'arrauzed, cultivated, and ‘mapaged of fruit and ‘omlnnwnlnl tre 00 o ‘cxamine the nurserfes, aud thu . premiums will be awarnded at the Janusry nceting, 1878, .« VINETARDS, 'IJ ‘bo mado 4t any time Lefore tho 16th fvated, apd mansged tnn Farm d L lm i on :’llleu Y 19, an u Farma, and tho prom(umy awh e at the January HOAD-MAKING, To the towmehip that aall bulld the great- est number of miles of earth road durin; tho year 1877, a preminm of. «,,,v.vese ). Statewont to bo joude to the 'Secrotary of this Bourd Ly the firet Monday in January, 1878, Nore.—Farms, orchards, gurserles, aod. yineyarde hiaviiig boa: awarded & vrambun by 1o Botd, snall y uot bo entflled to compete a3 uotbosniflied (o cumpsty aguin durioy 8 toFm of faur ——————— " THE FUTURE. 1 was muaing, mu At my window, yustor-nicht. While iny candle, burning dimiy, Shed around & tfal Tight; & Whilo the wiud without Was moaning, Moaning throwgh lhw noked trees, 1 was musing on the future Aud its drcad uncertatutics, Darkness o'er my spint broode Liko Lha darkiiess of & room i Where the dying embers only Uivo distinctaess 1o the gioom; Wearlly the momonts gllded, Wearily, with sadncss fraueht; Clad in sable robes of mourning Secnied cach welancboly thought, ‘Then the futars to wy vislon Beomed ty myslorfcs to unclose] I behield 1ifu's dreainy pathway ‘Thickly nct wilh deadly foee; Frlendship seemed unreal and eeting, Love [nconstant and untrue, Ang tbo alare that hope kad Hghted Une by vuc in clouds witndrew, ‘Then 1 praypd, in dee, angalsh, "Fisat fos CutwalkLt pase fromm n?t, Thut 1hoea daye of durkor sorrow 1 wight nover live to see; A, the while, & change came o'er me, Lk o from Letbe's tilo— A wost sweet aud soothiog calmtess O'e wy wpirit scomed 1o giide, Then & somsthing spoke within 1y ‘Fhat Jidf nioru thuy wosta) spean, Whisporiug sofily, whispering swetly, Liko an angel 16 & dreamt - Peaf nol tho (o trust the futures Wherv'er thy lok ey (ll, God ls with tlics sud sbove thep— He directs sud guvecna ailt | Pamsuny, N, Febo 16 IN77, ng lowely. Tavon., e — THE CATTLE u THE PLAINS, 79 {As Kditor of The Tribune, Cuicago, Feb. 23.—~A few 0 Teaw in your paper & letter from your Colorado corre- spondent, in widch be stated for a fact that the lo4a to cattle-breeders duriug the recent trylng winter hias beeu of au average of ouly 9 per cout, In view of the interest your readers must 1aky (o a matter of such importance (and uow that tbe trude I3 belng extendud tq other coutl- ucnts, Importance Iy too milda word to use ln its deseription), I will give you u few figures guthered by inyself from stock-raisers them- sclyes, oue 0f whom has had over twenty yesrs' sxperience of the businegs in Australla, and who therofore kpows of what he s tulkiog.” L wysclt have been trying mixed farming in Min- nesota with “wretched results, as the win- ters are too seyers for wrofitable cattles ralsing und tho grasshoppors tuo severs for “But to retura to our cattle” Buj iant0 uveat. 500, for which b as0 500 yearilog heifers; 80 per ceut e of thelr fucr 30 at tho end of three years he would Lave a herd of 1,700, cumprised and of the value as follows: £00 4-year olas, worth $17 per head. 8,300 400 d-year olila, worth §17 per Lead 0,800 H-yeur olds, wortd §i2 per head Y 400 1-yeaz olds, worth $7° per bead. 2,8 For the 500 helfure you would Laye to providy about 20 bulls, at & coat of abont $1,000,—goail bulls are worth fromn £50 to 8040 there, This would bo the abrolute increnae of the 00 frst purdhased; but at the end of the three years {nm’ B-year olds and 2-year olds would havealao bred, giving & further” fnerease of 10 liead _at an average of $0 per head, would be $5,700, which would about ‘)uy the expenaes, Of e the Iife is & ronghish one, but very healthy, llll‘i ono should be n good horseman and siiot. [ myself start for there shortly, and should any orie want farther information T inclose you my card. Yours obudiently, EMIGRANT, « PIGEON ON TOAST.” from New York to Aspinwall on Commo- dore Vanderbilt's Stoamer North Bar. Boectal Correspondence of The Tribune. PaNAMA, N, G., Jan. 26.—The newsof Com- modore Vanderbiit’s death recalls to mind the old steamer North Star. This vessel, it will be remembered, was the steam yacht Inwhich Van- derbilt made hiscelcbrated crulse, and was after- ward placed upon the Commodore’s line run- ning between New York and Aspinwall, It was tho veatel fnwhich £ mado my firat fourney to SBonth Amorien, snd the jncidents of that trip aro as vivid in niy mind aa though occurring hut yesterday, and the many sufferers with myselt will remember the curscs heaped upon Vander- bilt's penuriousness and his feckless disregard of human life when money was thestake against 1% In October, 1883, In obedience to a peremptory mandate from the Sccretary of the Navy, I took passage on the North Star to proceed to Pana- ma, and from thence to other points on the Pa- cific Occan. The scene at starting bafiles de- seription. The wharf was filled with thousands of people, pushing, clbowlng, swearing, praying, crying, or Jaughing, swoylug back and forth like the waves of a mighty ocean. Shouts, good- bys, and oaths were Indiscriminately mixed, but despite the babel and confuslon I succeeded in gainiug the deck of the steamer afow mo- ‘ments before sho started. My lirst anxloty was to secure s state-rvom, but not a berth, nora sofa, nor & chair coul I find unoccupled. Even the floors of the cablua and saluons were divided into *clalms " of 6x2, and occupled by **squate ters.” When night came I manoged to crawl under a table, but was no sooner comfortably dozing away than the man on the tablo became scaslek, and the outpourings of his troubled 1nplrll. caused e to vacate my soft couch ina hurry. Onf deck it wasmo_Letter. Men, women,'ani children were lying huddled together, and It waa jmpossible to walk about. After 4 comfort- less uight, daylight at last came, when a littlo inyestigation proved that tho vesscl contained 1,100 ‘nannnuen, while ber accomunodations only allowed of 400. ¥ arly in the morning I found a dozen other ofticers of the nayy, all bound for thelr vessels in the Pacifle. When breakinst was announced wo managed to sccurc a table just large enough tocnable us all to seat ourseives aronnd it. <(nels-worded blll-of-faro was handed to cach ono ‘of us. Amu‘nF tho items thercon was *Pigeon on toast.” ¥ Pigcon on toast!! ordered the first one. “Plgeon on toast!" sald the next, Aud 50 on to tho end. Thirteen * plzcons on tonst " were ordered. After-a long delay, the colored walter emerized from the pantry, bear-. ing o largo tray. 1o dullberately placed 8 plece. ot bread hery, 8 eracker or two there, o plekle somewherc else, and flually lald u covered dish in tho contre, Bolug nearest to this last 1 re: moved the cover, and there sav-—a slica of toast withi the leg of a pigeon lying In the middle. I soon transferred the whole to my plate, and de- voured it, while the othiera looked on. At Inst, * Walter, where {s my plgcon on toast?" came from the fips of one after tho other of the pegts. i “Done gone, sah " S Well, bring suimo beesteak?”! “ All gone, sahi" #Bring something to cat, ‘you rascal 1" shouted the ofticer at the liead of Liic table. *4fabn’t got nuflin clse, sahl ' s In o rage, ung of our party wout in scarch of the head atewird, and returned with that fune- tlonary, Hoexplained that his orders wers to coole only n stipulated smount of food; no mate ter ow many mouths had to be filled. Ho waa sorry, but if ho used o pound more fmr day than Tis fustructions warranted, tnd old man’(Van- derbliit) would dischinrge him at onee on reacns o New York agaln. uckily for ua, the weather was alittle rough, sud after that brenkfast very faw pnssongers visited the dining saloon untll“a day or two out fromn Asplnwall, Sca-slvikness verily saved us from starvation. It was not Vanderbiit's fault we made a gulek passage, and were not beset by #torms to_ciause delay, Subacquently, In other vessuls, 1 have knockid about off Cape Hatteras for weeka at o time, unable to eafl one \vn‘{ or the other. Ilad such a catastrophe bappened on ho North Star, the hassengers would huve had to enl one another Aftor ten dayas of atarvation-meals and sleep- less nights Aspinwall was reached In safety, and, with thaukfulness that tho old Commo- dore's penurlousness had not resulted disage tronsly, wo rushed to the nearest hotel and on- Joyed the luxury of u * squarc meal,” & And, while ‘In the retrospective- lne of thought, my mind reverts ton somewhat ludl- crous affalr which transplted on our urrival In Pauama. On firat leaving thecars we werg beset by hundreda of the wp{)ur«wlurfll natives, who clamored for the peivilege of carrying our bag- gaze, One man, however, mansged 10 obtain (L all, and pited it on his shoulders in a wonderful watner, Londed down [lko,n pack-horse, car- rying thirteen vallses and scyeral other nrdclnn. Lie led us to tho Aspluwall louse, where wa ordered dinner, Wiilo walting for the repaat to be prepared, it suddenly occurred to one of our party thut wewerc ' In a forcign laml, ‘Whereupon a discussion arose as to tho value of greenbacks In Nuw Gronada, 'To sottle the watter, tho gentlemaaly clerk, who, by the way, undell;s‘oml o English, was approachéd with the question: 44 Wil greenbacks pass fn this country 1™ : No entiende, senor.” ([ do nut underatand, 4l i Looking around our party, the questioner d s **&\¥no understands Spanish" o reply. ST} 36 38 Y can't miako thio som ol & sea-codk understand 1" sald our spokesman. IHandiog o $10 greenback to the, cleik, just as our dluner was being lald on the table, he wade motlons and grinaces enough to have secured hit g tirst-¢lass engagement with a pantomime troupe. Finally the ‘greaser appearcd to comvrengnd, ‘Throwing the note down on the counter, hio ex- clafmed: “*£1 papel es no bucno!" (The paper is bad.) Wo took in the situatlon In & mowment. The fellow had mever scen greenbacks, In fact, rechbacks’ were new things, anyhow, in 1863, Matters were fimwlnu scrious, We were hungey, The Victuals were on the talle, and " fhefr temptlug perfumies reached _our rila, We scurched our pockets, ‘and unlted capltal (coin) ‘vonsisted of about 26 cents, We courdn't talk credity we couldn't, in fact, do anything., —The walters cartied the Qishics aivay ogaln, and wo left. At tho door we met the man who had carried our bageage, and whomn we had forgotten to pav. We gavo him our entira cash capital, and then vomnenced wwdrymmmmnd tho streets, walt- ing for the tugboal whixh was to carry us to the Paciic Ml Compauy’s stoamer, and whiclh would leave at nightfall.” Worse than Tyutalus’ was our sufferiniz, for oranges, bananas, aud pineapples were for sale at every strect-corner, —and wo couldn’t buy onu, although we pos- scased bundreds of doflars of Uncle Bum's ture - reney, Nf{zm cuime at last, aud we arrived on thedeck ot thio (Jolden Age. We fonud the steward, and he kindly fod us Into tho puntry, where we ate all the cold ylctuals we could get our hands on, n wy next letter Twill tell sumetbivg about this place (Panama), sud descrlbe some of its fn- teresting characteristics. e — ‘“ NOTHING BUT LEAVES." 4 Nothing but leaves *—0 (lod! forbld That, when thu Master comea this way And 1ooks for frult, that in it stead He Bauds & worthlcss, barren tree. #* Nothing bot leaves *—0 what & thought, ‘That life should yleld o fruit for Goa; ‘To fuul that 1 bad never wrought A work desorviag of reward, ° *+ Nothing bu leavea''—it muat not be ‘That mine should be & wasted life. 0 Futber! Ilul‘r me work for Thee, f Vol I'm called from garthly stilte, ' 1 10 bring the ered ehea ‘Help me to bring tbe garn ‘d‘ul I:“ Into Thy kingdom, pur : TBALT kY have Dot TrLL and lEares, T be o use, 1o Fby pure g oU LovELAXD, e e— Made Tusane by Halr-Dye, New Milford (Coan ) Ruy. Most of our readars i Now SHLI{or willdogbt- 1osa remember Mrs. Mirands Ruby, acrazy wou- € vfl;fl has lived fn this village many yeass, sud wholic fusanity was manifested by alwuys weur- 1ng a letter cavelope ou her bounet or tled Lo htr‘?uml or {u suwce otber harmless way; but we doutt 1€ sug one would be likely to surintjo the cause of her jnsanlty. A fow days ago her 00 cawnq to New ilford and 400k Mrs. Huby to A Navnl Officor's Recollectlons of a Voyage' reo a phyaiclan in New Ilaven for his advice Tha physlcian safd that her diMculty was softe enjug of the hrain; that it was lhlnlulel{ incur- able, aud that It was causcd entirely by the use of hair-dyo. JOHN IN CALIFORNIA, An English View of the Chinosa Preblem on ihe Pacllle Conste London Times, Feb. 1. Given a 8tate ns largoas Great Britaln and Tretand, with the richest agricultural land in the world, with an abundance of mines and almost cvery specles of- metallle wealth, with a tem- Pcmlllrn nover cold and rising frequently to 1200 n the shade, an average popnlation of four {o thoaguare mile and concentratod slinoat en- tlrely fn the nolghborhood of the chiel citles, and, Gnolly, with the wagesof skilicd or un- skilled lobor almost anything the - laborer chovses to ask, what {s the want Itkely to be found most presalng, and how can it bo Lest relieved? Such o Btate is California, und the natural cry of Callfornfa has long been for more Iabor, fur better lnbor, for chieaper labior, tor more ubedicnt labor, for labor more capable of being made availadle for hard and unplensant uses. Tho ery has been heard and anawered In a somewhat unespected quartor. A supply of labor, of tha precise quality demand- ed, has been sent trom & source practically un- lmited. White Iabor was not forthcoming, and wos often troublesome when [t was, found. Blatk Iabor, would, n wany ways; havo done better, but effective Ulack labur 3 o com- maodity seldom voluntarily - tendered, A middle term has lorl.uuuull been found fn sellow labor. China with ler tecmn- fng " millions and hundreds -~ of millons of inhabitants, bos sent over o few sparo thou- sands to California, and caun easlly scnd as many moro as often a8 they may bo wsked for, Thoy are precisely of the_ typa of which Califor- nla fins been In most want. * Ilandy, subiglssive, ool workers, patlent under {1l-usage, no ™stril- ¢rs,” and content with a tithe of what a white man would demand, they have proved, in every wayy 2 most useful set of follows. Thelr serv- fces, unco enjoyed, are aiready begiunlng to bo pronouniced lmllr{musnhlm They do the hard work and the dirty work, and " the work for which 1o ong elso can be found, and they do 1t well, and quictly, nnd cheaply, * So far from de- erndier white [ubor, oy have ralsed it by ro- Joving it of all that could be thoughs degrading dutfes, Like the slave of Aladdin’s lump, they have couforred priceless obligations and have asked for notting In return. “their presenca In Callfornis has already fnereased by one-half tho taxable proporty of the State, and manufactires arg earried on and branches of industry under- taken which would_be slmply fmipossible with- out them, aud would at onve perish If the sup- ply of thelr labor were to be cut off, ft sonnds strange to be told after all this that the Chinese are not welcome in Californin, or, rather, that they are regarded ag an evii of which 1t would "bg moat desirable to get rid. ‘Tho fact, however, has been more than once ox- plulned by our San Franclsco correapondent. An ho repéats in his tetter this morning, more than sl the voting poputation of Callfornia constats of forcigners, and o good many of thesa are Injshmen. Now, Irfsh lobor throughout the Union has long. oppropriated ltselt the sort of part 'that Chlncso labor has Intely” been pluylug. fn Callfornia, but with RADWAV'S READY RELIEE, s e o e, - R-R-R. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Cures the Worst Pains fn From One fo Twenty Hinntes, NOT ONE HOUR After Reading this Advertisement Need Any One Suffer with Pain, RADWAY’S READY RELIEF 18 A Grrg for Every Pain It was the First and is tho That instantly stops the most excraciating Tains, sy inflammations, and clres mmg\mnm, whether of thy Lunio, Btomach, Bowuls, or other glsnde of orgaus, by ‘onv appliestion, IN FROM OXE T0 TWENTY MINUTES, o matter how violent or excruclating the Rbeumatic, Bed-Itidden, Intrm, Cripplod, Nouralglc, of prostrated with disessa may sulter, RADWAY'S READY RELIER WILL Afford Instant Ease. Inflammation of tho Kidneoys, Inflamm, tion of the Bladdor, Infiammation of the pal, the Rervouy Bowols, Mthnps, Congestion of the n mnarked differences Raw Irlshinen have heen i Y alwost s coatly aw If they Tud beon tho bost Lungs, Bota Thwdoh, Tl workmen In the world. It Is natural enough® roathing, Palpitation of thnt the half {dlers who have been tewmpted into the Hoart, Hysterios, Culifornia by high wages should resent the com- Croup, Diphtherin, Catarrh, fngof a new class which bids tairto beut them wholly out of the ficld, To compete with them by falr means would have been unploasant. Bomae meusures, however, iave had to be tried, ainco far rivalry was out of thequestion. The rowdy Influonza, Hoasdache, Toothnchs, Nouralgis, Bhoumstism, Cold Ohills, Aguo Chills, Ohlliblainy, and Froct Bites, Tho_applfeation of tho Teady Tellef to tha partor f‘“m" in (‘muon,h, forciguers mnd '{1“"[“1: oo, partawiicrs tho paln or digicaliy exinia Wil aiford cue have found mieans wore reudy to thelr bands ' e balt atumbler of water will, nud petter adapted for easy use. They haye lel:'fil‘l‘lnte.‘?”cn‘.‘@: énmm'.' l‘-lnl,n ;flr“bmm# % mobbed the Clilnese {mmigrants, stoned taem H’f::""':'"“""" :*.(‘gkn‘;g,l'}:t:‘;fll"lllflmmz-‘llgimlcq. Colt inthe streets. and treated them with a per- b carry a hottle of RADYY, sonal brutality ,such as no other clyilizod nm&‘t‘fir‘"flffl?fi‘i‘ it Ehem, '.\‘n@:hfu'é-m%u’r\m Toveot Bicknres Or p3ina from chinngo of watcr. It ls o thAR French Drandy or Bieierd s & st EEVER and AGUE. rand Aguo cured for afty cents. Thern fs not 1 wmmunlt{ aver openly peritted, The law In Callfornia has been on thie side of the ofonders, and bias_further alded them by an uncqualed system of taxation, 80 contrivod expressly as to a1l most bordly ugon the Chinase, and worse in ita cxecution than fn Its design. But all has been fn yoln, The Olinese have thriven and fu- thia world that will cure fever an. creased in numbers In apite of all discourage- | Seinedint aene in the world st d Tents. Their treatment i California moy bo | ellow. nd Othor fesers, (aited i'&“:h:fi'c"y’-'.‘f‘fi»% Lad, but it i3 ot Ieast as wood na they can mfuu- jajck ds tadway's Ieady Reliof, ¥fty cents per bottle, H0Id by Druggists. : Iate uponin Chinu, aud It 18 compensated by. wwu!,wllow, Indecd, accorditg to o Cullforniun standurd, but nur&ru&sluz anything tho most. Imagluative Chinaman could” have cted nt home, npd with n margin of oxeess far too large to dlsappear under the re- ductlons to which it has boeh subjected. ' The Chinese, it {8 declared on good aytbority, are not only better than tbenegroes, who have been thoughi descrving of tho franchlse, but are bot= ter, too, In overy way than the majority which lna been most hostile to thom, and which, apart from ts new-found zeal for murullt(. [} transpnrent rensons of jts own for wishing to et rid of them, ‘\Ye will pronounce no opinloa of our own on the wholy merita of a cas which 18 atll) hefore tho Judgea. 1t Is Hkely that a colony of Oricu- als, planted s outcasts n mltrnufiu countr) and cut off {rom houe restratluts and from afl famlty tles,"slioull be for fromn blameless in their “porsunal Labits, But it is aven mnore cer- tafu that they are very useful, and most certain of all that tae ottery agalust thomn has been embittered far wmiore by thelr obnox- fous virtues than by thelr rcal or sunposed vices. The report of the Committee, favorablo or unfavorable, will appear, wo presume, In duo DR. RADWAY'S REGULATING PILLY Rarrectly htelons, Slegunily conted, L myca: AL s T A ptrcngten. e cayia it 1urh?ucuké SE°R alaorders it the sl acil, ' Livor, Tlawaln, K tinoys, Dindder, Nervous T Llythomuis Bilotsitu. v, wtlon b tha owelt, TS, & i Tiligus Fover, Tntia matlon 4 tho Internal Vi curn, Purely v eral, nsdnluldfln(xl drugs, b= Qigerva tis folGwin symptoma resdittor troa Dlsorders of tho Higestive Grgaus : Lonatipatlt Inwand Plies, Fullness of the Dioodin piolisadearidiip ity Licm 7 gt o dou ity of tha Bivinach, ood, Fullness of. Welght in ruptions, Blnkini ot Flutterinis in the Pltof the tomach, Bwimming of tha Liead, Hurried aud Dlilicaiy irestuing, ¥lutterhiusat tha ledet, Cliokingor buloy enting bertatlon what 10 0 $ytug Posgure. Dlmrcaot nty Fover and Duil coursc. The [uterval of suspenso is not intoler- | Yiston, Dutaor Welsbefara thy e bal able. It is intorcatiug, widlo it Justs, to askc | TRRIGAIGchl, Doteloncy of Demplation, Yiior how wo ourscives shiould behave wuder an ins | Linbe, and Sudden Musnes of Host, BSurniag it the fliction of tho kind from which Californis hns | ¥iesh, A fow dotes of HADWAY'S ) torm from all of ¢h centa perbux, L8 wiil free the s been sultering disorders. Price,25 Ing that the Chinese, ula, ahould flud u refl and whether we should bo will- if expolled from Califor- uge on our mory distant, ond, it xnn{ be, wore hoapitable, shores e could fnd plenty of work for them when thoy arrived, Laborers who would never “atrike,'" domestic scrvanta wha wonld do just ‘what they were told, and wha would never give 3 month's warning, would bo a novel experlence for us, and we should not bo sorry to ive it a trial. It would be strange enough to ud oursclyes served by dumb mcolals whom we shiould sigual to thelr dally task, or ad- dress with phrascs which we should kuow wero not hall understood and were very likely to be wholly misluterprated. Thers {s but little sympatny even now between employors and employed, between the dining-room “and the scrvants’ hall. How would it be when the lower ranks wers ‘made up of belngs whom wa conld scarcely recogulze us human, whose thoughts, and " feclings, sud . interests would bo ohsofutely distinct from onr own, and into the bove named old by Druggists. Ovarian Tumor Of Ten Years' Growth Qurod by IR, RADWAY'S REMEDIES Ihave bad an Ovarian Tuwor iu tho Ovarles wad Bowols for Tea Ypar. secrets of whosa inaer life wa could noyer ob- —pm. That T bven "l gloias) T GiTorent | o ASror, e 3 T i Maban classcs of English socjetyaro uven now (u mauy 1Tiave lind so Ovarlsn Tutmur in the Oraricsand Boxs poluts & puzzly to ons suather, s beut pbyaiciane of 1Bl e —e jonger; A LVE . . ‘Who sald Love's but » little part of life, T'0 relgn & untlm‘ hour, then rightly yield Tte regal sweotness in some nobler strlfe? Homo hot race but 10 galn a wicker shiatd Emblazoncd, on the gory batile field, With (ivin; harvest resped fn blood and teare} Or, in the busy marts of commerco, wield ‘A powar proportioned to the sylo of plers nuu'x uptostaud'mid frequent Aovds ot ** panla*® eare. led them, * : Tteso o boxesol n‘;‘n’i“é{.’x‘fl‘fihfuf Jw’:’li‘t‘.‘ {ieg s e ot boistex o (s Hesdlyenius 4 o8 of 11! Plila, ll/:[fll they Yero ko oan 811 40 Bse $be miedicins uoy) ¥ was sure that T Ehircly Curch, b book tho bicite; about 918 E”{‘»\'\'l&?i‘u‘.’&'.".‘/fixéfl“.‘.aflifi.' P R X itles le] and six bflxanlfill. Plile i ‘ c| fect) I, 11 of gratitvde e w'Jfi:‘f‘;'nfiffinfu'fi?n\-ffi'f{fl':al- et ue": i "E:Mm' When Love's prononnced the blessed thing, I ey e oA LI ey Ve s BIock o8 A bieuisf Ny prayer is thas )t sy b Tu voften down the grievous Tin, iy u"“ 'hax besa t o n our aging brows; to cure the (Bldnec vgo gfllfullflul‘l rankle In our hoari of care - 1 n& MRS. E. C, DIDBINS id bare, — 3 ¥or Love's trao sytapathios our lives do sharet reon for whatn | roquested you 1o seud. mediflad (8 + ~ Home of you latizh 1 macking by a8 she turtit 5' o 'fi;fig;‘ofi' ,“;'_'.3 mutabersy My beartaid Lary fesl, knowing Love is fairt Gy ey (UACSF Attt WEorTact witonts oo delight Ly dotug Lav wii= | {uaitacdiion; lgdeds B LRRCH We must not daubl whal Love's suie promlacs ‘Drugglss and Chemist, Aun'Ar tes fulgil, This mag certity that Mrs. Bidhina, who makes - - particy it Bl S s u ind on Lhon v 0 luloyal e dignity of Love, Jadentabhy orroct, - Ay oie ShoEatuan. The priso will not be found, though fondly BENJ. . COCRER, Butt WEHE upon bigh sauntalas, far ibove (ALY OYEND, U3, here 16 prer ate, slthouh the dove ¥4t Tlub] Ts gler lrald: aithoughtha soni e more aweat ¢ In midgight-shaded grove, e Dxnlghlllu BUilf may we woll aspice, yet r.-m!m;. Ou fulreal beights,” thiv sacred joy—made “rsometime * weett Cuicayo, 4877 ‘Fou Ozonga La Moris, e — FATH, Upon the blue wavos of Lho peacelul yea, Walklug with graclons micaaad with e treed, i i o F tory vt oo T Faye 0 rou ad: Uit ke Lioras voloo sa1d, b gontiest tovky DR. RADWAY'S Sarsaparillian Resolvel, TH, GRRAT BLOUD PURIFER, Wor the Cure of all Chronle Disesses, imhlll '" itle, Moreditary or Contegloss, bo or T Pelyr, whAL {oaraat 1bo) HBAr DOI—1is (1" AledIa tueLines O slamich, SHiCH ' Come, then, to meet 1 Then St. Petor rose, Hollds and Vitiatiag the Plulde As did Be alwiys at bls Lord's command; el But, when bio foucked Lhe waves, bis beart grow | | Chrosio Rbwumatiam, Sovafula, Ganduiss BREhid WEaAT By crisd, S0 reach to me T w | Compisfats: Bicedtug of tos. Lunus, Dyspeosise WeIEE . y hand . Tio Dolosens. White 61 U Then out waa stretched the gracious haud of Gud— | Biia o Diseased, Mo mfi_‘um»‘ oot Al doubt forever vautshed ot the touch: Comniatou out, Dy i st iiein e If we will call Thee when we necd Thing afd, chiia, Contuinpilos s ff;‘-ml;.g'l&- Lvet ¥or the least of s Thou Wilk do &y much, plaiacy ete. Phiich , Dear Lord, 1t Thou should'st come yato this heart, Aud 1 not know Theu and would co b f iy l'i'::}::; s aad would pass Thew by, DR, RADWAY & (}0., R Wal‘l‘flll-fl-, N ToThy paor servaut—Whisor, 1t ia 11" Aud lz 2p08 tho l‘ionl‘)grléllh u{ Lfe, S Lao lThuu.'il‘:.:L:l m::a ‘":x: ear shdild- B Read “¥anlso and True” piay Thee do as Thou didat ycars sja nd one lettcr-atymp to RADWAY & €O To kood B, Peturwreach 10 we Toy Hand. S By 3 Toy l Wiigon. fin‘fl?&‘fll?fi!"‘.’t iirmanion werts Only Pain Remedy Mrs. ilbing, who makes the above certidcate, latbe

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