hour of climbing and lifting and pulling, I felt like hastening home s o as t a be there when the millennium set in. Take a good stout run every day. I find in that habit, which I have kept up since at eighteen years I read the aforesaid Todd’s Manual, more recuperation than in anything else. Those s i x men of Ohio will need all possible The ancients know how t o cheal. 0 Tolls of tho ~ ~ t f ; ~ l l r nerve, and all possible eyesight, and all Tlmt Yawn for t h o Youtlr of ous possible muscular development before ruins of Herculaneu Land. they get through the terriflc struggle of this Me. Take care of Your robber8 are convicted on a ma es the flood of novvote of the cornmunit diences a t t h e elettes, ninety-nine out of a hundred beAcademy of Music, .littling to every one t h a t opens them Two thousand patents have b Dr. Talmage meets Here come depraved newspapers, sub. many hundreds of merging good and elevated Americar ken out in this country on the manw young men, from journalism. Ifere Comes a whole perdiCacturs of paper alone. different parts of tion of printed abomination, dumped the union, and rep- on the bi~ealrfasttable, and tea table resenting. almost and parlor table, Take at least om every calling and good newspaper, with able editorial and profession in life. reporters’ columns mostIy occupied with To them he SPeCial- helpful intelligence, announcing mar17 addressed his discourse this after- riages and deaths and reformatory and noon, the subject being, “Words with religious assemblages, and charities bestowed, and the doings of good people, Young Men.” and giving but little place to nasty di. “’Fayette, 0. Reverend unders~gned,being earnest readers of vorce cases, and stories of crime, which, Liliuokalani has a your sermons, especially request t h a t like cobras, sting those that touch them. walk in, but still desi you use as a subject for some one Of Oh, for more newspapers that put virShe should be given Your future sermons, ‘Advice to Young tue in what i s called great primer type, Men.’ Yours respectfully, W. S. Millott, a n d vice in nonpareil or agate! You all seen the photographer’s negaF” 0. Millott, J. L, &herwood,’Charles have tive. He took a picture from it ten or T. Rubert, M. E. Elder. S. J. Altman.” twenty years ago. You ask him now for Those six young men, I suppose, rep- a picture from that same negative. He reaent innumerable young men who are opens the great chest containing the about undertaking the battles of life, black negatives of 1885 or 1875, and he and who have more interrogation points reproduces the picture. Young men, in their mind than a n y printer’s case your memory Is made up of the negaever contained, o r printer’s Angers ever tives of a n immortal photography. All set UP. But few people who have ar goes into your passed Afty years of age a r e capqble of soul to make res f o r the future. giving advice to young men. Too many You will have you till the Judgbegin their counsel by forgetting they ment Day the negatives of all the bad ever were young men themselves. No- pictures you have ever looked at, and of vember m o w s do not understand May- all the debauched scenes you have read time blossom week The East wind about. Show me the newspapers you never did understand the South wind. take and the books you read, and I will Autumnal golden-rod makes a poor fist tell you what are your prospects for at lecturing about early violets. Gen- well-being in this life, and what will be erally, after a man has rheumatism in your residence a million years after the his right foot, he i s not competent to star on which we now live shall have dfscuss juvenile elasticity. Not one dropped out of the constellation. I man out of a hundred can enlist and never travel on Sunday unless it be a keep the attention of the young after case of necessity or mercy, But last there i s a bald spot on the cranium. I autumn I was in India in a city plague attended a large meeting in Phfladely the hundreds the people phia, assembled to discuss how the were down with fearful illness. We marshes. young Men’s C h r i s t ~ a nassociation of went to the apothecary’s to get some that city might be made more attrac- preventive of the fever, and the place tive for Young people, when a man was crowded with invalids, and we had arose and made some suggestions with no confidence in the preventive we pursuch lugubrio$s tone o f voice, and a chased from the Hindoos. The mail manner t h a t seemed to deplore that train was to s t a r t Sabbath evening. I everything was going to ruin, when a n said, “Frank, I think the Lord will exold friend of mine, at seventy-five years cuse us if we get out ofathisplace with as young In feeling as anyone at twen- the first train;” and we took it, not ty, arose a n d said: “That good brother comfortable till we were has a scheme to beat the who has just addressed you will excuse feeling quite of miles away. I felt we were cheapness and durability, me for saying t h a t a young man would hundreds in Aying from the plague. Well, no sooner go and spend a n evening right the air in many of our cities is struck among such funereal tones of voice and Counterfeit I-cent pieces are In cirthrough with a Worse plague-the culation in New Yorlr. NOW, then, funereal ideas of religion which that plague of corrupt and damnable Xiteraseems to have adopted, than he brother Get away from it as soon as poscount~rfeitinghas got do would go and spend the evening in Lau- ture. sible. It has already ruined the bodwhere it is likely to affec rel E1511 Cemetery.” And yet these ies, minds and souls of a multitude young men of Ohio, and all young men, which, if stood in solid column, would have a right to a s k those who have had reach from New Pork battery to Golden is possible for people to repent of di- inany opportunities of studying this Horn, Theplapue! The plague! , vorce as well as ~ a r r i a g e ,and now world and the next world, to give helpWord the next: As soon as you can, W swgestfons as to what theories of life one ought to adopt, and what dan- by industry and economy, have a home do I mean by tl gers he ought to shun. Attention, y men! ~ o t w ~ t h s t a n d i nfugitive g rumors to First: Get your soul right. You the contrary there is great unanimity that i s the most valuable part of you. in the belief that J. Wilkes Booth is It is the m o ~ important t room in your preparation and the partaking thereof. &ill dead enough for a11 practical pur- house. It i s the parlor of your entire na- Mark YOU,I would like you to have a ture. P u t the best pictures on its walls, home with t t i r t y rooms, all upholsterPut the best music under its arches. ed, pictured and statuette^, but I a m pptting it down at the minimum. A ne of the attractions of the next I t is important to have the kitchen husband and wife who cannot be hapright, and the dining room right, and Paris exposition will be a hole in tho the cellar right, and all other rooms py with a home made up of two rooms would not be happy in heaven if they ground a mile deep. One price of adgot there. He who wins, and keeps the the guests who it. Shut its doors af‘fection of a good, practical woman In the faces of those who would de- has done gloriously. What do I mean woman? 1 mean one who d8‘thatQueenjLil twangs the spoil and pollute it. There are princes by a good God before she loved you. W h a t ango, If that is so it changes the snd kings who would like to come into loved cal I do I mean by a p r a ~ ~ ~ woman? whole aspect of affairs and the justice it, while there a r e assassins who would mean one who can help you to earn a its curlike to come out Prom behind of her s e n t e ~ c ecan no longer be ques- tains, and with‘ silent foot attempt the living, for a time comes in almost life when he is Aung of urderous, Let the ewxy ~man’s i ~ ~ o r t uand n e , you do not want e is now at the door. hard ~ i n ~around the house oloael Corbett gives it out cold that Let me be t h e usher to a n n o ~ n his ~ e ar- a w e a ~ ~ going h ~ n i nand ~ s n i ~ i n gabout how she can be lindclied out only by a chance rival, and in~roducethe King o f this w had it ~ e ~ o you r e ~ ~ r r i eher. d The , world; the Icing of all w o r l ~ s the w and Colonel Fitzsi simple reason why t l i o u ~ a n d sof rnen l y sort of a blow :tern%& i ~ ~ O r t a 1 ,jnvisible. that that is ~ r e c i s ~the room. Stand back. CIear the way. Bow, never get on In‘ the world is because e is now giving out. s never got ‘kneel, w o r s h ~ pthe King. I-fave him they married n o n e n t ~ t ~ eand u r and it does not Dvbr ft, The only thing that Job’s wife snce for ~ ~ guest, ork dime museum ~ a a a g e r make much d i ~ ~ e r e n cwho e co~es to China a most Iiberal of- goes, Wou1d YOU have a warrant t museum man’s che ** your knees every day The ~ u r o p e a n ati ions which let apan alone while she was doing her right. “‘How a r e YOU I meet a friend of m is over seventy, an1 ghting would create a favorable impression by continuing the policy re- and very prominent in t a n ~ w e is, r “I a m living on the c To members of literary societies: love, uni n search of q~otations~about selfishness, the ideal life, purity, etc,, The daughter of President F France writes poetry. This probably o plains, though it does not justify, tho latest anarchist plot to assassinate the resident. Are ths sins of the children t o be visited upon the fathers? ! The Prince of Wales has reconsi red the idea of coming over to Newort th’is summer. If he doesn’t come o will miss the treat of seeing a rare John Willres Booth, according to reports, has been seen a t different times 3n Europe, Asia, Africa, the islands of the sea and South America. In order to convince a common sense public, how- nator Carey of Wyomi t republican national convention Id be held in ‘ra quiet western n, away from the hurly-burly and ment of the great cities,” and it o paper cruelly remarks that St, oad Chapel he complained to the peo- every crime in the catalogue except d r u n l ~ e n n e ~ s when : ~ ’ his wife arose in the back part of the church and said: “‘John, you know you were drunk last night.” Then Wesley exclaimed, “‘Thank there a r e hundreds God, the catalogue is complete.,’ When good people who ar a man marries, he marries for heaven suits o f early sins. or hell, and i t is more so when a woman gives one a new heart, but not a new marries, You six young men in Faybody. David, the ~ s a i m i s t ,had to cry ette, O., had better look out. Out, “Remember not the sins of my Word the next: +10 not postpone too youth.” Let a young man make his body a wine-closet, or a rum jug, or a long doing somethi y you The greatest whisky cask ,or a beer barrel, a n d ~ ~ u m a n i tand before forty smoke poisoned C~garetteS until his things have been hand trembles, and he is black under years of age. PascaQ at sixteen years of age; Grotius at seventeen; Romulus the eyes, a n d his cheeks at twenty; Pitt at then at some church seek Aeld at twenty-f ligion; yet, all the prayin ; Loyola at thirwill not hinder the physical cons+ t ~ i e ~ t y - s e v e nIgnatirus luences of natural law fractured. YOU ty; Raphael at thir+ty-seven,had made six young men of Ohio, and all the the world feel their virtue or their vice, young rnen, take care o f your eyes, and the biggest strokes you will probthose windows of the soul. Take ‘care ably make for the t r u t h or against the 3f your ears, and listen to nothing +that truth will be before you reach the m e lepravcs. Take Care Of Your lips, and rirlian of life. Do not wait for some-. 3ee t h a t they utter no profanities. ‘“Ji’alre thing t o turn up. Go t o work and turn :are of your nerves by enough sleep and It up. There i s no ‘such thing as good %voidingunhealthy excltements, amd by luclr. No man that ,ever lived has bad taking out-door eXerclSe, whether by EL better time than I ‘have had; yet I ball, or skate, or by horseback, lawn- ncver had any good ’luck. But instead has e crowned :en&, o r exhilarating bicycle, if you thereof, a kind P r o v i a ~ n ~ 3it upright and do not join t h a t throng m y life with mercies. Y o u wig1 ;Ilever of several hundred thousands who ’by accomplish much as long as you :go a%, eel a r e cultivating crooked your work on the minute you 82re exnd cramped chests, and aeform- pected, and stop ‘at ’the first miinUte it s,rapidly coming down toward is lawful to (quit. The ‘grea’tly usefull f ‘next centmry all-fours, and the atti’ixde of the ‘beasts and successfu’l men ~ d &he that perish. Anything tha‘t ‘bends ’body, will be those who ‘began half a n hour mind or soul to the earth fs unhealthy. before they were ‘required, and worked Oh, it is a grand thing Yo ’be well, but do a t least half a n houriafter they might not depend on pharmacy and the cloc- h a w quit, Unless .you a r e willing sometors to make you wefl. ‘Stay*weI1.Bead times to Work tWdlVe~hoursof the day, you will remain on ithe low levels, an8 John Todd’s Manual, anti your life will be ’a prdlonged humdrum. Word the next: Remember that it is similation. Where only a small part of our life t h a t we are you flnd one healthy man a r woman, to pass on ear€h. Less than your flnger nail compared with your whole body ‘is you And Afty ha’lf tiead. the life on earth when compared with 2xperience 1 can testify the next life. I suppose there a r e not Sisciple of the gymnasi time just before going to *the parallel more than half a dozen people in this bars, and pundh’lng bags, and Pulleys world a hundred years old. But a very [Iew people in any country reach eighty, tnd weights, I thought Satan was’ Word the next: Fill yourself with taking possession of society an shurch and the world, but afte in the business, or occupation, or proA R U S S I A N SHOOTING-BOX. fession you are about to choose, or have aIready chosen. Going to be a mer- 1 chant? Read up Peter Cooper. and Ab- A M ores st of! BQ1ovishsky. bot Lawrence, and James-Lenox, and The Belovishlry Palace is the William 33, Dodge, and George Peaspot in the whole of his vast e body. See how most of the merchantE at the start munched theit noonday luncheon made up of dry bread and a or Country-~lio Cost %Vila hunk o f cheese, behind a counter or i n itself is rather a large shooting-box than coed Eightcon IJundrc a storeroom, as they started in a busia n imperial dwelling, albeit that for troiti ArchPtoct’s Xclou. ness which brought them to the top of s e v e r a ~months in every year it accorninfluences which enabled them to bless modates its royal master a n d mistress, the world with millions of dollars conIt is an unpretentious building, of na A?--I HE a c c o ~ p a n y ~ n particular g secrated to hospitals, and schools, and atyle o f architecture-an obillustration shows long block with a tower at either end, churches, and private benefactions, a tasteful and con- the one bearing the imperial escutcheor where neither right hand nor left hand -- and standard, the other surmounted b j venient C v u r l L r y UL knew what the other hand did, Going to be a physician? Read up Harvey I,@ city home. The cost the golden eagle. It is built of red and to DUIIQ will not yellow brick, almost without decora. and Grosse, and Sir Adam Clarke, and exceed $1,800. This tion, and owes any beauty it possesseE .Tames Y. Simpson, the discoverer 01 chloroform as a n anaesthetic, and Lesestimate will cover to its site, buried in the midst of thc who, notwiths~andingal ancient forest. Under the window lic done by his ~ m i t ~ t o r s m a worii;- two large ponds formed by the rfvei material _ . stands one of the greatest benefactors mansni Narevka, dotted over with islands and of the centuries; and all the othex kind. swarming with wild fowl; while behind mighty physicians who have mended This design h a s stretches a piece o f cleared park, undex broken bones, and enthroned again deveniences of a cost- whose oaks stands a summer pavilion posed intellects, a n d given their lives stimate covers the e palace contains 12C to healing the long, deep gash of t h e :ost of mantel and grate, furnace estibule ;L wide stairworld’s agony. Going to be a me dry (two tubs), bath room, Btt case communicates with every story, Read up the inventors of sewi with all the latest improvement a n d the ceilings a r e frescoed with picchines, and cotton gins, and life-saving pipes, etc. The height of storie tures o f the chase. The czar’s study i e apparatus, and the men who as archi- Cellar, 6 feet 6 inches in the clear: first simply furnished throughout i n solid or sponge. Every tects, and builders, and manufacturers, story, 9 feet; second, 8 feet 6 inches. oak from the surrounding forest, covand day laborers have made a life of r h e flrst story contains: Portico, 5 feet ered with brown leather, while below thirty years In this century worth more j inches by 6 feet: vestibule, 6 feet by the oak paneling around the rooms runs than the fall one hundred years of any 3 feet. On the left o f the vestibule, a n original sort of dado of elkskin. other century. You six young men of Ohio, and all the other young men-instead of wasting your time on dry essays as to how to do great things, go to the biographical alcove of your village as they cannot possibly O r city library, and acquaint yourselves If your dealer does not with men who in the sight of earth, a n d heaven, and hell, did the great things. , we will send a sample diRemember, the greatest things are yet; to be done. If the Bible be true, or as each. Cuffs5oc. pair. State size an C had better put it, since the Bible is beyond all controversy true, the greatest battle is yet to be fought, and compared with it Saragossa, and Gettysburg, and Sedan were child’s play with toy pistols. We even know the name o f the battle, though we are not certain as to where it will be fought. I refer of other game, and the principal amus’eto Armageddon. The greatest discovs family eoneries are yet to be made. A scientist has recently discovered in the air something which will yet rival electricity. The most of things have not yet been found out. An explorer has recently k u n d in the valley of the Nile a whole fleet of ships buried ages ago where now there is no water. Only six out of the is an arbitrav word used to designate t h e 3 k h t hundred grasses have been turned into food like the potato and the toonly bow (ring) which cannot be pulled off mato. There a r e hundreds of other styles of food to be discovered. Aerial navlgation will yet be made as safe as travel on the solid earth. Cancers, and ’onsumption, and leprosies a r e to be ;ransferred from the catalogue of incurzble disease to the curable. Medical endant (stem) and men are now successfully experimentt s into the grooves firmly l o c k i n g t h & n g with modes of t r a n s f e r r i n ~diseases bow to t h e pendant, Irom weak constitutions which cannot 6 0 t h a t i t cannot b e :brow them off, to stout constitutions which are able to throw them off. Worlds like M a r s and the moon will be within hailing distance, and instpad of :onfining our knowledge to their can11s and their volcanoes, they will sigla1 all styles of intelligence to them. 30ming times will class our boasted lineteenth century wfth the dark ages, n Snder the power o f ~ o s p e ~ i z a t i othe world is going to be so improved tha$ the Sword and the musket of our time will be kept in museums as now we nches by 8 feet, is off the kitchen, but look at thumb-screws and ancient in- ‘an be put upstairs if desired, and this were t e m ~ o r a r i l ythrown ofP, together 3truments of torture. Oh, what oppor- pace used for a ~ e r v a n t ’ sroom, The with the u ~ ~ fand o where ~ ~ ~~l e ,x a n d e r tunities YOU are going to have, young lecond story has a front chamber 13 a n d the grand dukes might almost men, all the world over, under thirty. eet by 13 feet, with two other cham- III. have been mistaken for ordinary morHow thanlrful you ought to be t h a t you )erg opening off the landing, one 1 2 ~ e t a m o r p h o s i swhich they made were not born any sooner. Blessed a r e eet by 1 4 feet 6 inches; the other is tals-a :he cradles that are being rocked now. 0 feet by 13 feet, with clothes closets no secret of appreciating in its just Blessed are the students in the fresh- o each. There is a large attic store value. n a n class, Blessed those who will yet OOm over the kitchen. A N IOWA PRODIGY. 3e young men when the new century The flrst floor i s a double one of yel:omes in, In five or six years from now. Ow pine, laid on a rough board Aoor, A S i x ” ~ o ~ r - 0Boy 1~~ W h o Knows Mom Phis world was hardly fit to live in In vith one layer of Tlinn Somo Aclulte, t paper between. ;he e i ~ h t ~ e n tcentury. h I do not see ’he floors in the vestibule stairsiderable, interest i s m a n ~ f e ~int low the old folks staod it, During thia ase hall to be covered with and ~ a r q u e t r y Greston, Iowa, over the w o ~ d e r f u lpro~ineteenthcentury the world has by ‘ooring of a p ~ r o v e dpattern, The finish cl~vitiesfor learning of little Dale ~hristianizing and educational infiu- n vestibul~, ~ a r l o r ,stairpase hall qnfi ?nces been Axed up until it d ining room to be h a r ~ ~ The ~ opan~ , says the Iowa Regivell f o r temporary residence. s re~bntive ~ e m o r y .wentieth c e n t u r y ~ Ah, that will be the ry, k i t c h ~ nand bath room to be waines for 1eai.nin~ are .irne to see great sights, and do great coted three feet six inches above floor leeds. Oh, y o u n ~men, get ready for nd finished In paint, The second story e ~ t r a o r d i n a r y . I-le Arst began to deats the age o f two e s t ,o be ~ n i s h e dt h r o u ~ ~ o uint pine i n velop these ~ o w e ~ ,he rolling in of that ~ ~ ~ l i t ~and 11. The plaster is two-coat work, a years, when his father bought him a ~ r a n d e s t ,and most ~ ~ o r i o u lromn and a hard white ~ n ~ t h~e exh , set of a l ~ h a b ebloclrs. t These he ~ e a ~ n e d .hat the world has ever seen! losed walls to be plastered to the floor, rapidly and upon some of them being ; u m ~ e r smore; five auturn ~ d r a u ~ h so t c o m m ~ n lost told which blocks were n i i s s i ~ gand Ive winters more; Ave springs more, hus a v o ~ d i nthe s. The walls to be the letters upon them. ind then the cloak of time will strike heathed inside and out with build^^^ go to school last Septe he death of the old century, and taper b e t ~ ~ eoutside n sheath in^ a n d rapid a d v a n c e ~ e nwas t a source of coniirth of the new, 1 do not know iding, The roof to be good quality ~ i d e r a b l e~ o r r yto his ins~ructors.Pror it will be ;ort of a ~ e c e m b e night ~ ~ gables, e s ~ r o ~ ~ d eord cut mot~on€allowed ~ r o ~ o t In ~Q quick n suchis c e n t ~ r ylies down to die; ~ h e t h e r ~ i ~ n also ~t will be starlit o r tempestuous: , c t a ~ o n a l ,to suit the owner. The win- cession, and Anal~ysome o f the teach~t a r e to be g l a ~ e d ers went to the ~ a r e n t sand c o m p l a i n e ~ n ~ ,lows t h r o u ~ h o house w h e t h ~ rthe snows will be d r ~ ~ t i or the soft winds will breathe upon the vith best American glass and hung that he had o u t ~ t r i p p e dhis classmates vith weights and sash cord, each to be so quiclkly as to make it almost impillow of the e x p i r ~ nc~ntenarian. ~ millions will mourn its going, for urn~shedwith suitable sash fasteners. possible to grade him. Dale i s at presmany have received from it ~rindnesses Fhe doors are to have a good quality of ent read in^ the flfth reader and studyb ~history at home. H e locks horns innumerable, and they will kiss fare- )rass-faced mortise loclrs, with ~ ~ n oing almost any one in a spelling conwell the aged brow wrinkled with so o match flnlsh, Gas pipes and electric Take the first reader, i n which many viciss~tudes, Old nineteenth cen- vires to be r u n to each and every arlier studies were, and pronounce tury of weddings and burrals; of de- tpartment. This house, as the illustrao f nations born and ion shows, presents a massive and words from i t at r a ~ d o mand he will teats and v~c~ories,: iations dead; t h y pulses growing feeb- taid appearance, and is entirely devoid tell you the page and lesson where the ler now, will soon stop on t h a t thirty- bf a n y outside work t h a t will not stand word i s found, and if you should fntrol r s t night of December. But right be- .s long as the heavier work. For a home duce a strange word to entrap him he 3ide it will be the infant century, held i t a low Agure, comb~ningall the latest will know it. Mr. Stough, his father, t s modern building, this is a railroad man and his time table is ; ~ pfor baptism. Its smooth brow will ~ p r o v e ~ e nin :low with bright expectations. The annot be beaten.-Tho~as Hyland. of great interest to Dale. Early in the We a r e Indebted to Mr, Thomas Ify- morning, before his parents a r e awake, ;hen more t h a n seventeen hundred nillion inhabitants of the earth will and, architect, Detroit, Michigan, for he will be sitting up in bed deciphering pray for its prosperity. h i s design and description, and would the meaning of the intricate column of [ts reign will be for a hundred years, all your attention to a book of designs figures. Some time ago Mr. Stough tnd the most of your life I think will be mblished by him containing twenty- happened to allude to the date the pay o f its scepter. Get lve p e ~ p e c t i v eviews of modern dwell- car would arrive a month o r two in ve your heart right; n g s from $900 upwards, together with advance, and named a certain date ; your brain right; loor plans and description giving size that he flgured it would arrive. Dale rour digestion right. We will hand .nd location of rooms, interior Anish instantly denied this on the ground that iver t o you our c o m ~ e r c eour , mechan- .nd cost of building mailed to your ad- the date ~ e n t i o n e dwould be Sunday, sm, our arts and sciences, our profes- iress on receipt of 25 cents. There a r e and examination proved him right. ;ions, our pulpits, our inheritance. We wo pages in his book devoted to how Aluinlniuni f o r Wallpapor. ielieve in you. We trust you. We pray ‘ou can become possessed of a home The uses of alumin~umdo not seem ‘or you. We blew you. And though o r what you now pay in rent. to have been e ~ h a u s t e dyet. It is now )y t h e time you get into the thickest coming into use in the decoration of )f the fight for God and righteousness, Snccossful S o u t ~ o r n~ ~ r ~ o r ~ ” wallpapers, many beautiful conceptions we m a y have disappeared from earthly As illustrating what energy a n d thrift being shown in which this metal is a scenes, we will not lose our interest in your struggle. and if t h e dear Lord will ,an accomplish on a southern farm, the conspicuous figure. I n floral striped ef‘excuse us for a little whfle from the :outhern States Magazine refers to the fects the motives are printed on beauti‘Temple Service and the House of Many :ase of a family of brothers t h a t set- ful embossed grounds, which gives a Mansions, we will come out on the bat- led in AcadHa parish, Louisiana, about burnished eEect to the aluminium t h a t tlements of jasper, and cheer you, a n 8 iix years agoI with only a few hundred is very desirable. An effective arrangeperhaps if t h a t night of this world be lollars. They are now worth $100,000, ment of daisies and fern leaves around may hear our voices Chey have on hand from this season’s the metal line i s said to make a choice very quiet, TOI iarvesting 10,000 barrels o f rice, which decoration for parlor or bedroom. The hey say has cost them less than $10,000 use of aluminium with colors, with o r o produce, counting expenses of every without the addition of gold, is spoken ’have *aCTown!” of as m o t h e r special feature of this new class of papers. I ‘ 3neform Is Noodod. ir Isaac Pitman is still earnest tn his ire for a “reformed” English orthography. This is the kind of spellingculle8 Yrom ‘his recent views on the subject-he would like to see univers ly adopted: *‘Idu not no wun profess ov ‘Iangdvej, etimoloji, or Aloloji, i n aul Great Britain, I the United Stat . I *....J.--- Sounds i n tho € ~ u ~ a Voice n One’s surprise in the fact t h a t no two persons’ voices are perfectly alike ceases when one is informed by a n authority t h a t , though there a r e only nine perfect tones to the human voice, there a r e the astonishing numbex8 of ;rowers. There are 700,000,000 apple 17,~92,11~,044,415 different sounds. Of Tees, 2,000,000 grape vines, 700,000 plum these, fourteen direct muscles produce rees, besides many thousand 16,332, a n d thirteen indirect muscles pro,na chem,y trees. auce 173,141,823. i
© Copyright 2024