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, - ... - -.r. - - f i x '"A. IP AK AV, A Family Newspaper, Devoted to Home Interests, Politics, Agriculture, Science, Art, Poetry, Etc. X! -J 1 : WELLINGTON, OHIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1879. ' ? NUMBER 29. i VOLUME .Xll. ... . . . , . - .r w.-.l -j-,i.- i - I. 1' 11 r. V 1; PUBLISHED. EVERY THURSDAY, J - W. UOUGHTON. TERMS or BDB8CBIFTION: Orve oopy, one ymr. , . m On otn.y, ix nontka. 73 One oopy, three months .V) If ot paid within the jrmx- 20) BUSINESS CARDS. ATTORNEYS., J. II. DICKSON, ATTORSEY-AT LAW, Wellington, O. Offlr,.in Bank Building, 2d Boor. V W. b HERRI CK, ATTORNEY an.l Counsellor at Lw. Benodict's block. d floor, Welliogtoo. m. 6. JOHNSON- L. MCLZAK. JOHNSON McLEAN. ATTORNEYS anl Connlloia at Law, ' ElyrU. O; Office No. i Uaawy Block. NOTARY rUBHC J. W. HOUGH rox, NOTARY PUBLIC. Office ia HouKh ton't'Diug Stnrr, East Side Public Sqoare. ARTHUR W. NICHOLS, NOTARY PUBLIC. Loam aad CrlketioB -Arot. Basiaree rotraated to wy cre . will iwmt prompt attrntioo. With Joha mk McLeaa.No. S Uiaar'a Block, Elyria. . PHYSICIANS. y-t ) V bIC J. RUST, HOKOOPATHIST. "Hesidmce and of. r fice, West Side Public Square. JH DR. R HATHAWAY, TTOMOBOPATHIC Phyaician and Sur- M " (eon. - Office, at residence, west aide Xally Street, Wellington, Ohio. I ; - jTLOUR, EEEU. ETC. .. y;-,' .,r;', H. B. HAMLIN, ' Dealer ia Floor, Feed, Grain, 8eeda, Salt, Etc, Eto. -WaMiooae, West Side Railroad Street. Wellington, Ohio. I 0 iH f i BARBER 8HOP. II TOT W&NT a first-clans Bhare, Hair ' Cat, or Shampoo, call at Robinson's O. K.ShaTiog Saloon, Liberty Street. A full sinlniiat T Hair Oils, Poawdes and Hair Sssterabrea. Wc also keep the best brand ml Bason, and warrant them. - Rasars booed or ground to order. E. T. ROBINSON. PLANING MILC. TIi ELLINGTON PLANING MILL. r-- JJ -" Manufacturer aad dealer ia Sash, Soors,BlnidB, Brackets,. Baitings,' Lnmber, ghiaslea. Lath, Cbeeae and Batter Uoiea. Scrou Sawing, Matehing and Planing done to older." JTX L. Wadswortb, Prop. - Office, wsariailread depat. ( .- - LUMBER YARD.' J H. WADS WORTH 8ON, Dealers in Lnmber, Lath, Shinylea, Doors, Sash. Blinds, Moulding, and Dressed Lasaber of all sorts. Yard near Hamlin's Feed Store, Wellington, Ohio. JEWELER. J. H, WIGHT, TXEALER IN Clocks. Watches, Jewelry, 3J SilTerwaie, Gold Pens, etc. aarShop m Houghton s Drug State. TAILORS. . B. S. HOIXEXBACH, , M ERCHANT JAILOR, in Union Block. Boom - .- X8-U. .BANK. UL -it c T7IBST NATIONAL BANK. WelUi.cton aJP- Ohio.' . Does a general banking -boai-nms Bays and sells N. Y. Ezchane, Got. ernmeat oods, etc. 8. S. Warcer, Preai- . went, R. A. Horr, Caabier. ' FHOTOGRArHES. ; j r : W.T. SAWTEU. r THOTOGRAPHER.'. Gallery ia Arnold's Ja. tiiock. Welliogtoe, UMO. r '. " . i'fi PRINTING. ' V. Ja - ....... BRIN&.YOUR PRINTING to the Eo terpria Office. All kinds of printinj wane neatly aad pronitly. Ufflea West Side . Public 8qaarr, OTer Houghton's Drug Store. wELis, . . ! OADDLER ANDHARNRES4 MAKER. O The best workmen employed, and enly - the bast stock .usrd. All work done under jmj immediate Mperviaion. North side Me- aaaau street. :- . . 11-16-ly X f BOOTS AND SHOES. - . - - . W. H. ASHFORD, . -' MANUFACTURER and Dealer in Boots and Sboia and all kinds ol nrt class custom work. AH work and materials fr-lly warranted.'' Shop, sooth vide Liberty Street, oae door east l Ottrrbacker's Harness Shop, Wellington, Ohio. " 11-9 ly . INSURANCE AGENT. t B. N.GOODWIN, .fTtHX INSURANCE AGENT, will be L found at hia office in Hasted Bros.-' Boot and , Shoe Store, where he will be -ilad to aee hia obi cuatomeis needing ' . - v : c 1 : - aa J miff a, 11 Mm un minaini vuuiMBirt . isunaantnd aad tales reasonable. Los tea promplty adjusted and paid at hia agetcy, HEAT MARKET. . O. FULLER. D EALER IN Freah and Salt Meat-, Bo logna and for sausage. nurneat : mm in eink naid Or Beeves. Sheen. Hants. Hides. An. Market, south aula Lib erty Street, one door west of Otter backer's ' Harness 8bop. U--ly LIVERY STABLE. tm cushion & son, T IVERY AND SALE STABLE. Choice S-J turnouts furnished, and charges ran aonable. South aide Mechanic street, one . door aaat of American House. 11-15-ly CC AL YARD. H. McKMNKT ' - pvEALER IN BLOSSBURG GOAL, - the B ' nneas article Known tor blaekmiitb - ins?. Mulw mbiM-iti. renuirins iM.M.n,- ' ty done, and am tiaf actio guaranteed. South suit Mechanic street.' . 11-15-ly arayaeae taa baa that la spar Ua anakiac" Waaa eiaetsi aaulaa that h tallf-hlawa rn War a taa vatsa at aakolaa Wa aoaa tka lm that la brokaa witk partia UitltmmU Blskaraata MlMaa! sata? Way la an lamiiilm mWo Manias Claaa ea aaalauaa at aaii attalat WayT Vara Eat with this aaataatthatishlddaaaa4aoly nttMmtlti waarsaetaaatsat. (Saadar Afternoon. A MOTHER'S DAEISO. The great golden eagle, tha pride and fear of the parish, swooped down and away with something in his talor a. One single, sndden female shriek and then snows anu oni-crica, uui uiuivu apirv had tumbled down on a congregation at sacrament. "Hannah Lamond's barin! Hannah Lamond's bairn !" was the loud fast-spread-inarcrr. "The rarle's taen aff Hannah Lamond's bairn!" and many hundred feet were in another instant hurrying to ward the mountain. . Two miles of hill and dale, and copes and single, and many intersecting brooks lay between; but in an incredible short time the foot of the mountain was al ire with people. The eyrie was well known, and both old birds were risible on the rock edge. But who shall arale that diz zy cliff, which Mark Stuart, the sailor, who had been at the storming of many a fort once attempted in Tain f All kept gaz ing, or weeping, or wringing of hands rooted to the ground, or running; back and forward like so many ants essaying their new wings in discomfiture. "What's the use what's the use 'o any puir human means? We hare nae power but in prayer r And many knelt down fathers and mothers thinking ot their own babies as if they would force the deaf heavens to bear. Hannah Lomond had all this while been sitting on a stone with a face perfectly white, and eyes like those of a mad person fixed on the eyrie. Nobody noticed: her; for stiong as all sympathies with her had been at the swoop of the eagle, they were now swallowed up in the agony of eye sight. "Only last Sabbath was my sweet wee wean baptised in the name of the Father, and the Son and the Holy Ghost!" And on utterine these words, she flew off through the brakes and over the huge stones, up up up taster tnan ever huntsman ran to the death fearless as a swat Dlarine amoor the precipices. No one doubted- no one could doubt that she wouW soon be dashed to pieces. But hare not people who walk in their sleep, obedient to the mysterious guidance of dreams, clomb the walls of old ruins and found footing, even in decrepitute, along the edge of unguarded battlements, and down dilapidated staircanrri, deep as draw, wells or coal-pits, and returned with open, fixed, and tmaeeing eyes, unharmed, to their beds at midnight T It is all the work of the soul, to whom the body is a slave; and shall not the aoony of a mother's pas- si a who sees her baby, whose warm mouth has just left her breast, hurried off by a demon Ut a hideous death bear her limbs aloft wherever there is dust to dust. till she reaches that devouring den, and fiercer and mora furious than anv bird or prey that ever bathed its beak In blood, throttle the fiends that, with their heavy wings, would fain flap her down the cliffs and hold up her cnua in deliverance, No stop no stay; she knew not that she drew her breath. Beneath her feet Providence fastened every root. How was she ever to decend t . That fear, then, but once crossed her heart, aa up up up to the little image made of her own flesh and blood. " The God who holds me ud now from perishing will not the same God save me when my child is at my breast f .Down came the fiercn rushing of the eagle's wings, each sage bird, dashing close to her head, so that she saw the yel low of. their wrathful eyes. All at once they quailed and were cowed. Yelling, they new off to the stump of an ash jut ting out of the cliff, a thousand feet above the cataract; and the Christian mother, falling across the eyrie, in the midst of bones and blood, clasped her child dead dead, no doubt, but unchanged and un tom, and swaddled up just as it was when snelaid it down asleep among the fresh hay in a nook of the harvest field. Oh ! what a pang of perfect blessedness trans fixed her heart from that iaint. feeble cry "It lives! it lives! it lives!" And bar ing her bosom with loud laughter, and eyes dry as stones, she felt the lips of the innocent once more murmuring at the fount of life and love. "Oh! thou arreat and thou dreadful God. whither has Thou brought me ? Oh ! save me, lest 1 pen an, even lor tny own name's sake! Oh, Thou who died to save sinners, have mercy upon me.' Cliffs, chasms, blocks of stone, and the skeletons of old trees far. far down and dwindled Into specks a thousand creatures of her own kind, stationery, or running to and fro! Wa that the sound or water fall, or the faint roar of voices ? Is that her native strath ? ana that tun or trees does it contain the hur in which stands the cradle of her child ? Never shall it be rocked by her foot! Here must she die, and when her breast i" exhausted her babby too. And those horrid beaks, and ever, and talons, and wines will return and her child will be devoured at last, even within the arms that can. protect it no more! Where, mil this while, was Hark Stuart, the sailor. Half way up the cliffs. But bis eyes naa got mm, ana nis neaa aiszy, and his heart sick : and he who had often reefed the top-gallant sail when at mid night the coming of the gale was heard afar, covered his face with his hands, and dared look no longer on the swimming nights. "And who will take care of my poor bedridden mother." thought Hannah, who, through exhaustion of so many passions. could no more retain in her grasp the hope she bad clutched in despair, a voice whispered "God." She looked round ex pecting to see a spirit; but nothing moved excent a rotten branch, that under its own weight, broke off from the crumbling rock. Her eve bvsome secret sympathy with the inanimate object watched its tail; ana it seemed to stop not lar on on a small platform. Her child bounded upon her shoulders she knew not how or when but it was safe and scarcely daring to open ner eyes sne alia down tnC snetving rocks and found herself on a small piece of firm root-bound soil, with the tops of ousnes appearing Delow. With fingers suddenly strengthened into the power of iron, she swung herself down bv Drier and broom, and heather, and dwarf-birch. Here a loosened stone leapt over a hedge, and no sound was heard, so proiouna was it tail, mere, the shingle rattled down the screes, and she hesitated not to follow. Her feet bounded against the huge stone that stopped them; but she felt no pain. - Her body was callous as the cliff. Steep as the wall of a house was now the side of the DreciDice. But it was matted with ivy, centuries old long ago dead, and without a single green leaf but with thousands of arm-thick steins petrified into the rock, and covering it as with a trellis. She felt her baby on her neck, and withBhands and feet clung to that leanui ladder. Turning round her head and looking down, she saw the whole population of the nariah so (treat was the multitude on their knees. She heard the voice of psalms a hymn breathing the spirit of one united prayer. Sad and solemn was the strain- aaaaauaaa asaatlaBat loasuc LI11 SiisirtdawamtaaeHMaeBtaaaaart; ata taaaraiaalhlta taioaalas. ay that aa taa kaivlmi start. tins alia sai tailas lit isa fil'i T -'"T Oaiy aa tar aa Ma ansttacte ara aaat; but nothing dirge-like sounding not of death but or deliverance. - - There had been trouble and agitation, much Bobbin?, and many tears, among the multitude, while the mother was scaling the cliffs sublime was the "shout that echoed afar the moment she reached the eyrie never reached neiore - in tne mem ory of man by human foot then had suc ceeded a sileooe deep as death, in a little while arose that hymning prayer, suc ceeded by mute supplication ; the witness of thankful and congratulatory joy had next iteflsway; and now that her salvation was sure, the great crowd rustled like a wind swept wood. " Fall back and give her fresh air," said the old minister of the parish ; and the ring of close faces widened round her lying as in death Gie me the' bonnv bit bairn into my arms." cried first one and then another, and it waa te nderlv hande round the cir cle of kisses, many of the snood ed maid ens bathing its face in tears. "There's no single scratch a boot the puir innocent, for the eagle, you sec, maun hae struck its tal ons into the lang claes and the shawl HI in', bl in' m un they ne wno see not tne finger o God in this." Tke Wife aftae Jasllelaaa Hooker. That learned and judicious divine. Richard Hooker obtained his wife some what casually. - When he was ordained priest he went to London, according to the statutes of his college, to preach at St. Paul's Cross. He arrived there wet, weary, weather-beaten, and very angry at a friend who had persuaded him not to walk, but to take the journey on horseback, which had Droetrated him with influenza. His hostess, one Mrs. Churchman, attended to him with all care and diligence. Hooker was afraid be would not be able to preach on the following Sunday; but the good wishes and good nursing of his hoot em nerved him for his duties, and he got throueh his work admirably. The preacher was very thankful to Mrs. Churchman, who had cured him f his distemper and cold, and he thought him self bound in conscience to believe an the poor woman said. Mrs. Churchman told him he was a man of tender constitution. and that it was best for him to have a wife that might prove a nurse to him, such a one as might, both prolong his life and make it more comfortable; and such a one she could and would provide for him if ne thought fit to marry. Bo Mr Hooker,' in his guilcleHsncss em powered her to choose a wife for him, and promised to return to London at her call to receive his bride. Mrs. Churchman at once attended to this little business for Master Hooker. In look ing around to find him a wife, she thought it wise to beirin at home, and in her own daughter, Joan, according to her judg ment, she found one who would nurse the preacher, prolona: his life and make it more comfortable. In due time Mr. Hooker went to London to be joined to the wife of the choice of his hostess; but she brought to . him neither beauty nor portion: She was, sad to relate, a woman of an unruly tongue, and, instead of add ing to his comfort, she was an incessant trial to his patience. ' The moral of this is: choose yourself. Chambers Journal. Tne Haumaai Ear. In - the following plavful manner the New York Mercury eossips about the fe male ears: The human ear,' more than any other protuberance, links us with the animal kingdom. People pay little attention to the shape and dimensions of this queer organ or sound, and yet it is full of charac ter. Our female friends should look closely to the car tiefore giving themselves away, and males should study well its structure when the feminine arrangement of the hair permits them to do so.- The jackass and the hound have the largest. longest ears, in proportion to their size and weight, of all other animals of their king dom. One is hiehlr sensual, noisv and combative, and the latter quality he has transminen to tne mule, which has a natu ral antipathy to mankind in its heel, while the other is a sneak and a coward. In a human being these qualities are all com bined in persons of long, large, flapping ears. There are ears which stand out from the head like those of a pointer dog, and this arises from large or very large destoructiveness, an organ which lies just oacai 01 ano around tnem. The owner or such appendages is always on the alert for a row, and will make things lively in the domestic circle. The Sine Sing convict style of young men who have their hair cut close to their craniums enable sensible girls to investigate that kind of ear. In the female the ear tells a story of future bliss or misery in married life. Sharp eyes denote sharp tempers and a disposi tion to slaughter character. They belong to the gossips ot every ' neighborhood, small ears evince selfishness and cirotism. oval ears indicate a disposition which is neither even or uneven, and round cars a corresponding roundness, and consequent insipidity ol temperament. The hand somest and the most feminine of ears is that which is slightly and delicately curved pear-shaped and of medium size. As the curved line Is the line of beauty, that sort of beauty indicates a refined and lovely organization. Perhaps in the aftertinie wc may evolute out of all connection with the lower animals, just as the little feathered songsters in a lady's boudoir sec in to have done, whose organs of hearing arc hidden. am mines now are. it is not Drobable that the jackass entertains private and silent disdain to our ears, because they are close to the head, just as we despise him for his long appendages. A tlaale Protective aaralamt Epidean- Those who are at all afraid of enidemic disease may feel comforted on hearing mat one 01 tne uesr protective measures they can resort to is a very simple one the use of soap and water. An eminent physician says: "It is worth while for common people to MM !. UI1WI . 1. 1 1 1 . !.' uim uv,wv .jrpuiii, gvuiB will III 1 1 V e in t the circumference of a pin-bead or a visible globule. It is worth while for them to note that these germs may be Jes sica led and be borne, like thistle seeds, everywhere, and like demoniacal posses sions, may jump noiselessly down any throat.' But there are certain things spores cannot stand, according to the last ascer tained results ot science. A water temper ature of 130 degrees boils them to death and soap chemically poisons them. Here sanitary and microscopic science come to gether. Spores thrive in low ground and under low conditions of life. For redemp tion, fly to hot water and soap, ye who live in danger of malarial poisoning. Hot water is sanitary. Soap Is more sanitary. Fight typhus, small-pox, yellow fever and ague with soap. So sip is a board of health. The total value of the: leal estate, stocks. and loans comprising the residuary fund of Girard College, Philadelphia, is given in the annual report for 1878 of the board of directors of city trustee at fo.ud i,'.w. To thin should be added a leeacv of 153, left by Lawrence Todd of IllinoisThe total income of the college for the year was $745.373 ; balance on hand on Jan. 1, 1878. f 222.033 : expenditures for the year. $892,027; balance In treasury, Dec 31, 1878 $75,842. The number of orphans on the rolls is 671. Applications lor admission continue to be mucn in excess 01 ine in stitution's capacity. Comfort, Silence and Patience were the names of a brother and two sisters in a New England villaee. A gentleman called to see Comfort. His sire said: "He is not at home, but if you will sit down with Patience and wait with Silence, Comfort will come soon." Silence died, the other day, at the age or tsu. , NEW" YORK FASHIONS. t'ootasaiee. Paraaelav Kopplna A . . Frtsnaf Dmsa at Hoaue. ; COSTUMES. Moraine costumes are often devised in simple fashion a deuii tmiued skirt, with long sacque, though again we find basques with trimmed skirts quite popu lar. Favorite materials are cettoa salines and cotelines: the former so called, be cause they show a satiny finish ; the latter dcrivine the name from a rep which shows distinctly. These goods for the reason that they are so fashionable, are Mild at the rather high price of about forty-five cents per yard. Jardiniere or Pompadour foulards are gayly covered with small, bright flowers, and these com bined with silk, form dressy costumes, to be worn al summer resorts. Every thing indeed is "combined," and I should have said that the satines and cotelines just mentioned are combined with plain materials, lau most striaioK uu'wi however, are the Bandana silks and per cales, showing all the extravagant mix tures ol color characteristic of the "negro handkerchief." These of course arc too pronounced for city wear, but will be seen at Saratoga and Newport, being especially adapted to garden parties. When made up into short costumes they are extremely iauntv in effect, and to young ladies will be very becoming. The LAiiiniMB or osn vuc tuuau, no it is wine times called, is as popular now as it was last summer for a short costume. Other pretty skirts for walking costumes arc the Littia and Francesca. Nothinc would form a imirx tastfnl finish to a walkine skirt than the Hilarie jacket with vest. A middle-aged lady, Tor a heavy sua or grenadine combined with silk, might pre fer the Rosalind train with Desirce basque. PAKA80US. The Drown parasols, which lead the styles, are made with sixteen ribs. Now the effect of the sixteen ribs is much en hanced by the fact that they are gilded or bronzed, and that with a view of showing them off. the linine is Disced behind them. Tops are also novel, being very low and broad. Brocades or all kinds, pongees. striped, satin wove and Bandana silks are employed, and the latter, especially, be ing striking in effect, will be extensively used at watering places ; the more so as they are in keeping with the Bandana silks used for costumes. Of course there are quiet tones and styles of silk adapted to people of quiet taste, and for city use. The size is eighteen inches, and no orna mentation appear on the edges. The de signs in handles are as novel as the con struction of the parasol. . Light woods employed, for the handles are carved into bird's heads, among which we nnd par rote, pheasants, swans, chickens, ducks,- owls, etc Insects, also, are represented. orrr or tows mioitkrs would do well to place themselves in com munication with Stern Brothers, whose new building on Twenty-third street just off Fifth-avenue, attracts such fashionable custom. Their establishment includes everything in the dry goods Hat dress goods, costumes ready made nnd to order, r: 1 -r, - c ,, 1 - 1 unuerwear, iancy anieieo 01 aji kujus, up holsterv. laces, etc The spring catalogue prepared expressly for out of the city resi dents gives complete information with full lists of prices. A MUM A DONNA AT HOME. . Imaeine me seated in the boudoir of Mme Marie Koze, the favorite prima don na. It is rather a small aimrtnient, but fitted up prettily iu blue and crimson, while the music piled on her chosen Stein way upright piano is proof that an artist's labors are never ending. As the beautiful Marie came in to welcome nie.with gentle sinidlicity of manner, he was quite as engaging as when bclore the public. She wore a morning dress 01 oar Drown casn niere. made in princess style, and with out other trimmings than a band of bright embroidery which coming up the Ironu . extended an arounn, aooui twelve inches above the lower edge. A band to match appeared of course, on the sleeves, in which lace fills to correspond with that about the neck gave finish. Ap elegant toilette she's made plain except a plaiting on the lower edge, a long sacque and blue velvet bonnet com- pletc the outnt. Another rich driving toilette, and one which she sometimes wears to the opera when only a looker ou, is of black satin made with plain high necked basque trimmed with fine jet passementerie. The demi-lrained skirt tails In unbroKcn folds, but is handsomely trimmed with jet. IjCCT uabtek. laaiaaa Vtasaoaials. Mr. J. D. Mast, formerly an Ornish preacher, has been creatine considerable excitement in Libcity township by his actions. He came to the residence of Mr. J. D. Row one day last week, and, whip- ingout his divining-rod, asionisncu Mr. tow that there were diamonds on his farm, and finally located the exact position of them, a few feet down in a spot of ground not far from Ibis residence, and near the main road. Mr. Row failed to be convinced, and refused to dig at the spot indicated, although he gave Mr- Mast per mission to do so. Mast dug down the dis tance indicated, and shortly after showed to Mr. Row a substance which he called diamond, and claimed that it was worth $2,000. It w-as as clear as crystal, and cut glass as readilv as a diamond would. Mr. Row allowed Mast to take the alleged dia mond away for, as hrsaid, "if that is a dia mond, 1 threw up millions of dollars worth of them when 1 dug my cellar last sum mer." tie thinks it is a peculiar kind or quartz, something like the crystals round in geodes. At any rate they are so abund ant as to be not even curiosities. Besides, "Mast's diamonds" he was with his divin- ing-rod located two coal-beds in this coun ty and three in Marshall. More than that, he has located a box or treasure on a cer tain farm between this place and North Liberty, which is not to be dug for except on a certain night in next June. It is, perhaits, hardly necessary to say that there are lew who believe in ine vagaries 01 Mast and his divining-rod, while there are some who have perfect faith in them. South Uend (lnd.) Tribune. , laaeelai em aa Aoctlow Block, The following story about President Lincoln is certainly characteristic: Soon after he went to Washington he attended the Foundry church, occupying a seat within the alter while Bishop Simpson preached a missionary sermon. After the collection was taken at the close of the sermon, and as the congregation was about to be dismissed, an irrepressible brother rose and proposed to be one of a given number to raise $100 to make Presi dent Lincoln a life director of the mission ary society. The proiiosition was put, and brothers A. B. and C. responded glibly. But the inevitable pause finally came. Pa t of the monev was wantine. . When bishop announced "Who will take the ...iance?" the pause became slightly im pressive. Then the long form ol Lincoln was seen to rise, a long bony arm was ex tended imploringly, and he said, "bishop this is the first time I have ever been placed upon the auction block. Please let me pay the balance myself and take me down.', maHaiyDe Von Vrow It ? Stlisfv is often called "Oyster plant-n We wish it wasn't, for many who live far inlnnd do not like oysters, and the name prejudices these against one ot the great, est delicacies of the garden. It is indeed a choice vegetable, uut one within the reach of every one, as It requires no more care in cultivation than a parsnip. Its requirements are precisely those of the parsnip a deep, ncn sou and eariy sow- ine of fresh seed, the seed being auite uncer tain if not of the growth of the previous season. Make the rows , fifteen inches apart and sow aa soon as the soil is dry enough to work ; the seed being long and narrow is not sown readily in a machine, and it is safer to sow by hand. The root Scorzonera, or "Black Salsify." is a re lated plant, grown in the same manner and for the same uses: the root has a dark er exterior. By- sonaav the flavor .of this is preferred try both. Both are hardy, and if desired, a part of the crop may be left in the ground until spring, the winter's supply 'being stored away like other roots. Uses The roots are to be scraped and thrown into water at once else they turn black. They are cut into small pieces, stewed and served with a sauce of butter thickened with flour; they are boiled whole until soft, then dipped into butter and fried, or are mashed after boiling, made into cakes which are dipped into butter and fried. It is surprising that so excellent a vegetable should be so little known. American Agriculturalist. FEASTED WITH HIS Oil FUN. A Ksmalaa Writer reanpelled Literal ly to Bat Hia Owi Word. A recent libel suit in Moscow, in which city the author of a quarto volume was . . . 1 . . ; v subjected to a most ignominious punisn menu very forcibly reminds one of the in. estimable blessings enjoyed in a country in which the freedom of the press is a guaranteed and established right, the facts In the case referred to are as follows: In the above named city a goodly-sized book was published in vindication of the rights of the subject. The work contained stinging sarcasms aimed at the venality of the officials, with many satirical and hu morous allusions 10 DnoMiunsnu oiuer iniquities. Even the Czar himself was handled without gloves, his acts were fear lessly denounced and a powertui argu ment was adduced in behalf of the rights of his subjects. The maladministration of law was -net forth in strong, plain lan guage. The book attracted general notice, but this was bad for the author. He was ar rested and -thrown into prison. After a short and summary trial his production was Dronouced a libel, and he was con demned to "eat his own words" or sutler the punishment of the knout. This terri ble instrument of torture is in the shape of a long whip or scourge, and is com posed ot many tough thongs 01 tnica, hard skin plaited together and enterwoven with strands of stout wire. The crim minal is stripped, and is flrmlv bound to two stakes, which are sufficiently wide apart to admit the free motion of the head. The blows are laid upon the bare back every stroke cutting like a knife, and soon the victim of the scourge is a shapeless mass of blood and flesh. One hundred blows are equal to a death sentence. This was the alternative of the unhappy author. The day fixed for carrying the sentence of the court into execution arrived. A platform was erected in one of the public squares in the city. Bound hand and foot. the victim or despotic power was seated in the center of the platform. An immense concourse of people had gathered to wit ness the Btrange spectacle, ine imperial Provost, the Magistrate, the physician and surgeon of the Czar were in attendance. The obnoxious book had been seperated from its bindine. and as an act of grace the margin had been cut off- The leaves were then rolled up- not unlike cigar light ers. And there they were a basketful. Now the meal began. Amid roars of lunghter from the ignorant and degraded populace, the provost served t'te author leaf by leaf with his own production, put ting the rolls of paper, one by one, into his mouth. He slowly chewed and swal lowed one-third of his book, when the medical gentlemen concluded he had re ceived into his stomach as much of the in nutritious material as was compatible with safety- He was then reconducted to his cell to digest his meal. The two follow ing days the same scene was enacted, un til every, leaf was swallowed, and, as a matter of fact, he was compelled to literal ly eat his own words and feast on his own fun. tinea Clock Kens aa rex. ' The Asiatic gambler is the most reck less; it seems to be his second nature, ami he will not scruple to stake his wife, child ren, or, at a last venture, one of his own limbs, his life or liberty, becoming thus the slave of his antagonist. And here I am reminded of a fine point in law once extant among the ancient Hindoes and touching upon this very question. A war rior staking his last farthing on chance, .1 ,, . , - , -1 . 1 : 1. : i. 1. nnaiiy put up nis iiuervy, iusiuu; wuiuu uo bethoueht him of his beautiful wife. Luck being still against him. she was summon ed as a slave before her husband's antago. nist and escaped the life of serfdom by the adroitness of her first query: "Did my husband lose me or himself first? For if he played away himself be could not stake me." There is a story of a similar case as having occurred in an English-speaking country. It was during the plague in Eng land that a young captain of the king's bodv-cuard niedged the key ot his house against all the winnings ot his adversary and lost. The wife's honor was saved through the medium of a terrible avenger, the plague, one sot of which, having ap pcared upon her tliroat, frightened away the winner of the kev. The story is along one: there was a duel ; the husband waa the cause or all this woe, the lucky games ter was only cursed by the weird plague prophet, "to perish in everlasting lire." I r orney s progress. Xot qolte a Fool. A voune ladv was-addressed by a man who. though agreeable to her, was disliked by her father, who would not consent to thuir union, and she determined to elope. The night was fixed, the hour came, he placed the ladder to the window and in a few minutes she was in his arms. They mounted a double horse, and were soon some distance from the house. After some time the lady broke the silence by saying: "Well, you see what proof I have given you of my affection ; I hope you will make me a good nusoanu." lie was a suriy iei low. and gruffly answered: "Perhaps I may. and iierhaps not." She made no re ply, but alter a silence of some minutes she suddenly exclaimed : "Oh ! what shall wc do? I have left my money behind me in my room !" "Then," said he, "we must go back and fetch it, Tbey were soon again at the house, the ladder was again placed, the lady remounted, while the ill- natured lover remained below. But she delayed to come, and so he gently called ; 'Are yon coining r" rrnen, sne looaea out of the window and said : '-Perhaps I may. and perhaps not ; and then shut down the window and lett him to return on tbe double horse alone. BaptiatBst 1st HMwimter. A number ot journals in New Jersey and Ohio have betrayed grave anxiety of mind in respect to the hardships and penis ot baptizing in the open air in cold weather. .' In particular the enormity of baptizing persons in water that could be reached only through an opening made in the ice that covered it, ex cites very lively emotions. It does not seem to have occurred to these our brethren of the press-1 what is never- theless the authentic fact verified by many witnesses that the suffering in tbe cases referred to is all in the imagination of lookers on. It seems to have been for eotten that water under ice is warmer than the atmosphere above tbe ice. We have personally tested the point, and the near est approximation to the sensations of a warm bath in the act of baptizing, within our experience, were felt on a cold day in winter, in a baptistry formed by cutting through more than a foot of ice. The water seemed tepid. Boston Watchman. RELIGIOUS. ITS HIM WE LIVK. . O Master, la aw walk with thaa Ia lowly paths at ssrHoafiae; '-- ' - '- - TaU aas thy aacrst; help aa bear ' Tha strata ot sou. tha teat of oart; , . Ratp asa tha alow of asart to sss.s -By ansa plsar wtanlna word t towi . . -Taaah aw tha wayward fsat to atay. .' Ana uMa them to tha aaaaswara way. " O Master, let asa walk with thaa - BaeorathataaatiasPharlasai Halpatetobaartheattasof splta, Tha hate of awe who hide thy llaht. TIi lias iIIsiiimI ia? snnls sIimsts . Waonaaant raad thy jailautsata Uar. Thedallnaasa tha maltttode Who dlatly co that thoa art aood. Tsacli ata thy patleaoa; still with thaa Ia tie ttr, dearer eompeay, " In work that kaspa faith swsat aad stronc . la trust that trlaatpha over wrooc In hope that stalls a ahialae- ray Far down tha ranaraa broadanlna way, la pas oa that only thoa aaaat alva. With thaa, O Maatar, tot sa Uva. A WANDERER BETUfiHED. BT BEV. A. HAZEK, NORWICH, VT. There are times in life when the joy of an hour seems to overbalance years of toil. The servant ol uod has at times waited long, and watched carefully, lor some particular result. He has patiently borne "the burden and heat of the day,'.' he has not been "weary," for he has ex pected the reward to come in due time.. When it comes, the joy of harvest causes the long-continued labor to be forgotten. Sometimes a particular desired result has been so long delayed that the servant has ceased to expect it. He has long prayed for it, ano the answer has not come.- He may feel that his prayer has been answered in some other way. But when at last the particular request is granted, it has come to him like "life from the dead." The joy he feels, as such an abandoned hope has come to pass, is a compensation for long labor and pain, for much toil and sorrow, a is a ioreiaste 01 the joy that awaits the faithful worker, as he enters upon the eternal life, and learns that no earnest work for the Master ever fails of its accomplishment. A boy was once for a time in a mission school in Western India. He had a quick, active mind. His father was regarded as a wise man, a poet and a religious teacher among the Hindus. Under the father's instruction the boy became familiar with the tenets of the sect to whieb the father belonged, and also with the weak points of tbe Brahmans. The young man became a Christian and was received to the church. After a time he went away to another mission and was employed as an assistant. He developed much sKiii as a controversialist, anu was held in high esteem by the missionary under whose special care he was. At length he was assigned to a sphere of labor in connection with a man who proved unworthy of the name of Christian. Unknown to the supervising missionary, this man was given to drink. The native preacher could not get on with him at all. He fell into doubts, and gave up his ser vice; left all his Christian friends, and wandered off as a go tart, or religious teacher of the Hindus of his father's sect, the missionary made all effort in bis pow er to trace him, and bring him back, but in vain. No one knew whither ne naa gone. Years passed. The missionary was obliged to return home, with no expecta tion of resuming his work in India, in conseauence of impaired health. But he could not forget his former assistant and friend. Meeting a brother missionary re turning to India, one day in London, he mentioned to him the case, of this man ; and gave him messages to the wanderer, if he should ever meet nun. Aeain years passed with no word from the man. A few weeks since, the mission ary who had received the message was at tending a meeting of the church to which this man had first belonged. For the first time in many years he saw . this man among the candidates for membership. He asked to be taken back to their fellow- shin. He told in simple words the lea- sons why he had gone off. and the story of bis wanocungs. tie naa neen amicteu, and told of his sorrows. All hearts - were moved at the recital. He said that be was restful to eet back aeain to the fold. His annl I, in cm 1 to taste atrain the bodv and blood of liis Saviour. He was gladly re ceived, and now bids fair to be once more a useful man in the Master's service. "The Lord knoweth them that arc His," even thou eh thev wander far. There is in this little recital new ground iorconnuence in our work. There is a fresh assurance. that God answers prayer. In the language of Mr. Treat: "Nothing done for Christ is ever iosu" - tleir-CeojeleaMB.esM. It sometimes happens that the people who are afflicted with it mistake their own symptoms, and miscall their own state. They think themselves diffident, timid. deplore their want of self-possession even. and never dream that the trouble lies in their inability to forget themselves. "What courage you have!" said one young lady to another. "I could rot have crossed this crowded room before all these people, as you did just now, under any circumstances." "it did not require any courage," replied her friend, smiling. "It never neenrrea to me tnnt anv one wouia notice my movements." And that is the whole secret: it is but a nervous sense of our own conspicuousness which niakas us so keenly alive to the effect of our words and acts. If we reaily believe that we are unimportant if we feel that our fellow, creatures have more engrossing subjects of contemplation than ourselves wc shall hardly be likely to suffer from any dread of their criticisms. Besides self-conscious ness destroys independence of thought and action. The unfortunates who feel them selves the center of interest and observation will be continually adjusting their words anu ways to suit tneir oeiioiuers. Lather Taaa-kt by kin Wife. Greut-soulcd Martin Luther could be lieve and doubt against any man of his time; in believing he could excel the au gels, and in horrible Ihuurhts of doubting he could aiinost mulch the devils. Ureal, hearted men are subject to horrible tits of faintness and despair unknown to minds ol smaller cuIiImt. One day he tell so low iu spirit that bis friends were frightened at what he might say or do. Things were going ill with the great cause, and tne retormcr might iu 11 is dreadful condition have uset everything. So his mends got lnui out ot the way, say. ing Jo themselves, "The man must lie alone, his brain is overworked, be must be quiet." He rested a bit. and came back looking as sour anu gloomy as ever, itesi - . . ... and seclusion had not stilled the winds nor lulled the waves. Luther was still in a storm and judged that the good cause was shipwrecked. I will now give you my own version of the method adopted for the great man's cure. He went home, but when he came to the door nobody wel comed him. He entered their best room. and there sat Catherine, his wife, all dress ed in black, weeping as from adeath in tbe house. By her side lay a mourning cloak such as 'ladles wear at funerals., "Ah." says he, "Kate, what matters now Is the child dead" .She shook her head and said the little ones were alive, but some- thing much worse than thai.iiad happened Luther cried, "O,-what, has befallen us? Tell me quick ! 1 am sad enough as it is. Tell me quick!" "Good man." said he "have you not not heard la it possible that the terrible news bad not reached your This made the reformer the more inquisitive and ardent, and he pressed to be told of tha cause of sorrow. -"Why," said Kate, "havo- y ou ' not been told that our heavenly Father 'is dead,' and His cause in the world is therefore overturned ? Martin stood and looked at her. and at last burst into such a laugh that he could not possibly con tain, himself, but cried"Kate, I read tlry riddle what a fool 1 am ! God is not dead, He ever lives, but I have acted as if He were. .Thoa bast taught me a goou lesson." opureeon. Tke Outlaw, YoauBa-cr. ttkeelo JUa " Lead. '.. ' - ' When Jim Youneer was captured near Madeiia, Minn., September 21, : 1876, he had a bullet fired into- his face from a needle-gun at ten paces' distance. The ball smashed the rieht half of the upper jaw, and lodged in the muscles in the back ... . part or the throat. There it has been ever since till last week, when the Stewart of the Minnesota state prison hospital undertook to loosen and remove it. An incision was made by the surgeon, and two days after, at Younger's request, the Stewart began to separate the muscles from the ragged bul let, and after working at intervals for two days he removed the battered and twisted piece of lead from the- place where it had been for two years and a half. The con vict was in a fair way to die, but he is now likely to recover. . "' Hoar Cholera. E. R. Moody, a prominent breeder of Kentucky, writes to the Indiana Farmer as follows concerning his treatment of hogs: Mr stock has been bred bv me for twenty years, without losing one by cholera. My mode or treatment is simply to furnish clean, well ventilated quarters, fresh 'run ning water, plenty of green food in sum mer, a dense forest for range in winter. My principal food is soaked corn, with rye and corn-meal slops, slightly soured. Give sulphur twice a week; stone coal, salt and ashes are kept in the lots. I have thought that I could take many hogs sick with cholera, that otherwise would die, and feed the disease out of them with sour slops and sulphur. This is the only rem. edv I ever used, and it always Droved effectual, and I have had a number of sick hogs. , . One of the most ruinous habits of the Russian peasants is displayed at marriage calebrations. A peasant, to celebrate the marriage or his son, procures twenty-nve gallons of whisky, to get money for which he sells his horse, cow, or pig, and is ready to become a pauper.' He cannot resist the practice, for custom requires that the population of the villiage, men, women and children, must get drunk. Ohio. Five prisoners were discharged from the penitentiary Saturday. W. M. Rogers, engineer at tbe asylum for the insane, has resigned. Mrs. Tuttle. a pioneer lady of Clark county, died Friday, aged 81 years. The Cincinnati democratic convention Saturday nominated Colonel Len. A- Har ris for mayor. : , A drunken man named Timothy CahilL of Georgetown, was drowned at Manches ter Friday night. Riley Finney, a four year man from Gallia county, has been pardoned from the penitentiary yesterday. Some liberal and enterprising citizens propose to erect several fine fountains on the Columbus fair grounds. The library at the penitentiary contains 3,800 volumes, and over 1,400 volumes are now out among the convicts being read. Mr. William H. H. Irwin, of Greenfield. was killed as he lay in an epileptic fit on the car track, the engine striking and mangling nun ternbiy, f Tiaay morning. A connle of foot-nads wavlaid and rob bed a student named C. Miller, near the college, Springfield, Friday night, getting his gold watch and chain and $60 in money. . . The Akron Stoneware company, capi tal stock $13,000, in shares of $50 each, by Henry A. Gibbs and -others, have filed a certificate of incorporation with the secre tary of state. - , . The auditor of state paid to Frederick Eversmun, of Toledo, $30,914, being the amount of the special appropriation for the discharge of the tent contract for the state militia. The coroner in the Edgar abortion case at Springfield rendered a verdict of death by abortion, caused by instruments and medicine by Drs. Allen and Porter, with criminal intent The two were held for preliminary trial. The Dodds bill to permit women to be come notaries public has passed both houses, and is now a law. Ihe author or this bill is a bachelor, and that accounts for it. Women can now swear their hus bands, and it may become embarrassing, Because Oberlin judiciously sent a man down and walked away with Ottcrbein in the contest at ' VVestervilte, some level headed student appropriately draped the latter institution in mourning. Some of the good people considered it a reflection, but it isn't. , The parties who have been looking af ter the interests of the Miami Valley and Columbus railway project, express them selves as highly gratified with the results of their labor. They have opened stock subscript books, and will be very much disappointed if the required amount ($75, 000) is not soon made up. President Haye's war horse, ' "Old Whitey."died in Fremont Thursday night of spinal meningitis. . He entered active service in 1863, and was the hero of 30 bat tles, principally in Virginia. When in the army he was a very spirited animal. He was '28 years old, and is now buried on tbe president's grounds, beside "Old Ned," an old family favorite. .... In the Guersey common pleas court Wednesday Peter Haas, a liquor dealer, was arranged for violation of the law, and fined $75 and costs, and two cases of Bell ing liquor to a minor, in which he was fined $35 in each. Thomas Gardiner, an other dealer, was also fined $50 for viola tion of the law. Botn men were jailed in default of payment of tines and costs. The citizens of Akron seem to be jiccu- harlv afflicted. Last Wednesday occurred the 14th and 15th elopement cases in thai town within the past year. These cases were, the wife of James March, a miller, and the wife of G. W. Andrews, a grocer. The latter is charged by her neglected husband with various attempts on his lite, even. Tbe first named is chaired with eloping with one Joe Lehman, and Mr. Andrews with her cousin. One of the laxly employes ut the Long view asylum who had frequently partici pated in the exhilarating amusement of "taking down," "ducking" and - larrup ing" the insane patients, innocently swears before the investigating committee-that she and others never thought there was any wickedness in such practices until the newspapers said so, and raised a "fuss" about it : then they "just quit." Score one for the wicked newspapers. Some time ago the Sandusky conference ot the United Brethren church made a proposition to tbe people of Fostoria that if they would donate $30,000 the confer ence would build and endow a college of learning there. A board of trustees was c!ecte'i.iuHi canvassing committees appoin ted, etc.. and the work of raising the $20.- 000 has been' completed. Hon. Charles Foster,' including a donation of land for a location wortrt J,UUU, heads the. list with a subscription of $6,000. It is proposed to build tne college the coming summer. ..ITBWP SUMMARY The Widow Oliver is now designated at 1 4 Ihe "Great Unmarried." - - ."-v M-i .'' ... ... .': -f v Dr. Karmarsch, the german author of, -. the "History of Technology," is dead.' v ? ' '' ' " (' i - - .-- ft;;! t ' M. Tenaille de Yaulabelle, the French . historian, is dead. -. ' , ' ' ' . General Hancock is the wealthiest-officer of the United States army. . '- Mexico win reduce its army next month .-' ' so as. to save $4,000,000 annually. - i : . ' ' ----1 -i-t-'-r'- ft v ;- --. A lead mine naa been most 'appropriate-. . , ly discovered in Bullitt county, Ky. f Vicar General William Byrne of the ! Boston archdiocese, hi 1 seriously llL" "4. ,. The projectors of the Mount Simplon" tunnel will begin work next tummer.' "- ' Texas is proving ' its clainV to tine" right of being called the desperavtoistate. ' General Grant and party have arrived at . Penang. The place is in the Strait of Ma- ? : lacca. -. .i, - : . --.- - Walt Whiteman will soon ; lecture i : New ' York on the subject of Abraham Lincoln. . . . - .. At Powhar, in Austria, the. petroleum . well lately discovered now yields 2,000 gallons daily. -i . v- . The Rev. Dr. Cuyler says that Ihe flf h : and eighth commandment are "peculiarly - ' good timber." - " . Recruits for tbe British army no longer -receive the traditional "queen's shilling" . on enlistment. Ttorfie.n'a rnmpt ia viftihfo in tha vpatttrn " - 1 sky with a good telescope of three or four incnea aperture. - ? ' Governor Marks, of Tennessee, has' set " an example of economy by relinquishing -$1,000 of his salary. .;'... Butler has had a man named Frederick ' -Weirich arrested for attempting tp black- y .. mail him out of $100. . ' .; ' Contaeious peri-pneumonia, - attributed to importations of cows from Italy, has ap- -peared in tbe southeast of France. .- -- . Miss Clara Louise Kelloee has aereed lo be in London bv the 14th of May.-1879 . - and sing at her Majesty's Theatre, - j. 1 . " Prentice, a brother of the famous parse-' rapher, poet and punster, is living la V.' Washington, aCthe age of tbreescore.-.-tt t . The Spanish Don Carlos is enraged hi writing a history of his unsuccessful cam- . paign against his cousin, King Alfonso. . -, Eugenie sent young Napoleon to- South ' -i - Africa to get him away from low com-. ; pany. in which he had been disgracing i himself. : Burglars stole $8,000 in bonds from a . safe in the residence of James A Bell, a wealthy citizen of Arlington, N.- sH, " recently. . - fc. . . Patrick Gorman, of Ottawa county, ' Mich., died lately. He was 110 years old. ' and his age is attested by the parish regis- -terin Ireland. The New Oi leans Picayune says that the - best remover of weeds is an active young . husbandman- The weeds aimed at are -widows' weeds. King Kalakaua, of Hawaii, has knighted Clous Speickles, of San Francisco, for hia services in developing the resources of the Hawaiian Islands. - :.; Boston has a temperance reformer who claims to have drank more liquor . then any -other man in that city, and to have squandered $300,000. A. Rowan & Co., booksellers and pub- . Ushers; Joseph L. King, stock brokers, San Francisco, have suspended. Cause, Union and Sierra Nevada. o,: , '. .. ' If O'Leary ever peddled bibles in Chica go, says a St. Louis newspaper, he must have had towalk a great deal. A very poor fellow, named William E. Dodge, owns upward of . 200.000 acres of pine lands in Dodge county, Ga. . . . , . A voodoo negro doctor in Georgia, upon being acquitted of a charge of killing a . patient acquired additional eciat ay stat ing that he had voodooed the jury. K oublic subscription is to be opened in Paris for the purpose of erecting a statue ; to Bel-anger. Victor Hugo is the president of the committee formed for the purpose,. The ministry of public works at : Rome - has introduced on tbe Italian railways tho Philadelphia and Reading railroad locomo- ;' live, on account of their superior tractive ". power.' '- ' " ''"". "' " '.." Friends of Reed, the desperado recently killed in Fayettuville, Arkansas, amuse themselves by riding through the town at night and emptying their revolvers into the houses. . Ben Butler started in youth to become a Baptist minister, but he could get no one to risk being immersed by him. That ' look in his eye would upset the courage of the stoutest convert. 1 :, .. Ladv Elizabeth Campbell, sister of the ; - Maruuis of Lome, is to be married next - v month to Mr. Eustace Ralfour. The wed- T". d ing will take place at the Duke of Argyll's ' Scottish seat, Inverary Castle. 1 ' S ' The Sunday law just made by the North Carolinia legislature prohibits the loading of freight -and the running of trains on that day between sunrise and sundown. It does not apply to mail trains. There are not enough convicts in the Joliet (III.) prison to meet the contracts made lor labor by tne state, ana unless there is an increase of crime the state will . have to pay $190 a day to cover this want. , Mark Twain . lately made , a wedding- - present in France, the gift consisting of -a couple of logs ot fire-wood prettily 1 . bound toeether with Dink silk and labeled : ' "The costliest thing 1 could find in Paris." The newest bonnet flares in front: - lace . - will be much used in Summer hats ; a new - b rieht shade of cardinal is tbe "Prince de Galles;" black pearls, pending close to the lobe of the ear, are an imported earring novelty. - ' ... - " The Duke of Connaueht, when he went down to the yacht to meet his Prussian bride, gave her a frank kiss, wnicn was loudly applauded by the crowd on shore. Then he kissed his prospective mother-in-law, and there were more cheers. - His little imperial highness, the Grand ' Duke Michael Alexandrowitch, of Russia, is, considering his age 4 months aa ex pensive person. He has a household of liftfwn beonle. and SI 4.000 a Tear is allow-- ed for his baby highness's table. : BaDtain Ed O'Meaeher' Condon.' who was incarcerated in a British prison for 11 ' years for fenianism, and released last year-, by request of President Hayes aad Minis-, ter Welsh, has been appointed clerk in the ' treasury department at Washington. Reports from almost every point of the wheat-growing region , of the west and northwest show the winter wheat crop to be unusually good,, its present fine condi tion being attributed to the heavy snows ot the past season which afforded complete . ' TakI mar tln loaffer house of the ' Pc sylvaoia legislature consumedJZ3,OLO worth of stationary about $20& "worth to each member; and the senate' $11,000, or $320 to each - member-An investigation has therefore been ordered to ascertain, how the members managed to use np so much in the 100 days to which the session is limited. a?-'- ; a