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. am dposs w , Stwe d te oyster knows S M,. d w l., ,, sags sa to pay a emidsrae S for asks ars. am nt sMrie an w I enes those who do know _thdec_, powoal by whiob hi.iL in slosly aealogous to that by -ob tle food la oen own bodies is con -gd through rthe walls of the stomach md h paer at te digestive apparatus Spourd into the bood and lymph to ob work of nourishment. Phyelg are, I believe. agreed that Spaese of the digested food through Swalls t the alimentary canal in man ' er animals is in large part due to agm-e or dialyis, and that the operation ae thi physical law is a very common ern- l the animal body. But the quanti ve study a the chemical changes in wlved is generally rendered dificult or epoble by the very fact ao their tak pie in living animals where the ap of chemical analysis is imposl An opportunity is, however, offered by the oyster, which, since it lives In water and has a body so constituted as to readily permit the inflow and outflow of water and solutions of salt, may hIe eaialy usd for experiments. The re.ults of the esperiments have a practical a well as oientifo interest, since they confirm the aommon explanation of the increase in bulk oysters by "floating," and show that it emits a a proce of watering in which the b is increased without my corresponding increast. but rather, f anything, a loss of nutritive material -Profesmor W. O. Atwater in Popular lgine Monthly. 2%0 Zhan1 L.nmi.n charfY. The latest novel charity in Imdon, hat town Which beats all the rest of the wor lan the multiplicity and magnitude of both its charit-es and its poverties, is tha Home of Rest fer Horses, which bha been recently eatablished in the Victoria buildings. The scheme is to take the borsn of *he poor when they are well agh broken down from too much work ad too little food and give them plenty do food and not'ing to do till they are widy to start out on their labors once area. That is very well for the people, but it it piteously hard on the horses. About tie most painful object in the world is the underfed, overworked city horse, and de most cheering thought connected wlh him i of his death. To systemat tasly prolong his misery is cruel, and if I most be done the "Home of Rest" people ought to make arrangements to thmelves kill oi in some merciful way the bopele horses. They owe thea some atonement for having belped them to 4jve.-New York oraphic. emme mst watrIrSeasm.L It is announced that the eminent dntist, Profemor Huxlry, of England, b making inquiries into the phenomena Sqpiritualism, with a view to elucidate ai thee is in it, if anything can be land. It is well that pbilosopbhe and Mperimenter in the material turn aside aensionally to Investigate and test what purports to be immaterial.or so obscurely anstmdal with the material that thus far ao point of connection has been diaoov rad. Is the human nervous organism, ome an electrical apparatus, a machine bor the play of natural forces, or is there iomething outside and beyond that vi rates the "harp of a thousand strings?" Proeasor Huxley, from long study, habit and thoght, is well adapted to settle this qsnrs by all methods heretofore em plyd, or any other that may be sug. ted, or that he may himself conceive. -Milwaukee Journal. Itadeuta at the ChapeL Profeuor D. G. Lyon, in The Inde pendent, says that the abolition of con ý attendance at daily chapel in university has been a success ftom a religious point of view. A large Mmnberof students are in the habit of tending the regular and special religious rvices that mare provided for them. "The undergraduate religious life." gys Proesor Lyon, "is not all that we should ihe to see. but t is so much better than Spopularly supposed to be, and seems so £U of promise, that a just appreciation d it cannot fail to awake profound grati fnld"-New York Tribune. Chame tor a Arehltet. A chance i offered to some ambition Aerican architect in the competition fr a house of parliament in Buenos AIm upon which the Argentine Repub Sproposes to spend not less than 40, S0,000 france. The architect whose pl is chosen will receive a premium of ig,0W francs. The Courrier de L'Art, wek makes this announcement, states rt bhe legatio of the Argentine R-e MbUo In Erope will furnish detailed in bratn reprding the competition. mew York Triboue. Tampeimr som erut. Sibea s. IUmt. W. . hueteM writes: "As w proa d Verchoyansk (northern rk) the codd wa almost unbearable, mongU a stop a nearly every in ed -native but, not only on account 4 o landve, but more owing t the reln dor, wMhch sfeurd vibly during At rw Braeating was at 4e . and on Jan. 10 and 11, MM the temperature sank to G dep. qf-eorr a lng to W6.80 de UlnMk balow o. Thi instheo tmpart-m, ever oebarved. b Pages V a Rogaow casinap *Y^inu in - wood LWSSW ME sak M bok. tbat mes, $0 dIas *m to n1e he, to1 ; god s s 0t 10P ieU , on; homes dl d-los d Od l m, o mhatrec tobe atagesato Vt. Ise see ad ease ea AN AUSTitALAN' CHAT. *Sewa' " InaSgesbg Csawmanlhl WIE a c df Mhe A-mpeald I CtT. Going out to the oast were some Ae.. tralian, with one of whom, named George Walker, a hotel keper n Mel. bournse, I talkd parts of eveal day to the followin efdos: "Whenm d you leave Australia" "ILet May. When I reach home. about Oct. SO, I shall have croed the equator twice and been around the world. The fare from Melbourne to Eng land by Suea is nearly the same as from England by the United States back to Melbourne; say £70 each way, or $700 around the globe. I have spent in the five months of my amence £500. I have not been to England before for ten years, and can hardly go again for five years more. My brother cams out to America with me and went home from Chicago." "Only at Aden, in the Red sea, and we tied up at night in the Suez canal, be cause we carried no electric light. I got off at Naples and came overland to Lon don. The ship touches at Plymouth first, and then comes up the Thames to Oraveernd. Going back, we shall stop at Honolulu and at Auckland, New Zealand. It is a tedious job crowing the equator, and for a fortnight we are in a languid sweat. Still, we do not feel so far out of the world as you might sup pose, since we have an ocean cable and get the news from everywhere daily. There are two regular lines of steamers, the Peninsular and Oriental and the San Francisco line besides French and tier man service." "-How is the railroad service, compara tively?" "Better than in Eumope. But in Aus tralia the government of each province owns all the railways. We have no cor poratiou railways at all. The Victoria railways pay nearly 5 per cent. Those of New South Wales pay only S per cent.-hardly that. But you see, Mel bourne city has 400,000 people." "Then. I suppose, you have no exzes sively rich men. since you have no rail. way magnates?" "God bless your soul, we have got one man worth £8,000,000. He is a money lender; old Money Miller he is called, aged now 94 years. The poor fellow is a skinflint. Ten per cent. is low interest for him. Hle made most of his money going security for the administrators of trust estates, where securities are required of double the sum involved. The law plays directly into the old fellow's hands unconsciously. We have a large line of wealthy men; real estate in Melbourne is enormously high. I thought to buy a piece of ground ten mdies from the city, of only twenty-five acres, but the price asked was £5,000. It afterward sold for three times that amount. In the best parts of Melbourne ground is £1,200 the t foot, lot 200 feet deep." "Have you got universal suffrage?" "Yes. That is the trouble with us. Our speaker of assembly, Sir Peter Isler, is the representative of the rough element. Some yearsago he was a pro claimed rebel having resisted the collec tion of the government tax on miners. But without him and some other such natural leaders of headstrong forces, I suppose we should not get along at all. The effect of universal suffrage is to make men vote into office people whom they like rather than people they should like. One fellow gives a dinner to every constituent; another buys up the boses of a district. The society of Australia compared to that of England is like a perpetual picnic. Those who stay after they have made their pile are those who find England dull and distasteful." "How do your colonies compare?" "New Mouth Wales, or Sydney, is the old, eonservative, jealous, parent state. Melbourne is the American state of Aus tralia. Their leading politician calls us a mere cabbage garden, alluding to our raising table vegetables for Sydney. We generally carry away anything valuable or enterprising, such as the colonial ex hibition of next year. South Wales has a good city, Adelaide., of near 100,000 people. Perth is the young emporium ofAVest Australia: Brisbane is the chief city of Queensland. where now is a good deal of land speculation. Victoria is the high tariff state, whilst Sydney is the free trade port. "We have a duty oat above 27 per cent. on machinery, no that $500 worth costs above its value to import near $140. We had a piece of public work to do re cently where the home bid was £25,000 more than the English bid, yet the min ister gave the work to the home biddern, and they were unable to complete it. so that it had finally to be sent abroad, after all." "Does Sydney grow faster than Mel bourne?" "I think Sydney has been growing rather faster of late, although the gen eral movement of the two states is in favor of Mellourne. which is 500 miles farther south, and therefore colder and much more energetic. You see our cold climate is the southern. Our cold wind comes from the south pole. Our spring is next month. October, and our summer is January. The sun rises diff.rently to us from its coumre overhead in Europe and America. We have a climate alter nated by rtifling heat from the north and cold blows from tie south, which we call our southern husters."-Oeorge Alfred Townsend in Boston Globe. Imaitluag UIp. Ptatoee. The only people in the world who have fallen into the rievous emir of striving to subist almost entirely upon potatoes are the Irish. It cannot he doubted that nearly or quite all the ills that trouble unhappy Ireland are due to the humble po-tao. The Irish are the meanest fed peop living In a civilised land of which we ha any knowledge; they aw in a comditin d seml-starvation, even when s their highest praqrity. Every visitor in Ireland is struck wih the "pot bellied" appearance of the as. thve, men and women. This anormal di. ntio a the abdominal walls is due to thb eomous am anm of Potatoes they am compelled to oemmi , In order to intin a tolerable degree of Ihealth. If this people would quit the eiltivation at tre potato, and supply its piace with seal pains, Ireland would soon become i hIp and Irospearro r dion.- Popular * ig- es.. Dr. POWELL REEVES 31+ s.u. 00 s1., Oe.a , Mea. PRIVATE DISPENSARY. Rtfbllshed for the bsleatlle and Speedy Caro of Craaole, Nerveus sand Speclal Dsemases. The Old Reliable Spelalist of many yeas oxper lense treats with wonderhfl sucea all LUNG, THROAT. CANCKa1. PILBR, FIdTOLA, RUP. TURK. enud witheut KNIEl OR CAUTSTIC. Treats all forms o That, lung. Nervoe sa rle dlsmess, ol Camle 41es+se sad Dote Ra. les far on advlanw o m lay IstitutiUe n this e, eu try. Those who contemplate gIDng to Hot .pr ae_ for treteen t of sar I rlvato or blood disease cao beesurd for eo-third the ooet at our Privr Dis. pensay, 814 aoutt 13tb street, Omaha, Net KUtlURt ceue wtlllut pain or hiLeorsmee from businuess. SIC By thl treatment a pure lovely LA lEgoS mplezloe, Iree rom lslownesr lreL ls, bLokbheads. eruptions, eta., Brillant yes said perfect health can be had. IPThat "tLred" fesillg and all female weak nesses promptly cured. Blouthte Headches., Neor vous ProstratiLo, (Generl Debillty, NileOples-ess, Deparessio and Indlglaolle, Orltisa troubles, Is. Iammatloe and Ukleration. Fallitg sad Displace meats. 8pinsl weakness, Kidney omplalnta and ('hang of Life. Consult the old Doctor. EfEp AND EAR Acute rChroole Infl rr m mmatiloa o the pelids or (;I be sad far or nearsightedness., Iersion of the d14s, t4crofulous Err. Ulceratlon laoS, mStions, Abease, I imness of Visio of one or both eyes,ad Tumon of Lid. Wrlaammmtilou of the Ear, Ulceration or CaLrrh.lnternal or External Deafness. or Paralysis singli or roaring noles, thiekened Drum, etc. 'MIC U lOD 8 ebility, permatorrhbo, oeminal Le-sms, Niht e.mtsslona, Less of Vital ower. diesleessne. Dsepondener. Loss of Memory, Cofuslot o uf Ideas. Blur before the eyes, Lassutude, Languor, Gloominess, Depression of spirits. Avehrion to society. Easily Discouraged, Lack of c ndenoe. Dull. Listless, Unfit for s dy or business, and fnds life a burden, saflly per manently sad p irately cured, d'u a must horr,; pLOOl AND SKINW h"'able a ben its results-oompletely eradilated without the use of mercury. crofula. Ervnpelas, Fever. Head and Bones, syphillitle sore hroat. Mouth sad Tongue, Usadular Enlargem. nt of the Noek, ltheumaltas, .Catarrh, ote., Permanently Cured whoa others have failel. URINARY Kidinew ad Bladder troubls, g R Weak hsek, burning Urie., Fre quearny of urlatli . Urlne high coloreG or milky solimeLt onstanding, Goneo rbms, Gleot, Cystltis, *e., rom ly ,cared. hbarges reasonable. PlUVATE DISEASES"ve'nont taint leet, str.cture, seminal emallasios. lols of sezu w power, weaknese of the sexual orgaus. want of desire i male or female. whether from mprudent hablits of yong ad . zea habits I mature yeas, or anycae ta debilitates the sectional ruao sous, spqetily sad permanently eared Ceeultatloe fee and strietldy eaf tleual MNeleine free f observation to all pasts of the United Itates. (orsepedone resolves prompt a.tetiaon. No'otters anoswored unes soe aump.. led by four e n a in stampso tnd stamp for pam phl~ t and list of questlho. Terms strictly esh. Call ea or address, Dr. POWELL REEVES, No. 14 e, uth 11h St. Omahb. Neb. NOBIBH PACIFIC RAILROAD. THE DIPET LIME BITWEBI SAINT PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS. Or DULUTH Idah, WaliLIe Territory, AdadU ] hidnts Minnesota, DO kota, Montana, OREGON, Bit ColbaCi Pict SoN d ad ALASKA. NO CIANB. OF Cals ST. PAUl, and PORTLAND. Om Au . of TIMbs. 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