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JIM YOUMJKR. A I'rolmbilfty Unit Death Will Result from Ris Old Wounds and theStateho Relieved of Its (Juurdianshlp—Down- Hearted and in Rad Shape—Slow |y (Jetting Weaker. Hi. I’oiil l*:mier.l , rHH. Jim Younger, of the Younger broth ers, confined in the penitentiary, and whose deeds at North held are still fresh in the memory of every Minnesotian, is in a fair way of shuffling oil' this mortal coil in a short time in the pen itentiary. In his capture, it will he re membered, he was shot in the month, and tins upper left jaw is gone, as is nearly all ol the antrum. His wounds have nearly all healed, hut occasionally small pieces of hone work themselves out, keening his month very sore and inflamed, these sores almost constantly discharging matter substance. From the loss of his paiate and upper hft jaw, it is very dill'mnlt for him to mast icate his food, 'which is taken with hut little relish. He is unable to cat other than articles of food which can he taken easily, having hut three upper teeth, and these are on the right side of the mouth. A dentist visited him a day or two since to see if a plate could ho lilted to aid him in eating, hut it was decided that it would only irritate his mouth, without being of any benefit. The fuel, that a bullet is still imbedded in his month, and that it is nearly all nf the time sore, with no hope of gel hntler, and slowly hut surely growing worse, shows that it is only u question of time us to how soon death will result from the injuries. Jim is a man of iron will, and the amount of sull'eiing he has endured already would have crushed one less determined or hope ful. He is continually in pain, which is oftentimes very severe. Though he says hut little, it is plain to see that In is disciairageil am' down-hearted, and is slowly growing weaker. Of course it is only a matter of conjecture as to how soon he will get his freedom through death. He is in had shape, and has lint little hope of recovery. The state may he relieved of earing fol ium in a short time, and possibly his endurance -mil determination may carry him through two or three years, at the longest. i:ioi|iicnl Tribute ton ITcfeHsloiial Jury in an. I* I lie Ili ti 111 I I'minai'irliil * There was a pause, and a sol emn stillness prevailed the court-room when the venerakle member of the bar rose to second the n.'solntions. Unsaid. ‘‘The deceased was a remarkable per sonage in the ranks ofprofnssional jury men. lie was an old-liner, patient and steady like a clock, determined in opin ion, ever ready In assume the cures and responsihilit ies of the occupation he had marked out for himself in this life. Men are prone to falter and lie out of it if they can. pleading business, measles in the family, much information and pnjudiee in llie ease, lint lie never shirked. When duly called he was always there, and came as pure and unbiased as a dove. “ I doubt that we shall ever look upon his like again. Others may emulate his example, and by great experience, de votion to duly and (hoiough develop ment of talent, rise high in the profes sion, lad. who shall lake the place ofhim whose loss we mourn? I knew him long and well. We were friends, Mneh of my success iu life and in plead ing at (he bar I owe to him. He never forsook a friend in Ihe jnry room. When 1 film my eyes to that vacant and well worn chair at the end of the front row, I can iilmostsee him as of yore, so calm, so e imposed, so like a judge upon the bench. Towards the last, in the in firmities of years, he may have slept much at his post, yet so vast was his exner cnee and intimacy with the re <|inrements of his olliee, licit lie ilis •eharged his duties without embarrass ment, and in a manner to satisfy his • iwn conscience and one sideof the con tending factions. What more could mortal jury man do? lie was not. yon may say, a popular man with his col leagues. He hud enemies, as • very man of decided opinions him. Some were envious of his success. He was, moreover, a stickler. The bent of his mind was toward disagreement. He held his comrades with a steady hand, and either brought them round, or there was a dead lock. He was a leader of juries, or he went atone. Hence he in curred disfavor. More than once was his life imperilled in the jury room, hut he calmly looked death in the face and hung on to the last. When, on one oc casion, a tnoh of eleven strong men at tacked him, and hauled him tin to the ceiling several limes to persuade him to submit, his unconquerable spirit did not llineh. And then, on another oc casion, w hen a similar molt tmeked and gagged him. and kept him w ithout food and drink for live long days, he was still for the disagreement, and trinmnh ed at last. There, if it please the court, was the virtue of the old school. And all he asked was his per diem. “Von take a jury (hat has sat through a long ease of, say two or throe weeks, and that goes nut indeliberate as consti pated in bowels and ill tempered in spirit as a sedentary hen; you lock that jnrv up in a cold and cheerless room, anil let the judge swear in his charge that they shall not get out or have a mile to eat or drink, or a change of socks until they bring in a verdict, and you may wager strong that they will agree, somehow, inside of a week. Hut when the deceased was among ns this was not a safe investment. He was w onderfully constructed, physically and mentally, for protracted hanging. In a cow ease, involving $-40. he held the jury nine days. One died of privation, and I the other ten, emaciated and half in inane, had to he carried into the court room. This, fie frequently remarked, \ wan the proudesteffort of his life. Dis agreement wan the characteristic of his existence—in the ’Squire’s office, dur ing a long career as coroner’s juror, and then for half a century in the higher ! walks of justice. He was horn to he a juryman. It was Lis sole aim on earth; and now that he is gone, f venture to say that, if opportunity presents, he will offer his services in a similar capacity in the npi er courts.” Then the judge ordered the resolu tions smeared upon the records, and j the chair of the departed properly I draped. ♦ * ♦ Andrew .lackson’s Dentil. New Verk Tribune. I "Aunt” Hannah Jackson, a very old colored woman, and formerly a servant of Andrew Jackson, gave, the other day, with much emotion, this descrip tion of her sturdy old master’s death: “Sunday morning I didn't see any change in him. Murse Andrew asked if he know them all. ‘Yes,’ he said, ‘I know yon all, though I can’t see you.’ And they brought him his spew, and In said he reeogni/.ed them all. The lirst thing I knew (ieorgo Harris cried, ‘Oh!’ and it was repeated hack to the kitchen. Old marse was not dead, hut his breath had slopped. All crowded into the room, when Dr. Ksselmcn said they must go out. The Dr. gave him some thing, and it revived him np and he lived until eight o'clock in the evening. White and black were all standing in the room together just before he died. No distinction was shown in the eyes of the old master. Turning his eyes to where me and (Jeorge was standing, he said: ‘And here's poor (Jeorge and Hannah; they’ve been faithful servants to me. I have left it so yon will he well taken cure of as long as there is a hit of properly lefi,’ lie then called Mrs. Adams np and told her he had ful ly provided for her, and she would not stiller for anything. Just before he died he preached his own sermon. He said: ‘My friends, Christ is no respecter of per sons, and wliul I say to one I say to all, and I haven right to the Tree of Life; prepare to meet me in heaven, where I am going. And now all cried out, “look! look!’ and old utilise was dead." VvtT too Llltc to I.CHI'II. Socrates, ill an extreme old aye, learned to play on musical instru ments. ('ato, at eighty years of age, began to study the <lreek language. I’lntareh, when heUveen seventy and eighty, commenced (ho study of Latin. Itoeeaeio was thirty-live yetirs of age when he eomineneed his studies in light literature; yet he heeame one of the greatest masters of the Tuscan dia lect Dante and I'lutareh heinu the oth er two. Sir 1 1 enry Spelnnin neglected the sei- j enees in his youth, hut eomineneed the study of them when he was between lif ty and sixty years of age. After this time he heeame a. most learned ;1111i<j11:i --rin11 lawyer, I>r. Johnson applied himself to the ; Dutch language hut a few years before his death. Ludovico Monaldeseo, ill the great age of one hundred and fifteen, wrote the memoirs of his own limes. Ogilhy, the translator of Homer and Virgil, was nnacijnainted with Latin and (Ireek till he was joist fifty. Franklin did not fully eommenee his philosophical pursuits till he had reached ins fiftieth year. Dryden, in his sixty-eight year, com menced the translation of the Iliad, his most, pleasing production. Thousands of examples of men who commenced anew study, either for livelihood or amusement, ill an ad vanced ago could he eded. Did every one familiar with the biography of dis tinguish >d men, will recoleel individual eases enough to convince him that none hut the sick and indolent will ever say, “ 1 am too old to learn." A \on hit Dili Killed by Lighting. nmeiiiuirl. In., Oii/i-tlu, The only fatal result of the terrible storm on Sunday, occurred two miles above Drury’s Lauding, in the southern part <d’ Dock Island county. A party of picnickers, consisting ol six persons, two gentlemen and four ladies, had gone down the river to fish. While there, the storm cainenp, and two girls, Matilda Kssex, aged 1 • and (.'elinda Troxel, aged IV. took shelter under a 1 tree. Tlw lightning coming close, Mrs. j (image Kssex, mother and sislor ol tin' two j'iiN respectively. called to them to I’omc front under the tree, as it was not safe. Uni the eall came too late; scarcely had they moved when then* came a frightful Hash and crash, and tVlinda Troxel was lying at the loot of the tree, a corpse. No marks were found on her hotly, excepting a slight mark on her right cheek. The other girl was struck in the side, the Unit! running down her leg and tearing the shoe into fragments. Though terribly stunned and prostrated, and severely blistered on the leg, she snllered no se rious injury. The parties are well known in Ihnry township, and have the heartfelt sympathy of the commu nity in tl. i- dark hour of thei r alllietion. 1 A nn.i. has boon introduced into the house of representatives for the ap pointment of a commission, to consist | of three persons skilled in the sciences pertaining to cotton culture, for the pin- 1 pose of inquiring into the origin, habits, i and best mode of destroying the cotton j army-worm. The results of these in , quiries are to be reported to the Com- ! I missioner of Agriculture, the sum of | £IO,OOO being appropriated to that de- j ; partment for the purpose in question, j The Old Homestead. There it stands, the dear old home stead, where generation after generation have lived and died. The great elms still stretch their giar t arms over the moss grown roof as in times gone by; the lilac blooms beneath the window; the old wall still marks the garden plot, the old well is still there from which was drawn by the “old oaken bucket” the cool, spa-kl'pg water; the white cottage rose, so highly prized by the sainted mother, las passed away, as has many another cherished object, hut their sweet memories still linger. Time has wrought many changes. Voices once full of joy and gladness I have ceased to he heard on earth, and | are now swelling tin; glad anthem of i praise in heaven. Silent and deserted j are the rooms of th ; old house; over ! the threshold comes not the footfall as lof yore. The hearts that once beat | high with hope, the voices that were j filled with kind, laving words and tender expression of sympathy, are silent forever here. •‘Tlici's ric’tT attain the lioit's convivial voice Shall bat with conllal ''retting" to rejoice, Nor < arofnl housewiles kindly proffered hoard He spent to tempt the traveler to her Imunl," As we cross the threshold and enter I the now deserted rooms one after another, wo are reminded of the scenes of llie past; of the joys and sorrows, hopes and fears, these ancient walls have witnessed. Here lias been brought home the bride, leaving her own home to share that of he; loving husband; j here children have been born and I reared; her vows have been plighted and fnliillcd, and over its door step, now worn and decayed, has been taken, flesh from the marriage feast, it loving heart, that shed sunshine in the old, to illuminate and make glad llie new home; it may be on the distant shores of heathen land. From the same portal have issued the mourners bear ing tenderly llie darling taken by the kind heavenly Father from the arms of its loving mother l > a blessed home in heaven, where it shall he free from care and sorrow; or the venerated father, with snowy locks, the dear mother, brother, sister, eae i in their turn called to pass through “the dark valley of the shallow of death.” “ Hut vein’s Imvc hliicc o"cr Hh lliichliulil passed The lonely, of—the last." While many of those who once gave life to the old homestead have ceased from their labors, and others have been scattered far away from the place of their birth, still the inllueue.es of the old home cease not their mission. The prayers of faith that were daily offered have been, and are still being, answered. Thousands of hearts now silent, as well as many thousands more still full of life, have testified and do testify to the blessed influence of a Christian home. The joys of such a home are a fore taste of (he joys that are in store for those who love Christ.. Hear homes of our youth; whether on the hillsides or in the valleys, let us ever keep them in remembrance, and so live that when we are called to that new home in heaven we shall meet the loved ones who have gone before, and with them attain to such joys this world has never known. The Weilllillg of (itMKM'ill mill s. I,l'licr in < Indmmli Kiniuim. There was ;i Sliemum wedding in Cleveland some veins ago that caused some eniii ineiit. (leu. Miles hail not heeume the fainniis Indian lighter then, hut he was recognized as a good snMier anil a man who would make a reputa tion if the opportunity were hut given him. lie came wooing in the same family eirelu. where the seiialnr has made suit so sueeessfully, and was re warded with the hand of the eldest of I,he four daughters. The family resi deuee was then loeated on Prospect street, and it was the scene of a gay as semblage as the gallant soldier and his beautiful bride took the vow they have kept so well. Miss Lizzie was then a girl in hei t ens, with more interest in school and e indies than in orange blos soms and young l.oehnivars, hut the promise of that girlhood has been ful filled, and she will take to her new home in Washington, or Pennsylvania, wherever it may he, a beautiful woman hood that has always been surrounded by good intluenees, and a heart that has always refused to recognize any master until the right one seems to have come at last. V ( lond-lhirst in Washington Territory. Walla Walla tali'll. Samuel Johnson informed us that a j so called cloud-burst occurred on Pine, creek' I'malilla county, n Monday j afternoon last, helwoen ■> and t o'clock. The rain fell in torrents and inundated j the whole valley ot Pino creek to the! depth of live feet in the immediate track of the the storm, which was on the ranch of Mr. Suinton, and at Italy's j place, below, the water was three and a 1 half feet deep over the entire bottom. I A small herd of horses being in pasture | saw the avalanche of water coming. | w hich so terrified them that they broke j from it, leaping the fences like deer. They took to the hills for safety. The damage to the stock was not great, but large bowlders, weighing IdO or odd pounds, were driven before the water like ehalf, and the debris of brush, trees and stone are piled up several feet thick lon some of the farms- The cabin ofj ! Johnson was earned otV, and the tree i adjacent were 'urn up by the roots and j carried otl' by the sweeping current. Abolish the ** Parlor." Uorul Now Yorker. What horrible associations crowd into ! our mind when the word "parlor" is I mentioned. We immediately picture iin onr imagination the terrible oppres siveness of that best room, where the I sun is never allowed to shine for fear of fading carpet and furniture, whore tlio chairs have all a stately, polished and stiff look about them, where the children are never allowed to enter, where what little air there is may never lie allowed to change, and where the smell is some thing akin to that of a family tomb. This is the best room, and is too sacred for the use of the family, and is only kept for purposes of ceremony and for the convenience of those peoplu for whom we do not care a rush. People whom we like and with whom we arc on familiar terms, come right into the living room and have a good chat in a pleasant way; hut the ceremonious visitor, whose departure gives us relief, is ushered into the parlor.” The principle upon which this room is founded is all wrong. Let us have no such room in our house. Open the shutters and windows. Admit the sun light and air. If the carpets and furni ture fade, let us enjoy their use in that condition. Let us not have any tomb in our house, where all should hecheei fullness and brightness. Abolish the “ parlor” and enjoy the home. Itewim l . It is related of a gentleman in India that iie went into Ids library one day and took a hook from the shelves. As he did so, he felt a slight pain in his linger like the prick of a pin. He thought that a pin had been stuck by some careless person in the cover of the book. Hut soon his finger began to swell, and then his whole body, and in a few days he died. It was not a pin among the books hut a small and dead ly serpent. Heware ! there are many serpents among the hooks of to-day. You may not see them, hut still they coil beneath the llowers and foliage of a fascinating literature that is thrown out from an ever-working press. You may not feel their poisonous fangs; but your children, charmed by the plot of tin; story, may he led on to the fatal spot, where they shall not only feel the sting, but writhe by reason of its deadly poison. Ah ! when the light of eternity shall reveal the record of ruined souls, of how many will it ho truly said, “ Poisoned by the serpents amone the hooks.” A (food Daughter. There arc other ministers oflovc more conspicious than a good daughter, hut none in which the heart's warm requit als more joyfully respond. She is the steady light of her father’s house. Iter idea is indissolubly connected with that of his happy fireside. She is the morn ing sun and the evening star. The grace', vivacity, and tenderness of her sex, have their place in the mighty sway which she holds over his spirit. The lessons of recorded wisdom which he reads with his eyes, come to mind with anew ehurm, as blended with the beloved melody of her voice l . lie scarcely knows a weariness which her song does not make him forget, or gloom which is proof against the young bright ness of her smile. She is the pride and ornament of his hospitality, the gentle nurse of his sickness, and the constant agent of those nameless, num berless acts of kindness which one chiefly cares to have rendered, because they are unpretended, (oil expressive proofs of love. I The Peril of Plowing Out the (las. A few minutes before .‘i o’clock Friday afternoon. Utlicer Wilbur, of the Cen tral Precinct, was called into the Wash- j ington Motel by the proprietor, who in- ] formed him that a. manwhohadoccupied room ‘J7 since S o’clock Thursday night, had not put in an appearance. Officer Wilbur made his way to tin* room and shouted loudly, but there was no re sponse. He hurst in the door and im mediately detected a strong smell of gas and saw a man lying upon the he'd, seemingly dead, lit l hastened to the bedside, and found that the occupant had not expired, but was partially tin- ' conscious. Vigorous remedies were! employed and in a few minutes the man recovered sullieiently to give his name as K. 1?. Smith, and claimed a residence I in (ilocester, K, I. He is seventy-four j years of age, and it is supposed that I when he retired lie blew out the gas, forgetting that in so doing he placed bis life in jeopardy, and that he was not at home, where a lighted candle or kero sene lamp furnish illumination for Cue rural homes. — I'rov. Journal. When using the eyes continuously the room should be cool and the feet warm; there should be plenty of light, but it should not come from the front of us, nor should the sun shine directly upon the object upon which we are working. The page or other object should be near as possible perpendicular to the line of sight, and not less than fif teen inches from the eye. It is unwise to read or write before breakfast by arti ficial light, or to read lying down. Us ing the eyes at twilight or when one is debilitated by recent illness should be especially avoided. When the eyes are used for a long time continuously or in tie examination of minute object-, it is indispensable flint short intervals of rest should be given to them. W kst Vna. ini a is getting a bad repu tation. The authorities have not hang ed a murderer for four months, but dur ing that time mobs have slain, with every imaginable detail of ferocity, no less than lit human beings, one of whom was a woman. The worst of it is that in live of these cases the mob had no means of knowing whether their vic tims were guilty or not, and at least two of them are known to have been inno cent. The governor is apparently much disturbed at this disgraceful slate of : things, out has as yet taken no vigorous measures to reform it. A Urent Salt* of Pictures in London. Button Advertiser. The most noted sale of pictured in London of late years was made by auction on the Ct"h hist., consisting of the so-called Novar gallery, belonging to the late Mr. Munro. The proceeds of | the entire sale were about three hundred and seventy thousand dollars, of which more than one-half came from the Turn ers in the collection. The spacious rooms were crowded with patrons and bids for the famous pictures mounted upward amid,the applause of the excited audience. “Ancient Italy,” and its companion, “ Modern Italy,” were sold respectively for £5,450 and £5,-60. “ Rome from the Mount Aventine” mounted still higher, and was sold for £0,142 10s., the highest pr ce at the sale. “Modern Rome, the Campo Vaccine,” whose beautiful effect of afterglow and j cool light from the moon seen through | light clouds is indicated by the couplet, ■The muon i< up, tind yet it- is not night: The sun (• vet divide* the (! > with her " brought £4,072 10s; “,St. I,ark's Place, Venice, hy Moonlight, with Juliet after the Masquerade,” brought £5.4(50, and “ Van Trump’s Shallop at the Entrance of the Texel,” $5,200. The Turner drawings sold at prices ranging from two hundred to one thousand guineas. O I ( | A IIAV. How to make It. Somolhlnßiicw • I t for Agents. Cut;, Viisiik* eo.„St.l,onls,.Mo. C f . AI tjCKU K TON WAGON. freight-pan ,WjI ' u ,liinKsof 111nglumton,Binghamton,X. V I.son w.ut In the K vst'aml eettsE of Uttjr.aiUlross (iooil.spfM’il.sltook, Bltde.vrhronio House, Chinago cpr c awns- nrAiiD coMvorsn vtix rorr ■ “■ "Ki tnaka Whiskers frn# on tha •mooiheat fare m IEL CL Wilhnat ■•• in nr i "jury. Thrun.nH, cl yoon* men now woof s Moattarh* hating n.o l t I |i4r|>M. A r*. k.~. wuh dirwt.o,,. n.nol HIKE to any ■d.Poao . I'oump la lailJMdioytt |oiaga, ItaauraaadaddiM J. W SMITH, PaUiiaa, 111, p. 0. Hu* 137. OfT'- -. > REfIRp i ELIXIR f . S 1 'li-Hhan'.'iHKiYiniiin imn atrva.lywrnr h*v **** f* g , ,. i V. injury. Emily tupinil. Certain in . . ' , : J r “ r,< . •*" 'IITII A Pi*., Solo Agents. Palatino, 10. Hu* prapnr.uon la imitated, lha public will u* *n* .nu'ui. and AJJiwM m abota, (he Kidney*. niuddpr ami IT Jnury Or-I BUnai. Hunt's Kemody m purt-iy vegetable *nd ■ prcparnl expi'viily f>r tin- above dieas*.‘g. It haa I I cured thousand*. Kvtry bottle wai ranted. Send to W. I L. Clarke, Providence, It 1., fur illustrated pamphlet. I If your druggitt don't have if. hr will order it for you. I F Jbef’ The Boss Sickle Grinder* rf 4 JTBADK-MARK PATENTKD.J , a. - II Every Tamer honld Have Cne. Sr **" ■M't Simplest, most durable and perfect m l!iWS> \ Sickle Grinder In the World. A buy 3 /eMlir ■ Vweun run it. Can be chunked from an /yTCO V OBCll.tlng to a stationary Stone tn 11 //! : \ moment. la the best Grindstone // B i 4 ’ by all dealers. Good Agents and D / 1 . —““S eanvnsaers wanted. I'OWKLI, D f t STEVENS A DOUGLAS, Wan- J * ' F key-in. Him ESTABLISHED Ififll. ELECTRO MEDICAL INSTITUTE. M n.w auks, ft, Wlf. jxf/ should tint lull toeor.aillt eonVt (lent in 11 v l)r. MoNamabv f’HO jimv era to their Hill vigor, and the ml mi to Its oriel mil cheerfulness ami streneih. Thu Doctor’* skill with the Turkish ami Snluhur Baths cannot b oNcelle-1 in the healim! art. Ciieulars seiii free. Dr. T. WILLIAMS, HedicaU) Sarglcal Institute, 435 East Water St., UILWACKKK, WIS. Who has had c rotifer experience in the treatment of sr>\ual troubles, both mule and female, than any specialist in the West, elves the results of his long ami successful practice in two popular medical works for the people, entitled : “The Physiology of Marriage,” and “ Dinpam's of Youth and Manhood.” Hooks that are really self-instructors in everything pertaining to this speciality, and supply the want long felt of a reliable medical companion and homo adviser, free from quackery. They ar chastely and beautifully illustrated, and thongh in plain language easily understood, contain nothing offensive to good tft*te. The two books contain ft#o pages, and much valuable information for both married and single, with all the recent improvements in medical treat ment. Either work will ho sent to any address on receipt of 60 cents in stamps, or bath for $ I. CT* VIBIIATOR’^> Rij. MirciJl. 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MAKVELOrS for Simplicity of Pnrto, "“>* • *•* ! ‘'*h BUa mi O ai. Mno Littering* or (Scatter inga. F 01*11 Slip§ of Hrpnmtop* Mnrfp, rnng i ..M Six I I Iwti.R II ret- IM, OJ lotjiaof M ‘Ruled UutM Powers to match. STEAM I’owrr Thppplior* n Sp*rinlty, aiwctai *Ue bej*aratoi mad* exyt r*#iy lot b.uj i'waer. 01 R riirlTnlotl Bfrnm Thmalur En - '*Pa, * . . \a. tab!# lmprnemn • and raUncHT* > ratuica, Jar beyond any other make or kind IN Thorough VVorkmnnnhlp, Flrgnnl ■ I Ktnlah, |*ar e> nf I*arta. CompiatenMa nf £qtt,pmt|a etc . oiir “Vtuuroft" Turaahar OulQtaare locotnparahia, FOR I’nrilmlnr*. roll on cur Dealer* ur writ# to a* lor ILuairaUd Ctrcuiar, whu* we xuait 'w*