Daily News, Volume 2, Number 67, Franklin, Johnson County, 5 November 1880 — Page 3
te
•0
"DAILY SKEWS
FRIDAY. ttOmmfcttViW*)
!il,J ,$09t ©&« Mitfittin. Clwdns Mail* nod furrier OCUTCIT
farriers L«tve for
a KftiheVm'a,' SrW«ro*in id Northern Illinois,......
MB
Cblnago, Iowa, Mie Minnesota, Wisajnsln Northern Illinois} Ixean*port and stations
H. A Logansport RR. Station* on tar A MUUon*
I
I
H*fl*
E AhT. delivery. Closed
t^luUmHt* mmI thro' east.*,*- «*+**.. tSOOMd. Iiuliuupolii wd station* on VjuwialfaHallroad 7 OB* m.. dflOan fndfanapoUs and rtattdbr*on
VsatUlU Railroad 1130am.. 816pa (Jndlaoapoli* *nd station# 001 ?r00am..l«00ndt 1. AtSlL.,. K/.A........ fli» a $ Extern Indiana. Chicago and
Korthrrn Illinois ,11 30* ni Kurtcra Kiaitacl^.i.tropin SHJ'I TIFFS' east.... 430 ft 4 IndianiftwlSHknd full ,• Vandal ia Rail™ Io*a, Michfjym.
££0pa 315 pn 2 15 pto *15 pa *T5 pm
Wisconsin 4 20 pm.. 2 IS pn WB8T St. Louis and thro* west 7 09 in.. 1200,xndt W tine Urn* on Yandalia RR and
Southern Illinol..,. a,.. 7 00a m.. 1200sad St. Ixu{« *atl thro^weet..^.4 HJjO a..W00md It Ht, LionU and' stetkms on Vaif- 1 dalla Railroad 4 90pm.£ 830am
St- Loals and stations on 1.A 8t, L.RR 4a0pm.rlO»*a St. Loai* and thro* went 4 SO pm.l & Ifi pn Marshall and station* sooth on mi tbeDamilJ«kVlneenn««RR.1l-10am. S15pa
Peoria and station* on Illinois Midland Railroad 700a mj 600 a a Button* of) Toledo, Wabash A
Western RH. west of Dan 36 f9i 7 1 0 0 NORTH. Chicago. Ill (thro' ,— Danville ana station* on R..T.
H. JtC.KK. Intri
7 00 am 10 00 pa
7l4»n».j 000am
1000 pa
I iWKt
... up Toledo, Wafcsab & Wentom Rfi., cant IaaTilie.'7iX)a a. jiaOQ pa Northern Ohio, Northern Indima, Xiehigin nd Canada r.".*700 »m. .1000 pm {iOUTK. BvwwTltle, VtaeenBt* *nd
Princeton A 7 00 a a. 1200mdt Port Branch and 8nlllvan(thro' pouebcti .%• .^OQsm. :lS0f^dt i\ timvllle and HUtloso an J6.4k ffl 1t)
T. H. RR 700*%. 8vgn«vllle end utationtoaB.
k.J« Opmdt
AT. II. RR... liidpa.* 23D pa HoaUicra Illinoin And Western
5
Koniuckr 4 90 pm.2 *30 pa Hon 1 hern IIllnol* and Western •, Kentucky 7XJain..l2f»Wdi Worthlngton and KtAtloM on
T. II. A. 8. %. RR »4 80 pro. #00 A l« HACK UTSIBS. Prairi*fton.Pr*lrieCrc#k,4rAjr» rSi rllle and F»irbAnkn,TaMdajr,
Thursday and Saturday 7 00am, J(X$je Nelnon, Ind., Tneaday and Satnrday...... €1K pm 100 pro
The city ta divided into Carrier Districts' an follow#: I -j KIKUT Difrrmer—Frfld Tylor, Carrier,
North «id« of Main mreet, letw«ctt 81 And7th MtreetA north from Main to city limits, ineladtnf to the Alley Mtvreen 7th And Jth snd to'thf allej between 4tb an(J, 0th streeUi *1jk», 8th, 90^400 10th i»tr»et». north of ftd avenne.
SKcomoDmrnKiT—JohnK»ppcnhelmef,CArrier. Ttw iwnth «ide of Main street, between 5th. and eth. and all territory between 4th And 6% street» woutb to the dty limtu, incln^TIns to tL»- 'alley be Lween and^th aueota And to Uu» allev^ boLWteeft i™tb streets also 7th utrect »oulh of Dcm*
SV4 Anditb itrect» Also 7th street soutii Ingtoclty 1 THIHO IJlimit*.
The «mth (Ida of Main Atreet, trim the rirer to 8th ihtxtt, All territory we»t of the Alley be-
ISTBICT—JAmcs Johnson, Carrier.
tween 3d end 4th streets south to city limjts. Kr)ifKTnDt«Klc$'*--FrSok Sibley. Carrfcr. The north Mde of MaIo street, frea thb river to 9th stnwt, vad a& territbry »eat of the]Alley betwven 4th wd #Uv etfee^Aiid north td the city limit#. i-ii
J^irrR PiATMvT T^riuUiJI. XUl|jQu-ner. Tb»* north side of Main street, from 7th to the old eanal, between 0th And 10th etreetk And All territory from the Alley bett»«st»7Uu«ti tnh streoti" east to the VandAUA RR., nortii tn M-Av4nue, And all U'rrltory noftfc or the VatiilollA HRi, east !0th strvet to cjty limits.
Stxra DiSTprr—John R. Byers. CArrl The soath jk^Ao of Main, between Oth uta 7u streets, froia^at'AUey between 8H And 7th streeU, east to thcolfteAml. south to Doming, aid all ter rltory eal %F^ipr street and sonth tocltrllnUU.
SiviNTU
'7
U|«W1(T~LO'I!II Baganx, JrA
of Main street to 6n*bte
rf
vkrntt
South side of Maln street from 7th eaiit Ut ritj limits, lnclupA|^ the north side of MA&I, east of old canal Uett tofifor Mmtta, and all territor from N UM irt**&>«t to city UmiU fr^n I stree|i!wi the soath lo^o Vandalia RRi tr ^w'S^McCliO^, it to UAke cxtrl
limits, And All terr it to city limits
nr wes* 1 Pop
11
VAndaliA
«F
lllary CArrier. whose doty ectlon And delivery trtpa MMCLATtOK*. 1
The (ttAil iscolleot«4 from street letter boxes on Main »treetfrt»m 1«t 18th street*, north on 4th to Che.ry, eonth oft4Ulfc Walnut and sodth on lsl taffaplkr. »w9 OW0 '*tfe«t between ls( anil 5th, week dUt betwee# 8.80 and 9.80a mi between
I 10:80 a between l»:30 and feKJOpw #0 Poplar street on (hr Id north to Unl4»
.. *al »viw «i (this collection Inclnd 1 soaUi, vi4 e*«t to 18»m between 1:10 And »r a, nad between boxe* Are collected the honrs of 8 W and, hew AM^foar deltvVfi^* of mat' per lay in the part of the at 7:00 and 1|:S0 a a and ittO im a delivery #t 6:00 ueas bob so* AS desitejt, v^h^K
Mainess
between 4: nd ft:0i)pm. {Allothei wlce per dayi between
A and betwdftiD 4S|T
&I&XSX1SS
between
streets and Hot mow tattoo
4 On Snnday. thw Poet OAfti
oQk a a. and pereons at the window des' elr carrier. StmdAy colleciloa#
&
/l 'iimStv' «xlleciloa# ovei lj^a to-i between 4
»ees part of Use city Bottttrtajr ho*«« ha« l^eii MJT
jjnif-qym em)
by the qnmber of
«mtire eSSjr BMd again l^tJbe bflai
1
iTu) avidl th*Bwe)e«».cyM made thWKwrwtffc iwfn« TheattantVwaof tbe puttie i» dtounce *ach «arrief is tbltarf ties living A distance back in y« rtMieetea to pl*e» boxes In their rwnt io such other eonrenlenl plic#* as will f«41l prompt delivery of mm. Onrrterssrenit lowalt tosMf uvut'ltf second* for an answer, bell, and after waltine that Iom and rv* answer. most retwa the mail nnUl ur
be launediktely r^ort«d sons ownVnl doge are it during 1 mi eflte*.
f".
I
I WW!'
•I
u^walk* and par yards are fameirtlj
In tmir front door* or Ir lltate th* allowed
Carrier? are obliged to he promt*,
livery. do ue! to be lupolittt or discoarteos
ext and
do their work flutckly. clrednas i)ttrt#oo»»ndaMs**chi
W4
1
«F»*|i(«4ter. Per» *iil*«*thejkeejr
vhea U«t Turitvk the dajr, carriers will t»t jleliTji their mall, bet thev wltl be obltf«d tokll aith trfftcm. I'l* rtt»*«5li |l«r g»
1
.L.
BILLIARD PARLOR
ast -t- I
If SAMPLE R60M.
I
Ww,w*
Fln«6t and B«et
WINEStf AND| 1 LIQr.ORS
1
.V olM ki»d|M'ttU Iw. 1 •«,
The ntock fit Cig*r* on Mt nrtitdft frop»UMi d»v^t
on hand \k culkd on Ui« market.
8. L. FRISBtfc.
For table and poeket
I eutlerj of all deserlptlons
«o to Bolinger & Liiyiasy
*-.v 114 south FoortM.'l
ifisftfes
-Ail
••*ojiirn«w«.
-m
JWCI*A F. FST*MT •.'"
Soawtim**—not often—when the days are lon«. fields of #rralnfv
And golden lie the ripening te hsdf-fortoften so
Like cadence of socae There ra«m amemofy across my I hear the landnfl far anions the pt».
The drowsy nnrtnnr in the scented limeal Is I watch the radiant bntte-rHle* that pass. And I am Md and tifllcat heart innetitnner- 1 hometUni^.
Sometime*, when royal"Winter Soid# Ws »way, When every cloud is *wepf from »anr* sktCM, Atea hearth and n«h'.ed hearth are gay lips aud yet mote lAOgnin eves,
Ami frozen With __ Prom far-off days ah ecbo wanders by,
Stjpeiiaesf
2 15 pa 6 00am
ana on T.
4 90 pa.} 600*8!
1 on IridiajtapolU, DecaSprlngfield RR 7 00
iaa.j 6 00am
chimes,
That makes a discord in the CbHmnns A moment in the dntce or talk I sistb. And seem h*lf kne|} lii^the rrowd sonietiaes— ^f ts
5ot often, nor for Ion?. O friend, my friend. We were not lent oar life that we might weep The flower-crowned Mav of earth hatn soon an end:
spring A longer »o)oarn keep? the the time of fading leaves,
Amldottrfiir Comi all too toon Dome on tbi cold short day*. We mu*t.rise Ana go oar way. and garner home OTTT^sbeaves.
TfeosjstLsome fair faint jpmret may cloud onr oyes Sometimes. »i'T:*f Sometimes I «ee a Hjjbtalmost dhrine
In the meeting eyes of two that now are one, impatient of the tear# tiatijse to mine, I turn away to ««ek some work undone. There dawns a look upon some stranger face
I tblniy^ -Hdtv lik«!, and yet how far less
And look, and took again, and seek to trace A moment more yoor fancied jthere— Sometime?. O sad. sweet thoughts I O foolish, vain regretal
As wiseR were, what time Jnne'rftses blajv,, To weep because the first bine violet We foand in spring ha* faded ljng agb. CHow. my torn if yet IV e®®8 °f bv some sad poet's rbi tirred, etimes!
iMow.«3r iaire» If yet e®®8
D,ro.
By flower went, by some saa poet's rhjmes. Mr heart, that fafn wtrold be atjieat*, is stlrret Am 1 to Mssnfe that still I aigb aotietim firaMlmftSf
And sometimes know a pang of Jealous pain. That, while I walk.aU lonely, other eyes May happy smile to yosfs that salle again,
Betoeath tk& san And stars of watAcrn jskies. The past ia P«t but |t sln- if jct I. who ixr cJmn S)Wtent wotud seek toxfwell, Wimwillnatj
Elm will not grlarc, yet cannot qnlte forget, 5H11 «»end a thought to you and wish yon well :8onM»ttm^
11
HT MTDNI6HT PERIL. e'{-
•Tlte night of the 17th of October-— shall I ever forget its pitchy darkneai, the roar of the autumnal wind through the lop elf forest, and the Incessant downpour, of tiie r«n. ,1 "This comei of Bhort cats*' 1 mntter^dpetu^ntl/to m^seK as
I plodded
along,' Keeping' close to the trunks of the trees to avoid the ravine through whioh I could hear the roar of the turbulent stream forty or fifty feet below. My blood, ran cold as
I thought what
might be5 the possible fconseqneruces of a.ipisrtep or a move in the,^wrong direction/ Why had
I not be&n content to
keen In th^right ro»d? 17 Hold on W&B that a light, or my eyes playing me ft lie? j*
I stopped, holdii^ on to Ute low'resinoos batons of a hemlock that grew on the edge of the bank, for ij actually seemed that the wind would seize me bodily and burl me down the precipitous descent.
It was a light—tliaftk Providehce—it was a light, and no itpui faittxxg to lead me on to destruction and d.eath I "Hallo-o-o-o T'
My voice rang through the^wboos like clarion. I plnnged on ^through tangled vines, djenae briers and rocky .hanks, until, gr&atially nearing,
I could perceive
a flgare wrapped in an oil cloth chpe, or cloak, carrying a lantern. £1/ As the dim light fell upon rii«i face
I
tlmost recoiled. Would not solitude in Is be pre lou^hip of this withered,
the ,woods_be jxeferable to the pan-
was too latfl to.] rled |wi niiad
now.
with a
peculiar motion of the .lips that A to leave his yellow teeth all bare.1 "I am lost in the wooda ,88M, rect me to station 1 •TTes, Rt-i—htatiflft is twelves he re 'Twelve mileaP'
IT iu
di-
miles
Istood agliast, "Could yon tell me any skelter could obtain for the JiigUt?",.,^
(5l
"No." .fM^a ^Whereare you going7" t-u "To Drew's, down by the maple
It a tavernr
"No," 'Would they take me for the night? I "*mld pay them well."
His eyea gle&m'ed the yellow Mumps stood revealed once more. i'--"I guess so! folks don't ptop thrire.*?* "Isitfkr from hertsf "Sot very: about half a milei* "Then tautke haste And let us reach it. I an ctrenched to the skift."
Wa plodded en« my companion more than keeping pace with m». Presently we left the «lge of the ravine, entering what seemed a trackless wood, aud
tner straight on until lights fully through the wttefolia^. It was a ruinous old place, with wintiows aIJ drawn to on« as if the fotint&fiort hAd settled, and the plllam nf a rat porch nearly ro&tad away.
A vnutn answered mr ft*llow trav0)91^ krock My coibpaakm whispered or two to her, and sfee tnm^d to
?erty of their ac-
ewnroodatrons: bat ^1 was welcome to them nacb as theywtjre. if ltdt tetne la #ei.M
'"Put him in Isaac's room."
"it* the »ortoosn«wrtabl "iteUymt&r "But here
a
ctoeejRD pine tal
TW
tlm tafrfN
»*1
I sat down on a wooden b«ich beside the fire, and ate a few mouthfols of
1 shoold tike to retif* as soon as poeH\te*lmkd,for my wearinees was exoesKive* -Certainly^ The woman started up
yoa goinf to pat Eusr*
^W'
I interrapted the whl
colloquy.
80I waa ooodBcted up a mmp ladtlet that stood in the comer of U* room, into aa naartm«Bt ceiled with aleping b«ams^ andtlSS^ br irin« dow, Where a coi bedstead crowded
nythlne more I can "Kott^as^ thank m* "1 bope yoo will sieep w«li. sir. When
the mcMrnint, if yM
"HI be sure to call you, sir.M Bhe withdrew, leaving me aldne fn the gloomy little apartment. I att d»wn and leoked around goe pith fio veiy
I thought "that will soothe my nerves and qui^ me perhapa.n ,l *-£,
I descended the kdder' tie file itill jdowed redly 1ft the dearth beneath my companion and the woman sat beaded talking in a low tone, and a third person sal at the table eating^ a short, stout, Villanious-looking man, ina.j^itflannel skirt and muddy trousers., a
I asked £r writii^ matenalfl and returned to my room to' write to my wife. "*Iy darung. Alice—**
I paused aSd laid down my pen as I concluded the words, half ttniling to think what she ifonld say could., she know of my arrange quarters.
Kot till both sheet*, were covered did I lay aside iny pen and prepare for slumber. As
I folded my paper ^hap
pened to glance toward the coOch. it tn
•lance toward
Was it the gleam of a hntnan eye observing' me through the boaid partition or was it my own fancy? There was a crack there, bat only blank darkness beyond, yet I could have sworn that something had sparkled balefhlly at me.
I took out my wjttch—it was 1 oclock. It was scarcely worth while for me to undress for three hours' deep. 1 would he down in my clothes and snatch what Wlfunber I con. at the head the lockless door with tWb chairs,
my clothes and snatch what ould.'
80,
placrriff my valise
of my bed, and nirncading
I ex
tinguished the light and l*fd 3#wn. At first I was very wakefhl, buti gradually a soft drowsiness seemed tjo steal over me like a misty mantle, utdil, all of a sudden, a startling, electriq thrill coursed through my veins, and sat up excited and trembling.
A luminous softness seemed to glow through the room—no light of the moon or stare was ever so penetrating—puad by the little window I saw Alice, my wife, dressed in with her with a blue coming to me with outstretched Shands and eyes fall of wild, anxious tenderness. 1 sprang to my feet and rushed toward her, but as I reached the window the fair apparition seemed to vanish into the stormy darkness, and
At the self'samo instant the sharp report of a pistol sounded—I could bee the jagged stream of fire above the pillow, straight to the very spot where ten minutes Defore my head had lain.
With an instantaneous realization of r, I swung myself over the my edge of the window, lumpinp ",busne
soitae ten
feet into the tangled, bushes below, and as I drouched there/ recovering myself, I heard the tramp of footstepe into my room.
Is he dead?" cried a voice up the ladder—the smooth, deceitful voice of the woman with the half-cloeed eyes. "Of course he is," growled a voice back ''that charge would have killed tep men certain."
A cold, agonizing shudder ran through me. What a den or midnight murderers I had iallen into 1 And how fearfully Harrow waii iri$r esfcabfef
With the speed that only mortal terror and deadly peril can save, I. rushed through the Tyoods, now muminated by a faint glimmer
01
gtarligbt. I know
not what impulse gtiided my footsteps— I neve* shall know how many times I creased my own track, or how close
I was close to the high rood, some seVep. rail#* from R—. Once at'ihe town,
I told my story to
the police, and a detachment was sent with me to the spot. .. I... After much searching ind many false alarms, we succeeded in finding the ruinous old house but it was empty—the birds had flown nor did
I recover my,
valise, and watch, aud chain, which latter I had left under my pillow.
Drew's1gang," said the leader of
the police, "ana thev'\ troubled us for two years. I don't think, though, they'll eottie back here just at present."
JSor did they. W 7.: But the strangest part of my story is yet to come
Qome three weeks afterwards I received a letter from my sifter, who was with Alice in her English home—a letter that SUed i^e wttliOTtpri$e. must tell yoa someuiiog very singular^ wrote she, "that happened on the night oFttoe 17th of October. Alice had not bleh well for sotiie titae—in »ct she had been confined to her bed for nearly a week—and I was sitting beside her, reading? It w« late—the clock had atrock one—when "all at once she seemed. to faint away, growing white add rigid aifa corpee. 1 luuiteneS to call afisartt^nce, but all out efforts to restore anMsUon were in vain. I was just about stenuinc for the doctoi-, when her senses rettirned at suddenly aa they had left her, said she sat up in bed, poshing beck her hidr and looking wildly arouna bar. *'Allce,"
I exclaimed, how yon have
terri^ed us all! Are yoa ill now?
wXok
ilL" die answered, "but I rffeel
strange, Grn^e, I have been with my
"And all our reasoning failed to convince her of tue imposdibility of her assertion. She persists to this foment that she saw you and 'WM w'ith Jroo on the morning of the 18th of October. Where and how abe cannot tell, but we think it most have been a dream. She is better now. and
I wish yoa coald je^
bow sh^ inc^rwin^?* This ir my piain, unvarnished We, I do not pretend to explain or acoonnt for itenmieriefc I simply relate fiacta. Let rare 1 it lam notfstipe^
wraitha or apparitions bi do know: that,alth»igh
&
believe in
bntthis myirlfewaa
in Bngland in body on the motnuig ot the ltthof 05cber, b«r «rit ao«ly tftood befiwe me ia New iorkin the moment of deadly peril Uhat rnfenat^ me. It may be that to the stibtle itisu.net and m^ things are possibleJbut Alice surely «ared tnyufe.
JPWii WHet.iat newri^ TtH»"do«p coafinfment of all fartopy work, gives the dperativw pallid fac«, poor appetH®. lanft^. tnisrtraoJefi^ln#. pmH- h£od, inac«iv4Miver. kkba^s aid
theiB tmiese Ikey get mt of doo» or u« IiopJ3ii»m, tbs pwagt and best eifwdally for stkdh cases, haviu aba|dance Of" WjtkVtcashioe §aS **& cbeekifft thetiL^rber cott lniu See anotlKS col|nk.
QoloiBUndxiMM^
Tfcwe is no human Untirmity more ct^ Hons than is oolor-blindnww^ and scarce^ about which so little known, oddest thing about It, perhaps, is that ot certain, tor ^en likely/that
&
itts not certain, tor f^en
I'WhO^)
ST^wareof Color-htinduewi
guirii MIOM, blind
lAlly color-
can see* no^ore than the! fo things but «ase« of twtfcl sbseftae power to pereeHf coWf art vwyi rare. most persons who Are Jolting hi this iespedt,rtieinfirmityextehcteonlylocertain, colors. ,One man cannot perceive a red' lllfAnrl|A|
rto»^g^(!tno!hCTblt,e,ml»9l
™Wi
men is defective in the percejrtiott of color and it is asserted that the defect is not so common in women as in men. I
Probahabfy not many readeraof this paper are conseiou&.that they are color-blind. Yet, if oocnlists are corrects, and four or five in every 100 persons' are deficient in this rpspectfejthe delect assumes proportaonn that command attention, .for the reason that there are many occupations ac whieh a quick and amitate perception of color is necessary. Theiack ofit^nay render-sue* cess impossible.
There are many ways of testing the eye, to find out if it is color-blind: Toe best is to pnt into the hands of a peraoij worsted of various* boPars, and ask him td separate the pieces intoD red, blue, green and other colors and then to shade them from fight to dark'. A man who is color-blind will nanally make a mistake in assortng the colors,. |n the first four or five .pieces given him for examination.
Another test is to nee if a person can read red letters printed on a black ground. A third is to cover a blue sheet, printed with black letters, with thin white tissue' paper. To the perfect vision, letters Will appear a yellowish brown. If they are black letters printed on a red sheet, they will appear grfeen under the paper.
1
I was left alone
The causes of color-blindness have been sought by scientific men, and vertr plausible theories have been formed with regard to them, which we hAve not space to give.
The defect is incurable. A peifeon who does ncit know colors can never be taught them, and there is no operation or instrument that will remedy the defect.
Miscellaneous R«cipe^.
wm-* I .!• Mix a little saltpetre ,or carbonate of soda witli water, and it will preserve flowers for two weeks.
A French chemist asserts that if tea he ground, like cofl'ee, immediately before hot water is poured upon it. its exhiletating qualities will be doubled.
Sore Throat.—Dissolve one drachm chlorate potash in half a pint of water, and gargle the throat therewith a few applications will allay inflammation.
(i
I
stood to the deadly ravine—but a merci-, ful Providence encompassed me with a a guiding and protecting care, for when The morning dawned with feint, red bars of orient light against the stormy eastern sky,
j«l
k.vTo Heal Out* «nd Wound*.*- The leaves of geranium aTe an excellent application for cuts, when the skin-is rubbed ofi, and other wounds of the kind. One oR. two leaves must-lje-bruised and ajiplietl on lineu to the pari, and the wound'will becom'e cicatrized in a!very short tine.
Liquid Shoe Patiak.—'The following is a (German recijie: Dissolve three and a half ounces of shellac in a half pint of alcohol. Rub smooth twenty-five grains of lampblack with afx drachms hi* cod-liver oil, and mix!' A few drtps aretobi applfed to the leather with a sponge.
Remedy Jor Diphtheria,—A New Bedford, Haas., woman reports a new, and ^s she claims, a successful cure for diplithena. A little nephew of hers was sick with diphtheria, and the child's mother wis told to give him a wa 'made of the hark of Ihe roots of*the white birch. She did sq, and the white coating of the throat and mouth began to loosen and come of^,aiid entire recovery followed. The $ea. may be used as a drink or gargle, or may be held in the yMpt
Mcdtcal Properties of Egg* S For burns or scalds, nothing is more soothing than the white of an egg, which may be poured over the wound. It is. soft* er, as a varnish lor a burn^tban collodion and^ being always at hand, can be applied immediately. It is more cooling than the "street oU and cotton" which was formerly jmppowd to be the surest application to ally the smarting pain. It is the contact with the open air which gives the extreme discomfort experienced from ordinary accidents of the kind. What prevents inflammation is the thing to be at onceapplied.
The egg i&also considered one of the best remedies fbr dysentery. Beaten up slightly, with or without sugar, and swallowed at a gulp, it tends by its emollient quallitiee to lessen the inflamation of the stomach and intestines and, by forming a transient coating of theseorgans, to enable nature to resume her healthful sway over the diseased body-: Ti^4 or at mm three per day woo|d be ill that* Is reqniredin ordinary ca^es and, since_ fee egg is not m«rely medicine but food as well, the lighter the diet otherwise, and the quieter the ]»Uenf~Jfckept the more certain ma
I is at it in in a ha a oertnta oil to he obtained from the yolks ef boiled eggs ia of gwat n»e in Curing cuts and hnuses., The oil is obtained by cooking !th» yolks owisM Art- They are birred amstantly tUI seemimdy on the int of bnwlis« into a blase, when it is thai quite a quantity of 0*1 is eliminated Aem «6ch yolk and this| strained aadnieenredf^ii mid to have wwrtetftil h«ding^t^ierti#^-r^b«sanSc^BNU^ Ym4.
jNothttte is mom ceeaasopi than tie he«r •id peopW utter qneraloMi complaint* abort their deafneM hat th«»whe d# a» nel prthsps .aware..that, thii inftwei^y is the lefttl* of «n exprnsaad wiwai^ mfeaMBt of Providatte* ia coartsnettea the human body. The gradual kar*of hearing effceted for the best porpe^dt hiiiif Tnliiiiea to give esse and qoietode to the decline ef lift, wiwa any notee«r souoda 6ng wilhoct bet afa^Wpo-es^tbe enfeebled mind, 4»d prerenli peNrafal meditatioa. the xtadoal hmiOh* drawal of all "the mt fame in old age hive dained inorftttto wtcn the fto«a tile «»oenw'"«od -^lei»are» wortd, and to indnec a
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Cure far Earache.—Tske a tobacdK'pipe, place a wad of cotton in bowl, drop eight or ten drops of chloroform and cover with more cotton, place stem to afflicted ear and blow in the bowl.
Sme Firter—Take otto of roseei twentyfive drops, rub it in with an oiifoce of white sugar and four drachms of carbonate of. magnesia then add gradually half a gallon Of water, and .four, vQjjfices jof jproof spirits.
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