Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 20, Number 22, Jasper, Dubois County, 7 June 1878 — Page 3

WEEKLY COURIER.

C. DOAXE, Fnfaliffeer. JASPKK, INDIANA. ITEMS OF INTEREST. I'monal hhiI I.ltnrarjr. Prof. II. U. Palmer and wifu sailed for America, May I8tli, in the Soythia. Jlishop Perry, of Iowa, Is a voluminous author. He is now only in middle life and hits already Issued 43 volumes, all either edited or written by himwulf. Ills bent is history. The marriage of Prof. Hjalmar Hjorth Iloyosen, to Mise Elizabeth M, Keen, daughter of William 11. Keen, formerly of Keen, Cook A Co., of Chicago, is announcodfor tho 27th of June, in Now York. Tho Into Catherine Needier was tho teacher of :i girls' seminary in Cincinnati in 1832. Sho whs for many years a teacher, and was hIho cngagud in establishing girls' schools in various parts of what used to bo tho West. It is told of Hans Christian Andersen that his geography was as fanciful as his fairy tales. Ho invariably addressed hid American publishers as "Hurd & Houghton, Astor Place, Now York, Riverside Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United Stntos." Mr. James Gordon Bennett, if ho takes caro of his health and his money, ought to beconio one of tho richest men iu iho country. Ho has some expensive tastes, but ho is not a spendthrift by any means. Ho is now verging on -10, and is unmarried. Tho daughter of Richard Henry Dana, .Jr., Miss Henrietta Dana, has gone over to tho Koman Catholic Church. Sho was the schoolmate at :i Parisian convent of Queen Mercedes, about whom shewrototm article in a recent number of Scribncr. At a recent sale of autographs in London, Johnson's signature to a receipt went for only three guineas, though Mich a document must have been mro indeed, for the Doctor was, according to Iloswell, in the habit of forjretting the names of the subscribers to his books, and spending the money, so that it is not likely ho was ever fond of giving receipts for it. Josh Billings (Henry W. Shaw) is reported to have made more money than any American author by persistent working of his peculiar vien of humor. Some years he has got $4,000 from a weekly newspaper for his exclusive contributions, and has made besides $5,000 or $0,000 in lecturing. . A performance, arranged by Miss Kate Field, was given at the Gaiety Theater, London, Slay 2J, iu aid of the Shakspearc Memorial Theater, Library and Gallery, at Stratford-on-the-Avon. Miss Field made an address, and appeared in her own comedietta, " Kycs Right," and sang, " Antels Kver IJrlght and Fair." , Theodore Schwann, the famous au-; thor of the coll-thcury, which he announced in 1839, is Mill alivo and teaching as Professor of Physiology in the Helgian University. His discovery constituted him the real founder of modern histology Tho fortieth anniversary of his professorship will bo shortly celebrated in the city of Liege, on which occasion it is proposed to present him with an album containing photographs, of all the leading biologists of Europe. (trace Greenwood thus writes on the Woman Question :" "If 1 had tho forming of tho nw only such women should bo allowed to vote as had sewing-machines and knew how to use them; no woman would have a vote who could not read and write ; who was not able to cast up her millinery accounts, and cut them down; who could not make a loaf of bread, a pudding, sew on nhutton.wash dishes and, on a'piuch, keen a boarding-house, and support a husband decently." fS'Vool ami Church. There are 13 different denominations of Methodists in the United States. Mr. Spurgeon's church has now o,045 members, being the largest society under tho care of one man in the world. Rev. Florence McCarthy, who some time ago left the llaptist ministry in Chicago for the law, has joined the Methodist Church on probation. Kight hundred persons have joined tjio churches of Hartford as tho fruit of the meetings held in that city bv Messrs. Moody and Sankey. The German Baptists have dedicated a new publishing-houso in Cleveland, 0. Their society publishes one weekly and three monthly papers, besides numerous books. The Professors of Vale do not suffer from poverty. Ik-President Wolsey is assessed upon a property of $17,320; Profesor 1) wight on $51,290; Professor Silimnui on $')7,G0O, and Professor Hoppm on $34,781. A .Summer School of Natural History will bo held at "The Illinois State Museum of Natural History," at Normal. The classes will open June 2G, and vyiuinue 10 .iuiyi'4, umier tho charge of Mr. S. a. Forbes. " Hew Dong Gong, a converted Chi-1 natnan of Portland, Oregon, is assault-1 cd every day hy his Counttymen, and lino .t . v a uniiuwiy escaped assassination twice. Ho still preaches Christianity, however, but carries two revolvers. Hishon Stevens, of Pennsylvania, has recently gone through the formula u " SEW from the ministry" the Nov. W lliam Newton, of Philadelphia, who withdrew from the Protestant hp scopa and ioined the Reformed ivpiscopal Church.

ri Presbytery of Cincinnati has , passed resolutwiw against going to the-j ters, oiroue ami balls, and akio saying 1 .!... T ) .,1... I . ... .. . ......

play oards. TIih-o resolutions further lament the prevalence of 41 hill-ton and i

euburban roeorls " where beer is sold I Louis Uoederer, the groat chamand Sunday is desecrated. rmgne merehant, has been unseated by

Dr. .loim nail opposes the practice of advertising the subject of sermons, and advises his hrethern not to be templed into it. He considers the results of this to bo that the poor, unin8l rue ted owners of itching ears and vacant minds have a good tune, and persuade tlieraselves that they are talking religion when discussing" the relative merits of the performances." The Society of Friends has purchased thirty acres of land at Bryn -Manor, on the Pennsylvania Railroad, as tho site for a largo college for 4 the beter education of females." It will be of the same class and grade as Haverford College, and the ground, with the building and its endowment, will be worth together about $1,000,000. Helnnce nut! Indtmtrjr. An Epsom salts mine has been discovered about 12 miles from Chattanooga, Tenn. The deposit is 2 feet thick, and easy of access. It is pure, and only requires crushing to make it marketable. Tool steel is generally first hardened by heating it to a cherry-red and then plunging it into cold water. Afterward the temper is drawn by moderately heating the steel again. A linn in Richmond, Va., has ready a second btcam lire-engine for the city of St. Petersburg, Russia. This same linn just before the war built the first engine used in the Muscovite Capitd. Norway has some curious exhibits at tho Paris Exhibition. She has fishlrlni tunnixl fur irlovnu- ru.l.clr.nd itri. pared for harness; shark-skins, 10 feet long and i) feet wide, for various purposes; and whale-skins, GO feet long, for : unvuig-oanus lor mucninery. Engraving on glass is now done with tho aid of electricity. The glass is first covered with a concentrated solution of potassium nitrate, and the dosign is traced with a lino platinum point connected with one pole of a battery. -It has been proved in regard to railrtiu ni uui ;.. ,u,r,. 5n I iriLi irSiSZ ways that nuite dillerontlv from rails ..laced at ! riifht. simrlna to tliia ilirc-tinii t hn forinnr 1 oxvdize and do not become briltlo: the' It! brittle rails tn'med fuer uewerijeneiss for his investigation of the causes of mill fires. He shows that all sorts of Hour in dust clouds are j in iaiu mao e, anu uiat, khuo oi uie sot.i ..t .t.i .... . i 7'"t'i""' "f "T are really caused by the ignition of the are really caused by the ignition of the ClOlldS Ot oust tloatlllg in the atlllOShere of nines, tree and s toady venti a ion will greatly diminish the ganger of destructive explosions in nulls, and those of 14 dry mities can bo nearly made impossible by occasionally sprinkling the headings and galleries with water couvoyed in llexiblo pipes from the pit-mouth. Hap Biul Minim). Daniel S. Myers, a Well known horse-trainer, was killed at Lima, C.t by beiiiir thrown out of a btiirsrv and Mriking against a hitching-post. At Providence, It. I., a young man named Martin, while playing base-ball, ruptured a blood-vessel, which resulted in instantaneous death. Near Alliance, ()., Wm. Mate, aged 15, son of John Mate, was instantly killed by a piece of machinery which they were unloading from a wagon. Daniel Moon, of Tipton Township, Ind., while driving a load of hay was thrown from his wagon and received the ! prongs of a pitchfork full length in his abdomen, causing fatal injuries. Mrs. Margaret Keifner, an old lady of 0, was killed while crossing the railroad track in the suburbs of Cincinnati. Four years ago her son was killed at the same crossing and in a precisely similar manner. At Ilellefonto. Pa.. Gconro Wntsoni and Alfred Kankin iKith drank from a f bottle which they nrobably supposed to I l.t .1... I.... l.f.l !.. V. ... I

; in intormediate directions the : iho inrths aiuounteu yuo.oa-,

i participate more or less in the exclusive ot those stillborn, and the ieBnctt's hou.e was totaliv destroyed and Z u ' r"lI .k "V.'fe",

the two extremo directions 1 m of population was 132,008 persons. The capMwhh lmt little injury. The houses of tht the money be not advanced faster i i. xrx , . i , stillborn numbered 44,080, and the mar- Jw-Princo nd W.Jaeka were destroyed, than the work w the ! I'rof. K. Wchflr. nf Renin, has oh-I ...i t. . . . while a burn situated between theinwa lclt itormatiAnt !... li f tln uviim- aunnul

- - - - i t-iij uiu: " I i . 1 1 k I i ii in i I'Aia t; nnur t iiut ' ... twv m"iiu v wia w. vuu ? niui ooouluxab

tho tiftMi ..f ih ftorltn Vnrwtn ' 'v ul" " "fc un ii nrcd. At the brewvrr of C. Uillmann 1

.e ius, u..b v ,uci whs in iy ear- , - j UT r .7 T,, 1 1 ' , , V ' Tho aorni came from the direction of Mnithbolicacid. One of them died soon af- rich?" "I do not know," was thore. WC!,t, passing through a s-ection of the State

tonvaru anu the other was not expected " t except- it is inai uuuars anu sense where no telegraphic comiauHluatioii is esto recover. i do not always travel together." ! tablishod, henee tietall of the great destruc--W. H. Colelaugh, Grand Trunk -jW.dri station-agent at Trenton, Out., commit- old, but it has never been excelled: vacation and t-aerlrtce of property and life ted suicide by swallowing a quantity of " It was the shape of a turkey, and tho has been, appalling. In the vicinity of I'rimstilphute of copper, which he took size of a goose; he turned it over on its rose, ii inlle,-. Mittthwe.t nf r this city, and from a telegraphic battery in his ollice. back and rubbed its lelly with a stick, ff te1"?"",,," fcj.i ' He died aluYost immediately. Itissup- Htid oeh! St. 1'atrickf how it did da,S! From 25 to W

posed no was ueiuntt in his returns. Allen and John Campbell, of Union ; County, Miss., poisoned thennselves! fatally by eating tho tuliers of the plant commonly called hemlock (conium ma atl'ita) under the impression that it was ginseng. They died in violent convulsions throe hours after eating the roots. John lheler and Jimmle Locke. ?Scd respectively 5 and 7 years, were instantly killed at Garrett City, Ind., by the explosion of a torpedo used by tho railroad as a danger signal. The top of young Uloler's liead was blown oft', and Locke's skull and face were horribly mangled. FereljtH Mete. Next to Toole, John S. Clarke is said to be tho most popular eccentric comedian on the Knglieh stage. It wm a delightful ide of the pro-

prietor of a Pari hotel, who wished to make every thing tu attractive a ioi. hie to hi English visitors. On the carte ..... .. .1.,... .1.1.. 1.. . . . . . T.

It " wag marked, " Uiftwks a la Mouton alien. " the t ranch Assembly where he sat lor iteuns. I lie irregularity m his election mi loo wine in me uiirioi it iw wem i turned. ..II !.. .1... .!!.!.. It I... . Although China has long been ; known to possess enormous coal fields, j . i it.i .i i i

liiu MipersHivif)iis ui wiupeopie nave pre-1 last obtained permission to form acorn - pany to work a coal mine about VJQ miles west of Cheefoo, with all the modern scientific appliances, and also to construct a tramway to the sea for transportation. Sir Francis Goldsmid, whose death is reported, was one of the most distinguished Hebrews in England. He was an excellent and cultivated man, taking deep interest in higher education, and in all important scientific and political affairs. Ho strictly maintained Hebrew customs, and in Parliament was spokesman for his persecuted brethren in tho East. London University will long be grateful for the substantial aid bestowed by him. A serious attempt is about to bo made in London, to introduce horseflesh as an article of food. It will be remem

vented all attempts to explore and use round Mary and her little lamb the other I hfas w, orrating require a chanel nothem up to the present time. It is day.and this is the way he understood it; ! H;'!lf,t,,an , .;T 1 1 .?V worthy of note that a mandarin has at ! Marv 1lBI, . Lio illian. ! ot .? 'J1,.!1 Ah?uhfc haVto

bered that in 1SC8, a grand banquet was Duuuque, Iowa, May 24. Tho Her-, a channel 250 foot wide, of a depth of held at the Langham Hotel, at which 1 aid ha the following pecfol concerning the j 24 feet, will be obtained during thia .the chief dishes at least of every course tornado at Mineral Point, Wis.: The terri- month, as but 3,740 cubic yards of raaConSisted of horeeik'Sh dressed in a va-1 hla tornado which struck- Mineral Point i

riety of ways. The dinner was pronounced to be a success. The Hoard of Works having sanctioned the establish ment of slaughter-houses for horses tended for human food exi"teU to hav "&'',u There will beopene July 15 au institution known a the Tisserand Home. It was founded by a rich real estate owner of Montrougo for tho accommodation ot thirtv old men

born at that place, and his feiriUiy was them, has been found. Some friends of S that it is for tho interests of the Governauxtnented by his widow. In England Mr hiwnr1 irom Dubuque, part of whom menL and the country that the work shall institutions for old men prove so little 4 wt'A l? h0"Uhai.lime.2 !?..!orHa'i0 i be pushed with the utmost vigor to such a

f tifctoiT for those for whom they are designed, that at Greenwich Hospital cy have done away with indoor pen?,on.c.rs andgtve them em an allowance for al summarv of the tOOU mStCZMl. A sor general 000,000, that is, half as much again as ,,;d an in;,(lsc of popllfation' amounting t0 132 000, the increase in the latter ' country reached 206,000, half as much , ln FranCe While in Enj,landi

i . i a . . . i-H.i i wit .H ' m u ii i.riiiiiiri u liivrini in'uiniir i nu riiu iit nriTiii 111 in- vinui iiiiiirv 111 vriii t isn am

France. while in England 1 wards of 15,(kk) or Houoes slttiat,Lnrn :c i.:-,l. mou ;t,uv.;oC :td in th SiimiHer Garden of .Mr. .lohn

Krauca thore is not quite one birth to 3G Kin 1Iumbort. of It!lh. ;3 nrofllsft

in Ids gifts. In general his present is a geroulv Injured, and Slrx. llohan died ' emporium of the world, yet there is not watch, gold or silver, according to tho midnight. The house of Martin ! a fan-manufactory in the whole Empire. rank ofthe recipient with the crown ! SinSSlSi E !lody can ,n,ake thc,i1' md tbo and stem upon tho back of it, and a.htSM chain with a locket attacked. On the , Locking's houxe ww taken, and nothinif left : " very young, the genteel and rcspectannivorsaty of his birthday he called all but a few pieces of furniture. A bchool-1 able of all classes, to whom laborious tho coruzzteri who had assisted in guard- house, alout two and a half miles eajtof the j or constant application would be impos-

ng tho , body of Victor Kmmanucl into tlie Ilall of tho OWlsS. antl Wlien lliev Odd and Knit. If vou wish to stitution, y servc t,)o bile The man who wrote, u Revolutions never go backward,1' had never turned a back somersault over the tail-board of fri nsis.-t v a farm-vs agon. Detroit t rce Press. Jim poor man out West whose, - other dav. id vdntmoil ' 1 !hing in the i " i wife dealt him triplets the looked at them gloomily and " three of akiml and nothmsr m the Pl? i,,st t my luck!" vny is it, my near sir," said atlandlady to hint the other day, tt l.u swiaie price, and when told, said, iu some surUe: Is that so? Wl, ;, that's what L paid to advertise i my first wife. I thought prices might have come down." uunisnr u iitaj. P. T. Harnum says: as a showman, vou can't drink whisky. They know showman is mistaken. We once heard a woman call out of a second-story win - dow to an oblect that for nearly an hour had been try ng in vain to unlock the frontdoor: " Drunk again, you old hog, are you?" And if a hwr ien't an animal, what is it? Norritown Herald. j IT f A boy in it Sunday-school proposed question to be answered the Sunday

( were ranged in order the little Prince of Jured. The teacher, whiio holdini'one of 1 oamourat classes lurnisn tno best paint1 Naples presented each of the thirty with tl, f-maller scholars in herarms, was thrown , ers and decorators. Born and raised to I a watch and chain in the name of bis ffiw,'rAt ; is and Government service, they have j father. To the six chiefs iof the camhin- Vlm chv, ffi I f11" l occupy themselves with; so terc he gave horses which thev selected breaking down every thing before it. .Mr. Uicv turn to art the painting of fans, from the Itoyal stables, having previ-' Folev, a prominent man, was killed In the i screens, etc. As their numbers are ouslv looked these trift-horscs in the 1 town of Waldwlek, as well a one or two , large, and their pensions sufficient for

1 w Norwegians, wuose names ean not oe 1

j IllVUlll.

! "

preserve vour enn- home, wife and child; I'aoli Family of A.

on must first carefully ob- Clrke, Mhrhtly Injured; Orepu-v i e

1,...,. nv,.'. t,.,n ' ciuiureii oi ji.jtcunniiy, imuiy injured; l.iWS. HllltnHl ItmCS. At- ,.,i lt..rc. t,i.rinn.K nl nn.

I ....... . i. t.t....... .i.......

' n.irnt anu i.u m-Huii-vi. yurv iimni, uijeu to iuutk ranK, oiitce, caiuns, anu

A scrawny-looking individual catno some of them utterly destroyed and the de- to deshrnttto functions Every body into the ollice, the other morning, to ml- bri e irrled ff in he nilshty vala,.H,c of )U ht.of.hftml wilf, thenJ vert.se his wife whq had left him, that , aSSK , There is the Iron-bound fan of the warpeople should not trust her on his ac ,. .ko ji,nuiota war this dtv. Sonte , rior, to be worn with armor: there are

...ltr I I i auL'Afl ,1... I.sttl f . n . . m .1.

. following; " How many letters doe the Bible eonUin?" The answer was three million live hundred and thirty . . . . . ....

thousand three hundred and thirtythree. The Superintendent says to cava ii James, "Is that right?" was the prompt re tfell 118 llOW 111 UN eply. " Will you please ey there are, then?" atn Tl. following ? 11.. CMn vr. i". ... , . WimkhI iMiiiiu Moll had lamb, I -!. SUI KHHietl WllltH NHOW, Kvly pi hc Moll khI WMlkuu, ijh na iio)w iohk "H ! .nd the wool van white intohiy: An' wliernvur Mary vrud ttlilr Her Htlminiw, j ne yuuiiK nnM)e wouiu luitow I'er com jMKttly. So celebrated French version: poem should have a La petite Mario had In June mutton. '.va wool whs blsnolitw as z snon, And everywhere la belle Marie went, l,o juiHi nmttoHK whs zurn to pso. Stamford Aiivocoit. Oui, monsieur; vou avez un very large imagination; mais comment oet this, pour Deutsche : Dot Mary haf Rot cin leedle sha ; Mtt hair yust llko ohw vool; Und all Our blace dot khI did vent, Das achat ko like ulti fool. llatktmtKk ItepttllicaH. THE TERRIIiLE TORNADO. Gruat X.e of I.lfw and Destruction Property. of Thursdaj evervhiy entered from the southwet direction. It Hrt struck the leadfttnelting furnaces of James Silencer, tearing anil In another infant fhatterin it to splinter. Mr. Spemley's barn wa taken up and carried oil'. A horse which was in the 1 . pii it i; jiir!j-kl uui uftl t anil viAttliiii I luir.. nor i. or anv nnrtlnn if ottiior nf f US0 ,H fa cclllar, hu Mw.w Valter, mother of John Walter and Mrs. Sixmsley, f worried ojr with the houM-. The hot.e ! of M'' IOfd was next uplifted from its utooii, carrvinj? with it Mn. l.ofard, who?t body wax found about 100 yards dMant, the norm did the greatest damage, carrying on" tho houses of Mr. Gillmann and Mr. , Adams ami nadly Injuring a Mis Zimmcr. The brewery building ami the bam con nected therewitli were total y demolished, .nci.mtuiiu.rnf . vftiihi hnr- iriiipci rsni..,an riu -,.. .,. lJ iilffiA&fftfk , '"r " fLf r,t' hllCJt If,, , tr .uwcli .xl.unil tli.. t;ii.if.f slli-htlv In. learuuu. Among those repcrtcil killed and injured are the following: Mt. Vernon Wm. Osor: MoutroseWife of John' Galena killed. others badly Injured. , Au c?u .wil" a-vs k'e!l1. fa.rr ho could learn, were John Coleman, Mrs. Leonard. l)aa Zimincr's dauiehter. of filth. land; two children of Mr. UcardMey, .Mr. ad Jlw. Jhdian, Win. Ooiey, of W'ahlwlck; nd Mr. Cramer, of the same place. r.. ii,j r.... in n. . f which passed over this place last nignt which passed over tlilst place .n.u.i.v.., t .. i.u iuuu ; g in o w , hread and tile :r"" ; ..." ..-"t: 0 ! tWfilVfl or rlirlltei'll IRT.SOns am kllOWIl to have been killed and largo numbers erl - ' StWSi'fflf; orm0 reams and wagons are reported takt.H rom rmiU Mul carried In the air, and . nusiimi in inn Lrritunu. nr. inr.Te i . oame from the direction ot Mineral Point, ' where It wrought such terrible damage. It $J!trJl H,? riK , TZTi tTi&Z here. Xmr Primrose and Paoll, the storm seemed from a half to a mile In width and 1 .uunt ...m Ihtlitf li.fnril Iff taftU'lntf ilnwf. treiw, feHees, lmr, houses and shrubbery m It with a .cyt he. Further returns may be had to-night.

m- them almost to ruins, it next carried ott i cent, of the work required to comnlete

, hippophajjy , the liotice of John Coleman, badlv inlurinir ' th inttiAa has Vun Anna nil 1a than

o a fair trial in ! Mr. Coleman, his two daughters, and Tip , n r,,.r cnt 0f ti1G contrRC nrirfl w

It then ktnick the ;t dence of John Snen.. 1 PW h7 the Government. The de-

.1 T.. ., I.... .I... I. ,.. iu .I. ..(.,.. i lav in imvmntil limlnr tho nrnennt unf

r tell you, f,,0 "V.CT ivory, metals, wood, make animals .' V. i!n "V, !c.1 " " . etc. : fans from ten to the cent to 81.000

better." lhet(.AHh. kllllnsr them lnMantlv. The storm and more each. HrtWtflt . Dotk, m

The MiMt!Hp I Jetthw.

A report U going the rounds of th i Pr Captain Lads has asked ! from hie engagement ,to t to be ' ibibwwu num nis vniicnnni u vi umvm I a channel of 30 feet through the jeUiee, . nd has almndoned the undertaking as a f,Iu 'I w ranort roae from the faot ! Uiat Captain Kads is now ia WashingUiat Cantain Kads is now ia Washlnrton advising . wliieh will not remilre turn 0.fooL chaanel to be more than 100 feet in width. With such width the 24-foot channel I would probably be not less than 400 i feet wide, and the 22-foot channel about AOO feet. The act under which Captain create such a width of SO feet water between the jetties will be injudioious and. tend to injure them. Captain Eads expressed this to the committee when the original bill was being drawn, and he te confirmed in his opinion by observation m uia jeiiies, aim mereiore proposes 1 the modification referred to above. As an increase of the flow into the pass can bo readily obtained, not one-tentk of tho whole discharge being used, It remains entirely for the Government to say whether the stipulated size shall be adhered to or not. There is now depth of 23i feet in the whole length of the channel, and in one part a hollow of 80 feet in deptli has been created by the current through the jettios. Uy the terms of the law the contractor ha3 until September of next year to create a channel 24 feet deep, but so fast has the work advanced that it is probable that m aw a w ii wm u a. ua a. uu a a s u m Captain Eads also asks for a modifi cation of the mode of paying him for the work done. Upwards of 80 per is so great that it is impossible to push , the work as rapidly as the public inter ests require. The work is now so far . advanced and the success so pronounced J EjKKEt t uy of action in increasing the capacity ; of the channel. The board of nffom to whom the queetien of .. in ' approes oi it, anu li w i me mouincaact was referred ould certainly The Fan ia Japan. Tho Jinanasn plaim tn Vm thn 5nvnnf ' x"? ,Pnese claim to no tiio mventors ot the fan especially the open-and-shut fan, which they have had over I eleven centuries. Errv .Tininnsn mm. child uses andean make I fns. The etiquette of the fan is a scii enco with them. Japan is now the fanW I mcn u.ni iiuiiiuj. i us their needs, the result in this direction is prolific, and the cost but small. As your vessel drops anchor in Japanese waters, custom-house officers come i aboard with their fans. The sentos ' (sailors) who pulled the boat in which i they came will bo seen, naked except their loin-cloths, fanning themselves af- ; ter thejrexertion. At the landing-place j you will see policemen with their fans. '? '"incKsma men, nvno ptiujot their pemmbulator-like carts, at In "speed, overall roads, will have j f T,he WwksmlUi waiting for a 4 will pull and use his fan as rrce The Jinricksha men, who pull j'ou on horsetheir boat 1 will null and use his f:tn as rninnfnllv . . ... .ci . . Rs a lady to cool His person: his fan benn,na r tnn ; u-J,it- nl ..,i1iiI, - J njc0 Ln tl mefno: i.t. ...... .,1 randum-iablets, correction-rod for chil dren and naughty gentlemen; the balance-polo of the rope-dancer; signal stick of gymnastics, and all theatricals and pantomimes; takes tho place of tray, card-receiver, etc., when these aro not at hand; of bellows in starting fires, ami of a blower of many of their cook ing and other processes; decorates their i ceilings, walls, cabinets, etc. They are 1 ... .... 1. ...I,!.." 1 ulitl tci ami itrdecin lnna f inu ,v all 1 i;tmis of ceremonict and advertisements. I SmSkSSvSS , countless materials-skins of rcptilos, fish, birds, animals, silk, satin, hemp, Chicago TribHm. s a mrs wn " Ifl llf ? t i be maud Dr. Ball's Bby Sy Ix a nureery wherein all l life ami laugh Inthere i ntre to rap. Trice, M cents a bottle. Thomas J. Clay, r grandson of Henry Clay, Is a soldier in the regular nxmy itiTexas. ' '