MOORE'S HTO&L KW-YOK&ES. 



£ I) C U C U i C IVU V. 



T« Peon*— rv« Ptuut iunOW W *»£££ 



.atuiT^PP. * l' 3aVl-*l jjjjj^^J.'X 



'■ ■ ■" ''"; f^\'; l m''.',r , A l .i r .V,?^ 



. Fisn, of (Ms etlj, U« Qenersl Agen 



, Hooimon (aided by 1 



wr eo.srant.-c* tbal loo Mrt» 

 t>U lIMB? wide reputation. 



Uiuca Cows *J>n Dsiav F*b 



d. [is m o.-pp.m] 

 3 wort — altogether 



'"/iK-Vluni;." -If" Ltlwr. 

 p. 416] Boston: PolUipS, 







d. The 



leveraliy 



be very likely to Ond It in ibii wort, while 

 iDgaged Id Ibo dairy butlnew II will prove 



D'ji Indispensable. As it Is by far the 

 i Dulry Book published, 11 rnuil speedily 



Intanprn 



inarlly Ignore meraty 



1 skillfully wrought, ■ 



TofE A. 6. Bvb! 

 Tin publication c 



Interest, and should l 

 lifo of Hi patriot ■■ !i ■ ■ f. 



[Iflmo-pp.BM.] Now 



.biography of OAEiBALri 



icd man who participated 



iipotent knowledge of the 

 ?reod In tho Italian qoes- 



■r'in'r, ilPl 



*v 



[iCm 



i AppletonA 

 m ft a "slashing" work— replete with fuc 

 lailro. The author is evidenuy not only a f 

 hut Informed In regard to the question disc 

 )d bo aludiod It thoroughly In tho Tapal 

 therefore speak* or wilics advisedly, as i 

 ■«ly, In exposing (be corioptlons of tbo G 



BMbMh I Asuu . 



Pnaoxax Biooluctioks or TnM Alrt] 



I- 1 '"'"-l" T.^Vu,, /wau^C' 



Tnis is a very iBtoTttUna; volume, com 



ig graphic 



il style- Rochester— D. M. Dkwbt. 



gnu OongTMattoolu 

 I lon'j' 0I Lo * loQ ' IPP- 138 ) Boston : Itttfus Leigh. 



jj u "- p «aaU«ms!d 



I 9 £JH*7** "' *" p ™ 



•eat day. 



' proclaim 



HARK! 'TIS THE LOWLY SIGHING. 



^^^^^^^E^^^^^^ 



I. Hark! 'lis the low - ly sigh - taj ~0f re - phyrs o'er the 



fhe sea - bird swift U fly - ing Home to iu mountain 



High o'er our heads is shin - ing The faith ■ foi orb of night : Haste, ere its rays de - clin - ing-, Haste, by its nicl - low light 



3. Quick - ly burst the n.a - gic speU That binds thee to the shore. O, breuthe the word; yes! say fare - well to those thou'lt r 



mrm^=mmn^^^^Mi3£ £M 



, Our home shall be the bil - low; The dark blue vault our dome* The sil - rer spray our pil - low; Our joy the soow - y 



s s m ^M M£m mimt~mMi 



sleep - ing; No hare 



s thy weep - ing: 



i^jl^i^^iirps^gbgpBsgar; 



Then fly, my maid, with me : Gen - tly blows the mid - night 



Spice from Nero Books. 



Young Men in Different Countries. 



.boot, in his book, " The Roman 

 kes the following comparison of 



Alter describing tho education of young Roman 

 itbles, he says: 

 One fine day they attain their twenty-fifth year, 

 it this age an American has already tried hiB hand 

 t a dozen trades, made four fortunes, and at least 

 ne bankruptcy, bas gone through a couple of cam- 

 aigDS, had a lawsuit, established a nerr religious 

 ect, killed bulf-a-do7.cn men with his revolver, 

 freed a negress, and conquered an island. An 

 Englishman has passed through some remarkbte 

 amioalions, been attached to an embassy, founded 

 factory, comforted a Catholic, gone round the 

 world, and read the complete works of Walter 

 Scott. A Frenchman has rhymed a tragedy, writ- 

 newspapers, been wounded in three 

 duels, twice attempted suicide, vexed fourteen hus- 

 bands, and changed bis politics nineteen times. A 

 German has sloshed fifteen of bis dearest friends, 

 swallowed sixty hogsheads of beer und the Philoso- 

 phy of lie gel, sung eleven thousand couplets, com- 

 promised a tavern wailing maid, smoked a million 

 pipes, and been mixed up with, at least, two revo- 

 lutions. The Roman prince has done nothing, 

 nothing, learnt nothing, loved nothing and 

 Buffered nothing. His parents or guardians open 

 cloislcr gate, take out a young pirl as ioexpe- 

 ienced as himself, and tho pair of innocents ore 

 bidden to kneel before a priest, who gives them 

 permission to become parents of another genera- 

 like themselves. 



Watering Place 3. 



"Abb you going to any watering place thi 

 summer?" asked a young friend of Mrs. Partini 

 tos, on one of the rainy days the present weol 

 Sbe had just put up the window to keep out lb 

 damp and disagreeable air, and pulled her bant 

 kerchief up over her shoulder to keep off the chil 

 " Watering places," said she, with a Up on her boi 





in making a kite out of the last Puritan Recorder, 

 that the dame had laid by for her Sunday reading; 

 "wateriog places I don't think much of, now-s- 

 dayB, There aiu't no need of 'em since tho lucky- 

 motives have run off tho stages ; but once, as the 

 old pomps stood by the wayside, under the ambigu- 

 ous trees, with a hollow log for the cattle to drink 

 out of, it seemed like a horse in a desert, as some 

 of 'em used to aay." " My dear madam," said her 

 young friend, " 1 mean the fashionable watering 

 places where people go to spend the summer." 

 0," she replied, "that's it, is it? Well, we 



„,.„„■ 



yfroi:. 



ulitida 



gplo. 



to-day; and tbem that do, depend upon it," an< 

 here she laid her moutb close to his ear, and spok< 

 in a whisper — " they go for something else besides 

 the water." She gave him a queer look as she said 

 this, and pointed significantly to the little buffet in 

 the corner, where an old-fashioned cut-glass decan- 

 ter stood, surroubded by half a dozen little glasses, 

 as if they wero young decanters just batched out; 

 hut what she meant we dare not attempt to explain. 

 I kb just then finished his kite by burning tbe holes 

 for tbo belly band with tlie small point of Mr*. 

 Partington's scissors, that bad been heated red 

 I for tho purpose— Knittiny Work, by Ifn. 



The Transfiguration of Memory. 



As there was an hour when the fishermen of 

 Call.lee saw their Master transfigured. His raiment 

 wh.te and ghateniog, and His face liko the light, 



oura when our whole mortal lifo 

 celestial radianoe. From our daily 

 lot falls off every weed of care; from our heart- 

 friends, every Bpeok and stain of earthly iDflrmily. 

 Our horizon widens, und bluo, and amethyst, and 

 gold touch every object. Absent friends, and 

 friends gone on the losf Jrtnrrcy, staud once mora 

 together, bright with an ^immortal glow, and like 

 tho disciplea who saw M* * Mftat«r floating in the 

 clouds above them, we soy, " Lord, it is good to be 

 How fair the wife, the husband, the absent 

 mother, tho gray -haired father, the manly son, the 

 :yed daughter I Seen in the actual present, 

 i some fault, some flaw ; bat absent, we see 

 their permanent and belter selves. Of our 

 distant home, wc remember not a dark day, not 

 vile care, nothing but the echo of its holy 

 and the radiance of ita bright days— of our 

 father, not one hasty word, but only tho fullness of 

 igor and noble tenderness— of our 

 mother, nothing of mortal weakness, but a glorified 

 form of love — of our brother, not ono teasing pro- 

 voking word of brotherly freedom, but the proud 

 beauty of his noblest hours— ol our bister, of our 

 child, only what is fairest and bweelest— The £fi»- 

 iitat^s Wooing, hy Hauriut D&80HBB Stowk. 

 Autumn Night. 



I stood by the window, looking ut the moon 

 rising behind tho forest — tho ravaged forest that 

 lifted its torn trunks, bereft of their summer off- 

 spring, mutely and pitifully to heaven. The moon 

 dungeoned by clouds, hot gleamed through open 

 bars, and its vast red disk seemed to set all tbo 

 forest ablaze. In the morning there was a wind, 

 and I walked forth, ushered by troops of leaves, 

 that rushod before mo and danced in my path as if 

 I were a monarch; some came clamoring, jostling, 

 and eager behind me.likoaswann of hungry place- 

 seekers. But at night the wind was bushed, and 

 upon tho meadows, tlie garden walks, tho roads, 

 the dead leaves lay ghostly still. There was a hush 

 everywhere. The moon came mutely up, tho tree* 

 silently darkened themselves against its light, tbo 

 shadows crept like ghosts, the roads lay white as 

 grave stones. So melancholy and deathlike was 

 the sceno, that I dropped the curtain, undstepping 

 stealthily back to my chair, wheeled 



fire, Blumberc 



usly droning 



in tho 



full-mouthed 



grate.— "A Bachelors Story 



.'■y Oi 



vaa Bench. 



Chimneys. 









1 lovh my hearth, and 



he fancies that come 



to lifo within 







do I love the 





ss of summer 



Butt 



his I claim;— 



tho great inve 



tionofmoniH 



tho chi 



nney. When 



that was conceived, eivilixa 



on became complete , 





blessed; the 



Darbaric and noniudic 



fled before it ; 



peace and good will 



curled up in 



every wreath of smoke that 



iMiedfi 





Our chimneys 



openuptohea 



an, and 



through them 



ascend burnt 



ncense to all 





iliesoflife.— 









windpipes of 



hospitality."— 



"A Bachelor' 



Story.' 





not all of us be beautiful, but the plei 



We can all of us increase and strengthen the I 

 ily affections and delights of homo. 

 Dn. Fcaxki,™ observes, "The eyes of ot! 

 eyes that ruin us. If all but myself * 



should \ 



neither fine housi 



ippy v 



His is h 



per; but he 



temper to any 



Iris with the 



of tho body; w 



stand our diburder, and half cured 



e-excellont who eat 

 .instances. 



asesof the mind as * 

 half dead before « 



POISON IVT. 



Sosiu time since a correspondent inquired in 

 this department for a core for the effects of Ihiton 

 Icy. To this inquiry we have received many re- 

 sponses. Nathan Hauding, of Lakeville, N. Y., 

 says :— "To prevent tho poison, rub tho port that 

 it is presumed will be affected, with wild or Qreat 

 Celendine, thoroughly; or iu winter, with a strong 

 solution of tho herb. To cure when poisoned, use 

 a poultice of pulverized blows of hollyhock and 

 Indian meal. Change every fifteen or twenty 



, H. Y., 



'The 



A. Wilson, of Marcelh 

 poison from ivy may be cured by salt and strong 

 vtn-wjar. I have been poisoned twice heretofore, 

 and cured it by three applications as above." 



C. S. E., of Camillas, N. Y., gives the following 

 remedy: — "Tuke a muskrat's tail (if dried the 

 bettor ;) cut in pieces half an inch long, 

 put this into ono pint of ewcet milk; simmei 

 a slow fire thrco-quarlcra of an hour; cool 

 wash tho part affected. After six hours, i 

 with warm water and apply again. Take a little 



stomach, as il muy make you feel a little qualmish." 



D. L. K., of Oaks Corners, N. Y.,flays he knows 

 from experience that the following is a sitro cure : 

 "Take thejuicc of Lobelia, or Indian tobacco, and 

 apply it to tho part affected, by rubbing it on 

 freely. It can be found in almost any field in the 



Eds. Rurm.:— Your correspondent's inquiry for 

 a cure for poison from ivy, is answered by tbe 

 following facts: — About the year 1885, OJ lather 

 wishing to use an ointment for sore eyes made 

 from bittersweet, inquired of part 

 supposed to know, where it could be found, and 

 was shown 



posed to be the article required. They aro both 

 vines, though Dot much more similarit 

 between them than between the wood and grape 

 vine. Tbe root was chosen from which to make 

 the ointment, aud as it was dug, my father chewed 

 large quantities of it, swallowing the juice. The 

 samo day the ointment was made, and forthwith 

 applied to tbe eyes freely. The result showed 

 that he was fearfully poisoned, and from an eai 

 experience be was fully aware that it was fr< 

 ivy. The slightest contact with it had alwn 

 produced more or lesB irritation and sympto 

 of poison. Now irritation und inflammation n 

 very great and general. The face was swollen 

 much that an intimate acquaints 

 have known it. The eyes 

 closed, and large 



I would i 







iuflkib hung down below 

 in from either cheek. The sufferer i 

 ,o the bed, and the worst results Bnti 

 d recipe book was consulted, after several 

 al gentlemen had looked very wise and 

 i their beads. Wild turnip, or Indian tur- 

 as pronounced a remedy by the book, and 

 as much esteemed und used for its cooling, 

 : ratio" qualities, it was decided to try it, 

 alone. It was grated and taken as a pow- 



der, consuming in this way alt tbe dry ones that 

 could be obtained, while green ones wero procured 

 and steeped for a wash, bathing particularly the 

 face; bnt as every part was inflamed, the applica- 





!'■ i 



inflammation was abated, and full recovery '"sti- 

 *a»ed Ui a week or ten days. Hourly wsj! we*- 

 and repeated doses of a teaapoonful, proveeTvery 

 cooling and grateful, and were kept op until the 

 recovery was certain. Your correspondent could 



prompt and complete, 



FLowiir.iKG Saauos foe Hissoobi.— Excuse me, 

 dear Rdea l, for my presumption in making a few 

 inquiries through jour valuable paper. I see il 

 year Rcoal a short piece on gardening, but given 

 more particularly to flowers. I should like to 

 know more about the nature of soma of them, 

 whether they will do to stand in the garden all 

 winter, whether it is the best to put them out in 

 the fall or spring, and where they can bo had, and 

 what is the price of the following varieties? — 

 Thotitt, the Double Red and Double White, tbe 

 Horse ChutniU, the Double White, the Ross-colored 

 Wigelia, and the Ca/ycanthus, and much oblige 

 one of your many readers. As we live in the north- 

 east corner of Missouri, I suppose it would be diffi- 

 cult to get those flowers bcrc without injuring 

 them, but I am a great lover of flowers, and having 

 never seen any of those varieties, I am willing t* 

 risk something to procure Ibem.— M. M. L , Ltwit 

 Co., Missouri, July, 18DD. 



RBiiiuKfl.— All the varieties mentioned by our 

 correspondent are perfectly hardy. The Thorn* 

 are small trees, the tioubl* White Horse Chestnut 

 is of the same size and habit as the common Horse 

 Chestnut. Tbe Calycanthut and Wigtlia are small 

 shrubs. They can be obtained at almost any nur- 

 sery where a good variety of ornamental trees and 

 shrubs are kept, and may be planted either in tbe 

 autumn or spring. If you have to order them 

 from a distance it would bo best to do bo in the 

 fall. Assgentsot eastern nurseries arenowpretty 

 generally traveling over the western country, per- 

 haps you can order them of ono of these. They 

 may be sent a long distance safely if properlf 

 packed. The Thorns and ehrubs wdl cost abont 

 fifty cents each, and the florae Chestnuts one 



TnE Siupi 



>— Twenty clerks in a store. 

 Twenty "hands" in a printing office. Twenty 

 apprentices in a ship-yard. Twenty men about a 



village. All want 



the world, un J are 

 clerks will rise tube 

 partner, and make a fortune. 0«<;of the composi- 

 tors will own a newspaper, and become an influen- 

 tial and prosperouscitiien. On* of the apprentices 

 will become a master builder. One of tho young 

 v 1 1 1 a " o rs will get a handsome farm, and live like a 

 patriarch. But which is destined to ho the lucky 

 individual* Lucky? There is no luck about it. 

 The thing is almost as certain us the rule of three 

 The young fellow who will distance his competitor, 

 t* he who matters his business, who preserves bis 

 integrity, who lives cleanly and purely, who Devcr 

 geta into debt, who gains friends by deserving 

 them, and puts bis money into the Suvings Bank. 

 There are some waya to fortune that look shorter 

 than this old dusty highway. But the staunch 

 men who achieve something really worth having,— 

 good fortune, good name, and a ser 

 all go this road.— 2f. Y. ledger. 



A ooon man, who has swo much of the world, 

 nnd is not tired of it, says :-" The grand essentials 

 to happiness in this life are, something to do, «— 

 thing to lo\ e, and somothiog to hope for." 



E2»aP 



