Denard Friday Morning, Sept. 20, 1889. WHAR THE CORN JUICE FLOWS, CLARANCE H. PEARSON. My son, ‘afore you leave your home, I want ter say to you, i Thar’s lots of pitfalls in the world to let young roosters through; : So keep a padlock on your mouth and skin your weather eye, . But never advertise yourself as being mons- strous “fly.” : : Don’t run to dress—of all the sorts with which "the world is strewd, mr The most consarned useless thing is what they call a dood ; : 2 An’ don’t be “tough” an’ wear your hat a tilted on your nose, ' i An’ don’t be forever loafin’ i: Whar the corn juice flows. I know you think I don’t know mueh; but take a fool's advice, i An’ never go toa saloon to play at eards or dice, : Fer tho’ I'don’t hold play at cards itself is any crime, I know those barroom games use up a heap of cash an’ time; vi An’ every little while, you know, the reg'lar drinks will come, : | Until your head goes swimmin’ on a reservoir of rum; Somethin yowll jaw about the game, and likely come gi ' er yi 't know what will happen Sorgeduns Whar the ty juice flows. They saya wise man takes his drink and goes about his biz, il Tho’ I think he is a wiser one who lets it be whar tis. . Still, barroom talk an’ sich does more than drink ter spoil a man, : Fer the mind absorbs more poison than. the stomach ever can ; So ef ye will indulge, my lad, don’t hang about the bar," ‘ ; But down your booze an’ plank your dues an git away from thar; ; Fer barrin’ liquor men themselves, thar's no one ever rose, That made it his headquarters Whar the corn juice flows. . I s’pose this kinder talk from me may sotind a Tittle odd, 1 Bein’ as'how I've allus drank my forty rod; , But if I had to live again the years thet’s pass- ed and gone, : I'd undertake ter organize a temperance club of one; hs Fer now that you are leavin’ home ter steer yer own canoe, i Some theories I hav allus held is sorter fallin through, : ; An’ I'd feel a good deal better ef my son, afore share of he goes, Would boycot all the places Hy Whar the corn juice flows. THE MILLINER. : . iid Ly Every morning at precisely six o'- clock, Miss Annie Diamond opzned the door of her miiliner’s shop, and deli- cately, yet most thoroughly, swept the floor; then, while the dust was settling, she swept the sidewalk in front, and when she came along in front of her neighbor, Mr. Wilkins's, shoe Store, the rosy bachelor proprietor, flinging his door wide open, with a cheerful masculine disregard of the sadly need- ed broom in his own shop, would smg out, “Good morning, Miss Annie, and how do you find yourselfthis morning 2” To which greeting the buxom little milliner would reply, with an innate sense of discomfort as she remembered that her front hair was yet in crimping pins, and gave a somewhat bristly ap- pearance to her bright face— “Dear me! Mr. Wilkins, how do you do sir?” and she was apparently as much surprised as though these greetingsiwere not exchanged every morning of the year, excepting Sundays, when both shops were demurely closed, while the owners, dressed in their best, went to church. At this hour in the morning, tha lit- tle milliner's shop presented rather a ghostly and winding-sheet effect, owing to the fact that all bonnets, and what not, were covered with white sheets, to protect them from the dust. These the little milliner next gathered up with firm, careful touch,and soon had things temptingly arranged, and exquisitely clean; after which, she disappeared be- hind the curtain partition in the back of the shop and proceeded to prepare her breakfast. On this chill October morning, the aroma from the fragrant coffee-pot went heayvenward, only stopping on its way. long enough to tickle bachelor Wilk- in’s nose; as he chopped wood in his back yard he looked wistfully at the closed door, nnd heartily envied sleek, ‘well-fed Tom, Miss Annie's pet Mal- ‘tese cat, that had smelled the coffee ‘too, and was now meowing on the steps for admittance. As his mistress opened the door to let him in, Mr. Wilkins called out, “0, Miss Annie!” “What do you want, Mr. Wilkins 9" answered Annie, with one eve on her sizzling mutton-chop and coffee-pot and the other on her neighbor. He did not teil just what he wanted, which was, to go into the cheery little room with its strip of red carpet in front of theshining stove, and its old fash- ioned chintz covered rocker, with the innumerable womanly touches all about, that presented only too vivid a contrast to the room next door, sans red carpet, sans pampered cat, sans everything but bare necessities, and not too many of these. All these things he kept in his mind, while he said :— “I thought I'd see if you wouldn't let me chop some wood for you.: 1 need to, you see, get up an appetite for my boarding-house breakfast, which ain’t altogether so tempting as some,” he added, with a rueful glance into the room with its appetizing odors. “Dear me, Mr. Wilkins, how kind Youare! don't think I ought to let vou, but the fact is I hired a boy to do the job, and he hasn't been near, so last night 1 had to chop some, and | was really afraid I should do myself an injury, for I had to shut my eyes every time the axe came down, which made it a little uncertain just where jt would come down, you know,” said Miss An- nie, laughing. Mr. Wilkins laughed too, and vault. | ing over the fence, said : “It does heat | all how women folks never can swing | an axe or shoot off a pistol with ther | eyes open! What rood it does to shet | ‘em nobuddy knows, but they allus do ity, So you see, Miss Annie, it's abso. Intely necessary to have a man around for jes’ sechthings.” : There is no telling how much furth- er things might have goneif the coffee pot hadu’t boiled over just at this junc- ture and the mutton-chop spatterzd hot fat on the Maltese’s back, which sent him wildly spitting and growling around the room. So Miss Annie had her hands full for a little while. : After her breakfast was eaten, the dishes washed and put away in the cup- board, that hung by the chimney-jamb, with red curtains inside the glass doors, Miss Annie disappeared behind an art- fully contrived screen and made up her bed, which had been airing ever since early dawn; then the crimping- pins came out, and the pretty brown hair rippled down either side of the bright Bile face, which this’ morning for some reason was not as bright as usual. And, as she tied a white apron | around her plump ‘waist in ‘place of the gingham one, she sighed heavily once or twice, and shook her head somewhat dubiously ‘as she stepped outside her screen, all ready now for the work of the day. Now when a pretty spinster with an ardent admirer next door sighs and looks desolate it means something, and'in this case this was what it meant: Lona : uid Years before handsome Jack Addis and Annie Diamond had been lovers. Jack was a roving spirit, who was never contented to stay very long in one spot, but after his* engagement to pretty Aunie, every one was delighted thinking now he ‘would settle ‘down ; but it only lasted a little while, and when the Pike's Peak fever broke out Jach was among the first to go to win a fortune for his little blue-eyed sweet- heart, he said, kissing away her tears. And he had gone gaily away, and had never returned, nor had any word ever come from him direct. Annie's blue eyes were in danger of losing ‘their brightness then, from the tears she shed; but by and by she had settled down to the inevitable, and after the death of her father and mother, had opened her millinery shop and been on the whole not unhappy. But a week or two before this Squire Addis had died, and a rumor was floating around that Jack was coming home to settle up his father's estate, and Annie's heart had been stirred by old memories, and his mistress put him out. . Poor Tom felt injured beyond expression, and hat- ing Mrs. Grubbs with all his might, started off on a mad career of dissipa- tion. - : Meanwhile Mrs. Grubbs was comfort- ably putting Miss Annie on the rack. “Did you know Jack Addis was to her knitting-needles flew back and forth in the coastruction of a. stocking for young Grubbs. = : “Yes, I know it,” answered the vic. tim, quietly. asked the tormentor, eagarly. “No, I met him down street was all. Do you like the way these loops are put on, Mrs. Grubbs!” said Annie, holding up ‘the bonnet, © : “Yes, make em high. Mis’ Cecil had one on Sunday, week ago, that came from the city, and it's a regular sky scraper; but talkin’ ‘bout Jack Ad. dis, he was down to our house las’ night, an’ him and Grubbs set up mos’ the whole night through, cause he's anxious to get his paw’s business fixed, so he could get off this, mornin’! He made Grubb a sort of agent like. [| s'pose he fold you bout his wife and babies, didn’t he ?"* peeting inquisitive- ly at Annie. Paid “No, I dida’t talk to him at. all,” she answered, growing pale, and with a queer tension around her heart, which she felt might give ‘way almost any moment, “There, this is about done; I think it's real stylish, don’t you?” she con. tinued, in a vain effort to stem the tide. “Yes, it’s right peart now; but about Jack Addis, seems so he told us that he writ an’ writ back here, a right sinart of times, an’ never hesrn ga word from here, so bime-by he got kind of wild I reckon, and he féll sick where he was a boardin’ and his landlady was a widow, so when he got well I recken he thought "twas only polite to marry her, bein’ he hadn't” any money nor nothin’ else to reward her with. = She had some children. They've made a right smart of money, he ‘lowed to the old man. But lawsey me! I mus be goin’; I lef’ ali my work, an’ I reeken the quiet routine of herlifeshaken up a bit. So this morning as she sat down to trim Mrs. Grubbs straw bonnet with darker ribbon for fall, her mind was full of thoughts of her one time lover. At last, with a little shake of the head, she sat up very straight and thus ha- rangued herself, punctuating her lecture with emphatic stabs of her needle. — “Annie Diamond, you are an old goose! What on earth is the use of raking up by-gones? Will it make you a grain happier or better or usefulier ? Here you've got a good paying busi- ness, a nice home, a cat for company, and a neighbor next door to chop your wood and pass the time of day with you, and yet, you, you, with your gray hairs pulled out and more a coming, and an old maid down to your fingers’ and toes’ ends, aint you ashamed to be setting here raking up old by-gones ? Suppose Jack Addis does come home, is it going to make a mite of difference to you? Nota grain. Now I'll tell you what, you write to Jane this after- noon and tell her you will come over to Griggsville to spend Thanksgiving with her. You're getting morbid, and if her six children don’t holler the nonsense out of you inside of an hour, saltpetre won't save you.” So she wrote the let. ter that day, and when it had grown the baby’s tumbled in the well by this time.” So saying, and having emptied her gossip bag, she took her bonnet and her departure. But another and anoth- er dropped in, some with an excuse and some without any, but one and all to see how she took it. Poor Annie barred her door against her tormentors that night, with a grim feeling of delight that now they could not get in. When she had seated her- self in her little rocker with her cro- cheting in her hands, she looked down at Tom's vacant corner and shook her head sadly: “0, Tom, Tom,” she thought, “how conld you run off just now when I need company ? Well, Annie Diamond, I do believe you're getting in your dotage. I know you're not fool enough to pine after another woman's husband, but something's wrong. You need to go to Jane's, that's certain, and you can bring back one of the children with you, Not one of the girls this time, for they will try on every bonnet in the shop twice a day at least, but a great, noisy boy.” And then she arose to answer a knock at her back-door, and there stood her neighbor Wilkins with the Prodi- gal Tom in his arms—Tom, once so sleek, and now so ragged, with one eve too dusky for enstomers to come in she put on her gray shawl and second best bonnet, tying the strings in a severe | bow under her chin, and went out to post it. She had a sharp wrestle with temp- tation when she was getting ready, to put on her best bonnet with two be- coming knots of red on it, and her crim- son shawl, because the stage had just come in, and there was no telling what might happen; but this was weakness and conscience frowned it down, In a very few minutes poor little Miss Annie came running back with a white frightened tace as though she had seen a ghost, as indeed she had— the ghost of her old time love, Jack Addis. She had fairly blown up against closed and in a general disreputable state. His mistress uttered her favor- ite little cry of dismay at this spectacle, whereat Mr. Wilkins, putting him gen- tly down, said : “Yes, Miss Annie, here he is; I knew he'd run away ‘cause I heard you call- in’ him several times to-day, so when | went to carry old Smith's boots home to night, who should come rub. bin’ up ag’in’ me in the street but old Tom? I'd never knowed Lim 1f [ hadn't knowed he was lost. Can I come. in a few minates, Miss Annie?’ added Mr. Wilkins, blushing all over his cherubic face, partly from embarrassment and partly from a fearfully tight collar which was doing its best to choke him, “Why yes, Mr. Wilkins, please ex- him as he was coming out of the post | office, for the wind was blowing in | great gusts; she had known him at once | and after her little startled cry, he had | recognized her and hadsaid, “Annie, is | it you?" and then as she turned and i fairly ran away, he had let her go and | had never come afier her, No one knocked at the door that evening, and Annie sat long before her fire, with idle hands folded in her lap, | while Maltese Tom worried himself in. to a fever trying to find out what ailed his rosy, bustling little mistress, who paid no attention to his landishments, | but always looked straight before her | into the fire. The next morning Mr. Wilkins’s soul | was troubled within him at the sight | of his neighbor's white face and quiet | response to his cheery greeting, “What | can have happened’ he wondered. If it’s only one of her sister Jane's young "uns that's ailin’ I don’t think she'd | look so smitten like as the flowsrs do | after the first frost. “Sides,” contin- | ued the kind-hearted shoemaker thoughtfully, “if it had been one of | Jane's young 'unsshe’d likely (old me.” “Well, T wish't I could help her, for if there's anybody I sets a store by its Miss Annie Diamond, town of Mary- ville, State of Illinoy.” This had such a legal sound that there was something comforting in it, so several times that day the good man repeated, “Miss An- nie Diamond, town of Maryville, State of Ilinoy,” each time with “unbounded ! satisfaction. Meantime his little neighbor was in a manner fortitying herself against the | flood of gossip and questions she was sure she would hear that day. ! Directly after breaktast came Mrs. Grubbs for her bonnet, and when it was produced, she found a little fault with the trimming, and then followed Miss | Aunie behind the curtain to wait until | it'was altered. As she sat down heavi- ly in Miss Annie's rocking chair, she rocked on Pom’s tail, causing an in- stantaneous enlargement of the feature, and a dreadful howl of rage, whereat | out of me. cuse me for not asking you before, please come in; I was so flustered see. ing Tom looking so, I quite forgot everything else, and after all your kin- ness bringing him home too, dear me!” and Miss Annie flew around to get her easiest chair for her visitor. Mr. Wilkins came in and sat down a trifle gingerly, as though he feared [ something might break; put his hat ex. actly under the middle of his chair, and then sat up and noted the little bright room with its mistress flying around to get her wounded per some supper, and a calm emile of approval broke over his face. “I'll do it,” he thought. “I'll do it if I bust this counfounded collar, and I hope I will, for its choking the life I'll ask Miss Annie Dia mond, town of Maryville, State of 111i noy ;”' and now Mr. Wilkins knew why be had liked the sound of these words, they sounded like a license to him-._:ty be my wedded wife.” To think was to act with Mr. Wilkins, and he thereupon laid his honest heart at the little milliner’s feet, when withouta | word and to his great dismay, she burst | into a flood of tears. “Bless my heart, Miss Annie” (Dia- I mond, town of Maryville, State of I)i- | noy, he was going to add, but thought ! beiter of it), “don’t, I beg, ery! 1 | wouldn't a-grieved you not for nothin’ {nor noboddy,”” he continued, with a storm of negatives. But she kept on crying fora few min- utes, until observing the concern on her friend’s purple countenance, she stopped | erying and said as well as she could, +0, { Mr. Wilkins, don’t mind me. 1 am fee]. ling kind of hysteriky this evening, and | (just couldn't helpit. You've been so kind that T hope you won't think me ungrate- ful, but really I can't think of marry ing you or anybody else I--I was going to harry some one once, you know, iu things went wrong, and I never Hi URL think of such a thing again, but 11 Just stay alone all my life.” At which cheering prospect her tears gushed forth again. | “Now that,” said Mr. Wilkins, wich $0 much earnestness that it is a marvel hum?” she opened the ball with, as “Du tell! d’e‘¢éme up ‘to’ see ye 2 that his collar button did not fly, “is utter nonsense. 1;don’t suy but we both | had our youth romances, but that's no ish with loneliness now. T tell you now, | if you could see my forlorn room just separated from all this coziness by one wall, you'd marry mein a purely mis- sionary spirit.” "Here Miss Annie be- gan to look interested. “I tell you,’ went’ on the sturdy wooer, “this red room with its womanly fixins looks like a bit of heaveu to me. Come now Annie, don’t be foolish. I'll try and make you happy, and I'll take care that frost-bitten look T'see on your face this mornin’ don’t git there again through any fault of ‘moine. I aint a a goin’ home, and leave you to, think about all T've said.” And Mr. Wilkins, quite out of breath from his elosuence and coliar, took his leave. Annie was surprised to find the ten- sion about her heart had melted away and had not killed her, but left her on the whole much more comfortable. Meantime things went on about as usual. Tom licked himself respectable again. Morning after morning went by until it ‘was’ very near Thanksgiving. door open at exactly the right mo- | ment to sing out, “And how do you find yourself this ‘morning, Miss Annie?" and the answer came as usual. “Wy, Mr. Wilkins, how do you do, sir?’ The wood in Loth yards” was chopped. The feet and heads of Maryville were appropriately covered for cold weather, and one evening Mr. Wilkins appeared in his neighbor's cosy room. This time he was not as near strang- ulation from his collar, which was about him that caused a gentle flutter about Miss Annie's heart. “Are you goin’ to Jane's soon?” he asked. “Yes, L expect to start day after to- morrow,” she answered. “Well, what do you say to being married up there Thanksgiving even- ing?” suggested this audacious lover easily. Miss Annie almost screamed. “Mr. Wilkins! the idea! Why I haven't a thing ready,” she gasped. “That don’t makea mite of difference,” calmly replied Mr. Wilkins. «I do hate a lot of fuss and feathers, don’t you? Then, too, we can have the partition b2- tweeen this room and mine knocked out while we are gone, and you can fix ’em up.” Miss Annie was positively speechless. So after a short pause he arose to take his leave and added : “I'll be up night before Thanksgiving and make all the arrangements ; you needn’t be to a grain of trouble.” Annie knew her cause ‘was lost, but for some reason or other she took kindly to this peremptory wooing. That night as she was putting her hair up in erimp- ing-pins she laughed as she thought, “Well, that ridiculous man! to think he should fall in love with me, and see- f 10oks, let alone mine—-I ing me every morning with these things on! It's enough to spoil a beauty ’s reckon folks will be surprised.” CE———— —————— Comparison of Cows and Sheep. The hardest work on the farm is that of dairying, for such work never be milked regularly. To conduct a dairy means to rise very early in the morning, feed the cows, milk, cool the milk, haul it to the railroad (in all kinds of weather), and it converted into butter there is the setting of the milk for cream, churning, working the but- ter and clezning the cans and other utensils, Then the stables are to be cleaned, bedding arranged, the cows sent to pasture, all in the forenoon. Late in the afternoon is more milking, cooling, feeding and fastening the cows for the night, a late hon appearing be- fore the work is finished, CAPITAL, AND PROFIT FROM COWS. The amount of lahor necessary in conducting the dairy business demands an outlay of capital which is very large, for it means shelter for the milkers, and other accommodations, Buildings and fences, horses and wagons for hauling, and other adjuncts drain the purse, and yet the farmer may not make any pro- fiv av all if the season is unfavorable, the grass scanty and the hay crop short. Yet dairying pays despite all these draw. backs, as a large portion of the prolit is in the manure, which enriches the land and adds to the value of the far. PROFIT FROM SHEEP. As the sheep is an active forager,and can subsist on nearly all kinds of food, the outlay of capital required to make sheep pay is comparatively small com- pared with that required for dairying ; but with more labor devoted 0 sheep they can be kept to better advantage and made a specia| branch of industry. titably kept in large flocks unless they Lave an extended area of ground, bat this is shown by the methods practiced in England to he a delusion. True, sheep in England are not kept in large tiocks, but large numbers of sheep, di- vided into suitable flocks, are hurdled upon limited spaces, the hurdles re- higher than some farmes can be pur- chased in this country the sheep pay. well. The mutton breeds kept, as wool is given no at'ention in England. being classed a by-product, the sameas hides. Americans ohj «ct to the hurdling system as being too laborious ad requiring extra help. A compari- son of the labor required in the man- agement of dairy stock with that which is necessary tor sheep under the hurd- ling system will show a great advan- tage in favor of sheep, while the profits will be much lar_er in proportion to capital invested and expenses incurred. With the use of improved breeds and the hurdling system sheep in Eneland at- tain the live weight of 300 pounds in twelve months. With the demand for choice mutton which aiwavs exists in ur narkets there is nothing to prevent he American tarmer trom rivaling his wother in England. eras smtsebris sn ~~Michigan’s new 8500 liguor tux law begins to operate on October 1, earthly reason why we should each per- | A writer in Forest and Stream has oin’ to say any more to-night, hut I'm 2 A Ye led it. Both began to “bore” for worms, Every morning Mr. Wilkins banged his | comtort, but there was a resolute air | ends, there being no holidays or Sun- | days to afford rest, as the cows mnst | It is claimed that sheep cannot be pro- | moved as occasion demands, and on farms that are rented at sums much alone are Woodcocks and their Work, They Imitate the Sound of Rain dnd the Worms Come Up. © —— this to say on a subject few people have | thought about. : When the moon rose I took a position near one of the moist places, where the | “borings were freshest ‘and most plenti- ful, and awaited developments. For ga long time the bright light of the moon fell full upon the spot I" wished to ob- serve, and I could see everything with the utmost plainness. At about 8 o’- clock a woodcock dropped down silently beside the brook.. Presently, another bird walked out of the shadow and join- an operation 'l hud never seen before, and a curious performance it was. The birds would rest their bills upon the mud and stand in this position’ for several se- conds, as if listening. Then with a sud- den, swift movement, they would sink | the bill its entire length inthe soil, hold | it so for a second, and &s swiftly with- draw it. Though I watched the birds carefully with the glass, I could not de- tect the presence of a worm in their bills when they were withdrawn. But the subsequent process gave me the clue to their method of feeding. Af- { ter having bored over a considerable piece of ground—a square foot or more —they proceeded to execute what look- ed comically like a war dance upon the perforated territory. They also occa- sionally tapped the ground ‘with the tips of their wings. My intense curiosity to know the possible utility lof this process was at length gratified by seeing a worm crawl, half length from one of the bor- ings, when it was immediately pounced upon and devoured by one of the wood- cock. Presently another worm made its appearar.ce, and so on until the two woodcock had devoured ‘as many as a dozen of them. Then the ‘vein’ seem- ed exhausted, and the birds took their leave. ; -I have subsequently studied the phil- osophy of this method of digging bait, and have come to the conclusion that certain birds are a great dealer wiser than certain bipeds without feathers. If you will take a sharpened stick and drive it into the ground a number of times, in a spot which is prolific with worms, and then tap the ground with a stick for a few minutes, you will find that worms will come up through the holes which you have made. 1 account for it by the supposition thatthe tapping ofthe stick somehow affects the worms the same as the patter of rain, anditis a well-known fact that worms come to the surface of the ground when it rains. The antics of the woocdcocks after they had made their borings, were simply mimetic, and intended to delude worms into the belief that it was raining in the upper world. The worms being deceiv- ed, came up and were devoured. All this maygseem ridiculous, but if is it not true, will some naturalist [please state how a woodeock can grasp and devour a worm when its bill is confined in a solid, tight-fitting tunnel of soil, and also how itis enabled to know the exact spot where it may sink its bill and strike the worm ? And further, of all those who have seen a woodeock feeding, how many ever saw it withdrawn a worm from the ground with its bill ? Elijah'a 1d the Ravens. An Eminent Divine Cannot Make the Incident Apply. Washiugton Post. North Carolina probably never produc- | ed an abler preacher than Dr. Francis LL. Hawkes, who a quarter of a century ago was pastor of Grace Episcopal Church, New York. Short, thick-set, swarthy, black-eyed ani! black-haired, he was a striking perscnage. He was not only a | great pulpit orator, but considered the best reader in the New York episcopacy. | His rather luxurious family deterred him | from accepting a bishopric, whick would | have been otherwise tendered. One day | a delegation from a Buffalo church wait- ed upon and invited him to accept a pastorate in that city. “Well, gentlemen, other things being satisfactory, th question of acceptance | narrows down to a business matter,” said Dr. Hawkes. “What salary do yuo offer 2” “Dr. Hawkes," said the spokesman, ‘we recognize that you have a high re- putation and are willing to be liberal. Our recent pastor has received $2,500, but on account of your standing we have | decided to offer you $3,500.” “My good man,” cried the doctor, gasping, ‘do you know what salary I. an receiving here?” #tNo, sir.’ “I get $15,000 and this parsonage, and as I have an expensive family I do not see my way to accept your offer,” The spokesman looked rather sheep- ish, but made another essay. “If we had known that fact, sir, we would un doubtedly have looked else- where ; but you should remember that | the work of the Lord must be done, and | as to providing for your family, you | | know the story of the ravens 277 “Now, my friends,” responded the clerayman, quizzically, “1 have made the Bible my study ever since I was 28, I have read it through carefully and | prayerfully over a hundred times. I | remember the raven incident perfectly, but nowhere can I find any reference to | | | the TLoid’s providing for young Hawkes.” tn re rm mn Some Very Startling Figures, New York Herald Our neighbor Seicnce goes into a mathematical calculation of the pros- pective population of this country one hundred years from now, which is very interesting. In the course of its Arguiient some statistics of the past ave given, aud they are well worth looking over, For instance, our population in 1750 was 1,260,000. Ar the ena of thirty vears, in 1780, it had reached 2,945,000. At the end of thirty years more, the lifetime of a generation, 1810, it stood | at 7,239.881. In the course of another generation, or in 1840, it was 17.069,- | 453. At the present time the ficures | run up to the neighborhood of 65,000, | 000. | [t this ratio of increase is a fair Lasix | for prediction we shall have a* the time! when the 10-year old boy of to-day shall be 40 years of age, in 1920, some thing like 160,000,000 of people in the United States, and when that man’s 40 reaches his 70th birthday, 1950, we shall have close upon 400,000,000. That man’s son, who will be in “the youth of his old age” in 1990, one hundred years from now, wiil be the citizen of a republic with a population of more than 1,000.000,000. these figures are rather appalling. They are in the region of the unthink. ‘able, and so far beyond the reach of our imagination that are practically value- less. Events may happen which will ma- teriallyfimpede this progress of numbers. Bat even if we cut the sum total down fifty per cent., which would seem to be discount enough for any emergency, we still have a population of five hundred millions as the result of anoth- er century of national life. Train the Girls. According to an exchange when a girl is ten years old, she should be given household duties to perform according to her size and strength, for which a sum of money should be paid her week- ly. She needs a little pocket money, and the knowledge Low to spend it judi- ciously, which can so well be given by a mother to her little girl. She should be required to furnish a part of her ward- robe with this money. For instance, if she gets ten cents’ a day, she should purchase all her stockings, or all her gloves, as her mother may decide, and doing this under her mother’s supervi- sion, she will soon learn to trade with judgment and economy. Of course, the mother will see to it that the sum is suf. ficient to do this, and yet leave a trifle for the child to spend as she pleases. This will supply a healthy stimulus, it will give her a proper ‘ambition and pride in her labor and ability to use money properly. © As she grows older these household duties should be increas- ed, with the proporiionate increase of money paid for the performance of them. We know ofa lady who divided the wages of a servant among her three daughters. There is a systematic ar- rangement of their labors, which is done with a thorougliness and alacrity found neither with a hired girl or a daughter who feels that she has to do it with nothing to encourage or stimulate her in the work. —According to the Washington cor- respondent of the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette, an interesting, not to say valua- ble discovery has been made by Captain Weedin, in charge of the animals at the Zoo. The building is infested by rats, and how to get rid of them has long been a perplexing question. Traps were used, but nothing would tempt the ro- dents to enter. Ina store room drawer was placed a quantity of sunflower seeds, used as food for some of the birds. Into this drawer the rats gnawed their way, a fact which led the captain to experi- ment with them for bait in the traps. The result was that the rats can’tbe kept out. A trap which appears crowded with six or eight rats is found some mornings to hold fifteen. All Sorts of Paragraphs, —!‘Prof.”? Wisoins, dicts an open winter. —The month with an r in it is here, and oysters are now ripe. —A post-office in North Carolina is to be named “Baby McKee.” —It is now asserted that there are fully eighty varieties of tomato, —An Eastern Ohio man only thirty- four years of age is a grandfather. —There will be no ‘“watering-place season’ after the 20th of September. —Fourteen hundred men are now em- ployed at the Brooklyn navy yard. —New England is having no lack of of Ottawa, pre- { quarter-millennial anniversaries nowa- days. —A post-office in Fulton county, Pa., bears the brief and unromantic name of Sis 7 — Boston spent about $100,000 dur- ing the vacation ‘scason on her school houses. ; —Jay Gould thinks governmental control of the telegraph both practical and advisable. —Alice Liebmann, aged nine, is as- tonishing London critics with her skill on the violin, —P. Myett, accompanied by a dog, | has driven in a buggy from California to Pennsylvania. —The mouth of Calumet river, empty- ing into Lake Michigan, has moved east 2,800 feet since 1836. —Tatah county, Idaho, boasts of a genuine ice mine, with veins from one to four inches thick. —In Paris something new are silk and linen handkerchiefs made in the form of a leaf with a stem. —General Albert Pike, the head of all the Masonic orders and rites in this country, is in his 80th year. —The outgoing European steamers from New York are no longer crowded. It is now the season to come home, ——D. L. Moody is preparing to open an evangelistic training school in Chi- cago, to continue througout the year. —There was a reunion of the Smith family in Peapack, N. J., the other day, but only 3,000 of them were present. —Thenew Constitution of the State of Montana is said to be ten times as long as the Constitution of the United State. —The people of the United States spend $25,000,000 yearly for baking powder—so says an official report pro- mulgated at Washington. —In point of service the oldest pilot on the Hudson river is Ezra I. Hunter. who has stood at the wheel for forty- eight consecutive years, —-Chus. Young, a colored cadet, crad- uated from West Point, a few days ago, being the second negro to receive a diploma from that institution. —-Hermann, the magician, was ho- cus-pocussed out of $650 the other day. Even a slight of-hand professor has to look very sharp after his cash these days. ~~The first monument to Genera] Grant in this country is to be unveiled this month at Fort Leavenworth, the post where he passed nis early career as a soldier, dn”