.. BABYHOOD. ' ' IlelfjTi-ho! Ilnfovhouii: Toll mo whore you HnpriT. r.cl'n imlillf horn agnln, for we lmvo gone nn!rny; Tuke llilx rnm-r hnnd of lulno and him me ly the (liiKor T.nok to tlie lotus lnnda of the fur awey, Turn Imrk tlio lnovca of llfi'! rtnn't rend l!u uttirv lt'i 11 ml tbe plctnrea nnd funny nil l!i; rent i W cnn nil the written pngog with n lirlehtcr Klnry thnn old Time, the atory-tollir, nt hl ocst. Turn to tlio brook, where the honeysuckle tlpi'liw; OVr lin vane of perfume, spill It on tho And the ht-e nnd humming bird In ecutnay nre Ripping , , From the fnlry flngoni of tho blooming liiciiHt trees. Turn to the Inne, where we used to "teeter totter," I'rlntltitf little foot pnlma In the yellow Laughing "at the lar.y cattle wading In the water, . , Where the ripples dimple round the but tercups ot gold; Where the dusky turtle Ilea basking In tho grevel nf the minnv sandbar In the middle tide, And tho ghostly ilragon-lly pauses In Ills travel . To rest like a blossom where the water Illy died. nclgh-ho! nnbyhood! Tell me where you linger. . . , Let's toddle home again, for we have con astray: Take this eager hand of mine and lead mo ly the Anger Paek to the lotus lands of the far away. Jumca Whlteomb Itlley, In the Inquirer. A BIG BUCK. Cnto roused us with the dawn, nnd wo went out to si tlio log. fed, pre punitory for tlio nioruliiK hunt. It wns lndood a msijinltltvnt i:ick. "Spot," tho slro nud loader of this noblo Kroup, wns of a pure white body, with a Bluglo black spot In tho centra of the forehead from which ho took his name. He wns a most powerful unimnl nnd nblo to cope with the larg est buck alone. Ho wns a stnshound, carefully crossed upon tho short-logged and long bodied foxhound. "Music," the dam, was a foxhound of the "true Spnrtnn breed," with a voice like a distant alarm bell, while the organ of old "Spot" was as sonor ous as the loom of "old ocean" against hollow cliffs. But among them all my eye Instant ly detected a magnificent creature a block and tan hound, that to mo seemed absolutely perfect as a speci men of canine symmetry. Hla coat was as flno as the most glossy silk; from his head, which was pointed like a serpent's, his line, broad and thin ears, with their great swelling veins, dependod more than an Inch below the tip of his nose. Ills neck like a young stag's; his cheat, barrel ribbed and deep as a panther's; his loins, an clean as a greyhound's, with a broad, strong back; limbs that seemed to have been hammered by some wondrous skill out of fine steel; and such a vote! bugles, clarions, cymbals, bells, winds, waters, echoes, mingled, clashing, rolling, roar ing, in one tide of rushing sound; alto gethar they were nothing to that voice. "No where, nor nothing!" as Jack ex claimed, "to the voice of 'Black Terror and 'Smile, ' as he named a beautiful tnn slut of smaller size, which, stood besldo this noble animal. The whole kennel was fed upon bread exclusively during tho hunting season, and were never permitted to touch any meat except what they themselves killed. Tills kept them in flue bottom and wind for running and made them very savage. A delicious breakfast Is rapidly dis patched, the horn Is sounded and we are off for our stands In the deep for est. Cato, who "drives," turns to the loft at the corner of the plantation, follow ed by the whole pack, while wo follow a bridle path loading straight abend Into the depths of tho forest. Iu a half mile I am stationed Just on the verge of the "old bank," as it is culled, of the river, with the deep for est, through which Cnto is driving on my left, and on my right, after a sheer descent of twenty feet, a tremendous swamp, which was now dry, except where traversed by deep lagoons tilled with quicksands. Jack rode ou a inllo further to his stand. My instructions were not to let tho hounds pass my stand if I missed the deer, which would attempt to get by me Into the almost Impenetrable swamps, where, If the dogs followed him, they would be lost for the remainder of the day. I hnd not long to wait, for I could just begin to hear my heart beat In the restored silence, nnd a neighboring squirrel had only just commenced bark lUjg at me, when a low and distant bay, followed by a faint whoop, showed that a trull had been struck. Gradual ly tho sounds gathered as voice after voice Joined In. until at last the thun der bass of old Sixt boomed out and old Music followed with a blast, and now ihe elasniiig ciangor of Black Ter ror's tongue htl off tlio bursting sym phony and the forest rang to reverber ations, which startled tlie heart Into my very throat Peal on peal and now a sudden si lence iny blood Is running like mill tails through' the swollen veins nnd the arteries throb almost to bursting! Crash! there it goes again! Heavens! what music! How tho leaves Mutter and the trees sway to my vision! Whoop! In a smothered gasp. If I could only yell! Here they come! I wouder the forest Isn't levelled before tho mighty roll of sound! Ha! lost again! No, it Is only mullled as they go down some valley! Now they rise again! ye gods! If I could only give one ytill. How it deafens! ihev must be right upon mo! they will be running over mo, dogs, deer and all! I am no Aetnoon! Oh, hurricane and thunder claps hist! here he conies, nnd out bounded within ten feet of me a tre mendous buck, with his mighty ant lers Uko forest trees, thrown back up on his rump! He has paused an lu stanr. Crack! away with one prodigious bound, he clears tho twenty feet of bunk and is crushing through tho swamp. What a roar! Here they are! bristles up, tongues out. Black Terror ten paces ahead, Spot next, then Music and all the rest In a crowd, looking savage as harried wolves. You might ua well talk of stopping tho Mississippi they have swelled blood. What a terrible burst! Black Terror's leap Is as long as the buck's. Old Spot roars again. They are out of sight! That's Jack's yell! Hark! his horse's feet al ready! He Is coming, furious because I did not stop the buck. And furious he was sure enough! I began to ox.clulm at tho top of my vo!co before ho enme In slht, but it wax of no use. He comes ilnttering up nnd nearly rides mo down. "Why tho deuce didn't you stop that door? Are the dogs goneV Black Ter ror will never stop. Confusion, man! were you a.' lrepV" "ile wim ua big as nn elephant, Jack. Here's ph r.ty of blood." said I, trying t appeiii1 cool nnd pointing to tho ! i::-.)i'.ii(l Willi my gun; "he's done for." ...tek sprang to tho ground and ex amined tho signs. "Oh, thunder! you've shot him too far back and through tho loins; ho will take to tho river. What a track! It must bo tho 'big buck.' I shall lose r.lack Terror. Come nhend and let's cut htm off before he gets I hero If wo kill our horses!" And away he dashed through the wood. 1 followed as fast as possible, and such n ride ns thnt was! Through vino matted thickets, over dead trees, leap ing nt breakneck speed tho wide la irooiis away, away we clattered, ftwim ln t hit m eh the donso swamp like wild men possessed of demons. At length we burst upon open ground and .lack gave a yell that would have waked tlio dead. "Too late! tot) Into! the P.lg Buck, by old Bell Mouth! he'll take the river." Jack's yell had slightly startled the buck, which was making for the river along the bank of a wide lagoon. Ho ti::iiitl f'harp and attempted to leap the lagoon; lie disappears on we rush nt mad peod but Jack knows what he is about, and his horse, too while my mare leaps. Plump wo laud In the middle of the lagoon, followed by a roar of laughter from Jack. "Next time, shoot further forward, If you plenso, old boy!" But it was no Joking matter for mo we li.nl landed in a qulcksnnd. I looked iii- und with nn expression of terror nt Jack, for 1 felv my mare sink ing under me. "Catch that limb above you," shout ed he, "and tie your bridle to it or you will both go under." There was no time for mincing mat tors. I let go my gun, which sunk out of sight forever. Rising In my saddle, with n desperate effort I reached the stout limb of a bending cottonw'ood tree, which I dragged down, nnd to which I managed to secure my bridle by a strong knot I succeeded llnally by tlio aid of the Cottonwood In reach ing the bank, nud by this time, when I bxiked back, I found that my poor mare had sunk nearly up to her eyes. I now looked around, nnd saw Jack busy enough betwecu beating off the dogs and attempting to secure the buck, wideh hnd stuck fust nlso in tlie quicksand. Ho succeeded lu throwing a rope about his horns, and when tho "driver" came up we dragged It out at our leisure, after having rescued my poor celeste, wuich from banging so long by her headstall had grown quite black In the face. The buck was a prodigious animal, and had several times before been chased by Jack, when It always took to the river and had thus lost him sev eral '.no hounds. Romance. ' Frenrh Art In Manipulating ritutter. It Is stated that French builders, who have carried the art of hardening plas ter to whore It is used for flooring, cither In place of wood or tile, em ploy for this purpose six parts of good quality of plaster Intimately mixed with one part of freshly slaked white lime finely sifted. The mixture as thus composed is laid down In as quick time as possible, care being taken that the trowel is not ustd upon tlie surface for too long a time. After this the floor Is allowed to become dry and Is subsequently saturated In a most thor ough manner with sulphate of iron or zinc, the iron giving the strongest, sur face, its resistance to breaking being found to bo twenty times the strength of ordinary plaster. It appears that with sulphate of zinc tho floor remains white, while when Iron Is used It bit comes the color of rusted Iron. But if linseed oil, boiled with lithnrge, be ap plied to tho surface It becomes of an attractive mahogany color, this being especially the case if a coat of copul varnish is added. Their Descent. Swinburne Is a descendant of Celtic nnd Scandinavian stock. Tennyson seems to have been equally of Danish and Planlagenet ancestry, with a slight mixture of Kronen blood. William Mor ris is a descendant of Welsh and Anglo Danish stock. Robert Browning's great-grandfather, who was of Welsh Saxon origin, married a Creole, while the poet's mother was of Oerman and Scotch parentage. Rosettl is 25 per cent. English, and northern blood mingles with his Italian ancestry. The commingling of races in the literary geniuses of France is more remark ublo still. The grandmother of the senior Dumas was a black woman of St. Domingo. Flaubert hud Iroquois blood In his veins. The fathor of Vic tor Hugo came of the Hermans of Lor raine, while his mother was descended from the Bretons. Greek, French and Italian blood exists in Zola. His father was nn Italian mathematician. Ibsen Is of German and Scandinavian nn eery intermixed with Scotch. Royalty's Cigars. When f wns In Tlnvnnn T bow two orders of Il.tMil) cigars each thnt hud been nintle up ror the Czar of Rusula and the Prince of Wales. The hlgh elass foroleaioi' smnkoa r1irnia nl-wMit double the size that the American does. 1 ho cigars made for tho Czar and the Princo of Wales were six Inches long and cost $t npieco lu Havana. The labor of making each cigar cost o cents, nud on account of the great enro necessary In tho selection the wrappers cost 15 cents apiece. The wrappers were the finest leaves from tho Vuelta Aba go district, a small sec tion of property which produces the finest tobacco In tho, world. Pittsburg Dispatch. A Cigarette Fiend. ' George E. Mills, a young man, has Just been committed to nn Insane nsy luin at St. Louis as a clgarotte maniac. He repeatedly threatened to kill his father, mother and sister and had made two attempts to commit suicide. His mother says of his Incarceration: "My poor demented son begged trite ously not to bo taken to tlio asylum, but I felt tlmt It was a duty I owed him and ourselves, and now he Is in good hands, whero, thank Clod, he can not get cigarettes to make him crazier." Not Affected by Hard Ttm.s. The gay and festive trnln robber Is still plying his trade In the Southwest. He has felt little of the hardships of tho panic and tho repeal of the silver i bill does not affect him. Baltimore ; World. POULTRY FOR MARKET. . Dlreeiloiia n to (lie llrt Method of I'neklng. All poultry slumld bit thoroughly pooled and dried bcloro packing, pre paratory for shipment to market. For packing the fowl lirovldc boxes, as no. 1. Ihev are ureatly preferable to barrels. Commence your packing by placing n layer of rye. straw, that bns been thor onirhly cleaned from dust, ou tho bottom of the box. Bend the betid of the first fowl under It ns shown In our Illus tration (Fig. 1), and then lay It lu the left bund corner, with tho head against the end of tho box, with tho back up, 'out Inuo to till this row in the same manner tinlll completed: then begin I ho second row tho snmo way, letting the bend of the bird puss up between the rump of tho two adjoining ones, no. I. which will make It complete and solid (see illustration. Fig. ). In pneklug the hist row, reverse tho order, plac ing tho lntid against tho end of tho box, letting tho feet pass under each other. Lastly, fill tight with straw, so that the poultry cannot move. This gives a ilrmness In packing that will prevent moving during transportation. Cure should be taken to huve the box filled full. To Double the Uunntlty nt Manure. Provide a good supply of black swamp mold or loam from tho woods, within easy roach of your stable, and place n layer of this, one foot thick, under each horse, with litter as usual on top of the Jonm or mold. Remove tlio droppings of tho animals every day, but let the loam remain for two weeks, thou remove it mixing it with other manure, niid replace with fresh mold. By this simple means any farm er can double not only the quantity but also the quality of his manure, and never feel himself one penny the poorer by the trouble or expense in curred, while tho fertilizing value of the ingredients absorbed nnd saved by the loam cnn scarcely bo estimated. Joslah Qulney, jr., has been very suc cessful In keeping cattle In stables the year through, and feeding them by means of soiling. The amount of ma nure thus made has enabled him to Improve the fertility of a poor farm of 1D0 acres, so that In 20 years the hay crop had Increased from 0 to Hi HI tons. The cattle are kept in a well nrranged stable, nnd nre let out Into the yard nn hour or two mornings uud afternoons, but they generally ap pear glad to return to their quarters. By this process, one ncro enables him to support throe or four cows. They nre fed on grass, green oats, corn fod der, barley, etc., which are sown at intervals through tho spring and sum mer months, to bo cut ns required; but ho remarks thnt his most valuable crop Is his manure crop. Each cow produces three and a half cords of solid, and three cord of liquid manure, or six nnd a half cords In nil. Five to eight miles from Boston, such manure Is worth from $5 to $8 a cord. From this estimate, he has come to- the con clusion thut a cow's manure may bo made as valuable as her milk. Ilome-Mnde Superphonplinte. A Western journal remarks that al most every former has upon his own promises one of tho best superphos phate manures known. Tho elements ure found in the old bones, scattered carelessly over yard, garden ami farm, nnd common wood ushes, generally al lowed to go to waste. If the bones are gatheml, placod under shWter, thoroughly mixed with three or four times their bulk of nshes, kept moist with water enough to make a good lye nnd occasionally stirred and mixed, they will, In u few months, become so tender and friable that they may be pounded Into powder, ami in this state they form a valuable manure, better than the average of the commercial fertilizers that seem so expensive. The ashes, of course, should be mixed with the bones. Tho fertilizer thus made should be applied by the handful In tho hill of corn, and Us effects may bo early seen in tho deep, rich green of the growing plant. Tills may seem like small business -to a farmer who has but little spare time, but it Is by just such economy that our best farm's become so profitable, uud It Is by lack of such economy thnt so many farms fail to yield even a comfortable living. 1'onltry Manure, Fifty fowls will make, iu their roost ing house alone, ten hundredweight per annum of the best manure lu tin world. Hence fifty fowls will make more Ihuii enough manure for an acre of land, seven hundredweight of guano being tho usual quantity applied per acre, and poultry manure being even richer than gunuo In ammonia and fer tilizing sails. No other stock will give nn oqunl return in this way; and these figures demand curoful attention from tlio larg.t farmer. The manure, "before using, should be mixed with twice lu bulk of Mirth, nnd then allowed to stand lu a heap, covered with a few Inches of earth, till decomposed throughout, when It makes tho very best mauuro which can be had. f sJte Bang-up ? lack AwnTsi.ru K'n. sky. Klegunt ilk rnhouldrrnnd sli-evo llnliiK. Fancy iilnld liodv lining. loop rnlvot toiler, linw mlffo. Color nbso- lutoly Kunrnnteeil a twnntyUollnr Coat anywhere clio. $io MEN'S THIBET SUITS Muck or Mue, ilnglo or doublo-broastcd. Largo loti of otlior ktniln. BROWNING, KING & CO. warren a. rced qio-oi2 Coughs and Colds are signs of weakness." Don't wait until you are weaker and nearer Consumption. Begin at once with v. Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphitcs of lime and soda. It strengthens the Lungs, cures Coughs and Colds, and builds up the system. Physicians the world over, endorse it. Wasting Disoasos of Cuildren are speedily cured by SCOTT'S EMULSION. It stops waste end makes children fat and healthy. Prepared by Soott & Bowne, N. Y. Druggists sell It. B- F. Sharplesr, Ties. N. U.Funk, Sec, BLOOMSBURC LAND IMPROVEMENT COMPANY. Capital Stock $30,000. Flottel property is in the coining business centre of the town. It includes also part of equal in desirability for residence purposes. , CHOICE LOTS are offered at values that will bo doubled in a short time. No such opportunity can be had elsewhere to make money. Lots secured on SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS Majis of the town and of plotted property furnished on ap plication. Call upon or write to the Secretary, or J. S. H oodd, Side Agent, or any member of the Board of Directors. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. B. F. Siiaiiplkps; C. W. Nexl A. G. Dr.. H. W. McReynolds, N. Tj. FUNK. 5-12-6 nios. ALEXANDER UUOTIIERS & CO. DEALERS IN Cigars, Tobacco, Candies, Fruits and Nuts SOLE AGENTS FOR Henry Mail lard's Fine Candies. Fresh Every Week. p,-nny aoocs s?Eci..iiT-r- SOLE AGENTS FOR F.F. Adams & Co's Fine Cut Chewing Tobacco asolo agents tor tbe following brands ot Cigars- Haary Clay, Londresj Normal, Iadian Princess, Samscn, Silver Asb Bloomsburg Pa. IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF CAM FE T, ML AT T 2 IYf YOU WILL FIND A NICE LINE AT W. IL BE0WEM 2uH Door aoovo Court IIoufo. A large lot of Window Curtains in stock. "He that works easily works Suc cessfully." Tis very easy to Clean House with STYLES Men's-f $I5 Overcoats, I Chestnut St., Philada I IIIIUUUi C. II. Cami-heix, Trea the factory district, and has no J. L. Dillon. Bsigos. Dk. I. V. Willits. ILook Here ! Mo you wit nt a fi&Ho ? lio you want an l(MJ5'Sv.'--. -o. m II o ytJii want a Do you want anv kind of a MUSICAL IN STRUJIIilNX? Do you wxiut SHEET MUSIC? If so, do not sentl your mon ey away from home, but deal with a reliable dealer right here, who will make things right, if there is anything vvronjj. For anything i'i this line the place to go is to .ers. "Ware-rooms, MainStrec ho low Market. THE MARKETS. BLOOMSBURG MARKETS. CORBICTKD WKIKLT. BITAIL PBICI8. Butter per lb, .....$ Ss Eggs per dozen .3 Lard per lb .14 Ham per pound .14 Pork, whole, per pound 07 to .08 Beef, quarter, per pound , , . 06 to .08 Wheat per bushel .85 Oats " " .50 Rye " " 80 Wheat flour per bbl. 4 00 Hay per ton 18 00 Potatoes per bushel .7 Turnips " .S Onions ' " " 1 Sweet potatoes per peck 25 t0 '35 Cranberries per qt Tallow per lb 08 Shoulder ' " "J Side meat " " '4 Vinegar, per qt .o8 Dried apples per lb .08 Dried cherries, pitted .'5 Raspberries .'8 Cow Hides per lb .03 Steer ' " 05 CalfSkin 40 to .30 Sheep pelts, . ; .9 Shelled corn per bus -(S Corn meal, cwt 00 Bran, " i-5 Chon " i-S Middlings " '-2S Chickens per lb -1 Turkeys " " 12 Geese " " 10 Ducks " " -I0 Coal. No. 6, delivered a S " 4 and s " 3 5 " 6 at yard.. v 2 2$ ' 4 and s at yard 3 lS W;'Kr;-;..v C' ke y WtSii:&SS 1 WKH'lliSmBl u-HMt. a