FARM NOTES, WHY FARMERS SHOULD KEEP BEES, ~The fact that bees are polien distri! « ‘utors is sufficient reason why a place should be made for them on every farm. If kept for no other purpose thau the benefit they do to growing crops and Truit-bearing trees and plants by spresa. ing the pollen nmong the blooms, these industrious workers would be a valua- ble adjunet. Testimony is abundant &rf gonelusive us to the desirable ef. fects of bees upon grape vines, fruit trees and frul -bearing plants generally. Indeed one promiusnt aplarist goes so far us to insist that a few hives of bees Judiciously placed will revive a fruit farm from a non-paying to a profitable investment. Field crops, scientists tell us and wide-uwake farmers know from their own observation, are greatly as- sisted by the honey bee's manipulations, Indeed, their influence is required for the pertect floral fertilization of some of the cereal crops and the meadow grasses. Where the farmer is too busy to give his personal attention to the pro- duction of Loney it is suggested that he purchase a few hives and turn these over te the care of his wife and daugh- ters. They will ind the pin money ac- cruing from the sale of the honey a convenient and pleasant return for the Jaber and time spent among the bees, “The outdoor occupation, too, will prove # welcome and healthful change from indoor drudgery, which they can then afford to hire done, v This is a matter of interest to steck- men, It issald that Pasteur’s idea, that Infectious diseases in animals can be prevented oy inoculation, the same as vaccination prevents smallpox, has been carried out to some extent by the Saxony Agricultural Society with the approval of ths German Government. Sixteen head of cattle were inoculated for pleuro-pneumonia and subsequently placed among a herd highly infected To Revolutionize Sill Hanufatere. A new proeess for tne manufacture of salt from brine, which is described od | himple, automatic snd continnons, has | been invented. While requiring only hbout two-fifths of the fuel at present 1ecessary for the manufacture of salf, éhe process can be worked with a mini: mum of noskilled labor. Tle system of salt manufacture al present in vogue is that of the evs rt of brine. in open pans, heated by fires underneath. he defects of this system are that it ls very slow, and that tho ontput is come paratively small in proportion to the ares occupiod and the quantity of fuol used. The life of a salt pan aversges too, only three years, the lormation of scale on the Lowtom of the pan causing ‘it to burn away, In the new process ‘tho evaporation of the “Lrine takes !place in rarefied chambers, and the liquid is Leated by steam. The new | *pparatus I» made {a threereparate Lut ,duplicate sections, each section eon+ (sisting of four main sod closely cone ‘bected parts These are the Leating chamber, the boiling chamber, the col: lecting chamber and the flitering olism: ber, he three seolfons are placed side by side, a few feet apart, an they are couneeted together by pipes. The first section is in commupication with s steam boiler or with the exhaust steam fromwen engine, while the third seetion is connected with an air pump and condenser. Edoh of the three sections, having been charged with b ive, steam is admitted to the beating chamber of the first section, heating the Lrine in it. The steam given off from thas. brine enters the steam chamber of tho second saction and heats the brive in shalass tion, the steam from which goes to the Loating ‘chamber of tbe third svction snd lieats tho Lrine therein. A vacuuin being maintained iu the three sections by a pamp, boiling or evaporation is carried on at the reduced temperature due to that vaonum., The salt as it is wih that disease, Thirteen of the | number remained entirely unaffected; | the other three had the di-ease In a | mild form. While the experiment has | not beer tried to a sufficient extent to | demonstrate teyond all doubt that the | principle is correct, the results are re- | garded as possible, BEET sUGAL.—There are at present | I3 0 beet sugar factories in Europe,and whey consume 24,000,000 tons of beets avery year. Thelr annual output of | sugar amounts to 2,000,000 tons, It is | said that over $30,000,000 are expended for labor and fuel, and that $10 1,000,000 are pald to farmers for beets, These Ggures are probably too high, but they | serve to throw light upon the magni-| wide and importance of the industry. A novel device for controlling excita- | ble horses has lately been Invented, It! 8 attached to the browhand of the bri- ile or beadstall, and a light but strong | ord runs through loops along the | reins to the hand plece, ‘‘In case of | right pull the cord, and Ins antly the | horse is blindfolded. This diverts his | attention from the object of fright and | uts him into another train of thought, | Let go the cord and the double spring | instantly withdrawsthe blinds from the | syes and rolls them out of sighs.” This device is not clumsy, and does not clog | in actiou, | A farmer labors hard, early, late per. | distently. He gives littie time to men- | tal culture; to silent communings that | slevate the spiritual nature still less. In | oid age be has worldly wealth, with | wental and spiritual poverty. This Is | uot the best success, Ignorance and prejudice are the bane 8! the farmers’ cause—iguorancs of thelr | rights and prejudice against each other, | When they kuow their rights and are willing to trust them in the hands of their kind as in the hands of others, ther prejudices will vanish, A potato “sorter” is something that i3 needed, and, it invented, it will find | ready sale, Apple ‘sorters’ have been | in use for some time, Lut us yet pota- toes are assorted by hand, Solid manure and dry dirt will bold | I'quid manuie well. The solid porti ns absorb large quantities of moisture and the mixture of s.lids and liquids ime proves the quality of botl, Dry soils should receive flat cultiva- tion, and damp solls should be ridged, | The object, in the first place, is to save 4s much of the moisture as possible and | in the second, to g-t rid of the excess, Time intelligently given to bees will pay equally well with that given to any | other Kind of farm work,and where too | many are not kept it may be done at | such time as not to Interfere with other | important wogk. The only great thing needed in the winter care of suimals 18 more food of | a succulent charscter, and the silo 1s a ready Lelper in the production of such food, If young raspber.y plants are to go out no delay should be made, Very! warm days are ut bene deia’ to them at ! first, as they (refer cool siinde unul they | begin to start, Don’t let earth or rubbish accumu late around the sills of the baru; if you do, it will not Le many years before the expense wud troulde of » new sill will have to be incurred, A correspondent of the Mirror stat Low to avuid rot aud scab in potatoe “Roll the land, and whet the potatoe are four incLes high sow on a mixture fifteen parts plaster, three parts slaked Lime and une part of salt.” An English gar ener claims that to scatter sand that has been soaked with petroleum over the Leds will keep away the omon fly. Osage orange .nakes a hedge un. less carefully trimmed, Evewth ng Je- pends on the management of the Ledg- for the first three years, It is important that the corn-crib be precipitated settlos: in the ocollectiog chamber, and thonoe is admitted: at in- tervals into the filtering chamber. Here the ULrice, which is carried forward with tho salt, is sutomatically returned to the boiling ehiamber, and the eryss talized sali is withdraws, molded and | dried for the market. The brine from | tinnous. A- single-section apparatus may be ased, but the working is not so coonvmical az with the three sections It is estimated that the cost of produc tion of salt will be reducod Ly the new brocess Ly about sevesty-five por een) ities A “Ragged” Ball In Vienna, The ragged ball in Vienna, Austria, was a great success, over £9000 being for the poor. Weaithy citizens and members of tue aristocracy all attired in tatters, and high-born | dames dressed as beggars, were in ate | tendance. The quadrille of ragged nobles was a wonderful sight, as als) | was a ludicrous cancan by officers | disguised as blind beggars. Another juadrille included countesses costumed as Nautch girls and three archdukes attired as scavengers. All distinguish. | ed society people of Vienna not on the floor were watching the ludicrous scene from t oliected he boxes, : a—— * Death of a Prince.” Upon the death of the I alian prince Amadeus, the lottery offices in Vienna were besieged with tickets bearing the | number 47, which, sccording to the dictionary, signifies oe ¥1 . came out, and the play- tw Iu o rial trossury. “May I have the honor of this] waltz?” “Dut I don't think I have | the pleasure of your sequalntance.” an, hour since, and [ heard you say you would remember me as long as you | lived.” cap Agent (pityingly) ~* Capable, thing.” —————— Si —— made of a number of diagonal which fall apart leave the bottom of the posed in tie hand, — One Thousand Dellars. ness. It is a certain cure, and affords immedi laint, Nervous Pubility and Consumption, ‘loraplexion bullds up the weak system and Ask your druigiss for it and gei well, Valuable ok “Th ngs Worth Knowing,” also, sample bottle sent free: all charges prepatd Address Franklin Hart, ® Warren Sireet, New York. A A 550 There is but little change 1m braces lets. Kuife edge circlets set in nrecious stones, and deep tinted gold in Lntique forms in whch & reihies and sapphires wie sunk we the popular FOTIOS, wirds, The eonfidence of people whe have tried Hoa 1's Sarsaparl. la. in this preparation, Is ree markable, [It has cared many who have failed to derive any good whitever from other art felons, For diseases caused by impure blood or low state of the system it is uber passed. Acquaint yourself with the best means of exit, both at the bottom and top of the house, The very best way to know whether or not Doubins Kieetr.¢ soap (2 as good as it Is sald to be, is to try fl yourself. 11 can't deceive you, Be sure to got no bnitation, There are lots of them. ASK your grocer for just one bas Jean Ingelow devotes all her time to holy, ile pon i— Praser Ase Use the Frazer xie Grosse tia the beet in the worlu—wil sear twice as long as any other, Ask your uesaler loc 16, aod take no vtner A The gambler« at Monte Carlo lost £14,000, 000 Inst * —— a LBERT BURC “ot Toledo, ON t “Hall's Catarri ¢ wed my hie, WH bili for particu, Ad by DD uggists, Me. — ———————— t The tal, "tive of the Levant, Jdunmus ol Coppatioaia, and Is ae Lo be the iy of the ISSA VE cleaned out sud fumiguted so as to de atroy insects, “ily ' eld spoke. by ur Saviour, Warm Weather Causes ko That Tired Feelin To be Strong, Ta ? Hood's Sarsaparilla EEILIAMS PAINLESS ~wvevun- EFFECTUAL. BILIOUS = NERVOUS DISORDERS, Such as Wind and Pain in the Stomach, Giddiness, Fullness, Swelling after Meals, Dizziness, Drowsiness, Cold Chills, Flushings of Heat, Loss of Appetite, Shortness of Breath, Costiveness, Scurvy, Blotches on the Skin, Disturbed Sleep, Frightful Dreams and all Nervous and Trembling Sensations, &e. THE FIRST DOSE WILL GIVE RELIEF IN TWENTY MINUTES. Every sufforer is earnestly invited to try one Box of these Plils, and they will be acknowledged to be a Wonderful Medicine — Worth a Cuinea a Box. Beocham’s Pills, taken as directed, will quickly RESTORE FEMALES to complete health, For Sick Headache, Weak Stomach, Impaired Digestion, Constipation, Disordered Liver,&e., work wonders upon the Vial ans, Strengthening the muscularSystem, restor. ing long-loat Complexion, bringing back the keen edge of appetite, and arousing with the ROSEBUD OF HEALTH the whale physical energy of the human frame. Thess are “facts” admitted by thousands, in all classes of society ; and one of the best guaraniees 10 the Nervous and Debilitated sthat BEECH. AMS PILLS MAVE THE LARGEST SALE OF ANY PROPRIETARY MEDICINE IN THE WORLD, Full directions with each Box, Prepared only by THOS BERCHAM, St Helens, Lanenshire, England, Sold by Druggists generally, BF. ALLEN CO, 565 & 867 Canal St, New York, Sols Agents for % ‘nited States, whe (if your Zraggiss not keep them Will mall Beschar's Plils on receipt a” 25¢cts. a the Arsen Cream Balm Cleanses the Allays Paln and Inflammation, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell A particle Is applied into each nostril and is agreeable. Price cents at Druggists : by mail, registered, Gets. ELY BROTHERS, 8 Warren Street, New York ww hdd i FOR FIFTY YEARS | MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHINGSYRUP has been need by mothers for thelr children while Teething for over Fifty Years, It sonthes the onild, safless the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, aud i the beet remedy for dlarrfoes Twenty-five Cents nu Bottle, ARLEN READY A representation of the engraving on our wraopera-RADWAY & C0, KEW YORK. —" ono ‘LEY PENSIONS =i" Xp OF amasidy Agent, Washington, B, C A. LENIN PATENTS Bsjimenbis hmppe home. Integrity must be the ar- chiitect and tidiness the upholsterer, It up with cheerfulness, and | must be the veutyar r renewing the at- CLAIMS SET PENS bed Shia. Washlagton b: 0 Six things are requisite to create a must be warmed! by a mosphere and bringing in fresh salub. HUMOROUS. THERE WAS NO PROYIBITION HERE, ~*] huve had a delightiul eveuing,’’ lie said, as he took his hat and rose to go. "May 1 call again?’ “Ista l be glad to see you,’ she re- plied, with a blush, As he walked out into ihe hall he! saw in the mirror of the hat-rack a re- | flection of the rogulsh girl slyly throw- Ing kisses at him, and he turned back, “I must have that in the original package,’ he whispered, He was a Kansas young man and he got It, i ————— DESPERATE CHANCES-——First New | Yorker (to a friend)—Do you know | | some good life insurance company that | you can recommend? Second New Yorker—Yes, balf a dozen. Any hurry about it? First New Yorker—Yes; I want to get wy life insured right away, And say, if anythiag shouid happen to me won't you look out for my family? Second New Yorker —Goodness gra- cious! man, what desperate step are you about to undertake? First New Yorker (in solemn tone) ~1'm going on a steamboat excur- sion, Second New Yorker—If that's soget insured before you leave; you are tak- ing desperate chances. iii —— THE L'TTLE GEOGRAPHER "Now, Willie,” said a Washington lady to her | nephew from Boston, *‘I wonder if you | cau tell me who discovered America?’ | **1 can’t tell you that,” “Why, Willie! Don't you know that | it was Columbus?” | *I beg your pardon, auntie, but you | are mistaken; Columbus did not dis | cover America, He discovered a land | which wus subsequently called America, | but when he made his voyage there was | Cueap what A Well, BUBSTITUTE, = Wife | do you think Johnny Husband-—I've no idea, i Wife—He wants me to tease you into | Husband (who has tried bicycling { himself)—Nonsense; he can't have one, i Tell him to go up into the attic and fall down two flights of stairs. It willl just about the same thing, and save me i # bundred dollars, A JUNEBUG'S TRIALS —Teacher— | Give me the name of some quadruped | that Is, an animal with four legs. | Tommy-—A dog. Teacher— Mention another, Tommy—A Junebug. Teacher—A Junebug has s'x legs, Tommy What's the matter with pulling off two of them? ——— Mave Tone Tracumr FrzL ~Aunt—Didn’t you get thrashing in school! to-1ay? Johunvy—Yes, Indeed [ did; but it didn’t hurt a bit, Did you ery? Yes, I bellered like everything; but | I only did it to humor the tescher. | —— It Would Give Him a Chance—News- boy--Please, mister, will you give me | 2 cents to get a night's lodging? ! Minister—But 2 cents won't pay for | that, my little friend. Newsboy -No, sir. Butif I had 2 | cents I cond pitch with the other boys | und perhaps win a plie : Goo. another | THEY'RE MARRIED XOW —Bnooks— ! How are you getting on since your mar. | riage? Scroggins —Not as well as I expec:- | ed. When she gave me her hand, a | little over a year ago, 1 was filled with delight; but the way she gives me her hand now only makes my ears ring. } Harpry Wontata WHILE ~A, 1! hear that your daughter was married | toa man in Japan, B.—Yes, that's so, A.~I8 he well off? B.~Not very. A.~-And what is his name? B,—Smith, A. Great deott! The idea of a woman going all the way to Japan to marry a poor man by the name of Smith, msn tl —— IE MEANT IT,T00, ~A young couple | on their honeymoon are dallying lan. | guidly with the grapes at dessert, She (archly)—And you don't find it tiresome all alone with me? You are quite sure you don’t want tb go back tn our bachelor life again? He (earnestly) Quite, my darling. Do you know If you were to die to-night I'd om married again to-morrow morn. ing I ———— The Ladies Delighted. The pleasant effect and the perfect safety whoh iadies may use the liquid fruit laxative, Syrup of Figs, under all conditions make It their favorite fem. ! edy. Itis pleasing to the eye and to the taste, goatle, vet No uar tn acting | on the kidneys, liver ald bowels. Aviid all confusion. Aamit no one Jot firemen, policemen, friend or neigh- BS i Tin oon Ba a es Grad veious cures, Treatise abd $500 trial free wo } cases, Send to De. Kine 61 Arch St. Pale. Pa A BL A II sn Sn, In escaping from a fire creep or crawl with your face to the floor Rupture cure guaranieced by Dr, J. B. Mayer. 831 Arch st, Phil's, Pun. Kase at once. uo operation or de- ny from business, stiested by thou en ls of eures aiter others fall, advice free, send for circular, Women were made before mirrors, and they have been before them ever Cure Ants in a Mitel Dislng Boom, I the year round, you ma “Ses that?’ sslced a walter in the A x J y . 1 , Pierce’s Golde Pulace hotel, holding up a dish filled rely upon Dr P ¢ = with black insects. Medical Discovery to purify “Caviar? inquired a San Francisco | the blood and invigorate the Examiner fupoeiar 1 whom the qu es-| system, It's not like the ion was ; : “No; Ants,” wus the sententious re- sarsaparillas, that are said to ty. This is my harvest since noon. good for the blood in “very other gentleman in this dining- : room has collected as many more. March, April and May. The The house is literally overrun with |“ Golden Medical Discovery | them, and has been for three years to | at a my certain knowledge. | works © ually well . £ “Trying to evict these little crawl. | imes, an in all cases o ers has cost the Sharen estate $10,000, | blood -taints, or humors, no and it will cost many a thousand | . hei more before any effect will be made matter what their name or on these intraders. They creep in | nature. everywhere and there is no way in. ; . . vented to keep them out I don't It's the cheapest blood - puri- think we can get rid of them without fier, sold through druggists, moving the hotel. They are in lows of | A L we houses and pothing has been found because you only pay for the that will leaze them. They are worse | good you get. than flies, because polson doesn’t have | ay > : any effect on them, and they are] Your ,oney is returned if worse than cockroaches, because they | it doesn’t benefit or cure you. areemaller | Can you ask more? Customs of the Ksquimsux. | “Golden Medical Discov- Like tne Indians, the Esqul-| ory » contains no alcohol to maux often kill the old. Olen]. bri d svru or the old are tired of life and | IOC rate, an no y 1p beg to be dispatched. 1f food is scarce | Sugar to derange digestion. Ls | It's a concentrated vegeta- they like it or do not The super-| : a. in larg fluous women are also disposed of in | Dl extract; put up In large this way. Barbarism shows uel > bottles ; pleasant to the taste, hie DOAY | : of a favorite wile or child is sometimes | and equally good for adults or cently buried In the spring. but as a T . . ins P nm corpses are dragged a| 1he€ ‘ Discovery” cures all short distance from the village and | Skin, Scalp and Scrofulous bandoned to the dogs. ! aL - I hoz A no idea of the! affections, as Eczema, Tetter, marriage relation. Women are treat Salt-rheum, Fever-sores, White ed as chattels. The number of wives! Call: i. 3 ATG a man may have is regulated pot by Swellings, Hip joint disease and kindred ailments. his possessions, as among our Mor g his ability One infers is not carried to manag: — . this HABIT, Oaly Certats and Shag { URE in the World, Dip, J. L. STEPHENS, Letanon, & women. from that polygamy ou WwW any I prescribe and fury A — ss forse Big (3 as the Hungarian grass or millet is the crop to sow in the poultry vard. b WM. FITCH & 103 Corooran Buliding, Was PENSION ATTO Feary esxperiet pensions and Line, LF No * EE Co. Be bow a DC YOHE & CO, | STOPPED FREE * nro ‘ saat Cuts tds possibie CNL BUCK “od + lie aie. PENSION Bill PENSIONS ici rowwn, Baths nd Fathers are on Foe 10 when HB. BUYTER, t your mone under the New dof, | you LS Ang, Wank gion, Bb. ENSIONS Fis ‘nmeliwly | for masks for ap | plication. Employ the old reliable firm, J.B. CHALLE & CO., Washing we, D. C. Spool Holder ly DEW PATENT, Save time aud roadie. Ag in i ulspetsavie article fo fey bousatold. Nolsis should be without ig sified oo DR. KLISE RSL Are ne Livuggien. BEWARE OF Thoumsnts safitied P [ AXLE RAZER Eke TEST IN THE WORLIM Its wearing qu ilitiee are unsurpassed. aety lly outiasting t © boxes of any other brand, is effected Uy beat. SGET THE GENU. NE. FOR SALE BY DEALERS GENERALLY, WALL PAPER BARCAINS! We will gusssntes all thes clean new goods Jus made, and full length~4 yards 1 the roll An N.yd. roll White back Paper. 3 te 82, | An Boyd. roll Gilt Paper, 3 to 10e. An Berd. roll Embossed Giilt Paper, Mie 13a Gilt Borders, 4 te 1Y inches wide, 2 and : Be. por yard. | Borders without Gilt. 2 te 9 inches 1c por sard, Bebd Go. In stamps for samples of the Lost aud greatest bargains in the country. Fs EX. CADDY, 303 HIGH STREET, Mention this paper Providence. BR, 1, Jon { i 1 1 HICHEISTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS rn DIANORD ® “0. wiways relishes Bw Desmond rod, . 3 wt Drage Pa in JOIN W, MORRIS, iON Washington, BD, C, MIETORA Frotopytes Qlpims: Byre fu leet war 1 edjodiosting caine, sity siaos. tmp in nai ——— me er ASTHMA, mail. Stowell & Oa a OME STUDY, dook-keepng, Butives For, HB Peamatelip, Arfthaecic, Shor and, © thoroughly taught Mail, Cwcuinrs in Bryant's Celioge, 25% Main St, Muifalo. X . Write as for new fawn | Sent free. Deserters re : » fiered Baccess or ne fos - 3 Sb ree experience AW clineerbe mami, ndY -Ponlre useall® oe * Qomvmipwes 3 UT AQvice QE lo use SAPO LIB: Iris aX solid cake of scouring soap, used [or cleaning purposes I asked a maid if she would wed, And in my home her brightness shed; She faintly smiled and murmured low, “If I can have SAPOLIO.” er —— EVERY WATERFPROUF CULLAR or CUFr THAT CAN BE RELIED ON T Sa aye No.a - \ 2 | . \ “ Go hd a.