PECULIAR INFATUATION. Mrerent Methous of Fo lowing vhe Injunction “Love One Another, Do men ever fall in love with each other? Women do. Not long ago a young woman in New Jersey was marrie od to a youthful laborer on her father's farm. ymetime afterward it was discovered that the husband was a female; the young wife refused, however, though earnestly entreated by her friends, to give up her chosen consort. The strangest part of the diseovery was the fact that the bride knew her husband altar. if men do not exhibit this strange in- fatuation for one of their own sex, they fact that they love one another. ‘There are many instances on record where one man has given his life for another. There are many more instances where men have given life to another. It is a proud possession—the knowl- edge that one has saved a precious hu- man life. Meriden, Conn., is the home of such a happy man. John H. Preston, of that city, ds 11th, 1890, writes: Five years ago I was taken very sick, I had several of the pest doctors, one and all called it a complication of diseases. I was sick four years, taking oreseriptions prescribed by these same ootors, and I truthfully state I never expected to get any better. At this time, I commenced to have the most terrible pains in my back. One day an old friend of mine, Mr. R. T. Cook the firm of Curtis & Cook, advised to try Warner's Safe Cure, as he me had effected a cure for him. bottles, took the medicine as directed and am to-day a well man. I am sure no one ever had a worse case of kidney and liver trouble than 1 had. Before this I was always against proprietary medicines but not now, oh, no.” peculiar ways sometimes; but the friend is the friend in need. ABOUT THE FARM. Hints for Farmers and Busy Housewives to Appreciate, How to clear the fields of ox daisies is a question which is not of solution. If they are kept with a mowing machine as fast blossoms appear, it will, in time, the plants so treated. jut the which become seattered from adjol fields and ro adsides EK rminate and i duce more weeds, The evil widespread that nothing short general and perseveri swvement could eradicate it, and ly out of the question. eve Cassy cul close is 1 “$3 this is pra tical- In fattening very gradually. 3 ing it will be an expe: them on their regular feed ¢ all vour animals room enough many If they would not 1 horses had wider not obliged to good rack for a of a sugar or cutting holes fo heads through bottom. Leave ¢ f the holes and the she , crowded while eating wr BO on few she mo ] never Wii for shipping to market, it is alway good rule to plant largely with which the market was o od the last season, and those which ruled The foregoing item aronnd others very y well for nina ne ight ardners foll ive on beans have to eat turnips next something Ww rules. less lary among personal yborhood, awed rho this Hos Ai Farms rs can ved by rule, nor by else, reversing Ys BUC Fred Mather ‘ Superir it New York State Fishery Commission, sends a statement of a computation he has made of the n aber of eggs sunfish. Taking a female fish extreme length was six inches and weight five endent of the whose and a half and a half held, less that it ready for spawning, not than 44,000 eggs. It is the habit of the sunfish to lay its eggs in nests made in the sand and gravel near the shore, where the male fish keeps guard over the nest until after the young {ry hatch out. accurate computation nearly F. T. writes that after the word chucks had become 80 numerous on his farm that they took a large part of the crops, he found an effective method of destroyi ig them. His method econ- gisted of snothering them in their lairs. For this purpose he took old fertilizer bags, or any old rags, satu- rated them with kerosene oil or crude petroleum, and shoved one of them down into the hole with a stick. The were set on fire, and then the sod put securely in place and pressed down so closely that no smoke could escape. When this method is employed in woods or hedges, a damp day should be on to avold spreading the fire, Where unrestricted swarming is al- is not an uncommon thing for third swarms to issue, with two or When there are the caps upon ‘the cells and prevent the young queen from escaping. In such cases if the bee-keeper listen at the hive, the young queens may be heard piping. When the weather comes fair, and the swarm issues, several queens will be liberated snd issue with the swarm, Such swarms frequently cluster in several bunches with the different queens. In the case referred to, they had evidently clustered to- gether and stung the superfluous queens. Any person who was well acquaint ed with the methods employed upon farms even 25 years ago will see many has traveled far ina farming community at the present time. Such changes come about very slowly for the reason that there are many impracticable schemes proposed by men who are not acquainted with the business at all. Another reason is that the fact is too often overlooked that be jut pro- BO steady all these reasonable doubts everything new, we less farmers who leave their tools and carriages out by the roadside all winter, gr @S8, and £00 soil of the farm because they will roll down easily, less who spoil the looks and lessen the value of the fields by making swales deeper instead of drain. ing and filling them up. These are but few of the changes which may in farm pr and the management of manure, orchards and show as great changes, noticing these changes we are ask, what has the chief The general reply would be that it had learned 1} is true as far as it but was the knowledge disseminats Fairs, farmers’ clubs and similar ganizations have done much to be but if their teachings had been limited to the few who attended them, agri- culture wld have been in worse condition than is now. The agricultural papers have done the work. Sneered : : ized found fault with by their own read used when- be seen actice, stock, crops, buildings And led to been agency ? Was people eller, This how. FOeR, Gl=, sure, wi ® it it classes, aon and visionary ; any new departure of being ever they good or pi useful future. vidual not d be take Herd register and 3 drown’s book, along with other papers. It is well to agitate this subject and | tis not too early to begii. People who suppose that the registrations of ancestors is a proof of merit in the | present individual are on a level with those who think that a man's life will be longer or more secure if he is in- sured. Recorded ancestry proves! nothing but probabilities. A pure bred animal is more sure to transmit its own characteristics, because in do- ing so it is at the same time transmit- ting those of a long line of ancestry without any out-crass to “take back” to. And this peculiarity of transmi- tion will exist in thorough-bred ani. mals after they have become degener- sted by neglect and injudicious selection, and they will degenerate under these conditions as surely as mongrel stock. Therefore a mean thoroughbred is at best no safer than a respectable scrub to breed from. The pedigree of an animal only shows what has been done, but does not do away with the necessity for constant care and seleo- tion any more than having an honest father can insure a man against dis grace without regard to his own habits, And if these facts are not kept in mind by breeders and some strict rules and followed, pedigree will come into disrepute, and the future will al field for stockbreed.’ Hoa fA ~-jKansas has 41 counties without PASS aud 37 without srminaly To Dispel Colds. Headaches and Fevers, to cleanse the system effectually, vet gently, when costive or bittous or whon the blood Is impure or sluggish, to per manently curs habitoal constipation, to awaken the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity without ‘rritating or weakening them, use Syrupof Figs stn. -A gander at Opelousas, 1a, the cistern faucet with Lis bill, and when the water begins to flow sits down under the stream and takes a bath, turns - One Thousind Dollars Twill for! eit the ab unmount, tI fall to prove tha Flor aplexic i is the i silence or Dyspepsia, Ind © ¥ affords immedi CR A idney and Liver Com Consumption din cure, and othe r i for it and get os Worth Knowing,’ . i ree: all charges prepaid Adare Franklin Hart, 8% Warren Street New York. re —— ~The women in St. Louis, Mo,, make life a burden tothe gripmen on the ca- ble roads by punching them in the back with their parasols whe n they want the cars sto) ped, sent An Unparalielled Romedy, In olden times the b happy nbination of veg- on, st m is gestion, sand vie . Bernard A panacea and modern discov i% no equal to them of al § 1 be sent Bern 3 He free Box Zi to all ATG, -— sarin —A man named Kingsley, at Poris- { mouth, Onio, has an apple growing on | a grape vine, the result of grafting. cates a ge very part -—— n of ujp= ~The number of diamonds know ! the weight of thirty-six carats and i wards does not exceed twenty. Frazer Axio Greases, 1 _ There is n imposed on | h w iusist on b sf Ax rreass, Cue greasing Weeks, A a ————— he young men of Prattsburg, N. Y.. recently collected, with much diii- e, all the pleces of old brass they : find Iu that vicinity, ¥rom them they cast a brass cannon welghing nearly “U0 4 | — } pounds, isin (ann’s Kidney Dropsy, Crravel, i } Heart, Urinary OIE nese ’ Arct for 85 Cure for 1 cures, wed TOR HEHE COLE | rest civilians, »"” “Hels an bri yearsol a Agesilaus, King B., C., inshowing his army of 10,000 men pointing to them ald: ““T".ere are the walls of Sparta, { and every man is a brick.” ~The expression, 8 over 20 0 | of Sparta, tate CR, te ad) ~A report of the existence of a very peor ilar eat family emanates from an Altanta, Ga,, man, who claims to be { the possessor of a Maltese cat and kitten | whieh are bringing up with the utmost eare and attention a couple of infant | mice, ~An olive tres, with an authentical- ily recorded age of five centuries, was | recently destroyed by the wind at Beau- i lleu, France. It measured thirty-six | feet in circumferetice, «That which is known to Americans as a pitches is called a jug in England. szim NS LAY AKE HE NS te FE POWDER Ee Fig yo a Wire of mora. 1. White Swelling ling come on his right leg below the Knee, which contracted the muscles so that his leg was drawn up at right angles, 1 considered him a confirmed cripple. Hood's Sarsaparilla woke up his appetite and soon pieces of bone came from the sore, the dischar ¢ decreased, the swelling went down, the : straightened out, and in a fow months he hind perfect use of his leg. He now runs everywhere, and apparently is as wellag ever” Jouns x MoMUuRRAY, No tary Public, Ravenswood, W, Va. Hood's sarsaparilla Bothy alldruggis Preparedonly by C. L HOOD & CG, iowall TM 184 200 Doses One Dollar, ANN ELMS PAINLESS. meesnee EFFECTUAL. ta, #l:sixf! wr” CHA Aree Relieves "| § 2) | ING / Twenty Vs > t , ¥ nntp A LLL A PATENT | | PILLS. si 8 —— Worth a Cuinea a Box. Pt a FOR ALL ‘BILIOUS:NERVOUS DISORDERS, Sub u Sick Headache, Weak Stomach, » Impaired Digestion, Constipation, (Disordere Liver, &ec. wi the Rosebud of [ealth the whole Physical ( ) Energy of the human frame, Beecham's Pills, taken as! directed, will quickly RES TORE FEWALES to complete health. { SOLD BY ALL DRUCCISTS. Price 25 cents per Box. ¢ £3 16 ’ ry THOS BEECHAM, ing 3 NM NNINININSNS NNN PP 704 Stop that CHRO iC Cove Now! rany SOOIA BON. valine pf *" Nery i Wastis rales, J Irisca sen, like SION Of Pure Cod Liver Oil and HYPOPHOSPHITES OF Tsisme and Sodas bie nx m! 900 it's Emulsion it the gerosine, $ a A SB IAN, BN SALINAS NANA 0 Sma, biatned 8 was bar " DOW ELL & O the se books, ewok wv enn for on ty im ak DR. SCHENCK'S ULMONIC SYRUP. & {uate AD jarticle ot urions, It to uti Droggios k's Book on LAL roms tatnhia Tt ie plessant 10 1 doen sot contain uo or anyihing Comgh 3 Pris, $1.00 per bottle, Dr. Schen Consumption and its Cure, maalind Tres Dr. Jd HH. Borenck & Son, AAA AAAI AAA AINA AIA FOR FIFTY YEARS! MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP has been used by mothers for ig Shiidren while Teething for over Pilt ours, 1% pooties the onhild, softens the Fos aiays alinys all pain, cures wind coolio, and the best remedy for diarrhosn ents tise «© ents n Bottle, Inventor's Gulde, or How te Obtain PATENT a Patent, Sent Pres Patrick O'Farrell, 8420 woy iC FAT FOLKS CRD ar . — ay — PUFF PUDDING, Into two temcupsful flour Jin two powder and a half . — A Simple Breakfast, It seemed simple, and it was, but it wins a work ol art, and the cook had put her whole mind on it. First came melon, or some kind of frait in sen-on, Then some one of the family of muslies, whentena or steamed wheat, orosimeal, or wheat-germ meal, or wheatlet, or hominy, In this particular bre the mush was of wheat steamed for hours the day before and heated through for breakfast. 1len cine omelet, The egus were beutls ately, the other ingredien tiie w gently ily e nough, and without a scorel With the omelet wasserved | fried potatoes. 1 hese, leit over Ni { the previous dinner, were cut in siices | and browned in little { salt pork; each slice was in ually | and delieately browned. [he beverage was chocolate, made carefully seccord- “I = is a ie ded ont ti suggest { 3 Hoe cooked OTOL ing. 0 irom Via ter what kind of china, but the feel « was exquisitely clean. Then there graham gems—light, sweet, hot Licious—and bread and butter. It took about an hour to breakfast, less rather than mo table was perfectly pet, the table | was clean and not awry, nor the tab | There was no jumping up to get { thing that had been orgotten. | three courses succeeded each other | without confusion, the cook having | time to enjoy her portion with the rest, for she was one of the { mily. I'he same painstaking aod | their equivalent, ghe i cined in | musician {1t ’ BOLI The Ax skill, which ni IZ an and pi innist, ge i sompounding, COOKING, a4 serving i bre akfast, The san designing and making her n arranging her bi of getting up mde dishes and hie ty | worthy of | engaged becor exer d in her she used (re ¥ 16 taste in fare and iesserts, used i Wis With she 1 in 3 al the R Oaln ng lady leaves gr tified ever; self Aanl i famil , own , great ut by IVE ing Mie masters other mon COOK] the verything n place, Bl fakes a hand “ala 'eo You Ever = The German us da will emigrate, Lhe auld { burg | them naving detern Woman, Her Di ment. 71 pages, upon receipt of 100, t 2 : Prob. B.H. Kuixe M. D., 951 Art ht ———— a Americans as ‘‘hives®’ is in known as ‘nettle rash.” Candy is var- jously known as “sweals,” ‘sweet. meats,’ ana “lolly.” i { i { cory miki oo A signal sere nics to weak womankind of lost health—the “a run-down” system. Nothing it so surely as Dr. Pierce's It cures all rangements, irregularities and weaknesses peculiar to the sex. It’s of strength-givers, tone and vigor to the system, For overworked, de- bilitated teachers, milliners, me stresses, “shop - girls,” ng mothers, and feeble women gen- ally, it is the greatest earthly Lh being unequaled as an ap pe~ is the building-up © gen nur Prescription ” action in every case, “ Favorite gatisf gives Or mons { ( that’s the their faith aleohol to ine- no syrup or sugar to de- digestion : a legritimate medi a bev Purely ve ( y harmless in condition of the system. Wi Me dics) Associati i ., Buffalo, N.Y, RRR ADWAY’S READY RELIEF. That's the way it’s sold ; way its makers prove in it, Contains no briate 3 range rap IgE, (Fide any Throat, Bronchitis, SU Neck, all Viearisy, Lowels, BHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA, Paiy in by one applion- for all internal , Wek He iach, Palpit Chills and Fever and Malaria All wt or Limbs, iy in Hearth tion. Intern water “wren Kirepleossness, H0e. bottle, a Druggista. mild Safest exoellient and The for the Cathartic ¥ Best Mo Dis i OR BOWELS they urely table, and licine Care of all lers WMilR UllAud acoording LIVER, S101 y i Taken will nd renew vite Box ADWaY & CO. rics bets. a PRE. RK sald by all Draggists. NEW YORK. AXLE GREASE BEST IN THE WORLD oases Berators Porm) Hrd only by tha = Brass Cheniogl Oo 3, Cincinnet], Oris, i ITS su fee rane Persons i for wail 1 * WF ALLIEAN y 3% tne s rin a ES renn Chrpes on boy when i exprew widow wl t iE. Thiele wn, Pa. Ses Drage pars 11% orthe gaindullesy You canlessen PISO’ FOR
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers