WHERE "DON'T" NEVER HEARD interesting feature IS | er if meals are served there during Plant vines which grow { quickly about the porch, making the upper Fifth little “diningroom’” a nest of green Room,” a com-| Open of the children where tha h nature, the summer of ave The fashionable home in nue the "Do Do pletely equipped playroom, word “don’t” is heard The | 1 idea of this origin ated with { hood was ing "Don’t that!” The place, ty of windows, red Cine is uncovered thick securely most the the colors, the to eauties is eyes of the sounds and simplicity sche most the shadows ins Of nme never Wers birds and ects, evervihing Of of these juvenile paradise whose chil fsb w WHOSE ail nature's course flat dw ures vmilias continually hear “Don’t break in gEreat ler pateri 10 marred his!" or by do are impossible Scranton bune sunny " JAN CHARGE OF AMIR'S HAREM splendidl plen Sal Pet To Mi aoor | floor | wooll that amount of loosen {it ened, 10 ie Ami not allowed ered when Tor sti mm I'he caged ble amount hay Seventh ron of Adventist she decided reek th her son-in-law Robert 8 Perry in single pieces Or sel with the bride's monogram (n gold ind narrow gold rims and handles (or the of the choice artistic and and the the mos! Pleces the are to decoration and shape gift cannot fail favored bride, 1 most selected please china eat have say married obey beautiful in one of ime to those and so 1h rom fido't « all ‘ame i they t altar it will avoid] any ar the ' glergyman-- | or JaiNew York | Press, ' | | MAKE THE TOTS HAPPY idea of simple food and simple into children’s aud pleasurds for the summer | season. Let them stay out of doors | from morning until night if they will, | in demand than ever, even eating n the porch! he had in attractive Who doe the joy of} shops eating on e porch one wad! There Is a certalu style in the dull table with low chairs, | kid ties that Is somehow lacking In an be easily sup: | those of polished kid though the Jat plied w fresh ones if broken, willl tor have the advantage of being of is %e the children happier and strong I fighter weight. them if when | f ns words | fingers | unt at | — when AE FASHION NOTES. Most of the new suils are without but with the collar effect, got applied, to break gument the other fellow collars, by trimming long line What has been done to voiles and other thin stuffs this season makes the old idea of tallormade suits seem crude and guinips are more They are to variety in the Carry the the Hives surprisingly Chemisgettes their meals « remember when The Battie of Alamance. By Rev. Thomas B. Gregory EXINGTON! What glori Laster where a bom round the All want to detract one ota from triotic | the little New Put another the eves of the merican world over spot is Alamance, Not of the American 'rvon, Royal “on! 10 man uf L.exin ziory pot ington in erty the That fug majority William of "The Wolf of Nort! In the ui ff his rova ister brut peopie, th Carolina, people have ne (0 nor, wi 0 ita Care ii und op , Borge Own taxed Of thing two 5 ‘The Passing . | I of Matrimony. B3v Charlotte 'ericinst fYhiney rid 7 By thie Fditor of t] ey 243 Was Brutus an “ Honorable Man? Harold Hodge Marcus Hr of ideal gaecustomed to be old that the ulus is are honorable man, but an sltruggliog This 1¢adiug, with the conception on crime If Brutus nemesis should peare’s play not only an unsullied patriot, a lofty character, overborne hy at any rate march of nemesis no crime that an ultimately wrong, does not i ’ - the play as the right, he committed evil fortane right agree well o? or of | plow crushes Brutus and his whole cause, crushes him by the hands | mere man of the The sitaation leaves the spectator unsatisfied; un is deed which abstractly vengeance thal ought to attend on erime; yet the doer a , try's ruin aster, a splendid sacrifice absolutely in viiin, wrong everywhere trivmphant, Taken as the march of nemesis on crime, as the righteous punishment of | Brutus as a singleminded patriot~-Harper's Magazine SHOULD PARMERS COMBINE? Buccessful Far tion, and then as follows: This is force effor belug ming asks this proceeds lo answer of combination Everywhere neces is a may worl oni but with one Keeps ought Before applying the mulch the be should be put in a thoroughly good from weeds and well and free The well up around ds condition free cultivated, mellow mulch may the stems of plants having little pro-| tective foliage--as the Ililies—and | tucked under the leaves of low grow. | ing plants Hke pansies. It must be | added to from time to time, as it grows thin by drying and the mulch | that seemed ample when placed will | be a thin film after a few days’ dry-| {ng sun and wind so that each time | the lawn is clipped the contents of| the grass carrier should be spread over the beds. This fa of further ad- vantage in those beds bordering the lawn ag the fresh grass is far mere gightly than the old dead grass could be. The muleh once placed should not be disturbed, as it forms, under the influence of the dew and rain, & be brought ion el. % the orchard. FOOD FOR HOGS It would be diffic food for young two parts (hy parts of corn ration wheat, corn In Canada it wheat fed sixty-one and 145 gave an average increase of 156.46 pounds per bushel, while with heavier fattening hogs from pine to éleven pounds of gain was made per bushel find a better and han of wheat, two or a of it to hogs shoats weight) and one of shoris: perhaps of equal weights and shorts was found between weight, that frozen hogs, in pounds It Is said that Gen. Sir Redvers Buller iz such an excellent cook that he would have little difficulty in ob- taining a firsteclass chef's position in a West End hotel in London Because a girl admonishes her sweetheart to be economical before marriage it isn't safe to assume that she wants meney to spend alter mar riage