r ANOTHER PROPHETES LARGE. There is a little girl in prophets if any of from the of No. 122 The new sincere really is t to life again, to heaven, and the one, of the time one better claim to have dead, as Eula W wweland avenue, Wichits prophet appears to be ‘lalms, she 38 them rise does however died being « hat and after the ainly arried i “2 : doctors say case Is cert not ordin: persons believe to an throng the where Eu dreds are that the sent her back to save sculs, and she is try it by relat For son, who i walk finishe has be in bed are evening cro ission y, while urned away. For Eula riour her strange experienc Eula named invalid that h worn en an long have 20 skin agreed and day chile nother from a and the wh ¢ the bout 11 that until be well looked WY After midday of milk and a | the aft 5 n mn after uk refresh meal, or, mor ne he ng vides past mon everings probably between e clients, and ont yr are inevitable, and room days «child her caretaker least make in the in the ard both mother and maids are ful and all the better for respite of an hour and The pay is usually about a «lay Daily Mirror naed house, ® this half daily shilling a d CEREMONIES AT A JEWELE COUNTER ~1 want a plain gold ring for a Best you've got in the store.” “For this lady?’ “Sure! Who else Pull off you glove, Katie, and let saniic-nan measure your finger The girl withdrew her woolen glove and bashfully extended her small hand, red and toil-worn, toward clerk “There: that's about the size.” sald she jeweler to the girl “Io you wish him to put “No--not yet,” “When he puts that ring on, it's on to stay!” Size, quality and price were set. R'S lady would it the it on?” “Here you are, gold for gold!” he exclaimed proudly. “Nothin' gold'll pay for that ring. “Haven't you anything naked the sordid clerk, “Plenty! to pay for that ring!" “Bit of sentiment, eh?” queried an interested bystander, “Oh, sir!” said the girl with evident pride; “he's been saving that | twenty-dollar gold piece for nearly four waiting buy this ring-— York Pross yes, months New to REST FOR WOMEN In France no woman may legally work more than ten hours a day, but ‘a woman of Marseilles, the mother of seven ohildren and the assistant of her husband in his vineyard, com plained to the magistrate that her hus- compelled from eighteen to twenty The magistiratg that her to work hours a day. the joimt husband WAKes, earnings of pro of and wife are, un- something f family. Yet contemplate that rears a f and band's affairs she shall both as and strength than an employe, not but of or n good not a wife both her hus 8 protection a « | the State does amily to her y f reason she should have Without law wife no having speci- for his ruling, cannot be com- aA a full band appealed of the Mar stained Chi- than that must st. The hu the de work re ten hours she have ision magistrate was st News WIFE politician AN'S BUSY The wife of a prominent a typical day during the PER SHOES the feet will grow per shoes Pir makes them A unsight muscles of all and attractive “ASHION NOTES linen is an ma long Louis coats to wear oven ideal now lined permits of slipping difficulty. lingerie of blue and pink Footgear an item which never regarded as trivial by the Parisienne, but tais year nt which she feels obliged to spend hoes und boots far exceeds any extravagances ol past years. Colored leather, matching the dress in tone, is an expensive matter where of the new fautastic shades are concerned another extravagant | innovation that of high boots of | flzard skin of the Hnest and most sup | ple description | Home of the daintiest examples o1 bouts &re to be seen carried out in fine gray lzurd skin literally covered | with openwork embroidery, through | which the delicately embroidered stockings below are plainly visible, | while an almost equal vogue is shown tor brogued shoes of grassgreen mo rocco, which are designed to be worn with gray or black and white gowns, in spite of the fact that peacock's feathers have more than earned a tight to disappear from the realm of | dress, rafsed silk embroideries of this iress gloves are which waists have pale tint ow a yoke and cufls a very of lavenaer, represents roagad the amon on many w litle is | especially where opera Wraps are con cerned HORSES AND THE INDIANS. HOW THE REDSKINS CAME BY THEIR STEEDS THROUGH THE SPANISH, The Southern Plains Proved Very Favorable to the Breed and Horses Greatly Multiplied-—Pawnees Had Horses Early in 18th Century. The first horses the main. land Indians were those he ish invaders of Mexico A few later De Soto brought the horse Florida and westward to the Mississip- pi, while Coronado, on his march Quivira in 1541, introduced it to Indians of the great When | Aztecs s they sean uy of 1 plains aw to bo greatly alarmed at The classical Centaur supposed horse and man and were the animal Wed its A traditic th wed among the Pawneesg 211 n exi that air ancestors mistook a ridden by single and shot tu man for a at it from concealment, cap the man fell to when rine Ning I'he horse was arvel the In dians and regarded sacred shippe of the It of ave number LO tl IAKes ng the d char * names having the from 1 other tribes across 1800 Ww the Cx and 1550} them Le Your he Nez of 1840 and other tri regs bes Dei ween of the tradition among of | time when they had no horses learn®d of their existonce for heir having the south, of the purposes which they were used and of ahundance, they strong war | went south and captured horses made up a part I: is impossible to fix the dates at any , and, hos wandered in small bodies sat which their Sesame gince mans he plains which m net, it is HOM ands acquired the long time » other sections of the same tribe that from | and | state. relate variously procured their first Arapaho, from the from the Shoshoni, and all t ments may be 4rue for different A very definite statement is made that | received their first horses from | the Kiowa at the time when the Kiowa | lived on Tongue River. The Chevenne did not cross the Missouri until ward the end of the seventeenth cen- | tury For some time they resided | on that stream, and tho.r progress in working westward and southward to the Black Hills, Powder River and Tongue River was slow. They prob ably did not encounter the Kiowa on Tongue River long before the middle of the eighteenth century, and it is possible that the Kiowa did not then posses horses, Black Moceasin, re- puted trustworthy in his knowledge and his dates, declared that the Cheyenne obtained horses about 1780 The Pawnee are kftown to have had horses and to have used them in hunt. ing early In the eighteenth century. Carver makes no meation of seeing horses among the Sioux that he met fo 1767 in West Minnesota; but In 1776 the elder Alexander Henry saw them among the Assintboin, while Um. freville, a few years later, spoke of horses as common, some being brand. d, showing that they had been taken Son Spanish settlements. — Reprinted in Forest and Stream from the "Hand | hevenine horses the Kiowa hese bodies they tO wok of Indian Tribes,” of Ethnology U. B. Bureay “FENUGREEK NOT A CURE" Physicians Here Say Fattening Weed o May Prevent Consumption. As:cording to physicians here who talked yesterday the recent ex i periments by the Department of Agri | culture with a weedlike plant, known fenugreek, as a consumption cure, there is little likelihood that the dis. sage will be cured by it. Some sald tuberculosis in its first stages might { be cured by it, but others scoffed at even this idea. All seemed of the opinion, however, that the life of victim might be prolonged by its use The weed, according to the depart ment, thous on us “ has been in existence for several and ve and extensively grown in the northern parts of Africa ana Ea Asia. It been by the natives as a great flesh ducer The government even after experimenting with fenugreek, will | not an opinion as to its quall | les, leaving it to conduct further According to several physicians talked been ars, is tern has used pro express to the medical experts experiments who of the used yesterday his cl country weed little in t this of rposes it is very is generally the in chief ingredient cattle powder, pu Crump, profes: York hat of Homo Or », ww \ EN ig fr Her i aid t fenugreek n sion in been scientifically investi rapes f 3 irols beds i Lilin } can be abstr the fresh p sculen The cattle in powders flavoring cattle food Tribune A GRAVESTONE OF 1838. ~Now in Boston. ) wwe in the rooms of the His Genealogical Somerset street, Boston i tone that came from the oldest marked grave in America, In the 1 rounds at the corner of and Columbia road, Dor toric a graves ing Dudley street chester, - A few years ago John A. Fowle, of while delving among the came across the beneath the surface of the the grave where it had fallen, says “The Boston tombstones, stone, just enrth, over presumably lefore this gravestone was found the oldest marked grave was supposed to be located at Jamestown, Va. The the following inscription: “Here lies the bodies of Mr. Bar nard Capen, & Mrs. Joan Capen, his wife, He died Nov. 8, 1638: aged 76 vears, & she died March 26, 1653, Aged io Years” The old Dorchester burying ground, which was started in 1634 in a plot only five rods square, now holds the remains of distinguished men, among them Governor William Stoughton, founder of Stoughton Hall, Harvard College, who died in 1701. Beneath the trees at the corner of Columbia road and Dudley street is the tomb of William Poole, a school master, which bears the following epi taph: “Ye epitaph of William Pole, which he himeelf made while he was yet liv. ing in remembrance of his own death, and left to be engraven on his tomb, yet so being dead he might warn pos: terity as a resemblance of a dead man bespeaking ye reader.” | s— ad — Paris derives a huge revenue from the sale of doll's dresses, 4 (TARDEN Sk RL - CELERY A MONEY CROP. Celery is a few yet, not so profitable as it Years ago however, The return from is about three makes price. harder acre of celery This at a celery is the in dozen, about $600 acre fair Boston and Celery soil. best be and twenty-five Plow the should be to highest moist, sandy the high new Erow mands better grown nuring o price on lands is n land should cords per acre on old land thre times. glass + last of best started February wot Buy can Bee @d the 1s « v A "nv as late as May y lightly Barely it in danger is will bring up under Lops this three They ground firn about them another field where they ee their Sheep and cur dogs do not go toget i AIWAYE WH Kooy § i . u » 8 1-blood ichmond Dispatch ould © INOCULATING LAND New York Stale Experim committed itself last the ation, The Station the statement that for legume i market, were worthless roused much Iticism preparing and tures: but Director view confirmed by at sixteen other stations: tle tests agreo in showing the cultures to be of little or no value. It was claimed in de fense of the cultures that their failure was due to alternate moist and dry ronditions of fie air in shipment and storage: and that by sealing the pack jees the germs wonld survive for at east a year. Acuvordingly many of the cultures sent out in 19806 mclosed in meta! tubes to prevent access of air. This made new tests YER? dried ecultur then « inocu mn cr Dy - his gnch Jordan finds results secured were selling = ages were secured, of which twelve were in metal tunes. Careful tests of these packages in the bacteriologi eal laboratory showed no living germs m fourteen of the packages and only a few in two other packages. In two of the packages, enough bacteria were living to give some nope of success ful inoculation; but as many or more germe bf other kinds were also pros ent. The dried cultures certainly can. not be recommended. Country Gen tleman, NOTES oF THE FARM. Have the shelter places about in the i chicken zrounds where the chicks can run to shelter {rom showers and from birds of prey. Fit your stock offering it for sale, often sells when a poorly find at for market before A nicely finished for a good profit shed one would sell | animal a los A barbed for a sheep lot, wool wire fence is unsuitable The barbe catch on make the sheep look also that injured the i the and There is danger be ragged | the animals | barbs. | "ke | money for in may by wante of time and to allow sheep to become too Get rid of is a great old mutton or wool, time pig them Young should not be overfed have They § ON OF IUCK tiiizer or Dig out an: Have the , down along the bushes v the place get their start in and cut roadsides b often | neglected weeds. PROFIT FROM COWS An Ilinois dafryman about ninety cows the fear round and sells hig whole milk on the Chicago market cows are kept on 285 acres and rece cow runs These he average year were about $108 for this about 235 for each Farmers’ Home Journal ITOER pts per The gross $10,151.14, of land.— ant receipts Vear are acre London's New Statues. In the addition to the equesirian statue of Duke of Cambridge, the granite pedestal of which has just been set up in Whitehall, some half dozen | others will be placed in position short. Iy The German Emperor has given a statue of his ancestor, William of Orange (William I11.), which our Premier says will be appro late us Kensington Palace. Close by it, at | the Round Pond, will be erected the i i { i 1 quadrangle of the he. being now at the Cape. Actorg are giving a statue of Bir Henry Irving, and a statue of Clive will be placed in london as well as in In dia if the subscriptions admit of it. The memorial to the Royal Artillery who fell in the South African War will be Joczted inside the park rails opposite the Duke of York's steps, near that of Royal Marines, while the base of the colossal siatue of Queen Victoria in front of Buckingham Pal ace ls slowly progressing. It is pro posed also to erect a statue of Mr. G. F. Watts at the Tate Gallery and one of Dr. Johnson in the Strand. It is algo proposed 10 place a National South African memorial opposite the Crimean one In Waterloo. Place. — Lon. don Globe. the al Academy