LAIIKS' DFI'VRTMKNT, l'mvliloit Notri. Coek's-feathor fans painted ly hand are novt'ltit's. Camels' hair bonnetts in braided bands are late I'arisian novelties. Stylish costumes of cloth or velvet are trimmed with natural gray lynz. Black velveteen is a favorite walking suit of thedrossy New York woman. j Walking suits of velveteen are rivalling plush costumes in popular favor. It takes an artist to place a bird or bird's crest effectively on a lady's hat or bonnet. Knots of ribbon of several shades are worn by some in place of (lowers , on the corsage. The newest linen collars are stand ing clerical bands with a finely em broidered edge. The fashion just now is an em broidery worked in gold threads on the insteps of tine stockings. Skirts, when made of velvet or cloth, plush or velveteen, need not be; trimmed at the bottom. Cedar red is the new shade for kid j gloves, and heavy lines of embroidery In black decorate the backs. Young girls should avoid heavy vel vets ; simple muslins and soft, clinging materials are much more attractive. Moyenage necklets of silver or euamelled gold are replacing the mus lin cravats that have been so long worn. Long "matinee" saeques for mornings in the houses are of plush, and worn over a blouse waist of satin mrah. Tulle and satin are favorite mate rials fi'T ball dresses, as aw- satin and ( \aahinere or nun's veiling in delicate evening shades. Black dresses of fine camels' hair or ihnodah cloth have a collar, cuffs, vest, md panels of black velvet, with a cord :>f gold on the edge. Moonlight-blue satin with embroi lery of silver threads and llounces of white lace is one of the most elegant materials for reception dresses. Russian sable trimmings are made of the tails of the animals, in perpendicu lar rows that form stripes of darker brown than that of the bodies. A gentleman's cravat of terra-colt a satin, striped with gold, and a scarf-1 pin to complete it. is worn by ladies with double-breasted Prime Albert frock coats of olive green cloth or velvet. The chasseur hat of green or brown felt, with a high, sloping crown and long rocks' plumes, is a favorite with blonde young ladies, who wear it pushed back from the brow, to show all the front hair. Serpent green with golden tinges is one of the colors most fashionable for velvet or plush suits, and a slight glint of terra-cotta enhances its Is-auty. Black Spanish laco with thickly corded designs is the rich trimming, and with these two odd shades make unique coloring. Mastic gray cloth paletots are fashion able for children. They are semi-fit ting, and are long enough to cover the chilli's dress. They are braided in rings of large size, and have square pockets and a wide collar of brown plush. A mastic beaver hat of the great cart-wheel shape is worn with this cloak, trimmed with brown plush IrajKTy. Tfcr rillltT r >'nlnr In Itrrn. Neatness is. however, the great de sideratum to economy in dress. If the toilet is carefully made, the dress tidy, well fitting and neatly put on, and the collar or frill spotless, the effect can scarcely fail to lie attractive. To keep garments fresh and and neat much pains is necessary. The dress must lie brushed or at least shaken when taken off, and Is* carefully hung up, not tossed down on a chair or tHe lied in a crumpled heap. Gloves should lie '• tenderly smoothed out, frills rolled up and straightened and ribbons smoothed over the fingers, tightly rolled up and pinned with a fine needle; a pin is apt to leave the mark behind it in un sightly holes. A C barmlna I'hUs, There is a custom prevailing among the inhabitants of the Sandeman Isl ands, which may throw a light upon the civilized use of wedding cake. When a native girl whose exceptional beauty has brought her many suitors is knocked down with a club and car rieil off by her accepted suitor, the wedded pair, within forty-eight hours of wedding, the send a cup of poison distilled from the hulahula tree to each and every one of the bride's former ad mirers. If any recipient feels that he cannot become reconciled to the mar riage, he drinks the |siison and dies ; but if he decides that he will survive the loss of his intended wife, he throws away the poison, and feels lsmnd in honor never to show the slightest sign of disappointment. By this admirable system the husband is spared the pangs of jealousy, and be able to live on i friendly terms with the surviving ad mirers of his wife. Wniiimi tit lii r* I and $48,320,671 deposits. , A company at Ft. Louis turns out i 200 doxen shovels a day. FOB THE FARM AM) HOME. ' llnitftHinlil lllnl*. Sixty drops make a spoonful; three teaspoon fills a tablespoon, one-third of an ounce. ('opal varnish applied to the soles of shoes, and repeated as it dries until the |iores are tilled and the surfaee shines like polished mahogany, w ill make the soles waterproof and last as long as the . uppers. A barrel of flour weighs one hun dred and ninety-six pounds, a barrel of pork two hundred, a firkin of butter fifty-six, wheat, beans and clover seed sixty pounds to the bushel; corn, rye and flax seed fifty-six; buckw heat fifty two; a barrel of rice six hundred; bar ley forty-eight; oats thirty-two; coarse salt eighty-five. To wash lace make a soapsuds of white eastile soap and soft water, ami while cold dip the lace in and put on the stove to boil. Let it remain until the laeu looks clean. Do not rub. After boiling sufficiently rinse thor oughly in clear, cold water and then dry. When perfectly dry, wet it in milk and let it dry again; then dampen and stitch it on a flannel .doth and put over it apiece of damp flannel. Steam dry with a hot flat-iron and then pull out. Hrrlticu llakd Ctmikuiihi \i. A cupful of sugar, a cupful of nice molasses, two well-beaten eggs, a teas|MMU.ful of soda sifted in the flour, a little salt and ginger, tloiir enough just to roll, bake in sheets in a quick oven. This i-i so simple that invalids can eat it. Kick Cihc kin I'd:. Line a pud ling diah with slices of broiled ham, cut up a boiled chicken and nearly till the dish, filling in w it), gravy or melted butter; add minced onions, if you like, or a little i urry powder; then pile bill ed rice to till all interstices, and cover the top quite thick. Bake it for half or three-quarti rs of an hour. Stk.wkd Aiti.i.s. Fare smoothly half a dozen good sje/isl tart apples; scoop out the cores; Imdl the apples in sugar and water until they are soft enough t<> be pi'Teis! with a broom splint, but be careful to have them keep their shape. When Voll cut out the cores, cut out a little less than one third of the app'e, separate it from the core, and, after slewing it, mix it with some cold billed rice, the Volks of two eggs, sugar and spire to suit your taste. When the apples are done, (ill the centers of the apples with the rice, etc.; heat the whites of the two egg's to A -tifT froth, ad i ng the two t able* j* inn - fuls of powdered sugar as von leat them; put a sje-mful of this on the top of each apple and send to the table. These are delirious, either warm or cold. New U a? of Hrrn in® fhM mrnf. Take a dessert teaspoonful of oat. meal, place it. in the morning, in a tumbler and fill up with new milk. Let it stand all day. and take it for supper or for a night-cap. The grains w ill have b>en softened bv their long soaking in the milk, and it can le eaten with a spoon. This is said by its advo cates to b- a pis ifir agninst neuralgia, and is soundly recommended for sid entary folks. (•rnfllni (.rnpr Vlnea. (ira|e vines ran !• grafted, although grafting lias not bs-n rnueh practiced in this country. Various methods of grafting has ben recommended, but i the following is, probably. ~imnl J any "The old vine should oe cut I clow tne ground early in the spring and liefore the sap has started and cleft in the same manner as an apple or pear stink. The mtting is prepared and insertcd in the manner usual with Jthcr grafts. The stock is bound up and the earth replaced. The cutting should have one eye left above the ground.— Empire State Agricultuftet. Prrarriln# Mnnurr. Some experiments have recently leen Conducted in the old country, with a view to ascertaining the b-st methods of preserving manure so as to retain the more valuable ingredients. In one of these experiments the manure was allowed to accumulate under the cattle for a long jieriod three months or more—in s|erially constructed deep stalls. It was found that in every case the manure so formed was, as compared with that of the ordinnrv miuiure heaps, in a more workable con dition, theammoniacal salts were better preservfsl, ami useful ingrislients were present in greater proportion. The disease in founder exists in the form of inflammation In the urinal or leaves of the feet. The stiffness and inability to move are often thought to lie liest symptoms of trouble in the ,'hest, but it is always in the feet, llemove the shoes, soak the feet in hot water one at a time once a day, ami put linseed poultices on them on coming out of the water, (live him plenty of liedding ami encourage him to lie down to lake the weight off the feet. Continue this a week or two. then i blister the coronets all around with lly blister to promote a new growth of hoof. Then stand him in aelay puddle days and take him out nights. Con tinue this as long as there is any still ness or soreness. Repeat the blister of the coronets oner a fortnight for aj couple of months. ' 'hhngo llnmemtiu. Hrril I urn. F. I). Curtis w rites as follows to the I'muitr/ th nth man oni eriiing seed corn: A friend undertook a few years ago to improve his corn crop by plant ing all kinds mixed together. lie con fessed thut this plan was a failure, as he got no improved variety, but a mixed up lot, just w hat the offspring would be from a mongrel sire, illustrat ing still further the similarity in the nature (breeding) of corn and animals. ! A great many farmers comfort them selves with the notion that if they change seed with some other farmer they are doing a big thing. This is a mistaken idea. Seed should be un proved and taken from the farm w here it is growu, and to whuh it lias adapted itself. At home is the place for im provement. The idea that the little germ of a seed can carry the good qual* it iesof a good farm w it h it i- ridiculous, but it ran carry with it peculiarities in its nature (growth and maturity) ac quired in one place, which will be un suited to another; hence, reader, im prove the seed on your own land. Thr Pl#. No other domestic animal gives as full, quick and easy a return br grain feed as the pig. When rationed for the shambles, the experienced eve of the feeder ran almost measure the ra tioofgain per day. The healthy porker is so well-regulated a machine for the conversion of corn into fii-sh that the farmer who fcisN by a regular system car. generally till about how mm h |iorh a given quantity of grain will produce. It is comparatively easy, therefore,as compared w ;th other stock, to tell just when and to what degree jiork production is profitable. These things, nrrupicd with the fact that a crop of hogs ian be bred, ra-sed and marketed alnc-t while the feeder is laying his plans for growingand ripen ing cattle and sheep, have rendered hogs more popular as a market product than any other class of domestic ani mals, and there an- vastly more pro ducers of hogs m this country to-day than of cattle and sheep combined, while it is perhaps true that three foiirths of the meat producers prefer liief to jiork as an article of fo.nl. /'itUt/nrjti tun n. Hovr n I ow d, The feeding of acow during the win ter must neci s anlv Is- • hietly upon dry foodor, as hav. corn stalks, etc. Well cured corn fodder is but little inferior to the best hav, whii his clover. Tim othy hay i- not so gix! for milk as g >d corn fishier. Blue grass and red top hay is b-ttcr than timothy, abmt as g.xwl as g.xM) corn fodder that has Iks n cut liefore it lias Ik-couic dry or frosted. Mixed mc.ujow hay. with ab>ut one half clover, is b-ttcr still, and orchard grass and clover in equal parts is yet b-tter, while well made hay from clover cut when in blossom is the. very best fishier for a row. The stalks of the small early kinds of sweet corn, cut when the corn is in the state in which it is used in cooking or canning, is quite espial 111 value to the l>est clover hay. Hut a cow requires some good food to give quality and richness tothe milk. And this usually consists of corn. oats, rye and bran, or middlings. A mixture of these is t>cttrr ttian any one, lieoausc with ttie mixture one can get precisely what is needed, when any one of these will furnish only a part, t'otton-seed meal is now much used for feeding rows, and it is most valuable and should l>e addisl to whatever mix ture is made. The result of years of experience with dairymen has estab lished eorntneal as the principal feeding substance, aYid coarse wheat middlings, or rye bran, or bith as the best addition to it. A portion of cottonseed meal is then added to complete it. The mix ture is b-st made by grinding it togeth er with the corn as follows: DM) pounds of corn. 100 pounds of rye bran, 1(H) pounds of wheat middlings and Ix, and tw o quarts of the mixed meal added, and the whole stirred and given for one meal. At noon two quarts of the meal ran l>e given dry with a small quantity of dry hay or fishier not cut, I At night a similar feed to that of the i morning is given. The day's feeding will then lw ton poinxU of meal and about twelve pounds of bay. If less meal 1m given, twice as much hay should be siibstitijcd as the meal is les sened. Some other equivalent ratioim, which may l>e found more convenient ami will tie nearly or cjuite an good: 1(H) pounds of corn, .V) pounds of oatw, HH) pounds of rye, JOf) pounds cif com, Ir. I'. A. Willuto thinks lie has ob served as e\ il results of coffee-drink ing gout, cong< stion of the liver, indi gestion, nervous debility and irritabil ity, mental depression, etc. His atten tion was tirst directed to coffee as a cause of such affections by observing a disappearance of them in Southern women whose supply of coffee w as for a long time iut off during the war. - In. Foott'v Hxitth il'ihtlily. Children should have warm night gowns fastened around the ankles, as they are sure to kick off the < lot lies in the night. It is btt< r to sleep in a moderately cord r''in. though dressing m siteh an atmosphere is not conve nient in the morning. not wis! it to liecome subject to fatly degenera tion. An unu-isl muscle shrinks and Im-cuihcs -""ft and tlabbv, presenting an apjiearance of marked contrast to the brawny arm of the 1 l.e 1,-mith. In stances of the feebb liess of tissues thus jirescrvfsl frequently present them selves to the until i of the surgeon. A muscle i called upon to perforin a vi gorous contraction, but it snaps in the effort. The heart Itself is fuimetfcucs torn asunder in attempting to send an extra supply of blood to some needy limb. No man can afford to low er his general vitality for the sake of mere idle gratification. He never knows when he may require all the energy which rati be storisl uji in his tissues \ railway accident, a runaway horse, a run to catch a train, a fall on the ire, or even a fit of roughing, may bring a life of misery or an early death to one who would have passed unscathed through them all hail he allowed his nerves find muscles to w ear aw ay in v igorous a< ti\ ity. Having fen Ihonsand Dollars. The feast was set, the guests were met, w hen a young man entered in. "Sir;" said he to the master of the house, "I have romo to you on a very important mission. Were it otherwise, I should m>t have ventured to call uj>on you upon this auspicious day, when, as 1 perceive you arc abuit to celebrate the betrothal of your fair daughter, still, as it may save you slo,(*ki hut if you are engagixl I will retire." "By no means, my dear sir. by no means,"said the father of the bride ex pectant, warmly; we are just ab>ut sitting down to dinner, join us, and after dinner we can discuss matters." The young man allow s himself to lie induced to join the jovial company, where he cats for two and drinks for three. At the conclusion of the feast the father escorts hint to a private depart ment and begs him to reveal his busi ness. "1 think sir," he says tothe stranger, offering him a rigar of prime quality, "that you observed that you could show me how to save $10,000." "Precisely," says the stranger, light ing the rigar. "Now, you intend mar- I rying your daughter to that amiable but somewhat weak-minded youth down stairs, and giving her a marriage portion of $20,000. (Jive her to me. sir, and I'll take her with half the money. That'll leave you SIO,OOO 1 ahcaill"— Chicago Tribune. At Last. I/ik<-tonstorm toufdbint llit,tiredof flight, K<-cks longingly it" not, Ko J, world-weary, find itl thy dear sight My truest rest. I will not oak what coining year* may hold; If thou art near, llioagh pain and sorrow time for me unfold, 1 shall not fear. f have safe garnered m mjr '|Uiet heart A love so deep 'Hint hide me liva a charmed life apart, And safely keep All tender thoughts, unutterod, nonprossed, < >r yet to lie, lake ojx-ning httds. within this loving hreaat. To bloom tor thee. l'htUi/lrlphut />C'/rtX. I'AKAMI Al'llS. A mere nothing O. I'at en t medicine* are now made that will eure everything except hams. A Jiieee r>f ht'-ol is a good ileal like a man when you get it red-hot it looses its temper. Why in a railroad ho patriotic? Ileeause it is lioiiiid to the country with the strongest ties. An exi hange wants to know, "What are our young men coming to?" t ojnifig to see our girls, of course. "Ma, don't you remember that ona day, a few years ago, you swooned?" "Y*H, my dear, I have a faint recollec tion of it." A coat-tail flirtation is the latest. A wrinkled roat-tail Is-aring the dusty toe marks means "1 have spoken to your father." The average life of a farmer in tifty six years, hut it depends a great deal on how old he is when he purchases a mowing machine. A young man who was presented with eleven penwipers last Christmas hv his lady friends, continues to wipe his jK-n on his coat tail. "What shall 1 do," asked a miserly millionaire of his physician, for a tight ness in my chest ?" '"Mart a home for Incurables," said the doctor. Clothing is nei more apart of the man than is the toothpick a {tart of the dinner, hut given the man and the dinner, clothing and toothpicks are Useful. Over ]}n.m*i plants are known to lmtanists, and vet out of the lot tha chemists can't make a mixture that will undo in ten minutes the work a hornet has done in two seconds. The f ierman pajnr rcp-rts the case of a woman who had a muscle of a dog successfully grafted on her foot. Whenever she sees a cat si nail to notice; hut hal you calhsl me a dog an old dog—l would have knocked you down." A man at a hotel fell the whole length of a flight <>f stairs. Servants rushed to pick hnn up. They asked him if he was hurt. "No," he replied; "not at all, I'm used to coming down that way. I'm a life insurance agent. She went into a shop to huy some toilet soap, and while there the shop man was expatiating on its merit*, and she alniut made up her mind to purchase, hut when he said it. would keep off chaps she said she didn't want that kind. "Why do women so often wander aimlessly in the murky solitudes of the dead past, brooding over days forever gone?" asked a young lady of a mar rying widower. "They don't 1 think," he said. "Rather they wander in the dry goods stores of the present, often pricing articles which they have not the remotest intention of buying." In a rural church where it is the custom to publish the banns of marri age a queer incident recently occurred. The minister, after the service, pub lished the banns between a loving and interesting couple. At that portion of the form where the words, "If you know any just cause," etc., came in, the minister, whether from any previ ous knowledge or not. looked straight at the young gentleman directly attho foot of the pulpit. Thinking that ho was personally alluded to. he immedi ately rose up. amid the laughter of Iht congregation, and exclaimed, "Oh, no, not the slightest objection, sir." OS TO* KAMI! fOOTISO. How much s man in like old shoee! For instance, both a sole may lose, IV ah hare been tanned, both are made tight By cobblers: both get left and right. Both need a mate to be complete, And troth are made to go on fewt. They both need healing: oft are sold. And both in time all tarn to mold. With shoes, the test is first; with men. The first shall be the last; and when The shoes wear oat, they're mended new; When men wear oot, they're men dead, too. They both are trod upon, and both Will tread on others, nothing loth. Both have their ties, and both incline. When polished, in the world to shine; And both |xg oat. Ami would you choose To be a man, or be his shoos?