HAPPY HOURS. I know. 1 know that the Spring la coming; I feel It nearing in happy dreaiua Of the rloleu face and the brown bee's hurn mlra A nd the laugh and clatter of dancing streams. D hasten, wind from the South, and bring ma ine long-warm days and tbe sunny flowers, And Ibr bird 10 build in ihe treee and ring ma Their aongi of love In the April hour. Ebch K. KuroBO. NAPOLEON'S WOOING. Cooking his own suprerover a blaz ing wood fire one hot evening in July, Napoleon Crowe felt that he was in deed born to misfortune like the sparks that flew upward. For forty years he had tilled the stony, stubby little farm which at its uesi naa never yiekica its owner more a than a precarious living, and now at the age of 60 he was alone in the world, having a few months pre viously buried his third wife. V hether it was owing to an inher- ent delicacy of constitution, a lack of appreciation and tenderness on his part, or a too continuous diet of Ktewed yellow -eyed lan9 and pork, we are unable to determine, but for some mysterious reason Napoleon's wives refused to thrive on his hands, and drooped and pined away, one'guQ rises to-morrow mornin', it'll see after another, until he was almost 'me streakln' for the Widder Spooner's! convinced that In his case marriage i Let the neighbors talk if they want was a failure. That he had been his own house- 1 keeper for a period of seven months j every room and closet in the dreary old farmhouse lore evidence, and the numerous scarson hishandsand arms, testified to the burns and scalds he had received during his cooking oper ations. for napoleon was peculiarly un- fortunate in his culinary experiments, j If after serious reflection, he decided that he could afford a small roast tor the Sur.daj dinner, to which he in variably invited his old crony, Jotham Sparks, that roast so tenderly watched and Jealously guarded for hours was in the end temporarily forgotten, while Napoleon was grap pling with the biscuit problem, and burned to a blackened crisp. He baked beans without pork, for got to put the meat, in his soups, or j the salt and pepper in his vegetable i hash; left out ttie sweetening from j bis apple pies, the salt from his but ter, the ecus from his custards, and wondered why he had no apietite. After a multitude tf disastrous fail ures similar to the ones we have re corded, Napoleon resolved he would, from motives of economy and other wise, confine himself exclusively to a diet of flour biscuit hot from the oven, alternating with such relishes as mo lasses, fried pork fat, and the un savory production which once in four weeks he churned, and spanked and patted with his big, hairy hands, and designated as, "butter." Three times a day regularly, Napo leon produced a small wooden doutrh dish, and after mixing together sour milk, saleratus and flour, toiled and sweated over the sticky mass until it went into the oven huge, unsightly lumps of spotted dough, and came out the same. It might have been the legitimate result of eating his own hot biscuit, but within a few weeks he had devel oped iuto a gloomy pessimist. He neglected the poultry and stock, al lowed the weeds to flourish in the garden, and seemed to have lost all interest in life. Everything went w rong with Napo leon. The old cow went dry three months earlier than usual, and the two-year-old heiferchoked to death in her stall. As a natural sequence, his groans and sighs became louder and more frequent. Thirty hens and two roosters cackled shrilly from morn to tiil night, and though he crawled under the barn on his bands and knees at the risk of a personal introduction to a skunk who made his headquarters there, and climbed ladders to the highest scaf folds at the risk of breaking his neck, not a solitary egg glaldcned his anx ious eyes. One morning his friend and sym pathizer, Uncle Jotham Sparks, called before breakfast to borrow a rake. "Jest hevin' a bite, hey?" ob served Uncle Jotham, his eyes wan dering to the bare pine table adorned by a tin of steaming yellow biscuit. "Ya-a-s," answered Napoleon in a dissatisfied tone, "I'm tryin' to heat a drop o' water to make a cup o' tea to go with them ere biscuits. Won't you hev a biscuit, Jotham?" "N-no-no," responded Jotham with alacrity. "Thanky, I've been to breakfast an hour ago." "I know It's late," sighed Napoleon, but I've had a regular tussle to heat this dipper o' water. I broke ray tea kettle by pourin' cold water in it when it was red hot, and I hain't had any tea-kettle to use all summer. It's terble hard for a man that hain't never been used to putterin' round the house to do their own cookin' and housework. " "It must be, I vum," said Jotham, and he edged away to an open win dow to avoid an offensive arose from a bean pot on bearth. odor that the stove said he solemnly, "Jotham. ain't you seen, can't you see that I'm fall in' from the crust?" Jotham shook his head mournfully as he stop; e l to light his pipe. "Yes, Napoleon, I've seen all sum- j mcr that you've been fail in'; you've' grown old, and thin, and gray, and bent over, and don't look much like the man you was a year ago." "Do you think l'ia pin ted for the grave, Jotham?" he groaned. "No;" said he bluntly, "but you won't live six months unless you get some woman here to cook your vittles, and do your washin', and keep the house wholesome. Why don't you bire a woman, and pay her so much a week " "I couldn't afford it, all the income I git from the farm wouldn't pay her wages. I think myself, not relishin' my vittles lias something to do with my onhappy fellins'." "You might git married," sug gested Jotham. "Ya-a-s, I've thongnt o' that. I know of a smart, bkely woman that's wuth s-nie prupputty that I think would Jump at the chance to get me to-day. Sne's a widder that I courted some when I was young, and lives on a farm somewhere in Stough ton. I'd slick up a lit tie, and go up and see if she would like to change her conditi-n, if 'tivasn't for neigh bors talkin'. You know I hain't been a widderer th s last time only about even eaonths." , "I ow, but circumstances alters cas, ad if you can't afford to hire a hakeeper, you had better hunt tip a w fe livciv. Let folks talk if theywatto. Yoa hev a smart woman come hre, and scrub and booth, ana brigh'en up tilings, and cook you thics good temptin' meals evory da, and you d soon begin to fat up, and be as strong and ambitious to wort W CTer yw ww id roux Uf.Kow, I ao Hope Napoleon, you realize Jest bow slim and peaked yon are look in', and If you don't trant to slip your wind afore the snow flies, take my advice, and merry that 'ere widdef Jest a soon aa she'll hev you," and taking his rake, Jotham departed. leaving Napoleon to his thoughts WniCD Were DOt pleasant t)J arts' rocans. For several days after, Napoleon wandered around in a discontented, absent-minded way, as though be was uncertain whether to take Jotham's advice or not. At length, on this hot July evening when we introduce biru to our readers, having nearly caused a conflagration by upsetting a kerosene lamp which exploded in the flour-barrel, Napoleon gnashed his teeth, as be tore around the room in bis efforts to extinguish the flames, and vowed he would have wife to cook his suppers before the week was out. "Ain:t this a pooty way for a roan o my years to be livin." he muttered savagely, as be vainly tried so make me lantern- wick Durn. "xnere ine danged thing has gone out, and I mignt as wen give up I've got to. . set here in the dark, or else crawl to bed without a solitary nibble in my poor stummock, and I'm ready to faint. S'Done I'll nut un with this any lonirer? not bv a iueful! If the to, what they say don't put slab-Jacks M ...,!. nH . .1 ,1,. V1 I. 1 in my stockin's. Yes-sir-ee." and he 1 11 111 J 111VH1 L. 11, VI 1UCI1U LUC Ulg UUICS snapped his fingers defiantly, "let . 'em talk; I don't give a dang if i Eunice Spooner will have me; we'll be merried short-off; that's flat." The "Widow Spooner was in her the strawberry-patch, pulling up weeds, and she was about to throw them over the fence, as little Kittie Henderson came rushing round the corner. O, Aunt Eunice!" she exclaimed breathlessly; "Mamma sent me over to borrow some cream of tartar, and don't you think the awfulest looking old tramp has followed me way through the woods, and he's sitting down on the big rock in the lane now I Oh, dear! I dar'st go borne, what shall I do?" and Kittie began to cry. I "Tramp, hey?" said the widow ; coolly, "that's nothin, new. I've been Jest pestered to death with' tramps this summer. There was two called here last night, and they was Jest as sassy as a lord, and wanted me to give em some supper, but they didn't git any. Jest the same. You wait a minute till I can look after my bakin', and I'll go home through the woods with you, Kitty. I never see the tramp yet 1 was afraid of." With Kittie following close at her heels, Mrs. Spooner proceeded to the kitchen, where, throwing open the oven doors, she displayed a pair of beau tifully browned chickens which sent forth a most appetizing odor. "There, Kittie, Jest look at my fowls, aiu't they doln' lovely? I've' been doin lots of cookin' to-day, and I do wish some interestin' company would happen along. I've had signs of a stranger all the afternoon; two chairbacks got together, and I bumped my elbow ag'in the pump handle " At that moment there came a loud knocking at the door. Kittie gave a little shriek. "It's it's him, auntie!" 6he gasped, "It's the old tramp." "Is it?" said the widow brusquely. "Jest let me git my weapons ready, and I'll soon start him goin'." With a saucepan of boiling hot water in one hand and a fire shovel in the other, Mrs. Spooner advanced boldly to the door. In the semi-twilight stood a seedy looking Individual, wearing a sjouch hat covered with dust. (Could you ahem give me'' he began in a hesitating manner, then hastily retreated a few steps as he caught a glimpse of the war-like im plements in the hands of the widow. "Yes, I'd give you," cried the widow, "a good whackln with my shovel, and a scaldln' to boot, if you ain't off my premises before I can count ten. You great, lazy loafer. Ain't you ashamed round trampin' and beggin' your livin'? Why hain't you workiu'on some railroad, diggin' ditches, you shitless hulks?" 'I I hain't round beggin' no livin'," stammered the man, his eyes firmly riveted on the widow's weapon's. "I ain't no tramp neither I'll have you to know I " "Oh, no, you're no tramp, none of em' Is, you're a bank president most likely. Come, git; put yourself!" "I won't stir a blarsted peg," he spluttered. "You can't drive me till I've had a chance to tell you who "I can't, can I? We'll see about that, you wretch. Follow me with the tea-kettle, Kittle, I'll scald bim to death." Mrs. Spooner's appearance as she screamed out these words was more that of a modern Amazon, than a staid elderly widow, and with a smothered shriek, the man fled pre cipitately before her, never pausing until he ignominously tumbled over a rock-heap by the roadside. "There, Kitty," exclaimed Mrs. Spooner, as she come into the kitchen flushed and triumphant, "I've sent him about his business. I've learned by experience that, soft words don't count with the tramp gentry, and I guess this pci tickler one won't visit me ag'in." "Why, auntie," said Kittle, star ing hard out of the window,, "he ain't gone; he's sitting down by the barn now." "Why, how you talk. lias he bad the impudence to come back here? "Well, now you Jest wait; I'll start him j out of my door-yard, or I'll know the j reason why!" I With hurried and determined steps she took her way down to the spot where a forclorn looking figure was seated on a huge bowlder, sorrowfully rubbing his knee-joints. "Come," said she, "what in the world do you mean by hangin' round here? Why don't bless my soul this ain't it can't be Napoleon Crowe?" "Yea," it's me," said Napoleon plaintively. "Took to trampin' round the coun try, and scarin' little girls? You!" "It's a danged mistake," said he. I hain't trampin' round no country, nor scarin' no little girls either. I wasn't never in this place before, and I didn't know fur certain which house you ltved in, and so I was goin' to in quire If you could give mc any idee where the Widder Spooner lived, and you come at me with a fire shovel and a bucket o' bilen water." 'Whr d!dn't you tell your name?" "Yoa didn't give mc no cbance,did ; you? 1 tried to tell you my name, I but I couldn't get a word in edge ways. I expected a different wel come from you, Eunice, bein's we 1 was alius sech good friends, and I'd walked fifteen miles to ask yon to BMfBlr " ' 1 " 'A warm flush tost ta the wldow'g sunburned cheeks. If there was a person on earth who had always held n warm corner in ber heart, it war Napoleon Crowe. "Napoleon," hazarded she, "It was a dretful misunderstanding." g5"I should hope it was, I swan," sighed Napoleon, still rubbing bis bruised knees. "It was Kittie's fault; she told me there was a tramp at the door, and I was that mad and excited I never took a good look. You've no idee how I've been pestered with tbievin', sassy tramps, Napoleon." "I don't doubt it, Eunice. You hadn't ought to be livin' here alone." "You hain't goin', Napoleon? Do stop and have some supper " "Do you really want me-to Eunice?" "Of course I do. Napoleon, and we'll have roast chicken and cream biscuits " "And you'll hev me, Eunice?" "I shouldn't wonder, Napoleon " So Napoleon stayed to supper, and after partaking of the roast chicken and cream biscuit, was. in such ex cellent spirits thai he tossed Kittle j up and down in his arms, and pre sented her with a nickel and two ' pennies, a freak of generosity on his part without precedent. Yankee blade. ". - One of the most curious Inventions of this inventive age is what is called platinized glass. A piece of glass is ' coated with an exceedingly thin ,layerof a liquid charged with platl- i num, and is then raised to a red IIIG 1(193 111 3 U l LI S (U IAJ IUIIU very odd kind of mirror. The glass has not lost its transpar- k. ..I-,.. l .,.k t j ency, and yet if one places it against a wan ana iooks at it ne sees his image as in an ordinary looking-glass. But when light is allowed to come through the glass from the other iue, as wueu n is piaceu in a winnow it appears perfectly transparent like ordinary glass. Uy constructing a window of pla tinized glass one could stand close behind the panes, in an unilluminated room, anu nenoia cieany everything going on outside, while passers-by looking at the window would behold only a line mirror or set of mirrors, in which their own figures would be reflected, while the person inside re mained invisible. In France varions tricks have been contrived with the aid of this glass. In one a person seeing what apieara to be an ordinary mirror, approaches to look at himself. A sudden change in the mechanism sends light through the glass from the back, whereupon it instantly becomes transparent, and the startled specta tor finds himself confronted by some grotesque figure which has been hid den behind the magic glass. What wonders mitrht not a magician of the dark ages have wrought if he could have bad a piece of plantinlzcd glass! As interesting feature of the Gov ernmental exhibit at the World's i'air will be a model of the earth on a gigan tic scale, with all the geometrical accuracy that mechanism and rt can , give to snch a difflenlt representation. So far as known, it is the largest rdobe ever constructed. It is about CI feet in cirenmference, with a diameter of 20 feet, superficial area of 1,216 feet, weight 4,003 pounds. It will boar npon its surface representations of the land and water on a scnle of G9 miles to 1 inches mensareJ at the eqnator. The degrees of longitude and parallels of lititude are indicated, together with the zone lines, the inothormal lines, the principal steamship lines and an appro priate tracing of the ronte of Colum bus on the voyage of 1492. The di visions of land, with the boundaries, even down to the provinces of coun tries aad the location of the larger cities, and the direction of the rivers and streams are represented witb fidelity. . This monster globe will surmount I star-shaped pedestal whloh will elevate it 15 feet above the floor, bo that it will rise above the snrronnding ex hibits of the Fibh Commission and Census office. I The pedestal for the globe will, with its ingenious construction, afford op portunity for the display of six big maps of the new Htates of Wyoming, 1 dado, Montana. Washington and the two Dakotas. The edifice may be en-1 tered through five doorways,, to be artistically draped with flags, the arrangement ol wbicn will have a siir- nificance beyond a mere blnndino- nf colors. No doorway, for instance, will Kn lonnrat ;,K . v,,'i , '-'-"J' " -v" tuuiuiu.uiiu vi flags of rival nations. A circnlar apart I merit in the centre of the globe's ped- ' ZEXfc ZU lie lands. The room will be 15 feet in .. height, witb a convex ceiling formed by the lower part of tbe globe. An in- i "i hare been afflicted with an affection of terlor stairway will afford access to a the Throat from childhood, caused by dlphth balcony aronnd the base of tbe globe, aria, and have used various remedies, but hare which will be supported on a horizon- found anything equal to ' Bbown's tal axis, tnrned by a email motor, in- Bokohial Tbocbm." R-.v. a. SI. P. Hamp Btead of being placed at an angle of ton' ! Sold only la boxes. 67, degrees, as the world is actually I v ... , . " . hung in space. ' "ow beautiful is modesty! It wln- The aDnaratnt for tnrnino- Hia o-lr,'. Detn upon 11 beholder, but a word or wiU WaTd".: fthUaerndn olt .ThaTeZ IS" and bidden from view by an immense bouli hava ben forr thec representation of the official seal of the ' The advertising of Hood s SarsaparlUa hi Ueneral Land Offioe which will serve suDstantiated by endorsements which In he as a screen and lend significant decora- Dnanclal world would be accepted without a tion to an otherwise prosaie part of tha moment's hsitatlon. They teil the story globe. HOOD'S CUBES. Is A LtTTL village In Sussex, Eng- Hood's mis cure LrerTus, Jaundice, lsn'l, there is a garden where thousands . .... of white lilies shed their perfume, and Bowling has become a fashionable where women gardenera tend and pack means of physical exercise, and ship the flowers. Twenty-tive . years ago a single lily bnlb was given to Mrs. Bates, a farmer's daughter. After sixteen bulbs had resulted from the original one, Mrs. Bates, finding that ber children, as she called them, bad ontgrown the snnny window where they grew, planted them in the corner of the garden, len years ago a dangh i f l IJ l - i . i 1 1 . U i.rm..A of tho tim. nt am hloMom. to the London Market, and now, in association with ber sisters, han mad the Bates lilies famous for their beauty and perfection. The danghters are keen business women, interviewing tbeir buyers at the six o'clock market; and sell rg to private customers, florists and commission merchants, without the intervention of agents. The average product of their garden is said to be six bnndred dozen a week. The dkriomno of carpel and wall papers opens to women a field for work ' in which tbey seem naturally qualified to cxeeL A few years ago a firm offer- : ed prizes of 81.000, $500 and $300 for 1 tho tet designs in wall papers, the ' competition being open to natives and foreigners, men and women. All three ' of these prizes were awarded to Amer- 1 ican women. A man of mncb experience ' in the business said recently that when ' women have bad as many years of the ' same advantages as men, their work win bu.u.1 uu ii some iOYoi suu pjr baps ahead. - Trrer are mistaken i mortals who think way to see whether there are weed io another. I wonns'i dry op tbe tears of this world if I could: they are often tha only things that poor human natur' and found little relief. She was ln ! as to batho ber troubles in. duced to try August Flower, which The despotism of custom ta on tha gaVe immedaite lelief. We cannot &TSl to much for it." U C Frost. : ' ' ENCLAN&'S SHAME. ttasfconslbks far the Cm mt Oplaan Imiai 6T0.000.OOO People. Americans do not realize the ex tent of the terrible curse of the opium ( vice in Asia. In China alone 125,- I 000,000 out of a population of be- tween 300,000,000 and 400,000,000 use ' it And now the British Government ' In India, to increase its revenue, has authorized the licensing of shops throughout India and Lturruah for the free sale of opium. These licenses are issued in very unusual form. Those who take the license come under obli gation to sell a stipulated amount, or to pay a forfeitl Thus the Govern ment almost compels the holders of the license to stimulate Its subjects to consume a deadly poison! The door is thrown wide open for all the inhabitants of India to take that which destroys at once the body and the soul. The unrestricted sale of opium is permitted in Java, with its 20,000, 000 of population. It is also permitted in the French possessions of 8,000, 000 or 10,000,000. The vice is also i carried by the Chinese immigrants into Slam and all the islands of the Eastern Archipelago. If the popula tions of the various countries in Asia, in which free sale of opium is J permitted, are added together the ag- : gregate number is more than 600, 000,000! In Europe and America the ' ruin laMDtUtA 1 ; 1 .. . V. I 1 ! direction of physicians, a and boxes containing It, and the vials when thus given out by druggists, are carefully : labeled, "Poison!" The laws of China once prohibited the sale and use of opium, the viola- tlon of which was punished by death, ' So earnest were the Chinese to pre vent its introduction into the coun try that the Government became in- j volved in a costly war with England about It, at the Close Of which a It, treaty was made, in which England recognized China's right to prohibit the introduction of opium, but left it with China to seize the vessels that 1 smuggled it in and confiscate the vessel and cargo! But as the smug, glers were Englishmen and the ships English ships the Chinese were afraid to execute the law, aud so opium was brought in English lottoms from ; India to China from 1842 to 1300. j The Chinese Government finding it could not stop the smuggling of opium into the country by British ships finally determined to legalize the horrible traffic it could not de ' etroy. Shops were opened in every . village and town in the country and . the cultivation of the poppy was be ' gun. To such an extent has the use of opium been extended that mis sionaries have said that seventy out of every 100 people are more or less opium eaters. j To sum up: The population of India and Burmab, according to the ' census taken last year, Is 235,000,000; that of China Is 350,000,000, some make it 400,000,000. The Island of Java counts its 20,000,000, to which the French possessions in Southeast ern Asia add at least 10,000,000 more, i 'Ihe Eastern Archipelago has say 5,000,000, making altogether a total of 670,000,0001 The curse of Asia has been saddled upon that con tinent by Christian Europe. For this terrible blight cast upon the greatest of the four-quarters of the globe, the British government is chiefly resmnsihla A hnnrlrpil Vfvira ago the East India Company com- menced to monopolize the production ction of opium for sale in China, and the government at home gave to the com pany the protection of the British flag. Since 1853 the British Govern ment has bad a monopoly of the pro duction and sale of opium. Great Britain is thus directly responsible for the prevalence of the opium plague among the 670,000,000 people in Asia! The obtect of the manufacturers' of Dobbins' Electric 8m I'aaheen lor 24 years to make this oio 01 such turnHor quality that It will Kire I "uifocito. riaye they succeeded? Ask your grocer for It. Take no o: hr. It is In the facu.ty of a noble, disin terested, unselfish love that lies the true gift and power of womanhood a power which makes us. WIIX WE HAVE CHOLERA T If such Is to be the deplorable state of aff ilrs, it would not be wise to overlook any precau ttonaiT measure. The rhMiu.., ni Jo Improve the sanitary condition of your home iv r.t..i,- itu ine old the old naiier nnti hi, naai ntit on. .1HEFIKEI.ITY WALL FAPKR CO.. of '"''lli1 s,Jeet' Philadelphia, a '"ing gold embossed papers for li aud 15 sciiu. oeuu s two cent suinns for samples, . Thra la nntl.ino- .oi...i.,. . '.?3S co-ioutT'.rohal Malmr a cravon rortra.lt nf liimulf by a amateur artist. Cann. Kidney Care for Dropsy, Gravel, Diabetes, Bright', Beart, Urinary or Liver Diseases, Nerv ousness, etc. Cure "uarauieed. 831 Arch Street, Hillad'a. $1 bottla, for 5, or druggist. 1000 certificate W rare. Try It. ' I In Finland and Fast Turkestan than- aerstorrjM are who'ly unknown, If afflicted with soreeyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Lye water. lHuculats seU at 25c. pet bottle. A bald-headed religions sect In sia holds that hair Is aiuf uL Bus- Peechim's Pills are belter than mineral ws ers. iteechain's no others. 26 cents a box. A great many due English gloves are made f llama August Flower" ' I am happy to state to you and to suffering humanity, that my wife as used your wonderful remedy, August Flower, for sick headache arjd palpitation of the heart, with "" aeyww years T- t ne nJS n g"31 snnerer, bas been under the treatment of eminent physicians in this city and Boston, Snngbeld Mas. i ! After Diphtheria i i Paralysis of the Throat- Numbness and Weakness r orient Health Restored by Hood Bana- paurllus. Mr: C. 8. Southwtclc North Uadlaon, Otlla. "My wtr and three children were attacked ulth diphtheria at the same time. Aflar aeilous lllneta toa zreatest danger wu safely passed, but they were all left wlta Paralysis of the Throat, and with uy wife It also affected her limbs. Her arms were numb near to the shoulders, ac companied with a prickling sensation. It was so difficult tor her to swallow. It seemed as If she must starve. The children were In a sim ilar condition, fhyslctaus were greatly per plexed and said It was very critical with my wile, as she was more than likely to have paral y -la at any time, and If ao It would be very doubtful ir aha aurvlrrd. Finally a friend suggested Hood's Sn ipa-llla. Although we bad not the alight -st faith, we were so dis eouraged that we were ready to try anything. I got a buttle and began giving It to them. Words Are Feeble to express the gratification we all felt at the end of a week to find an Improvement. Whea they had finished three bottles I could not e but they were as welt as previous to their sicknets. The numbness and paralysis entirely disap peared. There was uo trouble In eatlug, be- Hood's x. Cures yond their apparent Inability to get enough to eat. The neighbors all know of this cae and all think It wonderful, as do the doctors." C. H. Soctuwick, Grocer, North Madison, Ohio. Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, carefully prepared from the bet lugredieuts. 25o. Do Not Be Deceived with Paste. Enamela and Patnta which stain the bati'ls. Injure tb lrto and hurn red. The Hlln Sun 8t Poll.k Is Brilliant, Odor leas. Durable, and Uia consumer tva for no un or aiaaa package wlta rry purchase. We Pay asTAtl you have guessed about Life Insurance may ott wrong. It you winli te know the truth, Mud for "HOW AX1 WUY," issued uy the PENN MUTUAL LIFE Ka-23-5 CHESTNUT STREET, 1'hiladelphta. Pa. f Hrr buruM4 by Q j CsbqIUUmiIW. KndsrwaMsuarptiTsfefua.lsdMssSBniaal. assi sillies, aw straw. (Sakna.lss.alrjL MUST HAVE atom k, -"3 Sample 8ish lock irat. '92) free by mail for 2c. stamp, immense. nrls-ailaMl. Only good one ever Invented. Heats weights, bales unparalleled. HI a day. WrU guici. Bhouahd, Puna, t'a. RlVrSTrJii1. cS. BV MAIL. Thoroughly tamrht sn1 nr-t n fiw. J o H-ndsr. inithand I'oUVcs.wUlls.au'pMrt. Ia- ' who ha wtk lunga r AtHh Bft.9taOs.ldBM PMo'a Car for Coaannptloo. It km ear bMad. It tau notlnjar l one. It is nut toad to tevfcft. ltttb b.ieoatirrft. goW Torrwl.orft. . Too Punctual. The Hindu places a clock In his show-rooms, not because ho ever de sires to know what the hour is, but because a clock is a foreign curiosity. Instead, therefore, of contenting him self with one good clock, he will per haps have a dozen In one room. They are signs of his wealth, but they do not add to bis comfort, for he is so indifferent to time that he measures it by the number of bamboo-lengths the sua bas travelled about the hori zon. , In the country police stations, where the European division of the hours Is observed, time is measured , by placing in a tub of water a copper pot in which a small bole bas been bored. It is supposed that it will ' take one hour for the water to leak into the pot so is to fill and sink . it When the policeman sees that j I the pot has disappeared be strikes the j hour on a bell-liko gong. If be is smoKing or aozing, the copper pot may have disappeared several minutes before he discovers the fact but the j hour is when be strikes the gong. I A writer in Temple Bar. from whose article we have gleaned, tells an amusing story to illustrate the Hindu's indifference in this regard. When the railway was first opened t In a new part of India, It took a long , time and many bitter experiences to convince the natives that a train al- ways started on time. Shortly after . the opening of tho new line, a Deputy Commissioner sent his native servant with bis letter-bag to put on board the mail-car. Presently the man re turned with the bag, having missed tbe train. "You had not half a mile to go, and you knew that the train left the itation at three o'clock," said the an gry commissioner. I "Yes, truly," answered the native, in an aggrieved tone; "but, aahib, when It strikes three here, tbe train joes from there!" Such sharp practice the native had never known before, and ho did not I think it creditable to the company. The Skill and Knowledge . Essential to tbe production of the most perftct and popular laxative remedy known, have enabled tbe California J Fig Syrup Co., to achieve a great anc- cees in the reputation of Its remedy, t Syrup of Figs, aa it la conceded to he , the universal laxative. Tor sale by all druggists. They Boeosno Expert Shots. Engineers of railroad trains In Texas and most of tbe Western States carry revolvers, and often rifles, In hm - V. n .1 .... n . I .1 . 1 . Tl 'vug wubiujjrutica iua L mlurht arise. Thev amnae f homes e by shooting at the telegraph poles or anv nt.hetr mnrlr wrillct mnnlntr n t ell -l -. B - . '-. ipeed and attain a wonderful skill In marksmanship. A few daya ago an inglneer on the Denver and Rio Grand railway shot and killed a wildcat near Newcastle from tbe car- f his locomoti ve. Ne w York Sun A boy's Idea of baring fan la to b atUowad to mak ail tb sol b can. gJUrTUl-13 t.J.B.MlVKt. lUlSArrkM- CHINESE ENGLISH. S.BMt iflStakee That Arm .! by trttserr at Dialect t lories. It is well known that the Chinese cannot master the sound of the letter "r," but this bas proved the rock on which many professed writers of the Chinese dialect has come to grief. They do recognize the fact that while John Chinaman cannot make the "r sound he Is fertile in expedients to avoid it. Two Illustrations will show how easy It is to blunder on this point. In an early edition of one ot Bret Harte's stories altered we be lieve in later editions he makes a Chinese servant call himself "Ah Ri, which Is a manifest Impossibility. His name would certainly have been Ah Li," for the initial "B," would not only come trippingly from his tongue, but not at alL But In the same or another story he makes a Chinaman call his employer '"Mr. Fostel," his name being Foster. Now, no "Chinese person." to quote the re striction act, would ever say "Fostel." He would soften the last syllable of tha name and call it "i osian, -just, as the name "Porter" in his mouth would become "Potah," very like tha negro pronunciation of the same word. The autboress of "A Summer In a Canon" baa given a very good exam ple of the difficulties of the Chinese with the letter "r." She maket one of heroines, a mischevious girl, select a reading lesson for the Chinese cook. who wants to learn Enguso. xne lesson is made up of such sentences as "The grass is green," The rose is red," and the like. Of course, they became in Hod Sing's mouth "The glass is gleen," "The lose la led," and so on. The wnoie scene is a excenen. study In broken China, savs the San Francisco Chronicle, and ts com' mended to ambitious Eastern writer! who want to try their hands at En glish as she is spoken by the Chinese In California. The letter "1" is another which presents difficulties to John, which, however, he usually resolves by mak ing it into "cb." It may be slightly exaggerated to say that Chinese schol ars in Sunday-school know the author and founder of the Christian faith aa Chee Cly," but It is not very far out of the way. An American of this city, an interpreter of the Chinese language, whose given name is "Jer ome." Is usually known among the Chinese as "Chee Loam," tbey, per haps, imagining that that Is all the name that belongs to him. It should be noted, too, that the Chinese in California do not use the lingua franca called "pigeon En ; glish," whloh is employed in China. Such an expression as "My b'long 'topside," meaning "I live higher up," ! Is never heard here. The Chinese in this State try to talk English, and some of them succeed fairly well, al though the "r" and "J" are too mucb I tor them. I This is not an attempt at an ex haustive study of Chinese English, but rather a note of warning to am ; bitlous dialect from books. If they will but bear In mind that "r" does not become "1" unless It carries the genuine "r" sound, and that such a word, for example, as "Berkley" is not "Belkley" in the Chinese tongue, but something more nearly resem bling "Bahkley," tbey will be saved from blunders which make tbeir sketches and stories rather ludicrous than humorous to those who are ac customed to the dialect. Queer Facts About Cols, ! Occasionally some one applies to the Fish Commlssidh at Washington for a consignment of eels' eggs, to stock a pond or stream, and the re quest is Invariably refused. This is not due to any intentional desire to be disobliging, but because nobody knows whether eels lay eggs or Dot. As to breeding, tbe eel is tbe most mysterious animal in existence, and the question bas been a puzzle to learned and unlearned for centuries. Soma authorities have contended that eels grow up from horsehairs, which, in some strange manner be come vitalized. Others have held that they were generated spontane ously from slime, while others still have gravely advanced tha belief that they came from the skins of old eels, or similar exuviae of water snakes. Most popular among people who get their living from the water, how ever, is tbe theory that eels are the progeny of various other flshea. The Sardinian fisherman assert that they 1 are produced by a certain kind of wa ter beetle, which for this reason is called mother of eels. All this mystery about the eel, as science has learned in the last few years, Is due to tbe fact that it lays its eggs in tbe sea, where no one bas cnance io oDserve ine process. Other fishes, like the shad, leave the ocean to spawn In fresh water streams, but this curious and slippery ""i-ounsr uoes precisely me reverse. auc yuuujr ceis, newiy corn or batched, leave the salt water and make their way in armies up tbe riv ers. Obstacles apparently insur mountable they use ths utmost ln-j genuity in passing, even traveling a considerable distance on dry land In order to get around an obstruction. In tbe spring and summer any vis itor at Niagara Falls, who descends beneath the great sheet of water at the foot of the falls, will see literally hundreds of cart-loads of small eels wriggling over the rocks and squirm ing over the whirlpools. Of course It Is impossible for them to go over the falls, and thus It happens that, al though eels have always been plenti ful in Lake Ontario, there were none In Lake Erie until they bad been multiply at all when placed In ponds that are landlocked, although In such places they will grow rapidly and be healthy. It costs so little to pur chase young ones by the quantity that this is no great obstacle to theuseful ness of stocking inland waters with these fish. In all probability eels lay eggs, just as do nearly all other fishes. The only difference is that they deposit them In tbe sea instead of in fresh water. Mr. J. Montgomery Sear has pre sented a chime of bell to Saint Angus tine Episcopal Church on Phillip street, Boston, in memory of Bishop Brooks and hi friendship for tbe col ored race. Th. Mlt Ut, brought from England. They will probably be pUeed in th .teeple at once, and will be rang for th first time Easter morning Madam Modjeaka I said to contem plate studying Sanscrit in order that ah may read tb poetry of that lan guage. 3h b already an accomplished linai?t. P9?kYg Engliah, German, French, and Italian aa wU a ber own tongue. Povibtt k hard, nt debt U horri ble; a man might aa wall have a smoky said to bo tho two worst vil of our i7r7omIn my 8Ut In which women enjoy too right of ul txC tw am 04Mt o.osJlt with tsoa. ri'L . i . PROMPT, COOD WOrtfC. irfr A rr TC2 'XT .1 fVJK ftt I -:iij p font Canaioharie, N. Y., writes: " Awoke one ! tNjjVk JyrnrrA Mr VVi'l.ucUt) pa n' io oulder. Tr.ed viou, tXXCWCI morning with ' """"r. iftbout effect ; went to my ofi.re ; the p,.0 relicts lor became iusufte ocurmanent-' 3V . . . . ,,. My wife suffered ssnn "-j - mold die. n awi- lour boar. !U1 iru Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partnei of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in thi City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use ol HALLS CA1AKKH LUKE. Sworn to before me, and subscribed in my presence this 6th day of December, A. D. 1889. ; NOTARIAL, SEAL : : lucas CO., O. : 0 HALL'S CATARRH CURE IS TAKEN INTERNALLY, and acts directly upon the Blood and mucous surfaces. A. VV. TESTTJUOUTA TjJ3 : E. B. WALTHALI, CO., Druggists, Horse Jave, Ky., ssy; "Hall's Catarrh Cure cures very one that takes it-" CONDUCTOR E. D. LOOMIS. Detroit, Mich., lays: "Tbe t-fTect of Hail's Catarrh Cure is oiiderfuL" Write him about It. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is Sold by all Dealers in Patent Medicines PRICE 75 CENTS A BOTTLE. 1U Testinonlals sent free on application. lyi j u It Was Before ihe Day cf SAPOLSO They Used fo Say "Woman's Vork is Kever fene." CURES RISING .-. BREAST .-. "MOTHER'S FRIEND" offered child-bearing oinan. 1 have been a mid-wife for manv yearn, and in each ae where "Mother's h'rlend" had been used it has accomplished wonders and relieved Eiuih suffering. It is the best remerlv for ri.infr ol the breast known, and worth tbe price for that aiuce. ilits. M. M. Dbi stfh, Montgomery, Ala. Bent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt mt price, f 1-M per bottle. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Bold by all dnt"cis'. Atxanta, lia. This Traite Marlr lion the best ' WATERPROOF COAT SiSSSX! ,n World I A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS. "UnTik8 the Dutch Process No Alkalies Other Chemicals are used In the preparation of W. BAKER & CCS reakfastCocoa rhich 9 obtain tely It. han vnnm-mtUmM k i " , - ""'inrt nmrv tn strength ot Coca mixed with RtaMh a I - v."' wwruoi or mmiical, costing Uu than one cent a cmST DIOMTED. nOUrUhlnC an ASXLT Sold by Crerers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO.. Dorchester. Ma. FOR FIFTY YEARS 1 MRS. WINSLOWS SOOTHING SYRUP f1? If?1 "S?. MtlHone f Mothers ', v ,t,ihvLT.Sbl'ina .T b"e Xeethlag for ovVf 1 " " " avnuw .ne 00 lit, ejoftens th . imsifPTe ititi a Bottle. 7fSHlL0HSfl IfOUGHt ee. If "T on AvQhta that euro tbo m at iv stinjoss caa In XO to to y. let him wr tsfor (raloour reaib lity. Our BLOOD POISON! A SPECIALTY. Jcxltfte potaaBtvria. arap .rtlla or lint Spring faiTWi ntn thatwiUcnnj permanently. I itiT proof aoot "lx tnm. cooc knur Co., Chic go, Uu - CANCER CURED - .Vr-" e sake of TOfff . o there ip gome yews saw your aderUsmentof f)I?r?-,? hn 1 once decided to try ltTiad Li h"rjr.c"r. 1 cursd me DerfecUr lTtA - o y It hss well. AUoTitd hmiVrS ?AJ J?. .' Garfinlri Tna JuresSick Headache Off '.. home at l o'ciock ana used ST bli "r"' icaT pain ceased, and at i o 'eh ?Li EXJ RALG IV. Lrrrta kafids, wis. neuralgic pains tn the face,, she thought she ,, gf. JACOBS OIL, and it cured beri. C3.RI SCHEIBE. City of Toledo, ) Lucas Co., S. S. State of Ohio. ) GLEASON, Notary Public. REV. II. P. CARSON, Scotlsnfl, Dslr , UT. " Two bottles of Hall s Catarrh Cure tomp.ei, ly cured mv little plrl." J. C. SIMPSON, Marquess, W. Vs. ssvs "Hull's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bsd case of catarrh." THE ONLY GENUINE HALL S CATARRH CURE IS MANUFACTURED BY Ft J. CHENEY & CO., TOLEDO, O. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. ssssvs set ts Did you ever want a Tack? -want a Kail? fail to find either tack or nail when you wanted to nail or tack ? How bandy then a package of m, te SHOS; TICKS'; (All sizes to suit,) and a carton of HOME NAILS 5 fail sizes for home usesi C ' Dont grt caught that wiv ncsin. All SI) UC41CISICU IIUUIC.SIU Ilia I lUmf 1 SCSI (f) ( mt ) Hade solely by the Atlas Tack Cers's, BmIm (e VirwtrtWW,-Bon. rl.TT..Thll..liAI. j Cki. S40, Hsliuaurs. St. ssnc!sr .lrsou ' SM Yflm m Tn'.m. Ms,. rslrtis Jfsss. T I Whiuasa. Msss. liuiUiry. Mus. r.fUslUa wwm cD,:;r AS Li JIXL-aSSa XTHBO. the A'eindnJniproved Crcttn Srp Sr.iur; capscity 2.WU tosoOO pounds per honr ; 'mo J'.rx.w-r srlll run It. Also new mod. l HAND BEPAKATOR for the sale of wn!-h AGtNiJ '"eWANTED in every swtlrm. Msnuisciur-n ol every! hiu it m line of machinery and supplier foi putter and cheee fsctorlp.. 6-nd for c' oei. S4Q to 354 West Lake Street. Chicaso. Itt-ntms MEND. YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH THOMSON'S! SLOTTED it CLINCH RIVETS. A.i!,i-iT2i0r V""1' f" 0 In bases. . asurtea sue. Maa'ld by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO.. illeadsk t'enUmtUfc Bid t.... "Orders at the gcamsuh. lS?SS,?.u?r thir se. Bold U.iR1A j -ns-eo t WewTer. FENSIONS.' 'misonnt, "'""-nilrf iilsliai. atty w: y 4c xiim "Pm Ibsssss I r 1 --r St. r - Zfb 'iti KasCIl tWJal TiT (m