r' t; ,, ' '' is .i THE BLACKSMITH. Cltng elnn?, cling enT ! Went the blaoismitii's hammer, While his brazen Tilco oatranj HIh o'er all th clamor. In his forge from break of day, When he pealed his roundelay. 80 fierce he seemed, the neighbors ron4 Qaakt4 witi terror at the soun J. Loadly ring; my anvil true, ru have ne'er a bride but yon ; In my black abode, t'jy beat Than a love song is more iwoft : La, U, la, la, la, la, la. la. la, 1- Cllng clang, cling clang Softly rang the hammer .. Conor's heart Instead went ban. With a riol.nt clamor. He the pretty Eose had seen, Flower toll biowa of sweet ttftecn. Tut on glovcf, was wed lull soon, Changed was then the blacksmith's tune Soft, my anvil, ring to-day In the name of lore I pray, foltly, softly sound the blom, Kot to drown the voloe of Koa, La, la, la, la, In, la, la, la, la, la. Cl'ng clang, clinician;! Rohi was vi-ry trying ; Tisree times, hark ! a siap outran', luto silence dying. Ah, poor Bos", sure all Is o'er! Cauie the watch and bunt the door. Lo, the man of noise and strife On his knees before his wife ! Kos", in love's di.-ar name I pray, Iiunt me, beat me all the day, for thy pretty hand will be ho it as satin Mill to me. La, la, la, la, la, la, la, Is, In, It. From the French of G. Lemolne. CIIASL ii ATOiiNADQ "I don't believe that fripht evei turned a person's hair white off band," said Henry Wbtherell, an en gineer of the Jer. oy Central Ha lroad. "If sui'h a thiu could hai.pen these lovks would not be a 1c as you n-o tiK'tn now, for 1 will venture to cay that n- man ever went through a jnoro fear-lnsplrinj experience than I did once. Tell you the story? Why, certainly. But I am not very irood at a yarn, and I can nly (five you the baro fa t without descriptive orna mentation. "It happened this way: The year was 1873 or 1379, I forget which. Anyhow It was sometime in Ju!y. The we itlier had lee.i pretty hot, end it wm just the sort of day for broedi.n ,' a tornado. "i;nt I am gel tins ahead of my story already, not tuiin very expert in the way of anecd jte. I was work in:: on a one-horse road in Southern Kansas. The fjujierintendent wired me to in j h ruy engine a distance cf o!k t reventy miles to a phfe called lterst;wa It was wanted to haul a Jot of perishable freight, mostly mark 't produce, which had shunted oil by sow 9 cldent onto a side track and was In danger of spoiling. A suit unlnst the company miht have followed, and the business had. to bo attended to In a hurry. There were only seven locomotives on the road, b:irrin two or three that were dis abled. 'Well, not to be too long-winded, I got fuel and water aboard as quickly a; io;slb!e and started for Peters t iwn, tatting it rather easily, be c.u o the trac'.i wasn't in condition l and fast running well. I was about an hour out from my starting place, arid had cone sixteen miles 1 e haps when 1 noticed some queer io!)ing clouds on the western hor l.on. The day was exceedingly sultry, and there was a curious sort of trlara over the landscape which made IB look sort of feverish. I can't th nk of a belter word for describing it Tbero was something unnatural about the appearance of everything. My fireman wai a boy who had been brought up in that region, and he aid that it looked like a tornado com He ouuht to have been a j.ro.1 judge of the symptoms, because Ibe whole of his family, together with a 1 their pror-evty and live stock, had been wiped out by such a twister,' as they call 'em, when he wai hardly old enough to toddle. "Bv the time we'd gone, maybe eight or ten miles further, a dene bank of clouds had spread around to ward the southwest It was black as ink, but teneath it was a blank streak of white. I had never s en anything that looked quite like it be fore As I looked at it the bank rose higher, and presently I saw some th nsr like a sharp point of cloud pro ject itself downward from the black mass. All this time there was no thunder nor lightning, but only a look ab'ut the sky that was dreadfuf, t.i see, because it was so unnatural.' like. It seemed as if something aw lul was going to happen. It was tho boy who called my attention to the pointed cloud, and he said it was a tornado beginning. '1 pretended not to be afraid, and Lot be likely to hit us. But ba was as pale as a ghost. Says he: ' 'Don't you see that It is directly southwest of us?' 'Why, certainly,' I replied. What of that?' " 'T.ey alw sys travel northeast,' ho said, "and we are right la the track of It-' ' 'Then we'll run away from it, I guess,' says I. pulling the throttle wide open. But the boy, he said nothing only watched the clouds in the distance. "By this time the pointed cloud had got very much bigger, the lower end of it nearly touch. ng the ground. It grew rapidly larger ana larger and seemed to be approaching at a great rate of speed, w hile the rest of th( view toward the west and southwest became blurred to the eye, so that nothing could be made out clearly. 1 taw that it was a tornado that was coming, and no mistake, for the strange cloud, which had the shape of a gigantic peg-ton, was distinctly outlined In its inky blackness again t the general blur. I began to feel pretty badly frightened myself. Now ar.d then, when I could take my eye oil the cloud, 1 looked at the b y, but he only sat s lent in the cab. staring at the great peg-top with starting eyeballs and white lips, finally I said: 'D you think we are going tj escape it?' " -We are right in its track,' ho said, without looking at me. "You seo, we were running In an :i i r line over the prairie, directly northeast and pursuing tho very path in which the tornado was com in j. Any other course, with the ; learn 1 had on, wouid have carried us out of the way. "The toy shoveled more coal on. He had already done so three or fouf limes since the strange cloud was sightet But It was no use. Tho engine was doing Its best, and she wasn't capable of more than about lhirtv-eii;ht miles an hour. ' "It's gaining on us, I said. 'ITqw fast docs such a thing as that travel?' " 'About a hundfed miles an hour,' iculicd the boy, white aa a sheet. , -'if that bad be.entruj l W9J114 Bfil - T.' i'':' - at"'- rT'.y' be here to tell the story. hav 6ince learned that eighty miles as 1 hour Is sunnosc I to be the best 1 1 tornado can da My belief is that this one was going at about sixti iailes. Anyway, It wasn't any mor than six or seven miles distant by this time, and gaining on us rapidly. Il jny reckoning was correct, it would catch us In a little more than twenti minute. The way I calculated it was that the great peg-top was niov J;ig at the rate of three miles to out ;two. It wr;s the most frightfull specta cle to look at that can possibly be imagined. To me It seemed to be a iuonstrous giant, pursuing us with an evil intention to destroy. Kuw and then the blackness would be transformed into a dark greeD and it was constantly lighted up by flashes, as if it were an immense b .l'oon illuminated from within. It ap. eared to whirl around with in conceivable rapidity, and from it came a sound across the prairie as ol bellowing, with a voice so awful that the rumbling of the locomotive was lost la it. Of the destruction it wat accomplishing 1 could get no notion troiu my point of view- Fortunately there were few settlements in that jpart of the country, but as we passed vwo or three small hamlets at full Fpt-cd I uld see tho people running about uying to find some place ol tafety. The bov staggered to my side the roi-King of the engine made it UiDlcult to Keep one's feet and clutched my arm. I stooped my head, smd he yelied into my ears, 'Make the bend.' I knew what he meant on the in stant. Less than ten miles ahead ol us was a br dri over a river, after crossing wu cli the road turned abruptly southward. It was a freak railway anyhow, and its zlg-zas were intended to pass through a many supposed centers of future pop ulation as tossible. The only long stretch of it in a straight line was just where we got caught by the tornado. If we could get to the bend ahead of the monster we might run out of its track. 'As you may well imagine, I had no opportunity t. consider the plan calmly and in detail," but it struck mc like a Hash. It was a race for life sure enough. If that engine never did her forty miles an hour befotp I think she must have done that and more too, then. With the great funnel cloud rushing on behind us and steadily approaching, we tore over the rails at a frantic rate of speed. 1 was fairly cra.ed by the excitement, so that it almo-t overcome my sense uf fear. I remember distinctly that I pulled the whittle cord and let the locomotive scieatn with all her iaigiit though it could hardly be heard in the roaring of the pursuing tornado. "Six miles passed, as well aslcould estimate, and the monster was only about four miles behind. Three miles more arid it had les-ened the distance by a mile at least. But wo were ne.ir the river. A minute later and we rero running across the bridge. No time then to heed the Miming that trains must run slowly over this stream, in obedience to the sign p 1st. ' Over the bridge, we flew around the curve and dashed away south ward. Just in timj to see the fhig'nty balloon pas; by with a whirl and a roar, as if a'.l the demons in the in fernal regions were let loose. Wo could not make out anything ve y distinctly, the sky being darkened and the air filled with dust, but we knew that we were safe. A few min utes later the clo ;ds rolled away a ,d everything was as quiet, and ica eful as before the storm. We ran bac' to the bridge, but it wasn't there. 1? .as cleat gon-, a'ul sucu remains of It as were le:t w?re scattered a'l over the country- Tiie road was o badlj lorn up, the track for considerable instances being twisted and broken 10 pieces, that the expose of repair tig it bankrupted tbe company. 'Eleven people lost thIr lives by that lornado, which afforded mo an ex perience which I woiild not repeat fur ill the money iu the world." Wash ington Star. Jnpanes Fan. Only one cent for a fan! Yet it it strongly made of twenty-flve strips of bamlioo, with two thicker ones at the ends, the latter having on them a polish of black lacquer. The strips are held together by a rivet, forming a hinge, on which the fan opens and closes. The upper ends of the strips are covered with two lawyers of tougli paper, painted In four colors repre senting flowers, the top edge touched with another color. How can sucli an article, brought from japan t this country, be sold at so low a price with protlt? In the first place, bam boo grows plentifully in Japan; it is easily split by a band-and-foot ma chine, and hundred of thousands strips can be made in a day. The Japanese excel in the making of strong or tough paper, and in paint ing rapidly by a stamping process, the flowers upon it. The putting to gether of the fan is done by machin ery, and the cost or the laDor is al most nothing whem compared with the pay of American workmen. The. cheap fans are used as packing for more expensivo goods" as porcela;n jars, and as they pack closely, a larre number can go inside and around one umbrella stand, so there is no cost for the freight of the fans. Although there is thirty-five per cent, duty on both the porcelain and packing, tho t;lut germ feed has about the same feed invoice price of the latter is so small jrl vahle as a mixtnre o eqtlal part9 that the duty amounts to little. i,v weight of wheat hrannnd corn meal; The fan packing is then sold here in ln ,t sBr .! nnil rpftm inten me,i job lots, and the peddlers get thenx for a mere nothing. That is why they can sell them so cheaply. Even at one cent, the realized price is much higher than the Japanese charge for them in large quantites. Charm of AmUbUlty. WVipn naked bnw she managed to retain her vouthful aDDearance Mme. Pattl brightly answers: "I have kept my temper. No woman can remain young who often loses her temper."- The woman who .is constantly flying into a race soon has her reward. . A deep graven line stretches from each corner of the mouth up toward the nostrils. The mouth becomes pout ingly flabby or shrewishly compressed. Between the eyebrows appear thj , fretful, petulant frown, and no j amount of dress, no powdering, roug ing or face-steaming will brin back the lost beauty. ' "Handsome is as handsome does," said -our grandmoth- j especially if they have been trans ers. An amiable face cannever.be ported a long distance. All nnrsery plaln. Bright eyes and smiling lips , pien jn sending out trees should con- have their own .beauty. xne ugiy faced damsel should cultivate piaciu lltivate placid- sympathy and isume a virtue, entheassump- Ity of temper, human generosity. Let her assume II sne nas it not, ior ei cn tuo assault mi tlon of womanly sweetness will lead to its possession, for its own charm, and the naturally plain face will be tranungureu ty its nguw -''.'''". Farm Notes. SKTT.imgfl nr TTT 8TABTJ2. Tnic tiie eowa in the stable. It fl tnuch better than the old way of out . : rr-i a: a troublesome, and the cows are not 2 tin ning around the yard, causing the, milker to follow, two or three times i?i the course of the operation. Glva each cow a little graiD, if no more thf-n enongh to encourage her to go readily to her place in the clean milking stable. American Agriculturist. I BREEDING OF? THE HORN 9. is a futilo hope to expect It to breed hornless cattle liv the practice of dishorninjr. 'ihera have been in stances in which an artiScial peculiar, ity in the anixnol has become inherited, but this is exceedingly rare and is Dot to be taken as a rulo for breeders. Lambs have been docked for centnrirp, but they still come into the world witl long tails. 'Ihe only rtitin'actcry wsy to have a h rd of polled cattle is to use a Dolled bull, and this, bein JO ol ronformitv to the naturr.l laws 1 i .-.nnr.- mnv Vf drnended on in time to fix this character on the progeny, It may not be fully effective in the first generation or in several, bnt ex- perieiice has nhuvn that in time the character of tho sires will Le fixed on the progeny in the end. Tor dairy cattle the polled red Xorfork will make a good hornless sire. Tha KontMi AWr.Wn eattla are sometimes excellent Times. dairy animsls. Xew York " EEST CROr FROM DKHVUED COB. for three years, says a Xew York firmer in the Tribune, our drilled corn has yielded from 106 to 130 bnsh els of ears per acre, whereas we got but seventy-live to 10J by the check row method. The extra yield is one to th"re bein m.-ra stil';''; yon ria have lour to SiX hUlka to evciy t'uva feet of drill, and they ear as well hi three to four sUlks put in a checkrow clump. V.e plow the ground ia the full, draw ten to twelve loads of good fct ille manure per acre early in the spring, so the strength cf the manure will be partly washed into the joil le fore planting. Harrow 6:ue as for any crop. Kct the drill to sow frcm 8 to 9 j tpit-rt per acre, according to sine and variety of corn. But the safest way to set the drill is to pull the rubber hose out of the hoe and h i tho corn run on top of tha ground, uu 1 set it so it will run from four to eix kernels every three f ;et of drill; to run it any thicker is waste of timf, seed and fertilizer, as ii will havo to be thinned. Of fertilizer drill in 200 pounds T.ith the corn; the fertilizer box phould be partitioned off or the cxira runs covered with thin pieces o bo.u'd, or lefs phosphate may run iu with the corn ami clear wood ashes nae.l (ly those not wishing to buy much fertil izer) in the runs each side of the ona used fur tho corn ; then there will be no danger of injury to the seed. I'r-r-sons desirous of planting pLimp".;:iu with the corn may do so by mixing ti: seed with the fertiliztr th-.t runs ia with the corn. If the drill does iid run the corn deep enouf h hang li:,iil weights to the hoes uso 1. I agree with Waldo F. Brown that sced-i-orn should be thoroughly dried byaiiii cial heat and hung in a dry place; such seed will germinr.tj oae to tlnva days quicker and grow stronger, nn-1 in not eo liable to rot during any cold, wet spell a tu?r planting. FERmso v.vlcz or crea'.i Tho results of a p !' es of feef.ii: j t.'f.ts at the Vermont -xptrime.it nU tin with sugar nie.il, cream giiie.l n.eal and germ feed spe:.k vory strong ly in favor of the high feeding vh'iu iX cream gluten ni'-al. Two of tha cjws ate it quite well, the other l-;.t it gcod de-l of it, bnt in spite of thisUie crcn'ii gluten pro .In?, s mora milk thr.n, '.he bran and corn iu .'our cf.es out ol ix, makes n richer n.iili live times out of six anH yields mora butter fat eery time. The milk increases about one twe'fth, the riehnes of the milk in creases a third of one per cent, and tho net gain is about oue-sixth of the total fat. On a herd of tweidy cows yielding 5000 pounds apiece of four per cent, milk with bult.-r at twenty-five cents a, pound such na increase would repre sent 6(10 po-.m ls of butter yearly with a value of :jlii'. The fi.ii-n obtained show that not withstanding the fact that the sugp.r meal was n-.t eaten in so large quanti ties as tho bran and corn, and the further fact that what eirect the chand to pasture hud was against tho sugr meal, yet it gave better returns tlv.n the bran and corn. In tho five trinlt ii produced more milk and more ptun Is of fnt every time, and a rich9.' rnili: four times out of rive, producing cna iiinth mora milk, one-fiftieth richer and one-seventh more butter. Xot so good results were obta.ne 1 with t lie germ feed. Its ree was i;l lowed by a decrease of milk, an in crease of richness and but slight change in the tot"t' amonnt of fat. It has then, considerably less feeding value than the ere .on of gluten meal and the sugar meal, us one would naturally expect from its composition and market price. It hus apparently about the same feed ing value ponnd for ponnd as the mix ture of bran and corn, and as it can be purchased iu the market for less than, either of these it follows that it should i l e an economical and profitable feed. I '.!r in ltil tit inn ennelnnion both have a higher feedinsr value thaa ,he ,i,ov aml tnHt thege atter also !iave liAt effect on the rjchness of : i, -.nt- Finally, it should be remembered that this is but a slight series of trials' and that the work needs to be repeated several times before a sure conclusion ololos, no longer living jn the coun can be drawn. I try, have left profound traces of tl.eir It is necessary here to ntter a wor l fo-tuer occupancy, of caution in regard to the use of these ; I concentrated feeds, sugar meal and especially cream gluten meal. They ure both exceedingly rich concentrated feeds, and like cottonseed meal should be fed sparingly. Three or four pounds a day of sugar meal per cow is as much as it is safe to give, while with cream gluten meal the limit of two pounds er day per cow should not be exceed- Ld. Xtw England Farmer. . - K,AXTrso tovn trees. . A crreat deal of difficulty is ex- prienced ia handling young trees thut uave Deen bought at a nursery, and . 1(ier jt a part of their contract to send written orders with their trees, giving goo description of tha kind of soil jn which the trees have been growinr, I-nd the general location of the nursery; i nfi tne general location of tue nursery. tnd the geaerallocation of the nursery; trbia would help many farmers ami I kmit growers to give the trees a good fctart. As it is now, very often tha entirely different soil to which, the . ihave been accustomed, and a yetr 01 two of good growth, is lost ttrongi ithis sudden clicage. A great deal can be saved, however, if the firmer understands how tc iiandle the trees and how best to sei .i . A If . HWA VAnAivnn (during a dry season, and as they hav been transported a long distance, they peed planting at once. When th trees ere received they should be eel jraioedintely, tnd tho longer they are kept implanted the longer will ti check to their growth be made. Prnnt ieff carefully all dead and mutilated (roots. Then dig a hole largo enongl Ito a commoeb'te all of the remaicmj roots in the vositions ia which t'lej lir.n. If tho rooti can h-3 planted in their ratr.ral position tbera will bf less danger of lesi; but to do this, yery large holes nn oitn required. Place the tree ia tiie Ziola and till it half up with tho clay, and then saturate it thoroughly with wnter until it is workable clay. With a small : pi a blunt stick this stk-lty clay sho b worked carefully around and i With a small hoe should int j Ithe roots of tho trea. ith a little labor at this wcr'i t!i3 roots will Inuieklv (Ttt establli'sct', end decide (largely tha future o. tiie tr -a. Afte: this the rest of the soil should be Ithrowa in and piled u; around the Itree, on I a good mulch of stuble manure provided. If the season is a rwet instead of a clry one, the toj; mulch will not be needed, but if there ia any danger of a drought, tha muleh is the only way to prevent the roots from getting tlursiy. Bat wit a a good mulch a newly set tree can be kept moist for months. The water that has been applied directly to the r.iots will be kept thera, and not allowed to erporate. To put all of tha soil baek into the hole, and then pour water upon it, is a method that mui.v praetico now, bul is not nearly as E..i.sfauiory as tho one described. A groat deal of the water tini prt on the eur'ace will never get Io.n to the roots, but will be absorbed 'more by the surrounding surface eoiL .When we put it in the hole half filled w ith soil, it goes direet to the roota, where it is needed. Where the soil is very dry in times of drought, it is sur prising to see Iiotv much water the Furface soil will absorb. If one digs down a foot, however, lie will find that the subsoil is still niitowhad by the water. American Cultivator. TAKM ANT CARDES NOTTS'. The apiarist should pay especial at tention to the weak colonies.. Honey, either comb or extracted, il properly taken care of improves with i'ge. If moths once get a footing in the hives, the colonies will be destroyed ia a very short time. Land that is not drained dors not hive time to dry snfiich-ntiy between r:.IiT to jiermii working the crops. In aa e::t-'e:i:ei7 v. et sea.iou, and in an ex-Irc-mel ury one, the cost of draining is scmstimes ret aid by a single cro. There are nr.meroi.s eRy wa-s of i?.ch!-.g the cj.ix is drir.lr, l ut to irsny t! is teemn to ce a veiy herd fcb. t-'.ve the c.Ut the eati of yc ur line? a fev tiines and he w ill soun learn to d-iul:. Use the method as given ey a little gir", ho oaM that cha taught t ze youngsters the vr.-.y in which t ) Criiil: by wrapping piece cf cloth arouni a vm coo acl ) laeing-it ir. the mill:. hits iicwis are oilen very popular because they loo!-: cieau. A spotless plumage, accompanied with bright-red combs make a decidedly beautiful pio ture in feathers, whether it be on the biwn, iu the green meadow in spring time or before you in a clean, tidy poultry house. It is well, however, that we have a variety in color; it en ables all to be suited in taste, for in his regard many of us differ. TMEIR LANGUAGE 13 A LEGACY, Tlio Conuaerors Havo Gone, but Their Tongue la the Only OueSpokcn. There is an' instance in Africa or a j eople who subjugated a large region and after years of supremacy were thcmse.ves expelled from the country but left their language the tiniven:;! medium of speech as a leminiscem-i. of their occupancy, says an exchange. Iliese people are the Makoloio tri e, who. fortv-eight years ngo, urdcr their warlike chief, Sebotoane, left tlicir homes among the mountains ol liiisutoland, crossed the wide desert of K.ilahaii, an enterprise involving in.'redible hardships, anil finally set settled along the upper Zambesi and its tributaries. Their emigration proved the capacity of the savage African to leave his native land and make s, new home for himself in a far-distant region. Livingstone has described this fierce chief, Sebotoane, who con ;uered all the trib.;s around him, madehims.'lf master of the large empire of the Barutse, and so came to iu!e a regkn as large as some of ihe European states. It was in 143 that Livingstone saw him. Tha empire of the Makololos lasted until 1864, when, on account of the cruelty of Sekeleto, the son of the old king, who had died five years before, a general revolt octured, and the Mak ololos were driven from the country by tho natives, who were far more numerous than the intruding people. There Is to-day not a sing e Mak o'olo in that region, but, strange to ; say, during the twenty years of the domination of this tribe their lan guage, a little corrupt, became the language of all that immense terrl- Iflrv Thus it. h.nnnens that, a l:in. guage of South Africa is now spoken in the upper Zambesi by many thou - sands of people w ho are quite distinct from the tribe that imposed the Inmrnnrra nnnn Virii Thn rnti vii have, in fact, almost forgotten theii ton and has kept them filled with original languages, though they have P or teachers and widows, and moth introduced into their new speech e" with si -k babies, not one of whom quite a large number of the words would have been able to leave home which formed part of the vocabulary l'ut for her? She has given them of their forefathers. So the Mak- happiness and health, and perhaps Chaft The chaff of grain is Nature's way of protecting seed between the time it falls to the ground and that for it to grow again. Now that grain Is stored in barns or stacks the chaff is scarcely less necessary. It is often the straw may be almost rotted where the band went around the bundle yet Ithe craia will shell out with little apparent injury. J' Musky GMl. Several medical journals assert that the young women of the present day ; are better developed physically, taller, j the young women of 50, 100, 150 or 200 years ago. ' 1 ' ' w ,. ltuuivA, olwukci auu iiuaibuier iiiau : nt it win How Miss TJp-tc-Dite Shops. The real fin de tiecle girl is a curious nmiluriinn of the Deriod. Btlongin us she does to the Up-to-date family. she is thoroughly independent, ana en She is welledu-lof tirely self possessed, one w wen rated, not only in book learning, but as well in all the domestic duties, to say nothing of her many accomplish ments. - The girl known to us, has learned to cook in Conwell's Temple College, to trim hats and bonnets in the Drexel Institute, and how to draft, cut, make and trim gowns in the most approved fashion in McDowell's dressmaking school, so now with the suggestive aid of Reve, The French Dressmaker, aud other hitrh class magazines, she makes herself look like a charming fashion plate. She not only knows how to make garments, but she is as thoroughly posted in the art of buying, that is she understands the nature and merits of materials and their prices, and she can also tell you what, where and when, to buy. Our girl went down town not long ago and came home full of facts and settled some perplexing questions con cerning the wearing of black; crape she learned from reliable authorities, is the mourning material par excellence, and Eudora is not Henrietta. One of her errands was to get velvet enough to make swell sleeves and lo further trim a dress of Lansdowne. She bought Velutina, because she said Velutina looks just like Lyons silk velvet, wears much longer, and costs one third less a yard. It comes in all the colors of the season, as well as in neu tral tones and delicate tints, and now is used instead of velvet as trimming and combining material, as well as to form evening gowns and street, suits. A costume of Velutina cord trimmed with bands of Beaver fur, she thought Darticularlv stylish. She also bought, as inter-lining ior her sleeves, and also for themter-huing of a jacket, a new material, bearing the suggestive name of fibre chamois. The most notable result of her days investigation was the following letter, written after consulation with her father and mother, in regard to the sum of money they could afford to spend in replenishing the family outfit. It shows she knew what she wan tea ana how to ask for it, and as it is really addressed to the largest dress goods house in the world, it may prove sug gestive to others who find it necessary to make purchases by mail. Stkawbkidc.e axd clothier. Mail Order Department, Market and Eighth St., Philadelphia, l'a. Pear Sirs: Please send me samples sf dress goods suitable for street wear, to cost from ouc. lo jl.uu a yaru. Cheviots, whipcords, homespuns, and overt cloths in dark color?, with dasues sr shadings in bright colors. Also of bourette and boucle effects and novelty cloth in ' color with bhick, in one or two of the num- irous designs. Send sample of Eu lora in best quality. For evening owns include samples of Satin Duch ;sse, and plain and figured sublime loths in pale green, cream and laven- Jer, and also enclose samples of elu tina in shades to go with the various :lress goods. At the same time you send samples ;lea3e send me one of your catalogues f Cloaks and Costumes, another of House Furnishing Goods and Linens, ind also your suggestive list of novel :ies and articles suitable for Christmas presents Respectfully, Jewel Ut-to-date. In writing to the house of Straw ondge & Clothier fur Samples or cata logues, please mention the name of Ihis journal. Ed. Both Side of the Story. Two young girls sat on the porch af a seaside hotel, ia which they had been guests all summer; near them was a gentleman who had just ar rived. "There," said Miss Blank. "There ;o those lovers off for a stroll. It is said they are actually engaged! So absurd! Roth middle-aged; he is a liompous fool, and she is pockmarked. What can they see in each other?" "They have been lovers 6ince they were children," irently answered Miss Case. "But she has devoted her life to nursing her mother, who has been ill for years with an incurable disease. Now her mother is dead and they will soon be married." Presently: "Do look at those Wright sisters! fried Miss Blank. "I'm sick of the sight of them. The elder sails along With that slow, majestic grace, as if they were of royal birth, and the ugly little one trots after her never leaves her a minute. It's a wonder it never cccars to her she may be in the way when a pretty girl is talking to a gentleman." "Her sister does not' think her In the way," quietly said Miss Case, The reason she walks and moves slowly is because she Is subject to ter rible attacks which are brought on by rapid motion. Her sister never leaves her. because if she were not there to apply the remedies, the poor girl would ale. Jhere never was a more unselfish sacrifice of one life to an other," she added warmly. Her companion was silenced, but jnly for a few minutes. "There is the s'.upid Miss Brown going awayl That is a relief! When women get to be as old and ugly and (uninteresting as that they ought to ! w kept out of sight of their friends." Miss Case hesitated a moment "Do you know that Miss Brown en raged two rooms for the whole sea new life. I heard this from one of them not from herself," she added juickly. And so on, and on, one seeing the iiiiiuun 1 11 tmu iiiai artier, bue otuer Ihe bright side. The newcomer keenly inspected the faces of the two girls, as thev rose and parsed him. Both were young and pretty. But one was already tilled with discontent, and with mean, vulgar thoughts, while the i Cther turucJ on life eyes full of se- 'ene acd jJ"ful calm. Whatever their uisap- . Polntment in the world; but to the other it will always be. as Charles Ringsley says, full of eweet and noble souls." Monte-Trap. Th" sticky tly-papor which is coiu- lno,l,Jr so1'1 uurinU the summer season i aid to make an excellent mouse-' , trap. -A. sheet of It laid In front of :'i' hole from which the mice emerge i:iy nolo from which the mice emcrgo THE DEADLY RATTLESNAKE. So Known Cure for th TOt of tHo Genu ine Article. - " ' "Out of a thousand peoP1 hitten ,.ti,nnirM said II IX Bourne, Palm Springs, to a Pomona (CaL) Progress man, -a " -; ttftyever really recover, do i as I know, and I hare posted myself thoroughly upon the eubject for over twenty years on the desert and in Arizona and Texas, there Is no .known cure for rattlesnake poison, In spite of the fact that many people have said that theywere cured by whisky. You may depend upon it thas, when a man says he was cured of a rattlesnake bite, though not necessarily a liar, be is at least labor ing under a misapprehension or tbe facts. There is a small snake simi lar to the rattlesnake in appearanc, whoe poison is not so venomous, and negroes bitten by it place lime upon the spot or else drink enough whisky to .counteract the poison. W hisky, if taken in a large quantity, goes di rectly into the blood and counteracts the poison of the snake. But the regular Arizona rattler, from Ave to seven feet in length, is a deadly cus tomer to meet. It does not give any warning, but strikes the moment it is disturbed, and it can strike an ob ject almost twice as far distant as it is long. "A friend of mine, ex-County Clerk George English, was riding along in the saddle near Y'unia, when a b.g rattler lying on the road leaped at him as he passed. 16 siuck to u.s boot leg, driving one of its fangs clear through the thick leather of his boot through bis trousers, just escaping the flesh. It required considerable kicking to shake that snake off, and when he was nnany got. rm oi started In pursuit. Sly friend naa faced bullets in the army with non chalance, but his hair stood on ena when he saw that snake coming, and he jammed spurs to his nag and didn't stop until he had gone a quar ter stretch. He knew as well as I what an awfal thing rattlesnake poison is. He lost two men in one month from rattlers. My ranch is literally full of rattlesnakes, and only last week my hands killed twenty-six in a field of twenty acres." IX 0M)EX TIMES People overlooked the importance of permanently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient action, but now that il is generally known that Syrup of Figs will permanently cure habitual constipation, well informed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but liually injure the system. An oyster weighing sixty pounds is occasionally discovered in luget Sound. A Itenrli-ve ol Trii Voarn. An averaee buiiM-s in::u's life tan easily fco I Irnutheneil tu yeiirs In- the urva-ioua' ue or Kipmu. Tbul. Ioyou kuuW any one who wants those tea yeursV A Kentucky court recently deliber ated three days, at a cost of $200, up on the ownership of $11 worth of scrub pine land. Dr. Kilmer's Smur-RooT cure il Kidney snJ Bladder trouble. Pamphlet and Consultation frea. Laboratoi" im:!;nmton. K. Y. Before storing bonev in trees, bees n'ill i'Iiiq r tli ti-.io f( nil rnltpii u.nm1 ! .ml mf.w TI,ov nnver do nnvthine bv halves In most parts of Syria, Palestine and Arabia tig trees and date palms are counted and a tax is levied on each tree. Karl s Clover Kont, tlic irre.it Wool purifier, piYi'sfreshnww and ric:inu'-i- lo tho un.uilcxioa and cures coustiimtioii wcts. ioctt. si. The strawberry is kno.vn all over the world, and was uso.l as an article of food by the anciei.ts. JTrs. Winslow's Pootldnir Svrnp for children tretliinir. softens tb- uimis. reduces inlia'i. illa tion, allays aiu- iuiim wiad colic. oc.a bottle The inhabitants .f at the setting of tiie efore sunrise. Korea go to bed suu and get up If afflicted wllli soiccyi-s uio i)r. Isaao Thi nt fou'ohie water. Dimuista sell ati.iiot Jt.id Not nis Titrr. Floor Walker Don't you hear Miss Sclleru calling '-Cash" at the top of her voice. Cash-Tiny Yep. Why don't you go to her?" "Tain't my turn. It's Jim Jim sons." "Whore is Jim?" "lie just fell down th' elevator." Street & Smith's Good 2Cews. v. : I : I::', iio. Landlady Why do you wish to leave my house. Mr. iStarboarder? Ooti't you like the table? Mr. S. Oh, yes, very much indeed. I don't know that I ever saw a better one. It's what you put on it that I an't stand any longer. Detroit Free I'r-.-ss. " 43 013 GIVE AWAY A Sample Package (4 to 7 doces ) ol Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets 7b any one sending name and address to us on a postal card. ONCE USED THEY ARE ALWAYS IN FAVOR. fence, our object in sending them out broadcast ON tbia I They absolutely cure Sick Headache. Bil- ionsness. Constipation, Coated Tongue. Poor Appetite, Dyspepsia and kindred deranae: mjnts of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Don't accept some substitute said to be "just asgood." The substitute costs tke dealer less. It costs yon ABOUT the same. HIS profit is in the "just. as good." WHERE IS YOURS? Address for Free Sample, j ! r? World's Dispensary Medical Association. Ao. 663 Mala St. BUFFALO, N. V. ! T JMf'ie-JlviJ.P I jjr. ' If you've neuralgia, take on rub itonbari keep -3 S tn fnfi tbe tain tbafs a- Kysrm nuarOfJU TO Y0UT 15 YOUR HERL7H lire de Ait to rour thin don't bcwitkcut A USE Or TJfi BEST CHEAPEST TABLE MINERAL WKTiKlK Tilt Mxtinti. atffi? 60? Sansom St. Philadelphia, Pa. Ml mm 'nanus smrrm ASS WR GROCER Ifcoughtless Folks Have the Hardest Work, But Quick Witted People Dse SAPOLIO HANGED HiS OWN FATHER. A. Peculiar and Toochlnr Scene on Gal lows. It was a strange meeting of father and son on the occasion of the hang ing of old Bill Stebbens for the mur der of bis second wife at Spokane. The murder was attrocious, the peo ple said, and there were few glances or sympathy for the doomed man among the morbidly curious stares of the little crowd that filled the jail yard. The Sheriff's deputies bad attended to the details. The trap was set, ready t3 be sprung and in an instant send a man into the great beyond. The noose had been made carefully of the best hemp rope, greased with tallow for thai occasion. The pro cession had moved up the steps to the platform. With business like dignity the Pherid, who h.:d been notified, stepped from his olHce, crossed the courtyard, and mounted the scaffold with the death warrant In his hand. He read the document in a calm voice, as one would a notice of a sheriff's sale. "Throughout his trial, in the dark Iho-.irs after his sentence, through the last night of life, and while viewing cur ou ly from his cell the rays of the la-t sunrise he would ever see on earth, the victim of the law had been stoically sulloi. 1'motL-n had never siiown itself in l.ii face He had taken his fate philosophically from the first, making no defense, ' saying notniiig wnec me sieni o mine ' n:ia g!Ven nlnl an opportunity be fore passing sentence. Few noticed It, but it seemed as if a tear glistened in his eye then. Addressing himself to the bheri.f, be said in a suppressed tone: "Won't you shake hands, my boy, before I go'r" The SheriiTdid not hear him, or if he did no one could have told it. He was still the bu iness-like executive o:!;cer of the county in which he lived; nothing more. "1 know 1 didn't treat you r ght," the condemned man continued, show ing a tr.ice of excitement, 'nor your mother either, but a word of com f rt to a man that's going to die isn't kaueh. Won't you say something?" Twenty years of battling with the world on his own hook had hardened the Sheriff's heart. Silently he mo tioned the assistants to buckle tho straps, adjust the cap and fix the nosa Then with steady and unwavering countenance he pressed the button und sent his father into eternity. l-pokanc lie view. The Sailboat. Watched from the wharf a sailboat seeuis an easy sort of craft to alan ine. The wind appears to do every thing. The casual guest of a skilled j.kipper likewise is apt to think that i s bis host takes thimrs so easy it fannot be so very difficult to handle u sailbo.it alter alL He regards the warning of experience as based on the jealousy of competition. Let him who thinks sailing a science which its followers try to represent as hard to learn because they want to Ikeep it to themselves take a trick at the helm once. It looks easy to keep the boat on her course. Your friend, whe takes you out sailing barely touches the tiller once in a while. Some day be j usks you to take the tiller while he ;wa luiwaru. jic tews you W Keep that Bpire and that tall chimney line. You take the helm; you do what you think you have seen him ilo. The chimney and the steeple act as i.f they were bewitched. They liositively will not come into line. You observe in a knowing tone, "She Hoesn't seem to mind her helm." Jiut she is minding her helm, and ipretty soon you find ouc what "jib bing" means. Most of the fatalit:e3 of summer Bailing are due to the man who thinks Hailing is easy; who is conildenc that Jie knows all about It. ln reality many a sea captaiD who can handle ft big ship without difficulty does not Ifeel at ease in command of a sall Ihcat. Boat-sailing is a course at the 5aval Academy in which the cadets undergo arduous training under the most skilled i est rue tors. Boston Transcript. 4 ITow'a This t W offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F . J.Chenet A Co., Props., Toledo, O. we, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che ney for the last 15 years and believe him m-r-lectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion made by their firm. Wesi & Trcax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WAL.DINO, KtsrAM & Marvih, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. HaU's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon thebiood and mucous sur faces ot the system. Price, 75c per bottle, bold by all Druggists, Testimonials tree. ' Pumpkins. Pumpkins are easily dried, and those who like can have them all tho year by taking a little trouble. Tak ofT tho skin of the pumpkin, cut it in mm strips ana ury quickly over a hot stove. The uicces are as himl n. stove. The pieces are as hard ai j chirm, but a little ste'win? will make I them good as when fresh from the I III fl 'IMaV mrlll J- all . St. Jacobs Oil--rub it nibbing it on it bas got y what if s for. ,;4 wmMomwsr On WBUTlwmJL FACE TO FACE. The pleasure of a confidential chat 5s doubled by the sweet breath that rocs with a well-ordered system. And that la always insured by Ripans Tabules. Sweet breath, bright eye, clear complexion, Ripans Tabules. W.-L.'Doucla 5 3 SHOE IS THE BEST. v NO SQUEAKING. 5. CORDOVAN, r KLNLntfcfclMMr'ifcLli.O lLT. 54.3.5- FlNECALf &KWJGASC1 $ 5.o P0LICE.3 Soles. 2.l.7-? Boys'SchoolShoes. - LAD1ES , 5END frCK LAlALUoUb WLDOUGLAS, BROCKTON, .MASS Ton ran save money by wonrinir the V. I.. Donalas 3.00 boe. v Recauiie we are tbe lnrppst manufacturers of this grade of shoes in the world, and guarantee their value by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protect you against high prices and the middleman' profits. Our shoes equal custom work In style, easy fitting aud wearing qualities. We have them Bold everywhere at lower prices for the value Riven than anV other make. Take no sub stitute. 11 your dealer cannot surply you. we can. Furnilure and Beit GREATEST EVENT l HISTORY. llelnfii dealers nntl manufacturers we are enabled to sell vou goods lower iban any Furni ture Houe in the countrv. LOOK 1 10 riecesSoli.i "Oat, carvel Beil Room Fuils $l!.O0, S-Jl .OO. fi".00. 14 I'iet-tH Larue Oalc Hed Kouin Suits. f-K, i-i- lni'lvl'lcs 1 1'ureau. 1 Wnihstanil, 1 Jicilsti-ail. 1 lttl Mat tress, 1 Woven Wire Spring, 2 l'illows, 1 ltoUter, 2 chairs, 1 Kocker, 1 1'arlor Table and Luro Stand. Best line of Royal Mattresse?, Feathers, Tables, Side Hoards. Couches, l.ouuee, 1'arlor suites, Chain, Springs, Hall Stands, Ktc. Our goods in workmanship, durability or prie have no ciiiaL Call and be convinced. Uoods aciu all over tha country. GREAT EASTERN M'F'Q CO., No. 12 1 N niDGK AVI"., . Above Spring Harden. CASH OR CHKD.T. yjg DailielS Raphael, Angfio. Kulxna. Tom Tim " LINEN E" are the Best and Mont feronomi ral Collars and Cuffs worn; they are made ot nn rloth, both sides finilitd alike, and heintr rcverai ble, ona collar is equal to two of an y ot her kind. They tit well, war wll an t 1k veil. A bnvol Teu Collars or FiveTairaoI Cuffa for Twenty-i'ivi Centa. A Rample Collar and Pair of rnffsbyxnaa for Bis Centa. Name style aud size. Address REVERSIBLE COLLAR COM PANT, 77 Franklin St.. New York. tf Kilby St.. Boston. EflSTM'Ii COT.I-EOK, PoronKrErwTB, ?. y.. oTTers botd acxes i m i est fin 'ittlftnnladvai.taiies athalwe(tco t. II-1 hful; bet Inllut s; iccUra letentny ad liustrtrsa Mu!i,'; i.lut O.a-. iand TT- in ; vrill ip; rngmn una .bwiiiw i.in wijH 'i irnn.u . e a tninr I fi r Cm at inm compflent niut'enffi. A CLBMKNTCGAIMJ SCOLLEOE MenT. .1 ) Wastiinirtoii Fouglikeepsle, New Trrntnl Kree. Willi Vfiit-lalile lEi'iiitilit-.H. JIuve . iiii-d mativ tlioti- futii 1 4;iKM pro nonnoed taopelcm. From first dw ynitit 'inA raj-ldlydisappt-ar.nnd In n du.i at l-;ust iwtMiilnlx ir all nyinpuniBure rt'inovtl. Hooiv ol' Uliaiotiiitls ct" miraculous rurw wnt Fit bill TEH DATS TREAiMcU r k URIUSrHD FREE by maU. Dr. fl. H. Glf & SQJS, Scciaiists, Atlanta, Ga VTE V1LL MAIL POSTPAID flno lantl 1'lrture, ciititl.M "MEDITATION In oxchaiik'9 it id Luico Lion lieuda, cut from Lii'U i.'oL' Wrappers. anl a 2-cciit ftcnip io pfiy pot.-ur. Write ir.r '1st of our ol her flue prvmiunifs Iik-IuU-tug b-KiWa, a knife, K&uii, eU). WOOLSON SPICC CO., ' A50 Huron bu, Tui.eih, viuo FOR FIFTY YEARS I MRS. WINSLOWS SOOTHING SYRUP baa bps-n BPfd ly Million ff IVfottirra ftr tl.vir cliil'lrea w hitv 'ltUmtc fi over Fifty Yeftrx it sotthv tltocbtl.i, wften ;h E;ms, allays alt pain, o-.in- w iud colic, aud tbe bt ren.Hiy for d larr "va. Trety-ia5-o Cets a. Borxte 0PIU3U Morphine Rtl Cnrr4 In 14 to 2 riMjr. Km ih.t till mrffd. DR. J.8TEPHENS. Lebanon Ohio. rtllUA.. TA. atnoee: noopritiiAo oui-i from bu.tnwi. ioauit. it, Kc.lorM.nmuo. phyri.'jxi ltili. itii Inmml. mutUluu. Sm1 lo, Si"-; ,t jTmSJ-ji. RP,MlrtM'!St,?.TV-raon!"'S SiiCCe8sf"v Prosecutes Claims. Succeesfullv Prosecutes Claims. Ltw Principal x4wninur U.S. Pcnb.on Buriill 3yraialut wu, liifcujiHlicii.iugclttini.'s tty jioc. HQ am i-i ; - r. DROPSY m