VOL. XXVIII PROFESSIONAL CARDS. JOSEPH W. MILLER, M. D. Physician a d Surgeon, OtHce and residence ii 8. Main St. B'ltler, r». Dr. N. M. ..wOVER, IST K. Wajae,gt, office boors. 10 to 12 M. and I to 3 P. M. L. M. REINSEL, M. D, fBYSICIAJI AND SCRGEO.V. offlce aud residence at 127 E. Cunningham St, L. BLACK, MITBICIAK AKU New Troutman Knllding. Butler. Pa. E. H. LEAKE. M. D. J. E. SIASN, M. D. Specialties: .Specialties: and Sur- E>e. Ear. Nose anil {try. Throat. DRS. LEAKE & MANN, Butler, Pa. G. M. ZIMMERMAN. I-urinciAK A*l> KCASEON, Office at No. 45. S. Main street, over Frar.k * Co"* LH ax btore. Buiifcr. I'm SAMUEL M. BIPPUS. Physician and Surgeon. No. 22 E*al Jefferson fat., littler, Pa. W. R. TITZEL. PHYSICIAN AKD SURGEON. 8. W. Corner Wain and North £16., Butler. Pa, V. KcALPINE, Dentist, la now ivrtiiSLti.tly located at 1M South Main Street" Lutifr. 1 a , in rooms formerly .ccoupied by Dr. Waldron. J. J. DONALDSON, Dentist. Butler, Penn'a. Artificial Teeth inserted cn the latest lm- Lroved plan. <*old EHUIIK a specialty. Office o»er Sctsul s CloUiing Store. DR. S. A. JOHNSTON. DENTIST, - - BUTLER, PA. All work pertaining to the profession." execut ed »n Ibe neatest manner. Specialties :—OoM Killings, and Painless Kx tracUonof Teeth. Vitalized Air administered, our* Je»«s«« Street, •■« <•« East «f Unrj HOOM, CP htilr*. Offlce open daily, except Wednesdays and Thursdays. Communications by mall receive prompt attention, R. B.— Tke only Dentist In Batler Ming the beet Mkes of teeth. C. F. L. McQUISTION, EM.IXKEU AMI SlKVEl'Olt, OFVFCS KKAK DIAMOND. Brn.ua. TA. A. B. C. McFARLAND. Atfy at Law—Office on S. Diamond St opposite the Court House- second floor. H. Q. WALKER, Altor wy-at-I.aw-Office in Diamond Block Butler. Pit. J. M. PAINTER, Allot ney-at-Law. < .fl.ee- -Between PostofTlce and Diamond, but ler. Pa. A. T. SCOTT, ATTORN EY-AT-LA.W. <>ol'* at No. 8. South Diamond, Butler. I'a. A. M. CHRISTLEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office second floor. Anderson 111 k. Main St., neor < < lilt IJoutte, Butler, Pa. J. W HUTCHISON, ATTOBNKT AT LAW. Office 011 Second Boor of tlie llustlton block, Diamond. Butler, Pa.. Boom No. J. JAMES N. MOORE, ATTOBKKT-AT-LAW AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Office In JUx.tn No. I. second door of Huselton Block. entrance on Diamond. IRA McJUNKIN. Attorney at Ijiw.Omee at No. IT, East Jeffer son St., Butler. Pa.; W. C. FINDLEY, Attorney at lew and He*l Estate Age nt. Of Oce rear of L. Z. Mitchell's offlce on north side ol Diamond. Butler, ['». H. H. GOUCHER. Attoroey-at-law. Offlce on second floor of Anderson building, near Court Douse. Butler, Pa. J. p. BRITTAIN. Atfy at Law -Offlce at 8. E. Cor. Main B', and Diamond, Butler. Pa. NEWTON BLACK. Att'y at Law— South side of Diamond Butter. Pa. L. 8. McJUNKLV, Insurance and Real Estate Ag'l 17 LAST JEFFERSONJBT. DUTLER, - PA. H LTLER COUNTY Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Office Cor. Main & Cunningham fits. 0. C. ROESBING, Pbisidmtt. H. C. IIKINEMAN, Skohktary. DIRECTORS: O. C. R>w*tln«, Il<-iid*rv>n Oliver, J. I. furvM, James Htephemton, A. Trmilniaa, H. C,. Helnemiui, Alfre •( and everything that can be J V VV 1:1.) ! :te brother, Comte de Ker garade- : I.- brought this stone from China ai:;; it mounted in the Hue la Paix. 1 ■ ii/..-d it all the more readily inasmuch as the setting which Is by no means a common one, was ex ecuted from a design I gave him." "Anil this book?" "As certainly. That book belonged to the count On the fly-leaf is a dedi cation from the abbe to Mine, dc I'ora nouc, our ane. stor in the time of Louis XV. Besides, the Kergaradec arms are on the cover." "Quite satisfactory. These two ar ticles were among the contents of the valise stolen from the count, your brother, at the hotel in Senlis on the night he was murdered?" "They were." "Well, then, all that I have to ask of you now is to sign the paper on which rny clerk has written my questions and your answers." "What's all this nonsense?" I said, when tile 'tour had closed on the old gentleman. "I am here to question," said the magistrate, "not you." "You might at least tell me of what I am accuseiL" "Of the willful murder of ' ount Louis de Kcrgariulec in the hotel of the U tin ning Stag at Senlis, on the night of September 12, l&sl, and of the robbery of his vali e, which contained, among other valuu le :i. the two articles found in your pos r sicm." I burst out ladghing. "Nothing else?" I said. "Not that 1 know of," said the mag istrate. "I in list ask von to sign this BUTLER, PA., I'HIDAY, A I'(JUST 14. I*ol. paper after roa tmg it- it 1. our con versation jnst notv." I signed, and as I "*vas leaving 1 tho room the magistrate add -d in a most i paternal tone: "Yes, just try and remember how that amber oin came into your pos session. It will really be worth your i while to account for it." That evening 1 was transferred from the depot to Mazas jaiL The first question the magistrate asked me on tiie following' morninj was: "What were yoi> doing at Senlis on ! the night of September 13, 1S81?'' "I don't recollect having been there j at all in that year." "Very good. It is well to lie frank. ; As a matter of fact, you stayed there on ' the twelfth, as we have learned by ex j aminitif.' th« hotel woman's register for that year. You left the hotel on the i morning of the thirteenth, and after ! wards disappeared. Where did you I g° ? " , , , "I stayed in Paris a week aud then went to London, where I have since j lived." "Well, how about that pin? Have 1 you remembered how you got it?" j "I have been cudgelling my brain all i night on the subject, but I cannot re : member." "It is unfortunate," he said. "In fact, a number of unfortunate circum stances are against you. liy the way, what lias lioeomc of I'ierre Bastide?" he asked, abruptly. "I'ierre Hastide? I never heard that i name before." "Yes, IDastide. The man who was in the hotel the same night that you were, and who is suspected to be yonr accoft ; plice." "Do you roallv think, Monsieur le i Judge," I said, "that if I had murdered ! this count to rob !mn I would carry about on my person in prominence evi dence against myself? I know noth ing- about this murder. I never heard j of it." "Your statement will be tested. Meanwhile let m? put b.-iore you the position in which you stand. I must | warn you that it is a very serious one. ;On the 10th of September, 1881, Count Louis dc Dvergaradee. an eccen -1 trie old gentleman, arrived at the Run ning Statf hotel. His valise, besides a ! change of linen, contained a quantity ! of bank notes and a few of the anti | quarian treasures of the count. lie I was a great collector of curios of all sorts. "On the 11th a man passing by the name of I'ierre llastide, and describing himself as a cafe waiter, came to the hotel and took the room at the top of the house. On the l'Jth you carne, and after inspecting several rooms insisted on having the one adjoining the one in the occupation of the count. You re fused supper and went to bed at a re markably early hour. "The next diy you left the hotel hur riedly at five in the morning, while it was yet dark. At eight o'clock IDas tide came down to breakfast, ate quiet ly, paid his bill and went away with his knapsack on his back. At eleven o'clock the woman of the house went to wake the count, but was unable to do ho. The woman, seriously alarmed, had the door broken open, aud found the old gentleman dead in his bed, with his right temple fractured. All the valuables contained in his valiso had disappeared Suspicion immediate ly attached itself to IDastide and to you. You were both searched for by the po lice, but in vain, when I>y the merest hazard the other morning the of the victim recognized the in your ciavat. You will there is at least reasonable ground fur suspicion. l'y the way, how did you get the money to pay your bill at the hotel and get youF ticket to London?" "I pawned .a gold watch which had belonged to my father. The pawn broker lent me ono hundred and sixty francs on it. My bill at the hotel was eighty francs, and my ticket cost about thirty-five." "At what date did you pawn this watch?" "It was about a week after I left Senlis. On the twentieth or twenty first of September." On my third visit the magistrate re ceived me with greater courtesy than before. He said: "I have examined your statement and find you have spoken the truth. The official record of the pawnbroker makes mention of you having pawned your watch. The hotelkeepcr remem bers you; aueen carried to the hospital, u here he had died in the eve ninsr. Before dying he had been able to state that his real name was Tierre Bastide, adding that he wished to make confession of some crime to the pr >per authorities. Before these, however, could attend the man died. Among other houses where this valet had served was mentioned that of a certain Dr. II , where he had stayed three year-.. "Dr. II -!" I cried, jumping to my feet; "but I know that house. I dined there- five years when I was over in Berlin, as correspondent to the •• Let me think. Ah! 1 have it now." My memory recalled in a wonderfully vivid manner the event which happen*! five years before. I saw the whole mystery in a flash. I had brought an introduction to Dr. H from a mutual friend in London, and, not having been able to see him on the day I called, left it with iny card Th* next morning 1 received a tele gram from the hospitable doctor, in viting me to lunch at his house that day. The telegram found me in bed, and it was then only twenty minutes of the hour fixed for the lunch. I jumped out of bed, dressed in haste, and drove off to the doctor's house. As I was giving my hat and coat to the valet in the ante-ehsiiiber, I noticed that the man wa> staring at me in a curious way. "What are you staring at me like that for?" I tried irritably. "I b-g monsieur's pardon," said the valet, with all the politeness of his countrymen; "but if monsieur will look in the g~ ass. "Dear, dear," I cried, when I had ex amined myself, "I was in such a hurrj* I havo forgotten my cravat. What shall I do? I say, my good fellow," this to the valet, as I handed him a thaler, ''you must have plenty of ties to spare; run and get me one out of your room. Anything will do, so long as it looks tidy." The vj.let hastened off, and presently came back with a black tie, a ready made sailor's knot, very stiff and large. I put it on hastily, and giving the man another piece of inon-'y. aske l him if I might keep it to go home in. "Oh, certainly," he said, "monsieur has given its value twice over." Having a repulsion for other people's wearing apparel. 1 had taken it off as soon as I reached my hotel and llung it into my portmanteau. It was the same portmanteau in which, several years later, I had found the scarf pin which had got me into such trouble. I imagine that the pin had slipped 1 down between tiie cardboard frame work of the tie and its silk cover, and that Bastide thought it lost when he gave me his black sailor's knot lu flinging it into my trunk the pin must have fallen out, to remain undisturbed until that unlucky day. Unlucky? Well, yes, inasmuch as what ensued brouV'it about this cruel separation betwe.-ri Clara and myself. Perhaps, though, a girl who could cast off a lover, as I was. on such a sus picion is not v.-oi ih troubling about. — B. F. liarnes. in Yankee Blade. THE NATIONAL CAPITOL. Dimension* of the llnlldlng'ri Various I>e partment i. The entire length of the national cap fl building from north to south Is 751 t 4 inches, and its greatest dimension m east to west Jl5O feet. The area covered by the building is 153,112 square feet. The dome of the original central building was constructed of wood. This was replaced in lssfl by the present structure of cast iron. It was complet ed in 1865. The cntiro weight of Iron used is 8,009,200 pounds. The dome is crowned by a bronze statue of Freedom. It is 19 feet 0 inches and weighs 14,985 pounds. It was modeled by Crawford. The height of the dome above the base line of the cast front is 237 feet 5 inches. The height from the top of the balus trade of the building is 217 feet 11 inches. The greatest dipmcter at the base 135 feet 5 inches. The rotunda is 95 feet C inches in diameter, and its height from the floor to the top of the canopy is ISO feet 3 inches. The senate chamber is 113 feet 3 inches in length by 80 feet 3 inches in width and 36 feet in height. The galleries will accommo date 1,000 persons. The representatives' hall is 139 feet in length by 93 feet in width and SO feet in height. When X.lfe !i Kxtlnet. The French Academy of Sciences ten or fifteen years ago offered a prize of one thousand six hundred pounds for the discovery of some means by which even the inexperienced might at once deter mine whether in a given ease death had ensued or not. A physician obtained the prize for having discovered the fol lowing well-known phenomenon. If the hand of the suspected dead person is held toward a candle or other arti ficial light with the fingers extended and one touching the other, and one looks through the spaces between the lingers toward the light, there appears a scarlet red color where the fingers touch each other, due to the blood still circulating, it showing itself through the tissues which have not congesy-d. When life is entirely extinct the phe nomenon of scarlet space between tho fingers at once ceases. The most ex tensive and thorough trials established the truth of this observation. Cloti.l i'.totograpliy- A great deal of remarkable data, which is of immense value in the prep aration of weather forecasts, has lately been compiled from an investigation of cloud photograph- . The range of ol>- scrvations extend I from clouds float ing less than one and a half miles high in air moving at seven miles an hour, to nine miles ab >ve the ground in gales blowing sixty-live miles an hour, while the surface wind was only a gentle breeze of five miles an hour. Speaking from K*perlenee. An old country gentleman, returning home rather late, discovered under his kitchen window a yokel with a lane tern, who, when asked his business there, stated that he had only come a conrting. "Come a-wliat?" said the irate gentle man. "A-conrting, sir I'se courting Ma ry" "It's a lie!" exclaimed the old gentle man. "Whatdoyou want a lantern for? I never used one when I was a young man." "No, sir," was tho yokel's reply, "I don't think yer did judging by the missis!"- Jury. A Married I.ook. Mrs. Grtimps Your friend, Mr. llald pate, did not mention his wife tin- whole evening. Mr. Grumps—Wife? He's an old bach dor. "Well, I declare! I took it for granted he was married." "Why?" "Oh, I don't know. He has a sort of married look somehow." "He used to live out west, anil once he was treed for three days and three nights by a grizzly."—N. Y. Weekly. Hi* Age. Attorney (to witness) What Is your age, sir? Old Iteau - What has that to do with this case'.' "I insist upon an answer." (After a pause) "I was just five years old at the breaking out of the war." "What war?" (With extreme reluctance) "The Black hawk war." < hieago Tribune. A FORTUNATE ESCAPE. How an Imprisoned Trawler Was Saved from a Lion. An affent for a IlaTnbnrg firm that deals in wild animals was riding' on the bank of a Transvaal stream, says Golden Days, when his horse suddenly reared and threw him, and then ran away. The man picked himself up, only slightly bruised, and was calling to the fleeing horse, when a monster lion rose up from liehind a bush. Tho agent's rifle had been strapped to tho saddle and his revolvers were in tho holsters on the horse's back, so there was nothing to do but run. Luckily there was an opening in the rock-, close ! by and in this he squeezed himself. The hole was irregular and ran back nearly eight feet, but was too narrow for the lion to enter, and he could not reach the intended victim with his paws. When he found the man beyond his reach, he grew furious and growled and bit at the rocks. The agent at first rather enjoyed the situation, feeling that his fortress was secure, and taunted the lion by shouting and kick ing at him. The camp was only six miles distant, a search would soon be made for him, and the lion would lie down presently for a nap. so the man argued: but the lion had other views. Hour after hour passed, no help came, and the lion did sleep, but right in front of the opening. The agent assuaged his thirst by licking the damp rocks, but was terribly cramped and now quite anxious, liut deliverance came in an unexpected form. Another lion hap pened that way, and in two minutes a terrliie battle was in progress. The agent listened to the sounds of combat until they finally ceased, and then care fully caine out and made a bee-line for the camp. Next day both lions were found dead a few rods from the rocks. A VALUABLE OPINION. It Itrou»lit a I. iirver a C'omiortablf For tune. The late A. T. Stewart was harassed by a certaiu treasury decision which vastly increased his payments of duties. His lawyer, says the New York Press, called one day about another matter. ! Stewart -poke in an exasperated way about the treasury decision. "Let me see the decision," said the lawyer. After reading it through he j said: ! "This law speaks of 'all-silk' gar ments. Why don't you have a thread of worsted run into these goods when they are made abroad?" "Will that come with fa the new law?" asked the great merchant. "Certainly." "How much do you want for that opinion?" asked stewart a few months later. "Fifty thousand dollars," said the lawyer. And he .tit. He was mod est, too, but a ilolk-.r wtfnt further in i those days than it does now. Stewart years after told his legal ad viser that the casual suggestion made that day had been worth over one mil lion five hundred tho; and dollars to the merchant. So the fifty thousand-dollar fee was not high. A lComantlo Marriage. Twenty years ago a young Chicago couple were engaged to be married, but the groom's parents interfered, because of his age, and sent him west with th» understanding that if at the end of two years he was able to support a wife he might marry. In the meantime, how ever, the young lovers were not to cor respond He prospered, and at the ap pointed time communicated with the girL He misdirected the letter, how ever, and it never reached her. He in terpreted his failure to receive an an swer as a rejection, but eventually he received his own letter through the dead letter office, and he then under stood the situation. Not hearing from him the girl naturally thought he had lost affection for her, and married another suitor. Ilcr husband died three years ugo, and her first admirer, learn ing this, wrote his old love with the re sult that they were married at his home in Rochester, Minn., one day recently. He is one of tho richest men in his town. A Snake'n Big I'mlertaklng. A negro woman in Georgia hoed cot ton until midday, and then lay down for a nap in the shade pf a tree. sho was barefooted. Suddenly a tickling sensation in one of her big toes dis turbed her slumber. She looked sleep ily in that direction, and saw a sight that made her teeth chatter. A huge blacksnake had swallowed the toe, and was acting' as though he proposed to swallow the rest of her. As she gazed along the sleek back of the undulating serpent he denied so long that his tail was below the horizon. When she re covered from her temporary paralysis she arose liko a skyrocket tired slant wise, and disappeared in the pine tim ber with a blood-curdling shriek. After being jerked through tho underbrush for a few roils the snake let go. Tho I'atient C!il:ien. A wonderful example of patience in the Chinee is afforded by a consular re port dealing with the manufacture of f>alt in central China. Holes about six Inches in diameter are l>orrd in the rock by means of a primitive form of iron drill, and sometimes a [>criod of forty years elapses before the covered brine is reached, so that the work is carried on from one generation to an other. During this time the boring, as may be imagined, goes down to an im mense depth. When brine is found it is drawn up in bamboo tubes by a rope working over a large dntm turned by bullocks. The brine is evaporated in iron caldrons, the heat being supplied by natural gnn, which is generally found in the vicinity of the salt wells. I'luuti of tho World. The flora of ICurope embraces about 10,(100 species. India has about 15,000. The British possessions in North Amer ica, though with an area nearly as largo as Europe, have only aboflt 5,000. One of the richest floras is that of Cape of Qood Hope and Natal, which figures; up about 10,000 sjK-eies. Australia also Is rich in species, about 10,000 being now known. Brutal. She—lt is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all. He Yes. It is better for the florists, for the jewelers, and sometimes even for the lawyers. Harper's Bazar. TROniLKK OF A YOI'SO I!,\KK. J *|g Grandmamma You seem very solemn this morning. Johnny what's the mat ter? Johnny- I'm in trouble, grandma. Jennie Jackson says I've trifled with , her affections, and she's going to have me arrested if I don't marry her, and j the fact is I love another girl.—Mun sey's Weekly. ' USEFUL BARREL TRUCK. An Implement Whteh i;vUeve» the Fans* the pjst braces E. in Fig. 2. I have a loose lid | to prevent slopping and it rests on these braces when not in use. The wheels ary the old hind wheels of a carriage. The junction of the handle with the post is 13 inches from the bottom of the post and the Junction of the foot with the arm l'J inches from the post. The length of the slots G in the posts is 10>j inches, the distance of these slots from the top of the post 17 inches and the distance of the axle from the I bottom of the post 14 inches. These slots are so fixed that in emptying the barrel into the tank on wheels it tips over as shown by the dotted lines in Fig. 1, until the top rests on the big barrel. Then, if the swill is not all out. lift up on the lower end of the fit fl> • cart barrel and the pegs ou which It rests, 11 11 in Fig. 2, will slip easily in the slot. and all the contents will be entirely discharged into the barrel on the ground, thus doing away with all dipping to get the barrel empty. The axle is fastened on the sides of the posts with blocks, thus preserving the strength of the posts at that point, see Fig. 8. The wooden pins in the bar rel, II II in Fig. 2, are below the center to raal; • the barrel dip easily and the honk at the top of the barrel, as shown, keeps it from tipping over when being wheeled. The length of the axis be tween the hubs is 25 inches.—Jacob Wyckoff, in N. K. Homestead. KEEPING SOIL LEVEL. K Will l're.rrve It In Good Condition for Succeeding Crop*. One advantage in keeping the soil reasonably level in finishing up the cul tivation of the crops is that it leaves the soil in a much better condition for the succeeding crop*. This is especially the case when the next crop is to be small grain or grass. Many prefer to have wheat follow corn, and when the cultivation lias been thorough during the growth of the cultivated crop in many cases it will not be necessary to plow. The spring tooth or disc harrow will work the soil into a good tilth, better in fact than to plow, and having the soli reasonably level will lessen the work necessary to get in a good con dition. When th'j land is to be seeded to grass either in the fall or spring the same will apply. With both small gTain and grass or clover it is quite an item to have tbe suhface reasonably level, aud when in cultivating the laiff is plowed or cultivated into ridges it requires considerable more work to secure this condition than when left level. With both grass and small grain it is better to have the surface worked into a good tiflh before sowing the seed, but at the same time it is an item to lessen the cost as much as pos sible. By leaving the soil reasonably level and in good tilth when the last cultivation is given, ordinarily but lit tle work will be necessary to prepare In a suitable condition for rye, wheat or gi-e-'s While if hilled up or full of weeds or it is often quite a task to clean up and get into a first-class condition. -Prairie Farmer. NOTES ON BEEKEEPING. Tine bees garner what would other wise go to waste. EVEUY fruit grower ought to raise a few bees, and so hhould every grsin grower. FOLLOW the bee's example and in your care of honey and comb don't let anything go to waste. TIIK ideal place for an apiary is where the bees can get plenty of blooms, spring, summer and autumn. Ofß boards of education would do weF to follow the example of the thrifty Germans and have the art of beekeeping taught in the public schools. THE value of bee products is being recognized more and more every year. Already a large amount of honey Is an nually consumed in the various indus tries of pork-paeking, tobacco and other manufactures, while the com mercial value of beeswax is very great. Nearly live huudred tons of beeswax arc annually imported into Great Hrituin, while Russia alone uses nearly five thousand tons in the ceremonies of the church— Farm, Field and Stock man How to Stop *n Expreu. Suburban Hesident —See here, sir! You told me that that sountry place I bought of yon was only thirty-five min utes from the city. City Agent -Yes, sir, thirty-five min utes by express. You remember, when we went out to look at It the time was thirty-five minutes exactly. * "Hut, confotiud it, sir, the express trains don't stop there, not one of them, and the accommodation takes about an hour and a half!" "You and I went by express, and it stopped for us, you know." "Yes, I know; but it hasn't stopped since." "It will stop if you hire a man at your station to buy a through ticket for somewhere. That's the way 1 did tho tlay we went out." —Good News. The Knglrie or Clrllliatlon. Ktirul ICdltor Have you finished that editorial on the recent mistakes of the young German emperor? Assistant Yes, just got through. "Dili you write any artiele on the Italian question?" "Yes, got up a column of good advice to the king of Italy." "Glad to hear it. We'll send him a copy. What else did you write?" "A long editorial on national finances." "Good! That will fill the page. Now let's go out and see kf we can l>orrow a dollar."- N. Y. Weekly. >ro. 4:0 CLOVER FOR SEED. Point* to lie Can.ldFKd la BMID( TUf Valuable Crop. Under ordinary conditions the grow ing of elov.r for seed can readily bo made profitable. The first crop can be cut for hay and fully as good a crop of seed be obtained. It should be allowed to get fully ripened before Cutting, aa harvesting toi early injures the quality j of the seed. It is quite an item in harvesting to lessen the handling as much as possi ble, as every time it is handled it wastes more or less. For this reason one of the best implements to use Is a self rake reaper. That will cut and lay off in even gavels that can be readily handled w .th the fork whei gathering up. 1/ tie threshing c.tn be done rea sonably soon, the more economical plan is to let it tie, and when ready to thresh load it on the wagons and haul direct to the machine. Hut too much risk should not be run, and rather than do this the hay can be gathered up and stacked, or be stored away, where it can be got at conve niently to thresh. It is best to thresh with a regular clover hullcr, as this will clean, all ready to market, while with a common threshing machine it will nearly always require recleaning, and this not only adds to the cost but increases the waste, and it is too valu able a product to waste. The usual price for hulling and clean ing is SI per bushel, and counting in the expenses for hands, teams and board, it makes the product too costly to waste. From four to six bushels per acre is considered a good yield, depend ing considerably upon the season. Tho straw should always be carefully stacked; it makes fully as good a win ter feed as the average wheat or oat straw, and If not needed for feeding makes a better bedding and a more val uable manure, and it should not be wasted. If stacked before threshing the safest plan is to top out the stacks with timo thy hay or wheat straw, as it is some what difficult to make the clover turn water thoroughly. It will thresh easier if the straw is thoroughly dry and the seed will be gotten out of the straw more thorouglxly. And considering the yield and the valne of the product, it is important not only to save it all, but to save it in a good condition, and the less handling both before and after threshing, the less the waste.—St. Louis Republic. HORSES LIKE SUGAR. How to Improve tho Condition of ROB- Down Animals. The fondness for sweets on the part of the horse has been taken advantage of in different parts of the world, and his appetite for saccharine matter ca tered to with the best results in im proving his condition, says the Newark (X. J.) Call. Horses thrivo remarkably well on sugar and molasses, and these ingredients— interchangeable terms In this connection—have been regularly used since 18?3 in Australia and South America and other parts of the world for getting horses into condition for sale and also for colts while wintering in the yard. In raising colts there is »' risk of their suffering from stoppage of the bowels if fed entirely on dry food, and to avoid this they are allowed car rots or roots of some kind in addition to their dry food. Sugar not only improve! the condition of the colts, but prevents any risk of the stoppage above referred to. The way it is used is to dissolve the sugar in water amU pour it on the chafT or cut hay, taking care that the food is well mixed, and in a day or two the colt will be found licking the sides of the mangers long after the last morsel of chaff has been eaten. The saccharine matter left after the extrac tion of table sugar from the cane, and leaving about ten per cent of solid matter, is used by horsemen in South America In the ease of horses which are "off their feed," or to induce them to eat their food which they would otherwise reject, sugar may be used. The average quantity of sugar per day for a horse in poor condition is about a pound and a half. This should be mixed with cut hay or chaff and turned over a few times, leaving it for a few hours to allow the sugar to be ab sorbed. Seven pounds of sugar to fifty six |>onnds of hay is a good proportion. From some interesting experiments conducted lately by an eminent scitm tist it appears that sugar should not be used in any quantity with such food as the cereal grains, maize or meadow hay. All those substances are some what low in nitrogen, and to dilute nitrogen by way of sugar would tend to waste it. AN EXCELLENT DEVICE. How to (iln Medicine to Mtruygllnff and Squealing rlfl. Figs make more noise about taking medicine than children. The illustra tion herewith shows the most efficient means of securing large pigs for the administration, but even when thus se cured they will struggle and squeal, and spill the remedy if possible, but DOSIXO A PIO. with the head thus raised and secured • little tact will accomplish the object aimed at. A sick hog is more stupid and stubborn than a well one, and In quiries are frequently made hqw to give medicine to liogi. This sketch will answer the question better than a long description, and the mcthcyl will not be rcadilv forgotten.—American Agriculturist. WHAT may be a perfect animal in th* eyes of one breeder will fall short In some of the essential particulars with another, mainly because some breeders will consider some things more (essen tial than others. MILLET seed is a good feed for young chickens. In saving the crop it will often be a good plan to stew up a good supply especially for this purpose. They All Do That. Mrs. llrook—My husband keep* SO eount of every drink he takes. Mrs. Hanks—Are you sure? Mrs. Hrook—Oh, yes; the dear fellow says he never gets one that he doesn t put It down!— Puck. AN EXTRAVAGANT KUL'CATION. Son —Poppy, de teacher told roe tew bring a penny ter school fer k new slate pencil. < Fop -Of cose, money ag'inl Dat maiks twenty-free cents Fse spent al ready on yo' edieation, an' vo 1 dunno yo" A 11 Abs ylt.—Judge.