VOX, XXXI DON'T Want A Wheel? Just as good time now, as any, to think of buying, to compare pri ces and merits. We pin our best faith to the CLE\ ELAND and the PHOENIX. A wheal should ba Easy Running, Looking, V jj/r Jg Full y Guaranteed. Ladies Phoenix. We l:\ave r\ow ar\d will have ii\ Sprii^. J. E. FORSYTHE. GREAT UUTER Sit OF OVERCOATS, - SUITS, Underwear, Shirts, Hats, Caps, Hosiery, Ties, Gloves, Mittens, Cardigan Jackets, Sweaters, Trunks, Valises, Telescopes, Watches, Chains, Charms, Rings, Pins, Suspenders, Handkerchiefs, Brushes. Purses, etc. This NO CLEARANCE SALE Of Summer Goods, but our regular stock of FALL AND WINTER GOODS. We show you the lar gest stock in Butler to select from and everything goes. Don't miss this "H'Grand + OpporttinLity.^ We are the pioneers of LOW PRICKS. We never ■ were, never can and never will be UNDERSOLD. Bear this in mind, and don't make your purchases un til you see us. We feel satisfied we can do you good. D. A. HtCCK, 121 N. Main. St., Duffy's Block, Butler, Pa. FALL FOOTWEAR. CV.st voor ej« s in upotj the fiae dis ■T3 TVtV 1>1"J of tie newfst tttif! most elegant \ yttvlL ttylee in Fcotwinr you hsveever look ' 'J ed up< n in Butler tbat we are now of I eriuflr to the poblic 1 » --"1 HV tiro now prepared to s-erve nil burets that wunt pood, suitable Foot w< 8r h t prices never before offered in this town, quslity considered. Th»- HLM people of Bntler county know our ' w ' UD( ' P li,irar;,p '" if» stifficieot on any —Jr j shoe we offer, as time has prcven. ~~lf you are looki- g for I.adies Shoes see onr 75 ard 9fic. sl.2f> t- nd slso;t-K p ui:d look at 'he $2, $2 50 and $3, as fine as silk, in 'Blocl eretts 'and I'titton, Nairow and Square Toe, all widths. IF YOU WANT MENS SHOES You have K'rt to the rijflit plaen at liit, either in workiisf sh >es or fine dress shoes. Fine linMat 85?, 90s, $1,51.25 a'id $1 50; vvait a moment and »e» the $2 and $2 50 shoi in London, G1 >*»», Vale and St F•ih>n•th it y>i • !• v »-".h I ■)) -s *i.4 \ to nvery inn, worn 10 aid child. If roti I f>r a nn tbat i , it., -t. >•: i't M a >mq and not in thn un ipar*, la fact if roa wii r . t » tr-v 1 ; \vi 'i i iMli tb' <, tirst clws Sh ie House po at ouce to HUSK ■ .TON'S. Where the majority of tbe bast pe nile of Butler county do there buy ng in foot weir 102 V. Maiu St. Butler, Pa, opposite Hotel Lowry. *2A Summer Drivc ( ' OS€S a measur ' : °f ' ls pleasi;; ■; if the carriage is less IUA J urious, easy running and handsome than it might be. Fredonia Buggies have nothing but good points. They're the handsomest vehicles you can get —are as strong and secure as they're sightly. Ask and insist that you see tlieni at your dealer's. Made by FREDONIA MFG, CO., Youngstown, Ohio. THE BUTLER CITIZEN. Weak and Weary Overcome by th° heat or extraordinary exertion, the physical system, l>k* a ma chine, needs to l>e renovated and repaired. The blood needs to be puntied and invigor- Hood's *«<•»«-. £ parilla ated and the nerve-s f V g j and muscles strength- M vd ened by Hood's Sarsa . parilla, which creates 'WVWW an appetite, removes that tired feeling and gives sweet, sound, refreshing sleep. Hood's Pills . MARTHA WASHINGTON COOK-BOOK ,i FREE! [fPg;; 320 m-ci». COOJJSS- i ILLUSTRATED. i | * I O.V «* i!:c ! 1 Cook r* I j ' ' il'*t recipe.-, fi 11 J i r Imndy refer IM MAILED FREE, In Exch .. ■_ fcr ?■') I.AEOE L.10.N HEADS cut }ro:.i Cr v.'ra;jp«rf I and a 2-cent ..! zcr . I Write fo.-i; - . . 1 1 IV c j har>> nuny vil-: j- it< Krtth Gaaao. I rtc.. to Rtvo I-'. r. . * t II -u.o Card 1.1 'I I every patUaso <•' Uo.*r ( mag s E s; It is unnecessary j to bore you with the advertisement of our i largest stock, best facilities, biggest busin ess,etc. \ou know we have that. The important an nouncement is, We will Positively save you Money on your Fall Clothes. Our stock tables are resplendent with the ne\\< st patterns. See them. ALAND, TAILOR. C. A business that keeps grow ing through a season oi de pression, such as the country has experienced, is .an evi dence that people realize they save money by trading with us. We know, and always have known, the days of large profits are past. Without question we are giving more for the money than last year. Our stock is larger to select from than last year. '".ALL AND SEE US. Colbert & Dale. What You Need Is a Dictionary! r HERE IT IS! One Webster Int. Dictionary, sheep, with patent thumb its»i«x, together with one Noye'a patent ad justable dictionary hold' r nil com plete for We are the only firm in tbe county able to wholcf-nle school KU;> pliet* iu competition with large firrns from Chicago and other cities We noil for has than other firms here pay for things. J. H. DOUGLASS, (WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ) 1241 S. Main Street, Near Postoffice. 1,. CJ. W1(!K DKALKK INj Rough and Worked Lumbf OP ALL KINDS Dour;,, Sash, B:u:ds. \ioui
; Sningie- and Lrfti Always in Stork. MME. HAIR AND PLASTK.-. Offlov oppoHite.l*. A, W. Depot, BPTLER a BUTLER LUMBEIi CGWPANY Sbipp rs and dealers in Buildin Materials Rough and dressed Lumber of nil kinds, Doors and Windows, und Mouldings of all kinds. H. E WICK, Manager. Office und Yards, kuat l.'unnlngham and >loiin)f%trfet*. Great Discovery. t '"T««o r ,. anil disfiguring growth* removed withorn the knife and without pain. Oar specific medicineM net only on th<> diseased part* and ]i?rin3noml.v cure. N•> fee until cured I»K. TAYLOR, No. 320 Liberty Street, Pittsburg. ''.FTLEK. PA.. THURSDAY. OCTOBKE Tl">. IHI4. THE DIAMOND MAKER. Was He an Ingenious Monoma niac or a Fraud? RA OME business ( had detained V me in Chancery 1 lane until nine I 1 o'clock in the evening, and jj _ _ - \ thereafter, hav ,7 ing some ink y ling of a head ache, I was dis 'v/, inclined either for entertain ment or further / work. So much Tjr of the sky as ' the high cliffs of that narrow canyon of traffic left visible spoke of a serene night, and I determined to make ray way down to the Embankment, and rest my eyes and cool my head by watching' the variegated lights upon the river. Be yond comparison the night is the best time for this place; a merciful darkness hides the dirt of the waters, and the lights of this transition age, red, glar ing orange, gas yellow, and electric white, are set in shadowy outlines of every possible shade between gray and deep purple. Through the arches of Waterloo bridge a hundred points of light mark the sweep of the Embank ment, and above its parapet rise the towers of Westminster, warm gray against the starlight. The black river goes by with only a rare ripple break ing its silence and disturbing the re flections of the lights that swim upon its surface. "A warm night," said a voice at my side. 1 turned ray head and saw the pro file of a man who was leaning over the parapet beside me. It was a re fined face, not unhandsome, though pinched and pale enough, and the coat collar turned up and pinned around the throat marked his status in life as sharply as a uniform. I felt I was was committed to the price of a bed and breakfast as I answered him. I looked at him curiously. Would he have anything to tell me worth the money, or was he the common incapa ble—incapable even of telling his own story? There was a quality of intel ligence in his forehead and eyes, and a certain tremulousness in his nether lip that decided me. "Very warm," said I; "but not too warm for us here." "No," he said, still looking across the water; "it is pleasant enough here —just now. "It. is good," he continued, after a pause, "to find anything so restful as this in London. After one has been fretting about business all day, about getting on, meeting obligations and parrying dangers, ,1 do not know what one would do if it were not for 6uch pacific corners." He spoke with long pauses between the sentences. "You must know a little of the irksome labor of the world, or you would not be here. But I doubt if you can be so brain-weary and footsore as I am. . . . Bah; Sometimes I doubt if the game is worth the candle. I feel inclined to throw the whole thing over—name, wealth and position -and take some modest trade. But I know if I aban don my ambition —hardly as she uses me—l should have nothing but remorse left for the rest of my days." He became silent. I looked at him in astonishment. Ifeverlsawa man liupelc-inly hard up it v\a:» Cti•' Mian ill front of me. He was ragged and he was dirty, unshaven and unkept; ho looked as though he had been left in a dust biu for a week. And he was talk ing' to me of the irksome worries of a large business. I almost laughed out right. Either he was mad or playing a sorry jest on his own poverty. "If high aims and high positions," said I, "have their drawbacks of hard work and anxiety, they have their compensations. Influence, the power of doing good, of assisting those weak er and poorer thau ourselves; and there i 3 even a eertain gratification in display—" My banter under the circumstance was in very vile taste. I spoke on the spur of the contrast of his appearance and speech. I was sorry even while I was speaking. He turned a haggard but very com posed face upon me. Said he: "I for- Ji l "I WILL HELL. IT TO YOU FOR ONE IIL'.N --DBED POUNDS." get myself. Of course you would not understand." He measured me for a moment. "No doubt it is very absurd. You will not believe me even when I tell you, so that it is fairly safe to tell some one. I really have a big business in hand, a very big business. But there aro troubles just now. The fact is—l make diamonds." "I suppose," said I, "you are out of work just at present?" "I am sick of being disbelieved," he said impatiently, and suddenly unbut toning his wretched coat he pulled out a little canvas bag that was hang ing by a cord round his neck. From this he produced a brown pebble. "I wonder if you know enough to know what that is?" He handed it to me. Now, a year or so ago, J had occu pied my leisure in taking a London science degree, so that 1 have a smat tering of physics and mineralogy. The thing was not unlike an uncutdia mond of the darker sort, though far too large, being almost as big as the top of my thumb. I took it and saw it had the form of a regular octahe dron, with the curved faces peeuliar to the most precious of minerals. I took out my penknife and tried to scratch it—vainly. Leaning forward toward the gas lamp I tried the thing on my watch glass, and scored a white line across that with the greatest case. I looked at my interlocutor with ris ing curiosity. "It certainly is rather like a dia mond. IJut, if so, it is a queen of dia monds. Where did you get it?" "1 tell you I made it," he said. "Give it back to me." He replaced it hastily and buttoned his jacket. "I will sell it to you for one hun dred pounds," he suddenly whispered, eagerly. With that my suspicions returned. The thing might, after all, be merely a lump of that almost equally hard substance, corundum, with an acci dental rescmblaace in shape to the diamond. Or, if it was a diamond, how came be by it. and why should he offer it at a hundred pounds? "How did you get it?" "I made it." 1 had heard somethi/ig of .Moissau, yut I his Artificial diamynd# were very small, i snoou my Dead. "You seem to know something of this kind of thing. I will teil you a little about myseVf. Perhaps then you may think better of the pur chase." He turned round with his back to the river and put his hands in his pockets. lie sighed. "I know you will not believe me." "Diamonds," he began—and as he spoke his voicf dropped its flavor of the tramp and assumed something of the easy tone of an educated man— "are to be made by throwing carbon out of combination in a suitable flu* and under a suitable pressure; the carbon crystallizes out. not as black lead or charcoal powder, but as small diamonds. So much has been known to chemists for years, but no one has yet hit upon exactly the right flux in which to melt up the carbon or exact ly the right pressure for the best r<» suits. Consequently the diamonds made by chemists are small and dark, and worthless as jewels. Now I, you know, have given my life to this prob lem—given my life to it. "I began to work at the conditions of diamond making when 1 was seven teea, and now 1 am thirty-two. It seemed to me that it might take all the thought and energies of a man for ten years, or twenty years, but even if it did, the game was still worth the candle. Suppose one to have at last hit the right trick, before the secret got out and diamonds became as com mon as coal, one might realize mil lions. Millions:"' He paused and looked for sympathy. His eyes shone hungrily. "To think," said he, "that I am on the verge of it all, and here! "I had," he proceeded, "about one thousand pounds when I was twenty one, and this, I thought, eked out by a little teaching, would keep my re searches going. A year or two was spent in study, at Berlin, chiefly, aud then I continued on my own account. The trouble was the secrecy. You see, if once I had let out what 1 was doing, other men might have been spurred on by belief in the practicability of the idea, aud I do not pretend to be such a genius as to have been sure of coming in first in a race for the discovery. And you see it was important that if I really meant t» make a pile people should not know it was an artificial process and capable of turning out diamonds by the ton. So I had to work all alone. At first I had a little laboratory, but as my resources began to run out, I had to conduct my exper iments iu a wretched, unfurnished room in Kentish town, where I slept at last on a straw mattress on the floor among all my apparatus. The money simply flowed away. 1 grudged my self everything except scientific ap pliances. I tried to keep things going by a little teaching, but lam not a very good teacher, and I have no uni versity degree, nor very much educa tion except in chemistry, and I found I had to give a lot of time and labor for precious little money. But I got nearer and nearer the thing. Three years ago I settled the problem of the composition of the flux, and got near the pressure by putting this flux of mine and a certain carbon composition into a elosed-up gun barrel, filling up with water, sealing tightly and heat ing." He paused. "Rather risky," said I. "Yes. It burst and smashed all my windows and a lot of my apparatus; but I got a kind of diamond nevertheless. Following out the prob lem of getting a big pressure upon the molten mixture from which the things were to crystallize. I hit upon some researches of Daubree's at the Paris I.,aboratoire des Poudres et Saltpetres He exploded dynamite in a tightly screwed steel cylinder, too strong to burst, and found he could crush rocks into a muck not unlike the South African bed in which diamonds are found. It was a tremendous strain on my resources, but 1 got a steel cylin der made for my purpose after his pat tern. I put in all my stuff and my ex plosives, built up a fire in my furnace, put the whole concern in, and—went out for a walk." I could not help laughing at the mat ter-of-fact manner. "Did you not think it would blow up the house? Were there other people in the place?" "It was in the interest of science," he said, ultimately. "There was a costermonger family on the floor be low, a begging letter writer in the room behind mine and two flower women were upstairs. Perhaps it was a bit thoughtless. But possibly some of them were out. "When 1 came back the thing was just where I left it, among f.h while hot coals The explosion hadn't burst the case. And then 1 had a problem to face. You know time is an impor tant element in crystallization. If you hurry the process the crystals are small—it is only by prolonged stand ing that they grow to any size. I re solved to let this apparatus cool for two years, letting the temperature go down slowly during that time And I was now quite out of money; and with a big lire as well as my hunger to keep going, 1 had scarcely a penny in the world. "I can hardly tell you all the shifts I was put to while I was making the diamonds. I have sold newspapers, held horses, and opened cab doors. For many weeks I addressed en velopes. I had a place as assistant to a man who owned a harrow and used to call down on • side of a road bed while he calle 1 down tho other Once for a week I had absolutely nothing to do, anil I begged What a week that was. One day the lire was iroing out, and I had eaten nothing all day, and a little chap taking his girl out gave me a sixpence to show oil Thank heaven for vanity! Ilow the fish-chops smelt! But I went and spent it all on coals, and had the furnace bright red again, and then Well, hunger makes a fool of a man. "At last, three week . ag >, I let tho fire out. I too 1 , iny cylinder and un screwed it while it was M ill so hot that it punished my hands, and I scraped out the crumbling, lava-like mass with a chisel, and hammered it into a powder _ —3B?— :r . 'J MSt W ! s "Sr.RCUIST?" 8AII) HE. upon an iron plate. And I found three big diamonds and five small onlovrn upon, or be as an an irchist. So I went up to my neighbor ind took him by the cellar, and rolled lim about a bit. aud then 1 gathered .jp my diamonds and cleared out. The ;veninp papers called my den the fventish town bomb factory. And now t cannot part with the things for love jr money." "If I go in to respectable jewelers they ask me to wait, and go and whis >er to a clerk to fetch a policeman, ind then I say I cannot wait. And I found out a receiver of stolen goods, ind he simply stuck to the one I gave lim and told me to prosecute if I wanted it back. I am going about sow with several hundred thousand >ounds' worth of diamonds around my jeck, and without either food or shel ;er. You are the first person I have ,aken into my confidence. Hut I like four face, and I am hard driven." He looked into my eye. "It would be madness," said I, "for ne to buy a diamond under the circum ttances. Besides, Ido not carry hun- Ireds of pounds about in my pocket, i'et I more than half believe your itory. I will, if you like, do this— ;ome to my office to-morrow." "You think lam a thief," he said, leenly. "You will tell the police. I am not coming into a trap." "Somehow I am assured you are no thief. Here is my card. Take that, inyhow. You need not come to any ippointment. Come when you wilL" He took the card, and an earnest of 21 y good will. "Think belter of it and come," taid I. fie shook his head doubtfully. "1 jvill pay back your half crown with nterest some day—such interest is will amaze you," said he. "Anyhow fou will keep the secret Don't fol ■ow roe." Afterward I had two letters from »im asking me to send bank notes — lotes, not checks—to certain ad lrcsses. I weighed the matter over, ind took what 1 conceived to be the visest course. Once he called on me vhen I was out My urchin described lira as a thin, dirt 3' and ragged man, vith a dreadful cough. He left no nessage. That was the fiuisli of him 10 far as my story goes. 1 wonder tomeiimes what has become of hitn. sYas he an ingenious monomaniac or i fraudulent dealer in pebbles, or has le really made diamonds, as he as lerted? The latter is just sufficiently •.redible to make me think at times hat I have missed the most brilliant >pportunity of my life He may, of :ourse, be dead, and his diamonds farcies dy thrown a>ide—one, 1 repeat, ivas almost as bi-f as iny thumb. Or he nay be still wandering about trying jo sell the things. It is just possible diat he may yet emerge upon society, ind passing athwart my heavens in :hc serene altitude sacred to the wealthy and the well advertised, re jroaeli me silently for my want of en :eipri:e. 1 sometimes think I might i • • 'iav • r five pound-*. Pall COINS OF LITTLE USE. The Gold Dollar li».id I the patient iu a tone of utter re ■.'nation "You've got about everything else I own. There's no reason why you shouldn't take that, too."—Washington Star. ABOUT SWEET CLOVER. >'oxloai Weed In tho North, For»|t riant In the South. In a recent bulletin Prof. Goff de scribes sweet elover as a noxious weed. It is extremely common in many north ern states, abounding in waste places, along roadsides and to some extent in fields. It is and tall, resembling alfalfa somewhat, although much coarser. The leaves are large and suc culenL It is extremely fragrant when in bloom and is an excellent honey plant. In most of the west and central west as well as iu llie northern states it Is regarded as a nuisance.but Prof. Tracy finds that it is valuable for reclaiming waste land, as it grows not only upon rich soil, but thri*-»s on the poorest kind of land. The large roots contain a vast number of tubercles which aid largely in enriching the soiL Prof. Goff says: "The decay of all the large roots not only supplies plant food but aids in draining the land by forming numerous narrow passages through which the soil water ttnds au outlet" In the south, however, this clover is regarded as a useful forage plant. Al though not eaten by cattle at first, they soon learn to relish it If cut earl3'it is there regarded as valuable as cow pea, red clover or Japan clover hay. Its great value there, however, consists in its power to renovate the soil, doing for tho south in this line what red clover does for the north. Prof. Goff. however, states that, ad mitting it has useful qualities, the sweet clover is a coarse, homely plant, and where permitted to grow its tall flower stalk is certainly offeusive to the eye, and the annoyance it causes would v. arrant its destruction. It should not be allowed to bloom or ma ture seed. This plant is easily got rid of in cultivated fields, a single year being sufficient to remove it if the work is carefully done.—Prof. L. H. Pammel, lowa Agricultural College. THE HORSE NETTLE. A Troublesome Weed aud Direction* for Exterminating It. The well-known horse nettle (Solan um Carolinense) is apparently spread ing in the northern states, though not as fast as some of the annual ones. Horse nettle is a native, from Con necticut south to Florida and west to Texas. I have seen it very abundant in central Illinois and in southern and central Missouri, occurring not only along roadsides, but in the streets of cities, on vacant lots and too often in cultivated fields, where it docs great injury to crops. Its common name does not indicate that this weed is closely related to the cultivated potato, but the botanical name of tho genus shows close rela tionship. An examination of its flowers will show that they much resemble those of the potato, being bluish or whitish in color. The berry, common ly called the "seed," also resembles that formed on the potato. The leaves have large prickles on the midrib and JUL THE UOKSE NETTLE. some of the large lateral ribs. They are also slightly hairy. The stem is beset with numerous stout prickles. Many of the related plauts of this genus are annuals, but horse nettle is n deep-rooted perennial, its roots often extending three feet or more into the soil. This fact makes it a very tena cious weed, very difficult to exter minate. For this reason the weed grows in dense patches, which are carefully avoided by stock in pastures. I would advise plowing the land at this time, allowing none of the leaves to appear. The plants should be kept down the succeeding year. Plow the ground again next summer. Sow thickly with rye and keep watch of the nettle, allowing none to grow. Careful work for two seasons should remove it.—Prof. L H. Paminel, Agri cultural College, lowa. Applying Anhru to th« S<»11. The quantity of ashes that should be applied to the acre must depend on the soil and crops cultivated. Potatoes, turnips and all roots—clover, lucern, peas, beans and the grasses are great exhausters of the salts, and they are consequently much benefited by ashes. They are used with decided advantage for the above crops in connection with bone dust; and for clover, peas and roots, their effects are much enhanced when mixed with gypsum. Light soils should have a smaller, and rich lands or clays a heavier, dressing. From 13 to 15 bushels per acre for the former and 30 for the latter is not too much; or, if they ure leached, the quantity may bo increased one-half, as they act with less energy. Irrigation liy t'w of Windmill*. Irrigation by the use of windmills U receiving attention in ail sections. There arc now eight journals devoted to irrigation. As a remedy against drought the storage of water for uso when it is most needed will at sotno day be a portion of the work of suo cessful agriculturists. Necessity is in ducing invention in the storage ol water, and already large market gar dens are being partially supplied by windmills, though the rains aro de pended upon for the larger share of moisture during growth. He stopped ot a small and elegant place, Down by the sounding sea: And later he said. As he rubbed his head: "You can't hardly tell by the size of the house, What the size of the bills will be." —Detroit Free Dress. POI,ITIC*L ITEM. J ' "lie ha:, about decided to run and is In the hands of his friends." —<>ood BowU. M JK CTOCR > CUTTER FOR ROOTS. Althongh a ilomrmale Article It Pot *«*»»•»«•* M any (ioo.l Total*. Rural New Yorker thus describes a homemade root cutter seen in the barn of au ingenious young farmer: Two pieces of 2 by 4 ash scantling are nailed together in the form of an X. Two of these X's are used for the frame. Cleats nailed across the bot tom hold the frame and serve for the support of the box A, which is under the cylinder to catch the cut roots. Tl»e end pieces are V shaped and made of 3 inch plank, with a hole for the cylinder to turn in. Inch boards, C C, are used \ G A HOMKMADE ROOT CUTTER. to side up the hopper. The shaft is made of a turned hard wood stick and Is 0 inches in diameter. The cutters are made of heavy band iron, which is ground to an edge on one side. They are shaped like a staple, and after the ends are driven into the shaft are lJi inches wide and 1 inches high. There are 13 cutters placed in diagonal rows, inches apart and the same distance from the ends or sides. The distance between the sides of the hop per and cutters is about one-half inch. There is no bottom to the hopper, the cylinder occupying its place. The hop per holds about one-half bushel, and the roots can all be placed in at once. A balance wheel would help in turn ing- FEEDING CALVES. Practical Otrectlona for Raising the Young; Creatures by the Pall. Don't overfeed, especialy for the flr«t ten days. Don't expect the calves to thrive if the pails are not washed every day and occasionally .scalded. Don't stop the new milk ration too quickly or too abruptly; gradually change to old milk, with linseed meal porridge. Don't forget a lump of chalk or clay sod to lick when in stable, as an anti dote to acidity; in a state of nature they get to the soil directly, and con sume more or less daily. Don't neglect the feed box. Get them started to eat as soon as pos sible, and by keeping manger sweet and clean encourage them to eat aa much as possible. As with the palls, so should the manger be scalded oo casionallv. Don't forget that the calf requires a ration to grow bone and muscle as well Don't expect corn to supply all that the calf requires in shape of grain. Remember it is food rich in nitrogen ous elements that will supply that which is most wanted, such as oats, bran, p«as and linseed cake with clover hay. „ Don't ever let it slip the memory or practice that to be grown profitably there must be no let up from day of birth to the block; one day unproflta bly spent, or in which there is no in crease, will take the profit of three days to simply pay for its keep that day.—Live Stock Journal. Th® Scleuoo of Feeding. Iu artificial feeding of cattle the flesli-forining and heat-producing elo ments should bear a given relation ship to each other, according to the Beason. If a cow is not in milk she may not need any more albuminoids than in warm weather; but she will need more heat-producing food. Hut when she is In inilk she will require a much larger proportion of album inoids; so that to keep up the flow of milk she must receive those kinds of food in which albuminoids bear 4 larger proportion, as compared with heat producing materials. These kinds of food would be meal of va rious kinds and grains generally, oil cake, cotton cake and hoy cut a little under ripe. Farmers' Voice. Feeding Wheat to Hogg. I have the following report of an ex periment of feeding wheat to hogs, says a Miamisburg corresponded of the Northwestern Miller. Twenty-one shoats were fed for a week on wheat. The weight of the hogs when feeding began was I.W'.H) pounds, and at the end of the first week it was 3,345 pounds, showing a gain of 355 pounds. The amount of wheat fed was 12 bushels. These liogs nre sold, to be delivered September 15, at $4. «0 j>er 100 pounds. This shows a gain of $10.56, or 81.38 per bushel for wheat. This wheat is soaked for 24 hours before being fed. About half our crop is going to be fed to stock, as there will be very little corn. KEEP the cultivator going and tho surface of tho ground frequently stirred in all the growing crops. This not only keeps tho weeds at bay. but also lets the heat into the soil, and through that agency forces along the growth. That "tillage is manure" may not be quito true, yet it greatly aids the growth of plants. PURSLAIKE (purslcy) is hard to kill, and has millions of seeds. It grows very rapiJly, andean only be eradicat ed by constant wai fare on it. The March of Progress. Stranger—l hear that the long feud between tho Willinghamsandthe Clay ridges has at last been amicably settled forever. Native —Yes, sail! What was tho use in keeping it up when both families, sail, bought complete outfits of bullet proof clothing?— Puck. A Paradox. Though wo boast of modern progress as aloft wo proudly soar, Above untutored cannibals whose habits w« deplore, Yet In our dally papers any day you chance to look You may find this advertisement: "Wanted— A girl to cook." -Ida Goldsmith Morris. In Judge. On the Koad to Karae. Artist- I sold four pictures yester day. Friend—What are you going to do with the money? "I think I'll buy o frame for another picture I'm working on." —Town Top ics. He Haw the Point. "Now I see the point," said tho hap less dog to the barbed wire fenco that he ran against. "Yes, I thought you would," said the fence. "I tried to Impress it upon you." —N. Y. World. Good Cause. Tho maiden smiled, as well she might. For there beside her sat A youth who owned In his own right A sixteen-story flat. > r o ! 2 MAN-EATERS OF THE PACIFIC, Sharks That Arc the Dread of the Cali fornia f'lsheruieu. The true uian-eater bhark as taken on the Pacific coast is known only as a man-cater Tlie shovel-nosed sharks arc sand sharks, too cowardly toattack even a yellow dog. The thirty-four foot shark, captured by some fisher men, of the true man-eater variety (careharodon carcharins). seemed brave enough and savage enough to attack anything within its reach. This mon ster's mouth was wide, the teeth long and sharp, with an inward incline. The stomach would hold a full-grown man easily and a good deal besides. The tish became entangled in a net ofl Point Lama. Two boats attacked the vicious creature and finally succeeded in punching an iron into vitals. Th« elde of one bxit was stove in by a blow forcible enough to knock one fisherman overboard. These sharks, says the New York Tribune, have been known to attack a small boat, upset it and eat the oars man. A man-eater over forty-two feel long has been reported below Sat: Diego. The natives are said to live in fear of this awful fish,which already hai the record of having eaten six men. II has been shot frequently. The water about it has been discolored with blood. Yet the shark still lives. The tiger shark is as ferocious as the man-eater. Another large shark hereabouts is the basking shark. It is taken measuring fifteen to forty feet in length. The skin of one thirty-two feet long is at Stanford University museum. It was captured last March. This skin alone weighs over fifteen hundred pounds, while the shark's liver produced one hundred and eighty gallons of oil. These sharks, however, are sluggish, lazy and do not bite people. Their gill-rakers are on the whale model. When entangled in a net they fre quently suffocate, as the net restrict! the gills. California fishermen do not consider five-foot sharks of much account when from San Diego wharves black sea bass are caught six to eight feet long, weighing three hundred to five hundred pounds. Such fish arc common. They are taken on shark hooks and clotheslines. When hooked the fish is allowed to swim about thq bay towing a two-inch plank. When he is exhausted the line is hauled in aud the fish killed with an ax. COST OF THE CRIMEAN WAR. John Hull l'tld hu Enormous Price to Keep Russia Out of Turkey. On July 12, 1850>, the Crimea was final ly evacuated by the British forces after the war of over two years, says Spare Moments. All the remaining stores and the establishments having been embarked, a company of the Fiftieth British regiment was posted outside the town of Balaclava to receive the Russian troops, and on their approach marched in with tlio Russian guard, which was composed of about fifty mounted Cossacks and a similar num ber of Cossack infantry. The usual salute took place, the Russians placeq sentinels where they wished, and tho English troops marched on board 0. M. S. Algiers. Gen. Sir William John Codrfngton, chief in command of thci forces in the Crimea, and who died in 1881, embarked with his personal staff at the same time. During this war the British lost 3,500 killed in action Ofj died from their wounds; 4,244 of cholera, and nearly 10,000 who suc cumbed to other diseases, making |i total of 23,744, of whom 270 were offi cers, and besides these 2,873 w ere dis abled. The loss of French alP.es was estimated at 03,500 men, while the loss of the Russians on the opposite 6ide was reckoned as high as 500,000 men. The war added to the British national debt over 5200,000,000. Notwithstand ing the enormous amount expended Britain asked from Russia no pecunia ry compensation, nor gained one inch of lund; but the defeat of the Russians kept them out of Constantinople and inado the way to India and the east clear. The memoirs of Earl Russell, show that it would have secured for the Turkish empire much internal ben efit if the French hod been as disinter ested as the British, and not required in that case some territory for them selves. The Women ta Blame. Prof. Poyl, the ethnologist, recently described to the Asiatic society the condition of the head-hunting Nagas on the borders of Assam. Tho women are to blame for the continuance QI the practice; they taunt tho youugmen who are not tattooed, and the latter go out and cut off heads to exhibit tq them, fully half of which aro those of women and children. The area occur pied by the tribe is not more than twenty miles square, but in it during the past forty years more than twelve thousand murders have been commit ted for the sako of these ghastly tro finies. She Wanted the Real Tiling. Several years ago a celebrated tra gedian was announced to play "Ham let" at Windsor. When he came to the soliloqm- he made an unusual pouso after "To be—" The queen, believing that he had forgotten Ills lines, instant ly prompted—"or not to be. That is the question." "By your leave, yotir majesty," said the tragedian, put out of courtly humor by the Interruption, "that is not the question. The ques tion is my method of interpretation." ''Never mind your method," returned the queen, smilingly; "what we want s Shakespeare." Irresistible. Book-canvassers should take courage from a story told by an English lectur er on "TWe Art of Bookbinding." A mau of their profession had called at a house whose occupant met him with a growl. "It's no use to inc. I never read." "But there's your family," said the canvasser. "Ilaven't any family—nothing but a cat." "Well, you may want something to tArow at the cat." Tho book was purchased. Not a Safe Juryman. "I should like to be excused, youi honor," said a man who had been sum moned on the jury. "What for?" "I owe a man ten dollars and wish te hunt him up and pay it." "Do you mean to tell the court thai you would hunt up a man to pay a bill instead of waiting for him to hunt yon up?" "Yes, yotir honor." "Y'ou aro excused. I don't want any man on tho iiry that will lio likfl that." —Bostoir Bulletin. Unfortunate ll*ure or Speech. "Gentlemen," said tho chairman oj the anarchist meeting, "in my judg ment the time has not yet come for ac tion in this matter. If you resolve to go ahead, gentlemen, I wash my bandi in the whole bus—" It was at this point the disturbance took place, and when the police restored order there was seen a large, jagged holo In tho window back of the plat, form, through which the chairman had retired from the scene, head first.—Chi' cuffo Tribune. A I .ant Hesort. Jltnaou (confidentially)— Say, do you hear that young woman singing? Policeman —1 should remark. "Sho lives next door to me. Say!" "Well, say it." "I'll give you a box of tho best clgarj ever smuggled if you'll rush into that framxa and YVkttb VfilSff