VOL- xxxvi Sales Must Grow! I|| Trade Must Flow! We jirojK*e to show to the jwople of this vicinity that de«pite the cry ot scarcity of monev ami hard time*, we still crowd our store with eager purchasers. --■T-v New Shirt Walst-A ««*t collection of alt that W turn . , . x v .V anil stylish in wash wa*sts. CoifecUy nm'k: jr-Fleet tilling ' >. waiots or jour money back. Percale, Madras, Lawn aivl P. K, ' „-~-'y Waists. Latest cut, new sleeves, new yokes, new fronts. Corded, tucked and Insertion trimmed. Prices wliUtlct* down to the tip-end-of-notliing. Summer Wash Fabrics -They're the daintiest of the dainty, the lightest and coolest of fabrics. Regular beauties in lawns, dimities. organdies, ina 25c y ' Linen, lioines[>uii ,<>c . 13 ' i and 15c , ,•; India Uixm and Victoria Lawn 5 C to 40c .7 " Striptd, plat 1 antl fancy white goods 10c to 25c Denim for skirts —blues, browns and tans t2'.. j | I.j , . Linings and Fixings. . • J/- • '• Everything necessary for the inside as well as the outsi 1 • l *v, y, of a dress. r \ '/V 1 Fancy wais*. linings—fancy skirt linings silk, liuen an«l/ Cotton linings, canvas, haircloth,beltings, tapes,brai ls, placket " > sets buttons, buckles and all kinds of linings and triiumines /"a \ x L. 5B T EIIN SON, Store Closesiat.6 p. m. except Saturday. | | I ) That the it read house cleaning is over the nex 1 O { I and more important work is picking 1 new carpet A j 1 To pick .1 carpet in our well stocked catp».t room 4} J. is a pleasure, so say the many who have done so t We have the famous Hartford Axminister, Wilton Jl I Velvets, ttody and Tapestr) i'russels and Ingrains .1. in all the up-to-date patterns, only, and prices | ' ' that will astonish you. Then our China Mattings, | ' Floor and Table Oil Cloths, Linoleums, Rugs and | * Art Squares, deserve a passing notice. Ask to '|' * » SI.OO Axminister Rugs, * ' Neatest tiling fOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO^OO^OOO„. s to make up an I'P-TODATK MILMNHRV STOCK, and at prices "'at will suiiirise you. We would call especial attention to our ladles'. Misses' and Cbll dren'a TUIMMHD IIATS, hi which wu haw aluaya .xcelleil You Chu always get the right good# at Hie H«lit pricuf «« ROCK t; NSTKIN 'B, 31S South Main St., - - ~ Butler, l'a. SEND ONE DOLLAR & wtthin .<>. i ;«• ihK nil* iii i.i.r cr tio.iuai' u. i>. \* | y ,il •I BJM"r TO JOU Il »i ~.iir (r«lglU dri.,l ««.l if 1 M.d V J 4 WSJ | " THAT miTiltiTi«o.o«t. »H.uo ..>;, I—l \ MxM from the Bvet Kea!*<»n*»d Wood. Urir, Huat Ttiat W«»iu y Can 1 , f T 1 Build. b4 Byriart. as Illustrated, or Hrvweter tUi ri*V ]*■■. '■■ d rv \yay of . !■ : say that I Lav t *.in dccßtaad \\i v jly <• .. in tUi tar western diocese call me "the poire," conplin.c l!i nam ::•:<> Willi mi intima tioii tb.it 1 .-ho.ili Lave b. n a | ri< -t of tli' 1 older faith ratin i tir ii a poor cler pyman t.f nnr own. lii rJV < wn looking ;,lass —and which of ns i.i iv. r vouch safed ajm i j>into that of at: 'ic i v I find notliin . to J .-iify the inf. The quicksilver i; : iges tlie fi;»nre uf a mid dle ng< 1 pci 7i, wiu> •> 1 i.'.ary habit has sicklied a t'ace n.-v.-r ruddy, whoso vigils with (h ■ student's lamp have be gun to acc ntaatc the stoop in a rather nngainly iiair of shoulders, whose attire is not and has Diver been, I trust, more than decently ecclesiastical in ent and ensemble. Xniii the L:-s. sincerity comjiels the admission that in traveling 1 am not inficq u utly taken for a Ilomish priest, and that even here in my own little parish of Carbonoro the coal miners call me Father I'en barton. It was this ab surd misc'nception, heightened, po*.-ii bly, by the fact that 1 was rending a small black bound hook which may have b n mistaken for a breviary, that led to my entanglement in a romantic affair on the railway -an entanglement which lias since cost me many disquieting mo ments. Not that I hold myself in any way accountable or blameworthy, be it understood, but merely becanse it has given my clerical associates a fresh oc casion for other of their ill chosen and meaningless gibes. The beginning of it wgs in this wise. I had been on a visit to the bishop and had boarded the train to return to my parish. Having taken a seat in tJie Pullman, I was reading the small black bound book —which, I beg to protest, was not a breviary—when two young persons entered the car and established themselves in the section nest to my own. At their incoming I fancied they were the inevitable newly married con pie whose presence seems nowadays to be a necessary, complement to the pas senger list of any publie conveyance. The young man was a clerk of some sort, one would say, and his face was vaguely familiar. It was clean cut, smooth shaven and of the alert type which marks the younger men of busi ness in this progress ridden region. The young woman was petue and distinc tively handsome. Her face was a most agreeable study in youthful beauty, and her flashing brown eyes, alight w'itli repressed excitement, had a look in them which carried me swiftly back to my—-but pardon me, this is not the story of my own youthful follies. I perceived at once that the two were laboring under some stress of emotion which I took to be very natural embar rassment, and as they sat facing me 1 thought to relievo them in some measure by Ut king the opposite eeat with 1115 hack toward them. I desire to empha size tliisi point beeausp one of uiy fxl> Jeasjjocs I* uncharitable enough to insiii* ufttu that the chamge was made in order that their -conversation might be the better overheard, a charge which I wish to repel with proper scorn. That theii talk was overheard is a matter of no moment. livery right minded person will agree with me that motives and not incidents are the cosmic principles underlying any code of ethics. "Great Jehoasb! You say he did come lioiue to dinner, after all?" The speaker was the young man, and there was a very emphatic note of un easiness in his voice. "Yes, he did," answered the young womaiv "Aud that isn't all. I'm al most snre he suspected something." "You are? Why? What makes you think so?" "The way he acted. He was as short as pie crnjit ajl through dinner, and when I left the table he asked if you had called; said he had seen you in the carriage driving down Alameda street. " The young man groaned quite audi bly. "Of course he did! That idiotic driver turned out for a furniture van just as we were meeting him and drove up to the very curb. I made myself as small as I could, but he couldn't help seeing me. What did you tell him?" "Isaid: 'Why, poppa—Mr. Roderick! After you'vo forbidden him the house?' " The young man chuckled as if the sinful equivocation were applausive rather than a thing to tie sorrowfully deprecated. "Good! What did be say to that?" "He was angry—as he always is when your name is mentioned. He said you were enough to do anything. Then lie asked me if I could be ready to start for Aunt Josephine's tomorrow." "And you told him you could?" "I did just that, bnt I didn't tell him I would. Oh, why doesn't tlio train start ?" I heard the click of the young man's watch case. "Chiefly because it isn't time. We have five minutes yet." "Oh!" The exclamation was almost a sqb. "If he catches the 1 o'clock car down town, he can overtake us here, can't he?" The watch case clicked again. "He might, but it's unlikely. The car is due at the corner just at our leav ing time, and he would have a block to walk—-or rnn. But I was thinking of something else. If he has his wits with liini we shan't lie safe till we pass the yard limits." "The yard limits? I don't under stand- " "We have to stop to register at the limits. If he just misses us here, he can take a carriage, run the legs off the horses and intercept us nt the yard sta tion. It can be done. I've done it my self more than once with a belated pas senger. '' "Oh, horrors! Alan, if you let me be taken back now, I'll never speak to you again as long as I live!" "You needn't threaten me. It won't be my fault if we're captured. I'm not on* more anxious to meet your father just now than you are," asserted the young man. earnestly. Then silence supervened, and ! had leisure to construct the accusation. It was a wedding party, indeed, but a priori—an elopement, in short. This Bweet faced young woman with the re mindful eyes was taking her future in her hand to give it over into the keep ing of a young man whose consent to a proceeding was his sufficient con demnation. I pictured to myself the distress of the father, whose wishes had been so unfilially disregarded, lie was doubteaa a kind and indulgent par ent —are not all modern parents culpa bly so?—and his objections to tho alert young man were probably well rooted in g.iib: of pnrcnt.il authority that I con Id with difficulty hold my peace. Indeed, it was borne in upon lue so forcibly that I ought to expostulate with the young raahlings that I was almnt to do go when the train moved ont and carried them so to speak, suddenly across their Rubicon. Having thn.; lost the opportunity for hopeful interference. I may confess that I awaited the turn of events with no inconsiderable degree of curiosity. Would the injured father have his "wits with him," as the young ntan ijo irreverently phrased it, and drive post haste to intercept the train at the reg istering station? The day was warm and the car win dows were open. When the shriek of the airbrakes was uplifted and the speed began to slacken, I looked out and np the road leading down from the city. Far away among the last scattering houses of the snbnrb n earring.- drawn by fast galloping horses came in sight. At the same moment 1 heard the young man say: "This sun is fearfully hot, don't you think so, Eleanor? Let me close your window. " The bang of the sash and the whir of the shade followed quickly, and I di vincd his intention. He, too, liad seen the carriage. Presently the train came to a stand with the forward end of the Pullman immediately opposite the platform of the small registering station. From my window I saw the conductor come out and raise his hand to give the signal for departure. In the very act he espied the carriage with the galloping horses and desisted. He was evidently going to wait for the vehicle to come up. For the next few moments the sus pense was well nigli electrical. The crucial anxiety of the two young peo ple seemed to communicate itself in some mysterious manner to the other occupants of the car, and we all sat breathless under the weight of a silence which was surcharged with suppressed excitement. When the drumming of the horses' hoofs became faintly audi ble. the young man could endure it no longer. With a hasty "Excuse me a moment" to his companion he left his seat, and 1 craned my neck from the window in time to see him join the conductor on the platform. "What are you waiting fear, Graffo?" he demanded, with the air of one who is made bold by the occasion. The conductor jerked his thnmb over his shoulder in the direction of the chaise. "Some drummer got left at the un ion depot, I guess. Serve him right if we didn't wait on him." "Don't you fool yourself!" The young man's manner of speech was dis tressingly idiomatic, not to say vague, rl' "If you don't pull out Ixl ore he gets here, I'm a dead man." at times. "That's Mr. John Bostwick. If you don't pull out before he gets here, I'm a dead man. Do you save#?" The conductor laughed, and rejoined with what appeared to be intended for rough pleasantry : "Oh, come off! What are you giving me?" I bad not noticed that the young man had offered to give him anything, but he ignored the inquiry and burst out: "Facts, by Jove! Cold facts! I tell you ray blood will be on your head if you wait till that carriage gets here!" "Pshaw! D'ye mean it, honest? What yon been doing to the master lieclianic? 'Nother one of your foot prank.-i I bet you." The chaise was in plain view by this tirnn. and it presented the unusual spec tacle of a square shouldered gentleman with u fierce military mustache and a very rod face leaning far out of the car riage window and gesticulating violent ly.. The young man saw, winced and made answer of mingled plea and pro test. "Pranks nothing! It's business this time, I tell you. Give Ike the signal, quick, before it's too late. Miss Bcst wick's mixed up in it, and"— The conductor's hand shot above his head and hung there fluttering like a misshapen flag. There was an answer ing clangor from the bell and a hissing of steam and the wheels began to re volve. The young scapegrace and his new made confederate sprang aboard, and I gave my attention to the oncom ing carriage. The cabman was certainly a most reckless driver. Hi! lashed his horses down the steep slope, and for a palpi tant second a collision with the moving train seemed inevitable. It was happily averted at the critical instant by the madcap son of Nimslii, who stood up in his place and dragged the plunging animals back upon their haunches by main strength. Bnt the sudden cramp ing gf the vehicle jammed it lietween a coal car and the iron lever which operates the switching mechanism, blocking the doors as effectually as if the obstructions had been placed with malice aforethought. sank back into my seat with if sigh "Tingled regret and relief Hie young man had rejoined hia companion, who, thanks to the drawn shade and wlosed window, bad apparently neither seen ner heard aught of the exciting episodr. "Are we safe, Alan?" she queried, her voice a-treuible with trepidation. "Safe as a church. Didn't you see him "I saw nothing, bnt I thought I heard some one shouting." Then, with a gawp of sudden and dismayed Realiza tion : "Oh, it's my father, and he'shnrt! I know he is! Stop the train. Alan! Stop it, lsay! I'm going back!" "Oh, sit down! For pity's sake, sit down. Eleanor. Don't you see every body's catching on?" This in an ago nized whisper. "He isn't hurt, I tell you. Not at all. That was the driver you heard yelling at his horses. "Are you sure you're telling me the truth "Of course I am. Didn't I see it? The fellow drove down between the switch stand and a coal car. and your father lohld nt tret <«thrr door open. H«* wasn't hurt an r.t iiiL bnt lit acted as rf I lii? wsi;*ji m • d dml disappointed. 1 "lii-itplu intcd' Yon njaf dep- jid , upm-if. ii< fcnruuus l-'ju aw folly all InJJI ifci .m.jjh tiling d. sj» r rtfe vet.' "I don t see but what he will have to it lin -J' ps ns now. He can tu»t to Lav;irock ahi ud of 11s. and la minutes after we arrive you'll be Mrs. Roder iok.' She w< nt silent at that, as what unnl est yi ung woman would not? But after . a littl- she plucked up courage to ask ahiiit the details. Her companion ex j plained. "Aft r I left you at the honse I went ! down town and wired Hardwicke, the 1 ag nt at Lavarock, telling him there i would l>e a couple 011 this train to be ; uutrricd in the hotel parlor on arrival. ! He i- tii airange with the county clerk ! to keep his office open so that I call get 1 the license, and to have tlie minister r- adv. I can drive to the court honse ' and back in ten minute's, and we can have it all over with while the passen ' gers are at supper and bo ready to go west 011 No. 5." "It's very dreadful, Alan," she mur mured. "So pitifully different from | one's ideal wedding." "That's so" cheerfully "there i isn't any ideality to spare for a fact. ' But we can't help that. If we hadn't [ made the dash, your father would have pack, d you oft to < ihio between two 1 days, wouldn't het" "He said he would, and I'm afraid 1 lie inc..lit it. And yet he has always i been very good to me, Alan, before— ! before this, you know." ••I know . bnt he meant business this | time. Aud that isn't all. After I had ; my little s. ance with him this morning —when I asked him outright if we mightn't be married like other people —he abused me like a sheep thief; said he'd write to the general manager and have me discharged, though lie didn't mention upon what grounds he would demand it." "But how could he do that?" "I give it up. There is nothing on record against me, I believe, except that I've had the audacity to fall in love with yon after he had quarreled with my father. But I couldn't help either the one or the other." "No, indeed. But I hope you didn't quarrel with him." "Didn't I ? I told him to go ahead and write his letter if he wanted to; that I guess I conld stand the publicity if he could." "Alan! Yon didn't tell me that." "No, it didn't seem judicious." "Perhaps I mightn't have consented if you had." "Oh, yes, you would." "Why would I?" "Because you—love me." In good truth 1 could not obtain my own consent to listen any longer More over, the notes of the wood dove, feath ered or humtin. are not particularly edi fying in the ears of one who has long eschewed all thoughts of domestic joys, and I betook myself with my book to | the deserted smoking compartment, i Hero I ivas left in i»eace ontil uftej: [ tlit train had passed the first telegraph I station, but it was no auoner under ' ■again than tin- conductor entered ; fbllovved closely by my young scape grace. They sat down in the opposite seat, ignoring my presence as if I had been something more or less than a hninan being. "What is it, Tom?" demanded the young man anxiously. "Oh. you're 111 for it up to your necks yon two I I have orders to dis honor your passes and put you both off at the next station," said the conduct or, with what I understood to be mock solemnity. Roderick nodded appreciatively. "I thought that would lie the first thing he would do. That's why I bought reg ular tickets. We're patrons of the com pany, jnst like other people, and I dare yon to put us off!" The big conductor's laugh shook the windows. "That's what I wired 'em," he said. "But that ain't the worst of it. Your don't want to be father-in-law's out I rnuld not et yon big money some- j thing would happen down at this end | of the Brownsville yard that'd hold that there wild engine another 15 minutes • ! or s.l What' "Tom, V'/n'r.> a trump: Jack willifc> it. if it ■ ~. 1 you talking t>> flttu rt - _•■ \ to lie a straight out ix'.*ident, yon kn.>w. with nobody to blame. " '"I know," replied the young rascal, with a mid ot intelligence "Trur't me ferthot Hallo? This it La Vaca Let'o go set- what the wires have ti say." They went out t< .g. tht-r, leaving me with a new responsibility. Her.- was a I Id con-piracy to obstruct the railway company's bn.-iness. possibly to imi.lv.- an innocent person or i»-rhajis nior»' than i 011 •in trouble Was it not my duty to interfere at all hazards? I confess 1 have little regard for intemieddlers of any sort, and this was certainly no af fair of mine. Nevertheless, I compro mised 011 a resolve to expostulate with the young man himself before we -h-.nld reach Brownsville, and in the . ddy of that determination resumed my l»»ik and the interrupted train of thought. Now, it i- a student's weakn. -s to lw unconscious of the lajise of time, and. atier what seemed to me a very short interval indeed, my younjt Romeo en tered the smoking room alone. Her.', thought I, is my chance to reprehend the } ■ ring knave, ;uid I was abont to do so whi 11 he forestalled me. "This is Father Penburton. I !*•- lieve," he In'gan affably, producing a est of my knowledge and belief. "I know of np rule forbidding it. Why do yon ask V' "Read that," be said tragically, thrusting the message into my hand. 'lf you can't help ns ont, we're done for. world without end*" I read: To Alan Ktxlerick, on Train No. 7: Everything O. K. m ordered ezeept the min ister. He id not at Heservatlon. Have sent cow puncher after him on liest l.foncho in town, but am afraid he can't reach befur.- 7 o'clock. Khali I grt justice peace? Answer It was signed "Hardwicke," and there was a footnote in brackets —evi- dently a bit of cxtrantsins informalK>p addod by the receiving operator at Jor nada . B>isty in uverhnuling you right, tlupaunl Oronsliee five minutes »R<\ running lik«* the wild Irishman. He'd beat you 13 minutes Into Lavaroek it he could get by you. "What have I to do with thisY" said I\ indicating the message "Why. 1 thought—that is. 1 didn't know but you'd—well, you see. Father Penburton, we've got to have a minis ter of some soft some way. It's no use talking about a justice of the peace to Eleanor. Sh»- won't listen a minute to that. Bnt she might consent to be mar ried by a Catholic priest. She is what we call pretty high church, you know "Still I do not understand. lam not a justice of the peace nor yet a priest of the Romish confession." "You're not? Why, Graffo enid you were, and your—er"— he broke down and finished rather tamely. "I thonght you looked like one. " "Which one?" I asked, trying to be as severe as the occasion demanded "The magistrate or the priest?" "Don't hit me when I'm down," he pleaded. "I meant the priest, of course." "Ah! I suppose 1 should be flattered, but I am not." He sat twiddling his watch chain nervously while ho tried to frame the crucial question. "Then may I ask. Would you myid telling me what kind of a—a minister yVni are?" lie stammered finally. "I am a clergyman of the church of which Miss Bostwick seems by your ad mission to be a communicant," said I. "Oh, thank goodness!" he exclaimed, jumping up to grasp my hand effusive ly. "Two young fools for luck every time! You'll help ns out, won't youT" It was my opportunity, and I used it unsparingly. "Not by any manner of means; quite the contrary, I shall do everything in my power to prevent the consummation of this unhappy affair " (My colleague liefor. referred to insists that my indig nation was merely an otitlmret of pique at being again mistaken for a Romanist, but the charge i» t«>o trivial to refute.) "I shall go at once to the young lady to try if I may dissuade her while it is yet time to withdraw." H« dropped HIT hand and sat down again. It wan a coup d© grace, but he was manly enough to hide the wound. "Doit, "he said, Iwtrdilv. "Go and try it. if you like, and l lf give yon a clear field lint yon are the most mis taken person on this train. Mr. iVnbnr ton, if yon'll allow me to say it. Yon are going on general principle* in an exceptional case. I do hope you may have theplrasnre of meeting Mists Bo*t wick's father some time when he isn't feeling well Yon'll forgive us then." I went at once to the young woman, introduced myself, and labored with her as her own pastor might, tint nil to no pnrjK>se. she w; i'.,ti. n 1 "* i .4 -ft ai.j aui n has jtist r • >. *l' -'i ii. t that -ffei-t •aid I '"Mft' ifal le nTi# What shall we d-.* Isut y . will help nv wU y.,n not. dear Mr IN* -;t- «. -ie pleadtsl lay ing bt't hand on inj arm. "Yon fan t x tn-e- now I .iju ,ure. I rotifi -■* frankly tlk.it the neoeiwity t.a in. tryitiK but I roald do no otb irwi-.' and I- iikim.-l.—• * Y..n sr* v.rv hard I b<.p* yon won t b' trv f> rit ilay," sh* man ui- 1. and at tii* *igbt ->t th« tip - i what h i»ty retreat to th* an; kin* !• p irtiii. Nt (n> as . -TLvrta j THE WONDERS OF ALFALFA. \a l»i»|»lii> rtl Hi Ctr \»-»i Jrraef kEt* |M»rlmriiC Mfttkia. Tli. re h:i- in n a ileal -aid abont alfalfa of late, whi-u Profe-<. r V. *.i u.'. >. f lit !.'• wJi r-ey -tuti. n said be was aluuet'ready to lie enthusiastic al>ont t: pliint ."lr. of The Itr.r.il N. w Y.irker conclnded. as he tells iii that Jnarnal. that it was tiui> t" go and *■ * what ha>is Profess, r Vooriie.-. lia.i for tbe stat>meßt. th* latter i;> inu a i-arefnl man and not easi ly carried away by ;i »in'_-le -n< c*ss with aoj crop So on May 9 Mr Cotliag «•(»..) went down t.. NVw Urnnswick to l< k ;:t tSic alfalf.i. . B.i this is what h> fonml. report. 1 in The New Yorker Th- rt it -ti od. a wilid mat areraacing aK>nt 17 inches hiith aud so thick on the gronn 1 tbat one conM hardly find even a weed in an aero of it. Tb* alfalfa would average at least fonr inche* higher than the best crimson clover, and it* immense leaf *nrfac* as comp .red witb .lover evidently mad* it a U-tter plant for feeding. "Bnt this is not alfalfa soil!" was my first < .uimeat, for the ground was bard, heavy, well baked, not at all like the friable, loose, open soil in which alfalfa is "aid to delight. "Tbat is trn*." raid IWaaw Yonr bo - "Bnt there ta sncb a thing as fit ting the soil for the crop and changing its character so that crops will fe*l more at homa in it- In the first place, we luaile It clean The great reason why f many people fail with alfalfa is that they let the weeds kill it oat The w-te'ls will certainly d«> this if yon give tin in a chance We cleaned that soil for two years by constant ami thorough tillage and growimc clean crops npon it. Th< n in the fall it wa* ' token np an.l potash nti'l phosphoric acid applied, witb a p«»l coating of lime. Then it was sown to rye. In tb* spring this wp* plowed nnder and the gronml was th«w onghly snbsoiled. Yon know alfalfa ia a long, deep n» te.l plant The ideal soil for it is one with an open, poroas sub soil into which these long roots can easily work By lotbeoiling—that is. breaking np the earth to considerable depth -w*> gave these roots a chance to get down int'> the gr'-nnd. and th«j most crrtatufy went iters. We *.wed sib. sit the tM <4 May. using varying quantities of seed at the rata of 30. 44) and 50 pounds per KM " "You can se#foV yourself that where we have used the moat «eetl we have the heat stand and the beat crop. Al falfa cannot stand np in a flight against wetds The weeds came np, of coarse, last year after the young alfalfa, and we clipped them off eo aa to give the latter a chance. When it once got ahead of the weeds, it staid ahead. an*ts 15 feet high, with self supporting roof. As a hay barn Is called for. it i« unnecessary to have any floor for driving space The bay should be J ~| # Jk 'J ' * I -* rf i!r ■ M — How TO BULO A HAT BAIX. carried from the wagon to the opening in the end of the barn by means of a carrier or sling and then npon the track the hay is carried to any part of the barn desired- The sill. AA. sh< >n Id be of 8 by 8 material The beams, B B and C C, should also be 8 by 8 and mortised into the j>csts at the corners and in the center. These beams serve as brace*, and must be securely fastened or the barn will spread. One danger which must lie gnarded against will be the bulging of the ends. To secure these strong steel ruda should run from the side platttroit No. sfc> THE bhood FRAME »•*> r»M Br RalH kf at X **■»** " »«»• T n v *bir.:.; th* ;sa»t wia '*r * d»-i..-s» t -1% • ftat vmH ni^i * TI :• i.» • - ->4 zh- -m p*T*».n# pcS i -difary .kill *n.l txti*. a tvnt- ml-i untrv i nt!eman itm » - : ! s ,E » ' Hi t [art whu-h win :»nw* a c ri.. m. -I ir i. -ay. «fff« eighth* .-r on* ißrh. N « !'i th- Mb*of on* -nd .< r a stoj r"r »m thin *t.»p roranniT* •ft th.- U f tij» fupmiL sad mw4)«b »t r: hi jb;!, - For tb* *H ton eh— t* F r rtte rn«l p. *ts make -in.>th-r at the >twf)»r» from tk» «t. p. F r lis* ht»c* pin'm to* will awl an-, til. r box a boat an iadh sad a joar Nail in 1 tt- xn 4fxw«a sad fmm a » rner ft this «aw a «»-h of 4-» Jejpr*** Now if y, n take a pi*e« ta inch and a (jnartcr wi.W and thr**-*ightha oft. v«a win get tb* c« rB« r pieces A# t» <• iKtrnrtinn. y.sa lay tb* top piece in its plat * «n tb* board. aad tba side pieces in th*ir place* an«t sail on th* c> rn-r pi.-c.-s. Tnan ami tb* top to end* ant tnra «*** an.l sail >m bottom. 0., . . —-,jg i i c: | 77c7 y =^' . R/C «2 riu* ro« >«BDot> rum aixl yom hav* a «tr n* frin*. a* Mi cat*d in Fi<. t. that will apar* ltm>{f in th* bn ■ ao>! »tay tbnv < >a* fratn* will nwi bta« t-a "B both «i.V* to kmrp it tb* proper diatact-* fr»n» tb* «i«l* >4 tb* hive A.« rrpinb »ib* antborittas 4iS«r 1 bibil* mm** I* ißt bvs loair b*caaaa that wa« tb* length f f nt b*ia«j bom*, and * in< lini rt taau tbc kaif* a* won. tb* pi tana bnma huaa. aai tba a4 tb* ttnani ptetar r««b W*tb i Chair an>l en* «aa>. bolt aad raßcv li*ariiift ma* be at! right, bat wb*b I wl*t-t a mac bine I will link Mostly at tb* rntter bar awl ptlmaa I 4oa't think tb* kaifa aboaM rnb all o t tb* WaKtb rtß as tb* back of th* kaif* to bold tb* kaiwa Jown •nnj< and tight »b tb* gnavd plat*, aad wb*a tb* kaif* d< wn on tba arnafda gt* worn tb*v >aa b* r*plar*d with a*w amm at aoiall nat Tb* plat** in tb* aaarbn* fbunld b* a*lf ot>arp«Bin«f—iwcbia *dgwt p*rbapa Th*y tlao sbottld b* bd tbat tb*T caa b* r*ptar*d witb a*w oaaa Tb* kaif* b*ad boa ibuaM b* uttafri a> that it >-aa h* h*pt tigbt aad tba pit man bar tb* auo*. aad a ft a* a lav years' na* jf*t a n*w knif* aad baa* inga and box. .in«l tb* aiarhln* will eat a- art* aa well »a a new .>a# aad aa** at Waxt #.Hto fli) Tb* main thing »a to k**p tb* knirra and gnard piataa 'harp and rlnaa t< gatb*r aad tba pit aian bos** tight. •» as a rtraai atataa that a piaatati n of 'Hat p*aa * affbrdß *xr*ll*at "aCaadtßg ma*t" for piga. aad its fl. wera ar* n»trh I. -ijaent.*! by baaa lb* honey from thia auairca bvlag -xc*p tioaally fine Horn* eip*rim*ata of tb* sf* Ha tup •hue atatioa indicate tbat formalin* treatment of «**d potatnaa is aa eAnt ire remedy for arnb F rmallaa paa waui tb* advantag* o»«r corroai** *b limat* of being lea* putaoaoaaaad mar* easily applied A r •K«rl#Kfl»v« Kaaplaraa. "I a»h-ratand joar pretty typ*wrtt*r go*a to a summer ngort at yoor ex l*-nae cTary summer." "Yes." rep He.l t>e lawyer, "ioat a little txtalneea arrangemmt. yr»l Am AM Je*« Bww|»l Mrs Styles—l>> yon suppo** that blnl on yonr honaet *x*r wblatlad? Mrs Fnsaanfeather—Well. I know I heard something whistle when It cam* home with the MlL—Tuakrra State*