THE CHANCES OTHERo HAVE. "I might be riob, I might be great," I heard one sadly say, "Could I have had my master's olianoe to start upon the way; Had be been placed where I was placed, men would not praise his name; Had I been favored as ho was I would have greater fame! They that ignore me now would all be syoo phants, to dance Attendance on me here if I had only bad his chance." The wires whereby men's messages are sent beneath the seas. The gleaming rails o'er which men speed what time they 101l at ease. The graceful domes that rise until they seem to pierce the sky, The mighty ships that cleve the main as fast as eagles tty, The disks and tubes through which men see o'er space's broad expanse, Are not the him who sighed to have some other's chance. The songs that live through centuries are not the songs of men Who longed for favors others knew and tossed away the pen; The names upon the noble arch that makes the artist glad Are not the names of men who yearned for ohances others had! O' all the wonders of our age that rise at every glance Slone came from him who might do much had he some other's ohance. —3. E. Kiser. I —THE— | I Errifl Horalio Forgot. | X BY ANNIE HAMILTON DONNELL. X "Him— Horatio Miser married? No, be basu't ever been, quite!" "Quite married?" "Yes, not quite." Lucretia ndjustel her sewing glasses and sorted out two or three patchwork squares. The suggestions \ of a story were iu ber face. Theu she j was rocking gently, and the rocker gave forth its familiar creak which was a suggestion, too. When Lucre tia's chair creaked iu that way, her hearers settled into their chairs and waitel. It was only a matter of wait ing "Well, there's them that are absent- i minded and there's them that are ab- | seut-miuded," Lucretia said. "I sup- i po.«e you've noticed that? Horatio Mixer's the lattermost kind—land, yes! I have not been to the North Pole nor to the Soutli Pole, but if I had 've, I shouldn't ever have run across his equal anywhere on the way —not for absent-mindedness. She tried a pink triangle with the chocolate and then a blue one. Neither exactly met her ideas of har mony, and fiually, with a sigh, she substituted a vivid green. "Yes?" some one said,suggestively. "He was never entirely married, you eaid, Lucretia?" "The greeu'll do," she decided, and , then returned to her story. "No, but he got pretty near it.—as near as the postoflice!" i The creaking waxed a little trem ulous, as if tho chair were laughing with Lucretia. Of course every one else was. There was somethiug con tagious iu Lucretia's silent mirth. "To this day I haven't got over it!" she gasped. "Nor I guess Cicely Gove hasu't —nor Horatio. He hasn't been lo the postoffice since. My little Jerry gets his mail." She threaded her needle slowly. "Poor Horatio!" she smiled. "No, he hasu't been since he came so near j getting married. Laud, yes, I sup pose I might as well up aud tell the whole story! I've got jour appetites whetted up!" "I should say so! Mine's as sharp as Uncle Nehemi' Castlo's scythe!" Polemia Dunn exclaimed. This was a neighborhood pleasan try, b.it Lucretia's mind was on Horatio's narrow escape from matri- j motiy, aud she let it slip by unappre ciated. "It was this way: nobody but Horatio Mixer could 've doue it. Laud, no! But Horatio's equal to , anything absent-minded under the light of the moon! He and Cicely concluded to get to the parson's and gr"-, spliced. Cicely'd got all her fix ings ready, and there didn't ssem any use putting it oft' any longer. So Horatio harnessed up. It was a good two miles to the parson's. They •tavted along about two o'clock, so as to get there betwixt hay and grass, so to speak." "Wall? Well, Lucretia?" "'Twarn't well," chuckled Lucretia, aufeeliugly. "Horatio's unlucky star rose early that day and soared! I calculate 'twas right up overhead by the time they got to the postotHce. Cicely said she guessed they might as well stop and get the mail—poor Cicely! —as 'twas weekly paper day. So Horatio went in and shut the door of matrimony behind him. Cicely * heard it slain, but she didn't realize what it meant. She set out there holding Horatio's horse and waiting. She waited two mortal hours!" "Lucretia!" "Two—mortal—hours. Theu Cicely she climbed over the wheel aud went home. The horse kept on waiting— land, he'd have waited till crack of doomsday! He was acquainted with Horatio." "But Horatio, Lucretia?" "Horatio? That's what I say! Well, you see he'd run across Hannibal Bin ney, and that reminded him of Hannibal's yoke of steers. He'd been planning, off and ou, to swap his mowing machine for them. They got arguing, and argued themselves out of the back door, across lots, to Hauni bal's. It was two hours or so later that Horatio came back, towing the steers. He hitched them on behind his wagon and climbed in, as self-con gratulating as you please. He was real tickled. "Some of the neighbors were out on tho lounging seats,and they spread it round what Horatio did next It made a good story, after they'd found oat about Cicelr. Horatio took ud tho reins, looking kind of puzzled, thoy said: 'Warn't there something else I was going to do?' he ruminated, out loud. 'Seems to me there was au errand. Now where was I going to from here?' "He scratched his head consider able and then he looked relieved. " 'The parsonage! That's it! I was going to the parsonage on an errand. Get up, Molly!' and he rode away, with those two steers capering along —he'd forgot them!" Lucretia's bright bits of patchwork drifted to the floor in a rainbow stream. She glanced across at Polemia, and began to laugh again. "Land!" she gasped. "Land!" echoed Polemia. "Well?' " 'Well!' I'm glad you think so. You're the only oue! What do you suppose that muu did then?" "Went to the parsonage and— and—" But imagination faileJ. "That's just what he did! Went to the parsonage—and—and set there ic his wagon, with them steers gaspiug behind, trying to remember what his errand was! Well, after a spell ol racking, he—remembered. I guess there's where we'd better draw th« curtail), my dears. The sun's got be hind the meeting-house, and it's time to b'ile the kettle for supper." And Lucretia went out and left hei guests sympathiziug with pool Horatio, "Didu't Cicely ever forgive him, Lucretia?" Polemia went to the dooi to call out. Lucretia's voice came back to them plaintive with the softening effect o: distance. "Cicely? No, she didn't She said she'd find a man that could get as far as the parson's front door She said if ever she died, Horatic Mixer'd forget to bury her. Pooi Cicely!" "Poor Cicely!" Polemia echoed, but her heart was with Horatio.— Youth's Companion. THE THUNDERBOLT'S CRASH. An Up-to-IJate Romance at the Nationa Capital. "Do not be angry with me, father,' pleaded the beautitul young girl ic the striped shirt waist. "1 know 1 am your ouly daughter, and all that, and for many years you have beeu both fa'her and mother to me, but you ask me what is impossible." "Then you have come to defy me?' sternly demanded Monas Moneybags, as a scowl darkened bis face. "Not to defy you, father, but to ask you to be reasonable. You desire me to marry Henry White because he once jerked you out of the way of a trolley car." "I do. He is a jerky young man, and I want him for a son-in-law." "But, think, father. He is simply a clerk and his salary is about sl7 per week." "I know, but I have promised him your baud. Any time yon are out of soap and pins you'll find me ready to chip in." "I cannot do it, father," said the daughter, as she looked into the glass to see if the powder was all wiped off her chiu, "1 love Count Kolinsky, and if I caunot marry him I will never, never wed. He is a man of millions, aud as his wife I can have every wish gratified." "Daughter, do you forget that I am your father?" "I do not—but—but " "You will marry Heury White. But for him I should now be buried." "father, I won't do it!" "Girl!" hissed tho father, "I am worth $9,000,00i). I should have left it all to you. Now you do not get a cent. Here is a new will which leaves every dollar to charity. I will sigu it anil then drive you out to do second work for a living. Behold!" But as he drew the will toward him and dipped his pen into the ink, the nine weeks'drought which had hovered over Maryland .and Virginia and burned the crops to tinder was sud denly broken. There was a flash of lightning—a crash of thuuder—a sudden downpour, and as the girl looked around at her father she found him dead. A hunk of thunderbolt weighing 51 pounds 5 ounces had hit him on the jaw and knocked him out with the new will unsigned. Two weeks later she became Count ess of Kolinsky, and on her marriage day the jerky Henry White was sun stroked, and died without recognizing his washerwoman.—Washington Post Cat* on Ocean Llnem. Every large ocean liner carrying passengers always has on board from six to ten cats, these being appor tioned to various parts of the ship, as well as appearing on the vessel's books as regards the rations they draw. And, eveu beyond this, on most of the great liners, particular employes are instructed to feed daily as a part of their duties certain cats in their part of the ship. And there is pro motion for pussy as well, for any cat that is particularly amiable, clever and inte v esting is permitted to enjoy the run of the first or second or third class saloons, according to the popular vote. In this way certain of the first class saloon pussies have become quite celebrated, especially ou the long voyage boats that goto India and Australia, and the stewards of the various classes are quite commonly eager to push their own favorite cat into first place. Of course, savß Tit- Bits, there are amazing favorites with the staff of the ship that are fine hunters aud do not seek "society." When the ship is in port a certain man has the duty of feeding the cats at regular hours, and of entering the rations in a book, but every cat on the ship that has been long there seems to wait with eagerness for, and to recognize at once the professional rat j catcher who always goes to work iu the hold of every passenger liner ' when it comes to dock, and who li v *s I by ridding ships of rats. [FOR FARM AND GARDEN! ! Harrowing Sod Land. ' To obtain the most satisfactory re- ' suits in harrowing a piece of newly ' turue.l sod ground, where the plow ing is a lap furrow, it should be bar- 1 rowed the same way as the plowing. ] If the plow has left the sod kinked up < iu places, or the sod does not lie down 1 as flat and close as it should, it will i pay togo over the whole surface with i a field roller. This not only presses 1 the uneven surface down smoothly, but leaves the ground in better shape i with once harrowing than if harrowed 1 twice without rolling. 1 t t Energy of Been. Indefatigable industry, energy and j 1 perseverance are the peculiar charac teristics of the honey bees. They 1 begin their life work at birth in caring 1 for and nursing young larvee, and at 1 about 16 days old they become honey ' and pollen gatherers, and during the j honey harvest, iu the early dawn, ; when the balance of God's creation i are asleep, they sally forth on then daily mission, and when evening's twi light has cast its sombre mantle over nature's face they may be seen return ing laden with sweats which, but for their unequalled energy, would be forever lost. They fear not the sun's ; scorchiug rays and regard not the rain nor the storm. They deserve a nice house and a clean yard, and they will provide abundantly for themselves and a surplus for their owner if treated fairly. Why Incubator Chick* Die. At the Fhode Island station careful investigation has been made of the cause of death of young iucnbator chickens. The total number of dead chickens examined during the spring and summer of 1800 was 826. It was alleged that nbout one-third of the chicks had been more or less in jured by uneven lieat during incuba tion. Another common cause of | trouble was in overcrowding of brooders, resultiug in death by suffo- j cation, trampling, etc. Tuberculosis was found to be very prevalent and 15 per cent, of the chickens were more or less affected. For guarding against this disease, it is recommended to gue the interior of the brooders all the sun and air possible on pleasant days. Bowel troubles were a common cause of death. Feeding should be as nearly i as the time of tho attendant lenders profitable a continuous operation, but by no means a continuous gorge. Sometimes too much animal food is given, but in moderate quantities animal food results in rapid growth. Lack of animal food sometimes causes diseases of tho liver and gall bladder. The Dnfttructton of Woe In. There are two classes of weeds those that come from seeds and those which are propagated principally by means of their roots. Weeds which spriug up from see ls can be destroyed by successfully bringing the seeds in the soil to the surface, where they germinate. The seeds of some weeds have great vitality and remain iu the soil for years. Some are inclosed iu clods and retained for other seasons, but when the clods are broken and the weed seeds exposed ti warmth near the surface they are put out of exist ence by the harrow as soon as they germiuate, for which reason it is im possible to clear a piece of laud from weeds in a season, unless every clod is pulverized. The oft-repeated in quiry, "From whence come the weeds?" may be answered, "From tho clods." The weeds that spriug from roots are cut up, checked and prevented from growing by frequent cultivation, because they caunot exist for a great length of time if not per mitted to grow. If no leaves are al lowed on such plants they perish from suffocation, because they breathe through the agency of the leaves. The advantages derived by the soil iu ' the work of weed destructiou reduces the cost of the warfare on the weeds, for every time the harrow or cultivator is use 1 the manure is more intimately mixed with the soil, more clods are broken, a greater proportion of plant food is ottered to the roots, the loss of moisture is lessened, aud the ca- ' pacity of the plants of the crop to se cure more feed is increased. The cost of the destruction of weeds Bhould not be charged to the accounts of a single year ouly, as thorough work during a season may obliterate the weeds entirely or so reduce their j number as to make the cost of their destructiou during the succeeding ! years but a trifle.—Philadelphia Record. Thinning Tree Fruits. Thinning tree fruits has been prac ticed for a good many years, yet few fruit growers are in favor of it, if we may judge by the number that do not do it. The fact, however, that the most successful orchardists do thiu and that they attribute much of their success to it is a strong argument in its favor. Some of the growers along the Hudson river were thinning their apple crops twenty years ago, and, as a result, got a good yield of beautiful fruit nearly every year. The most 1 qoted peach grower iu Michigau has his peaches thinned every year aud the bill for the work is considerable. This last is the reason that thinning is j not more widely practiced. Men I heeitato to let goof the money that the work calls tor. Compared with the benefits received tbt cost i3 slight, and may be counted - AS part of a permanent investment For trees that have a tendency to j overbear there is no better treatment, ; and some of the American apples, pears, peaches aud eveu plums liuv6 this bad habit. Thinning tkd fruit j from the beginning of the tree's ex istence get 3 it into the habit of bear ing about the same amount of fruit each year and gives a double advan tage—that of haviug fruit iu the years when others have uone and iu pro longing the life of the tree and in creasing the number of crops it re turns in its lifetime. The writer has seen pear trees so loaded with fruit that each individual pear was below medium iu size aud the limbs of the tree had to be propped to keep them from breaking. Higher up in the tree great limbs were hang ing lifeless, having beeu broken by the weight of fruit in previous years. He could but think how much better it would have been to have thinned this fruit by three-fourths, that the tree might have been saved mutila tion aud the market have received a pear that would have attracted at tention. A man can thin fruit very rapidly as he merely passes his hand along the limb pinching off oue after another of the fruits and permitting them to drop. The cost will be generally fonud to be less than might be ex pected. Orchardists will do well to give this jr.ictice a fair trial—Farm, Field aud Fireside. Utilizing Springs and ISrooks. In case* where there are springs, and small brooks near a homestead, advantage should always be takeu of them for watering stock, forming ice and fiih pouds, and supplying cool water for the milk and butter dairy. Also for cooling aud keeping lresh meats, cooked vegetables, etc., in hot weather. Clear water, flowing iu a perennial brook or from a never failing spring, is the cheapest water supply known, and the homo that has such an appendage near by is worth certainly a hundred dollars more than a like farm without it. It saves well digging and watering troughs, draw ing and carrying water; enables the owner to ha\e a series of small pouds, where he can raise fish and save ice; and there is no better locution for a few scuppernong and other grape vines for the family supply of grape 3 from August to October, thau tho sandy, mellow I auks of such a stream. Cool spriug water, flowiug through a latticed or wire-netted (lairyhouse, is just the thing for keeping meats, cooked provisions, butter or milk sweet and nice iu summer time. The water of a spring may be con ducted, first, through a series of shallow basins or troughs for setting milk and butter pans, vegetable dishes, etc., so that tho water would bo con stantly flowing around and from them in the dairyhouse; thence into a small pond, where carp, trout or pike could be grown, and around the sides of which grapevines might bo set aud trained to trellis or I ar; from theuce to another small lake for ducks aud geese; and perhaps, if descent aud space permitted, iuto a third pond, where osier willow,sweet aud coopers' flag aud other desirable water-loving and valuable plants might be grown. Perhaps if there was much level ground near the stream —soil fit for gardeu crops or corn or any farm crop, or for pecan or othor nut trees —tlie little farm brook might bo turned and made to flow liithor and thither iu a way to irrigate large plots of soi', where the crispest and sweot est vegetables could be grown and a never-failing supply of water to be given to many things that, too often, fail and languish on the upland for lack of moisture. Keep up tho Summer Milk. A very large share of Vermont farmers are dairymen. Every one of them lias a bai u more or less tfell equipped for the winter feediug of his stock. They all labor iu summer, sowing, cultivating and harvesting crops for winter use. A large share of taem carry, to all intents and pur poses, dry cows only iu the winter, working hard all summer simply to keep the cows alive during the winter, while they are bringiug in little or no income. These same men, however, often take no thought of means of summer feediug of cows. They depend solely upon the pastures. It happens all too frequently, however, that the pastures dry up anil the cows shrink seriously iu their milk flow. It is a difficult thing to tide backward. A cow once shrunk in milk seldom regains her former yield, and then with difficulty. It seems the part of wisdom for the farmers to divert some of the energy which they now devote to the growing of food for the maintenance of dry cows to the growing of food for keep ing up the ln'lk flow during the sum mer. The larger use of soiling crops, such as oats and peas, Hungarian, rowen and tiie like, is well worth while. Considerable amounts 11117 ' )0 grown without very great expendi ture of time or money, aud they are excellently well adapted to help out a short or dry pasture. There i j , perhaps, nothing better for this purpose than silag.'. It has beeu very thoroughly demonstrated that » pound of digestible dry matter can be placed in the cow's manger by way of the silo cheaper than in auy other mauuer. The silo capacity of a dairy farm should be made large euough, in my judgment, to euable one to use silage all the tima The silo intended for summer use, how ever, should be deap and with a rela tively small surface area, to avo'id what otherwise might prove to be large losses owing to fermentation. The stave silo is now coming rapidly into vogue, and is proving so very ; useful for most purpo;e% an l is so readily put up and comparatively so inexpensive for its tonnage capacity, j that it is to l>e hoped that the number ; of silos iu Vermont will rapidly in crease in the near future.—Director |J. H. Hills, Vermont Experiment I Station, iu Field and Farm. SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. There are Ave counties in North and South Carolina that spin more cotton than they raise. Th j total number oi bales spun is 395,000 and of Lalea raised 18O,00iX The Russian agricultural depart ment has recently discovered in Kirghiz Steppa on the eastern shore of tho Caspiau sea immense naphtha springs of a quality which is said to be equal to the best American naphtha. The hydraulic mining pits in Cali fornia materially changed the land scape in many places. The pit of a hydraulic mine in Nevada county, Cal., which was washed out some 50 years ago, is again covered with a growth of pine and other trees, and patches of brush again dot the once verdureless ■"lopes. A special report of the agricultural department tells about a new use to which skimmed milk is being devoted. By a process of dedication the caseiu of the milk is reduced to a dry state, and it can then be molded into any desired form, colored, etc., after the manner of celluloil. The new prod uct can be adapted.to the mauufac ture of billiard balls, oilcloth, book bindings, paper sizing, eto., and skimmed milk being practically a waste product in many sections the material ought to be inexpensive. Folds of rock, with allied phenom ena, are reproduced for the instruc tion of geological students by a novel apparatus devised by Professor G. A. Lebour of the Durham College of Sci ence. Two parallel wooden rollers, about four inches in diameter, are mounted about three feet apart, and are provided with gears and a crank to rotate them slowly in opposite directions. A sheet of rubber is lirmly attached to both rollers. The rubber is stretched by rotating the rollers, when layers of cloth, clay or paste are laid ou it, and on reversing the rotation the folds are shown grad ually growing with the contraction. At the last annual meeting of the Geological Society of America, Pro fessor 112. C. Russell called attention to tho recent discovery that many of the swamps and lakes in the southern peu iusula of Michigan are rich in calca reous marl, suitable for making Port land cement. Although partly com posed of shells, the Michigan marl is princpally a chemical precipitate which is still being formed. The precise method of its formation is not yet understood. The supply is practically inexhaustible. Large cement works have lately been constructed, others are in contemplation, and Professor Russell says that Michigan can easily take a ieadiug place in that industry. An interesting experiment was car ried on during the year just passed by Sir W. Thiseltou-Dyer, who tried to ascertain the effect of exposing seeds to a temperature of 330 degrees centi grade, or the temperaturo of liquid hydrogen. The seeds selected were mustard, peas, vegetable marrow, musk (for its extremely small size), wheat, and barley, and the samples used in the experiments were of the best quality, selected by expert seeds men. The seeds wore then sent to Professor Dewar, who in the first instance sealed them in glass tubes, cooled them first iu liquid air, and then transferred thein to the hydro gen, where they remained for more than an hour. The seeds were then planted and germinated as usual. Iu another experiment seeds were im mersed in liquid hydrogen for six hours, being actually soaked iu the liquid, and when planted germinated | without showiug the slightest effect o) | the treatrneut to which they had beer subjected. The Sunfiml Ant. The native Brazilian, far removeo as he usually is from doctors and sur geons, depends upon a little ant tc sew up his wounds when he is slashed or scratched. This odd creature ia called the surgical ant, from the use to which it is put. The ant has two strong nippers OD his head. They are his weapons foi battle or forage. When a Brazilian has cut himself, for example, he picks up an ant, presses tho nippers against the wound, one on each Bide, and then gives the bug a squeeze. The indignant insect snaps his nippers together, piercing the flesh and bringing the lacerated parts close together. The Brazilian at that moment gives the aut's body a jerk and away it flies, leaving the uippc-rs embedded in the flesh. To be sure that kills the aut, but he has served his most useful purpose in life. The operation is repeated until the wound is sewed up neatly and thor oughly.—St. Louis Post-l)ispatcli. Spnech lle«torod h.v Klcctrie Shock. H. T. Steffev, a venerable wagon maker of Rising Fawn, Ga., was stricken with parulysis 10 years ago, and lost his power of speech. The other day Mr. Steffey was called upou to do some work which involved the handling of electrical apparatus, and received, through accident, quite a severe shock. Great was his surprise to find that the electrical stroke had restored his speech. At first his ut terances were imperfect, bat they continued improving, so that now he has completely regained his voice.- Chattanooga (Tenn.) Times. New Shoe r»«tening. Shoes can be rapidly fastened ou the feet by a new lacing device, which has a series of leather or cloth loops attached alternately to either edge of the upper, with a single stroug cord threaded through the loops to draw them into a straight line when th» . string is tiffbtnued Some Desirable Stamps. Nothing in a small way is moro suggestive of the change that has taken place in the fortune of war, and iu particular of the fortune of the Orange Free State, than the postage stamps bornci by the latest mail-letters from Bloemfontein. These stamps will not improbably be much sought after by philatelists. Three varieties to hand are respectively of the values of "half-penny," "een-Denny," "zes pence" (sixpence), and are colored light orange, heliotrope, and light blue. All alike bear the tigare of a tree, whose symbolic meaning is accentuated by the word "vrij" (freely) above it, being part of the legend "Orange Vrij Staat." All this is familiar enough. What, however, makes the little colored squares in teresting is the evidence they bear of the British occupation. Immediately beneath the "vrij" of the Taal in scription are stamped in black letters "V. B. I." And"V. E. I. 'just now to the Free Stater means a very dif ferent thing from "vrij." —London Daily News. The Romance Spoiled. A story has been going the rounds that a secret chamber containing a skull and crumbling bones had been found in the historic old Virginia mansion known as Lower Brandon. The secret chamber was discovered indeed by Miss Gulie Harrison, daughter of the present mistress of Brandon; but, according to the young lady herself, as quoted by a Rich mond correspondent of the Baltimore Sun, gruesome remains of poor hu manity alleged to have been found existed only in the vivid imagination of some romancer. The floor of the secret closet was covered with the dust of ages, but was empty of else. As to the use to which this myste rious room was put or its purposenone of those acquainted with its history know. It was possibly constructed for the uuromantic but highly practi cable purpose of concealing the silver ware and other valuables of the early owners of Brandon. A Garden on Shipboard* When Captain Taylor, of the Ameri can ship Kenilworth, arrived in Phila delphia from Leith, Scotland, on a recent trip and opened her hatches he was amazed to see what was appar ently a green and growing field of grain, extending the entire length of the vessel. Then he remembered that the Kenilworth had carried from San Francisco to Leith a cargo of Cali fornia barley. When she left Leith considerable ballast in the shape of loose earth was dumped into her hold to give her the necessary stiffening lor ber transatlantic run. During the passage, which occupied over a month, the loose grain which clung to the ves sel's side dropped down into the earth and sprouted. The barley was sev eral inches high, and the hold inside as green as a park hillside.—Philadel phia Record. The Sargent Flesh-Eater Alive. The United States possesses at Ka diak Island, on the southeast coast ot Alaska, a few living specimens of the largest carnivorous animal now in the world—a monster bear—which has not at any timo been brought into captiv ity. Professor Langley has been try ing for two years to obtain live speci mens of this and other great mam mals of Alaska, for the National Zoo logical Park, in the hope of preserv ing the species. What Shall Wo Have For Dessert! l'lils question arises In the family daily. Let us answer It to-day. Try Joll-O, a delicious anoxes, $2.40, booklet fre*». Wri*e EUREKA CHEMICAL CU. La Crosse, Wb. "«2 } Thompson's EyoWator