NEW YORK' FASHIONS. 1 ij Designs For Costumes That Have Be $J come Popular in the Metropolis. Nhw Your Cirr (Special). Tho ewest head-dresses adil not height, bat breadth to tbe wearer. In oonse qaenoe, they are not so generally be- Mm 0k. SMART TIKAD llRKSKS. coining, but a change is what fashion in ever after, evea if it bo a change for the worse. The upstanding sprig of tuaideukair aul ivyiugroeu velvet, so novel bnt a few week ago, uor Hud themselves displaced by the regu lation clnssio chaplet of ivy, such at bound tba head of the victor in tho Olympian games or the winner of the prize in a pooni-oontest. ltosa nnd geranium loaves also appear in this tame chaplet fashion, and one merit of the wreaths is that they may be worn with the hair dressed either in Grecian or up-to-date Parisian mode. The first figure in the cut shows the effect of this broad head-dress. Upon ing. Tho first is in cream ponge silk, with insertion and lace, and is worn over a colored silk; the other is in white silk trimmed with lace and ribbon. Mitten MeeTes. Mitten sleeves havo undergone sev eral interesting variations since last season. For instance, one of the new est mitten sleeves reaohos from the thumbs to elbows, nnd is fastened to the shoulder by a lattice work of vel vet ribbons. Another sluevo, that only the girls with perfect arms should attempt, reaches midway to the elbow. A second sleeve half oovers tho hnud and forearm. Upper and lower sleeves are commuted with a lattice work of velvet ribbon. Ou a perfect arm this sleeva is beautiful, but unless the el bow im dimpled and the upper and lower arm in perfect proportion, it is very ugly. Another pretty sloeve that is beiug used on many of the newest dinner gowns is lace on tho under side, the edges strapped together with narrow bauds of velvet ribbon, pulled through jeweled bnckles. vj yr-jR ''SB TWO WAYS OP WEARlNrt IHt OSPRKV. the very tall girls that seem to tower above the rest of as iu such numbers nowadays it is especially becoming. A ctiio, if less novel bead-dress has a airclet of plaited ribbon in any color to snit the costume, white preferred. The cirolet is finished with a small bow nnd ends and a single jeweled os trich tip iu white. This ornament may be worn so that the plumo rises directly in the front or at the side. It requires high hair, however. The Nwl in Millinery. Incongruity iu millinery has Ion,' ceased to cause surprise and nothing that the spring season davelopos may be oxpeoted to excite any special as tonishment, uo matter what tho mix tures, for certainly far and tnllo at'A as extreme as any (wo mixtures can be. Already there are toques made of chiubu, stripped with fancy satin straw braids in dirTorout colors, and (lowers are fast usurping the place of made up feathers. A large toque of snow white tulle trimmed with eider weiss blossoms and a largo bow and baud of black pauuo at one side, is one of the novelties. Gardening are one of the fuvorite flowers of tbe inomt it with the always favored violets. Tne latest huts, which, however, are nob really the spring models, have rather a high small round orowu enoirolod with cords or tuoks, and perhaps cov ered with a net work, hand made. Plaitings of tulle ou whioh chonillo in sewn like a cord are oue of the popu lar hat trimmings. Feather Fan Again. Large feather fans are once again be ing worn, though tbe smaller ones predominate. Fur Spring Millinery. A basic fact of importance iu tin millinery line is tbe probability, al most amounting to certaiuty, that tho new hats will be higher in price thau ever, owing to the increased cost of PARTY DRESSES FOR OIHLS. Many beads -appear dressed for evening with no other ornament than single long osproy in tbe dominant color of the costume, set at oue Hide an 1 curving over the middle coil of hair most gracefully. Tbe osproy starts from a tiny rosette in bebe rib bon the same color as tbe osprey, or sometimes a jeweled clasp or buoklo holds the plume iu place. This is one of the most eft'eolive because most simple modes of adorning coiffure. To give that breadth to the coiffure that tbe latest dictates decree, the osprey is set at oue side of tbe coil and extends out iustead of up. With the hair parted in front this way of dressing the head is a decided change from the long domiuant pompadour and its aigrette that towers straight aloft. Two l'ratiy Model. Children aro keenly sensitive on the subject of their attire and its fashion, but, luckily for them, they bare oue favor in common with meu: tbeir frocks do not go out of style quickly. Although many of tbe models for their dresses follow closely those of their elders, yet they never go to the same extremes, consequently when the peudiilum swings back it has not so fur to go uud does not hurry mad ly. When we wore balloons for sleeves tbey wore large ones, of oourse, bnt not monsters, consequent ly, while we had to cut ours down about once a mouth to keep puce with Dume l'Vshiou, theirs were some time iu becoming pusse. And tbe tight aleeves, tliauk their happy little stars, they can never have iu entire discom fort, for any healthy child who took tbe proper amount of exercise would wear out a pair of the sleeves, whioh . lo not allow the arm to be raised, in about Ave .Sours, The party dress is just as important, if not quite bo elaborate, to Little Hister as it is to Big Bister. The double-column sketch shows two pretty models, which cun readily be utilized also iu tbe summer dresaiual:- everythiug employed iu their making. That flowers ure to prevail in hat trimming seems assured. Koine Paris models are made wholly of the smaller blossoms. A Spauish turbau, for iu stance, is all of violets, with thu stems drawn over the edges to form i facing. Tbe crown is of violet loaves with a drapery of lace around it. T 1 1 brim is wide iu front ami narrow at tbe brink . OHtrich plumes aro to bo .used in combination with flowers of the.larger varieties. A toque of while tulle, with crown of creamy Irish lace, ban lace of the same design twined in thu brim, which is caught back at the left front by a knot of duhliu purple panne velvet, held by a rhiuestone orna ment. From uuder this knot a singlo white ostrich plume sweeps over the left side of the crown to the back. . - A Itenlnlinlug Abandoned Farm. A farmor in Taxton, Worcester County, Mass., who settled upon an abandoned farm about two years ago, is reported to have raised on eight acres this year 7500 bushols of pota toes, 25,000 cucumbers the latter from a singlo acre 830 barrols of cabbages, 700 bushels of tomatoes, 350 barrels of carrots, 000 bushels ot parsnips, 1100 bushels of turnips, 400 bushels of boets nnd 1100 heads of cauliflower, besides squashes and some other truck ad libitum, and all the vegetables used by the family. Of course it is presumed that those pro ducts wero marketed nt a profit, and, that being tho case, it is easy to seo why many of New England's aban doned farms are being reclaimed. lioston Cultivator. Growing Tiirnlm. Wo havo never seen a crop of 1000 bushels of turnips grown ou an acre, though wo saw one field that came very near it, exceeding MOO bushels, if wo remember rightly, but at n farm ers' institute in New Brunswick one speaker told how he succeeded in growing 10U0 buthels per acre, lie took a poor piece of ground in tho fall, and aftor be had plowed it he put ou thirty tons of manure to tbe aero and harrowed it in. lie wants no manure plowed in unless it is to be plowed up again iu the spring, harrow lightly and furrowed two feet apart about two inches deop. Iu the lur rows he strewed -50 pounds of super phosphate to tho acre. He uses two pounds of specially selected turnip seed to the acre. When they aro two inches high ho thins them to eighteen inches apart. After this he keeps the horse cultivator running two or three times a week botwoon tho rows. As ho grows them principally as a succulent winter food for his stock, ho sows early, that they may havo timo to grow. When we used to grow them we gave greater distanco between the rows and did not sow thorn until July, and most of them grew as large as dealers cared to have them for table use, while the small and the very large were saved for tho stock. When we could sell the best at fifty couts a bushel or more wo thought it was more than they were worth for stock feeding. fUILOIl FOR SPIUNlJ WK.tl!. Under the brim, at tne light, near tho back, is u olnster of crushed vet vet roses iu dahlia shade", Kailor hatJ will be more tho ra'b than over. Fxcil to a Flnlnli. Never before in tho history of the trade has there been so wide a margin between half-fat aud prime, ripe beeves as exists at' present. The situation offers every inducement for feeders to make their cattle fat, and ou the other hand the wide range in value plainly points to tho penalty that must he paid by those who disregard the law of supply and demaud and persist in crowding half-ripo cattle ou a market already ovor-supphoil with that class. Many of the unlinisbed cattle marketed during tbe past few weeks would with sixty to ninety dayB' longer feed havo brought sevouty-ffvo cents to $1 mora per hundred pounds, whioh would be almost all clear profit, as tho increase in weight would nearly offset tho corn and labor. Wbilo we do not antici pate any furthor advance, except for a few fancy holiday cattle, we do look for a good steady demaud and satis factory prioes for well-futtened cattle for an indefinite period. Whore a man is feeding a considerable number of cattle it is an excollcut plau to keep topping out the bunch and sending iu a load or two of tho fattest as fast as they are ready. This not only divides the risk and gives the cattle left be hind a better chaune to mature but also avoids the dead loss ot holding ripe cattle, as there is no profit in feeding a steer after be is ready for market. It is poor policy to hold a. big drove of cattle simply because there is a light end of one or two loads that is not finished. Tbe feedor who carefully watches bis drove and ships the fattest steers as fast as ripe aud then pushes tho others along to tbe same condition is, other things being equal, the successful one. Kxhnuiteil Holli, Professor L. II. Bailey, of Cornell University Experiment Station; says that impoverished soils are usually those that have beeu neglected. Not having been tilled they have beoome cloddy, hard and foul. They may lack in humus, whioh can be reme died by stable manure or plowing under green crops, or they may lack some one of the three important fer tilising elements. An average ot thirty-four analyses of soil shows that an acre ot laud may contain in eight inohes of tbe surface soil 3217 pounds of nitrogen, !WU0 pounds of phosphoric acid aud 17,597 pounds of potash, beside what may be iu stones and gravel which will not pass through messes one-fifth of uu iuoh square. This would beeuough to grow abcut 200 ordinary crops if it was all avail able. It becomes so by action of what he calls "film water," thai is the water adhering to tbe smaller particles of soil, if this water mingles with the humus to develop humio acid. But this water must be drained riowu through the surface soil to the water bed below, that the air may penetrate the soil. If it does not, it absorbs heat, evaporates and leaves the laud cold. When tbe water drains off and tbe surface is well tilled it becomes warm, and (be water is drawn up by capillary attraction, thus preventing loss by drought as well as brings back the dissolved fertilizing elements to the surface or near it, where the plant roots can find them, Ou many soils these two items of drainage and till age are more needed than fertilizers though most eil'eotuul when the soil is made light or porous and warm by the .addition of humus or vegetable mutter. , Kvneialie Fit I'reveuts Egg Forinntlnn In some way exoessive fat destroys the breeding power ot animals, as is well known by tbe meu that put lliem iu what is culled show condition. Fat ill the heu secies to destroy not only the power of elaborating eggs, but also the power of the organs to even produce the embryo ot the eggs. Kill u heu that is not tut aud, though she ut not be laying eggs at the time UikO n ii iu bur a ot euiiiryouio eggs will be found, tioinotimes tuese embryonic t ggs remain undeveloped for a very oij time, Knowing that the organs l-ttw produce theui are busy a long time before tho organs that develop tbe eggs have begun work. Evidently the latter require periods of rest be tween every clntoh of eggs. Bnt a very fat hen when killed shows not tho slightest trace of these em bryonic eggs. - The lunation to oven produce the germs seems to have de parted. Tho writor has killed hens that be did not think too fat to lay and has found them in this condition, aud that, too, nt a season whan other hens wero laying vigorously. At just what stnge of fatness the hen is rendered impotent to produce egg science has not yet determiuod, or whether this stage varies in the lions of different ages. It is without doubt trne that many hens are kept for years at a total loss as to cost of keeping, for certainly mauy do not lay an egjf from one year's end to another. Tbero may be other elements outer ing into the question that wo do not yet understand, and it may bo that other things beside excessive fat pre vent egg formal ion and dovolopment. But with tho limited light we now havo on the Mibject it is probable that the best way to keep a flock culled down to the actual layers is to keep the fat hens killod off. This leads to the romark that sons hsus got fat under any system of feeding. Tbe writer has been surprised whon food ing a ration balanced against fat to find here and there a heu laying on fat and ceasing to lay eggs. Evidently fowls show tho samo characteristics as breeds of larger live stock the ability with some to develop size and fat at the oxpeuso of every other func tion. I'lci For I lie Dairy I' arm it. The best and most profitable way of disposing of ttkim milk and buttermilk s to feed them to pigs. Whore but ter is made extensively, or even on a small scale, there is opportunity for keeping pigs at a very slight cost. If the required number are not raised upon tho farm, ttiey may be purchased at six weeks old, or at weaning time. For a few weeks at least after weaning they will thrive best on sweet skim milk. Buttermilk is nlso good, but should not be fed undiluted, or scours may result. With plenty of warmod milk combined with brau, shorts or other ground feed of which corn should form but a small portion, if any pasture if convenient, and pure water at all times, pigs which have re ceived good care through tho mother previous to weaning them will grow to thrifty maturity. The practice of keeping over pigs or shotes until a year old or more is al most if not quite out of date. Quick returns make the profit in raising hogs for market. It must be an exceptional case which would warrant keeping them longer thau six to eight months. As fast as tbe pigs of one lot are fattened, and sold, othorB should be ready to' take the places of those dis posed of. It is far better, in the writer's estimation, which is based upon considerable experieuco, to feed milk to pigs rather than to calves, ex cept iu tbe case ot heifers or uu ex ceptionally fine male, which it might be desirable to raise. A pig at six months will bring nearly as much as a stoer at three times that age. At pres ent prices of fat cattle, no farmer can afford to raise them for beef, while in six months the pig will be in prime conditiou for sale and return a good profit. The hog is one of tho most profita ble animals the farmer has. Consuming as' it does the refuse of which uo other disposal could well be made upon tbe farm, looked upon as the lowest of domestic an imals, doomod too often to exist iu filthy quarters and receive only the slightest attention as to material com forts, yet tbe pig repays his owner tenfold profit for his keeping. While pigs undoubtedly thrive better when given u liberal supply of sweet skim milk for a time after weaning, they will do fairly well without it, if fed upon bran aud middlings made into a slop with water. Whey from cheese factories while sweet is better than water for this purpose, but is not available iu many localities. SUBSTITUTE FOR RUBBER THE CUM SUPPLY CETTING SHORT, ITS USES INCREASING. trical insulation. According to those who are interestod in it, it wilt answer as a substitute for rubber in many forms, besides having uses peculiarly its own. No information has been given as to its cost.- -Now York Bun. the Farm and flarden Note. Skim milk and Indian meal are very best food for pigs. Flat stones where abundant are the cheapest and best material for floor ing pigpens. Probably the best lice exterminator for poultry is a good dust box filled with oommon road dust. Potash is tho chief fertilizer to bo applied to fruit trees, particularly af ter they come into bearing. A pound of meat scraps to twonty- five hens is about tho right propor tion. Feed every other day. Often when pullets are not laying, a ration of meat twice a week at this timo of year will start them at work. Iu most cases, it is crowding that makes hens get into the feed trough. Make tho trough long and give them plenty of room. Hoots and straw are very deficient iu albuminous material, consequently where a little oil cake or pea meal is' added to a diot ot this kind excellent results are reported. In arranging a pigpen, give spooiul attention to the construction, so that it can be eusily cleaned aud supplied with fresh bedding. A pigpen should be cloaued out every day. There is every reason to believe that in order to have good luyers it is necessary to havo good laying stock. This is the rulo applied to cows, horses, sheep and hogs, so why should it not apply to tbe poultry as well. Draft horses should rarely be driven faster than a walk iu taking exercise. They require much less than road sters or running horses. No draft horses should have less than five or six miles a day and roadsters can eus ily go to six to ten miles. The moulting period is one that all poultry have to go through, aud at this time tbey should receive a littl more attention than is generally given. Keep them out of draughts aud feed oily food, such as sunflower seeds nnd liuueod oilmeal, and you will find it a great help to tbe birds. Boosters in the majority of oases are of no use to tun farmer, and should he have any arouud that are of uo value as breeders, the best thing he can do is to turn them into money. The heus will lay just us well, if not better, without them, though theeggs are useless for hutching purposes. Paper Fonml to Urn a Good Euballtnta For Home Klnnlrlo IntnUtlnc t'nrpoias 'Another New ftlnterlnl M'l ot Lin seed or Castor Oil BuceenRfu!. " The increasing nsos for India rnb her and gntta percha and the fact that the supplies of these gums do not in crease in like proportion and oven threaten to become smaller in a few years unless extraordinary means aro taken to keep them up, have led to maDy attempts on the part ot invon tors'to produce some substitute which would fill their place at least tor somo important commercial uses. The re cent rapid extension of eleotrio instal lation with the ottondant call for insu lation of miles and milesof conductors lias emphasized the demand for rub ber and gutta percha substitutes for insulating purposes, and the proposi tion now bcijg actively agitated to extend tho great sea coble telegraph scrvico of the world by laying a sub marine cable from the United States to the Philippines makes the quostiou of immediate interest, Tho consumption of rubbor is esti mated at fiO.OOO tons a year. The finest quality as well ns tho largest quantity sent from any oue region, comes from tho Para district in Brazil and tbe recont high prices aud great demand for the cxtra-elastio sorts for bicycle, wagon and automobile tires have so stimulated the work of the Brazilian rubber gatherers that in 181)8 tbe exports from Para reuched about 25,000 tons, as against 22,000 tho year before. r.eports from that district indicato a serious danger of exhausting the rubbor trees unless a systematic method is adopted of re planting, and considerable interest has been evinced in other parts of. tho world rewarding the possibility "f growiug rubber treos successfully, Experiments in this direction have recently attracted attention in Mox ico. No substitute which has yet appeared seems to offer success for those purposes which put the strength, durability aud elasticity of Para rub ber to their most severe tests, but considerable progress has been loado in providing substitutes of like quail tics for a number of other uses, and notably for that of electrical mania- ting. The Singapore rubber is tho variety best fitted for work of this sort aud the shipments of this do uot increase, aud in lS'JS amountod to only about 2G00 tos. The last At lantic cable took 500 tons of Singapore rubber to iasulate it and a Paoilio ca ble would tako a much larger amouut, In land purposes, such as tho many miles of cables which aro beiug laid for telephone, telegraph aud power purposes and which are iuoloscd in lead, paper has become the favorite insulator. For telephone purposes it is superior to all others because of its low solf-iuduction, which makes talk ing over a lino of paper insulated wire as easy as whispering into an adjaoent ear, while rubber aud gutta percha both have a deadening effect upon the sounds. Power cables, such as those which tho Third avenue road is uow layiug for its undor-trolley lines, are insulated with paper, but in this caso it is laid over the bundle of wires that form the conductor in a compact form, while tor the telephone and telegraph wires the paper is twisted lightly about them with air spaces loft among tne wires running the whole Ieugth of tho cables. With paper insulation it is imperative that water shall be ex eluded and all the cables in which it is used are leadeucasod and this waterproof covering is carried along unbroken to the cable heads and here, in turn, the covering is conuectc.l by soldering to watertight connections with the office wires. For submarine purposes paper could not be used. Ttio inventor who wished to find substitute for rubber aud guttapercha naturally turned toward other vegeta bio products for a bano and consider able success seems to havo been at tained by a number of clever men in this direction. Some timo ago, there was described in tho Suu a process by which linseed oil was turned into fair substitute for rubber, made capa ble of vulcanization and of taking the place of rubber for many uses. Tho unseeu on in tms process was pre pared by oxidization, changing its character just as it changes wheu it is applied to surfaces as paint. The principal point in this invention was the method ot oxidizing the oil thor oughly. This was accomplished by dipping bunches of tow into tho oil aud then exposing tbe oil thus subdi vided on the filaments of tow to the uotion of warm air. A large factory was built in Eugland to manufacture articles under tbe patents which cover this process. A later process, which has beeu de scribed recently, uses linsocd oil as a basis also, but treats it instead with nitrio acid. Tho product is called velvril. tt is composed of a mixture eti nitrated oil and mtro-eollulose Either linseed or castor oil may be used. The nitrated oil is prepared first and the nitro-ccllulose is added to this, A homogeneous mass is ob tained whose final qualities of hard ness and elasticity may bo altered by varying tne proportions of tho mix ture. The proportions which yield a product most closely resombliug Parn rubber are two pins of nitrated oi and ono pin mtro-oollulose. Castor oil is said to bo superior to linseed oil for this purpose. Advocates ot velvril declare tbatrtbis mixture has an elus ticity of twenty-five percent, and that its durability exposed to tho weather is superior to that of rubber. Sam pies in England have beeu exposed for three years, it is. said, aud still show but slight sigus of disiutegra tion. Velvril. it is said, can be worked and moulded under heat and pressure or it can be turned into a vsrnish by dissolving it in a suitable volatile sol vent. In using it for cable proteo tion, it may be applied in tbe form of thick paste, each coatiug being al lowed to dry before the application of the next, or it may be applied direcfty by the aid of heat and a pressure of fifteen tons to the square inch. may uiso ue used as rubbor is, upon tape windings. It is asserted that velvril is superior to vnlcauized rub ber when used ou copper, because it coutuins no sulphur, and henoe has no action on the corner. The use ot vo vril is not, however, confined to ele BARSED WIRE I.N THE WEST. What ttio Intrndnrtlon of Wire Fenoot ll'is Meant to Man nnd llensl. In tho Century magazine Mr. E. Hough, author of "The Story of thor Cowboy," tells of the introduction of that "fourfold abomination" which marked out the path of civilization iu tho far West: A tew years ago a vil'ager down in Illinois bent u bit of iron about a straud of fence wire, and noticed that his caltlo avoided It. Out of this idea grew a system of fencing whioh has preservod our pino forests a few decadei longer, but which brought to an end many decades earlier the glorious free days of tho open and un- fenced West. The great cattle ranges, over which roamed ono of the most independent populations oyer seen on earth, could never have been fenced by rails, or stone walls, or boards of pine. It was difficult enough for the spider-like genius of ndvaucing civilization to keep them fencod with the ever-ronowed web of tho fatal wire against whioh tho wild men of the early days rebelled so strenuously. Yet milo by mile, thousands of miles after thousands of miles, the cheap and easily spun web crawled out across tho West and held it hard and firm. You can never un coil the deadly web, neittier can you replace tbe victim whioh it strangled. Little more than a dozen years ago the writer was with a party hunting for buff.ilo calves iu tho tipper part of the Panhandle nt Texas, where we knew of a little herd still remaining of those great auimsls, even then con sidered virtually extinct. It was a weary and desolate loud, where be- tweeu water-holo and water-hole lay sixty or seventy miles of absolute desert. Not a ireo broko the endless monotony of the plains. Tho soil was liko flint. Tho sky had for months been guiltless of a drop of rain. It was a region so utterly un suitod for the habitation of mankind at these last few represeutatives of a passing raco of groat American ani mals had chosen it as thoir final place of refuge, thinking that perhaps there tbey woulc never again hear the sound of rifioshot or see airain the face ot mau. Yet one morning, as we faced thu sun of another waterless day, we came upon a lino of strong wiro fence, coming from where no man could tell, and running iu one unbroken line to the uttermost limits of our vision I It was no delusion, no miracle, no wonder of the wild mirage. It was an accursed foot. It bad no right there, on that free land, whore oven the wind had swopt for ages unfettered by so much as a leaf, or stem of straggling tree. As we marvelod and mutterod at this thing, wo saw, in tho red light of the east, a littlo moving band of great forms which we knew to be those of tbe buffalo. They saw ns also, and with the instinct of a generation of perse cution swept away at once in flight. Across their lino lay thts fourfold abomination, this corded barrier, this new thing, this infamy never before dreamed of on thesu free plains. CI o.io bunched, tho buffalo struck it with the force of a heavy locomotivo. and crushed through and over it as though they passod so many straws. Ah, there was a thing dramatic, ad inirablo, out there ou that faraway desertl It was the old West roudiug tho net of the rctiarius, casting aside the strands set for its undoing, and standing on unhiudored, free! See ing tho beauty of this spoctaclo, our ot roper, a cow-puueher born outbe old range, rose in his stirrups aud took off his hat to cheer tho buffalo as they fumbored on. For twenty panels tbo fenco lay flat, aud we rodo across it. Along its inner sido was a path woru inahes deep by the foet of count less antelopo, cut off by this tunoe from their ancient way to somo un known water-hole. No man of our party felt glad at this evidence of ap proachiug civilization, this fence thrusting out into the wild- land. Every man was partisan for the buf falo aud tbe antelope, uud exulted at this prostration ot their euemy, I hough knowing with sorrow how brief must bo their little victory. A Secret of l'rolltabln Travel. "The American' is wise," writes Edward Bok, in tho Ladies' Home Journal, "who going to Paris this year spends enough time iu the French capital to seo the Exposition, and tho beauties and spots of fragrant memories which the city unquestion ably possesses, but who then leave Paris behind and goes iuto those quaint, romautio aud gone-to-sleep old places with whioh France abouuds in the Balzao country, for example, where French life is still lived iu tho old, doligbtful way. This is tbe secret of profitable travel anywhere: to go about with tbe mind open uud recep tive: to judge people from tbe cou ditions which surround them: to get an impression of a nation not from tlu life whioh floats on the surface of its great centres, but from its own people living iu tbe heart of their own lands, iu their homes aud in their own way. Thus wo will see the real people of tho country wheroiu wo travel. But we cannot truly judge the English from what wo seo in London or the Freuch from tbo boulevards and oufes of Paris, auy more than a foreignei can judge tbe entire population of America merely from the people he aces in the city of Now York." 'HE SABBATH r INTERNATIONAL LESS;' for march! Ho Had l-:y Like a C'ut'i. Alonzo Bauin, fifty years of agp, who died on Friday near Huntington, V. Va., was known nil over that section ns tho "cat-eyed" man. Ho could soa clearly in tbe darkest night. Duriug tho duy, however, tho light oppressed him aud he could seo scarcely any thing. Tho pupils of Uuum's eyes were elliptical, aud had all tho other physical characteristics ot the oyos of tho oat. Ho did everything possible to conceal from strangers the ourious condition of his eyes, and hated the notoriety it brought him. Hometiiuilo Wooden Teetli. Albion, Ind., lias au economical genius in the person of James Hyde, Ho makes his own teetli out ot hick ory wood and holds them iu place with a wooden handle. Ho is able to ttr.t tho toughest uteuts, t,irk i., ti-s-oi 'J tie 4-1Ieinnry Verm,,, ,,f, ,r on tlia laj, I.,,Jt? Lihk.-aJ . si! Andrew S' i jpn' i Bnbjoeti Jean Mn .14- ary . COSHECTIKO nreth He wnnt I definitely enllsil John tho second tlinu. nn.l f 'i I ln,.u,l 21. "iiitoCnperiinuiir j Cnperimtim His homo,. WV His ministry for inorn'ti,, Lr t oallHil Ills own city (Mn- ns n cltlzmi He imM u, h. jd'z 17:21. His motlinr nnl i,.'i. ( wllh lllm. John 11:12. "r "' ' His II rut Halihnlli In - 0 F synagogue." This win i'mr turlon. JLuko 7:5. h,.', j n were often aonnn!t, wi'i-""1 Thny were the center, 0( .$.trs. inneciuni me. unif ( innn to eun upon uuy , sneak In the synng i-'ii uot unlikely Hint at t'ii, , what us it ml said ntNu til. it wns truth 1 1) it .. Whatever may Iiiivm hug -r" 22. "They were nn. mutter, manner, sjih it i His teaching. "1. At fi,. Wi7i tiillactn.il gifts. 1. Tin, Cti, trillions. 8. Ills nciunin; -man hnart. 4. His iliv.-! f Dlvihii law." "Anthori; ona oomuiiiitiiM i,v great striws ion Himo unto you," without an., "lie was, 1. Dlgnlll,.,!, J vincing. . ,0lll-t..in MnflltMu ' 11.1 i.eil. .. 1 dual life, their ruunnur ul1 1 nn unholy ninbltlnn,tlio(. frill unit not OoJ's glory, '.'.i-fas slst on tlio olwerviincit ', -V vented by men lllm ti,r " ilovo down to eturnil lnK born tho Impress of Mm i itlvi a.l. "A'mm with snin,i; I cl says he hail "a spirit of , and "cried out with h h.f-10' 4:13. Tnero has hpniimii.'l E garding this "uneln.-in tn:i Hint those who were il i, ( wero simply dlsonwc I ntv f V' I0 i ' I inr: -jcotl It t strong paroxysms Mvr Ices tl cannot ngreo with th'.ji a Insist tltnt.difll'v.ilt i Hand, yet real ileum T if.v 1" I ,,t V i;t;r it n nit and those d-Titm ! 'Thla conntrv nh.iim,1.il, ' oauso '.hoy were tlion it-lv. faPS" lielgUt .it impiety. Tlmr-?" under huavon morn wl-'i :) off 2. Tlmy were ad li.'lml t-'' ,,,, vita. i ...-ii .,,irii,. i,i. rem 'urimi out. "An nvll its depths whsu in co 24. "Ijiit US alone.-' Inc-e iloslros to bo let almi", k. s want to bo (llsturbinl wu, WiMmar tills cry tint iw. Jbes. tako to deal with nnolm irell sii"h as IntoinporniKe niil " What have wo to ilnm-J' Ing nt nil. Tliern Ik no e11 Christ and llallnl. "To ' th rtrlvs us from our ai)0i.ii1JB,ril place. " know Tne.'. ' I aa nse, liko the iipoiil.-xv. Christ! No, Christ fcfa'' now, and they know nin-p, " oue of God." Tho M'xsh ydW to destroy the kiug lom m John 8:S. I 25. "Jesus rnbnkflil lib. "y iloniro the testimony ot .1-1 Meslnhshlp. T hroiighi? V f Christ niivnr for a moa n anything that might h rttruce with Satan. "II llt ally, "He tlion murnW. lllm." Ho speaks witu n- sbow who He Is, by cinMt.l 2fi. "Torn h in." Or. l.uku snvs the ilnvil HiniI enrae out of him, ami liurary. wnstlioro n person prw f t spirit who did notsnnvm nnpB n total ruin, liv It. uos np the foundation! By very fow of this clan liv-L days. "Ho came ont it f " nevus ontiy his worn oi Is an ovIileiKieor the gnu! mission, to destroy Mick it is nlso a proof of lilt i- u Tlio Piinrlsoes said tluil II M" by Itaolsscbub I truth was that t With Hatau 27. "What tiling Is thW nro morn wonderful tint ten dors." "Jbsiis tniig!i In r well ns bvwlinl Uo anltl." t&.l Him," Thin Jiisus ol kg j slou by the miracles H r tlmy could not ilouht It. 28. "Falun spread nlirii the prince vt- at the vnry lli g Would I nn f ,iP fjci was wrought In the iul fC nnil thoso who suw II l1"1 f they wont, mid th nwp' Galilee wore soon illvu- i worn, no niu not iicmi i Him, nud wo do not ' with the world, the flu1-' (Iny In order to bnuhlntimi 29. "The house of 8I j Jesus, James and .Tabu Us I house. iO. "Simon's wife's mot a married man hih! liv It Is strange Imlnud tint! Ho Church sbould 1.1V ' , ..III-M.. .1.. Alnp..UTr oil lot corner-stone, Iwnla'fTI of a fever." J.nke cnlii i Luke 4:31. Hhe win P'T burning fover.'"-"Tli)f "I Tills was really a rnquon' i knew Hooould ronton! Mpf.. 81. "Took lier by tlmlu dr illing on this side ttioo--Qod offset such a '"''l should demonstrate HM j, (alllganes of overy itins. f- her." Christ Ims powr'T can, anil frequently iloAT yet wa cannot tout the 'I. health of tho body. H"j saints unvo siiiierea wn ' i . nnd lisvo beeu sick. I' 7 ! fsltti" that inves tli " offers thnt prayer will " suits, ".ills inlnisierii'i. feotly recovered. Hlio' wait a long time for tr;fj-. 32. "When tho sun 'J'1 "SJi'i snded with thu sotting . brought tbolr sick to H': havo boon a deseornllon had eoms beforotlie snuff bad lust performed a ft" I. 33. "All the city." person, bnt a very lnrr rf, 84. "Healed many." " I that were sink." Luke"' " on them. Jesus liimM f t hoy were many. "DIW'j uiniinoiiou is inaue iw fall to notice; dbease 'l devils "cast ont." "rtnfi'l,,,, vorsn28. This bad been ler erntium. a dav ililcil r 1 1, Hay God give us uoh J!' , k- Tombstone l'h"1' Photographing tonifc-j Industry whirh has "f. a colored man In this 1 one time boy-of-all- granh gallery. 'e brunched out for lilfif rcudy established a nous, which promises wider field in the futur various cemeteries '! nnd when the duy I 'J turcs of many of the H ments. After he a' plutcs he takes proofs the relatives of the uf tilly finds a ready sal'' Of course, he -has to he works entirely ' trusting to Beutlnieo' Still, he says it is ver! doesn't get an onl'r habit of haunting tll where tombstones striking while the If" tl picture before even 1 atlves have seen the ' phla Record.