Trj E.BT& Op f shion. t York City. Whether a girl or does noi. Mii goir t-n p .1.. 1.1 nil wear, as well as folf n liULil- JI19SRS (Apr:. irivi'liiiB ii"1' lo "''1' ,)V,'l' ipnvii she wears lo Hit- Inl'iirmnl tat vl nil young people enjoy, j ruh', (lie material chosen Is y.fn (1 clolh, lilalu outside, plaid n, mill Hie cape Is iinlined, but prolty evening wraps In the sauio If model ran lie made of lighter ilr;i) (i'cte or even cashmere Immtiglinut tith soft sill; and in--1 nlili wool wadding, If a seiini jilc nt tin- buck. To cut wit limit ;,n lift y right inch goods will be yi. sniml May Manlrm model illus . j cm without a seam, and is A Willi simple niaelilne sliteh :ho fruiiis being iinderfaeed Willi Mil, nil outer c : os turned tinder. Ii,hk1 Is tlie latest style, and lianas .fully over the shoulders, at the lime thai II Is entirely prnctica jilrau he drawn up over the liend , required. The high foliar Is rut liium that are curved to fit: the i ami Unit Hare becomingly when tip against the head. Straps maelicd to the shoulders that , uvit lu trout and, closing in , support the weight. At the re three pointed straps, held In by buttons and buttonholes, by i of which the capo Is closed. t tills cnpe for n girl of fourteen of ngo two yards of material In narrow pin stripes in ,..k and white. The cITeet is iiiile allraetlvelv silvery and Is s in boleros, sleeves, Vests ami even whole eoNtunies. The wide stripes of an eighth to n quarter Inch, advaiieed as a trimming, !s too striking and has not had uvuxlf warm a welcome. New Knlii tint. The rain hat is ol dark gray stlrrnod felt. The brim Is covered with rows of imicliliie stitching. Tlie soft crown lias a black silk ribbon parsed around It. and this vanlslcs from sight be Ileal h a tall military pompon of cocks' feathers. These shade from darkest, changeable given to black. The cylin-dcr-sliapcil pompon Is eniiiclv new this season. It is placed H,e ,,f,. It Is ho becoming th;ii . r.,iM ,.,r will be worn on many a clear afternoon. Mliirl ( icIn.kli'L i ,,. Koic. Thirt.vsix indi petticoiits in while, cotton, silk, mcrccrh'.eil fancy cotton?; and sateens may now be U,), lo wear Willi the short dress skirl. Experi ence lias proven that the tights rirst worn under them were nut all thai could be desired, ami thai lie cipics trieiine skirt sets belter and doesn't. cling around the ankles ui ml'orl- ably vheii one skin is worn under it. Tin Trim-PH Kll',.,., A princess eflecl is given to some gowns by carrying the pleals which liliisli the buck of the waist down the skirl. These may he in box t,v pleals. One fr,k of this kind, which has a broad, louse eors'igc licit, has Ihe bell begin umlcr Ihe two sides of Hie pleals in tlie back, whence It comes around In the front, which is finished Willi an Dion jacket effect. Mil. Il.it.. Sliiehcd silk hats are being worn, trimmed Willi a llnle black velvet ami a couple of quills. . t;lrU' Long Itox rout. Pox coats are almost linilortnlv be coming fo little j;lrls. The loose lit means comfort and ease lu slipping on and off, and the lines are such as to suggest without concealing the figure. The long one, designed by May Mim ton, here shown has the added merit DOUBLE LltE.VSTKI) JACK KT. 'our inches wide, or one and n llfty-elght inches wide, will 'Hired. iM tul, AII-Kiium.I JlU'Ult. Hful, all-round Jacket which inn is without takes many ' trot Is never more serviceable 'lii'U iiiiulo r.fter the May Man- wt'i llluslrated In tho largo on '4 'itli a lltted back nnd half '"'Ms. Favorite lnatcrials are 'tfoth mid heavy cheviot lu dark blue and Oxford gray and -tot similes of covert cloth. atWitlniial warmth Is required "its ( , iac,.,i with fur, iMtiidcs iiieanliirf comfort, adds Ic, lint as Illustrated the Jack "ii'iivy black cheviot, wit it re- collar faced with petui de sole iltcli(.(, The fronts are lltted 'it'll' dnrts. The back Includes re'uin anil side backs, and is 1 10 Hie fronts by iinder-arin When rcvers are rolied Ui" waist line the Jacket Is 'visibly with large hooks nnd "lli'B the Kliiti-tni' i'ii'io'u are '""PIH'd over In double-breasl- . auu closed with buttons and 'ihe high flaring )llar la 'I1iiiis and fits tho threat flic Hti'cvcM ni'o I wo-uemneil over the hands, where they M'u I" simulate cuffs, l'ock- lllllS 1 ,...1 I I. , -, mi. iiint-i it'd Mill It Ul H till. 1 ,,!.. ....r, Ill-IUK 11II11.1MI1U i ronn.i M "oee sides. tills jacket for n woman of '' four ami three-quarter 'iimtcrlai twenty inches wide, '""J' rour Inches wire, or "veeigim, yards lift y inches , ""''(luarter ynnl of silk rcvers, will be required. B""1 ""Hi, Ki.,,.re ;un. f fiil k "" 'uiplre gown , ""'Iciiii 1.1,.... ... ., I) .. ,11 l.llr 11 11 1II5II I'll 1 , . rutin " wino now Li B l"'l'on. it,t ,.,..,. i.. i , - -v, uuun hiiu rrout. ''ton lu"' closo-nttlu w 1 "88B uiousi-elluo do sole. 4 moumj 1Uo lhroilt wus " mi collar of whlto cliif of iy lu nnd i,n !",ro"K1 dlnniond slides, t iK. 'I r '"""'I'tliig itself lis it) h toS!lril-a Velvet. "'farut. ck rrom ut w Wovp of velvet w'hdu ?j of giving a tall, slender apicarance ami of entirely covering tlie gown. Co vert doth, cheviot and heaver are all correct in black, blue, lau and mixed Ian and brown, bill the covert cloth is especially smart, and Is far less dilli cull to handle than the beaver. As Il lustrated, I he nialerlal Is covert elolh lu a tan shade. Willi collar, shield and cull's of velvet in the same shade, ma chlee stitched; Ihe lining, taffeta in llowercd stripes. The back s seamless, shaped only by under-arin seams. The fronts are cut simply, and hang straight from the shoulders. They are lapped one over the other, and are dosed by means of handsome buttons and but tonholes. The sailor collar is stitched to the neck and rolls over; the shield is ill Inched to the right side and hooked over lo the left beneath tlie collar. Imt can lie omitted as shown in tlie small cut. The under-arni seams are left opeu for a short distance from the lower edge lo give ample freedom, ami the edges of the coat are finished with applied bands of tlie clolh. The sleeves are two-seamed, with roll over flare cuffs. ,To cut (his coal for a girl of eight years of age one and three-qunrlct GIRL' LONi BOX COAT. yards of innterlul fifty Inches wide, two nnd three-quarter yards forty four inches wide, with tlueo-qunrter yard of velvet ror coiinr, cuuo uu , shield, will be required. - j torn re 1 - AGRICULTURAL. J W)OIOIOIOtfOf ' n n Food For Stork. The farmers of Ontario, Canada. Keom to have great fnlth In peas as tin Important crop to be grown ns n feed for slock, ltelw.-m, art...... .....i twenty millions of bushels are raised niinuitlly i Ha" Province, nnd flu greater part of the crop Is fed to live stock. It Is thought that much of the success which the Canadian farmers have obtained in preparing slock for iue mnriict has arisen from tin. lib eral use or peas in the food rations. No doubt lliere Is n prolltahle lesson in tins for a great many American ianiiers.--.New ork Weekly Wllm I'SS. SiiiiiiiMM' simile l or Sl,.,i. T Tlie accompanying iliusiratloti shows how to arrange n very ooneVnleiit shel ter for sleds when not in use. Make n hinged roof of light material, say throe-fourths In boards, large enough to cover sled when let down. 1 1 Inge tills roof to an outbuilding about three feet rrom tlie ground. Fasten two pieces or two by four to the g'-ounil for sled lo rest on. If II Is not possible or hniulv to HI.i:t) SIIADK IN position. fasten shelter to an outbuilding, two posts eight to leu feet apart. sit one post six led high ami liie other three feet. Hoard up on,, side of the pu.xls to three feet from the ground ami at tach Hie hinged root'. When sled is In Use Hie roof Is raised out (,r the way and lasleiied to Hie six-foot poM by a hook. Orange .linhl l ariner. Iiimi'cIm ,1,1,1 lt-oirli. Tour soil scantily immured ami but poorly cultivated suffers much riiore, or Hi- plants on it do. from attacks by drought, insect pests and fungus (liseasts than where the laud Is well supplied with vegetable matter and mineral fori Ulster, well worked before the crop is put In. and well cultivated during the growing season. It Is one of nature's ways that when a plant or an animal is badly bred, poorly nour ished and neglected, that It Is subject fo attacks of every 1;ind to farther weaken it. Tills Is one of tin- methods Wlileli nrlngs about 'the survival of the lit test." If we would rei uber tills and try to give tlieiu a fair siart nnd proper care afterward we would see less occasion to tlnd fault w'th Hie weather. We cannot control that, but we can 'so provide as ,p be pre pared for the proverbial rainy day or the drought, and to im;.!;e (lie sunshine and-tlie rain, the frost and the scotch lug heal, all work together lor good. The Cultivator. MrllioiU of n Mutton .linker. Sheep require no expensive shelter. A dry place and protection from the force of storms, an open shed with II roof t lint w ill turn the rain, is all that is required. Sheep will not lie down In mud, nnd no matter how warm ami commodious your barn, unless clean nnd dry, they will seek a knoll or dry spot of oarth, no matter how lU'ix'e the storm. Coiitlning them to Inelos ures Is less dillleult than Is generally supposed. 1 never knew a sheep to attempt jumping a barbed wire, it is a common mistake to hull, I fences too high, and not low or close enough. I believe a flock of sheep that have never been taught to climb or creep can be successfully restrained with four barbed wires, properly strung and kept taut. Their wool Is such a pro feel ion to them against the Vlcions ness of flic barbs that when taught to creep, the building of Impregnable fences becomes a necessity. Stagnant water Is the best vehicle for conveying the parasites that Infest the sheep. If you have not an abun dant supply of clear, pure water, easy of access for sheep, do not attempt sheep raising. Low, marshy or spouty laud is an aboniln.'ii Ion lo Hie llnck liuisier. Klther drain the ponds or apply Ihe herd law n m I fence the si p out. Sheep are great scaven gers nnd will clear your farm of weeds If you give lliein time and opportunity, but l hey will not thrive ami Increase twofold and pay your grocery bill four times a year on weeds, barbs ami fence corners. Sheep, as well as other live stock, love a greater variety of feed than they usually get; but sheep especially lire fond of change and variety, even until apparent fickleness. They adapt themselves quickly to n change or eon dltlotis, ami no matter how luxurious the pasture, they will leave it daily nnd frequently to nip sprouts and weeds. II. S. K Irkpatrlck, In Now Kngltind Homestead. To Miikit 'lii-i'e nl Home . ' Some of Ihe most delicious cheese Is made in tlie homes of modest farm ers, lu New Kiigland It is no uncoiu mon sight to see u room tilled with shelves bearing ti score of handsome cheeses. The making of cheese Is a very sim ple process ami almost any one can turn out a good article with little prac tice, writes .1. SI. Smith, in Field ami Farm. I will give a met hud by which any one can make cheese successfully. Take evening's milk and strain it Into some clean vessel and let II stand lu it cool place until morning, Kvoning's milk should he warmed to about nine ty six degrees before adding morn ing's mill; . A gootl way lo warm It Is to set a pail of boiling water into the milk. Prepare the rennet by soak ing In one gallon of warm water for twenty-four hours before using. Add as much salt us It will dissolve, strain, let settle and it will be ready for use. I'se a lablespoonf ill ,(or each three gallons of milk. If U is much over half an hour coming Increase tho quan tity; If much less decrease It. As soon as it Is well curdled fake a knife nnd cut the curd into blocks so that the whey cau escape. As soon us the whey is mostly out of the curd take a basket und place a cloth lu It so as to receive the curd. As the curd bardeus con- tiniio to strain off the whey. Chop tin curd fine, add salt one ounce to end five pounds of onrd and It Is ready for the press. Tut the curd In a tic hoop made like n peck measure with out bottom. It Is ii 'good Idea to luiv( two sizes, ns the amount of curd wll) differ at times. Almost nny one with u few tools nud n little Ingenuity can construct n presj that will answer tlie niirnosn. ver well. A simple way Is to mortise a beam Into a post so that It can work up or down nnd hang n weight to th outer end of Hie beam. The hoop wltb the curd in It should be turned or re versed every eight or teu hours. From eighteen to twenty-four hours Is gen erally long enough to press n cheese. Now comes the curing period, which requires considerable care and ntten- Hon. 'I lie cheese when taken from the press should be rubbed with lard ami a bandage of new muslin pinned loosely iiromid It. The cheese must be greased every day. lo not remove the bandage, but apply the grease on It. I u rrom four to live weeks tlie 'l se should be ready for home Hsu or market. I.lulilrr Kliuo For II, -'. The wear ami tear on horseflesh makes quite an Item on the farm, and anything that will reduce this friction r the farmer should be welcomed. " U'is I n proven beyond dispute lli.H lhi average horse Is shod with too heavy shoes, ami if lighter ones were substituted tlie animal could do more work with less weariness. Heavy shoes have no particular ad vantage except for large truck horses on stone ruiiils where shoes wcic .mt lilickly. Kvcn 111 such cases it Is doubtful If too heavy shoes prove of any value. Cerialnlv fur fntin l, light shoes are much more satisfac tory. The ctToels of such a change are quite noticeable sholtlv al'ler thee e put on, and in a year's tl .the cf:a amount of work that ,,hc.ii.e.i from a horse will mure lUnu pay for the si iii-ier time that light shoes may wear. The main object of thu shoe Is to prolc-l the hoof, nnd the lighter It can he made and serve Its purpose the better ii Is tor the horse. A good part of the year horses on the rarni would be belter off without slioes. and they can do plowing and similar work III soft fields without in anv wnv In. tiring the feet. In winter, when the ground is frozen, !t Is quite different. and shoes seem necessary at these limes. A horse weighing 1HMI pounds should generally be shod witli slioes not weighing more than twelve to lif ted! ounces each. If four ounces are lidded lo each shoe, the total differ ence lu the animal's slioes is sixteen ounces, in plowing, cultivating, mow ing and reaping, a farm horse will walk from ten to twenty miles a day. if It takes about four feet each step tin- horse will lift half a pound extra on Its two feet or six hundred pounds In every mile. If we make the av erage day's work lil'teen miles, the horse will lift 1MMMI pounds a day, or nearly live tons. The energy required lo lift this amount is wasted and serves no useful purpose. If It could be expended lu doing extra work that would pay. it would nearly pay Ihe animal's keep. Leg weary horses are common on the farm, and leg weary horses are apt lo break down In time ami have crooked and ailing limbs. It Is not only a matter of Im munity, but one of prollt to lighten Ihe horse's burden nil we can, and this is one good way. -C. T. White, in Amer ica ii Cultivator. Making mi Op, ii Milk Wugoii. Tlie wagon Is a short reach, side spring vehicle capable of handling 1(H quarts In bottles or L'tltl quarts In cans. This body can be nirde by any one handy with fools, at home, although I had a carriage maker build this one, p- Jllisli VLAJt OK TUP, WAUON, as I was too busy at the time to do ll myself. Instead of a wagon box, Hie foundation is a bed similar to Hie lied of n carl body, haif-lncli rods being used Instead of slats, ltods are better than slats for the bed of a cart body. Here nre the specifications of the wagon body: Length, six feet; width, three feet. Three one and one-half by two inches by six foot nsh sticks ami two, one ami one-half by two inches by three feet ash slicks; six rods one-hair Inch by three feet iseant, so as not to come through the sides), ami two half-Inch boards, from tin- bed, .Mortise sticks logellier, drive In rods and staple boards to rods. In stead of a dashboard the front Is built up solid twenty-nine inches high with half-Inch boards fastened to corner stakes mortised Into the bed twenty- two Inches back from the front. An other stake twenty-nine luetics high Is mortised Into bed, and five slats, two Indie by nine-sixteenths, on each side connect the side stakes. On top sixteen Inches is light board ed, rein holes go through the front close to th (op, and In the centre un der Ihe top board is a pigeon hole eight by seven by sixteen Inches, with a three ami one lnilf liieli strip acn.ss the bottom front. This is handy for nil 11. account book, and other odds and cuds. On each side is space for a forty-quart milk can and room to turn It over into a dipping can wll li mit hitting Hie top. if no cans larger Hian thirties are used a lower front would do. This front protects the cans I ioiii sun, dust, etc. At the back the posts are fifteen Inches high. The front post Is set thirty-two Inches from rear end, hav ing an outran Ighleen Inches wide. The diagram will explain the delails of the back. The end board is fif teen Inches high, slutted, hinged to drop down and closes with catches. All Ihe posts are strap-bolted to the bed, nnd the whole body Is very flria. Tlie seat can be made stationary or movable its desired. ti. C. ltlrge, In American Agriculturist. The richest town In Germany, nc cording to the estimates of the Prop erty Tux Commission for 1H!)1), Is uot lletllu, but Frankfort ou tho-.Mulu. COUDERSrORr ICE MINE. REMARKABLE SOUVENIR OF THE CLACIAL ACE IN PENNSYLVANIA. Ilip Selenitic Fili,iintliii nt Ihe I'lir nnmrnnn It In YIpIIiIh From Mny I'nlll October F.verjr Vcnr Ten Tliou- Hiut Years It lis l.nnlcil. Cotldersport, Penii.. does not occupy j very conspicuous spot on the map, hut to-day Coudcrsport is noteworthy, "(ireetiland's Icy mountains nnd In- .lla's coral strand" In Juxtaposition, jii Ice cave under foot nnd tropic heat aver head, are Coudersport's twin tl ties fo faine. lu Northern I'ennsylvit ilia, as well as nearly everywhere else In these Fulled States, it was iiiiusu illy hot last summer, but in this ham let, lu Poller County, one had only to lescend n rude ladder, leading fo u uinll cavern under ground, to Hud frost. Icicles ami December zephyrs, Icy stalactites ranging from an Inch to three feet In thickness hung from Ihe roof of the Coiiilersporl "Ice mini luring one or the holiest lint waves :if last August. According to the Uatemetits of men of good repute In Hint neighborhood this phenomenon is visible from Slay until October very year, but this summer additional explorations of the lee mine have re vealed unwonted wonders. The scientific explanation of the phe nomenon is tills: Fous ago Southern New York, Northern and Northeastern Pennsylvania were covered to a (re- minus depth by glacial deposits. Scientists have dug down and found far below the ground, where the earth's heat should have Increased materially over the surface tempera lure, streams of Icy cold walcr. Tlie subterranean flows were Ihe liquid re mainder of the great glacier which swept across Camilla, by way of Lake Kile, Pennsylvania. New York ami Long Island to tlie Atlantic. In the .lotirmil of the Franklin In stitute of Philadelphia, Issued In Jan nary, 1SS.'t, Professor II. Colvllle Lew is presented u map showing the bound ary of (Ids glacial area In connection with an exhaustive lecture whlcti be delivered before the Inst it ute on "The 1 1 rent Terminal .Moraine Across Pennsylvania." In Hie beginning of his monograph Professor Lewis says; "When Agassiz, over forty years ago, after a prolonged study of the Swiss glaciers, announced the conclusion that larg portions of the continents of North America ami Furope were once covered by an Immense glacier thou sands of miles in exteut and several thousands of feet lu thickness, geolo gists the world over were startled at what then seemed au impossible hy pothesis. "To-day (here Is hardly a truth in geology more widely accepted or capa ble or more conclusive proof.'' Three phenomena plainly indicate the progress of the great Northern ltirt: (I) the mantel of "lill" (a de posit of stones and clay imstralillcd by Water), which Is a characteristic feature of the Alleghany plateau, lu Potter County, Pennsylvania, CJ) tho longitu dinally scratched bowlders nowhere round except lu the vicinity or gla ciers, and (It) the smoothed or striated rock stirraccs, another glacial remind er. All these go to prove the correct ness of Agasslz's hypothesis, for simi lar phenomena are found at the foot of many Swiss glaciers, .lust as the ancient Swiss glacier carried bowlders from Mont Plane to the .Iiiras, so this great continental glacier carried them from Cnmula across Lake L'rlc into Pennsylvania. .lust as the (Ireenlaiid glacier now fills the valleys and overtops the innunlalus, so this larger glacier ad vanced over mountain ami valley alike lu h continuous sheet to lis final halting place only sixty miles north of Philadelphia. At Its edge, as ob served lu Pennsylvania, this glacier must have been ht)() feet thick. A hundred miles back from Its edge, among the Catsktlls, it was at least .'tUM) feet thick, while iilMI miles fur ther, lu Northern New Kngland, it was .'itHlo reef (hick. There are data, says Professor Lewis, which Indicate that the glacier did' uot finally withdraw from tlie I illicit Mates until its recently as Kt.tKltl lo 1.1,1)00 years ago. Professor Wright tlmls from a study of glacial "kettle holes" In Massachusetts that the accumulation of peaty matter in II, whether caused by growth of veg etable matter or by winds and rains. Is equal to a level deposit of eight feet 111 thickness. At the rate of one Inch in a century, which is probably less than the true rate, according to Pro fessor Lewis, this would place the close of the glacial epoch at less thai) lO.litMt years ago. In Kansas similar Ice caverns, or "kettle holes," have been found, lu Hie Kansas Journal of March. 1S!7, Mr. .1. ltitchle describes lu detail these Ice caverns and other glacial phenom ena, and the. Kansas Journal previous ly printed a similar dissertation by Professor N. M. Lowe, but none of these "kettle holes" equal lu Interest the Coudcrsport find. Its precise local Ion Is four miles southeast of Coiidersporl. Four years ago William O'Neill, a mineralogist of no small knowledge and experience in Potter County, Pennsylvania, fell convinced that he could find a silver lode on flu- farm of John It. Dndd, sit uated in Sweeden Valley, near Cou dcrsport. Consulting with Ihe owner, who Is a merchant ami at present Postmaster of Sweeden Valley, Sir. O'Neill arranged to sink a shaft on au uncultivated hill of Hold's twenty live acre farm, lu case O'Neill discov ered any silver or other minerals of value Doild was to have a pro rata share of the findings. Naturally the mailer was kepi a pro found secret, and O'Neill began opera lions very quietly. At first work was carried on only at night. A couple of years elapsed, and Ihe country folk thereabout were quite unaware of O'Neill's secret belief and persistent search. Au excavation sixteen feet square was dug through broken rock nnd primeval debris on the hillside, nnd then the work lapsed. Numerous curiosities lu tho form of rocks and bones were revealed lu tho f()0() square feet of earth excavated, but no argen tiferous mailer was found. Last summer digging was resumed nud small chunks of Ice were found nt ft level n few feet lower thnn th petrified bones. Imprints of fern lenvps hnd been revealed. The furth er the diggers proceeded, Isith later ally and perpendicularly, the more Ice was encountered under mossy beds be tween rocks. The Icy belt wns found to extend for twenty rods one way nnd n eoitple of rods cross ways. At this time the thermometer at tlie sur face registered eighty-six to ninety degrees Fahrenheit In the shade. The mine wns then nboitt thirty-five feet deep, nnd the ntniosphere was so cold It wns dillleult to make much progress. O'Neill abandoned Ids hunt for silver, nud Sir. Doild determined to exploit Ids lee mine In lieu of his silver shaft. I!epcnto(l and thorough tests were made to prove the frigidity of the Cou dcrsport lee mine. It has been demon strated to the satisfaction of all who visited the spot that such articles ns potatoes, fruit nnd small animals when left In the cave over night after an extremely hot summer day lire frozen stiff and solid as rocks. A platform has been constructed over the lower seventeen feet, necess which Is had through u trap door nnd via a ladder. During the torrid Au gust days when a visitor stepped through the outer door nr.d descended to the platform a current t.f cold nlr coining from the bottom of Hit shaft would turn his breath Into dense mist. Just as when one leaves n hothouse ol. a frosty January morning. A I the northeast corner of the bot tom of the mine then was discov ered an aperture about six Inches square. From this point Issues the Icy blast in a steady current. It is impossible to hold a lighted match or a caudle near this opening without having the Ihinie extinguished iinmt dialely. I here nre other lesser llssures throughout Hie mine whence come cold currents continuously. FfVorts have been made fo ascertain the depth of the main niicrture bv throwing weights attached to twine and arrows, but bottom was not reached. (he best focal opinion is that fwo immense caverns underlie the mine at a considerable depth, that sublerran can rivers have been formed from iiieiiing giactai ice ami that some cross current causes the draught of Icy air fn Hie t omlersport nillic.-Ncw York Herald. CURIOUS FACTS. A few years ago a bull light look place in .Mexico, the toreador being mounted on u bicycle. The rider, Man uel Oarcla by name, was so badly In jured that he died soon afterward. In the village of Sllllbeek, near Kes wick, Kngland, is a most curious freak of nature. Two trunks rise on each side of a spring of clear water and Join together three feet above, forming our tree. Ihe phenomena of cyclones and mi- ll-cyclones observed lit the earth's stir race, such as wind circulation, clouds. rain, etc., do not reach beyond leu thousand feet; above that there Is an entirely illliorcnt stale as regards pres sure and wind circulation. 1 he biggest blast on record tool: place mil long ago at tne I'arren gran He quarries lu Wales. Five tons of powder were used, u drift fifty feel deep was drilled into the solid rock and when Hie explosion look Place n whole side ol the mountain came down, about TO.otill tons of granite be ing dislodged. There are three cases on record where whole ships' companies have gone blind. Illlmlness Is au nlllictioii anywhere, but at sea It Is a fatal one. If the ollieers are blind (hey cannot set (he course; If the men are blind they cannot steer the course: if the ook Is blind he cannot cook the food. Such was Hie case of the ship .Tunics Simpson. The crew caught the strange disease on the African coast nnd one by one became blind. After drifting about the ocean for many 1iivb the re w I overed their sight and brought Hie vessel to port ill safety. A remarkable cave has been discove red in Sweden Valley, a short dis tance from Wellsvllle, N. Y. A work man, wlille digging Hie side of n moun tain there lor coal last spring, noticed that Hie air grew steadily colder, and finally hecnide so severe that he was obliged to leave the excavation, af ter having penetrated only a short distance into Hie side of Ihe hill. The water Unit dripped from (he rocks overhead turned Into Icicles, although the month was Slay. During the sum mer a coating of lee several Inches thick formed on the walls, and cold air rushes through the crevices of the rocks. It is now observed Unit Ice has melted, and Hie air lu the cave Is growing warm. The temperature of the cave changes from hot to cold, but Is exactly Ihe reverse of the outside air. Why tlm Yeomen Were Iteleaaeil, Talking of the Yeomen brings back a good yarn that Is going round the camps at their expense. They nre no torious for two things -their pluck and their awful bad bushcrnft. They would ride up to the mouth of n foe nian's guns coolly and gamely enough, but they can't find their way home on (he veldt al'ler dark to save their souls, and so fall Into Itoer traps with a regularity (hat Is becoming monoto nous. Itecently a Itrltish officer who had business lu a Poor laager, nsked tl coiiiiiianiler why they set the Yeo men free when they made them pris oners. -Oh!" quoth the ltoer, with n merry twinkle In his eye, "those poor Yeomen of yours, we can always cap lure lliein when we waul them." This Is not a good story to tell If you want au encore. If you happen to be sitting round ii Yeoman table or camp lire. Loudon News. The (.Mlventou Horror. Here Is an extract, from u lettet written (o n friend In New York by a Texan: "There Is no telling how many were killed along the coast. After one day the sun caused decomposition, and It was not possible to tell a white person from u negro except by the hair. The list of known dead Is now nbovo 5000, und probably there tire half ns inauy unknown. It wns n ter rlblo piece- of business." New York Press. PROMINENT PEOPLE. T.leufonnnt General Stiles Is snld to favor nn Increase in the number of ollieers at Western ports. Archibald Havering Ountlier. tho California novelist gets fT.'MHHj of his mothers estate by a will llled nt Kim Francisco. Crown Prince Frederick William of (lermnuy will appear during the win ter In n series of court thentrleals. as suming leading pnrts. William C. Wliltney hns Wn offered ST.'i.isni for his "I inline nud the (loldeti Haiti." by Titian, which he recently bought In Paris for ?5(l,tHHI. tlovernor llchnrds. of Wyoming, wns seized with nn nttnek of rheuma tism while lu Chicago the other day, and had to be taken to a hospital. John Olney. of Chicago, who died recently at the' age of seveuty-elght, was the hist Illinois Lincoln elector and the oldest member of the Chicago bar ltoth tlie Prince or Wales nnd King Victor timimiiiiicl or Italy have a ner vous infection of the muscles of the face which makes tlie lert eye blink constantly. It seems that the young King of Italy, economically Inclined though he be lu nil other respects, Intends to In dulge In good music and nlentv of It. Moth he and his Ouecn are mission- ately fond of music. Governor von I.chr Stover, our new Minister to Italy, was born in Itoston in in., graduated from Harvard in I1""!), served his city and Stale In olll ciai capaclt'es for eight years, and last summer represented It nt tlie Paris Kxpositlou. Tlie bill- General John Sf. Palmer was the .oii of Louis 1. Palmer, a veteran o' the war of is 12. u poor farmer of Madison County, 'pint boy worked on the farm until he was seventeen, vlicn he started out to make his ow i way, n bundle over his Sliuulder bell g his only baggage. CfCLINC; NOTCS. The T-. A T7, Is planning side pnlh improve uic its 1u various parts of the counl ry. New pfe, it Is said, will be Infused in tin- club movement for wheelmen next season. An Increasing number In the country Use the wheel when I hey have to make long Journeys on bus'iieMS. A refreshing sight Is when a whole family, father, mother and children, are out lor a day's spin. A rare spectacle that Is seen In the large cities Is one ol' the old fashioned tricycles exhibited and marked "For Sale." Several f .rins of outdoor nmitse nient. notably golf and Ihe automobile are bringing about a decline in blcvclo rilling t People who follow sedentary occu pations would find a Judicious' use of Hie wheel b neflclal to their physical condition. There are some people now enioy lug perfect health who were saved from death of consumption by taking fo the wheel. If some riders were to oil their wheels more often than they do. prob ably they would not have spells of dillleult riding every little while Johnnie Nelson. Chicago's crack cyclist, has defeated Fsslo SlcPuffe, of itoston, In the lit'lceii-mlle motor-paced race at Hie Coliseum, In Chicago, win ning by half a lap. His time was 27.3S. An argument In favor of a low gear Is flint it gives a greater control of wheel, preventing side slip In wet places ami giving ndditlonal security lu an emergency when It Is necessary to slop or start quickly. A new s;yle of chain that Is belmj looked upon with favor by the trade Is one made up without rivets, the links being S shape ami hooking Into each other. A link can be detached und u new one pul lu with the lingers. MARKETS. rAi.Tiuons. onus rra Fi.ont rtiiiio. r.ost iul TIIkIi (Irnilo Kttrn WHEAT No. filed t'OUN No. 3 Wliltit Outs Kniithorn A l'viin... ItYK-No. 2 HAY t'linli-n Timothy.. (ionil to I'rlimi t'J IiAW Ilye la i'lir hit.. W llOllt blocks Vnt blocks 71 ! 11 :" (3 lfi nil n no 11 (Ml 7 10 7 ft) TOMATOES No. i M'AS stnnilarilH. Hfi'miils t'OIINDry l'nek. Hoist rANsr.it nitons. Html. No. a t'lTYSTKFIIS.. Uy Cows Illltl-'l. 1 10 fiv; 1'OTATOF.Il ASH VKOSTAIU.H. -ltiirhtuilo. .t rOTATOF.H-ONIONtf.... MlOVIHIOSt. nod riiopvcTa-iiij. lour rllwliles llftlllH Muss Perk, nor bur LAKH Crinlii l(wt ri'lliu'il ITTTK.IL Bt'TTKIt I'lu Crinv. . .. f I nder 1'liiH Creamery Hulls rnriem. -N. Y. Funny. . . i .0 )j 12 21 11 4 7." VI 4.1 2i..'.i M Hi :.u 15 ft I 1 1 50 K I)) H 00 70 ft.', -in Ml SI) 71) ii II) D 4', is Slj SI . ,,J'" H ftu 4 a CI1EF.HE. kliu C'liuneo ram SO OH Btnte north Curullna uvs rouLTnc CniOKF.NB Ducks, per lb TOSAOert. TOBACCO Mil Inter's.. Hound cominuu HlddlhiK i'auey UVK TOOK PT'EF Best Ueevos $ blllCKP llotfs mm kvo ski s. MVBKRAT ItllOCOOD lied Foi r-Uiink lllnok. OpCHDUUl Mink OU.ir t rw tons ID iG' 1) 'a ') J .V) i il 0 10) 1(1 till 4 7- fl) J .IP ft .jJ 19 4 40 liJ - 17'-; ; 17 b. a to 4&I) '0J 12 00 B 15 a oo bio u 4 ) 00 80 21 SO 1 00 FLOUB Poutliftm CM 5 90 Wll HAT No. a llod 77 7 II YD WiwtMn f.'.i it i loitN No. a -t; s OATm No. 21 J.'i nt; iTicn htstn n vu tdllH Ktltttt 21 ai ClU-i-hli bUte 11 ii' rBii.ADsi.vai4. fl.OCIl floutborn Wlll.AT No. ailotl COllN-No. , OAlltNo. a.. lir'JTkH--ntiit9 kAlUtt-i-euaaft..,.. SJ 7i 4(i at 7i "4- 2i ' a. kit