The l.nllshy l.suil, Thi t.ullnhy I.bikI In womlnrful land Not funnel on the mat of mni For thn illmilcil hiiml of thn I.ullnhy banil Know nothing nl pi'm'll iir pen. Ami Din only ijr yen ran reach thin html Is to Inkn up thn thread of jrnnrs Ami follow II lm'k llfn's win. linn traek To a mnlhnr's nmllnn ami tcarn. Anil tlmrnynu will flml thn l.ullnhy t.nml, Willi It lloi-k-ii-lly rlvnr of mirth Plowlnir on to thn iinp of Klnnp, llntiy, Hlnep, Thn sunniest m-nan of earth. Anil up liy thn Inkn tlmy nail Wl.lr-Awnkn Is many n gohlln nml fiiy i Anil fHlrlin nml elves Unit nwnllow them selves To frighten Ihn pnoph sway. Oh, n womlnrful html In thn l.ullnliy ,nn'l, Where llttln wnn folks nni fouml Who only mm wlmn tlmy tnlk to you, Anil HiikIi with it lisping noiiinl. Their hnlr nanny, th'lr eyes nrn lilun A Ihn ili'pth of lh Hiinimnr sky, Ami thi-lr liri'iitli no soft n thn wimls aloft Whnn a spirit gnus Mnutliiir ly. Ami these llltln wnn folk havo thn funniest chip, Thntliknn pi'iiiliilum swing In perfeel time to Dm worillrss rhymn Of u wiiii) tlmlr mother sing. Ami tlic-i' llllli' w.ii f.ilk iri-t Into tlint ship An. I go snllng nml nailing nwny, I'xplorlnu thn hi minis of Ihn l.xlnl of lip-am All night, till Ihn lirnnk of ilny. Ami wlmn ih.'v get tlrml nml long fur ti rl.ln. No nmlilln or lirhlln hnvn tlmy tint tln'y mount In glw on tlmlr lulli -r'n knnn, An I go rn-lng nml ehnsliig nwny; IViumlng nml iIiiiii'Iiik with nwny mi l swing Of fnnr tlmy hum imvnr n onn. ' For wlmn tlmlr toni limn-oses his spisul ll only lii"r'iiin llmlr fun. Oh, Isn't It niwy nml rosy nml rum 'T.l llvn In thn l.ullnliy I, mil Where slilin am a lilun a Urn nun nlilnnn through Ami llfn Is no lovely mi l Kruml! If I noul l hut take my own holnn to-night Of nil Urn ountrliw of nmn I wnulil tnkn up my nt,ui, t, i,ulnliy I, nml Ami 1 imvnr woulil leave It again! - .lfnil Kllhon, In Chlnniro ItP'ioril, ON THIS ROCK. KV W. J, I.AMPTOH, Bridal couplcn urn nupposcd to Iinvo a monopoly of Niagara Fulls, mi l there nru few to dinputo it witli them, Imt now ntul thou Cupid unfettered hies ti i in thence, nuil pni'iiiH are writ- ten in tho lives of youths and maidens, net to tho rhythm if tho riiHtiin wn tern. Such ft poem wiim (Imt which Ralph Jteedcr nml Anno Martin inscribed one 1ay before tho rourin rapids, thn towering cliffa nml thn great over hanging trees ns witnesses to their troth. They stood out on nn impend ing rock, fur above tho torrtnt, nml in this temple of nature gavo tho wonl to each other that limy imvcr lio gain said. "Dear Anno," ho said, for ho win n eorious mini, not Riven to lino speech, "on this rock wo plight our troth. Horc, with no lminnii witnesses, Imt n thoiiHuml cym to kco iih, wo piomiho to love ouch other nlwnyB." "On tliin rock?" nho echoed, an she clunff to him. "On thi rock," ho went on, "if tho evil tinio hlioulil eoino when that love has grown cold nml liitternesH lms imi) into ita place, wo munt meet to .break tho tiea, in tho prcHcnco of tho naino witiiRHHen which have neon u aoal them thin lny." "On this rock," nhe whinperoil, clinging doner, aa bo bont ami kinned her. Thon thoy punned tinder the viuen nd through tho low hanging branches into tho open groumlH, away from the brink of the great ehanm, and strolled back to their hotel w ith the newly made munio in their hearts and its otter notes murmuring iu the words they spoke. Three months later, when the leaves were crimson and gold in all the for cats, and the air was touched with tho grateful crinpness of tho flrnt frosts, these two became one in the old church where Anne's mother had been married and whore Annio had been christened, and it seemod as if no cloud could ever shadow the blue of their sky. But the clouds will come, and to some they show no rifts through which the sun may shine, and to these, ere the year had gone, the clouds came. For threo years more they thick ened, and then the evil time came when they thought it was not possible for them to live the life their married life was, and they resolved to under the tie which had bound them. Why they had grown apurt in this terrible fashion neither could say. She had been frivolous, as most young women are whose lives are passed in plenty, and he had grown cold and hard as men do who devote themselves to their ambitions. He had not thought enough of her, nd ahe bad thought too much of her elf.v With this as a promise there con be bnt one conclusion, and that conclusion they had reached. And more in sorrow than In aiiKcr, for each of thorn, but with that calm rnliltics which nothing can mell. "You remember, Annie," he said to bvr gently, when they hnd ended thn conference which was the flnlnh thair dremn of love and hope, "wo pnim Innd each other, if tliero should ever oomo such a time as this, that on the rock whore we stood above the tumult uous waters and made our vows, there wo should nluinl again to break them." "I romember," nho replied coldly. "Wo lenvo for Niagara at 7 o'clock this evening," ho nnid to her iu that firm tone, which chafed her npirit, though it compelled her obidietice. Mho tioiMiul merrily ami went to her mom as ho went to liin. Him thought of many thing as nho Hindu ready for thin unexpected jour ney, and when they met unniii at din ner, her eyes were red and his voice trembled ss ho npoke to the si rviuil, fur between them, as for mouths past, there was a silence Hint shivered, The next ilny at noon they were nt Hie hotel, where four years before they had been, but the harp strings were broken, and the music was ileml in their h ni t n. 1 liev liml nenrcelv spoken of their journey, and now nho nuked no ques linns, but followed him as if nho were walking in a nightmare. As they left the carriage near where the little pnth led out to tho rock of their troth, he stopped iu the nhailow of a tree mid she stood by his side waiting. "In a few moments, Anne," ho said with quivering lips, "the tie that we made for ourselves w ill bo by ourselves broken. When wo have retracted the vows on that rock where we made them you will return in the carriage nlone. I slntll not return until the sun has set." Hhe tried to spe.ik, but her wori's were only a great sub, and hIid fol lowed him as he moved on toward the rock. At the Inst turn in the pnth, where tho rock first ennui into view, was a rough place, which hu remem bered to have helped her ur runs on that other ilny four years ago by giv ing her his hand. He remembered, too, how it trembled in his and wlmt a thrill this reliiiucn of hers upon him sent through every nerve of his body, and, unconsciously, when ho eniiie to this place lie held out his haml to her, and she as unconsciously took it. Then, hand iu hand, they stopped out toward tho rock, but it was tliero no longer. Tho never-ceaniiig power of the rushing waters had swept out its foun dntions ami it lay sunken iu tho dark current below. For one instant standing there on tho brink of the chasm, they looked into each others eyes, and then he opened his arms aud with a littlu cry of joy she went to them. "Thank Ood!" ho exclaimed, and smiling they turned from tho chasm to tho open beyond, where the sun was shining, ami thoy drove back together before the sun had set. ffutroit Froo Press. Whaling oirthe Puclllc Coast. There is a shore whnlo fishery off tho southern coast of California, be tween Monterey and Poiut Conception, which for many yiars has boon a very productive industry. It may booiu an odd thing, but tho California gray whale is very fond of huuiriuir tha shore. He has been known even to enter San Francisco Bay. Huu Him- oon Bay noar Tort Hartford, is the ' favorite place for catching shore seek ing whales. Thure is much less ox- citcmuut and a groat dual loss romance iu going after the shore whale, but when he is ouce got he is about as profitable on ocean bird as can be found oven in the Arctic. The coast industry is conducted mostly by Por tuguese and wholly from the shore. The trying-pots and all of tho render ing paraphernalia are, of course, lo cated on tho shore. The whales are captured by boats which go out from the shore. A lookout on a bluff is usu ally the first to dis over a whale in the distance. The whales which fre quent the coast have been so long and constantly pursued that they are very wary and it is impossible to approach them with any hope of capture without the aid of the dart gun. When the gunner fires, if he hits the game, the the next move is to haul up near enough to sho ot a bomb lance into a vital part. When this explodes the whale usually turns "toes up." The prize is then towed to the whale station, where it is hauled up on the beaoh and the work of cutting off the blubber is performed. The blubber is taken off in large oblong flitches or Pawtucket, B. L, baa been removed square pieces, one or more men md aet up in a cemetery. It base standing upon a whale nd cutting baara in big letters the tonohingly ap with sharp apadea. I propriaU word. "Weloome." Captain Hentnmon, mi old whaler, thus describes tho scene at one of thn shore whaling stations: "Near by sro tho trying works, sending forth volumes of thick, black Binokn from thn scrap fire under thn straining cauldrons of boiling oil. A little to one sidn is thn primitive storerooms, covered with cypress boughs. Boats aro hanging from thn il'ivitn, some renting on tlmipiny, while others, fully equipped, swing at their moorings in the bay. Heaward, .on the crest of a cone-shaped hill, stands the nignal Miln of the lookout station. Add to this thn cutting of the nhnpelensnnd half putrid mass of mutilated whale, together with tho men shoving ami heaving on the capstans, the scream ing of the gulls mid other sea fowls, mingled with the noise of the surf about the shores, nml we have a pic ture of the general life nt a California coast whaling Ntiiti "Chicago Her- nlit. Minnie .'hells hi Chalk. !id you ever microscopically exam ine a liny bit of powder scraped Inmi a piece of common chalk? "If yon never did," as the philosopher told the boatman iu the oft-repnated story, "you have lost lit leant one-tliird ol your life, "Not one permm in lll.Olll) has the li nit ioVa of the number nml curious forms of the minute shells that can thus be brought into plain view. The largest of these shells is not more: than tho one three-thoiinamlths of an inch iu length, yet they are as perfect its the pearly titans of the beach that are large enough to hold a half gallon of water, and w hich, w hen empty, roar like a cyclone. Some are shaped like squids and cuttlefishes, others like ''sand dollars" or nea urchins, but by far the larger majority will remind you of seashells that you have s"cu at olio time or another. One very common form of theso infinitesimal Htructures is shaped exactly liko tho common couch shell, but it has been estimated Hint at the least cnlciilati. hi it is 2,0110,- 01)11 times smaller I A earxful examination of different samples of any one specimen of chalk will generally show that there are from MOOto 500 specie of these minute shells in every conceivable sliupe mid form, the very minutest specks among them being as ciiriounly and woiideroiihly made as thonn of larger enliber. Oeologists say that ltiehmond, Va., is built over a bed of clmlk that con tains 10,000,000 uiiliut i extinct shells to every cubic inch of the stratum. HI. Louis liepublic. Tile Sun fumes Mglitn nif. Professor Klilni Thompson, the ex pert electrician, in the course of a re nt lecture oil tho luitiire ami charac teristics of lightning ami electric currents of high potentiality, said that iu his opinion lightning is caused by the action of the sun on tho clouds through the ether, arguing that if the sun can produce the aurora Imrealis in the light, thin , air, which he repro duced by electrical apparatus, thorn is reason to think that in tho dense air nearer tho earth it can produce a cur rent of high pressure that will striko through with brilliant discharges. Ho showed a completely snfo protection from thunderbolts in tho shape of a cake of brass wires and declared that an umbrella held open oscr tho head with brass chains hanging from tho uuds of tho ribs makes a complete protection. Killed u Whl:e Beer. A short timo ago mention was made that a white deer was seen by hunters in the vicinity of President, this ojunty, and afterward at dough's Dam nur Marionville, Forest county. What is thought to havo been the same .ueer was snot near roxlmrg, Forest county, on Wednesday morn ing by H. A. Oilson of that village. It is the first albino deer that has been killed in this vicinity for the past quar ter of a century, and visitors from all parts of the oountry have called at the Dubois house to get a sight of the freak of nature. Oil City (Penn.), Derrick. Mast and Sail for Bicycle, Charles D. White, of San Bernar dino, Cat., has iuventod a must and sail rig for his safety bicycle, which he uses now in all his riding. His mast is ten feet high and the boom eight feet long ; and with it Mr, White says that with good handling a speed of twenty to thirty miles an hour can b) obtained. "Beating" is almost im possible, and the greatest speed is ob tained while riding at Tight angles with the direction of the wind. A fountain that stood for many years on the main street square in roB rxnn ap uaiue?i. tirn.ti a wooiisttp.n, Kvery farmer should sen that thn woodshed is put in proper shape. Iiet neatness and order characterize it. I'ilo tho wood nwny in such a manner ss to econouiio spacn nnd make it easy to get nt. A woiiinn who' has housework to do appreciates few things morn than good, dry wood, nml this cannot bit had unless one has a good plaeo for It. Bo sum to havo a wood Iioiisii or shed. Let it bo near the kitchen, but do not oblige thn women of tho household to run to the shed overytiniH a few sticks nro wanted. Havo a neat woodbox nenr tho kitchen stove, nnd let the children know Hint you extort them to keep it filled. Wood seasoned under cover Is Hilleb preferable to that exposed to all kinds of weather. American Agriculturist. w iif.m to sow iiitkw nr.A r. Buckwheat will not grow if sown early in the spring, ns il is a semi-tropical plant, native to Celitrnl Asia mid India. 'I'll 1 1. it is sown late in the n ring or early in the summer, gener ally in Into June or early duly. It is a branching plant, and as it bears its needs on the side brunches, the seed is sown quite thinly, not more Hum one peck to nn acre. If sown more thickly than this, it will bear a very light crop of grain. When it is grown for plowing under for immure, it is sown in the first week of duly, and then will be in the' bent condition for turning under early in September or late In August. It must Hot be ex pected to mako a heavy growth on poor laud, nltlioiigh it will iiinke some growth on tho poorest soil. New York Times. nooT-pni'stso rnt'iT mans. Itoot-primiiig nets likn inngio nuine tinies in bringing barren trees into bearing state, especially when uiifriiit fulness is brought about by undue luxuriance. When trees nru making very strong shoots they are foluid on exiiiiiiiistion to bo milking roots in proportion, mid so long ns this goes on fruit prospects are very much jeop ardized. It is the small Illinois roots which command tho for, nation of fruit spurs, and in somn noils tliero is dill!- o.ilty of maintaining a fruitful condi tion. In gardens where the surface is light mid open, with a clayey subsoil, tliero is a great tendency for the roots to go deep in search of moisture, espe cislly if thn aspect is nt nil open or windy. With soils of this description mulching is of considerable value, of no matter what kind, so long as it creates ami maintains moisture. Vick's Magazine. WASIIINII 1IITTKII. Those who say that unwashed but ter will keep ns well and as long as that which has had all caneous matter taken out of it by washing, seem to be oblivious to an el.-.':ncr.tiry fact iu the laws of decomposition ami decay, says J. P. Sheldon. The casein of milk is an albuminoid, and is, there fore, very liablo to early arid rapid do. composition, if no preventive means are taken. Butter fat, on tho other hand, is a carbonaceous compound, and will keep sweet and iindecomposnd a much longer timo than casein will, if only it is in w hat may be called a pure condition that is, free from casein, and con taining no moro than the unavoidable quantum of water. Unwashed butter can bo made to keep, of course, but only by the aid of a liberal supply of salt ; carefully washed butter will keep a considerable time without salt, at a reasonable temperature, and in an at mosphere which is what we terra pure froo, that is, from unpleanaut odors. The idea prevails iu some quarters that the buttermilk can bo got out of butter by squeezing, pressing and working, and without washing. So, no doubt, it may, in part ; but it is the part left iu that does all the mis chief to the butter later on. It is, in fact, physically impossible to extract from butter fat all the casein with which it is incorporated in milk, save by careful washing while it is in a granular condition. This, I believe, is a proposition which does not admit of refutation. If, therefore, it is desirable that butter should be free from cheesy matter and who will venture to say it should not? washing is the only way of ef fectually getting rid of it. The hard-and-fast advocates of unwashed butter appear to be persona whose minds do not possess the aoentifio instinct, or the intuitfon of progress. There are (or have been) men who go on wearing top hata everywhere, in season and out of season, at home and away from it, in fine weather and foul, until one fancies they sleep in them I And so it is with the advocates' of un washed bntbu! The whole thing this cross, ennt-iron prejudice sgnlust tho washing of butter Is the creature and offspring of habit nnd of bins) just ns when a mail deelnres hn has thn Imnt wife In the world, though no one can see it but himself. It must, at the came time, bo ad mitted that butter, lii the granular state, may easily be Injured by wash ing -,by overwnshing, or by rude or careless washing, or by Impure water, or by Rnler at a wrong temperature, or by too violent oscillation, and so on. In favor of washing butter in brine there is much to be said, or rather, iierlinps, of letting the butter rent for a time, Hunting in brine, lifter It has been w.lshed slowly oh I so slowly) and gently oh t so very gently I in pure water. Therein art ill the washing of butter, a gentle art, we may call it. It I Is such ileli- eule, esreful, gentle mnnagemelit that one feels tempted to say that only woman nhoulil do it a man, never I Wo may sympathize, iu fact, with those who disagree with the washing of butter, because they have seen certilleated dairymaids in Ireland "wash ami wash nnd wash the butter until one would imagine there was lioiio of it loft." list her than this, in deed, I would almost prefer to wholly dispense with washing nnd try to get out all the buttermilk possible by work ing tho butter. All the same, however, we must not discard a principle because somu of the people who administer it lire rudo ami careless. Taken at tho right mo ment butter requires very little wash ing, mid that little should be very carefully and tenderly given, as if to a very young child. Two rinsings iu clean water an I one soaking in well made brine as we:ik as you please ought to bo enough, and for this thn butter will certainly Im none the worse, but all tho better.- New York World. PAIlM ANIl OAlUiKN NOTTS. Apples are healthful because of Hi 'J acids contained in them. Millet hi.v is mm the b.ist wintor . grasses for the dairy cattle, Pumpkins and squashes will stand about as much frost as apples. Do not always usecoriimeal alonu iu making slop for fattening hogs. In making butter consult thn tnstn of your customers rather than your own. The pear treu depends altogether upon insects for tho transfer of its pollen. ('lean up all thn brush and rubbinh which will afford hiding places for vermin. Oood breeding and good cam must go hand iu hand if a good result is expected. Try to kn"p your sheep of uniform quality and that will shear wool of uniform grade. It is b -ttj-r to feed life into a homo than to whip it into him. Direct and control tho spirit of your horse, but don't try to break it. There cannot bo a thoroughly good firm unless there is a good water sup- lr. If your farm is wanting in this, spare no effort to correct it. Do not think because your horso drinks warm water with a relish that he prefers it. Cool, fresh water is always abundant. Let him have it. A light stable is more healthy than a dark one, and will save the horse's eyes from the injury done by taking him from the dark into a blinding glare. This is the timo to make all your repairs about the farm and to seo to it that machinery is put away iu order, so that all will be in readiness to begin work at the earliest opportunity. Husking gloves aud mittens will last twice as long if rubbed with a little pine tar, to which a little re:iu has been added. This preparation is also said to be good to apply to the hands. Kerry cattle are very bsrdy and easy to keep ; the cows are good milk ers and the beeves fatten rapidly when properly fed. Altogether the breed have many points which would seem to recommend them for certain parts of the Uuited States. A heavy clay soil will bold water like a basin, and no crop can do its best if the plants hive wet feet. A subsoil plow that will break deeply without lifting the under soil will make the cropping of such land much more profitable than it has been before. The Orloff, through his process of evo lution, has been selected for sound ness, shape, size and style as well at speed. ' With our trotters all ex cept the speed has been neglected. Henoe, the Orloff, when crossed with our harness horses, will give both sub stance and quality. I0K THE liOL'MKWirE. fiARKi) Tunsitr. Tatnn mid wild turkeys nrn prepared and cooked alike The time for oook liiK Is from fifteen to twenty minutes to thn pound, but this depends much upon the ago of tho bird. It must bo well done to bo palatable. Success lies In cooking it long enough, and frequent basting. Put the turkey Into a pan of cold wnter rinse It Inside and out In three or four waters j in thn last wabir but one, dissolve a teaspoonful of soda. Fill tho body with this water; shake it well; pour it off mid rinse with fresh water; wipe it dry iimido mid out; rub the inside with pepper and salt. Pro pari. a stufllng ss follows: Mix Into enough grated bread to fill tho craw and body of the turkey a half tea spoonful of pepper, one teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of summer savory, thyme or sage, four ounces of lard, four ounces of butter, with moiigh warm wat tr to urifco the mix ture moist. Mix all thoroughly aud stuff tho craw ami body with it; tie a string tightly about thn neck ; sew up tho in cision ; tin down tho wings mid legs, then lay it on its back in tho baking pan ; wet the skin and neanon it with pepper and milt and dredge it with flour. Distribute on the upper side mil ill I pieces of butter; put into thn pan about a pint of boiling stock, or a quarter of a pound of butter; have a brisk fire ; put the psu into tho oven and bake. Bast frequently, at least nvery ton minutes; bake to a rich brown. If it browns too rapidly lay a sheet of white paper over it until th ) lower part is done. When the turkey is browned on the breast, turn it over iu the pan while iu the oven. Pepper, salt, and dredge the back with flour, nml bake until browned, basting ss above. When baked re move the strings from the neck and body ; put it into a hot dinh and serve with a gravy prepared as follows: Cleanse the gizzard, liver, and heart of tho turkey thoroughly iu cold water; milieu them ; put them into a pot with enough cold water to cover them. Stow gently until tender, and keep warm. When the turkey is removed from th i pan add tho giblets with tho water in which they were stewed to tho dripping remaining in tho pan; put tho pan on the tiro; thicken with one or two tablespoon fills of blended browned flour, stirring it in gradually ; let it boil up once, season with pepper and salt, pour it into a separate dish, aud serve. Prepare and bake ducks, geese, pig coiis.gronne.partridgen, chickens, etc., lame or wild, as above, except that the stiilling for ducks and geesu must bo made of mashed potatoes instead o' bread crumbs, with one or more par boiled onions finely chopped and mixed into the potato. Homo prefer to omit tho stuflirg from tho body in order that ttio bird may bo moro thoroughly cooked. Tho stiitling omitted from the body rusy lie mailo into cakes and fried. Turkey may bo stuffed with saunnge meat, fresh oysters or roasted chestnuts. American Farmer. ROL'HKHOr.O HINTS. Mend tho torn pages of books with white tissue paper. Oloves can be cleansed at home by rubbing with gasoline. Tooth powder is an excellent cleans er of fiuo filigree jewelry. Chlorido of lime put about rat boles will drive away tho rodents. Corks warmed in oil make excellent suntitutes for glass stoppers. ' The fumes of a brimstone match will remove berry stains from the fin gers. Tinware may be brightened by dip ping a damp cloth in common soda and rubbing it well. Ceilings that have become smoked by kerosene lamps may be cleansed by washing off with soda water. Strong tepid soda water will make glass very brillant, then rinse in cold water, wipe dry with a linen cloth. Boiled starch is much improved by the addition of a little sperm or a lit tle salt, or both, or a little gum arabio dissolved. Salt will curdle new milk ; hence in preparing milk porridge, gravies, etc. the salt should not be added until the dish is prepared. For cleaning oil paint before re painting, use two ounces of water dis solved in a quart of hot water, then rinse off with clear water. What He Was After. Old Gentleman "So yoaareenxiooa to become my daughter's husband?' Young Man "No, sir; to become) your sua in law." Truth. e