Before the end of this year every one of the 108 towns in Connecticut will be connected by telephone. The Per avian oil region is said tc cover 72,00 square miles. That of Pennsylvania is about 050 square miles. A correspondent asks the Chicago Times-Herald to "describe the Greek cross." It would be much easier to describe what has made the Greek cross. According to the London Labor Gazette, there were 1037 strikes last year, as against only 876 in 1805: but the number of laborers involved was 263.758 in the latter year, and only 199.600 in 1896. A curious illustration of the diverse conditions that may exist in this conn* Sy is the fact that while so many :ple in the Mississippi Valley are suffering from floods the New Orleans papers are raising money for sufferer# from the drouth in Louisiana. A woman's bicycle club was organ ized in Detroit the other day, but the Free Press says that it collapsed within a week because no two members could agree as to the uniform to be worn. When Colorado musters iu its eotupuuy of women militia there will be trouble. While a marriage ceremony was being performed uear Danville, Va., a kerosene lamp flamed up and was about to explode when the bride seized it and hurled it through a window. The groom then came out from under I lie table, where he had hidden, and the ceremony proceeded. Promotions are coming rapidly these lays in the upper official circles of the regular army. What few veterans of the Civil War are left find the age of retirement close at baud in the young est cases. "The army will soon be in the hands of officers trained only in the walks of peace," observes the New Orleans Picayune. For the first time in twenty-eight years the State of Ohio is without Democratic representation in the United States Beuate. The long period of divided representation began in 1869, with tlie election of Allen G. Thurmau as the colleague of John Ahermau. Once only has the rule of divided representation been broken, and that was in the Forty-sixth Con gress, when George H. Pendleton was the colleague of Senator Thurman. One of the new dictionaries has in it a pretty big and yet perhaps a useable word, * "politicalization," of which it seems to be itself somewhat in doubt, nl though it half-supports it with a quotation from the Brooklyn Eagle, which coined the phrase. The Eagle it seems, once referred to "the steady politicalization of the public schools," j>y which it meant the subjection of these schools to political control. Whatever we may think of the word, comments the New York Observer, the danger indicated is certainly a real one. Illinois women arc making a strong effort to lift the compulsory education law of their State into activity. At present the law only .remains that every child shall attend school for six- Veen weeks each year. Children easily evade it by an irregular attendance during the last term of school. When .Hie school has closed it becomes diffi cult to determine whether or not they have had the prescribed amount of mitiou. Actually, although there is a penalty for infraction of the law, and although infraction is frequent, the penalty has never been imposed, it is believed that a simple amendment requiring the sixteen weeks of tuition to be consecutive and at the begin ning of the term, and providing for the enforcement of the law, will be suffi cient. A newspaper artist has been telling soihe of the woes of the men who make pictures for the daily papers. He says: "It makes me tired sometimes when J hear some smart Aleck who couldn't tell the difference between art and a side of sole leather criticise newspaper illustrations. The public doesn't un derstand what handicaps are continu ally thrown about our work. A few days before election I was given in structions to moke a portrait of one rit* the candidates. He gave me an old daguerreotype, made just after the war, ami said he had had no photo graph taken since then. Well, I made his picture all right, but in order tc Madonna. But Jan Vereker's prao- j ticed eye had told him that this was j only a secondary use to which it had : been put He took it home; he enre fully cleaned off (be the upper daub. Another paintlug Jgudsenpe—ap ; penred beneath. But even fJ;iwas not the original, though, apparently, n hundred years older than the first; nnd he cleaned ffcjs also oft'. Then he came upon the rest thing, and he un derstood that ha had speriei)ee flo BQ might, pq doubt, lie considered riithey sharp practice. j And James Hosier's wish was aotu* j ally fulfilled, The fifteen days of grace | elapsed. No communication arrived i from Jan Vereker. On the morniug I of the sixteenth day, the manager took • his stand upon the strict letter of the | agreement. He paid £2OOO, plus in- I tjerest, into the partnership account out jof his own pocket. And thus he ac- I quired old Vereker's Van Dyck at less j thau hull' its value There was no need, as jt tpruedout, I for the banker to have been in such a | hurry. For days and weeks went by, I and fctill Jan Vereker remained absent | and silent. Of this Rosier was glad, because now, when the old fellow came ' liack, he could scarcely complain of | hia security having been dealt with; ! whereas, if he had turned up within u ! ilav or two of the limit, ho might I reasonably have been incensed at find* : ing liis Van Dyck already sold. lint it was not long before the true 1 explanation came. Hosier & Sons one | day received a rather startling letter i from a well-known banking tirm in j Manchester. They (the Manchester I bankers) had learned a few days since, j from something seen by one of the ; partners in the newspapers, that Mr. j Tames Rosier had, in the course of a i business transaction, acquired posses ! don of the Vereker Van Dyck. This | news was heard by them with aston i ishment. for they themselves (as they j believed) held the picture in question j as security for an overdraft allowed to ! their customer, Mr. Jan Vereker. I Their suspicions being thus aroused. | they called in an expert, and he had at once declared that their present j security was merely a cleverly forged 1 substitute. They had, therefore, placed ! the matter in the hands of the police, nint bad thought it their duty to corn ; municate with Messrs. Rosier & Sons, | in case they might have been similarly j imposed upon. James Rosier was in a tine state of j mind after lie had read this letter. He j lost 110 time iu dispatching a messenger ito Messrs. , the art publishers I above mentioned, asking them to send | up their Mr. (who had previously I valued the Vau Dyck) to his private | residence, at the earliest possible mo- I ment. When he arrived, the painting was submitted to him. He unbesita ! tingly pronounced it a forgery. ! In the course of inquiries it trans pired that ten other banks in various large provincial towns Jliad been simi larly duped. In eacli case precisely the same method had been adopted. The first step was the depositing of the real Van Dyck at the bank for safe custody. The second, the advance made upon the genuine work, and duly repaid. The third, the depositing of u skillful forgery, so artfully executed as easily to pass for the original. The fourth, the advance obtained on the security of this forged subtitute. The last, the disappearance of Jan Vereker with £24,000. So far us could be ascertained, he had no confederates, and there' was little doubt that all the twelve forgeries were the work of his own practiced band. Though every effort was made to run him down, he still remains among the number of the "wanted."—London Truth. WISE WORDS. Silence seldom makes a mistake. To have a bud habit is to have a | hard master. i Some of our happiest moments are spsut in air castles. The shortest way to do many things ! is to do only one thing at a time. If you are looking for trouble tell a | woman that her new wrap is unbecom- A woman's reason may not convince, but it often puts au end to the discus sion. Women seem to think that husbands never have Hiiy need to reform their wives. The man who goes out of office as pleasantly us lie does in is u very rare I individual. i When you are in trouble, people who I call to sympathize are really after the j particulars. A person under the firm persuasion | that he can command resources virtual ly has them, i There are others, but people never j find it out until they are married, and it is too late. Talk] what you will of taste," my friend, you will find two of a face as oon as of a mind. Fortune's ladder has no top. "No man has ever stopped climbing for want of another rung. An egotist may be defined as a per son who is so wrapped up in himself that he pays no attention to us. After a girl has heard some one say she has a sad face she always goes around trying to look sorrowful. Since a woman can't make her hus band like her ideal, why not try to make her ideal like her husband. (live self power to move a mountain, and it will put a big sign out on it to show who did it, as the house movers do. The one who works the hardest re ceives the most blame. The idle, do ing nothing, are responsible for noth ing. There is such a thing as knowing too much. 1 have seen people who would be wiser if they could forget half they know, —The South West. £le*tiio i.lfflit flit It. William Johnson, who has just re turned from Binghnmton, N. Y., from a trout fishing trip to Delaware County, made a successful experiment with a number of small incandescent light bulbs, which be used as bait. He at tached tv bulb about the size of those used by physicians, to his line near the book. Then he made a trip up the stream at night, throwing the lighted bait into the water, the current j being furnished by a pooket battery, j His success was phenomenal. ' The fish attracted by the light would j flock around the strange object and ; snap at the baited book. Mr. Johnson I says he has consulted counsel, and finds that this manner of Ashing is not prohibited by the game laws, and ex perience satisfies him that it is most remunerative from a fisherman's point of view.—New York Press. glut Knew. Minnie f whispering) f Mamma, ! isn't Colonel (Irimsliaw ugly?" The Colonel—"Don fc-yoii know, my j little girl, that it is rude to whisper in company?" | Minnie—"Well, it would be ruder to 1 say it out loud!" Punch. Make a .Study of Your Hay. A prevailing opinion of t-lie majority of farmers is to the effect that the con sumers of hay and those engaged in the business in large cities do not know what good hay is. The sooner the people divest themselves of this delu sion. the better. The commission men who handle thousands of tons of pressed hay every year have a better opportunity to judge of the different qualities, consignmentsjreaching vhein from all parts and the article being of all grades. Furthermore, it does them an injustice, inasmuch as they ale a very intelligent class of people, equally well versed in their business as the most progressive farmer is in his. Those readers who engage in raising and marketing hay and who have fol lowed the market reports, have proba bly come to the conclusion by this time that in the future it will not pay to raise inferior grades, but to produce n quality which will command the highest price and will always ho sal able. This kind of hay is very scarce in this country at present and is an nually growing less, and the trade in this article will soon he a thing of the past unless those engaged in the busi ness will take steps to enrich their land and destroy the foul weeds with which their meadows are infected. A few tons of fertilizers every year with what manure can he saved ou the farm would soon make the land produce the right kind of hay again.—Watertown Standard. Feed for Clitekefi*. It is a great mistake to suppose he cause the ehicken is small that it needs to l>e fed wholly or oven mainly with soft food. The plate of wet corn meal, left where the young chicks can run into it, trampling the food with their dirty feet, and then leaving most of it to ferment, as it is sure to do in the warm sunshine, is the cause of more mortality among very young chicks than any other one thing. The food even of little chickens should bo as nearly dry as it can be to he fed con veniently. If corn meal is fed, mix it with uiilk curd until the curd becomes "crumbly." So soon as they will eat, give them hard-boiled eggs chopped very tine. Follow this with cracked wheat or rye. When a week or ten days old, the chicks will eat either rye or wheat whole, and be all the better for it. The digestion of the chicken is naturally strong, if not weakened by feeding exclusively on soft food. Some sand or very tine gravel should be placed where they can get it. They will only eat what they need. but with this gravel there is all the greater necessity for some hard grain for it to work on in the gizzard. Whole corn should not be given to young chicks. It is too large a grain for tlieiu to di gest well, and its heating nature makes it apt to ferment in their gizzard, as indeed corn meal may do if eaten free ly when digestion is impaired. Some whole small grain should alw ays he fed to chicks while growing, anil there is nothing better than whole wheat. The small, shrunken grains that go out with the screenings in cleaning wheat are even better for ehickens than the plump grains. They are harder, have less starch and a greater proportion of the nitrogenous nutrition that is ro quired to promote growth and make feathers.—American Cultivator, Insect. Injuring Apple., Bulletin No. 31! of the Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station, Columbia, by Professor J. M. Sted uian, reports the results of elaborate experiments with means of preventing two insects very injurious to apple trees, and describes cheap and efficient methods of combating them. The insect known as the apple loaf folder may be readily killed by thor oughly spraying trees or nursery stook jußt as soon as the young insects begin to botch, and before they have had time to fold the leaves to any consider able extent. This spraying should he done just as the apple tree loaves are unfolding. The spraying mixture should he made as follows: One pound of Paris green, three pounds of fresh lime, 150 gallons of water, " Since there are three broods of this insect eaoh year, there are three peri ods during which spraying oau be most successfully done. The leaf crumpler, another insect very injurious to apple trees, may be readily killed by thoroughly spraying the infested trees while the leaves are unfolding and before the blossoms open, with the same mixture as recom mended above, If ueoessary, the trees may be sprayed again immediately after all the blossoms have fallen, but iu thiß case the amount] of water in the mixture should be increased to 175 gallons. Never spray a fruit tree while it is in bloom: serious injury to the blos som nnd imperfect pollination may re sult, and in many instances honey bees will be killed. Never omit the fresh lime, and al ways use two or three times as much lime by weight as Paris green. This will lessen the chances of fuming the leaves and injuring the trees. Spray with a mixture {of the strength just given. To make it weaker is to ren der it loss effective in killing Insects; to mako it stronger is to injure the fol iage of the trees. Always see that the mixture is kept constantly stirred while spraying. Apply with as much force as possible, and use as fine a snfo as can be madq. Spray tlioroug }'• Hold the spray on the tree ig enough to saturate it and to read parts, and always spray from at hast two sides. The bulletin is for free distribtr •>& to the farmers, and may be had by writing to the Director of the Exp i* inent Station, Columbia, Mo. IlMtidling the Colts. I On the average farm the colt is ng* j lected. The value of the colts ot all j ages has been below par for sev> *1 years. | A change, however, is coming al'it j and every one who has foresight fflc Id , recognize good value in every ;fejrlflg and suckling that is in sight! Ve j would qualify the value where tin e has been neglect in proper breedig. Parentage and blood lines count fn!y as much tin. the colt at this Itiie 8 ever. The average farmer regards ie produce of his brood mares when® t! •y are worked as about so muclilcUr gain, and too often gives thenmliir food at weaning time grudgingly! 'be little fellow is expected to take cfti">f | himself after six months of age* i d j make his way along with a herd >f older stock. Such a policy manifi ts j poor management, j From the time the colt is eiat | weeks of age, it should he graduny trained to eat oats, bran, etc., and ts | training to the halter should aUo>e I begun ut this time. When it is th o ! months old, it should be quite ger'o ! and not ut all afraid of mankind. 111- | tering and feeding it regularly foi a | half hour once a day during the th <1 j month of its age should accustom it o I the halter so that it will never in at r life fail to be submissive to this j straint. i It is not wise to take the colt w h i the dam into the field at auy timers it is better off in a lot or pasture wli i other colts or horse stock. The dais j blood should always be at nornd | temperature when she is permitted o nourish the youngster. Once or twice a week it is art visa'' j when the colt is four months of age i older to hitch it beside the dam whu she is given a short drive on theroi 1 This accustoms;the little fellow to t sights of the world and gives its training that will be accomplished t this time with much less trouble th i if it is permitted to run wild until fo years of age. The colt must learn by experien and observation, and will learn as fa as the older horhe. When well train> to lead and to know the meaning "whoa." half the battle of subduir the creature is accomplished. Every month tip to eighteen monil of age it should be haltered in the hi ,i a few times and also led either by hr n or beside the team on the road. The n n who likes company, instead of a d p could lead to advantage the colt w 11 him when he goes a-foot. After tl i period it should be hitched and driv u occasionally.—Home and Farm. FREAKS OF THE MISSOURI. Farmers iWho Find Their Fields 111 re l>lHuppenred Over Night. In St. Nicholas Frank 11. Spearm n baH a paper entitled "A Sbifti g -Boundary," which is particulai y timely just at present, as it tells of t e way the Missouri River has of sn 1- deuly changing its boundaries. \ •. Hpearliian says; Of course you've heard of the eu |- ous freaks of the Missouri River—t e "Rig Muddy:" how the sudden, trenc - erous mountain waters roll down 1 mighty Hoods from Montana at 1 Wyoming, ricochet from side to side f the broad valley they have eaten de > into the soft prairies, and pour heai ■ long into the Mississippi near St. Loui ; how, night and day, winter and sun mer, the twisting torrent Hhifts it channel, exits its banks, undermine railroads, astonishes the muskrnts keeps the tlsh studying guide-posts worries the bridge guards, and sets tin farmers crazy. For, just think ot it the Nebraska farmer whose lane stretches along the river goes to bee thinking he will exit his broad acres o golden wheat in the morning: but lo in the uight that madeap river has eu tered his waving Helds, and the like snow they have melted away. Groin, fences, trees, buildings, laud— are gone! And a great, sullen, yellow flood boils and eddies where his harvest smiled yesterday. Next week, very likely, the rooking stream will make his neighbor across the river a present of a hundred or more acres, just because he doesn't need them. 0( course it was natural for a man who lost his land that way to look longingly across the river, ami think, after a wldle, that the newly made laud over there belonged to hiru; and ninny n wearisome lawsuit lias begun to recover title to "made" laud which lies, maybe, exactly where (he lost farm lay, but on the other side of the river. Perhaps there is some equity in such a claim; but tbo trouble is, that sort of thing is going on all the time, and the courts said they couldn't keep track of such pranks; that lands acquired by accretion—mark that word —should belong to the farmer who owned the river-hank where they wi re thrown up; that if the river took ynur farm, you would have to fish it out of the stream yon lost it in; at least, you needn't ask the courts to give you an other for it. LIFE'S JOURNEY. He went to seek his fortune iMth light nnd joyous tread. Ami all his bag ami baggage "as just a crust of bread. Ho proud and iadopcmlent 'Hint youth upon that lia'v. Ho brißhtiy boamcd the future, He throw the crunl away. Years afterward a pilgrim Without sack or load. Hut with a stick to lean on. Came hobbling down the road. it was the youth you wot of how humbled, bowed and -'bust." And ho had journeyed homeward To try and find that crust. i. L. Parks, in Truth. HUMOR OF THE DAY. i —' 'Pa, what is an heir-at law. Pa—"Usually the lawyer, Bobby. —Judge. 1 I can't see why ,thev speak of the wisdom of the serpent." "Well, you never heard of n serpent getting its leg pulled, did you V" —Truth. Gosling— "JJTiss Oldstvle seems to be very strong on literature. Miss Giddy—"Yet, pour thing; that's nil that is left to her!"— Truth. "My husband is a great lover of the beautiful." "Indeed he is. I should think that you would almost feel jea lous sometimes."—Detroit Journal. Jimmy— "1 heard Tommy Jones was ill nearly all the holidays." Johnny and what's worse, he got well just iu time to go to school."—Boston Traveler. Mrs. Hashcroft - "Is there too much seasoning in the turkey, Mr. Billings? ' Billings—"No; I should say there is too little turkey in the seasoning."— Indianapolis Journal. Freshman—"l would like to get shaved, sir—close, sir." Barber— ' Exactly, sir; there is nothing better for the scalp than that, if you don't mind the looks. "—Judge. Frances—"Yes, he is pursuing literature." Gertrude—"lndeed. And is lie very successful?" Frances— I' i R "till a long way ahead of uim."—Cleveland Leader. ' Teacher—"Tommy, if you gave your little brother nine sticks of candy and then took away seven, what would thnv, make?" Tommy—"lt would make him yell."—Harper's Bazar. "How could you have the nerve after hearing her—to tell her that she sang divinely?" "Why, my dear fel low, a woman who would sing like that Jould he told anything?"— Puck. The Boarding Mistress—"And she moved away owing you for three weeks' meat?" The Fat Boy—"Yes'm! It. wasn't so much, muni. She kept a boardin'-house, you know."—Puck. "Willie Wishington," said the friend, "is one of those people who tell everything they know." "Yes." replied Miss Cayenne wearily, "and he doesn't talk very much, either."— Washington Star. First Cabman—"l axed him free dollars, but he said he had only two; an', anyhow, he said (le legal fare was only one." Second Cabman—"Well. I s'pose you took dc two dollars an' ac cepted dc apology."—Puck. Tramp (desperately, to reporter;— "If yer don't give me some money, guv'nor, I'll commit suicide before y ' werry eyes." Reporter (eagerly)--") wish you would lav good fellow; "copy" is awfully scarce!"— Standard. Waggish Friend—"Where did you get thut—" Spriggins (gasping;. "Eh! Wlia—" "That hat?" "Oli! Hat? Of course! Bought it around the corner. I was afraid yon were go ing to ask me where' I got this um brella."—New York Weekly. "Novel Itabbit Traps. ' Many of the Russian farmers west of town are complaining about jack rab bits falling down their chimneys and frequently lodging therein, stopping; the passage of the smoke. Their peu sautlike houses—which are all pro vided with large fireplaces and pro portionately large chimneys—are most ly low and covered with the "beauti ful." The chimneys, of course, lift ve obe kept clear of snow. After it lias j.een shoveled away several times, 1 irge funnel-shaped cone remains, the vails of which are rendered icv by the Iternate influence of tho fire below ud the cold above. Any wild an nul prowling around on a bitter ild night, upon Hearing one of these moke cones and feeling the warmth ould naturally seek closer proximity lereto, whereupon its ventures would ivariably result in a slide. Mr. An lal lauding in the fire box below . ttliu (N. I>.) Wind. Soap From Sulitlower Seeds Those interested iu new industries 'ay be glad to hear that it is possible 1 manufacture good soaps from sue Lwer seeds. Sunflowers grow easily, 'id need little attention. A company Is been organized in the United cites to manufacture this sort of soap. Ila claimed that the average yield of lints to the acre is 2500 pounds gross; lrcentage of oil is one-third the eight of the seeds, so that 600 pounds "seed will make 200 pounds of oil., '■le latter, when refined and ready to U, in making soap, is worth about # a pound, and is said to make the ®est of toilet soaps. The net profi I °the sunflowers to the grower is put a sll an acre. lint Killing Their Fad. I'Ue newest fad ill Scott County,, 'liana, is "rat killings," The vicinity L lately been iuvnded by hordes ol r 's, which are doing much damage, ''en a "killing" is arranged all the tt u and robust hoys in the neighbor Aid are invited, and, armed with f'lis and accompanied by dogs, they 'in a systematic cleaning out ot 'us, haystacks and corn cribs. The 1 1 are very fierce, and several men ' e been severely bitten by them, but ' work goes on nevertheless, and tin " age mortality of rodents at a kill • ' 'is about 200.—Detroit Free Press,