Freeland Tribune Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVKBY MONDAY AND THURSDAY, BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY. Limited OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. FBEELAND, l'A SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months .r .75 Four Month 9 00 Two Months *2O The date which tho subscription i 3 paid to is on t tie address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent "date be comes a receipt for remittance. Keep the (lgurcs in advance of the present date, lie port promptly to this ofllce whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. Ma '■ <■ all in ny ordt rs. checks, * tc %% payabk to th Tribun - Printinj Company, Limited. Italy lias given up lier scheme for building $104,000,000 worth of war ships. She had unfortunately over looked the important fact that she hadn't the price. The average yield of wheat per acre in France has been steadily in creasing for seventy years, until now it is one of the highest in the world. There is a lesson in agriculture which even the United States might heed with profit. Steadily American ideas of liberty are invading the sacred precincts of Great Britain. Mill cqjeratives in Lancashire, England, struck because they were not permitted to shut up shop and attend the Bar num. circus, which is touring Great Britain. Hundreds of American farmers are gettiug good interest on the value of their farms, simply because they lo cated near a large town where real es tate had a chance to increase in price, says the American Agriculturist. High taxes eat up a good part of the profits, but still if the town grows fast, the owner of the farm often grows wealthy. Increase in land value is a legitimate part of a farmer's profits, but nobody should buy a farm wh eh will not pay its own way by straight farming, whether real estate goes up or down. By the launching of the new battle ship Illinois one of the five warships of the same displacement of 11,525 tons is pluced in the water, to be fol lowed by the Wisconsin, there having been already launched the Kearsarge, the Kentucky and the Alabama. The Illinois exceeds the lowa by some scores of tons, and the Indiana, Mas sachusetts and Oregon by over 1200 tons. The armor of the Illinois will not be quite as thick as that of our first three battleships, but it will be of better quality and of a greater re sisting power. It will be seen, there fore, that the Illinois forms a splen did addition to the navy, and will add materially to its efficiency. A fire, with its consequences, in the courthouse at Eastou, Md., recently, furnishes a hint for the novelist or the dramatist. To counteract the damp ness in the vault of the probate court an oil stove was lighted. It was neg lected, with the result that fire was communicated to some unfiled and un recorded papers, which were charred beyond recognition. One of these papers was the will of a late resident of St. Michael's, who, for reasons not disclosed, had "cut off''his only child, a daughter, with $lO, bequeathing the bulk of his small estate to the Methodist Episcopal church in his village. By this accident of lire the condition, according to the law, was the same as if the St. Michael's citizen had neglected to make a will, and all of his property will revert to his next of kin, the daughter, who is traveling in the far West, as the rep resentative of a commercial firm in Baltimore. There is an uncle in the case, who deposited the will in the court, and who was by the will, made neir to the favorite h rse of the de ceased. This uncle can eas ly be con verted by the novelist into a wicked and scheming relative, the modest es tate can he multiplied many fold, the quality of attractiveness can be given to the daughter, the once necessary honest wooing can be added, and the book is ready for the publisher. A Temple of Serpent*. The email town of Werda, In the kingdom of Dahomey, is celebrated for its temple of serpents, a long building In which the priests keep upwards of 1.000 serpents of all eizes, which they feed with birds and frogs brought to them as offerings by the natives. Eti.y Work. "We've got to economize, Maud." eald Henry. "It's absolutely neces sary." "Very well," returned Maud. "I shall give up your cigars." "And I will do without your fall bonnet," ■aid Henry.—Harper's Bazgy. THE LITTLE DINNER PAIL. Tn morning gray, along the street, I hear the trump of many feet, And hear the friendly hail, ••Good morning, Johnl" "Good morning, Bill!" As on they trudge to shop or mill, With little dinner pall. With little dinner palU they go. Through mud and ruin, through slush and snow, Wearing in manly way- Wearing as King wears kingly crown, The toilers' garb of blue or brown; For very kings are they. I TIM'S INITIATIVE. 1 By WILLUM A. LEAIIV. ARTNEK and my- H se " c (° u '( tkiuk we fj ,8 shall need you af eSSs H ter 'o-night, Titn- SjAI U othy." ■ The blow had C"" eu "t ' as t- J-'ira * u tact, front "the wm moment Lawyer gSt ]j /J Dodd had ve - m kA' marked to '.his F / partner, "Well we'll try him any way," Tim had known he would not suit; aud time had only confirmed him iu this conviction. The lawyers were so sharp and quick; their errands full of strange terms, hard to remember, and de spatchedto Btrauge places, hard to find. Aud when he was left alone in the of fice, and other lawyers came in, all quick and sharp, like his employers, how confused he grew! How he blundered at the telephone! How he always failed to say the right thiugto the clients! How he hit upon the utterly wrong thing to say to the judge one day, aud saw Mr. Dodd slap his long yellow envelope on the desk and swing his chair around 'and look at him, as much as to say, "You born dunce!" "You don't seem to take hold as we would like to have you," explained Mr. Dodd, counting out two two-dol lar hills, n dollar over Tim's usual week's pay, but the last that he was to receive from this employer—tho last, perhaps, he was ever to receive from anybody, he thought, as he shut tled disconsolately down the stairs. It was a sad story to tell to his mother; though, of course, being his mother, she would be easier than any one else. "Well, it's too bad, 'Timmie, losing your very first place, but I suppose you can look around for auother one." "Oh, yes," replied Tim, choking up at her sympathy. But when he went to his own room and looked out of the window, it really did not seem any use. It was the recommendation from his grammar school that got him this placo; but now he hadn't any recommenda tion. Aud who would take a dis charged office-boy? However, next morning he faithfully copied out all the "Boy Wanted" ad vertisements iu the Sunday paper, aud on Monday started out early to try his luck. At noon he came home discour aged; at supper-timo he had no ap petite at all. Sometimes the place had just been taken by another boy. The "Help Wanted" column had many readers, it oeemed. Sometimes a bigger boy than Tim was wanted, aud how Tim wished he was tall! Sometimes it was n smaller boy, aud Tim regretted his long trousers. Sometimes the faces of the women clerks, looking sidewise from their desks at the candidate for Harry's or Charley's position, froze his courage completely. His voice sank low, and he grew in his own esteem twice as shabby and buinbio as he really was. Then he saw clouds of doubt gather ing on the face of the manager or floor-walker, and heard him conclude the examination with a bluut "You won't do;" or, perhaps, the more evasive "Well, I thiuk we'll make other arrangements;" or, gentlest of all, but knelling with no less certainty tho doom of his modest application, "Leave me your address, so that if we should want you we shall know where to send." Two weeks of constant rejection sappe.l Tim's hope most lamentably. He dreaded to turn au office door knob. He began to look upon em ployers as a class apart from other men, of stern, inquisitorial temper aud disposition that could not be pleased. "It's too bad we haven't some friend who could get you a place, Timmie," laid his mother. That was just what Tim had been thinking, himself. Naturally, he aud his mother had certain traits iu common. "But I can't thiuk of any; so you'll keep ou trying, like a good boy, won't you?" "Oh, yes," replied Tim, "I'll keep ou trying." But two months went by, and ho hadn't energy enough left for n real, hearty try. To bo sure, he dreamed every night of golden strokes of for tune, and usually started toward town in the morning determined to "do somethiug, anyway." But even this vague determination oozed away after he had crossed his threshold; and the upshot of every journey was a random saunter through the streets, with his hands iu his pockets and a far-away, desolate look in his eyes. Now and then he would stop at a store window with a sudden jerk, then turn aside after a short survey, move ou to the next corner and halt a minute before he decided whether to proceed to the right or to the left. He Who, brave of soul, with cheerful faca, Are faithful in the lowest place That Duty calls them to; , Who for the home, the weans, the wife, Grow gray with care and stern with strife, Keeping their heart-beats true. Such men—God Vla**"Thom! cities need— i Men great in thought and strong in deed, Knowing no word like "fail;" Then doll* your hat what time you meet The man who carries down the street Tho little dinner pail. —Mr9. M. I*. A. C'rozier, In the Voice. ran to all the tires. He stood in lino with the crowd on the curbstono to wntob the procession. Ho idled into the reading-room of thepublic library; everywhere an easily recognizable picture of irresolution and failure. One cveuiug, as Tim came home, tired, despondent and a little sulky, be met Nelly at the gate. This was no nnusual occurrence, as Nelly lived next door aud their families used the same passageway. Now Nelly was as brisk a girl as ever swung n broom, which was just her occupation this evening. She hail tho gift of making things and people go lier way. Tho babies, no matter liow many, could not override her for a minute; aud arms akimbo, with a stamp of her foot, she could scare the surliest prowler from her yard. Moreover, unlike Tim, she liked to talk to people, to push ont into the world and expand her knowledge and experience. With these qualities, she made an excellent housekeeper for her father, and although barely sixteen, assumed capably the place of the mother who was gone. Her sleeves were rolled tip to the elbows; her eyes were on Mamie and Eddie, straying a little too far up the street; aud the open house-door showed that she had left some unfinished task behind her. "Hello," she said, as the wanderer shambled in. "Hello, Nelly." He saw that her eyes were fixed on him critically, and felt that ho was not altogether fit for inspection. "Aren't you working yet, Tim?" Now this question, when put by anybody else than, of course, his mother, was iu Tim's sensitive ears a thrust, a veiled innuendo, an unfavor able verdict, But he and Nelly had for a long lime made friendly eyes at each other and exchanged intimate confidences. For, if Tim was nnfor unate, he was also, according to the standard of that neighborhood, dis tinctly "nice." So Nelly's voice had a ring of sympathy iu it, which relieved tho harshness of this most embarrass ing question. "No," said Tim, "not yet." "Why can't yon get a place, Tim?" "I don't know," lie answered, With a sickly little smile. "I wish I could." "I guess you try hard enough." "Oh, yes, I've tried." Tim was truthful. He put his statement in the present perfect teuso. "But it's pretty hard." "Other fellows get jobs. There's Jack White, ouly graduated with you, aud he's clerk ill u dry-goods store." "Yes, hut Jack White's a fine writer, aud I'm no good at writing." "Well, there's Walter Oraig works iu a meat-shop." "Yes, I know. He got tho place I was going to get. His big brother goes with the mau that started the store and " "Oh, well, there are lots of other places. Don't you ever see any chances?" "Ye-es," replied Tim, slowly. "Yesterday I went in to get a place, but the man asked me if I oould make change, aud I never made change " "But you could! Of course you could 1 Aud you've got to make thein : think so. Spunk up to anybody, i That's the way to get along. Why \ don't you try selling papers?" j "Oh, I'm too old to sell papers." "You aren't as old as the Martin ! boy." j "Oh, well, bo always sold papers." Nelly (licked some dust off the wooden gate. "I know what I'd do. I'd get a wagon aud peddle." "Oh, people wouldn't buy anything j of a boy like me." | "Nonsense! You went round with Dineen last summer, and everybody J said you hollered fine." Determined as he was to deuy him solf every imaginable virtue, Tim | could not contradict Nelly's last as sertion. His voice was famous, both ! for power and quality, although, curi ! onsly enough, when he tried to sny !he simple words, "I saw iu the papers this morning that you w-wauted a ! b-b-boy," it could sink to the feeblest, huskiest whisper that any employer ever heard from au applicant. "Anyway, I haven't any wagon or anything," protested Tim, more fertile iu imagining obstacles than expedients. "That wouldn't cost much," said j Nelly, a little doubtfully, because the ; price of wagons was beyond her range. "How much do you have to pay for a horse?" "Ten dollars. That's what Dineon : paid for his." | "And a wagon—a second-hand one, I mean?" "Oh, I don't know anybody that I has one to sell." "Well, if I was a boy, I'd make one," said Nelly, sharply, and when Tim looked ill her eyes this time, he saw that they were not quifco like his | mother's after all. They were sym i pathetic, but they also seemed to be examining him, probing him, just like the eyes of those terrible managers anil floor-walkers and employers. "Where's Dineen's wagon? Ho isn't peddling this year," said Nelly. "Oh, I forgot that. But that's all— old and—kinder—" "Couldn't you paint it up?" Oh, I'm no good at painting." "You're too—too bashful to live, Timmio Tighe. You just want some body to plant yon in a chair, and put a pen in your hand, aud tell you what to write, aud you'll write it. But they never will; and you'll go to the bad, if you don't look out. That's what you'll do." "Oh, no, I won't do that, Nelly." "I wish I was a boy." "Besides"—the idea of the ped dler's wagon haunted Tim strangely— "l'd havo to have n license, anyway." "What of it?" "Where'd I get the money?" "Your mother has some. She could set you up. You could get a license easily enough, and a wagon, too, and a horse, anil stock, and everything, if you weren't such a—great big baby." Tim looked up once more in Nelly's eyes. Now Nelly was not a queen or a heroine of any sort. But the fire which she flashed forth at that mo ment was tho very inspiration which has urged kings and conquerers to their greatest achievements—some of them no more adventurous in the be ginning than our halting friend, Tim Tighe. Tim read it correctly. Ho saw fate in those eyes; he saw initia tive. They said "Must;" they said "Will;" they refused with scorn to ac cept any paltering negative like "Can't." A week later he announced casually to Nelly that he had bought Dineen's old horse aud wagon; and the look in the eyes was friendly once more. It had been hard work to persuade his mother to advance so much money; but if a boy cannot persuade his own mother, what hope has he of moving the world outside? Tim's first investment was a stock of blueberries. Columbus, journey ing westward, in momentary peril of falling over the brink of the world; Nansen, pushing north, nearer and nearer to the pole, but farther and farther from kin and succor—neither of these heroes could have felt more venturesome than Tim Tighe, daring to drive his newly-painted wagon through strange city streets, and to send into tho cold ears of residents and passing pedestrians that loud clamor of his: "Blueberries—all ripe--throe quarts for a quarter 1" The firnt time ho shonted, the sound of his own voice startled him; he seemed to hear the words thrown back in derision. But "Willy, Nelly's ten year-old brother, who sat on the wagon, seat to "mind the team," seconded his effort with such a shrill, cherry chirp. "Yeer they are—blueberries —all ripe!" that Tim felt ashamed of his timidity. Tliuy had resolved to experiment in a distant quarter of the city. For fully fifteen minutes their cries were un answered; but at last a neat old lady called Tim to hor doorstep, inspected his berries, and ordered three quarts. That three-quart order was the mak ing of a man. Tim did not sweep tho berries off level with the top of his measure. Far from itl They rose in a great mound from the middle of the box, and when he turned them into the lady's brown earthenware dish, they actually spilled over at the sides. He counted out the change in his left hand with a new feeling of im portance; and the very horse started with exoitement when ho tossed the measure back into the wagon and sang out boldly, with florid variations of his tune: "Nice ripe blueberries yeer—three quarts for a quarter!" At dusk, one great box of berries was empty and another well hallowed in tho middle; "Willy was hoarse, and Tim, who did the walking, was tired; but his pockets were heavy with sil ver, which he jingled for Nelly's sat isfaction—she happened to be at the gate again—and counted out on the table for his delighted mother. Next evening the return was larger. Gradually the customers began to watch for him and he for them. His cry was a warning signal which in quiet quarters could be hard a block away. It distinguished itself sharply from other peddlers' cries. Keally it was like a song, compared with theirs. Perhays that was why the nice old ladies called him so often to their doorsteps. His being a boy did not seem to deter them in the least. For a week he did not venture to peddle in his own neighborhood. But one evening, as he was driving home, a stray customer tempted him, aud his call was heard by some schoolboy ac quaintances, whose_ curiosity was aroused. "Hello, Tim! Where's Dineen?" "This isn't Dineen's team." "Whose is it?" "Mine." The others raised their elbows be fore their faces, whioh, being in terpreted, meant. "Get out." "It is, too!" said Willy, on the wagon-seat. "Wliere did you get it?" "His mother bought it," said Willy. "Did she? Aw, you can't jolly usl" "I ain't trying to." "Gee! You've got the cheek!" A week before Tim would have wilted at this contempt. Now, his views had changed; he knew it was a compliment. It was their way of saying he was enterprising. The period of his awakeuing was vacation time, one year ago. This summer Tim's stock includes all j kinds of fruits and vegetables in their season. If you should see him, reach ing over the tail-board to fill a peck | measure with tomatoes, you would | hardly recognize the desolate eaup ! terer who used to stop so often at the j store windows. Watching him ex pand the "orbic flex" of his mouth to emit the full fortissimo of his splendid lungs, you would not believe that he eould ever say, "I s-saw your adver tisement for a b-boy," in such a half, inaudible whisper that the employer quite mechanically doubled the volume of his own stentorian "What!" His whole air is fearless and pros perous. The very horse realizes a change. The mere way in which Tim shouts, "Get up!" or snuggles down a loose end of the blauket, or pulls Dobbin's ears under the strap of tho feed bag or hops up on the seat and stands .there, shaking th,o reins, his eyes alert in all directions for a cus tomer, stamps him as an independent proprietor. To be sure, all he owns is a ped dler s wagon; but it is well-painted, not lopsided like some, aud as tidy on top as any fruiterer's stall. Anil though Tim gives good measure, and knows that it "pays," he has learned that such wasteful generosity as that with which he heaped the measure for his first sale depresses his bank ac count. The other day he met Mr. Doild, the lawyer, ou the street, aud the two had a chat of several minutes, at the end of which Tim politely but firmly dismissed his old employer in order to serve a customer. Of course there's nothing he would not do for Nelly Gray. Their good understanding continues. In fact they meetevery morning aud evening. But Nelly hns grown singularly shy lately. If anything happens between them, it will have to be Tim who takes the initiative.—Y'outh's Companion. A Tulltmianic ltlng, A mysterious ring regarded as a talisman is owned by the imperial house of Ilohenzolleru. It belonged to the Palatine Johann Licero, and is deposited in the imperial treasury, sealed up iu a packet, bearing the fol lowing inscription written by the hand of King Frederick William IV.: "I opened this packet in the presence of my sister Louise to convince myself of its contents. I then closed and sealed it and returned it to Prince Wittgenstein's safe keeping." King Frederick 11., on ascending to the throne, discovered a box contain ing u ring set with a black stone. To the ring a ticket was attached, written by Frederick 1., which ran as follows: "This ring was given to me by my now sainted sovereign father on his deathbed; with the remark that as long as the ring remained in the pos session of the house of Brandenburg the dynasty would prosper aud iu creaso." Emperor William 1., who | instructed his master of the treasury i as to the safe keeping of the ring, put j no faith in its miraculous virtues, j The ring had been shown to him by j his sovereign brother aud it had also been seen by bis consort and their j son, Prince Frederick. The stone, as far as he could remember, was not black, but simply dark. His family, be said, had for generations set great store by it, and thero was no reason for exposing it to the light, seeing it was securely sealed.—Chicago liec ord. Letter Delivery in Cuba. What woulil be thought iu the United States if a city of nearly 300,- 000 inhabitants bad no public letter delivery system? Yet such is the case in Cuba. There is a sort of delivery which requires the recipient of the letter to pay the carrier in addition to the postage; but the system is not in general use. The pogtoffice building is as old as the memory of man run neth, aud modern facilities for hand ling the mails are conspicuously ab sent. Box rent is "away up in the pictures," and a small box that would cost about $0 a year iu the "States" brings here S4B a year in gold. This isjnot a lock box, either. The post oftico is iu an out-of-the-way place and smells of the mold of years. Havana needs a new building, with all the late improvements and a system of delivery like that of the United States. Those who can do so send their letters now to the steamer Mas cotie and mail them with Uncle Sam's reptseutative, but this is an expen sive process, requiring the hiring of a boat-for each mail. The operation of the postoflice by the United States in tho near future is one of the dreams of the American in Ilavaua.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Went Up on HI. Kite- William M. Olive is the name of an Emporia man who just now is at home ou a furlough from tho United States Signal Corps. Mr. Olive secured his place in this branch of the service be cause ho was able to go high in the air and keep his head while stringing ropes nnd wires. Before joining the army he was a professional steeple climber. He has worked on the high est domes and steeples in the United States, including the dome of the Na tional Capitol and the dome of the Kansas State House. A year ago he flew a kite across the steeple of the Emporia College and used the string to carry up larger aud larger cords until he made one fast that would bear his weight. Then he mounted to the very top.—Kansas City Journal. Factorlo* Without Chimneys. To horseless carriages and smoke less powder add ohimneyless factories as the newest in nomenclature. Here tofore it has been necessary in order to secure plenty of draft for a fur nace to build an immeusely tali chim ney. Now it is found that instead of pulling the draft by a chimney you can push it from below with a fan. A plant running three boilers of 2GO horse-power tried this experiment with a fan whose wheel had a diameter of fl iy-four inches. The draft was so in alh bettered that the firm saved nearly SIOOO a year by using' a cheap er grade of coal. —New York World, HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. Novelty In Sofa Cushions. The sofa cushion has become as much a part of tho home wardrobe as the shirt waist is of the persona) outfit, and every season new styles of cushions are exhibited, putting the seal of disapproval on those we have and tempting us to replace the worn out ones with those on which fashion smiles. The newest cushion to-day is the one whoso cover is made of the famous canvas work in cross stitch. The beauty of this cross stitch work is in its possibilities of infinite gradations of color; with an intricate design one can use ten or fifteen shades of the worsteds. The pillow is finished with a ruffle combining two or three rows of inch wide ribbon of the shades em ployed in tho canvas work, stitched together or embroidered with her ringbone or buttonhole.—New fork Herald. Iluting Good Ventilation. The poets' "melancholy days have come," and with them the season for starting the furnace, that foe to all plant life. The writer is a thorough believer in that form of house-heating, but it must be said that the ordinary furnace-heated house is a bad place in which to grow plants. The air seems to have had all the dampness removed, and that moist condition so conducive to a good growth in plants is not found. This may in a measure be overcome by means of evaporation, which, while not supplying a great amount of moist ure, should do something toward re lieving tho bad condition of she at mosphere. Place jars or pans of water in, around or about the furnace, hang buckets of water down inside the furn ace pipes below the registers, or place them anywhere hat rapid evaporation may be induced. Keep all the plants in light, airy locations, but away from drafts. Never consign a well-grown specimen palm to a corner of the room, though it may look better there. Its boautiful ap pearance will last a short time only in the dark, close place. It may seem strange to some, but the very best place in tho houso, if tho temperature can there be maintained at au even point, is the kitchen, because of the constant evaporation of water as it puffs forth from tho spout of the tea kettle.—Woman's Home Companion. Curing For the Piano. It is well to sometimes rub the wires gently with chamois or a llannel cloth, and to pass a soft muslin over the sounding board by meaus of a slender point which will slip between the wires and engage the cloth, which may then be carefully moved over tho surface, taking off the dust. A steel crochet hook or a stout kuittiug needle will answer tho purpose. It is advisable to keep a little cam phor gum inside the case, for if the moth miller has been attracted by tho felt used iu various parts, it will serve as a meaus of protection against tho moth. Tho temperature of the room should bo moderate, and as even as may be. Extreme heat that is drying should always bo avoided, as when n piano stands, as is often the case, too near a stove, a register or a grate fire. An instrument should be opened for a shore time each day; if it is not much used this is especially de sirable. Often there nppears n sort of bloom upon the case, or the wood looks dingy, and seems to be in need of cleaning. It is. however, very uncertain work to to attempt to improve the fine finish of a piano with polish, so much of which is advertised as making a piano look like new. Instead, the method recommended and used by a profes sional tuner is one that may be safely tested, with the certainty that it will not bo the means of gathering addi tional dust, as oils aud polishes are apt to do. Take the finest toilet soap and luke warm water, aud wash a little of the piano at a time, as you would wash a baby's dirty face, using a soft cloth, such as Cauton flannel, working upou a space not larger than your hand. Wipe it off with clear water, aud rub well with clean Canton flannel until it is perfectly dry and well polished. The fine soapsuds does not affect the original finish iu the least, but simply removes that which obscures it, and, if rubbed absolutely dry, with a brisk motion, the result is that the piauo is cleaned and brightened. Recipes. Baked Pear Sauce—Cut peeled and cored pears in quarters, and stir as usual, adding sugar. Then put iu an agate pie plate with the sauoe and bake slowly half an hour. They have a different flavor from either baked or stewed. Brunswick Stew—Cook n small part of beef shank until nearly done, then add peeled and quartered potatoes, skinned and sliced ripe tomatoes, small or quartered onions, salt, pop per. This may be dished with the meat in centre and vegetables around, or cut the meat in pieces and serve 09 any stew. Apple Puffets—Three eggs, one pint of milk, a little salt and enough flour to make a batter, and one and one-half tablespoonfuls of baking pow der. Fill the cups alternately with a layer of the batter and then the apples chopped flue. Steam one hour and serve hot with sugar and cream. Any other fruit may be used. Italian Paste—ln one qtiavt of sweet milk soak until pliable one-lialf pound of macaroni, drain off the milk and place the paste in a deep earthern dish. To the milk, with enough more to cover, add a teaspoouful of salt, two well beaten eggs, a dessertspoonful of sugar and pour on the paste. Orate dry bits of cheese and sprinkle over the paste one-half inch deep; bake brown. I SOMEHOW AMD SOMEWHERE I \ The Pains and Aches of / ( RHEUMATISM ) 1 CREEP IN. f | Right on its track 1 ) St. Jacobs Oil ( ? CREEPS IN. 1 } It Penetrates, Searches, Drives Out. f Save the Baby From strangling with croup, by check ing it at once with Hoxsie's Croup Cure. 50 cts. A. P. Hoxsle, Buffalo, N. Y. 11. 11. GREEN'S SONS, of Atlanta, fin., are the only successful Dropsv Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer iu advertise ment in another column of this paper. Piso's Curo is tlio medicine to break up children's Coughs and Colds.—Mrs. M. tl. BLUNT, Sprague, Wash., March 8,1804. Russia exports 430,000,000 eggs an nually. NO-TO-8.0 for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure, too, (1. All druggists. I'nited States contains 75,000 type writers. CLEVER MATCH MAKING. Both of the American Girls Got EUffl. bin Husbands, "An exceedingly clever bit of match making has just been executed by an American lady whose eldest daughter left New York with some friendß on a European tour, and who, after doing the continent, returned to our gay cap ital for several mouths of rest and pleasuring," writes a resident of Paris to tho New York Commercial Adver tiser. "Attractive and clever, she had many suitors. She adroitly reduced the number to two. Then she v rote home to her mother, explaining the exact situation of affairs, adding that they were both so handsome, agreeable, well-conducted and rich that she could not decide between them, and closed with the question: 'What shall I do?' Ten days later she received a telegram from her mother: 'I sail tomorrow; hold both until X come.' The next transatlantic steamer brought the mother with her second daughter, just turned 18. On her arrival she at once took the helm of affairs, and she at tended the wedding of her two daugh ters at the American cnapel ou the same morning." Cost of Launching n Wamhlp. The total cost of the launch of modern battleship often amounts to over SIO,OOO. About five tons of tal low and over a ton of oil aud soft soap are used in greasing the ways—that Is, the slip down which the cradle in which the vessel Is placed, glides into tho sea. All for One Price. "What a lovely new coiffure Misa Oldtimer has. Where did she get the style?" "That comes with tho hair." Msickl naiwcgl ! Many persons have their good day and their bad day. Othera are about half sick all the time. They have headache, backache, and are restless and nervous. Food does >t taste good, and the digestion is poor; the skin is dry and sallow and disfigured with pimples or eruptions; sleep brings no rest and work Is a burden. What Is the cause of all this? Impure blood. And the remedy? It clears out the channels through which poisons are carried from the body. When all impurities are removed from the blood nature takes right hold lis and completes the cure. If there Is constipation, take Ayer's Pills. They awaken the H drowsy action of the liver; they I cure biliousness. I Wrlto to our Doctor. I We have the exclusive services of | some of the most eminent physiciuns in H the tmlted States. Write freely all the ■ particulars in your case. You will re- H celve a prompt reply, without cost. Address, DR. J. C. AY EH, Lowell, Mass. Farms for Sale! Send stamp, get full description and price of *0 cheapest farms In Ashtabula Co., O. Best state in tho union; best county in the state. H. N. BANCROFT, Jefferson, Aahtubula Co., Ohio. HENSION^KTO Bdyrstulast war, 10 adjudicating claims, utty sine*