Y - T1EOI9 T1Ea CORNt : " The Weaver. When sliver bells ring out the old , And play the new year hi . A spirit In the winter woods Softly begins to spin ; No mortal eye boo seen her face , Or watched her labors there But crocus buds ) are In her breast , And blossoms In her hall' She weaves upon her magic loom , The Bnowdroll'lI silver sheen The tender tint or April boughs , The mcadow'H velvet green ; I ; ' 1 ho lilac and the daffodil Beneath her fingers \ grow , And 1111 she tolls from day to day , About her melts the Imow. So , what Ir clouds ) are dark with storm , And windows white with frost , And voices of the running brooks : ! In Icy voles are lost ; Whnt Ir the wondrous northern lights Their crimson banners 1JIIIJ- Still Nature In her woodland weaves The bridal robe , of Slrln ) ' -1'ho Smart Set The Brooch of L.orn. In 1306 therQ tool place a battle at Dairy , near Tyndrum . between Robert the Bruce and the MacDou galls or Lorn. The king was very hard pressed , and had to save his life at the cost or his mantle , which , along with the sliver brooch that fastened H , was torn from him by the furious IlIIrsuers. For generations the brooch was kept by the MacDongalls , both as a trophy gained In tIght and as an Interesting historical relic. But In the seventeenth century during a raid upon Dunolly Castle , the l\1acDolt. gnlls' stronghold , which was besieged and burned , the brooch Was seized with the spoil by Campbell of Bar- Gleann , In whose family it was pro- served for two centuries. Then it was acquired by Gen. Campbell of LochnelJ , who presented it Sn 1824 to his friend Sir _ John MacDoulal1. Thus _ _ ' . _ n _ _ _ _ _ _ _ - - - _ _ _ _ it returned to the custody of the chief of the clan whose ancestors had won it from the Druce. Now it is safe in the mansion ot the MacDougall5 , adjoining - joining the time-worn. picturesquely situated castle of Dunolly. . Heating With Ice. If anyone should say to you : "I use Ice to keep me warm , " you would . laugh at the idea ; but the big packers - ers who ship so much beef prove every - ery winter that ice Is a great help In keeping out the cold. Refrigerator cars are kept cool hy having ice and salt packed in each end , but in the winter when these same cars pass ) througlC ' parts of the country where the weather is away below zero , then that same ice and salt are used to ! keep the car Warm. ThIs Is because ice is normally about 32 degrees cold , or just at freezing , and it resists get- ting colder EO strongly that In zero _ _ _ _ _ _ U _ _ , _ _ _ _ _ , _ u _ u. _ , , . _ _ _ _ _ weather it acts us a stove : that peeps the contents of the refrigerator car from freezing. The shippers apply the same principle by turning the hose on a car when the weather is at / zero. The water freezes quickly and gives the car a novel overcoat of Ice , through which zero cannot penetrate. Meantime the air inside that is a little above freezing iG kept : ; 0. . - - Smallest Book In the World The smallest book in the world is ' " Almanac fur Schloss's "Engllsh Bijou 1839. " DIminutive us It is , there tire illustrations in it On its pages arc portraits of Princess cess Victoria , hCI ; ; i > > " ' royal highness the Duchess of Kent. / Lady Blessington Wellington , Sir n Thomas Lawrence , . / Pasta , and Doetho , 1W vent To each pic. lure is appended a short )10em. Then follows the calendar. Inside the cover - er is the inscription , "Anna East : Her Bool " The small proportion of thc \ . ' lunge will lIe realized when it is leon : side by side with a thimble , as . . l 1 . - . - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - I I the l11ustrallon. It Is three . eighths 01 l an Inch wide by one . half an inch high. A Nonpuncturable Tire. There has hccn a growing demand from all owners and operators 01 non - puncturablo , tire. Solid tires have been used to some extent , hut they have never shown the desir- able resilient qual- ities. Now comes . a French company claiming to have Non uncturabic automobiles and Motor Tire . motor cars for a solved the problem with a tire , a cross section of which is shown in the l11ustratlon. The advantages claimed for It are : Nonllablllty to puncture , great cushion ability owing to its hollow construction , nonllablllty to sideslip owing to its flat tread , absolute security , as It can not be twisted out of the rim. English motorists . torlsts are now giving it a trial along the country ! roads In their island Novelty In Advertising. A novel way of Introducing a new article has been discovered in Lon don. A number of men who suggest hy their apparel that they arc grooms valets or servants of some kind are sent about the shops to buy the article ! which is being boomed. They insist upon having this particular article and no other , rejecting any substitute which may be offered them. In many cases the tradesman has not the article In question , hut is sure to lay in a stock when a few days later a drummer waits upon him with the article in question. As the men are selected with a view to give the impression that their employers arE : wealthy , the shopkeeper naturally . thinks that the article will bring him the patronage of a class he is anxious : to please. Crabs That Eat Cocoanuts. Crabs which live upon cocoanuts : which they pick for themselves arc found In the Coral islands. Nature has provided this crilst.ean with claws and nIppers of. enormous strength , and It is supposed that the crab climbs he cocoa palms and de taches the nuts. It reaches the mat of the fruit by picking and rapping with Its claws at the end of the nut where the three small holes are to be found t1ll'a slight breach Is made. Then the nlppel'l are brought Into use for the rough fibers which surround the shell. These he shreds with his nippers and conveys to his burrows , where they form a comfortable bed for the crab while ho Is clanging his coat. Some of these crabs attain a length of over two feet , and live in holes which they have made in the earth at the roots of tropical trees. . Find Worth Having. Lewis Shore , of 'ores1dale , Vt. , recently ' cently purchased an old building belonging longing to the estate of Arthur Gib son , near Drandon. Mr. Shore had it tom down , find in building a barn with the lumber a plank that had been carelessly used for staging attracted . I tracted 'ofr. Shoro's attention and he discovered that a halo In the end or it contained It tin box which was found to contain $1,200 in government bonds , besides all of Mr. Gibson's valuable Impel'S. Some of the papers were dated 1880 and it is thought that they have been there since that ) 'ear. Mammoth Organ In Maine Church. The Universalist church at Port' land , \Ie. : , has a mammoth organ. In I it are over 5,000 pipes , the smallest , n piccolo , being half an inch long , and the largest a double open diapason , or 32.foot C pipe. The vex humana stop alone , having 61 pIpes , cost $600. . The four pipe rooms are each as. large , as an ordinary bed chamber. The organ was voiced br : J. H. Brown , who voiced the organ at Westminster abber. The organ is blown by a three horse power electric motor. . . . . . . . \ . . . : / . , - - - - - - - - - - - - HOG TROUGH OF CONCRETE. - Simple Rules for the Building of Valuable Utensil. G. \f.-Plense : ! describe how to con- 3trllct a cement hog trough. What is : ho best size and shape ? In malting a concrete hog trough 'rst laY the concrete floor , this an- wers for the bottom of a trough. Malto a box out.of 2 by 6 Inch plank L4 inches wIde , inside measurement , mad the length required. ThIs box has :10 : bottom. Place it where the trough .s required. Make another box out of t by 6 Inch boards to form the core. This should be 11 ½ inches narrower at the bottom ; place this in the outer box , leaving a space of 2 inches bed tween the two boxes at the top for concrete. Place small blocks between the boards to keep them from spring- Ing In and nail n. strip on the top of the molds to keep them in their , ' 6 : : , ii Cross Section of Concrete Hog Trough and Mold. A. 2 by G In. plank ; D. concrete ; C. 1 by I Gin. boards ; D , nail to hold l form In place ; E , one-Inch strip ; F , concrete nOOl' places. The concrete should bo one part of Portland cement to 2Jh parts Jr tIne gravel. In tIlling the molds with concrete never put in over an Inch at a time and ram it wel ) When finishing the top leave the edges rounded oft. In a couple of hours the core can bo lifted out and then the outer box removed. Give the trough I a wash or pure cement. In warm weather , after the trough is built ten ar twelve hours , it should have a pail or two of water put into it and left for several days. Fertilizing land. A. D.-I wish to seed down a piece of land that grew barley last year and was not plowed last fall. I cannot et yard manure but could purchase nitrate of soda. How much of thIs should be applied ? What quantity of oats , also timothy and clover seed should be applied per acre ? It would be well to plow the ground , then apply twenty-five to thirty bush- 21s of wood ashes and harrow them In well before sowing the groin and grass 3eeds. Then sow oats at the rate of even pecks per acre , and a mixture Df five pounds timothy and eight pounds clover per acre. The oats should be sown wtlh a drill and the grass and clover broadcast and har- rowed in. When the grain is about tour inches high , apply broadcast about 100 pounds nitrate or soda per 1.cre. This will dissolve with the low : or rain and feed the young plants When harvesting the oats a long stubble - ble should be left , and no stock should bo allowed on the field in the fall. Spotted Chickens. P. H. H.-White Plymouth Rock hens were dusted with insect powder , which gave them a dirty appearance ; when their eggs hatched some or the chIcks were spotted ; what was the cause ? There has been some other cause than the lice kl11er. The effect of the lice killer on either sitters , or newly hatched chicks would only be tempo- rary. Ir put Cll the parent stock there could be no quch thing as spotted chicks. If the hens which laid the eggs arc quite white the chickens have probably been thrown back to a weak spot in their ancestrr. ; Ppro bred White Rock stock do not give spotted or dark colored chickens , and ' blemishes on plumage from lice killers - ers are as a rule only temporary. Neighborly sympathy , as a rule , turns out to be about nine.tenths cu- riosity. . ' . ' . . .1 ' . . . ' . . " . , . . -it.iiIi . . . , . - " ' - " _ J ! : . I , \ . . ; . Irr59iN" ' AND , 't" - J Burdensome Responsibility. The new office boy stood beside his- employer's desk , waiting for orders. The employer , who was new to the office boys , turned with n smile of kindly discipllne. "l\ly lad , remember that n first-rate . office boy should be diligent , modest , unobtrusive , accurate and attentive : ' The boy looked Gcornru ) "SaYi ; mis- ter , have 1 cot to do aU dat for $2 a wee-Youth's } Companion. . r A Pleasant Doctrine. ' , \ \ . , . ' " . $ . v A . , a . \ , s a ' 1 0 1 1 , J \ Fargone-What is reciprocity ? Why , suppose I kissed you and you kissed me in return ; why , that would be reciprocity. Miss Willin-Why , that isn't bad at all , and I always thought it was something - thing dreadful. The Better Man. "The last time I passed through here " said the drummer , "your editor and the Rev. Bm Gunning were hav- ing quite n religious discussion. I J1I . . ' guess the editor , after all , was just - as good a man as the ministor. " J "Yes wrong thar , stranger , " replied Alkali Ike. "How do you know ? " . "I jest come from the editor's fun- eral. " Proper Thing. "In society , " said the young bud , "the gentleman is always presented to the ladY , is he not ? " - "Yos , " sighed the heiress who was doing her second season , "unless he happens to have a title , then one must pay for him , I suppose. " - - - - Hint. - . 1.it.i1 I , I II w tRP , ! S . . . . h s ' J til . . , 1.e'tAYtt0. The Lady-1\iercy on \1s ! Why are you sitting there making that queer noise ? " = " " ' ' . ' S The - "I'm a.imltatln' Bum-"Aw , a er ' . robin , lady , th nkin' dat'mebbe youse'd , t' " \ come to do window anti throw me fa > few crumbs , misBus' ! - Hard Work. Bagley-Deering tells me that when he gets angry with his wife he always co ants ten before re1 > I 'ing. Simpson-I wondered what he was getting that mechanical adding ma- chine for when I saw him the other ' day. . . " , , ' - - :