mJ Wr f. £ A LITTLE IRISH 6IRL * mr -n. ■»%««.• CflAPTBR XIII CovTi*ru>. "Mover mind ” frowning painfully. “I win ray It It U a food punishment for me It ho know 1 had even lho-:jfht of mooing away with Mr. V.yr*. «.« yea think ho would still bo aaxMmr to Marry bn him vrlfv’ "Ho mffbt” ray* her cousin. "Oh. Andy?' ray* Dulrlnea. with keen reproach. "Wall." rasignediv, "it corse t matter. I shall tali him the truth, whatever it costs me." • But look horn ' — "I shall (ell him the truth.1’ repeat* Ih.Irinea sadly. "Why should I leave him in ignorance? f shall tell him everytblag. It Is only honorable to do so f'UU twin. 'm hotstir most earefuty.” says Andy, with h very nnplevisnt an lie. •■Of esuraa,' slowly. "it hx* waver oc curred to you to look after mine? to ••on-lfier that you nre rather giving me away?” • Yo.jf honor'" ••Yea, mine — th.lt f have sacrificed to your welfare." aayx.VIr McDnrrnot. with considerable inrJigostion and a pro;eeyed shake of the head. 'What are you talking about. Andy?” "About yon and your ridiculous plan*. Yuti will rnn away with an orjrau grinder, and you Wottf! You n-iii marry & reariec-tabin baronet, and you wont: And. in the meantime, you lot your good. kind, devoted cousin in for' •■What*" "t>limited lies, if it come* to the point, ray* Mr. MclWmot. linking intohisehalr once more, with very distinct rage written in hie ordinarily beaming face. ••r.ien*” "Weii, d’ye think be wont regard them an lie* when yon tell him what you believe to he the truth? And I •hail be the toiler of them; I •hall be the Har ” "fcut wbat have you said, Andy?" "Didn’t 1 tell him you tied walked to the station with mm that it was quite *'^incidence your meeting Kyre them? that 1 hoped he would take you home safely, aad let you bi et the beck door without the governor'» knowing anything of your esoapade. I didn’t call it that to him. because if he found you were out be would lay the blame on fne. who had induced you to go for a Walk se late et night. Tou can do •* you like, Dulcle; but I wish yon had into me beforehand yon meant to make a confession to him. I should not feel so poor a fellow now an I do " "If. by speaking to 8ir Ralph, you think, 1 stall bn tray you. Andy—you. who have been so good to me!” eays Ihiivir.**, with n pale face. certain ly shall not speak. I shall simply tell him 1 wish to put an end to our en gagement and shall decline to say why Khc looks up at him witha pale, etcaoy expression. • ."If Is beyond d nbj that he would regard me as a Har or the first water ” •aye Mr. blcDeranot; ••and yet-If'it can help you, Dulcie. to let him know the iraih—-whj/’ generously. him know ik” -I could leave you out of the con fession," says Dulcines. "I could let him thlak—that—that you kaow noth ing about it That you-thought too r'lTr,?.h^r°r” tniserabljr, -that wouldn't do; you told him we had walked home from the station.” DuMel I’ve been thinking, and I’ve really come to the conclusion, that to lell him everything will be the best plan, after all. And as I for nty share in it -why—why—it comes to this that I 1J be gled when he Jtaowe tun truth of my lying too!" "Ob. Andy! but to botray yon!" "Betray me by all means! I’H nve throngb it. And —I dsre nay he'll un ders'atid I did It for you. that’ll set mo straight with him." "But-but. indeed. Andv. I couldn't be such o sneak as that. You told a lie for me. and do you think l don't ‘"That" is a thundoriog knock at the hall door! .••He’s coming!” nays Dulclnea faint: picking up her skirts and preparing to run, "receive him. Do into the drawing room. Say ant> thing—that I’ve a toothache—any thing al all." y ••Bui jou'll come to dinner?" in dU ",8V; ,, » , • Yes—oh yes!—1 suppose I must " . L.by’ 1 t»o#jrht you were mad to ten niQj about it —to contoifi, an you said ” •So 1 Will—so 1 will: but not Just ’ iioW*' breathlessly. "No—" with a J Us* backward gl*nce. •'•just—not now. Andy!” i , CHAITKR XIV. “Oo lovalv t*g»e, &K- Tell t.«r that •Htn'btr time end me: That now nlie know*, Witec 1 reaemble bor lo ibee. Il»w > weet and fair aha »eew* to me.” Dinner has come -has gone. And. ^ * to be just t» it. It was a most diurnal %' affair. In spite ol Andy's jocularity, which. in despair at the end took rather a pronounced turn, this one meal beneath The MuDermot'sroof has proved a oomplete failure. * Miss Mi Dermot has refused to help In any way. Just before dinner, as she entered the drawingroom there had hero a little flush upon her white cheek*, a nervous, yet hopeful aparkle in her dark blue eyoe. The tull, child • Ish figure had boon quite drawn up — eveu.the nut-brown hair coiled on the top of the shapely head had helped to a rc her the conquering air that she bad vainly dreamed might be hers. That old frock! -it was old, of course; but she looked—she knew she looked welt in It. Once. a long time ago. be had said he liked her in It; perhaps now, when he saw her again in it—he might Alas! her hopes even ns she crossed the threshold fell dead. Kir Kalph, ./ tvik lig to her father, lifted hla eyes,1 «riane*>d at bar. cane forward—re r, iiirtantiy, it seemed to her—shook hand* silently, and dropped baok to thr hearthrug beside The Mcbermot, \' without so mueh as the appreciative smile. The poor child huddled her S?;. self iate an arm-chair somewhere, aad sj told htieeif It waa all over. When il be so folly realize* what he has lost la her—so much iorelioese, but oot for him. A shabby frock in deed! a poor little frock! but did erer woman yet wear a frock so altogether becoming? Such a shabby gown and without ornament of nay kind; but what ornaments could compare with that sweet, soft neck, with those snowy, slender arms? what Jewels coaid oatrie those glesming eyes? Oh, ! whet e pele but perfect face! end the I head—it seemed bora to wear a crown! ; How sad she looks—bow sad! Be memberine, no doubt. She had almost thought his glance cold. She could not see that his heart was well-nigh broken! She could not know, seeing him there talking plati tudes to his host, with his eyes deter mlnately turned away from hers, that yet in his soul he is looking at her, see ng each curse of her gown. It has come to him that, if she can look so charming in that indifferent garment, how beauteous she might be made to look in something better! Oh. that he might be allowed to give her such things as might deck her dainty beau ty to ita utmost! that he might give her ail he possesses! home part of him she has already, a pure gift of bis. that she will carry to her grate, whether she wilt or not—his heart! The dinner is over at last, and the dreary half-hour afterward in the drawing-room. The snow is still fail ing. and The McDermot lias elected that his guest shall spend the night beneath his roof, ho going home natil morning. Oulcie had gladly left them to see a chamber warmed and aheeted and prepared,- and sick at heart, and seeing no chance of a tete-a tete with her betrothed la which to ! betray to him her one small act of fol- ; ly. has refused to come down again. ■She has gone to her own room, and, still dressed, sib cowering miserably over the huge fire that the old nurse had built for her. Teo-eleven—twelve *has struck. ; Rlstag at last, she goea to the window, j and, pulling aside the bliAd, looks out , npon the silent night. The snow has ! ceased! There is no wind. What!— j not even rain? She opens the win dow, and. leaning out. looks first up at the heavens bedecked with stars, then down at the earth beneath' The latter proves Infinitely more interesting! Below run* a b.l.oov from which The McDermot's den. that in other richer houses would be called the smoking-room, opens. To bar snr Srise a lamp shines through the win ow. casting a dull, bair-sbadowed light upon the night outside. Not goaa to bad yet? Surely her father - If any one is there she could, from where he now ia, hear them talking. Leaning a little further out, she •trains her ears; but no soond cornea No voice floats out upon the chilly air. They must have gone to bed and for gotten to put out the lamps. She had better run down and extin guish them. • She is about to draw in her head with a view to accomplishing this purpose, when the window beneath her leading from the smoking room to the balcony is thrown open, and a man dressed in evening clothes steps on to it He has a cigar in his mouth and the red tlpof It shows through the mirk of bis surroundings. To mistake this mao for aay other than Sir Ralph would be Impossible! Dulcinea, drawing back hurriedly leans against the shutters of her win dow. The first impulse was not to be seen; the second compels her to stand upright and face a situation, although it be with blanched cheeks. Now — now is her time - -to speak. He is alone. She is sure of that If she hesitates now she may not for a long time, perhaps a whole intermin able week, get a chance of squaring herMlf with her conscience. She must tell him. Then why, not now? It takes but a little minute to run down the stairs, open th* smoking room door, and crossing It reach the balcony. ••Dulcle!” save Auketell sharpt ~ as sharply as though he had seen a ghost. CHAPTER XV. “Drink to me only with thine eyed And 1 will pledge with mine: ' Or lenve a kiss bur, In the i-up, And I'll not look for wine. The thirst tnnt from the soul doth iU« Doth nsk a drink divine; But might 1 of Jove's nectar sup, ‘ 1 would not change tor thine. "Yes, it id mo,*' said she, regardless of grammar. “I have come to tell vou all about it” ' 3 “About wbat?” Hi* face Is now as I white as her own. and that is saying a great deal for it. •'You know—that is— do you know?” asks she, that old doubt returning. ••Even if I do, don’t let ns talk out here; It is miserably cold; come in.” •‘No, uo; let me tell you here," (‘where you can’t see me.’ she would have added, had shedared). ‘•As you will, of course; but it’s madness. It is the coldest night we have hod yet, .and there is a fire with in and—” “You did not seem to feel it too oold to come out a few minutes ago,” savs she. ' 3 “How do you know I came out?*’ “1 saw you; 1 was looking out of the window. And ... 1 hare wanted all day to see you alone. . . .” “To see me alone? For the first ; tmie in your life, surely,” with sudden I bitterness. “Oh, uever mind all that now,” says she. with a touoh of impatience th it is full of despair. “At all events I did want to see you, to—to tell you the truth eboul . . “Don’t go on—don’t if it hurts you!” says he hoarsely. “Hurts me? Oh, it U more than that,” says she in a stilled tone. “It Is so bad that I can’t live until I tell You.” . “Tell it, then,” says he. freezing again. Her grief! her misery! and such strong grief that it seems t> ' shake her slender frame to Its very j soul. And all for that other. •> ; [to an ootmwnKD.) { AH AGRICULTURAL WORLD! PRACTICAL HINTS FOR THE FARMERS. A Cheap Hav Frame—Salt for Anl male—Treatment of Sollefor Crop* and to Keep up Their Fertility—Interesting Short Items. Cheap Hay Frame. Oar Illustration represents a bay ' frame easily constructed but when completed it is one of the best. It is 14 test long by 6^ or 7 feet wide. The two main timbers are pine 2**> inches, ! the four cross pieces 2x4 pine. The bows oyer hind wheels can be made . trom old tires of the back wheels of a wagon. Forward wheel tires answer but arr a little short. The boards over the front wheels extending from first cross piece to the third are or dinary 1x6 fencing material and should be both bolted and nailed ou. Use eight half inch bolts. 12 inches long to secure the cross pieces to the main timbsr. The roller in front to which the ladder is attached is osk 8x3 inches, and the ladder itself is of oak to make it perfectly secure when • man climb* onto the load. The ■takes at the back end are fastened with one bolt so that they may be turned down after the wagon is unloaded. They also should be made of oak or other hard wood. The materials for a rack of this kind, not including the iron bows, cost at retail in the ordinary country town about $2.50. Old wagon tires are found on nearly every farm or can be purchased for 25c to 50c. A good hand saw, a brace with several sizes of bits, a hatchet, a chisel and a square are all the tools necessary and these should be on every farm. A blacksmith will make these tires into bows for a trifle, or a farmer may do this himself if he has an iron drill for bis brace. The constructing can be done in Winter or early Spring at times when the weather prevents other work, so the labor practically amounts to nothing. Thus a first class hay frame can be made at home at the very small cost of $3.00 to $3.75 at the outside. The frame is more easily painted, if made of smooth lumber; the undressed is probably a little stronger. If kept painted and under shelter when unused, it will last many years.—O. F. Farmer. Salt for Animals. Those persons who manage to per* auade themselves that course and dis agreeable food is necessarily better than that which is finely flavored and delicately cooked are very likely to be violently anti-saline in their views. For some occult reason they imagine that salt is injurious, and so discard it. Taken in large doses, undoubted ly it is; but who wants to take it in large doses? It is a seasoning, not a food, and in proper quantity is a benefit to the system. The same untenable idea is occas ionally broached with regard to the domestic animals. There are some persons .who vehemently maintain that salt should never be given ro horses, cows or sheep.. The only ground we can conceive of one which this notion can be based that the animals like salt—and anything that is relished must of necessity be in Bat the fact ia that it is a positive cruelty to deprive animals of salt. If a man wants to make a fool of him self by eating unseasoned, coarse grain, let him do it; but the domedlic animals cannot help themselves, how ever much they may need the salt, it should not be withheld from them in pursuance of any cranky notion that it isn’t good for them. These anti-salt fanatics are 'also usually bitter opponents of the use of tobacco, and one of their favorite arguments against the "fragrant weed" is that instinct leads the lower animals to avoid its use. Let us attack them with their own weapons. Every one knows how fond all animals ars of salt. Therefore it must be good for' them. There are, however, many who take no stock in such foolishness who nev ertheless give very little, if any, atten tion to the needs of their stock. They seldom salt their sheep and when they do the sheep are liable to injure them selves, so greedy are they for it, by eating too much. As for the horses and cows it is not thought worth while to allow them any at all. Bpt this is very short-sighted policy. Salt, besides being greatly relished by the stock, is one of the best of tonics when ^iven in connection with dry winter Every man and boy about the stable, says an exchange, should know that salt is “indicated" in the case of every animal which shows hard and dry excrement. The beet plan for giving it in the case of all animals is to place a lump pi pure American rock salts which is better than the imported, within their reach at all times. If this, for any reason, not practicable, a quantity of common salt should be kept in a box in the stable, mixed with wood ashes, an a liberal pinch given the animals daily. This is the more necessary since the old practice of salting the hay has been pretty generally discarded. It has been suggested that when a horse is greedy in licking up a lump of salt, at frequent intervals the bet ter way to supply him with sait would be to sprinkle some strong brine over the hay. This will satisfy the craving without danger oi his taking more than he needs. There shoaid always be lamps of •sit placed in tbs pastors where sheep can take a lick whenever they desire. Cows whether in stable or oat ot it, should be provided in the same wav. Attention to this detail will add much to the comfort and health of the domestic animals, and no careful stock owner win neglect it. 1 Treatment of Soile for Crops nod to Kssp UpThsIr Fsrtiltty. Sandy soil being loose and por ous. the fintOirer applied leachee away sooner than on clay soil, hence in cropping you should be careful not to crop too long before seeding to grass. Clay and clay loam, being mors doss and compact, will hold fertility lonaer. Farmers, as a general rule, run their meadows too long, taking off too many crops of hay before plowing. When a piece of land is inmod mead ow, do not mow more tnari one or two seasons, st most, before plow irH* It your rotation consists of corn, oats and wheat, the soil if thesodhas been good, should bring good corn and oats without manure. Plow as soon as posible alter the oats are cut, pat on all the manare yon have, then harrow gjid roll until perfectly fine before seeding to wheat. Put on timothy with wheat, and about the middle of March sow clover, and you ought to have a good stand; and when you get it, do not mow and pasture nntil the clover is killed out before plowing; bat turn under after mowing one season, and your land will not ran down as in the majority of farms to-day. If farmers would not pasture their meadows, they would have leas trouble in getting their soil fine when plowing. Keeping the soil fine when cropping aids in keeping up fertility. It is this lack of preparation of the soil, mowing and pasturing until the clover is all gone, that knocks the profits out of farming. One coat of manure, and one clover sod to one ro tation ought to keep up fertility.—W. J. Burke, in Farm, Field and Fireside. Success In Horse Raising. It would be as sensible to plant good seed and neglect to cultivate the crop and then wonder why yon do not reap a rich harvest as to breed good horses and pay no attention to the growing colts and expect them to turn oat valuable animals, says an exchange. Colts, like crops, must be well tended if the best results would be attained. The young things need nursing in a certain sense of tbs term and, when they grow older the care required grows greater. They may live and thrive and make valuable horses without much attention, but there is no question about their thriving bet ter and being much more valuable if they are not only fed and sneitered well from clothood up but also received that discipline and training which makes a horse trustworthy, tractable and docile. Some men seem to be able to apparently mold horses into almost any shape they want, both physically and mentally. The secret oi their success is simply in giving attention to details in the management of the horses. They make the care and treatment of their horses a part of their business and attend to it as they would to any Other part of their work. Not until every man who raises horses looks up on this matter as one requiringthouaht. and study will this department of live stock be made profitable and inter* eating. Short Rows. Many farmers buy implements which they ought not to buy, because they do not grow crops sufficiently large to warrant it. Be sure of this point be fore you invest. The manufacturer who makes the best goods is the one who has the least trouble in getting good prices, the tarmer is a manufacturer to whom this item will apply. Success with any crop depends large ly upon how well the work of planting and cultivating is done. Start right, and attempt to till 'no more land than you nn till thoroughly. The potato crop is usually aprofit able one if due economy be observed in producing it. *\Vhere .large areas are grown, the potato planter and potato digger will be found useful aids to this end. There is accumulating evidence that a general error in our agricultural practice ie that of too close seeding. Less overcrowding of the plants, and better cultivation and fertilising ie what we need. < If the fall pigs have come early enough eo get a good start by Christ mas, thsy can probably be wintered with profit. But if not, it might pay best to fatten and sell for small roas ters. Oats form an excellent food for all kinds of young stock. They contain largely the mineral required to form and grow bones, and the portein that makes muscle and other tissues. A man who wishes to have bis cattle ! quiet and easily handled, must be quiet himself when about them. An excitable, nervous, ill-tempered man should never be permitted to have the care of stock. The results of good breeding may be seen in every line of stock, by com paring our present farm animats with those of a generaliou or two ago. Beeves are heavier, cows produce more; fleeces are heavier, and horses |havsgainsd in wsight. I Cmtof Can*. An example of the cmmwf of gulls w» observe.,! at Tacoma, when wrrral alighted on a bunch of logs that had been in the water for a long time, with the submerged sides thick with barna cles. One was a big gray fellow who seemed to be the captain. He walked to a particular log. stood on one side of it close to the water, and then ottered peculiar cries. The other gulls came and perched on the same side of the tog, which, under their combined weight, rolled orcr several inches. The galls, step by step, kept the log rolling until the barnacles showed above the water. The birds picked eagerly at this food, and the log was not abandoned until every barnacle had been picked off. The Vw Brand. Attention is called to the sew method of baking bread of superior lightness, flnnnnne and wholesomeness without yeast, a receipt for which is given elsewhere in this paper. Even the best bread bakers will be interested in this. To every reader who will try this and write the result to the Royal Baking Powder Co.. 101} Well St.. New York, that company will send in return a free copy of the most practical and useful cook book, containing one thousand receipts for all kinds of rooking, yet mentioned. Mention this paper. t , I napplied Science. •‘One day," writes a correspondent ot tlie Boston Transcript, “my brother went to bny a bushel of buckwheat for sowing-. He found a man of whom he was to buy the grain away; but his wife was at home, and she undertook to make the sale. She got a peck meas ure and they went to the granary. There the woman filled the measure twice, poured it into the bag which my brother held open, and then was going to tie the bog and take pay fora bushel. ‘But Mrs. F..’ said he. ‘it takes four pecks to make a bushel.’ ‘Oh. does it?’ said she ‘Well you see, I never had any experience in measuring grain before I was married; 1 always taught school?” Sued for Damages. A woman in Delaware was black listed because of a coal bill which it was alleged she owed and would not pay. Because of the blacklisting she was un able to obtain credit. She immediately commenced snit for $10,000 damages. A jury returned a verdict in her favor for 100. White Rhinoceroses. From a letter addressed by that re nowned sportsman. Mr. Selous, to the Field, it appears that that curious snd rare animal, the white rhinoceros, has not yet gone the way of the dodo and the great bustard, though some have ventured to give Mr. 8elous*authority for saying that he is extinct. It is to the occupation of Northern Mashona land. which kept the native hunters to the west of the Umniata river, thst this gentleman attributes the fact that in this part a few specimens still sur vive the constant persecution which in the last twenty years has utterly ex terminated them.in everv portion of South Central Africa, '“There may yet,” Mr. Selous adds, “be ten, or even twenty of these animals left, hut cer tainly not more, I think than the latter number.” The editors of the Century hare learned, since it was printed in that magazine for March, that the very in teresting account by Capt. Ussher of “Napoleon’s Deportation to Elba.” was very obsenrely printed in Dublin in pamphlet form in 1841. It must Have had very small circulation, and. in fact, when the manuscript was submitted to the Century, the family were not aware that any copy of the pamphlet was in existence, nor that it was the same ma terial. as they had merely heard that Capt. I’ssher had once printed a brief account of the trip, as they believed for private distribution only. Its publica tion tbis month has brought into prom inence a very valuable and very little known historical document. Coagrst olations. They were on a train going from Cleveland to Colnmbus, Ohio. The train was crowded and the last man ' on took the first seat he could find. “Going to Columbus?” he asked after j a few minutes. “Yes,” was the response of the first j comer, who, by the way, was quite a I respectable looking person.. “ Legislature?” “No.” “Penitentiary?” “No." “Ah, let me congratulate you. I've tried both.—Detroit Free Press. DUQUETTE & t’O‘8 POMONA COUGH Tablets. “Absolutely the best made.” Two ounce package for 5 cents, at vour1 Drug gists or Confectioners. Ask for them and STOP THAT COUGH. It is poor policy to do all vou intend to for a person on first application. Everybody uses Mlllcou IVallPIns, »er. Why not you! Write for illustrated catalogue to Hie Omaha Silicon Wall Plas ter Co.. 515 First National Bank Buildm*. Omaha, Kab._ ' No man can pay his bills aud maintain the reputation of being a good tellow. Om Belt-conceit is Harder to cure than cancer. Are Yea Svlng g East or south during the winter, if so Tn Wabash desires to call your attention as the tourist route to Florida and all the win ter resorts of the south. Round-trip tickets will be placed on sale about Nov. 1st., good returning until June 1st. ’flu. THH QUICHES !' ROUTS SOUTH ASP SOUTHEAST. 16 hours to St. Louis. K " Hot Springs. * *>,, “ “ New Orleans. ’* Atlanta. “ “ Jacksonville. vttJt " Tampa. With (■orresponding fast time to all points east and south. The only line running Re .dlning < hair Cars to tit. I.ouis, Decatur, 2*“yu®' Lafayette. Logansport, Ft. IVavne, Toledo and Detroit. Pullman Buffett Sfeep ing t ars on aU trains. For tickets or fur •5er re(t»r'l to routes call at the Vt abash Office. 1&02 Farnam 8t.. or Wrw8 N' CI.ATTOH, Northwest rn Pass. Agent, Omaha, Neb. Jefferson a Welshman. “Wales." said a Western Welshman, •has given three presidents to the Lnlted States—Jefferson. Adams and Monroe, Thomas Jefferson was pure 5«W». too, and the \\ elriluuen of New \ ork are now organizing a movement to erect a grand monument to him lhere are ;.,IMK>,000 Welsh and their im mediate descendants in t]iis country and over l.rw.uoo pure Welsh a„d their1 «rst defendants The Welsh. Irish and Scotch are. in my opinion, all off utioots of the little build of Aryans that Emui rrJrr l MritUny and •ettled on what are now the Uritiali rowrft? * ** Wf ie»ru fro* „ eoseries, was in nse , J** *U hack as 3300 B. C .J" g£S&£sr£ it appears, knew more .tijf taka than thev , ™*lni The Greeks nude silver****** SR«?s SS-.fiSu'rrca’i! shows the skill of »v, “ntab * f**°tpr-v h» the mJJSii! «* decoration: and in » iaa ta* eachwS K’ IS*- * not«>. historical, bio^SS? ? g»phi«l, etc. ScienUfc^ 2kss3Bjs$ 55Srj22--SS, Hl* PerqabltM. 8tory 01 Cha™<*v M n t«Us how a spinster with inJ cork-screw curls risited him nS flee to consult him as to some m]. Ah, he said, in his most m ‘t^"* are two thing! I nothing about, and they arewoe. ^ *5^” Th^shesudd'^1 the after-dinner orator and out. Sereral men who were watt a corner of the room to talk to 1 pew advanced, laughing at the tion scene they were compelled i neas. Wheeling his chair aba mernly said: “Gentlemen, tin dent of the road is entitled tod perquisites. ”—Philadelphia % Frotacted lavsntlot. There are sixty-four country, an invention can claim protect! rather where patent fees mtr Sixteen of these are in Enron " Soil Matter. •• If the nntritorious matter of. is carried down below therootsd plants the plant form may be a able. But all plants do not feed as some reach down into the and bring up the plant-food which in atored in the stalks nd It is in this manner that clorerpe such excellent service; and the! plains why clover always leas land in better condition* thu _ when a clover sod is turned usds Par aad Wide Not oa Ibis broad continent aim, “•Jsrtal-brecdla* tropical rntonak mala, Mexico. South America, the 1st Panama and elsewhere, Hotietien i Btttarn asorda to labanitaau tad Iraakty irriietf immigrant, the tite . . * ijnnmiij i Mil, ISO Ulla virgla toll newly robbed of ita bran sae of the pioneer, and In the wad fabrlto apeclno a prenerver tgtimtatl one miaama which in rant dairies Batumi reaoureea. is yet fertile iniSa aaaihlIntel diaorders of the hoikUi bowels, farUSen thoee who am It min made allmaata bred aad foetciedjtyi exposure; lafnaea genial warmth hat chilled by a rlcoroua temperature, ut their power to harm mormilf tail suets aad vapora laden with M strengthens the weak and eeaewu S kidney trouble. Surd for Ihaafn. t A woman in Delaware wadi listed because of a coal bill whidhi alleged she owed and would* Because of the blacklisting the n able to obtain credit. She ii commenced suit for 110.005 A jury returned a verdict in h# for $3,500, THU MODERN WAT Commends itself to the well-fan do pleasantly and effectually wh formerly done in the crudest ■ and disagreeably as well. To d the system and break npcotdt aches and fever without tmn after effects, use the delightful 1 laxative remedy. Syrup of Fiff* Bad luck is the only ldsd people who trust in ltlck._ False teeth are now made from [*P are said to wear well._ Some shepherds pev the most sttd the fattest sheep_ THE WORLD'S MAMMOTH the 1,100 room. Ore-proof, summer” “GREAT EASTERN." at St. Law” and 60th St., Chicago, two Wocbne way Flaisaace World's Fair end* overlooking famous Washington World’s Fair visitors can avoid u» and extortion of sharks by engWe now at $1.80 a day. each person iw by addressing Copeland Townsend formerly mgr. Palmer Housei. - ™ formerly mgr. Building, Chicago. HI The busy woodehopper away coat._____ - Lew Rales to Niorth «a'«J Special lew rate excursion to Texas every Saturday evening ticulars and tickets apply k ■ First ' National Bant *1 Omaha. Fun only items frivolous to u. Mot in it. __-— , HT* Smfler Coughs and Colds, or. *“.„vli Thrust, than ‘-Brows'* -- Price25cents, SoWfW CHS8. --- . Host people are wiling to *> rices—of other people The heet IV the wotiJ. Make* new Wood snd a«so. jw^'_ Busy people rarelv havetun* sick. •WS.SSSfi1 Tr«*u<»# ittlr. erf Obstlnite people are stl««e‘ the credit of being sincera____ B***1 lnne-e Medicine Mo«es ‘M ^.is !-order inuruc* , Vsuiirtn oe»OB a7ilv^rouS?^a." ^uUW. ach and bowels. _^ No woman respects a *** rule without diplomacy_ We eat too much an,d‘•^jt’s'"5 rcise. This is thef*"^# door exercise. This ern civilization. It >’ ”, edps^11 Tea. a simple herb remedy. overcome these abuses_— The fact that a man }'',lL'V * that he is doing anyth'.ug-^ irihe Bshr >• ears aid use that old ami lit*1 - Ctuldiw Winslow'a SoaxysK^S**1^ ^ There are people who for kicks proVided thV^* . wmi-sKTSKw IrusKlM C«rit.