bar, 'Hud ard ,"Cu attl sIjuJ li,lul "P. wen ! d(XH "hod pan an nil Can'l fyoJ a- eyej to KM 't bei thoaf ter of ;V3ry eatest ilarj "itini iblesJ elainl wliiM en hiJ 5 U-lf i day hat ii , oon il Tar ana L ' WM roug! !re, , a4 spot! vhiW pted ndonj Id brinf card id d etf nakej nei 'kmf astoi angi d n ing atai litfl nn m C'tUft rtul lecm of anni i is feet lefts' helg nd, Vagi robil uia qui Vith ) d t wbi lomf !U ne d re n K IALMACE S SERM C.i,l(irii- Mnl and mmuniia had bwn off te aim when they fame bak fe asked what kind of people tl stn. They answered that pie had a royal apiaranee; each mriubled the children of a king. today before many who have gprarance. indeed they are the daugheters of the bird Al- w iiiougn now in enle, they fjft come to their thronea. Tliere aily names lUat stand for or patriotism or iiittiligense. Bn;e 01 Washington means in although some of the blood race dm uecorne very tliin in t gener;Uion. The family of itoml aa tlie representative of The family of the Itothsehilds liCcantof wealth the lossof40,- in IHWpntting them to no fiicon- hard! Escf. iiiesiroae of tiieir pt-n on imtinif room desk shakes every frum tho Irish aea to the Danube. ojieu their hand, and there is war; ibut it and there is peace. I come to preach of a family potential, more rich aod moreex- -royal 1 louse of Jesus, of the whole family in heaven and is named. We are blood re- by the relationship of the croi,a; ui are the children of the king. I ttpeak of our family name. He see a decenda.it of someone y celebrated in the lust century, k at them with profound interest ive had conquerors kings or princes ancestral line gives luster to the Vfyname. In our lne was a king JicoiKjueror. The star in the east tblon of light, woke up the eternal Htra that made music at his birth, itheticehe started forth to cou nt all nations, not by tramping i down, but by lifting them tip. Mm saw him on a white horse. b returns, he will not bring the i chained to lil wheel, or in Iron a, but 1 hear the stroke of the f of the snow-white cavalcade that J i tliem to the gates in triumph, r family name takes luster from itar that heralded him and the irtliat pierced him, and the crown I was given him. It gathers fra- C: from the frankincense brought cradle, and the lilies that Hung i sneetness into his sermons and tlul mx oi aiauasier mat uroke at his The comforter at llethauy. The TH-torat Aain. the supeniatu- list at lletluaida. The savii r world and the chief joy of r. 1 lie storm Ins frown. The ht his smile. The spring moriiiticr ath. The earthquake the stamp inu foot. The thunder the wtilsper kvolee, Tho ocean a drop on the his linger. Heaven a sparkle on losom of his love. Eternity the I line, of his eye. The universe the dust of his chariot wheels. Able a heartbreak, or hush a tempest 'Wii a world, or flood immensity his glory. What other family cuuld ever boast of such an s personage ? cc forth, swing out the coat of ' Great families wear their coat on the dress, or on the floor of Ii, or on flags and ensigns. The ic sign Is sometimes a lion or a or an eagle. O&r coat of arms rigtit orer the heart, hereafter be a cross a lamb standing under a dove flying over it. Grandest escutcheons! Most significant of ily "coats of arms." In every 1 must have it bUzing on my khe dove the cross the lamb; and I fall wrap roe in that good old fia Hag so that the family coat JM shall be right orer my breast, Vl the world may see that I looked i dove of the spirit and clung to awn, and depended upon the of God, which taketh away the ttlw world. ed of Jesus! that dear friend. whom mr hopes of life depend; When I uluui be tins my sliame I no more revere his name. 1 speak of the family sorrows. le comes to a member of the all feel it. It is the custom (tie body is lowered into the ', for all relatives to come to the of the grave and look down into irst those nearest the departed those next In kin until they have into the grave. So, when and grief go down through the of one member of tlie family down through them all. The of una la llm uuiiieM of all. on of the filial, material, and Mi relations of life we stand so fther that when trouble sets fcry all feel the thrill of distiess. great Christian family, the 5 of one ought to be the sorrow of one persecuted? All are per- hot one suffer loss? We 3 loss. Ia one bereaved? We JWrearad. 1 streaming eyee together flow ooun guilt and mortal woe. -fcnjoietat another's misforune 'Sot one of tb sheep, but one PU: and the vulture of sin sted on jour soul and not the y Spirit. Our Lord Jesus H and an assembled today wlaiMd. He says: -My ffhs onto yoa." Through bis myt: "All are yours. frvytkfef ' Tat, everything! vc-rld snd ti.p , ... diAtin- there are old lianirinir .... 4i pictures u 11 called the -lirl,,,,,,-' 1 !''y are all "f the estate i ney are very old from generation took inu n and have i.oihh il,,,.,.' t' generation. o I -i .i "eauties of the U " orwas the heirloo; wins of our "jai latniiy The i sun. which n,ii. , . ., loiniaaratioiis 'ong the cities or dou(li aild !"t and dome allame, stoops to Paint the lily wLe and the buttercup and the f, UJ hat can resist the sun? UgUl f voyager over the deep: Light fo he shepherd guarding the tlocks alield' K". iur me ioor who have no lamps to burn: uglt fr t e aching eyes and u.a.,.. aim wasted captive' J-'ghtforlhe smooth brow of cladhood and for the din. vision of the oct()Re. "arean! Light for queens cornet and for ewing girls needle! Jet there be "Kht. Whose morning is this? My morning; y0ur morning. Our 'father Kttve us the pictirt-e and hung it on theskyinlopJOf fire. U i3 the heir oom of our family. ,nd su Ul(J iKllL It is the full moon. The mists from shore to shore clcmn lik i..,h...j r mv oiirtturiiru jinirrors; and the ocean, under her giance. comes up with great panting upon me beach, mingling is it were loam ana lire. All the dwelling places of dukes and princes and queens are as nothing to the family mansion that is already await.ng our arrival. The hand of the Lord Jesus lifted the pillars and swung the doors, and planted the parks. Angels walk there, and the good of all agei The poorest man in that home is a millionaire and the lowliest a king and the tamest word he speaks is an anthem and the shortest life an eternity. Htookal'axton to build for ( hats worth a covering for the wonderful liower. Victora liegia, live feet in diameter, lint our lily of the valley shall need no shelter from the blast, and In the open gardens of (;od shall put forth its full bloom, and all heaven shall come to look at it and its aroma shall be as though the cherubim had swung before the throny a thousand censors. I have int seen it yet. 1 am in a foreign land. l!ut my father is waiting for me to come home. I have brothers and sisters there. In the bible I have letters from there, telling me what a tine place it is. It is not a frail house, built in a month soon to crumble, but an old mansion which is as firm as the day it was built. Its walls nre grown with ihe ivy of many ages, and the urns at the gate way are abloom with tho csntury plants of eternity. The queen of Sheba hath walked its halls, and 1 sther, and Marie Antoinette, and Lady Hunting don, and Cecil, and Jeremy Taylor, and Samuel Hutherford, and John Milton, and the widow who gave two mite, nml t!, lMK,r mel from the hospital these last two, perhaps outshining all the kings and queens of eternity. A family mansion means reunion Some of your families are very much scattered. The children married, and went off to St. Losis, or Chicago, or Charleston; but, perhaps, once a year you come together at the old place How yon wake up the old piano thai has been silent for years! But how will we act at the reunion in (he old family mansion of heaven? It is a good while since yo-i parted at the door of the grave. There will be Grace, and Mary, and Martha, and Charlie, and Lizzie, and all the darlings of your household not pale and sick and gasp ing for breath, as when you saw them last, but their eye bright with the lust er of heaven, and their cheek roseate with the flush of celestial summer. What clasping of hands! What em bracings! What coming together of lip to lip! What tears of joy! You say; "I thought there were no tears iu heaven." Tliere must be, for the bible says that "God shall wipe them away," and if there were no tears tliere, how could he wipe them away ? '1 hey cannot be tears of grief or tears of disappointment. They must be tears of gladness. Christ will come and say: "What! Child of heaven, is it too much for thee? Dost thou break down under the gladness of this reunion V Then I will help thee." And, with his one arm around us and the other around our loved one, he shall hold us up in the eternal jubilee. While I speak some of you, with broken hearts, can hardly hold your peace. You feel as if you would 8xak out and say: "Oh blessed day! speed on. Toward thee I press with blistered feet over the desert way. My eyes fail for their weeping. I faint from listening for feet that will not come, and the sound of voices that will not speak Speed on. Oh day of reunion! And then Lord Jesus, be not angry with me if after I have Just once kissed thy blessed feet, 1 turn around to gather up the long-lost treasures of my heart. Oh! be not angry with me. One look at thee were heaven. Hut, all these reun ions are heaven encircling heaven, heaven overtopping heaven, heaven commingling with heaven!" I was at Mount Vernon, and went In in the dining room in which our llrst president entertained the prominent men of this and other lands. It was a L.toraatlnor RIIOL llllt Oil! tllO TCI n.ii v...(, banqueting hall of the family mansion r .hirh I sneak! Spread the table, spread It wide; for a great mullltude are to sit at It From the tree by .the river gather the twelve manner of fruits 111 Unrl.l i .. .' l't that table, 'i t .i. i.ilt., , cmiers irom ' I'm" ' '-.-d press them - Blur .anKarm for that table. " bask, U " i" the bread of which fa man eat, he shall never hunger, fake all the fih(,Mora (jf conquest and engine them among the arches. LetUHv.d come with his harp a'd Gabriel with his trumpet, and Miriam with the timbrel; for tho pro dfgals are at home and the captives are free and the father hath invited tie mighty of heaven and the redeemed of earth to come and dine. A Young Woman's Tact. There was a pretty (ouch of courtsev in Brooklyn church on a recent Sun day. After the. bervice began some lato comers, evidently strangers wero shown ot'ier seats being occupied to the very front iw. There were four of them and they scrupiously followed the routine of worship, rising and re maining seated, as they noticed those arouud them doing. At the hymn be fore the sermon, having stood during the singing of all the others they rose as well. It is the custom of the con gregation however, to sit for this hymn, and the four stood alone when the first note was struck. Only for a few seconds, for a young woman, a church member, who saw the mistake, rose to her feet to Bhare tho situation with them. An old gentleman just behind her followed suit, another at his side joi ed the slanders, and in less than a minute the entire congregation was on its feet, put there by the quick tact of one young woman. And the strangers never knew they had blundered.-Her 1'oint of view in Xew York Times. The oldest American Theatre is in Savannah. The largest steam shovel in the world is at work digging phosphate out of the mines at John's island, near Charleston .S. C. The glassmakers of Thebes centuries ago possessed the art of staining glass and they produced tho commodity iu the utmost profusion. The longest and heaviest train ever carried over any road in this country consisted of 22r loaded 4-wheel coal cars on the Lehigh Valley railway. Ju Great Britain tliere is $1.05 of paper money in circulation for each in habitant; in France 812i'; in Germany, !?:J 03; in the Tinted States, i.iij. An Arizona farmer has a tame rattlesnake to guard his premises in stead of a dog. The report does not say whether the snake sleeps in tho farmer's boots. Parmer Geneseo Burke of Koscom rnon, la., has a pippin on his farm w hich he vows won't get into a peck measure Of all the apple records this seems tin greatest to date. An owl Hew down one of the circuit courtroom chimneys at l'alymra, Mo., recently perched himself in the unused pipe-hole, and listened as if he had been admitted to the bar. In the hot region of Africa more than 2,(HK) laborers are engaged In buid ing the Congo railroad and in the colC regions of Siberia many thousands ol Russians are employed in the con struction of the trans-Siberian railroad A Chicago guidebook for the use of intending Knglish visitors advises them not to buy an outfit before coming but to get their clothes In Chicago, "in order not to attract at tention by tie different cut of their garments." A Peculiar. Prayer In a Maine town near the seacoav'. was one of many communities where the men were, so to speak, a cross bo ween farmers and sailors, and where, as a natural consequence, the cultivation of the soil was somewhat neglected. The minister of a neighboring towii exchanged with the minis er of tlr community, and as a drought was mw them the people sent him a request that he would pray for rain. This he did, as follows: "0 Lord, thy servant is asked by thl' people to pray for rain, a nd he dos'so But thou knowest, O Lord, that what this soils needs is dressid." Atlantic Monthly. How the Natives Trent Gorillas Natives in tho countries inhabited by great apes regard them always as hu man beings of inferior types, and it Is for this reason that for a long time it was found impossible to get hold of an entire gorilla skin, because the savages considered it religiously necessary to cutoff the hands and feet of the ani niRls when they killed them, just as thev do with their enemies, possibly for the purpose of rendering tliem harm less in case they sliould bv any ciianco come to life again. Iuferview in Wash ington Star. Horn nnd Married in Prison. The body of Robert Western, win was drowned at St. Louis, was buried in Evergreen cemetery. In one respect ltnliert Western was remarkable. Ji was born in jail, was married in prison and spent eleven years In the penlten tiary, yet he and his parents were emi nentlv respectable people. Robert's fa ther was keeper of the county Jail here it h i birth. For eleven years he drove the prison carriage, and was tendered A repetition at his marriage, wincn iook place at the penlteniary. Chester (111a) ir t T outs Globe-Democart, . i A Possible Telephone Between IMi ladelphia aa J l.omUii. A distinguished authority on the telephone says that it is rot imnrob- able that telephanic communication may be established between Philadel phia and Liverpool in a few vears. It is admitted that some obstac:es are iu the way, but the success of the tele phone 1 ne between Paris and London has given the promoters of the inter- oceamc scheme new confidence. the successful ernerimpnts nhicli have been tried on the cable across the isntish channel are regarded as an al most certain presaej of what may noon be accomplished between this city and an J-.nglish port. 1 xperiments have already been tried on the Mackey fiei nett cable with telephonic connec tions, and, although something of a failure, has not discouratred new ad ventures which are soon to be made. the experiments will be very expen sive, and may reouire some time in de veloping, but there ii no doubt that both capital and the brains will be found. A moveme t in this direction is already afoot, and the future of the promoter s plans wiU be watched with intense interest by the scientific world. Xew York capital and management will no doubt be united, and the first experiment will be attempted from the Newfoundland end of the trans atlantic cable. Philadelphia can al ready talk half-way across the conti nent, and if this city should be the nrst to inaugurate a transocean tele phone her triumph would exceed any thing in recent discoveries. Jlaihvay Register. The Latest Sn ikc Mory. Snake stories are always in order, and it matters little how long a bow the story teller draws, everybody be lieves him. It is a rule long established that it shall be so. Xow here is one that comes from an Indianan: About the middle of June, SIX), says he, a gas-well contractor, contracted for a well to be drilled in South Amer ica, on the Uruguay river, a few miles below the city of Assumption Mr. Freeman's contract called for SlOnwo at the completion of the well, s.j he im mediately shipped his tools and rig to San Francisco. They were then loaded on a steamer and sent to their desti nation. After everything was in run ning order for drilling, it was a great sight to see the derrick, 500 feet high and covering three-quarters of an acre of ground. We got along all right for a while, when at the depth of 1,800 feet the cable broke and loft all the tools in the bottom of the well. AVe worked for several days and nights, but without any success. The cable was all broken to pieces, with the exception of about 500 feet of good cable, that was lett on th shaft We had pulled some forty or fifty feet of that over the derrick and piled it on the tloor. I do not know why we did this, but it was done. We did not Have cable enough to do anything with, so we finally all sat down to talk the m it ter over and come to some conclusion as to what to do, when to our astonish ment, we saw a monstrous snake crawling into the derrick. Mr. Steward the driller that worked on the opposite tower from me, threw the anvil at it. No sooner was this done than the huge monster started down the well. It suc ceeded in getting in, all but about 500 feet of its tail. AVe immediately took a rope, hitched it onto its tail, turned on the steam and then wound the loose cable that was laying on the floor around the shaft. Presently il began to raise the snake's tail. On, on went the engine, pulling Mr. Snake higher and higher in the derrick, till, filially the end of the tail went over the crown, within 103 feet of the shaft, when, all at once everything stopped for the belt was slipping. AVe doubled the cable from the snake.s tail to the shaft, then put plenty of resin on the belt, slacked back a little, took a run and shoot, turned on all the steam, and presently something gave way. AVe kept on pulling and winding the shaft, when at last the head of the snake made its appearance at the top of the well, but to our astonishment it had hold of tho end of the tools. AVe tried everyway possible to get it loose We hammered it with sledge hammers burnt it with red-hot irons, but did not succeed in getting it loose. AVe finally eave it up and went ahead and finished the well, using the snake for a cable It had bucb a death hold on the tools that we had to burn its head off after irettlng the tools out of the derrick, yet it should be said that we did not get a superabundance or natural gas. The- snake was shipped to America. Tlie sfesleton is now on exhibition at Noblesville, Jnd, and the hide is used for a gas main in Hartford City. V. T. Barnum, after making his will in 1881, summoned several prominent physicians to examine his mental con dition and to make affidavits to his sanity, which they did. This was to guard against any possible contest upon the plea of Incapacity. . .-' An Kiprt Opinion. New' Owner (proudly Showing horse "Rather high bred, don't you think eh?" -s- Horss Expert-"Y-e-s, rather hybrid that's a fact" A St. I ouls Woman Says She Ii Yi-t-ia' 1 laughter, Xow St. Louis has a woman who claims to be a near relative of ( Jueen Yictoria. Her name is Madame Chari pot, aud she lives with her husband and two children in a neat little cottage surrounded by a well-cultivated garden of flowers and plants. It is a queer tale that she unfolds, and is best told in her own words as addressed to a Chicago reporter, who visited St. Louis for the purpose of obtaining an inter view. "My history," she began, "is well known among my countrymen, espe cially at the French village where I was raised, and any Frenchman, includ ing Imile Korst, the former consul could have given you the facts. My birth is recorded at the mayor's ollice iu the city of Toulouse on the 2;th day of April, 18 7, under the name of Jeannie Melanie Palisse. The residence of my parents is mentioned as La Lorade, Xo. 4. This was done to com ply with the French law, I was reared by a gentleman named Jean Carrichou, until three years old, when Mr. Palisse took me away and brought me to the United States. The oi.lv recollection I have of my early days is that I was carried very often to the Castle of Pan, where M. Carrichou's first cousin was superintendent. The ladies ot the royal family residing there were very kiud to me and 1 was not treated at all like the daughter of a country peasant AVhen M. Palisse brought ine to this counlry I understand that he received a round sum of money to raise me, but witn the understanding that lie wmld be assassinated if he would divulge the secret of my birth. Since then I found out also that he was paid at tlie be gining to give me his name. lie never treated me like his daughter and always told me that I would know all about my parents when I was M years old. lie died seven years ago, and left all his property to his two children. I received 85 by his will, but did not expect anything as I ws positive that he was not my father. It has always been my belief that M. Palisse's death was very suspicious, He never gave me positive information, but from what he said I surmised that my mother was no other than Queen A'ictoria of England, and I suppose my foster- father was too well posted on the matter to live longer. 1 did not attempt to solve the mystery until t was 40 years old, and 1 was so anxious at that time that I was taken sick with nervous prostration. Somebody came to my house and gave me a voluminous en velope with the royal seal of England. 1 was delirious with fever and burned the package. Several years ago a stranger sent from ICngland especially to visit me told me that this envelope contained 25,000. At intervals I received similar visits and once my life has been threatened. This is . the reason I have constantly a revolver near at hand." The woman repeats the same story in a straightforward manner to all who question her. The dates are in accordance with English history. Princess Victoria, daughter of the Duke of Kent, succeeded to AVilliam iv, in June, 1837. The Princess, ex plained Mine. Charpiot, spent a season in Biarritz in the spring of 1837, before she was called to the throne of Eng land. It is not impossible for an interna tional dispute to arise over her sweep ing claim. A remarkable feature of her claim is that she resembles the Queen iu many ways. Sufferers from Cougs, Sore Throat, etc., should try "Brown's Bronchial Troches." Lisht Without Sight. AVe can "perceive'' light without the smallest aid from the retina. If the optic nerve is sufficiently evcited to reach the sensorium and create a dis turbance at that center of the brain where the optic nerve terminates we shall then see light and sjOrks. If moreover, the optic nerve is cut or mutilated in any way we sliould see a brilliant flash of light, through with out any sensation of pain. And so it is with the other nerves, the auditory nerve has only to be excited, not necessarily by sound, so as to reach it center, the brain, and we shall hear u sound. How many ghosts might not be destroyed in this way ? Chambers' Journal. Names of Three Children. AnEgtptian family lately arrived in Chicago, the father to work at the World's fair, have a small son whom they havo named Abraham Lincoln Levey. The two elder children are named Tonah, the Egyptian for Star, and Victor Hugo. The first boy was born In Paris. Boston Transcript. FARMERS: I ftftlf OUT! Tu in expend to Hidden chance ST. JACOBS Oil Cures RHEUMATISM. SPRAINS, BRUISES, CUTS, WOUNDS, SORENMS, STIFFNESS, SWELLINCS, BACKACHE, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, BURNS. A PROMPT AND PERMANENT CURE. "August Flower" Tl is :a tV'c query per What 13 pituaKy ou your little Loy's l':5. And be ii It For? no woi- '.hau the' big ger, older, balder-headed Iwys. Life is an interrogation point. '"What is it for' ' we con tinually cry from the o.!le to the grave. So with thin introduc tory sermon we turn Mid ask: "What is August Flowkr for ?" As easily answer o.l as H::-.i : It is for Dys pepsia, a -pedal remedy for the Stomach t:i 1 Liver. Nothing more than this . but this brimful. We believe Ai ust Flower cures Dyspepsia. W now it will. We have reasons for I. uowing it. Twenty years ago it started in a small country town. To-day it has an honored place in every city and country store, possesses one of the largest manu facturing plants in the couutry and sells every where. Why is this? The reason is as simple as a child's, thought. It is honest, does one thing, and d-,t-s it right along it cures Dyspepsia. ft G.G GRt'LX Side Maa'fr.V.oft.lbury.X.J. Tutt's Hair Dye Cray hull or Yi liiskerNcIi.'iugtri toagloftsy black by a single application of thin Dye. It iinparta a natural color, avt instantum oiiglyaiMl contains nothing tiiJiu-ioti to the hair. Sold by all rtruKgittS or sent by ex press on receipt of pri-e, $1.00. Office. 3D A 41 ark flace, ew 1'orl.. prUT Hindu $71 in four day on in yv Electric DUCn I Corsets ami Special iics. luO percent "iiTolit und Cash Prizes. Sample free. lr. Brldgman, Jlroadway, K. V. UAV CCVCD CURE0 T TAY CURE0- Tin I It 1 LH We want the name and ati . dress of everv sufferer in the & ACTUM ft U.S. and Canada. Address. HO I nllln P.EaroldHayes,V.D.,BBffilo,lU CONSUMPTION. I hBTfta positive romcdy for the above disease ; by ita ' use thousands of cases of the worst kind and of Ionic ! landing havo been cured. Indeed so strong is my faith ' in itsefGcacy, that I will send two bottles free, with f a VALUABLE TREATIHfi on this disease to any suf ferer who will send mo their Ei press and P.O. add rem. 1 T. A. Slocmn, M. C.f 181 rcorl St., N. Y. I I TiTCJlsthpaclrnowlwlBM' "arlinir remdv for all thf nnnntural dlscharges-and private diseases of men, A certain cure for the debili-. tatlu? weakness peculiar to women. T nrfirrihe It and feel safs I The EVANS CHEUifHCrt. in recommending It to kCINCINNATIlO.B Bunerers. I A. J. BlUNtH, M U.tUECTUffilLL 1. N. U. Na 157 York,Xeb Enterprising Advertising. A firm on Fourteenth street, in the busiest shopping neighborhood, has in troduced a novel advertisement. A painted theatrical ocean is constructed on the roof of one house while the roof, of the adjoining building, being a little higher, serves as the shore. On this shore a man attired as the lone fisher man sits and iudust riously goes through the pantomime of lishing. Now and then he works the lines of a miniature sailboat, causing the latter to skim tlie mimic sea.' All of this attracts the at tention of thousands of people in the. opposite walk. For fear, however, that some might go by without seeing it, a hired confederate of the lone fisherman saunters along tlie walk and gazes up-' ward. It is human nature to stop and look at anything anybody else is look ing at. Ilesult, crowds of curious gazers Xew York Herald. The Field fur the f urentor. In the realm of machinery and man ufacture the inventor is yet but entering upon his infancy. Many millions of dollars have been reaped and are to be accumulated by tlie inventor in ma chinery who understands the com plicated needs of humanity. The cen tral idea in this work is to reduce labor expense and time to the lowest point, and so to economize hi the use of ma terial that there will be no absolute waste. To enter upon this field of in vention one cannot trust to accident and happy luck, but he must first thoroughly acquaint himself with the laws of dyramics and mechanics, so , i . c.i appreciate an improvement when it is suggested to his mind. George E. Walsh in New York Epoch An Early Bird. Marion Faulconer reports something phenomenal in the way of chicken en terprise, lie has a pullet that first saw the light of day on March 15. She laid eggs and hatched a brood of "chicks" on Augaust 20. lie requested us to state that if any one can beat this re cord he would like to hear from them La Grange (Mo.) Herald Democrat ol temperature, mnd to Injuria AlTo&DAYS.V M OorDUd not 10 mtwm Uf-rfnnlvbr I. trdNiSlSUrk'l J4 J