.3 c I ' i : i ; ; n - .r f t ' I 'I . 11 jl Oarrison ""Journal. BO. D. CAUM, rIMt sad Prop. IEB. for trrvy slice taken by every other power. For example, Oertnauy crabs, then Englaud gralis much; Uussi.1 tekes something, then England takes a jMirti.i!!-. France alworbs a province, then En:--J arprorfstcs one equally as large and powerf ul. HIAWATHA AS HE WAS The latest abscond tbOUt SJW.lMO sllAt't." Loose hibi. no ii: ply badly lucusnn tight lit i -yiiniiyi. piu. r from Georgia Is J. inches tall and e necessarily im-rloihe-i than a oii w ii'i a drink The fahi'Ui writer say that overcoats are not worn as low: now as they have been. Is this an indication of the re turn of prosperity V When it come to questions of nation al policy the British lion may draw bs wn conclusions, but it won't permit the other powers to pull its tail. An Easterns contemporary wants to know a sure cure for insomnia. Go to bed and sleep It off. If you can t get to sleep buy a.n alarm clock. It's seldom wise to become too much absorbed by a pastime. Skating on the river Is very well, but care should be tken not to go into it too deeply. An American lady in Paris writes in spirit of semi-indignation that in that Jty "they actually pay for water in djeir houses by the quart." Don't give the klea away to your milkman. U costs Uncle Same about $'.t.(M).tK) a year to keep his warships in com mission, but, after all, that is cheap in surance on all the billions of dollars' worth of property in his dominions. In the old colonial days of Virginia, wires were sold at auction for 120 pounds of tobacco. They do not seem to have been so particular about "cold Dayments" in those elementary times. fiomeltody In Boston has been mak ing lifteen'$: bills by cutting fourteen bills to pieces and pasting the frag ments together. They are very wise in Ronton, but there are better ways than that to make money. "We have not less than t, h a i,t i i loaned out In Europe at this moment." says nn editorial in the New York Times. To prevent misunderstandings It may be well to explain that this is probably not the -'editorial we." Speak well of every one. If you can not speak well, then speak no ill. SI lewce here la golden. This does not aaeao that no criticisms are permissi ble, but that you should never say of atkers what you would not Is? willing to amy to them or In their presence. Iepew Is among those who believe that the revival of college debates will jet reinstate the old academic auxil iary of oratory and bring hack the days ,.r Hi., in, -ii'i. lieu oratory was fiiiioii" the inline Inbitious of A uteri ! an youth. The a ,c of oratory in the sense iu which it was once exalted, as a mover of public opinion. Is gone, aud there is little prospect that it will ever be revived. The printing press has quite overshadowed it, aud the world is too busy to follow mere forensic idols. Oratory thrives where the spok en words teach as far a the written. Where is there such a place now? To day the audience reached by the spok en' word is so Infinitely small as com pared with the audience furnished by the press that mere oratory lias lost much of its old charm and largely out lived Its old-time usefulness. These facts do not. however, argue the need of discouraging oratory. It still has its place, and If it could purify legis lation or make men teUer citizens. Its reinstatement would be worth any price. Alas! it serves to gloss rascality, obscure reason, and sugar coat Iniquity as readilv as it serves higher purposes. The age of the written word has come, j The press, the telegraph ami the "phone," of various dceriptions. have largely made the traditional " god of the forum" unnecessary. College debates may serve to recall the majestic figure of the orator, but it's the man who starts the mammoth lightning press that is most eloquent to-day. Bishop Potter's pronounced pessim- j ism cannot chill the affectionate regard j nor impair the resect In which the dis- j tiuguisiied prelate Is held by his fellow i .-itizens; but it Is, nevert l.-,. ;i source 'of regret to many of his judicious I friends. His latest deel jratiou, to the 'effect that the country has passisl the zenith of its prosperity, does not strike a responsive chord in the hearts or the intelligence of thoughtful people. They do not believe that there Is any good reason why we may not In the future 'have as prosperous times as any pa si period has witnessed. They see no con ditions, eith r material, moral or Int'd- lectual, that do not justify a reasonable expectation of continued progress. They expect, of course, that the future will ' be lik- the past In that Its upward and onw ard movement will be subject to oc casional checks; that there will tie waves on the ocean of prosperity and depression between them. But they to verily believe that, with the vast and varied resources at their command, the American people have every prospect Beantiful Indian lscnd Which It llave 1 umpired Longfellow. The Indian story of Hiawatha Is even uore beautiful than that which Longfellow has told so charmingly In the Justly popular poem Inuring thai title, but It depicts the hero as a very different man from the Itold and tender-hearted warrior of whom the poet writes. The Indian story, though iu part fiction, is founded on fact; there u no itoiilit that such a man as lii.i- reilhil the clerk. "She Is from the uiislcal conservatory, where she prae ti.es on the piano three or four hours a lay. In order to prevent the finger nails from coming In contact with the iv iry key she has them cut very short ;iud we apply Iodine to take the sore ness out of the ends of the linger! after they have been subjected to three or four hours of pounding. Most piano players, you will observe, have their linger nails cut to the quick, so that li. i clicking sound Is endued w hen they srlke the kevs. We keep a I Kittle O. watba once lived, and that he played .Mine and a brush for the special use The newspapers have copied photo graphs of two couples with arms about each others" necks. The ttrsi. mat or the Czar and Kaiser, has leen conns- i eated In Russia; the other, that of a j bicycler of ephemeral fame and his nf aaced bride, ought to be. To make eapltal of affection is to shame It. Never condemn your m-ighttor un heard, however many the accusations preferred against him. Every story may he told in two ways, ami justice require that you should hear the de fease as well as Che accusation. Ke neniber. moreover, that the malignity of enemies may place you in a similar position. Piracy is not made more respectable by false pretense. When Germany enhted Kao-Chou Bay she made a pre text of the murder of German mission trim in China. But tin- pretext was so hldlcrous-ly irrelevant that even the consecrated person cannot have meant It to be taken seriously. But iNs-ause Tour missionaries have Ik-cu murdered o so reason at all why you should de iiand a coaling station by way of atonement. a leading part iu forming the compact of the Six Nations, says a writer in the Pittsburg I'ispatch. According to the story, Hiawatha was the wisest man of the Onondaga, anil when the ditTereut trils-s were troubled bv the Hurons. who lived to the north of them, and the Algotiquins. who were their Eastern neighbors, he proposed a meeting of the trilies to form a union for mutual defense. But the scheme was defeated by Atatarho. j a great war chief of the Onoudagas, who was Jealous of dividing his mw I er. and Hiawatha was driven out of j the trilie. He did not give up the plan, j however. As he Journeyed toward the j south he came to a beautiful taut? (probably Oueidai. On the shore he picked up a quantity of licautiful white shells. Hiawatha, living alone all this tin I'd never sis-ing any man, learned much from the great spirit. It was finally revealed to him that his people were at last ready to unite, and he hastened back to them. Then there was a great meeting, which all the chiefs attended. Atatarho still sat back defiant, saying never a word. When at last Hiawatha arose and le gan to speak the people were charmed by his voice and listened in silence, for it seemed to them that he spoke vt.th the wisdom of the great spirit himself. 1 if ting Ills strings of wam pum. 11 law at Ma unroineo ms pian ioi the union, telling off on each shell the position and over allotted to each tribe and to its chief. Atatarho was to bo made the great war chief of the confederacy which shows that Ilia watlia was something of a politician -and at this event he gave way and the treaty was adopted. While the people w ere celebrating the treaty with the usual feasting. It was observed that Hiawatha was sad and silent. 'FeuKti" U not for me." he said, when his friends urged him to join the festivities: "I am to go on a far Journey." At that moment a beautiful white ca noe was ss'ti approaching across the lake, driven by some unseen potter. When it reached the shore Hiawatha, bidding farewell to those who had crowded about him, stepped ldo the canoe, which moved rapidly away. As It reached the middle of the lake It sud Into the ii ir Hizher and of a pros,K-rous and progressive future. nt) f,w U)(t w,lte Ours is a young country, the greater , , pan oi u asv ,,,,uB o-.. ., WaniP. , .iin, HIMH-k and then van- ..f the pianoforte pupils ol me con servatory. They come in here for treatment two or three times a week and pay by the monlh."'-New York Times. A sensible negro preacher in lUe South has lieen advising memlsTS of hat race to stick to the farm. Good ad rlce. The negro is a lsni farmer and agriculture suits him bolter than any other occulta tion. Herein is one field M least in which he has an equal chance with the white man and In which there can be no isisslble discrim ination against him. In business, in the profession. In the industrial world the color of his skin is often against kin and he must tight, race prejudice. But thla Is not true of the farm. Mocb has been said. IhiIIi Justly and wisely, on the education of the feelings that la, on tbe duty of discriminat ing ! regard to them, repressing some, stevdoplng others, and so training and llsclpllnlng them as to bring them Into haraaoay with our entire Itelng. aud to aiake them couduce lo the best ends of which we can conceive. When we re aiesnber how strong Is feeling as a fac tor in life how, on the one hand, it may override conscience, Judgment, aad even commonr sense, and. on the atber, bow afely It may conduct us to tbooe realms where giKKlness and spon taneity unite to make the character and tbe life beautiful we- must admit that wo cannot lay too much stress upon It a a power for good or for evil, nor too earnestly strive to direct Ita Influence towards tbe one and nway from the tber. fbe Manchester Guardian, which has tbe reputation of being one of the beat tafonaed of English Journals, givea tbe world to aaderstand that John Bull to till doing boslneMS at the same old , and propose to protect ms pat- i sad iwprrlgbts with hl. scenstotn- 4 bttcttlgewce and vigor. All he a mmtU now in that. If China U hanged. f -jnr gad quartered by the gentle ed to settlement within the past forty I or fifty years. Our agricultural re- sources, even In the old States, have had but partial development, while in the new States their development Is for the future. Our lands could feed the world and furnish a surplus under Just such cultivation as Is practiced In Bel gium aud Holland. The Southern States have just Iwguu lo grow towards their magnificent destiny. All over the country there are lauds fur the land less," and a (sqiulation of L'tJ,iJN).(S will still find ample room aud opiorfu uity. The solid facts of commerce prove that the Inventive genius of our jieopie, aud their skill In manufactures, are uuequnletl, and this is the natural result of obvious causes. The most en terprising Inhabitants of European countries have made this nation, and our laws and natural facilities have afforded them the best field the world I ever saw for the utilisation of their tal ents. Our mineral wealth Is literally inexhaustible, and the w orld will be j . 1 I..... 1. f.m lu l.lirillij,d tat geiy oejeuo'Ui oi ii iui n of all the products of Iron ore. Foreign nations will need our cotton, our K-1ro-i leitin, and oilier staples, and there is scarcely a limit to our capacity for 1 meeting these demands. The fact that the era of railway construction is Hear ing its end is a hopeful rather than a discouraging circumstance. We built too fast and too far. but time will cor rect that error, and capital that U now unproductive will Itccoine productive. And our geographical iosiiloti. together with our tiolicv of minding our own 1 business, will always give us an fldvau t tage over European nations. ltecnd j lug on- the patriotism of the eople to defend the mil Ion's honor, by taking up arms In any lime of need, we cnu con tinue to cxicnd our energies In promot ing (he arts anil Industries of cnce. while Europe Is exhausting Its re sources in the maintenance of vast armies. Ished altogether. That was the last of Hiawatha, but the league which he founded continued for centuries, and was never conquer ed by Its enemies, and every year since the wampum has been brought out at the great council and the solemn riles with which Hiawatha had instituted the confederacy have been rehearsed. Harmless lUspt rsiors. Scientific Investigations in reganl to the health of those engagl In the vari ous industrial occupations, have re sulted in definite regulations, public aud private, wblcb are of lieneflt .to the community us well as to the Indi vidual. The fact Is proved, beyond any doubt, that sedentary occupations In m. ventilated atiartiuents and those which expose the workmen to the In halation of dtiai should ! especially avoided. The different sort of oust vary, too, In their harmful effect; thus the sharp dust produced in the grinding of uewlles and sieel tools and In the mining of metals is particularly Irritating, and the mortal. ty from con sumption among operatives in such In dustries Is high, but oiwratlves thus engaged may diminish the liability by wearing "respirators" over the mouth aud now w hile at work. Iu a number of factories In Massachusetts aud pre sumably elsewhere, in which consump tion has made serious inroads ujmju the 0eratives, the adoption of measures for the prevention of a dusty atmos phere has secured a marked diminu tion of the prevalence oi this disease among those employed in litem. The fact also appears that owners aud su perintendents of mills, factories and workshops can accomplish much to ward the prevention of tu!rcuIois among those whom they employ by the Introduction of adequate systems of ventilation and heating, aud by tbe use of hard and smooth floors without cracks or crevices. The estate of Mrs. Margaret Oil Pliant, the authoress, who died June ZTt i- i.toior s-.'.iisni. It was left to hel adopbsl daughter. "An Oregon Boyhood." by iouls Al bert Banks. Is an interesting narrative of the author's early life In the unset tied Oregon of ante railroad days. ll.'iu-v .lames, whose recent novel. What Maisie Knew," has had eotifld era ble success, is giving up his connec tion as a iiirr-sKiilenl of Harpers Weekly. Mr. Bellamy's "Equality' is likely to be read In a greater number of lan guages than any recent American ltook. One of the latest propositions received by the publishers is for a translation into Bulgarian. GillM-rt Parker's new story is to le called "The But'le of the Strong." It is to ape...- as a serial in the Atlantic Monthly. It will be rcincinU'red that the Atlantic printed Mr. Parker's suc cessful "Seats of the Mighty." Umls Zaugwill. who has heretofore written over the initials ". '..." has decided to Use his full name in future, believing that it will au-e less confu sion. "Cleo the Maguilicetit" Is the title of lib new l.ok. which, by the way. (bo s not allude to the French dancer. No one is quite sine just what baa brullgll' -'"Hit the prfsetl! Hickeus ciaze; but one and all acknowledge that they are reading, or writing, or talking alsmt Dickens. The newest IxMlduii editions of the great novelist's works are to be illustrated by Phil Mav, of the Enudon Punch, and Charles Dana Gibson, of the New York Life. Mr. Gladstones recollections of his friendship with Arthur Henry Hallam are announced as the leading feature of tbe Youth's Com pan ion for 18:. Mr. Gladstone calls HaJlam "the noblest roan he ever knew." The general list of contributors to the periodical for next year is as starry a usual, ranging from tbe Duke of Argyll and Thorns li. Iteed lo Kipling. Zangwlll, ami Cy Warman. WHAT MAX DOES NOT LOVE IiEAlii ? Mm. Pinkham Counael Young Wives to Keeep Tbeir AttlactiTtaas A Letter From a Young Wife. Seven-eighths of the men in this world marry a woman because she is beautiful jtT : in their eyes. What a disappoint ment then to see the fai in if'"'s b' anty faiV:i;- away before a year passes over her bead ! 1 feel as if I would like to sav toevery young woman who is about to be married -"Strengthen yourself in ad orr. m that vou will not break down under the new strain on your powers." Keep your beat it la nroeions nosvssion ! Nourhnsban your beautv, be is proud lo be seen in public with you; try to keep it for his s,ake, and jour own. . lhe pale cheeks, the dark shadows under the eves, the general (trooping - me y". wife s form, w hat do they mean ? 1 tu'y mean . That her nerves are failing, that her strength is genng and that something mustltedone to help her thrown the coming trials of maternity. IU ild her up at once by a course of some tonic with specific powers. Such a Lvdia E I'mkl) am's Vegetable Compound. You can get it at any druggist t i Uow I J publisn bv request a letter from a young wife -of her own ac cord she a.hlre.sMPs it to her " suffering sisters," and while from Mka to withhold her name, she gives her initials and alrert number In Chambcrttbnrg. Pa., so she can easily be found personally or by letter TTmv Suffering Sisters: - Ul me write, this for jour benefit, te hng you what Lvdia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound has done for me. 1 am but nineteen and suffered with painful menstruation, leucorrh-ca. d.incss, burn L sensation back of cars and on top of my h-ad, nervousness, patn and lofene"s of muscles, bearing-down pains, could not sleep well, was UD.bL to stand without pain, and oh', bow Il.mged to lie well. , , , One day I wrote to Mrs. Pinkha.n telling her ail, knowing I could do so 'UrSeTl'ovely letter in reply, telling me exactly what to do. ftcr taking nine bottle!, of the Comiund. one box of Liver pills, and using one-balf package of Sanative wash, 1 can say 1 m cured. 1 am .. .. i :,. . ntlur than Mrs. I'inkliatn. ana owe my niq m i..... - - -- , , ww .i,t women suffer when help is near? Let me, as one who baa had all suffering women, especially young wives, to seek: Mrs. P.. S. It.. 113 E. Catherine St., UianitxTStmrir. I a. ives Whv will women sutler wnen neip wne experience, urge Mrs. Piukham's advice. Itun l (lore Hour llen. Hen thst are being "c.uaciod" for etg production should not be "sUifT-d." i,eif f'od being of proper ctiaiactcr hir crops should never be more f an noderatelv f ill. It is a oehiion to sup pose that hens w ill not eat more than i (rood for them. As in the rw "I Human sx.-dlsli riil1hy. A bo-bind alvays lak hm wife better after hae find out she get mad Jioorty easy. Aye tank d g catcher could make guto el of money el hue vonld send vat hao get oi pen ilea Klondike country. Never yutiiti on a fuller ven haft es bo t n ii. -u when temn'e 1 ny sr.peuz ng iiown. lor vui as ia - "c v and-, they wdl gorge them-eives and ; hot Ink ihcket.a vn he get opp. thus bring on indigestion, ;-nd wate! K( young liln get married balora lies energy in the effort lo get rid of the sui plus. A WORD OF ADVICE. -. iskers BUM line can never ox ct pjorty vans lak old ba -helor hae haf. limlter that Tit Thin t onliie to Alli nr like ild Helil. the Klin- Itiniam leronry Would Iteacli. While altiKtst any one knows about the principles ou which an ordinary thermometer operates, there are a uumlter of things about this apparently little Instrument which are not gener ally known, and which are of a great deal of Interest. One of the most m- culiar of tliese Is the question of the length of tube which the mercury In the bulb of au ordinary thermometer would fill If It were stretched out In utmrle column the sir.e of th&t In the tulte. Most people, when asked how long this would be, would probably say from five to fifteen feet, while as matter of fact this column of mercury would In an extremely delicate instru nieut be miles In length. The reason of this is that the column of mercury, while It apjx-ars quite large. Is really of almost Infinitesimal siae. If the tube of a thermometer Is broken, one Is at first at a loss to see where the mer cury goes In, but close examination will disclose a line line, much thinner than a hair, running across one eud of a little slit In which the mercury rises. As It has Its flat side toward the eye, It appears to lie quite large, and the couvexlty of the outside of the tube, through which It Is seen, mag nifies It and gives It that rounded ap jiea ranee which Is so deceptive. The reason why the slit Is made so small Is to give the greatest ratio of result for the expansion of the mercury la the bulb.-ISoston Transcript. Komam e ami ItealUm. One of the passages in Miss Wilkins' new novel, "Jerome," which have Iteeii pronounced too eccentric ami Incredi ble, Is the story of the rich miser w ho hanged himself -stealing the rote- lie cause of the fear of losing a third of his property. Hut It Is not necessary to come to New F.nglatid for such avarice as Ihis. Wirt, the New York baker, who hanged hlinelf In ills cellar to other day, was driven to his fate by the widening of Kim street, which he feared would take away part of his house. Ills estate Is valued at $10t. ". - !l! ingllcld Republican. Children Taught to I'se th l icger Among the w ilder tribes itf the Cnti caaua every child Is tnuglit to use the dagger almost ns soon as he can walk. The children first leurn to sub water without making a splash, and by Inces sant practice acquire nn extraordinary cotnniiind over the weapon. Give the average nisn a position, and lie will so cas'. hi eyes around for au aiM'-siaut, Iodine for IMsno Player. A modest aptearlng young woman entered a drug store In Madison are nue one morning recently and, walking to the end of the counter nearest the prescription department, mutely held nut lioth hands toward a clerk who chanced to be standing Iu that particu lar place. This clerk, equally mute, reached behind a screen and brought ou: n liltie glass bottle from which a brush handle protruded. After stir ring the contents of the bottle with the brush for a few seconds tbe clerk daintily brushed the tips of the young woman's fingers with the mixture, leaving a dark stain around the top of each finger nail. With a pleaant nod of her head, and low murmured thanks, tue young woman quickly withdrew from the store and the blue glass bot tle was put back In lis hiding place. Observing a pn.zled expression o the face of an old pa trim of tin' stora who bad come In to get a cigar, tb clerk said. "Iodine." "What for'" asked tbe smoker. T.-f rant Angers from getting sort,' A Chapter of Ituaaiatt History. Here Is a little bit oi Russian history that Is nut told In the school books and Is not generally known. When Oath erlne II. met her husband, Peter III. for the first time his ugllnesa caused her to faint, it waa only her am hi tliMi to become czarina that enabled her to go through with the wedding cere mony. The torrlble consequences were Inevitable. Catherine forced Peter to abdicate In ber favor, after which she murdered blm. Hut before these events had taken place Catherine bad takes mi with Count SoltlkotT, who w.ts doubtless the father of Catherine's son Paul, who succeeded to the throne, only to bo aasaaalnaUKl a few years later. Where I'eoplo Ilve Longeab In Norway the average length of llf Is greater than In any other country on the globe. This Is attributed to tbe fact that tbe temperature la cool tod uniform throughout tbe year. (Joe thing eh juid be impressed Uon very miner, prospector or trader com ing to Alaska, to the Klond le, or tbe Yukon country, and that is the neces 4itv for providing an ad quato and o'oper food topplv. Whether procured n the States, In the Dominion, or at the supply stores here or f .nberon, hie ruu-)t ba bis primary concern. Upon the manner in which the rnmer has ob served or neglected this precaution more than upon any other one thing will his success or failure depend. The e supplies must be healthful and should be concentrated, but the moet careful attention in the selection of fxxi that ill keep unimpaired inde finitely under all the conditions ubich they will have to encounter is impera tive. For iiitcie, as bread raised with bakiu powder must lie iei ed up on for the chief part ol eve-y meal, im sine the helpiesness of a miner with a can ol spoiled baking powder. Buy only the veiy best flour; it is the cheap est in the end. Experience has shown the V- val Baking Powder to be the most n liable and the trsdtng compari ; a i ow uniformly supply this brand, :-.i otto t will not keep in this climate). Be sure thai tlie bacon is swe. t, soun 1 and thoroughly cured. The-e are tlie absolute i ec-silie upon which all must place a chief reliance, and can under no circumstances lie neglected. 1'ney may, of coure, be supplemented jy as uisny comforts or delicacteu as the prospector may be able to pack or lesire to oar for. rrom the Alaska Mining Journal. A book of receipts f x all kind of eiokery, which is specially valuable for uee upon tbe trad or n tlie camp, n j published by the Royal Baking Powder; tmpaii , ol ew lork. 1l receipts; are tlcr Ubly practical, and the meth- J ods are carefully explained, so that the j inexperienced may, with its aid, readi ly ptepare ever)tning requisiu fori i good, wltO-psoms meal, or even dain ties, if he has the neceassry materials. , i h i matter i) in compact though dur- j ..ble form, the whole book weighing but two ounces. Under a apeciat sr rsniren ent.tbis book will ba sent iree to ml ra or itl whw may desire it We would recommend that everyone going lo i ha Kl'nlik proca a copy, tddrers lhe Royal Bsking Powder (jo., Sew York. Truthful boys ara the great men are male of. One ol the (iarman cities boasts a stnet laid w ith rubber. A position of trust and an aching tooth are hard to fill. It always unmann a woman when she obtains a decree of divorce. Trouble and mules should always m approached from the front. A rtai by any othar name would b just a eipensive in midwinter. A man's hide is too poor for ntilily wheo it won't hold an opinion. In pi ying bis organ, the street ma sicisn always knows which way to tarn. Mt winiow- soothis.j stBUr for SfcUl in leetliln. i,f!m Ihs nmi. reduces tttflsm mmon. ily (lii. eir mJ eolW. As twlUa Phonogrsphs are like women: they w-ll talk all at onoa i f they get started . TO l i:HK A COLIK IN OJtK DAT. twin Hpmixi UulsltwTlMeU AB HraestSSl MTuBd Um UUtuef U II IftlUtArnn sfts In prearing carrots for cooking, al- wys scrape; never pttei. Ask for Allen's l'ool-tKae, A powder to shake Into your shK-s. It cures Corns and Bunions, Chilblains, Swollen. Nervous, Damp, Sweating, Smarting, Hot aud Callous Feet. At all druggists' and slute stores. 'AVr. ASK To DAY. Sample I'ftKK. Addreaa Allen S. Olmsted, U-ltoy, N. Y. When a man Is a loafer, ba la put o ine rock pile; when a woman la loafer, aba la put la society. When maa makes near that he tnakaa a oant, M k1i Cinders form a gosi miterial (or cover ing tbe flojrs and paths of the conserva tory. Ptso'st'nre for ("onsnmption has keea a liixi send to me. Win. tl. McCUIIanf Chester, Florida. Hept. 17, liSiT), In mending gloves, use fine cotton thread instead of silk, which is apt to cut the kid. Thirty-Ate unfortunate gamesteit c mm t ed suicide st Monte Carlo, last y-f -r. Ac ore and barbers are men of many ,.rts. If it wasn't for the lynch n js occasion diy there won il be more trials in tnis world. Merry chickens iel others do the tight ng. Iin it far from home who has none to o to. If yon can't swim, never wide in un known w st art. I'otlu.k ttnty be poor luck, II taken ith a alrangr. Few wear their character lika tbair . ak- outaida. They catch tarpon 4 to S feet long and weighing 100 to I -W I Iw. alt along the Florida ooaet This in mid-winter, mind you, wheo Nebraska and Iowa ar covered with snow, and the thermometer Is any where from Un below to twenty abovs. Il enau roinirilltlv IIUIs te reaott Florida If you purh, Urkets via lbs Hiirllnn.n Koula. I'ailleulan al local lirket tlic or by wrlUm u J. I lands, Oenrral i'SMeager Afaat, Omaha, Neb. d nnci ii r Th u,t Hmi tt or nuurinu Irr. Ssmplri ! m an. II.. mm aaal nalta inulmled. SiiUalluiUa ia fn. free. THK VA1 MAHII.I A CO., t'Mn, tt. 4, N. N. U. NO. 482 II. YOftK, MM. i anoa ' ;V;:: ;;