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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1898)
it .4 Qatrfcon 3ournal :rT7mt - . m t , , lata Boston Herald says: "Spain It A losing game, however, from to finish. . Uncle 8am went Into the box a man of the opposing team has I glTen a base on balls. . now the Consumptives' Horn-: In 4Bewtoii baa been destroyed by fire. A i of quick consumption. Tha Chinaman says that the Spanish talkee, talkee, talkee," while the aVaaeflrans "Do-ee, Do-ee, Do-ee." Come and take a swear with me; It's mj treat," may become the proper Invi tation la New York if the anil-profanity law la enforced. If this territorial aggrandizement Mm continues. Instead of the great American sign, "Keep Off the Grass," W may put up: "Get Off the Earth." The Washington agricultural experts my that the Detroit trees are being kill ad by the "Ieueostlgma." Of course, the trees could not exist under such a thjma. That woman who warns a divorce m because ber husband's love has melt &" probably made married life so hot far him that no other result could logl aally be expected. Zola can use his novelist's pen per haps as profitably while In exile, just aa Victor Hugo did a generation ago, and In aeordance with numerous French precedents may return to Paris with honors a few years hence. The Memphis Commercial-Appeal adltorially says: "Within the week four cuttings have occurred, three of them being fatal. There Is entirely too free oa made of the knife In this city." How many cuttings a week would be about right? Women often try to reform a drink ing man by marrying him. The experi ment la usually unaueeessf uL In a cer tain European city a decree has been leaned which forbid the granting of a sraarrlage license to any person In the habit of getting drunk. What meas ureless sorow would be prevented were each a regulation enforced In every eommunlty. The events of the war have contrib uted essentially to bring about a better sanprehenslon In Europe of the Amer- , character. Two points have been cially emphasized that the Atneri- ae are splendid and Indomitable Cfbters, and that they are generous magnanimous in the hour of vic- In proportion as other peoples capable of appreciating such quail- Americans have risen in the esti mation of neutral nations, who did not aaderstand us before. An official of one of the Chicago-New York lines stated recently that the wag-distance telephone bad practically rained the business of the "limited" trains. These trains were put on for she accommodation of business men to whom a few hours meant thousands of Vellars. But since the 'phone has made It possible to hold personal conversa tions without traveling the volume of travel on the "limlteds" has visibly de- The time and money saved by . substitution Is, of course, an enor- i Item. But If, as a result, the Im- Btwrement in passenger transportation ware checked, It would not be all gain. Severe competition, however, la which tbe passenger service is made ancillary ft more lucrative traffic, will probably i Improvements upon the railroads i If the Inroads of the long distance 'phone become more severe. TVjre baa been co-operation In vari os departments of business, but co- tlon in farming, as practiced in Minnesota, is somewhat new. The Journal of Political Economy tells how tbsa business is carried ou. and some tthf of the success that has attended JL Bo far co-operation has been con stat! to the dairy business. In a farm Baa; community in which there Is a ni.'n tsjMB Of 500 cows the owners fliilte atid gttm a company. The buildings and asMfctaery for a dairy plant cost from (3jK0 to $4,500, and the money to pro Vfcta them ia borrowed. As soon as the 2aat a pot In operation a sinking fund If provided for paying off the lndebted bmbbi by lerfing a tax of 5 cents on each taadred pounds of milk delivered ac Of creamery. The average annual re tS!yt of these creameries are about C90, although some of them receive double that amount. In one the distribution made by these fM)itlT( creameries reaches $380, SWn nail y. The cost of conducting a nj ia about $2,400. and the aver se tsare (or each member is ?21.. Vie farmers bare been greatly benefit ed tf fksjsja co-operative institutions, as T tar relieved them of the labor of caring for and marketing the t, while the butter itself has been i .tir than they could make, uniform f '. 'Caailty and bringing a price far ' ,7 that paid for ordinary dairy : raet groat men have always been rri la the treatment of their snh TW Dake of Wellington was itryrMwIag his obligation to fel- and the rank and file of hit i T4d dispatches of Oen. ;as his Memoirs, ore filled .-kfDents of his obltga agst laea auder lis command. The three greatest gener als of our civil war, Grant, Sherman and Sheridan, vied with each other In their mutual loyalty. Every true null at the head of a great enterprise, whether he be general, admiral, the president of some great corporation, the manager of a newsTuper, or what nt, gives due credit to the workers tinder him. Only the narrow minded, the self-coneelted and In reality the In competent refuse to do this. We say incompetent, because the head that re fuses due eonsideratiou to his subordi nates Is not capable of obtaining tha maximum of good service from those subordinates. Human nature isalike the world over, and lack of appreciation quenches ambition, from the humblest to the greatest among those who are engaged In any undertaking. To be appreciated Is one of the mot precious rewards that come to any worker, and It Is the most productive of good fruits. "Love me, and tell me so someumes," said Uolmes. In a discuslson of the effect of ma chinery on the opportunity for employ ment of labor, C. Wood Davis, in the Forum, calls attention to the fact that one of the chief benefits of the substi tution of steel for iron in railway build ing and other constructive work is the great lessening of the necessity for re pairs and renewals. For instance, the complete renewal of the liOO.ouO miles of railway tracks in the United States involves the ue of some ;jo,W0,XJ tons of metal, and if Iron rails were in use upon this entire mileage it would in volve In the renewals the use of more than 3,000,000 tons annually. With steel almost entirely In use renewals now absorb but one-third as much metal an nually. The substitution of the more durable metal for the other has been made possible only by improved proc esses of manufacture, huvlng the effect of wonderfully cheapening the cost. Mr. Carnegie, in paying a tribute to the late Sir Henry Bessemer, says he re members that the cost of the first small lot of steel rails purchased for the Pennsylvania Railroad and imported from Sheffield was $256 per ton. "We have made and sold," he continues, "hundreds of thousands of tons since for $1(5, one-sixteenth of the ante-Bessemer price." The Bessemer process Is not-alone the cause of the substitution of steel for iron. Improvements In ma chinery have brought the price of steel rails down far below the former price of iron rails. Cheap steel makes possi ble lines or railroad where without It there would be none and lessens the cost of operation by reducing the neces sary allowance for repairs. So also In building Industries and other trades cheap steel has effected a complete revo lution which has all come about so si lently and gradually that few realize Its nature or its Importance. It Is some times argued that the good coming from the cheapening of steel Is offset by the lessened demand for labor in the prep aration of lijon for commercial use. But labor finds employment in the many new lines of business created or foster ed by the fact of cheap steel. As a matter of fact labor Is the chief gainer from the cheapening of steel. WICKEDNESS IN LITERATURE. Villain Are Popular Characters with Authors and Readers. That the vllllaii of a play or a story Is generally the raost Interesting charac ter In it has been discovered by most raders at an early period of life. Charles Leona rd Moore, In comment ing upon literary values in general, af ter references 4o the literary value of style, of invention, of observation, and of enthusSafun in one's own creations, turns aside for a moment to mark the important part assigned In fiction to wickedness a subject, one may re mark in passing, that would afford am ple material for much more than the Incidental treatment which he gives It. Wc quote from his article in the Dial: "The fact that an author has enjoyed a cluaranter 4s one test of its resiliry. Jane Austen evidently delighted in her curates, whereas Charlotte Bronte half hated and wholly despised hers. The difference is felt. There Is hardly any one In Shakspeare's world villains, criminals ot fools Included 'whom h,e did not evidently love, hardly any one against whom he would have been will ing to draw an Indictment "It Is curious, indeed, that wicked ness and weakuess force themselves to the front as the protagonists of almost every drama. Great literature Is the biography of criminals and foola. Av erage mortality and average Intelli gence are not the stun out of which to create character that will In wrest Evil, Indeed, seems to be the energetic force of the universe, and is the cause of the obstacles and collisions from which events spring. Every great cre ative poet is a Manichean. In spite of himself, Milton was forced to make the devil his hero; and Richardson was shocked to discover that his Lovelace was a most attractive monster. The populace are willing to pay for crime. Nothing sells a newspaper like a mur der. Even in the natural world, those lurid villain of nature's melodrama, the lightning and the storm, get in finitely more spectators than the mild er and beneflcient agencies of sunlight and dew. loihe said that b had learned from Polygnotu that our bus iness on this earth was to enact hell. Except I'oe and Hawthorne, no Amerl can writer has ever had any suspicion of this fact. Ever since that advent uri In Boston harbor, there has been I flavor of tea. In all New England liter ature. -Literary Digest. ' Sparsely HeUlod Province. The province of Barmm, in Brazil which bf about the ?. of A nm ro-Il iiti gary. has only 3oo,iOO Inhabitants, one half of whom ar foreigners. ftlnce the war beean babies are up li. anus and opinions are fired at random i3r The Dog- lender the Wasron. "Come, wife." said good old Farmer Orsy, "But on you things, 'tis market day, And we'll be off to the nearest town. There and back ere the sun iwes down. "Spot? No, we'll leave old Spot behind." But Spot he harked and Spot he whined, And soon made up his dogjrifch uiind To foilow under the waj;ou. Away they went at a good round pace, And jny came into the fanner's faee, 'I'O'.r Spot," Kiid hp, "did want to come, But I'm awful !ad he's left at home He'll guard the barn, and guard the cot. And Leeu the tattle out o' the lot." "I'm uot tu cure of that." thought Spot, The dug puder the wagon. The farmer eil bis produce aold And cot his pay in yellow pold; Home through the lonely forest. Hark! A rubber springs from behind a tree; "Your money or else your life," sav be, The moon was up. 1ml lie didn't see The dug under the wagon. Spot ne'er barked and Spot ne'er whined; But quii kly c aught the thief lx-hind; He dravsred him down In the mire and dirt, And tore his coat and tore his nhirt. Then held him fast on the miry ground; The robber uttered not a sound While his hands and feet the farmer bound. And tumbled him Into the wagon. So Spot he saved the farmer's life, Tlie fnrmer's money, the farmer's wife, And now a hero grand and eny, A silver collar he wears to-day. Among hia friends, among his foes And everywhere his master goes He follows on his horny tees. The dog under the wagon. The Advance, The Ayrihlre Cow. This old breeed from the County of Ayr, Scotland, needs s"tne one to blow lj.s horn: the breeders don't seem inclined to do It even when given a special invitation. The breed s ems fipecially adapted to the northern part of our country, as this more nearly re sembles Its native home. Daniel Web ster is said to have kept Ayrshire on his farm at Marshfield. llass., and he recommended them specially for New England. Professor Sheldon d vid' d the breed into two cltsses, one repre S"nting the butter and the other the cheese tyje. At the Vermont Experi ment Station, in lK0"i, rt.na Myrtle ft-VlO, a farrow cow, made the largest milk and butb r record ever obtained at the station from a cow of any breed In one year 12.175 p ut:ds of milk, producing W'l pounds of b.itter. The average production of cheese In Scot land is from 5l0 to 000 pounds per cow. The secretary of the Ayrshire Breed ers' Association, C. M. tVInsIow, gums up the qualities of the Ayrshire, by saying that she Is noted for vigor, hardihood snd for producing a maxi mum quantity of good milk from a minimum quantity of food. The aver age weight of the cow Is about 1,000 pounds. The Ayrshire buil Is highly recommended to Ci'oss on Jersey cows. In the language of the breeders, the Ayrshire nh'ks well with the Jersey. The cut represents the Ayrshire cow. Rose Clenna, the property of C. M. Winslow &l Son. She has a record of pounds of milk and 4'A pounds of butter In 365 consecutive days. She took first premium at the Vermont State Fair last year for the largest amount of butter fat from one day's milking. There were thirteen cows In competition. Tows Katlna 'traw. Wherever much grain Is grown, and the grain straw Is stacked tn the barn yard, It is necessary to build a stack around It to keep cows from eating It Freshly threshed straw, even when all the grain Is out i palatable to cows at this season of the year. But tbey should be kept from It If the milk yield Is to be maintained. Even a little straw will dry off the cow Tory fast, and If grain Is fed with It the effect will only he to fatten the cow rather than to keep up the milk flow. Beats for Knaltaaje. One or the other, If not both, should be produced on every farm where stock of any kind and be It only one cow ls kept Beets come handy even for fattening stock. Says Trof, Cnrtlss, of the Iowa station: "From our experience here In the use of beets In finishing cat tle of high quality for the block, I have no hesitancy In saying that the Intro duction of roots and tb beet prodoet Into our fattening rations will result lu s vastly better product. All of the cat tle that hare been marketed by tha ROSE CLEKNA. Iowa BtatVn and killed with snci' good results have been finished on a ration consisting la part of roots. The use of root crops enables the feeder to make a better and more definable carcass of beef than can be made on dry feed alone. The animals fed roots are mel lower to the touch, evener In their floh. and In better bloom than It Is possible to obtain on dry feed, and the gains are lrg and more economically pnxluced." We abso find beets a fine auxiliary food fow p!gs, and ran winter them very cheaply on this diet For Watering Fowls. A well-mida watering fountain for poultry is t!fe beet arrangement for watering fows, but these are more or less expensle. Some sut8!ltutes are shown herewith. A gallon "canned ap ple" can tnaybe attached to the wall, as show-i-fJra lard pail may be hung upi n a n;:l) within rea h of the floor. Butter still is the third device, which permits waver to be poured Into the pall each flay from the outside, and Is up where the litter will not be r DEVICES FOR WATERIJTO FOWLS. scratched lcto It Make the platform on which tfce pail rests broad enough so that a fowl can fly up and stand up on the edg while drinking. Where fowls and chicks run at large there can be no better drinking fountain to be placed out of doors than the familiar device of filling a tin pail, can or oth'-r vessel, accruing to the size desired, and inverting it over a flat dish a lit tle larger in diameter. This supplies clean water as fast as It is used, and cannot be soiled. The Asparagus Krctlc. The asparagus beetle has nearly de- ! stroyed the asparagus industry In some localities Many remedli s have been j suggested, among them applying lime freely over the bed late iu the fail, after the tops and bed have been burnt over, with another liberal application of lime iii the spring. Some growers claim that, where the rows were hilled up two feet and the young shoots cut off as sopn as the dps appyed above groundA damage was doTe. Cutting the thooVs was also continued until quite late." Where shoots were allowed to gTOjiv ontil 2 or 3 inches high before cutting, the beetles attacked them. It may be stated, also, that if all shoots are cut when Just appearing the aspar agus stalks will be found tender from the tip to the butt, and of much better quality than when the tops are "green," and if the rows are hilled the cutting of the shoots Is done with more ease than when the level culture method is practiced. The suggestions given are worthy of consideration by those who have had the beetle to contend with this season. Canker Worm IVsf, The canker worm, known as the measuring worm, Is a nuisance much dreaded by fruit-growers, as it feeds not only on apple, plum, cherry and other fruit trues, but also on the elm and maple. The eggs are deposited In masses of 100 or mc.re, and the parent moth lays in the fall as well as In spring. Spraying with parls green Is the remedy. , For Mending Hose. The accompanying illustration repre sents an Ingenious article for mending horn;. A piece of pi tie or other soft a o woon, nonow, cut "7t- "1V 3 Inches long and turned to In at A. 1 Inch at B and inches at C will fit the ordinary size of hose. For larger or smaller sizes the wooden connection Is made to correspond. To repair the damaged portion, slip each end of the hose half way over the connection. So long as the JointMs fairly tight no wiring or tlelDg Is necessary, as the water soon swells the wood, making a tight Joint. Weeds on the I.awn. Plots of grass Infested with weds are unsightly. The best remedy Is to mow the grass and use It for bedding. The mower cuts down the weeds and destroy many of them, but the grass will make a new start. By doing this once or twice In the year the trass will crowd the weeds out Hortlcaltarat Notes. The English Ivy does not harm a tree on which It grows. See If a little leaa water on Irrigated land will not be better. Fruit when placed in cold storage should be firm sad hard. Sprinkling plants with water when frost Is expected will protect them. Pears to be put In cold storage should be picked lwfore tbey begin to ripen. Waternielous ought not to be grown on the same ground oftener than three yea rs. The grape vine trained to a single stake has never done its best In our ex perience. Tomatoes are so Lardy that tbey may bo transplanted eveu after the fruil begins to set If grapes have been planted too close ly and become too thick, battar taee out amy other viae. hi:? M VH F WHAT ONfc HlUM MmN UIU. Be ked rained Mia Town front Mas) Urava Disorder. The newspapers of a Southern town gave, not long since, a sketch of the life of a man who had jut died there. He was tha only dewudant of a wealthy family that bad lived In the town since colonial days. After leav ing college be spent several years abroad, and coming home, fwand hU native village givsu over laainly to the control of that portion of Its Inhabi tant who were Indifferent, who con doned draru-driuking, and in Ignorance opened their doors te direct disease. An opes sewer ran down the main street into which all garbage was thrown and left to decay, figs, goats and drxrs wandered abwt, The bonnes were dilapidated. Three saloons kept up a busy trade. The schoolbouse was In almost an untenantable condition. Typhoid fever lurked In the town tho year round. Mr. I. the man alluded to was both earnest and sensible. It was suspected that be had had some secret trouble; but If so It never came to the light He did not push his way into politics or literature, and made no effort to make more money, or to "make his mark In the world," like other men. He busied himself only with the town In which he lived. "The sewer should be put underground," he aid. "Certainly," said his townsmen. "It would be well to do It and we shall do It some time."' "Let us do It now," be urged, and headed the subscription. The drainage set right, he went to work at the schoolhouse and at the church. The Idle negro boy, by his dl rcction and encouragement found themselves at work, cleaning and prlnkllng the streets. When any of his neighbors proposed to build a dwel ling he had a picturesque plun ready to offer. He gave packages of seeds to many of the poorer householders, and offered prizes for the best kept gar flens. Trees were planted on the bor ders of the sidewalks, and the pigs and goats were banished. Tills was the slow, cheery work of years. More years were needed to bring a majority of his townsmen to close the saloons; but at last the town became known as the cleanest, and as being In the best sanitary and soeinl condition of any small town in the Stat. It bad Its hospital. Its free li brary, its reading-room, all suggested or given by the same hand, but none of them called by his name. "I am not fond of seeing my name in print," he said. j He was often nuked why he did not marry; but he always replied, "My na tive town Is my wife and child. It gives me work enough. I would rather care for these people among whom 1 was born than for a family." He made no reputation for himself; but he opened a live spring of health and of good In the world. Mr. Theodore Kcxmevelt said the other flay In a speech In New York: "The American young man without money owes bis work to his family; but the young man with money owes his work to his country." The limited patriotism of this wise and generous man of whom we have written, flowing In narrow, direct chan nels, will accomplish greater results for civilization In the state In which he lived, than either he or the generation of men about him can clearly appre hend or fully measure. Youth's Cotn oanlon. . Alfred Nobel. Alfred Nobel, the In ventor of dynamite, who recently died, has been honored by a beaut ful noonu mrnt to bis memory st Hamburg, erect fd byhla Had, Max A. Phil i pp. It represents the final tatimph of the humane, enlightening Idea ol peace over the rough and bestial impulses of tl. world. It was Noltel's greatest sor row that the dmamite which he invert ed and devoted to works of utility was to commonly applied to the cruel pur poses of war and anarchy. j If a man is lucky be never speaks of the proverbial luck o! iools. If there is nothing in a man he is not on the visiting list of opportunity. A S0LDiKlTsKSCAPK. Frrm t. D'miierat Meag, Ml. Sltr'-lnq. HI. I When Richmond hud fallen and tha great commanders bad met beneath the historic apple tree at Apismiatox, the Jv'Sd i Pennsylvania Volunteer, prematurely aged, clad in lattera and rax, broken in body but of daunt less spirit, swung into line for the lairt "grand review" and then cjuietly iimrohni away to begin life's fray anew amid the hilla and valleys of the Keystone Slate. A oki ii i the number Ana Knhtuson came back to the old home in Mr. Ster ling, 111., bark to the firmide that be had left at the call to arms four years tnviyitiH II,. u.' ..lit IT fhldUr't Rttun. awy , happy, l ral thy farmer boy in the fit flush of vigorous manhood; he camn bar k a ghost of the self that answered to President Lincoln's call for ";irf,000 more." To-day lie ia an alert, active man and tells the story of his recovery as follows: "I wa s great sufferer from sciatic rheniimtiam almost from the time of my discharge from the army. Most f ! tlnie I wna unfitted for manual Iair ' any kind, and my auflVriiiKu were at all time intense. At times 1 wna bent al most double, and got around only with the greatest dilimlty. .Nothing s'-euo-d to give me permanent relief until three yerira ago, when uiy attention was called to some of the wonderful core effected by Ir. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. 1 had not taken more than half a box when I noticed an improvement iu uiy condition, and I kept on improving atead lly. I took three boxwi of flic pilU. and at the end of thai time was in belief con dition than at any lime am. thf dose of tny army service. Hinee then I have never been bothered with rheumatism. Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pilla for Pale People ia tht only remedy fbat ever did me any good, and to them 1 owe my reatoration to comparative ssalta. Tbey are a graad remadr." Pure Biood Good Digestion These are the essentials of health. li'wd'l Snrsaparilla is the great blo"d purifier and stomach Ionic. It promptly exia thS Impurities which rauie pimplea, sores and ru;it;ons and by triving healthy ac tion to the atotiiuch and digestive organs it kwps the system in perfect order. Hood's Sarsaparilla' It Aiuerics i (,otet Malic ue. !; ! tot H, 're;.rwl oulv by C. 1. Ho si Jt Co., Lowell, Hood's Pills How Does It Seem to Vou? It seems to me I'd like to go Where hells don't rimr. nor whistles blow. Nor clocks don't strike, nor gonga don'l sound. And I'd have stillness ail around Not real still atilluess, but just the trees" Low whisperings, or the bum of bees, Or brooks' faint babbling over stones In strantjely, softly tangled tones. Or maybe a cricket or katydid. Or the aongi of birds in the hedges hid. Or Just some such sweet sounds as these To fill a tired heart with ease. f 'tweren't for aicht and sound and smelL, I'd like a city pretty well: But when it conns to petting rest I like the country lots the beat. Sometimes it seems 1 me I must Just quit the city's din and dost. And get out where the fl-y is bin". And say, now, how does it seem to you? Eugene i'ield. Mark Twain's Arable. The London Saturday Keview says that when he was In Egypt Mark Twain hired two Arab guides to take him to the pyramids. He was familiar, enough with Arabic, h thought to un derstand and be understood with per-i feet ease. To his consternation he found that he could not comprehend a word that either of the guides uttered.) At the pyramids he wet a friend, to whom he made known his dilemma. It was very rcysterlous. Twain thought "Why, the explanation Is simple enough," said tho friend. "Please en lighten me, then," said Twain. "Why,1 you should have hired younger men. These old fellows luive lost their teeth, and, of course, they don't speak Arabia Tbey speak gum-Arabic." Snake charmers ought to make eicel' ent bartenders. IjimI m !rn Wo:ir Shoes One site t r after tis;im Allen's Foot Ense. a j -r to be shaken into the nhoes. It ii.'akea ticht or new shoes feel easy: gives instant relief to corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort (': rov -ry of the aae. Cures and prevents swollen feet, blisters, callous snd ore spots. Allen's Pout-Ease is a cortsin cure for awes ting, hot, nervous, aching fet o!d by all druggists and shop stores, 2."c. Trial package PUEE by mail. Ad iress. Alien 8. Olmsted, Ioik Hoi ST2, Le Koy, N. Y. A baby running between two friends is sure to make trouble. Mrs. Wlnalow ttoorniMO Hvsor for child ren teething, soften the gums, reduce Inflam mation, sJlsya pain, cure wind colic ibc bottle Why are eak-minded men usually headstrong? ' WANTP.r.-Oaenf tsul liesllh llisl R I P-A JVS will; eit tw-nefll. K--rel ft cent n HOe 'timtrmt Co New York, fer UsmpU- Attrt l.UJJ tvHOmofilaJs. Why isn't a drnnken steer corned btef? Vest I'ohet Ileitis. The stamp clerk often weighs other people's words. j The fewer acquaintances a man has thi less be is bored. , J Cat gists ware would be more popular if dealers would cut prices. j A man is seldom Interested in tha weightof another man's burden. j Riijoor is gossip's strong fort and troth is the dynamite gun that reiuoet it. Two bottles of Piso'a Cure for Consump. tion cured me ot a had lung trouble. Mrs.: J. Nichols, Princeton, Ind., Mar. 38, P ., The list which turns ba.'k from tho face is ttie latest Parisian f n.cy. Homo of the most sty.ish of the rprina; gnwna are also the simplest. Alstster t K-fcrrt-ty mors tmmf-iiiate. thn the com pleil'iii (--suit -l sum Ott-nnt .-uli'lmr ' esp Willi llsir usl i.utr li) n. blxs or bruwa, Mm. It the baby ban a decline ot flesh, leed the Cit ( ul of the same dish, and the will run down ami the baby get well. To kiss a baliy's leei is said to make, it walk iu trouble. ' Hall's Catarrh Cure Ia a comututionalcur. Price 75 eenat. If men have no temples about Ashing on Kundav they're apt t have drains. ' Ifgoa ips would u top to think, their tongues would get a much-needed rest. If the leat her tlos a girl pupil be hits smisa; if the girl dodges she misses bit. Mlscellnneons Items. Two small oil stoves are more conve atent than one large one. as tbey are more easily moved, and the burners can be used to better advantage. The Russian custom of using lemon Juice In tea Iji for the purpose of neu tralising the tannin, and thus render lug it ..a;:nlei. Plenty of milk will have the same effect. Blanc mange, Spanish cream, JellUe. etc., are more tempting when served In individual cups. Even cottage pudding may be baked In cups, (hen turned out on a folded napkin on a platter. The chaflug dish Is an accessory la the uuraery snd the hospital, In prepar ing special fool tor a growing child or an Invalid, This application to boms AiMfticM aive. t su added mrortsaos ini:!:iMltHii SST00T.a 907D1SUVC Nnslsn t f f f MMM 1 SllS Nj, U. NO. 511-41 YORK NS.