4V V THE EED CLOUD CHIEF. M. L. THOMAS, Publlshor. ISE1) CLOUD, NEBRASKA. F.CUOES. Mr lot Injr fnthor. I can ce. How kind, how ilrnr Up i! Iy inntliei's Inro cotnof back to jb. To Jill my hcait with blls; Her klsrs uiiir, Aroon my lirmr, lo earnest, will, i-mlcarlnsl How Bwct nnd low Ilrrncccjiti Howl It'? crndlo-jwmjr. how chcerinsrJ At three ncoro years and ten. bow Rwcet 1 liew echoes on iny dull cars beat! WhTo mnplo wovllrtmls blup with Jcy, "Vouth auliitnn indent puiilc, I hcv a inaMcn. yonn and coy A maid that kn-jw.i no jrulle. I Icr oyes ah 1 well, 1 may not toll; Yet, when at mu ahe jflnnccs, Tholr wondrou ower, l'T-itnltbishour. M v I cry fml ontrnnw! At thrM; eorj jijnn and t'n. how fcwect 'Jliese cub ova on my dull oars ltc.it! 1 coo a little cherub run. Ill f.ioe in riiinhcntn1! clad. Alxitit thvhotis till day H done: Ovhat a noKy I .id I He oiltnb my chair, lie pulls my hair, lie kisses iiw, irrscs, HI1? on inv hut. Tires or all tb.it, HlH bead my 1omwi proRa. t Ihn e Hroro ycara and fn, how nwect Tbcv? cbyoi on mv dull cars ttcat J Mv parent rct with Tlim nlovc, Jflio maid l hero no more. Yrt yon, d.ir wlf 1 true 1 loto. An I did h'Tof oreI ,, Knvb fond srl.ince stir Mo. iMdidhcr! Vour vole Is an enthralling! The boy t hut ran 14 tiown nin'i. I'm ohl tbernnwsnro falling! I'ut fiwetly through my pyul doth How, J'heL- oclntefl of the lonjf a?o! t '. ir. nurJicc. in DUntit Frrc Vrt. iu:me.mhkim:i). Tiinv were at lea. Judge Provost, Mrs. Provost mid their son Fenn. Tho Itnlpro was not behaving perfectly well; - (hat is, he was snubbing the other two pen-.ons at the tahle. This is not to bo wondered at, perhaps. Heing a lawyer uiid a judge of the Jaw, it is natural to suppose t hat ho might be impatient with tho guo arguments in which they wore indulging, uml their illogical deduc tions, lie was, therefore, not in a favorable mood for mi interruption to his remarks. The interruption was i au-cd by a loud and startling blow against the front door, which brought w the three 1'rovosts to their feet. In the same instant thor cried out: "What in heavons!" "What on ....ii.! owi. . i... ,.,:., ..:ri" Villlil. II It. 41- iJlU 4JIOIll'. '1 he first e.velaination was from tho Judge; the second was an interjection m from Madam IVovost; the last was from Fenn. The Judge turned to the frontdoor, Jerked-t open, and went "out on the j oreh. Mrs. Provost and I'enn followed iiim. Again they nil uttered an excla- untiou of surprise at thchpeetacle which met their view. Ilefore them was an enormous eab 1 agi", hurst into four fragments by the momentum with which iL h:ul met tho door. Kach of the three spectators said angrily: y. "'Who eoidd have thrown it?" TJie Judge rati out upoii.tho sidewalk; in did Fenn. They looked up the ivu, aiii now!!, piiuiiig up wiuir nanus us eve shields from tho setting sun. " I here he is!" "There ho goes!" (hey cried. 1 believe it's that Faiiehers young boy,' s:i'd Fcr.n. "Til iid out who he is, if I have to & 'chase him to tho State's line!" Wit! Ijiis the Judge started off on a m f'trious chase, followed by Fenn. " Do come back. Judge, and get your Iiut!".er:id Jlrs. Provost, leaning over the poreh-rading, with a fragment or two of the rent cabbage in hand. Fenn, too. screamed to his father to return, declaring himself fully lulo to Xiang the F'incher boy to account. Hut the Judge, heedless of entreaty or advice, kept on the chase. At the end of a block of houses the fugitive disappeared around Iho corner; bill the Judge, who was a famous run ner, pressed on with strides both long H and rapid, leaving Fenn smartly dis taueed. liut'tho Fanchcr boy Jyad a a good start, and was tleetas a deer. He turned a second corner, a thirTl and a fourth, and was yet beyond tho Judge's clutch. From doors ami windows and side walks people we ro watching the rac'c, laughing and asking what was tho mat toir One or two"tFthcm cried "Thief! f thief!"' and joined the chase. Of course, tlie Judge had no time or breath for ex planations. Suddenly the Hying bo- paused, pant- iii-, at a gate. The Judge saw his hand fcon" the latch, and at once leaped the fen-o at the corner of tho yard, and wont boundinc diagonally across the lawn, as the fugitive passed through the nito and made a bcc-lino up tho walk To the porch of the house. Tho Judge -cached tho bottom step pist as the boy's foot was lifted toward "the top one." There was ono upward bound from the pursuer, the ontreach ing of a long, strong arm, and the ur clun thought he was ni the hands of a "X giant. Tim shoemaker's family jrocs bare -... w -.. ... foot; the doctor's family, unmedicincd so it is said. It may be that a magis trate's unofficial punishments may havo his wares of unprejudiced justice left out. In the rase of Judge Provost, it must be said ho was a good Judge when b ' seated on his trade-bench in tho public service. Yet in his private life I am afraid that calm, uuru'tllcd justice was not always administered. Younir Fanchcr should have been punished. Any boy shoifld be punished who bursts a cabbazo-hcad, or apj thing 9 chrc. against a Judge's door, or any bodv's door, or any part of anybody's - hoii?e, scaring people ouC of their wits and their appetites. The Judge, still more excited by the laughter and shouts of tho peojde, and by his heated, panting condition, I am porry to say, administered a punish ment out of proportion to tho offense committed. "Without asking the boy if . he was the cabbage-thrower, and why Xbc Jd thrown tho vegetable; without asking anything; without even a won!, the Judge, resting a foot on the top step, turned the trembling, panting lx3' across his leg, and laid on a dozen or more astonishing blows, tho long arm swinging them, with tremendous 'leverage. Tliat the boy would utter loud cries whs to be expected; whathoy wouldn't? That tho cries would rouse the people in the house was also to be expected. The door of the Fancher residence was thrown open; out came tho Fanchcr mother, the Fanchcr sister, and tho Fancher maid, all asking questions and utterm0, indignant exclamations. To their excited inquiries, the Judgo tc i turned no reply, but Kopt industriously administering sharp blows. "Ask this little imp what the matter is," ho at length said, Standing the shrieking boy up with a steadying, ad Ajustinir shake. Good evening!" he added, hastcn- ino- down tho steps toward the gate. You had better hurry awav oeiore ' Air. Haneher comes in!" shrict w glad's mother. "My father will make you pay for 'j. this!" cried the Fancher daughter, her ..black eyes blazing. "He'll have you fcrrested for assault and battery !" "An' it would sarve ye right to be tackin' kauld in the naked head of ye!" said tho indignant servant -girl; "a batin' the darhnt like a savage that ye Then the hoy explained, his sobs separating adjectives from their lawful -canons, ana verbs from their subjects. "What was the cause of the trou blo?'' "I didn't go to do it; I went to throw the cabbage at a now-bird, oh! and l went kcr-bang against Judge Provost door, oh! And. oh mu' cverylo;ly, oh! came running out oh! like I'd. mur dered Judgo Provost oh! anil they took after me, like I was thief oh dear me!" "Served yon right for trying to kill a little snow-bird; a great ltoy like you?' said his Histcr. looking "tho "slcmlct lad over from head to foot. liut thou-rh fihe admiuistcrcil this re proof, Kate's black eye continued to Hash rescnt'ully at tho treatment he had received, and her heart kept oa burning revengefully. Miss Kate was between fourteen and fifteen years old. She was a bold, mas culine girl, and was a favorite with thof rough boys ot the ncighuornoouas well as with a few rough girls. She was known as Captain Kate lor everal blocks beyond her neighborhood lim its. She led'her hots in skating, and coasting, and snow-balling, planning the races and the stakes; led them in Christmas caroling and other seren ades; in devising and executing April Fool tricks, in May-basketing, in Fourth of .Inlying. Woe to the man, woman or child who incurred Captain TCatcs diiplcasiire. There was suro -to be a visitation, a trick to bring the objectfinto ridicule ori to otherwise annoy. 1 lioe who Knew of Judse Provoit's administration on 3'oung Fanchcr, prophesied that Captain Kate would j-oon be heard from on the subject. " Sure enough, tho retaliation began that night. It came in the shape o! an outrageous hnrt of noiio in whifih screeching, banging, tooting, braying, were factors; and it assiilud the Judg.; as he was drifting in'o a delightful haTf- slcejung state, and was .-eemingly drojiping down a peaceful bay to the murmur of soft music. The din lasted an hour. The next night, Kate's -clan built a pyramid of coiiibiHtihlcs in tho (Told in front of the Judge's residence, and tlierc, in the form of three scarecrow figures, the Provosts were burnt to ashes amid the laughing and jeering of a crowd of boys.- - r '" i " "" 1"" It may bo that4 the Jiidgoifoltih'at his uudiio severity , Jo tli Faricherjto'y merited some punishtiient." However this may have been, he allowed the in sults to pass' with the rcmauJc that the children would tiro of the vulgar sport if if yry.ru not noticed- I'ut 7oiiil was very angry. lie felt that lie muH do something to shame Captain Kate or vox her;" but. what? What could he, one miituie-sized boy uo 'against cap tain Kate's host? "There she comes nqjv," ho said, looking up the street. "She makoi'lior shoe-heels sound liko a boy's. I am going to do something, if it's only to make a face at her." Then he heard his mother calling him in. "She's afraid for her little boy," was Kale's sneering taunt; "afraid some girl will whip him." " I'm not afraid, if she is!" exclaimed Fenn, stoutly. "Aren't jou?"' said Captain "Kate, striking, his'face with her fan. "That's to pay your father for whipping my brother!" Swiftly Fenn'shand went up to strike back. As swiftly it was dropped, and he stood looking at. her steadfastly, his' eyes wide and burning "If you wero a boy," ho said, "I'd knock you down!" She looked him over as if Hio had been a crasshoppcr. laughed in con- tempt and went marching away. This was tho beginning of a feud which ran a course of eight years, the persecutions and retaliations gradually abating somewhat in coarseness as the. two young people, 3 ear by year, put away childish things. There was tho valentine persecution, tho nnon3inous letter persecution, the doggerel-verse persecution, the insinu ating newspaper squib, the social cuts, tho slighl3, direct and indirect, etc. At the end of tho eight years, Fenn and Kate's brother both cniistcd. for it was now in the time of our civil war; and Kate, a tall, handsome, forceful woman, married a man of large wealth. Then, from the Battle of Five Forks, Fenn was brought home dead; and his mother stood appalled at finding herself in a world where such suffering as hers could be. When her heart emerged from its dis may into the next phaso of sorrow, it remembered first her boy's friends, and then his ancient enenry and persecutor. And whenever tho thought of Kate came, it was as of ono triumphing in her grand home with her baby-boy," hor prosperous husband and her brother re turned, if not triumphing that her ene my was laid low, at least that her dear ones hail, escaped. Tho bereaved mother and Madam Kate met as in the olden times at church, and in all tho quieter of life's walks, the one assertive haughty, tho other reticent, sad-faced aud occasion ally bitter of speech. " pmetimes, in a tender mood of ef, the mother would say of Kate, 't forgive her." But oftener. when sho thought of him as "poor Fenn," under the frozen clods, away from light and sky, and warm hearth-stones ami all sweet life, then tho soul sitting in darkness would "exclaim UHtcrly, "1 can never forgtvo her cruelty to him! Sho has never felt an ache for it; she never given me one pitying word, never oho glanco of compassion." So it was with. her on the day of tho regimental reunion tho reunion of Fcnn's .soldier comrades. Her heart was wild in its envy of the living, and in its jealousy, for his memory; "in its love for thoso'who had loved him, and, alas! its hate of his enemies. She saw tho bedecked'' city, uttering from arch to pyramid its words of hai(; speaking its welcome by ten hundred banners; by tho mouths of a thousand guns, and by tho cannon's roar. Oh, ow sho wanted her boy there to thrill with tho city's welcome to the heroes! Wanted him to feel tho pridcthat was swelling the hearts of those returning soldiors! Sho wanted him so that she would almost have plucked him from the very radiance of Heaven. She wanted him recalled to tho thought of this city, burstinjr with irladncss: to the memory of the cheering multitude. But no ono remembered him m tho still while city on tho hilL "Only am thinking of you, my poor dear," sho said in her heart. " I am coming to you. You shall not be forgotten. 1 will keep watch by your grave." Sho put on a bonnet, drow the crapo veil ovor the pinched face, and passed with swift, trembling movement, under nags and garlands, from tho teeming city of tho living to tho "cityTof the silent." "Forgotten! forgotten! forgotten!" was the heart's jealous refrain, as sho pressed on to his grave, .to make up by her passion for all the world's indiffer ence and f orgetf ulncss. The walk "was long, but without a sense of fatigue, sho at length reached the little ound. There sue stopped. What was Jt- that caused her grief sixfekca eyes to "dilate in, surprise? What did it mean? Was it'his trave? shrieked the4Hadsho .missed the Tvav? No; there .was his .name on the head-stone. Who had brought them? Where tho sod would have heaved could hisheart havel throbbed in answer to hers, was a wealth of water-lilies, wet, cool, fragrant, pure as'the stars! He had not been forgotten! Her boy had not been forgotten! He had been remembered. "ISvett before I could come to him, some one had been hero before me." She fell on her knees; she carried the flowers to Tier quivering" lips; tears like rain wet the white petals. " Dear, pity ing friend," he murmured, "I kiM theo with tho khw of eternal grati tude!" She replaced the lilie, and with a new, wet wnsc of tho common broth erhood of all men, entreated good upon tho sou! that had remembered her boy prayed for pleasant visrons to all eyes that had ever held lib dear imazc Her tundcrnesi dtd not stop here- It went on, till, like Buddha's, it took in crqn his enemies; tho stranger without (he gate; all the feeling world; every point of nature; even the dumb animal life. A little green measuring worm went creeping pvur lw:r cuflT. -Willi -gentl', reverent touch- ho moved iHaablailc of grass. In her tendemes. she could not harm it. nut! puL larther oacK in 5ablc vc'I, and looking skyward, felt assured that the gracious (Jod had re membered her; and nearer, nearer to IIm, went the affection of a grateful heart. Along the cemetery carriago-way camo the rulljof wheejs. She looked up the winding road, and started toiico iu the carriage Kaui Kancher. "J will beckon her, and here, beside his grave, I trill put away all enmity against her." Sho stood up. A spot of yellow on the gras4 shone at her feet. She stooped down; it .vas g-dd, a (lower-holder, ami on it she read Kate's full name. She knew (lieu who had placed there tho watcr-lii'ei. As the carriage stopped, she held out the golden calyx. The two .women looke I into oacn other's eyes. The mother knew then that tho other in pen itence had come out from the joyful city to lay the lilies on her soldier's grave. Kate came down the carriage steps, nnd in a mom-'nt, without the utterance of a word, tho women were, iu each other's arms. Down at the c motory gale sounded the. nuilllc'l drum; up tho walk came the measured tread of men in blue. To the right the eolunvis turned, and crossed to his grave. About it in hollow sipiare they formed uncovered as in prayer. Willi the nicj intuition of t-udr-heartcd men, thty asked permisMon to take irom the grave the lilies. Into the button-ho'ei and bullet-boles of their bluu coats they placed them, nnd dropped upon the gr.tve other dowers, and tears, it may be. Then skyward started a wilde.racAi of musket. The word to "salute" was given, and tho boys of Fenn's ivgimentjiiado the air ring with an all-had to their old com rade. He had been remembered. YouUfs CompatitSitr " ' ' " ' ' ' Four Prospectors Lost Starnu In a Snow Tiik readers of the Democrat lmo been furnished with numerous accounts of mine accidents, murder., suicides, and mishaps of various kinds in the past, but one of the most horrible ad ventures that has become tho part of the reporter to chronicle for the past few weeks, is that which a party of prospectors untl"nveilt while seeking their way to the Mount of the Holy Cross. A part of four, consisting of Messrs. Parker, Benjamin, (ieorgo Kos and Walsen, Marled out on their journey under tho happie 5t auspices. Full of hope with tho brilliant prospect of wealth and happiness that was before them, they proceeded to fight the boundless realm of snow that surrounded the Uto P;iss, where they were obliged to go should the succeed tii mak ing their arduous trip. rAftcr wandering around through the mount ains for two or three days they retraced their steps in order to find a comfortable camping place and make a new start. They soon refreshed themselves and started out anew on their perilous journey. When about half way up the mountain side they encountered a violent aud heavy snow storrii, which lasted for some time, but full of that pluck, courage and energy which is characteristic of every true and noblo Western man, they defied tho stormy elements and pursed their way bravely forward. The snow was falling so thick and fast that it was utterly impossible for them to find their way. Tho wind blew with such terrible and unresisting vio lence that, while s-ceking shelter in the woods they became alarmed, and in order to prevent any p6ssib!e harm the cut down tho trees in the immedi ate vicinity of their camping grounds, fearing that the violence of the wind would, during the time they were slum bering, tear the trees from their fasten ings in the Mother Earth, and, falling across tho small huts that they had erected, would in all probability curtail the lives of one or more of their party in the angry tumult that must ensue. They cut every ono of the. trees flown in a'distance o"f forty feet. The wc.iry and unfortunate men could hear the ominous and tcrriblo growling of the mountain lions around their camp lire at night, as if seekins the shelter aud protection of their superiors during that fearful porioiL In tho evening the bay ing of the elk and tho bleating of tho mountain sheep could be plainly heard in the dim distance, a3 if they also were seeking the protection of man. For throe days and three nights the storm continued with unabatmg fury, and during the da time, the men, driven to desperation through contemplation of tho horrible fate" that was presented to them, strovo in' vain to -find their way out of tho tcrriblo dilemma in which the were placed by the action of tho elements. In vain did they seek for the pass, freezing their fccC hands aud faces in Iheir efforts to find their way back to civilization. Destiny, however, fated them to remain camped npon the bleak and barren sides of the mountain, surrounded by an everlasting, endless mass of smm as ono of them expressed himself, "Snow to the right of us, snow to the left of us before and be hind us." Only here and there would the tops of a pine tree show itself above tho bounqlcss plain of snow, breaking tho direful monotony of the scene. Finally, on the afternoon of the fourth day. Providence ki his mercy lore the clouds of snow and desolation asunder, anil permitted tho god of the heavens to throw forth its slnningsplcndorupon 1 the woeful waste, whereby with its lisrht the party were enabled to track their way back to tho haunts of men. After many weary hours of terrible suffering they finally found, their .way back to Tennessee Park, where, after refreshing themselves, they were con veyed toLcadvillc. They say that for all tho gold and silver that might be found in tho Mount of the Holy Cross they would not again pass through the some experience. All of the party ex pect to lose one or jnoro of their digits, and possibly one of the party may lose his loot. Such are some of the "many hardships that-men will endure in their insatiate desire to obtain wealth and riches in a short space of time. Several other parties have started out within the pa3t week for the same place, and it is to be sincerely hoped that it will not bo tho part of any trav eler to relate a similar story of hard ship and suffering. From the mauy perils that beset -the traveler in that direction, it would advisable foe all to delay their trip until the spring. Fears are entertained by the many, triends of L C. Terry and party that he has met with a terrible fate, nothing having been heard from any of them since a week ago yesterday. LcaivilU Democrat. There are 4S.000 poatoffices in this country, and they require 60,479 per sons to run them. The postofnee busi ness is not a paying one, as last year the expenditures exceeded the receipt by $3,500,000. E-rr In "Tinier. Kvr.nr farmer who knows anything knows that It pays U havo egg to Hrll in winter when tho pfc I anywhere from twenty to forty coot a don, bwi not one farmer in tRvaty takes the slightest pain to pvrnid his hn to lay In cold weather. TJicy grumble and growl about their fowl., and are eter nally rehcaning tho kair.o old story about tho perveweaesj of hu who will "lay well enough when egg arc cheap, but will quit entirely a oon as the price goes up" One njawjdecbms that ho " don't tako-rauch eeru of hit hens in wintr because they don t lav enough to half ay for what they eat, ' never onoe tlncking that the failare to to produce- egg" results from lack of proper food, t-heller and care. Many farmer who use commoaene in care- ing for thnr horuj, rows, -rbwp and xh.ibit a wonderful amount of dwine, cxl ignorance and &tnpidJty when it come to managing poultry, and thu (locks of twenty or thirty heiw instead ot binga source of rcenuo ' barvtr pay their way in summer, and eat th'ir "head off" iu winter. Whose fault is it' Not the hens', mircly. A hen cannot run au egg machine without a supply of raw material to work oa any more than tho Israelite. of old could make bricks without ftraw. What would these farmers think of a man who shehcrud hi cow in a ral pen. fed her on traw, let her go without water, and then growled because ehe did not produce as much m'rlk as when on clover pasture in June? To put it mildly, they would call him a "fool." Draw our own conclusions. A medium-sized egg contain 1-7 grains of albumen, ninety-four grains of fat, thirteen grains of ash, and Citfi grains of water. To tho.c who have never studied up" these things the amount of water seems large, but it is leas than in beef, while the amount of fat and of tnujclo-formiug material is greater than in fat beef. Now ii any body fool enough to imagine that henl can'maniifaclure such a highly nntri tlou article of food unles-s the are pro vided with, plenty of raw material iu tho shape of egg'inaking fo'xl, and a com fortable house to work in? It is just as easy to have eggs to sell in winter as iu summer, and a great deal more profitable. Don't tell mo that " it ain't natural" for hens to lay iu winter. It is jint as natural for hens to Iny in winter as It is for cows to give mfik in winter. Give your fowl com fortable houses and ith proper food ancarc they wdl lay because they can not help themselves. No live stock on tho farm will pay as well iu winter as a llopk of hens proper ly managed. Farmers look to this, give your fowls the same care that yon give to other slock, and you will never have cause to complain that hens "eat more during tho winter than all the eggs they lay in a year would pay for." Fanny Field, in I'ra'ric Fanner. Water for the Farm Yard. An abundant supply of wholes-omu water is one of the prime considerations in the arrangement of the farmstead. Whore this is not proi ided bv springs and running Mrcatus, earc should al ways be taken tit secure it by means of wells and cisterns. Diseases among farm animals of till descriptions are more frequently occasioned by impure or insullicicut supplies of water than we imagine. Cholera 111 hog-, r.t in sheep, colic iu horses, murrain in cattle, im pure milk in dairies, are often the. re sult of this eamc. Iu all cities good wa'.er is regarded an indispensable san itary condition. It is not lc-s impor tant to the health of farm animals. The steep wells in a filthy barn :ttd really not much more than cesspools in which arc collected the liquid manures that ought to be saved and applied to the soH, are often the unsuspected sources of disease in our live slock. An analysis of the waters from these wells would exhibit tho presence of substanco which, while valuable for fer tilization, are the prolific fountains of disease to man and beast. The Miresl source of an abundant sup ply of pure water in the farm yard is cisterns. The roof of abuilding twenty by forty feet will, with tho ordinary niiu fall in our climate, afford twenty thousand gallons of water, and tho usual accommodations of a well arranged farm yard will therefore afford an ample amount of roofing to furnish abundant water for all stock purposes. In the construction of a cistern in tended to afford drinking water for the family, it ought to bo made huge enough to allow a full supply to be caught in tho winter, aud provision should also be made for a receiving chamber from which the water is fil tered intb the supply reservoir; but if designed only for the uses of tho farm yanl, the e'stern consists only of a res ervoir for containing tho water which may be caught throughout tho year. '1 he interior of the cistern should bo well cemented with hydraulic cement, which, in compact clay, may be applied directly to the surface: but in sandy s6il or joint clays it Is indispensable that tho walls bo bricked and then cement ed. The covering should be a brick arch, and tho opening for tho pump se curely closed, to prevent the admission of vermin and filth. Such a cistern, supplied with a well constructed iron force pump, which can be procured for fifteen or twenty dol lars, is a comfort, a conyeniencc.'and a safeguard against many of the diseases which infest' tho stock yard. Alabama Farm Journal?- The Preserving of Egjs. According to a German paper, lin seed oil is tho very best substance with which to coat eggs to render the shells impervious to air. The cxreriment was as follows: Ten 'eggs were coated with linseed oil, ten with poppy-seed oil and ten others were left uncovered, the weights all being ascertained. The thirty cs were laid on sand, taking tho precaution that no eggs touched one another. After from three to six months they were rc-wcighed and opened, with the following results: Tho unprotected eggs had, after three months, lost eleven per cent, in weight, and after six months eighteen per cent. On opening them they were found only half full and quite spoiled. Those cov ered with poppy-seed oil had lost in threo months threoper cent., and in six months fonr and one-half per cent.; on opening them they were found full and without bad smell. Tho?o covered with linseed oil had lost, after three months, two per cent.; after six months, three per cent.; oa being opened they were found full and smell ing perfectly fresh and sweet. Irish Law Owners. The following figures in regard to the ownership parish land arc interesting. Qna-lnan owns 170,000 acres three men own 100,000 acres each, fourteen men 50,000 acres each, ninety men 20,000 acres each, 135 men 10,000 acres each, and 452 men 5,000 acres each. The Association of Salters owns 19,000 acres, the Drapers, 27,000 acres; the Ter chaats, 21,000 acres: the Skinners; 24, 000 acres; the Fishmongers, 20,000 acres; tho Ironmongers; 10,000 acres, and the Grocers, 10,000 acres. It is not threfore, any exaggeration to say that of the 21,000,000 which Is the annual Irish rental, at least say 12. 000,000 is spent out of the country, and where, as in the case of Ireland, the country is not wealthy, and has no other industry except agriculture, this state of things, until remedied, will be 'productive o? want and misery. Don't pile manure around the stem .or body of your fruit trees. noxE, rxnx .ix guides. A ock5W of Hrao will oftca b of great bcncJit to an orchard. Div tho tip of ttsiht lagrcaw and ther wilt easily dmre Into hard wwd- IUUNES, lht has been soaked with water will dry bard, unless H b dri wh'Ic damp with ora: kind of non-drying oiL Fimt wipe off the barncw with 1 sponge, and then w.ta a doia Kept f. or tbu purpo yon can apply the r dreitjiag thoroughly. od or Irrx.i.w Moss Chocoiatc !)! wire one ounce of Iceland mo in on pint of boiling milk; boil one oanco ot chocolate for tire nsiantc in oac jMUtul boding water; thoroaghly mix tho two. ( and give it to the iura id night an 1 morning. Thi l a highly nutritive drink for Inralid.. Chkjwc rcuuivri. Into wx quarts of boltag water, containing two table- spoiiu'ul ot tall, tr ono j-oaiid of ; yellow Iud'an meal and a quarter ot j a pound ( grated chee. boil It for twenty minutes, etlrnng it oo-astcnaiiy to prevent bunting, then put it ia a grcael baking pan. sprinkle orer the ton a nuaaccr ol a tounu ot gratcl cheese, anu urown in a tiincc oven m - a Serve hot. If any remains slice It cold ard fry it brown. How Si!t'i.tCATri.K-r.uiM Hk ht I'Kovku? hot portions of thorn, at leant. alay be kept dry and comforta ble, no that when it thawi or nuns the animals wKl not bo obliged (o stand or he in the mud- They .-hould be well littered. In addition to their comfort, and of course to their thrift, litter add. largely to the stock of manure. No one need givea.s a reason for neglecting it, that ho has no litter. Enough of something ur other may be found. To W.imi FiSNi;r. Sicmrs. To pre sent them fading or hhrinkiug up, (trat j set the color bv eoiking for a quarter of . au hour in cohT water 111 which jmgiro! j lead has been addiPl." A teaspoonful of j sugar of lead is Chough for a pailful ol water. Alter tliii preparation wah it 1 in teoid water with borax cnouirh In It to make it soft. What soap is used dis- j M)Ive in tho w.itor; do not rub it in the j skirt. Uinse iu tepid water, shake out. and hang where it will soon dry. I'ltovKNCAu: I'oTATots. l'eel one quart each of potatoes and ouions; boil them tender in boiling water and salt, then 1 min them, rub them through a fine colander with a potato maihcr, sea sou them palatably with fait aud pep per, press theni into a buttered dish or mold and bak-s them half an hour in a moderate oven. When wanted for the la'le place a dish 011 the top of the mold, turn it upside down, and gently shake it so that tho potato will fall out without breaking. How to Pki'nb Tin: Guai'K. Dur ing February the vines tihoultl be pruned. The small linos of a lighter color and of a nearly uniform size, those of last .ea-on's growth, arc the ones to be headed ba"k. From five to ten inch es apart on the.-c vou will &ee buds. In mojt cases cut oil" all above the third bud 011 thoio canes. If thero are but two or threo such canes, then they iiuy be left four or livu feet in length. The amount of last year's groiith to be left iMicut depends upon the vigor of the vine. Many leaw only one Stud next t the old vine. Too many prune too close. Minute I'uoihn'. I'ut a pint of milk properly salted into a clean quiri stewpan; havo ready a basin of hour; a soon as the milk boils take some llour in the left ban l and l"t it full lightly into tlio milk (which must be kept boiling (at the whole time), stir without ceas'ng, add.ng Hour until it Is abo'.t the consistency of porridge, then let it bo' I a fw minutes longer, still keeping it stirred. Turn it out on a hot diih, stick pieces ot butter all over it, sprinkle sugar, and gr.ito some nut meg, win 1 (h butter and sugar will u.eltand mingle, and. running all over and around it, form a delicious sauce. Do not be iny sparing of butter and sugar, and th.- cook need not be dis couraged if sho does not succeed in her first attempt, as experience alone can teach her how to sprinkle tho Hour in properly. If'it is not done very light ly, tumps of uncooked llour will" be the result. It ma? bo flavored with vanilla. How to Destroy the Iljrcr. James W. Roijinson, Eq., of Fre mont, III., an cx-I'residcnt of tho Ill inois State Horticultural Society, give3 the following mode of dealing with this destructive insect: The ci5 arc deposited in the bark of the tree, tho beetle puncturing or splitting the bark of the tree upward or downward aud a littlo sidewhc, the puncture looking very much as if made with an ordinary pocket-knife. The eggs are usually injected into this liuncturc so deep as to bo out of sight; but not always. On young and thin barked trees tho vi will be pushed in next to tho wood, but in older and thicker-harked trees they will only be through tiio hard outer bark and uiticr soft bark. As soon as the eggs begin to hatch, which is in a few days alter being deposited, its enlargement causes tho puncture to open, and thereby it is union easier delected. The young borer hatches out iu the inner side of the cg and cats out a circular piece the size of a half-dime, and then starts off boring upward at first, but some times sidewiso or downward. At this stage of development it is easy to detect the young doprcMator by a few drops of discolored juice of the tree exuding from tho puncture and sticking on tho bark. The larva? usually bore down below the ground surface in the win ter, and up again in summer, living in tho larva state in the tree nearly two years, then boring out in the form of the beetle, ready to repeat their round again. The remedy I have successfully u?cd is to keep tho" ground around the trunk of the trees clean and mellow, so that thoro will bc.no cracks or open ings there for beetles to get in to lay their egrjs in the tree, and so that the puncture where the eggs arc laid or young beetles hatching "may be easily seen and eggs or insects destroy edf which can bc"ilbno while in the egg by merely pressing (irmly on the punc ture with a knife blade ("the cracking of the eggs can be heard distinctly,) and if hatched, by cutting aVay the dead bark over the cavity hrst eaten out, and killing the yosng worm. The borers do not go into the wood much the first year, and can be easily followed by a knife; but if not taken out soon after hatching, they seriously injure, if not entirely kill the tree, especially when they run around just under the bark, as they sometimes do. Or, when several borers arc in a small tree, they so in jure it that it breaks over with the wind. 17 the ground is well cleared and patted down smooth around the tree about the last of June, the destroying of the eggs and young borers will be more certain. The trees should be examined twice or perhaps three times a year, if the borera are very numerous in order thai the first hatched may, be killed before they do serious injury to the trees. August, September and October are the months in which to destroy them. They seem to infest certain parts of the orchard from year to year, while others arc com paratively exempt. .Low grounds have been more infested with them than higher parts of the orchard. A aaa can usually exaaaine and kill all eggs and borers ia five hundred or more trees per day, if the ground has been proper ly prepared, and bo work in any orchard nas been so absolutely accessary. Lucr Hoopek, the great ferainiaa correspoadeat, writes a barrel of let ters every day. Tar Grrat Udt4a! JUtttf. The prtr tffcrrd by Mr. lEcta llnwta HHpcr for eoy ad fow which !fW tni rlgwrntfy artrocatr t prowci of "Use Th-e Atutora lUtWrsi' fcaM? bw3 's -" Jo rs I raak FrcfrtJcV Ulec HtJiW, Mo.. prt,t.3M,- Frt4rickA Urs, CorUnd-nHttdoit, N. V pnw 1.?C0; WttUim Whrun Atohr. ics rrass v 1 UaUno, t. arvu, ry, 'wi;i by fortylferen coti?itn,. The J, i Lah commltte? of award ay to Mr, Helper "Wc Iodine U thr oplatm I tbai thrre arc bet few. If any, '-ar 1 headed thinkers la this or a&7 other ctwjotrv ho will arbe from a carcial jcrttal of the fir extId paper wtihwl guing a hearty aen to the . general CKr-nao of yHirwa rfc w 1 relation to thi stupewlutt faterjrle la reply to them Mr, Helper ay ero "tho (1rt-nned of th wvrthr . trio whom I ihu hare the hon r f a4 dressing !lcon. the comh! a lUrte, and th third a hhake-ptaro, aed the mighty mental power of all thiee were combined In one ph:hopar, in "ne statesman, or In qsol pd, vet w juld even that tr.ee potent mleirfctcaJ riant be too feeble to do more thai a mere fraction of jutlce to the triple con siderations of posibUitias and yroba bihuw and ccrtaintie oumprwtxl m the fcheme of coiutructiog a ratid lorg todinal railway thf ngh tho Itepub'sc " of North and Central and rnHrth meri ca." Mr Helper ftij kbJi an addreA to the unuccosalul wrrei, a them that the railway wi,l te built atirui! . The wife of dliani Shidd, of ihli ncinity, aH tho Muscatine (Ion a) , Joumat, wears a gold ring which b,i a history. It vtas bought by her grandfa- ' ther in Kngland pr'eviou' to hl tnsr rlage. H had inscribed on tho indi . ol tho ring the word "I Me ray ihoic." and prwscatctl it to hk wife as a wedding present. It was worn by the vonnr bitdo durimr her short wntdeil life of six jearj", when sh died, and by request of her husband the ring was rot talon from her finger when .he wa buricil. After the body had been buried teventy ears the graro wa tipact the ring taken out nnd gneli to tht daughter of the docevjed, who recently -vui it to her danghter, Mrs. ihie4d. co the ring Is alout eighty yean, old a: hut. - Thu man who fttrlkcs from th houldvr has a way of making hlm-ell felt iu Miciety. A fair young mother, with aerjlng b tlic in btr arm, at In n itern atngi -o aeh. On the opoiiu at wa a politician of emraviug' manner. H and by" he ahl 'M.et nirt holdorr baby. IVrhnp 1 in -o.tl o 1dm." (Mi, no:"l am much obliged; you couldn't help me any," athe answer. lu," he 1 oristed, "'ou hud Wtlor let " try." "Vou arc voiy kind; but I know , OU eonldn't help iue. (or ho Is hun gry," replied the blu-hing mother. - Ier kilt a man?" fhe nkcd of t'ie tender-fiKit. wl on he 'arrived A Uoudwooil. Ileckou I lmc, vend,'' ho replied. M.m reectfiil iu luancc.' ' thev akcd: ' Mh t Inn'' "Im)." Kiiife him;" "N " "t'lub him to death?" --No." I'oiwti?" No, wh ' ' I lien how d.d you ever kill u man? Drovu a butcher s carl!" - .Johnny ame homo from chd the other dn "ory m jth tHtel. nnt do you think, pa? due Steward, 01 e of the'bij; Imi!, h- d an argument .tli the tesehcr ahoul a ipiet'on in ;nuttninr. ' What iOMtlon did .loc tnke?" "l last posilion was neroa a ehair, tvi.h hii . facedown." It ii ii" e feiued. The l.t'c I scicrc weather hat nroiicd the r-iii uieuiii'ei, and lor moulliu wi- ma j (pfct to ho haramd ly lone; nnd p;r- 1 ticuhir aeeouut.s of tho iron' to:tn o 'I'll, the cold weaiher of '" o:id ! e.'ei j. snow of the year J. -. j i irtnii)t A new way of puttirj; u: U e h s ' been adopted "by a man ol l.vr.t , Iowa. He houghi a lot of npp'c barrel , t pumped them full of water, and leUln-n. ' freeze, when they were tolled in'o a thed and eovcred with .traw. ) IMIlTauke- SenllnI.I That wonilcrful rcmc jj lor rbcumitiim, 8t Jacobs Oil, h l":n uJ by a hrjfc nmn Ixrr of ro;Ic In thi eltr, ami with effect truly marvelous. Frequent report are nule where sufferer have W.v.i aitorJed rclle', and tho ale Is growing largely. The facttbat It la an ccrna, reinj. comm-ni iinrM wouM not otherwise think of ?oJn outof Uio beaten trtck to SnJ a remedy. , "T ' . , 7" . A noon doctor Is a peat cman to wlio-n we pav 3 a Tlit for alrllni? u to eat lew and excrcUe more.-A. ItCluvj,. (TnillnnipoIU Itallj- SVntlnel.l A AIor Citl. If we are correct lr informed, St. Jscab Oil Is now tho usnI tca-partr topic In ptace of the former staple 'ree gossip. How wise an J Iiott mtirh tnnre lwnrScjl. . J Desveu has a policeman who writes ro ctrr, and the editor who rclusea to pubiiih it Is liable to go to the lockup. .V. O. i'.cj- yunt. AdTertlttnc Cheat. It has become so common to write the be Clnnlnz of an elegant, lntere'tln; artx.es aod then ma It into foae edt eitiscmeni that we , avoid all such cheats and flmp'r call alien- I tion to the merits of Hop Blttera in a plain, t honest terms as po!b1e, to InJace people to pivc them one trial, as no on who knows their ralue will ever ue anjthln elfc , PmtiiUutt AdrtrCitr. Tnn tramp will noti awar empty-hai'lel from a :ood rum's door not if he cars reach an orercoat from a hall rack. An? 0Uau m (. .Toha .1. lVvxaa. rfcro of the late war. and now United Slates Senator from IHInoli, writes: 'Some jcara sco I was troubled more or les with rheuaj tism. and bare within the last year or to suf fered Sntennelr with ate dhee. I Vsaft to take Darans'a Khesnatlc nmedj, atd am thoronsh'j saUsHeil that I have teen cured by its use. I do not hesitate to re cots- mend It to all roffereM." j It i taken iatersailr and acre r fails to cans the worst cae in the shortest time. old by ' all wholcsa'e and retail amzrtrta. nr.K tor 43-page pamphlet to R. K." Helpbeaitlae, DrnKgLit, Waihlrton, V. C eVnd 3 cratsUap forS)-pase book, on ""Tba Liver, Its Dia.esaadTheicTreUneU0 Ad dreaa Dr. Saaford, IGi Broad war, 2rx York. ' Tax on! j ceaclue Aile Hrraae baa tLe naraa of Fraier on eTery paciae, aad wears longer than aaj other. REDsrxo Rcvta Sixtx, the moit woader- lal healisf mediua: la the wocld. rrice : tot Onav caste. H5st. lesa. mav nmoalf S3505-?o"2S H! tTriiwTrCT: wu:toa. innad, V., pro, Sl.vWi frraas if 1 Carpenter, New Votk CUy. po. UjO; KtwJrrickA.Dtfir&s Nor4ci;t I I M gill 1 11 II BiijM ' asaaas1asasasHasaVasSas1aMaslasasBasi IW TV -H lH V g H ' Arniwa. I KMuanttmsxz' X"ttt3 HflH ka 6XCAT6CJUUJI REMEDY JgllATSI, f UJ!Al'A, . rik LtfUtAWL lAofAclir, CHUST. SORETHROU. 5niuxa iPlJUKS, ritosTtD rcrr CABS. NCAtinii, TOOTH, CAR HEADACHE. 11 mvwtlk uiui 111 SlBlE nrK ' U.L Ullllil J SIS J A.CIIR. UlBIMBMaM unt'riwxMKl t ! ' w4r H., Knt -"t- - kkr . I- ' l. A VU'H. oj ir n 1 i ' i4-k wueintiit it tin ni. (US H AU KtMUU t(Uttl II KIJHM. A. VOQCLCK & CO. ivo.iX.s Ti;irrn: iss. ltcu l mtm, of inn, mass. LVDIA E. PINKHAM'S MKVTCKtA r VEGETABLE COHPOKH). The IWttnt faro frIl (VeMraiaffcl (wililiti mi W,l Hwiarrr Utvlr IU rvJ ! t 1 rl Cw j liint, .'t orl I -iMlfiucvkiV4 ! t"Vr iwmi, iVirnr t iriirtsiv4t rmfm ttptnfl W kn, 1.1. it jMirj AZ- l IK Oianr tf . It wilt HuJr ! rivt tenwrt tf, m IK ntww In J t-ulf KiCot J-;tVaV. ! UiatT la ruv rrot bM IVi Ii rlnrtM rrr j n4 J Yj lt te tl n mnt fUoUs tlVr7. -Ur!l rriln fur HlmuUol, uhI r bt rkim lho tr It run lSittrr. llf-'Vr. r frrttn. C.rutni tKUM?. kUv(lvMa, XfTMU4t 4 1.H- Tfctt f-lby et lrtng Jrn rnnj pJi wHrfet n Uiflwh.. ilwjirmjtrtUj crrl hyBJv llwUlal!li hmM UrilI.ir-o!wiiwr wltn hrmonf ilhtttflvHbtirvrruiiftv-Uf'r. rr tk enrt KUwrr vrtAimU t Urr mi tJki CmrfKt l tjin-l. I.YIIIA 1. lMMCUVW VrCITAHIX COM. rot'XtJU r(Urrl .! US rl XU Wm4.i irmws IB.lUsv ln--0l. minuinr.'rit Ibnltiu.! la t frin t nils imlx trm tirm. vn lrrrl' of it. 31 f r tot fTrlUr Mr. lnVtri ttrxtf utvrvr H lrirr t f hKflry. Irt tr pinpfc let. XiAtr u Uft. JtmlNMi IU iir. VtmT tutl4 trttholt.TrUK. nMKHiBn UVHl 11UJV Ibr nra mufl;Uo. Ulinn'M ul lniii'T "t Um lir. Btuii par U(. hOISi liv RICHARDSON &. CO.. Ut. Unit, Ho. TXLJ2 JOkq of Saw Mackixes Prioo aa.oo. innn nn lr oasit j dtpoiti in iSAUUU.Uy injj aguintl ny oUwr saw inaclJno ia America. ThU U tho cticapAKt muchino rntdi. ncd warrcatcd to mxvr loja easier And Cutr than Ant othvr. "We fcrtj tho oldest ww tnociilno firm In America. A7 promlnnnt mar chant vrlll ttl yoti tto are reponUjti Unwiro of tn!rlaraaeat3. Our circnUro ara froc Addross, i United SUtts KinaKeturlng Co., Oitcige, til. t 0ttr VELL AUCERS wlU boro wcn 75 fsct dttp Md 2 te!i Jn di,,. " J la day. ThU woalrt ttoar yoa f60 la a j j dar- Bnd for our Pictorial CtaJoiru. ! j ... .. .. n.i..Z. m . H r' "" 8. " j -, . T , r-l. -d--j JkVUVU.I Ailili il I.U UUiU UIVTWabAOk 1 OCCa vUTTCII S.t.aaHkMibflU 4 dm., -4. n.t.mm. 'M bt ai j rtntn I y. . 1 . frnmun wll-m - Oa nH r ' ll1l. fTj , t rtf trStatproe Tf. tU fi tr Vtr-tfr Agitx. ft trtsl. Mi Ii GOOOtlL UJ.Anii-iM.w, n.,b. HMsfKturn SEEDS!I Iter rr kmr-gr !!- TrrUf-fc 'UmtxtpriiK. t Ji-arrr. Hr.ftt.aai- rivri tmtarmr-fTfK JT J9i frvr ltU fft4 tiritT$, Katktett, II - I wi 11. MJi.il. a rorrw MY 1XW SK. uy.u.i .. G.n :ani Kiwmmtn oaef r mcr. U say 1-7171 iii wfll rre K tavBK 4 TtXLoH'jLaA&U I ASTRWA. rATARRN, mmKSTH t&B A1 or BKQarMITlit, ih.laiorriilnt:itiH rotnSM U of tr is. - sntr ut i 1 1 ir&. t M PVBT Krf Vrr: t rrt nw: km. ; VfLJt. . Wnf Jr ta Soeirk M.. rmiitimf O. tirtg tvt Jt" TrfTi k aunt msrim2r tJ tstxij (rm pmam of ik'kv!: rhemur ami f rprtitCdStj tal& a4tirr twvmuv. NEEDLESiiii ,Part 4ttaeaiMt unrisai : jUtkf. t XT JI CUir y hmtJl ngii "Xi Pf ae4 6j& Bmmiri; vrif 3&K Trwrn t rrie.i vXSBvra. S.W AznAtti "UpAnzArUlT wU X aM; VtS ta uftl: rnd trrfmeiir Vrm. w. x. auxoa. sm lmc3c sc imk v. pttiiuirnMr naiiMsa aa ! ; i untJIllv Aim vriwci:au f UIIWnn,rr:ijcr tffli t. a --. 1 1 ia a law w a.nra& iiannaH "r:' t-aaCtA.l!.lLDjlc5LU. rjr- mmmtCrrm. J6hfM,i fniMFBni AT. Mm f'rMt! yuwrioiiwajaAj uvutw. uiin pvnn,4UJjp,navikuA'i " mi a - rMTtta3rfgrrf wsufct Ju-scfcnrtrj-cTvfe.o- MT 1 m s: tv 1 .-V4" s-, .iHEt - mt tk. i5-'fikJ lata i fm-rTv.M" VTK 4 "r;asWasr-r--"awaafalZa"aa6a"aP tffmt M ifiiijyKkURi HI JjiLLliaiWI MM WUUI f afaTaVA2ala1atasKD9aUa 'JLmMMM .MCSUTIUX .aaak t aa s aaBBBBBBBar? i swaaaai jmibmm, KA VlfHixfIE -jn?f - TV t-Hr. Jm?Er&P9!teW&!m mum aBBh.Bar aaaV Amm kafs& TaTar bbMb1bbbbW ." 4sa Miaasa4aai sisawaiaaaaa' vlMkaiiv Sssaaiaa)T SMsfansaist mmw saaaast sTaaaMasraBBa mWmJjL9 KSa.y'"--V wi L' -mim-m. ZX JmSK H H kXmmm sBbBbBbbV mW atwvfa(ma W 1 1 la last" MKaaaakaM TilaaiaaaBfei 4a ssby aa m V& mmmmmmmumimmu yiMttsraoriS TUTP PILLS !i.wi!!lfriG i TOKPIO LIVfcK. r, a ?, h-.; rrtjriaw-w hI-m fTk? HMtjW. I Met U. 9tl ! t2 In WtM ? r, Wi, ! r & r A v mm- trif im ii ?fk JlVf wltilftt . rt&tr If"! COWTITIOW TUTT'S PILLS -.. uiH ilfol SB tWik 14 -t trreV & Mf -! r oixi o-rv O O fiMDEW OF FINE ARTS i Tv jls tkfowM rmH- fr.m.f, VV ' " ""3y I- Mlm r " ,"yt A "i' mh r - ' u.4 1tlt- hl,U A fmm ! M m " yini v U.t4 M w ' ' X " m " A Mb tj t ni.fil I W ( rfV j.j l r Wy . W- - -. ti t 1mmj H !. . n - J Ml T-yV t m - pm. Imhh' tMT 1 R f - m r Chd . r v lUllMlMtlU T W 5 f" juj-i W w OIXiOAOO 'ACADEMY OF F1ME ARTS a. W. Cm, Stat 4J ':r at. j tkhc of DrATving aaI Poialini;. m t vv -- " !- ! frr fMr . a ta ' " 1 J"y - M f IV mm .ok t' - mm t- a4 8 Sriu Vrt'-f fi rr vfc I , rjlWT r? 4k-l I . t-4A , i-a - k -Y" " I . t IVH VV ft I i.. r ....; j . - -" t . . - wat ' , M. - " - - - . 1Z.- - 1 .--w 1 t n - Ft r ' NEW MUSIC BOOKS. RHYMES H l M 1 -f I I" Ki ! f ' . t H A M fTa '' 't' B, r - , M M " f .wl ' ml - i I -H lil Uxlfil ! - ' i&,r .! u itiwii' I VJICO. HM4. 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