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Show the greaf-B- ay 7 Colony master of . puppets, his enemies called hlm Hala, bluff, adroit, plalna man of the people, he had grown old la the business of agitation. Fifty-twyears he had lived, planning always for othersj never for himself. He had .never looked forward In his llfeNhe frankly saldr "never planned, laid a scheme, or framed a design of laying up anything for himself or others after him;" had let all his private bind npss go neglwted, and lived upon the petty salary of a small public office tin indulgence of fortune, and the good offices 't the friends and neighbors who loved him The "Master of Puppets. Hewas In Philadelphia now wearing the plain suit and spending the modest purse with whljh his friends and partisans had fitted him out the vi ry Impersonation of the revolution nn n were beginning so to fear NtniidiTTirfdever daunted him; He neither could any corrupt him was potoesHf d with the Instinct of agl tatioii, led the piopl'e, not the leaders; cared not for placp, but only for power; showed a mastery of means, a self containment, a capacity for timely and telling speech that mark ed him a statesman, though he loved the rough wak of a piople's govern mint. Bnd preferred the fiercedem craey of the town meeting to the sober dignity of sr nates I.lke an eagle In his high building and strength of audacious flight but in Instinct and habit a bird of the storm Not over-nicwhat he did not too scrupulous wliat hede vised, he was yet .not selfish, lovi d the principles lie had given his life to and spent himself without limit to see them triumph 'Another Kind of Adams"" of-John Adams. Ins routtlm-n- M ft very difierent mould; a younger man by thirtun years; no man of the peo pit, but with a tuste rather for the claims of education and breed iaig;julfregakdful;-- a. thought toa cal ruidting; too quick wilted to be patient wllh dull men. too self conscious to be ut eiis with great ones; and yet public spirited withal, and generous. in action if not Jn Judgment; of great powers. If only he could manage' o home. Their leader could at least linger at the Raleigh and concert means to have their way, house or no " house. A convention took the pluoe of the assembly, and seven lending members of the house were sent to JUilladel phla, with as full authority to sptak I and act forjtlie Colotiy as If the Bur el!8e themselves had commissioned installment 11 TVs opening of the year had found In very genial humor. letters touched with pleasantry Ud gossip. Our celebrated fortune. Hiss French, shorn half the world sas a pursuit of. he wrote, in February. is Colonel Bassett. -- bestowed - her tand on Wednesday last, being her tirthday (you perceive,! think myself rvder a necessity of accounting for if VrH. 3), on Mr. Ben Pulany, who take her to Maryland. . . 'pnlng of one wedding puts me .ad of another and so through i nc pf Miss More, remarkable ry frizzled head and good ;ng," and (he rest of the neighbor Y talk. f at Trouble Vernon, (Mount ( t the year Rrned out a very sad for him. kad been scarcely ten days back Custis. MedTYork vw,an - Lj j 1 Mr. Hantsen agitation. In Philad'd -- If such men, artles and steady as any downright country gentleman. ot all the latent tht business to .t declared phla that' "he would have come op foot rather than not come, nnd quiet Richard Bland that "he would have gone If 4t had been to Jericho" Colonel Harrison struck his new colleagues from the north as a bit rough In his free southern speech and manner; and Mr Bland seemed to them Ja plain, sensible man," surh as would be more given to study than to Pty called forth an faith of the thoughtful, ast man to withstand the shock J Master Jack Custis, the girls yard brother, gave him little but .sty. He would nSt study, for air iblngtoa - was so solicitous he ;ultl have the liberalizing outlook of ;ks, and be made "lit for more use-and purposes than horse-racer,',igh ike was but twenty, could hard be Induced to see the year out at lege before getting married The Boston Tea Party. It was no doubt very well that pub-affaire of the first consequence Washington's mind Imperative 7 off from these private anxieties :tlch could not but be dwarfed in the reaence of transactions which threat to shake the continent As the year drew on, the govern-- , sent in England undertook to force - -' J 3d of the East India company's the ports. When all resisted. d Boston, more forward even than Woes ' ,tm ;x into 7s rest threw three hundred and , :rty odd chests of tea Into the bar-zr- acts passed parliament giving mgeroua Increase of power to the TYrernor of Massachusetts, and directing that Boston port be closed to HI commerce on and after the first C zj of June; and It became evident tla( vigorous action must be taken response. of conclude what the hud lor easy men would be likely to plan younger and do; and the Massachusetts dele gates found themselves great tV'tieart ened John Adams, Thomas rushing. Sam uel Adams and Robert Treat. Paine of MassaWerev the representatives It was their people who chusetts had most provoked Parliament to be highhanded and aggrisslve The struggle with the ministry nt It home had tnkenf shape In Boston had come to actual rioT there All the continent and nil England had seen how stul horn' was the temper, haw In corrigible the spirit of r slstance. In that old seat of the Puritan power, ways hard set nnd proud In Its resolution to be Independent; and all eyes were turned now upon Cuehlng and Paine and this "brace of a!-- ; self-wille- AdamseB," who had come. It congress thought, to hurry-th- e was Into radical courses Kindness, applause, hospitality, studied and expensive respect, had attended them at every stage of their long ride from Boston to Philadelphia, Great Excitement Over Congreee. The CQuntry was much stirred bv the prospect of a general "congress of committees" at Philadelphia; and the delegates from Massachusetts were greeted ns they passed even more e to usefhem w Uhout, Jealousy Adams Samuel thought only of his end, not of hlmstlf; seldom spoke of himself Indeed; sethned A sort of subtle engine for the peoples business John Adams thought of himself always, and yet mastered himself to play a great part wnh the nobility of' a man ot Remus If not with the grace of a man of modesty and self forgetful devotion For the time he could even hold back with his wily rousln, lesign leadership In the congress to Virginia.' nnd act In all thtngs the wise part of those who follow A Situation Full of Peril. It was a circumstance full of peril that Hi delegates of the several cola nlesshouldaLjiucha Juncture be A Day of Prayer and Fastln- grto one another, and provinstrangers The Burgesses In Virginia - (May, people had beeiulhe first to suffer in cialsnow here bred ,to continental all, resolved "70 that June lat should Thlq bad business!"" "becHUSF their ) r apart as a day of fasting and chief port at Boston. was closed, and clvU war might red coated sentries wereon their ; : . r.lsd sad the peeplo of America streets " qtramon cause.. It behooved the Massncusetts men ior dissolved them; but however, not to suffer themselves to Un the long room of th be misled. Many looked upon them r.'.-h- . and there resolved to askance; some disturbed them heartl v agrees. of all the colonies, ly. Their own hotheaded mob hnd .ad to eJ a convention for Virginia provoked the "massacre," of which meet at that place on thejlrst day they made so much They had wanAugust to take action for the col tonly destroyed private property when my. they' threw the tea Into their harbor Dints With Lord Dunmore, to show the government their spirit They showed no spleen towards the Suspicious of New Englanders 'overnor. Washington dined with him There had been more than a touch ho very day of the dissolution, spent he evening at the palace, even rodo of violence, more than a little tuibu lenee, and, a vast deal of radical and ut with him to hla farm on the talk In nil that llirv Kad morning and breakfasted there; revolutionary were full yet and done; the Burgesses did not fall to giye yd of men who had no tolerauee for anv v ball they had planned In honor that transgressed, were It never Lady Dunmore and her daughters thing had so little, the moderate limits of con the (i t itj s 1 evening the day they their meeting In the "Appolo " at the Raleigh. there were fasting and prayer saaj 1st of June; the convention . on the first day of August; very jo ken resolutions were adopted: stltutional agitation "There is an opinion which does in some degree obtain in the other colonics that the Massachusetts gentlemen, and especially of the town of Boston, do aflect to dictate 'and take the lead in continental measures, that we are apt, from an Inward vanity and self conceit. to assume big and haughty airs" said Joseph Hawley, Richard Henry Richard Bland. Hlmund Pendleton, George Washing ton and Benjamin Harrison were dl Wh- o- for-a- lf he had grow n old as .a reeled In attend the congressof-Thccionles appointed to meet in Phil quiet Massachusetts lawyer among his neighbors, had kept bis shrewd eyes fifth day of Septerncalphla on the ' "It is highly probfible, abroad he trr. ... told John Adams, with a wholesome Sets Out for Congress. When the time came for the jour-:y- , bluntness, "that you will meet gentle Henry and Pendlton Joined Wash-jto- men from several of the other coloniequal to yourselves or any at Mount Vernon. It must es-fully ive been with many grave thoughts 1st the three companions got to Britain, the colonies. law. history, govcommerce . . By what we yru and turned to ride through the ernment, from to time see Id the public time north. tbe . :ng August day towards In the congress of 1774 the leaders papers, and w hat our' assembly and cf Virginia were for the first time committees have received (ram the conference assemblies and committees of the thought Into more southern colonies, we must be With the men of other colonies. J 0 1765 Fauquier had dissolved the satisfied that they have men of as and literature as any we irgesset with such sharp despatch, muchorsense ever could, boast of " can, Mr. Henrys the ot passage cjoa "Advised terBe Prudent.''"" ' that they were all rone home ' was mere counsel of prudence It LUaro the call tor a congress to act should that reach the could they duties play their part In the stamp jjmpo.' them. congress with modesty and discretion Not Cushing and Paine, but the The Patriot Leaders Independent Put In 174 they were not to be so Adamses, carried the, strength of the Lxented. They bad themselves Issued Massachusetts delegation; and It was coll for a congress this time, and Samuel Adams, rather than John, who . ' eoluton could not drive- - them was jusfnow the effective master In 2 Peyton Randolph, Lee. Patrick Henry, e - -- n . face-to-fac- e reso-Ttlon- x TASTE than one oasis befoie coming to ours but all the same he had a thirst " Smore! iaidhe ;t Customer Couldnt Complain of "I drew him another and placed 23io Sandwiches, Having Put Them two of the round caidboard checks beTogether Himeelf. fore him, ten cents each He picked them up. wabbled over to the lunch before they put a cash register In counter, fumbled'around In the qravh said the reminiscent man be-- ! er diJu got a couple of the crackers, tbe bar,' we used to "hand the and after a desperate effort in its card-: mer a round, fabrication, got a sandwich made He check when he bought hie waa as long in chewing It as he 1 , with the amount ot money hie In making it, and having finished it ' ire called tor specified .on the remarked to roe with contempt as he went bumping along to the cashier's i the luncd counter we carried a desk to pay his checks: ! round crackers of-- a T dont see anything sgreat 'bout special Each cf'cker b- - q on one side 'ese cracker aannlshesl. Taste.' like the ' Jt- rs cabalistic buckskin gloves, b'gee, 'n poo' near as on 2 w wfcat it tough! ter. "Disgusted, he wabbled on to the cashier. He looked at his checks. The youth with on the look of disgust on his face gradually hty In his gait changed to one of amazement-Wa- ss jr.ILY HAD STRANGE T cream-colore- 1 d s - tr Only 11 dele-i;atesw- ixumsel , Many of ihi del gates .had come to town a week - more before the date set for the (oimresK. and had settled to amaeguaniii.i ee before It was tune "The checks one indiRT,ai,t (nuked the in at the isS'iurs window With a broad grin on his fate, the cashier took.them hroke each lu two and pushed the places back to the protester, who picked em up. and as he looked at em amazement on his face slowlj gave way to disgust again. said lie, Say! Don't Say, Percy If I '4idn t make a san say a werd nish out o my checks' An', say. ol man, I ate ern bgee!' "Then he left uS with as much haste as he w as able to command,, and the cashier was so much 'amused that he didn't stop him to collect for the two beers New YorkJSun. -- tl tar Backache Is aWaming Farm Animal More CaPb,e Different Meth-od- e Adapting Itself to of Treatment. No Device Shown Which Does Not --- 7 Demoralize Insects. Too many farmers are overlooking to a good opportunity- - by, neglecting who do, Men farm on the have sheep o not like sheep must "either learn business the of oat or keep like them care Men who do like them will take re taken they-awhen of them, and to discare,of they are no more Table animal farm ease than any other aniTbe sheep is tbe most modern mean that we that mal in creation. By his he has left no fossil remains of dea is He own kind or ancebtry. ofcreatioti last the days of velopment and of about the same geological age There Is no animal' on as mankind. the farm that is more capable of to different methods of t Arrangement With Narrow Attached to Frame andWhole Thing Placed Near the Hive. Slot at Bottom'la , Last season 1 used a simple device .taking off one and a half tons of honey for clearing supers of bees not demoralize quickly, which do-the bees In the hives, fiTUt leaves them lu fine condition to defend themselves. The drawing makes the plan clear. full depth super, I used a and on tho under side, I nailed two Square sticks in the center. Then 1 cut two thick pieces of wrapping paper, eight Inches long, which I tacked to the upper side of the super; then I brought the lower edge down and tacked it to the paraellel square arsticks, thus making a rangement with a narrow slot at tbe bottom In s ten-fram- e treatment and adapting himself to different environments tbanjs the sheep. He can be bred into almost anycoarse thing of the sheep kind Long, or no horns wool, fina wool, or short, carcass a big or black white, horns, for mutton, or other modifications have been produced, - and all are when properly Tsu-diemoney-maker- s the by right man.. Dried Fruits. The recent dmeuswon--- anent the high cost of livtng has brought out a number of exponents of various ways and means of reducing this cost StrangelySmough, however, little atand tlss? ha exclaimed. Eighty tention hag been paid to dried, fruits, cents for beer, dollrn sixty cents to which in general are known to be Hull gee! Extortion! healthfi! and nourishing. It is a fact 1 all varieties jot dried fruit .sw-tha- t , - - v- -- v at t Thousands suffer kidney ills unawares not knowing that the backache, head- Anybody who suffers constantly from backache should suspect the kidney. me irregularity tof thesecretions may needed give just the - . proof. , Doans Kidney Pills have been curing backache and sick kidneys for over ", fifty years r "XvfJ Ptflarr Xtilts A North Dakota Caao N. O, Afl "My feet J frier, Coedthand Ajrr 1 cooldn on and Hubs wereiwoiieo My back was lame weakness Account of kidney Ixra.n' Kidney and sore and 1 telt miserable. occasion to Pills cured me and whenhatI Have bad failed me." noyer use them since, they -- Got Doans ot Aay Stora, 50c Box DOANS wav CO, BUFFALO. FOSTER-WILBUR- N. Y. d SPEClALrTO WOMEN Do you realize the fact that thousands eight frame' superpand cleated both FEW POINTS OF A GOOD COW of women are now using ends, ywhlch made it ready for use. Mherj I am ready to take off honey I set the whole thing near the hire, Important Characteristics ofActlvlty and Vitality Should Be Determined remove a super and set it on the by Eye of Animal. b In h ac a::ru Meaner p r.; south man at- the front o? trathror of jegal practice' the hive If necessary. As Fuse loose A Soluble Antiseptic Powder Nervous temperament In a cow does In Boston or New York' or Philadelhanging frames without spacing denervousness of state mean a not high, as a remedy for mucous membrane afvices 1 loosen all of them yith a screwphia: "77 or irritability, but the animal- - has fections, such as sore throat, nasal or The southern colonies, besides,' had nerves- such as make the various parts pelvic catarrh, inflammation or ulceraIlved inore' In sympathy with tbe life toner, vitality and activ- tion, caused hy female His?' Women active,glving Qf Jiiej:m.plre--thau.tnu- l their northern to the many parts of the body. w ho have been cured say "It is worth ity neighbors. ' Their life had depended Dissolve in water This important characteristic Is Judged Its weight in gold. For ten years the directly upon that of England hitherto ajiply and locally. of her size eyes. character the and by and had partaken of ij with a conMedicine Co. has E. Plnkham Lydia Her face should be broad between the recommended Paxtlne in their stant! zest They had no rlvel trade; private dished and well eyes with women. they hpd wanted no val government. be prominent, correspondence should The eye For all hygienic and toilet uses It baa The r eral air of the wide empire bright, clear and mild, but not at all no equal. Only 50c a large box at Drughad blown In all ordinary seasons sluggish looking. The prominence and gists or sent postpaid on receipt of through heir affairs, and they had culopenness of he joints of the backbone price. The Paxton Toilet Co, Boston, tivated none of that shrewd antagois a very important Indication The Masfl. nism -- toward the home government backbone should be covered with no of Prevents Bees. Escape which had eo sharpened the wits and usnarrowed Jhe, political interests of the driver and slide them over toward the surplus flesh, for If It is, the cow is should which to that fatten herself ing best mei In New England opposite slde of the hive. Then w ith go into the milk pail. The ribs should I begia brush-ln- g Reasons for Virginias Primacy bewicfe In themselves, and "should bees the down without taking any have plenty of width between them. Prompt Relief Permanent Cure They had read law because they frames out of the hive, pulling them This can be measured by inserting the CARTERS LITTLE were mmrof bnutness, without caring I get them clean me as toward ovef too much uhout its niceties or meanfingers between the ribs. Persistency LIVER PILLS i of bees. When the bees strike the in to In It chewing the cud is a very important faiL Purely vegetalitigation They, incline below ing, practice ble act surely they slide with dairy cows. hud read their English history with , point but gently on out feeling that they were separate of the slot Into the elghtframe super from It... Their passion for freedom before they can take wing, and most KEEPS ALL IMPURITIES OUT the liver. Stop after was born not of local feeling so much of them will be clustered below. There dinner distrare across cleats of the end the super as of personal pride and the spirit of ess-cure ef Cement Curb to Prevents Platform I a Ahe furnish hands, and grip for those wfyo love old practices and tho indigestion,' Surface Water From Trickling the bees out by lifting the the complexion, brigbtenthe eyes. just exemptions of an ancient consti- empty and improve - Into Well. Downr sudden-jaon super giving It a tution. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. It was the life they had lived, and the ground In front of the hive after Genuine must bear Signature A well house like the one below is a the conceptions of personal dignity all of the supers have ,been cleared of will not bees. that guarantee get impurities and immemorial privilege that had Of course I use some smoke at the into a dug well The curb is set in gone always with it, that gave them when 1 begin brushing. As soon a cement jfiatform. This platform Is time so striking an air of mastery. It was nearest slde- of the first comb built around the curb, thus holding It as the pot simply because the Massachusetts is free from bees I pull it over toward solid and preventing surface water THOUSANDS tion. Learn bo free VVrite delegates kept themselves prudently A. ihA. HUMnaOiN I 14,1m Aw.. SmHja. I Tack vlown, says the Iowa methen brush the bees from the In the background and the rest yietd-eThe Is curb Homestead. from to made then next the go to her pretensions that Virginia opposite side; W. N. u., Salt Lake City, No. matched lumber with a roof that has a waa accorded primacy in the con- one, etc. sharp slope. The well wheel is hung WHILE THERE WAS YET TIME gress; it was also because her repreToo on' the center pole of the roof. The for Swine. Silage Bulky sentatives were men to whom power Swine raisers are adviBed against forms for the cement platforms are 11, and because ft had she naturally KAean Man Made Hie Suggestion and won so honorable a place of leader- feeding young swine extensively on in Some Haste From Departed in recent a bulletin from the ship already In the common affairs of silage, of Indignant Women. Meeting fibrous Iowa too It is station and the continent low In digestible nutrients to prove With tense, eager faces, the great .Washington Not a. Leader. satisfactory for growing and audienceoLw omen leaned forward ColoneJ Washington, striking and has a digestive forcible m a n"l h o u g h h Tw a 7 d i d not seats, eagerly drinking In the to suited concenapparatus largely noted speakers every word. figure as a leader among the Virginian trated feeds. Old sow's will eat some Mere man, she was saying, Is delegates. silage; however, if fed to them it wont to belittle womans ability to enPeyton Randolph was elected presi- should constitute only 8 small portion ter the fields already usurped by him. dent of the congress; Richard Henry of their rafion. Lee and Patrick Henry stood forth as As a matter of fact, she is capable of the Virginian leaders on the floor. filling any post of public or private Plan Work Ahead. 17 :'' ofllce now held by man, and, if apIf you speak of selid Information V'lyr11 II. fi Wv Everything on the farm cannot be and sound Judgment, Colonel Washingpointed to it, could even perform run with the precision of clock work, ton is unquestionably the greatest man buMhe bulk of the work should be man's tasks with greater faithfulness Well Curb. Sanitary on that floor," was Henrys confident planned In advance, and greater daring. making allowboards. The con- . "Name, If you can, one post for and generous verdict; but Washington ance for changes which may become made from was no politician, and did not stand (n necessary. Keep your Ideas ahead of crete is mixed half cement and half which she cannot fit herself! Name exactly the same class with the rest. your work. Make the brain help tbe ballast. Apply three inches of con one office to which she would not, Crete, then spread on a layer xf hog could not, give the greatest" measHe had headed committees and pre muscle. wire. Put bent rods around all the cor-- ure of capability the hlghest-degresided over popular meetings among ' ners" ApplY the rest of. the concrete. of courage, the his own neighbors In Fairfax, and had Chicks. Starting With A mere man, who had Bllpped unbeen prompt toJotn them in speaking let stand three One way to start, and that is becom- - Smooth off well-andays before jenloving forms . The noticed into a'back seat, rose nt this with high splrtragainst The course of lng very popular, is to purchase the ministry In England. He had been chicks, and brood them, either by well curb should have lids attached point, and the light of sudden inspirab in ger these can be closed when tion gleamed tEThis eye." forwarUnnrging andpunctillously the hen and natural method, or arttthe well is not In use. thus preventing careful In practicing Rat catcher! use of the he .shouted. And con houses by ficiaHy, He had declaied Gage's couduct In structed for tho purpose, with full lu dust from blowing down. then he fled. Boston "more becoming 8 Turkish structions as to Their opcration. an English governor." Use the Clippers. Literal Nomenclature. The clipping of horses and mules in Healing Wounded Trees. Deeds ard Not Words. "Why do you call your sketch Examine apple trees for mlc and 6Pring is generally conceded to be Wrinkles V But he wak a man of action, rathe-tha' The clipped animals not because It is a head If the injury is bad. beneficial rabbit Injury. 111 liner." of parliament. T w raise one Better "oniy sppear are and smair n' only bridge easier patciit8 grafti Thousand men. efillsf them at my own are stripped of bark.they may be cleaned, but tb?7 dry off quickly . . Love may laugh at the locksmith, expense, and march myself at their patnted with white lead paint 'or night, get good rest and are more vig but It of the relief for had Boston." head wilj refuse to smile over a loch orous and thrifty. wax. of the wrong womans hair. beei his'Tiupetuous utterance in the liquid grafting Dairj men now regularly clip tht Virginia convention the most eloflanks and udderB of cows every three for Place Vessels. Drinking quent speech that was ever made." Mr, Drinking vessels placed in the hen- or four weeks. It is easy to wipe off 1 have heard he houses Ljnch declared the parts then before milking and should be put on a shelf said," reported an admiring Philadel- Is raised at least six Inches from Jhat the sures clean, uncontaminated milk. T have heard he said he phian or the fowls will scratch a ground, wished to God the llbertlea of Amer- lot of For Skin Disorder. dirt Intel the water. ica were to be determined by a single The following powder given each and George! day is said to be good for skin But his fellow Virginians understood Jn - horses: - Finely powdered him better They had chosen him for iodine of potash, four ounces; granu, Skilfully cookeforce and sobriety; not as an orator, lated sugar and common salt, of each but as the first soldier nnd one of the one pound. Mix well together and difirst chancters of the commonwealth, Get busy with the grafting when vide Into 32 powders Feed no com, and he had made the Impression they the buds begin to swell. but let the grain feed be oats and tx petted Every fanner should b$ horticultur- wheat bran. Use tjnetur i TO BE CONTINUED) . ) ist enough to furnish fruit for his fam- onnhelumps" every second ofjodine day until ' the skin becomes a little tender. ily. The appearance of the orchard is for the lasj five years. For Instance, -a package containing fifteemronces of helped by cleaning It of dead Nitrogen From Air.. branches. Nitrogen from the air is now got fancy steded raisins' can be retailed If you have a poor seedling pear or artificially by the form of at a profit at ten cents a package; sulphate of vhoiev seeded raisins, which are only apple tree it may be entirely made ammonia by a new chemical process at a cost of 620 a ion, besides a byslightly smaller in size, but just' as over by top grafting. Prune a little each year, and prune product that will revolutionize gas good iu quality, at 9 cents; forty-fiftReady to eat direct prunes at 13 cents; sixty seventy sparingly. It does not pay to neglect manufacture. These afe remarkable claims,. and if half of them are true hundred the pruning, ot trees. from tightly - sealed prunes at' 9 cehts; ninety-onThe young trees should be banked the cost of -- nitrogen prunes at 6 cents, prunes at . 4 St' cents, choice with earth, which will keep water will be universally reduced. But we sanitary package. evaporated peaches them. about a await from 9 settling at is cents, nnd choice evaporated practical, demonstration ot From. our ovens to Probably the best results come from these claims before accepting them. York tipples at 9H cento. New . Ti Hies pruning the orchard rather vigorously 7. your table Post ToastCleanliness With Ration. every two or three years.' - - Time and care spent in the orchard discard ies are not touched Always any decayed pota, In Latar Year. by to to sure for Is a or Itself other almost and pay and cut away vegetable, "Tastes alter as wre grow older human . hand. , . , rate.oMnterest besides aaydecay ed portion before boiling the good from to them to feed the vigoryoung, tips Raspberry A hen poultry.' lady en route for Reno. Delicious with cream should always be selected dislikes a rotten potato as much as Yes," responded the fall one In the ous plants, of to those in if other forced you to do.acfi any eat preference and sugar or fruits. next chair. "1 "used to inarry men itshe is ' harmed thereby. that I wouldnt exchange photographs kind. Wait until the ground dries out a with now. sale-bgrocers little before planting either trees ot Plowing Deep. ' Is not well to plant in tret, everywhere. hand en It truck. the for prrsnipa plowing Mean insinuation. and other soiL root plants, Belle Look at the beautiful dia- soggy One of the best ways of managing plow deep and keep the manure down Post-Toastiemond engagement ring Will has giv ? la to set In rows alx feet deep; otherwise you will have a lot raspberries en me of apart, and th plants two feet apan of Surface rootsA Instead the Net long. . 1 ( aches, and dnll.nerv-ou- s, dizzy, all tired condition are often due to kidney weakness aloae. m ber-cl- -- - - i Constipation Vanishes Forever down-and-- out -- , - , pt, from-trickl- -- d ing 21-19- 13. -- ( fatten-ing.Bwin- The-ho- in-the- g ir h e Day-Ol- d -- d day-ol- d - -- Sweet Bits coTnbat"-betweuihlm8el- ol Corn f Horticultural dis--Ord- d- NOTE'S Post --Toasties , 0 At Your Service. y e 100-12(- 1 1 more-experienc- fpot-bat'wt- Jl to But there waa, in fact, no good reason to wordey at the natural loader- Their- - life had Filp of these mem bred"lhemmore liberally than others It required a much more various capacity and knowledge of the world to administer a great property nnd life tho life of a locaL magnate tn the FeeTout six-inc- since the passuge of had they taken any thought for each oilier There was no assurance that even the hist leaders of a lolony could rise to the stutesmau's view and concert measures to Insure the peace of an empire. Rising lawyers like John danis, brusque planters tike Colonel Harrison, well to do TiH'K'h.'uns like Thomas M If In, mighl bring all honesty and good intention to the task and vet miserably fall A provincial lawjiracllce-th- e easy ascendency of a provincial country gentleman. the narrow rouud of provincial trade, might afford capable men. opportunity to bhcome enlightened them to b citizens nuTTiordly-fitt- ed statesmen Delegates Become Acquainted. The real first business of the to become acquainted, and to learn how to live in the foreign parts to which most of them had come There was a continual rouud of entertainment In the hospitable town thereto! e "a universal exchange of courtesies a rush of visiting and dltfTngrsrffow'Tif exceilehr wine7aTtC!i abtandam e of good cheer, such as for a while niud the occasion seem one of festivity rather than ,pf anxious a flail's to effect an organization! but the. gentlemen from Maryland and Virginia, more familiar with the journey, arrived almost uponthe day.j Make a Good Impression. They made an Instant Impression upon their- ne w - colleagues John Adams promptly declared them the most spirited and consistent of any,-an- d deemed Mr. Lee particularly ."a maifferly min Josoph Hawtey's fulfilled "The Virginia and indeed all the Southern delegates appear like men of Importance, said Silas Eviane; I never met. nor scarce ly had an Idea ot meeting, with men of. such firmness, sensibility, spirit, and thorough knowledge of. the InterMr Lynch of South ests of America. Carolina, though he wore "the manufacture of this country, and was In slf things "plain, sensible, above ceremony, seemed to Mr. Deane to carry with hlnH'ronre force Jti hla very appearance than most powdered folks In their conversation. The high bearing and capacity of the southern delegates came upon the New England men like a great surprise: where they had expected to aee rustic squires they found men of elegance and learning -- - 'For deep-growin- g -- - - - y -- -- - . . in: have 4 |