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Show the other hand the gaseous emanation level surface. Small hollows cf this kind occur in the travertine deposits are very striking and abundant. In the middle of tho creek, which of the Mammoth hot springs of the A DEADLY GAS SPRING IN THE here forms a deep pool about thirty park, and near tho Hot lakes of tho feet across, bordered by the polished Lower ( Jeyser basin. In these places YELLOWSTONE PARK. enicite already mentioned, tile water small birds, mice, etc., attracted by Remains of Animals Found that boils up furiously at several places. the warmth of the vapors or the dead Had Feen Asphyxiated by the Ir- - Tiiis water is, however, very cold; insects, are often suffocated by tho resplrable Gas Given Off in the and the boiling is caused by the very gases. Such hollows resemble the Fatal Ravine. copious emissions of gas, mainly, no mofettes of the huaeher See in GerThe familiar fablo of the upas tree, doubt, carbonic add, though containmany, where dead mice and bird-- , are living; iu a valley of death wherein ail ing some sulphuretted hydrogen, since always found, and are common in othlife was killed by its deadly exhala- its Mtieil is quite noticeable, and the er regions as well. The well known turbid with particles Grotto del Cano, near Naples, is the tions and the 'round was utrewn with water is slightly which also coat the sides nmit familiar example of such accuei sulphur, of bones boon its lias the victims, pro- and bottom of the pool. Rising mulations of carbonic acid gas, and ven, Like many a travelers talc;. lobe ih rough tlio water of the creek, tlio visitors are frequently entertained by highly eolored and exaggerated ac- great amount of gas given off at his the asphyxiation of a poor dog, whilo count of a natural phenomenon. Tho place is easily appreciated, but equally the guide, whose head rises above the copious emanations may occur from gas, is not affected by it. Death Gulch upas tree is now well known L h&re tho deposits and old veuts near by, is, however, without a peer as a natupoisonous sap, but not jxtisonoas which being invisible, remain un- ral bear trap, and may well be added But the story survives in the ac- noticed. to the list of the wonders of the Yellowcount given of the Death Valley of Above these de;msits of altered and stone park. Science. Java, which it was long Ixjliored no crystalline travertine Ihe creek cuts '1 he Hand That Holds the Plow. traveler could erosi. wherein orrery into a bank of sulphur and gravel by this material, and a few All about the corn is waving living being which penetrated Ui val- cemented, otid is the debouchure of a Emerald green with tips of gold d yards bey ley falls down dead, and tlio soil small natural gulley coming down Amber laving with tho carcasses of tigers, door, from, the mountain side. In its bottom round them roll'd Shores of hedge-ro11, birds and even the bones o men, is a small stream of clear and cold Neath your poplars tall and stately, killed by the abundant exhalations of water,. sour with sulphuric acid, and Robed in shimmering silver leaves. door sedately, carbonic acid gas. with which tho- bot- (lowing down a narrow steep channel From his tom of the valley is lilled. Such is the out in bods of dark gray volcanic tulla. Counts the lord his coming sheaves. ABConding this gulcli, the sides, closing Mark, as evening shadows lengthen, s description given by Lyeii of tins he sends delighted eye, become very steep slopes of How valley; while another locality is de- together, O' re the uplands wealth of treasure scribed as a place where the sulphur- white decomposed rock, the silicious Where the shaven meadows lie. Nature weaves her lairest garlands, ous exhalations have killed tigers, birds residue formed by tho decomposition 'bound tho sun burned reapers brow, mid innumerable insects, and thu soft of rocks by acid vapors or waters. And the Ship of State is guided Tlic only springs now flowing are of these animals arts parts perfectly small oozes of water issuing from the H.y the hand that holds the plow. while bones the are eroded preserved, baso of these slopes, or from the See his offspring troop about him, The jiud entirely destroyed. of limb und brown of cheek. of Junghunn have siiowu.th.tt channel bed, and forming a thick, Strong Rearea to trust and never doubt him. about white the vents, deposit these accounts are much exaggerated, creamy, Patient taught lroin week to week. This U it tun doors the stream-betho housewife tripping the Valley of Heath being a fuamil and covering consists largely of sulphate of Back and forth in thoughtful part, shaped depression but 11M feet in deposit alumina. The slopes show local areas Loving hopes her steps outstripping, diameter, instead of a valley half within her motlier-h.rt, where sulphur has boon deposited by Horn mile across, in tho bottom of is laden Till the snowy oxidation of hut the sulphurous vapors, With the food her hands prepared there is a liole la feet in diaextinct hot spring vents were found. Home liistructed while a maiden meter, from which gaseous emanations no main stream Richer feast no king eer shared. About are given out, which at times accumu- these ISO feet above oftlio Nature weaves tier tairest garlands. acid water cease ; ocxiug springs late to a depth sufficient to etvelopt 'Round the sun burned reapers brow, remains of the but the character gulch And the Shin of State is guided, and sulTocate animals on th bottom of benow of Hy the hand that holds the plow. the hollow. Repeated visits by Jung-Iiuu- the same.. Tho odor sulphur comes stronger, though producing no Can there in city splendor extending over a period of other effect than a slight irritation of Walled undgrow twelve years, showed that tlio amount sunless, rank with sin. or The rather the so ends, Souls broad they would delend, or gulch lung. of gas varied greatly -- from time t in a. scoop or basin about 250 Die, their country s good to win begins, two rose ever but aver lime, rarely above Cache creek; and just below Hero minds need ditt rent feeding feet six inches above tho bottom. At feet Hills and valleys, sky and sun, we found the fresh body of a large Such thia will rise, their country needing, the time of his earliest visit ho found rea.silvor-tip with the Rise true patriots every one. grizzly, (he body of a Javanese native la the bear, never can enthrall them, advanced an in mains of Slavry deoression, but experienced no- diff- state of. a companion Gold is sort to Right the king. him. above decomposition iculty or oppression while there him Near Greed cannot appall them, by were the skeletons of four more Dragon self. This same body was still Who have heard the rivers sing. a an of with bones elk the yard Nature weaves her fairest garlands, owing to tho preservahvo effect bears, of Round the sun burned reapers brow, of the layer of gas, when he repeated or two- above, while in tho bottom of And the Ship of State is guided, fresh remains were the the pocket his visit eighteen months later. The Hy the hand that holds the plow. several squirrels, rocks hares and other Charles Eugene Hanks, Farmers Voice. only other remains seen during his small animals, dead numerous besides subsequent visit were tho carcasses of butterllios and insects. Tho body of six swine, which were decomposed und A Great Scheme. was carefully examined for putrid. At this time tlio absence of lhegrizzly Look here, said a bright young marks of bullet holes or other injury, the gas was shown by the presence of showed no traces of violence, traveling man to a friend. Ive got a crow feeding upon tho dead bodies. but tho only indication a few an invention. being of its shorn much ihus of Though drops of blood under tho nose. It was n What is it? former glory, the lakaraman, W evident that he had met his death but hole, is the largest and meet danSomething that will prove a boon a short time before, us tho carcass was gerous of the gns springs or moletUH still to mankind and a treasure to society. offensive perfectly fresh, though of Java, and indeed of the world, and of a later visit. me an idea of what it tho time at Well, enough give of deserve? tho titlo a natural The remains of a cinnamon bear really just is. death trap. Though such emanation are common in all volcanic regions, above and alongside of this were in an Its a little album, to be c arried in this has boon the only place known advanced state of decomposition, a vest pocket or suspended from the where the gasos have accumnlated anal while the other skeletons were almost wrist by a ribbon. On each pagq is caused Jthe death of the larger aahmdn. denuded of flesh, though tho claws and a in letters illuminated was much remained. tho ol hair It printed large In the Yellowstone Notional park animals, as well as single sentence. When you go now so well know n as the wonderiaixd aPParen l n s e e t ji s li a,d n tet m el society all yuu Uafvo to do fs to l&u of Amei'ieatluu-- is a place equaling death by violeneo, hut had boon your little hook with you, and you can' this famous death valley, and wlieto the gaseous exhalations have proved asphyxiated by the irrespirable gas with scarcely any trouble or mental fatal to numerous bear, elk and many given off in the gulch. The hollows exertion carry on a conversation with were tested for carbonic acid gas with the most tiresome people to bo met smaller animals. This place, to which tho appropriate lighted taiors without proving its with. What are the sentences? name of Death Gulch is given, was prosenco. but tho strong smell of sulIve only got the list partially discovered by the writer during the phur aud a choking sensation of the the presence of noxious made up. Here are some samples past summer (1888) white making a lungs indicated geological examination of th region gases, while tho strong wind prevail- though: Yes: I have read Robert F.lsmero. iter Mr. Arnold Hague, the geologist ia ing at the timo, together with the open nature of tho ravine, must have I liked it. charge of the survey of the park. It is caused a rapid diffusion of the apora. It has been a very pleasant day. situated in tho extreme northeastern materNo; I do not dance the York. This differs, of therefore, this plaeo short a reservation, portion Yes: I admire Kyrle liellew cry distance south of tho mail route, which, ially from tlio famous Death valley of leaving Lamar river, follows up Soda Java and similar places in being sim- much. 1 have read all of Rider Unite creek to tho mining camp of ply a V shaped trench, not over Haggards feet deep, cut ia tho stories. Cooke City. In this region the lavas seventy-liv- e I agree with you that James Whitwhich fill tho ancient basis of I no park mountain slope, and not n hollow or rest upon the Hunks of mountains forme cave. That the gas at times accumu- comb Kiley writes very preity verses. I dont know whether marriage i ed of fragmentary volcanic eject and lates in the pocket at the head of tlio tertiary andesitic breccias, which rest gulch is, however, proven by tho dead a failure or not. There are more to come, but this in turn upon nearly horizontal squirrels, &e., found on its bottom. paleozoic strata: white tho hydrother- It is not probable, however, that tlio will show you what an idea is." Its a great scheme, said the lismal forces, which are represented by gas ever accumulates here to a considthe geysers and hot springs of th erable depth owing to the open nature tener when the list was run through A gre it scheme." Merchant Travel- centra! portion of the park, where ihe of the place aud the. fact that tho lava sheet is thicker, show but feeble gulch draining it would earrv off thr, manifestations of their energy ia tKe gas, which would from its density tout 'I lie Gaelic Singer. almost extinct areas of Soda to Cow down the ravine. This offers an Gaelic songs of which the people Hutto, Lamar river. Cache crock aud explanation of the death of tho hoar? Miller crook. Although hot water no whose remains occur, not in this basin, are so fond, aud which they smg so longer flows from tho vents of these but where it narrows to form tlm admirably, arc no less rein ir, cable for area?, the deposits of travertin, sinter ravine; for it is here that the layer ol their fre 'doni from the slightest taint and decomposed rook attest tlio former gas would bu deepest, and has proven ol impurity or indelicacy than for tlndr presence of thermal springs. Gnscoas sufficient to suffocate the first hear, emanations are not given off, however, who was probably attracted by tho re- native rigor aud simp'i iu, alia ve iu considerable volume, producing ex- mains of tlic elk, or perhaps of the ihe theme. When we assort that tlioy tensive alteration in the adjacent smaller victims of tho invisible pus: are always well sang, the reilc will rooks, and giving rise to sulphurous and he, in turn, has doubtless sened probably wonder how this should he as bait for others who lane in turn when we at the same time to deposits. it is at one these places that tho succumbed. Though the guleh has possible make the admission that e on the most fora ala! ravine is founu. Situated on doubtless sened as a death-trasing-r.areas a u!e utt uy of time, these skele- delightful Cache creek, but two miles above its very long destitute of any scientific knowledge of be tons and bodies must remains the confluence with Lamar river, it is easiof music. Of musical rule- - and musily reached by a horseback ride of some ouly the most recent victims: for the cal terms they know nothing. Soag is miles from tho mail station of Safa ravine ia so narrow and the fall so with them as with the wild birds of flutter. Tho region is, however, rare- great, that the channel must he cleared their native woods and wilds, an inly visited, for hunting is forbidden in out every few years, if not annually. stinct, an inspiration; and it is simply the park, while tho place has not hocn The change wrought hy the water the faet, strange as it may seem, that ifnown to present any attraction for the during a single rain storm, which oc- the native singer who knows not a note few visitors who pass near on tbeir curred in the interval between my of music from the scientific standpoint way to the well known Fossil forests-sin- first and sceotid visit was so consider- will render a Gaelic air more musically able the seems that it probable that the weird sconery of th Hindoo und better in every way than the most floods of early spring, when the sno ws basin. aeeoinplished musician you can perAn old elk trail, which runs along are melting under the hot sun of this suade to attempt it. The philosophy to must lie afregion, the north bank of the Cache creek, powerful enough and motif of a Gaelic song, grave or of wash rone to the lords traveling, and leads to a little everything down gay. are so closely intertwisted, so l opening in the pine forest bordering on debris at the mouth of the guleh. timately bfended with the melody that Gaseous- - emanations are very frethe stream. In the center of (he a native singer can give their, full only meadow is a shallow depression, once quent in volcanic countries, and may musical utterance: and better, the bed of a hot spring pool, now dry bo either temporary r permanent. ns it mav seem, when he i, and covered with an efflorescence of Tho former are, as is well known, par totally ignorant of music as written salt, making it attractive t tho elk ticulariy abundant after volcanic erup- and taught than when lie has had any and other gamo of tho region a a tions, Tbe gases emitted from fissures amount you please of scientific Tho banks of the crock op- ia the fkuiks of Vesuvius arc said to lick. Good Word' training. posite this meadow and below it are have hilled thousands of hares and covered with tho ancient hot spring pheasurtM. and whole herds of cattle Tile .Mind Jealous;. deposits, which are very dense aua have been suffocated by volcanic gas is hivder The hard, and at the borders of the stream given off near Quito. The permanent have been polished by the action of emissions of gas. as the mofettes some women to bear than the hi.ni-- i the water until the surface shines like of Itily, tile Lonelier See and the jealous,'.. No vulgar r ui of o.ir-- r D HOUSEHOLD. "DEATH CULCD. ra-jio- rs. ; eov-ere- wheat-field- sea-lik- e farm-hous- - iam-on- d. e b, I - deoom-jxjse- d, jwi-so- he 1 e -- hot-sprin- g . - p -. iti-- pan-doxie- mind-jmilous- y so-h e, glass. A hot spring cone half washed away by the creek and a mound of altered traverline on the opposite hank show g the character of tile ancieivt water, the rippled surface of the de- pi'sit being exactly like that of the beautiful terraces and silkies of Mammoth Hot Springs. At present, however, the only thermal action is the emission of a little tepid sulphurous' water at the edge of the stream. On hot-sprin- ; rci'.cin unchanged, however, for renturic. here earl) mie acid gas is evolved from a fairly uniform surface it is quickly diffused into the atmospiieiv upon the slightest movement of the air, but tho case is unite different m hen Hi gas is emitted in caves and hollows in the ground. In such places it accumulates, because of its density and slow diffusion, until Ihe hollows an filled to the brim, any cos? being quickly diff used as from i unfaithfulness can imp' mt ui h a -t do-- s iu the lire as the drew sting that the man who is line u,a find a won. 'a higher 'h .I'lire will, auo.li.-than the one w ho lnv es him 1. coarse intiiteliu ma lie do'idsrd. th,. contempt it 'how- - ma he m weh contempt. imt the lo'tmr feeling t; it t, sat I'tied hy the loftier s!niath t be despised and treated :k si Louis Maga'hie. -- i can-no- eon-teni'- i realms j Cattle for j,roflt The manner Vn. wintering cattle intended ter Reason's market detho we intend to market. pend- on uvtjjr And now t!le arises Which thenct is the best stock on Testion 're ason of the year to put market?" Upon this dr' erenee of opinion. ther Many think J iir hr even the earlier part of the the best, as prices rule in the fall, iiut to close hnjlicr th a se.i-o- n. will be manifest that the in prices is in the half-fslippery stock, while choice stork nles nearly as high iu the fall as pring. Cattle never weigh, to ippearanee, as well during the part of the season as they do in til, and after having wintered we like to have the benefit of the Pasture season. However, each has Jsome advantages and disadvantIt often suits farmers better to ages. sell part of their cattle early in tho season, and keep part of them until fall. her, intended for early market, they should come into winter quarters in good condition, and the feeding should begin. It should be moderate at first, say one-hagallon chopped feed per head, with nil the good hay they will oat, and during the day they should occupy a yard by themselves, or in fact, should have stabling and yardage as nearly isolated from other cattle as possible. It is folly for any one to attempt to lay down a rule by which we can be governed concerning tho amount of grain to he fed from time to time. In all my experience in feeding I never yet have found two seasons which it would be practicable to feed the same iftnount. Tho feeders judgment must be depended on, and the grain ration increased to them steadikeep enough ly growing and improving until pasture comes. Then dont be in too great a hurry to turn out. It is better to let the grass have a good start and harden some. Then a dry day should be chosen for turning out. It is a good plan to bring them in for two or three evenings and feed them hay at night. They eat more of it than one might suppose, fare must be taken in order to not overfeed with grain until they become accustomed to the grass: then they should be fed very liberally, and be forced right along until they are ready for mai ket. When intended for the fall market it will be necessary to pursue a different course. During my early experience in cattle feeding, I thought it necessary to feed them all summer to have them ready for market. When the time would arrive when tho pasture becomes more dry, I found that they spent too much of their timo at the troutrhs, depending more on the grain than on the pasture. This led me to abandon this plan of feeding, and adopt tho three months or one hundred days system. They may be wintered much the same las yearlings, except they should have rather more grain until spring, when they can be turned to pasture with nothing except regular salting. And bv iSeptembcr 1 we find them round and plump, and to the inexperienced .iiiiv wjll appear to bp fat; but when weco1ue to handle oq, weigh, we find they are soft, but in splendid shape to begin feeding. We fnention September 1 because three months from this date brings December 1, and the last of November or first of December is a good time to sell, as this is about the beginning of cold weather, the time that cattle fatten the best. The feeding should be quite moderate at first, and if a steer refuses to eat sprinkle his fuod with salt or bran, or anything that will tempt tho appetite. When it it is found that every one will eat, increase the feed steadily until about October 1, when new corn can be had. Here 1 would note that in my experience I have never found anything equal to new corn for fattening cattle, and they will eat it in preference to anything else. It should be broken or cut into small pieces to enable them to chew it easily. With the corn increase the rations gradually, but as rapidly as possible, and whenever corn can be cribbed after being well sorted, they thould be fed of the refuse corn twice a day all they will eat up clean. There is no danger of foundering a steer if his feed has been increased gradually. Duriugthis time the feeders vigilance is in demand, seeing that every steer is reeei; ing his share of feed. It is a good plan to give a food of some different kind every few days, which will sharpen their If preferred, they may appetites. oe fed each alternate feed with chopped feed, blit I prefer plent y of corn, and if a few jugs are turned in with them once a day, there will be no loss from ieeding whole corn. J. 15., in I Tactical Farmer. luiii;a Farm. In buying a farm for a family home two things are so frequently overlooked and are of so much importance that we would impress them upon the reader. The first is the drainago about Xo family can be the dwelling-houshealthy and happy unless its dwelling is situated on a spot whence the drainago is good. On not a few farms the dwelling has been located where the drainage is very poor and can not be Tho person who lomuch improved. cated the house may not have cared for drainage, or may have thought of greater moment tho advantage of a location near a spring or grove of trees or something else. Xo fertility of the land or bargain by reason of low m ice will justify a man putting himself and family in a dwelling from w l.ieh the drainage is imperfect. Sick-n- . ss and death, with the attendant suf-- n ing and expense, will make the farm t bad bargain, no matter how low the ee or fertil the land. I he other thing is the intellectual i moral character of the neigh bor-- . ,, ,1 for no man can afford that he ,oi,i his family live among unintelli-- i t. immoral people. 'Io no small v nt vour neighbors will mold the .irneters of your children: if you "" dd have bright, intelligent, respeet-.- . ,. children you must have neighbors Iu the country we o the s .me sort. for social tte.-- t look to our neighbors 0 tcreour.se; and, unless they are as ti should be. we must live like her-'- i ts. or associate with people whose gIV ifi st ITerence at lf e. i : 1 : . . . v companionship is uninteresting while it is harmful. Land in a good neighborhood may cost somewhat more, but it is nevertheless the cheaper. Land where there are not good people, and the good roads, schools, churches and books that these people will have, is alvvavs too dear for a wise man to buy. It is also worth while to take care to got near church and of a mile further from means many church and miles more travel every year for your children, sometimes when the winds are fierce and cold, or the snow is deep: sometimes, also, the children may be kept altogether from school or church for many precious days. These things merit the consideration in buying a new home. Cincinnati Enquirer. school-hous- One-fourt- e. h schooi-hoiis- e Farm Honey the comb late if it is one of .Notes. taken out of tho comb, or in if exposed to air, will granu- is pure. In faet, granulation the best tests of its purity. If glycerine be added the honey will net granulate; but who wants to eai glycerine? It is a form of adulterating food that should be prohibited by law. It is equally injurious to both the seller and the consumer of honev. A flagstone floor with cemented joints is best for the dairy. Wooden floors are apt to rot ouf, and brick floors absorb the spilled milk, soon becoming very offensive. If breks are used, the floor should be kept painted all the time, and even with this extra trouble, it is not so good as flagstone and cement. The flagstone underground is always easily kept cool, as a dairy floor should be. Tho first setting of eggs every year should be in the line of improvement. If your, fowls are a mongrel breed, send for some pure breeds of the variety you prefer, and tliey will probably furnish you more eggs next winter than all your present fowls would if kept over. It may seem questionable to pay breeders prices for early eggs but there is money in it, getting them now rather than waiting until summer, when the eggs can be CREAT NEWSPAPER. Scenes In "The World Office on a Busy Saturday Night. It was my good fortune to spend a portion of last Saturday night in Tho World Huiluing. and under intelligent guidance I was permitted to witness the process whereby tons of white A paper are, almost by magic, transformed into huge volumes of reading matis on tho ter. Tho composing-roofoutli floor, whore 1J2 compositors were busy setting type aud sending tho forms to the press-roobelow as fast as completed. For their use on the Sunday edition over ten tons of typo are required. The editorial staff, m m proof-reader- artists, engravers, re- occupy various rooms throughout the building, and were all intensely busy and seemingly uncomfortably crowded. But the most interesting place to a novice like myself, as well as the noisiest one, is the pressroom in the basement. Tho World has twelve largo printing presses in operation every night. The greatest of these is the new quadruple press which is regarded as a mechanical wonder, and is said to be the largest, fastest, costliest and most perfect newspaper machine over constructed. It will print, fold and count out in fifties 48, Odd eight-pag- e papers an hour. In addition to this it will print lour, six, ten, twelve or sixteen page newspapers when desired. It is a model piece of mechanism, has fully met the expectations it awakened and would seem to be the crowning glory of inventive genius in its lino. The World has on its pay-ro- ll about 1,200 names among them JO editors lOt reporters and conand &c., porters, 468 tributors, correspondents in other cities, 275 in the composing and proof Ac. rooms, 71 in the press-rooThe Worlds Sunday edition is a wonderful thing, and taxes the utmost resources of the vast establishment to bring it out promptly on time a task that no other newspaper plant in the county is equal to. It may, perhaps, aid the reader to understand its dimengot at cheaper rates. A good deal of grain must be grown sions when I state that it uses up over where farms are entirely devoted to 75 tons of paper, from 800 to 1,000 stock husbandry. The keeping of even pounds of ink, and when printed each cattle and horses does not imply only Sunday edition is of such magnitude grass for pasture and meadow, as it as to make a library, if printed in once did. Some grain must be grown book manner and bound in books of for feeding, for the simple reason that the average size, that would be twice library in the grain grown on the farm is in most as large as the largest cases a cheaper feed than hay or pas- world! That is, it is the equivalent of ture. It is also necessary to grow and 4,000,000 volumes, while the largest feed grain to keep the land from ex- library in the world is the national haustion. Meadows and pastures run library at Paris and contains only volumes, while the next in size out in timo, because manure enough cannot be made by them to maintain is at London and contains 1,800,000 volumes. And yet, notwithstanding fertility. of these Sunday the huge proportions The lrof. Manly Aides says; editions, the time allotted for their of ground feed may bo summarized as follows: 1. It is conven construction is theof almost incredulousbrief period a little over tea iently fed with cut fodder, and an ly hours. Chatham (N. Y.) Courier. economical consumption of the feed may be secured. 2. When mixed with Doesn't Like the Change. cut fodder the demands on the several An old negro sought the mayor of organs of digestion is equalized, and the digestive apparatus us a whole acts Chicago. What cite I do foryou? more efficiently. 15. The wastes in the the mayor asked. alimentary canal are reduced to a minWall, sah, I doatf know bout dat, imum. as the digestive secretions are I kaint gi, but I come yere to see brought into more intimate relations wifh all the food to be digestcd.i 4. A justice somehow. kWhats the matter? greater aggregate return mtif with Naff de matter ter make er man greater certainty be obtained for tho Mid consumed. pizen, dats whut. I moved up It will pay to give extra care to frum de south "caze I didn think I yere wuz. cleaning seed oats or barley. These enjoyin' all my rights down dar " 1 see. grains rapidly run out in our climate, Tliey interfered with your as they are very apt to head and the right to vote. Oh. no, sah. da let me vote all I grain to fill during hot, dry weal her. Like produces like. If light grain is wanted ter. N ices people bout dat I sown the crop harvested will bo lighter eber seed. Jes let me stun up an vote than it otherwise would be. It is a right erlong. but den da didnt count good plan to get seed grain from more my vote. northern climates every few years. And you wanted to come to a plaeo Though it costs extra for such seed, where your vote would be counted." the larger crop will more than pay the Yas. sah." expense. Much barley is every year Well, wha is the trouble? Leek slum troubles. imported from Canada, paving a considerable duty, because so much of Don't you believe your vote was that grown this side the line is too counted?" Oh, yas, I knows it was." light for profitable malting American Cultivator. Then whut have vou to complain of? Hint to Houspkeopcrs. Remove warts by rubbing several Wy, all. I hada mon voted fo' er limes with tho half of an onion dipped blame p'lieeman came up, he did. au la mined me ober de head. iu salt. What were you doing? Silverware can be kept bright for Nothin er tall; jes standin dar." months hy being placed in an air-tigDidnt he tell you to move on? case with a good-size- d piece of camYes, sail, lint whut binoss wuz it phor.' To whiten vellovv piano kevs, rub o' hisn? I vvati't foolin vvid him. What did you say when he told you them with sand paper and finish with to move on?" a piece of chamois. Didn't say nothin', To cure aud heal a running sore, apshuck my head, an' den ply alum water twice a day. liittiu" me w id dat stiek. For a cough, boil om ounce of flax- wav ter aek -- no way ter seed in a pint of water, strain and add man is 'habin" liisse'f. a little honey, one omn'e of roek can ly Fin very sorry and Hie juice of three lemons: mix and You ain't ha'f ez sorry boil well. Drink as hot as possible. Jis' look at dis yere lump on my head. nibbing vvitb a flannel dipped in Big ez er goose aig, now. Whut you ly tilt1 best whiting, the brown discolorgwine do erbout it, sail? ation may be taken off cups iu which 1 don't know that I can do anycustards have been baked. thing " Much sickness in farmers' families How come?" in winter is due to keeping large quanWell, the policeman doubtless tities of potatoes and other vegetables thought that he was discharging his stored under sleeping-roomduty. Is dat whut you calls 'chargin his Xever throw away cold potatoes, a? there are so many delicious ways in duty? Is knockin daylight oaten er which they may lie warmed over and man chargin duty? Im gwyne way f'um yere. I'd rather not hah my vote made into new dishes. Useful napkin rings are made by counted den ter pay so dear fur it. Ef da hatter Hit me to make my vote e d crocheting them out of and count, w'y, den, Fd rut her da would cord, and are made glo-'.J- . stiff by an application of varnish. fling it oaten de box. Dat's er mighty Work-basket- s, Crack er wnst paper baskets and cuis way ter do bizness. whisk-brooholders are all durable mans skull ter make his vote count. and pretty mado in this way, and Doan want no mo votes counted in dis town. Arkansaw Traveler. brightened by bows of ribbon. unslaek-lime To meml china or glass, mix Suspicions Submission. with the white of an egg, and seeA small boy lvid been having a ( ing that tho edges of the broken parts are quite clean, put the paste on with of unmitigated outrageousness, such a match. all children who do not die young Ringworms will yield to the treat- likely to have at times, and when ment of borax. Wash with a strong was solutitinn three timesji day. and dust him: ready for bed his mother said over the line, dry powder. When you say your prayers, G A good rule for tho use of the difask God to make you a bet gie. ferent kinds of flour is to use pastry bov. A on Lav e been very nauf'htv flour wherever baking lie is used aud day. with flour bread yeU't. rile youngster accordingly put his petit inns in the usual form. ; A Natural Inference. then before closing with Allien." I5row n Have you noticed anything added And, please, God, make me a gi about Smith lately? Ever think him flighty? subject to temporary insanity? In y. He paused a second and then, to Anvthing like that in his family? Robinson No.indeed! Why, what idler consternation of his mother, c eluded with unabated gravity: N have von noticed? not ertheless. O d will, Lord, my lies bought a spring thine be done! Providence Jouri overcoat, that's ail. luek. -- s. old-gol- mae-ram- m ; : : liver-colore- |