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Show ad The Rose In the Ions, kvm? uko. Ill a g ii i (v. in: . T. There gi'i w a ouvrl. r-Ami a homely, the Lily. l'.n . idl me. ' h . P-i- wsj. i'.'ii. wlihe lily white rima. they both loved the uinorous West Wind. Just why. I'm sure nnhndy knows. And the Wind was in love with tho lily Thai grew by ihe homely white rose. In the night came the amorous West Wind, Confused by the dark. I suppose: And the kisx that was incnru fur the lily Was pressed on the lips of the rose. And ever sines then, so they tell me. Wherever a sweet garden grows. There's a paleness of grief o er the lily. And a blush on the fare of the rose. And "Willie, hen? Ths Lau&htcr of the Crewi. li Let li.m i'i'i Impi- in do pri-;i! ni'ii-- r W'li-- i mi'll tn:iv i':ii. TillIlf KliiiMM who li'mld - ml. In l...ltlr in liul IlM.il' is Ills rfirlfssiu-imi'll ill. Win. ullicis liuiyli to try. ! 'i liinl wilt In li si Min if!l kiinliK tiiil tl.c !::::ii,: rCu'iil !; Liitfi i:f i'i. s '.ifl'iTK rlni, Wiiii, l.i'.iiiriK tlii in. Iniil :s ml ur sii...s. : Ih-j- o ;a'i:iui;. f-- A the ii:i'!f! '? of a reil wut.r snail L.r.iiis in all tna lit.1. wins-- . r Mow take a piece of soft wood, about six indies in length, ami with .our part of it ilown to th? to slip easily into the hole .I.'ht !.riu;;!i the spool, ami In this part .iidt-r !.o Ions enough to exton.1 half a:i inch Mi'll lain;!. ml :il A .ri 'I' lit1 uni'lii liini i' mi1 Ii..i,i:!i liis Mi.ilut of t l.o other end. Tut a brad liro'.'g'.i it thero to keep the spool Irer.i i umia.': oft. The uutrlrvued rt of the stick will servo ns a hap for ym to hold the wh'Kl by, a:i? a- -' i' is tun :ho trii.jii'-- l of cui."u the spool cainot fft oli t'nt end. Wat-.- r Wheel. wish to see li Toy rdtily this A gixid toy is u waii'r wheel. tho ra li.j'.l'ie lH tie Ah' id v.Ili tun v In n kind that has a by which a lurid it in n stre.ru. try R in lor the boy can hold it in a striva hydrant with the valor turnod half on. ami sci; it turn. Ami. uf course, tlie boy must make it fur himself. An Ir.'Jror Game. Here is the way to make it: Got Tin re are wet ai i s even in the largest empty spool you can, say. summer, and if you are havii g a tea party it is so difficult to thick of mine-thlfto play at. The game of is very much like lilind mans buff only much more fun. Two players are chosen; one is blindfolded, ami I ho other is Jacob. A circle is funnel round these two, who may not run outside it. Then the blimlman keeps calling out "Jacob!" who must answer "Yes. sir!" every time. Of ourse, the bllml'ran" makes u dash for "Jacob. who has to dodge him until he is finally ci'i.y.ht, when two more players are chosen. XV-T- Av III.-- bh..'d.ii'-v-.is, s t.-i.- si-'.- '; i j - p-- Ii.-g-- r rt, 11 li.V-idi- c -T ti-m- He can lay an egg on a hot stove without burning his feet and the hen How to Secure Wild Pets. The gentle, graceful little jurrip'nii mice, mice, meadow-ratand ere to lie found in almost any rum! pl.ie ' in this country. These Interesting lit creatures can be cat ture-- with or nary Cgnre fours or tin. square or round wire mouse traps. The wl.it mice, or doer mio-my lie found in the abandoned of other rodents. In holes in the fene ' rails, and under chid of oil plowed fields, or bcneeMi Irtish heaps in tha fouoD corners. Fonetlp.es bills nests are found wRli a ii 'itly thateVl ref over th' lio'vl, and a mind doorway of ere. to tho interior. where, kcitIv cur!''! up in a warn bed of down, the LuR wHte-footmou ce is sleeping. You may capture tese l:.!t la fallows by hand, 1? you use due cantion in their habitation, and shieli your hand with an ordinary pocket white-foote- ran't. Huh! Funny, isn't it? Now yon tell me, Sailie, of what use are ankles? Ankles? Why, I dont know, Wil- d s flying-squirrel- s ! box-traps- Sallie and Willie. why is a man unlike a lie. To keep the calves from the corn. Roller Monthly. , But He Didnt Catch On. d equi-dista- nt 1 Box Xotart ruMto. f WAS TOO WELL TRAINED. 'V3k$C ij Aubrey Youah daughtah has consented to mawy me, and er Id like to know if there is any insanity In youah family? Old Gentleman (emphatically) There rautt be! c Divide This Piet. Here is a square plot of ground. In tho center of whl'h we find a well (Y), houses (II) and trees (T) in different locations. Tbe.prublem is so to divide this plot Trying the Wheel. each one shall have the same that one on which stout linen thread is genpiece of ground, each one shall shaped erally wound, and on one end of it have a bouse and a tree on that piece tack three strips of wood cut from an old cigar box. The strips should be about tive inches long and half an Inch broad, and they should lie tacked on the kkk)1 so that, the six ends are from each other, like the spokes of a wheel. Tack three strips on the other end of the spool in the same way exactly, bo that the strips at one end shall be opposite to those at the other. The accompanying picture represents one end of the spool with the strips tacked on. Now bore a hole through the strips whero they intersect, at both ends, so that these two holes may be a continuation of the hole through the spool. Your next step is to cut six strips of ground, and each have access to the from the cigar box, and having made well without trespassing. It was the them the right length, tack them surveyor who solved the problem. across from the strips on one end of How many of our readers would like the si mol to the strips on the other to try to solve it, too? FRANK J. CHERRY. Sworn to before me and subacrllied la niy preaeaoa, this tib day of lMcaiuber, A. I). IKs. A. W. (1LKAS0W, i i e. T.'sV Vi- fr .. Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-EasA powder to shake into your bhoes. It rests the feet. Cures Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Eas- e makes new or tight Shoes easy. Sold by all Druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy. N. Y. g - 1 Fbaxk J. liiBvzr wakes oath that he ! senior firm of K, J. Cannier a Cu., doing Krtner ofla ths the City of Toledo, coiiaty sod State aforesaid, sod that said firm will pay tbs sam of U.N 1 liUNDUKU IX ILL A US tor aai-- aud eraiy raas of CaTAsaa that cannot be cared by the use of UaLb'a Catabsh Cumb. Nothing Striking. Eszla Youi manager pronounces It a very striking likeness. Champion Pugilist Not on your tintype. Where's ie chump wot's gittin de punch? Philadelphia Ledger. Ja-cul- i" L Osio, City or Tocsuo, hin orLucas CorxTY. I Hall's Catarrh Cara la takan lateraally, and seta dlrar.tly on the blood and mueoas surfaces of tho raieni. Send for teeilmoulata. free. F. J. CHUNK Y CO., Toledo, 0, Sold tiy all Druggies, 7So. Hail's Faintly ill la era tha bait. -- Jj.'- Bulletin. San Francisco Trap Baited and Set. handkerchief. They will make delightful pets, and you will find them much more interesting than the common white mice. Give them a tall, narrow cage with plenty of head room, wl:e a branch containing a last summers birds nest to the side of their cage for sleeping quarters, and feed the mice with bread, seed and grain. Meadow rats are not climbers. Put them In a flat cage with a good wide expanse of bottom covered with Bod of growing grass, the roots of which they will eagerly devour. Feed them garden vegetables when grass roots are not available. If you are expert it Is sometimes possible to catch chipmunks by hand. They will enter almost any ordinary sort of a trap, and can best be captured In that way. Set the trap near the hole known to be occupied by one of these scolding rodents, and glvs your captives a roomy cage, with a dark corner for a nest. They make gentle and amusing pets. Feed them on acorns and nuts. Crack the hardest nuts for them. The simplest kind of a box trap, which is almost always effective when baited with a slice of fresh vegetable, is shown In the illustration. It Is very easy to make and will capture your little pets wlthont injuring them ia any way. A Narrow Escape. She Of ( curve he bored me awfully, but I don't think I showed it. Every time 1 yawned I just hid It with my hand. He (trying to be gallant) Really, I dont see how a hand so small could er hide that is beastly weather we're having isnt it? How It Ended. Askem What became of the newly organized Honest Suffrage league? Newitt Well, you sec, the president of the league found out that he had been mistaken, and that he really stood some show for a public office after all. So he resigned and the organization disbanded. Irishman Had Good Reason for Getting Rid of Dog. The Irishman wanted to sell the dog, but the prospective buyer was suspicious, and finally decided not to buy. The man then told him why he was so anxious to sell. You see, he said, "I bought the dog and thralned him mesclf. I got him bo he'd bark all the toime if a person stepped inside the gate, and thought I was safe from burglars. Then me woifo wanted me to thrain him to carry bundles and I did. If you put anything into his mouth the spalpeend keep it there till some one took it away. Well, one night I woke up and heard some one in the next room. 1 got up an grabbed me gun. They were there, three of the blaygards and the dog. Didnt he bark? interrupted the man. Sorra a bark, he was too busy." "Busy! What doing? "Carrying the lanthern for tho burglars ! WHEN MAN STAYS AT HOME. Often the Way. Tis Said That His Wife Soon Tires Harry I want to discard that girl of His Company. and don't know how to do it. Is It how soon a wife surprising In Walter Why don't you start of tires of a man who the company disshe and will be drinking heavily is too much at home. Men are wise gusted. in from their away no. She'd getting to want marry Harry Oh, i certain portion of each day. Among me to reform me. their wives wil be found a very general concensus of opinion to this efNo Good. fect There will be found everywhere roof-tree- s disposition to pack off the men In the morning, and to bid them keep out of the way till toward evening, when it is assumed that they will probably have a little news of the busy world to bring home, and when baby will be sure to have said something exceptionally brilliant and precocious. The general events of the day will afford topics of conversation more interesting by far than if the whole household had been together from morn till night. A very little inquiry, too, will elicit the fact that men about home all day are eminently apt to be fidgety and grumpy and interfering altogether objectionable, in short. Tho Gentlewoman. & DOCTOR SAID Quit Wrong ITi! Whore are the dominoes?" George and I.ow have em. And tlie checker are gone, too! George ami I.ow have 'em," repeated Marie. "Uni they aren't playing with both at the same time, arc they? a.ked Joe in surprise. You don't believe it. do you?" said increduMarie, as Joe shook his Coine upstairs and I'll prove lously. li'-a- it." This is Joe saw: Tin duiiii- r.oes had lid'll d'l.l:;-- d out of the box on tho floor, where they had been use.- in liuil li'ig what appeared to he a miniature bri !ge. There were six were nm- arches. All tie- do'eii o.n ti uvi ion. that jdnyed in ibr-ithe arches were :di"i;g enou.'h to A domlmj the shock of a with Its face outward formed tho tvP of cadi arch. vvhal l - - r . . re-sif-- t Tlio first arch was capped by a domino with two pips or kikUs (a double 2") over it. and ru on consecutively to the sixth arch, which was topped by a double I',, the ilotni".o with tho greatest number of pips, there being 12. After these arches were constructed the small checkerboard was laid flat oil 1;! floor, closed with bs edge pushed up agaln-- t the entire back of tlie bridge, this forming a brace and making six compartments out of the as shown ia drawing. six art "Now. where do tlie checkers come in?" you ask. (horie and Isw quickly showed their iimv (P urge took ten reds, wkilo l.ew got n:i i qi'.si. number of blacks; then they toed a lim. about iy.bt feet away iron the front of the bridge, from where they now tried to roll tliu checkers under tlie arches. Georgo 1 Food and Eat Grape-Nut- s. An Illinoisan who has been through the mill says: Ioist Spring I was so bad with indigestion I could not digest even soft cooked eggH and doctor said I must eat predigested fond and preI changed for the scribed Grape-Nuts- . better before I had used one package, eating it three times a day. on Grapo-Nut- s My improvement missed thorn entirely In his first roll, food was so wonderful that I conbut on liis second trial he managed to cluded to use your fond drink Postum penetrate the arch that was topped in place of tea and to make a long the double counted six. Each by pip story short I have not been without one point, so George got 12, which put and Postum since and my him ahead of l.ew, who had managed Berth Did you hoar my rich uncle Grape-Nutpresent health proves my doctor's to gel only four and six on both his was dead? two rolls. Gussio No. What did he leave wisdom in prescribing Grape-Nuts- . have got strong as a horse and wall Tho game grew very exciting and you? and I own it all to your delicious food was not decided until the last mil, Ilertie Noli ing! Name given by a Low when Gussio Well, what's the good of and Postum. won by a score of 43 to 42. Co.. Battle Creek. Mich. his dead? called new They this game luii.g In (ho making of Grape-Nutfood and if you wih to play it. all the starches of Indigestiblo tho on here is another way of counting: Iri- Romance. Rough Mend of taking only ten checkers, ltso Romance and chivalry are not what grain nre transformed Into Post Sugar. is digestas many as you like, hut fix on a cer- they were, alas; Onn tlie hero, hav-- ; Every particle of Grape-Nutin the weakest stomach. Physitain mnihor- - r,u to ! as tin win- ing revciied the maiden front the ible cians have never found a stomach ning i nudier, and whoever reaches it tower, paused iu his flight to exclaim too weak to digest and asHimilato lir-- t i wins he '.'a:ne. Hark! The hiHiflieats of puit. (oiiiidiuil imi eiuy not lie as scien- rsuer!" Ixxdt in eacli pnekage tor a copy of Hut now: tific as il x parent games, yet it's a lot fatuous little honk. "Tho Road to the ll! Tho odor of thy father's Wall vi lie. of fun. and as an eyetrainer it is a "Suu - Stray Storie i motorcar! splendid s Pos-tur- "Com-bimitinn- ," s i s ; i e. "- |