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Exeter Times, 1901-1-31, Page 6TALE ntgaewo/ to nreed Kea non One of the te a the Siblee feriae is Samuel htylor, Mr. TaYlet beds tarheys a.d makes money on them, although h. does not pretend te be anything bet lamer. The Parm ere Voice retweeeietative tithed with hiat Tayloe the otheri day awe had ao op- porianity to tae turkeY which bee oat beeu through. the Chicago merlon. IL was the Orst time for eeveral yeare that a well-fed and welt-dsishedturitey bad been eerved np to us, Mad we wished. &matte or our city Mende GOUld be with us aue ootice the difterence betWeen properly fee turkey and the kited that eomea to the market. The bird that was eacrificed for ate betteet ot the guests of the occasion Wae a last springa,s pullet, which weighed bete= Poltrids, and it tasted very muen Woe those We used to eat back le the old Buckeye atate, Atter dinner we went out to see Mr. Taylor's turkeys, and found some toms ot last spriugis batch thet weighed tweuty-eight and thirty pounds. One Of thtese hu4 been sold for V au d an- other will go tor $10, ax4 the smeller onesoeith the hens, wile eell for prices three or four times above the market P te ., We are not adnertng hen ihayharee turkeys, because he has Peale I ° sell that ttee uot epoken for, we un- derstand, bat we would like to imPrese Upon our readers the fact that it pays the biggest way to breed just euch fine poultry. There is a steady demand for it all the time, while the ordluary city enalleet re!ght pessibly he overetocked. There is no (larger of the market be- ing glutted 'with the kind a torkeye htfr. Taylor ralses, however, as they never get to nearizet until too old Tor " breeding purposes. The demand tor the best of any itiud ot breeding pool - .try is an open and unsatisfied one, and ibis conditiOn promises to contieue for od matey yearse-Farmers Voice. eta. neeetrinoto.neerettea taa rearm. er ieve,-, 45141 ltia . ovtmeet is oit foot in France to an. "Egg department" to their of co-operative dairies.. The a Is simple and evorlts well. Each of the Dalry Associatiou un- to send not less than 200 per 'week On two fixed days; a (Ils- OUon Is to be made betweeo egge commotion and awe intended for Members can only send the Predtet a their own hens and at their awn eXpenee to the creamery office. Tie secere that ebe eggs be in a fit and proper conettion the members will bbad. themselves to remove the eggs daily from the nest, and leave as the nest -egg one of porcelain. There is • heavy penalty for sending old or Spoiled eggs. The creameries under- tace the sale of the eggs and secure the best market price. Associated with the egg industry that of poultry will be added later on. This is eXtending .the co-operative eystern in a. preetical way. If it were prahticable to do the same work in ortn0).atinote Nth our co-operative cheese factories and creameries it would go a long way towards solving the problem of how to collect the eggs from the farmers in a pertectly fresh condition. Cold -storage 'facilities could be provIded at the factories. where the eggs could be kept in a freab condition and packed ready for shipment to the Large elties or direct to ,Great Britrin, Part tra tee merry. hate•are very scientific 131 these days Ind talk of bacteria, bacilli, micrococ- pasturizinge sterilizing, etc., and there IS danger that we shall forget that scientlec dirt le just as bad as the odmmon variety. Dirt under a Latin name is just as dirty as it is in Eng- lish, Med requires just as much soap and hot water, scrubbing, bruebeeind Mow grease as ,the old variety that our fathers used to -wreetletfvith before the days of washlegcowders and con- zentrated lye. /litre need no special sterilizers'pasteurizers to keep the .nailk eats clean: leave all these cora- Ithecetheil machines to the scientific fel- * ows and go at 'the cans and dairy ves- sels in the old-fashioned way, as if bac- teria and bacilli had never been heard of; use plenty of water, soda, sunshine and fresh air. Have your milk ves- sels clean first, and thietk of bacteria afterward. Ti your butter or cream are •off flavor, nine times out of ten, the trouble is that your stable, cow or dairy is dirty, just plain, dirt, that doesn't need a microscope and a chem- ist to find it; only a. thorough cleaning and the trouble •will vanish. • The tentb time you may need the help of the expert bet don't ask for it till you bove got rid of the common dirt; then you may took for the scientiee va- riety. -Hoard's Dairyman. • Tee oh...titer. The Iteautiful oleander with its wealth of beautiful fragrattt blooms is a plant that contains a most deadly poison in its composition. Cows have been known. to drop dead in five min- utes after eatirg the leaves, and chil- dren eating a blossoni have died in a few hours, or barely escaped with life when errtidotes have been given inareediately after the flowers were taken into the stomach. We know of a young man who hap- __ pond to pick his teeth with the stem --teeenafaxfallen. leaf from an oleander shrub. in anfew minutes his gums began to pain auti throb anclebefore evening he was in Aierfect •agony. His gunas ul- aerated, and the caze was one of great temioustess fpr several weeks. It was • keteen to be it case of vegetable pots - mere, but it was quite a while before • e thought of the oleander tooth pick. • have noticed the great carelessness tt which this shrub is handled on Pacific Coaet and It is a wonder at mote aecidents do not occur from It ceetately contains a deadly • 2oleen. QZ At ENDS. te e c n rotat(uituro ie1 1,tts/111, Perhalts no farm erop is a eubjeet tc fluctuation in price as potatoes. One year the yield is irameese wee Prices rule so low that atoesands of bushel are dumped, over some benk. The fol. - lowing spring will witness a much de- creased acreage planted and prices are high. I know farmers who are coutine ually shiftieg about in this manner, het infrequently buteing seed at high prices expectiug big returns iet the fall. This eatne cias.s ot fanners are coutinually changing from sheep to cows, ad agaitt from cows to sheep. At the tinae 1 beau on the old home- stead I found it ueees.sary to give a roortgege to secure moaey from an uncle to pay oft other heirs. shall never forget the frieudly advice he gave tee when be handed me the money. Said he: "1 want to impress upon you this one thing. lilaric out your course end do not deviate from it. If your plaia is to raise pigs In con- uection with dairying, raise pigs every year. Because calves ro.ay be high °Ile season Co not change, but atick to pigs." Thi e advice has been lived up to. r have practically followed the seine rule in repard tr farm crops, es- pecially potato growing. Only a few Years ago potatoes were almost value- less in the spring, but I pat in the 'usual amount, which. has been front two and a half to three acres. This 'particular spring of -welch. I write I put in about two and a hale acres. Ow - lug to a succession of heavy Talus. planting was delayed until •Tune: but In the meantime after each wan as on as poesibie the ground was them- oughiy cultivated, the potatoes were up before r fairly knew it and grew so raptday that 1 had no use for parts green the entire season. Before tier next plantIng time I sold from thet two and one-half acres $177 worth, be- sides all I needed to supply a large taleilY wed ter eeee ee- ttext spring I planted three acres and the weather kept good until ad cultivated them thoroughly. use a shovel plow for hilliug, as hill - log is better than levet culture ou our eon. I bad. Just time to hill up scene eight or ten rows when there came on a very long, heavy nth. This was followed by other% so that not anotit- er of work was done. I never took visitors to the potato patch be - use I was esteemed to have it seen. but 1 sold nearly MO worth besides seed and those used in the family. ae tt D MEN --ete Se ething Ahoet Orteresting Career .of ColonTeallee ......,-,T, Several months age tee hing of i con" men, . Coemel William Trailer, eatae te Memphis. The "Ocounel ' had been to Menaphes ' bre. R.- bad many a.equetieto.oces to :hie ti y, more than he really en - la toot. the actin lettancaa•iiip was a snob a aeture .h t the ' tioe.a 1"frcqu9ntly. tnd me. 0 yap. el t.ty ,131 latter years.: . saw II . eat lee font 4 ..e hUcrivano di me ef thi stearabo et, on whitt he hap - 0 ee . to h teaking tt "pteasere" trip, The "eo oriel' was aevar known to ot' on any teher nestiou thee gee of 1.41. nitsurtoeunel ' w-etel i taveois explain . ili Otte Viet he et 1 not teave the boo, by st.y.we the. he heel a isciatte . affilet eta mai e.id noe thee 'hid-- •' elimbing." :. In iteePs of yore "131.1' Pryde or , "Cur.y ' ellatunte, or any oht Luezzlimr of the ioni detective force wout I haw given. a different exptanatIon ot why the t•Cotortel ' del not lea.vit his hoe.. lh yee an ...' Carly" have *Once mosste ihe dark r.ver, and the men whit knew the “Clatorxel" in his palm - est it. ye ere few and et:oh-ring. 'rim "Coiontl '' yet remains, however, tore ht is stet an intenetieg character, mace soagne Leta by the vial- ; atm poeive off.ci as of the Illietile West and the South. 1 The "Co.oners " lest visit to Mem- phis wi:i no:. be fee geoteu wan. He . came down the river oa a boat. 'The tiassongere hot departed and some of [hi boat' crew were :eavinw for "uptown." . "thaitag up towel, Voionele ' eaid a i man wit) was thoroughly familiar • with the "eon" man's pied and Me to - cat situation. "Wee, if I were sure any et my !friends were euff -ring ituy anxiety-. , Ili' ileoee for instanee-I wouid ao I tat. was togniii. I so, ' rip. tr. 1 the etexon. I" in perfect , good heture, bat his facethmenette ; • Wept ite :tail eee the e4y," it -,1 1 ilia fi4Zi.--.".'20 'F',..lx" is all light, I , rbeefelervreed. 1.41:tl'als4ttell'e.:;One ilelrYlle‘ w" Ah. ev .1, sate Toiler, inuhteigt)h• 'Do you know the Vox is a man tit edlaire intenealy; e g rt .1.0 give t 1- . am, a pentee of goo. Mame; .4 thor,. mgh man in his due, fe.rect by i:II neraina. el teats, and restocteil by eat Mutest men. I have 11,1 most pro. ioani te go -4 fot hate Who etee is iu "IA' i'''.1.At.:.1‘0 ° :.ttw words were teehaugete the "Ceentel ' pelt d his =Lige. he :4nd puftet et i frageaur tiger. Tben he saia be might atroil "tot tato the eity later in ate vv ednet." An,1 he dial. Ile Wati tiehighted with the wonderfu: geow.h 4,3f al eityeince he had last had an opportunity of seeing It. Memphis was a:ways a wonderfui city, in his astirnation. 119 met many aid frien is and, whet les geniat manners, made met y new onea. Among thine was one of the most pre - =Meat Coun y effete:a, who w es 1ight9d with the "Co oaths" e43.1711 •tay an 1 flatterell with bet inlet tti n t• drink wine, wheel was • le:. et th e 1 spite of the fact that the /reel ei I it - ed "Coionel" latel known lee r .3: ... before the official wee been -n •Ivo, more famiher wIth his tet re .r i hen nuts* in de The next morning., Mkt a P h s:w ate "Cozumel s' ii'sr' in tit• Cernmerelai Appeei b foto he hae teft his breakftst table and lie al- most fiel ca, of his eitaize. Iii t ap- petite 1e:1 out of him. T$.' 11P,..i: day t 11' "Cteetnel • i ook off his hat ee I. belie 1 stIffty to the hletcri: Cleteak- r...siw bluffs as les boat stearae.1 out. "Yon know, captain, 1 :lite that old town and its p-ope," sae the 1.Calon- t1, as he stooe on the hurricane 67.eek vith the master of the bolt, ear- vey:ng the receding xnetropoils. "And you have good reeson, Colon - I. I suppose," said the bronzed riv- r man, "Ys, the people have a clever way beet them," the "Coionel" replied. 'A system of surprises, you pa:girt ay. One le never prepared, awl of - en overwhelmed, with the reception nai gets." And he bit hs cigar vice- usiy and turned his face to the Ar- omas shore. And there was both history ani in - 'dent behind the "Co:onti s' remark. ir, had chucldel to himself wion he teard the "Foxe wus ail righe. "1 an deal off a ceel deek to the rtst," e said, "I heve known peopte who ouldn't catch a mocking bird in a aga with a pair of boxing gtoves." nd he concintied that he would sre reater and newer Memphis. Ani he Id, until it was ehielded from hie gaze by the walls of the station house. He was known in the city. His "l'ittle ..ets," as the term.ed them, became nown and were repeatee. A few oars after the "Co:onel" was sitting ia a prominent oafe, entertainingiy iseussing a thick, juicy steak with friend. Detective Hayes °hies en- tered. He saw the "Coot -tele reflected in the mirror. Chi:es leisurely ape proached him. "Why, Cotonel Trailort I'M glad to see you," said Chiles, naively. "Sir, you have the advantage of ate," said the "Colonel," with cold, indifferent mien. "The advantage of the draw, Colon- el," said Chiles, with painfal humor. "Sir I don't quite understand you," Traitor, flushing to the lobes of his Poultry mute. The plum trees are becoming very ropular tor setting in ben yards. Experiments at Utah station proved that exercise has definite value In low- crine the cost of egg production. One thousand pounds of poultry will cost less than 1,000 pounds of beet, aud sells for twice as Mitch In Market Eggs are extract of grain, grass and waste food generally, and are one of forms in which to xuarket such products. • In constructing home-made brood- ers, corners are a nuisanee ane ehonie be avoided as far as possited A squa-• top is the cheapest but the corners may be filled in. It is a question just how mudt. vertu feeding Pays. It Las beet claimed that warming alone will doe ble the number of eggs as compare' with fowls where cold grain is fed en- tirely, Proper feeding two or three week:: I t before the fowls are killed for marke. will make a great difference in the price. There is nothing like corn and , gluten meal to give th.e required yel- lowness Land plumpness. The poultry industry is on a boom In the South. Mississippi breeders ; lave organized a State poultry aszo- dation. Eyelids of young ducks' waterinn I and sticking together is generaiie • ,caused by their taking cold and be- , coming, .what might be styled roupY The changes eh temperature in thr morning and Wining from that in. II; r middle of the day, leads to MIS. h Nicely fattened poultry always sera " quickly. When offered for sale. thee h should not have their crops filled elite feed, The bird should fest at 'keel ' twelve hours before being Jellied. Thee mey bave water in the morning beiore ktIithg time, but no feed. quertere toiarate -nde roe etner with 1 r Ms OF TidOleGield Met Rea:bards. Ife wee at, Capt ext Hever, C atri M leen, a looked ap oo ordera lama the obit. That is tee laet time taa- g zeal "C= has been even la Memplfan Poor Trallorl He is the 'ed. tie Jo taf the "'teen" Matia's stet:ere. He ea not put his Loot on terra firms wit out violating the meters of triune chi of pollee, r1e must keep alining, a evety man who knowe tem gives Id that brand of eonsoeition of which t Most reverend and plow, Mr. Oh= -wick was ver, prweic. fohowin unietue and evere,:/atm of the "Co on- a" latest impleesernetees is fro the pen of a writer in the Cineitnia Ihmulrer: detItnxinc‘lenBlialfl tlanaTililitetet°1olinT, bet who of :ate bee tame tenbieg ben petty weft tug in skin pater g on rai.roici trains, lets .1 tt-eeeppi this el:y for a number of yettre an the 1.0.•:: I detectivts had no ide J'xe tit,' hembestie . I four- Lush ing cohmel bad one. Coes:galena news that was recelvae at is, es hem. quirters lete yesterday afternoon t tile effect time Traiiier had b en giv: en e "bo: foot ' oat ot tepee San dueky was greeted wish eoeeeitrebie satiefaction. Bet nue a fellow "skin artiste al ghted frora a tr.•in at eetn :reeky las eotouve cif :,y,:inaggooaf%tlis,elii.tri clItquahrett ries at the hest betel in tee - town. That t4l he wij register at .:,slAt-np:nitoqt thef or a settlement of the tow. mi.-, a Ilitale of the "salve" to the hotel Tee colonel and bis hien) with the checked clothes set teityn ta the titIP- per table. hie tore off .1 few ems words ani ocderee a rere dtPu* on a hot plate. Up in lepper Sanditelty they are not guen.asetneynatit thWe p‘irnepha tevien celle4 in the. vill nearsbal. wit, se wily recurameniat ot le ill it truer° are goo t netey nt arshele tin badge wbitalt rati ins ie. Lloot Street ourep in g el, 1- ”1 when ;11,7 wall; up antt ouien itte etretele len ibis ei tuella it ,n exotet.on. kuew Twitter, . tote him to leave but titeek and t ta wOodie The cotortel ire lied too he woul reersis111.1ite.1 line 7. eloi h`hele. 4,41.14 foe,,, off .."itit sow -tie-too eiihe it. The marsh 1 v. h.t it rm.el by the mo 4. • ill. thee egettittel level 4U it. it dd. $1" fi ° on man. n. r.iteret .,ti care - ea me foe ra to • est • i ; 101 saw that the g et • v. op. tote :7;1,ttli.thotafttiAzudabeilitir.a. add. t41.atia aazinci g.liery pl .yer eta ;4 is hitt few aquals. lu the b wee daps when the "eon" men coel . toe; ou. el*, ar eratratej was al tbe b. yaay of hie gio y. • le .1 311V 1C0113- ing man, of ni et pitytique anal on • of thew legrati utig talkers that melt a a doll u' 10,,fiVe f 1 ow a ket as ails 4a. 1 arAira-1. ;spiel. in the:to d iye s a %%moles.- it:igen/iteration of leg %tools put Ilea 10 11:1VP UP:41'03 dePet. 11. has t be • • •t Bend benedte oft ileee tern =ea= =Xi:ed.-Savage. I Cod's music veill not garish with oae en I tune. -Sir E. Arnold. he• Knavery's plain faite is never eee he I till used.-Shaltespe.are. ef ; In the human le -est two master m pessions cannot to -est. -Campbell, eta this iefe we want nothing • but d- facts, sir; nothing but factse-C. el I Dickena I - tin Judgtxtent is not upon all occasion it required., but discretion always is Lord Chesterfield. There is no better motto which It (culture) eau have than thee warde af Bishop Wilson; "To xnahe reason and the will of God prevail."-Oute titre aud Anarchy. a In youth, grief comes with reerush , end overflow, but it (Wes up. too. !Me y• the torrent. In the winter of life it remains a naiserablo pool, resisting L all evaporation..-Aladame Swetchine. A NEW 1. liE EXI,V.VER TIMES enbaisbed every Mendes, morning ab • Mlles Stearn rrillting 4Louse ra flelisve Street car Conduotore o .e- n etreet, nearly OPPOS130 $4$tOndieWelry Mg Ms/Vs:nes of Street& store, neuter, Ont., by etniN WRITE SONS, Proprietur4 va • ' en! wit n he drifts Imo a tity 11. rr ver falls to put up at tha bate it 1. When he veettot (1 ie a .att he 14 geso•i tat at the (le. it 2 Mid eza NI eol,ts. Tie most adnil aele qa tli , Met h • poettieses is M, nerve. it h carrieit Mot through se u a deb.'. • ei me Without being he ill et. Hi inet le iellinat be ciiitel vo tragh, bu. Le eina ply "hard g II.' 11‘ bate foarie tv°01 vheor awilh:n.tar‘rornwel.i.1 than 10 AUDACITY OF A, 1.1171tGLAR. Z1sehest devil Truant le ;deo ab normally lirge and he can snap the hawser ol a battleship over It whet: 1 itt at its Oiliest expulsion. A few pars ago when the agitatton woe ewecting over the country concerning it a absorpt on of Amine:au brewer - Is l'y ztn ittaglith spa ihete, Trailor, toene the ei.u.tt.on proafet of goo pi. king. Ile went to Lt.xington, tiaere he made such a splendid .v ront" that he es:oared an option o reevery looated there. The syn- dieate would have paid him a. goort round sum for .his op.ion, and it zooid almost feel the money, wbe. he was tipped off, and was forced leave town in a cloud of dust. Th; has always been the bid luck of Wit- ham. He would frame up a Wide, an just about the Cline it was to be ear - tied to a successful xonclusican i wont I be shown up ani would se • the dough vanish. Colonel William Patterson of ti,i knows Trailer, In Columbus at on lima Patterson and Tealler were tie, g then Patterson heti the coin anti Tz.ailor steered him up against' tie bar and told him. to "sling for tht ariake.' Billy kapt buyiug ani er kept on stalling. Ile sale that ha etatild "con" the bar boy out of l5 casco and then he woul I pay In I. lerecnt back. Finally Pinter sexes funds were exhausted and then he told rrailor to make his -spiel for thi -soft." Traitor placed his thumbs ie the ar.mholes of his vest, threweeut his chest and said: "Why, my good friend, indeed I did not know that I was drinking with a man withoue money. I do not know you, sir. Goo: night." ; Patterson felt inclined to land Li' learnah of fives on the point of Trail -1 or's jaw, but he refrained, 'When he was informed yesterday that Trail - sir had been chased but of Upper San- ausky Patterson said that he would s to have hit know that he had Amour... the 3 toes,... A. California farraer is ttilizirg his a /ow eeade raisins by feeding them to a, his- horses. He says they are cheaper then barley or oats, and that the en -es seena to relish them, and keep in 7.00LI condition. Since the break/71g out of the -aver. ib-ee months ago, the government bes paid $1,250.000 to the farmers ef 'Mica enitri• for mules, and $97,500 fer Itorses. The war, has not been ti bad thing for Missouri up to the preset! Feeding rooes to horses is a 'mean more conarnon practice irt rrariand an n our own coun ry, -where we stuff animals with corn in season are out of -season. Carrots for the hp' - and turnips turnips for everything, shonid le; raised and stored for winter. • One of the best four-year-old f dn. Austria is said to be the reetre crossing the American trotter Pelea, Warwick, on a highly bred fire t. mare. This fillr won all be big, at Vienna and is a very 'moire -ea animal. At the recent horse, setae, eine r Richmond, England, in free tem.,: fa -- the best horse in harness, ship. M from Canada or the United Siatera. te- stallion Gold Ring won the e."50 cm. and Fides Stanton was given germ.. place and also highly , come-m-Amil •These borees were exported fro: r. • rade, where them were owned, American trotters. Eoal. enown on American macke, eee Te ca m p a ign ere. ears. "Bat I understand you," said Chiles Coemel, the Chief would like to see Pole" "Oh, ' I see," said Traitor, at once adapting hbeiself to the situation. Richards; let's see, Jerome is his name, Jerome Richards, a nice, clev- sr gentleman. I know him favorably. certainly appreciate his kindly, thoughtfulness in Semenabering me. fel be only too glad be go down and tee him with you. I know you'll par- don me," said he, turning to his com- panion, with whom he had been tak- ing lunch. "I must catch that boat in a few hours, and I want to call and eee a friend of mine before go- ing," and the ,g.eni.a.1 • "Colonel" bow- ed herneelf away from his company, eeing escarted by Detective Chiles. On the way to the police station he raonemented on the growth of Mem- • phis and the wonderful changes; greW reminiscent as he passed ;Jefferson rtreet, where the old Senate saloon Ind gambling palace use to flourish, incl when he r,eached Police Head - I k nought a mansion ha Clifton and that. he had found an oil well on his pro. eaerty, and that it was his great de - ,sire to have the genial Colonel spend the summer with him. Trailer, when here Iasi; was "mug- ged" by Sergeant Kiffineyer. •Pie walked into the Bertillon room and looking around said; "Iudeed, sir, this • Bertillon system is a, wonderful thing. Why, do you know -that it is I• protection to criminate? After ray picture is 'taken I will not be taken tor some one else."- Meraphie Com- mercial Appeal. Street railways in Havana, are to ehange the motive power from horses to electricity: According to the school revilew, only ii.ef per cent. of the papile in ,Am- si.iean high schools are boys. - Sbears in` a steel mill' in Coates - rine, Pa:, eat a .slab of /roe four icier tvide and 'two feet neck at one arokee A bilele and a newspaper in every house, a good school in every district studied and appreeiated as they merit, are the priucipal Support of vw- tue, morality and civil liberty.-Den- lemin Fra.nklie. never could believe that Provl- Owe bad sent a few men into the world, ready booted and spurred to ride, and a 'connote ready saddled and bridled to be ridden. -Richard Ruin. bold. on the seitaotd, 1685. "There is nothiegt" says Pieta, "eo delightful as the heartieg or speaking of truth." For this reason there is no convereation so agreeable as that oe the man Of integrity, who hears with- out any I -Mention to betray, and speaks without any intention to fie. ccive.-Addison. If our plates are oot for time, but for eternity, our knowledge, and therefore our love to God, to each other, to ourselves and to everything, wili progress forever, Knowledge and love are reeiprocal. lie Who loves, }mows. He who Imows, loves. -Char. les Kingsiey. Persons ot genius are more Intl!. vIdual titan any other people, and less eaPable, consecillantis, of fittlug them. &forest -without hurtful corapreesion, into ally -t);•:?,x, smqt1L,numbers or moulds which sxlety p or- der to save its ma'am the troultio of forming their owa charaietere.-e. Jelin Stuart Mlle. If there be no nobility of &smite. all the more indispenzable is it that there should be nobility of accent. --a char- acter in them that bear rule SO ilno and high and pure, that as men come with in the circle of its influence thett involuntarIly pay homage to that which is the one preeminent tion, the royalty of 14rZue. SOtil P N The eucalyptus trees in Australia, penetrate from 180 to 220 feet Into he coil with their roots, whteli absorb an moisture within a raditte of thirty to sixty feet. 4. man'e accueations of himeelf aro always believed; his praisee, never. In the Pacific ocean a lish diet is as common as beef and pork. In this eountry. There are ordeierilet from thirty to forty varieties of fish In the Honolulu raarkee. IL la ge percen•oige of he natives make their living by fishing. The annual consumption of meat in England is 70 pounds per head, 10 per cent. of which, te imported. Between Madagascar apd the coast of India there are about 10,000 is- lands, only 600 of which are inhab- ited. What is the difference between don- keys and postage stamps? One you liele with a stick, the other you stick with a lick. The largest grape -growing region in the world is not the champagne dis- trict of France, nor in the sunny val- leys of Southern California, for West- ern New York owns the title by virtue of 50,900 acres now given over to grape culture. Most Of the province of Tse -Chau, China, is underlaid with large coal - beds and the coal area is said to be greater than that of Pennsylvania. The following Chinese legend an- coUnts for the invention Of the fan itt a rather ingenious fashion: The beautiful lean Si, daughter of a pow- erful mandarin, was assisting at the fest of lanterns, when she became overpowered by the heat and was compelled to take off her mask. As it was against all 'rule and custom to expose her face, she held her mask be- fore it, and gently fluttered it to cool herself, The court ladiee present no- ticed the movement, and. in an instant one hundred of them were waving their masks. FROM THE BEST THINKE: Society -will pardon much to ge- nius anti special gifts, but being in its nature a coaveution, it loves what is conventional, or what belongs to com- ing together. That makes the good and bad of manners, namely 'what • helps or hinders fellowship. -Ralph Waldo Emerson. - Is a' enchanted fairy land Where pleasure is the magic erancL That wielded right, Makes hours like nairutes, hand in hand, Dance by fir' light. ' -Robert Burns'. Strong imphlses are but another, name for energy. Energy may be turned to bad uses; but more good may also be made of an ertergetic nature than. of an indolent am" inn, paesive one. -John Stuart Mills. Still the question I must parry, Still a wayward truant prove; ,Where I love, 1 must not marry; Where I naarry, cannot love. --Thomas Moore. As the truest society approaches al - Ways nearer to solitude, so the namet excellent speech finally falls into sil- mice. Sileftee le 'audible to all men, ' -.a •- tit ali times and itt all places.--•Henrer, David Thoreau. , t5i5 01' • fte ephonographic enemoiatone eog, theeet cars Is a Pew oetiee au17,,,ttk,Ve the overworked coodnettaz tie the, trou- ble of phouting one nauies stres,s, while giving, neater-tee:4 a foettee ehaerree to 1113401At411G eriey „nave arrived at toeir destimaneks. As a matter eoaree, the aaereareatielee wIU 00 verw vain swee,;:s, so tAdt no- body neee he in actuat as to weal it MTS. It is a oboncearateh instruiehat, of pe- e:eller pattern, and it' tittetteed to ea plaieed enove the door at tae aorvrard end oe the car. The le.vett en:eater which it contains has inecteted on it 0. series tire sa.z.;,,,..nes: or. nue StNe LS to te ero.ssve ou the route. en aemoaeb- me a croneing the cone:tete; oleiees a -atom, and the atpearaties Felts: "...tine - :et -nth steeetl 'Change for V', eat Niliar, 5e'cobtal" Any Viave elescial interest may be annotim'el. sue thee a theater, biy shoo or a, howl. It is eiabined -by the inoeutor thee his tontriveoee is equaily atteeeratne to a railroad car. An "enunziator" heing imstalied in each smell passenger vete-, me, the bralteman wilt not he obliged to put his head tinertigb the door am/ oilcan aseme aninteee.g.ealte Chestanw. On Ike vont:any. the daty of enneranneat- les ineenenetion atierat stations wile lee regulated to the insteement. which, just rbefore a etoetobto piece is rereehed, will, at thee touter of a buttoa by the conamter-one eaetten will do Or en tire oars ort a Ueda -inane tem eetietaite anneemeement in a et:lee: eieed ateeleine Another inventor he.s eust oatentea a olltonteerPhie fire atenea, whnii en tee teriaitinag met tal tire itt oet eleed evith the weetarattie, ^ice atiee tie. twine-at:wean of aa elartel. give lien. In the torree of tee i.„(,,zari vonae the exant tomtit/it of the the taoth tc pert:es In the vieettity ny tele- phone, to the tere titmerterterat." itt eerier weeds, the rise a e .441,:..eraturf. In its neighetethood leet ieetuates n to entiSe it mateenatteaey to tete:el:lone eor the fire euetnes and to shout t weitniag lo the people who ai t 1.: tie Pato% Rfietw.mt,,,P.M.4.0ompttnarvne,-- Cut It Yield., fiettorRakrtu Tier: Quarter 4ettea ezraleet, raerdy eat lIli., Granted by the tirettel States ee, . herireetead Is le:anted ier Sutii4z4ta7,,se.i14e4Lz( a;;...4 1.Q,.to tire extreme' ea-et:mane-en taienete 1 VIOria-e. 4114 te art itearia set tee 410i 1 ern end 0! Lake Wcitle titre e 13,`,4011t 011 eleata . et ...tee er yet elairn (tier mae 4le lertitrea Qtateu latet um e. ae 1 cam made, «ad tire (1"-,z 1 i *1110 CAME': .t otetel 45 0.!null it .4.0. e, na went to 1'1i .1&-'.,,. nontit remaa terinte, it a; on . -e,10 5,0;ja:n.> or:4c...t:Isrilil 1 hri e retteviel a :a. it 1. CzJ. then exo-cenotee it at ..tert 20 ee.nto 18 ordee to enetitlate title. "1 saw; the ir:aild larst "winI,.er Whet W.243 itt Etwida. It, is jinn a eant it obout 40 Ceet tin eentalt altoate. 1.1,cat a mile front tn.: teican, what, tide llowa Inte itt, lake tteasetah on in let. Haley has -neat a net tot:atm to tee esiarel erea le tl.ete. es Cow taer says cif Alexander Won an.ah et ail he eurvoyee •aTo01.111 at the istend one woula conelude that a pm =Ma- would titarve death on sueh a naiten spot; hut Ha ley Is not only nee starving. but Is fat %ening Ids ft'anetis atocant. Ile makes te an average about $125 ner month ou ce that 'barren ente. that cost trice entry :fee and IA, rtlaciet ,15 20. "lie,w does he do It? Well, Haley like all Yankees, bao a -keen eye fo Lusinces, anti when he first caw ieland he noticed that it was In tla path of ithe loggerhead and green tur ties as they crane into the lake to tle ce,ean to Tee.J. Ziniey knew that tur ties were greatly ,'ea demand, and le eetight the 'It -land tor the purpore loin eying the dernarid arid adding 0 his hank roil. "As soon as he settled on tbe Islam he began talcing tuntles and *a:tippler; tbeen north, and now his aerateness hat increased so that he easily- nets eieti t month. He has nets steread in wince the turtles are 'meshed as they try tx otter .the lake. Senneternes he finds it 01 nrore huge turtles In the nets. Tau "earths are not nhipped as soon an neratit tot a,re placed in `meanie' re, *- one cense:meted in deer) water aboit lelani. 'There the turtles are ktepr • d fed until 'they are fat enough rst the erheores end then they art . !peed north to he eesnevee eeto that elk:Ions soup which everytece, lend. "Theft eighth of an acre al land 13. 'etter 1.1:1,-.33 a Klondike eilaisn. It costs work anad the stivoly 01 rrties 1,;h:iI1 never give out; nor wig the r.erltes of opittnez ever cease to call •,tur tie ecoo."--tertlanta Conerti eel in AGE , 53,IG Referring to the age et the brig tree= et California, Prof. C.E.13eseey remand/ In Salentse that he once oeunite,d with inruelx vete the rings ce gennetel oe the ti.ee of which the stereoice-institutes ate floor of the so-et:Leldancing pa- vilien. 'Sere count itte.e made from eir- rrumferenee 00 cem:er, and every rfd.r.4 that d,istance was eounted, nc estimates or gueese bedng rriade. The result awes that 1,147 rings were c•ounti ed, a,nd ay.coodinigly It is saife to saa bhat this tree, whitoca was fqi.,11 24 or 21 feet In diameter, and ',co,nsid,essazie htore alia.n 300 feet dn heigfat, a,conired ',these dirnerts:ons in eleven hundred forty-seven years. I'mf. pesser3, doubts whether any °fettle enlisting atrneceis yae,apprilr.rearch tee age,, two,theos, - WflinkieteleG peer T�U15 BRAIN: Va. -French solentist 'hare determirie,i that the military nod marvel proeesasiona moot q,uichiy wear onit the .bradei. Gui ott 100,000 naval and triiiitaey men; 191 are confirmed idnatics. Next- oonte tihti alheral prefesalocnes, arrests heat:Ana- the est, irceilewed closely by .ileayYere. anti more diStantly :by doctors,- deny-, lat. rary mei and servants. The milber oe those railho ,go mad ds 177. in 11 100,000. Domesticservants, and zy ea -borers, run the prefession men . .J Close, sending 155eqt at esich 100,. CC:P.) to tfire asyl,tian;, These' are epee-awe:1 ' a ilorrig", Aistitaalice bY, itlet;ibartlee, °nee 23 cZ where' leo in each 100,000, the grolltp-wthdah is most faveralb11&. IS, contrary ,k,o genenal Ibetdo comme,hcitaa men, Nvihfich „senda o._ey „ate out of 100,000 to the aswition" 11. • , Itil t.eiteerne:Iitin'teetan to cents I,r Hue a cent@ 0( insert insertein at crib" intuits should i l.ct„ku.tri 34(111317); .2:::/t,n1.1..p.L11:141:::31:0::::::: k ,.11 e iargel,t aod be .3 facitaplicton t^it: kk.ittoty t,lik1011. An wrr, to rubtea to u.1 littnre. i t 100 et a r(na...n 1,11..i;0;1::::11:1:11;134:10:::0;3trtIl;i1:01-sezi:11$;"(::::1;.:41::-;;i."'',4:e:",0. i...,,.e,11:4s,.:1..f.:::::.:.4.P.:Irtilcrahrira 1 ,..1.;-3, ktu n 1.1.,14otni ,(t?x.r.i.(..„eeirz,,nuist, at..h.tioli-pi li,k,10%,.11440C.14 \ 1 ‘11(1J, , to eena it ea t the p. *was is made, In.,ett 1:::4taci-it,..:4ilte,:ksoteplili,ift.:t7:volwoi::::...50.4:1,111:,e„ht.. orefiti:lept 44_ _en: 3- in a thfor?-no-crapt on-. ' -.1 '- male eue : '1:•-;:.- t'il'it41,', letitufk r11.1:1:1714IT'tz'azi..e'vf‘'d4r''eatrItt'itn:' 'luf'aiati;dt: a t:S.,:e.::46.,re4u/P4rnottiereedrit°eTeetuee.`" 4routah tuxittetrteds* .er it erinet tole evaders 0 of intentional ei irlitz,97-,:-.Ztac,' of' tit r:rnr, D17/34;4. DILTUSNESS* TOMO WE& COOTIPATION. SALLOW SKL 1CQMP.EX 1 IC A AOHE• These pills cure ell diseasee and dis- orders arising from weak heart, worn out nerves or watery bleed, such as lealpita- ' tion, Skip Beats, Tertabiug, Smotherieg, Dizziness, Weak or Paiet Spells, Anemia, Nervousness, Sieeplestnees, Brain Fag, General Debility and Lack of Vitality. ' They are a true heart ton!, nerve food anti blood enricher, building up and renewing all the worn out and wasted tissues of the body and restoring perfect health. Price 50e, a box, or 8 fox $1,25, • at all druggists.' 50 YEARS. EXPERIENCE TRADE MARRS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &c,„ Anyone sending a siretab and ,destription may quickly aseertain opinion fit yvnetber nit invention is probably patentableCommunica- Dons strictly torineentral. Bandbook on Patents seigtIgt% OIdett MVIIIICrireP:itlenettvp special notto, without cbaree. lathe Scientific iinietican A handsomely illustrated 'weekly. Largest eir• cnititiOn of any Scientific jOurnal. Terms, $3 a year: four monthS, $L Bold byall-newSeettletit VUNN & Co 361Broadway, New York 'Branch office. 925 v Bt. Washington. 5.0 urt - o Eat. The painnausea and dis- tress that Dyspeptics suffer after every meal can all be permanently- removed by Bur- dock Bitters, • It tones up aria restores the stomach to normal condition so that it digests food without causing discomfort. ' • liere's proof positive: miss 'Maggie Splude, Dalhousie, NtB., wrote the .following: I have been a sufferer from Liver Complaint and Dyse pepsia for the past two year and felt very miserable. I could not take numb food as it hurt me to eat. My friends Bald, Why don't you try B.B.13., 1did so, using two'bottlesewhich made smelt a complete cure that I ea.nhow eat any- thing I like without it causing ale disconte fort." •