University of South Carolina Libraries
to * ?lr votfc. Boats a? so* iot ? fro* iuUrferia^ bat to strikes fciattif. Agrfcaftorat. JR# oilj f**fca potato a*lung*s attack* both the fotiafe sad the bjber PO&J plasty caus ffcrl* the ooc cfio bhgfat of the vines and in the otherwhat is best known as potato rot. ' The' first appears ?Me on the leant is Seen in jellow spot*!' a ad a powdery substance- on .their sat. fee*. These spots soon tarn brown, en^ finally the whole plant becomes infected < I *-5^f ' V the leaf spinas come i a contact with tip tubers, or if |ba fungus reaches the?, through the stems, ratting of the tubers Woes* provided, there is a continuance ojWm, moiat weather, wbick-seenrr &T ' of ttfe disease. in seasons wuim the at nt?ph*ej? cool the to pa a& not at tacked, and if the sdil remains coot ? the tuber* will often, escape whsn'^tka tops destroyed. .4 Unfavorable climatic conditions ol lffra>ac cannot be prevented, bat it should ie remembered that a loose, light s^ii . does not promote the decay like oni In which water is held aacf the air ecleq : t with difllcaUy . Deepiy^Janted potatoes may escape, while tubers lightly covered may mire, readily contract the diseaM from the vines. As a rule potatoes shouM be di% as soon as the vines jjtov thai - they have been struck by the rot* ^ i A | an applied preventive, some of thi experiment stations hare" reported favor, sbly on *wr*jiag the vines three or fOq times , v?JBogtleaax mixture. TTsei -l_ with Paris zmzajMr* aiier tfo? of a Texat n>i*brU?r of the go> pel that line* January 1801, there; hu been SflUmrrttars in Dallas Co. : and no.convictioa. Thu appaUDgj [Cord, we anre, Las jiOt been ! ehocU't O'lwirleston noticed t:>at the above n? Governor Till out failing a fympftirmxj TTRTT WJ^ HWj, [, fitot feeding, sour and de kills left from last feeding widen chill from exposure ind and wet ground, all may iwea in young calves. Even fl^er from too mtich and/1 ?fct is best to give calve^. HT miilc. Any sudden \ produce baneful results. / h? calves should be suckle<y r for two or three days, as . contains the natural physic the removal of the mecon fceticky accumulations in ?awry -born carves. IT sot Be excites irritation Of file r ?3 membrane of the bowels, ' pod calve%.of delicate and n, or those having diar tmatiocu ere meet sahjedt If the calf's braafcb smells : nach secretes too much :'ra tesspooafol >of m sodi:;*v.wiU oocrect A tal^oosM of *4 ?or jowg pootej. '"T A di-j na it theoNteljmmdiarj far the hmtth of terkeyt. . Better flotftt better whea ooW water it (?Ipai '? j j" Air-f Isked lime dettod oftr the ytrdi it t good pnnittn of gipM ? 8w*et pets Ml lie gfm ntppoft at loon m &*f "fit* good start ia growth. ^ '*u ftHMlfaMf - Hftft ' SliHNflt ;ir#SV* Aej *thw nt b < ln> both of food aodiifc*. la Werax unethhr. if the touoi DOttitri ? mixed ihta i? ctttp ttdm Mflkthoold no* b&efe tod to etbbee before the cresm it tkfuift, tt ia tMt wsj * jpetidotiof cms It tatt Pemeteat kthg ot hetlth tad -flesh iadkatet tbot e cow it tofiafiag fntf ^oe tiiaeot, tod her milk tbouWaot be twoctflt ftHRpf, jwnonntW Hon Idbllart, put ?Ue li, staytp* would mnk^r a bi around the e.irt !i one ami a. twaMkwwl J, |L !?****?/, has been ike sunfio ror o t had (itjfotpd to L? ?*> Empire. >1. Campaign Thr following i# program to l?e ?>!U counties of the date forward : C'ht'iUM Huh!, K ;r?h?v?, ,) ot some species of sunflower is used m making-oil which, is consequence of su perior ceic r, flavor, tod taste and its low price, has largely taken the place it Russia of the French table oil. Is an other species of sqpdowec the seeds are sold to be eaten somewhat as peanats are j in tbis country. After the oil baa been i pressed out of the seed it is sold in a f ^jC^ke form as food for cstt'e, the exports i ofThis from Russia to Germany, Dsn* msriv and Great Britain aggregating of late years nearly 100,000,000 pounds a year. The suoflowes stalks are gathered from tb?ifield? end dried a piles, and Lave very largely takes the place of firewood in the country district*. Ia fa<ft, thew stalks are prefened eves to pcne wood, producing a quick and hot flame Jfire. As about a toil of suci fire wood is gathered from X* acre of -land, j this is looked upon aa a decide J advan- j tage In tijose districts where wood is j scarce. The ashes of the sunflower con Una high percentage of potassium, sad art hugely naed n a fertiliser. Uodei the system c If estivation adopted, tho stalks at tte asaflowerart often three inches in diameter and about eight feet ong, sometimes forming many heads, ome of winch are mom than a foot in Hanieter and containing about 2000 cede. 1 oorder to grow the plant pref tin have a fertile mm* op irit ^ ^ CWuoIhii | o< every rank go bareheaded ' .s^-;vh;- : nvf /? : ' fashionable ehiaa mast now Tfc?? ?? three thnownd f jmale com poaitoaintbaUeited State*. ( The world's typewriter record i* 18$ words a minute,^ by elect* Rastfing skirts are dacidadly the tiling with European ladies of fashi*. Paris ha* one wooun chamitt, Mile Li Cler*5k,who- passed afirat-clatt ex&nraa^ Hon. ?'?; ? i'M 7 ?' Severe! titled Boanan w>man here sold their jewels end lace* for the fam ibe sufierers. Crocodile skin shoes tor yoaog women wil! be one of the fashions in footwear fifaiie summer. Worth, the Parisian dressmaker, works hard aad regularly, potting in tee hoar* \ day at his detk, Mrs. Edison, wife of the electric tight1 expert, prefers candies to any other form of household illumination. Mrs. Tnena Weil, of California, gets, 110,000 e year in tto insurance bosiness, the largest salary paid to sag women. The Woman's Medical College of Chi cago has becotae a department of the Horthwestern University of Evaaston, HL - Idas Charlotte M. Yonge, the author has given $10,000 for building a mis j elenary college at Auckland, New Zea? The Empress of Germany has mani fested a deep interest in the religious snd charitable institutions in aad about Mia. A young St. Louis girl is said to have made e profit of $1300 lest year In fur nishing bread for the Woman's Ex To make your bureau drawers sweetly odorous, cover the bottom with layers of China silk filled with sw?et smelling powder. Shadow cretonnes, so culled because they do not show any decided pattern until placed against thelight,are summer favorites. > ^ ; - . A female preacher in Page County, Virginia, has made application to the County Coprt tor permission to perform the marriage ceremony. | \ Madras muslin in ptim leaf and art. basque scrolls are being used tor draping parlor, dining and bedroom or-^e&side and suburban cottages. ] { ^ In Rone, Hi J., there!!} a colored chvch. under the ministration of a col ored woman preacher of gjood education aad considerable power. A movement is on foot in Chicago to induce Mayor Washburd to appoint a number of fashionable women to seats in - [ the Boerd of Education. ; Most New York women won't Relieve it, buithawomen of Paris. do not wear what are known here aa Ffonch-heel hoots when they ere out walking. " Paul Deschanel, the Frenchman who was over here recently studying the> labor question, pronounces the girts of San FrancascO the prettiest in the country. The flAchine for making square-bot tomed paper bags was- invented by Margaret L. Knight, who has since then invented a machine for folding these i*8? look upon, 1^****? Un?tOQb !**?* ?ra-?cc _ AMtdl infe Hoppin, of. Ober the one woraun in the ___ claw of twenty at the last comtnmceroeat of the Oberlin Theologi cal Seminary. , It is estimated that of er six thousand women in the United states act as po3t mistresses. The largest number for any one State ? 483 ? are in Pennsylvania and 460 in Virginia. Tho Harvard "Annex"' for the ac 1 commodation of wozaenstudents now his 241 names on its books. Thirteen years ago the dumber of atudents there was only twenty-five. ; James H. Fish, for many yeavs official stenographer of the New York Supreme Court, says it is easier to find a iirst-class stenographic clerk among young women than among young men. *,Ths "Ella Reed" House, which is to j be ofrtned as a home for Boston street wsafc, is being built by Mi's Cynthia Btta, a business woman, in memory of v i beloved niece. Tbe Rav. Phillips Brooks laid the corner-stone. i The bargain counter flourishes in Paris i m in the retail turn* M th* SWWi. "Occasion" is the sign by wtftcji ' it ]? known, and the Parisian housewife ! is not a wb;f behind the housewife of j America in knovriog how to take ad ran- | tsfleof it. Felix, is making dresses in different styles, bat sll r tend toward the. 1830 reodos, and shov even a leaning in favor of the Empire, bet this is as unde cided. Wbut slaves we are to fashion; every one is execrating the Im*" >*** * . & and yet evffcy woman orders her? made Some uniaue featurS>^e5j?intrc>'!ncs'4i nt a wedding in Wisconsin recently. Bs sides the maids of honor, best man, four bridesmaids and four usher?, yne lady icted the part of Queen Venus, dressed ta ri?ic robes, with a jeweled crown on her bead. ; Her part was to bring the minister from some hidden retreat . The graceful arrangement of lu ce will be the prominent feature of all . summer gowns. ' A new design is of black Caan tillf net, with spray 3 of lily of the valley sad lily lea*es?v4t measures forty-five indies in width. Another design is of black nrt, with a start of small jet beads. Russian net, with a cheoile border and a spot design is effective. IWooRirer, k Alaska, is g^r. its five tncrat bs rTip*?if?5Swy.'-?)?a *?? *s tbe Jm?*j ntm^Aei! a! way from in front of his pUce; i ^WW| houae clear of weeda. L 8*W the ftnti; eoatflr the aahee f&m tto? % reeerring that from i ?tot* jit poitlratod kad, ! or weed* i ?ppe?r i&l them 1>jl application of aeh. Very j fruit truei adjoining wiBilse 1 bitt it will kill ihe gra? uAjit beauty <if the Boston A GOOD POLOHTNG FOW&EB. "M One of the beet pohehiog powders that wars erer used ia my kitcheo, writes a housewife, I di?xm$ed qoiwby acci dent. The range was beioa cleaned oat, : end in the flue under the orenthere wa> ? a quantity of^ny dust, asort of smoke j deposit, aa wre as flour, that was taken ; out witXmJarge apoon. In washing the Ipooig k wne noticed that a mysterious brilliancy was acquired, and the credit': foe this aria qittckly ginn to the ?raoke, dust SinOe then we have always used it for poliihing tinware.? New Yofk* Journal, j ? : v . DEMSBT6 FOB SUHHBR DATS. At the summer season of tbe year, say* the New York World, a light puddiox Tn a cream served. with fruit; makes the best kind of dessert. Tbey may be usol forluncheon or made rich enough to grace a dinner mpnu. The following recipes can be used for either purpose :j Rice kerringqe? Boil one-half teacup of rice till very soft, drain it dry, beat the yolksot four eggs light. Use ooe. half pint of milk; batter the siw of an egg.; (jhfrte the rind of one lemon! iijt the rice when soaked, add poo teacup of sUgir and a little salt. ; Bake one-half hour. Beat the whites of the four eggs, .add throe tablespoon fu Is of sugar and the juice of the lemon: Spread this ob the top and rlturn t? the oven uutil slightly brown. Eat coW. Bavarian Cream? One quar fof cream, two tabftspoonfuls of sugar, one-half box of gelatine, one cupful of water, fout eggs (yolks)? flavor with vanilla. - Soak the gelatine an hour in the water, whip atpint of cream to a frothy boil the other pint of cream and tb4 sugar; Wtoen slightly Cooled stir in the jyolks of the eggs, well beaten. When quite cold na? it haa begun to thtoScea stir without ces sation until it is very smoOtfcrthea stir in the whipped cream Ugbtly until well mixed. ^$la& in . a mold and *et cm ice. . Servd with strawberpe3. Almond Costard?Blanch and beat four ounces of almonds with a spoonful of water. Beat a ptnt of cream, flavored with vanilla and mix with; it the yoke of four eggs, with as much! sugar as will make it pretty sweet; , then add the almonds. Stir it all over a alo w tire till it is of a ; proper thickness, but do not boil. Pour it into cups oi glasses. . " Delicate Pudding ? One cup of straw berry juice, <vie cup of water, three eggs, three tables pooofuls of corn starch, sugar and a pinch of salt. Let the water aad jui(Ce come to a boU. Mix the coru starch with a little water and salt. Add the juke fmd boil ten minutes. Beat the whites of the eggs to a foam, but not stiff, and itir into the syrup after taking from tile stove. Sweeten to taste. Put into a mould and serve with soft cos tard around it. A _ Bohemian Cream ? Rub'aptarof fresh gathered strawberries threigfi-a sieve. ~h Add six ounces of powdered su^ar and .the juice of a lemon; dissolve one and a . half ounces of isinglass in one-half pint water, lpix all well together and place the didi-upon the ice, stirring it until it begins to set. Whip nearly a pint of cream to^a light froth and stir into it fill the mold and let th$?^r7jttrries; price# than e\T u sliouUl ye4 m\ J. n psrt itr.UKIU ; serve. Then plunge it intovvara^racCT for an instant, wipe it dry and torn 9*ii the cream on a dish. Tapioca Cf earned Pudding?' Tiro heaping tablespoonfuls of tapioca, one half;' cup sugar, three eggs, a little nut meg?, one quart of milk, three tablespoon fuls of sugarroee small {easpoonful of vanilla. Soak the tapioca over night in water , enough to cover it. Add the yolks of tW eggs, nutmeg ah(Urhalf capful of sugar. Beat well together. Boil the milk, stir iu the mixture and cook five minuies'or more. Spread the whites, beaten to a stitf froth, over the top, after adding three teaspoonfuls of 'sugar and the vaniiu ?* Ambroasia? Place in a deep glass dish alternate layers of grated cocoanut, sliced oranges and sliced pineapple. Be* gin with the orauges and use cocoanut last, spreading between each layer sifted sugar. Serre with sponge cake. Delmonico Pudding ? One quart of milk, fire eggs, three tablespt?o3fub<<lof ? corn starch, ; sugar to taste. L& the 'milk come to a bait, be it t'ue yolks of five eggs and Ithe whites bt two with the sugar, a little salt, aid the well-beaten corn starch wet with a little of the milk | cold, flavor with ^anilh. Hcald the I nniture until quite thick, pour it into a pudding dish and place in the oven to glaze over. Beat the whites of . the eggs to a stiff froth, add sugar to milceathin frosting, flavor it delicately. ' Spread over the pudding aui brown slightly. To be eaten cold. ? , r Velvet Cream ? One quart milk, three eggs, one-half , box gelatine, one cap sugar, ooe-halK cup powdered iu/ar. Soak the gelatine in part of the^ miik half an boor. Put tbex-Qjst of the milk on the stove in hot water. W,heu^thc milk comet to a boil add ttie yolks oft^ eggs, well beaten, with t'ae cap of sugar ana un gemtiuc. it nea it -co thicken take it off, and when nearly cold add the whites of the eggs, well beaten, with the half cup powdered suear. _ _ O" ? * Cherry Oustard? Make a custard of a pint of rich milk and cbe yolks of five eggs. Sweeten and flavor. While hot add one-half, box gelatine dissolved in cold water. Set in a mold. Pour around it ifi the dish, when served, a sauce of jtefl k ^ J andjUuckfen Decorate with ? VJ*"' : ! 1 1 1 1 1 I - i ' * * 7 WWe? "Ufcaries i %ant someimoaey. Hoiband ? 4,I can't let you have it I f*r?youi chec'c yetterday.'' Wife? T< Wall, that'll D<^"?rn you should want to give nra c&: . c; to-day. "?Detroit There are sSrae people s ? Jofin v con .ftftotod that tMg wouhi use ff. HO-toa 'wmm I lof/tt | ''S3* than _ >?ng ?pca? tsrv come# back .to. On the samet think of heaven, scape of joy and picis? the rivers life, the thrones of _ of everlasting lova. that I ooold bring he tangibles and make really i*-tbe great ni lisoati ss the sea ? rolls and before!! Unprofitable to ? off upon that land which 8*. John de _tfceJ*ees of T&SSjX . mis account in m heaven aa it ison a 1 came to New Yartc day that Koai ' and be saw the m flung in " (Qbi bom " foolish to wwa^jpLu? my tax? s pea It is a time , of the birth or w perhaps of thedOi I and. depot of all ages, the puWr of Oodrit uad terse* - ? . ' : : ! , "This account in rnvteit gives 4 picture tff ?W*-* s holiday.: JtoftH amsit _k f^ the fi|gt time on tiw day that Kossttth arrived frSn Honzarf, J " lifted, and thenou* 1 idhebeerd the mry^i Jnai - heaven _ $??&* srhjps Jeataa, deSDOttfOL because of the i rushing hi I of the millennium. I : know not what, bat it doss seem to me in reading this passage as if it ware a holiday inxheavsn: this I beheld, land totngreatSnulti tode .which no man ooold number, of all nation* and kindreds and people and. toogttes, stood before' the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with ; white robes, and palms in their hand*, and cried with: a load voioe, <? ? ' upon taetnrone, anqunto u I shall speak to yotf of heaven? their number, tilt their dresathair symbols But bo# shall I begib by ts hombersof those in peavsn? curious estimate by Ian calculates how tone the lMt.MdhowaMjjt" generation, ana ttto . matter, and says hetfa twenty-seven trfllioas of bare no faith taribis ? thefplaln -?? which sittsth {Lamb."-* . L glorified in anteoedentsi I song.) of the en a1 nan who m going to areinoach the whole Br# will be in dorr, I IsliSSf take * text-4t > maii can : One of the most Ijipiswlv^ things 1 hate looked upon is an army. Standing upon a hillside you see fort* thousand or fifty fchou? pand men pass alqag.. \ You can hiirdly imagine the imnrastfion if you have not actuf ally fstt it. But yon mat take aft the armies that the earth bas e ver smb.? the legions -of fijpnaoherib end Cyruf and Osssar. 'Xerxes and Alexander and Napoleon, and an or modern forces am put them in one great array, anrfsihen pn some swift etcea you may v*l?le Wong the line and review the tjoops; and that accumulated -host from all ages aeema like a half formed regiment compared; wfttf the jgreat array of the redeemed. ? j I stood one day ait Williamaport, and saw on the opposite side of the Potomac the fah>ee coming down, regiment after regiment, and brigade after .brigade. It seemed a* though there was no end to the procession. Bat now letmetnke the field glass of St. John and look off . upon the boats of heaven? thousands upon thousands! ten thousand times teaTthpusand, one hundred and forty T and fouHhoqaand, and thousands of thou sands, ontil [put down the field glass and say, 41 cannot estimate it? a great multi tude that no man cann Ton may tax your imagination and tor tur^ybur Ingenuity and freak down your powers of calculation in attempting to ax press the multitudes of. the nae*se<l from earth and the estraotured of heaven! and talk of hundreds of hundreds of hundreds, ) of thousands of thousands of thousands*?* J millions of million? of mHUora,, until your |* head aches and your heart faints, ana ex hausted and' overburdened I you exclaim: f'l cannot count them? a great multitude thai no man pan number . But my subject advances, %^rtells you j of their antecedents, "of all nations ana km* . dreds and tongues." Some of them spoken ' Scotch. Irish, German, Tf.ngiiah, Italian, | Spanish, Tamil, Choctaw, Burmese. After men have been long in the land yotf can tell by their accentuation from what nationality they oame, and 1 suppose in the great throng around the throne it will not be difficult' to tell frdm what part of the earth they came. Thaw reaped Sicilian wheat fields and tftbsp picked cojjpn from the pods. Thjesi lies gathered tamarinds ill II ?< ncK , ,ui Md rams. ij^anww, And those by Siberian .10; the epats far up on tbe fought the walrus and wqiw of everlasting snow, and t songof aer^wingedbir&in a ? TheJ *&re white., They WAPa t*<w4 * r^ulW The** regions ird th-} !n thick - ? j nWe waiie. . ioey Were black. They were red. They were copoer color. From ail lands, from all fc^es. They were plunged into Austrian t dungeona. They passed through Spanish Inquisitions. They were confine ! in Louden Tower. They fought with beasts in the amphitheater. They were Moravians. They were Wajdenses. They were Alblm***^ rru ? were SfoMi Covenanters. Th#v They wore ? v WVUU OOVI Sandwich Islanders. In this world men prefer different kinds of government. The United States wants a republic. The British Govern ment;neeis to be a constitutional monarchy. Austria wants absolutism. Bat when tbey oome up from earth from different nationalities they will prefer one great monarchy? Kiug Jesus ruler oyer iff And if that monarchy wer? disbanded and it ware submitted to all th?i hosts of heaven who would rale, than by th?> unanimous suffrages of all the redeemed > " J ?' ?uuxag08 r_.. ^rist would become tta' n* universe. HajfadTcb houses of 1 ? 1 rfcht, lent of the - -.1) ; bills ot BrwssS5Sffi 5 (Mil can you imagine it? .. ??? ? Grange oonmingling of tastes, of histories, >f nationalities, "of all Nations and kindreds md people and tonguee. " My subject advances and Mis you of res of those in hearetL T^e object of in this world is not only to veil Hie bat to adorn it The God who dresses e^p^ing morning with blue ribbon of round the brow and earrings of dew hang from tree branch and mantle of oac&adlhuig over the ?houMer and the ted slippers of the grass for her feet? I that]8od;d?ee nob despise beautiful i Wen* what : aUft we wear in nf * igntfliiMi clothed itor^Ba^; world , ccmrmttu the toil of a and from 1 rent, arid *oqm and cooed 3b white. I see a soul goil $rom alt this ?ceaa of sin and tn gjter j. I seem to hoar Mm say: tesr/' ' To hesreaij joy aed f reeriotn, V ' From earthly care sod Hears. ) When Cbrltt my Lord thill gathfc All Ilia redeemed again, , Hia kin^lom to inherit? f Good -night tiit then. . Ihear raj Sarknr calling; ; The iJorf?? tooor has coater I Tftc angrf gttarda are read* Tojjnidetjwvoottmoiar? $ That hand once jbflld tho implement of toil ?* wMd ?d Um tirord of war, bat now it tot odea doWd branches from the tree of We a* titty sHWd before the throne waving their palms. Onoe he wh 4 pUgriul da earth ? be crunched the bard crusts? he Walked the weary way, bat it i? all gone now^the tin Cs, the weariness gong, the stnlnw gone, sorrow gone. Apt&rist stands op be fore thegreat airay of the savad and te* counts His YicfeeSfee It wffl beHkethp rockitar aad testing <f a forest is a tempest as all the redeemed rim Up, host beyond m>st, rank betqodnuik, waring their palms. My sfabject makes another advancement, tad speaks of the soag they stag; Dr. Dick* hi a very learned Work, mr? that among other tbingsia beared he thins* they will gtve a great deal of timato tile study of arithmetic end the higher branch* of mathematics. I do aotbelieve ft It would upeet my idea of heaven it I thought so; I nsrsr liked mathematics; and I woald rather take the ^representation *of my tefct, which describes the oocupatian of heaven a* being joyful psalmody. "They cried with a loud voice, saying, Salvation unto Our God." la this worm we hare sscular sopgs, nursery songs, ' Iwatmen's songs, harvest soon,' sentimental songs; but la beaten ws wflfhavatastotor only one song, and that will be tike song ot salvation from so eternal death to an. eternal heaven through the; blood of tiMDsm&that was slain. . . '?]> ? In this world wttave plaintive stag?? songs traaulous with eorrow, songs diigstfol forth* dsad; boUa hgsven thsra win ba no sigttngof windOm-waft&^bC anguish, no weepiorsympffimy. The tamest song will be ballelpUh? <?e dullest tune a triumphal mriireh. Jsymnong the cherubim! Joy among the seraphim) Joy among the rau* somedi Joy forever I On earth the music in churches is often poor, because there Is no intersst in it or be xsuss there is no harmony. Some would not sine, some could not sing, some sang too hign, some sang too low,, some sang by fits: and starts, but in the great au-j dienoe of the redeemed on high all voioes will be ' ^ooordant, and' the man who on earth oould not tsll a plan tatlon melody from the "Dead March in SanP will lift an anthem that the Msndels sohns aad Beethovens and theBohumanai of earth never imagined, and yon may itend through aU eternity and listen and there will not be <me discord in the great anthem that forever rolls un against the great heart of God. It will iAt be a solo, it will not be a duet it will not quia&isfc but ao innum erable host before tfe$ thrafti, crying, "Sal vation unto (Ar Qod and- unto tneLamb.'' They crowd all the temples, they bend over the battismeats, they flllall the heights and depths aad lengths and breadths or heaven with their hn? nrr? Wh?t Mopte wtre tak m Into the Tempi# of .Diana it! vu snob a brilliant room th*t thvwilwkyiMtoBthilrioiri. 8om? petoto btdlMfc their dfht by jnrt looHn* ?&? brilliancy of that to this d?op*frt_^ ^ M*nm would always chargB him. "Tak* heed of your eyas." cm! when IgUok.of the song that go* up around the throne of God, so jabflaat, manf voiced, multitudinous 1 feel like suri "Take heed ot jour ears." It is ao U3 m a weary lurid And the chorturt-; in, "Chriit tha shadow of a rock that guided u*f&rough the thick; when all other lights went oat si sky the morning star, pouring li soul's darknett?" And the choi? ... in, "Christ, the morning star,st soul's darkness." They will s song, saying, "Who is He tty all our way, and breathed s our soul, and bloomed thro > tempest?" And the chor "Christy the lily through frost and rui, raifiinr nciie. -~ey ting a ^ 'Who is He that to uslfiMn the frowning crab, and ^,-wuod the dttkest ravine of troulle, and brought cool in the temples and refresh tnent to the lip, and was a fountain in the midst of the wikfernessf and then the chorus will come irif' "Christ, the fountain iu the mi'lst of the wilderneM." Mv friends, will you join that anthem? 'Shall we make rehearsal this morning? If we cannot sing that song on earth we will not be able to sing it in heaven . Can it be that our good friends in thac land will walk all through that great throng of which I apeak looking for us and not findbag us. rill thev coma down to the rate and Viakjf e uf?*n ? ? l'lffiiites or flondarA*. Ia the early days of the American ma hogany trade ia the interior of the main land1^ party of woodcutters on the MoUo Riverj- British Honduras,' claimed to have discovered and captured a strange little being which suddenly emerged from the forests, and was too startled by the sight of the whites. to make its escape. It wa* a dark skinned girl, about eighteen yean old, and not quite three feet high. She had no covering except her luxuriant DiacK Hair until one of the men her his red tUnnc! shirt, which on her reached to the ground. Though very wild she waB by do means stupid, as wa* proved by her ready consent to pilot the party to the settlement of her pwple, who, she told them in the Maya tongue, were an agricultural people living in a ?ecluded valley. . Having gjwdsd the n le distance into the Jbreitsnesui ? ' when hc*sc?p l* ib of voifces. quite ir people for l}toe little Sorted ofl ,v i would taftrttot inty the woods, and U its Patents have aeter sin^-w^ by Anglo-Saxon eyes. Wiufottt-. be fie present peculiarities "of th* itaja^ itanls of those unexplored wilds, certain it .seems chat within historio times a pygmy race ba? oecupied this lantof the .Mayas. ? New lork Sun. Tlie largest raisin producer in tb^ United States lives in Yolo County. CaI., ?vhio has 1200 acres in bearing. Tbe | largest raisin vinejard in one-field I ?ctg< i? iTbUi* Coantf. CaL .ifiv Xf?. SetharlfciuL :8a Cuiwdme # P j swelliutrs IaJ1 j wb|i:h 1 had old U1I I was 52^ begtui taking Hood i saporilla I was fe< j ^discouraged wi' uArfceomatte. lit ^Icfaghteold r 8. walk two bloc I falntfne K rrm tt all aad lean i tssssmc HOOD'S PHJJBWthe Pttiw Xh*7 M^Sfe?Uoa#iul co 1 'TT^n^ ? ?-- -* pRAlBta wolf si art crsating haTOc among itock near Hlkbom, Wis. ~ - otrcngtn, aw* if jetton, tones we nerTw? create^appatite. The beat toniq for Nursing Mothers, weak women and children.^ Thjs Scotch- Irish oongreM at Atlanta, Us.. halAfa inter-ting tfrrss dsjrf #eioo. ? fh?(hty On* Itlf frtilt* ii ? "J 1 ' , OA* TOO TtMt fttfe WOE?? Thsasts a S lnoh display adrer; lsement la this pMer, this ?eek. which has so two yrCrdt aUke elcept one Word. The tame is trueof ?ach n??* one appearing- each week, from The Dr. Harder Medicine Co. This house places ? "Creec?mt* on everything they make and pun li?h. Look for it, aend them the name of the word and they will return you book, B*ACtI? rcL ntHooaAPHS or asMPLwi run. Trs Wfoming Experiment Station has ?ix experiment farms in different sections. MAt4.au cured and eradicated from tha arstem by Brown's Iron Bitten. whiohe* riches the blood, tones the nerves, aids diges tion. Act$ like a charm on person* In fcoeral *U health, (giving new energy and etreettiu Steel will soon ba do#n to one cent ;a pound, i - v : j ; " I have found yottr Brad ycroti ne s^sqre care Nx* Oklkakb, Ls., is m k**? ? ?oarthouis and jail to cost $350,000. ? : Sick Hkadachx. latitude, weakness and loss ? of appetite caused by malaria can bfciro mediately aired by Beet: ham's PUR 6a | Eowxv . Amold hat returned to 'f?' c - If afflitted with ipina use Dr.Isaai Thomp son's Ky&.water.prufgQts sail at Sfoper bottle Natai* thtald to assisted totlirow offlmparttiptftla blood. lUthlif does it s# well, s* pr#**tlr, fr w safely as <*?ift?4l is ainw? universal by the Heuwwifc. tfl rmcr, the Stock quiring an effective IMTment^ itner ipplication compares with it Jtf well-known remedy has stood the years, almosr generation!. * No medicine chest it complete without* Mustang Liniment. Occasions arise (or its use almost ever) All druggists and dealers have it * Store. A for sak for T ume. I think it is a splendid medicine/' E. A. Bond, P.M., Pavilion Centra v v 1 **? * ? The stomach is the reservoir. If it fails, everything fails. Th? liver, the kidneys, the lungs, thf heart, the head*the blood, thenervf! all go wrong. If you feel wroi look to the stomach first. Put tf right at once by using At Flower. It assures a good ajJ and a root digestion. f firl&rtTlJTimr * WwiaWf ??*- ALL G ??4 fetattj u, ? "if Mr 'J* <b*tw ...Sri&WNI8 I testify. TAK* No 8 50 TO $1 Men's