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BEWITCHED. While stretched upon the sands one day Beside a lake, whose waters shono As bright as any mirror on My lady's chifTouier, in play 1 tossed therein a stone. It made A rippling circle, one that grew ; Yards wider as the seconds flew. Until it kissed the shore. A ranid Who sat near by gave me a glance, j Awakening into life a wave. Whose impulse I could not deter, And so love conquered. Sweet romance, Beginning then made me thy slave, Yea. rather Love's idolator. ?James T. Sullivan, in Boston Globe. j J Great-Grandmother's Mantle. * j * jj ^ By Annie Hamilton Donnoll. ^ j In spite of herself, Nancy had to ; laugh at the frowning lace in her lit- j tie looking glass. "There goes the scowl!" she cried. ! "Well, you do look a deal better, ma- 1 'am. The idea of scowling because | it's a pleasant morning, when it's been 1 - ?-?- ? - "' '-v other day I a idinj uuc ocij v. for 'most a week! I know what the trouble is. It's that washing. Nancy ! Crowe! What would your great- j grandmother say?" There was an authentic and valued ! entry in the Crowe family records to i the effect that Great-Grandmother Nancy was won't to rise extremely early on wash-days, and get her washing for a household of fourteen j out on the line before breakfast. It j was even recorded that she had ac- I complished this extraordinary feat at j seventy years of age. Her achieve- I ment was the boast of the Crowe fam- j ily, and Nancy had heard it over and over again. I "You've got taree in your family and you're seven-teen!" Nancy scolded herself aloud. "The pity of having such a great-grandchild as that!" Nancy was housekeeper for her father and Thomas while her mother was away, nursing a sick sister. It was great fun, too?all but the washings. How Nancy disliked those! Down-stairs there was breakfast to j get and clear away, the chickens to feed and Thomas to "shine-up" for school. It was long after nine o'clock before the young housekeeper got to the washing. -" " * ? a: ? i Willie tne water was uea.uu& sue rail across the yard to se how little | Mrs. Cilley's baby was. "He ain't any better. I was up with him about all night!" sighed the young mother, wearily. "I'm nearly discouraged. I can't work to-day, and I don't know what he's going to do for clean things." "I do!" Nancy cried, cheerily. "I'm just going to take his little clothes home with me and wash 'em with my things. They're so little I shall hardly know they're there!" She held out her hands for the tiny wailing one. "You. poor, tired little woman, you! Give me that baby while you go and get his things picked up." A few minutes later Nancy went home with a little soft roll under her arm. She was humming a tune as she went "I'll just put some more water on to heat, and get these little bits a-soaking," she thought. "I'm so thankful I went over there?that poor little thing looks all tired out! She's so very young!" Nancy added another gallon of water to the sizzling, foamy contents of the boiler on the stove. Then, singing at the top of her clear voice as she worked, she bustled about among her tubs. The clock struck eleven. "Eleven o'clock! Of all things! Well, I'm glad I haven't got to stop and get dinner for anybody!" she cried. "It was lucky for daddy he took to-day to go to town on! And Tom would carry his dinner to school?'so 'f it did rain.' I must run out and put up my lines? there's Mr. Sophia putting out his now. Oh, my goodness, I hope Mrs. Sophia -?""doesn't see where he's putting 'em!" Nancy gazecNacross the roajJ_^the pottering figure uT^the H&ed-ticking apron. The glimpse of dun-colored trousers below the apron hem betrayed the sex of the washerwoman. Poor Mr. Sophia! How he would blunder, and how poor Mrs. Sophia would groan! How the water wouldn't be hot enough and the starch wouldn't be cold enough and the bluing would be too blue! "My heart goes out to Mr. Sophia," laughed the girl across the road, under her breath. It really was a hard place to put an innocent, well-meaning man-person, to have to do the washing for a Mrs. Sophia! "Oh, he'll make a mess of It, fast enough," Nancy said, with positiveness and pity. "I know Mr. Sophia. And she'll lie there and groan at him. I know Mrs. Sophia, too." It was hard on Mrs. Sophia, too. Wasn't she known throughout Far Acres as the "most particular housekeeper on the footstool?" And wasn't mild Mr. Sophia's capacity for blund- I cintr Vnnwn tr> hp limitlpss? It was I miv " ** ww ww - ? ? the Far Acres name for him?'Mr. Sophia." "I declare, I pity that man!" exclaimed Nancy, suddenly. "I'm going right over there and do it out loud!" "Sh!" Mr. Sophia held up a warning forefinger as she approached. His ? anxious glance wandered toward a certain window. "She's asleep. She's Just dropped off. I'm puttin' in to see if I can't make out to get the washin' done before she wakens up again. Look here, Nancy, I wisht you'd tell me some things about how to do it?do you blue the clothes before you rinse 'em or after. An' how much do you starch the sheets? Seems as if I'm all muddled up in iny mind. Sophia's so particular? I'm all of a tremble!" Nancy's laughing face tried to sober at sight of his genuine dismay. What a pity it hadn't been Mr. Sophia that sprained his back?no, that didn't sound kind. But there was a pity somewhere! "She had a turrible night with the pain in her back." whispered the plaintive voice. "I'm glad she can get some of her sleep made up now. All I ask is to get the cashing done while she has her nap." Nancy touched Mr. Sophia's arm gently. "I'm afraid you're not putting the lines out quite right." she said. "I know it! I know it!" he kept groaning, softly. "I don't hope to do any of it right, my dear." A. sudden inspiration came to Nancy. She caught his sleeve hurriedly. "Quick, bring me the clothes!" she whispered. "I know what we'll do. You'll take 'em across to my house and I'll wash 'em. That's what! Then I'll hang 'em out over here on your line? I know, exactly how Mrs. Sophia does it. Quick, we've got to hurry! Never mind if they are in soak. Pour some of the water out and take the tub right across. Of course I can do it as well as not. I'm washing to-flav. too. A little i more or less won't, count." Nancy hurried on ahead of slow Mr. Sophia to put on another kettle of water to heat She hi (Z& Hie way across the street, and the sort little j drone broke into a song at her own threshold. "That's all right! I'm thankful I went | over there. Poor Mr. Sophia, he needed help!" she was thinking, as she ate her hasty wash-day luncheon from the pantry shelf. All the afternoon how Nancy work- j j cd! How she splashed and rubbed and : | rinsed and wrung! How clearly and contentedly her voice trilled out above the sound of the rubbing. It was nearly four o'clock when at last she hung her wasnings out. "What would great grand-mother say?" she laughed. "She got hers out i before breakfast. Well. I don't care, I ! shall get mine out before supper!" The clothes were daintily white ana sweet, and Nancy hung them up with I careful precision. She gave the tiny j baby things a cross line to themselves. | Mrs. Sophia had a long, refreshing i sleep. When she woke the wash was j flapping gently out on the line. She ! lifted hersejf painfully on her elbow and gave it sharp scrutiny, astonish- | ment and distinct approval dawning in i her pale face. "Well, l do declare: sne cjacuiaicu, \ slowly. "Done!" cried tired Nancy, in tri- I umph. "Why! Why, I-don't call washing very hard work. I've enjoyed it. Nancy Crowe. I believe you've put on your great-grandmother's mantle!"? Youth's Companion. THOUCHT C. 0. D. MEANT COD. Mistake of a Fish Dealer When He Got Geotl* "Collect on Delivery." An amusing story is told of an enterprising, though verdant, young man who lives in a small town up the state. He wished to embark on the sea of matrimony, but finding his income entirely insufficient for the purpose, he cast about to see if be could not find some vocation which would yield him enough to support a wife on. After considerable reflection he decided that since there was no fish dealer in the village, it would be a wise plan to engage :n that line of business. He was totally ignorant of what tho demands of the public required, and, as many another young man had done before him, consulted his fiancee on the subject. She told her lover that once when she was on a visit to the city she had eaten some haddock, and that it was delicious, and advised him to lay in a stoc# of that kind of fish. The young man went to the local express office, and told the agent what he wanted to do. The latter said that he would order the fish from New York, and that the young man could pay for it when it was delivered. The barrel of fish came in due time, and, of course, it was marked "C. 0. D." When the goods were delivered to the prospective fish dealer he looked at the barrel for " ? oynrncc. a. uiumeiu, auu, lunuug u>v man, said in a tone of great disgust, "I ordered haddock and they sent me cod." The story was too good for the expressman to keep to himself, and the fish dealer, who made a success of his new business, is often, even to this day, greeted by the housewives on his morning calls with the sly question, "Have you got any cod?" To this he replies: "I pay for my fish when I or- I der it now, so I never get any cod."? j New York Tribune. PEARLS OF THO'JGHT. Want of desire is the greatest riches. ?Vigee. Idleness is the sepulchre of virtue.? Madam Roland. Ignorance is the mortal enemy uf thrift.?Harden. - - - !iL IV If thou wouldst be borne wun, iueu i bear with others.?Fuller. Purpose is what gives life a meaning.?Charles H. Parkhurst. Observe your enemies, for they first j find out ycThr faults.?Antisthenes. It is good to make a jest, but not to,make a trade of jesting.?Fuller. One thorn of experience is worth a whole wilderness of warning.?Lowell. The man who in this world can keep the whiteness of his soul is not likely to lose it in any other.?Alexander J Smith. If you wish your neigbors to see j what God is like, let them see what j he can make you like. Nothing is so infectious as example.?Charles Kingsley. Kind looks, kind words, kind acts and warm handshakes, these are sec- i condary means of grace when men are ; in trouble and are fighting their unseen battles.?John Hall. Affections should not bind the soul, but enfranchise it. Through them it should know larger, deeper, higher lile. They should be to it as wings by which it mounts. A friend comes as an ambassador rrom me neavens.? j Trinities and Sanctities. The pressure of a hand, a kiss, the ' caress of a child, will do more to save, sometimes than the wisest argument, even rightly understood. Love alone is j wisdom, love alone is power; and, where love seems to fail, it is where ! self has stepped between, and dulled j the potency of its rays.?George Mc- j Donald. No Chance for Flim. . "Now that we are engaged." said the j fair young thing, "I will tell you that j 1 do not fear mice." "That is nice," said the prospective j groom. ? "And," continued the fiancee, "I can j drive nails without hitting my thumb; I and I know how to use a paper cutter , without ruining a book; and I can add I a row of figures without making a i separate sum for each consecutive fig- i urs; and I can build a fire; and I can ! tell when a picture is hung straight on the wall." Here the man drew himself up with [ much dignity and sorrow, and cried: j "Then I cannot marry you, aias:" j "Why?" gasped the girl. "What prospect is there for my evei being able to demonstrate the superior- j ity of man over woman if I marry a j woman who possesses such traits of J character as you!"?Baltimore Ameri* | can. "No Doe* at I.are?." The board of agriculture draws attention to the fact that the landing in ' Great Britain of dogs brought from any | country except Ireland, the Channel Islands, and the Isle of Man will bo | subject to Ariticle 2 of the Importation of Dogs Order of 1901, which ex- j pressly provides that every imported dog must be detained and isolated for six months upon premises in the oc- j cupation or under the control of a veterinary surgeon, which shall have been previously approved in writing by the board for that purpose. This j does not apply in the case of an im- j ported dog which is intended to be ex- j ported from Great Britain within ; forty-eight hours.?London Globe. Close friends are seldom the onei j who spend their money on you. BLACK WALNUT. Wood That Has Become Too Valuable to be Used, as Once, for Fence Rails. The best black walnut in the United States is found in Indiana. Forty years ago there could be found in this State a crop of black walnut unequalled In quantity and quality. Today it is not to be found in such immense trees. Neither is the number of trees by any means so numerous. Years ago the largest and best trees were used for fence rails and such common purposes. At that time it had no particular commercial value. Before walnut came into general use, the most of domestic furniture was of cherry. Walnut has now entirely superseded this and all other woods. Fence rails can be found today through Indiana that were split more than half a century ago, and they are as sound now as then, save the wear and tear. Of all hard woods the walnut is most durable, save red cedar, and possibly in the ground, black locust would equal it. Our walnut is comparatively gone, fn isolated parts of the country, where this timber grows, there is yet some of inferior quality, but to a limited extent. But the general black walnut growing in the deep forest, in the rich lowlands, in its primitive nature, is a thing of the past. The general supnlv must now be gathered from the four quarters of the earth to supply a demand that requires a century for its culmination witnesses the astounding spectacle of the almost entire extinction of the valuable material. Kentucky has quite a good stock of Mack walnut, and much that is very in. ferlor on account of its grey color and tough, hard texture. Missouri also has some of rather an inferior quality. Western Ohio and West Virginia is poor in quality. The whole stock of the states Is not equal to a full demand for ten years to come. Furniture manufacturers do not now use it as lavishly as they did five years ago. Other woods are substituted when possible, and 1,000 feet of walnut are made to go as far again as it did a few years ago. Chicago uses annually in her different branches of manufacture, such as house, school and omce turniture, aiso in finishing material. door3, mouldings, counters, &c.. 14,500.000 feet. Probably about half of this is bought at the mills, and does not go into the account of the dealers at all. Many of the largest manufacturers direct, or have mills or an interest in. mills in the walnut district.?Terre Haute Gazette. THE OTH^R WAY. Blim?What is Speeder doing now? Blum?He is interested in a get-richquick scheme. Blim?You don't say so? Blum?Yes, he is courting an heiress.?Town Topics. MODERN DARWINISM. "Yes, your dress does fit beautifully, but I thought you were above such trifles." "No! I believe in the survival of the best fitted.?New York Sun. American Flag I>ny. An effort is being made to establish June 14th of eat" year ne Hag daythroug out the country. It was on this date that the thirteen stars and stxi;>es became the Natl nal Km blent. Prisms who suffer fi\m less of appetite, insomnia, nervousness. Indigestion, dyspepsia constipati n or malaria, lever a- d ague. can date th.- r recovery iron t.^c time they ros lve to try Ilo tetter's i tornnoh Hittors, th- world famous n nu'dy for tluso diseases. Try it to-day. It wills ml/ euro you. Time may be money, but you've got to spend the one to make the other. Are You Us ins Allen's Foot-Fan- ? I' is the only cure for Swollen. Smarting, Tired,AehiDg.Hot,Sweating Feet,Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Easo,a i owder to be shaken into the shoes.Cures while you walk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores. 2oc. Sample sent Free. Accept no substitute. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leltoy, N. Y. People who are in love with themselves have no fear of rivals. A Noted Teacher. Prof. Walt*r Wilson, of the Savannah High School, says: "1 feel it my duty jo t< stify to the wonderful <urativep>op<-rii' a of Teiterine. It cured in a few days my son. whose feet wore affect'd wuh stubborn s in trouM?>fter using a numb r of other remedies without any benefit.' 5fc a box by moil from J. T. Shuptrine, savannah, Ga., if your drugg st dou't k< ep It. The spendthrift can easily make a $10 bill look like thirty cents. FITS permanently cured. Nofltflornervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great KerveBestorer.t2trial bottle and treatiscfrce Dr.R. K. Kline.Ltd.. 931 A-reh St., 1'hila., Pn. People in the smart set believe that all's well that ends swell. Mrs.WiDslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, redueesinflammatiofi,a]]av6pain,cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle The one crop that never fails is the dead beat crop. ' J. 0. Simps'*", Marquess, W. Va., says: "Hall's Cfttarth Cure cured me of a^very bad case of catarrh." I)i u.-pists sell It. 75c. F. J. t liEKKV & CO., Toledo, 0. What a pretty girl wants is a full complement of compliments. 1'iso'sCure is the best medicine we ever used for all affection- of throat nd lu ps?W*M. o. Endslkv, Vauburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. The new woman is beginning to realize how a man feels when his collar button rolls under the bureau. Summer Tours By Band and Sea?Excursion Tickets at. Very Low i'ates. Central of Georgia Railway and connections are now so ling Summer Tourist Tickets from all coupon stations to New York, Boston,,Philadelphia and Baltimore via Savannahand Steamship lines. Tickets Include meals and stateroom i erth aboard ship: much less than all rail. For full particulars. berth reset rations, etc., apply to > our nearest railroad ag. lit. F. J. Kobinson, j A?st. Gen'l. Pass. Agent, Savannah, Ga.: J. I C. Haile, Gen'l. Pass. Agent, Savannah, Ga. I Black Hair BRBBC8HBB59BB2SBr:!B!S38?l2flEHBSE9HD9HMH8S98 1 " I have used your Hair Vigor i for five years and am greatly ; pleased with it. It certainly reI stores the original color to gray j hair. It keeps my hairsoft."?Mrs. ij j Helen Kilkenny,New Portland, Me. Ayer's Hair Vigor has | been restoring color to gray hair for fifty years, and it never fails to do this work, either. You can rely upon it for stopping your hair I a from falling, for keeping I J your scalp clean, and for 1 I making your hair grow. S ^ $1.00 a bottle. All drujjists. |[ ra If your druggist cannot supply you, I] g send us one dollar and wo will express l| 8 you a bottle. lie sure and give the name It H of your nearest express office. Address, I J. c. AY Kit CO., Lowell, Ma33. ft n n A n n 1/ cubed i n 30 to ?o days. I! I) 1111 V V ^'rlte for particulars and 10 days' I K 11 r l\ I treatment tree. O. E. Colluin U11U 1 v .? n?d. Co., Atlanta, Ua, WINTER FARMING NEW. SCIENCE SETS AT DEFIANCE ALL LAWS OF SEASONS. Tlie Demand for Farm Products In TVinler ICowponKlble for the Expansion of 'J )ii? Industry ? Hothouse Fruits and Vegetables Multiply in Quantity. The idea prevalent in some quarters that agriculture has not kept abreast of modern industrial developments is so Tar from the actual truth that occasionally the public is surprised by repoi is which indicate a change and revolution in methods and result of a most phenomenal character. In nothing has our agriculture changed more decidedly in recent years, however., than in the seasons of production. Science has deliberately set at defiance all the laws which govern the seasons of growth, and in the conflict it has proved a great triumph for man. \v mier iarraing nas oecomc m uie i-swa | decade an industry more profitable and successful than ordinary summer gardening or farming. The demand for farm products in winter, when most of them are scarce and difficult to secure, has been responsible for the growth and expansion of winter farming. To-day this industry is of national importance, and aids i millions of dollars to the wealth of our country. Lands that were formerly considered almost worthless have attained through this industry considerable value, and farmers who were disappointed at the outlook of their profession have suddenly discovered new means of reaping financial rewards for their labor and genius. Instead of following in the old ruts in vogue fifty years ago, they have branched out in entirely new lines to develop an industry that is as fascinating as it is profitable. Naturally one thinks first of truck gardening, either under glass in the North in winter or along the belt of Southern States, when this subject is broached; but winter farming is not by any means confined to even this field. Winter dairying has become in the last five years one of the most profitable sources of farming, and it is pursued by the most progressive dairymen of the country with great success. By means of the silo, succulent food is stcred awav for winter feedine that produces almost as fine milk and cream as the June grass. The milk and cream in winter time are worth so much more than in summer that the dairymen find it profitable to provide good winter quarters for the best cows and to feed them with the best food. The poultry farmer has likewise changed his methods, and by means of the incubator and brooder winter and spring broilers are produced to-day in | enormous quantities for our tables. Winter poultry is to-day about the only product of the chicken farm that actually pays a good profit. The high prices obtained for spring chickens and broilers out of season have caused complete changes in this industry. Those who depend upon the eggs fpr their profits are endeavoring to induce the hens to change their season of laying. so that winter eggs will be had in abundance. Extensive experiments in winter feeding and winter breeding in glass-covered houses have produced re"nK-ri nfVi 1 aV* nnnnnvo on +V?A nnnlfrvmon j OUUi3 U 1UV/11 CIK/V/Uia^'v I'lV puuivi JII1V1I to believe that eventually breeds of hens will in time he reared which will lay their eggs in winter instead of summer. At present the results obtained arc not entirely satisfactory. Hothouse lambs have become important parts of our winterd diet of recent years, and breeders have established enormous houses where these delicate animals can be reared and fattened through the coldest of our winter weather. The work is profitable, and the breeders are increasing the industry each year. Hothouse lambs are delicacies out of season at present, but in the future they may become an ordinary part of our regular winter diet. Hothouse fruits and vegetables mulI tiplv in quantity and quality every year. The industry is expanding so [ rapidly that the annual winter supplies of these delicacies are running up into thousands of tons. Around Boston there arc several hundred acres of land j covered with glass where fruits and j vegetables arc raised for the winter markets. Jersey ana JLong lsiana are also centers of this industry, and hundreds of acres are now under cultivation right through#the winter. These hothouse products bring high prices all through the winter, and from two to four crops are raised annually on the same land. In the spring when the weather grows warm, the glass sashes are removed, and the plants for the summer markets are raised as easily if the land had not been producing all winter. When the cold autumn frosts come., the glass sashes protect the new crop that has been planted for the Christmas holiday seasons. Then when these winter products are harvested, seeds for an early spring crop are sown, and by the time Easter is here fresh vegetables ar e again ready for picking. The truck products raised under glass in winter receive the most modern intensive culture. The soil is of the richest, well heated by steam pipes, moistened properly, and sometimes lit artificially at night time by arc lights. The electric light tends to stimulate the growth of certain vegetables, and the season of maturity is thus rapidly hastened. The profits from this business often run from 50 to 80 percent on the investment, and during the rough winter weather when southern truck cannot reach the markets, prices for the vegetables raised under glass soar up to almost fabulous prices. Yet in spite of the great number of acres of land covered with glass and devoted to winter farming, the supply hardly keeps pace with the increasing demand, and there is ample opportunity for further expansion in this line. Winter gardening and farming in the southern belt of states where the climate is warm enough to produce the products out of doors have spread with phenomenal rapidity in recent years. Whole sections of states have been reclaimed by this industry, and land that was worth only a few dollars an acre ten years ago sells to-day for two or three hundred dollars an acre. Our whole system of living and diet has been transformed by this industry, and our winter season is supplied with fruits and vegetables almost as freely as the summer. The expansion of this form of winter farming has been due to the railroads and steamship companies operating lines along the coast or through the belt of states with climate and soil j suitable to the business. The cor.strucj tion of refrigerator cars which would j enable growers to ship their strawi berries and tomatoes from Florida and : Louisiana to New York or Boston in ! midwinter gave a great stimulus to the industry. It is now possible to land the most perishable fruits and vegetables in New York from the most distant gardens within seventy-two hours after picking and in perfect condition. Each year the source of the supply Is extended. It was first the Carolir.as, Norfolk and Georgia which monopolized this industry. Then Florida entered the field, and finally the gardens spread along the Gulf and included those in the Mississippi Valley. California made special efforts to ship her 'fruits and vegetables to eastern markets in cars made for the purpose, and now Texas and exen Mexico are entering the field with their peculiar farm products. There are some 60,000 refrigerator cars engaged in this traffic in the winter season, distributing the fruits and vegetables of the tropical and semi-tropical gardens and farms to the large cities of the north, south, east and west. The best of these cars are scientific products of modern genius, and they carry their loads of fruits as carefully as a Pullman palace car transports its millionaire occupant. Strawberries from the Carolinas alone amount to some 12,000,000 quarts a year, while California pours across its borders some 193,000,000 pounds of fresh fruits. New York citv alone ab sorbs some 4,000,000 packages of southern vegetables every winter. All told, the winter farming which supplies the cities with their fruits and vegetables in ihe cold season represents an industry amounting up into many millions of dollars. All this is pure gain for the farmers and land owners, who formerly made little or nothing from the soil which is now brought under contribution to feed us with a' winter diet of fruits and vegetables. The creation and expansion of the industry lepresents wealth added to the country just as surely as if new gold mines had been discovered which yielded annually a dozen million dollars' worth of the precious metal.?George E. Walsh, in the Scientific American. AN ELECTRIC BATH. A Euxnry That Members of Conj-rtc* May Now Enjoy. To be literally sprayed with electricity from head to foot, rolled with an electric roller, the wrinkles ironed out of the face with an electric glass bulb as a flatiron, and to have the spark of life imparted to any particular section of the anatomy through a wooden ball is one of the luxuries which a senator or representative in congress can enjoy by simply descending in the elevator to the magnificient marble bath rooms at either end of the capitol, stepping onto a zinc plate and ordering Chief Electrical Engineer Gliem to "turn on his lightning." The electrical adjunct to the legislative baths is a comparatively recent addition and as yet seemingly few members have learned of its wonderful invigorating effect on a tired .legislator. Those who have, however, are constant patrons, and the static machine is creating for itself an enviable reputation as a "next morning" antidote. And for putting a member into rendition for a sneech in the senate or house it has no equal. The static machine creates its own electricity right before your eyes. The machine in the house end stands in a small, marble-walled room. It is driven by a quarter horse power motor, attached, and stands in a glass case. It consists of ten circular glass plates thirty inches in diameter. These plates, which are placed a little distance apart, revolve on a single shaft through the center. On a line with the shaft rows of double metal combs, with the tips of their teeth close to the plates, gather the electricity as it is generated by the revolving glass. A positive and a negative pole extend out of the case. A platform, insulated by being placed on glass legs, stands nearby. On this platform is the zinc plate on which the statesman stands. Over his head is suspended a round brass crown which is connected to the positive pole by a slight brass rod. The different apparatus for administering the electricity are at hand on a board suspended on the wall. The "bath," generally proceeds in this order: First, the "chain shower" ?two round metal bars about 18 inches long are connected to the respective poles of the machine by a brass chain. The electrician holds a bar in each hand and holds ms hands about three feet apart. The chain connects the two by running loosely through a metal loop near the far end of the bars. When the current is turned on the one operated on has a sensation as of a warm breeze blowing on him. The bath is taken with all the clothing on, but the breeze seems to penetrate it as though there were no obstruction. The breeze soon changes to a warm, prickly sensation. The hair begins 10 niro o lmnrh of Chinese fire ^J a.^x\v i nikV/ u _ crackers, and when the current is suddenly allowed t9 descend from the brass crown also there seems to be a general conflagration in progress. However, there is nothing violent or unpleasant experienced. After the shower and head sprays, if the statesman is in a bad way from the "night before," he takes a chair and a glass bulb, not unlike an electric light bulb, but with the big end flat, is caressingly brought in contact with his face and brow. The current for this is obtained through a Tesla coil, and produces very little sensation. A polished metal resembling a small coupling pin is the threat ironer, and a wooded ball about as big as a base ball as the terminus to a metal pole, acts as a mild distributor to any given locality, while a brass roller irons pains out of the back or shoulders simply by rolling it along the clothing. It only takes a few minutes to take an electric bath, but the results obtained are said to be equaled only by a i summer vacation.?Washington Star. i What Overwork Means. Professor Huxley gave his opinion in 1893 that what is called overwork means, in a large proportion of cases, | under-oxygenation, and consequent ac| cumulation of waste matter, which operates as a poison. Sir J. Sawyer Birmingham, in corroborafton of this opinion, urges that much chronic invalidism is chronic suboxidation, and one of the worst of wrong conditions is I work in stale air. Whenever we doubt I aiinnt nnr vitalitv. we should doubt about our ventilation. Dr. Clieadle reminds us that one-third of our lives are spent in our bed-rooms, of which the a:ir is poisoned beyond what would be tolerated in a sitting-room. It is weil conceded that many of the cases of nervous disease, and especially the various forms of neurasthenia, depend largely upon want of open-air exercise.?Medical Record. English Fashion in Words. There are pet words in literaturewords which become the fashion for a time and then take rank again in obscurity. Thus in the 18th century we find such words as "vastly," "hugely," "the quality," "genteel," etc. "Ele gant" still lingers conspicuously ii. America, and in England at the present time especiall favor seems to be shown to "convincing," "weird" and "strenuous."?Notes and Queries. 0 - * - An Addition to the Kench Seat. j The latest addition to the bench i seat so universally seen built around a ! bay window is to run each end out into j the room about a foot or a foq? and a j half, and finish the back of the extension with a small Colonial balus- ! trade. It is both comfortable and j pretty. Tn riace of Tiles. Cream colored calcimine, resembling enamel, is now much preferred to tiles for perfectly appointed kitchens. This 1 does not discolor like tiles or drop out, nor have interstices to collect dirt as tiles do. One luckv chef, with a kit- ! chen of calcimine, white enameled woodwork and fixtures in keeping, asserted that he could stand in the middle of the kitchen and thoroughly cleanse It with a strong stream from a hose without harming a single thing. An Odd Screen. One of those tall screens which may be put to so many uses about a house is a unique affair in Flemish oak. There are three panels to this screen, all rather wide and covered both sides with fine Japanese matting. This covering extends to within about two feet of the top of the screen, the open spaces being inclosed in a skeleton frame. The upper open part of each panel is then filled in with a realistic spider web of heavy brown twine. For a further touch of realism a huge spider is caught in the meshes of each of the webs, the effect of the whole being odd and unusual. Those screens covered entirely with matting are pretty and serviceable, and for a little adornment the matting of each panel is sometimes bordered with narrow strips of leather closely studded with large brass nails. Lighting k Dark Hull. A mirror will lighten a dark hall if properly placed. Place the glass opposite a door and the light from?that apartment, falling on the mirror, is reflected back from it to the hall, to its much greater lighting, while the apparent size ol' the little place is greatly increased. The mirror is unframed, and is fitted in between cornices and baseboard, and finished at the sides with a flat moulding that seems a part of the woodwork. The value of this treatment is not realized until it i's tried. Often a blank stretch of wall that seems a hopeless shutting in of space may offer the transforming opportunity. Care must be taken not to overdo the treatment in such a ay as to create the effect of a hotel corridor or public hall; but judiciously used under the care of a good architect the plan is to be commended.?New York Journal. Cleaning a Floor. Genuine skill can be exercised in cleaning a floor as in anything else. After the rugs and carpets have been taken up a floor that is not finished in any other way should be thoroughly scrubbed and dried before it is covered again. It is economy to lay down floors of matched boards of good seasoned wood, which will not warp and show the cracks. After the carpet is up and the dust has been thoroughly swept up and has settled, scrub the wood with warm water and sal scda, cleaning and scrubbing about a square yard of surface at a time. It pays to have two pails, one of soda and water tr> srrnh the floor with, and one of clear hot water to rinse it up with. Use two cloths, one to wipe up the floor and the other to dry with. When the floor is scrubbed wash and dry these cloths before you use them for another cleaning. If the floor is hard wood it would better be dressed by a regular finisher, as there are few maids in this country who are willing or intelligent enough to do this work, though this is the regular part of the maid's work abroad, and the tools furnished in this country for the purpose are much easier to handle than those used in Europe.?New York Tribune. Rsc/PSS Cake Fritters?Cut stale cake in slices one inch thick; dip each piece - J ? - 1ii.ll _ into cream; iry mem m a miie uuuci in the frying pan; lift them to a platter spread over the slices a little preserve, and sprinkle over chopped almonds and powdered sugar. Chese straws?Mix half a cupful of flour, three tablespoonfuls of grated American cheese, half a tablespoon of parmesan chees, a little salt and one beaten egg; work to a smooth paste; roll out on a floured board to a thin shell, cut in strips one-fourth of an inch wide and four inches long, place them in a buttered pan and bake in a rather cool oven ten minutes. Crackers with cream cheese?Grate American cream cheese over snowflake crackers, sprinkle over each one a dash or two of cayenne pepper; put in the oven; when the cheese has melted remove them and serve. If any remain over by putting them in a baking dish and covering with milk and a little more grated cheese and bake in a slow oven, it will make a nice luncheon dish. Delicate cream muffins?Cream three level tablespoonfuls of butter; add to it two tablespoonfuls of sugar; beat the whites of two eggs; add the unbeaten yolks to the butter and sugar; add one cup of milk, half teaspoonful | of salt, two cupfuls of sifted flour and four level tcaspoonfuls of baking powder; beat well and add the eggs; fill greased muffin pans two-thirds full and bake 20 minutes in a quick oven. Substitute one cup of graham, rye or corn meal for one cup of flour and you will have the different muffins. Custard ice?Mix two ounces of wheat starch with enough cold milk to make a paste, then add gradually a pint of milk; then three-fourths of a cup of sugar, and whisk until the sugar is dissolved. Cook in a double boiler ; until it thickens; then remove from the j fire and add half an ounce of butter. I When cold add any flavoring desired j and partially freeze the mixture. ThSn j whip the whites of two eggs stiff; add ! these carefully with a pint of whipped i cream and freeze quite stift. Beat up | well before serving with a fruite comj p te. I , Tli? Moon's Temperature. I It is probable that the temperature oi 1 the moon's surface at its mid<2^.y is | 750 degrees Fahrenheit The drop at night is probably 1000 degrees, 1 "s degrees below. . CONGRESSMAN FI1"ZPATRICK Says Pe-ru-na is a Splendid Catarrhal Tonic. || Congressman T. Y. Fitzpatrick. < ?VVVVMWVVVVWVVVVVVVVVVW^?VV?i Hon. T. Y. Fitzpatrick, Congressman from Kentucky, writes from the National Hotel, Washington, D. C., as follows: "At the solicitation of a friend 1 used your Peruna and can cheerfully recommend your rem *dy to anyone suffering with catarrh or who needsa good tonic," -T. Y. FITZ PATRICK. A Good Tonic. Pc-ni-na is a natural and efficient nerve tonic. It strengthens and restores the activity of every nerve in the body. Through the use of Pe-ru-na the weakened or overworked nerves resume their natural strength and the blood vessels begin at once to regulate the flow of blood according to nature's laws. Congestions immediately disappear. Catarrh Cared. All phases of catarrh, acute or chronic, are promptly and permanently cured. It is through its operation upon the nervous system that Pe-ru-na has attained such a world-wide reputation as a sure and reliable remedy for all phases of catarrh wherever located. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartinan, giving r full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice free. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Ilartman Sanitarium. Columbus. 0. .$20.00 TO ; J Being Made selling "500 I book of legal and business t* Compendium of plain and o; Calculator and Farmer's Re< A complete set of interests ments of CISTERNS. T*mb< one volume. Over 472 pag* It is a complete business < SIMPLE, PRACTICAL ar and glrla can sell as well s One agent in the country e week. Agents have canvass Selling price $1.50. Libera! isfactlcn guaranteed (or raor Circulars free. T _ il Ripans Tabules are the best medicine in the world. There is scarcely any condition of ill health that is not benefited by the occasional use of a Ripans Tabule, and the price?10 for 5 cents-'-does not bar them from any home or justify any one in enduring ills that are easily cured. A family bottle containing 150 Tabules is sold for 60 i cents. For sale by druggists. I At druggists. The Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, CO cents, contains a supply for a year. "study law at homeT You can Learn by Mail to be a Lawyer. Made easy by questions >>nd answers. Learn to write your? wn Wl.ls, Deeds and Contracts. Summer Course Now Ready. It will cost yon nothing to write for particulars. C. Xj. BOVA.RD, 202-3-4 Norcoss Bld'g, ATLANTA, GA. | S ^ . CURES i i fAPUDINEffS i n Cola*, etc. m | V y Sold at all Drug Stores, & I*** wwiijmjnoot ssrasnsKf Kit** Wc^NDV CATHABTIC^^^^ Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold In bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "something just as good." i $5,000 Deposit back of our Guaranty of Positions. OPES ALL THE YEAR. Endorsed by Bankers, Officials, Business Men. R. R. Fare paid. Board at cost. Write Quick to GA.-ALA. BUS. COLLEGE, Macon, Ga. PROFITABLE EMPLOYMENT If you can (or think you can) soMelt LIFE 1/NSUHA/NeE, Write (with references) for terms to R. F. SHEDDEN, Manager, Atlanta; Ga. j 'J he Mutual Life Insurance Company of New " ?OtO fWl <V*A OA 1 OI K. AM5UL3 UVCI <P*AAw,VW,V/W.VV. 250 FREE SCHOLARSHIPS. Apply at onoe to TIIE LANIER SOUTHERN BUSINESS t OLLEGE, Macon. Ga. BookkeepIn?, Banking. Penmanship, Shorthand. Typewriting, Telography. Mathematics, Grammar and Business Correspondence thoroughly taught. Board (8 to $10 per month. IjCllBETltEBlUtS gfl MiPU p kn inuuenuie "ArrcR-DiNNCN fill" PR. J^HNSO^j S FREE SAMFLE* Iff THE HOME REMEDY CO-iACSTiLLBLDO , ATLANTA, GA. ^ . , > . . . - - >" '"S '' ' ??V' 'sL:. . !-iL jfe^-'; . - - ^ ' FACE Pimples, Blackheads, Red, Rough, Oily Skin Prevented by Siiticm* YjTnjyfH Millions op People use CuticceA Soap, assisted by Cuticuba Ointment, foe preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing tho scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling liair, for softening, whitening, and ' soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itch ings, and cbafings, and for all tho purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women use Cutjcuba Soap in the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, and excoriations, or too free or offensivuperaphathm, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative purposes. Complete Treatment for Hnmoers, $1, Consisting of Cuticura So ap(25c. ),to cleans** the skin of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle; Cuticuba Ointment (60c)., to instantly allay Itching, lrflamroatton, and irritation, and soothe and local; and CCTJ- .: j Cuba Resolvent Pills (2.x;.), to cool and cl anso tho blood. a single Set la often 3 uCIclcnt to cure the severest case. , . r?> ^ Cuticcra Resolvent Pills (Chocolate ' ; Coated) are a new. tasteless, odourleaa. eco. nomical substitute for the celebrated liquid Cuticuba Resolvent, CO doses, prico, 26a Bold throepboat the world. Britbh Ch*rterboa*e Sq- London. I rrneb Depot i SSm d? la Palx, r*rii. Pottxx Dsro axo Cm. Coar., Soto Prop*.. Bo-ion, u. s. a. ????? ? * Corset P \ 5 is one that puzzles all women. If H you want the rteht kind, wear the B best made, the Straight front B >yal I arcester t orBon Ton 1 Corsets. I t please. B Ask your dealer to show them K -JJ to you?Take none other. ... Bj Worcester Corset Co., worc^er. Ma* j) .00 PER WEEKjeseons In Business." It is a complete hand* jrms. A complete Legal Adviser?a complete rnamental Penmanship; a complete Lightning \,. :koner. , Grain, Lumber and Cotton Tables; measure* >r, Lumber, Logs and Bine of Grain, etc., ^in )3. 250 Illustrations. iJucator; brought home to every purchaser. . ii PLAIN; 5C0 asents wanted at once. Boys 1i men and women. old 45 copies in one day. Another 210 lirca* ted all day and sold a copy at every boote. *'J, discounts to agents. 8end 25c for outfit; sat* i *y refunded). , . J. K NICHOLS & CO., ATLANTA, GA." ? ' Avery & McMillan, SI and 53 S. Forsyth St., Atlanta, Oa ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all 5izes. Wheat Separators, all Sizes. in j l BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH. * , Large Engines and Boilers suppljdd promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills, . Circular Saws, Saw Teeth, Patent Dogs, Steam Governors. Full line En* gines and Mill Supplies. 8end for free Catalogue. _ Hand Power Hay Press. IMPROVED THIS SEASON. Better than ever. Pays for itself quick. For testimonials, etc., address WATKINS HAY PRESS CO., East Point, 6a. THE UBIHE IS MY 6UIPE JSj If you willeend me a eaapleof jcmt mora* \ log uiin. for chemical analytic, I will tell ^Jtf you by letter, the NAME. lOCATIIN *rA \B 4B Diitance i? co barrier to eucceee wbea erf?l - * -- -? S to.- <L?e*/t WjtW r*"| Ki>DCI IUM wo pun uo |a?-un. __ -.tiro crrrti for mxilinc cut for aria*. Mr ^ A 4i*t??oB THE WATER DOCTOR ??<? . JSUJWj. E. SHARER, M. D? 522 Pean Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 911 REPAIRS S S? SAWS. RIBS, KLB ?f ?S$?| Brlste Twine, Babbit, ^nf B 88 Hie , for any make of Gin ENGINES, BOILERS AND PRESSES And Repairs for same. Shafting, Pulley?, i eltlng. Injectors, Pipes. Valves and Fittings. * LOMBARD IKON WORKS AND SUPPLY COMPANY, Augusta, Ga. Tfl KPCNTC teachersand STUI U Ablin I O DENTS. The World Bible Home having opened a Southern depot at 70J< Peachtree St., Atlanta. Ga , want active men and women to sell the best books on the market. Liberal terms and prompt dealings. HCE;III [EISPike TO in time. Sold by dxngginta. gl "