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& P'1 .* if A WIFE "OF TH Li PLUIOD." Oh! wou'd I could live where there's nothing to do— Nothiug like working the whole year through No cooking to manage, n' dishes i u waah. No children to see to, and at! that bosh. No sweeping, no dusting, no making bods, Nomcudfn^ of garments all worn into Rtireds No darning old slock ingH, no knitting of r.ew Such work Is just horrid, the catalogue, through. I "would banish all washing and Ironing days, Their RUds-rceklng air and their steam-chill ing haze With scrubbing and churning and baking of bread I'd have nothing to do—1 would rather be dead. It can't IHJ my duty. I'm sure it is not, C'uit 'iitmcni to fuel with #0 hateful a let. With faco that is comely and hands tu.ii arc White, To shine in .society—that is my right. Instead of this drudjfing my time should bo free. Just to 'dross' and 'go out,' to bo seen and to see To play the piano, lato novels to road. All! that is tin life for a lady to lead. Poor fool that 1 was when 1 married for iov -, Prizing husband and homo other pleasuris above I now know that wealth must accompany these If a lady, who marries, would live at her ease. Nest ttmc when 1 marry—it may come some day When this dear, good old husband (jots out of the way I must, know thero is money enough ana to spare To save me this horrible houuekertpin care." J. I,. Daymiide, in Yankee lUade. AT THE PATENT OFFICE. Perpetual Motion Cranks aro Nu merous Among tho Visitors. A few weeks ago, a white-headed, gray-bearded old man appeared at the 'rout-door of tho White llouse, with a little pine box under his arm. II' ap proached Colonel Dinsmore, tho giant like guard who presides over fiie vesti bule, and asked to see tho President "What is your name and what do you want to see him for?" asked the Colonel. Whereupon tho old man, pointing to his box, said that he bad '.i covered the secret of perpetual motion, and he wanted to show it to President Harri son. Colonel Dinsmore told bim that ho had better take his invention to tbo Patent Office, and tho old man started off down Pennsj ivania avenue. It in estimated that at least ten thou sand American citizens are experi menting to-day upon a plan of produc ing perpetual motion. These ten thou sand aro scattered throughout the United States, and several of them find their way, each week, to tbo Patent Office at Washington. Some of them aro insane, others aro full of common sense on every other subject but this, and all are disgusted when t-hoy find that the Patent Office demands a work ing-model of their machines. 8uch a model has never been produced, and, however attractive, tho scheme may ap pear on paper, all such invention must necessarily fail when they come to this test. Not long ago an Associated Press dis patch was published in nearly every daily newspaper in the United States stating that an Ohio man hud at last produced such an invention, and a few weeks ago a furniture-earvor in Balti more claimed ho had made tho dis covery. His machine was a set of al most perfectly-balanced weights con nected with a leaden ball which, roll ing up ono gutter and down another, produced a power which operated the machine for a time, but which was, of course, lost as soon as friction began to act uion it Ilia idea he considered new, but it is the same that ono of tbo Brahmins of India conceived three thousand years ago and described in the Vedas. It is much tho same as that of an Italian inventor who in 1078 had a hollow wheel with weights attached to it,which fell down as tho wheel passed a central point and were expected to close up to the wheel as it went on around, thus apparently making tho weight on tho descending side of the wheel greatly exceed that on tho as cending. The Marquis of Worcester, who had much to do with inventing a steam engine, got up a hollow wheel fitted with cannon balls and having curbed spouts. The idea was that the balls would run to the rim of tho wheel on tbo falling side, set it in motion and then run back to the center as it turned on. A practical model, however, showed that the greater part of tho balls soon got to tho outer edge of tho wheel, and the motion stopped. About a hundred years ago, a Con necticut Yankee, named Harris Han som, asked tho General Assembly of that Stato for a monopoly of bis discov ery of the "art or mystery of making perpetual motion of water, whereby ho is able and can raise tho water from any river, pond, spring or fountain to the height of thirty feet perpendicular, and convey tho samo to any parks of any towns or cities, or return the samo to tho original fountain or head, which said performance will bo of great ad vantage, not only to the petitioner, but to tho public in general, by affording them at all times good and wholesome water at a very trifling expenso." Eight men signed this petition, but as thero is no perpetual water-machine running to-day, it is evident that Han som made nothing out of it Three years before the Declaration of Independence, John Shiptoan applied for a patent on mills to bo run by tho ebb and flow of the tide, and got a mo nopoly for forty years to run his tida mills anywhere in the town of Say brooK. Benjamin Hauks, of Litchfield, Conn., claimed that ho had invented a clock that wound itself up with the mo tion of tho air, and that would continue to do so without any other aid or assist ance until its parts wore worn out This was generations ago, and if an air-clock ever existed, we find no record of it to day. A Mr. Jennings, of Now York, has constructed moro than ninety models worked on moro than sixty different principles in his attempts to invent per petual motion. Ho has been working on it for thirty-one years, has spent for ty thousand dollars, and now thinks ho has succeeded. Be A tuw not, however, patented hU inve:.' :tn, and 5 leading examiner of the motor section of tbo Patent Office believes that there is no danger that ho ever will. "We have," said tho examiner, "hun dreds of application-, for patents, but these aro based on dtseri prions and specifications, and not on working machines. In more than two decades we have not received any thing like a model of perpetual motion inventions. Once I remember a Gorman brought a bag containing some wheels and bit* of tin fastened together with strings. He had no doubt that it would work, bo cause he had dreamed for live nights in Kuecrshion that it. would, and as he had no money to pay for his patent, ho was sent away sorrowful. At another time, an attorney brought In a couple of levers and the picture of a machine of winch these were a part, which ma chine, ho said, was actually working in New York, and he asked us to grant a patent on the levers. He was told ho must, give a perfect working model, and wo have never heard from him since then. Tho application for perpetual motion patents an? so many that the de partment has golien up a blank which is filled out for all sue!i applicants. On many other things a winking model is not required, and we grant the patent on designs and drawings. To the per petual motion cranks we send back the money which they forward with their application, with one of the3e blanks, which reads as follows: 'Sin--Your an alleged perpetual mo tion, has been received with the fee therefor. 'Heforo entering sael on the hooks of tho oflice, it is thought proper to sidvf,c you. in order to save you further oxpens and labor, that the views the office coincide with those of scientists (n general, in regard to mechan ic-.1 perpetual motions—that the arc impo s| bihties. Should your bo the (lr.-it official action would be the requirement of a working del the office being aware that it will h'» impossible for you to comply with this requirement. 'For the asorn given you, and the ttccompaiiyiii:.' feart- herewith returned. "If, liotwitustamiing this notice, you stHi desire your and the fee to be accepted by the ofttcc. you may return them and they will l»: retained. Very respectfully, «'HAKI. :S K. MrrcHutu 'Commitloner of Patents.' It will be seen from this that tho Patent Office promptly advises all ap plicants for perpetual motion patents that thero is no liopo of their success, and that they will only accept then application and money if they insist upon it. Many of the would-bo patent ees get very angry at this notice. They return the money and insist upon the patent, but they do not get, «o far as to make the working model required. Tho Patent Offieo does not wish to make money out of enthusiasts. It is run on a common-sense, business basis, and it is the best-paying bureau in Uncle Sam's great governmental machine. It is ono of the few departments that bring in more every year than they pay out, and it has a balance in tho Treasury to its credit of more than three and one half million dollars. It made, last year, ono hundred and eighty-six thousand dollars more than it spent, and it grant ed, during that time, more than twenty one thousand patents. Its officers em brace some of tho most skilled thinkers of the country, and it is a big machine, run on business principles, in the inter est of the people.—Frank G. Carpenter, in N. Y. Ledger. FLATTERING A POET. Ad Experiment Attrmlivt lijr Vary Oae»- tlonnble Sufoen. Not long ago a poet was staying at a seaside hotel, where ho attracted some attention as a celebrity. Among the guests was a woman who wished her daughter to seem on intimate terms with literature, and, as far as possible, with literary people. Accordingly she sol the girl at jvorlc to learn ono of tho poet's shorter pieces—which might have been a Vlever move to gain her point, but the effect of it was somewhat injured by tho daughter's carelessness and ignorance. On the same page with tho poorn in question—in a book of selections—-was one by another and moro famous writer, and the girl made the mistake of com mitting this instead of tho ono which her mother had intended. At the first opportunity tlieyoungladj said to tho poet in the presence of sev eral of the guests: "It is such a delight to moot one whose lines 1 have carried in my mind for years! The poom which 1 love bet ter than any other In the world is ono of yours." "Indeed!" answered the smiling poet. "I bad not flattered mvsol* that I had written any thing worthy of such honor. What is it?" With an affected emphasis tho girl repeated the poem she had learned, tho company, of course, remaining silent till she had finished. "It is lovely!"' murmured one of the guests, who did not recoguo'.o it "Yes," said tho poet "It is so good that I can only regret that Wordsworth should have taken th- liberty of writ ing it before I was born. Otherwise should undoubtedly have written it my self' Tho best, of good breeding could not altogether repress the smiles of the by standers, and tho poor girl, suddenly remembering that her mother needed her, disappeared with much celerity. "It is a pity," tho poet said, mildly, when she was out of hearing, "it is a pity that people can not understand that we writers, vain though we may be, aro not so blinded by vanity as to be un able to toll genuino admiration from tho poorest of make-believe."—Youth's Companion. Vitality of th« Snail. The snail is blessed with very great powers of vitality. A case is recorded of an Egyptian desert snail which came to life upon being immersed in warm water after it had passed four years glued to a card in tho British Mujoum. Some specimens in the collection of a naturalist revived after they had appar ently been dead for fifteen years, and snails frozen for weeks together in soUd blocks of ice have recovered on being thawed out. The eggs of this creature aro as hard to destroy as himself. They seem perfectly indifferent to freeing, and have boon known to prove prod act ive after having been shrivelled up in an oven to tho semblance of sand.—Longman's grains of Magazine. SLCOND-HAND LOVfc. A Pernicious CortA That Rule* the Rela tion* of fnny VOUIIK Me» ami Women. Mav Rusm'11, after two or three v,-in ters if beilehood in her native town, went to visit her cousins in Blankville. She was not twen'y-one years old, and was a pretty, sweet-teiiipered vivaciou: girl. Her friends soon saw that Doctor Holmes, the physician of the village. njoy(i meant to win May for his wife, and that May was ready to be won. For the first k) time in her life she had found a man who appealed to her highest nature, and in whom she could find her own better self. Doctor Holmes was an honorable man of great depth and tenderness of feel ing, who had been a faithful son and loval friend, and who would give his whole heart to his wife. "He is too gotnl for May." said ber cousin. Mrs. lJussell, to her husband. "Thegirl began her flirtations at school. when she was ten years old. The doc tor has never before wished to marry any woman. She is skilled in the con duet of sham love affairs.'' "The fooling is real with her now," replied Mr. Russell. Doctor Holmes was a At last he resolved to hesitato no longer, and one evening went to the house determined to ask her to bo his wife. A young ff.:1 one of May's com panions, was in the »om with her, and both were looking amusedly at a large card, on which were fastened six lucks of hair, each labelled with a name and date. "What have you there?" asked Doc tor Holmes. May laughed saucily. "I call them my scalps- tokens of my victories," she said. "They are locks of the hair of men who—shall I confess it—have pro fessed to be my admirers," Doctor Holmes was silent. Her friend soon afterward loft the room. Then he said, "Arc you serious? Do you mean that these int n have been so much in terested in you and have professed such regard for you as to give you locks of their hair, possibly at your request?" "Yes, indeed," she said laughing. "In my part of the country a girl would feel neglected if she had not received some such tokens of personal regards, per haps of love, from gentlemen who had offered her special attention. She never means l-eallv to marrv them." "But she allows each man to look upon her as possibly his future wife, probably to kiss her?'' "Yes. There does not to me seem to be any barm in it." "I think 1 can not agree with you," he said, gravely. He loft her and never returned. May Russell's rode rules the social re lations of many young men and women. They hold familiar intercourse or form engagements which they Know aro .not founded upon love or esteem, and which they never in tend to fulfill. No young girl can pass through one of these "ex periences," as they are called, without degradation and taint. She goes to'her husband a battered, second-hand thing. which no art can restore to its first in nocent purity. We speak plainly, because the evil exists, and the danger is great.- Youth's Companion. FECUNDITY CF FISH. What Would If All the Efffi of I ho hJ Maturi'ii? Fish that take much care of their offspring naturally don't need to pro duco eggs in the same reckless abun dance as those dissipated kinds that leave their spawn exposed on the bare sandy bottom at the mercy of every corner who chooses to take a bite at it. They can afford to lay a smaller numbert and to make each individual egg much larger and richer in proportion than their rivals. This plan, of course, ena bles the young to begin life far better provided with muscles and tins than the tiny little fry which come out of the eggs of the improvident species. For example, the codfish lay.* U,000,O K) odd eggs but anybody who has over eaten fried cod's roe must needs have noticed that each individual ovum was so very small as to be almost indistin guishable to the, naked eye. Thousands of these infinitesimal specks are de voured before they hatch out by pro daceous fish thousands more of the young fry are swallowed alive during their helpless infancy by the enemies of their species. Imagine tho very fractional amount of parental affection which each of tho ',,0 /0,000 must needs put up with. On the other band there is a pater nally-minded group of cat-fish known as tho genus Arris, (,f Ceylon. Australia and other tropical parts, the males of which carry about the ova loose in their mouths, or rath«r in an enlargement of the pharynx, somewhat resembling the pelican's pouch and the spouses of these very devoted sires lay accordingly only very few ova, all told, but each al most as big as a hedge-sparrow's egg—-a wonderful contrast to the tiny mites of the codfish. To put it briefly, the greater tho amount of protection afforded the eggs, the smaller the number and the larger the size. And conversely, the larger the size of the egg to start with, the better fitted to begin the battlo of lifo is the young fish when first turned out on a Cold world upon his own re sources. This is a general law, indeed, that runs through all nature, from London slums to the deop sea. Wasteful species produce many young, and take bui little care of them when once produced. Economical species produce very few young, but start each individual well equipped for its place in lifo, and look after them closely till they c^n take care of themselves in the struggle for existence. And o 1 the average, how ever many or however few the offspring to start with, just enough to attain maturity in the long run replace their parents in the next generation. Were it otherwise, the sea would soon become one solid mass of herring, cod and mackerel.—Corn hill Magazine. SOME STRANGE CASto. II.m Chlnfttnan Took an tbtth €rk I'ollcw Coin '. The police courts of th!5 "ity furnish more amusement in one day, than the average theater does in a week. A day spent at tbo Tombs, the principal polico court in this city, where one can sit and the ir ()l! s throng that continu- in amlol)l l)f Ji|U pn ly lh(i many grave, quiet man. The step he was going to take was for lifo he would not allow himself to be rash. Yet surely ho could make no mistake in taking this apparently in nocent, artless, swuet-naturcd girl into his heart and home forever? interesting dialogues n iu inj rrich with accent, amply repays a person for his time. It will give you lots and lots of opportu nity to see the ups anddownsof life and furnish your brain sufficient matter to feed upon for months. Mrange sights although sometimes sickening ones, aro seen daily, and thev tend to instruct a person in the vagaries of human life. The mode of swearing of the different prisoner-! and wi,.leases who are brought before the magistrate are sometimes very amusing. Ninety-nine out of a hundred witnesses and prisoners in & police court are satisfied with laking the usual oath, holding up the. right hand while the justice repeats tho oath and then pressing the lips against the cover of the well-worn Bible, but once in a while an obj.'clor against this mod," of oath-taking will turn tip. Recently a case, involving an assault on a China man by a gang of Mulberry street hood lums. was brought before Justice Smith in the Tombs. Several witnesses, in cluding the a* K aul'ed Chinaman, and an Italian bootblack, who had seen tho assault, were sworn in the usual man ner, when a witness was encountered that proved rather obstinate. He was a Chinaman, with a fair kno.vledcre of Knglish. and dressed in very rich ap parel. He was somewhat above the ordinary New York celestial, both in appearance and manners, and when he took his seat in the inclosure set aside for witnesses, every eye in the court room was upon him. The clerk handed him the Bible, but the Chinaman took it not. He knocked the clerk silly by requesting to bo sworn in accordance with the ancient custom of his country by the ceremony of lii'.r.ieg a fire, placing it on a saucer, and then breaking the saucer to pieces: bt the ditliculty was that the requisite article was not at, hand. The clerk toil the Chinaman that such a thing could not be done. The Chinaman persisted and the clerk expostulated. Finally Jus'ice Smith thought that ho would settle both the Chinaman and the question by re marking, "Let him take the usual oath." "Very well," answeted the Chinaman, "give me your book: or ask me que,, tions and trust me." Neither of the al ternatives was accepted: but the witness persisted that it was no business of hi-, to provide a saucer, though ho suggested that a saucer could he obtained from a near-by crockery store, and. diving his hand down into the inside pocket of his silken blouse, he brought out a well tilled pocketbook, selected a dime, and, by permission of the court., sen' a police man out to procure the required article. The policeman, no doubt anxious to see the fun, v\as not long in obtaining the saucer, and when he hrousrht it into the court room, and placed it on the desk before the justice, every neck in the court room was craned toward the desk. Several sheets of paper were placed on the saucer, a lighted march applied, the burning paper reduced to ashes, the saucer broken into fragments and the following oath administered by another Chinaman: "Duly, in the reign of Quong Sue, in the sixteenth year, second month and seventh day. I arrived in this court to be s.vorn to tell the truth, ami to tell every word of it. If I tell a false hood my soul will be extinguished like this incense." Thus the testimony was obtained. —Onco a Week, CLEVER DIAMOND THfEF. Probably the .lewder l» WMtliift for the Brother Y. t, A Qfirriage drew up in front of a jew elry store in Vienna, a lady dressed in black alighted and asked to be shewn an assortment of diamond rintjs, from which she sol ecti one worth seventy five florins. An hour later a stylish looking gentleman called at the sumo shop and asKed to see the proprietor, whom be addressed as follows: "Sir, my namo is Baron Von S and I have come on a delicato errand. An hour ago a young lady dressed in mourning purchased a diamond rin from you, but at tin- same time she pur loined another valuable ring." 1 he jeweler started in amazement, and the voung gentleman produced the ring from his pocket, saying: "Allow me to ret,urn it to you, with tho request that you will keep the mat ter to yourself. The lady is mv sisior. and since the death of her husband she has been suffering from mental aberra tion. At every shop she goes to she tries to pocket unobserved any small article that takes her fancy, sutler mortal agony whenever she contrives to leave tho house. In conclusion, I would entreat you in caso she conies again and attempts to take any thin" not to frighten the poor creature. wifl make good the damage." The jeweler promised ontire secrecy. Two days afterward tho lady in black called again and asked to see a ntnnber of diamond rings, but did not make any purchase this time. Tho jeweler kept, a sharp watch on his far customer, but did not perceive any Uiing unusual. However, when she had gon,- a diamond cross of very great value was found to be missing. The jeweler waited iu vain for the Biron to make his appearance and return tho stolen property. No wonder a Baron of that name never existed.—Illustrirtes Kxcrablatt, The Way Sho Put If. 15. is a self-made man, has good Hit 1 AUMIM^WUKLU. ANOTHER POTATO SORTER. i Thai Is l7~H.lv ide «n«l Which WurU-i Weil. In the llural of July I noticed il lustrations of two potato sorters, and •hat vou would like to have drawings of home ,he room, and -made articles sent in. I do not Know that there has been any special .i em and iu th s region for such an aiU •lc but I immediately thought how I would go to work to make one, and 1 send vou two rude drawings -see fig ures 1 and rl-from which the artist may he al.de to see what 1 mean. have two wire-covered cylinders, one monov out of it, see if he dtl»s HOMF-M I lge of the dirt. By the .vi '. 'ion of mother cylindc»« another o-'ing of potatoes could be m'^e The inside cvlin. -aould extend iboiit four inches fav.' v than tho out lde one, so as to makc a more conven ient lit ting lor tho boxes through which the potatoes would slide. I think s.ich in ai'r,ing"ment would be much better than either of the, sorters illustrated. It would be belter than the Hoover sorl hecause tho dirt would bo separated from the small potatoes, and two sort ings could be made if needed. One ad vantage it would have over the Collins sorter would be th it there would bo more certainty of separating the soli from the small tubers. I should sup pose that in the Collins sorter, if the potatoes were thrown in too fast. the. *mail one, wi)»id fa 1 i o ,' bevon I the lower vreen and tuinhie to t:.'- gr. .hiiLT: -U»E Vlt'.W. FIG E TOMATO WORM. It Has Parasitic I'lmniy Tliat of a little parasitic tlv. an enemy of tho ome tine summer day when the to mato worm is enjoying'his meal of the leaves of the fruit, of the tomato, a small, black, four-winged fly alights upon his back and deposits beneath his skin by me :ins 0 a the, U| Any ones can get tin flies by inclosing some of nn ners and is a favorite with the Lid in. When he was courting his wife some one said to her: "Is it possible, Miss Stubbing that a girl with your expectations and of a family such as yours cay condescend to entertain kLe advances of tbat common fellow?" "Well," replied the heiress, "I prefer marrying a man without a name rather than a name without a man."—.1 udpe sa —"Well. Doctor, how do you flnd our beefsteak?" "Very small for its age." Fliegende Blatter, DA I Y O S Dn.rrr. your cream with weight of water, and you can the cream a few hours win, use of ice. DUOPPIN dead stock term.,, will cnlve in "coupleot nionihs weekly yield of butter strong market. the other. The inside one better cows than you do see if that within ,hould he of a larger mesh nothing but earth and small potatoes rould |mss 'hrough. and the outside one j{ such mesh s 10 allow only tbo puss- Make* will [it you have a boy vv)I0 cows this hot weather he ..,,, s for the city on the ne\t train to make a lawyer kind of him. 'netbing Ik you fail to make dairying. 1 would .vour neighbor manages to'-rab ni! ihu,ll| worm, and they originate as follows: gravel substituted, says Vick'.s fine summer dav when tlx. The plants are propagated by of the root and require to bee' lifted, and replanted twice a yeas plantings and removals should in successions during May and J' affording supplies of salad is A and during September, October a vember for affording.Supplici int lung needle-like in strument called the overpositor, great numbers of minute, eggs. in a few weeks these eggs hatch into little lee-. less grubs which absorb the juices of the worm and develop at his expend. In a few weeks the tomato worm slops I feeding its body being literally full of the grubs. When full grubs bore holes in the back of their host and crawl through tho skin and escape. As soon as ihoy grown these i by the para- tho attacks of a still smaller parasite which destroys them as they destroy heir nosts. These secondary parasite/ as they are called, are quite diff-n-nt from the primary ones, differing both' n form and color. This species of primary pavasilo which at'acks the to-nato worm is-all,.d by enlomob.g.s W tho secondary species s do not see *-liV *ay Of pre,e o parasite the cocoons a box or oiher receptacle The liirtls and Fruit. Sometimes the hint« t„i, orrnnt Asanj! ,^ well afford to give them what 'fruu\ W ^11 eat. in payment for their destroying insects i,„ in is the friend of tho Z Tl Uh j,lari W( New ork fruit glower av 1 I 0111 mended. He covered his w ith mosquito n tied at the result. 'nut in a sort of wholesale lS ,\s Uat the cove rin" years, and whil, pay so far as grown, Btince—for th n not some secret about feedin* you have not "caught on to if there is not something in [tjSn ment that you might make pr by adopting. It is the duty of every w patron to deliver good iriilk'ing( dition, says Mirror and Karii^ should keep his cows heuli'riy good flesh, see that thev hn wholesome and good miik-pr, food, that the milk is draw handled in a cleanly ttvannpr, an erly aired so that it will not tair Tiistrii-: is no sickness or dUc, cow which does not affect ito mi Practical Farmer, and the row from many dangers by reason escape through the milk of ir matter eaten. Hence the food cow, and the water especially be carefully scrurini/.'d and'* and the animal s best of health. he kept Ok I'll samples the chemist of t: Food Commission the North western enty-nine per cent. l-te a nMj ite Dai. Minnesut A„':ieulUiris were pure, two below the standard, sevens and foil- watered. Those bel standard and the skimmed and 1 constituted twenty-one per cent sampies analyzed. SoMitriMKS mil', -..i a "cow and the cause is 1 ndrito Country tientL-iiia' 1. t•« drii: quantities of water, and nut ha passes off through the kidneys, in health and the skin ci- HU It largest p\rt finds an outlet throi pores of the skin and take, aim it. effete und. ma'ter and 1 !T'"!siv( which arc thrown off through capillaries with (he per-piraMon action of the skin is as n'-ee-is the purification of the hi i,d its healthy action of tho lntvs. milk has a "cowy" ode- 1 that the.skin is not wor lowing the impurities :y. back into the blood, whence s them find their way into thf making it smell o{ the cow T! gests that to have pure am butter the skin must be kepicle free from s.-urf. which tills -. th e easier cows do not give "cowy In the device have attempted de scribe. an arrangement might be n eie v\hereby one end of tii^.' cylinder could i frequent grooming he raised or lowered, making it more or Clean cows do less slanting. If tne dirt clung to the For the same reason most pec potatoes, it would be rolled off if the flic ted with diabetes aro those vv r-ylmder were nearly level, and if it did lect personal cleanliness. In not cling the potatoes would pass cases of ihi, malad v can s-uneti thioughinuch more quickly if the cy- jI remedied by judicious bathing, litider were quite slanting. -Kurai New can offensive odors of tho person Yorker. WATER CRESS. I Som ,,hln,r A 0,,t It* l,,fe a UnrUtui. li«*l Suitable for Tliwir (irom' I ant frequently asked, says Entomolo- l»1 o*es most su.tabic for a gist Clare lion M. Weed, in American i the backs of tomato worms. These not eggs, however, but are the wat, Oarden, concerning the origin of the peculiar egg-like objects oft n seen on Their nlture- 1 cress are generally flow in wi,h v elly or ch.iiky hotto w t!l fr,,m at "l oiie-!.!ilf to tivo inches depth of wat- f. ani n,, "ld.y bottomed rills are avails'' be removed from tb The plants should be set, ii commencing as near as possible sources of the stream: and ally full of i s 'iould be about eighteen inches- in ar on (|lf ()UN side they begin -spinning white silken. cocoons, which arc the objects frequent- ly mistaken for eggs. Within 1 the youngest: and best rooted cocoons they change to tho pupa state- and in about a fortnight emerge as four, r"lu,'ried into the stream winged flies like the original egir.]av(,r' in its proper place with omato worms affected hv sites seldom livr shallow rills, and from eir inches to seven feet in deeper on In every process of cleaning s newal, all weeds, mud and n should be cleared away and in mn ,:in ying process of repl.uitir H'l(J"'d be selected for 1 ur n to change to their i [it.tlc» parasites do not always i ant ti re STOBO winter crops in even the nv,s p'upa state, and never, so far a, known ''""ing as to impede the currt omplete their transformations. j{u^ a sufficient degree to maintain streams should bo so maiUi of Wilvs s TO""- *t is black, uh.le mav he either 1 four or five inches ia\e things entirely to their own lik- Gatherings from the plants shot 'ng. for they are thomselves subiecj to (1I11':l'1 by cutting, arid n»v breaking and. in a favorable -0U1 with a good set of plants, may b® as often as once a week. The cuttings should be very clo summer ami after the plants have cut about three times, tlie.v beg stock, and may thenceforth be cull and often. For Forty i'«w This house is suitable for 4" be in each room. It is 5i(Jxb aD' rooms ara 10x1(1 ft- The nests can reached from tho halls, and the can be used for sitters or bree--1 J(* & it cherry trees 11 and fee This grati- "bagging"j wSy- He I will last two I «ven then it may not berries—fo- i rirttiftM-Xn?"1- n i xirrr 1 wul ,,av an: u V lf W n Western Li^L Lu,m us i bens. About 3,000 feet of cheap and 2.000 shingles will complex The cuts explain it in fuli.-~*« in the Homo. rm