O N Y O N E K I N W O
Twas a little thing, only one kind word.
In tlic hurry and hustle of every day,
But the heart was touched and ttio soul was
stirred.
And a rainbow of hope spanned the darkened
way 1
Twas a world-worn man with n vetrrht of woo.
Who was Rroplrii? along. In tin: crowded Htrr l,
When ho hoard a voice that was soft anil low
And u word that was warm, and passing
swceli
And tho sluggish life in his reins moved fast,
And the light In his eye was tho olden light—
Twas the one kind word, he had met and
passe.l
'Twaf the blue In the sky, where the stars
shine bright!
'Twas a sinning girl, with a reckless air,
Who was one of a throng on a sunny day,
And her painted cheek ani her stony stare
Were the signs of a soul on its downward
way!
But a greeting came, and a kindly word,
With a message of grace to the erring one,
And the con: red depths of her nature stirred,
Till she turned from the wrong, and the good
was won!
—Ella Dare, in Inter Ocean.
"THE WORM."
An Interesting Story of the Ono
That Turned.
Khakespoaro say3 something about
worms, or it may bo gnats or beetles,
turning if you tread on them too se
verely. The safest plan is never to
tread on a worm—not even on tho last
new subaltern from home, with his but
tons hardly out of their tissue paper,
ami tho red of sappy English b«-)f in his
cheeks. This is thf story of tho worm
that turned. For tho sake of brevity wo
will call Ilenry Augustus Ilamsay Faiz
anno "Tho Worm," although ho was an
exceedingly pretty boy, without a hair
on his face, and with a waist like a
girl's, when ho camo out to the Second
•'Shikarris" and was made unhappy in
several ways. The "Shikarris" aro a
high-caste regiment, and you must bo
abie to do things well—play a banjo, or
ride more than little, or sing or act—to
got o« with them.
Tho Worm did nothing except fall off
his pony and knock chips out of gate
posts with his trap. Even that became
monotonous after a time. He objected
to whist, cut tho cloth at billiards, sang
out of tune, kept very much to himself,
and wrote to his mamma and sisters at
home. Four of these things wero vices
which tho "Shikurria" objected to and
Bet themselves to eradicate. Every one
knows how subalterns aro, by brother
fcubaltnrns, softened and not permitted
to bo ferocious. It is good and whole
some, and does no ono any harm unless
tempers are lost, and then there is
trouble.
Tho "Shikarris" shikarred The Worm
very much, and ho bore every thing
without winking. He was so good and
BO
anxious to learn, and flushed so pink
that his education was cut short, and ho
was left to his own devices by every ono
except the senior subaltern, who contin
ued to make life a burden to Tho Worm.
Tho senior subaltern meant no harm,
but his chaff was coarso and he didn't
quite understand where to stop. Ho
had been waiting too long for his com
pany, and tiuit always sours a man.
Also ho
was in love,
took
which
made him
worse.
One day after he had borrowed The
Worm's trap for a Udy who had never
pxisted, had used it himself all tho aft
ernoon, had sent a note to Tho Worm
purporting to como from tho lady, and
•lias telling tho mess all about it, The
Worm rose in his place and said,
in his quiet, lady-liko voice:
"That was a very pretty sell, but I'll
lay you a month's pay to a month's pay
When you get your step that 1 work a
Mill on you that you'll remember for tho
test of your days, and tho regimont
after you when you're dead or broke."
The Worm wasn't angry in tho least.
And the rest of the mess shouted. Then
'the
senior subaltern looked at Tho Worm
jfrom tho boots upward and down again,
Mid said: "Done, Baby." The Worm
the rest of the mess to witness that
tbo bet had been taken, and retired into
a book with a sweet smile.
Two months passed, and the senior
subaltern still educated The Worm,
Who began to move about a little more
the hot weather camo on. I have
Mid that tho senior subaltern was in
love. The curious thing is that a girl
Was in lovo with tho senior subaltern.
Though the Colonel said av.ful things,
and tho Majors snorted, and married
Captains looked unutterable wisdom,
Hid the juniors scoffed, those two wero
engaged.
Tho sonior subaltern was so pleased
with getting his company and his ac
ceptance at tho same time, that ho for
got to bother The Worm. Tho girl was
a pretty girl, and bad money of her
own. She does not come into this story
at all.
Ono night, at tho beginning of the
hot weather, all tho mess except The
Worm, who had gone to his room to
write homo letters, were sitting on tho
platform outside tho mess-house. The
bund had finished playing, but no ono
wanted to go in. And tho Captains'
Wives wero thero also. The folly of a
man in love is unlimited. Tho senior
tubr.ltern had been holding forth on tho
merits of tho girl ho was engaged to,
and
the ladies wero purring approval,
whilo tho men yawned, when there
was a rustle of skirts in tho dark, and
a tired, faint voice lifted itself:
"Where's my husband?"
I do not wish in tbo least to reflect
on
tho morality of the "Shikarris," but
His on record that four men jumped up
at if they wero shot. Three of them
Wero married men. Perhaps they were
afraid that thoir wives bad como from
homo unbeknownst. The fourth said that
.he had acted on tho impulse of tho mo
ment. lie explained this afterward.
Then tho voice cried: "O, Lionel!"
Lionel was tho senior subaltern's name.
A woman camo into tho little cirelo «i
light by tho candles on tho peg table,
•tretelling out her arms to tho dark
where tho senior subaltern was, and
fobbing. Wo rose to our feet, feeling
ibat things were going to happen, and
ready tobelievo the worst. In this bad.
aniall world of our.i ono knows so little
*if the life of tho next man, which, after
all) is aatirelj bis own concern, that
is n-.t surprised when thi* crasn
Coines.
Any thing might turn up any day for
any one. Perhaps the senior subaltern
had been trapped in his youth. Men are
crippled that way occasionally We
didn't know wo wanted to hear, and
the Captains' wives were a* anxious as
wo. If ho had been trapped he was to
bo excused, for tho woman from no
where, in tho dusty shoes and gray
traveling dress, was very lovely, with
black hair and great eves full of tears.
She was tall, with a fine flguro, and her
ncohad a running sob in it pitiful to
hear. As soon us tho sonior subaltern
stood up she threw her arms around his
neck and called him "my darling," and
said she could not bear waiting alone in
England, and his letters wero so Short
and cold, and she was his to the end of
the world, and would ho forgive her?
This did not aour.d quite like a lady's
way of speaking. It was too demonstra
tive.
Things seemed black indeed, and tho
Captains' wives peered under their eye
brows at tho sonior subaltern, and the
Colonel's face sot like tho day of judg
ment framed in gray bristles, and no
ono spoke for awhile.
Next the Colonel said, very shortly:
"Well, sir?" and tho woman sobbed
afresh. Tho sonior subaltern was half
choked with tho arms around bis neck,
but he gasped out: "It's falsol 1 never
had a wife in ray life!*'
"Well," said tho Colonel, "como into
the mess. Wo must sift this clear somo
how," and ho sighed to himself, for ho
believed in his "Shikarris," did the
Colonel.
We trooped into the anto-rooro, under
the full lights, and there wo saw how
beautiful the woman was. She stood up
in tho middle of us all, sometimes chok
ing with crying, then hard and proud,
and then holding out her arms to tho
sonior subaltern. Sho told us how the
senior subaltern had married hor when
he was homo cn leave eighteen months
before and sho seemed to know all
that wo knew, and more too, of his peo
ple and his past life. He was white and
ashy gray, trying now and again to
break into tho torrent of tier words
and we, noting how lovely sho was and
what a criminal ho looked, esteemed
him a beast of tho worst kind. Wo felt
sorry for him, toougli.
I shall never forget tho indictment of
tho senior subaltern by his wife, nor
will ho. It was so sudden, rushiug out
of tho dark unannounced into our dull
lives. Tho Captains' wives stood back,
but their eyes were alight, and you
could soo that they had already con
victed and sentenced tho senior sub
altern. The Colonel seemed five years
older. Ono Major was shading his eyes
with his hand and watching tho woman
from underneath it. Another was
chewing his mustacho and smiling
quietly, as if ho wore witnessing a play.
Full in the open space, in tho censor,
by the whist tables, tho sonior sub
altern's terrier was hunting for fleas.
I cremember all this as clearly as
though a photograph wero in tny hand.
I remember tho look of horror on th«
senior subaltern's face. It was rathor
liko seeing a man hanged, but much
more interesting. Finally tho woman
wound up by saying that the senior sub
altern carried a double F. M. in tattoo
on his left shoulder. Wo all know that,
and to our innocent minds it seemed to
clinch the matter. But ono of tho
bachelor Majors said, very politely: "1
presumo that your marriago certificate
would be more to tho purpose."
That roused tho woman. She stood
up and sneered at tho senior subaltern
for a cur, and abused tho Major and
tho Colonel and all the rost. Then sho
wept, and then she pulled a paper from
her breast, saying, imperially: "Take
that! and let my husband—my lawful
husband—read it aloud if ho dare!"
Thero was a hush, and the men looked
into each other's eyes as the sonior sub
altern came forward in a dazed and
dizzy way and took the paper. Wo
wero wondering, as wo stared, whethor
thero was any thing against any ono of
us that might turn up lator on. The
senior subaltern's throat was dry but,
as ho ran his eyes over tho paper, he
broke out into a hoarso cackle of roliof,
and said to the woman "You young
blackguard!"
But tho woman had fled through a
door, and on tho paper was written:
"This is to certify that I, Tho Worm,
have paid in full my debts to tho sonioi
subaltern, and further, that tho seniol
subaltern is ray debtor, by agreement
on tho 23d of February, as by tho mess
attested, to the extent of ono mouih'i
Captain's pay, in the lawful currency oi
the Indian Empire."
Then a deputation sot off for Th«
Worm's quarters, and found him, be
twixt and between, unlacing his stays,
with tho hat, wig, sergo Jrcss, etc.,
OE
the bed. lie camo over as he was. and
tho "Shikarris" shouted until the gun
ners' mess sent over to know if thej
might have a share of tho fun. 1 think
wo wero all, except tho Colonol and the
sonior subaltern, a littlo disappointed
that tho scandal had come to nothing
But that is human naturo. Tbor«
could bo no two words about The
Worm's acting. It leaned as near to i
nasty tragedy as any thing this sido oi
a joke'can.
When most of tho subalterns sot upon
him with sofa cushions to find out wbj
ho had not said that acting was his
strong point, ho answered, very quietly:
"I don't think you over asked mo. 1
used to act at homo with my sistors."
But no acting with girls could ac
count for Tho Worm's display thai
night. Personally, 1 think it was ir
bad taste, besides being dangeroua
Thero is no uso in playing with firc^
even for fun.
Tho "Shikarris" mado him president
of tho regimental dramatic club, and
when tho sonior subaltern paid up bit
debt, which ho did at orsco, Tho Worn
sank tho money in scenery and dresses,
ilo is a good Worm, and tho "Shikarris'
are proud of him. The only drawf«acli
is that ho has boon christened "Mrs.
Senior Subaltern," and as there aro now
two Mrs. Senior Subalterns iti tho sta
tion, this is sometimes coufusang tc
strangers. Rudyard Kipling, in The
Woman's Journal.
—There aro flfty-ono different post
masters within the corporate limits ol
the city of Chicago
BLANCHING CELERY.
Knm« Sugceitnm as to tlic
Moit Successful Method*
ploy© I.
Hyl
rto. 1. M-ANC'lilNG IN' HOt'M III.I S.
ened by adopting any of the following
method?.
When the plants in tho rows have
reached a freight of from eight to twelve
incites, each bunch is either closely
wrapped with strong paper or inclosed
in a tin tubeabout two anil a half inches
in diameter, open at the ends and one
side. Over this tube, or wrapper, a
three-inch drain tile is slipped, pressed
firmly in the ground, and left in a per
pendicular position as seen in Fig. 1,
the tin or paper wrapper is removed
and tho same process repeated with the
rest.
In Fig. v! is shown the manner of
using botse-shoe tile in connection with
a board at least ten inch--, u ide. .. i
i:i..\ m.\(,
TII.K3.
rto. 8. liLAxriiiNM m. iwit.s
condition. It does not in the laast in
jure the drain tile, which may be used
for draining after the celery is removed,
or kept over from year to year. Where
space is verv limited the method illus
trated in Fig. 3 may be adopted.
Boards are placed eight inches apart
along the rows of plants and the inter
mediate space is filled with soil.—
American Agriculturist.
WlnUr-HrmdliiB Poultry.
It was not originally intended for the
chick to come into the world in winter,
says the Mirror and Farmer, but as it is
now a subject of domestication, the
domestic methods must be resorted to in
order to enable it to thrive and ac
complish the purposes sought by its in
troduction to existence in the winter
season. The greatest loss occurs from
diseases of the bowels. When this ap
pears the cause is attributed to the
food, and the attempt is mado to save
the chicks by all manner of feeding,
but the real cause of the bowel disease
is cold on the bowels, duo to lack wf
sufficient heat. This cold does not
come from prolonged exposure, or from
a lack of warmth during the day, but
from tho failure to supply warmth at
night, at which time the chicks are
quiet, and do not have the aid of exer
cise. A single night's exposure (or
even an hour) to a temperature that
will cause the chicks to crowd, will
bring on the bowel disease. When the
whole brood is attacked by it, the
chances of saving the chicks are very
slim, as they seldom fully recover, or,
if they pass the critical stage of the
difficulty, they seldom amount to any
thing afterward. In raising early chicks
for broilers, therefore, the main condi
tion is warmth, continual warmth, and
plenty of it, as 100 degrees is not too
much for very young chicks.
Infective Kyrg la HnrsPH.
I am forced to believe, says a writer
in the Horseman, from much practical
experience among young horses, as
well as those more advanced in years,
that in nineteen cases out of twenty,
the visual organ has not the power of
perceiving things aright There are
several causes in operation to produce
shying. I have known many with nar
row and flat foreheads, possessing small,
ill-shaped eyes, desperate and dangerous
shyers. The shape of the cornea has
not been convex, but I have found it
more prominent at one part than at an
other. They are what i havo termed
them—"angularly convex.'' I have
noticed a similar shaped eyo in the
bovine race. I dare say many persons
have noticed that cows when driven
along a street, shy a good deal, which
may be accounted for tty the fact that
they meet with objects they are unused
to, and beintr excited their vision is less
perfect than when they are in a tranquil
•tate.
UCCESSFUL
and
Km-
One of the principal drawlaeKS in
raising celery for home use is the trouble
or non-success in blanching the stalks.
While several self-blanching varieties
have come into favor with many, thero
are not a few who prefer tho long, ciisp,
artificially-blanched stalks. 1 work
of blanching may bo con-ddrra! less-
idi
A I I"'i'I
CREAMER1.
It r:ain, PrwrtlrAl ail'l Profit i!le Ho#
It «'sn *1 ide s
A !i tie over a year airo. Mr. Isaac
Budlong. o.' Scots ilie, N. linding
that milk was not bringing as satis
factorvprices when shipp'd to Rochester
as formerly decided to erect a creamery,
and work up the milk from his cows into
more salable products at home. With
his usual energy he began operations,
and the creamery shown in the cut was
soon finished and furnished with tho
most mo.lorn appliances for the manu
facture of gilt edge butte '. 'Ihe main
building is 4-0x40 feet, with adjoining
milk-room SOxl'J feet, and the cost with
all the equipment was 1 sa than Sl.OiK).
.All the in iik used in this creamery is
I produced on the farm of 1100 acres, and
from 11 .*» cows. Manv of these cows aro
I now dry. the i lea being to make all tho
i butter possible in the winter. Labor is
cheaper then, and the price for tho
I product iH decidedly higher than during
the summer months. The butter-room
is ceiled inside with matched stuff and
i hut th milk-ri»»e is left in tho
re. Ml. 'I i.reo large i cr.%me-r»,
MI
v
v A i
holding: 144'quarts each, stand on ono
side of the milk-roon: and partly across
one end. Each creamer has eight 13
quartcans, which are submerged in ice
•\ater that has been previously reduced
to a temperature of 45 degrees. The
Cooleys as far as possible ate used for
night's milk, and it is allowed to remain
in them -JO hours before it is skimmed.
1
is thrown against the tile t, keep them
pressed against the board. By either
of these plans the celery is
nicely and evenly blanched, is clean
and free from earth and while it may
appear like a didicult operation, it is
quite simple and quickly done. An
other advantage is that a greater
amount may be grown on the same land,
and that the ground is left in a level
n
the south siie. there is one vat iO
few long.4 feet wide, made double, and
rilled in with sawdust sunk in tho
ground to the level of the floor. This
vat lias a cap icity of Fairlamb cans,
Holding in all ilOO quarts. The Fair
lamb cans are not su11merged in tie
water us tho Cooleys are. and ha.'
ie skimmed with a surface skin
The morning" mi..v i, 1 in
cans, and left i.: ti.e ue\ mi-n
before skimming
The main building is divided into two
rooms. A small one in the left-hand
corner contains a four-hor.se power Ship
man engine f»r running the machinery.
I '1 his engine uses kerosene as a motive
power, and consumes when running
i 'JO
UOATJDS.
pounds of steam, a gallon an hour,
costing .V-. cents when bought by tho
barrel. The other room, occupying
three-fourths of tne space, is devoted
to butter-making, and is well fitted up
tor that purpose. A large cream vat
Holding .TOO gillons rests in a tank that
s kept filled with ice-ivater. The
•ream is allowed to ripen in this vat for
hours before it is churned. Opposite
the cream vat stands a rectangular
burn holding a."0 gallons, and making
4'J revolutions per minute. The cream
INTKBIOIT OF MII.K-HOOM.
tho rest is packed into tubs and
crociis. Nothing is wasted here. Half
the skimmed milk is sold to peddlers
in Rochester at a cent per quart, and
the remainder is fed to swine:. Ono
man does all the creamery work, and
has a boy an hour or two in tho morn
ing to help wash cans, etc. Tho aver-I
age price for the butter last year was a3
cents per pound, and what is bein»
made now sells at V.i cents. The above
prices show the superiority of tbo
product.
i he Budlong Jersey creamery, as it
is called, lias been a success from its in
ception, and shows what can be accorn
plished in the creamery line by a farm
er. Mr. Budlong started out without
any financial backing at all, and now
at sixty has upwards of 1,800 acres of
land. mot of it in the Genesee valley
This property was made by farming
ana selling live stock in New York
City. Mr. Budlong is a business man.
i'he little creamery is run on business
principles, and that is why it is a strik
ing success while so many others aro
failures. Tho remainder of the farm
home, beside the pastures of 400 acres
in which the cows run, is devoted to
general farming and is divided as fol-'
lows: Two hundred and fifty acres of!
meadow land. 0J acres of wheat r.o
and
acres of beans. AO acres of corn, 33 acres
of Hungarian grass and 25 acres of oats
Ldwa ,1 F. Dibble, in Kural New
Yorker
1IIKUE is
a
herdred per cent, between what the
producer receives and the consume,
ynys for beef.
HINTS FOR COLLECTORS*
Mote particularly f..r Tt.es,. Who Do No*
Have Too MuH» Money.
A w hints of jjfMioriil clKiniotor m«iy
1ful to the collector whose knowl
ciire has not yet been bought in the
market of practical experience. Let
him avoid, in the first place, a servile
following of the fashion. Let him avoid
riving an extravagant price for any
Thing/ The shortness of his purse is
often an actual protection to the col
lector. It makes him use his wits and
gain that knowledge which his wealthy
cninpetitor never attains to. 'lake
pi.-tures, for example tho rich buyer
tills his gallery with what he is pleased
to consider masterpieces of art. He bo- 1
gins in ignorance, and the dealers-the I
whole crowd of those whose business it
is to minister to his vanity and extract
his gold—take care that he shall nevor
learn more than they choose to teach
him. When he dies he leaves his col
lection to the nation, in the firm confl-
dence that the buidings in Trafalgar
Squaro will be forthwith enlarged to ac
commodate so priceless a treasure in its
entirety. There would be little rest for
tus troubled spirit could he learn that
the trustees have selected three or four
works out of uiany hundred as alone
worthy of a place in the national collcc-,
tion. I
The poorer collector, having devel-
5
is churned at, a temperature of 60 s
degrees. When the butter is in tho
granular state, it is washed and then
worked by a Mason No. 2 power butter
worker, having a capacity of 100 pounds
at one time. At first a hand-worker
was used, but soon it was found that it
destroyed the grain, and so it wa.4!
abandoned for the Mason, which makes I
a fine quality of butter without injur-)
ing the grain in the least. Back of tho
cream vab and in ono corner is the
cooler for storing the butter, but thero
is no use for it no*v as butter is rarely
kept over night. The output of butter
at present is only about 300 pounds per
week, as the larger share of the cream i
i' shipped to Rochester, bringing prices
that would equal '25 cents per pound for i
butter without the expense of making
it. Last winter, however, 000 pounds
of butter per week were made. About
b.iif of it, i«, made pound prints,
As to sleeping with tho head to the
north which some advocate in order tc
be in line with the magnetic currents,
there is nothing in it. The magnetic
north pole is several degrees away from
the geographical north pole, therefore
those who attempt to carry out this
theory fail in getting in lino with th» 1
currents.
EL PASO'S FIRST CHURCH.
Alt the i:imt.lers In Town Sulmrribed
Jh,! re wt
"How to MiUe Mon.^T
Ann "flow to Succeed in Life'
ing themes to everyone. i„
the reader's attention is ,Cuii
tiseinent ,in this
1
HulUI the Snored Kilitlre.
"The first church built in El Paso,
Tex., was put up by the gamblers," said
Harry Wicks, a frontier sporting man.
"In the early days of that border town
everybody gambled. It was a good-sized
town, and we had no church. You see
I'm counting myself in. Well, along
came a minister and said he would preach
for us if we would build him a church.
I can't recollect his politics-1 mean his
religion.
"The boys wanted me to raise tho pot
for tho building. I did all of that char
ity work, and a few days before had
taken up a collection for the widow of a
fellow we had hanged for shooting a
man without giving him a show for his
'fo several gambling
houses and—the population of the town
was about ono thousand, not counting
the several hundred cowboys that came
rom tho plains at night. So I took
round the hat, and all the boys chipped
I wanted to give something and did
not have a red cent. So when I was
passing the hat round at one of tho
faro tables I saw that the jack had lost
through two deals and chopped. Well
ackw'rT »'«o»tbe-thi?a deal tie
kn w tt!
a W lyS Play s stcra
^d just
knew the jack would win out, and as
I w'? ''I""'
0 8JmctM
ng to tho church
I just took uao out of the hat and played
open on the jack for me and lit
-(lurch. It won on the turn and I
played the deal out, winning Smo which
lth
00 raised from the
a good stake for the
church Tt-.
among the profession that who^T.
was robbed last night.
have been in two or three 1
Mock within a week
1
then,.—x.
difference of more than
a
10
oVX
U3
Pa Mercy! Next door"
hweet (iirl— Yes
VIH'H
,tefe,l
Y
°w and
Weekly"
and Watc
^rouRh alLnwd.!orrwt,Jj.
^a., made her
apor|
„f
Brothers omp,my 01 Clcvo],,,,.
of the largest, and best-kn„vn
in the United States,
A,-'™
IS-.T
k
they make can he reW"uJn
ros
neHl be no hesitation in
8e«Vat
money Vav $].,«, the.y pn.po^
1
book giy inga larpe amount of vulr
formation Better read -1,1
fully and see if y
Vi:
uu
dj not wan
tit'
1
UK dee I mo of iitoruturo ty,
blank that accompanies rei^l
script—St. Joseph New
a
Jected
Hav no equal as a prompt and
euro for sick headache. bihouS,
pation.pum in the side, and all livw
Carter s Little Liver Pilil Try
lh
THERB'S a wnio dlffor#tico~b9tWee
made man and a summer
Washington Star.
a
LIKK Oil Upon Trouble.) Water. 1
Honey of Ilorehound imd
ur
,lnn.
Pike's Toothache 1 )rops cur" ja
THE fish that has
1
FEIT/A
danger of taking snap jiMgmea
Picayune.
Do
purge nor weaken the bo-
act specially on the liver and bile a
liver corrector. Carter's Little Lit
Fill
ENDS
get 011 bet K-r Win 11 ear!
ing to come off a little hit.- Kicurii
J?r«T, easiest to use and cheapest
Remedy for Catarrh. By druggist
1
oped a faculty which stands him in the
stead of gold, builds up his fabric in a
mow humble and tentative fashion,
Keeogni/ing that great works of great 1
men are not for him, refusing to look at
Raphaels or Correggios at any rice, he
secures good works by unknown men,
contenting himself with .slight sketches
studies and unconsidered trifles from
the studios of artis's win se reputation
is established. Mich works give him
nearly all the gratification that can be I
derived from pictures, and, viewed as
investments, havo a constant tendency,
as tho auctioneer says when he tries to
elicit a bid fur some atrocious daub, to
"grew into money."—Blackwood's Mag- 1
.1. lie. i
POSITION FOR SLEEP.
I rem I.pi'ture hy ,1. H. KHIogK M. P..
of Hattte Creek HMtiitaritiiii.
The st position for sleep is as near
a horizontal one as possible With per
sons who have tendency to hyperemia
of the brain, it is better to sleep with
the head somewhat raised. On the other
hand, in anaemic conditions, where the
blood supply is insufficient and tho
brain with the rest of the body, suffers
from lack of proper nutriment, it is tho
best plan to sleep with the head a little
lower than the feet. My attention was
lirst called to this some years since by
seeing half starved Italian beggar boys
sleeping on the hillsides around Naples
with their heads downward. Their in
tuitions had led thein to adopt the posi
tion for sleep which tho low nu
tritive tone of their systems made most
desirable a position which to one very
full of blood would be almost sure to in
duce congestion of the brain. Over
taxed students or nurses who sometimes
fall asleep in their chairs do not awaken
with normal feeling of refreshment, for
the brain has not had a fair chance tr,
recuperate. To sleep with tho head
high on a bolster is very perincious. not
not only that it robs the brain, but it
tends to make tho shoulders round and
the spine curved. It is better to sleep
without any pillow at all. As to further
position, assume that which is the most
comfortable individually. I'robably a
little inclination to the right side is the
most normal position, especially if one
goes to bed before the .stomacli is en
tirely empty since the pyloric opening
is on that side.
LAUOR checks are always f,lshi„n
Uiw\ers' suits Boston O.'i.inenV
A Poverty-stricken
Millionaire!
This seems a paradox, but
plained by one of New York'.*
men. "I don't count my w
dollars,'' lie said. "What are
possessions to me, (since i am
of consumption My doctor
that I have but a few months
for the disease ia incurable. I j.
or than that beggar yonder."
interuptod the friend to whom 1
consunipj lou run be cured.
in time. Dr. Pi 'ire's Coldon
v
Di-covery will eradicate even
of tiie disease from \our system
try it," said the miliionair-. at.i
and to-day there is nor a
happier man to be found at
The "Discovery" strikes at tin
the complaint. Consuinntion
ease of the blood—is nothing
less than lung-scrofula ---and
and does yield to this wonderful r,.
"tiolden Medical Di-cowry"
only an acknowledged rt nudy
terribly fatal malady, when
time and given a fair trial, but :.
nil forms of Scrofulous. Skin at:
Diseases, as "White Swellings, 1
sores. Hip-joint Disease, Salt
Tetter, Eczema. Boils, Carbuncli
sipelas and kindred ailments.
SCOTT'S
Of Pure Cod
Liver Oil and
HYPOPHOSPHiTES
of Lime and
Soda
to nnl
|»r»«cl,',t
'p'v!1,ni!
|»hyu:i uis hofuuftA both fVwi
ttU'l Ih/ioih»*ihitrs nri? tho WS^'I
iijjt'io.s in 1 no no of Consumption.
as jxilaiablo as uilik.
1 Scott's Emulsion 2
-I /•(.•si, r,
Ust j.t CONSUMPTION,
Scrofula, Bronchitis, Wasting1 D'8'
I ea es. Chronic Coughs and Col^j
Ahlt f..rSc..u's r.miil.-'.' i. nn-i laS*1"'
ETU AQ
1' rom bad srwcni ".' or imJi.iind
swamps deranges the liver and
dermincsthc system, creates blood
diseases and cru ptions, preceded bjr
headache, biliousness and coio«
pation which can most effectually
be cured by the use of the genuine
DR. C.
McLANE'S
GIIEBIU1ED1111
Pi
PRICE, 25 CENTS. Sold by
druggists, and prepared only by
Fleming Brothers, Pittsburgh,
Get the genuine counterfeit! W
made in St. Louis.
{Salvation Oil t!V low"1-*'
lr lfir!!
UouM
'»«n thi.
4''1
"7^^
'."X'rnrM?'"?!1J
»ne to sit un a few
TREATED
eEi
P«*ITIV|:i.Y CI If ll will.
nnnnri-.l iioiii'lpssiiv tho I"''1 •'""'nJS'jn
dose 8.V1111.o,ms rnpi'lty diwii'l"1'"
re0,.ni'l.
least, tw.i (hii'ilK of itII N.vmptn"1s
forKRI K It'H.K Of ,"f m»i'-
Ton lnv« trt'iument Mr.ii*l»-.l
*or
hor9°
u
rch-•.'^''bburg,
and barked gracefully
ouu
!,,i»
f"'',
fVT
1,..I, I .n
int. II. II. l:l S I N A
M-KAMk Til 18 r\l'»:it..rrr nn.« __
.....
food-bye