FARM AND HOUSEHOLD. Interejtmg Iwms for tte Agriculttirijt, Gardener and HooMkeeper. If grape vines ire growing too likst and slender, pinch o3 the endd. It ii atated that over oOO.OOO rose pUnt3 •re annually imported into America from England, France and Holland. Uae a naason's trowel to scrape the mosa or loose bark off the stem) of (ratt trees, taking good care no: to injare the inner bark. A p>}r tool 03 th? {arm imposes a tax upon the user every day it u employed, often greater in a year than the whole price of a good tool. Afier carefnl experiments a dairyman concludes that bran is pronsable for the milkman, but that oats are mach more protitable for the bustermaker. The old ad%'ice to treat a co'.v as a lady is first-class advice. If anybody cannot ii that, and :uilk rapidly and thoroughly, better not attempt to milk at all. Hay contains the largest amount of nutriment per acre when somewhat past the bloom, bat the proportion of nutriment per ton is greater when cat at an earlier stage. Whenever boughs of trees or vines be- come troublesome, lop them oS, no matter vhat time in the season. Cat smoothly : don't manule or tear or skin the parts which are U-ft. No aged sow that has proved herself a good breeder and sacker should be disposed of to make room for young and untried BOWS as long as she will raise large litters of good pijis. A prominent dairyman says to prevent blackleg give a mixture of four parts of ealtpeire, three parts sulphur and two parts copperas once or twice a dav during spring and fall. Whenever you see little holes in the cur- rant and gooseberry leaves the best thing to do ij to apply white hellebore, dusting carefully over the leaves. If the work be done carefully the remedy is almost certain. Take a bushel of air- slacked lime, ten pounds of solphur and about four ounces of crude carbolic acid, mix thoroughly and scatter anywhere in the poultry house. This it a perfect specilic against all manner of vermm. Considerable of the work of pruning next year can be avoided by going over the trees and rubbing off all the shoots and water sprouts that have started up where they are not wanted. This ought to be done before the wood hardens. A remedy for ams in the lawn is to dig to the bottom of the neets as soon as they are discovered. Tbrow oat the loam and thon cover the bottom to the depth of about ten inches with coarse salt ; till up with soil, and usually the ants will not trouble any more. Add to the capacity of your fartn by adding to the strength of the soil. Many farms of fifty acres produce more and are more easily cultivated than other farms of one hundred acres. If you can double the productiveness of your farm you will more than double its value. The weighing of the milk, testins^ of the -oows, and knowing to a dollar what one is doing, is a groat help to the dairy farmer. It enables him to get rid of poor milkers and replace them with good ones, and the latter cost no more to keep and handle than the former. A 'J-year-old steer re>]uires in his daily food, to enable him to make an even, well- developed growth, about one pound of desh-formin*: food to eight pounds of fat and heat-proJucors, and this is about the proportion in which these two classes of tinl'ients are found in good timothy hay. Not only should skim milk bo warmed when it is fed to calves but it should also Oe warmed when it is fed to young pigs. The fact is that c^-^ld milk is just about poison to the bowels of any young animal that it is fed to. Not only should it always be warm when it is fed but it should in- variably bo sweet. In using kerosene or coal oil in an emul- sion for destroying insects considerable cari' should bo taken to keep it Ihoroujjhly mixed. If allowed to stand even a few minutes the oil and water will separate and often considerable damage will be the result, as the oil atone will injure the trees and plants >|uite seriously if applied (0 them. There aro so many beautiful annu.'ils that bloss:)ms if early sown, from the early spring until frost comes, that the ancces- sion oan bo easily kept up, and one need never be without them. It will re^iuire bat little time to cultivate them, and the vigor gained from the outdoor exercise will compensate for its outlay even if the llowers yielded no other returns. No implement neo^ls better care than those that are costly or diiiicull to con- struct. Some of them are uso^l but a short time during the year, such as harvesters. They should be wsll cleaned, and every part subject to rust given a brushing over with kerosene. U couveuieni, exi>ousive luachinety should be covered, as durius; the winter there it always an accumulation of dust that does moro or less damage to implements. The jvtato Held should not be itllowed to grow up in grass after the crop is o;T. To allow wet>il8 and grass to take possession is simply allowing the field to be seevle^l with such pests for next season, thereby doubling the amount of work during the busy period, Sow the iKitato lield to some kind of crop, rye being o.\cellent for that purpose. To make blaokK'rry wine : Measure your l>errio8 and bruise them ; to every gallon add one >iuart of boiling water. Let the mixture stand twenty-four hours, stirring occasionally ; then strain oflf the li>)Uor into a cask ; to every gallon add two pounds of sugar, cork tight and lot it stand until the following October and you will have wine ready for use without further labor. Small jKitatoes aro very nice coi^kevl in this way : Ttvl them and boil in salted waler ; do not lot them boil until they get soft. Heat ono egg, and have ready some fine cracker crumbs ; roll the potato in the egg and then in the oraoker and try in butter until a light brown, turning fro- qnently that the color may be uniform : or the potatoes may be dropped into hot lard. In this case a doth shoold be laid over a plate and the pouioes should be drained for a moment in this before sending them to the table. In fruit growing remember that fruits are like grain and vegetable crops ia this, that they must have manure to keep up the fertility. Calike vegetables and grain. however, their feedint' roots are mostly at the surface. It is best, therefore, annually to top-dress fruit trees. If manure cannot be had, any fresh earth from ditches or roadside spread half au inch or so under the trees will have a woaderfol e?ect. Indeed, we do not know but that for the pear tree i th'ji Uyer of road sand is one of the 'je«: of manures. We hive seen apples thrive amazingly with a soatin:^ of coal ashes. A large English farmer says that his manure which is taken from the stables and piled up under a shed all winter .i worth in the spring four times as much as that which has been exposed to the weather. This is undoubtedly nearly correct if the exposure be a bad one, such for example as throwing the manure out of the stable window and letting it rest in a pile against the side of the stable exposed to the rain dripping from the roof. In this way most of the fertilizing salts are drained out of it into the earth below the heap or are washed away in the oversow of the yard, and the manure ia left of little value. Entire wheat muCns. â€" For a dozen mnfiias there will be required acupful and a half of entire wheat door, a cupful .f milk, one-third of a cupful of water, an egg. a teaspoonful of cream of tartar, half a teaspoonful of soda, half a teaspooafol of salt and two table- spoonfuls of sugar. Mix the dry ingredients and sift them into a bowl. Beat the egg until it is light, and add the milk and water to it. Four this mixture upon the dry ingredients, and beat them quickly and vigoroosly. Pour the baiter into buttered muffin pans and bake for twenty-five minutes in a rather i^uick oven. The batter will be thin and will give a moist muffin, but that it as it should be Batter padding.â€" Mix smoothly one tablespoonful each of flour and sugar, with a pint of :n;Ik and » pinch of salt. Pour it into a well-buttered pu^-dish and leave it in a Blow oven till set. It miut sot boil. Cornstarch cake.â€" Two cups of white sugar, one cup of batter, the whites of five eggs beaten to a froth, one cup of swe<i milk, three teaspoonfuls of baking powder, two caps of dour and one of cornstarch . davor to taste. Amouretten. â€" Sleep some neatly shaped slice* of bread, without crust, ia a custard of et:^. milk and a little sugar, well be«ien together. Fry a golden brown and strie very hot, with a squeezeof lemon and sifted sugar over tfaem. Pearl barley pudding.â€" Simmer a table- spoonful of pearl barley till thoroughly swelled in milk. Lay it in a pie dish, poor in the milk and a little sugar ; place some tinypieoesof dripping (well clarified! on ihe top and bake. Tapioca and apples.â€" Core the apples and Slew them, well co%ered with water, either whole or in qaartert, with su^r to taste. nil tender. Boil three or four ottnces of tapioca till liquid, pour it on the apples and bake half an hour. Serve with .^ jug of milk. Cup Dudding.â€" Mix carefully one cup each of Hour, ground rice, finely chopped suet, milk and raisins, with a tablespoonful of soda, ihe same of ground ginger (if liked I and a tableepocnf ul of vinegar. Boil four hours and serve with sweet sauce ; but il is very good without. Marmalade pudding.â€" Five onnoea of bread crumbs, four ounces of auet, two ounces of candied peel, one lemon, one egg, three tablespoonfuls of marmalade. Chop the suet very finely, shred the candied peel, grate the rind of the lemon ; put these in- gredients with the crumbs into a basin, and mix with them the marmalade and egg. Well grease a basin, turn in the mixture, cover with greased paper and steam four hours. Floating island.â€" Beat the yelks of three eggs until very light : sweeten and flavor to taste : stir into a quart of boiling milk, cook till il thickens : when cool pour into a low glass dish : whip the whiles of the eggs to a stiff froth ; sweeten, and pour over a dish of boiling water to cook. Take a tablespoon and drop the white* on top of the cream, far enough apart so that the "little white islands" will not touch each other. By dropping little specks of bright jelly on each island a pleasing effect will be produoed. Also by filling wine- glasses and arranging around the stand adds to the appe«nuico of the table. .\ desirable dessert.â€" Sponge cream fur- '.lishos a very delicate and easily mads dessert. The ingredients are : 0:.e pint of tresh milk, three tablespoonfuls of gela- tine, three tablespoonfuls of sugar, throe eggs- Put the gelatine into cold milk, let it stand for a little while ; pat oo the stove and bring the milk to a boilmg point : then add the sugar and yelks of the eggs, which have boon well beaten logethor. Remove fro'.M the fire and stir in the whiles, which have also been beaten stiff. Add a little salt, davor to suit and (vur into moulds wet first so the cream will turn oul easily Velvel cream. â€" Two tablespoonfuls of strawberry jolly, two tablosiKxmfnls of currant jelly, two tablespoonfuls of pul- voriiod sugar, whiles of two eggs beaten stiff ; then whip the creain : fill a wine- glass one-half full of the whippevl croam, and fill Ihe gla»s with the abo\e mixture boatou to a croara. Tomato Savoy.â€" Four pounds of toma- toes, one pint of vinegar, two ivunds of sugar, cinnamon, cloves and mace. Peel and slice the tomatoes, adding the vinegar, sugar and spices. Poil half an hour and bottle, corking tightly to exclude the air. If not exposevi to mold this will keep for vears in adrv closet. Tlie UHngor of TrmveU Charlieâ€" Harry, do yon know that I don't like to travel on the railroad on Mondav. Harry- Why ? ».'U»rlie â€" Because there's always a wash- ou; on the lino. The Hat tVout With the 1l«7. -\k the Mountain Ussorl- -Fond Mamma twhcise son had jnal been reeouM by Po ioues from a watery grave) â€" '• Thank you over so much, Mr. l>e Jones, but you've forgotten to get Tommy's hat." TA5TXKSS or UfOIA. A. Popoloos Nation Wltli Great ClUea and a Fatore. For iO years at least writers have endeavored to bring home to the outside world a knowledge of the vastness of India, but so far as can be perceived have failed. The average man, says the Fartn: :'i:'.y RerU-r, reads what they say, learns up their figures, tries to understana their descriptions, but fails, for all his labor, to realize what India is â€" a oontinect large as Europe west of the Vistula, and with SO.OOO.OCK) more people, foiler of ancient nations, of great cities, of varieties of civilization, of armies, nobilities, priest- hoods, organizations of every conceivable purpose, from the spreading of great religions down to systematic murder. There are twice as many Bengalese as there are Frenchmen ; the HiadoBtanee*, properly so called, outnumber the whites in the United Slates ; the Mahraltas would fi.U Spain, the people of th? Punjab with Scicde are doable the population of Turkey, and I have named four of the more salient divi- sions- Everything is on the same bewilder- ing scale- The fighting peoples of laiia. the men are as big as oorselvee, as brave as ourselves, and more reijardless of deain than ourselves, number at least l'.JO.0OO,OOO, equal to Gibbon's calculation of the population of the Roman empire. There are 100,000 trained brown sclliers in native service, of whom we hear per'r-aps on::e in ten years, and at least 2.iX)0 i>X) men who think their proper profe«sion is arms, who would live by arms if ihsy could, and of whom we in' England never hear a word. If the Prussian ccnschpticn were applied in India, we ahouli, w.thoat counting reeerves or land vehr or any force not summoned in time cf peace, have â- i.500,000 soldiers actually ia barracks with 300,000 recruits coming no everv year â€" a force with which net oiilv Asia but the whole world miihi be su'tdaed. There are tens of milliocs of peasants wtose hoardings make of India the grand absorbent of the precious zietals, tecs cf millicns of peasants beside whose poverty fellahs or Sicilians or Conaaoght men are rich . millions of anisa::j, ranging from the men who build palaces to the men whc. nearly naked and almost with cat tools. do the hamblest work cf the potter Every occapation which exists ia Europe exists also in India. The iniasirT of the vast continent never ceases, fcr India, with a popolatica in plaoe* packed beyond European precedent, imports nothing either to eat or dnak. and bat fcr the Europeans would import nothing whatever. She is sufficient to herself for every iking gave silver. Amid these varied masses these ^50.000,000, whose varied descriptions weald £11 volumes, the tide of life ficws as vigoroasly as in Europe. There is as much labor, as mach conten- tion, as mach ambition, as much crime, as mach variety of careers, hopes, fears and hatreds. It is (till possible to a moneyleas Indian to become viiier of a dynasty older than history, cr finance minister of a new prince whose personal fortune in hard cash it doable that of the late Emperor William, or abbot of a monastery richer than Glas- tonbury ever was, owner cf an estate that covers a ccanly, head of a firm whose transactions may vie with those of the Barings or Bleichroders. One man, J ate Pershad by name, fed and transported the army which conquered the Punjab. How .tiu«ricsii< Look. Frederick Barnard, t^e illustrator, sur- prised me a Utile the other day when he said: • Yoa Am*rican3 are not' a "diI like the English in your appearance. In the coarse of a century or so you ve chan>;od from the Engluh type altogether. The voices of your women have grown loud and shrill, and your men have got darker face* and keener eyes. I've got so now that 1 can tell the New.'Vorker pretty well by his eyes wherever 1 find him. They arv sharp eyes and are sei near together, as thoaih their owner had brought them doae to his noso by poking that organ into very narrow places where it was necessary to see at Ihe same time. Y ca look like a lot of ferrets. Then the eyebrows, instead of going straight across the face slope down. ward at the outer edge and come rather close together above the nose. That not only makes you look shrewd, but it makes yoa look bored and tirevl and dragged out, as I suspect most of you are. A great many of you look like actors. Boston jwo- pie look somewhat diiTereut from New Yorkers, as they ought to, for they live in a more Christian town than this. Your eternal jumping and rushing in this city make me tired, as the boyssay." â€" i'-.vv.'},fi » Tile Crut»« of a Bottle. Captain Gloadell, of the steamer Gor manic, reports thai a bottle thrown over board from the Celtic two years ago. in latitude i\> degrees SI minutes north, longi- tude 30 degrees t,i minutes west, was picket! up recently at Rivadeo. on the north coast of Spain. The bottle had travelled lOoO miles east-southeast, half ea-it. at the rate of nearly ctj miles per day. • This is a very slow rate of traaslalioa for any drift mat- ter in the current between the jvinls named. A bottle thrown into the Sargasso Sea, on its northeast margin, has been known to reach Cuba, a distance of 3. AX) miles, in 437 days, making an average daily progress of more than S miles. This is about Ihe speed made by other like waifs ia the Atlantic Equatorial current. The cruiso of the bottle reivrtod by Captain Gloadell must have boon apparoutly mach longer than a great circle drawn bolwwn the point at which ii was thrown oul and that at which il was pickoil up, Il cannot indicate the rale of Ihe ocean currents, but it shows very clearly their general dirivtion in the higher latitudes of tho North Atlantic. la A " Suiokltic Car.** Fanny d.i.'tor (with cigar, to iudividaa smoking foul pipe)â€" Y"oa should reallv tako care. Im a medical man, an^ I oan assure you, my dear sir, that ',>^' per cent, of the cases of throat disease arise from the smoking of foul pipes." Individaal : " Humph 1 And do you know, doctor, that '.';• of tho cases of black eye are caused by not minding one's ono busineiss ."' â€" JU^vns^im*. A 8TKXS CI.KAK3 A STOBK. It B«Klaj With Cabbaces aad Ends With B«l Fepren. As a irjTe ;» iv«n was r^=""j the grocery SK.-e of Wm. Peters, at the ocrner of Hanc:ci and Je^s.-soa streeu. last STe.'dng, one of them w.th a mini of an injoinag tarn walked law ine open door and sia.'-,ed on a tear of investigation ih.'cagh the sic.-e. The place viB filled with customers, who led precipitatelv a: the steers approach. Those who ccali not reach the door crouched under the counter ia an agony of fear. His baUabip leisn^ely pro-»eded to .aspect the ca'c- bage pile, and, after n:anchi.ng conttcieclv at it for a few momenu, lamed 'nis atten- tion to a 'oask^j of red peepers that lav within lenicting reach. After a ini2 he concluded ihey were edible, and taking a good mocthial began id chew. No sooner had he broken the skin of ihs r*d-hot vegetables ihan the fire 'twgaa to barn, and he stamped around the siore ia agcny. 'nel- lowing with rage ikcd pain and ihrea'iening to demolish everything wiihin re*:h. Sav- ing a craw cf eggs i- made i plunge "fcr them and emerged from the box with 'nis head coated w-.iii egj? yelis. After stamp- ing aroand the store for a sncrt time he escaped and ;clned the herd. An immense crowd had gathered aroand t'ne store, and a Tenth district policeman was ccnsidermg the best means of ending the show, when the steer rushe-d into the street.â€" P'.i..;. dilpht^ Ri:.--i. GOBccocs ruowMa bxss. Wliat sSklUol tianieccr H^ to Skow la BaMOB. Tbouaaads cf visitofs have ^>«*'' to the Daavers hospital grooods the past tew wiecs, says a Boston letter, and the horse ^Ti carry great loads daily, extra t.-lpa 'oein; made on visitm.- f»)s â€" Mcndays and Wednesdays- Ihe main ot;cCi held in view by the many slran<;ers is to see »"• maTeilctu tfower beds designed and kx rang^ by the fiorist anj gardener, Etiore Tassinan. w'mch are new in prime condition, and rival anything of their kind in the I'aaed Stales. Tee largest de«i^ :s a C'ciaeBe pagoda, 17 feet high, with a dome sucponed by cj pillars, and archway c^neath them high enough to paas ander withca: steeping. There are tnree fcantams and thirty varieties of plants la pcrta'ole "301=3. and the back of a shield, lags and draperies. FIorisiB from far and near 'nave pronounced this design the best they evtr saw. A solar clock or stm dial ati.-acts mach itiention, as is accaraiely tells the time of day by a shadow cast by a ncle of grow.na: planis placed ai an angle ;f ] ij aegrii^s, and p<:inting to the North star. The siiiow falls en loral numerals m the r-.n: of a horse-shoe shaaed 'oed of nlant*. I r'ner-e are na=er:as o^is cf leaser n-o"ie. and several photographs nave 'seen ta^en of the A We»t«rn raii^ue. •• Away out on what is known as the south branch of the I'aicn Pacific F.ailwav, '.a Gunnison county. Ccl., -.s a station called Parlia. There is nothing of the place except a depot and a post office, and every tram mass stop there five minatos. whether :t is a passenger cr a freight train. Not many fees aistant'is the house cf John ParUn. The house is made of logs and is oa the side cf a hill which stretches back and hitches itself to a mountain thai raises itself up until its snowy sammit ivuches the bias sky. The .- iiers come down the n:oanlain side ii; a Kecu'.ar Hoan fur Sleep. The final word of pcyjiology so the rta- i'.D: ii not to sum niiht into day, and to never su'otraci f.-^cm a iae m'easare of sleep. No one needs regular and full hoars of sleep more than the tra.a-wcrker. I 'oelicve W-. lose aoshmg by taiioi nine hoars of sleep : nc one can do scand and boaaufai thinking wish less th-in seven or eight hocrs. We ire cr-.asares cf hi'nii. It is ail Important that iheyoani be taught the need of regularity. We oeccme sleepy as rega.ar cars. we oabisaallv take si-verv laoihter. i id all day long oake music wiiii::i ,» stone's throw of John Parlm. The acres of iohxa. the pastures jSreen for miles a'o«.'3t belong so John Par- lm. The herds of biooied cattle on the hillsides a;;d in the vallej s are John Par- ha's. Near the stsiion ind m the middle cf as limpid a stream cf water as ever charmed a fiiry is a dairy in which are creeks and crocks ar. i cr.cki cf milk from John ParUn's Hoistei:: herd. •â- Here in this sedaded spot, remote from the contentions of this busy world, came the railroad engineer rann'ing his line. John Parlia took him in and save him of hu cheer in a hospitable manner that would inspire an American Walter Scon. The engineer went away, and later on came oiher railway men â€" some of them mag- catea- and John Parlm famished them food and rest and plenty of milk. Then shoy told him Ihey wanted L.''00 acres cf his land and asked him to name his pnce. The old man, m h:s generosity of heart, m his nature which partook of' tho freedom of his h-'me and its piclures-iue surroundings, said to them : • Yoa can have 1,.V0 acres if you will put a dep«oi over there near the dairy and make all of year trams stop there five minutes. The road was baili. The agreement was kepi, and is till this day. And John Parlm sits in the dcvrway of his log house and tees the trams come in and step. And the passengers and the en- gineers and the firemen and ibe oonduo- tors and the brakemen leave their trains and go over 10 the dairv and partake of John Parlin't Hclstein ^.x-^ws' milk, fresh and cooled by the mountain stream, free of charge. Then they return to the train and it speeds away, and John Parlm stands in his doorway ana waves his hand and his children shout in nature's grasses at the departing Kene. " â€" O^ic-ij-o ri»»^». Mr*. H. It. Stow* »aatr Altered. After the death of Professor Stowe the eyes of the I win daughters of Mrs. Stowe.who «ere her iaseparahle companions, detected a change in their mother, and have courage- ouaiv admitted of late that the wonderful {vrsonaliiy of Harriet Beecher Stowe is sadly altered. At limes, it is true, she is her old selfâ€" a woman of tremendous force of wiU, unfailing common sense and a mind remarkable for vigor and ;aalisy. In her limes of clouded mentality she will deny aci]uainlance with her oldest and best friends, and forget facts as familiar 10 her as the fingers on her hand ; again, she will slop strangers in the street, question them. an^. as in the case of an Italian ["odlor whom she recenl.'y confronted on the sidewalk, she will berate them soundly for imaginary o3enoe*. But she IS so slight and frail m appear- anoe, so gentle and winning m manner, orilinarily that every one realicos that some- thing is wrong with Ihe little woman, and they treat her as they would a oiiild. Her neighbors were long ago made aware of the fact that, like Emerson, she is failing at the toi-.and with a great tenderness and thooghi- fuinoss Ihey speak of her as of ov.e who has made a long and iisefvil sojour.i here and who is now living in two worlds at one and iho same time. Occasionally she seems so like her own strong self that those about her hope she is re<.'Overing, bat tho condition is temporary, and the delightful conversation- alist and practical woman is gone, and with Ihe eclipse of the former individuahly she beautiful eyes look vacantly upon well known faces and faiv.iUar soonos. and she is merely a memory of her other self. â€" l..i:..-j I.'. Hc.'i.'uMi It .Yew Vc- i ijra;>.:c. W, H. McBean, a young man of goovl family, was arrested at Winnipeg on Satur- day night on a chargo of outraging an Ice- landic servrtut girl in his tsther's family. He i^sserts his innocence, and says it is a case ot blackmail. Mr. ThUtU't MUIalie. " Papa. " said a boaatifv.l girl, 'â- young Mr. Thistle has written nie a note in which he asks me to be his wife. ' •• Written yoa a note ' Why in thunder didn't ho come himself ." ' " Il wv>uld have boon pleasauser that way no doubt, papa, but I suppose he feels a little timid, and bosidee. papa think how much more biudms; the note is." sleep promptly when the hour comes. ~; ^V'eisnes-s is 'oroaghi aScat by irregu- >;â- --C. again, if we decact from the c:.â€" ic hoars given to sleep, it becomes a^:ait to sleep it all. Drigs compel is for a sime. bus no drag exists w'nich .lives ncrmxl sleep, or fails in time so make as lis slave. Natural sleep can come only by a aaia.-al process- Nigct. let 11 be under- stood. IS not. and is never, the time for study. The very best rale is to study in the momici. before breakfast, before' noon ; and again, if necessary, before the third meal . bat never ia the evening. The later hoars of the day shoald be given to spcri, tc light reading and to thoee occapa- tions that relax ihe nerves. Let no temp- tation whatever induce vou to reiam to writing or study, or even letter-writing or to anything annoying or exciting, ifier 1 in the afternoon- Defer all matters liable to arouse and intensify attention or anxiety until morning. If yoa have a worry lot it alone till th« early hours , and so with any problem that taxes the brain. Children should be forbidden their books la the evericg. We shall be dnveo to reverse Ihe prevalent fashion of tarning night into day. The nitiht has the advantage of rela- tive quiet, bul the disadvantage of being Ihe true time for sleepâ€" J.'. Jf juruv. M.D., la ..•.'^'v* i'<TiiOi'MJ. Fall ShadM In StUllDery. M..i:::;fry TrkJe .'.-ar-c*; The syndicate of Paris manufitciurers have adopted the following as among the leading colors for the comia*; season : Emeraaieâ€" a deep, nch. emerald green. Scarabee â€" a dark, yellowish green. Coaroncoaâ€" a shade lighter tn » : s.-ara. bee. Peupliereâ€" a shade lighter than couroc- cou. NU â€" a light, watery green. Ccvjusiicol â€" a rich, blood red. Cardinal â€" a dark scarlet. Bcalanger-a bright, live- blood red. Boason d or â€" a golden yellow. Mais^-a straw yellow. V clean â€"a reddish terra colla. Alezan â€" a dark, reddish brown. Pactoio â€" a light, golden brown. Oxide â€" a dark slate. Lionceauâ€" a dark fawn. Heron â€" a gray drab. Laciole â€" a gendarme blue. Curloa« Ketic*. In searching some old clothing which belonged to the late .\rchibal3 Hall, Spra<;-ies road, in one of the pockets were found two 50 shilling notes of the Bank of British North America, of a very ancient dale and style. They bad evidently been in possession cf the old gentleman for scnie years previous Ki bis death, pot away and forKotien. only to come to light when the clothes were being ripped up for some household purpose.â€" -Jal; K.'por:rr. A whsal crop of M.OW.OOO bushels up in Manitoba oSers a rather floury pros. peel. !K1T l^Sarah Bernhardt is to return to Paris from England on Friday of this week. She will rest thronghont August, and then will take steamer for In^lia and .\ustralia, to be gone seven monthsâ€" lime enough for the claws of her i>et Jtiger to grow into good- sized scralchsrs. Praggist (excilevi'- Ran and overtake Col- Boarbcn. James. I've made an awful mistake in his prvscripiion' James seicing his hat â€"Whâ€" what's the mistake '. Prog- sisi - Ihe prescription called for spiritus ferineati and kiaa. I gave him all a.iaa. The dose will kill him MARVELOUS MEMORY DISCOVERY, tVhoUy uuliko Artitu-t;«l «]r.itoiii5. Carv «*f ilituvt n Ati.trrluic. Auy bo<tk le»ru«^l lu ou«* readlnic. Clas«o«o( LOST »: !J».i;;-;,'ro l.OO.v %i l\;n.iit l.SOO at rt>i4*at<l('!iia. l.tlii It W uhiuKton t,^lB at l^osu^u, '.arjj-* els***-* of Coiu'.'i^i.* Law students, at Yale. WeLWelev, Olvrlm. I iiiTvrwty ot Fena.. Micbi^aa I'liiTorsity. Cl^.*ut*-.i-.vetc I'tc. KaJorseJ i>v Kuuaju' I »v.vt^ s. Uio Sciea tlil, HoOa. \V. W. .tSTVH, Jvi'Aii I' l^i.NJ-iMiN Judge iJiKSON, Dr I'sown. K. H cV, s. ITiu N.Y Siaio ^o^lâ- .â- .»l vVlietw. etc T»as-i by cvrres- IvoJence. l"to«i<ev'iui i-o.st yiivs ttotu FKOK. LOISKTTK. a?: t'i!ih Ave., NY. D C M I- .<3 .>l» BAKING POWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIE^in y