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v oe FOR BOYS AND GIRIS. SOME GOOD STORIES FOR OUR JUNIOR READERS. Queer Ways of Growing Manly—Why the Children of Guiana Grow Up to Be Cruel Men and Women—The Youth- ful Days of Octave Feuillet. Dirge at the Sea. HE moon goes down and the shad- ows creep Like dark, lost souls o'er the starless deep; The dull wave sullen shock Where the sea-bird moans on the lonely rock, Oh, minstrel! give your melodies breath Solemn and tender as love and death. Where the ribbed sands draw their line of white Along yon grass in the cold, dark night, There are two low graves where the lovers sleep Who were hurled to our arms by the murderous Deep; Oh, minstrel! give your melodies breath Solemn and tender as love and death. The bride was my sister; the bride- groom my friend! (Low with the wind let your melody blend) { the joy of young love, and alone all to be An gee ee the waves—thou murderous Sea!— Oh, minstrel! give your melodies breath Solemn and tender as love and death. Queer Ways of Growing Manly. In Guiana, if a child is slow in its movements, the parents apply an ant to the child instead of a whip to make ‘t move faster. This little ant bites nore cruelly than a mosquito, and its bite is apt to be very troublesome aft- erwards. As you can imagine, this treatment does not make the child very kind to others, and the children of Guiana are said to be particularly cruel to animals. The little boys of Guiana do not reckon their age by years, but by their ability to endure pain. Un- cil he gets to the point where he can ‘et the Hucu ant bite him without winc- ing, he is considered merely a baby. Like boys all over the world, the lit- Ue Guiana boy wants to be a man, as he understands it. So he cuts gashes in his arms and breast and rubs into the wounds the juice of a plant which stings and bites, but this juice is said to be also an antidote of snake poison. Some little boys grow up with very queer ideas of what it means to be a man. I remember passing a group of little boys, little bits of boys, in a ten- ement house street once. Before I got to them I saw that they were greatly excited, that they were all talking at once and talking very loud- ly. I walked slowly to try to find out what was the cause of the excite- ment, and I found that the boys were telling each other what they meant to be when they were men. One little fat, chubby boy put his hands in his knickerbocker pockets, swelled out his chest, and said, with an air of pride and decision, “I am going to det junk (drunk) when I det to be a man like my papa.” You see, he did not have very clear ideas as to what it meant to be a man; but he showed one thing, that he loved his father, and that his father was to him the best kind of a man. Octave Feuillet’s Early Days. Madame Octave Feuillet tells a pret- ty story of her famous husband’s youth in “Some Years of My Life.” During the first few years of his literary la- bors, the author of the ‘Romance of a Poor Young Man” was himself poor and struggling. His father, who had desired for him a diplomatic career, was bitterly opposed to Octave’s adoption of literature as a profession. He even went so far as to refuse to receive his son, and to withdraw from him his modest allowance; but the young man’s aspirations re- mained unchanged. He set himself dil- igently to work at the labor of his choice, full of confidence in the future. During this saddened and restricted pe- riod of his life, the only recreation he allowed himself,strange as it may seem, was dancing. Passionately fond of this amusement,he devoted all of his leisure evenings to it, regularly attending the students’ balls, where he would dance until he was redy to drop from ex- haustion. The masked balls of the op- era had for the hard working young writer an especial fascination, One ev- ening he so ardently desired to attend one of these balls that he pawned his watch to obtain money enough to hire a costume for the occasion. Now this watch had been his mother’s, and no sooner had he entered his attic room than hé began to reflect upon what he had done. Remorse followed exhilar- ation. He resolved to return the next morning to the pawnshop, give back the money and reciaim his watch. “I paésed the night,” he said afterwards, “gazing upon the ten francs I had re- ceived, my heart beating painfully, my eyes filled with tears, and asking my- self if I would be strong enough to absent myself from the ball.” The fol- Jowing day he proved the strength of his resolution by returning to the pawnshop and redeeming his watch. As in this instance he was, throughout his whole life, actuated by a sense of duty and constrained by the most del- icate sentiments. A Primitive South African People. If we could find people who live in communities in a condition that owes nothing to our boasted civilization, we need not confine our search to the in- terior of Africa nor to the yet unex- plored regions of Central Australia. “The continent of South America sup- ports nations that are still, at the close of the nineteenth century, undeniably wrimitive in their manners and rts. breaks with a | The tribe of the Jivaros isa large ona and one of the most distinguished, in- dependent and warlike in South Amer ica. They speak a language ef their own, Jivaro, and oocupy the country generally from the upper Pestessa to the Santiago River, down to the Pon- gode Manseriche, on the Maranon, They are hospitable and their houses are large and bulit of palms. They have a most perfect method of scalping, by which the victim’s head is reduced to the size of a moderately large orange, maintaining tolerably well all the features. The skin is cut round the base of the neck, and the en- tire covering of the skull removed in one piece. Tais is then dried gradual- ly by means of hot stones put inside it, until the boneless head shrinks to the required size. They also wear the hair of their slain enemies in long plaits around their waist. Great fes- tivities take place when a child, at three or four years of age, is initiated into the art and mysteries of smok- ing. The Jivaros of the Pintue have the art of producing emesis nearly every morning, with the aid of a feather, because they hold that all food remaining in the stomach overnight is unwholesome and undigested, and should, therefore, be got rid off by any means. They ave satisfied the means they have practiced through many generations is the readiest available and the most effective. Oldest Theater in Europe. The oldest theater in Europe is that of Dionysius, otherwise named Bac- chus, at Athens, which is the prototype of all later theaters. It was founded B. C. 320, and when its remains were excavated in 1862, the stage, the or- chestra and lower rows of seats were discovered to be in a fair state of preservation. The cave, where the spectators sat, hewn out of the rock, proved to have been large enough to accommodate 30,000 persons. It has in the front row 67 marble thrones, each inscribed with the name of one ef the chief Athenian priest, or of some secular official. Of theaters which have been built within the last 300 or 400 years, the oldest in Europe is that within the Vatican, built by Bramanti in 1580. The oldest existing theater in England is Drury Lane, dating from April, 1662. A Queer Chick. Mr. John Hess, of Brooklyn, N. Y., has a chick recently hatched that has four legs and four wings. When it came irom the egg it walked and looked like a weakling calf, but soon became spruce and chipper. It had its photograph taken, and then it died. Now it’s preserved in alcohol. Accomplished Cats. In the treasury department at Wash- ington there is one very wonderful cat. According to Our Animal Friends, his name is Tom, and when addressed he will quickly respond, even waking out of a sound sleep to go toward the speaker. Sometimes, to confuse him, the clerks will sing out some word or words to which the syllable “tom” is emphasized, and to that he pays no at- tention. But let one call, “Tom, it’s dinner time!” and forthwith he walks across the room, reaches up with his paws to a tin pail claws it down, and comes bringing it in his mouth. Tom is passionately fond of music. At the cry of “hand organ” he climbs to a high window seat, but at the words, “Here’s a dog,” he slinks under a desk. One of the most accomplished cats in England belongs to Lady Randolph Churchill. It is a Maltese Angora, without spot, and with a particularly cunning face. This cat was bought for the late Lord Randolph Churchill dur- ing that year or two when his strong mind failed and every effort was made to amuse him. He was afraid of dogs, taking a sudden terror at the sight of them, but Miss Angora just pleased him. She was sent from India by an officer in that country who had taken her parents there years before. Her mother had been a watchcat, able to keep guard over a tent, meowing if a strange step came, and of course her children were very bright. When this Churchill cat was told to “go play the piano,” she would immediately walk back and forth upon the keys of the baby grand in the boudoir. “Now sit for your picture,” meant to assume a demure position, with her paws in line, her tail neatly curled around them,and her head nicely bent to one side, as if trying to “look pleasant.” Good for Evil An organ grinder stopped to play in front of a tenement house. A number of children gathered to hear him. A large rude boy made a snowball and threw it, knocking off the organ grind- er’s hat and it rolled into the gutter. The man picked up his hat, brushed it and put iton. Then he said to the big boys, “Now, I will play you a merry tune,” and he bowed and began to play a lively air. The little children danced, but the large boys were ashamed, and walked away. The or- gan grinder had taught them a lesson. He had returned good for evil. Three thousand Lascars, especially imported, are to be turned loose on Lon: don by the Peninsular and Oriental and other steamship lines plying wit€ the East, as their contributions to tlg picturesqueness of the Queen’s Jubilg celebration. FARM ‘AND GARDEN. MATTERS OF INTEREST TO AGRICULTURIS7S. Some Up-to-Date Hints About Cultiva- tion of the Soil and Yields Thereof— Horticulture, Viticulture and Flori- culture. Water in Crops. ORE water is sold by farmers than any other sub- stance, and it brings a_ higher price in proportion to cost than any nra- terial known, a writer in Philadel- phia Record says. Water is sold in so many forms, how- value varies daily. A crop of green clover contains 1,600 pounds of water per ton, and when a ton of dry clover hay is hauled to market 200 pounds of the load consists of water. Every hun- dred pounds of milk sold contains 87 pounds of water, and the mixed stable manure which is. spread on the fields is more thaa one-half water. No mat- ter how dry oi well cured the hay and fodder crops may be, from the farm- er’s point of view, there will be water to hau} that is contained in the plant. A ton of cured fodder contains 575 pounds of water, and even salt hay, which is usually apparently as dry as if passed through a kiln, contains over 100 pounds of water per ton. The far- mer sells this water, and the more W4- ter he can sell the larger his profit, as all nitrogenous and mineral matter taken from the soil by the plants is a direct loss unless the price at which the crop is sold is sufficiently large to reimburse the farmer for his loss of plant food, as well as afford him. a profit. The greatest profit from the use of water as an ingredient of farm pro- ducts is wnen the farmer grows such crops as beets, carrots, potatoes and turnips, as they can be utilized on the farm instead of entailing cost of trans- portation to market. While these crops contain a large amount of solid matter in proportion to the yield per acre, their chief value is in the water, as the water is a valuable aid to digestion and contains the nutritious matter in solu- tion to a large extent; hence the water is not a useless substance which adds weight only, but is as desirable in the form in which it exists in the plant as the solid portions, but while the sol- id portions cost the farmer sometimes the water does not, and that is an im- portant consideration which must not be overlooked. The water in plants sannot be supplied artificially. Every one knows that there is a difference be- tween green apples and apples that have been dried and cooked in water. {t is the same with vegetables and roots, We can dry them and render them juicy again by cooking them in water, but we cannot regain the condi- tion in which the water existed in the plant before drying or evaporating it. It is more valuable than that which is supplied. Beets and carrots contain 1,800 pounds of water per ton. A crop of twenty tons of beets per acre de- notes that the farmer has taken from that acre as a crop 36,000 pounds of water, and such a yield of beets is not a large one compared with results fre- quently obtained. Turnips, one of the staple crops of the farm, contain but little less water than beets or carrots, and potatoes are sold at good prices some years, although there is about 1,- 500 pounds of water in every ton. The proportion of water in fruits is much greater, especially with grapes, straw- berries and cherries; in fact, water in fruits brings a higher price than is ob- tained for any material, as a box of strawberries selling at 10 cents would allow less than one cent for the solid matter contained, leaving nine cents for the water. To secure this crop of water, however, the farmer will be compelled to use care and judgment. It comes from the clouds, it is true, but there are periods when the plant cannot store it; hence the fruit and vegetables do not grow to perfection and the far- mer will lose a portion of his crop of water, while his land will have already given up more than the proportionate supply of mineral matter. that its ever, Sprays and Spraying. In spraying currants there is danger of making an application within three weeks of the time the fruit is used for food. Currants should be sprayed as soon as worms are seen with paris green; if they reappear repeat the spray, adding bordeaux for mildew. If worms still trouble use pyrethrum or hellebore. The third application to ap- ples should be made a week after the blossoms have fallen of bordeaux and paris green; repeat after ten to four- teen days and again in ten to fourteen days use bordeaux or weak copper sul- phate. When cherries have set use bordeaux and paris green; repeat in ten to twelve days later, if signs of rot appear. In ten to twelve days more use copper sulphate solution weak and repeat if necessary. Cabbages may need five sprays. When worms first appear use paris green. If worms or aphides are present repeat if the plants are not heading using using emulsion for aphis. If aphis persist, or if worms reappear, use kerosene emulsion if plants are not heading. After heads form, use saltpetre for worms, a tea- spoonful to a gallon of water, emulsion for aphides. This may be repeated if necessary. Tomatoes may be sprayed three times as follows: When first fruits have set use bordeaux. If dis- ease appears repeat or use weak oopper sulphate solution. If necessary spray with’ weak copper sulphate solution. Never spray with arsenites while trees are in blossom, as the bees will be poisoned; they are necessary to fertil- ize the flowers. Bordeaux Mixture is the standard remedy for all fungous diseases, Use ‘four pounds copper sulphate and four pounds of fresh lime to forty gallons of water. It is comparatively inex- pensive, does not injure the most ten- der foliage if properly prepared, re- mains for a long time upon the plants and in fungicidal powers has few if any superiors. If a large quantity is to be used it is well to prepare a consid- erable amount of the materials so tha! they will only need to be mixed befor’ using. The copper sulphate will dj solve readily if suspended in a b: of water in a coarse sack or bay By thus dissolving twenty-four-péuuus {n, say, thirty-six gallons of water, we shall have enough for six barrels of forty gallons each. The lime should be slaked slowly, adding water only as fast as it is taken up. Twenty-four pounds is all that is needed for the above amount of copper sulphate, but if it will be required within a week or two the entire barrel may be slaked at once. It will not deteriorate if kept covered with water. The above form- ula is adapted for use with most crops but it may be slightly modified. Thus for the second spraying of grapes the amount of water should be reduced to thirty gallons, and for most other crops it may be increased to fifty gallons af- ter the second application, especially if they are made at frequent intervals. Insanity in Horses. Whether there are not some horses that are actually insane is a subject upon which opinions differ. On this question an English writer says: “I have little doubt but that in many cases where the horse shows sudden, unaccountable fits of ill temper, vice, or other demonstrations of strange conduct, that the cause is due to cere- bral affection. Horses may become temporarily insane from certain forms of disease, such as, among others, the development of a tumor on the brain. Fits of unaccountable vice may occa- sionally be the result of organic changes in the brain matter, as in man, and not to normal mental disposi- tion. I was recently told of a young foal which sometimes was subject to demonstrations of strange conduct, ac- companied at intervals by what ap- peared fits or convulsions. He was found to be suffering from water on the brain, otherwise hydrocephalus. He was operated upon surgically with a view to his relief, but even after he was broken-in and became a “made- horse,” he never afterwards was trust- worthy either under the saddle or in harness, consequently the owner part- ed with him. Singular to relate, both his dam and grandam were queer cat- tle, and at various times were subject to strange periodical aberrations of conduct. In the case of the foal men- tioned, there can be little doubt that he was the victim of hereditary brain disease, productive of temporary in- sanity. Such cases, I believe, are more frequent than is generally supposed. Horses are not always responsible for their actions. Two Kinds of Horsemen. All mankind may, with great clear- ness, be divided into two parts—those who understand horses and those who do not, says an exchange. There are people who will drive or ride a nag all day—nay, who may own one and use it for years—whose powers of observa- tion are not sufficiently enlisted in the details of the animal to distinguish ‘t from any strange horse in the next stall unless there be some gross dif- ference in color. Such equestrians will be content to see a fine horse, with nerves, eyes, muscles and possibilities for good or evil cashiered in favor of the dead certainty of a peripatctic steam engine. The second, smaller, and aside from horse dealers, more no- ble group of individuals cannot so much as enter a fortuitous close cab without taking unconscious note of the stockings, the withers, the size and the facial expression of the creature be- tween the shafts. One whose sym- pathy stands this test has felt the thrill imparted by the responsive spring of a glorious saddle horse, has enjoyed mental conversations with the shape- ly, all expressive ears of the sensitive creature, has been fairly exalted by mere proximity to the splendid spirit of a hard driven thoroughbred and has quivered with the same heady drink which briliant frosty mornings have brought to the smoking muzzles of his dancing bays, with their flashing eyes and strong, curved necks—but is it not absurd to defend a good horse from a horseless carriage? Onion Cut Worms. Bulletin No. 118 of the New York experiment station states that there is but one brood of the dark sided cut- worm a year. The young worms ap- pear in the spring upon the grass and weeds which line the fences and ditches and waste spots about the fields. From these neglected or un- cultivated places the worms advance to attack the young onions, and so spread over the fields by degrees though often quickly. An opportunity is thus given to stay their progress by putting across their line of march a barrier of poisoned food; and this plan was successfully used by the station. Spraying the young onions with a poisoned resin lime mixture, sprink- ling the worms while at work with kerosene emulsion, and the use of poisoned green or moistened baits proved ineffectual or had some serious objections; but the dry bait of bran and middlings and paris green was easily applied by means of the onion seed drill, was eaten readily by the worms and was deadly in its effects, Japanese Plums.—J. H. Hale thinks that in Japan plums we have a race that will be profitable. They differ from the European, being hardy in the bud more so than the peach. The skins are thick and the fruit is handsome Burbank, Yellow Jacket (or Shabo) an¢ Abundance are the order of merit Norman, a yellow flesh, needs experi. menting with. The Wixon is all right put blooms rather early.—Ex, Patents Issued. List of patents issued last week to | Northwestern inventors: |_ Henry O. Amundson, Clear Lake, 8S. | D., clothes line reel; Ernest J. Bauman, Waseca, Minn., extension table; Frank A. Johnson, Minneapolis, Minn., Linio- | type machine, matrix-making machine, | making controllers for composing ma- | chines, type-casting and composing ma- chiae, machine for making controllers for composing machines, type-setting machine; Samuel O. Jones, Stillwater, Minn., lubricator; John J. Waldner, Mil- tewn, S. D., indicator for engines; Roessner Manufacturing company, Wi- nona, Minn., (trade mark) liquid polish for shoes and leather. T. D. Merwin, Patent Lawyer, 910 Pioneer Press Building, St- Paul, Minn. DIMINISHING STATURE. One of the Chief Causes Is the Mill- tary Service Exacted. The relation between stature and health is brought to concrete express- ion in the armies of Europe through a rejection of all recruits for service who fall below a certain minimum standard of height, zenerally about five feet. The result of this is to preclude the pos- sibility of marriage, for all the fully- developed men during their three years in barracks, while the undersized indi- pmpted from service on this e left free to propagate the species meanwhile. Is it not apparent that the effect of this artificial selection is to put a distinct premium on inferi- rity of stature in so far as future gen- are concerned? This enforced age for the nor- mal man implies not merely that the children of normal families are born later in life—that would not be of great moment in itself—it means far more than this. The majority of children ere more often born in the earlier half of married life, before the age of thir- ty-five. Hence, a postponement of mat- rimony means not only later children. but fewer children. Herein lies the great significance of the phenomenon for us. Standing armies tend, in this resp d succeeding genera- tions with infe pes of men.—Pop- ular Science Mentbly- A Shrewd Scotchman, The Scottish-American tells a story of a cobbler who was sentenced by a Scottish magi e to pay a fine of half a crown, or, in default, twenty-four hours’ hard labor. If he chose tke lat- ter, he would be taken to the jail at Perth. “Then I'll go to Perth,” he said, r I've some busiress there.” An offi- cial conveyed him to Perth ,but when the cobbler reached the jail he said he would pay the fine. The governor found he would have to take it, “And now,” said the cobbler, “I want my fare home.” The governor demurred, but discovered there was no alternative; the prisoner must be sent, at public ex- pense. to the place he had been brought from. The cobbler was sixpence ahead A Womanly Craze. “Your wife seems very fond of fiow- ers.”” “Well, sir, that woman never goes anywhere without taking a garden trowel along; she is so afraid she might see something she would want to dig up.” To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25e, It C. C/C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Best He Could Do for Them. “Do you have mice in your house. asked W s, lots of ‘em, id Parker. “What on earth do you do for them? I am bothered to death by them at my house.” i “What do I do for *em?” said Parker. “Why, I do everthing for °em—provide ‘em with a home, plenty to eat, and so forth. What more can they expect ?’-- Harper's Bazar. The editor of this paper sdvises his readers that a free package of Peruviana, the best kidney and liver cure on earth. will be delivered FREE to any sufferer, if writ- ten for promptly. PervuviaNna REMEDY Co., 286 Sth St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Poor Prices, Indeed. Deacon Blodgett (meeting Farmer Jones in market with a load of prod- uce)—Well, John, prices look up some this week, eh? | Farmer Jones (dryly)—Leokin’ up? I j guess they be! Cain’t help it very well, | secin’ they’re flat on their back.—Harp- er’s Bazar. ame Class. “Who is that man who is going in a balloon to hunt the north pole?” “He comes of that family which is ng to go over Niagara Falls Educate Your Bowels with carets, Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, . If C. C. C. fail druggists refund money. That Proves It. Mrs. Hampack—Is she asking for a divorce in good faith, or dees she wish to marry again? Mrs. Livewayte—She wishes to marry again. “Did she tell you so?” “No; but she is asking for no alimo- ny-”—New York Journal. Close Competition, Trivvet—Is there anything more tire- some than to hear a woman talk about her first baby? Dicer—Have you ever heard a girl talk about her first wheel? A Cheerless Invitation. Youngbach—Hello, old man! Glad to see you. Come in crd make yourself at home. Henpeck—Humph! If you can’t make me any more comfortable than that I guess I won't stay.—New York Journal. = | By axrs can bo saved with- ¥, out their knowledge by ANTI JAG, the marvelous D RU N K cure for the drink habit. - 08 Brostware Bow . ork, City. BUCI’ INFORMATION” GLADLY “MAILED FREE: DROPS NEW DISCOVERY; sives quick relief and cures worst cases, Send for book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatment Free. Dr. H.H.GREEN’S SONS, At'anta, No. 27-1897 | The greatest merit of any medicine is sure relief. That’s the great merit of Sagwa. In any and all diseases that are caused by bad blood Kickapoo Indian Sagwa is a specific. Ninety per cent. of diseases be- gin in the blood, and ninety per cent. of diseases are curable by the prompt and proper use of Sagwa. It expels from the blood all the corrupting and corroding elements and builds up a new body with new blood. There is no substitute for The popping of a cork froma bottle of Hires is a signal of good health and plea- sure. A sound the old folks like to hear —the children can’t resist it. HIRES : Rootbeer is composed of the very ingredients the system requires. Aiding the digestion, soothing the nerves, purifying the blood. "A temiper- ance drink for temper- ance people. Made on! The Charlee B. Hides Co., Phila, ‘package makes 5 gallons, Bold everywhere, HALL’S Vegetable Sicilian HAIR RENEWER Beautifies and restores Gray Hair to its original color and vitality; prevents baldness; cures itching and dandruff. A fine hair dressing. R. P. Hall & Co., Props., Nash |. H. Sold by all ‘Braggists.” eS IT KILLS Potato Bugs, Cabbage Worms, and all forms of insect life, Harmlean t beast. Will not injure the most delicate plants." Cray Mineral Ash is fully warranted where directions are followed. Sen@ for our little Bug Book.” Itmay save you lots of money. National Mining and Milling Co., Baltimore, Md. 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