v MED MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1892. VOL. IV. THE FORD :;;mmm V PROFESSIONAL CARDS. X. B. PICKEL, X. D. Physician and Surgeon. Medford, Oregon. Office: Booms a & S, I. O. O. E. Building FBA2TCIS PITCH, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Medford, Oregon. J. B. WATT, X. D. Physician and Snrgeon. Medford, Oregon. Office: In Chlldera" Block. B. P. GEABY, H. D. Physician and Surgeon. Medford, Oregon. Office on 0 street. KOBT. A. MTT.T."rTR. Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law. ' " - Jacksonville, Oregon. . Will practice In all Courts of the State. J. H, WHITMAN. Abstracter and Attorney-at-Law XEDFORD, OREGON. " Office In Bank bulldine. Hare the meet com plete and reliable abstracts of title in Jackson county. W. S. JONES. M. O. Physician and Surgeon. Medford, Oregon. Office Hamlin Block, up-staira. DR. O. F. DEMOREST. RESIDENT. DENTIST, Makes a specialty or first-class work at reason- .- -T able rates. Office In Opera House. Medford. Oregon B. PKYCE. M. 3. Physician and Surgeon- Medford. Oregon. Office Chlldera Block; Residence, Galloway residence. - . . WILLABD CRAWTOKD, Attorney and Counselor at Law MEDFORD. OREGON". Office In Opera Block AUSTIN S. HAMMOND. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. . . ' MEDFORD, ORE. war., k. colvig, ATTORNEY-AT - LAW. . JtOBBJS X. KAKE3TESS. Attorney and Counsellor Grants Pass, Oregon. DRUGSTORE The lead Ins drug store of Medford to GEO. H: HASKINS, (Successor to Hasklns k Law ton.) He has anything in the line of Pure Dniffs, ' Patent Medicines, " " Books, Stationery, Paints and Oils, Tobacco, Cisars, Perfumery, Toilet Articles, And srerytblng that Is carried Is a first-class Drug - Store. Prescriptions Carefully Com- -.- pounded. . S '.- . . XaiM Street, Xedford, Oreffea. '.j EAST ilD SOUTH . - VIA - Southern Pacific Eoute. THE MOUSI SHASTA BOCTE. n " - - .EZPBXSS TBAQS LEAVE FOBTLASD DAILY: South Sorth 7 P. K . I Lv P. M. I Lt 8:K A. K. I Ar Portland Ar i 7 :3 a. Medford . Lr 5:05 P. . San Francisco Lt 1 7 JDO P. M. A bore trains stop only at the following stations north of Boaehurg: East Portland, Oregon City, Wtodburn, Salem, Albany, Tangent, Sheuds, . Balsey. Barriaburg, Jonetlon Cliy, Irrlngand Eisjene ... J Kosebura; Mall Dally. 8X15 A. St. I Lt 4.40 P. M. I Ar Portland Boeeburg Arl Lt 4 Ml P. M. eao A. M. Albany Local Dally (Except Sunday.) 5:00 P.K. M P.M. Portland Albany Ar8:M A. K. Lt6) a. m Ar ' PTJIXKAK BUFFET SLEEPERS. Tourist Sleeping Care Tor accommodation of Second-Class Paseengers. attached to Expreae trains. WEST SIDE DIVISION. BETWEEN PORTLAND AND COEVALLIS. : Mali Train Daily (Except Sunday.) 7 30 a. sc. I Lt Portland Corral Us Arl 5:30 P.M. Lr UMp.m. 12:10 P. M. I AT . . .lhnn-v and Gorrallls connect with trains of Oregon Paclflc BaUroad. (Express Train Dally Except Sunday.) :40P. JtlLT 7 35 P. M. I AT Portland Ar I 830 A. M McMlnnTllle Lt 5:45 A. at 49-Through tickets to all points East and South . ForUekets and full Information regarding rates mans, etc., call on Co's agent at Medford. K. KOEuLeK. JtOUEMS. Manager. asslQ. P. k P. Agt - Tai'ore'n A Matter of Taste. Ella looked completely puzzled. "Bat what are you trying to prove now, George?" "I was only showing yon that, even though yon have come back earlier, we couldn't possibly have got ready in time if I hadn't" But here he stopped. "No, I want that to be a surprise to you, Ella; you 11 see presently," he added. Ella's delicate brows contracted. "I like to be prepared for my surprises, please, George. Tell me now." They had turned np one of the quiet streets leading to the hill; they were so near the house that George thought he might abandon further mystery, not to mention that he was only too anxious to reveal his secret. "Well, then, Ella, if you must have it," he said triumphantly, "the house is very nearly ready now. What do you think of thatT "Do you mean that that it is fur nished, George?" "Papered, painted, decorated, fur nished everything, from top to bottom! I thought that would surprise you. Ella!" "I think," she answered slowly, "yoa might have told me you were doing it." "What, before it was all done? That would have spoilt it all, dear. I should have written, though, if you hadn't been, coming home so soon. And now it's fin ished, I must say it looks uncommonly jolly. Tin sure you'll be pleased 'with it it looks quite a different place. She tried to smile. "And did you do it all yourself. George?" "Well, no, not exactly. I flatter my self I know how to see that the work's properly done, and all that, but there are some "things I don't pretend to be much of a hand at, so I got certain ladies to give me some wrinkles." Ella felt relieved. She was disap pointed, it is true hurt, even, at having been deprived of any voice in the mat ter. She had been looking forward so much to carrying out her pet schemes, to enjoying her friends' admiration of the wonders wrought by her artistic in vention. And she had never thought of George, somehow, as likely to have any strikingly original ideas on the subject of decoration, although she liked him none the less for that. But it was something that he had had the good sense to take- her mother and Flossie into his confidence; she knew she could trust them to preserve him from any serious mistakes "You see," said George, half apolo getically, "I would ever so much rather have waited till you came hack, only 1 couldn't tell when that would be. 1 really couldn't help myself. You're sure yon don't mind about it? If yoa only knew how I worked over it, rashing about from one place to another as soon as I could get away from the office, pick ing up bits of furniture here and there, standing over those beggars of painters and keeping 'era at it, and working out estimates, and seeing foremen and man agers and all kinds of chaps. I used to get home dead tired of an evening, but I didn't mind iat; I felt it was all bringing you nearer to me, darling, and that made everything a pleasure." There was such honest affection in his look and voice, he had. so evidently in tended to please her ami had been in such manifest dread, of any further sep aration from her, that she was complete ly disarmed. "Dear George," she said gently. I am so sorry you took all the trouble on your self; it was very, very good of you to care so much, and I know I shall be de lighted with the house." "Well," said George, "I'm not much afraid about that, because I expect oui tastes are pretty much the samt-in most things." They were by this time at the house, and George, after a little rumbling with his as yet unfamiliar latch key, threw open the door with a flourish, and said: "There you are, little woman! Walk in, and you'll see what you shall seer No sooner was Ella inside the thaa her heart sank. "Looks neat and nice, doesn't it? saiuC George, cheerfully. "You'd almost take-1 that paper for real marble, wouldn't you?' See how welT they've, done those wm I like this yellowish color better tham : green, don't you? It looks so cool hit summer. That's a good strong hallilamp. not what you call high art, exactly but gives a rattling good light,, and that's-: the main thing. Here, Til light it. up for . you. Confound it! They ha.Ten't turned, the. gas on yet however, there's too much sunshine for it to shw.if .they had. This linoleum is a capital' thing you. might scrub as long as- you liked and. you'd never get that pattern out!" "No," Ella agreed, with a tragic little smile; "it it looks as if it would last." "Last? I should think so! And here's: a hat stand you could almost swear it was carved wood of some sort, but it is. only cast iron painted; indestructible,, you see. They told me it was the latest . design wonderful how cheaply . they turn them Out, isn't it?" "I thought you said you were helped?" "Oh, I didn't want any help here thi is only the passage you know!" Yes, it was only the passage and yet she had been picturing-such a charming;, entrance, with a draped arch, a graceful lamp, a fresh bright paper, a small buf fet of genuine old oak and so on. She suppressed a sigh as she passed on. After all, so long as the rooms them-! selves were all right, it did not bo very, much matter and she knew that her mother's taste could be trusted. , - i But on the threshold of 'the dining room she stopped aghast. i CHAPTER H. , The walls of the dinning roont had been distempered a particularly hideous drab; the curtains were mustard yellow; the carpet was a dull brown; the mot-, tied marble mantelpiece, for which Ella had been intending to substitute one in walnut wood with tiles, still ' shone in slabs of petrified brown; there was a hnge mahogany sideboard, of a kind sh had only seen in old fashioned hotels. ; "Comfortable, eh?" remarked George; 'lots of wear iu those curtains!" Unhappily there was, as Ella, wasoiily too well aware. . - "You did this room yourself too, then,' George?" she managed to say. without, betraying herself by her voice. . 'Yes, I chose everything here. . You see; Ella, we shall only use this ruoin for meals." - "Only for meals, yes," she acquiesced, with a shudder; "bnt, George, snrt.y you said mother had helped you with the rooms?" ... . . .. !What, your mother? No," Ella, her notions are rather too grand for me it was Jessie. and Carrie I meant. - Just come and see what they've made of my den." Ella followed ; the window which had commanded such a cheerful outlook into one of the pretty gardens, with a pink thorn, a laburnum tree or two, and some sycamores, which still flourish fresh and fair on Campden hill was obscured now by some detestable contrivance in tran sparent paper imitating stained glass. "That was the girls' notion," said George, following the direction of her eyes; "they fixed it all themselves. It was their present to me pretty of them to think of it, wasn't it? I call it an im mense improvement, and you see it's stuck on with some patent cement var nish, so it can't rub off. You get the effect better if you stand here now see how well the colors:come out in the sun!" If only they would come out! but what could she. do but stand and admire hypocritically? Her eyes, in spite of her self, seemed drawn to that bright hued sham, intersected by black lines intended to represent leading; of the room itself she only saw vaguely that it was not un worthy of the window. "Nothing to what they've done with the drawing room !" said innocent George, beaming. "Come-along, darling; you'll scarcely know the place!" And Ella, reduced to a condition of stony stupor, followed to the drawing room. She did not know the place .in deed. It was a quaintly shaped, irregu lar room, with French windows opening upon the garden on one side and a deep bow window on another. When she had last seen it the walls were covered with a paper so pleasing iu tone and design, that she had almost decided to retain it. The paper was gone, and in its place a gaudy, semi-Chinese pattern, of unknown birds, flying and perchiug on sprawling brandies laden with impossible flowers. And then the furniture the "elegant drawing room suit," in brilliant plush and shining satin; the cheap cabinets. and the ready made black and gilt over mantel, with its panels of swans, haw thorn blossoms and landscapes sketchily daubed on dead gold surely it had all been transferred bodily from the stage- of some carelessly mounted farcical coin- edv! Ella's horrified gaze gradually took in. other features; the China monkeys swing ing on cords, the porcelain parrots hang ing iu great brass rings, huge rnisshapen. terra cotta jars and pots, dead grass in. bloated drain pipes, tambourines berib- honed and painted with kittens and robins, enormous wooden sabots, gilded Japanese fans, a wooly white rug and a, bright Kidderminster carpet I -Bao on earth are vouT" demand td George. , "Oh, George!" burst involuntarily fro: her lips. "I knew you'd be pleased," he said. complacently: "but I mustn't take all the credit myself. It was like this, you see. i I felt all right about the other rooms, but the drawing room thafB your room, : -and I was awfully afraid of not having- j , it exactly as it ought to be. So I went , !;i to the girls, and I said: 'You kno9"&li. , ' about these things just make it what hyon think Ella will like, and then we can't go wrong.' We had that Grosvenor Gallery paper down first of all. Choose something bright and cheerful,' I said, and I dont think they've chosen badly. Then the pottery and china and all that those are the girls' present to you, with, their best love." "It's very, good of them," said poor Ella, on the verge of tears. "Oh, they think a lot of you! They were rather nervous about doing any thing at first, for fear you mightn't like it; but I told them they needn't be afraid. What I like, Ella will like,' I said, and I must say no one could wish to see a prettier drawing room than they've turn ed it into they've a good deal of taste, those two girls." . Ella stood there in a kind of dreary dream. What had happened to the world since she came into this house? What was this change in her? She was afraid to speak, lest the intense rebellious anger she felt should gain the mastery. Was it she that had these wicked thoughts of George poor, kind, unsuspecting, lov ing George? She felt a little faint, far the windows were cloeed and the room stuffy with the odor of the new furniture and the atmosphere of the workshop; everything: here seemed to her common place and repulsive. "How about those plans of yours now. Ella, eh?", cried George. ! TJiis was too much her over tired pa tience broke down. "Gearger she cried impulidvely, and her voice sounded hoarse and strange to heir own ear. "George, I must speak I must tell you" and then she checked herself. ' She must keep command of herself, or she could not, without utter loss of dig nity, nua tne-words that ware to sting him ' into a sense of what he had done and 'allowed to be done. Before she could go on, George had dnwn her to; him and was patting her shoulder ten derly. "I 'know, dear little girl," he said, "I know:; don't try. to tell me anything. I'm so ' awfully glad you're pleased; but nil the money and pains in, the world wouldn't make the place good enouja far my Ella." i ' " She released herself with a lit tie cry of impotent despair. How could she Bay the sharp, cruel speeches that wecre strug gling to reach her tongue now? It was no use; she .was a coward, she simply had not the courage to undecei ve him here, on the very first day of the jreunirm, too. . ;. .-. . "You haven't been upstairs yoVeaid George, dropping sentiment abruptly. "Shall we go up?" ; . . Ella assented submissively, much as even this cost her, but it was hotter, she reflected, to get it .over and kncw -the very worst However, she was spared this ordeal for the present As they re turned to the hall,, they found them selves suddetdy face to face with a dingy man, whose face was surrounded by fringe of black whiskers, and crowned hr a shock of fluev hair. . ""Who on earth are you?" demanded George, as the man rose from the kitch en stairs. "No offense, sir and lady. Peagrum, that's my name, fust shop round the cor ner as you go into Silver street, plumber and sanitry hengineer, gas fittin' and hartistio decorating, bell 'anging in all its branches. I received instructions from Mr. Jones that I was to look into a little matter o' leakage in the back kitchen sink, also to see what taps, if hany, required seein' to, and gen'lly to put things straight like. So I come round, 'aving the keys, just to cast a heye over them, as I may term it, preliminry to beginning work in the course of a week or so, as soon as I'm at at libity to attend to it pussonally." "Oh, the landlord sent you? All right, then." "Correct, sir," said the plumber affa- blv. "While I've been 'ere I took the freedom of going all ow this little 'ouse. and a Dice cozy little 'ousa you've mado of it, for such a "nouse as it is. You've done it up very tysty, very tysty you've done this little 'ouse up, and 1 ve some claim to speak, seein' as how I've had the decoration throughout of a many ouse in my time, likewise mansions, xbu ain't been too ambitious, which is the error most parties falls into with small 'oases; now the parties as ad the place before you, by the name o' Rninmlea well, I dessay they satisfied theirselves, but the 'ouse never looked right, not to my taste, it didn't." "George, get rid or tins person, said Ella, under her breath, in French. Unfortunately, George s acquaintance with that tongue was about on a par with the plumber's, and he remained passive. The plumber now proceeded to put down his inci-hauic's straw bag upon the rinll table, which he did with great care, as if it were of priceless stuff, and con tained fragile articles. Having done this, he posed himself with one elbow resting on the poet of the staircase, like a grimy statue of Shakespeare. "Ah," he said, shaking his touzled head, "this ain't the first time I've been 'ere in my puffessioT.il capacity, not by a long way. Not by a long way, it ain't Mr. Rummies, him as I mentioned to you afore, and a nice pleasant spoken gentleman he was, too. In the tea trade. Mr. Rummies, he alius sent round for me whenever there was hany odd jobs as wanted doin', and in course I was al ius pleased to get 'em, be they hodd or hotherwise. "Er exactly," said George, as soon as be could put in a word, "but you see, 1 this lady and I" The plumber, however, did not aban don his position, but seemed determined that thev should hear him TO BB CONTLNCED. QUEER THINGS IN COFFINS. ntoeatrtettira iHmt Will Make ma the tsdinaktn Lan(H. " What is the last curious tninjr you have met in your lugubrious business?" -4aaked a reporter of aa undertaker the other day. The undertaker opeued the lid of a coffin sear his elbow, and replied : " Do you see that satin linging?" " Yes. What's odd about that?" " YeUovr.- Yellow Is a common enough color." " N'ot icV coffin lining, my boy. They're iranerall' hue. But Ibis coffin was made for a wc n whose main ambition in life was to k well, and her last dying r qtmt' that her coffla be lined with bid jrotd v as that color bwst set off her com; lon. which was rather sallow and dark.' 'Promise me,' she said. I don't want all those women to come in and see me in my coffin looking like a frUrht' So they promised, and she died contented. " Only a arornan would bother her head with such thoughts on her dying bed," moralized the reporter. Tm not so sure of l hat," said the under taker. " I once buried an old chap, a saloon-keeper, whose income while he lived was unevenly divided between the supxrt of his family and the decoration of his person. The family jrot the smaller half. He wore the most expensive clothes at all times, and the ditter of A-l diamonds from from his shirt front neeklie. watch-guard, and his big. red. chubby hand, actually dazzled the beholder. Well, when his time came, he bad very little property but bis jewels to leave behind him. but be made a will bequeathing the little be bad to bis wife, on condition that she dressed his body In his best suit of clothes, decked it with all his diamonds and buried them, every one, with him. Otherwise his whole estate, including the diamonds, was to go to Charity. The poor woman declared she would obey his every wish, but it was with a heavy heart Uiat she brought out toe suit I was to dress the corpse in. It was of the loudest biggest most glaring plaid you ever saw; enough .to inglitcn Uld Met himself away. Tho shirt was all covered over with a pattern composed of purple ballet dancers and scarlet bulldogs, and these, with his big diamonds glittering all over him, made a startling sight for the mourners who looked -nto his eofllu. Many were the lamentations that the poor widow should be obliged to bury all those dia monds, and much admiration was ex pressed for the wifely devotiou which kept her from murmuring. ... " But tho widow was no fool. She buried the jewels sure enough, but hardly was the grave filled up before she ordered the sex ton to empty it again. Tho coffin was opened, and the widow took tho diamonds from the old curmudgeon's shirt-front with her own hand. Then they buried him a second timo. I heard or anothor str inge case, con tinued the undertaker, " which, though it did not come under my own olwervation, yet I believe to be true. It was that of a man who always had a horror of being buried alive. Ho left a provision in his will that a big bottle of chloroform was to be put in the coffin with him. lt was to be laid by his side, and a tack-hnmmer was to be put in his band, so that it he came to life under ground ho could smash the bottle at a blow ami fill the eofllu with fumes that would kill him instantly and painlessly. Jt . Y. Tribune. The South', Prosperity. Financially, tho southern states are glowing with health and promlso and re joicing In the consciousness of tholr essen tial greatness. Mo furor has boon created by sensational advertising, but the world has been astonished by the latest statis tics of wonderful growth, as shown in the national census of 1HW.. The sum of all is in tbe fact that theassossed value of prop erty in nine suites is estimated by the census officials to have grown from $3,000, 000.000 in 1880 to JG.O.W.OJO.000 in 1800. . The reports of the census everywhere tell of enlarged aud eulurglng areas of cul tivation, of new mines of coul and iron, ex cellent' in quality and luexhnustlblo in quantity, of now manufactories la every (tanartment of human industry. All the banes of wealth and of sound and satisfac tory finance are bore ; and in my opinion, southern enterprises are animated, sus tained and fortified by as stucore and high reirartfl for commercial credit and personal ihonor, and by as profound a conviction of the necessity of fair dealing, as are to be found a where. J. L. Williams In the Forum. . Woman's World.' Feeding the Sick. Mr. Editor: In an article In Our range Homes on feeding the sick I And a good deal of wisdom, but I taken exception to the idea that dainties and delicacies should pe prepared to tempt the appetite andinduce the pa tient to ..put ..Into the stomach food that it does not crave and probably cannot properly assimilate. ...JLhe writer says : Food for the sick should be prepared in the most careful and painstaking fashion. The dainty bit of meat, the whitest and most Inviting potato, If such uislies are permitted. And I would add, if not permitted, in uny but tho the rarest cases the first thing to do should be to dis charge tho doctor. With the excep tion of ono or two rare ailments where starch must be. avoided, there are no cases where a light, mealy potato is not among the most easily digestible of foods. . In no cose where bread may be safely allowed, either fresh or fttule, is it as good food for an invalid as the potato. - - When the gastric juice is deficient, and food cannot be "properly assimi lated, the appetite fails. This is the stomach's distress signal. Food is not wanted, and if the patient is in duced, by tempting flavors and sea sonings which tickle the palate, to swallow it, nature continues her pro test and expels it if possible by vom iting. If this fails, the offending sub stance lies in the stomach, causing distress. When nature wants food, when the stomach can digest it, apie tite returns, and if the patient has led a proper life, and the organs and tastes have not been perverted, the appetite is the safest guide in the se lection of food. What it craves whut the system needs. is Of course, food for the sick or well should be neatly, carefully and taste fully prepared, and special attention should be given in case of sickness to malting the food and dishes, as well as everything else in the sk-k room pleasant, neat and comrcxt?.vlo. . Aious W. Mattison Can Boet Fickle for Sale. A writer In an exchange advises women who need pin money to try canning beets. She says never use a beet that is too large to put into a quart can whole. Cut off the leaves. but do not cut the stems short enough to bleed the beet. Boil until tender ; put into cold water and slip the skins offx and then put the beets into the cans, arranging them to show off thoir size and shape a much as possi-1 ble. Next heat good cider vinegar boiling hot, season with pepper and salt, and fill the cans full of the boil ing vinegar. Put the covers on at once and tighten them from time to time, as the cans shrink from cooling. Use glass cans and keep them in a dark place. A few pint cans put in any grocery will convince you that there is money in it ; or send a few cons to people who are known to you as "good livers" (being sure to include the hotels and restaurants in your list), telling them that you have them for sale either at your home or some store, as the case may be. - If you have some nice cans in mid winter, send them to this class of people and solicit their orders for the next year. A few printed circulars to send with the cans will enable you to do your soliciting through the medium of a "small boy," if you dislike that part of the work. Lay your plans, and put up a quan tity in pint, quart and two-quart cans and it you use any energy at all In in troducing them you will wish you had more. Strawberry Preserving. You can not put sugar on fresh strawberries, pack them down and let them stand and have the fruit perfect as you can In the case of pineapple or raspberries. The strawberries will become spongy and the sugar extracts the juice. Heat should be applied to the berries as soon as the sugar is added, and no water is needed. Good strawberry preserve is practically out of the market and if one wants it search must be made among private houses, or at hotels where they make a specialty of nice things and have their preserves made for them. S 'uwberry jam can be bought, but this is aiways inferior to the genuine rich preserve. Always use the best ripe strawber ries and have them red, not light col ored, as all the color is needed for the beauty of the preserve. Put a pound of sugar Into the pre serving kettle to each pound of ber ries. Put them in alternate layers but never enough to make more than six inches in depth of both fruit and sugar. Put the berries over the Are and watch closely ; when they begin to boil skim carefully. Simmer ten minutes, then pour into platters and set In the sun. It should have twenty-four hours' exposure to the sun and if the sun does not. nhlnn cnnsoeii-. lively it will do no harm to let treTtora,B? much, :.e r preserves remain in the platters. Alter sunning turn the preserve into small jars just as it is, without heating, and seal. I have tried put ting the preserve direct from the ket tle into -jars and letting them stand in the sun, but the result was not as good as on the platters ; neither did deep layers result as well. Use small jars because the preserve is so rioh that -but little Is needed. Miss Parloa. Currant pudding. Beat two eggs light and stir into a cupful t f sugar creamed with half a cupful ot butter. stir in a cupful of milk, three-fourths' oi a pint of nour, with two even tea spoonfuls of baking-powder and one cupful ot currants. Notes, wi ta Kill Hogs. . 'L . .! Axmsson, If arch 22. Tf VAitnr- I WOUld like tO ASk your advice as tc ln best time to kill hogs. Some of m T neighbors tellcie to kill them In the flt quarter of th mnnn hwsiiiw if trill w wueu me moon is on the wane th9 n 'leat will shrinkJ Is there anything in now muca anlr.riAtor nhnnld I u. 9 to Salt 100 pounds of pork? YoiWO Fabmeb J The best time to kill frogs is when they are in good condition. A year ling, if kept grow ng all tbe tune and fed plenty of com or other good fat- producing food the last morrth or two will not make as much meat as a two or three-year-old hog, but will pro duce sweeter, nicer pork and at a less cost per pound. The ttiird hundred pounds cost more to produce per pound than the first 200, and the fourth hundred Is dearer still to the farmer. As for killing in the first quartei of the moon, I would not kill them in the moon at all. Your barnyard will do very well, If there are no breeding animals; if there are, do your killing where they will not smell the blood or the carcass. The moon does not med dle in our affairs nowadays half as much as she used to In the days when good people couldn't keep good with out burning witches xtnee in a while. When your yearling pigs are fat kill them on a cool day, and If you are go ing to salt the meat down do so in the coolest room available, after the ani mal heat has been thoroughly expelled from it Don't be afraid of using too much salt Run' a knife In around the bones wherever you can and jam tbe gash so made full of salt Lay a layer of salt two inches deep in the bottom of the tub. Then a layer of the cut-up meat Fill all the inter stices between the pieces with salt and also cover the layer out of sight with salt Then repeat the operation till all the meat is packed and cov ered out of sight with salt Cover the barrel to keep out dust In a few days, if the meat Is not covered with lbrine, add a little water till It It cov ered. Keep it j?ool and always see that there is undissolved salt in the tub, and your pork will keep good and sweet without the use of any salt peter. Saltpeter gives meat a flavor that many people object to. - The moon never meddles with meat pre pared as we have directed, nor in any other way. . Electricity for Plaats. It would seem that electricity is one of the agents employed by nature to ia'sapplying thu plnnr. jsrith nour- Ishment and to stimulate its growth. To what extent plants may be sub mitted to electrical influence, or what strength of current is best suited to them and what currents prove detri mental to their development, have not been determined as yet, but it is desirable to continue this research until some definite information shall be gained on these points. Probably different varieties of plants differ greatly in their capacity for enduring the action of electric currents without Injury experiment alone must deter mine this. It has been proved that the slow discharge of static electricity facili tates the assimilation of nitrogen by plants. Faraday showed that plants grown in metallic cages, around which circulated electric currents, contained fifty per cent less organic matter than plants grown in the open air. It would seem from tbe re searches of the latter physicist that those plants requiring a large per centage of nitrogen for their develop ment would be remarkably benefited if grown under electric influence. Five plants died from mi'dew, the others were well developed and the heads large. The laigest heads were over the greatest number of wires and nearest the electrodes. It was further noticed that the healthiest and lar gest plants, as soon as the current became feeble or ceased altogether, began to be affected with 'mildew, On examining the roots of the plants it was found that they had grown about the wires, as if there they found the greatest amount of nourishment; the roots were healthy and in no way appeared to have been injured by the current, but, rather, much benefited by the electrical influences. Beside this garden was prepared an other plot of the same dimensions, having the same kind of soil and treated in like manner as the first, but the electrical appartus and wires were wanting. kAt the close of the ex periments only three plants had par tially developed and two of these wero nearly destroy by mildews-one only was tree icpm tne aisease, : xne re sults, therefore, shb that te healthi est and largest- plants-ft-w-tn the electric pmw a-? v r - ,; J.- Thi'deetnicWon iof IheHrtain portatfoa ief infet!tQ. tcees at Sti Pedraaa, portation ol infected i. Lthe.easfc rfll assure- that Hie threat or -a re WWW, U VI 1W MWO,.UW . e--farmer JJiat has breediiijj jsjoesf Will not calves in thetr'tfted. .For the calves should be put house treatment, or, in oth they should be fed to nur,A possible growth from tt i farmer that neglects a raal makes a loss he never d It costs far less to make 100 p beef in the three-year-old In the six-year-old ox. T for nothing it the a" us many are ant" weeks old tosh go about and pinched up - , lions, halr.s' and lookin- den to the cannot b ZoriSmi Genecal News. : Argentine theU- -rM t Ik "usea.' reciprocity with ean ex-convicte were ' t NewYcrk March ' . ' r i , ; -. . Jltion treaty between Unltedtates .has ta,' VToxthe "Msefrew xelud- ex. V Ameii; goods. Pavawhl.i im to .America -as -It aly's minister, Mon'astbebestion of indemnity the families of the Italians lynch d at Ker "riea&a is seiuea. . . unnta st Arts'-: ' "Walt Whitman is dead- Two million dollars is needed to complete tne census. ; . The Standard oil trust has reorgan ized to evade the anti-trust law, - Jim Keene, who failed in Kew York In 1883, is paying up his old debts. - . Mills has been almost unanimously re-elected to the federal senate from Texas. - - Blaine is likely to retire from poli tics soon on account of his ruined health. The Chicago board of education is charged with taking bribes, the same as the aldermen. When the Standard Oil company re orgmized it had $26,000,000 surplus earnings on hand. The boiler in a lumber mill at East Jordan, Mich., exploded March 21, killing seven men. The Brotherhood of Trainmen has petitioned Congress to close the world's fair on Sundays. A house fell on a housemover named Brobst, who was moving it, in Chicago March 20 and killed him. a jury at Darlington, Wis., has de cided that sll thA Siebold last September were insane miu um wree oi tnem are insane yet The Anuvimn TtnhHin Rnsmi vvwu, - OUU Shuttle company, which owns twenty three mills in 'low l-'nnloTil I, - tailed. .- - A boiler in a brick fw-tnrv nt T.l clede. Mo., exploded March 21 and killed four men nnrl 'llsinmmnelT in. jured four more..- Seven of rthfl hnnillinir rhiuimil. dermen have-been indicted. One of the witnesses ii a woman In whose DresencA in a hnnco nt ill.fam tho ol. dermen talked too freely while tirSk.' Tim lAfirnr nntt mrt-at itrt f .At legheny Cirv, Pa., have been arrested for embezzlement and the superin tendent of water works and health board are short. The total shortage amounts to $300,000. Edward M. Fielu. the swindler and forger, son of Cyrus W. Field and nephew of Stephen J. Field of the federal supreme court, has been sent to the New York state insane asylum at Buffalo for examination as to his sanity. The most startling case of bank wrecking in years has come to light at Painesville. O.. wher hv foiwrv and theft K. K. Paige and Horace Steele have left the bank $600,000 be- nina. raige and Steele, the presi dent were arrested. A gasoline stove used for warmine water for baptisms at Mannintr, Iowa, exploded, March 20. Bev. M. Boles carried it out of the church. He wore celluloid cuffs, which caught fire and nis arms .were Durned to the bone. Physicians pronouced his injuries fa tal. Justice of the Peace Frank Green wait of Sioux City and his wife had a fight and she whipped him. He is a farmer and he deputized Bill Otto, a farm nana to arrest her for batterv He tried and convicted her and sent her to the county jail in charge of Otto, bnt on the way she whipped who ana went. noma. Cerro Gordo HL. suffered March 96 from the most damaging cylone ever known in that vicinity, "it left a track about 300 feet wide and over half a mile in leangth through the most thickly inhabited part -of the village.- Houses, barns and buildings of all kinds were twisted about in the most terrible manner, but fortunately no uves were losr. Church Maddox was taken from his home at Marengo, IncL, by whitecaps wno proposea to nog rum for stealing some fresh pork he had in his house He protested that he bought the pork from a neighbor named Gibbs. Gibbs was visited and confirmed his claims, and the men unmasked and turned Maddox loose. . He recognized five of them, two of whom werelocal preach ers, ana tney nave, oeen arrested. -: FOREIGN. V, Fire has destroyed the village of Level, Switxei land. . ; Fifty-two May day rioters in Borne have been imprisoned and fined. . In northern Bolivia 30,000 Indians are reported to te on the. war path. Jl syndicate has been formed to cul tivate tobacco, on . a large scale in ' Th9Greek parliament has been 'dis solved and Mar; IS fixed as the day tor a new election. .. - President Palacio of YeneiuliJs re: ported to be insane. So is Emperor William of Germany. . - An uprising of Malays against British rule at Pahang, India, is as aumingserious proportions. . The Russian force on the Prussian frontier has been ordered to be-ready to 'march at a half-hour's notice. Curreiit :I,oys. : V- Bsfcrta im f ., iasidq There Is a hitch in the fiahriHo' J coiTes-pondenca between th TT. j States and Great Britita. Engf ji. reiusesw renew last years agreen ; - , JJ to keep poachers ont oT the sea'pSfciT rag aroitration unless tha TTrt States agrees - W idemcfr British . sealers for what they- Ioae- thereby U ' ine arbitrators '.decide in favort- of ; Great Britian. "She. nacrrnKtui sealers who give bonds to pay dan.. ages ir decided Against be allowed to continue sealinjg in the Bearing set, i thisyear. -.. '- - 2p:; - . President Harrison' aim In- rnt . demanding an - inunediate answer: ; . The modus. of Jast year is the Icaat this government can accept in reason. -: The restraints after this treaty , of sr. . bitration should be more absolute, ' Ji not less. He does not want to protect this discussion, and having sow in tie most friendly spirit: submitted th - V considerations which support thejust demand of this government that the ?. property which is the subject of agreed arbitration shall notbeenMivt i" to spoliation pending arbitration he expresses the hope that Lord Sails- l bury wi'l give promut and friendhy assent to the renewal" of the modus. The president will bear with regret that her majesty's provernment vm- tinues to assert the right to deal with tnis subject precisely as it. no pro vision had been made for the settle ment of the dispute, and in that event this government, as has already been pointed out, will be compelled to deal with the subject upon the same basis. and use every means in its power to protect from destruction or serious in jury the property and jurisclictional rights which it has long claimed and enjoyed. , England has sent some w&r vessels toward Behring sea. . - The Canadian government issued a notice March 28 to all Canadian seal- - ' ers who had been driven outofBeh- ring sea by reason of the agreement between the United States and Great Britain to file theirxlatms "foTcSmS- geTwithin one month. The Abercorne tin plate works have' closed, throwing 3000 hands ont of work. : , Fifteen hundred bricklayers, car penters and cabinet-makers on the two new Astor hotels on Fifth avenue Xew York, struck March 21 because five non-union men had 'been given work. The strike of Canadian Pacific con ductors and brakemen has extended from Winnipeg to the Pacific -:"ZZ. The enginman at Hepburn colliery, DuxharaEng., were stoned by strik ers and several of them injured March 24 because they refused to join the strikers. - - The British house of commons re jected by a vote of 272 to 160 a bfil ' making 8 hours a days work in the mines. i . - The authorities at ' Brisbane, Queensland, are receiving 500 desti- tute persons daily. The -mayor s the distress is due partly to bad man agement ;n the late strike. " The Canadian Jaeific strike trouble ' was submitted to arbitration March - 23. B. Williams, a non-union lumber handler in San Francisco, was badly clubbed by strikers March22. A non union lumber handler was badly beaten bv strikers in San Francisco March 24. The Pacific Pine Lumber company offers $130 for information . leading to the conviction of a union lumber handler for beating one of its V employes. Red coats quelled the riotous strik ing miners in Durham. : : In Paris 5000 cabmen struck March ' Discharged switchmen at Kent, O.," attacked the men Who had tak -'n their places and the police who were defending them March 26 and firing resulted, inwjjich two of the rioters were wounded. Judges Sent to Jan. " Judge Phillips ot the United States ' Circuit-Cijirt at Kansas City, Kas., nas sentenced Judges Say, Blaine and George of Cass county to jail un til they make some arrangement for payment ot the bonds voted by that county twenty years ago iu ai i of the Tebo and Seosho B idroa L "He also imposed a fine of $500 on each of thW, ' Tff 1870 the two countieoted $730, 000 and $1,000,000, respectively, tc ai in the construction of the road. 1 was, never built, but thetwnds into the hands of innocent porch? who have obtained judgment edly, but have never been a' lecU mhn8 5