REALLY GOOD MANNERS. CHINESE ECONOMY they CoimUt In Making Unpptor 1'crnong Whom You May Hurt, It has bean tho fashion to assumo a ttrong inclifToronco toward strangers, even if ono ilocs not fool it, and not -www, u Kujiiubtii IU1 V, Ktl All suui u. manner us 10 iiuiko a illlio People Who Can lln Almost Any ThlnT hy Mriwm of AtiniiHt Nothing. Tho Chinese nro pro-omlnontly oco nomlcal, whether it be in limiting tho number of wants, In preventing tested, but toward thoso who aro asso elated togothor in business, and tho ones whom ono moots ovcry day. It is notnocossary for two peoplo to fall upon each others neck every timo that they moot In order to bo civil, but in the short lifo that wo live horo why not give and re-elvo all tho good that wo cnn. Strangers upon settling in a new place fool tills stony and hard ex terior, and whon the cheery-faced, really Christian man or woman is mot with, what a b!es3ing, and how one loves to remember tho mooting and tho kindly look. It is like a perfect Juno day, or thj hurdling out of tho sun lifter days of cloud and storm. A woman who wiis assistant In a largo school, ono day s:iid to the prin cipal, who was a man, that tho manners of tho boys in tho school wore not such as thoy should be. Tho man, who was very dark naturally, turned a good deal darker and lost his temoor. Then ho burst out Into a tirade against man ners. Ho s:iid Unit he did not believe Jm nny such thing (all of tho time growing blanker) and finally brought iiis fool down on tho platform with a great jar, saying: "Some of tho great est rogues that ovor lived had tho most polished manners." That seems to bo a poor reason, or no reason at all, why wo should not cultivate pleasing and kindly manners toward each other. Not that tho books on otiquotto should bo swallowed whole for more than one of them lias unreasonable and silly ideas -but there is a manner that is respectful, kind and right, and it is born of tho kind, true heart every time, its name is politeness. A young girl was trolntr from hiv- homo in Connecticut to a school in .Massachusetts, a distanco of ono hun dred miles, and was obliged to go alone bho waited a weary timo in Hoston and finally took her train on tho Old Colony roau, ovcry fneo Doing a strange one Alter a Tow miles' travel sho noticed that an old gentleman was regarding nor. ana Ills very kindly look reassured her. After awhile ho came to her and indeed her if she was traveling alone, and upon boing told tlm'sho was ho sat in tho scat in front of her and talked very kindly and pleasantly, and before sho loft tho car ho gave her bis cam anil attended tier to the door of the car and curried her sachel. Upon looking at the card sho found that tho old gentleman was Presiding Elder lUa, and his "Peace bo with you,' ... 1 , .... . . uu iuii. ucr, was a oeuciiicuon mat can novor bo forgotten. It was a very exacting waitross who, wnou sent to wait upon a guest at a hotel, hesitated and said that shodld not llko to wait upon him because sho had never been introduced. That seemed Quite far-fetched, but it is as consistent na tho stony manners of tho would-bo lofty minded peoplo whom we moot A young woman wont to reside in a oily where she was a total strangor. and in taking a morning walk always met a man who bowed and said, "Good morning." I ho first morning sho con eluded he had mistu con her for sonio acquaintance, but u- lio continued to greot her each m ling in the snmo respectful manner, sho know that it must be his practice to so saluto tho peoplo whom he met. Upon attending one of tho churches there sho discov ered that it was t ie minister of tho church, a highly educated man. who had traveled much abroad, and was eminent In his profession. -Springfield (Muss.) Union. represent a great deal. Tho uni versal diet consists of rice, beans, mil let, garcion vegetable and fish, with a little meat on high fostivals. Whole omo food in abundance may bo sup plied at less than a penny a day for each alult, and oven in famino times thousands of parsons havo boon kept allvo for months on about a halfpenny a day ea-ih. This Implies tho oxistonco of a high doroo of culinary skill In tho uniiieso. Iho.rmodos of preparing food aro thorough and various. There is no wnjio; every intng is mndo to do as much duty tn posiible. What is left is t'10 vor'.oit trlilo! The physical con dition of tho Chlnoio dog or cat, who has to ltvj on tho leaving of tho family, slnws this; thoy aro clearly kept on starvation allowances. Tho Chinese iv.'o not extremely fastidious in regard to food; all is fish that comes to tholr not, ind most things come thr.-e sooner or Into?. In the north tho .hors3, tho male, U13 donkey nro in universal use, and in some districts tho camel also does duty. It must bo understood that tho practice is to eat all of those animals a soon as thoy expire, whothor tho cause of death be accident, old ago, or disonso. This is done as a matter I WINNING FRIENDS. ' ' Tho Value of Amocliitloii With Able, Hon rut ami ICuni'Kothi .Mon. It is bad pulley to bo haughty, ropol lanl, un-ocial. The most resolute and determined aspirant to wealth or po sition may stumble as he climbs, and If 110 one stretches out a linger to save him, may roll headlong to a depth far below the point from which ho started. "An eye for an oyo, a tooth for a tooth," was the old law in Judea. A lift fur a lift Is tho business rule of to tlay; and If sometimes broken by tho ungrateful when there Is most need of Its observance, It certainly works hot ter than the principle thata man should euro utterly for himself, neither giving nor receiving assistance. Hut it is not from prudential motives merely that the onorgotiu and persever ing assist each other. All men of vigorous minds and elastic tempera ments sympathize with effort. Thoy honor the Individual who has fought tfullantly the battlu of lifo, though re verses may have overtaken him; thoy vooogulzo I1I111 as a kindred spirit, though ho lies on his back; they aro willing to give him a "boost," because thoy feel that ho needs but a now foot hold to assure Ills ultimate success. These lire uniong tho reasons why 111011 who aro true to themselves, nro almost Invariably true to each other, and why tholr friendship nnd sympathy mean woinothlng more than words. Lot no one, whatever his talents, hli opportunities or his confidence in his own powers, despise the alliance of Hiioh men. No human being ever was or will bo capable of uohlovlngomlnonoe in tho business world without at least tho indirect help of others. Therefore, let all young men who are entering business life labor in a manly and just way to make friends and of the right eort. A', J'. Ledger. -lie (at a Now Jersey race course) "Several of thu horses in this race tayu boon orulohod.M Sho "Well, I don't wonder; I was never so hourly Um up Hi my life," V, Jf, bun, of course, and tho fact that tho anim: has died of an epidemic malady does not altor Its ultlmato destination. Cor tain disturbances of tho human organ station, duo to eating diseased meat aro well recognized among tho people but it is consl'l ?dd batter to cat the meat. c.ioapnoss of which is cor- 1 1.. 1, and run tho risk of tho ennse quonces, which aro not quite cortaii than to buy dear meat oven with th assurance of no evil results. Indeed the moat of animals which havo die of ordinary ailments is rather dearer than that of thoso which havo died i an epidemic such as pleitro-pnoumonin Another example of careful, ealcula ting economy is tho construction of th cooking pots and boilers, tho bottoms of which aro us thin as possible that tho contents may boll all the soouor for fuel is scarce and dear, and consists generally of nothing but tho stocks and roots of tho crops, which make rapid blazo and disappear. Tho bust ncss of gathering fuel is committed to children, for ono who can do nothing else can at least pick up straws and leaves and weeds. In autumn and winter a vast army of fuel gathorors spread ovor tho laud. Hoys as cend trees and boat them with clubs to shako oil' tho leaves; the very straws got no time to show which way tho wind blows before they aro annoxod by some enterprising collector. Simi larly professional manure collectors Hwann over all the roads of the country. Chinese women carry this minute econ omy 11110 uioir dross; nothing comes amiss to them; if it is not used in one place it is in another where it, appear a thing of beauty, roroign residents who give tholr cast-olT clothes away to Chlnoso may bo assured that tho career of usefulness of theso trnrmonts is at lust about to commence. Chinese whcol- barrows squeak for tho want of a tow drops of oil; but to pooplo who have no nerves tho squeak Is cheaper than tho oil. Similarly, dirt is cheaper than hot water, and so, as a rule, tho peoplo do not wash; tho motto "Cheaper than dirt," which the soap-dealer puts in his window, could not bo made intel ligible to the Chinese. To them the average foreigners aro mere soup-wasters. Scarcely any tool can bo got ready made: it is so much cheaper to buy tho parts and put them together for yourself, and as almost everybody takes this view roadv-niado tools are not to be got. Two rooms aro dimly lighted with a single lump deftly placed in a hole in tho dlvldlnir wall. Chinese, In fact, soom to bo capable of doing almost any thing by means of almost nothing. Thoy will give you an Iron foundry on a minute scale of completeness In a back yard and will make in an hour a oooklnu range, of strong and perfect draft, out of a pile of mud bricks, lasting ludollu Itoly, operating perfectly, and costlm? nothing. 1110 old woman who in her last moments hobbled as near as 110s slblo to tho family graveyard lu order to die so as to avoid thu oxpenso of collln bearers for so long a distance, was a characteristic Chinese. North China Herald. Tho Pool of Bothosda. Tho pool of Hethesda has been satis factorlly Identified at Jerusalem, 110 cording to the cliulrmau of the Tales- tlno exploration fund. All early au thoritios agree lu representing this pool as being near the Church of St Anno, but nothing was known of the pool lu later years till some Algerian monks recently unearthed a large tank in tho rock under the church, reached by a lllght of twenty-four steps. How ever, tho pool bolng invariably de scribed as having tlvo porches, tlild tank did not quite correspond to the Hethesda pool until now, when Herr Conrad Schick has found a twin pool slilo oy side with the first discovery those sister pools, tho re fore, could easily havo had a porch on each of the lour suios, with a llflh 011 tho wall separating the tanks, and this link Is considered to complete the hlontincu tiou! Among other traditions, the old writers describe this Piscina Probation as the birthplace of the Virgin Mary. ntwvti uomo '() rh. It is a powerful hard thing for 11 woman to wear slx-button kids when hur husband woars a ovciibuUoh poulcatboQlr(ntffV. LONG WALKING TRIP. An EnglUh Family wllh N Children Walk Fire Htimlretl Mltr. Mrs. Adam Acton, an English lady w ho has ono residence in St. John's Wood, London, and another In Orml dale. Arran, Is tho heroine of tho latest remarkable pedestrian fent a walk of five hundred miles In England and Scotland, beginning in London and ending in Glasgow, and performed, not alone, but in tho company of her whole family of six children, tho oldt of whom is twelve years and the young est twelve months. Tho latter, it nood hardly bo said, did not walk tho whole distance, being wheeled, in fact, to gether with his feeding bottlo and appurtonances thereto belonging, in a baby carriage. Mrs. Acton, in tho course of conversation with a Scotch reporter on tho experience of lior trip, remarked: "you must bear in mind that wo had no idea when wo started of doing any thing wonderful in walking. n o como up from London every year from our house herein Arran; and as wo went down by rail no loss than nine tines last year, wo thought wo would wall: this' year and ecu the coun try, for, of course, you never sco any thing of it from the window of a rail way car. "().:r party consisted of six children, tho youngest In our famous baby coach, which has boon, oh, thousands of miles 0:1 tho Continent and in England and Scotland, and my husband and myself and two maids ton in all. When wo started from St. John's Wood wo each took a small black batr in our hands: but wo soon had to glvo thoso up. Afterward wo had absolutely nothing but a night-gown and a mackintosh each. There was ono brush and ono comb for mysolf and all tho children. Wo really couldn't carry more than the least possible quantity of luggage, you know. Tea my husband is so fond of a cup of tea so wo carried our tea all the way from London; and we had a kettle, too; one of thoso fiat onos to boil over a spirit lamp, and tho spirit lamp itself. And, of courso, the baby, bolng a young baby and fed on tho bottle, obliged us to carry a tin can of milk. Wo had very light faro. As soon as wo got into tho Xorth of England wo always had porridge for breakfast. Wo never had much moat: on the only two occasions when wo had really a good dinner, we found that wo could not walk afterward. We had eggs and milk, and broad and b.ilto to any amount. Tho meat we had was almost entirely tinned meat, which wo bought with broad in tho town or vil lage in the morning, and carried with us till wo came to a suitable place for dinner. Wo had dinner in tho open air always. Thon for tea we' had just to call and got a kettle of water and tho use of tea things, which thoy wore always glad to supply us for a shilling (twenty-five cents.) Of courso thu trouble was boots," Mrs. Acton continued. "Wo wore ccommonded all sorts of hvgionie solos, and every thing, and wo tried every thing, and wo had to give thorn all up. We gave up boots altogether and took to 'sand shoos1 canvas shoos with India rubber soles. Those allow tho feet o go any how thoy llko; thoro is no pressure and wo found them admirable. Vo never got blisters or sore feet or any thing. Wo used to soap our toes ind heels and tho Inside of our stoek- ngs before wo started; that Is a very ,'ood thing. Then as to washing, wo ould not possibly stop to have ovorv thing washed at tho inns and places, so tho way wo managed our washing as to have ono thing washed every Ight. Wo found wo could always got one thing washed and quickly got up, md so wo had clean things without tho oublo of carrying any with us. Wo carried 110 umbrellas. Hut though tho nuaiuer was very ono in England wo did very well without. In tho first part of tho timo wo walked in our mackintoshes and hats that tho rain would not hurt. Of courso it was very muddy, and, what with tho mud and the rain and tho sun, our dross got into such a statu we were quite ashamed of ourselves. And on Saturday nights wo had to stop somewhere and buy llowors or some little frilling or something to brighten up our hats to go to church on the next morning. Hut wo novor and colds, lu spito of having no urn nreiias, ami, though wo had a great deal of gray, cold weather that, peoplo complained of, wo found it splendid weather for walking." Cor. Philadel phia I'ress. THE ARIZONA KICKER. fjrae Fine Spoelinrn of Ufiatlultcratnl Fontler .TourrmlMin. OL'i: Cincri.ATios-. There nro news papers which do more blowing about their circulation than wo do, and there may be a few who add more ubseribers In a single week, but the 9icker gets there ju&t tho same. We began on a circulation of two (2; copies, one of which wo carried about in our own pocket, and tho other wont as a dead head to the postmaster. Wo now work 198 copies which are paid for in ad vance. J his is an increase of 114 ner V MISCELLANEOUS. An impecunious young man refers to his "undo 1 as a very dear relative, MtrcJiant Traveler. Thoro Is a dog at Seymour, Ind.. who will look at a clock and then put his new on tho exact hour us marked on a card. Experiments show that tropical sugar-corn will grow in many parts of Arizona and that it is as productive as In tho Sandwich Islands. It is also as certained that tho boxwood tree will 'grow there. O A Philadelphia markotman rejoices SUCCESS IN FARMING. , , , "u,"wia' nu wo vo 11 in .Cablegram from Prince Hismarck J. ...... . Dajw umer nspipor ordorln twelve pairs of canvius-back u no uonu can equal 1. o don' lduckSi Th gaQ de!ller Uefl n." : , ' ... r"'" 1 Wilkio Collins with Now Jersey snipe rcrurs raniDioon inoir uirones. or , A vMior who oxnmlnei 80mo town that it has bettered tho moral standing . r n.i t....tau. ,ui extract from an old sermon, preached of tho American masse's a thousand per cent, but wo do know that we havo made life worth the living for a good many people out this way who were ready to hang themselves when our first number was issued, and that ovorv; new subscriber who comes hiis failli that we will make a better man of him. Ot.n Exctsi:. Wo havo boon severe- ! ly criticised because we refused to at lend tho funeral of old Pcto Shinly, ' who died on tho street of too much whisky one night last week. It is j claimed that Old Pcto was our creditor in tho sum of twolvo dollars, and that it was shabby in us not to sou him planted. In", the first place Old Pete ' owed us two'dollar3 borrowed money, instead of our owing him. la tho noxt 1 our bunday pantaloons needed a patch 1 about four feet square at tho end oppo- site tho bow, and wo did not care to 1 subject ourselves to ridicule for the ake of showing off. Wo can keop our back bohind us in our own olllce until better times arrive, and that's what wo are trying to do. Wo have sent to San Francisco for a patch tho color of our pantaloons, and whon it arrives and is welded on to tho spot, Richard will b himsolf again, and ready to rustle at funerals or address a public meeting on tho topics of tho day. Mitst Taku Tiikiii Ciianci:s. Throe times during tho past month wo have surprised onrsolf and tho public by mopping the lloor with assailants, while on two occasions wo hilv'e igno niiniousiy took to flight. Wo state it as a physiological fact 'that there aro times when wo had as liof fight it dozen men, and other timos when wo'd run from a good-sized boy. Partios plan ning to lick us must bo prepared to take their chances. Wo may light like a Hon or run like a jack-rabbit. Tiik Coi.onki, Has eiety pretended to weoic oeeauso uoionoi ucuiaire was arrested for a horse thief and taken to Nebraska to stand trial. It was oniy a pretense. Wo havo known for months past that the Colonol was a beat and an impostor, and many others havo known it. Ho sent us an order for a now hat as soon as he arrived horo, and thus put us under obligations not to give him away. Tho hat grow old and rusty after a time, and as the Colonel didn't como in with a cash subscription wo felt that wo had given him rope enough. Wo just dropped a hint to tho sheriff of Henry County, and a week later the Colonol had tho Irons on. Wo aro alone every evening after six. Wo can't bo bribed, but then are parties in this town who bad best como in and subscribe for copies to send to friends. Our terms nro. $2 por year--strictly in advance. nbout 1700, on tho sin of wearing periwigs: "Adam, so long as ho con tinued in innocency, din wear Ills own hair and nbta porfwig.1.1 A. cooking school lecturer has bravely., attacked tho custom of the multiplying of-little dishes upon tho table.,, She says that tho-greatest need of the American table is not variety, but variation; variety in food does not necessarily preclude, a certniu amount of routine In so.o of the counties of Dakota they pay five conts a tail for prairio dogs, . and in 0110 place they pass as ! currency. A man goes into a saloon and lor ins drinks throws on the coun- ' tor gopher tails. It looks a little novel I in church to see prairio dog tails going I into the contribution box. but so it is. I Tho method of Inoculation for tho prevention ot splenio fovor and other fatal diseases in domestic animals, which was discovered by Pasteur, has spread to Asia, where it is now applied to elephants, with success. Thoso huge creatures, in a domesticated stato, are liable, it seems, as well as other animals in tho service of man, to fatal epidemic diseases. Not long ago an Italian workman on tho wa.er-works at Dover, N. II., re ceived notice that ho had been drafted into the Itali.ui army. He at onco settled up his small affairs and started for his old home. Asked why ho didn't stay here and pay no attention to tho draft, ho said that if he did ho would never dare to return to Italy, for ho would be liable to arrest and imprison ment. In cleaning out tho lower levels of tho caves at Dordogne, in France, along with sonio of the most rudiment ary stone arrow-hoads yet discovered, thoro were found a great many oyster shells piled in such a mannor as to show that tho Neanderthal mim lmrwl t-iONK. .lonyso-jthe bivalve as a common article of bo all upset last I fnnil. 'I'hn nvulni, is time ilni.mnc,,i,l to bo tho oldest domesticated delicacy known to man. Theso relies aro esti mated to be over sixty thousand years old. MANGERS. Much Illin- Georgo Was Not Afraid. loimg lady (badly frightened) O, George, hero coinos pa. George (ditto) -WhoreP Whore? outig lady Hoar him stoonlncr along tlio hall In his stocking feet? George (greatly rolioved) Ho calm. darling, bo calm. George is not afraid of stocking foot. Washington Critic. A light between a rattlesnako ami a coach-whip, near Moultrie, Fla,. Is thus described: Tho rattlosnako watched his antagonist, but could not obtain au opportunity to strike. Thinking that tho coach-whip did not mean business, tho rattier thon leisurely uncoiled himself and started to go, when, quick as lightning, tho whin started for him, seizing him back of tho neck, and w nipped himself tightly around his body. In ton minutes tho coach-whip leisurely uncoiled himself and gilded away into tho undorbrush, caving the latter a mass of jellv. julte dead. Tho rattlosnako had so v. cral rattles, and was a dniiL'orous. ooklng monVer. Thu report of the Trustees of tho Vermont l.uimtlo Asylum shows thu wliola number of putiunts admitted to Um asylum In af-twy yaara U 0.48.S. man, mm r.uon womwi. "Not on Him Thoro aro no Hies on J. M. P. Hraytou, Esq., who owns that beautiful ranch commonly known as Jackass Dell. Ho entered out- otltce the other day and left a peck of pota toes of his own raising. His wifo is one of tho handsomest women in the West, his daughter tho tinost singer and musician, and tho gontleinon him self ought to bo President of tho United States. It Is to such go-ahoad, enter prising men as Mr. Hraytou that Ari zona is indebted for her prosperity. Wo call attention to tho two-column ad. which wo havo Inserted free, of the fact that Jackass Dell Is for sale at $10 an aero. Is worth five times that It Is not for us to suggest that othor farmers bring us in potatoes, butter carrots or apples. Such as do will find us ready anil willing to glvo them from one-half a column to three columns of notice in return, and in our most cheer ful vein.1' Detroit Free lYcss. He Had Had Experience. Applicant Twenty-five dollars week sooms a small salary for tho hard work of a reporter, sir. Editor Perhaps it does, but tho field is overcrowded. Wo rofuso appllca 110ns aimosi every uay. 1 tnuiK you said you had had experience as a news paper man? Applicant (wiin uigniiy 1 1 was principal of a school of journalism for a year. suitor (coldly) 1 os, sir. w o paV flo a wcok to beginners. Chicaao Jrwunc. Cultured Damo " Just llko a man! You grab a paper as soon as it arrives. keep It all to yourself, and then blame me for not being informed on matters of public interest." Husband. "Well my dour, I'll read the paper aloud If you wish. Iot mo see 'Another Ocean Horror."1 "O, don't road that." 1 In PiwiVi'.w j rf tltik t 111 111 livn " ' aav 'f J S HIV! Vt tl'tlf 111 1 don't care for poUtlus." "'Issue. of tho Hour.1'1 "Never mind that.' "Solemn Solves a Problem1 " "I lmto solono Mrs, Tlptnp'n Pari UifcuHpUun of tht I)ih& 0 rtl ikuV'MftoifftyMi AUvaf, CONVENIENT Hoiv StoL'k-On-nerK Can Save Kfccabln Work. The manger which is in general uso in most stablos is very inconvenient nnd causes unnecossary work every time tho horses aro fed. I s'earcoly know a stable which has not what might bo called a regulation mangor a box about two foot wido extending across the front end of tho stall and about threo foot deop. To feed ahorse in it tho hay must bo lifted and crowded into each mangor separately, and thoro is no possible way to clean out ono of thorn except to lean over and scrape up tlio contents with tho hands, for they are too contracted to permit tho uso of a broom or sliqvol. Whenever visitastablo having those old-fashioned mangers, 1 always examine them, and iu.o nut itucujmiioii 10 una a muss a foot deop of mouldy chaff and corn cobs, and ofton tho horses havo slob borod on it, or wator has been spilled, lill it is much moro liko manure than horse feed. My old stable had just such mangors, and 1 made up my mind that if over 1 built a now stable I would havo a mangor through which I could walk from ono end of tho stable to tho othor. and so arranged that I could sweep a mangor thirty feet long from ond to ond to ond with nothing in tho way. I built a new barn threo and a half yoars ago, and I put in 0110 of thoso "continuous mangors," as I call it, and I liko it so well that I would havo no othor. I havo two stables with tho stock standing facing each othor, and Instead of having a feed room between thoso stables into which to throw tho hay perhaps down a stairway nt ono ond and thon havo to carry it and fill twolvo soparato mangers, I make tho food room Itself a mangor. I ralso tho lloor a foot hlghor than that from which tho horses stand and lot thorn eat directly from it. Tho feed room, or mangor as wo now call it, is made five foot wido, if for two rows of horses and cattlo, or two and a half feet wido for a slnglo row. It Is floored with dressed lumber, tho lloor running longthwlso of tho manger, and tho sides of It aro boarded from the inside so that thoro is not a projection, and it can bo scraped or swopt from ond to ond in a very short timo. In winter whon both stablos nro full I sweep the manger twice or three times a week and shovel tho waste Into ono of tho stalls for bedding, or if wo aro feeding corn fodder I remove tho waste every day. If wo are feeding tho fodder without cuttlnc I carrv thn long stalks out to tho barn-yard and scatter them around the straw stack. I have a door at tho end of tho mangor for this purpose, but whon, as we often do. wo cut the fodder to loucths of sir or eight inches, tho waste all goes un dor tho horses for bedding. Tho food boxes for grain are not in U10 manger hut nro luftlio eurmtrs of thu stall, mtWQ urwn, 111 QM Winner, Horr to Make Agricultural l'uriuJia llca- nut auil I'rolltahlr. Tho rulo may bo laid down with very few exceptions, that men liko the busi ness in which they are successful, nnd acquire a dislike to that in which thoy fall. To tho farmer, largo ond fine crops, raised at rcasonablo expense, nnd paying well in money, afford posi tive enjoyment; and ho cnn not help feeling a certain dollght, asido from tho money profit, in viowing tho rich nnd luxuriant fields, under clean nnd neat cultivation, tlio result of continued good management. Ho will feel less dis posed to givo up tho business, pull up stakes, nnd movo into town, or migrate to tho distant region of tho West, than the man who has weedy and stunted corn crops, winter-killed nnd chess laden wheat, bug-caten potatoes, and scant products generally, together with the frequent losses and vexations of the incursions of animals through poor and broken fences, and delays from de ranged farm machines. Tho question is ight bo prcsonted to the ownor ol such a farm, whether ho who permits i.uch derangements would bo any more successful in city business, or with hi superficial labors spread out over the wilds of tho West. The farmer who would m ko rural pursuits attractive to his sons and in duce thoin to continuo farmers, should surround them with pleasant associa tions, givo them an Interested share in tho profits, present to them a handsome ly laid-out homestead, with neat fences, clean fields and good-looking buildings. Ho should not mako them moro drudges as a matter of convenience to himself. but throw upon thorn some responsibil ity, nnd givo them tho stimulus of par ticipation in successful results. A great mistake is inado by many cul tivators in spreading out their bushiest over too mnny acres for tho amount of appliances thoy can uso for thorough md profitable work. Superficial cul ture is tho grent enemy of good farm ing. Tho word "slipshod" should nev er trutumlly apply to farm manage ment. A wheat-field thoroughly culti vated boforo sowing, often makes all the difference botweon twelvo bushel 111 acre and luxuriant crops of twenty Ivo or thirty bushols. It Is more economi cal of labor to cut and gather three, tons of hay from an aero of meadow. thanU spiead all tho work required for the three tons ovor four or five acres, as if often dono by poor managers. Tin singlo rich aero is moro easily plowed and cultivated in obtaining tho seventy shelled bushels of corn, than the thro, badly tilled acres for tho same amount of crop, even if dono in tho most care less mannor. Tho man who has a mod erate sized and productive farm has a shorter drivo for his team in drawing in crops and in returning manure, and in tho daily routine in tho superintend ence of work. Hut it must not bo understood that merely occupying a small farm mean? profit and success, nor that a largo one is failure. A largo farm may bo ad mirably managed and yield correspond ing profits, provided tlio owner has the means to carry it on in tho best man nor. So on tho other hand tho occu pant of a small place may easily neg lect and mismanage it. Hut tho mistake is quite common that tho small farm is a dotriment, because tho best care is not given to it, a courso which is much easier on the wholo than on broad do mains. Country Gentleman. How to Make Hens Lay. Put two or moro quarts of water in a kettle, advisos an exchange, and one largo seed popper or two small ont-s, then put tho kottlo on tho fire. When tho wator bolls stir In coarse Indian meal until you havo a thick mush. Let It cook an hour or so, and feed it hot. Horse-radish is chopped fine and stirred into tho mush as prepared in tho above directions, nnd for results we aro got ting from five to ton eggs a day, whore before wo had not got any eggs for a long time. Wo hear a good many cJm plaluts from other pooplo about not getting eggs. To such wo would warmly recommend cooked feed fed hot. Hoiled npplo parings seasoned with red popper or boiled potntoes sea soned with chopped horso-radit.li are good for food, and much better than un cooked food. National Stockman. Love in a Dry-Goods Store. An old dry-goods merchant of New York, says one of tho worst things to contend with in tho business is lovo af fairs between tho unmarried employes. When a young lady, say, in the hosiery department, falls in lovo with a nice young man In tho dross-goods depart ment thoro Is troublo ahead. If tho young man should happen to return tho young lady's affections tho trouble is doubled. In nlno cases out of ten tho tender passion unfits its victims for work in tho snmo dry-goods storo, es pecially in tho caso of tho voiinc ladies. Once thoy cot in lovo with man at another counter their mind. In stead of bolng at tholr own counters, is continually at tho young man's counter, and business suffers. It is tho same with young men, and when far gone tho only remedy is to dlsehargo them. Chicago News. Thoro aro still on tho pension rolls of tho Government ovor 00 men who t-orved in tho war of 1812. That war ended Eovcnty-threo yoars ago, and ther.- woro about AO, 000 mon who wore 1 ccognizod us havltig hud a pensionable lirt In It. Taking U10.0 figure as a buis a Hasten nowounper mmi enlcu. IkUm thnt if the Mtiue pmiurtloii of veU)tnns nt tint wur of 1K01 survive for 111(11 pH.ill, tlu-iv wu: lH' 1U (lit M IWW oiitu JO.OOJ ui niis.