U. S. Government Baking Powder Tests. The report of the analyses of Baking Powders, made' by the U. S. Government (Chemical Division, Ag'l Itep't), shows the Royal superior to all other powders, and' gives its leavening strength and the strength of each of the other cream of tartar powders tested as follows: LEAVESINO GA9. ROYAL, Absolutely Pure, The OTHER POWDERS TESTED are reported to eon tain both lime and sulphuric acid, and to be of the following strengths respectively, ... Royal Baking Powder is absolutely pure, and of greater leavening power than any other powder. BALLAD OF A JESTER. Whan beanls were brown that now are fron, Above the salt 1 used to sit; Now, at life's feast. 1 am uo more 'Fluui yon poor dog that turns the spit. I could go mad to tbiuk of it; Although forever in mine ears Kings an old rhyme that out'r was writ, "Twill matter naught in fifty years." . When flattens with Rhine wine ran o'er, iV&d tongues wagjted fast.auil lamps were lit, I "set the table in a roar" With many a shaft of wanton wit; The king would cry in boist'rous tit, While walls and roof tree rung with cheers, "Good cousin, never heed the hit, Twill matter naught in fifty years." I loved a maid in days of yore. And thought to win I he saury chit. Despite the "motley suit" 1 wore; (Alack, how far my fancies hit!) The damsel cared for me no wltft. And 1 got naught but jaiieaund Jeers That chafed me like a Jeuiiet's bit. Twill matter nought in llfty years. Bead weary ant 1 ami heartsnro: I meet rolri welcomes, and submit Like him that hath not paid his score, The tapster wilt no more admit. Life's raveled threads the fates unknlt. And soon, with fardels and with tears, And cap and bells 1 shall be quit: TwiU matter nought In fifty years. Friends, though the grave gapes like a pit. And mirth takes wiug when grief appears. Bear bravely what the heavens penult; Twill matter much in fifty years. J. Redfearn Williamson In Temple Bar. Cold Water Injures Plants. Guard against the application of cold or hard water to the roots of plants, and especially in the winter months, when there has been a heavy fall of snow, hail or cold rains. The water in the tanks then becomes very much too cold. This may not he noticed in the ordinary coarse of things, and the plants are sure to stiller a check at the roots that, in the case of camellias, for instance, wonld be qnite sufficient to cause bud dropping. I am always very careful that the water in onr tanks is a few degrees warmer than the house in which the plants are growing. This is very important in suc cessful plant culture. - We are apt to say sometimes on be holding a sickly plant one mildewed or with rust on the foliage that it must have been subjected to a draft or cur rent of cold air, whereas the probable cause was lUe use of cold water, which paralyzed the roots. Proof of this may easily be seen by giving one or two ap plications of cold water to winter cu cumbers or kidney beans when setting their pods. Exchange. Ordering His Own Tombstone. A countryman called on a sculptor in Tilsit and ordered a tombstone in the shape of a cross, and gave full instruc tions as to the lettering and the date of the decease and promised to fetch it away himself. He failed, however, to turn up at the day appointed, and the sculptor wrote to remind him of his promise. The other day the man turned up at last, but said that he wanted the date erased. On "being asked his reason for the strange request the countryman answered that a gypsy woman had told htm that he would die on the day which he had ordered to be inscribed on the cross; the prophecy bad not, however, come true, and he now wanted to take away the monument, but without the date. Deutsche Warte. Paving Streets with 'Cork. A material which is being satisfac torily introduced for paving streets is composed of granulated cork and bitu men pressed into clocks, and which are hud like bricks or wood paving, the spe cial advantage secured being that of elasticity. In roadways it furnishes a fine foothold for horses, and at the same time does away to a great degree with the noise which commonly accompanies city traffic. In Australia this method bus been resorted to with excellent re mits. Mew STork Bun. ' An Axiom Disproved. Is the whole always equal to the sum of all its parts? A German beggar thought it doubtful. "Here I ant," he said as he looked at himself in a pocket 'mirror; "here I am wearing the boots of a bank manager, the trousers of - a landed proprietor, a baron's coat and vest and a count's bat, and in spite of it all I look like a tramp!" Exchange. . , i Per esst. Cubio in. per as. 13.06 160.6 12.68. . .151.1 11.18 . . . 133.6 10.28. . . 123.2 ) 8.53 ... 114. 0.28 . . . 111.8 8.03 . . . 86.5 7.28 87.4 4.98 ... 65.5 Tliey Wanted to Open Aeoounts. A man hastily entered a La Salle street bank recently and, approaching a teller's wiudow, carelessly threw down a check with the remark, "I would like to de posit that; please credit the amount to my account." The teller glanced at the check and winked very hard and vigor ously to convince himself that his eyes were still all right. The bit of paper called for (403,0110, and bore the signature of one of the most powerful syndicates in this country. It was accepted with out a word, and the depositor left the bank within one minute of the time he entered it. Afewweekaagoamiddleaged woman, carrying a small sachel, entered a down town bank and said to a teller that she would like to make a deposit. "We can't open an account with you," said the young man behind the window, "unless you make some arrangement with the cashier personally. 1 can give yon a certificate of deposit, however." "Very well," quietly remarked the vis itor, I don't want to be bothered to j carry this about town, and the certifi cate will do very well until 1 can una some institution that will -open an ac count with me." The expectant yonng man opened his certificate blank book and dipped his ! pen in the inkwell before him. The sachel was opened and from it came not a black purse or a few dollars tied into a knot in a handkerchief corner- but United States bonds, the face valne , of which aggregated more than (348,000. The certificate was not tilled out. An account was opened. Chicago Mail. Death from m Cat. The people of South Englewood are on a still hunt after the cats in the neigh- borhood of that village, and one large Maltese in particular is doomed to an untimely end. That animal, the proper ty of Bernard Schram and his wife, killed their five months old child Satur day night, and half the residents of the village believe the feline sucked tne in- fant's breath from its body. The Schrsms reside on Vincennes road, between Eighty -seventh and Eighty-ninth streets. They retired at the usnal hour Saturday night, leaving the baby in the cradle at their bedside. They were awakened during the night by the ctulds labored breathing, fol- lowed by a piteous, stifled moan. As Mr. Schram arose and struck a light the large house cat leaped from the cradle and escaped through the door. The in fant was lying still, with its little hand clenched and its face blue from suffoca tion. Dr. Tallman was nastily sum moned, but pronounced the child dead. He said that suffocation was the cause, and that the cat, attracted by the warmth of the child's body, probably lay down ' on the baby's face and smothered it- Chicago Tunes. Getting Beady lor the Holidays. A New York correspondent says; The man or woman who sends a Christmas poem or story to one of the big maga zines in November would be interested at a private view of an editor's desk which he had recently. There were all the manuscripts and illustrations of the next Christmas number piled up, being edited, assorted and gotten ready.for the printer! Mitgaziue editors live in the future nowadaysl The Boy Knew Tennyson, A Freshwater boy was once asked if he knew Mr. Tennyson. "He makes poetefortheqneen,"saidtheboy. "What do you mean?" said the inquirer. "I don't know what they means," said the boy, "but p'licemen often sees him walking about a-making of 'em under the stars." New York Tribune. General Rosecrang, the register of the treasury, is remarkably vigorous at seventy-one years. He breakfast every morning at 7, reaches his desk by 9, and remains there hard at work till 4. The bulk of his salary goes to old soldiers and other needy claimants on his charity. Mr. Justice Stephen's evident insanity while on the bench is a public scandal in London, though one that, such are the libel laws in England, no great jour nal dares openly to discuss. Oue I: tllar's Worth of OratUude. In one i if the city's largo dry goods shops lust week a little cash girl brought to one of the heads of departments in the eonreeof the early afternoon hours of Tuesday a woman's purse. She had just picked it up, she said, on the floor, near the counter, and she remarked as she passed it over that site guessed it was "stuffed full." The floorwalker opened it and saw at glance that her opinion was justified. Carrying it to the super intendent's office, he, with that person age, counted the money. The purse con tained f'i.UtU). There were ten five hun dred dollar bills, a check for forty dol lars and some small bills and change. Within half an hour a pale faced woman appeared at the office, asking breathlessly if a purse had been recently found in the shop. The well stocked pocketbook was hers. She had not left the shop before missing it, discovering her loss at an up stairs department to which she hud gone from the one where the purse escaped her. Her identifica tion of the money, including drawer and drawee of the check, was complete, and it was promptly delivered to her. She thanked the superintendent warm ly, and was about to leave the office when that gentleman suggested that she owed the recovery of her money to the honesty of the little cash girl. "Do you think, madam," he said pointedly, "such honesty ought to go unrewarded?' The woman stopped. "No, of course not," she said hastily; and opening the just re covered purse she produced a silver dol lar, which she gave to the girl. Then she departed with the fortune of whose keeping she was so careless, and of whose finding she was so unappreciative. Her Point of View in New York Times. Journalism in the Rookies. Journalism in the broad bosom of the Rockies in midwinter is arduous. At this time, when the boulevards are wrapped in the plastic embrace of the snowslide, and the march of communi cation with the outer world is imagi nary and irrepreesive, the constituency unite in wishing that winter was gone gone with her laughter and love. The country scribe seeks the snowy wreaths of truth in silence and with uncertain step, as a search warrant parades the realms of somnambulistic slumbers in qnest of a hundred typos to cope with the rush of business at the office, which is left in charge of his satanic majesty, Now, what seems death is a change, when we look deeper down in the world's beautiful, and the blazoned optic sees not fruition but an altar, in coercion of thn trihnte of nature. However, no one can deprive hibernated vitality of this sphere of the felicity that across the vista of winter, with its fathoms of snows and frosts, April smiles, and the atmosphere ripens with fragrance and croons blooms, just as over the gulf of death Faith sees the glow of the jeweled walls of heaven. N. B. Only lie in this issue. Rico News. Novelty of Window Dresslnf. A window was recently shown in a neighboring city, which, from its novel and pretty arrangement, attracted a good amount of attention. A frame work making a drawbridge partly open was built. The floor of tiie bridge was made of striped dress goods, which made a good plank effect. The sides and the girders were made of fancy hosiery, the legs only showing, the foot being car- ried under and hidden by the floor of the bridge. A wagon heavily laden with boxes of hosiery, marked & Co., was on the open draw waiting to get across. Lamp posts with red ma terial for glass made a pretty effect at night when lighted. A wax policeman preserved order among the half dozen pedestrians. Finger posts directed the public to the great hosiery sale at & Co.'s. Retailer and Jobber. Booth's Fortune. I am glad to say that so far as money is concerned Edwin Booth has enough to keep him in comfort the rest of his life. He was able to give (130,000 to the Play- era" club, and if current reporte are true he has invested in one of onr large in surance companies a sum of money which insures to him an annuity of $15, 000 a year for life. He did this when some of his friends rather protested against his lavish gift to the club, I suppose that, notwithstanding the can celing of the Booth engagement here, the great actor's name will remain for some years to come a potent attraction to audiences, for Booth, even in his de cadence, is still a man worth seeing. New York Cor. Charleston News and Courier. - 1 Chose to Die with II Is. Sweetheart. Andrew Moore, aged twenty-one, and Miss Ollie Cox, aged sixteen, were drowned in the Luxapalia river, at Ken nedy, Ala., recently. This couple, to gether with Joe Kennedy and Miss Floy Cook, all pupils of the Kennedy high school, were out boating. The boat cap sized, and Mr. Kennedy barely succeeded in bringing Miss Cook to the shore, bnt Mr. Moore was nnable to swim through the strong current with Miss Cox, and gave up his life rather than swim out alone. The young lady was the oaugn- ter of Representative Cox, of Pickens county. Mr. Moore and Miss Cox wore to have been married shortly. Cot. MemphisAppeal-Avalanche.' i The annual police report states that there are nearly 20,000 hamtnal crim inals in London. There were 463 burg laries, 36 fewer than in the previous year. TURKISH COMPASSIONATE FUND. One Outcome of the Great War with Itnssla The ohurltnble women of New York have recently taken great interest lu what is baited the Turkish ootnpaHsionate fund, and the account of Its origin and develop ment Ib very Interesting. It originated In 187H-n, when Constantinople was crowded with women and children who had fled from' the districts ravaged during the Husso-Turkish war. The Baroness Uurdett-Coutts, than in Constantinople; the British minister, Sir Henry Ltiynnl, and others hastily organized for temporary relief, and It was soon found that away front their home the refugee wom en were as help less as so many children, no far as earning their own liviug went, One exoeption was noted, most of them had mna- MHB, tacaroft, tered some kind of fine needlework. Bo the Freimli and English ladles engaged In the charity fur nished them with materials and sent their products to Lontlou and Paris to be put on sale. It "took from the start." Mrs. Arthur Hanson, an enthusiast In the charity, soon had orders In great numbers for scarfs, hangings, tlrntierlwi and other fine work. The itlmrlty was then extended to amhruce all dependent Turkish women. Parisian artistaiu those, lines added valuable sug gestions, and so an Immense business has grownup. Mine. Tacaroft, a Greek lady, came to the United States in 1801) and set up a branch in New York, which is already a great success. This Novetnher tho Oriental exchange, as It Is called. Is making a holiday display of its Turkish goods, and their delicate richness and beauty excite much enthu siasm. The pricea are quite moderate. In Turkey thousands of women even little girls and women of eighty or upward are now supporting themselves In this work, and the exchange takes rank as one of the great charities of the world. Uses of Fungi. The coal mines near Dresden have long been celebrated for the production of fungi which emit a light resembling pale moonlight It is phosphorescent in its natnre. Another siiecies furnishes a use ful color for dyeing; another is employed for making ink; anothor is utilized for stupefying bees, for stanching blood and for making tinder: another serves the Laplanders to destroy bedbugs, for which purpose it is smeared upon the walls and bedposts, and another is valued by the Kainschntkans for manufacturing an in toxicating liquor. The "polyporous Nquaniosus" makes a razor strop far suierior to those com monly sold. For this purpose it must be cut from the ash tree upon which it grows, in the autumn, when its juices have been dried and its substance has become solidified. It is then to be flat tened out for twenty-four hours in a press, after which it should bo carefully rubbed with pumice, sliced longitudinal ly, and every slit that is free from dam age by insects glued upon a wooden stretcher. In quite ancient times this fungus was so employed, and it seems strange that it has gone so entirely out of fashion. Washington Star. A Geometry Examination Three elderly gentlemen, all college graduates, were discussing the effects of time in obliterating early training at school. One of them, Mr. A, asserted that they had all forgotten nearly every thing they learned at school, and this the second gentlemen, Mr. B, as stren uously denied. . 'For instance, said Mr. A to Mr. B, "what do you know about geometry now? Anything at all?" "Certainly, said B, "a good deal." "Well," said the third man, Mr. 0, breaking in, "let's have a little examina tion. A, what is the shortest distance between two points called?' "A railroad," said Mr. A, promptly. Mr. B laughed heartily. "Well, B," said C, "perhaps you can tell me what the shortest distance be tween two points is?' "A telegraph line, of course, said Mr, B, triumphantly. Youth's Companion. A Good Coueelt uf Himself. Lieutenant (to his intended) T, see by the papers that there is an increase in the mortality of the female population. Had no idea that my engagement would produce such disastrous results. bach sischer Postilion. . He Marched. Literary Aspirant I can write abont anything. Bored Publisher Then please right abont face. Exchange. ely'8 Catarrh CREAM BALM ur When spoiled Into I CO ru uf the Dontrftn. will bel iDlN n-n Hbaorbed, eiteeti.ally MWilK. (ft OiHHiiitiig the nam w w hay ht UHUrrhal vlrwi, min ing healthy were tiomt Itallayninllam matlon, protect the membrane from ad ditional colda, com pletely heals the mrm and reatorea miiue of ot taate aud aiaeU. Try the Cure. HAY-FEVER A particle la applied In each nontrll, and is agreeable, Princw cent at dniKRiBti' or by mall. tLY ttiitri'ilKkti, 66 Warren btreet, New York. N, F. fi. U. No. 465 B. F. N. IT. No. GU2. mm THE REASON. Let us look into the force, mean ing, renson of the oft-repeated line: Cures Promptly and Permanently, Tains Endured for 80 Years, 28 Years, 20 Years, 10 Years, Have been promptly Cured by ST. JACOBS OI1U By the use of: A FEW APPLICATIONS A HALF BOTTLE ONE BOTTLE TWO BOTTLES, Correspondence with Sufferers shows entire permantnoa of ourt up to this time, In some oases covering 8 Years, 7 Years, 8 Years, 10 Years, and to on, and this proof we bold. A eony of the "OBlclal Portfolio of the World's uilumblan Exposition," descriptive of lluildiuits and Grounds, hesutlfully Illus trated, In water eolnr oflcrts, will he sent to any address Upon reoelpt of inc. in postage stamps bv Tils CHABLss A. VouBLKH Co., Baltimohs, Mb, II y 1)1 n wsnt a IHAXONIK DIAMONDS, DIAMONDS. DIAMOND DIAMONDS. Ill A VMM'S. DIAMONDS. DIAMONDS. DIAMONDS. DIAOOMD. 'I'utlerstanil that MElaWMB It'ii'ima JUWKI.KK, I'nrlU' It, Or., Is Hole Importer nt Riire Jewels. taoml at anv prloe front III mil 000 wrlw to tts for lowest prlcai. August Flower" My wife suffered with indigestion and dyspepsia for years. Life be came a burden to her. Physicians failed to give relief. After reading one of your books, I purchased a bottle of August b lower. It worked like a charm. My wife received im mediate relief after taking the first dose. She was completely cured now weighs 165 pounds, and can eat anything she desires without any deleterious results as was formerly the case. C, H. Dear, Prop'r Wash ington House, Washington, Va. 9 VjC I nedyand J tea I The Timothy Hopkins Collection of Sweet Peas Coataiftliis twnty-one distinct vsristiss a lanta pack.t 01' tL-li fgrSi.s. or a padest of tha sanis varieties, mixed, for to Wilts. 12 Carnations (datisctntuM . $1,00 12 Chisanthemurns(,)$i.oo 12 Pelargonium ntum $,.00 12 Roseg SMJactnrkttn) . .. $1.00 Allttrjng, ktalthv, pot-grown plenti, frn bu mall. Flower Aeeds-ssv i'"""?"""1 Vegetable Seeds t,7,am With tither of abow collection., our handiomty IHuMrstml loo-paRacsisloKUfl i km fret, 'ilm u admitted to be it work uf an, ami contain a reproduce ti'ni. in natural color, of tin t urniy-one variMtai imw umvmally rerxmrtiwd a The Timothy HoptilM Collection of wt Pea. Sherwood Hall Nursery Co. N MANCiaOO, CAL, flSH BRf ThliTrsds Mtrti lion Hubert WATERPROOF COAT ffiSSK? In the World! A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS, DON'T ft MARK BE BY NOT S1DHW THE HIOHT BICYCLE ,tHO ftMfTAiDowa--Tia. you all about ORTHPACIFICflrCiEflO. BtbYGLES Of tVEHY DESCRIPTION. . Msmvot Btiiiotm -Powtiand Obeoon. IRRIGATION MINING. Pulsometer Steam PUMP. ftoit and ohtuiittjit witter eliwator kuowtl. L. A. POUTER. Mgr., I.dwlalim. Itlitho. Old GnM wit Mir Beoghl atntT tottr old OoU and Niitar l mall tvt Ik old nud iwliahla hmia il a. OnLenuu), 41 Thiid itrtMt.HAD lYreDoUoo; I will atod tar jDonauBi.tlvsjui and people j who nave weak limn or Asth- j fua.ii.ouidiw Piio'n Cure fori Conauuiiulon. It haa in-il P tbnnaiHiUa. It haa not Injur-1 T',:- a." . M' l"W' MiBMio uwwutuiyrup. Bold erarrwhitn. SAo If k