NORTIT PLATTE SEMI-WEEKLY TRimE. DA ANISH Camilla Kenyon FACTS ! Doubloons SUCCULENT FEED FOR COWS COPYRIOHT THE DOBDS.MERRILL COMPANY RY )llitftWlttlllTWlWlfWWgl,l,,,l,w,,t,B,BtwtB,B,,,ll THE ISLAND. SynopsisJane Hardlnc, ronpect able and conservative old maid but never too old to think of mar riage with more money than brains, Is inveigled by a strong minded Hplnstnr, Miss Higglosby Browne, Into financing an expedi tion to hunt (or burled treasure on Leeward Island. Her nleco, Vir ginia Harding, undertaking to atop her, gets on the vessel and Is un willingly carried along. Dy no means concealing her distaste for the expedition and her contempt (or Ita members, Virginia makes the acquaintance of the Honorable Cuthbcrt Vane. Talking with Dugald Phaw, leader of tho expedi tion, Virginia very frankly ex presses her views, practically ac-, cuslng Shaw and the other mom bora of the party, Including a somewhat uncertain personage Cnptaln Magnuo. and a shady "flnancler," Hamilton II. Tubbs, of being In a conspiracy to defraud Juno Harding. Ijimllng on the Island 'h a matter of some difficul ty, Virginia being carried ashore In the arms of Cuthbert Vane. (CHAPTER IV Continued.) "I wcb," I announced, moved to de fiance by tho neighborhood of Mr. Shaw. "Before wo started I was so afraid that If you had listened you might have heard my teeth chattering. But I had at least tho comforting thought that If I did go to my end It would not be simply In pursuit of Bor dld gain I" "And Indeed that was almost a waste of noble sentiment under tho circumstances1," answered tho dour Scot, with tho fleeting shadow of an enraging smile. I promised myself, as I wont with Mr. Vano toward tho Are, that some day I would And the weapon that would penotrate tho Scotchman's arm orand would uso It mercilessly. Oooklo received us with unctuous warmth. "Well, now, 'clar to goodness . If It alnt the U'le lady I How como you git ashore all dry lak you Is? Yes, eau, Cooklo'Il git you-all somo'n hot Immojusly." lie wafted mo with state ly gestures to a seat ou an overturned iron kettle, and served my coffee with an air appropriate to mahogany and plate. It was something to see. htm wait on Cuthbcrt Vano. As Cookie told me later, In the courso of our rapidly developing friendship, "dt young geinmun am suro ono ob do quality." To Indicate tho certainty of Cooklo's Instinct, Miss Illgglcsby Browno was never more to him than ''dot pusson." On tho beach Mr. Shaw, Captain Magnus and the sailors were tolling, unloading and piling up storos. Rath er lagglngly, Apollo joined them. I was glad, for a heavy fatigue was stealing over me. Cookie, taking noto of my sagging head, brought me some- "All Dry Lak You l?" body's dunnage bag for a pillow. I felt him drawing a tarpaulin over me ns I sank Into bottomless depths of leep. I opened my eyes to the dying stars. Tho moon hud set. I heard men shouting, "Hero she comes!" "Stand by to lend a hand I" In hasto I crambled up and toro for the beach. X must witness tho landing of Aunt Jans. Through the dawn-twillght that lay upon tho covo the boat drew neur that boro Mr. Tubbs and his fair charges. X saw the threo cork helmets grouped together In tho storn. Then the foum- tag fringe of wavelets caught the boat, .hurled It forward, seemed alt but to engulf It. Out leaped the sail ors. Out leaped Mr. Tubbs, and dls appeared at once beneuth the waves. Shrill and prolonged rose the shrieks of my aunt and Miss Hlgglesby Browne. Valiantly Mr, Shaw and Cuthbert Vane had rushed Into the deep. Each now appeared staggering up the steep, foam-swept strand un der a struggling burden. Even nftor thoy wero safely deposited on tho riiiml, MI&9 Browne and my uunt con tinued tft Bhrtck. "Save, save Mr. Tubbs 1" Implored Aunt Juno. - But Mr. Tubbs. overlooked by all but this thoughtful friend, had cnnnl ly saved himself. lie advanced upon us dripping. "A closo call t" he sang out cheer fully. "Thought ono time old Nop had got a strangle-hold all right. Thinks I, I guess there'll be something doing when Wall Street gets tills news that old II. II. Is food for the finny deni zens of the doepl" "It would" havo been most most shocking I" quuvered poor Aunt Jane with feeling. She was plteously striv ing to extricate herself from the folds of the green veil. I came to her assistance. The poor plump little woman was trembling from head to foot. "It was a most unusual experi ence," she told me as I unwound her. "Probably extremely unifying to tho soul-forces and all that, as Miss Browno says, but for the moment unsettling. Is my helmet on straight, dear7 I think It Is a llttlo severe for my typo of face, don't you? There was a sweet little hut In a Fifth ave nue shop simple ond yet so chic. I thought It Just the thing, but Miss Browno said no, helmets were always worn Coffee? Oh, my dear child, how thankful I shall be 1" And Aunt Jano clung to mo as of yore as I led her up the beach. CHAPTER V. Tho Captain's Legacy. When In my tender years I was taken to the matinee, usually tho most thrilling feature of the spectaclo to mo was tho scene depleted on the drop-curtain. Directly I was seated In tho body and had had my hat taken off, and been told not to wrig gle, I vaulted airily over the, uncon scious, audience, over an orchestra en gaged In tuning up, and was lost In tho marvelous landscape of the drop curtain. Tho adventures which I had there put to shame any which tho raising of tho curtain permitted to bo seen upon the stage. I had novor hoped to recover In this prosaic world my long-lost paradise of tho drop-curtain, but morning re vealed It to mo here on Leeward Island. Here was the feathery foli age, tho gushing springs, the gor geous flowers of that enchanted land. And hero wero tho soft and Intoxicat ing perfumes that I had Imagined In my curtain landscape. Leeward Island measures roughly four miles across from east to west by threo from north to south. The core of tho Island Is tho penk, rising to n height of nearly threo thousand feet. At Its baso on three sides lies a plateuu, Its edges gnawed away b'y tho sea to tho underlying rocky skele ton. "On tho southeastern quarter the IKJttk drops by a series of great preci pices straight Into the sea. All tho plateau and much of the peak aro clothed with woods, a beau tiful bright green against tho sap phire of sea and sky. High above all other growth wave tho feathery tops of the cocoa-palms, which flourish here luxuriantly. The palms wero nowhere more abundant than In the hollow by tho covo where our camp was made, and their size nnd the regularity of tliolr order Bpoko of cultivation. Guavas, oranges and lemons grow hero, too, and many beautiful banana-palms. At tho sldo of tho clearing toward tho stream stood a hut, built of cocoa- palm logs. Its roof of palm-thatch had been scattered by storms. Near er tho stream on a bench, wero nn old decaying washtub and a board. A broken frying-pan nnd a rusty ax head lay In tho grass. In the hut ltsolf wore a rude bed stead, a small table and a cupboard mado of boxes, I was excited at first, and fancied we had come upon the dwelling of a marooned pirate. With out taking thetrouble to combat this opinion, Mr. Sltaw explained to Cuth bcrt Vane that a copra gatherer had once lived hero, and that the place must havo yielded such a profit that he was only surprised to And It de- serteu now. ucuinu una coui, em phatic speech I sensed an Ironic zest In the destruction of my pirate. After their thrilling experience of being ferried from tho Rufus Smith to the island, my nunt and Miss Browne had been easily persuaded to dlsposo themselves for naps. Tho boats of tho Rufus Smith had departed from tho Island, and our re lations with humanity were severed. The thought of our Isolation awed and fascinated mo as I sat meditatively upon a keg of nails watching the mir acle of the tropic dawn. Tho men were hard at work with bales and boxes, except Mr. Tubbs, who gave advice. It must have been valuablo advice, for he assured everybody that a word from his Hps had Invariably been chough to muke Wall Street Bit up and take notice. But It Is a far cry from Wall Street to Leowurd Island. Mr. Tubbs, ignored, sought rcfugo with mo at last, and pointed out tho beauties of Aroarer ns she rose from tho embrace of Neptune. "Aroarer Borealls, to be accurate," he explained, "but they didn't uso parties' surnnmcs much In classic times." The glad cry of breakfast put an end to Mr. Tubbs' exposition of my thology.. So does dull reality clog the feet of dreams that It proved Impossible to begin the day by digging up the treas ure. Camp had to be arranged, for folk must eat and sleep even with the wealth of tho Indies to be had for the turning of a sod. The cabin was rcroofed and set apart as the bow er of Aunt Jane and Miss Browne. I declined to make a third In this sanc tuary. You could tell by looking at her that Violet was the sort of per son who would Inevitably sleep out loud. "Hang me up In a tree or any where," I Insisted, nnd It ended by my having u tarpaulin shelter rigged up In n group of cocoa-palms. Among our earliest discoveries on tho Island was ono regrettable from tho point of view of romance, though rich in practical advantages; tho woods were the abode of numeroux wild pigs. You should have seen how "No, We Do Our Best to Keep Out of Them." clean, how seemly, how self-respecting wero our Leeward Island pigs to real ize how profoundly tho pig of Chris tian lands Is a debased nnd slandered animal. These quadrupeds would have strengthened Jean Jacques' be lief In' the primitive vlrtuo of man be fore civilization debauched him. Aunt Jano had been dreadfully alarmed by tho pigs, and wanted to keep mo Immured In the cabin o' nights so that I should not bo eaten. But nothing less than a Bengal tiger would have driven me to such extrem ity. "Though If a pig should eat me," I suggested, "you mlfcht mark him to avoid becoming a cannibal at sec ond hind. I should hate to think of you, Aunt Jane, ns tho family tombl" "Virginia, you aro most unfeeling," said Aunt Jane, getting pink about tho eyelids. ftAh, .1 didn't know you Americans went In. much for family tombs," re marked the beautiful youth Interested ly. "No, we do our best to keep out of them," I assured him, nnd he walked off meditatively revolving this. If tho beautiful youth hud been beautiful on shipboard, in tho Inform al costume he affected on the Island ho wus mora splendid still. His whlto cotton shirt nnd trousers showed him lithe and lean and muscu lar. Ills bared arms and chest were llko cream solidified Into flesh. With his striped Bilk sash of red and bluo nbout his waist, and his crown of am brosial chestnut curls a development due to the nbsence of a burbor tho Honorablo Cuthbcrt would certainly have been hailed by tho natives, If there had beon any, as the island's god. Camp was made In the early hours of the day. Then came luncheon, prcpured with skill by Cookie, and eaten from a table of packing cases laid in Uie shade. Afterward every one, hot nnd weury, retired for a si esta. Always around the Island blew tho faint cooling breath of tho sea. No marsh or stagnant water bred In sect pests or fever. Every day while we wero there the men worked hard, and grew lean and sun-browned, and thrived on It. Every afternoon with unfailing regularity a llgtit shower foil, but In twenty minutes It was over and the sun shone again, greed ily lapping up the moisture that glit tered on the leaves. "In tho first place, I don't believe In your treasure," (TO BB CONTINUED.) Dried Apple Pomace Does Not Cause Decrease In Milk Flow Nor Yield of Butterfat. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Dried or "evuporated" apple pomace as a succulent food for the dairy cow Is the subject of a preliminary report from the bureau of chemistry und an imal Industry of the United States De partment of Agriculture bused on an experiment to determine the feeding vulue of dried-apple pomace, especial ly Its suitability as food for cows In lactation. Preliminary results are re ported because of a largo number of Inquiries on the subject. Tho text of the report follows : It appears there Is a belief among dairymen that the dried product has a tendency to cut down the milk flow, or even cause cows to go dry, although apple pomace fresh from the cider press Is generally recognized as being a good succulent feed for milk cows. To test the soundness of this belief a feeding trial hus been carried out by the department. Only one cow was used In this test, and the total quan tity of dried pomace fed was less than 400 pounds ; therefore It must be borne In mind that the results obtained, while Indicative, cannot be nccepted as conclusive. In this feeding trial the dried-apple pomace was feu" wet and Its feeding value compared with that of corn si lage, since It Is Intended to be a suc culent feed. The pomace was pre pared by adding to the dry material three times Its weight of water sev eral hours before feeding, thus pro ducing u feed similar lp water con tent to that of corn sllne. For a period of 30 days the cow re ceived a bulance rntlon consisting of grain, hay, and corn slluge. The si lage was then repluced by the apple pomace for a similar length of time, following a ten-day transition peripd for tho chnnge In diet, and after a like transition period at the end of 80 dnys the original ration containing silage was resumed and continued -for a third 30-day period. The quantity fed 30 pounds of wet pomace per day was such that the total dry matter In the pomuce equulled the weight of dry matter In tho silage replaced. The quantifies of grain and hay fed remnlned prnctlcnl ly constant throughout the , whole ex periment. While the data obtained are not sufficient to Warrant the 'drawing of final nnd definite conclusions, the Indl- Dried Apple Pomace Appears to Ua Pal atable Feeding Material for Cows. cations are thut no bad effects follow the feeding of dried-apple pomace. There was no decreuse In the milk flow nor in the yield of butterfat. When ,fed as described the dried pomace appeared to bo equal, pound for pound of dry mutter, to good corn silage us a succulent food for this dairy cow. Owing to tho property which It possesses of absorbing largo quantities of water and swelling, it should never be fed dry, but should be allowed to sonk In wnter for un hour or so before feeding. Tho pomnce appears to be a palatable feed ing stuff. Caution Is advised In feeding dried apple pomace, as thero Is a possibility that the feeding of large quantities, or of quantities contulnlug excessive amounts of apple seeds, might prove Injurious. It appears to bo safe, how evor, to feed us much souked pomaco by weight (one part dried pomaco to three parts water) as It would be to feed tho same amount of pomace fresh from the cider press. TO PREVENT DREAD DISEASE Foot-and-Mouth Ailment Need Not Bo Feared If French Serum Proves Reliable. Tho dread foot-and-mouth disease will no longer bo feared by cattlemen If tho announcement of the discovery of a serum for the prevention of this disease by a group of French scien tists, proves, reliable and if this serum can bo manufactured In sufllclent quantities. Several outbreaks of the disease have occurred In the United States, the last of them several years ago, causing a great loss. The only affective method of stamping out tho disease heretofore has been to slaugh ter all cattle affected and thoroughly disinfect the premises. Never say "Aspirin" without saying "Bayer." WARNING! Unless you see name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 21 years and proved safe by millions for Colds , Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy tin box of 12 tablet Bottles of 24, and 100 All drugglaU. Aepirio I um trade aurk ot Barer UaaaCactare ef UwMMtlucUMUr at SaUc7lleact Giving a Guesa. "What were the Greenbackers, paw?" "People who lived up near the North pole." Louisville Courier Journal. GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER The Remedy With a Record of Fifty Five Years of Surpassing Excellence. All who suffer with nervous dyspep sia, sour stomach, constipation, Indi gestion, torpid liver, dizziness, head aches, coming up of food, wind on stomach, palpitation and other indica tions of digestive disorder, will find Green's August Flower an effective and most efficient remedy. For flfty flve years Chls medicine has been suc cessfully used in millions of house holds ull over the civilized world. Be cause of Its remarkable merit and widespread popularity Green's August Flower can bo found today wherevei medicines are sold. Advertisement. Speaking His Mind. . "Is It true that America is the land of opportunity?" "There Is no douht of It," replied the disgruntled citizen. "I don't know of another country on the face of the earth where a man hns greater op portunity to make a fool of himself In politics." Birmingham Age-Herald. Robert Was Wise. Grandfather had token little Robert, ago six, to the movies where botli "boys" laughed over the antics of the comic creatures In one of tho "Aesop's Film Fables" series. After talking over the film fable, the grandparent thought he would test Robert's ability to draw a moral. Here's the conversa tion that followed : Grandfather What Ib the lesson for good tvhlch Ave learn from the busy bee, Robert? Llttlo Robert Not to get stung I The Buck's Revenge. The telephone In the Division Q. M. olllce rung nnd the brand new and highly Important shavetail reached for it. "Hello I" snld the voice. "This Is the operator at headquarters. May I speak to Colonel Lummux?" "He Isn't In," said the shavetail diortly. "Mujor Dingus, then?" "Isn't in." "How about Captain Doodab?" "No Isn't in." "Eh who Is this, please?" "This, young mun, Is Lieutenant Bumpshus." "Oh, yes, thank you, lieutenant," mid tho voice sweetly. "And If an jfllcer should come In would you please ask him to call?" American Legion Weekly. The efflock Signals Are Working The greatest tuttle tale In the world is u woman's age when It once begtaa to tell on her. Red Cross Ball Blue should be used In every homo. It makes clothes white as snow and never Injures the fabric. All good grocers. Advertisement Solomon couldn't have had 700 wives If his subjects hadn't thought tli n t was all right. DYED HER DRAPERIES, SKIRT AND A SWEATER Each package of "Diamond Dyes" con tains directions so simple that any woman can dye or tint faded, shabby skirts, dresses, waists, coats, sweaters, stock ings, hangings, draperies, everything like new. Buy "Diamond Dyes" no other kind then perfect home dyeing is guaran teed, even if you have never dyed before. Tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. Dia mond Dyes never streak, spot, fade, or run. So easy to uso. advertisement. Always in Luck. A fellow who has nothing to eat Is In luck. The stomach reully needs a rest now and Uien. Again, If there Is something to eat three miles away and he has no car fare, again he Is In luck, for a three mile walk will help any man's appe tite. According to how you look at It, there is no such thing ns "up against It." Richmond Tlmes-Dlspatch. Important Omission. VYour collection doesn't seem com plete," said tho visitor to the natural history rooms. "What do you mean, clr?" "I don't see here thnt most baleful of all Insects, the one that brings dis appointment, spoils pleasure, causes divorce, deceives the credulous, frus trates hope and leaves the fondest ex pectations unfulfilled I refer to the fly In the ointment." Fatal Turn of Affairs. "Mrs. Wlggs, ' said Mr. Hugglns, "I asked your (laughter to marry mo and she referred me to you." Mrs. Wlggs I'm sure that's very kind of Sadie, she always wus a duti ful girl. Really. Mr. Hugglns. I had no thought of marrying aguln at my nge, but If you Insist, suppose we make the wedding dny next Thursduy. Tea Grown In Pennsylvania. It Is not generally known that I'enn sylvnnln lias a tea crop Indigenous to tho Blue mountain region, ond which largely surplunts the use of the Ori ental tea in severnl counties of that section. The crop Is now being gath ered and tons of the tea are belug picked nnd dried for winter use In some respects, human experienoa is like railroading. Every moment of the business and social day the block signals are giving right of way to keenness and alertness while the slow and the heavy must wait on the sidetrack for their chance to move forward. The ability to "go through" and to "get there" depends much on the poise of body, brain and nerves that comes with correct diet and proper nourishment. That's why so many choose Grape Nuts for breakfast and lunch. Served with cream or milk it is completely nourishing, partly p re-digested, and it supplies the vital mineral salts so necessary to full nutrition. Grape-Nuts has a rich, delightful flavor, is ready to serve on the instant and is distinctly the food for mental and physical alertness and speed. At all grocers. There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts