r If you hnvo not started thoso farm accounts yet begin now. Romcmbor llio cow miiBt hnvo food lo keep up hor bodily vigor uh well aa to provide for the mil Ic yield. Cut the burdock off at the rrown and pour a few drops of kerosene on each iilalk. Tlmo will do the rest. Calves should have access to good c lean hay at all times If the best re sults are to be obtained from tho grain ration which Is fed. A can with a hole punched In the bottom of It the size of tho seed to bo sown makes an excellent aid to sow ing of need In tho garden. Qet the sunshine habit. You know how sunshine makes tho crop grow. Smushlno In tho homo and about the dully tasks is Just as essential. It Is folly to sell off the stock just because the prices seem to bo low and It looks as though It was unprofitable to raise them. lie patient and wait for prices to recover, as they will. An old farmer who has tried It says that common poke root boiled down to a strong ten and added to the drinking wator In proportion of one cupful to a pailful of water will euro chicken cholera, and hog cholera, too. A farmer who fed his hogs the skim milk warm from the separator, mixing with corn meal at tho ratio of one to throe, that Is, one pound of corn menl to three of milk, found that he secured what amounted to 10 cents a 100 pounds for his skim milk. i 1 Owing to tho wot went hor this Bpring tho, weodsjmve given the farm ers a hard flgbt In most sections. Hut If by extra effort tho Holds are kept cloan, tho crops will show proportion' ntely groator improvement as a result of tho more thorough cultivation. Tho farmer's wife should be his help meet in all things, but not his drudge. She should help In planning the work of tho farm but sbo should not bo nsked or expected to take tho placo of a hired man and do rough choros. Vro think that she should not even be asked to help do the milking. Ever stop to flguro out how many eggs your hens avoragod for tho year? Porhpan you would be surprised to know how low an averago your Hock ,wouId show. It costs no inoro to feed a 200-ogg-u-year hen than tho ono that only lays 100 oggs. Why not study tho Individual merits of your flock and brood for bettor layers? Little or no grain should bo fed tho brood sow when not suckling plEB. Koen tho boar In a sonaratc nen'far enough away from tho sows to keep him from fretting. Tho wot land will grow alslke clover when other clovers will fall. Try It. It is high In nitrogen content. Thoro Is no reason to supposo that tho Plymouth Itock egg 1b harder to break than that of any othor variety. Don't bo discouraged. Corn often more than makes up In July and Au gust what It has lost In May and Juno from unfavorable conditions. In climates wheio low temperatures are constant during tho winter a hillside site for tho orchnrd Is to bo preferred to tho low-lying placcB. The Kraln from two-rowed barley lf usually of better quality than that from tho Blx-rowed variety, although the production Is not quite bo heavy. The right start with work In tho morning makes things run smoothly all day. Try planning out the work tho night before, so that each ono of tho hands has definite work assigned. It Is coming to bo more generally ad mitted that tho dairy farm needs tho dairy typo of cow and tho beef pro ducer must hold himself to the beef animals. In other words, the dual- purpose Idea is on tho wane. Tile drainage Is a subject which is receiving more Intelligent considera tion of tho fnrmors than ever before. It is costly Improvement, but repays tho outlay many fold In Increased pro ductivity of tho land thus treated. Tho trap nest Is tho only sure way of (hiding out the best layers, but the observant farmer's wife can pick out tho best layers and by keeping them for the breeders next season sho will bo on the rond to Improving her flock und Increasing her egg money. Too many poultry yards are un sightly mud puddles after a rain. One farmer eliminated such condition by enlarging his yard spaeo so as to take in a big patch of green and by tho poultry house door laying a wide strip of cement and around this cinders up to the point where tho green sward began. New ideas are all right If they aro carefully digested and wisely used. The man who plunges blindly ahead into something which sounds good but which may havo weak and Impracti cable points connected therewith, Is the man who Is constantly making serious mistakes and is making a fall- uro of farming and slockraislng. Have you put In that patch of corn for summer uso for tho cows? He- member that tho pasturage gets pret ty dry and thin during tho hot weeks of July and August and you neod something to piece out and prevent serious shrinkage in the milk yield. It Is a groat mistako to let tho cows run down In their milk. Secretary Wilson defines the pro gresslve farm as ono who rotates his crops, tile-drains his land, keeps dairy cows or mutton sheep or both, breeds draft horBcs, does farm work with brood mares and growing colts, and improves tho power of tho soil by growing legumes. How Is It? Do you como Into tho class thus defined? HE GREW TAFT TROUSERS. This Texas Angora Supplied Mohaln Chicago. Tho pair of trousers which; members of tho Texas delegation toj tho recent Republican natlonnl conven-l Hon wiivni! nlnft 1iirlni tho nnrlnrisi of enthusiasm nttendlng the nomlnn-l tlon of William H. Taft for president, woro mndo especially for that candl dato. Ho haB accepted the gift and! iuib promised to wear them on tno oc casion of his Inauguration If ho Is, elected president. The mohair from which tho cloth of these trousers! was woven was cut from Admiral, Togo, a Texas three-year-old Angora' vvuim.,, . fTf MimnliliWHVW i f UU ml U1 Goat That Supplied Mohair for Taffc Trousers. goat, owned by Frank O. Landrum of Montell. The sire of Admiral Togo' was Imported from South Africa and, won the first prize at the Louisiana! Purchase exposition at St. Louis. His' mother also was a noted Angora. Heri name was Lady Holmes and she won many prizes. Admiral Togo bears the marks of his' splendid lineage. The mohair clip which was used to make Mr. Taft's pair of trousers was of six months' growth. It was cut last March and yielded ten pounds, which Is said to be the largest six months' clip ever taken from an Angora goat. It. was suggested by some of the An gora goat raisers in Texas who are ad mirers of Mr. Taft that It would be do ing a nice thing to have a pair of trousers manufactured from the mo hair that had been cut from Admiral Togo. John B. Carrlngton of San Antoaio took charge of tho matter and sent the clip to a Philadelphia firm of cloth manufacturers. It was converted into an elegant piece of cloth. It was then sent to Owen Owen of Washing ton, D. C, who is one of Mr. Taft's tailors, and had his measure. It was found that the piece of cloth from tho ten pounds of mohair was ample'for a pair of trousers for Mr. Taft. Mr. Owen mado tho goods up in proper style and the trousers were then turned over to Col. Cecil Lyon, Repub lican national committeeman from Toxas, for use at the Chicago convention. MAY BE PROHIBITION CANDIDATE. Farmers In somo sections aro ex periencing troublo thlB year from clod dy ground due to tho plowing having beon dono whon wet. Thoro is not much which can bo done to relievo nuch a condition. Tho only thing to do Is to watch and put tho harrow on tho ground at tho moment whon tho clods appear to havo their groatest .possible friability, due to their con taining a cortaln amount of. molsturo. Whitewash may be put on with tho upray pump provldod tho wubIi is thor oughly Btralned beforo pumping. Oth erwise partlclos aro apt to clog In tho pump. It Is a fast way of gottlng on tho wash and a good way, as tho wash may bo forced Into nooks and corners whore tho brush cannot reach. Evory farmor should havo a spray pump, as it is not only handy about the poultry houso, but Is frequently necessary In tho orchard. In a hog feeding oxperlmont by tho Oklahoma station In which Duroc-Jor soys and Poland ChlnnB woro uaod, six lotB of.flvo each woro fed as follows: Lot 1, corn moal; lot 2, sevon parts corn moal, one part moat meal; lot 3, olovon part corn meal, ono part moat menl; lot -I, four parts corn moal, ono part cotton- Bood moal, alternated overy othor two woeka by corn menl nlono; lot 5, corn moal, alfalfa hay; lot 0, corn meal, cowpon hay. In this tost tho cost of making 100 pounds of gain In each caso was as follows: Lot 1, $8.01; lot 2, $4.04; lot I), $4.73; lot I, $0.38; lot C, A mason who Is onto his job and who builds In the Interests of his em ployer says If chimneys aro plastored tip lusldo as they aro built with a mortar to which one-fourth common salt Is added It will havo a glazed finish to which tho soot will not stick, and hence thoro will bo no chimneys catching fire from tho Boot accumula tions. A good oil or vlnogar barrel cut In half and placed over tho pasturo spring will mako a good drinking placo for tho stock. Without tho barrel tho wator softens all tho soli about which Is tramped by the stock until It be comes a mud hole. If tho land BlopoB away from tho spring tho othor half of barrel can bo sunk into tho ground and a pipe run from tho half barrel at the spring. Spare that trco! Thoro Is not a trco of any variety In the United States which should be cut down unless thoro Is an apparent and immedlato necessl ty for Its destruction. Thoro aro fow pieces of wooded land west of tho Rocky mountains which will not soon bo worth moro as thoy aro now than If clearod and under cultivation. Data furnlshod by tho agricultural depart meat, and from othor sources rollablo In dotalls furnished, show that this Is absolutely tho caso. Estimates mado show that the hardwood tlmbor of tho United States will ho practically ox Initiated within tho noxt 1C years. Tho samo ostlinato, with a lengthened time for destruction, applies to tlmbor of othor kind. FriendB of Judge Artman Would Have Him Run for Presidency. Chicago. Jmlgo of Lebanon, Intl.. Samuel R. who has Artman a large JUDGE Washington Whisperings Interesting Bits of News Gathered at the National Capital. Taft Boom Was Born in Barber Shop WASHINGTON. The nursery of Taft's boom for the nresldontlnl nomination was a room in the execu tive ounces of the White House grounds, where President Roosovolt, beforo he left for his homo at Oyster Bay, was shaved each work day. Here, whon the boom was a green and ten der thing, Its first young shoots pushed to the light. Here It was coaxed to sturdier growth. Here, in full blossom, It was talked over and admired. Frank Hitchcock was the ofllclal and tho president the unofficial manager of the Taft boom. The president, at these heart-to-heart talks with the can didate, was in n barber chair. A cer tain White Houso messenger wloldetl tho razor and lather brush. Ifwas the only part of the day when official busi ness did not claim all of Roosevelt's time. It was Taft's one chance to do most of tho talking, Even then, the barber uad to bo watchful, and quick to snatch away the brush or blade. When T. R. wants to talk bo sometimes forgets he Is be ing shaved. If the barber's hand had not a gambler's quickness, the presi dent would hnve had the lather brush in his eye ns often as he had it in his mouth. The Bhavlng of the president and tho midday cultivation of tho boom of Taft started at 1 p. m. and lasted a half hour. When Taft was away Roosevelt oft en received others in the shaving peri od. Sometimes tho correspondents talked with him there. Sometimes it was Hon. Jimmy Garfield, he of tho classic brow. Wholesale Prices Are Highest in Years IT will bo of Interest to those who woro busy last year In keeping the wolf from tho door to know that fig ures on wholesale prices of 258 repre sentative staple articles reached tho apex of their soaring last October. These statistics aro for the 18 years between 1890 and 1907. Tho annual report on this subject of the commerce and labor department shows that the average for the year 1907 was 5.8 per cent, higher than for 1906; 44.4 per cent, higher than for 1897, the year of lowest prices during the 18-year period, and 29.5 per cent. higher than the average for the ten years from 1890 to 1899. Prices reached their highest point during the 18-year period In October, 1907, the average for that month being 1.2 per cent, higher than the average for tho year 1907.- When the commodities are divided Into nine groups every group shows an increase in price In 1907 as compared with 190G. For farm products, taken ns a whole this Increase was greatest, namely, 10.9 per cent.; for food, 4.6 per cent; for clothes and clothing, 5.6 per cent.; for fuel and lighting, 2.4 per cent.; for metals and implements, 6.1 per cent.; for lumber and building materials, 4.9 per cent.; for drugs and chemicals, 8.3 per cent.; for house furnishing goods, 6.8 per cent., and for the miscellaneous group, five per cent. The effect of the money stringency in the latter part of the last year is reflected in the decrease recorded In all commodities during November and December, the average price showing a decrease of 3.5 per cent, below Oc tober. Of the 258 articles for which wholesale prices were recorded 172 showed an increase in the average prices for 1907 as compared with 1906; 35 showed no change and 51. sho wed a decrease. Wiley's Poison Squad End Their Test DR. HARVEY W. WILEY'S hygienic experimental students. Irreverent ly referred to at times as tho "poison squad," have ended the season's feast ing at the bureau of chemistry, and their condition is being carefully noted to ascertain what effect the diet has had upon each. Seven young men compose the class, and they havo been giving their services to demonstrate what effect saltpeter and a variety of miscella neous food products chemically or arti ficially treated havo upon the human system. Tho students havo resumed the reg ulation boarding house meals with out fear of interfering with tho scien tific investigations of the government. Besides taking up such matters as summer boveragos, widely advertised as possessing medical properties, but thought by scientific men to be objec tionable because containing caffeine or other injurious substances, there Is a wide field for the students to experi ment. One of the most Interesting possi bilities is the determination of wheth er or not foungreek, the famous old world herb remedy, which Is part of most medicines advertised to increase flesh, is really what it is Bald to be, and will accomplish the purposes for which it is advertised. A class in foungreek is said to be one of the pos sibilities of the early future. Condition foods for animals also offer a field of endeavor that Dr. Wiley may yot explore to determine If the claims made for the various brands of food are really true. Tho experiments conducted by Dr. Wiley are tho first large experiments of tho sort conducted in tho scien tific world. Tho clnsses, which were started In the fall of 1902, lmvo al ready gone through n variety of ex periments. Borax and boric acid woro tho first to receive attention, eulphuric acid, benzote, formaldehyde and cop per salts have also been fully tested as to their effects on tho human sys tem when taken with food. Makes New Record for Cabinet Changes number of friends In tho prohibition movement who favor making him the pnrty's candldato for president, is a circuit court judgo of Boone county, In diana, who gavo a decision against tho constitutionality of licensing sa loons February 13, 1907. According to the decision the stato of Indiana had no moro right to license liquor soil ing than to llcenso gambling, being dangerous to public morals and public safoty. Tho decision supported tho claims of tho Antl-Nulsanco Lcaguo of Indiana and was hailed by prohibl- tlonlsts as affording a means of com bating llquor-selllng throughout tho na tion. Since tho decision Judgo Art man has boon In demand as a lecturer lor prohibition. Ho Is a Ropubllcnu, THE rotlroment of Secretary of War Taft leaves but two men in Roose velt's cabinet who woro thoro whon ho succeeded to tho presidency on tho death of President McKlnloy. These are. Secretary of Slate Root and Sec- rotary of Agrlculturo Wilson. Mr. Root was secretary of war whon Mr. Roosovolt becamo president In Soptombor, 1901. Ho shortly after ward retired from tho cabinet, but wns persuaded to re-enter It upon tho doath of Secrolary of Stato Hay. There lmvo beon moro changos and shifts in Presldont Roosovelt's cab- inot than In that of any of his prcdo cessora. Ho haB had two secretaries of utato, Hay and Root. Ho has had three secretaries pf tho treasury. Gage, Shaw and Cortelyou. With Luke E. Wright he has had three secretaries of war, Root, Taft and Wright. Ho has had threo attor neys general, Knox, Moody and Bona parte; five postmasters general, Smith, Payne, Wynne, Cortelyou and Meyer; fivo secretaries of tho navy, Long, Moody, Morton, Bonaparte and Melcnlf. Ho has had two secretaries of the In terior, Hitchcock and Garfield. Ho has had ono secretary of agriculture, Wil son, and threo secretaries of commcrco and labor, Cortelyou, Motcalf and Straus. Tho retirement of Secrotnry Tnft has led to some speculation ns to how long Mr. Wilson will continue at tho bend of tho department of agriculture. Tho chances aro that ho will contlnuo to servo through tho term of Mr. Roosovolt, and should Secretary Taft succeed to tho presidency, It Is possi ble that Secretary Wilson would con tlnuo lu the cabinet. It will bo 12 years noxt March slnco Wilson be i came secretary of agrjculturo. $0.88; lot 0, $0.(17.