THE MASTER OF APPLEBY ' 1——— ■ - ■—- By Francis Lynda. ■-. '-'-a1..-: ■'■'■■-■■■ ■ a CHARTER XXII.—Continued. Tte effect of this fierce tirade, poured Wt to a torrent of hot words, was less ■■■bill upon his helpless capttve than ■paai her four would-be defenders. It us variously, each after his nevertheless, I think the thought lighted Instantly each of us. Though we not reach and rescue her. her v fibtepsst peril would be blunted upon MM quieting of this flend-ln-chlef. ■a Kphralm Yeates stretched himself bass downward in the damp grass and baaoffbt his long rifle to bear, while the fiafitaa sprang up and poised his hatch tt tor the throw; but neither lead nor ■teal was loosed because the light was pass, and a halr's-breadth swerving ■wt tbs aim might spare the man and day toe woman. As for the two of us ateo asust needs come within stabbing fitatance, the same thought set us both to stripping coats and foot-clogs for • parage Into the barrier torrent. liut whra we would have broken cover, the •M borderer dropped his weapon and grtraid us with a hand for each. “1*0, no; none o’ that!" he whls psood. hoarsely. “Ye'd drown like rats, sad we can't afford no sech foolish aahetflees on the altar o’ Baal. Hunker toast and lie dost; if there’s any dying to be done, ye've got a good half o' the atebd ahead of ye, and there’s all o' to ■pnv that ain’t teched yet.” K takes a pitiless avalanche of words to apread these Interlinear doings out tor you; but you are to conceive that tea pause Is mine and not the action’s. WMte the old man was yet pulling us Sown, my fearless little lady had drawn bate a pace and was giving the villain tea answer. “t am glad I know you now for what yaai are. Captain Falconnet," she said, asMMr* And then: "You can take me you, If you choose, having the strength to make good so much r threat. But that Is all. You take for yourself what I have to another." “Osanot, you say?" He dapped his tart on smartly and whistled for his torao-hclder; and when the man was para to fetch the mounts for the wom a«h hs finished out the sentence. ‘‘Llst aa yra, In your turn, Mistress Spitfire. < sfeafi take what I list, and before you aaa your father’s house again, you'll fiflffte* on your knees, as other women terra, to marry you for very shame's >l was then that Unoanoola did the toBMost bit of Jugglery It has ever bate aay lot to witness. Posturing like raa at those old Grecian dlscus-throw a% be .sent his scalplng-knlfe handle toMBSOBt to glide snake-like through tea grass to stop at Margery's feet. Tbswgb I think she knew not how It gat there, she saw it, and the courage illta sight helped her to say. quickly: “When It comes to that, sir, I shall fcsow bow to keep faith with honor.” His laugh was the harshest mockery wt artrth. "You will keep faith with •mm, bear lady; do you hear? Other Ba turned to take the black mare bam his man. At this my brave one set her foot upon the weapon In the *1 have no faith to keep with you, Captain Falconnet," she said. Ba struck back viciously. "Then, by heaven, you’d beat make the occasion. 31 taw happened, ere this, that a lady sa Painty as you are lias become a plaything for an Indian camp. It Ilea »ta| n«, to save you from that, my Bha stooped to gather her skirts for mooting, and In the act secured and hM tee knife. So her answer had In It tes fine steadfastness of one who may make desperate terms with death for haras's sake. “I thank you for the warning, Cap Data Falconnet,” she said, facing him ■ravaly to the last. "When the time amass, mayhap the dear God will give ass Isa re to die as my mother’s daugh ter ahouM." “tosh!” said he; and with that he wMstlsd for his troopers; and while •a tasked, my dear lady and her tlre wanan were helped upon their horses, ata! at the leader’s word of command tea aacart formed upon the captives as a center. A moment later the little •tafia, with the smoldering embers of, tea lodge fire to prick out Its limits ‘ty red, was empty, and on the it stillness of the forest the ig hoofbeats of the horses came and fainter till the distance red them. tt was that my poor lad, fam I and frenzied, rose up to me bitterly. “Haw may all the devils In hell drag Cfiown to everlasting torments, Ireton, for your cold-hearted that made us lose when we had hope to win!” he cried. “One hear I begged for, and that hour •ought her battle and set her free. Bad aow—" Ba broke off in the midst, choking wOth what miserable despair I knew, and shared as well; and throwing hltn mfif fiown in the wet grass, he would 'tea Mt the bitter words with such rav tagaand sobbings as bubble up In sheer abandonment of rage and misery. XXIII. «OW WE KEPT THE FEAST OF BITTER HERBS. Too may be sure that Richard Jen nifer's bitter reproachtngs came home k> me in sharpest fashion, the more ateM now I saw how we had lost our ulsara by neglecting the commonest jprecautions. Having determined to at tack. the merest novice of a general wwold have moved his forces to the mnareot point; would have had his its search out the ford beforehand; above all. would never have de the blow beyond the earliest ait of the enemy’s unwatchfulness. 8% now, when all was lost, I fell to Jtoatdrng out this sodden dough of aft arwit with Ephraim Yeates; but when 8 aw«M to carry off the blame as mine by right, the old borderer would not ghre me leave. "■kirflnd easy, Cap’n John; fair and mmtrT be protested. "Let’s give that aW aarpent, which is the devil and Satan, his dues. Ez 1 allow, there wus afee wbole enduring passel of us to ntoaBect all them things. To be sure, WW bad our warnings, mistrusting all tataag that this here dad-blame’ hoss egptaln bad his finger in the pie. But. hrarmte! we had ne’er a man o’ God "hsaagat us to rise up and prophesy wbat was a-golng to happen If we llbfl ,tet up and scratch gravel im mMr. If not sooner; though I won’t -ahsay that Cap’n Dick did try hi3 hand tbnt-away." ""True; and I would now we had ; Mflfcned to him," said 1, gloomily “We have lost our chance, knows if we shall ever have Falconnet must have half a men. red and white. In the train; and by this time he has from the Indian who recon us on the mountain that we within striking distance. With the forewarned, as he Is, we might well try to cut the women out of my ' Cornwallis’s headquarters.” The old man chuckled his dry little laugh, though what food for merriment he could find In the hopeless prospect was more than I could understand. "Ho! ho! Cap'n John; I reckon e» how ye're a-taklng that word from yonder down-hearted boy of our'n. Walt a spell till ye're ez old ez I be; then you'll never say die till ye’re ; plumb dead." Now, truly, though I was dismally disheartened, I could reassure him on the point of perserverence. 'Tla an Ireton falling to lose heart and hope when the skies are dark; but this Is counterbalanced In some of us by a certain quality of unreasoning persist ence which will go on running long aft- ! er the race Is well lost. My father had this stubborn virtue to the full; and so had that old'Ironstde Ireton from whom we are descended. ’’That’s the kind o’ talk!” was the old man's comment. "Now we’ll set to work In sure-enough arnest. Ez I said a spell back, my stummlck Is crying cupboard till I can’t make out to hear my brain a-slzzllng. Maybe you took i notice o' me a-praylng down yonder j that the good Lord’d vouchsafe to give us scalps and provender. For our on falthfulness He’s seed fit to withhold i the one; but maybe we’ll find a raven ' ’r two, or a wldder's mite 'r meal-bar'l, ! somewheres In this howling wilderness, ylt." So saying, he summoned the Catnw- I ba with a low whistle, and when Un- ! canoola Joined us, told him to stay with Jennifer whilst we should make another effort to find the ford. "There’s nobody like an Injun for a nuss when a man’s chin-deep Into trouble," quoth this wise old woodsman, when we were feeling our way cau tiously along the margin of the swift little river. "If Cap’n Dick rips and tears and pulls the grass up by the roots, the chief’ll only suy, ’Wahl’ If he sits up and cusses til! he’s black In the face, the chief'll say, ‘Ugh!’ And that's Just about all a man hankers for when his sore's a-runnlng In the night season, and all Thy waters have gone over his head. Selah!" Now you are to remember the sky was overcast and the night was pitchy dark, and how the old borderer could read a sign of any sort was far beyond my comprehension. Yet when we had , gone a scant half-mile along the river i brink he stopped short, sniffed the air and stooped to feel and grope on the ground like a blind man seeking for something he had lost. , "Right about here-away Is where they made out to cross," he announced; “the whole enduring passel of ’em, ez I reckon—our seven varmints and the , hoss-captaln’s powder train. Give me . the heft o’ your shoulder till we take : the water and projec’ ’round a spell on t’other side.” We squared ourselves, wholly by the sense of touch, with the river's edge, locked arms for the better bracing against the swift current, and so es sayed the ford. It was no more than thigh deep, and though the water lashed and foamed over the shoal like , a torrent In flood, there was a clean bottom and goo(W footing. Once safe across, we turnecf our faces down stream, and In a little time came to the deserted glade with the embers of the kldnnpers' Are glowing dully In the midst. Here a sign of some later visitants than Falconnet's horsemen set us war ily on our guard. The tepee-lodge of dressed skins, which had been left un disturbed by the sham rescuers, had ; vanished. "Umph! The redskins have been back to make sure o’ what they left be hind," snid Yeates, In a whisper. "I i Jlng! that’s Jest the one thing I was i a-hoptng they'd forget to do. I reckon ez how that spiles our last living •hance o’ finding anything that mought help slack off on the belly-pinch.” So he said, but for this once his wis dom was at fault and tricky fortune favored us. When we had found the covert in the bushes where the two horses had been concealed we lighted upon a precious prize. ’Twas a bag of parched corn In the grain; some share of the provision of the captive party overlooked by those who had returned to gather up the leavings. With this treasure-trove we made all haste to rejoin our companions. And now behold what a miracle of reanlma tlon may be wrought by a few hand- < fuls of bread grain! In a thrice the , : Catawba had found a water-worn stone to serve for a mortar, and an other for a pestle. These and the bag of corn were carried back to a shel tered ravine which we had crossed on our late advance; and here the Indian fell to work to grind the corn into coarse meal, whilst Yeates and I kin dled a Are to heat the baking-stones. In these preparations for the break ing «f our long fast even Richard be stirred himself to help; and when the cakes were baked and eaten—with what zestful sharp-sauce of appetite none but the famished may ever know —we were all in better heart, and bet ter able to face the new and far more desperate plight In which our lack of common foresight had entangled us. For now, since we knew the fult , measure of the peril menacing our dear lady, there was need for swift deter mination and a blow as swift and sure; | a coup de main which should atone In one shrewd push for the sleeveless failure of the night. So we would grip j hands around, even to the stolid Indian, ; and swear a solemn oath to cut the j women out or else leave our bones to , whiten In the forest wilderness. You'll laugh at all these vowings and handstriklngs, I dare say, and protest there was a deal of such fustian he roics In your doddering old chronicler’s ' day. Mayhap there was. But, my dears, I I would you might remember as you j laugh that we of that simple-hearted elder time lived by some half-century nearer to that age of chivalry you dote on—in the story books. Also, I would you might mingle with your merriment a little of the saving grace of char ity; letting it hint that, perchance, these you call "heroics" were but the free, untrainmeled folk-speech of that slncerer natural heart which you have learned to silence and suppress. For I dare affirm that now, as then and al ways, there will be some spark of the Promethean fire In every heart of man or maid, else this would indeed be a sorry world to live In. So, a&. I say, we four struck hands anew Mi the desperate venture; and, after carefully burying the Are to the end that it might not betray us while we slept, we burrowed in the nearest leaf bed to snatch an hour or two of rest before the tolls and hazards of the chase should begin afresh. In the thick darkness following hard upon the doutlng of the Are. I saw not who my nearest bedfellow might be. But ere I slept & band was laid on my shoulder, and a voice that I knew well, said: “Are you waking yet. Jack?” I said I was; and at that my poor lad would blurt out all hts sorrow and ' shame for the mad At of despair that . had set him on to rail and curse | "you will say with good reason that I am but a sorry Jockey for a friend— to fly out at you like a madman as I did.” he added, by way of fitting epi logue; and to this I gave him the an swer he wished, bidding him never lei a thought of It spoil him of the rest hi needed. "The debt of obligation and forgive ness Is all upon the other side, as you will some day know. Dick, my lad,* said I. hovering, as a coward alway. will, upon the lnuendo-edge of the con fession he will never make. He mistook the pointing of this pro test, as he was bound to. "Never say that, Jack. ’Twould bi a dog-ln-the-manger trick In me t*t blame you for loving her. And slnci you speak of debts, I do protest I owi you somewhat, too. With so fair a chMnce to cut” a clean swath In that fair-weather month at Appleby Hun dred. another man would have left ms scant gleanings In the field, I'll bs bound; whereas—” "Damn you!” I broke In roughly, "will you never have done and go to sleep?" And so, taking surly harsh ness for a mask when my heart was nigh bursting with shame and grief, I turned my back and cut him off. XXIV. HOW WE FOUND THE SUNKEN VALLEY. Looking back upon the hazards and chance-takings of our adventure in the wilderness, I recall no more promising risk than that we ran by sleeping un sentrled within rifle shof, for aught we knew, of the camp of the enemy. But touching this, ’tls only on the mimic stage of the romances that the players rise to the plane of superhuman sagacity and angel-wlt, never faltering In their lines nor betraying by slip or tongue-trip their kinship with common humankind. Being mere mortals, we were not so endowed; we were but four JUtwearled men, well spent In the long vhase, with never a leg among us fit to pace a sentry beat nor a decent wakeful eye to keep It company. So, is I have said, we took the risk and ilept; would have slept as soundly, I lare say, had the risk been twice as treat. We were astir at the earliest graying >f the dawn, Richard and I, and were the laggards of the company at that, ilnce the old hunter was already out ind away, and the Indian had kindled i Are and was grinding more of the larched corn for the morning meal. Dick sat up in his leaf litter, yawning Ike a sleepy giant. ‘ Lord, Jack,” said he, "If ever we win >ut of this coll with a full day to spare, i mean to sleep the clock hands twice iround at a stretch, I promise you. Twas but a catch, this cat-nap; no nore than enough to leave a bad taste n the mouth." “Aye, but the taste may be washed >ut,” said I. "I am for a dip In the •Iver; what say you?” He took me at the word, and we had in eye-opening plunge In the spring mid flood of the swift little river at the nouth of our ravine. 'Twas most mar velous refreshing, and with appetites iharp set and whetted by the stripping tnd plunging we were back at the Are n time to give good day to Ephraim Ifeates, at that moment returned with he hindquarters of a fine yearling nick, fresh killed, across his shoulders. Seeing the deer’s meat, we would hlnk the old hunter’s thrift of the lawn sufficiently accounted for, but when the cuts were a-broil we were nade to know that the buck was mere y a lucky incident In the early morn ng scouting. Taking time by the forelock, the old jorderer had swept a circle of recon naissance around our halting place, “to fet the p'lnts of the compass,” as he would say. Ills first discovery was hat the ford we had found In the dark less served as the river crossing of an indent and well used Indian trace. Uong this trace from the eastward the lowder train had come, no longer ago han mid-afternoon of yesterday, and irguing from this that the night camp >f the band would be but it short march 0 the westward, Yeates had pushed on :o feel out the enemy’s position. For a mile or more beyond the ford le had trailed the convoy easily. The :nd!an trace or path, well trampled by he numerous horses of the cavalcade, lollowed the up-stream windings of the iwift river straight Into the eye of the western mountains. But In the eye it lelf, a rocky defile where the slopes in each hand became frowning battle nents to narrow valley and stream, the me to a darkling gorge, the other to 1 thundering torrent, the trail was lost is completely as If the powder con voy had vanished Into thin air. Here was a fresh complication, and >ne that called for Instant action. We lad counted upon a battle royal In any ittempt to rescue the women, but that v'alconnet, Impeded as he was by the flow movements of the powder cargo, vould slip away, was a contingency for which we were wholly unprepared. So, as you would guess, the hunter jreakfast was hurriedly dispatched, ind by the time the sun was shoulder nigh over the eastern hills we had bro ken camp and crossed the river, and were pressing forward to the gorge of Reappearance. (Continued Next Week.) What a Square-Jawed Man Is Doing. New York Telegram to the Pittsburg Gazette: It takes power and englneei ing skill to raise a row of ten houses at me operation and to throw them high enough to build stores under them. This Is the undertaking begun today In Harlem. Engineers and contractors who are watching the Job declare It will be impossible, but the men bossing the performance say they will get the houses up in the way Intended or "bust.” To add to the remarkable character of the whole affair all the families in the houses continue to live In them. The raising process will bo done only a fraction of an Inch at a time, and it is thought it will be ac complished without damage of any kind. When the block has been put up about fifteen feet on stilts, stores will be built under them, and the former habitue of the neighborhood who has been away a few weeks will not rec ognize the street when he comes back. That is the promise of the contractor, and he- is a square-jawed, sturdy fellow, who seems to understand his business. A Yankee Trick in Matches. New' York Times: "Will you let me have a few matches?” asked the cigar et smoker at a bar up in Connecticut the other day. and the bartender passed out a long box containing matches twice the usual length. "What are these big sticks for?" ask ed the youth. "To make the maches awkward to carry away,” explained the bartender. "Every smoker who spends a nickel for a drink used to fill his vest pocket with matches, and it cost me a prettv penny. I tried 'safety matches,' and each one would take a box of them. Then I caught on to this Yankee trick. These matches won’t go into a vest pocket, and a box of them lasts as long as a gross of the others. My match bill amounts to almost nothing now.” Resignation. Yonkers Statesman: Th» Waiter—How will you have your steak today? The Crank—Oh, 1 suppose burned, as usual. PECULIAR METHODS j OF SETTLING DISPUTES: Fantastic Contests That Have ^ Tried Men’s Nerve and Courage. FRENCH ARE MOST WARY They Generally Devise Some Scheme to Avoid All Possibility of Meet ing with Any Personal Injury. Tit-Bits: Two heavy weights suspend ed from a beam by slender cords were the weapons chosen by two Parisians named Durier and Volson to terminate their rivalry for the hand of a pretty actress. Beneath a weight each took his stand, there to remain until the breaking of one or the other of the cords should decide hls fate. For more than four hours they remained motion less, when the cord attached to Durier’s weight snapped, and the ponderous mass of metal, falling upon the man be. neath, struck him to the ground. For tunately, however, It Just missed his head, and he escaped with no worse damage than a severe shock and a broken collar bone. Somewhat prolonged was the duel waged a few years back at a well known Yorkshire seaside resort to de cide which of two young men should surrender his claim to the hand of a local publican’s daughter. The rivals both prided themselves upon their nata tory prowess, so It was agreed that he who should first miss hls morning's swim In the open should withdraw hls pretension to the lady's hand. For nine months and more each took hls matu^ tlnal swim, but at length there came a Jay of such furious storm that one ‘.urned faint-hearted and refused to Jare the tempestuous billows. The oth er, however, at considerable risk, dashed Into the roaming sea, and, al though he was badly cut and bruised, emerged a triumphant wooer. Another aqueous duel occurred two years sines, the location being the Lake it Geneva, and the contestants a Swiss named Zellner and Lenoir, a French man, agreed that he who could remain the longest beneath the surface of the water should without Interruption or hin drance from the other be permitted to pay hls addresses to the daughter of a wealthy tradesman. The rivals dived simultan eously, and more than two minutes elapsed ere Zellner's head appeared above the'sur face. There was no sign, however, of hls rival, after whom, when yet another two minutes had sped, a couple of onlookers dived and succeeded In recovering hls senseless body. Restoratives were suc cessfully applied, and on Lenoir's recov ering consciousness he was acclaimed the victor. At the time of Succl's forty-day fast at the Westminister aquarium, some years ago, a couple of young Mancunians agreed by emulating hls example, to decide which of them should first propose for the hand of a girl who had hitherto regarded them ;with a seemingly Impartial affection. Four days was sufficient ordeal for one, who, refusing any longer to abstain from food, Igft the field clear to his rival, whose pro posal, however, met with scant consider ation from the lady, who declared that she would not Intrust her future to the keep ing of such a fool as he had proved him self. Needless to say hls rival's reception was equally glacial. During a very severe winter In the for ties a couple of Germans, natives of Dres den, resolved, for love of a woman, to fight a duel to the death. Without pro vision of any kind and clad only In the lightest of clothes, they went out Into the country., there to remain without shelter until one of the other of them should succumb to the cold. Three days after their departure a wretched object crawled back Into the town; ten miles distant hls rival, frozen to death, lay be. neath the falling enow. Trade Condition* in Morocco. Ion Perdicarla In International Quar terly: What critics Ignorant of trade conditions In Morocco do not realize is that the entire trade, both Imports and exports, amounts only to about $15. 000,000 per annum, and that the ful fillment of government orders for pub lic works required to develop trans port and other resources constitutes the only Important financial operation of the immediate future. If France were -willing to assume the responsi bility or expense of maintaining order, she might have been entitled to reserve for French syndicates alone such ad vantages; but as It is, the kaiser Is simply Justified It) Insisting that Ger man merchants shall have a share In placing tenders for these Moorish or ders, tenders or bids which, unless thus especially protected, would be defeated by the predominant Influence which the French profess the right to assert by rlrtue of the Anglo-French agreement of April, 1904, and the subsequent Franco-Spanish agreement. The only way to secure this right to a share In such enterprises Is for the various governments represented at the Madrid •onferenee In 1880 to hold the sultan o that agreement, and to refuse to recognize any right on the part of France, England or Spain to guarantee to France or to any power an exclusive or predominating Influence in Morocco. The authorities at Washington who scored brilliantly by the energy they displayed In securing the release of Ralsuli's hostages from so painful a predicament have now, also, taken up a position which. In view of this lat er and still more dramatic Incident of the sudden appearance of William of Hohenzollern on the Tangier stage, would seem equally well considered and advantageous. The department of state asserts that should France an nex Morocco the government of the United States might accept without de mur an effective occupation of the sul tan's dominions assumed in the Inter est of law and order, which It has seemed of late beyond the sultan’s own unaided power to maintain efficiently; yet, falling such effective annexation, the United States, as one of the sign ers of the Madrid convention, must look to the sultan himself to guarantee the rights and liberty of American Citizens throughout the territory over which Mulal-Abd-el-Azlz, or his Mek tiazen claims Jurisdiction. A Shampoo for Dry Scalp. A splendid tonic shampoo for a dry scalp can be made as follows: Taka two ounces of white castile soap, one half an ounce of potassium carbonate, eight ounces of alcohol, two ounces of tincture of quillaija, twenty drops of oil of lavender and eight ounces of water. Dissolve In the water the potas sium carbonate and soap, then add the other Ingredients. Rub well into the roots of the hair and then rinse well In several waters. Dry, If possible, in the sun, never In front of a Are, aa this will make the hair brittle. France Imitates in Shoes. From United States Consul Ridgely, Nantes, France: Among the features of 1904 has been the general appear ance of shoes closely resembling In form anl style those made in the Uni ted States. The clumsy, ungainly and heavy French shapes ear gradually disappear ing. In their stead are coming grace fully cut and finely finished shoes of a decided American appearance. The fact Is, however, that It Is rather our shoe-making machines than the shoes themselves that have come to France. In any event, the American-appearlng shoes which are now quite generally seen In this city and elsewhere In the provinces are made principally In Paris with machinery Imported from the United States. This does not alter the fact that some bona-fide American shoes are on sale here, but they are much dearer than the French made articles, and It Is not likely that they will make head way against the strong combination which Is represented by cheap French labor and prolific American machin ery. A Worried Debtor. Kansas City Journal: Ned—I’m dreadfully worried about my debts. Jack—It must be very annoying to be continually dunned. Ned—Oh, hang the duns! What wor ries me Is the fact that I can’t get any more credit. Relieved. Chicago Record-Herald: "Ah!" she said with a sigh ot relief as the flames licked up the last bit of what had once been her happy home, "that old Bible with the date of my birth In It Is gone, anyway." His Reputation. Judge: Jim Jackson—I undahstan’ yo’ve bin glvln’ folks de impression dat I'm a liar. Mose Possum—Nonsense! I allers says yo's pufflc’ly honest. Jim Jackson—Yes; but eberybody knows yo’ nevah tells de trufe about nuffln’. M. Delcasse, former French Minister of foreign affairs. Is now In his flfty thlrd year, and is described as being wiry and tough, with a round head, closely cropped, a bristly mustache and a locked mouth, Indicating a man cap able of much toll. Sound aa a Dollar. Monticello, Minn., Aug. 7.—Mr, J. W. Moore of this place stands as a liv ing proof of the fact that Bright’s Dis ease, even in the last stages, may ba perfectly and permanently cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mr. Moore says: “In 1898, three rep utable physicians after a careful ex amination told me that I would die with Bright’s Disease inside of a year. My feet and ankles and legs were bad ly swollen; I could hardly stand on my feet and had given up all hopes of getting cured, when a traveling sales man told me that he himself had been cured of Bright’s Disease two years before. “He said he had taken to his bed and expected to die with it, but that he had been cured by a remedy called Dodd’s Kidney Pills. “I commenced taking them at once and I am thankful to say that they saved my life. After a short treat ment I was completely restored to good health and I am now as sound as a dollar.” -- | » HOW TO FIND GROUSE. Uncertain Birds to Which Rules Do Not Always Apply. Outing: The ruffled grouse Is one of the uncertain birds to which no hard and fast rules will apply, yet he has a few small peculiarities of which advantage may be taken. In wild, heavy w'oodland, his orig inal haunt, ho has a weakness for two things—an old tote-road, or any seldom used road, and the bank of a stream. A man trying a bit of woods with which he is unacquainted probably will see more grouse near an old road than anywhere else. In hilly country, the lower slopes of the ravines are apt to be the best of ground. In level country, the long strips of thicket bordering large blocks of stand ing timber are Ideal places, and if the thicket happens to mark the edge of a clover field, so much the better. Never pass even a small thicket which stands out in a clover field with a wood upon any side. Grouse are fond of clover, and un til winter sets In are apt to be In any fair shelter near the field. Later, In snowtime, the borders and Interior of large woodland swamps are the chosen places. If there be a region of thick, low-lying forest, hav ing close-grown beech ridges here and there, these surely will repay the labor of beating them, for they are almost cer tal nto be the strongholds of all the ruf fled grouse of the neighborhood. Old wind falls and slashings are good because they afford acres of the stort of shelter the birds prefer In cold weather. Should a single bird flush, proceed warily and ready for instant action, for a second and per haps a three or four stragglers may be within gunshot of the spot. Ground good for one bird may be as attractive to three or four, although each Individual remains some slight distance from the others. When beating border thickets with a com rade, I prefer to work in the cover about along the line where thicket and forest join. Most men will choose the outside, but ruffled grouse almost invariably dash for the w’ood, hence across the line of fire of the inside man. Such shots arc none too easy and trees have a knack of getting in the way, yet as a general thing, tli eoutside position means the most fun. BABY’S INSTINCT Shows He Knew What Food to Stick To. Forwarding a photo of a splendidly handsome and healthy young boy, a happy mother writes from an Ohio town: "The enclosed picture shows my 4 year-old Grape-Nuts boy. ■•Siuee he was 2 years old he has eaten nothing but Grape-Nuts. He de mands and gets this food three times n day. This may seem rather unusual, but he does not care for anything else after he has eaten his Grape-Nuts, which he uses with milk or cream, and then he is through with his meal. Even on Thanksgiving Day he refused tur key and all the good things that make up that great dinner, and ate his dish of Grape-Nuts and cream with the best results and none of the evils that the other foolish members of the family experienced. "He is never sick, has a beautiful complexion, and is considered n very handsome boy. May the Postum Com pany prosper and long continue to fur nish their wholesome food!” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville,” in ev ery pkg. NOTES ON SILAGE By W. J. Fraser. a ------ An example of great loss owing to the form and faulty construction came under the writer’s notice a few days ago, when a square silo, with a capac ity of fifty tons was built, with air tight, but rigid walls. Simply the springing of the sides of the silo al lowed the air to gain access to the silage to such an extent that the en tire fifty tons spoiled completely. Since, for mechanical reasons, it is practically Impossible to build a square wood silo with perfectly rigid walls, the round silo is the only proper form. * • tfi To obtain satisfactory results silage must be in perfect condition when fed. Since fermentation soon takes place when silage is exposed to the air, the silo should not be of too great diameter. Not more than eight square feet of sur face should be allowed for each cow in winter; then, when feeding forty pounds of silage per cow, a layer l1/* Inches deep would be fed off daily. When silage is fed in summer, it is ad visable that the exposed area be not over half this size, so that a layer three Inches deep may be used daily. How ever, much stock is to be fed, a silo 20 to 22 feet in diameter is as large as should be built. If a silo is of great er diameter than this, much of the sil age is at too great distance from the door, Increasing the labor of removal. * • • The deeper the silo the greater the pressure and the more compactly will the silage be pressed together, hence the larger the amount that can be stored per cubic foot. For example, a silo twenty feet in diameter and forty feet deep will hold twice as much as one of the same diameter and twenty live feet deep. This shows the ecdnomy of reasonably deep silos. To be well proportioned the height should not be more than twice the diameter. No silo should be less than thirty feet deep and to get sufficient depth for a silo not. over twelve feet in diameter, it may be placed four or five feet into the ground. * • • The number of tons of silage needed san readily be estimated from the size of the herd and the amount to be fed dally. Even when it is desired to feed is much silage as possible, not more than forty pounds per cow should b« fed dally. In Illinois silage will usually be needed from about October 20 to May 10, or 200 days. Each cow should have an allowance then of 200 times forty pounds, which is 8,000 pounds of silage, or four tons per cow for the year. A herd of ten cows will require i silo holding forty tons; a herd of thirty cows, 120 tons; fifty cows, 200 tons, and 100 cows, 400 tons. Where young stock is raised an allowance should be made for them. HARVESTING CORN. The time to cut com that is raised for both fodder and grain is as soon as the ears are nearly all dented. If It is raised for fodder principally, it may be cut while the ears are in the milk If there Is danger of frost. Cut all corn before frost if it is ripe enough, as a frost reduces the value of the fodder. If a killing frost should come early, cut the corn and put in shock as quickly as possible. A corn binder that will cut and bind thick com that is planted one bushel or so on an acre, on rich mellow soil, without clogging, and bind field corn without knocking off the ears, is the one to use, says R. J. Brooks in the Northwestern Agriculturist. Use either two or four horses on the harvester, as three horses abreast tramp the bun dles too much. Cut as near the ground as you can so stubble won't bother plow. Shock the corn just as fast as it is cut, never leave it to lie on the ground over night or through a rain storm, if you can possibly avoid it. It needs two men to shock to advan tage using a shock horse, so that you can see through the shock one foot from the ground after it is finished, thus allowing the air to blow through. Every shock should be tied with binding twine before you move the shock horse. Use a three-fourths inch rope with a knot in each end to tight en; put the rope around the shock about two feet from top. Let each man pull at an end as they stand fac ing each other on opposite sides, and pull hard. Then one man takes hold of the ropes where they cross and holds tight while the other ties the twine. Don’t use a rope with a ring or pulley in one end and pull from one end in tightening shock, or every shock will be twisted and more liable to go down before stacking time. Set the shockrow in a straight line so a team can follow It more easily in stacking time. Stack the corn as soon as thorough ly dry, in small round stacks, keeping the middle of the stack real full and solid from the ground to tip so that the stack will always turn rain if it should come either when you are stacking or feeding it out. Build one stack in a place, so you can get at it on either side when feeding it out. If you are going to thra3h or shred don’t put more than two small stacks in a setting, as a very large stack of shred ded fodder won’t keep as well. Don’t tramp the fodder any more than you can possibly help after it is thrashed or shredded, as it is more liable to heat and spoil, the more solid it is packed. Don't put shredded or thrashed fod der by means of a blower into a barn that is partly full of horse hay, as it fills the hay with dirt more than it would if a carrier were used. Don't put any quantity of shelled corn as it comes from the machine in to a tight bin, or it will surely spoil; rather spread it thin on a large floor so it may be shoveled over and aired. And last, but not least, don’t let tha corn stand in the shock till winter, so you will have to shovel it out of th« snow and chop it loose from tha ground. These don'ts all save dollars in handling corn. SHABBY FARMING. About the shabbiest piece of farming I have seen In many a day was a ry* field, where the corn stalks from Iasi year’s crop were standing. The owner was trying to cut that rye, and the trouble he had with the stalks will keep him in ugly temper for the bal ance of the season. But the lesson has been a good one, even if it was costly. I will venture that the next time that man sows rye in standing corn he will get the stalk3 down before harvest time. Brother Clarke finds his discourage ments among his bees and we have ours In the poultry business. We keep a few bees as well and find what he says is true. Our bees have loafed a good deal this spring. Russian officers In camp receive money to pay for their meals, but In many cases they keep this for other purposes, and eat with the common soldiers. _ Tired of bad treatment, the nursing sisters employed at San Isidro, Spain, went on strike, wrecked one of the wings of a hospital and made a bonfire of the medical supplies.