A CHERRY-BUD IN A FOREIGN HAND " A Japanese Love Story (Copyright, by J. B. Westward from the Cascade of Nunobikl, through the ever-shifting tracery-work of pines and wild aza leas, you can see, if you would climb a quarter of a mile, on a spring day, a stretch of land that looks more like a dream than the actual solid footstool of God. That was her home; there we saw her. Her environment was common her dress, her cottage, the people about her, yes, the people especially. Hut all these common things, because of her, seemed to ine as If I saw them on the canvas of Millet or Rembrandt. She was a part of the laudscapc, and If we Bay of the ensemble that It is Just like a picture, I do not know whether the Higher Artist would take it as a compliment or not. Describe her? Better ask me to pet rify a dream. Her lips? Oh! one folds his hands on his left side when he speaks of them. , Not satisfied with her success in this, her' fair masterpiece, Nature placed her in the rustic surrounding to heighten all the charms of the glvl through the touch of that potent ma gician called surprise. Yes, candidly, 1 was surprised, and so was Mr. Sid ney White, who was with me. Mr. White la an American who has spent more years of his life in Paris and abroad than under the roof of his mother. He was an artist, an ar tist who. as he confided to mo once, was trying his best to fall an much That Was Her Home; Saw Her. There We In love with a woman as he was with Art. Take my word for It, he had tht something that goes Into tho making of a true arllBt, that all-absorbing something which made him by turns a fool and a god; he had that Idolatrous adoration for the beau tiful; that contempt of everything common. In order to picture his meeting with the girl, you must fancy an artist facing Art made flesh and beating in a woman's heart. In addi tion to this, you must take Into ac count that poignant sense of surprise as keen as that of a man who finds a diamond in the dirt. O Tome was her name. O Tome became an object of study to Sidney. Then, a short time afterwards, the object of study not only artistic but also From the very start O Tome was a thing of beauty to him, and in the course of time a joy forever as well. When, therefore, about a month afterwards I went up to his studio I was not surprised to see It converted into a huge multlfaced mir ror of 0 Tome every pose of her figure, every expression of her fea tures, the innumerable blending of her many moods, were caught in all the concelvahle cunning of colors. "Am I really aa pretty as that, Whlte-san?" "Very, very much more beautiful, mademoiselle!" "And my hair and oh, hut my eyes, are they softly dreaming as they are yonder?" "That? Why, that Is nothing but a shadow; that Is nothing but a pic ture, like a picture on a temple wall, a picture of a goddess, ycu know. One can look at a picture, not the goddess the original is too daz iling!" O Tome, who was not sure whether she understood this poetic ambiguity of the artist, smiled as If to say, "The best thing I can do for you is to pretend that I believe all that you say." "But, really, White-Ban, does your humble maid please her master, then?" "Hush, sweet one; you Bhould rath er say that your slave worships his Ideal." "What do you think I have found now, old man?" he asked me one day as he burst Into my den. Dropping my brush at the suddenness of his entry and Interrogation, I answered: 'Hello! you? Why, I have not tho slightest Idea." "Well, she Is not a beautiful study, but sho is as bright as a Buddha's eyes I mean her mind. You ought to come and see her." Yes, I found out that she had learned mi ny an English word. "Say the first sentence I taught you for ub, O Tome-sun," White Bald In Japanese. mm mim I A Llpplncott Co.) Then the olive velvet of her checks beccauie a warmer color, and a smile muilo her lips like an opening bud. Then slowly she said, "I love you, Sidney . The last syllable was in the merry ring of her laughter. I saw him often teaching her Eng- j lish and French. In those happy j hours he looked like a male mother ! mad with ecstasy over the first falter ing words of hid baby. Ho was very proud of her; and day by day she ! rewarded him with the discovery of ' the hidden U'eusurea of her simple heart. Twice winter chained water; twice spring set It free and gave it songs; twice chrysanthemums decked their little garden; and they fanued away two summers. They were too much In love to think of marriage if that were possible. Those were happy days for iilin for her. Then there came a little piee? of paper Into that studio to that nest, to speak more correctly, of Art and u couple of spring buds. I'pon that paper was a message that cunie from the other side of the world. Since the receipt of It Sidney White was never the same man. And poor O Tome only wondered. It was. rude, to her Japanese way of thinking, to J ask many things of a man, and then, if he loved her, ho would tell her all she ought to know without, her ever ! asking. So she was silent sad, be cause he was sad. "Come with me, O Tomesan," he said to her one morning. "Where are we going?" "I have found a nest for you. And I want to tee If you like it or not." And they walked up the hill side of Kobe City. "You see, sweetheart,", ho ex plained to her, "I have always thought that you would like to have a cottage ull your ovui. And I think I've. found it. We'll furnish It as you like, and there you can do whatever you want. I will come and see you there very often, and we won't be bothered wliu people who come to my studio;" for I am going to keep my studio as It Is." They saw the cottage, whose ver anda laughed full-mouthed towards the entrance of the famous inland Sea of Japan. O Tome was delighted with It. It was arranged that everything would be put in order within a week, and at the end of that time O Tome was to move Into it. "Hut why don't you move your studio, too? I miss the pictures so much," she said to him. "Oh, sweetheart, you will have nil the pictures you want. You see, I don't wnt any of my studio friends bothering us nt tho cottuge." It was about seventeen days since Sidney White received a cablegram stating that his parents would bring out his wifo with them to join him lu Japan, where he seemed to be mak ing such a prolonged study. Sidney expected them seven days ahead. O Tome was to move to her new cottage four days hence. She could speak English fluently now, and nothing charmed the artist as the honey words from her lips. Her head nestling in his breast, her left arm around his neck, and the fingers of her right hand going astray In the maze If his hnlr, making the long, wavy locks ripple like the golden surface of a sunlit sea, she was mur muring: "Dear, you bare such pretty hair; It's like the halos of saints you paint." There was the Bound of many steps In the hall. The housemaid never al lowed anyone to enter the studio without seeing If the artist were ready to receive u visitor. Hut this time tho steps came steadily towards tho door of the studio. Just as O Tome leaped off tho lap of Slduey the door Hew open. There was a vigorous swish of a skirt. "Sidney!" exclaimed a stronger voice than tho dreamy melody of O Tome's throat. And he was lost be hind the flutter and whirl of foreign millinery. A resounding kiss. "Great Heaven, Kate!" gasped a husky voice. A surprise party, my boy!" shouted his father In the door-way. "We did surprise you! ha! ha! ha!" Mrs. White released htm at last' She turned round to signal the old people to follow her example. The slim figure of O Tome stopped her eyes. At once they flashed back at Sidney and found him ashy, all in a tremor. Something hard entered tho blue of her laughing eyes. "Pray, who Is that, Sidney?" Her volco sounded like the breaking of an Icicle. Sidney was a human flame In an in stunt. He stammered, "Husband, for Heaven's Bake ' riled the lady, und then, turning V O Tome roughly: "Who are you?" "I am just his model, madam," sh satd quietly In English with her head down. Mr. White wanted to paint mo." Sho walked out noiselessly. That was the last time Sidney White saw 0 Tome. Yes, ho is hunting for her now over hunting. But 1 think lie would And nn Insane asylum long before ho would find O Tonto, A W J! mOM ATLArtTJC TOPACFCff i v' LOCOSfOTV III 7 m - x '-at fri5ss3s . ?J 1 4 A W "A mm r ; i , i ; i ; im inn umm ---- ' VIO MA WALL Am WAR'ff TUWt'R OT I swung up Into the cab of the loco motive nt Colon and cuddled down on the warm leather seat with a nod of recognition and n handful of Tana- teniae money to the engineer. It Is not every evening that one gets the chance of riding from the Atlantic to the I'aclfic In the cab of a locomotive. The distance from sea to F,ea nt Pana ma is 44 miles. Tho Paama railroad curves some and in one' or two places I was reminded of a railroad down In West Virginia where the curves ore so sharp that the fireman often throws coal Into the headlight of hid own en gine. The track from Colon. Panama, la what railroad men call a red-hot track; that Is, It Is jammed all day long with passenger trains, ten cars (o a train, and trains of flat cars load ed with dirt from the Culebra excava tion. At night tho freight goes through from tho big ships waiting on Dno Bide to vessels at the wharves on the other. It takes two hours and a half to cross the Isthmus and the fare Is $2.40. Our special train whirled through station after station about a mile apart and the buzzards hopped off the track and the other regular trafllc stood aside to let us pass. To right and left the rank vegetation crowded right up to the rails cocoa nut palms and banana trees, bejucca vines and celba trees. As you leave Colon it's hard to tell where the green scum leaves off and the solid land be gins. Everything Is green a poison ous, verdigris green. The main thoroughfare of the Pana ma railroad swings around quite out- siae me i;i)iei)ra cut. Bending spur tracks into it to fetch the spoil away From" Paraiso you can look back bo tween the mighty walls of the cut with terrace after terrace, where the steam shovels Btand, eating out seven or eight tons of clay at every bite. On this particular occasion It was too dark to see more than the vague out line of Gold hill and then directly in front of us the moon rose, round and pumpkin yellow, as our locomotive charged up hill toward the east, and It really seemed ns though we were go ing to tako a header right straight Into tho moon, when wo should get to the top of the grade. So we rocked and reeled onward through the soft flooding moonlight, aud at all the stations near to Pana ma the platforms were crowded with Americans In evening dress and their partners In white muslin and chiffon, waiting to take tho regular train to rannma, 10 Riiena me new year s dance of the Culebra club. So when we got to Panama and 1 had cla in hered down out of the cnb and snld my grimy ana perspiring adieu to their Batanlc majesties of the hrottlo and the firebox there was tho Tlvoll hotel, where the dance was to be held ablnzo 'with light and festooned with bunting and vines and ail manner of creeping things, all ready for the ficBta. I ran upstairs and put on a boiled Bhlrt and a black coat, with two tails to It. and the uRual evening regalia of ono who Is "condemned" to live In the midst of n "clean nnd shaven race." When I got down stairs a band over In tho corner was vigorously going It There was no piano, but they had shout Vk trombones, a violoncello, a llute and the parts of several violins It really made very tolerable music. At a few minutes before 12 o'clock wnen i turned in, ine pnncera wero still hopping and gliding about. Sud denly the whistle of tho toe plant and the bells of the cathedrsl found out thnt the new year was horn and then the whole town nt once was In en up roar. The Chinese were setting off long strings of firecrackers; tho bull hide drums and tambours, the tin enns full of stones, the barking dogs and V.v- :.v::-X;, i 1U a .... ':: V S. k Mi ? 'iiti sSf &Jf.-Tv the yelling urchins, the locomotives ut the roundhouse and above all the whistle of the Ice plant, drove sleep fnr from one's pillow. And 1 was par tlciilarly anxious to get to Bleep, be ctuiso nt 3 a. m. tho chief of pollc wis coming round to take our part) on an alligator hunt. I was just dozing off when thor came a loud rapping at the door and a boy thrust In his head: "Was you do gemmun dat ordahed de Ice-wntah?" "No," I said, "next room," nnd com posed myself to resit. About twt o'clock I was meeting with some de giee of success when the same boj rapped ngaln. "Did you wish foi ke watah, suh?" At three o'clock he came a third time and said the chief of police wat waiting downstairs. I had not slept at all, but neither had tho chief ol police. We drove, with day breaking abova the royal palms and the celba trees past tho Chinese cemetery and around Ancon bill to the wharf of La Boca the Pacific terminus of the canal Here there was a G0-fuot launch wait ing for us; the American engineers found tho launch on the top of the hills at Culebra and put it together, With two Jamaica natives shoveling coal lu tho cockpit and a Spaniard at tho engine, we went up the coast 25 miles through water alive with sharks chasing the mullet clean out of the tea and the pelicans solemnly fishing from the reefs. At the mouth of the Chowera river we turned in. Opposite a stone dock built by a British trading company we anchored the launch and took to four small boats, each boat rowed by two policemen from the Panama constabulary. It was bard lighting up that river. The tide was rushing out nine miles an hour and after passing a native village of mis erublu shacks thatched with palm, we came to a reef that spanned the river except at one or two points, where the water rushed boiling through Again and again the oarsmen, yelling, bent to the paddles and forced the boats right Into the teeth of the rap Ids, but the water played, with us "as a kitten pats a cork," and drove us back with our gunwales dipping un der. Capt. Shanton, our chief of police, was getting a little discouraged, for he had not seen anything much to shoot at except a couple of water dogs, or soras, that ventured too neai the bank, and the captain had given us to expect a happy hunting ground with a whole herd of alligators. As we rounded the corner just above the rapids, 1 nearly fell out of the boat There they were on the bank, at least 15 of them not 200, as the champion liar of the party subsequently stated The biggest was not less than 25 feet long. They shambled very rapidly on their fat legs to the water's edge and plopped In. The minute their nosei came to the surface 12 Marlin 44't gave them a volley, but Capt. Shan ton's elephant gun was probably th& only weapon that did any damage - A grent hunter was telling me the other night how yon proceed with I whale. He Bald: First you get the whale interested and then you kick him in the face.' But you can't do that with an alliga tor. We probably shouldn't hav landed a single one If it hadn't been for the fact that a lady 'gator was taking a nap in a thicket far above the water line and, hearing the tu mult and the shouting, came down ths bank in a hurry toward Capt. Shan ton's boat, clapping her under jaw like the bottom of a steam shovel bucket at Culebra. The captain was ready and let her have both barrels of the elephant gun, which would have wrecked the shoulder of an ordi narily strong roan. A congressman from California was peeping between Capt. Shanton's legs with a Brownlt camera, but he pressed the button e great many times and forgot to turn the film, so that the result was decld ly composite. The 'gator keoled ovet just before she got to the water and when we were sure she was sufficient ly dead we cut off her claws for sou vcnlrs. Life's Perfect Duties. Gentleness and cheerfulness, these come before all morality; they are tho perfect duties. If your morals make you dreary, depend upon it they are wrong. 1 do not say "give them up," for they may be all you have; but conceal them like a vice, lest they should spoil tho lives of better and simpler people. Robert I.oula Stev enson. Tho dlstanco in traveling seems great when one needs sleep. It is a long Uue that bus uo turn-In. EARLY BEGINNING INSURES SUCCESS IN SWINE Many Different Points In the Care, Feeding and Health of Market and Breeding Slock-Ily A. J. Lovcjoy. Tho following notes are taken from the address of A. J. lvejoy, a well known swine breeder, delivered re cently before the Live Stock Breed ers' convention at I'rbana, 111.: The pig that is to be Bold for meat has but a few months to live, and there should be no letup in feeding from birth. It will begin to eat shelled corn at three or four weeks of Age; nnd Uttle Bweet skim milk ar a thick mush of the same material is that given the mother. Is a great help to hasten growth. Well bred or even god grade pigs ihould weigh GO to 80 pounds when weaned ut three months of age, and ihould then go on alfalfa, clover or Dther fresh green pasture, and have corn twice a day. Lute in the sum mer there Bhould bo ready for them h 0 no -k Profitable Type a pasture of rape, field pens or soy beans, besides the corn. It their teeth become sore, change to ihellcd corn, sonked 24 hours In wa ter, slightly salted. It will pay to have n cool, shady place where It is rather dark, if pos- ilble, for the pigs to lie In during the heat of tho day, with free access to mixture of salt, copperas, lime and isuea. The feeder should watch close ly to see that every pig is eating with a relish. If the pigs cough it Is prob ably due to a dusty shed. Worms will also cause a cough, and If the hair becomes starring and dead in ap pearance, it is well to give a worm powder. Lice can be gotten rid of by nipping, and all of the market dips can be Improved by adding crude oil Dr petroleum. The pigs will be ready tor market at any age after six to eight months. In raising hogs to be used as breed- rrs tho object is very different. They ire not to go to market at six to eight months of age, but to grow up to ma turity. They should be pushed for rapid growth, but must be fed for a (rowth of frame and bone; not fat tened on corn, but expanded by a teed of rich protein. . At six, eight or ten months of age, they should show more length of body and more scale than the market hogs, and be smooth ind well covered, but not so fat as for market This can be very easily done by feeding a mixed grain ration, with ten per cent of tankage or ten per tent of oil meal. Use corn, barley ind outs ground together, mixed thick ly with water, and fed at once while iweet It Is much better to mix three pounds of milk to one pound of grain. f one has no milk the next best feed Is ten per cent tankage. If one has the corn and does not want to buy the mill feeds, he can use 80 per :ent. of corn nnd 20 per cent, of tank WATCH YOUR HORSE'S FEET Bhoer Should Thoroughly Under Btund Anatomy of tho Foot. It Is absolutely essential for the borseshoer to thoroughly understand the anatomy and physical laws as well as the mechanical rules of the dorse's foot, for most all ailments to which horses' feet are subject come under his direct supervision. Ho is often called upon to treat foot disorders and should equip himself with sufficient knowledge of the sub ject before attempting to remedy such ailments. Corns seem to be one of the most obstinate cases that come under tho observation of the horseshoer. Some authorities claim that these corns resemble the corns on the human foot, but they are misled on account of tho cause and location be ing generally the same. It is a misapplied term when con nected with the foot of the horse. The discoloration which appears be tween the bar and wall Is a depositor blood after a rupture of the blood ves sols which form such r complex net work around the foot. This part of the foot has to do more than its share of work Corns are chiefly found on the age. and have a well balanced ration. The summer treatment of young pigs should be about the same as for the market pigs. For lute summer and fall, I have made It a practice to have a field of Evergreen sweet corn to fcer in the roasting ear. I begin by adding one stalk and ear for each pig In addition to his other feed; In a few days two stalks and two curs, and gradually increase this amount to a full feed, while diminishing the other ration. In winter the brood sows should have something to tuke the place of tho green pasture. I know of noth ing that will equal alfalfa, bright und green, run through a cutting machine. Two-thirds chafed alfalfu und one third Bhelled cor nmlxed together and ground In a steel bur grinder, make A1 - 4C .V "Jf'-'-' " ux v 4 Ate" 1 - 5 vT? Si . Av-.-fc y.-.-2-- -WJ- ft X "v- .iv-i- it- of 8wine. nn almost Ideal ration which cun b fed dry or mixed thickly with scald ing water; a little salt adds relish. It Is a cheap ration and bus just bulk enough to take the place of grass. If one cannot have alfalfa, bright, well cured clover Is good. Sorghum cane Is a good fall feed until henvy freez ing. Mangles or sugar beets are of course very good. It la very necessary that the brood sows have exercise, that they may bring Btrong litters of pigs, full of vt tality. It Is best to keep tho same sows for several years If they have If t r -wwtt 1 '4 5 Good Friends. proven good breeders and careful mothers; they will ralso more and better pigs than the young gilts. Mature sows can be kept breeding, , raising two litters annually, and can be carried from year , to year after weaning their litters, quite cheaply, with little or uo grain after the spring litter Is weaned until the fall litter comes. If they can have fresh grass or other succulent feed. We should learn to produce as much of the feed as possible ourselves. inside of the foot because of the habit of fitting the shoes closer to tho cen ter of the frog than tho outside, thus throwing the work on the inside heel Another error Is making shoes right and left. Why should this be dons when there is no distinction in the anatomy? The foot has as many points of observation as a marine compass and each point must be rigidly ob served It we wish to be successful In manipulating the ailments of the foot The shoe must be an equal distance from the center of the frog In ordei to balance the foot. If this cannot be done by nature, mechanical rules must bo followed. : The Open-Top Tree. It is not necessary to go over the tree trying to cut off every little twig The leaders nre the ones that need attention. When heading in these leaders It Is best to cut them off to a side branch, rather than to dor mant bud. Frequently when a.i In experienced man practices headlng-ln he Is tempted to shear tho tree al'. over nnd leave It a smooth, oval form It will be seen that this is very differ ent from tho method dusciibed above, . where only the lenders are cut back and the side shoots thinned, bo as to leave an open top. The amount ot headlng ln to be done should vary from year to ypar. according as the crop promises to be large or small. As tho tree gets older less headlug-:n tu usually necessury. i t If Sit. :