E0PIC8 OF THE TIMES. A CHOtCC SELECTION OF INTER- CTTINO ITEMS. CNmmH aad Crlt.cieau Baaed Upoa ha appcniaga at Ik bay Uia If I aad Ntwt Notea, "What la the biggest game In your rtjctoltT" asks a New England corre spondent. Draw poker. Spain certainly experience! a ureat leal of trouble in Manila Bay, but her war ebips were at the bottom of it. The Spaniards readily believe the ram that Dewey was a bad boy. and fa addition they think be grew worse M he got older. The attention of the Harvard prof en ter who says there are no gentlemen In America Is called to the fart that there are a few lighters. This war may mean more compulsory sflncation In giving scholars something additional to learn about the United ttatca and its dependencies. Adherents of the Spanish throne atsndly talk of what Is behind It, but (tin at present to Its occupant must be af teas interest than what's before it The Anstraian government has de cided that "hello" In telephoning Is Im polite and roust not be lined. But It kften Is convenient for abbreviation. "All honor to the new navy!" ex flaims the Detroit Free Press. In view af a well-known occurrence at Manila we would like to Inquire what Is the natter with our old navy also? A local poetess contributes to a West trn paper a "stirring, martial poem" be ginning "To war, to war with Spain, I ay!" So do we remembering always that Gen. Sherman said "War is beli." The Wichita Beacon says that "any girl who bleaches her hair can be kissed." So can any girl who doesn't bleach her hair; bat the Job must be fione by the right party of the second ftart of course. "Am I my brother's keeper?" Al ways inevitably; and it Is generally Cheaper to help him maintain himself It home than It is to let him go to the foorhouse and then support him alto gether. This applies to nations as well Individuals. The Cramps at Philadelphia have se cured contracts from the Russian gov ernment for a first-class 12"00 ton bat tle ship and a first-class G, 100-ton pro tected cruiser. If we are in a position to build navies for Europe we certainly Ihould be able to build a first-class aavy for Uncle Sam. sThe nation takes off its hat to the American navy. It may not number the ships that ore gathered Into the Beets of England and the great conti nental powers, but. man for man, offi cer for officer, ship for ship, nothing afloat equals It We are not a warlike people; owr ways are those of peace, but there is a satisfaction In the knowl edge that when the crisis comes we are not unequal to maintaining ourselves Ilka men. It must be remembered that in this war the private's part Is more import ant than in any war in the past The open order formation -In which battle Is now fought, on account of the preci sion and rapidity of Are of modern mail arms and machine gnns. makes toe individual soldier more dependent upon himself and less dependent upon lis officers. He must use his brains as well as bis legs and arms. Other con ditions being equal, the army that has the moat Intelligent soldiers will win. Spain furnishes to the world a mel ancholy example of the improvidence af the policy of unrestricted tree cut ting. Its arid territory. Its torrential streams, are. the natural result of in difference to or ignorance of the de mands of a wise foresight We do not want to make a Spain of America either physically or morally. We do aot want to strip our timber lands for (he enrichment of a few speculators and leave a forestless domain to the seat generation. It sometimes requires more and bet ter courage to stay at home than to go to war. Many a man who, If duty would permit him to volunteer, would be glad to go, Is compelled by the most solemn and binding of all human obli gations to stay at home. It Is not a manly, a wise or heroic thing for a citl acn to leave bis wife, children, parents or slaters In want in order to go where fee la not needed. So long aa there Is a surplus of men who want to enlist, and whose p.eaence at home Is not as aeatiai to the support of families, no man whose presence Is thus required baa moral right to enlist Aa A medium through which to cos- pessimistic Inferences the essayists am OTorworklng the subject of reject ad reiaateers. without other Informa ttoa the eo Delusion might be drawn (Mas some o these com meat that the sili of this nation are rapidly de tortorating la physical empnbfUtles. Aa eaJd. this tvbjeet has been tnrorkad.CM nation to aot r abort af sn material oapa- 0 f ataadlng the teats of masae, iVsMtoslK ftaaaaa aad apned. It la O ends at fat to select from ft eaaafr CI bafca any, sdally rigian hi tat ay llrm at tea tea. We are net ba taaaafvvstvaca, .' rXaaf rUtana C 3 Cj land af C K.iHasafl Ma f a a ij -j sjr m yers." It U felt that the frightful In crease of crime can never be checked so long as attorneys, who are admitted to the bur as the sworn ministers of Justice, are willing to sell their ser vices to secure immunity for the worst of criminals, not only by securing the fair trial, which Is the right of every accused person, but by using tbelr le gal ability for the perversion of law and evidence and the misleading of Juries. Is there any possible form of wrong, any dishonest combination for private or public plunder, which doea not find able and willing lawyers to dress it np and parade It before the courts In the robes of Innocence and virtue? Yet there have been lawyers, like Horace Blnney and Abraham Lin coln, who would not thus prostitute their powers; and we would gladly give full credit to the claim made by Hon. Joseph H. Choate for bis ninety thou sand brother lawyers, that "you will look in vain elsewhere for more spot less honor, more absolute devotion, more patient IndUKfry, more conscien tious fidelity than among these." June 14, 1777, the American flag was adopted by Congress and the annual recurrence of the anniversary calls to mind the first standard of our Inde pendence, which had represented on It a snake cut In thirteen pieces, repre senting the thirteen colonies, bearing the motto, "Join or die." Patrick Henry's men marched behind a stand ard bearing a rattlesnake in an atti tude ready to strike and the warning, "Don't tread on me!" Doctor Frank lin wrote of this design: "The ancients considered the serpent an emblem of wisdom. It is quite customary for countries to be represented by animals peculiar to that country. The rattle snake is found nowhere but In Amer ica, Her eye is exceedingly bright and without eyelids emblem of vigilance. She never begins an attack nnd she never surrenders emblem of magnan imity and courage. She never wounds even her enemies until she generously gives them warning not to tread on Iter. Her thirteen rattles, the only part which Increases In nmnler, are distinct from each other, and yet so united that they cannot be disconnected without breaking thea to piece, showing the impossibility of on American republic without a union of States." Doctor Franklin pursues the simile still fur ther, and in following It the reader is impressed with the analytical keen ness of the old .philosopher in bis study of the fitness of the symbol that was to represent the character and relation ship of the thirteen colonies. New Tork Journal: The taking nearly two months the Atlantic fleet when, Oregon to Join had the Xicarairuan Canal been existent tt could have made the voyage in two weeks, leaves nothing to say ngalast the military necessity of that short waterway to the United States. Either we must cut the canal or make up our mfads to do a more costly thing maintain a double navy. Every na tion that maintains a powerful fleet in the Pacific has us at a fearful disad vantage now. The voyage from New York to San Francisco by way of the Strafts of Magellan Is 13,174 miles, and by way of Cape Horn 15,(500. By way of the Nlcaraguan Canal it would be but 4,907, a shortening as to one route by 8,267 miles ami as to the other by 10,753. With the canal we could hurry our ships from the Atlantic to the Pa cific and vice versa as they might be needed; without the canal every one of them will have to follow the same track that the Oregon has taken the same that was pursued by the exploring Ma gellan, discoverer of the straits In 1520. Commercially the canal Is ns necessary ss It hi strategically. Its opening would mean an enormous Impetus to the de velopment of our Paelfle coast. Well within ten years the population of that j region wouiu oe uouoieu una us natural wealth poured out to enrich the whole country. New Orleans and other South ern ports would spring Into greatness under the stimulus of the new trade opened to them and the territory which produces their special exports. The western coast of Sooth America would become tributary to us by furnishing a direct market to our cotton growers, iron founders, and manufacturers in general. Thanks to the Suez Canal, England Is nearer than we are by about 2,700 miles to China, Japan, and Aus tralia. Open the Nlcaraguan Canal and our Atlantic ports would be only 1,000 miles further from Hongkong and Cen tral China generally than Is England, and from 1.200 to 1,900 miles nearer the northern ports of China, Corea, and Japan; 2,700 miles on the average near er the western ports of South America; 1,300 miles nearer Melbourne, end over 3,000 mile nearer New Zealand. The canal would bring within trade reach hundreds of million! of consumers with whom we have now but scant connec tion. The commercial face of the world would be ensnared, and all to the bene fit of the United States. The canal will be ect now. The Oregon's voyage baa been a kindergarten lesson to the entire country, and the fight With Spain has opened everybody's eyes to the cold fief thst the best time to pre pare for war Is when we sre at peace. Ton will soon be going off for a pie nlc. When yon go, behave yourself. Aa a rule, when people go away on a picnic, they act worse than savages, and those living near the plcnle grounds art dlsgnsted. It ton't neces sary to go crany la order to enjoy a A yvrng country fellow's Idea of a a me seems to be to pile two pret ty Jte la a ataale-acated baggy, and ttta fa town on their laps. And, by. Oa way, we rather dilra his taata. 17a feara known a asaa twenty yean wtoaaya be la vary atofc, aai Matla at THE FARM AND HOME MATTERS OF INTEREST TO FARM ER AND HOUSEWIFE. How to Sacceed with Batter Palry Caring for Rrea ia the t-pring:-Hiata on Beet Sugar HaiaiBg-Kcep' lag Old Cow la Unprofitable. Good Batter. To succeed with a butter dairy it Is necessary to have good butter con not some good ones and some poor oles and these cows must have good but tor cow feed and care. One bad butter cow will eat up the profit on several good ones; therefore, all unprofitable cows should he tested out and sold to the butcher; a duiryman can't afford to keep them If be is dairying for proilu Then the cows must be treated with the consideration due to their Import ance as a factor of success; and the milk and cream must be properly han dled from cow to churn, and those who don't know precisely how this should tie doue should stay out of the busi ness He must know how to make but ter. There is absolutely no prolit in uny other grade, because people dou't want bad butter at any price. Then, good butter being made at least possi ble cost, it must be properly pres.-nted to the market. It must not only lie good, but must look good. Marketing requires some good, souud business sense. Some people could hardly sell good butler at a profit If it wns given to them. It requires an all-round niau to make a successful dairyman. Breeder and Horseman. First Food of Hera in Pprioc. After bees have safely wintered they first gathei propollis, a reddish sin stance which they procure from the buds of trees, and whose its is not clearly known, though part of it deems to be to close up cracks which the win ter has made iu their dwelling. Then they set to work to gather pollen, the fecundating dust from the stigmas of flowers. They get a great deal of this from the blossom of the maple, and It is this rather than sweet sap that the bees frequent maple trees iu bloom to obtain. Of course there Is no sweet ness in maple sap after the trees have leaved out. - The taste is rattier bitter than sweet. Nature Is an expert chem ist and can change In a week's time nil the sugar in a maple tree into the material for depositing fibre In the branches and the new foliage that the tree then puts on. A good substitute for the pollen of flowers Is found In very fine rye or wheat flour, kept where It will be sheltered from ruin, and where the liees can readily get at It. , """ " cany spring w tl..n.t...) t , ... .... . visit a dish that has a little nc Hour sprinkled on Its liottom and exposed to the sun. The bees use this pollen as feed for young bees when newly batched. Therefore the queen bee dc, not begin laying until a supply of pol len has been obtained. The earlier .jo queen bee begins to work the sooner the hive fill- with !ees, and new s warms are ready to issue. Meet huicar ItaiaiOK. Beet sugar experts say that the beet, In order to be rich in sugar, must have a chance to setid Its tap-roots down into the subsoil. The factory wants smooth roots, not those that are all "fingers and toes." Thus they expect the grow er to subsoil his beet land In the fall, by followtug with some sort of subsoil stirring plow in the furrow made by the ordinary plow. Slany farmers will consider this quite a task, and possibly be a little, slow to bind themselves to grow sugar be"tg under them? condi tions. For most soils this subsolllng will not be so difficult as It may look at first glance.. The work can be done In the fall, and should be done with greatest care. All msnurfnl substances should tie applied In the fall. Stable manure should be well rotted and sp plied la moderate doses. Suiorphos phate may be used quite freely with out detriment. Close planting Is abso lutely necessary. The Individual roots should weigh from one to three pounds only. . Larger roots are deficient In sugar. The rows ire made about twenty Inches apnrt, and the plants left alsjut Ave to eight Inches ifirt in the rows. Food for Voong Chlcka. More than half the young chicks that die while very youug do so because they are Improperly fed. Even the most dreaded of all pests, lice, will nev er trouble the chicken that is fed as it ought to be, and has free range to scratch in the dirt. But proper feeding does not mean pampering the chick, and still less does It mean feeding with soft. Indigestible food, that gives noth ing for the chick's gizzard to work on. We never failed to have good success with chicks after they were big enough to eat whole wheat After a while we took the hint and cracked the wheat, and they would eat thl cracked wheat the second day. The chie needs noth ing the first day. Its last act In the shell Is to store up the remainder of the yolk and white. It Is these which make Its body, bones, bill sod feath ers. In picking Its way out of the shell the chick Instinctively swallows some of the shell, and this supplies Its first grit, for Its gizzard. Bat the egg shell is Itself dissolved and furnishes bone for growth. So the first thing Is to put cracked wheat among coarse sand or very flue grarel. The chick will eat some gravel with Its food, and thus be put In a fair way to lire, tad soon learn to take care of Itself. American Cultivator. KaaotncOtd Cowa, Oaa of the in all compensations for the great Injury dona to farmers by tba taberralosls scare to that It baa tod to a weeding ant of tbo old cowa. These an always stoat sabject to baaaaw lag usually has her health I in pulped. Slid at some one of these periods. If there are any tuberculous g-rni in the air, the cow Is very liable to lake tbiiu. Youug, vigorous cows, not pampered, can resist the germs even If ttey do get some into their systems. It !i curi ous that the commission pleading for its life tells of the Increased knowl edge that the farmers have on this subject over what they hud before the commission began Its liilsirs. It Is true; they do know more ihau they did. anil so we may add do the veterinarians! It has been knowledge very dearly jHtid for. ami at the cow owners' expense ex clusively. The Wind Blew in (be Wheat. A sickle moon hung low and white, in the etlgt'of a golden tcit, With clanging bells the herd rame horiM ami mother bird on the nest Trilled lo the sung that is never snug -so wift! so uiidJ)' sweet! The whiipoorwill iu tlie marshland called, t and the wind blew in the wheat. High summer had broken to hedge-row waves with a fun in of elder blixm, By waste aiwl wayside the sweelbriur diars showed faint in t lie tender giooin. And nibbling hares crept out to play m silent velvet feet, Aa waxing iledro timed the chant, the wind blew in the w Ileal, "lieninon to ench lieanW'd head. tin- html of goMi-n grain! Ye ha!l drink of the mm, in strength and iiower, nor lark the gralcful rain. In the bursting mills, in the ocean pressed w ith the ks ls of a IhiKii fleet. Ye may rend the smile of the 1-ord of lliiM." the wind blew in the wheal. Ilarjei" Weekly. Cantirtowrr. There Is no good reason why the fanner should not grow cauliflower if he or his family like them Is-tter ihau cabbage. They require no stronger soil, no heavier manuring and no more labor until the time comes for tying up the heads, and even then the Ialr is but little, only that they need looking at almost every day to see when they are just right to tie up for blanching and when they are ready for cutting. If the garden Is where It should Ik- near the house this extra care is but a little task, to he done after siiper In a small garden. Market gardeners do not need to le told that cauliflowers are much more profitable, usually than cabbages. American Cultivator. Mnntrc on llo. John C'ruze writes to the Uural World as follows: "Have Just had some In teresting experience with mange or scab on pips. lost fourteen out of thirty-six from dosing them with every thing I heard or read about. Wns in despair until common sonse came to my aid. I figured if out that It was a parasite under the skiu, and to cure the pig the parasite must lie destroyed. So I mixed up some turpentine and coal oil, and added guile a bit of sulphur. Tltfcn, while the pigs were nt the trough, I squirted the mixture nil over them from now to fall by means of a machine oil can. Have not lost a pig since, nnd have not !een obliged to re peat the dose." Controlling Plont Lire, riant lice are among the most Im portant of the Injurious Insects. As plant lice suck their food, purls green arid similar polsobs cannot lie depend ed upon when used In the ordinary manner. Some external Irritant must be used Instead. Numerous Insecticides of tills nature are recommended. One of the most Important Is good whale oil soap. Experiments during the past season show that one pound of whale oil soap to seven gallons of water will kill plum and currant lice. The solu tion should be applied in a flue spray to the under surface of the leaves. Orange Judd Farmer. The Choke Ball. Cows will often get choked with a small potato or other article of food. The following peculiar remedy is some times employed : Take of fine-rut chew ing tobacco enough to make a ball the size of a hen's egg. Dampen w ith uii lasses so that it adheres closely. Lift np the cow's head, pull the tongue for ward and crowd the ball as far down the throat as possible. In fifteen min utes It will cause sickness and vomit ing, relaxing the muscles so that the object will probably be thrown out. Kansas Farmea r'erdlntr Steera. A cattle breeder who has experi mented In various modes of feeding states that be estimated the cost of the food according to the value of the land and the crop, and with a bunch of steers on a pasture from May to Septemlter he cleared $4.N0 an acre. As no labor was required, the steers se curing the food from the pasture, the gain was an addition to that which the pasture gives ordinarily, while the ma nure is also on Item of profit I.et Well Enoaslt Atone. Novelties In fruit growing serve to keep growers on the alert for some thing better every year, but the major ity of the novelties pass out of sight after, the first year's trial with tbem. Many af the so-called novelties are old varieties brought to the front again. In venturing upon new kinds let It be done experimentally. Never discard a satisfactory kind for another until cer tain thst a change will be of advan tage. Taste la Vaedlas C'kJchsae. After making repeated testa In feed ing, the New. York Agricultural experi ment station says: 'The ground grata ration proved considerably more profit able than tba whole grain ration with the growing chicks; nnd the same was true af capons of equal weight fern those chicks, and from others of aajaal weight aad age, fad alike before ea aoatolac. No dlffareace waa notfeed la health ar rigor af ohlcka or onpoaa fat T" ITT Coat of 4 tone Koada. In Owen County. Indiana, where Itone is abundant and very accessible, it costs t the crusher loaded into the s-agon f0 cents per cubic yard or nagon load. To lay a mile of road with this stone, nine feet wide and fight Inches deep, requires 1,173 cubic rards or wagon loads. At that rate the stone at the crusher would cost f.V-0O. Then I think 30 cents hT .ruble yard at an average haul of say ne mile, would be a fair estimate of the cost of putting It on the road, and r- ould amount to JXil.StO, which, udded Ui the coht of stone, would make f!i.'J8.4). In a former article on road building In Owen County. I said roads were being built at an average cost of f 1.4)0 iht mile. - According to the fore going estimate of the cot of puttiug the stone on the road, that would leave f-MU for grading, bridges, culverts and ewer pipes. This would seem to nie t pretty gKsl margin for profit to the :imtractor and yet In a rough country like this, where the grading Is netes tarlly heavy, and where many culverts ire needed, It may not be too great, if the contractor complies faithfully with ill the specifications Ui building the road. James N. Hill, in Indiana Farm er. Broad Iron Ifnite for Knad. The Covernment has given a vast Jeal of attention to the subject of gK.i country roads and has Indorsed the plan of using steel rails to form a track HHn which the vehicle can run. No wood Is used in the construction of the road and no cross ties for supisirts. The track consists of a simple inverted trough or channel of steel for each wheel, with a slightly raised bead on the inside to guide the wheel, each rail resting on a bed of gravel. The rails are lied together i't regular Intervals to prevent spreading. Special devices are used for holding the rails together at each end. Ths licaring, or tread, for the wheels Is eight Indies wide and the thickness of the rail is seven sixteenth of an inch. The total weight of the rails is alKjnt 100 tons to the mile, for single hack road, ami the cost of the Iron Is about f,W) per mile. The first order for rails has been given by the ofllcers of the New York agricultural experi ment station, who will make a thor ough test of the road from every pos sible mint of view. flood Koaila Abroad. Americana must feel some disap pointment, since their country has long been famous for its quickness and skill In adopting mechanical and scientific discoveries for business purpose, when they realize that Euroiwan cities are far surpassing any of ours In the use of horseless vehicles. T Tn til we have better roads and bolter street pavements we ninst submit to the hu miliation of being distanced by Ger many, France and England in one of the most Interesting and Important phases of modern progress. It Is one of the penalties we pay for makeshift highways and for the folly which per mits the use upon them of destructive ly narrow tires. Cleveland Lender. Knrlleal Japan can rH.-nlttiire. Prof. Ernest F. Fenollosa contributes to the Century "An Outline of Japanese Art," with unique and unpublished ex amples. Prof. Fenollosa says: By the year 00 of our era not only had the Japanese empress Hitiko be come the devoted patron of Buddhism, but Shotoku, the imperial prla-et him self a priest, was expounding the new religion at court, and sending to Corea for archlUvts, bronze-casters, weavers, and scholars, with whose bel he de signed tc erect and maintain Japan's flrst greai- monastery, Horlujl. .still in existence it is her finest an museum to-day, though few parts of Its archi tecture djte further buck than the end of the stgentb century. Japanese ar tists we associated with their Corean teacbert in this work of years, am) the temple'i tironze altar-piece, a trinity of small sUtuos on the Coreun model, is tald to !&ave been designed and cast by Japan'! flrst professional sculptor, rorl. But tje flrst great original Japanese statue g aa carved, nearly llfe-slzc, out f haitj, dark wood, by the prl.ieo Sho toku hjaaself. It represents the Spirit of Prasldence, seated in thoughtful al tituda Severe ami uuortmmented, wllbojt losing Chinese dignity, It adds to Ccean spirituality a more human propettlon and s more human charm of najve sweetness. Nude from the waist up, Its abstract beauty disdains, without offense, all suggestion of inus julaa detail; and, though It is almost :lumay In parts. Its presence at the nunaery ChuguJI Is so powerful ss al most to compel the obeisance of the be holder. Development of aabarban Trafflo. Ajnerlcan corporations hare been very enterprising In extending their (ins Into new districts often. It must be added, where there waa little busl aces to warrant such extenslous. With. ul auestlonlng the wisdom of those en terarlsea. It may nevertheless iw aid that there baa been, In mott Instances, I failure on the part of these corpora Uoai to secure to themselves the enor BMna local aad aabarban business which baa grown np la and around our grant dtlea. A great number of eaaea ana be cited where thts bnsineaa to handled ucceasfnUy aad profitably aa t hum Mal by the steam roads of Bo repa, establishing beyond a. (Motion tba assttabfllty af tat aarrlos that oaa be germ. However, have not aaw dlstvcataV ed tlls business, but bare artnaltjr Asf cournged It; and It Is only wltlile a few years that a proper appreciation of lta importance sud value has lieeti sfaowa by even a very few of the leading com panies. There Is, on the other hsod. an almost total lack, on the part of tbo public, of any proper appreciation of the part which the existing Hues ter minating In or pa icing through tba great citU-s should take In the develop ment of this local and suburban trac. Ou-jioration have been allowed, and even encouraged, to withdraw tbelr freight and passanger stations lo points fan her from the business centers; and. with very few exceptloua, there baa never lcen an effort, oil the part of either city or State governmcnia, to take such action aa would lead to any development In the line above sugsjeac ed. Century. WHAT IS TRIPLE EXTRACT? The Procrwi by Which the Oder af Klowrra la Obtained. Flowers that are to be used In the) manufacture of perfumes are slwaya gathered at nightfall or quite early in the morning when the dew Is upon them. Before they are gathered, how ever, receptacles are jircpared for them In the shape of large frames, over which are stretched cotton cloths well saturate! with olive oil or almond OIL The cut flowers are brought In, and ara thickly spread on a frame; then anoth er frame Is fitted over It, and thsl In turn Is well spread with (lowers; then a third frame Is fitted over the second spread of flowers, and thus the work goes on until a huge pile of flowers la prepared. This flower heap Is left for two days, at the end of which time the flowers are removed from the frames and re placed by fresh ones. The frames ara filled and emptied every two days until two week have passed. Then the Cloths are douched from the frames and placed under great pressure, snd all the oil Is pressed out of them. The oil thus obtained is heavily charged with the fragrance of the flowers, sud It Is mixed with double Its weight of very pure rectiilcd spirit and put In a vessel ciilhnl a "digester," which Is sim ply a porcelain or block-tin kettle fbst fits in another kettle. When In use the ouier vessel Is filled with !ililig water. In tin's vessel she mixture of oil snd spirits "digests" for three or four days; then, after having cooled, the spirit Is din!i into another vessel holding the same quantity of fragrant oil, snd the digesting process Is repeated. After lH'ing Hum digested three times the spirit Is found to have taken tip enoufc"S of the perfume, and II l then decanted from the oil for the third nnd last time through s. tube, one end cf which Is filled with cotton wool to nerve as a Bi ter. The fluid thus jin-pared la called "triple extract. Horse Willi an Appettuv "An old horse with an Inordinate ap petite Is one of the curiosities I found on a recent trip In Eastern Kentucky," said Colonel Andrew . YaUn.. "This ancient animal was ome ridden by a mail rider. over in West Virginia and had to go in a Jog from daylight till after dusk each day except Sunday. But after long service old Bawley was traded off to a farmer living on the Kentucky side of the mountains, and he recently pensioned the animal, put ting Bawley on the pasture and letting him have all he craved morning and evening at feeding time. An ordinary meal for Bawley is two racks of hay. thirty ears of corn, a two-gallon bucket of bran, a gallon of oats and all the stale bread and meat In the house, Bawley Is as fond of meat and bread as of hay and corn, and, in fact, will cht almost anything, not drawing the line at fruit or sweetmeats. The four legged gourmand once broke In the hog pen and emptied a large trough of slop which had Just leen poured In for the porkers. His owoer said be once heard the old horsf whining In pain, and went out and 6m1 Bawley, his Imprudence In derourjt a bucket of new-made Jam having r.perlnducvd a serious Illness, but txy horse waa read to cat the followlL morning af usuaL" Ixmlsvllle Post, Horaea ami Men KIUmi In War. In regular battles thv proportion of loss among men and kuis Is quite ckwe, and in luuid-to hutA combats of cavalry as well as In sIwto artillery en gagements for every u,.ii killed or wounded there Is also 4 Jumb warrior entltli-d to a place beside him en the roll of honor. The ligi brigade at Balnkalava rode In WK .not t;00) strong and lost 2W wen, but 4 the MO boraes 3(i0 were shot down l.y the Unsidan guns. In the fierce ctt fges of the Ger man Uhlans and culiassiers ut lon vllle, Mars la-Tour, U 170, 1,400 men and l,00i horses were ki I d and wound ed. In the fierce artUt-ry contests oa the same field 730 ija and over kflllt horses fell around lb guna. At Ora vclotte, soon after tUrs la-Tour, the artillery fighting w also terrible, and 1,300 horses were shot down around tba batteries, though thf loss of the artil leries was less than 1,000. Our Ani mal Friends. A Mai h-Prluad Coppav. Among numlsmatlata one of tba asset sought after colonial coins la tba High ly copper. They ara of severs! vari eties, and were struck In 1787 by laav twl Highly, wbo wa a physician and a blacksmith at Umnby. Conn. Ha obtained the coppar from a mine aant by and shaped tba eolns nt bla forga, Aa ratal as War, Tbo sudden chaagea of ctfmata aa countered by asldtort whan troops ara moTon rrem oaa Quarter of tbo watfJ (o naouer ara oanmatod aa li taa annual mortality af amwna A real boy does aat rare Brack far a. aa tba taw after img tank- it toa deUw aa a ha& ) 1 , kfT., rf ttto way.