WORK FOR HEALTH Exercise Absolutely Necessary to Keep the Body in Proper Physical Condition The sedentary man is like a stag nant pool, while the active man is like the mountain stream. In the stag nant pool reptiles of many descrip tions crawl and croak, and front it noisome odors rise. The mountain stream is pure and stveet and crystal clear. The body is a form through which a stream of matter flows. Exercise is the moans by which the movement of the s’ream is accelerated so that the blood is kept pure and the tissues clean. The Bible says that he that will not work shall not eat. and Na ture says the same. A man who in sists upon eating, even though he does not work, pays the penalty for his violation of natural law. The food he eats becomes poison in the tis sues; his body is not only like the stagnant pool, but it becomes even like a cesspool, and ready food for germs. Exercise increases the ability of the body to resist a disease. It encour ages every bodily function, creates appetite for food and the ability to digest when oaten. It strengthens the heart, clears the brain and enlivens the spirit. How much must one exercise? How much muscular work must one do to maintain good health? According to recent English authorities the average man should do, daily, work equiva lent to climbing a perpendicular lad der one-half mile, or twenty-six hun dred feet high. If one lived in the vicinity of Leukerbad, Switzerland, or in the neighborhood of certain deep mines, he might actually climb such a ladder. Ordinarily, some other more convenient method of exercise must be adopted. It has been determined that walking twenty feet on a level, at the rate of three miles an hour, is equivalent to lifting the body perpen dicularly the distance of one foot. Hence, one may, if he chooses, walk ten miles, instead of climbing a lad der half a mile high. Of course, hill climbing and mountain climbing will accomplish the same thing as ladder climbing, and if one chooses to do the work indoors, he may work out his task in stair climbing. Going up and down a flight of stairs ten feet high is equivalent to raising the body about twelve feet perpendicularly. Hence, one might do the required amount of work by going up and down such a flight of stairs one hundred and sev enteen times. But, first, he may do the work while standing in a corner and raising himself on his toes. In such .exercise the body is elevated about three inches. Hence, four heel raisings* would be equivalent to rais ing the body one foot, and to raise the body half a mile, or twenty-six hun dred feet, it would be necessary to rise upon the toes ten thousand four hundred times. One might easily ex ecute this movement at the rate of one a second, which would be fifteen feet a minute, or nine hundred feet an hour. At this rate the day’s task would be accomplished in about three hours. But it would be very tiresome to do the work in this way. for almost the entire amount of work would be thrown upon a single set of muscles. By placing the hands upon the back of a chair or upon a table the arms may be used to assist in lifting the body so that the movements can be executed much more easily. More or less weight can be thrown upon the j arms. By raising upon thefheels and bend- ! ing the knee3. the body may be alter nately raised and lowered through a distance of about two feet. The exe- i cution of such a movement requires } nearly four seconds, or fifteen to the minute. The body would thus be lift ed thirty times a minute, and an hour and a half would he required to do the day’s work. By placing weights upon the shoulders the rate at which the work is done would be increased, j and time shortened. But, on the whole, there is no method of accomplishing the work so good as walking, and par- 1 ticularly climbing a hill with a mod erately steep grade. Bicycle riding, if not overdone, is excellent exercise. To accomplish the same amount of work riding a bicy cle, one must, cover about four times the distance required for walking. Most city people, outside the labor ing classes, take far too little exer cise. As a result the deficient oxida tion of the body wastes and the accu mulation of uric acid and other tissue poisons after a time result in rheum atism. neurasthenia, apoplexy, prema ture old age and a great variety of disorders which may be traced more or less directly to uric acid accumula tion. Vital Statistics. Everyone who is troubled with “symptoms” will he interested in the statistics prepared by a leading life insurance company showing at what ages different diseases may be expect ed to stop human machinery. The figures deal with a period of fifty “Ours," Not “Mine." “It is mine!" “I tell you. you are mistaken; it is mine!” Divorce court. Whic'h is a terse way of putting the sad history of many a marriage dis agreement over the things mine and thine and the domestic misery that fol lows. The way to settle such a dis agreement is for both parties to say, “It is ours!” Because of the struggle for mine and thine the records of his tory are rolled in blood, nations have fallen, barriers of hatred have been raised, brother has fought brother. Envy, dissension and division have come because men have contended for that which is not theirs, but “ours.”— Minneapolis Journal. Ex-Bandit’s Son Reading Law. Jesse James, only son of the famous Missouri bandit, is reading law and taking the three years’ course* in a Kansas City school of law. This is his first term. When the course is fin ished he will practice law. The pro fessors of the law' school say that Jesse is a good student. Much of his timers spent'in reading In the law library in the county courthouse. three years—1815-1S9S—during which time 46,525 ceaths passed under re view. They, of course, tell nothing of individual cases, but of the average or typical cases they reveal much. Skilful physicians are connected with the large life insurance offices, to examine into the physical condition of applicants for insurance, and to make a careful investigation of the causes of death in cases of policy hold ers. The records of the company in ques tion show that the chances are about six to four that consumption will car ry off its victims before the age of forty-five. Fifty-nine per cent of suf ferers from this disease die before they reach this age. Above sixty, the per cent of cases is only twelve. In general diseases, such as small pox, diphtheria, measles, etc., the chances do not differ widely. Thirty per cent of the deaths from these dis eases occur under the age of forty five; 36 per cent, between forty-five and sixty; 34 per cent, above sixty. Apoplexy, softening of the brain and paralysis chiefly afflict elderly people, 55 per cent of the deaths from these causes occurring above sixty, and only 12 per cent below forty-five. The probabilities are that sufferers from other nervous diseases will not reach the age of sixty, only 27 per cent of deaths from these causes oc curring after that age. Heart disease afflicts principally the elderly and middle aged, only 11 per cent of deaths from this cause occurring before forty-five years of age. Although pneumonia has been called "the old man’s disease,” the chances are sixty-four to thirty-six against one dying of this disease after the age of sixty. Twenty-nine per cent of the deaths from pneumonia occur under forty-five, 35 per cent between forty five and sixty, and but 36 per cent above sixty. Other respiratory dis eases, such as bronchitis, pleurisy, etc., grant a little longer lease of life. Derangements of the digestive sys tem do not glean from the aged a very large number of victims, the chances being more than two to one against those so afflicted reaching the age of sixty. Thirty per cent of the deaths from this class of diseases oc cur under the age of forty-five; 38 per cent, between forty-five and six ty; 32 per cent, above sixty. Victims of Bright’s disease have a fair chance of reaching sixty, only 16 in 100 dying of this disease before forty-five. Complaints classified as "genito urinary” are old-age diseases, 77 per cent of the deaths from such cases oc curring at ages above sixty. Fifty per cent of the deaths from violent causes occur under forty-five. Fully 68 per cent of the typhoid fe ver deaths occur under forty-five, and only 9 per cent at ages higher than sixty. HEALTHFUL RECIPES. »* Salad Sandwiches.—Boil three eggs ten minutes; drop in cold water two minutes; peel, and while still warm, mash fine with a silver fork, -work in a tablespoonfu! of thick cream, two teaspocnfuls of lemon juice, salt to taste ar.d a little watercress chopped fine. After cutting off the crust, but ter sparingly the end of a square loaf of good Graham bread; then, with a thin, sharp knife, cut as thin a slice as possible. Butter and cut until you have slices to make the required num ber of sandwiches. Spread a buttered slice with egg mixture, place over it a lettuce leaf washed and dried, then another flic; and press well together Trim ti e edges, removing tough crust; cut across twice diagonally, and ar range the triangles on lettuce leaves on a wooden bread plate. Toasted Granose Flakes With Nuts and Fruit Juice.—Toast the flakes in ti e o' vt delica'ely, but enough tc crisp *ht-.n well; sprinkle over them a cupful of ground p-'can or othei nuts, dust lightly with sugar and serve with fruit juice. Baked Bananas—Beat two eggs and a cup and a half of water together. Peel one dozen bananas, dip in egg batter, roll in granola or bread crumbs; repeat. Place in oiled pan. i hake twenty minutes in hot oven ! Serve with— Orange Sauce—Mix thoroughly half a eup of sugar and a rounded table ; spoonful of cornstarch. Then add, in the following order, a tablespoonful of lemon juice, the juice of one orange, a little of the rind, thrpe quar ters of a cup of boiling water. Cook in ten minutes in double boiler, stir ring constantly. Remove from fire, whip in the whites of two eggs beaten j stiff. Nut Sponge Cake—T-rgredients: S.x j eggs. 1 cup flour. 1 cup sugar. 2 table I spoonfuls lemon juice, three-fourths cup chopped walnuts. Damages for Lessened “Capacity.’’ Louis Gurber. a Philadelphia musi cian. sued a street railway company tor injuries sustained through the de railing of a car. He wanted $3,(00 On the stand he declared that previ ous to his injuries he was able to drink fifty or sixty glasses of beer a day. but. that now the best he can dc is less than twenty. The court inquir ea gravely: “Would that be claimed as an element of damage” Gurber’s ! counsel thought it ought to be,.and ap | parentl.v the'jury thought s\ too. for the plaintiff was given a verdict of $1,000 on account of his reduced ca pacity. Town Clerk for Half a Century. Ira N. Goddard has been town clerk of Millbury, Mass., for fifty-two years ami is now the unanimous choice of the Republican caucus for another term. At the election la=t November he was chosen to represent his district in the state assembly. Mr. Goddard if 75 years old. but looks fully fifteen years younger. He and his wife will celebrate their golden wedding this year. RELIGIOUS SOLEMNITY IN UPPER LOMBARDY This solemnity, peculiar to the Sab bia Valley, takes the form of a proces sion preceded by weping women with disheveled hair hanging over their shoulders. They are intended to rep resent grief and pain and their pray ers are offered on behalf of all the sufferers and mourners who on bend ed knee line their passage. The idea i is that the plaints and prayers of the weepers are more acceptable to the departed than those of the real mourners themselves, who, on the day of the procession, pay a pious visit to the cemeteries. NOW JOHN STAYS HOME. And All Because of an Innocent Re mark of His Wife. Less than two years after his mar riage Gayman began to overlook his promises to stay away from the club, after he reached home at night. At first he moved cautiously, pleading a business appointment there and prom ising to be back in an hour. Soon that promise began to slip his mind, and he came home at all hours. He did not even give an excuse for going. Mrs. Gayman did not rush home to her mother. She did not appeal to his another. She played her own game. One evening, when Gayman showed no inclination to leave the house she said: “John, dear, you'll be late at the club.” “How do you know I’m going?" he asked. "Not going? Oh."—affecting intense confusion—“it would be most awk ward. that is—but of course you're going.” “Well,” he replied, “I must just run around, for I have an appoint ment. But I shall be back in two hours.” He was back in one hour, and seem ed astonished to find his wife alone, reading. He was glum all the even ing. showing frequent disposition to go out again. But the same game has worked ever since. Gave Up Waiting. A young man who was anxious to secure a job as a railroad br'akeman wandered into one of the local yards the other day and came across a bunch of railroad men who were sit ting in a shanty. He made known his ambition and one of the men. who is quite a joker. asked him a few fool ish questions. The youth answered them and then asked: "How long before I'll be likely to get a job?” “Sit down and wait.” said the joker. "There's ten or fifteen men killed here every day and you can't tell how soon w* will need you.” The young man's ambition seemed to fade, and he remembered that he had an engagement elsewhere.—Al bany Journal. At the Mission. Fair Catechist—How many Crea tors were there? Will the little boy on the aisle please answer? Young Heathen—Five. Fair Catechist—How many? Young Heathen (nervously)—Four. Fair Catechist (reproachfully)— What? Young Heathen (desperately)— Three, then. Fair Catechist (angrily)—What? Young Heathen (edging toward his hat)—Two. (And he fled.) “Lest” Great Pianist. Paderewski, the pianist, got lost in Providence the other afternoon and for a time his manager was on the ragged edge of a fit. The hirsuite virtuoso's private car was sidetracked at a particularly secluded spot and the driver of his carriage, being a comparative stranger, mistook the way and drove in the wrong direction. Meanwhile a large and fashionable audience has assembled and was be coming impatient. In desperation the unhappy manager was about to send out a corps of town criers, when the auburn-haired Russian appeareAm the stage. • * An Anecdote of Whittier. A young lady teacher, who was a great favorite with the poet Whittier, had recently married. Meeting the young husband one day, Mr. Whittier remarked: “John, thee ought to be on the school board.” Th* young man, somewhat sur prised, said: “Why, Mr. Whittier, what makes you think so?” “Because,” was the reply, “thee is sach a good judge of schoolma’ams.” Old Cypresses Gone. A sad piece of news for the lovers of old Rome is publicly announced. The last but one of the five immense cypresses planted over 400 years ago bv Michael Angelo Bucnarotti in the beautiful cloister of Santa degli An geli, was blown down and broken to pieces during a recent great rain storm. The sole remaining one of this picturesque and famous clump is also much damaged, and must soon fall, too. The dear Carthusian monas tery behind the church was taken by the Italian government, the monks were dispersed, and the place turned into a hideous museum of profane dig nitaries discovered during recent ex cavations in and around the city. With almost incredible vandalism the fine old well and fountain in the middle of the Michaelangelesque cloister were clumsily removed, and in doing so the roots of the overshadowing cyp ress tiees were much injured. They at once began to decay and fall and were carried oft for firewood. Cosmopolitan New York. A young Western dentist who is as sistant to a dental surgeon uptown had the cosmopolitanism of New York thrust forcibly upon him the other day, says a newspaper of that city* An elderly Greek, accompanied by hi" young son, came into the office to have some work cone. The youngster spoke a few words in English which the dentist took to mean that the father would take the chair first. The dentist examined the old man’s mouth and then looked at him help lessly. lie wanted to ask him wheth er he wanted bridge work or plate, but he could not make himself under stood. Knowing that most foreigners speak more than one language he called iu the other dentist, who speaks French. In English he told his pro fessional brother what was to be done; in French the man translated it to the boy, who in turn told his father in Greek. The reply came back by the same route. Good Advice in Any Language. Tennyson once attended a dinner where G. L. Craik proposed “The Ladies.” In doirg so he recalled the cynical advice given by a brother Scot to his children: “Tak my ad vice and dinna marry for siller. You can borrow cheaper.” Some time later Tennyson, at his own table, repeated Mr. Craik’s story, but expressed the idea without attempting dialect. His son Hallan remarked: “Surely, fath er. Craik did not use those words.” “No. he did not. But the Craik is a Scotchman and I am afraid to venture on repeating him exactly. However, it’s almost as good in English as in Scotch and it's tremendously true in both.” First Edition of^'Ben Hur.” Inquiries have reached the Harpers concerning the binding of the first ed tion of “Ben Hur.” which appeared in 1880. The first edition was issued in a series which the Harpers were tl*on publishing. It was in 16mo form, bound in cadet-blue cloth and decora ted with clusters of flowers in red, blue and green on the front cover and a vase of flowers in the same colors on the back. The lettering on the cover is black. Cremation Grows in Favor. Statistics for the German empire show a further increase in the num ber of cremations, there having been cremated 1,381 bodies in 1904 against 1,074 bodies in 1903, an increase of 28 per cent and double the number cremated in 1901. Automobile Speedway. A project is under consideration to build a twenty-mile automobile speed way, from sixty to one hundred feet wide, in Mercer county. New Jersey. It is reported that options on the nec essary Dropert%’ have been obtained. LAID IT TO THE CELLAR. Uncle Recognized Superiority of His Neighbor’s “Cider.” Uncle George Blodgett was a farm er near a summer resort in New Hampshire. He was a teetotaler and an uncompromising prohibitionist. He raised a good many apples, and made cider, and sold it strictly to make vinegar. “Bill” Small ran a hotel nearby, and he bought a barrel of cider from Uncle Geocge in the fall of the year. One day in the .following spring Uncle George was at “Bilks” hotel. “Uncle George,” said Bill, “that bar rel of cider I had of you last fall doesn't turn into vinegar worth a cent, but it is the slickest cider you ever put inside of your frtfce, and I want you to try it.” “Bill” went into the cellar, and, thinking to have a little fun with UncLe George, instead of drawing a glass of cider, drew a glass of Eng lish ale, blew the froth from it, and took it up to Uncle George. “Try that,” he said, “and if you don't say it is about the smoothest stuff that ever passed vonr lips I’ll give in.” Uncle George looked at it,* touched his lips to it, sipped a little, and then drank the whole contents of the glass without stopping, set the glass down and Remarked: “I beats all what a difference there is in cellars in keep ing cider,” and walked out. Value of Teaching Obedience. Is there any reason why our schools should limit themselves simply to put ting children through a certain course, of study? We think not. In our opin ion. if the schools fail in discipline, if j they fail in developing a spirit of obedience, they fail in discharging their most vital function and at the most vital point. And it seems to us that this taiiure is one for which the schools may very justly be held re sponsible. For the very theory on\ which the state proceeds in this mat-; ter of public education is that through education the children will be prop erly trained along the line of good citizenship. But they cannot be good j citizens unless they learn to be obedi ent to law. In some way, therefore, the schools must inculcate this obedi ence.—Indianapolis News. Grandma’s Girls and Boys. I wish—I wish (said Grandma Gray') That little hoys were always good. That little girls so fond of play. Would help their mothers when they should. I wl«h all boys would be polite. " And all the little girls were neat. That all would try to do the right. And all had tempers that were sweet. How very pleasant life would be If every wish of mine came true! It can he done, you must agree— And all dependif^ny dears..on you! —Dew Drops. He Got the Job. The Hon. Frank Jones once needed a general man on his farm, outside of Portsmouth, and among those who ap plied for the place was an Irishman. After giving his name, etc., Mr. Jones asked him how long he had worked for his last employer, who was also a farmer, and why he left. “Well.'’ said the man, “after I was there a while the grub was very bad, and one day an ould hog he had died, so we had to ate It. Then, agin, one of his sheep got drowned in a bog. We ate that, too. But one mornin’, two months afther, his ould mother in-law died. Then I thought it time to lave.” Talk from Omaha to Boston. The longest distance over which speech is regularly transmitted is be tween Boston and Omaha, 1,600 miles A business house in the Western city talks daily with its representative in Boston. The human voice is trans mitted between those distant points on a copper wire in less time than it would take it to cross an ordinary room without electrical propulsion. Treating Fruit Trees Gnawed by Mice or Rabbits. The winter of 1903-04 was fearfully cold and the snow deep. The food of the rabbits was scarce and they gnaw ed the bark from some of our young apple trees. Six of them were badly girdled in this way. To pull out the young, thrifty trees would have been quite a loss. So 1 applied an effective remedy, which is within the reach of all. « In spring as soon as the orchard ground is dry enough, fill an old pail three-fourths full with fresh cattle droppings; with a wooden paddle mix up the manure in the pail, adding wa ter to it as needed until it is of the consistency of mortar. Apply the pre pared paste to the eaten parts of the trees, putting it on as thick as it will stick. It should be not less than an inch thick. Now wrap all the parts well with old cloths and tie with strings. There is no danger of putting too many cloths for they help retain the moisture around the wounded parts during the growing season. Should the trunks be entirely girdled, which checks the flow of sap. cut scions of last year's growth of wood loug enough so you can enter them at least one inch under the bark of the tree at the upper and lower extremities of the wounded part. The ends of the scions should be shaved down so that they will wedge in snug ly under the hark. According to the size of the tree, fit from two to four of these on opposite sides of the trunk, then cover the entire work with a coat of manure paste and wrap with rags. If this has been properly done the sap will circulate through the scions, and in this way the tree will be saved. It is said that this treatment is not like ly to succeed with the plum and cher ry tree, but it is fairly successful with the pear and apple. I tried it with one tree that was entirely girdled, but was not successful for the top of the tree died. A sprout grew a little way from the ground. I did not dis turb this when sawing off the tree, and it made a growth of some three feet during the season. If the trees are two inches or more in diameter and the entire trunks are girdled clear through the bark to the hard wood of the tree, it is best to null or grub them out and plant oth ers. \Vith the exception of the one which was entirely girdled, all trees that I treated in this way last spring showed by their luxuriant growth that they were doing as well as the young trees which had not been damaged. I know from experience that had the wounded parts of the trees not been covered the trees would have died. I had some difficulty in getting the ma nure paste to stick to the trunk when applying it with a paddle, so used my hands. Mice will not gnaw' trees as deeply as rabbits. Usually only the top lay ers of the bark will be wounded, but treatment is just as necessary as for j those damaged by rabbits. If some should object to the manure paste remedy let them try this: Take five or six parts of resin and two parts of beeswax. Melt this and while hot add one part of tallow. Try a coat of this on a green stick, exposing five minutes to the cold air. If it is too hard and cracks easily, add a little more tallow. With a swab apply a coat of this wax over the wounded parts. While applying, the wax shouid .be kept warm, but not too hot or it will burn the wood or bark.—Fred ' Strohschein, Winnebago Co., Wis., in Farmers' Review. Wind and Raspberries. A grower says raspberries do best where they have the protection of a wind-break. The wind breaks the canes when it has a full sweep. We have noticed that in a wild state rasp berries are found in the vicinity of trees especially in clearings, where there is a partial shade from trees still standing. All that have picked wild raspberries have noticed the in creased size of the berries where there is partial shade. Alfalfa Ground. Ground on which to plant alfalfa : should be carefully prepared as early in ;he spring as convenient, though the seed in the latitude of northern Illinois should not be put into the ! ground before the early part of May. The plowing should be deep and this ! should be followed by the roller, tin ! less the ground is a clay loam or clay ; The seed should be sowed early enough to give it the benefit of the spring rains. Irrigation and Gardening. Tha use of extra water in the garden is coming into use in the humid states as well as in the arid states. Wher ever a stream can be turned or a pump installed with some cheap force to work it. the use of water in the garden is desirable. A little water at the right time is worth more than an abundance of water when it is not needed. The water is an assurance that the orop will not fail on account of drouth. The Kitchen garden should be planned at once, so the work of plant ing can be pushed as soon as the ground is dry enough. When work in the field? begins, the garden will re ceive scant attention. The man that intends to go into the growing of peaches must determine to do a vast amount of hard work in a good many directions. If he is not willing to do this he had better save his money. Barren Stalks of Corn. Reason for barrenness in corn stalks is not .really known. It has been as sumed that some corn seed had in it the tendency to produce stalks with out ears, but that has been a guess. We have yet to be convinced that it is a good guess. One farmer tells us that a certain corn field bore a very large per cent of stalks one year, when growth conditions were not good, while the next year the same field planted to seed from the crop of the preceding year bore almost all fertile stalks. The second season was a good growing season. I IVET STOCK Use of the Brush and Currycomb. Some farmers have no use for these two articles, but I would find it hard to get along without t£em. I have heard it said that a good currying and brushing is worth two quarts of oats. This may be a little exaggerated, but I had rather see a man have this idea .than the idea that there is no profit or use in it. A good currying will keep the horse on less feed. I do not say that it will save two quarts of oats a day, buf I do say that it will pay well for the time spent in doing the work. I have heard men say that they had no time to waste in currying their horses and that it might pay the men who raised fine horses. Does it not pay the farmer to raise good horses? It surely does. The liberal use of these tools pays the practical farmer better than it does the fancy horse trainer, for the reason that if a farmer is not rich and loses a horse he feels the effect of it more than the rich man who may have money ip. the bank with which to buy another. So it pays the poor farmer to give his horses the best of care and keep them in a healthy con dition. He has just as much time to do it as the man who makes a busi ness of training horses and it will pay him just as well. A horse should be curried daily, es pecially when working hard. Use just enough time to put him in the right shape, whether it takes five minutes or half an hour. Don’t stop until you have all the dried sweat off. If this is allowed to form a coat on the hair it will stop the pores and keep the im purities inside. Such conditions are not healthy for the horse and will cause some ailment sooner or later. It will pay to use the brush and comb for looks alone, but looks is only a small part. How does it look tovjiave manure sticking all over a horse and why wouldn’t it pay to use the brush for a few minutes? Don’t think it a waste of time, for it will kdfep them in better flesh and make them able to do more work. This is my practice, and I could not be persuaded to discontinue their use. I do not say that I keep my horses better than other people, but I know that they would be worse if I omitted the daily use of the brush and comb. I know that it pays me and do not see why it should not pay all others who keep horses. A good currying is the same to a horse that a bath is to a man, and how would a man feel if he worked day after day and never washed? How long would he feel like working? Try it once for a while. A well-kept horse will do lots of work for a man in a year and should have the best of keeping in return. The horse is a most faithful animal, hut the general way of keeping horses would not indicate that their owners appreciated it. It is nothing less than sin the way many horses are kept and some owners should not be allowed tc possess horses. But we have no pow er to prevent their owning horses. Al* we can do is to advocate better care for the horse.—E. J. Waterstripe. Shel by Co., Mo., in Farmers’ Iteview. Walls of Stables. The problem of what material tc use in the construction of stables Is one that confronts the farmer tha' is about to build a stable that he wants to be a permanent edifice There is some advantage in building stable v. alls of stone or brick, or ever gravel, but usually that advantage i' more than compensated for by the increase in the cost. Wood is without doubt the warmes' material to use, especially if there can be an air space between twe thicknesses of the wood. The therma permeability of wood is about 100 tc about 400 of stone, cement and the like. Brick also permits the trans mission of heat quite readily and most serviceable when there is an aii space between two layers of brick Dead air lias a thermal permeability of about 50, which gives it double the value of yvood as a protection agains* cold. All materials like stone have the advantage of being non-combustible but this is not a very great factor as most of the fires in barns are seri’ou' because of the burning of the contend ot the barns rather than of the struc tures ihcmselves, and stone walls wil insidT' 6111 the C°mbustion of dry haj The question of the material out 0 yvh.ch the walls are to be constructed must be settled by the cheapness an abundance of certain materials in any one neighborhood. The writer know of one locality where the farmerfl built their barns largely out of i a'f flers left by the gl.cter,1 They ' ™ ,nte t!lP cheapest and best materb? ? that locality. materia, ir The Stable Floor. The floor cf the stable harT, is one of the very tZL ! things that must he niportanl when a new barn is' beh^61'60 ed. The floor must be smooth ereCt to he easily cleaned and must en°u^ so smooth as to he kH™ 11 bt not belj"n.l fhe coXV'ffc," 11 “ mal3 ft must be water JL?™ “n‘ vent the leaching awav 7,1 l° pre portions of the manure It Bible to keep a floor c,ea ‘Si.l“po.s saturated with urine. This f, J* U Is objection to wooden floors •,nC)Sreal great argument in fav0r d thf floors. a'or °* cemem On our high-priced land* no longer be kept for the V s can raising a calf out of whim?Urp°8e of beef. It costs ettoU of «'0O to keep a cow and the calf *1° a year that at the outset win h»mthat Costs profit on his development^ if ^ake a to be marketed at the „ri f he ha8 prevailing for beef. prIce usually We have too few fnnj ,p the United StateB A°fttUe herds century of agitation of ^7, hal' a methods and the Important breedin? tudes of blooded catUe ?vi muIti' fore this have had aimJ Shou,d he number of herds „ot?d for"8 * lar« celleace In all the memhl 6real «• herds. members of the