Loup City Northwestern J. W. BURLEIGH, Publisher. LOUP CITY, - - - NEBRASKA. Anti-Dog League. Although the dog is generally ac cepted as being the truest friend of the human race, he has his enemies who are loyal to their hatred. An ef fort of these people to get together and give force and direction to their antipathy has just begun, having its origin with Ambrose Bierce, the es sayist and satirist on the follies and foibies of both canines and humans. Mr. Bierce, says the New York Press has all his lifetime been an enemy of the dog and has given a great deal of attention to projects for his re moval from the face of the earth. In the prospectus of the Anti-Dog League it is set forth “that he is the only one of our domestic animals whose existence is due altogether to hered ity. ne is an anachronism, a sur vival, a heritage of shame. He is ad dicted to more unmentionable habits 'than the number of hairs on his tail( and in point of inutility he dominates the situation like a brick ship in a fishing fleet. True, he has enough in telligence to fawn upon his master (and his master enough to be proud of the attention), but that is a matter of thrift and signifies no superiority to the courtier in his blindness. As to the creature’s deeds of devotion and fidelity to those whom he deems it inexpedient to chew, they are mostly narrated by those who have not in' mind the example of little George Washington. “Let the good work now' begun go on until the entire plague of besetters, disappoin ers, gravy hounds, sirloiners, manglers, bedrag glers, spick-and-spanieis, e»rly fra grants, skyoodles, insulters, dalmna tions, great scots and miscellaneous afflictions are a memory and a tradi tion of the unsaintly past.” The or ganization of the Anti-Dog League society is hampered by the fact that its prospective members live at such long intervals from each other that they are aimost unable to assemble. However, an organization of dog haters was effected in Washington re cently, which was able to elect a per manent chairman and a correspond ing secretary. Lntil a more numer ous gathering of delegates is arranged other offices of the organization re main vacant for lack of persons to fill them. Women and matrimony. Those who keep a close watch on women's ways profess to see a de cided faliiug off in enthusiasm among the fair sex concerning the right and opportunity to cook and t e increasing fields in which they may tin cl a chance to earn money cr gain a livelihood. “Women are beginning to find out,” says a close student of this burning question, “that work is work, after ml, and that competition grows fiercer all the time. Young women who come from the country districts with high hopes of independence and ideals about living their own life un trammeled by old traditions soon learn that it is a struggle harder than any they might encounter at home. Then their views change and they begin to think much better of matrimony as a vocation than they did before. It w.ll be sonic time before this new feeling will have much weight in lessening the present rush of women into ail avenues of labor, but there will be an effort in time and the rush will sub side. The shadow of independence rather than the substance is all that many women gain, and this is fc:.ng slowly realized.’’ Ifriuas Perking Up. These days of volcanoes and earth quakes the Kansan looks at his occa sional flood and sometimes droughts and almost forgotten grasshoppers with a commendable toleration. The season may go dry or it may come wet; there nuiy be a little hollow born" among the cattle and a few chinch bugs in the wheat; the wind may blow the title to the laud over in thr ner.t county now and then or droughts may shrivel the coupons on the moit gages once in awhile, but af'er ail Kansas is a good place to live in Even though the cyclone may gallop along and remove a few of the Kan sas farmers’ goods and chattels, me wind brings him enough of Ills neigh bors’ household goods on the low er 80 across the creek to start house keeping. And always, says the Em poria Gazette, there is a chance to slide into the ’fraid hole and let Lae winds blow and ihe storms nge. Kut an earthquake turns the 'fraid hole wrong side out and shakes its occu pants clown on thy under side of it. Kansas is a mighty safe place for a man to live in. A genius of fertile imagination re siding in ChilUeoihe, O., says that during a landslide on Higgins hill the other night an old stone well, 4u feet deep, containing 15 feet of water, slid down the hill 22 feet and remained intact. An old windlass, at the top * was not disturbed nor was the water in the well made roily. Wouldn't that jar your credulity? The London Express asks the ques tion apropos of earthquakes, etc.; “Is the earth becoming unsafe?’’ WhaLs the answer? Easterners generally do not realize the size of the state of California. Many, no doubt, will be surprised to learn that Los Angeles—founded by the Spaniards in 1781 and named “La Puebla ue Nuestra Senora la Reina de Los Angeles” (City of Our Lady the Queen of the Angels)—is 482 miles from San Francisco. Before we can have absolutely pho netic spelling all over the United -States we shall all have to pronounce alike. THE FUSSING SHOW II NEW VORK Ths Gaikwar Came, Saw and Con quered—Day of the Dog—Many Italians in Farm Colony. NEW YORK.—Seldom has a foreign prince made a better impression in the metropolis than that made by his highness, the Gaikwar oi Barvoda. This potentate trom India was knowD to be in the very highest rank of princess; he was known to he enormously rich; he was known to own $20,000,000 in jewels alone, to have solid gold cannons to protect his private quarters in the great Barvoda palace, and a chariot overlaid with solid gold for his queen to ride in. But what manner of man he was New York did not know. The Gaikwar came, he saw and he has con quered. New York likes him. He is not bad looking, lie speaks good English. He does not wear his $5i)0.000 pearl necklace, hut just plain clothes. He is earnest and democratic He goes to places where he will meet peop.e He want.; to Know auoui an Auiuiu.au euuuv tion;„ n> t, ns. He believes in republics and isn't sure that India wouldn't inak. n m 1 i' : ;>>.ic o tiie j• ople were ready tor it. IP r, . r the Gaiawar's wife, her highness the Maharani, has made l hit. She i a simple, sweet little woman, very gracious, ready and charming I saw her tiie other day at a studio reception. She dots all iue democratic things she would not dare do in India, wherf her life is circumscribed by the-wails of a lovely garden. New York cannot dazzle these orientalists. Nothing in this country cat look gorgeous to the owner of a palace like that of the Gaikwar’s at Barvod?, though the skyscrapers, bless them' do help out a little. They always servt to astonish the foreigners when everything else fails. SOCIETY DOGS AND DOG DOCTORS. i ins nas ueen me worn ui me »uuw uj mv Ladies’ Kennel association at Hempstead, anc society has had a great out-of-door diversion on the eve of the flitting season. Mrs. ’’Jimmy’ Kenochan, the famous huntress, has been a leading spirit In this enterprise. Altogethe* this may be marked as distinctively a smart set function and the outdoor dog show is certaii to grow in popularity each year. Speaking of society dogs, it is no longei considered extraordinary that canine hospitals should flourish, or that very able veterinaries should devote their life to dog doctoring. Tht other day I met a well-known veterinary whc remarked that he was very tired. "I was up all night,” he said, "at a birth.” "A birth?” I queried. "Yes, a greyhound. Mother and children are doing very The mother was the petted darling of one of the richest and most fash tonable households in millionaires’ row. This doctor of dogs is a hard-worked, high-priced practitioner. His offices are fitted up as elegantly as those of any fashionable doctor. He has a fine operating table, with all the latest scientific appointments—and he ha: many bites. In fact the bites are the one drawback to his career. Man; weeks in the Pasteur institute have rather cut into his fine income. A CITY FARWC NOVELTY INTERESTS NEW YORK. tfanon nail s notion uiai uig pieces ui m* used laud within tlie city, and often well within the city limits, should not lie in waste, has re suited in something practical. A big piece of Astor land in the upper par’ of the town was turned over to the reformers divided into half-acre sections, and little farm; are springing up in an astonishing way. Around the old Bank homestead on thf Astor estate are clustered a curious group oi city farmers to whom the concessions wen made at a merely nominal rental. The work has been carried on under the supervision of H. V. Brute, an energetic young New Yorker who lias carried out his difficult task with dis cretion. Many nationalities aro represented in thf I -v - -_j colony. Li!■ hi liana ueiug sLrougiy 10 tut* ilh I.t was a sentimental experiment, much ridiculed at the outset, but it i.' already a success, a success of which the average New Yorker as yet know: nothing at all. This is one of the characteristics of New York—its ignorance of itself The town has grown so amazingly on the suburban side ‘.hat more than eve one-half doesn’t know how the other half lives. Sometimes it seems as i tho one-half didn't care, until the settlement workers as reformers push for ward with some new radicalism that, really counts. A reform that is to mean something is the abolition many of the slum sections lay the creation of parks. Chinatown is to go in this way. San Francisco needed an earthquake to get rid of hers. New York is taking tin simple expedient of a park. “FIFEAK" BETEDING TO KISE. aiOKT vr.uaute ot an iann m now torn prop ably is that at Broadway an.t Wall street, and it is just here, across the way from Trinity church that the newest and queer st skyscraper is t< be built. The owners of the ground eall them selves the "No. 1 Wail Street Corporation,” ant No. 1, Wall s reet now holds a low. old-fash ioned building _'> feet wide. For a long time i lias been Known from other sales that this lane is worth over fCOO a square foot—square foot not running foot—and various rumors as to sky scraper plans have ehcoed in the Street fo: years. Now the tower is actually to rise. Twenty five by forty will be the ground dimensions o the building, its height will be "45 feet—18 stories. This is not a record height, of course but the building will he the tallest for its grounc size in New York. it w in nave anotner peculiarity, i nave seen tne aretntoct s plans and they show but one room to the floor—a big room upon which tha three eleva tors open directly. Naturally this one room will be partitioned variously on each floor. The building will be of the newest steel construction anti trimmed with statuary bronze. 1 fancy every inch of space in it is already rented . A really sensational announcement is that of a Itm-story building to be built on Broadway not far from Wall street. Probably this will come so-mt day, but this announcements looks like the prophecy of a concrete company Concrete, by the why, is the coming medium—it is already here. Steel am. concrete—this is the combination, though 1 believe even concrete is no earthquake proof. as the steel is. IF THERE WERE WOlttEN POLICE it was only a Joke, of course—though this is denied—that so many citizens of Bayonne should sign a petition asking for the appoint ment of women policemen, lust the proposition has occasioned a good deal of talk. The proposition is not entirely new. Every time local conditions become unbearable some body suggests ||iat if women hail the manage* ment of things they would be different. Womer. police have been seriously and not merely sar eastically proposed in many parts of the west. In various quarters committees have been or ganized. But they have not been real police Nothing but a •'uniformed force" will answer to the popular craving. .Mayor Garvin, of Bayonne, has not yet ac tivelv aided the policewomen idea. Mrs. Julir, G itizier, the leader of th - movement, is quoted a.s ug m«u so iar as imuurras are concerned tnere need lie no obstacle Divided skirts and a “becoming'1 hat are quite possible—not merely a stag* policewoman idea, but a practical one. The difficulty greater than that of clothes, the difficulty of a division o! labor between the policeman anil the policewomen, is said not to be impossi ble. Women’s ciubs have taken up the question by declaring that an auxiliarj police force of women is quite possible with a view to improving municipa housekeeping. Women police need not be asked to arrest 300-pound men whi are violent—though they would expect to tap spitters on the shoulder am order them to the station—but they would report or arrest statute violators o' many kinds, and in various ways help keep city streets decent. One reformer suggests that women police could in no way be more serv Iceable than in looking after the men policemen. They need a lot of watching OWEN LANGDON. OATH IN THE ISLE OF MAN. The judicial oath in the Isle of Man Is so quaint us to deserve printing. It runs thus: “By this book and the holj contents thereof, and by the wonderful works that God hath miraculously wrought in heaven above and in the earth beneath in six days and seven nights, I do swear that I will, without respect of favor or friendship, love or gain, consanguinity or affinity, envy or malice, execute the laws of this isle justly between our sovereign lord the king and his subjects within this isle, betwixt party and party, as indifferent ly as the herring's backbone doth lit in the midst of the fish.” Valuable Knowledge. "You have been wonderfully success ful in evading the responsibility fot your country's boycott against Ameri can goods.” “Yes,” answered Mr. Li Lo, the emi nent Chinese statesman. "I teamen two very valuable things while study ing civilized life at Washington, thd two-step and the siae-step.”—Washing ton Star. CONQUERING SQUASH BUG. Best Methods of Protecting the Vines from the Ravages of This Pest. After the squashes, cucumbers and melons are well started the squasn bug makes its appearance. Those who have a garden know the flat, rusty black creature with its vile odor. In spring or early summer the eggs are laid on the leaves and stems of plants, sometimes singly, but usually in groups of from 12 to 50. They are brownish-yellow and easily found. Fortunately the insect confines its at tention almost entirely to cucurbi- \ laceous plants. As the bugs grow they scatter over j the leaves, molting five times before they reach maturity. Naturally the j plaut is weakened by such attentions. I k leaf that has nourished many bugs will turn yellow, and if the pests are numerous enough the whole plant may be killed. It is sometimes claimed that the bug stings the leaf and kills It, but it would be more to the point to say that the leaf is tapped and its life-blood sucked out. In autumn the adult bug crawls under a board, stone jr rubbish and remains till spring. The Nympha may be killed by a spray of kerosene emulsion or tobacco water, as their bodies are soft and unprotected. But the old bugs are proof against this kind of treatment. Thfii hard-shelled backs protect them. The most practicable remedy thus far seems to be hand picking, says the Orange Judd Farmer. It should begin with the first bug and be repeated at short intervals. The best time for it is in the morning while it is cool and the bugs sluggish. A convenient way is to drop the bugs into a can containing water witn a little kerosene. The bugs will,swim in clear water, but the film of oil on the surface is sure death. Boards or shingles placed on the ground are an assistance in gathering the bugs. They will seek these shelters in mid-aftfer nocn and remain dormant till it is warm in the morning, when they can easily be gathered. Crushing the eggs tn the leaves is a prevent ive measure that should not be neglected. So far as my experience goes, the best way to guard agaiust, the bug i* to plant the vines among potatoes. It has rarely fount! them there . I have : gr.own good crops of squashes in this j way and found few or none of the in serts, though in other places they were numerous. HAY DOORS IN EARN. Placing Tracks for Them on an In cline Will Facilitate Open ing Them. There has been great trouble in find ing a suitable method of hanging doors for unloading bay with fork or slings from the outside of building. The GOOD HAY BARN DOOR, method described by my diagram we think the very best. Place your track j on an incline with the roof, and put j on rollers on the doors at the same in- I clinc. They will open very easily, i says Rural New Yorker, an l shut hard, bat they can easily be managed from ' Inside. _ MUZZLE FOR CORN PLOWING Necessary Protection When Cultivat ing the Growing Crop. This wire muzzle is very easy to make and is much better than the I [nail muzzle. For j cultivating corn or drilling wheat in corn muzzling is always neces sary, says a cot- | respondent of the Farm and Home, [ and I have made muzzles out of smooth wire, like cut, which have j proved first class. They do not scratch the moss of the horses or trouble their breathing as do cloth bags, etc. JOTTINGS. Try to harrow as soon after plow ing us possible. Two good stalks of corn in a hill is the best number. An even stand of three stalks of corn ; to the hill is desirable-and will give better results than more or less. Most farmers take their chances cn the germinability of seed. This fact is the cause of much loss every year. The quickest way to start sprouts of Irish potatoes is to cut them in small pieces, lay in flats, cover with sand, and place them in a light, warm place. . Why spend much time in trying to make the bean poles set firmly? Just tie them together at the top in groups of four and so form pyramid-shaped stakes. Poor Seed Corn. If late, poor seed corn is planted, only an uneven stand may be expected, with lots of barren or unfilled stalks. Select ears which are even and well filled at both ends, then shell and run the grain through a fanning mill with a strong blast to blow out the email, light seed. The Dairy-Bred Steer. It has been demonstrated time and again that dairy bred steers, when properly cared for, make as many pounds of beef from a given number of pounds of food as do beef steers. Only they don’t put on as large a per centage of porterhouse steak and rib roasts. WKAT IS A GOOD ROAD? A. Discussion by Edward K. Parkin son, and Comment by Editor Country Gentleman. The best roads that have ever been built were those constructed by the Romans ten or fifteen centuries ago, rnd which are to-day almost perfect sxamples of what roads should be. Their roads had a width of 30 feet, and pavements of heavy stone at the bottom, and often one or more layers af stone bedded in cement to make the road waterproof. The two cuts show the best types of ancient Roman roads. It has been argued that such roads would cost too much to build in these days of high wages. To he sure, the initial cost would be enormously greater, but the final cost would, on the other hand, be much less. Some of the Roman roads are 1.600 years old, and are still in fair con dition. I will say, for the sake ol argument, that a modern macadam road will last 20 years without hav ing to be extensively repaired; at the end of that time, however, the road will have to be practically reconstruct ed, at least to the extent of half the original cost. So a new road will be built and paid for every 40 years. Therefore in 1,600 years, the age of some of the Roman roads, we shall have built and paid for 40 poor roate Evan granted that a mile of Romar road could cost 40 times as much as a mile of our macadam road, which it doesn’t, wouldn’t the loss of money from obstructed traffic and inconven ience be sufficient reason for building roads that would last at least 10C years? The old excuse, that the con ditions are so different and our ell mate so bard on roads, does not seen to have much weight. The truth is, we build our roads ir such a hurry, and oftentimes with sc little Judgment on the part of the en gtneers, that the wonder Is, not that VJ TYPES OF OLD ROMAN ROAD. they don't last long, but that they last as long as they do. Macadam, who was one of the best modern road-builders, constructed ills roads on the idea that when any road bed is thoroughly underdrained, so as to remain permanently hard, crushed stone alone may be used, the pave ment of Roman practice becoming un necessary. Please note—thoroughly underdrained, and crushed stone maj be used. The point is. how many macadam roadbeds are thoroughly un derdrained, so that they remain p r man ntly hard? I feel safe in say ing not one in ten: in fact, the roads built outside of cities and suburbs are not. as a ruie, underdrained in any way. In France, which has perhaps the finest roads in the world, the roads are divided into sections, and one or two men are put in charge of a sec tion to keep it in perfect repair. They are required to go over the road every d y. and in every section there is a toolhonsc, with a quantity of stone ready for repair work al ways on hand. The result is the cost of maintenance is very low and the roads last for years. Edward K. Parkinson. in commenting upon tne anove ar gument by Mr. Parkinson, the edit Dr j of the Country Gentleman says: Mr. Parkinson has broached a sub ject that certainly deserves most earnest consideration. If a macadam road becomes rutted and gutted the first winter, it may be questioned whether it is very much better in the long run than the mud-hank it re placed—that is, it will shortly revert to a condition about as bad. On the other band, the weight ol expert opinion seems at present to be against the attempt to build Ro man roads in this country. Not only j is the expense excessively great, but I such solidity is unnecessary, with or dinary care in draining. Thus Mr ' W. P. Judson, in his book on roads ] and pavements, says that the Romar roads “were remarkable for the.i strength and durability, and for lit tie else. If anyone were so unwise as to attempt to build similar roads now. the cost Would be from four tr. eight times the present cost of oui most expt nsive modern pavements which are. in every way, better fet modern uses, and upon which the cities of the United States are *e.tti mated to have expended half a bil lion of dollars.” Similarly the late Prof. Shaler do clares that the Romans “built with an utter disregard a to the relations of strength and strain.” He adds: “In the construction of the Rornat road we note a crude perception of the solidity which stone foundations af ford, and also, in the cercent layer, a recognition cf the importance of keeping the road dry; beyond thfe.se half-formed conceptions there is, in these structures, no trace of engineer ing skill. . . . The sections of the Roman roads indicate that the con struction was often three feet or more in thickness even in places where ex perience should have quickly told, as it has taught moderns, that six or eight inches of stone would hav: served the purpose. In a singularly clumsy way they combined' layers of different substances, one placed above another, usually with a block pave ment on top. in such conditions that no beneficial cfTect whatever could have been gained from such accumula tion. In general these roads, meas ured in the cost of labor in this coun try, must have cost from $30,000 to $100,000 a mile. It is not too much to say that at least three-fourths of the expenditure was really wasted.” Have Straight Hows. Don't be satisfied with crooked rows. Nothing adds to the appearance of a field more than straight rows, be sides they are more easily cultivated. WOMAN ONCE RICH NOW A VAGRANT LANDS IN DENVER JAIL AS RE SULT OF DRINK HABIT. HAD COOD START IN LIFE Married Wealthy Scotch Manufac turer Who Obtained Divorce Be cause of Her Fondness for Liquor. Denver, Col.—From a good social po rtion in Scotland .as the wife of a •ich manufacturer and the sister of me of the richest women in northern Scotland, and from a home that made tecessary many servants to a cell in he Arapahoe county jail, serving a 10-days' sentence for vagrancy, is the ■tory of Mrs. Joan Lorin. Mrs. Lorin was arrested a few lights ago by a policeman whom she lad asked to direct her to a cheap odging house. Justice of the Peace Judson sentenced her as a common SHE WAS ARRESTED AS A COMMON VAGRANT. vagrant, and afterwards she told so pitiful and plausible a story of s em ng abuse that several charitable ladies ire now endeavoring to secure her release. She said she had come ;o this country at the request of her brother, a widower, to care for his ihildren, but that last August he was •narried and she was forced to- leave ois home and earn her living as a do nestie. Not being strong enough to continue the drudgery of the work, she was now penniless in a foreign land. The brother, Robert P. Milne, and his wife, tell a different story. Mrs. Milne is an English woman of the bi ter class, well educated and evidently of the greatest respectability. She said: “This affair distresses us greatly My husband's sister has been of much trouble to the family. It is because of her habit of drinking. “Xo woman ever had a more for tunate beginning in life. She mar ried into a family of rich manufa.^it ers and her own father was a wealthy banker. She has had everything that money could buy, a splendid social p. sitien and many servants, hut she cannot leave drink alone. “Her husband divorced her on this account and she l as been of great snr row u> us all since. “Even after the divorce her bus band 6 ered to give her five poundJ sterling a week if she would leave him in peace, but she could not. live on this amount, which is a great d* a more, comparatively, in Scotland that in this country, bt cause of tho cheap ness of rent, food, etc. “In England she went from bad to worse, and it was finally decided to send her here. “My husband did not even know that she was coming. It was last Septemi her, and we had just been married She stayed with us for a fortnight and then became restless because w« are total abstainers and do not allow liquor in the house. She wanted to gt to Denver and my husband gave hei the money. “We did not hear from her and sup posed she was getting along all right until this latest episode. "We would help her still, but w* haven’t the means ourselves. “It is not the first time she has been in prison. If It wasn't for drinl* she would be one of the most r© speeted women in Scotland to-day, buv she can't let it alone. “All of her relatives have cast hei off, and even if we did try to help bet it would do no good.” One of Mrs. Milne's brothers is a captain in the English army. A large number of women have vis ited Mrs. Lorin in the county jUil anil offered her their sympathy. A Mr. Brown, who lives in South Denver whose full name and address she did not take but who said that he was. a wealthy cattleman and had to leave his family alone while making business trips, told Mrs. Lorin that he would give her a good hot®* and pay her to stay with his children while hi w,. away. The matron also said that the emi gration officer had visited* Mrs. Lorin and offered her free transportation back to her home in Scotland. Human Hand Printed Orv A Negro’s Flesh Phenomenon Followed Shattering of Tree fcv Lightning Without Hurting Uncle Jasper. Little Hickman, Ky.—“Uncle" Jasper Brown, an ex-slave, nearly 9J year old, was in a field one day recently when a rainstorm set in, and he sought shelter under the spreading branches of a maple tree. Thunder and light ning followed the rain and the tree T s struck. The old man felt a sudden pain in his chest, which he likened unto the Sticking of needles. His right boot solo was torn off and his foot was scorched, but the bolt did him no further injury, and he went home to Col. Braden’s place, where he Is a pensioner; Th ■ pain in his chest was only momentary, and he thought no more of it. The nex’ morning when he was dreeing he hap pened to look in the mirror and saw a big white patch on his breast. He was frighteend, and called one of the house servants, who in turn sum moned the colonel, and the latter made a careful examination. To his astonish ment he saw that the white patch was the clear outline of the fingers, thumb, palm and part of the wrist of a human hand. The edges were sharply outlined and seemed to be slightly raised, so that the hand looked to be imbedded, palm outward, in the black flesh. It was so perfect that the lifeline could be seen clearly, as well as the wrinkles at all the ting*: joints. These lines and wrinkles faded away within the next 2-f hours, but the white Imprint of the hau l remained. The fingers pcint upward and the thumb is stretched out nearly a; right angles with the palm. Uncle Jasper l: convinced -- THE OLD MAN KELT A Sl'DDKN t’ALN' IN HIS CHEST. that he is doomed. Fie spends all his time in prayer and looking into the lit tle hand mirror, now his constant com panion. PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH TREE. It Ip the CheiTy and Is Found Wher ever the South Germans Rave Settled. In late April the countryside in southeastern Pennsylvania is every where white with cherry bloom, says Indoors and Out. Here and there are old trees three and even four feet in iiameter, all birt dead but still put ting out lush bloom from two or three branches; trees whose height and spread and girth would almost per suade us that they were the first seed ■ings from the cherry orchards and rherry lanes of our German ances tors. The gardens of old Germantown were thick planted with the many sorts of cherries dear to the hearts of South Germans; the lanes of old German town were cherry lined, and thence for generation on generation cherries had been bird sown over the sur i -minding hills. j There is hardly a township in the ‘ier of German counties of Pennsyl vania that not its Cherry Hill or Cherry Valley, and in the German jounties nearer Philadelphia and be tween the Delaware river and Mason and Dixon's line you will find many places named from the Sotfth Germans' favorite tree. There ai scarcely a cultivated town ship in this district in which the cherry is not. a conspicuous tree, it lias followed the Pennsylvania Dutch in their spread westward, and wherever there are German communities in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Iowa you will'meet with cultivated cherries about the farmhouses and along the fences. Sheep Buried Six Days in Snow D:if;. Cheyenne, Wyo.—Buried alive in snow for at least six days, resurrected and taken to a neighboring ranch and restored to their nornikl condition, is the history of ten head of valuable bucks belonging to the L. U. Sheep company. The animals were found by searchers for the body of Pete Brother son, who perished in tne recent storm. The sheep were huddled under a shel tering ritn rock, over which the snow had drifted, completely covering them. The herders who discovered the ani mals aver they must have been com pletely buried under several feet of snow for at least six days. Matter of Preference. Mrs. Jubb I just hate to get on railroad trains; so many people dia that way. Mr. Jubb—That's just the reason why I hate to go to bed. So many more people die that way.—American Spectator.