\ \ HERE Is an underworld not Invaded by novelist or play wright. Yet In It occur strungo and often subtle dra mas of survival and destruc tion. Nor Is It a noiseless underworld. Every evening after n hot sunset It forms an orchestra which shrills out Its prowess and flaunts Ita coming achievement. And In all the world there Is no orchestra so well paid. To bo sure It getc little In the matter of attention , but In ways moro substantial It is rewarded hand- comely. For it Is permitted to levy toll upon the corn nnd the wheat , the cabbage and the apple , as they grow. It Is allowed to eat the profits of the miller and the grain dealer. Cer tain members of the shrilling tribe go farther und demand greater concessions In their greed. Not satisfied with money tribute , they exact human lives. Their gruesome tracks are made upon the faces of Httlo children. Then from places where poverty forces women and ba bies into filth nnd sickness , they take wing nnd they bear their death message Into homes fair nnd clean homes where the Inmates can not concern themselves with life's wretched ones. And so nature In her Inexorable circle from which neither the proudest nor the poor est can escape , herself supplies the link which brings the miserable homo to the fair one. But reducing It to a dollars and cents basis which all of us understand , what would you say the Insects of this country cost us each year ? Millions of dollars ! Moro In fact than our entlro system of public school edu cation , from the kindergarten to the univer sity I Moreover whole sections Intended by na ture for the production of particular crops often nro compelled to abandon them for no other reason than Insect Infestation. This Is especially true of horticulture. Myriad , In deed , are the Insect foes that Infest vegetables and fruit If over the life of this underworld is brought upon the stage as that of the barn yard has been , it ma > well open with this plaint of the truck grower : . The Insects are busy tn clover nnd srrass. I A-hatchln' out sorrer fer my garden sass , i ) They're happily hummln * this giddy re frain The old mule will still be your alry-o- " plane. Now the farmer has found himself help less before this foe which must be fought with microscopes and laboratory mysteries. Consequently ho has appealed to the man lot science whom everyone despises In the Iday of prosperity and rushea to consult when the world"is awry. I-ipt me tell you of what has been accom- pllshed by one man with a microscope. His name Is Stephen A. Forbes and ho Is state entomologist of Illinois. His chief work in this position Is to exterminate "economic In sects , " as those which damage the growing things are called. Ho is also head of the state laboratory of natural history and pro fessor of entomology In the University of Illi nois. Ho has hold these offices 25 years , 1i which means that he has spent a quarter of a. century fighting the prednceous Instincts of economic Insects , barring on occasional short lapse to fight the economical Instincts of state legislatures. Naturally ho Is on Intimate terms with a vast number of bugs. For a practical knowledge of an insect , the \ \ . ability to recognize It in all Its phases Is a mere beginning. Its dietary must bo known , not only what it prefers but what it likes next best nnd what it will eat to escape starvation ; how the weather affects its health , its temper , nnd its power of multiplying ; Is it subject to contagious diseases ? If so , how may it bo Induced to catch ono ? Also It is well to know how its neighbor bugs regard it Whether the eight of it arouses the instinct to protect or the Instinct to kill. For there nro bugs so kindly disposed toward other bugs that they will carry them to their food supply , hatch their eggs for them , and bring up their off spring. The solo duties they leave to these they protect are breathing , eating and multi plying. First lot me tell you about the fight against the chinch bug. As everyone knows , the chinch Is a devil-devastator whose evil Intentions are backed wltb energy and resourcefulness. When It starts to take what It wants from the farm there Is Just ono thing it leaves the mort gage. For more than a generation scientists In all parts of the country directed their intel ligence against Its instinct ; and instinct won the victory. It seemed that reason could not fathom the cause of the outbreaks nor find a way to prevent them. In despair the men of science were for saying as did the old Irish woman of the rain that spoiled her potatoes , "There's no ralson In it , It's Just the will of God ! " And right there it seemed the problem would have to rest. But nn occasional per- elstont brain was unable to accept this colu- tlon. Observations went on not only week by week but day by day , and often oven hour by hour. Even so It was a work that proceeded fllowly. The chinch bug was hard to make rules for. Indeed , It seemed moro an excep tion to rule than the French language. For Instance , scientists flattered themselves that ono thing was proved concerning his chlnchshlp viz. , the abandonment of wheat culture meant an end to chinch hug ravages. But farmers made the sad discovery , qulto unintentionally , you may be sure , not at all for the sake of enlightening the men of science , that the aban donment of wheat may oven Increase the chinch devastation. For if they have become numerous and can find no wheat , they will accept oats , barley , grass or corn. The aban donment of wheat to bo effective against the chinch , must take place at the beginning of an outbreak. Therefore Dr. Forboa straightened his mor tarboard , polished his microscope and prepared for wholesale slaughter. Ho was going to wade deep , not in gore but in bug Juice. The encircling claws of what wore meant to bo their banquets. As for sprays , the bugs throve \ipon them. Dr. Forbes had his assistants in the fiolda bcforo It was found that plowing the Infested grass In the autumn would practically do away with the post. Of all the foes which the agricultu rist must light , none presents a more dif ficult problem than the whlto grub. For ono thing , there nro many species. Illi nois has about thir Cow GooT/lfW * ty differing in hab dTTirtD/irtT drr : W/ngecl its , but all endowed fema/ee Tivo Wing/ess femafo , with an original and Egg and Pupa of dphh , and hard working brand Worker Ant ; of natural cussed- ness. They attack first plan was to present - plnntH at the roota , sent the chinch with a and it is not at all contagious disease. It Corn Bf//-Qug3f Grub of same and Corn uncommon to find had been observed that . whole acres of grass Want J/iow/ng Qi/J-0ug injury. It was subject to a where the sod can ftlnfrmia disease simi . lar to that of the com man's purse than mon house fly , which rich relatives on left the dead covered n visit , there Is with a white mould. the fretful soil Why not spread it ? It which gets sour was tried upon the like a colicky ba university fields and by , nnd there the bugs took It most nro sturdy , hun obligingly and died gry Insect foes. most successfully. Before Over two hun dred of these attack fore It could bo con- sldered more than an Grub in . . - tack corn , forty experiment , however.lt four 3fayes : June Beet/e , capable of doing was necessary to try y. Grub one/ notable damage. It on a larger scale. It Is In dlscov- Consequently letters were Bent among the farmers , asking for boxes of sound bugs. These bugs were to bo given the disease and returned with directions for spreading It. The response was surprisingly Immediate. Boxes of bugs poured into the express offices and yet more boxes of bugs. Farmers from neigh boring states heard of the offer and they , too , went bug hunting. The express companies worked overtime. The assistants In the ento mologist's office became moro undertakers for bugdom. The mouldy bugs were sent out on their beneficent mission of destruction. Then the results came In. They varied ; they did , indeed. Some thought the entlro entomolo gist's office should bo fitted out with a golden , glbrlous halo as the rescuer of Its country ; others alas ! thought a fool's cap would fit the case moro exactly. But although the disease project could not bo called a complete success , means were found which make It possible to" raise grain even In the very worst of the chinch out breaks. The barrier methods and sprays with a kerosene emulsion will catch them every time. Just after harvest the scarcity of food in the wheat fields arouses in the chinch an Instinct to migrate. On foot it sots out to got an appetite for corn. This is the tlmo to make , a rldgo boween the infested field and the field the chinch desires to Infest. This is done by plowing a backward furrow which is packed with a light roller or by hand and has a line of tar poured upon it from a can with a tubular spout. Post holes are dug at Intervals of about twenty feet. By keeping the tar line fresh his chlnchshlp cannot cross , but will follow It to the pesthole , Into which ho speed ily tumbles. It then Is merely pleasant recre ation for the farmer to travel out and pour a weak solution of kerosene upon his accu mulated enemies. Kerosene Is an excellent death dealer for these pests. When they get Into the cornfields the farmers of Illinois sally forth with nn emulsion containing four per cent , of kerosene nnd half as much whale oil soap mixed by five minutes simple beating with a stick. This Is flirted by hand upon the corn In the cool of the day when the Insects feed most thoroughly and when there Is less danger of Injury to the corn. Sometimes a single application does the work ; when the Infestation Is very bad two and oven three may be required. Now let us talk about corn exclusively for a while. With that staple at Its present price and with the grave gentlemen who produce statistics as hens produce eggs the louder the cackling , the smaller the statistic assur ing us that it is on Its lofty perch to stay , it seems that the farmer will have to cultivate automobiles and bad habits as obesity cures for his bank account. But , halt ! Nature pro vides several. There Is the weather , moro ex asperating and with less regard for a poor erlng the way to conquer a pair of thcso precious rascals that Dr. Forbes has made his most valuable single contribution to sci ence. They are the corn field ant and the corn root-aphis or , as it Is better known , the corn root louse. For a long tlmo they were the particular scourge of the corn grower who supposed that they operated each on Its own account. Through the research of Dr. Forbes , lt is now known that ono Is help less without tho-other. The resourceful and industrious ant p entirely unable to extract1 ; the coveted sap from the corn root , and the stupid aphis would , If left to Itself , starve In the very presence of the corn. But the ant can carry the aphis to the corn root and de posit it thereupon ; the aphis can extract the sap and then exude It , thus passing It on to the ant. Therefore It was not a problem of exterminating two foes but of outwitting the clever little ant Were It banished , the aphis would soon disappear. The wretched little soft-bodied hunk o' creation can do nothing for Itself except lay eggs and suck corn sap. The ant gives It a homo In Its own burrows , hatches Its cgga for It , carrying them to the warm surface If they nro slow , bearing them farther Into the ground If they threaten to hatch before Its food supply Is ready. And this protection extends through the aphis' life. If , because of plowing or other Inadvertence , the nnt finds Us charges scattered , It will cheerfully collect them and reconstruct Its homo If that has been molested also. The ant has nothing clso to do nnd It is as active as an outraged Puritan conscience. However , methods of control have been found. The UHO of the disk and crop rotation will exterminate them. The root-aphis refuses entirely to oc cupy ground planted to oats , so this crop la of the greatest Importance In clearing fields of thorn. Also by disking two or throe tlmea with a 20-Inch disk lu , prlng , especially on a sunny day when the ants are likely to have their charges near the surface , they will bo killed and scattered and their nests so broken up that oven the enthusiastic Httlo ant cannot reconstruct the colony. Another enemy of the corn that Dr. Forbes has caught by cultivation Is the bill bug , as certain beetles are called because of their long , hard snouts , which they poke Into the farmer's business to ruin It This tlmo the cultivation must bo with the plow Instead of the disk and in the autumn Instead of spring and in the fields of grass where the bill bugs breed. Thcso bugs are distinguished by a belligerency which Is only equaled by their strength of claw. Ono variety appeared In Illinois which looked so largo to the harassed farmers that It was christened "elephant bug. " Chickens turned into the fields to feast upon them fled In flapping , comical flight , unable to relieve their terrified souls by a squawk , as their bills were tightly held together by the be rolled up like a carpet By preference they devastate grass , but It the supply Is ncant , they are willing to ruin small grain , corn , strawberry and Indeed , many other plantations , woodlands , , to combat difficult especially situations. They are bat because the llfo history Is hard to follow from the first to the last stage. Only n Blnglo specimen has boon bred from the egg to the beetle nnd its llfo cycle occupied three years. So far the best remedy has been found to bo In cropping , especially In planting the In- fpBtcd ground to clover. Well-known enemies of the whlto grub also are the fustlvo porker , which will dig a foot for a nlco fat ono , nnd crows and crow 'blackbirds. Occasionally a farmer notices that a field which has been brown from a grub ravage becomes - comes green and nllvo. Ho Is Inclined to think It a clear case of the Lord remembering the righteous ; as a matter of fact nnotljor Insect has appeared nnd Is working out another Bet of Instincts. This Is the Tlphla , n member of the solitary wasp family. It stings the grub into submission and then glues to Its thick hldo un egg which In a few days hatches Into a veritable vampire. It sucks from Its host Ita k llfo juices , leaving the shell to crumble back to earth. Trees , both those In natural forests and those which have been planted , "noblo and helpless products of nature , " to quote Dr. Forbes , nro often dragged to a slow and un sightly death through Insect Infestation. Have you never late In May or In Juno noticed upon shade trees Httlo wads of cotton ? Each wad , you will see , If you look , projects from a brown cap , which Is the female maple scale. It Is n native Insect paraslto of the soft maplo. It will infest , besides the maple , the linden , box elder , elm and honey locust. Thcso cotton wads are the soft bed In which the careful female lays her eggs , and each female can bo rolled upon to deposit something like 3,000 eggs In her own particular Httlo wad. Dr. Forbes found after considerable experiment that a kerosene omul * Blon was effective In disposing of these pests. A 20 per cent , emulsion could bo used In winter If the roots of the trees were protected , and a 10 pur cent In summer. It Is made by dissolv ing ono pound of common soap In ono gallon o [ water by boiling. This Is removed from the fire and two gallonn of kerosene poured In With n eprny pump the mixture Is then forced back Into Itself for about live minutes , when il will look Ilka a thick cream , and no longer sepa rates on standing. Seventeen gallons of water added to the throe gallons thus prepared \vil give a 10 per cent solution. The cost wll bo1.3 cents a gallon nnd three or four gallons will save a large tree from destruction. Doubtless you have noticed upon the apples you brought homo In a paper bag and those that fell from your own cherished tree a crescent cent mark. This means that a busy Httlo curcullo 1ms had Its beak In your apple before you and has probably laid an egg at the sign of the crescent curcullos. A spray compound of 12 ounces of acetate of lead and four ounces 01 nrsennto of toda to fifty gallons of water , 1 : used three or four times , will catch practically all these orchard destroyers. Among the Insects injurious to health the common housefly takes first rank. Dr. Forbes has found that 75 per cent of the common housoflles breed in horse manure. Aa the reme dies that will kill the housefly maggots are too dangerous to bo used In stables , except boiling water , which is hardly practicable , the only protection scorns to bo In screening stables against flics as we do our houses and In curofu city sanitation. TETT YEAUS Or BUFFEIUNO. nentorcd nt Jn i to Verted Health lir Donu'n Klilner i'UU. Mra. Narclssa Waggoner , Carter Ylllo , 111. , sayaj "For over ton ycar I suffered terribly with backaches , head * aches , nervous and dizzy spells. Tha kidney secretions ! were unnatural nnd gave mo great trou ble. Ono day I sud denly fell to thu floor , where 1 lay fol n long tlmo uncon scious. Three dee tors who treated mo dlAgnoscd mj case ns paralysis and Bald they could do nothing moro for mo. As n last resort , I began using Doan'a Kidney Pills And was permanently cured. 3 am stronger than before in years. " Remember the name Dean's. For said by nil dealers. GO cents q box. Fostcr-Mllburn Co. , Buffaloj N. Y. THE DOCTOR'S IDEA. - r Invalid Doctor , I must positive ! * Insist upon knowing the worst. \VIso-Well , I guess my bill wW bo about $85. Doll House Library. A search for a chlld'n short story , "Tho Grlffln nnd the Minor Canon , " In u volume nil by Ituolf revealed to o persistent city shopper the thought and money that are expended on the furnishing of dolls' houacs. Book stores hnd not the stqry In a slnglo volume , but in a department store ono young woman Interviewed had ro * contly been transferred from the toy department nnd was able to contribute a helpful hint. "I think , " she said , "you can nnd U In ono of the dolls' houses dowiv stairs. " Curiosity had by that time bccoma a sauce to literature , BO the shopper hurried downstairs to inspect the doU houses. Throe of the most oxpcnslva houses contained libraries consisting of n Bcoro of diminutive books and each book contained a child's story complete. Ono of them was "Th Qrlflln and the Minor Canon. " A Bcrnhardt Trick. Mmo. Sarah Bernhardt , who IB sup posed to bo something of an artist as well na an actress , was recently call ed upon in ono of her marvelous croo * tlonn to enact the role of a sculptor , and to model a certain bust in view of the audience. This fairly electrified the critics , but when going Into rhap sodies over the technical skill In ban- dllng the clay which Mmo. Dornhardt exhibited they showed that they know llttjo of the artistic tricks of actors and actresses ; as a matter of fact , sha does nothing of the kind. The bust Is modeled and baked , and over It la placed damp clay of the sumo color. This the talented actress merely pull * off , exposing the beautifully modeled Ucad underneath. A Fitting Design. "I want an ostlmato on 10,000 letter heads , " said the professional-looking man with the silk hat. "Any special design ? " asked the engraver. "Yes , elr , " replied the caller. "In the upper left-hand corner I want n catchy cut of Patrick Henry making his memorable speech , and in distinct letters , under the cut , his soul-Inspir ing words , 'Glvo mo liberty or giva mo death. ' You see , " ho added , handIng - Ing a card to the engraver , "I'm a dl- vorco lawyer , and want something flt > ting. " Llpplncott's. Summer Comfort There's solid satisfac tion and delightful re freshment in a glass of Served with Sugar and a little Lemon. Postum contains the natural food elements of field grains and is really a food drink that relieves fatigue and quenches the thirst. Pure , Wholesome , Delicious "There's a Reason" POSTUM CEKEAL CO. , Battle Ortek , Mich.