r iwWv 4f r SrrVfti AF I Some of the Inter- esting Features Briefly Described Any effort at exaggeration in at tempting to describe the Worlds Pair at St Louis would more than likely result in failure Ones Imagination would Indeed be abnormally develop ed if he were to conceive more glor ies more beauty more majestic splen dor and a more comprehensive gather ing of men and the works of men than has been assembled on two square miles comprising the Louisiana Purchase Exnosition More than a thousand native Filipi nos are living in the 40 acre Philip pine tract at the Worlds Fair Their homes have been reproduced in St Louis and they are counterparts of those left behind in the Pacific archi pelago The Filipino colony em braces representatives from many tribes and Americans and Europeans will be interested in seeing the sub jects that Uncle Sam acquired with the Philippine islands and in learn ing of their lives and habits Besides the native villages the Philippine commission which has ex pended nearly 1000000 on the exhi bit has erected replicas of many of the most famous buildings on the is lands Several bits of old Spanish architecture aro sure to delight all visitors Patagonian giants are even less Renown than Filipinos And there are a number of these strange people domiciled nearby while a little fur ther on may be found another strange race pygmies from darkest Africa whose very existence until recent years was doubted The Ainus the aborigines of northern Japan are an other strange race that may be seen SHOTS WORLD F A I Never was the United States gov ernment so deeply interested in an ex position as it is in this 1904 Worlds Fair Already the governments in vestment has reached the 11000000 mark and this does not include the Philippine expenditures which were paid out of the insular treasury The result is the greatest exhibit ever made by Uncle Sam One of the interesting government exhibits is the great map of the United States worked out in growing crops each state being represented by crops chiefly grown in that state This map covers six acres of ground One who has not seen the map may have an idea of its immense size when he is told that Illinois on this crop map is 75 feet long The bound ary lines between the states are gravel walks and the Worlds Fair visitors stroll at will through the states and receive simultaneously a lesson in geography and agriculture The largest timepiece in the world is at the Worlds Fair and may be seen on a slope on the north side of Agriculture Hill The dial of this great clock is 112 feet in diameter The frame work is steel of course but it is so covered with flowers that it appears to have been built entirely of flowers and for that reason it is popularly known as the floral clock Germanys participation in this Worlds Fair surpasses anything that that great nation has ever done at any other international exposition The National pavilion on a high hill over looking the Cascades is a faithful reproduction of the ancient nastle Charlottenburg and the gardens Girls Question That Paralyzed Gun nery Lieutenant She was a dear little girl and had spent most of her life in a country rectory It was not surprising there fore that her knowledge of things maritime and warlike was not ex tensive The young gunnery officer of H M S had been showing her round the battleship It was the very first warship of any kind she had ever visited and her mind was full of the wonderful sights presented Being an industrious and a thor ough young man the gunnery lieu tenant had explained very fully the mechanism and the use of the tor pedo in warfare She examined the long deadly cigar-shaped engine of war critically and fearfully Then she tapped it with the point of her parasol and let her glove run over its burnished side and finally paralyzed the gunnery officer with the question How does the crew get inside London Tit Bits Californias Building California is erecting a pavilion in the agricultural building at the worlds fair that will attract univer sal attention Its exterior is entirely covered with dried fruit four tons of apricots peaches and prunes being exhibited Many Varieties of Mosquitoes In Louisianas world fair exhibit there will be shown ninety eight vari eties of mosquitoes They are in cases and are guaranteed not to bite or sting V v If prtiHfliwfaitoAiraaaasraWiafiritfli iintui A Visit to the Exposi tion is Equivalent to a Tour of the Globe Hank Monk drove Horace Greeley into Placerville on time is seen daily in the Gulch Mark Twain and Artemus Ward in the early days made Hank Monk and the old coach famous by their vivid descriptions Qf the celebrated ride The landscape of the Worlds Fair is a feature of diversified beauty It ombraces hill and valley plateau and lowland In the Cascade region alone more than 4000000 brilliantly colored flowering and foliage plants are used in the creation of the Rainbow Gar dens More than 30000000 plants are used in beautifying other sections of the grounds All of the main avenues are delightfully shaded with rows of silver maples and in several sections there are great groups of forest trees that ever afford a delightful shade The largest engine in the world is an exhibit in the Palace of Machinery This monster with a power equal to that of 5000 horses occupies a space in the center of the great structure and towers 35 feet in the air It is as large as an ordinary three story house Altogether the engines devel op a power of 50000 horses At the Chicago exposition ten years ago which more nearly than any other similar enterprise approaches the present in magnitude the greatest power developed was 12000 horse power The Pike is a most alluring place It is a broad boulevard more than a mile long with the shows of all ra tions arranged on either side in the most captivating array The archi tecture of The Pike is that of all I I 1 I mtodJM JJw h M x S ik IKE Jifth H I MMMmmlmMma Looking Down on the Government Building from the Missouri Building at the Worlds Fair These queer people are snall of stature and their bodies are covered with hair They are quite a different race from the modern Japanese Japan indeed is in the front rank of nations at the great Worlds Far The site selected by Japan for her group of buildings is one df the choicest alloted to for eign nations and the enterprising Japanese have made the most of their advantages On a high hill overlook ing Machinery Palace workmen from the Mikados realm have built a num ber cf quaint and beautiful pagodas and have embellished the surround ings with just such gardens as have won the Japanese the enviable reputa tion of developing and perfecting such flowers and plants as they cultivate An Experience One of Allentowns young ladies re turned recently from her first trip to New York On reaching the metrop olis she had accepted an invitation to a matinee It was a brilliant pro duction and left an impression which was dimmed only by a visit some time later to the opera in the even ing She was giving a glowing ac count of the first experience to some friends the other day one of whom interpolated enviously Yes I have seen it But continued the other did you ever attend a matinee in the even jng7Philadelphia Ledger Why Co operative Colonies Fail Co operative colonies fail because they get out of touch with the great world around them said a lecturer recently who had been a member of the famous colony of Zoar All the property and all the earnings of the Zoar colonists were divided equally said he As a result there was less energy and thrift petty jealousies interfered with the colony work and when its leader died it gradually went to pieces Canadian Route is Shorter At a recent meeting of the royal transportation commission in Halifax reports and maps were submitted showing that the Canadian route be tween Europe and the East was 680 miles shorter than those from United States ports Russian Ship Canal been completed Surveys which have just pleted for a ship canal across Russia to connect the Baltic and Black seas will be 1468 show that the distance miles kand tte cost 5180000000 rounding it are gems of the landscape architects art Germanys immense pavilion of white and gold in the mammoth Palace of Agriculture is one of the features of that interesting building while the Palace of Varied Industries contains another German exhibit of unique interest Most interest naturally centers in the races of the airships To win the grand prize of 100000 the suc cessful aeronaut must cover the 10 mile course at the speed of 18 miles an hour Santos Dumont has several of his wonderful machines on the ground and is sanguine of success Other noted aeronauts are prepared to contest vigorously with the famous little Brazilian The historic stage coach in which SHE WANTED TO KNOW ages and countries from the prehis toric ages to the present day J and everything that is new strange and in teresting is shown in this street of all nations After night The Pike is a blaze of glory and myriads of electric lights accentuate the beauties of the quaint architecture In one newspaper article but few of the places of interest may be touched A large volume would be required were each feature mention ed in a single line The visitor who can find time but for a weeks stay at the Fair will see more glories than he ever dreamed of and were he to lengthen his stay to the seven months of the fair he cbuld pass every mo ment in profitable and interesting sightseeing Center of Lamb Raising Industry Greeley Colo is becoming almost as noted for its lamb as for its po tato industry Shipments of young lambs from Greeley to Eastern and other markets are now being made at the rate of from 75 to 100 carloads a week The experiment of feeding lambs during the winter months on a food composed in large part of sugar beet pulp from the many jbeet sugar factories in that section of the State has been proved a success in northern Colorado Tens of thou sands of sheep and lambs are now being fed in that manner at Greeley Ft Collins- Loveland and elsewhere in the region referred to Real Case of Broken Heart Died from a broken heart an old woman of 74 who married her fourth husband aged 72 in Decem ber last at West Ham was deserted by him a fortnight after the wedding She died suddenly on Sunday her last words being My hearts broken and a coroners jury on Wednesday found that the causp of death was valvular disease of the heart Phila delpnia Ledger Noted Scientist Dr Maximilian Nitze who just a quarter of a century ago invented a luminous apparatus for looking into the stomach and other internal or gans is still living in Berlin where he is an instructor at the university Telephone Statistics In the United States there are up ward of 20000000 families and at least 5000000 places of business mak ing a total of 25000000 opportunities to place telephones Of these about 1 one eighth arp now equipped f l X TJIItiXt K ev VL m mfrf Xt MZVTs WSSSVlttVliCL Three Pasture Grasses At a meeting of Kansas farmers a speaker said Combinations of grasses and perennial legumes are usually to be preferred to any single grass both for pasture and for hay A combina tion of grasses is especially desirable for pasture giving more continuous grazing a greater production of pas ture more variety and perhaps a better-balanced food ration In choosing grasses for pasture the object should he to select such varieties that the deficiency of one variety may be bal anced by the good qualities of anoth er Grasses should be chosen which are different in their periods of growth and their dates of maturing in order to lengthen the grazing period and give the greatest amount and most continuous grazing also a combina tion of grasses may be made which will make a more perfect sod than any one grass will produce and a more permanent pasture To illustrate take a combination of orchard grass mead ow fescue and Bromus inermis Orchard-grass starts very early in the spring makes a rapid growth and ma tures early in the summer It pro duces little during the drier summer months also it has the characteristic of growing in bunches but does not form a sod Meadow fescue on the other hand starts late in the spring makes a slow growth in the early part of the season and matures several weeks later than the orchard grass Meadow fescue renews its growth in the latter part of the season making excellent pasture late into the fall Like the orchard grass it also grows in tufts but is not quite so bunchy in its growth hence forms with orchard grass a better sod- than is produced by the orchard grass alone Bromus inermis is quite different in its char acteristics from either of the other grasses It starts very early in the spring and continues green and grow ing throughout the season Being a firm deep rooting grass it withstands dry weather well hence produces pasture during the dry periods when orchard grass and meadow fescue practically cease growing Bromus in ermis also grows late into the fall It has a habit of spreading by under ground rootstocks and thus fills up the spaces left between the tufts of orchard grass and meadow fescue forming a perfect sod In the region where each of these grasses thrives the combination of the three should make a much better pasture than any one of the grasses seeded alone When Constructing Drains A drainage engineer gives the fol lowing advice to a land owner about to construct drains 1 Employ a reliable drainage engi neer to make surveys and plan your system of drainage Otherwise you are very liable to throw away part of your money 2 Require from your drainage engi neer a complete map or plat of your drains showing the exact location izes grades and depths Remember hat your drains will be out of reach except at much cost and trouble liter they are covered 3 Make your drains of ample size Drains which are too small fail when you need them most in wet seasons 4 Put your tile down to a good depth Otherwise they will not draw well to any considerable distance Make them four feet deep in the low est ground if possible The extra cost of good depth is small in proportion to the total cost 5 Have your drainage engineer in spect the work during construction and test the grades of the drains and see that the work is well done Many tile become choked with mud because not laid true 6 Be sure to protect the outlet Build a bulkhead wall of brick or stone to hold the end Also use a piece of iron pipe at the end if tile is not too large or for large drains use a few feet of sewer pipe cemented 7 If you are obliged to construct an open ditch make it at least five to seven feet deep if possible to give good outlets for tile and to avoid choking up 8 The bottoms of open ditches should be at least three feet wide and die sides should be given slopes of at least one foot horizontal to one ver tical to avoid choking Dirt should uoi be piled near the edges of the bank Corn and Beef A noted cattle raiser says that the pure of corn and beef should go to gether When corn is high beef must be high or the farmer will go out ot the cattle raising business The man icferred to declares that the large r ii eipu of cattle during the past year are due to the steady unloading of tl il mers that do not want to feed high priced corn to medium priced cat tli a also accounts he says for mi of the animals arriving in a halt rut condition It is doubtless true that there is not a wide enough difference between corn finished cattle and cattle that have received almost no fitting at all When every bushel of corn a man puts into his beef cat tle is put in at a loss as is the case this year farmers cannot be very en thusiastic in the finishing of cattle One of the most valuable elements in the manure is the nitrogen which is easily lost The manure that con tains it must be got under the sur face as soon as possible biC J I K A MJkfL Michigan as a Fruit State We speak of Michigan as a great fruit growing stato and we are correct Yet we generally have in mind the idea that she is par excellence a grower of peaches that she grows more peaches than any other kind of fruit In that we are mistaken As a peach grower Michigan does not take the high rank that she does as a grower of apples There are more acres of land in Michigan devoted to apple growing than there are acres devoted to all other kinds of tree fruits Peaches pears plums and cherries make a poor showing when compared with apples The acres de voted to the different tree fruits were in 1902 as follows Apples 206 G75 peaches 00813 pears 5359 plums 3892 cherries 2117 The yield in bushels in the year named were Apples 11331524 peaches 3253350 pears 231423 plums 113 202 cherries C0211 During the- same -if the straw berry acreage was 5923 and the yield 368365 bushels There were 2587 acres in blackberries and they yielded 111679 bushels The acreage in rasp berries was 4342 the same year and the yield was 149285 bushels Grapes were grown on 10933 acres and pro ciuced 33973931 pounds of fruit Duration of Vitality in Seeds The seeds of different plants vary greatly in this regard Some seeds quickly lose their power to germinate while others retain that power for a long time Lettuce seeds are gener ally short lived in their vitality but some planters declare that this is due lb imperfect methods used in keeping them and that when properly taken care of they will retain their power to germinate for several years The seed of the beet has a long period accredited to it that being not less than ten years Seeds that cannot be trusted to germinate after four years are the following Cabbage kale rad ish tomato spinach turnip aspara gus brocoli cauliflower beans and peas Pumpkin cucumber and melon seeds will also keep their germinating power for ten years Onion and leek seed quickly lose their power of ger mination and cannot be trusted after the second year Some gardeners be lieve that both melon and cucumber seeds are more fruitful after three years than when only one year old But it is also believed that the three year old seeds make a less vigorous growth of vines Cultivating the Plum Orchard S H Marshall of Wisconsin who has a large plum orchard said re cently to a representative of the Farmers Review I begin to cultivate my orchard in the spring as sodn as I can get onto the land and I keep up the cultiva tion till about the 20th of August when I sow the land to oats I leave the oats for a winter cover crop In the spring I run a disk through the oats and break up the surface of the soil I never plow unless I have to do so It is sometimes a little difficult to cultivate under the branches of the trees but for that I use an extension harrow Then around the trees I put to work the man with the hoe I do not use a weeder on my land as the land is not light enough to give good results from the use of that imple ment My object is to keep a dust nuilch of from two to three inches over all the ground Late Setting of Strawberries It is certainly best to set strawber ry plants early yet they can be set at almost any time during the grow ing season J L Herbst tells the writer that he has known strawberry plants to be set even when they had fruit on them The fruit was of course picked off before the plants were put into the ground It hap pened to be a wet season and the plants grew all right As good suc cess would not probably have been at tained in a dry season It shows how ever what can be done when the plants are properly taken care of even when the transplanting is done out of season We do not advise set ting out strawberry beds in the mid dle of the summer yet there may be exceptional cases where good plants would be available at that season and at no other time Lake Yellow Crab Apple On this variety the Virginia Sta tion reports as follows Probably same as Large Yellow Siberian Only fairly vigorous in growth but larger and has stockier limbs than Red Siberian which it resembles very much in habit of growth Upright spreading head limbs droop after fruiting Trunk 14 inches in cir cumference at base 13 inches at head Generally free from disease First bloom and fruit noted in 1892 FulL crops of fruit in 1895 and 1897 Light crop 1898 Heavy crop in 1899 and fair crop in 1901 In 1899 eleven bush els of fruit were picked from two small trees Fruit very large for a Siberian crab beautiful golden yellow in color rich spicy flesh highest qual ity for culinary use Ripens with Hy slop Highly commended Professor Goff used to say that seeds of the pumpkin family should be planted flatwise rather than edge wise since in this position they most readily free themselves from the seed case The Acacia Tree discovered In There has just been thf of the acacm fr east a spocies tree which closes its leaves together in coils each day at sunset and carte Af of pigtails its twigs to the shape itself thus for settled ter thoree has if touched he whole a nights sleep or impatient if agitated thing will flutter as disturbed The patient at being oftener the foliage is molested the the shaking or more violent becomes the branches and at length the trea odor which If inhaled emits a nauseating haled for a few moments causes a violent dizzy headache It has been named the angry tree Story v From Patti In Syracuse Adelina Patti told a reporter how she had recently jbeen teaching music to a little American girl This little girl she said is a delight Her questions and answers are as entertaining as a comedy The other day I was explaining to her the meaning of the signs f and ff F I said means forte Now if f means forte what does ff mean Eighty said the little girl A HEART STORY Folsom S uak In these days when so many sudden deaths are re ported from Heart Failure and vari ous forms of Heart Disease it will be good news to many to learn that there Is a never failing remedy for every form of Heart Trouble Mrs H D Hyde of this place was troubled for years with a pain in her heart which distressed her a great deal She had tried many remedies but had not succeeded in finding any thing that would help her until at last she began a treatment of Dodds Kid ney Pills and this very soon relieved her and she has not had a single pain or any distress in the region of the heart since She says I cannot say too much praise of Dodds Kidney Pills They are the greatest heart medicine I have ever used I was troubled for over three years with a severe pain in my heart which en tirely disappeared after a short treat ment of Dodds Kidney Pills 4 Energy Wasted After Business Hours A great many people dissipate more energy between the time when they leave their work at night and when they return to it in the morning than they expend all day in their vocations though they would be shocked and of fended if anyone were to tell them so They think that physical dissipa tion is the only method of energy sapping But men and women of ex emplary moral habits dissipate their vitality in a hundred wayj They in dulge in wrong thinking they worry they fret they fear this that and the other imaginary thing and they carry their business home with them and work as hard mentally after busi ness hours as during them Success Anecdote of McMahon - The late John MacMahon of the frish bar although a Celt had a pon derous heavy style and no sense of humor On account of being deaf ho agreed out of policy with any re marks made by the judge even though he did not understand what was said On one occasion he was appearing before a master of the rolls who thought that MacMahon was ar guing rather elementary law for such a court as his You are speaking as if I were a mere typo in the law Mr MacMahon said the master of rolls testily Quite so my lord said counsel airily proceeding with his ar gument oblivious to and regardless of what the judge had said The School HAS A SAY Principal i alks About Food The Principal of a High School in a flourishing Calif city says For 23 years I worked in the school with only short summer vacations I formed the habit of eating rapidly masticated poorly which coupled with my sedentary work led to indigestion liver trouble lame back and rheuma tism Upon consulting physicians some doped me with drugs while others prescribed dieting and sometimes I got temporary relief other times not For 12 years I struggled along with this handicap to my work seldom laid up but often a burden to myself with lameness and rheumatic pains Two years ago I met an old friend a physician who noticed at once my out-of-health condition and who pre scribed for me an exclusive diet ol Grape Nuts milk and fruit I followed his instructions and in two months I felt like a new man with no more headaches rheumatism oi liver trouble and from that time tc this Grape Nuts has been my main food for morning and evening meals am stronger and healthier than I have been for years without a trace of the old troubles Judging from my present vigorous physical and mental state J tell my iCUic iuciuusuiaa may yet have tc take second place among the old men for I feel like I will live a great manj more years To all this remarkable change In health I am Indebted to my wisx friend and Grape Nuts and I hope the Postum Co will continue to manufac ture this life and health givin food for several centuries yet until f move to a world where indigestion is un known Name given by Postum Cn Battle Creek Mich Ask any physician what ho know3si about Grape Nuts Those who havst tried it know things ff Theres a reason 4 Look in each pkg forUhe famnmi little book The Read to WeUvilie a t V f If a J