THE NGKtiOLK WEEKLY NE\VS-JOU11VAI FH1DA , JULY H3 l'-09 Tin Norfolk Weekly News-Journal the NOWB , Established 1881. The Journal , Established 1877. THE HU8E PUDLI8HINQ COMPANY. W. N. HUBO , N. A. HUBO , President. Secretary. Kvnry Friday. By mail per ycnr , $1.50. Entered ut the pofltoIHco at Norfolk , Nob. , ( IB flccoml clnaa matter. "TefeplJoncH : Eelllbrlnl Department No 22. Business OHlcc nnd Job Rooms No. II 22. "While TonncBsco 1ms gone "dry , " Kniinna 1ms gone "wot" nnd It's till water , too but with It lota of dnmngo. At the rnto President Tnft IB JoinIng - Ing secret HocletleB It IB evident that Jm proposes to keep lila grip on thlngB. A mini In Pcnnsylvniiln IB sending letters to his swootlieart by means of carrier pigeons. Ho probably culls lior lovey-dovey. The British BUffnigottcs are trying to show the fallacy of the old argu ment that women are not entitled to the ballot because they cannot light. The manufacturers of motion pic- turcfl have agreed to eliminate from their collection of films all fllma de pleting drunkenness , crlmo and vice President Eliot's llvo-foot shelf of booki may not milt your fancy , but they will help him pay for his grocery lilllH and make money for the publish crs. An oxchnnpo observes very port ! nently that "a man usually spends his seventieth birthday explaining that ho feels , younger than ho did thirty ycara ago. " Schools of Journalism arc getting to bo as plenty as fleas In Rome , but the best Bchool of Journalism that has over yet been devised IB a country printing office. Down In North Carolina a debating aocloty has deckled that the earth if flat. Some of the people who have been flooded out living in n more hilly country wish it was. The Dayton ( Ohio ) Journal got a scoop on Its contemporaries the other day by printing a sheet from nn air ship'and distributing It among the people plo below. Most newspaper men will prefer to stay on earth with theirs. A man down in Indiana Jumped off n bridge into the waters of the Wn bash the other day and was drowned Poor fellow , his burdens were more than he could stand. It is said that he had four wives nnd that none o ; them would support him. Whether Chinamen are more or less criminal than other people who come to America may be debatable. But there Is one thing sure , they are quite different and should be placed in charge of our men and not of our young women. Albert Gwynne Vanderbtlt told n Paris newspaper man "I don't care what any one says. " It seems to run In the Vanderbllt blood not to care for Uio public , but the young man's grand father expressed himself In. more forcl tole , if less polite , English. The London suffragettes are abou to besiege King Edward in Bucking ham palace. Between the Dutch war scare and the belligerent English wo men the monarch who is supposed to rule the' British empire will feel like taking to the woods. Rev. Mr. Grant , who has been ap pointed chaplain of the United States senate to succeed Edward Everet Hale , needs not to envy those who have gone to darkest Africa as mis slonarles. His own field of labor 1 among those who need cnlightenmenl There Is Just one way to get trade KO after It. Make yourself and you goods known , felt nnd seen. Compo people to como in and then on th merit of your goods and your ablllt > to convince people of them , sell them The columns of this paper are open to all legitimate advertising. The total cost of repairs to the flee of battleships which cruised aroun the world , over and above what they would have required hnd they staye at home , was about n million and half dollars. American citizens ar unanimous in pronouncing It mane well spent. A venerable citizen of Michigan a tributes his good health to the fac that ho has always eaten whatever h wanted to eat and as much as h cared for. Ho says he has never war ried about his stomach and his ston ach has never worried him. The have nlwaya been good friends an pot along very well with one another This statement Is One Of such extop ttonal common sense that it deserve to bo noted. It does not. often fall to the lot o man to bo present nt the unveiling o his own statue , but such high hone Las como to Mistral , thq poet of Pro % 'onco , who was awarded the Kobe prize for literature a few yeara ago It IB sometimes a good thing for me know the value their countrymen lace upon their work and character eforo they leave this vale of tears , t Is of llttlo comfort to them after- ards. The Political Equality union of Chi- ago , composed of single women very one of them charming has re- olvcd that Its members will not mary - y any man who docs not favor suf- rage for women. Of course , any sen- Iblo man who BOOB hi any one of lioso girls his affinity will quickly and raceftilly yield to the Inevitable , lore man must "stoop to conquer" in hcBO strenuous days and keep from talking back" if ho Is to avoid trou- lo. The move for bettor roods in the vl- Inlty of Norfolk should awaken en- liuslasm not only among business men but among farmers. A sight of ho now rends around Omaha nough to Instill ono with ambition or real ronds. The work of the gov- rnmont exports around Stuart , too , Is nough to set a good example. No ono hing IB moro of vnluo to the farming ommunlty than good roads and the movement to accomplish something ; along this line should bo given aupi ) ort. MAY GET OIL HERE. If it develops from the striking of oil at Lincoln that there really Is oil n any considerable quantity nt the tate capital , those who have always contended that there is oil in this ter- itory will feel encouraged to spend a ittlo money In testing out the conten- ion. ion.There There are those who have for yeara maintained that there Is oil beneath .hose prairies and at times it has even seemed likely that wells would bo dug o test out the proposition. Fashion the awful travesty which ms been responsible for the slaughter of millions of harmless song birds Is low demanding metallized horned oads for hat ornaments and pins and Texas is supplying thousands of these ittlo Insect destroyers to meet the demand. The worst feature of this Is , that the horned toads are metallized 11 while ullve the hot metal coating Is jlaced over their bodies and they are burned to death. If there was ever Iterally a burning shame , this is the one , and It is a disgrace to American civilization that it Is permitted. The man who wants work and Is willing to work , and has an ambition L .o do his work well , will not long bo ) out of employment. There Is always i a place for the efficient man but it t takes a greater degree of skill to hold 1 a Job than it used to. The methods of t doing business have been greatly im proved over what they were years ago. The man who was considered a fair carpenter in pioneer days would , under modern competition , be simply a wood I' butcher. There is always room at the , top , but this is an age of sky scrapers and the top is much higher up than It was in grandfather's days. We were lately looking over the va cation number of a magazine , and not- that , while It taught travelers all about "kicking , " it gave little other information of value. "Let the hotel ! clerk see that you will not be Imposed upon , " says the vacation number. In another place , it says : "Speak firmly to the guide , and do not give in. " And j so it goes throughout the vacation number. All of which tends to send out quarrelsome , disagreeable travel ers. Whoever has traveled much will admit that there Is llttlo occasion for "kicking. " Conditions are nearly al ways pleasant , and a traveler gets along better as a gentleman than as a grouch. Now that the time for filln& candidacies I- Ii dacies has closed , the Nebraska primary i- i3 mary campaign may be said to bo fairly on. Among the candidates for the republican nomination for supreme Judge , none is so deserving of support as Judge J. B. Barnes , at the present time associate Justice. Judge Barnes has rendered splendid service to the state in the capacity of supreme Judge ) , and he Is entitled to a renomlnatlon and re-election. Ho served when the salary was merely nominal and he is deserving of a term In the office with the now salary of $4,500 a salary more nearly adequate to the high cal ibre of service rendered. A PROSPEROUS SEASON AHEAD. , Never such growing weather for the crops as during the past month and a half , says the oldest Inhabitant. Corn and small grain could scarcely be In better condition for a bumper yield this fall in northern Nebraska and southern South Dakota , and the horn of plenty promises to fairly bulge ns a result. Prosperity is oven now getting ready to perch upon the shoulder of the new northwest and business men In Nor folk and In all of tl\o \ towns of the surrounding country aie optimistic. The farmer's prospects were never brighter , nnd the former's success means prosperity for the entire coun try. DARIUS GREEN'S DREAM. As day follows day It becomes more nnd moro apparent that the dream of Darius Green with his Hying machine is to come true and that la the vary neW future. In various portions of the world men are today making trial flights In benv- Icr-thnn-nlr machines , and every llttlo while n new record IB established. Ono man has just outftown the Wrights In point of altitude. And a Frenchman , attempting to 11 y across the English channel , made a twelve-mile start , nt enormous height , when his engine played out. He dropped Into the ocean nnd was rescued only to declare that ho will make another trial. Airship tiowa has como to be ono of the regular features of the day's events and speed nnd height nro getting to be commonplace In midair. There Is every reason to believe that ton years from now aeroplanes will bo as successful and practical as automobiles are today. Adam Bede , the Duluth , Minn. , hu morist and ex-congressman , pays this very beautiful and unique tribute to one of the "grand old men" who has recently i died. "Personally to have known and frequently to have shared In public functions with so great nnd good i a soul as Edward Everett Hale , jwho ; nt the ego of eighty-six went to heaven 1 , the other day , Is one of the sweetest i memories and will long bo treasured. i Ho always seemed a grand old watch dog at the gates of glory. Ills life was a century of prayer set to music ono grand oratorio of uplift and optimism. He loved his country ns few countries nro worthy to beloved loved , lie trusted human nature be cause his own nature could bo trusted , and ho gave his life to man because 'the world offered nothing higher to serve. He had prayed for the United States senate several years. But ono day God said , 'What is the use ? " and the nngols bore him home. " Fact is ever more wonderful than fiction. It was not so many years ago that Jules' Verne wrote that fanciful story in which ho sent Phllcas Fogg around the world In eighty days. Thousands road the book and looked upon it as the champion flight of the versatile Frenchman's mind. Not so long afterward Miss Nellie Bly actually - j ' ly made a trip circling the globe In sixty-five days. And now by the new ( railroads through Asia nnd the short ening of ocean routes and the quicker time across the United States one can make a trip around the world inside of thirty days , all at a cost In fare' of a little more than ? COO. Even a quar ter of n century ago he would have been a bold man who would have pre > dieted such rapid transit in this gen- J erntlon. It only shows that the entire world is becoming remarkably close j neighbors too close for the building of Dreadnaughts and big navies. Con- , dltions are approaching which will compel nations as well as Individuals to be friendly. There is no vocabulary rn literature so inexhaustible as that employed by ' . the baseball fan. It is simply aston- Ishlng what a wide range of telling expressions there are in the language of sport. The New York Sun gives a hundred words that its sporting editor uses In describing the making of a base hit in a game of baseball , and ad mits that even these far from exhaust his barrel of expletives. When ho wants to say that "the batter drove a hit" he can turn to any one of these expressions : "Stung , lugged , lined smote , soaked , smacked , spanked smeared , swatted , slammed , scorched knocked , crashed , clubbed , lammed lunged , laced , burned , bored , flayed punched , pelted , pasted , pronged thumped , hammered , pounded , pummeled moled , walloped , banged , whacked whaled , splashed , spilled , slapped dumped , dinged , plunked , swung , sunk shot , swept , switched , pulled , percolat ed , brushed , landed , laid , whipped thrust , carved' , carromed , careened , uncorked , produced , discharged , put , cut , emblazoned , ejected , emptied , fes tooned , pickled , aimed , registered , heaved , rolled , divulged , poured , siz zled , scratched , skinned , sandwiched , slipped , bounced , glanced , flicked , flipped , bumped , peeled , crowded , jammed , trundled , pickled , forced , sailed , scared , lifted , lobbed , arched , forked , popped , pushed , winged. " GILDER'S FINDS. Nebraska is Just now receiving com- pllmontary attention from the scien tific world through the finds of R. F. Gilder , the Omaha newspaper man who dug up skeletons of prehistoric beings a year or so ago. The current number of the Araeri can Anthropologist contains , among other interesting features , a paper by Mr. Gilder concerning his exploration covering eight months in ancient house ruins In Sarpy and Douglas counties. The article covers thirty- three pages and is accompanied under Mr. Gilder's title by a highly scientific report on the skeletal remains found In the vicinity of the ruins , by Dr. Ales Hrdllcka , the famous physical anthro pologist of the United States National museum , to whom were sent six skulls and portlohd of skeletons. Mr. Gilder's article Is printed on heavy book paper , and the maps and illustrations drawings and halftones are of n very high order of excel- lenco. The halftones were made from photographs taken by the official gov ernment photographers connected with the museum. Upon receipt of the objects reproduced in the article jby the museum a request was made of Mr. Glider that the museum ciirator bo allowed to 'make ' casts or replicas of the objects for exhibition In the im mense collection of the museum , a privilege which was readily granted , nnd the casts were thereupon made by the sculptor who executed other replicas of the museum's valuable specimens for the Seattle exposition. Since publication of the article Mr. Gilder has received complimentary let- era from scientific men nnd university irofesBors from all over the United States , and ns ono result Prof. Charles Montbomery of the University of To ronto , Canada , lias expressed his In- cntlon of continuing research here abouts in connection with Mr. Glider tills summer. THE TARIFF VAUDEVILLE. The trouble with some of those "re form" senators , such as Cummins of [ own , Is that they show the "yellow" whenever self Interest makes It policy for them to forget the principles for \vMcli they claim to stand. The present vaudeville performance at Washington , In which Insurgent senators are turning somersaults In the air , serve both to amuse the coun- cry nnd to disgust onlookers who care for consistency. Some of the Insurgents who have been yelling loudest about reducing the tariff on the necessities of life , now that the pruning knife is applied to commodities from their o\yn states , begin to throw themselves down on the floor , kick up their heels and scream to the extent of ihelr lungs' capacity. Some of the senators from cattle stwtes , for example , who have been standing all along for sweeping reduc- lions in lumber and oil and coal ar- tlcles produced In other states and who havp contended that the necessl-'j ties of life are costing too much , due to excessive tariff now demand that the tariff on hides shall 'not be touched , because if they are these self same senators may not be allowed to return to Washington. It begins to look more and more as if the old epigram which people have laughed at so many years that the tariff Is a local Issue is , after all , the true story. But for the sake of consistency and for the sake of the principle for which they claim to be fighting , the "Insur gents" ought to have the backbone to stand up for the ultimate consumer all along the line of necessities and should work for less expensive shoes as much as for less expensive oil. It Is little surprising , under such topsy-turvey conditions as these , if a few weeks of work in congress shall , after all , fall to bring about the most equitable and the most judicious sort of tariff bill. WE'RE GOING TO PAVE. Prospects for the paving of Norfolk avenue are better at this time than they have ever been before , and the prospects seem good for actual paving early next spring. With the creation of a sewer district on Norfolk avenue , by virtue of which the old and outgrown sewer now under the street will be replaced with a mod ern sewer connecting with the new main sewer system , the present city administration has taken a long step toward paving. As soon as the sewer Is constructed the paving proposition can be carried out. Property owners are more than ever enthusiastic over paving , realizing the great need of such improvement for the street and appreciating the fact that property values will increase when paving comes. Norfolk can never hope to bo the city It ought to be until paving has started , and when paving starts , if the history of other towns Is repeated here , the city will take n now lease on life. life.It It Is confidently declared on all sides that just ns soon as paving starts , it will spread to all parts of the city. We're almost up to the starting The Tennessee prohibitory law is attracting much attention throughout the country. Its features are quite different' from those of any other state , as It prohibits both the sale and the manufactu" of liquor. No "booze can bo sold within four miles of a school house , and that practically wipes out the traffic. Everywhere within the borders of the state there is a prompt compliance with the law , except in Memphis. In that city the saloons are still running and say they will continue to do so until the consti tutionality of the new law is tested , The law provides that after January 1 , 1010 , no liquors shall be mnnufac tured In the state. The wholesale liquor dealers and brewers will also make a vigorous light against the law. The decision of the court will be awaited with Intense eagerness both i by the "wets" and the "drys" ns very much depends upon it in the progress of the contest now going on In many states between the liquor nnd nnti- liquor Interests. It will by no means settle the question , but It will greatly hasten or delay the onward march of prohibition which Is sweeping over the land. Francis W. Crownlnshleld in Life gives this not overdrawn picture of the fashionables in Now York nnd it ought to make us all who have the good fortune not to bo In that kind of t a VswItu" restful and contented with our lot This. Is the advice , given in regard to those unfortunate possessors of too much money and too llttlo pur pose , in the columns of Life : "Let us permit them to go on- and ride , nt n furious speed , In motors ; to Issue en graved Invitations ; to answer little notes nnd leave P. P. C.'s ; to bant nnd tnco and pinch their toes ; to hnvo their hair glossed and dyed and occasion ally augmented ; to see food placed be fore them nnd feel no appetite for it ; to employ a retinue of servants who burn with n lust to leave them ; to have sentiments but no passions ; to swallow pates , pills nnd palpable flat tery ; to deny silly stories about them selves In the paper ; to buy spurious sV works of art at hair raising prices ; to lend 1 money to friends and so to lose 1t them 1t ; to make themselves agreeable to bores because they have tasted their truffles and terrapin ; to hnvo largo 1 nurseries but no llttlo children ; 1t to t be robbed and fleeced by their ser vants and 'beauty' doctors and trades people I ; to telephone to a tedious pro It cession Ic of bachelors to (111 ( a place at dinner or an odd bed in the country ; to dispute about lawsuits , libels , taxes nnd rates of Interest ; to bo forced to watch stocktickors nnd muslqal com edles ; to shoo , defy nnd do battle with black clouds of ennui ; to pay bills and fiddlers and trifling visits ; to sell tick ets for bazaars and piano recitals ; to offer cold cordials nnd tepid apologies ; to marry their daughters to scoundrels of Europe ; to change their dress nnd demeanor and opinions from ono day's end to another ; to own houses in town but never to live In them ; to bo snubbed and derided and mlsunder stood , ; to sign checks , receipts and pledges j ; to store furniture , furs , jew ' els ( , securities and hangings nnd to bo I vigilant , about moths and fire and burg' Inrs and breakage nnd water and In' surance , ; to send more margin to their brokers 1 ; to journey to Carlsbad and there 1 to drink liquid abominations ; to lose 1 sight of their feet and friends and youthful Ideals ; to find that their liearts and natures have become hard ; to divorce the ono nnd marry the oth er ; to grow fat and old nnd nervous and full of rancour and rheumatism and then , at last shall we go on , colonel , to the very end ? " AROUND TOWN. That's playing the game. But it's good for the corn. Nothing like winning the first game. Any team will have Its off days. The- nights are the best part of the days this weather. It Isn't considered loyal to bet against the home team. This ought to be great weather for the fans. Norfolk's old time baseball blood Is boiling again. Now the political pot is boiling In earnest. Less than a month for the primary campaign. If you could always tell how a ball game was coming out , it wouldn't be a game. It Is feared the near-war in Persia may send the price of oriental rugs skyward. "I wish men could conventionally wear as little as women do , this weath er , " said a Norfolk man. Page slipped In hero so suddenly and so quietly that few people realized there was a genuine baseball article on tap. Ic doesn't pay to cheat a boy. Fif teen years ago a Norfolk man short- paid a boy here for thinning sugar beets the boy had thinned eighteen rows and the man refused to pay for but seventeen , at 10 cents a row. Now that boy has grown up and he's going to get even with that man severa ; times over , if It's the last thing he ever does. Queer what foolish things youths nro whose heads are turned by girls Ono young man has telephoned n girl In Norfolk at 2 o'clock the past three afternoons asking her to go some where with him and each time she has cut him off with the blunt assertion that she'd bo busy and didn't care to go , anyhow. And the moro she turns the fellow down , the crazier he seems to get. ATCHISON GLOBE SIGHTS. If you want people to like you , you must like them. Everybody has to exaggerate n little to be interesting. It Is natural for a liar to doubt every statement he hears. The "steady drinker" Is never very steady at anything else. Wo have never yet seen a leg that looked well in a white stocking. Every boy believes that some day ho will bo able to lift a half ton. Most women can whistle Just enough to like to hear themselves do it. Occasionally wo meet n woman these days who seems conscious of wearing too much hair. But , when a woman thinks It is possible she has ou too much , she has on n terrible lot Making Money On the Farm V.-Wheat Raising Dy G. V. GREGORY , Author of "Homo Course In Modern Agriculture" Coprlht 1909 , by American Pr * > AiiocUtion NE of the most Important grain crops grown In this country Is wheat. It Is second In value and acreage only to corn. Not | withstanding the great importance of the wheat crop but llttlo attention bus been paid to Improved methods of cul ture. Wheat Is largely looked upon an an extensive crop. Most farms In the wheat belt are large. This \a \ especial ly true of the spring wheat bolt In northwestern United States and south ern Canada It is no uncommon sight there to sou a section or moro In one Hold. Wheat follows wheat year after year. Llttlo live Htuck la kept , and no manure Is applied to the laud. Under this treatment the seemingly exhaust- FIO. fX HAKVE8TEII AT WORK. less supply of fertility is becoming worn out The humus especially has been used rapidly , with no source of renewal. Usually it does not take more than a decade of continuous wheat growing to reduce the yield one- half. Conditions in the winter wheat belt nro not BO bad , but there Is much room for Improvement there also. Not only is continuous wheat growing harden on the soil , but it docs not distribute the work evenly throughout the year. In the spring there is a rush to get the seed In. In the fall there is a still greater rush to get the crop harvested and thrashed. The rest of the year there is little to do. What the wheat farmer needs Is diversification more live stock , more crops and rotation. The wheat belt and the corn belt should be mixed up more. Many farm ers in the corn belt raise wheat as ono of the leading small grain crops. Many others would tint ) it profitable to do so. Classes of Wheat. Wheat is divided Into two general classes winter and spring. Winter wheat is sown In the fall , makes a con siderable growth and comes up and heads out the next season. Spring wheat is sown hi the upriug In much the same manner as oats. In Minnesota seta , the Dakotas and other states of the same latitude or farther north spring wheat Is the only kind that can be grown successfully since the se vere winters are faral to the fall sown varieties. In the northwest , however , the warm winds from the Pacific so moderate the climate that winter wheat can be grown successfully Far ther south , in the winter wheat belt , the bulk of the wheat Is sown in the fall .There are many objections to winter wheat. It does not make ns high a quality of flour owing to the smaller gluten content. It Is the gluten that gives the gummy consistence to bread dough that causes It to rise when mixed with yeast. Winter wheat occa sionally winter kills , resulting in a loss of the seed and the work of seed- Ing. The most uerlous objection in the corn bolt Is that it does not work in well after corn , which is the accus tomed place for small grain in the ro tation. Those objections arc overbal anced , however , by Its greater yield ing ability. The rtnrt which it gets In the fall enables It to come up much marc vigorously In the spring and give about twice as many bushels per acre as can bo obtained from the spring varieties. Wheat Is further subdivided into hard and soft varieties. The soft wheat makes a. flour that is unsultei ] to brendmnklng because of Its lack of gluten. It Is used extensively in mak ing crackers. The amount of soft wheat grown for market Is compara tively small. A new variety of wheat known ns macaroni has been introduced into the western states within the last few years. It is verv high In gluten and Is much used In the manufacture ol macaroni. It does not mnkp n very high quality of broad owing to Its yel lowish color The chief advantage of macaroni wheat Is that It can bo grown In regions where the1 rainfall is too scanty for the utandard varieties. Will Wheat Run Out ? There is a widespread Impression that whent will ran out If grown in the same locality for a number of years. Experiments nt a number ol stations show that this is not so. The real cause for wheat running out is continuous culture on the same land , with little attention paid to seed selec tion. Another fnct tjiat experiments have brought out is that the standard varieties are superior to most of the now ones. Every year seedsmen make claims of wonderful yields obtained from new varieties , not only of wheat , but of other crops as well , in most cases these claims arc entirely un founded. Before introducing a iijt variety It will pay to write to your eT porlrnent station for Information re garding it Even If they recommend It tbc imfrst plan la to try only n few acres at Orst until you nee whether or pot It ! adapted to your particular lo cality. Where winter wheat c n be grown It will pny to ralfle It In * pto | of Itn dis advantages. It can be worked Into the rotation by solving It after oatx In a rotation of corn. ontn , wheat , clover. The clover seed may bo Bcntter nl on the ground among tbo wheat plantn early In the spring. Another method of ufllng winter whent In the rotation Is to cut the corn early for Bllngo or fodder and BOW the wheat on the corn stubble ground. The trouble with thin method IB tiiat It IB usually BO Into before the corn can be got off the ground that the whent doc.i not get enough of a start to cimlilo It to with stand an extra severe winter There Is an advantage In having wheat fol low corn or some other cultivated crop In that the weeds will Iwther much IORH. The work of seeding is also ICBH since the ground dovB not need to bo plowed. Preparing the Ground. Wheat , like oatn. needs a firm seed bed. Corn ground which linn been run over twice with n disk Is an Ideal seed bed. It Is line and mellow on top and firm beneath. There Is nothing to pre vent the capillary moisture from ris ing rapidly to the loot-e top layer , where It Is held Just where the roots need It. When wheat follows ROUIO other small grain tbc ground Is so hard that except In the case of very loosu soils , the disk will have llttlo effect on It Such ground must bo plowed. Plowing for wheat does not need to bo very deep. Many farmers practice b'unilng the stubble before plowing , since In this wny ninny insects and weeds are destroyed , and the capil lary connection Is restored quicker. Some humus is lost In this way , but the advantages gained In many cases make It more profitable to obtain the needed humus in some other wny. The soli should bo well disked nnd harrowed after plowing to make a One , compact seed bed. With whent , as with oats , considerably better yields are obtained by the use of a drill. In loose or dry soils the press drill is a big advantage. The wheels that fol low pack the soil over the seed. This brings the soil Into closer contact with the wheat grains , and they will absorb serb moisture fnBtcr and begin to grow sooner. This quickness of starting is of much Importance In fall sown wheat near the northern limit of the winter wheat belt , since there every thing depends on the wheat making a good growth before the ground freezes. Earllncss of seeding Is important for the same reason. If you cannot get your winter wheat in early and by early is meant the first half of Sep tember it is better to wait until spring nnd sow n spring variety. The ground for spring wheat should bo prepared In much the same manner ns for oats. The rate of seeding where \ a drill is used should bo five or six , pecks to the acre , with cither springer or winter varieties. When sown broad cast about n peck more will be need ed. If there Is much smut present the seed should be treated ns outlined for oat smut In article No. 4. The seed should bo fanned nnd graded nnd test ed for germination. Rotation In Wheat Farming. In the great spring wheat regions the Introduction of n crop of clover every two or three years will material ly increase the yield. The growing of clover will moan some live stock to eat it , nnd the manure thus obtained will still further Increase the wheat yields The Introduction of some of the other grain nnd forage crops will equalize the demands upon the soil nnd add to the profits obtained from FIO. X WHEAT WELL STACKED. the farm. Experiments at the Minnesota seta station showed nn Increase of 50 per cent , or seven bushels to the acre , in wheat following cultivated crops over whent grown continuously. Dairying fits in very well with wheat farming , especially In localities so far north that com cannot be successfully grown ns n grain crop in such districts the flint varieties can be raised for sllnge nnd fodder The wheat follow ing this corn will be freer from rust. scab mid weeds and will yield much more. The cows will yield a good profit for all the feed they consume , and the work will be more evenly dis tributed throughout the year. When wheat Is grown to be sold to the flour mills the price will depend directly upon the quality To get the best quality wheat should not bo cut until It Is fully ripe. It should not be allowed to staiul too long after It is ripe or It will shell out badly. Whent should be well shocked and capped. If not well capped the bran will be come stained and cracked. Injuring the appearance and lowering the price. Stacking Is more advisable than shock thrashing since It means better qual ity nnd more fall plowing. So much depends on the quality of the grain nnd the quality is so depend ent on cultivation and harvesting that It behooves him who IB after satisfac tory results to make a close study of the Hltuntlon. It does not pay to cultl- vnto wheat Intelligently and harvest it In n manner that makes nil previous care and labor of little avail Chanoe. The three-year-old boy on the sdo ! seat in the street car turned suddenly to look out of the window , thereby wiping hla muddy shoes on the light colored trousers of the middle nged \ man sitting next to him. "Madam , " exploded the man , "is this your nasty little" Hero the boy's pretty mother turned her head and looked at him. -"angel boy ? " ho finished with n rasp. Chicago Tribune.