THE NORFOLK WEEKLY NEWa-.inJUNAL ! KllIDAY OCTOBER 1 1 09 The Norfolk Weekly News-Journa Tliu News , Established 1881. Thc Journal , Established 1877 COMPANY W. N , HIIHO , N I'rt'Hlik'nt. Secretary Every Friday. Hy mall pur year , | l.r > 0 Entered at the postolllce ul Norfolk Noli. , n second CIIHH mutter. " " TeTuiflionoB : " TMlforTal Department No. 22. BuHlnosB Olllce and Job Itootni No. II 22. _ The wt'Ht lin money enough t : inovo ItH cropH without liorrowlni much form the eitHt , tliiuik you. C. H. Smith will make an efllclcn Hhorlff. He will he "on the Job" ever ; minute. He IH entitled to the nolli ( republican vote In MadlHon county. The polltlelntiH who have DCCI counting on a big plum from the cen HUH might aa well count theiiiHelve out. Political pullo tfcn't shake dowi CC11HUH pltltllH. Alahama , like Abou Hen AOhem o old , leadH all the rout of the Incom tax amondment. It IH only one Hint out of the thlrty-llvo that miiHt sign I before It bocomoH a law. 1'roBldent Taft declarcH the IncrciiE In the coHt of living the world over 1 duo to the demand being equal to o in excess of the supply not to th tariff. Mr. HooHovelt'H account of bin rid on the cowcatcher through Africa Kiimu country IH a thrilling Htory. M JlooHovelt would ho right In IIH ! eli inunt In Htich a iioultlon. In Mexico COIIHUH taking IH n dill cult piece of biiHlnoHtt , The Mexican fonr that the enumeration mean cither rompulHory military Horvlco t inoro taxcH , and they are not lit favc of cither. The si'Hoiw diplomatic difference between .lapiut and China over th concoHHloiiH In Manchuria and More Jiavo been settled In the cimtoinnr innnner by Japan taking what Bh wanted. The Philadelphia TlntCH Is worryln About what wo are going to do wit the north polo , now wo bavo It. ' HfoniH as though a central place whet everybody could BOO It would slmplll this matter consldorably. Frank I * Dowllng Is a young mai clean-cut , Intelligent and ambition Ho IH the republican candidate fc county Judge in Madison county till fall , That ho would make good o the Job Is conceded. Why not ole < him ? It Is fortunate for Premier ABqult that those English Hitffraglsts , llko otl or women , are failures at throwln atones straight. It Is one of their fi vorlto pastimes shying bricks an stones at the Hrltlsh statesman , hi they rarely hit the mark. William J , Bryan admits that he tired of talking. In the early days ( the boy orator's career he never sui posed the time would come who Hpeoohmaklng would become Irksoni but Mr. Uryan has reduced his schoi lo of spi'i't'hes by M per cent f ( next year. Uules are moro stringent at Rholn than In American cities. During avl tlon week an aoroplanlst was lined f ( reckless Hying. Ho did not damaj and harmed no one , but he frlghtene the people. Would that wo had i stringent laws for governing our ant mobile drivers. One family In every forty will hav mi auto by this ttmo next year. The * nro the llgures for the Halted State .imputation In general. The man wli did the figuring did not add that tli other thirty-nine families will be tr , Ing to mortgage their homes to rah money to buy one. A certain county fair mauagomei In Kansas has contracted for an at that Is so "death defying , " thrlllin and clangorous , that the county papoi refuse to advertise it In detail for fei of scaring children. It must Indue bo a terror when a county newspape refuses to exploit It. President Taft's tour Is one Ion line of banquet tables. The sight ( these festal boards must become a odious one to the president. Incldoi tally It would be Interesting to kno how much has been spent In the at Bfogate on these spreads reachln from the Atlantic to the Pacific. GOOD UOADS AUK PAUAMOUN" Madison county has not seen tli time when u man more capable , mot honest or more aggressive along coi servntlve lines than Burr Taft , hn occupied a place on the board of com ty commissioners. He should be n elected this fall by a big majorlt ; Ills record should and will ro-elee him. The Aleutian Islands are now belli exploited as most desirable and sin cossful locations for stock ralslni They stretch In n long chain out froi the Alaskan coast , and the climate I so mild as to make grazing the yen around possible. Hero is undoubted ! the source of our future meat supplj and again wo give Mr. Sownrd on united thanks. No better or more practical work hns been clone for the relief of the McBHltm earthquake sufferers than that accomplished by ati American coif structlon company , which built 1,870 wooden cottages and left material for 1,200 more. From the king and queen to the poorest subject , they have re peatedly shown their gratitude for this assistance. Now York brides among the four hundred are no longer showered with rice and pelted with old shoes. A shower of rose petals Is good form now In .Gotham. In thin departure from old fashioned customs they cer tainly have made n great advance. Hose potato not only carry far moro sentiment than rice and old shoes but they make less dangerous missies. Dr. Wiley IH a man of many Ideas. His latest scheme is decidedly reac tionary , Ho proposes In his desire for pure food , In the homes of the land , to refuse marriage licenses to all would-be brides who do not know how to cook and will not promise to exer cise this knowledge In her new home. This Isn't a bad Idea , but It may tend to reduce the number of marriages. No stronger endorsement of any candidate for county superintendent could bo given than has been glvon to A. 10. Ward , candidate for Madison county superintendent , by former State Superintendent McUrlen and other educators of high standing In Nebraska. Madison county people will cheese well if they select Mr , Ward to look after the county school system. Chief of Police Kohler of Cleveland , Ohio , has tried with remarkable sue COSH running the police department ol that city according to the golden rule and common sense. As a result of thle policy the arrests In Cleveland arc only ono-Blxth of what they were twc years ago. Life and property arc safet than formerly. It Is a wise chief ol police who known and lives up to the golden rule. Dr. nruco llarton says If the crowds- will go to the baseball games Instead of coming to church , the minister ? should carry the gospel to them there Ho inado a definite proposal that the ministers should be allowed to addresE the assembled crowds at games in the few minutes between the eloso of prac- tlco nnil the beginning of the game This Is a now departure Indeed , but who can say that It Is not In the right direction ? This year's corn crop promises tc reach three billion bushels a quantity so great that the human mind cannot grasp it. During the next twentj 'years ' a great revolution will take ; place in the manner of farming. Agrl culture will become moro Intelligent I and moro intense. New plants will be i discovered and better use will IK inado of the land. An aero will pro duce twice as much under proper treat 1' ' mont as It produces now. Few people are awaie of the care used by railroads In keeping tab on the productiveness of land along tholi lines front the standpoint of the amount of freight produced by various crops. The heavier the crops poi acre , the more business for the rail roads. Nor are theie many people who think of lumber as a crop , and one of the most Important crops at that , which contributes a large share of the freight business of railroads. So great Is the demand for teachers of agriculture and manual training since these subjects have been so generally orally Included In the public school curriculum that some state unlver sltles are issuing bulletins urgltif young men who have a high school training and also some practical expo rlence on a farm to lit themselves foi this line of work. It offers an excel lent opportunity to young men as the preparation Ip not so expensive as li some other lines. Travelers in Africa tell of a curlou * trail which is a relic of a raid of the dervishes. In order to mark the course for those who follow and alse for their return trip the advance com pany tied the slender saplings along their course into Knots. The trees continued to grow but the knots re mained and grow with the trees , sc the trail is more plainly marked to day by these distorted trees than II was when the dervishes raided the Abysslnlans. Ilurr Tart Is one of the most cap able , most progressive , and most trust worthy commissioners Madison conn- ( ty over bad. People Interested in see Ing good roads built , substantial , permanent manont bridges erected where ' they ought to bo. and the business of the county conducted along economical , business lines , should by all moana vote for Taft. Madison county ls out of debt for the tlrst Unto In many years , which speaks well for Taft'a past record on the board. It has long been supposed that it was necessary for those dwellers of the east who were afflicted with tuber culosis to go west to BOIUO of the states favored by consumptives , Now , however - over , physicians are trying to discour age this practice , They say that If the disease can bo cured at all , it can bo cured as well in the east as the west , If the proper treatment IB per- Hinted In. It will take n long tlmo to convince people of this fact after hav ing been taught the exact opposite for HO many years , It seems an unfortunate and pitiful thing that after a century nntl moro of persistent effort by bravo men to reach the north polo that when vic tory lias at last been wrested from the llorce elements that the result should bring not glory and honor , but n bitter and degrading controversy. It is not strange that Lieutenant Poary , after spending twenty-three years of his life In this search should bo terribly dis appointed to find In the moment of Ills victory that another man claimed the laurels , but If Cook honestly accom plished the great feat , Peary should be great enough to acknowledge It , and by HO doing ho would add to his own popularity and receive the sympa thy of the world In his disappointment. Roosevelt and his constituency of national conservationists are needed Imperatively In a new line of national conservation of resources. The Amor- lean blond Is rapidly disappearing. The same complaint comes from every nation. Even In Germany and Sweden the llaxen poll IH giving place to the brown head. Dr. Woodruff states that the blonds are losing out In the strug gle for existence and tilling the Jails and alms houses because of the excess of sunlight which the sensitive blond cannot endure. One would infer from this statement that the climate of the entire world was changing and becom ing warmer. In which case the time may soon come when n trip to our twlco discovered north polo will bo a pleasant holiday excursion. It doesn't pay to discredit men and doubt their Integrity and sincerity. The great mass of men yearn for something bettor and are always ready to follow a leader who represents all that Is best in humanity. As Lymnn Abbott says : "The spirit of universal suspicion tends to personal degrada tion. Ho who allows himself to be- llovo that all men are liars easily comes to believe that sincerity Is a llctlon of the preachers and the poets. " One of the poorest assets any man can have Is distrust. There Is a great deal in the world that Is wrong , but there arc such transcendant possibili ties for good that It ought to keep everyone busy figuring out how he can do the most to push himself and his fellows onward and upward. Moro than a million trees have been planted by the Pennsylvania company this season , making a total of U.400,000 trees planted by this cor poration In the last three years to provide for the future demand for timber and cross tics. This work con stitutes the most extensive foiestry plan undertaken by a private corpora tion In line with the American Civic Association's campagn for the con servation of the timber supply. No better evidence can be given of the practical value from the utilitarian viewpoint , of the efforts of the Ameri can Civic association for "a moro beautiful America. " And , while the Pennsylvania railroad company's forestry operations are a private enter prise , the policy of the company Is to encourage public reforestratlon. Humanity is constantly hoping for and looking forward to the time when sanitary methods ofIvlng and the ad vance of medical skill and knowledge will eliminate disease from the world. It Is true that yellow fever has been largely done away with , cholera and small-pox no longer cost the world many lives. Even tuberculosis Is becoming understood and the death rate from the white plague Is not quite as high as It was twenty years ago. Typhoid Is known to be re sultant from unsanitary conditions and Is preventable by sanitary sur roundlngs. Of the old enemies , so long fought by the medical fraternity , cancer Is now the most dreaded and the least understood. Kvcn If this dread disease should come under con trol , some new affliction would be bred by new conditions. Our manner of living Is constantly changing anil these changes affect the physical mental and nervous force of the sys tem. Even Improvements In personal cleanliness and habits destroy Im munities as well as ailments. The end of disease is probably no nearer than It ever was. The great nations of Europe , with tholr powerful navies , do not take the American navy seriously. We have heard too much of our world circling "buttle ( loot as a visible embodiment of American sea power. " It was and is a powerful Hoot , for purposes of peace , but those In authority assort that In the event of war Its alien col liers would have been compelled by International law to desert It and it would 'have boon lucky to get home. If the American navy were forced to combat a righting Hoot from any of the great nations , It would bo a very different proposition from chasing the Santiago tloet unresisting to Its doom or taking Manila , So far appeals to congress for n merchant marine and a resumption of our former ocean car rying trade have been in vain. Some thing must arouse a sentiment In favor - vor of restoring our ocean traffic bo- faro anything will bo done. It Is thus that reforms come. It was a woman with n novel that set the sword against slavery after half a century of fruit- CHS talk. Who abolished child labor n the mines and factories In England ? A woman with a poem. Who led the lohtors out of prison In England Dickens with his Inimitable stories , while Whlttler's poem did the same for American debtors. All successful ippeal Is to sentiment. Some tlmo some American poet will strike a note that will arouse Americans to the loss they are Incurring In neglecting tholr rightful heritage upon the ocean and leaving their navy utterly at the mer cy of foreign colliers. TAFT'S TARIFF TALK. The frankness of President Tnft In saying what ho thinks , and the com mendable attitude taken by him upon questions of public moment , as ex pressed in his present western trip , have won for him now friends through out the country and have made old friends even more staunch. The Wlnona , Minn. , speech , In which the president discussed the tariff bill , declaring that the Payne tariff bill Is the best that ever has been enacted by the republican party and consequently quently the best ever given the na tion , Is attracting unusual comment In all parts of the country. The pres ident frankly admitted that certain re ductions which ho had hoped for wore not gained In this bill , but he also pointed out clearly and strongly that many very decided reductions were gained , and with these as a founda tion moro could be hoped for In the future. The president supported those con gressmen and senators who , even though they did not got all that they desired In the bill , recognized the fact that It was much better than the bill then in existence , and voted for It. Just what thought was In the minds of those "Insurgents" who chose to vote against the bill , Is not apparent. That they could hope to gain anything at all In voting against the bill , scorns Impossible. They were fighting for tariff revision ; the Payne bill offered partial revision ; to vote against it was to vote against partial revision and to vote for a continuation of the former bill. Law-making as It Is done In this country , and particularly tariff law-making , can come only In a series of compromises , and President Taft and those who stayed with the repub- Hcan party In supporting the measure , did much moro toward tariff revision than those who voted against the bill , The president's plea for party soli darity Is well taken. Party solidarity is essential to the accomplishment ol legislation along lines uphold by a party. To djvlde a party and elect the enemy means the loss of every' thing that the party works for. And thus it is easily seen that republicans must stand solidly together , one sec tion making concessions to another at times , but all standing for republican' Ism In Its broadest sense , If repub lican principles and not those of the populist and democrat are to be main tained. Effort within the party to accom plish certain principles of action , the president endorses. This Is a healthy sign for the party at large. Hut when the light within has been fought , the majority must rule and the losers must be good losers if they expect to re main republicans and If they hope foi the achievement of republican prin ciples. PUT BLAME ON DAHLMAN. The result 6f the Omaha slight tc Governor Shallenberger , In not Invit ing him to meet President Taft , it- already boiling over In Nebraska pol Hies , and it begins to look as if Dabl man will lose heavily as a result ol the incident. The governor is a candidate for re nomination and re-election and Mnyoi James C. Dahlman of Omaha is alsc n democratic candidate for the same place. Already the Shallenbergei democrats are commencing to make capital out of the fact that the gov ernor was not Invited to break broad with the Omaha bunch and at the same time they are placing the blame at the door of Mayor Dahlman , thug seeking to create sentiment against him. Already the news of the action ol the Omaha people has reached Furnas county , and it has been an important factor In the democratic convention that has Just been held. At that con vention the following resolutions were Introduced and adopted by a unani mous vote : "Whereas , It pleased those in charge of the reception and banquet tendered President Taft at Omaha to insult the democracy of Nebraska by falling to invite our governor to be present on that occasion ; therefore , be it "Resolved , That the democracy ol Furnas county , in convention assem bled , resents such Insult , and hereby pledges itself to do all In Its power to secure the renontlnatlon and reelection tion of Governor Shallenberger to suc ceed himself as governor of our state. Do it further "Resolved , That the active candi dacy of James C. Dahlman , mayor of Omaha , at this time Is 111 advised , un timely and If persisted In cannot but fail to work Injury to the Interests of our party , both in the state and in the nation. " Mayor Dnblman. when shown a copy of the Furnas county democracy reso lutions , said that their adoption would not swerve him from continuing In the race. He denied that ho had anything to do with the Inviting of guests to the Taft banquet and was not even a member of the committee that made up the list. However , the Injury has been done and democrats In every county are blaming Dahlman. It now looks as II this will cost him n large number ol votes and very materially Injure life chances for election , If he over had any , and If ho should secure the noin Inatlon. Omaha democrats who are against Dahlman and for cither Shallenbergei or Lobeck , say that this action of the Furnas county democrats Is but the start of what Is to come. The mosl of the county conventions are to be held during the next two weeks , ane they predict that In a majority of the counties strong resolutions will be adopted. They add that the work It being prosecuted and that when tin conventions are hold , In more that half of them , enough strength will be developed to denounce Dahlman ane endorse either Shnllenberger or Lo beck. As they now figure results Dahlman will land as about third mar In the race. Already Dahlman sees the handwrlt Ing. and is hurrying his lieutenants on Into the state to repair the breaks li his political fences. One of the flrsi places where Dahlman will try tc stem the tide Is in Lancaster county In Lincoln a movement that looks t ( similar action as was taken In Furnai county has been started , and evorj possible effort Is now being made bj Dahlraan's friends to counteract It His friends arc loaded with letters ane affidavits to prove that he had nothlni to do with the Taft banquet and tin "snub" to Governor Shallenberger. AROUND TOWN. Not much cquinoxlal storm abou ! this. this.We We must confess that Gregory cat play ball. Raj ) on wood whenever you spcal of this weather. This is the old original Itallai brand of atmosphere. Does ordinary accident Insurance cover aeroplane rides ? Saturday was our hoodoo day los' ' at both baseball and football. No more grandmothers of the office boy will die until next spring. The baseball season has come to an end. The Methodist bishop at Nellgh yes terday declared that It does not paj to underpay ministers. It doesn't paj the ministers. Stand up for north Nebraska. The only one of that Kansas City woman's six husbands to leave her , was the one from Meadow Grove. And she levee him most of all. ATCHISON GLOBE SIGHTS. A lean man's Idea of a good lookinj man Is a fat man. About the only thing a bachelor am the father of a family regard from the same point of view is a baseball game An Atchlson sport recently had hh picture taken with two watches. Am it wasn't deception ; he had twc watches In his pockets. With one outfit forecasting the one of the world , and real scientists pre dieting earthquakes , you'd better gei under. Dr. Cook's Bill of * Fare. Chicago Tribune : Through the courtesy of Dr. Cook's publishers we are permitted to reprint the explorer's bill of fare during his final dash foi the pole : SOUPS. Dog tall. Puree of Pup. FISH. Planked Whitedog. Sattse Eskimo ROASTS. Breast of Dog. Prime Native Dog au jus Spare Ribs of Dog. Boiled Leg of Dog with Caper Sauce ENTREES. Dog Livers Saute. Northern Lights Baked Dog's Heart , Glblet Sauce. RELISHES. Pickled Dogs' Feet. Deviled Dog Hot Dogs. Dog Flakes. BEVERAGE. Dog's Head. Wayne Democrat Philosophy. Fifty cent butter Is coming , thej &ay. Please pass the axle grease. The man who drives an automobile is a chauffeur , but I have heard then : called something different when the > come near running Into people. In fact there are several other names. Madison claims to have the smartest man In the state when he Is drunk Wayne Is a city of millionaires when it comes to that. "Stick to the farm" Is beginning tc pay big dividends. The man who sold out a few years ago Is generally worthless , while those who hung on are rich. "I am the only white man who has ever reached the north polo , " shouts Peary. But Penry can't act white about it , if true. For heaven's sake let Roosevelt go and finish the canal. Got hint some place where It will not bo necessary to hoar from him for a while. Well , it doesn't now matter much about a now depot In Wayne. De Ber- lot says that In fifty years from this date we will all be using flying ma chines , and as the railroad company will not give us a now depot before that time elapses we don't care when they build one. Making Money On the Farm XV. Locating and Plant ing the Orchard By C. V. GREGORY. Author of "Homo Course In Modern Agriculture" Copyrljfht , 1909. by American Pitt * Aiiociition farm should have nt EVERY a few fruit trees to pro vide fruit for home use. Where Hell and climate arc favorable and a good market can be secured fruit growing for market is a very profitable business. The most Important point In plan ning an orchard Is selecting the loca tion. The land should be naturally well drained If possible. If not , arti ficial drainage should be resorted to. A moderate northeast slope Is the most desirable. Trees on a north slope do not start us quickly in the spring , and the danger of having the fruit buds nipped by an untimely frost Is less ened. An orchard on such a slope also suiters less from sun scald and drought. If the hill on which the farm build' ings are placed is large enough I he orchard can be located on the north slope and the buildings on the south. A windbreak of a double row of ev > r- greens on the west and north will stop the snow In winter and help to keep the fruit from being blown off In sum- turr. To complete this protection the windbreak \ylll have to be extended nil the way around , since In summer many of the heavy winds come front a south erly direction. Air Drainage. The question of air drainage Is fully as important as that of water drainage Cold air is heavy and drains rapidly into the hollow * , while the air on the slopes Is warm and dry. The differ ence of a few feet in elevation often makes a difference of several degrees In temperature. An orchard located ou a rise of land will escape many of the frosts that cut down the profits In an orchard less favorably located. Trees on a hill are also less likely to be trou bled with fungous diseases , since dry air Is not favorable to them. A soil too rich In nitrogen promotes leaf and wood growth at the expense of fr'iilt. For this reason black prairie soil is not so well adapted to fruit growing a.s some other lands. Loamy clay soil underlaid with a porous sub soli makes an Ideal foundation for an orchard. Cleared thnbcrland Is also very good. You cannot expect success with an orchard If you plant the trees lu a hole in the sod. The land should be put In to some cultivated crop for at least a year before setting out the trees. This gets the soil In good tilth and the trees will have a fair chance from the start. What to Plant. Having eleclded on the location for the orchard , the next step Is to soled the kinds and varieties of fruit to be grown. The apple Is the most widely grown tree fruit In this country. It has hardy varieties that can be grown well up Into the northern sections. PIO. XXIX TllllIKTY VOOSO A1TLE THEE. while other varieties are adapted to southern conditions. The plum Is even more hardy than the apple , and some of the Improved varieties give as de licious fruit as could be asked for , Cherries are also fairly hardy , and a few trees are n valuable addition to any orchard. In the milder sections peaches and pears can be added to the list. list.The The question of variety Is one that must be answered for Individual con ditions. The old standard varieties are the most reliable. Varieties that are already doing well In your locality can be depended on. Your state experi ment station or horticultural society will gladly furnish you a list of the varieties that are adapted to your lo cality. One mistake often made In setting out an npple orchard Is In planting too many summer and fall varieties. These are of little value for market ; they do not keep well and are largely wasted unless they can bo canned or dried. Slnco the devel opment of cold storage some of the better keeping varieties , such nn Wealthy , can be kept nearly all win- ler Not all farmers have Ice or are located within reach of a storage ware house , however. It will generally pay to put n largo part of the orchard Into reliable win ter vnrlotles. For homo use apples are appreciated more along toward spring and will bring a higher price. An important point to consider In selecting varieties Is quality. This U especially Important In those grown for homo nee. When the frnlt Is to bo shipped any considerable distance , shipping and keeping qualities are of first Importance , and the eating and cooking qualities take a secondary place. Yield IH also Important. Buy at the Home Nuriery. In buying fruit trees It Is best to steer clear of agents with plausible stories of wonderful quality and yield. Some nursery agents arc honest and conscientious , but HO many are not that it is dllllctitt to separate the sheep from the goatH. The best way IH to make your selection of varieties and thru get the trees of some reliable nurs eryman In your own locality. If you can go to the nursery and buy them of the nurseryman himself HO much the better. In that case you can select the trees yourself and be sure of getting good ones. Thrifty one or two your old trees , with well developed root sys tems , stand transplanting better and arc cheaper than larger ones. As soon as the trees are received from the nursery they should be "heel ed In. " This Is done by digging n trench and covering the roots and about half of the tops with dirt. When the trees have been shipped for some distance It sometimes happens that they are frozen when received. In this case they should bo placed In Borne outbuilding , covered with straw and loft to thaw out gradually. In this way little harm will bo done. Preparation For Planting. The land should be deeply plowed before planting and well disked and harrowed. It Is a good practice to ? IO. XXX LOW HEADED AFl'IiB THEE. make the back furrows whore the rows are to bo and the dead furrows between the rows. The dead furrows will thus serve as ditches to carry off surplus water. It Is better to do this plowing In the full If the preceding crop can bo got off the land In time. In the Eouth the planting may be done In the fall also , but In sections where the ground freezes to any depth It Is safer to plant In the spring. Fall planted trees nre Ilablo to root killing during the winter. In the drier parts of the country , too , the roots do not get milll- dent molstnro to supply the trunk and branches , and the tree Is so badly dried out during the winter that II Is killed. In lands with n stiff subsoil running n subsoil plow down the row before planting Is practiced with good results. In extremely hard soils a little dyna mite exploded In the bottom of th hole loosens up the subsoil consid erably. The hole should be dug lar ger than the roots of the tree and 'line soil thrown In around the roots. The roots should bo well spread out and the tree set three or four inches eleeppr than It Is to be finally. By taking hold of the top and churning It up and down after the roots have been covered with dirt the soil will be thor oughly worked in around the roots. As the tree Is worked up and down II Is gradually raised to the proper height Part of the top should be cut off be fore planting. The top Is dependent on the roots for Its moisture supply. A considerable part of the root sys tem has been lost In transplanting , and the top should bo cut back to match. In planting one or two-year-old trees , known ns "whips , " this cutting back ficrvcp a double purpose by causing the tree to throw out branches Just below where It Is cut off. In trees of this kind the cut should bo a few inches above where the llrst branches nre to be. There Is considerable difference of opinion concerning the proper height to head npple trees. Low headed trees are much less liable to sun scald since the branches shade the trunk. They are easier to spray , and the apples can be moro easily gathered. There Is also iptich loss damage from large branches being broken off by the wind. The chief objection to low heading is that It Is dllllcnlt to get near the tree when cultivating the orchard. This objec tion , however. Is hardly enough to out weigh tle : advantages of low beading. If the soil Is ( Irmly packed there Is little need of using water In the hole when planting trees. The dirt should be packed very firmly around the roots. Get In with both feet and pack It as hard as possible. It is a gooel plan to lean the trees a little to the south In order that the branches may shade the trunk better and also because ? - cause the hardest winds in Ruramei nre usually from a southerly direction. The standard distance apart for ap pie tree * is thirty-two to forty fei each way. Plum and cherry tree * may IMS as close as twenty feet. Ap ple trepi are often planted 10 by 32 feet , the alternate rows being of some early bearing , short lived variety. "When the Litter trees come Into bear- Inc these fillers should be cut out A Money Maker. Sanso-De Is not rich and vet he Rodd How can that be ? Sanso-IIe works In the mint. A Persian philosopher says "Th Boat climbs the rocky hill , the wlso man takes the valley road , "