?5iV" .'?' wnrff'B" -'' 7;.",rf'?1!2 s -f-L. V v: '.' "-- $ V w - .aHfaHcnnV nn anai ' AaWRPeSafc. aanmW "JMJar'BI?rTaml ' ( We held oar sacred dead aloof. We put taeai by like treasures old. No awre for them or hearth or roof. Bat Barrow dwellings lone and cold. The dear, warn hearts that fell asleep! Way un them In our secret thought? Why ever at a distance keep. As If some change were In them wrought? They cease not from their constant love. They are not strange and far away. Their presences about us move Closer than presences of clay. Bow It mast grieve them, whenthey e Heart-close, and find WClmb Or whisper love, and find us dumb. Forgetful, hedged with servfle care! Oh. let us hold our dear ones we Closer and closer, when they move Beyoad the veil! For no one knows i r human love! Z? .JS."- ."Christian Advocate. , DUtkHMU "w" Yeaagest Miar. The honor of having been the youngest regularly enrolled soldier of Mr. Yaa Zeadt as He IS Te-Dey. the civil war is claimed by Gilbert Van Zandt of Kansas City. Van Zandt was 10 years old when he enlisted as a drummer boy August 6. 1862. in Company D. Seventy-ninth Ohio Vol nateers, in the little village of Fort William. Clinton county. Ohio. HU discharge at the close of the war de scribes his as a "soldier 13 years old 4 feet high." He was bora at Vaa Zeadt at the Tlaie ef His tMseaerge treat the Amy la 1SS5. Port William, Ohio. December 20. 1851. He is a member of the Farragut Thomas Post. No. 8, Department of Missouri. G. A. R. Uecola's Peaslea Petition. Col. Walter H. French, file clerk of the House, has, perhaps without exception, the finest collection of scrap books of any public man in the country, aays the Washington Times. Not only scrap books, however, but aatographs of statesmen long since passed away, and rare old public doc uments, the history of which is most fascinating. Among his collection is the original petition of Mrs. Lincoln, widow of the saartyred President, to the Congress of the United States, asking for a pen sion. The petition is signed "Mrs. A. Lincoln." A copy of that petition was printed a few years ago. Just now it is of peculiar interest the statement having been i cently made that the widow of ao President had ever applied for a pension. Uttle Creelty la Civil War. "It was not necessary," said the cap ' tain, "to restrain the boys from cruel ty. It was not in the soldiers of forty years ago to be cruel. I served from flrst to last in the same brigade with General Jacob H. Smith, now in the Philippines. He was an Illinois boy aad I was an Ohio boy. but we both enlisted in the Second Kentucky vol unteer infantry, mainly because It was reported that Major Anderson, just arrived from Fort Sumter, was to command the brigade. "Our first experience of war was la the mountains of West Virginia, bat our first great battle was Shtloh. where Captain Smith was left on the eld wounded. He recovered rapidly, however, and was soon with his com pany. At Stone River. I saw that Brigade meet the charging rebel lines ia a crash well calculated to develop all the ferocity in soldier nature. "I remember that as I looked at the laces of our men as they went over the tret rebel line and into the second. . t had a feeling of dismav at what happen. Every face was ablate i fury, and the men as they sprang into the melee looked like so may demons. That was a time tor oselty. That was a time for brutal ; aad merciless stroke, but in an t it seemed to me. two or three dred confederates threw down riles, uabuckled their belts, and their cartridge boxes to the id. aad there, in the midst of the little. I saw oar men offer their can to aad shake bands with the i who. ten minutes before, they had striving to IdlL" Chicago later Tea j i r & Garr. now a deputy at the county Jafl, vras. oae of the youngest ajMs lathe service or eitner sise m Urn war between the North and the svth. At' the age of 10 Mr.' Garr re sjjrfaf am flrst laetrucUea. $a the year that the LsaieviUt I. 1 f5eT aft flV essuBsna. -bbbbbb BBBBBBBWaBmBBBBBBBBBkk bbbbbbbMbbbbbbbW bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbsbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbV bbbbbrbbbbbbbbbabbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbrv JaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaPaaaaaaay Jf aT BBBBBBbI B M BBBBBBBBBBBBBBB forts were built The order for an able-bodied men of certain ages to as sist In the construction of the forts had been issued, and many Southera sympathizers were looking about foi some way to evade the edict, says th Louisville Courier-Journal. Judge 8 A. Garr, father of the deputy Jailer, openly declared that he would do ao work for the soldiers from the North He also declared that his negroes should not help build the forts, aad the officer in command of the federal troops heard of lt A squad of soldiers was dispatched at double-quick time to the Garr homestead, which was with in a hundred yards of Westera Park. When the soldiers arrived they found a barefoot boy sitting upon a fence post He was swinging his legs and whistling as only some boys can. A lieutenant was in charge of the sol diers and he drew rein, whea he saw the boy. He Inquired for Judge Garr. The boy shook his head and answered that he did not known him. The soldiers passed. An hour later they returned and the boy was rtlU upon the gate post All day the sol diers searched in the woods and all day the boy sat upon the gate post The following morning the soldiers returned and again the boy was upon the gate post "I sat there for about four days," said Mr. Garr. "My father and several neighbors and all of their negroes were hid In the woods, and by meaas of a signal code we were able to com municate with one another. Two or three men were statloaed In the treetops. We all had white hand kerchiefs. I watched the soldiers. One wave meant that they were in the neighborhood, two meant that they were leaving, and three meant that they were not in sight and that all was welL" The Oaly Peastoaed Vetersa at ISIS. Hiram Cronk of Ava, a veteran of the War of 1812, and the last surviving pensioner of that struggle, was 102 years old April 29. Heretofore the day has been celebrated in some appropri ate manner by ithe relatives and friends of the old veteran, but owing to the advanced years of Mr. Cronk and the fact that he has been some what feeble for some time past, it was deemed unwise to mark the occasion this year by any special event Mr. Cronk was born in the town of Frankfort, Herkimer county, April 29, 1800, but In his early youth moved to. this county and lived for some time at Wright Settlement the family later moving farther north and locating in the town of Ava. During the last months of the War of 1812 Mr. Crons then a mere stripling, enlisted with' his father and two brothers and served about 100 days at Sackett's Harbor. For a long time he received but 8 a month pension, but within the past' few months, by a special act of Con gress, his pension had been Increased to $25. Utica Dally Press. At Oetrraaarg. As the One Hundred and Forty-seventh New York was making its glo rious record, the Iron Brigade swept forward and entered the woods just as Reynolds was being carried to the rear dead. The West had in that line Its noblest sons, there to defend and to crimson the soil of our state with their blood, and what a fight they made on that July morning! Of this brigade the Twenty-fourth Michigan lost 60 per cent killed and wounded,, and. in addition. 83 missing; the' Nineteenth Indiana lost 56 per cent and 50 missing; the Second Wiscon sin 43 per cent and 20 missing; the Seventh Wisconsin 41 per cent and 43 missing. This regiment had 10 of ficers and 271 men killed in battle during its term of service. Taking the five regiments of the Iron Brigade as a whole, we find the killed and wounded to have been 49.5 per cent with 249 missing, many of whom were among the dead. Habit ef taa Otter. The otter, as is well known, will eat none but the choicest portions of the fish it catches, and will, for preference select even those choice portions of the plumpest and best-tasting var ieties. It is this trait in its character which leads it to play such havoc in trout streams and other preserved wa ters. In order to provide for itself a meal of perhaps two or three dozen mouthfuls. the otter will not infre quently catch and kill nearly as many fine fish, contenting itself with a small portion from the back of each victim immediately behind the gills. When an otter kills a moorhen which is not seldom when these birds abound near its habitat it devours the neck only, leaving the body intact and devoid of every drop of blood. A Seldlei's Seavealrs. A collection of war mementoes owned by Corporal John Maurer, who is in charge of the recruiting station, at Terre Haute, Ind., tells of the world-wide movements of Uncle Sam's soldiers. Maurer has been in the army for seventeen years. He has several hundred articles obtained by himself and they include Indian blankets, pipes from China, shells from Cuba, photographs and guns from Borneo, bolo knives and photographs from the Philippines. Among the photographs are pictures of the Gllmore party, taken at the time they were rescued, after a long captivity, by the Filipinos. Among the many articles Corporal Maurer has is a drum he himself took from a Spanish drummer in Cuba. Geaersl Jack. Old Hickory was a sobriquet con ferred upon General Jackson in 1813 by the soldiers under his command. The name was not an instantaneous inspiration, but a growth. First of all, the remark was made by some soldier, who was struck with his commander's pedestrain powers, that the general was "tough." Next it was observed that he was "tough as hickory." Then he was called "Hickory." Lastly the affectionate adjective "old" was pre fixed, and the general thenceforth re joiced in the completed nickname us ually tbe first won honor of a great commander. f Carter ITswatre Dead. Hugh McQuaid dropped dead of heart disease in the lobby of the Cos mopolitan Hotel at Helena. Mont Mc Quaid was an early settler and report ed the Custer massacre for the Asso ciated Press. For many years he was editor of the Helena Independent, and was also a well-known mining man. He was a civil war veteran. He just had been appointed custodian-of the new state house. AoSRffil? -P In different parts of the West there has been much complaint of "alkali soils." In all cases complained of these soils-have been under cultiva tion, the alkali at first act seeming to affect the crops. The rendering bar ren of the soil has occurred after the application of irrigation water, and usually after a number of years op erations. Year by year these barren tracts have increased till it has be come a question of some moment as to what should be done to reclaim we Ic3t areas aad to prevent other ares from becoming also infertile. Oa care ful Investigation it has been found that the alkali In these soils was to distributed through the soils at Irst that It was not harmful to plaata. Thus, in a layer of earth three feet deep there would be a certaia amount of alkali, enough to be decidedly harmful If it were moved from Its po sition In the subsoil and accumulated In the first foot of aolL The irriga ting, of the fields and orchards has hmiirht ahont this very thing, as the amount of water anolled was not suf ficient to more than supply the needs of the crop and of evaporation. Had the water been sufficiently abundant to have supplied a good quantity for drainage the alkali would have re mained largely distributed through the soIL As It was, the water in three feet of soil was gradually drawn up ward by capillary attraction and took the alkali with it Thus the alkali was brought to the surface and de posited in a thin layer. A continuance of this process increased the alkali to a point where It destroyed all vege tation. The Arizona station has ap parently solved the question for all localities that are subject to flood waters. These should be used to flood these lands, covering them to a depth of eight inches or more. The result would be the carrying away of much of the alkali and the washing of other portions into the subsoil. The CaaiBaeU Bieth. Several years ago, when Mr. Camp bell was publishing through the coun try the wonderful things that his sys tem of soil culture would do, he re ceived small attention. We thought then, and think now, that his system Is of no particular use In Illinois, Wisconsin and adjoining states or in other states where the supply of soli moisture Is ample in most years. The system seems to be particularly adap ted to the lands In the more arid re gions, especially where those lands have the soil water long distances from the surface. For some years now the system has been tried in Westera Kansas, and favorable reporU are re ceived from it Professor H. M. Cot trell. of the Kansas Experiment Sta tion, is particularly enthusiastic in support of it for Kansas. He relates many circumstances where It has giv en good sized crops where all others have failed, and says that every farm er in Western Kansas should give it a trial. Mr. Campbell has purchased a farm at Hill City, Graham County. Kansas, on which he is showing what his method can do. The farm was one of the most unproductive ones in the county, the crops generally failing on account of drouth. Mr. Campbell has changed all that The crops grown on his lands last year were good ones, while crops grown by other methods failed. It may be that the Campbell soil culture will yet push the line of profitable farming further west Seaseai la Porte Rtee. The question "when to plant?" Is a puzzler to the Porto Rico agricultur ist It seems to make no great differ ence when a crop is planted the re sult is always the same a good har vest. Some years ago, one of the Is land's most enthusiastic agriculturists, in endeavoring to force Nature to di vulge her season secret planted a patch of corn each month consecutively for a year with the result that sixteen months from the time of the flrst planting he was rewarded with his twelfth" good crop. There was a slight difference In the height of the Decem ber crop from the other eleven and It was a few days longer In ripening, but aside from these two differences, there was nothing to show that Nature fa vored one crop more than another. Another prominent grower, in experi menting with pineapples, produced an abundance of this fruit in March, fully three months before its "season." These two citations of the many like experiments that have been made on the island, make it easy to understand how it is possible for the people in the United States to have fresh fruit and vegetables 365 days in the year. Porto Bico Agricultural Journal. ' Want Mr. John Howat in an address said: The lamb has its enemies and the shepherd that can succeed In constant ly getting a crop of lambs on the mar ket without serious loss is deserving of a statue. The stomach worm Is the worst enemy of the Iamb. We have read and studied and experi mented with all or nearly all of the so-called remedies, worm powders, gasoline, turpentine, and so forth, but the conclusion of the whole matter is that in the long run they do aot pay. The damage to the lamb's thrift is not compensated for in results. Our theory, which we have partly demon strated by practice, is to feed the ewes and lambs grain until the lambs are in the habit of seeking grain on their own account, then feed corn in a creep with a tonic that will aid digestion and keep the stomach in the most vigorous condition. This Is the only cure or preventive against stomach worms that Is practicable and profitable. Bye Faetarage. A correspondent of the Farmers' Review mentions the fact that hut year he had twenty acres of rye and will get a good crop from it this spring. He says that in addition he saved $50 worth of feed by pasturing it in the fall and spring. It came par ticularly bandy this past winter when hay was selling at 8 per ton and corn it 55 cents per busheL The rye crop frequently works is to advantage with Dther crops, and wherever it can be ldvantageously used will pay well. It is of great value to the mea that have no silos and have to feed dry hay all winter. It adds succulence to the ra Jon. and in that is like fresh silage. The practice of pasturing rye is an jld one, but may yet survive the in uoschment of modern methods. The woman who has a treat porch her house now beglas to set out :at!rs and hang up the hammocks. , . m HL f ten "tUt lwSSS--vSk. fAI if I m fwam - aaaaaL .aaaal amvVgak M. lTwlsL I JawaT-sM . 1 sVaTnaT ITlIwas ,anw ffrr .jaaaaaaaaM t avXasTYnasnlanr lr l"Tev"n sa AbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbST' UnranyaBBBBaBBWaBBBBBaf aswrwi AWT shi "SJr ' I alaBBBBBBBBBBBBBmsaaBlaBBBBBBBm a-a7BsBBBw9aBBVaxXew- TI fliBBlsr? TTfttP- LBBVaWHamBBmleBIEea-J ' aflaaBBrWlaSlKL XtiBLfyWBm&SLT'irJP' w -f PbPW J VaBBBBBBBraBaBaft&efVN. IMaflM MaBasWr BUBWilli B3jF-r B4laBBBBBBBBBUHBSaaaXJ sB Uw IV Vamsg- jtr BpsHRc JtEEibJ bbbbWbI BBBBBaaTCr Paean BBmBmamaVjBmBBSBB- - VaWrVV llBBmamaaBB I Tia prottless cow Is a subject has beam haraed oa now for a may years, bat, wo are sorry to re late, she still remains U Ue land. A cow census would show that, so far as the farmer Is coaceraed, half of taa cows could be seat to the butcher without loss to their owners. Taa public would of coarse be the loser. for a definite amount of milk would be taken out of trade, and the remsla der would be in such demand that the price would be enhanced. On the farmer's side, however, the result would mesa profit Ultimately the general public might get its milk as cheap as at flrst for the poor cows would no longer produce poor cows, but the entire supply of calves would come from profitable milkers. Now, year after year the farmer puts a cer tain sum of money in the way of feed into his cow and gets back the same sum. He throws in his work. Most of the men that are doing this do aot know It for they have never kept aa account of what they are doing. They have no idea as to the results imam their milking operations. They take It for granted that the hard work they are putting in is profitable. Little by little the poor cows are oemg ww out of the herds, but progress is stow. We need to use more universally the milk scales, the Babcock test and the lead pencil. A Baeteilal War. Investigations have shown that bac teria wage a fierce war among them selves, just as do the grasses ano weeds that clothe the surface of the earth. It is a common remark that blue grass will drive out other kindf of grasses. So do certain kinds of bac teria destroy or drive out other kind of bacteria. Not that the one kind feeds on the other kind. But one kind takes possession of. the food supplies and the others perish from lack of sustenance. In milk, when it is drawn there appear numerous bacteria. The lactic acid ferments are few In num ber, yet these are the blue grass that Is to drive out all other kinds. For the first few hours after milk Is drawn the miscellaneous bacteria Increase and seem to have possession. But in twelve hours the lactic acid bacteria have increased enormously. In a few hours more the miscellaneous bacte ria have about disappeared. As days go on and the cream ripens the lac tic add bacteria become as high as 98 per cent of all and in some cases 100 per cent all other forms having dis appeared. Later the lactic acid bacte ria themselves are destroyed by their own products. These facts are of In terest as showing a possible increase In healthfulness of milk and cream aa It grows older. It may be that dis ease germs that get In are themselves destroyed by the lactic acid ferments. It is a field that has not yet been widely explored. A Good Illaatratlea. Senator Dillingham, of Vermont in a speech before the United States sen ate recently said: A circumstance has come to my personal knowledge which occurred in the city of Washington, and indicates the way the business has been done under existing law. I was appointed last year as one of the vis iting trustees of the government re form school located in this city, and when there upon a visit I learned that it was the custom of the officers of the school to advertise monthly for the supplies needed during the nexf month. They did this upon one occa sion. They advertised for oleomargar ine. They advertised also for butter. They procured both, as they supposed. Before the month was gone they were in doubt and caused both samples to be examined at the department of ag riculture. One was found to be oleo margarine and that which was bought for butter was also found to be oleo margarine, and the government of the United States had been paying 14 cents for oleomargarine bought as oleomargarine, and paying 23 cents fot exactly the same article furnished un der the name of butter and in answer to the contract which they had made with the grocer to furnish butter. The Fare MUk Frebless. Frank Dewhurst: If the milk Is held for some hours before delivering to the factory, the storeroom should be clean, and If running water is not present the water In the tank should be changed frequently. Milk should not be stored near manure heaps or any other strong smelling material, as it Is so very susceptible to taints. In hauling to the factory a cover should be placed over the cans. This will keep out the dust and In hot weathei be some protection from hot sunshine The cover must be clean, or it will be useless to prevent the entrance of dirt The whey from the factory may be responsible for poor milk. The whey tank should be scrupulously clean In fact the entire factory should be an object lesson to the patron In clean liness. All cans should be emptied at once on reaching the farm and the cans cleaned. This precaution Is too often neglected, and the fermentmg whey stands In the hot sun for hours. It Is very difficult to clean such cans so that they shall be odorless. Kew Zealaad Seamer Batter. The New Zeslanders are preparing to invade in earnest the RngUsh and other European markets with their butter. They say they are not afraid of the presence in the market of Si berian and Russian butter. They ar gue, and that rightly, that the geo graphical position of New Zealand gives her an advantage not possessed by any European nation. HertocatJoB la the southera hemisphere makes it possible for her to be turning out fresh grass butter when Europe is buried in snow. Winter dairying Is not a great factor ia northern Europe and will not be in this generation. New Zealand seeds 'oaly follow summer dairying. -She can ship her batter to Europe aad have it reach there at a time whea butter is at its highest price oa ac couat of dry feed and winter condi tions. In other words at the sraiua of the year whea butter sells highest in Europe it is being made ia the southera hemisphere. In raising chickens it is necessary to have the temperature la which they live for the flrst week or ten aays uni formly high. Many chicks are lost by the temperature being permitted to tall too low. The man that Is running an Incuba tor mast see that his lamps are cleaned and trimmed once every day. This Is a requisite for the setter con trolling of the temperature. The Malays are supposed to be ef As parent stock of the Black Javas. Mt have never been popular In this jouatry. They are bred for exhibition paly, not pom ana sg euaMUes for prac tical purposes. They are of medium Use. and In carrlasw are particularly aprlght and powerful looking, the back being almost always at an angle f forty-five degress. Their plumage !s very close and red or maroon aad black in color. The body tapers from the broad shoulders to the tail, which troops almost la a straight 11ns with the back. The thighs are loag aad powerful. A striking feature of the Malay is the head. It is long and snaky, the brows over the eyes heavy tad projecting, giving the bird n cruel and flerce expression; the neck is long and scanty of hackle, the sUa of the throat Is a bright red. aad the scanti ness of the plumage causes the red to show distinctly, and this Is a charac- terlstlc of the breed. The wattles and ear lobes are slight in development The shanks and toes are bright yel low. The Malays are large and hardy, and are used for crossing with other breeds to infuse vigor and size. In disposition they are reputed to be very savage and In battle literally tear their opponents to pieces. a at Of The nonltrv raiser is too often In clined to work out the problem of poultry raising rather than to take from others his Information. This Is especially true if the owner of the poultry happens to be a farmer with just a few hens. For when he was a boy he took care of chickens, and that is the start he has or thinks he -as of others. But the great world around us Is full of wisdom that has been gained by the experiences of a thou sand lives, none of those lives running parallel to the others. It has been said that a man can learn more in one year by taking information from others than he could gain In his own experience in twenty years. The say ing, unlike many popular adages, is true. The flrst thing a new maa at poultry raising should do Is to go systematically about learning from others. This will cost him something In the way of time and money, but it will be the best investment he can make. reality Petals Picked Vp. In an experiment to test the loss of moisture in Incubator eggs the West Virginia station found that the smaller eggs lost a very considerable larger quantity of moisture than did the larger eggs. This is as it should be, as the relative surface on the larger eggs Is less than on the smaller eggs. The result should be that the moisture content of the large eggs should be more constant than In the small eggs and in some seasons this should give hutching results in favor of the large eggs. e e e For a good many years now the ad visers of amateurs In poultry raising have been advising to feed the young chicks on hard boiled eggs chopped fine. Now some of the poultrymen are declaring that the practice Is not n good one, and that the hard boiled eggs are too hard on the young chicks. We would like to have the opinions of some of our readers on this point If chopped hard-boiled eggs are bad for young chicks we ehould know it as the practice of feeding such Is evi dently very widespread. e e e One poultryman says that he finds it advantageous to have two sets of drinking vessels, using one one day and the other the next By this means one set is sunned and aired In the off day. He thinks he keeps down disease germs by this method. With out doubt drinking vessels so handled will be free from slime and Other things that may foster the develop ment of disease germs. Partridge Wyaadettes. From Farmers' Reveiw: The 1 art ridge Wyandottes compare very fav orably with the rest of the Wyandotte family. They are good layers and make good table fowls, their flesh ba ing very juicy. They are early to mature. They breed very true to color snd markings and better than 75 per cent of nil birds raised make good breeders. I think that In a very few years the Partridge Wyandottes will be the most popular of the Wyandotte family. C. F. Avery, Whitley county, Indiana. ffaJ Peed Hard ta The pare food bills that are based on the discovery in them of deleterious substances sre practically impossible of enforcement A judge must depend on expert testimony for the determina tion of the polats iavolved. Ifasciea tlst comes oa the stand and declares that a certaia drug ia food Is harm less, that testimony carries weight, no matter how many thousands of other scientists declare that It is harmful. The Judge is not in a position to sum mon all the experts in n nation. An Illustration of this is shown ia the verdict of an English jadge recently. Food preserved with borax was found by the inspectors and the owner sum moned Into court He brought in wit aeeses to testify that borax Is n great help to the aJgestion. The jadge took the side of the defendant in the ease. The natural Inference Is that milk so adulterated would not be harmful, but we have a great mass of dreumstan Ual evidence to prove that the pres saes of horadc add la milk has re sulted ia the death of maay children In smgiaaa, where the matter has been sore fully investigated than la this rouatry. 'BW - E-BB-BB-BBM The man that expects to money out of raising aad fattealag cattle for market mast do thing that other men have to do in order to reach successC Profits cannot be ob- taiaed by careless management The man that Is going to fatten cattle in considerable numbers must have sheds for shelter ia bad weather, a good sized feeding yard, racks as well as troughs for feed. Moreover he mast be In shape to make the cattle com fortable at night no matter what the weather may be. He must have a sup ply of good water, and If he is further fitted to warm this water in winter so much the better. The man that is finishing steers will in ordinary years find corn and fodder the most important and serviceable feed. It Is then the business of the feeder to see that the cattle get just enough of this to keep them growing steadily. This manner of feeding can be learned only by practice, for the gulf between too little and too much is not wide. An animal must never be fed so highly as to get it off Its feed, and, on the other hand. It should not be permitted to go hungry. Some feeders start in with the intention of fattening their anlmsls in three months. This is not easy to do and there are tn this at tempt many of the failures recorded. If the process can be spread over a year the work will be found easier to accomplish, and the results more pro fitable. In the one case a man must get his anlmsls on full feed In the shortest time possible, while in the other case the cattle can be brought onto full feed gradually. SeaMes aad Cattle. Bulletin 140, Department of Agricul ture: The mite that causes cattle itch, or mange, Is closely related to the mite that causes sheep scab both belong ing to the same genus and spedes. but are different varieties. The sheep-scab mite will not attack cattle, nor will the cattle mite attack sheep or other animals. The itch mites sre found ts be very numerous upon affected cattle, and n very small quantity of debris from an actively Infested area of the skin will often reveal a surprisingly large number of the parasites. These mites may be removed from an animal and retain their vitality for a long time. Spedmens have been collected and kept In small glass bottles in the laboratory at the ordinary tempera ture of the room during the winter months varying from 45 to 80 degrees which lived from eight to eleven days Exposure to bright sunlight, however, would kill most of the mites In a few hours. Scabies does not appear to af fect cattle while they are doing well oa grass nor attack those in good condi tion over three years old. The ani mals that suffer most are calves, year lings, and two-year-olds, and those Is poor condition. The first symptom ol the disease is usually an intense Itch ing of the skin about the neck ot shoulders, and it extends more or lest rapidly, depending upon the health and vigor of the animal, along the back and sides and down the outsldf of the legs, but does not usually af fect the Inside of the legs or the skin of the abdonen. The Vferk ef Jeeas Wee. Elihu Burritt, writing of Jonas Webb, says: But what higher honor can attach to human science or indus try than that of taking such a visible and effective part in that creation In sending out into the world successive generations of animal life, bearing each, through future ages and distant countries, the shaping impress of hu man fingers long since gone back tc the dust features, forms, lines, curves, qualities and characteristics which those fingers, working, as it were, on the right wrist of Divine Providence, gave to the sheep and cattle upon a thousand hills in botr hemispheres? There are flocks and herds now grazing upon the boundless prairies of America, the vast plains of Australia, the steppes of Russia, as well as on the smaller and greener pastures of England, France and Ger many, that bear these finger-marks ol Jonas Webb as mindless, but ever lasting, memories to his worth. II the owners of these well-created things value the joy and profit which they thus derive from his long and laborious years of devotion to their Interests, let them see that these finger-prints of his be not obliterated by their neglect, but be perpetuated for ever, both for their good and for an everlasting memorial to his name. At Calvlag Tlae Prof. D. H. Otis: If the weather is chilly, put the cow In a box stall well bedded and free from draught Whea the calf is born, blanket the cow until she regains her normal condition. If nothing better is available, gunny sacks, sewed together, will answer. Give light, loosening feeds and water from which the chill has been re moved. Cold water Is likely to cause a contraction of the womb and reten tion of the afterbirth. If the latter Is not discharged in twenty-four to forty-eight hours. It should be re moved. If tbe udder is hot and caked. It Is better to milk the cow frequently (at least once In two or three hours), but not dry, as a fresh flow would be stimulated which would increase the inflammation and might lead to milk ferer. Steaming the udder with a flin.Y9l cloth dipped in as hot water a tre bands will bear Is very desirable. a.er which the udder should be rub bed dry and treated with camphorated vaseline. Keep the bowels loose. If any signs of constipation appear, give oae and one-half to two pounds of ep som salts, dissolved in warm water. Adhering to these points means much In giving the calf a good, vigorous start t Fata as Peed. A eovernment publication says: higar beet pulp can be successfully preserved In silos and makes a very fair quality of silage. It is relished by cattle, even the 'slightly spoiled por tions not being distasteful to them. In Europe the silos consist of trenches sr pits dug in the ground, but the or dinary silo used in making corn silage will undoubtedly preserve the mate rial with less loss. As the sugar beet crop Is an exhaustive one, and the fer tility of the soil can be maintained by feeding the pulp, it becomes quite sa important matter that farmers (rowing sugar beets should combine vith It the feeding of the pulp where practicable. A smile may hide a men's thoughts. just ss paint may hide a woman's com-Dlextoa. BLUFF WAS CALLED Y C Jadge Jsrrott of the Seventeenth iudiclal district, before whom Grant Jvoodward was tried and convicted of .ury bribing, tells this story to the laasas City Star of the flrst time he mme to Kansas City and tried n case lefore the late Judge White of the rriminal bench: "I was quite young then," said Jadge rarrott; "in fact, I was what might be railed a green country lawyer, who lad never been to the city before. I lad been told that Judge White was a tartar, so you can imagine that I was wmewhat nervous when I appeared before him defending oae of my owa country boys who nad come to the dty ind got Into trouble. "A panel of twenty-four jurors had been selected, and all of them had luallfied as being unprejudiced. As rou know, after the state's attorneys iave made their challenges and turned the list over to the defendant's attor ney, a 'reasonable' time is allowed the lefense to strike off the names of men It does not care to have on the jury. Pwelve of the panel had taken seats in the jury box, while the remainder oc moled chairs near by. "Before the list was handed to me Judge White looked ?er his glasses ind scowled. "Young man,' he ssid fiercely, I Joa't want you to delay this court oy JVfVJruxJf-uru-rr--vv-l-l- - - - WiWMk90kW0i&lkW&kW0kW&WJUUkB3k Foundlings in Demand t ROT ElfOVGH OT THE UTT1X CASTAWAYS S to MrtGurrcM lonixy homes. JifflrMlrTPl It is surprising to discover what a rushing mail-order business for babies could be transacted. Inquiries for ba bies come to the State Charities' asso ciation and the Guild from all over the country. Recently the mayor ot a flourishing Massachusetts city wrote for a baby, inclosing plans and speci fications for the same, which included "blue eyes, light hair, girl, anywhere from 15 months to two years old." From a colored family in Pittsburg was received a request for "a boy any where under two years, not black. Must be light colored." From as far west as Denver and as far south as Alsbama come the re quests, and if investigations proves the parties to be really responsible the foundling does his first traveling. Un less the child is legally adopted it is always under the supervision of the organization that indentured it Rare ly does it happen, however, that the child is taken away, even if it is not legally adopted. Legal adoption is an expensive affair for parents of moder ate means the class that usually ob tain the children and the formality of drawing up the necessary papers is often omitted. But the foundling is to the satisfaction of its foster par ents regularly adopted and treated as such. asnrmi Were ffot SeeK$ng Vealh ? llfNKZXPEK DiSCOVEKS HIS WATCH ON YOVNG 3 COVPIX WAS EUTHrgXY VlfHECESSARY. J Arthur Farwell, the musical com poser, whose development of Ameri can Indian music is attracting atten tion, tells a story of how he had once been taken for an intended suicide. "While living in Boppard a few years ago," he said, "I went to Co blenz to attend a concert A German musician, a young woman, accompa nied me, and there would be no story if we had not missed our train home after the concert We waited in a cafe until 3 o'clock for a later train, only to find that it did not stop at Boppard. "There was a strange reluctance on the part of the inkener to whom we applied for quarters to admit us. but he finally gave us rooms at the oppo site ends of a long hall. For the rest of the night he tramped the length of the hall, listening first at my door and CASHIER STOLE IMMENSE FORTUNE Aad How Is Pardeaed Afler aa I prUoaamt of Three Tear. Something over three years ago the National Bank of Dover. N. J., was looted. William N. Boggs. the cashier, participated in the looting, his share in the peculation being, it is said. $00 000. He didn't run away with the boodle but faced the responsibility for his crime and was sentenced to five years' imprisonment. Last week, after having served three years, he was pardoned by President Roosevelt It is said that Boggs was a tool ol others. So Is the boy on the street, entering upon a criminal career, the tool of adepts in crime. So is the criminal the tool of necessity at times, or of passion and evil instincts. Every lawbreaker is the. tool, or victim, of circumstances. We are not arguing from this that every lawbreaker should be set free, but our citizens do not point out a reason by Boggs should have been absolved. So long as Eminent and model man" thieves like cashiers and bank tellers are dealt with leniently by the law and then aided to escape the full penalty contained In the legal sentence Im posed so long will banks be looted. Five yeTrs for a theft of $200,000 is certainly a light P""150; "" when pardon follows this and the cul prit escapes with three the penalty Is a farce. Hew Parsers Are Swladied. "While agricultural departments of the national government anof " various states are doing good work and their investigations and experi ments have been of great value to famers. gardeners and stock raisers. nU a reUred farmer the other day "ands of sharper, take advantage of every official announcement made by the authorities. -For instance, tbe department an nounces the discovery ofan insect that destrovs the cabbage. Within twenty JSr hours tbe sharpers are advertis Sg a Powder that will destroy these Insects A department oufnc " appearance of the elm pest In every locality in tbe country appear snv 3oth talklng gentlemen who claim i to be able to prevent damage to the trees by this iwect People believe the. and pay them money, only to have their trees killed by the very methods which the sharpers claim will save them from destruction by the pests. "The national agricultural depart- UwjwWm tnklnc two or three hoars to your caallenges. By a "reasonable'' time Is aot meant all forenoon. "Of course. I was frightened, but I acted oa a thought that came to ma liken flash. " 'Tour honor.' I ssid, 'I have no de sire to delay the court The twelve mea who happen to occupy the jury box will be satisfactory to me. I don't know any of them and they don't know "But your honor. exclaimed the prosecutor. 'I want n few moments In which to make "challenge."' "Can't have it,' saia the judge. 'If the defendant is willing to take his chances the state surely should be equally aa willing.' The case was tried aad I won It I cleared my maa. Judge White cann dowa from the beach and walked to where I was standing. "'Young man.' he said, 'your're n poker player, aren't your "'No, judge,' I answered bashfully; 'I haven't played any poker since I be came a man. "'Nonsense.' said Judge White. 'A man who calls a bluff like I made at you a little while ago is bound to be a poker player of the first water.' " Three things kill a maa a scorch Ing sua. suppers and cares. " - i"" Only one instance is on record where a child was returned as unsat isfactory. That was when a woman, angered by the visit of one of the state eharities agents, who called to make inquiries as to the care that was being taken of the child, resented the Investigation, and sent back the in fant That the foundling never quite gives up the hope of discovering who his real parents were is shown in many a pathetic Incident in the office of Mrs. Dunphy, the superintendent on Ran dall's island, where the records ot New York foundlings for the past 20 years have been kept by her. Often n man, sometimes prosperous looking, oftener with the stamp of the toiler upon him. will ask to see the books of the Infant hospital for a cer tain year. Running his finger down the page of entries, he will pause at a name and ask if there is any record ot a parental inquiry after the infant's admission to the hospital. It is the foundling come back, with the haunting hope that he may. after all. find out who he really Is. But the foundling never doc3 find out And so. even if he rise to be gov ernor or manufacturing magnate, ho is. beyond everything else, pathetic to the end. Ainslee's Magazine. IIHlHIHtlHHHlHHHU then at hers. We were laughing over this in the morning when the proprie tor entered the breakfast room. He seemed much surprised at our exhibi tion of spirits. "'You are happy this morning.' he said. 'You want to die no longer. "We stared at him in amazement "'Want to die!' I exclaimed, finally. 'What do you mean? We never want ed to die.' "'Then you are not Lebensmudc?" he said. 'Ach Gott! I watched all the night for nothing!' "He finally explained that Coblenz was just then in the midst of one ol the periodical epidemics of suicide. Three couples had taken their lives within a week, and he had taken us for another life sick pair." New York Tribune. JSS ment at Washington has announced recently that the seventeen-year lo custs will appear this year, and fol lowing this there have suddenly sprung into existence several unique methods of destroying these Insects-, or of preventing their ravafics." Waea Jtfftnoi latervlews St. retor. Joseph Jefferson is a firmly estab lished favorite at Yale, where he an nually delivers an informal address before the undergraduates on the afternoon preceding his evening per formance at the Hyperion theater, says the New York Times. List year Mr. Jefferson was taken by a senior to "Mory's." the orthodox chophouse that Is one of the landmarks of Yale. The rooms are mellow with age and rich with tradition and are generally conducive to reminiscences. Mr. Jef ferson wa3 discussing the life to come and was asked by his student host: "Mr. Jefferson, it is said that wc shall have the same character of work in the next world as on earth. Do you expect to be an actor In heaven?" "Well." replied Mr. Jefferson. "I'll tell you. I am afraid that if I reach the golden gates St. Peter will shake his head and say: 'For heaven's sake, Joe, change your roles.'" The Eadarlac Ple The young women at the University of Indianapolis contended in a debate with the young men that "pic is not of greater service to mankind than ice cream." When these young wo men become experienced wives they will feel shame that they should have decried the value of pie. When there are big bills for spring hats and spring dresses to be paid, they will fill theli husbands with pic. knowing that un der its benign influence all the genlai and generous impulses will be awak ened. The fancy for ice cream is s mere passing characteristic of young womanhood; but the passion for pie which fills the breast of every norraai man Is an enduring source of happi ness to the tactful wife. In these days of progress, blood hounds sre set not on the trail of es caping slaves, but fugitive bandits in Nebraska. 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