' t "-F e 5 A J l-rf . . r v. . . . . ;. .-. I . :.. . I - v.- - 1 I r-WL Iron and Oust. Ike mighty ones who wrenched the world with pain. Far In the past. AttlU rasing o'er the bloody plain. The Scourge of Heaven, and bold Tam erlane Where are they now? The dust of centuries old Time has cast Above each brow. Where roams the spirit of the Norman? Where The untamed soul That from the sea. a lion from Its lair. Arose 'gainst England? Where ths ban ner fair The world saw wave? O'er Harold, resting in man1! common goal A narrow grave? What proflts Alexander now, that hs Across the world Bore ruin, sorrow, death, and misery? The grim phalanx which Irresistibly Moved o'er the field Dust ail is dust! The war-flags all ars furled; Gone every shield! Man lifts his voice and fills the univtrst For one short hour With blatant vauntlngs of bis sword or purse; For God a sneer; for Destiny a curse. Tim's stroke is slow; But when it falls, man withers at its power And bows him low. Man's arm is strong; his footsttp shakes the land; His iron grasp May hold a mighty nation; but his hand Withers and falls when stops tha run ning sand In Old Time's glass; Death's finger touch a shudder cry a gasp. The strong ones pass! Where is the glory of ths sword and shield? The bright spears rust; Fond lovers stray where once ths legions wheeled; The stolid plowman turns ths battle field; The olive tree. Green badge of peace, may from a Cas sar's dust Spring tranquilly. Oh, you who would Smmortalix your name. Ne'er soulless cast Tour brother's blood upon ths pyre of shame And call the dread black amoks Immor tal fame! Though reared usseen. The sodded mound white marble will out last. And still be green. Lowell O. Reese In San Francisco Bulle tin. The Soldier as He Was. The commissioners appointed to se lect a memorial for the 29th, 35th and 36th Massachusetts regiments, which took part in the siege ef Vlcksburg, have accepted the design submitted by Mrs. Thco. A. Ruggles-Kitson. The monument is to stand upon a bowlder quarried at Annisquam, and will be erected in the National park near Vicksburg. Mrs. Kitson submitted the figure of a typical private soldier of the union army to represent the men of Massa chusetts, who were in the Vicksburg rampaign. Old soldiers who have seen the design were impressed with the veracity of tho bronze figure, as the sculptor has reproduced, with faithful detail the union soldier in rough campaign carelessness. Veterans have commented upon the realism of the clothing. They hare pointed to the socks, pulled up over the legs of the trousers, as an evi dence of the value of this work of art as an example of the real soldier of the Civil war. Warm Praise for Selfridge. The passing of Rear Admiral Thomas O. Selfridge will cause a feel- . leg of sadness in the hearts of all his old shipmates, for he was an idol among us. His was a positive (strenuous, as we call it nowadays) character. Without such the great re bellion would never have been put down. Born and reared, as it were. In the United States navy, he was entirely at home on board ship, and wee to a delinquent officer who had :o pass his scrutiny. We were always hearing something fresh and racy that Selfridge had said or done. One instance which happened in Illinois offered us a great deal of amusement. In 1864, while in com mand of the United States ram Vln ' Sicator, which was being fitted out at -Mound City, 111., his paymaster, who ivas fresh from the capital, where he - lad been serving as Gov.. Yates pri- rate secretary, came to the captain . .at great distress, claiming that the .nen had stolen a lot of the ship's -' stores. It transpired that said stores rtad been' left standing out on the ' leek over night. "What did you leave them out there !or?" asked the captain. VI thought I would trust to tne " tonor of the men," answered the pay master. ; And the captain included - with the remark that -.- whea you have been in the navy as long as I have you will know better aa to trust 'to the honor of old sail ;. rs where anything to eat or drink Is it stake."- CapL Selfridge speeded the Vindi cator around for'a while, and had the nisfortune to run her aground and '.ear the copper tiff her bottom. Com- sunder-J. P. Foswr of Indiana said ; Mai: "See here. Tom, you have tot down to the Vs. so you will have ' bet little 'careful or you will run . t" When a vessel grounds in the Mississippi river the swift curreat win mt great hole ia the saad under -.ier bows aad pile it up asters, causr - mg the vessel to break in two. Aa fae captala was bringing the Ironclad S gSBSSSSSjE mm 7 . TSBS - p ffi'SVV $-. IBHJPJW; Hb nw BIKSBSb U. S. S. Ozark up the river the pilot run her aground at Helena, Ark. The captain astonished the admiral by reporting the accident. "Why, you haven't got the Ozark aground, have you?" asked the admiral. "Ob, yes, she's aground and broke in two by this time I guess. I want another ves sel. She will hare to lie there all summer, high and dry on a sand bar. You had better get some soldiers to guard her or the confederates will destroy her." He got another vessel while the more timid officers said, "It is the audacity of the man that carries Mm through.' May our glorious navy always have her Decaturs, Farraguts, Porters and Selfridges T. F. Leech, M. D., Late Surgeon United States Navy. Wasted Self-Sacriffce, Surgeon General Sternberg had a peculiar experience at the battle of Bull Run. Just before going In he was approached by an Irish sergeant major of his regiment, who handed him a bag of gold weighing three pounds. "Doctor, said the Irishman, "I know I'm to be kilt entirely, an' I want you to take care of this money an' see that it gets to the ould folks at home in ould Ireland." The doctor had no time to remonstrate or make any other arrangement, for the Irish man dropped the bag into the sur geon's lap and hurried away to his place at the head of the column. All through two bloody days Dr. Stern berg carried that bay of gold with his surgical instruments, and it was a bur den and an embarrassment to him. He tried to get rid of it, but couldn't find anyone willing to accept or even to share the responsibility, and he couldn't throw it away, for the sake of "ould folks at home." Toward the close of the second day the surgeon was taken prisoner. He lost his surgical Instruments and his medicine chest case, but clung to the gold, and, making a belt of his neck tie and handkerchief, tied it around his waist next to his skin to prevent its confiscation by his captors. Dur ing the long, hot and weary march that followed the gold pieces chafed his flesh, and his waist became so sore and blistered as to cause him In tense suffering, but he was bound that the "ould folks at home' should have the benefit of that money, and by the exercise of great caution and patience nianaged to keep it until he was -exchanged with other prisoners and got back to Washington. Here he found his regiment in camp, and one of the first men to welcome him was the Irish sergeant, who was so delighted to learn that the doctor bad saved his money that he got drunk and gambled it all away the first night. Told by a Veteran at Washington. "We've been living like fighting cocks since we came to Washington," said a member of one of the Pennsyl vania posts, "and it makes me think of the time when my company was anchored at Point of Rocks, Virginia, and when it was deuced difficult to get anything tc eat for love, money or anything else. One of these hundred days fellows came to our bivouac and wanted to buy some butter, remarking that he hadn't had any butter for nearly three weeks. The laugh that rang out from throats that hadn't tasted butter for nearly three years made the woods ring. The fellow got huffy, and we didn't do a thing to him but take him to a nearby spring and make a baptist out of him. Some of these fellows that sent up such a howl during the little play with Spain ought to have been treated the same way. The war department ought to get a supply of nursing bottles for these boys, that has yet to learn what real soldiering is." Veterans Welcome Old Foe. The annual reunion of the survivors of the Second Illinois cavalry was held at Quincy, 111., recently, and an ex confederate soldier was the guest of honor. He was CapL J. H. McDowell of Nashville, Tenn., and he came to return a carbine which he took from a soldier of the Second Illinois cav alry. Capt McDowell was dressed in the gray uniform he wore in the con federate army. He captured the car bine at the battle of Holly Springs, taking it from Isaiah Weidman, who was killed in that battle. CapL Mc Dowell presented the carbine to M. L. Weidman of Farmer City. Ill, a son of the man from whom he took it nearly forty years ago. "We of the South thought we were right," said CapL McDowell, as he handed 'the old carbine to Mr. Weid man. "But, thank God. we losL Provi dence decided the war right, and we are now glad you won." Few Veterans on Army LisL Ten or fifteen years ago more than two-thirds of all the officers of the regular army on the active list had been participants in the civil war on the Union side, either as volunteers or regulars. The last army list shows that the raea of 1861-65 are nearly all gone. They now number no more than one twentieth of the whole. They are not all dead by any means, but death and voluntary and compul sory retirement at the age limit of 64, have reduced those still in active ser vice to a very small proportion of the grand total of 3.575 military officers on Uncle Samuel's pay rolls. The last monthly official list shows that only 177 officers who held commis sions as volunteers or regulars in the civil war are still carried on the active list of the army. Wanted to Be Near Her Lover Annie Lillybridge, only l years old enlisted in the Union army at Detroit so that she might be near her sweet heart, who was a lieutenant in the Twenty-first Michigan. To her great disgust she was assigned to a differ ent company in the same regimenL She made every effort to get a trans fer, but failed. Through a number of '"S61118 the ronnS KM stood manfully at the front and did good service. In 1865 she received a wound. in the arm and then her sex was discovered. An her pleadings for retention in the service failed. When she found that she must don woman's clothes and go home she declared that SL wSILfT it otner "nlment first. Whether she succeeded or not Is not known. With the selection of an Icehouse in Nome as an appropriate place to hang a murderer the limit of modern cruelty was reached. Think of the sudden and. terrible change of cB-BMle. Moccasin Shake One of "When It comes to downright vl Jousness among snakes," said a man from Arkansas, "I will put the water moccasin against every other kind ol snake on earth. I was reading a story about the snakes of Martinique, and it seems that they are afflicted on the is land with a rather bad brand of makes, snakes that really go around looking for trouble. I could not help thinking that the Martinique reptile must be related in some way to the vicious water moccasin which is to be found in the SL Francis basin, up in Arkansas. They are savage, and what is 'worse and more of it,' they seem to have organized for offensive and de fensive purposes. There are millions upon millions of these snakes in the basin of the SL Francis river between the Sunk Lands and the mouth of the river, a few miles above Helena. I have seen the lakes alive with them. I have known of instances where it would be .impossible for a farm hand to water his horses after his day's work on account of the snakes. The makes fed in the edges of the lake during the evening, and as soon as an effort would be made to water the horse at a certain place they would make a charge on that particular place, wriggling in from the lake in great numbers. They seemed to re-' Strange Chance the World Is Not So Vast "I have a cousin in America. No doubt you have met him. He lives in Topeka, Kan." Few are the voyagers to the other side' who have not bumped against some such assertion and then fallen under suspicion of being themselves unknown, since the provincial mind of the foreigner cannot realize that the Western hemisphere is slightly larger than a parish in KenL And this, apropos of the fact that some years ago a certain New York man who happens to be a "mighty hunter before the Lord," journeyed to British Columbia in search of big game. While sojourning at Winnipeg he expressed a desire to bag some caribou and a friend who knew the country thoroughly advised him to go to Waubagun, a station on a branch of the Northern Pacific. "There is nothing but a water tank there," said his friend, "and only one man in the whole section, a Scotch recluse, who looks after the tank; but he is a superb guide, and as he has only one train a day to watch out for he will give you all the sport you wanL" The New Yorker went, won the re Biblical Writings Old Some very interesting manuscripts have been discovered in the vault of the Jami-and-Kebar mosque, in Dam ascus. Relying on an ancient tradi tion, which said that important docu ments relating to the early Christians' were stored there, certain Biblical scholars requested the sultan to let them search the vault, and after con sidering the matter for a year and being assured by oriental scholars that there were no ancient documents in the vault relating to the Mahome tan creed, he finally gave his consenL As a result a thorough search was recently made and many valuable manuscripts were found. These were taken to Constantinople, and an ex amination showed that among them were several fragments of the Old and New Testament in the ancient Syralc tongue, as well as portions of a trans lation of the Old and New Testament in that Syralc dialect which was spoken in Palestine in ancient times. "Wimii THE LOGIC OF THE SABBATH One Day in the Seven Should Be Kept Free From Work. As a psychologist. I believe in the Sabbath day. One day in seven should be kept holy from work and sacred to man's primitive paradise of leisure. I am no Puritan pietist or even Sabba tarian in any severe sense, but hold that this is one of the greatest of all human institutions, and that the com mand to keep it- as a day of rest is written in our physiological constitu tions. If need be, it may be kept in sleep, man's great restorer. Monday our nerves and brain must be re freshed, and we must start a new weekly rhythm on a higher plane than we closed the old one. The mental scenery must be changed. The brood er's overthought must have-enlarged our plans and given us both moment um and direction. What form the rest cure should take differs perhaps for each person. I go to church, but my neighbor should perhaps spend the day in the fields with children, in music,, in books, but for all there should' be peace, tranquillity, repose, surcease of worry and relaxation. In no land should the Sabbath be so hal lowed as in this land of hustle, tension and Americanltls. G. Stanley Hall, iu Ainslee's. Wanted a Miracle. It was a bluff spoken Englishman who was consulted as to the warming o a church during the cold weather. "Give me $60 a year," said he, "and I will guarantee to 'eat this church." On the steamboat this summer Rev. George JacKson of Edinburgh gave to a fellow passenger this story, .which he vouched for: ., An English farmer had a number of guests to dinner, and was about to help thpm to some rabbit, when he discovered that the dish was cold. Call ing the servant, he exclaimed, "Here. Mary, take this rabbit out and 'eat it, and bring it back a little 'otter!" Indian Merchant a Visitor. One of the most interesting foreign xisitors to Washington, just now is J. N. Tata of Bombay, India, a mer chant prince, manufacturer, philan thropist, scholar and philosopher. Mr. Tata is known In every great commer cial center of the world because of his vast business interests. He is a Par see by birth, that historic race the members of which believe in Zoroas ter and are commonly called fire wor shipers. He is a personal friend of Mr. Foster, exjiecretary of state, -by whom he was entertained at an elabo tate dinner the other evening. kin Retains Life. Detached bits of human skin Hve two to ten days. the Most Vicious sent it as an encroachment upon their rights .and no amount of 'shooting' or chunking would Hrlve" them 'away. They would 'simply choke the drink ing place. 'I have seen this same thing happen a number of times. Of course, it would be. necessary to take the horse elsewhere for watering purposes. They are exeremely poisonous, and I have heard of many instances where the moccasin bite killed animals. Dogs in that part of the country frequently die as the result of being bitten by a water moccasin. They are not bad about running away when -they are in a fiockr In fact, the running had bet ter be on the other, side if it happens to be either near the beginning or at the end of the snake season, for they really seem to be more vicious and more petulant, if I may say it, at the extremes of the' season than at othei times. I suppose there is some nat ural reason for the facL At any rate; it Is a facL Coming, back to the point I will put the particular brand of Ark ansas water moccasin to which I hjjre i ef erred against anything in the rep tilian tine to be found in Martinique, cr in any other place, for that mat ter; for I really believe they are the raost desperately vicious- snakes on the face of the earth." New Orleans Times-DemocraL Proves gard of the hermit, and slew caribou by the score. Last summer he was in Scotland, and while roaming, over the moors one cay lost his way. At length he espied a little cottage, and making for It inquired for directions and asked if he could not be accommodated with something to eaL His hostess, a motherly Scotch body, at once set about getting him a "snack," and, like all rustics, during the course of hei preparations deluged him with ques tions. "An so ye're frae America, ye say?" she finally interjected. "Happen ye ken my son, Sandy McNeil? He'fc been over there mony a year." "I think not," replied the visitor, wearily. "You see America' is a verj large place. Where does your son re side?" "At Waubagun water tank," replied the dame. Strange freak of chance! A habitue of Fifth avenue was made the link oi communication between- the lonelj mother and her equally lonely son. separated from each other by half the distance around the globe.' in Turkish Mosque Among the latter was a translation of some of the epistles of SL Paul the existence of which was unknown to scholars, and which is of great value, as the dialect in which it is written was spoken during the life of Christ. Among other treasures discovered were fragments of the Pentateuch, in the Samaritan tongue, an Arabic translation of the 78th psalm, seventy seven pages of a hitherto unknown commentary In the old Syralc tongue, and several psalms and eleven pages of the Pentateuch, written In Greek, and dating back to the 11th century Baron Marschall. the German am bassador to Turkey, has shown much interest in this discovery, and it is said that the sultan has granted him permission to send the manuscripts to Berlin, with the object of having them carefully examined by the best biblical scholars in Europe. Stray Stories. ift.rtVWVWAAAiVWIAAi AS GOOD AS SLEEP. Why Insomnia Had No Terror for the Late Senator Vance. During the.last term of the late Sen ator "Zeb" Vance of North Carolina a man noted at the capital and through out the South as a wit, he was met walking down Pennsylvania avenue about 2 o'clock one winter morning b Maj. E. B. Pope. Scenting a senatorial poker party somewhere or else a late supper- at Chamberlin's, Maj. Pope, with feigned seriousness, said: "Good morning. Senator, isn't it a little early for you to be taking c stroll?" "No, sah," drawled the Senator, with all his Southern dignity, "it is very usual for me to walk about Washing ton at this hour." "Ah. I see." replied Maj. Pope, back ing water, as it were, "insomnia. I know how it Is myself.".. "Majah Pope." said the statesman, "I long ago vanquished insomnia. It is' quite true that sometimes I go tc bed and can't sleep. Then I get uj and take a good stiff dram of corn whisky. I go back to bed; -and If sleer doesn't come Immediately I get up and take another dram. I go back to bed. and then, if I see that sleep is still backward about coming to me, I'll get up and take a great big dram. And do you know. Majah Pope, after I've had five or six drams of corn whisky, I don't care a rap if I never go to sleep. FOR THE NEXT GENTLEMAN Street Gamin's Fellow Feeling for .Those In Distress. An amusing incident -was witnessed in a' cigar store on Chestnut street the other afternoon. A newsboy, having picked up a cigar stomp, walked in and, addressing the man behind the counter, said: "Say, boss, give us a match." The man be hind the counter, looking down, said: "My young friend, we are not here for the purpose of giving away matches; we sell them." "How much are dey?" was the question. "One, cent a box." the clerk announced. The urchin stuck his hand Into his pocket and produced, after a great deal of hunt ing, a penny and handed it to the man. He received his. box of matches, and,' taking one ouL lit the "butL" Return ing the box to the man back of the case, he said: "Say, put dis back on de shelf, and when a gentleman comes along and asks yen for a match, why. give him one out of my box."- Phila delphia Times. Best Methods of Cooking. Boiling meat Is less wasteful than baking and baking less wasteful than roasting. AGRICUaW Vheat Growing Developing North- ward. Year by year It Is noticed that the rea of wheat growing in the United States and Canada .is shifting to the lortn and wesL Time was when the irincipal part of the wheat crop was .Town south of the Dakotas, Iowa and Wisconsin. When Minnesota took up he business of wheat growing and leveloped vast fields the people of he east and south were astonished, rhen the Dakotas began to grow vheaL It was believed that little if iny wheat could be grown north of he boundary line between the United States and Canada. But the chief lurprise has come in the tremendous levelopment of the wheat growing iountry in Manitoba and the North jrest Territories. Reliable statistics nfornvus that .the yield of wheat in Manitoba last year (1901) was in ex :ess of 50,000,000 bushels, and 'that :he yield in the Northwest Territories was in excess of 12,000,000 bushels. This makes a total of over 63,000.000 jrorra in a section of the country that was looked upon as almost too near the arctic circle to be habitable. Wise men have been figuring how soon the wheat growing area of the world would cease to expand. They have not figured the possibilities of this vast territory lying to the north of us and extending we do not know how far toward the line of eternal frosL All this wheat was grown on about 2,500,000 acres of land, or about 4,000 square miles. This means a strip of territory 80 miles long by 50 wide, a very small area compared to the Im mense area usable in Manitoba and the adjoining territories. Evidently American wheat growers will find Btrong competitors north of the inter national boundary line. The average yield there of about 25 bushels to the acre will prove to be a strong factor in the further development of wheat growing in that region. White Lupine. The lupines are divided into three general classes, the White, Bluo and Yellow. They are all annuals. In Europe they are used both as forage plants and for enriching the land. We illustrate White Lupine. It is a good WHITE LUflKE. plant with which, to experiment, but should not be grown extensively till its value is fully understood. . Doubtless there are lands on which it will do bet ter than other plants, but the exact lo cation of these lands Is yet to be dis covered. Fertilizer Facts. A report of the New Jersey experi ment station says that fertilizers are fertilizers only when they contain one or more of the essential constituents of plant growth, i. e., nitrogen, potash and phosphoric acid in such materials as nitrate of soda, sulphate of ammo nia, acid phpsphate, ground bone, mu riate of potash, etc., and when their application to the soil will contribute quite as much or more to the growth of crops and the constituents already there. The chief cause, of unsatisfac tory results from the application of fertilizers, to soils deficient in avail able plant food Is that the person us ing them does not understand the character of the materials he Is hand ling or the characteristics of growth and specific needs of the plant whose growth he intends to encourage. While the value of a commercial fer tilizer is determined almost exclu sively by the amount and form of the nitrogen, potash and phosphoric acid which it contains, it does not follow that all soils or crops will respond equally to applications of fertilizers containing those elements because the needs of soils and the require ments of crops vary. Soils differ in respect to their need for specific de ments owing either to their method of formation or to their management and cropping. A sandy soil is usually deficient In all the essential elements of plant food, while a clayey soil usually contains the mineral elements in abundance, particularly potash. On the other hand, a soil very, rich in veg etable matter is frequently deficient In mineral matter, .while a limestone soil Is likely to contain considerable proportions of phosphoric acid. Growing Potatoes Under Straw. From Farmers' Review: On this farm we tried the plan of covering the potato patch with straw. The re sult was. satisfactory. The tubers were planted th,e ordinary, depth and as they came up the straw was put on. Next' time we will merely cover with earth and then cover that Im mediately with straw to a depth of ten or twelve- inches. Deep covering with straw has. proved the best with us. There is much complaint here about potatoes rotting, but we are finding very few rotten ones. E. C. Thompson, Johnson County, Ne braska. Planting potatoes under straw has been tried for a good many years, yet the practice does not seem to in crease. We would like to know what 'are the objections to the practice.' It seems there must be some, or the plan would be more generally adopt ed. Will some of our readers give us -their experiences In this matter. Food Value of Mushrooms. Mushrooms generally consist of 90 per cent water, but the remaining 10 per cent- is- more nutritious than bread. Any young man who is In love likes to say good night the next morning. 1sUIa 1avniifAmafi AWif tel da IIVUCU B ViCfV flUIUOU VW1 ISJ folly it Is usually a very large one. - ' - 4 fr BSaSJBSSSSSSSJi fBUnanSSS-ff. S) .2 I SSSSSSSS BSSSSSlBSSSjir M TS ssss ss S9BTHPSk mm WW SSSSSSSStW jA r kSBSSSSW AfiT 4VS BEsv BSSS73 BSBTTB9 SSg9gIB552BHa3ssv jBsSTy X. cljBBSSffwBSr'r SKES PgaSjEf Bjjjn) S Origin of Buff Wyandottes. Bulletin 31. of the Department of Agriculture, says: There has been considerable contention about the question of priority of production of this variety. From all information at hand the indications are in favor of George H. Brackenbury, of Auburn, N. Y as the pioneer, with Dr. Al dridge and R. G. Buffington, of Fall River, Mass close seconds. These two distinct lines were produced under different methods. One was formed, from Wyandotte-Buff Cochin cross; the other came through the Rhode Island Red-Wyandotte cross. Other strains came from different crosses all aiming for the same end, but each using a separate rule of procedure. The New York strain of Buff Wyan dottes was produced from the anion of Wyandotte males and Buff Cochin fe males. This strain is largely Cochin' in blood and form, in color of wings and tail, and in surface color, and Is the best of any of the early productions. The amalgamation of this and the other strains Improved all and gave them the start toward their present per fection of form and color. The Buff Wyandotte is nearer related to the Asiatic family than any of the older Wyandotte varieties, as the latter were crossed again upon the Cochin to gain the desired color. The original Fall River strain (so called) came as the result of an unguided cross of Silver Laced Wyandottes and Rhode Island Reds. The Rhode Island Red, a cross bred farm fowl, In union with the Wyandottes, which were placed among the Reds to advance their value as market poultry, gave a product that was molded into the proper form and color for the Buff Wyandotte. The Rhode Island Red was largely de scended from the early Asiatics, and thus gave renewed strength to these later blood lines, and addiug to, rath er than detracting from, the tendency toward Asiatic form. The Capon. T. Grelner: It is easier to castrate a young cockerel than a pig or a Iamb. It Is profitable in more ways than one. Once operated on, capons become the most tractable and peaceable animals imaginable. They do not run nor chase nor fighL I will not say that capons while young grow faster or lay on more flesh from a given amount of food than unaltered males of the same age do. As long as the cockerel Is young enough so that no energy goes into the reproductive organs, I think their development is about at an even rate. But there is a change after a time. The development of the organs of reproduction in the male and bis growing activity and restlessness con sume energy, which in the capon is saved for flesh production. Water comes to a certain degree of heat only. All the excess above this is utilized for the production of steam. It is the same ?.thing..wiqu the rooster. He grows to a certain,slze or weight, and all the 'surplus energy 'above this is use'd for " the- purpose of reproduction. In other-words,- the capon will con tinue to grow and lay on flesh much longer than the unaltered male. It takes a year or more for the capon to come to his full size and weighL but at that age he is much larger than the rooster of the same age, and several times as valuable. Fanners' Review. Salicyclic Acid Fails to Keep Eggs. Fifty grams (about one and three fourth ounces) of salicylic acid (crys tals) were dissolved in alcohol and the concentrated solution extended with 950 cubic centimeters (about one quart) of water. In this solution the twenty fresh eggs, after being washed with water, were allowed to remain Immersed for one hour. They were al lowed to dry and were then, on May 18, 1899, packed, small ends down, sep arately, in fine dry sand, and the stone jar was placed with the others on the .floor of the cellar closet. Result: Good, 0 per cent; bad, 100 per cenL Opened on May 31, 1900, 'this lot showed brit tle shells. The air cells were enlarged, and contained more or less mold. The whites were clear, and the yolks more or less gummy, in some cases sticking to the sides of the shells. The egga had lost their good flavor. They were stale or musty. Weevils in Peas and Beans. . From the Farmers' Review: After cleaning beans and peas ready for use, take tight box, barrel or cask (dry), .and put the peas or beans into IL Take a small bottle and put into it two ounces of bisulphide of carbon. Put the bottle Into the peas while it is corked up. Press the seeds about the bottle some, so it will not tip over. Then take out the cork and cover the receptacle in which the peas or beans are. This covering should be so 'perfect that the fumes of the gas will not get ouL Do not uncover it for some time, nor carry a lamp or candle near it, as the gas from it might take fire. D. C. Pros ser, Michigan. Irrigation at the New Mexico Experi ment Station. In the October 8th issue of the Farmers' Review there was an article on Irrigating by Bleans of Steam Pumps. It referred to experiments made at the New Mexico Experiment station. In some mysterious way the word Arizona was substituted for New Mexico, and the latter station was thus deprived of proper credit. The New Mexico station was prompt in calling our attention to the matter, and we hasten to make all amends possible. The work being done b) the New Mexico station is certain tc bear abundant fruit, especially in semi-arid America. That station hat demonstrated that a six-inch well wil irrigate a considerable area of terri tory, when the water is applied a.' mentioned. Moreover it has beer shown that the cost is much ligbtei than was supposed. It further dem onstrated that ordinary fuel can be used, such as wood of various kinds There are many localities where fue- is a poslUve nuisance, but where ir ligation would be very profitable Since the publication of the article October 8, the Farmers Review bat received a further communlcatloi from the station on the subject it which the writer says: "Since th press bulletin was issued our worl has been even more successful, ant we have thrown from the slx-incr well already described a stream o over 1,000 gallons a minute." Dogs-and Hens. The keep of one dog costs as much as the keep of sixty hens, and sixty hens will Icy 600 dozen eggs. ' The Hamburgs are great egg-producers. They are non-sitters and sdve no trouble through broody inclinations. When Pigs Have Scours. When little pigs get the scours, give a heaped teaspoonful of copperas to the sow in her swill and feed a little lighter, says Texas Stock Jour nal. After the first day. if it is not cured, give a second dose the follow ing morning. I have never seen this fail where given when pigs began to scour, but let the scours run on from three days to a week and they will likely be beyond control. As the pigs get older, provide a place where they can get all the shelled corn or ear corn they want, clean out all they leave every morning and give to old er hogs. Give piggy fresh com. Sprinkle the floor where little pigs eat with air-slacked lime occasional ly. As the pigs get a little older and want swill, mix the swill of clean shorts, a little oil meal, with sweet milk and water, and add a teaspoon ful of lime water for each pig. which should be increased to a tablespoon ful as the pigs get older. Feed this when they get their corn. Be sure their troughs are kept clean. If they are accessible to the old sow they win not leave enough to sour. Con tinue lime water until the pigs are five or six months old. Feed nothing sour. If milk should be the least bit sour, or tainted even, throw it away if you have no fattening hogs to feed it to. The pigs will easily get along without milk for one feed, while the dose of sour milk might set the pig back for a month or two. As to the lime water, it is easily made by put ting a piece of unslacked lime in an earthen jar or wooden pail. Put in a chunk about the size of a quart cup in a two-gallon jar; fill it with water. When lime is all slacked and water gets clear, dip off water and throw first away, refill, and when this Is clear, dip off the scum, when lime water will be ready. Don't use any tin or iron vessel for lime water. You can keep filling and using out of this a month before you need to add any lime.. Don't rile it or stir, only use the clear water. A War Upon Goats. "The Western press reports from Grand Junction, Colo., mention the killing of six hundred Angora goats valued at $8,000. by fourteen masked men, presumably cattle herders, and from Oregon it is reported two hun dred and eighty sheep were slaugh tered by settlers and cattlemen the same day. While not excusing law lessness in any form, there must bo some good reason for the antipathy which has for many years been shown by Western settlers and cattle own ers to the herding of sheep and goats. In Arizona, New Mexico and South ern Colorado, as well as many other places in the semi-arid countries. tnere are Immense herds of goats which have made the mountain sides so bare of grass that other animals cannot exist, at the same time ail the coarse herbage is devoured by these animals, and every seedling tree de stroyed. It is utterly impossible for forests to survive where goats are pastured. This is simply a repetition of Spain's experience upon her moun tains, which resulted in the downfall of that nation, because no forest trees could grow where goats were so numerous. After the forests were de stroyed and climatic changes made agriculture so difficult, the nation be gan Its downward career. The prop er way Is to punish the men who law lessly commit these acts of violence, and to enact laws which will confine the herding of sheep and goats to those lands where grass is abundant, and limit the number in each herd so as not to destroy the pasturage more especially to keep them forever out of the forest regions." The above is from a publication called Arboriculture. We would like to hear what some of our goat raisers think about the charges made. Farm ers' Review. International Live Stock Exposition. The International Live Stock Expo sition held each year in Chicago dur ing the first week in December is the grand round-up of all fairs and shows of the year. At this exposition all differences of opinion on previous judgments rendered during the show season are settled for the year. The International is a harmonious blend ing of the interest taken in the live stock and agricultural industry of the world at large, but more especially of this continent, by the National Pure Bred Record Live Stock Associations and by the live stock and railway In terests of the greatest railway and live stock center of the world. The Union Stock Yards Co. furnishes the housing and finances the show. The railways grant extraordinary low rates of fare for travel. The Record Associations, through their member ship, put forth the effort of the year to make a representative exhibit. The week will be divided into special fea tures of interest for both animal lover and student. No such educational ex- liihtft fa nffarcwl In ttiA IIita DtntL ...! agricultural people as this, their own live stock exposition. Tho exhibits this year, both in the breeding, indi vidual fat, and carload divisions of the show will far exceed the two pre vious expositions. People from all over the civilized world will attend this now world-famed event. Very low rates on all railroads. Ask near est railroad agent. Write for booklet on the show. Remember date of show, November 29 to December 6. Fatress Is Not Health. It has been remarked that some swine breeders mistake fatness for health and vigor. Fat does sometimes indicate thrift, but not always. When a pig has been properly fed on bal anced rations and lays en fat it is an indication of vigor, for the animal Is getting the most possible out of the food. But when the ration is one of corn only and the pig gets fat the in dications are not such as may be trusted to Indicate health. The fat comes in that case from an attempt of nature to build up the body through elaborating a large quantity of food. As the food is in that case mostly fat-forming a great deal of fatty tis sue is elaborated in the work of get ting a small amount of muscular tis. sue. Farm Stock in Middle Asia. As to the extent of cattle-breeding I in Middle Asia we can judge from the following figures: Russian Bokhara. Horses .. 900,000 Camels . 200,000 Oxen and ' cows . . 600,000 Sheep ..6,000.000 Goats .. 296,000 Asses ... 65,000 Khiva. Turkestan. 100.000 130.000 120.000 960.000 170.000 10.000 1.646,000 816.000 1.53M00 12,733.900 1,756,000 107,M0 Dairying in Sibcric. New York Produce Review: Mr Bagge of Swedes, recently made a trl$ through Siberia and Landmandsblad gives the following report of a lectuw on the subject: It Is shown that SI berla is naturally adapted for becom ing the future dairy country. Assooc aa the Ural mountains have beer crossed, one is astoaished at the enor mous prairies with luxurious growth oj forage plants, a veritable heaven foi cattle and dairying, and this impres sloa is confirmed if one gets a chanct to examine the soil which Is of the same rich, black kind known in the European Russia. Herds of several hundred head of cattle are frequently seen aad the impression is that dairy ing must be promlnenL The Russiaa government has also commenced to understand that it has a gold mine in Siberia and has taken steps to utilize It, but to a stranger it will seem aa if the cart was being put before the horse by establishing re frigerator trains for export iastead of first Improving the production. The lecturer attended one of the great dairy exhibitions held every third year, this time in Kurgan. Tobolsk' There were 400 firkins of butter, fresh and preserved, shown, and not a single perfect or simply good could be found among the fresh samples and as to the preserved the smell was enough to prevent him tasting IL The main blame he lays on the dairy instructors. Of course there are exceptions but as a rule, he did believe them to be com petent and he mentions a sample of fresh butter made by an instructor to which had ben added several pounds of sugar. When this is done by aa instructor what can be expected from the rank and file? No! first of all ex pert instructors are needed. It must be remembered what kind of people it is who handle the milk. They are on a very low plain of civilization, they have even deemed the centrifu gal separators the work of the devil and believe that the late drought was God's punishment for the introduction of these machines.. Cleanliness, the foundation of dairy ing, was not much in evidence at the show, how much worse must it be JL" the creameries! These are both individual and co operative, and there as everywhere it has been demonstrated that the co operative creameries make the best butter and they also took most of the premiums at the show. A peculiar thing is that but seldom is mechanical power used to run the separators; as a rule they are run by baad. Every patron has his separator by which his milk Is separated at the creamery ( ! ! ? ) That is a great bother and loss of power is evident, but the rea son is that human power is cheap and fuel very dear. Pasteurization is near ly unknown and the care of the cows is poor, the cows small of various breeds and give but little milk which, however. Is very rich, testing 5 to 6 even 7 per cenL The Trade in Dairy Products. '"" The exports of cheese from the United States in the fiscal year ended June 30, 1902, were smaller than in any like period for the past thirty years, and amounted to only 27,203. 184 pounds, valued at $2,745,597. against 39,813,517 pounds, valued at $3,950,999. la the previous year, says a report of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture. In fact, as far as value is concerned, the Imports of this product are now almost equal to the exports, the Imports of the for eign varieties in 1902 having amount ed to 17,067.714 pounds, valued at $2,551,366, against imports of 15.329, 099 pounds, valued at $2,120,293. In the previous year. To appreciate the decline In the export trade in this, product, it is only necessary to recall that in 1880 the total exports of cheese from the United States amounted to the large total of 127. 533,907 pounds, with a value of $12. 171.720. Exports of butter also continue to decline. In the. fiscal year 1901-02 exports of this product from the Uni ted States amounted to 16.002.169 pounds, valued at $2,885,609, against 23,243.526 pounds valued at $4,014,905, in the previous year. Twenty-two years ago the exports of this product also were at the maximum and amounted to 39,236,658 pounds, valued at $6,690. 687, constituting an export trade that in value was worth about half the like trade in cheese. In 1895 exports of butter had declined to the low rec ord mark of 5,598,812 pounds, with a value of only $915,533. As early as 1897, however, they had recovered to 31,345,224 pounds, worth $4,493,364; but since that date they have de clined steadily, excepting for the slight recovery in 1901. Exports of butter, as measured by values, ex- ' ceeded exports of cheese in the last fiscal year by over $140,000. Value of Whty, At mnay cheese factories the whey is an incumbrance rather than a source of profiL It is usually disposed of at almost no price, yet it is of con- .' siderable value for pig feeding. Tho Wisconsin station has determined that whey for pig feeding Is worth 7 cents - per 100 pounds, and if properly coat- ' bined with other feeds Is worth 10 cents per 100 pounds. The greatest ' trouble with whey Is that it rather de- . moralizes the handling of the milk supply. As soon as a patron empties his cans he wants to fill them up with milk, and this prevents bis cans be ing washed and steamed at the fac tory. There are various ways of get-. ting rid of this necessity. One method, that is practiced at some cheese fac tories is worthy of consideration. Pis pens are built far enough away from the factory to prevent the odor frost reaching that institution, but near enough so that the whey can be easily. run to them on tram tracks. All tha whey ia fed at the factory In this way, and the profits from the operation a into the general fund. In this way 'tha proflts get back to the patrons. There are several advantages about this plan of feeding whey. One of them is that the whey can be fed in better conditian than it usually to fed to when it has to be hauled back to the farm: Spoiled whey at the factory is put into and is certainly not Improved when it arrives at the farm. The cans that "'. convey It are-never or seldom nmlS. cleaned aid SL ISIT?T muub( mj Mm factory ia. those cans is injured- Ine quality. Farmers Review. - -f. ' Wit Is said to be the" salt of eel tersatioa, yet most people prefer it' fresh. a: Women with double china sr. to he exactJBg ia love affairs. ' : - I h X - K, KCf v Ttf. Ifr'basfe&&'.yfevj5- 4 t r . . .. . . , , , J--J3tx.ir. . -. .i - &&