1 ' - . -w .1 n -. " ---. L - -i. --3- . ,. V'Vy Sa "' . .Mi i Matters in Nebraska, i ' iiiiiiiiiriiiiiT' """! t ttini i tut ii mil T TERSELY TOLD STATE NEWS. , Wahoo barbers have organized a mi fOB. ' Fralt la York coaaty. will be at least half a crop. Fremont ha decided to hold a street fair this summer. The Tecamseh opera house is in the hands of aew management A ire at Hartlngton destroyed prop- ertjr to the extent of $15,000. Clyde Courtney of Osceola nearly cut off his right foot with aa ax while ehopplag wood. Tke repablicaa sUte committee has been called to meet at the Lindell hotel la Lincoln on Tuesday. May 26, ltOJ. Fremont bank clearings last week were f 232,566.68, being larger than for the same week last year by $15,168.10. or aver 6 per cent. State Treasurer Mortensen has is sued a call for $100,000 of state war rants, aumbered from 88,710 to 89,760, to take elect May 16. Tke Globe Oil company has leased S00 acres of land near Fossil. Wyo.. and will go iBto the oil diggiag busi ness oa a large scale. The York firemen held a meeting aad decided to send a team to Norfolk - to compete for some of the prizes hung ap by the state firemen's associa tion. Bernardo, a fine trottiug stallion re cently brought from Kansas by Fred Robare of Beatrice, was sold to a gentleman living in New York for $2,500. The number of cases filed for April la the supreme court Is nearly 40 per cent less than for the same month last yean according to reports from the of- Sce of the clerk. Charles Shearer was bound over at York to appear at the next term of j the district court, which opens there June 9, to answer to the charge of baring burglar tools in his possession, with felonious intent Horse thieves have been Infesting Adams coanty farmers along the Lit tle Blue river for several weeks, but aa yet no arrests have been made. A lae large team of horses was stolen from J. H. Meecham, who lives near LaRoy. A runaway team caused the death of Mrs. Charles Oreencloud, a Winnebago aaaaw, la Homer. Mrs. Greencloud. with her 14-year-old daughter, was driving from her home on the reser vatioa to Homer, and when coming down the hill into Homer the team . ran away. Congressman McCarthy has ap pointed Judge F. D. Fales of Ponca as his private secretary. The appointee was the chairman of the congressional committee in the late campaign and - has been prominent In Dixon county aad Third district politics for a num ber of years. Because he failed to Itemize his bill of $390 for the execution of Gottlieb Netgeat ad. Warden Beeraer has been requested to do so by the board of public laads and buildings, and the bill is' held up in the meantime. The statement turned into the board by Mr. Beemer is for $300. Chief Justice Sullivan of the su L prerae court signed an order suspend ing the sentence of Mrs. Lena M. Lillie aatil her case can be reviewed by the supreme court, which will probably be in September. In the meantime she will remain in the Butler county jail. Mrs. Lillie was convicted of murdering her husband and given a life sentence. The bonds voted for Wasau water works have beea disposed of and all is now in readiness to begin work on installing the plant. The only thing that remains to be decided is the sys tem of pressure to be employed. The floater found south of Nebraska City proved to be the body of W. Mc Lelbra of Rulo, who fell from the Plattsmouth bridge on March 28, when - the "traveler" fell, and was drowned. Chief of Police Fergus of Falls City arrested a stranger giving the name of Job Headerson, who had just dis posed of a horse to a buyer there for $50. About the time of the sale the chief received a postal giving the description of a horse and supposed horse thief from Atchison, Kan. The chief started on a tour of the livery barns aad nabbed Henderson from the . description on the card. The horse was recovered and lienderson taken to Atchison, where a reward was paid for his capture. Miss Joanna Hagez of Norfolk has been elected librariaa of the Beat rice public library, to succeed the late Mrs. Abel!. Miss Hagey is a gradu ate of the State university and also the library school of Illinois, ana comes very highly recommended. The voters of Nance county voted to tssae the beads of the county to the amount of $75,000 for the purpose of etecting over the Loup river steel . bridges at Genoa. Fullerton and Pal mer. The vote stood 1.038 for the bonds aad 239 against them. George E. Barker, a tenant farmer, liviag aear Benedict, fell in front of h!a disc aad his team ran away and -fee was badly maagled and cut up. Neighbors are assisting in putting in crops and test week they contributed $99 ta cash to Mr. Barker. Joaa G. Mickey, ancle of Governor Mickey, died at Osceola. He has had asthma for years aad has beea con f aed to his house twenty weeks. He was 74 years old and was one of the first settlers of the county, being the f rat coaaty commissioner. Fred Oeetrica, August Oestrlch, Jno. granger aa William Degaer, living oar, were arrested for sein- aad having: flak la their posses They had their hearing before Coaaty Judge William. All bat Wll- gaer pleaded guilty to the aad the judge flaed them each tltsawceets. Tha arciariwta of Johnson county are vary kapafal for at least from half ta twa-tawda af a crop of peaches aad as sin, aai aa afaeh from the straw. HrrlaV"'1 Ufetard. DAMAGE TO THE FRUIT CROP. What Robert W. Furnas Says Regard Ing tha Matter. Ex-Governor Furnas, being Inter viewed in regard to damage to fruit by the late cold weather, said: "The morning after the nipping frost of the 28th ult, we all thought therr. was no hope for a fruit crop this year. After confronting facts. It was found we were more scared than hurt. Many early blooms of apples, our great standard fruit crop, had escap ed. The later bloomlag trees, large ly in the majority, came into bloom, and fruit setting unscathed. To date, my apple orchards give all the prom ise I could ask. or wish for. That old sensible and reliable variety of ap ples. Rawles Genet, in common fruit parlance known as Jennetin the lat est of all to bloom could not be se duced by March or April sunshine from its winter quarters, out of its season, and is in all Its glory. "Peaches will be a good fair crop. From their scarcity we hope the qual ity will be superior and; in a meas ure, compensate for the lass of quan tity. The later and more valued vari eties are less Injured than the early ones. "Apricots are next to an entire fail ure. Only a few scattering specimens are to be found heie and there. "Plums and cherries stand next to apricots as to damage. Cherries gtra more promise than plums. "Grapes, all early blooms were kill ed. To the surprise of all, the vines are putting out new fruit buds, giving promise in the end of a possible fair crop. "After all, we have really no cause to complain. Apple trees, our stand ard fruit, will do their duty, and we will be favored with a good crop if we perform our duty and fail not to look after spraying." Orchardists Are Hopeful. TECUMSEH The orchardists of Johnson county are very hopeful for at least from half to two-thirds of a crop of peaches and apples and as much from the strawberries, notwith standing the blizzard. Cherries and plums are greatly injured and there will be but few. The gardens are coming up again in good shape. Wheat was benefited by the moisture and is looking fine. Corn planting Is now on In earnest and the weather is warm. Statement of Appropriations. From the office of the auditor there will soon be issued a statement of the appropriations and expenditures of the last legislature. The office force is busily engaged in making the compila tion and the copy will soon be ready. The law. requires that this be done within sixty days after the adjourn ment of the legislature, and while It has not always' been the custom to have the reports ready by that time, from the prospects this y.ear such will be done. Rain Will Retard Planting. BEATRICE The heaviest rain ot the season visited this section Sunday and Monday. The rainfall is estimat ed at more than three inches and as a result the river has raised about two feet. It will have a tendency to great ly retard corn planting, which is well under way in this section. Talbot in the Lead. LINCOLN Advices received here from nearly all the states In which conventions of the Modern Woodmen were held Wednesday indicate that A. R. Talbot of this city will have a sufficient backing to win the head con sulship, the highest position in the or der, when the national convention meets next month in Indianapolis. Farmers Are Buying Lumber. YORK There never was a time ta the history of York county when farmers were making as many im provements as now. During the month one lumber company in this city paid $9,000 freight There are ten other lumber yards in York county and they are all enjoying a large business. Hot Metal Injures Eyes. YORK Bert Barnett, an employe of the York foundry and iron works,' met with a serious accident while melting babbitt metal. A particle of the molten metal struck him in the eye, which was badly burned, and may cause him to lose his eyesight. Failure for Irrigation. NORTH LOUP Irrigation in this county is probably deal for all time, the thirteen-mile canal which the township helped to build by issuing $10,000 in bonds after having passed through forecloseure proceedings, fail ed to furnish any water last year. This season an effort was made to organize an irrigation district and buy in the property, but it failed to get the required number of signatures to the petition. Man and Money Missing. WEST POINT Ludwig Herse, for two years water commissioner of this city, whose term expired May 1, has been found to be a defaulter to the amount of $798.77, and a warrant has been issued for his arrest by County Judge Krake on complaint of his bondsmen. Herse has absconded and his whereabouts are unknown. He had been a resident of the city for twenty-five years and enjoyed the es teem of his fellow townsmen. Dobson on Irrigation. LINCOLN State Engineer Dobson has returned from a trip to the west ern irrigated portions of the state His report of the results of irrigation and the prospects for still more suc cess duing the coming year are rose ate. Irrigation work, he says, will consist this year largely in the con struction of storage reservoirs for the purposa af conveying the water which is plentiful daring the springtime, but wale dries, ajp tetor fe the hot stoats. &r Tha Dark Before Dawn. h, mystery of the morning gioain. Of haunted air. of windless hush! Oh. wonder of the deepening- dome Afar, still far. the morning's (lush! My spirit hears, among the spheres. The round earth's ever-aulckenlng rih! A single leaf, on yonder tree. The planet's rush hath felt, hath heard; And soon all branches whispering be! That whisper wakes the nested bird The song- of thrush, before the blush , Of dawn the dreaming world has ever stirred! i The old moon withers in the east The winds of space may drive her far! In heaven's chancel waits the priest Dawn's pontiff-priest, the morning star! And yonder, to! a shafted glow The gates' or day-spring fall ajar! Scribner's. A War-Time Incident. Several months ago, when Depart ment Commander Weber of the Grand Army was in Chattanooga looking after a site for the Ohio monument to her soldiers who fought at Mission Ridge, he met a CapL SmarC Incident ally, in the conversation,-Commander Weber spoke of the charge- of the Union forces up the ridge, and of a Confederate battery which tried to escape, but snagged one of its guns on a stump. He spoke also of one ot the boys of his company who dropped a red cap near one of the batterymen. CapL Smart gave him the address of CapL Dent, who commanded the bat tery, and the commander wrote to him receiving the following interesting re ply: "I commanded what was known as 'Dent's battery' at the battles of Chick amauga and Mission Ridge. My bat tery was on the ridge and not far to the left of that part of the Confeder ate line which was opposite Orchard Knob. My battery was divided when the assault was made on the ridge. I had two guns at the left of a public road, and four to the right of said road. I think the road was the Shal low Fork road, but am not sure. I had six brass 12-pounder Napoleon guns, and lost five of them In this battle. "I feel satisfied from your descrip tion of the battle thatit was my bat tery that fired on your flank, or at least a part of it. As soon as the as saulting column got under the hill so we could not reach them by front fire, we turned our guns so as to infilade the assaulting column as much as pos sible. One of my guns, the one near est the road, got away. When I found the fire so heavy that I could not hope to escape that way. I tried to take the guns over through the under brush. "In going down I remember the axle of one of my guns caught against a stump. I tried to have it lifted over the stump, as the ground there was quite steep, and got the front axle over, but before we could get the hind axle over your people got very close and opened fire, killing, as I now re member, one man, and wounding sev eral others. I was with this gun, and a bullet went through my coat sleeve. The gun, of course, was abandoned there. "The red cap which your people found there belonged, I think, to the man killed there his name was Schaub. When I say he was killed I know he was shot through the neck and fell, and judging from the way the blood spurted, I saw no chance for him, and we left without ceremony. "My impression is .that the officer who rode the white horse in that bat tle was Gen. Patton -Anderson. Gen. Anderson was afterward very badly wounded in the battle of Jonesboro. He died a few years ago in Memphis, Tenn., but went into the army from Florida. "My battery was reorganized, but with only four guns, and I was in all the battles from Dalton to Atlanta, and was wounded July 22, 1864. in the battle of Atlanta the day Gen. Mc Pherson was killed and later was wounded in the battle of Nashville. I was also in the battle of Pittsburg Landing, as some of your people call it and was wounded there. "The war is over. I have a son in the navy who took part in the Spanish-American war a few years ago so you see he fought, for the flag in that war. if I did follow the stars and bars in the war of 1861-65. "S. D. Dent, Eufaula, Ala." In a postscript the captain cays of the battle of Mission Ridge: "One incident of the battle you may recall. As your column advanced up the hill just opposite where one sec tion of my battery was posted, which was to the Confederate left of this road; in firing on the column with the infilading fire, we cut down the only tree, as I remember, left standing. The tree fell right on the advancing column, and, as it rolled down the steep hill, it carried with it one man, who had evidently been caught in the limbs of the tree. The picture of that man as he was carried down by the tree is very vivid in my mind." Think Railroad Rate Too High. There is a good deal of comment Ip Grand Army circles in the East over what the comrades regard as too high a rate established by the rail roads for the trip to the National Encampment, to be held in San Fran cisco in AugusL Seventy-three dol lars from New York is regarded as too high. They cite the fact that the Christian Endeavorers, when their international convention was held in San Francisco, were given a rate of $52. Massachusetts veterans have taken the matter up seriously, and a committee of six will be appointed to act with the Department Commander of that state In securing lower rates, if possible. A meeting of the present and past officers of the Department of Massachusetts and delegates was held in the state house in Boston re cently to consider the subjecL It was resolved to ask Commander in Chief Stewart to use all proper in fluence to get as good rates to San Francisco for the week of August 17 as was given the Christian Endeavor society. Colored Man Was Grateful. "I had a pleasant reminder of the war the other day," said the Captain. "It came in the shape of a silver cream pitcher and. sugar bowl, ac- companied by a well-written letter, which my people liked very much. The letter abounded in references the Rigniflcance of which waa apparent only to myself.- After one of the hot engagements of the war I came upon' a young colored man who had been between -the lines and who was like a man paralyzed. I spoke, reassur ingly to him aad hurried after the re treating enemy. "In the evening some of my men brought the young negro into camp, and aa I passed the group I heard the boys explaiaiag to the young fellow that he was free and could do aa he pleased. They wanted to know what he was going to do about It, aad In timated pretty strongly that if they were In his place they would take the job of cooking for a certain mesa in their' own company. As I passed the' colored man came toward me and stammered that he didn't know what the massas meant, but if he could do as he pleased he would do whatever I wanted him to do. "He became my cook and man of all work at company headquarters, and remained with me to the end of the war. I took him home with me and in due time established him in business. Then I came West, and after my location in Chicago did not hear from my protege for thirty years. He, in the meantime had changed location, had prospered In business, and after thirty years' wait ing sent me the silver creamer and sugar, and a letter testifying to his gratitude and affection. I liked that, you know, and I was as glad to hear of his success in life as I would be to hear of the success of an old com rade In arms." Chicago Inter Ocean. Daughters of Veterans.'. On Memorial Day, 1885, five school girls, none of them being over 16 years of age at the time, stood at the gate of the cemetery at Massillon, O and watched their brothers, the Sons of Veterans, taking part In the observ ance of the day in the official capacity of their society. "Why can't we have a society to be called the "Daughters of Veterans?' interrogated one of the girls of her companions. "Why can't wet" they all responded. The ides had no sooner had its origination than the girls set to work with a will and a vigor to organize a local order, anc soon their number was increased to 14 girls and they became the chartei members of not only the first societj of Daughters of Veterans in the state of Ohio, but in the whole United States. The girls were encouraged by theii parents and soon the society was in corporated under the laws of the state as is any other lodge or society. The growth of the order has beer slow but gradual and it bids fair in s few years to become an organizatior of great strength as any descendant of a veteran may become a membei of the order, thus permitting it to per petuate itself. Few Fraudulent Claims. Every now and then 'is heard i remark to the effect that many appli cants for pensions are frauds, or that many claims made by soldiers are fraudulent, and the unthinking be lieve IL The last report of trials anc convictions for one year shows then were 226 convictions, against 159 Per sons, as follows: Soldiers and sailors, 11. Women's roll Claiming as widows (after re marriage), 22; bogus widows, 11; claim as mother of soldier, 1; false witnesses, 4. Civilian's record, men'f cases Attempting bribery, 1; con spiracy, 2; false certifications, 23; false claims, 22; false personation, 1; forgery and perjury, 24; prosecuting claims while a government officer, 3 Offenses also against pensioners Embezzlement from minors', 1; charg ing illegal fees, 15; personating gov eminent officers, 13; retaining pen sion certificates, 2. Only eleven soldiers and sailor? appear in the above list, two of whom were deserters, and one other served in the' Spanish-American war. Grand Army Notes. The fifteenth annual encampment ol the Grand Army of the Republic oi the Department of Georgia was held at Fitzgerald, Ga,, on Saturday, March 21. E. D. Bacon, department command er of the G. A. R. of Alabama, has is sued general orders from the head quarters, Birmingham, Ala., conven ing the fifteenth annual encampment of the department . at Birmingham. Ala., on Tuesday, March 24. The members of the Roanoke anc Newberne Association held their an nual reunion at the Grand Army Hal' in Athol, Mass., on Saturday, March 14. The meeting was well attended James Oliver is president and R. L Doane secretary and treasurer of the association. Raising Fund for Encampment An effort is being made to raise t fund of $100,000 to pay the expenses of the coming ex-Confederate soldiers reunion in New Orleans. One contri butinn of $1,000 has been made, ape is the largest thus far. Three of $500 one of $300, and five of $200 have been made. The Union Veterans' As sociation has given $10, regretting it inability to give more, and saying: "We are prompted to this action by the kind treatment always accorded us by the Confederate veterans dur ing our residence among you." Postpone Meeting Till October. The Society of the Army of the Tennessee has decided to postpone itt meeting, in Washington, D. C, from May to October 15. This action ha been taken on account of a desire to have the President present at the unveiling of the statue of Gen. Sher man. Confederates to Meet Yearly. It is. proposed to have a yearly re union of the South Carolina Confed erate veterans so long as a sufficient number survive, and that it be al ways held in Columbia. A Novel Experience. A great feature of the new "Lake" submarine, says Page's' Magazine, is the driving compartment,' located in the bow of the boaL It has a room about eight feet long, with a door that opens outwards into the sea. An air lock connects the diving compartment with the living quarters when the cap tain desires to send a man ouL He enters this compartment, closes the door, and opens a valve, which admits the compressed air until the pressure of the air in the diving compartment equals the pressure of the water at whatever depth the boat happens to be. There is a duplex gauge in the compartment with a red 'and black hand. The black hand shows the water pressure outside, and the red hand shows the pressure of air Inside the diving compartmeaL When the two hands are together this indicates that the pressure of the water outside and the air pressure inside are equal. men tne aoor can oe cpenea, ana ue i water will not come in. The diver, who haves the boat can pick up and cut cables and can do mining and countermining work. HQDTTQIJKriJCT v The Hardy Catalpa. Wa. L. Hall: Hardy Catalpa makes its bast growth on very rich, deep soil. la tha FarMngton forest the best returns oa the best 'soil are almost Are times as great as on the poorest Grown in pure' stand, the Catalpa should be protected from the wind by shelter belts of taller trees. A thin belt of cottonwood on the windward side of a plantation will protect tha edge trees and allow them to, make much taller and stralghter growth; even aa Osage orange hedge, though not growing so tall, will generally protect them. It Is much cheaper for the planter to grow his trees from seed than to buy them from a nursery, if a large number are to be planted. In the Manger plantation the cost of trees grown on the farm was 50 cents per thousand, while those from a nur sery, with freight, cost about $4 per thousand. The cost of establishing the Yaggy plantation with home-grown trees, including cutting back and two years' tillage, was $11.70 per acre; the cost of establishing the Farllngton forest by contract, including the same amount of tillage, but no cutting back, was $30 per' acre. The proper spacing used In planting is from 4 by 4 to 4 by 6 feet The Catalpa planter who sets his trees thinly upon the ground will find them growlsg with spreading tops In spite of his most careful efforts to prevent It The most important advantage of close planting for the Catalpa is that it kills the lateral branches while young. If the lateral branches die be fore becoming more than one-half inch in diameter, they are easily pushed off by the tree and do no damage; but If they reach a larger size than this, as they are sure to do in thin planting, they cling to the tree for years, even after they die. The development of large side branches unfits the Catalpa for practical use. While the stand may become so dense as finally to shade them out, they cling with such per sistence to the growing trunk that it can not cast them off. New wood is deposited around the dead branches, but does not unite with them. The holes thus formed lead straight Into the heart of the tree, and the angle of the branches Is just right to con duct water and germs of decay into ;the trunk.- When the branch is finally released It leaves a great hole leading to the decayed heart of the tree. The tree thus ruined sooner or later breaks down a complete loss. Cutting back the young trees after two or three seasons, so as to develop a single sprout from the stamp, greatly hastens height growth and prevents low side branches. Spraying a science. Spraying Is a science of Itself, says Prof. F. M. Webster. It is a profes sion as yet undeveloped, and until we give it more attention and improve upon and develop its practical value we shall never get the full and effect ual beneut from it that is possible with our material and machinery. I be lieve the time will come when spray ing will constitute a distinct and sep arate department of horticulture, and students will in our agricultural col leges be trained -in not only the science of spraying, but the sciences that are most necessary in connection with it, viz., entomology, botany and chemistry. Agriculture in Honduras. Reports of United States consuls show that agriculture is rapidly de veloping In Honduras. The products are largely those that can be sold to the United States, and are such as compete but little with products raised in this country. Half a million bush els of corn and 20,000 bushels of red beans are raised for home consump tion. A little wheat and large quanti ties of rice are also being produced. But tropical fruits are the products that promise most. Over 42,000 acres have been planted to banana trees, and last year over three million bunches were harvested. About 20,000 acres of plantains have been planted, and last year over 36,000,000 of this fruit were harvested. Over a million cocoa nut 'trees were last year reported in bearing, and $120,000 worth of that fruit was exported. Oranges, lemons and limes are being grown in ever increasing quantities, as well as plan tations of coffee trees and the fields of tobacco. About 9,000 acres are re ported as producing indigo. As yet only about 8,000 acres of land are un ,der Irrigation, but it is said that with irrigation the whole country can be made a veritable garden. A Blue Grass Pasture. From Fanners' Review: I do not think anything can equal a blue grass pasture for milch cows, for a perma nent pasture. I have a pasture of 35 acres that has never been plowed and it is better now than when I bought it thirty years ago. The thirty-flve-acre piece pastures 40 cows. It is divided into two fields and the cows only pas ture on about one-third of it during the first of the season. A good blue grass pasture should be rather low and level and well drained. Cows should not be allowed in pasture until grass has a good start In my 'coun ty (Carroll, Illinois) it pays to keep cows in yard until the 15th of May or 1st of June. W. R. Hostetter. Worms. The worm's home is a hole of long halls dug in the ground. These halls are lined with a kind of glue from the worm's body, the glue making the walls firm so they will not fall in. The 'halls are not very deep under ground, and when the weather is cold or dry the worms dig deeper. In win ter worms plug up the doors of their houses, and this is done often by dragging Into It a plant stem that will fit it They carry into their homes leaves and stalks to eat, and they bring out and throw away things which they do not like. Worms usu ally come out of their holes at night or in wet weather. If they get far from their homes they cannot find their way back; then they make a new hole. Each worn lives alone. In the evening .or early morning, or during rain, you will often find worms with their heads stuck out of their doors. They do not come out when the sun is shining bright, as the heat dries worms up very fast and kills them. Birds know the habits of worms and search for them at sunrise or after sunset, or while it is raining. A worm will die in one day in dry air, but will live for weeks under water. Yonng worms know as well how to build 'their houses and carry things in and out of' them as do -old worms. The American Boy. I POULIKY 1 Meat for Buff Leghorns. From Farmers Review: My ex perience with this variety of egg-producing fowls goes back to 1901, being one of the very first in this county to take the same up. I raise them for eggs and show purposes both, and be lieve no better fowl wears feathers for an all round breed and a money mak er, as there is more money in eggs tnan In .market poultry, and no fowl can beat a Leghorn for eggs. In order to get eggs in the winter we must feed meat, green bones or some kind of blood meal. The only question with me (and it should be with any breeder) Is the cost of the feed, as I consider all are on the same level for the good of the fowl, and the' foods the breeder can get at a reason able cost are the ones to feed. Fowls must have meat to 'lay. well, and also no better feed have we found for mak ing eggs fertile than somo meat We use green bones, which we consider as good,. and .can be purchased in this city at 2 cents per pound, all ground and delivered-and the cost of meat Is 4 to 6 cents per pound. Meat should be fed to chicks as they are growing, as it gives muscle and helps the chick in many ways, and for getting a bird In show shape Is one of the best feeds we have ever found. In fact it is one ot the articles of .feed that I could not get along without, and can hardly see how any successful breeder can do otherwise. We must have it, and the only question is how cheap can we get it The birds that win for me in such shows as New York, Chicago, Detroit, a- ' Cleveland are all meat eaters, and no better birds can I find for eggs, and I want nething better. Geo. S. Barnes, Calhoun County, Michigan. The Leghorn Cock. In shape a Leghorn cock should be graceful; body, round and plump, broad at the shoulders, and tapering toward the tall. The tail should be well balanced on a fair length of A LEGHORN COCK. shank and thigh; the length of leg giving the bird its sprightly and proud carriage. Closeness of feather ing adds to the general shape and se cures a freedom from angles which always proclaims the pure bred, typical specimen. The breast should be full, beautifully curved, rather prominent, and carried well forward. Neck, long, well arched, and carried erect; back, of medium length, with saddle rising in a sharp, concave sweep to the tail; tail, large, full, carried upright Feeding Little Chickens. One rhould not be In too great 8 hurry to feed the little chickens. A day or two can go by after hatching before feeding. When food is first given it should be of a nature to be easily digested without the aid of grit Perhaps the best food for the early feedings is stale bread, slightly mois tened with milk. Fresh bread Is not desirable. In a few days ground grair can be added to tho feeding ration such as corn meal, wheat bran anc wheat middlings. Sour milk or sweet milk are excellent to go with these At first, feed often. As the young chickens Increase In size, the numbei of feedings can be diminished and the quantity of food increased. Green food should be provided early. If yoang chickens are permitted to run In the orchard and grass yards they wil fine worms and Insects and peck away at the grass blades, thus getting foi themselves what they need of these materials. If it is not possible to pro vide feeding yards, as Indicated above the grower should have small pens, It which are seeds, rye, grasses, rape or other forage crops, to furnish the necessary succulence for greatesl vigor and growth. Bulletin N. C. De partment of Agriculture. Development of Young Pigs. Much of our success in bog raising hpth as to economy of production anc quality of product, depends on how we care for the young pigs after weaning says Prof. W. J. Fraser. The old say ing that "feed' Is half the breed" if true, if we include the methods ol feeding. Feeding largely on food thai tends to produce fat, without sufficient exercise being given, will often change a little Yorkshire into a thick, fat type or may cause such a derangement ol the digestive organs as to founder the y ung pigs. This is a most serious condition, and will render them profit less. Indigestion may show itself bj the pigs failing In flesh, loss of appe tite, roughness of hair, scaliness ol skin, teeth becoming black, etc. The last condition is often thought to be the cause, rather than the effect It is, together with the others, but at evidence of injudicious feeding. It case some young pigs become so fat that they die from what is known at "thumps," in all cases proper food anc exercise will prevent, and, In a meas ure, remedy them. "Prevention is bet ter than cure." Corn Meal Mush. From Farmers' Review: To make good mush, the water should be boil ing hard when the meal is stirred in If it stops boiling, put in no more mea until it boils hard again. Do not make it too thick as it will stiffen up it cooling. A handful of oatmeal or flout will Improve the flavor. It makes very healthful supper dish for childret and elderly people. We eat too muck rich food at supper time. If we woulc eat more simple food we would live longer have clearer brains, bettei sleep, as undigested food often causes sleeplessness. Mrs. AxtelL One Way to Cook Eggs. The farmers of India when fuel is scarce, cook an egg without fire. The egg is placed in a sling and whirled around for about 5 minutes, until tne heat generated by the motion has cooked it The "pea comb" is a triple comb resembling three small combs in one, the middle being the highest . . lasB9saI' aa KIIbbbbb,. Ml BBBBBBBmffflamPBBBBBm!&iJr silly BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBY BBBBBBBBBBBBW MlZ&7i bbbbbbbbbbbbw' J& W&Mma BBBBBBBBBBBKraBBBBBBBaK JBBBt5SsBBBBBaBrBV -f LIVE STOCK Sugar By-Praducts aa Horse Feed. The beet chips, diffusion residue, ind other by-products obtained la the manufacture of beet sugar, consist of the sugar beet from which a consid erable portion of the carbohydrates iias beea removed, says a bulletin of the Department of Agriculture. The total amount of nutritive material present, however, is fairly large, rhese products, properly speaking, are also coarse fodders. Molasses, which consists almost entirely of car bohydrates . (sugars), was used as ?arly as 1830 as a feed for horses,, and has recently attracted considerable attention in this connection. When used for this purpose it Is usually sprinkled 'on dry feed, being first di luted with water, or It is mixed with some material which absorbs It and renders it easy to handle, such as peat dust or with some material rich in nitrogen, as dried blood. la the latter case the mixture more aearly represents a concentrated feed than the molasses alone, or molasses mixed with an absorbent material only. Cane-sugar molasses is also used as a feeding stuff. It differs from beet molssses la that It contains glucose In addition to cane sugar, and has a much smaller percentage of salts. In this connection the experiments reporting the successful feeding of cane molasses to over 400 work horses at a. sugar plantatloa la the Fiji Islands are of Interest As high as 30 pounds of molasses wss fed per head daily at different times, but the ration finally adopted consisted of 15 pounds of molasses, 3 pounds of braa, and 4 pounds of maize. In addition green sugar cane tops were fed. The health of the horses remained excel lent. Molasses did not cause diarrhea, but rather constipation, which was counteracted by feeding bran. Feed ing molasses effected a saving of over $45 per head per annum. However, it was believed that such a saving was possible only by reason of large quantities of waste molasses and valueless cane tops available on the spot. In discussing these experiments the following statements were made: For working horses the sugar in cane molasses is a satisfactory substitute for starchy food, being readily digest ed .. . and 15 pounds can be given to a 1,270-pound working horse with advantage to the health of the animal and to the efficiency of Its work. It produces no undue fatten ing, softness, nor Injury to the wind. The high proportion of salts In It hss no injurious effect An albuminoid ratio as low as 1:11.8 has proved high ly suitable for heavy continuous work when a sufficient quantity of digest ible matter is given. Cement Floors and Rheumatism. From the Farmers Review: We use a cement floor for our station herd, and I am acquainted with two of the most up-to-date dairies in this part of the country that also use cement floors, and as far as I have been able to see there has not been a case of rheumatism in our own herd, and I have heard no complaint from the pro prietors of the other dairies. It is true, I think, that cement will sometimes cause sore feet, and for this reason It is necessary that more bedding be used than would be re quired on a wood floor. On the other band this bedding Is not wssted as It goes Into the manure, and a wood floor is bound to become saturated with urine and give off more or less odor during the hot weather. As far as my knowledge goes I would prefer the cement floor under every condition that occurs to me at the present time. C. F. Doane, Dairyman, Maryland Experiment Station. From the Farmers Review: I have had very little experience with cowa standing on cement floors and have not seen any case of rheumatism re sulting from it I am of the opinion, however,' that cement floors without plenty of bedding, might cause rheu matism. Where bedding is at all scarce, I believe it would be wise to place planks on top of the cement. H. E. Van Norman. Associate Profes sor in Dairying, Purdue University, Indiana. The original name of the Dutch Belt eu cattle wa3 "Lakenfleld," from "Lakcn," a sheet to be wound around the body of the animal. A Handy Wagon Box. From the Farmers Review: We are using on our farm a form of wagon box that is handy and substantial as well. It takes the following material to make it, all dressed and painted. Two sills 2x6x12 feet. Four pieces 2x4x3 feet for cross sleepers. Thirty six feet unmatched inch boards for floor. Eight clips made from 7-16 Iron rod with threads cut and nuts fitted. These clips 9 inches long and used to fasten cross sleepers to under side of sills. Eight socket clips pur chased frcm hardware store or may be made from wagon tire iron. These clips are l&x3 inches on inside, and are bolted to outside of sills to re ceive the 2x3 standards on side boards. Eight standards 2x3x18 inches. Two sideboards 1x12x12 feet Above standards are bolted to these boards, and boards are cleatad at each end to receive endgates, which completes the bottom bed 18 inches high and 12 feet long and will hold twenty-two bushels of ear corn. By adding a ten-inch sideboard 35 bushels of corn can be hauled. It will take a box of fifty carriage bolts 7s3 inches and three pounds of 8 penny nails to complete the box. Material for same costs $7.00 dressed ready to make up including hard ware and extra sideboard, and $10.50 made up and painted. We call this box the "knockdown box" because it can be taken apart to remove from the wagon and be stored away in the dry handily when not in use. Geo. W. Brown, Hancock County, Ohio. Helping the Lord. Quizzing old Uncle Jake was one of the recognized amusements of the resort. The views of the old negro were so quaint and his good humor so Jmperturable that he had established himself as a general favorite. He was asked one morning if he was married and replied: "No. suh; not now. I done bin mar ried foh times, but all my wives don daid. suh." "That's too bad. Uncle Jake. Are you thinking of marrying again?" Yes, suh. To be sho, suh. De Lawd giveth and de Lawd taketh ! away, and I'm helpin' him best I know how." If it wasn't for the weather lots of people would have no excuse for talk-lag. VflBBBff'47'yCr" 1 s9HlHB9JgQb nTVaVi BjilSjjgBjflBBjSJBBBBmB BB I Commercial and Natural Starters. Prof. G. L. McKay: I am asked to state which I like best, the commercial or natural starter. For the average maker. I believe the commercial start er will give the better results. But the intelligent maker who has taste aad smell well cultivated, will-be able to select milk aad prepare a starter that will produce flavor equal or su perior to aay culture oa the market. When the good Lord created the earth. He provided everything that was nec essary to bring about the best results without any artificial means. We usually find that whea thorough clean liaess Is observed la everything per tateiag to the milk, that the right spe cies of bacteria are present to give the most perfect flavor to the batter aad cheese. Milk becomes impure from an external source. It I were asked to give a definition of a natural starter, at the present, I would find it a difficult thing to describe. For In stance, one man has a dirty, leaky vat which is loaded with foul bacteria ready to contaminate the purest cream. Another man will have im properly cleaned churns and pumps, filled with undesirable bacteria, and still another washes his butter with impure water. There Is the over-ripe hand separa tor cream which some" makers have to' contend with. These are all starters of their kind. One man uses batter milk and calls It a natural starter. Another uses skimmilk caught from the average milk as it comes from the separators, and he calls it a skimmilk or natural starter. Another will go out and get the milk of a fresh cow and allow it to sour, which Is also a natural starter. Some will use whole milk and some will use cream, and they will come under the head of natural starters. Most makers would get about the same results If they did not use any stirter as to use the kind I have just mentioned. Milking at Sunny Peak Farm. D. W. Howie thus tells how tha I milking is done on Sunny Peak farm. near MiiwauKee: The first thing we do is to wrap a heavy blanket around the cans which are to receive the milk. By so doing the milk is enabled to retain its heat for a very long time. This prevents tha necessity of warming It again for the separator sad calves. The next procedure is milking. Each milker has his own cows. The poorest milker, as a general thing. Is given the easiest cows to milk and the best milker gets the hardest ones. This may not seem fair, bat it saves time and also pre vents the chance of spoiling the hard milking cows that, though they may be hard milkers, are nevertheless ex cellent cows In every respect. I have noticed that good milkers are "born and not made." If a man has any con siderable number of cows to milk for six months aad at the end of that time Is not a good milker you may rest as sured that be never will be one. Each man feeds his own cows their grain ra tion as he milks them. The milk be ing weighed by the milker, he. of' course, is in the best position to know which of his cows should have the most feed. Some are fed just before they are milked; this takes their at tention away from the milker and they give down freely, standing quietly at the same time. Others, if fed while being milked, become so engrossed with their eating that they forget everything and step forward and back, now stretching tneir whole bodies to get a good mouthful, now drawing back to chew It, thus greatly annoying the milker. Such cows are generally fed after being milked. We arrange it so that when the milking Is being done the cows all have their grain either in front of them or in their stomachs. How About Your Well? The following, taken from a docu ment issued by the Michigan State Board of Health, snouid receive the thoughtful attention of every one: "The most scrupulous care should be taken to keep the present sources of drinking water pure, and to pro cure future supplies only from clean sources. The general water supply of cities and villages is a matter of great concern; 'it should be procured from places where there can be no probability of immediate or remoto contamination. The well-known out break of typhoid fever at Plymouth, Pa., where over a thousand cases and one hundred and fourteen (114) deaths occurred, is apparently an Il lustration of how great a calamity may follow the fouling of a general water supply by the discharges of a person sick with typhoid fever. When there is no general water supply, nor good sewers, much may bo done to protect wells by the abolition of cess pits and privy vaults, ly the use of dry earth in privies, and by the fre quent removal therefrom of all their drain Into wells unsuspected by those who use the water. Should typhoid fever discharges pass into such a privy an outbreak of typhoid fever among those using the water from a neighboring well would be likely to occur. If such a well were the source of the general water supply of a city, typhoid fever might soon be epidemic there. There Is good reason to suspect the water of a well whenever a vault 13 situated within a hundred feet of it. particu larly If the soil be porous. In nu merous instances fluids from excre ta have leached into wells from much greater distances; and it has been proved that a well thirty rods from a cemetery received water which had filtered through the soil of the ceme tery. Dangerously contaminated water may be and often is found to be clear and colorless and to have no bad taste." The noted instance at Lausanne, Switzerland, where tho discharges from typhoid fever pa tients were thrown into a small stream, which disappeared by sink ing Into the earth and gravel and reappeared about half a mile distant as a mountain spring, the clear water of which caused typhoid fever in one hundred and forty-four (144) per sons, is instructive, and Is worthy of note as illustrating how the disease may be spread. The Dutch Belted cattle originated in Holland prior to the seventeenth century. From the outset they have been chiefly if not entirely controlled b the nobility of Holland. That the tanners of Nebraska are getting larger dividends than the steel trust is proved by Prof. Davisson of the state university in a pamphlet just issued. Buds are lateral when on the side of a shoot; and terminal when on the end. ':. f. . -.'iS .- -