tmTSfSlf,!S!S &&&$&& &&5.t&P:' V; v" "? . ir-T , T; F rr ? . K- I ! :. s & . I E v i- tKt.f & &. immMMIIIMMmtHltllMMtMIHIMHlltmiW Matters in 'iniiMHiuiiiiMiutiti - THE STATE IN A NUTSHELL. There was liberal attendance at the Sarpy county fair and the exhibits were line. The record of the mortgage indebt edness of Cuming county continues to show a gratifying decrease. Edwin Bostrom. aged 21, fell under train No. 4 at Ogalalla and was killed. His body was badly mangled. Harlan Wyman. a 16-year-old Lin coln boy. was killed by the street cars, under which he fell from a bi cycle. A Fremont gardener raised 160 bushels of potatoes off two town lots and will dispose of them at l a bushel. Fifty cattle were inoculated at the farm of John Warren north of Beat rice to prevent the appearance of blackleg. The home of Dr. R. W. E. Casterline of Graf, Johnson county, was burglar ized recently. Thieves entered some time between 2 o'clock in the morn ing and daylight and made away with 210 in cash. Pom Mertes, a prominent German farmer living four miles north of Ta ble Rock, was severely injured by be ing struck by a train two miles north of town. He was sleeping on the right of way. The farmers in the vicinity of Fair bury are becoming indignant over the operations of chicken thieves and ex tensive raids are reported almost daily. At one place over 400 chickens were taken in one night. The Fremont league of baseball clubs has 9512.35 in its treasury, in dicating a total paid attendance at thirty games played amounting to 5,- 123. After paying ground rent and expenses there will be $350 left. The run on corn at the Beatrice canning factory the other day was a record-breaker in the historv of the plant More than 30,000 cans were put up. The pack of corn will be un usually large this year and of a fine quality. A peculiar disease, pronounced as lackjaw by veterinarians, has made Its appearance among cattle on the farm of John Lenz a few miles south west of Beatrice. From the symptoms it was at first supposed that the cat tle had blackleg, but it later devel oped that it was lockjaw. A movement is on foot in West Point to organize a Commercial club, whose object it will be to foster the trade of the city, improve the avenues of communication, encourage man ufacturing and generally to exercise a supervision over the material inter ests of the city. Charles Rosencrans, a Papillion man, but who has been working in South Omaha at the carpenter trade, has disappeared and every effort to locate him has failed. He received a telegram at his boarding house in South Omaha a week ago, took his de parture at once and has not been seen since. Word has reached Beatrice that Bert Dodge, who left that city several years ago and located at Houston. Tex., has become a millionaire in the Texas oil belt. Dodge purchased 400 acres of land that is just now in the center of a new district and a few days ago big gushers were struck on the land. The Frontier county fair has closed. It was one of the best fairs in the history of the county. The attrac tions during the three days were many and varied. Mrs. Scibold, living five miles from Papillion, had an experience from the effects of which she will not quicly recover. During the absence of her husband. Andrew Seibold. the hired man became suddenly violent, and with a revolver in one hand and a shotgun in the other, threatened to exterminate the family. Otis Hefflefinger, who was arrested last spring at Concordia, Kas., in com pany with Bill Blowers, on a charge of stealing a team of horses from his father in Beatrice was arraigned in district court and pleaded gulty to the charge. Judge Letton sentenced him to one year in the penitentiary. As Hefflefinger has served seven months in the county jail this time is to apply on the sentence. Fred Davis pleaded guilty to stealing chickens, but the court did not sentence him, as this is his first offense. No clue has yet been found to the burglars who entered the Union Pa cific depot at Dannebrog. It now seems that a small haul was made, about $6 in change, a gold watch, a quantity of jewelry, some clothing and other property having been taken. The thieves left on a handcar. Rev. E. A. Osborne, rector of St. Luke's Episcopal church. Wymore, has accepted a call to St John's church In Brooklyn. N. Y and he and his wife will go there about October 1. The Fillmore County Independent Telephone company have completed the installation of their local village exchange in Grafton. Many farm res idence 'phones have also been in stalled and more will be put in at an early date. The old soldiers of the district com prising Brown, Keya Paha, Rock and Holt counties closed their annua1 re union at Bassett Forty-five soldiers were in attendance. Judge Barnes of Norfolk and Captain Fisher of Chad Ton, delivered the principal addresses. Harry Vertees, injured several weeks ago near Beatrice by a bridge giving way while crossing it with a threshing machine, in company with Charles Folden. who was killed, has begun suit for damages against the county in the sum of $5,000. Mabel Buhr, a little girl whose home is in Blue Springs, was so badly burned at Beatrice that she will die. In passing a gasoline stove her cloth ing caaght Ire and she immediately ran oat is the street enveloped in a mass of flames. mm i Nebraska. jinumitmiumnm NEB HAS KAN SUICIDES ABROAD. John D. Kilpatrick of Beatrice Takes His Life in New York. NEW YORK Ruined by reckless speculation in Wall street, John D. Kilpatrick of Beatrice, Neb., 27 years old, killed himself in his bachelor rooms in the fashionable Martin ique apartment house, 56 West Thirty third street. The bullet from his revolver lodged in his heart after passing through two letters and an unmountetd photo graph of a handsome young woman, which were inside his waistcoat pocket. Young Kilpatrick was a director and stockholder of the New York Import and Transportation company and a member of the firm of Kilpatrick & Collins of Nebraska, the- largest rail road contractors in the country. He had inherited a large fortune, all of which, it is believed, he gambled away on the stock market He lived at the Martinique with Charles Lind ley, who had been his classmate in Ann Arbor university. He had come to New York a year ago after a tour of the world and connected himself with the New York Import and Trans portation company, of which J. Ed ward Lombrie, his stepfather, is pres ident. According to Mr. Lindley, Kilpatrick had been speculating heavily on the stock market for several months past. Another story is that the young man had been paying attention to a society girl, who refused to marry him. Some of his acquaintances declare it was for love of her that he died. Kilpatrick was a graduate of Ann Arbor university. He enlisted as a private in the Spanish-American war and after being promoted to a lieu tenancy joined the army in the Phil ippines and fought under General Funston. He was a native of Beat rice. On his body was found $4.85 in change and a gold watch and chain. Many scraps of torn paper littered the floor of his room. The revolver used was a brand new one, loaded with cartridges from a freshly open ed box. EXPERTS TO VISIT LINCOLN. English Educators Will Inspect the State University. BOSTON, Mass. Word has been re ceived regarding the itinerary and personnel of the commission of Eng lish educational experts who are to be brought to the United states next month by Alfred Mosely, a millionaire mercnant of London. They will ar rive in New York about October 12 from Southampton and will visit all the technical schools, colleges and universities and investigate many of the best public school systems throughout the country. Among oth er places to be visited are the Ne braska state university, the public schools of Omaha, Lincoln, Kansas City and St Louis, Tulane university, the university of Texas, Colorado state university and others through the west. Little Damage from Frost FREMONT A trip through the country shows that corn crop is in much better condition than has been reported. The frost of last week did scarcely any damage. Selling Horses in Illinois. YORK Colonel Fry. the veteran horseman, who is known by nearly every horseman in the west, departed for Illinois, where he will dispose of York county speedy thoroughbred horses and colts. Keep Up Search for Madison. HASTINGS Small posses were has tily organized here and continued to search the ravines northwest of Red Cloud for Madison, with no results. The officers have not yet returned, but it is believed that Sheriff Mac Arthur has gone to some point south of Lincoln to work on a clue there. TOPEKA The Smith county offi cers have not yet succeeded in appre hending Thomas Madison, the sup posed murderer of three women in that county. Madison is suposed to be somewhere in Nebraska. Governor Bailey offered a reward of $300 for the arrest of Madison. Convict Makes Mistake. E. L. Simon, a convict at the state penitentiary, is roaming around the country somewhere and Warden Bee mer is again up in the air over the slowness of the contractors for the new steel cells. Simon was allowed to roam outside the walls for a little while and he is still roaming, leaving a year behind him. He had been shut up from Saunders county for trying to take a shot at a tenant with whom he had trouble. Found Dead on Bridge. COLUMBUS Henry Rudat. a farm er living south of town, was found dead on the Loup river wagon bridge. He was coming to town with a load of corn and. while no one witnessed the accident, indications point to the fact that the neckyoke came down and Rudat was either dragged from the wagon or fell off and his skull was crushed by one of the wheels, of the heavy load. Rudat was a well-to-do farmer, 54 years old. Mortons Donate Land. NEBRASKA CITY The Overland Investment company and Morton brothers of Chicago have made an of fer of twenty acres of ground south ol Morton park providing a local country club is formed. The Mortons will build a $2,000 club house. Fremont Man is Killed. LAS VEGAS. N. M. Russ Powe of Fremont. Neb., fell from a passen ger train here and was killed. LIVE STOCK j Feeding the Dams. With regard to the grains best suit ed to the nourishment of the female while carrying the young, it Is only necessary to say that these should, for the most part, be rich in protein. These foods help to build muscle and keep the nervous system in a vigor ous condition, and hence the foetus is more likely to be well nourished, ud be strong and healthy. Carbohy drate foods, such as corn meal and 3ther starchy products,, should be avoided for reasons in opposition to "hose already advanced. Foods thus aave a very Important influence, not only on the health of the dam, but an the development of a vigorous off spring, and the nourishment of the female should receive more, considera tion at the hands of the average oreeder. It would not be a difficult matter to provide an abundance of the most useful foods if more care and forethought were given to the rota cion practiced on the farm, and the oenefits accruing to the breeder are such that he can well afford to adapt nis rotation to the best needs of his stock. The importance of nourish ment to the dam so as to produce a 3trong, vigorous foetus is not gen erally recognized. While the size of the foetus is probably controlled by the dam, its after development de pends largely on its proper nourish ment before birth, and that the dam should be liberally fed is clearly an2 parent for in most instances she is not only expected to be a productive factor, either in the field or at the milk pail, but to provide plenty of nourishment for her young as well. Where an animal is expected to do double duty the food supplies must be liberal or else one or both of these duties will be Inadequately performed with disastrous results in the case of the young. For example, if a mare is overworked, so much of the en ergy of the mother is used up that the foetus necessarily suffers, and so instead of growing and developing uniformly and being strong and vig orous in every respect it is perman ently stunted and injured, and this will be evident .throughout its wholo life. Prof. A. M. Soule. Cause of Cattle Mange. A government bulletin says: Scab ies, or mange, of the ox is a contagious disease caused by a para sitic mite. Cattle are affected with two varieties of these parasites, which belong to the class Aracbnldae. The Psoroptes communis var, novis, is the one which most frequently affects them. It lives on the surface of the skin and gives rise to great irrita tion and itching by biting, and is most frequent upon the lateral aspect of the neck and shoulders, at the base of the horns, aud the Toot of the tail. Frca these points it spreads to the back and sides, and may invade nearly the entire body. Its principal manifestations are more or less num erous pimples, exudations, and abund ant scaling off, or desquamation, of the skin, falling out of the hair, and the formation of dry gray-brownish scabs. In the course of time the skin becomes thickened, stiff, wrin kled, and acquires the consistency of leather. When mange has spread over a large surface of the body, the animals lose flesh and become weak and anemic, rendering them constitu tionally less able to withstand or combat the effects of the mites. At the same time the decreased vigor and lessened vitality of the affected animals favor the more rapid multipli cation of the mites and the further ex tension and intensification of the dis ease. Thus we have cause and effect working together, with the result that scabies, or mange, in cattle may in some cases prove fatal; especially are fatal terminations liable to occur in the latter part of a severe winter among immature and growing ani mals, or those of adult and full age when in an unthrifty condition at the time of becoming infected. There have been noticed variations in the progress of the disease depending upon extreme seasons aggravation in winter alternating with improve ment in summer. The Feeding Flcor. The hog is the cleanest domestic inimal we have and if he is properly sared for there will not be one par ticle of droppings or urine in that aoghouse, says John Cowine. They will set one corner off into a kind of closet and they will go back and forward to that Give them just room enough to lie down and' no more. It is an advantage to have your hoghouse divided off into pens. If you haven't enough hogs to fill up your hoghouse shut off part of the space; give them just enough room to occupy and no more. After you have fed them clean the feeding floor. What would you think of your wife if she let the dishes set on the table from one morning to another? Suppose the supper was served on the same dishes. You would say to your self that you wished you had not married that woman. I would no more thiuk of feeding my hogs on a feed ing floor that had not been cleaned 1 immediately after the last meal than I woud of eating my dinner off the breakfast dishes without washing. I have done it for thirty years. It is a small matter. We hare a wooden aoe made out of a 2xC three feet in length; have an old saw for the 'ower edge. This is wide enough to sweep off three or four feet at a time. If your floor is smooth and if you can do it immediately after feeding you can clean it off as clean as if swept By having the floor :hree feet high on one side you can clean It off month after month and the refuse will not pile up ou you. No matter how wet or muddy it is. if vour , hogs are confined in this building 'their feed is always clean. Feed your hogs corn and water. I would add a few oats and perhaps a basket or two of raw potatoes once a week, but my main feed would be corn and cold water. New Name for Teats. The girl who expressed so much sympathy for the poor farmer because of his cold job in harvesting his win ter wheat is equal in agricultural knowledge to the one who expressed a desire to see a field of tobacco when it was just plugging out But the damsel who asked which cow .gave the most. buttermilk is entitled to the whole bakery.' A girl on her return from the country who was asked if she ever saw any one milk a cow re plied: "Oh, yes, indeed I have; it just tickled me to death to see uncle jerk two of the faucets at the same tiise." Ada Index- "3 "3bSU- -.r- 4BWT ZSSSBSs"BBj!j AvV jyfr ' KTbV'bbbVbIbbBbk fl Ba'Bs bbt 1 Invention of Separators. J.-H. Monrad in New York Produce Review says: "Professor Farrington writes in the Farmer's Sentinel. Mil waukee, Wis., an article on the evolu tion of the separator as follows: 'One' of the first applications of this princi ple to creasa separation was made by a Massachusetts man in about 1875. He placed graduated glass tubes filled with milk in pockets something like those now used in the Babcock milk tester and whirled these tubes in a machine constructed for the purpose. After whirling about twenty minutes the thickest of the cream was meas ured in each tube. This machine was designed to be ;used as a cream tester for milk. It was, .however, a pattern for the first commercial cream sep arators, which were constructed, on the same plan, excepting that pails holding fifty to sixty pounds of milk were substituted for the glass tubes.' It seems Professor' Farrington over looks the fact that it was Pro! C. J. Fuchs of Germany who suggested the use of centrifugal force in testing milk as early as 1859 and that, in 1864 Antonin Prandtl of Munich experi mented with raising cream by placing small cylindrical vessels with milk in an ordinary centifuge. Furthermore, it was, according to Ed. Burnette, 'about' 1870 when Rev. H. F. Bond of Massachusetts made his experiments with two glass jars attached to a spin dle making 200 revolutions. Let us give the honor where it is due, that is, to Germany, not only for originating the idea, but also for the first use of a separator (crude as it was) in a commercial creamery." Agricultural College Cows. ' It it with pleasure that we note the addition of twenty high-bred cow3 to the herd of the California Agricultural College. This will give them thirty cows In all, representing the three breeds, Holsteins, Jerseys and Guern seys. Lack of good cows is one of the chief deficiencies in the equipment of many of our agricultural colleges. In the past the appropriations have been so small that the funds have been barely sufficient to pay the charges of the instructors and keep up the buildings. The live stock departments have been the last to receive atten tion. Probably this' could not be help ed. But it is hoped that the day of inferior herds at the fountain head of our dairy instruction is passed. There are several other colleges that need better dairy herds than they have' at present The students should have before them the best types of cows and abundant opportunity to see th'o good and bad points of the various dairy breeds. It is not enough that one dairy breed be represented. All dairy breeds should have their repre sentatives at the agricultural college. Otherwise the student will have a one-sided education in this regard, and he will go from college prejudiced in favor of one breed and against an other. Dairying in England. According to reports from Eng land the English dairyman is making slow progress in his efforts to supply the demand's of the home market This applies to butter, cheese and cream. The latter is said not to be extensively used, except in the west of England, where it is found on the tables of the wealthy and well-to-do class. Some of the leading thinkers on dairy subjects are urging the Eng lish dairyman to abandon the idea of supplying any but the highest class of trade. They would leave to the Canadians and Australians the sup plying of the demand for cheap pro ducts. They would have the English cow devote all her energy to turning out cream, milk and cheese of the finest quality only. ' It is claimed that of the entire product of English cheese more than four-fifths is of in ferior quality, and that cheese of rep utation Stilton and Wensleydalc arc made in such small quantities that they are found an ,the tables of the ! middle cjasses only at Christmas time. The trade in cream especially should be worked up to a popular bas's. Unhealthy Surroundings. At a medical convention recently held in England the cow and her sur roundings came in for discussion in relation to the public health. The' doctors pointed out some things that should and some things that should not be. One of them said that in many of the stables the cows had too little air space per cow. This should not be less than 800 cubic feet per cow. This would be a space ten by ten by eight feet. Also the cowe should not.be permitted to stand with their heads to a dead wall, that is, a wall without openings of any kind. It was better to have them face the feeding racks. It was said that in some parts of England it is common to see drinking ponds located at the lowest point in the yards, and in such location it was impossible that they could escape having washed into them at every rain much of the droppings from the cows. This had been the case with some ponds for generations. ., Good and ,healthy milk could not be made from such water. Selecting a Bull. I would not buy a bull to-day to use in a thoroughbred herd unless I knew his ancestors back three or four or even five generations. I do not sim ply want to know what his dam is. Succeeding generations of his dam may show improvement, but not from her own qualities alone. It comes from her inheritance, and that inher itance will very often in the bull come from three or four generations back. V. E. Fuller. ' Effects of Loss of Pigs. ' From Farmers' Review: Our own experience with spring pigs this year was satisfactory. From four sows one with her first litter and two with their second litter we. raised thiriy three thrifty pigs. They now average more than 100 pounds each, and half of this was made from pasture, part rape that wintered. But complaint was quite general this spring of loss of pigs, even from' farmers that care well for their stock. So, notwith standing the stimulus of high prices toward increased production, this county will not market more hogs this year than last P. F. Nye, Elkhart County, Indiana. A good rule, to commit to memory for the making- of a mayonnaise is three eggs to one quart of oil and half a cupful of vinegar or lemon juice. Sometimes the mayonnaise will thick' m sufficiently with Jess than one quart nf oil. if it is very cold. 1 POULIKYl ' Experience With Broilers. From the Farmers' Review: To be candid, I wish to say my experience along this line is somewhat limited. However. I will give what little I mow and trust it may be of benefit to some brother poultryman. In the test place, we must have the right aind of breeding stock. Now it Is not what variety we like the best but the variety that finds the most favor in the market. We most raise what the xmsumer likes the best -I 'believe Ae White Plymouth Rocks or White Wyandottes make the best bspilers; 'or the reason 'that their pin feathers do not show as badly as do those of ;heir darker-colored cousins, and :herefore present a nicer appearance when dressed. Now, after having nothing but good healthy birds in ur flock, we begin saving eggs for hatching about the first of February, rod, as soon as we get enough to 311 the incubator, we start it going. We have been reasonably successful with the incubator and much prefer it to the hen. The next thing in order is to see :hat the brooder is in good shape. We have an old house with a stove "n it, so we can fire up in severe weather. There Is where we put the orooder, cover the floor of the' brood 3r with sand, and, about 12 hours be fore taking the chicks out of the in cubator, light the lamp and heat the 'brooder chamber up to about 95 de grees. After the chicks are two weeks old the temperature need not be over 85 degrees. We hare found that it Is best not to feed anything for at least 36 hours, then give a light feed of rolied oats and a little sweet sklmmllk. For feeding the milk we use a tin can with a holo punched about half an inch from the top. Fill with milk and invert it in a saucer. This makes an ideal drinking fountain. It is best, in my opinion, to feed rather sparing ly the first week. Then, feed five or six times a day till they go to market Rolled oats, wheat and cracked corn are my main feeds, always feeding corn the last thing before they go to roost. I throw chaff from the barn floor onto the floor of the room and scat ter wheat, and, once in a while, a lit tle millet seed into it. This will give the f hicks exercise, which they must have to be healthy and strong. We have heard it said "Don't let the chicks have all the water they will drink." My experience leads me to be lieve that they should have water con stantly before them. A little pounded charcoal and grit is also very essen tial. In sight or ten weeks we should have 2 or 2Vi pound broilers, and they should be marketed at once. There is good money .in the business, but to run it on a large scale requires con siderable capital. This we do not all possess; but we can all raise a few nice juicy broilers for our own table and maybe a few besides. Charles E. Niewold, Logan County, Illinois. Housing Geese. From the Farmers' Review: There :s probably no fowl or animal on the farm that requires as little shelter as geese after they reach maturity. Give them straw or something of the kind to sit on and they appear to be com fortable even in the coldest weather. 'An open shed of almost any descrip tion, that will keep out the snow, is 'an ideal place for the breeding of .geese. They should never be con fined in a close building. For the .young goslings a different place is needed. Mine are nearly all hatched '.with hens. As fast as they get out of the shell I take them in a covered basket and place them near the 'kitchen stove. They are such large, soft, clumsy things that they are often crushed in the nest, if not re moved at once. When they are all tout and well dried off, I place them In an ordinary coop with the old hen. If it is early in the spring and the 'weather is cold, it is generally best -to leave the hen with them until vthey are two or three weeks old, but .later in the season, as the weather -becomes milder, I discard the old hen (entirely after the goslings are three r four days old. They are then kept 'in a dry place and shut up at night !in a coop that is rain-proof. I use 'the ordinary A-sliapcd coops. They 'shed the rain well and arc easily 'made. Goslings should be well shel tered from rains until their backs are well feathered out. Alter that your troubles are practically over with them. Turn them out where they can get plenty of grass and water with a feed of meal once a day, and you can almost see them grow. My ex perience is confined to the Toulouse 'variety, and I have found them very 'hardy and easily raised. They are a ; profitable fowl for the farmer and should be more extensively raised. Harvey H. Huggett, Columbia Coun ty, Wisconsin. In-Breeding of Poultry. In time our experiment stations will doubtless take up the question of in breeding and conduct series of experi ments to determine just what its ef- 'fects are on birds. It is not necessar ily a fact that what is true of one kind J of animal life is true of every other 'kind, though it may be so. It is probably safest not to do much in breeding. But on the other hand, there are large breeders that claim that in breeding does not result in the de terioration of the flock, if care is taken in selecting the most vigorous breed-, ers. One man claims that he actually 'in-bred for vigor and increased the vigor of his flock in that way. In breeding is generally reputed to affect the vigor of a flock first of all. If any of our readers have tried experiments along this line we would like to hear from them. Wool Prices. F. E. Warren, president of the Na tional Wool Growers' Association; writes the Farmers' Review as fol lows: This season's wool clip in Wyoming was short from fifteen to twenty per cent, owing to last year's dry summer, and the' past hard winter. Prices have been very fa'ir, and a trifle higher than they were last year; I should say about one cent per pound higher, on an average. The future as to the price of wool looks well, be-; cause there Is a shortage in sheep everywhere," not only in this country, but abroad as well ; and the hold-over supplies of wool have been exhausted. Wool will be wool before'' the z,ext clip is on the market if I am any judge of the situation and prospects. Before we bring happiness to others we must first be happy our selves, nor will happiness abide with in us unless we confer it on others. Maaterlinck. -Bsafll "tBBsfLVSrvlBBBr JBbRbIBbV BssalBBsBsrTlBliyl''Mr HHBaTBsTBTaL ILuTBL J Bst Bm Tb.BbTbk sbLa Sub-Earth Factories. The farmer is not generally looked upon as a manufacturer. Yet on hjs lands and under them, on the roots of all leguminous plants, there are at work the microscopic creations that labor in changing the free nitrogen of the air into soil nitrates that may be used by the plants. Every nodule on the root of a plant is an immense factory. It may be smaller than a' pea, yet In it are multitudes of the lit tle workers. They existed from the be ginning of the development of legum inosae on the earth; but man has only recently discovered them. Be fore he understood that they were the friends' of man, he regarded these factories as symptoms of plant dis-. eases, and various remedies were Jn-' vented for the cure of the said dis eases. But later such efforts were found to be misapplied, and it was recognized that these same tubercles were part of the machinery of Mother Nature, by which she kept the soil supplied with the so-readily soluble forms of nitrogen, which alone can be taken up by the roots of plants. In the woods and on the prairies there are numerous forms of leguminosae, which help to keep up the balance re quired. There are the wild, peas, the beggar weeds, the vetches and their relatives. On all of their roots are the little nitrogen factories crowded with workers. Man is able to assist these laborers and make it possible for them to increase their product. This is a manufacture in which there is not danger of over production. Cow Peas and Velvet Beans. On light soils especially cow peas and velvet beans prove valuable as fertilizers. They have- been experi mented with long enough tor people to be. certain that their use as green manure is fully justified. Even where crops of beans and peas are taken off and the rest of the plants turned under, the supply of nitrogen added to the land has proven of immense advantage to the succeeding crop. It Is freely stated by experimenters that any kind of cow pea will furnish enough nitrogen to the soil to fully meet the demands of any following crop, that is, of the next year. In some tests recently conducted, we notice that the increased yield of the corn crop following the plowing under of cow peas and velvet beans was over 80 per cent When crops of velvet beans and cow peas were gathered and the hay was stored, the remain der of the plant being plowed under, the increase of corn was over 30 per cent, of oats over 300 per cent, of wheat over 200 per cent, and of sor ghum hay over 50 per cent. The plants that seem to utilize most the fertility from these legumes, especial ly on light land, are oats and wheat, probably for the reason that these two plants begin to cover the ground at once and to send down rootlets that catch the nitrogen that may be leach ing out of the soil. The plants that leave the land unoccupied for the longest time are the ones that profit least from the plowing under of the rrevious legume crop. . Crates for Fruit Packing. In the gathering of fruit, especially of fruits that bruise easily, like peaches, pears and plums, it is. ad visable to have a strongly built rigid crate. Baskets are quite generally used, and we see pictures of men carrying bushel baskets heaped up, holding them by the two handles. This is considerel by the best packers detrimental to the fniit, which should be rubbed together as little as possi ble. There is some "give" about ail baskets, and a basket on the ground full of apples does not retain its shape entirely when lifted from the ground. The apples are pushed together op posite, the handles and are shifted more or less in the other parts of tho basket In a greater degree bags cause the bruising of fniit. A two bushel bag is filled and is generally lifted by the middle. This forces the apples very closely .together in the two ends of the bag, and they roll back again when the bag is set down. One Michigan packing house has made a picking crate that wil.' hold a little more than a bushel. It is rectangular and composed of slats. Care is taken to have the slats on the bottom close together, so that the fruit will not project below the slats and receive bruises when the crate is set down. This crate will largely take the place of the other receptacles used in picking and delivering fruit. Thrashing Broom Corn. The removing of the seeds from the brush is variously termed seed ing, scraping, or thrashing. This is accomplished by bringing the heads in contact with a rapidly revolving cylinder the surface of which is set with teeth or spikes. A thrasher of the kind now in general use in sec tions growing much broom corn costs from $150 to $200. Such a machine with eighteen to twenty men to keep it running steadily, can clean the brush from 20 to 40 acres in a day. The seed heads are not drawn entire ly through the cylinders as in thrash ing grain, but are held firmly and evenly by means of a toothed belt which carries an even stream of brush in front of it and at an angle with the cylinders, so that, beginning at the top portion, the seed is removed as the heads are carried farther and farther between the cylinders. With all the seed removed the belt deposits the brush on a table at the other end of the cylinders. The feeding of the seed heads to the thrasher and the removal of the cleaned brush and storing it in the drying sbeds re quires a force of twelve to fifteen men (fig. 5). Bulletin 174, Department of Agriculture. Young Pigs. Prof, R. S. Shaw says that In Mon tana young pigs should have constant access to forage grounds in the sum mer season, and sheltered yards In the winter. When four weeks old they will take a little sweet skim milk to which some shorts or middlings may be gradually added, and later some ground wheat A light grain ration should be supplied the yotiDg growing pig In addition to the forage throughout the forage season but may be entirely cut off as soon as the pigs reach the pea or grain stubble fields. During the winter season the shotes should have access to stacked alfalfa, clover, or peas, from which they will secure a large amount of fcod. Sugar beets should also he supplied. j In fcp "am nf tn-.-P HinmnT.rf,, ,' Hop . .- v j- ... w . .-,-. ,.. iMvmaw Vfct 9 rank higher than hearts. CjXMPfIP I At Dusk. Earth-mother dear. 1 tnrn. nt last, A homesick child, to thee! j The twilight glow in fadlutc fast, " " And soon I shall be free To neek the dwelling, dim and vast. Where thou uwaltest me. I am so weary, mother dear! Thy child, of dual nice. Who gazing past the starbeams clear. Sought the Undying's face! Now I but ask to know thee near. To feel thy large embrace: Tranquil to lie against thy breast Deep source of voiceless springs. Where hearts are healed, and wounds are dressed. And naught or sobs or sings: Against thy breast to lie at rest A life that folds its wings. Sometime T may for who can tell?" Awake, no longer tired. And see the fields of asphodel. The dreamed-of. the desired. And mid the heights where He doth dwell. To whom my heart aspired! And then but peace awaitcth me Thy peace: I feel It near. The hush, the voiceless mystery. The languor without fear! Enfold me close; I want but thee! Bur thee. Earth-mother dear! Florence Earl Coates, In Scribners Magazine. He Was a Good Jumper. "Yes," said Peter Price of company H, One Hundred and Twenty-fourth Ohio, "I was a good jumper in the army, but I never said I jumped a river, as the boys reported. I was one of Hazen's hellions, otherwise a mem ber of Hazen's brigade of the Third division of the Foarth corps. At New Hope Church, Georgia, May 27. 1864, Sherman sent Hazen against what he supposed was the left wing of John son's army in the air. Hazea struck, however, Johnson's right wing at a point where the line bent to conform to the hills along Pumpkin Vine creek. The rebel line was not in the air at all, as we soon found out, but was compact and ready for business. "However, we marched to our left, came in contact with Claiborne's division, charged and drove the reb els into their main works, where they were re-enforced by Walker's division. We could go no further, but we held our position until the two rebel divisions charged us. The bri gade in retiring left our regiment in an exposed position on the extreme left, and we were soon cut off. The boys fought like furies, and. checking the rebel advance, made a dash for the rear, the enemy following close. I was late in starting, and the rebel skirmishers were abreast of me when I reached Pumpkin Vine Creek. "As we came to the creek at a full run it seemed to some of the boys about sixty feet wide. To me it did not appear more than six feet wide, and I made the jump of my life, clear ing the stream. Those wh didn't jump were captured, but I went across with a good deal of company. Before this, in going down the hill I brought up against a log and fell, head first, over it. A rebel right at "my heels struck at me with his musket and ordered me to surrender. But I kept up my rolling, tumbling performance until I regained my feet, jumped the creek, and. getting behind a tree, gave my pursuer as good as he sent. "I never think of that scramble and jump but I am reminded of Sheridan's remarks about Rosser's rebel cavalry in the Shenandoah valley in 1864. When they came down the valley after Sheridan, Rosser's men wore wreaths of laurel and ivy around their hats. After they found Sheridan and went scurrying up the valley, the farmers suggested that they wear pumpkin vines around their hats, be cause they were good runners. At Pumpkin Vine Creek I was a good runner and a good jumper, and so I live to tell the tale of that hot fight." Chicago Inter Ocean. Flag That Never Came Down. "Surrender." was the message. "Go back to your homes; I will cot have one of these young men encounter one more hazard, for my sake." That night Richard Hunt fought out his battle with himself, pacing to and fro under the stars. Ho had strug gled faithfully for what he believed. still believed, and would, perhaps, al ways believe, was right. He had fought for the broadest ideal of, lib erty as he understood it, for citizen, state and nation. The appeal had gone to the sword, and the verdict was against him. He would accept it. He would go home, take the oath of allegiance, resume the law. and. as an American citizen, do his duty. He had no sense' of humiliation: he had no apology to make, and would never have he had done his duty. He feU no bitterness, and had no fault to find with his foes, who were brave and had done their duty as they had seen it; for he granted them the right to see a different duty from what he had de cided was his. And that was all. Renfrew the Silent was waiting at the smoldering fire. He neither looked up nor made any comment when the general spoke his determination. His own face grew more sullen, an he i cached his hand into his breast and pulled from his faded jacket the tat tered colors that he once had borne. "These will never be lowered as long as I live," he said, "nor after wards if I can prevent It." And low ered they never were. On a little Isl and in the Pacific ocean this strange soldier, after leaving his property and his kindred forever, lived out his life sniong the natives with this blood stained remnant of the Stars and Sars over his hut. and when he died the flag was hung over his grave, and above that grave to-day the tattered emblem still sways in southern air. John .Fox. Jr.. in Scribncr's. Origin of "Fighting Joe." Gen. Hooker's sobriquet of "Fight ing Joy Hooker" is said by Sidney V. Ixwell of Brooklyn to have originated as follows: "I was reading proof on the New York Courier and Enquirer and had been at work from 7 o'clock in the even'ng until ?. in the follow ing morning. McCIellan had come into contact v.ith .the confederate forces and was pressing them back toward Riohmoud. Onr press dis patches from the front, written with carbon on . . - -. . I T2 luaniioiii sheets oi tissue paper, told of desperate lighting ail along McClellan's line. Among bis corps commanders was (leu. Hooker whose command had been periiap too gravely engaged. Jut as the lat page lorm of the Courier and En- (juirer was made ready for the press zuotiier dispatch came in from the front, giving further particulars of the figliting in which Hooker's corps was ro desperately engaged and ccross the Of the fllSpa'.CtJ as written Kight'ng Joe Hooker." I knew that ) this line meant that tho matter sfcoutt be added to what had gone before, but the compositor who pat It ia type knew nothing about about the preced ing matter, consequently he set tho phrase as a head line. 'Fighting Joe Hooker.' Concluding that it made a good headline I let it go. I realized that if a few other proofreaders treat ed the phrase as I did Hooker would live and die as 'Fighting Joe Hooker.' Enough additional proofreaders acted likewise to do the business." Relic From First Boll Run. An interesting relic from the battle field of first Bull Run was shipped from Washington to the Michigan state capitol at Lansing on the forty second anniversary of that celebrated engagement early In the Civil War. The relic is a black log. properly pre pared for preservation, which is taken from a tree on the line of tho extreme Union advance at Bull Run. Attached to the log is a handsomely engraved bronze plate reading: "Pre sented to Maj. Gen. Orlando B. Will cox, by Charles F. Joy. M. C. of St Louis. Mo., and by Gen. Willcox to the First Michigan Volunteers' Asso ciation." Accompanying the log is a printed placard for framing, which reads: "This log is from the tree near tho most advanced line of the Union army at Bull Run. Va.. July 21, 1861, tc which Gen. Orlando B. Willcox of Do trolt, commanding the First Michigan Volunteers, was brought severely wounded. Near this tree Michigan dead were found in tho extremo fed eral advance. It was secured on tha battlefield In tho presence of Gen Willcox and Gen. Ira C. Ablwtt bj Charles F. Joy, M. C of St. Louis Mo., a nephew or James F. Joy. whe with Gen. Lewis Cass and others, equipped tho regiment." Boston Journal. Southern Cavalry Sabers. "Speaking of cavalry." said the col onel, "there was an incident of tho fight between Sheridan's and Jeb Stu art's cavalry at Hanover Courthouse that made a great impression on me. The Union and Confederate lines crashed together in a charge, each breaking through the other. A Union cavalryman sitting his horse like a statue struck at a Confederate as ho passed. The latter swung clear aad. rising, made a back cut, severing the Union soldier's head from the IkmIj-. So perfect was the cavalryman poise, however, that the body retained its erect position for five or six yards and then toppled over. "A Confederate officer, on my rcfer ing to the incident after the war. ex plained that in 1861 the .Black Horse cavalry secured a number of fine Spanish sabers from the government arsenal at Harper's Ferry; that tho men ground these until they were like razors, and that as a result a good many heads went off. The young Vir ginians of the Black Horse cavalry were good riders, having been trained in tournaments, and in the service they gave special attention to sword exercises. They believed, at one time, they were superior to any other cavalry in the world, but learned by experience that they were not." Chi cago Inter Ocean. Escaping Conscription. Gen. Nelson A. Miles was talking about some of the phases of the civil war. "One phase, he said, "was the fran tic effort that some citizens made to avoid the conscriptions. Hence many swindles ensued, for the man with a plan to defeat the conscriptions could get money much more easily than can the man to-day who has a sure ytp on the races. "There was one conscription fakir who made thousands of dollars before tho authorities restrained him. This chap would send letters broadcast, wherein he said he would communi cate for $2 a sure means of escaping the conscription. Letters, inclosing ? notes poured in on him. aud in reply to each letter he would send a printed slip reading: "'Join the nearest volunteer regi ment.' " Honors Her Veterans. I. II. O'Neil. Overseer of Hudson county, claims that New Jersey is not behind her sister States in honoring her veterans, dead or alive. He ha.: the record, alphabetically arranged, of 1,300 'eterans buried in eleven cemeteries of Hudson county. N. J. These names are also on the cemetery books, with the names, company, regi ment and organization of each. The county has purchased three cemetery lots in principal cemeteries at a cost of $fi,.V)0. These lots measure GoxliO. making 1.200 square feet in each, and there is a tablet, made of aluminum, three feet in height, in each plot, which is inscribed with the beautiful poem, "The Bivouac of the Dead." Each plot has a flagpole fifty feet high, and also a flower urn inscribed. "Hudson County Soldiers and Sailors Plot." Gen. McClellan's Statue. The commission appointed some time ago to select a sculptor to design c. statue of (Jen. George R. .McCIellan. to be erected at Washington, has chosen Frederick MacMonnies of :ewr York City. Some weeks ago an ad visory committee examined a number of models submitted by competitors, but failed to find a satisfactory de sign, and the commission then decided to intrust tho work to some Ameri can artist who hail not been in any way identified with the competition. The result was t"e choice of Mr. Mac Monnies. who has accepted the order. The site for the statue will he prob ably be chosen in tho reservation south of the State Department. Survivors of the Eighth Vermont The recent doath at St. Paul. Minn, of Col. Edward M. Bjrown made the first break in the field and staff officers of the famous 8th Vt. regi ment. Gen. Stephen Thomas, its col onel, are now living, as are Charles 1 f ! m noii f nhn I T)o rifr.t uinmnam. 'j'. .... . .-iu, adjutant, rred fc- Smith, quartrr terma5tcr, .f. Elliott Smith and W. H. Gilmore, quartermaster sergeants. Shows Growth of Tobacco Habit. An idea of the growth of the tobac co habit may he had from the devel opment of the business of the French tobacco mcuopoly. The government monopoly was established In 1810 and n that year the receipts wore S4.32."; 1i. Last year the receipts were ;s.,ooooo. :. i --k -'4 -3 $ "-! I BBBBJBBfi?v-vLi ( - ; -v i BBBBsBBssaiita-f:'J'i-v--J . 1 . . . ' . ---,-- r v BsBsBsBMBsMBWBWBsTsfsWBM .- llAte . . 1 Ub&K - Uhii BslBaBfiSaBBW