r"JiLi: " - -.. BMMMOTVMMaiiailMn "' """""3"rT""Hr"" ""'"B"6RI' - - SgT: -Sr pf frTFf ' 7 i"5"" T-TSWKfg??"- . -.- - -. w . - .1 -s . - - -'-- -.-.-- . ... . V . -e -VI. 5".-'--v. .. .-..- hA.,-:. ..- -o v -: -. : . - - v.. h : c .... ?': .. .i u-t- jr . . - - iCj, - 'I:---- i:" -" i .. -.- ' t "."- It -. X . " .'i y. - . ? . f - ti . L-- .. r9 F WEEKLY PANORAMA I HILL TO QUIT POLITICS. ' ' Kevt York Senator Gives Formal Notice of Withdrawal. ;"' Dai id Bennett Hill is lighting in the --.'! jtofitical campaign i which he '-"over will ugage. On tin eve of his ..aixl birthilay he announced his in . ---font:un of retiring from inditics Jan. "I. lo"". refsardie.s of the lesult "f the 'motional or state election. ; . With the passing of Hill goes, the .- jdeisliijvpt the Democratic party in -".Now York" state.' which has been hold ovbini for a score of ears. Not only :wiH he relinquish the active leader ship, but he declares that in the event 5 Vf Democratic success this fall he will-not accept any position under the national or state administration, nor wili lie again be a candidate for any office. Mr., Hill has been one of the power ful factors in the national councils rf the Democratic party for fifteen --'year. His personality has been felt in all the national conventions of re - cent years, never more than in the Oavtd Bennett Hill. mof-t recent. He has made politics his life study, starting as city attor ney of Klmira in young manhood, and being In turn alderman, mayor, mem tr ol the state legislature, lieuten ant governor, governor for seven years, and United Stales senator Tor sx. years. He was the choice of the Tammany element of the New York delegation in the national convention of 1S0J for the nomination for presi dent. ELECTRIC AIDS IN FARMING. Agriculturists of the Future Will De pend Largely on the Current. Snentitic men who are calling at tentat: to the great benefits of elec-tro-rulture ! the farmer of the fu ture will he a highly skilled electri cian, u ho-from a .-cntral switchboard at IiIh farm will direct the germina tion and growth of cabbages, carrots, imtatots and oilier crops. Xo longer :m ignorant laborer or mere machine dependent niHiii the weather, but, like dtf engine driver, regulating the sup ply ni energy in the lorm of 'electric current according to certain deter mined rules, the agriculturist will take his place with the other large users tf t'lecirjcity under modern conditions. This Is the pro.spvt held out by a Helgian scientist. Prof. Gnarini, who .hay recently been delivering a course fd lectures under government aus pices at the agricultural institute of UemWov.x, on the relation of elec tricity to plant life, which he states 1s an electrical phenomenon that can lc regulated at will. According to I'rof. tiimriui the at fUf'phcr:c electricity is essential to irianl growth and it is not electricity that can be suhctitnrcd for light in . fcrtaiti cuc. in the accomplishment d ttnr Junction or chIorophl. which us in tin: denn:ixisition of carlMinic acid and waT. but the light of the Sun rr of eleclrieity arc lamps, with the accompanying" electric radiation, that, may fake the place of purely i-'ectrjcal action GETS FORECAST BY 'PHONE Farmers to Receive Daily Hints on the Weather by Wire. -: Farmers and business men in west- " ern Pennsylvania. West Virginia and .eastern Ohio will receive the weather .forecast by telephone hereafter. Fore- . caster Frank Ridgway of the Pitts- hurg office has, with the consent of the Washington bureau, arranged with the two local telephone companies to send out the forecast over their lines to anyone who desires it. Bells will ring simultaneously n the ntorning in hundreds of little towns and villages and through the farming districts and the sweet voice of the telephone girl will be heard with the current forecast. The experiment is being watched fr.-m Washington and if It proves popular and successful it will be intro duced all over the country. The idea emanated from the brain of Forecas ter Ridgway. who secured the consent ot Prot. Willis L. Moore for the trial. When Bret Harte Taught School. Old-timers boast that Bret Harte once taught school at Tuttletown. Cal.. and in that way acquired knowledge of the localities in the vicinity that he afterward worked into his writings. Mark Twain clerked in the only store in the town at the same time. The town itself is a small village nestling at the foot of Jackass hill, the latter eing a veritable quarry of gold. Near ly all of this hill is owned by James (lillis. the original "Truthful .lame." and is covered by parties working small pocket mines "on shares." Sculptor Has Won Honors. James Wilson Alexander MacDon ald, the venerable sculptor in whose honor a reception has just been held in New York city, can look rack on sixty years spent in his chosen pro fession. Mr. MacDonald. now SO years old. has lived to see sculpture flourish in this country as never be fore, no small portion of its progress being due to his efforts. He is a na tive of Ohio. It is just half a century since his bust of Thomas Benton brought him into the world's notice. Swedish Explorer Honored. Hven Hadin, the Swedish explorer, has heen. honored with the medal of the American Geographical society. Few men in the history of mankind more thoroughly deserved that dis tinction. He knows the great desert of central Asia more thoroughly than any other man who ever lived. Sir George Clarke. Sir George Lydenham Clarice, secre tary of the British defense commit tee, has been governor of Victoria and Hied many foreign missions. EX-SULTAN OF TURKEY DEAD. Unhappy Life of Murad V Comes to End at Constantinople. Sultan Murad V. modem Turkey's man of mjstery. died last week and was buried with scant ceremonj. hi .May. 1ST!", when there was smol dering reiolutiou in Turkey "proper and open rebellion in Servia. Bulgaria, and Montenegro. Abdul-Azi.. sultan ot Turkey, was dethroned. The sultan was visited by his ministers and high dignitaries, and informed that it was the will of God tnat he be deposed. He wa.- deK)sed. and a month later v.as found dead in the palace to which he had been assigned as a prisoner. He was succeeded by Murad V. who. distracted by the quarrels of Midhat P.isha and other reformers with the conservatives in the council, was seized with melancholy and declined to assume the responsibilities of gov ernment. Meantime lebellion was rampant in all the Turkish provinces. Constanti nople itself was in a ferment. The Eu roiiean iower.s were clamoring that the porte should fulfill its obligations, and the governing council again re sorted to deposition. The ministers called in some of the most celebrated physicians in Europe, called in representatives of the Mo hammedan hierarchy, and Murad was pronounced insane, and Abdul-Hamid, a younger brother of Murad, was de clared regent, or sultan., The reform iiarty, it was reported at the time, consented to the change on the theory that Abdul-Hamid should be really regent, and that when Murad re covered his mental equilibrium he should lie restored to the throne. Abdul-Hamid. however, informed all par tics that he would be sultan in fact, and he socn became the real head of the government. Midhat Pasha carried on his quarrel with his rivals in the cabinet, and succeeded for a time in banishing them from power. Later he was him seir banished, and the two factions to this quarrel, which had led to the de posing of Abdul-Azi.. found that Abdul-Hamid was to be counted on in every step taken by the Turkish gov ernment. Meantime sight was lost of Murad, and for nearly thirty years his fate has been a mystery. It was reported at one time that he was dead, and that for reasons of state the fact was con cealed. It was reported again that he was very sick, that he was well cared for. but that he could not recover. At last the mystery is solved. Mu rad. who. it is said, held the promise Sultan Murad V. of Abdul-Hamid to leave tne throne wl.en Muntd should recover his health, is out of the way. While he lan guished in a sanitarium that was a prison, his younger brother has be come one of the most iiowerful of the sultans who have ruled in Turkey in the last fifty years. RICH MAN LITTLE KNOWN. Wealthy Citizen of Philadelphia Has Just Passed Away. There are some very rich men whose names never become familiar to the public, and one of them was William Weightmau, who died at Phil adelphia last week in his 91st year. He was a native ol England and went to Philadelphia when It years old to enter the chemical manufacturing business started there by a relative. Eventually this establishment, under the name of Powers & Weight man. became the largest manufacturer of chemicals in the world. It is said that for fifteen years prior to the death of Mr. Powers each partner took $G00.0U0 a year out of the business. Mr. Weightmau invested most of his money in Philadelphia real estate and ltecame the largest taxpayer in Pennsylvania. Offended Chinese Empress. The empress dowager of China, ac cording to the Shanghai Times, is highly offended with the wife and daughters of Yu Keng. late Chinese minister at Paris, and has issued or ders that they are not to enter the palace again. The cause of their sudden downfall is said to be that they instigated the young American lady artist who painted the empress dowager's portrait to demand a sum of SOO.OuO taels for her work. The empress dowager at the advice of some of the officials had previously presented the artist the sum of 12,000 taels and some presents. Pen Picture of Great Heiress. Of Miss Pauline Astor, American heiress of a naturalized Briton and fiancee of Captain Spender-Clay, an English paper says: "She is quiet, rather nice-looking, sensible, self willed. Not pretty in the accepted sense, though her hair is beautiful in its wayward profusion and her deep eyes look into jours with a sympa thetic intelligence. Playing hostess to the great wot Id ever since she was 14 ha.- given hr -m nir of easy distinc tion, and with it perhaps a suggestion of being a little tired." Royalties Breakfast on Fruit. At the present moment there is quite a rage for friut diet among sev eral European royalties. The German emperor breakfasts and lunches off fruit and only tastes meat at dinner time, when he partakes of it very sparingly. The king of Italy for the last couple of months has lived almost altogether on fruit, and in several of the leading restaurants at Rome fruit in various shapes and forms makes almost the sole article of diet supplied to customers. Woman Keen in Business. Br. Frances C. Williams has ob tained control of all the coal lands in the Coalda'.e district of Nevada. She has organized a trust capital of $3, 000,000 and the railroad companies that are dependent upon the Coaldale section for fuel will have to make the best arrangements they can with Dr. Williams. Bulgaria's Exhibit. Bulgaria's exhibit in the Palace of Varied Industries at the world's fair covers 6,000 square feet 3 AS THE WORLD ID LJ REVOLVES GIFT OF GERMAN EMPEROR. Statue of Frederick the Great Now on Way to America. The replica of the statue of Fred erick the Great, the work of Prof. Ur.hue. which is now en route to tflis city, is a prerent from the German emperor tenceted to the American people. It will be creeled on the ar senal grounds on the river front, at thf I'Atrenie southern limit cf the c'ty ol Washington. This gift from the emperor has evoked unfriendly com ment from certain German newspa- pers. and at one time it was said that because ot the. remote site chosen for it here the statue might remain in Berlin. NAVAL LESSONS OF THE WAR. Little of Value Disclosed Through Combats on Sea. The war in the far east has. luckily enough, been barren in results that might turn sea methods and material into vague and uncharted channel ways. It has. for example, taught nothing new in naval policy, nor has it revealed any truths that experts have not insisted upon for many years. Til's, however, does not mean that the conflict is valueless either as an object lesson or as a guide to the high er development of fleets, for. indeed, in this sense it has been most fruitful. Never, perhaps, has the necessity of initial preparedness and of com mand ot the sea been so quickly and incontcstably established. Further more, in the latest engagements the dominance of the battleship as the vehicle and the supremacy of the gun as the instrument have been equally reasserted notably when the latter is associated in a just relation with ar mor protection and good speed. But these. let us remember, are old stand arils of naval thought, an-2 the Japa nese have earned their place- aicong the sea pov ers. not because they have given us anything new. but because of the manner in which they have proved in stern practice the validity of these accepted theories. New YorkHerald. BABY PRINCE OF EGYPT. Here Is th? Future Ruler of the Land of the Pharaohs. The hereditary prince. Mohammed Abdul Monnelin. is the eldest son of Abbas I. and was born Feb. 20. 1899. Father and son are both visiting Eng crGVPr land at present. He is a smart and most intelligent boy. His father, the khedlvc. was born on Aug. 12, 1874, so that he is thirty years of age. He ascended the throne Jan. 8. 1892. on the death of his father. Mohammed Tewfik. during whose reign occurred the now almost lorgotten Arabi rebel lion in 1SS2. when the then khedive's life was saved through the presence of British troops. This picture is by DIttrich. photographer by appointment to the khedivial family and court. Test for Travelers. A traveler just returned from a tour of the Rocky mountain and Pacific coast region says that he was sur prised one evening to find a large pic ture of Dr. Edward Everett Hale hang ing on the wall of a little inn in Ore gon. The landlord exclaimed: "Ye sec. mister, a good many strangers come along here and want me to take care of them. I don't know nothin' about them, of course, but if they know Dr. Hale's picture I know they're good for somethin' and I let 'cm stay. I'm a Yankee myself." No Room for Shakespeare. London has never had a memorial to Shakespeare. Recently a resident of that city offered to donate $12,500 toward the purpose, provided the county council would accept a finan cial responsibility in the undertaking and secure other contributors. This the council declines to do and. as much as it appreciates the fitness ot thus honoring the greatest of Eng lish poets, someone else must guar antee the full funds before it will en tertain the provision of a site. Family in Marriage Ceremony. An unusual .wedding ceremony took place in the Church of St. Eusebe at Montreal when Mrs. J. Charron, who hes been a widow for several years, and her two daughters, Lennia and Ale::ina Charron. were married re spectively to Denis Laudry, Leon Mar tel and Marcine Therrien. To Popularize Science. Sir Norman Lockyer has been .elect ed president .of a new scciety for the popularizing of science called the Brit ish Science Guild. BBUKusBsW BBKJlJBBHVBVnWl Tk Alligators of Canada Among the most common sights in the streams and lakes of the Cana dian lumber country are , alligators. One canuot go up a river in the woods without seeing anywhere from two to half a. dozen of them lying on the banks or floating in the water. Nobody bunts these alligators, and there is no instance known of their attacking anybody. Indeed, the lum bermen swim around right alongside of them, and generally there are from one to three lumbermen sitting on the back of one alligator. The fact is that the Canadian alii gator is not a reptile, but a boat and a boat as queer in the world of boats as the real alligator is queer in the world of reptiles. The Canadian alligator boat is an oval, flat thing, with a small boiler and. engine bolted to the dec!;, without any deck house or other structure over it. Two spidery iron paddle wheels on the sides do the propelling. They look funny enough plunging along, with the skeleton wheels pad dling like mad. and a great raft be hind them: but the funniest part of the alligator is not seen till the craft happens to get to a shallow place, or till it becomes desirable for aome rea Cruelty of By the statutes of Illinois it is pro vided that when a person is arraigned in court to answer to an indictment, if he refuses to plead the court shall order that a plea of not guilty be en tered for him. If the court proceeds to try -the case without a plea, such omission is good ground for setting aside a verdict of guilty for the rea son that without a plea of not guilty there is no issue presented to the jury to try. John F. Getting, in the elev enth American criminal reports, points out that under the old English law if a prisoner stood mute and failed to plead to the indictment a jury was impaneled to determine whether his conduct came from ob stinacy or from a natural impediment. According to Blackstone if the pris oner was found to be obstinately mute and the indictment was for high trea son it was settled that his silence was equivalent to a conviction and that judgment and execution should follow. This same rule applied to petit larceny and misdemeanors, but upon appeals or indictments lor other felonies, or petit treason, according to the ancient law the prisoner was not deemed convicted, but. because of his obstinacy, he received "the terrible At Jackson's Old Home The mention of "The Hermitage" calls up a peaceful scene that should appear most attractive to American tourists on American soil. There is in the first place a drive of twelve miles from Nashville through a beautifully undulating country and by prosperous-looking farms and coun try homes that would be an ornament to the richest sections of the long-settled East. It is. perhaps, difficult to associate President Jackson with such homes when one recalls bis life in the backwoods, but, as a matter of fact, the house in which he passed his last years is a notably fine old mansion. It stands far back from the street behind a curtain of trees that are scattered about the great yardv and is impressive at first sight, and more im pressive still after a close examina tion. A hall some fifteen feet wide passes through the center, the rooms are all large, and they are seen to day with furniture aud all appurten ances much as they were in Jackson's time. This is due to the patriotic work of the Ladies' Hermitage asso ciation, whose services in the cause Tale of a Gov. Pennypacker of Pennsylvania was reviewing the State militia at Gettysburg. A young staff officer de scribed to him in a low voice some unimportant error that had been made. "But as to the cause of the er ror.sir." he said, "that is a mystery." Gov. Pennypacker smiled. "If it is a mystery." he said, "it 13 like the pickled pork disaster that be fell two Pennsylvania Dutchmen, Hans and Fritz. "These two men bought a lot of pickled pork in partnership. They put it in a barrel, and stored it away in the cellar of Hans' home. Now. Hans, though a Pennsylvania Dutch man, was dishonest. The combination is rare. "Weli. the morning after the deal in pickled pork. Fritz met Hans on the road. " 'Good morning. Hans." he said. 'Is For to The Inji.oi Ocan set an' smile S" sof. po bright, so bloomin blue: There ain't a wave for miles an" miles Excp" the jiggle from the crew. The ship is swep". the day is done. The bugle's gone for smoke an" play: An' back aRain the settin' sun The I-us-car sings. "Hum deckty hai:" For to admire an for to see. For to be'old this world mi wide It r.-ver done jyi .ood to me. Hut 1 can't drop it if 1 tried: I .i the Sergeants pUc-hln' quoits. l'.'.tr tle women Inimh an" talk. 1 spv upon the qu.nter deck. The orticers an lydies v.-.ilk i thinks about the tilings that was. An leans an" looks acs.-t the sea. Till, spit" of all th" crowded ship. There's no one lef alive but me. The thinss that w.i. wlileli I "ave seen. In b.irrick. cuinp. an act'on. :oo. 1 lelis thorn over by myHf An" sometimes wonders if they're true: For they w- odd most awful odd Kut all the same now they are .r. There must be eaps o plentj uch. n" if I wait 111 see some more. Only New Mistakes Condoned. The following is a rule in an Atchi son wholesale house: "Employes are welcome to one mistake, but we sock it to 'em for making the same mistake twice." Atchison Globe. "Hymn to Apollo." A song called the "Hymn to Apollo," written. 2S0 yenrs B. C. has just beon sung for the first time in England.. son to warp a great crib ot logs into shore or fasten it to the bank. Then the alligator proceeds to dem onstrate why it is so named. It chug chugs calmly to the bank-, goes straight at it. up goes its nose on the shore, and the next moment the paddle wheels cease to revolve anil the queer boat trundles up on land. Then the amphibian character of the thing becomes visible. Under the keel of the alligator are wooden roll ers. When the queer cratt has been forced as far up the bank as the pad dle wheels can drive it, chains are run to the nearest tree and brought back to the rollers. The engine gear ing is shifted from the paddle wheels to the rollers and the alligator pro ceeds to pull itself along over the land. Thus the lumbermen have a boat, a locomotive and a stationary engine combined in their alligators, and the value of such a combination can be realized when it is understood that sometimes they bring down rafts so huge that they will cover a square mile; while the distances over which they are floated are so great t.iat rafts have been known to be three years on the way-from the far north to the settled country. Ancient Law sentence of penance or peine." and was pressed to death. Blackstone thus describes this pun ishment: "That the prisoner be re manded to the prison from whence he came and put in a low. dark chamber, and there be laid on his back on the 'bare- floor, naked, unless -decency for bids: that there be placed upon bis body as great a weight of iron as, he could bear and more; that he should have no sustenance, save only on the first day three morsels of the worst bread, and on the second day three drafts of standing water that should be nearest the prison door, and in this situation this should be alternately his daily diet till he died, or (as anciently the judgment ran) till he answered." During the trials for witchcraft in New England a respectable citizen be ing so accused, knowing that by rea son of the excitement of the times a plea of not guilty and trial would re sult in a conviction with confiscation ot property, and the same judgment would follow a plea of guilty, refused to plead, thereby preventing a convic tion and enabling his family to retain his property. The court ordered that he be pressed because of his obsti nacy. The order was carried out and the victim died. of restoration are of inestimable value. It would require a long catalogue, however, to enumerate the things of interest within the house, and there are mony others outside. There is the carriage in which the general trav eled to Washington, there is the fam ily monument, and a little farther off is the poor cabin of pioneer days, which affords a striking contrast to its grand successor. It harmonizes with the character of the owner better in some respects, for. in spite of his later experiences and a certain na tive courtesy and chivalry, he re mained to the end of the aggressive, fighting, pioneer type, but apparently he knew how to make the new home inviting, and certainly there were grouped about him numerous objects which testify to the esteem and affec tion in which he was held as a hero of the nation. The hospitable build ing, with its spacious rooms and many mementos of Jackson's life and serv ices to his country, is. in fact, an in tensely interesting historical museum, a shrine that will always richly repa the visitor for his journey. Mystery there any news about our picklei' pork?' "Fritz. Hans answered gravely 'there is news, and bad news. A strange thing has happened. It is a mystery to me. '"Well. Hans, tell me all about It,' said Fritz. " 'Fritz, my friend, it was like this,' said Hans. 'This morning I went down cellar to get a piece of pork for my breakfast, and I put my hand down in the barrel, and I felt around in the brine, and there was no pork there. It was all gone all gone completely. So then I turned up the barrel, and, as true as you are alive, the. rats had eaten a hole clean through the bot tom and dragged the pork all out.' "Fritz was amazed and stunned. "'Why didn't the brine run out of the hole?' he asked. "Ah. Fritz. said the other, 'that's the mystery. That's the mystery."' Admire 99 Oil. I ave come upon the book. .n' often broke a burrick rule. An stood beside an" watched my.-elf Ke'avln like a bloomin' fool. I paid my price for findin out. "N'or never grutclied the price I paid. But sa: in Clink without my boots. Admirin 'oxv the world was made. Be'old a cloud upon tin- Iram, An" "umped above ihe sea appears Old Aden, like a b.irrick-stove Tii.it no one's lit for years an years' I passed by that when I began. An', go "ome the road I came, A time-expired soldier-man. With six years' service to "Is rame. ?.I g'rl she said. "Oil.. stay with me:" .My mother "e!d m.- to "er breast. They"e never written none, an" so Thee must "ave gone with all the r-t With .ill the ret which 1 "ave seen An found an known an met along. I f ,m not sny the things I feel. But still I fins my eenin" song: For to admire an" for to see. For to be'old this world so wide It neer done no good to m". But I can't drop it if I tried" , Hudyard Kiplipg. Gold Quartz in Ceylon. Gold bearing quartz has been found Li Ceylon, but it remains to be seen whether it is present in sufficient quantity to be commercially success ful. Women Taxpayers May Vote. The Evangelical church council of Hungary has given taspayicg women (he tight to vote. TARM OC33AII);an! isVB WSSDBKVBVvSBli 1wib BB. BaBfeflBflSBBBBBvlBBBCnBBBeVflaBSBBkSBBkBBBlBBBBi uBKflnBVWSBHRflflSSVBnu - f3mBSfa:2w9l4KlEFBjPKBcaUDHKtK VkBBflflVBPjKBHEBBBHHiE Mr. Wragg Invites contributions ot any new ideas that readers ot this de partment may wish to present, and would be pleased to answer coi respond ents desiring information on subjects Gl-niFsed. Address M. J. Wrasg. Wau ke. Iowa. THE FARMER AND THE AUTOMO BILE. August is a very good month to consider some of the problems which the farmer is facing, and will have to settle, and we know of no question that is interesting them more at the present than the automobile. We are having evidence, both ocular and from letters received from writers to this department, which leads us to believe that the automobile, as it is operated on the highways at the pres ent time, is a menace to "life. liberty amTthe pursuit of happiness." One of our correspondents not long ago In writing says: "The automobile is a nuisance on the public roads. We are not building roads for machines of this kind, and we will never have roads here in northern Iowa if they continue to use our roads as they do at present. We have had several run aways and severe accidents and I would sooner meet the than an automobilist. When the roads are muddy these machines cannot use the roads, which gives us farmers an opportunity of doing a little hauling with a feeling of security." We have lately had occasion to talk to a doctor, who said that the "automobile was all right" and that in the use of one for over nine months he had not had an accident, nor had be caused anyone any incon venience. Our observation is that when automobiles are owned in our small towns that they are dangerous to the public. No woman or child dare drive even the gentlest horse, for fear of meeting the strange thing. Hence it makes a prisoner of every woman in the neighborhood, and when a spirit horse is driven there is great rtsk ot meeting one of these machines on the road at any time, and the result, with few excep tions, is a runaway. The whole fault lies with the op erators of these autos. They do not consider that the farmer or anyone else but the automobilist has any rights on the highway. We have seen them urging their machines, and run ning their gasoline engines at a ter rific rate over good roads, regardless of the fact that the rural public is taxed to maintain them. This is a question that every farmer wants to give more than passing thought, and should see that there is proper legislation along these lines. Sec that the man asking your vote at the coming election is in sympathy with the rural population, and is in favor of a law regulating the speed and setting forth the rights of the automobile on the public highways. -If all the apple trees and aP the pear and plum anil peach trees in th United States, or at least the bulk of them, should once bear full crops, or anything approaching full crops, we would have fruits to burn, aud apples and pears would be worth little more than hog-feed. Such a thing, however, is not likely to happen. We have our seasons of superabundance, and cor responding cheapness, of fruits; but apples, pears, plums and peaches of good quality and properly marketed have seldom failed to give good re turns to the grower in the right loca tion, and we need not fear that they will often do so in the near future. PASTURAGE FOR GEESE. Geese are grazing birds. Ir lict. they live and thrive on good pasturage and water, although, of course, they do not make the rapid growth that may be secured when some grain is fed; on the other hand, it is probably not possible to raise goslings on an exclusive grain diet, without a liberal supply of some succulent vegetable food. Young goslings make the most rapid growth upon short, nutritious grass, or brook grass and grain. In wild state geese devour large quan tities of roots of grasses and aquatic plants which they dig from the banks and borders of streams, and wash free from earth in shallow water. Do mestic geese confine themselves to less water and aquatic plants, and generally feed upon pastures, prefer ring moist, rich localities where the grass is kept short and sweet by con stant feeding and rapid growth. Tall, woody grasses which have become tough are not relished by them. This natural habit of geese makes consid- erable space necessary for their sue- j cessful keeping, or requires that they be provided with succulent green growth. There are lots of fools who drive horses, but one of the biggest is the one who trots his horses down hill. It jars the shoulders and may bring on paralysis of the nerves and mus cles. It weakens the tendons and springs the knees. Let a horse have his own way and you will notice that he wfll slacken his pace and go care folly down hill. Only those go down hill pell mell that are first made to do It under the voice or whip. THE HARVEST MOON. It so happens that the position of tms moon is such that the full moon proceeding the autumnal equinox for several successive nights in the lati- tude of London rises only nine or ten ! minutes later each succeeding even- I mg. This phenomenon is called the "harvest moon" from a notion that it is a provision of all-wise Providence calculated to enable the husbandman to take care of his grain at night if there is so much of it that it cannot be handled during daylight. In farming, as a rule, it is better to raise a thing, or an animal, than to buy it. Something should be grow ing and going all the time, and this can be done only by keeping a variety of stock and crops. Different plans of management will be necessary on dif ferent farms, but is should be remem bered that the fanner is farthest from market who has nothing to sell. The cow's memory is long. Often it reaches clear down into the milk pail. It always will do this If she is treated badly. DANGER IN DRAINAGE. t A FARMERS OUTING Two wet seasons in the West have turned attention to the drainage of large sections of the country, particu larly in Minnesota and Iowa, the crops on hundreds of thousands of acres of the low and undraincd lands having been practically destroyed for two years by reason of the excessive rain fall. Some very extensive' and ex pensive drainage propositions are now under way. A serious question arises in connection with this work. AH drained lands rid themselves quickly of surface water. The rivers and main natural waterways of those states are ot a capacity to care for a uornial flow of water without serious damage by overflow. When these drainage schemes are all-completed and the floods of an ordinary wet time re leased in a hurry from these lands it cannot be otherwise than that very destructive freshets will result for all the bottom lands of the stream which have to carry the water, and the dis asters which belell Kansas City. To peka and Des Moines last summer will become a common occurrence. These wet lands with their numerous ponds and slough have, undralned. served as reservoirs or feeders, the surplus water escaping slowly but when they are drained cut will go the water with a rush. Cities and 'towns. built adjacent to such rivers will have to meet the problem of how best to guard against these ag gravated flood conditions, for it will not be possible to prevent the drain age of the lands referred to. Why should not farmers and their wives take a vacation the same as city business men? A week or two of change and rest will prove beneficial as well as instructive. The best way to take an outing is a carriage drive of 100 or 200 miles through surround ing counties. Twenty to twenty-five miles a day can be easily made with a good horse and carriage. One can see much more in this way than when riding at express train speed. EVERGREEN TREES. Evorgreens are a class of indis pensable trees which fill a very im portant place in landscape work. What tree can take the place of an evergreen in the winter, when all other trees are leafless and stand out naked and cheerless against the cold elements? In reply to a question sometimes asked. "Are evergreens go ing out of fashion?" I say most as suredly, no. and I do not think they ever will, as long as mankind is capa ble of appreciating the useful and beautiful in nature. From the time these trees are several inches high in the nursery row they are attract ive and beautiful, and when they reach their full growth they are magnificent. Nothing gives a home a more cheerful and trim appearance than well planted hedges and groups of eergreens, and the value or a farm is greatly enhanced by the loca tion of belts, groves and hedges. The steady demand for these trees proves conclusively that their popularity is not decreasing and that they are wanted not only on farms, but on pub he grounds and large private estates where he best things are used and needed. Evergreens were created ever green for a purpose, and no oth er tree or invention can supplement them. The are a beautiful tree, and animals and fowls will seek their shelter in winter or summer. There is something about the mere mention of lightning rods that sends a cold chill oxer a good many of us. I presume this is because we have yuch distinct recollections of unpleas ant experiences with agentrs anil the outrageous bills they have saddled upon us for that kind or farm fixtures. And - we do not like to think or the matter any more than we can help. HE KNEW A HEN. A boy who was required to write an essay on hens produced the follow ing: "Hens is curious aniimals: they don't have no nose nor no teeth nor no ears. They swallow their wittles whole and chew it up in their crops inside of 'em. The outside or hens is generally nut into pillers and into feather dusters. The inside of a hen is sometimes filled with marbles and sich. A hen is very much smaller than a good many other aiiumals. but iliev'II dig up more tomato plants than anvthing that ain't a hen. Mens is very useful to lay eggs for plu'ii puddings Hens have got wings aim can fly when they get frightened, i cut off a hen's head and it frightened her to death." Composting manure does not add any to the benefit that is ultimately derhed from it. but does make the plant food in it more readily available. Whether composted or not. the amount of plant food actually con tributed to the soil will be the same, but when composted it is more under control and we can compute with more certainty its effect on a given crop or during the season. HUMUS IN SOILS. Humus is simply vegetable matter In the soil and unless when first put in. is undergoing change through "r-Mlnnt dec:-. Some soils are large- ly made up of humus, as. for instance, th soils of the prairie, open and cimii-v in cnaraeier. iiiki-k i:i co!or and so light that they lift more or less with the winds. Other soils are deficient in humus, more especially stiff clays The effect of tillage on soils is to lessen the supply of humus in the anie Soils that have been long tilled without enrichment are generally very low in the supply of hiimtia which they possess. It never speaks well of any farm er who lets weeds grow in the fence rows and along the highways. It is jur.t as detrimental to have barn doors hanging on one h.ing- or the doers fastened shut with rails. Neg lect sometimes goes to seed when it becomes a menace to the farm. Imagine yourself to he your neighbor and then go past your own place and note criticisms you would make. This is cue way to eco the defects. GARDEN Is found on his farm, an exchange says, anil adds: "The city man who works in factory, shop, store or of fice, generally has a vacation some time during the harvest season. And when he goes out and sees the farm ers all busy in the harvest field, he is apt to sympathize with the poor, over worked tiller of the soil, because he has no vacation. But all his sympathy is misplaced. Sympathy is rather du the man who toils within four walls, among machines that are hot and greasy, or at a desk in a constricted office where he can hardly straighten his legs, for eleven months in a yar. He must have a vacation, for human nature canuot stand the strain of per petual imprisonment without a break down mentally and physically. The farmer has much hard out-door work, but there is, but little monotony about It. and his physical energy is in creased and his wits quickened by the ever-changing variety of his work. He has pure air and abundant physi cal and mental exercise: he mut mingle with his stock, provide for their wants and profit by their develop ment. He has something interesting to think of every hour of the day. He has a variety of work to do. and 'va riety is the spice of life.' It makes life taste good. He learns that recre ation is better than rest. Thea if he would hunt and fish to vary the scene, he can enter upon the sport with a vim and vigor the vacation fiend knows not of." The above is at least partly true, but where the whole thing rails through is that the wife, and frequent ly the children, do not get this vari ety which their souls crave. The farmer himself gets more variety from the nature of his work. He goes frequently to town, attends town meetings, auction sales, lawsuits and almost everything else. He is all too apt to forget that the wife and chil dren to not get this same change of scenes, and before he is aware he is often warping and narrowing their monotonous lives most cruelly. Forty ears ago settlement preced ed the railroads, the pioneer settler often having to wait from ten to twen y years before he was afforded any benefits of railroad transportation. In these days the railway goes ahead ot the settler aud thus removes many ot the hardships which fell to the lot ot the -pioneers of the west. The roads rhouM have credit for much enter prise in this regard, especially, in the matter of making low excursion rate to all parts of the country, so that it is Missible for even a poor man to seek a new location and a home. OUST SPRAYING. Dust spraying, which now seems to come to the front, has proved just as sure death to leaf-eaters on trees as it always has on potato-vines to the potato bug. Whether it does as well for fungous diseases as spraying with the Bordeaux mixture is as yet an un solved problem, although in some trials seven dust sprayings appeared to give about the same results as liquid sprayings, which cost fully as much in lalor and material. For leaf eaters, such as cankerworni. the pro portions applied were one pound of Paris green to fifteen pounds of Hour. The one objection which I always have had against using dust sprays on potatoes namely, that we an; li able to inhale a portion of the poison ous dust, seems to apply with even greater force to dust-spraying trees. In the operation we fill the atmos phere around the tree with the pois oned dust, and as we have to work in close proximity, we cftn't help getting ome of it into our systems. I prefer liquid spraying, and would even if it was more expensive or laborious. So far from each cow giving milk of a fixed richness that cannot be varied by feeding, experience shows there are rarely two milkings when the milk is of identical richness. While some breeds of cows are better adapted to the production or butter than others, yet prize butter has been made from the milk of every known breed. HONEY AS A DAILY FOOO. Honey is one of Nature's pure, healthful sweets The nectar from which it is made is distilled in th ehalices of the peerless clover and tiagrant linden through the alchemy of sun and shower by the Divine Chemist. It can never be success fully imitated by man nor excelled as an article of diet. Th bee with its husbanding instincts collects the wa tery sweet before the wind drinks it from the flower cup and transforms it into one of the most useful and ap petizing of natural foods. In the laboratory of the hive it has under gone such a change as to fit it for human digestion without the labori ous stomach process necessary with most manufactured sweets. It is as similated more easily than cane su gar, and therefore not so likely to produce distress in the stomach. WHEN TO WEAN PIGLETS. A series of eight experiments re cently demonstrated the advisability of keeping the pigs on the sow as long as possible, consistent with the healthy and strong condition of the mother. The chief reason for this is that a sow and her pigs together will extract more nourishment from a giv en quantity of food than will the weaned pigs alone. The sow and pigs were weighed separately each wee!:, and any loss or gain of the sow was deducted from or added to the i::-' creased weight of the pigs. The pigs were allowed to remain on the sow for ten weeks, then a similar course of feeding was carried on with tho pigs for seven weeks. The sow pigs consumed on an average 2.11 pounds of meal and 531 pounds of skim milk in making a similar increase. Unless the stable is comfortable and dry the horses will not lie down as much as they should for perfect rest. A good supply of bedding will not only add to the comfort of the horses, but will materially aid in increasing tho amount of manure. 5- f-r i m vf. :Jr-' - i :- l- - It :-.; c ' Ir It I Ml I 'if , -'.- -xi ."'r!fnmy.i .."-" ". 1 e"r - -.1