BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBPIBSlVBFBBB S . , . mmmmi WSsEKSa ffJl KgJOTRiSdM bbbbbbbbBvBBb 't&r ' - .-g.T?5jfcj5y3wqiaHBBjSHMSr7irfy r fc?, k Ancestral Wisdom Our ancestors, so scholars pay. Were wont to live in trees. "Where they might comfortably sway "With every papsins breeze. They wore no collars-, stiff and hot; They shunned the fiery drink In faith, it was a happy lot To be a missinp link. Where branches screened them from the sky And kept awar the heat. With wardrobe that weie very shy They dwlt hi blis complete. Xow science ansnirs to our call; And et I sometimes think Th- ver-v smartest of us all Wii Grand Dad ilisySns Link. Washir-ston Star. e fCopyrisht. 1303. b Daily Stor Pub. Co.) LITTLE SUNSHINE. The Sensational Serpentine Dancer, After a Successful Tour or the World, Returns to the Scene of her Former Triumphs. This announcement, in gizantic let ters, is seen on all the hoardings and bill-posting stations. It is read with interest by men about town who are to the scene of her former triumphs." familiar with the career of the dia- j Tin- wretch who had lured her into mond-decked beauty, whose noto- j uie glamor of the footlights had al riety has been lar more profitable J ready lound means to make her than any little talents she is supposed beauty and her grace a source of to possess. It is read by hosts of en- j profit. vjous young artistes wnosoaciuiuuiw are centered on becoming a star in tli- vaudeville world, no matter what the cost. And it is read early each j morning lry one man infirm, rasged. i decrepit old John Maudley as m- , chanically he creeps along toward his , place of business, idiotically mutter- ing the words of Thomas Moore: "Sunshine, broken in the rill. j Though turned aside, is sunshine j still." i Very little sunshine had ever come , into John Maudrley's life. The office in which he had worked since boy hood, from early morning until late at night, appeared to have been buried in a Mock of big buildings for the express purpose of shutting out an j stray rays ot sunshine which might otherwise have striven to penetrate j the everlastingly unwashed windows , The head of the publishing firm which he had served long and faithfully seemed to have acquired the habit of stifling anything in the least resem bling sunshine, probably as the result of their systematically smothering the hopes and ambitious of budding au thors. The home which, with much hus banding of his scanty income. John ;Maudsley had built up, sometimes stole a stray ray or two which fell foul of the smokestacks of the big , tenement house and tumbled down the airshaft. but even these were dead when John returned from his work. So it had happened that the sun shone only once a week for John. That was on -Sundays. It was during one of the brightest of these, in summer time, that John first met a little living sunbeam. A girl who seemed to make the sun shine brighter: to absorb the rays of the great liiegiver; and to shed them again on the innermost recesses of th poor fellow's heart. Then it was that he besan to dream wild dreams , of how his little home might be brightened with a perpetual sunshine, always on tap. so to speaK when he j ought to have known that it is a dan- j g.-rous experiment to bottle up sun- , shine, of the feminine gender, in such obscurity. I u it "was who first called her "Lit- tle Sunshine." and when he had won ' hi'r consent to illuminate his home, it n,,i to him th.it henceforth every - "-"-" - - i day must be a summer Sunday . There was great caiwv in the here- ' ""-" "" b- auu "u "? miuw tolore dismal little flat, both when i ' identity of that broken-down man. John wa, at nome anci wiien he was I that wreck of humanity, who each away at his work, for the golden glory j uight occupies a back seat in the pal .if that little head must have sub- lery. No one hears him as he mur- jects to shine upon. Then came to John what was the mystery of mysteries. It was no eclipse. It was simply that while the man's whole soul still circled around that first sweet sun. another lesser orb of love was born and shed new rays of gladness on his heart. Sun shine! The skies, the home, his life was full of it Hut oh! The pity of it! The sun which with it brightness transforms crawling worms to butterflies, also breeds such vermin as one might shudder at' The sunshine of that little home was broken in the rill and turned Very little sunshine had ever come into John Mandsley's life, aside by one of these reptiles. John re turned from his work one night to find it night indeed. "Little Sunshine" was gone, but the lesser oro was left. Cruelly deserted, husband and child together sobbed through the first dark night. Dawn came and brought no Sunshine. Nev er after that came sunshine to their hearts. It was always night. Night to the child vfco lived her little life, intend ed and uncared for, in the gloomy home. Night to the man who saw that baby life fast fading r.way, while be Eiust wort even harder than before '4 i; I , r:1B gr mzzPjy' to provide such luxuries as might pro Ions that life, which really needed the lost lityiiry of a mothers love. "Heavens! Give me sunshine! Little Sunshine, come hack to me!" he often cried aloud. "Come hack, if only to keep the last little ray of happiness Irom lading from my life." lint Little Sunshine never "returned '-Mamma! mamma!" murmured the iTE.A "Sunshine broken in the rill." fever-stricken child. "Me wants my mamma!" Hut those tiny tones never reached the woman's ears, in which were ring ing the plaudits of a brainless, heart less throng, as she posed and pirouet ted in a state of semi-nudity. No longer a sun, she had degenerated into a star. The little one died. The last gleam of sunlight sank beyoud the horizon of John's life, as his baby girl was lowered into the grave. But secretly, that same night, he went to a vaude ville theater, a gay and garish place where the "Sensational Serpentine Dancer" was to i.iake her New York debut. He saw huge bouquets of costly flowers passed across the footlights. to "Little Sunshine." He had been too poor to purchase more than one solitary sunflower to place upon the casket of their child, He never even let the mother know of his loss. Why should he? She looked so bright and happy, even as snt Jia(1 I'or-' He had dared to hide her brilliancy for a time in the ob- scunty of his dismal home Again she has "returned to the Per- scene 01 ner lormer inumpns. "! uie greatest 01 ner inumpns is murs: "Sunshine broken in the rill. Though turned aside, is sunshine still." Morris Shot at Connecticut. i A young woman who has been em- j ployed in collecting material for a man who is writing a history found I something the other day which amus i ed her very much, as illustrating the I tender and brotherly feelings which existed between the different colo nies prior to the Revolution. It was a passage in the will of Lewis Morris, recorded in the Surrogate's office of New York in the year 1760, arid ran as follows: "It is my wish that my son. Gouver neur, shall have the best education that can be furnished him in England or America; but my express will and directions are that under no circum stances shall he he sent to the colony of Connecticut for that purpose, lest m his youth he should imbibe that low craft and cunning so incident to I the people of that colony, and which I are so interwoven in their constitution that all their wit cannot conceal it fiom the world, though many of them, ; under the sanctified garb of religion, j have attempted to impose themselves i on the world as honest men." "Looks to me." said the investiga tor, "as if old Lewis had had some dealings with Connecticut people and come cut second best." Cosmopolitan Production. Clyde Fitch was talking about two young playwrights. "Riter." he said, "is always stealing his ideas from the French and making money, while Swett. an honest fellow, writes original comedies that rarely pa their way. "These two men met the other day and at once began to talk shop. "Riter. the plagiarist, declared that his latest farce, 'Little Bo-Peep,' was having an extraordinary success. " 'And an Enclish manager has put it on in Liverpool, too,' he ended, 'and it is having a superb run there, but the Englishman hasn't yet forwarded me a cent let royalties.' " 'It is also having a superb run at the Odeon in Paris.' said Swett. 'Have yott received any royalties from there?' " Jt - -i-i .tv'S-' "r j Sr&xS'tnnw g 'T2t THE JOCKEY AND THE KING. Royalty Not Always Accorded First Place in Life. King Leopold of Belgium told a gcod story on himself and Tod Sloan some time ago which has just found its way into the French newspapers. "I was dining in a Paris restaurant," said the most democratic of kings, "and on looking arourd saw Tod Sloan, the American jockey, whom I had seen often riding at Longchamps, dining in solitary splendor at the next table. While waiting for my dinner to be brought I watched the little American and saw him, after tasting some tried potatoes that had been brought him. summon the waiter an grily anu bid him take the dish away. Now, I had ordered fried potatoes also.'and I had no difficulty in discov ering, when mine arrived with sus picious promptness, that the very same disn Tod Sioan had disdained had been brought to me. "I suppose." saiu a .listener. "Your Majesty summoned the restaurant man anil had the waiter dischargeI7" "Oh. no." replied the king, smiling. "I tasted the potatoes, and I discover ed that Mr. Sloan was quite right. They had been cooked with rancid butter, and were very bad. But I knew that if I sent them away it would seriously injure the business of the place, so I went on eating them. You see. therefore, that nowadays a jockey can afford to be more particu lar than a king." NO ONE TO RUN IT. Simple Explanation for Stopping of Alarm Clock. An Irishman who had been unoccu pied for some time induced his friend Patrick to try to secure him a position with a contractor. One evening about a week later Pat went around to Mike's boarding house with the news that the contractor had granted Mike a trial. "But." said Pitt, "he is avery par-a-tickler, and e moost be sure to be at the oofice by 7 shar-r-p Oi'll git ye an alarm clock and then ye'll be sure to git up on toime." So Pat bought the alarm clock, wound it up and set it at C:C0. It went off sntisfactorilj-. Mike went down and worked all day. "When he went home at night he wound the clock, but did not bother with the alarm, think ing that it would go off automatically. The next morning he slept until S o'clock, and when he went to the office the boss gave him his pay and told him to leave. Mike went home mad, swore at the alarm clock and finally took the back off. A lot of springs, wires and wheels fell out, and, last of all, a dead cockroach tumbled over on to the table. Mike looked at the roach in surprise, and then burst out: "Be dad! No wonder the thing wouldn't go off. The injineer is dead." Protection from Tuberculosis. A leaflet on "The Hygiene of Con sumption" is now being largely cir culated, containing facts that every one should know about tuberculosis. Certain rules are given, which, if lived up to, will keep the lungs healthy, and very greatly lessen the possibility of their becoming infected with tuber culosis. Every one's help is needed to make war against consumption, and. first of all things, against the habit of spitting in improper places. 1. Gjt plenty of fresh air and sim ple food. Fresh air in plenty prevents con sumption. Sunshine kills the germs. Choose sunny rooms. Raise tl windows and let the air in. Keep th house clean. 1'. Live a regular life. Get plenty of sleep. :'. Never neglect dyspepsia or a "cold." 4. Avoid the company of any con sumptive who is careless about spit ting. T. Before moving into a house for merly occupied by a consumptive see that it is properly disinfected by the Board of Health. C. Never put coins, pencils or simi lar articles in your mouth; they may have been used by a consumptive. 7. Always wash your hands before eating. A Bud of Promise. A few Sundays ago a well-known minister preached in a village church. After the morning service, while strolling through the village, he came across some small boys playing ball. "My son," he said to one of them, "don't you krow that it is sinful to play ball on the Sabbath day?" "No. sir," replied the boy, innocent ly. "It is. my boy. and very sinful." said the minister. "God knows all things, and He therefore sees you and vill punish you for your sin." "Do you really believe, sir." asked the 1kv. "that God knows everything?" "Most assuredly," said the good man. "Does He know that my Uncle John has got a cow?" "Of course He does, my child." "That' where you git left, for Un cle John hain't got no cow!" cried the boy. as he started after the bill. New York World. Song of the Baldheaded Man. Grfai C.ivsar's classic head was bare. And likewise Socrates': Peter and Paul were forced to wear l rin i-ipihar nieces; Shakespeare, earth's literary kinp. And Johnson. Tope and Gibbon, Being; short of hii.-ute covtiinp Wort wips tit-d doft with ribbon. But Achan. J. Iscariot. Anani.f '-f truth chary). Herod, the 1'haiisees I wot. AH si-orted caputs hairy; Later came Danton. Robespierre. And Marat, bloody trio; Guv Kawke and Jeffries. Glencoe Stair. Thick-thatclud like riddling Nero. Nor will the ee. in sooth, oft see Bald Hottentot or Arab. KamchatLan. aborisinee. Kurd oi man-eatinp Carib; Xay. nay but of the human breed The prcater in earth's story. Are tho who lead in thought and deed CrowiieJ not with hair, hut S'orv! Monroe Guy Carleton. Caught in the Act. Rushins into the smoking car, an old man ;ried excitedly: "A co'kscrew! Who's got a cork screw?" A sco of kindlv hands sought poc kets ani a score of kindly voices said: "Here you am. sir." "I thought so." shouted the old man. "And ".s" T lay before you. gentle men, .fifty temperance pledges. Who will sizr the first?"' 1Kb A Sanitary Milk Pail. Herewith we illustrate one of the sanitary milk pails in use in some parts of the country. As wiil be ob served, the top of it is almost entirely covered. The place into which the milk is thrown is the strainer, so that the milk is strained as it enters the pail. The top being covered prevents the falling of hair and other dirt into the milk. Any tinman can manufac ture one of these pails, as it is so sim ple that there is no patent upon it. Two general principles need to be kept in mind, one is to cover as much of the top of the pail as possible, and the other is to have a rim around the orifice through which the milk enters the pail. It seems to us that the strainer is of little value in a pail so protected, for if the udder is clean the milk is not likely to be contaminated with dirt. There are many forms of these pails in use, some of tliem dif fering very much from this. One that we saw in use on the farm of H. B. Gurler simply had a large part of the top covered, while the balance was covered only by absorbent cotton placed between two layers of gauze. As is known, the Gurler milk is very clean and therefore has long keeping properties. Some of this milk, bot tled, reached Paris, France, in a sweet condition. It had only been kept in a refrigerator, had not been pasturized, and had in it no preservative. It did not begin to turn sour until the 17th day after being drawn. On the day it was used in Paris, it was compared with some of the milk produced that -ay in Paris, which began to sour when only twelve- hours old. This shows the difference between clean milk and milk that has been con taminated. The use of the big open uouthed milk pail is the source of much of the souring of milk. Hairs from the cow and minute particles of dust drop unseen into the pail. These contain spores of the lactic acid fer ments, which are always present in the air during summer. We believe the universal use of sanitary milk pails would very greatly improve the quality of our milk, and consequently improve the quality of our butter and cheese. Farmers' Review. Pumpkins as Cow Feed. In all of the eastern states where pumpkins are extensively grown they are used for cow feed in the late fall and early winter months, and as long as they can be kept without deteriora tion. Possibly they could be kept all winter under proper conditions of cold storage, but they are such a bulky food mat a very large place is re quired to store enough of them to last a large herd through the winter months. Thej are not only hollow in side, but their round shape makes them space-consumers in storage. I regard the pumpkin as equivalent to silage for feed, but when we have the problem of feeding many cows, it is much easier to build a silo that will hold several tons of silage than to build a receptacle for several tons of pumpkins. Moreover, the pumpkins must be cold enough to prevent them from decaying, for the air will get in to any receptacle in which they can be placed. With silage, the tempera ture makes little difference If it does not reach the point where it freezes. I have found in the feeding of pump kins that we can feed about 40 pounds per day per cow to advantage, and with seme cows the milk production will be greatly increased. I have, how ever, had occasional cows where the effect of feeding pumpkins was to cause the cows to lay on fat and de crease their milk production. There are very few experiments to which we can point relative to the value of feeding pumpkins. In one experiment that I have in mind there was a gain of C per cent more milk when pump kins were fed than before they were admitted into the ration. This was the result, too, when the dry matter was so decreased in the ration that the increase of milk, based on the units of dry matter in the feed, amounted to 10 per cent. The milk did not in any way deteriorate in quality. In another test with which I am familiar the cows fed on pumpkins prouueed about 5 per cent more milk than cows fed on silage, and when compared with dry bay the increase of milk was very great. The health of the cows was not impaired by this large pumpkin ration, nor did the but ter made show any bad effect. The great advantage about feeding pump kins is that the men that have no silos can feed them, and nearly all men that keep cows have no silos. Silos are numerous only in regions devoted very generally to the making of but ter. Gprge Ellis. Caldwell Co., Ky. Cucumber Salad. Our cucumber salad is a dish we rel ish all the winter. To make it peel about 100 cucumbers and a quarter peck of small onions and cut them into thin slices; cover with salt and stani' in the sun for six hours, rinse and stand in clear, cold water for one hour For the dressing, take a box of tlu best mustard, put into it a little salt pour in enough olive oil to stir easily and add vinegar and oil alternately til' thin enough to pour smoothly. Put the cucumbers in jars, cover with th J dressing and seal the jars. S. A. 'ton fls.T jf rj$' i- 'iLftBEEfSKv Organizing For Egg Selling. It has often occurred to me that we farmers should take measures to dis pose of our eggs in a systematic man ner. I have been reading a great deal about what Denmark is doing in the way of egg associations, especially for those that are to be exported. Their plan is probably familiar to many readers of the Farmers' Review. I need only say that large syndicates of farmers are organized for the collec tion and sale of eggs by a central bureau. Every farmer that belongs to one of these syndicates has to conduct himself according to the rules laid down, and on the third violation of the rules is expelled from the syndicate. As membership in the syndicate is very valuable, the members are care ful to conduct themselves according to the general plan. Even egg that is laid is stamped with the number of the farmer, the number of the syndi cate, and the day on which the egg was laid. These eggs all go to the central agency and are sorted accord ing to the dates of being laid. The consumer knows just how old the egg is when he gets it. If by chance a farmer puts in an egg that is past its prime he is fined heavily for it, and the third repetition of the mistake will cost him his membership. This pre vents bad eggs getting into the con signments. The result is that the buy ers know about their eggs, and the consumption of them is increased. I believe that it would be perfectly cates in this country. We Americans feasible for us to organize such syndi do not readily fall into the syndicate idea, because we have found it so easy to dispose of our eggs without making very much effort, but I am certain that the price we receive for eggs is very much less than it would be under a systematic collection and sale. I think the consumer pays enough for them, but there is too wide a differ ence between what the consumer pays and what the farmer receives. When the fanners dispose of their eggs, they are competing with one another, while many of the buyers are members of syndicates of produce dealers that have eliminated the competitive fea ture from the buying side of their business. They agree upon a price, above which they cannot go, hut which may be reduced as much as possible. I believe that this is to the disad vantage of the fanners, and that it we had a large number of syndicates for the collection and distribution ol eggs, we would be able to sell to a little better advantage. I believe that the producers of the eggs should re ceive a higher price than the man that simply handles them. Phoebe Caldwell. Butler Co., Ohio. Water Glass. From time to time we receive in quiries relative to the use of water glass as a means for preserving eggs. We can, without hesitancy, recom mend this as probably the best pre servative to be found, this being proved by tests made both in this country and in Europe. Water glass is really soluble glass. It has two forms in commerce, one known as silicate of sodium, and the other as silicate of potassium. This may be purchased in the form of powder, or in the form of a liquid which has the taste of syrup. It has long been used for rendering fabrics incombustible and for hardening petrified woods. We believe that many of our readers should give this a trial. There should be about ten times as much water as water glass, and this water glass should be thoroughly mixed with the water. This may be placed in a jai and the eggs placed within it, but they should not come nearer to the top than two inches. As water evaporates very rapidly, and would soon leave the tops of the eggs uncovered and exposed to the air, the jar should be kept tightly covered. Farmers' Re view. New Colors in Poultry. We hear a great deal about new col ors in poultry, nearly all of the stand ard breeds now having buff or some other color grafted onto them. These new colors are very fancy and very pretty, but the farmer should under stand that they are not at all so en during as the old colors, so far as their continuance in the flock is con cerned. Thus the new colors do not re-appear in the young birds very largely, and it would take very many years to fix these colors so that they would re-appear as often as do the standard colors. The farmer, when he buys fowls, needs something useful. If he is to breed to a standard, he wants a standard that is not variable. These new colors make it very diffi cult for the farmer to breed his flocks true to color. Unless he wants to produce breeding birds for sale, or show birds, we see no reason why he should forsake the old colors. Good and Poor Breeders. The quality of a hog as a breeder de pends largely on the conditions under which he is born and reared. There are enervating conditions that take the breeding force out of a hog. One of these is lack of exercise and the other is the deprivation of a food that makes muscle and strong bone. There are several elements that it is necessary to combine to make vigor. One of these is potential energy, which we get from the fats and starches oi .oods. The other most important one .s the nitrogen, which is of prime im ortance in making a muscle that will oe able to use the potential energj lerived from the starches and fats. Too much energy and too little muscle .s as bad a combination as a great steam power in a weak boiler. Dis aster is sure to result. A Temple for Serpents. In a little town in the kingdom of Dahomey is a temple devoted to the .orsbip of serpents. There are always nore than 1.000 snakes in it, which are arefully tended by priests. The :nakes are fed on birds and frogs rought in by natives as sacrificial -fferings. BWEN1WN AND nPfeYtMW Skating Boat a New Invention. After submarines, supermarines. The French, and one of the French, a M. de Lambert, invented the innova tion and call it a skating boat, be cause of its gliding along the surface of the water by means of five in clined planes fixed on its bottom at certain distances. When the boat is not moving these inclined planes are several centimeters below water, but as soon as the twelve horse power motor engine starts the inclined planes are raised and the boat soon glides on a mixture of air and water until, as the resistance is diminished, it is re ported to attain rapidly a speed of from twenty-six to twenty-eight knots, a velocity which motor boats of fifty horse power cannot always compass. The new boat is said to be handled with much ease and pauses as soon as the engines pause, for the planes be ing immersed suddenly form a most powerful brake with almost instantan eous action. The largest boat in the world for times past or present is to come from England, an Atlantic liner measuring 7S0 feet in length, with four propellers and CO.000 horse power, developed by turbine machin ery and requiring about thirty months to build. Swinging Cradle. Nobody receives more care and at tention than the baby, everybody seeming to vie with one another in do ing everything possible to make life for it comfortable. Still, at times the mother has other duties that need im mediate attention, and unless she has somebody to help her to take care of the baby these duties are left undone. Vn Iowa man has devised a swinging cradle, which, he claims, will be a help to all mothers. The cradle is suspended by means of rods on a spir al spring, the latter being attached to a beam and brace fastened at any convenient place. A slight push of the cradle sets it in motion, the spring keeping it moving up and down for quite a long time. Oftentimes all the bah' needs to keep him quiet is a slight rocking movement of this kind, and, no doubt, this device would lully serve the purpose intended. This de vice can also be detached and re moved from one room to another, sep arate permanent fastenings only be ing necessary. Cold Storage Sunlight. Cold storage sunlight in the form of coal versus the fresh article as sources of energy interest a man of Bombay, who says that "the various sources of energy in the earth may be 'ivided into two kinds viz.: income as arising from the daily receipt of thermal energy from the sun. which consists in the growth of vegetables ot all kinds, of stored energy in ele- I vat-d water, etc.; and of 'saving.' which corsists of stores of vegetable products, such as coal and petroleum, etc. At present we are making a most inordinate use of the latter, while in the main ignoring the lavish annual donations from Helios. After many years study it has been found cheap er to plow and sow eucalyptus than to import coal, the dry timber being as serted to be far more efficient than im ported coal and greater in thermal value, bulk for bulk. This is a specula tion over which we have been exercis ing our minds for over twenty years and for which we believe there is still a solution to be found oi value ines timable to humanity." American Cookery in France. If Americans have sat at the feet of Parisian chefs to be instructed in cuisine there are those in Paris who are now getting points from Uncle Sam's kitchen. Two American shops selling popcorn and other Yankee dainties have opened in the French ; capital and have caused Parisians to J devote more serious attention to j maize, which with wheat and rice con stitute the world's principal cereals. On the recommendation of physicians the cultivating of maize as well as Its industrial uses, which are as yet in their infancy, are about to undergo a beneficial change. This is particular ly the case with the confectioners and oatissiers. who for some time have been experimenting with the new food. Many agreeable surprises are in store for gourmets, and all ttude Irom maize. Odd Form of Coal Discovered. One of Colorado's greatest discover ies in the form of innovation in coal is interesting experts and scientists in that state, where a deposit four and a half feet in thickness has been pros pected for two wiles in extent and has yielded coal la the strikingly pe culiar form of little cubes and hexa-zon-shaped columns. It separates eas ily, the seanre give off little dirt or dust, it burns with a blue flame, re tains heat o tong time, and makes lit tle ash. It breaks to a small nut size and is considered suitable for hard coal burners and grates. Many regard the now coal as one of the most valu able find in this almost unknown em pire of riches. Reduces Cost of Steel. An ironmaster in South Wales claims to have invented a process by which the cost of making steel can be reduced 20 per cent. TO HOLD 4,000 BUSHELS. Design for Granary Easily Filled anc? Kept in Order. What dimensions would a granary have to be to hold 4,000 bushels of grain, and is it necessary to have the bins made Inside? Can you give a plan of a cheap building (lumber), to be erected some 30 or 40 miles from a railway? One thickness of boards would do. A granary to hold 4,000 bushels of grain should be 34x40x10 feet high. It is a good plan to have bins on each side and a passage through the cen A Passase C feet wide. 15 Iims !xU ft. D Doors. ter. When filling, fill the bins first and if more room is required the pas sage can be filled. This will help to keep the grain from heating as well as being handy. Have ventilators in the roof. The frame of the building can be built with 2xC-inch studding, care being taken to have a good solid foundation, with sleepers or cross sills running underneath the joists, eight feet apart, so as to prevent the floor from settling. Have sleepers or cross sills running underneath from plate to End iVew. plate every eight feet to keep the building from spreading. A gable roof is suitable. Painting a Frame House. Please publish directions for paint ing a frame house outside, eitner white or light yellow. Would you recommend raw or boiled linseed oil? Which oil will wear the best? Would you use any turpentine? Would it make any difference if it had previously had a coat of paint? What is the cause of paint peeling off? To paint a house first give the knots a dressing of shellac, then apply the paint in two coats, allowing the first coat to dry before applying the sec ond, which is composed of about four gallons of oil and forty pounds of lead for every one hundred yards of surface to be painted. Raw and boiled oil mixed equally are generally used. Either cue will do for outside work, but the boiled oil will dry much quick er than the raw oil. There is also less danger of the work being damaged by rain when the raw oil is used. Not unless it is necessary to thin the paint. Not unless it is scaling off. If this is the case remove the scales. The pulling off of paint is usually due to the use of an inferior brand at the outset. White People Growing Smaller. Size and sufficiency are not neces sarily associated, as is shown by the way the Japanese have outwitted and outdone their Russian enemies in strategy and in combat. Neverthe less, it is not a good sign to find a people diminishing in size, and the English people are properly disturbed at finding that such is the case with them. There improper nourishment is supposed to be the leading cause, but Dr. Anna Shaw reminds us that the American people are on the verge oi taking the same turn. A Brockton shoe manufacturer already claims tc note a sign of degradation in a falling off in the demand for the larger sizet of men's shoes and predicts that il nothing intervenes to prevent we shal be no larger on the average in another 100 years than the present Japs oi Frenchmen. Nebraska State Journal. Ants Built Cow Sheds. One of the most interesting studies of insect life is the relationship be tween ants and plant lice, or aphids These plant lice supply honeydew from the juices which they take as food from plants. The ants are very fond of this sweet substance, and care for the aphids in a manner that seems to us surprisingly intelligent. They sometimes carry them bodily to a bet ter feeding ground and drive away certain of their enemies. It is claimed that they even build sheds of mud in the crotches of shrubs and small trees. On account of this insect rela tionship one may truthfully call the ants "farmers" and aphids "cows," and these protecting mud cases "cow sheds." St. Nicholas. Aristocratic Milkmaid. Lord Carew, the English nobleman, is a farmer of renown and owns a herd of Jerseys of rare strain and milk-giving qualities. It is Lady Ca rew's delight to go. milkmaid fashion. in short nkirt and low-cut bodice, and fill a bright tin pail with the creamy yield. Sh is an expert milker and fan put Jiany of the dairymaids to blush ii. rapidity and in obtaining milk frcm the most fractious cow of the herd. Of course, it is pure sport for her ladyship and nothing pleases her more than to invite aristocratic friends to watch her as she plays the part of milkmaid. g W j I ' ' 14 ft . J ! I 6 8 a: & B : & B 2S-'-. ' k .: r h t .! if I I 5 vm ?. h m m :4ii xi Vt'-l v? rz&- t : o H :3 m . ! -? f. 'X K Q-4 &M&J