a- f. , v . J f'"-' sTT v f X 1", . if IK hi' i - 18 ti I Columbus Journal R. a STROTHER, Editor. F. K. STROTHER, Manager. COLUMBUS. NEB. Tho New Footbair. Daring the past two months advo cates and opponents of football and hose who regard it dispassionately as a human activity, to be reckoned with and understood, have had oppor tunity to see it played under the new rales. For some years educators and parents objected that the game was aurally and physically injurious. Some good players, frank enough to. brave the charge of disloyalty, con fessed that the game was all work aad little sport. Spectators protested .that the play was a formless struggle of massed power, not intelligible, nor pleasant to watch, except for thrills of partisan loyalty. After long con fereace the rules were changed. It is evident that the changes were real and in the right direction. The play is now more open. There is more chance for agility and speed, less, scrimmage and shock of mere weight and muscle. The players cover mora ground in a given series of plays. Offenses against good conduct ara easier for the officials to see and pun ish than in the old dense formations. From all parts of the country come expressions of satisfaction with the improvement Spectators find it more interesting to watch. Players seem to enjoy it better. Besides observing the formal rules of the game, players have felt that football was on trial, and have evidently tried to show a good spirit Several prominent edu cators who opposed the old game think that the new game has earned its right to an extended probation. There is room for further improve ments, remarks the Youth's Compan (ion. Undesirable roughness is still possible. Those whose duty it is to frame the. rules can proceed on the basis of this year's experience toward yet better game. The real faults Jie in loss of temper under excitement and the presence of a spirit which idrives contestants to try to win at all costs. Football cannot be made a (satisfactory game by mere changes in Its outward form; real improvement must be in the spirit of the contest 0 is ' HHa ZJSiBBtt- sAbbbbbbbbV ar m. K 'mmmmmmmmmmmmmr .9!mamt&mmmBBBBBS BBmmmmmmmmmmmmmBBn THE DELUGE ZIVTOGBAHAMPfiaLLJra taamKSHr&arim xrv. OF A -,. a I I To Work Together. An address before a woman's club is not the place, nor Is the president of the National Federation of Wom en's clubs the source, from which men look for understanding of their work and methods. Nevertheless, a vote of cordial appreciation and com mendation has lately come from that place and that source. "The man makes the best club-woman," said the speaker. "Men get things done, and they are so fine and loyal." Did the president wish to imply that women are not loyal? No, but she argued for a more catholic spirit and a broader tolerance among women a greater willingness to take one an other for granted. Here, indeed, is lone respect in which men have oppor tunities to excel, remarks Youth's (Companion. Their business life brings them into contact with men of all (sorts of religious beliefs, of various Nationalities and all shades of cultiva tion and attractiveness; and the club Jlfe and political life of men is marked by the same characteristics. .The effect is a growth of tolerance 'which makes for practical achieve ment as well as for comfort and the Enenities of life. Many men find ey can agree to work with others for one thing in which they are inter- tested, although they may differ radi cally on other things. "That other (woman, that woman who is so differ ent from you. who is a little less cul jtivated. a trifle 'impossible. " said the president of the federation, "she. too, (belongs to this movement and we jaaust let her in." Novelists, some of whom may never feave owned a dress coat used to be fond of drawing, in their tales, a sharp social distinction between per sons who "dressed for dinner" and those who did not Now the editor of British medical journal has been discussing and commending from a hygienic point of view the habit of dressing for dinner. Everyone knows that a change of clothing is often re freshing. The English editor believes that the effect is physical as well as mental, or physical through the men tal stimulus, and advises that even the hard-working clerk, the shopkeep er and the laboring man cast oft their workaday clothes and put on clean clothing for the evening meal, when Ithe toil of the day is over. The American method of sowing wheat has been introduced in Asiatic Turkey. If the sultan has any regard for some of the ancient institutions of iris kingdom he will see to it that the American method of sowing wild oats Is kept out Georgia justice of the peace dropped dead the other day as be was about to kiss the bride after having performed a wedding ceremony. There have always been many who regarded this practice as harmful. The United States eovernmont- i. said to be after the Wright brothers' (aeroplane, and has made an offer, provided the brothers show that they can fly the coop. Things are jumbled in this world. No sooner had the shah of Persia .granted his country a constitution than his own went on the blink. A fisherman claims to have caught a skate weighing 144 pounds at Bally cotton, Ireland. He certainly did have skate oa- tO ME STRANGE LAPSES LOVER. But before there was time for me to get a distinct impression, that ugly shape of cynicism had disappeared. "It was a shadow I myself cast upon her," I assured myself, and once more she seemed to me like a clear, calm lake of melted snow from the moun tains. "I can see to the pure white sand of the very bottom," thought I. Mystery there was, but only the mys tery of wonder at the apparition of such beauty and purity in such a world as mine. True, from time to time, there showed at the surface or vaguely outlined in the depths, forms strangely out of place in those unsul lied waters. But I either refused to see or refused to trust my senses. I had a fixed Ideal of what a woman should be; this girl embodied that ideal. "If you'd only give up your cigar ettes," I remember saying to her when we were a little better acquainted, "you'd be perfect" She made an impatient gesture. "Don't!" she commanded almost an grily. "You make me feel like a hypo crite. You tempt me to be a hypocrite Why not be content with woman as she is a human being? And how could I any woman not an idiot be alive for twenty-five years without learning a thing or two? Why should any man want It?" "Because to know is to be spattered and .stained," said I. "I get enough of people who know, down town. Up town I want a change of air. Of course, you think yon know the world, but you haven't the remotest concep tion of what it's really like. Some times when I'm with you, I begin to feel mean and and unclean. And the feeling grows on me until it's all I can do to restrain myself from rush ing away." She looked at me critically. "You've never had much to do with women, have you?" she finally said lowly in a musing tone. "I wish that were true almost," re plied I, on my mettle as a man, and; re sisting not without effort the impulse to make some vague "confessions" boastings disguised as penitential ad missions after the customary mascu line fashion. She smiled and one of those dis quieting shapes seemed to me to be floating lazily and repellently down ward, out of sight "A man and a woman can be a great deal to each other, I believe," said she; "can be married, and all that and remain as 6trange to each other as if they had never met more hopelessly strang e." "There's always a sort of mystery," I conceded. "I suppose that's one of the things that keep married people interested." She shrugged her shoulders she was in evening dress. I recall, and there was on her white skin that in tense, transparent bluish tinge one sees on the new snow when the sun comes out "Mystery!" she said impatiently. There's no mystery except what we ourselves make. It's useless per fectly useless," she went on absently. "You're the sort of a man who, if a woman cared for him, or even showed friendship for him by being frank and human and natural with him, he'd pun ish her for it by by despising her." I smiled, much as one smiles at the efforts of a precocious child to prove that it is a Methuselah in experience. "If you weren't like an angel in comparison with the others I've known." said I. "do you suppose I could care for yon as I do?" I saw my remark irritated her, and I fancied it was her vanity that was offended by my disbelief in her knowl edge of life. I hadn't a suspicion that I had hurt and alienated her by slam ming in her face the door of friend ship and frankness her honesty was forcing her to try to open for me. In my stupidity of imagining her not human like the other women and the men I had known, but a creature apart and in a class apart I stood day after day gaping at that very door, and won dering how I could open it how pene trate even to the courtyard of that vestal citadel. So long as my old fashioned belief that good women were more than human and bad women less than human had influ enced r.e only to a sharper lookout in dealing with the one species of woman I then came in contact with, no harm to me resulted, button, the contrary good whoever got into trou ble through walking the world with sword and sword arm free? But when, under the spell of Anita Eilersly, I dragged the "superhuman 'goodness" part of my theory down out of the clouds and made it my guardian and guide really, it's a miracle that I es caped from the pit into 'which that lunacy pitched me headlong. I was not content with idealizing only her; I went on to seeing good, and only good, in everybody! the millennium was at hand; all Wall street was my friend; whatever I wanted would happen. And when Roebuck, with an air like a ben ediction from a bishop backed by a cathedral organ and full choir, gave me the tip to buy coal stocks, I can nonized him on the apot Never did a Jersey "jay" in Sunday clothes and tallowed boots respond to a bunco steerer's greeting with a gladder smile than mine to that pious old past-master of craft I will say in justice to myself, though it Is also in excuse, that if I had known him intimately a few years earlier, I should have found it all but impossible to fool myself. For he had not long been in a position where he could keep wholly detached from -asEBEL. oona&y$ the crimes he committed for his ben efit and by his order, and where he could disclaim responsibility and even knowledge. The great lawyers of the country have been most ingenious in developing corporate law in the direc tion of making the corporation a com plete and secure shield between the beneficiary of a crime and its conse quences; but before a great financier can use this shield perfectly, he must build up a system he must find lieu tenants with the necessary coolness, courage and cunning; he must teach them to understand his hints; he must educate them, not to point out to him the disasagreeable things involved In his orders, but to execute unquestion ably, to efface completely the trail be tween him and them, whether or not they succeed In covering the round about and faint trail between them selves and the tools that nominally commit the crimes. Wilmot was the instrument he em ployed to put the coal industry into condition for "reorganization." He bought control of one of the coal rail roads and made Wilmot president of it. Wilmot taught by twenty years of his service, knew what was expect ed of him, and preceded to do it He put in a "loyal" general freight agent who also needed no instructions, but disaster, buying up more and more wreckage; third, reorganise; fourth, offer the new stocks and bonds to the public with a mighty blare of trum pets which produces, a boom market; fifth, unload on the public, pass divi dends. Issue unfavorable statements, depress prices, buy back cheap what you have sold dear. Repeat ad In finitum, for the law is for the laughter of the strong, and the public is an eager ass. To keep up the fic tion of "respectability." the inside ring divides into two parties for its cam paignsone party to break down, the other to build up. One takes the profits from destruction and departs, perhaps to construct elsewhere; the other takes the profits from construc tion and departs, perhaps to destroy elsewhere. As their collusion is mere ly tacit, no conscience need twitch. I must add that at the time of which I am writing. I did not realize the ex istence of this conspiracy. I knew, of course, that many lawless and savage things were done, that there were ras cals among the high financiers, and that almost all financiers now and then did things that were more or less rascally; but I did not know, did not suspect that high finance was through and through brigandage, and that the high financier, by long .and unmolested practice of brigandage, had come to look on it as legitimate, lawful busi ness, and on laws forbidding or ham pering it as outrageous, socialistic, an archistic "attacks upon the social or der!" Roebuck had given me the impres sidh that it would be six months, at least, before what I was in these fatu ous days thinking of as "our" plan for "putting the coal industry on a sound business basis" would be ready for the public So, when he sent for me short ly after I became engaged to Miss Ei lersly, and said:' Melville will publish the plan on the first of next month and will open the subscription books on the third a Thursday." I was taken by surprise and was anything but pleased. His words meant that, if I wished to make a great fortune, now IfJlilll r - M "V m t . JBBBBBBBBBBBBEBm 'CT BBBBBwBBBBa jBBBaBWBBV m ''ZV ' '& "I HADN'T A SUSPICION THAT I HAD HURT HER." busied himself at destroying his own and all the other coal roads by a sys tem of secret rebates and rate cut tings. As the other roads, one by one, descended toward bankruptcy, Roe buck bought the comparatively small blocks of stock necessary to give him control of them. When he had power over enough of them to establish a partial monopoly of transportation in and out of the coal districts, he was ready for his lieutenant to attack the i mining properties. Probably his or ders to Wilmot were nothing more definite or less innocent than: "Wil mot my boy, don't you think you and I and some others of our friends ought to buy some of those mines, if they come on the market at a fair price? Let me know when you hear of any attractive investments of that sort" That would have been quite enough to "tip it off" to Wilmot that the time had come for reaching out from con trol of railway to control of mine. He lost no time; he easily forced one mining property after another into a position where its owners were glad were eager to sell all or part of the wreck of it "at a fair price" to him and Roebuck and "our friends." It was as the result of one of these moves that the great Manasquale mines were so hemmed in by ruinous freight rates, by strike troubles, by floods from broken machinery and mysteriously leaky dams, that I was able to buy them "at a fair price" that is. at less than one-fifth their value. But at the time and for a long time afterward I did not know, on my honor did not suspect, what was the cause, the sole cause, of the change of the coal region from a place of peaceful industry, content with fair profits, to an industrial chaos with ruin impending. Once the railways ami mining com panies were all on the verge of bank ruptcy. Roebuck and his "friends" were ready to buy, here control for purposes of speculation, there owner ship for purposes of permanent in vestment This is what is known as the reorganizing stage. The processes of high finance are very simple first, buy tha comparatively small holdings necessary to create confusion and dis aster; second, create confusion and was the time to buy coal stocks, and buy heavily for on the very day of the publication of the plan every coal stock would surely soar. Buy I must; not to buy was to throw away a for tune. Yet how could I buy when I was gambling in textile up to my limit of safety, if not beyond? I did not dare confess to Roebuck what I was doing in textile. He was bitterly opposed to stock gambling, denouncing it as both immoral and unbusinesslike. No gambling for him! When his business sagacity and fore sight (?) informed him a certain stock was going to be worth a great deal more than it was then quoted at he would buy outright in large quanti ties; when that same sagacity and foresight of the fellow who has him self marked the cards warned him that a stock was about to fall, he sold outright But gamble never! . And I felt that. If he should learn that I had staked a large part of my entire its tune on a single gambling operatioa, he would straightway cut me off from his confidence, would look: oa me as too deeply tainted by my long career as a "bucket-shop" man to fee worthy, of full rank aad power as a financier. Financiers do not gamble. Their oaly vice is grand larceny. All this was flashing .through my mind while I was thanking aim. "I am glad to have such a long foro warning," I was saying. "Caa I be of use to you? Yoa know my machinery Is perfect I caa buy anything and la any quantity without starting rumors and drawing the crowd." "No, thank you, Matthew." was his answer. "I have all of those stocks I wish at present" Whether It is peculiar to me, I don't know probably not but my memory is so constituted thst it takes an in delible and complete impression of whatever is sent it by my eyes and ears; and just as b? looking closely you can find in a photographic plate a hundred details that escape ycy glance, so on those memory plates of mine I often find Iocs afterward many and many a detail that escaped me when my eyes and ears were taking the impression. On my memory plate of that moment in my interview with Roebuck,. I find details so significant that my failing to note them at the time shows how unfit I then was to guard my Interests. For instance, 1 find that just before he spoke those words declining my assistance and implying that he had already 'in creased his holdings, he opened and closed his hands several times, finally closed and clinched them a sure sign of energetic nervous action, and ia that particular Instance a sign of de ception, because there was no energy in his remark and no reason for en ergy. I am not superstitious, but I be lieve in palmistry to a certain extent Even more than the face are the hands a sensitive recorder of what ia passing in the mind. But I was then too intent upon my dilemma carefully to study a man who had already lulled me into absolute confidence in him. I left him as soon as he would let me go. His last words were, "No gambling, Matthew! No abuse of the opportunity God is giving us. Be content with the just profits from investment I have seen gam blers come and go, many, of them able men very able men. But they have mpltMl nwav and when are thvT i And I have remained and have ia creased. I feel that I can trust you. You began as a speculator, but success has steadied you, and you have put yourself on the firm ground where we see the solid men into whose hands God has given the development of the abounding resources of this beloved country of ours." Do you wonder that I went away with a heart full of shame for the gambling projects my head was plan ning upon the Information that good man had given me? "You've gone back to gambling lately. Matt," said I to myself. "You've been on a bender, with yonr head afire. You must get out of this tex tile business as soon as possible. But it's good sound sense to plunge on the coal stocks. In fact, your profits there would save you if by some mischance textile should rise instead of fall. Act ing on Roebuck's tip isn't gambling, it's insurance." I emerged to issue orders that soon threw into the National coal venture all I had not staked on a falling mar ket for textiles. I was not content as the pious gambling-hater. Roebuck, had begged me to be with buying only what stock I could pay for. I went plunging on. contracting for many times the amount I could have bought outright The next time I saw Langdon I was full of enthusiasm for Roebuck. I caa see his smile as he listened. "I had no idea you were an expert on the trumpets of praise. Blacklock." said he finally. "A very showy ac complishment." he added, "but rather dangerous, don't you think? The player may become enchanted by his own music." "I try to look on the bright side of things," said I. "even of human na ture." "Since when?" drawled he. I laughed a good, hearty laugh, for this shy reference to my affair of the heart tickled me. I enjoyed to the full only in long retrospect the look he gave me. "As soon as a man falls in love," said he, "trustees should be appointed to take charge of his estate." "You're wrong there, old man." I replied. "I've never worked harder or with a clearer head than since I learned that there are" I hesitated, and ended lamely "other things ia life." Langdon's handsome face suddenly darkened, and I thought I saw in his eyes a look of eavage pain. "I envy you." said he with an effort at his wonted lightness and cynicism. But that look touched my heart; I talked no more of my own happiness. To do so. I felt would be like bringing laugh ter into the house of grief. (To be Continued.) miFs IMS fcy MAI t pB JSBMJTV-fe??:-jOj:'-"- u9PJfL aBVeaBBBBnvBMxMri' lk-1- It's the blind farmer that puts blinders on his colt It's the cow, not the breed, that counts when figuring the profit Sheep prices keep up. Good profit in them. Get a few. Feed the sheep in good troughs. The ground is a poor feeding place. It pays swine. to cook the food for the The man who doesn't know bis hens is on the easy road to failure and loss. Poultry shows are good schools for those who are not hide-bound by pre judice and pet notions. Good feeding as well as good breed ing is essential in producing the su perior animal. Your farm is entirely what you make it By your methods you can run it up or down. Experiments with sulphate of iron show that it has value as a weed de stroyer. Pumpkins make good hog feed if cooked and mixed with corn meal and shorts, or any other meal. An occasional drink of milk is rel ished by the hens, and it is a help in egg production. The chemical value of peas for fer tilizer is in the nitrogen they bring to the soil. The well conducted poultry show will cater to the farmer and try to make him an interested visitor. Mark the pullets with a belt punch in the web between two toes. Mark all alike, and you can tell their age at a glance. The farmer who has never learned the lesson of sticktoitiveness in over coming obstacles will never cut very much of a furrow in farming. Don't take it for granted that' everytaiag is all right Keep a sharp J lookout for anything wrong among:, the sheep, or other farm stock. It ia easier to conquer disease ia its early stages than after it has gained a strong foothold. Did yoa ever stop to figure how large a percentage of sunshine that dast-aad cobwebs could abet oat ef the barn? Sunshine is the host ef tonics to pour iato the Mre stack quarters. The careless housewife floats eC many a pound of hatter during the season in the buttermilk which she draws off from the churn, If she has aot a strainer to catch the butter particles. These little flakes ef but ter seem so insignificant but la the aggregate they prove aa expensive waste. The first steel frame barn has been constructed by F. E. Dawley at Fayetteville. N. Y. It is a gigantic affair, capable of storing 509 tons of alfalfa hay. 159 tons of alfalfa ensil age, and 150 tons of corn ensilage, grain tor 50 cows and stable room for 50 milch cows for the produc tion of sanitary milk. W. H. Jordan. New York experi ment station, in speaking of pig feed ing, says: "I doubt the wisdom of. feeding pigs with oil meal at least ia anything more than very small qua-, tity. The oil meals are aot considV ered as desirable hog feeds, and I: would not ia any case put in more! than ten pounds of oil meal to 100' pounds of ground oats." The 6.000-acre government swamp land in Kalamazoo county, Michigan, is to be drained next summer at a; cost estimated at $15,000. when it Is' expected that it will be the finest of land for celery culture. Such is the progress of agricultural science. The waste places of the earth are being conquered and made to yield their fruits in their season. One of the important question which is up to the interstate com-? merce commission to answer Is whether the potato is a fruit Iti seems that the new railroad rate law permits the giving of transportation to caretakers who travel with per-, isbable fruit, and the potato carrying roads have been in the habit of giv- ing such transportation with potato shipments. What are you going to do with those calls from your flock? They are not fat enough to kill, and under the ordinary conditions they will not, fatten for market Try this plan: Put by themselves in quarters that are reasonably warm, and feed corn meal mash. In which oyster shell is' mixed. Crowd the feed, and ia a week or two you will be surprised to see what a marketable lot of birds you have. Warm food is enjoyed by the hogs in winter, and don't forget that the more food is enjoyed by the animals the more digestible it is. Don't talk about that waste piece of land. Find out how to treat it. what to do with it. and make it work for you. The oldest agricultural college in the country is said to be the Mich igan Agricultural college, which is 48 years old. A new apple picking record has been established by William Vine, of Greece, N. Y., who picked 63 barrels in one day. A half hour spent in quiet observa tion in the poultry house will tell you more about your hens than you can learn in any other way. Shivers are expensive blankets for the farmer to use for his stock. Es pecially is this true of the growing animals. Cow peas and crimson clover are sure improvers of the soil. Try them on that piece of poor land, and with the addition of a little fer tilizer you will be able to raise corn. The frost strikes deep in a well- drained soil, and the farmer knows what that means in pulverizing the soil and perparing it for next sea son's crops. ' Treasure the hickory trees you have on your farm. If prices continue to go up for this variety of wood, a hickory forest will be as good as a 'gold mine. Guimard the Idol of Paris The Great Dancer of the Great Days of the Ballet The elder Vestris, who flourished in the middle of the eighteenth century, called himself the "god of dancing." and declared in all sincerity and with out rebuke that his country had pro duced but three supreme men him self, Frederick the Great and Vol taire. On one occasion, when reprov ing his son Augustus for refusing to dance before the king of Sweden at the request of the king of France, he said that he would not tolerate any misunderstanding between the houses ( of Vestris and Bourbon, which had lived hitherto upon the most friend ly terms. Madeleine Guimard made her debut when she was 13 years of age, and for nearly 30 years kept all Paris wor shiping at her feet This was a suc cess of ait, and not of beauty, for Guimard was so aggressively thin that she was known as "the Spider." She discovered the great painter Da vid, who helped Fragonard to adorn her house with frescoes. Indeed, Fra gonard, for whose paintings to-day fabulous sums have been paid, lost his commission because he dared to fall in love with his patron. Guimard had a theater in her own house, and her entertainments there were deemed extravagant In an age of luxury. Paris could not spare her to London until she was past her for tieth year. She was a sort of boudoir adviser to Marie Antoinette, and so great was the esteem in which she was held that one of the most dis tinguished sculptors of the day mod eled her foot and when her arm was broken in a state accident a mass for her speedy recovery was cele brated at Notre Dame. Macmillan's Magazine. A successful strawberry grower says he has quit using fertilizer on strawberries grown for plants, but he gets his plants out as early as pos sible and gives them a top dressing of stable manure. Circulation. "I notice your esteemed contempo rary claims your edition never exceeds 500 copies," remarked the neutral ob server. "Yes." replied the editor of the Weekly Bazoo, "and his remarks have stirred up a good deal of bad blood in our office " "Bad blood? Ah! then your circula tion really is poor, 0"' The farm house bath room! Why not? Part of the store room off the kitchen can easily be partitioned off and fitted up. And the heat of a small oil stove will make it com totrable for bathing. Good brisk work for the cold day is the sharpening up of the saws, the grinding of the axes, and the filling of the wood box. You keep warm outside getting the wood, and you keep warm inside with the wood after it is laid in. Many of the apple trees growinf In this country are on stocks from the seeds of apples grown in France, for the reason that they come from the pulp from the cider mills which use a hardier apple for that purpose than is used in this country. There is a story going the rounds of a farmer who used an automobile horn to call his chickens. When he got them well trained, an automobile tooted its horn in passing, and his chickens started after the machine, I and 14 hens and two roosters ran I themselves to death. Another score i agalast the auto. An orchardist who has tried it for several seasons, says that if green boughs are scattered between, the rows of fruit trees it will prevent the mice from gnawing the bark of the trees, as they will prefer the tender bark of the twigs to the tough er bark of the trees. Worth trying, anyway, although it may encourage the breeding and protection of the mice. Along with the green boughs use a little poison to kill off the mice. or. better still, soak the boughs ia arsenic solution. Two lots of steers fed at the Kan sas experiment station, one lot fed with silage and the other without It were marketed with 25 cents per 109 pounds in favor of the silage fed steers. In this test silage was est!-' mated to be worth $3.29 per toa and. three tons of corn silage was equal' to one ton alfalfa hay. The silage lot were pronounced excellent cattle, fat enough for the ordinarv trade. The carcasses showed good quality with very little waste, and would be salable ia any market The American Cultivator complains of a condition that has long existed, namely, the neglect of the local mar ket by farmers. We have known the markets in towns in the peach belt to be absolutely bare of peaches in the height of the season, though eight or ten car loads of choice fruit might be shipped from the station daily. It is often impossible to get good butter, milk, apples, potatoes, and many other articles In the neigh borhood in which they are abundant ly produced, owing to the fact that everything is shipped to the cities, and often at lower prices than might' be obtained at home. The influence and power of organ ization is shown in the statement of President Miles of the National Asso ciation of Agricultural- Implement and Vehicle Manufacturers made at the thirteenth annual meeting of that organization recently held. He said that while in 1893 when the associa tion was formed, the exportation of farm tools and machinery amounted to only $5,000,000. ia 1900 it had reached $10,000,000. in 1905 it was $20.00.00. and this year it was $24 000.000. With our billions in crops and our millions in farm machinery, we are going a long ways towards farming and feeding the world. It Is interesting to note the differ ent ideas which farmers hold as to the meaning of rotation of crops. There are those who think that va riation in the succession of the crops grown means rotation. In tho literal-sense, of course, it is rotation. but not in the sense in which the term is used by the experiment sta tions. Wheat may be siufPfiirrf k barley, and barley by oats, and the bare fallow by wheat again, but this does not in the true sense mean rota tion. All these crops and also the bare fallow detract from the fertil ity of the soil, and put virtually noth ing into it in return. A true rotation has in it a soil builder such as grass, clover or green crops plowed under. The rotation described above will stimulate production for the time be ing, but it does so by depleting the sou more quiCKiy or Its fertility sy growing but oae crop. 4 H m A m , x . ,v - X . ' - -V k Z .v-X ti. W .- -'.' ti r7maanniaVHPiiv - "- " t- T .- " faAl