I . 4.4. ILaw it i F there are any two men In this wide world whs should meet and present each othrr proper greetings and mutual felicitations It la surely Theodore Roosevelt of Washington and Oy liter Bay and Charles Kushnlk of Eden. Wis. President Roosevelt is renowned far and wide as the strenuous advocate of the anti-race suicide propaganda. Mr. tvusnnix is not so greatly renowned, but Just the same these two men should meet and compare notes. For while Roosevelt Is by word of mouth and pen adjuring; his fellow men In this, our land of the free and small families, to raise many children to brighten their homes. Kushnlk Is and has been for the last twenty-four years following the president's precepts to the last letter. If President Roosevelt some bright Sunday afternoon would drive out to the little Kushnlk farm, which lies snug gled out of the way of the main road amid the hills of Pond du Lac eounty. near Eden, he would see a sight that would gladden his philoprogenitive heart At first. If he was un wise as to the state and number of the Kushnlk family, he would surely think that he had run Into a country party or social by mistake. He would see sixteen sturdy, robust, country children and young folk playing and sitting In the front yard. Eight of them would he boys and eight girls. They would range In age from the staid young married woman of 24 to a romping boy of 7, and If any one was at band who knows tha Kushnlk family he might explain to mm to mx&, atto of it- - little brighter, a little happier, and take a little of the work off the old folk So many children a trouble? Neln, neln, Mein Herr!" Mr. Kushnlk corroborates all that his wife says abctrt the many benefits snd Joys to be derived from 4 large fam ily. He says and listen, you husbands and wives who some times sit up nights worrying how to bring up the two ot three that you call your own that the family problem la qne that la easily solved. ' According to him the large family tr Its own solution, and the larger the better. " It Is not hard, and It Is not so expensive as some people might think to bring up and keep a family as big as ours," says he. "I came here to Fond uu Lac county twenty-two years ago. My wife and I were both young then, as we are still. We had two little daughters then and money enough to buy the twenty acres of land where the house now stands. That was all the land we had for a long time. The family grew Increased and multiplied. The first wing came when the family numbered six and the old nous was outgrown. It la comprised of three rooms and marks the progress of tb family from small to tmdlum site. Apparently the home with this wing added sufficed for several years, for the wing that grew out on the opposite side Is. by all evidences of the eyes, at least ten years newer. Ihls was built when there were ten little Kvishnlka to house and the family was mentioned about the countryside at " pretty big." But fame more than local was to come to the family, and the last wing on the house, which cropped out from the rear, attests to the day when Its numbers were sixteen. Potatoes averaged 130 bushels to the acre last year on the farm of Charles Kushnlk, and the market price was f I, so the house has recently experienced a complete coat ot paint, which makes the wings lock all of the same age, but the neighbors driving past will point to them as notches in the progress of the big family. "There's the six wing," they say. Indicating with their whips the first addition. "Then there's the ten, and behind Is the sixteen wing. Charlle'a family grew so fast he didn't have time to build a new house, so he Just slapped on an other wing whenever they grew short on hedrooma." Ann "Charlie." seeing the motion of the whip, comprehends and miles happily. 1 i m h a iV 4 V 4 A, 0 s Ight along at the rate of one every year, but we managed to make enough out of the twenty acre farm to support them. Income Increases with Family. I " How did we do It? Ha, ha! It la not hard. It does not cost much more to keep two young children than It does one when they are all good and healthy. With the advent o each child, of course, our expenses were Increased aome, but all the time the farm was beginning to produce more, too. "As the children grew larger of course It began to cost more to keep them. There were more pairs of shoes to buy, more clothes, and more food. When they got old enough to 40 to school there were books to buy. Sometimes there. were books and new clothes for twelve children to be bought at one time when the school opened In the fall, but we alw.ws managed to buy them and also managed to keep the children in school. It cost much more than the average family.' But it Is In the autumn, after the summer's harvest is done, after the corn Is cut and shocked ready for husking, and the potatoes In the ground are clamoring to be di before the big frosts come, that the advantages of a big family, at least on a Wisconsin farm, are to be best underi stood. . ji A, J V AA Not Worried by Lack of Help. . There Is a twenty acre field of potatoes to be dug and picked. It takes a man a day to dig half an acre of po tatoes. The farmer must pay 2 a day and board for every rr.an whom he gets to help. When potatoes ripen late the farmer with a couple of thousand dollars' worth of them In the ground gets gray headed worrying about getting gooa l.elp and enough of It. Hut Charles Kushnlk of Eden wor ries not In this, the strenuous season for the Wisconsin farmer. Thi Sunday .Tribi-nb man's first Introduction to Mm and his family was the sight of five sturdy boys, five pretty girls, and two cheerful adulta putting a hole Into the twenty acre field at a bewildering rate. The five boys and the father were digging and the five girls followed, putting the tubers Into baskets as fast as they were taken from the ground. The mother walked about the field and beamed generously on them all. In another part of the big field another son had already started on the fall plowing. " You see how It Is that we could raise such a large family without any trouble and on such a small farm," said the father proudly. " I keep all the profits of the land In the family. It doesn't cost a cent for any of the work on the farm, and the work is done much better than any hlrea men would do it. Look at these boys and girls. Does It look as If they suffered any from lack of care and attention because they are part of such a number. No, they are all healthy and my wife and I are still young and strong. The farm here is a good one and the older children have gooo positions or have married well." So It would seem that the family problem Is no problem at all. but simply a foolish chimera that people have con jured up for their own disturbance. Mr. Kushnlk should know whereof he speaks, and he says so. All that Is neces sary, apparently, Is to arrange that the children be all strong and healthy, learn to love them and have a farm, preferably a potato farm, where the activities of the young may be utilized with due profit. '$7 t 1NL J 7 7 .Si tot J .3 the Illustrious visitor that this was Sunday afternoon and the KuBhnlk children were all at home today. 1 ' d J Proud of Family Rosier. Then Papa and Mamma Kushnlk would come out and proudly toll oft the long list of names and ages of then happy offspring on their fingers. These same names ana ng's tell a story that Is replete with human interest. The roster Is: If. -5 M l:Siilf if'i Mil I Hi v lf "ft, Oirls. Age. Lulu '. 24 Etta 23 Elisabeth 22 Minnie 21 Anna.. Martha Emma 14 Pauline, 7 , Twins 17 Boys. Age. Charles ...19 Frank 16 Ernest 15 Herman 13 Paul 12 Henry 11 Louis 7 John 6 v; 1 If there are any other fathers or mothers In this country who can show a list of their own children to equal this Charles Kushnlk and his good wife, Elizabeth, would like to know of them. If there are any families who are worried and troubled over the burden of two or three children they 4" 1 1 if 1 t ',ir". IV V- '5 0 Hit :3y A v i';vi'v mi :) . - v 9 f , V s WaJT im t Ml l- . r should list to the story of the Kusnnlk family and the wise words of the heads of It. Mr. Kushnlk and his wife have found little of the "woe and trials that are declared to be an Inevitable part of the upbringing of a large family. They have reared one of the largest and certainly the most unique family In the land, and they are not sorry for It. Sorry for It? On the con trary, they are glad and happy because Providence so boun tlfuly endowed them In the matter of progeny. Mr. Kushnlk Is a small man, a sturdy little German of the kind who came to this country from the fatherland and settled on a homestead When the middle west was consider ably less thickly populated than It is now and by sheer per severance and hard toil wrought farms and homes for them selves In the wilderness. The mother of the remarkable flock that bears his name Is, on the other hand, of the large. German type of house frau, and the fifty years to whlcn she owns have passed lightly over her head, and she Is to day possessed of the fat, red cheeks and the high spirits that onf e probably marked her as the belle of some little German village. Every Addition Brightens Home. She agrees heartily with her husband that a multiplicity of chiNren Is a Joy and pleasure to the heart forever, " Trouble to raise a large family?'' she repeats In answer to a question. "Where Is the trouble? Is it not . so that many hands make light work and many kinder make lignt In the home? Surely, no one will say that they are not glad tc- have one little darling to brighten their home. If one child makes the home so much happier does it not follow that two should make It twice as nappy, and sixteen eight times as happy as two? We have, found it so. Every one of these sixteen Is Jut as dear to Ul aj If be or she were the enly one. Every ons of them hjjlps to make tha bom a r- s -1 X - Here IswTTera the big family -began to belp. I fcou' I then and can now work my farm better, plant more actew, , and care for them better than any other farmer in Jhe county, and never had to pay one cent for hired help, fho children did It. As they grew up they learned to do . work of the 'farm and do it well. My farm looks iiae v garden In the summer time. There Isn't a foot of the land which can be broken that Isn't under the, plow and cultl ated as closely as a man will cultivate a little garden la' , his back yard. Other men might have bought more land ;i : they were In my place, but I know it Is better the way we ' bave It. 'k " That Is how we managed to care for our big family so ' easily. Of course. It might have "been harder In a city. Hera the more help you can bave on a farm the more money you can make out of It. Every year one of our children got big enough to start to work in the field we began to raise more and better crops. The expenses grew in tbe meanwhile, but we were always Just a little ahead." Farmhouse Indicates Family's Growth. The Kushnlk home is a low, substantial farmhouse. A close observer can nearly read the Increase and growth oi the family In Its construction. First there is the original farmhouse, the little square, unostentatious, one story, four room styia that farmers first' build when their family Is small and the funds limited. From each side of thli struc ture addlUops and wings have grown as the tribe of Kushnis H -