ALFA MORTGAGE LIFTER try of How the Hardy Crop Wai Brought to This Country. ERILOUS TEIP TO GET IT INP Which Ad mlmr to K.trrr .-re of Land In Kntlre WMltr ouutryVrot. Hansen l.ertsres. Little known anil little grown eight year siro, alfalfa has become a western staple rrop, a crop upon which the horded of men who have sought anil who are seeking ortune In the still new west may rely to bring them a mire ami certnln income. siientiHts along one line and an other have been thinking, planning, ex perimenting anil accomplishing result" for '.he benefit of men. laborer In the a ienoe of horticulture have not been Idle. The progress that haa been made by the "hlrdmen." the men who have devoted themselves to the Invention of new labor waving machinery and to the Improvement of old, and the men who have labored for better methoda of transportation of prod ucts of farm anil factory la no greater than la, In Ita way the progress that has been made by those who have spent their yeara In research and experiment to know how productive soil may be made more productive, how the valuable farm may be made even more valuable. The story of alfalfa, a story that prop erly can be described by no weaker word than "wonderful," will be told In all Its Interesting details at the Omaha Land Show. Not the least Interesting chapter of the atory will be that which recites the experiences of Prof. Niels R. Hansen of South Dakota In his tours abroad, on the i., khlsteppes of Siberia, on plulns In Asia, In other out-of-the-way places In search of knowledge which would enable him to nake alfalfa what he believed It should be a hardy plant, a plant that has within It power to resist the cold and prosper when chill northern wind drive over it, power to live and thrive in the heat of western summer. Professor Telia the Story. How well Prof. Hansen aucceededand that was well will be told at the show , by the professor himself; but the visitors j will not have to take his word for any thing. Every statement's proof will he found In the alfalfa exhibit, which will be one of the largest und most elaborate to be seen at the show. The Northwestern railroad, which Ih u."if lnn the cultivation of the plant along its JInes. will offer the alfalfa exhibit. The rall- , road, quick to realize the value of the comparatively new product of the soil, la specially anxious that western land own ers, as well as those who expect to own Western land, come to know the value of alfalfa as a regenerator of the soil as well urn a valuable crop for feeding purposes. William James of Ikirchester, Neb., will fe in charge of the exhibit. Mr. James managed alfalfa exhibits at the National Corn expoHltton In Omaha, at the Trans mixslsittit exposition In Omaha, and at the LoutHanu, Purchase exposition. Ous Kense, of k-Sar-Hen fame, will be re sponsible for the mechanical effects In the huge alfalfa booth. Prof. Hansen's experiments with a view producing a hardy alfalfa have resulted "-!n success w hich scientists and agricultural experts agree means many dollars of In creased value for every acre of western lands. The history of alfalfa In America dates hack to the Spanish conquest of Mexico, when the plant first was brought from . northern African plains. Yeara later Harrl t "on Parker, a Kansas civil engineer, saw the alfalfa fields in Old Mexloo. lie knew no reason why there should not be similar fields in the United States In the west and ' in the northwest tu inin i i The plant grew' and prospered In many sections. The next great step was taken hy Prof. Hansen. In 1M7 he was called bpon by "Tama Jim" Wilson, I'nlted States secretary of ngrlculture, to go to eastern EllrnriK N n 't nMtani anl nant..! I quest of drouth-resisting and cold-renlsttng - plants. Little further Instruction was given. I Secretary Wilson knew that Hansen knew just what to do. Makes llartl Jonrner. Much of the wild region which the plant 4 explorer had to 'traverse the heart of Asia " , Journey and he knew It. Hansen hurried to St. Petersburg and I thence southeastward to Nljul Novgorod, the BCena of TltlMallt'a vrait annual m I- --was mninar Vlrirlfl SOU It mritm rw, nlrn fi Hers he thought he might find the hardy plants. He did. H flew down the Volga, east to the Vral mountains, southward a ways, then east and over the south centrol Russian plains to Kief, Only a little while he stopped In Kief; then he was off for Odessa, whence he went to Transcaucasia, the "land of .Noah's Ark." that storm center between Europe and Asia. Crossing the Caspian sea, he plunged -.Into the land of the Turkoman. Here he ? knew he wai on the trail of hardy alfalfi. ' With the aid of an Interpreter he was able to make Inquiries that convinced him he " iisui. niuvrn, army oixteer. travel ers were questioned. ' Even horses 'were approached on the subject." Hansen found they lived largely on alfalfa. ' Onward across the Oxus river went the explorer. He found that for centuries central Asiatic civilization had existed on alfalfa. What had sustained a seml-chiliiatl.m In the east lor so long a time he knew must be Immeasurably valuable to the people of an enlightened west. He was still more firmly convinced that he was on th. trail of an alfalfa thoroughly hardy a variety Inured to drouth and cold through thousands of yeara of natural methods of cross breeding Th signs still pointed northward and east- ium, iior me ciiinaiB a.H still more f severe. , 1 he man pressed on. stopping only now and then to ret-t or to question some Turke stan plowman with camels hitched to crude Instruments hundreds of years behind times, according to the view a western ( farmer would take. Mode Ih n Taraataaa. A lung Journey was made In a tarantasa. a crude vehicle like a buckboard. only worse, it was a ,:M)-iulle Jaunt. The traveler went along the Tlan-Slian range of mountains between Turkestan and China and finally brought up at Kuldja in the province of 111 In the flowery kingdom. He bad traced the blue-flowert-d alfalfa to the very doors of the Chin temples. He was l.OtD miles from the nearest railroad; he , had gone months without letters from home. He was using three Interpreters wne m uanaiuin v nuiese into Tartar, one Tartar Into Kusslan, one Itus?latt Into tier nan. which he could understand Still they told him alfalfa grew to the I liotth. lie pressed on and on and on, j t trough snow and bitter winds, in which two other Journey era perished always go ing further north. And everywhere he went b found alfalfa growing. A part of the Journey waa a TOO-mlle slcdgo trip over the Siberian steppes, li.re one niht hia Tartar guides lost the way and the party spent the night In the chill wind. Finally, after a t emtio drive three nights and days with no stops but to change horses he leached Omsk, hastened by train to Hremcn by way of Moscow and took ship for home. The act result of tli hazardous trip was the knowledge that there was hardy alfalfa .rowing la severely cold clliiuttaa. In lati tudes much higher than It ever had been known to grow In America, and, also, a shipment of five cat loads of hardy seeds to the department of Agriculture at Wash ington. Other Trips Made, This was but the first trip. Two more were made and when they were finished it was an established fart that hardy al falfa will grow In almost any clime, espe cially In those that are cold. Prof. Hansen and others will tell this story of alfalfa and the detailed stories of the other trips at the Omaha land show. The seeds of the hardy plant will be shown. The visitors will be told how to cultivate the alfalfa, how to make the hay. Besides the plans and seeds of many varieties of alfalfa will be shown, the M. C. Peters Milling company having planned an extensive exhibit. This concern has helped to upbuild the alfalfa industry by handling a la-ge part of the alfalfa grown in the west, making a strong, steady mar ket for the crops Annually the mill does a million dollar alfalfa business, supply ing food In condensed form for the great dairy companies of the east, which In turn supply the mllllins of eastern milk and cieain consumers. ' How the alfalfa is produced cn western farms will be shown by prof. Hansen and others. How It is handled from the time It leaves the western farms until It Is de livered In the feed barns of eastern dairies will be shown by the milling company. The railroad company's experts will show how alfalfa brings the heaviest Income' and how Its cultivation costs little more than that of many products which bring far less return. Evolution of Corn Will Be Subject of Land Show Display Collection of William James of Dor chester Illustrating Type Devel opment Will Be Seen. The "civilization" of corn, the evolution of the grain which means wealth from so many rlc h western acres, from the scrawny squaw corn of the aboriginal fields to the big golden ears seen In the cribs of Ne braska and Iowa, will be the subject of a display In the educational department of the land show. The display on the evolution of corn will be made under the direction of William James, a farmer and student of agricultural science at Dorchester, Neb. Mr. James will show specimens of all the breeds of corn from the progenitor of the maize family to the best of the grain produced. The collection has been gathered at great pains and expense. Many of the specimens cannot be replaced except by long effort. Some of the corn types shown in the ex hibit could only be reproduced by long breeding processes seeking reversion to types which are now extinct or occurring only aa accidental atavistic freak of th Held. The earliest corn was an Insignificant plant bearing tiny ears, each grain encased In a separate husk. Years of breeding, some of It by simple chance some by scientific effort, have been required to bring corn through the successive steps which Mr. James, display will ahow to the land show visitors. Aside from the peculiar historic Interest which ' attaches to the evolution exhibit It serves to Impreas on the farmer the necessity for the choice of good seed and attention to the breeding of his corn crops. The pedigree of corn Is now aa significant to the careful and successful corn, farmer as the pedigree of hia cattle and horses. The evolution exhibit to the student offers the opportunity for study of the effects of crossing of the many widely varying strains of corn. By attention to the evolution exhibit the silage producer will be able to determine what kind of corn la best adapted to hia purpose and his soil. He need not care whether the ears grow high above the ground or close to the roots, but he wants a good generous free growth. How that may be . attained In fullest measure can be made a lesson of the exhibit of Mr. James. The corn evolution exhibit is known to many of the farmers who visited the Omaha Corn exposition. Mr. James' collec tion was a display which attracted wide attention at both of the Omaha Corn shows. SEEMED HARD TO LAND Two liearts with Double Warily Spar for (Ipealna-. Thoughts an Do you think it would be well for us to be serious?" she-asked. Oood heavens!" I , replied. "Haven't been serious? Why, I have been making love to you steadily now for two weeks. Could anything be more serious than that?" She regarded me stolidly. "It has not hen without Its humorous aspects," she asserted, "as, for example, when you asked It I would marry you." I reflected. "Perhaps." I said, "It Is Just as well that you regarded that part of It aa humorous, You might have felt, you know, that I was taking advantage of you. It la one thing to make love. It Is another to marry." She sighed Incontinently. "And yet," she observed, not without a slight touch of Impatience, "you are only Just perceiving this. It has taken you all this time to arrive at the truth." "Will you forgive me." 1 said gently lou must remember that you are ahead of nit. in so many things. I perceive my mistake, of course. Hut it Isn't too late, yuu know. I can still continue to make love without any thought of marrying. I can still do tills, with an ever Increasing gratitude t you for showing me the way.' "That Is the point," she declared with a touch of severity. "There has been too much of it. 1 know all that you know about making love, and "I am learning moie all the time,' whinpered. "Surely "I know all that 1 care to know about what yuu know," she continued, Ignoring my Interruption, "and I wish to know something about your knowledge of other things. How can we continue to be well, friends if there Is but one thing that you can talk about?' "Why should we be friends?" "You do not wish It?" 'Certainly not." It suddenly occurred to me that a crisis bad arisen between us. I saw that It was all or nothing. I must act. "it Is this." 1 continued rapidly: "you are tired of my love-msking. and you wish to know If there Is anything else that I can do that will make our company en durable to each other. No, there la not. I am hopeless In all other respects. You know that I cannot make love you have tested me. Why, In. two weeks' time I have done nothing but talk. I haven't cvn kissed you." At this Instant I took her firmly in iny arms. ' But this has got to end." I said sternly. "I am going to now. There! and there! and there! She regarded ma faintly. "I was almost afraid." the whispered, sinking Into my arms, "that you were im possible." Ltpptncott'a Magazine. 1; RRIGATION WORKS WONDERS Display at the Land Show of Some of the Benefits. BIO SCHEMES AEE EXPLOITED Colorado Will Take the Lead In Ex hibiting; Papier Macke Models Uovrrssirat is Expending Vast lima In West. Irrigation Is to be the leading subject of scenic display and Colorado will be the state represented principally In this de partment at the Western I -and Products show. Recently the president and the special hoard of army engineers submitted to the people an approved plan for the distribution of a 120,000,000 allotment for Irrigation work, and the great reclamation service Is Just now uppermost In public Interest. Gus Rense, constructing engineer of the show, haa devised an exhibit showing the Irrigation methods In their every phase and an educational program of lectures cn the subject will complement the mechanl cal picture. Altogether, Irrigation will be laid bare and Its secrets will be one or xne most freely given Incidents of value to the visiting hosts at the forthcoming show. Twf investigation by government ex perts has ferreted out In remarkably com plete fashion the needs of the country in the direction of converting arid and aeml- arld landa Into producing areas of rich loam, Is shown by the president s report. Following Is the echedule of apportion ments Into which the IM.OOO.OOO fund is made: Salt River, Arlsona. $4S,010; Yuma Ar - cona ana caurorma, i,ww. uibuu lev Colorado. Il.ouu.uuu; I'ncompansrB. Colorado, l,W0,0OO; Payette-Boise, Idaho, 12.000 000; Milk river. Montana. 11.000.000; North Platte, Wyoming and Nebraska $1- 000,000; Truckee-Carson, Nevada, ii.ivjvo. Rio Orande. New Mexico, icxas su - loo, K6U0.000; Umatilla, Oregon. ..ow; Ki.muth Oregon, ana uauiornia, ow,v,, Strawberry Valley, Utah, $2,272,000; Hunny Hide. Yakima. Wash.. $1,0,000. and Tlelon Wash., ItKB.OOO. How Money Waa Raised. The money for reclamation was raised through certificates of indebtedness by order of an act of congress, which also gave the president power to appoint the board of army engineers. The board made an exhaustive Investigation of all the arid lands of the country and Its report looked toward distributing the money In such a way as to accomplish the most good. Colorado will be given a novel and ef fective exploitation at the Omaha show, At the suggestion of Alfred Patek, state immigration commissioner, John Morrison of the Field, Fellows A Hlnderllder En gineerlng company has been employed to' construct, under the direction of the ex hibition management, a papier mache re production of part of the Rocky moun tains, showing the Irrigated farming re gions, and a complete model of the big Ir rigation system. Pike's Peak la Papier Mache. Pike's Peak will form the nucleus about which the acene will be laid, and from Its peak will be blasoned forth the name. "Colorado." It will greet all comers in the big exhibition building and will give Colorado a notable bit of advertising. In the Irrigation ditches water will be kept running, and every possible detail showing the manner In which Irrigation land is tilled will be worked out. The scene will occupy the entire end of the big exhibition building. Fred A. Shank, special representative of the Western Ind Products exhibition. was In Denver last week on his way east ward from Los Angeles. He told the people of Denver things are shaping for one of the most notable shows of this kind held In America. Among the notable con tributions from Colorado will be the Keens brothers' dry farming exhibit, which has acquired a world-famed reputation. This exhibit Is counted upon to give tne most effective exploitation possible to dry farm ing. Among the speakers at the show will be Eugene Orubb of Carbondale. His repu tstlon as a potato and agricultural exptrt Is International. His part in the Omaha exhibition Is being advertised by the man agement as one of Ita big features. Mr. Morrison, the ' constructing engineer who has the Colorado exhibit in charge under the show management, glvea an ex tensive description of Its construction and the purposes shown In It. "The exhibit of Irrigation work aald wi . -. - t " r - - - Palatial Commercial Club Building t P-iz v- - T. -L,, h w w( m is l-fff " 'it :' i. ' SALT LAKE CITY PAID $400,000 FOR THIS HOME. This is a picture of Salt Lake City's new Commercial club building, the construction of which lias been completed at a cost of over 1400,000, Including the site and furnishings. ' The Salt Lake Commercial club has a membership of over 1.200 business men of the city. It maintains an active publicity bureau and Its grill rooms and pool and billiard rooms are not excelled by any similar institution in the west. Mr. Joy H. Johnson, the president of the club, is a former citizen of Nebraska and is rather proud of the fact that he worked at one time as an Associated Press telegraph operator for The Omaha Bee. Mr. Joseph B. Calne, the wide-awake secretary, is a native of Salt Lake City and a former newspaper man. He Is suc ceeding In welding the forces of Salt Lake City Into a compact and aggressive body, bent on progression and the building here of what Mr. Harriman said should be one of the three big cities west of the Missouri river. In the building of the Bait Lake Commercial club there is almost every conceivable convenience from a first-class dining room to the beautifully furnlahed bed rooms. Upon the walls are hung magnificent oil paintings, the work of Mr. H. L. A. Culmer, one of the foremost artists of this country and a native of Utah. , Mr. Morrison, "probably will give a clearer and more complete Idea of practical meth ods than an observer could get from the actual work on Irrigation projects. Jn attempting to inspect a piece of land under Irrigating processes, one Is baffled by the long distances he Is forced to cover, and he naturally misses the Impression of the whole work as a unit. The various subdivisions of the system are so far apart In actual operation that one flnda diffi culty In learning their connection and the theory upon which they are based. On the other hand, an inspection of the irriga tion exhibit will show at a glance all the Inner workings of irrigation. One can easily trace the water from its source to the spreading fields." Mr. Morrison was recently connected with the Orchard Mesa project of Colo rado, in which all the expedients of Irri gating known to modern science have been brought forward. The contour of the coun try madtl such engineering necessities as flumes, tunnels and trestles to be con structed. These things copied from the Orchard Mesa project will play a principal part in the irrigation exhibit. Speaking of the Orchard Mesa under taking. Mr. Morrison had this to say: "This project is a particularly good illus tration of the value of irrigation. It shows where land that formerly had a value of Z50 without water, Is now worth from 12,000 to K600. with water available. Fruit growing Is the principal industry, while truck farming also Is possible of great success. Owing to the lift which la necessary oy me amereni levels on me yi wji, i water Is made comparatively expensive. 1 The difference In levels there is 126 feet. We are using 1,400-horse power turbines for the elevation of the water and for the generation of electricity to be used In the plant and other auxiliary purposes. No use Is made of the water power for commercial purposes, owing to the law which prohibit! such use. "Great irrigation projects in the terri tory of the interstate canal of Nebraska and Wyoming also show the great increase In land values due to Irrigation. Land which formerly could be had for $2 an acre now brings $J6 an acre, owing to the bumper crops which are possible on them through the adoption of irrigation. . The water In thla system Is comparatively cheap because of the fact that It is dis tributed by gravity, and costs only about $45 an acre In operation. "Minnesota presents a striking illustra tion of Irrigation's value. In . that state, according to statistics, the wheat yield Is about thirteen bushels to the acre, whereas in Irrigated wheat lands the yield runs up to at least forty bushels to tile acre." 'Ike Uentle Cynic. A bad man sometime deliver the goods, goods. A suit answer may turn away wrain, but a soft snap Is surer. Blood will tell, but some people's blood Is not very communicative. Things really only coin our way when we niaKe up our minds to go after them. Many a woman has shed tnough tear to Iloat a more worthy ambition. Many a man has stubbed his toe over lux own ambition. Wit la the wine of Intellect which ill nature turns into vinegar. '1 he more a man Koum around the less lie is apt to develop Into a crank. Manners are like headaches. Home are natural and some are acquired. Looking for a nttdle in a haystack is a needleless - waste oi time. Fishing for compliments seldom lands a A man sometimes confesses a weakness omy to conceal a greater one. Love is a curious thing. Many a girl who likes spring lamb marries a black sheep. The world Is made up of equal parts of people who have money and don't know how to enjoy it and people who haven't any and do. New York Times. Thimbles. The thimble Is a liutch Invention, and was first brought to Unhand by one John Lofting, who began its manufacture at Islington In 1KH6. Its name was derived from the words "thumb ' and "bell." Originally It was called "thuinhell." then "thumble" and finally "thimble." It is recorded that thimbles were first worn on the thumb, but we can scarcely conceive how they could be ft much service so used Formerly thimbles were made of brass and iron only, but now they are shown In gold, sliver, steel, horn. Ivory and even glas. 'there is a thimble owned by the queen of hiam that in vhaprd like a lotus bud. the royal flower. it Is of gold, thickly studded with diamonds, and is held to be the most costly article of the kind In the world. In Naples very pretty thimbles composed of lava from Mount Vesuvius are oi ra SK.nnllv sold, but rather as curiosities than as articles of real utility, being, by reusjn e4J,iiy broken. Harper's Weekly. V X - ? MAN MARRIED FOUR SISTERS He Wasn't Happy Without Them and They Waited Their Tnrn. To marry four sisters is the experience of Harry D. Philkill, formerly a resident of White Hill, N. J., vho now resldee in Baltimore, Md. He is 68 yeara old, and haa married Miss Josephine Conroy, seven years his senior. She Is the fourth bride, and a sister. to his three other wives now deceased. Philkill declared after the cere mony, which was performed by the Rev. S. C. Cutter, that he felt like a boy of nineteen. He waa first married forty years ago, when he eloped with Miss Marie Conroy. He waa greatly attached to all four sisters, and It has been often said that they were all In love with him. His first wife waa killed In an accident about aix years later. He afterward married Miss Anna Conroy, with whom he lived for a doxen years. She died of heart disease, while they were enjoying a trip to the Pacific coast. Mr. Philkill remained single for two years, declaring to his friends that he would never marry. He did not keep this resolution, however, as he again fell In love when he came here to visit the Conroy t v.::. -s : r a , 1, ,, I1W" li-rl J The Luther Burbank Exhibit will show you the wonder creation of the man who proposes that all the world's waste places shall be utilized and all plant life shall be trained to pro duce better fruits, greater beauty and be more value to mankind in general This man would turn the seething desert with ita thorny cactus into a value producing nnd life giving garden peopled by a prosperous people instead of the death dealing scorpion and rattler y,a iahaa ihn ciiMna IViol- io hnca nlnnf vltro lonvns nro f This man is a scientist, who sees in the future better grains, nuts, fruits and vegetables, all in new forms, sizes, colors and flavors with more nutrients and less waste and with every inferior and poisonous quality eliminated and with power to resibt sun, wind, rain, frost and destructive fungus and insect pests; fruits without pits, seeds or spines; better fiber, coffee, tea, spice, rub ber, oil, paper and timber trees and sugar starch color and perfume plants. The Durbank Exhibit at the Omaha Land Show, January 1 to 28, 1011, will be a part of th Union Pacific Exhibit, and consist of grajes, peas, beans, cherries, asparagus, flowers and com plete exhibit of spineless cactus Burbank's most wonderful creation. This is the first time that a collection of Hurbank's creations has ever been exhibited at any show. 25 cents, the general admis sion price, takes you to ev ery exhibit, show and lecture inwm family, and the graves of his wives, who are all burled In the family plot. Miss Lillian Conroy was his next bride. He wooed and won her during this visit and she accompanied him to Baltimore as a bride. .This proved Philkill' longest venture in matrimony, as the couple lived together for eighteen years. At the ex piratlon of that time Mrs. Philkill died of typhoid fever. Mr. Philkill remained single two years, but Cupid possibly believed that he made too good a husband to be without a wife, the wedding of Miss Josephine Con roy and the widower being the outcome. Mr. Philkill is the father of three boys, one having been born to each of hi first three wive. New York Herald. Mortifying: Oversight. Accompanied by a few of his palace fuards the aood Caliph Haroun Al Haschid was making one of his nocturnal rambles through The street of Bagdad. Suddenly he atopped. "Thl look unfamiliar." he said. "Where are we?" "Commander of the faithful," they an swered, "we do not know. It is outside of our usual run and we have no idea where we are. You know we have no signs at the street corners." "No signs et the corners?" he scowled. "That must be remedied. When strangers come to this town I don't want them to think they are In Chicago." Hailing a passing taxlcab he left his lucklesB guards to find their way home as best they could. Chicago Tribune. BUH fit frr rtliino- iinrl hv h vrirwli tn nnrl fnr nrurtlHlsi linn whnsfl fruit ia "Br" Insect Display is in Charge of Prof. Lawrence Bruner He Will Explain the Methods and Hahits of the Various Crop Destroying Bugs. One of the most Interesting features of the western land products show will be an exhibition of Insects, both resl and papier mache enlarged reproductions. Prof. I.uwrence Primer of the chair of blologv of the Vnlvprslty of Nebraska will be In charge of this exhibit, which he has prepared himself Trof. Pruner has spent his whole life In the study of Insects, and what he hss discovered as to their mode of life, their varieties, their destructive powers over anl insl and vegetable life end the most ef fective ways of exterminating them will be shown In the moKt vivid way In this Insect display and through lectures by him at the land show. Tiof. Hruner Is often railed the Grass hopper King. He gnlned this title through his system of exterminating the pests at the times when they swarmed across the country leaving barren fields and orchards in their wake. His system was so effective it seemed almost a kind of mysticism or sleight of hand. He prepared huge vata of mixed chemical with the odd powers of attracting grasshoppers, which he had placed on wagons and drawn through the fields. Grasshoppers Jumped and flew Into these vats from nil directions and met (i.n'li quicker than the file that taste of the liquid In saucers In the shop window. Some said thiit a more appro priate title for Prof. Primer would be to t all him the second Pled Piper of Hamlin. Rut his exterminating methods for grass hoppers Is only an example of his knowl edge of Insects which he nas gaineu through study since boyhood. Ir- Hruner was a biologist oorn. lie kmuuto h technical knowledge of Insects after he had become older, but his boyhood day spent In the fields on the farm are principally responsible for his being at present In the .. . .... . chair of biology at tne university oi Ne braska. I.uiighablo stories of his hoyhood ad ventures coincident to his love of Insect study are often told by those wno anew him then. He always had a penchant tor "monkeying" with bug, and this pecu liarity often got him Into little troubles when ho was a farm boy. He neglected his chores frequently to go out behind the smokehouse and lay near an ant hill Just to watch the busy little Insect city and study the faces and figure of Its cltliens, their commerce and Industry. Nowadays, as when a boy. Prof. Bruner delights In the labor of a tumble bug, the sucking of sap from a plant by the aphis, or the buzzing of a Hessian fly. All of this study has enabled Trof. Bruner to reproduce these insects and to produce In Interesting style through hi lecture their various modes of life. A anakrr filrl's "Yes." A young Quaker had been for some time casting diffident glances at a maiden of the same persuasion, while she. true to the tenet of her upbringing, had given him mighty little encouragement. However, on day the opportunity of placing the matter upon a more stable footing presented It self to Beth, and he shyly inquired: "Martha, dost thou love me?" "Why, Beth, we are commanded to love one another," quoth the maiden. "Ah, Martha, but dost thou feel what the world calls love?" "I hardly know what to tell thee, Beth. I have tried to bestow my love upon all, but 1 have sometimes thought that thou wast getting more than thy share. De troit t Times. , Calendar Combinations. Those person who are curlouly Inter ested In the sequence of the same number In dates were writing letter yesterday In profusion and beginning them thus: "11 11," or "111911." In the first cae they got a sequence of four ones, and In the last they had five one out of six figures. On the 11th of January they can go one better, and on the 11th of November next their hearts will be filled with Joy because they can write 11 11 "11. 11-11-1911. These persona have not been so happy since August, twenty-three years ago, when they were able to write 8 8 1SWJ. Boston Tran script. linn unA rvru rironH in o tnnlieu u fnrwl fnr tri.m.