MACMILLAN in the ARCTIC ■, *A a Mj V* imi" Iff* '' /J . jg '_>» r' " :^:^"ii "" ii/ " / ' Ji i ..» . 1 ■••-.. ! I '-n ,jr •'H . - "fli j i :- vf •/ # ''TH.r \ T ,^BC|\ v I "L » j l' j^ 1 jtx* fc RkAM|^3 1 THE PHOTOGRAPHS Donald B. MtcMillu, who kx ■filitmj fam* a* aa explorer ia Ik* Far Nortli end incidentally form ad IW Arctic kakit, ia up ia tka aeigk harkead of tka North Polo again tkia iimmr, lookiag for BOW laaJi and aaytking alto iatereatiag and expect iag to rotara tkia fall. Tka party M| ko called tka MacMillaa-Nary- Geograpkic oxpaditioa, aiace tka U. S. aavy dopartaiaat and tka Natioaa) Caagrapkic aocioty arc cooperating. Tkoagk I oat to *ia« tko party will ko ■rack ia trMoaca, aa apocial pais* kaw kaoa takoa to maiataia radio communication, tka Peary having rogular a kip and tka Boor doia a apocially-daaigaod ahort-ware Arrested Eloquence A recent suggestion In the British boose of commons to Hmlt the time of debaters In the houae recalls some past drastic methods with long-winded speakers. It has often been told how tbe "good" Lord Bhaftesbury used to poll down discursive orators by their coat tails, bot Bishop Sam Wilberforce was occasionally even more unkind, is tbe days,when teeter ball was tbs mat May meeting place aa ontar traaamittar aad receiver. Tka air plaaoa aro alao radio-equipped. lacludad ia tko party aro fir* aei ontiata, appoiatod ky tka Nati*aal Goograpkic aocioty, wko will aaako atadiaa of Arctic kiology, miaaralogy, plant lifo aad polar aaagaotic effecta. A motioa picture operator waa takoa aloag, aad for tko firat time i* tka kiatory of Arctic expleratiea, a color pkotograpkar accompaaiod tko expe ditioa. Tko navy peraoaaol coaaiata of aiae man, comaaaadad ky Lioat.- Coainaadar R E. Byrd, of tko Bu reau of Aoroaaatica. Tk*ra are tkra* ampkikiaa plaaoa witk wkick tko ex ploratioa work will k* conducted from aa advaaco kaaa oa Axel Hoik*rg Load. rather low do*n in the program who had prepared a lengthy speech stld to Wilberforce, aa 1m noticed that people were beginning to leave, "It's bardlj worth my speaking: they evidently don't .expect me." "To be BUT® they do," replied Sam. "don't yon aee they're aU going T Two Bttt of Hiatory England's acquisition of Canada waa largely doe to tbe advice given by Benjamin FraakUa wbia Bngisart Tko pkotograpka are aaggeative. No. 1 akowa Arctic lead waa tea aa tkey appear from tke air. la No. X Commander MacMillaa (rigkt) ia exchanging fare walla at Wiacaaaet, Ma., witk Gov. Ralpk O. Brewster of Maina (left) aad MaJ- Gaa. A. W. Gr**ly, aeted Arctic ex plorer. No. 3 giro* laat-miauto portraita of air pilota Mayaard Sckar aad E. E. Riker. No. * akowa tka MacMillaa veaaela, Bowdoia (ackooaer) aad Peary. No. I ia Kenneth L. Rawaoa of Ckicago, IS, tk* *aly youagatar akoard. No. 7 ia Joka L. Reiaartx of 1 XAM, witk kia apodal low-ware radio eel. waa bartering with France to obtain, Guadeloupe. The French declined to grant Guadeloupe and offered Can ada Instead, and Great Britain gave In upon the suggestion of Franklin. An other Interesting International trade waa United State*' deal for Alaska la 1887. then called by opponents "Seward's Lamp at Ice" and "Sew ard's Ice." The purchase for $7,200.- 000 waa then regarded aa a natlouai scandal. In one year the caaaod-aal men production Sf ll—lts exceeded 12M04000 THE ALAMANCE GLEANER, GRAHAM, N. C. THE LIGHTED LAMP * By MCCLURE SHOLL by tfhori Story Pub. C«.) 7 HEN you're done cussin' \ \ / uurl swearin' and sum- VV nionin' all tlie powers of h —II to come and take the ctiuip, wili you foe so good as to tell nit? what you go p\e r yonder for every night?" "It's mme of your business." "Never said it was. You go into the dark— Xi"i come buck lookin' plagued. "Xlillt tip." "I won't." "Well, then, I was cryln". cryin' be r-ause 1 was hlumed .tired, cryin' like H kid because I'd been tifteen hours on my legs—■" The speaker glowered into the fire. The nature of his confession accorded 111 with his appearance. A creature dark with the sun and tormented by the winds, his powerful muScies knot ted and strained by agonies »f labor, his black hair banging over- bis som ber eyes, his suit of khaki as weather plained as his complexion—he seemed il.e incarnation of man's struggle with a howling, hostile' wilderness, a dry, litm'.ini;. cactus-covered, tarantula-fn fested eternity of desert. Mis fellow engineer, a handsome boy from the Kast, still unexhausted by the country, refused to accept the ex jtlnnpiion »f fatigue from the embodied dynamo opposite to him. Letter had la-ought something to the camp, Shel don conjectured, that jumped out of ,'0- dark snd clutched his throat In those leisure moments toward mld- when the two fellow workers, having dined on canned salmon and stale bread, sat shivering together by their fire, too tired to sleep, to quarrel, to ai'true,- tc read, to do anything but wonder what inadvertence of deity had .•rented that country. Each was plagued by It to the limit of his en durance, hut young Sheldon had no In terior inferno to deal with Into the bargain. I.eiter, he suspected, had. "Crying—that does you good! I bel low night after night when I've turned in I bellow for my mummie—fur broiled steak —one night I even bel lowed for the subway, I was so lone some. • My idea of heaven that night was just to be packed in a subway train !n the five-thirty crush and smell .that subway air! But you—you're cry In" for something different." I.eiter drew in his breath with a shuddering sigh. And then Sheldon risked being shot. "Tell me about her." He expected to hear the click of Leber's rifle, but the dark image by the fire sat motionless. Then he spoke as if every word tore him. "tiod. 1 will! I've got to. I've been nione with it for a year now." "Tell It, I.eiter, Just tell It," Sheldon urged. "Was you ever married?" Leiter i.sli(-d in a queer, humble voice, utter ly unlike that In which he thundered at ills men. "N'fvor! I've wanted to be," Shel .l«n answered hopefully, that the note of sympathy might not be lost. "There's 11 Kirl In Brooklyn—" I-eit'or v.ent on as If he had not heard. "I was livln' in the East for a spell when I met quiet little woman ■ifnil one of those steady men they 11reed there, was courtin' her. She "light to have married him; he hadn't any wild blood, nor rovin' blood. He couldn't have rove beyond the corner grocery, hut he probably would have matle tier a good husband. Anyways, he was after her when I come along. I sailed In an' took her. She was the first woman I'd ever wanted to marry und I kind o" frightened her into it, bullied tier, held her up! That's where I nmde my mistake. Vou can't lasso y.itir \\ife. likr she was cattle. "She was always sort o' timid with ne. She didn't say much and I used to think she took It out In cookln'. She was an awful good cook. But some how. she didn't seem happy, and then that other man used to drop In, Just to show her, I guess, what ahe'd missed. "I gave her all the rope she wanted, (•nugh 1 was burnln' up with Jealousy some days, and restless, too, wantln' to go back West. Seemed like I hadn't elbow room In that little town. "I'm Renin* lo the point—l came home one night late. There wag a nup lier k-«»pln' hot for ine In the kitchen, the table set for one. the lamp lighted •>n It. and under the lamp a note. It *ald: - 'l'm not the wife for you, Jim. Don't look'fhr me—' "1 don't know what I did for a while. Next thine I knew I was strldln' down the road to the depot, talking to my self. I talked to myself all the way \\e*t. I piles*, for t nearly got locked 'M«. What they did to the house, I don't know to this day. I left It Just UK It »»«, with the Bupper In the oven and the lamp lighted. I tore up her note —tl.at was all—to keep their ungues from wnggla'." Slu ld«;n gazed Into the (Ire. He plc 'urel (he Utile wife, young and silra ml frosh-cheeked, shrinking from her tornado of a husband. Leiter was •noiigh to frlgliten any woman, yet Hhelilon knew that he could be as .•entie as a girl. "I've cot a theorv, Leiter." -WellT* "She never wrnt away with that naa.~ "What makes TOO think SQT* "A woman married to yon might rur away witb a man like you but not with—" "Iteuben Joy." Leiter supplied. "Now fliat I know his name, I'm quite certain she didn't run away with him. Did you look for her that night?" "Look'for her! What do you mean?" "Why, go through the house, of course, go upstairs and see whether her bat was there and the hatpins on the cushion, and the little bag she took marketing?" Leiter .stared as If he'd been struck. "How did you know about that bag?" "I didn't. But every woman bas one." "I believe you've been married," Leiter said, suspiciously. "No, but there's a girl in Brook lyn—" Leiter interrupted. "Look for her! Why didn't I look for her? —but she said, 'Don't look for me.' " "That's what, she wrote," Sheldon said, "but only God knows what she meant. Now, see here, you old gov ernment mule of a tormented Idiot, you get leave from headquarters to morrow and start East, and I'll wager jou a hundred dollars to a box of sar dines that you'll find her where you left her and longing for you to come in and track her best carpet witb your boots, like you used to do!" Leiter heaved a long, reminiscent sigh. His lean, brown hand grasped Sheldon's for a moment. "If she's there," he said, contritely, "I'll leave my boots at the door. I used to make her a lot o' work forget tin" to wipe my boots." • •••••• Four days later, Leiter rode away from the desolate camp toward civili zation and his hopes were about equally balanced with his fears. Shel don watched him until horse and rider were a mere speck on the horizon and then turned back, strangely lonely and homesick, to the society of the Chi nese cook and the half-breed laborers. A fortnight passed, and one day the half-breed who acted as postmaster to fhe camp came riding In with a budget of mail from the teast. Sheldon sifted the letters hurriedly for one from I.eiter, and found It It bore the post mark of a little town In Massachusetts. He tore it open and read: "I'm home! Got here about dark, 'fhe lamp was lighted, and she bad a hot supper like she was expectin' me —said she'd been) expectin' me for a year. She'd gotten down in the mouth, before It all liappened—thought I didn't care for her —thought she wasn't makin' me the right kind of a wife. "She never got far that night She came runnln' home, cryin' home, after she gf>t started a little ways. She said that though she still thought I didn't love her she knew once she got on the run that she loved me. She was up stairs gettin' off her things when I came in and found her note —gettin' off her things and cryin'. You was right. "I'm bringin' her West —she's never been West —says she wants to see the camp. You can flre the Chinese heathen; and. Kid, when we hit the camp, Mary and I, I'll get you leave of absence to look up that girl in Brook lyn." Scenes of Beauty in Siamese Swamps If you ride out from Bangkok, Siam, on the state railway toward the north to Ayutlila, for Instance, where the rare visitor may go to see tlje ruini of ancient wonders, yon pass through blue and silver swamps, says Atlantic Monthly. The landscape looks very often as if a flood were JuSt subsiding. In full ditches along the track float huge pin lotus flowers. The paddy birds, all grace and pearly whiteness, fly In the yellow sunshine. Clumps of tiny thatched dwellings are lifted out of water on stilts. Under tliem in the ditches and In the flooded rice fields themselves bulking everywhere,' are the clumsy, gray-black buffaloes, do mestic slaves and best friends of Si amese farmers. Banana trees grow around the huts or anywhere they caii catch hold, and their flat dark leaves, springing stem lean from the ground, are like weeda in a fantastic dream. Thickets of bamboo and tall sugar palms make a pleasant edge of green for the glis tening wetness of the field*. In such entraclng scenes the peas ants live amid lotus flowers and thoughts of Buddha, water, buffaloes and muddy toil, malaria, mosquitoes and the hookworm. Youth's Predicament Frankly Explained They had been discussing embar rassing experiences, and It was Joseph Brown's turn. "Well." he said. "I've never forgotten an Incident that hap pened when 1 was twelve yea-a old. Tea of us boys were visiting the home of a neighbor, and though I wore the best psnts I hai. they were thread bare. They looked all right, but lacked resistance. "During playtime 1 forgot all about them until. In climbing a fence, they aoddenly parted. Mother was not at home, so I took a chance and stayed where I was. "It was Just my luck when we filed across the porch for dinner, that I was last In the procession and In the door way were a bunch of girls, i man aged to aqueese In front of one of the other boys and everything would have been all right If one of the girts hadn't remarked that I must be awfully hun gry to be In such a hurry. *"Naw. he ain't hungry.' piped tip the lad behind me. 'He's Just tryUl' to na awsy from the hole in kta breeches.'"—Lee Angeles TUeaa, Two "New Breeds" Are Investigated Believed That "Turken" Is Nothing Else Than Tran sylvania Naked-Neck. There Is no lure like that of tbe cross of widely separated species of animals and birds. That nature frowns on such crosses is evidenced by the failure of repeated and persistent experiments under favorable condi tions. Where progeny has followed vio lent crossings, It Is sterile as a rule. The Department of Agriculture hag is sued a press release in this connection, which Is as follows: "The United States Department of Agriculture has received many re quests from ail parts of the country for information concerning two so called new "breeds" of poultry, the 'Turken' and the 'Kiwi.' The depart ment has been aware of advertisements concerning these new and novel 'breeds,' for which some rather re markable claims have been made. The advertisements and literature describ ing the origin and qualities of these 'breeds' seem to have aroused much interest on the part of the public, since tbe department has recelvd several urgent requests for an explanation re garding the reliability of the claims made. How "Turken" Was Produced. "The statements In the advertise ments and literature claim that the 'turken' was originally produced by crossing a male turkey with a female chicken, and that the 'Kiwi' was pro duced by crossing a male ostrich with a female chicken. "Successful crosses have been made between the pheasant and the chicken, and in practically every case the prog eny has been of the male sex and sterile. Also, successful crosses have been made between the guinea and the chicken, and here again the sex of the progeny has almost Invariably been male and the hybrids have been sterile. Both of these crosses have been made with great difficulty and, so far as known, no cross giving any progeny has ever been reported between the turkey and the chicken. Yurthermore, it is highly improbable that the prog eny, if any have ever been secured would breed at all, and certainly not readily. In such wide or violent crosses the progeny Is always sterile, and the claim for the 'Turken,' which Is reported to be the hybrid progeny of a cross between the turkey and the chicken. Is In all probability not found ed on fact la Naked-Necked Chicken. "One other point must be made con cerning the so-called 'Turken.' The Illustrations acedfopanylng the adver tisements and literature are In all prob ability photographs of the Transyl vania Naked-neck chickens. Accord ing Jo the best Information obtainable this odd-looking breed originated in West India, and the characteristic naked neck has bred true for many years. It Is a distinct character of the breed. The department believes that the 'Turken' la nothing else than the Transylvania Naked-neck chicken, which apparently possesses no qualities superior to'the more Im portant standard breeds and varieties, and has not been shown to be par ticularly well adapted to conditions In many parts of our country. "As far as the reported cross giv ing rise to the 'Kiwi' la concerned, there la much less evidence to support such a cross than In the case of the Turken.' This Is too violent a cross to produce any results whatever. "The burden of proof that such crosses as those giving rise to the 'Turken' and the 'Kiwi' must remain with the sponsors of such novel produc tions. In the meantime, the Interests of the public should be safeguarded." Feed to Maintain Cows -♦ ' of Different Weights Extensive detailed experiments have been made to determine the average amount of protein and other food nu triments needed to maintain cows of different weights. Also, the different feeds have been tested to determine the average amounts of digestible pro tein and other nutriments. This data has been arranged in table form and may be found In various books, ex periment station bulletins, etc.. but is too extensive to reproduce here. These experiments also show the amounts of food nutriments required to produce different amounts of milk. By taking the data from these tables, showing bow much Is required, the balanced ration Is worked out by grouping to gether the necessary amounts of the different feeds to give the correct total and proportion of nutriments. Rations as worked out by this process can only serve as a guide because of the great variation In Individual cows, but they are very valuable In actually obtain ing the best rations. Exercise Mare and Foal in Cool of the Evening 11l tbe evening when It la cool and the flies are Inactive, turn the mare and foal ont on pasture. This will allow the colt to get plenty of ex ercise. graaa, and fresh air with the least possible Interference from flies. When the mar* la not working, tbe pasture la tbe best place for both mare and foal, bat they should be pro- Tided with shade of aome sort. When natural shade la not available, a cheap structure should be built to meet the needs. Hang a few sacks under the treaa or la the shed so that tbe mare and foal can use them to cfease off Prepare Early for Filling the Silo Arrange for Help, Power and Cutting Equipment Plan early'for the important work of filling the silo. Arrange fur your help, power and cutting equipment. Make measurements for placing cut ter and power. Plan to have a clear road to the cutter and also one leav ing, BO that the loads of fodder can easily be brought to the machine and leave without requiring backing or difficulties In getting away. Select a good foundation for the cutter and set up blower pipe as nearly vertical as possible so as to avoid friction and unnecessary length of pipe. The ma chine should be set level and securely fastened by stakes and by sinking grooves for wheels. In putting up blower pipe or carrier, care should be taken to securely fasten top at en trance to roof. In building your silo It Is well to construct a ladder reach ing from top door to outside opening at roof so that it will be easy for a man to gq to the top of an empty silo and open the roof door to lower rope or pulley for' elevating pipe or car rier. Corn should be fairly well matured, for at this time the plant contains Its greatest amount of food material. This stage may be determined by ob serving the denting of the corn, the drying of-the bottom leaves or some of the outside husks. The early dent stage Is that period when the corn Is best matured for putting In shocks. If the corn be sowed thick in drills or broadcast. Its maturity can be determined by tassel and silk. With cane, kaffir corn or mllo maize the same rule will hold true as ■to maturity. If the cprn Is overmatured- It will be necessary to add water which can best be done by using a hose and putting the water In at the blower, using from one-half to one barrel per load according to the dryness' of the fodder. Where the silage Is to be used for fattening, rather than milk production. It Is im portant that the corn be mature, and for this purpose It Is best to plant an early variety In those sections where a later one will not mature Renovating Strawberry Bed Soon After Harvest The strawberry patch which has borne one crop should be renovated soon after harvest. This Is done by plowing out the plants on either one or both sides of the row, leaving a strip only about four inches wide. The soil of the plowed land la thor oughly cultivated and If a spike toothed harrow Is used, cross-cultiva tion may be practiced so that a good bed Is made for the new runner plants. tJnder good soil conditions these will start to row within a short time and will make a row of new plants 12 to 16 Inches wide by early fall. The new plants are confined to the proper width by continuing cultivation until they cease to grow. Usually It does not pay to renovate a commercial strawberry patch that has already produced two crops, al though a home patch, under very favorable conditions, may be allowed to yield three and sometimes four crops. "Hard Luck" With Pigs Result of Wrong Feeds A great deal of so-called "hard luck" with young pigs soon after farrowing can be traced directly to Improper feeding and In most cases to over feeding of the sows. Just because a sow seems hungry Just after farrow ing Is no Index that she should re ceive feed. A liberal supply of water should al ways be available. This will usually satisfy and quiet the sow. She should receive very little feed for at least 24 hours after farrowing. The first few feeds of grain should be light and fed In the form of thick slop. She should not be on full feed for from six to ten days after farrowing. RPMRCTSfc few things give more and coat less than a woodlot • • • Watch the garden for unwelcome Insect visitors. A bug tn time saves nine—and the garden sass. Alfalfa la not only a soil enrlcber of outstanding merit; it la the best of all forage crops for dairy cattle. • • • Lots of loose talk about the poor claaa of help on the farms made one farmer Inquire if better living quar ters wouldn't attract a better grade of men. • • • During hot weather it Is very nec essary that the backets from which calves are fed be kept clean and ster ilised; since dirty buckets are a com mon cause of calf scours. Bacteria develop rapidly at this time of year and an unwashed bucket soon becomes very unsanitary. • • • Window glass filters out certain valuable son ray*. On a test at the New Jersey experiment station 1,000 chicks kept behind glass averaged ooe-fourth pound each at the end of 12 weeks. Two hundred chicks of the same ag* and fed the same ration, bat kapt outdoors, weighed 1% nnmult