$l)c ilmlljam ttccorb. &I)C l)atl)am Uccorb, - - j 7l A. LONDON, Editor and Proprietor, RATES OF ADVERTISING, One square, one insertion $1.00 One square, two insertions . 1.60, One square, one month 3-60 For Larger Advertise- Ay TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, $1.50 Per Year. Strictly en Advance ments Liberal Con VOL, XXVI. PITTSBQRQ, CHATHAM COUNTY, N. C THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1901, NO. 42. ': tracts will be made. tfW Iky 4 1lvty If I By Anna Katharine Green,! Anthot ?,,T,hFor8akert a a iDHj Kt I , COPYRiQHY. 1SQ, hY WOagWT IONNIB'5 SOWS. A CHAPTER XLIV. , Continued. f'jitiu K.io a position thai deinanufci in xil"ii;Uiou. "Fin h as well as I. calculated toe la lie upon th'.' resistance which ankles in fill no'-le nature's. You would not leave the iovii. and you would pre serve ilit attitude of a lover, and theuii-ii f : iegraw did not seem to b it a'Tecied ly your rivalry. I knew tli;M. Montelli had 'onceiveel the deep ed hatred- for you, and that he only awaited an opportunity iu order tc destroy you. 'Th- announcement made by his iisastci- of a particular desire to see me o;i a certain morning, taken witL the 'att thai a lawyer had already been unui)'md to accompany him 'on this interview, brought matter- to a climax, llic wretch attempted your life, and though I kuew nothing of it at the time, nor of the jeopardy in which il placed him with the police. I did know i ha t he desired to have some talk with me. for 1 had heard from my window, where I invariably sat between the hours of eleven and twelve, the short and peculiar bird whistle, which had been made a signs'. 1 between us. "It was a hateful call to me. but 1 dared not slight it. As in anticipation of his purpose. 1 had already opened a window in the hall below, I had wtly to descend to the lower floor to meet him. Hut when L stepped from my room. 1 became aware, possibly by some occult influence, ihat 1 was not Mone in the hall; that my actions were el-served: and that my future steps v-"Uld b.? watched, if not followed. "What should I doV (Jo back? It was too late. But how go forward iih out awakening criticism and risk ing discovery! Happily, my training ('; the stage had included the study .f the part of La Somia'nihula, and re iuembering it at this critical moment. I made my body rigid and tixed my uazo. : :ul so passed on without pause jr slfiirkin.u. though inwardly greatly r.gitatc i. For the persons engaged in watching ine wve 'likiry and a strau--?cr. whose presence awakened my ceenest fears, though no thought of l:i being a 'member of the police .-tossed my mind. "But this was nothing to th shock vidch followed, v.Iien in another mo : lent 1 encountered you. This I was ':ot prepared for, and I inwardly nailed. But instinct kept me from be itaying myself. I retained my studied manner, and went by you like an ap parition. But terror was iu my heart'. ror I noi only saw that for some reason ?11 my friends wee ti tiie alert, cither y surprise n:y seen;, or give me a pro-".-lien T was far from ue:ding. But i was under the constant apprehension :f Montelli making his appearance and i-.t provoking a conflict which might nd disastrously for you. You remem er how I give a weapon in the shape if a sharp paper knife, and then how I wandered into the back hall in the :opc of flitting off Montelli and thus .nsuring not only his safety but your jwn. "I did net meet him, though he must have been there, and I came back hope in!. a;ui went again upstairs. But hor Tur awaited me. When I reached my th amber door, I perceived the fierce eyes and threatening form cf this dangerous man emerging; from the back staircase, and though I had no fear of his keen knife, I had cf the de tection cf our secret; for I knew that Hilary and her strange companion wore vouching us from behind, and mat I-e had but to drop a word or cast a look belying his seeming antagonism for our mutual understanding to be fceu, and my despicable position dis- overed. "B:,t he was too subtle to make such p. mistake, or perhaps he bimseif had perceived the forms of Hilary and Mr. Oryce; for he increased the fierce ness of his demeanor; he even lifted his knife and I was vaguely asking myself how he would extricate me from" this situation,, when your friend, Mr. Byrd, extricated us both by his sudden leap upon the seeming assassin. "In the struggle that followed I bad no time to think. My eyes met these of Montelli as his knife flew from bis hand ana fell at my feet; but I did net understand his look, though I ricked up the knife and sought to es eape with it to my room. But my fears to what he would do in his rage and disappointment drew me ' back. I must, gain some assurance ', from him hat he would net visit upon me the misfortune that had fallen upon "him self. And so I had the courage to de-pc-end to where he had fallen, and lock t him where he lay, and listen to the pbras?s he uttered, and which were s I took it. assurances that he still had hopes fc:- himself, and little, if any, resentment against- me. But when you came forward and placed my. arm in yours, his manner suddenly changed, "s you v.ill rcrnemler, and be became pike fierce, fie foresaw difficulties if 1 Hung tr you .and threatened me. by w. :i d and gesture. I was glad when v.c vvere cvt of his sight and hearing, -:,nd was relieved rather than abashed when Mr. Gryce proposed to watch best of; my doer and keep me from harm's way till after I had held the premised interview with Mr. Degraw, which he and you supposed would P-'e me beyond the malice or reveDge t I L I - - - - of the persons believed to be mv ene mies. "Of that interview I need say little." It was a surprise to m? in more ways than one. I had not expected voti to be present, and I had not looked for the proposal w ith which Mi Degraw prefaced his great gift. If I had. I might have been better prepared to meet it. I could not have accepted it even if upon its acceptance had hung the wealth I now saw almost within my grasp. I had decided in the night that I would marry no man but you, and I cannot tell you how I was af fected by his generosity, which left me free to bestow hand and wealth where I would, "But you badscrupies, and though" I was too happy to be impatient t felt myself robbed of some of the satisfae tion which I had promised myself. Mouteili's arrest troubled me, too. but that anxiety was not destined to be of long duration. Before the day had waned, 1 was tirst shocked, then deli riously gladdened by the news that I need fear this dangerous man no more; that he was dead, and that one of the most relentless claimants upon my wealth was taken out of my path for ever. "Not that 1 begrudged the money he demanded. 1 con hi have spared a mill ion and not feit it. But I had some initiation into business matters during the transferring of this fortune into my possfssiou. and 1 foresaw' that it "was not going to lie so easy a matter to pro cure two or three hundred thousand dollars out of this eflat without ex citing th? attention of those who had it in charge. This was the reason, like wise.why I accepted your decision with so much grace. A husband would have been ineouvejuVnt to me in those tirsi. days: an agent was Pad enough. I had to deceive him. and I had to deceive Hilary. In order to meet the wants of the Portuguese. who crowded her claim doubly upon me. when site found that Montelli w:;p djad. 1 was obliged to ask for large sums of 11101103- for which I could give no ac-cmu, thus acfprirbig with my agent the name of being very extravagant, and with my friends the reputation of being strangely parsimo nious. I went with Hilary to the sev eral watering places, but I spent no money in jewels, and but little in th? nfcesaries of life; for I looked forward to the day when you would come back to me. dearest, and I wished to be clear of all obligations, and free forever from the hateful presence of the Portu guese; for she never was long away from me after I returned to New York. In the capacity of my hairdresser she visited me every day. and though but few words pass-id between us. it was well understood that a certain amount must be furthcoming every week, if I desired to preserve pleasant relations between us. "Hilary suspected nothing. She used to wonder why I persisted in dressing so plainly, and hinted, now and then, that a richer costume, or a more gener ous mode of living, would be more iu keeping with my wealth and position; but it did not take much to turn her thoughts to nobler subjects, and I was never unduly embarrassed by her Ques tions, or annoyed by her suggestions. "I was happy ah! how happy! for I had not yet come to the full realiza tion of what I had .lone, and saw noth ing but complete delight in the future. I never doubted that you would return, or that I should pay off tiia Portu guese, and thus win love and freedom at once. I enjoyed my wealth, my con sequence and my power, and experi enced, perhaps, more delight in the con templation of the future than I would have done if my present had been free from care, and I had been enabled to gratify at once my naturally luxurious tastes. And so the summer passed. "nearest, I have more than once asked myself while I have been pour ing out these confessions, whether if you had been less exacting and had not required the giving up of my fortune, we should bare been happily married. It adds to my grief to think we might. It makes death doubly hard to dream of what might have been, if, instead of asking the sacrifice from me of all for which I had worked so long in shame and sorrow, you had simply folded me to your breast and made me by that embrace the good woman I longed to be. But, then comes the thought that deception never prospers, and that it was iu this way the God of which you once spoke to me showed His disap proval of my sin and. the impossibility of my hoping to reap happiness, when I had sewed for myself misery. And this thought comforts me, for it takes from my fate that factor of chance, which it is so maddening to contem plate. I die because I haTe sinned, not because your fancy led you to play with my love, and exact conditions, when all that my soul craved was per fect confidence on your part and a blind affection. "The interference of Byrd in my af- fairs I doVnot understand. You may. If he has any real reason to suspect me, it must spring from the treachery of some one of those wretched asso ciates of mine. Montelli and the Portu guese are dead, but Annetta still lives, as well as that miserable woman of my name whom I have never seen. If they have betrayed me, they have done i with complaints and recriminations, ! and these I do not deserve. Believe it, I and siare'iae any nlLecJlsiryZe2-- Witat I acknowledge " is bad clioiigh. Byrd was nothing; to me; Prom the day I bade him good-bye ih Great Bar riugion till I saw him again in Miss Aspinwall's parlors, t did not bestow upon him a thought. But on that day he showed that he had not forgotten me; rD6 yon recall that day or can 51011 realize even how alt that it was to me? You had asked hie to give up my for tune, to yield What had beeii Avon Ihrougli ways so tortiioits and at cost of efforts so shameful; and I hesitated; can you wonder, and was swayed this way aud that, according as my reason or my heart spoke. But reason finally had its way, and I went dressed in vel vet, only to repent my decision so bit terly that, before I went within reach of your glance; 1 stepped into Hilary's dressing-room and put on one Of her cloth diesses: Love might mean self denial and fearful complications with my associates, to whom I had not yet paid the half that was due, but I felt ready to do and bear all, or rather, 1 felt in that moment more ready to meet the doubtful results of abnegation, than 1 did the withdrawal of the hopes which had made my summer so glori ous. But, after 1 was dressed and be fore I could meet youn appreciative glance, some one brushed me in the crowd and a note was 'nit in my hands. Ah. dearest, that not-1 li was sent by the Portuguese, then sick unto death, it seems; bm it was not written by her. but by Montelli. who had been dead three months. As I read it I knrw that my intentions had been foreseen by her. That, although she was ill. slit had wished to show nie that she stiH kept walih on my moveuunls and hold upon my fate. It van thus: and its contents are as great a mystery to mc as they must be to you: " 'I am discovered and must liy. You are safe if you will but forget your weakness for the artist. Ch?iish thai and you ave !o-t. You cannot haw hive and money both. 0 choose, but, ii choosing, remember that th" Portu guese and I will have our n ney ir v.v have io ak your lover for it. We hav nor run so many risks for nothing.' "This, iu the lnoni'itt I w.:s aio"! o commit myself to you irretrievably. What if the writer was dead, the sender was not. or so I thought in that moment of ."hock and terror. Pushed by the crowd, troiured by my fears, i hesitated one instant, and then went again to Hilary's eios t and procured me a cloak. Enveloping myself in this I went below. Did yon recognize i-. as bespeaking the hesitation wbi h ii reallv b'travcdV Hid your iov rake ala,rin aud aue you to turn a more willing ear o the insinuations of the detective' I .-hail never know, for ! have never dared to question you. "But the developments Avtie not at an end. While I hunted for a glimpse of your face, Mr. Byrd came why Mr. Byrd I have never been able id under standand told me in the strange way that he told me of Mouteili's death, that, by another happy Providence, the sender of this note had perished also; leaving my path clear of enemies and myself free to follow the dictates of my heart. "You know what followed. How. in a rush of renewed hope I threw aside my cloak, and called your heart to me in a song. How I looked for response, and how if failed to come. Mr. Byrd was at your ear and you listened to doubt which held you back, and when you did break away from him and seek mo. it was to find that I hearkened to ihe voice of another wooer, who asked of me nothing, aud promised me all things. "Can you not foresee the rest? How the love which had succumbed to your indifference rose triumphant again at this evidence of your continued affec tion. I had jeopardized my happiness, but I determined to regain it at any cost. Nothing should or could stand in the way of what had now become my one passionate' desire. I wrote to Mr. Degraw. I took the one means I knew whereby I not only would obtain a full release from my engagement but insure likewise his acceptance of the gift which he never would have given me had he recognized my real unworth iness. I confesed to him my love for you, and I confesed, also, my share in the plot. "It was a fatal act how fatal I im mediately perceived when my impetu osity led me to your studio, and we had that interview so unhappily interrupt ed by Hilary. If the suspicions of the police had been aroused in regard to me. how mad had been the impnlse which had led me to put upon paper words that could justify their suspi cions and make possible the detection of my duplicity. Though it seemed too late to profit by this discovery of my folly, I made one frantic effort to do so. I rode back home and endeavored to stop the delivery of my letter, but failed in this, and Mr. Degraw not only read the story of my deception, but by some treachery or some mischance which he could not himself explain, this letter was stolen from him almost immediately after his reading it, so that my secret was no longer at bis mercy only, but at the mercy of the world, and, what was worse, of you. "Do vou understand now the frenzy which drove me into asking you to marry me that night, or how I could hardly subdue my fears when you re quested time to notify your mother? Detection lay before me, and I had neither the stre-ngtu to meet it nor the courage to forestall it by telling you what would shatter your love at a blow. For though Mr. Degraw urged me to this course, measuring your na ture, perhaps, by his own, which is af fectionate rather than passionate, and tenacious rather than proud, I, who knew you better than he, felt that death must precede any confession of my past deception to you. ', "What! Tell jou that the sweet in uocence of -'which you have so often spoken was" the mask" which hld scheming heart? Pob my beauty of its charm and my memory of its grace? Make th-, most beautiful moment in our lives the mere climax to a farce and teach your Soul to hate that which had given it life aud purpose? Impossible I could die, but I could not do this, and though there was one chance remain ing of this letter escaping your notice, I prepared for death, and re-hired these rooms, that you might take your last look at m? where you did your first, and thus see in the final act of my life an expiation which would soften you? hate, and lead, perhaps,' iu time, tJ your regarding me with pity and ten derness. "But that one chance came near suc ceeding, and I breathed again, only to be dashed once more into the fathom less depths of despair. You had re ctived the letter, but you had hot read it, and though you gave it back to me you wished to see iis foments. "It was the final blow. Though it was possible to deny you what you re quested, it would be. as I kn?w, at the cost of your future confidence. I" could not lose this and be your wife, so I gave up the struggle from that moment and bade farewell to you forever in the silence with which I met your parting embrace. "This Mas two hours ago, but it al ready so"m an age, for tbo shadows m death are upon me. t;iul 1 niiss the smile which should h'eip me acvoss the dark river into which I am about to plunge. Has that smile left me for ever? or. may I hop'..1 that yjiu pity, if not your love, trill folic-w nie. into the shadows. I do noi: plead tny youth; I do not plead my VA brlnging-up cr mu tually disappointments and temptations. I plead my love, which, it small at iirsr has grown to be the tulipg passion of my life. U led me to give up a great fertuiK', ic led me to betray my secret faults, and now it has brought me here. Will you drop a tear for it. if not for your dead JKXNV:" 33 .Teuity Bogeis is dead, and yet. for the Degravs life h'dls much in pros pect. In a certain New York home there is a noble woman, avIi ) is now the comforter of the artist's grief, aud who will live to ie the angel of his home, while in a quaint, but unfash ionable square, below Fourteenth street there dwells and .smiles a little being whose name lecaiis bttiei memovios, but whose sunny nature and unfet tered spirit make it more than probable that the Delancy millions vviil again folloAV the beck of love and be be stowed not upon Yirginia Rogers, but upon .Toannelie. the name by which Poih the Degraw persist in addressing the charming young schoolteacher. TIIE END. - FOUND ANCIENT INDIAN JAR. Rare Specimen Recently Discovered in New York St2te. R. Horracks of Fouda, X. Y., while stalking deer during the last hunting season at the Little Falls of the up-: per waters of the Saccndaga, near Lake Piseco, caught in a heavy down pour of rain, was obliged to seek shelter from th? storm under the ledges of the Little Falls. While sit ting there his attention was attracted to what seemed to be a round, brown bowlder partly covered with moss. Carelessly striking it, it gave forth a hollow sound. His curiosity being excited, he dug away the earth with his hunting knife and soon laid bare a symmetrically formed earthen jar. The jar stands ten inches high. At its largest circumference it measures thirty inches, and at its smallest twenty inches. The circumference of the top or mouth of the jar measures twenty-four inches. The vessel on the inside bears signs of use, but the outside shows no trace of fire, as is usual in Indian jars. The bottom is rounded. The ornamentation around the top is of the usual style of the Mohawk pottery that is, a series of straight and diagonal lines. The jar still hears the moss that had gathered on the rounded bottom that was exposed above the earth. r The jar is a well preserved speci men of Mohawk pottery, and is rare on account of the shape of the top, which is cut in three curves, forming three points, which give it a triangu lar appearance. Amstsruam Morning Sentinel. Subaltern Foiled the Colonel. I doubt it the pranks of the present day subaltern are as pluckish as those of his predecessors. I can re member a story that went the rounds some years ago 'q a 'daring Junior of the Grenadier, Guards who chaffed his colonel in a, fashion that would not be tolerated to-day. ; But the colo nel was not disposed ta deal leniently Avith him. He kept unusually late or rather early , hours, so; one day an early parade was ordered unexpected ly, and live minutes before the hour the colonel rode past' the culprit's quarters. Cheerfully unconscious of, impend ing doom, the latter leaked out of his bedroom window in the airy gar ments of sleep to say good morning. The cplocel chuckled and rode on, but to his surprise at the stroke of time the subaltern stepped cmt on pa rade, fully dressed an.d-all in order. He knew cf the trap and had doined the looser garment over his uniform io take a rise cut of his superior.- f T-oti London Tattler Wearing Out Sole Leather. Our average man wears out nearly two inches of sole leather in a year. Some crank has estimated that if a man had shoes made to last him a life time they would have to have soles nearly nine feet thick. In-sanity has" for years been Increas ing in Ireland. .. AGRICULTURAL. et.ccvvrt' t"!edlQg Ky to Hogs. In feeding young hogs the rye may be fed either ground or soaked td growing hogs. It is not desirable to feed the whole grain dry. The better method of feeding is to grind the rye and. feed it as slop. As to which is the tnore economical method, will de pend oil the question of grinding. The man Who does his own grinding will find it more profitable" to grind his rye and mix it with some corn and oats ground, feeding this combination .as slop feed. Where it is necessary to pay for the grinding, the soaked grain will probably be more economical, as soaking costs but little; twelve hours' soaking is sufficient. Rye makes a splendid feed for growing pigs. It should be free from the disease known as "ergot," as rye which is thus af fected is poisonous to stock. J. H. Skinner, in Indiana Farmer. . Feeding .Sheep in Trough. The design of a sheep trough illus trated this week is one which has been found entirely satisfactory, all things considered; it is some little trouble to make it, but its superiority over the average trough is so great that the la bor spent in its construction will be well spent. As shown, the trough is twelve feet long, sixteen inches wide, twenty-two inches high, tapered as shown. With the exception of the slats, which are one-half inch thick, and two and one-half inches wide, the trough is made Gf inch lumber. The sides, which are nailed on the edge of the bottom, are six inches wide. The end pieces, or legs, are three inches wide aud extend six inches below the TKOT'GII FOR SHEEP, bottom of the trough as shown. These legs are, of course, fastened securely to the trough after the latter is built and are independent of the rack itself. The rack is built by nailing the slats 0110 foot .opart 0:1 pieces three inches AA-ide and twelve inches long, and are then hinged to the sides of the trough to that they rest on the edges of the trough when closed. Two hinges on each side strap hinges, of course.) will be sufficient. At about the middle of the racks a bent hasp is fastened so that when the racks are in place they may bs held so by turning the hasp to the other side over a staple and hold ing it in place with a bit of Avood. In this arrangement either rack may be let down and the trough thus filled from either side. Indianapolis Xews. Two AIitaU'S. Tt is a mistake to allow colts and calves to remain cut iu Avood or field through winter storm and cold with no other shelter than a fence corner or tree trunk. Hardening them, some farmers call it. It surely is a case of the survival of the fittest if they sur vive it and do well. The bony, scrag gy colt and calf brought up In the spring may live out its allotted time in spite of such usage, but it is at a loss. If you trust to the mercy of nature, she asks pay for it hi shortened days or stunted growth. The other day, passing a large field. I saw one lonely calf, its back parts to the storm, cov ered with snow, shivering in the fence corner. Xot a-shed or straw stack in sight. And I thought of the proverb concerning the merciful man. Stock should never be turned into corn stalk or wood pasture in winter without hav ing something provided in the way of shelter, which they can reach in stormy weather. Better not sell off all the straw to the staAvboard, and use it in covering rude sheets for cattle and other stock. Our cattle are now far removed from their Avild ancestry and do not bear eoltt and exposure well. Again, it is a second mistake to confine horses and cattla too closely. They re quits plenty of fresh air. Ths stables end cow sheds should be as warm as possible to make them, but they should be provided with good veotil ators. Cows standing in a close atmos phere, laden with th poisonous ex halations from their own bodies, pass that poison back again to diseased lungs and milk. Some exposure to the cold and fresh air is necessary for the well being of the cow. It is a tonic that shows up quickly in her appear ance.. You can kill or Aveaken your stock by lack or care, and sometimes you can veaken them by too much care. Ida Shepler, in The Epitomist. ClmteHFov Grain. In a great many farm barns the feed lng grain is kept on tht upper floor and all that is fed out is carried down an one way or another. An American Agriculturist writer has a barn ar rL thus and Avith uo suitable ; space au thQ baf t0 bic' t As .a Avay out of tne difficulty he put m ay out or tne mmculty tte pu xome grain chutes to run from the bins -above, as shown in the accompanyiu cut. In some cases the chute could be allowed to drop directly from the bin above Avitbout cny joints. Under; few circumstances will a chute Avith les than half pitch be satisfactory. . Oats will run through such a pitch witU lit tle difficulty. Whe-it or rye will foJIow ven a less slant, but W'th bulky Vtuff like ground feed there is consider) tble Uacger of clogging. - ' ? The iaft-rior of the chute ought not to be less thait six inches square six by eight would be even better. The in terior should be free from ali obstruc tions. The hopper shaped device just 1 A A GRAIN CHUTE. under the bin is quite necessary with oats and ground feed to give greater headway. The cut-off (A) is an ordin ary draw supported by two cleats oil either skie. An extension is also made to the rear board of the chute so that it projects about half an inch outward, thus giving chance for holding a bag if necessary. Connecticut Farmer. Vractical Farm Dairying. Thinking', perhaps, the experience of a "common'' farmer with a common herd avouUI be interesting as well as instructive, I submit this: During the year ended April 1, 1903, our herd aver aged a trifle over 300 pounds otbutier each. We sold the same at twenty -tAvo cents net. During the last year we sold part of the cows. At the present time I am milking four October cows, Avhich make an average of forty-two pounds a week. It avouUI be somewhat difficult to average them to April 1, but I am confident the four will make 400 pounds each next year. The cows are common Jerseys. Xot one is regis tered. No two are alike, nor is there one which could compete in the show ring. In fact, they are Avbat Mr. Pack would call "scrubs." They ftra stabled in a rather cold up- ground stable, confined in stanchions, tnd let out twice a day for water and put back immediately, except on pleas ant days. Avheu they are given an hour's run. Their feed consists of pleuty of good oat straw and timothy , hay twice a day, and shredded corn fodder or chaff at noon. The grain ra- tion is four quarts of whole oats and bran mired antl four quarts of buck wheat rinds onc-e a daj. They are watered at a trough from which the ice has been removed neroreuaun. Thev have no ensilage or summer erain: are Avell bedded, but never cur- , ricd. They are treated kindly, but in j no sense are they under different con- j ditions than are, or should be, iu reach J of every farmer. We try to have them olives, one breakfast cneese, one ta dry through September. While I ful- blespoouful of mayonnaise dressing ly agree that cows Avill do better with : and one tablespoonf ul of cream; stone scientific surroundings and better and mince the olives; cream the cheese. breeding, still there is better money J for the plain farmer with a common herd of full blooded Ayrshires, but the scrub cow is where Ave got the start to do so. and, in defense of this much abused beast, will say that many a one Avith a reasonable chance would surprise the felloAVS , with the high priced fancies. Lee Hathaway, in Tribune-Farmer. roultry Jiolee. See that there is vigor and activity in the male bird. Changing hens fc new quarters is apt to check their laying. It is best to cook cut clover hay and then mix it. hot with ground grain. Even if the chickens do belong to the wife, you should help her with the heavy work. Exposing fowls to heavy wind storms is as dangerous to their health as is rainy AA-eather. CroAvdeel roosts at night will bring colds to the flock about as quickly as anything we knoAV of. Heavy forcing will no doubt increase the egg yield, but it will cripple the stamina of future generations. Sifted coal ashes should be spread, several times a week, upon the drop ping boards. Never use wood ashes. Feed the morning mash before giv ing water to drink. It Is a mistake to allow a fowl to become chilled by drluking cold water while the crop is empty, -. It is a very easy matter to improve the farm flock, and now is the proper time to look over the flock and select a few of the very best pullets and mate them up with the best cockerel upon the farm. They can be confined in a wire netting yard adjacent to a por tion of the poultry house. The Use of the lead pencil in putting down in black and white the number of eggs and fowls produced and the price received for them is a good way to change the mistaken belief that hens do not pay for their feed. A rec ord should be kept of the fowls and eggs consumed for family use. This is the season when many farm ers are moving from one locality to uo other. Changing tens from one place to another is a good way to cause them to stop laying. They may be coaxed to resume operations sooner .than they would otherwise by changing their diet. Give something new aud they Avill come to their meals with an appe tite. Durability of Syeaunore. The durability of sycamore wood is vouched for by a specimen in a Cairo museum. It is nearly tiOOO years old and is in perfect p ojidition. Minccl Meat Browneft. Mince cold roast beef very line, adil to it one tablespoonf ul of chopped pars ley, half a teaspoonful of salt, a little pepper, one teaspoonful of minced onion, one cupful of grated stale bread, a little lemon juice and one cupful of stock or grary; put this over the fire, then put it in a buttered baking dish; spread over buttered crumbs and put in the oven anil when brown reAiOT ami serve with tomato purees,- . - . Coeoannt Pn(T. The whites of three eggs beateu very' light a small teaspoonful of fine white sugar, one teaspoonful of corn flour. When these ingredients are mixed, put the mixture into a custard saucepan? or a jug set in a pan of boiling water,1 and stir constantly for twenty mmutes, then take it off the stove and add a quarter of a pound of desiccated or grated cocoauut. When Avell mixed, drop in teaspoonful on buttered pa per. Bake in a very slow oven, as they must not brown at all. . -'. Graham GrhliUe Cake." Scald three-cupful of milk, -let K stand until cool; sift in two and two thirds cupfuls of graham flour; beat the mixture until smooth; add two ta blespoonfuls of butter melted, one ta blespoonf ul of salt ami half a com pressed yeast cake dissolved in a lit tle water; heat again and let stand oA'er night in a wl'm place or until the mixture is very light; beat yolks of two eggs; add them anil then the well bealen whites; let stand ten minutes; bake on a hot griddle. These arc a little more elaborate than some grid--dle cakes and also very good. - Brown ot White Sunilwii'lien. Any kind of finely chopped nut beaten to a paste with a small quanli- ty of mayonuaise, will make a delic- urns filling for either brown or wuue bread sandwiches. Waldorf sandwiches are made of white bread and butter spread with a mixture' of equal parts of sliced apple and celery, a sprink ling of sliced walnuts, all moistened well with mayonnaise. Chicken sand wiches are math? in the same way, omitting the nuts aud apple. The rip omitting the mi olive sandwich was very popular last season for afternoon teas. For ou loaf of gluten bread use a pint of ripe adding first the cream and then the dressing, and, lastly, the minced ol ives. Stir to a smooth paste and spread on thin slices of buttered bread. . . For making sandwiches, bread baked In large-siza baking powder cans will be just the right sbse and free from crusts. ' -y A simple tlessert is whipped cream, sweetened slightly and flavored with pistache. Serve the cream in 6halkw bowls, and In the centre of each drop a very fresh meringue kiss, one of the large round ones preferably. It is the present theory that one should eat a great variety of food. This does not mean that many different kinds of food must be taken at one meal, but rather that one's diet should , be made up of many different whole some things. Moreover, a wholesoftie diet should hot ba permanently reject ed simply becttu Jt I not liked at first. It U frequently the eaia that by eatjng such an article a few time one gcqnU'es a relUh for it. In tabic setting there if always iome thing new. At a recent dinner the hos tess surprised her guests by decorat ing the centre of her table with a cloth of pure gold thread solidly worked, the border a lace design of white silk antl fine gold mesh in diamord-sbape stitches. The green for the table wis small ferns, set iu an oval dish of dark blue t:hiua, with figures in relief rep resenting peasant? in holiday costume. At each corner of this gold centre was a caudles lick in dull silver of Colonial design, furnished with a shade of iri tlescent glass, which graduated from toues of light yellow to dark orange, and then to red. In the'. lighting of bouses plenty of light judiciously shaded is what best suits the majority. The idea in arti ficial lighting: is to suggest the bright ness and warmth of sunlight within the house Avails. The only real sun light color being pale yellow, ttris should be used largely. It is far.mare comfortable and more economical to have the light down low,, surrounding and Avarming the occupants of the room, and to have it standing out cold and chill from the distance. The wax candle Is untidy, and its light is not practicable fen- reading purposes, but feu general purposes there Ja no pur er or softer light. Many' women. pre fpr to have their drawing-roems un derligbted. . '." , ' 1 ' ,a ' -I I '1 I m 11 li 1 1. ill i : ' 4 i ilk i-t w, ' ';i V '' m i'p ill i m A 1 .1!'