V ghc Chatham Bccorb, H. A. LONDON Editor and Proprietor, 'TERMS OF.SUBSCRIPTlONr $1.50 Per Year. . Strictlv cn Advance fniii" s" - . ' I I TTLE M AKE-BEIiIEVE LI A CHILD s OF :::::: by.b. l.tarjeon. : : : : : : CHAPTER X. Continued. "If I'd been yer own brother no. I ..never want to be that If Td been yer sweetheart as, you was going to git married "to; jer couldn't bare done more for me than yer did. Ton regu larly kept me for I1 don't know bow many days; yer come to hifi-4ate at night and give me grub, and all that time yer never peached on me. What did yer do it for 2" -. ,.,, , . ... "I did it out of pity," she answered. "Pity!" he exclaimed. "But that was no good. You couldn't make nothink ontof pity." ' $ ' - ; ' ' ' "I didn't want to make nothink out of it," she said. "All as I thought of was doing yer a. good turn." "And all that I thought of was that you wouldn't ha' done what you did do if you hadn't cared for me a bit." "I do care for you a little," she said, earnestly, "but not in the way you jtvant No, don't-look like, that or yon will make me cry. See here, Foxey, I t hold yer to yer word, yer know. Yer promised me to get a honest living. You'll go on doing It, wont yer? Yer wont turn bad again?" . "I don't know what I'll do," he said, as he turned to' leave her "Do yer think I care what becomes of me now?-' . ; . . He was out of sight before she could eay another word. Her eyes were red when she re-entered the room- in which she had left Saranne. for she had not been able to Juppress her tears as she walked home. But she did not tell Saranne what fcade her cry, and Saranne did "not press her, being too full of delightful anticipations of the coming holiday. . CHAPTER XL . From Light to Darkness i "Wally." "Yes, dad." Tve been thinking lately that the sunshine of - life is very unequally spread. Some bask in it from birth to death, while others are condemned to .walk in shadow the whole of . their days.. Doubtless it is for some wise purpose that the Great Disposer of event3 has so ordained, but there are; times when one is inclined I say it reverently to doubt the wisdom of it Perhaps it is also ordained that these disturbing reflections should come to us when we see stretched before us the valley of Eternal Light." "We disagree so seldom, dad, that I am not so sure whether it is distressing or not to hit upon a subject in which our ideas do not run - in. the same grove. You are ' growing melancholy again, and by so doing are breaking the contract we entered into $o look only on the bright side. Not "that I have the slightest notion, dad, except in a general way, why you should al low yourself to relapse into sadness. I have a very strong disposition not to allow it, and to oyder you just as if our positions were reversed, as if I were your father and you my son in stantly to put on a more cheerful hab it. Now I have something to say upon the theme you have started, and which apparently has suggested itself to you by the sight ,of Little Make-Believe and Saranne in the garden there gath ering the pease for dinner." . "It was partly suggested by those tworWally, and partly also by what is In my mind concerning ourselves." "Concerning you and me, dad?" "Yes, Wally. Go on, I love to hear you talk." I travel back to the days of your childhood, and. reflect. upon the joy your innocent, artless little, ways brought to iiie. The contrast between you as yon were then and you. as you are now for do you know, "Wally, that within even the last few days a great change seems to have come over you? the contrast between the child and the man my child and my man is a source of the most surprising delight -to me; a delight, my boy, which has its deep anxieties, too." "I can imagine it, dad, though I cannot reciprocate your feelings in what I experience by the change which has come over you. It is true that, to myself as well as to you, a change seems to have come over me, a change I can hardly describe; but I think that In a very short time I have grown much older; years seem to have taken the place of days. I know that I have not lost your confidence." "No, Wally, no; never think that.?: "I don't think4 it, dad; if I did -I should -not be able to hid my grief from yon. And I know, that, some time ! or other, you wui connae in we, cu. give me an insight into the sorrow which weighs upon yqu. Bear this in mind, dad; I have been schooling my self, and I am prepared for news that is not entirely good, for were it soI. should, before to-day, have been a par ticipator in it Putting ourselves .out of the question, can you, in your whole ' experience, find two human creatures who have been more thoroughly con demned to walk in shadow your own words, dad than Little Make-Believe end Saranne?" . "X, Wally, 1 don't think I can; nay, I am sure I cannot." . r . - - - "Look at them now, dad.- Are they in shadow?" " "To all appearance they are in full snnlightrbody and soul." VOL. XXVIII, THE SLUMS, i "Dad, don't you see how, In this, ad mission not drawn-from fancy, but from reality you have destroyed your own argument? It pains me more than I can express to see that, what ever your sorrov may be, you are dis posed to be led from the paths of sun shine in which you and I have walked alt our lives." Say that a cloud is hanging over us, shall that blot out light from the world, shall it cause us to love each other less, shall it not make strong instead of weak? There, dad, I have brought tears into your eyes. Forgive me, dad,'' "They are tears of joy. Wally. You have taught me a lesson. I thank God for it, and for giving me you." , ; - , Time passed with' Little Make-Believe and Saranne as it passes in a dream.' , . ; Not for a- few days, but for many weeks, did they abide in the country with Mr. Deepdale and Walter. They were willing enough and would have been content to have remained forever with friends so faithful. When in the early morning they heard the singing of the birds outside their window they could scarcely be lieve they were awake, and were often afraid to move lest the sweet sounds should suddenly change into the harsh cries of the Clare Market coster monger. -r The trees bending down . with the weight of finit, the ripening and the cutting of the corn, the fragrant per fume which rose from hedge and field, even from the commonest roadsides, after the rain, the glorious-'sunrises which they were not too Indolent to rise ty see, the flaming sunsets which tipped the branches of the distant trees and shone in distant windows with fiery, ruby . glow, the wheeling and the cawingiof the rooks as they returned to their nests, the little water fall which fed the brook in which Wal ter and . his father" fished these and numberless other instances of nature'3 summer beauty filled their souls not only with wonder, but with worship. Their wonder and their worship grew when Walter took them to the seaside, and they saw for the first time the boats and the ships coming and going, and the great ocean which stretched as Walter told them, to other lands in which people dwelt thousands and thousands of miles away. 4 Was it possible that the world could be so beautiful? The squalor, the privations, the mis; ery, the hourly struggle of their lives had vanished, and they breathed the air of Lotos land. :- In more senses -than one was this true. For wnat Saranne, being very beau tiful in her springtime in which a beauty- lies no painter's brush can catch should have failed to make an impression upon Walter was scarcely possible. He saw her now in a new light; in a pretty soft dress, with a healthy color In her cheeks, with sparkles in her eyes. And there was a certain refinement In her which had no room to show it self in their squalid home in Clare Market; she was even ladylike the very reverse of Little Make-Believe, whom nothing outwardly could refine. It is written that love makes no dis tinctions; nobles have stooped to coun try maids, kings to peasants; wider gulfs have been bridged than that which up till now had divided Saranne from Walter. When heart commingles with heart in Innocence and honor, youth being there to favor the conjunction, it is easy to divine what will occur. It occurred to Saranne and Walter, and they yielded to the spell,of the en chanter whose presence bestows on all surrounding things a glory they.Jiever before possessed. It is a song whose pictured Images are mirrored in the midday's clouds, in the night's shadows, in the bosom of running water, t ' The breeze whispers it, the birds sing it; it Is heard in the drowsy murmur of the woods. Through all ages It has been sung by mortals below, by angels above. . It was heard on the first day by the first man and woman, and. shall be heard until the last, ever carrying with it, when it Is pure, a sweet and chas tening influence. - ' ? For not alone ln joy does it make it self known; it "reigns in sorrow also, when death has taken a dear one from us, and the mantle then it wears is such as the angels wear. - - In their rambles through field and wood, in their idlings by the water's side, in their excursions here and there to gather flowers, to visit poor cottages, one of Little - Make-Believe's chief pleasures, to see how the hops were getting on, to pick blackberries, to wit ness country sports Saranne and Wal ter were invariably together, Little Make-Believe Invariably a little apart. . It was not premeditated; it happened so naturally and was accepted. When missing her which was not always the case they turned and called to her, she Joined them, with smiles on her lips and in her eyes, but otherwise she lingered In the back ground, occupied with her dream.?. PITTSBORO, CHATHAM COUNTY, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1506. NO. 26. Strange that sne, who In her secret soul loved Walter with all the strength of which her nature was capable, with a love which In no wise weakened that she bore her sister strange that she should be blind to what was passing between Walter and Saranne. Stranger still that, for the first time since ; she had taken ' upon herself a 'mo'ther's duty toy a'-sister but little younger1 than hopself, she should be so engrossed by a secret affection of her own as not to perceive a. newer and more pregnant meaning In Saranne'a every word and look. But only for a little while was the veil before her eyes. Mr. Deepdale being absent In Lon don; whither he had 'been lately 'very often called, Walter and the sisters had a long, tiring happy day. . ; They went out as soon as breakfast was over and rode for a dozen miles in the carrler'scart to a cathedral town. After visiting the cathedral :and par ticipating in the service they walked by devious tracks to another part of the-country for the purpose of dining In a small, old-fashioned inn where an excellent cold meal was daily spread fortravelers.w y . r,! ! 1 They dined In the upper room of the Inn which had only one slory to 3t from the windows of-which a wonder ful landscape of Kentish hill and glade could be seen. Then, being urged thereto by the landlord who infoxuned them that they had plenty of time, and that they had only to be back by 4 o'clock to catch a 'coach which would set them down within 'a mile of their, village they walked two miles farther by other de vious tracks, to seo a famous tree called the Sisters, which was said to be not less thau a thousand year's old. They went, and dallying on the road andnn the fields, allowed the afternoon to slip' by without a thought of home, Then suddenly Walter cried: " "By Jove, it's 4 o'clock! We must run if we want to catch the cpach!" They ran, laughing and almost breathless to the inn, where they learned that the coach badbeen gone a good half hour, after waiting for them for several minutes. And then Waiter said: "By Jove, what's to be done?" "I don't know!" laughed Little Make Believe. , "And I don't know!" laughed Sar anne. ' They were not in the least disturbed. They had full confidence in Walter and had not the smallest doubt of his power to overcome even superhuman difficul ties. - He questioned the" landlord as to the possibility of obtaining a con veyance. It was not possible, the landlord said. . ' : ? A horse? Why, yes they could man age a horse, said the landlord. But he could not see this with a doubtful look at the girls how that would get them out of the difiiculty: , "No more can I," said Walter, mer rily. "Three of us could certainly not ride on one horse." - - ' Tney all laughed gayly at the idea. "Shank's pony," suggested the laud lord, ""and step out." "There's nothing else for it," said Walter. "Come, girls, we must walk." And oft! they set on a : fourteen mile walk at nearly 5 in the afternoon. For the first two-miles it was delight-' ful; then fatigue began toTmake it self felt; they stopped to rest; walked on again; lagged; stopped to rest again and again," and again, till Saranne said wearily: . "It's no use; I can't go any farther." "Oh, but you must,", said Walter, positively. - s Twenty or thirty yards farther on Walter looked at her solicitously. She shook her head. ". "I really dont think I can do it." "Then, by Jover he said, "I shall have to carry you; for it mus.t be done." Without more ado he lifted her in his arms and carried her awhile; but al though her arm was wound his neck, and her face almost,. nay, sometimes quite, touched his what else could tyj expected ou such rough and uneven roads? it was beyond his strength to carry her far, and he was presently, compelled to set her down. "It will be a case," be said, "of the children in the woqcls. I wish we could find some blackberries." ' Little Make-Believe had been hunting for some, and she called out that the hedge where she was standing" was full of them. : They joined her immediately. - "The worst of it 'is," said Walter, putting some of the ripest berries iuto Saranne's mouth, ."that the story isn't a bit of good without a wicked uncle." He called out very loud: , iWill a wicked uncle oblige us by appearing?" c "Or a bear?" cried Saranne. r: "Or a prince?" cried Little Make-Believe. "Or a fairy with a glass coach?" "Meanwhile," said Wajter, 'until something does come we'll go .on eat ing blackberries. Here's a fine bunch, Saranne." ' r : So these three careless happy people lingered by the roadside an4 gathered berries while the evening shadows were gathering around thejn. ' i ' : - Fortunately something did come; and they were not left to their own de vices. ' . ' .". f ' '' They heard the jolting of a cart over the road they had traveled. , . "Here's the glass, coach,'; said Sar anne; "Make-Believe is always right" Presently the cart came into View. "I'm in luck," said the driver, pulling up in , front of them; "the landlord down yonder told me I stood a good chance of catching you if I hurried. You look precious tired. "I can take yon six or eight miles if you care to ride." v -Ty ' r ' There was no question about that, aufl a bargain was soon struck.. ; To be Continued.) - ; Brave Annabel Lou.. Annabel Lou is only two, . , - And one can't tell that is, rery well - - What Annabel Jxu Is going to do - , ,i Annabel Lou is afraid of a mouse, . Or a dog or a bird or a fly. or a cat ; . . But she's not afraid to stroke' the fur ' J Of a. great, big fox, and give It a -pat, 7? And pull its tail, and handle Its claws, ' And put her hand in its open jaws. Annabel Lou is only two, --f - And one can't tell that is, very well What Annabel Lou is going to. tfo. tu;: fi But perhaps I' should say, to'Xe quite-fair,1 That claws and fnr and tail and head , 1 Are not exactly-as fcrst they grew, And are harmless quite, for the fox Js ; dead, ..--;, And it hangs round the neck indeed, 'tis true , ! ti i h -, -.-t Of the beautiful mama of Annabel Loti; Clara Odell Lyon, In St Nicholas. ? Conundrums. - ; What black ' thing'' enlightens the world? Ink. " ' ' How do bees dispose of their hon ey? They cell it.--- - . What game do the waves play at? Pitch and toss. What soup would cannibals prefer? A broth of a boy. , . , . t What is the oldest " lunatic on rec ord? Time, out of mind . . Name something " with two heads and one body. " A barrel. ' What sort of men are always above board? Chessmen. ' '.'"'" What coat is finished without but tons and put on wet? A coat of paint. t ' What is a muff? ' Something that holds a lady's hand -and doesn't squeeze it. When is a clock oil the stair dan gerous? When it runs down and strikes one. , Mr. Bigger, Mrs. Bigger, and Baby Bigger, which of this interesting fam ily is the biggest, and why the big gest? Baby Bigger, because he is a little Bigger. v ' ' V The Pancake Woman. Children in cities are well acquaint ed with the waffle-man, but a traveler through Japan describes his equiva lent, who appears as a pancake worn-, an. He says; "One of the delis at.;' of thV chil-' dren in , Japan is the pancake wom an, who, with her little brazier and its copper frying pan,' offers great attrac tion to the urchins who gather round her stall. ; : : "She is usually found on the corner of the streets nearest the schools; and, when the boys and girls clatter out with their wooden clogs and satchels, of books, what, more, wel1 come sight than' the pancake woman waiting on the corner for them! With a bowlful of delicious batter, d ladle, and a Cake turner, she is ready for the onslaught. ' ' - r ; "Her withered smile and wheedling tones Craw the hungry crowd as . well as the crisp smell of a sample pan cake baked 'on the griddle.? t r Ir a: small coin worth one-tenth of a cent a blissful child . may fry and turn his own cakes and eat them fresh from the griddle as he frys them. Happy is he who comes with .'. ttringful of cash hv his kimono sleeve, and who can fry and eat to his heart's content."-' y- ' Topsy-Turvy China. 4 ' China, as seen with' our eyes, is gro tesque. She' is. the antipodes' of . all the rest of the world. She seems the jpside down of everything. The needle in ; her ' compass points to the. south: she says west-north instead of north west, r She enjoys , her fireworks In the daytim?.5, Her ladies ' use wheel barrows when they are making calls. They drive' cows instead of horses. The necks of their prisoners are put in the stocks. Their Surname comes firsty as Roosevelt-Theodore. : , They mount their horses from . the right side, i The old men, fly;, kites, ,wnUe the small ; boys ( sit ? demurely j and watch them.. . They keep on their hats as a sign of respect , Their crimson visiting cards must' be a. burjlen to them if they do much calling, as they are four feet long and about ' two wMa" Thirrinkt.S are drawn W men. their carriages by sails. They never drink milk; and their .mourning color is white or! nale blue. Their young women," no matter how beautiful they may be, according to Chinese,, ideas, are slaves, while the old.. mother of grown sons and the . wrinkled grand mothers are queens and the most re spected and beloved members of the household:' ' Even y'the4- emperor's mother ranks -higher -than; he does. When a son is fortunate enough to re ceive an honorable decoration, he brines it to '.his mother, who . wears it for him. Amourette M. Beecher, in Sunset Magazine. a , ' ' ' Trr! Melbourne said: "YouAff men should never5 hear any other language than this: "You have your own 'way to make, and it depends upon, your own exertions whether you succeed or fail.'" Anv observer, -knows that the boy whohas his life planned for him, and the , rough places made smooth without 'any exertion on his nqrt. ' is apt to be indolent; discon tented and incompetent. :u This is the kind o4 boy, when fortune fails him, who takes up, the idea that the 'world owes him a living,? and waits f or his supposed :: inheritance... ' There are times. ;in .the life, of both boys and men. when they think if they had the rhance they ; could do great, things. Tho way to havo J. he. chance is to make ; ity Opportunity does not come torus heralded by trumpet and drum, and.' greatness is seldom thrust upon us, though men have achieved success through influential friends, or, by the pushing of great talents; hut-the ma jority achieve it by, a combination of poverty," ambition, hard work and de terminatloni',;..'1?he: hard "road' Is the sure road,' and strength of mind as of muscle; ' is only i to be had ; by persist ent exercise and 'steady training. The true. meaning of success is not-to ac cumulate .wealth or gain the applause of . the i multitude the majority 5 of whom shout onl y , because they, hear the shouting of others. ...A truly great man . wishes to stand pre-eminent for something higher and better J than money or notoriety; One to be really successful la the 'higher meaning of the word, must be a 'hard, earnest Avorker, and must expect to take the knocks and buffetings he is sure to get from meaner, envious spirits. Mo dest - merit is not necessarily over looked, but merit, to -be recognized, and hence to gain - the reward it de serves, must exert itself to find it; it must not fail through inactivity, neg lect 6T opportunity' or-untrained abil ities. It must 'not- hold, back to be sought, but should "let its light shine," and ' hold itself ready " at all times to make the most of whatever advancement ccmes in its way. For ward and impudent men are not pre fered above retiring merit but it of ten happens ths.t men of inferior abil ities are prompt and active in grasp ing opportunities, where superior merit holds itself . in the back ground. "A barking dog is often more useful tha.na sleeping lion," and his presence is surely better known.--The Commoner. - -' Betty's Bargain. "Everv time I want to so anywhere I have to play with Ned," said Betty, nuttingi her little brother in his go- cart rather crossly. "The. other girls can go to pick flowers this morning,' but I must amuse a tiresome baby all the time.", ..... , ,' "It would be very nice not to have a little " brother." said ' mamma. thoughtfully. "You could go where you pleased an tne time, ana a iew lir.tlfr- chores would not .'count." "" : "Wouldri't; it?" said Betty, with' a smile. y ' ' 1 --f; - ".!' -. f'Just think of the good-times Nell and Grace have. I wouldn't have to leave .my new story , book so often and : hunt playthings for Ned if he belonged to some one else.''' ,i . r : 'I'll buy him if he. is for sale," said Mrs. Turner, who was coming up the walk;' "How much do you ask for him?" ' ( i " -' '" "A dollar," said Betty. .- And to her great surprise the visitor took out a fat purse and gave her a big silver piece.-- ' -"i ' ' I - rr . : "Run along with- the girls and spend your money c.s you please,"; said Ned's new , mamma, as she took . the baby out. of the go-cart, "I think I have made a good bargain." y ? . . . "I'll get same oranges and candy and popcorn," thought " Betty as" she hurried after her friends. "They are, not going very fast, and I can catch up after I get the things. They'll be surprised, I guess, to see what I bring to the picnic.".. 1 ; r-The man at the store gave her a ismall basket; and, when she went away With it filled with good things, she had only half her money . left. "I'll save this much, to buy the -little cart for Neddie." she said to herself as she ran down the street; "He wants it so bad;" . ; :t "Where did you get all these nice things?" asked the girls when they spread their -dinners" on the big rock in the wools. ' ' y - "Mrs. Turner i gave ' me : a dollar," said Betty, "and I spent half of it" ; "Gave you r a - whole dollar? What for?'y i . tt . j '-JJ - "I I sold the, baby," stammered Betty, . getting red in the' face. J "Sold , Neddie yf or a dollar ; ' My mamma would have "given you ten times that much if ' she " had known you' Wanted to" get rid of him. What did vbu want, the dollar for?" ; "I wanted to buy Neddie a cart and--"-'- ri'- i ' a; -: : "But -your can't-get him; a cart when i he don't belong to you," said Grace. "I always thought you. ought to be the best girl in the world be cause , you had such", a dear baby to play with, and J here you sold; him for a dolltr." : ""'"' ; y - "Do you. think" .began Nell,-br.t ftpttv -was running home as fast afe she could go.7 The goodies were left. on the big rock, and all she cared tor was to buy; back the dear little broth er. - ' ' '". ' V'f "If you'll only sell him back to tne," she gasped. laying the - warm piec of money in Mrs.. Turner's hand. ".Ill earn lots and lots of dollars to, pay you. . I don't .know what made me so wicked." a;ivy H--tu::i "Well, if you are, sure, you ,want him, I suppose.rilshave; to. give him back: 8.id Mrs. "Turner with ' a smile.' "He is a little darling; and-1 am not surprised ' to have you come after him." , . V- Ki -,' 4 "Mrs. ' Turner said I made a good bargain but I think it was very bad, mamma," said Betty.-r1 hope Neddie will never find out how near he came to being Ned Turner instead of Ned Brown." Hilda Richmond , United Presbyterjan. J'i To Construct a Corn Brace. - To nake a firm support for stacked corn in the field, one " helper, took a rope five feet long and fastened a ring in one end and a snap In -the other end. Taking two stacks in adjoining rows, put the rope around them; snap the snap into the ring at one side of the stock; then cut the corn and set it against this. When the shock was filled, he pulled the rope out by tak ing hold of the snaps.. Adjust the rope half : way up the stalk. This make3 a very firm stand to husk from F. L. Risley in the Epitomist. Hog Philosophy. A symmetrically developed hog Is the profitable porker. A runty pig may be properly de fined as one that -eats its head off about three or four times a year. The hog pen is the logical ' banking Institution on the farm, and the farm er can draw on his account any day in the year. - Everlastingly at It is the successful hogman's motto. You can't make the most of the pigs and slight them, for one single day. " - The State fairs are the best educa. tors we have for the rank and file of hog growers.. They set higher ideals for men to work toward. The high grade hogs now found on the average farm trace through the best and purest ancestry known to the hog breeding world. Don't worry about feeding the sou till the" litter is a day or two old, at least, and then go slow. Feed some thing light and cooling. . , There is a better margin for profit in a well-fed litter of pigs than may be found in any ' other like invest ment of money on-lhe farm. k Breed for Quality. '''it has- been said that the poorest horse to breed is the little horse of the .draft type. But with the trotting stock the case is entirely different, for; both siae and quality are hard to obtain in the standard-bred horse. It is difficult to get much size without sacrificing quality. The tendency now is to breed more for quality than was true for many years when all shapes sizes and colors went, Just so the horse had a standard record. It Is not tnie that the large horse goes as fast, and stands training better than the smaller animal. Some of the big horses go very fast, but as a rule they are : "band-box", horses suitable for the show ring, of trotting exhibi tion miles. As a rule the great horses, the kind that can win a race or two every meet during the entire season, go Into winter quarters sound, and keep it up year after year, are of the George Wilkes and Lou Dilion types, and weigh S00 to 1000 pounds. This is the class of horses that render the greatest service for physicians, livery men and others who require horses oi great endurance. The large horses have to carry too much weight; their feet and legs cannot stand the contin uous fast driving and hard work all their lives and keep sound, equal to the 800 or 950 poundIorgans. Farm ers' Home Journal. Currant Cutting A little foresight is worth money, especially in setting out currant bush es. Cuttings from currant bushes are so easily propagated that there is small sense in paying nurserymen the com paratively high prices demanded for better varieties when it is within the capacity of even the most amateur fruit grower to raise his own currant bushes. Of rourse it takes more time to raise them than it does to buy them, but it costs less. With cur rants as well as with most other pro ductions it costs no more additional labor or money to care for and pro duce a good Vafiety than it does a com mon One. With a start to, a dozen bushes of Fay's Prolific, the writer has raised 200 fine bushes from Cut tings made from the original fwilve. The year after, planting these twelve furnished, by severe pruning, 120 "cut tings, and of these over . 100 lived and produced bushes. The second year excellent results were obtained by. cut ting new wood late in August and Im mediately planting 'in moist ground, a practice which does no seem gen eral. It can be strongly recommended. This new wood gave immediate and good growtlj and got finely establish ed roots before winter. They ( were planted in nursery rows a foot apart, sfcc Inches in the row, , in good rich ground, and they wintered nicely with out loss, straw and leaves being fused as mulch protection. In spring these cutting had .a long lead over those which - had , been . stored away In the cellar; they had the advantage of al most a third' of a season's growth. Three years from the August cutting, under good conditions, currants will yield well. In planting the cuttings care should be taken to select well drained ground in which an excess ot water will not stand and freeze around them. Y. M. I in Indiana Farmer. Cribbing of the Grain. 1 The ' shocks of, corn and fodder do not' alf stand up alike. " While a good . RATES OFJ ADYERJISINGr 1 One square, en fneertJoa $1.00 -On square, two insertion! . 1.69 On equare, on month 2-60 For Larger Advertise ments Liberal Con tracts will be made. number. will settle and stand perfectly straight, there are always shocks here and there that twist or fall down. II t these shocks are 'permitted to: remain until the field of corn is. gathered, the fodder will likely be entirely ruined. Such shocks will not turn rain and . a. few showers will make the fodder worthless., Even the corn. may,, bo badly damaged in the down or twisted shock. Haul in such 'shocks as soon as possible, when they are dry. If they cannot be hauled in, then reshocjc them In the field. After considerable time and labor have been" spent in har vesting the fodder, It is certainly not ' wise to lose even a small percent of it that might easily.be hauled in. It is hot likely that shocks standing strafsht one month after harvest' will - twist enough to damage by rains until, they are sufficiently, dry to shred or haul to the barn. As soon as possible the fodder should -be in the dry: ; A wet fall very seriously injures the feeding value of cornfodder. Oftentimes Octo-ber-and November are good months for shredding and when December comc, rains early hinder the work; . . ; More attention must be, given to corn not entirely out of the sap' thau to dry corn. Usually such corn has a sappy cob and if thrown In a heap the silks and shelled corn in , the . centre of the heap prevent proper ventilation and fermentation sets in. In this way the corn may be badly damaged. ; A tight crib is more likely to have corn heat and damage than an open one. The V-shaped trough with pigeonholes iu it H a good ventolater. These troughs are made to fit crosswise in the crib at Irregular intervals, espe cially near the place of filling the crib. This permits the free circulation of air through the heap. If troughs, are not used ordinary fence rails crossed oc casionally will permit "air to pass through. ,'."' Where shredding is. practiced 'the shelled corn Is difficult to handle be cause of . its : tendency. to heat. It must be made free of cut stalks and dirt. Then If not too sappy it may be spread and stirred two or. three times. - Then it will dry. W. B. An derson in the Indianapolis News. Dairy Cows Loose in Shed. Prof. Fraser, of the Illinois station, says in Circular: No. 93$ .The plan of allowing dairy cows to run loose In a shed looked so reasonable,' and' thost. dairymen who had -tried it reported so favorable concerning .the .results obtained, that it was decided to put th method Into actual operation. Accord ingly a shed 30x68 feet ndjacent to the dairy barn was. arranged for. the purpose; mangers were built on each side, and the two bull pens were rc- ained at the corners. ' This shed is a one-story building with windows and doors ou both sides, thus affording ex cellent ventilation. Twenty-two cows have been cared for in tnis manner with most satisfactory results. From the experience at the university, th past two years it has been found that the cows keep much cleaner than when stabled and that the milking stable is in a more sanitary condition, conse quently it is easier to produce clean milk. By this method there is- le3a difficulty In providing" cows with an abundance of fresh air they are more vigorous and healthy and have better appetites than when kept in the sta ble. Since they can move about and get exercise they will not suffer In cold weather If the temperature Is somewhat lower than In the' ordinary Stable. Labor fs saved as tho shed can be bedded much more easily and juickly than can stalls; there is lit tle stable cleantng to be done and the manure Is hauled directly Xroni ihe shed to the field at any time mos convenient and when least damage i done the land by tramping. Anothei advantage is the saving' of fertility much more compl$tely. Many barn do not have cement floors and so tber is more or less waste of the liquid por tion of the manure. Since, land is be ' coming eo high priced no farmer can afford to allow any fertility to be wast ed, and by this method all the liquiJ is saved, as it Is absorbed by the bedding. If only enough bedding 18 used to keep the cows, clean they, tramp the manure so thoroughly that It doea not beat to make the air impure. If manure is hauled directly (ram the sta ble to the field there is a considerable portion of the year when it must be allowed- to accumulate ' la the' yard where it will Jeaoh badly, or It must be hauled ontx the land when it is-so we( and soft that much Injury is done by ; tramping; this is especially true on clay soiLWeekly Witness. - , .Where it Belonged. An amateur authoress who had sub mitted a story to a magazine waited for several weeks without 1 hearing from, the editor concerning It. Final ly she sent him a noto requesting an earlv decision, because as she said, she "had other irons in the fire." bnorlly niter came, the editor's re- piy: y "Bear Madam, 1 have read your storv, i-nd I should advise you to put It with ; the other Jroaa." Harper'a Weekli.