woe ; The University of Cambridge had become notorious. To make its dis comfort complete, its notoriety filled tie columns of the halfpenny press. A murder had been committed in one cf the colleges. A murder was something so extra ordinary in a Cambridge college, so .-Hen from the even-course of 'varsity hfe, and so remote from the exper ience of 'varsity men that no Cam V'ijge man could estimate the conse r enees of the deed. Those in au thority were stupefied. A murder was something utterly remote from a lion's purview. But in Cambridge only one thing Altered. The life of one of the most popular run in the 'varsity was in jeopardy. l!:s college was proud of him because i,o was a Rugby Blue. Moreover, he vt.5 likely to be well up in the Mathe matical Tripos. He stood out a t.'.inirg example of that union of ath letic and academic distinction which j5 a splendid 'varsity ideal. Yet this ni railing question was in every one's thoughts. Would he be sentenced to u.ath? Perhaps opinion was evenly di vided. . .. Cn the cne hand the story' of the prosecution was strong and the links in the circumstantial chain were flaw ;s?. On the other hand, every one disbelieved it, because, though they saw the strength of the case for the Ciown. they saw also that the crime was one of which no one who knew tuc prisoner could imagine him guil ty, And even those who did believe it v- i?hed they did not. For the man who was dead was of lev: birth and low instincts, one of these men who are sent to Cambridge no: to be taught knowledge, but to be made socially presentable, whose only c'r.a:-ce of passing in the world as gen tlemen is to be thrust for three or four years when they are young into the society of men who are well bred. o that, though they can never do mere, they may at least pick up the externals which mark a gentleman. It was natural, therefore, that the rymrathy of the whole university went out to Charles Courtney as he sat in the dock, just the same in appearance- as he always was- a well built athlete, a young man with a Iear, open face, his hair curling crisply cn his temples, his features f.rrtily and clearly cut, his clothes those half Cambridge wore a tweed Norfolk jacket, gray flannel trousers, liberally turned up, brightly colored socks and brown leather "brogue" shoes. His tie was in the colors of the Hawks Club. He knew that his life was in jeop ardy. Three days of listening to the witness. 's for the prosecution had told upon him. His face was set and firm, but unusually pale. I . 1 Several miles outside Cambridge there stands a house isolated in its own grounds and surrounded by trees. It is a spacious dwelling, dat ing from the middle of the nineteenth century, and it is distinguished by an atmosphere of calm seclusion, which It deiives partly from its position and partly from being the residence of an eminent scientist, Sir Julian Courtney. The visitors to this house are frequently men of world-wide reputation, since Sir Julian Courtney stands alone as the foremost British geologise, and its well ordered house hold, from the stable boy to. the housekeeper for Sir Julian has long been a widower seems conscious of the dignity which attaches to the household cf a man whose pre-emin ence is acknowledge by men who are themselves distinguished scientists. Yet that house figured prominently U the- Cambridge murder trial, which the whole of England waa following .with eager and excited interest, The prisoner waa Sir Julian Courtney's taly son and heir to the baronetcy,1 On the third day of the trial, how eve?, nothing unusual narked the life cf Churn Manor, despite the fact that cn that day the prosecution closed its case, and left the impres ion on the mind of the great newspaper-reading public that the prisoner was guilty. In the large library the master of the house sat among his books, fos sils and his papers. He was a tall, bent-shculdered man, his gray hair receding from his forehead, his fore head splendidly and nobly built. He was a great scientist, a man far above the ordinary rough-and-tumble Sniggle of life, Men often smiled 3 thy reminded themselves of the mass of false theory which Court Pey's pen had swept away, and it was well known among scientific workers that no deception, however small" or eppareutly innocent, ever escaped his rictiee. He was. almost superhuman Ja his passion for the Truth. For he fctew, a3 lesser men do not know, tfcat from the Truth there must nev er be the slightest deflection. 'et surely that October afternoon; ps he sat there working calmly In his Quiet library, he was superhuman' in another sense. Hi3 servants, indeed, ii not mince matters. They said liuntly that he was. For their nerves were on edge in their anxiety Xor their young master. They said that a father who could sit quietly read- 'fig and writing when his son's life "'as in jeopardy must have a heart of stone. Many hard words indeed were spo kyii about Sir Julian that day in the kitchens and stables of Churn Manor. And it would have been strange had i!- been otherwise. He paid the usual Penalty paid by those who stand above the plane of ordinary men; he was misunderstood. In truth, that October afternoon r Julian was doing what scores of Jsen have done in times "of crisis seeking to escape from his thoughts. I'hat afternoon he was tabulating and ranging the work of years. He foiced himself to do this mechanical work that he might not be at the aercy of his thoughts, for he knew ;w,at no one else at Churn Manor knew; that on the morrow, when the ense begau he would be the first witness. He knew well enough that evidence would be the chief sen- In ni ward Cecil. 7 ,, , ,r--ic 3E37jyy satlon of a sensational trial, that all England would ring with It, and that every cheap journalist and emotional reporter would make capital out of his feelings. He shrank from the or deal. It was utterly repellant to him. But It was even worse, for he knew that it would be useless. There was, indeed, a flaw. It might .be covered by a He. If it were covered, his evidence would be strong In favor of his son so strong, In deed, that, if it were believed, it would be In itself conclusive. But if the flaw were not covered? "Why not He?" The question kept hammering at the back of his thoughts. It had been hammering there for many days, for more than a week, ever since the line of defense had been decided upon. It was hammering very loudly that afternoon. "Why not He?" He was trying not to hear the ham mering. The defense was an alibi, so com monly the forlorn hope of a guilty man. "The prosecution," said the coun sel for the defense In his opening speech, "has fixed the hour of the murder at 7.30 at night. That exact time is fixed with certainty. It is our business to prove, as we shall prove, that at 7.30 the accused could not have been in Cambridge." It was thus that the alibi was an nounced. . On the afternoon 'of the day on which the murder was committed Courtney was at Churn Manor. He had tea with his father, and after ward stayed talking. Sir Julian would be called to prove that he did not leave till it was too late for him to reach his college before 8 o'clock at the earliest. "The prosecution will show In cross-examining our witnesses, per haps," went on the eminent counsel, "that the accused possessed a bicycle. He also possessed, I admit, a motor- bicycle. But the one was in Cam bridge at the time, and the other was being repaired. Both these points AS 8 8 - I HL GOOD i - ..- TELL you, my brother men, it has become too much the fashion in these latter days to sneer and jeer at the old fashioned ways of the old-fashioned American household. Something too much of Iron there may have been in the Puritan's temper; something too little of sunlight may have come in through the narrow windows of his house. But that house had foundations, and the virile virtues lived In it. There were plenty of red corpuscles in his blood, and his heart beat in time with the eternal laws of right, even though its pulsations sometimes seemed a .little slow and heavy. It would be well for us if we could get back into the old way, which proved Itself to be the good way, and maintain, as our fathers did, the sanctity of the family, the sacredness of the marriage vow, the solemnity of the mutual duties binding parents and children together. From the house holds that followed this way have come men that could rule themselves as well as their fellows, 'women that could be trusted as well as loved. Read the history of such families, and you will understand tho truth of the poet's words: Self-reverence, self-knowledge, self-control , , These three alone lead life to sovereign power. Henry Van Dyke, D. D., In "Counsels by the Way." (Is ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft 8 ft ft ft ft 6 can be proved conclusively. In short it will be shown past all doubt that he walked back to Cambridge, that he reached his college at 8.15, as the cross-examination of the college por ter has already shown, three-quarters of an hour after Bernstein was mur dered, and that his return then was direct from Churn Manor, and not, as has been suggested, a bold return to the scene of the murder in order to disarm suspicion." Such was the defense. As for the theories of the prosecution, they could be explained. Courtney's dis like of Bernstein certaintly existed, It was natural, was shared by many others and, in short, was admitted. The tale of an acute quarrel between them was quite plausible. Such a quarrel might have occurred at any time between a man like Bernstein, who was an "outsider" in varsity life, and Courtney, who was a power in the most exclusive 'varsity sets a natural and easily understood 'quar rel between one man anxious, above all things, to pass through doors fast closed against him, and another man who had the power to open those doors, if he could be persuaded to use it.: That Courtney, being in an expensive set, was in debt and short of money, and that Bernstein had plenty of ready money always at hand these points excited no sur prise for those familiar with 'varsity life, At last, when the opening speech for the defense was over, Sir Julian Courtney was called. He gave his evidence in a quiet, but perfectly clear and steady voice. He testified to his son's character. He swore to his being at Church Ma nor on the day of the murder, to his having tea with him, to his staying and talking over some questions which interested them both. In brief, led by the questions of the defending counsel, he established the alibi. "There is only one question which I wish to ask," said the counsel for the Crown, and at once Sir Julian knew that the flaw had been noticed. "Is there any means," he was asked, "by which the exact time of your son's leaving Churn Manor can be fixed? We have been given the approximate time. Is there any cir-r cumstance which can fix the time ex actly?" "Yes." "Would you mind explaining?" There was perfect courtesy between the two men- the scientist called to witness on his son's behalf, perhaps to save his life, and the representative of the Crown and justice. Their quiet, well modulated voices were not raised above the pitch of ordinary conversation. "The clock which I kept on my writing table had stopped." "Yes?" "I set it by my watch just after my son left." "And you are thus able to remem ber the exact time?" "Yes." "What was it?" 'Twenty-five minutes to seven ;;And your watch is reliable?:! I t "It ; is a ; chronograph, it never va ries' That was all, but It was enough. Granting that the accused .had walked back to . Cambridge, It .was j now just possible for him to have .reached his college by 7.30., Sir Julian badsworn to his being at. Churn Manor at 6.30, But now, as every one saw,, the alibi had been, seriously damaged If : not destroyed. The defense would go on, of course. There were a score of witnesses to call. At worst, there was "the ben efit of the doubt'? to fight for. But the essential witness had, perhaps, destroyed the defense. . Sir Julian left the witness box and the court. He went out from the trial as he ..had come into It ab ruptly, and before the next witness had answered half a dozen questions his motor car was carrying him back to Churn Manor. There was a buzz of conversation. In a corner of the court one of the younger Dons a brilliantly clever man of the new school spoke to his companion, a fellow of another col lege, an older man, and one who rep resented things which some In Cam bridge speak of as "old traditions." "Surely he need not have men tioned that," he said. "A very slight suppression of the truth might have saved his son." . "Slight?", was the old Don's com ment, with perceptible raising "of his eyebrows. But in the dock the prisoner had grown paler. He knew that now, past all doubt, the chaises were against him. The fair vision of life grew dim be fore his eyes. Every one remembers how the greatest sensation of the many sensa tions of the Cambridge murder case came with its climax, the providen tial discovery of a new witness, who entered the box on the fifth da'y of the trial, when almost the last efforts had been made to bolster up the weak defense. Every one also remembers how this led to the acquittal of the accused, and how, all over England, there was a genuine sigh of relief when the case, which the man in the street had followed so closely be cause of the insight it gave him Into OLD WAY. 1 S6S 'varsity life, ended in the complete manifestation of Charles Courtney's innocence. A little less than a month afterward a fresh arrest was made, and, eventually, after an unpleasant exposure of what Bernstein's life had been, the murderer was brought to Justice. ' The demonstration which greeted Courtney on his acquittal was mem orable even in the annals of Cam bridge. It seemed as if the shouts of the undergraduates would never les sen, much less cease, ;'- The ordeal for Courtney was almost more than he could bear, . His hand was wrung till it was almost dead to feeling. Men of his college, press men, his counsel, and even gray-beared Dons crowded round -him and pressed upon him their congratulations. Finally he was carried shoulder-high from the court to the Bull Hotel, and, as the mass of men moved through , the narrow streets, shouting and cheering and stopping all traffic, the crush was frequently dangerous. Late that, night, however, Court ney had left the shouting and excite ment behind him, though at times the echoes of It still seemed to ring in his ears. . He and his father, were alone together in the library at Churn Manor. They sat before the fire, and silence. divided them. It was the son who at length spoke. "You have told me," he said. ?' that you knew all along, that I was inno cent," His voice was hardly recognizable in his own ears. His father nodded. "Yes, I knew," he said, "despite the evidence." "But you must have known nlso that the evidence was the kind which would carry conviction to a jury, the sort of men whowell; who conld not understand the impossibility of my doing and thinking the sort of things they suggested." . "Yes; I knew that also." - Then it was that the younger man lost " control. He saw the incident which was past with a distorted vis- Ion. The miasma which had. clouded his mind during the night after , his father's evidence clouded it again. "Yet you destroyed the alibi!" he exclaimed passionately. xou, - my father, snatched from me the one chance I had." . Sir Julian did not hesitate. "Listen to me, Charlie," he said. with an earnestness which command ed silence. "You are overwrought, but, nevertheless, you must hear what I have got - to say, and, well you must Judge for yourself. It is quite true that my evidence destroyed the alibi." It is also true that . it might have been withheld. But I was asked whether I was able to fix the . exact time. It.--would nave Deen a suppres sion of the truth to have denied that I was able. I knew what I was doing, and I answered as I did. You are free to judge me, and, well I must abide by your judgment," For a moment he paused. Perhaps he would have welcomed some iadi- cation , of what his son's .thoughts were. - It .was not given. "You must remember," he went on, "that there Is something which is greater than anything : else in the world, greater than the strongest hu man bond of love than the love of man and wife, mother and child, or father and son -the Truth. It will endureIn Eternity. With it there must neither be tampering nor sup pression, and from it there must be no deflection. ! Nothing can ever de stroy it, and nothing except It is of eternal value. That is the principle which Juts guided my life, and be cause of it I answered as I did. I knew quite well that I might be tak ing away from you your chance of life;- I also knew that I might be de stroying for myself all Joy in living. That is all." " - He stopped, but only for a moment. : "No," he said, "it is not all. It was the only way in which I could act. M hope nay, more, I believe, just as I believed you innocent that you understand even now that no matter what the circumstances, the Truth, is the only thing possible for me or for you." Charles Courtney was 'of the same blood as his father. He understood. After all, there was only one thing possible. And that one thing made the bond between him and his father not weaker, but stronger. It did not come, to him as a revelation. It seemed to be something which he had ral ways known, but; for the moment forgotten. A great gladness held him. as he met the question in his father's gaze. "It is as you say," he said. "Don't ask" me the question you are going to ask. All that has happened has not altered what I feel toward you." Then, with a deep sigh of relief, the tension of the long day at last over, he knelt down by his father's chair,, just as he had often done in boyhood. . And as he knelt there, able at last to rest, his head dropped forward and he slept. Gradually it becC-ie the deep sleep of utter mental exhaustion, and real izing all that it meant, Sir Julian did not disturb it. From time to time, however, his hand passed tenderly over his son's head. A servant came, and the fire was banked up high. The candles gut tered in their sockets and went xmt Darkness fell upon the room, and the first light of dawn put to flight the darkness. Sir Julian did not move and his son slept. The hours of the-night had passed by unnoticed. His son was spared to him, and between them there was a perfect understanding. When he awoke it was broad day light. The Sketch. a ' SCIENCE AND A recent discovery In the chemical world . was a liquid preparation to Drevent the bottom of ships from rusting or gathering marine growths, Although the secret was known to the Romans it was lost about 600 years ago. The light Intensity of the moonless night, sky is estimated by L. J. Lew- insor at 0.001 of a candle-coot; of moonlight, 0.014 if a candle-foot, and of daylight, between 8 a. m. and 4 p. m.; from 2000 to 8000 candle-feet. Some, clouds Increase, others greatly decrease the intensity of light. . - : Briquettes of compressed calcium carbide have been prepared by H. K. Koffer. of Vienna, and are claimed to be nonhydroscopic, keeping indefinite ly, and do not continue to give off gas after withdrawal of water. They are made by intimately mixing finely granulated carbide . with a I finding material and compressing in molds. An English inventor has devised a process by which it is possible to purify rock salt direct, and on a basis which is .not commercially prohib itive, declares , Popular , Mechanics. Hitherto, in preparing white table salt from rock salt it has been neces sary to depend upon the evaporation of brine. , The new process consists of melting the rock salt and then driving compressed air ; through the molten mass. Impurities are separated and deposited, and tb salt is left white and pure, ...;;-;, It a pound of chloride of copper la dissolved in a wooden pall of water- wooden because a tin pall will be corroded the solution will be suf ficient to give the flames from a great deal of wood the beautiful colors, when burned in an open, fire, which are ithe charm of driftwood coming from the hulls of copper-sheated ships. The best way to get the solu tion into the wood is to put the wood endwise in the - pail containing . the copper chloride solution and allow it to soak in gradually. Then, after the wood is dried, it makes a beautiful fire. When a Jag is Not a J oke. So absurdly lacking In a certain phase of humor is the Parisian that -he sees nothing laughable or joyous in rolling about gutters or hiccuping midnight songs or embroiling himself with his fellows while under the in fluence of strong drink. That' engaging product of social America who cames into the club, hollow, cheeked and liyid, remarking, "Gee, but I was. pie-eyed last night,'' has few -counterparts, here.; To have been helplessly or even conspicuously drunk, in a public place is a thing which a Frenchman would be prone to hide rather than .to exploit. A strange and immoral race! Nothing has struck me more forcibly than his general sobriety a dull, gray word by the way, whereby to describe a characteristic of the blithest people living. Collier's. G001I HUvnriNG 2 J ti J I ZS'? VV 'vUI AS M.VKlV .' 'j-' J all' -ev ' -n Cartoon by W. A. Rogers, in the New York Herald. THIRTY-TWO HONS SIGHTED WHERE ROOSEVELT WILL GO Despatch From British East Africa Tells of the Good Pros pects For Big Game Great Plans For a Wel come to the Former President. ' u Mombasa, British East Africa. Mombasa is preparing already tQ wel come Theodore Roosevelt, and his, coming has given a decided impetus to the interest in the present hunt ing season. ' " The Governor of the protectorate Lieutenant-Colonel Sir James Hayes Sadler, is arranging a program of welcome and entertainment for the distinguished visitor, but in spite of these arrangements the. greeting to Mr. Roosevelt will be more to the great sportsman, whose fame is well known to local hunters, than to the former President. "- East African sportsmen were high ly gratified to learn that Mr. Roose velt had refused the offer of the au thorities to grant him a special hunt ing license that would have permitted him to kill game to an unlimited ex tent instead of confining himself to the two elephants, two rhinoceroses, two hippopotami, etc., of the regular license. Lions and leopards are classed as vermin and consequently no license to kill them is required. , The white population of Mombasa has heard much of Mr. Roosevelt's personality, and In a joking way fre quent references to the "big stick" are being made. The rains are late this year, and a heavy fall Is expected (the regular time for the "big rains" 13 from the end of January to the end of April). The prospects for good hunting this season are considered excellent. Many of the settlers in the outlying dis tricts, realizing the increasing inter est in the prospects for sport because of the coming of Mr. Roosevelt, are voluntarily sending in information about the movements of game. According to " a dispatch received here a record group of lions, number ing thirty-two, was seen on the Nandi plateau recently at a point about fifty miles north of Port Florence tthe Nandi plateau is on the west side of the great Rift Valley). Among them are three huge males. Four families of giraffes have been seen at Makin du, 200 miles inland from here. on the line of the Uganda Railroad, and elephants have been seen at Elbur gon, 475 miles inland on the railroad. MESSINA'S UNBURIED DEAD. Estimated at 60,000 and It All the Bodies of the Rome, Italy. The General in com mand at Messina, who is in charge of the removal of the dead, estimates the number of bodies still awaiting burial at about 60,000. Most of them He several feet deep under the rub bish from fallen houses. ' ' : The work of clearing the debris from the streets is proceeding very slowly. Not more than 200 bodies are'removed and . buried on any day when the work is carried on without interruption for twelve hours. - The prevailing bad weather is hampering the work greatly and often stops -it, as the rain chanses the debris into soft mud, which the first sunny day hardens to the consistency of cement DR. LYMAN ABBOTT'S SEVEN RULES ON WHAT MAKES AN IDEAL WOMAN Brooklyn. "To be an Ideal woman," said Dr. Lyman Abbott, in a sermon in the Central Congregational -Church, "the feminine type represented in each individual must:'- - "1. Discard all , shoes the size of which makes walking well nigh im- ' Possk2; mns no$ consider her hands when it comes to a question of work ' ' -' "' ' ' '" . "' M3.' To obtain red cheeks, the ideal woman must take exercise and pass bv paint and powder;' - - ' -' " She must not be the servant of the dres3ma:er and milliner. They - "5. She must not change her styles at the dictation of men in Paris. "6. Her home, must be her palace, because in it she has developed ft love of beauty and shown she knows how to create it. "7. She must be industrious, sympathetic, energetic, enthusiastic, . motherly and a true friend," - Continuing, Dr. Abbott said! "A woman's idea, of modern industry is playing bridge whist morn ing and night. Her idea of modern life is to be supported 1jy some one ' "The ideal woman does not consider wark;,unwojnanly. Sh:be-. lieves that whatever: concerns her husband concerns her. -If the ideal woman's family finds fault with her cooking, she does not blame the cooking. She blames the food, and changes it. , ,m ,. "Woman was meant to be man's companion, and if the Idea were properly carried out there would be. no affinities." Russian Drugged and Left to Per ish in a Roman Boarding House. Rome, Italy. The body of a Rus sian, Vladimir Tarasoff by name, was found in a trunk in a boarding house, locked up in the trunk, it is believed, for twenty-three days. ; A medical examination indicated that the man, who was about thirty years of age, had been drugged and placed in the trunk, and that he had died of suffocation. Two Russians visited him shortly before his disap pearance. There is no clew to their Identity The Field of Sports Miss Emily W. Scott, of the West chester Country Clubr'has been nom inated for the presidency of the Wom en's Tennis Association. ' The official report of the State Rac ing Commission shows that New York State's income was more than $150, 000 less last year than it was the year before. A new roller skating record was established in the six-day relay race in Denver when Risen-hand and Burke completed 1519 miles and four laps nn an filfiven-lan track. The nrevlous record was 1512 mlle3 and eight laps. ,R. J. Cuninghame, a noted English big game hunter and. field naturalist, who is to be guide to and general manager of the Roosevelt party, has been here for some time completing the preparations for the trip into the wilderness as .well as the shooting and collecting excursions along the line of the railroad. He is selecting and hiring native porters for the ex pedition. He takes only experienced men who are known to be courageous and to possess great physical strength. The "safari" kit in other words, the camp equipment, for the work in the open is arriving from London, and all will be in readiness when Mr. Roosevelt arrives. The railroad car used on the line as far as Port Flor ence by other distinguished visitors to Uganda, such aa the. Duke of Meck lenburg, the Duke of Connaught, the Duke of the Abruzzi, Joseph Cham berlain and Winston Spencer Churchill, is being refitted for the use of Mr. Roosevelt. - . ' Everything points to a successful stay in British East Africa and Ugan da for Mr. Roosevelt. The natives are peaceful, game is plentiful and the people of Mombasa are waiting eagerly to extend him a welcome. TAME HUNTING, SAYS ANOTHER. Captain . Smiley Says Many Hunters Have Made lions Gun-Shy. San Francisco, Cal. Captain A. J. Smiley, who is said to have served with the Irish Brigade in the Boer war, , says . that the hunting grounds where ex-President Roosevelt plans to spend his vacation are nothing but a huge game preserve, and that tne hunter will have a tame time. The captain claims to have hunted over this ground many times, and ne as serts that the lions have been shot at so often they have become gun-shy. The Duke of Manchester, according to Captain Smiley, is said to have Bhot over the . country which Roosevelt will traverse without bagging any game; Smiley says he has written to Roosevelt suggesting that he go to a portion of Africa, where elephants could be met in droves. May Take a Year to Find Earthquake Victims. The soldiers and workmen have to break thi3 with pickaxes instead 61 clearing It away with shovels. Of ten a week passes without any bodies being extracted, and at the rate at which the work is -being done more than a1 year, will be required before all the -victims in Messina are buried. For some unknown reason the Government wants to keep this a se cret, and an attempt to send the story by wire some days ago failed; owing to the activity of the press censor. It is probable that the Government now reaUzes its mistake in recalling too soon the greater number of eoldiers and ; sailors .engaged in the work of burial. '. .:. - Proof That He's Nearsighted . Unfits an Oyster Bed Watchman. : Trenton, N. J.-"-The Civil Service Commission received its first request for the removal of an officeholder here. It came from an oyster grower of South Jersey who objected to a watchman, saying: "He isn't a good watchman because he is nearsighted. A nearsighted watchman can't do the work. I know he is nearsighted, be cause if he wasn't he could see his own father and brother stealing -my oysters right along." The watchman says complainant is merely sarcastic. vsr Tv6m Other Countries Earl Grey, GovernorrGeneral ot Canada, urges forest preservation in Canada. : Colombia has reduced the export duty on cocoanuts from $2 to $1 a thousand for a period of one year. - A company has been formed, sup ported by - English . capital, to open five central sugar factories in Ja maica. - - In 1908 the product of the fisheries of Canada was worth $25,5 .0,000, decrease of $750,000; from 1007, o: curring chiefly in Pacific salmon an sealskins. ; DAMP POULTRY HOUSES. Ko farmer should compel his fowir to , occupy, damp poultry houses or damp buildings of any kind. Dampi dark quarters are very often a cause of much .loss among fowls on the average farm, and such a condition is usually to blame for colds, roup' and most of the other diseases that ravage the farm flock.-Coltinesr is. not nearly so destructive as "damp ness, for dampness seems to work through the feathers of the fowls and produces a creepy, chilly sensation that is not at all pleasant. FIllytrp the low places in the houses and havd. the entire floor at least above the level of the ground on the outside of house. If there are any cracks in', the walls or roof through which the wind and rain can blow,-close them up at once." The saddest part of all the destruction caused by drafts and I dampness is that such conditions can ' so easily be remedied but are so oftaa neglected. Epitomist. SELLING BUTTER FAT. r How butter fat should be sold is; a question of importance to every", body selling milk, cream or butter.' From data supplied by the Maryland experiment station the -f ollowing con elusions are arrived at: Sellinghreo and ' one-half per cent, milk - fori twelve cents a gallon equals selling; butter for twenty-three and one-half , cents per pound; selling the milk for fifteen cents per gallon equals selling: butterlat thirty-two and one-halC cents a pound. Selling twenty per cent, cream for fifty cents a gallon equals selling butter at twenty-three and a half cents a pound; to say hothv lng of having the skim milk for farm use; selling the cream for seventy cents equals selling the butter for thirty-three cents. Computations! similar to the foregoing are the only? means of determining how to get tho most money for the dairy product, but it will be necessary to know what percentage of cream in tbe milk is the average in the particular dalry Progressive Farmer. . - ,v , . . CH00SING A. SAW. . . A sawmaker has this advice to glvci In the selection of a saw: -"See that it 'hangs' right. Graspr It by the handle and hold It in posi tion for working to see If the handle" fits the hand properly. A "handle should be symmetrical and the lines! perfect. Many handles are made of the green wood; they soon shrink! and become loose, the screws stand ing above the wood. An unseasoned handle is liable to warp and throw the saw out'of shape. Try the blade by springing it, seeing that it bends" evenly from point to butt in proporn tion as the width and guage of the . sway vary. The blade should not bet too heavy in comparison to the teeth, as it will require more labor to ub it. The, thinner you can . get. a stiff saw the better; it makes less 'kerf, and takes less muscle to drive it. "See that the saw. is well set and haa a good crowning breast. Place it at a distance from you; get a proper, light on it, and you can see if there has been any imperfections in grind ing or hammering." American Cul tlvator. FRESH CUT RAW BONE. 'A poultry keeper who seems to be very successful in getting his hens to lay in winter credits his success to fresh cut bone and says: "I make my hens lay more eggs in? winter than in summer, and fresh cut raw bone is the-food that gets thf eggs. Similar reports come to tne from poultrymen who have bought bone cutters and followed my rnetb. ods. I know" an instance of a mait owning seventy bens that averaged during February from forty. to, .fifty eggs, a day and some days he got as high as fifty-eight eggs. "I have kept a careful cost record and I. know that a yard of sixteen to twenty hens can more than pay-for the cost of a bone cutter during the winter months when chickens have to be fed. "By using fresh cut raw bone the food bill can be cut in two, and what . is more important, the hens will be forced into laying conditions." 'r This looks like an extract from a bone cutter advertisement, but there can be no dtfubt.that cut or ground bone is first-class egg-laying feed.- Indiana Farmer. r A CHEAP SMOKE HOUSE. ' Money being a scarce article, I in vented . a smoke house which glvefr just as good service as though it coit a hundred dollari. It is made of a large packing box three and one-half (eet high, two feet deep and tbre feet wide. A wide cleat is put in tha top, to keep the meat from banging against the box. In two days I smoked two large hams perfectly. Mrs. F. B. W., Minnesota, in Woman's Home Companion. &r'"K The Black Sheep. ,What," asked the man who had returned to his native town after an absence of many years, "became of Ed. Ferguson?" v w . . ' a a m a. l - ; jiQi un, ne s aoin nne. uoi ia best livery stable, anywheres around nere ana runs me aepoi uac. "Let s see, he naa a younger brother! didn't he?" ' "", 1 "yes. - Lem. He "never amounted to much. Wrote poetry and painted pictures. I guess the family kind of disowned him. At least, he 'went away several years ago, and I dunno whatever became oi Mm. .Chicago A -' w