THE CHARLOTTE NEWS FEBRUARY 6 1909 The F Forum Monthly arm Edited tey J. IV. BIGHAM IT S or Crop 'Rotation Rowto Main Ferti Soil tain lity ;:. .1. N. Bighani. ; t 1) :i i has not already done i! !ir casting about in liis w'.i.ii he will plant in Ihis ,!, tin- nailing season. u ca'-ic will of course t ..M-i.ifiai'ion. Time was , ,;'n i ion of the rotten was , ! tor purpose of keeping Hi. A THOUGHT FOR FARMERS. PUKE OF II ,1 I is shown an increase of nearly double i ne yiel'l ol 100 years, thus m-ovinc what we have so long contended for: that land when properly farmed, in stead of decreasing in productiveness will not meiely retain its fertility, but actually becomes more productive as he years go by. No "worn-out" land I ought, therefore, to be found. If it is. !t is the fault of the farmer and not if tSr. 1oti,l if -li-. a- . . ..' ...... : . . . . i 'i i ik iii mi. it .i i i v r.i "liiovo 1.1 c 111' t'4;M ' M MUtllK 'I IUI1. I """ ,u""Vi J " - ,. i,,. route when the cotton i ;"".sl . nn) e na(1 in country. Sure ,.. M ).. looked at from quite! -v l " time we mended our ways. The ,M . c i ion Th- high prices of ;Uin! r England has been cultivated J',;',- is; corn, wheat, oats, in ,lor Tillies, here the first century has . ,, .,11 products of the farm !'lC)t -vet b,Jn passed with most of our .", i. reckoned with. Farm-I aml- an 111 the ol(lest settled portion , ,,i to raise these products in Jlutl orc th:m two centuries have . mm irrespective of what ;ono b- aml Vft have millions of ; ,.r 11. does. Not onlv that ! '"T8 exhausted land. Let us with ; .niiii; fort Hit v of the soil,jlhls 'fJ:,r niIlke u new start and a bet ; ,.f the continued year after tei" ?ne- . , A. , ;. , hoed ciop culture is be-1 "e -'losp with the proposition we ...nous problem to thought-1 startwi out with that the time has '' !,...),.., th..v .ivti (.n"r'rti iecnie v.'hen the farmer must look at , ,,t To'iii-mv farmers 1 llu reduction of the cotton acreage t.riilitv is becoming quite j llmi mite a different view point than '.."'""when Mr. Lee got out his 'hat ,tne l)lice wiU probably be in i'.e -otton crop for 11K)S tal'- An" svstem of farming that . .;.,. veason the writer regard- '.1cu'6 not rry with it idea of improv ",s .'.te rather low in view of!1"-? or at loast maintaining the fer .. '.. -,nd the seasonal weather ,ll,tv ot the soil will surely prove dis-'..'r-M.n , tor ihe vear, basing the I "Planting. This has been proven i" e on t he average produe-i"orth- south, east and west. Nature "li-,t live vears whereas i nas beneficently provided the remedy . Mart Mr." Lee's estimate if the farmer will comply with the . justified by the recent ' conditions rotation with the legumes, v :t in tiie ginners" report. The. If the faith, the mother of hu manity, is to "wear out," what is to become of the race? The fact is that soils, properly treated, maintain their productiveness in- definitely under cultivation. The further fact is that, with the dis- appearance of pestilence and the discontinuance of war that belong to the future, all contributing to the growth of population, the pro- ductive capacity of the soil must 1 The wheels of the business world be sustained at its highest point 1 are revolving faster every day. Hit or the world suffer want. The li fe-Qec:lfnniii or mc:er tf fho nil -1 v tw , v. .... ....... AWAITED DEATH IN A GRAVE. MODE! FAB lib man ingbnuiw is constantly seekin: new devices to save that most valu- is lowered in two ways: (1) by able asset of modern business time. physical destruction, through the carrying away of the earth to the sea: and (2) chemically, by One after another, new inventors are I being brought into use in an at tempt to increase the speed of these the withdrawal of the elements wheels to the utmost. required for plant life. The waste from the former cause is very srrpilt It acpnunto fnv clovilitv - - - - - - v ... v v ........ . - i '' Of. all such time saving inventions jthe greatest is undoubtedly the tie phone. Introduced only about thirty the older," which are also the years ago it is under present condi- more hilly, portions of the cul- tions an absolute necessity as a mean tivated country. Throughout the of communication. Take for exam- South this process of denudation pie, the telephone service suddenly has proceeded far. and is going from the city of New ork and busi forward rapidly. . And even more ness there would be paralyzed; the serious, universal and speedy is j wheels of commerce would come al- the process of deliberate soil ex- " most to a standstill, lms necessity Japanese Youth's Attempt to Bury Himself and Die Afterward. A youth of Kobe, Japan, who sought mantic than professionalism." he said, alive and pair an accomplice 25 cents to spaae the earth upon his coffin achieved some degree of notoriety even in Japan, where new things are happening every day. He failed of his original purpose, however. A policeman was strolling alonsr the bank of the Minotogowa river outside of Kobe, one day last month when he happened to spy a joint of. bamboo pipe sticking a few inches above a mound of fresh earth. Being a Jap anese and also a policeman, his cu riosity was especially keen. He look ed down the bamboo pipe but could see nothing. Then he began to dig around the pipe. He had a considerable wrench put on his nerves when a voice came out oi the end of the pipe right at his ear: "Honorable condescend to go awav ana permit me to die peacefully. Farm Work for haustion. James J. Hill, at Min- nesota State Fair. '-Jet fiOllie coiuiun in un let the present crop but :wz fact of the depleted fer- seil still remains. The Charity of Youth. Not long after the Chelsea fire some children in Newton, Mass., held ..In rhnritir fair lw ivliinh SIR tvore . 1 t'ei t ili iv is not only noticea-1 " - , " , eetton' states; the same is! realized. This they forwarded to .. (ll.n and wheat states. Theth rector of a certain Boston church, ,;, ,h.n ha prevailed for corn i .ho had taken a prominent part-in three v-ar has enabled the relief work, with a letter which .ho have'been renting land 1rpad somewhat as .-follows: We en the shares to uniformly nave had a fair and made $1S. We ,. ,,, .ilt tiiov Jtre sending it to you. Please give it has spread from the large city to the small city, from the small citv to i the town, and is now making itself felt in the rural districts. The mod ern farmer does not. regard his tele phone as a luxury but recognizes its value as a financial asset. He real j izes the necessity of keeping in close The Month Fear Of u a r By Chas. Petty. This is a very important month on the farm. Harness, plows and all farm machinery should be put in first class condition. The provident man will lay in extra plows, plow points, single trees and keep a supply of heel screws on hand. Extra plow stocks should always be handy. This will rave much time when plowing begins. Every farmer who runs a two-horse or larger farm, should have n blacksmith ...ill nil iw l 1 IIJ1 . I , ' But the policeman did not go. He . 101) antl a s"m,lv o1' eoal. When that y FEERUARY. suggested io him the practicability of starving himself to death, but in order Ifcas been no weather suitable for plow- to be sure that he should1 accomplish ling- To-day a neighbor came rush this purpose he had determined to ing up to me with a handful of clav Ihis supplies when the market is low i bury himself in a securely nailed coffin halls and says: "Do you see that? I an-and sell his crops when it is high. i and await the ravages of hunger. He went over to my lot awhile ago and! does not prepare lor and have a good didn't want to suffocate first, so he found a hand turning my land. H ! garden the year lound is only a half The Girl and the Lobster, Dorando Pietri at one of the many Italian banquets given in his honor touch with trade conditions. With in Aew ork, talked about professional the aid of the telephone he can buy atnieiics. ""Amateuris is no doubt more roraan uc man proressionaiism, lie said. Science and invention have done "but we live in an unromantic age." Wonders in raising the standard of ne smiled. farming. The farmer of yesterday uniy i ne otner nignt at one or your Was poor, over-worked and narrow in gayest Italian restarurants," he said. many ways. The farmer of the pres "I overheard a dialogue that illustrated ent is prosperous, broad-minded and ioicion me ages iacK ot romance. contented. The telephone has been it was late. At tne tame next to -m inmortnnt factor in his develon mine a rich young Italian contractor ment. Broueht into closer relations was supping with a beautiful young with tlie business world he has been girl. As the young girl played with nhifi to keen nace with the times and the stem of the wineglass I heard to aduist the wheels of his farm to dug some more and finally unearth ed a pine box, the length of a man's body and about three feet wide. The bamboo pipe -led through an opening into the box. The policeman pried off the cover of the box. which had been securely nailed down, and dump ed the self-appointed corpse out. Yamada Katsutaro, the man who would have thus died, told the prefect of police" that he had wanted to die in a seemly fashion because he was out of work. The lack of food had is the case, if there are lour or five plow hands on the place, some of them will be sharpening plows every morn ing, or noon. It insures better work and saves much time. Thorough pre paration makes the work easy. The man who saunters around and never ;g,c-tjs ir.nii m ui v-UIiI)ll.-,n nine. llOOU tools should be bought. It is false economy to give hands a hair worn hoe or a plow that is only fit for the junk heap. The First Work. Up to the last days of January there 'Neath stormy skies the wintry blasts Sweeps o'er the hill and down the vale, While children 'round the farm- ers hearth Repeat the merry fireside tale. with their icy The forests plumes Are radiant with the rising sun, Or sparkle with an armed hosts Before the dosing day is done. Jillson. is enough to make a good man raise a lutllluia shout to see a large field so well cared for that there is not un inch in it where the rootlets or plant n will fail to find food. The Garden. A farmer's dinner without vegetables is a ixtor aflair. and tho farmer who her murmur: it is true, isn t it, mat you love ones in the city. run more in accord with the larger me, and me only?" The tlephone holds perhaps a i to the Chelsea sufferers. Yours truly. etc. P. S. We hope the suffering is not all over." Harper's Magazine. limnev t nun wnen mey i. eash to men who fed their i . iittle. This naturally checks 'i.n- . ii. ent which we regard as of i tnusi importance towards crop ... ! v.Hiiir nn.l tht mnin- ,. e! fertility. Moreover, high ,ne Language or commerce. . cu:!i ha- led to the heavy mar- '-I understand that your wife and i, , ( ., : ami will without doubt daughters have have acquired several ., ; ! r... ,e; se.l n.im'. er of cat-j foreign languages." i' . I'r.ited Stales. "Yes." answered Mr. Cumrox, a s;;iiil of cattle is also, "when they're having a good time in society or at the opera they talk French or Italian. But when it comes cf putting on weight as . to telling their troubles they get ; older, and hence are, back to plain English, so that I can i .i : ...i r uniers nave Muuieu than ever before the '" 'Yes, said the young man, 'though more important place on the farm this lobster is certainly mighty good DON'T KNOCK. k market bogs fed on corn " . uht. (Vnsequently last ! :;ue nv.r.iber of hogs were , ' h-h.t w.-igiit for the rea priced corn looked better ." h..: than in it. It is l'urth ;.;t in .-r.mo instances that - i I the middle west have .- m' tin ir brood sows for ii . -v. rsiocked. Of cours e i I affairs will right itself ' of time ent the cotton take a hand. Don't be a-knockin' the weather! Seasons will come an' will go; Seedtime an' harvest together, God sez 'twill alius be so. Look at the blooms that are fiingin' Sweetest of increase on you; Listen! The birds are a-singin' Look! See the sunshine stream through. E. A. Brinistool in Los Angeles Express. than in the city. Although not used with such frequency yet the long distances which prevail greatly increase its value. That farmers all over the country are having their farms connected by telephone is the best possible proof of its value and that it has come to stay. The farmer, as a class, is Uhe hardest" person in the world to be persuaded to adopt an uncertain pro position in spite of the proverbial "gold brick" stories which are cred ited to him. His decisions are t!ie result of careful thought and due deliberations. But once convinced he is not slow to action. Southern Cultivator. had thought of the bamboo pipe. began in the lowest and wettest part. The day before the policeman dis- Here is the clay he was getting tin. covered him, Yamada said, he procured I told him to stop at once." That clay the box and the services of a coolie, had water enough in it to make mor Then he dug the hole out on Egeyama tar, with a little addition. That is one and after giving the coolie his obi and danger. The two-horse and disc plows fifty sen. his last bit of money, he was should not be used Y'hen the clay is nailed up in his coffin, lowerd into the wet. It should be dry enough to cruni grave and covered under six feet of ble and mix well with the top soil, soil. jAnother mistake is sometimes made. Yamada promised never to try bury- Some farmers think that two horses ing himself alive again and the police are needed to subsoil land. That is the let him go. case where the top soil is five to seven .inches deep. But there are hundreds HUMMING. i of acres in every township in the (Piedmont where the soil will average All the mills are humming bake it about three inches deep and is devoid partridge, dear on toast, jof humus. And let me help your mother to an- j One lively horse or mule will break other piece of roast; two or three inches of the hard pan A servant in the kitchen and an on such land by using a narrow twister overcoat for Jim, or a half shovel. Remember that sub- Better times are coming, with a bim-' soiling when done right is breaking bam-bim; Jtwo to three inches of the clay at one sr itime. More than that is useless.' "T Better times, busy times a .bigger slice of pie, Buckwheat cakes for breakfast, and the goose hangs high! Baltimore Sun. You can always tell how young a woman is from the amount of gigling she does. Mrs. "Now I wouldn't for worlds have i "Why, that woman hasn't a single Mrs. Doigluv think that I thought 1 other thought in life except for . ciiti h can casly see how so," said Mrs. Rubberino to her vis- j those horrid little fices of hers. Now, i hint unless he hedges ' i i or, "but have you noticed, my dear, I am not taking "the point of view, j ting myself The wheat lands ol the; that queer angry, reddish rash on i my dear, as some folks do, that a s lias pone through about her face lately? woman ought to be ostacized from 'ibiur.g as the cotton of j "Yes? I knew won must've, be-j society and be drummed out of camp, - ,i tediit bulletin of t because it is so frightfully disfiguring, i so to speak, and all that sort of ie'.aitment will show, and you know- Mrs. Dorgluv whatever thing, if she hasn't a whole houseful her other defects, used to have a j of children. But it certainly, is dis nice skin, though, of course, she i guesting, to say the least, to see a down on excent an uncomfortable a while ago and Mrs. Dorgluv finally looking davennort. and I am sure 1 i found out that what ailed the mutt tnem. The next time get up a little more. Thus in a few years, if humus is added, the soil will be 8 to 12 inches deep. With these suggestions let the plows begin the first day the so:l is dry enough and keep them going every day when the weather will permit. Thorough pre paration with plow and harrow is about half the work in making a crop. These Terraces. The ugliest sight that comes in view to one who loves the soil and trees, as he rides along the laihvay is to see a hillside or a gentle slope marked by a hundred red gullies and the land as barren as the ocean beach. If you ride much you will see many such places, looking as if a curso rested on had no intention on earth of squa- on that with a whole man. lie ought to hire out to some good neighbor and his wife ought to repudiate him till he refonns. Deep plowing and much harrowing will pre pare the garden, but before that is done it should be well covered with pulverized manure from the lot. If acid phosphate at the rate of 40U pounds to the acre and the ashes from the fire place or ash hopper are scat tered over it after the plowing and harrowing, the garden will be ready for planting. Manure from the hen house mixed with three times its weight of rich dirt that accumulates about the premises, makes an excel lent fertilizer for all vegetables. Just now cabbage and lettuce plants should be set out. if you have them or can get them. English peas should Im planted. Onions planted in the fall should be cultivated. They need lots of manure. Spinach and mustard sown now will give fine salad when the tur nip salad fails. Crape vines should be pruned and the strawberry patch cul tivated so as to get out all weeds and grass. Get brush or sticks ready for running peas vrnl beans so that when ihey need sticking little time will be required. Prepare the Irish potato patch thoroughly and manure with well pulverized manure. 1 hey should be planted February 0 to Match 10th for an early crop. Volunteer Oats. It is useless to say that good pre paration of land and sowing oats in the fall will insure a crop every year pro vided they are p.;t in the open furrow. Abort .i year ago the writer saw a two acre lot near Cafl'ney, that gave a fair c-iop of oats which were followed by I car.. When ihey wejc cut off the oats came vt and the stand was :;o good that tiu-v were left. Nitrate of soda ,.s produced quite succoss- !'' it' O'litral New York for some 'iinu li';..- ii.ity years. During the lat !,i wii! df ih.it period the yields be in i .ciine. and at the end of an-''!i-r twenty years they were so low "i' . '. ,s.." wheat growing became '"m I'ni'.e.ie. otiio, Indiana. Illinois, ! it'l h rt.i h;i.. each in turn repeated hi" iii.-'.i. of New York. The soils (! ii." ! taies were productive in ihe '";itiid:is. it n l it required forty, fifty '" .ixtv ..;us for the single crop sys in ,(i tiiiii.-ri.illy lettuce the yield. In- ; "' in -' i ing the fertility of the t:r l.titnets have gone in search in a soils, . skimmed and aban '"ii.'l .is huh as the old show signs ,,! Ai. iiisiin. Now. that they have 11 .nli" i the jnmping-off place and there 'v I... (;.(;, i West to move into, what ;'' lett behind? The average '"'1,i ei wt:e; t p,M. acre in New York !l;;i" ei,u i .-ft years ago was tvventy- 'if iin-,.,.t., p,.,. acie, last year it was '"V"'1" n. ls.it for considerable tracts !i ai' i't't'ii carefully farmed in '" it un an earlv date the gen- "'' .'- e would now be much low '' 1:1 tatne short time the aver '";!' in Indiana has fallen from '"""ii '''t s i i . . s p,.r acre to fourteen, in 11:111. -,. t,, ., fifteen to thirteen, in li.il.Ma Lorn fourteen to ten, '"'"'"'iiia from fourteen to nine, J, ' "' enihe Tnited States from ' m .,) t.Hi.t,.,.!,. 0 cannot " inline population witn our titet nods'. Official sta- that the net profit from 1,1 twenty bushels of wheat ' ' is as great as that from "!'-; '.f sixteen bushels per acre, I" -II': (llvl fit I.l7,ln. inn " t fit -' im mi n 1 iirn, j... t ihis showing with what "' nit in England of the '! ii'ing u.n. plowed. The ' 'I'.-.-t has just completed an ' i'"' this subject, and ' m- results. "In 1S0S the 1 "I f wheat ier acre was ' 1 '-"Is. in 1S2S. seventeen l'! ;'ie. in is:;s, twenty-four " ' in Is IX, twenlv-seven !" 1 i"'"'. in In.Vs, thirtv-four ' ' r in isrs thirty-eight 1 .' "'". in IS.s thirty bushel-; 11 iss twenty-eight bushels bi r.ais thirty-two bushels . M...t a striking comnarison '' -".'-wii. Instead of a constant ia- average yield, there spent half of her time having her face bleached and massaged and all that sort of nonsense. "Well, when Mrs. Dorgluv was here the other day I felt real sorry for her, 'deed I did, even if &he has had four or five of my books for the last three months and , hasn't even suggested returning them, and, of course, I'd rather go to the stake than ask her to bring the books back, for if a woman can't get enough delicacy to Well, anyhow, my dear, 1 telt so I'H'S tit HslH's "II" ( 'M. 1,11,1.,.. '':s'h, '"i,li.- !'T ;. i ' I' ' I'' r ; , '' I'.e, l.'.'if,. woman rushing around like a chick en with its head cut off every time one of her herd of nasty little mutts gets a cold or becomes sick any other way. "Why, do you know that Mrs. Dorg luv once bragged to me that she stayed up all night two nights run ning with that sniffy little Japanese roomful of nice chairs that, the dogs had grabbed for themselves, and so I just gently, but firmly pushed one of the mutts off one of the chairs and took the chair myself; and d'ye know Mrs. Dorgluv didn't like that one bit in me, and she picked up the little cur-raudgeon of a mutt that I had pushed off the chair and made j much over it and said to it, um tne mean ol' 'ooman push mamma's dar ling off'n the chairses?' and a ,lot more like that, a-purpose, of course, to make me feel mean over having taken the chair. I'he next ugly sight, but bet was the toothache, didn't she have-ter than red gullies, are terraces cov- 't.o nerve in telenhoiie to Dr. Mat- "red Willi w ctis, grass ani oiien ',), jier dentist, to come around to bushes several feet high. There they was applied about the first of April see her never saying a word about stand year after year and they get aland the yield was 2 in "0 bushels to what she wanted to see him about, little wider too. If you ;;re obliged to the ;.cie. Near the same place w but oivin the inference that she have terraces make new ones above or have a 4-acre lot. A fair crop or hercptf needed to have her teeth below the old ones and plow and bar- hippies, oats and pea vines were made attended to and didn't Dr. Malgum row the old. Then level off the new rush around there, only to find that and plant a row of the same crop plant it was a measly little cur creature ed in ihe field on top and then the that she wanted him to took at. 10 jiiowm m weu.s, ..mj iiios,s -,Ui, "But to $ret back to the nerfectly spaniel of her when it was sick? The 1 abominable condition of her apart- niea, tne very idea: ut cours there's no way of . proving it, be cause she hasn't any children, but I'd be willing to bet anything that she'd sorry for her that, of course, I could-! hate like all outdoors to sit up two n't refrain from asking her what j nights running with a sick young 'tin ailed her skin. She got as red as i if she had a whole houseful of 'em, the bumps all over her face when I asked her that, though I am sure I don't know why. " 'Oh, this little rash on my chin ; she said, just as if it was nothing, and trying to make believe tnat it was only on her chin, when her whole face was covered witlrthe red bumps. 'Why,' she said, 'the young woman who attends my face as masseuse because I happen to know how Mrs. Dorgluv loves her comfort, you know, and particularly what she calls her beauty sleep the idea of an old married woman who's 43 if she's a day talking about her beauty sleep! "I hate to mention it, my dear, but did you ever in all your born days see such a poor housekeeper as Mrs. ment all the time, why, of course, there's an answer to that and the answer is her dogs. "She hasn't a particle of time for anything in the wide world except for that flock of mutts that she keeps around her all the ime, and that's why her apartment looks as if it had been raided by policemen with axes on suspicion of being a billiard parlor or is it pool room? It's something of that sort, any how. "Why. she washes the fices every day of her life and takes hours and hours for the job, when she might be getting a few tons of the dirt and coo if nnvthino- nilorl its teeth? ; It is well to change terraces every "I'll bet Dr. Malgum was good and - year or two any way. But a ten inch angry- Of course, he had to pretend, r.oil with r.n abundance of humus will when T asked him about it. that he do away wi-.h the use of terraces. It wasn't a bit angry, only amused, but I saw a glitter in his eye all the samee when I brought up the sub ject, and I'll bet he had a line or 1 thinks, as my misuanci cans 11, auuui last summer. list week the ft and of tats appeared to be good except they were too thick in spots. The plan is to h."Tow them about twice in March and then apply 100 pounds of nitrate of soda at th proper time. We believe it will beat cotton for all the oats over twenty bushels will be net. Mrs. Dorgluv that wouldn't sound well in Sunday school, 'deed that's what I'd he willing to bet. "It wouldn't be so. bad if Mrs. Dorg luv ever did a single solitary thing 4 else in life but devote herself to 14 those mutts, but she not only allows i t Delemathe Real Rose Hat Pins X her home to go to rack and ruin on i i onnmmf rvP t -T-T Hilt cVt rW fl O Vf 1 ' 1 Of ? ' I never has the slightest idea of what is going on in the world, never j T '"Well, well, my dear; what in the wide world can you possibly think of my utter and inexcusable thought lessness? Do you know, I neyer thought until this blessed minute that vou yourself have four dear little Dorgluv is? My, her apartment at worked a little too hard with her j ways looks like as if it had been j dust out f her home. 'Washes and fingers on mv skin the other oay, j rocked by an earthquake; dirt and dresses' them, she callsit the idea: .1 v. .. a .. i Itftlrt irritation . : .r ,t l-i -fhincro i t.icii . i . , . 1 .-. . ,1 : hr.nrc I OLl VOU1S, ami uicii ctuitsuu "".c , uusi cum siimc ccl,uCIC, lUwioa wen, men, nnri yciiuniS "UU"J .! tVinl. -.,,. hio-hU- nri7e and that i.s ., j . it!i h mnmnn Ku.-j n iu i : .i ,1 ; tho i (tOSS tnat yOU nigniV lUlZe, UIIU mat looked as if she really believed that general appearance all over the place skunky little beasts, why, she has 011 rZrZ JvJr, if I rlnetov eine the Flebis-ft , Httl tilWs'-thnt's whnt cho calls llaB sspuKru mc ....... 'How that woman's husband stands living in such a state of dirt is more We are sole agents for the Delemathe Ileal Rose Hat Tina. These Hat Pines a Ileal Hose Metalized. New assortment Juet ar rived. Garibaldi, Bruns & Dixon LEADING JEWELERS. I was going to swallow such an absurd story as that. "Of course, though. I didn t pi ess her any further, seeing that under neath all of her studied calmness sne was taking it to heart so much. But my dear, I don't mind telling you what I think although, as I say, 1 wouldn't have Mrs. Dogluv, poor crazy thing, know for worlds that I think so, even if it does serve her per fectly good and right, for I always did tell her that if she didn't stop being so caressy with those miser able little wheezv. asthmatic, cough ing, sniffling mutts of hers, why, she'd be sure to catch something or other from them some day. "Now, darling, don't ever breathe it that I told you I thought so, Nbut I honestly believe that Mrs. Dorgluv has the mange! "Oh, well, of course, I feel sorry for her, but still it's pretty hard to get real despondent, over the troubles of a woman who wastes her whole life on a pack of yippy-pappy, snivel ing, sneezy,- grwly, lay, good for nothing dogs, 'deed it is. as if it hadn t seen a nroom or a to cover them all up m their "cute little blankets' that's what she calls 'em and doyou know that women worked for a solid, two weeks mak- than I can tell you, although men get used to these things, in time, of course, and Mr. Dorgluv himself isji't any neater with himself than 'he should be, and maybe he finds the dirt of his home congenial, I am sure I don't know. "One thing I should think he'd make an awful roar about, and that is that there's never a chair to sit down in in the Dorgluv apartment, because those miserable mutts of Mrs. Dorgluv grab and monopolize all of the chairs. I s'pose she expects folks to sit on the floor when they call upon her. "The last time I w-as over there every last one of tlie comfortable chairs in the sitting room was be ing used as a snoozing place by her dogs, and they all dreamed in their sleep and barked in their dreams and sneezed while they slumbered and went on something awful. Ing those blankets for her poodles? Yes, she really did worked for two weeks to make 'em without once get ting out of the house. Well, after blanketing the barky Mrs. Dorgluv; but, of course, I was speaking of her particularly, although after all when a woman devotes her self altogether to dogs why she Candid. A summer visitor who was trying little sneezy, snoppers. why she has j a horse, the property of a New Eng to take them all out for an airing in i shire farmer, with a view to buying relays. She takes only two of them at a time, because when she. takes them all out in a bunch they are liable to get lost or stolen, she says, for it is too hard for her to j watch all of them at the same time. Well, to see that woman out on the street, on the bitterest cold days, making a perfect- martyr of herself walking up and down with those dogs and shivering herself as if she had the ague well, it's enough to make a gumboil laugh I mean a gar goylethat's what it is! "Yes. and when that Pomeranian r.pitz or spaniel, or pug, or whatever it was when that Pomeranian of him. noticed that after driving a few- miles the animal pulled very hard, requiring a firm hand and constant watching. "Do you think this is just the horse for a lady to drive?" he inouired doubtfully. "Well," ansvered the owner, with an air of great candor, "I must say, I shouldn't real!;- want to be the nncVinnrl of tbe Woman WllO COllld drive that horse." Christian Register. J asaae: 'i Well, there wasn't anything to sit j hers whimpered and whined around j love us. A woman will never forgive or forget J a man who doesn't rave over her first. baby. Whether or not we love our neighbor we always exnect our neighbor to OUR Hoosier Kitchen Cabinet SciIg WAS A GRAND SUCCESS. Sold all we had on hand. Mrs. G. M. Rainwater, N. Pegram St., got the free cabinet, which ve will keep on exhibition to lake orders by for a few days. We will have another shipment of these fine cabinets in a few days. Every kitchen should be supplied with one. Lawing-RobbinsFurniture Company 22 and 24 North College Street. 3E hi , ,,S. M . 'ir .. U l in:' ! ' 1 "s i ; i ;.: : : 5 ..i m ; . "k :V I l' ' '' 5 ' j 1 ? f ! ' ' . 1 . . i t ' ; -! j ; j t 1 . j.-:''- t;i. j: 1' i: i. !') 'V ti r. 1 " 4 1 11. a ,1 , . 7 - t : - L i. j I