Sx VOLUME XVIII. FRANKLIN. N. C. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 2, 1903. NUMBER Wo. J R014. MJorporal Green!" the orderly cried, '" "Here!" iu the answer, loud and elejrr. From tb bps o( the soldier who Mood near Lai "Here!" ni tb word th But replied. 'Ovrw Drewr-iha a sllsaea cll- This Mine no urer followed the ealli. Ouly his roar-roan ha I seen blm fall, Killed or wouaded, he oould oot tell. . Then they stood la tka (ailing light) These men of battle, with gran, dark K , WOKS, - - ' , mi" As plain to be read as opea bookit While slowly gathered th shades of light rh lern on th hillsides was splashed with i a.! i.ihi .a h. h. lumnU. J -PP wiIrf.i..K..i.-tai. War. redder slalo tbaa th poppta knew; , ; And wlmsoa-drod was the river s flood. For the ( bad ercsed from th other aids That day, la the taoe of a antrdereua Bra la' wpt theradowa la Hs terrible lr " And their Ule-blood went to color the tide. ' f f r An Undercurrent. 5 t Bar riorella Est. There was a man's voice, and a woman's, and through them both the lnsisvcnt voice of the s? ?The woman'! voice, clear, tralnante. began In A sutwrflcial, well-bred so Tdety tones 'How strange, Mr. Dwlght, Ihat we should meet her after dear I met I dare not think how many yean So unexpected, but del'chtfu),. I amJyouthlnk I did not know of your let- . sure." - v 1 The man's toIo, deep, musical, for ami, replied: "I do not think it very I ' strange, Mm. Van Ness. The place one knew in ono'a youth always have a stnQcg attraction, and draw one back - to aom soon or lute. But perhaps it is - ao'ywuat singular that we both should ehOiSi this summer for our .visit to " o!d Nanpachcmet after so long an alwence Pardon me, I think you said this is your flret visit since" . ' s The woman's voioe. quickly, Tea,"j Doubtfully, "I don't know that it was really very prudent for ua to come down to the rocks together." - i - . The man'B voice, hastily: "Why, not,! Mrs. Van Ness? What harm can come : ri -Tit?" r i'i'.M.ij,iieMltat)ngly: k.jitt urviu natrni, - ox c -you fknow people might say uukind thlwe because",! - ' . ;::" ,The man's voice, coldly : "Becauee we 4n married, and your husband and my wife are at their hotels, you were go- " ins to say?" : :.,"' ". ' ! f"- The woman's rolcei :wlstf ully: ?Yes. People do not know that we are old friends--such very old friends and and it pleasant to talk over - old "times down here by the sea, with no one llslening. Don't yoh think so?".. 1 The' tcim'a voice, dryly: "Oh, yes, '"""very ple4s,int; but one dbetrfTt'lufOW Just where to begin when" . IV 'After a 'pause Uie itonian'a voice, " , A Impatiaitlyt . 'When whatr .. . , ' The jnan's voice, slowly: "When we can't talk about" ' fjllenoe a moment, then the man a s voice, lightly! "Well, Mrs. Van Neas, - you certainly have had no teaaon to ' complain of your lot during the test . ten year. . Ten yearsl It doesn't seem 1 possible. . You are not changed in the least. I could fancy you Just the same little Dot I was going to say you have hT t J . I . 1 . i. imu a very vriiiiani carairf u.uaw may Lthi society columns of our news paper. TStave reaa very onea, aooui . the beautlf ulV ar? R isver gnj as and I her Jewels, her presentation at . the J Courts of Europe, her dinners and re ., ceptlons in New, York, her charities, t and everything elfe that goes to make up the life of A rich and fashionable .woman." ' ; tkii--'V'- , The woman's voice, quiet and avea: HLy.ed? Surely you have beeh hap py, tot you have accomplished the things yon planned to do. If the pa pers have kept you informed of my frivoloua life, they have at the. same time tolfoue of your achleremehU in .. the world of science. . The man's voice, indifferently:, "Hap py?' Ah, well! I have had my work.! Earnestly: "Tee, thank God', 1 hav i had my work; It has been everything to me." 81owly and thoughtfully: . "And yet I have not accomplished what t once hoped to do what I ought to "have dtme In ten years. Somehow, I lost a great deal of my early ambition. ' Things have not seemed worth while." . A pause, then the man's voice, al- ' most timidly: "Tou have been hap, py?1; (n(i),..,.;.'.' The woman' voice, cynically: "We modern society women have little time ' to think whether we are happy or not. f "We do not probe our deeper fettlngs to know If they still live." A bitter lit tle laugh, "Society has no use tor deep feelings, and we cannot afford to ' cultivate anything which society does i not demand." -. .. ...'-!,'.', . The man's voice, softly: "Ton have children, perhaps?" . ,',1, , The woman' low and tremulous: T had one. She was but a little thing when if only she bad lived!" ; The man's voice, tenderly; "forgive me, I did not know. I hav had no children." ; a - , Sllonce a momentL The man's voice, ' quiotly: "Ah, well! I suppose no man's life 1s Just what he planned it to be. He must do his duty as he a?es It, und let happlneHS take care of Itself. I have tried to do that all these yean. But I have always longed to know that you were happy with the lot you had chos en. I have tried hard not to blame you, or to harbor unkind thoughts of yon, thought It was a cruel blow, Dolly, a "f """l-iter-" " 1 'e wilnan'g voice, tot and bitter: "You talkY' unkind thoughts! You talk of a cruH w! I think you have foi-Kotten who ' that blow." The man's voice, 1.. : '11 not I, surely." f The woman's volte, as . "51 OMtuinly was not I." The man's voire, ewll"i.y: do J'ou mean, Dolly? I d-iut I' r slnnd. In Cod's name, (I n't j 1 a cntfl df-tl f'r you to t r n ' . r i' -an the flay 1 I 1 . , r I ) " "' 1 CALL. "JTerbert Kline!" At tha sail thera flam Two stalwart soldier Into the Una, In nrlnir between tbfin this Herbert Kline, Wounded and bletding, to answer his same. "Kara. Kerr!" and a toIo answered, "Merel" : ' , "Hiram Kerr!" hot ao man replied, They were brolhsn, these two tba sad Winds sighed, Aid a ehoddec crept through th .cornfield Bear. . .j "Ephratra Dae!" the aioldler epo: "itoane carried oar raglmenCl colors," he ' ' aaidi - "Where oar ensign wu shot I left htm dead. Brt nmr wmTOro4 mi Cto to tha roadside Mebodj lles( : 1 P"1 10,,,e,,l fw W drfnk: He murmured his mother's same, I think, VtMtk Mmf wlll ,t olute(J h,( ,1 . , ... . 'Tws a vlotorn Ve. but It oo t us dear . for that aonipany'a roll, when called at Bight. Of a hundred nea who went latotbe fight ' Fumbertd bill twenty that aaawarod ''Herel" . " ': ' ' Xatbanlel Graham Shepherd. wi'V? years, buoyed up by my faith In you, and the thought that you were to be my reward my wife? Don't yon call that a cruel blow. Don't? My Ood! 1 was nearly craned!" " The woman's voice, frantic, with pain: "Stop, sob shall not talk so. to tie. It was you who were faithless. Do tew audgifts to Kate Oakes? Every one In our set knew, tor she boasted of your devotion to her. Oh, my heart was broken, and my pride hurt beyond endurance! And when Mr. Van Ness asked me to marry him, I was glad glad although I did mot love him for as his wife no one would ever know how you had hurt ma. Aad six moqtha later you married Kate." Silence, broken only by a quivering SOb. The man's votco. Blow and dazed: "My tetters to Katel My gifts to Kate! -There wu a mistake somewhere. Why, Dolly, surely Kate gave you all the let ters and gifts I sent her? You remem ber your father waa displeased because I would not ""ty inwuid when I wnr to tlc-rvf any 10 compie siuirrua, he made us promise that W would not write to each other durin my absencehoping our love would die of silence and separation. .' I kept the letter of my promise, but not the spirit; I could not write to you, but I did write to Kate for you. She was such friend to us both, and she knew pur situation. I believed I could trust ? A pause, then alowly: ."Dolly, Kate la my wife." ; A long silence, then the woman's voice, sweet, tender, almost Joyous: Pg"1rf)v4a!attJclt. I love this bit of rocky coast better TKaTfy-OtiSt spot on earth! Nowhere else In all tka world Are the sunsets so beautiful. Just look at the skr now! That perfect took at the sky now! That perfect "r" von orf "- glory Qf-efttot-WSHld. ihfirfi?r' 'rMUZniSUi2-4-(ti mual".Htued I titfc ZaT ff8H "nT)raTeVs. To enter Into It. fully, with despair. - "Do you remember the first summer you cam down here with Tom? You were a big, handsome college boy, and I waa a spoiled child, who would go everywhere with you and Tom. You were so good to me always, and so pa tient Do you remember bow we used to ash from that level rock down close to the sea? You used to carry me In your arms over all th rough places. ' s t'You came her every summer after that" The voice became low and sad: And when Tom died 1 was sixteen then you came down here to comfort me; for 1 had no one in all the world but Tom. : Pa waa so cold and stern that I could not love him. Do you re member how 4 begged you to be my brother In Tom's placer i . . , Silence.; The woman's voice, clear and happy: "And two years after came th best summer of all, when you know what happened, and we plan ned your future. as4 talked of , the name and fame you would wln.,1 was so proud of you, and we were very hap py, and" The man's vole, hoarsely : "Don't Dolly 1 For God's sake, don't! I cant bear It If only I had known!" , The woman's voice. Ineffably tender: "It doesn't matter ao much, now that w know, Jack, You did love me, and you Jrere true to me? Bay It again, Jack. It cant be wrong for yon to tell me that you loved me before!'' ' - . . Tha, maat voice, brokenly: "Loved you, ttoliy, little sweetheart! Did I love you? Oh, Dolly. 1 have always" i Th woman'a rolce, quickly: "No i no, Jack! W have no right no. But It won't be ao hard to bear, now we know, and life I not so very long, and perhaps, sometime somewhere" A little catching sob. Th man's voice, deep; tender, trem ulous:" "Ood bless you, little sweet heart! Ood help us both!" - . -1 The gorgeous crimson and yellow ot the sunset had faded to dull purple, and twilight had fallen on sea and land. The fretful voice of the sea had grown soft and slumbrous with th ebbing time, and peace brooded every where, save In tha hearts ot the chil dren of men. A man and a woman arose from th rock, and, as they passed the niche where I, unseen, had witnessed ' the pageant ot departing day. and had heard rehearsed th supreme tragedy of life, the man raised the woman' hand to his lips, and gazed silently on her uplifted face, glorified with the love which through all time "endures, and la patient." Tha Household-I-ed-ger. How H Knew. .One day mother called Tommy and Mabel to go down th garden with her. She took them to the greptihouso, whre a quantity of soot had been scat tered all over the flixir of the ffreen hoiitto, and the path in front of It. 'hfr a 'Stf'd fech child If he or she ' i' It. 1 In the n he. T 1 . I p;tf you do It ottt tit PEIVACY 0FTHE SEA LANDSMEN HAVE AN : ADEQUATE IDEA OF IT8 VA8TNE38. I A Voyage of Three Month and Its : Impressions Upon th Traveler-jr Th By-Gon Whaler Wld Indeed I Old Mother Ocean' Bosom. Whether expressed or Implied, thet Is certainly a deep-rooted Idea In the minds of shore dwellers that the vast fenceless fields of ocean are In these latter days well, not to say thickly, populated by .ships; that, sail or steam whither you will, you cannot get away from- the whit glint ot a sailing ship or the black smear along, the cleaa bky of a steamship' smoke. . There is every, excuse for such an attitude of mind on th part of landward folk. Having no standard of r 'comparison against which to range the vast lonely breadth of water which make up the universal highway, and being mightily Impressed ty the statistics of shipping owned by maritime nations, they can hardly be blamed for supposing that the privacy ot the sea Is a thing of tha past; On voyage In a sailing ship to the Australasian colonies or to India?, If the opportunities it afforded wer rightly used, would do far more to con vlnce them of the utterly wrong notloa possessing them than any quantity of writing upon the subject would da Bui unhappily, few people today. hav the leisure or the inclination to spend voluntarily three months upon a se passage that can be performed la little more. than one,! Ivea those who f leaaob of poverty r tor their health pake do take such passage,' almost Invariably show signs of utter wearK ness and boredom. . As day after day passes, and. the beautiful fabric . la which they lire glides gently and leisurely forward, their impatience, grows until In -some It almost Amounts to A disease . This conditio of mind Is not favorable, to say the least, to ' calm study 0 th characteristic feat ures of ocean itself. Few, Indeed in punBengers ana ewer siiiiwr-nv sailors who will tor the dc Ht of tb thing spend hour at hour perched upon, some comma ng point la. wide- eyed ight sir; gthenlng gtl out upon the face of. IS SASL . ?i tesCl " ... 11 m MUD. Ul 1U. U1WI. tuuiyivt-v tvacy, a solemn aloofness belonging o th seas. The ' infrequent 1 Vessel, gentle though her progress may be through the calm, waters of the tropics, still strikes them as an Intruder upon Kthls realm of silence) and loneliness. Th voices of the crew grate harshly upon the ear as with a sense of desecra tlinauch as one feels upon heajlng loud (conversation In the sacred' peace of sonlerifttge cathedral. And when a vessel heavies in sight, a tiny mark against the skyline, she but, punctu ate the loneliness, as it were ftords a point from which the eye can faintly calculate) the Immensity of . her sur roundlng. . , r - i . Thi Induced "by contemplation of the ocen. ceedlngly marked even oir"" D lrB however. It Is necessary to toll 'either In a sable ship, a whaler, or an old slow-going merchant sailor that gets drifting out of the track ot vessel. Even in the English channel one can not but feel how much room there Is. In spit of our knowledge Cat the' number of ships that pass and repass Without ceasing along what may truth fully be termed the most frequented highway in th watery world, there 1 an undoubtedly reasonable sense In duced by Its contemplation that how aver much the dry. land may become overcrowded the sea wlll always be equal to whatever demand may be made upon It for space. There are many harbors In the world, it any rate landlocked! bays tLat may rightly be called harbors, wherein the fleets, of all the nations might Una In comfort And their disappearance from th open sea would leave no senso ot loss. So a ids la old. ocean's bosom. Perhaps this Is even now more strongly marked than It was fifty years ago! Tb won derful exactitude with which the (team fleet of th world keep to certain we! defined tracks leave tha Intermediate breadths unvlslted from year to year. They are arivate places whither he who should des'.re to hide himself from th eyes of mun might hid and be certain that but tor th host of heaves, the viewless wind, and the allent myriads beneath, he would Indeed be alone. They are ot the secret places ot the Almighty. ': '" ' Occasionally the great steamships th" 1"r ,or tn connecting; nerves 01 civilisation penetrate mese arcana. for their path must be made on the shortest Una between two continents heedless of surface tracks. And the wise men who handle these wonderful handmaids ot science know bow pri vate are the realm through which they steadily steam, leaving behind them the thin black line along which shall presently flash at lightning 'speed the thought-essence of mankind. The whaler, alas! Is gone; the old leisurely South Seaman to whom time was a thing of no moment. Her ruler, knew that his best prospect of finding the prey he sought waa where no keel dis turbed the sensitive natural violations of thfl wave. So these vessels jaw mor of lea solitude than any others. Saw those weird spaces unvlslted even by wind, great areas of silky surface Into whose peaceful glades hardly rolled a gently undulating swell bear ing silent evidence of storms raging half a world away. So, too, upon oc casion, did, and Joes, a belated sailing ship, such as1 one we met In the south ern seas bound from the milted king dom to Auckland that had Ix'en then nine months on her passage, in to what dread sea solitudes she had intruded. How' many, many days had elaiised during which the was f'kit solitary point rising from the phlnttig plain Into the tirpf-r air. licr crew had a wlfftil look tinon their f m s si of 1 1 11 n 1 1 t 1 t 0 Vlli ' 1 lilt 1 ( 1 tl S t ) I th-v tl'iniv n fiwt c t news 1 1 1 r s of a i'i t.f r- 1. P 1 1 t.f t 1 1 : a.-i All the tracks along which ships travel are but threads traversing these private waters, Just lltle spaces like a trail across an Illimitable desert And even there the simile fails, because the track across the ocean plain Is imagin ary. It is traced by the passing beet and Immediately it Is gone. And the tiny portion of the sea surface thus furrowed is but the minutest fraction of the immeasurable spaces wherein Is enthroned the privacy ot the soa. London Spectator. CITY'S PIER DWELLERS. Queer Abodes for a Part of Ncv. . York's Population. When an alarm of fire was soundid 'last Monday from the foot ot East Sixty-second street the firemen hustled out of their quarters with all the speed they were capable of, as the alarm had been sent In from 'the neighborhood of Flower hospital; Which la at Sixty third street and avenue A. Ji The firemen were greatly relieved to find that the fire was not in the .hos pital, but thry were surprised to find that It was tm the pier. ; As the en gine and trucks, the fire patrol wag ons and the battalion chief raced down Blxty-second street from First avenue they saw a mass of black smoke rising apparently from the East river, and they at Bret thought that come Ves sel was on Are', out they soon got hear enough to understand the situation. "Another' dock on fire and the last one waa only a week ago," one fireman said to another. ' . " ' ' ' Burning piers are of recent occur rence, and., In th opinion of .firemen, unless something I done to change the conditions' which are ravorable to the origin of such fires there will W W disastrous blare on .the .wate front. There 1 a 8treet Cleaning IJartment dumo at the foot of East glvV Aoeond. street and it was und ump.tl the fir, starte (JonalderaDlt damage was drm to the? pier, the dump and tbej ow which Was tied up there bo re the blaze was extinguished, Luck lly, the flames did not extend to any oft! the shipping In the neighborhood, , j - The firemen made an Investigation as towhait start t u WaetanaVsa did tha Inspectors of the street clean ing department and thy decided that I was accidentally started try the Ital ians who have their home under th pier or dump. It I a queer place for' human beings to have tholr borne, hut such as it la men, women and children live there.: The men are engaged tq the work of "trimming" the bcows which carry the city's refuse to Its fin al; destl nation. The trimming consist in sorting the paper,, rags and other material which may be turned Into commercial value. The men only are supposed to do the work, but In real ity the women and children work as hard as the men. The scow Is tied up underneath the overhanging ot ' the dump, and th street cleaning carta come along and empty their loads Into the scow. " Then the men, women and children scramble about with iron hooks, turn ing over the refuse. In warm weather the children have but little clothing on, . MtMt hnHtereaiiid. "'" "1 11 1 '"' 1 thlSkly with dirt. The women," too. are scantily clad, for they live In semi darkness under the dump when not at work oh the scow, and when so en gaged they are not on public view ex cept from passing boats,, , They live under the dump winter and summer. " They 'cook, oat and sleep there, and not even th close proxim ity of so much water can keep them clean. There are a number of such dumps along the North and East rivers, where Italian families are domiciled, and whose lives are passed amid the surroundings ' o( the city's . refuse. Truant officers don't think ot going there for children ot a school age." It was found that th fir last Mon day waa caused by the family cooking stove falling to piece while the worn. an was at work on the cow. Th fam- 1 lly midday meal was on the stove, but the arrival ot several loaded street cleaning carts Induced the woman Ot to out to help her husband,: tie chil dren and the boarders In trimming the cow. tl' :::;-:r ;";'':'',:';':-v''';;'''Vf;'' A similar fir occurred in one of the dumps further up th East river a short time-ago. The firemen say the matter is serious., from the fact that such fires are a menace to shipping.--New York Sun. " Th Fore f Imagination, . - Max O'Rell died as he had lived, passing humorous messages about among his friends; ' During his tour through Australia some years ago death was once close upon him, as It seemed to blm at the time. Lylog In bed one night in a Bush hostelry, wor ried by mosquitoes and thinking of the snakes against which he had been Warned, he became aware ot the pres ence alongside him of colJ, treacher ous snake, probably a death adder, as It was only about three feet long. Death from the bite of this playful ad der Is rapid and painless,' and the Frenchman' recorded afterwards his reflection that t was better perhaps to die that way than of gout or rheuma tism. After aa hour of agony, how ever; he slipped out of bed, struck a light, and went about the room search ing for the favorite walking stick he had carried specially for defence against reptiles. After a weary and nervous hunt be found It at last among the disordered bedclothes! London Chronicle. .Sugared Timber. Among new uses'' to which sttRsr has recently been put is in the pres ervation of timber. Much Interest has boon aroused by the announcement, as the result of a prolonged series of ex periments, of a method of so treating timber R3 to scrure, oven from soft wood, a largely InoienNetl toughness and hardness. Tho treatment to which tho tinitmr Is eulijtursc i in. roimhly r. that of sahin 'ion at I;;iil:ik :h a Miititltm ot mirar. the wa r afterward c-vnpornietl at a r tor hi! 1 t '! t :n. per- i I 1 in nut. '1 1 I re ii; n 10 1 f 1 r a 1 1 it .1 1 II! I 1 f 1 ! t I ! . I ITS wlmenalon of a Creamery. ft la rather, difficult to give the di mension ot a creamery to suit all con ditions. Howover, there is this fact to be borne In mind: The working rooms of a creamery should be built small, compact, and convenient, to- or der to save labor In keeping the cream ery clean. As an approximate esti mate t should say that a creamery handling milk from 400 to 600 cows should Contain from 800 to 1200 square feet of ficor space, not including coal space and store room. Oscar Erf, of tha University of Illinois. 4 ; - -: . 4. ."':.: Spreading Manure. ' . When the manure Is not decomposed In the heap It must be decomposed in the soil before the plans Can utilize It as a food, and the sooner the manure is spread the better It will be for the crop, As It Is difficult to spread ma nure on plowed ground, owing to the labor of hauling over the rough, soft ground, the method practiced by. those Who plow twice Is to spread the ma nure on the unplowed, ground, plow It under and leave the ground in the rough, (not harrowing), and when the land Is cross-plowed later on the ma nure I more intimately mixed with the oil. t. t Guinea. ; The value of guinea fowls Is under estimated by the average fanner, doubtless duo to tho fact that so tow really know of tholr genuine i&crlta. Guinea fowls are truly the watch dog tl at the first approach of danger their I I1 Hi 1 11 Instantly sounded. No hawk or cfiTw, mink or weasel can epcroach on; their preserves, and at night woo io the prowler who disturbs their restJThey are good layers ot small, though do Uciqusly, flavored eggs, and thoii.flesb, though dark, possesses a gamey .flavor not found in any other domesticated fowl. They1 -are hardy an -seldom subject to any of the many diseases that 'afflict the barnyard fowls. They are useful and need to be better kuown to be appreciated, and their ability to hustlo for their fcod makes them On economical fowl for every farmer. Home and Farm. " Producing Good Bacon. Speaking at the annual meeting of the Experimental : union -at Ouelph Professor J. H..Grlsdole,, Ottawa, men tioned a few facts in connection with hog-ralaing and the production of good bacon, which apply with considerable force to conditions In the Wostorn country, i He said: . "Properly cared for pigs, means pigs fed under condi tions conducive to health and thrift Airy, roomy, light quarters, are the right sort. If space is an expensive consideration, as It usually Is,, espe cially In winter, then let the small space be well ventilated, wel lighted and kept clean, targe runs are not jaar-saary where the other conditions "JsasfIBaBjWiittv of the feed are pruviuuu.- tuu MuBjsasaaBfa supplied ia unuouuteuiy an inipt consideration, Barley, is unsurpassed as a feed for the production of firm bacon. Oats ' also ' are" excellent Where skimmilk or whey can be se cured" It Is an Infallible guarantee of a gocd quality of bacon." 1 . Feeding for Eggs. . Cooked feed, for the morning meal Is excellent If composed ot the proper Ingredients and fed regularly. A good mixture may be made of equal parts of cornmeaL fine middlings, and bran, ground oats hud ground meat Tbltt should be stirred in & pot of cooked Vegetables, while boiling hoi, until the mass Is very stiff. The mixture should be seasoned with salt and cayenne pepper. Potatoes, beets, carrots and .turnips, clean and free from decay, wlll be acceptable. Th above contains variety of food elements, mnd such as compose th egg and the bone and muscle of, the hen: Tb fat forming Clements not being prominent. For the noon meal, wheat Is the best sin gle grain. It "may be scattered In chaff or leaves on the feeding floor. The night feed should be whole corn. Plenty of grit should be accessible at all times. Unless the morning feast can be given early, we would advise putting; a little dry meal in a vessel for them to pick at until their break fast is ready. Mrs. C, Carpenter, In Th Epitomlst , r , f ' Feeding Working Horse. 1 The average farm house ha but lit tle road work to do during the winter, and, as .a, rule, is not well fed. As a result he Is in poor shape to take up- the - work of - the (arm in the spring.- While Is Is unnec essary to feed ' horses who are doing little anywhere near a full work ration the (ood must be of a character to keep up the strength of the animal and enable It to respond fully to the In creased ration when it Is given In the spring. In other words when the In creased ration is given, the, horse should not be in such poor shape that It will require this ration to subdue the state of semi-starvation In which it baa been during the winter. One of the best authorities on horses in tlie country makes it a practice to feed a bran mash throughout the year, the mash constating of four quarts of brau moistened with ucaldlng water and fed quite hot. This Is given at least twice a week. The mash keeps the bowels in good condition and keeps -the horse, which has been on short rations dur ing the winter, from running dowi badly. Attention should also be paid" to the working horses in tho matter of care, especially during the spring. They will peraplre enHily, and If not properly cared for, catch cold. A gn, la f,i -lonn Hta finhnuj pu goi'U RH It Is hroiutnt In from the work i the (1 iv. and hmnkrt It v Mie -i t .:. I y the tone It In p-- uy t-i t ' e 1:0 f t 1 ' I t e 1 'i 1 1 - 1 1 1 t h v i 1 i ! I t.a t- 1 1 m i--; -e to :- v i I; 3 p 1 . 1 . : .v 1. 1 i 1 t too much,, and lay few eggs. But it I let them loose they dig In my Sorter beds, eat up my early peas and take my strawberries. What shall .1 do about It?"" ... Plant your strawberries where you can mot t conveniently surround the plot with, wire netting two or three feet high. Surround your vegetable plot In the same way. This netting is not expensive bought by the roll, and It properly cared for, will last for twenty years. It should be rolled up when out of use,- and stored In your. barn. Ton .will And that hens will not Jump over a two-foot barrier oi this sort If they do, kill them off and raise a stock of Plymouth Rocks. My white Leghorns are turned very readi ly. Once In wbilo a Jumper Is found, and the best place for her Is In the pot ' .-, ' Hens aro particularly fond ot goose berry, eating them as soon as they are In blossom. I am obliged to surround my gooseberry plants with ' netting very early in the spring. Hens are in valuable on tho country place, and with a little care they can be allowed to run loose. ' Feed them carefully and thoroughly three times a day, and near the barn, and you will not find them very troublesome. I presume that those who have but a few bushes of raspberries will be ODllged to sur round them also with netting. -In my case I allow them . to roam , freely through my berry gardens and vine yards. ' They rarely touch a currant and they an eddle only with those grape that are near the barn and are allowed to hong low. E. P. Powoll, ID New York Tribune Farmer. . ,). Turnip a Bummer Crop, The root crops are greatly overlooked In this country, bU In Qurope no farm er wcnld expect ruecesa without the aid ot turnips, beep, carrots, parsnips toe, is well known that unuerawrT Iuvorulie conauions r bushels may tm growlPps ajuft though such yields are ' exceptional and the averages are much less. In England much of the literature devot ed to agriculture la ot stock raising hand root or bulbous crops. When It Is considered that the English farmer pays an annual sum for rent equal to the Cost of a farm In th United States, and that he make sheep and turnips pay all the expense. It should encour age our farmers to give more atten tion to the mutton breeds of sheep and tp the advantages of the root crops as food 'for stock. Farmers should carefully select seed from the best varieties, and also from the ; best plants, as well as make comparative tests, In order to determine the most suitable varieties, for each particular farm, as-welt as the quality and also the yields. By so doing th varieties can be greatly Improved. In tact, by selection the farmer can double hla yields, and also secure varieties es pecially adapted to his farm. There are farmers living who can remember when the tomato Was small and wa tery, and they have noticed wonderful changes In corn, wheat, oats and" oth er plants that have been made by se lection. The root crops have also been Improvod for every year hew and bet ter varieties are offered, : but more work Is before those farmers who are tiling to improve in that direction. .. SnSWi n rui'omiin t nt pmn. ; Th.TT,. iiimjT uf'-j be mangels, turnips, fie. snoui done with regard to diminishing th amount of water contained therein and increasing the proportion ot sugar, starch and protein. Experiments made in England show that all roots have a tendency to contain an excess of wa ter, which In itself la valueless, and some varieties are claimed to contain water to a harmful degree. In the root crops s. small deviation In the percent age of water materially - affects the feedlug. value, as ton ot one kind may contain twice as much solid mat ter as a ton. of another variety. It is an advantage, a well aa a necessity, therefore, that the farmer ascertain the weight of the solids In a crop. This he can do by bending samples to the state experiment station. The specific gravity of th root la a guide to Its keeping quality, and the specific grav ity of the, Juice Is a guide to Its feed ing quality, hence, when It density is highest In both the Juice and the whole root, the value of the crop for feeding Is the greatest The farmer can easily ascertain these facts without the aid cf the experiment station, but the sta tion can .assist him In arriving at A knowledge of the proportions ot sugar, protein and mineral matter contained. The proportion ct sugar In roots Is Important as the more sugar the great er the value of the roots aa assistants in- fattening th anfmala. Th farmer who knowg something of the value of roots may secure a more valuable crop With lees yield than front a larger crop that contains a low "percentage of solids and an excess of water, and be should, therefore, , endeavor to be come thoroughly Informed In that di rection. '. '...' Roots add value to all other foods, because of the fact that during the winter, when dry food Is the rule, the use ot turnips, beets or carrots gives a change from the dry ration to a more Bucculent kind. - Digestion is, there fore, promoted, and all kinds ot food become more thoroughly digested and assimilated. Cooking roots for stock Is not now practiced, compared with formerly, si Inventors have introduced sllcers and pulpera, which prepare such foods for stock with but little la bor snd with rapidity, thus placing before the farmer of today advantages which he should not overlook. It is somewhat late for putting In crops ot beets and carrots, but July is the month for growing turnips. Since much Injury has Jieen done crops in some sections this year by drought and floods, the farmers who may give their attention to turnips will largely recover their los of feeding material. The turnip crop Is no one of the elteiipeat proline J on the farm, con nltlfiioe: the yt.-tds that are I " it 1 1 er to t t I tl wheel hoes no the pow I k ') down 1 n t I Hi list llill) OI i 1 1 e t V I r s ; a i It 1 pro- t r ( A SEMI0N FOB SUNDAY AN EL.OQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED "THE JOY OF CHRISTIAN SERVICE." Tka Rev. Dr. Geary p. Adams Tell a tha Spiritual Vpllrtlns Which Abides With TImm Who Walk Coastawtly With V 0U-Plauar 1st Chriitlaa Salaries. , New York Citt. Wbea ReV.Dr. Geo. D. Adams, the new pastor of the First Bap tist Church, Ije avenue and Keap street, preached hi first sermon as pastor of th church, he selected. for his text: Hebrews xii: 1 and t: "Therefore, let us also, seeing we are compassed about with so great a (loud of witneasee, lay aside every weight and the sin which i admired by many and let n run with patience the race that is et before us, loolting onto Jesus, tb au thor and perfecter of eur faith; who, for the joy that waa before Him, endured the eross, despised the shame and bath sat down at the right band of th throne of Bod" (N. V.). and auid; A very casual observer could easily tell that many Christians hav lost the Joy ol the Christian service which they once had. It takes no scholar, aor, indeed, a critic, of Christian life or human living to sea that many, who one day rejoiced with "un sponsible Joy" in tha service of Jeans Christ, are to-day indiffeient. Indeed, we ourselves find some times, when tp come to the botise of tiod ia a burden, ana we drag a weary body or reluctant soul into tb presence of the Almighty snd try to wor shin Him ia the "beauty ol holiness." We find ;ain aad again, if we should follow th inclination of our hearts and minds that we should stay at bom. But those arc new experiences comparatively. One We could give up any pleasure for ar. houi With God, and when to hav '.een in Hii C resent and feel that He was bearing us; I enjoy the touch of kindred spirits; to hav enjoyed tb song and the prayer and the service, out of God's heart, would bar been better to us than riches and store precimn than fin gold. But that ia gone. We find ourselves sometimes coming be e use we think 'we ought;, doing this or that service became it is customary;' enter ing Into this form or that because it is a habit it to do ao. and in th saner moment 01 our conscience we com sometimes to say: "Why is this so?" Has Ood ehsa.ed' r CUniV UsWblsllCBI W use the jxmrnp Mtiajwef io aue visbsnutnan life of its brudene'and suifer- vgs goner ia tnere leas oi power anu eur acv In the savins grace of Jesus Christ now thaa once! After all, is God's service really and truly at bottom nothing but 4 dnidgery? Or, ha something taken place with tuf Have we left behind something we once had and have we passed beyond that moment of exultant spirit when in th presence of Jesua our heart bounded with the joy of a new faith and th experience of salvation? Well, we sre perfectly sure Gol has not changed. We ar perfectly sure Jesus ia "the aama, yesterday, to-dsy and forever." We hav not a "doubt that tha old gospel will save men today, and when we come to think of it after all is not th matter of being saved a subject of just aa much joy in the twentieth century as in the first century? Haa there been any chant in th attitude ol th gospel? We are bound to eonfess there has been none, and if that ia true, then th trouble is with ns. Somewhere we have lost some thing. and I am looking into faces this morning that know better than I do, in their experience, that that something is the priceless treasure of Christian hope. How, to get that back. When I was a bo I wept when firs I saw the wrinkles coming on my mother's face. I wanted her to remain always young, and there are thousands of Christian hearts, some repre sented here, doubtless, that hav wept at the loss of their Christian experience it is dead, joy is gone. Oh, what would we give to get ft back! I am persuaded that w would give a great deal t get it back, but I am mora thoroughly persuaded that the way to get it back i to get into the atti tude of life that makes it constant The best thing ia not to get back th Christian experience of years ago, but to get into the attitude of lif that makes that experience perennial, I am going, therefore, to discuss the source of Joy. Th thing that most lies behind that experience and th first thing that contronte tne unnauan in iw m ter is duty. We do not lilt tba w duty. W associate with th word V sacrifice; and are surprised When that it is in itself a. terra of f hen J say to you, I want yf your duty'yoiiraj'i ,that wo about duty; I don t in-e-ajf ia larnlv because the worn to mean a matter of bondage, ality it ought to mean a matter of f reeuos. Why it was duty '-hind th text: "Let us. therefor, seeing w ar compassed about with ao great a cloud of witnesses lay aside very weight and the sin which is admired bv many (or so delight in rom special sin of th age, I suppose) and let us run with patience the race that la set before us, looking onto Jesua, tb author and perfect er of our faith, who, for the joy that was set before Him, endured tlie eross, de spised the shame, and hath sat down at the right hand ef the throne of Ood." That is duty. .In th light with which Jesua de spised th eroas wc ougM not to stop and reason about duty. I want yoa to notice that duty ia an ethical term, not legal. There b a kind of doctrine abroad to-day which is called the ethical religious idea, I do not mean that at all. Duty is ethical, not legal. Duty reside in th rtceaacs ol a man's character, not in the external leg islatioa concerning him. I am a moral Ing, therefore I Might. A dog or a rse can never b called upon because ol oughtness they ar not moral beings. The) Br within the restrictions of a master an that ia legal. There ia something in man that is an oughtness. "I ought therefor I must. Because I am a moral being I ought, therefore duty i; ethical. Many t man fulfills the law and breaks every poa- Jible moral duty, Th aaloonkeeper is eeping th letter of the law, but he is doing an immoral thing. It ia not a matter of legality or politics, out of moral ought ness. Until that moral oughtness is obeyed I am in bondage, but when I obey the moral oughtness I am free. I paased through a great sowing machine work ia Behridere, 111., and saw the machine called the automatio screw. Th ordinary ma chine know more than a lot of men. Men can't do a thing aa you tell them to. You set a man on a job of work and he will hang tb way of doing it juat aa eur as he lives tha ia, if a is an American. II he is a Chinaman or a Russian he won't. That is why corporations hire that kind of mart, because h will do no mora nor lea than he is told. But you tell an American to do a thing precisely in a certain way; he won't do il; you can't hire him to do it But a machine will. You Bay that is re stricted. Mo, it ia not. It will take thl pig iron and turn it out perfect screws as small aa a piece in your watch, and do il all day long. That ia liberty. Th iron waa restricted in th pig iron, it is at lib erty in the screw shape because it is doin) its intended work, and man ia at lit arty only when he ia doing his God-intended service. Morally speaking, duty is ethical, then. I do my dutv before God. not be cause I must, but .because 1 ought. I am less a man and less ires when I refuse to do thing I waa made to do. The chiel vnd of man, "ays the catechism, ia to wor ship God and enjoy him, Kxactly. So tiatt duty ia a part of joy in service. rielfiahneaa ia incompatible with service. Th servant ia not the servant when think ins mor of tit wage than the biues. u cannot serve and be selfish.. 'ihe sis of this --ra is scllihneas, my friends. -1 am tiiank.nl that 1 live in the age of elec tricity, wireless telegraphy ana automo biles, but let me tell you, the sin of tin s-.'e is pure, unadulterated sehiwhness. Ten thouannd people to-day in tins great cilv are seeking aif.olutely their own schib plemiiire, ami when st if deinrnnea God and nthrouea itwif the am of all sia in tins ipe is enr"mfC'l. Don, give me mn.w li nt" " it; it if m voii sav. V'U cams t linv 1 am going to k 'p u I rt to n.v.ielf.' 1 was rcitmnlut a .na , mi iron, T,.'tvimtn t--n- S t on tl V - I t-. ve ti.cn hut to f - a ' to a r v l I.v. in I I i. I a I. r ... (It .. -, t li..- 'Why b M,i. H Ood .hausedTf T'J sunlight. Then we entered fog, "'Im- w could not see more than five of six (' : away. Where was the beauty gone? attention became riveted upon our erfurti to climb out of thr fog. ' Presently we merged from it and were on th mountain top. My, what a scene! There iny the valley at our feet, like an extensive wnrj'i ; towns, rivers and railways tha great Val ley of the Mohawk. True, it was nearly ISO mile away, but we were looking at it. That waa like th Christian experience. When yoa cams to the seat that day you were en the foothill. You forgot all be cause Jesus wsa everything and you saw the little landscape. You. thought, "The Christian life is beautiful. I am full of Joy." And a few weeks passed and you eaid, "But to live as s Csbirtisn is not so easy; I do not ace the Joy. The little val ley, where is it? 1 What a tremendous thing it is to be climbing up to Ood." And th cloud settles and you get to be selfish. But if you persevered and. climbed up ward yoa have eoa to th mountain peak. Experience, and you feel that all your power and love ought to be settled on on effort ta climb still further and fur ther in th vision of the Eternal. I won der if ome of us are not still in the cloud, because w hav lost the joy f service. . (Suffering is only incident to service. I am perfectly aware, when I ask you to en ter with greater seal in the service of God that I am asking you to Buffer. , You will not be killed, or asked to move out of the United State or persecuted because you are s Chriatian, but you will have to suf fer, and when you aimer yoa-errtl begin to enjoy. No man laughs so hearVlyas llic " man who weeps most bitterly. No laugh ter ring so in heaves as that which comes through th tears down here. By suffering I mean yoa will b asked to endure the cress. Jeau endured tb cross, , Now, right her let me say that suffering is not service.' Some one y: "See here, do you mean to say that when. I suffer for Jesus Christ that is not servicer1 ' That is exact ly what I BMaa to Say. ' Uotl has Be pleas ure in your pain, but if your service for Him demand it, and yu bear it heroic ally, He baa pleasure in, the attitude of your life. Jesus Christ endured' the cross. Why? Because it was iacidsnt to.ths work -of saving this race. Somebody will call ' m heretic, but I am not; I befreve, and yoa believe, that Jsu.Chriatie tfrWiia I a 1- - ia. . . .. . il I worm isavp.w7jJ mt- 'ive auu jruu- hall aver be that Jens ts the diviae Bon of Ood. If He is not divine let us stop our preaching, sell our property and b infi dels. If Jesos at a mere mas let as-all quit business. I may .be an old fogy, but as long aa this tongue' preaches iheugospel Jesus Christ will he, the divine Christ in my message. Do I mean that Jesus came to His cross by-Maiden t! (No, elk He saw tb eroas standing at the end. of His mission; and for the-joy that was set be fore Him endured end came, to; sav this race, and that meant the bearing of a cross and Ha bote it But the real missies waa th saving of the race, not the bearing of the cross. Hi mission Was to : save men. "Ood so loved tb world that He gov Hia only begotten Son that whosover believeth is Him might not perish bat have ever lasting hfe. When the cross stood in the way of the perfection of salvation' Jesus sndund it divinely, heroically and unflinch ingly died. upon it to save us. Suffering ia incident to service, and when I sail you to serve Ood you will have your eross. Th man yon work with will say yon are too much of a crank and a fanatic. It will hurt and pain and go deep, 'aud.yo will flinch. Sometimes you will, try to apologue for bet of enuik and famtic, and you will thank Gd tbar ia something yoa can en dure. It is part et astri(nd behind the suffering comes a joy, deep and profotmdy When you are true, r Yes, you will have ham to bear, too. Two or three young ladies where I have been holdinr meetings lately and baptising some hav said. "I no not like to think of gettiag tip before all those people and being baptised. I won der if w ar going into th joy of fulfilling God's command. If we are we have got to endure aome of that sham He endured. Let m tell you if yoa bad administered baptiam and you saw as a minister ares in the fae of th believer buried out of sight snd raised to resurrection of newness of life if von saw) what he sees just onee you would drop yoif qaibblini now. Shame on cannot Dear in tne iwcntietn cen- '.Phnatjian troth all that fol--KiJjif us. A writer in . articl entitled says Bailing "r'Vns op- opposition . you are beati...s world will' oppoMTv. kill, then, to take tue-tij .-. suffering and sin and use them to advance nr life in th kingdom of heaven. When egin to sacrifice I begin to enjoy. Be loved, if yo wosld bare th joy of Chris tian service you must hav the heart of Christian sacrifice, ' ,y . n, us s&Mtki Yv When that last Sabbath eomee--the Sab bath of all- creation the heart, wearied with its tumultuous beatings, shall have rest: the soul, fevered -.vile ita anxieties, shall enjoy peace. The sun of the Sabbath will Barer set or bide it splendors in a cloud. Tho flowers that grow in its light will nevar fade, Our earthly Sabbaths are but dim reflections of the heavenly Sab bath, east down upon th Mirth, cammed by th transit of their rays from so gnvi a heigh. saai i8tliiPt'arJd:-Tlie fair eat landscape, or eorabiaatiuaTuf sin upon earth, ar but th outskirts -of tha paradise ot Ood, forc-eerseats and intima tions of that which lies beyond them, and th happiest Pabbath-heart, Whoa very pulse is a Sabbath bell, hears but very in adequate echo of th chimes and harmo nies of that Sabbath, that Met, Where we "rest not day and night," in which the song is never nw, and) ys. evg lung. Whs W CaaOlve, , On ol tb bravest things in the world it to give to others out of one's deepest pov erty, whatever that may becheer out of sorrow, hope"jit of disappointment, helu out of weariaws, courage out of defeat, the. precious mite out of the slender store. I r, is a brave thing to do this, aad yet not of ten an unrewarded thing. We do not know that th recording angel keeps a. special account df such heroic benevoienn . but surely they do not escape the iovu , cognisance of Oo'd. Wellspring. , Th world and -the church need to ri men of true courage, men Who dare to h i tha courage of their conviction ; men v. are not afraid to do what ia rigM; v who will stand up for the right. We I too many cowards in the church, anil : ar reproach to Christianity. The v, despises cowardly Christian and rf . no use for such. Th Kev. Dr. lloiu. i Atlanta, G. ' ' s " TOMATO CUSTARD. Tomato custard may be mails i canned tomatoes, but th fresh etable Is preferred. To ewch c of chopped raw tomatoos alhxv egg. 8lmmer the tomatoes wi i onion, a bay loaf, and i, sprig t ' ley for fifteen minutes. Prcm I a sieve. Add water If th- - ! enough liquid to flli two or the eifgs separately, and f a Ingredients. together, s ' " pepper. Pour Into cii" i !ake in s pan con' ' Just BS oilier rir--!ar : shortt-r t'.ui li r tin '.trd. T" ' ( '. en.! j-.-sr r- " h ii