o .""7 A 17TT DTP il1 i: u-M VOLUME XX. FRANKLIN. N. C. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 27, 1905. NUMBER' 52- , 1 1 PA'S ALMANACK ThetVa lota at books In oar houaeY Eaop , nd Thomaa Hood. ' Ibkeptaua. Pot and Parley's tile, and otaart . ju aa (Don : la fact, uti In (ho sarrat, for I've mm tbna 1 X i ' thr mywrit . 4r half hunrirtd dual booke pIM ea a i u jallow ahcir. Bat Fh ho nmr toaelwa on front eat that - For when lie ha the chance to read, ha . rtada -ie Almanack. . Ba .reads the leading "Hlnta to Health" and what will cure an arhe t And when there' urle In your blood tha . -' pills that joa ahould take. Tha ajrmntoma of black measlea and tha point on heart-dleraee : And.aa l'a tnrna h page hark h think, ho hai all these, ' "By giim !" he'll tar with troubled look, ... . - "I've aharp pala la iy back, And that'a the way lumbago cornea It's la tha Almanack.",. HI H 1 1 H 14 M H 4t)t44 I O M t M The Amateur Revolutionist J- The Revenge of A Lovef and Child, by JOHN FLEniNd WILSoN. 444M4sj444HH.tll4MIIIl4tllMt44tt It you should gee bronzed men or . men with soldierly bearing frequent ing it certain office In a. small street In San Francisco, and If you knew who the men were or what they represent ed, you could predict to a nicety the next Central American revolution, Its leaden, and Its outcome. That Is be cause San Francisco Is tha place where everything commences, and many have their end In the way of troubles In tha "sister republics." Three years ago the present govern' tnent of Guatemala missed overthrow by just a hair. As the man who had been financing the Insurrection Bald bitterly when the bottom fell out: "If It weren't for women there'd ue no revolutions, and It it weren't fcr a woman every revolution would be suc cessful." He said this to (he man who knows more about troubles political where there's money and fighting than any other man in the world. This mm nodded his head with a smile not often seen on bis spare face. The financier didn't like the look, and he growled gome more: "They might at least have let me hold the government up for my expenses before calling the whole business off. ' I could have got everything back and Interest on my venture." The other man kept on smiling. "That'B the way you fellows look at It. If you can't win sell out at a good price. But that don't win in the lung run. One woman can spoil the scheme." Two years before this a young worn-1 an landed from the Pacific Mall steam er Gity of Para, and registered at the Palace aa from Mazatlan. She hadaj i little maid whajtlgied adrtalked .Mexican. 0JBTwTIiggr with Vienna and Paris hotel labels over It, and the " manner of a deposed queen. She signed herself as "Srta Maria Rlvas." In due time Senorita Rlvas left the hotel for quiet lodging on Vallejo street But before she disappeared from the court, a gentle-mannered old - man with knotty hands, called and In traduced a companion. "This Is the young man I spoke ta your excellency about I present Scnor Thomas Vin cent Then the gray-haired man lipped away, and Thomas Vincent was , left looking down into the dark face of Maria Rlvas. He did not know why ' he was there, nor who she was, nor even the name of the man who had In . traduced him. But he was not sorry. . ' tihe let him stand white she glanced - olm over. Vincent drew himself up at her somewhat Insolent manner, and was rewarded by a smile. "Will you accept an Invitation to supper tonight if I press you very hard?" she asked him in Smooth Eng lUh. . . . Vincent turned his eyes about the court. Then he looked down sjt her again, and nodded curtly. "Certainly, madam." He flushed, and went on, "But I failed to catch your name, am awfully embarrassed." 8hc got to her feet, and held out a Blender hand. "I am Miss ' Mary Rlvas," she said, quietly. "My father 'was formerly the president of Hon- - duras. I went to school at Bryn Mawr, and J met your sister there. That's why, when I found you were In San Francisco, I asked to have you brought and introduced.". . Vincent loked at her very soberly, almost pityingly. Then he offered her . bis arm, and they went into the supper room, .where everybody , turned to watch their progress, knowing neither ; of them. When she removed to the flat' on Vallejo street. Miss Mary Rlvas. told Vincent to come and take the first dinner with her. "We'll christen the new place," she said fay ly, "and, be sides, I hope you'll find that I'm really American and can cook." That night at nine o'clock when the Mexican maid had departed ' giggling to the kitchen, Vincent's hostess leaned forward over the table at which they sat, and rested her elbows on it Her bare arms framed her face In a sudden way' that took Vincent's heart out of Its regular beat. He leaped to his feet when Maria Rlvas, dropping her .head, burst Into a torrent of sobs, her white shoulders heaving as her agony got the better of her. . As he stood there biting bis lips she threw back her head and darted up and to the window."-He heard her moan, as if she saw and heard some thing too awful to comprehend, i He walked over and stood back of her till she swung round, and he saw the tear stained fact relax and the swimming eyes close. He carried her to the table, and laid her down across It, and rubbed her hands. . . Then the maid came In, still giggling hysterically, and together they revived her until she sat np be tween Vincent's arms and slid from the big table to the floor. Vincent sent the astonished maid out by a ges ture of command. "Now what's the matter?" he de manded, hoarsely, "if you're In trou ble tell me." , She panted before him. "It was : what 1 remembered," she replied. "How can ! forget f " y "After I had been five years In the Elates papa' sent for me to axel him in Colon. I got oS the steamer, and he was waiting on the wharf. I knew We Ilka to en Fa winter nights alt by 4ha , . open grate '".,:.. Aid wad load hit Almanack tad tell 01 ! Ika Mat That Kero plavwl hla dddlt whlla aid Koaja waa turning rod, And vara that wlckoi Hnsllah king . poor lulclgh'a koa. waa auming roa, It'a Utti Arc Juat tha kind that till each paga of his Old Aimanaca. Pa reads tha tide k hundred times and when'a the neit ecllpae. ' . . And he has all the weather news right at his Anger-tins. . . II knows just when dry spell" kra du and when wet weather's near. And sometimes he puts on his gums when all Ik. wAI.A'a l "It Is n't rslnlni ret." he'll say, "but It will mwm I Mt h.fk." And If It don't we dassn't langh 't was , In the Almanacs. Victor A. Hermann, In Pack; ho would do It just that way. He put on his glasses with both hands, and looked at me as If he were very glad, and oh! I loved it for it was Just like it was when I was a little girl and ran Into the big room. "But trouble came In Panama, and papa thought we'd better .coma tip .to San Francisco, 'I've been so busy down hers one way and another,' he said, 'that I'm always suspected of con spiracy. Your mother Is dead, and the fun of lire Is out of it We will . live peaceably is befits an Old man and his daughter.' " Vincent's voice broke In oil her story. "When Was thlsf" "Five years ago. And everything went ail right till We got to Auapala, There a friend of papa's came bn board and showed me a paper. It said papa' was not to be allowed to Iatld in Hon duras, as he was plotting an Insurrec tion. He put on his glasses n read It. When he looked up at me, ho said: 'We shan't see where your mother is burled, nor the place where you were born.' He shook hands with the friend and said nothing more, "On the day we were In Ocos, In the afternoon, I bsw the comandante come on the steamer with some soldiers. He said he wanted to arrest papa, but that If he came along willingly he would not U8e force. " "I am under the American flag,' papa said. 'I know who has done this. It would 'mean my death If 1 went with you.' Suddenly I heard, a shot and then another. I hurried to papa's room. Outside there were two soldiers aiming into It. I saw papa sitting on bis camp-stool and his two revolvers wgfe-tn hlllsp. He was hunting for bis glasses7utttle-talDhad slipped down. He could not see to stoot One of the soldiers, after a long UnKvJ,re'1 his gun again, and father suddenly picked up his revolvers, and I cried out again. He didn't shoot, and I know now that he was afraid of hitting me. Then he fell. The soldiers fired again and ran away, panting and yell Ing to each other. I went Into papa and he naked for his glasnes, sitting up on the floor .very weakly. When I found them and gave them 10 him, the blood was running very fast down his breast He put on his glasses with both hands, wrinkling up. his forehead in the old way, and looked at me very Ho looked. ... Ho said, 'I am glad I could see you, little one . before I go.' That was all." She went to tho window and stayed there, immobile, while Vincent walked up and down behind her. At last she turned around. "That was live years ago, No one has done anything to punish them." , . ; Vincent, because she was suddenly to him the woman, did what every man once in his life will do for one woman: he sacrificed his sense of humor. With all seriousness he stiffened up. "It was under my flag he was shot down. I've served under it. Give me another flag for Guatemala and I'll go down there and those murderers shall die against a wall, with your flag flying over their heads, Its shadow wavering at their feet on the yellow sand." Marie Rlvas, because she was the Woman In this case, understood per fectly. "A revolution T" she said, very quietly. He bent over her hand grave ly and youthfully. His manner was confident, as if he saw very clearly what was to be done and knew how to do it, not as If he had promised a girl with tear stains on her cheeks to over turn a government because of a murder one hot afternoon on a steamer. In a foreign port. This was the beginning of the affair. Its continuation was In a little town on the Guatemalan coast, where Vin cent landed with a ton of munitions of war, marked ''Manufactures of Metal," and thirty ragged soldiers, A month later be had a thousand Insurgents and twentjr tons of munitions, "and 'bis blood 'had drunk In the- fever that burns up the years In hours. The first thing Vincent did under Its spell was to march oa Ocos and take It When the town was his and the commandante In Irons, the young man took out of his pocketbook a little list of names, made put in Maria RIvas's hand. Ha com pared this list with the list of prison ers and ordered out a firing squad. Half an hour later the shadow of the flag mace by the Woman in the Valle jo atreet flat waver over i the sand on which lay six men la a tangle. Generalissimo Thomas Vincent went out Into the sun and looked at the last postures of the six, anu then out across the brimming waters of tho Pacific: A mall steamer lay out there In the midst of a cluster of canoes, the American flag drooping from her mast An Irishman in a major's uniform came out of the Cool of the barracks and stopped beside Vincent, "Another week ought to see us in the capital," he said slowly. "But t don't like this business, general, These beggars don't amount to anything. Why did you order them shotr" A barefoot girl of some tea years crept around the corner of the sun-! baked wall. She picked her way ovsr tha sand, darting hot glances fearfully j ai the two officers. , Suddenly j she stooped over the crooked body of one of the motionless ones, She tujxed at the sleeve Of a shirt, and aa -tha face turned slightly npward to. her effort, she fell to beating on the ground with both hands, and sobbed in the heat, dry eyed. "Vincent strode over to ber, and gently picked her up. Her quick sobs did not cease aa Ji carrfed her Into the . shade, bis own" face drawn and white. He looked over ht the 'major, who stood gnawing on his stubby moustache. He did not reply to the question until the major repeated It angrily; "It was because . i . they de served It. . . ." Vincent stopped and then went on, almost Inaudibly "God knows why I did It, and then there's . . t the " He stopped once more. for the girl's hard sobs had ceased, and her little hands bad darted from tho folds of her scanty gown to the young generaj's throat, and the major saw him set the burden softly down, and fithed all. forward, the blood pouring round w. blade of A knife deep Id his throat'" - - '-; 4 v With ad oath the! majof leaped bvef to him and lifted his head, Vincent's eyes looked clearly into his.' then the wounded man looked over at the little girl, poised for flight a doxen feet awayi He nodded at her .with an air of abs& lue comprehension, and then died. San Francisco Argonant, FA8HI0N JN READING, How the English Woman Makes Up Arrears. Great boxes of books are going up to 'Scotland and the shooting moors now, addressed to the chatelaines of historic houses, jfhoy are not intend ed to augment the resources of the lib rary or to amuse guests of literary proclivities upon days of storm and rain, but are destined for the partic ular pursuit of the hostess herself la her own boudoir. The very exacting duties of the Lon don season make the pleasure of keep1 ing hp their pursuit of literature ad impossibility to many women. It may be practicable to dip Into the latest hovel when it makes Its ap pearance during the tow leisure mo ments that are sandwiched between a busy London hostess's day, but to de vote any time to serious reading 14 qulto impossible. - Numbers of biogra phies, book of travel and of science, delightful memoirs and interesting poem 8 must go unread, unless the modern plan of saving them up for September is resorted to, as it very generally Is now. This resource Is the established custom Of one very cxaltod persdnagd who Is devoted to literature and whose sympathies are so wide that no good ever escapes her perusal. It is her custom to keep in a little book throughout tho earlier months of the year a carefully compiled list of nov els, works of travel, memoirs, aut biographies and so forth that she de sires to rend, and these her booksel ler forwards to her in her Highland home for her delectation during the autumn. As this princess reads not .only the best English writers but those of German?, 'HTli PlUhCB, the precious hours she spends In Com paratlve privacy in tho north are most fully occupied In the penisal of their works. System in tho pursuit of literature Is the best friend the busy woman Call possess if she is to maintain her acquaintance with the writers of tha. day. It is not sufficient for her to have a miscellaneous collection Of novels and serious works forwarded to her lu the country. For these, though they mn afford her a Certain amount of recreation, will not further her alms of self-education, to accom plish which task is the aim of the modern seeker after enlightenment, who holds the view that education on ly ceases with life Itself, One . woman makes a specialty of reading all-the works pf all the lead ing novelists in Europe, and her task Is no light one; another gives works of fiction a secondary place, and de votes herself to travel; while to the third 'no form of literature appeals so successfully .as those volumes of clev er causerlo that so often appear, and prove so useful aa the subject of con versation. London Dally Mall. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. An English police court comevto the front with an antiseptic New Test ament for oath-taking purposes.- The covers are guaranteed to be death to germs. Editor Barnett of the American (Jrocer, New York, Is advocating the establishment of a school for grocers and a state board of examiners for its controh -The combined salaries of the presi dents of the 14 lesdlng universities In the United States do not equal the amount paid the bead of one life in surance company. An elephant . at Jena. Germany, seized a man who:' was teasing' him with a knife and dashed him to the ground. Three .days ;lnter the, man succumbed to hia injuries. 3 ':. .1,... iV'Srtar, ,A couple of cyclists In Spplng, near London were the prlnolpals at a wed ding, and they added a new wrinkle to marriage etiquette. . The bride and groom, rode to the church on single machines, but they returned on a tan dem. r a , (i The ' English delight In, odd rents, but the oddest is a tenancy at Brook- house, In Yorkshire, where the rental Is one snowball In June and a jrH rose In December. , The rose Woasljjr ar ranged and the snowball Is now mads of shaved ice. - i. -t . - A rich gold strike In the Kantishna diggings, 800 miles away, left Fair banks, Wash., practically without offi cers. : The mayor and all the council- men joined the rush. All the princi pal saloon keepers closed up and ac companied them. ? v.. f. ; Algeria has a river of genuine ink! caused by the Joining of two streams. one of which comes from an iron re gion, while the second ' stream flows from a pott swamp. On ineetlug, the acid of one stream blends with the on solution of the other, and Ink i. result FEEDING OF CANAL MEN. J. E. MARKEt TELLS ABOUT HIS BIO PANAMA CONTRACT, He, Expects to Provide Food fdr tti 0000 Men at a Time Board Will Cost from Cents to $1 a Day All Supplies to Bs Shlpptd from , New York; Direct 3. B. Markel, who has Just obtained the contract to feed the workmen on the Panama Canal, began the business of foeding people nearly fifty years ago when, as a boy, he took a contract to feed workmen on a big flat boat be tween St Louis and New Orleans, on the Mississippi, writes the Omaha (Neb.) correspondent of the New York Sun. He was raised on a farm near Mark Twain's place In eastern Mis souri, and after his sxperlence on the flatboat h settled down la St Louis to become a baker. " Next he drifted to the West, and In 1B72 begad operating eating houses along the Union Pdciflo, with which road h continued tdf thirty years. IU addition to bis Panama interests, Mr. Markel at present operates the boarding and eating houses along the line of the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton, the Illinois Central, the Denver and R10 Grande, the Rock Island, the Kansas City Southern, the Denver and North western and the new Moffatt railroads, and manages a number of. big hotels In Western cities. His great experience In ' feeding crowds placed him in a position to bid intelligently for the Panama contract. Regarding the contract and his plans, Mr. Markel says! "The contract Is not a $50,000,000 one to feed any 50,000 men, as the news papers have reported. 1 don't believe there will ever be more uian 20.000 men employed at any one timet The contract runs for five years. 'I was first Invited last March to go (6 the Isthmus by Mr. Wallac". and 1 was studying the conditions when hfl left. I kept watch of things and con tinued my Investigations until 1 found Out Just what was wanted. 'I spent a whole month down then, and when 1 finished I knew what was necessary and knew just what I was bidding on. The result was that t got the contract. "What the commission wanted artd what I am going to furnish Is a sys tem of substantial meals at reasonable prices, so that the employes on the canal can afford to buy them and will be In condition to return the commis sion In labor the worth of their wages, "For instance, the Jamaica negroes, now about 4,000 employed on the canal afe scattered along Irt camps from one to two miles annrt, there being thirty camps along the forty-seven miles of canal. These camps have from 200 to 300 negroes each. "The houses aro built especially for the purpose and are thoroughly sani tary. There are strict rules for keep ing them clean. The negroes have to have everything cleaned up by a cer- tain hour each morning. The houses are lliiiiiniLlilji in iuIiImTTTITIT lOfhl and fumigated every two weeks. They have comfortable canvas beds, "But whed it comes to eating, the only things ihey can afford W buy With their money, as things now are on the Isthmus, are sugar cane, bananas and such stuff, and a man can't stand up and do a hard day's work on such a diet and give back the value of his wages. Eggs are 10 cents apiece, salt fish Is 40 cents a pound, fresh meat from 60 cents to a dollar a pound, and everything In proportion. "Now we are going to offer then! three meats a day with sUch stuff as coffee, bread and meat for breakfast) tbffee, bread, fish, two kinds of vege tables-and pie or pudding for dinner; and much the same for supper, at 45 cents a day or f 14 a month.' "In addition, we will have a place at each camp where we will sell cooked food In bulk to the men with families who want to take It home, or to the men who live In clubs and do their own cooking, or part of it, and want to buy a portion ready cooked. There Is no compulsion about buying from us; the men can buy wherever they please, but I agree with the commission to have the food there to offer to the men at reasonable prices. "For the white men, Of Whom there are 1,500 now, and there wilt be 2,000 later, we will run hotels. Two are how finished and the number will be Increased to ten. We furnish them first class board at $1 a day, and rooms at $6 a month each, making the cost cv living $36 a month each. "Before these prices were made we figured it out with the commission that laborers generally In this country have to pay from 40 to 50 percent of their wages for living purposes; and clerks and other salaried men In cities about the same proportion. So we figured on the canal to keep down the cost of living to between 40 and SO percent of the wages. "The Jamaica negroes' get from (l.TS to $2.25 silver each a day. This Is from to cants to $1.10 gold; so the commis sion held the coat of living down to 45 cents A day, 'Most of the clerks get from .$150 to $175 a month, so their living' la also A made comparatively cheap, ' i i "I shall assemble all my supplies at New York for shipment to the Isthmus; my buying will be done wherever it can be done to tha best advantage. The commission ship my stuff for me on refrigerator steamers at a rate that just covers the actual cost; It gives me cold storage, rooms at Colon also at cost or Just a little above cost -. : "Practically everything will have to be shipped. ' There Is absolutely noth ing that can be bought on the Isthmus. The natives are too worthless and lazy to raise anything. As fine fish as I ever saw can be caught on the Isthmus, but the natives never catch enough to amount to anything. .,, - , "But Nelleve that the work of sani tation1 which Is now going on and the fact that the natives will have to keep themselves and their houses clean and do things differently will Induce thorn to do some work on the canal when we get, substantial food to them and en able thein to do hard work. . -? "As It is now their sugar cane and banana diet makes it Imponslble for them to atand more than one dny's hard work; and that gives them a dol lar or so and enables them to buy rum ir.id everything Wy pwi under prgs ent conditions for several days. Bo they are not much good now, but I tfe lleve within the next, two years pur system of feeding these people will make workmen out of great numbers Of them, "This Is a big contract, bat except for a difference in climate there Is no difference other than else between It and the large railroad contracts I have been handling tor many years." . PROBLEMS OF LAW. Cases With Which . English Judges v and Lawyers Have Struggled. Hundreds of years of test cased have not yet elucidated all the pos sible points of difficulty in the EngliBh law.'., Here Is a remarkable problem with which the Blackburn lawyers have Just been confronted An English gentle man had twin sons who were born within a few minutes of each other. He made a will tbnt his property In Australia should go to whichever of the two sons arrived at the age of 21 first, The younger of the two emigrated to Australia, while the other on a re mained in England, and tho former was still In the antipodes at the time of his doming of age. Now Aus tralia time Is some time In advance of Greenwich, and, therefore, the young man out there, was 21 before his elder brother at home. Which of these two brothers Is legally en titled to the property? The question has not yet been decidedv and in the mean time readers may exercise their own acumen upon it Aro eggs eggs, or are only hens' eggs eggs? This may seem a ridicul ous question, but nice shades of mean ing are Involved, and a case which turned upon It went through two or three courts of law. A lady sent an order for a dozen eggs Uf a dairyman and he sent ber ducks' eggs. She sent them back as not being what she or dered, but he refused to take them. Ehe, in turn, declined to keep them, and some time elapsing between their Journeys 'from the house to the shop, the eggs Went bad, and eventually the Shopkeeper sued the lady for Is. 6d., their value. The county court Judge ordered hor to pay, declaring that ducks eggs) Were as much eggs as any others; but the woman appealed, and King's Rench reversed the decision on the ground that when a party ordered eggs, hens' eggs were meant, and if any other contention wero admitted any kind of eggs might be sent, such as piegeons', canaries' or even rattle snakes'. Ducks' oggs, It was decided, were not egKS In the ordinary mean ing of the term. Are the grandchildren of a man al so his children? In the legal sense this question is not so absurd as it looks, and some time ago It was most seriously and laboriously contended In the courts that according to act of parliament they were. The particular act In question, pass- ed liv thn relizn of the late Queen Vlc- lmV. laid It down that "the father and Ibe grandfather, the mother and the gmamother, and tho children of any poor -person beldg of Sufficient nlillltv ahairwillevo and maintain any touch noor Person Tho argument waStrra4bac"'rllnft tn thn nntet irrandphildretHifite tO be reckoned as children for this pose, Just as grandparents were reck oned aa parents. On the other side u was argued that If grandchildren were children, then great-grandchildren were children sIbo ,and that a man might In this way be called upon to Support his father and mother, his fbur grandparents, his eight great grandparents and as many grandchil dren and axeatrErartdrtlldrefl as he might be lucky or Unlucky enough to possess. Is skimmed milk milk? A man ask ed for a glass of milk to drink and was given skimmed milk, and the pur veyor as fined for It; but in a high er court the decision was reversed, It being contendod at the time that skimmed milk was really much more milk than milk that was not skimmed, since the latter contained something that was not milk at all that is, cream. Tit-Bite. City Crop of Tan, There Is a great comparison Of com plexions going on these days When ever returning vacationists get togeth er. The one who can show the deep est brown is the proudest but this does not always fall to the lot of the sojourner at the seaside or in the mountains. The girl with the richest snd deep est tan lu a good-sized crowd the other day had not been out of town 'this summer, but every day. had taken a long walk . hatless through - Central park. The spending of much money for railroad fares and hotel bills la not at all necessary to acquire A bronze complexion. x: Old Mother Na ture with summer winds and sun shine and soft rains Is the one to get It from, and she gives It just as quick ly on a city roof or In a city park aa she does In the distant country or on the mountain top. New- York Press. - .-The Typewriters Experience.. ., A little event fraught with large significance was the celebration the other day In New York of the thirtieth anniversary of the entrance Into busi ness life of the pioneer woman type writer. All that innovation of thirty years ago meant to the business world no one could nave areamea ai tne time, and If volumes were given to it now the story would not be half told. For the one women has now become a vast and ever-Increasing host and the gain to business interests in neatness, legibility and accuracy, together with di.H.ini, tA all transactions whera uin..-, --. - writing Is involved,, has been equally j and proportionately great The pion eer typewriter deserves distinction for the new and wild field of honorable and lucrative employment which she opened to her sex none the less than for the immeasurable benefits which her action has conferred upon a busy world. Leslie's Weekly. The Rev. C. H. Marshall, pastor , ol the St Barn&Das episcopal cnurcn. of Denver, Colo., for 31 years, has officiated at 6000 baptisms, 3500 funer als and 1700 weddings. . Lice on Hogs. . The most satisfactory remedy for lice on hogs 1 have ever used and tho only one I now use, is a mixture of keroeene oll, lard and sulphur. Mix to as to be 'easily applied with brush or rag mop. This remedy is also good tor lice on poultry. J. R. Jonos, In The Epltomist- The Home-Mada Corn Cutter. The idea comes from Australia where tho machine Is used In harvesting su gar cane and sorghum, as well as corn. The Implement has been tried by a few farmers In this section and pronounced a success. It Is made by bolting the blade of a strong heavy Bcythe to a sledge or sled, as shown in the illus tration. A rod of wrought Iron about one Inch in diameter Is bent to form a follower, as shown. One of these ma chines Is expected to cut about 21-2 acres per day. After cutting, the crop is less easily handled than when cut by hand, but the total saving In laboi isconslderable. Massachusetts Plough- nan. The Time to Cut Ensilage Corn. Tn tet the hwt Dossible results with a silo. It Is Important for the corn to be cut when It neither too green nor too ripe. This condition, unfortunate! does not extend over very many day, cnneHollv If tha weather is hot and dry; therefore, when it is ready, the sooner it can be put Into the alio tne hotter. A creat deal depends upon what the weather has been or Is, If it Is such that the crop matures natural ly and the lower leaves on the stalks do not begin to dry up, It is advisable to leave It until the grain has passed the milk stage and is in the dough, and has begun to dent. Put away too green, anyway, an undue amount of acid is liable to develop and the eusil age become unpalatable. But, as said before, It will uot answer for It to get too dry. If It does It will not pack well In the bIIo, whereupon the air Will enter, mold form, and deteriora tion of tlie product result. To be ex actly right, the stalk Should be pretty full of sap, but the blades and tissels a little dry. If the corn Is rather on the dry order, It will be beneficial to wet It as It goes Into the silo. New Yorker, In The Epltomist. Breeding Ducks. After ducks are nearly grown, only the most preferable ones should be kept for breeding purposes, and not more than half dozen females mntcd to onn" drake. ' These Should be fed lightly until about the first of Novem ber, for to force their growth before mating tends to destroy tho vitality of the birds and thai, In turn, the fertility of the eggs. A good ration for them consists of one part clover, three part? bran and two parts corn meal. Sub sequently beef scraps may be added to this. Some time In February Is when g should begto, and It Is not co impomlit to gel a large numcer oi eggs, as ttrwli?1" gou ones, unuvr the most favoraTMondl"""8.- how ever, the first few esgV likely to be Infertile. Accordiu"lvTAd-lu(:ks should be fed about a third clover'frtU.1. sometimes plain hay and the rest bran and meal, before beginning to force tbem for eggs. The point Is to till them up with something bulky, and then, when they begin to lay, add 5 percent Of beef scraps, and thus gradually work up, until in a week or two they are re ceiving 10 or 20 percent In order to have them do well, water should be kept before ducks all the time. Fred 0. Bibloy In The Epltomlat. Young Cows and Richer Milk The production of milk and butter fat by dairy cows under normal con ditions increases with each year up to the fifth and ixth year, when the cow is at her best. The length of time she will maintain her maximum produc tion depends on ber constitutional strength and the care with which she Is fed and handled. A good dairy cow should not show any marked falling oft until after ten years of age. Many excellent records' have been made by cows older than this. The. quality of the milk production by heifers is some what better than that of milk of older cows, for we find a decrease of one tenth to two-tenths of one percent in the average fat content for each year till the cows have reached full age. It Is caused by the Increase in the weight of the cows with advancing age; at any rate there appears to be a parallel Ism between the two sets of figures tor the same sows. , . : Young animals use a portion of their food for the formation of body.tm-. sue and It is expected, therefore, that heifers will require a larger portion of nutrients for the production of a unit of milk or butter fat than do older cows." After A certain age has been reached, on the average . about seven years of age, the food required for the production of a unit of milk or butter fat again Increases as re gards dry matter and the digestible components of the food. A good milk cow of exceptional Btrength kept un der favorable conditions, whose diges tive 'system has' not been impaired by over feeding or crowding for high rec ords, should continue to be a profita ble producer till her twelfth year, al though the economy of ber production Is apt to be somewhat reduced before this age Is reached, Indiana Farmer, - Growing Interest In the Horse, )1' ;I believe that one of the strongest forces which will during the next de cade tend to popularize and increase the Interest Id the breeding and de velopment of the trotting horse Is tho movement of the people back to the land, says John McCartney, In the Western Horseman. Our great cltlea will became over-crowded and If this country continues to prosper a larga majority of the people must go back to the land. The nearer a people keep to nature the better will be their health morals. In all the whole history of the world the greatest nations have been those which depended upon agriculture and agricultural pursuits, and the na tions which have gone backward have been those which became so highly cultured that they forgot that In the green fields of the country there was life, and health and wealth. There Is a subtle force at work, almost imper ceptible, which will In time draw the people from the cities, to agricultural pursuits. In this movement the Influ ences of' industrial and agricultural education are playing a very import ant part. The coming generations of agriculturists will be better educated and better equipped to handle the pro blems of agriculture. The breeding of lire stock has always been an. import ant part of agricultural life, and the future will show increased Importance along this line. The breeding and de velopment of the trotting horse will In the future be conducted by a bet ter educated and more enlightened class of men, and in consequence bet ter -horses will result. For this and various other reasons the trotter of the future will be better In every respect than the trotter of today. He will be more popular than ever before for this very reason, and his breeding and de velopment will be one of the leading branches of agricultural development. At tho risk of being called visionary, 1 want to make the prediction that this back-to-the-land movement will make agriculture the most popular of all pur suits, and the breeding of the light harness horse in fact, all kind of live stock will occupy a large share of at tention. The closer we, as a people get to nature, with the green sod beneath our feet and the blue sky above us. the greater will be our love for those true children of nature, birds and flow ers and horses and all of the other lowly animals. The horse will always be the best beloved of all animals, as he is surely man's best and most use ful friend. Back to the land means better men and better horses, and the trotter will be the most popular of all horses, for he is the most useful of all horees. 8T0RMS BRED IN ARIZONA. Why Aqueous Vapor Moving EasV ward from Great Desert Is Precipitated. Dr. W. J. McOee, who was head of the anthropological department of the World's Fair, was In St. Louts recently on his way back to Washington, after a remarkable four months' experiment in the Great American Desert Ari zona In which he says he discovered how storms are bred In the region, which has long been termed the "storm-breeding belt." "A reservoir of aqueous vapor Is formed over the aclllc coast and the flulf of California," he said, "and this swings over the 'storm-breeding belt' The ground there Is perfectly level, and the radiation from the earth's sur face Is consequently regular and even. The heat radiation from the desert is, of course, very great. This strong radiation by its regularity keeps the aqueous vapor high above the earth Inj-gble condition. " WhenUfc-'rWOr nwves eastwaj over the mountains, and meets "tffe ir regular radiation that comes from the uneven surface of the earth, a precipi tation of the vapor results, causing rain and storms." Horse Commits Suicide. A peculiar incident occurred at La Pointe, Madallne Island, last week. A horse belonging to Postmaster Tann committed suicide. The horse had been sick tor several days and the owner decided to put it to death. With that end In view, he led the steed to the brow of a hill overlooking Chequamegon Bay for the purpose of shooting it When he reached the scene of execution he found he had negleoted to bring his rifle along, and, leaving the horse, he went after the weapon. ' Upon his return no horse was in sight. But he beheld It floundering helpless In the harbor. It had been seen to rush at breakneck speed down the hill, on being left alone, and hurl itself from th i pier Into the water, where it eventually perished. Bayfield (Wis.) apodal to the St Paul Dispatch. Pennsylvania Bear 8ectlon. '' . The bear hunters of central Penn sylvania are ready for the hunting season, which extends from October 1 to March 1. Formerly brum waa-an. outlaw all the year round, but, the law having become his protector for seven months in the year, his tribe Is expected to multiply and furnish rare sport tor the woodsmen. The bear section of Pennsylvania Is chiefly lo cated in the counties of Clearfield, Clinton, Cameron, Potter, Lycomlni Sullivan. Monroe and. Pike, althoi bears are to be found In all the ties traversed by the Allegheny ri The Beech Creek and Fall Brook1 tricts alone furnished 22 black to the huntsmen last season. delphla Record. ' , What Impressed H "Rivers, there was on your speech at the ) night that I admlrefl "I am glad to h Brooks, becauso 1 1 failure. When I hadn't the leas'' ing to say." "That waa I particularly sm1. sal nerve in maki. An appreciation o ramifications of th days may be glean published In Boeto 1200 miles of el' from the Hub ''a with. Wl I'BU 1 U I Ut'1' V ' TUB uruHE or ran. ' y Jhe Must Keep Informed as to What Other 8hops Are Doing. ' "For the life of me," said the girl at the ribbon counter to the girl across the way at the chiffons, "I can't make out whether she is a shoplifter, a pur chasing agejit or a store detective," " Indicating a woman who had just walked away. . - "You're away off," aald the friendly alslo manager, "She's not any one of thoso things. : She's a store spyer. Wo employ them In this establishment, ourselves to spy-on other stores, on ly you don't happen to know it They go out In various disguises. Some times they are the most fashionably dressed women among the shoppers; sometimes they are quiet, little unob trusive women, who don't look as if they knew a bolt of cotton from a yard of wool, and sometimes the store spy Is a clever man buyer. They start out early every morning to see what : is going on in the other stores. If Mr. Smith, up the street, is selling shirtwaists at 39 cents we want to find out bow be can do it; If the new est thing in fall suits la going at $17,. and we have Just put a lot of burs In for $18, off we send the store spy to see how it can be done; how much of. it is cotton and how much wool, There is not a position In a department : store which takes more nerve and more knowledge of goods. No green hand can go around from the kitchen utensils to the carpets and be capa ble of judging all tho fine shadings without knowing something about the dry goods business, and, besides, the store spy has to carry things in her eye. She has to be able to tell, when she gets back to her own shop, just how much better or worse the other stores are selling tor the same price. The job's worth all the money they pay for It." Philadelphia Record, A Famous Old Elm. The famous old elm tree in the grounds of the Llpptncott-manslon' at Broad and Walnut streetsirhlladel- phla, went down with a crash recent ly, a victim of the advance of business and money making. A large crowd had gathered to see the fall of the , tree which for more than two hundred years had been a landmark in that vicinity. As far back as 1764 It waa known as a tree that could easily af ford shelter for more than twoscore persons at a lawn fete. In the days of the Vauxhall Gardens the great elm was one of the chief features of In terest, with Its spreading limbs and sheltering boughs. Its crash marked the destruction of the last real landmark In the centre of the city, though in Its Infancy the elm was In what was then know: the suburbs. Thl trunk, was Ha In nU ... 1 nn..,HHt. ua w uc " wo wu vuuuiuuu no over a hundred years ago. Thi not a vefittpn nf itarav. and rings wereas BtiffiHfcUlflg flfc ' only a score of years old. WltEou'C losovof -4lme furniture dealers - and others quickly purchased pieces of the old elm at the. rate of $5 a foot so that In all the elm will net Contrac tor James Porter more than $500. In two years, It Is said, Phlladelphlans will be paying fanciful prices for fur niture made from tho wood of tne old tree. Philadelphia Record. A Test of Friendship. The professor was examining a dark brown substance spread on paper, when he was Interrupted by a visit from a friend. "I say, would you kindly let me place a Ilttlo bit of this on -loneue?" said the. man of to the newcomer, Ut come bo vitiated by samplliigall sorts of things." : t- i "Certainly," responded the friend, thrusting out his tongue. -i-' The professor took np a little of the substance under analysis and placed It on the other's tongue. The latter worked It round for fully a min ute, tasting It much as he would "Note any effect?" inqujid professor. "No: none. "It doesn't paralyze or prick tongue?" ' ',5a; "Not that I can detect." "I thought not. How d taste?" "Very bitter." - , , "Um-m; all right", "What Is it?" Inquired the t "I don't know. That's what Ing to find out. Some one has poisoning horses with it" Tlt-BItS, Making It Plain. "There seems to be a mutual mis understanding," says the patlentwlfe, ( after the husband has explained at great length his Inability to grasp her process of reasoning or to agree with her estimate of the Impulses and in tentions governing bis actions In sta ing out late and otherwlsejondiicti himself as she thlnXi' OTbaaw jems to- derstandlng. Wha. stand Is why you a what I can't 11 S! HUt r r a " "d; pU theSi his dpi is wh.jr 1