- . a. f win AC.K IOMDON .n.rirht W10 by th. N.W Torn H.raia w"" (CT?pyHSi lWft. hT th. MMllln Company. dispatched across the" bay fort' to take up his quarter, iu . ot the Oakland Riding Academy. rh. n.Tt dav being Bunaay, nk. ... awav early, crossing on the terry and taking with blm Wolf, the leader of hit ilea team, m -which he had eelected to bring with . .. h i.ft Alaska. Quest at he I 111 III BJV awa - . :Iy.iSht mSk a wnwtloniny would through the Piedmont ni... bu cSLntxy with th. m. U .. tn. many-gated back-road to ,ar. t th. TWoU ana ta.now iw Dayllaht saw nothing Of inin h a frltma. in a u" 8T-N0P8I8. ' rr l-W all thmilfh Al&fl- KiKTn riRmiBii. tv.iw . " " . kU ka a "Burnlns Dayll.ht," oelebrateii hi. nh birthday with a crowd of miner; at I. .t.ked.. Harnlehlohl. money and DH.w,"V."Vn TwIthdoT. and NOTES cw- ME&DOVBROOK FARM tart on. .k.T h. will be ta Mini ni irn "-. old he di. Decldlnt that tpia wi Dede Mason ana ner cne.iuuv foiVln fh. up-river -ijtrtot HarnUh fc fc d tU Ume (or disappoint- Kfi" tj tor hi- own cheatnut kept h.m IL'Lh- arrive, with hi. flour he. .find. ,i f half an hour the blf OK dMal'iI mred into conn- He no- to Dawwn. bme. he w, a,ong at a walk rom1nent flipir. In theKlondlk. uen:e. was r u B wtt .lack re col vrst. He In a va.t mining deal. He c vllinuon. ana. """'", DavllKht complication, of blKh nnance. Dayl! gM. eleven million. -SSSSSr He .or. to New Tork. and M. Sl.loyal Ptn.r. w,th a -revolver he threaten, to kiii """ , rn their jjt miiinv a cmareue. wivu . roi.Tort .eat. the relna lying th. onlmal'. neCK. BOD wuu.- .K-,nti. and with llfc-btntng ewlftness, """'" . . . . . LI. I. l7I plvoUng on bit nroa teg., u : : v. hnd a fu- returned. They .re cowm. ""v .o'san Dl "pl ' "11 m nothing teallnir. ana 1. fate tn tile rein acroaa vu "- jpranci.cu --nher. He it th evolution, Dle Ma.on. P"' -'" i". into the " ' T - v. .aa make. iarwinvr.un.M-- .-- .h political nna-. ,ror ,.- hiKh longing tor the .Impl. Uf. nearly come. Dim. CHAPTER XIII. r... o.,nv lata In the afternoon, found Daylight across the bay In the Piedmont hUle ot Oakland. At utual, he wat In a big motor car though not hi. own. the ruest ot Swlftwater Bill. own darling, who had come down to tpend the clean-up of the te enth fortune wrung from the frozen Aretle gravel. It wat a merry addressed the ant- VTla m mal, at the tame Ume wiping tweat from hit own eyet. "I'm free to that you re eure tuo est all-flred quickest creature 1 ever taw. I guess the way to fU you It to keep the epur just a-voucuua i . you pruiwi . , h- moment the "spur touchea him. hU left hind leg had reached for- A I. at trlnir TJ1&C BirUCB, i.uo rup a smart blow. Several times, out of curiosity, uayugm bh-uif-- .-m ..rh time Bob'a hoof landed the eUrrup. men the horte't example of the uP; and they bad made a merry day of It. iuddeni, drove both spurt into him circling the bay from nan and reachea mm u-uwu. around by San Jote ana up land, having been thrice arrested tor speeding, the third Ume. however, on .v.. H.v-,,rd. stretch, running away with their captor. Fearing that a tele phone message to arrest them baa been flashed ahead, they had turned hav.rnad through the hli.t, and now. rushing In upon Oakland by a new route), were Doisierouaiy HV..H in't nAVpr naa ..w-.-.D before." he muttered, a. Bob. thus ,vd nut of the circle of his i i.k mental nrocesset. thot aucau. . ,,,, Half a dozen timet spur. bit into him. and then Daylight settled a . ni-v the macnlflcent gallop. xt- nuniahed. at the end of a cussing what disposition they thould K,, Bob eased down Into a fast of the constable. canter. Vto.f. tolling the rear was nr. Ml mi r HRir rWI -.rnhlnir lift ATlfl HVBI JV"-"B " w wea - navlieht nun or tne meu niM w. Ana wneu, - ....--. jnoit nere. dwuvi. ociiBd tnat tne uu.oo sr.; r l i.. . . . . Ji III W. J W3 mm. 1 - L It Wat Dede. - Beet require water. Rotation lmprovea the toll. Rape It excellent for twine. Kaflr la harder on land than corn. Do not forget to provide shade for the poultry, The better the man, the better the cow. Every time. Cold water It practically useless for removing bacteria. ' Cover crops must be used to prevent the loss of plant food. You can't tell by the looks of a dairy cow how honest she 1b. Harrow teeth are made to be turn ed, yet how many people do ltT ot Bbeep like rape. Scaly leg it very contaglout. Feed the dairy cowt a variety. Every Idle acre It a tax on every acre In use! . The young calvet need an abund ance of sunlight Grooming la at Important at feeding for working horeet. The careful stockman glvee hit ma nure apreader daily exercise. Th TTnited States producei more corn than all the reat of the world. Cowt thould not be kept too long on one ration, no matter how gooa. The soft maple it a tatt growing tree that lovee a fairly moist climate. More fresh air and lest hot air are what it needed in the dairy DUBineB.. tt .hnuld ha remembered that l horse can do more than hit teet will ttand. Whenever hogs are confined to one feeding place a feeding floor thould be provided, Butter la eaten more at a reueu v n. tt,. APtuai consuuienia contains. God Demands Recognition By Rer. J. H. Rakon, Moob B&klMiMtOM. An inch of rainfall on an acre land weighs more than 10 Otons. A pasture arranged to Include a few shade trees Is 25 per ceui. If hens develop the feather-pulling habit, send them to market at once. rnm and alfalfa make a combination that cannot be equalled on the dairy farm. t ihri foedlna of the dairy calves Is money put where It will draw big Interest. Don't forget the weeds that are get ting ready to go to seen muue roadside. rcvorv farmer should have a small wheel seeder and a smau wne &- den hose. It Is a mistake to keep a nonde- i- aimniv because be cost a Buiiyv uui "'"'-. little money. I V.1 - Th. TTnited States U respou.iuio for two-thirds of the cotton crop ot the world. It Is Just as necessary to fit a col lar to a horse as It is to ni to the foot. Ducks are very fona oi Hons chopped ana mixea ground grain. worn the time corn tassels out un til it becomes ripe It increases its dry matter five-fold. a n.aprA noultnr farm has been added to the equipment ot the Uni versity of Illinois. oravino. nf the matter now, sec- and crop clover aaaea w proves the ensilage. ten minutes, . ---":.. "". u. h.d had a - HI ...b HAP. HWIHffHOl, IM. 1 1 1 H UUIDO u nouncea. ; uuui. uetium m - -- , v,, . . -.rd riht ahead, with! ..., hft ,,irrJed him around abrupt- lots of gates, but Itll take us back- , en t hlm into a g jntle canter . . r Then we can .v. nraard track. After a time. into Rerkelev. Then we can come back into Oakland from the oth er aide, eneak acroae on the ferry, and tend the machine back around tonight with the chauffeur." .But Swlftwater Bill failed . tee why he thould not go Into. Oakland t. . of Blair Park, and to decided. The next moment, flying around a ' bend, the back-road they were not going to take appeared. Inside tne ... leanlne out from her saddle and lust closing It. was a young woman oa ' -v..... .nrrel 4 With hU flfSt rllmDse DayUght felt there was some- and repented not glimpse, ajub her. roHred that Bob thing etrangeiy "" ent. atralKhtenlng up in the saddle with a movement he couia .n tn tdentifv. she put the horse into a gallop, riding away with her back toward them. It wat Dede Ma-son-he remembered what Morrison V... htm ahnnt her keeping a ria- Mall lUiu a-Mt-u - . 1,-1 lng horte, and he wat glad the bad would rap Bob on the nose. The horse didn't live, after it once learned tne lesson, that would whirl in tne i of the doubled quirt More keenly than ever, ounug u week in the office, did Daylight realize that he bad no social, nor even human contacts with Dede. The situation was w ih.t ha could not asa uer D UV.U vav t,a simple question whetner or noi was going riding next Sunday. Thus ,irM annthnr cara m iu .-,' a hd dealt him. ' How im- IU a. i portant that card was to oeco.u0 ., i . j , t ho decided that oia nut uibmu, j nniti irood card. - V ' . . . ,t, Sunday came, ana bod, out he reined In to' a stop to see If he were breathing paimuny. ouu,. . . minute. Bob turned hie head ana nuzzled hit rldert turnip -.nm,i.h tmnatlent way. as much at to intimate that it wat Ume they were geun'ni be Plumb gosh darned!" Piedmont bills, behaved like i a waK nf "No ,,1-wlll, BJ-i.t- no grudge, no nothing-ano r 1"" . imh. But no Dede did i.mh.tn! Toure sure a numiuw, wc " ----- rT ,, iiort T-teiinhr enonunter. ns ,v Bob." .... .K emnnir the hill roads, and In He had taken a liking to --- tnnk the Bteep grade 01 nis oargaiu. vu0 - ---- --- range realized that Bob was no, J-" - - Maraga Valley. Just mean, the trouble Being 1" "" T the foot of the descent. bursting with wgn spirits uU w---7-.- . heatB of a cantering dowed with more tnan ln . B" "B" ""r it was from ahead and coming horse', intelligence. It was spWU horse af u,were DedeT and the Intelllgen ce. t' Bob around and started to inordinate roguisbness. that made him He "rnea D lfc Tbe canter came ... What was required to return at a waia. ""-,., ..,, nim . . . .h 1 hut he laeea BiraiBui. control him was a strong the borBe behind check tamnered sternness and yet with the until ne nearo jm hlB not teen him "n thl. riotous company, tempered sternness ana yet w. - - - d over hlB not Bee.m... thrft moment ,on,rtlte touch of brutal dominance, to a wait inen Uon'wa. qu withjie, accom- intervening trees at mat --'-, -boulder. It was Dede. - . j anrirrwnTRr i ti.--.,a.tiir inn wee lwj6 ,u h.ut 6er ? r"n.: dlV r,rn much interested in Zinrrelr conTtabie: while Day- bs in Dede; and. not being In the light, leaning back with closed eyes t,ck 0f any big aea.s ne w- atm seeing Dede Mason gallop off aM, more Interested in both of than down the country road. . nr. Mnndar morning, coming m ....( ho looked at her with new ment to blm. "u""' .1 .. . . (Kins . interest, wougu b-- . "- - , ha iiig: if and the stereoiypea meet wiw -7-. - . " "uu T. n,i 1 1 .nm liiohv BtToke of I . . iM ka nnnineBB kbuiv. - vunu iu - . u.b f vhlrllna was OI Biwwm VI4W 1 , HOW to overcuuio Suppose he aia ana passed off in the stereotyped way. But BUpp0se by tome .taek ' stroM ot .b Err o,.nda found him on a k should manage to be riding along .v. anii,in onndav found him on horte himself, across the bay and rld .hronffh the Piedmont hills. He made a long day of It but no glimpse ai h. tch of Dede Mason, though he even took the back-road of many : gatea and rode on into ueraw, ."Vw, then that whirl of Bob't BlUO A am. would be most aisconcerung u ...inv He was not parucumiv ... tnr hor to see nim uuuu BUA1UUB w- .,V.. ward on Bob't neca. un vu hand, tuddenly to leave her and (go UDJlUi bihv-v , it iad been a trultlett day. .0 far at the aa(jWng down tbe back-tracs, p.y.ua - 'md. and vet not entirely Luirt and epurs. wouldnt do. either. nv ha had enloved the open .i. .nd Vh horse under him to such purpose that, on Monday, hit instruc- to the dealers to look tor the best chestnut -orrel that money could buy. At oaa the week he examined numbers of ehestnut eorreli. tried several and was satisfied. It was not UU Saturday that he came upon Bob. Daylight knew Win for what he wanted the mo ment he laid eyes on h!m. A large horse for a riding animal, be was none toTlarge for a big man like Daylight to splendid condition. Bob a coat to the aunllght wat a flame of Are. hit arphed neck a Jewelled conflagratloiu n..nt, omined the mane and found tt finer than any horses hair he had aver teen. Also. Its color wa. . " i ir. that tt was almost auburn. While be ran hie llngera through It. ; Bob turned hit head and playfully 1.4 novllnhf. shoulder. . "Saddle him up. and HI try him, w. .m ih. dealer. "I wonder It bet used to tpurs. No English sadoie. mind. Give me a good Mexican and a i.i.ot too severe, teeing at b .CUl If Ui. MW - iiva. tn rear." Daylight euperintended the prepara ri,,.ttn the curb ttrap and length, and doing the ' .hk hit head at the Tarunlale. but yielded to th. . - jaUjrt ' advice to allow it to go on. And Bob. beyond aplrited restlessness . and l a - few playful attempU. gave no trouble, I? . r kn.r. rldlna that followed. w" .r" "m. nermlaslble curveting d prancing, did be risbehar Dsr 7. A-tut.- th Durchase was ... wanted was a metnou -t, T..h to orevent that lightning whirl. He must stop the animal be- fore it got arouna. une r w. not do this. Neither would the spura. t the nulrt. uui uu w ompllsh ltT hod aiwajB wu...- the right very wen. : - h nnlrt In bis hand. and. tne instant of the whirl, that double quirt t hv aurnrlse. wnat w-" .....Mi tninir tnan lubu uv. lng bis horse, he should wait till she ..T,h with him: and that, when KUUB"- . - .. .V.Co.t abreast, they snouia ouuuu"7. r. th. eradeT He could 'have .k.rf ith reuer.. iuo -n eaallv. Greetings had been iexchangedr here .1 .(da nv aiae aou kuiub mo, .nd iin aha.it' of them. Ullic. . . . . In. He noted that ner eye .v. 1 and evt for him. Oh, what a beautyi sue u - at sight of Bob. From .tne light to her eyes, ana tne with delight he would scarcely have believed that It belonged to the young woman be had mown in . -. the young woman with the controlled, subdued office face. ' I didn't know you rode, was 1 one ber first remarns. i iu".B.u- were weaaea w s-"" i est He told heJ about Bob's tricks. and of the whlrBand bis scneme m overcome It; an J she agreed that horses had to be handled with a cer tain rational seventy, no matter now much one loveaitnem. ine-o Mab, which she tad tad for eight years, and which tie barf had to break of stall-kicking, re process uu uu painful for Mab, hit it haa curea ner. "You've rlddenl a lot" Daylight said. 1 i "I really can't tenember the first time 1 was on a hot." she told him. "I was born on a ranh, you know, and they couldn't keep te away from tbe horses." . And thereat she old him more 01 her ranch life In tk days before her father died. And Dyiignt was nuge.j pleased with hlmse. . Tbey were get ting acqualntea. ne Cuuc. '- bad not lagged in ne iuh they bad been tofther. When she talked, he Ustenedind tollowed her. and yet all the wBe ne was iouow lng his own thought and Impressions well It was a nervy mm for her to ao, n nuius and he didn't :now, after all, whether he Hkec It or not Hit ideas of -women ere prone 10 u. old-fashioned: tnejwere me u had imbibed In thtsariy aay. iroui.. life of his youth, wen no woman seen on anything Jut a side-saddle. He had grown up o tne tacit uiuu that women on hpeback were not bi peds. It came toiim witn a this sight of her o manlike in her saddle. But he hato confess that the sight looked goo to mm jubi u Sore shoulders are the result of iii.flHnar collars, and not always those of this season. Paper may be made to Btlck to whitewashed walls by. an application of vinegar to the walls. Clabbered milk drained. and left to dry makes a fine feed for young cdicks. Rub it fine before leeaing. Second or third crop alfalfa, if properly managed, furnishes a very satisfactory pasture ior sueeu. , All cows that are hearty eaters are not profitable producers, but all profit. able producers are nearxy bbibid. nontianese and patience are al ways Important In the dairy barn, but doubly so when handling the young, heifer. 1 Instead of feeding wet mashes to chicks try giving cracked grain in m.ii nnantltles to Utter. It's good health insurance. r,,Hivatlnn hastens the liberation ot plant food by permitting air to per meate the soil and oxidize or burn out the organic matter. Th. tr.ina nf corn silage to the beef producer Is not limited to its use in winter feeding alone. ..ur h.innce their own rations If they are given a wide variety ot feeds to select from. holding 1.000 ounds of water will hold about 1,032 pounds nounds of whole maa. snma farmers are even so busy in harvest time that they haven't -time to stop and do the oiling. ii.nn water first, then a ' little hay, and follow with grain; this gives the animal a chance to digest .phi. 1. a mod time to put a square of tar paper in the bottom ot each nest box for the benefit of lice. Th. lavelness with which a horse walks is one of the best evidences that his legs work in harmony. CHAP-SR XIV. ti .tnric husbandry will postpone toil depletion for a longer period of Ume than grain farming, dui u w not prevent depletion. The eezs from matured bens will hatch better and produce stronger hiMr than the eggs of pullets. They are usually larger, too. it is usually mere guesswork to tell' the age ot a hen by her appearance after she has passed the pullet stage. nrtion vnn set a good team let the other fellow whistle, but don't put a nrlce on It. and so invite its enj- sale. d,.... for the colt that's coming v., owino- the mare easy work, and UJ O..O ... . .. . plenty of nourisning 100a buu b water. .- ;;',;.;. Pennine chickens Is the best way to get a fine flock, for it means that you are getting eggs irom bens you have. nin Browing from the start Never let them go short one week be- . are hllRV lOOKing BllBl wun j - something else. of you machines. .. . .... fh and tn MS RTeai icuci, .-w launched on a topic of mutual inter- New York Hard on .Trousers Western Visitor Wears Out His Pock et Edaaa Digging uovn the Money. - The man from the west was In a clothing emporium to uroaawaj lecting a pair of trousers. "By heck." he said at be pawea over the pile before blm. rthto h town ot New Kora ib m " place on pants I ever gov Out to my town any hand-me-down 1 kit are EOOQ tor b l to with Sunday, for the first three ' 7 a A.,. or the rest of montnB buu the time. These ! got . . .- a nA niiira tnm uiiiu" oeai ""v- . . A ha Now look at -emr ana u -....l. i.r hand Dockets, hip ana side. The cloth was entirely wo , oB the edges and the wane "" hanoenr Inquired the clerk, surprised, but sympathetic "This town did it that's what ... r-and small bills to ... .t,?a nnrknt and my bant rou 1. . ho, tn the fc!. and. by heck. ...... w . d i, freauent for money since I've been In New ork that I've wore the edges off tiu tney uou 1 as If I had a cent to my name. Every I n avarrtnina I UU. btvw body I meet calls ror lu v. got to an.wer. rve80t It all ... k... if. mtvhtv hard on panta. 4d ha wear ana wtu j--- - same whether I go after a dime or a dollar. I've been wearing iui. 40 years and this is me "" .L, hi,, that aver haooened to 'em.- UllUB . I.. kt- Vnrk "Have you ever oee u innnirad the clerk kindly.. ' DE1UIV 1 i.... -N.r till two weeks ago. and rm getting out of it day 'after tomorrow. "I'm sorry." said the clerk. "I d Uke to tell you another pair w soon.".,,.. , -" ' ' ExDtnslve Instnietlon. , Experience." said the wady-made .i.iLr "la the best teacher. -Yes." replied the man who hat had with Wall street "but you're so liable to go broke paying the first Another Sundajnan and horse and dog roved the Bdmont hills. And again Daylight ai Dede rode togeth er But this tie her surprise at him wAlnctured with bus- plclon; or rathether surprise was of another order. - le previous Sunday bad been qulteaccioeowi. appearing the send time among her favorite haunts miea i m. the fortuitous, lyllght .1 that aha aiiectea niiu. bu.i isw - -7. ... n remembering tt ne nau , -big rock quar near Blair Park. stated offhana mat no lng of ; buyln, It His one-time investment in a Dncaju.u put the idea 10 nis UB"U".""--that he decidedas a good one. tor it enabled him touggest that she ride along with hlmo inspect So several tors ne Bpeni m ut company, in wih she was much the same girl as bare, natural, unaffect ed, ligbt-bearti smiling ana ".us ing, a good fel. talking horses with unflagging entwasm, mwu"B with the crue-temperea wu.i. " expressing a dire to ride Bob. whom she declared el was more In love with than ever. Ainst nis oeir mo ment Dayligb gave in, buu. unfrequented fetch ot road, changed saddles and biies. M "Remember.e's greased lightning, be warned, as. helped her-to mount She hoddedwhiie bod pricaeu his ears to thsnowieage uj-v a strange rir on nis obc tun came quliy enough-too quickly ... nAn w toona oerseu bs r.v,. -ir .he nlvoted around and bolted theothway. uaymsni iu..-- on her horsand watched. .He taw t) animal quickly to a standstill, animmedlately. with rein acrosa neckad a decisive prod of the left spuivhirl him back the. way h. had eomend almost aa swiftly. "Get read? give him the quirt oa the nose," Alight eaueo. . (TO f CONTINUED Tn avoid sore mouth in pigs, the littia faiinw. should have their large t.ath removed as soon after they are farrowed as possible. When the plow horses are brought ta at noon the harness should be re moved and the shoulders washed and rubbed dry while they are leeuiug. Cement floors are conceded by most all dairymen to be the most sanitary, and If the cows are properly bedded, It will give better satisfaction than planks. Oil meal it laxative, and helps to prevent the feverish condition which often appears at farrowing time and which is occasionally responsible for pig eating. The results of the tillage expert- mant. with dlBk and mold-board plows t-i,ata that fnr deeD plowing the diair la nreferable to the mold board plow. Tbe young sow has got to make her growth, while the 01a sow nas ur fnii growth, so that . the young sow must be fed liberally to order to de velop properly. Hoot crops will , be profitable for wh the dalnr cows and the hogs. Qma nf tha best breeders who are making official recorde uee roots addition to atlage. Those who argue against silos and natiaee have seen the points knock ed oft all their arguments except the one that it takes a great neat ot ex pensive labor to do tne niung. Do not expect a very large percent age of real high clast blrda, even from th verv best ot stock, and do not find f.n with the other fellow until you ar sure you have done your part well. For a brood sow prefer one of good length and breadth of boay ana placed on short strong, well-madt legs, set wide apart whan nnr hens are allowed to b come overfat, a disorder of the ovi duct it often the result, which causei it to "break down behind." atin. will he built In large numben this year, as many farmers had a sad experience keeping their cattle allvi during the long, severe winter. Hnnr milk is about as good foi growing a young calf as so much fog Ice-cold milk Is but little better, and excessive quantities are even won Tt nleases the cow to be mllkei quickly, and gets her in the habit oi giving down promptly. , It is often tht slow milkers tnat maae iue aiwiiv to text-Palm U:-"Bm .till, and know that I am God." . . . while we rarely find a professed deist nowadays, few men recogu... uoa a. u mom tests himself. Yet while men do not recognize God who bat revealed him self, they are con ttantly manufac turing gods to suit themselves, and these are at nu merous at thote of Egypt tn the dayt of the Pha raohs. In tue text there it the call of God to give atten tion to hlmeelf "Be still, and know that I am God." God is Intensely interested tnat man should recognize him, not only because man would thus greatly bless himself. but God demands this recognition De cause he is sensitive to the apprecia tion of those whom he has created to his own likeness and Image. We must maintain this, notwithstanding the spe cious plea that it would be Ignoble to God to demand tuch recognition. Thle matter can only be eettiea oy an appeal to authority, and multitudes believe that the Bible la tucn aumor Ity. In Exodut 34: 14, we read: "Thou, thalt worship no other God, tor th Lord whose name is jealous, is a jeal ous God." Joshua called the attention of Israel to the same characteristic to God when he wished Israel to return to God, to the enjoyment of their divtoa heritage: In the text God does not ask man to know him; he simply aaks that we rec ognize him as God, and appeals in tne 8th and 9th verses of this chapter for the use ot the physical senses: "Come, behold the works of the Lord, what desolation he has wrought to the earth; he maketh wars to cease unto the end of the earth, he break eth the bow and cutteth the spear In sunder; he burneth the chariot In the Are." Our attention is also called to what we have heard with our ears, and our fathers have told us what he has done in the time of old. Were not God's dealings with the Egyptians to orove that he was God! Was not God back of the blessing of Is rael' by Balaam, while Balaam's purpose was to curse! Has God not set up one ana put aowu another! Has he hot despoiled tne ae- , vices of the crafty that their hands cannot perform their enterprise, and has he not taken the wise in tneir own craftiness, and is not the counsel Of the froward carried headlongt And what shall be said of the occurrence of modern history! Had God ' any thing to do with the earthquake to San Francisco; the burning of the Gen eral Schofleld, and the sinking ot the . Titanic! Of the latter event It la said that to the last moments of that fated vessel's remaining afloat all classea ot people prayed, and the band played until the very end, "Nearer, My God, to Thee." And what was this , but recognition of God, ana possioiy with many, too late! To say that God has nothing to do with these things on the ground of that It would be violence to the reign of law, dishonoring to him as an to finite being, and entirely relieve man of moral responsibility, is really not worthy of serious consideration. The consciousness of God's immanence to all such things would be a deterrent from sin on the 'part ot tome; and would be an Incentive to good on the . part of others. , How are men to know God! Simply by being still. By searching, men can- not find out God. As David would He in the fields at night and look up into the starry heavens, it would not be for the purpose of finding out God, but as he gazed he could not help but exclaim: "When I consider the heavens, the work ot thy fingers,' the , moon and the stars, which thou hast created, what is man that thou art mindful of him, or the son ot man that thou visltest him!" As Moses would have Israel to recognize God, ha said: "Stand still, and see the salvation ot God." At Isaiah would have Israel . see wherein their strength lay, he said they should sit still. . So the method ot knowing God Is to just keep the eyes and eara open, to stop, look, listens-God is here, there, everywhere. The results ot this will be a mora serious consideration ot one's obliga ' tlon to God. The life ot the Christian will be made richer, and as the dark ness ot the t hereafter is approached. there will be a preparation to meet God, with whom, whether he will or , will not man has much to do. To know God, and him whom he has sent Is everlasting life. Too much stress cannot be laid or, the importance of a good supply ol green food for poultry. Nothing tendi more to keep tnem in goou uwum condition. If lice and mites fail to pay enougl attention to other treatments, irj hnmini them out with a torch. Bui don't burn down the house in order tt get the vermin. A small Held of rape nearoy uu hog yards and a few rods of wovex wire fencing will prove of great valu In conditioning the breeding animaii and young things. Oat straw makes a fair roughage; but not unless "It contains a bit ot un threshed grain. Remember that tht cow requires a very generous grail ration to connection with the straw. Roan-suds, or even cold water ap plications. If persisted to, will rM plants ot red spider, a tiny insect thai sucks tbe Hie rrom leaves buu mui causing them to dry and wither away The Bleating of the Word. It is the highest wisdom to avail ourselves of every help to right 11 v lng. There is no other help compar able to the Bible; there are number less books and tracts on ethics, on th conduct of life, on holy living and holy dying. But the Bible is the light from which all these are lighted, and they shine only in proportion aa they re flect its teaching and spirit Why should people prefer ' the trickling branches to the full tide of the cen tral stream; or the twinkle of the small incandescent bulbs to the blase of the tun! However it may be ac counted for, the old book brings to the sincere and Inquiring heart a message Of life and light, helping every man to know himself in his weakness and strength, and showing every man the remedy for his weakness and the sources ot ever-Increasing strength. Only to a world where there la But tering could God prove that be is love. The wan who buries bit might aa well bury himself. taleflt ;s" "ZJlZlLYtni Boh. with H k.an .r.hll iWB lUtO ' thtOt Installment on tuition. A . m v