'-Bit .•» vl P¥ I l, T: ry pwjappp»^,miiw^«» '"v -Detroit Free Press. MADE HOME HAPPY. "8he made home happy:" These few words I read Within a churchyard written on a atone, ^No name, no date, the simple word alone JPold me the story of the unknown dead A marble column lifted high its head Close by, inscribed to ono the world has known But ah! that homely grave, with more o'ergrown, thrilled me fnr more than his, who •i- armies led. -f'She made home happy!" Through the long, sad years The mother toiled, and never stopped to rest, Until they crossed her hands upon her breast, l&nd closed her eyes, no longer dim with tears. The simple record that she left: behind Was grander tbau the soldier s, to my A mind. +^y sfe •f" New York News A? The Kid's Chance HERE was a kid for you—a typl I jL eR' ^Tes,ern k'd, who hud Brown to the age of IS In the tough towns without being 'entirely spoiled. The quartermaster at the fort tOJk him on to help around because the boy was ~*fiot old enough to enlist, and yet want ed to get away from the vicious life lie bnd been leading. He wns fresh and slangy and up to a thing or two, but we found him to be right at heart. He couldn't read or write, and he couldn't •id four and four together, aud furth ermore, be didn't want to learn. He had a muslc.il ear, however, and with in a month after a battered old bugle hnd-beon given falui he was doing fairly well at the plaluer calls. He had set ^Isisartoiv Becoming a bugler, aid '.'.When this became known there were t'those who offered their'help. In si* months without being able to read a note, that kid could blow any call In the books. It was proud day for hint when he wiis allowed to blow his flrst official calls, but there was no t-'h -for him. There were buglers enough and .one or two to spare, and the kid was an outsldcT. The Seventh had seen two or three Ir.dlau campaigns, and of course there was mure or less story telling hv»bnr f. rai ks. The kid was an Interested -listener to coch and every one, and next day lie would go out and practice til? longer with bugle and revolver. It gradually dawned upon us that the boy was waiting for his chauce, and some' of us determined to help lilm""get It. There was no question about Ills cour nge, but It wns one of years. He'd no father, mother or gunrdliin, but there was no show for him to pass the re •*_ crultlng officer. He had been with us •./ a year innt a half and most of Ills toughness had disappeared when Ucd Cloud'broke loose again and led 300 of his warriors Into the valley of the Ite publlcan river. As a flrst move on our part, thirty of our troopers were ordered to make a night ride and get ahead of the Iudlans and give warning to the settlers. While the best mounts were being selected and saddled the Kid ap peared among us and whispered to Bergt. Bliss, who wns to have charge of us under a Iieutennnt. "Sarge, It's my chance. I've been waiting for It these two yenrs. Don't turn me down and say I can't go or you'll break my heart."- The sergeant looked at him for a minute without replying and then turned away. He neither consented nor ..opposed. That was enough for the Kid. He disappeared like a flash and when j. we rode through the gates he was at the rear, mounted on a barebacked liorse he had gobbled from the corral. .Over his shoulder wns slung his o'.d bugle and In his belt a revolver, and he meant to follow wherever we led. He'd have been ordered back fast enough bad the lieutenant known of his presence, but no one gave lilm away. We put our horses to the gal lop at once and held them to It for hours. At midnight there wns a wait for twenty minutes, and then it was on again. When daylight appeared y(fxe had covered fifty miles and were 'entering the valley. The ICId had stuck to us like a butr, but kept out of jiight of the officer. We were drawing long breath for -the last gallop when a scattering rifle lire was opened on our front and two or three men toppled from their sad dles. It was "left Into line" and a rush for a ridge a hundred rods away ~and we reached It to flud ourselves surrounded by Indians. We had head ed Red Cloud off, but he had got us 'Into a box. There were enough loose -boulders on the ridge to make a stout breastwork, but every one of our horses and two more men were down before we bad completed-It and were standing the redskhiB off. Red Cloud didn't move on the valley with part of bls force, as he might have done, but held every one of his 800 bucks close In band to accomplish our extermina tion. He'd sooner raise the scalp of rone soldier than slaughter half a dozen "citizens, and he had old grudges to pay off. The entire band circled us and 'opened a steady fire, and every man realized from the start that our posi tion was almost hopeless. It was half an hour after we reach td the hill before any one missed the Kid. Then It was believed that he bad OUT ON A SPREE. fallen when wo flrst struck the Indi ans, or being in the rear, had been cut off. There were plenty of others to mourn for. Lying as snugly as we could behind the boulders, and firing only when the redskins seemed In clined to rush, twelvo of our thirty •were killed between sun and sun. There wasn't the slightest show of re lief from the fort or from the valley, and If Red Cloud rushed our breast works after night had set lu the affair would have been over In ten minutes. At sundown the firing began to die away, and hnlf an hour later there was silence except for the songs of the crickets and the yelp of the coyotes. The Indians bad been called off to cook, eat and rest, but there was no way of escape open to us. At the flrst move to leave the little fort the whole pack would have been upon us. We bad scant rations and less water, and wfe were too worn out even to talk. Some of the men even slept and mut tered In their sleep us nlglit attack was waited for. The hours went by and none came. Red Cloud figured that another day of long-range flre would wipe us out, nnd why .Iflee a score of bis warriors In a night rusb. At 11 o'clock, with the silence of the grave around us, there suddenly camo to our ears the notes of a bugle. Tbey were clear and bold and defiant, and came from the direction of the fort. In an instant every man of us was on his feet and cheering. In an Instant the 800 red devils around us were call ing to each other lu alarm. "Column close up!" came the bugle call. "By fours, right wheel In line! Take open order!" We cheered nnd cheered again, aud we flred by volley to let our friends know that we still held out. Wilder grew the alarm of the Indians, and we heard the hoof-beats of their ponies dashing o-bout. Now the bugle blew "officers' call," and we were bewildered, but the con fusion among the Indians came when the calls, to "Trot!" "Gallop!" and "Charge!" filled the air, and away went Red Cloud and his 800 bucks In a wild flight, and over the rough ground swgmft I oumuu LAHr AID LUR —Chicago Record-Herald. smmmiz came chasing up to the very boulder»— the Kid! As he sat on his horse and peered over the boulders at us he raised the bugle to bis lips and sound ed the call of: "I can't get 'em up In the morning!" "God, boy, but what doea this mean?" demanded the lieutenant in a quavering voice. "It was my chance, sir," calmly re plied the Kid. "But how—how "Oh, I was left behind when you bits the reds nnd got boxed up, and I lay around In the woods back there all day and fixed up this scare for 'em." "And there's no one with you—no soldiers, no relief?" "Naw. Me and my old bugle did the whole business, and the reds won't stop running for ten miles."—Detroit Free PresB. An Englishman's Experience. A prominent marine engineer from London, who was recently sent to Bal timore to Inspect a British steamer, tells the following story: "It was in the days of the 'shovel en gineer,'as the men were called who had reached the tlirottle through the stoke hole, that British steamer was at Huelva needing attention to machin ery. A new and young superintending engineer was sent from England to look over the vessel. Being of the new school of engineers aud with a Board of Trade certificate, his questions wcro very technical aud correspondingly be fogging to the minds of tho two en gineers who had reached their posi tions by a long service In the fireroom. In the course of his Inquiry of one of them lie bad reverted to the pitch of the propeller. If you are unable to find an oppor tunity go to work and make one. FOUR WEEDS THAT MAKE GOOD EATING^ 80UK SOCK UJTP.-VDMRMCC. SKFFLFLNI MOMML Four plants, useful as pot herbs, or "greens," grow wild In most locali ties throughout the Middle West nnd In great abundance. The most fa miliar Is the dandelion, which Infests the lawns and Is mndo conspicuous by Its yellow flowers. The dandelion belongs to the aster family and derives Its name from the French "Dent-de-Liou"—tooth of lion—because the edges of tile leaves are In some degree like the teeth of a lion's Jaw. Such bright authorities as the Encyclopaedia Brlttanlca recognize the leaves of the dan delion as a food. As a rule the dandelion Is among the first plants to make Its appearance In the spring, but when it has blossomed It Is not palatable as food. Mixed and cooked with other pot herbs it adds to the acceptable flavor of the whole, Its bitter taste being conspicuous. Wild mustard, a small, low plant, with rough leaves, with clusters of small, bright yellow flowers Is another food plant. Generally It appears In May In places where the soil Is rich. The leaves, when raw, have the flavor of mustard, and the plant Is really mustard. Generally the growth Is close to the gronud, the leaveB spreading out somewhat like the dandelion. The flowers are on a stem, perhaps as much as twelve Inches In height The leaves are like radish leaves and having the same rough and hairy appear ance. Sour dock is another food plant. Its leaves vary from twelve Inches long and three Inches wide to two or three Inches In length and half an inch in width. Tliere nre several kinds of dock that which most resembles the edible variety Is yellow and has a much smoother, thinner leaf. The veins of the leaf are very distinctly marked And unlike most lcaves^the veins Inter sect one another nil over the back of the leaf. The general appearance of the leaf Is similar to horse radish. Tlie most plentiful and probably the most acceptable of the wild greens Is what Is known as "lambs' quarters" and sometimes as "lambs' lettuce." The Encyclopaedia Brlttanlca, Standard Dictionary, and books on botany recognize tills plant as a food plant. It belongs to the order valerlanaceae of the botanists, and Is widely diffused throughout the Northwest. The leaf, when full grown, is three or four Inches long, is thick and heavy, and has a white, dusty appearance on the under side. In shape the leaves are what the botnnlsts denominate oblong-lanceolate, sometimes with a toothed or in cised base, which in common phrase would be rather long spearhead shape. As the plant grows older the stem ncqulres ridges. The leaves aud younger growth on the plant Is good to eat, at any time. Sometimes the plant grows to be five feet in height and in formation is much the same as that of a tree, having limbs and branches. The flowers are small in dense clusters and almost Invisible. The plants described are good as long as tbey are tender and should be cooked the same as spinach. Dandelion farming Is carried ou extensively In Europe. In tills country the only place where they raise dandelions for food Is In Rhode Island. As to gardening, uot ranch skill Is required. The seed must be sown one spring In order to have marketable plants for the next spring. Thus It taker a year to get a crop. Iu addition to the foliage, the root used for medicinal pur poses. ?^4^4 _,V Finding his companion, he who had been drinking in professional wisdom from the new overlooker said: 'Sandy, mou, that new "super" Is clever fellow. He even asked about pitch for the propeller!' 'What? Pitch for the propeller!' said the second. 'Why, Archie, he re fused me paint for the.engine room!' r. THE HAWKEYE STATE NEWS OF THE WEEK CONOI8EUY i® i' "CONDENSED. .* Vaat Increase In Amount of Real Es tate Assessments—Fire Store to Con ceal Hobberjr—Korarer Caught—Farm* er Found Dead—Preacher Vindicated, An increase of from two to three hun dred millions of dollars in the valuation of real estate in lown will he realized this year, ifvlhe abstracts of nxsesKment from the counties that have thus far come into the revenue department of the office of Auditor of State Carroll in Des Moines ave an indication. TUu» will mean an increase of from fifty to fifty-five mill ions in the tavnhle value of real prop erty in the State. In addition, there will be a great Increase in the valuation of personal property. Ten countie?—Osce ola, Boone, llenton, Cedar. Clay. How ard, Palo Alto, Pnwerihiek and Itlnggold —"have reported, and these show an av erage Increase of $3,000,000 each in real estate assessments. Store Robbed and Fired. Thieves entered the store of Nason & Whitehlll, at State Center, and after helping themselves to goods, the value of which cannot yet be given, set tire to the building and made their escape. The rtobery was- not discovered until the pro prietors began cleaning up the store after the fire. It appears the fire was start ed in the basement of the building and after making some headway was extin guished by the fire department by the nse of a chemical engine. It wns not known at that time that any goods had been stolen, but a later examination showed that a lot of valuable goods had been taken nnd the fire apparently been started to cover up the crime. Forger R. P. Paler Caught. R. P. Daley, wanted in Cedar Rapids on two charges of uttering forged checks on the firm of 1*. Wallace & Son, nnd at Burlington under another name, on the charge of utteriug three forged cheeks, and attempting to utter a fourth, has been caught at ftloomington, II). Iiis i« a strange case. Tire forged cheeks are uniformly for $28. The victims have been shoe dealers without exception. The forgeries have all beeu on building con tractors. Tho Prcacher Is Vindicated. The church trial of Rev. Thompson of Blberon, which was held at Tauin, by a committee appointed according to the rules of the M. K. Church, resulted in a •erdict of complete vindication. The charges were preferred by his divorced wife, who got a decree at the last term of the District Court without resistance by the defendant. Her statements to the court wcro entirely unfit for public mention. Olrl Poisoned by Nutmeg. Miss Esther Snyder of Mount Ayr is In an almost helpless condition, the re sult of nutmeg poisoning. Misa Snyder waB ill and her mother suggested that the eat a riuall piece of nutmeg. The girl ate a nut and a half, and went into a semi-«tupor, her limbs became numb and partially paralyzed, and her heart action was so faint that it was only with difficulty that the doctors were able to keep her alive. Prominent Farmer Found Dead. A prominent Dane farmer, Xela Han sen, living near Kimballton, was found dead In the roud about a mile routh of Kimballton. The physician said the cause of his death was apoplexy. Mr. Hensen had spent the evening before at a neighbor's at Elkhorn, where there Is now being held a conference of Danish Lutheran divines, and it is supposed that the excitement (he being a very aged man) was too much for him. Wltkla Oar Bordsraa The Waukon Condensed Milk Co. has Incorporated capital $60,000. -v. The strike of the workers at the Dav enport button factory promises to be a long one. Study of the Scandinavian language will be added to the course at the State University. Fireman lumper of Waterloo, an Illi nois Ceotral employe, wns seriously scald ed by a bursting steam pipe. John George, a laborer, was killed by the cars at LeMars. The coroner's Jury returned a verdict of accidental death. Three thousand pairs of rubber !oots were sold by Des Moines shoe dealers during the recent high water in that city. The people of Sac County have the Beaumont fever nnd are preparing to punch the earth's crust up that way full of oil holes. Present MeLnne of the Idaho State University is being considered in connec tion with the presidency of the State College at Ames. Judge SMras of Dubuque is temporar ily tnking the place of Judge Thayer in the United States Circuit Court of Ap peals at St. Paul. Harrisou E. Spangler -of Adair has been elected general manager of athletics of the University of Iowa by the board of athletic control. John Crovisier of Woolstock was kill ed at Cincinnati, Ohio, by coming in con tact with a live wire. He was employed there as a lineman. Joseph Gafford of Burlington, president of the Iowa Grain and Produce Com pany, died suddenly of apoplexy, aged 70. lie was prominent in business af fairs nnd an old resident. The Rock Island Railroad has had plans for a new girder bridge to cost about $75,000 acrons the Des Moines river in Des Moines. The recent flood may cause a radical cbauge in the plans, as the engineer failed to take Into con sideration a stage of water such as was' recently attained. It is said over 300 head of cattle have died of clover bloat In 8cott and adjoin ing counties in the past month, iufiicting a loss of $10,000 on farmers. Henry" Barhope of Lowden was reri ously injured while assisting in moving a granary. He was under the structure, when the supports gave way and he was pinioned to the ground. He will recover. Damages aggregating $402,000 nre claimed by owuers of lands affected by the proposed drainage ditches lu Wood bury County. The cost of construction ifr&oe would be $75,000. It is probable the ditches will not be built. George Simons, Jr., aged 30, of Batn via, was drowned while fishing. He went into the water to unfarten his hook, which had become snagged, nnd was seiz ed with cramps. Ottumwa citizens at a largely attended mass meeting urged improvements to pre vent a repetition of the recent disastrous flood. It is planned to straighten the channel of the Des Moines river through the town. Mrs. Ed Kos of Riverside accidentally shot herrelf. She was going up stairs carrying a loaded revolver and fell on it, causing its discharge. The bullet went through her thigb, making an ugly wound. Secretary Wesley Greene of the State Horticultural 8oclety is of the opinion that the extreme wet weather in Iowa has not done grent damage tc the fruit crop. The plomt and cherries were near ly all destroyed by the frost of May, but the other fruits are coming along very well. The commencement exercises of the Iowa State College were held in the col Jege chapel. Degreea were conferred upon seventy-tfaree graduates from the scien tific, engineering and agricultural depart ments of the Institution. The commence ment address was delivered by E. Ben jamin Andrews, president of Nebraska Univertltjr, 1/oMars may get free postal delivery. A gas lighting plant has just been in stalled at LeMars. An unknown man, a laflferer, was kill* ed by the cars at LeMnr*. The assessed valuation of the dty of Burlington is $ir,000,000. A combined armory and assembly hall will be built at Fort Dodge. The Waterloo Ministerial Union will make a fight against all slot machine*. The new Presbyterian hospital at Waterloo will be located on the Weet Side. There has not been case of Infec tious disense In Burlington for over a month. An industrial parade will be the fea ture of Fort Dodge's Fourth of July cel ebration/ The residence of P. Kelly, at Ryan, was struck by lightning and burned to the ground. Fully 85 per cent of the ice stored In De.i Moines was swept nway by tho recent flood. At Mount Joy. Mrs. Mary Geitz, aged 01, while in a fit of melancholia, hung herself to a hook. The new electric light plant at Wash ington is now in successful operation. It is owned by the city. Two children of Alex Snyder nre dead ft Des Moines as a result of exposure during the recent flood. A rystem of drainage ditches, to cost about $8,000, is planned for a portion of the country near Nichols. Otto Schmidt, aged 22, of Clinton County, was drowned while attempting to ford a swollen stream. Rev. B. F. W. Cozier, formerly of Des Moines, i* dead at Moscow, Idaho, where he went in search of health. The Iowa Masonic Library at Cedar Rapids was robbed of coins, stamps and other relics valued at $1,000. The Dubuque street car strike is still unsettled. The employes have rented hacks and will run hack lines. It is agaiu asserted that the Illinois Central is backing the new Des Moines, Iowa Falls and Northern Road. Glenwood husband wants a divorce from his wife because she plays tattoos oil his head with a stove poker. .Miss Sadie Miller of Waterloo will go to India as a missionary under the aus plceM of the DunKard denomination. The Fort Dodge Military Band has been made the official musical organiza tion of the Fifty-sixth Iowa Regiment. Sister Agnes of Dubuque has been elected reverend mother superior of the entire order of Sisters of Mercy in Iowa. The Iowa Central State Medical So ciety will hold its semi-annual conven tion in Marshailtown on Tuesday, June 30. Louis Goochee, a Hamilton County farmer, was seriously burned by the breaking of a bottle containing carbolic acid. The Iowa Central has signed an agree ment for one year with its engineers and firemen, granting a slight increase in wage?. Mort Rosshaul, a porter in a Dubuque hotel, has Just received $22,000 as his share of the estate of a relative who died in New York. At Des Moines Judge McPherson of the federal court sentenced John Jones to pay a fine of $500 and retirement in State prison for fifteen months for boot legging. Ida Kodtman, an Iowa Falls domestic, narrowly escaped death as a result of taking internally a dose of liuiraent In tended for external application for rheu matism. A Wright farmer who Is a firm believ er in the theory of extensive drainage, has eight men at work putting tile in his farm and will have thirty miles of it be fore he finishes. Jim WjilHams, an Ottumwa colored yoiutli, was shot by a circus hand at Washington. The shooting followed a quarrel. The boy will recover. No ar rests were made. The new well at the Washington water plant was completed at about 238 feet and is a complete success. It has been tested and will furnish from 00,000 to 80,000 gallons daily of the purest water. A committee of the employes of tho Davenport pearl button workers, who were locked out recently, waited on Su perintendent Krause and were informed that the directors had refused to euter tain a proposition to take back the men and girls without prejudice and reinstate their former wage system. Iowa will have no woman's department and no board of lady managers at the St. Louis exposition. This was settled on at a meeting of the commissioners at Des Moines after a discussion that last ed nearly all day. It was decided, how ever, as a compromise, to appoint a com mittee of three women, whose function will be to assist the different departments in the exhibit of whatever pertains to the woman's work. Miss Frances Moore, who was drown ed at Chicago the other day, was a daughter of Rev. C. A. Moore, pastor of the Edwards Congregational Church of Davenport. The young woman, in com pany with the young man named Miller, who was also drowned, were on a pleas ure trip to the Spanish caravels in Jack son Park lagoon. It is presumed the young woman fell into the water and that Miller perished in trying to rescue her. Dissatisfied with the mental attain ments of many of the priests of the archdiocese and wishing to impress upon the minds of young Catholics that recti tude should not be the only qualification for admission into the priesthood, it was decided at the recent synod held in Du buque that hereafter the younger priests of the archdiocese of Dubuque must un dergo an qral and written examination once a year In theology, church history, canon law and other subjects in which priest should be conversant. This ac tion was taken on the advice of Arch bishop Keane. Rev. S. M. McConnell has resigned the pastorate of the United Presbyteriau Church at Wyoming, and will accept a call to Stauwood. The meeting of the Upper Mississippi Turnbezirk, which was to have been held In Des Moines June 15 to 18, has been postponed until Aug. 9 to 12. The de cision was made because of the floods. Evn Shonk, aged 43, of Des Moines, attempted suicide by drowning. She was rescued. The woman's household goods were lost in the flood, and she declared that as she had lost her home on earth she hoped to flud one in heaven. Colonel Humphrey has announced the appointment of A. IJ. Rule of Mason City as quartermaster of the Fifty-sixth Reg iment. and A. F. Peddle of Emmetsburg, battalion adjutant. Rev. A. P. Church of the Presbyterian Church at Wyoming, has resigned, after a continuous pastorate for over ten years, and will become the pastor of the First Presbyterian Church at Lansing. Mis* Margaret O'Laughlin, who claim ed she was incarcerated in a Dubuque hospital at the instance of jealous rela tives and who had filed habeas corpus proceedings^ to secure her release, has been taken away from the asylum by a brother. The Milwaukee railroad has offered the town of Lohrville fifty cars of gravel for graveling the street leading from tho depot to the town. The town of Jeesup has recently com pleted a system of water works and now the City Council has chosen a fire chief and a strong fire company has been or* ganUed. The business men of Dubuque are talk ing seriously of combining and asking that a writ of mandamus be issued In the District Court compelling the com pany to operate the street cars. The general opinion is that nelthe? side is making any especial effort torard a act* of the trouble, i. .1 'A:'- 3 "iT fllfilii' The Former's Garden. The common expression that Ameri ca Is a nation of dyspeptics is gener ally understood to be true, and it is also true that, In proportlou to tho population, there nre more dyspeptics among farmers nnd their families than among tlie city population. It is absurd .that such should be the case, for if 'any class of people has a chance to 'be healthy it is the farming communi ty. The fact remains, however, that the majority of farmers cling closely to a diet In which there Is little varia tion. Probably the lack of fresh frulta and vegetables 1ms more to do with their stomach troubles than anything else. The writer remembers visiting one of the wost exteuslve growers of truck In the vicinity of Norfolk, Va. More than 500 acres of this man's farm was devoted exclusively to the raising of vegetables for market, yet during a stgy of three days tho only vegetable placed on the table was a !«cant supply of cabbage at one meal. For some unaccountable reason farm ers seem to think that a kitchen gar den Is a waste of time and labor, nnd they go through the summer wl»h scarcely a fresh vegetable of auy kind. This is a mistake, for the expense of a garden sufficiently large to supply an entire family with vegetables Is so small that it ought Dot to be consid ered. Make tho garden near the house where an hour of spare time daily will keop it in e*od condition and give that variety in food which is necessary to good health. Surely there ought to be enough variety raised on the farm in all lines to give the best of each to the homo table, and with proper manage ment it can be doue without cuttiug off the Income materially.—St. Paul Dispatch. Convenient Small Harrow. T-! On every farm where small fruits and vegetables are grown a oue-horse borrow Js a grent convenience. By Its use the lighter weeding Is done nnd the surface of the soli kept loose at euinll expense of labor. If one has a lever harrow two of the beams may be used for this one-horse harrow, or the beams may be readily made with lumber of proper length, using long wlro nails for the teeth. The beams are fastened together in a shape, as shown In the cut and a wooden A LLOMT MADE HARROW. frame is constructed, as shown to sup port the handle. If a blacksmith Is conveniently near the support for the handle may be two iron rods running from tfie corners of the harrow to tho handle. A board may be placed over the frame and heavy stones set upon It to weigh down the tool if it is found too light for certain soils. This tool will be found especially useful in corn cultivation durlug tho early growth of the plants. Summer Shade for Powltrj/ here fowls are kept partially con fined there should be some arrange ment for furnishing the proper amount of shade. If the poultry yards can bo built around a number of trees this will be all sufficient, but If this cannot bo done, then plant a row of corn around the outside of the fence, on the suimy side, just far enough from the fence so that the fowls cannot reach it. A row of sunflower plants will answer the same purpose, or the plants may be castor beans, which mil provide shade aud ornamentation as well. A neighbor of the writer rets a double row of the tall growing cannns around tVe sunny side of his poultry yard, and thus obtains attractive bloom nnd the desired shade at the same time. Plant seeds of whatever is to be used of the seed kind now or set the plants of other sorts. Morn ing glory vines may be used by sow ing the seedB a foot frgui the poultry yard fence and running strings to the top of the fence. This plan gives one shade quickly nnd at small expense. lopth of Corn Cultivation. Depth of cultivating corn varies with circumstances, lu wet seasons it is often absolutely necessary to stir a soil deeply iu order to dry it out. Deep stirring is also necessary in wet seasons when weeds have once got the start of tho cultivator. The practice of cultivating a uniform depth of four inches throughout the entire season is quite common, 4t being claimed that weeds are most effectively destroyed at this depth, while the four-inch mulch conserves the moisture as well as a deeper one. There are those who advocate plowing deeply at all times, although, on the other hand, they nre taken to task by others who claim that it 1B just as prudent to remove the leaves from the stalk with a knife aB to cut the root with a cultivator. One instance is given where a compari son of the deep nnd shallow method of cultivation gave a yield of twenty bushels per acre in favor of the shal low method.—Iowa Homestead. A Dairy Futile. They organized aud built a cream ery, hired an expert, made fine buttw, sold all they could make and were making money. The son of the prin cipal stockholder got the idea that he would like to be a boss butter maker. He knew nothing about making but ter, and his idea was based on his iguorance. Influence was used, the expert was "resigned," aud pa's boy took his place. At- once things went. Purchasers returned the alleged, not •'gilt edged," butter and wrote, "When we want axle grease we will let you know." In a month pa's boy's butter had ruined the reputation of the creamery. The other stockholders then kicked pa and his boy out, hired the expert back, and prosperity returned with hiin. Moral—The "pull" may generally be depended upou to sprain the business that Is subjected to It.— New York Farmer. Keep Account, with the Cons. If farmers would open Individual ac counts with their cows, a great many of them would doubtless be surprised at the number of animals tbey are keeping merely as luxuries. It Is uot a safe rule to go by general Impres sions. Those who have tried keeping accounts have found that in many CM«« tbe cows that were tfewght to nr:- fjffljjgh-y •r-PPP^ V^" 1 -••j&8g be the money makers of the herd did not In fact yield any profit, while oth ers which had been considered less valuable provided a good cash income. Phcep on Small Farms. It Is mistaken idea to Buppose that lerge areas are required on which to raise sheep. It is true that it will not do to crowd too many on a small area with any Idea that they will get their living from the vegetation there, but if, say, one lumdred sheep were to be kepi on fifteen or twenty acres, prop erly handled, together with proper feeding, would bring desirable results. Taking twenty acres as the area to be UF-ed, it would be a good plan to divide this into three fields two fields of five aires each and one ten-nc*£ &*dd. The fix-acre plots should be so*#fl in rape or some other special feeding crop, and the ten-acre field used for general grazing. In this plot there should be shade ami water, and the grain feed ing should be done here also. Tlie fields of rape should be used alternate ly: that is, give the flock of sheep ac* cess to one field four or five hours a day for oue week, then to the other field In the same manner. If these fields were profitably pastured the re sult of the droppings would make them sufficiently rich for almost any crop when it was desired to use them In that way, which could be done by liming movable fences, so that other iltdds could be used for the sheep in other years. The Far»— jojr, The lot of the tarmer boy is undoubt edly lighter now than It was a half century ago, as many old Daviess County farmers can attest who have dropped corn all day by hand In a furrow "laid out" by a horse driven by a single line attached to a single shovel plow and keep it up for two or three weeks. Most old people who have lived bn a farm have had this experience or have followed the boy who was dropping corn, day in and day out, covering It with a hoe. For ty years ago a boy who could drop for two coverors could earn his 50 cents a day, while tlie ordinary loy who was hot so swift could earn 25 to 35 cents a day. As a matter of fact a boy could get over more ground and plant a much bigger acreage than a man, but then, as now, there was an un written law that he should not re ceive men's wages. Before the days of labor saving machinery, farm work for the boy especially, was a constant round of drudgery, and It was little wonder they wanted to get away from It. Now it is otherwise, and life on a farm is preferable to most other pur suits In life.—Exchange. Care of Lambs. In the case of twins, it is well to place them with the mother In a small, separate pen, for a day or two, in order that they may become acquainted, an/i to avoid the danger of one of the laiufrf straying away, which may cause trou ble. When lambs are born weakly, more care is required, and unless the shepherd Is with them to see that they are suckled soon after birth, they aw liable to become chilled and die. If the lamb is too weak to stand up and suck, it should be held up and some milk milked into it* month, when it will soon take the teat aud help itself,-or the ewe may le gently laid upou her side and the lamb brought to the teat on its knees or side, and helped aa above indicated—New England Home stead. Savins: CWver Hajr, Saving clover hay is not*a difficult matter if .the climatic conditions arc favorable, while it is almost Impose) ble to cure It in good condition in catchy weather. Where large areas have to be cured it is impossible to adopt the method of shocking It, it being much better to cut after the dew Is off, starting the tedder shortly after the mower and rake up and haul the next day. In this way hand labor, which--Is so expensive, is dispensed with. It Is better, says Iowa Home stead, to allow the crop to stand until the first heads are brown rather than cut it during catchy weather,* as It will spoil less standing than when cut. Form Notes. There are two certain methods of capturing the plum curculio. First Is by Jarring the tree every morning for three weeks, after the plums are set, catching the weevils in sheets laid on the ground. The .second Is by colon izing large tlocks of chickens in coops, or lu yards, under the trees. If farmers were as careful and sys tematic in the management of their herds as the breeders of pure breeds are with their cattle, much better re sults would be secured from ordinary stock. Even the best breed will fall if not rightly managed, and all classes of stock can be made more productive if extra care is given. Veterinary surgeons state that the milk is the first thlug affected when a cow becomes 111, and that the milk will show Indications of coming milk fever and garget a week before any outward sign can be discovered. A sore, or anything that may be liable to poison the bloo'J also poisons the mill at the same time. It Is mistake to expect that eggs will hatch precisely in twenty-one days. While this Is the rule. It Is not an Invariable one. Some will hatch in nineteen days, others in twentjvone days, and others will require twenty five days for incubation. The causes are various—such as getting too cold, too much heat, lack of moisture, want of vitality of either or both of the parents, and the age of the eggs. In giving salt to animals It should be done in a manner to allow each animal to partake of as much as It desires and prefers, instead of giving the salt in tlfe food, thereby compell ing some animals to use more than they wish. Each animal has its indi vidual preference, and the proper mode of allowing salt Is to place it where the animals cau have access to It at alt times, as each will use only the amount needed. Weighing the milk Is the best h»eans of registering the capabilities and pe culiarities of a cow and her yield. If done one day each week and noted down the table so constructed will be a most efficient guide to the total quan tity yielded, the rate of increase, the average or season's yield, the times of calving, the time of going dry, the ef fects of a particular food, etc., while a sudden decrease is the first symptom of any disease or trouble. The effort to produce the seeds of an apple exhausts the tree more than to produce the much better quantity of meat, because seedB contain a much larger proportion of the mineral ele ments. As much meat or pulp can be grown on 500 fine large apple trees as upon 1,000 small, inferior ones, but the production of seeds will be onlyi one-half as great. Thus "thinning" not only adds to the value of the pres ent crop, but economizes the energies of the tree for future ones. "Bromley seems to bo getting rich?" "Yes. Ho Invented a collar butto chaser that Is a great success."—Bz. "I'm not afraid of thoso horrid auto mobiles any more," said the off horse. "Nor I," said the nenr horse, "X help one home every day." He—The fact Is that you women make fools of the men. She—Some times, perhaps: but sometimes we don't have to.—Boston Transcript. So yon went to see one of those old New England plays. Was It real istic?" "Indeed It was. Why, when the rninstiinii -came up Uncle Henry's corns began to hurt him."—Magailne of Humor. Angry Voice (from top of stairway)— Verena. what did you lot him In for? You know we don't allow canvasser* here! Strange Voice (in hallway be low)—I am getting names for the blue book, ma'am. Changed Voice—Verena, show the gentleman Into the parlor. I'll be down In a moment.—Chicago Tribune. The sagacious wife watches her hus band's angry efforts to find the collar button that has rolled beneath the bu reau. "I should think," she says, "that you would have two collar buttons." "You should!" he snorts, reaching un der the bureau for the fiftieth time and rasping his hand along the floor. "It takes a woman to figure out some way to double a man's troubles!" Now York Herald. "I think you'd like the pastor of the church I belong to," remarked the pas senger with the skull cap. as the con versation drifted to religious topics. "He neiver preaches longer than twen ty-five minutes." "I have no doubt I should like him," replied the passen ger with the side whiskers. "The pas tor of the church I attend every Sun day preaches sometimes an hour or longer." "Horribly tiresome, Isn't It?" "Not to me. I'm the preacher."—Ex. "Papa," said the distinguished states man's petted daughter, "you have nev er told me anything about the house In which you were born." "No, my child," he replied, with a groan, "i have not. I could not bear to destroy the fond Illusion that your father Is a great man. 1 am not a great man, my dear. I am an Impostor. I was not born In a log cabin, but In a three story brick with stone trimmings!" And he turned away In anguish.—Chi cago Tribune. Costly Books. A Peoria friend of the late Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll tells how, while Colonel Ingersoll was living In Pooria, he was called upon one day by Gen eral John A. Logan, says the New York Times. The colonel was upstairs at the time, and General Logan was ushered Into tlie library, where, on a table, were three volumes of Vol talre's works, an edition de luxe rep resenting all that wns best In the book binder's art. General Logan picked them up one at a time, absorbed In his admiration of their beauties. While so engaged Colonel Ingersoll entered the room. 'Colonel," said the general, holding one of Ihe volumes In his hands, "this Is the most magnificent volume I have ever seen. 1 do not want to seem lm pertinent, but would you mind telling me what these books cost you?" "Those books," began the colonel, the twinkle In his eye growing brighter at each word, "cost me—the governorship of Illinois." Of course It was an Irish philosopher who said: "If you would keep your head above water you must not let the grass grow under your feet," "Mi 1 \Hr 0^ •A 1V/ Mother—lias young Meadows asked you to marry lilm, Ethel? Ethel— About the same thing. He said that If he ever should mnrry he thought he knew the kind of girl that would suit him.—Chicago Itecord-llerald. *$! a. The world Isn't what It used to be," complains the cynic. "Formerly a man had some chance now It Is just like—Just like "Just like a church fair," said the listener, 6npplylng the lacking simile without an effort."— Judge. "I suppose that if you marry my daughter you will expect me to pay your debts?" "Shouldn't think of put ting you to so much trouble," answer ed Earlle Byrd. "You can give me the money and I'll pay 'em myself."— Washington Star. "I really think you ought to go to church with me once In a while," she urged. "My dear," replied the wily man, "my good fortune makes that entirely unnecessary. I have a wife who Is good enough for two."—Chi cago Evening Post. vt-vNd frf*1 Guest (at dinner)—Ah, that's good old ale. Pardon my asking, but where did you get It? Subbubs Home brewed. Guest—Beally? The chicken Is delicious, too. Is It oue of your own raising? Subbubs—Yes, homo brood. —Philadelphia Ledger. They had started for a stroll. "There Is our minister," he said "I'm going to ask him to Join us." "To Join us? Oh, George, this Is so sudden! But hadn't you better speak to' papa be fore engaging the minister, dear?"— London Spare Moments. "I sing so much," said the man who thought he could, "lfs surprising I don't have some trouble—some throat trouble." "Ob, that's not surprising here In the East," replied Peppiwj^ "We don't lynch people here, even for that."—Philadelphia Press. "So you are not going to Europe again?" "Not for a long time," an swered Mrs. Cumrox. "It Is our In tention to live In America, thereby calling attention to the fact that we can afford to pay the highest price* for everything."—Washington 8tar. Mrs. Jenner Lee Ondego—My hus band says Americans spend $100,000, 000 a year In foreign travel. Mrs. Sell dom-Holme—I don't doubt It, but It 1* all well spent. Why, I consider the French accent my Esmeralda acquired from her two yearB In Paris worth every cent of It.—Ex. "Yes," said the critic to the aspiring foimg playweifht. "there are great pos sibilities in tnls jttey—-of—yews£ 'Thank you. It Is very kind of you to Bay so." "But there will be greater possibilities In the fellow who Is clever enough to find them and get them out." —Chicago Record-Herald. 1 •ffit ft *3 \%i 4? I* I /ft mi •Wj Itfi The timid young rann at the plcnla hastily asked his sister to Introduce him to the young woman In the blue shirt waist. "Miss Tlppltt," said his sister, "this Is my brother, Mr. Tap pltt." "Gl-glad to meet you. Miss Tlp pltt," he said. "Pardon me for men tioning It, but you are sitting on a bumblebee's nest."—Ex. ts. 4 -r-Vfy, fa A jH r/y,f -i«r Ai t. I -J 1 vt H" ~y*' Ml