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American Girl May Share the Throne of Portugal W .IX she ever become the queen of Portugal? That was the question which was nsked again and again, when, on July 9. 1909, there was an nounced in London the engagement of Miss ,:. 10 the throne of Portugal, and c-'•]'dson of the man who actually Wined as king to that country from 25-3 to 1 S34. 'That question is being asked re jeaiedly today, now that the dynasty Hr.igania-Coburg has been over thrown' by the revolutionary move ment and King Manuel and the queen mother have sought safety In flight. I! :, interesting as are tho complica ted which confront one when he un dertakes to investigate the history of royal family of Portugal, the con tirgeir-ies which might admit of the «i'o^s'nn of an American queen are :':ith"r improbable of occurrence, and .. are not much more improbable that the republic has been pro oIn ii.0(1 than they were on September 15 a Hgn his ei!:ce ill the hussars, but his '•'B. ns were dismissed from their posts. %.« was paid that Prince Miquel was looking for an heiress whom he might marry. The story runs that he first saw Miss Stewart when they were I'ei.ew-i :rssenpers on a channel steam 'icr ciowing from Calais to Dover. She Htt-i.rUd him. He compassed all the wiles known to the expert in the ef fort to get an opening so that he li.'l speak. None came. Tho young hi'iv and her mother kept a very lu i:chty attitude. Rut the mother and dn'iLhter became very suspicious us to the identity of the handsome young man shadowing them. They nsked that the guard lock them Into their railway carriage. But the persistent prince took the same train for Ixn lon. and when tho ladles entered their motor brougham he paid well a olianfTeur who kept In sight of their carriage until it reached its destina tion. Then nil became easy. The car riage stopped In front of a house in Orosvenor Square. The Identity of the Americans was quickly estab lished. The prince Induced a friend to take him to the house and perform the necessary introductions. He made Ills apologies for following them with cleverness and suavity. He "wanted sn much to know them." He called nt the houBe a number of times. Tho mother did not think of "intentions" until too late. When he declared them there was a prompt refusal. The daughter must not enter upon tho life of political Intrigue to which the wife of the prince would bo destined. Hut the affections of the young wom an were already engaged. the consent of the mother was given. Then in his turn tho young prince two weeks after the engagement to Miss Stewart was announced made a .•••public denunciation to nil claims to the throne of Portugal which he might have been supposed to cherish, l'efore tho recent revolution, there fore. the American bride can have thought of the crown of Portugal as -.but a very distant possibility. Hut now tho republic has arrived apparently. No one can say what the future story of Portugal may be, whether tho republic will stay, or tho present royal family will come back, it and here lies the one possibility •if the American girl becoming a iiueen—if the family of the pretender will he called to the regal palaces of 'he llraganzas. It is conceivable al ways that the people will tire of the newly-instituted form of government, that they will decide not to allow King Manuel II. to rule over them, und that they will Invite tho pretender to assume the throne which was re nounced by his father. It would not !:e the first time in history that one liraneh of a family has been exiled MS another put into power. '6 Hi Anita Stewart, the Amer ican heiress, 4b Prince Miqtiel Maximilian Sa bastian Marie de Hra ganza, the oldest son of Prince Miqucl, the pre- when the wedding took place iji Scotland. The assassination of King Carlos "aiii! M« eldest son, tho heir apparent, ii-e-srht the present boy king to the tlr oil", and made the pretender and li'i sons rather unwelcome In English ehl.rt circles King Edward acquaint ed the Austrian emperor with his dis pi^asnr" 'hat a Portuguese revolution iheuUl be fomented from Vienna, and a volution which, by inference at le:ft, might be Identified with the iniEody at IJsbon. The Duke of lira p.-ir.za thereupon was allowed to r«- IDEA OF FLIGHT THROUGH AIR Wost Commonly Experienced In Child hood and Also at Moments Preceding Death. The sensation of (1 yIn is one of t! earliest to appear In the dreams vi.iidhood. It Eee^is to become 'i iruqtisnt after midd'le age. Ueaunls ''•i bs that in his case it ceased at igo of fifty, says a writer lu the Atl.!iitje. it is sometimes the last ttr.fuiion at the moment of death. 1'J rise, to fall, to glide away has rUcn been tho last conscious sensa tioi. recalled by those who seemed to Jying but have afterward been Wu.iKht hack to life. Pleron hae noted ..'•"Ih sensation at the moment of death •. number of cases, usually accom by a sense of well being. The rat-f-j he describes were mostly tuber «'is and Included Individuals of Wh ibexes and with atheistic as well '•s ieligloug beliefs. lu nil tho last sensation to which jxpiession was given was one of Hy of moving upward. In some teath was peaceful, in oUiers painful. Anita Stewart, Wife of Prince Mlquel of Braganza. That wedding in tho little Scottish church on September 15. 1909, was hailed as tho first royal wedding which Scotland had known slneo the marrJage of the ill-fated Mary, Queen of Scots. The people of the region of Dingwall made tho occasion a semi-public event. Tho town was gaily decorated, and as hig a bonfire as ever blazed on a Scottish beacon hill was lighted on the slopes of Hen Wyvis, and around it danced the young people of the neighborhood to tho music of bagpipes. Tho prince was deeply in debt at the time of the marriage. I.ast De cember it was stated in dispatches from lludapest that a syndicate of creditors was suing the prince for a million. It was said that the syndi cate had advanced him a large sum. payable when be should have made rich marriage. Then last February In Vienna a large crowd in the streets watched tho transfer of bric-a brac and other belongings of the prince from his rooms to a huge wagon, some of his creditors having seized his furniture. To cap the monetary troubles of this scion of the llraganzas announce ment was published in Vienna on February 16 last that the Austrian courts bad placed Prince Miguel un der "curatel," which puts him In a At length much more humiliating position than is that of an undischarged bankrupt in England. 1'oople are only placed under curatel on \he ground of in sanity or reckless extravagance. Ono is deprived of all bis privileges as a citizen, he is incapable of contracting any legal obligation, not even the mere witnessing of a legal document, and he Is at the mercy of his curators or Judicial trustees, appointed by the court to act as his guardians and as the administrators of whatever prop erty ho may have left. Up to the time of this marriage the llraganzas had sought almost always royal alliance?, even if not. with reign ing houses. When their scions have married into tho nobility of lower rank it l'.as been always in the form of a morganatic union. Of tho family which the present revolutionary move ment has driven away from the cap ital of Portugal thero are two mem bers in whom tho succession would be vested. The one of course is the young King .Manuel, and the other la his uncle, the Duke of Oporto, who is unmarried. If both should die with out issue and the republic should not endure tho people might call the other iron bars of the bed, hi hoi ror oi Beaunis—from hi3 own experience —describes a typical kind of dream Bight as a series of light hounds at one or two yards 'above ti.o earth, each bound clearing frCr«n ton to twei Lies.' throne in tho person of the father of Anita Stewart's husband, and her hus band would then In all probability succeed him. Ilut the story of the grandfather of Prince Miguel in the years of his reign, 1S2S to 1SP.1. is not of tho sort that might inspire confidence In Ills descendants. This grandfather was known as Miguel 1. lie was tho brother of l'fdro IV., who resigned the throne with the understanding I hat It was to go, after the death of his father, to his daughter, Maria da Gloria, llo assumed tho title of Pedro I. of llrazil. and was succeeded by bis Bon, Pedro II., who reigned until the establishment of the Brazilian republic in 1SS9. As had been her father's wish, when John VI. died in 1820, Maria da (iloria was proclaimed queen. Hut she reck oned without the wishes of her grand mother, Carlotta .loachima, one of the Spanish liourbons, and this wom an's love and ambitions for her llltl North Dakota News Notes I v\ l«ako.- The sMbl's!.-•!.* .1 •U'W daily iajrr in this U' ts sahr t^ ui assured fact. lunseith.~A special run vision of tho '-ntly. LaMouiv.— Plans hv.en mavh fair the ka- iftir a site an.I electing r^.umatb'n. 5 Once in Lisbon, Miquel sworo al-|c.t ai-out thr middle «f liir bridu',. lo^iaiu-o to the vishes of his brother, ri\'-r and in the state of N'ortli IVflrc», to Maria, and to the new con- claimed the sole legltiinato kinx. 1 Many Live to Old Age. ue- lng borne upwar-l Piertin associates this™ petisation with the similar sensation of rising and floating in dreams and with that of moving upward and resting on the air experienced hy persons in tho eestatie state. In all these eases alike life is being concentrated in the brain and central organs, vshilo the outly ing distriels of the body are becom ing numb and dead. liri am liighi. it is necessary to note is not usually ihe sustained flight of a bird or an Insect and the dreamer rarely or never imagines that he is borne high into the air. Hutchin son states that of all those whom he has asked about the matter "hardly ono has ever known himself to make any high flights in his dreams. Ono almost always flies low, willi a skim ming manner, slightly, but only slight ly, above tho heads of pedestrians." About 32,000 persons die of old ago branch"Vof"the'"family" to the in Kngiand and Wales annually. si,rl ,1!^ ty yards, the dream being aecompa liied by a delicious sensation of ease r. and movement as well as a lively sat- Wiuti Isfaction at being able to solve tho]d nn problem of aerial locomotion by virtue of superior organization alone. Latendio 1 learn somewhat similarly describes in his "rfhadowings" a typical nnd frequent dream of his own as a series of bounds in long, para bolic curves rising to a height of soma Iwenty-tive feet and always aoconi panied by the sense that a MtUen« of. this town :s, .1 iho city's two chtfrtjical. iy^\uos recently in extinguishing a prairkMir.tv hviVr i»!act\ Ui'ilfcerwood.— An auto •'freight Una ha* been established 'his :-!:nv and Vis. an 1 »htTRle*tiny-tv-p-- -m l\:kta. l^smari k.—Two tscapedV prisoner* l'l 1 the penitentiary w-.r.' en l»y two half-brcod Indhm trapper .v. Mits ami returned t-v vity. Crystal.—Farmers ardiihvi hen a-'i »:».»d potato cr-»p this.-.y^ar... Hi (he tubers store,! in pri\ He-ar, it is expev teil tho crop will Sic W'.ank. lh kinsen. --Ninety-live p»vr the taxes of 1 ha\e :ii is oi^anty a11«i the aiuhun* •hat a still I'etter sh'^vX^Sfew (Iran.I 1 'orks \"n t'-r .vlvimtv in SteeV vunty was itinn ii to" :thvv ivronul on Kri«lav nitiiit last anil only a small part tlio uitt» nls, ,,\N-yr.« PaVed. 1 •,iKes.—Thursday was a hit tiay f•»r this elty. Tho fall market ,i.iv wax -n as well as tho Jiuteimr of the. 'eatra raise,] hv the school p\ipi!s "f lri« kt-y ee !!t V, l-'ar«o -The story to effect tluit thtO Soo anil Ci. N*. liad th 1 2 teillien^- mere lh the r-ip of either Minnesota or H..uth laK"t:i. 1 la I to-M I e. Mrs. Itudolph, widow ef tin- lute Intimin Kudol h. tttem[t* suicide by jumping Into the spoiled brother of tho emperor of man .so marked t» lu business wh i« Brazil. Carlotta had already sought ll( is her pains she had been shut up ln, ,him the Castle of Queluz while tho son rir the winter. The water or Mouse had been sent into exile. Hut he was iwr is very low and tho sewa^r is allowed to return on condition that now runianiinutint the supply for tln« ho should marry his niece, Maria dailcity. Gloria, who meantime had takru tho l-'arr-'n.^-- Thr*:'-'" riiurd^r nil last S «tur title of Maria II. j»i iy niuht nf I'-Vr VnkoHil rienirr.-d The nmrdrrt-r. who was an stitution, but he showed no «!r-slro to "Alllst,5an inrtal uorkrr. has born takrn marry Maria Then in l«8 he seized u, 1'',il lhi" rit^ the rein.i of government an with tho Mnndan. That tiro' ^soutlnv'sirr aid of his mother restored the reac- bryeh r.allroad fr«im this to\wi tionarv Cortes and had himself pro-j u',i. (l",a 1 hrivn'" luti ik power had been revealed which for the fu ture would bo a permaneLi posses sion. Literature Pays. "Hello, old man. How's limratura paying?" "Oh, finely. Tho railroad lost a trunkful of my manuscript and I got $100."—Loulsvillo Courier-Journal. Information Wanted. TJttle Willie—Say, Pa. pa—What is It, son? 1'1"' IJttlo Willie—A re the meals people get on dining cars served on tiuio ta- busiarss i» iiiist ra i- 1,11 1 sU 1 ,l lfl he. ji laid one hundre-l cars ^f mi r- or six years there was civil war. ». .i tndis• havr passed through here en r-'iste to points oiitl.at line. The interests id' .Maria de Gloria were taken eharse of hy Knglnnd and Spain. After the rnidtulatlon of Kvora in 1S-14 Maria II. was placed again upon the throne, was then that Miquel formally renounced all pretensions to tho throne for himself anil his descendants. He -vent abroad. For some tlmo ho lived in Koine. He died in lKfiO in Itaden, leaving six daughters and one son, tho present IJuko of Ilrnganza, the pretender to the throne of l'ortugal, and the father of the husband of ihe American heir ess. W'illiston.- -Whol t3,v thefts from 'Ir- iif Northern mrs hav" h^en «-•}•}.p ed by tile arrest -f l\v nir-n at ihH |!ae". The extent of tho thefts may !.indeed when it is known tint nne farmer f«-und l.V) pairs of trousers that one ,[' the men arr- sU-d u«imitte.| taking. ''arrinirt'Ui. —The Oond Uoads asso iati-»n of this city was not satlslb'd with the work iiready d-uir. no the campaign fur edur-athm, "M iii-f a meeting f'»r licit irpos on i-Yi ilay at whieh J. Ward Kinjf madu an address on tin- u-f of tii. split lo^ j.t r"'!1! making. |)uriri^ th'i win* ncnths It is prop--s«d t-» h'-r-p }}tr- mat ter hvf.ir»' the ejti/i-n.^ and biir ,^ the best met hods »f Si-urinj? re.su!!-. Hisiriarek—Tho city ha!th autlcai lie.--, report the cetidition "f the 11 v. i't as suspici-ms. 'a S' lOM. -A hresiief puih I ,is ouiiH o\ej» a crossim,' in this city the saitus iw.rd nesb^ ted to ucM surj»r:^« •'i--air it 1 !e was ben M'l'e le,] tid JlTi.cd. V^-:v" P.ismaiv k.- .M a:!l j'o!.er'-s» J.s ma'ii steti in the iv-ent leciyion of the rro r'lin oiurt of Wi-••')?!.'•!n where tb-at :rt helM that tt-«- tw :,!y la i:sc of the prijnar.v l.iv was ro/'.j-tj nab it will h.« rent' f!ih re-J ihat a ret-eni deci.-ion of the Xortl) Dnk it i. iprein,. ei.rart that a simiiar e}rr-i«e of thirty jier cef.t in the piiinary jaw AUTHOR OF "DARIUS GREEN' a traioe is \intrously tlonie*! and atio\h» serine sho'ild witness lively tini s.{»i]r«atl eonsirueii.»n. Iv-jvJand.-- The little elvl'.l nf Mr. 'and .Mrs. 1'rank Sand?«. rrsidintr n 'r-wus, was hurnoil to »hatl: hy iiiir u\ei' an oij heater tin its*. !f and ii^ nit nl its rhitlies. Chasel-'v. -The now v.*»nn« lv* \V «'!i ireh six miles frm th's j»la. )s de.ii ated Sunday, Uev, W'tn. S.a k«»\v, of Kar^-t, taking a prmm. nt part sr. the dedientory serviees. I'nrfj'o f'»ni ressman 11 muri av re er-ived word that there he an ar !y examination of ponl mis in t!i« vesi. rn part of tlie state agents (»f t!ie interim* Oopartmont. t' dumhus.—.Tav Z. Punworhly. al lejr emhe/./.lor, has he- r:i'luri ,| in Ari/.'»na an-l will he returned her. f. trial, 'i'h.e Standard Urain Co.. of |»u lut ii j*r»d'i*rr«'d tin oliarfti'. liiamarek.-—It is eslim.P-d that the Max erop of North 1aK.ta this se.-.r fn'h po\ser: will hi* eiulit million hushejs. .iv.-r two ||^)uj /ohn Towmend Trowbridge Wrote th» Potm 40 Years Ago, and the Whole Country Laughed. Toston.—Among tho thousands of persons who witnessed tho recent avi •iii'Mi 1111 e( at lto^ton thero was no "•more Interesting spectator than John Vowuseiui Tro\\ tividr.e, author Mf the room. "I iri 1 vIrecn and his Flying V.achtno," which ti'.aiio tho whole country laugh t' years ago. lespite tils advanced a^«.'. S3. Mr Trowbridge Jouriiejud from his home John Townsend Trowbridg®. !n Arlington. Mass to tills city In or ler to take his tlrst look at a ma rhino which had been Ills dream from o\hood a machine wh'eh would tly le was Introduced to several of 111" ivlators, among tle-m C.len Curtlss, Irnhnnto W'lilte. Wilbur White and "hers, and the old gentleman was nunensely iilease\l to niei't them. When i- Tt owioblge wrote abiut Darius Cita'eti. years ago. no one of liat time expected to see a Hying urn thine that would tly There were lo's if machines thai wouldn't, but the dea of usurping the realm of tho birds ns th miumic river. She was rescued by a secii.ei. foreman thatwa watching her ac-:, lions. Korman.—During the cons! ni' ion work '.n tho court bouse in this city :i sin: !I portion of a cement lloor not laving the proper support fill to the around, nece^.situting a fclight dcl.iy in work. Nupoliou. So far as luiown, Put Xlll-'cllt, com let] of violul llg he 11 til law and c. .nsiden 11 Irus- by I he juiler. is still after ihe p.nl of coal for which lie was sent lie r.uiled lo return. I younger, son Miguel, the Illiterate and „. ,, I'uibd lo use proper care when he 'stalled for Montuna and sold cnushl I erahle property that was morluuget], lie was brought hack and made a oin- IeIe settlement. 'Irund porks.- -The "man with gold in his teeth" that lias been .o idelv ,hIv.-rtisi'd in runner! ion wiih an :it- h.inl r,„. „ot known In the state the dethronement of her husband. ,l ,lt._Tll,P ,,ilv „l!l follow the „x •lohn VI.. in favor of her son, and for nf ,. ,. ,, iulM tl, ,...nserve the supplv of water '•'t tn ihi ot- this pf.ate was one uisti? -i''nab I lirmrl I'-iks -Th.- 1 I.li- of ti.lB -Ity are insistiiur that all daici'S MU»idyiii^ milk to patrons be. k'-pt Mean. Casselton.—J 'ermi -si r'. been crranted to use the 'deotrie light plant this ty up to lu» j-tatutory tim^ of redemption. I 'ickin.sun. —August 11- ro'Hon p* e.j ir-'in jai! l.y forcing a indou' r.p« ^ith the aid of a pie of iron from ,i bed in his ronrn. Ruffalo.—The barn of John Mat tli'Mvs, north of town. n'ri ownci) by M»nneapr»lis pai'tiey, was burned the L'r'tiiiid last Thurxiay arel tdghte^n I heod of horses and eibht hundred I l.unhfls of grain ljrsi.U-s various other n111 lurried sonieihlng uncanny with It, ITie baleful results of experiments of •hose times were always looked upon, iioro or less, as deserved .s,leaking of the days of Darius Sreeo, the poet sa\s: I never dream id when 1 wrote that poem ihat such tiling as a Hying machine was pos tilde in my lime. I never had the .bought of aclually seeing one. While have never attempted to build one, have followed the aeroplane devel opment from the llrst. and it lias ill Aajs seemed lo mo that tile greatest 'actor ami the hardest to overconm ftotild be I lie motive lorco. "I have never kaown that there were fill motors, and motors no ey are now using. They were a revelation to nio. I don't earn lo make any prophesies as to the fu ture, but It seems to me Ihat tho large machine for carrying passenger:) is possible, anil only a matter of time." .. TWICE STRUCK BY LIGHTNING 3eautiful Memorial to Henry Clny at Lexington, Ky.. Shattered by Electric Bolts. I.rxinKton, Ky, It !m a nln^ular ro Inrlilonrd that liuhtnlntf twice In succession has JfFtroyci| tho ntatuc eroctod In tho ccmctcry lK*ro to tho memory of 11«»nry ('lay. Years n^n thfi people of Kt-ntueky, proud of the Kn*aineNH of Henry Clay ami his din- **649 Monument to Henry Clay, tlngulshcd puhlie services, erected a handome memorial to him in tlo cemetery where his ashes repose. Ii HtO lightning bhatterwl the fclaM*. crowning tlils memorial ami Heps were soon taken t» repair the statue A new one was pho-ed in position the past summer. Ilefore II could b« dedicated ll^htnin^ aj-'.aln destroyed It, Thin elemental nation f-fems pi cal of the life of Clay himself. fir was one of tho commanding figure? of his ime, dis iriKnlshed as a state* man. oraUjr and diplomat and ^reatlv Hdmii'-d by millions of Americans iils oik .' great ambition was to be pres ident of the. Cnited States, hut hb prospects, even when most promising Were always shattered, just like h*1 Ktaiue (in the- top ol the Imposim? phaft., which a grateful slate has rect ctd In his memory. Army of CoUege Girls. Wnshing'on. The army of eo'lUgV rirls in the 1'nli.ed Slates nu'ri.berH 7|,:. 000 -•a fon-e of Amazons about, half as great In numbers a.4 the per-onm of our navy. Their sex conM!' utes than a third f'i'j P*r cent) of entire crdb-go enrollment of th:g irv. ar.d the north central -ta^'s. ontriljii!e 40,^her'-as all Ma- oUi f'r sfat.es put together'give only I', 1,000. Illinois, Ohio, pjwa Kansas, oach sut^ ^a ses New Yctrk In the number of f^lrl college studen's, v. hiio Mu^hh i:hu«e'is Is way do'An on the list" In .KanFai colleges {Ijere are Tiv? ei?-!-:: for cv^ry sev-n boys I git Is.for every '.hree-boys Ohio, en girls to each 1! boys. In New York there Is only one coJJe^vgirl for ea-h five colieg-- bp) 1 LABOR INVOLVED MAKES DRAFT HORSES PROFITABLE No Clusr of Slock Will fllvv ltvt.ter IJ. tnr ir Tli.m Anlmnln" W W I I ot Colt. Pri/o Wlonlng fLiiglicili Draft Mare». Th'e'•"eolt" .-.hoTi'ld hav" a roomy o\ stall. It you have two colts, keep them together wlon 'h^ ihhivh When they art* annul a var old and on Ihe pasture, wo Kraduailv wean them from the a!s ami mlik, ami they Ret. nothing hut pasture until fall, when they art? a^aiu fetl ^raln and hay. Wo always stable ail of our colts at nlRht, but they ha\e a roomy yard or Held to run in In the da mne, so that, they p»t plenty of exerdse. Wo always break ear colts to hnr nes hefor«) th* are three years old. Jet them used to the harness before spring work be^ln. Work them only half a day at a time to commenrn with, and see thai fheir coilam and harness lit 'Item well. When the weather ^eis warm dip your colts. Hy so doin^ you may avoid f?oro shoulders. If a colt Is a sor«» shoulder, i. itlm resl a lew days and he.'il It up If yoe rontinuo to work him and the bore keeps getting 'i he Oxford sheep originated in Imik land In the early part, of the nine teenth century from a cross of Cuts wold and Hampshire Downs, They have been known sine.* m:,V as Ox fordshire or Oxford hnwiiH, and are now widely distribute^ over tho Cnlt ed States ami Canada. Th--y are the largest and heaviest of the Iifiwn breeds. When lu wod t!«*sh the nuns should wel^h 2a0 to 2i~ pounds and the ewea from 2uo to pounds. The •ool Is ratiier eoar.-er than any other -"'"i About one in every ,"o of roiniii' ^,.itMl.fi'jb(»sr. suiprisltig of all. in ^taB?achus•'t!s there-'are IS' boy* to very girl in .eo!h £•. There are 11 tin es as many.- ol!ege .glr!s in obio as in Ma.^saeliiVsetts. nir pfr], an! onn In oaeh 20 of our t,nvx of coV wlil urtlclc-s were consumed. ... ... .' of the medium wool breeds and the as home, other.!. APPLE CULLS CAUSE LOSS *.*. I worse, you may have a sliVT? 1d"ri1' th.i will always bother you lu he i*v pui to haid work. ute at work, as thero is no animal that likes i-ompany better than a eeH.»a» a writer In Anierlean Cultivator. A they get oldi'r neu that thev have plenty of geo.l clover hay ati hrtKht oats to i'at. It Is well to have a littlo pneture near the ham and let them into tills when the mares aro at work Have this fenced ui:h good, woven wire, high enough mi they can not get th. tr heads over It. The pas true Hho'ilil he arranged ho they call into the ham to get away from the Mien. Leave tile I'over the oak box open, Ft1 'hey ran help themselves. Keep pall of water in the stall where they can tv uii it After iillle you can mix skim milk with th»» water later ^tve lie in elrar skim milk, but let ihrtm ha\^ what, water they want at all times Some rolls will take skim milk at once, but be careful and not nive them (no mu« to commence with, say two quarts at nrst, and as they j»et acr\iRtomed to It you ran Kiv»» them live or six quarts tuir.i »i lay. Thbi you can fend all winter, and they will go on to pasture In the j-prlnK in line shape. It they are «-nt lug oats and diliihin^ milk at wean iK time the re will he no setback, which always orrurs it' they are not. We mm to pell all of our Keldlngv before they nro seven years old When you Intend to pell 'our horses see that thev are In proper shi.po. They should be fat, as that what tlie market d«v mamls l-v» th.-m on ^ood lodesomn t'o«»d, ri-m can be t« to qulti* an cl ient. at 'he: time, with bran and 9 little oil meal ij ?i and Sell In N.itur.il St.i te. rl'.y .I'lHN' .1 TKN'NE.H 'i hf tuiiourii. of ii.on- lfj.1t 1 Hy lu'i-ediiiK the rU'ht horses, thos#. with weight and junli y. I know ot no class of htork that will lulu# bet ter returns for our lii^h priced fe»da rotisidor iiiK the amount «f labor ln« volve»|) than Kood diaft hov^*^. PURE BREED IS ESSENTIAL Good I ijtli vIvltiulH NN'ill ln^urd l*r«ii(i'niv With Ahanfti L'n lulltiiu: Cei iiiint OXFORD SHEEP VERY PR0UFIC \".-4 am ,y farrrt- ITH very year tbrnueh liirk of InK't'sst and l/ii.or of v.'jikins ii|i reiai fr ill r»ia'il« Is rnaihi the ko oilege this fall 111!) Makeup. I \Si .\'!lli:iJSiN In select Iuk a am I wo (dasses o» br« edlnft should bo avoided. Tho common scrub that has no Kood char acti-rlstlcs to tlx, and tho •'purehroil scrub" it lioul individuality, whoso purity (d breeding only gives him Ki'eater power |t wfuk ruin in tho flock. (lood Individuality, backed by several Kenoratinns of ood ancentry, will Insuro preptUencv with almost un (ailing certainly, hero the ewes aru suiiabbt and the manau^menL in cor roct. (Jreat attention shouhl be paid to the ram's K'-tmral contour. 1Mb struc ture shouhl Iju firm ami maMHlvn, with a broad, capacious breast, no dlspro* portionato length of le^s, ami wolb formed and fully developed ipmrterH, espeeialiy the hind quarters. Mis loin shouhl bo Hloul and well knit, his foaturoH bold ami masculine. A Arm and muscular neck is dcHtrahin a bold and courageous eyo and carrlaKo aro Indh-ailvo of Hplrlt and vlffor. Mis head should be lon^, but rather mnalJ and well mohiod. fleece Is ioavh r, weighing from 10 tx J'j poumis unwashed. Tho f»eo lrt usually an even dark j?ray or brown, with or without, a «ray spot, on the tip of the uoso. They are best adapted for lands furnishing pood pasture, aini do tiot suc/*r ed a« w«'i| under rango eou-lit.lons or on ru^^ed, broken pas tures. The ev.es aro v« ry proli/lc. triplets belnK riot uncommon. Tho iambs grow very rapidly and are of good form. The chb Phor fronting (f the breed Is that it is not as hardy presses, but. an hydraulic in'ichliej ei tract.s the very last possible drop of Juice to be obralm and leaves very little substaii'-e to be ihrown away. The first advantage r«dn"d hy wirk* :r| lng up unmarke!:\hle fruit. inUj cid'-r It Will Prove priifltnhlc to js ha. t, it is con verted Into a condensed uei'/.c II t» Out. I I .jsii'1 p«rtable form convenient for handling and r'oring. The second ob I je 1h to eojivert this valuable por tion of the crop' to a marketable commodity, v. hiehwoiihl otherwise bo wasted and los'., The cost, the tlmo or knovw'-d^'i of liiif iiicniiM to dispose di'-d isln-ln o!' iritu cidi.-r is of uriiiiHrki.-t.'ihlo iippli.-a ha.-. ri«'V«-r urily nominal hm tumpari wit.li tb! li,.,.ri r-stlmat.'ij, ''I lint In oii: of vaiu' tho Hi!'r. i'.s«-tf if proiji-rly th'i bit «ii«t"i on vvry faun wh'-ro 1 many apples nro a arid v,h. ri' hriii.s^d 111 haii'illn^ ar: iinp--rfectiy ». j|.-v -I ojk-i malri f.-atur.j of tin I'uriri. j»!th which would not worth thfi Kv.-n th.- oiciiaidist.:: ho Is IN ho corit of pankliiK, can bo utilized In this. imslni-Hs na a sjiei/lalfct ii.tist Huffer inamier and tin: orrhardist's revenuo n.oif or leas in liiw'rijl'lfi. larKoly .-nha»e-!. Tho rimximuin of As a j.«-r ci n'.. of rip" apples is juice sueeesHf il flnam-lal i-nterprlsea are as which sella for Kood p: io viiiK In applicable to the business of a practi Us natural Fta'.•/or a-i vinezar, it pay.s cal orchardist a.s to any other. The big to squeeze •-'«Ut this product little thiiiR-s must not lie overlooked throuKft a |ire.-js ii.-aeud o: .illov.inn it all the byp-rod': must be utilized, to w-vito I hun- handl'.:d. Api Ihat havo hi-cn I, too "n'l t-inarli-d up- to waste. 'for from them ia derived much oi' the There are many kinds of cider profit. i'' $ ift '{&• j.