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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1911)
n rnniMAim KIT T Q J 23 IN SOUTHWEST tost ruction Spread Through Kansas and Oklahoma. light Dead at Big Heart, and Evary Building Haed Schoolhouses Fall on Children. KaiiHiiH City. Mo., April lft. Twen- v three person are rcKrted dead, y itli lit li'HHt lOOjinjured, two towm radically swept away, scores of uildiiig demolished ami thousand of l 1 11 rrt ' worth of propertydumiigcd as ,, result of h tornado thitt raged in ansa unci Oklahoma today. TIk' torn in lo wait accompanied Iiy ..in, hail hih! lightning. Many build- ,gs were alruck ly lightning arid timed. Western MiitHouri wan visited by a un and luiil storm, liut thin section ,i nut in the main path of the storm. Telegraph and telephone wires wore ndcpsl useless in the worst stricken ction and it in probable that the rnidfto rciHirt of the death roll ami f i proH-rty damage will prove much cater t hun they now upM-nr. 1 lie tornado levied its greatest toll l 'dead lit Kit( Heart. Oklu., whirrs glit person were killed, ton injured ul almost every building in the town recked. Whiting, han., wan practically olf the map, 60 huililing he- blown down, III) eroii hurt and r.i. Iliivid Stone killed. At I'ow hiittan, Kan., a woman and child iTU killed. A high school building 'u wrecked D.-.kriilge, Run., a number of houses imaged and from 15 to 2i) jierson in-r.-d. At lliiiwntha, Kan., a Hrhoolhoutie i n blown down, nn 8-yenr-old hoy nVmcd Pclton killed and several build- atruck ly lightning. Several person are known to have en hurt at NYtuwaka, Kan. A child n killed at Manville, Kati. The Kansas end of the tornado irted near Whiting ami swept in a itheiisterly direction for a distance mi. re than .rl mi leu. In Kansas City the storm did little rimr;-. A few horse were killed ligtning and nine building atruck. e rain lasted alsiut un hour and wan ivy. Hail accompiuiiisl the atorm. Two more death were remrlrd 'in near Hiawatha late tonight, -raldinc Meiscnhcirncr, 10 Vein old, I a small child ofOti Mellott are victims. The Meienheillirr girl Sollht refuse Hi three companion in a country nt Ilmnse anil the nuiMing was i ked soon ufterward. The dead I'm eoiiipaiiion wi re injured. It is known how the Mellott child met death. Vurty persons seriously injured re taken to Tulsa in Mtoek car to .lit. The Midland Valley railroad roils ri ort four dead and over lui) nr. d. Many of the injured, it I leviil, will die and many more are igcrously hurt. SEPARATIONS COMPLKTE FOR TKACK NEGOTIATIONS Washington - Initial steps to bring lit peace in Mexico have heen tak here. I r. VilnpicZ (loiriiz, head the confidential agency of the revo lonists in the United State, an mced to the Associated Pros that hud rompleteil sjx-cial arrange nts fur expeditious telegraphic Kf mnunicat ion helween the camp of i ll in in Chihuahua and Washington. Assurances have heen (riven hy the I imrit ie concerneil that the mcs will have right of w ay over the xic, in telegraph line. Ir. Comcz' "age was addressed to Francisco I. idem in care of a friend in Chihua- i city. I'lie agent there of Dr. (oitnez lia ii aecoriled permiHion to pas "Ugh all line to execute hi mis- Oin. Famous Gun Roar Again. Agua I'rieta, Mox.-- Interesting in nniition ha heen received here re- 'nig to the movement of the "Hluo liistler" cannon, which is en route in Juarri to Ojinagu, where Jtlene 1 Jose Sanchez i prejiarintf to attack " hesieged Kisleral force of (leneral "pie. This cannon I one of 12 cap red hy the Federal force from the " Is at Valverde, N. M., during the merican civil war. ICecently the nnon wa stolen and taken aero line and turned over to the rehels, flio placed it in hiding. Sumter's Flag it Found, Lowell, Mas. The flag which flew 1 r Kurt Sumter, when it wa fired i Ho year ago, is thought to lie in KMseHHion of Mis Klizu ( iwley, this city. Misa ("owley nay that while in Charleston during the war. r brother Charlc. now dead, wa I'seriled with the llag and that it ha way remained in the ('owley fam- fr'. Her brother, Mi Cowley any, lintained that the llag was the one hich Major Anderson displayed. Hillman Qivea Bi'Bonof, Seal tic Clarence Pay ton Hillman, " niillinnaire real estate dealer con ''ted of using the mail to defraud tfid sentenced to nerve two and n half Jars in the Federal prison nt McNeill liaml and nay fine of If). 200. filed nd amounting to tUlS.OOO to gain Jn liberty pending an appeal. PATTON TO HELP MANKIND. "Special Service" to Be Wheat King's Guiding Star. Cliicago-- "SMciul Service" Is to be the guiding Mtar of Jume a Patten in the distribution of hi fortune for the benefit of Immunity during his lifetime. Mr. 1'atten ha deelansl that "a man should diKmn of great wealth for the benelit of the community," that "ajcial aervice is the one great thing in life," and ao he ha set about the diburemerit of his wealth and has given to the most appealing chari ties no less than $2,000,000 within the last six month. Half a million dollar was donated to the cause of medical reseurch in the "white llllltrile " An.. II...- I.. .. . - con tribution wa for the protection ami eoiii-Hiion oi mai neglecteil clus chIIciI by William I., liodme "the chil.l rn of the pathetic estate." ' A puMic park ha been providisl for in Fvurihton KIll.Hliliillul ui.l j i n extendisl Ui the Young Men's Chria- nan aHMociaiion lor enlargement or the coe of that institution in dealing with the young men of this ami ne. ceeding generations; generous assist- anev nun uwn auoniei lo tno cause or education in the Northwestern Uni versity and a largo sum given lo the Kvanston hosnilul ti.ui,la H... spoiiHes to the almost innumerable ap peal that have come to him from the widows, the orphans, the isKir and the distress ed. Mr. Putten'a Infum. irl..r.,uf In Iku tulKTCulosis investigation dates from the death of his brother from that disease. WOMAN MAYOR INSTALLED. She Says One of Sex Will Be Chief of Police-Ban on Pool Halls. Hunnewell, Kan. The first meeting of the city council of Hunnewell under ths new suirragist administration wa held Tuesday evening, Mrs. Klla Wil son taking her seat a mayor. After the old council had disposed of unfinished business, tiie new members organisci-d and the mayoress proceeded to leliver an informal inaugural ad dress. She sinted out conditions in Hunne well that ne.ilil rectifying and ex plained the hoM that her associates in the council would co-oja-rate with her in seeking to improve the standard of morals by reforming certain abuses. Mrs. Wilson's remarks were under stissl to be directed esM'cially toward the ssi halls, which Mr. Wilson lie lieve exert a corrupting intluerico up on young men. She want to put the institutions out of business with a high license tax. Mrs. Wilson said she would appoint Mrs. Kosa (Islsirne, defeatist candidate for silice judge, to the office of chief of (silice. Mrs. Oslsmie, it is under stissl, ha agreed to accept that office , provided she is given an assistant. The coiincilmen have not shown much warmth toward some of Mrs. Wilson's plan. One councilman went so far as to say that the council would not supsrt Mr. Wilson's apsintment and that there would be no license for the pool hall. BARS UP IN ASIA MINOR. Russia Opposes American Railroad Interests In Country. Pt. Petersburg That Russia is op ssed to American railway projects in Asia Minor i for the first time olli cially acknowledged in an interview which the editor of the Novoe Vremyn has had with the act ing minister of foreign affairs, M. Neratoir. The minister said Russia regarded the recent acquisition of a railroad outlet at Alexatidretta by Oermnny with indifference, as Alexatidretta is outside the direct sphere of Russian interests. On being asked why Russia, accent ing to resiits, hail intervenisl and in sisted that Turkey reject the Ameri can railroad project of securing Bn outlet at Mersina, the minister replied that the American proposals intro duced into Asia Minor an entirely new element, which not only considerably complicated the railroad problem, but affected the general political situation in which Russia was interested. Balloon Flight Failure. St. Iiuis -With only three sacks of ballast remaining out of 47 they enr riod when they left San Antonio, Tex., Lieutenant H. E. Honeywell and J. W. Tolland, of St. l.oui, landed 15 miles south of Little Rock, Ark., and gave up their attempt to lower the I.ahm balloon cup record. This is the third attempt within a year to lift the cup hy starting from San Antonio. Clif ford Harmon tried it in tho spring of HMO and landed in Arkansas. Febru ary last William Assman, of St. Iiuis, started, but landed in Missouri. Navy Gunners Marvels. San liego, Cal. According to a current reMit which is generally cred ited, the battleship South Dakota, whilo engaged with the California and Maryland in target practice oir this sirt, recently made a record with six inch guns that has hardly a parallel. Firing at five different targets nt a distance of 10,000 yards, the South Hakota, according to the resrt, made a record of HI hit out of US shot with her six-Inch gun. Bibles Conceal Crime. Chicago After the arrest of An drew Huktus, on a charge of counter feiting, Uited States secret service men found a counterfeiting plant for raising f 2 bills to f 20, hidden under a pile of bibles in Huktus' room. When arrested Huktus said hn was a bible salesman. In a case under the bibles was found a set of dies and tools, to gether with several altered bills. BRIEF REPORT OF TIIE DAILY WORK OF NATION'S LAWMAKERS Washington, April 14. The Can adian reciprocity bill introduced in the house yesterday was resrted favor ably to the house tislay by the new ways and means committee. The committee also pasaed favorably on the free list tun IT measure, but will not reiort until tomorrow. The Canadian reciprocity treaty bill was taken up first by thu committee, and, after a brief discussion, McCall, its ssnior in the 61st congress, moved that it be approved. This wus done without division. The free list bill, however, was not unanimously approved, the vote on it in the committee having been a strictly party vote, the Democrats favoring it and tho Republicans being solidly against it. 1 he Republican member, with Sereno Payne as sisikesman, de clared that the pnsised bill was hasty and ill-advised, that the measure had not been referred to the tariff board and that Chairman Underwood and his Democratic colleagues on the commit tee had not sufficient data to show what effect the changes would have. When tho house met. Underwood submitted the resirt of the commit tee. The reciprocity bill will be called up tomorrow for discussion. ()pssition to the reciprocity bill from the same Republicans who op posed it in the last sesion developi-d quickly. Dal.ell, of Pennsylvania, asked the privilege of filing a minor ity rert. The clause in the bill providing that the president continue negotiations with Canada to insure further recip rocal relations w ill not in any way jeopardize the bill itself, in the opin ion of political leaders of both parties. Underwood, of the ways and mean committee, McCall and President Taft himself, conferred as to the added clause before it was promised to incor (sirate it in the Underwood bill. Sec retary Knox was also consulted. It is rcsrted on good authority that the ways and means committee will offer a bill (tutting all woolen import ations on the free list. Senator Cummin bslay gave notice of a motion amending the henato rules so a to riKuire amendments to tariff bill to be germane to the schedule affected. A rule of similar inijsirt has been adopted by the house. Washington, Apri 11. The house of representatives, by a vote of 216 to Ifi, late today passed the Rucker reso lution promising a constitutional amendment for the direct election of United States senators. This i the first of the Democratic programme measures passed by the house. It went through without mod ification and with a sieed that brought protests from the Republicans. The resolution, as the house ap proved it, i in the form in which the Horah resolution wa rep .rted out of tho senate judiciary committee in the closing days of the last congress. Re publican opsisition to the Rucker re solution in the house wus based on the fact that it did not contain the changes afterwards made in the fight in the senate, which assured to congress con tinued control over elections in the several states. After six hours of debate, in which many demands were made for this change in the resolution, all but 15 Republicans voted for the resolution. The majority of them had stated dur ing the debate that they would supsrt the resolution because convinced the public wanted such a constitutional amendment submitted to the country as quickly as possible. Those who opssed the resolution on the final vote were: Republicans - - Cannon, Mann, Illi nois; Danfirth, Malby, New York; Dislds, Fordncy, McMorran, Michigan; Harris, Lawrence, McCall, Wilder, Massuchuesstes; Hinds. Maine,; Sul loway, New Hampshire; L'tter, Rhode Island. Democrats McDermott, Illinois. Fx-Speaker Cannon, Mann, the Re publican leader, and others of the Re publican who voted against the meas ure, declared that it form was such as to threaten the Federal government with the loss of control over senatorial election in the states, given to safe guard the integrity of these elections. They insisted, as did other Republi cans who ultimatey voted for the reso lution, that the direct election amend ment should be offered without any language lhat might be dangerous to the future congressional supervision of senatorial elections. The Republican insurgents, led by I.enroot and Cikmt, of Wisconsin, forced a record on the final 'passage of the resolution. The house voted overwhelmingly in favor of the meas ure, when S-aker Clark called for the vivn voce vote, but the insurgents demanded a roll call in order to put the house on record. Tariff Board Cannot Help. Washinton. April 14. Revision of the wool schedule of the Payne-Aldrich tariff law, accomplished as forming part of the program for the Demo cratic house of representatives, will have to be undertaken without the assistance of the tariff board. It wa announced today after the first full meeting of tho house commit'ee on ways and means that the tariff board is not yet in a position to furnish in formation on the wool schedule. Kenyon to Wnit Awhile. Washington W. S. Kenyon, Attor ney (leneral Wickersham's assistant, and senator elect from Iowa, will not qualify as a senator until the import ant anti-trust prosecutions, which he is now conducting, can be arranged without injury to the work. Washington, April 12. Farmers are to be won over by the Democrat to reciprocity with Canada ami inci dentally to the Democratic party by the placing of a number of articles which they consume on the free list. The first two measures to be offered in the house this session were intro duced today by Chairman Underwood, of the ways and means committee. They are the Canadian reciprocity bill and the free list bill. The former bill is identical with that passed at the last session except for a clause author izing the president to continue nego tiation for reciprocity on Canadian ariitic not coveri.ii oy me penning agreement. The free list bill com prise about 100 articles. When the Canadian reciprocity bill is called up Friday by Underwood there will be no effort to limit debate unless the minority demands un un reasonable time. It is the opinion of majority leaders that the minority should conclude whatever arguments there will be against the bill within two days. Probably not more than four days' debate will be given and it will be passed by a large majority in the house and be sent to the senate within a week. No amendments will be offered from the Democratic side. The free list bill, lo be called up af ter the passage of the reciprocity bill, is also a caucus measure and cannot be amendmed by the party in charge. Under the new rule no general tariff amendments can be offered by the minority because each amendment must be germane to some particuar item in the bill. Considerable debate is expected, but the Democratic lead ers expect both measures will be ready for the senate within two weeks. The articles designated for the free list would make a difference a com pared with the present duties and rev enue of less than $ 1,500,000. They are : Plows, harrows, headers, harvest ers, reapers, agricultural drill and planters, mowers, horse rakeJ, culti vators, threshing machine, cotton gin, farm wagons, farm carts and all other agricultural implements, in cluding repair parts. Ragging for cotton, gunny cloth and fabric suitable for baling cotton; burlap and bags for sacking agricul tural products, hoop band iron or steel for baling cotton ; wire for bal ing hay, straw or other agricultural products, grain leather, bu!T, split, rough or sole leather, bend or belting, leather, Issits and shoes, harness, sad dles and saddlery. Harbed wire fence, wire rods, wire strands or wire rope, wire woven or manufactured for wire fencing. Meats of all kinds, fresh, salted, pickled, dried, smoked, dressed or un dressed prepared or preserved in any manner; bacon, hams, shoulders, lard, lard compounds and lard substi tutes; sausage, buckwheat flour, corn meal, wheat and rye flour, bran, mid dling and other offals of grain, oat meal and rolled oat ami all prepared cereal foods; biscuits, bread, wafers and similar articles not sweetened ; timber hewn, sided or squared; round timber used for spars or building wharves; shingles, laths, fence posts, sawed boards, planks, deal and other lumber, rough or dressed, except elsiny, mahogany, rosewood and all other cabinet woods. Sewing machines and salt complete the free list. Washington, April 11. It required more than two hours in the house of representatives to elect its new com mittees. It was the first time in its history that committees had been elec ted. Kx-Speaker Cannon tauntid the Democrats with having approved as the Republican representatives on the various commitees practically the same men whom he, as soaker, had put on these committees in the last house. The Republicans charged the Democrats with gross unfairness in cutting down the minority member ship on the most important commit tees. Underwood, the Democratic leader, replied that the Democrats had based the proortionnte representation in committees strictly upon the Demo cratic majority in the house itself. "This is moreover," he said, "the first time a minority leader hail been permitted to name his committees and has had them adopted by the majority without dotting an 'i' or crossing a 't'." This statftnent was cheered loudly by the Democrats. Treaty Work Progresses. Washington - James Itryce, Rritish ambassador. Secretary of State Knox and Chandler Anderson, counsellor of the State department, held another long conference in regard to the pro posed arbitration treaty. Progress is being made in the negotiation of the convention, and the administration is still confident that the document will be completed in ample time for sub mission to Cie present session, for rat ideation. Northwet ternert Disappointed. Washington - Northwestern insur gents, with the exception of French, of Idaho, did not fare well in commit tee assignments and none but French is pleased with the committees given him. Lalferty, who made a strong fight to get on public lands, was placed on irrgation and on mileage. While irrigation is a fairly good com mittee for Western members, mileage has only perfunctory duties to perform. FARM m ORCHARD Soles and Instructions from Agricultural Collect and Exptrlmenl Stations of Oreaun and H'ashlnyton. Specially Suitable to Pacific Coast Conditions SEEDTIME AND HARVEST. H. V. Scuiiiler, Airromimwit. On-ron Agricultural ColleS". Corvallla. With such wonderful weather for the earliest plowing and seeding as only Oregon can offer every sower of seed is already looking forward with the highest expectations to a most prosperous harvest. Hut just a moment, friend! You remember well the scriptural warning "Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap." No prohecy ever uttered, perhaps, has received so uni versal acceptance from humanity in ail the ages as this, possibly because it is founded upon a most primal lit eral truth. From remote times man has been first of all a sower of seed and every recurring harvest in its dearth or in its plenitude has driven home the un alterable truth of this maxim. Yet the farmer of today, who of all men should give most heed to the literal accuracy of this text and its direct ap plication to his industry seems often more heedless of this first step toward a bountiful harvest than were his fore bears ages ago. For failure because of carelessness in the quality of the seed used, there seem little excuse nowadays. If "scientific agriculture" has done aught it has first of all increased the farmer's opportunity to secure crops of the highest quality, and repeatedly it has emphasized the need of so doing. Everywhere the state experiment stations and the federal agricultural authorities have eagerly extended the helping hand to aid the farmer in pro curing good seed, and year after year has the wisdom of these efforts been amply demonstrated. The farmer of Oregon seems less progressive in this matter than those of any other section of the country. Out of all of the samples of seed re ceived and tested at the cooperative seed testing laboratory at Lorvalhs last year only twenty per cent were sent in by Oregon farmers. let the need for most careful examination of seeds before purchase or sowing is constantly being demonstrated by the results of the work done in this seed testing laboratory. This need is evi dent especially in the grasses, clovers and alfalfa. ror example, in the test3 of alfalfa seed alone since Jan uary 1st of this year forty-two per cent of all samples examined by the seed experts contained dodder, and in sixty-one jer cent of this infected alfalfa, the dodder was the most dan gerous secies known to agriculture. One sample of alfalfa seed examined and rcorted only last week contained 15.1 per cent dodder. l et 1 per cent of dodder is sufficient to destroy the alfalfa crop. Alfalfa seed having 1 per cent of dodder would contain about 4.000 dodder seeds in every pound of alfalfa and seeded at the rate of 16 pounds of alfalfa per acre 400 dodder seeds would be sown on every square rod of the seed bed; enough under or dinary conditions to so thoroughly in fest the crop with the parasite as to destroy the alfalfa in a single season. Alfalfa is one of the most important crops in the state and in the North west. Dodder is a parasitic weed, the seed of which when sown with the alfalfa germinates in the ground. Af ter germination the slender tendrils of the dodder vine reaches out, fasten ujion and coil about the alfalfa stalk. The soil roots of the dodder then die and the Jest thereafter obtains its sustenance directly from the grownig tissues of the alfalfa plant, sapping it of life in a few weeks; Having des troyed the alfalfa plant the dodder vine blossoms and seeds most prolifi cally, the seed scattering upon the ground, quickly germinating and at tacking new alfalfa plants, thus rap idly spreading and ultimately destroy ing the crop, there being practically no remedy where the dodder once gets started. The only means of preventing in fection from this dangerous pest, the seed of which so closely resembles al falfa seed as not to be easily detected except by experts, and which cannot be separated from the alfalfa seed by any cleaning device now known is by the refusal of the buyer to purchase or sow alfalfa seed containing even a minute precentage of dodder seed. Free of charge.'the so! expert at the cooperative seed testing laboratory at Corvallis will examine and immediate ly roiort uKn any sample of alfalfa or other seed sent in by any farmer or seodman in Oregon or the Northwest. If free use were made of this labora tory there is little question that dod der in the alfalfa fields of the north west, and in the seed harvested there from, would be on the decrease in stead of increase as it is now. Nor is it in dangerous impurities that inferior see l is constantly being discovered. Using alfalfa as a fur ther illustration, germination tests of all the samples received at the labora tory since January 1st of this year sho-ved the following: 2e mr cent of nampli irormintx! flo-livl per cent l " " " so-no .s " " " 70-SII " 14 " " MO-T0 " ID " " " HMW " Yet good alfalfa seed should ger minate ninety-five per cent or over. That good seed can be secured, how ever, is shown by the fact that 20 per cent of the samples tested had a satis factory germinating power were good, live seed. The farmer must search for such, however. Using alfalfa as an illustration of what is even more common in the grasses and similar seed, it appears perfectly evident, that both in purity and viability, the bulk of the seed now being sown by farmers in the North west is decidedly inferior, and with absolute certainty this prophesies the harvest. The grass seed samples tested show even greater need of minute examina tion before purchase of seed. So far this year only two samples of Red Top have been received that were up to s'andard in purity. Two-thirds of all the Orchard Grass lamp'ei examined were below tne standard of purity that it is possible to obtain. The best sample of Kentucky blue grass exam ined contained 61 per cent of pure seed, while the standard of purity for this species is 80 per cent. The stand ard of germination for Red clover is 95 per cent, yet the average germina tion of the samples so far examined by the laboratory this year is 73 per cent. To illustrate how dangerous it may be to sow seed containing a small percentage of impurities, the exact analysis of a sample of what was sold for a mixture of timothy and alsike is given as follows : Timothy, 66 per cent; alsike clover, 14 per cent, other cultivated grass seeds, 5 percent; tra.sh, 9 per cent; foreign seeds, 6 per cent. Although the amount of foreign seeds is only 6 per cent, and may pos sibly be considered of no consequence, yet a list of the weed seed contained in this 6 per cent of foreign seeds fol lows : Plantain, Cinquefoil, Black-seeded plantain, mouse-ear chickweed, sorrel, pepper grass, evening primrose, witch grass, shepherd's purse, small crab grass, night-flowering catchfly, sedge, slender spike rush, lamb's quarters, amaranth, brown-eyed Susan, woolly panicum, crab grass, May weed, dod der, syperus, small-seeded false flax. hedge mustard, nerved manna grass, green foxtail, white vervain, curled dock, sporobolus sp., three-seeded mercury, forked catchfly, sleepy catchfly, yellow wood sorrel, sinuate- leaved evening primrose, Canada this tle, horsemint, lyespus sp., rush. Total weeds seeds per pound of sam ple, 13,500. Although the farmer received only eighty-five cents' worth of good seed for every dollar he paid out, yet, when the weed seeds he has sown on his farm are considered, it is not hard to realize how enormously unprofitable his seeding will prove at harvest time. It is this seeding of the land to worth less plants and noxious weeds that is causing the farmers of the Northwest the loss of thousands of dollars an nually from the inferior crop produced and the labor wasted. Nor can the dishonesty of the seedsmen in the Northwest be considered the cause of this enormous annual waste. The seedsmen of this region are, for the most part, trying to do their best, but if the farmer accepts and pays for in ferior seed as readily as for the best. little encouragement is given to the honest seedsman to search out seed of high quality and refuse to sell any thing else. Only by insisting upon pure, viable seed will the farmer secure, and final ly force the seedsman to carry nothing else. Farmer and seedsman alike have at their immediate service, free of all cost, the co-oerative seed test ing laboratory at Corvallis, which has but the one purpose, that of aiding both dealer and grower in securing and sowing high-quality seed. Hence, my friend, look well to your seeding, so that in the golden harvest time your present expectations may not le discounted. Hegin at the be ginning. Use naught but seed of quality, pure and of high vitality, and as logically as effect follows cause, so certainly will come to you at harvest the opportunity to reap in profit that which you have sown with precaution. Tale of a Bird. A little four-year-old boy living In ft country town disturbed and took some eggs from under a sitting ben belonging to a neighbor. The neigh bor complained to the boy's mother, who later called her boy to her and began to reprove him, when he broke la with the question: "Who told you?" The mother said: "A little bird told me. Now. tell me, how many eggs did you take?" The little boy. stammering, said: -Well! Well! Why didn't the bird tell you the whole of It?" NOTES OF THE SHEEPFOLD. The greatest profit Is realized by doing things right. . Sheep are nature's dependable aids In restoring and increasing soil fer tlllty. Phcep will thrive neither with wet feet or with damp, soggy fleeces. The lamb that cashes In the most mnnev for Ita owner 1m nrtt a nrniliii. I of poverty. ' Circumvent the large feed bills by producing better roughage and grata on your own farms. To allow feeders to eat all the corn they enn stow away after reaching; the fnrm la disastrous. A little flock well tended on the small farm well tilled will rarely dies appoint the good hepherd. , Throwing a Fit. "What Is the athlete In that piece of jUtuary doing V , "Throwing the discus. , "Wist sort of fit was thatr '