THE- BABY. Th little itottering baby feet, With faltering Steps and slow. With pattering echoes soft and sweet, Into my heart they go; They also go in grimy plays, In muddy pools and dusty ways. Then thro' the house In trackf ul maze, They wander to and fro. The baby hands that clasp my neck With touches dear to me. Are the fame hands that smash and wreck The Inkstand foul to see; They pound the mirror with a cane; They rend the manuscript in twain; Widespread destruction they ordain In wasteful Jubilee. The dreamy murmuring voice, That coos its little tune. That makes my listening heart rejoice, Liko birds in leafy June, Can wake at midnight dark and still, And all the air with howling fill That splits the ear with echoes shrill, Like cornets out of tune. II. J. Burdette. NOW I LAY ME DOWN TO SLEEP. The fire upon the hearth is low, And there is stillness everywhere; Like trebled spirits here and there The firelight shadows fluttering go. And as the shadows 'round me creep, A chlldiEh treble breaks the gloom. And softly from a further room Comee: "Now I lay me down to sleep." And, somehow, with that little prayer And that sweat treble in my ears, Sly thought goes back to distant years And lingers with a dear one there. And as I hear the child's "amen," My mother's face comes back to me, Couched by her side I seem to be, And mother holds my hands again. Oh! for an hour in that dear place! Oh! for the peace of that dear time! Oh! for that childish trust tutollme! Oh! for a glimpse of mother's face! Yet, as the shadows 'round me creep, I do not seem to be alone Sweet magic of that treble tone And "Now I lay me down to sleep." Eugene Field. A Lost Shoe. ARS SWANSON had blue and white hair and a downy mustache. He was broad- shouldered, hard-handed and the low shoes that encased bis feet were No. 10's. His garb was coarse and his language what little of the English he had mastered was "hard," as the expression goes. Lars had not been reared in luxury. His father had been a day laborer, and lived in a little house tn the outskirts of a village in the oil country. His mother had worked, too, when she could find em ployment, and Lars was forced out to shift for hirmelf at an early age. When ho reached his twentieth year, he had saved enough money to buy his passage to America In the steerage of an ocean liner. Stockholm was the first great city he had ever seen. New York was larger, and was full of very strange life. , When he landed in Castle Garden, he was lest in the Babel of tongues that greeted his ears. Grad u&lly he worked westward, and at last reached Chicago. He stopped and again sought work. Chicago was his Mecca, He drifted into the lower channels of life. He could- not have done other wise. One Sunday he passed by the open door of a mission, heard the singing and paused. A kindly man asked him In and he entered, taking a seat near the door. Presiding at the organ was a dark-eyed young woman, neatly dressed and sweet-faced. When she sang. It was in full tones which in spired ooi.f.dence in the wavering vote es of the congregation. The congrega tion? It was made up of just such men as Lars. A few there were who wore black clothes, high collars and white ties. When the singing was over one of these men spoke, vigorously. earnestly, in the first flush of college enthusiasm. Lars did not understand the sermon. He did not understand the words of the song that followed the sermon, but he caught the in splratlon and watched the side face of the woman at the organ. Then there was a little intermission, and the Sun daty school convened. The organist stepped down from the platform, took her position among the benches and began her work in the infant class. Iars was escorted .to a seat in the row; over whSch) he presided. She talked to him and he stammered out his replies in broken English, but showed that he had considerable knowledge of the Bible. "You must come again next Sun day," she said. He followed her to the door and saw her enter a carriage, saw a coachman in livery mount the box and drive away. Lars followed the carriage to Michigan bculevard, and lost sight of it in a tangle of tally-hos and fash ionable turnouts. The next Sunday he was early at the mission, though it was raining hard and the streets were muddy. He reared (the organist would not come. She came. Again 'he wathched when she lead the singing, and he attempted to Join in the sorg. When the classes wre called he took his position in the organist's row, and sat in front of her. The lesson was the story of Christ and the leper. "He touched. the leper wid made him whole." the organist said, and as she said it, she leaned ftrward, and with her delicate, jeweled fingers, touched the red hand of Lars. The blood mounted to his cheeks, and Burned against his forehead and tnrobbed against every pore in his body. Could he understand? He un derstood, though he could not say so. His tongue clave to the roof of his month. He felt that every eye was upon him. Then the singing came. and he walked out into the sooty air and rain. The organist stopped to talk to one of, the young ministers. When she came out, she tripped lightly across the grimy plank, and, with a flounce of skirts was in the carriage. A dainty rubber over-shoe was left, in the mud at the edge of the pavement. Lars saw It and ran to t pick it up for her, He was too late. Lars carried the shoe home anl washed it clean l mud, kissed it ami thrust it into his pocket a treasure; a token. That night it was beneath pillow. war out of work. The land- ook pcfseeeton of bis bundle and hfan Into the streets on Thurs- he day was clear and bright ra early morning until the noon place, seeking employment. fund him cn Michigan boule- le thought of the organist. It toils street that she had been' drive!.' The broad pavements Were tempting, and he strode on and on, southward, until he came to the rail lead trasks at Sixteenth street. I There was a cry of alarm from the g- toman. A worn in in a pony-chaise wis about to drive upon the tracks in front of a train. Lars saw her face nd knew her. Pushing past half a dozen men who were dazed by the danger, he sprang at the horse's head, siopped him, swung him about, and f.'ll against the engine as it passed. "When he vias picked up, blood Was trickling frc-m a gash in his forehead r nd staining his white hair crimson, and his arm bent under him as he was roiled to one side by the crushing thrust of the locomotive. The woman n-hom he had rescued pushed her way Through the crowd that was gathering nulckly. The policeman who did duty :..ear the crossing was taking the l.ames of the witnesses to the accident. T'ae woman tore open the oat of the unfortunate man who had saved h.?r life, and was fanning him with his Hat when ehe saw the toe of a rubber rhoe protruding from 'his pocket. She irew the rubber forth, recognized it, I hen wiped the blood from the still face before her. It was her Sunday school scholar. She felt for his pulse. It was still. AMERICA IX COREA. Our Citizens Hold Some of the Best Offices There. It is an interesting fact, not genar ally known, that American influence in Corea overshadows that of all other countries, even of China and Japan, and that American I . C .. l,nU nvtA WSy3 1 of the most impor tant government of fices. The most prominent and in terestl n g figure among these Ameri cans is General Charles W. Le Gen dre, who during the O. W. LHOKNDEM. civil war commanded a New York reg iment. Soon after the war he was sent to Amoy, as consul general, and there distinguished himself as a diplo matist. In 1867 he went to Japan, where he arrived just at the beginning of the great civil war, in which he took part, and it is believed his influ ence had much to do with the advance ment of Japan. Four or five years ago the general began to take great inter est in the complicated Corean ques tion, and he left Japan to go to Seoul as vice minister of the home affairs of Corea. Ever since then he has been struggling to keep Corea free from China, Japan and Russia, and must be taking a most active part in ihe events now taking place. MARIA DE FELICE. She Has Been Exiled to Mores by Premier Crispi. Maria de Felice, the daughter of the Italian ex-Dtputy de Felice, is but fourteen years of age and is a polit ical exile. She was born in Can tan ia, and in 1892 delivered her first speech be fore the labor fed erations. Her fath er wis recently sen tenced to eighteen years imprisonment at Palermo for lead Ing a revolt against the novernmenit. The MABIA DB FELICE, jau&hter at once tcok up her father's doctrines and has Jacomle ;a soolaillat oraitoat Premier Crispi has exiled her to Mores, a little town of 2,400 inhabitants in the island of Sardinia, to keep her quiet. MULEY ABDUL-AZIZ. The New Sultan's Accession to the Morocco Throne. The accession of the new sultan, Abdul-Aziz, to the throne of Morocco, which for some time was rather doubtful, seems now to be an accom plished fact. Mu ley Mohammed, the elder brother of the new ruler, at first protested against the accession of Abdul-Aziz, who, by the late sultan had been appointed his successor, but has UI.TAI? abdtjicAZIZ now submitted, as have the other pretenders to the throne. Muley Abdul-Aziz, although very young, is very energetic, well ed ucated, an excellent horseman, while his brother is a. fanatic ' Mussulman who detests all Europeans and Chris tians. COUNTESS WACHTMEISTER. She Is Now in This Country A Theosophist. Constance, the countess of Wacht- meister, now. in this country, is one of the best known representatives of theosophy, ranking in importance with W. Q. Judge, Annie Besant and H. S. Olcott. She has en joyed the intimate friendship of Mme. Blavatsky, the high priestess of the faith. She was born in Florence, Italy, in 1838, the daughter of COTOTESS wacht- Marquis de Bourbel. meisteb. The fle Bourbels wtre among the ancient French, and settled in Normandy in 936. The count ess was merried in 1863 to her cousin, Count Wachtmeister, who died in 1871. the was attracted to theosophy in 1881 and since that time has been unflaglng in her zeal for the advancement of the society. She has been a vegetarian for fourteen years, and is described as being of medium height, with blond hair, blue eyes and a singularly win ning manner. CHAMPION SWIMMER. James L McCusker is the champion American swimmer, who has gone to England to swim against Joey Nut tall, who is the world's champion. The men will prob ably meet in Sep tember for a mile swim for the inter national champion ship and a stake of $3,000. McCusker is a ixwerf ully made young man, 24 years old, 5 feet 9 inches in (height, J AS. JU X'rUSKKB. and at present weighs ISO pounds. He was born in county Down, Ireland, but came to this country when four yearn of age. His powers of endurance are wonderful, and the contest with Nut tall promises to be the greatest swim ming match that ha ever taken place. WW'?7" Short Story of German Military Life It Is Believed to Be from the Emperor's Pen. The Hero a Spendthrift Officer, a Typfc W hich the Kaiser Thinks Is Too Numerous. As a strategist and sportsman, artist and soldier, preacher and virtuoso, af- ter-dlinner speaker and debater, as architect, composer, stage manager, censor, diplomatist in all these var ious roles, the readers of the World know and have watched the Kaiser, who is as versatile, If not as crafty. as his great ancestor, Frederick the Only, the name given to "Old Fritz" by his fjithful Germans. At this present moment his majesty is about to pose before his subjects as a short story writer, a writer Of no ' mean merits, either. A book now in the press, "Tales, Legends, and) Dreams," the title page of which bears, the name of Count Eulenberg as au-j thor, contains, among other things, a remarkable narrative, said to be from William's pen, that cannot fail to make a deep impression. It deals with the topic, so much in evidence on the continent, and especially in Germany, "Luxury among Army Officers," which the kaiser once before discussed in a general order three years ago. Members of the court and Berlin so ciety accrediting to the emperor the au thorship of tha story. "A Letter," in the book fathered by Count Eulenberg, give as one of the reasons, the fact that his majesty is almost a fanatic on the question of reforming his offi cers' corps. He discusses it on all occasions, and an Incident, such as re lated in "A Letter," has actually hap pened in the artillery regiment of which the kaiser is colonel. Count Eulenberg Is the German Am bassador at the court of Vienna. He belongs to the ancient nobility, and for many years has betn 'the kaiser's close personal friend. William calls him "My Votaire." He stands in the same relation to the emperor's literary and musical efforts as the French philoso pher did to those of Frederick the Great, with this difference, however, that the kaiser allows his co-worker a fair share, :r even more of the 'honors jointly earned. It will be remembered that the kaiser's musical composition, recently made ''nown, mentions the count as the author of the text. Eulenberg is spending his vacation with his majesty on the Hohenzollern, bound for North cape. The ecene of the story "A Letter," is laid in a fashionable Berlin restau rant, name not given, but easily rec ognized as Borcharts, on Charlotten strasse. It is, by the w,ay, the ortly public supper room ever frequented by the , kaiser. His majesty was breakfasted at Borcharts some time ago by the officers of the guarde du corps, and when later on he learned, by accident, of the enormous cost of the banquet, hj became very much enraged, saying It was small wonder his officers were never a penny above a baggar if they paid so extravagantly for food and drink. Here follows the story: "A LETTER." "In a restaurant not a thousand paces from the Linden, the most pa latial thoroughfare of any European city, with the monumental Branden burg gate at one end, and at the other the venerable Hohetizollern Schloss, there assarrtbled the other evening a gay company of army officers, young men and old, most of them In uniform and all distinguished for a certain air of refinement, the result of birth and education. The resort is known as one of the most aristocratic in the city, probably because the prices charged by the proprietor are high enough to frighten away ordinary citizens, who earn what they spend, without ' re course to patrimony, found by more fortunate persons at the side of their cradle. "Is it right to style them more for tunate, or extol their good luck, as it were? The question has been asked again and again, philosophers have de nied and reasserted it self-maxle men despise those born with a silver spoon in their mouth, as the saying Is. Who shall decide what, after all, is a matter of individuality? A strong mind is not easily swayed by good fortune, a weak one often perishes under a small load of adversities. "The two foremost Prussian mon archs, the Great Elector and Fred' erick the Only, spent their youth in comparative penury; they were de prived of the benefits that usually fall to the heir of the crown, but these cir cumstances, which most of their con temporaries, styled misfortune, only tended to strengthen their characters, to increase their vigilance, to make them most expert students of human nature. And when they finally entered upon their inheritance, they did so with a will to defend what was theirs, to assert their rights. "I am not wandering off my subject. The remarks, though apparently forced eminently apply to the party of gentle men we meet at the gilded resort I am about to describe. It has none of the outside glamour by which similar establishments attract customers; its location in a building bearing a strong resemblance to a private residence guards against unwelcome intruders and insures exclusiveness. There are no show windows, no tempting plac ards or signs; the door keeper in fault less evening dress receives agreeable guests with a low bow, and frowns others away. I heard a story the other day in one of the military ca sinos to the effect that a certain saloon-keeper in New York selects his German waiters among the staff offi cers emigrated to tha strange country in preference to men below the rank of captain. In similar style the proprie tor of these snapper rooms distinguishes between men' of the aristocratic and tha nouveaux riches classes. I do not credit him, however, with disbelief in the Roman Emperor Vespasian's non olet theory; he would skin a negro if it were not for losing his feudal cus tomers. " 'Feudal' is the word that most ac curately describes the three gentlemen grouped with others of their Ilk around the festive boprd Jn the evening when the incident to be related harmony! ' they were 'Junkers,' a. nasty title. Which self -respecting men would scorn ' to adopt, if its true significance were known. The word really implies a; description of the plaintive yelping of a dog? under the master's whip. The young esquires of knightly times, it appears, were soundjy thrashed at their riding -and fencing let-sons, and! the common people, who quite natur ally rejoiced at the fact, nicknamed them the 'junkers,' or yelpers. The ' term has stuck to the lower nobility, and is regarded as one of honor by many who ought to know better, but the very people who should be best vitoJ In history generally make the Worst mistakes when it comes to ex-! plain ini facts and fancies of bygone time.-: "Of the three junkers, two wore the kaiser uniform, the older gentleman was in civilian's dress, an assessor, one of many seasons. After killing ten 'semesters' at various universities, this nofcleman entered the service of his country and has since been rejected I at two official examinations, held to establish his claim for a position on the bench. Being tolerably well off by inheritance, he cares little for advance ment in his profession and is abso lutely adamantean to the dishonor at taching to his repeated failures to prove himself a worthy official. He has become gray in a subaltern po sition, but bears his head high in the air, disdaining the acquaintance of his superiors, who are not privileged to place the word von' In front of their names. "A young artillery officer in fatigue uniform, who has just arisen to walk off a bit of itipsiness, Is his cousin. Both speculate upon retiring to country seats when the relatives from whom they have expectations make ready to depart this life. If these gentlemen ever do pray, it is for the hurried dis solution of the worthy party who 'in sists on keeping them out of their pat rimony.' The third in the group of friends is Lieut. Freiherr von X., now twenty-four years old, blond and pink, well grown, with the face of a lady killer. He Is known among his com rades as 'The Little Baron,' in society as 'the Little Don Juan.' "If I were not afriad of Increasing one of che Frelherr's chief faults, the mother of all others with him, as in the case of so many young officers vanity I would designate him the type of the 'improvident, reckless and conscienceless military man,' to which the kai3?r warranted luxury as prac ticed in the army. "Baron von X. has practically not a pfennig aside from his pay, but man ages to conceal this fact, under cover of a great name. His father was a colonel in the Huf sars, who squandered his fortune and left a widow, this son, and two daughters depending upon a moderate pension. The young ladles, by the grxce of the king, were ad mitted into the home for indigent no-bte-iWomeru The privy purse also equipped the young lieutenant for his present position, and provides him oc casionally with a little cash in an swer to his petitions. "Yesterday 'he received 100 marks from thi.t source to replenish his ward robe, and thjs is the way he lives up to his promise: " 'I had a stormy interview with my tailor this morning, he told his com panions in confidence. "The scoundrel of a commoner actually attempted to refuse credit to a baron of the ancient empire. I let him have the length of my tongue and eventually he felt so cheap as to be quasi compelled to send around the new uniform I wear.' The trio laughed boisterously and clinked glasses. " 'Confusion to obstreperous credit ors, baron!' "The Freiherr, not to be outdone, an swered the toast with a sneering 'Death jta Jtrotublesomei relatives! Somebody asked across the table how the Frelherr's immediate superior, Capt. D., was 'behaving.' " 'Quite ungentlemanly, as usual, in the service, but all right in private,' answered the baron, in an undertone, and added loudly, 'I should have in vited him to this love feast; It is not every day that my tenants are punc tual.' "The conversation then turned upon horse, dancers, and good living, sub jects which Interested all present, and for which, everybody confessed having a soft spot in his heart. Reputations were demolished, the names of fair women blasted by innuendoes and side thrusts. Who cares? If perchance, a friend or relative of the abused per son be present, let him say so, and we will give ample satisfaction, arms In hand. "The head waiter tiptoed to the baron's chair and respectfully an nounced that his lordship's bursche (man) craved an audience. 'Let him come in.' The busche entered with a military step, resounding through the gorgeous dining-hall. He brought a pair of white kid gloves, a clean hand kerchief and a boquet of roses in tissue paper. " 'Call a cab and place these things Inside,' said the baron; 'I hope those flowers won't spoil while 'Cheri' is de lighting the patrons of the winter garden. And say. plant yourself on the box next the coachman, for I may not be completely au fait by the time wa get through here.' "And as the bursche still remained glued to the spot, he added. Impatient ly, 'Is there anything else, thou block head?' " 'A your command, Herr Lieuten ant; a letter from Frau Baroness.' "The assessor cried, 'Pardon my in descretlor, my deaT Freiherr, but has madamolselle already assumed the family name and title?' "Von X., tearing the letter from the bursche's hand, said very coldly, after scanning the address, 'From my moth er, If you pltase., "A poor envelope, inscribed with ink of a rusty hue, in an unsteady hand, j As the lieutenant opened it, two five mark bills fell upon the floor. The Freiherr blushed violently, fearing' that his boon companions might have : observed the paltry inclosure.- He ' would rather go penniless for a week j than incur their contempt. j "The waiter rushed forward to pickj up the notes, but the Freiherr gave ! him a withering look that made the man desist. Then crushing his moth er's letter in his left hand and placing his foot over the notes, he cried, 'Twq magnums, waiter! i "The assessor smote the table before him and said, 'Bravo, dear Freiherr, i you are the right man to keep up one's spirits!' "'I congratulate "Cheri,"' laughed the other officer. "The next morning the scrubwoman found two wine-stained five-mark notes on the floor, which she kept, and a let ter, which she turned over to George, the head waiter, who intends selling it to the assessor. The letter reads as follows: I " 'My dear son : : 1 have done as you requested and hopy you will not find fault with your poor old mother, as you are in the habit of doing.- I sold poor papa's foreign decorations, as far as they had not been returned, and also pawned hb sword of honor, given all, around. If heel of toe, -the inside him by the officers of his regiment or outside of the foot, were too high after the war of 186fc I raised 300 or too low, the relationship of the leg marks which I would have sent you to the limb was disturbed in fact the forthwith, had not the doctor, the land- whole mechanism of the limb was lord, the grocer and others got wind of thrown otit of gear. Vi equal pres the affaiA They fairly beseiged me sure, however slightly occasioned, until I paid off my Indebtedness to ' would surely end in serious damage to them. Twenty marks Is all I saved the limb, and among frequent results out of the wreck, and half of that of such treatment is permanent in- amount I enclose, trusting in God. that you will not despise the small gift. " Ten marks is not much in Berlin, but, my dearly beloved son, when spending it, think that your poor old mother manages to live three whole days on such "pittance," as once before you called this amount. " 'Do not tell me, pray, that I should have sold the sword, instead of pawn ing it. I could hot bear doing it. It would make me feel as If your poor father was cursing me from the heav ens. " 'And, my son, you will not grudge your mother her freeness of debt ? It is the first time in many years that I can look my trades people in the face. And I need their good will, for without it I should starve, considering that I send you one-half of my pension. " 'But what a price I paid for this momentary bappiress! Ah. I must not think of it, though, as a matter of fact, I acted only upon your advice, and you are the head of the family. " 'Pray forgive me, my dearly be loved son, whom God preserve, and be embraced by your poor old MOTHER.' "Beloved son, Whom God may pre serve! To with such a son!" DAIRY NTES. It Is claimed that when cows calve in the fall there is less danger of milk fever. Make a superior quality of butter and put your brand on it. Keep tip your quality and customers will mul tiply. It is vry hard to overdo the making of firat-class butter. The demand for such goods is generally greater than the supply. A writer oxpref&es the opinion that it is often the case, that the flavor in the milk which is attributed to the eating of some kind of weed in the pastures is really due to uncleanliness in some particular. The most successful dairymen are most careful as to the condition in which the young animals are to be kept which are to be used in the dairy when they become old enough for being thus used, says a Canadian dairyman. One who realizes the importance of cleanliness in handlig milk says that milk should always be strained through a fine wire strainer and then through a cloth. A single trial of the cloth strainer will convince anyone that its use is Imperatively necessary in order to have all impurities removed. Four thicknesses of butter cloth fastened to the under side of the wire strainer by a in ring which slips over it, hold ing it in place, Is a very satisfactory strainer. The Jersey Bulletin 'believes that fat can be fed into milk, but does not be lieve that it can be done suddenly, or to the same degree In all breeds, or to the same degree In all cows of the same breed. It is of necessity a vory slow process. In some cows it is scarcely percept.ble during one period of lac tation. But it believes also that the fat making capacity can be developed to a small extent in the very poorest cows, giving time, patience, skill and plenty of rich food. STOCK NOTES. While looking for pedigree don't dis regard individual merit. Bad fences very frequently are the cause of stock be3oming breach y, Keep an eye on the fences between the pastures and the corn fields. The best pork as well as the cheap est, says an experienced hog raiser, is that made from hogs that have never been wintered. Quick growth and early maturity are essential in se curing the greatst profit. Here Is the list of foods with which British mutton growers vary the ra tions of sheep on pasture: Turnips, rutabagas, mangolds, vetch, rape, cab bage, beans, peas. Unseed cake, barley, and wheat bran. An exchange tells of a farmer who fed a flock of 200 sheep for five months in the winter on straw, and one and one-half bushels of oats every evening, at a total cost of $70. The fleece eas ily paid for the keep of the flock. The straw was turned into manure. An experienced stockman advises to never buy show sheep at big fairs or away because they are fat, big and fancy. Remember they have been ru Ined to make them so, so far as any usefulness as breeders is concerned. No farmer can ever hold them in the condition they are found when able to win in the show ring. A prominent horse breeder is of the opinion that the sooner our farmers realize the faots connected with horse breeding, the principle one of which is that ordinary and commonly bred an imals are bound to have a less and less value each year, the better it will be for them financially. The trend in breeding should always be towards a higher standard, and so compensate for the deterioration in prices. AGRICULTURAL NOTES. If hay is stacked outdoors, the stacks should be built on good rail founda tion?. We are gradually tending In the di rection of intensive rather than exten sive agriculture. Keep the wagons, buggies, cultiva tors, mowers, etc., well oiled, and see that they are under shelter when not In use. A successful farnfer ) thinks the proper time to commence cutting hay is as nearly as possible at the period of flowering. All ruminating animals d. better on hay cut at that time, but horses seem to prefer it made from grass more advanced. Make the hay for horses last. Have you an old rail fence occupying ground which has' not produced you anything for years but briars and hor nets nests? What loads of potatoes you might raise from it if you would but turn It under. You have been paying taxes on it all tho while. Stop the leaks; Btop the leaks. The Indiana Farmer says: Stable manures covered with loam or plaster will retain their nitrogen and keep in better condition for spreading on the field than In any other way. Much is lost by exposure in all kinds of weath er. Both the ammonia and nitrogen cf manure may be easily lost by such ex posure. ... POINTS ON SHOEING. An English veterinarian,' while speaking of shoeing horses, said that the great est care was .necessary, to shoe the horse so that the relative po sition of the foot to the leg In their normal state should be maintained. I The bearing: of he shoe should be level 1 jury to the coffin bone. Contraction', of the heel, he maintained, was not an active disease, .but a passive condi tion due to the horse easing his feet so as to minimize the pain felt at his heels due to bad shoeing. He had lit- tie faith in mechanical arrangements for widening contracted heels. "Shoe the horse," he remarked, "so that the bearing surface is properly maintained at the heel, and expansion will follow as a natural consequence." PROFITABLE POULTRY RAISING Mr. George Shepard writes a very timely paper on this subject, and touches particularly upon those points of interest to the beginner. In the winter time, with proper care, , he says, hens of the popular breeds will net a handsome profit from egtfs. if well cared for. In the morning a warm feed is desirable and should con sist of oatp, barley, meal vith a little bran and boiled potatoes and scraps well mixed; the more varied Ihe bet ter; while in Lie middle of the day wheat and buckwheat scattered among dry slraw should be given. Scattering it amon- the chart ana straw causes the hens l work to se cure the kernels, which affords them exercise and tends to work off that fatty substance that, if allowed to ac cumulate, would be apt to soon cause some disease to appear or else would make them too fat to lay. At night whole Corn should be given. By feed ing whole com at night the hen will be able to endure the cold nignts oet ter, as the crop will be well filled the entire night, as it is very slow to di gest. At all times of the year fresn water should be at their disposal. Water al lowed to remain in a dish all night becomes very foul and is very dan gerous for hens to drink. Cabbage and appls are much sought after by poultry, when fed upon corn, as is also coal ashes or gravel. Ground bone and oyster shells are excellent for lay ing hens, as they contain many ele ments required in making egg shells. Poultry, like other creatures, are subject to various diseases, and when once the flock is attacked nearly the whole breed dies before the remedy can be found or discovered. The so-called chicken-cholera is a disease that in seldom found to attack a llock, although it has been suppos-d to be always present In some locali ties. Whn once it attacks a flock it kills in a few hours, and the best rem edy is to remove the fowls to another place and apply the ax as soon as the birds show any symptoms. The most prevalent disease is called thu roup, and is much dreaded by poultrymen. The weaker fowls are more apt to have this disease, as it comes from catching cold. Fowls ex posed to dfampness in cold weather and allowed to roost where there is a draft are good subjects for the roup. At first the disease is confined to the head, but soon spreads to the lungs, and if not helped before this the bird should be killed and buried deep. The gapes, which attack young chickens, are very troublesome in the early spring and often destroy whol-; broods. My theory for the cause used to be that over-feeding of meal dis eased the crop, and the worms in the throat were the result of this disorder; but from what I have read and also learned from conversation with thos-' who have given the closest attention to the disease, I am satisfied that it cymes from exposure to the cold, u'.inip earth and unclean coops thot thu mother hen is kept in. Cleanliness and a warm, dry place for them to roost in, is a safe preventive; and as for a cure I always lost all I ever doc tored, so I never prescribe or admin ister to a sick hen or chicken. I am well satisfied that this in dustry is like any other that we have Krausse Bros. - City Shoe Store, ARE Leaders in Latest Styles and Lowest Prices FO 1 1 BOOTS HND SH06S YOU CAN SELECT Ladies', Misses' and Children's Fine Shoes And Slippers from the Finest and Best Selected Stock Ever Brought to Town. All Kinds of Repairing Done at Reasonable Rates. W. WRIGHT, Manager, - - Corvallis, Oregon. PIONEER BHKERY -AN! COFFEE HODES & HALL, Plain and Fancy Confections--lce Cream. CIGARS:: "OUR SILVER CHAMPION," "BELMONT." GENERAL ARTHUR," and a full line of Smokers' Articles. Come in when hungry and get a lunch any hour of the day. E. B. HORNING'S Grocery, Little BARGAIN HOUSE. AT THIS STORE you can procure at all times Choice Groceries, fresh from the markets, at prices defying competition. I have just received a fresh supply of Spices and Flavoring Extracts A GOOD and Invite you to call and purchase and everything In my line. E. B. to attend to. If you do not love tha business it is useless for - you to at tempt to make a flock of hens profit able. Just like that of a flock of sheep, or a herd of cows, a fin.? stable of horses or a yard of swine. Two neighbors can take an equal number of sheep under similar condi tions, and one in three years' time will have realized a good profit and will still have a flock that is double the value what they were at the time at which he became the purchaser, while the other will be about "run out" of them, and what, few he has will be worthless. If your farm and buildings are not suited for. the rais ing and maintaining of sheep, why, just leave them alone. And the same with cattle. Three good milch cows will make more butter than five poor ones, and you can figure the work and cost of feed you save yourself. A good team will do you more work with less grain than a poor team:; and with swine well, we have all learned about them. You probably know some neigh bor who, after feeding a cribful of corn in the fall to his fattening hogs. has only got them in shape to run a good race, while you, by having a well-bred kind, were unable to drive them from the pen on account of being too fat, and that from the sbrted corn. The same condition exists in poul try. A well-bred or pure-bred hen is healthy, strong and vigorous and not apt to become attacked with the many diseases that are common among poultry. From them you can expect to get an abundance of eggs, a healthy chicken, and a profitable income. To have a flock of fowls of this descrip tion does not require as much labor and expense as one without experience would think for. But whatever kind you keep, bear in- mind that the secret of success is to keep only well-bred poultry. JAPAN'S NEW MINISTER. Kentaro Keneko, Japan's new min ister to the United States, was edu cated at Harvard college. In 1871 when Prince Ko matsu visited Chi cago, just after the great fire, Keneko was one of the brightest members of the royal Jap's suit. Soon after ward Keneko took, the cnllee-iate Cfliirait . . t I , . J C was graduated with KSCTAiio XSKEKOh honors. He subse quently studied for several years in London, and on the continent of Eu rope. In 1891. he n appeared in Chi cug't with a commissi. -n from his gov ernment to report upc, i the prospects of the approaching World's Colum bian exposition, and the elaborate ex hibits from Japan was largely due to his efforts. He has filled the impor tant posts of secretary of the 'louse of peers, the senate of Japan, and assist ant minister of agriculture and com merce. FOR THE ENGINEERS. Prof. De Valson Wood Is the newly elected president of the Society for the Promotion of Engi neering , Education, which held its first meeting in Brook lyn from the 20th to the 23d of this month. This society is the outcome of the Interesting engi neering congress held at Chicago du ring the World's fair. It is designed to include members de valson wood, from all branches of engineering, civil, mechanical, min ing, electrical, sanitary, etc. The in structors in nearly all the schools of the country have joined the- society. Only upon recommendation df the council is any person other than those who have held responsible positions in the work of engineering instruction eligible to membership. AT - SALOON. Proprietors. for use in preparing DINNER, Glassware, China ware. Fruits, i Nuts , HORNING. SAW i