It -tf HER LACK OF FAITH ".UMB.1 Young Bride Jealous of Own Note Found In Husband's Pocket. By CLARISSA MACKIE. (Copyright, 1SH. by McClure Newspaper Young Mrs. Dewey took her hus band s brown coat and sat down In the sunny window to sew on a missing button. Antoinette Dewey had been married only three months and she still be lieved Jim to bo without a fault un less it might be the minor one of twisting his coat buttons when he was talking busily. "This Is the third time I've sewed on this blessed button," smiled An toinette as she snipped off the thread. At that moment her hand brushed the pocket of the coat and something crackled. "I do wonder If he has forgotten to mall my letter to Edith! I forgot to ask him and he Is so absent mind ed. It's funny she hasn't answered If" Antoinette's slim fingers bad gone down Into the Inner breast pocket of the brown coat. They brought up a half a dozen letters, a railroad time table and a leather card case. She picked out the letter to Edith Delano and actually gave the brown coat a pinch as she tossed It on a chair. "I must telephone to her at once. What will she think of me?" Antoinette sat down before the tele phone and pulled the instrument to ward her. While she waited for a re sponse to her call, she stacked the other letters on the desk. Just as Mrs. Delano's voice came thrilling over the wire, Antoinette, her eyes Idly scanning the package of let ters she had taken from her hus band's coat, noticed that the top one was without en enevlope. It was hastily written In pencil on a tttiy sheet of paper and the signature was folded underneath. The writing was rubbed and blurred as If the note had been carried nround In Jim's pocket. "The Idea!" breathed Antoinette quickly. Then she had to talk to her friend and when apologies had been prof fered and accepted and some girlish liosslp exchanged, Antoinette rang off and slowly picked up the little note. For a long time she sat there with It In her hand She shrank from opening tl-e sheet and rending the words but she was Jltrs wife and pile ought to know! Kor It was a woman's writing and that fnrt ex plained how Antoinette lewey put honor aside and deliberately read the note. It. was tnntnllzlnBly short for one who wanted lo know! "IVari'Ht: The d:iys are 60 hours long hlle yon are sway. Come buck oun to Your Own!" "The hnrhnr horrid creature!" snhhed Antoinette, after awhile "The lmld thing to write like that to a married man' I never would have believed It of Jim oh, Jlra, Jim Jim!" Antoinette flung herself down on the couch and allowed her bitter tenrs to suak into the brown coat. After awhile she arose and rmnved the traces of tenrs. tfhe stared at the re flection of her wan. white face and laid down the hand-mirror with a gasp of dismay. A few minutes later she put on her hat and a thick veil. 8he went to thw rortier drug store and when she returned she set forth on her dressing table a number of little Jars and bottles. Antoinette had never used rouge In her life but now to hide the rav ages cf grief, she restored her com plexion to Its usual brilliancy and the highly satisfactory result lent an equally arttncisl expression of happl ness to her face. She put on a becom ing frock of pale blue linen and plied her hair on top of her head. When Jim Dewey reached home that night he found a pretty little wife waiting for hlin. After his first quirk kiss Jim drew tick and stared hard at Antoinette; his look roldly Impersonal and bis manner stiff. "What has happened?" ha asked quickly. "He has a guilty ronsclenre!" thought Antlnnette. as she sat down hastily for fear her trembling knees Would give any. "What did von expect to happen?" she retorted lightly, Jim looked at tier closely and his mouth grew sitlkv. "Nothing." he said curtly and lth that word the con versation languished It was Mdeims n,e;il to both of them. Antoinette, scarcely touched her food ami Jim refused dessert It was ki tnvnrlte pudding, tun. Even Nora nutiiiil Hint something was wrong i.tid tried to patch up tlio qnr rel In her own Mi.d hearted ay. for, when the meal u over and she was washing dl-le. m the, kitchen they could bear her strong soprano sing ing lustily. -Tls Only iAm Can hutnea Broken Heart." Jim soltled down tn roj ry. ring paper nr .) Antoinette picked up some sowing, hut her fini-ers trembled and her eyes tilled ,h (PBr, gh( waa angry at herself r this display of emotion. All the women she hsd read about In fiction or seen on (he stage were I marvels of calmness when confronted with the proofs of a faithless husband Tall and pale and cold and perfect xnlstress of herself aven while the lata bare the secrets of Jim's heart thus would Antoinette have appeared if she had had her way. On the contrary she was small and piquant looking Jim called ber a "blacked-eyed chickadee"-most of the time. Now, she wondered what he called that other woman the one who confidently signed herself "Your Own! Jim was stirring restlessly In his chair. Antoinette could see the back of his head with Its heavy crop of brown hair. She could close her eyes and see his regular features, hazel eyes, straight black brows and finely chiseled lips. A little sob broke from her at the recollection that Jim was not all hers never had been! Jim turned quickly one might have suggested that he bad been listening for some sound from the little form In the willow chair. "What Is the matter, Antoinette?" he asked quietly. Antoinette lifted tragical dark eyes to his and placed on the table be tween them the blurred little noto she had found In his pocket. "This Is the matter," she said un evenly. "I found it In your pocket when I was mending your brown coat don't look so disgusted. I really read It I'm glad I did! For It has opened my eyes to your deception!" "Deception?" echoed Jim, jumping up and towering over his Bmall wife. "What harm Is there " "Harm?" Interrupted Antoinette angrily, "Harm what harm would there be If you discovered I was car rying a love letter from some other man next to my heart!" From some other man? What would I do? Why, why, I suppose I'd punch his head," he said dazedly. "Hut what has that got to with it? For the love of Mike, Chlckle. tell mo how you could raise a rumpus over that harmless little note, eh? Notice, I'm not saying anything about your rum maging through my pockets!" Harmless little note. Indeed!" flared back Antoinette. "She called you her 'dearest' she said the days were "sixty hours long' and she signed herself "Your Own." Tell, me, James Dewey, who la this woman?" Jim's lips trembled In a smile, stif fened sternly, and his eyes were quite hard when he asked: "Don't you really know who wrote that note. Antoinette?" "How should I know?" she retorted, am sure It cannot be one of my iViends nny way, It Is such a com mon looking, grubby note; If I'm go ing to have a rlvnl I " She broke down and sobbed brokenly. A gi'eat tenderness came Into Jim's eyes. He hnd never known Antoinette to bo ji-nlous before nnd ho was touched by her grief. Ho held the note before her eyes. Antoinette d:ibhd her handkerchief on her tear-wot face and It came back streaked with black and red and white !!ko the Kaiser's war flag. All In a flush Jim comprehended the reason for the rouged cheeks and lips and the dark pencil. An toinette had1 been crying all day over this note! "Chlckle. what do you want me to do?" he asked finally, "Destroy thut note and promise me never to see her again," was Aa tolnettc's quick reply. I can t do that, dear," ho said gently. "In the first place the girl who wrote that note was my first sweetheart and sTij will be my Inst one; I carry It around In my pocket oecause I like to look at It occasion ally and remember that she loves me as much today as she did when that waa written. Antoinette was as coldly composed now as she could have wished, only It was funny that her heart should feel so dead! "Very well," sha said listlessly. "I can go away." "Chlckle," said Jim again, "do you really mean to say that you don't rec ognize that note?" "I only read It once." "Well, read It again, word for word, read the address at the top. It 4s al most obliterated now but read It. The envelope la locked up la tor desk." Antoinette held the ragged note close to the lamp and -re-read the penciled words. A puzzled look came Into her face. "I can't remember anything about it waa she some one I knew T" she asked at last. "Dear, you wrote It yourself! cried Jim excitedly. "Don't you remember that time when you were stopping at Bea Sands with your mothor? We had Just became engaged and we quar reled over a necktie 1 was wearing? I went back to town and you wrote me this darling noto and I've kept it ever since!" And then, Antoinette vaguely re membered tho hastily scrawled note. No wonder she had forgotten It In the whirl of her short, happy engage ment to Jim! There was only one thing to do and Antoinette did It She laid her head on Jim's broad shoulder and begged forgiveness for her lack of faith A Future In Art "You say you are educating your bo for a theatrical career?" "Yes." "An actor or producer?" "No. I want him to become prosper ous as well as prominent. I am going to make a ticket speculator of him." A Ctntle Optimist. "Who Is your favorite poet?" "I don't know bis nam. He's th weather expert who writes the talf and warmer' predictions." FARM m ORCHARD Notes and Instructions from Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations of Oregon and Washington. Specially Suitable to Pacific Coast Conditions Uses and Care of the Loganberry. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor vallis The more the loganberry is studied tho more wonderful its quali ties appear. Possibly its greatest single asset is its remarkable keeping qualities. Who ever heard of a can of spoiled loganberries? Of course the careless and unsanitary handling given all fruit by some people would spoil anything, but if such treatment has resulted in producing bad cans or bottles of loganberries the case has not been reported. urieu loganberries likewise have ""vor. in all these qualities it is su been on the market in limited auanti- perior to grape juice." ties for several years ahd no loss from spoiled berries has been reported here, either by the dealers or consumers. It Handling Loganberry Crop. is not only very resistant to the action of germs of decay, but appears not to De inviting to the common by-products pests. Jams, preserves and jellies of most fruits are generally expected to dis play good keeping qualities, so that a great deal is expected of the logan berry In these forms. Nor has this expectation ever been disappointed, so far as reports show. Unlike the fruits that have to be heavily sugared and greatly concentrated by boiling, these loganberry products keep with a mini mum of both. Hence the natural and distinctive loganberry flavors are pre served, offering the much-to-be-desired something different to discriminat - l ng tastes. Training the Loganberry Vines. Most wonderful of all this berrv's fine qualities is the self-nreservinir quality as shown in bottled juices. the severe test of commercia fit ness has been given all the foregoing products with the single exception of loganberry juices, and they have met the test in a most satisfactory manner. In addition to the commercial tests, the far more critical test of the labor atory has been applied to the products, including the juices, by the horticul tural department of the Agricultural college. These tesU have established beyond question tho fact that the berry has very unusual Preservative qualities. Concerning these qualities Professor Lewis, who conducted the tests, says: "The loganberry has come to .lav and in it I believe that Oregon haa one of its greatest horticultural assets. There are but few states that can grow, good loganberries, and the demand for this berry is going to be tremendous. The output will doubtless be increased very greatly and I firmly believe the time will come when we shall shin out of Oregon ten million dollars worth of this fruit yearly. "It is a splendid berrv to work nn Into by-products by drvinir. canning and manufacturing into juices. These products will, I believe, be unsurpassed by any Iwrry grown. It also serves a a basis for a long list of products, val uable In confections, ice cream and general city trade. "VS e have conducted numerous ex periments during tho nasi ver In drying, canning and juice-making with this berry, ami hope to bo able soon to give out the 'information we have gathered in handling this crop. Lucky. There was only a thin partition be tween (he parlor and the taproom of the suburban hostelry, so that I could not help hearing what was perhaps a confidence about a certain Hill's terrl- ble condition the previous day. "Well, to cut tho long storv short." said the voice, which was husky, prob ably with emotion, "I had to set 'im on a doorstep and leave 'Irrl there. E must 'a fell asleep and Ma at dropped on to t' footpath, an' would ver hm. Ileva It T when woke up there was 11 penct In III" . 'I am very enthusiastic over the possibilities of the loganberry juice: more enthusiastic now than I have ever been before. The resultB of our experiments with four or five of the products are results that we are proud oi. necenuv we made un some nf th : preserved juice for drinkine-. earhnn. ! "ted t and gave it out to a number j f our friends to sample and test, Almost invariably they told us it was , tne best temperance beverage they had i ever tasted. It had a wonderful color, a delightful aroma and a very pleasant I A strong association of loganberry ' growers has recently been formed, I and a serious attempt will be made to escape the pitfalls and hidden dangers that have attended the launching of too other great fruit industries of the Northwest. "No slump" sums up the ambition or these growers and Profes' sor Lewis for the progress of this n dustry. The association expects to accom. plish this result largely by establishing rigiu sianaaras or products which all growers must adhere to in order to obtain the other advantages of the association. Every box of berries. every can, every package of dried fruit and every bottle of juice that goes out oi the stuto is to be of first quality. The fine preserving Qualities makes , this ambitious program a little easier 0f accomplishment with the Imnnhnrm n -J than with any other berry, so that growers fully expect to see the policy strictly enforced. All Inferior goods will be kept at home and uaed on the farm or else made into suitable by products. Another means of managing the ra&idly growing industry is a bureau of statistics. The acreage and produc tion or each year s crop will be ascer tained as nearly as may be, and pro vision made for marketing just what is grown. Extensive advertising will be carried on in order to widon the market and cooperate with the agon' lea that handle the crops. While the area of growing logan berries on an extensive commercial scale has been somewhat limited to certain district of the state, and doubtless always will be, these areas are extending. Experiments are being carried on In several new dis tricts, some of which, it is hoped, will show the necessary conditions for a large and profitable Industry. a HaiaaiiiHa(aMwaiis J. W. Cook has just paid In London $4000, a sum covering debts from which he was freed In the bankruptcy court 19 years ago. The payment was not the result of a windfall, but repre sented many years' savings. The Italian ministry of education will spend 115,000,0000 for new public school buildings In the next four years. At the Minnesota school of agricul ture a course of sewing for men is to be Included in the curriculum. There aro only 20 person In France with a yearly Income of more than $1,000,000. Too Much for Him. A Methodist bishop tells of a con versation he once had with a Wyoming man touching certain difficulties of the tatter's religious tenet. "Bishop," said this naive westerner, "I do not refuse to believe the story of the ark. I ran accept the ark'a great size, Its odd shape and the vast number of animals It contained, but when 1 am asked to believe that the children of Israel carried this unwlcld ly thing for 40 years In the wilderness I must confess that my faith breaks down." Harpers' Monthly. V - - - 1 Transport EMOTE as it Is from the tour y 1st trail, the "Middle East" Is a rpetnn hut 111 11a Itnnwn tn ,, Americans, Each season scores or trtpperB get as rar as Damascus, touch at scorching Aden's sandswept coast, or scurry by train across upper India on the beaten path "around the world." They swarm Into Constantinople, too, and overflow down the shores of the Mediterranean, seeking the levantlne delights of Smyrna, Beirut and holy Jerusalem. Uut Ilagdad, Dabylon and historic Nlnevah in fact the whole of Turkish Arabia and most of Persia Is still terra Incognita to even the most hard ened globe-trotters. Few travelers, Indeed, aside from those who are forced by duty to make the arduous trip, ever penetrate this Isolate though Interesting region. Shut off from the outalde world by burning deserts and tho hostile Per sian gulf the middle East the birth place of nations reflects to this day the simple, primitive life of centuries ago, uninfluenced by modern men. About Ilagdad the desert Arabs live as in Abraham's nomad age, observ ing the same rites and customs de scribed In the Old Testament Now the average American knows In a general way that Mesopotamia, Persia and Afghanistan are some where off In the scrambled geography of southern Asia. Hut let him be sud denly told to proceed, say to Hagdad, Heheran or Kabul and he probably wouldn't know Just which way to start. It was so with me when I wss ordered to Hagdad, writes Fred erick Slmplch in Loa Angeles Times, On the Map. It took tho tourlut agency almost a week to "route" me. The ticket ven dor at the desk so often an omnis cient person goaded to sullen silence by myriads of fatuous questions, hon estty admitted his Ignorance when named my destination. "here Ib Hagdad?" be pleaded, in a voice that spoke his shame. I proudly showed him, on tho ma but I did not tell him how long I bad hunted for it myself locked in my room with an atlas of the world! Be tween us we discovered that freight for Hagdad and Persia Is sent through tin Suez mostly via Bombay and then across the Persian gulf and up the winding Tigris. So It was my ticket read via Na pies, Aden, Colombo, Bombay, Maskat, Bassorah, etc. Hut to the very last the agent was dubious. He was loath to admit tbat Bagdad waa really town, and not a clgarotte, a dead hero or a strange disease. Ills last words were, "If you ever get there, let me know!" At Naples the company'! agent ex changed my ticket for another bigger than the first a sort of poster effect printed In four languages, and on which Bagdad waa spelled with an "h" In the middle. And by the time the Lutzow had slipped through the Suet, and over Pharaoh's bones In the Red sea and down past "Old Aden, bumped above," I waa a marked man on board. I wss known as "that man who la going to Hagdad." At Colombo a Portuguese sailor got aigllmpse of my trunk, with "Bagdad painted on IU end. He crossed himself nervously, and hurried Into drink ing place run by a Malay. Later, at the t'isUe Face hotel, a Slngalese man garbed In woman's clothes, selling In dlan sapphires made In Paris, told me his brether had saved rupees 11 years that ha might visit Bagdad. He had changed his mind at last, however, and bought a moving picture show. Hera la Colombo, Ilngdnd seemed fully as flir away as It had In New York. But I owned a ticket which laid I wltfit ride all tho way and llirco days nut of Colombo I landed In reeklnr, mildewed Bombay, the mar- let-place of the East. I was glad when the red faced dark" of lhi British-India Stentnshln totnpnny'a ofllie cautiously admitted Mth frugal use of words, that a steam r would sail "up the gulf" next morn ing. From the reluctant way he let the Information slip, I felt that I must bo robbing the firm of an Important lecret. The clerk was not sura at what hour the Kola would sail; I rould find ml at the dork "Really, rou know, yoo. Americans are deuced Inquisitive!" Finally I coaxed him to Ihe counter and Induced him to tell lie a ticket On the Kola'i nnsoourad deck Cart, Sonny camped a crowd I shall never forget, nor probably see the like of again. There were Sikhs, Slngalese, Arabs, Afghans, Bagdaddles, Burmese and Jews. There were a few women, too, with rings in their noses and fancy open-work tatoolng that took the place of stockings. It was a rare assort ment of race, religion, language, color and clotheB. The men carried knives; once there was a noisy row, and the British officers went In and disarmed the belligerents not a simple task and kept their knives away from them till the voyage was over. The night of the trouble, one man disappeared; he fell overboard, his companions said. Off to one side of the mass of men that littered the deck I saw a small band of Shia Musselmans bound for the shrines near Bagdad. They went through the movements of their prayers, kneeling and touching their foreheads to the deck, over and over again, and murmuring to themselves In the chant. Everyone seemed to have food and cooking-pots; some car ried a live sheep, a coop of chickens, or a skin or dates. The Hindus got their food ready off In one corner, where It might not be "defiled" by contact with unbelievers. All around the deck this moving mass of hu manity spread out, lying, sitting, squatting, eating, steering, Binoking, swearing, praying, singing, gambling with grensy Turkish cards and up from it all came more new and pus zllhg fumes to mix with the amazing stench of the Kola. Barrsn, Dusty Town. . Two days out of Bombay sailing northward along the flnt, malarial In dian coast, past the Gulf of Cutch, we anchored at Karri-hen, tho most Im portant town in northwest India. From here the railway takes off to distant Quetta, on the northwest frontier; from here England flirts with the Ameer of Afghanistan safe In his forbidden retreat at Kabul or keeps her ear to the ground to find out what Russia is doing on the north. Karachec Itself Is a barren, dusty town of barracks, freight sheds and somber clay buildings. From the roof of one of the latter flew the American flag, and the consul, a genial gentle- " man from Tennessee, made mo wel come, l-ong trains of camels, tied head to tall, filed through the wide streets bearing bales of goods for Baluchistan, tho great province to the northwest. Karacheo Is tho "boom town" of India. It has grown like our Seattle. Railroads and the export of grain have made It a city In a few years' time. At Karachee the Kola took on mall for various British consuls up the gulf. Two boxes of Ice, for the parboiled Englishmen at Maskat, were also taken on. Soon after sunset we aailed out to sea, making due west for Mas kat and the Persian gulf "The Gulf," sailors call It, and swear grimly. Time Wanted. Wanted Time. Lady who spends ber mornings at the dressmaker's, her afternoons at bridge and ber evealoga at the theater would like to get Into communication with some efficiency expert who will be able to tell her how she can get more time. She re quires time to get acquainted with ber children, familiarize herself with a few of the most essential details of housekeeping. Improve her mind by a little calm and serious reflection and develop an Interest In an occa sional subject of Importance, kfn.r bo time heretofore not employed, and positively must not Interfere with present activities. Money Is no ob ject whatsoever, and the highest price win giauiy dc paid for the requisite In formation. Address Exclusive, cor ner Rambler and Climber tr.i. Manhattan. Life. Circulation of the Blood. The circulation of tho blood throueh tha lungs was known to Servetus. a Spanish physician, In 1G63. Cesal. plnus published an account of th general circulation, of which ha had some confusing Ideas, and his treatise was later on added to by others In 16G9. The great Barpl of Venlca dls. covered the valves which serve for the circulation; but there Is no doubt tbat the real honor of positive discov ery of the circulation of the blood be longs to William Harvey, between 1161 and 1S2I. Tha Ideas of tha an. clenta were too confused to be called uisoovsry, or even a theory.