i-'-- ; w-i i TV A ' ' ' 1 ' ' O ' I ' i O 4 U M M Si dl - t h:e .:V.Wo.rid's, WorEsers. A '.V li, -m AT 4 1 Y7l prvo0 bj. ai t . fisherman who -take tribute of ! tli " Le In'; high rUtltude . ' : ' poorer paid for hit labors than ti th a- was lit any otbr catling tn the world, i But qnc a flsbnnan,alwkys a fisherman-' until otie day, with --the return of the fleet to " th hoijj i port, "when all tha Tillage li crowd-; - lu at I ha wharves, and tha tides are In and tha fa rlnaj wind la on ahore, some schooner . in tha llo shows Ha colors at half mast for ' th lifeless body that ' somewhere in the i ' wastes ot' chill seas drifts chart lea toward a 1' . port thai never may be reached. la valui thl harvest by th sea fishermen mounts t. ten of million of dollar every year. Tti or -thousand f men know no ''other meant of llvelihood.(and to th great mass of tri em the dangers of the deep are as common pa ic as th probability, of death In any other 1 orm In any otheV walk of life. In ' , toe grisslov veteran ot ice naumg port there 1 a certain contempt for the shore and It - monotony. I On shore there la beat and cold, wet and tfrl ; Sunday and th sit other days v of th week. He may bavajrpont 10,000 days and night m t aea. but In Its pulsing tides. It ibimmerlng horlaons. Its " pboaphoreecent deeps. It Arowntng-anlsts.Jtg storm, and ' wrath. noj calm are mysteries which he 1 nver bopto sound. . , ; .. ... ....... - g) ..-., '.-v., -r ,.; . . Do NuctH lor Welfur of World. J-T ii"-" "taiot-aiMatiierjtoiio view, the aea fiihermen colitrWUH rZiUZ i- -hatever flln Mrt th. fit. th welfarcff most civilised nation., "Wher a nation ltt doeanothavlUftaherles,lti " ' . - - -- m larpaiy 10 iiai inuu.ii j a, ivrvign. anoree. Tb drfed co and halibut the dried herrfng'T and bloater, this' sardine and tb saTted mac" erei ar Known wnerever civuisansn nas tra- posed th breakfast table, and In many of these countries these flah nroduots ,are V I adapted In m4rial way to tb support of If religious forms and InstltuUons., Th cod- I i fish of tha Newfoundland coasts.; for tln- ataaoe. Is known and valued tn almost vry Roman CathoHe'natlon In th world. " But- tol th flaherman who- goes 'down. to th ea In his schooner craft, beaten br, the . nom4 , ; , , . . some cf them weighing 800 pound. . It la no winds, and tide.' and Storm, pelted by rain, , of all the fishing countries of the gtob. th ' small job In a rough sea to take on of the ' and snow, and akiet. scouting In hi dancing dominion of Canada is In th lead In th "i monter aboard, ven ' after It ha bee "i punt and dory, lonely, eating bl . " salt magnitude andvalu of her fisheries. 8h . clubbet Into seeming submission, and many -horse," reeking bf T the fishy methv "d"Taa 5,d00 mile of Atlantlo coast fishing. f,3-f dory spilled its crew Into the sea P " scorning that fooli which come to his lines mtiea, ofjt on tb Pacific coast, and within their efforts to do so. A month may be re aod neta fresh from the eea. be Is a fcerolo .bc,orders are Rl.ooo sqoaramilea of water ' quired to fill b chooner of th fleet; two - .u.k hm.. .MiiiMfenMi , - -linnre-r-rttia-vwhaf -wttlnniaa4 th, KAalaVr- uawv twv . not dwarf, i 17. ' ; ' - Blmpl minded, finsusplclous, gentle In his powerfulnesa, an easy prey to th grasping landsman, who so frequently strips him and sends bun to sea again because of th stress of his "povertV, th American type Is not to be ' fa differentiated from big European brothers. Mi Whether American. British, Scandinavian, l Danish, or Putch, tha fisherman fs a product 7 1 of hi environment; and his environment Is J such as makes th weakl)ng impossible t I . I survive, whir it Is a-developer of th strong. ! I Dritbsh' Bt arfl Irfah Wort Paid. i fjui ot in ib airennm ui v.w- ! teK"bOtllawnir. bl knowledge ana ;rMt 'nd it i Jadgment. separaxea iroranis nome anu !"t Wend lor -week, and even moo th at a 77 t r a ' ' 1 - a? aT I ' 11 A NTnri7 flT aSI ITi I T H ITUV VOflTl flflTnA S Jl IlCWivi T ZaVWf AlAilt AilW VfAIlUUUlV alMV Vi9 v F you read th dallr newspaper, ssth I average -American does, 'yon probably -have read aorl ot; theJ! good thing that occasionally crop up in th great . "' and crooked gam of bor racing.' Often a, not these "(good things" ar not good.. -Half of. the. time they fall to win out This is the story of a good thing that was " good," per the schedule arranged by th men who bet on the, race, and of th consequence ,-nindpany tb consequences. ' - s . . It ti. mostly tb atory of on man. . Hi rbrht name may not be used, for this s is . will y. you traa' atory and- b la still living, so b vt Smith lo thl story. Vtd th story, whodellght . in: having a.luii oet on to races" oocailooally.T Perhaps K will Interest jrou.ilt;may;get yputo thinkings Then yon will sorely see-that it aoean i pay m ganiDie even ttiyou win.v a.ven n mar - Chat Wcostrno1ni!--i Bmhhllre out on th west sld in Chi- I "cagoJ; ,Up to -lw year ago hs .was a near a model young man a on win nna anywner In thl. day and age.' He never. drank toex - eeaa. never smoked clgarets. never dissipated in any way. wa entirely honest and " at tended, to hi business tnat 01 cierung in.a grocery tore. ' 80 well did . h attend tended to hi business "that of clerking to busines. and model wer his Habits. that even on th small salary of a ator clerk be saved up enough to et himself up ' la tb business. -.,1.', ;;"."'..:'" . ,. It had been a long, bard, uphill climb for "Smith. H began' work early, with'few prospect and with a mother and a younger - stater dependent upon him. . M staia wita one employer from th day b began to work . until he went into business for himself, and . wbea opened bl own store he took with Mm many of the customer, who had com . tto know him axd Ilk bim at theold place. , O, n wa a mooet tor n anrrma" ( , ma td puttern after Bmltn wa-up to two . year ago. . - .. ' . ',It wa thea that be got bl first "good n m MmuI rf l,ta mt ... tn him. nna" IOJi, 1 v . . ' - , , 'of the kind of friend whcom;to you and i tin off "good thing" and how up' after- ( wssdi If th good thing win out.' '' , " .Smith et 2 la a west aide poolroom and ' twercy minute later was paid 43 for th TrtiiertiateTTjiaTTie BmltW breath away, the audden and big re- turns. li hid been accustomed t hsvlng I Vitag money invested for weeks and month at a time before anything cam from Krand Uhen h eldom received over 10 per cent , met on th total investment And her hi ,. .money' had been multiplied by twenty-one befor'e he could hav smoked a cigar. . . t..Then raJD Uie.jiuesuon-Uiai cmeainTpror(0 evrtamy to tn man wno wins on a nore ravcv tur iti, . .... . of' working. . . ;. ' ' . Smith fell into th way that are followed all th tlm by a good number of young men in thl country. - H became an " easy bettor first .The tb system playing " flashed it lure to him and oon b was an Inveterat victim ot th pony habit .Week after week, month after month, Bmltn would have, a littl bet jm the races. He wasn't a heavy , player, only . a few dollar a day, ao he lasted longer than do moat young men of moderate incom who tag up tb ruin- . '.'' , - ----'- -r-l mi ' : - j-. . .X-.,. . . .j Jt' t" j. , By Mollis Vv Jlj icld Jim. AndlTig his hardship, th routine of every day and his danger matter of course, this figure among tji world's worker has . only a plttanc for all of these. With bis . , taOO.a year ha I better paid In Great Brlt ' ' tin than anywhere else in th world, per-. baps, Just as th Irish fliherman, with his .average of 30 a year, la on of the poorest . The fog and tha liner thee are tha twin paid of them alL v - . i ' danger of all danger to the "'.banks fuvh 4, Taking Great BrIUIn and Ireland. as an' erman, who, sleeping or waking, must hav example of th value. of fish food, too.' liiuiiM mow ipii m in uniiw mnfoom with ft proverbial beef ating Englllh- -. man." the per capita consumption of fish ana nen w iory pounan oi nan o iuo pouna of flesh food. Of the. nationalities which make an industry of fishing to considerable extent, the earning of. tha- Individual fish erman at hi calling may be tabulated as follows: . x' .:; JA' i ' 1 ; "; "ihmn'a ' V, Fiahormen . enstaad i....tf.tHul8paln ...... ........I TS Franca aiojlreland ............. N t'niled lata S4.YHw! ...... Six Uunuk ... SIX) Norway ..... ...... 12.1 Canada AnA Italy .... Partucal ao Raeste .... , 5 Holland Miana .... r 2A prmanf ..... B.'o tWlslum tt&O On Out of Cvary 1,000 Drown. One man out of every 1,000 flahermen In thli tabulation will be drowned every year, and whll men hav grown from boyhood to th ., -im- . .k....a.4..i.iH..A. i..d-u. v.,-..!- hnm t.,t h.;dory. and from on end of th trawl to th flar, mt naK miuit ,oall muil tne mIl(ln- ; oe wnanava cusappearea,r Attn wnarve wlU-bewo whether they be "Jiwjve gnwldow and hlldreajyhoonto.,:."dtothe gunwale with th slimy freight. "Twhether they be orphan or ar to welcome Through thee pile of fishes a JellyUk ...i.-. i . v N.0t Infrequently, however, - a ohdoner . ... v.i. -X.. , lngnes who may be oh th wharf to greet tu , coming-men who, tn stress of heavy .n(jfoa were lost from their achoon. ePE) and yet floated in their dories safely until nicked nn b soma areat ateamer or bv soma other fishing boat, which finally landed them rlcfl in oitrvma v iwirw, auif i u.u 000,000. worth of fish t iaken every year by - the 'fishermen of tb dominion government, . and much of th fishing by th United Bute , fleets Is off tb Canadian boundaries, as in th cold sea tb harvests ar grter and better. i v . ' i .' - v, Pril on th Nowfoundland Bank. in th taking of cod, halibut, and mackerel oft, the Atlantlo shore tb Canadian and American fishermen find tho danger and tha ihardaMp' of ttheir calling a great a they exist anywhere In the world. It 1s the coast & fogs and atorms, and through th fogs the giant steamship of th world cut thrtr blind way right' tbrpugb tha fleet qf fishermen, day or night, a they ply their note and line, ,' Jn the den fog that hang over th - 2 .... -. . ... i r v -" r- 1 a1 TTTT Tir -...:.-' - ' r .,. " - :Heiiry.Oyjen , ous pastime pt picking h six. best .bet of th day.'- H played along. Just a little be., f .bind all th time, but .not enough behind to f causa'any serious crash. ' ' ' of betting but that he could conduct hi bus!- neas properly until; the firt big good thlng cam lom.7That. Was tb ruin of smlth.H , won and lost everything.' Aaore-te-wln tlp ., was circulated extensively ln,crtaln"circ!ee. , Itywa the. beat ,'thHngi that had.ejver Wn fixed a cinch., unfaltabl. j AU good-things that are circulated xtansively: are thleibut this on "was different 'It Won. Along with other 'people who were on ;the killing good . aa strong waa Smith and,h won JL7S0. ",'. If be had lost thl Umho.mrtaUll'b ow OB tn, WMt mat, making obo trlng beta on th raoea. with bl Inevitable -ruin till; Just a, lit tie way off.' But hw.on. After that-h knw4hr wa no us In work- ing. H cornd to stay in Ui atuffy llttt tor. and-handle cent wher be might b uwt gating lir and handling dollar. He, ouian-t stand prosperity. He turned th , CTef ff Mi ch)rk foT ,h eonspKioB v of $L H gav th friend who handed him th tip 1300. : Then, with hi $3,450 and tbrpore, and there ar th racetrack men, with little account that ' n bad In th bank, b set out to be a plunger to see life. k Probsbly tb story of Smith -would never hav been told If th writer bad no dropped into a mall shop on a west side street a few day ago. A man drove a coal wofeon pact ' Money in Sight IXING on commission" v. : Chlcgc Chicago. . Bo far it I a ld Un In lu suggestion, but it I not tnt poselbVe.that' th evolution of metropotltaa life one of theaeiday may call for a ;mjxers" classification In the small ad, of the Sunday 1 papera V ; . V.. 1 i v' . '. , .." Onof the Urge evmnoymetK finding Inst!- Dn commi.Mon tbe-other day. A well .' a. annrlne man was i.w uuii. m.im ,m, ... ;-... v. ..... v . v. 'shown into the private office of on of th manager of the bureau.' explaining that be m a physician of th regular sohool, new to Chicago, and that h needed th help Of the employment machinery. -; , . . ' of course, I can't advertise In th news- -i am a ranger ner. ana nav openeaan office an rataoiireieo mr nom in a atria . tnat aeraanu an income wo we swt. . . . , u AA C' ByV George BrarvcKard. . Ill Nnea of employment in .-. .'.".. ?f "l-''- - -. v-;. Doctor Want Good " Toil MV - over tH illness of -th person win be auffl My Idea is this: I want to get from thirty clent to Justify my young man t writ my I fifty young men bf wide acquaintance, ham And address on th back of on of hi good family. and mixing with th better alas card. ,' , of people, r aim ply 'totak up a id Ian la .'' . ' -t '' touting ' me, a they say at th track.- Tou, Lack of Tact Might 'Qur Thin. know there .1 seklom a, mestlng of two per-- : ''Ton wlQ appreciate that not everyper ins under any circumstances wher om-. son eaa be trusted With ucha'Job, forth thing 1 notaald about tb health or 111 health' rion that a lack of either Judgment orUct of om On. CerUlnly it It a subject that a w w , -v. a-" r -. ' ', "'. . , - . f , 1. . ' - ? , ' - ( - J-.V (---- - -4- ; . i t ' -.. ' . j , - . , ..-X-.u........;jv -: i.Li. - " . "banks'" Hiawr-m dotTliM been sepa- rated from Ita schooner, drifting In the sudden burst, of tempests. tone to the bottom with Its crew of men. Or elaa out of the fog. soma great suddenly pitches, cutting dory or schooner two, senaing ail to me noitom, who oni man on- the bridge ot tha- steamer to their fate and he fceepa his lip sealed close as the secrets of th sea Hsela. -. an w.4djnye the deep, churning with It 30,000 horae , power engine, and probably againat tlm. One-third of th lost ; fishing vessels ara cut down by giant steamers. v ' ' . v aiouceater I. th port of porfs from which tb American fisherman goes In th tempu lng of th fate. . There are 400 boat In tha ' Gloucester fleet, with twelve or fifteen men - t to tha schooner, the dories eighteen to twen ty feet long. " seated " on the deck and ,-. XaAed fast for tha trip outward. V - Trawling Brings Boat R-eaulta. " . - Trawllng 1 (the manner of taking I . mni halibut. 4 trawl being a long ma the cod' main line, - anchored on th bottom at either end, and ' having short line with baited book fast t Intervals- These trawl are pUced from dorlee. that ar manned by two wen eacn- B whlch Put out 'ro tn chooner to. tne jisning grouno. -j ne irawi ues over .a winaiassiiii roiier aL mm dow of - pother and back and forth again th fishermen - . '" v " - baiting th barba. until Tha aory may be , suDstanc lorms. until tn noatioaa is on limy mass, making a veritable deck of fish, ' over which th waves may break la consider-' able fore without dtalodglng a alngl cra tur In th mass. - , v ;- : Th TSoPthern boundaries of the Gloucester fishing grounds are 4 he grinding icebergs, and It is in th edge of the Ic off th Iceland ' coast.' that th biggest halibut ar- taken. . , , tea day will sufflo for th equipping anew -of tb fleet, and it is offagaln. : - w ':-.,.r vO. Mxckrl th Solomon of th Saex. . Th mackerel long since became too wis for th trawl and complaint is mad that the swift fish Is becoming entirely to know ing for th nets that may be 1.000 yards long, . 'a. . -v".! .- ... . ' . der propitious circumstances such' a net and : each a crew in tb ena may, land .20.000 pound of mackerel at a singlet hauU V Th school of fishes will be sighted at " alght by th phosphorescent glare of th wateraa the fishes swarm through ly. Row. lng silently Is the dark, with the net ready for dropping,' the school la ovenflauled, the . ' 'A'. 'V ' -A 1 - ' TrU - ... x. . -, . .-i , n rt ana tn Shopkeeper volunteered tha Information, there" BmAth ' . Jrym engaged' In' the fisheries of th coast , - Tfr - tftfilr Mm inmt rn, -rmmr aai " . 4m ih T,. ' . la -w.tii.ni . -rt.it trtn win nnft " i m " Daa - arter -malting tn nig winning. He "Baw life" f or a year, thea bi took to drlv lng a coal wagon. .H needed taat and lif" refused to yield hun anything. Hi tor w, gon., hi 'good reputation, the - work wa gonei tits mother nd sister broken; hearted, -and, worst of all, bl own ; aelf-reepect, Waa. gone entirely, Of couree it Is-eaey enough "to may that , Smith was a foot' If th reader la addicted , to betting on. horse races h will, of coura, j be quit sure-that no sbch fat will ever be- faU him. And Smith, .llkswls. wa sure of himself.' be for th'bl winning. ' , ThJfact'l, thrar more men ruined achty(ear through, race gambling than any , . other agency, ,wlth, the oaibl, exception f of drink. h kind of men, who ar ruined are no sUbl boy7Jockey, owners, or any , of the men' connected with racing. It la the clerkAthe, wage earner, and th mall busl-. Bess man who fall a victim to tb ductloA of th betting ring. ; ... ' . Ever think of thl phase of it, you fellow , who gd out to th track with your money t Her are a lot of suckers working themservea getUng together enough monejr to mak ' a bet losing It and golsg back -to get soms big diamond In tbelr hirt front and not " wofktfuj. Peculiar coincidence. ln't ttt X ,Vrr i.wvu vanetiew bautlful a weU a th iweful. Brtwn . On,th four mil .farm mentioned tha hand Better give it a thought and then deoid " Th lettuce , bed ' aloa . contain .-over, , the vegetable patch ar planted) row of include BOO Chine. In addiOon tc-20 Amert that you won't be on of tbucker crowd thousand varietle. Many different kind of,- various kinds of flowers. tIn fact.theeeo- i can and German foremen and auperlnten- that play tb part or provider for th men with - tn good mixer could bring up anywhere. nny ' cold bottle '.ln th ooturacoltha yar v it will 'be their own fault J - ' 1 . . . v . v . .uv,rw ...... . meeta a woman friend some evening and b r atka why beraitr. perhaps. Is not present' ' O. he haa been ill for a week or more,' ex plain tb friend. The young man ha ayrar, pathy in a moment. There are further ex planation tintll he know enough of th gen eral situation to apeak of a similar Illness of ""vi rrui i u, noi biiwwii iv- speaker,-asd who has been brought ' through one of th worst form of tbodlseas . by th klll of Ir. Boandso naming me. xnerwui oe opportunity for (peaking fm . Sod my personality, and th natural concern la . a. consldtrabl ' gaibtrliig . might queer " jeweiry. , . . ; t, : . - - . veraj ; vantie -or: ceiery., nut peopte in Dorocrs. Jar Instance, between th tomato ' and durina everV month of th ver ther la :A' '': '"."' ? ..;';: .f.;,t " 'r.K'V- .'' ndb cucumbr may'beseen'a row-oft' nlenty 'of work for'each on." .. .. .'TTr'- ' ' A PI j-' tT ; ' "-.''' , 'aeo poppl' Nxt tth,Ittuo bda Most of the vegetable bed ar'laldout In JOlfT' illlM 53T iL ' I ar .Q jQ I V M 1 if ft IT. - ordr.ofcwhlt.wet pea.'maklng,a -November, when the-ground must be plowed,. ' v"" ir TW .' . T' Prettyicontraa. to the green of th vegt- harrowed, and planted, all tha planting being 1 3. 7 uei me nity young men.wnoanow now to , ativ or nis nas Been ill in tne same way, hi ' grow ; o luxuriantly nr tnat rxpenai v plow and' hoe.- There Is a constant m-x and who will undertake tie Job 11ave for., gratefulness for th recovery might be quit ; varieties can be used for ornamental work. ' againat weed;, and to get rid of these la - them, and If they don't, pick up mor than . reason enough to account .fort his telling . ;Tb-rtlsti Idea haa bean carried- out on of the, biggest pieces of work which th enough money for clothe, cigar, and a good . everybody whom he could reach an about y an elaborate scae In thl way. but the veca--' emwer has to attend-to. Weedlna and1 it h ;t'rkt.-- two i i-r-t-sfff Uner ' . VMXteW&UmM..., know , h intr&KW&KzMl. $mmtr 'f. )'. - ? - . , r , V ' -'V W ... ot!wung around rapidly and closed; then fmm Its Hit!., nuraa ihanad iCAnilnee tiia naoes are taaen out a. Tpuujre poasioi with scoop nets. Therwoifk'must be done silently and swiftly, and at the best thou- ssnds ot ths creatures escape by diving below thVlln of lead at tb bottom of tb at 100 Jeet down. . -'j : ' . r . , ' -n, ... . mm . . . . w - J a K 1 j-,. a a rr ' - a j j a a. J v The mackerel ar due off th coast about i trap Tn""." Tb;trap men' flnd.'iijeir; beat t clpl Qf the simple llf., H 1 an expoft May 20, and they ar gone In two weeks, ' field' off tb coast of Labrador and'-there, '.en t of It In all' hla relation With hla kind.; possibly to the water of th orient. ' living in "boat or to shack on tbhor. H' part with big family 'and -.hi friend - - - WwfoundUnd Horn of riahrfolki .Newfoundland l,th home of tb flaher. xotK lor arenerauona. . wra a total nonmjt. tion ' of. 100.000. thar ar 65.000 men and VVIV , PM imi , WV,WV,WV j : .. - . - : -i - n . " v r .'' Tf ' " ."-- J' - "WW . 1.T n gPC Ifirm Xisacommoa thing in th west lo e acoro field mi Iong,f ' 'but in California: they, rata . . onion by the 'mile, i In the BantaClara mil square. They ar' raised for reed and not to eat. The United State miaupplying most ot the world' onion, "Tor from th seed r,w a pawn inraa.Tnnii;a ilrm of ;Catifornla are being etit tb aup- niiM for th 'onion raisers In' neaa-lv every country on 'the globe, Tb onion seem' to take a special fancy, to.UveoUarrtcllmatof Canfornia. snd ther can be seeumor varle- tie than loewbereiaithalworld.-About , twenty-flv vaxietlea ar raised to supply the foreign and domestic garAeners.with seed. f. Not only th blggeK onion patchy but the biggest vegetable patch in th world la also situated In th Golden sute. There l on farm which contain no less than foursquare mile Of pea, carrot, lettuce.'cabbagea. to- y matoes, beeta, celery., cucumbers, and par. ; nips, pesiae ut iwKiwif whu. . im . latter take up knout one-ioutxn 01 in space. Ovr 1,000 VarUti of LMu.s . ' ' ,Jr '.'': "ill'';.', .tomato ar. t course, raiaea, a wu a exposure. Still, If i -young man has been sick' himself enough to . hav missed som tlm before.'or If torn rel- ' the recovery and how I ' brought it about ' Tou see that In a thousand ways thl mixing - ni. . i, w y. . -j4 puvuvHiuii ,u iuu- ccrned. ,. th whol schememnd suggest my1; bl. ..v ., . , - .), .. v .-.'.:! ,$ don by hand.' -Just, A aoon a th green ; I - my iiti a, vviiijuiaaavn vi.'av pcr.cenv -' - ( - b wiiiaj . miun uni- cross .Detween, 'jtnowu species-, inrn,; too, " of the first year bills collected of each per- form, so -that at a dlsUnc the Wtuca field the' foreman will notlc a freak, tomato yln ' on sent to m by these mixer, an account f prnt ra grea mas of o.ld color., i : or. pernans onion'Shoot, It may be of a dit to be opened with each of theseiww patients '' ",'' '' '' ' " ' '- -''. ferenf color rrm Us fellows, or the leyes and payment mad aa tb bills ar collected Million of Pound of Sd Sold. - may be shaped . differently. He pulls out a ' tb first oP eachT month. If a patient one v Th ' hugenes 'of these- garden 'farm, la ', little paper tag from hla pocket, ties it around - comes to roe, a can noia nimi nsr a erea- itabl establishment all round. I am up to oat In general practice, and know my buai neaa, I hav a good thing for tb right kind of , young men who will .mix industriously and wisely in my Intereata' At last account th employment concern had . not rounded up th necessary Individ uals, but so far as th physician I concerned th opportunity I still open.; Th estimate of the physician 1 that each main. of tha fifty hould b abl to send forty patient of a clas spending on an- average of V2S aplec on doctor bills, this s re rag coming from th fact that many of th Individual repr- sent whol famlke. n i,uvn (auiiin: j . . ' - -v-":' ). -rpl t. A- ' . , '.',:,.'.-'. ,, ' ' ... ' 4 ':. - . - -r2i. r .... - . - -aw .--ir-ir- 'att!: AfV&sa. i'" . tO.- vy.v;-'- ie-, i.C .T' W'j-Jir"-: ' af W pounda of dry codfish annuaHy, one - fourth - f wMca la . kmiauhuA . h -fha .iwinnla anf m rx soia'iO' to-. rour-quarters. or ;n. in' oeotrrn my D aiwaya, - globe. "Tbre generatlonamayfceseorept- Vags of K305 a year' by no i . sented In the mending of a net and children T?' years old ar expert in sailing the punt from. Which the flshe ' ar caught 'The two claaae of flahenpen ara.iha.lln men and th tney imv a community Mfe for toe sean. - Th Una mm flshln-oif bJiotnKor- : Is" hnely.workr. and th madhouseatsL' jnnB i ib iuii ot -nia Kina. 'ma aarninn era far below tb posaiblTltie of tb trap man. and frequently hi season's catch Is nwrt - sentry hi season s catch u mort-j; or th aon ha opened, u order - gagea pel or - ' ' . fT - ; 1 ': ' ''i' - ''Vv ITDA' m Afl C - LUall J.la. .A j,laiXl'w .yfl3Cy.atlll .- Vt , ;j different :parti i or the coutrtryar particular wuuw. . wr waiaoce.itaoiKina.wnicn atiltaJNew1 Tork 1 not'popular.ln the aouth. , Th "planU which. ara'aentUoHladelphi la the winter ar entirely different from the kind, which go to New Tort Th people of" .'i New Orleans eat a varieTr. which taralcrf especially for them. " ' "' .;," : : 1 A fw mor figure as to, the, is of th varlou beds, wlli giv an idea of th blgneas , "of th place. , Th pea-beds comorls 323 acre. ; carrots. 200 acrea, while the lettuce gardens combined, would) roek-what th .rwaterjla drained off, the good I paTated . atrn farmer would call a good led place' .from! the bad.' After gashing.-the seed is i 2.10 acre alone. Th aame pad is de- votedjo radlahe. When you a a hundred ' square feet, or so In lb. east .covered with- tomato vine or potato hills you will reallx the vaat seal on which gardenteg 1 carried sn in tnis section Ot IDS UMtd Btate. (. ', v- .. , , la gathering' the Seed of the other vege FlOWr Bordr for. Gardana. " tables -and nranarlne It for market tha aama CaUfornu gardener hav an y for th , tlons of the farm ar marked-off by floral It Is not an uncommon thing to see strip ; bt rose lining walk which hav been made between tha different . patches,1 for flower bl bed.tbmglv ar , ornamataJ,'e- Uvatlng rnust .b kapt' up steadily, until th J peclally-when .they, ar flowering. , CelerypianJ a re-read y fp hsrYestlf,,, r ' 7" vMmv...w .nbti;n - ( Just befor the plant rrady to be gatb- eprciany iiiuarratea auring harvest time. . " 11 aiaua inai dtw s minion poums v, avnu iin iiuin tmr iarms'in tn ;, Santa Clara valley.1 and that several hdn dred cnion plant, forexampla r required"' to mak on pound of seed, an estimate can ; ar taken to the laboratory and plared ondef . b -mad. Of. th magnitude of th work. '.th eye of an expert' who watchea-them ' Aboui on-half otthe quanuty of eed men- ' matur and anaiysea tb seed to find If It is .' tloned tome from the onion,, When th , any -better than that of th other species. , plant ls ready to be gathered the Chinese, " For. Instance, If he flnda.a variety of leUuc : Who do moat ot th work on'the farms,'' which I large amUender. ita seed I planted v warm into th Hera by th hundreds, cut - by Itself and an effort made to propagate It off th top of th plant, and put them Into , baaket. Then they ar taken to the drvina-,. lot, where - they ar prad out ' on large whw aa mAyumma to m nn. , swmetima , ' 'y - ' - . ! , A ,.,..'., , , . . ', -i .','."- , i' ' . ' , ' , ? V, .i - - ' - hi and expoaed to th tun.' Sometime . 7 il . ' w:. 'that he mar have salt beef for hla food and It' l th. na.kln. ne VI. ... A nrf'nn. cash' which passca through " un1verearnedivm of exchang, r But- overworked and underpaid the'.Aaherman' necessarily ha beet at the whaxf with, no shw of paxtipg if thtr bgrief itJwa been, spent home Itself. HI cheerful patience - euiiinv nn.m. avla ir iah b hi last well, b freouentlyl iat i falth wUcluai,,aln ---r-" wii'" 'f la th) i nn- iy ahallRLv of th VW faith .which, amis,. lmply Thy wUlb don." . . , . .. , .. , , '' fli' 1 - ' ' v-;4. ... ; ''' V1.: Itl t n A y CT - ., . . W1M MW WTW these' abeet over ' an -acr 'of tn:"crop. ., . Wtoetf. th pod r drted tlwy ar greedy , to be .thimahed. Just V , arheat Js ,'a thrashing m v englne. r IJ Sep then th seed , tnraaaea. ana tne.macain usea is simusr to t macuntiaDa is run. 07 a ateam separates the seed from th chaff; i i earned into Mga "But before being sent to tn gardener th aeed .naa.to so throua-h aaveral nthve-nrnn. 'sse.rirt'lt1'dusted by runhinglt through , .tannlng.mIir.tHenXlput In vats of water. j Her,lh,gooJ,sed slnks to th .bottom. A tht' Imperfect eed, 1 lighter and 'alwaya remain Ton top'.i Crftisequently. wben th taln spread, out Jo dry. in th sun. then r.raked ip, rua through th fanning mid ditC ahd'put Into sack containing abouk a . . kit-rfM iwinnA, aeli trt Ke vhlAna 500 Men Work In On Gvr4n. ' processes ar employed with the onion. "dsnhi. ; Every man of this fore I required. shoots appear above ground the Chinese ar senfout into the different beds to thln th , i plants, whll they ar' also eultlvted,wlth , ; war 6n seed oul- in tin great . gmnKM a I wnuuuiii springing un curious vegetsbies,' which area ' the-Mant and. UiusrmarKeo. lts.growrn.is ; ywaicnea. upon au ot tne larger larme are. plant . isooraiones, .wnere iipcm arm-ex- , pertmenting'wlth new species to determine' if theyar worth ralslnr.', TheM freak plant on an extenslr seal.. IHs in this way that nearly au ot the new fruit and vegetables: of which so much come from California, la , created. creaiio. . , - j c-i .,.r; ,.-.' .1 J ' .,, .,'J v,v. ' ' ., , ; . 1 .. . d , - ' f ' ' i" ' ' " . - . -1.---. v : - ' ,1-- - . ; 1- exar a. m VA