SEMI-WEEKLY UNION Batata. July. 1897. GAZKTTK Katsb. Deo., 1868, i Consolidated Feb., 1899. CORYALLIS, BENTON COUNTY, OEEGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1901. VOL. U. NO. 18. TttTTTPTTTTi The Ooetor By Hesba i . . . .. CHAPTER I. I think I was ns nearly mad as I could be; nearer madness, I believe, than I hall ever be again. Three weeks of it had driven me to the very verge of des peration. I cannot say here what had brought mo to this paas, for I do not know Into whose hands these pages may. fall; but I had made up my mind to per sist in a certain line of conduct which I firmly believed to be right, whilst those who had authority over me were reso lutely bent upon making me submit to their will. The conflict had been going on, more or less violently, for months; now I had come very Dear the end of it. I felt that I must either yield or go mad. There was no chance of my dying; I was too strong for that. It had been raining all the day long. My eyes had followed the course of soli tary drops rolling down the window panes nntil my head ached. There was noth ing within my room less dreary than without I was in London, but in what part of London I did not know. The house was situated in a highly respecta ble, though . not altogether fashionable quarter; as I judged by the gloomy, mo notonous rows of buildings which I could see from my windows. The people who passed up an ! 'own the streets on fine days were well-to-do persons,- who could afford to wear good and handsome clothes. The rooms on the third floor my rooms, which I had not been allowed to leave since we entered' the house, three weeks before were very badly furnished. The carpet was nearly threadbare, and the curtains of dark red moreen were very dingy. My bedroom opened upon a dismal back yard, where a dog in a ken nel howled dejectedly from time to time, and rattled his chain as if to remind me that I was a prisoner like himself. I had no books, no work, no music. It was a dreary place to pass a dreary time in; and my only- resource was to pace to and fro to and fro from one end to an other of those wretched rooms. ' A very slight sound grated on my ear; it was the hateful cliek of the key turn ing in the lock. A servant entered, car rying, in a tray, upon which were a lamp and my tea such a meal as might be prepared for a school girl in disgrace. She came up to me, as if to- draw down the blinds. . '.'Leave them," I said; "I will do it my self by and by." .'--.. JlHe' Jiot comiog home to-night,'? said a woman a voice behind me, in a scomng tone. I could see her in the mirror without turning round. A handsome woman, with bold black eyes, and a rouged face, which showed coarsely in. the ugly look ing glass. She was extravagantly dress ed, and not many years older than my self. I took no notice whatever of ber, but continued to gaze out steadily at the lamp-lit streets and stormy sky. "It will be no better for you when he is at home," she said fiercely. "He hates you; he swears so a handred times a day, and he is determined to break your proud spirit. We shall force yon to knock un der sooner or later. What friends .have yon got anywhere to take your side? If you'd made friends with me, my fine lady, you d have found it good for yourself; but you've chosen to make me your en emy, and I'll make him your enemy." . "I set my teeth together and gave no indication that I had heard one word of her taunting speech. My silence serv ed to fan her fury.. '" ' . "Upon my soul, madam," she almost shrieked, "you are enough to drive me to murder! I could beat you. Ay! and I would, but for him. - So then three weeks of this hasn't broken you down yet! We shall try other means to-morrow." , '- She came up to where I stood, shook her clenched hand in my face and flung : herself out of the room, pulling the door Violently after her. I turned my head round. A thin, fine streak oi light, no thicker than a thread, shone for an in stant. ' My heart stool still, and then beat like a hammer. I stole very softly to the door, and discovered that the bolt bad slipped beyond the hoep of the lock. The door was open for me! . -1 had been on the alert for such a chance ever since my imprisonment be gan. 1 My sealskin hat and jacket lay ready to my hand in a drawer. I had not time to put on thicker boots; and it was perhaps essential to the success of my flight to steal down the stairs in the oft velvet slippers I was wearing. I stepped as lightly as I could. I crept past the drawing room door. The heavy louse door opened with a grating of the hinge's; but I stood outside it in the shel ter of the portico free, but with the rain and wind of a stormy night in October beating against me. I darted straight across the muddy road and then turned sharply round a corner. On I fled breathlessly. As I drew nearer to snop winaows an omnibus driver, see ing me run toward him, pulled up his horses in expectation of. a passenger. I prang in, caring very little where it might carry me, so that I could get quick ly enough and far enough out of the reach of my pursuers, - There had been no time IU IUM, auu uum nam iusl. xue omniOUS drove on again quickly, and no trace of me was left. The omnibus drove into a station yard. and every passenger, inside and out, pre- pared to aiignt. i lingered till the last. The wind drove across the open space in strong gust as I stepped down npon the pavement. A man Had just descended from the roof, and was paying the con ductor,; a tall, burly man, wearing a thick waterproof coat, and a seaman's hat of oilskin, with a long flap lying over the : back of his neck. His face was brown and weather beaten, but he had kindly looking eyes. "Going down to Southampton?" said the conductor to him., "Ay, and beyond Southampton," he an - awered. "You'll have a rough night of it," said - , 3 A tJ 1 IS I . : miss. " . I offered an Australian sovereign, a ' pocket piece, which he turned over curi- ously, asking me if I had no smaller " hangs He grumbled when I answered fjilemma Stretton .... no, and the stranger who had not passed on, turned pleasantly to me. "You have no change, mam'zelle?" he asked slowly, as if English was not his ordinary speech. "Very well! are you going to Southampton? "Yes, by the next train," I answered, deciding upon that course without hesita tion. "So am I, mam'zelle," he said, raising hand to his oilskin cap; "I will pay this sixpence, and you can give it me again when you buy your ticket in the office." I smiled gladly but gravely. I passed on into the station. At the ticket office they changed my Australian gold piece and I sought out my seaman friend to re turn the sixpence he had paid for me. I thanked him heartily. He put me into a compartment where there were only two ladies, touched his hat and ran away to a second-class car riage. In about two hours or more tny fellow p'assengers alighted at a large, half-de serted station. A porter came up" to me as I leaned my head through the window. "Going on, miss? he asked. "Oh, yes!" I answered, shrinking back into my corner seat. He remained on the step whilst the train moved on at slackened pace, and then palled up. Be fore me lay a dim, dark scene, with little specks of light twinkling here and there, but whether on sea or shore I could not tell. Immediately opposite the train stood the black hulls and masts and fun nels of two steamers, with a glimmer of lanterns on their decks. The porter opened the door for me. ; 'You ve only to go on board, miss, he "SHOOK HER CLENCHBD said, "your luggage will be seen to all right" Aid he hurried away to open the doors of other -carriages. I stood still, utterly bewildered, with the wind tossing my hair about and the rain beating in sharp stinging drops upon my face and hands. It must have been close upon midnight - Every one was hurrying past me. I began almost to re pent of the desperate step I had token. At the gangways of the two vessels there were men shouting hoarsely, "This way for the Channel Islands!" "This way for Havre and Paris r' To which boat should I trust myself and my fate? A mere accident decided it. Near "the fore part of the train I saw the broad, tall figure of my new friend, the seaman, making his way across to the boat for the Channel Islands; and I made np my mind to go on board the same steamer, for I had an instinctive feeling that he would prove a real friend. I' went down immediately into the ladies' cabin, which was almost empty, and chose a berth for myself in the darkest corner. It was not far -from the door, and. presently two other ladies came down, with a gentle man and the captain, and held an anxious parley close to me. "Is there any danger r asKed one or the ladles. -' - - ; " ' 'Well, I cannot say positively there will be no dangei, answered the cap tain; "there a not danger enough to keep me and the crew in port; but it will be a very dirty night in the Channel. Of course we shall use extra caution, and all that sort of thing. ' No; I cannot say I expect any great danger." 'But it will be awfully rough r said the gentleman. - ; - It was very stormy and dismal as soon as we were out of Southampton water. "and in the rush and swirl of the Chan nel. It did not alarm me so much as It distracted my thoughts. My hasty escape had been so unexpected, so unhoped for, that it nau Dewiiaerea me, ana it was almost a pleasure to lie still and listen to the din and uproar of the sea. Was I myself or no? Was this nothing more than a very vivid dream, from which should awaken by and by to find myself a prisoner still, a creature as wretched and friendless as any that the streets of London contained? .' - I watched the dawn break through little porthole opening 'npon my berth, which had been washed and beaten by the water all the night longN The stew ardess had gone away early in the night So I was alone, with the blending light of the early dawn and that of the lamp burning -feebly from the ceiling. - I sat up in my berth and cautiously unstitched the lining of my jacket Here, months ago, when I first began to foresee this emergency, and whilst I was still allow ed the use of my money, I had concealed one by one a few five-pound notes.. counted them over, eight of them; forty pounds in all, my sole fortune, my only means of living. True, I had a diamond ring and a watch and chain, but how dim cult and dangerous it would be for me to sell either of them! Practically my means were limited to the eight notes of five pounds each. . As the -light grew 1 left my berth and ventured tt climb the cabin steps. The fresh air smote npon me almost pain fully. The Ma was t owing brighter. and glittered here and there in spots where the sunlight fell upon It. 1 stayed on deck In the biting wind, leaning over the wet' bulwarks and gazing serosa the desolate sea till my spirits sank like lead. was cold, and hungry, and mtseraoie. How lonely I was! how poor! with neith er s home nor a friend in the world! a mere castaway npon the waves of this troublous life! 'Mam'zelle is a brave sailor," sold a voice behind me, which I recognized as my seaman of the night before; bat we shall be In port soon." ' - 'What port?" I asked. 'St. Peter-Dort." he answered. "Mam' zelle, then, does not know our islands?" "No I said. "Where is Bt feter- port?" "In "Guernsey," he replied. "If yon were going to land at St Peter-port I might be of some service to yon." I looked at him steadily. His voice was very pleasant one, run or tones that went straight to my heart. His face was bronzed and weather-beaten, bnt his deep-set eyes had a steadfast, quiet pow er in them, and his mouth had a pleas ant curve about it He looked a middle aged man to me. He raised his cap as my eyes looked straight into his, and a faint smile flitted across his grave face. "I want," I said suddenly, "to find a place where I can live very cheaply. I have not much money, and I must make it last a long time. Can yon tell me of such a place?". - ... : "You would want a place fit for a lady?" he said. "No," I answered. "I would do all my own work. What sort of a place do you and your wife live in? - '"' "My poor little wife is dead," he an swered. "We live in Sark, my mother and I. I am a fisherman, but I have also a little farm. It is true we have, one room to spare, which might do for mam' zelle; but the island is far away, and in the winter Sark is' too mournful. - "It will be just th' place I want," I said quicklq; "it would suit me exactly, Can you let me go there at once? Will you take me with you?" "Mam'-ielle," he replied, smiling, "the room must be made ready for you, and I must speak to my mother. If God sends HAND -IN MY FACE. us fair weather I will come back to St. Peter-port for you in three days. My name Is Tardif. You can ask the people in Peter-port what sort of a man Tardif of the Havre Gosseiin is. I do not want any one to tell me what sort of a man you are," I said, holding out m)r hand. He took it with an air of friendly protection. What is your name, mam'zelle?" he inquired. "Oh! my name is Olivia," I said. ' I went below, inexpressibly satisfied and comforted. What it was in this" man that won my complete, unquestioning con: naence, i aia not Know; Dut h:s very presence, and the sight of his good, trust- wortny race, gave me a sense of security sucn as i nave never felt before or since surety uoa una Bent mm to me in my great extremity. ' CHAPTER II. Looking back upon that time, now it Is past and has "rounded itself into that perfect star I saw not when 1 dwelt there in, it would be untrue to represent my self as in any way unhappy. - At times wished earnestly that I had been born among the people with whom I had now come to live. " Tardif led a somewhat solitary life himself, even in this solitary island, with its scanty population. There was an ugly church, but Tardif and his mother did not frequent it. They belonged to little knot of dissenters, who met for worship in a small room,, when Tardif generally took the lead. For this reason a sort of coldness existed between him and the larger portion - of his fellow isl anders. -.-"' " But there was a second and more Im portant cause of estrangement. He had married an Englishwoman many years ago, mucn to the disappointment of his neighbors; and. since her death he had held himself aloof from all the good wom en who would have been glad enough to undertake (he task ..of consoling him for her loss. Tardif, therefore, was left very much to himself in his isolated cot tage; and his mother's deafness caused her also to be no very great favorite with any of the gossips of the island. I learned afterwards that Tardif had said my name was Olllvier,-and they jumped to the conclusion that I belonged to a family of that name In Guernsey mis smeiaea me irom curiosity. 1 was nobody but a poor womau who was lodg ing in the spare room of Tardifs cot tage. I set myself to grow used to their mode of life, and if possible to become, so useful to them that when my money was all spent they might be willing, to keep me with them. As the long, dismal nights of winter set in, with the wind sweeping across the island for several days together with a dreary,-monotonous moan which never ceased, I generally sat by their fire; for I had nobody but Tar dif to talk to, and now and then thero arose an urgent need within me to listen to some friendly voice, and to hear my own in reply. v ... " -.-.. -March came in with all the strength and sweetness ot spring. : I went out frequently to the field near the church. I was sitting there one morning. Tardif was going to flsh, and I had helped Mm to pack his basket I could see him get ting out of the harbor, and be had caught a glimpse of me, and stood up in his boat, bare headed, bidding me good by. I began to sing before he was quite out of hearing, for he paused upon his oars list ening, and had given me a joyous shout and waved his hat round his head, when he was sure it -was I who was singing. By 12 o'clock I knew my dinner would be ready, and I had been out in the fresh air long enough to be quite ready for it Old Mrs. Tardif would be looking out for me impatiently, that she might get the meal over, and the things cleared away, and order restored in her dwell ing. - (To be continued.) : His Mania. Is for Clocks. -One of the most Ingenious mechanics in the world Is a Frenchman named Le Boullat, living at La Coutaness, -who has made himself famous for the curi ous clocks he manufactures. He can make' a clock out of almost any con ceivable material. . Straw and paper are among the raw "materials he uses, For twenty years he has been manufac turing freak clocks and most French men who want something out of the common in that line apply to Le Boul lat A while ago be turned a lot of news papers Into pulp, mixed it with harden ing substance and carved the clock out of. the compound. Even the wheels and all the machinery of the clock were made of this material. . Naturally this curious clock does not keep very cor rect time, but the wonder is that it goes at all. The newspaper clock Is one of Mr. Le Boullat's latest trl- umpbs. - : . Another of his designs appears to be merely a collection of large and small sticks held together by wires. It. is only upon close inspection that one sees that it is a. clock constructed on excel lent principles. ; It keeps very fair time, never varying more than two minutes In a week. ---- - - Now and then the clockmaker receives commissions from wealthy .Frenchmen for clocks of unique design In silver or gold, decorated with precious stones. Some of these clocks are entirely made of gold, with diamond-tipped hands, and rubies, garnets, pearls,, opals and emeralds to represent , the figures on the dial. Some of bis clocks are beau tiful works of art and a few of the most interesting specimens are among he smallest of timepieces. - Her Father Was Not a Liar. There is a little girl in Detroit whose passion for the truth under all circum stances embarrassed her .father ; very much the other day.:- Not long ago he lost a high-salaried place in a business house because of its absorption by trust, and in the evening denounced all persons connected with trusts as thieves and robbers. But the trust found that It needed him, and he was soon holding his old place, in addition to a good block, of stock, ft was no ticed that the little girl was deeply im pressed with the incident and looked at her father doubtlngly when he was home. One evening there .was com pany at the house, and the -host be came involved In a heated political de bate with a peppery guest .The form er made a statement which the latter flatly denied. ''"-" 'Why, my dear man," laughed, the host, "you don't mean to call me liar?"- :"'"C.',r'V '" ; - 1" 'No, he don't," declared the little one. as she sprang in front of the visitor and", glared at him with flaming eyes, "and I won't have it My. papa is a robber and a tblef, but he is no liar!" The explanation was soon secured from the child, and the hilarity follow ing the expose was the joy of the even ing. New York Tribune. Air Torpedo. . The Swedish government has given 5,000 kroner ($1,340) to Major W. T, Unge for the purpose of making fur ther experiments with the air torpedo invented by him. Major Unge's inven tion Is patented under the name of "the flying torpedo," Is intended to convey through the air large explosive charges for considerable distances, and looks like an elongated cannon shell. It Is propelled through the air in tbe same manner as a rocket. In a sep arate compartment the torpedo con tains some kind of slow-burning chem ical composition, the propelling-charge. which generates gases in large quan tities. In the base of the shell is turbine through which these gases es cape, thus furnishing the motive pow er and causing the shell : to rotate around Its axis. Ingenious. The most recent triumph of the French postal administration is an In genious little machine which not only automatically weighs letters and sam ples, but records on an Indicator at the side the amount required for stamps. When the article deposited, on the bal ance exceeds the regulation weight, the Indicator promptly hoists the sign, "Too heavy." - - AmericVs First White Child. The first white child born on United States soil was the granddaughter of White, the governor of Roanoke Island. She was christened Virginia Dare, and her birthday was on Aug. 18, 1587. , Slow bnt Not 8ure. "They are not engaged yet? I sup pose-he is slow and sure." - "-well, he's slow, but she isn't at all sure." Brooklyn Life, - " Water for Plants. riants need a good deal more water as the days grow longer and warmer than they do in midwinter. " Woman may be at the bottom of all man's troubles,' yet without her life would not be worth living. Unfulfilled Prophecy. We have been re-reading the proph ecy of Mr.-C, Wood Davis, issued about ten years ago, in which he said that as m 18S0 the United States exported enough of grain, hay and cotton to sup ply 6,645,000 people In other countries. and In 1S85 enough to supply 4,300,000, that by 1895 we should have to buy food and cotton for 380,000 of our own people at home, and in 1000 enough for 5,47o,000. , We said then that we had no faith In his figures, and that, we be lieved the cultivation of some of the then unimproved land and better meth ods of production would enable us to feed and clothe our population and have a surplus for other nations not only - in 1900, but for many a decade after that We are thankful that we have lived to find that in 1900 our ex ports of agriculture products not only grain, hay and cotton, but many other things have not decreased In value or amount below the amount we sent out in 1885 and 1890, but have made a handsome increase, and it will yet be many ; years before all our available land will be tilled or grazed, and many more before we shall have reached our largest capacity of production. The average crops as reported by the last census are far from being one-half, and are scarcely one-third of what good farmers call a good crop. Figures are deceiving sometimes New England Homestead. How to Catch the Curculio. A Kansas experiment station bulletin says that the curculio has been con trolled successfully by Jarring the trees in early morning and collecting the in sects in the curculio catcher. The can A CUBCULIO CATCHER. below the canvas Into which the insects fall is partially filled with kerosene. A sheet with the seam ripped half the length to permit its being readily placed around the tree Is a cheap and effective substitute for the catcher here figured. When the sheet is used, the in sects should be collected in another re ceptacle after-jarring each tree. v Plants Poisonous to Animals. The bulletin from the Montana Ex periment Station gives a list of four teen species of plants which are known or strongly suspected of poisoning ani mals. Among them are the lupines, which killed 100 out of 200 bucks fed on hay, and in 1898 some 2,000 sheep from eating ripe lupine on the range. .The trouble seems to be in the ripe or near ly ripe seed. The purple and tall lark spur killed 40 cattle in the Gallatin Valley when other plants were covered with snow; aconite, water hemlock and nightshade have proved poisonous to both man and beast In 1898, a dairy man had a field of oats so badly smut ted that he cut them for hay instead of letting the grain ripen. Out of 30 cows which were given one feed of It, 12 died within 18 hours, having both gastric and .cerebral trouble. . Ergot on native grasses is claimed to have killed a number of horses in from six to eight hours, the muscles of tbe throat being paralyzed first, and then the whole body paralyzed. Strychnine and whisky seem to be the only remedy having effect It is better to avoid feeding ergot or smut on any grass or grain. Exchange. Farm Fence. ; - Bad fences have been a trouble to every rural community from the earli est history.: to- the present day. Neigh borhood rows and feuds and aggravat ing litigation and even bloodshed have resulted, from defective fences. Wood en fences, whether 'of rails, poles boards, are a standing menace to the public peace wherever they exist and but little better Is a wire fence that does not effectively serve its purpose. There are nowadays a large number of patterns of wire fences ready made and sold In rolls ready to be unrolled and nailed to posts. Some of these are good, and some are better, and some are almost perfect A really good wire fence may cost more to begin ' with than a wooden one, but on account of its durability alone It is far cheaper. f.. ,.1. stnflr Tnnd. Th valno of the cabbaze as food for stock may be summed up "as strong in two points, the large amount mat can ho rmwn nnnn an acre of soil and its succulency, which makes It a milk-pro-rtiipinfr food easily digested. . But it re- nnipoa atrniur soil and xood cultivation, does not keep well for winter use un less pitted where it will be frozen until cmnir. and vi then havine but a short season, while if stumps and any decayed leaves are iea u is aimosi im possible to prevent It imparting a rank, unpleasant, flavor to the milk and but ter, or even to the meat,, unless Its use in discontinued two or three weeks be fore the slaughtering. As regards tbe nutritive value Professor Johnston In Agricultural Chemistry estimated sev enty pounds of cabbage to have about the same value as four pounds of oil cake, twelve pounds of pea straw, six teen pounds clover hay, twenty pounds of meadow hay, 110 pounds of oat straw or 120 pounds of turnips. This last we think he bases upon the flat or English turnip, which are not as nu tritious as the rutabaga. The value of the cabbages, as of the roots. Is best found when a small amount is given along with coarse, dry fodder and a limited amount of grain. Massachu setts Ploughman. Destroying; English Sparrow. A paper published In New South Wales, Australia, tells how farmers de stroy English sparrows out there. They make a double coop and put one or more fowl or chickens in one compart ment, leaving the other empty. When feeding they scatter a little wheat in the empty compartment which is soon found by the sparrows. After about a week they soak the wheat In vinegar and sugar. After tbe sparrows become accustomed to this, they add a little strychnine to the vinegar and sugar, and allow the wheat to soak about twelve hours, then dry it and scatter it in tbe empty coop. One or two grains is enough to finish any sparrow, and if It is given every day at the same place In the same way, and dead birds re moved if any die in the coop, hundreds of them may be destroyed, but if the dead are left it may frighten away the others. Massachsetts Ploughman. Start Horses Slowly. When the horse has been fed and Is taken out' to work, it should be started in to labor rather easily to get the most work at the least inconvenience to the horse. The reason for this is not hard to find. It is simply that during the feeding time the organs are getting themselves into condition for digestion and are possibly even digesting the feed. - A large quantity of blood is call ed away from the other members and is poured into the vessels about the stomach. This blood must all be with drawn when the horse begins to work and be supplied to the muscular or gans where it is most needed. This change cannot be done all at once. It requires a little time for the blood to reach the physical demands. If the blood has time to make the change by moderate starting all will be welL If not, then there Is a temporary exhaus tion from which it may require hours to recover entirely. Running; Farm Machinery. No man can be considered an expert in running farm machinery unless he attends to certain points in managing the machines. First keep every joint and bearing well oiled. Next see that all parts which arerllable to collect dust are-brushed clean at least every time the team is unhitched, and see then that every nut and bolt is in place and holding the parts snugly. Not only that but if a rattle Is heard when at work. Investigate at once and stop it even if It is necessary to unhitch the team to make it safe to work on it Keep all cutting parts clean and sharp, and see that the draft is just right to be as easy as Is possible for both team and machine. r The man who does all this will accomplish good work and not in jure team or machine. , - Clo-rer Bloat. Clover bloat can always be prevent ed by keeping the cattle off the clover while it is wet with rain or dew. The usual cause of death when an animal Is bloated is congestion of the lungs- from pressure of the stomach against them, The flesh of such animal should be darker in color from the stoppage of blood In the small vessels than the flesh of an animal butchered, but I do not believe it would poison any one to eat the flesh of such animals. The best remedy for clover bloat Is to make an opening, in the upper part of the left flank with a pocketknife and thrust the fingers into the opening. Then the gas will escape at the sides of the finger. Or use some hollow tube to put into the opening. . ." " Bl ck Tong-ne In Cattle. ' Black tongue Is one of the forms of anthrax. The tongue turns black, and the animal dies in a few hours. . It is contagious and infectious and Is In curable, and all carcasses should be burned. If it appears in a herd of stock, the well ones should be vacci nated- with anthrax vaccine and not blackleg vaccine. 1 Notes Abont Frnlt. . - In the market buyers sometimes pre fer small but fully ripened strawberries to larger ones picked too green. Tbe grape Is considered tbe most healthful of all fruits. Every one who has a garden, a yard or a wall can grow grapes. ."'' ; ''.i? In starting a young orchard look af ter the trees often, and wherever a limb is found crossing another limb cut It out,-;. v.-.: .-r Plum trees should be sprayed with Bordeaux mixture, but it should be weaker than for apples, or it will burn the foliage. . .'"! - - -- . --, '''. - Apple, pear and plum trees should be planted in every poultry yard. They will afford shade for the fowls and the poultry. will destroy many Insects. Plum trees do not generally require as much pruning as apple trees. Prun ing should be ..done as early In the spring as possible, before the sap starts., i-. ,;: .- ' There is no section of country where some variety of every kind of fruit will : not do welL Experiment with fruit until you find varieties suited to your locality. ,". : ' - Most plums should be picked for market a few days before they are thoroughly ripe. Even for home use they are better just before they are per fectly ripe. Germantown Telegraph, A PRIEST'S GENEALOGY. Be Can Traca His Forefathers Back In dividually to Adam. Queen Wilbelmina'a much-heralded ancestry of 2,000 years and her reputed -descent from Balthazar, King of Ar menia, who some maintain was one of the three wise men who made presents to the Infant Savior, Is put to blush by an unassuming Delaware County (Pa.) pastor, who can trace his descent over 5,000 years to tbe davs when Adam and Eve began the history of the human race in the garden of Eden. Indeed, those who have the pride of ancestry should look with envious eye on the Rev. Matthew P. O'Brien, rector of St Charles' Roman Catholic Church - In the little hamlet of Kellyvllle. Through a long line of kings and no ble ancestry Father O'Brien can trace his descent clear back to Brian Bora, who early Iq the eleventh century was supreme ruler of all Ireland, and who died April 23, 1014. This, however, is only the beginning. -Starting with Brian, who is twenty- six generations removed, he goes back twenty-one more till be reaches Oliol Olum, King of Munster; a jump of for ty-seven generations more reaches Mile- sius, who was King of Spain thirteen centuries before Christ; from Mllesius to Adam Is thirty-six generations, so that Father O'Brien Is 130 generations from Adam, or 5,905 years from the creation of the world. -From the information of those who" are wont to twiddle their fingers at pedigrees' and to make faces when crowned heads are turned away from them, and who affect to despise rather uu utruiiy luye a luru, it may ue stated right here that Father O'Brien can put his finger, figuratively speak ing, of course, on one and all of his long line of progenitors, can call them by name, and is thoroughly posted on their doings, good, bad, and indifferent Yet, despite the fact that he can keep tabs on bis ancestors away back of Solomon the Wise, the Queen of Sheba, and David and Lot's wife, Abraham himself, the father of the faithful, to say nothing of Moses and his little tramp of forty years in the wilderness Father O'Brien is democratic In his tastes and bearing, and as faithful a pastor as he is democratic. For the benefit of the unbelievers who perhaps have but little data or accurate information regarding their great grandfathers Father O'Brien stated the other day that he thought it might be as well, although he was perfectly able to go back 5,905 years, for him to rest his claims of ancestry on the broad shoulders of the giant Brian Boroimhe, who was monarch of Ireland ten odd centuries ago, and chased his enemies across the bogs of the emerald isle a good long while before William the Conqueror subjugated England with his Norman hosts. Father O'Brien has traced his long ancestral tree only after many years of the most careful and painstaking re search, and. he is positively sure that he has not made one mistake. Ancestry has always been a fad with him, but he is frank to acknowledge that he had no idea when he started to investigate the subject of his own that he could go back, without a break, to Adam, the original progenitor of man kind. v Think of a man being able to tell who his ancestor was when Helen of Troy was sweet 16, when the hanging gar dens of Babylon were in full bloom and glory, when Achilles was a schoolboy, or when Romulus was still in the care of his she-wolf foster-mother! Phila delphia Inquirer. Wholesale Weddings.' At Plougastel, In Brittany, France, there is but one day a year on which, from time immemorial, weddings are allowed to take place namely, on the Feast of St Frances, a model Christian wife and mother for whom the citizens of Plougastel have the greatest vener ation, which they chiefly manifest by setting ail the weddings for that day. This year not less than forty-four cou ples knelt before her altar to pronounce the nuptial vows. This day of wed dings by the wholesale is, of course, a feast for the whole village. In the early morning all the couples meet on the town's public square. Thence they go to the City Hall, where the civil cer emony is gone through with. This over, a procession is formed, and all the cou ples, followed by their respective friends, march three times around the village before entering the church, where the religious ceremony is per formed. Hereupon follows the banquet, which is held at the common expense. The last wedding, feast saw no less than 2,000 guests partaking of the bounteous repast According to an eye-witness of these fraternal agapae, apart from the tables at which sat the wedded couples, plates were conspicu ous by their absence. There was on an average one plate to every four guests. That little deficiency, however, did not prevent the Plougastelites from enjoy ing themselves capitaly during the six days duration oi tne ceremonies. i ftoyai ADSiainer. The Queen of Holland, it is stated, is a total abstainer, and ostentatiously re fuses, on all public occasions, to par take of wine. The Queen is a patron of the Total Abstinence Society and of the Women's Social Purity League, and it Is said she is among tbe most active of workers. ' ' - . , - .'. Timber in Germany. Germany, although it has 35,000,000 acres of forests excellently managed and yielding an immense revenue, de mands increasingly greater quantities of wood, so that for the. last ten years tbe amount of timber which it buys has doubled and its value trebled, ' r Covetous men live without comfort and die without hope. . t