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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 1902)
Li- . WCMMMii:i!m:-: GAZETTE. ; , i0nft COTtVAXLIS ISEXTOK COTJKTT, OILEGOy, TUESDAY, AUGUST 2G, 1902. : VOL. NO. 18. FiZVl'-. 1 Consolidated FcD., 1899.. cokvajin ..jiius a y . , , . , , . - - - - " --:r--r Or cr ctinV vh---' '-p. Ji'll-glr.r - - to follow the lnstrnctiona gtyenexact- A,. A !y!!!A 88W HoImes- ' , " : -rttp!!ffr The children I should like to know.'" Ws55!Sr,,,llW6a. '. nd d no ore aud no leSs than . jrfftoSl&WWWWWWWi2 John Ranee appeared to be Borne' GD TMF WKi; " f ? -22SS3S5CT2i ' ; 1 18 expliciUy laid downKand to do It by :; ' ' what irritated at this digression. I Vl , I . How fair ereation'is to themt - - . f raW. I fl JnW--.. tne dock. - A STUDY IN SCARLET. BY A. CONAN DOYLE. CHAPTER IV. It was 1 o'clock when we left - 3 Laurlston Gardens. Sherlock Holmes led me to the nearest telegraph office, when he dispatched a long telegram. He then hailed a cab and ordered the driver to take us to the address given us by Lestrade. "There's nothing like first-hand evi dence," he remarked ; "as a matter of fact, my mind is entirely made up up on the case, but still we may as well learn all that is to be learned." "You amaze ihe. Holmes," said I. "Surely you are not as sure as you pre tend to be of all those particulars which you gave." "There is no room for mistake, he answered. "The very first thing which I observed on arriving there was that a cab had made two ruts with its wheels close to the curb. Now, up to last night we have had no rain for a week, so that those wheels, which left such a deep impression, must have been made there during the night. There were the marks of the horse's hoofs, too, the outline of one of which was far more clearly cut than that of the other three, showing that there vas a new shoe. Since the cab was there after the rain began, and was not there at any time during the morn ing i have Gregson's word for that It follows that it must have been there during the night, and. therefore, that It brought those two individuals to the house." "That seems simple enough," said I; "but how about the other man's height r " "Why, the height of a man. In nine cases out of ten can be told from the length of his stride. It is a simple cal culation enough, though there is no use my boring you with figures. I this fellow's stride, both on the clay outside and the dust within. Then I had a way of checking my calcula tions. When a .man writes on a wall. hia instinct leads him to write about the level of his own eyes. Now, that vrlitnir wa lust over six feet from the ground. It was child's play." "Anil hia aire?" I asked. "Well, if a man can stride four and b half fppf without the smallest effort. he can't be quite in the sere and yel low. That was the breacitn or a pud dle on the earden walk which he had evidently walked across. Patent !.-.ather boots had gone around and cauare toes had hopped over. There la nn -mvntopv ahoirt. It. 'at all. I ft-fH simply appyling to ordinary life a few cf those precepts of observation and deduction which I advocated in that article. Ia there anything else that nuzzles you?"' "The finger nails and the Trichinop oly." I suggested. "The writing on the wall was done with a man'a forefinerer dipped in Wood. Mv glass allowed me to oh nerve that the nlaster was slightly scratched In doing It. which would not have been the case if the man s nail had been trimmed. I gathered up some scattered ash from the floor. It was dark in color and flaky such in ash as Is only made by a Trichonopoly I have made a special study of cigar ashes in facU.1 have written a mono vi-gnh unon the suhiect. - I flatter my- nt.lf that T can distinguish at a elance the ash of any known brand of cigar or of tobacco. It is in ust sucn ae tiiils that the skilled detective differs from the Gregson and Lestrade tvpe "And the florid face?" I asked. "Ah. that was a more daring shot hon p-h T have no doubt that I was right. You must not ask me that at the present state of the affair." T nnssp.l mv hand over mv brow. "Mv head Is in a whirl." I remarked; "the more one thinks of it, the more mvsterinus it exows. How CR.me these two men if there were two men in to an empty house? What has become of the cabman who drove them? How could one man comnel another to take poison? Where did the blood come from? What was the object of the murderer, since robbery had no part In It? TTow came the woman's ring there? Above all, why should the sec ond man write up the German word Rache before decamping? I confess that I cannot see any possible way of reconciling an tnese tacts. Mv comnanlon smiled aunrovtnglv "You sum up the difficulties of the situation succinctly and well." he said Thorn la much that la still obscure taoneh I have quite made up my mind on the main facts. As to poor Le strade's disovery. it was simply a blind Intended to put the police upon n wrong track, by suggesting social ism and secret societies. Tt was rot done by a German: The A If von noticed, was printed some what after the German fashion Now a renl German invariably prints In th T.ntin character, so that we may cnfolv sv that this was not written bv one. but by a clumsy imitator, who overdid his part. It was simply a ruse, to divert inquiry into a wrong channel. I'm not going to tell vou mnih mnrp of the case, doctor. You know a conjurer pets no credit when once he has explained his trick, and U I show you too much of my method of working you will come to the con clusion that I am a very ordinary Indi vidual after all." "I shall never do that." I answered: "you have brought detection as near nn exact science as It ever will be brought in this world." Mv companion flushed up with pleas Tire at mv words and the earnest way In which I uttered them. I had al ready observed that he was as sensi tive to flattery on the score of his art as any girl could be of her beauty. "I'll tell you one other thing," he said. "Patent-leathers and Square toes rme in the same cab and thoy walked down the pathway together as friendly as possible arm In arm. In all probability. When they got Inside they walked up and down the room or rather. Patent-leathers stood still, while Square-toes walked up and !own. I could read all that in the dust; and I could read that, as he walked, he grew more and more ex cited. That is shown by the increased innirth of hia strides. He was talking all the while, and working himself up, I no doubt, into a fury. Tnen tne trag edy occurred. I've told you all f know uyself, now for the rest is mere sur mise and conjecture. We have a'good working basis, however, on which to start. We must hury up, tor l want to go to Halle's concert to hear Nor man Neruda this afternoon." Thia conversation had occurred while our cab had been threading Its way through a long succession of dingy streets and dreary fiy-ways. In the dingiest and dreariest of them our driver suddenly came to a stand. "That's Audley Court in there, ne said pointing to a narrow slit in the line of dead-colored brick. you li find me here when you come back." Audley Court was not an attractive locality. The narrow passage led us into a quadrangle paved witn.nags ana lined by sordid dwellings. We picked our way among groups of llrtv children and through lines of dis colored linen until we came to No. 46. the door of which was decorates witn a small alio of brass, on which the name Ranee was engraved. On inquiry we found tnat tne non stable was in bed; and we were shown into a little front parlor to await nis coming. He appeared presently, looking a Ht- i ii-T-itahlo at bin sr disturbed in his slumbers. "I made my report at the omce, he said. Holmes took a half sovereign from his pocket, and played with It pen sively. "We thonc-ht that we should like to hear it all from your own lips," he said. "I shall be most happy to tell yon onvthinr T can." the constable an swered, with his eyes upon the little golden disk. 'Just let us hear It all In your own way, as It occurred." Ranee sat down on the horsehair enfo and Vnltted hia brOWS. as though determined rot to omit anything in his narrative." I'll tell it ye from the beginning.' he said. "Mv time is from eight at night to six in the moruine-. At eleven there was a fight at the White Hart: but. bar that, all was quiet enough on the beat. At one o'clock it began to oin and T'met Harrv Murcher him who has the Holland Orove beat and we stood ' together atrthe corner of Henrietta street a-talkin'.. Presently maybe about two. or a tittle atter i thought I would take a look round ana see that all was right down the Brix ton road. It was precious dirty and lonely.- Not a soul did I .meet all the way down though , a cab or two went past me. I was a-strollin' down. thinkln' between ourselves how un common handy a four of gin hot would be. when suddenly a glint of li-jht cnught my eye in the window or tnat same house. Now, I knew that them two houses in Liauriston Gardens was empty on account of him that owns who wont have the drains seed to though the verv last tenant ths?t lived In one o' them died o' tynhoid , fever. I was knocked au in a nnP. ; therefore, at seeing a ngnt mtne win- dow. and I snanected as etn.ng . was wrong, wnen we got to door- You stopped and then walked back to the garden gate," my companion in terrupted. "What did you do that for?" T?nnc fsvs a violent iumo and stared at Sherlock Holmes with the ut most amazement upon his features. "Whv, that's true, sir," he said, 'though how you come to know ,it. Heaven onlv knows! You see. when I when I p-ot nn to the door. It was so still and r" , "J. r;;m:(i,,f t hht tm h none tho worse for some one with me. I .. - - !.. J nnfV;nr on 'thla cilia the grave; out I tnougnt mayoe u aa him that died o' typhoid inspect ing the drains what killed him. The thouebt gave me a kind O turn, and walked back to the eate to see it I could see Murcher's lantern, but there wasn't no sign of him nor any one else?" 'There was no one in the street?" 'Not a livin' soul, sir, nor as much as - ... a j j a i t- seiner ami wt-nt uauiv o.u fuucu j ah mnn tnoMh t went Into the room where the light woa n-hnrnin'. There was a CP"Me flickerirV on the mantel-piece a red wax one and by its ngnt l saw "Yes. I know all that yon saw. You wnllrort . round the room several times and you knelt down by the body, and then you walked through and tried the kitchen door, and then " John Ranee sprang to his feet with a frightened face and suspicion in his eyes. " "Where was yon hid to see all that?" he cried. "It seems to me that , you know a deal more than you i should." . I Holmes laughed ana tnrew nis cara j across the table to the constable. Don't get arresting me for the mur der, he said, I am one ot tne nounris, and not the wolf; Mr. Gregson or Mr. L,estrade will answer for that. Go on, though. What did you do next?" T?nnc rfanmd his seat, without. however, losing his mystified expres- sion. "I went back to the gate and sound- ed my whistle. That brought Mur- "Was the street empty, then?" "Well, it was so far as anybody tna could be of any good goes." "What do you mean?" The constable's features broadened s - . . I ye seen many a drunk chap In my time." he said, "but never any one so cryin' drunk as that cove. He was at the gate when I came out. a-leanln' up agin the railin's and a-singin' at the pitch of his lungs about Columbine s New-rangiea Banner, or some sura stuff, help. He couldn't stand, far less "What sort of a man was he?" a aired Sherlock Holmes. John Ranee appeared to be some what irritated at this digression. .. "He was an uncommon drunk sort o' ruan," he said. "He's ha found hisself im the station if we hadn't been so look up." ' '.. "His face his dress -didn't you no tice them?" Holmes broke In, impati ently. " ' . . "I should think I did notice them, seeing that I had to prop him up me and Murcher between us. He was a long chap with a red face, the lower part .muffled .round -" "That will do," cried Holmes," What became of him? - - : "We'd enough to do without lookln after him," the policeman said, in an aggrieved voles- "I'll wager he found his way home all right." . ; "How was he dressed?" "A brown overcoat." "Had he a whip in his hand?" I "A whip no." - "He must have left it behind," Mut tered my companion. "You didn't happen to see or hear a cab after that?" "No." - - "There's a half sovereign for you," my companion sld, standing up aDd jUno- hia hat ' "T am afraid. Ranee. hthat you will never rise in the force. mat you win never rise m liic iui Tnat neaa oi yours bhouiu ub iui as well as ornament. You might hff; gained your sergeant s stripes last of thla mvaterv. and whom we are seeking. There is no use of argu ing about it now: I tell vou that it is so. Come along, doctor." Z We started off for the cab together, leaving our informant Incredulous, but obviously uncomfortable. "The blundering fool!" Holmes said bitterly, as we drove back to our lodg ings. "Just to think of his having such on incomparable bit of good luck, and not taking advantage of it." "I am rather in the dark still. It Is true that, the description of this man tallies with your idea of the second party in tnis mystery. But why should ho come back to the house after leav ing it? That it. not the way of crimi nals." "The ring, man the ring! That was what he came back for. Ifwehaveno other way of catching him we can al ways bait our line with the ring. I shall - have him, doctor I'll lay you two to one that I have him. I must thank you for it all.- I might not have gone but for you, and so have missed the finest study I ever came across; a study in scarlet, eh? Why shouldn't we use a little art jargon? There's tho ccnrlot thread of murder running through the colorless skein of life; and our duty is to unravel it and isolate it, and exnose every inch of it. And now for lunch, and then for Norman Neruda. Her attack and her bowing are splen did. What's that little thing of Chop in's she plays so magniflcenrfy; Tra-la-lalira-UMtlay?": .. . Leaning back- In the -cab, this ama teur bloodhound caroled away like a krk. while I taeditated upon the many- sidedness of the human mind. STRANDED IN THE DESERT. Fully Equipped Steamer Rests on Snds Bor dering the Colorado River, There doej not seem' to be much use for a ship in the desert country of Cal ifornia, whiih borders on the Colorado river, yet travelers in that region may see there a veritable "ship of the des ert." Far from any body ot water ca pable of floating even a mudcow,may be foun(j a big stern-wheel steamer, accus- tomea to ply up and down the river, flrrvine Do8Seneers and freight. She -- there since iast SePtem 'AoT u;u anA Ar sands a mile and a half from the stream's nresent course. This strange condition of affairs has come about simply because Jthe Colo rado, a mighty stream, but one of the most tieaeherouH ot rivere, cnose to cud a new channel for iUelf early in the fall without notice or warnine. One night last September the AIviso L. , .. .f ., , - i f si . ... r . , , . above JNeeuies, awaiting teiegrapnic ; "" . i : .. . i ,. i i - i BPlTS mm BUDDUCS. U11U tua navel la Bunreuures icmuicij r""" Colorado, au hands turned in lor a good night's sleep. Eetween 3 and 4 o'clock. Caotain Babson was arouFed : by Indians, who warned him that for some reason the river was fa Ulna: rao idly, and advised him to pull out into midstream as quickly as poetiDle. This' the captain tried to do, but the i i j 1 woipr ii i h rHHiiv iriiitH I li in I fit in w that hia orow stuck fast in the mud --- -- nlipn lift sot no "steam and tried to : turn the paddle wheels and move out into navigable water. And there he has stuck ever since, becoming resigned to bis situation perlorce and nope.uuy naiatinv the flood, water that comes down at the-times of the melting of the Colorado and Wyoming snows. WHAT THE WISE ONES SAY. He that hath wife and children hath given hostages to fortune; for they are impediments to great enterprises, either of virtue or mischief. The only real belief . in ahso ate conquest ; and the earlier the battle , begins, trie easier ana tne snorter it will he. If one can keeD irritabliitv ! under, one may escape the struggle to . the death wilh passion. Juliana i Ewing. j There are twenty-four hours in a i day, and not a moment in the twenty- lour in which a woman may not change mind.De FiuoU - . . -. . . . ! it you wisn to ne miseraoie vou must at think ahont yourself about what v..ii j ant, what you like, what respect peo- 'pie ought to pay you, and then to you nothing wili pilre. you wi)i t as wretched as you choose Charles Kings- J . lev- j As many as 7,287 men have been to the national house since the American congress was organized. The mw ,i. ..sMn.l th wh have occupied seats and oat on contests. been thrown TOR:, TOUNI Wfcat a fialny Day Taught Helen. Down came the rain with, a steady patter; patter, as though It never meant to stop. . The prospect was anything but pleasing to little Helen-Worcester, as she stood with gloomy face pressed against the window pane, watching the bedraggled sparrows hunting for eeds in the wet road. . , Poor Jittle Helen's face -bad grown darker and darker as she stod watch ing the rain drops, for It wa Saturday and she- had planned to spend It all out of doors. Mamma had even prom ised her that she anight have luncheon under the apple tree with ime of her ..... . J . t s.aa - v.In. nrtie scnoomaies. v nu n no jng so hard that even li it snouia siup, wbJca did not seem at ail likely, it d he altogether too wet to go out lost their charm, and she was feeling so disconsolate that two big tears were lust making their way down ner cheeks, when mamma opened the door and came into the room. Why, Helen, dear, whatever is the matter? Is that mammas sunbeam weening?" "I'm afraid I'm not a sunbeam at au to-dav mamma; this rain Is so very disappointing I really can't help .cry lnr" . no vou think, dear. It will help mat ters to have rain In the house as well na ontV No. I suppose not; but there Isnt nnvthinir to do. and It's so lonesome when it rains. I don't see why it had to rain to-dav." "Ttiin and eet mamma her menaing basket, Helen, then bring your little chnir over here by the window, ana we'll see if a story will not relieve that lonoa'ome feeling. Th mpndins basket was Drongnt, and aa she worked away on a big hole In Helen's stocking, mamma began her story. " ; . ' nh dear. oh. dear, what snau do??' siched the rose. "I am so thirsty I can hardly endure it: - i nave i rootlet 1ust as far as I can after water, and now I have used it all up; I really amafraid r shall die. I love feo iJiin mt oh Ma btafesjare so hot they are withering me upf and sheH dropped her beautiful head m utter uib- Aiirflr(mpnt. - 'And I," sighed the grass, "am neany norishin? too. My beautitui green dress is all turning a dirty brown, and all for lack of a good bath. Oh, that tha wood aonth wind would seno. us li'.- j5V"M " anmo rain!" ".Tnat think of me," moaned tne pea- vine. "Here I have been doing my nest to get my peapods filled for the good folks of the bouse, but how can i wueu ivo hnrdiv strength enough left to hold myself up? If the rain doesn't come soon I shall die before I get half ..I tt wovlr done.1 Aina Rie-hed the berry bush, I, too, shall fail of mv work If the ram uoes n't help us speedily. How can any one expect me to produce juicy uein if t have no water to put into them? Sunshine Is nil very well, but it won't do alone, and the children will be so disaDbointed if I am not aDie to give them some berries." v "You people down there are not we oniv ones that are suffering," chirped the bird from the apple-tree. "The ground is so dry that tne worms nave find a single one, and you can't imagine how hard I have to work to nna enougu tu family alive." "If this is a complaint-bureau. 111 enter mine," snorted the horse, poking his head over the fence. "It's so long since I've had a mouthful of f.resh grass, I've almost forgotten how .it tasts Just then up stole the south wind, and softly caressing these complain ing children, whispered: "I know you are suffering, dears; but just be patient a little longer, and I will do my best for you," then she hurried away to find some clouds. sho worked so hard all flight that when morning came the sky was cov ered with clouds, and as soon as they understood the situation they sent the ..imirnna down in a hurry to comfort these poor, forlorn children of Mother Nature. Af th comforting touch of the rain wr. th. drooning things began to re vive; the rose began slowly to lift her hi nti fnl head, the grass Degan to iook o.rn a ?a in. the peavine straightened itself, the berry bush began work at robin chirped this thank8 , . k a , fat as he flew down to pick up a big, fat worm. "Thank vou. mamma," said Helen, looking ud with a happy face. "I jMnf t-nonr t was so . selfish in not U1UU I. cvuv .. Tontintr It to rain when everything needed it so much. Now I am going to the window to see how happy things are growing, and, oh, mamma, tnere is the robin pulling up a great, long , rt 1 ( ,1 nnip tlii t It'a rninv worm, iuibu - for after all I'll get the. most benefit from ItM ' "Yes, dear, our heavenly Father knew what was best better thair yoa ma and we can always trust him dar ling,, to do the best thing for us, even though we can not see it at the time." Observer. I Unknown Children. I meet them in the country lane, In villfltra shnn and city street. With cheeks all glowing in the rain. I Or voices gladdening in the sleet. How fair ereation'is to them! '-. ;"' They dance opon it lustrous hem, And. lose In rainbows au tneir tears,- How easily the hearts o'erflow . -Of -childrenr we- shuald like to know! V Their sleep is deeper than our peace, .-'".N Their waking gladder than our dreams, Their guardian angels never cease--.' To speak to them in winds ana streams, The days are lifetimes, sweet and slow. To children we should liKe to Know, - r, Ob. little heart above this page. : The .road is long; the road is hard, But do not thou obscure in age , - . That early sky so thickly starreo, -Keep sweet the faitlf'af long ago, Dear child, whom I shall never know. i Youth's Companion. - ' . - An Optical Illusion. -In the following diagram we have two circular "figures fitted closely togeth er. Which Is the larger one tnat is, has the greater surf ace-1 or 2? Now turn the paper upside down and con template the dlagram again. What is your conclusion as - to their relative aizes from this point of view? Ask your friends to guess, and see if they are not surprised to find that tne two pieces are exactly the same size and shape. Montreal Star.- - He Had to Sneeze. ; Bobbv came home one day covered with dirt and bruises and trundling a broken bicycle. "What on earth have you been do ing, my child?" exclaimed the terrified mother. - I ran over a big dog and took a fall," explained Bobby. Couldn't you see him and give him the road?" "Yes, I saw him and was turning out, but when I got within about ten feet of him I shut my eyes, and be fore I got 'em open again I'd run into him "For the land's sake, what did you shut your eves for?" - "Couldn't helo it. Had to sneeze If vou. think you can 'hold your eyes open when the sneeze comes, "you just try it some day.". - -If the reader think's Bobby's excuse was not a valid one, let him try It .some day "when tne sneeze comes." Selected. CALFSKINS MUST BE GOOD. Those Used for Drumheads and Banjos Are Prepared wltb Ureat care. Calfskins are used almost exclusive ly In the manufacture of drumheads and banjo heads, and the utmost skill and care are required In their prepara tion for these uses to produce a smootn even, unbroken skin. The drum and banjo heads are all made from skins. nnifairin la the- best material, but sheenskin is good. : The hides come by rail to the fac tory in great bundles. They are ex actly as when taken from the carcass, except that they have been pickled In salt.-" On receipt at tne factory tne hides are thrown into a small pond be sides the building and lert tnere to soak In running water till all the salt is washed out This takes a long time. Afror heins freshened the hides are thrown over the frames and "broken." The bits of flesh remaining on the hides are removed and the skin is tnen soft and pliable. The hide Is next put in a vat wun lime and left -there for about two weeks. This loosens the hair, which la acmned off. Then the skin is stretched tight on a frame and shaved on hoth aides. Another Datn in a vat elves the skin a transparent effect and puts It In apple-pte order. Once more the skin is stretched out on a frame, anA if anv finishing touches are needed they are given. After being -cut. in chonA it la ready for tne marKet. The armv drumheads are nineteen twenty inches in diameter. Other sizes vary from the tiny ones used ror tov drums to the great big bass drums some of which are sixty Inches in diameter. Banjo heads are of more uniform size. u Cinida Obtained Its Name. The Spaniards visited the country wow known as Canada oerore tne French, and made careful searches for ,oid and silver, and finding none tney often said aca nada (there Is nothing hm-Ai. The Indians, wno watcnea doaelv. learned this sentence and its -meaning. . After, the departure of the Spaniards the French arrived and the Indians, who did not want their company, and supposed they also were Spaniards come on the same errand, wo anxious to Inform them that they wasting their time by stopping in that country, and so they incessantly atd to them the Spanisn sentence, nada. The French supposed that this constantly recurring sound was h name of the country, ana so tney called it Canada, a name it has' borne ever since. If you are riding a free, horse too hard, and it throws you, take the blame. Don't whine and say you nevr did a thing.. " A girl in the country has good reason for keeping the date of her marriage secret; shewants to escape a chari vari. . ..' ."Automatic Poultry Feeder. -Another Inventive pen ins has forgot ten the' needs of man long enough to devise an Interesting and novel con trivance for the feeding of. poultry, which, if itworks as the designer In tended it should, will mean a large saving In the amount of labor neces sary in the are of fowls, nd also In the amount of food. ; It consists of a feed box "equipped with a-trap door In the bottom opera ted by a slide, which in turn is at- POTJLTRT FEEDER. tached to . an arm reaching to an in cllned step" on the ground. The step is really a shallow box In which bait is put to tempt the fowls. Thebalt is corn scattered on the bottom of the box, which Is covered with glass. The fowls are lured by hunger onto the board and 'they nick at the kernels they can see but cannot get The weight of the fowl releases the slide In the grain hot- a nd enoneh- food falls - to tHe irroiind to satisfy the hungriest of owls. The idea is that a fowl will not walk onto the bbards unless hunger prompts, and so the Inventor hopes that the law of supply and demand will work ad mirably. ' No Wheat Famine Imminent. Argentina, according to a book just published by a German authority, K. Gerger, has 157,000,000 acres suitable for wheat This Is three, to four times our present wheat area.. At present Argentina produces aDout ao.ouo.oou bushels a year. Herr Kerger asserts that It can raise at least twenty-four times as much, or over 2,280,000,000 bushels, .when all the. land capable of growing wheat . is . under cultivation. This would aDout aouDie tne exisuug whoa aiinnlv in the world. Calcula tions of this character are always more or less illusory, but tnere is no qoudi whatever that In the humid region or Argentina only about . one-sixtieth of the surface is as yet under the plough, and that the supply of wheat lands seems to be equal to any possiDie ru- ture demand for years to come. Since 1890 when Mr. Robert wooas- uavis was predicting that the United States by this time, would be" Importing wheat the world supply of wneat nas more than kept pace, in good years, with consumption. Philadelphia Press. Lime with Fertilizers. Th nan of lime on farm lands is largely for the purpose of sweetening the soil, and as It has little or no mauu- rlal value there Is no good reason wny it should be applied in connection with commercial fertilizers, but many rea whv it ahould not be so mixed. If the commercial fertilizer contains ni trogen In the form of ammonia tne ac tion of the lime will be to-set free the ammonia and it will escape into the air; of course if the fertilizer was ap nlled to the soil at once after being mixed with the lime the sou mignt re tain most of the ammonia, but it is takins a risk that ought not to be taken. -The same loss of fertilizing ma terial takes place when lime Is mixed with some other chemicals, and the loss is even greater with some than In the case of mixing with the nitrogen in the form of ammonia. rino far the Hoars. ' Ray Eveland sends the Iowa Home stead a sketch of a gate through which hogs may pass and which will restrain the cattle and calves from f o 1 1 o w 1 ng. Make a small gate and hang It with a pairof small hinges as shown in the il lustration. Let the gate hang downward so It can swing both ways and the hogs will soon get on to the combination of opening It Saving Nitrogen in Stables. F.xnerinients In Europe have proven that the loss of nitrogen from the ma- nnr In stables amounts to M.b per cent where only straw Is used for bed ding, and but 48.3 per cent where peat was used. In the sneep snea tney fnn- a loaa of 50.2 per cent where straw was used, and about half as much where peat or eartn was usea. Dry earth rich In numu or vegetaMe rnittnF in about eaual to peat A good plan for using them is to put the earth or peat over tne straw wuere iue ma nure drops. Success with Poultry. Thrwe neonle who do not have good in hatching eggs under hens usually will not do much better .with the Incubator. They may De uiviaea into two classes, one that Is careless and neglectful, and the other that" Is altogether tco fussy, wno wants to oe stirring the hen, . or feeding her, or handling the eggs three or four times a day. For either or tnese to succeea with the Incubator there must be a I thorough reformation; a determination Ttm Af CaHlnv ITar. ' The Pftsnlts of pTnorimonta conducted K " . by different stations show that the de-" gree of maturity at which bay Is cut Influences- very largely the shrinkage' during" curing. At the Pennsylvania station early cut hay lost on an average , 29 per cent In weight while late cut hay lost only 215 per cent 'limotny. cut when just beginning to. head, lost 75 per ceut of water in curing! wnen cnt at -the beginning of the. blossoming period, 66 per cent and wnen cut a little later, or about the usual time, 5T per cent. The Michigan station found a shrinkage of about GO per cent in. curing clover. At the New York sta tion meadow fescue mixed with a little red clover lost in one lot 62.68 per cent and in another 5S.2o per cent during curing. The moisture retained in cured fodder varies with different kinds. At water states that for New England timothy bay retains on an average 12 per cent of molsure. clover hay 14 per cent and cora fodder 25 per cent " A 40,000-Acre Farm. The agriculturist who carefully culti vates 40 or 60 or 80 acres and calls It a farm Is likely to look upon a "quarter section" the regulation homestead of 160 acresas a large estate; an entire section (a mile square) he would doubt less regard as a tremendous area, and , a half dozen sections would seem like a whole province. What would such a man think of a farm on which 100 to 150 men are employed; a farm whose farthest corner is 17 miles from the farm house; a farm that requires three bookkeepers and stenographers to make a record of its activity? That Is the scale on which M. M. Sherman con ducts his farm in central Kansas. He has more than 40,000 acres. Every year he sells . more than 2,500 . fat beeves. If a man were to start to ride around his farm on horseback, follow ing the fence line and riding 50 miles a day, he would not make the circuit in two days. " - Paner Berry Box. The paper berry basket has been re cently Introduced, and if one may judge from the opinions of those who have used It the "present season it will be most welcome. The- Illustration, from a nhotosrranh. shows the form ot the box. It Is made of so-called water proof paper, Is well ventilated and the Inside is treated to a coat of paramne so that it Is moisture-proof and odor less. If manufacturers can get the nrice of this box down so that It la cheaper than the splint boxes now used the paper Jsox Is ; destined to have a . BERRY BOX OF PAPER. larere sale. It carries the fruit In good condition for long distances and, ap parently, It does not dry out so reaauy , as Jn the splint baskets. The Law About Dishorning, in some. States it is unlawful for any one but a graduate veterinarian to dis horn cows. The Idea is, of course, to prevent improper treatment of the ani mals. The reader who Is an expert at dishorning, and who sees a chance to do a favor for a neighbor, or to turn a Denny in this way, should nrst inquire into the law of the State. If there are any calves to be kept,, take care of the small horns before the button ap pears by applying caustic potash, ob tainable at any drug store, to tne spot where the button may be felt. Moist en the stick of potash and rub It over the spot, being careful not to cover too much surface, for it will take off the hair and burn the flesh. Treat the youngsters in this way, and there will be no dishorning to do later. 1 Importing Butterine. It is now reported that the latest scheme of the manufacturers of but terine Is to Import colored margarine from .Europe, thus avoiding the ten cent tax, and placing it In the list of food articles imported In the original packages. Whether they expect to send the oil to Holland and Denmark and have it manufactured there, or will exDort the completely made ar ticle, either colored or uncolored, and then have It sent back as Danish or Dutch butter, we ao not learn yet. Possibly If they try the latter method it will sell at higher prices when it comes back, as Jamaica rum made In Massachusetts, or French brandy from California, or Cliampagne from New Jersey apples, sell for more after they have made the two ocean voyages. Exchange 1 Cheap Lice Killer. A correspondent m the Poultry Mes senger says a most effective and cheap liquid lice killer can be made by dis solving a pound of naphthalene crystals In VA gallons of kerosene. Put the mixture into a jug or can and shake occasslonally. It will be ready for use in twenty-four or forty-eight hours. Paint roosts and dropping platforms. - Cottonseed Meal for Horses. . Cottonseed meal is successfully used, as a feed for horses and mules. It may be better In winter to combine the meal with corn, though some ha ye bad complete success with the meal as an exclusive grain ration ' for botU horses and mules. ' Grazing Lands in Large Tracts" ' Sheepmen in Wyoming arestlll -taking up large tracts of grazing' lands. One party bought 50,000 acres recently. It Is stated that the price paid was the highest ever obtained for similar lands, I i I i I ,1-