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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (April 2, 1908)
I The Firm of 3 I Girdlestone f BY A. CONAN DOYLE t t t TTTT't'Jr,lr4; CHAPTER VII. (Continued.) The old man was pale and nervous. The one weak point in his character was bis affection for his son, an affection which he strove to hide under an austere manner, but which was none the less genuine. He had never before parted with him for any length of time, and he felt the wrench keenly. As to Ezra, he was flushed and excited at the thought of the new scenes which lay before him and the during speculation in which he was about to embark. He flung himself into a chair end stretched his thick, muscular limbs out In front of him. "I know as much about stones," tfie said exultantly, "as any man iu London. I was pricing a bag of rough ones at Van Helmer's to-day, and he is reckoned a good judge. He said that no expert could have done it better." "You deserve great credit for your quickness and perseverance," replied his father. "Your knowledge will be inval uable to you when you are at the fields. lou will promise to be careful and to avoid quarrels and bloodshed." i won t get into any rows it 1 can belp it," his son answered. "That's not my game." "But if you think that there is no mis take, if your opponent is undoubtedly about to proceed to extremities, shoot him down at once, my dear lad, before he has tims to draw. I have heard those who have been out there say that in such cases everything depends upon getting the first rhot. I am anxious about you, and shall not be easy until I see you again." "Blessed if he hasn't tears in his eyes Ear a exclaimed to himself, much aston ished at this unprecedented occurrence "When do you go?" his father asked, "My train leaves in an hour or so. reach the steamer at Southampton about three in the morning, and she starts with the full tide at six. Well, good-by," said the young man, rising up and holding out his hand. "Keep your eye on Dims dale and don't trust him." "Good-by, my son, good-by !" The old merchant was honestly moved, and his voice quivered as he spoke. He mood motionless for a minute or so until the heavy door slammed, and then he threw open the window and gazed sorrow fully down the street at the disappearing cab. His whole attitude expressed such dejection that his ward, who had just en tered the room, felt more drawn towards him than she had ever done before. Slip ping up to him, she 'placed her warm, tender hand upon his-sympathetieally. "He will soon come back, dear Mr. Gir dlestone." she said. "You must not be uneasy about him." As she stood beside him in her white dress, with a single red ribbon round ner neck and a band of the same color round ber waist, she was as fair a specimen of English girlhood as could have been found in el! London. The merchant's features softened as he looked down at her fresh young face, and he put out his hand as though to caress her, but some unpleasant thought must have crossed his m'.nd, for he assumed suddenly a darker look and turned away from her without a word. More than once that night she recalled that strange spasmodic expres sion of something akin to horror which had passed over her guardian's features as h gazed at her. CIIA1TER VIII. The anxious father had not very long t wait bfore he heard tidings of his son. Finally there came a long epistle from Kimberley, the capital of the mining dis trict, in which the young man described his eight hundred miles drive up country and all the adventures which overtook bim on the way. "This place. Kimberley," he said in his letter, "has grown into a fair-sized town, though a few years ago it was just i camp. Now there are churches, banks, and a club in it. There are a sprinkling of well-dressed people in the streets, but the majority are grimy-looking chans from the diggings, with slouched hats and colored shirts, rough fellows to look at, though quiet enough as a rule. Though Kimberley is the capital of the mining fields, it is not there that the actual mining is done. That goes on in a lot of little camps, which are dotted along the Vaal river for fifty or sixty miles. Tha tones are generally bought at the camp Immediately after they have been found, and are paid for by checks on bonks in Kimberley. I have, therefore, transferred our money to the South African bank here. Keep your eyes on that fellow Dimsdale, and let him know nothing of what is going on." He wrote again about a fortnight after wards, and his letter, as it crossed the Atlantic, passed the outward mail, whi. h bore the news of the wonderful diamond find made by an English geologist among the Ural Mountains. "I am now on a tour among the camps." he said. "To-morrow I push on to Delparte's Hope and Larkin's Flat. I am well received wherever I go, except by the dealers. They hear that I am a London capitalist, and fear that I may end up the prices. They little know I bought stones all the way along, but not very valuable ones, for we must husband our resources." One day news arrived of the great dis covery of diamonds among the Ural Mountains. The first intimation was re ceived through the Central News Agency In the form of the following telegram : "Moscow, August 22. It Is reported from To'iolsk that an important discovery of diamoud fields has been made among.it tbe spur of the I'ral Mountains, at a point not very far from that city. They geoloplst. wno has exhibited manymagnll cent gems in proof of his assertion. Thesa stones have been examined at Tobolsk, and are pronounced to bo equal, if n it superior, in quality to any found else where. A eompauy has been already formed for the purpose of purchasing the land and working the mines." The crisis at the African ti.'lds was even more acute than had been anticipated by the conspirators. Nothing approaching to it had ever been known in South Africa before. Diamonds went steadily down in value until they were selling at a prk-o which no dealer would have believed pos sible, and the sale of claims reached such a climax that men were glad to get rid of them for the mere price of the plant and machinery erected at them. The offices of the various dealers at Kimberley were besieged night and day by nn importunare crowd of miners who were willing to sell at any price in order to save something from the general ruin which they imag ined was about to come upon the indus try. Some, more long-headed or more desperate than their neighltnrs, continued to work their claims and fq keep the stones which they found until prices might b better. As fresh mails came from the Cape, however, each confirming and amplifying the ominous news, these ind pendent workers grew fewer and more faint-hearted, for their boys had to oe paid each week, and where was the money to come from with which to pay them? The dealers, too, began' to take the alarm, and the most tempting offers would hardly induce them to give hard cash in exchange for stones which might prove to be a drug on the market. Everywhere there was misery and stagnation. Ezra Griddlestone was not slow to tak? advantage of this state of things, but he was too cunning to do so in amanner which migh call attention to himself or his movements. In his wanderings he ha come across an outcast named Farintosh a man who had once been a clergyman and a master of arts of Trinity Collegi Dublin, but who was now a broken-down gambler with a slender purse and a sti! more slender conscience. He still retain ed a plausible manner and an engaging address and these qualities first recom mended him to the notice of the young merchant. A couple of days after the re ceipt of the news from Europe, Ezra sent for this fellow and sat with him for some time on the verandah of the hotel talking over the situation. "You see," said Ezra, "I have the name here of having a long purse and of know ing which way the wind blows. If I were to be seen buying, others would follow my lead, and prices would soon be as hign as ever. Now what I purpose is to work through you, d'ye see? Y'ou can go the round of the camps and buy in stones on the quiet without attracting much atten tion. Feat them down as low as you can, and give this hotel as your address. hen they call here they shall be paid, which is better than having you carrying the money round with you." The clergyman scowled as though he thought it was anything but better. Ha did not make any remark, however. "Y'ou can get one or two fellows to help you, said tzra. lou know who would be likely men. I can't expect you to work all the camps jourself. Of course, If you offer more for a stone than I care to giv-, that s your lookout, but if you do your work well you shall not be the loser. Y'ou shaJl have a percentage on business done and a weekly salary as well." "How much money do you care to Iti- est?" asked Farintosh. "I'm not particular)" Ezra answered. If I do a thing I like to do it well. I'd go the length of thirty thousand pounds." tarmtosh was so astonished at the mag nitude of the sum that he sank back his chair in bewilderment. "Why, , sir. ne saia, i tninK just at present you could buy the country for that." czra laugnea. w e u make it go as fai as we can," he said. "Of course you may buy claims as well as stones." "And I have carte blanche to that amount?" "Certainly." "All right, 1 11 begin this evening," said the ex-parson, and picking up his slouch ed hat, which he still wore somewha bioader in the brim than his comrades, in deference to old associations, he departed upon his mission. Farintosh was a clever man, and soon chose two active suordinates. These were a navvy, named Burt, and Williams, young elshroan, who had disappeared from home behind a cloud of forg' checks, and having changed his name had made a fresh start in life to the south of the equator. These three worked day and night buying in stones from the more ntedy and impecunious miners, to whom ready money was a matter of absolute ne cessity. Farintosh bought in the stock, too, of several small dealers whose nerves had been shaken by the panic. In this way bag after bag was filled with dia monds by Ezra- He was becoming somewhat uneasy in his mind as to how long the delusion would oe Kepi up, or now soon news might come from the Cape that the Ural find had been examined into and proved to be a myth. In any case, he thought that he would be free from suspicion Still, it might be as well for him by that time to be ujon his homeward journey for he knew that if by any chance the true, facts leaked out there would be no hone of mercy from the furious diggers. Hence, ho incited Farintosh to greater speed, and that worthy divine with his two agents worked so energetically that in less thaa a week there was little left of five and thirty thousand pounds. Ezra Girdlestone had shown his power of reading character when he chose the ex-clergyman as his subordinate. It is possible, however, that the young man's Judgment had been inferior to his powers of observation. A clever man as a trusty ally is a valuable article, but when the said cleverness may be'turned against h'S employer the advantage becomes a ques tionable one. It was perfectly evident to Farintosh that though a stray capitalist might risk a thousand pounds or so on a speculation of this sort, Rothschild himself would hardly care to invest such a sum as had pessed through his hands without bavin some ground on which to go. Having formed this conclusion, and having also turned over In hU mind the remarkable coincidence that the news of this discov ery in Russia should follow so very rapid ly upon the visit of the junior partner of the House of Girdlestone, the astute cler gyman began to have some dim percep- ra mid to have been found by an English j U(u ul ui. truth, iieuce. h brooded good deal as he went about his work, and cogitated deeply in a manner which va once again distinctly undesirable in so vt ry intelligent a subordinate. These brooding and cogitations culmi nated in a meeting, which was held by him with his two sub-agents in the privata parlor of the Digger's Retreat. It was low-roofed, smoke-stained room. Round a solid, old-fashioned table iu the cent of this apartment sat Ezra's staff of a sistants, the parson thoughtful, but self satisfied, the others sullen and inquisitive. Farintosh had convened the meeting, and hW comrades had an idea that there was something in the wind. They waited for him to speak. "Well," the ox-clergyman said at last. "the game is nearly over, mid we'll not he wunted any more, (iirdlestone'g off to England in a day or two." Burt and Williams groaned sympathot ically. Work was scarce in the diggings during the crisis, and their agencies nad been paying them well. ies, lie s off, tarmtosti went on glancing keenly at his companions, "and he takes wth him five and thirty thousand pounds worth of diamonds that we bought for him. We have to do the work, and then are thrown aside as you would throw your pick aside when you are done with it. When he sells out in London and makes his pile, it won't much matter to him that the three men who helped him are starving in Griqualand." 'Won't he give us somethin at part' in t asked Hurt, the navvy. He was a savage looking, hairy man, with a brick colored face and overhanging eyebrows. "Won't he give us nothing to remem brance him by?" "Give you something!" Farintosh said with a sneer. "Why, man, he says you are too well paid already." "Does he, though?" cried the navry, lushing even redder than nature had nade him. "Is that the way he speaics after we makes him? It ain't on the stquare. I likes to see things honest an' above board betwixt man an' man, and this, pitchin' of them as. has helpe ye over ain't that." Farintosh lowered his voice and bent further over the table. His companions involuntarily imitated his movement, un til the three cunning, cruel faces were looking closely into one another's eyes. "Nobody knows that he holds those stones," said Farintosh. "He's too smart to let it out to any one by ourselves." "Where does he keep 'em?" asked the Welshman. "In a safe in his room. This," said Farintosh, taking a small key from his pocket, "is a duplicate, and will open Ae safe. I took a moulding from his key while I was speaking to him." The navvy laughed hoarsely. "If that don't lick creation for smartness !" ho cried. "And how are we to get to thin safe? It would serve him right if we collar the lot. It'll teach him that If he ain't honest by nature he's got to he when he deals with the like of us. I like straightness, and I'll have-t ! He brought his great fist down upon the table to emphasize this commendable sentiment. "It's not an easy matter," Farintosh said thoughtfully. "When he goes out he locks his door and there's no getting in at the window. There's only one chance for us that I can see. His room is a bit cut off from the rest of the hotel. There's' gallery of twenty feet or more than eads to it. Now. I was thinking that f the three of us were o visit him some evening, just to wish him luck on his jour ney, as it were, and if, while we were in the room something sudden was to happen which would knock him silly for a minute or two, we mignt want on wirn tne stones and be clean goue before he could raise an alarm." "And what would knock him silly?" asked Williams. He was an unhealthy, scorbutic-looking youth, and his pallid complexion had assumed a greenish tinge of fear as he listened to the clergyman's words. He had the makings in him of a mean and dangerous criminal, but. not of a violent one belonging to the jackal tribe rather than to the tiger, brought his great fist down upon the table Burt laughed again in his bushy rd beard. "You can leave that to me, mate," he said. "Meet here at eight o'clock to-morrow night," said the leader. "We can get it over by nine, and we will have the night for our escape. I'll have the horses ready, and it will be strange if we don't get such a start as will puzzle them." So having arranged all the details of their little plan, these three gentlemen departed in different directions, Farintosh to the Oriental Hotel to give Ezra his evening report, and the others to the min ing camps, which were the scenes of their labors. (To be continued.) Good Sheep Rarn a Poor One. A goml sheep barn la a poor one. This may seem to be absurd, but the facts supiwrt such a statement. There Is no question but that many flocks are rendered unhealthy and therefore le3i productive by reason of too close housing. In few sections do sheep need more than a windbreak and rain shed. Some of our best shepherds have kept their flocks for decades with only such sheds as would prevent the flock being exposed to direct winds, rain and snow storms. Tne cut shows the type of sheep barn found on the farm of a success ful shepherd, which might be copied witn success. In this instance the sheep nre kept upon forage crops grown in four adjacent lots. The flock may be turned Into any lot at pleasure. It Is well to have this buildln; equipped with a large ventilating win dow In the end near the gable or two small windows such as, shown In the sketch. These, however. , should be r"Iax in the Northwest. The second factor making for th" now prosperity may be termed "the dis covery of flax." For years there had boon a few scattering Ilax fields, but It was only In the middle '90's that the Northwestern pioneer awoke to the dis covery that Unseed oil was of more truly golden line, not only than the wheat field, but than 'any gold-bearing quartz California ever saw. And so the endless golden yellow of tho fields In August and the tinkling bells in September or the flax Held. Those who have never heard tho ringing of the flax bells have missed a truly wonderful sensation. The round seed pods, smaller than peas, which contain the seed, give a faint metallic sound which as one drives or walks through a Held, setting thousands In motion, seems like myriads of Infinitesi mal bells tinkling so faintly as to be all but Inaudible. Nor Is the mere sight of a flax field In the mellow Au gust soon to be forgotten. Imagine a 100-acre field, filled with flowers of a blue more delicate than violets. And of Its profitable character one Illustra tion will suffice. Ill June, 1000, Ole Jannsen bought ICO acres in the heart of the great flax belt for $10 an acre on the crop payment plan. Ole "broke up" that fall and the next spring lJa acres and planted It In flax. In round numbers, he thrashed In -the fall eigh teen and one-half bushels to the acre; sold It for $1.39 $3,500; a little more than twice enough to pay for his land out of his first crop. Not only was the flax Immensely profi table itself, but It removed from the country the stigma, "one-crop country." World Today. THEVEEKIY ORIAH IIlHISI Burled Seed. The Department of Agriculture has undertaken a series of experiments In-1 4-nAA - " r .. MM r V. 1 . - I 1437 Murder of James I. of Scotland. 1525 Imperialists defeated the French at battle of 1'avia. 1544 Diet of Spires opened. 1547 Coronation of Edward VI., when only 10 years of age. 1587 Thomas Cavendish passed the Straits of Magellan. 021 Miles Standish chosen captain of Plymouth colonies. 174(1 Brussels tnknn hv Mnralinl Snro a bushel, total, . , iL , ' 1 'i iiuiiui cn-itruruuK". one oi mo builders of the Savannah, the first steamer that crossed the Atlantic, born In Belfast, S. C. 1777 Col. Neilson, with a party of American militia, defeated British troops under Major Stockton American Congress commissioned five major generals. 1778 Lord North's conciliatory bill pre sented in Parliament. SOILING SHEEP FOLD. equipped with a sash that may be closed In severe weather. Many farms where sheep are kept eveu centurl. but very few actual ex tended to answer, If possible, the old question, "How long can seeds remain burled In the soil and still retain their power of germination?" Many extraordinary stories hare been told of the prolongation of the vi tality of seeds during many years, and are equipped with a barn cellar In which the flock has been kept with varying success. The barn cellar is an excellent place for sheep if rightly arranged. There 'should be plenty of openings to the south, allowing sun to reach all parts of the stable so as to keep It thoroughly dry. Thorough drainage Is essential. mere must be ventilation at the rear of the stable. A bad practice Is to keep the sheep in stables on stable manure, says Farm and Home. The fermenting manure destroys the color and texture of wool. A hint which has been worth many dollars to me Is to use only long straw, hay or weeds for bedding sheep. If short straw or saw dust Is used It gets into the fleece and Is an everlasting nuisance. perlments have hitherto been made. Dr. Beal has reported that he has found seeds that responded to germina tion tests after having been burled twenty years. The seeds burled by the experts of the Agricultural Department at the Arlington farm last year were packed with dry clay In porous clay pots, covered with saucers and placed at various depths from 6 Inches to 3V4 feet There are 32 complete sets, In 3,584 pots, representing 100 spe cies, 84 genera and 34 families. Tests are to be made at the end of one, two, three, five, seven, ten, fifteen, twenty, twenty-five, thirty, forty and fifty years. Table Repartee. "Say," confided the red-bordered nap kin, "I am really smitten with the pret ty stenographer who lunches here every day, but she throws me over as soon as she rises from the table." "Yes," sighed the salt cruet, "I'm Prontable Cattle Feeding;. The Missouri Experiment Station at Columbia has Issued a very elaborate and handsomely Illustrated bulletin on the most successful methods of fatten ing cattle, by Dean II. J. Waters. This bulletin summarizes the expe rience and conclusions of about 1,000 of the most experienced and successful cattle feeders of Missouri, Illinois and Iowa, and contains also a summary of the results of a large number of tests with different kinds of feed, different ages of cattle, etc.. conducted by the Experiment Station of Columbia. 11 consiuers sucu practical questions as the most profitable age to fatten cat tle, the proper weight, the best season of the year, the best method of pre paring feed, the best of shelter, the market demands, the host sort of roughness, etc. It Is Illustrated with cuts of the different types of beef cattle, Including excellent Illustrations of the fat steer herd exhibited by the college this season at the Interstate Fair, Kansas City, the Missouri State Fair, Sedalla, the American Royal, Kansas City, and the International Live Stock Exposition, Chicago. These steers won nine championship prizes, seventeen first prizes, sixteen second prizes, seven third prizes and two fourth prizes. Every steer won at every show excepting one steer in one show. Hire Frame Spacers. The arrangement here shown, If properly adjusted, Is excellent; but, says the Gleanings In Bee Culture, In the first place It Is difficult to bend the nails, and. In the second place, It BENT NAILS IN FRAME. Roots for Farm Animals. If roots are stored In a pit In the field a high, dry place should be chosen. If the ground is clayey the roots should be placed on top of the sweet on her myself, but she always ground. If it Is gravelly and drainage gives me the shake." Is good a shallow pit about 5 feet wide and of necessary length may be shov- ! eled out The roots should be carefully placed In a gable shaped pile about 5 feet wide and as long as convenient. A Xever. Amateur What do you think of the artist Albino who painted a splderweb on the celling so naturally that a chain- j Wn , of traw ghould then be bermaid spent a whole morning trying , to sweep it off? Critic There may be such artists. but I don't believe In the existence of such a chambermaid. morning trying ' la,d Qver the p,e and thIg covered wUn six or eight Inches of earth. Another and thicker layer of straw and a final layer of earth will complete the work. Ventilators should be placed at Inter vals of ten or fifteen feet, which should be closed when sweating has ceased. There la Hope. Husband When I see all those bill I am tired of life. Do you think the The pit should not be opened on warm time will ever come when we shall be days In winter. A ditch for drainage out of debt? I should be cut around the pit Roots Wife (cheerfully) Why not, dar- ' stored In this way do not keep as well ling? You know that you are carrying as when stored tn a good cellar; there- an exceptionally large life insurance. I 'ore- tD?y should be red out as early as A Hot One. The Poet's Wife My husband rend this poem at a public celebration t fore thousands of jtenple. Alas! It was the last poem he ever wrote. The Editor I see. Did they lynch him or shoot him? ot I.raal Tender. GratefuJ Patient Doctor, I owe my llft rt .J j ' l- a Dorfor TTist's all rlrkf knt T With . w . 'V, UUl A UlUI take it in payment for my aervlcsa. possible. New York Cornell Experl- nent Station. Apple Tree Canker. Treatment recommended for canker of apple trees by one of the. experi ment stations is to paint the affected trunk with a combination of one pint whale oil soap, three pints slacked lime and four gallons of water ; thicken j to right consistency with wood ashes or Bordeaux mixture, thickening 1 with lime until like whitewash. would be more difficult still to bend them all with exactly the same curve, for it would be Important to have the bee spaces alike. In the third place, one would have to bore a hole In order to drive them into the frame for the reason that the hammer head would strike one side of the line of penetra tion of the wood, bending the nail over. Taking It all In all, the ordinary staple Is much easier to insert and far cheaper. Location of Beehive. Beehives should never be faced to ward the north. In a northern lati tude a northern exposure In winter la almost sure to cause the loss of the colony, by the rigorous north winds blowing in at the entrance,, and the confinement of the bees, caused by the entrances being shaded on mild, sunny days when the bees In the hives fac ing southward fly freely. SI me and Capacity In Cisterns. In digging a round cistern, 8 feet In diameter and 17 feet deep, will hold 202 barrels of 31 V gallons. If 10 feet In diameter and 11 feet deep, It will hold 205 barrels. 1780 New York ceded her richts in western lands to the United States. 1781 Congress appointed Robert Morrit superintendent of finance. 1703 British flag raised over Corsica. 1797 Trinidad captured by the British under Sir Ralph Abercromby . . . . French and Austrians resumed hos tilities in Italy. 1803 Ohio admitted to the Union. 1809 Drury Lane theater, London, de stroyed by fire. '810 Andreas Hofer, the Tyrolese pat not, shot by the French. 1813 British and Canadian soldiers captured Ogdensburg, N. Y. 1814 Henry Kirke Brown, who produc ed the first bronze statuefiever exe cuted in the United States, born at Leyden, Mass. 834 United States concluded an In demnity treaty with Spain. 1858 City of Corinth, Greece, badly damaged byearthquako. 1SG2 "Thad" Lincoln, favorite son of the President, died at the White House Jefferson Davis inaugurat ed President of the Confederate States at Richmond. 1803 Arizona territory formed from New Mexico. 1804 Second Confederate Concress met at Richmond. 1800 President Johnson publicly de nounced the reconstruction commit tee and declared Congress to be in rebellion against the government of the United States. 150 7 Maximilian entered Queretaro. 1508 House of Representatives resolved to impeach President Johnson. 187i Business section of Panama de stroyed by fire. 1880 Attempted assassination of the Czar of Russia. 1881 Orange Free State declared to be neutral territory. 1SS2 Charles Bradlaugh expelled from the British House of Commons. 1884 Gen. Gordon entered Khartoum. 1887 Congress passed a bill to retire the trade dollar. 18!)4 Capital of Honduras captured by the insurgents under Ortez. 1890 The Confederate States' museum 'dedicated at Richmond, Va. 189$ Courlnof inquiry began its investi gation into the blowing up of the battleship Maine. ?70SSVDS, or Farm Notes. Do not have the sheep pens too warm. The natural coat of the sheep makes it able to endure severe weather. President O'Brien of the American As sociation has signed Gerald Hayes as umpire. The Northern Baseball League has abandoned all idea of entering St. Pau and Minneapolis. Jack Palmer of Newcastle, former champion of England, lasted four rounds before Tom Burns of America in a Lon don fight. I E. C. Cowdin has leased the racing qualities of The Pippin and Counterpane J to the Newcastle stable. Both are 2-year-old fillies. If the members of the nonltrv flrwv which seldom or never lay ' could be ' rhe Lake Mich'ga Yachting Associa weeded out, the feed bills would be wn, .ha9 deci.ded .t0 ,ptart the annuaI .uunnmc cruise or me CUlcago lacht less and the egg profits more. Change the hog pasture often. Have a small bouse built on skids so it can Club on July 25. The youngest and smallest ski ridet who participated in the national tourna- be dragged around to a new pasture ment at Duluth was Carl Taleen, 11 yeara as desired, lr nogs are tea long Id of age, of Ishpeming. one place the grass Is killed out I At the meeting of the biennial congress One poultry raiser says he feeds ot the National Trotting Association tbe roupy chickens whole corn that has doors were O!nedo amateur racing an been well soaked in kerosene, and bathes the swollen heads and eyes with a mixture of equal parts of kero sene and lard. In the highly fertilized garden the aim Is to keep crops coming on In as' der the association's rules. The racing discussion in Kentucky has been ended for this season by granting licenses to four tracks Churchill Downs and Douglass Park, Latonia and Louisville. C. C. Wheeler of New York is building rapid succession as possible. Plan so motor 00,11 Ior t!le purpose of defending as to have one variety ready to take the ritish international cup. which was the place of the crop which ha. beea ' Y n 1f ' i'-V ha" hw ' -nrf h.,iti challenged for by the Brit.sh Mator Boat Clul