Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1905-1915 | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1908)
I*± **± ± *± * ****+ + + + * *+ *+ **w ' » The Firm of i Girdlestone A. CONAN DOYLE C H A P T E R VI. The revelation of the real state of the film’» finances was a terrible blow to Ezra Girdlestone. To a man of his overbear ing tempestuous disposition failure and poverty were bitter things to face. All his life he had reckoned, as a matter of coarse, that when his father passed away ho would be left almost a millionaire. A single half-hour’s conversation had shat tered this delusion, and left him face to face with ruin. He proceeded to qualify himself as a dealer in diamonds. It happened that he was acquainted with one of the part ners of the firm of Fugger & Stoltz, who did the largest import trade in precious stones. Through his kindness he received practical instructions in the variety and value of diamonds, and learned to detect all those little Haws and peculiarities which are only visible to the eye of an ex pert, and yet are of the highest impor tance in determining the p»*ice of a stone. With such opportunities Ezra made rapid progress, and within ^ few weeks there were few dealers in the trade who had a better grasp of the subject. Early one April afternoon the major was strutting down St. James street, frock coated and kid gloved, with pro tuberant chest and glittering shoes which peeped out from beneath the daintiest of gaiters. Young Girdlestone, who had been on the lookout from a club window, ran across and intercepted him. “ How are you, my dear major?” he cried, advancing upon him with out stretched hand and as much show of geniality as his nature permitted. “ How d’ye do? How d’ye do?’’ said the •ther somewhat pompously. He had made tip his mind that nothing was to be done with the young man. and yet he was re luctant to break entirely with one whose purse was well lined. “ I ’ve been wishing to speak with you for some days, major,” said Ezra. “ I wish to speak to you quietly on a matter of business. Can you meet me at Nelson’s Cafe at four o’clock? I know the man- eger, and he’ll let us have a private room.” “ I ’d ask you round to me own little place,” the major said, “ but it’s rather too far. Nelson’s at four. Right you a re!” It was clear to him that some service or other was expected of him, and it was obviously his game therefore to hang back and not appear to be too eager to enter into young Oirdlestone’s views. When he presented himself at the en trance of Nelson’s Cafe the young mer chant had been fuming and chafing in the sitting room for five and twenty min utes. “ I ’ll tell you why I wanted to have a chat with you, major,” Ezra said, having first opened the door suddenly and glanc ed out as a precaution against eavesdrop pers. “ I have to be cautious because what I have to say affects the interest of the firm. I wouldn't for the world have anyone know about it except yourself. We have a difficult enterprwe on which we are about to embark,” Ezra said. “ It is one which will need great skill and tact, though It may be made to pay well If properly managed. For this enterprise we require an agent to perform bne of the principal parts. This agent must pos sess great ability, and, at the same time, be a man on wham we can thoroughly rely. You are prepared to put yourself at our orders on condition that you are well paid for it?” “ Not so fast, me young friend, not sc fust!” said the major. “ Let's hear what It is that you want me to do, and then I ’m ready to say what I ’ ll agree to.” Thus encouraged, Ezra proceeded to unfold the plan upon which the House of Girdlestoue depended. Not a word did he say of ruin or danger, or the reasons which had induced this speculation. On the contrary he depicted the affairs of the firm as being in a most flourishing condi tion, and this venture as simply a small. Insignificant offshoot from their business, undertaken as much for amusement as for •ny serious purpose. Still, he laid stress upon the fact that though the sum in question was a small one to the firm, yet It was a very large one in other men’s •yes. As to the morality of the scheme, that was a point which Ezra omitted en tirely to touch upon. Any comment upon that would, he felt, he superfluous when deal ug with such a man as his compan ion. “ And now. major,” he concluded, “ pro vided you lend us your name and your talents to help us in our speculation the firm are prepared to meet you in a most liberal spirit In the matter of remunera tion. O f course, your voyage and your ex penses will be handsomely paid. You will have to travel by steamer to St. Peters burg, provided that we choose the Ural Mountains as the scene of our imaginary find. 1 hear that there is high play going on aboard those boats, and with your well-known skill you will no doubt he able to make the voyage a remunerative one. We calculate that at the most you will he in Russia about three months. Now, the Ann thought that it would be very fair if they were to guarantee you two hundred and fifty pounds, which thay would increase to five hundred In case of success; of course, by that ws mean com plete success such as would b« likely to attend your exertions.” When the young man hid finished, the major stood up with his face to the empty fireplace, hie legs far apart, his chest in flated. and hia body rocking ponderously backwards and forwards. "Let me he quite sure that I under stand you." he said. “ You w ish me to go to Russia? You have the goodness to su ggest th a t on m e w a y I should rook me fellow passenger« is the boat?" •That is to say, if you think it worth your while.” “ Quite so. I f I think it worth me while. I am then to pretend to discover certain diamond mines, and am to gi/e weight to me story by the fact that I am known to be a man of good birth, and also by exhibiting some rough stones which you wish me to take out with me from England.” “ Quite right, major,” Ezra said encour agingly. “ I am then to telegraph or write this lie to England and get it inserted in the papers?” “ That’s an ugly word,” Ezra remon strated. "Th e ’report’ we will say. A re port may be either true or false, you know.” “ And by this report then,” the major continued, “ you reckon that the market will be so affected that your father and you will be able to buy and sell in a manner that will be profitable to you, but by which you will do other people out of their money.” “ You have an unpleasant way of put ting it,” said Ezra with a forced laugh; “but you have the idea right.” “ I have another idea as well,” roared the old soldier, flushing purple with pas sion. “ I ’ve an idea that if I was twenty years younger I ’d see whether you’d fit through that window, Master Girdlestone. I ’d have taught you to propose such a scheme to a man with blue blood in his veins, you scoundrel!” Ezra fell back in his chair. He was outwardly composed, but there was a dangerous glitter in his eye. and his face had turned from a healthy olive to a dull yellow tint. "You won’t do it?” he gasped. “ l)o i t ! D’ye think a man who's worn Her Majesty’s scarlet jacket for twenty years would dirty his hands with such a trick? I tell ye, I wouldn’t do it for all the money that ever was coined. Look here, Girdlestone, I know you, but yon don’t know m e!” The young merchant sat silently In his chair, with the same livid color upon his face and savage expression in his eyes. Major Tobias Clutterbuck stood at the end of the table, stooping forward so as to lean his hands upon it, with his eyes protuberant and his scanty grey fringe in a bristle with indignation. "W hat right had you to come to me with such a proposal? I don’t set up for being a saint, but I ’ ve some morals, such .is they are, and I mean to stick to therm. >ne of my rules of life has been never to know a blackguard, and so, me young friend, from this day forth you and I go on our own roads. I ’m not particular, hut you must draw the line somewhere. I draw it at you.” It struck the waiters at Nelson’s well- known restaurant as a somewhat curious thing that their two customers should walk out with such very grave faces and iu so unsociable a manner. to our desire that you should m a ster the whole business from its very founda tions.” “ There is nothing I deaire better,” said Tom. “ In addition to the routine of office work, and the superintendence of the clerks, I should wish you to have a thor ough grasp of all the details of the »hip ping, land of the loading and unloading of our vessels, as well as of the storage of goods when landed. When any of our ships are in, I should wish you to go down to the docks and to overlook everything which is done.” In one respect Tom Dimadale was im I m p r o v e d D ltc h ln * P l o w . measurably the gainer by his connection A recent Invention provides an im with the firm, for without that it is diffi cult to say how he could have found op proved ditching plow, especially adapt portunities for breaking through the bar ed for digging tiling sewer ditches or rier which separated him from Kate. The draining ditches. The device is o f very surveillance of the merchant had become simple construction, and capable of ef- stricter of late, and all invitations from I fective service in any character o f soil. Mrs. IMmsdale or other friends who pitied It Is especially adapted to be drawn the loneliness of the girl were repulsed by by a traction engine or capstan, says Girdlestone with the curt intimation that Scientific American. As shown in the hia ward’s health was not such as to Jus engraving, It comprises a beam A, tify him in allowing her to incur any risk of catching a chill. She was practi which extends forward and with an cally a prisoner in the great stone cage m upward Inclination from the cleaner B. Eccleston square, and even on her walks The latter Is triangular In shape, being a warder in the shape of a footman was, provided with two diverging wings. The as we have seen, told off to guard her. purpose o f the cleaner Is to travel over Whatever John Girdlestone’» reasons may the surface o f the ground and remove have been, he had evidently come to the the excavated material from the edges conclusion that it was of the highest im o f the ditch. The beam A Is hinged to portance that she should be kept seclud* the cleaner, so as to provide for a cer ed. tain amount o f vertical motion. Below As It was, Tom, thanks to his position the beam and forming an angle there ns oue of the firm, was able occasionally, in spite of every precaution, to penetrate with Is a blade C, provided with a cut through the old man’s defensive works. I f ting edge at Its lower end, which serves a question of importance arose at Fen- church street during the absence of the senior partner, what more natural than that Mr. Dimedale should volunteer to walk round to Eccleston square in order to acquaint him with the fact. And if It happened that the gentleman was not to he found there, how very natural that the young man should wait half an hour for him, and that Miss llarstou should take the opportunity of a chat with an old friend? Precious, precious interviews those, the more so for their rarity. They brightened the dull routine of Kate’s weary life, and sent Tom back to the office full of spirit and hope. The days were ac hand when the memory of them was to shine out like little rifts of light in the dark cloud of existence. And now the time was coming when li was to be decided whether, by a last bold stroke, the credit of the houss of Girdle stone was to be saved, or whether the attempt was to plunge them Into deeper and more hopeless ruin. An unscrupulous agent named I-angworthy had been dis patched to Russia well primed with in structions as to what to do and how to do it. He had been in the employ of an English corn merchant at Odessa, and had some knowledge o f the Russian language which would be invaluable to him in his undertaking. In the character of an English gentleman of scientific tastes he was to establish himself in some convenient village among the Ural Moun tains. There he was to remain some little time, so as to arouse confidence in the people before making his pretended dis covery. He was then to carry his rough diamonds to Tobolsk, as the nearest large town, and to exhibit them there, backing up his assertion by the evidence of villag ers who had seen him dig them up. The Girdlestone» knew that that alone would be sufficient when telegraphed to England to produce a panic in the sensitive dia mond market. Before any systematic In quiry could be made, Langworthy would have disappeared, and their little specula tion would have come off. A fter that the sooner people realized that It was a hoax the better for the conspirators. In any case, there seemed to be no possibility that the origin of the rumor could he traced. Meanwhile Ezra Girdlestone had secured his passage in the Cape mail steamer Cyprian. On the night that he left he sat up some time in the library at Eccleston square talking over the mat ter for the last time with his father. (T o be continued.) to enter the earth more or less deeply as the plow ls drawn forward, and carry the excavated m aterial to the surface. At Its forward end this blade Is braced by means o f a support D, which Is fastened to the beam A. At the forward end o f the beam A Is a clevis bar E, which Is secured at Its upper end to d raft bar F, extending to the rear o f the beam A. In this clevis bar are a series o f apertures adapted to receive a link to which a pulley block Is connected. This block serves to re ceive the cable that ls passed to the windlass or drum o f the traction en gine, for the purpose o f drawing the car forward. • Owing to the lightness of this plow. It may readily be loaded upon a truck and transported from jlace to place. C H A P T E R V II. There were rejoicings in Phillimore Gardens over Tom’s engagement, for the two old people were both heartily fond of Kate— “ Our Kate,” as they were wont proudly to call her. The physician chafed at first over the idea of keeping the mat R u ff O rp liiN T ton F o w l » , ter a secret from Girdlestone. A little No varieties o f fowls are better suit reflection served to show him, however, ed to the requirements o f farmers and that there was nothing to be gained by others than Barred and W hite Plym informing him, while Kate’s life, during the time that she was forced to remain outh Rooks, W hite under his roof, would be more tolerable as WyandrA-T .. a n d long as he was kept in ignorance of it. B u ft v/Apitigtons. After breakfast one morning, the doc Both Barred Plym tor asked his son to step with him intd outh Rooks and the library. “ Y’ ou must do something to W hite Wyandottes keep you from mischief, my boy,” he said are to be found In at last, brusquely. every locality, and " I ’m ready for anything,” replied Tom, eggs from them "but I don’t quite see what I am fitted m a j be had at rea for.” sonable cost No "F irst of all, what do you think of variety seems to this?” the doctor asked abruptly, hand ing a letter over to his son, who opened have a greater BUFF OKI*I xuTore. it, and read as follows : hold on the farm ing community than "Dear Sir— It has come to my knowl the Barred Plymouth Rock. The Or edge through my son that your boy has pingtons are com paratively newcomers, abandoned the study of medicine, and but have rapidly made their way to a that you are still uncertain as to his fu first place in the utility class. Particu ture career. I have long had the inten l i e G ra n p ed th e Id e a . larly may this he said o f the buff v a ri tion of seeking a young man who might ‘‘Harmony In costumes Ls tho Chinn ety. Buff Orpingtons are one o f many join in our business, and relieve my old now,” remarked Mrs. De Style, “ the varieties and probably the most popular shoulders of some of the burden. Ezra urges me to write and propose that your Idea being that a woman o f fashion 3f the Orpington family. They are rap son should become one of us. I f he has should clearly express her personality idly replacing many wornout strains any taste for business we shall be happy in her attire.” and mongrels on our farms and have to advance his interest in every way. He “ W ell, my dear,” rejoined her hus taken a front place In the utility poul would, of course, have to purchase a band, “ that being the case, you couldn’ t try ranks as winter layers and market share in the concern, which would amount possibly Improve on your present cos fowls. There ls to seven thousand pounds, on which he tumes.” great demand for would be paid interest at the rate of five “T h ey are certainly elaborate,” said eggs and fow*ls of per cent. By allowing this interest to this breed. They accumulate, and investing also his share her ladyship, “ but do they fully express have light-colored of the profits, he might in time absorb a my character?” legs a n d white “ Sure thing,” answered the mere large portion of the business. In case ho flesh. Chickens are joined us upon this footing we should man. “ Any one can readily see that have no objection to his naftie appearing you haven’t a single thought beyond hardy and grow as one of the firm. rapidly. Eggs are them.” c “ With kind regards to your family, and o f medium or larg S tir r e d H im U p. hoping that they enjoy the great blessing er size, according of health, I remain, sincerely yours, "C heer up, old man,” said the In oariNOTON H IX . to strain. “ JOHN G IR D L E S T O N E .” v a lid ^ friend, "you're not gglng to die W hite Orpingtons are a most promis ” \Vhat d’ ye think of that?” the doctor ye«.’’ ing variety and are likely to become naked when his son had finished readiug "Y ou bet I aln’t l ” declared the In popular on account o f their merits as it valid with a new determination. ’ ayerg and table fowls.— Exchange. “ I hardly know,” said Tom. " I should “ T hat's the way to talk.” like a little time to think it over.” “ Yes, I heard the doctors quarreling S t u d y o f B la c k h e a d D la e a a e . “ Seven thousand pounds is a good The blackhead disease which has be round sum. It is more than half the total about which one o f them should per- capital which I have invested for you. from the autopsy, so I'm Just going to come ao destructive to turkeys In the past few years has been under Investi On the other hand, I have heard those fool 'em.” — Philadelphia Press. gation by the experiment station at who ought to know say there is not a T o De E n co u m sed . sounder or better managed concern In Kingston, Rhode Island. A small para "B liggln s ls always repeating th . Ixmdon. There’s no time like the present, site. microscopic In size, ls the cause things his children say.” Tom. Get your hat, and we'll go down to o f the trouble. I t lives in the tissues "W e ll,” answered Miss Cayenne, "he Fenchurch street together and look into o f the turkey snd causes lrrltatlotjs it.” ought to be eueouraged. I have no that result In the death o f the affected It was a proud day for the ex-medical doubt they are much less wearisome student when he first entered the count than his original remarks would bo.” bird. The Rhode Island experiments showed that more than four-fifths o f ing house of the African firm and realized — Washington Star. the young poults exposed In Infected that he was one of the governing powers yards die before they are six weeks in that busy establishment. Tom Dimv- P h ilo s o p h ic a l. dale's mind was an intensely practical "B eg pardon, ma'am," said the but old. The disease has been popularly one, and although he had found the study ler, "but your son has Just eloped with supposed to be confined to birds over of science an irksome matter, he was able six w eeks I t Is notably a disease a f the parlor maid.” to throw himself Into business with un "Oh, that Isn't so bad," rejoined Mrs. fecting young turkeys, but one from common energy and devotion. The clerks which the older turkeys do not escape. soon found that the sunburned, athletic Uppson. "H e might have eloped with O f the one-fifth that do escape or sur looking young man intended to be any the cook— and I never could have re vive Its ravages at least ten to twenty- thing but a sleeping partner, and both placed her." five per cent may die throughout the they and old Gil raj respected him accord- A P l f t u r o to A d m ir e . year at almost any age. Ingly. A rtist— W hat kind o f picture do you The eradication and prevention o f Girdlestone called him Into the office the disease ls somewhat difficult but no one day, and congratulated hhn upon the admire most? Friend— -Rare engravings. I particu reliance can be placed on any drug to progress which he wae making. “ My dear young man,’’ he said to him In hia larly admire the landscapes on the beck cure a bird that Is already Infected. patriarchal way. “ I am delighted to hear o f a *100 bill. Since the blackhead disease la less pre of the way in which you Identify yonrself valent In dry situations It Is apparent O lv e i t r » . with the interests of the firm. I f at firzt Mother— Raymond, that hole wain*? that sandy, well-drained lands are bet you find work allotted to you which may ter fo r raising turkeys than (be (w ar appear to you to be rather menial, you In your stocking this morning. ier moist clay sol Raymond— Where waa It, then? must understand that that Is simply due K PF T T T T fl H A M E R V h , f « W . . S u Ilo u b t A b o u t H a n n a n U b r a t b n K u i c l l . h l. u i l , F i a l . h r d . A bygone generation witnessed au acrimonious controversy In the Irish fam ily o f O'C'ouor In County Roscom mon us to the right o f uuy brunch o f the undent ruee to spell the name thus— with one “ n.” That right, It T h e C a t ITnttep t h e B a n . According to the report o f the Stata wus maintained, was held only by the Game Commlsalun o f Pennsylvania for O'Oonor Don as head o f the house. 11(07, song and Insectivorous bird* lu So prolonged wus the contest between that state are Increasing and game tho partisans o f the O’Conor and birds becoming scarcer. Bear and deer O'Connor titles that It wus culled tbs are rapidly Increasing. "N-lesa” (stundlng for "endless” ) cor Bears are now protected In Pennsyl respondence. Finally the question was vania by a legal dose season during referred to Sir J. Bernard Burke, the the spring and summer months. Our- j Ulster king o f arms. H is dedslon lng the season o f 1907 there were killed coincided with a dedslon In a certain In the state 230 deer. ¡other matter— namely, that much might Dr. Joseph Kalbfua, chief game pro- bo said on either side. The two dla- tector o f the state, recommends the putlllg fum lliea had a common origin, •placing o f a bounty on the scalps o f the a klng o { Connaught, and could with domestic cat as well as ou those o f th e , propr|ety aIld la accordance with tra- wl.‘l c'a t , I ditlon spell the name one way or the K1 J ' » " 0 greater destroyer o f other. Fortified by tb |8 - award(.. th a bird life, he declares, "than th* house j two fam llleI have oontlnue(I to 8pe„ cat I their name with one "n ” up to the The legislative appropriation for presen: hour. hountlea on noxious animals and birds Equally firm on the question as to was Insufficient to meet the demands how his name should be spelled was the upon It last year. A much larger ap witness In a case tried In the king's propriation ls called for. and the addi bench a few years ago. Asked his tion o f the great homed owl and the name, his prompt reply was "John goshawk to the outlawed class is re ’Awklna.” “ Oo you,” queried counsel, quested. "spell your name with or without an s ta r tin g Seed, in d o o r.. II? ” The emphatic answer was. Any one who Intends to start seeds "J-o-h-n.” As a rule, however, as we Indoors needs a knowledge of various have suid, variety In the spelling of facts concerning each variety— the | t'lie names’ o f people, as In that o f the length o f time needed for germ ination,1 names o f places, owes its origin to peo- the time required for the plant to reach pie not being so clear as was our friend the blooming or fruitage stage, and regarding bow a name should be spell- whether It can be transplanted to the ed. open ground with safety In early I T w o stories In Illustration o f this spring, or not until considerably later.'occu r to us. In the first Mrs. Qulver- For Instance, say. Suburban L if e , ' fui wa8 havlng christened her latest chrysanthemum seeds will germinate In , baby. The old minister was a little from five to ten days, but the plants re- deaf. "W h at name did you say?” he quire a very long season o f growth be- queried. " I said." replied the mother, fore flowering, and the person who gets with some asperity, "Hannah.” “ Do ahead o f Jack Frost must sow t h e 'you/. 8ftld Hle otber, ..n,ean Anna or seed, not later than March 1 -a n d Hannah?” 'Look ’ere,” exclaimed th . earlier. If I»o «lb le W ith v a rie tie s ' thoroughly exasperated lady, " I i which r h l.-h ir n r tt i n n t o n n l n b 1 rr a nm m >.! . 1 I germinate quickly, grow rapid won't be hexatnlned In .th is way. I ly and bloom early, the sowing should mean ‘ Ha Itch-hay-hen-hen-bay-ha Itch'—- be delayed at least a month, to avoid Hannah P the trouble o f repeated transplanting,. I .nl,„ '___ . , ,, . . ... . ... ,,, . . . The second incident to which we re- to prevent the seedling plants from „„ , a mi weak. fer ls thls- H ere also there was "a getting “ leggy” and lady In the case.” She was on an er rand, and she had to deal with the A m e r i c a H a i t h * H e a l t h i e s t r a t t le Secretary o f Agriculture W ilson says name o f another party. In brief, she the United States has the healthiest had bought a pair o f sleeve links for cattle o f any nation on the face o f the her fiance when the shopman asked, earth. This ls owing to our rigid sys "Any, Initials, miss?" The rest may be tem o f Inspection nnd our prompt meas stated thus: She— Oh, ye s; I forgot. Engrave a ures to eradicate diseases. Iu Europe 40 per cent o f the cattle are Infected “ U” upon them for his first name. Shopman— Pardon me, ls It Uriah or with tuberculosis, and In the United States only 10 per cent, and w e w ill ' Ulysses? Names with " U ” are rare, soon have It entirely eradicated. W e You know. She (p ro u d ly )— Ills name Is Eugene, have Inspectors In Europe, and not one animal Infected In any way Is permit —London Globe. ted to be shipped to this country. C rop H o ls te in * P r e fe r r e d . The Iow a State board of control will soon have 1,000 Holstein cows at Its different Institutions. Different breeds liave been used heretofore, but It has been decided to have only one breed and Holstein was selected because o f Its mllk-glving qualities. Last year the cows at the Iowa Institution gave nearly a quarter o f a million gallons o f milk and this amount w ill be In- creased. M e a s u r in g lin y tn S ta c k * . T o find the number o f tons In long, square stacks, multiply the length In yards by the width in yards, and that by h a lf the altitude In yards. Then divide that by fifteen. For circular stacks multiply the square o f the clr- cumference o f the stack in yards by four times the altitude In yards and divide by two. The quotient will be the number o f cubic yards. Divide by fifteen fo r the number o f tons. F e n c e P o u ts . W yoming experiments In preserving fence posts show that when the posts were dipped In crude petroleum and burned o ff so that the char comes above the ground when posts are set, they w lll keep Indefinitely. P roceaa R a tte r. W e ll W o rth K a ln ln a . A crop that w ill produce $15,400 to the acre has been discovered In Brazil, according to a report to the department o f commerce nnd labor from United | States Consul General George E. An- derson at Itio de Janeiro. It Is the Bra- zillait liuen and several experimental plantations are making an effort to put It Into practical use. According to the consul general's re port the plant grows tw elve to eighteen feet high and somewhat resembles hemp. It matures so rapidly that a field w ill produce three crops a year. The fiber has strength, firmness, flexi bility and adaptability for bleaching and dyeing. It may revolutionize the linen Indus try o f the world and become an impor tant competitor o f cotton. An acre will produce seventy-seven tons and the 1 product Includes not only the various grades of fiber for fine or coarse linen but stems and roots can be used for making paper. The suggestion ls made that the agri cultural department should Investigate {his wonderful plant and see If It can be produced In the portions o f the Unit- ' ed states that are free from frost. The p)ant Is said to be ‘absolutely hard, re- slstlng alike the dry or rainy season, bearing equally well on dry or wet soli and not a prey to insects or mildew.” The government Inspection o f reno vated butter last year showed a total M y Choice, production o f 63.000,000 pounds o f such I'd rather be happy than sad, butter, an Increase o f 15 per cent over I ’d rather ' be good ' than bad; I ’d rather rejoice, yes, this is my choice^ the preceding year. Than brood over the troubles I ’ve had. F a r m f s p l a a a d F a n c ie s . I ’d rather be modest than proud, Hogs need' clean, pure water as much I ’d rather be quiet than loud; I ’d rather look up, to the sky's goldev as the rest o f the stock. See that they cup. get I t Than walk with my head always bowed Perhaps you do not realize It, but the dearest animal on your farm la the I ’d rather be healthy than sick. cheap scrub. I ’d rather bn certain than quick; I'd rather be broke than have It Which do you keep? The cow that spoke makes more than she eats or the cow I grew rich by an underhand trick. that eats more than she makes? , , . . . . , I'd rather be sober than tigh t It Is impossible to plant an orchard ■ r d n t h „ be kindly than fight or a windbreak In the winter time, but • Unless, It were true, only fighting It Is possible and profitable to plan one ' would do or both. , The work to establish the right. Fungous diseases and Insect p ests' can be kept from taking the profits of l ’* f" T , * h* n * the orchard this next season by faith- i 1 bV ‘° b,e ,h*? braV' l _ , , ,, , . 1 l I ’d rather be me, with my babe on my fui, Judicious spraying. [ kne# The five to eight quarts o f milk a Than the richest old man near the grant day cow will never return the farm er I ’d rather be lavish than mean, an adequate p ro fit unless the percent-, I ’d rather my wife than a queen, age o f butter fa t ls high. And I d rather my home than the splem . . dors o f Rome An argument In favor o f the open q , th, ca8,ie8 that Europe has seen, head In fruit trees Is that the fruit on —Detroit Free Preea. such trees does not rot so badly aa that P r id e a a d P r ie d . on trees with dense beads “ Blffers gets his new car out several F irst the framework, then the trim times a day. M atter o f pride, I sup mings. So with stock-raising. Feed pose?" to get the biggest kind o f growth, then "Yep. Pried It out o f a mud hole lay on the fa t as fast as possible. three tlmee last Monday.” — Cleveland A dairy cow must be given more feed p ia in Dealer. than Just enough fo r her own support, _____________ . If she Is to be relied upon to give aay-1 The more children a woman has, the thing for the supnort of her owner. fewer theories the ham