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About Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1905-1915 | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1908)
o f them have been brought up on farm« In Europe, and would be useful on American farms. Moreover, the lesson of the crowded city should be driven home to the boy who thinks there Is no chance on the farm or In the small town. The large city is the worst place In the world to be poor In, to fall In; and even to succeed in It, ns one man In a thousand does succeed. Is by no means the highest aim of wholesome American ambition. the men showed great deference to the German, and the major began to perceive that his friend was a very exalted indi Topics of vidual in socialistic circle«. He liked the look of the two foreigners, aud congrat the Times ♦ ulated himself upon having their co-op- eiaton in the matter on hand. Ill luck was in «tore for the expedition, ► however. On inquiry at the ticket office ▲ freat deal of advice about married they found that there was no train for life cornea from people who have never upwards of two hours, and then it waa a tried it. alow one, which would not land them un til eight o’clock at Bedaworth. At this Judge Gray sa.va he is out of politic«. piece of information Tom Dimadale fairly broke down, and stamped about the sta Aeverul jther meu who are out of poli The Imagination la strongly affect a tion, raving and beseeching the officials tic« have not discovered it y e t by the recent Governors' conference at to run a special, be the cost what it the White House, which suggested tho might. This, however, could by no means It the ice trust 1« at all sensitive It power and greatness of the country and A. CONAN DOYLI C be done, owing to the press of Saturday must be deeply pained to hear the uu- has a spectacular and dramatic inter- traffic. There was nothing for it but to klnd things they are saying about It in it. But It was hard logic that brought wait. The three foreigner« went off In fW New York. the conference about. The condition of search of something to eat, and having found a convenient cook shop they dis the natural resources of the United The fly, say« Dr. Adolph Gehrmunu, States la such that some general move appeared therein and feasted royally at 1« as dangerous as the wolf. And we ment for their protection may be re Von Baumaer’a expense. Major Tobias CHAPTER X X II.— fCootlnaed.) cannot make mink muffs out of Us garded as absolutely necessary, and un Another moment and the door was Clutterbuck remained with the young man, who resolutely refused to leave the hide, either. der no circumstances could It be post stealthily opened. Once again the broad platform. The major knew of a snug lit golden bar shot out across the lawn al poned many years. The logic appears It is estimated that In every $100,OCX) most to the spot where the confederates tle corner not far off where he could have in circulation only $1 50 is counterfeit. In the facts that are recited by Gif were crouching. In the center of the zoue put in the time very comfortably, but he Of course Mr. Easy Mark la bound to ford Plnchot, chief o f the forest service, of light there stood a figure— the figure could not bring himself to desert hia com 1“ » ° ut rwentl>' b* the of ¿ h V V l ^ r 'E ^ a t “ ttat“ 'iiU n 'c .T h v panion even for a minute. get more than his share. Indeed, it waa well that «lay that young Agricultural Department to which w e . M ld distinguish the pearl-grey mantle Dimadale had good friends at hi« back. The next time the government takes shall now refer. Thla country had at ■ which she usually wore ami the close St Hia appearance was so strange and wild a census we suggest that an effort be one time a million square miles of tlm- | ting bonnet. She bad wrapped a shawl that the passers-by turned back to have made to find out what the [»essiuiist lier land, the most magnificent forests round the lower part of her face to pro another look at him. His eyes were open of the globe. Its people thought the ; tect her from the boisterous wind. For a and staring, giving a fear-inspiring char population o f the country Is. forests Inexhaustible amt treated them ! ” >lnu,e or morf slle ‘ too<i peering out into acter to his expression. He could not as though they were, “ but we have now , »he d.rkness of the night, as though un- sit still for an inslant, but paced up and When we finally establish com muni . ” . . . . a .. - 1 certain whether to proceed or to go back, with ft quk.k Budden ge8ture , h# clown and backwards and forwards under ration with Mars we probably shall And reached the point where the growth o f that the newspapers there are devoted our forest« 1» but oiie-thiril o f the an- { closed the door behind her. The light was the influence of the fierce energy which «‘ensumed him, while the major plodded exclusively to the chronicle of high life. nual cut, while we have lu store -lm- j no longer there, but they knew that she along manfully at his side, suggesting ev her enough for ouly twenty or thirty j was outside the house, and that the ap- ery consideration which might cheer him There Is in New York a man who has years at our present Tate o f use.’’ This pointraent would be kept, up, and narrating many tales, true and gone Insane because he made money is a bad story, but It Is only the be- | " hat an age it seemed before they apocryphal, most of which fell upon heed rapidly. Usually this kind of insanity ginning. The older oil fields are ex- j |"‘ard ller footsteps. She came very alow- less cars. already, natural gas has been ¡ * M ° n ‘ he Ezra Girdlestone had four hours’ start develops In the sons of the men who do halisted . . 7T ,w , ,1« , othee, as if afraid of falling over some- wasted until the supply has failed In thing jn the darknesB 0nce or twice Bhe of them. That was the thought which the money-making. many places. It is said that our an- stopped altogether, looking round, no rankled in Tom’s heart and outweighed He knew Somehow It doe« us good to read of thracite coal fields are in danger o f be- doubt, to make sure of her whereabouts, every other consideration. Kate’s nature so well that he was con that man who traveled more than one lng exhausted in fifty years, the bltu- j At the instant the moon shone out from vinced that she would never have express "Our ' behind a cloud, and they saw her dark hundred thousand miles looking for u ruinous In a hundred years. ed such fears to Mrs. Scully unless she wife. It goes to show that a wife Is ranges in the West, from which we first ' figure a short distance off. The light en- had very assured reasons for them. In drove the buffalo to cover them again | * ble<l ber to “ • tbe withered oak, for fact, apart from her own words, what «till worth having. with cattle and sheep, are capable of |*be rapidly toward. it A . she ap- could this secrecy and seclusion mean ex . . . . 1# l * proached she satisfied herself apparently The French republic is going to spend supporting but about one-half what that Bhe w u the flrBt on the groundi for cept foul play? After what he had learn $8,1 XX) for the purpose of transferring they could under intelligent manage- : , hr B)acktBed her pace ouce more and ed about the insurance of the ships and the remains of Zola to the Pantheon. ment, and the price of beef is raised J walked in the listless way that people as- the manner in which the elder Girdlestone had induced him to cease corresponding There L b nothing like death to cause a accordingly.” We are really suffering §ume when they are waiting. The clouds with Kate, he could believe anything of man to be appreciated by the French now from the carelessness of the past, ‘ were overtaking the moon again, and the his employers. He knew, also, that in light was getting dimmer. and so are beginning to realize that pro republic. * "I can see her still,” said Ezra in a case of Kate’s death the money reverted tection Is necessary. We see, too, that to her guardian. There was not a single A« to the devotion of a wife to a It Is desirable to consider all the nat whisper, grasping bis father’s wrist in his link missing In the chain of evidence husband who beats her, one philosopher ural resources at the same time and to excitement. which showed that a crime was in contem .. , The old man said nothing, but he peer- hus observed that the average woman prepare for united efforts to save them. ^ through tha darkness with eager, plation. Then, who was that butcher-like man whom Ezra was taking down with would rather take a sound thrashing This Is what the forester calls the new ‘ straining eyes. than be knocked speechless by unan point of view. "There she is, standing out a little him? The major haa put it on record that swerable logic. from the oak,” the young merchant said, those two hours appeared to him the long pointing with a quivering finger. "She’s THB MAP IN POLITICS. est that ever he passed in his life, and V>t near enough for him to reach her.” A barbed-wire fence Is soon to mark Tom, no doubt, would indorse the senti "H e’s coming out fro mthe shadow the boundury line between the United P r e s id e n t a n d V i c e P r e s id e n t S e l ment. Everything must have an end, now," the other said huskily. "Don’t you d o m fro m X e s v S ta te «. States and Canada. Gentlemen who however, and the station clock, the hands Candidates for President and Vice we him crawling along the ground?” ■tart for Canada, taking their affinities of which aeemed aevernl times to have "I see him,” returned the other in ths stopped altogether, began at last to ap with them, may in future years find It President on a party ticket nearly al same subdued, awestruck voice. "Now he necessary to provide themselves with ways come frofn widely separated has stopped ; now he goes on again ! He proach the hour at which the Portsmouth States, says the Brooklyn Eagle. John train waa timed to depart. Baomser and wire clippers. is close behind her! She is looking the hia two frlcpds had come back, all three C. Fremont of California was united «ther way.” smoking cigarettes, and looking the better with William L. Dayton o f New Jer A thin ray of light shot down between Some one has discovered that our sey, Abraham Lincoln o f Illinois was ths clouds. In its silvery radiance two for their visit to the cookshop. The five quarter is a “ hoodoo’' coin. It has first conjoined with Hannibal Hamlin figures stood out hard and black, that of got Into a first-class railway carriage and thirteen stars, thirteen bars, thirteen waited. Would they never have done ex of Maine, and then unhappily with An the unconscious girl and of the man who amining tickets and stamping luggage and arrowheads, and so on. Yet no one crouched like a beast of prey behind her. drew Johnson o f Tennessee. going through all sort« of tedious formali seems to object to hoarding thirteen When Grant of Illinois was first He made a step forward, which brought ties? At last comes the shrill whistle of of them when they come In bunches nominated his mate was Schuyler Col him within a yard of her. She may have the guard, the answering snort from the uor adding the thirteenth to the pile. heard the heavy footfall above the ghriek engine, and they are fairly started upon fax o f Indiana. Those States were ad of the storm, for she turned suddenly and joining, but that was the only modern faced him. At the same instant she was their mission of rescue. In an attempt to fast forty days, a instance In which adjoining States There was much to be arranged as to struck down with a crashing blow. There man succeeded In starving himself to have been drawn on for such a fuir- their plan of action. Tom, Von Baumscr was no time for a prayer, no time for a and the major talked it 'over in a low death in thirty-one days. Ills purpose pose. scream. One moment had seen her a mag voice, while the ttoo socialists chatted to was to prove that the mind controls Democratic nominations in the same nificent woman in all the pride of her gether in German and consumed eternal the body. All great religious teachers period followed the rule of widely sepa- j youthful beauty* the next left her a poor cigarettes. Tom was for marching and phllosopners have already proved rated States. In 1864 McClellan o f New battered senseless wreck. The navvy had straight up to the Priory, and demanding this, and a sound knowledge of their Jersey rail with Pendleton of Ohio. In earned his blood money. that Girdlestone should deliver his ward At the sound of the blow and the sight noble demonstrations should forbid 18158 Seymour of New York ran with up to them. To the major and the Ger sf the fall both the old man and the such Iguoble experiments. Blair o f M issouri; in 1872 Greeley of young ran out from their place of conceal man this seemed an unwise proce»din.r. It New York ran with B. Gratz Brown of ment. Burt was standing over the body, was to put themselves hopelessly wrong from a legal point of view. Girdlestone Dentil duties on great estates are ex Missouri. That was the year In which his bludgeon in his hand. had only xto say, as he assuredly would, tremely heavy lit Urent Britain. The Grant, renominated, ran with Henry "Not even a groan,” he said. "What that the old story was a ridiculous mare’s d’ye think of that?” beneficiaries under the will of an Eng Wilson of Massachusetts. nest, and then what proof could they ad lishwoman who died recently had to Girdlestone wrung his hand and con- duce, or what excuse give for their inter Iu 1876 the Democratic ticket com giatulated him warmly. "Shall I light pay to the government two million sev- prised Tilden of New York and Hen ference? However plausible their suspi eu hundred and fifty thousand dollars dricks of Indiana, and Republican the lantern?” he asked. cions might be. they were, after all. only "Don’t !” Ezra said earnestly. suspicions, which other people migkir not In taxes on an estate worth about ticket Hayes of Ohio and Wheeler of "I had no idea that you were so faint view in as grave a light as they did. eighteen million dollars. Snell a tax Is New York. hearted, my son,” the merchant remark "What would you advise, then?" Tom urged iu America by influential public The recapitulation could be furthei ed. "However, I know the way to the asked, passing his hand over hia heated men. pursued to show that Garfield and Ar gate well enough to go there blindfold. forehead. thur. Hancock and English, Cleveland What a comfort It is to know that there " I ’ ll tell you now,” the old soldier an We are not Informed as to the and Hendricks, Blaine and Logan, is no blood about! That’s the advantage swered, "and I think me friend Von amount o f Sunday work required of of a stick over a knife.” Cleveland and Thurman, Harrison and Baumaer will agree with me. 1 under government employes In the depart Morton, Cleveland and Stevenson, and "You’re correct there, guv’nor,” Burt stand that thia place ie eurrounded by a ments at Washington, but there can be *aid, approvingly. wall to which there la only one gate. Sure Harrison and Held represented widely no question of the desirability of re different States In the national elec* "W ill you kindly carry one end and I'll wc shall wait outside this wall, and one ducing it as far as possible, In accord take the other. I’ll go first, if you don’t of ua can go in as a skirmisher and find tlons. mind, because I know the way beat. The out how the land lies. Let him ascertain ance with the petition of the citizens In 1808 Mr. McKinley o f Ohio ana train will pass in less than half an hour, from the young lady herself if she re of the capital who recently waited upon Mr. Hobart of New Jersey ran together so we have not long to wait. Within that quires immediate help, and what she the President. Popular sympathy, too, against Mr. Bryan of Nebraska and Mr. would wish done. If he can’t make his will be with the movement, Inaugurated Sewall o f Maine. In 1900 Mr. McKin time every chance of detection will have way to her, let him hang about the house, gone.” by the same petitioners, to prevent gov Girdlestone raised up the head of the and see and hear all that he can. We ley o f Ohio and Mr. Roosevelt of New ernment contractors from compelling York were named by the Republicans murdered girl, and Burt took her feet. shall then have something solid to work their employes to work on Sunday. against Mr. By ran of Nebraska and Mr. Esra walked behind aa though he were in on. I have a whistle here on me watch Whether we believe In the Puritan or Stevenson o f Illinois. In 1904 Judge acme dreadful dream. He had fully rec chain. Our skirmisher could take that the continental Sunday, or, as most of Parker of New York and Mr. Davis of ognised the necessity for the murder, but with him, and if he wants immediate help us do, occupy middle ground, we must West Virginia as Democrat* were de he had never before realized how ghastly one blow of it would be enough to bring admit that employes' rights are Invaded feated by Messrs. Roosevelt of New the details would he. Already he had be the four of us over to him. Though how gun to repent that he had ever acqui the devil I am to git over a wall,” con by the operation o f any system that York and Fairbanks of Indiana. esced In It. Then cam** thoughts ef the cluded the major ruefully, looking down encourages work on Sunday, whether splendid possibilities of the African busi at hia own proportions, “ is more than I It specifically exacts such labor or not. T h s Itr a v e a i M a n . ness. which could only be saved from de can tell.” It la to be hoped—and expected—that James Creelruan, the well-known war struction by this woman’s death. How "I hope, my vrienda,” said Von Baum- President Roosevelt’s sympathy with correspondent, who Is on record over could he, with his luxurious tastes, bear ser, “ dat you vill allow me the honor of labor and the decent observance of the his own signature as having provoked the squalor and poverty whish would be going first.” Sabbath will bring about a reform In the war between the United States anti his lot were the firm to fail. Better a “ That ia my place,” «aid Tom with de thla direction, and there need be no pol Spain, gives this description o f the rope and a long drop than such a life as cision. that! All these considerations thronged itics In It. It waa nearly eight o’clock by the time bravest man he ever saw: into his mind as he plodded along the “ It was during the siege of Port Ar slippery footpath which led through the they reached their destination. The sta No nation baa a finer opportunity thur," says Mr. Creel man. "On the •orest to the wooden gate. tion maater directed them to the Flying Bull, where they secu>ed the very vehicle than thla to learn the lessons of right edge o f one o f the parapets, his feet iu which Kate and her guardian had been living and to apply them, for In our hanging over the edge, sat a man mak CHAPTER X X III. originally driven up. By the time that country every sort of condition Is rep When Tom and the major arrived at ing a sketch o f the scene. From the resented somewhere, every stage of de Japanese ships In the offing there came Waterloo station, the latter in a breath the horse waa put in it waa close on to the half hour. velopment can be studied In the life; a continuous stream o f screaming, less condition, they Ituind the German “ Drive aa hard as you can go to the young, growing communities can sea death-delivering shells. Bat the man tvaiting for them with his two fellow ex Priory, me man,’’ saidL the major. iles. The gentleman of Nihilistic procliv the faults o f the overgrown, and plan The sulky oetler made no remark, but a sketched on unmoved. Mauser bullets. ities waa somewhat tall and thin, with to avoid them. Such an exhibit aa with their peculiar snakelike hiss, flew , A long frock coat buttoned almost up to look of surprise passed over hia phleg matic countenance. For years back ao the “Congestion Show,” recently held over and beside him. In «11 this noise his throat, which showed signs of giving In New York City, has Its leaaona for and Imminent death the man continued' at the seams every here and there. His little had been heard of the old monastery the remotest American village. It waa hi* work, completely absorbed In it. j frizzly hair fell over hi» collar behind. that ita very existence had been almost forgotten in Bedsworth. Now. whole graphically shown that most of the “ Finally fie-re came from within the *nd *** bad * »hort bristling beard. He troops of Londoners were coming down in evils of a large city, 111 health, poverty, ,h* f*®"» succeaeion, deinamliag to be driven there. forti float Ion a R om an officer o f gigan I « " ? ? wl,h OD* h*D't *t,u* of hia coat and the other upon his hip. aa crime. Imperfect education, are due to tic size. He stood long beside the man though rehearsing the position in which He pondered over the strange facts as he overcrowding, to Improper distribution who was drawing and watched the pen , his status would l»e some day erected in drove through the darkness., but the only o f population; that the human being cil carefully Riling In the graphic lines. the streets of hia native Russia, when the conclusion to which hi« bucolic mind could needs space to live and grow In, end The shells from the ships when they people had their own. and despotism waa come was that it was high time to raise the fare to that particular point. that a large city la tolerable only when struck the masonry stirred up s cloud no more. In spite of hia worn attire It was a miserable night, stormy and It la laid out with wise foresight. These of mortar dust, and as they exploded there was something noble and striking wet and bitterly cold. None of the fire obvious conclusions are Important to about the man. Ilia bow. when Ranm- threw chunks c f broken stone In every men had s thonght to spare for the weath every email American city; for almost direction. The officer’s uniform was eer intro*lured him to the major and Tom, er, however. The two foreigners had been would have graced any court In Europe. every one haa the blind ambition to be covered with mortar dost, and his fa Round hia neck he had a coarse string so Infected by the suppressed excitement bigger. If It la to grow large healthily tlgue cap had been knocked awry by from which hung a pair of double eye of their companions, or had so identified and gracefully, the email city muat a Mauser bullet 1 have never seen a glasses. Tbeoe he fixed upon hie aquiline themselves with their comrade#’ cause, atudy the hlatory of New York, the (•rarer man. At laat he aald. In ex none, and took a good look at the gentle that they were aa eager aa the others. protdema It haa met and failed to meet. “ Are we near?” the major asked. cellent Engl lab— for all Russians are men whom he had come to nerve. "The gate 1« just at the end o’ the lane, What may not the j Uuil|[ western city Bulow, of Kiel, waa a «mall, dark-eyed excellent linguists-—and speaking with sir." w hl.ii haa not yet gone wrong learn an aristocratic drawl, T «ay, Creel- clean shaven fellow, quick and energetic "Don’t pell up at the gate, but take ns from a comparison of the factory and man, aren’ t you ever going to finish In hie movements, having more the ap tenement house areas In New York? pearance of a Celt than of n Teuton. He a little past It." that sketch?*"— James 8. Metcalf*, lo T h e re ain’t no way In except the eecmed to be full of amiability, and as- Even the farmer whose nearest neigh Success Magairtne. sored the major in execrable English bow gate.” the driver remarked. bor la ten mllee away la concerned with “ Do what you're ordered,” said the The three-he 11 merchant never ad very happy he was to be able to do a ser major sternly. this city problem. Societies In the city vice to one who had shown ktndnesa to are trying to send to him some of the vances any thing on ths rewards oi Once again the ostler’■ face betrayed their esteemed colleague and persecuted people who ana stock In tha city. Many virtu* patriot. Yes Bsumser. Indeed both of unbounded astonishment Us slewed half ! The Firm of | Girdlestone ! A way round In his seat and took as good a lock as was possible in the nncert&in light at the faces of His passengers, it had oc curred to him that it waa more than like ly that he would have to swear to them at eorne future date In a police court. " I ’d know that thick ’un wi’ the red face," he muttered to himself, “ and him wi’ the ycller beard and the stick." They passed the stone pillars with the weather-beaten heraldic devices, and drove along by the high park wall. When they had gone a hundred yards or ao the major ordered the driver to pull up, and they all got down. The Increased fare was paid without remonstrance, and the oetler rattled away homewards, with the inten tion of pulling up at the county police station and lodging information as to the suspicious visitors whom he had brought down. "It is ioikely that they have a watch at the gate," said the major. "W e must keep away from there. Thia wall ia a great hoight. We’d beat keep on until we find the aiaiest place to scale it.” "I could get over it here,” Tom said eagerly. "Wait a bit. A few minutes can make, no difference one way or the other. Ould Sir Colin used to say that there were more battles lost by over haste than by slowness. What’s the high bank running along on the right here?" "Dat’a a railway bankment,” said Von Raumser. "See the posts and the little red lights over yonder.” "So it is. The wall seems to be to be lower here. What’s this dark thing? Hullo, here’« a door lading into the ground«.” "It ia locked, though.” "Give me a hoist,” Tom said imploring ly. "Don’t throw a minute away. You can’t tell what may be going on inside. At this very moment, for all we know, they may be plotting her murder.” "He haa right," said Von Baumser. "W e shall await here until we hear from you. Help him, my vriends—shove him up.” Tom caught the coping of the wall, al though the broken glass upon the top cut deeply into his hands. With a great heave ho swung himself up, and was soon astride upon the top. “ Here’s the whistle,* said the major, standing on tiptoe to reach a downstretch- ed hand. "I f you want ua give a good blow at It. We’ll be with you in a brace of shakes. If we can’t get over the wall we’ll have the door down. Tom was in the act of letting himself drop into the wood, when suddenly the watchers below saw him crouch down upon the wall, and lie motionless aa though listening intently. "H ush!” he whispered, leaning over. "Some one ia coming through the wood.” The wind had died away and the storm subaided. Even from the lane they could hear the sound of feet, and of muffled voices inside the grounds. They all cronched down in the shadow of the wall. Tom lay flat upon the glass-studded cop ing, and no one looking from below could distinguish him from the wall itself. (To be continued.) u s s ilif o f S e e d s. As the result o f tests o f alfalfa, red clover and grass seeds secured lu the open market Chief Galloway of the bureau of plants lndusry makes a re port that Is certaiuly o f Interest to farmers. Red Clover.—O f the 1,217 samples of red clover seed secured 406, or one- third, contained seed of dodder, 424 contained traces o f yellow trefoil seed, and 136 bore evldenre of having orig inated in Chile. Alfalfa.— Of the 399 samples o f al falfa seed secured 191, or about one- half, contained seed of dodder, 136 contained a trace of yellow trefoil seed, 120 contained a trace o f sweet clover seed, and 16 contained a trace of bur clover seed. Bromus Inermis.—O f the 69 samples of Bromus Inermis seed obtained 15 contained seed of cheat, or chess, 28 contained from 2 to 3 j>er cent o f seed of the wheat grasses, several con tained seed o f meadow fescue and one contained more than 24 per cent of meadow fescue aud rye grass seed to gether. Kentucky Blue Grass.— O f the 429 samples of Kentucky blue grass seed obtained only 8 were found to be free from any trace of Canada blue grass. In most o f these samples the trace of Canada blue grass found was imma ture seed, showing that it was harv ested with the Kentucky blue grass seed. The seeds of the two plants not ripening at the same time. It Is Im probable that mature seed o f Canada blue grass would be harvested with Kentucky blue grass seed. In 110 samples, however, Canada blue grass seed was found in quantities exceed ing 5 per cent, 32 of these being Can ada blue grass seed misbranded as Kentucky blue grass seed. I f given befora the hogs get past tha eating and driuking stage, the fol lowing Is claimed to be an infallible cure for hog cholera: To a barrel o f good slop add one pint o f Venetian red and one pint o f kerosene oil. Mix well. The first rule for getting a good profit from poultry is to get the chicks hatched early, and the next Is to keep those chicks growing so fast that they will reach laying maturity before the commencement o f cold weather. The garden should contain moat ot a!! of the common medicinal and flavor ing herbs. Moat o f these can be grown with very little trouble, and the herb plat should Include such useful plants as S A g e , hoarhound, caraway, saffron, pennyroyal, tansy and others that will suggest themselves. T h ree H o re e Ilo e b le tr e e . A doubletree attachment to binder or sulky plow can be made according to the plan shown. The dimensions can be varied «Itghtly to accommodate bors**s of different sizes. S eed G e r m i n a t i o n . It requires from 20 to 30 days fo* asparagus seed to germinate; beaus, 5 to 10 days; borecole, broc-coll, Brus sels sprouts, cabbage and cauliflower, 5 to 12 days; carrots, 14 to 21 days; celery. 14 to 20 days; corn salad, 14 da ys; corn, 8 to 14 da ys; cress, curled, 3 to 5 days; cress, water, 12 to 14 d a ys; cucumbers, 5 to 10 days; egg- plaut, 8 to 20 days; endive, 3 to 7 da ys; lettuce, 3 to 5 d a ys; melons, cantaloupes, 5 to 10 d a y s ; melons, water, 8 to 15 days; mustard, 3 to 8 d a ys; onions, 7 to 14 days; parsley, 20 to 30 d a y s ; parnlps, 8 to 14 days; peas, 5 to 10 days; pepper, 8 to 20 days. W ood A .b o . Ashes made from bard wood are more valuable than those made from soft wood. It Is claimed that some ashes from soft wood have not enough value to make It worth while to bother with them. It has also been discovered that the value Is largely governed by T h e P o ta t o H o g . The potato bug, or Colorado potato the part of the tree from which tha It Is declared by beetle, passes the winter In the ma- ashes are made. FARM-BUILDING CONSTRUCTION. THE TW ENTIETH CENTURY JEW . H ia D « « l r « « a n d A m b i t i o n s A r e N ot o f H is R a c e N o r o f H is C r e e d . Ezra Brudno, the widely known He brew novelist and essayist. In Llppln- cotts writes most Interestingly o f the life of the 20th century Jew. Despite the happiness which the Jewish Immi grant feels when he first sets foot on our shore, the newcomer has a lurking longing In his breast for home. Says Mr. Brudno: "Not that he likes that ‘home’— he speaks off it with a creeping sense of horror; but he Is helpless against the enchanting echo o f old memories. The warm, Ill-smelling synagogue o f his native town, as contrasted with the airy American house o f worship, calls him back with the magic charm of childhood ; the communal atmosphere of the Pale lures him with the sweetness of a fandly fireside; somehow, at a safe distance, the very yoke from which he sought to free himself seems to him now pregnant with poetic sentiment. Does not the beggar grown rich some times yearn for his discarded tatters? American customs nnd atmosphere are to him what a flood o f sunshine It to the blind; he may feel its warmth, but the brilliant beams are not for him. It la only after a sojourn o f a few years that his viewpoint begins to broaden. Then he begins to realize that in the whole history o f his people the ■lew never had a period of tranquility parallel to tbp present In the United States. Gradually he even becomes proud o f his adopted fatherland. And while in his heart o f hearts he never ceaseR to hanker after ‘the fish, which we did eat in Egypt,’ he knows that this country Is his Canaan, tho Prom ised Land." With the growth o f “Jakle” and Rachel, or perhaps more often Jim and Catherine, the real tragl-comedy be gins. “ Often Jim and Catherine usher In a tragedy— the tragedy o f the race. And the trngedy Is not always one-sided. The tierce struggle arises from misun derstanding. Jim nnd Catherine de mand Independence, and they win the'r fight for It. But not Infrequently lnde- l>endence Is another name for tyranny. Jim cannot understand why *the old man’ Is so fond of the synagogue; he falls to see what chains 'daddle' to those musty habits he brought over from the old country. Catherine frowns at the sound of the ’old lady's’ Yiddish; her mother's old-fashioned manners an noy her. At first the ‘old folks’ make a bitter fight, but If old age has pa tience. youth has vigor. Little by little the erderly people weaken; they soon begin to yield, but yield as they might, they never bend enongh to please Jim and Catherine. Alas I Alas! how often they break because they cannot bend! “ While the Jew o f the past regarded everything as subordinate to his faith, and it was with the eyes o f his faith that bs looked upon the world, the 20th century Jew views life as a man first, and as • Jew last. His desires, am bitions and hope« a rt o f tha nation o f whlcA ha la a part, not o f his raca. not of hia creed. It la the natural pride o f bis blood that sometimes makes him strtva for recognition as a member of bis race, but only aa a means o f re moving the world's prejudice, not with the hope of retaining hia Jewish Iden tity." The above diagram shows a cross section of a piggery building thirty-four feet wide, which may be of any desired length. The foundation is of stone, but may be built of concrete to be in keeping with the floor and the piers, which are concrete. The floor is in two layers, the lower three Inches being comprised of coarse gravel seven parts und cement one part, the upiwr inch being mixed three parts sharp sand to one o f cement. The alley running throughout the center of the building is six feet wide, with a crowned floor one-half inch higher in the center, to insure its being kept perfectly dry. The floors of the pens are given a fall o f two Inches from the alley to the outer doors. The partitions are constructed of one nnd a quarter-inch honrds cut into three-foot lengths. These are placed in an upright position, the bottom ends resting on a two-by-four and the tops capped with similar material. The loft above Is about eight feet high nt top posts and furnishes an abundance of room for storage of strew, crates, crate materials, etc. No meal feed should be stored here, ns It Is likely to become contaminated. The Illustration shows the ropes and pulleys by which the doors and ventilators are opened and closed from the feeding alleys. On the right side the door and ventilator are open ; on the left side closed. ture form. As soon as the potatoes are up these bugs begin feeding and laying eggs on the young leaves. The young that hatch from these eggs, as well as the next brood, are the ones that do the damage. Therefore, It is necessary that treatment should be be gun as soon as the young beetles ap pear on the vines. Dust the plants while the dew Is on. with a mixture made of 1 pound Paris green to 10 pounds of slaked lime or cheap flour.' Another good method Is to spray the plants with a composition o f 2 ounces of Paris green In 50 gallons o f Bor deaux mixture, spraying the vines two or three times. F or' this purpose the Bordeaux mixture should be made out of 3 pounds o f Milestone aud 5 pounds of lime to 50 gallons o f water. This mixture will not only kill the beetle, but also prevent the early blight from destroying the leaves and stems o f the vines. a R a is in g R h u b a rb . Rhubarb requires a deep and very fertile soil. The great secret of suc cess In raising It is high manuring. It Is a gross feeder, and requires a lib eral application o f manure every year. A grower whose small patch produces rhubarb of enormous size explains his success from his practice o f throwing soapsuds over the ground on washing days, lie had sold $30 worth from a patch o f two and one-half rods in • single senson. C r c a m fr le a und F a c to r ie s . There are now in Minnesota 825 creameries and seventy-six cheese fac tories In actual operation, nearly all o f them being operated and owned by the farmers, using the same system of bookkeeping that Is given In the short F t r n N o te », course In the dairy school, and every When the wheels get so dry that creamery In the state is using the Bab they rattle, have the tires properly s e t; cock milk test and is making first class do not try to chink up the spokes. butter.— President Northrup of Minne With all classes o f stock the value of sota University. the feed Is the same, whether It Is sup plied to the scrawnles or the best of Q u r d e u G le u n lu s r a . To make the garden soli warm dralb thoroughbreds. Teams that have been partially Idle off all the surface water possible. Uss for some time should come Into work underdrains and overdrslns. again gradually and their shoulders The best way to secure very early plants la to start them in the seed box bathed with salt water. The cutworm Is the larvae of s or hotbed, then transplant to two-inch m oth; the worm Is o f a brown color, flower pots as soon as the seedlings are fat and sluggish, about an Inch long, large enough. and feeds only during the n ig h t. Don't work the garden and truck For bumble-foot In poultry i aint the patch while the ground is wet In tha corn liberally with tincture o f Iodine haste of starting an early crop. Notn- dally for a week. If this is done in lng Is gained, but mneb is lost, lu work the early stages the corn can be spread. ing wet soils. To easily remove the handle from an axe, place the blade on top o f a heated stove and leave It there till the I roe around what is known as the “eye” be comes quite h ot Heat expands the iron, making It sn easy matter to drive the handle from the blade. A horee will never run Into any other burning building besides bis own. or even pass a bonfire If he can help it O at w it» It. but when once he scents danger he -D o yon believe love la Mind. tries to get to his stall— his homo— and George?" when once he reaches there can only “O f roerse it Is." bs driven sway by fright or shock su- ‘T h aa what good la thla gaslight Ir osrlor to hia drsf * •€ oar chemists that the ashes o f young twigs are of more value than the ash of the trunk o f the tree, while the ash of the leaves la still more valuable. Are the garden and truck patches well drained? T bs garden should have two gates— one small on# and one large one. The small gate shonld be convenient to the bouse and the large one convenient to the barn for hauling manors and en tering with team and tools. I f the garden fence Is defective either mend the old or build a new one. Fix It sn poultry and other animals cannot disturb. It Is • waste of tiros end vexation o f spirit to have tbs chick ens and ducks forever destroying thS gardes.