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About Washington County news. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1903-1911 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1906)
_____ preservation predominant over all other thoughts, he became conscious of a huge black msec (urging upon him out o f the darkness. An Instant's buffet with the current, an ineffectual attempt to dive beneath It, a horrible eenee that the weight at hla feet was dragging him down— and the huge log. loosened from the raft, waa upon him. crushing him be neath Its rough aud ragged aides. Tha log passed completely over him. thrust ing him beneath the water, but his hand, sefaping along tha splintered side, camo In contact with tha loop o f hide rope »02 that yat hung round the mass, aud ha F a r m W a x » » Attachm ent. clutched It with the tenacity of a death- A well-constructed shoveling boar grip. In another instant he got bis head above water, and, making good bis hold, attached to the wagon box Is a Kr e jt twisted himaelf, by a violent effort, convenience when unloading ear coru, root crops or any similar thing. 1•>* across tha log. For a moment he saw the lights from illustration shows a simple, practical the stern windows o f tha anchurad vas Idea, the lower picture showing the sals low In tha distance; Grummet Rock board lowered fo r use aud the upper disappeared on hla left; then, exhausted, one showing how It can be closed. breathless, and bruised, he closed his The shoveling board pro)>er 1« nt>ouf eyes, and tha drifting log bora him sw ift ly and silently away Into tha darkness. one Inch narrower than the width of A t daylight tha next morning, Mr. the Inside o f the wagon box nnd is at Troke, landing on tha prison rock, found tached to the latter with strong hinges ; It deserted. T h e prisoner's cap waa the board may be the same width as the lying on tha edge o f the little cliff, but sides o f the wagon box, or wider. If the prisoner himaelf had disappeared. desired. The side-boards A aud B are Pulling back to the Lady-bird, the intel slanted off at the back sides nnd the ligent Troke pondered on the circum- front entls are the same width as the •tance, and in delivering hla report to Vickers mentioned the strange cry he box where they are nttached with bad heard the night before. “ It ’s my strong hinges. Strong, short hooks are belief, sir, that he wae trying to swim placed In euch side-board, as shown un* th# bay,” he said. “ H e must ha’ gone to the bottom anyhow, for he couldn’t ewlm five yards with them Irons.” Vickera, busily engaged in getting un der way, accepted this very natural aup- posltlon without question. T h e prisoner had met his death either by hia own act or by aceldeut. I t was either a suicide or attempt to escape, and the former conduct o f Rufus Dawes ren d er«! the latter explanation a more probable one. In any case, he was dead. Aa Mr. Troke rightly surmised, no man could swim the bay In Irons; and when the Lady-bird, an hour later, passed the Grummet Rock, all on board her believed that the corpse of its late occupant was lying beneath the waves that seethed at Its base. The drifting log that had so strangely served as a means o f saving Itufua Dawes swam with the current that was running out of the bay. F or some time SHOVELING BOARD. the burden that it bore was an Insen sible one. Exhausted with his desper der letter A, and an eye In the shovel ate struggle for life, the convict lay along the rough bark o f this heaven ing board Just under the hook, thus sent raft without motion, almost without keeping the bounl In position. There breath. A t length a volent shock awoke is n light iron chain support nt ench him to consciousness, and he perceived side o f the box nnd hooked under thnt the log had become stranded on a neath.— Indianapolis News. % sandy point, the extremity of which was lost in darkness. Painfully raising him M u h i n s I n c u b a t o r P ro fita b le . self from hla uncomfortable posture, he The Incubator has passed the experi staggered to his feet, and, crawling mental stage, ami is no longer a ma few paces up the beach, flung himself chine o f chance results. Any one with upon the ground aud slept. When he woke up it was past mid a reasonable amount o f common sense day, and the sun poured Its full rays nnd the ability to take enre o f the mu- upon him. His clothes were dry in all cbiue nnd Its contents while it is In places, save the side on which he had operation w ill he rewarded by success. been lying, and he rose to his feet re I f one is lu a position to go Into the freshed by his long sleep. H e scarcely poultry business on a scale o f consider comprehended, as yet, his true position. able magnitude the better plan Is to H e had escaped, it was true, but not for long. H e was versed In the history prepare a cellar expressly for the work, o f escapes, and knew that a man alone for, perfect as they are, Incubators on that barren coast was face to face sometimes catch on fire, and then the with starvation or recapture. Glancing loss o f the building they are In genera- up at the aun, he wondered, indeed, how ally follows. The cement building It waa that he had been free ao long. blocks which have recently come Into Then the coal sheds caught his eye, and use offer the means to construct an he underatood that they were untenant incubtor cellar In any section o f the ed. Thla astonished him, and he began to tremble with vague apprehension. En country at moderate cost. Brooders, too, tering, ho looked around, expecting ev must be added, nnd there should be a ery moment to see some lurking consta structure for the brooders, so thnt the ble or armed soldier. Suddenly his early hatched chicks need not be turned glance fell upon the loaves which lay out o f doors to get wet or catch cold, In the corner where the departing con incubator cellar In any section o f the victs had flung them the night before. paelty and sold at n low price. A 50- A t such a moment, this discovery seem egg machine o f reliable make can be ed like a direct revelation from heaven, l i e would not have been surprised had iHiugbt for $10, nnd with It one can get they disappeared. Had he lived in an nil the exiierience needed to enable him other age, he would have looked round to operate those o f larger capacity a second season. The Incubator nnd the for the angel who had brought them. tTo be continued.) brooder are essential In ojierations of considerable size, the sitting hen to be R a t t le d . used only as a m akeshift Miss Decry'a mother came Into the room rather suddenly, and Mr. Spoon- W h e n nnd W h n t to Prune. eigh endeavored to cover his em bar This list o f plants and shrubs, with rassment. their requirements In regard to the ” A s I was Just saying,” he began In pruning season, is especially timely and a form a lly conversational tone. helpful. It has the weight o f author! "W h y , no you w e r e n 't G e o rg e !" In ty, as coming from a practical gar terrupted Miss Deery, hastily. “ You dener. w ere speaking o f football— don’ t you There is a right time and a wrong rem em ber?” — Cleveland Lender. tim e to prune each plant, but few nmnteurs can distinguish between I n w e lcom e C onten t«. them. Also certain trees do not need “ I see you carry a heavy stock o f pruning at all. e ggs," remarked the caller. “ Is there Head back Immediately after bloom anything In eggs.” in g : Kalm ia lntlfolln, dlervllla or "W e ll,” replied the truthful grocer, wiegelin. azalea, forsythta. snowball, there wns som ething In the consign kerrln, mock orange, Phlladelpbus, bar ment thnt cam e In last w eek.” berry, most woody spireas. “ Indeed! W hat?” Head back when dormant: Roses, “ Chickens.” eclmatls. splrea sorblfolla. hydranngea! « 0 ^ | ÍÍQ ¿ . C H A P T E R X II. “ The oM dodge.” »aid Frere again. “ O f courae, I couldn't let him go; but I took him out of the chain gang, and pat him on the Osprey. You »aw her In the dock aa you came in. H e worked fo r eome time very well, and then tried to bolt again.” “ T h e old trick. Ila ; ha! don't I know It? " Baja Mr. Frere. “ Well, we caught him and gave him fifty. Then he was aent to the chain gang, cutting timber. Then we put him Into the boata, but he quarreled with the coxswain, and then we took bhn back to the timber rafte. About alx week» ago he made another attempt— together with Oabbett, the man who nearly killed yon— but hla leg wae chafed with the lrona, and we took him. Oabbett and three more, however, got • way.” Juat then aome one came up the gar den path and aaluted. “ W hat la It, Troke?” “ Prisoner given himaelf up, air. Oab bett. H e came back to-night. He* down at the aheda. Yon can aee him at once, gentlemen, If yon like.” It waa not far to the aheda, and after • few minute»’ walk through the wood en pallaadea they reached a long atone building, two atoriea high, from which laaed a horrible growling pierced with 4¡l ahrilly »creamed eonga. A t the Bound o f the muaket butta claahing on the pine wood flagging, the nolaea ceaaed, and ■ilence more ainlater than aound fell on the place. Paaaing between two row » of warder» the two officer» reached a aort of ante room to the jail, containing a pine-log •treteber, on which a maaa of aotne- thing waa lying. On a ’ roughly made ■tool, by the aide of tbia atretcher »at a man In the gray dreaa o f "good con duct” priaoner». Thla man held be tween hla knees a baain containing gruel nnd waa apparently endeavoring to feed the maaa on the pine log». “ tJabbett!” Th e Intelligent Troke. conaldarahly alire to the wlaliea of hla auperlor offi cera, dragged the inaae into a altting poature, and awoke it. Oabbett— for it waa he— passed one great hand over hia face, and, leaning exactly In the poaltlon In which Tm ko had placed him, scowled, bewildered, at hla visitors. “ W ell, Oabbett,” any» Vleker», “ you've come back again, you »ee. When will you learn sense, eh? W here are your tun tea?” “ Dead,” aaya Oabbett “ W hy don’t you eat your gruel?” I* ! “ I have eaten It. A in’ t yer got ntif fln’ better nor that to flog a man <m U gh ! yer a mean lot! W o t’a it to be this time, major? F ifty ? ” “ A nice specimen!" Raid Vickers, with a hopeleHs smile. “ W hat can one d< with such a fellow ?" " I 'd flog hla soul out o f hla body, ■aid Frere, “ if he spoke to me like th a t” The giant raised hla great head and H n l looked at the speaker, but did not rec- r i ognlze him. l i e saw only a strange face— a visitor, perhaps. “ You may flog, ami welcome, master,” »aid he, “ if you'll give me a flg o’ tlhharky. F rere laughed. The brutal Indifference o f the rejoinder aulted hla humor, and with a glance lit Vleker», he took -I JjjM I amnll piece of cavendish from the pock * D 1 * 1 et of hla pea jacket, nnd gave to the i d l£ ' recaptured convict. Oabbett »Hatched , 1 «I|I » It aa a cur »Hatches at a bone, nnd • lL }| thrust it whole iutu his mouth. , 1 ! “ H ow many males had he?” naked \ l| Maurice, watching tho champing Jaws | g J ■ » one looks nt a strange animal, am «»k in g the question ns though a ‘‘mate' * J * was something n convict was horn with i t ' 11 « —like a mole, for Instance, l I "Three, air.” • I <1 “ Throe, eh? Well, give him thirty jlj I r laahea, Vickera.” lijj f j ‘And If I ha' had three more," growl ' )' )A , •*? Oabbett, miimhling at his tobacco, f f l R l I “ yon wouldn’t ha’ had the chance.’’ * sM| Aa he aat there gloomily chewing, he I | g was a spectacle to shudder at. Not so B u m I much on account of his natural hideous i Q ^ i jnesa, Increased a thousandfold by the • ll j ^ I tattered and filthy rags which barely ■ f I Covered him. Not so much on account 1 | o f hla unshaven Jaw», hi« hnre-llp, hi» ■ U n to m and bleeding feet, his haggard 1 ' 1, k Icheeka, and hia huge, wasted fr ame, i f 1 l ^ 0* 0Illjr because. looking nt tho animal. ' J |V • a » hd crouched, with one foot curled <Htxrand the other, and one hairy arm y ^ Q I p e n d r n t between Ins knee». I,e wns < . (h orrib ly unhumnn, that one »hmldered to think that tender »om en nnd fair chil dren must, of nceesaity, confess to fel- | low ship of kind with such a monster lB u t also because, in his slavering mouth, hia slowly grinding jaw », his restless fingers, and hla bloodshot, wandering eyes, there lurked a hint o f «onto terror 9 » o r e awful than the terror o f starvation ■—a memory o f a trngedy played out in the gloomy depths of thst forest which had vomited him forth again -and the ibadow o f this unknown horror, cling to him. repelled, as though he bore at with him the reek of the sham t I I ns go back, gain, I sup- wonder they loo! what’a that red light there?’ "D a w es ’ fire on Grummet Hock.’ •y e Vickers, going In; “ the man I told « i t about.“ e a e a a a a T w o or three mornings after the ar- deal o f the I.adyhlrd, the solitary prls iner of the Grummet Rock noticed my» •rioua movement» along the ahore of he Island settlement. The building of a •ier, or breakwater, running from tho irestern point o f the settlement, waa llscontlniied; and all hands appeared bo occupied with the newly built j , which waa lying on the slips, art lea o f soldiers also dally le ft the -adybtrd. and aealated at tha myetertoua ork In progress. A fortnight after thla, about the 15th t December, he observed another curl- ua fact. A ll the boats on the Island nt off one morning to the opposite side the harbor, and In the course o f the • great smoke aroee along the able the kills. T h e next day the tam e was repeated; and on tha fourth day tha boats returned, towing behind them a bugs raft. Thla raft, made fast the side of the Ladybird, provad to ba composed o f planks, beam» and Joists, all of which wero duly hoisted up and •towad In tha hold of the brig. Thla »at Rufus Dawes thinking. Could It poselbly bo that the timber cutting wae to ba abandoned, and that the gov ernment had hit upon some other method of utilising Its convict labor? H e had hew-n timber and built boata, and tanned hides and mads shoes W as It possible that some new trade w et to be Initiated Before he had settled this point to hie satisfaction, ha was atartlad by anothar boat expedition. Three boats' erewi went down the bay, and returned, after a day’ » absence, with an addition to their number In the shape of four etrangera and a quantity o f stores nnd fanning Implements. Rufus Dawes, catching sight of thee» last, cams to the conelo- alon that the boata had been to Philip Island, where the “ garden” waa estab- Ilphsd, and had taken off the gardeners and garden produce. Rufus Dawaa de cided that the Lady-bird had brought new commandment— hla sight, trained by hla half-aavage life, had already dl tlngniahed Mr. Maurice Frere— and that these mysteries were “ Improvements' under the new rule. When he arrived at this point o f reasoning, another con Jecture, assuming his first to have been correct, followed aa a natural conse quence. Lieutenant Frere would be more severe commandment than M ajor Vickera. Now, severity had already reached its height, so far aa he waa concerned; eo the unhappy man took a final resolution— he would kill himself, Ignorant that the sights and sounds about him were symptoms o f the final abandonment o f the sett*m ent, and that the Lady-bird was sent down to bring away the prisoners, Itufua Dawes de cided upon getting rid o f that burden of life which pressed upon him so henv ily. For six years he hsd hewed wood and drawn water; for six years he had hoped against hope; for six year» he had lived in the valley of the shadow of death. H e dared not recapitulate to himself what he had »offered. Indeed hi» senses were deadened and dulled by torture. H e cared to remember only one tiling— that he waa a prisoner for life. In vain had been his first dream of free dom. H e had done his heat, by good conduct, to win release; but the villainy o f Vetch and Rex had deprived him of the fruit of his labor. Instead of gain Ing credit by hla exposure of the plot on board the Malabar, he was himself deemed guilty and condemned. In spite of hla asservations o f innocence. The knowledge of hla “ treachery,” while It gained for him no credit the au thoritlea, procure.! for ¿fin tM« detests tion and 111 will of the monsters among whom he found himself. On hla arrival at Hell'a Gates he was a marked man. a pariah among those beings who were pariahs to all the world besides. In tha meantime, the settlement waa In a fever o f excitement. In less than three weeks from the announcement made by Vickers, nil hnd been got ready. The commandant hnd finally arranged with Frere as to hla course of action, He himself would accompany the Lady bird with the main body. Hia w ife nnd daughter wero to remain until the anil Ing of the Osprey, which Mr. Frere was to bring up aa soon aa possible. “ I will leave you a corporal’s gunrd, nnd ten prisoners as a crew,” Vickers said. "Y ou can work her easily with that number. T o which Frere hnd replied thnt he conld do with five prisoners If necessary, for he knew how to get double work out of the laxy dog», Near Philip's Island, on the north »ide o f the hnrbor, la situated Coal Head, where a party had been lately at work. This pnrty, hastily withdrawn by Vick era to nssist In the business of devasta tion, had left behind It some tools ami timber, and nt the eleventh hour a boat's crew was sent to bring away the debris The tools were duly collected, and th« pine logs— worth twenty-five shillings apiece In Hobart Tow n— duly rafted nnd chained. The timber was secured, nnd the convicts, towing it nfter them, pulled for the ship Juat ns the sun aunk. In the genernl relaxation o f discipline and haste the raft had not been made with as much care as usual, nnd the strong current agninst which the boat was la boring assisted the negligence of the con victs. The logs began to loosen, and though the onward motion o f the boat kept the chain tant, when the rowers slackened their exertions the mass part- ed, and Mr. Troke, hooking himself oh to the side of the Lady-bird, saw a huge log slip out from its fellows, and dis appear Into the darkness. Gating nfter It with an Indignant and disgusted stare, as though It had been a refractory pris oner who merited two-days’ "solitary," he thought h# heard a cry from the di rection In which It had been borne. He would have paused to listen, but all his attention waa needed to save the timber, and to prevent the boat from being swamped by the struggling mass at her etern. The cry had proceeded from Rufus Dawes. From his solitary rook he had watched the boat pasa him and make for the Lady-bird In-channel, and he had decided that the moment when the gath ering gloom swallowed her up should b# the moment when he would plunge Into the surge below him. The heavily la boring boat grew dimmer and dimmer, aa each tug o f the oars took her fnrther from him. Presently, only tha figure of Mr. Troke In the stern sheets was vis ible; than that also disappeared, and aa the nose o f the timber raft rosa on the swell o f the next wave, Rufus Dawes flung himaelf Into the sea. H e waa heaTily Ironed, and he sunk like a atone. H a had ree-lived not to attempt to aw-ltn. and for tha first mo ment kept hit arms raised above hla head In order to sink the quicker. But aa tha short, sharp agony o f suffocation caught him, ami the shock o f the Icy w ater dtapelled the mental Intoxication under which he was laboring, he desper ately struck out. and deapits tha weight o f hla irons, gained tha aurface for an Instant. Aa ha did so, all bewildered, and with tha one savage Instinct of saU Large floweriug trees not requiring A t Itneon R rlfiit*. pruning: Aeseulus (horse chestnut), Drum m er— W h y are all the natives sorbus snmbueifolia, catnlpa, sorbus o f this village out this morning? Americana (Am erican ash), llrloden- Uncle Silas— W hy, by heck, they dron (tu lip poplar), pavía, sorbus henrd nn autom obile w ith one o f those grandiflora, pyrus aria (w h ite t«.nn new ealllhope whistles com ing down tre e), sorbus elnnocnrpa, roblna, clad the rond and thought a circus parade rastls, tlngtoria (V ir g in « tree), sopho w as on the way. ra, sorbus ancuparia (mountain ash). O n« W o m a n ’ « W isdom . C llp p ln « Horses. But,” queried the visitor, “ what The clipping o f a horse in the early wns your ob ject In putting a stove In this room when It is steam-heated T' spring Is now conceded by all the lead ___H replied _______ _______________ __ Ing veterinarians to be as essential to “ Oh.” the hostess. “ _ I did i lo c o e s »f A r e * you making all there la to he made in the dairy business? I f not. why not? This Is a question which every dissatisfied dairyman may well j ask himself. When a business man or manufacturer finds his business Is not paying to suit him he seeks for the causes o f loss and strives to elim inate I f we Investigate we shall find that the successful dairymen attend to every little detuil that uffeets their business. They look ut everything from u busi ness standpoint, save wherever any thing can be saved, and discard aui- inals or methods that don’t pay. I f you ure not one o f the success ful dairymen, look around and see why you are uot There Is u reason for everything, und when you know the reason you are in a poaltlon to remedy the trouble. I f you hare no liking for your business, the sooner you change to something you do like the better it will be fo r you and those dependent up on you. Have you tested your cows Individually aud discarded those which show by their own perform ance that they are uot profitable? The Babcock test aud the scales w ill show which ure profitable and which ure not, and it Is sheer shiftlessness uot to apply such a test.— Iudluuapolis News. "W E E K L ? H f l- f t 1369— Battle of Montell. 1519— Fernando Cortez and bis u j explorers attacked by Indian f J 1521— Insurrection and masur» island of Majorca. *1 1590— Battle o f Ivry, 1621— Plymouth colonists r e d « . Indian vislt....C om p liln, 1 Lord Bacon for corruption , to the House of Lords. Im proving; au Old Orchard. It Is often the case that an orchard In middle life is found to he no longer 1032 Treaty o f St. Germain, bj profitable, mainly because a mistake Canaria and Nova Scotlt was made In the selection o f the varie ed to the French. ties In the beginning. In such cases the 1044— Roger Williams obtained ™_ orchard may be made profitable again for incorporation of Provident^! by top-grafting the trees. This Is not Indlani a difficult task, provided it Is proper 1070— Narragansett Northampton, Mass. .. Settlaw ly done and the union between the Warwick, K. L, de.troyedTJ branch and the scion Is p erfect As Indians. a rule branches not over an inch In di- ameter ure the best to work this way. 1080— First Assembly of New lUasd met at Portsmouth. O f course, it is understood that the scions would l>e much smnller In dlnm- 1718— First person inoculated for pox In England. eter than the parent stock, so the plan Is to Insert two on each outer edge. 17o7 Adm iral John Bying shot it h The main thing to observe is to be sure mouth, England, for eowarditt that the burk o f both scion and parent 1700— Celebration in Boston over n stock Is in i>eriect line, so that the flow of the Stamp act. o f sup may be perfectly free. Care must 1770—-Boston evacuated by the I also be taken that the space between the scions und the parent stock made j 1778 Engagement at Quintan'« Bri New Jersey. by the chisel tie filled with the graftin g wax, as well as any other spaces in 1781— French surrendered ¡»land i which the air may g e t It Is not cus Bartholomew to the British..... wallls retreated from Guillord t tomary to leave both o f the grafts, but house. to cut out the weaker one If both grow. This work is Interesting and really very simple If one gets the knuck o f I t and It certainly pays with an orchard that is not too old If care is taken to ob tain scions from known hearing trees o f tha best sorts. “De ai Iptnimvnl lliniti. gli 1793— Battle of Linden. 1800— British ship Queen Charlotte! stroyed by an explosion off 1 1802— M ilitary Institution established West Point, N. Y. 1808—-King Charles IV. of Spain i cated in favor of his son. D o N o t O v e r p e t t h e 'Jfonniz S t o c k . 1813— Delaware river blocked by Bricd ships. One o f our contemporaries anys "make the calf the fam ily p e t” In ! 1815— Kingdom of the Netherlands p»| the opinion o f the writer and o f other claimed W illiam I. ns King. dairymen o f long experience this would 1848— Insurrection at Milan; flight i the viceroy. be one o f the worst mistakes that could be made. The calf that is the pet of 1833— Nankin taken by rebels; XJIM| the faintly Is more thnn likely to be massacred. used by the children fo r many pur 1855— First train across Niagara bra poses for which it was never intended. 1858— Lucknow taken. By all means treat the calves thnt are 1801— Kingdom of Italy eatabl¡shed. to lie raised kindly, handle them con 1803— Prince W illiam Georgs of P»| siderably aud pat them caressingly o ft mark elected K ing of Greece. en, but let the petting stop here, for if 1805— Battle of Bentonvllle, X. C.. . it Is played with by the children, run Lincoln issued proclamation to | ning nnd Jumping with them, being ish persons supplying arms to 1 harnessed up with strings ns children dlans.. . .Confederate arsenal at F are quite likely to do, It becomes a ettevllle, N. C., destroyed by nuisance ns it grows; it soons gets Im man, pudent, noses around where It has no 1807— Mexico evacuated by the Frtoil business, and, If Its horns arc allowed 1809— Revolt of convicts in Sing Sag to grow, becomes dangerous Inter on. prison; n keeper killed. Such „a c alf w ill invariably try to 1871— Communist uprising in Farit., boss the herd after it gets old nnd Siege of Paris begun. ernlly. and is • "»¡sa u ce gen Exchange. S e l f -F e e d e r fop P o n te rj, A perfection feed hopper Is shown in the cut, says the Orange Judd F an n er. It Is eight Inches wide, two nnd one-half feet high, and three feet long. The roof projects over the perch on which the fowls stand while feeding. The method o f constructing the perch es nnd the weight and attachment to the lid over the grain Is clearly shown In the picture. The weight on the urm should be adjusted to the size o f the fowl. This box may be made o f any length desired, but the height aud width are about righ t r h a n x ln g Lots fop Swine. that so the baby wouldn't catch cold !*!* wel1 b<’ in8 as »hoeing him or giving Where swine are raised In sufficient I f It accidentally touches the steam * conifortnble bed to He on. A crippled horse dries out rapidly after a numbers so that they are herded In pipe*.” small Inclosures, |t is Piw ntlul to hard day s work and w ill rest com A fte r (tee R rested n as, . fortnbly and be refreshed fo r the next ch an p these lots yearly if one would Prudent 1 a - Y e s . my son, e v ery lad day’s work. An undipped horse I avoid the danger o f cholera or other should let the w ord "push” be hla ab!e to catch the h eave* pneu J ' V ’ r »o accomplish this w atchw ord. ^ and all sorts o f colds, etc., because the to the test advantage Is to have the M odem Son— I agree w ith yon, pa. moisture from persplrntion Is held by H e may some day grow up and ow n the long hair and chills the body. 7 , r : ,ru'mr ’ 1,1 ,ma" coi° nips- of dnul T H,,Ve * ' * I »«« an automobile. f 1 nl le sire, using one-half o f each A man would not expect to enjov l a a X n tah elt. very good health If be did hard manual ant .T 1U* ^ e" rly * * rt o f the season T e a «— Count Brokelelgh seems to be work clothed with heavy underwear, a Th?. m F half at the '» t t e r part p aying Miss Mona Tobura marked at- heavy suit and a fur overcoat, and after This will carry one through the perspiring freely, as he naturally teotlon. th.w„ i . . ’ «n n men Jesa— Yea. dollar marked attention. would. go to Sleep without removing r T 'T ' * abandoned for — Philadelphia Press. same. It Is Just ns ridiculous to ex «m e . U ing cultivated tbe next year pect a horse to be In )>erfeet health li new lots provided fo r the swine " M s | Uottesm ." worked under the same condition» to coMidarmble trouble to be sure Gunner— So you w ent to N ew T o r t I f you would get the best returns " n° w ay - r t n l n to on pleasure b e n t eh? Did you get from your investment In your horse avoid disease than this. P articu larly bent? « this plan valuable In sections where ' treat him right, and be sure to eii„ Guj G a y e r - W o r s e than b e n t 1 g o t him In she early sp rin g.- n , . « , o ' broke. slew. th made by th « swine d o «« not ¿ K in into the soil readily. 1X72 Execution of three C o «i«s h > < gatory. 1873 Sun Salvador destroyed bj • I earthquake. 1875— Tornado devastated Itienii, Mi» 1878— Great strike of weavers In Ear I la n d ... .O ’ Donovan Rossa riot in TeJ ronto. 1882— “ B illy the K id ” captured in Mir| nea polls. 1883— Collision on Edinburgh and GlseJ gow railroad at Central station; *''1 enty-four k ille d ... Alleged atteB$| to assassinate Lady Florence Piw| at Windsor. 1884— Egyptian troops defeated at toinn. . . .T ribal rising In Egypt I"* Knssala to Berber. 1885— One hundred and thirty-seven ** ers suffocated in Rhenish I’m»11- 1880— Oeronimo and band surrender | to Lieut. Maus in Arizona. 1887— Train fell through a * J Boston; forty lives lost.. ■ stroyed Richmond hotel in Buff»-*-1 thirty-two lives lost. 1888— Santa Fe railroad tied ■» strikers... . Morocco refused dnn**, | of the United States. 1889— Coper panic In Paris. 1890— Boomers invaded the strip. 1891— Steamer Eutopla sunk ¡n_ Oib«H tar bay; 571 lives lost----. National bank in Philadelp!»1 | its doors. 1893— $500.000 fire In Milwaukee— Jules Ferry, president of Ir*0** ate, died. 1894— W alter Wellman. Arctic sailed from New York. 1895— Missing Spanish wl,r*hip Regent* found sunken near '■ | ta r; 420 persons lost. •••'**’ , ,rin i dred thousand bootmakers in England. .R evolt crushed ® lombia. 1905— Cruiser Washington Hunched « Philadelphia. . . . James h . declared Governor of C o lo r * *", Gen. Linevltch appointed to , Kuropatkln In command » a rm y .. . . More than a »*k | coal mine explosion at W. V ,. ' H m m __ B e tw e e n F rie n d s - ^ Jlmjonea— W h a t did y o « ,hln* that ciga r I g a v e you thla w"ra^ t ^ Samamith— D on 't ask me, P1“ ] I'm tryin g to fo rg e t it. B'uir.iaj,