----------- Buyer of Dry Goods Need Not Take Clerk’s Word. stronger than cotton and when I broken the ends are very uneven (and straight, while ends of cotton 8 h 0 pper. _ K „ o w . THE Winter fslonths on the farm .he has a certain sum to spend and never 8 AME OLD GAME W ORKED W ITH spends more. Knows what she wants SLIG H T VARIATIO NS. By Mrs. Helen Bryce Brooks, of the before she goes to the store and Dept, o f Domestic Art, Oregon insists on having it. Does not de- Agricultural College, Corvallis. pend on clerks to tell her what or Women are the great shoppers of boaf touch to buy. Knows what ma- ¿rocer “ Sells” His Place to Stranger, Keeping t*ie Dairy H «d Up to the terlals and colors wear best, the Maximum Production in Co.d W exther Then Placet His Money in a the world, It is they who buy the ]ook ^ fee, oi good cloth of a)1 Trunk— Presto, Finds Brick B y P ROF. G. C. H U M P H R E Y large output o f cotton and woolen kinds, the prices that should be paid, W u con ja C o lL tt o f s lg r * u lU ;i in Its Stead. mills, linen and silk manufacturles and the stories that can be depended Do they transact this immense bull uf\ ae ;t coarse and dull; did it spot, did it dress, all go to prove that there are raised and the alleged agent produced vlllage Moslems e bran u is espe dally valuable due to its 3 osiems loitering loitering about about the the an(l an,i the tbe problem problem is is, how how to get get a a la ta v are prove to be o f more cotton than nlanv women who are not intelligent $3,500 in bills. ' court, even ‘ “ .. ..................... ■n Mozuffer Khan with his production of milk from an economical laxative properties It farnijl.es bulk wool, although you were assured buyers, To show that both the purchasei guardian policeman, all reverently system of feeding. afld Iilenty c { prote.n and asU so es- that it was "all wool"? in fact, did I Many dairymen Soirvm «, make a great ureal mis- sential in milk formation. The coin- and the seller were in good faith it withdrew. you simply take a clerk's word for the puri'y of the fabric rat{ier than va s agreed that Kayas was to pul ^ moment later they reappeared on take in not keeping enough grain and lunation of bran and corn meal is not your own Judgment? up the same amount, place it in a tbe wide concrete veranda outside the roughage to carry their herds through | excelled as a dairy feed. Ti e bulk There are a few simple tests that tiunk where the money was to remain window at my left. There they laid the winter. Instead they sell grain I of the oat though carrying little nu- may be used which would aid ma until the necessary papers were down their prayer-mats, and standing and roughage in large amounts and i triment renders this grain a feed of terially in the selection of te x tile ! signed and the store turned over to a nr8t with devoutly bowed heads and as a result find themselves bandi- I light character which is easily di­ fabrics. Do not go by looks alone buyer. | hands folded they murmured the noon capped for feed before spring i asture gestibie. Oats contain a higher pro- Get a sample of the material and test j Just as the bills were placed within prayers o f the prophet’s religion; then is available. Unless a man grows ¡¡ortion of digestible protein than corn in the following ways: the trunk, a customer, thought to have knelt, still praying, and made obels- enormous crops, this sale of farm prod- or wheat. This grain in itself is a For Fading.— Cover one end o f the sample with a piece of cardboard been a confederate, entered the store. ance, prostrating themselves before uct in its original form not only robs wed-balanced ration. Corn meal is a Expose the rest to sunlight for a Kayas went to the front of the place A1]ah the Merciful, the Compassionate, the soli of fertility but also is a false j heavy, rich feed and should always be number of days and then note the and sold him a cigar, then returned to The reverence of their devotion was economy, for the reason that in late . lightened or extended by the use of effect. the agent. He left shortly a fter perfect, and wholly free from the self- winter the farmer has to buy feed at , bran, shorts, oil meal or some other For Shrinkage.— Measure the length ward, promising to return soon. conscious shamefacedness that I high prices when the supply is scarce feed of light character.” and width of your sample. Dip in When he failed to put in an appear should have felt, supposing that I, the or has to sell his cattle because of Feeding experiments prove that hot water, or wash k it with warm ance, Kayas became suspicious, opened magistrate, had suspended court to lack of feed for them, dried distillers' grains are more valu­ water and soap. Is it very much the trunk, and instead of the neat pray there in public.— Charles John- Much wiser is the dairy farmer, able than oats as a feed for the dairy shorter or narrower? Would it shrink roll of greenbacks which had been ston in The Atlantic, a great deal In a yard? who fills his feed bins and his siio or herd. Cows are fond of brewers placed there found a large brick. The , For Strength.— Where strength in his root cellar and feeds their con­ grains and their use influences a good transfer was probably made when the wearing and washing is desired, place Because of the sloppy tents to his herd during the winter. milk flow. the thumbs and first lingers over the] confederate called Kayas to the front A R T IS T ’S CLEVER WORK. He markets his produce in the form * character of wet brewers grains they cloth, pressing down hard and pull­ of the store. > I ----- of milk and besides realizing a good j should be supplemented by some dry ing the cloth in both directions,— a Kayas was ashamed of the fact that The notable instance of . . most „ ... . . . . profit from it also has the use of the feed in the winter ration, with the warp and with the wxif. he had been duped and refused to re novel dealing with a country which manure frcm the herd t0 rcturn t0 his ! o il meal is a very healthful feed Do you find the threads weakened? port the matter to the authorities. A the author had never seen was Short- | fields. A money value is realized ; and brings the animals into good con- Is one set of threads much stronger house’s “ John Inglesant.” friend, however, notified the police. i from the grains and also a fertilizing dition. with pliable skins and oily than the other? The second volume of that remark­ Materials are sometimes weak be­ able romance deals In the most de -1 cause of Imperfections in the weave, $500 TO FIND RALPH JACKSON tailed way with Italian manners and o r because one set o f threads Is ----------- I Italian scenery. Many of the descrip- stronger than the others. Hold the BKaL . sample toward the light and see if Family of Kansas Teacher, Who Was tions— that of Umbria at night, for in-j you can detect a difference. Soon to Wed, Offers Reward stance, and the scene in the pavilion r. Cords running only one way weak­ for Information. in the forest— are charged with the' en materials. Cords running both ----- very atmosphere of Italy; and Flor- j ways give strength. I,ooaely woven Wichita, Kan.— A fter two weeks ot ence during the plague lives horribly! cloth catches on splinters, nails and most diligent searching by scores of before our eyes. Y et Joseph Henry other sharp things. Closely woven men, who have turned over every Shorthouse had never been In Ita ly ., cloth Is more satisfactory. brush pile and combed every field in Enthusiasm and the genius for as- For Finishing.— Hub the material in the hands or pick at the surfaoe with this part of the country, no trace of *imiiati° n evolved tt all In a quiet j the finger nail. Does the starch the missing Ralp Jackson has been bouse at Edgbaston. London Chron- come out? Wet the finger and rub found. I lc*e- on the cloth? When the cloth dries When this young man, alumnus of has the gloss disappeared? Chicago university and the Friends C A P IT A L ’S BEAUTY SPOT. Sometimes cotton cloth which has university of Wichita and teacher of ----- been on the market for some time Is weakened by the action o f the mathematics In the Sterling (Kan.) One of the beauty spots in Wash- chemicals used In bleaching, dyeing high school, stepped off a Santa Fe Ington is the water lily farm conduct- Comfort, warmth and attractiveness or In the sizing. This may be de­ train In this city he apparently ed by a woman who< as a clcrk ln the arc all rolled into one when- a c,.at of tected by tearing the cloth. stepped out of the world j treasury department, lost her health. this kind i* concerned. It i* h indy to Beware of low-priced cotton goods The only thing that might possibly Starting as an amateur cultivator of slip over the afternoon card-party-frock with a thick gloss or a pasty look. Indicate that he Intended to disappear lllies- 8he has become one of tbe most j They are probably tilled with starch. ai well as fur train wear over the evening Is that he drew all his money, about prosperous producers of the flowers. \ Do not expect linen at cotton prices. gown. ' f I.lncn is much more expensive than $65, from a Sterling bank before he She purchased a few acres on the Po­ tomac and caused an artificial lake to | cotton, and when linen prices are took the train for Wichita. Two per­ be made on her land by piping in the paid linen should be demanded. Since sons, however, refuse positively to GEORGE AN ATHLETE give water. She became fascinated with the two fibers are rather hard to' KING any significance to this. They are distinguish, especially when heavily i the work, and willingly gave up her Mabel Copplck of Enid, Okla., starched, and given a good fin’sh, it I His Majesty Has Practiced Most Miss ___ . . , , , ,, . government position so that she could »h em he was to marry this fall, and deTOte her attentlon to the flowers.; is quite easy to deceive the buyer. Forms of Manly Exercise and the girl’s brother, a schoolmate and Now she has ponds which cover five r ‘‘Linen" collars are frequently large­ , Especially Likes 8 hooting. . . . . . .. 1 careful mixing of feeds suited to tho individual needs of each cow is the chum of Jackson. ly cotton; "linen" handkerchiefs! I acres, in which she is raising the flow. secret of successful feeding for milk. This feed car makes the mixin( may not have a thread of linen, as This brother The king s reception at Buckingham „ . has been most indus- ers, and many persons go to her gar- of rations an easy matter. la likoly to he the cage with rattier trious of all the searchers. He an- den at early hours of the morning tc palace recently of the team of polo Inexpensive embroidered handker­ nounced he will find Jackson s body, see the lilies In full bloom. players who are to represent England chiefs; table "linen" may lie nier if he is dead, and w ill find the man ____________________ value in that the mauurial residues sleek coats. It has a very beneficial «erlced cotton, cotton and linen or j In the United States, recalls the fact I o f these feeds is returned to the soil. effect upon the digestive tract but «v e n ordinary cotton. that hts majesty played regularly himself if he is alive. The last person who remembers* “ CH INAM AN.” The golden maxim of the dairy fanner should not be fed in large quantities For Spotting.—Shake Borne drops! when he was a naval lieutenant. He should be "Produce as much feed as due to Its concentrated character. _ .. ' . . 7 . , of water on the sample. Does it t was a good player, too, and could hold seeing him is Calvin Knight, a student lose lustre where the drops . have 0n 8" b ect f * ur^ ,8in* m° d' possible on the farm. Feed the grains , .. his own with some of the best repre- friend, with whom he rode to Wichita I he nutritive ratio of a given ration and market them as milk and meat, at " i f * 8 U ls " ° ‘ able that be __________ ______ ______ drted? Hang out a piece o f r 8entatlve, of the two Bervices. Almost that night. When the train arrived depends upon the character of the In the sun nnd submit to the action here Jackson told Knight he was go- f ° rd dlct, 0 ” aJ7 flnds ,,n° e^rlier ,n' the same time making use of the feeds which it contains with refer­ o f sun nnd rain Does it loose its every form of manly exercise has been ing to walk to a dormitory on the ‘V * ! !? * !! as fertiilzer ” practiced by hts majesty, and there >-» j 1 _ 1 01 & native of v nina, tnan 1854, ^ h 6 n , _ color and become gray nnd dull? ence to their protein, carbohydrate Friends campus to surprise Professor Emerson B O uscu ,t. X he previous; According to Production. la M t lbs slightest doubt that every T o prevent spotting, lay a damp and fat content. Some feeds are de­ cloth on the wrong side of the ma kind ef sport will benefit enormously Truesdall, a particular friend when he word was ••Chinese” from which th e 1 Each fdrmer 8hould keeP ‘ be P r » ficient In protein and such feeds, terial. roll the two together nnd daring his reign was In college here. Although the pluraI ••Chineses” was formed by Mil - 1 d“ ction and exI ,ens and tbe gr* en and orange of ----------- itr protein and - should old test o f moistening the Anger and «(stance arrived. was arrested for fighting. An account th* bean tree can b* *ccn from the by clover hay or some similar have paid special attention to the rutting it udder the cloth Is nut In th, -boo,,,» period of cycling, his of his arrest was read by his daugh , steamer's deck, for the course Is nerv- lnong hay ag cIoTer question of the relative economy of always a aure one as the moisture majesty was often sees a-wheel; while ter. Mrs. Lizzie Austin of Gage, O klaJ ously near^ the rocky ledges. Ap- volch hay in order to provide suffl he different kinds of feeds under will not eoiue through heavy linen . . or one with starch In It. and It will of course, he has constantly who wrote, offering to apologize and preaching Haycock Island the tourist clent protein. Where silase i> b® r Part‘Çu'ar conditions indicate a ticket if he notices how one steep peak seems t o ' available tt ls advisable to srnw ™ come through sheer, tightly twist, m I P'ay®d a" d continues to follow with sending her father that a medium wide nutritive ratio ls cotton. A better test la to put n the Interest of a keen observer. would come to her. Schroeder went rbanF® l,s position and aspect as the crops as mangels turnips and mi in general to be preferred under con­ drop o f olive oil on the cloth and! ----------------------- to police headquarters, read the ve88el Slid * 3 ‘ brouKb water that re- bagas and use them as part ot th ditions of dairying In the northwest. press between blotting paper. The daughter's letter and decided to go flefts ®Tery b®‘* bt and r®Pa'nts every ration. These roots can be vrew Is This a H lntf linen become more transparent than Medium Protein Rations Best back. Schroeder Is seventy-three mounta,n tint. Creeks, almost ob- cheaply and can be substituted tnr " “W hy do you smoke cigarettes?" the cotton. years of age. His wife died several 8cured by mangroves, wind among the part of the grain in the dalrv This investigation mentioned above Linen Is cooler to the touch than “ Why not? Robert Louie Stevenson years ago. b>H 8 tor miles. — ■— being ■ 3 cow on showed conclusively that the medium ration, especially relished cotton. smoked them.” _____ ... account of their succulence. Even Pr° tel“ J|atlons were more economical The breaking test Is rather satis­ Yee—but be went and lived o . the FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW . with silage they furnish variety and î f i Pn reSulU tbai> the factory Linen threads are much island of Samoa while he did." Lawsuit Over Bones. ---------------- ------ are valuable. Alfalfa Is verv nalof. high protein rations. On the average Valparaiso, Ind.— When William The fugitive slave bill was p u «e d ble and valuable 7 pa ta Beet Beeke Up Cfcureh Bewtena Blistering Once Universal. Hubbard was digging a dltch through « G T S Z iu r T ” 1 S vor W af 8 • medium J S ? ,n the net Pr° "t favor o of protein rations A unique occurrence broke up t£e Blistering formerly was an almost the farm of Mre. Zada Cooper, he imposed a fine o f one thousand dollars excellent food both for m is'* amounting to nearly ig per cent service In the German Lutheran universal treatment for Internal con- significance of this result lies in th» church at Chicago the oth«c Sunday gestion to drnw the diseased Auld to appropriated them, saying the state p *rson harboring runaway slaves or m>g. tlon for cattle consists of corn silage A swarm of honey bees Invaded th« surface. It acted as a couater-lrrl- ditch law, allowed him to do so. Mrs aldlng thelr e8cap0 from and alfalfa. 8 were composed largely of farm grown building and drove out the pastor and tant. tt was also used for sciatica, Cooper has brought action against t0„ ,t was the passage of this bill feeds supplemented by mill feeds and System of Winter Feeding. congregation, and services had to be mistering la still used to a consldera- him for »1.500. which she says Is th* that „ „ H,e to tbe more radical During the winter the dairy herd fmall amount, of the more expensive held on the lawn In front of th« ble extent, but a milder application ts value o f the bones. phase o f abolitionism, with Its ~Un- church. more frequently employed. ! d*. ThU ‘ » r e . t 1 g.tion derground Railway" for the escape of ' ‘ u ^ rJ ^ l'v’ ^ ' ^ r i f ol*e* e ° f Agricul- i«.a,ig t0 the f! conclusion' Supreme Cant. Indian Attacks Brother. fugitive slaves. The M..‘ led to the da“rr o th e tT T ' i Men's Period of Foolishness. O f all the cante which are canted Of ait literary compositions the love Chicago. Joe Mexicans, a Sioux In [J ^ ° U8 s «?** ca8*“- * hl' b- wltb capacity of the animala $ to »'pounds Z 7 ,ltuated w111 ut th* nortbern baU of the pounds of butter fat per week The 1 h^ * i l^ tlTely wt