r'VZrZr 5? -3? lN Of IrjtcrQSt to GREAT TOMATO TERRITORY. One of the I'lnnrialilnic InJantrles ol "K.KM'I," In Moulhrrn llllnola. Culro, III. ''Kfl-pt" now Ho tomato seed In liotlxMl in Febrnury und from' tlint time on until nettled wentlier tho toniuto grower waits with tinted breutli (t st- hilly If nil hl are In tills one frail liiiNket) iiioii tlie clinneeit a ml i'haiiK'H of front ami huh and wind that may wean plenty of money In IiIm pocket later or u woeful cinptiiifHS Of tilt' HII llll'. .Soutlii'iii IIIIikiIh Ih 11k- Kden of tlie. tomato in tln north an 1 tin; t'rj'Htul Springs (MIhm.) region In tin- Honth. It Ih cMliiiated that over l.tWO cur IoikIh of 1,'khi half lninln'1 cruteM each went out from I'ulon county liiMt kiwi Mil n In H.lle of tin- fait that front cut down many of the llrnt plant net In the IIi'IiIm. 'J'Ih'mw llcliU were com puted at over 1,"imi hitch, and it In be lieved Unit Hid iicrciiuu thlM hi'iihoii will li even urealcr. Thin IndiiHlry of Hiintlicrn llllnola be gun ninny .year np near ('olnlen, whUh l now n gri'iit KlilppliiK point. I.Ike ni'iirly every other nirrli'iiltiirul Kpit'lalty It ri'iiilri'H a "hustler" behind It. (I'rowini; tlio pl.-mtM from need In hotlii'dH, pnili clliik' Hii' lcdn with Htraw or ciiiiviih on mid ulirlitn, nncov- erintf to five h Ix'iii'lit of I nun In the day mid providing ventilation whenever possible, all t It Ih ciiIIh for eternal vIkIIi , ipileU and food Judg ment uml unliliilted cM-rtlnn. Mailt lire, iih a rule, net out through the Ill's! two week or more of May. They are placed three to four feet apart, and a little eommorelal fertilizer or ciiHtor lii'iui pomace Ih Hpiinkled around each. One four foot Make U driven for each plant, to which the plant Ih kept tied. Thin facilitate tioth the ripening and the pilhcrlnK of the fruit. Shipping the touialocH may bt'nln with the early varletieN by June '.'O ami continue, accorillni; to the neason, IIiwiikIi Anuiist. Much of the ship ping hiiHlnesH Ih carried on through iiiiupiinli'H composed of growers and tiUHlnexH men of varloiiH towns In the tomato district. Colon ty Ih the I Ilntf portion if the tomato territory, which IncludcH also .laikson, .lolmson and Pulaski count Ich. ! UNIVERSAL LOG RULE. A Urn l-orniiilit llralitnt'il tu Mfle Kill !: ii llnnilfil Julli'i'. IturliliKlon, Vt.- It Ih Hald that there lire over twoscore of ho called "Ion rules," nore or less used In varioiin re gions, for deti nnlnlni: In advance of tlie hiiwIiik t lie actual number of hoard feet In u Ion. 'onccrniiiK thin vital matter Ir. A. 1.. IiiiiIch, professor of inathemalli'H In the I'lilverslty of Ver mont, llilnJts that the farmer and In certain cases the Ion buyer have fared hardly In their atlemplH In solve the ipicHtlou, "How many board feel in a IokV" and he lias worked out n formu la that appeai'H to be In Home ivny a distinct advance over lit predecessor!!. It Ih at any rate worthy the addition of anybody who drain hi Iocs. In bulletin lit'.' of the Ntali) expert incut station In-. liauicM stale that In taking up the Hlmly of the measure lueiit of Iokh It soon became evident to lilm that not one of the rule In a lint of forty or more In uho In thin country and Canada wiih based on au adequate knowledge of mathematics and that not Olio of thciil u Honied reasonable or iMultable result. Some rule are tin Just to the buyer on small Ions and mi Just to the seller on III rue In;, while other run the contrary way. lie en deavored to llnd the true mathematical rule, one that should mote out even lm tided Justice to both parties, and he Ih-Hcvch he ha found It. I'r. lianiel make Id argument for what he ha named "the universal lo rule" mid give explanation of Interest a to tin mathematical reasoning mi which he found It. According to I be bulletin, tho unlvcrsiil rule can becally express ed In laiiKuaKo fur all practical pur Ixmvil. It read, "Take live cIkIiIIi of tho diameter In Inche. subtiint two and multiply by the diameter." The error 1 only about one part In 1'ihi. Whr Not l lnUli thr liiioil W ork f Why piiHteuri.c the milk or cream and then wiinIi the butter with dirty, Kcrin laden water? The Iowa expert Incut Hint ion took Home ripened cream, divided It Into two equal lot, churned one of the lot mid washed (he butter with ordinary well water, churned the other lot under the Name condition und washed the butter with the same well water, but not until after the wu ter had been pasteurized and cooled. Thrco experiments were made In the name way, and the result all showed that tiie butter washed In (lie pasteur ised water kept normal very much longer than the name butter washed lu the unpiiHtcut lcd water. Here I pretty good evidence on an important point. Rws nnl Note. lnrTtlon of the large display of Machinery wim one of the Interesting feature of the corn canners and pack rrn' recent convention nt le el.md. A pure for hog cholera I reported as the ri'Miilt of ihreo year of evperlincnt hy I r. liriihain, former hacterloloulHt of the I Diversity of MishoiiiI. It U In oriilntlon with n crum. WIhcoiihIii cpertnicnt have nhoirtl that cheese cured In cold storage lost Ich In weight than cheese cured at lUl decree, an. I wa superior In flavor, lextilii' and ' eeping oualltv. In nii-ii! tomato evperlincnt potash had R Inaiked result o Inereaslng the yield of the toniati'. TomatocH fer tllUiil with potash were more oolid. yet A little more acid Iloblii ItedhronHt 1 Htill nfe In New Jersey, the niPiinre to take Mm off th llt of proti-cted bird having leeu to fen toil In the Btate legislature. A TrmiMirnry HiiIrIiih. TIic riancee -The Idea of hi thlnU lnr that he I unworthy of me! The Confidante - Ye, but 3-011 needn't nr g the mutter with Mm. He'll dl Cover Lin error lu time.- Urooklj n IJf. . Tb Farmer. FARMERS' INSTITUTES. Yours, IJrowluif und liiflaenllnl, The Track mn All Imiiorlaiil Art. Ily IS. iJENJAMIN, JIt. 'ahlnmou, V. C Tlio luiportance and extent of the farmers' Institute movement In Uila toiintryj-ecelved rec ognition by tu piverumeTit lat year and were broiiKht more prominently to Bcnerul notice than ever before by II"' eHtabllhbuiei.t of u uf w olllce lu the olllce of experiment Hlation that won llevoted to tin duly of asslHtlng the farmerH' iiiHtltute worketfof the I'nlt ed State. To the charge of third olllce Hon. John Hamilton wa appointed under the tltU of "farmer' hmlltuto HpeclallHt." ThTe are probably many people, however, even among the farm em who Htill know little or nothing of furmer' IiiHtltute wink and the object It neck to accomplish. A to w hat the farmer' Institute ought to be and what It ought to titrlve to do SpecialiHt Hamilton ha nld; "There wim a time when the Insti tute meeting wa nclccted a an ap propriate place for home agricultural peHslmlst to preach a fu 'al Heruion. That day I past. The new gospel of agriculture I one of good new -of deliverance from Ignorance, HllpelHtl tlon and inedlii val way and the true inlnlHler In thin hit-. Ice Ih a hopeful, helpful and enthusiastic man. The ob ject I. In abort, to educate not only the farmer, but the n , In the fun damental principle that underlie the all Important art of producing animal and cropr.. It I the agoncy 'or di xeminatlng Information In agriculture that the platform I in molding public sentiment lu political campalgiiH. It 1 the complement of the educational force now organized for uplifting ag riculture In the I'lllted State." Knlhnnlnaiii In Michigan. Michigan ivport a total attendance nt Institute for the year l'.Mi'ju.'t of loo,!), of whom liiu km aUended two day' meeting. The amount of money expended wa the Htate fund of $7,.r00. Ten thousand tuple of an Institute re port of 1.10 page were published. The number of Htate speakers on the Iii Htltute force wa loo. For Hcveral yearn the largent attendance at one day IiiHtltute lm been seeyeil lu small village 111 the center of 11 thickly net tled fanning community, and the great (llllleulty ha been found lu securing 11 hall or a church Hiilllcicntly large to ac commodate the crowd. While thin 1 most common with the one day IiiHtl tute, which are held for the most part In village, a similar dilllculty ha been found during the year at 11 number of the two day Institutes. In only one Htate, Kansas, do government statis tic for UKil'-o.'l give a larger average attendance than in Michigan, the llg tirc being: Kansas, -I'.i'.i; M ichigan, -io7. Wtlllten'M lllMtllllli'H. Thl 1 1111 age of organizations, and In Canada a feature I being made of women' IiiHtltute, because, though the men and women of farm have many Interest In common, there are time When the subjects discussed are not equally Interesting. The department of agriculture give each women' Institute $10 a year, and each also receive $10 from either (he farmerH' Institute or the county council, III Home case from both, thil giving It Hometlilng to start with. Another nource of revenue Ih the year ly excursion to the agricultural college. Kach farmer' institute ha an excur sion during the month of June. The women' Institute receive some propor tion of the fund provided. Kach mem ber pay a membership fee of '-'.' cent a year. Thl Ih within the reach of every one and give all Home Interest ill the IiiHtltute. They belong to It. Niiccmsrul Inallliilr Work. One of the nee re Is ol' success in In stitute work ha been lu the practical character of the work done, 1 11 the great majority of cane Hie teacher it fanner' Institute llms far have been practical men and women, who have put their heart and soul Into it simply for the gissl of (he cause. I'resldent Saltil of (he American Association of Fanner' IiiHtltute Worker character ize the work a "young, growing and lutltleiitlal." Knrm I nilrr llir Hull Wrrtll Art. Columbia, S. C. The llrst of the thirty experimental farms that are lo be established lu the south a a part of the government work under the boll Weevil act 1 to be located three mile from thl place, which I about the central point of the state, 011 the farm of President Hyatt of the State liood ltoad association. Mr. Spillman, agroHtologlHt of the department of agriculture, will hate charge of the work. When this 11 ml presumably the other faruiH are well under way, e curylou will We run by the railroad that a many farmer a possible may visit these demonstration farms, and on thene occasion explanatory lec ture and addresses will be given on the work. One TlilitK mill Inulhi-r, That "the center of gravity of agrl cultural wealth In Canada Is cry soon to be transferred from Ontario to the province of Manitoba and the north went" I the view of Hon. Ii. W. Kos. the premier of Ontario. "Iowa oat are all right," nay an e change, basing the statement on opln Ion cxpross.il by W. II Olln of the Iowa State college inucernlng report nil oat that the seed will not germinate well. A prize winner lu corn I Chester Hubert of liougl.'i county. 111. Tlir.v prize nt IVorta. first prlr.e nt IV Molne and necoud at A me I hi reiv ord. The Kane county (III.) furmer' In xtltute I giving the bo) cash prlre for corn. Straw berrlea Imve bivn well protect ed by snow thl winter, mid n good jrop In reiMirted In pro4cvt In WIhoob til. f rogrfMion, Iter nm. nn simply Mirv Clin I'littl her fnlli.r trmk h mliiix A n,l then lo lit Din futility tr.. fclm h. alt, r,t to M.irlii. V4 l r tone HenjiSfnan From Indiana $Zt Cepyrljhl. 1999. ky Vaukltday ! Copyright. 1902, P.y Kiecial rctoieHt with the serial stoiy, we will continue "The (ientleman from Indiana." In order torenume the tbreud of tho etory, the ;lirt few chap ter will be reprinted. CIIAI'TKIt I. II KN the runty hnntl of th olllce clock marked half pant 4, the editor In chief of the Carlow County Herald took w 'D'-Z- hi hand out of hi hair, wiped hit) peu on hi last notice from the White Cap, put on Ida coat, "wept out the clone little entry and left the aunctuui fur the bright June afterniHiu. lie cIiohc the way to tlio went, Htroll lug thoughtfully out of town by the white, hot, deserted Main ntreet ami thence onward by the country road Into which It proud half mile of old brick Htore buildings, tumbledown frame NhopM mid thinly painted cottage do cot crated. The nun wn In Ida fnca wh.'re the road ran between the auia incr tlcliw, lying wavele, low, gra- cloii lu promise; but, coming to 1 wood of hickory and beech und wal nut that Htood beyond, lie might turn hi down Is-nt bat brim up and hold hi bend erect. Here the shade fell deep nnil cool oil the grei'u tangle of rag and Iron weetl and long grass In tJie corner of the Hnake fence, al though the nun beat upon the road no close beside. There wa no movement of the crlnp young leave overhead, High In the bough there wn a quick tllrt of crimson where two robin hop- pod nnleloHly, The late afternoon, when the air 1 quite ntlll, had come yet there rented Homewhere on the quiet day a faint, pleasant, woody mncll. It ciiiiio to tht editor of the Herald tin lie climbed to the top rail of the fence for 11 neat, and he drew 11 long breath to get the elunlve odor I no iv luxuriously, and then It wa gone III together. "A habit of dellcnclea," lie Bald aloud, addressing the wide alienee iplaln Ingly. "(Hie tante and they quit," he lliiished, gazing nolemnly upon the uhlnlng little town down the road. It wa 11 place of which It Inhabit mil Hometlme remarked easily thai their city had 11 population of from ,Vooo to (1.000 souls, but It should be cany to forgive them for Hilch Htate- inentH. Civic pride 1 it virtue. The town lay In the heart of that fertile ntreteh of (hit land In Indiana where eastern traveler, glancing from car window, Hhudder and return their eyci to Interior upholslery, preferring even the swaying caparison of 11 I'ullimin lo the monotony without. The landscape run on lniermlnably level llne-bleak In wlutei, a desolate plain of mud and miow; hot and dusty In Hiiinmer, mile on mile of Hat lonesomeness, with Hot one cool hill slope away from the nun The persistent tourist who Heck for Hlgn of man In thl natl expanse per ceive a I'ccklcn amount of rail fence, at Interval a large barn, and here and there man himself, Incuiiou, patient, slow, looking up from t lie Held apa thetically a the limited (lie by. Now and then the train panne 11 village built seal terlngly about a courthouse, with a mill or two humming near the track. Thl I a county neat, and the Inhabitant and (he local paper refer to It coiitldently a "our city." Such 11 county Meat w a I'latlvllle, rapilal of Carlow county. The social und busmen energy of the town con centrated on the square, mid here In summer lime the gen!leni"ii were wont to lounge from ntore to ntore in their Hhlrt sleeves, mid ill the center of the square stood (he old red brick courthouse, loosely 'fenced lu a shady grove of maple and elm-"nllpp'ry t-l 1 11 111" called (be "courthouse yard." When the huh grew loo hot for (he dry good box whit tiers in front of the Htore around (he square and the occu pant of the chair in front of the Pal ace hotel on the corner they would go ncroK and drape thcmnelvcH over the fence ami carve their Initial on the top board. From the ixmiilon of the nun the editor of (he Herald Judged that these operation were now In progress, and he w a not deeply elated by the knowledge that whatever desul tory conversation might pan from man to man on (he fence would probably be Inspired by hi own conviction ex pressed editorially lu the Herald. He drew 11 faded tobacco bag and a brier pipe from hi pocket and, after lilliug and lighting the pipe, twirled the pouch mechanically about hi linger, llieii, suddenly regarding It, patted It caressingly. It had been 11 giddy little bag long ago, gay with embroidery in the color of the editor unUerity, mid, although now It was frayed to the verge of tatters. It ntlll bore an air of pristine Jauntines, mi air of which It owner in nowise partook. He looked from it toward the village in the clear distance and Highcd softly a he put the pouch back lu hi pocket and, rest lug hi arm on hi knee and hi chin on hi hand, Hal blowing cloud of moke cut of the Hhade Into the sunshine, ab nontly w atching the ghostly shallow on the white dust of the road. A little garter snake crept muter ttie fence beneath 1 1 1 tit mid illnappcarctl In the underbrush; 11 rabbit, progressing on It travel by crle of brilliant dashc and terror smitten halts, came vlt'.eit n few yard of bltn, ant up with quivering none and eje alight with fearful imagining and vanished. n ilasli of fluffy brown and while. Shadow grew longer; 11 cricket chirped and heard atuwer: there wa n wmnliand tir of hreiTi, and the pair of robin left the brniiclie oveihcnd lu eager (light, a cnttiig Ivfot (lie arrival of a flock of blackbirds hastening (hither ere the eventide should Is' upon them. The blackbird came, chattered, gossiped, quarreled mid Nat each other with I heir wing alsne tile mucker lttln 011 the lop fence rail. I'm be bad rcmc ml' red. A thounnd mile lo the east It w aa tviuuieiitt iih nt ? . Xy XOOTH T;HKIStCTOSi ted McClarw Cm. JJt iy McClun. TbilUn 3l C. JJf day, neven year to a day from bla own cummeneeineiit. Five yeur ago, on another June aft eruoon, a young man from the eut bad alighted on the platform of the station north of I'lattville and. entering tlii rickety omnibus that 'Inhered there pecking whom It might rattle to deuf lies, demanded to be driven to tho Herald building. It did not strike the driver that the uewcomer was pre. clsely a gay young man when be climb ed Into the omnibus, but an hour luter, as be stoiid In the doorway of the edt tlce be bad Indicated as bis definition, depression seemed to have settled Into the marrow of bis bones. 1'lattvllle was lnntantly alert to the stranger's presence, and interesting con jectures were husearded all day long at the back door of Murtln'a Dry Good F.mporluui (this was the club during the day), and at supper the new ar rival and bis probable urioMcs wers diHcilHHed over every table lu the town I' pon Inquiry be bad Informed Judd Itennett, the driver of the omnibus, that he bad come to stuy. Nnturullj such a declaration cuuued a sensation, uh people did not come to I'lattville to live except through the Inadvertency of being boru there. In addition the young man's appearance und attire were re ported to be extraordinary. Many of the curloVH, among thum most of the marrlageble females of the place, took occasion to pa und repass tho sign of (lie Carlow County Herald during th evening. Meanwhile the stranger was seated In the dingy olllce upstairs with his bead bowed low on bis arms. Twilight stole through the dirty window panes and faded Into dark ties. Night iK'ed the room. He did not move. The yo'mg man from the cant had bought the Her ald from au agent had bought it with out ever having been within a hundred miles of I'lattville. The Herald was au alleged weekly which had some time appeared within live days of Its declared date of publication und some time missed tire altogether. It wus a thorn lu the side of every patriot of Carlow county, und Carlow people, oft er HUDbortlng the paiior loyally and long, had at last given It up and nub scribed for the (iiuette, published In the nclghlMiring couuty of Amu. The former proprietor of the Herald, a surreptitious gentleman with n goatee, bad taken the precaution of leaving rinltvllle forever on the afternoon pre ceding hi successor's arrival. The young man from the east had vastly overpaid for his purchase. Moreover, the price bp bud paid for It was nil the uioncy he had In the world. The next morning he went bitterly to work. He hired a compositor from Itonen, a young man named I'arker, w ho net typo all night long and helped him pursue ndvertlnemenls nil day. The citizen nhiMik their head pessl lulsticnlly. They had nlniut given up the Idea that the Herald could ever amount lo anything, and they betrayed nil Innocent but caustic doubt of nbll- Ity in any stranger. One tiny the new editor left a note on hi door: "Will return In fifteen mln- Utl'H." Mr. Hodney McCune, n politician f roll the neighboring county of dallies. Imj ponlng to be lu I'lattville on an errand lo hi henchmen, found the note anil wrote beneath the message the scath ing Inquiry, "Why?" When he discovered thl addendum. the editor mulled for the tirnt time since hli advent und reported the Incident In his next lHHiie, using the rubric "Why Has the Herald Ueturned to Life?" as a text for a rousing editorial on hon esty In politics, n subject of which he already knew something. The political district to widt h Carlow belonged wua governed by n limited number of gen tlemen whose wealth was ever on the lucre-use, and honesty In politic was a startling conception to the minds of the missive and resigned voters, who talked the editorial over on the street coruers and lu the attires. The next week there wu manner editorial, per soiial and local In II application, nnd thereby It becutne evident that the new proprietor of the Herald was a theorist who believed In general that a politi cian's honor should not be merely of that middling liealthy species known n "honor among politicians," nnd in particular that Itodney McCune should not receive the nomination of hi party for congress. Now, Mr. McCune wa the undoubted dictator of the district, and hi followers lauihed at the stran ger' fantastic onset; but the editor was not content with the word of print. He hired n horse nnd rtde about the coun try and (to hi own surprise) proved to be nn adaptable young man who en joyed exercise with a pitchfork to the fanner's profit while tho farmer tnlk ed. He tulked little himself, but nfter listening nil hour or so be would drop word from the saddle as he left, and then, by some surprising wlEnrdry, th farmer, thinking over the Interview. dii'lditl there was some sense In what thnt young fellow sa MuTiil "grew curf- cu to hiv what the young fellow bad further to say In the Herald. foil tic Is the one subject thnt goes to the vltnl of every rural American, nnd n I loonier will talk politics after he I dead. Fverybmly read the cninpnlgn edi torial and found them Interesting, al though there was no one who did not perceive the utter absurdity of a young stranger dropping Into Carlow and Inxolvlug himself In a party fight against the bos of (he district. It wn entirely 11 pnrtjr fight, for by priu-e of the last gcrry niandi t the nomination cnrrled with it Ihe certainty of elec tion. week l'fert the convention there came a provincial enrtiiiiunke. 1 tie news passed from man to mail In awe struck whlspcrs-Mct'iine ImJ with drawn bis name, making the shallow est of excuse to bis cohorts. Nothing was known of the real reusou for bis tflHorfiered" retreat beyond the fact that bo had been In I'lattville on the morn ing before hi withdrawal and bad uv aued from a vhrit to the Herald oiQce In a Htate of palsy. Mr. I'arker, the Itouen printer, had been present at the clone of the Interview, but be held but peace at the command of bin employer. He had been en lied Into the auuctuio and bad found McCune, white and ahuklug, leaning' on the desk. Tarker," auld the editor, exhibiting a bundle of papers he held In big band, "I want you to witness a verbal con- Mr. Itudncu McCune Jouml the note. tract between. Mr. McCune and myself. These papers ure un atlldavlt and copies of some record of a. street car company which ehtulned a charter While Mr. McCune was In the legisla ture. They were sent to me by a man 1 do not know, un unouyuiou friend of Mr. McCune in fact, a friend he seem (o have lost. On consideration of our not printing these papers Mr. McCune agree to retire from politics for good. You understand, If be ever lift his hend again politically we pub lish them, und the courts will do the rest. Now, In case anything should happen to me" "Something will happen to you all right!" broke out McCune. "You can bank on that, you black" "Come," the editor Interrupted not unpleasantly. "Why should there be anything personal lu all this? I don't recognize you 11 my private enemy not at nil nnd I think you are getting off rntlier ennlly, aren't j'ou? You keep out of politics nnd everything will be comfortable. You ought never to hnve been In It, you see. It's n mistake not to go squnre, been use In the long run somebody I sure to give you away, like the fellow who sent mo these. You promise to bold to a strictly pri vate life?" "Y'ou're n trnltor to the party," groan ed tho other; "but 3'ou only wait" Tho editor smiled sadly. "Walt uotb lug! lmn't threaten, man. Go home to your wife, I'll give you three to one she'll be glad you are out of It." "I'll give you three to one," said Mc Cune, "that the White Cups will get you If you Htay In Carlow. You want to look out for yourself, I tell you, my smart bo v." "liood day, Mr. McCuue," was the answer. "I,et 1110 have your note of withdrawal before you leave town Uils afternoon." The young man paused a moment, then extended his bund as he said: "Shnke hands, won't you? I I hnven't meant to be too hard on you. I hope things will seem easier and gay er to you before long, and If If any thing should turn up that I can do fur you lu n private way I'll be very glad, you know. (Joodby." The sound of the Herald's victory went over the state. The paper came out regularly. The townsfolk bought It, nnd the farmers drove In for It. Old subscribers came buck. Old ndvertis- ers renewed. The Herald began to sell ill Amo, and Unities county people sub scribed. Carlow folk held up their head when Journalism was mentioned. Presently the Herald announced a news connection with Itouen, and with that nnd the aid of "patent lnsides" began nn era of three Issues a week, nppeur Ing on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satur days. The Plattvllle brass baud sere naded the editor. I luring the second month of the new regime of the Herald the working force of the paper received an addition. One night the editor found some barroom loafers tori.ieidlug n patriarchal old man who hnd a mngtiluccnt bend and a grand white beard. He hnd been thrown out of u saloon, nnd be was drunk with the drunkenness of three weebs' stendy jiourlng. He propped himself against n wall and reproved bis tormentors In I-nttn. Tin walking your way, Mr. Flsbee," remarked the Journalist, hooking bis arm Into the old man's. "Suppose we leave our friends here and go 1101110." Mr. Flsbee was the one Inhabitant of the town possessing nn unknown past, ind a glamour of romnnce was throw about him by fhe gossips, who agreed that there wus a dark, portotitous se- fret lu hi life, au opinion not too well confirmed by the old man's appearance. Hi fine eyes had a habit of wandering to the horizon, nnd bis expression wus mild, vague and sad, lost In dreams. At the first glance one guessed that his dreams would never be practicable In their application, and some such Im pression of him wn probably what caused the editor of the Herald to nick name him, lu his own mind, "the White Knight." Mr. Flsbee, coming to I'lattville from nobody knew where, bud taught lu the llieii si hool for ten years, but he proved quite unable to refrain from lecturing to the dumfouudetl pupils ou archie ology, neglecting more and more the ordinary courses of Instruction, grow ing year by year more forgetful nnd absent, lost in bl few Ismks and bis ow n relic, t ion, until nt last be bud been dim barged fur Incompetency. The daz.l old man had 110 money and no way to iiiake any. One day he dropped hi at the hotel bar. where Wllkerson, the proi'cssioiial drunkard, favored him w ith his society. The old man under stood. He knew It wus tlie hcgtnntng of the end. He sold his books In order to continue bis credit at the 1'uluce bur. and once or twice, unable to pro ceed to h's own dwelling, spent the night In a lumber yard, piloted thither by the hurdler veternu Wllkerson. The morning after the editor took him home Fts!c appeared at the Her aid olllce In a new bat and a decent suit of blnck. He had received his sal ary In advance, bis books had been re purchased and be bad become the re portorlal stuff of the Carlow County Herald; also be was to write various treatises for the paper. For the first few evenings when be started borne from the office bis chief walked with him, chatting cheerfully, until they bad passed the I'uluee bar. Cut ITs bee's redemption was complete. The editor of the Herald kept stead lly at bis work, and as time went on tlie blttPrness bU predecessor's swindle had left In 1dm passed nway. Hut his loneliness and a sense of defeat grew and deepened. When the vistas of the world bad opened to bis first youth he hud not thought to spend his life In such a place us I'lattville, but be found bimself doing It, und It was 110 greut happiness to him that the Hon. Kedge Hullowny of Amo, whom the Herald's I opposition to McCune hud sent to Washington, came to depend on his In fluence for reuomlnatlon, nor did the realization that the editor of tho Car low County Herald bad come to be McCune's successor ns political dicta tor produce a perceptibly enlivening ef fect upon the young man. The years drifted very slowly, and to him It seem ed that they went by while he stood fnr aside and could not even see them move. He did not consider the life he led an exciting one, but the other citi zens of Curlow did when he undertook a war against the. White Caps, tleul sens of Six Crossroads., seven milei west of Plattvllle. The natives were much more afraid of the White Caps than he was. They knew biore ubout them und understood them better than he did. There was no thought of the people of the Crossroads lu bis mind ns he sat ou the suuke fence staring at the little smoky shadow dunce on the white road In the June sunshine. On the contrary, he wus occupied with the realization that there hud been a man In his class at college whose ambition needed no restraint, his promise was so great lu the strong belief of the university, n be lief he could not help knowing- and thut seven years to u duy from bis coin mencemeiit this man was sitting on a fence rail In Indiana. iJown the pike a buggy came creak ing toward him, gray with dust, old and frayed like the fut, shaggy gray mare thut drew It, her unchecked, de spondent head lowering before her, while her Incongruous tall waved In cesHuntly, like the banner of a storming party. The editor did not hear the flop of the mare's hoofs nor the sound of the wheels, so deep wus Ids rev erie, till the vehicle wa nearly oppo site him. The red faced nnd perspir ing driver drew rein, and tlie Journal ist looked up nnd waved a long white hand to him In greeting. (To b continued ) " ODD BATTLE PLACES. Hen Have Made 'n on lee and l'u dcr the Earth Kurfui'e. Dattle have been fought In many cu rious place, ranging from mountain peak to sewei'H, from Ice Held to des ert Hand. At the battle of Monterey, In the Mexl.'iui war, the American wore nblo to command the street of the city with their urtllleiy, but they had ditllcalty In dlsliMlglug the Mexican from the hcuncs; ho, the city being built of stone or adobe lu solid block of houses, the Yankee broke through the wall from one house to another, fighting and driv ing out the enemy, so that the buttle of Monterey was largely fought In doors. In one of the battles of the wars of William the Silent for the Independence ef the Netherlands the Spanish ships Were frozen In on the Zuj;der Zee. The Baker's Scvcp-X The Perfection of Rrleiilillcslrjr prepared from s Iimc of pure Glycerine In combination with pure Tce Utile uila Perfectly nrntral, mi I Inept ic to Ibe nkiii yet without medio, I ten; ili-lirniely liul not olletmlvely perfiimeil, Kvery cake la itnirouKhly bkimI Iwfore oilered lo the eon miller. The niHiilileliirtr of Haker'a Setreii-X idveerine Snap tiller tills exo illsltu lirnml tl It Itch urailo Honp In Hie public Willi a llrm coiiTict'ion Hint it Is without doubt the mrit ami tict wisp 011 ihe umrkct. llsrinleHiiaH aanvhiiir. puoe an llie tireatn tf Jane. Kvery sriicle that eiiteri Into lm mmpiuiltlon l aelecleil with view to excellence; the rom pniindinK In pfraoiially mirpetvioeit liy Mr. N. A. linker, who hii ((Wen year ol utility to the uiamifatHiiriUK of liiKh Kraile Soul. Haker'a Hvvon-X tilvrerhie Heap olteii ami whlieiii the akin an nn other .p will. Kor nensallve akin niithiiiK couhl be more heal. Ins- ami m sit h 1 11 if - llathhiK bahy with Ilaker't Heven-X t.lyceilne Soay. la a luxury for both mother and the little newcomer. Portland Toilet Soap Co., p. o. r.ox, wis. FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS SAMPLE BOX BY MAIL 75C. r Who Pills Your Prescription? If we fill your prescription or re cipe it is filled with the best quality of drugs and full-weight without over charge fot honest service. We pay no one to send you to us and therefore, it FAYS YOU to bring your prescription here. A goodly nutnlter of people are al ready aware of this and a trial will convince you. Bailey's Pharmacy. BICYCLE HOSPITAL JIgcnf for (Be Rambler, Bartford and Racycle Bicycles. Special attention given to (inns.Uniinniiitioii, and other Spoiiini; (iooiN. Second hand wheels for sale cheap Wheels lor rent. A neat repair shop in connection. F. R. DAILEY, Prop MAIN ST. NILLSBORO. Imtch came ont on horseback over tlie fee unit attacked them: . TUls 1 proba bly the only battle In wliiiti -irf wus ever used directly against ships, ' reverul olbor combats were fought 1 tween trools on the ice In these wars, and on one occasion the Infantry la said to have worn skate. The buttle of Aunterllta was partly fought on u frozen lake, and when the ullles were retreating acron it the nho' from the French artillery, plunging In to the Ice and breaking It UP, cuused the dctith of thousands of Husstun und Austrian. Of the many underground battles which have taken place lu history the fiercest was probably that of the siege of Haarlem In tho Hutch war. The Spnnlartls mined and the lnitch coun termined with equal Industry, und be low the ground a fierce couillct raged. When the Versailles troop took Par Is ufter the columnar', they clmaed some of the communist troops to the greut sewer of the French capital, where Rome deHperute struggles took pluoe. Washington Post. A Vain Regret. "It must be terrible to die rich." "Yes, Indeed, your dying hours would be so embittered thinking of the time you might have bad blowing tho mon ey." EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given thut the under signed bus la-en bv the County Court of Washington County, Oregon, only up-pcint'.-d executrix 'of the last will and teHtuiuent ol Jaii.es 1'. Lilly, deceased, and has duly quulitied us such executrix. All peisuns having claims uguiust said es tate ure hereby lequired 10 present the same, with proper vouchers, to me at my evidence ut Hales Creek, Wui-hinglou county, Oregon, within six mouths Irom the dute hereof. Iated at Uillsboro, Oregoli, this Murth 2-rth, l'.HH. 1IAKKKTT J. MI.LY, Executrix of the hist w ill und testument of James I' billy Deceased. M. OA ILK Y 11 1! ill', Attorney for estate. Notice is hereby given, Hint by virtue ot un order made by the County Court, Mar ch, 7, 1!XM; I will sell lor ca-h in hand, at Forest drove, Oregon, at private sale, I'uoiit und ui'lea, Saturday, A, ril !t, llll 4. nil the reult'hlate belonging to the estate of Ash Williams derenned, to-wit: The South wesfj of Section ', Twp. 8 North, llange 4 West, Willamette Mejidiuu, coi tabling llMi iicits, all in Washington County, Ore uted ut Foret (irove, Oregon, this 10th dny of Murch, UK 1. PAl'All K. CbOW Administratrix of the entitle ol Asa Will iams, deceased, Hull man und Welch, attorneys for Ad m nitrutm. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. m Notice is hereby given that the under signed hus tiled, 111 the County Court of Washington County, Oregon, his final ac count and report us itiliiiinistrutor, wi h the will annexed, of the estate of Hamuel C. 8nider deceased, and that said court ha set the same for tiiial hearing helore said court 011 Monday. A mil lit, l'.M, ut the, hour of 1(1 o'clock A. M. Dated this 1st li d ay of March, ltltH. J. C. COUKY. Adnfinistrutor of the Kstutu ot Pannifl C. 8utder deceased, with the Will of said deceased unnexe I. 1IKNT0N HOW MAN, Attorney f r Admr. PORTLAND AND RETURN 85c. The Southern Pacific is now selling round trip tickets to Portland from Uillsboro for cents, good goin Saturday P. M., or any train of 'Sun day, returning Sunday and Monday, giving all day- Sunday and Monday in Portland. The same arrangement applies from Portland, giving nil Port land people a chance to visit valley points at grea'ly reduced rates. 6lycgripg Soap all Toilet Soaps. R PORTLAND, 0