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About Hillsboro independent. (Hillsboro, Washington County, Or.) 189?-1932 | View Entire Issue (May 15, 1908)
Aa- t Topics of the Times I j The wild bird that mg tfi sweet always themselves In the bushes. rtuge develops will ower. Alia won't rr. Th motio r nck on th 0''1, sgnlu. We hope the coin will not go back on tlii people gain. Mm. Paderewskl paid $7,300 for four chickens few days ago. She ought to let her husband ilo th marketing. Cobalt stock are capitalized at $175. OnO.OoO. If all tljnt watered stock ever freei.-s over, th skating up there will He flue. It won't be long until poor men may begin to complalu that the tmnkers Mini financier are crowding them out of the Jails. Kocrclary Wilson of the Agricultural department ay the i;.'ll' cannot tell fresh msi from male. After It lias c;il ii them It can. If we tiinli ist.ind tli.' matrimonial Bit nation la the Panama canal gone, leap-year girl w.iuldu't be able to get proposal in edgewise. A preacher says girl should not ob ject when young men wish to hold their hands. Naturally this lead to the sus picion that some girl hni been objecting. A I'.erllu detective weut Insane be cause he wa unsuccessful In bin ef fort to catch a thief. Incident of till kind are not uncommon, hut they are found uaiially In work of Ac tion. A Oorglu woman ha been deserted by her fourth husband because he didn't like her cooking. A woman with her experience ought to have been able to pick nut u man who waa able to hire a cook. Home :'cjile escape the rucking boat, the unload. 'd gun, the exploding kero sene can, und the reckless chauffeur, only to get bold of the carbolic acid bottle In the dark when looking for cough syrup. A returning arctic traveler announces that the north pole Is shifting. Hence forth explorers cannot hope to bring back a splinter oft the pole, but must content themselves with a piece of the bole n proof that they reached the final "farthest north." Siime Idea of the present Importance end value of great tracts of timber laud may be gathered from the fact that an Austrnllnn company linn secur ed a concession from the Kussliii gov ernment to take out thirty million feet of lumber a year from Siberian forests. Price lire so high In Australia that the Siberian lumber can be transported right thnuinnd miles to Melbourne nt a tiandsomo profit. To find new names for old colors must, tax the Ingenuity of weavers and dyer, yet the demand for novelties never fails to be met. This year blue will tie known its "hydrangea," or "bluet," or twelve other things, and there are fourteen names for inniive, nine for pink, four for deep ml mid scarlet, and sixteen for green. Kaclng uch an army, a men-hunt, being only a man, may sometime become bewild ered; but probibly no experienced "shopper" will pypr entertain n doubt as to whether h"i- new gown should be colored rose of the Alps, mirage, ame thyst, minuet, ltngrill, or Niger. A i-onsiilcuou American statesman ha lifted up bis voice In the Knsf to do honor to the great American pay roll. Here are III words: "We have much to show the world ns nn evidence of America a greatness. Put I venture to my Hint there Is nothing that we should regard with as much pride as the Ainer- Iiyiii pay roll. It lias no txpial any where. In a large sense It has mini um American home, the American a-lsiol. and the American savings bank the envy of the world, tempting tlioii- sands to our shun- every day to shar.1 our prosperity niul our' contentment." The American pay roll - the fisted re wards or American Industry In nil ranks and walks of life-is umsiinlisl In any nation. It Is a proer subject f national pride, for It proves the comfort nf the average man of Anierb nlsive Hie avernge man of any other cointry i or (Miieru iiu pay roil lias iKS'ii snme- ivhat neglected of late by our niot con pii'iioii Kiniesiiieil. II n.'IS not ix-ea nften nientioiMsl ns nn uplifting Infill en. e. It bus not been rmmherr-d for several year nni'!g the. .''forces tli.it make for g-sl. Vet t lirf- is no t: flu piicp more potent for n-fral inlvamv inent ns will n for murliil welfnie, None bus sisitbed more anxiety, dntsl more tears, proilu. -ed more ImptMnis, or prevenlcil more crime. :?it tin tions nppreclnte Its benefits even while we do not, and their people come by Hie th-nis.ind daily to llnd places upon It. When in engng'.iig swindler of fns.ii lia! ' ,; ilc;iie.iiir llmls It possible '.o do biisiniss witli a romantic fraud or ven erable nnti'pilt.v It becomes nppinut that ordinary method of existing tii-e well worn ili-'e is d i imt avail to prevent llieiii from ciitihuig fn-sli , -finis nt reginar Intervals. A m:i I. rit v if the frauds could Is- e;,t.il.g:.sl. Tiny Ii.-imi been ill use f ir generation's. Tliey have Iss'ii drama! ! is, "n. i cll.il, ' iiud uiadi' the jiroiindwork -f the joke lx.'. They have been In oety poliie iniirt and in eery newspapir with sueli fre-Ueii-'.v tluit It would be natural to sup oc that one istuld not sliow Its face wltlsuit N-liig rpoigulieil from one end of the land to the other. In spite of II tbl the venerable fraud rmve only to let down their net nnd thty catch fresh fish. ThU IeiU to the suggestion that It would be highly rb-stnihle to have compiled a handlsnik of awtndle. taking In ewrithlnc from the dropped. w. ...M t.et. k nn tu til Inteat Spanish fraud, and to give It the blest dr.-ulutlon ioHlble. U-t the good iiwiii of the bouse make a place tr It alongside his wife's ck t"k. the almanac, end the vo'imie of ready rem edies. When lie learns that he ha a beautiful cousin Imprisoned In a con vent lu Spnlu let blm turn flrt to th Index of the awludle book, look under cousin" or "conveut." and there put .'V sH-- . Iiefore fidng ahead to lrn by erierlen.-e. Nearly all the successful deceits are of proved antiquity. The confidence man doc . . - . M...An lia H ! lit not invent new irons --.. hi band old ones which have prov d their ethYlency and which have not lost value because of their age and loin service. A handbook of awlndles. If It could be given general circulation, would aid In retiring the ancient frauds to a deserveJ rest. In the day of a state Uink currency, when counterfeits were more numerous than now, audi works as 'Tliompson' Hank Note I totor" served the same purrs'" In pro tecting people ngalnst bad money as a handbook of swindle would serve In rhe prevention of dwelt which con tinue to have un almost ridiculous sue Nt urn II y the confidence man would be driven to greater invention ii nd a crop of new fraud might lie ex po-ted. but even these cnulil lie incor porated In annual revision of the hand book and much protection might be giv en to psple who now seemingly find no way to Inform themselves from the una fortunes of others. BUILDER OF STANDAKD OIL. Was No Boekefeller bot aa Ob nn l.awrrr Nanira Dodd. There waa a time when the Standard Oil trust waa nothing- more than an Idea In the brain of one man. Who was that innnT How did hla Idea originate? And what wo hi purpose, In build ing the greatest mllllnnalre-maklrHf or ganization that the world ha ever seen T The answering of these three ques tion make It necessary to dig up the romantic tory of Samuel C. T. Dodil, the legal builder of the Stnndard Oil trust, who rose from a log cnbln In a Pennsylvania wilderness to be the lirt great corporation lawyer In the world, says Ilerls-rt N. Casson In the Broad nny Magazine. One of the main reasons why the Standard Oil Is now In a state of prac tical outlawry Is, perhaiw, that Isidd is dead. The brain that created the pio neer trust and protected It for twenty five years has ceased to think. Three year ago I said resigned hi position a legal rlinMrnti to John I). Rocke feller; and several months Inter he lied. with hi mime practically unknown to the Ainerleiiii people. Among lawyer S. C. T. Isnld was the "man with the Iron mask." He wu the Inventor of trust. Ills client hold world record for the sudden Hcqulbl- tlon of wealth.. And yet Dodd lived and died In mmpnrntlve oblivion, with out either fame or millions, when ho might have had both for the nuking. Iniring the time that lodd was the attorney lu chief for the Standard OH trust It paid $.iiHMH'.HK) In dividend. It Increasi'd lis share of the American oil business from 4 Ier cent to So. It enlarged It yearly output from a few trainload of oil to 2,(HH),(MK) barrel. And It wldemsl the si-ne of It netlvl tie until It Is'i'iune the most Interim tlonal of nil eorMi'it tions, carrying It ill to fifty countries with It own fled of M hundred steumship. It was Dodd who saved the Stand ard Oil trust from Attorney General David K. Watson of Ohio In lwrj nnd from Attorney (lenernl Frank 8. Mon nett of the same State In IN! 1:1. It was he who unlocked the doors of foreign countries: who kept the Standard re finery nt llavnnn In operation during the Spanish war; nnd wlsi, during the Kusso-Japntipse war, secured such com plete protection for bis company that It did not I os.. n iiiiieh us a quart of oil or n biuipwick. lodd brooded over the Standard Oil like a tnnn with one chicken. He was not like the conspicuous nien of the trust, who had other Interests. J. 1. Kis'kefeller bad his Iron ore miiips nnd railways, his church and his Chicago university. Roger had bis rout und copMT, ringler his Arcadia on the Florida bench, and I .ode hurt bis Htls- burg Iron mills. Hut lodd was ubso- iiueiy Kiiigie-minilisi. lie wa a mini of one Idea and one Job. From an Inside Miint of view It was he-the fororatlon lawyer who was the central figure In the immense trust It was be who solved the hard prob lems. "What does lsld sny?" was the dully question at P.roa.lwny. f John I). ItoekefelliT wished to consult with Rogers or Flagler or any of hi other partners, he called them to hi olliiv; but In most cnsi-s, if h,. wislnil to we liotld, lie want to Itodd's olliiv. He ran to i.l, as n child runs to a pa rent. "I feel that I can't do wrong," he would often say. "if i,Md Is behind me." ' A .h...l I niler the Srs. The story Is told of n diver who saw two ghosts "full fathom five" under he surfi He had g i,ie down to the wris-k of a large steamer and was crossing the main saloon when two gray shnH's of enormous size came shambling toward him. lie did not w.ilt to make notes for the Psychical Society, but gave the danger signal and was nt once pull, -d up. Told In the cheerful light of day, it :u,., rather a lame story, ainl another diw-r went down to see what lie could make of It. Toward hltn also came the shambling gray shape. He Mood irresolute for a moment and tin n. going boldly for ward, siinek his batebet through a mirror: The glios: 0,llv a ()m reflection of his own legs, mtieli en larged, of course, ns everything is that a diver sev through the great frontal eye of bis helmet. I.eorae's Idea. "Must I wash my hand before come to the tab'e, mamma?" "Of course, troorgle." "Why. ain't ws goln' to hate finger bowl to-day, niauiui T lonkeri SUtvsuiaft. The Firm of Girdlestono A. CON AN OOYLE CHAPTER XII I. (Continued.) -I am sorry to be late, mother.- the lad ..id. klasing the old lady. "I have W-en down at tli. dock all day, and have been busy and worried." .Mrs. Itinisilnle wa sitting in her chair ocide the fire knitting when her on rame In At the sound of his vol. she glanced anxiously up at his face, with all her motherly Instincts on the alert. "What 1 It. my boy?" she id. You Sot.'l 'cn.it -ycerstttf. . Sotpetbln has gone wrong with you. Surely you're not keep ing anything secret from your old moth er." "Don't lie so foolish a that, my boy," aid the doctor earnestly. "If you have n thing on your mind, out with It. There' nothing so far wrong but that it "an be set right. I'll I bound." Tim pressed, their son told them all that had happened, the rumor which he had heard from Von Itnumser at the Cock and Cowslip, and the iibse.uent visit to Kccleston square. "I can hardly reallxe It all yet," he snid In conclusion. "My head seem to be iu a whirl, and I can't reason about it." The old couple listened very attentively to hi narrative, and were silent some lit tle time after he had finished. Hi mother first broke the silence. "I wa always ure," she said, 'that we were wrong to stop our correspondence at the request of Mr. tiirdlestone." "It's easy enough to say that now," said Tom ruefully. "At the time it seetn: ed as If we had no alternative." "There' no use prying over spilt milk. remarked the old physician, who had been very grave during his son's narrative. We must set to work and get things right again. There is one thing very cer tain, Tom, and thnt is that Kate Harston is a girl who never did or could do a dishonorable thing. If she snid that she would wait for you, my boy, you may feel perfectly safe; and if you doubt her for one moment you ought to be deuced well ashamed of yourself." Well said, governor! rrled Tom. with berming face. "Now that la exactly my own feeling, hut there is no much to be explained. Why have they left London, and where have they gone to?" No doubt that old scoundrel (iirdle- itene thought that your patience would soon come to nn end, so he got the start of you by carrying the girl off into the country." "And It he has done this, what ran I do?" Nothing. It 1 entirely within his right to do It." And have her stowed away in some little cottage in the country, with thnt brute F.zra tiirdlestone hanging round her all the time. It is the thought of that thnt drives me wild." You trust In her, my boy," said the old doctor. "We'll try our best in the meantime to find out where she has gone to. If she is unhappy or needs a friend you may be sure that she will write to your mother." Yes, there is always that hope," ex claimed Tom, in a more cheerful voice. To-morrow I niny learn something at the office." "Don't make the mistake of quarreling with the (iirdlestones. After all they are within their rights in doing what they appear to Imve done. "They may be w ithin their legnl rights, Tom cried indignantly, "but the old man made a deliberate compact with me, which he has broken. "Never mind. Don't give them nn ad vantage by losing your temper." The doe tot chatted away over the matter for some time, and his wurds, together with those of his mother, cheered the young fellow s henrt. Nevertheless, after they had retired to their rooms. Dr. Dimsdnle continued to lie very thoughtful nnd very grave. I mm i like ii. ne said, more than once. "I don't like the hlea of the poor girl being left entirely In the hands of that pair of benuties." CIIAPTKR XIV. John Cirdlestone and his ward were at Waterloo sthtion. He gave orders to the guard that the luggage should be stamped, but tiNik enre Hint she should not hear the name of their ib-sti tint ion. Hurrying her rapidly down the pint form amid the confused heaps of luggnge and currents of eager passengers, he imh,., her Into a first-clnss carriage, nnd sprang ftPr her Just as the bell rang nnd the wheel be gnn to revolve. They were nlone. Kate crouched up Into the corner among the cushions and wiiipiw'd her nig round her, for it was bitterly cold. The merchant pulled a note book from his piskef, nnd proceeded by the light of the lamp nlmve him to add u, column of figures. He snt very up right in his sent, nnd npsnred to be a absorbed in Ins work ns though he were among hi twin, in Fem-liureh street. He neither glan.-ed nt hi companion nor nn.le nny inquiry ns to her comfort. As she Hill opposHe (o him ,( not keep her e.ws from his hard, angular fa -e. every rugged feature f w!lj,., waj I'Xang.M'llted by the lliekering vew light lime him. Those deeset eves nnd sunk, en ,1 L. I,,,,! I f in.' . . . I " ooiiouir in l, t for (years. How wns it that th.-v mcv. for (lb- lirst tin,.-, strn.k her ns being lerri ,ble? Was it tti.it ,,,. cpreion wll,h , hnd nppenre.1 iiH,n them, t hat hard Inet- 01 able set about the t (),. whirl', rn, a more sinister ,lnrn,t..r fn , nh..le I fare? As l. r,, , ,,im n) j,,,.,,-.,, I loathing niul dread t,,,. j .r ,,, nl)( ' -I'Pek.Hl t of ,.,; .r. ' " ""r "ami up to .r i,r,,.lt with a gasp t !,." ,!. ,,. ,,1I1 . iliiiatiou to ,ry out. A . ,,, ko , guardian fin need over the lop of the note boos ,th Ins piercing ,r,t e,.,.v "Ism't g-t hysterical ; ,e cried. "Yon S'icii iis inniM.. em,,,,, I, hat." without "Oh. why are yon o ImrsliV ,h cried throwing out her Rrm, ,.,. him elispient entreaty, while the tears .-nursed down her cheeks. "W,M have I Hone that is so .Irrnilful? 1 oolll(, , . your son. and I do love another. I ,m M jneved to have offended y. y0 to J kind and like . fnlh(.r , ni(1 - having allowed you to g , STsTZ '"I K"""n, 'her. ,o b.r. thro,D Into th. company ol uia 4 young adventurer by hit scheming olJ father." "You may say wlmt )oU like of me." he said bitterly. "I i,MMe that ia one of your privilege ,n). jUsrdian. You have no right, however, to si- vil my friemU." "Y'ou are Is-eouiing inqiertinent. he l antwered. aud .vsui j,in calculation i in his note bMk. Kme cowered hack into j her corner again, while the train thun I dered and screeched unj rattled through th" darkness. I,ooking through the steamy I window nothing wns to he seen save the Mian iir.ii;..; j.;;, ul fj, O'""1 the Si-attered country I'ottag.'S. Occasion ally red signal In,,,,, ,.nlllj .nre down uisin her like the lil,M.M,t eye of aome demon ho presided over this kingdom of Iron and steam. Fat behind a lurid trail of smoke marked the y that they had com. To Kate's mind it Wa all a weird and gloomy and clin-rhns even as the thought within her. And they were gl.smiy enough. Where was she going? lw n( u she going f..r? What wa she to do when there? On all these isiiuls she was absolutely ignorant. What was the object of thia sudden flight from London? Her ruardian could have separate.) ,,.r from the Dims dnle In many I-hs elaborate way than this. Could it be that he Intended some system of pressure and b-rrorisin by which sue should be for.d to accent Kira a a suitor? She clenched her little white ?S" :h.,;:fr:,i ,,f it, ,ud r .Sacred a vow that nothing in this world would ever bring her to give iQ UMn thnt point. There was only one bright pot In her outlook. When she retched her destina tion she would at once write to .Mrs. Dimsdnle, tell her where she was. and ask her frankly for in explanation of their sudden silence, 4low much wiser if she had done so before. Only a foolish pride had withheld her from it. J he train had alretdv stunned at one large Junction. Looking out through the window she saw by the lamu that it wa Oulldford. After another Intermin able Interval of clattering and tossing and plunging through the dtrknes. they came to a second station of importance, Petera fleld. "We are nearic our destination," (irdlestone remarked, limiting up hi book. Thi proved to be a iniall wayalde sta tion, illuminated by a tingle lamp, which gave no information at to the name. They were the only passenger who alighted, and the train rolled on for Portsmouth, leaving them with their trunks Usm the dark and narrow platform. It wa a dark night with a bitter wind which carried with it a suspicion of dampness, which might have been rain, or might have been the drift of the neiglilsiring ocean. Kate wu numb with the cold, and even her gaunt companion stamis-d his feet and shivered as he looked about him. I telegraphed for a trap," said he to the guard. "Is there not one waiting.' "Yes, air, if you be Mister tiirdlestone. Here, Carker, here's jour gentleman." At this summon a rough-looking ostler merged into the circle of light thrown by the single lamp, and touching his hat, announced in a surly voice that he wa the individual in quentiun. The guard and he then proceeded to drag the trunks to the vehicle. It wait small wagonette, with a high seat for the driver in front. "Where to, sir?" axknl the driver, when the traveler had taken their sent. "To Hampton Priory. Do you know where that is?" "Retter'n two mile fno here, and close t. th railway Una." sn!bo wma. "There hain't been no one livif there for two year at the least." "We are exieeted and all will be ready for us," said tiirdlestone, "lo as fast as you can, for we are cold." The driver cracked his whip, and the horse started at a brisk trot down the dark country road. Looking round her Kate now thnt they were passing through a larte country vil lage, consisting of a broad main street, with a few insignificant offshoots branch ing away on either side. A church stood ou one side, and on the other the village inn. The door wa oen tnd the light shining through the red curtains of the bar parlor looked warm and rosy. The murmur of cheerful noieet sounded from within. Kate as she looked across felt doubly cheerless and lonely by the con trast, (milestone looked, too, hut with different emotion. The road wa lined on either side by high hedges, which threw a dense shadow over everything. The feeble lamps of the wngonette bored two little yellow tunnels of light on either side. The man let the reins lie loose Umiu The horse's hack, and the animal picked out the roadway for its. If. As they sw unf round from the narrow Inne on to a broader road Kate broke out into a little cry of plensiite. "There's the sea," the exclaimed Joy fully. The moon had broken from behind the clouds, and glittered nn the vast sil very expanse. "Y'es, that's the set," the driver said, "and them lights down yonder is at Lea Claxton, where the finlier folk live; and over there," pointing with his whip to a long dark shadow on the waters, "is the "Oily wolfe." "The what?" "The Isle of Wight, be means," said (iirdlestone. The driver looked at him reproachfully. "Of course," said he, "if you Liinnnn folks knows more about It than we who are born and bred in the place, it's no mntter o' use our tryin' to teach you." With this sarcastic comment he withdrew Icto himself, ntel refused to utter an other word until the end of their Jour ney. It wa not long before this wa attain ed. Passing down s deeply rutted lane they came to a high nt,,,,, null which ex tended for a cotqile of hundred yard. It had a crumbling, denying appearance, as far a could be judged in the uncertain liht. This wnll wan broken by a single iron gate, flanked 1,T two high pillar, eneh of which wn surmounted by some weather-beaten tiernldie device. Passing through they turn.-d up winding avenue, with line of tree, on rithcr side, which shot their branch.- thickly above them thnt they might have been driving .through si me somber tunnel. This avenue termin ated In an open apace, in the midst of which tow. -Jed t great irregular white washed building. whi,-h wa th obi Pri ory "All below if fcl thed in dnrk ncv,. but the upper wind,,-, caught the glint of the n.i,, iited a pallid nnd sickly glii,er. The wliol" effect wa o weird nnd e,v ,,,, Kate felt her henrt sink within ,r The wagonette pulled up in fr,,t nf , door, and (iir 'lleitone Ssi,.,l ,er , .n,!,,. I here had b,.,.n j,,, r nny svmp toms of welcome, h, ,, ,,v pulled down the trunk the ,,.r n.,,.,,,.,1 end a little old woman npi- re,l i,h a candle in h"r hnnd. w hi.-h she cnref,,!!, shaded from the wind while she peerfj ,)Ut into the dark ness. "I that Mr. C.ird!, ne 7" h rrled. 'Of course it I,- tl)R merchant said Im patiently. "i,i(l , Bot (..uraph and tell you that I wa, eominuT" . ye,.- ,h tnnrrfr hobbling for ward with the tilU .Vnj thia la the ymir.g ldy? com, mJ dMir; pome In. have not got thBft very mart yet. Fhe led th way through a lofty bab I into a large sitting room, which, no doubt, had been the monkish refectory in bygone! day. It lisiked very bleak and cold now. although a small fir sputtered and spar kled in the corner of the great iron grate There wa a pan upon the fire, and the deal table In the center of the room wa laid out roughly a for a m.-el. The can dle, which the old woman bud carried in. wa the only light, though the flickering fire cast strstige fantastic shadows in the further corner and among th great oak en rafter which forme- the ceiling. old woman. "Take off your cloak and warm yourself." She held her own shriv eled arm toward th blase, a though he abort exposure to the night air had chilled her. (ilanelng at her, Kate saw that her face was sharp-featured and run ning, with a loose lower lip which exposed a line of yellow teeth, and a chin which bristled with a tuft of long grey hairs. From without there came the crunching of gravel aa the wagonette turned and rat tled down the avenue. Kate listened to the sound of the wheels uutil tbey died away in the dixtam-e. Tbey seemed some how to be the last link which hound her to the human race. Her henrt failed ber completely, and she burst into tear. "What' the matter then?" the old woman asked, looking up at ber. "What are ye crying alKiut?" "Oh, I am so miserable and so lonely," i-riitl. --'Whir Live I i-mo. !-!.; should tie so unhappy? Why should I be tuken to thi horrible, horrible place? "What' the matter with the place?" asked her withered companion, "I don't see nought amiss with it. Here' Mr. (iirdlestone a-comin. He don't grumble at the place, I warrant." The merchant wa not In the best of temper, for he had bad an altercation with the driver about the fare, and wa cold into the bargain. "At it again," he aaid roughly, a be entered. "It ia I who ought to weep, I think, who have been put to all thia trouble and inconvenience by your disobedience and weakness of mind." Kate did not answer, but sat upon a coarse deal chair beside the fire, and burled her face In her hand. All manner of vague fear and fancies filled ber mind. What wa Tom doing now? How quickly hA would fly to her rescue did he but know how strangely she wn situated. She determined that her very first action next morning should be to write to Mrs. Dims dale, and to tell her, not only where ah was, but all that had occurred. The re flection that she conltl do this cheered her heart, and she managed to eat a little of th supper which the old woman bad now placed upon the table. It wa a rough stew of some sort, but the long Journey had given an edge to their apetites, and the merchant, though usually epicurean in hi tastes, ate a hearty meal. (To be continued.) KEEP GUNFIRE SECRET. What Waa Learned by the Japaaes In Knc.iunlep wlih HoJel vrnsky. To those who have enjoyed the op portunity to gauge the Japanese chiir ucter ut cIoho rango the recent state nieiit of a prominent nriny officer none other, In fact, than Hen. William CroKler, chief of ordnance that ubso lately uo Information regarding the effect, of Japanese gun fire on tlw urmored buttle nhtji of the ltussiun fleet bus been made public or bus even leaked out, will not prove surprising, say the Washington Post. To thv army expert the fact appears to huve been the (amnion of surprise nnd ill appointment. They bad long experi mented with gnus and nrmor and bad reached certain conclusion which they regard a practically definite. Never theless, they longed for more practical diMiiotiHti'atlou even than their exjierb incut afforded of the actual effect ol , ,., , . , , , on trnnsp hinting plants In full foliage modern rilled guns, using smokele . . 1 ' ... . i i. V . . . at n ght. The results of some oxpeii pouder nnd discharging ten nnd twou- . ,. , 1 I ... ....( l.v ir.iiuiiitt u-oiilil innL-n iirm.M-e- ty-foiir Inch projectile at the side and on the (leek of the modern buttle ships, currying nil armored belt of eight, ten or twelve Inches of Harvey l.eil steel, and with deck protected with lierli.'ips six Inches of the same ui.i terlal. Would the arnior-plerclng shell, currying a large qiiuullty of high ex plosive, or the iirnior-plorclng shot, currying a materially smaller charge, but with greater piercing capacity, crente the grenter havm-? Would gun fire directed nt the superstructure prove, more effective lu the long run than that aimed nt the annonsl sides? Would it be possible so ucciiriilely to place the shots a to penetrate the lig'.it"t armor of the decks, nnd If so. nt whnt ranges? These and n hundred olh"! vital questions the ordnance exs?rti knew would be solved when Togo' fleet met KoJcHtvensky's. Thnt the Japanese fire was merciless ly destructive they huve had iimpie evidence. Put no bint bus come of the precise effis-t. No details are vouch safed. Japanese admiral and Japa nese generals meet nnd exchange com pllmeiits and comiiMinplnce with Amor lean ulllcers. but never enn tbey lm Induced to part with one scintilla of Information which might prove of value to the American. They sunk the Hus sion ship nnd then they raised them They gathered nn Immense fund of In valuable Information. In the opinion of the American expert, but they have never Imparted the smallest fact. Po slbly to P.iiglish ('Ulcers, their alllo tbey have given some bint on this nil Important subject. And American olfl cor arc surprised nnd dls:ipilntei Not so they who know the Japnnes.i Ilrtren.-hlna. "Old Sen is Is In n tight place, i fear." "Whnt makes you think so?" "He' doing everything possible to raw expenses." Hadn't heard of It." "It's so; bo's broken the ptigngometr hctnts'ti hi daughter nnd Lord Nullln.' Houston Post. The Minuter of Slneerllr. Mr. Kail No, I do not believe It: nrtifliial nld to tiaturnl appearand I think there Is something incretrbioiii nlsoit attempts to pass off the fnlse for the real. Little Pad Mn, Tommy I plnylnj mousey with your new hair puffs I Ilaltlmore American. Ua Meneh. QnnnerMany of our singers go over to Europe to reach the high C's. Ouyer Well, what do tha Europe I singers rome. over here for? Gunner Oh, they conn ovtr ber U raach tl X'l tod V. .. Taa laatuear f I.lnaetsl meal bus a tendency to make a soft butter, provided tht meal I fed In large amounts. If fed In only me dium amounts, the butter fat are nor mal. It Is a valuable milk stimulating food, ami can lie rued to prevent the formation of excessively hard fats In wluter. Tim only disadvantage to the general use In the prb. Half or three- quarter of a pound of llnseel or oil meal In a ration per day will txert h very favorable Influence upon the quali ty of the butter. Corn mcnl, when fed In large amounts with coarse fodders, has a tendency to produce a firm butter. When mixed with other grains, a bet tor quality of butter I produced than If tli corn were fed alone, (iluteu meal, a by-product obtained In the manufacture of corn slan-li nnd glti cose, produce n softer butter than corn meal. The gluten. It I to be observed, contains more of the vltnl nutrient, protein. Prof ssor Harry Snyder, t'nl vcrslty of Minnesota. Keeping a ala from Snaa'asf, Most farm gate are heavy, nnd nf tor a little time they ng. When they get this way It tukes a strong man to open and shut one. Here Is remedy. Get a wheel, either hlg or little, from an old piece of machinery, nd bolt It to the front end of the gate 0OO0 VSK FOB A.I OLD PI.OW W1IEK1. In such a way that the gate will be held level. Now the sinullest child can open the gate for you. Try It, for It Is n savor saves your patience, your back, nnd the gate. N. W. 8., lu Funn and Home. Hoblns Killed for l-'ood In the Month. A million robins were killed In Iiuls lana during the winter of 1907-8, the offenders being men and boys who shot them for food. While they nre pro tected its song birds In Northern States, It Is a common Southern practice to shoot them for the tnblo, nnd In some States the hunters kill tl i In grent numbers nt their roosting places, a government expert Kiiitgests that tic eastward movement of the boll weevil bus been facilitated by the killing of the robins. If that Is shown to be so, the cotton growers will not receive much sympathy from the member of the Audubon sodctles. Leslie's Week ly. Trannilitiitlnii Tree. In Iteviie I!nlvcrelle, according to another foreign coittcinpornry, there Is a practical article of gciiernl Interest incut by Kouiiult would make iinnoce snry the customary transplanting of do. cldiious trees In the full or winter, lit has found that trees may he trans planted In full foliage In May or June, with little or no Injury, providing the process Is carried on ut night. This has been demonstrated to the entire satisfaction of some of the most prom inent horticulturists of Prance. Hrewerr Slock Fred. Dried brewer' grains rank close to brun In feeding value, containing a little more protein aud fat, but not quite so much carbohydrates. It Is claimed thnt In 100 tHiunda of this feed there are iri.7 (suinds of protein, 3H.3 pounds of carbohydrates aud 5.1 pound of fat. Malt sprouts and dried brew ers' grains are valuable cow feeds, es pecially the lutter. Sprouts are rich est In protein, but not much relished by cow and should lie fed only In lim ited quantities. Wet brewers' grain are apt to Injure the quality of the milk. Population and food. The statistician In the Department of Agriculture of the Pnlted Ktnte e tlmatc thnt In ltd the population of the country will lie irK,KHi,(si0. To sup ply the requirement of this number of people will necessitate the production of 7O0.OH0.000 bushels of wheat. I."-".-(g)g bushels of nut. .1.-."i0.nOO.(KK) bushels of corn, 'U0,0(ift,0(Kl ton of liny ; and cotton, tobacco, fruit niul vegeta bles in proportion. This will necessi tate bringing under cultivation nn nddl tlonnl l.-n.ooo,'"10 ''re of land, nnd It I estimated that we have only Iiim.ooO, fHKl acres available for cultivation. Insect with Sprlnahnnrd IVose. Among the curious Insects of the Malay Peninsula 1 one called th" lan tern fly. which Is remarkable for It sudden leaps, made without the aid of It wing. It was only nfter the first specimen of tills queer Insect were cnrrled to London for exit ml nn t inn. Hint It whs discovered that n curious projec tion on the front of its head, a kind of tiose with a crease In It, w.i the leaping organ. When bent back under the abdomen and suddenly released It sent the Insist flying. The XX le.l.nn nf the Bee. We marvel nt what we call the wis dom of the hive bee, yet there Is one thing she never lenms from experience, writes John Burroughs In the Atlantic, and thnt Is thnt she I storing up honey for the use of ninn. Khe could not lenrn this, becnuse alien knowledge I not necessary to her own well being. Neither d. she ever know when she bn enough to carry her through the winter. Thi knowledge, again. Is not Important, fiather and store honey as long as there Is any to be had Is her motto, tnd lo that rule h Is safa. OT?7 XPS3J Weather Koreeaatlaat. People have learned by exerienc f make allowance for error In the pre- dlrtlons ot the V.'cnfher P'jr-fu. h"t mivi ahotild be olllclnlly stated. As tronomers, It apiie.nrs, are In the habit of giving the value of the "probable error" when publishing their obwrrs tlons. But, although meteorology lendi Itself more readily than any other science to the evolution of deviations from the mean result, the weather forw CHSter have not adopted the custom of stating the probable error. I'rof. rMuister looks forward to the) time when weather forecasts will be accom panied by a statement of the odds that the prediction will be fulfilled. Then, perhaps, we shall rend In the weather column not simply, "rain to-niorrovr," but "3 to 1" or "0 to 1 for rain to-morrow." -A r.oiii "'M'eTV.. Here Is a well recommended white wash : For 10 gallon use ti.'i pounds of common lime slaked with boiling water;' 3 pounds of clean wood ashes; 10 pound of incited beef fallow; 2 pounds of common salt and one-half pound of glue, dissolved. Add any dry mineral paint to color, uch ns burnt timber, yellow ochre or mineral red. Mix all while hot and appply while warm, keeping 't well stirred. The Sheep Pen. As a rule there Is very little mols tnre In the sheep pen from the ani mals themselves Sheepmen say that by heavy bedding, particularly at ths beginning of the season, the straw will absorb all the urine from the sheep without there being any softness or rotting of the straw, and the pens are often not denned more thnn once In a season without Injury to the stock. "penrlnar Prnlt Tree. All fruit trees should be sprayed while dormant, with lime, stilphnr and salt, as a preventive of Ran Jose scale. to destroy the fungi. It Is also claim ed that this preparation Is a good fer tilizer, and will help to keep the trees healthy. Quite a number of Insects Mt tack only dead or decaying trees, and these form a breeding place for many other vurlctles of Insect pests. Uln-ealed Fertilisers. Manure I simply materials that have been softened nnd decomposed (digest ed) within the Ixidy of nn animal. To apply such raw materials as bran and linseed mcnl directly to the soil would be of no advnntnge, notwithstanding that they, are excellent fertilizers, their vnlue being Increased by feeding ta stock. An Iron weight with n strap attached to It should alwnys be carried In the farm wagon. The moment the horse I stopped nnd the driver Is to leave the team, the weight should be dropped to the ground aud the strnp fastened to the horse. Tbl will make It safer than to allow the team to stand un hitched. Ilrmnnd fiie lloreltndlsh. Atinuully ".".( barrel, or 7,f0O.O0( pounds, of horse-radish are shipped from St. Iouls to the Atlantic coast, to the Pacific const, to the lakes and to the gulf. Kirm phi nnd Kntea, t'lide Sam received $1 .r.OO.onn last year for public land of all kinds, A gardener nt Tacomn. Wash., Inst season marketed $7."0 worth of celery from one acre of ground. The explosion of a cream separator nearly killed Earl Adams nnd his moth er, living near TretniH'leiiu, Minn. Emperor William of Cermnny sent fifteen conch and cavalry horses to the International show. They were among the most ben ut If ul animals ever seen lu this country. Wyoming Is sending a large n umbel of her tough little bronchos to Alaska.' as It hns been found thnt they stand the rigorous climate up there better than nny other breed. Night riders in Tennessee who wern arrested for burning tobacco sheds and shooting at farmers were set free, be cnuse a Jury could not bo found In the county to try them. The government reports that 2.H00.. 000 cattle died In the Putted State Inst year, over half of these succumb ing from exposure. The total losses from all causes Is estimated ot $lM,(KK), (too. Farming In New Mexico has been given n grent Impetus during the past few years by the work of the fanners' Institutes nnd many unprmluctlve val leys have been turned Into rich grnle nnd fruit fields. One of the slglit nt the Internation al Htock Show wn a pure white (Sallow-ay, sired by Scottish Standard, a thoroughbred (Inllowny bull out of a pure bred white (inllowny cow. This la a freak, but may produce a new type of (Jallowny. Self-Preservation. "The man who ran be coerced InU paying hush money Is either a cowanf or a criminal." "I don't clns myself with either and I pay hush money." "What for?" "If I didn't my wife would talk to mo from one pay day till tin; next." Houston Post. Knrly Inillenllnna. "Whnt makes you think your Infant daughter is going to be a prima don na?" "Itecause," answered the Impresario, "she keeps vocnllr.ing regnrdless of the surrounding conversation and never seems satisfied with anything." Wash Ington Htar. qnlta So. "What do you think of Edlpon'a con. crete house?" "Seems to be all right la U ab tract"