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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1907)
•' 1 ■lan frontier's on the list, ain’t It? Draw ings made o f tha old walla to have every thing put in the same place. I don’t lay out to be aoopernatural, but I ain’t auch a born wooden head, 1 can’t make a gueaa aa to what all that mettna. I t ’a cate.” “ Do you happen, to know,” aaid O ’Rourke, suddenly turning on hla com panion, and seising him by the wrist, “ i f Austin F arley’s new novel is on the book stalls yet?” Ilia look was triumph ant for the moment, and, Indeed, he thought he had trapped Frost with great neatness. Farley had never written a book with the theme o f which O'Rourke the effect that little pitchers have long had not been made acquainted long before ears. I shall think o f that proverb with ita first page-had reached the public, and respect forever a fte r to-day." he knew this story perfectly. Frost did “ Y on choose to be facetious, air," m id not look In the least disconcerted. On Zeno, with an a ir o f chagrin. “ I will the contrary, his eyes took a new light of not pretend not to understand yon, but certainty, and he slapped the table em your good fortune la leas agreeable to me phatically with the hand O’ Rourke had than It la to yon. W ill yon kindly make left at liberty. a m atter o f business o f our talk, air?“ “ Austin F a rle y ? " he cried, with a voice “ T h a t is Just what I wish. I happen at this moment to be pressed for eleven o f triumph. “ I t was him that gneesed that Zeno was a spy. And I couldn’t hundred pounds.” “ Ah. a ir !“ said Zeno, “ I f I should hap make out how It was that he was so pen to bo press« il for any such sum as sweet on him in spite o f that. Said he that I am a fraid I should bo forced to was a pearl o f men, and a man o f genius. Said he’d love him for a collaborator. quit tbs country.” “ I am about to transfer tbe pressure I asked him what set him admiring Far- from my ahonlders to your ow n," said ley, and he aaid It was his native talent. O ’Rourke quietly. “ T h e sum is small I f F arley’s done a book like that, he's enough In nil conscience. I merely men got his idea out o f It, that’s positive.” O ’Rourke knew Frost for an unblush tion it bees net I happen to want it now. I t doss not h a ve me a solitary five-pound ing liar, but it was Improbable to his note when my Immediate necessities era mind that F arley's book could be oat ns mot. Y ou r employers w ill find my hum yet. H e dismissed Frost, and wandered out ble chnrgs no more than a flea-bite, Mr. into the streets, striving to banish his W roblewakoff." “ Vary wall,” aaid Zeno, “ I throw op own thoughts. H e walked on gloomily, not knowing my hand and go. T h at is all. I t is not in my power to find auch a sum or any whither he went, and not caring; and conscience struck him hot and hard all thing like auch n sum.” the way. Y e t what could he do? Noth “ W ill you ring tha bell for me, P r o s t f asked O’ Rourke. Frost rang tha ball, ing but torment himself until the thing making a somewhat crab-like program was dona. A n d afterward, forever. across tha room in order to koap an ays I on Zeno. “ Bring me n dosen telegraph forma," aaid O ’ Rourke to tbe waiter. There waa another pause, and when tha forma ware brought and they ware again alone O’ Rourke handed the sheets to Frost. “ Go to that table," ha said, “ and writs to my dictation. A re you rm dy? N ever mind Mr. Wroblewakoff, Frost. I w ill taka care o f him. Now, i f you please, w rite : ‘Qnard every dock and station. Wroblewakoff la Zeno.’ , Repeat that on every form. Addreas to Bremmer, to Dobroaki, Slater, Hughes, MacAdam. J o yce; addreas them from yourself at your own address. I w ill give yon more names by and b y." Frost wrote one form a fter tha other, shooting a shifty, frightened eye at Zeno every now and then. Zeno leaned back in his chair, looking from Frost to O’Rourke with a mischievous, snakynem o f glance, which expressed with tolerable clearness his own feeling at tha turn a f fairs had taken. O ’Rourke, with his band on the back o f a chair, stood at the head o f tha table, and never took bis eyes from Zeno for an instant. “ W rite me a telegram, my faithful Frost,” m id Zeno, suddenly. “ Date from T h e L a d le s F e lt It N e e e e a a ry to R e s t T h e m s e lv e s A w h il e . THE GIRL WITH A MILLION ---------- By D. C. M urray C H A P T E R X X I I . — (Continued.) T h e boy, who at first sight o f O ’ Rourke had expected to be hailed with a friendly hoiateroiuKM and treated to a free amt on tha patriot’s shoulder, had not known what to make o f him under his new as pect, and after waiting for some, time to be noticed, had betaken himself to one o f tha windows which looked upon the street. There ha wound himself up in n window curtain and draw upon tha dusty p a »— w ith his forefinger. H a was still con cealed whan the apy and hla companion “ Engaged?" aaid Zeno, with an oddly foreign gayety which had distinguished him fo r a wash p ea t “ Tha good Frost and I are a little before our time. W# w ill e m it W a w ill w a it Th at la but little trouble.“ doom om this rang ant the boy’s riser treble in a delighted laugh. “ M r. Z e n e l" ha cried, and danced ont from behind hie window curtain. T h e apy turned and stooped with a horrible threatening face, both hands draw n hack and apart, with tha fingers working. The boy fell back, frightened •tad wondering. O 'Rourke by a mere impulse seised the spy by the shoulder an d dragged him back. Zeno’s hand went lik e lightning to his breast pocket and ■toyed there, and ha fixed an eye like a oerpeat’s on O ’Rourke. Tha patriot drop ped his own hand and smiled. W hatever •Ise he waa, ha had never been a coward outside hla coat in tha region o f his heart. “ M y dear little Austin,” aaid O’ Rourke In his silkiest voice, “ come here. You ora frightened.“ H e ant down and took the child upon hla knee. “ W hat made you take this gentleman fo r M r. Zeno? Ms. Zeno was a very wicked man, and this is a very nice gentleman Indeed." / “ I don’ t like him," aaid the hoy, shrink in g into O'Rourke’s arms. “ I liked Mr. “ This la a very nice gentleman, indeed,” aaid O ’ Rourke. “ W hat made you think h e eras Mr. Zeno. A u stin ?" “ I didn’t,” said little Austin, rubbing his eyes with his knuckles. “ I thought I heard M r. Zeno speak." “ W hat a funny m istake! " he raid. " I shouldn’t tell that to anybody I f I were yon. People would think that waa quite ailly, wouldn’t they?” , “ Yea,” assented little Austin. O ver ths little follow*« innocant golden hand, O ’ Rourke looked s t Frost and Zeno. “ Monsieur,” ha raid placidly, speaking h i French that the child might not un derstand him, and choosing his phrases to «h a t end, because Austin had mastered a fc w phrases o f the language at Janenne, ■“ I have never mat a more striking exam p le o f Infantile perspicacity. I am pro digiou sly Indebted to our young friend mnd shall probably profit a little by this .brilliant stroke o f his.” T h ere were five or ten minutes o f blank ■Hence, and then Dobroaki, opening the •door, looked In and nodded smilingly at h is three friends. “ Good morning, gentlemen. I w ill Join p e n immediately. Come this way, dear littla one. Your father la going away now. L e t me aee. I think I have some w here a packet o f bonbons. L ittle people lik e bonbons, eh? Sometimes old gentle men eat bonbons also. I do. Ah, you find that droll? I w ill be with yon im m ediately, gentlemen.” T h e smiling old man led. the child aw a y, and dosed the door with a bow. 1 —1 When O’Rourke and Frost reached the form er’s chambers after this episode, Froot told o f hla fears for Dobroski. “ I think,” he said, leaning forward and speaking in a whisper, “ they want to get the old man away— spirit him out o’ the countiy.” “ Dobroaki r* "Dobroski. WroblewskofTs in the pay o f the Russian government, and tbe old man’s been in the v e ^ . middle o f all the plots against the Czar and the govern ment this fifty year. I t ’s my notion they C H A PTE R X X III. wsnt to get him Into Russia and squeese “ Beautiful summer we era havin’,” said things out o f him there. I guess they’ll M r. F r o s t with a ghastly attempt to seem make it warm fo r him If ever they do a t ease. H is lips were blue, and his get him into the C sar't dominions.” eyes were dilated and curiously pale. “ B ut he w ill never be idiot enough to N eith er O’ Rourke nor Zeno took the go there,” said O ’ Rourke half to himself. ■lightest notice o f him, bat each regarded Th is was horrible if it were to be believ the other fixedly. ed. T o have le ft spies at liberty to dog “ Yon are here,” said O ’Rourke to the old man and frustrate his plans was Zeno, “ to discuss the purchase o f arms bad and base enough, since he who did f o r Ireland?” it, and was paid for doing it, had pro “ T h a t is why I am b an ,” answered fessed to be with him heart and aoul, bat to hand him over to his enemies was “ W hen that is over we w ill find a worse. “ No, no,” he ra id ; “ Dobroski’■ p riva te place somewhere and discuss an too w ily to be caught by any trap o f the other question,” O ’ Rourke m id quietly. Russians H e knows better than venture “ Vary wall,” m id Zeno, just ss calmly. into any part o f the C w r ’s dominions.” Dobroaki and O ’Rourke discussed ths “ T h ey ain’t going to ask his tear«,” business o f the morning seriously, and whispered Frost. “ I ’m certain about one Z en o’s aspect o f seriousness was com thing, and I can average the rest. They're plete. The patriot had never before con going to drag him. I'm sure o f th a t cerned hlmelf personally in an enterprise Zeno’s been at me— Wroblewakoff been at o f this kind, and would scarcely have ma, I mean. H a’s been at me about bow cared fo r Frost as a colleague even now to give a man a drug over and over again. I f ha hod not felt ao sure o f his bold Look here, he’ s brand new furnished hie o ver him. T h e discovery o f the morning rooms. I caught a chap making sketches alone w eald have given him a power o f tha walla one day. U gly as sin tbe which Frost would have been powerless boose was, too, and a fellow there making t o fight against, and even apart from that pictures o f the Inside o f it. W a lt a b it he knew enough to break him a score o f Yon help to hunt this down. He sent tim es over. me down to the railway station with n lot When the morning business was fin o f pecking cases— one lot for Calais and ished, and It had bean finally arranged another for Vienna. H is rooms didn’t' that the whole details o f the purchase stand In want o f new furnishin’ a b it and should be left practically In O’ Ronrke’s theaa yer parkin’ cases came from the hands, with Frost to act as hla Interme earns establishment he got hia furniture diary, ths three guests took their leave from. Do yon sea anything in all that, together. now 7” “ Nothing,” O’ Rourke confessed— “ noth “ W here ran we have that talk I spoke ab ou t?" asked O’ Rourks, ns they ram « ing.” ) H e began to think that Frost was Inventing soma sham secret to keep back upon tha street “ Y o n ran come to my rooms. I f yon what he knew, and he watched and list please,” responded Zeno, somewhat sul ened keenly, bnt with no great appear- Alice o f interest« len ly. “ T r y a bit further," raid Frost, still “ On ascend thought” said O’ Rourke, “ w e w ill find other quarters, M r. W ro leaning forw ard and speaking in a whis blewakoff. I happen to know a very re per. “ T h is struck ma as being all a lit spectable and quiet restaurant near your tle bit queer. I . wasn’t lot know much, hone«, where wa ran have a p riv e t« room. and it kind o f piqued me, so I took a walk Into tha Tottenham Court Road, and I Suppose wa drive th a n ? " got Into talk with a warehouseman. I “ Aa yon pleasa,” returned Zeno. In a littla while the three w e n seated wasn’t long In finding out what I ’d guess ♦ t — i n q a ie t Frost ordered cold ed to ba shoot tha thing before. The lunch, and Intimated to tha w aiter that stock for Calais was the same as ths stock th ey wished to ha left alone until they for Vlanna, and ths stock for Vienna waa tha same, to a teacup, aa had gone to «howId ring for hie farther attendance. Anything in all that, “ I bad not the advantage o f knowing Zeno’s rooms. yen very intimately at Janenne,” m id now ?" The patriot's eyes were bent upon O 'R ourke, when they w e n finally laft tbe floor, sod bis fees was shaded in hia “ Th ree seta o’ rooms furnished alone. “ Even I f I had had that advan hand. tage, I do not believe I should b a n rec alike to a hair. Calais is oo tha way Vienna's on tha way to a ognised yen but for tha little accident to Vienna. «4 this mam lag W a b a n a proverb to good many places, but I reckon the Run Th at pretty ears are not alw ays tha bast sssd corn has bsao shown by tbs experiments at the Ohio Station. They ml acted twenty-four extra fins nan , all o f the asms variety. The seed o f these wore planted, each aar In n row by It self, and thinned to throe stalks In a hill, so that such ear had tha same chance aa Its neighbor. One ear out o f tbs twenty-tour yielded at the rate o f l i d bushels per sere, another 113 and a third 104 bushels, w hile other ears made fifty-five, sixty-five and seventy- seven bushels per sere, Th e row that made the smallest yield had fifty-eight barren stalks. T b e row next to the highest had fif teen barren stalks, and the row that made sixty-five bushels hod fifty-tw o be m o stalks Th e ears w ere nil o f equal appearance and o f equal germ inating quality. T h e re m its show very p b tn ly that w hat w e have been fo r years hwleflng upon, that the breeding o f corn la the field, tbe rem ora! o f disturbing Influences about It, and tbe e o ih fug tow ard an Ideal plant as a whole, a plant o f productive character ra th e r than big e o n , are nil o f fa r more Importance than the selec tion o f fine ears by the sl u t s card without any knowledge e f the breeding o f the corn. Selection o f the largest ears tends towardslngle-earproductton, fo r It Is a Isw o f nature that when w e Increase the slae o f the Individual fruit o f any plant w e w in decrease tbe num ber o f fruits, and when we Increase the number w e decrease tbe else o f the Individual fruit*. But it baa also been shown that a stalk w ith tw o or more medium-sized ears o f corn w ill make more corn than a stalk with one big ear. In a test made tor the yield o f grain, one sample was from a sin gle-eared plant, one from a two-eared one, one from a three-eared one and one from a four-eared one, and the quantity o f corn shelled Increased ex actly with tbe number o f ears on tbe plant. Th e breeding In the field to breed ont barren stalks Is the essential matter In developing the productive character o f the corn, and the best ears are merely relative and not by any means the largest ' you see how Impossible, how cruelly Im S im p le l l a s s k t e r l a f O w tat. possible, yon made It fo r me to defend Figure 1 shows a big galvanized Iron m yself properly hi h er pr esence? Don’t washtub set upon a few bricks plied up you see how still more cruelly Impossi ble It was far me to defend myself when fo r tbe occasion. A, small fire can be Msskeyne appeared? H ow could I wound Maakelyne? A man I ’ ve loved like a brother this ten years ! A man who has heaped countless benefits on m e! A man who has acted toward me with a con stant kindliness! Julia, I swear to.yon by all I hold sacred that I knew Mira Butler's predilection for myself before you and I ever met. I f you and I had never met— I confess i t ! You ask m* for the truth, Julia, and yon shall have it all without disguise! I f you and I had never met I might have brought my built beneath.which w ill,o f course.melt self to look upon Miss Butler ss a charm o ff the cAnting o f zinc on the bottom ing and suitable future w ife for me. Bnt o f the tub. bnt this w ill do no great that I ever loved her, that I ever told harm. Such a tab costs about 75 cents, her so, or gave her reason to hope so or and can be purchased anywhere. believe so, is profoundly false. I have Fig. 2 Is the table and hogshead for never loved a woman until I met you. I have never breathed a word o f love to any woman but yourself. You will be lieve me some day. I can go away and wait. And even if we meet no more, I have a certain prophecy in my own heart. You w ill understand me and dr me justice.” (T o oe continued.) la v e t fro m D is g ra c e . In one o f the old fam ilies o f C h arts» ton* South Carolina, w rites Mrs. Kav- enel, there was an important personage, Jack, the butler.* Jack disputed with another old man, Harry, the butler o f Mrs. Henry Izard, the reputation o f being the beet and most thoroughly trained servant In tbe town. From the judging o f the wines to the arrange ment o f a salt-spoon there was noth ing which these withered brown poten tates did not decide and maintain. Nothing would have astonished either more than that master or mistress should dissent from his verd ict Jack was intolerant o f anything which be considered a breach o f tbe etiquette o f the table. Nothing could have Induced him to serve a gentleman before a lady, or a younger before an elder brother. T o place fru it and wine on a table-cloth Instead o f npon the mahogany waa to him a fa llin g from grace. On one occasion he was mnch annoyed when a Senator from the up- country tw ice asked tot rice with his fish. T o the tin t request he simply r e mained d e a f; at the second he bent down and whispered Into the senatorial ear. Tbe genial gentleman nodded, and suppressed a lau gh ; but when the ser vants bad ie ft the room, be burst Into a roar, and cried, “ Judge, you have • treasure! Jack has raved me from die- grace, from exposing my Ignorance. H e whispered, T h a t wouldn’t do, air; w e never eats rice with fish.' ” IL A U O irV R IIfO TABLX AND VAT. scalding and taking off hair, scraping, etc. F *• *1 ~1n -M M Fig. 8 le the fram ework on which to build the smoking box. P o t a t o « « to r P la n tla a r. In digging potatoes, known to ba pare seed and o f the same variety, fre quent variations may often be noticed. Boms o f these are due only to differ ences o f «oil, bnt others are true “ «porta,' ’and w ill reproduce their kind I f planted another year. If these "■porta" are usually productive and valuable they should be carefully saved for planting. In this w ay some Up to a few years ago the dentists o f o f the beat varietlra o f p o t a t o « have Japan pulled teeth with their fingers. been originated, one or tw o kinds o f Forceps and other Instruments are now late rose being prominent Instances. being generally used. One day Ellen Dow and Aunt M ar tha, on a city shopping Jaunt, acquired Innumerable bulky packages and tw o string bags full o f smaller bundles. By afternoon they were completely ex hausted, and there was still a list o f tblugs yet uupurebased. “ I can’t walk another atep!" exclaim ed Aunt Martha at last. “ I muat find some place to rest and sit still a fu ll hour." “ W e can go to some w aiting room,” suggested Ellen. “ No, that's a waste o f tim e; we sha’n’t be seeing anything while w e’re doing that,” responded Aunt Martha. Suddenly her eye fell on a sign across the street: “ Concert at Throe O’Clock I” “ N ow that’s the very thing 1" she burst o a t “ W s con go to that concert and rest w hile we’re there, and then finish our errands. W hat do you say, Ellen?" “ Th at w ill be nice," Ellen responded, "unless It is too expensive." “Oh, It’s likely w e can get some sort o f seats fo r fifty or seventy-five cents. I don’t mind where I s i t " “ Anything w ill do tor me," rejoined mien. “ I ’m never fussy." “ H ow much are tbs seats?" Aunt Martha asked the doorkeeper, n little tremulously. " I t Is s free concerM o advertise the Pollard piano," replied the man. “ Step right In." “ W ell, i f this Isn’t la c k !" gasped Aunt Martha. “ And there is scafteely a! person in tbs hall, either, so wa have o ar pick o f seat*.” “They always say music Is better fa r off,” suggested Ellen, motioning to some seats near the back o f tbs ball. Aunt Martha agreed aa she dropped Into n chair, and disposed the bags and Tbs strawberry propagates Itself In tw o w ays—by runners and by seed. I f the numera are kept from rooting, the vine w ill make an effort to reproduce Itself from seed (production o f berries) In tbs R>rlng. and some horticulturists have given ns their opinion that I f tbs vinas are not allowed to throw out run ners In tbs summer there w ill be no Ions o f vita lity by tbs old plants, and toe matter Intended to be converted In to runners w ill be stored In the plants and converted Into fru it when the proper tim e arrtveu. Th e first thing to do after harvesting tbs crop la to thor oughly clean between tbs rows and pull out tbs weeds between the plants in the rows, so ss to giro the beds tbs benefit o f tbe boe an muob ns possible. Moisture Is always beneficial to straw berry planta, and tbe ground should be worked deep at first and than kept loose on the surface until late In tbe fall, when tbe vines may be mulched. Burning tbe beds should be dons when the ground le fresen. This, It is claim ed, w ill enable tbe plants to begin anew In tbe spring, tbs old planta being thereby Invigorated, the ashes provid ing potash, and tbe seeds o f weeds de stroyed. Leaven, strew o r other m a terials may be pieced over the plants before w inter sets In, to remata aa n mulch until surly fa the ^ r t n g F er tiliser Is applied both Jest a fter hub vest and early In the Rising. Potted plants are numera that a re grown la pota, cloee to the parent plants, e*ch “ I don’t know," Elian aaid, after an runner being separated from He parent when It Is w ell rooted In the p o t I t Interval, “ but w e've made a m istake; Don’t you le traneplanted from f i t pet to tbe w e can’t aee much here. think we’d better go farther front?" open ground. “ Maybe w e had." 'T h e y gathered up th e ir packages, In one ton o f ssboe from Mtumtnoas moved down the aisle, and took possoe coal ere 8 pounds o f potash, 9 pounds sion o f tw o end seats. Tbe audience o f phosphoric meld, 38 pounds o f lime began to assemble. and a large proportion e f waste mat “ Let's move to the middle o f this ter. Coal ashes are said to he about equal to clay, and are nearly o f tbs ro w ," whispered Aunt Martha. “ No one same composition. They possess little can crawl past all these bundles.” Accordingly they moved to the center or no value as s fertilizer, but serve to assist light, sandy soils to retain o f the row, and were quiet a few sec moisture, answering tbe earns purpose onds, when Ellen murmured: “ I t makea me dreadful nervous to bo es day. Th e percentage o f potash end phosphoric arid contained Is too email packed In among these seats so I can’t In quantity to pay fo r hauling and get o u t W hat If there should be a spreading coal ashes on the gronnd os fire?” “ Th at’s a fact," assented Aunt M ar a fertilizer. I f any benefit le derived It le due to the mechanical effect e f the tha. “ W e’d better go and alt In those ashes on the soil and ea an absorbent seats by the w all— they’re right on an aisle.” material. Again they gathered the bandies and straggled pest the long row o f people There la more lose storing potato so to the two seats near the wall. than in storing any other crop. Burring There was a pause, and then Aunt all waste from rot, there Is a heavy Martha raid, s o ftly : shrinkage, both In quantity and w eigh t “ Ellen, I don’t think I can stand sit A bln holding 100 busbela win show a ting h ere! There’s a hot radiator right shrinkage o f nearly one-tenth, besides a by my side." greater loan In w eigh t A bushel basket They rote once more to search tor full that w ill weigh funy sixty pound* In October, when taken from the soil, ether Bests, but the ball had filled, and win not weigh so much a fte r being there w ere no empty seats le ft Even stored In tbe cellar daring tbe winter. thoee they had Just vacated were In The shrinkage In weight la much less stantly taken. *11 wish we had stayed where we w ere when kept In pits closely covered with earth, for there la then less chance for at first!” M id Annt Martha petulant ly. “ W e might as w ell be shopping as evaporation. standing up all through this concert” — Youth’s Companion. T o a careful observer It Is clear that W k * t H s w s l a r Spoke. horses are now better classified than formerly. Thus tbe horse that la best What can be the matter? Doom adapted to road purposes Is placed at open, members rush ou t; members are such work, and the horse that Is suited tearing past you from all points In one best to tbe plow and heavy hauling has direction— toward the bouse. Then its own proper work assigned. Hence wigs and gowns appear. They tell you the advantage o f breeding fo r a pur with happy faces their committees pose. The man who makes the best have adjourned, and then come a third success o f rearing horses Is the one who class, ths gentlemen o f tbe press, hil clearly understands the situation, and arious. Why, what’s the matter? Mat breeds what la most desirable fo r his te r! Macaulay Is np. You Join the customers. runners In a moment I t was an an nouncement one hadn't heard fo r O n u l s f o s Rye. The practice o f turning cows on years, and tbe pawing o f tbe word young rye in tbe fall Is a good one, bnt ‘‘ Macaulay's np” emptied committee when the ground Is very wet damage rooms now as before It emptied clubs; may result. Grazing the rye causes It the old voice, the old manners and tha to stool, and tbe young rye provides old style— glorious speaking; well pre late greet} fo o d ; but, while the rye field pared carefully elaborated, confessedly may be used fo r cows In the fall, they essaylth, but spoken with perfect art should not be turned on too early In and consummate management tbe the spring. It does not do ao roach grand conversation o f a man o f the harm for cows to change from grass to world confiding his learning and bis rye. as It does from dry food In the recollections and his logic to a party o f spring to young rye. gentlemen and Just raising his voice enough to be heard through the room. K e e p Sheep. A s the house filled he got prouder Every farm er should have a few and more oratorical, and then he pour sheep, In order to save mnch o f tbe ma ed out bis speech with rapidity, In terial grown that may be wasted. Sheep creasing a fter every sentence, till It be w ill eat a great many plants which cat came a torrent o f the richest words, tle reject, and they graze closer to the carrying hla hearer* with him Into en gronnd. Young and tender weeds are thusiasm and yet not leaving them delldona to sheep, and they, therefore, time to cheer. The great orator was assist in ridding the fields o f such pests. A small flock o f mutton sheep should be treinbllng when he sat down. T b e ex kept. If fo r no other purpose than to citement o f e triumph overcame him, end he had scarcely the self-possession supply the fam ily with choice m eat to acknowledge tbe eager praises which K w » 1 s > A n im a ls la C s s ilt ls s . were offered by the ministers and I f the animals are allowed to run others In his neighborhood.— From down In flesh It w ill be n loes to tbe W hltty's “ Parliamentary R etrospect" fanner, ns be Is then compelled to re H e w le M ake R velets. store them to their original condition before he makes a gain. A t the same There's a new way o f making thoan time, there is « waste o f many days, troublesome eyelets, discovered by n as the animals are below their normal girl who Is locklly famous for Invent condition, which Is lost time that can ing labor raving Ideas, rays the Wash never be regained. ington Star. I t consists o f running tbe eyelet around and then cutting It from r * o 4 la s C o b b a n « to P o o lt r y . end to end and buttonholing It, making The email and in ferior cabbages are the stitches as deep as those upon the valnable as food fo r poultry, and w ill usual buttonhole, but reversing the be highly relished In winter when stttch so that the edge stitches back green food la scarce. They are easily upon tbe material Instead o f around handled, aa the heads require no cub tbe open edge o f tbe eyelet I t la ting, the fow ls picking them to pleeea about one-fifth as hard to do as the and consuming them down to the usual way, and tha difference la. length o f time Is even more marked.