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A Political V e n d e tt a
Hr
W E L D O N J. C O B B
C H A P T E R X.
“straw”— indication of a precinct or
Three o'clock in the afternoon of elec county.
All were fairly hilarious as they at
tion day— three o’clock in a maelstrom, a
first watched the flashlight figures.
vortex I
Hut in half an hour each man of the
Percy Kane had reached the acme, the
apotheosis, of his career at that hour, yet group was silent, anxious.
And then— stupefied !
here, amid turbulent, excited political con
It was incredible ! preposterous! Pre
freres, he was the coolest person in the
cinct after precinct, county after county,
room.
It was at the central headquarters of rolled in opposition gains, or opposition
•
the party— or rather clique— which he majorities.
“Kane, it looks bed !’’ observed a seri
had chosen to bear him, the great trust,
ous faced ringster, coming up to him.
on to power and fortune.
“ Yea, unless the tide turns, we ere
Wires, constant ticking, in other rooms,
the incessant Jar of telephone bells— mes beaten.”
“ Mr. K ane!”
sages, telegrams, hurrying, scurrying pre
The old professional had arisen from
cinct leaders, more dignified officials,
jostling, seething mob half exhausted af the table, unsteady, hut not at all maud
ter a day at the polls in a contest that In lin. Ilia tab was in bia hand.
“Do you want an estimate ?” he in
sixty minutes more would free or enslave
quired.
a great State!
“I am beginning to form a decidedly
There had been peculiar rumors afloat
since about dawn, for at 7 o’clock “mask adverse one myself.”
“I can give you almost exact figures.”
ed batteries’’ had appeared all along the
“And they tell?”
Une.
“The State will swing round to the
Almost to a man the potent Amalga
mated, which Kane and his hirelings had opposition by over 60,000 majority!”
A hissing curse left Percy Kane's grim
believed to be servile under a spell of
dread and influence, had swung into ac lips, for he had confidence in the predic
tion.
tion boldly massed for the opposition.
He stepped out upon the balcony, to
Then up from the southern tier of coun
ties came the rumor of a trade in candi get a reviving breath of fresh air, to be
dates that mean) the swamping o f 1 five alone, to cast up the chances as they
needed representatives. The western pre now faced him, and— a c t!
Slowly he buttoned up hia coat, and
cincts, too, reported strange and mysteri
ous defections among the ranks of the shook off the insidious lethargy provoked
by the liquor he had drank.
faithful.
“I need a clear head,’ he muttered.
“I can’t understand it,” anxiously as
serted Kane to a powerful political boss “ I must get to the treasurer’s vault, I
at his elbow— “it looks as though con must see her, arrange for the marriage,
certed action had been planned months flight, at once, if this last hope ia indeed
failing me.”
and months ago.”
Again he glanced at the bulletin— like
“ It’s a nesv play in politics, then," de
clared the other, “ for we did not get a snapshot reproductions the returns were
flashing out, a cheering mob ia the street
hint of it in advance.”
“Can they win out?” questioned Kane below. Every new set of figures empha
sized the fact that boodle and bribery had
seriously.
“With our lead, and our money?” de sustained a telling defeat.
Give it up?” abruptly spoke a voice
risively smiled the boss— “well, hardly!”
It was a restless boor for the trust at his elbow.
Yea— ” short, definite.
stagnate. He sat turning over accumu
It’s queer, though— all the work we
lated reports on the table before him,
listening to the statements of new ar did, so sure were we.”
“There's been a mistake somewhere,”
rivals.
Tile minutes sped by.
It was
four o'clock. For weal or woe the die drily observed Kane.
Wrong— there’s been slick, secret work
was cast; the election was over.
Kane arose at the striking of the clod, of the finest description by some master-
passed some words with his managers, hand at politics!” retorted the other.
In politics as in finance, mused one
aad was driven to the principal hotel in
the full force of realisation overcame
the town, where the president of the trust
had agreed to report to him on company him.
Who had been undermining him— and
natter» that evening.
He found Worthington awaiting him. why?
As he stood thinking this over, it seem
A first sight of his wretched, twitching
face told him that he was the bearer of ed as if he coud vaguely trace power and
method behind the double assault on the
no encouraging news.
Tliat morning the misappropriated se the company and the company’s political
curities had been placed in the local interest a.
“Directed at me personally?” he mut
banka, the agency man hoodwinked, the
statement of new assets wired to New tered. “P sh a w ! why? and by whom?
Only a turn in the tide— well. I ’ve had
York.
Then Kane had advised his partner he my k o w !”
Out from the balcony a form had
had done his all. Pending strict undivid-
ad attention to the political situation, he ‘stolen, noiselessly as had it glided through
must not be disturbed with news of the the crowded room.
It was the “disguised” man— Gideon
financial outcome, good or bad, until the
Hope.
elect ion was over.
He kept in the shadow, hia eye fixed
“W hat have you to report?" he Inquir
ed, rapidly scanning his companion’s face. strangely npon one'
Then, abruptly, he »track a match on
“The worst, Kane— the worst 1” half
the balcony railing— it flashed, went out.
groaned the unhappy president.
It was a signal to a man watching the
“Our stock?”
“ It hasn't bodged from last night’s low- balcony from the street below, who now
in turn signaled to the person who was
ast figures.”
“ W h a t ! The new statement, the heavy directing the atereopticon.
Absorbed, Percy Kane had not noticed
buying we ordered?"
The president shook his head wearily. the flash of the match, not even the in
“The public are Beared— warned, K a n e ; trusion of the stranger upon th« balcony.
H is glance was turned for a final view
s blight has fallen npon u s ! Someone
with the completed knowledge of our of the bulletin, ere he left the spot and
most secret affairs is directing this attack the hotel.
It was ho returns Chat met his eyes
upon our stock. The final blow-------”
now, but a portrait—
“ How
.The portrait of a man, of a face he re
“The owner of the mixed metal process,
our biggest hold for profit, has gone over cognized, was expected to recognize, by
the man tumultuously watching him two
to the Blennerhasset combine.”
feet away.
“ Im possible!”
As an accusing wraith it confronted
" I t ’s true. Kane, I ’m frightened! I ’m
afraid— in fact, I have learned that it is Percy Kane— as if a rej^y to the query
leaking out that we have hypothecated the what the motive of “the hidden hand”
that has brought to him disaster!
♦rust securities, and-------”
From the canvas it looked upon bis
He paused. It was needless to go on.
Percy Kane's face was the face of a guilty face.
“ From the dead— that man: murdered
man wbd knew that the final blow had
Everett Hope!” gasped
Kane,
reeling
come, and ruin was their portion.
In his mind at that moment was a berk like one stricken by a thunderbolt.
Guilt, dread, horror, were in hia tones,
quick, wild suggestion he treasured for
final desperate action; to “run for it,” his face, hia pose.
He turned to fly, for just avenging
with what of ready cash he could secure.
If the day ended with no change in the Heaven seemed at hia door at last!
At that moment he was checked.
situation.
From his concealment sprang Gideon
nope, hia hands encircling the criminal's
Kane drank deeply the few remaining throat stoutly as bands of steel!
hours of daylight. He managed to get
rid of his limp, weak financial colleague,
• C H A P T E R X I.
and sought more congenial company
An
aspiration
ringing as a hosanna
among bia political friends.
Seven o’clock found him one of a group left the lips of Gideon Hope, as his steel-
of half a doxen choice party leaders, oc knit fingers met about the shrinking, quiv
cupying a room in the hotel that looked ering throat of the man whom he had
directly out npon a great blank sheet bounded down.
The esctasy of a mighty peasino sway
on which the returns were to be thrown
ed his soul, merging every emotion into
from a stereopticon.
The returns were “ mixed,” and alow in one ail-absolving conception of vengeance
coming in.
This gave K ane time for — stern, swift, complete.
lie “had found out his enemy!”— the
hop«— time, too, for planning what be
would do if inevitable crash was not to fruition of the task of the years was at
band— a self-confessed murderer writhed
he averted.
I f the election went favorable. It would in hie powerful grasp, and at his mercy I
Before bis eyes there seemed to float
•uggrst on* salient point to bla industrial
In
lightning-quick
rivals: the trust would practically con a biur of blood.
trol the State— a power, this, more valu series the ebair-oeenro of events painted
able than an unlimited franchise for mo the vivid pictures that grouped about this
present tikgic denouement e marvel-fring
nopoly.
As the fumes of liquor rose to his ¿tear, ed history of rare human interest.
For this man— his victim,
now—
steady brain, in reckless desperation Kane
encouraged a picture in which he figured wrecker, swindler, political master, mil
as a fugitive, but with an abundance of lionaire— Gideon Hope had abandoned
stolen means, and a lovely bride to share ambition, position, happiness, peace.
He, Percy V. Kane, had robbed him
his forced sojourn In some safe and re-
of hia brother and was about to steal
mots foreign dims.
H s and his friends adjourned from the from him, too, the woman be loved!
And now, while the turbulent mob of
tabU to the expansive hay window, as It
was announced that the returns were be ward-heelers and excited sensation-seekers
ginning to oocoe In with rapidity aad reg surged in the street below, amid the crash
of all his millions and the disaster of per
ularity. *
One m s« alone, an old, experienced po manent political obliteration, Kane lay in
litical hack, remained at the table, pencil his dutch a broken, wretched, cowering
aad tab before him, ready to estimate a thing.
“ Listen r
basis of loss or gala from the merest
Close to the marble-white fe e « of U *
prostrate man he had dragged to the floor
o f the balcony, Hope bent his hot,
breath. A t riot in hie brain ran all _ _
formidable facts o f guilt with which he
had invested his dowofall. Aad the other
shuddered, for he felt that doom, sudden
and sure, enmeshed hia w ily soul at last.
“ W ho are you?” he panted, struggling
to arise.
“ W ho?” — a grinding laugh— sardonic,
full o f bitter triumph— out the air.
“ D ream ! Guess— remember: the avenger!
Go back the yeere— Chicago, your rotten
stork-jobbing swindle, the man you mur
dered because he had probed your secrets
and in another hour would have given the
facts to the commercial world— my broth
er, my brother, Everett H o p e!”
The name was pronounced in a sob.
Religiously at that moment Hope con
sidered himsef the appointed instrument
o f almost divine Justice. Yet, the thought
revived of the sunny-faced brother, so
cruelly put to death, wrung his soul to
anguish. •
“ Your brother!” gasped Kane.
‘"H i»
face on the transparency! It was you,
then— ”
H is striving limbs fell inert, his eyes
were horror-stricken. Now he t(new; in
a flash he traced the hidden hand, the
motive, that had so fatally pursued him —
from affluence to ruin, from proud power
to the threshold o f the gallows' g a te !
“ Run d ow n !” he murmurmed, in a loet
and helpless tone.
“ Yea,” came the prompt, discordant re
sponse. “ I swore it— I have achieved it.
And you— you have acknowledged all. The
face o f the dead on yonder canvas—A y e !
you remember it. I t brought confession
to your lip s ! And I can only drag you to
ja il 1 That does not give me back my
brother— poor, pitiful recompense.
But
you shall listen, you shall know what tire
less resolve haa done to rid society o f its
worst foe. I have snatched the cup o f
Croeeus from from your lips— I have un
dermined your every ambition. Thus I
have’ done it.
W rithe, weep, rave, but
naught w ill avail yon. Your hour haa
com e!”
So Gideon Hope
fervently
believed.
This was hia moment o f triumph. Into
the craven, crushed face he shouted his
story— a record almost incredible. H e did
not mention his helpers— only o f the
plain, strong facts he told, o f the giant
strokes that had assailed the great wall o f
power and wealth, and battered down ev
ery approach, destroyed every drawbridge
o f escape.
H e was in a frenzy az be spoke. He
could have torn the wretch in his grasp to
pieces. H e felt all hia usual calm and
steady methods fly to the winds, but he
recked little. Here was the climax he had
striven for, this the final arraignment,
and he poured forth his soul.
‘ T o your fe e t !’’ he shouted, suddenly.
Kane was brought upright like a child
in the grasp o f a Hercules.
“ And then?— ” chattered hia prisoner,
incoherent with terror.
“ Your doom !”
“ Stop— w a it ! " hotly
panted
Kane.
“ You can prove nothing absolutely. Let
ua bargain. I f money— ” '
“ You have none.”
" I can secure it.”
“ H e !”
Scorn, disdain— cold and entire— show
ed in H ope’s eyes. H e dragged h is’ cofp-
panion toward the open window. Intent
on
proclaiming his rightful
character^
first o those who had been hia friends,
and then to the mob in the streets below.
“ W a lt a moment, I say,” pleaded Kane,
holding back.
“ N o !” thundered Hope.
“ Yon m ust! Yon sh a ll!”
“ Insult— then defiance! You scum !”
In hot anger Hope released the man,
but only to sweep him back with a swift
blow be cquld not restrain.
Both power and frenzy were in the
movement,*and the ex-millionaire spun
through the 'air, a plaything o f caprice.
W ith a crash he struck the frail metal
railing encircling the balcony. Hope, too
late appraised o f the full power o f hia
blow, and then appalled, saw the railing
give.
I t cracked, broke, brittle, and,
shooting the darkness like a falling clod,
Kane went speeding outward and then
downward, without time to even utter a
cry for help or o f terror.
0
(T o be continued.)
r
1
4
a
1
A
D is c a r d e d T h ro n e .
On the eve of the Franco-German
w a r w’hen the Emperor Louis Napo
leon entered upon the conflict which
ended so disastrously to himself and
his countrymen a couple of strangers
appeared at a German town.
They
brought with them a large packing
case, which on their arrival w as car
ried to a hotel. Here the unknown vis
itors remained some time and eventu
ally disappeared without paying their
bill, which «m ounted to a considerable
sum.
The landlord, whose curiosity had
often been arointed with reference to
the possible contents of the case, at
last determined to open It, and on do
ing so found a handsomely designed
and richly upholstered
state chair.
This w as adorned with the French Im
perial arms, eagle and Louis Napoleon’s
monogram, and beneath It was a musi
cal box which played when the cushion
w as sat upon.
It Is supposed that the throne— foi
such It Is believed to have been— In the
event of success attending the French
army was to hare been used by the
emperor at Berlin after the capture of
the German metropolis. Fate, however,
spoiled the Imperial plans; hence the
sudden and precipitate flight of the
custodians of the chair. The widow of
the hotel keejier a few years later sent
It to England, where It eventually
found a purchaser.— Stray Stories.
C o »l
Of F e a d l a « .
From experience of feeders at the
experiment stations the pig Increases
with greatest profit until 6 or 7 months
old, when It has reached the maximum
A fter that the gains require a larger
amount of grain to produce a given
amount o f pork, and they should be
fattened and dlapoaed of.
One bushel of corn made thirteen
and one-third pounds o f pork at
months old, at 7 months old
one
bushel made 13.2 pound«, and at S
months old one buahki
made 12.8
pounds.
W hile there are varying conditions
that have their Influence upon the
amount o f gain made. It ia a general
principle that after 6 or 7 montha the
amount o f gain from a bushel of corn
is on a decreasing scale, and tt has
been demonstrated again and again that
the first hundred pounds costs less than
the second, and the third leaa than the
fourth hundred, and that to produce
the fourth hundred too often coats
double as much as the second hun 1819— Cortez entered the Indian city oi
dred.
Tlaaca.
1333— Cartier left hia ahip and proceeded
S teel F r a m e fo r B a r e s .
up the 8t. Lawrence In boats.
The. picture shows a new style of 1638— De Vries eailed from Holland on
frame for haras.
It la made entirely
* his third expedition to America.
THE W EEKLY |
¡■ ■ R IA N
S e le«|
B ro o d
Sow s.
/
Many put off selecting the t/rood sow*
which they need for breeding next year
untl. late in the fall or right at breed-
lag time.
W hen this la done we are
apt to take the beet-looking' Individu
als, losing sight of many of the essen
tials of a real good breeder. I believe
In keeping over al. the old sows which
have proved g o jd mothers and whose
pigs are thrifty. Not all sows which
bring big litters «ire desirable breeders,
bc'-xuse some litters lack stamina and
never become thrifty. Cut these sows
out. no matter If they do brli^g ten to
twelve pigs. Then cut out the cross,
ill-tempered sows, and the chicken eat
ers. Save every old sow that la really
n good mother. Many o f these old sowa
suckle down to almost akin' and bones,
but in doing that they have given their
litters a mighty good sta rt and good
feed will fetch them up In condition
quickly.
The selection of the young
sows la n much harder problem. I nev
er pick for “butter-balls.”
They sel
don: make satisfactory breeders, and
after a few months they are bound to
lose In condition. Take the rather
comae, thrifty ones, coming from big
litters and from mothers which yon in
tend to keep.— L. C. B., In the Indiana
Vn finer.
1671— Mediators between the colonists
and the Indiana met at Plymouth.
1689— Count Frontenac arrived in Can
ada to reassumb the government of
the pzovince.
1693— The British army adopted the
ring-bayonet.
1737— The Hebrewa disfranchised by a
vote of the New York Legislature.
BASN
C ora
and
P e aa
fo r
ERAME OE STEEL.
S ilo .
The corn is most easily handled by of. steel. Heavy plauka are bolted on
cutting with a corn binder anil using a to the frames, onto which are nailed
silage cutter of a sufficient capacity to the roof and aiding aa In ordinary
barns
avoid the necessity of cutting bnnds
When corn is fully tasseled It contains
E le m e n ta N e c e a u r y to P la n t L ife .
less than one-fourth as much dry mat
One acre of soil o f medium fertility,
ter as when the ears are fully glazed.
From this time to maturity the Increase taken to depth of 9 Inches, would weigh
contain
is but slight. Records of the cost of about 3,000,000 pounds, and
silo filling were kept by the Illinois nitrogen, 200 pounds ; potash, 6,000
experiment
ststion on ten different pound*. There ia enough nitrogen to
farm s a n d the cost was found to range provide for ten crops of corn, slaty
from 40 to 76 cents a ton, the average bushels to the acre, while the phos
phoric acid
and
potash would last
being 5 « cents a ton.
That silage should keep well the cam much longer. There are fourteen ele
ments necessary to plant life, and of
should not be cut until most of the ker
nels are glazed and hard. I f too ripe these carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxy
the silage w ill not settle well and the gen, phosphorus, sulphur, chlorine, sili
air .will not be sufficiently excluded to con, calcium, Iron, magnesium, potas
prevent spoiling. Corn seems to be the sium and sodium are derived from the
best single crop for the silo, and by soil, though several are also in part
combining It with cow peas
or soy derived from the air.
beans the feeding value is greater ton
T e C are W a rts .
for ton than o f corn alone.
O f 878
The common w ay of removing warts
comparisons made between silage and
non-silage milk, 60 per cent were in — by tying s silk thread around— too
favor o f the silage milk. 29 per cent often proves disappointing In that the
were in favor of non-all age and 11 per trouble returns in a short time, per
haps In a more malignant form.
A
~ent Indicated no preference.
practical horseman declares this sim
D ea lrm b le P o a l t r y H o e s * .
ple remedy to be a perfect cure: Five
One of the beat arrangements for cents’ worth of bloodroot and 10 cents'
nests which can be opened without en- worth of chlorate of- sine.
M ix to
gether In a paste and put on twice a
day.
A fter two or three applications
grease with lard until the roots come
out.
1776— Congress
appointed
Benjamin
Franklin, Silas Dean and Thomas
Jefferson commissioners to the court
of France.. . .The new constitution
of Pennsylvania was formally pro
claimed.
1779— Paul Jones with the Bon Homme
Richard captured the British frigate
Sera pis.
*
1780— Americana under Gen. Marion at-
\ tacked a party of Tories at Black
Mingo.
r
1780— Samuel Osgood of Massachusetts
became Postmaster General of the
United States.
1803— First Catholic church in Boston,
Maas., dedicated.
1813— Americans defeated the British la
battle of Lake Ontario.
1815— First dally paper printed at Al
bany, N. Y.
1828— A monument was unveiled
In
Charleetown, Mem., to the memory
of John Harvard.
1889— Treaty between France and Texas
signed at Paris.
1830— A Boston merchant paid $626 for
the choice of seats for the first per
formance of Jenny Lind in that city.
1854— A reciprocity treaty between the
United States and Canada signed by
the governor general.. . United' 8tatee
sloop Albany eailed from Aspinwall
and was never more beard of.
1833— The corner stone of tbs Masonic
Temple was laid in Philadelphia.
1802— Gen. Nelson shot by Gen. Jeff a
Davis at Louisville.
.1803— Confederate troops attacked Gen.
Burnside at Knoxville.
1884— Union troops victorious In a con
flict with the Confederate force» at
Athena, Ala.
1885— T h » Bank of Concord, Maas,
robbed of $200,000.
Take
H E X »’ NESTS ON THE OUTSIDE.
ttrlng the remaining bouse Is shown
In the picture The nests open directly
into the laying shed and a tight lid
will keep them perfectly dry in all
Mnds of weather.
F a r ia
S tan d ard s
H ig h e r .
One thing that will cut considerable
Ice in the labqr question: The man
who has been studying the books and
good farm papers, and kept up with
the procession in new w ays o f doing
things will find that he has a better
grip on bis jo b than the man who Das
n ot
Many a man has kept bis posi
tion beoauae he has taken an Interest
in bis work and haa learned bow to
farm according
to modern methods
when other men could have been hired
in bis place for one-third leke wages.
There is no doubt that the standard
o f farm labor is getting Into a higher
notch every year, and we have got to
bustle and learn about things by read
ing books, good farm papers and at
tending the institutes. Get the hunger
'o r reading, boys.
« • l a a a l E A le « • T r e e B e e « »
1808— Gov. Warmoutb'e veto of the
An Inventor in Algeria, Africa, has
negro equity bill wee sustained in the
devised and bad patented an air tube
Louisiana H ouse.. . ,Gen. McClellan
for supplying a ir to tree roots. The
welcomed in New York upon hia re
turn from Europe.
tube is made o f ceramicware, and Is
almost Indestructible. Placed In the 1870— President Grant paid a visit to
Boston.
ground beside a tree, with
the top
slightly above the surface to admit the 1880— The judicial system of the United
States established by act of Congress.
air, the young roots find their way
1800— A strike began on the Canadian
through a number o f holes.
Expert
Pacific railway.
\
mentB have proved, saya Popular Me
chanics, that the growth of vegetation 1899— Naval parade in New York har
bor'in honor of Admiral Dewey.
haa been greatly advanced by Ita uae.
1902— A $000,000 fire in Stockton, Cal.
C l e a r l » * «h e C ro n ml o f S l a m » » .
There Is no better way to clear lano
from stumps then by first loosening
the soli about the roots with dynamite
and then using some kind of a stump
puller, o f which there are many good
ones in the market. It would not be
safe for an amateur to uae dynamite
without first working for a time with
some one skilled In its use.— Suburban
Life.
The
W h e a fa
C a r e f o r S h eep K i l l e r .
B e »«
B **e .
There Is a constantly
growing da
mand for eggs that are both uniform in
size and cojor.
Such eggs, while not
demanded, are generally the first se
lected and, all other things being even,
they will aell more readily. About the
only way one can judge of eggs offhand
Is by their appearance, and If all are
uniform in color and size they will be
more likely to command a better price.
P l a a t C h a r r la » .
About the best time to plant cherry
trees is In early fall or very early In
spring. It la better to plant In October,
even before the leaves fall, stripping
the leaves off, than It la late, just be
fore winter seta In. In fact, many trees
would do better than they do were they
set early, stripping their leaves, not
waiting for the leaves to fall.
1904— Earl Grey waa appointed governor
general of Canada.
1903— Robert Bacon resigned aa director
of the steel trust to become first
Assistant Secretary of State.. , .D is
astrous fire in the business section of
Bntte, M o n t.. . .Highest court
in
Canada denied the appeal of Greene
and Gaynor againat extradition.
1906— Race riots continued in Atlanta;
two negroes lynched. . . . Mayor Mc
Clellan of New York, announced that
he would support William R. Hearst
for Governor.
1907— Cuban agitators
near Havana.
were
arrested
FACTS FO B FARM ERS.
In Norman county, Minn., wheat baa
been threshing out 20 bushels to the acre.
Barley and flax are exceptionally good.
H ie State land department of South
Dakota haa made the first offering of
State lands in the old Fort,'Sully mili
tary reservation, which waa practicaly
all taken by the State at the time It waa
thrown open to aettement
While the South Dakota 8tate veteri
An Ohio farm er, after suspecting the
narian and tba 'government authorities
doga o f all hia neighbors of killing hia
are watching the anthrax situation in the
sheep, finally discovered that the mur
counties of the southeastern pert of the
derer war bis. own prize collie. As the
State, the Governor’s office la yet receiv
animal Is very valuable the farm er
ing complaints in regard to the situation,
did not kill him, but subjected him to
and demanding something more in the
way of stamping the disease out
A ll
punishment which he believes has
such complaints are turned over to the
thoroughly cured him of bis
killing
officials who have the situation in charge
propensities.
Every morning the dog
for Investigation. From reports the indi
is placed In a tread mill wtilch oper
H o le s fro m th e D a f r r .
cations ere that the situation In that pert
Bed cream will never make good
ates the farm churn, washing ihachine
of the State ie of a serious nature, and
and other utilities, with a sheep pelt batter.
will require careful handling to get the
hung directly In front of him, and be la
Uae only salt that Is fine In quality disease stamped out.
The manager of the first baseball compelled to work all day long In this and grain for butter.
The Red river valley la beidg invaded
8o keen Is the dog’s grief
team which won a national champion position.
Cream left on the milk too long will by representatives of seed bouses in the
Southwest who are after the potatoes
ship was Hicks Haysburst.
He man over this punishment that he bowls get bitter and rancid.
grown in this section to use for seed po
aged the Philadelphia
Athletics
In and cries when he is placed In the
As
s
rule
churning
Is
put
off
too
treadmill, and It is necessary to confine
tatoes through Kansas, Missouri, Okla
187 L
___________________
long In the winter time.
homa and Tezas.
him carefully to prevent his running
In the perfect creamery the animal
Following oat hie declaration of Im
One day he was set to work
The human body contains
enough away.
hydrogen gas to fill a balloon that and the sheep pelt w as omitted. The beat1 and odor are got rid of aa soon munity to any one defending lives or
property against night rider», Gov, W il
would actually lift the owner into the dog w a s so overjoyed that he showed as possible.
son
o f Kentucky granted pardons to W al
every manifestation of pleasure and
The cream pot should ha vs its con
clouds.
ter Duncan, who was convicted of ¿loot
_1
worked vigorously all day, but on the tents stirred every day at least, and
Greatest depth of the Atlantic ocean next day when he went to work and every time any cream ia added. Tbla ing and killing Newt Healett at Jackson
ville, Shelby county, in June, and Riley
is 27,806 fa st;
Pacific ocean, 80,00# found bla noaa rubbing the pelt Kfl Insures an even ripening and ’bettor
Harrold, who was Indicted as an acces
fast
grief w as uncontrollable.
ouallty o t batter.
sory to the murdee