It Is a rapid age In which we live. So now are the new Cunarders thnt oin; has not hail time 'to lose wonder over 1ho.se gigantic lineM, to cease to nmrvel at their Immensity of length awl tretiif tidous power. It looked as though thes "fHl feet steamships were to be the lust word In marine roust ruction, and th.it their f!S,(KX horse power marked the limit of motive strength. But now, while one is yet marveling at these new marvels, It Is announced thut the White Star Steamship Company has length, Displacement, Nam. Kate. feet. tons. Ciat Kuslern 1858 USD 27,000 Britannic 1874 453 8,500 T'uihria 1885 500 10,500 Campania 1.S93 600 18,000 Kaiser Wilhclin W Crosse l.S.'I'.l 625 ' 20,800 Dentschlitnil U)00 (1(12 23,000 Kaiser Wilhelin II 1!03 678 20,000 Adriatic 1007 723 aS.OOO Limitnnia 1!W7 700 43.000 New While Star Liner I90S 1,000 ahout.GO.OOO 5 r 1 I.I . a i P tav tan w h F rpi : I . la; 3? m lie I unfiled at his cliih, and drovi to Cavendish wpiare In the afternoon. A footman Informed lilin that Mrs. Mow muy whs hi Home, ami ne was siiown Into the drawing room and left to his own reflections. After an Interval of about live minutes she came In. the three years which had passed since lie had seen her had scarcely changed her at all. lie noted the small head perfectly poised, with Its crown of fair hair, the slightly tilted chin, and the gray eyes that had lingered In ills memory ever since she had dismissed him. Now he saw them light up with pleasure at the sight of him. She smiled radiantly. "Gooff:" she said, "Is It possible?" "It's more than possible, It's an ac tual fact," he replied. "I got back to England a week ago." She looked at him with her head on one side. "You're not changed," she pro nounced, after a pause of Inspection. "You are," he answered. "Am I? In what way?" "In a very Important one. When I eft you you were a girl ; now you're a married woman." "A change for the better," she laugh ed lightly. "Of course! Especially when your husband Is so celebrated a man." "Oh, celebrity has lis penalties," she answered, mulling. "You see, my bus band Is so Immersed In his work i:ud has so many Hclentllle meetingsto at tend that I see very little of him. At times I am tempted to wMi that he was not quite so distinguished." "An Ill-natured friend," he said, I rneenuiiy, "iniorineii me this niornln. that you crept under the lens of his microscope In order to attract his at tention." "Horrid! Who was It? Well, In a way ; suppose I did. At least, I took II lively Interest In all bis doings. 1 hud made up my mind to marry him, and found the Infusoria the best way of iiecomplls'lilng my purpose, You see $n frank." '"Very frank. And now that you have accomplished It, 1 stipso you are quite happy.'.' "Not quite. One can't be quite happy In this world, can one? You see, a scientific man can't bo always looking down the microscope at one object. So lifter a time he took me off the slide mid began looking at the othor--Infusoria." "Kitty! You don't mean !" Shu broke Into a ripple of laughter. "You absurd boy!" she cried. "How could you tlhlnk ! Hut you don't know the professor. He Is older than 1 am, of course. And 1 don't suppose lie had ever looked at a woman before well, before 1 put myself under the lens. Ami now that he has actually married one of us - has gone through the ceremony, so to speak I am sure lie considers that he has done his duty by the sex for the rest of his days. No. Ho has gone back to the other kind of Infusoria horrid little things with wiiggly tails. He finds them more at tractive. You see how frank I am." "Then lie franker still," he replied, "and tell nie why you married him?" "Well, It was a kind of rxierlii:eiit," he admjlted. "I wanted to know how It felt to tie the wife of a celebrated man: and besides I fell In love with him." "And was there nothing?" he asked, In a slightly lowered tone, "no thought no memory of ?" "Of?" "Well, of me?" he said. Muling down little toward her and looking keenly Into her eyes. She blushed a little. "None at all," she answered, hurried ly. "Don't be foolish, Geoff. All that boy ami girl nonsense was over ever so long ago." He straightened himself. "Oh, well he said, morosely. 'Tm TO BTJUD VESSELS ONE-FIFTH OF A MILE COMPARATIVE TABLE OF OCEAN LINERS, afraid I must be going. So glad to have seen you, Mrs. -Mowbray, l'ray give my kind regards to your husband and tell him how greatly I regret " "Now you are more foolish than ever, Ceolf," she laughed. "I'm not going to let you go so soon. You must come often, and we must see a great deal of one another. I get so bored at times. Sit down and have some tea, and tell me all about South Africa." At tea their tete-a-tete was Interrupt ed by the appearance of the professor and his sister. The professor was an elderly man, stooping slightly under the weight of his years, a trllle short-sight ed, and with little puckerlngs about his right eye due to years of research at the microscojie. Ills sister, almost hi own age, rigidly erect in black satin had obvously no touch of his absent- nil ndedness. She was even unpleasant ly alert; and Geoffrey, as he caught her eye fixed upon hhn wltih suspicious In quiry, felt absolutely uncomfortable, and was glad when tue time came when be could take his departure gracefully, "Good-bye, Oeoff," said Kitty, as she shook hands. "Itemember now we ex pect to see a good deal of you as long as you are In town." "Delighted," murmured the professor 'I in a busy man myself. But my wife will always be glad to entertain you." Geoffrey lost no time in availing him self of the Invitation so frankly ex tended. At theaters, at concerts and In the park, he was constantly to be seen In Kitty's society. Her manner CONSTANTLY TO 1I1C SKKN IN KITTY'S SO- tantalized him. She was always friend ly, always glad to see him; and there were times when he thought that thel.1 Itlmacy was becoming more than mere friendliness. But Kitty was elusive. She knew how to skate daintily over thin ice. to turn a diliicult situation with a laugh. It was slow work. But in proportion to Its dilliculty, his de sire Increased until it became a pas sion, wasting his days and giving him sleepless nights. He hated the profes sor now. and mingled with his hatred was a touch of contempt for the man who, ssessing such a treasure, did not know how to value It. He was sitting at tea with her. His manner was moody and abstracted After a pause he looked up. "I'm going away," he announced, ab ruptly. "Going away!" she cried, Involuntar ily. "When?" "To night." "To-night! Why?" "Why not? I'm doing no good here I've ben a fool for staying so long." She strove to laugh, but the effort was a failure. She was conscious of a momentary sense of restraint. Then she was actually frightened as he roso and came over to her. "You know why I am going." he said, tensely. "What right had you to play with me all this time to hold out ii promise?" "I gave no promise," she Interrupt ed, quickly. "No, you didn't; not In so many words. You hadn't the pluck for that. You didn't mean anything really. You were content to play." She was fascinated by his earnest ness. "But, Geoff," she whispered. "If I were not playing?" He knelt beside her, and his fingers tightened upon her arm. "If you were not! Kitty! Do vou mean what you are saying? Come with me then come to-night. I've made all arrangements to leave for Paris. We li if -k fa M LONG. contracted for the construction of two steamships that are to have the amazing length of 1,000 feet each, a length 210 feet greater than that of the Lusitanla and 320 feet more than was the length of Brunei's great failure the Great Eastern. These two steamships ara Intended to be far ahead of anything yet designed. Ex traordinary speed will not be sought for In these larger vessels. About twenty knots an hour will be their gait Indicated horsepower of engines. 7,050 5,500 14.300 80,000 80,000 86,000 88,000 40,000 68,000 Speed, knots. 14 13 13 20 22 23 23 23 . 24 20 can catch the 11 o'clock from Victoria, Will you come?" "Oh, how can I? Yes. No. I don't know !" The sound of the opening door star tled them. He stood up swiftly, just in time, Miss Mowbray, the professor's sister, entered the room. When shi saw them her eyelids narrowed. Half an hour later Miss Mowbray confront ed her brother In his study. Geoffrey had Intended to send In the note by the servant. But seelmr the professor, a flash of mischievous hn mor made hhn hand It to him. "For Mrs. Mowbray?" he said. "Do you mind? Thanks, so good of you. It contains a few arrangements for our expedition this 'evening. We are irolna to the theater." " The professor took It In silence. nn, watched him as he turned away. Then he went Into the house and entered the drawing room. His wife was leaning against the mantelpiece. " "From Mr. Arnott," he said handinc it to ner gravely. She opened It with assumed careless ness. It contained a desperate appeal. For a moment she felt an Intense Indig nation that he should have dared to make her husband the bearer of such n message. Then the fire died down, and she thought of what life might possibly come to mean with a man who loved her and who did not merely accept her as a fact In the routine of a somewhat colorless life. She raised her eves to meet those of her husband. "Thomas," she said, curiously, "aro you busy this evening?" I have a meeting," he answered du biously. " Is it very important?" she asked, with a slightly mocking stress upon tho word. "It has a certain Importance." "Then you wouldn't give It up If I asked you?" she said slowly. Some instinct told hhn that the ques tion meant much to him. "I would," he answered, quietly. "Oh, Thomas!" she cried, surprised. "But your meeting! Why?" "Because, my dear," he answered. courteously, "I consider It more im portant to please you. Do you really wish me to give It up?" "Mr. Arnott and I am going to n theater," she said. "I do wish you would come with us." "I will," ho answered. She let the letter fall Into the fire. and watched Its edges curl and blackeu In the flames. "Ho Is to call for us at 7," she said. The theater party was not a success. Constraint reigned in the box. Arnott strove hard for a word with Kitty, but she gave him no chance. She kept her husband constantly at her side. When It was over, Arnott shook hands, a de feated man. "Good-bye, Mrs. Mowbray," he said "I shall not see you again. I leave for Paris to-morrow." "A pleasant Journey," she answered. When he had gone, the professor, conscious of the evening's restraint looked at her anxiously. "I'm afraid you have not had a pleas ant evening, my dear," he said. "No matter," she replied. "I'm so happy, Thomas. Take me home." Black and White. Not a Sololat. The late Theodore Thomas was re hearsing the Chicago Orchestra on the stage of the Auditorium Theater. He was disturbed by the whistling of Al bert Burrldge, the well-knowu scene painter, who was at work In the loft above the stage. A few minutes later Mr. Thomas' librarian appeared on the "bridge" where Mr. Burrldge, merrily ' whistling, was at work. "Mr. Thomas' compliments," said tha librarian, "and he requests me to state ' that If Mr. Burrldge wish to whistle he will be glad to discontinue hla re hearsal." To which Mr. Burrldge replied, su avely: "Mr. Burridge's compllmentt to Mr. Thomas; and please Inform Mr. ' Thomas that, If Mr. Burrldge cannot properties requisite to form and grow whistle with the orchestra, U won'r bone and the protein that makes mus whlatle at all." Success Magailne. cle and other tissues. I.'leetrlo Farming. Although agricultural machinery originated in the United States and the American farmer used patent mowers, reapers and threshing machines long before their European contemporaries In the same field of labor had put aside scythe, rake and flail, the possibility of Introducing electric power in farm work was first recognized In the Old World. This has probably been due to the fact that the farmers of America, thrifty and far-seeing, recognizing the economy and reliability of the small oil engine, failed to perceive how any saving could be effected by generating electric current and distributing to Its motors in outlying positions. When, however, the mains from some large electric power company pass with in reach of a farm or estate the condi tions arc much more favorable, - and this state of things must already exist In a measure which wUl beHargely ex tended in the future. Current German newspapers contain an interesting ac count of the application of electricity to a group of farms in Saxony. The elec tric current is brought from an adja cent town by overhead wires carried on wooden poles. Two receiving sta tions are arranged, from which tbee)ec. trlelty Is distributed to the farm build ings and to convenient positions 'n the fields for the purpose of driving thresh- 'ng and other machinery. Sixteen fixed electric motors are in stalled for chaff- and root cutting, oat crushing, pumping and for operating machinery used in the manufacture of Potato sI)lrit In additlod to this pow- er equipment, six portable motors arc- Provided, which may be used for driv I lug PumPs. circular saws, threshing ma- oulnery nU(l "So forth, at any point wnere tue'r sen-ices are required. The uousea auu" buildings on the farms are 811 m "V electricity, 9 ar: lamps and i about 1,000 glow lamps being used for fe Purpose. 11 must e pointed out, however, that tbls exan'I,Ie could only he followed in Unlted States en a very large es:.ite or a group of adjacent 'nms. and it is (louDtful whether such a scheme could be made a commercial success for the operation of farming machinery pure and simple. It would appear that wood sawing, pumping and other operations requiring power mils': be- la -hided If the results are to compare favorably with those at present obtained by the use of oil or steam engines. But the Saxon experiment is full of interest. ana displays a curiously progressive splrlt ln a country wliere ':,rm feupe9 re almost unknown, and shepherds and cowherds are still living amid pictur esque realities. Comparative Food Values. An English journal, The Lancet, ln discussing the comparative food value of roast beef and turkey, says that it may be said that, weight for weight, the flesh of the turkey is more nourish ing than that of beef; but the latter is, generally speaking, cheaper than the former. The moisture in beef, how ever, exceeds the amount present in the flesh of the turkey, and the latter contains a better percentage of proteid or flesh-forming substance. In either case the percentage of moisture Is sel dom less than 70 per cent. In lean beef the amount of fat Is much the same as in a not too well-fed turkey, but it must be pointed out that the flesh of poultry differs from that of beef and mutton In not having its muscular fibers permeated by fat, and. moreover, the fibers iu the flesh of the fowl are short and rarely yield to the disintegrating action of the digestive processes. A large amount of fat in either case is apt to interfere with the digestibility of the meat. The fat of beef Is more digestible than the fat of the turkey. The fat of birds, in fact, is harder, and owing to its tendency to become rancid, is unsuitable for the dyspeptic patient. The Lancet believes that the most important difference from a dietetic point of view between beef and turkey is that, whereas beef contains a high percentage of extractive matters, tur key contains hardly any at all. The ex tractive matters in beef account largely for Its peculiar and imrrked flavor, and owing to their absence in poultry gen erally, and In the pheasant and part ridge, the flavor of these meats Is deli cate. But there is no doubt that the extractives of beef, as well as mutton, are valuable, for not only are they flavoring agents, but they also act as perhaps the most . powerful stimulant to gastric digestion. ' Learned by Hard Knocka. So long as the home market .s not fully supplied there :s no 3am in ship- phig away. As a rule the offspring of Immature and pampered animals are predisposed to disease. A proper rotation and wise tillage will do much to kep (he soil supplied with available fertility. Better methods, better stock and bet ter tools have dco'ed tu productions of more than one farm. Oats contain largely the mineral Quality of Grass Seed. The Maine law regulating the sale of agricultural seeds requires that grass seed shall be sold under a guarantee as to purity. Bulletin 13S of the Maine agricultural experiment station, which, doubtless, many of your readers have received, gives .analysis of the seeds which were collected by the Inspector and those sent to the experiment sta tion by correspondence In 1U0G. The dealers are very generally conforming to the law and the purity of most seeds Is now guaranteed. The'uuestion nat urally arises In the mind of a farmer, should a seed be strictly pure, and, if not, how nearly pure should it be? - The purity of seeds varies greatly with their kind. It is possible to grow timothy seed so clean that It shall car ry practically no foreign weed seeds. It. Is not as easy to grow any of the other grasses or clovers so clean. There Is no need for the sower to ever buy timothy seed that Is much less than 90.5 per cent pure. Samples have been examined by the station the present year which contained not a single for eign harmful seed. The best red clover seed will fre quently carry as much as 1 per cent of foreign matter, although these Im purities are usually comparatively harmless. It Is, however, poor policy for the sower to buy a red-clover seed that is less than 98 per cent pure. The best grades of alsike clover will run about 98.5 per cent pure on the average. It Is doubtful If the purchaser should buy an alsike whose purity Is less thaD 97.5 per cent. Redtop Is the moat difficult seed of all. It will, of course, coutaln more or less chaff. It Is difBeult to grow red top ' free from timothy, and the seed cleaners find It difficult to separate tim othy seed from redtop after It has once been Introduced. Samples of redtop carrying as high as 12 or even 15 per cent of timothy are not unusual. If one could be sure that the Impurities were harmless like chaff and timothy It might be safe to buy a redtop even as low as 85 per cent pure. Unless one Is assured of the character of the im purities, it is unwise to buy a redtop less than 95 per cent pure. Donble-Edg-ed Saw. To make one saw take the place of two, and at the same time preserve Its durability, Is the recent Invention of an Indiana man. Every carpenter Includes two saws In his kit one for cross-cut and one for cutting with the grain. He can now dispense with one saw, as it Is possible to put the two blades having different teeth on the one saw, as HAS TWO EDGES. shown in the Illustration. The smooth top edge always seen on saws Is changed to a cutting edge, simi lar to the regular cutting edge, the saw thus having teeth on the two longi tudinal opposite edges. The handle is hinged to the blade Instead of being rigid and can be reversed as it becomes necessary to use either blade. This saw Is also an economical saw, as It saves the expense of purchasing two saws. Grasa Better than Drag;. A famous veterinary surgeon de clares that grass beats all drugs In creation as a cure for sick horses and mules. Horses should have a few quarts of cut grass dally, from spring until fall. The prevalent notion that it is harmful Is without foundation. Grass is to horses what fresh vegeta bles and fruit are to the human family News anil Farm Notea. The profitable line of production Is to maintain good health with early ma turity. More than half a million emigrants from Russia have passed Into Siberia the past year to engage in wheat rais ing. A farmer near MeEwan, Tenn., is dis playing an ea.r of corn twelve Inches long, weighing three pounds and con taining 1,380 grains. A grain farm at Murray, Iowa, ship ped twenty-seven carloads of timothy seed last fall, for which the farmer received from J1.50 to $1.75 a bushel. A Kansas man claims to have Invent ed a fence-weaving machine, run by a two-horse power gasoline engine, which will weave and set a mile of fence a day. , The United States produced 14.000,- 000 bushels of rice last year ou-a half million acres. The culture of rice is gradually creeping north and some very good grain Is reported ln Arkansas. Holland has set engineers to work to pump .the water out of the famous Zuyder Zee and turn it Into dry land. When this work Is accomplished there will rise where 4,000 fishermen now sink their nets farms and homes for 50,000 Hollanders. A Washington dispatch says a genius has invented a dope which when used as paint for farm machinery will pre- vent rust and decay. This might be good news for those farmers who use the fence corners as storehouses , for their farm machinery, but the proba- bility Is they are too lazy to apply the dope. R, W. Crouse, a graduate of Iowa asrleulturnl eollese. has been nr,!,,- State lecturer on animal husbandry for Virginia. Another Iowa boy has gone to the Massachusetts agricultural col lege as assistant In animal husbandrv. The demand for college graduates ln the high class agricultural lines at sal-. ones ruiu5 iruui -ji.vuu to J,uw a Ww t ' t THE WEEKLY 1619 Two sisters burnt at Lincoln, Eng land, for the alleged crime of witch craft. 1624 England declared war on Spain. 1629 Third parliament of Charles I. dis solved. IGSO First Assembly of New Hampshire met at Portsmouth. 1689 Habeas corpus act suspended for the first time in England. .. .Jamel II. landed in Ireland. 1702 The Daily Courant, the first Brit ish daily newspaper, issued in Lon don. 1776 English soldiers plundered Boston ....Americans bombarded the Brit ish in Boston. . 1784: Blanchard, the aeronaut, made his first ascent from Taris in a. hydro gen balloon. 1785 John McLean, associate justice of the Lnited States Supreme . Court, who dissented from the majority opinion in the Dred Scot decision, born in New Jersey. 1795 William Lyon McKenzie, first ... Aiayor of Toronto and . an ardent ad vocate of Canadian independence, born -in Dundee, Scotland. 1796 Napoleon Bonaparte married to Josephine Beauharnais British Parliament passed Irish insurrection act. 1797 Albany became the capital of th State of New York. 1799 Napoleon laid unsuccessful siege to Acre. 1S05 Jacob Crowninshield of Massa chusetts became Secretary of th United States navy. tSll The "Ludilite riots," resulting from a depression in the hosiery trade, began in Nottinghamshire, England and continued for several years. 1815 Kingdom of the Netherlands con stituted, and William of Orange pro claimed King. 1825 Pasturing cows on Boston com mon forbidden. 1833 President Jackson signed the tariff and force bills. IS36 Texas proclaimed her independenct . of Mexico. , 1848 Louis Philippe escaped from France to England. 1856 Nicaragua declared war against Costa Rica. 1S63 Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, married to Princess Alexandra of Denmark. 1804 Ulysses S. Grant appointed lieu tenant general. 1865 Parliament at Quebec adopted th confederation scheme. . 1867 Mexico evacuated by the French ....Attempted assassination of King Victor Emanuel at Milan. .. .Presi dent Johnson vetoed the tenure of office anil military : district bills, which Congress passed over his veto. 1S70 First woman jury in America as . sembled in Wyoming. 1875 Moody nnd Sailer '- opeued - their great revivriTmeetiugs in London. 1S77 William M. Evarts appointed Sec retary of State. " 'SSO .-inti-Chinese convention held la California. k 1891 England and France connected by telephone. 1S92 Business suspended in the north west by a blizzard.. 1899 Opening of the Great Central railway of England. 1903 i zar issued a decree granting re ligious freedom in Russia. 1907 An explosion on the French bat tiesilip Jena killed 117 persons. NUBBINS OF FARM NEWS. Farming in New Mexico has been given a great impetus during the past few years by the work of the farmers' insti tutes and mauy unproductive values hart been turned into rich grain and fruit fields. Frank Donnelly of the town of Oak Grove, Barron county, Wis., was bitten four weks ago by a vicious boar, and blood poisoning set in. from the effects of which lie died after three weeks of suf fering. Forty young Indians have been received at the government Indian agricultural school at Wahpeton, N. D. Most of the young students are from Fort Berthold, W a few"-uf -thein art from. the. Sisseton reservatlon - ' ' . A movement has been started for the "L .'.T meefmg has been held in Sioux Falls and about 90 per cent of the managers have expressed themselves as favorable to the v'm Prof. Shenperd recently shirmed to Rn- shi samples of North Dakota corn for the Purpose of aiding corn growing In , tut country. The Russian experiment Btatlons "e d?ln th same thing as our uwu! 'eS to pusa the corn hnutt northward. Because of the heavy demand for pria on twine the warden of the Minnesota State prison has been authorized to work the prisoners overtime for three- bourn each day, allowing each man who work 25 cents for the three hours. The suddIj oi twine now on hand has already bee rear la larger than the supply. aold