BONO. forgiye me If when lille blow , And lane are all a-trlll with song, And hedge gleam with scented mow, And vision fair on mortal throng--Forgive me, of thy gentle grace, If I can find 'mid scene so choice No fairer vision than thy face, No dearer music than thy voice. forgive me if when bleak rain drips And mist obscures the wintry skies, I find June' rose on thy Up, June' heaven in thy radiant eye. So craving skies forever blue, And roses ever at my door, Forgive me If I ask of you. For I lovs much and more and more. , I. Zangwlll. : ' The Traitor's Thumb "That's grand slam again In no trumps to us, and the rub," said Guy Hardwlck as he added some big fig ures on his score sheet. "What do you make it work out at,' Willie?" Willie Stamford's face looked rath er white as he slowly totaled the amount that Hardwlck and his partner had won; he was already realizing what a fool he had been to attempt to play bridge against a man with Hard wick's notorious luck. , ' "I think," he said at last, "It is ex actly 550. I'll have to send you a check, Hardwlck," "All right," returned the other man, easily. "No hurry, old chap. Nobody game for another rubber, eh? Well, It is a bit late." "You do have the most extraordi nary luck j Guy," said Willie. "Luck!" said Hardwlck. "You may well say that; I've got a mascot, you know." . 1 , , Mason, bis partner, laughed some what skeptically. "It is all very well to laugh at what you don't understand, but I'm not Jok ing. Look here, 4f you fellows will hold your tongue I'll show you the thing." Hardwlck took a silver cigar case from his pocket and, held it out to them open. They peered over it eager- "haven't too heard, SIR?'.' ly, wonder written large on the faces of all three. It did not contain cigars. All that there was inside It was a curiously shaped brownish, weezened, shriveled object set in a wide gold rim of an tlque workmanship, round which ran a somewhat roughly executed Inscrip tion. "It's a man's thu.mb," replied Hard wlck. "I found it amongst a lot of odds and ends when I succeeded my old uncle at Hardwlck. You know he would not have left the place to me only I happen to be the last Hardwlck left, ud he went and chucked a whole lot of money all he could. In fact to Impossible charities and things, and I thought I was up a tree with the death , duties an'd that. Well, I was rooting about, and as I say I found that grlisly re! In and a Ions rigmarole written on parchment wrapped round H, which being interpreted and condensed in- the thumb had been a disreputable Hardwlck who had tried to betray torn fortress (or the safety of which be was responsible. He was caugnt red-handed sneaking off with the keys of the front gate, and somebody lopped oft his thumb during the resulting un pleasantness The gentleman was sub sequently boiled In oil or hanged i forget which and the thumb was pickled, and sent to his sorrowing rela tives as a little reminder not to fol low his distressing example. As tor that chaste and elegant mounting, I don't know who put that on. "I felt pretty desperate when 1 found what a trick old Uncle Guy had play ed on me, and as 1 stood one day with that thing in -my hand an Idea flashed into my head. "'Good luck you bring, do you?" I said to myself. 'Well. Mr. Traitor, we will try your luck." "I did. I went off with my last hun dred pounds ami a single ticket to Monte Carlo and made that bank alt up there. The traitor certainly was all on tor roulette. Then I tried tha stock exchange and paid oft the death duties and all little worries Ilk that. WORMS AND WORMS. The most recent benefaction of John D. Rockefeller is the gift o $1,000,000 to a commission of twelve scientists, educators and business met. to Investigate the "hookworm disease" In the South, with the object of checking Its ravages. The disease does not exist north of the Potomac river, as the worm thrives only in a certain temperature. But in the South tibere are 2,000,000 viotims infected by this parasite, which virtually sucks away the vitality of those in whom It finds lodgment. The hookworm is a hair-like parasite, which enters the human system to some extent through the mouth, but generally through the skin. It ulti mately lodges In the Intestines, where it feeds on the mucous membrane, forming a poison which, while rarely fatal, renders the victim anaemic, re tards development, and, by lowering his vitality, makes him easily subject to typhoid, pneumonia, consumption and other more serious diseases. Much of the so-called laziness and shlttlessness observed in certain sections of the South and which seriously interfere with economicjdevelopment fere due to the hookworm. The disease, however, can be successfully treated, and it is to this end as well as to Introduce sanitary precautions by which the malady may be prevented that the Rockefeller gift is made. Apparently, all Is. fish that comes to my lamented ancestor's net; we scoop the dollars gaily In, even when we play bridge for penny points or' beggar by neighbor with somebody's children. Well, goodnight, you fellows." He lounged out laughingly, putting the silver cigar case carefully back In to an inner pocket as he did so. "I wish," said Willie Stamford, as they parted on the club steps, "som kind ancestor had left me a mascot." "Get Hardwlck to lend you his," sug gested White, the man who had been his partner; and he and Mason hailed a belated taxicab, leaving Willie alone In the murky night, for Hardwlck was already out of sight. "Five hundred and fifty pounds," groaned the young man to himself m he walked along the deserted street. "Heavens! Why, I can't raise fifty, let alone five hundred. Briefless bar risters shouldn't play bridge." Sud denly something lying In the mud by the curb caught his eye as the hazy light from a street lamp fell upon it. He picked It up. It was a silver cigar case with a crest engraved upon it Hardwlck's. He opened It, his hand.i shaking with excitement as he did so. There was no .mistake. Inside sinis ter, crooked, loathsome lay the gold mounted traitor's thumb. "Hardwlck's luck," he exclaimed. "By George! He must have dropped It out of his pocket and not noticed. I'll take It round to him in the morn ing. It is too late now." He slipped the sliver case into his pocket, and suddenly White's words as he climbed into the taxi after Ma son flashed into his brain. "Get Hard wlck to lend you his," hammered and churned seething in his head. He pulled out the case again. "Why not borrow the thing for a bit?" he told himself. "Not keep t. Just borrow it for a week or two to pull things round a bit and set me on my feet. Hard wlck might refuse If I asked hlm.'so I will say nothing about it. It it doest bring me luck I'll return It at once. At any rate, it is too good a chance to be thrown away." He closed the case and again put it in his pocket as he reached the front door ot the old house where he lived and pulled out a latch key. After he had drawn the bolts he felt in his pocket the last edition of an evening paper at which he had not yet troubled to look. He unfolded It and glanced absently through its columns. "By George!" he cried. "Florida has won the Grand National. A 60 to 1 outsider, and I have a fiver on the beast Hardwlck's luck has started me off with 300." Three months later Willie Stamford, poor briefless, obscure no longer, en gaged to be married to a girl whom ae had loved for several years, but whom he had not dared to ask before to share the fortunes ot a younger son, stood waiting tor the door ot Hard wlck's flat to be opened for him. In his pocket he carried the silver cigar case and its withered, crooked con tents which at last he was returning to their owner. Ho was going to make a clean breast ot what he had done. Hardwlck, he knew, was never a fel low to bear malice. Even as a boy at school he had been a generous-hearted lad. Willie felt certain that when ne explained to him how very tight a cor ner ho had been in when the traitor's thumb came into his possession he would understand and overlook what Willie acknowledged to himself had been broach of honor, though tha lapse had made him a rich man rising fast in his profession.4 As.- he thought over these things growing nervous and uncomfortable the door opened, and Hardwlck's ma: appeared. Stamford screwed up his courage and made the plunge. "Is Mr. Hardwlck in?" he asked. "I want to see him on Important bust npss." The man's mask-like face twitched with a sudden gust of feeling. "Haven't jou heard, sir?" he said In a voice that only rigid affort kept steady. "Mr. Hardwlck was run over and killed by a motor 'bus Just before lunch time today, sir. It's terrible bad business." New Orleans Times Demo crat. Monte Carlo Threatened. The little village of Cap D'Ail, oil the national road near Monte Carlo, ii threatened by destruction from a land slide, a Cincinnati Inquirer's ' Monte Carlo dispatch says. Suspended like the rword of Damocles above the ham let is a huge rock, which has lately given signs of collapsing completely It has already partially destroyed the town hall and ominous cracks have ap peared In the walls of other buildings. The cause of the threatened catas trophe dates back to when two Monte Ct.rlo contractors commenced to dig the foundations of a dwelling house Just at the foot of the rock. These op erations cut away a portion of the has, of the rock, with the result that the huce mass moved slightly, causing the walls of several houses to become cracked. After having visited the scene the mayor of Cap d'All Informed i M. de Joly, prefect of the AIpes-Marl times department, of the situation and a civil engineer was appointed to re port on the steps to be taken. A few days ago traffic on the ra'l way line, which passes close by, win diverted to a branch line, and similar changes were made In the tramway service. Despite these . precautions, however, the rock again moved and partially wrecked the house which serves as the Cap d'All town hall. Should the rock fall on to the nation al road it will destroy the water mains which .supply Monte Carlo and Men ton and will piohably block the rail way l'ne. 1 ! Comrades. To complain Is not a fault of ag alone; it is a favorite pastime of youth also. A writer in the Argonaut tells the following story of an incident in a Western university. The dean ot the institution was told by the stu dents that the cook was turning out food not "fit to eat." The dean summoned the delinquent. lectured him on .his shortcomings, and threatened him with dismissal unless conditions were bettered. "Why, sir," exclaimed the cook, "you oughtn't to place so much Importance on what the young men tell you about my meals! They come to me in just the same way about your lectures." REAL OLD CBOFTZH'S HOMB. xao Reproduction of Irish Cabin Built for Children's Playhoaao. One of the show places of Far Rock away is the handsome residence of James Caffrey,, the Brooklyn Eagle says. Visitors during the -summer months rarely fail to stroll up Green wood avenue from the beach so as to get a glimpse of this fine piece of colonial architecture, with Its massive stone columns towering thirty or more feet in the air. But while the villa is Interesting, there is still a more interesting ob ject on the grounds that draws forth exclamations. of pleasure and admira tion. It is the play-house of the Caf frey children. This play-house occu pies a prominent site on the g&at lawn to the west of the Caffrey resi dence. It is an exact reproduction of an Irish crofter's cabin, and is be lieved to be the only one of its kind In this country. The play-house is about 15 by 12 feet In size and one story high. The walls are of hewn stone and white washed .on the exterior. It has a thatched roof, straw tightly bound to gether to a thickness of about one foot. There are three windows in the front and three in the back walla. Near the center of the front wall is the entrance. Visitors notice a .sign, painted in real Celtic characters, "Don Na Stoegas," which in English means, "Fort of the Fairies." There is just the faintest idea of a porch over the entrance, the roof being supported by two heavy trunks of trees. The door to this "Fort of the Fairies" is made of white birch limbs, set together lat tice fashion, and swung on heavy crude iron hinges. An old chain and latch fastens the door when the chil dren are not in the house. t While the exterior of the cabin is interesting, the Interior Is equally so. Inside the walls are covered with twigs and straw intertwined and cemented over, while the children's playthings, tables, chairs, rockers, dressers, side board, etc., together with toys and dolls galore are found there. It is an ideal place for the children to preside over and play in. Good Bora. "Young men are so selfish about not wanting to kiss their slstera more often." "On the other hand, they show a wondrously generous spirit toward their chums in turning all such pleas ures over to them." Boston Herald. Up to date, every joke concerning Dr. Cook and the north pole has uadt mention ot a gumdrop. The Sentimental Son-o. My sentimental sense Is such That Realism's ruthless touch Can not displace ' ; The fond embrace ' "With which Romance I cling' to. Now pigs are hardly thought to be A theme for loving eulogy, Or lyrical apostrophe; Pigs are poetical to me. And so a pig I sing to. Oh, pig, thy blue and beaming eye Smiles on me from thy rose-decked sty. Oh, pensive pig, 'Romantic pig, Hear my adoring sigh! A cabbage, by the common herd Is generally deemed absurd; Both coarse and plain. Of common grain, A vegetable yokel. And yet to me a cabbage seems Fit subject for an artist's dreams; . For fond effusions, tender themes; A cabbage, in the moon's pale beami Inspires my praises vocal. Oh, cabbage, of the pale-green hue, Washed by the pearly morning dew, Oh, cabbage fair, ' -' Oh, cabbage fair, I bring thee homage true! And some there be of whom I wot, Who holds that kitchen soap I not A proper thing Of which to sing In sentimental measure. But kitchen soap, by one of taste, Upon a pinnacle Is placed; And any scene by it Is graced. So smooth and bright, so pure and chaste, It gives exquisite pleasure. Oh, kitchen soap, of graceful form, I bring to thee my worship warm. Oh, kitchen soap, Oh, yellow soap, . . You take my heart by storm! Harper's Weekly. Flaar Display Accounted For. On a visit to St. Petersburg a vis itor noticed that on the occasion of the birthday of the Czarina there were only one or two flags visible, these be ing displayed on official buildings. On a later visit, a week or two later, he observed that flags were everywhere, the very streets obscured by waving bunting. "Why," he asked a ' friend, "do you show a flag now while you did not then?" '"Well." was the reply, "a police agent came round and said that if I did not display' one I should be fined 200 rubles. So I hoisted three,' to be on the right side, and the others are doing the same." Art Farm Land Prices Too Hlghf How long will the price of farm lands continue to increase? Just so long as the price of farm products con tinue to increase, and these prices will remain firm so long as labor finds steady and profitable employment. In no other country in the world is la bor so well rewarded as here. Where prices are low, wages are necessarily low. The man who Receives liberal returns for his work can buy liber ally, and can pay a fair price. There seems to be no probability that in dustrial conditions will, be radically changed in this country soon. ( The people generally are too well satisfied with them. Good markets may, there fore, be expected to continue indefi nitely. Farm lands which may be relied on to product satisfactory crops of grain snd grass are not selling too high. Land which, with proper management, will produce from 60 to 100 bushels of 50-cent corn per acre is well worth $150 an acre or more. There is a large amount of such land in Kansas and adjoining states. The sure way to increase the value of land is to increase its productive ness. Under existing conditions prices will take care of themselves. The days of large surpluses are past. De mand crowds close upon the heels of supply. Mouths are multiplying faster than food for them. Kansas Farmer. Individual Hog Hoaaei. "Noticing articles from time to time on the construction of individual hog houses, I wish to submit the plan of houses that we use," writes a corre spondent of the Breeder's Gazette. "1 make them six feet square on the ground, both doors to be hinged so they will open and close readily. Twelve-foot boards make side and roof. I use good soft pine flooring, as It is lighter and much' easier to move when necessary than heavier lumber. Four pieces 2 by 4 inches and six feet long INDIVIDUAL HOG HOUSE. Coat Fine hr Jadn-e Latadls. Judge K. M. Landls, who fined the Standard Oil Company 129.240,000, has fined John Bower, of Rockford, 111., 1 cent Bower had sent a threatening letter to his brother-in-law. who is al leged to have misused members of his family. The Judge apparently sympa thised with Bower and told him that if he had said to the relative what he had written to him it would have bee all right - .- I co Box Reoarteo. "Huh!" sneers the plate of ice cream to the piece of limburger cheese. "You needn't give yourself such airs. Didn't you see in the papers where ttere are a million microbes to each drop of ice cream?" "I did," retorts the limburger, "That's nothing. Compared to me you are a sparsely settled territory.": When you die, will people say of you: "It s too bad he didnt die ten yearsago! ..." The world's estimated steam power la use to-day is 12,in)0,000 horse-power. ' ':. . ' . . . i ; ; . are for sills. Two pieces 2 by 4 Inches and 6 feet long are for ridge and plate. "If this plan is UBed It will be found much more satisfactory than- a plain A shaped house. The door In the roof can be opened when the $in shines. Sunshine is the best tonic known for little pigs, and the door Is essential when the sow needs attention at pig ging time as a means of entrance and., as is sometimes the case, a very hasty exit." ' . Valne of the Home Market. Farmers should encourage their home town, to build up a good home market for their dairy and poultry products, fruit, vegetables and many things that sell far more profitably at home than they could by shipping them away. Here Is where the French farmers gain their prosperity; they have good home 'markets, where they market everything at high prices dl rect to their customers in their thrifty home towns and villages. Towns can be revived by the farm ers and merchants working together to get new industries, and the home market soon develops for all the farm products that make a prosperous com munlty, and as the town grows the farms -increase in value. Inland Farmer. Squashes and Pumpkins. With care in storing, there is very little difficulty in keeping these, es pecially the former, In good condition until spring, and I have kept soma varieties of the genuine pie pumpkins until well into March in just as nice condition as they went into' storage, Select those that are well matured, and make sure that they are gathered before being touched in the least with frost Store in a cool, dry place a late as safety from freezing will per mit, then remove to a garret where they will keep cool and dry, but al ways safe from frost. Do not pils them, but set them on the floor and, better still, separate them . so that they do not touch.. In this way. weil matured specimens can be kept almost t will. Exchange. Alfalfa Soils. . . . Alfalfa does best on well-drained soils, where the water level is several feet below the surface. It is a very deep-rooted plant, ' sending its roots down into subsoil which is largely un available to other farm crops. .These roots will not thrive in a water-soak ed soil, and in attempting to grow al falfa on a wet soil, or a soil with the water level only a few feet from the surface, the alfalfa Is placed in un natural conditions and little can be ex pected of it If possible, a field with a sufficient slope to effect thorough surface drainage and sufficiently open to porous to provide good under-drain age should be selected for alfalfa. Maryland Experiment Station. Vhy They Dot lr. Mnv who keep hens are asking themselves just about now why their . pullets don't lay. when the fact is that a lot of their young stock was hatch- ed too late, or was not given proper fond and Care during growth. The size and general appearance of a pul let does not always denote tne ume nrhon uhA should commence producing I have seen flocks of pretty big nice pullets and they would lay hnrdiv an eez all winter, ine nrst essential for. winter eggs is the riht . kind of, stock to produce mem. j?ooa will not supply that want; It may help some and In some Instances it's pretty difficult to help the matter very much by giving extra care. The strain has got to be of the right sort If they nrove themselves reliable and profit able layers. After being in the poul try business so long, and seeing so many people fuss and experiment and work in the effort to get eggs from stock that had no eggs to lay, no in clination to make eggs or ability to commence to get ready to lay, It Is impressed ail the stronger upon my mind that there is a whole lot to this hen business besides feed and care. Inland Farmer. . . . Beehive of Concrete, Among the occupations which offei profit and amusement, and at the same time entirely suited to women, is that of bee rais ing. Its advant ages are that little space is required, there i, is no great expense and the . work is light, re quiring only a lim ited amount of time and care. Much ot . the apparatus re quired may be made at home and where tlie facilities for concrete beehive this are not pres ent, the things may be purchased with out any great outlay of money. There have been many Improve ments lately in the manner of con- structlne the beehives, and probably the most Interesting is one which is made of concrete. A patent has been recently issued covering the manufac ture of concrete, beehives, but any one with a little Ingenuity may easily make them, and a set of molda once -having been made satisfactorily, may be used indefinitely arid any number of hives made from It. Anyone at tempting to make a hive of this ma terial should acquaint themselves with the character of the cement and should also be familiar . with the habits of bees. i Warning; to Dairymen. : . We have repeatedly , ' warned the dairymen that the oleomargarine law is likely to be amended next Winter, and that the amendments proposed will destroy the value of the law, so far as concerns the protection of dairy products. Again, we ask you ;hava you written your congressman about it? Do you know his views? Does he know what you want him to do in the matter? Does he know what you are going te do to him in the cam paign next year if he doesn't give you a square deal? This is no Joke. i It is a serious proposition, and no time is to be lost if the oleomargarine law is to be preserved In Its present form. Missouri Dairyman. Convenient Light for the Barn. Many fires may be avoided when the short winter days require the use of a lantern in the barn by having some such device as here shown to keep the lantern in place. , This affair.,, requires only two small pulleys and a rope. The rope is run through the pulleys, the banters attached to one end and then pulled up to a convenient height, the loose end of the rope be ing fastened to a cleat on the wall. If this device is arranged in about the center of the barn much , better light will be given than if the lan tern were carried around from place: to place. Cor. of Farm and Home. FOB SAFETT. Prises for Peasants. The hilly territory of Trieste, it is stated, in a consular report on that district, is covered by pointed stones which prevent any cultivation, and some years ago the Society Agrarla offered prizes for those who would remove them and .thus change the waste ground to meadows. The work has now been going on for some years and every autumn a commission ascer tains the area of . the proposed redemp tion and the difficulties to be encoun tered and fixes the prize to be given. In spring it again visits the improved BiuuuuB iuu va)u iue prizes ii un served. This year in the different par ishes sixty-six peasants Improved forty-four acres and received 11.040. , . Snnahtne la the Dairy. Sunshine is the dairyman's bes friend. When the sun beats down hot in the summer we are apt to think it an enemy, but a week of clouds, even in July, casts a gloom over everything and makes both man and beast at cross purposes with the world. Sunshine is required to kill germs and microbes and keep both animal and human dispositions sweet . The Ver nionter's cow barn that must be built so warm and tight lacks sunshine t keep the inmates in the best of health. All along our country's northern bor der, tuberculosis is on the Increase ia dairy herds. Farmers' Mall and Breeds.