Hie Sacrifice $ By HM. EGBERT (Copyright, lilt, by W. O. Chapman.) The flay when L-!'a and Tommy came Into the life of Jim Peters was bis reddest of red letter days. He al ways saw the scene Just as he had seen It then. The early snows had be gun to whiten the hills, and Peters had driven his stock down Into the lower Country for the winter pastures. He was sitting in his hut, thinking over things. At thirty, he felt vaguely that he ought to be doing better for himself. Not that he wanted to leave the cattle country for the city. But life in a two-room shack, where he cooked his own meals and made his own bed, was becoming unbearable. Most of the settlers of his age were already married. The settlement was beginning to prosper. Neat little flow er beds appeared round the houses and the young wives were very gaily dressed upon occasions. A church had been built; altogether it was a place KJlJhvyoung man with two thousand dollars In the bank to rejoice in. But Jim had always lived a lonely life; he did not know how to change It Too bashful to make advances to any of the town girls whom he saw on his rare visits, and with a vague feeling that he wanted a wife of a spe cial, hardly defined type, something above the common run, he was brood ing In his chair when there came a tap at the door. It was a timid tap, such as he had never heard. The men who tapped at Jim's door hammered with hairy fists until he opened to them. Jim opened now, and was amazed to see a woman and a boy outside. Both were thinly clad and shivering from the cold. Nevertheless the worn- mmm Watched the Car Shoot Dowi.tne H" an did not attempt to enter Dut only asked where lodging cott 06 0D" talned. She had come In on ( evening train, she said. She offered nc4urtner explanation, but It was evident"4 she was gently bred. The looks0' 'weariness In her eyes haunted Jim r?r days. lie uei UUWT "' u, fn r, ,m- an of the valley. X hospitality of the West prfvaJJtnver suspicion. The stranger and her son were given shel ter. j Next day Leila Drayton, as she called herself, went to work for one of the richer settlers. But soon she was asked to fill a pressing need. The children were growing up and, In spite of Its advantages, there was no school In the valley. She became the school mistress. Speculation was rife about her. She never mixed with the valley people, never talked about her past. And the West accepts women as well as men for what they ure, and asks no ques tions. The days grew into weeks, Into months. Jim Peters often found occa sion to saddle his horse and ride down into the valley. He and the boy be came fast friends. But Leila was as indifferent to him as to the other men. Perhaps Jim would never have found the opportunity he craved, of becoming her friend, but for an acci dent. The boy was straying on the railroad embankment In search of birds' eggs. His mother was with him, but seated a little distance behind the rise. Jlin, watching them impatiently from the other side, knew that the af ternoon train was due. Becoming uneasy, he hurried across the valley. He was Just on the oppo site ridge when he heurd the train in the distance. The sound, which burst forth suddenly as the train came out of the tunnel, startled the boy, perched on a ledge. He lost his footing and fell twenty feet, to lie unconscious across the metals. At the same time the mother rose, discovered him and screamed. Jim plunged down the steep embank ment, seized the boy, snatched him from the metals and cowered with blm npiinst the cliff, while the train went sweeping by, so near that the draft almost blew him from where he had planted himself. Afterward the boy opened his eyes. The distracted mother kneeled be fore Jim with her bands clasped. "How can I thank you?" she cried. "He Is everything I have, he is everything In the world to me." "Be my friend," said Jim holding out his hand. That was Jim's chance. Friendship ripened. One day he asked her to be come his wife. Then the strange look of fear that he knew so well came Into her eyes. "No, you must not ask me that," she said. "I ss.ll never marry again." And, seeing,'' ' distress, she added: "I will f the truth. 1 am a runaway w Annot speak ill of my husband now. I could have bon4 with his infidelities, with his abuse) but I did not want my boy to grow up to be like him." It was weeks afterward that she told him all. Her husband was a wealthy man in Omaha. When she found that she could endure Ufe with him no longer she had run away, penniless, save for her railroad ticket He had one redeeming quality: he loved his son. On this account she knew that he would leave no stone unturned to find them. Jim went away, sorrowing. He knew now that she could never be his. For she shrank instinctively, he felt without asking, from the pub licity of divorce. Besides, to seek divorce would be to put her husband on her trail. She wanted to let the years roll between them, creating an ever widening barrier, until she felt that the past could never stretch out Its grisly hand upon her. So the months changed Into years. It was nearly three years since Leila's coming when something happened which Jim had always known to be Inevitable. It was morning,, and he was on the high pastures with his cattle when he saw her running toward him, with the boy, scrambling up the steep hill side. She reached him; her face was white with fear. "He has found me!" she gasped. "O, save me I Help me!" Up the road came the toot of an auto horn. Jim saw the car climb the grade like a heavy locomotive. The car stopped. A man leaped cut, a man In the prime of Ufe, ab surdly strong, absurdly healthy, with the bluster, and yet the sense of pow er, that sometimes accompanies the successful man. He leaped to the ground and ad vanced upon the woman, smiling. Jim barred his path. "My wife," he said. . "I know," answered Jim. ' "See here, young man. Yon don't perhaps understand. I nm here to claim my own, my legal own, my wife and child. She has nothing to fear from me. I have never laid my hands upon her. Stand out of my path." "You may have a legal right," said Jim, "but you ain't going to take her." The man laughed, whipped off his coat, and displayed a pair of muscular arms. "Her lover?" he sneered. "God witness, there has never been love between us," answered Jim. -The woman sprang between them. "Jim, he Is right," she said. "Now he has found me, I must go with him." Jim, amazed at the change of atti tude, stood absolutely mute. The man nodded. "Good for you," he said. "Leila, the past is past. You'll never hear of it from me. It's only for the boy's sake I want you back. And I guess you'll be happier than you were." Mechanically the girl entered the auto. They lifted the boy inside. The horn tooted. They were gone. And Jim stared foolishly after them. How strong the bonds between hus band and wife! She was gone out of his life. He had never dreamed of such a thing. But why had she gone with him, when he was ready to light for her? Jim did not understand women, their changes, their sense of duty coming in so oddly at critical mo ments. Like a man in a dream he watched the ear shoot down the hill. It was going very fast. The brake was damaged by the rough road, in fact, but Jim did not know that All he thought was that It was going very fast toward the cutting. And sud denly there came the roar of the train leaving the tunnel. The auto shot forward. It was now evidently beyond control. Jim began to run. But he was much too far away to be of any help. As he ran he saw the dreadful picture: the train rac ing along the narrow cutting, the auto caught and overturned; the desperate efforts of the occupants to free them selves. . . . Then he saw the man stagger to his feet, lift the boy In his arms and toss him to the farther bank. The train was almost upon him, a hissing snorting monster with flaming breath. But he caught up the woman In his arms and flung her clear of the metals; and the next Instant the train was upon him, bearing him down, grinding out his life beneath its wheels, tearing the decapitated body along the way and passing onward. Jim was sick with horror when b reached the scene, to find that the woman and the boy still lived. He kneeled before Leila, trying to shield her from the knowledge of what had happened. Then, picking her up, he carried her to the top of the embank ment. And the look on her face told him that she knew. So mixed was life, so mixed the qualities for good and evil In all. This man she hated had given his life for her. Some gate in Jim's brain went down at that moment, and he knew that life must be faced very soberly thenceforward even with her. The Tongue and Typhus. According to P. Kemllnger, quoted in the Journal of the American Medr leal Association, an infallible method of telling whether a patient has typhoid (or paratyphoid) or the much more serious typhus. Is to ask him to "put out your tongue." The typhoid or paratyphoid patient does It without effort, but If he has typhus he can not get it beyond his teeth. Not Really an Escape. We often think that If we had been placed In the same difficulties which we see overwhelm others, we couki have got out of them. Just so; wtt might have squeezed, or wriggled, ol crept out of a position from which an other who would not stoop could not have escaped. If escape takes the form of a temptation, they do not es cape. Mary Cholmondeley. Their Derivation. Mrs. Blnnderby (to her caller) "My sister has named her four children, Miriam, Ruth, David, and Susannah, all after Bibulous characters." Bos ton Transcript Warned. "These pills have a horrible taste," said the lady cus t o m e r . "Please take them back and give me something I can enjoy." "Very well, mad am," answered the obliging drug gist, "but pleas.' remember that the difference In the price of a box of pills and a box of bonbons Is considerable." Something in the Air. "Waiting for a car?" "No," replied Mr. Dubwaite, "I'm waiting for my wife. She's over there talking to a neighbor. 1 may be here for an hour or more." "Why so long?" "When they met the other woman drew her aside and began: 'My dear, have you heard?' " Most Worthy. "AVliy do you seek admittance here?" asked St. Peter. "On earth many blessed me and said I would surely go to heaven when I died," answered the shade. "How did you win such gratitude?" "I was always kind and considerate to the people who owned flivvers." "Enter," said the saint. "A place is prepared for you." No Fanatic. "Are you a devotee of the screen?" "Certainly." "Then you know all about Charley Chaplin and Mary Pick " "The dickens I do! The kind of screen that's popular with me keeps out flies and mosquitoes." Disheartened. House-Cleaning Time Comes Every Day Now By DR. SAMUEL Q. DIXON Commissioner of Health of Pennsylvania. It used to be the custom for house wives to cleanse their homes twice a f year, and now ad vanced sanitation requires that the home must be kept clean at all times. The benefit of cleanliness about the home reflects both upon the physical health and the morality of our people. The necessity of clean liness In our homes has become so manifest that It Is not worth while to dwell further up on It During the recent battle against In fantile paralysis we took two small towns which were badly infected with the disease and had the homes cleansed, Insect life destroyed, food kept clean and no garbage, ash plies or manure allowed to collect. The streets and alleys were made clean in each town and Infantile paralysis rap Idly disappeared. The cleaning up of the municipalities seemed to run paral lel with the subsiding of the disease. The fact that the disease spreads at times beyond the boundary lines of these dirty breeding places Is no argu ment against the theory of cleanliness U a preventative of Infantile paraly sis. At present it is well to look upon filth and Insect life as factors taking large part in permitting the so-called plague to invade our homes. Cleanliness regarding our children, homes, stables, yards and towns, as well as guarding our houses from all kinds of insect life, must be Insisted upon by each Individual citizen and by those In charge of the health and cleanliness of our towns, country, vll .nges and homes. Careless Speech. "I hear the Grabcolns have hired n tutor for young Reginald Grabcoin." "Yes, but whenever Mr. Grabcoin mentions the new member of the household Mrs. Grabcoin is greatly hu miliated." "Why so?" "Mr. Grabcoin has a way of pro nouncing 'tutor' as If the person re ferred to did exercises on the trom bone, cornet or some other kind of horn." uuhv Nnf Move Hiah Schools From City to the Country? It seems a strange thing, when one thinks of It; to send boys nnd girls of twelve or fourteen away from their ,,trir surroundings to the city to attend school, where people are more or less crowded together nnci mere are so many temptations to spend money, waste time and divert the mind from study, lino much more sensible it would be if high schools nnd grounds were In the country nnd the young loms or the cities were sent to get their edu cation where they could learn some thing of rural conditions and means of livelihood. Instead of that, country boys and girls often learn to prefer city trades and occupations, Just sup pose there was n well-equipped high school right out In the country with fields and woods surrounding It. There could be cottages where nonresidents might board and gardens, poultry plants, orchards and small model farms where students might pay their way In part at least, if they chose, and laaxn other lessons than those in I Ml Ui: 11 in the mass "Was there much money spent I election? "Don't ask me replied the disap pointed politician. "If there was any money being passed around I didn't see It Be lieve me or not, but I'li be lucky If I get a new silk hat and a Prince Al bert coat." jgtf An Exception. "Would you like to see the log cab In where our greatest citizen was born?" "Why, yes," answered the visitor. "Do you mean to tell me that this town has turned out a president of the United States?" "No. That's one reason why we are so proud of him. Uc writes books and is one of the few log-cabin celebrities produced In this country who has never entered politics." A Wobbling Gait "Didn't you know that If you struck this pedestrian he would be seriously Injured?" "Yes, sir," replied the chauffeur. "Then, why didn't you zigzag your car and miss him?" "He was zigzagging himself, your honor." An Effort to Define. "Father," said the small boy, "what Is a diplomat?" "A diplomat, my son, Is a man of so much courtesy and distinction that you wouldn't dare offend him by question ing the reliability of any statement he may deem It expedient to make." New Fire Escape. A cleverly made steel fire escnne which rolls up in a coll small ciioml-Ii to be carried in one's pocket, is the in vention of Pietro Vescovi. To prove tne excellence of his Invention, Mr. Vescovi used It several times in de scending from the upper stories of tall buildings of Stockton, Cal. The steel is tempered to stand the welaht of two adults. Here's Gown WiuKSrt Hook We have bad the dress which fastened with three, two, or even a single hook, but here la a frock which has no fasteners whatever. It la made of soft taf feta In a delicate lavender. The blouse Is cut like a middy and slips over the head. It Is smocked on each side of the front along the shoulders and across the back with soft green silk. White chiffon over green silk forms the collar, which is not as wide or deep as a sailor collar. The skirt is smocked to form a six-inch yoke and Is sewed onto the blouse with an elastic as a waistband. This elastic stretches to permit the frock to go on over the head. A large, soft green cord, with loose tassels, ties about the waist and hangs down at one side, and a narrow green silk cord, ending In tiny tassels, laces up the front of the blouse. Time expended In putting on the frock one minute. Your Corner Leatherized satins are the fashion for sports wear. Don't you like your little corner of the world? Have you sweetened It with sunshine and with sons? Have you tried to make It brighter as you tolled. Have you tried to right Its sorrow and Its wrong? Do you think It's Just the finest spot you know, And the noblest spot for effort that could be? Have you made It shed around a brighter glow? Have you tried to help the rest of us to see? Are you happy In your station and your time, And contented with the way that things go on; Have you made the little corner 'round you chime, Does It sparkle with the dewdrops in the dawn? Do the thousands that go marching on their way Stop to smile before the beauty that you've brought From the chaos and the turmoil of the fray By a little friendly purpose and sweet thought? Don't you like the little corner he has given For your gladness and your use ana your delight? Have you made It Just a little nearer heaven, Have you turned It from Its darkness and Its night? It's your corner, and It ought .to be so fine No other corner anywhere could slow With the beauty and the gladness and the shine That your special little corner's learned to know. Baltimore Sun. SUPPLY VARIETY -IN WINTER Any Kind of Succulent Feud, Seen as Clover, Corn, Feddor, Leave, Beets, Etc., Are Qocd. It Is only in the winter, when the food .. 'ry and the hens confined, that the diffiLuity affording a variety of green food is met. Variety In green food Is better than one kind. The term "green food" does not apply to grass or cabbages only, but Includes any kind of bulky, succulent food, such as clover, corn fodder, leaves, cabbage, beets, ensilage, potatoes, turnips, car rots, etc. The object is to give bulk In order to dilute (if It can be so ex pressed) the concentrated grains. These foods are the cheapest that can be used, and lessen the cost of produc tion of eggs, not only by promoting the health of the fowls but also because such foods assist in the digestion of the more costly kinds. In feeding green food, variety may be attained by giving cabbage one day, beets the next, potatoes the next, and so on. The object should be to lay in a supply of such articles and have them ready for use when winter comes. Grass is the cheapest of all foods for poultry In summer, and the farmer who feeds grain at that sea son is not only Increasing the cost of eggs, but taking the risk of causing In digestion. On a range the birds get seeds, insects and a variety of grasses, Including young weeds. Ducks and geese are grass feeders, and enn eas ily secure more than they require, while turkeys and guineas are the bent Insect destroyers. PROPER CARE OF FARM TEAM Grooming Combined With Feeding Will Go Far Toward Putting Horse In Good Condition. (By DR. H. HAVNER, Pennsylvania Ex periment Station.) The old saying that "grooming la half the feeding," as applied to the farm work horses, still holds true. The sweat glands of the horse eliminate from the body In a 24-hour period, an amount of waste material equal to that excreted from the digestive tract. Hummingbirds, Harmless, Should Be Preserved on Sentimental Grounds Mm fm affiV O W By F. E. L. BEAL Hummingbirds are popularly sup posed to live upon the nectar of flow ers, and unquestionably this substance forms an Important part of their food. Close observation has shown, however, that these little birds do not visit flow ers wholly for the purpose of gather ing honey, nor do they obtain nil their Ruby-Throated Hummingbird. food from flowers. The writer has ob served them hovering in front of a cobweb, picking off Insects nnd per haps spiders entangled In the net. They hnve also been observed to cap ture their food on the wing, like fly catchers. Stomach examination shows that a considerable pnrt of their food consists of Insects and spiders, with sometimes a little vegetuble matter. There would be n domestic science course, especially adapted to country girls. Music, lectures, gnmcs and worth while motion pictures would not be forgotten. But no rows of stores, beg ging for bard-earned money; no mov ies, that are simply dime novels put on screens, no slums to sadden the heart and stutter disease. Only one species of hummingbird Inhabits the eastern part of the United States. This is the ruby-throat which is more or less common almost everywhere in that region. The wri ter has seen 100 of these tiny crea tures hovering about the flowers of buckeye tree, and this number was maintained all day and for many days, though the individuals were going and coming all the time. In order to obtnin definite knowl edge as to the food of hummingbirds in general, and the ruby-throat in par ticular, 59 stomachs of this species were examined. Although the hum mingbirds are the smallest of the avian race, their stomachs are much smaller In proportion to their bodies? than those of other birds, while their livers are much larger. This would Indicate these birds live to a consid erable extent upon concentrated sweets, as stated above, and that the Insects, spiders, etc., found in the stomachs do not represent by any means all their food. The quantities of food found in these tiny stomachs are so minute and the Insects com prising them are so small that Identi fication Is very difficult nnd uncer tain. The food of the hummingbird fam ily, it appears, possesses but little economic Interest, and that little ! mostly In the wrong direction. The ants eaten are probably largely parasitic species and so to be reck oned as useful, while the gnats and spiders may be considered as neutral, although It Is possible that some of the former may be of the gallgnat family nnd so be harmful. The bugs eaten are probably mostly of the in jurious species. On the other hand, hummingbirds do no harm to any prod uct of husbandry and, as they are beautiful and Interesting creatures, their preservation may well be urged on purely sentlmentul grounds. Odd Names for Pickaninnies. A colored servant In Aiken, S. C, who had Just heard of the birth of her third granddaughter, nnd who was in a quandary as to what to name tho child, heard her mistress rending an account of the Titanic disaster and rather fancied the Carpathla. So In the old town of Aiken there's a little pickaninny running around by the name of Carputlila Jackson. The oth er two grandchildren are Exlma Jack son and Mutual Life Insurance Jackson. Fault-Fi- He who si" nothing else sclous of tl will be at fi suits sees "ully con Uutt be The Missing Coat-Tails Schoolboys usuully stand by one an other and refuse to betray a compan ion who is In trouble. A well-known instance of this occurred while Doc tor Vuughun wus headmaster of Har row. Returning one night from a din ner party the master caught sight of a pupil who was taking a walk when, according to tho rules, he ought to have been In bed. The moment the boy saw Lis taaster he fled as If for his life. Doctor Vaughan ran also in hot pursuit, and Just managed to seize his pupil's coat-tails. After a lively tussle the boy escaped, leaving one tail in the master's hands. It was a dark night, and the master bad not recognized the pupil, of which he had not seen much more than the back. He made sure, however, that be would find out the culprit In tho morning by means of the missing coat-tall Bat when Doctor Vnughan entered the school he saw that every boy of the sixth form. had only one tall to his coat! Thus the offender went HARMFUL CHINCH BUG Evident That Pest Is Threatening Next Year's Crop. One Plan of Eradication Is to Burn Over Fields, Woods and Other Fa vorable Winter Quarters Heat Will KIM Many. (By L. HASEMAN, Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station.) Judging from the numerous com plaints being received by the Missouri agricultural experiment station, it seems evident that the chinch bug Is threatening next year's crops. Over the state generally the chinch bug's day was brought to a close by the heavy rains of 1915, but as usual, there were enough "for seed" this last spring, and with the unusually dry summer Just passed these Increased nbundantly. They seem to be most abundant in the central part of the state. Through out most of the corn and wheat belts of the state there are probably enough bugs to cause severe outbreaks next year, If weather conditions should be especially favorable for them. A dry fall, mild winter, with but little snow and rain, followed by a dry spring and summer are the conditions which will fnvor the pest. The chinch bug Is abundant now, due to the favor able summer Just passed, but with plenty of rainfall and snow during the full, winter, nnd spring, the chances will be decidedly against outbreaks next summer. Since It Is not possible to know what the fall, winter, and spring may have In store In the way of favorable or unfavorable weather, every farmer should do everything possible to re duce the chance of chinch-bug In juries next summer by getting rid of favorable winter quarters. They winter in dry, protected places, such as mead ows, pastures, aiulwaste lands, In woods, neglected fence rows, and sim ilar places. Very few winter In corn fields or In wheat fields. After killing frosts have come, select a dry day when there Is not too much wind and burn over fields, woods, and other fa vorable winter quarters. The heat will kill many of the bugs and expose the rest to the winter and to natural enemies. This pest can be fought suc cessfully at only two times during the year, namely: while clustered In win ter quarters, and while migrating from wheat to corn In the summer. Now Is the time to get ready to fight the pest while in winter quarters and prevent it from proving destructive next year. A recurrence of this pest like the out breaks of 1012, 1018, and 1914, which dnmaged Missouri crops at least $5, 000,000, should be prevented If possible. Splendid Farm Team. If those glands become clogged by sweat particles and dirt a very Im portant waste channel Is closed. In addition to keeping tho sweat glnnds open and the body In good working order, grooming Improves the quality of the hair and the general condition of the coat. Feeding alone will not put a team In proper shtipe, but proper grooming combined with feeding will go far toward It. CORN VALUABLE IN THE SILO Where Used for Feeding Silo Is Most Economical Place to Store the Entire Plant An acre of corn ensiled with cars and stalks will produce as much, If not more, milk or beef thnn the same acre of corn with the stalks ensiled nnd the ears fed as ground corn. The extra expense nnd labor of husking nnd storing the ear corn Is very largely wasted unless the desire Is to market the ear corn. If there Is sufllclent feed on the farm and the eur corn will cure out properly when snapped off In the man ner described, then It might, he profit able to follow this practice; but If the corn is not to be sold as ear corn and Is to be used for feeding on the farm, then the silo Is the most economical place In which to store the entire corn plant. TRYING OUT SHEEP BUSINESS Nothing In Inferior Business to En courage Farmer In Falling in Love With Industry. The: u is no advantage In trying on! the sheep business by buying the cheapest ami poorest quality of sheep to learn On. This class of sheep has nothing In Its fitvor anil tba owner lias nothing io encourage blm in fulling in love with the Industry; In fact, In could not embark 111 any live stock III dustry tluit would be more trying on his patience, lend more discourage' incuts ami have less enthusiasm In It than to become the owner of n lot of poor-quality sheep. MOST IMPLEMENTS RUST OUT HOLDING WOOD IN SAWBUCK Illustration Shows Device for Prevent ing Stick From Rolling While Being Sawed. Anyone who has used a sawbuck knows how Inconvenient it Is to have a stick roll or lift up as the saw blade Is pulled back for the next cut. With the supplementary device, shown In the sketch, from Popular Mechanics, which can lie easily attached to the Stirrup Holds Wood. sawbuck, these troubles will be elim inated. It consists of two cross pieces hinged to the back uprights of the sawbuck and u foot-pressure stir rup fastened to their front ends as shown. t Spikes are driven through the crosspieces so tbut their protruding ends will gouge Into the stick of wood being sawed. The stirrup is easily thrown buck for laying u piece of wood In the crotch. BEWARE OF THE CROWN-GALL Considerable Danger In Using Rasp berries as Fillers Among Fruit Trees In Orchard. There has come to be considerable danger In using raspberries us fillers among fruit trees. The crown-gall disease now fre quently attack! the different varieties of raspberries and will be coniinuni cated from raspberries to the fruit trees growing In their vicinity. It Is therefore now considered the safer plan to use the blackberries for fillers among fruit trees rather than raspberries. Proper Housing Will Offset Injury to Large Extent Coating of Oil Is Recommended. Most farm implements rust out be fore lliey wear out 1'roper bousing will offset rust and corrosion to a large extent, but In damp weather the best melhod of preventing rust Is to coat all unpointed parts of the machinery with a heavy oil, thick enough so It will not run off. This coating keeps air and moisture away and prevents rust from starting. Swamps May Be Redeemed. Swamps on the furm are like durk spots on the human character. They are neglected nnd misunderstood and may be redeemed to usefulness and beauty by proper cultivation. Inbreeding Weakens Vitality. While inbreeding is tho surest and quickest means to Hi type, the sys tem weakens vitality unless very care fully followed. GREAT VALUE OF HONEY BEES Wisconsin Horticulturists Recognize Worth of Insects as Pollcnir ing Agents. Wisconsin horticulturists producing annually thousands of dollars worth of fruit Ohd berries recognize the value of bees ns pollenllsing agents and either keep bees In, or - near ibelr orchard, regardless of whether or not any honey Is produced. Wiscon sin Bulletin 'JM. CAREFUL HANDLING OF FRUIT Necessity for Avoiding Bruising and Mechanical Injuries More Urgent Than Is Realized. Small bruises ami breaks Jn tho skin of fruits are large onoir'li to af ford entrance to the sports fungi, and the necessity for the uti, .1 care In all operations connected with the handling of the fruit, to uvold bruis ing und mechanical injuries, Is more argent than most growers realize.