of the Times kv-SsSSffVf Tnray lies Peter's crown. the head that wears Some one might surest to General Corbin th.-.t an otaeer's marriage Is a private affair. The Empress of Japan smokes a sil ver pipe. Well, even that Isn't as bad as cigarettes. The pumpkin pie that mother used to make were usually called punkln pies, 'were they not? The conviction grows that If Teary falls John D. Rockefeller Is the only man who can take the North Pole Into camp. King reter had a good deal of tinsel at his coronation, but he has nothing on his clothes hooks that compares with Dowie's new robe of ofiice. All proposals of marriage on the ten year plan should be accompanied by tables of rates showing, among other things, the cash surrender value from year to year. . While the statistician Is striking all arts of averages, the practical house wife Is being convinced that figures on domestic economy are susceptible of prevarication. The Czar has appointed his uncle In 'apector general of artillery, but the old man will not have much to inspect un til some of the artillery can be taken back from the Japs. It is probably just a coincidence that one scientist predicts that we will all be insane Just a few years after the date fixed by another scientist for the disappearance of the blondes. Scientists have declared that if a man be put in a dark room with a blue light it Is possible to extract his teeth plalnlessly. Shut a man with the tooth ache in a dark room and the air will become blue enough without artificial aid. A statistical expert says more money la spent in this country for candy than for hats, shoes and gloveg combined. This, however, is not as startling aa the fact that more money is spent for whisky and beer than for all of them put together. Some actresses have advertised that tbey take buttermilk baths (and it ia Letter to take buttermilk baths than none at all), but it remained for Prof. Elie Metchnikoff of the Pasteur Insti tute of London to discover the efficacy of sour milk as a life-preserving pota tion. It is feared that many persons will be so unappreclative of the scien tific achievement of Prof. Metchnikoff that they would rather take on age than take in sour milk. HoweTer, if It came to the last pinch, where a man must decide between the cold grave and a glass of sour milk, some of the more timid would doubtless take the milk. Twoimportant announcements made recently will no doubt cheer the heart of dilapidated humanity. A Christian Scientist announces that he is able to pray a new suit of hair onto a bald head and a Scotch dentist is prepared to graft new teeth on an old jawbone. The secret of eternal youth, It appears, is not to be sought In an elixir which Is to transform the human body at a jump, but in skillful repair work which makes good the wornout parts after the method or the bicycle or automobile mender. Treating th human body as a piece of machinery Is a cold-blooded proceeding that the average man is likely to resent, but we may be coming to it With the story that a prominent candidate for national ofiice prefers a bumble although meritorious kind of poetry, attention is again drawn to the legend that Lincoln's taste for poetry was not fine. Lincoln was fond of the didactic verses, "Why should the spir it of mortal be proud?" but he also liked the greater poetry of Shak speare. in one 01 ms letters is an Impromptu criticism of "Macbeth" not unworthy of a cultivated man with more time for books and art than Lin coin had. The man who wrote that masterpiece of American prose, the Gettysburg address, could not have been insensitive to good poetry, and bis own style shows that he was alive to the literary beauties of the Bible. The wonderful discoveries in chem Istry make it almost certain that the miner of the future will be engaged in a search for rare elements, and perhaps for some that are still unknown or not fully appreciated, writes John A, Church, in the Mining Magazine. The power of electricity has given us the command of elements which could not be separated except In minute specks twenty-five years ago, and it Is entirely possible that new alloys with valuable qualities will extend the field of his usefulness. The miner in fact has one eye applied to a telescope, looking for new fields of effort, and the other glued to a microscope, searching for traces of metal, that he may recover from the lags and gases of his waste products, His work la bound closely with the de velopment of transportation, and In deed with every other industry, so that men who boast a conservatism that re jects investments in mining look with dismay while their bonds fall in value Topics a strike among dl- The hardest task of the missionary among tropical savages U to teach tropical MvtM U to teach dignity of labor. Where Illy want I supplied freely i, the chief motive to work. ! them the every bodily by nature, the -earning of one's daily bread. Is absent. Hut the lesson .Is beau ; learned. This was shown some months ago In Toro a central African couu- try lying to the west of Uganda at the j foot of the snow-clad range anciently kuown as the Mountains of the Moon. The king's birthday was celebrated by ku exhibition of native work. There were two hundred entries, a smaller number than the previous year, but the standard was much higher and the variety greater. The queen, who was herself a prize-winner, presented the prizes, and the king showed much In terest Yet ten years ago, when the first native Baganda missionaries went to this people, they were sunk In the lowest depths of savagery. Iu some respects, this exhibition In the heart of the dark coutlnent was more Inter esting and remarkable than that In St. iouis. The establishment of a through line of stermers between St. Ioui and New Orleans is only one of many tokeusof a revival of waterway transportation In this country, and serves to call atteu tion to the many ship canal projects under consideration at tho preseni time. Twenty years ago river ami canal navigation were pronounced dead. It was said that the steamboat had seen its day; that the canal boat had gone to join the stage coach, and that the railroad had superseded all other methods and means of transpor tation and traffic. To-day the govern ment of the United States Is engaged in the construction of an lnteroceanlc canal. The Erie Canal is to be deep ened and widened by the State of New York at an expense of one hundred nilllliu dollars. Canada is talking about connecting the upper lakes with the ocean by locking and canaling the Ot tawa River, while our own Congress is Investigating the feasibility of con structing a deep water canal between the great lakes and the Mississippi River. It would appear, therefore, that water transportation, in this country at least, la still in Its infancy. It la claim ed by the advocates of inter-waterway enterprises and they present strong arguments that canals are well worth their cost In protecting the public against extortionate freight rates. At any rate the country is likely to wit ness in the near future a remarkable renaissance of canal building and canal traffic. It would have been better If George Meredith's short-term marriage propo sition bad been received with that si lence which a scheme so repugnant to all that Is finest best and holiest in humanity merits. For no matter what may be Mr. Meredith's place in the world of letters, he has not shown him self competent to deal with problems affecting the most sacred and most mo mentous relation that can be entered Into by a man and a woman. We are not disposed to take the En glish writer seriously. There Is a sus picion that his belief that the plan sug gested would "cause a devil of an up roar," lets us into the real motive actu ating him In giving his unlovely scheme to the public. A little free and exceedingly vulgar advertising may please him better than the solving of complex social problems. We do not propose to enter into any argument with Mr. Meredith. Judge Kersten, of Chicago, has said about all that needs saying in the significant sentence: George Meredith must be insane; the few who would entertain his proposi tlon would be better satisfied with one- year marriages or a shorter period." For the rest we are content to leave Mr. Meredith and his repulsive remedy for unhappy marriages to the thou sands of husbands and wives who are traveling through life hand in hand, sharing together cheerfully the bur dens and the joys of home making; to the fathers and mothers who are rearing as best they know how our fu ture citizens;, to the boys and the girls growing up with that ?ublime love for parents which strengthens and In creases In tenderness as the tottering steps of father and mother draw near to the end of their earthly Journey. For after all is said about this matter we face this question: What of the boy and the girl? Would a five or ten year marriage satisfy the love of the child for father and mother? Would It compass the demands of .that divine mother love, than which there is noth ing finer? Would it meet the longing of every human heart for a home? To these heart-touching and all-important questions there comes a mighty NO echoed from Eden and reaching the last man and woman on earth who shall plight their troth and say "Till death do us part." A Man's Excursion Mrs. C, the wife of an ardent lover of "The Wilds and the Wilderness," accompanied her husband on one of his "out-of-the-way trips," and this is what she wrote home of "a man's pleasure excursion":- "First of all, I made up all sorts of costumes to keep us from being eaten alive by green flies, mosquitoes and fleas; then we got up in the middle of the night and took a train, and went just as far as it would go; then we climbed into a rickety old wagon and rode to the limit; then we got into a boat, and followed the water's course to Us finish; And then we walked till we dropped down dead and Ike is happy I" You must finally acknowledge that you eat too much, and that you eat tog fast because there Is tant mine. wt VW V" iV-" L ! "fVl? t-H jrv V s0 bird cau tly backward and rlso or ,uaiUtalu Its elevatlou at the same tiuu, . , .... . ... f c - - - - I " ,have discovered that the water tank lu private houses are favorite bretvllug ! places for mosqultles atd they have learned as well that goldfish are effect' Ive destroyers of the mosquito larvae. As few as five or stx goldfish are suf ficient to keep au ordinary house tank free. No animal has more than five toes, digits, or claws to each foot or limb. The horse Is one-toed; the ox Is two toed; the rhinoceros, thrcetoed; the hippopotamus, four-toed; and the ele phant, live-toed. Carnlverous animals never have Uss than four toes on each foot. The hyeua alone has four on each foot. The dog ha i four on each hind foot No saint has a more interesting flow er dedicated to him lu the tloral cal endar than Si. Matthew. Thin is the passion flower. It Is thought to have emblems of the crucifixion, and to these It owes the name given to It by Its Spanish discoverers In America. The Imaginary resemblance- of the corona to the crown of thorns is tho basis of the fancy. In addition, to that there are the five anthers for the five wounds and the three styles for the nails, while the hammer, the lance and the scourge are also traceable. "When I was In Montana last year," writes John Burroughs, "I heard of a weed called the loco weed that made horses crazy if they ate it In a maga zine article published since 1 wondered If the buffalo had learned to avoid this weed. A Western correspondent now assures me, on what appears to he good authority, that buffalo do eschew this plant A ranchman In the pan handle of Texas has crossed buffalo with polled Angus the 'black cattle' and he has found that an ar.lmal with one-sixteenth buffalo blood will not touch the loco weed. If this Is a fact it is a very interesting one. It shows how discriminating wild creatures be come in the course of ages and how this wisdom becomes instinctive. LAKE LEVEL AT HIGH POINT. Big VeMela Able Thta Year to Carry Larger Cargoes Than IsnsL The largest vessels of the great lakes have been able this year to carry car goes from 7 to 10 per cent larger than at any time for the last ten years, be cause the water In the lakes has been onslderably above the mean level. The profits resulting therefrom have ac cordlngly been greater. It has been variously estimated that the water level is between one and two feet higher than usual UkIs year. liar bors and rivers, therefore, have been able to accommodate vessels of larger draft This, of course, permitted the owners to load their boats more heav ily and since the cost of trips was only slightly Increased with a greater ton nage the profits have been coinpara tiveiy larger for each trip. In accounting for the unusual amount of water In the lakes this year. Major Dan C. Kingman, United States engineer for this district, said: "The frequent and heavy rainfalls this season In the district drained by the great lakes partly account for the high water level, but the comparative ly small amount of evaporation, be cause of the continued low tempera ture, has had a great deal to do with It too. I do not know the exact fig ures, but the water Is considerably higher than the mean level." One of the boats of the Pittsburg Steamship Company last year carried 7,300 tons of ore on one of her trips and this year the same boat has car rled 7,800 tons. The difference of 500 tons means a neat profit, and when It Is considered that this company owns and operates about 150 boats, It may be seen that the rising of the lake level has been a big thing for that company. Of course It will be remembered that this season's shipping has been com paratlvely light, but It would seem that it must have been comparatively more profitable. The change in the lake level has wrought havoc among the game birds which make their nests along the shores of the lake In this vicinity. The nests have been overwhelmed by the high water arid the young birds have been drowned. Cleveland Leader. A Tight Fit. President Cassatt, of the Pennsyl vania Railroad, while taking a quiet inspection trip over the road on one occasion, saw the conductor having an altercation with a flashily dressed young man. The conductor was attempting to place a check In the young man's hat, which the latter resented. Consider lng the matter too trivial for a scene, the conductor ended the controversy by placing the despised piece of paper on the hat-rack. "What was the matter with that man?" asked Cassatt of the conduct or. "Ills head was so swelled," explain ed the conductor, "that I couldn't get a ticket under his hatband." "Appropriate. "Well, my friend Jones has been elected," 'said the office seeker. "I want to send him some flowers. What would you suggest?" "Forget-me-nots ' would be just the thing for you," replied the wise friend. Philadelphia Ledger. NIEDLE AND SPOOL OF TMREAtV The IViaUrpnit Which Vrank Parmtrs HulU a 1'orlune, When Frai.k Parmelee, founder of a Chicago transportation Hue and a man of much wealth, died In Chicago the other day there was found lu the pocket of the coat which he had last worn thread and n needle. He had car r I e d t h e iu so throughout h 1 s long and success ful career and they were burled with hltn. To them he l HANK rARMKLKK. Olieil Kin muim ui. success and he never wearied of tell ing the story of his "needle and Jhread capital." Seventy-six years ago, when Parme lee was 12 years old and living with Ms parents at Byron, N. Y he decided to leave home. The family was poor and the boy considered himself old enough to make his own livelihood. Ills parents granted their consent re luctantly, and the son arranged for a "Job" In a stage coach office at Erie. Pa. He was not concerned as to the manner In which he was to reach that point because his future employers were willing to transport h'.in most of the way and he could walk If he had lu- Ul ' . a . mk.A ,1... - i.u .1 . .iVA iii. tit.ttn. er oaue mm gouu-uj in un inuniu. "Franklin, I wish your father was able to give you a little money to start on, but you know he hasn't got It. Now then, Franklin, your mother, who thinks a good deal more of you than you ever Imagined, Is going to give you a bit of advice and something else 1th It and she wants you to treasure both of them. "Above all things I want you to take great deal of pride In yourself and just make up your mind that you are going to be successful. And you must always keep neat and clean and keep your clothes In good repair and don't let the buttons come off or else you won't respect yourself. Now then, 'm going to give you a reminder. The mother held out ber hand and young Parmelee reached for the "re minder." It was a spool of black thread with a needle stuck through it crosswise. The boy kissed his mother and put the thread and needle In bis carpet bag. Then be started out for Erie. lie afterward went to work on the lakes, saved money, started a street car line In Chicago and later engaged in the express business. MOTOR FARMING. Latest Phase of Bctentlflc Agriculture in England. The many uses to which the motor has been put are illustrated lu the ac companying photograph, which shows the Ivel agricultural motor, an English invention, at work. This machine is capable of hauling any kind of two' or three furrow plow, or. In fact, any agricultural implement. It can also be used for driving all kinds of machinery usually driven by steam or gas en glnes. and when not at work In the field It can be doing cartage work. In a plowing experiment the Ivel motor, hauling a three furrow plow, THE IVEL AGRICULTURAL MOTOR. plowed six acres one rood nine poles of land of very hard surface to an average depth of seven Inches In eight hours fifty-four minutes, and the cost worked out at a rate of 5 shillings per acre, which Included everything. Comparing these figures with the cost of doing the same work In the or dinary old-fashioned way, it will be realized that by using the Ivel motor you can get the work done very much cheaper and quicker. Machines have already been export ed to Portugal, Egypt and South Af rica, as in these countries the superi ority of mechanical power over horses and cattle Is appreciated. Japs In American Army. It may not be generally known that the United States army of the future will include a command of Japanese soldiers, but ,thls Is a fact. They will not come from the armies which are fighting in the far east but will bu enrolled from our Japanese citizens in the Sandwich Islands. It is need less to say that a very large portion of the population of the islands, and especially of Honolulu, Is composed of this nation. They are found among the bankers, merchants and profes slonal men and are included among the wealthiest residents of the city, One of the principal schools of Hono lulu Is attended exclusively by Japa nese children and here has been eu rolled a command of cadets which Is to be mustered into the United States militia as soon as Its members ore old enough. It is drilled by a former Japanese army officer and although organized but a few years ago this battalion has already attained high standard of efficiency. It Is frequent ly seen on parade In Honolulu and attracts much attention. It Is always encouraging to visit at a home where they call a chicken "fry." i Jr. ? 1. Y.T 3" -.f , ' 3 u v fir The RaUlnnce I'luin. Aa a rule, seedling plums have not amounted to much, but the teta with tho Radiance, extending over a num ber of years, neein to Indicate thnt this nort Is an exception to tho rule. While the variety originated lu the South (North Carolina) It has been tested much farther north and pronounced to be all that Is claimed for It. It Is ex tremely early, yet escaping the late ring frosts lu tho North. In color It Is light red and yellow, of good qual ity and a tine shipper. The writer has fruited the Radiance ut a slnglo season, but It is so prom- ing that trees will be set in consid erable number as soon as obtainable. We believe It will not be offered by THI RADIANCC PLUM. nurserymen until the spring of 11K). and then the trees will be high In price. As It bears early It will pay plum growers everywhere to give the variety a trial. Indianapolis News. Preserving Fence Posts. The well-known methods of preserv ing fence posts and wood, which are partly embedded In the earth, are only effective when both the charring and tarring are applied. Should the posts only be charred, the charcoal forma tlon on the surface would act as an ab sorber of the moisture, and, If any thing, only hasten the decay. By ap plying a coating of tar, without pre vlous charring, the tar would only form a casing about the wood, and would not penetrate to the depth which tho absorbing properties of the charcoaled surface would Insure. Wood that Is exposed to the action of water or let Into the ground, should first be charred, and then, before It hus entire cooled, be treated with tar till the wood Is thoroughly Impregnated. The ncotlc acid and oils contained In the tar are evaporated by the heat nnd only the resin Is left behind. This pen etrates the pores of the wood and forms an air-tight and waterproof en velope. It Is Important to Impregnate the wood a little above the line of ex posure. Stubble and Yited Breaker. With a device like the illustration good work can be done by running over stubble fields when weeds nnd stubble are covered with sleet, as they 2L GOOD STUBBLE AND WEED BHEAKKR. will break off and fall as nicely us If cut by a mowc-. Take two pieces of lumber about 2 laches thick and 0 Inches wide and bolt or nail together with short stays. It can be made of any length desired. I made mine 20 feet long and used a pair of horses to it, going over fields while the Ice was still on the weeds. C. E. Nichols. Death-Dealing Wire Fences Since the use of wire fences has be come so extensive the number of cat tie killed each year by lightning has greatly increased. Farmers' Insurance companies have Investigated the mat ter, and now come forward with a warning to policy holders. Nearly all of the cattle killed by lightning have met their death In open fields, where, In many Instances, there was not even a tree to attract the electric fluid. As many dead cattle were found near wire fences, this led to the discovery that the lightning was carried along the wires composing the fences, Dur ing a severe storm cattle are liable to run until stopped by a fence. Here they stand huddled together ready for the bolt. A remedy Is suggested in running a ground wire every ten rods several feet Into the earth. Feeding Wheat to Stock. When wheat sells at low prices con slderable of it is fed on the farm, but when it approaches the dollar-a-bushel mark it is considered an expensive feed. In many cases tills Is a mistake, for wheat will be found very useful In making a variety in the ration. In deed, it is, with us, essential in the ration fed to laying hens, and we have fed It. profitably and paid a dol lar a bushel for it Then, too, we con ildrr It profitable at a ration for young i. J T rr-Ni,-. i j pigs mixed with ruual psrts of ground corn nud l.lin milk, the wncai aiso helnit ground. This ration gives them a start that nothing else will. KhtuiimrUm tn lings. It Is hard to sajr what causes rheu matism among hogs, although It tuny bo generally found that they have oc cupied damp quarters at some ttiu during their growing period, iledl cine may or may not do them good, but It Is safet not to fool with drugs. The better plan Is to let them have all the charcoal and wood aihes they will cot, supply them with clean, dry bed ding, and tempt them to exercise by turning them out on a good range where the grass is thick and fresh. All corn should taken from them during the sumiupr and the feeding of grain should be confined to mid dlings or bran, with im re or less clean slop lu which vegetables are liberally placed. Clean waier for drinking may be supplied, but no Inducement offer ed the animals to root or to wallow. Swine suffering from rheumatism should be kept In a a lot by them selves and be given special car. Hush and Lima Itoans. Bush beans are hardier than com monly supposed and may be sown ear lier than corn and other tender vege tables. Tbey will endure a degree of cold that will Injure corn and prove fatal to squash vines. Sow and drill 84 feet and cover about two Inches deep. Plants of the bush variety should grow about six Inches apart. The ground should be kept soft ami mellow and free from weeds. Snap beans will be ready for table uc 11 bout two months from sowing. A quart of beans will sow K) feet of drill. Lima beans are let printed In hills, as poles are needed. It Is Im portant to plant the need rye down, else many of the seed will fall to com up. The limns are more tender than the bush varieties and cannot be safely planted so early. Products of the Corn Plant. Among the products of the corn plant are oils, paper, pith (that la nseet In battleships to stop shot holes below tho water line), whisky, three kinds of sugar, and two each of syrup and molasses; many food elements, differ ent kinds of cellulose, vlcose, pyroxy lene and amyloid; many products use ful In the arts celluloid, collodion, sizing, varnishes, films, filaments for Incandescent lights, artificial silk, gun cotton, smokeless powder and lino charcoal; many varieties of starch and of glucose; several kinds of gum, gmpit sugar, corn rubber (used for buffers on railway cars), corn oil cake and meal, malt, beer, wines, alcohol and fusel oil, even shuck innts and shuck mat tresses. Notes About the Farm. A good rotation for a stock farm Is corn, oats and grass. Spread manure as It Is hauled out. save labor and secure the best results. The average farmer should buy as little oud se.l as little feed as pos sible. The greatest profit In feeding sheep for mutton Is gained while the animals are young. Bran Is rich In bone, and serves an other good purpose In keeping the bowels open. Animals cannot thrive their best on dry food clone, no matter how rich and plentiful. Brittle and rotten hoofs are caused by horses standing In soft ammonia breathing manure. The variety of sheep Is not of o murk consequence tin Is tho Item of securing a good growth of wool. Above the food of productions thnt goes to milk, a cow demands a food of , support in proportion to her size. A rapid taking on of fat Is not al ways an Indication of health and thrift; quite often the contrary, lu fact The first and most Important Item In the dairy Is to select the cow for the special purpose for which she is to be used. The hog Is only a machlno for turn ing grains into meat, nnd the greater capacity It has for this the greater will be the profit Poultry Pickings. Whole coin Is the best feed at night. Kerosene the roost all over every week. Hot tar is a good remedy for red mites. Poultry for the plum trees and swine for tho apple orchard. Make tho hens scratch for a living by scattering their grutn among litter. Do not undertake to run things econ omically by Btuning tho young poultry. When geese have plenty of room they do best when allowed to forage and secure their own food. One advantage in the use of dry dirt for the dust boxes is that it also prevents lice. If the hens nre given plenty of dry dirt they will dust frequently and re move lice from their bodies. Eggs cannot be 'secured waen they are highest unless the poultry be made comfortable and fed properly. In building the poultry house, have it so constructed that the fowls may have the benefit of all of the sunlight possible.