INTENSIVE HORTICULTURE. On a farm of nine acres in eastern New York, E. P. Powell has been try we intensive horticulture with the fol swing result ¥ach year marked CRI not only in of sountry life, but on ward financial old trees; to make sweel peas; { work some stage of D1 my conception To nouts Bi succes NO ft new tre ideas th peas tad } 8¢€ and were novel Of the twelve sorts of orc garden fruit plants, to out took time-—years of ime hard ar fence has taught will tot rost will This OM EE whic? thre a sing) $100: mi chickens, $200 of $1.2 sold, come Qn above contributi emies to ho! 3 hat ward ani troving pear bili il} tree alate in t tralize the which the These test knowledge cay and SPN CE man disease cause of in the trees, as in human species of bacteria has beet und to be the cause, and to reach it they imjecting into the eirculation the of fluid that will arrest the of these bacteria Indianapolis proces d tdeca relating to fruit ailment, instances are kind ravages News PLANT FARM The ampelopsis vettchil, or Japan ivy, known in this country as the Bos. ton ivy, 18 one of the best climbing or creeping vines we have for the It belongs to the same family A CLIMBING FOR is not so gross growing in habit form. The follage is not unlike that form and Is much ligher in color, sven when mature, throwing out, at frequent intervals, tens itself to any rough object—wood, stone or brick—and clings tenacious ly. the foot of a dead tree from which the branches have been removed, and #8 equally beautiful grown over the wides of a brick or stone bullding or a * practically hard, the fall the fi autumn plants rapidly, heauty tone wall fit is een, In the but not liage ¥ everg! takes on all hn of the maple leaf are moderate in and in a few varied The Zrow much Indianapolis price, add grounds VeArs to the farm News, CLAPPINGS of providing winter THE youl poultry in SAVE An easy metl green lawn clipping of save the 1 clover tiv rol had nixtiure ove in the h 1 a noon y afiah does the has neve; than twice GOOD SOILIN{ stash wroduets + CROP "is one of the most tooth: of garden when solling crop luxury is as sure to grow in popular among farmers Farming corn, and peas mixed and sown by an ordinary grain at the usual depth. With any gort of a chance this combination may large enough to feed in 60 days, and sown now will come when early feed Is getting made after this t table to stock it is favor names Oats he grown to 70 handy short. MARKETING Dressed poultry ed for transportation cold. It should then straw, breast down, keeping wings and legs close to the body. See that there is no discoloration of the skin, POULTRY ould not be pack- until entirely be laid in clean VALUE OF TOADS. Professor Hodge, of Clark Univer sity, has estimated the value of toaas | to the farmer at $18 apiece because they destroy cutworms. There ig a | regular market for toads In England, however, at 20 cents place. Five hundr od persons saved from drowning in forty-eight years was the ‘ger, a Danish boatman, who has just died at Harboe, Jutland, aged eighty. three. sn — - The leech has three jaws, each fit ted with eighty to ninety teeth. Man's Rights. By Sarah F. Waters, ess and straining afl too tim ie sig! of, i Woman's Rig being already numerous to mention—tho: seem ad not ce now and that i he only acquit scathing papel picke 9 o Generalizing. Hag The Vics o By Ruiter pC A Rhapsody: The Cotton Blossom John Ia ge oatwood Moore By @ > - The Baby Toilers. Their Daily Bread- Will it Cense 7 Toddling Infants Forced to Earn When By John Spargo more precious make buttor If they a 1 il n nou! BOW i baby fingers precious «till intelligent) hey play an increas usehold Yncre working, WOrk as a sensa by the testimony of artificial pull out flower oo lew stamens of from four to 8iL yea of age can A child of cight ca» make artificial and can make pap just as well and from eight to twelve 1 old can finish boys’ pants as mother in our greae and richest city babies dergartens been compelled to work in saribed and others of a like nature VOR O almost almost as quick! knee as who should the have such cccupat iona have Clear Enough to Her. Andrew Carnegie once delivered a little homily to the pupils of a public school in Washington, wherein he en deavored to demonstrate that the judgment of men is apt to be warped by sentiment and feeling. “Ay, It is handsome,” sald she, sad: Scotland,” asserted Mr. Carne: | jy whut | prefer the glass jist as “the people abominated hymns {Gog made it!"—Harper's Weekly. simply because ihe dpiscopalians SL... used them. The Presbyterians sang Beaumont and Fletcher were the only the Psalms of David, The Epis | go 15 collaborate piays In English copalians used stained glass in thelr literature. church windows, and for that reason the Scotch looked upon stained glass gs something of unholy origin” | story of a Presbyterian minister who i had been bold enough to Introduce this hated innovation. He was show. ing it in triumph to one of hig par ishioners, and asked her how she | liked it. “wy in gle, Germany has 2630617 persons em: ployed in its pustal service—a larger INTERESTING To! changing day “She sald of anythir waa REUD od her remind slOCK whether more of a hen's egg or a majorit of them are and nah of when they are of rtols dome are add Others ink coral, shell or amber, with little gold are if big pleces and even wele they are hatpin had she had Woman's Home Companion i bigger than any ever seel before.’ MEN A smart {DS TORN CLOTHES little Frenchwoman shop in Shaftesbury and pursues a trade of the only representative in ‘Express.’ called an “artiste Paris, where there aro but in this country sits in avenue which she is England, She would be like her, that there js gear, so to speak, to indicate the no for. but that suggests the result rather than the process of her work. “All the principal tatlors in the West | “See here” and she showed the ooat working on—"a little mistake-—~the pocket in the wrong place, 1 mend It, anything was wrong in the making” garmma J can be so look pew e put Amar gars i made coffee or othe mend alg 4 new over “an mality legs expense The ina of the on the revival # to pr ideas of the idea that a hat ia protection lements t a8 SOW decorative Oper As IN HR RADGEAR hats whic! arriv. ing from Paris in the vanguard of fashion are what may be siyied three and may be taken for physical science. Miss Elkins has a »at which goems to typify alr and water Ths wide high orown. which bas braid as a founda tion and is with grass and | fishiylooking and edged with iridescent shells. The alr might be {the soft waves of compose the rim, white tulle whieh and the earth is { well exemplified in the soddenJooking | velvet rosettes on the bandeau, which | are fastened to a covering at least four inches tall of dark brown vel i vet. Yel Miss Riking looks very well in her scientific hat, and some of her | friends are going to copy it in lighter | hues — New York Press, AAA TI re statue of General Nicholson, the | mutiny hero, was recently unvelled at | Delhi by Lord Miato, the vicerpy of | ladda, GEOGRAPHY Some of i} tne are KITE exhibit in storted af an Katherine earth, waler ju the glasalike coverad objects