“MILK TEST" Sixteen vears ago Dr. Stephen Moulton Babeock announced through a tiny bulletin, a small, paper-bound, | few-leaved circular, a most humble affair, “a new method for the deter- mination of fat in milk adapted to | him—while if you are eternally talk: creameries and cheese factories.” The | Ing to him, simply render him bulletin few hundreds | careless and inattentive. Caress the of pecple, It gave no hint of the enor- | spot you have just addressed. nor mous influence of the dis- | think that he understands a pat on covery so simply set forth. But this | the neck, as reward for something he discovery has increased the wealth | has just done with his hind quarters, of nations by many millions of dollars | Go direct to the spot, and where two and will continue to do to the end of | Parts have been addressed, caress time: it is the basis of transactions them both, as in backing, the hind around the globe, running into many quarters, and sides where the thousands of dollars per day: it has | legs came, ete, etc—and the same been adopted by the butter and | thing in bitting—do not pat the neck rheesemakers of every nation in the | if you asked im to his world: without it, the present advanc- | “Don’t reward your daughter for your od position of this important feature | Son's modern would have that is been | “Directing Prolonged Ware, in the conclusion that any of the real upen chemical action force. He knew, for . # i 113d 1 BABCOCK. DON'T SPEAK TO YOUR HORSE, Caress must promptly reward per formance, and the volece be never used-—the horse does not understand your words, and if you are angry your tones will only further disconoert you was sent to a economic vield jaw, ful geography lesson” the idea in a nutshell.—From the Saddle-Horse,” by F The BUCO: industrial life impossible the chemist to | Outing Magazine, determination niust rest | A MODEL mechanical | On that tha | fat, the act- He knew | reseptacie | study led ——— MILK farm the arate from the FARM, milk-house 1s barn and itself Thera white-clad pails drawn enters his aan diy wi Yur passage directly milk and example, solve all value of i such a deserves a word for i would dis come the clea milkers whose from the mil milk from the ; 1-handed, d ilk save the I f with their milk. revolving by centrifugal forward a confined in a bottle in the receptacle. He combin- ed the two and made the Milk Test. He constructed a chine to put the in practical op- eration, primitive in it but covering all the essential points. | saw ths machine not since, a | a simple-looking affair tray- | Whose ned thousands of miles and | through which fias been From the of people at rect int America and abroad 1. 8 capped in The World To-Das vavad the covered have been No milker that contents ald a mould force, w clean cows throw liquid but each pours an outside into This plece ma- | of warm milk fresh and cools it im mediately to 36 degrees or 40 de grees F., pas Dabeock togt from fashion tank over fron 3 pipe long large expanse of « which has interior coils tens of run di These are they the seen by tens of thousands cooler, the milk Is great expositions in Harwood, where ren TRTIMAT With the a ) » growl Yn beg 4 ie |] t g of £ food have ‘less labor and summer, as the cows can be put on | pasture and co feed them- | selves. Nevertheless many points from whic ducing milk and #s8t cost may be viewed f1an should first know character- | growers of | ww used bags istics of the cows in the herd. With rthe ald of should be Alle 40 estimate the amount of food one happened » nail a fonsumed by each individual and by | slats togeth the use of the milk can keep | come the Rimself informs cow ® doing. Unless tantions he erating in the | lark ‘here | wide difference in the capacity when of the same br erence | may be such as to cause a loss from while DAIRY 1 PR( Dairymen Spring onsequentl; ther ire matter of pro low- dairy their fields crop pit But few has com the wagon the scales some this now and apples ach monly these pres | SCA field, even ome Cow profit forty cows, there may be ent animals and the entire herd may give a profit, yet among them may 17x15x13 incl itelde measure be some that entail a loss and at the tame time increase the cost for labor fn a test at the Mi Station it was found thal a from twenty to | me excel mind nae ineh gata re 1 INCH SUA: f corner yl will ‘ gsouri Experiment | do Se bought rom 12¢ tao 160 knocked cach, cow in a! fierd that preduced 295 pounds of and last a long while buiter in »f thirty that he $ollars. The capacity of to dizest ter than if they taken care of Indiana only zave a while a vear profit dohurs produced only when they are not in Farmer another cow use & pounds in profit of sixty | one cow was | the food game neriod GIVE MOY HY st al 11d ¢ HORSE WARNING ww he re ov VET i I bet NO was | quired of the le-horse nen i has heen warned. however crude a fashion the effort not 0 neglect this 1 ig it to and assimiin® the profit tot In the quantity of butter fuced, but in inction of the "st. ~The Epitcmist until ha ands in collected other. The the ro him him to ark him in farking fair to haul trength, or kicking heels, or hita i | CORNING BEEF i is | advance 1 the his Please advice me whether it sracticable to corn beef in small quan. titles by a family living In an apart ment in the cit Does the iced fon be kopt at a certain perature; —or expressed another way, does voriation of temperature affect the pickle?’ What the average | fall down rom {ength ¢f time necessary to thorough. | dle-Horge” by F. M, iy corn the beef? Have you a recelp: | Outing Magazine for a pickle that ecculd be used in| Sm the above case? M. B. (The practi | TO Kill. CABBAGE WORMS ability world ba house | An effective with a cellar. but presumably tha | cabbage they be tpartment honee has a cold room of | Zebra caterpillar or of the common foie sort and apace to accommodate sprinkling £950 1b. of beef. If that is the case, and sprinkle ke 8 ih. of ga’t. 2 ib. of brown sacar plants, taking that ¢ oz. of saltpeter; cut the into | the hot water con pleces about the size vou mav wish | tact with the The water does lor cooking: mix the salt and sugar | not harm the cabbage, but kills the therenghly, Dissolve the salipeter in | Worms Another remedy for these ww little water as possible and mix | cabbage destroyers is to sprinkle com: with the salt and sugar; put some of | mon salt crystals over the pests or this on the bottom of a cask or jar, | apply as brine Indiana Farmer put in a layer of beef and pack it | srs ne “ Mase and solid. cover with salt and Cold Job for the Under Man. \nother layer of beef to the finish, Some years ago an Irishman just After the beef is all in and fairly | from the old country, secured a job ked, put a heavy weight on and | cutting ice on a pond. ve it. After two or three days if | The foreman gave Pat an icesaw Were is not enough brine developed | and told him to go to work cutting Jo entirely cover the beef, add enough | jee, good soft water to do so. It is a good | Pat fad seen a cross-cut saw used %lan to put the pleces intended for in cutting logs, which requires a man fried beef on the top layer. It ought at either end. As the saw the fore 19 be sufficiently curéd for usé in man gave him resembled the cross 21 aays. This receipt will keep your | out he had seen, he sumposed it re beef good and sweet for several | quired two men to work it. So, see months when kept In a cool place ng another man standing near when ~-the less variation in temperature he was to commence cutting, he sald: the better —From the Country Gen- “Say, friend, I'll toss up a cent to dlewan, nee who goes below. ribs mouth customary pickle | a8 are these erformances nor should npon follow hauling body must or he must the Sad in The tem he be turned only by one rein his head and neck F “Directing Ware, means for whether destroying the greater in a Worms green variety is to fill can with the cahbage } Your hoiling water care direct beef comes in insect, i § 1 : DY OF IT! ~artoon from the New York News r- GIVE. UP COLLEGE. ATHLETICS, OR $3.000,000—WHICH? - Swarthmore Puzzled Whether to Withdraw From [nterceclieginte Sports as a Price For the Big Bequest of a Rich Quakeresc., *hiladelphia Anna T. Jeanes the old and wealthies 5 College i8 to receive os lands val 8 44.0 00 if it gl forever all emnly pledge themselves to forbid every possible form with other ions of learnin from football to lawn on which ! i paying heavy royalties go to the lutely: if they fail to do this the property goes to other chari Miss Jeanes was the last member of died recently In ids’ Ho which she established members of the family ithy $4,000,000 she left vi] are str adherents to wealth has come from the increase in tions ago Swarthmore wealthy Quak ( been distinguished for the baseball and lacrosse teams duced i the Jeanes ! ; ts productive fu: is about 2400.00 a 168 athletics, holding abscibe much of th 3 } dered harsh f ing eiween colleges She ade known this in The ques : } the Board ers \ Charles F. Jenkins and Howard Cooper gate the 1 y . 5 Tf “r 4 cember Mr i d vey particip: ath istees sol iveical conte; the are collie immediate ia family, and urviving to be affected by the dis sal of the r and thei: of property acquired almost v in the Frio: the ancien values genera co-educational institution, maintain siphia, on the outskirts of the city it has & i Its while it h general athletics Mer d the coll ', u RIWARVS athletic prowess of tudents particularly have ions in time geveral intercollegiate cham family helne WAR ime her wi bequest nmittee, Johnson was appointed to investi meeting in De that boar seemed women, but no ition of athlet stigating the prominent Dr will ! ¢ “ college aliairs chairman i inves lege men Oe re eo ted tics, said and bone of out for any amount o nes The faculty ir 16 Quaker it looks as Hoad le: the Facult ‘ not “11 mT ws wt 14 8 COIR iO should cut the accept ance of the gift under the conditions Walter Clothier, chairman « Alumni Athle so far as |! ommittees go be does not believe up amoun en credited with hav would rather wir om the University letic field than have Professor “1 talked uently ab iy opp to football said she ha & about the a ents which attended the game to the gambling y frequently develops over games Herman Prit the football team We would rather have intercollegiate athletics than all the money | v Miss Jeanes, or even all the r Wall Street Swarthmore enjoys al pre an tion of $3.000,00¢ funds wo financi standing Northy versity of California, and within a million 3 imposed says that id be given the college f the {tine for any the liberal at q ig she captain of endowmen vf 200, 00( ddi- the a rinceton, the the Uni of Pennsylvar WOULD CURB POWER OF FEDERAL COURTS Attorneys-Cenera! of Thirteen States Consider Means of Ending State Conflicts. 8: Lows action that may have a far-reaching effect In anti-trust and corporation litigation, and which may bear fruit in aimost every State, was taken by the convention of Attorneys-General of thirteen States in its final segsion here A committee was appointed to draft a scheme of anti-trust legislation to be sent to all Attorneys-General, and as a climax the Attorneys-General adopted a resolution which is expected to aid in removing a thorn in the flesh of the State officers—the interference by Federal circuit courts with the operation of State laws, Permanent organization also was effected, under the name of the Na- tional Association of Attorneye-General of the United States, and a united front will be presented in legal actions brought by different States against the same corporation or trust The resolution is a memorial to Congress, and was framed by a com- mittee composed of Attorneys-General E. T. Young, of Minnesota; Dana Malone. of Massachusetts: A. M. Garber, of Alabama; W. T. Thompson, of Nebraska: W. H. Dickson, of Colorado, and H. 8. Hadley, of Missouri. It follows lines pointed out by Mr. Young. The memorial is as follows: “Whereas, The efficient administration, as well as the preservation, of our dual system of government requires that each sovereignty be permitted to exercise its function as defined by the Pederal Constitution, unhampered by the other; therefore, be it “Resolved, By the convention of Attorneys-General of the several States here assembled, that we carnestly recommend to the tavorable considera- tion of the President and the Congress of the United States the enactment of a law providing that no circuit court of the United States, or any judge exerciging powers of such circuit courts, shall have jurisdiction in any case brought to restrain any officer of a State, or any administrative board of a State, from instituting in a State court any suit or other appropriate pro- ceeding to enforce the law of such State, or to enforce any order made by such administrative board, but allowing any person or corporation assert- {ng in any such action in a State court any right arising under the Constitu- tion or any law of the United States to have the decision of the highest court of such State reviewed by the Supreme Court of the United States, as now provided by law, “We also recommend thet suits in Federal circuit const by persons in- terested in corporations to restrain such corporations from obeying the laws of States in which they are doing business be prohibited.” AA 0 NEGRO STRAN JR'S STORY, CHEAP FARES IN CLEVELAND. Chicago.— Richard Walton, a ne- gro, has confessed that he alone mur- dered Mrs. Lillian White Grant, by strangling her as she lay In bed at her home. Using Police Inspector Hunt as a dummy Walton illustrated how he had tied an undervest about Mra. Grant's neck and choked her to death, Afterward he stole her watch and money and fled. He was arrested in Springfield, 11l., by a negro police- man. Cleveland, Ohio.—The Cleveland Electric Railway is now selling street car tickets at the rate of seven for twenty-five cents. The announcement of the company says the experiment is made to show the public that the company is in earnest in its effort to give the Cleve land public practically three and a half-cent fare, which, it says, would, be permanent if its proposition to the city is accepted. OBJECT OF WOMEN'S CLUBS to stay but to multiply, question is what its and then in object, If marred the old-fashioned ct man, we find that the conditions her life to confining her pathies and making rather and the great obiect should that that the how far it attains what it was one ask life and influence of tended interest ommunity useful to large they value But propaganda organization nature ments and the nobler the nrad i ¢ how th £ mn that nomic indeper the dignity of what a Trietry man and Wet ArTexg and advance and loving after all, only she had no r of some twent buy an easv-chalr ton, that three thelr mother sa “Thank Go ww h on tale chair 1 want much as my hushand maid never mention it shamefaced!s that the econ needs some af woman's or admiration man and only & 1 chattels and lishonor nvites § It is far nonrove another women’ the re multi questi tiple cubs social nhiect than to for or nt Mk tha gnoble jor r show ¢ one woman m flaunt something from which she lebar another There are clubs exist to offor women a the more common selfl-indy There are men to speak whatever tim centuries of All these which is may I they uphold many virtue attend to better geems no doubt pertaining to the children in th: State, woman and disinterested than that of man. There iz no doubt that the civic cleanliness, conven fence and order would be more wise. Ivy administered by But, chiefly, lot ue hope that the women's clube, by bringing women more con stantly in contact with each other, may teach them lovalty to each other the can which chance at TOnces « f men tO encourage wy in public, to ae reserve the inculeated and domesticity have purposes, barring the first, simply and wvnlear primit shaped to useful ends if only lead true and There are women by women to respect woman dutieg which of thelr training can than men There that, in al! matters welfare of the more civie the influence of sorapnlous women sibility of all women Yor the fate of each woman From the Editor's Diary in The North American Re view, W——— HAT MOST IN DENCE. Modifications of the cloche fgure among the models, or rather it may perhaps be more correct to say shapes with the brim slightly inclined downward; nevertheless the general opinion fg that this style is dying out, although we have been treatea! to so many surprises of late that it ® quite possible “general opinion” may again be at fault. Undoubtedly it is the picture style of hat that buy. PARISIAN EVI will find most in evidence: It ors its new develop gure to be American public, and are such as taste, ments are their hat from there ig be the the © Considering the picture he Parisian point of view no doubt but what it will hat of tion is to what dinary were when no the Beason, extent it will be opted for or wear woman of good appeared standing would have rs on foot with an immense ! put such conventio Howed nos Review, York New CONTEST 14 new writing or beauty Huneker says paper contest in body's, James I confess | irelel ie old-fashion louis or ries size, radiant, “1. Picture fore the of the UGE es fa this wholly human X Hen IYAnn: Hervien Rex devote number hushand And who is the of everything on then. toon, there is guest afraid earth and thought that vou live and antomobiles, canoes: and who forgets of horses the boats, and i nereon fora in the and emptie make his in: and feels pe country. by ving to enough swim fndivi 1 who in at good taste to starts large what you think by “The Doll's House.” “Qatome” ought or not to be “The the Hostess" slee’s Magazine breakfast, hasn't try to disgvse it, tellioet the but asks really meant or whether given in Ain- subjects you {been Joya of THE GERM OF DIVORCE Marriage 8 woman's work in the world--not man’s. From whatever posnt it is viewed, physical or spirit. ual, as a question of civie polity or a question of individual ethics, it is her specific share of the world's work Jast, and always: allotted to her by laws far stronger than she is. And the woman who fails to recog germ of divorce in her veins at the outset Anna A. Rogers, in the Al lantic. What the Christian Herald calls good service has been done by Presi dent Hadley of Yale in warning young men against lying. We wish he had gone further, as he might very wisely have done, but we gratefully acclaim the step he did take. He sald, “We all recognize that no man is worthy of our tolerance who departs from the truth for selfish reasons, or who habitually neglects it for any reasom whatever.” It will be something gain- od if educated men refuse to tolerate a man who will lle for the sake of gain, or who is a habitual liar of any kind. J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers