ROA. WHAT FIGHTING WILL BE AT on $s Go bington INSURGENTS TO HARASS CANNON eR How Cannon Greets Insurgents, savings bank and at game time routing the leadership of Nelson W, Aldrich, G. Cannon, of Hlinois. In laying aside their plans to op- pose the responaible leadership in the House and Senate the insurgents have gelected one of the measures whose passage at this time is recommended urgently in the annnal message of President Taft. % * FEARS DULL SESSION, The minority leader in the House, Representative Champ Clark, of Mis- gouri, predicts an inactive session if the desires of the Republican leaders are carried out, “We may be here.a long time,” sald Mr. Clark, “but the present intention of the Speaker and his advisers is to do little more thau pass the necesgary -appropriation bills and adjourn. “It will be the duty of the Demo- the ino Endl Bor SBMA . ow , int ew 3 he N OVER THIS SESSION OF CONGRESS, TOLD MEMBER TO “BEAT IT. wh false A 13 PROVOSES HT SESSIONS, injected NiG into t aunnounc Ys 34 o [ Texas, that yf the cus- jament of of The Texan ed the futility of asking e to conform to that custom ged that the custom- | ary rule providing that the Senate shall meet at “12 meridian’ be amended to read "2 post meridian.” | Mr. Bailey did not put his suggestion iin the form of a motion, and the { usual rule was adopted. It la a safe prediction that “the British idea’ will find little favor in the upper house, although its sponsor purposes Lo press { his suggestion later on, * * *% WiLL STARTLE THE COUNTRY. Reports of the extent of the white {slave traffic in connection with immi- aid he the Eenat just now, but un {gration have been prepared by the { Immigration Commission for submis. sion to Congress, which will startle {the country. If the story of condi- {tions as they are found to exist by {the special agents of the commission {do not stir Congress to action the i members of the commission will be greatly disappointed in the effect of the results of their investigations. At a special meeting of the com- mission the report was laid before the full membership for approval and practically completed. It will be laid before Congress very soon, probably before January 1. It is the plan of the commission to give to Congress the result of its work by subjects in- | stead of in one bulky volume. Since the authorization of the commission ends with March 1 this must be done during the present session. Follow- ing the white slave report will come one upon affecting “Stooraga Conditions.” as immigration, and one on fit Homes,” Mann, y Committ an promised fon of the traffic through the power gr over interstate and foreign coms merce by the Constitution. it a felony punishable by a fine $5000 or imprisonment for five years, or both, to induce or coerce any of Commerce, bill “white Bit al lucod suppro for slave merce” for an immoral her consent, of a ticket on any to enable a woman to a purpose is almost within the common carr r travel for such made to come law, In the case of a girl less than eigh. years of age the penalties also directs the Commis Immigration to obe tain and keep a complete record of all women immigrating to this country for immoral purposes, and provides a penalty $2000 fine or two years in i persons harbors wn and refusing to file the om missioner- General Immigration * %* *%* SENATOR DIDN'T SEE THE JORE. On the Senate's openin are : . * weal ¢ sioner-G eral oi oth, for ing su her record wit m VON 3 a Sepa 4 8 DO wife up shaking down to tell day tor Depew came in three m noon Fie } hi in the e hands, and nuts fore galier) out i REYNOTE IS CONSERVATISM, * %* *% SENATE'S LONG AND SHORT OF IT. During the reading of dent's when | WINTER In winter, on locations CARE OF POULTRY. well ventilated houses where not winds nor undue damjp- suited for winter quar. exposures 1 into mild weather should ghould consist of roosting room, nesting room room where feeding is done in wenther. The latter should tered often with fresh on feed is scattered the exposed ness are hest ters, South ample runs had ading for be Houses bad De whic? fowls lraw to cause i | rose is some six and a half feet tall i Mr. Guggenheim does not go far be- yond the five-foot mark and is slight physically. Death Duties Upheld on Balti. morenn Who Died in England, London, —The House of Lords, the highest court in Great Britain, dis- missed the appeal of the executors of the estate of Mr. W. L. Winans, of Baltimore, who died in England in 1897, against the levy of death duties on part of the estate, The executors claimed the retprn of $650,000 duty paid under protest on foreign bonds to bearer. which, they set forth, the Commissioners of Inland Revenue had wrongfully levied on the estate of Mr. Winans. x Prince Frederick of Germany Gives Up His Title to Wed. Berlin, ~~ The renunciation by Prince Frederick von Sayn Wittgen- stein of his princely rank has been ga- getted. The renunciation was at the direction of the other male members of the family, and in necordance with the law of the family, established in 1607, which provides that any mem- ber marrying beneath his rank shall lose his Inherited ht of title, In 1903 Frederick m Marie Loulse Yartiing, a young woman of the mid. i * : + 2 Laborer Meets Death When Pail Falls on His Head. New York City.~—Antonio Martini, forty-three years old, while at work on the ground floor of the ten-story bullding at 133 West Twenty-seventh street, was struck on the head by a loaded tar pail which had become detached from the hoist at the eighth floor by contact with a projectis of seantling. He was kill Eb A rele floor and the pall was on its way up. Sand, dust or ashes (leached) should be convenient for fowls in. The nesting room as to sec turb the Roosts convenience and Whole 1 ' be pnvyd £ Xxept { i, to i bie not to ghoul ure quiet so as dis Inying hens should be arrange 1 fowls inside be sprayed days close qu ia far m than even SNDOWS, cause feeds are duction Necessary confined beets, tur: these t from the ple parings, man with water, In Hest remed , pure are the ligease ig best to arate from the ol are more pubisct the GUBE ahi ’ a yOUE keer 4 kindnes and 4 turkey of flelieving thougt vill do to stand sued the readers tc even tenor « ing its £ the of improved Wal fot the future decide the issue So now, and all through the vears there has for Bronze turkeys and their hatching. The have but rather strains of pure in inter vening hoon a stead demand for fallen better epes prices not the for increased stock Rock. Light Brahma Leghorn some of the other standard bres dz of fowsl guide, though, as a rule, we should ad- vige the reader to heed its siren voice GRAZING FOR GEESE The goose i8 not commonly regard ed as a cousin to the cow, yet one is about as persistent a grazer as the other. There are farmers who won't turn geese into a meadow because they think the geese make so clean a sweep of the pasturage that It is spoiled for cattle. An. English authority says that geese do not eat an excessive quan tity of herbage if the goslings are willed off the grass at the green stage or are kept till after harvest and finished on the stubble. the common belief that geese damage the pasturage the ame writer says that they destroy mainly the tuber ous roots of the ranunculus, a weed which could well be spared. Nowadays In England the green goose, or more correctly the gosling, is more gencrally esteemed than the fat goose of Christmas, says the Queen, and the Magering regard for the Michaelmas bird is perhaps more gentimental than actual. The poul terers tell us that goslings are in sea: gon from April to October, Hut from the point of view of the English pro ducer it must be admitted that a home BOT Si prevent IELL BEGGS To hens soft ‘ is old from laying shelled egg to furnish grit and i ftances 3 the first thing to do them with plenty shells, to furnish the the shell, SBome rich In Ov el sul of lime, thie CEE for are 4INong the nun the greater in the After furnishing i right kind of of the entire egg, | the mext thing to do | ditions such that apundance # best of | being proportion lime leaves the the with feed formation of clover, hens tha for the including the shell, is to make hens will exercise Con the Bo in range Of d The when ather open the weather Wi scattered COM REWARD OF POLITENESS Not Always What Might be Expected by Those Who Make Room in a Street Car. sald Mr urn fas wilhess when in a street A ting ocn +1 } We iry ay ar. Here are two persons sit 3 ‘ wi 3 Fi th an gide Ww ’ Lard BIGE WE rrvttyeine the Space occupying the hy the (90 of about two persons and a half, and then in comes another passenger who stands up In front of these two, | holding on by a strap. Then present hesé two move along a little away {rom each other, making a Tit tie space hetween, enough to give the | newcomer room to sit down on the of the seat, making not Che comfortable sitting place in i iy edge * most i | “The newcomer, he or she, ag the | case may be, accepts the seat ; 8its in it quietly, well forward, with- out crowding or incommoding able for all three. Bat the new: comer has not yet got through with what he has set out to do. “Now he manages Ww get one shoul der in back of the shoulder of the displacing that person, and then the newcomer gradually but firmly in gerts his other shoulder back of the shoulder of the person on the other gide and dislodges him from the seat back, with the result that now the person for whom room had been made gite with his, or her, as the case may be, shoulders both back against the back of the seat, thus occupying now a full seat space, while the two persons who had politely made way are now both forced forward and made to sit uncomfortably on the lara evan PAVE V AVA Avie asta r%ers Household Notes BLASS r ar eva Pe ¢ Bs RAS SLANT R SASS ANAS PEANUT COOKIES, jeat one-fourth cup of butter to a cream in half a SURAT, one two tablespoonfuls of milk, and one cup of flour sifted with two level of powder and teaspoonful of salt Add three-fourths of a coup pounded fine in a the teaspoonful, tin, put half nut moderats * 5% © Maga- beat Cup of ore, teaspoonfuls baking onefourth at the of peanuts, Drop, by buttered each ake In a last, mortar upon a a meat of aven School zine, VEGETABLES ma MORENCY glice exceedingly two white MONT it with atoga potato fine two turnips oEe hine or mediam carrots, hree white onk small peeled pliant, t tatoes, head one Tw and cored medium, peeled poe one the of a very small, white cabbage Finely chop a bean garlic, three branches parsley, one branch chervil leaves of a branch of tarragon, and add to the vegetables. Season withy a teaspoon salt, hall tea spoon pepper, and mix them well Lightly butter a small square tin of about eight inches square, arrange vegetables in the tin by layers, sprinkle over a teaspoon grated Par mesan cheese and half ounce bud ter, arrange over each layer alten nately, cover with a sheet of dub tered paper, set in oven to hake for one hour and ten minutes, remove and use as required--New York Globe, green pepper, sound HINTS. Kedp fresh meat above the ice. Keep cold cooked meat in a clean dry safe. Keep potatoes and all root vegetables in a bin in a dry cellar Keep butter in a covered crock In a dry place. Bread and cake should be kept separately, in japanned boxes, Cranberries may be kept for months in jars, if covered with water, To make old lace curtaing ecra or cream color, dissolve a little yellow ochre In the rinsing water. A table spoonful of ochre to a pall of water will give them the ecru shade, A few drops of turpentine on a