VOL XXXX. iMrs. J. E. ZIMMERMAN < — % |Cloak and Suit Department^ ~ Greatest Suit values in;: iwfo Sutler for Ladies, hisses k and Children, including J^ e^arafo^° a k 8 \ • We aie rti.dy with a great »howicg i 4/ /111 I of Ladies' Tailorwad.- Soite— separate l' *l* I <; ,aH aud ftkirte—in drees and walking rrn»-nt"i they are all well J /jfc I I *4 a mile, fi'tn / 1r :• r< ■ Ll\fc° low. All that is Dev. e-t in material.- f i 1 I lAjf*- and design. / ""J I m/jKZ- — Ladies' Tailor made Sat-, in fancy , y yreavee, also plain elotha SIO.O0 —valnef ,»£ Ladle.' Plain Bine, also Black Cheviot Saitd of befct <}nality. at f lift. 50. O'.L- ra a»k $25 fir same values. Prvses range from $lO to *.V) %JtnHtrf.-. Pri. eaia ;->kntH IS.'JS up to fH. Tidies* S-parat'.* Jackets £>. , real v*l«* |7.30. Onr Ladies and Misses' Jacket at |IO is a spe«al _ > jf leader in quality and price. Same valnen gtt'd elsewhere at sl3. JU ,t. w * a w. * We cull sj>e.-: T -'l'teiition U> our elegant &■ ■/ 1-H 1 JI \r stof kofl* - /-iifhatiu newest ir; de- \f ® ajid u>- -ii«:b Ltrey i-qairrel. A Isabella and tiabie h>z uotri i mid '.marten, at Prices fwr 93c UD $75 00 .* V save you 3oc oa every <; y ir;vesr in Fnrs * ■ h» n.-i our Fnrb were all bonifht six rit'". r>e»<.re advance in A Fun'. The first shipments in Fnrs are always-i'ore f- -1 t:um later , * shipments and the prices much less. ■} Dress Goods LfiTifbft and choicest collecrtion of Uiess (ii/ods, Suiting:- md Novel- / \7 ties this Mfore h»s ever showu now ieady f»ir your inape'-*ion arid np-"" proval. Thn for same valnes Price in novelties, plan and |r fancy weave*. 25c to S3 per yarjf. •TVYillfne'ry-Ms Trimmed Free| if. In the new Millinery Department, which i> now locate'' in our new annex,aud where we have double the space formerly occupied splendid- t' A|y lighted —large mirror* and experifri(se«l attendants —^we are showing y hundreds of artistic designs and Siodels copied from the finest imported i W modela ax well a* t'ie creations of onr own v. >r 1: room-all at reasonable \i prices Trimujey goods ft ire. Our C motto—the same or better merchandise for 1- rjouey than elsewhere. £ |Mrs, J. E. Zimmerman.! /V Bell Phone ZPS. p lll t|~ r P„ J; Peopie'ji Paone ia# liUUrr, I tl. yp * MILLINERY OPENING CONTINUED 8 AND FALL DRESS GOODS DISPLAY T[ f hte iModerq Store 'A BEAUTIFUL FALL MILLINERY ! ) § 1?^t ed HATS c> S • CHILDREN'S * * M * * Onr new styles are attrar-ting attention and we believe we can show .V 10 you the most up to-date heaflwu v. il •- '. a-," 1 - We O'.y a full h-c of !>r Chemical'. A .i- '•-**. "• Purvis' Pharmacy 8. G. Pmtvrs, PH. *-a it in my presence I aru h< re for business. ar:d I am hap py to say I have lot* of it My patron 4 are my friends, I aiwa\H refer to them. Af-k them. 1 can give yon a list of over :i"0 l>atrons to whom I h ve sold pi. I:OM 1 UIII.H litJUi fuui f ... A And if you will find my of l hem who will say th.it I have not t*'i-n honor it 0l« in all iny dealings with tbein I wiii present yon with a piano. Trusting to have my just share of your patronage, I am yonrti for business. Your credit is good at W. R, Newton's THE PIANO MAN, 317 S. Main St.. Butler. Pa. REMOVAL. ; We have removed our "nr blc | and Granite Jio|>:. fi .in corner of! Main and ' lay streets to i\>>. 208 1 N Main street, (opposite W. I>. Urandon's residence), where wc | will he pleased to meet our customers with figure* that are on Monuments & Headstones of all kinds and are also prepared to give best figures oil Iron Fence- Flower Vases etc., as we have secured the sole apei:cy from the "te'vart Iron Woiks of Cincinnati, 0., f"« t'u town and vicinity. P. H. Sechler i Ste lhe "'* n d,ret ' .' '* opposite the t,VOld Pnsiofllcc Theodore V^el^y. Veil Eitate and Insurance Ajfenty, L3I ZJH S Mall St. ( ,£d Rutlcr, Pa |«j| f f ym huro prop* rt v Hps OR. want TO HUF OR ftC r« ril riii, writ* or 11st Wailed Upon Apo!ic?.*irT' L. C. WICK, LUHBER. BUTLER. PA.. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1908. Cross Poor man ! He can't help it. It's his liver. He needs a liver pill. Ayer's Pills. !' Waal jour moustache or bear J a } beautiful tro*n or rich black ? Use 1 Buckingham's Dye! jiOcti.ct druf gutter ft. P. H»" &Co.. tiiihus.N.H \ Nasal OATARRH E!, ; sC«Bal 4"^J# t tiueji. sootL» and heals I y M th membrane. J; ire» catarrh and drives E t yt. cold in the head quickly. ( roam ISnlm is placed into the nogtr .3, spreads irver membrane and is atforbed. Rel.efisim r: and a cure follows. It is not drying—does t.: produce sneezing. Size, 50 cents at Drng g'sts or by mail; Trial Size, 10 cents. ULY BROTHERS. 5C Warren Streets Z'St Service. Prompt and Careful Attention. Pour registered Phdrnidcists. Prescription Worl< a Specialty. LIRILL OWNER iicW I have purchased the C. J. Harvey Pharmacy, in the Stein building, at 345 S. Main St., am remodeling and restocking the s'.ore. I have twenty two years e/perier. eas a pharmacist, and ccmpou; ling of prescriptions will be u.ider my personal at tention. Pure c.rugs and honest treat ru nt gr iranteed. -Vhen n town shopping, stop 'i leav your packages. < L A : cKee, Pharmacist, l»|.. k, li. iW Ul , ' P>l Binding: of Books rur occup tion. VVc put our i r K tiinr* to studying the best -I lafes method> of doing our i rk. It you are thinking of ing some work done in this I am sure you will be well Med if you have it «:>>ne at k Butler Book Bindery, W \V. AM ON, Prop. Oop CoTt House -J OR. HARRIS' X miner Cordial, | >1 TIOUS MARK ni'RKIHI.T « I RKS W Diarrhoea, Dysentery, if Sick Headache. 1 Sumaier Complaint, VomitiiiK, Sour Stomach, Indigestion and f >r Children Teething. AHHOM TKI.r JIAKMI.KNH. F- itcpurf l LIF 11. A. VA IINKHTOC*K CO. I I'ltulturg, I'M. At llriljcullitff A hoi I in CONCERTS, Pittsburg, Pa. ++++++ + + + + + A Z The best place iv, jC' to stop at 2 * when in town is the + WAVERLY HOTEL, * T WJ "j* J. H HARVEY, Prop, 4 /▼/ * Rates, $1.50 per day. $ J. .J. + + + + + + + + ++ + H. (j. Allison, l-uneral Director, Bell Phone No. 3. Baucrstown, Pa. M. II WfU.HK, F'IRE and LIFE INSURANCE and KEAL ESTATE I 'if HICK- flyers' Building -next to p •O. Ittitler Pa. i i i CAMILLE Of MARTINIQUE 2Jy MA NY TVOO'D Copyright, law, b> ths 9. S. McOtire Corornns > =<-' Under the brilliant southern stars the white camellias jrleawed wasiike. Be tween the glossy leaves a sieuder fig ure leaned over the low whue wall that skirted the garden. It seemed a kplrit of the night, that face shadowed by dusky hair. K-zii.; down witb troutded eyes into the pj -• • .ate ou« raised to her own. "Camille," he whispered, "niia bella, must I still implore you? It Is that you do not lore me, cruel one." He seized ber hands imperiously as If to draw her to him. They trembled in his hot grnsp as her voice sighed: "FUipe, it is you who are cruel. You know—the granpere is so old. lie has none but me. It wouid kill him if I should fly with you." The girl's charming patois betrayed the daughter of France, while h«-r deep, mysterious eyes were the heritage of some Indian beauty—a quadroon girl, bift none the less vaunted as the heiress of old M. Le Moyne and the belle of St. Pierre, where the color line Is but loosaly drawn. Her granpere planned great things for her when they should go to Paris In the fall. She was so beautiful; a prince perhaps, or at least a count. And she? She had already given her heart to the keeping of Filipe. he who ®nly owned a small lugger plying be tween Martinique and Guadeloupe. Bhe loved him. and yet she answered all his prayers with "Wait!" Filipe could not understand it. As the night wind, perfumed with the scent of a hundred flowtrs, caressed her cheek bis heart was suddenly filled with a passionate Jealousy. She was so tieau- | tifui, and she loved him alone, and yet the fates had placed her high above him, so that, as now, be could barely touch the tips of her delicate fingers with Ills Hps. The hot blood of Spain that lent color to Ills swarthy cheek and fire to his dark eye could not brooK | such thwarting. t "Camille," he cried Impetuously, "let me again implore you! Come with me. The white sails of my Santa Maria will bear you safely to Basse Terre, | | THKISK. AMTL> THE BLACKENED KTEMH, I.AT | A UUUX. and ttiere I have a friend, a good i padre, who will make us one. Come, my flower." His voice had softened to Infinite j tenderness. Cainille leaned heavily against the wall, and her words were j broken by longing as she whispered, j "1 cannot" A hot tear splashed down upon his band, but be drew It away roughly. "Knough of tears!" he cried bitterly. "They cost you nothing, while I—l am eating my heart out for you. But you have said 'No' once too often. I swear | to you" and he raised his hand and pointed to the distant mountain peak half cloaked In vapor—"l swear to you : that your sleeping Pelee shall wake to i life before I again s<-fk for your love!" I (.'a in I lie gave a cry of anguish, but It ' fell on esrs all unheeding. Filipe i strode down the road toward the quay with never a backward glance. The j girl's face was as waxen as her name- , sake's, and like a rudely broken flower she sank on her knees against the wall. | Above Ikt sobs came the rumble of ) Pelee's voice, but she did not hear. • •••••• It WIIH at Basse Terre that tin- news caine to Filipe came In a swift suc cession of horrible rumors, each more terrifying than the hist. Pelee had awakened. And St. Pierre? No one j knew. Ami Camille? Flllpe prayed In hla f heart when hla dry lip* refuaed to ; move. So benumbed were hla sense* t from ll iiguiah nnd suffering that the I memory of hla oath had no longer power to move blrn. The Santa Maria waa bended directly for the port of i St. I'lerre. Iler decka were atrewn with aahea and atone*, her aalla and rigging torn and broken, yet gallantly : abe rode thla unknown aeu of dirty anffron color, whose aullen water waa cumbered with wreckage. She had j met huge tidal wavee that awept away | her crew, for ahe could not full the hand of the man *t the helm. The pllot'a eyea, bloodshot by long houra j of vigil, were fixed on the blazing ' heap* which alone remained to tell the r.tory of St. I'lerre. Swollen bod lea were now added to the wreckage on the water. Flllpe hud aunk on hla knee*, aa If fearful of | recognizing a beloved face among, then). But the Hiintn Mnrln, driven j on by a midden breeze, headed straight for the quay that Iny neareat to where the white wall atlll allowed amid the atrlcken garden. Hardly conacloua of having made the landing, lie staggered up the walk and leaped the wall A groan eacaped hla Hp*. There, amid the blackeli«d stems of the cameliiaa, lay u body. It wna burned to u crlap far beyond recognl tlon, but the lover could not doubt. Around waa alienee, denotation, death. And here lay Camilla. "She waa watching for tno for the henrtleaa one," he muttered. Then audilen fury aelzeil him. "I aha ll not leave you here, my flower 1 OIIP!" he cried. "There miiat be plncea on thla accursed Island atlll untouched by lire. I will lay you to aleep there under fragrant bloasoma, nnd then per haps the Hiilnta will eaae me of my mlaery." Stripping off bin coot, he wrapped It tenderly about the body, hiding the face, and lw>r<- It down to the quay. Again the favoring wind sprang up. and the Santa Maria crept slowly down the bay, and atlll the voice of I'elee thundered from flie peak wren tiled In forked lightnings. Her ashes fell ceaselessly on the shrouded figure at the foot of the mast and on the head ef the pilot. His hands and face were blackened and burned and his eyes were blinded by smoke and dust, but his hand still kept the helm and th« Santa Maria her way. The Dixie's deck was crowded with anxious man, for were they not al ready entering the groat zona of ashes thkt surrounded the fated island? Through the gloom came the gleam of a sail. "Ship ahoy!" brought no an swer. "Probably and too dazed to s{K.-ak," OUJ man said commiseratlngly. "No; not dazed —only dead." another replied, for Pelee had added another victim to her list, and the saints bad released Filipe from his misery. Per haps—who knows? —he found his flow er one again in all her radiant beauty where camellias ever bloom. Heooprnlred Him. A professor in the Harvard Law school has a memory which plays him false on all matters except points of law. He cannot remember his men. When the school opened last fall a stu dent who prldt'S himself on his reputa tion with the instructors and makes himself felt by wise questions In the classroom approached the professor and held out his hand. The professor hesitated a moment over the man's name and finally got it out iu triumph. The student was highly olated and a few minutes after said with proud sat iofiirtion to the professor's secretary. "The old boy seems to he g-»ttlnji his memory back. He hesitated only a minute before he called me by name. Pn-tty good after a three months' vaca tion. isn't it?" "Why," replied the secretary. "It's funny he hesitated when I had Jusl told him your name. He saw you com ing across the hall and asked me who . you were."—Youth's Compauion. The Mlntletoe I.cacml. i Here is tho real historic reason for a very pretty custom tixit should never be allowed to die out. It Is the good old Christmas custom of kissing a girl I when you catch her under the mtstle- I toe. Here is the legend: "Balder, the Scandinavian god of f poetry and eloquence, was protected from the violence of his enemies by the promise of everything in earth, fire and water not to harm him. "The mistletoe only had not been asked, nnd Lokl, his enemy, discovered ' this, got another man to shoot him with an arrow formed of it. Then all ! the gods and goddesses mourned griev ; ously, and at their urgent reqnest Balder wns restored to life, hewauso ho was greatly loved, j "S<> to the goddess of love the uilstle | toe was given to guard and and every one passing underneath the | bough slie held kissed bor as a sign I that henceforth the branch was an em ; blem not of death, but of love." —Kan- ; sus City Independent. A n»r witils » Pl»y. | Atkins Lawrence in recalling his ap i pea ranees with Mary Anderson when j shi' was a youtLful ssplrant for stellsr | honors in the east ssys: "I was get j ting a little stout In those days, even | though I was a young follow, and, as j Claude Mclnotte, 1 had a vest that I j bud supplied with three powerful buc i kit's in ihene I would draw as tightly us possible to make mykelf sliu.. One night 1 bud Jrr* finished n-y description of my palace and knelt down to say, 'Llkest thou the ptcturu, Pauline?' when suddenly all three of the buckles gave way with a snap that j sot the people In the orchestra tittor- I lng. 'What's the matter, Atkins?' Ma i ry Anderson said in a staga whisper. I 'My vest buckles have broken,' I an- I swered. 'That's all right,' she replied. | 'I was afraid It was your suspenders.' " ; —Argonaut. The I'rlnrlpnl Wripnm «f Drnth. The fifteen principal cau«e* of death, with the rate per 100,000, made public by the census bureau, nre as follows: Pneumonia, 191.0; consumption, 101.5; heart disease, 134; diarrheal disease*, 85.1; kidney diseases, 88.7; apoplexy, cancer, GO; old age, 54; bronchitis, 48.8; cfeolMl infantum, 47. H; debility, 45.5; Inflammation of the brain and nienlngc*,4l.B; diphtheria, B4.4; typhoid, *.'lß, and premature birth, .'13.7. Ileatli from all principal causes *hows a de- Tense since IfifHl, the most notable be In* consumption, whlcli allows a de sense of 5-1.0 per loo,ooo.~l>lctetie tnd Hygienic (Jasette. HEROIC SELF iiACRIFICE. Onurmr Willi Wlilrli n Tonn* Ofllncr Urwlril llnilh. "Sjmnklrig of heroism," mild a n«vy officer at hi* club n few evening a no, "It I* rare that such an example la aeen ax that of IlyriMon, who wn# a pasw-d midshipman at Vera Crur, In IH4«1. It WDM really more than a bit of bori/lsm; It wn* fortitude, paaalve oowAffc, Hint confronted a peculiar danger, a self ancrlflce, that was moat conapicuoiia. "Our fleet was off the harbor oil bkx'Ttade duty when one day n Spanish merchant v»"<«el managed to slip In wlthotft l»-lug discovered. Ilyiiaon con ceived the Idra if capturing the vessel by a night attnck. nnd lie succeeded In doing so lint aa lie could not take Ihe vessel or, for th« reavm tluit all"' was undue the clow range of the enemy's gun*. ll.vnaon aet t«> the vessel. In doing so lie burTnif an aquarium day after day. sometimes for a year, in the effort to catch tilings outside. The elements of consciousness in the mind of a fish foot up a total -'equiva lent, perhaps, to the lowest idiocy when measured by human standards." It Is possible that the fish's capacity for learning is "about 0:1 a level with that of a man in deep sleep or preoccupa tion." Bird* That Exercl**' IoBmnl(T. Birds building on high trees are not so wary about the concealment of their nests as hedge builders and those that seek the springing corn or grass land for the shelter of their homes, tnisUng to the loftlnoc uf situation for secu rity. A nest placed upon the ground is in constant danger of exposure. A browsing animal might destroy it. Then the scythe with one sweep occa sionally lays bare one or more nests, thereby endangering the eggs or callow nesUtngs. This renders the parent birds very wary and causes them to practice great ingenuity in their ef forts to protect the young birds. The skylark has been known to T«rry its egg or offspring to a place of safety after an exposure of the nest, and It has been s iid Its long hind claw-the use of which has puzzled many natu ralists—ls specially adnptrd by natnre for more easily grasping and transport ing its treasures from the source of danger. When the yomig Idrds are too bulky to be thus removed the par ent bird carries them on Its back, though this mode of removal Is a somo wlrat di(2cuit one.—London Tit-ISlts. Jrltcraon nml the I'alenl OCtee. The flint patron of our patent system was Thomas Jefferson, who during three years gavr his personal attention to every application for a patent. He used to call the secretary of war and tho attorney general to examine and scrutinize with him. and they did it so thoroughly that in one year the first— they granted only three patents. The very first patent of s'l was given to Samuel Hopkins in 17i»0 for p"arl ash es. Mr. Jefferson held that the patent system was not one for creating rev eptie, but for encouraging a production of that which Is to be of benefit to the whole people. In the first twelve years n sins!:' cleric In the state department and a few ;,:p< r«n:.• >I«•.-» were all that the tnisiner-n of tlw ofllee required. Tl en a IT. Tim nton to«.k charge of It and devoted hinii'clf to It as t<> a hobliy. *r>ldpr» Mkf Murale. A violinist pays spiders are notori ously and historically fond 01" music. At one > f his jierfonnaneci th" concert liali wns made ilisagree-aOle t>y » nml den Invnslo'.i of spiders, which were drawn by Ilia violin out fro::i Wie cracks nnd crannies of the ancient building. They ernwled about the floor nnd on to the stage, and ho could see the rntioyed nudlenee stamping on the Insects. The writer adds thnt hf has known a small garden snnlte to h" at trncted t»y pinno playing and n young cult' to wlih'k his tall anil pruneo about most gleefully at the first notes of a French born. Ills neclc would curve about proudly, Ids hoofs trend lightly nnd Ids ears wng Joyously when the tooting began, and he never quieted down till the music censixl. Prcallar I'rlvllrarr*. Tin* spo!ik<-r of the house of commons has several peculiar privileges. Every yenr he receives n gift from th<' innster of the hucUlioundH of a buck and doe killed 111 fli" royal preserve.-.. This CUM toin goes back so far tlirit then- Is no record of It. Later In the year tho spanker reef lve< another trttmte from n dltTerent souro*. Th" the speaker of th<' house of commons and to several of his majesty's ministers a generous width of the Is-st broadcloth to Itv found In ICnglnnd. Il«*r Audloncr. "How are yon getting on with your music, my deurV*' lin|iilred a lady of her niece. "Well, of course." replied tho niece diffidently, "It wouldn't lot proper of tne to compliment myself, but some of th" nelglilMirs have told ni" they have stayed awake M t night for hours Itsten- Irrff to my playing." Tli" Knltfil fftrta. The new bonrdor had Is-i'n fbree we«.'Us fn the house. "It Is usual," raid (too Innitlsily, with gn*at delicacy, "for my boarders to |>ay as they go." "Oh. Hint's nil right," he replied af fabty. "I'm not going for a low; tltue." *laill|(1« «1 Mltl* If. ~Whnt fx that plee ( » j-ou nrp playing? Ia It by Wagner?" "No; the piano f« out of time."—• Brooklyn Times. With the Persians the writing of poetry nnd beautiful nnd witty say- Injfn Is described as tho "threading of pin rls." Why lln llnly Alt* Ihr Volt*. An Atnerfcnn woman tra\e|in*; In England stopped one dny nt a Utile country house, ('hutting with the vln I tor, the woman of the house told of her difficulty In getting along nnd of nn experience she had lind with n bisinler. "Tim first morning this innti stopped hi're," vlie said, "he begun to eat liolled eggs very gnsilily. I'.gg after egg he uto three, four, fUi% si* and It was only the yolk of tliem that he swaJ lowisl; tfio white be didn't Isrtls'r with nt all. "When he dug bis spoon Intn tiio sev entli cirg my temper got the beHcr of fno, and I said In a severe (ortei "'Don't you ever eat the Whfte of the egg, Sir?' " 'Surely not, iny wotuaij," lie at) awerrd. 'The yolk Is the tdrd; tie' wUH»' is the fentliers Would you luivo in make a Isdsler of myself?' " BnilntM. Merchant Did you find out what thnt gentleman wanted? New Clerk No, but I found out what he didn't want. Merchant Whnt? How dare you New clerk And I sold It to him. - Catholic HtnndiinJ and Times. FjljggS&fW r ——-~.t. , .«, ~ ORCHARD PLANTING. Plain uml Practical I>lrectlon» For SrlltiiE Oat Apple Treea. We first set what I call the sighting ■takes, 132 In all for a double row all around a nine acre rays \V. I. Chamberlain in Ohio Farmer. Wo took for each stake two pine fence laths, V 4 by I' 4 Inch by 4 fret; sharpened one, planed the other, nailed the two to gether with two shingle nrils driven planting. lapping the laths one foot so n* to make the stakes seven feet long. The top half Is planed so as to make It more easily sen forty rods off. With good tape line begin, say, at the southeast corner of the field (see Fig. 'i ...... 1 j : • • .. i • . . u*' %n* » • ~: » • • • ! > ■ ' • . * •"• uJ * f * :;. j . •. . • • a,-* » • i • r • • • no i EZZ—n ~>J nets IkAVIKO OCT AS OBCUAHO. 1), measure just one rod from the soutli line of the lot and set the first stake quite close to the east line; second stake two rods north of that, and so on north ward across the cast side, and so on for the other three sides, end trees one rod from line; other trees two rods apart. We set the planed side of the stake toward the field. Then I stand outside the first stake on tho cast line and sight across to the tlrrt stake on west sld«v with a man and a loose stake about four rod* from each of these two line stake*. I wave with the hand, north or south, to the further man until his stake ts set In exact line; then the same to the nearer man. Then all move north two rodu and sight and set stakes as before, and so on until the sighting stakes are all sot In the four Inner rows, each two Inner stakes In exact line with the two corresponding outside ones. The tree stakes are made as follows: Raw old free splitting pine boards into eight Inch lengths and wttta a sharp hatchet sharpen each stake with one blow and then spilt It off with another blow, as tliln t.s it will spilt well. For nine acres you will want 720 of tkese, two for each tree. Now take n basket ful of these setting stakes and take for a sighting pole a straight rake handle, long enough to reach from the ground up to your eye and pointed at the lower end, and begin, any, at the southeast corner. Move and both west and north until you are In exact line with the three stakes west of yon (one rod i north of south line) and with the three stakes north of yon (one rod west of the cast line). Llold your sighting pole plumb, move It Into exact line both ways, press It down and set a setting stake firmly In the hole made hy the sharp end of your sighting pole. Drop one hxiflc setting stake close by the one set In the ground, for future use. Now move two nsls westward and sight west and north as liefore and sot and drop two setting stakes, and so on to the end of that row of trees. Then move two nsls northward along the west side (where you then are) and set the setting stakes for the second row of trei-s from the south, and so on for the entire field. Let the setting board be about alx feet long and six lnclnf» wide. Bore an Inch and n half hole midway of the width near each end and In the middle of Its length. Saw In to this last, milk Ing It horseshoe shnpe, as shown In Fig. 2. Place fhls setting lsmrd with the horseshoe toe ngalnot the setting stake, slick the loose stake Into the ground at one end hole, pull the middle stake and stick It In at (he other end hole, then remove the board and dig the hole for (he free aliout three feet la diameter and übout a foot deep, and with Its center Just w here the setting stake first stood. When you are ready to set tho trees place the end holes of the. setting board over the two setting stakes, with the heel of the horseshoe toward the south, and move the trunk of (lie little apple tree up Ming to the toe of the liorsi-shoc, and the base of the tree will Is- exactly In line In all directions. The trees should be set leaning slight ly toward the prevailing winds. ( oiicrriiliiff Corn With a crop of corn r.00,000,000 bush els less than that of last year In pros peet many people are jumping to the conclusion that pri<"«*t for that grain will be proportionately higher than they nre now. Therefore, they reason, this will lie a Is-ltvr year to sell corn than to feed It. < Virn may lie higher than It 1s now, for tin- crop Is not safe yet, but the eff«vf of the k-sscned yield has already Ih«cii discounted 111 market, as Is shown by the present high price level. Furthermore, It Is very likely that much less corn will be needed than last year. Not so much stock will be fed. nor will so much of the crop be devoted to replenishing tho reserves, which were practically exhausted when the last crop was harvested. Under these conditions, unless there Is great damage to the crop by early frost, It Is well not to e \pect too milch of com prices, ad vises National Stock man. THE IRUIT OR THE BIRD? ••Some! blnu llolna" 4in»uß Frolt I.rtmer*—firimc \rrnnii Sentiment, There begins lo be "something doing" among the horticulturists, who have Buffered more than ever this season from bird depredations, and here Is what some of tin in have t« *ny In ltu rnl New Yorker: 1 am glad lo las* you *t>eak out ou tln' bird question. My experience Ims ls-en alsnit like yours, altltough per haps not quite so bad If 1 try to grow n (Vw strawberries In my own garden the\ prarSl'tilly amount lo nothing l» v (•nuse the birds take tho gntifer part. In experimental work we find results lire likely to be greatly vltUilcd for the same reason, 'ibis year they de stroyed many currants as well ptrawberries, particularly on any plant* near toees. In Nebraska we found It almost Impossible lo gel any grapes from a vineyard containing per haps half an acre lo an acre, and also Impossible fo get any early red applies flint were perfect. I think It Is time liortlculturlsls took a hand In flic bird question. If our Andulsiu societies Would reorganize Into bird destruction societies I think they woubUtl" more H»od, nt ler«l If their activities were < 4 1r'kruda"iirf"fbc nflihi anil No. S9. the catbird.—Professor Fred Card/ Rhode Island. I have read a great deal of what I can call by no other name than non sense about the beautiful birds. Tho great majority of people have been #o etturaTed 1 hit while they would be hor rified at the thought of killing a robin they consider it quite the proper thinff to kill on sight a snake, a skunk. •! hawk or an owl. As a friend of fruit grower or fruit how can a robin be compared to one of the above despised four? I have 300 sweet cherry treea, most of them small, three or four bi® old trees. The birds came in flocka* took them all. I did not get OTer three quarts. The larger trees had a big crop on I have fifty May Dukes set in IS!*;. They*t>oro a pretty good crop. 1 got less than a busbel. Then they turned their attention to our otherf sour trees. This was most too much. My partner suffered a relapse, and 1 there was something doing. As near as we can estimate, COO birds won't ea> any more cherries. —A. I*. Pennsyl vania. We have always been friendly to the birds and opposed to killing them; even spared the European sparrows until they became too great a nuisance by nesting In gutters and spouting, from which they had to be routed. Until the present year other birds have not 6eemed too abundant, but this year one other bird, the robin, haa multiplied beyond nil reasonable expectations, ■our or five nests were built on the place early in spring and must all have been successful. Strawlierrles were unmolested, but by the time raspber ries Were ripe the young birds had reached maturity and seemed to eat little but fruit. Toward the end of the season they took absolutely every thing, and we estimate that they took probably one-fourth of the crop of raspberries and blackberries. Cherries were scarce, and birds took all there were. The redheaded woodpecker has also been a prominent fruit eater with us, but the robin has been by far the I most destructive. We need the pro tective law !>eyond all doubt, but we also need a modification In It, such as now applies to rabbits and squirrels, which will permit the farmer to de stroy within the limits of his own farm any that become a nuisance through becoming too numerous. This would give protection to the fruit grow er and still be protective of bird life In general. Sentiment in regard to the birds is nil very good, but sense is bet ter.—J. M. 8., Ohio. Dactrrta by Mall. The syndicate letters sent ont from Washington have announced that the government Is preparing to furnish farmers with clover and other helpful bacteria In small mall packages like yeast cakes, and we are getting In quiries as to where to apply for them. We have no idea that tho government will undertake to supply these bacteria to farmers. If government scientists find a way to handle them, as suggest ed, private enterprise will probahly place theui on tho market just as It iuis put other bacteria within reach of the butter maker, says tho National Stockman. As to the practical value of the plan we cannot say, but usually it Is not necessary to Import bacteria except for seme crops new to the farm, such as alfalfa on land where It haa never been grown before. And It is not always necessary to do so In that case. Typhoid Fever In Cattle, jg Typhoid fever to affecting horses and cattle In Dane county, Wis., to an alarming extent. Within a year past 100 horses have been treated for' It, twenty dying, and nearly ns many cat tle. It Is also called swamp fever. In belief that horses become affected by eating grass and hay grown In low ly lug regions.—Country Gentleman. Asrlcaltaral Notes. Intense cultivation and care are the only things that will make big crops of liny, snys O. M. Clark. One of llio experiment stations ad vlhoh dalrymon possessing silos which' they can but partly fill to ensile all the apple pomace they can l>eg, borrow or' buy. New England Is giving the Angora goat a good trial. Iluy wheat, for It canuot be grown profitably In any part of New England except Aroostook county, Me., an ft a Homestead writer. There Is nothing to prevent ranking pickles on tho farm and selling direct to consumers. Is onlnn growing a gamble? Not sa much with the transplanted system. You are surer of your crop and of you*' price, remarks llnral New Yorkor. Where It Al*rnyn R«ln«. There Is a group of Islands to the •outh of New Zealand called the Sis ters, or Seven Hlstcrs, which nre re pub-d to lie subjected to a practically constant rainfall. The same may l»e said of the Islands mid mainland of Tl erra del Fuego, save for the differ ence that the rain often takes the form of sleet nnd snow. On a line running round the world from 4 degrees to H or D degri-es there are patches over which rain seldom ceases to fall. This Is culled tho "wm of constant precipita tion," but at the same time there are several localities along with it with very little rainfall. Llffhlnlnv Praaka. The most beautiful display of light ning or atmospheric electric currents which l( was my good fortune to wit nes«," says a resident of yuobec, "wu» out on the Heauport flats, near Quebec, when two electrically laden clouds, us though two trees, their heads toward each other and their longer bronchi * Interwoven, kept on for more than fen minutes, Interchanging horlxontal Hash es of beautifully colored fire, not one of which ever reached llie earth, while occasionally a flash would shoot up ward as If toward some cloud In that direction." Aft Rtpfrlmpnl. "You see," said Corntossel, "a phre nologist once told us that our boy Josh had a remarkable head." "Ho you sent lilm to college?" "Yes. Now we're waiting to see whether his head Is goln* to turn out to be a congenial residence fur brains of Jos' a garden fur football hair.—* Washington Star. Iler Method. Stella So die married him to reform Mint Mow did she begin? P.eJhi II) speixWng n lot of money. You know how hard it Is for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven - lliirper'a Baxar. \ Cna*c Far Worry. A man may go along fur fifty years nn' in I be worried niUeh alsiut de here after. bill de mlnlt de barlier find ; ». Ini|ii upot on bis head he's got a burden to i .i , fur de rest of Ills days. I>e I roll Flee Press. The poii of (lie seif made man geu pt illy begin* at the top nnd work* downward. Chicago H ord-llerald.