tit is born beneath the shadow ot a field or waving corn f[ Mw\ From a flower whose golden color outshines the glow of morn, // Sfemiill Where the bumblebees are work- 11| backs all jJ x And we learn tho wondrous secret '/ v-^/^T x v!V their busy hum has told. I \^ v - m\ They say this flower sometimes ||\. K Will take a different form w And be the yellow pumpkin I I / When autumn sunshines warm. // jjju il \\ W/ When the skillful housewife turns / --Wrt .||J I it by some necromancy keen I 'Mil / Into the pie so toothsome, with a Ujnf I As the yellow of the pumpkin as Mnff 1 1 Ejjjf > Has a flavor sweet whose richness 'J jjjjj' i With the good old-fashioned pie. EKi. All hall, all hall King Pumpkin, Live ye long and never die. Ar 00000000000000000000000000 1 THE BOER AS 1 i A FIGHTER. | 00000000000000000000000000 The Boers are born fighters, a na tion of sharpshooters, they never waste a bullet; each Boer selects his man and kills him and keeps on doing the same thing all day and every day un til the war is over. It is a common boast with them which they have made good in more than one olash with the British, that one Boer i« equal to ten Englishmen. They do not come out and fight in the open, but swarm all over a mountain side, hiding behind trees and rocks, and woe to the thin red line or hollow square that comes within range of their unerring Mar tinis and Mausers. In fact, the Boer victories over the British soldiers are largely accountable for the British feeling against them, and in the bitter warfare against the nation the success of the Boers has been extraordinary. Fewer than 450 Boers resisted 12,- 000 of the fiercest Zulu warriors on December 16, 1838, and 3000 natives were left dead on the field, and this with old flint locks. President Kru- FIELD CORSET'S MESSENGER HANDING OVER COMMANDOS TO BOER FARMERS TO BE READY FOR WAR. ger, as a boy, helped the forty Dutch men hold off 2000 of the men of Mose litkase, then the most renowned na tive captain in South Africa. The bravery of the men is shown by the attack that 135 of them made on 10,000 Zulus on the Marico Biver, driving them out of the Transvaal. These are simply better-known in stances of the fighting abilities of the Boers. Every man has handled a gun from infancy. In the old days, when a Boer was not fighting the fierce na tives he was defending himself from savage beasts. Every Boer has been trained in warfare. They discovered the method of laagering their wagons, placing them in a hollow square, which the British generals have adopted as the most successful way of fighting the natives. The Boers have shown themselves masters of strategy, the result of constant warfare with a cruel and treacherous foe. U Po T Lpt£ V OFFICER AN(^PRIVATE STATE- ARTILLERY TYPES OF BOER INFANTRY, CAVALRY AND ARTILLERY. The Government of the South Afri can Republic is empowered to call at any time the bnrgkers for armed servioe. The Field Cornet of each distriot goes round and serves a no tice on the conscripts, who, mounted and fortified against hunger for ten days by a errulj of buck cr besf, cured in the sun, and called "bil tong," concentrate in the specified "dorp" or village, where they invaria bly meet in the market place—the church, iron gated, iron steepled, in the background. Arms are distributed I . V \V 112 X \ |\ INSPECTION OP A "COMMANDO" OF BOEES IN THE MARKET TLACE OF A TOWN. to those who are without them; and as for forage, the velt is trusted to supply it at need. The commandant, who is the Dutch equivalent of the English colonel, drills his forces as best he may; and a certain amount of military discipline is eastly ac quired, despite the rather slouchy ap pearance, due in part to the absence of uniforms, except in the case of the commandants, the other oflicers, and the"State Artillery." The Boer much resembles our Amer ican Apache in his ability to live on the shadow of things when in the field. A writer of South Africa, in a contribution to a London paper, calls attention to the ability of the Boer to live ou rations which an ordinary trooper would not endure and his ca pacity to travel great distances with horse in incredibly short time. The Boor knows every road and trail of the Transvaal; as a hunter he knows the devious ways of the wastes beyond. He is an agriculturist and a hunter. By the law of self-preserva tion he has learned the wily ways of the savage whom he displaced in the Transvaal. The secret recesses of the mountains are at his command. As a horseman he much resembles our American cowboy. He can ride on top of the saddle, or over his horse's neck, or Cossask fashion, with one foot in the stirrup, one leg on the sad dle and his head and shoulders ou the ground. His horse is part of his fam ily life. The beasts are very hardy, sure-footed and affectionate. Then, too, the Boer is inured to the hard ships of the mountains, to long horse back journeys, scant allowances of food, treks on which the water supply is scarce. In the campaign of 1881 against the English the Boer took good care that his forces never faced the enemy in the open field. He never offered open engagement. He chose his eyrie in the mountain gorges, and from that vantage point ho picked off the foe at his will. Even when he assaulted Ma juba Hill he came up rock by rock, squirming like a snake, twisting in and out and not flriDg until he bad a mc.vk to hit. An English correspondent who went through the 1881 campaign wrote at that time of the fighting qualities of the Boers: "We never are able tc see the enemy. Except before the fight at Majuba Hill, ] never saw but a hand ful of them at any time. And when they thought we noticed them they and their horses disappeared as if swallowed up by the earth. I think we all feel that they can shoot. Our losses at Hatley and Laing's Nek showed that. We were very much in the open, but not a blessed Boer was to be seen. But every once in a while there was the crack of a rifle, and then one of our poor boys would go over, the line would close up and we would begin chasing again for the enemy we could never find. I was taken prisoner just after General Colley was killed, and I can say that I could not have been treated better by any people. They were kind to our wounded, did not molest the dead nor insult us of the living. I think they are a very brave people, and, as for fighting, they seem to know just as much about it as we do." The Boer loves his country with a passionate patriotism. He is not a miner, or an engineer, or a railroad constructor. He is pre-eminenly an agriculturist. In Cape Colony nearly the whole of the wheat growing is done by the Dutch farmers of the Western province. In the in terior the bulk of the grain used is supplied by the Dutch farmer of the Transvaal. The whole of the fruit crop is produced by Boers. Eveu far up in Bechauaualand you will find Boer wagons l'vom the Bepublic loaded up with fruit, oat forage and other products. The Boers, in short, are a pastoral folk, stolidly content to be that and nothing else. They shun towns, shop BOERS RECEIVING AMMUNT" pN. keeping and gold minin ask only to live in a nK degree of comfort, in a rude to provide for their child 1 * .j grow up and to be let alo. Germnn Viceroy in the Cnrollnes. A correspondent of the Berlin Tageblatt calls attention to the fact that a German was Viceroy of the Caroline Islands thirty-five years ago. His name was Teteus, and he was captain of a ship which exported snails to China. In 1805 he married one of the daughters of the "King" of the Carolines and bought of him one of the islands. Mule Goats Aino»e Sheep. A correspondent of the Charleston News and Courier sends the following information, based on personal ex perience, to the farmers of South Carolina: "If you put among a flock of sheep from three to four male goats the dogs will rarely attack them. Sheep always run to the goats for pro tection." Novel Sport In tli« Far Kant. The eflete Parisian has just taken lip the sport of fish contests. Oriental sporting men in Siam, Cochin China and some parts of Japan have long taken great dulight in the lively con- SIAMESE FIGHTING FISH. tests of the little fighting fish which are bred in the East for thin particular purpose. The little finny belligerents are prettily colored red and blue fish, and when it comes to a matter of flght f. > io it the death. WHEN JOHN BULL LEFT US. A Monument in Botton Will oOinmein o rate the Historical Event. "It is with the greatest pleasure I in form you that on Sunday last, the 17th inst. (1776), about 9 o'clock in the foreuoou, the ministerial army evacuat ed the town of Boston, and that the forees of the United Colonies are now in actna! possession thereof. I beg leave to congratulate you, sir, and the DOBCHESTEB IXEIGHTS MONUMENT. (Marks the spot wtiere Oeor«e Washington stood ami watched the British soldiers sail away.) honorable Congress on this happy event, and particularly as it was effect ed without endangering the lives and property of the remaining unhappy in habitants. I have great reason to im agine their flight was precipitated by the appearance of a work, which I had ordered to be thrown up last Saturday night on au emiueuco at Dorchester, which lies nearest to Boston Neck, called Nook's Hill." Thus wrote Gen eral George Washington to the Presi dent of Congress March 19, 1776. The City Council of Boston has approved plans for the Dorchester Heights monument which marks the spot where General Washington stood and watched the British sail away. The plans show a type of tower common iu colonial times, with fountain aud memorial tablet on the most conspicuous side. It will be built of old-fashioued brick with dark headers. The trimmings will be of Indiana stone or white terra cotta. The height of the monument to the base of the steeple will be aboul seveuty-five feet. The original appro priation for the monument was 525,000 Ukeri Them in Grotipde Albeit an attractive young miss in most ways, like man}' other youug animals it was her habit to wolf hei food. Of this her mhther tried tc break her, and on this particular oc casion was remonstrating because ol the number of peas Alice seemed tc thiuk it necessary to consume at s mouthful. "Take fewer peas on your fork, Alice. Why should you want to tak« so many at one time?" "They taste so much better whec eaten in groups,"' was Alice's uuex pected explanation. Altered a Trifle. One small girl says to another "They are not saving rubberneck any more." "Why not?" asks the other with some joy. "Because they are saying peuin sula," says the one. "And why peninsula?" says the other, innocently. "Because it stretches out to sea," says the one.—"Worcester (Mass.) Gazette. A Kemarkuble Girl. Helen Keller, the deaf, dumb and blind girl, whose acquirements have attracted the attention of all students of educational methods, spent last summer at Wrentham, Mass., as the guest of Mrs. J. E. Chamberlain. She keeps up her study of Greek and Arabic, and writes her exercises on a typewriting machine especially de signed for these languages, with inter changeable cylinders. By way of ex ercise she delights iu climbing trees, and she is an excellent swimmer, HELEN KELLER. (The deaf, dumb and blind girl.) which she vastly enjoys. Helen puz zles new visitors by telling the color of the flowers they bring. She cau even distinguish a white aud yellow pansy from a purple one, aud a red from a white rose. Her explanation is that th'j petal of the darker colored flowers are thicker than those of the lighter ones. She Caught Illm. Patrice—"You know, Will said he'd like to be caught playing golf." Patience—"Yes." "Well, I caught him on the links this f'jry ofteruoon. We're engaged." —Yonkers Statesman. _ t FARM AMD GARDEN. £ Have Thin?* up to the Handle. A well known writer on agricultural subjects says that especially in seed ing should there never be any hap hazard ways. Even in giving milk to the calves should the process be the rule. The calf should have its ration statedly, should have it sweet, and should have it warm. Over feeding is | injurious, but feeding cold milk is j worse. Weed* on the Koadflide. I Not many farmers bother tliem | selves about the weeds that grow ! alongside their farms on the roads, and, as a rule, not • many road overseors care whether the weeds grow on the roads or not; but these same weeds produce seed and keep the farm well supplied with weeds every year, which cost the farmers large sums to destroy. The wise farmer will keep the weeds down at his owli expense if they grow on the road. I)l«l>o«al of Potatoes Inclined to Hot. Potatoes from fields affected by blight should be kept by themselves, so they cau be disposed of first aud in ways that might not be open to the disposal of the whole crop. Where blight has appeared inn field, except it be the early blight, the tubers from that field will rot, to some extent at , least, when placed in an ordinary cel- I lar and exposed to about all kinds of I temperatures above freezing. The 1 first care is that none of them be ; saved for seed, as they carry the my j celium of the diseases over from year to year. In disposing of them two ! ways are open. One is to sell them for use at once, even if they have to 'bo sold at a small sacrifice. If they ; goto hotels or other places that use large quantities of potatoes they will probably be used before the rot be gins to make itself manifest, i If the potatoes must be kept, it can only be in cold storage of some kind. If dug late in the fall and the weather remains cool this may sometimes be accomplished by putting the potatoes into the cellar and keeping the cellar cool by opening the windows nt night aud keeping them shut during the daytime. This will keep the temper ature down to a poiut where the con cealed fungus will uot develop. Later the tubers may be pitted. Too >1 well Pollen for Winti rins. It has been claimed by apiarists that have tested the matter to some extent, that bees will winter better if u it allowed to partake of pollen, but i con lined on co nbs of honey alone. I think some attention should be giveu to this matter in arranging hives for winter. lam satisfied that in some cases where a large amount of polleu I tilled the combs which the cluster of bees occupied during the winter, did nit winter well. Dysentery showed itself to some extent iu almost every ; case in such iustauces, but we nrght attribute this to the fact that they were confined to the combs contain ing polleu, and we e obliged to par take o;' it or starve. I believe they should not be con j fined to such combs, but I do not be ieve it necessary to entirely remove ; hjm from the liive. The frames of comb that generally contain pure honey are found on the outside of the brood nest, and those that contain pollen are always found next to the ; brood, aud as this is the case the tees i are likely to occupy the combs con j taiuing pollen for their winter quar ' ters. This can be coutrolled to quite : nu extent, and ell I think really nec essa y is to remove the centre combs, i or those combs containing pollen, and , place them at the outside, aud the ; combs that cou.aiu lioaey next to the I bees. If this is done aud the bees con fined 011 combs of pure honey, we ; thiuk no damage will be done by them I partaking of the pollen at their p'eas ure. It is very necessary that bees have a good supply of pollen in enrly ! sprint, and if possible we prefer to ! have it in the hive where they have i access to it when needed. It is true j that we cau furnish a substitute in the shape of meal, etc., but cau only do so on days that they cau fly and work 0.1 it. It often occurs that a large amount of pollen is stored on i the combs, anil as it is exclusively ' used for food for the young bees, it ! naturally is stored near the brood | nest. The amount of polleu stored | depends on the supply. Bees seem to j be us eager to gather pollen as to ' gather honey, an I o ten a large re i serve is 011 hand.—A. H. Duff in farm, ! Field aud Fireside. Sac«- 11* it Market Cr p. Almost all farmers grow some sage for home use iu making dressing for roasted turkey ami chickens. Iu the olden time, when cheese making for home use was common, sage was usually put iu one or more of the cheeses to improve the flavor aud make variety. There is no more wholesome seasoning than sag®. Most others, especially the boughten spice-', pepper, allspice and the like, brought from the tropics, are too constipating for health. Sage is uot so, or at most only in very slight degree, aud as it is always used as condiment with fresh meat, which is laxative, it does good rather than harm. Those farmers who grow sage have generally au active demand about holiday time from their neighbors who have been less provident, and they have euougli demand in their own neighborhood to lake all their surplus. Sometimes, however, the well-to-do neighbors are ashamed to take so little a thing as this for a gift, and what peunies th«y give for much more than pays the expense of carina for the bod. The market gardeners grow celery as an annual, and by taking th« thriftiest plants and allowing them to seed, they have developed several varieties of large-leaved sage, wbicli it is always better to use as seed when setting out new plantations. Sage, may, however, be spread from the root. This requires no annual plant ing of the seed, and of course keeps the large leaved variety pure, though after being grown in a clump the plant will be less vigorous and have smaller leaves. .The layered sage stem, with its lower leaves stripped off and covered, roots very quickly, and this can be done any time in midsum mer and secure a well-looted plant next year. Most of the old sage beds in the country are grown from layers. This is why they grow in clumps, as the layer has some dormant buds which send up shoots the following season. The sage plant is best grown from seed which may be sown now, aud get growth enough to live through the winter if the top is cut down in the fall, pretty close to the ground, aud coveied with a forkful of manure. This winter covering is important to keep the sage roots from heaving out in winter by alternate freezing aud thawing. New Way of Planting Strawberries. It has been found that it costs more to cultiva'e a spring-set strawberry bed during its first sii weeks than for any other period of its life. Atten tion must be given at the very time that other items of farm work need looking after. If this care is withheld the bed will become a mass of weeds and will be so checked that it may never recover. The following method which is in use in some sections of New York state and which the writer has tested in a small way, will be found as practical as it is simple. The young plants are removed from the field in the usual manner, but are taken to a previously arrange ! 1 ed of good soil where they are planted, after being trimmed of old leaves aud in jured and superfluous roots. The shortening of the remaining roots is rapidly done as follows: The plant is held in the left hand, leaves up, the collar grasped by the thumb aud first linger, the hand is closed around the roots, which are snipped off by means o:' A pair of shears. In the bed the plants are set in rows about a foot apart and an inch apart in the rows. They are shaded until they have be come established and a mulch of well rotted stable manure that is free from straw is applied. The plants are sprayed with Bordeaux mixture every ten days or two weeks, aud watered if necessary. The ground is soaked just before they are to be removed to the field. They are then lifted, set closely upon trays aud carried to the field. They are remarkably well pro vided with roots aud suffer no check when set in the permanent rows. While the plants are in the beds the field is beiug prepared. It is plowed, harrowed aud thoroughly fined by means of a weeder run over it once a week or ten days, aud after each rain. It not only pulverizes the surface but kills weeds and turns up any grubs and worms for the birds to remove. The plants have, by this method, a warm bed to start in, which is very different from the usual cold comfort forced upon them in early spring, wheu, in order to be ready, the ground frequently has to be plowed before it should be touched. The re maining treatment is the s.me as for other beds. This method permits of easier spray ing of the plants for disease, which operatiou occupies less time aud re quites less fungicide by far than is used in the open field. A double saving is thus effected. No sprayiug is usually needed in the field after the plants are set, unless the germs of disease are already present in great quantity in it. Much more time is allowed for transplanting since it may be done wheu the greatest rush of spring work is over. Shipments of plants that arrive late cau sometimes be saved from utter loss by this plan. Lastly, plants grown in this way are in every respect equal to pot growu plants.—M. G. Ivains iu the Epito mist. Poultry Notes. It is possible to improve the egg laying qualities of any flock by careful selection. The farmer who tries two colonies of birds this winter will want four next winter. It is a good plan to give laying hens nu occasional feed of corn that has been burned until it is charcoal. The color of an egg has nothing to do with its nutritive value. A white egg is just as good as a brown one. A party gave a dollar for a horse, killed it, sold the hide for $1.25 aud had the meat for his chickens for his trouole. If yon havn't got a bone mill feed chipped meat scraps or sausage to the fowls —meaf, is just about as good as bone, anyhow. The hen is the most profitable of ail birds kept on the farm, but it is well where one cau to have ducks, turkeys aud geese. If the hens are too fat to lay or moult well, feed them but once a day if yarded, or not at all if free, until reduced in weight. The first three days that a lien sits on her ej?gs she should attend faith fully to business in order to start the "ileck" to growing. One brood at a time is best for the farm unless the farmer has money and time to build the yards aud houses to keep the birds apart. Ground oats, when made from a good quality of grain, is one of the best parts of the moruiug mash. It produces muscle, boue and feather*-* not fat.