IN HARBOR. !fi little boat it In bar. It awing with Ren tie motion; And there 1 Ho and watch all day The far-off, noisy ocean. The ahip go up, the nhipn go down, And never ire me spying; They are the pride and (ear of town-- Sail wide and color flying. A BELATED By GERTRUDE S tbe train puffed off from tbe littlo station, a port- 7V I ''. well-dressed gcntleuinn XJl. J seated himself In the wait ing cnb, took off bis Pmf nma hat, and mopped lit perspiring brow. The brow had broken from Us oldtlme limits and readied nearly to the back of bis lieud. lie was clean Rbaven and ruddy a fine specimen of well-preserved years. "Whar you want to go, sur?" The negro cabman stood with his Land on the door and bowed obse quiously. Tbis was Just the kind to give a half-dollar and ask no charge. "To Wbnley's Hotel." "Whaley's Hotel! Good gracious!" The negro stepped back and beckoned to another driver. Then he turned re spectfully to his passenger. "Dey ain't no Whaley's Hotel now, suh, but a passcl o' rocks an' a ole chimney. It done burn down, suh, 'fo' I was born, t reckon." "Hm m!" The stranger was evi dently disconcerted. "Well, take me to some hotel." As the negro gathered up the lines, Ills passenger put his head out of the window. "Driver, do we pass by the Presbyterian Church?" "Vass, suh. Go right down Main street." ' "Stop when you get there. And here " "Thankee, sub," said Jetf. lie had not mistaken the species. "Don't drive too fast I want to see the places as I go." Judge Blashford was passing through an experience that, under the most favorable circumstances. Is never with out Its pangs. He was revisiting for the first time the scene of his early manhood. He had been educated in this little Missouri town. It was en deared to him by many tender associa tions. He had left it a youth of twen ty and now was returning, forty years later,, expecting to find everything un changed. As he leaned bark In the carriage and closed his eyes, blessed memories were forming a picture cf the little old and bare church, which Iiad been the gato of heaven to his soul. "Hyeah's de chu'eh, suh." The car riage stopped before a handsome brick edifice with cathedral glass and stone steps. "The church!" The Judge sat up right and looked bewildered. "Yass, suh. Dis de Prlsbyte'lau Chu'eh. Maybe you was thlnkin' 'bout de old one. Dat done pull down long time ago, suh." Judge P.asbford experienced a feeling Of keen disappointment. "Drive on," he said briefly. He was looking out Intently as they passed down the street. "Yes," he said musingly, "there's the old catalpa in the Riley yard. That's the first familiar thing I've seen;" and there came into his mind a whimsical recol lection of Holmes' words: "There's nothing on earth that keeps its youth, 60 far as I know, but a tree and truth." "Stop at the next coiner, boy," said the Judge. The next corner would be the old Dyer place. It rose before him as it he had seen it yesterday, the big, square white house with a brick pave ment leading up to it. Set in this walk was r generous henrt filled with flow ers, "painter's brush" and "golden but tons," pink and portulaca. By the side of the parlor window on the east was a smoke tree, and a grape arbor was in the garden. The carriage stopped. "Hyeah's de corner, suh." It had been transformed into a com monplace business block, Not a ves tige of smoke tree or flowers left. "Drive me to the hotel," said the passenger, with a kindling sympathy for Rip Van Winkle in his heart. He felt bereaved. The depression that had fallen upon him deepened as he talked with the landlord after dinner. It seemed to him that he had returned to a -place of tombs. The "boys" were gone; the "girls" had passed away. It was some minutes before he could bring himself to the point of asking that for which lie had come back. "And Colonel Cailborne's family?" he said at last, interrogatively. "What has become of them?" The laudlord shook his head. "Most of them are gone. The old Colonel died twenty years ago, I reckon, nnd his wife soon after. John, you remem ber John, the youngest boy; well, he was killed. His girl lives here with Mies Bettle now; 'she raised her. Mighty pretty girl she is, too. They say she is going to marry young Fales. You remember the Faleses, don't you?" 'And the voluble landlord switched off to a conversational sidetrack. The Judge did not follow him closely. He had the informatlou that he most de sired. Miss Bettle Callborne was at that precise moment making strawberry preserves. "I won't put up many," she -was thinking rather drearily, as she measured out the sugar. "When little Bettie's gone there won't be any. body but Delphy and me, nnd-l'ro afraid we1 won't have much appetite." Life looked a little gray to Miss Bot tle. Little Bettle had been discussing only the night before, tbe arrangements for her marriage. All of this called back a flood of memories to Miss Set tle, as she sat in her own room late in th, day, rocking gently in the moon light Littlo Bettie's confidence bad made her heart strangely tender. Did he ever love anybody? All, she rose from her chair, lighted the lamp, and opened a bureau drawer, Life from generation to generation s but 8 repetition of the old. In every lonely woman' wt tueie Is a secret JVy are o atrong, they are so tall. They fear no storm, no sorrow; With brave eyea to the aim, they 1! Set tail for aome to morrow. Sometime. 1 long to range and roam, My harbor life bewailing; But little boats mint bide at home, To gayly tpeed the aailtng. Helen Uay Whitney. ROMANCE E. WRIGHT. drawer, and in it Is a faded picture or a bundle of letters, or n withered rose bud, meaningless to all but her. Miss Bottle's secret drawer was only a little pasteboard box. As she raised the lid, U6 scent of June roses filled (he air. But one solitary letter, taken from among notes and faded flowers, inter ested Miss Bettio. A tender, troubled look came into her eyes as she un folded the paper, yellowed with ng' "How strange it was!" she mused. "How very strange! I will never know why he did not come!" The letter was replaced nt Inst. Then Miss Bettio knelt down to say her prayers. Dear, sweet Miss Kettle! Such a fragrant, beautiful flower to have been so long ungnthercd! The Jam was going into the glasses when tbe doorbell rang. Delphy ush ered the visitor Into tbe dim, shaded parlor, and left him to grope for a seat alone. After stumbling over an em broidered footstool or two, Judge Blashford, for It was he. sat thank fully down on the horsehair sofa and looked around. He reached over and turned the Venetian blind with an odd feeling of acquaintance. It had been a long time since he had seen Its like. He could not have told for the life of him what that parlor once held, except a beautiful blue-eyed girl who had blotted out for him all lesser things, but when the sunlight fluttered through tbe slats it revealed a strangely fa miliar scene. A big figured brussels carpet, a marble-topped table on which "gift books" and "unnuals" and little piles of family daguerreotypes were primly placed around the family Bible in the centre; a small square piano with flowered cover, surmounted by a wax cross un der a glass globe, these were the sal ient features that met his gifze. For mural ornaments there was a long mirror over the high mantel, and a wreath of hair flowers. He rose and went to where the wreath hung. Ho remembered it well. There was the same rose that he and Bettie Cailborne had laughed over in those old days. It was made of Sallle Miller's red hair. How radiantly beau tiful Bottle had been in those days! Of course she would be changed, that was unavoidable, but such color as hers could hardly There was a slight noise, and he turned. An elderly lady with a sweet, wrinkled face stood be fore him. Her hair was almost white. and there was a stoop to the shoulders. The Judge started. He was sure the landlord had said that Mrs. Cailborne was dead. But he advanced to meet her. "Mrs. Cailborne?" be said interroga tively. "Miss Cailborne," she returned in a voice that thrilled him with its famil iar sweetness. "Miss Bettie Call borne." Judge Blashford gasped. tf- had a strong inclination to run. At that mo. ment happening to raise his eves, he caught sight of h' own bald head and rotund figure in .he glass. Hp had forgotten that time' stands still for no one. "May I ask your name?" said Miss Bettle. "I think, perhaps, I ought to know it." "I am William Blashford," he said. "Will Blashford!" Miss Bettie stead ied herself by a chair. It was the name Rlgned to her letter. And this was the man that the slender, curly- headed collegian had grown to be! She had always thought of him as young and slender. Miss Bettle felt as If she had been personally bereaved. When the first einbnrriissmcnt was over, they entered cordially into con versation.. They sat together 011 the worn horsehair sofa and talked of old times and old friends. They were glad to meet; they laughed and chatted merrily; but each held a baud close upon the secret drawer. Each thought that the other had forgotten all about it. Judge Blashford stayed to tea. Miss Bettle had stolen from the room when little Bettle had come In, and hurrledfj donned her new black and white o: gnndlo and pinned a Queen of the Prairie rose on her breast. Perhaps It was the hurry that brought a flush to her faded cheek, but as she sat be hind the silver coffee pot and poured out delicious coffee, Judge Blashford looked at her with deepening interest lie was begluuing to see a little of the Bettie of old. Miss Bettio was a capable house keeper. Judge Blashford was exnerl- enced enough to know the signs. Those not wjiffles and broiled chickens went straight to the heart hidden beneath his capacious vest. He had not had such a meal since well, for some years. Miss Bettio certainly looked much younger than he had thought at first. They went out on the porch after supper, and little Bettle came out with a crocheted Bhawl and reminded ber aunt that she would be having neuralgia if she were not more care ful, and Judge Blashford remembered that he had been a good deal troubled lately .himself with rchumatism, and they fell to talking about symptoms and remedies and preventives. Strange to say, a sense of couniradeship came upon them with this interchange of elderly confidences, that had not ac companied the recalling of youthful escapades. They bad grown old alike, and it did not seem to be a matter for unmixed regret. They began to talk, now, of the sober, sad details of life. He spoke to her of the wife of bis youth, of their separation by death, of the children who had left htm one by one, until now his home was a dreary place, and she listened with only pity in her eyes. Then she thought f little Bettle, and confided to him that she had never let the dear child know how she dreaded to have her go away. Finally the Judgo took a letter from his Inside pocket. "Miss Bettie," he said, and his tone was very sober, "do you remember a letter I sent you on. the day before I left college?" Did she? Ah, could she ever forget? It was the one she had read only tlio night before. "Yea," she said. "You wrote an answer to It." Miss Kettle's head dropped assent. After all these years her cheeks flamed to think of Hint answer, and how it had been Ignored. Feople used to siiy that Will Blashford had a way of playing with girls' hearts, but she had never believed It. He held a letter, yellowed with age, In his hand. "I sent my letter by nail. I expect ed the answer In the same way. You gave It to Henry Hillard and asked him to give it t me." Miss Kettle remembered. Ills letter had said in cioslng, m tiie romantic fashion of their age, "If I may hope, solid me but one word, Come,' " She had written that word. She had sent It by his friend, for she would not trust it to the uncertain malls. But he bad not replied. Tiie next day ho hnd gone awny and she had not seen him for forty years. "I did not receive it." he said quick ly. Miss Kettle looked at him wonder Ingly. for It was her letter that he was holding In liN hand. "I did not re ceive it," he repented, "for Just seven years. Then Henry nnt It to me with a humorous letter of explanation. Ho had laid It away in his book and for gotten all about it till he came across it by accident. Ho did not know what was In it. When It came I was mar ried and had children about my knees. It was too late then for explanation. I put it away In my safe, and It has been there ever since." He stopped, but Miss Bottle could not raise her eyes. He waited a mo ment, nnd then went on: "I would not have you think that this blasted my happiness. Life is largely made up of substitutes. I had a loving, faithful wife and a good family. They made for mo a true home. I have had all the Joy of domestic life. You, I trust, have not been unhappy." "I hnve had much, to be thankful for." she murmured. She would not say more Just then. "But while this is true," he contin ued, "it is no disloyalty to the dead to say that the miscarriage of this letter has changed life entirely for both of us." She could not speak. She was think ing of those sad, sad years of waiting before hope died, of the girl who thought each morning, "He will come to-day," and ench evening, "He will surely come to-morrow." And It had been to-morrow, and to-morrow, nnd tho years had passed away. She had had a useful, busy life; she had been content; but still she pitied that girl she knew so long ago. The Judge was speaking again: "Miss Bettle," be said, "we have not many more years of life, you and I. We are on the downward slope; but" He' stooped over nnd took her thin, blue-velued hand In his strong one "shall we not walk together the rest of the way?" A mist was in Miss Bettie's eyes. It hid from her the portly Judge. Tho lover of her youth was beside ber. June roses were blooming again. The question she had waited for so long had come at last. "Will you not speak to me, my dear?" said the Judge. And .Miss Bettie gave him the an swer that had been in her heart for forty years. Florida Agriculturist. A Ituia of Battleflrld. . It is not always policy to acknowl edge a defeat. A little coolness nt the critical moment sometimes saves the day, as in the case described In Mr. Ripley's "Story of Company F." In a close encounter during the Clvlt War, two soldiers, one f ,om each army, came face to face within short range. Each put up his gun nnd fired, as it subsequently appeared, bis last cart ridge. Both missed. Tho bullet of one man burled itself In a tree, and the shot of the other passed through the coat of his enemy. Each man, know ing his ammunition was gone, sup posed himself to be at x disadvantage. One of them made a great show of reloading his gun, and, Rtcpping for ward, demanded a surrender. Tho other threw down his arms wilh a groan. "If I had another cartrklgo 1 would never surrender!" he exclaimed. "That's all right," calmly remarked his cuptor, marching off his prisoner. "If I had another, you may be sure I shouldn't have asked you to surrender." Tho Wiley Ways of luina. Tho well-known Paris theatre man ager, Doligny, relates In his "Reminis cences" an encounter he once bad wilh the elder D 11 inns which furnishes an illustration of the novelist's willness. Doligny produced Dumas' drama, "Kenn," with the rather peculiar stip ulation that the author should receive one-third of the gross receipts when these exceeded 3000 francs, and noth ing at all if they fell below that figure. Dumas, who was always hard up, came late one evening to get his share. "Luck is against you ngalu," said tho manager. "You don't get anything to night. Here is tho account." Dumas glanced at It and went away. In a few minutes he came back and said: "Just look over the account again, and then pay me 1000 francs. Tho ticket that I Just bought for three francs brings tbe total up to 3000 francs 60c." Mat Willi Ha Meant. The supremacy in English history of little Prluce Edward of Wales Is a matter of Justifiable prido to his par ents and tutors, but, according to a story in tho Londou Telegraph, his knowledge of periods and personages Is healthily tempered by the m. con ations humor of the average schoolboy of eleven years. He was being examined recently on tbe time and reign of Henry VII. "Who was I'erkln Warbcck?" he was asked. "Perkla Warbeck was a pretender," replied the prince. "He pretended to be the son of a king, but he wasn't He was the son of .respectable par-euts." Bran Tor Sheep. 'A report of n German experiment has been received nt the Depnrtincnt of Agriculture of the digestibility of brans fed to sheep wheat and rye brans and brans resulting from mod ern machinery. It appears that the rye bran was more thoroughly digested than wheat bran, nnd that, as It might be expected, the bran obtained by mod ern milling has a lower nutritive value than old-fashioned bran, since the lat ter is not so entirely divested of tho other portions of the grain. -Weekly Witness. Dairy ItnU. Milk separates best Immediately af ter being drawn, while the natural heat Is still In it. The salt In butter will remain in grains, not being dissolved, if the but ter is worked very dry. The best time to skim Is when the milk has thickened just a little at the bottom of the vessels. Be sure that the bull used with the dairy herd is from n good milking strain of cows, if the heifer calves are to be kept on the farm. A cow will most probably produce heifers similar to herself. By u 11 means keep the heifer calves from cows with valuable dairy qualities. Do not suddenly change the method tit feeding or the ration given a cow. as she is such a creature of habit as to be affected undesirably by it. Feeding Corn. 1 am one of those tha believe that the corn plant Ic one of the most won derful plants that ever grew and that it is, trore than any other plant, the one rendering greatest service to the producer of pork, writes J. Owen in Farmer's Review. For myself I feed corn heavily as soon ns the hogs arc large enough to mrko the feeding of corn profitable, for. after all, it gets down .to a matter of profit. I gather from what some hog men say In their writings and in their speeches at conventions that they have discarded corn altogether, but I am unable to find any feed lot thnt bears out the claim. I think it is getting to be fashionable to claim not to feed corn, but the popular drift is due to a reaction, from the too constant feed ing of corn. 1 will admit that some of the farmers engaged in the raising of hogs have overdone the matter in tho past, but there Is a recession of the practice. Nothing has helped this more than the high price of corn. It is no longer profitable to feed corn lavishly, and the man that does feed it must use the greatest care how he feeds it or he will be badly out of pocket. The time of ten-cent corn wus the time when men shoveled the corn into the hog troughs by the shovelful or cast the whole cars Into the feeding lot without knowing or caring much whether It was eaten or tramped Into the mud. That time has departed for ever, and I never expect to see it re turn, and corn must contiuue to be a part of the hog's diet, but it must be used at the time of finishing the bog for market. The man that cannot find any food for his hog but corn dur ing the growing period of the animal Is making pork at a greater cost than he can sell it for. The Pig' I.uneh Conutar. Are you provided with u side table where the pigs can go to get a lunch when their mothers fail to furnish them a sufficiency of feed to keep them growing? The youngsters should never pet so hungry that they fail to grow rapidly and to supply feed where the Old ones cannot get it Is nbout the only way to keep them thriving, says an exchange. Make n pen by the side of the pasture with the fence made by the boards put on perpendiculur, anil spaced so that the pigs can and the old ones cannot get through, nnd keep feed there all the time until tho pigs get to eating well, then they may be fed at stated times. There should be care used not to allow the feed to become Stale or sour. Cleanliness is next to godliness, and as an element in suc cessful hog raising possibly ahead. There Is in some quarters the mistaken Idea that the hog is not a cleanly ani mal; nothing is farther from the fact. True he wallows in mud, but fnrulsh him clean water and see how he en joys a bath. Do not require the vlg to lunch on corn, but see that he has some more suitable bone-forming material. Don't expect bricks without straw. Oats are the best grain, and nt present prices are not expensive. Slop made of bran aad shorts are about as good as any thing if you huve to buy feed nnd can get them right. Often shorts are high. Tankage is most excellent feed, ond can be used to good ndvantago when feeding largely on corn, but see to the price you have to pay. Don't feed en tirely on corn, for some of the other feeds combined with it will make a cheaper feed, cheaper because better, if not othenvUe. Don't complain about small bone and "chuftinexs" in your hogs and feed to rroduce these results. Furnish pasture, clover, rape, blue grass, and --hilu corn U tha basis of the feed, let there be something else up to the time of final fatleiiiu" Faruiers' Home Journal. " Building; Sllna. Is there any experience in building silos of cemeut, or cement blocks.? I would like to build one nbout I2xia feet square. Tho farmers around here nre talking of building uuu;y silos and would like some advice through your PaPw' Henry Hosteller. Lnporto Co. In building cement silos a double wooden hoop or receiver must bo con structcd. In sections about two feet In height for cement walls between the hoop U to 14 inches in thickness at the bottom and diminished to 4 to 0 inches the Sll beI,1 ao t in depth These double hoops are lilted and when the cement, properly mixed with coarse sand, is weH J,, ti"re moved Up to tho top nU UKalll ulw1 ar-d so cm to the top of the Ulo, The 18 inches below tho surface filled In with cement concrete and well ramm d down and this foundation raised a riot above the surface, when it ,8 ready for the cement wails as described Building the Ulo wUh cement blocks Hie cement being properly mixed with coarse sand, is an easier task. Moulds ore made In a curved form to suit the diameter of the alio; do not build square silos, for silage docs not settle nor keep so well in them. The curved and moulded cement Mocks may be made 8 to 10 inches In thickness, ac cording to the ize of the silo, and f and IS Inches In length. They ran be' lajed up by almost any one. The short blocks are used In breaking Joints in the wall when laying them up. The curved molds may bo made with a core, so r.s to niako the blocks partly hollow and with air spaces Inside, as cement hous-bnlldii)g block are made. The blocks should be made In cement as they go Into the silo wi:II. so that the silo shall be very strong to stand the pressure of the silage wlinn the silos are filled. When tiie walls are completed the Inside of the silo should be slushed with cement, a kind of thin cement mortar, to keep out moisture, ns cement blocks nre penetrated with moisture from rains outside. It is said the wooden slave silo costs less in construction, by those who nre using those built by the I-.i.liana Silo Company, of Anderson, this State, and keep the sllnge in good condition. If any of our readers have experi ence In bu.luiiig and using cement, ce ment block or tther kinds ti silos, we would be glad to have their experience for publication in the Indiana Farmer. From every section we are advised that a great ninny sll 's will be put iu'.j u?o next season. Indiana Farmer, Ventilation of Farm rinltillngn. There are no smu buildings 011 the farm that can not be amply ventilated by tbe simple plan here described. Generally such buildings nre of the single or sloping roof sort, so that the plan can be carried out at small ex pense. In the rear of the house, near one corner, build an air shaft, made by Joining at the edges four boards about eight inches wide. Set this into the ground or fasten to the floor If of boards, so thnt Is will be firm. Have It open at the top, of course, and make It three or four feet high. In the side of it, next to the wall of the building nnd about n foot up from the floor cut out a piece so as to have an opening the width of the board and about sis Inches the other way, and in the side of the building opposite this hole in the shaft cut a hole of corresponding size. Cover these two boles ns well as the hole in tho top of the shnl't with wire netting so thnt no bird or' small animal enn get in. This is the shaft by which the air enters the building. Then build nnother shaft long enough to rench from about eight inches to a foot from the floor up through the roof so thnt it will come out through the roof a foot or fifteen inches. The top of this shnft must be capped so that the opening will be protected from rain. The lower end U to be covered with wire netting. Fasten this firmly nt the roof end and with comer supports to the floor at the bottom. The plan is simple, easy to construct and works splendidly. It is particularly good for ventilating poul try houses. Iu the plain illustration' A represents the shaft through which the foul air passes and B the shaft through which the fresh air enters. Indianapolis News. (Inld Output of Alaska. The gold mines on the American side 0" tho Hue in tho far Northwest are this year, for the first time, producing much larger quantiti-iS of the precious metal than are being found iu British territory. The yield for 1905 nt Nome and in tbe surrounding district is esti mated by experts nt approximately $ 10,000.000, and the Tauanu valley has cleaucd up $7,000,000. Last year the total gold production for all Alaska was $0,05(i,O(H), or nearly $1,000,000 less than this year's clern-up at Nome alone, where the principal increase took place during the last summer. It Is safe to assuun that the entire Alas kan gold output will not bo far short of $0,000,000. On the other hnnd the Klondike output for 1904, which wus 10,8JfJ,000, will not be much exceeded by ltn total for 1005. Tacoma Ledger. German Faturuallaui. American tourists returning from Europe bring back stories of the pater nal watch which is kept upon them In Germany. One woman was requested by a policeman to bold up her gown, which was a trailing, elaborate affair of lace and chiffon. It was after din ner, and she was taking u stroll with her husband thrc jgh a park whoso liu iiHieulate walks seemed to offer 110 harm to tz delicacy, so she let It hnug. The policeman was polite enough, lie informed her gravely that any dress that was allowed to trail was liable to collect undesirable matter and prove Injurious to tier health, and he remind ed lier that one time u law was under consideration to make the wearing of fucli fkitt: u misdemeanor. New York Tribune. Oa Woman' Odd rad. Collecting wild birds and animals for zoological gardens is certainly a unique occupation for a wou.au, yet Mrs. O. F, Latham, of Grant, Flu., seems to thorouglw.r enjoy it. Her home has been iu that locality for twenty yeurs, and sho has hud some exciting as well as interesting exper iences. Not long since, after securing the specimen for an order, the num. lier of birds was cut down, and Mrs. Latham had throe big blue herons pud ten whlto I'olses which refused to leave her dooryord when liberated, and for a long time ala with tiie family cat and hens; Though sixty-five j eais old Mrs, Latham lives mostly oui of doors aud 011 tho water - Chicago Journal 1 : i A 1 GREAT BRITAIN'S NEW PREMIER. 'I , ' v I (' . V'' A-V h : v ,i . " :' v 1 Svi-' : : ;' . Mtfvi a. j v, .A&u'sy V-"-. SIR HENRY CAMP SOFT-GHOUHD HORSESHOE. Quite a demand has recently arisen for soft-ground horseshoes that is. broad, flat shoes which, owing to their large area, will prevent the feet of horses from sinking unduly into the ground. A simple shoe of this type has recently been invented, which Is so designed that It can be easily re versed. The advantage of this de sign will be particularly felt in winter time, : s the shoe .s prevented from balling up with snow. As the revers ible shoe Is smooth at one 6:dc. it will be found advantageous for use on horses when mowing lawns. It con sists of a plate with a flange projec tion from one face along the periphery and formed with slots fo admit the calks of a horseshoe. Ribs on the SOFT-OROUND HORSESHOE. plate prevent tue calks from sliding tack and forth on the plate. At each side a T-slot Is formed to admit the head of a clamping strnn. The two straps are bolted together over the hoof of the horse, as shown. One of the straps is formed ' f two members AGAIN HE YIELDS f ..' 5fVt Xr,-x '". -'"":' . 11 in 11 ijnr jTi'l a Tir 1 ABDUL HAMID, SULTAN OF TURKEY. which are adjustably connected by means of a pin. This permits of adopt ing the shoe to different sizes of hoofs. Scientific American. NEW INCUBATOR IDEA. A ChtCaifO nilin nt tho arnnnaa t f considerable complication, proposes to uunu incuuaiors, ana no nas patentee IKOCBiTOB IMrROVBMBNTB. tils idea, so that the eggs are iu con- BELL-R A NNER M A N. tlnuous rotation during the period of incubation. To accomplish this he provides within the warmed chamber a wheel, with peripheral pockets, each large enough to carry rn egg. The latter are held in position by inclosing bunds. As the wheels nre balanced. It takes but comparatively little power to Impart a speedy rotary motion ta the wheel, so that the germ, to quote the Inventor, "is brought successively In contact with all purls of the nourish ing material of the egg." Philadelphia Record. tfacuar and Atllicator. The most Interesting thing about crocodiles and alligators, declares the author of "The Romance of the Animal World," Is the way they get their food. This they do mostly, and by preference, In the water; but they huve also a habit of lying In wait upon the mud of river banks until some animal ap proaches sufficiently near to be within their reach. Lying sunk In the mud. and of the color of mud themselves, they may well be mistaken for a log. A wild pig, or some other animal fond of root ing in the mud, sees the long, shape less object, but Is not disturbed by it as he roots happily among the reed beds. He looks up suddenly, to find that the log haR moved. One end of it, the longest, thinnest end, the tall, Is gliding away In a curve; but like an arrow loosed, It flies back and meets the body of the pig wilh a tremendous sldewise blow, and tue poor pig falls In a heap. With a sudden, swift rush tbe alli gator is upon him, and seizing the body by the skin, which It holds puckered up between its front teeth. It shakes It furiously, as a terrier would a rat TO THE POWERS. and then halt drags, half pushes It be fore it us it cruwls through the mud to the water's edge. There is only ono wild animal, ssys the author, that will purposely attack an alligator, and that is the Jaguar of South America. The Jugtiur springs on tbe back of tbe alligator, and with all his n ight tears ut the roots, of the reptile's tail. This, possibly, is with the Idea of paralyzing that member, and thus rendering it lucapuble of those sweeps from side to side which are more to be feared thun even the great armed Jaws. The fear of both these weapons uiuy deter the jugr-ar from cluwing the throat of the saurian, for were he to be shaken off In the latter struggles, he would be more exposed' to either than if he fell farther buck. Instances of 'the Jaguar's success la destroying tiie alligator are given by various observers. Youth's Compan ion. I J he new musketry regulations of th German army prescribe tiring at human 'figure targets only, and these are to be colored gray.