BOYHOOD RECOLLECTIONS. T recollect my childhood day: 1 recollect the whool Where I wi licked and frequently informed I i fool. 1 recollect the babbling brook, the miller' dripping wheel, And likewise I recall to mind the tone-bruie on my heel. 1 recollect my weet first love, the fairent of the flock; Whene'er I'd ask her for k" "he'd bang me with a rock. 1 recollect the picnic grove where I would sometime play, But where they'd never let me go when it wi picnic day. ) recollect the village folk, so hearty anil ao hide; I recollect they alway nid that I'd wind up in jail. I often run my train of thought on recollection's track I love to recollect tuoae day, but I don't want 'em back! Philadelphia Bulletin, I The Professor iand the Tig'er B1IAVEKT. doctor (said my friend, the third officer), Isn't such u simple thing ns you think It. One man is bravo In one way, and another In a different one. Often enough, that which is railed bravery Is nothing more thnn custom. Von wouldn't go up on the fore-royal-yard In half a gale to reef Mil, would you? Not you! You'd be nrrald. Well, you might think me a brave man because I would. But then Id be afraid to cut a chap's lea off. and you wouldn't. That was what old Captain Ilosklns, whom I used to sail with, could never understand. If n man was a bit ner vous about the sea, lie used to look down on blm as all sortu of n coward. But there cunie a day when he learned be tier. It happened when I was with blm In a three masted sailing ship called the Arrow. We luy nt Singapore, alongside the Tanjong Fagan Wharf, loading with a general cargo for Liv erpool. The principal object of that cargo or at least the one we took the most -lotlce of was a tiger that we were shipping for London. It lay In a strong cage of wood and Iron, with a door In the front through which It could be fed. It was a line big brute, and every time It stretched Itself you could sou the muscles slipping over its sides and the big. wicked looking claws peeping out of the pads of Its feet In a way that made you very tli.iiil.ful lor the bars. Ys had . passenger or two. One of tlicm was u young girl who went by Ihu name of Hilda Sandford. She had been n governess In the family of one of our agents out there, but the climate hadn't gulled her, and she had to go ha me. (Hc was coming with us Instead of by steamer because she got her pnssi.go for i othlng and she wasn't loo well off. Directly the old man sot eyeu on her trim figure and the wealth of golden brown hair about her head lie was struck nil of a heap, so ? speak, und I could seo that he was promising himself a mighty pleas ant voyage. Thu other passenger was u strange, lUlle. dried up 'man, who wore gold pince-nez and kept peering ubout the ship in a most uncomfortable way. He gf.ve his name as Mr. Hay Professor Hay. he called himself, though we didn't find out what he professed until later. Of course, the tigor had Its at tendant, but he berthed ."orwnrd. An hour or two before we started this Mr. Hay came t.p to the old man and began asking him a lot of ques tions. "Captain.'' ha said, nervously, "I hope wo sh i have a iiulet passage." "I don't see why we shouldn't," said Hoakius genially. Mr. 3ay looked up at the sky. "There seems to be a good deal of wind ahor.t," he said. 'Tretty fall." said Ilosklns. "That's what's going to take vs home. Not being a steamer, wo can't do without if." "You're sure It's safe?" nsked nay. "Safe!" says the old man, getting on his high horse, "safe! I'm sailing this ship." The lltte man smlkl np'logetlcnlly. "You will excuse me. enptnin,' ho "aid. "I did ::ot mean any offence. The fact Is I am constitvtlonally nervous 'n shipboard. It Is a feeling that I have never been able to overcome." The old man looked ?t him with a tort of good naturcd contempt. "You've no call to bo alarmed," lie said; "we'll take ?ou to England safe enough." Mr. liny smiled again and walked off into the waist, where we had Used up the tiger's cage. It seemed to havo a sort of attraction for him, for he rtood beforo It for nt least a quarter of an hour. Ilosklns looked after him, and then turned to Miss Sandford, who was sitting near. "Nice sort of a chap to have on a ship." he said. "A man Uko that ought to stick to dry land." "Well, you know, I have a follow feeling for him. captain." sh an swered; "I'm afraid of the sea my self." "Ah," he said, "but you're a woman, you sec. A bit of fear Is all right in a woman. It's natural to them. But with a man it's different. A roan ought to be afraid of nothing." "And are you afraid of nothing, cap tain?" she asked. "Not I," said Ilosklns. "You can have the biggest storm ever hatchod by the China seas and I'll thank you lor it. it brings out all the good in h man." "It must be nice to be brave," she exclaimed. "Oh, it's all right when vou're used to it," said Ilosklns, modestly. "And n brave man and a pretty woman are two or tuo nuest sights in creation. iney ougut always to be together." Thero was something In his toue that made her blush. And thoinrh aim a,ill she agreed with him. she took tho first opportunity of clearing off to another part ot tne deck. Shortly afterward we put to sea. For the next few days we had the best of wenuier ana everything wont smoothly, ..uv uij tuna prony wen taken up twlth my work, but for all that I could too one or two things that set ma thiuklng. The flrst was that the old muu was making himself uncommonly ttenttvw to Miss Sandford. The sec ond was that this Mr. Hay in a quiet and timid sort of way, was thiukiiig a good deal of her too, Ilosklns saw quickly enough that he had a rival but as bo had started off with a health J contempt for blm, he didn't disturb ttlujsBlf over sud above much. y0r 1 : i : : : By j. : ; : Sackvllle J ; I Martin ; my part I thought the girl fancied Hay ruther tbaj Ilosklns: and though she couldn't avoid the old man, and could not help listening to bis sea yarns, I could seo her eyes turning forward toward the waist, where Hay was put ting In his time looking nt the tiger. One afternoon the skipper was sit ting beside Miss Sandford on the poop deck when Hay came up tho compan ion and made his way toward them. "There's something I want to tell you, captain," he said. "It's getting on my mind and making me quite un comfortable. That man whoso busi ness It Is to look after the tiger isn't doing his work properly. The animal Isn't getting enough tood. It is devel oping a savage nature. And yesterday, when I went to see the man about it, I found that he was Intoxicated. I really think you should interfere." Ot course, the old man should have interfered. . But he didn't like belug told his duty by the little professor, especially when the girl was about So ho just sneered. "I suppose you're afraid tf the beast escaping?" he said. "I should certainly regard it as un- fortunute," the little man replied. "You see, a drunken man mlgnt be careless about the fastenings. I must really Insisit upon your speaking to him." "He's not one of my crew," said Ilosklns. "I have enough to do to look after them. If any of them get drunk, they'll hear of it. But this chap is a passenger, even if ho is only a steer age one. lie can do as ho likes with his spare time. If you're so blamed frlghteued about the beast you'd bet tor look to the fastenings yourself." "Excuse me," said the professor stiffly, "that is not my business. The animal does not belong to me. I havo done what I believe to be my duty. I can say no more." He turned away without even a glance at the girl. "That man," said Ilosklns, looking after him, "is frightened at his own shadow. Let me give you a bit of fatherly advice, Miss Saudford. When you are looking for a man to marry, never marry a coward. A girl like you wants some one who will protect you in time of danger; some one she can rely on and look up to." "I'm not thinking of getting mar rled." she said shyly. "But when I do I II bear your advice in mind, captain." 'That's it," said Hoskins. "Think over it carefully. And as for getting married, I'd be glad if you'd think over that, too." She started like a frightened horse, "Oh, captain!" she said. "I don't understand. What do you mean?" "You do understand," he said ten derly, drawing his chair a bit nearer to her. "Miss Sandford! Hilda! Haven't you a word for a poor old seaman who worships the very ground you tread on? Think it over. None but tho brave deserve the fair, you know. "You mustn't speak like this." she exclaimed, rising as though she was distressed. "You are older than I am And I don't know that you are a brave man. I have only your word for it, Please don't speak to me about this again." The old man saw that he bad gone a little bit too far. "Walt!" he said; "don't be fright ened. I promise not to say a word until we reach England. Before we get there, if we have a bit of rough weather, I'll show you the sort of man I am. I should love a bit of danger for your sake." For the next few days ho went about whistling for a wind, as though ho wautcd to send us all to Davy Jones' locker. I believe he would have been glad ot a typhoon Just to show his seamanship and his coutedipt for danger. As for his seamanship, no one ever questioned it; aud as for his con tempt for danger, he was to get his chance all right, though not quite iu the way he expected. It was about a week after his eou versatlou with tho girl that it came. Hilda was sitting on the poopdeck reading a book. Vhe old man was marching up and dow; with a quarter dock trot, casting glances at her think lug how pretty she was, when sudden ly he let ofc a howl thtt would have frightened an elephant and sprang into the port mlzzen rigging. I wasn't far oft htm at the time, and I looked at him, wondering whether be bud gone mad. Then I saw what he had seen, aud I went up the starboard mlzzou shrouds as quickly as he had gone up the port ones. The girl raised her head aud looked up at Hosklua, and he gaped down at her and tried to shout, But for come time he could only make faces. "Look! Look!" he yelled at last, "Come up the rigging, the tiger is loose!' She spranj to her fee', am. looked about her. Not four yarus away from her the tiger was playing with a coll ot rope. It was paying no sort of at teutlon to her at the moment, but she felt that it might take it into its head to spring at her at any time. As she stood she was cornered between the stern of the ship and the cabin door, There was nothing to be doue but to climb up the rigging. She tried, but the flrst step was too high, and she could not mauage it. And when she realised that I thought she was going to faint. Ilosklns was just going down to give her a hand, but at that moment the ti ger looked up and saw him, and gave a kind of a roar. The old man stuck where ho wss then, and sort ot shlv red all over like a jelly in a gale. As tor the girl, the went white ail oyer, and gave up herself for lost. And then out of the cabin came Trofessor Hay. He Just took one ook around and saw the tiger. Then he picked up a broom that some one who had been washing decks had left leaning against the deckhouse, and pushed at the tiger with it, looking It straight between the eyes. I'd heard of the power of the human eye before, but I had never be lieved it until that afternoon. He kept walking forward, pushing the beast gently before Mm right into the waist and back Into the cage. Wbeu he bad It safely fastened In, he came astern again, looking not In the loast bit ex cited or worried, and put the broom carefully back into its place. The girl was looking hard at him, and her eyes were shining, nnd he didn't seem to be aware ot It. Ilosklns had come down the rigging nnd was looking a trifle ashamed of himself. He hadn't known it was so easy to push tigers into their cages with a broom, or he might have had a try at It. After a bit he spook up. "That wos a fine bit of work, sir," he said. 'If I hadn't seen it I couldn't have believed It." "Oh, It's nothing," said the professor. 'It's my business. I tame wild ani mals." After that he seemed to dismiss the whole subject from bis mind, and went down into the cabin. But I saw him, later in the evening, talking to that girl, and he must have had some thing important to say to her, for when tho old man met her the next morn ing and began making excuses for him self, she cut him short. 'Captain," she said, "do you remem ber advising me to marry a brave man?" "I do," said Hoskins. a bit puzzled. "Well," she said, softly, "he asked me yesterday; and I'm going to take your advice." Which shows you, doctor, that brav ery is very much a matter of custom. As for poor old Ilosklns, we had mill pond weather the whole way home, and he didn't even have a chance to show himself. The Sketch. WILD CEESE ON MICRATION. How the Old Leader Gather mid Start Them on Their Journey. At the end of March or during the flrst week in April nil the gray geese In the Outer Hebrides collect In one place before taking their departure for their nesting haunts within the Arctic Circle. To estimate their numbers Is Impos sible, says the London Mall, and to be hold this vnst concourse of geese is one of the sights of a lifetime. The vast host of birds stands packed together In a huge phalanx till the king of the grayleg starts the flight. As the old leader ascends 100,000 voices salute him, but none stirs till from overhead he gives the call for his subjects to follow him. Some fifty birds rise in the air and follow him. and as they go gradually assume the wedgelike formation, with three single birds in a strlug at the apex of the triangle, and in a few min utes are out of sight. When they have been fairly started the king returns, nnd after a few minutes' rest he rises Into the air again, and the same pro cess is gone through before be leads off another batch. Again and again he returns until all are gone but 300 old veterans, which rise to meet him in the air ns he flies back to them. Then, with their sov reign at their head, these also wing their way toward the Pole, not to re turn until the following October. Artificial Wod From Peat. Frequent attempts have been mada to use peat as raw material for the manufacture of artificial wood. The material must, for this purpose, be fully reduced to a fibrous condition, so as to produce a fibrous and a mealy mass. This mixture is mixed with au emulsion of two parts by measure of plaster of Paris and ten or twelve of water, and is subjected for consider ble time to heavy hydraulic pressure In molds, then artificially dried, pol ished and oiled, painted or varnished. A more sinmle nrocess Is to wash the peat, without destroying its natural fibrous state, and to mix the rosultlng moist mass with a mixture of hydra ted lime and an aluminum compound (as for instance aluminum sulphate) and press It in molds for n short time in the moist state, after which the resulting plates are allowed to burden in the air. The resultant product needs only a comparatively low pressure, aud this for only a short time, and Is then set out to dry in the air. Tho resulting ar tificial wood is not hygroscopic, and in order to use it for open-air work needs no painting or further impregnation. In view of the fact that the presslne operation takes only a few minutes, considerable quantities can be manu factured in comparatively small space and time. Scientific American. ft Wm HI Only Tie. One morning, as Mark Twain re turned from a neighborhood morning call, sans necktie, his wife met blm at the door with the exclamation: "There, Sam, you have been over to the Stawes' again without a nocktlel It's really disgraceful the way you neglect your dreBs!" Her husband said nothing, but wnt up to his room. A few minutes later bis neighbor Mrs. S. was summoned' to the door by a messenger, who presented her with a small box neatly done up. She opened it and found a black silk neck tie, accompanied by the following note: "Here is a necktie. Take it out and look at it. I think I stayed halt an hour this morning. At the end ot that time will you kindly return it, as it is the only one I have? Mark Twain." Ladles' Home Journal. A Happjr Thought. A well-known Boston writer tells, with glee, of a neat sally on the part ot bis nine-year-old ton, who is a pupil in a private school at the Hub. Apropos ot something or other, the teacher had quoted the line, "In the bright lexicon of youth there's no such word as 'fall.' " At this point the lad mentioned aTose and politely made known hi de alre to offer an observation with refer ence to the maxim. ' 'It occurs to me, sir," taid he, "that if iucU be the case it might be advis able to bring the omission to the atten tion of the publishers of the lexicon," Harper's Weekly. " """" Poultry Pa. Poultry on the farm con be made to pay better than any other stock, value considered; but It is necessary that proper care bo used. Kllr-Made Dark Neat. One of the best nest arrangements known Is readily made by havlug a box ot sufficient depth so that it can be stood on Its end with one board re moved on one side nnd the top fastened to tho wall. This box is set on the floor, with tlir lace to the wall and tho nesting material put Inside on the floor. First line the hex with building paper to keep (lie light out of the ?racks. The one board removed on the one side, next to tho wall, will leave a i:lulent opening for the hen to enter, and then a hinged cover may be made en top so that the eggs may be gath ered and the nesting material renewed without difficulty. Hens wi'l lay more eg !f the nests are dark than when Ibey are light. Uao Nnnene. After slumbering more or less quietly for a few years, the romantic tale that the bees drop Into each cell a small drop of poison from the sting before scaling up the cell, using the sting ns a trowel to work the wax, seems to have started anew Its round of the public press. To any who have sent In clippings of the kind, possibly won leriug what foundation there may be for the yarn. It may be said on the au thority of a bee expert that it Is all a work of Imagination. Its originator seeming to think it true. Iut never offering a particle of proof. Of course, hone of tho papers that give It cur rency, will bother themselves with a contradiction, and the only thing that car lie done If patiently to allow It to un Its course and die out, only to be resurrected seven years later by some penny-a-liner who has nothing else- sen intional on hand. Boston Cultivator. ItpUe Your Own Meat. The Poland China is the best hog to n's to my knowledge. When pigs are tbout two or three weeks old I make a mail pen, put a trough Inside and put i little milk and hominy lu this, scat tering some shelled corn on the ground, ind In n few days the pigs begin to :oir.e In nnd stick iheir noses in the trough, tasting the milk and nibbling it the corn. In n week or so they are very nrxious for it, and I Increase the .lnantity. Milk Is the best drink for rouug pigs; It keeps them growing. I 3o not feed for fat, but for frame. I five them .'1 ni"c green pasture to go aver with plenty of fresh water and good shady places for the pigs wbeu lot weather comes. This prevpnts sick ness and makes bone nnd muscle. To make a hog grow ho must have a clean pen, exorcise, plenty ot pure fresli vater and must be fed nt regular times, with a variety In diet. ' When the pigs are three or four months old take them f.om the sows and feed a little more corn or hominy. This keeps them growing well, and by (he 1st of October you have them on a full feed. (Jive them nil they will eat aow to make hud nud pork aud by the 1st of January you will have nice fat jogs to kill for home use the next year. -The Epltomlst. "Pro" nud "Con" of Wild Tree. Professor Cook, of the Michigan Col lege, has said in tho course of one of his addresses that not long ngo a hor ticultural writer of considerable prom inence urged that nil wild trees nnd shrubs be carefully excluded from the vicinity of the orchard. He argued that the presence of such vegetation would attract Insect enemies, and so bring added danger from their ravages. Professor Cook believes this to be a wrong conclusion, ns the f.-icts show conclusively that the removing, not the planting of these wild und uncultivated plants, Is what has augmented the evil. With plenty of wild cherry trees about the orchard, the trees In the orchard will suffer almost none nt all from the tent caterpillars In a few wild cherry trees than when they are scat tered wide through a whole orchard. There seems to be reason to beileve that the same is true of the apple tree borers and the apple maggot. If we have the wild haw and wild crab In goodly numbers near by, the apple trees aud their fruit will suffer less; often none at all. and, reasoning from the Insect side of the question, It Is probably better to pluut than to up-root or cut down these wild plants nnd trees. Dairy Farming. Dairy farming adds to Instead of sub tracting from tho fertility of the farm and the dairyman leaves to posterity tho land over which he has held stew ardship in better condltlou than he found it. Dairying adds to the profits of the farm without making much dif ference to the other branches of farm ing carried on. 'Mixed farming Is rec ognized as the best, and where dairy lug is Included with the other branches will be found tho most progressive of all farming. It fits In and rounds out perfect fanning, It fills a place that cannot bo filled by nny other industry with the same degree of financial sue ces. Dairying Is tho highest form of agriculture. Tho dairy farmer grows crops to feed his cows and makes his money from tho products of the herd. He becomes a manufacturer ot finished goods from raw product and sells his manufactured feoods to tho consumer, taking to himself all tho profits the manufacturer usually gets. Where dairying becomes the principal busi ness of a neighborhood more cows are kept but other stock do not disappear. for progressive dairymen understand the vuluo of calves aud appreciate the fact that money may bo made raising them and pigs are kept to turn the skim milk into good money. It Is not 10 do wondered that dairy fnrmlng hat becu looked upon as an honorable rail- lug from the earliest times and the proauct ot tho CMry farm have risen In price nnd Increased in use until now It has grown to be an Immense and profitable branch of business connected with agriculture. The Epltomlst. Forcing Hhubarb. A test was made at the Vermont Sta tion during thS winter of the value of ether iu forcing rhubarb. The rhubarb roots were dug In the fall and placed In a cold frame, where they were sub jected to the action of frost In tho usual way. A part of four separate lots was etherized, the first lot Decem ber 18 to 20, the second January 0 to 11, the third January 30 to February 1. the fourth February 24 to 20. Sul phuric etbor was used nt the rate of ten cc. per ' c foot In all cases ex cept with the third lot, where seven teen cc. was used. The first and second lots, which were etherized, gave results decidedly In favor of the process. The third lot, which received seventeen cc. per cubic foot, was Injured by the treatment, while the fourth lot was etherized so late in the season as not to show marked benefits from the treatment. The Increased yields In lots one, two and four were 34.4, S9.7 and 5.7 per cent., respectively, lu favor of etheriza tion, while In lot three the untreated plants gave an Increased yield of 20.8 pe- cent, over the etherized plnnts. Considering only the three lots which are strictly comparable, the gain In favor of the etherized plants for the different pickings was as follows: First picking, 022 per cent.: second, eighty-six per cent.; third, twenty-three per cent., and fourth, forty-seven per cent. These results show a decided Increase in enrllness and In weight of product due to etherization. It Is be lieved thnt still better results might have been obtained had the work been undertaken n month or six weeks earlier. Forcing took place under the benches In the greenhouse In darkness. W. Stuart. I)nnfta For Ponltrrmen. Don't keep your bousfl without hens; your garbage can will feed several. Don't bank on "twice two are four" In poultry raising. Don't expect to succeed without some hard work and study. Don't try to get along without two or more poultry journals. (I take seven). Don't begin with several varieties. Don't begin on a large scale. Don't think that any old place will do In which to raise poultry. Don't sell the best of your flock. Don't set a hen where other fowls can molest her. Don't disturb n sitting hen or an In cubator when the chicks are hntchlng; wait twenty-four hours. Don't put too many chicks In a brooder. Don't feed baby chicks wet food; prepared food Is best. Don't count your chickens before they are hatched. Don't forget to feed regularly. Don't forget that green food Is good to feed the year round, und It lessens your grain bills. Don't overfeed, but be sure you feed enough. Don't feed corn alone, except for fat tening. ' Don't throw grain on the bare floor or the ground; make the birds scratch for It lu deep litter. Don't forget to have plenty of shade for fowls In the summer. Don't put fowls In a filthy place; have good drainage. Don't neglect to find the cause when things go wrong. Don't guess at accounts, but keep books. Don't allow sick birds with your flock.-Successful Poultry Journal. lleait and Cabbasn. The most lniportunt point In benn culture, to my thinking, is the flrst hoeing. This must be done right to get even fair results. Without It there j will 00 a very poor crop aim luugu, stringy pods, as well as small ones. The first hoeing, If doue right, will In itself Insure 11 fait- crop. The first hoeing must be done ns soon ns the beans are up. When they poke their noses above the ground and put forth their first green leaves, they also curry the kernels of the old seed with them on the stalk. These ker nels divido Into the two halves just under the first leaves. These must be covered nt once. This Is all that the first hoeing calls for, nud. Indeed, all that is necessary In future hoelngs is to keep these old seeds covered by soil. If these two kernels are not covered ut once but are allowed to dry iu the ulr. the vine will lose vigor. If the bean Is to have only one hoeing, I would say by all means let It be this one. As a matter of fact the bean should have at least one hoeing nfter this, preferably two, and nlways up to the lowest leaf. I must repeat the or der for the first hoeing, because It Is so Important. Cover the old bean ker nels ut once and keep them covered. If you do not, you will lose half the vine can offer you In the way of healthy pods. I have seen beans go to waste because this hoeing was neg lected. Also do not hoe beans when the vines are wet or dump. The pods will rust If you do. Hoe only when weather Is dry and there is 110 dew en the vines. Iu setting out young cabbage plants, set low so that the stalk is covered up to the lowest leaf. This also applies to lettuce and cauliflower. Cabbages should be hoed often and always so as to cover stalk up to lowest leaf. Some people even nip off a sickly low leaf and hoe above it. Another "don't" relates to cucumbers. Don't plant them lu a hill. Plant them level and hoe them high. I have kept on hoeing ray cucumbers until they stood up like stalks three or four feet. Then they get ready to run. Over they tumble and run along the ground, but they are healthier plant for belug hojd high and kept erect--W. N. Freeman. THE IDtAL LIFE JVath'l C. Fowlw Honiara That It I f.aad by tho Cooatrr Editor. The country editor Is no less an edi tor than bis city contemporary, yet he Uvea in an entirely different atmos phere and works under conditions Im possible for the city, writes Nath'l C. Fowler. He is the great big toad In the little puddle, and tho prominent man of his locality, with every oppor tunity for the realization of ordinary ambition. True, the country editor may not climb to the pinnacle ot Jour nalism, but to be at the top of a coun try monument Is more remunerative, and far more pleasant, than it is to desperately cling half way up the shaft of national fame. There Is nothing happier and surer than the life of a country editor. His income Is small, but so are his expenses. If he is a do cent fellow he Is respected, and nobody in town is too good for him. The influence of the country press, in its aggregate. Is the greatest power for good which the past has ever seen, which the present has ever experienced and the future has ever dared to sug gest. The country newspaper has done more for progress, and has puclied civ ilization larther to the front, than have all other influences for good combined, save that of religion. The life of a country editor '. as close to the ideal as civilization has yet permitted. His average income is from $1000 to $1500 a year. The maximum income of a country editor and proprietor does not exceed $0000 to 37000, except In very exception. I cases, and comparatively few receive beyond the $5000 mark, but quite a number get from $2000 to ) $3000 annually, usually vtth the assist ance of the printing offlco conuected with the newspapers. I Most country editors are proprietors, few country newspapers being edited by oalarled men. The weekly country newspaper, as a rule, has but one editor, who does sub stantially all the work, often Including the reporting. Usually the bulk ot the work is done by the editor himself, ot perhaps by his reporter, if he hires one, with the exception of the out-of-town news items, which come from various correspondents, few of whom receive any money for their services. - There Is no sharp llin drawn be tween the country weekly newspaper editor nnd reporter, as they do similar I work, .ho editor doing more editing j than reporting, and the reporter more I reporting thnn editing. WORDS OF WISDOM. They seek in vain for power who fear all pain. Toleration may be but a synonym for sloth. He can not reach earth who docs not touch heaven. , The man who will not waste his love always wastes his life. It's easy to have large ideas of liber ality with other people's money. Tho heurt that is hot with passion may have an icy face for the poor. Ho can not be a light to others who is unwilling to be consumed himself. Accepting favors means carrying a load of observations. Before an old man makes a marrying fool of himself he begins to argue that he is not so old. Everyone naturally dislikes those people who are so good they suggest the top line In a copy. Which brings worse luck: To break a mirror or to spend a lot of time every day standing in front of one? The only men who ever cornpluined of God's service were those who sought His py roll for their own promotion. When a man asks a girl to let him call ber by her first name it means he thinks her last name ought to be changed. It Is a good plan to listen to every mother you meet in order that you may find out who is tile smartest child In town. When a woman takes her sewing to the back room "for quiet," the truth is that she Is trying to get used to her first glasses. Tact in a married woman consists Un refusing to remind her husband in his cross moments of what he used to say to her when he was In love. If any one shall say unto thee that thou knowest nothing, and notwith standing that thou must not be vexed, then know that thou hast begun thy work. Epletetus. When a woman demands that a doc tor should be sent for, her husband should put the two dollars in her pocketbook and refuse; she will then get to thinking of how she will spend the money, and all will soon be well. It la so that we must come to the sense of the deepness ot the blessing of the life we live. Go into the heart of it, at whutever labor and pain; en ter mightily into its duties; watch not for its shadow alone, as complalners do, but most ei all for its light Rob ert Collyer. SfmponlQia, N "Push." said the Button. "Take pains," said the Window, "Never be led," said the Pejocll. "Always keep cool," sold the Ice. "Be up to date," said the Calendar. "Do business on tick," said the Clock. "Never lose your head," said the Bar rel. "Make light of everything," said the Fire. "Do a driving business," tald the Hammer. "Aspire to greater things," said the Nutmeg. "Never do anything off hand," tald the Glove. "Be sharp in all your dealings," taid the Knife. "Trust to your start for tuccett,' tald the Night "Do the work you are suited for," tald the Flue. "Get a good pull with, the ring," tald the Doorbell. "Find a good thing and stick to It," tald the Glue. "Make much of tmull things," taid the Microscope. "What 1 the tecret of tuccett?" asked the Sphinx. "Strive to make a good Impression, aid the Seal.-LUe. DUtrlct Attorney Jerome, ot New York, pleadt guilty to three weak ness candy eating, cooking strange KUshet and making furniture. QUERY. When eomp'ny eome to vitit a We alio make a lot 0' fun, An' uae our bee tea' china set An' olid ilver fork, you bet! An' nothing is too nice to bake Not custard pie ner nnel-cke! It's jeat hecuz they're round! But say. Why ain't we je' a good a theyf Ma he put on her runtly dre, An' pa ahave twict a diiv, I gueaa. An' ahine hi shoes, an' I mua weal My Sunday red tie everywhere! We're all polite as we can be, An' no one' croe er putcheky. It' diff'rent when they've gone away But ain't we je' as good a they? I don't sec why the eomp'ny ia So better'n we ourselvee gee whizz! Kr why we have to go an' treat Them with a lot 0' stuff to est That we don't have when they ain't herel What make u nave it up oh, dear! Whv don't we allu Jive that way? Ain't wo worth thing" min h a they? Edwin L. Sabin, in the Woman' Home Companion. "l couldn't get a seat In the cars to day." "Oh, that's a complaint of long standing." Judge. "Is your business 'on a running basi yet?" "I should say so; I nlways run when I see a creditor coming." Prince ton Tiger. Willio put hi tockinn on Wronpule oat, a naughty whim, Willie s pleasure all i gone Mother turned the hone on him. "There's Madeline. She's beginning to show her age. Isu't she?" "You mean she's beginning to hide it" Harper's Bazar. Tommy "Ps pa, what Is a consulting physician?" Papa "He Is a doctor who Is called In at the last moment to share the blame." Life. Grace "I hear thut Charlie and Helen have made up their quarrel." Gussie "Only tempo.-arlly. They are going to be married soon." Chicago Dally News. Mr. Saphedde "I aw really cawn't bolievQ.tbe things I cawn't understand, don't you know." Miss Pert "What a terrible skeptic you must be." Phila delphia Itecord. Blobbs "Is the population of Lon don more dense than that of New York?" Slobbs "Sure. Dldu't you every try to tell an Englishman a Joke?" Philadelphia Kecord. "Yea, kiHaiiig's often overdone," Mie answered him; "it's horrid When men ignore the lips of one And kins one on the forehead." Philadelphia Pres. "How fur is it tor de land er con tent?" "It's 'cordlu'. tor how much faith you got. Ef you think you in it, dar you Is. En ef you don't well, it's ton mile furder on." Atlanta Constitu tion. Ethel "I showed papa one of your poems and he was delighted." Scrib bler "Indeed !" Ethel "Yes; said it was so bad he thought you'd probnbly be able to earn a living at something else." Judge. Teacher "How many command ments arc there, Sally?" Sally "Please, teacher, ten." Teacher "Sup pose you were to break a command ment" (Impressive pause). Sally "Then there'd be nine." Punch. Ethyl "I wonder why Maude is afraid to venture out in a shower." Mayme "She's hunting a husband." Ethyl "What has that got to do with It?" Mayme "She believes In keeping hor powder dry." Chicago Dally New. In addressing the Saturday Night Club iu Topeka Joseph L. Brlstow said: "There are two ways of getting Into tho United States Senate." Then some one interrupted him by asking: "What's the other way?" Kansas City Star. "I have here some Jokes." "You what?" asked the editor. "I said I have here some Jokes." "O, you have there some jokes. What kind of jokes ore they?" "New, brand new. Never been used before." "Can't use 'em," said the editor. "It takes our readers too long to get used to the new ones. Good day." Milwaukee Sentinel. Too Much "Fanny Batine." A well-known Kentuckian tells of a marriage ceremony that a Justice ot the Peuce in the Blue Grass State was hurriedly called upon one day to perform. It appears that the bridegroom, a big mountaineer, very roughly dressed had brought his prospective bride with him to the office of the Clerk of the Court, thinking to secure bis license and have the ceremony performed at one vlBlt. When his license had been duly grant ed the mountaineer asked if there was a Justice ot the Peace then lu the court house who could tie the knot Upon being advised by the Clerk that he himself was a Justice of the Peace and that he was willing to join the two lovers, the bridegroom said: "Waal, then, we're ready; go ahead!" "But you'll have to secure two wit nesses," smilingly observed the Clerk aud Justice, "before I can proceed." At this the mountaineer demurred, saying that he did not care for wit nesses. Nevertheless, he was . con vinced in a moment thnt this formality was an Indispensable one, aud accord ingly the necessary witnesses were procurred and the ceremony began. When the couple had promised to love, obey, etc., together with tho rest of the service, the Justice ot tho Peace quite Innocently observed that the bridegroom should "kiss the bride." Thereupon the mountaineer exhibited fresh impatience at tho exactions of the official. "Look here!" he ex claimed, angrily, "It seems to me that you're draggln' in a lot of funny busi ness in this weddln'. Why, I kissed her before we came in!" Success Apothoosl of Mnn Here is an editor who has been touched in a sore spot. The Okmulgee (I. T.) Democrat tayi this ot tome residents of its town: "A mat) may use the mole on the back of bit neck for a collar button; he may ride a freight to aave three cents a mile; he 111 11 y light the lamp with a splinter to save matches; he may, iop hit watch at night to save wear; uae a period for a semicolon to save ink, and pasture hit grandmother's grave to save hay, but a man of this kind it a scblar and a gentleman compared to a mau who will tak a newspaper and when asked to pay tor It put it back In the postoOlc, narked 'Kehued.'