MAKE A BLUFF. St lhr Isn't any pleasure Waits for you beside the way, If there's not a thing to grin nt In your journey day by day. If rou've gut nniH for kicking And for stirring up a row, Don't you do HI Don't you do 11! Just be happy, anyhow. Just be happy, just be happy; Take the fiddle and the bow, Bnuunle it against your shoulder, Limber up and let her go, Till the world is full of music And there's joy in every string. Till you get all outdoors laughing And you make the echoes sing. It's duty yon are owing To the world to shake your feet, And to lift your Yoip m stagin' Till the music Alls the street ; If the world is dark and glor my And you haven't got a friend, It's your duty to dissemble, It's your duty to pretend. If you meet the world a grinnin'. Then the world will grin Bt you; You can laugh the clouds to flinders. Till the blue slur glimmers through; If you just pretend you're happy. With your whole heart in the bluff Then, almost before you know it. You'll be hsppy, sure enough! Houston Post. I The Quest of Two Moons. I BY FRANKLIN WELLES CALKINS. I "Yob, he'g an effective member of the police force," Bald my friend, the Indian agent. He was speaking of a tall young Sioux In uniform, who bad just handed In a message and stepped out of his office. "Two Moons wag an odd boy," he mused, "a dreamer, and imaginative to an uncommon degree. He was bout thirteen, I reckon, when he came near to bringing on war out here, and by a curious incident as trivial in nature as many which have been responsible for bitter reprisals on our frontiers. This was the way Of it: "Two Moons was wading In the shallows of Antelope Creek one day, and found an old horseshoe. He took this to his brother, Little Chief, who was a helper in our blacksmith's hop, and the brother told him care lessly of an old tradition which said that any one finding an 'Iron hoof In a river, with the toe pointing up or down, should ride to the end of the stream, where he would find a line herd of horses which would fol low him home. The finder of the ahoe was to go secretly, saying noth ing to any one. "Two Moons swallowed the story, and kept down his excitement until his mother slept that night. His father wag away somewhere, and the lad took his gun and cartridge-belt, some bacon, which had recently been Issued, secured a pony and stole away. He was certain that the toe of the iron hoof had pointed up the creek, so up the creek he went. On such an errand, the day-dreamer was bound to strike trouble sooner or later, and Two Moons struck it aoon. He crossed the line of the reservation Borne time in the night, and had ridden fifteen or twenty miles on the cattle range when he came upon a bunch of horses, young stock, feeding on the bottom-lands. Looking beyond, he saw that the creek was apparently cut off by hills; so feeling a 'heap good,' he rode out to the horses. The animals showed no sign of wishing to follow him. and Two Moons, concluding that something was wrong with the 'med icine' somewhere, drove the bunch off down the valley. "It was now morning, and Two Moons, dreaming of the excitement which his arrival at the agency would create, forgot even to eat his bacon. He had Jogged on for two or three boars when, in turning a bend, he looked behind, to see a number of borsemen riding hard on his trail. "He had the real Indian's Instinct, In spite of his mooning, and he knew St a glance that there were white riders after him. He had made a dreadful mistake in driving these borses, after they hau refused to fol low him. They were the white men's stock! "He knew what would happen to blm should he be caught, and he put the quirt to his pony, as much alive and alert as he had been dazed and dreaming. He rode a good pony, .which had done nothing but graze all summer, and for a time he opt his lead. He had nearly reached the reservation line when his horse be gan to give out. His pursuers were swiftly gaining, when, in dashing over a rise, he came face to face with his brother. "Two Moons' absence had been discovered early in the morning, and Little Chief, guessing the cauBe, had taken the trail, and was riding hard after him. The brothers' horses both were well blown, and, there being no need of words, the elder wheeled and led the way Into a coulee which he had crossed a little time before. At the head of this ra vine the two turned their ponies loose and took to cover, where they had perfect command of every ap proach without exposing themselves. "Well, the cow-men came up, and warned by a couple of shots, grasped the situation. There were five of them, and they posted four, so as to hold the Indiana. Then the fifth rode away after help. "It was about this time, I reokon, that Two Moons' father came in from his visiting; and ho posted after his sons, to come Wxk in the afternoon and report their situation to me. Much disquieted, 1 cautioned the father to Bay nothing to any one else. but to get a fresh pony at ouco, and guide me to the besieged. "It was after dark when we roached the ground. 1 posted my guide at the mouth of the coulee, and soon was among the besiegers. There were u dozen or more angry cow-men sur rounding a covert so porfect that they couldu't rush the Sioux without a certainty of serious loss of life. "I found their leader, a ranch fore man named Farrell, whom I knew. 1 told him my version of Two Moons quest, and begged him to drop the matter. He and two others who stood with him laughed at my tale, which I must confess, though I doubt ed not of Its truth, smacked of im probability. They declared that they would 'get those thieving Sioux,' it they had to starve them out! Had they been within the reservation lim its, 1 might have made my authority felt, but they were well outside my jurisdiction; and I naw that neither threat nor persuasion could avail i "After some talk I wont back to where I had posted Chaska Two Moons' father only to find that he (was gone. I knew then that, in spite bf my injunction, he had passed the tord of bis boys' plight out oyajr the Seucy. The cow-men muu back down In the end, or fight my Brutes. "The wretched prospect of another Indian uprising was staring me in the face, and I had not even com munication by wire with the outside world. I went back to the cow-men, to be a witness against thorn and for my Indians In the last extremity. "Had the night been dark, I should have had hope that Little Chief and Two Moons might crawl through the lines or make a dash and get away; but there was a brilliant full moon, and a man could be seen quite plainly at 200 yards. The cowboys stood, or grimly sat, at Intervals of fifty yards, and a rabbit could not have passed their line without discovery. "Farrell was not at all pleased to see me when I bivouacked at his stand. He was offish In conversation, not exactly rude, but with a tone which said, 'You may camp here, it's a free range too free for Interfer ence of any sort!' "By midnight other cow-men be gan to arrive, and by daylight there were twenty-five or thirty at hand. Evidently these men expected a sortie by the agency Sioux, and were pre pared to fight. Losses from stock 'rustling' of late had exasperated the whole district of the Antelope. Each man of these besiegers carried a mag azine gun and two revolvers, and was belted with metallic cartridges, so that, in the distance, he appeared to be uniformed In copper plate. "I knew that, if not interfered with, they would rush my Indians and end the business as soon as they bad coffee and a bite to eat. While a detail was passing coffee and hard biscuit along the line, my Sioux put in an appearance. To the number of fifty odd these filed out of a coulee, in a glitter of oiled guns and copper sjiella, and took position, sitting their horses, like a group of bronze and armored statues, at 600 or 700 yards. They were the pick of my agency, armed, doubtless, with all the guns and cartridges that could be collected on Antelope Reservation. "The cow-men paid this formidable and greased, hung In two strings down his breast. In all his bearing there was the high spirit of celf- sacrlfice, of making atonement. As he drew near, I found myself biting my lips and my vision getting misty with the pity of it. He came direct to me. " 'My father,' he said, 'I alone am to blamo for what has happened. I wish to give my body to these men that my people may not suffer.' "A dozen or more cowboys had gathered about their leader as I in terpreted. As I spoke. Two Moons, with flushed face, showing a plead ing eagerness that his sacrifice should be accepted, went forward a little to face them. "Before I had finished speaking a thrill went through me. The at mosphere of hostility had melted as clouds vanish after a June shower. The bravo spirit and truthful face of the boy had won what neither argu ment nor force could have accom plished. "There were somo seconds of si lence; then one of tho men raised the tension. " 'Shucks!' he said, and turning his back on the scene, walked off. Everybody laughed, and Farrell flung his hat at the boy's feet. " 'You little sap-sucker,' he said, 'you've mighty nigh raised a lot of mlBchlef, but you've shore made good for the sand! Bill,' ho said to one of his men, 'bring up that gray pony o' mine and give it to this high red. We've got to remove him from tempta tion.' "Amid laughter and the gathering of the clan, white and red, the gray pony was brought, and Two Moons, the most amazed and delighted little Indian on earth, I reckon, was lifted upon the back of a fine cow-horse, and made to understand that it was his. Then the cowboys rode away, with my Drul on whooping 'Howl How! How!' aftor them. "When the noise had subsided. Two Moons turned to me. 'At any rate, father,' he shouted, earnestly, 'my medicine was good, else I should not have got this fine pony!' " From U-" Youth's Companion. A NEW VOCABULARY FOR A NEW INDUSTRY 0-y('-y-.S)-y.Sk. -.(sv-w-w'- The Price of Eggs. "When eggs get in the neighbor hood of forty cents a dozen and but ter climbs to thirty-five and forty cants people always want to know what the cause is," said a New Jer sey farmer to a Dock street merchant the other day. "They think we are trying to bleed them, but It they really knew the truth, they wouldn't have much to say, I don't believe. Of course you fellows here on Dock street know the causes, but the ordi nary person doesn't. Do you know why eggs are scarce? It's not be cause the hens are not working as hard as usual. Some may he taking a vacation, it's true, but it's because the farmers are saving their eggs for Incubators. About this time of the year the poultry raisers collect all the fresh eggs they can and pile As It Striketh the Philosopher. By H. J. THIEDE. 1. Keep your conscience tender. 2. Be not weary in well doing. 3. To-day's frugality Is to-morrow's felicity. 4. Salvation Is an accomplishment through the selection of the best ends of life. Degradation is a consequence of the cultiva tion of the worst ends of life. 6. Better go supperless to bod than to rise in debt. 6. Man should pay more attention to the chips on his lathe than those on the street. 7. Every dollar put by to-day comes as a gift to you to morrow. 8. One whose falsehoods no longer deceive has forfeited the right to speak the truth. 9. Mediocrity can talk, but It is for genius to observe. 10. Beware of little expenses; a small leak will sink a great ship. 11. Character building Is a consequence of constant train ing and development. 12. Man Is like a cracked bell that does not ring because of the grating of the two broken surfaces on each other, but if these could be trimmed off by means of a saw or file, it would remedy the defect. party no apparent heed, but pro ceeded calmly with the bread and coffee. Yet I knew that a fight was imminent, and without providential interference could not be delayed be yond a few minutes. I begged per mission of Farrell to go to their covert and have an interview with them Into the patent setting hens You aBk why they do this? Well, it'i simple proposition. It takes thret weeks to the day for eggs to hatcb j out. As soon as you get chlckeni you begin to feed them to beal everything. The brooders, in which I they are kept in winter to keep them "By what authority came the word chauffeur to be foisted on an English-speaking public?" The question is often askod prlvstely and from time to time some indignant pure-speech-loving enthusiast echoes the same query through the columns of the dally press, with an appeal to the potentate of the blue pencil to use all his power and Influence to extermin ate the foreign Intruder. There are about a dozen other words, as foreign to the average man ten years ago as ancient Oreek, which have gradually slipped Into evoryday use until to-day they pass unques tioned, and have, by their mere per sistence, earned a place for them selves In the latest editions of na tional dictionaries. It Is one of the rules of life that a nation which has the honor of Intro ducing anything new In any depart ment of activity should Impose Its own nomenclature. There are suffi cient examples in our own products adopted by speakers of other tongues and allowed to retain their native names to warrant accepting a few from outside. Because France got a few years' advance on the world in the Introduction of the automobile she had to supply a new set of terms to cover the nakedness of her new creation. "Automobile" suggested Itself, nothing being simpler than the combination of auto self and mobile moving. But before automobile was allowed to pass as a substantive it was used In connection with car rlage, the new vehicle being a volture automobile, or automobile carriage As every noun In French must be of either masculine or feminine gender It had to be decided which class au tomobile should go into. As volture is feminine some declared that auto mobile should be of the gentle sex, too; pthers took up the opposite side, and an academic division was pro duced. Even now It Is not certain In the land of its creation whether an automobile Is a "she" or a "he." "Chauffeur" Is an Interloper an Interloper who cannot give one solid reason why he should have been al lowed to creep into the automobile language. Before self-moving road vehicles came into being chauffeurs were found only on railroad engines, steamships and stationary steam en gines, their duties being to feed their charges with coal. Why the driver of an automobile should have been called a chauffeur it Is difficult to understand, for his prototype on steam engines had nothing whatever to do with driving, that task being left to the mecanlclen, and even the first automobiles, crude as they were, had little In common with a stoke hole. The further one goes back the less glorious is the ancestry of the chauf feur. In the dark days of the French revolution armed bands took advan tage of the weakened executive pow er to roam through the land and rob all and sundry. A favorite method of persuasion when the terrified na tives refused to reveal the spot in which their treasure was hidden, was to chauffe or burn the feet of the un fortunates. Frequently, in those cold winter nights the chaufferette or bed warmer, was seized upon as the convenient Instrument of tor ture. So extensive were the depre dations of these bands that for a time chauffeur and brigand were sy nonymous terms. A garage is merely a shelter, with nothing in its make-up to indicate that It has any connection with auto mobiles. Tho connection is easy to Bee between garage and gare, a rail road station. A garage line on the railroad is merely a siding; when It was necessary to christen the home of the automobile, It was moro nat ural that the locomotive should be godfathor and not the horse stable. As at present applied, chassis Is Just , a little younger than the auto mobile Industry. In earlier days It designated any kind of wood or metal frame, from a wooden cucumber framo to the metal framework of a railroad coach. It Is only by common consent that chassis has olitalnod its present-day significance; originally It meant the side members and cross sections, nothing more In fact than the framework on which the mechan ical organs are attached. Little by little its field of Influence was en larged, until now It Is generally un derstood to mean the entire mechani cal part of the automobile. Whether used In the singular or the plural, Its termination Is the same, chesses, which occasionally finds Its way Into print, being altogether Incorrect. Georges Hullller, one of the direc tors of the Mors factory, in Paris, is responsible for elevating the tonneau from a humble field of usefulness as a wooden cylindrical chamber for containing wine or beer, ln.o a dig nified position as part of the automo bile. At a time when automobile carriage work was without form and void, Hullller produced a new design of body with rear entrance and rounded ends, to be fitted on the chassis in the rear of the driver's seat. Roughly it resembled a barrel cut across the middle; as no more suitable term could be discovered. It was called a barrel for tonneau Is merely the French for barrel and has remained a tonneau, In tho Eng lish language, despite radical changes In Its design. In French modern side entrance tourlsg cars have ceased to bo known as tonneaux, the type de veloped from the rear-entrance barrel-shaped body being a double phaeton. Down In the old-world Department of Correze, In France, known under the old regime as Bas-Llmousin, the peasants wear a heavy full footed wooden sabot, known locally as a limousine. The district has also a particular type of closed carriage, a sort of small stage coach, the design of which. In this unchanging country, has probably not been modified in ages. A coachbuilder from Limoges established himself In Paris, produced a new type of open vehicle and named It limousine In honor of his home land. From an open vehicle the name began to mean a completely closed carriage and with the automo bile Its importance has grown antll now it designates the most luxurious type of touring body; the peasant's wooden Bhoe, however, has not re nounced its right to the title. Bavaria appears to baveglven birth to the landaulet, with a type of ve hicle fitted with a folding top, and known as a Landau, after the town of Landau, in which it originated. It was modified, slightly reduced in size, and a few more letters added to Its title. Taximeter had to be created to meet a modern need for a handy term to designate a vehicle that will doubtless play an Important part in every-day life. Some advertising agents appear to have assumed that a taximeter is a special type of auto mobile, forgetting that the box of clockwork In Itself no more modifies the vehicle on which it is placed than the gas meter changes 'the na ture of the gas. It Is merely a com bination of taxi, a tax, and metre, a measure of distance, designating the instrument which taxes accord ing to distance. On Its Introduction it occasioned a little trouble, some users being in favor of taxametre and others rlatmlng taximetre; after some discussion etymologists declared the latter form the only correct one, and It has remained. Jerome Cardan has long laid in his unknown resting place, and his math ematical researches have so passed into the sea of knowledge as to be almost forgotten as individual efforts. The universal Joint which his fertile brain created, and which was first known as Cardan's joint or Joint a la Cardan, was never In danger of dying out, but Its application was somewhat limited and Its admirers were few until the automobile came along and brought It Into public favor, four cen turies after the death of its inventor. The Automobile. Little Chief and Two Moons, but after warm, are fairly alive with the little a brief talk with some of bis men, he fellows, and by stuffing them wltb refused my request. corn and wheat we soon have chick- ; "The tragedy was at hand. The ens as big as squabs and kill them men had finished eating and were for broilers. You know what the looking to their weapons and hitch- are th4 highest kind of chicken ing their cartridge-belts into position, and a detail had brought up their horses tor distribution when, at the meat. You can't blame the farmer for hoarding their eggs when you know the profit there is In broilers. head of the coulee and In their cen- Then you get as much per pound a tre, I saw a fluttering rag, apparently , you get for a dozen eggs at forty thrust up out of the ground. cents a dozen. Its only the law ol "I lost no seconds In pointing this supply and demand which makes out to Fa-rell, who was about to mount his horse. " 'They want to talk,' I said. 'Let them, and I will interpret.' eggs high, as everything else. Let all the farmers turn all their eggs into market, and you will see the price come down; let them hoard theli "Farrell scowled fiercely at the eggs for hatching and up goes tb pitiful signal, and swept the outlying Sioux with a swift glance of sus picion. Theu he turned to me. " 'Well,' he growled, 'holler at 'em It it'll do you uny good; but don't give 'em any notion they can get away from what'B coming!' "I raised my voice and shouted to Little Chief to know what ho had to say. " 'Two Moous will surrender!' was his auswer. 'He will go out to those meu now. I have never taken their horses, and I did not counsel my brother to do so!' " 'The boy who ran off your horses by mistake will come out to you now,' I Interpreted, turning to Farrell and the nearer men. 'He will come un armed. The other man, his brother, was In no way to blame, save In tell ing the boy an old tradition of finding a horseshoe. If you punish Little Chief, you uhould punish also r.U these others who have come out to defend the boy.' " 'Sounds reasonable,' Farrell re luctantly admitted. 'Well, tell the thief to come out.' Then word was passed along the line. "I signaled the brothers that Two Moons should come on. There was no hesitation. The slim, half-naked boy suddenly appeared upon the levsl. He came toward ug, walking very straight aud steadily, and to bis doom, as I verily believed. "The lad was stripped to the log gings, and his hair, freshly braided price. It's simple when you know the truth." Philadelphia Record. Costly Necklaces. The most costly necklace In the world belongs to the Countoai Henckel, a lady well known in Lon- j don and Paris society, the value a', j which is said to be $250,000. It if really composed of three necklaces, each of historic Interest. One was tile property of the ex-Queen of Naplos, sister of the late Austrian ' Empress; the second was once the proper t of a Spanish grandee; whlls j the third was formerly owned by the Empress Eugenia. Not long ago a 1 necklace composed of 412 pearls, to ! eight rows, the property of the lata ' Duchess of Montrose, was sold foi I $69,100. Tho Empress Frederick of Germany is said to have possessed a necklace of thirty-two pearls, worth at least $100,000, while Lady II Chester's necklace of black pearls is valued at about $125,000. Tit-Bits. Vegetarians. Vegetarianism has got Its grip on society, and baa already commenced to make converts In numbers large enough io be encouraging to the evangelists ot the cult ot the beau aud-nut-food. M. A. P. Preserving Shingles. The Forest Service has studied the shingle problem along with that of the preservation of farm timber. It is found that shingles treated with creosote by a special process which the service has invented warp but little and decay slowly, because water is kept out of the tissues of the wood. One such roof will out last two or throe left In the natural state to curl, spring leaks and fall to pieces. The creosote used Is noth ing more than dead oil of coal tar, but it keeps water from entering the pores of the wood and render it im mune to decay for a long time. A root of that kind costs a little more at first, but it Is cheaper in the long run. Woods which are usually classed as inferior, such as loblolly pine, beech, syca more and others which are quick de caying, readily take tho preservative treatment and are given a largely In creased value. The preserving apparatus is neither expensive nor hard to oper ate. One such outfit will serve sev eral farmers. The main items are an Iron tank (an old engine boiler will do), with preservative fluid In it and a fire under It, and another tank of cold preservative. The shin gles of other woods to be treated are immersed for a sufficient time in the hot creosote and then in the cold. Full details of tho operation are given to applicants for Informa tion by the Forest Service at Wash ington. Harper's Weekly. It Is suggested that Boston should pension the cook who, in forty years, has made 39 4,000 pies and 2,000,000 doughuutB. The National Forests. The area of forest land reserved by the Government was increased during 1907 by 43,000,000 acres, making the total area ot the Na tional Forests more than 160. 000. 000, seres. The income from the Na tional Forests waa greater during the past fiscal year than the eutir cost of administratioD. This income amounted to $1,530,000 twice as much as the liioomo for 1906 and mors than twenty times that for 1905. President Roosevelt's Message. What Happened to Clark. Just what a railroad train can do to a man when it hits him is sug gested in a petition filed In the Ma con Circuit Court by M. B. Clark, a motorman on the Union line, St. Jo soph. Tho Injuries tor which Clark wants $50,000 are thus summarized: Compound fracture of the femur. Crushing and maiming of right leg below the knee. Amputation ot right leg. Injury to head. Bruising of back. Injury affecting hearing. Bruises, maiming and injuring ol hip. Pressing and injuring ot sciatic nerve. . Injuring ot left arm below the el sow. Injury to general health. Affecting injuriously the norvou system and hearing. Injuring plaintiff Internally, cans ing him to be sick, sore and maimed General permanent disability and suffering great physical pain. Mental anguish. Kansas City Journal. American Cars Needed In India. Consul General William H. Mich ael, In the following report from Cal cutta, shows the desirability of tli American railway train system lu India: "in consequence of recent murders robberies and other outrages on trains in India the Eastern Hongal State Railway has ordered electric alarm bells to be Installed In the cars of their line, so that passengers may communicate with the guards on the train. It would appear that the only effectual and practical remedy is the subatitutlou ot cats built on the American plan, with open ends and vestibule connection, for the side door arrangements used In India The EVgllsh passenger cars, or car riages as they are called, which open at tho side, are not suitable for lu dla. waily Consular Report. W Better Cow, Better Calf. 'A good cow In good condition will fjlve birth to a stronger calf and will give more milk to nourish It than will a cow In poor condition. Cor respondingly, a plump, heavy kernel of grain will produce a better plant than a shrunken. light kernel. This fact has been demonstrated beyond doubt from experiments testing the yield from light and heavy weight seeds. American Cultivator. have to break her, which often Is quite a vaudeville show and often of somewhat unpleasant memory. From the start play that you are the heifer's calf and make her believe it, and to the calf be Its god of the feed dish and two disagreeable things In dairying breaking heifers and teach ing calves to drink are made into pleasant pastimes. Popular Feed Rack. The Illustration of a fodder rack here shown is one Invented by the editor of the Agriculturist and used by him for many years. The rack Is such a good one that hundreds of farmers copied the Idea, and they came into quite general use on cattle farms. There is absolutely no waste of feed In using this rack, and any thing can be fed In It, from corn fodder to ensilage and meal, says the Wisconsin Agriculturist. The rack has n tight bottom, into which all litter falls as cattle pull How to Dip Sheep. For dipping a number of sheep, I from 1000 head up, the vat should be at least forty feet in length and five feet deep. The bottom of the vat should bo six Inches wide, tho sides sloping outward and upward, till at the top the measurement Is at least two feet, but on no account should It be any wider, as then the sheep swimming through would turn around, which Is one of the things to be guarded against. The vat Is made five feet deep to obviate the danger of tho sheep striking tho bot tom of the vnt when thrown in and is made sloping at the Bides to save ex pense in dip. The inside ot the vat should be Hush, so that no obstruction will interfere with the passing through of the sheep. Sink the vat in the ground to the depth of four feet. The vat should nt first be filled with water to see if it leaks. Keep water In It till the leakage stops, then ball out and fill with dl- Epitomlst. Feed Rack. out the hav or other fodder from between tho slats. It Is twelve feet long and five feet wide. Three or four such racks in a yard will hold a load of hay or corn fodder. It Is the best rack In which to feed corn fodder we ever saw. Cattle will pull out every leaf and husk, leaving the bare stalks in the bottom, which may be removed as desired. The posts are four by four, six feet long. On top of the posts a two by four is spiked, upon which the slats that hold the fodder rest. These slats arc four inches wide and placed far enough apart to admit the nose of a cow about six inches. The bottom is made of common six inch hoards. If meal Is fed In the rack matched flooring Is better for the bottom. A six inch board is nailed on around the outside ot the bottom to hold the feed. Where young cattle, cows or steers run loose there Is no better way ot feeding them. We have fed a good many steers in this rack. They were dehorned and ran loose in a shed. The rack was kept full of clover hay and ensilage, and meal waa fed twice daily in the tight bottom. m A Rather Novel Idea. It is said that a farmer near Lan caster, Pa., unable to obtain farm help and realizing that he would be unable to harvest his crops alone, hit upon the novel scheme of a public sale of his crops as they stood in the fields. He had a sixteen-acre corn field and a large apple orchard. The novelty of his proposition attracted n crowd, and bidding was spirited. In consequence the farmer netted $28 per acre for his corn, while his apples fetched him $1.25 per tree, the purchasers furnisMng the labor necessary to gather th; corn and pick the apples. Weekl;- Witness. Has Double Capacity. The drawing shows a low down j barrow In sufficient detail to enable any one to make a Similar one. We think that next to the low down cart it Is the handiest thing around the buildings and garden that we hare, says a writer in Farm and Fireside. Its capacity Is more than double that of the ordinary kind, and the load Is much more easily put aboard. It has the advantage ot getting into close quarters where the cart would not go, and for use about the feeding alleys, the stable, the lawn and the garden there is hardly anything that will take Its place. For the framework get two pieces of hard wood two by two Inches which will project to form handles on one end and for the wheel frame on the Other. At front ond of box in rea:' ot wheel a piece of the same dimen sions is mortise! Into the frame to hold it rigidly and to make the front end of the box frame. Pieces one and a half by one and a half inches are also mortised Into the bottom ot the legs, both front and back. Thes? form the foundation for the floor, Breeding the Baron Hog. Mr. Hoyt says that Dr. Harper is trying to get a good bacon hog. He has Tamworths, which are certainly a good bacon breed. But why should he think to improve by crossing on the Poland China, a purely lard hog? There Is really no hog that will make better bacon than the razor-back of the South, the black-haired survival of the fittest. His fault Is slow ma turity and big waste. It I was breed ing for a bacon pig I would use the Tamworth with razor-back sows, and by continually keeping only full blood Tamworth males, I would ex pect to have Ic. a little while the finest bacon pigs In America. Smith field hams are made from the native Virginia stock, and caunot bo made from the Western lard hog. The Value of Poultry Mnnure. Farmers do not appreciate the value of poultry manure. It has been estimated that the value of the droppings for fertilizer is fourteen cents per fowl per year. The New Jersey Experiment Station values the fresh manure of fowls at $4.96 per ton; the Massachusetts station values it at $5.28. The farmer doesn't value It at all, yet fresh hen manure Is considered nearly twice as valuable as fresh cow manure. It is claimed that the poultry manure if sold or usod would cover the cost of the care of the fowls. Left In the hen house to dry, the dust breathed in by the fowls, it costs the farmer more than he would wlllinzlv nav. did ho i kuow. Wallace's Farmer. A square foot ot a Persian rug means tweut)-tbre days' work for the H.nd. Teaching a Calf to Drink. H. E. Cook says In Tribune-Farmer: Fix things ao the calf can never suck Its dam, and when the cow has mothered for a few hours don't be in too big a rush about it milk about three quarts of her milk Into a pall, put It up under the calf's nose so as to touch it, and in a minute it will drink from the word go, aud you have wou oui and kept your ploty besides. A calf that has never sucked will drink as readily as it will get the bang of finding its own dinner. By the same rule, a heifer should always be hand milked and then she knows no other way. Let the calf run w.th her a few days am' theu to milk her is. In her way of think ing, "robbery" ot her calf snd you Low Down Barrow. which should be of three-quarter Inch boards. The legs are mortise! Into the shaft or handle pieces, the front ones resting about three inches from the ground and the rear ones securely braced, as shown in the cut. If desired the sides may bo built from the floor solid and straight up, but we find it better to have a per manent bed from floor to top of han dles, with removable side boards to slip on for use in handling bulky stuff. Heavy matorial, such as bags of fertilizer, large stones, etc.. are easily handled with this type ot barrow, as they may be loaded between the handles directly from the ground. Farm Notes. It is a benefit to an old orchard on level land to turn hogs Into it. Hitch the horse to the stone boat, put on a box and drive around the building, dooryards and nearby fields and pick up the loose stones. If we cultivate small fruits, have plenty of Interesting work on the farm, this will tend to keep the young men at home. Clean out and air out tho cellar thoroughly before putting in the po tatoes or other root crops. Old, musty or vermin Infested lumber should be replaced with new and clean. Don't let any apples go to waste; convert them Into cldsr or vinegar. Don't use a sour or musty barrel; roll it on the fuel pile. Cider to be kopt during wiutcr should be got just before the mill shuts down in late fall. Put in a barrel tree ot muatlneas and then keep as near to thirty-five degrees as possible. Such cider will keep sweet until spring. Tho man who peddles squashes, selling them by the pound, will find it helpful to leave two or tbreo inches of vine with the stem. In belling, by using a pull down hang scale, the vine aud stem will hang to the hook. Cut the corn low, thereby savins more fodder, and making the field look less unsightly and the i..-:.t plowing easier. Burn the potato tops, is the good advice of nearly all potato special ists. Don't winter over any manure: you can't afford to. The 10113-r yo.i keep it above ground, tho less valui It has. Every farm ought to havo a thor oughly good watch dog; mi he should be treated just as kindly and considerately as Is the horse. A dog thus kept Is an ever faithful friend. If the corn crib needs repairs, why not make them right now? When poultry attain good slss look them over and any runts, sick or maimed coop by themselves and give special care, with the Idea of selling or putting In the vat among the first.