MEMORIES. Th hours I've passed nwnv from tsta Bfftm lika ao many daye to mo, All fraught with discontent. But in each tender shimmering atar I count n record from it r Of hour I've with thee spent. --A. Mary William, in Lippinrott'l. I I I I i wiiiimii mm nam , jsjereditij or ii By Kate Gannett Wells. I Marcella had never forgotten the day ahe discovered ahe was only an "adopted." She rould atlll hear the acornful tone with which Jimmy Jonei, In shoving her sled down the Long Path on Boston Common, had announced the fact to a group of boys. She remembered alao that a tall, handsome lad had offered to drag her aled up the hill, and had told her she'd como out all right In the end, which ever since ahe had been trying to do. On that day ahe had gone home sorrowfully, and asked what it meant, to be adopted, only to be petted In reply, and made happy for the . co ntent. Yet she had lain awake at night wondering and vowing to her little aelt that never again would ahe go roasting, and she never did. Marcella had a long memory, a hot temper and an Investigating turn cf mind. So she looked up the word "adopted" In the dictionary, and de clared to herself that Jimmy Jones had told her such an awful He he ought always to be punished for It. Then she began to fancy that people pitied her Instead of loving her as they did other glrU; and she felt "riled," to use her own expression. Everything seemed to grow worse and worse for her, until one spring day on account of her carelessness at school she was sent upstairs to the aub-master for admonition. "Poor child," she overheard the teacher say, "she may not be wholly to blame; for no one knows what are her Inheritances." "My mamma will give me Just as much money as other girls have," de clared the child, indignant at misap plied compassion. "The sub-master, an excellent man without Imagina tion, was shocked, and passed her on to the master, who had no time for little things, and sent her home until he should have leisure. As Marcella left the office, she turned on him, with all the latent wlldness of her nature, and the pent up woes of her heart bursting from her child ish control, exclaiming: "I hope you never will have time, for I shall pray God to get you drowned In vacation. You don't know how to keep school." Before the master could summon Ms wits to reply, she had rushed downstairs and out into the street, hatless, to run home. But a police officer espied her, and caught her by the arm. As she tried to escape, her boy protector of the winter seized the hand, which she had thrust for ward for a pull at the officer's sleeve strap, saying, "Let her alone, Cop: she's a neighbor of mine and all right." As the lad was rather a favorite of the ' policeman, who knew boys better than often did their fathers, he consented, after a few words, to leava the frightened child in the boy'a care. She refused to go home. So Hal took her to a vacant lot, and In a place dear fo all children's hearts they sat down, Marcella find ing comfort in stubbing her boots Into the sand and refuse. Hal. how ever, was embarrassed, and fervently hoped that no one would discover him with a pretty, hatiess girl. The alienee between them had lasted long enough for him to Insist on speech. "What'a up?" he asked "I don't know," answered Mar cella, recklessly. "Things always have to begin; and It began, you know, that day last winter!" Hal nodded. "Well, It's spread. I'm not popular. I'm an adopted. The dic tionary and mamma and papa don't agree. When I used to get mad I lust got marked like anybody else. Now they take to excusing me, be cause of what they call heredity. Everybody has got that, only mine is different. Miss Smith said I could not help being careless, and called me 'poor child.' I told her I could help It, but I wouldn't. So she sent me upstairs to the sub-master. and he sent me along to the master; and I Just up and at him. That's all." And she swallowed hard, for ahe did not want to cry before a boy. Then Hal did just what he had had no notion of doing three mo ments before; he put his arms round her, and she laid her head down on his knees and cried, just what she did not mean to have done. But both of them started up as they heard the well-known whoop of boys coming round the corner, and each nooded lo the other, comrade-fashion, and dis appeared at opposite ends of the parkway. Marcella went home, and said nothing. Hal went down town, and called on Marcellu's father at his office, "it's none of my business," he began in belter-skelter fashion. "What Isn't?" asked Mr. Lord, with whom Hal was on friendly terms. "Why, whether she is adopted, or Bt. 1 am Itnlnir tn marrv hnr 1nar a, same aa soon as I'm In business the but you ought to tell her she's an adopted, and not let the story sneak out the way It doeB and have her Pitied when Bhe gets mad juat aa If ahe couldn't help It, for of course ahe can." "What are you talking about?" jwked Mr. Lord, so sternly that the boy quickly recovered bla aenaea and manners, and begged pardon, but with grim Inalatence told what he know how Jimmy Jonea hated Mar je'la, becauae ahe anubbed him and (Would not take hla apruce gum, and Kbat somehow he had found out from je aunt with whom he boarded, who ad once lived In a boapltal and had jUkeu care of babies, that Marcella aad been one of them. So Bob wh la yered it all round, Juat to aplte Mar cella. Mr ALory 1t1I'v tne ld "Yea and Marcella believes It, too, because, when she aaked yon and Mrs. Lord, you did not do anything hut hug her and give her candy. That's Juat the same as saying It was true. Then, lately, you are always excusing her when she Is naughty--I guess she Is most of the time and saying ahe can't help It: and once she overheard you say you were afraid of heredity." "How do you know this?" de manded the man. "Because Marcella told me herself; because sir promise me you won't tell, never" (Mr. Lord nodded) (the boy stood on tiptoe and whis pered Into Mr. Lord's ear), "because I'm one of those babies, too, nnd I know how It feels. Only," and he spoke louder, "the folks that took me always told me what I am, and that It depended on me what I got to be, because heredity needn't count. Most folks don't know It, and. II they do, they can't surprise me. You see Marcella didn't know, and she didn't like being surprised." Mr. Lord looked searrhlngly at the lad, and then out of the window Turning, he laid his arm on the boy's shoulder, saying: "Don't speak of this. I trust you. Come here to-morrow." "I beg your pardon, sir. I was hot-headed." And. taking up his cap, he left the office. In vain did Mr Lord try to balance his accounts. Across them ran the great mistake he and his wife had made. Hal waf right. Marcella ought to know, hard as it would be now to tell her. Years ago he and his wife, In theli childless loneliness, had adopted the child. His logic had wanted het early to know the truth; but hi wife's selfish craving for childish affection had kept them silent, lest Marcella might not love them ai much, If she knew she were not their own daughter. Now the Nemesif had come through the girl's suffer ing, and Mr. Lord Insisted that she should be told. "Tell her then yourself, ' yielded his wife, at last. "It will be the saddest day of her life." "It will be the beginning of the best years of her life. One can't gc on living a He," be replied. He went upstairs lo find the child curled up in the broad window-seat, looking at the moon. He drew hei towards him; for he loved her more, if possible, than did tils wife, and understood her far better. "Papa." she asked before he spoke, "am I au adopted?" He held her close with kisses on forehead, eyes and lips as he an swered, "Yea." The silence seemed long and cruel to them both. She shrank in his embrace as If she were Ir. pain, but he would not let her go. When quieted by his tenderness, he told her how her own parents had died, and how he and his wife had taken her from the hospital to be their own blessed little girl, and that there had never been a day since she came to them that they had not re joiced she was theirs. "Are you sure you don't want tq get. rid of me, when they poke fun at me at school?" she questioned. "Never," he answered; "but why didn't you tell me they did so?" "Because first, I thought they did it just to tease me; and, when I did try to ask, you and mamma gave me candy. I threw it away, though, just as soon as I got upstairs. Then I heurd mamma call me 'poor child' " Mr. Lord shuddered as she spoke "and you said you were afraid heredity counted. 1 looked up the word In the dictionary; but, when the teacher talked to me about inheri tances, l Just pretended she meant money. I wouldn't let her know I saw through her. O papa, I'm the mlserablest little girl ever was adopt ed. Iajlon't belong nowhere. I don't see why I got born." And the child sobbed as If her heart would break. Very tenderly and slowly, so she could understand each word, her father explained to her that she was truly their child, and that heredity needn't count, It it held aught else than final good for her. The girl listened, at first stupidly, then comprehendingly. "Papa, If I can begin to-morrow and not go to that horrid school any more, perhaps heredity needn't count that's what you said. Perhaps I needn't get mad so often. Please don't give me any more candy, not for a whole year; and I'll try to get ahead on heredity, If I've got it bad." "You haven't. We three, you, mumma and I, will try togethor for a year, so that trying will make a nice little Inheritance to hand over to next year." "That will be fun," she exclaimed, clapping her hands, forgetful of her sorrow for the next hour. But it re turned to her as she woke In the night, until she made up her mind to begin at once, on the inheritance, and so fell asleep. The next afternoon Hal went lo Mr. Lord's office. What the two said to each other was never known till years after, when Hal asked Mar cella to be his Wife. "It Isn't heredity, so much aa love in the home and will-power lu one's self that counts for good," said Mr. Lord to his wife, as Marcella and Hal dro o off on their wedding Jour ney. The Boston Cooklug-Sehool Magazine. Spanish Women. Spanish women are not the person ification of southern passion, as we have been taught by "Carmen" and romance to believe; they are physlcal ly and mentally superior to Spanish men, capable of passion, but far more difficult to woo than northern vomen. Glasgow News. A Coy Young Thing. The following advertisement re cently appeared: "Being aware that It Is Indelicate to advertise for a hus band, I refrain from doing so; but if any gentleman should he Inclined to advertise for a wife, I will answer the advertisement without delay. I am yoilng, am domesticated, and con sidered ladylike. Apply," etc. Phil ippines Gossip. Tennessee's Stingiest Man. Gallatin claims to have the stingi est man In Tennessee, If not In the world, and a premium Is offered for his superior in closeflstedness. He got married to a home girl to save expenses. They walked around the square for a bridal tour. He bought her a nickel's worth of stick candy for a wedding present and then sug gested that they save the candy for the children. Danville American. "The Truth of the Mutter." The publisher has not in years been able to "manufacture" and sell a newspaper for one cent. Some papers should not be sold for less than three cents. Nevertheless, the judgment which passes on newspaper affairs has been satisfied to load consequential loaa on the advertiser. The only le gitimate aud buslneas course la that of providing a selling price which will cover the coat of production and provide a profit aa well. All of uh are paying increased prlcea for meat some of us are paying higher rentB. And there Is not a single plausible reason why newspaper circulation should not find Its proper aud natural level aa the result of an adjustment of coat to the reader. Newipaperdoni. Children's Hats. This year little girls school and everyday hats are In bright-colored straws; those for more formal occa sions in manilla, crin or chip; or lawn embroidery hats In every degree of elaborate and simple trimming are usually trimmed with a bunch of gar den flowers, or with a full ribbon bow or scarf wound about them after the manner of such drapery as arranged on the hats of their elders. Harper's Bazar. Longer Skirts For Little Girls. This fashion of putting little girls ! Into frocks that scarcely cover them came Into vogue last year, and lit ' erally deformed thin children who be came the victims of It. This year the loose frockB are all about a full knee in length, and some still longer. In addition to the blouses and tunica there are many apron, or pinafore frock forms, a supply of which will keep the healthy romper looking fresh at all hours of the day, at a comparatively small outlay of labor or money. Harper's Bazar. Explaining the- Huge Hat. The plain, rather dark colored suit was In vogue this winter, the simple kilt skirt and severe three-quarter coat! Obviously, something had to be Introduced to soften the hard lines are about the size of a small squirrel and are found In the snowy expanses of the sub-urrlle regions. The hunter of ermine provides himself with a number of knife-blades or pieces of steel, which he covers with grease and fnstens in places where he sus pects the ermine are to be found. The ermine may not be a very use ful animal In the plan of nature, hut when one sees so many of his pelts In one collection and thinks what they represent in the way of suffering. It suggests a problem. Considering the brain-power and the general useful ness and value of the kind of women ono usually sees wearing ermine. Is this decoration they affect quite worth what It entails In the way of cruelty? Of course, the egrets and other birds one sees are more beautiful on wom en's hats than flying In the air or singing among the trees, but the main problem Is whether the results se cured In the decoration of pin-headed women are in proportion to what they cost other members of the animal kingdom? New York Life. Household Matters. Iturn the Rubbish. Old rubbish Is more valuable In the form of ashes to the gardener than any other way. Wood ashes make excellent garden fertilizer If applied properly. Kerosene Kmulfilon. One-half pound soap, one gallon water, two gallons kerosene. Dis solve the soap In water over fire. Remove from fire and add kerosene. 8tlr violently. Use one part of emul lon to fifteen partB water. Latitude in Fashions. A fashion note from New YorR tells us that a considerable amount of latitude Is to be allowed to women In the matter of new costumes. They may wear any kind of sleeves that they like. They may be long or shore, depending upon whether the arms are of thf kind that one wishes to show or to conceal. But this apparent generosity is intended only as a lubri cant to an inflexible rigor elsewhere. The edict against waists and against hips is to bo enforced to the utter most. Here there will be no latitude and no concession. The devotee who would fulfill the law to the uttermost must, present the appearance of hav ing been liquified and then poured into the dress. And the dress is en tirely without those undulations that prove the presence of things unseen, the waist and the hips. The edict against waiat and hips has been received with mingled emo tions. In some Instances it meets with easy and instant acquiescence, but elsewhere there are protests and maledictions. It Is easy to under stand a compliance that means no more than the discarding of those useful appliances that aro prodigally displayed at the bargain counter ard plctorlally advertised In the dallv newspapers. But how about the ladles whose hips are fixtures and who have received from mother na ture without money and without price what less favored ones must purchase from art and mechanical skill? Their lot is truly a hard one. for to the mere male mind it seems a bewildering impossibility thus to Name the Farm. Name the stock farm Is the advice given by an exchange and we think It la good advice. Nothing loaka better In print or sounds better when mentioned than "John Smith, pro prietor of the Maplewood farm.'' Have your printer print your letter heads with the name of your farm thereon. Some few back numbers may laugh at you, but remember that this Is the twentieth century nnd peo ple who laugh are always back numbers. Pickled Onions. Peel small white onions and cover them with one and o-ne-hnlf cups salt and two quarts of boiling water and let atand two days. Drain and cover with fresh brine the same as before; let stand two i ays again, and drain again. Make more brine and heat to the boiling point. Put In the onions and boll three minutes. Put In jars, Inter spersed with bits of mace, white pepper corns, cloveB, bits of bay leaf and slices of red pepper. Fill Jars to overflow with vinegar scalded with Biigar, allowing one and one-quarter cups of sugar to one gallon of vinegur. Cork while hot. Amer ican Home Monthly. Vry Picked Capons. Capons are always dry picked be cause It would be impossible to scald them and leave part of the feathers In. They are killed by the braining process. Feathers aro left on the neck, legs, wings, rump and tall. If dressed as ordinary fowls they will not bring any higher price than other fowls. The larger the birds the more they will bring per pound. They are in most demand from December to April. Many of them are dressed aa soft roasters and sold as such. Their flesh Is more tender and de licious than the ordinary fowl. Farmers' Home Journal. Early Cultivation of Corn. This has been a season when the ordinary steel tooth harrow has done good work on the corn ground. deep and round. Its shape gives tin peculiar attraction of the breed and ahould be carefully preserved In all the varieties. The rocks should weigh about eight and one-hslf pounds The comb is rose, lying close to the head, corru gated or Indented with small spikes at rear, curving back over the head. The head Itself Is short and broad with a short, well-curved beak. The corks should weliih about eight and one-half pounds and the hens' six and one-half, while cokerels and pullets are a pound lighter respect ively. B. M. I., In the Southern Cultivator Why riiMivnte an Orchard? For the same reason that we culti vate a hill of corn. We plant apple trees thirty feet apart, while we plant corn three nnd a half feet apart, for the reason that the foliage of an ap ple tree bears the same relation to thirty feet that the foliage or a hill of corn bears to three and a half feet. Also, that the roots of the tree oc cupy the en'lre thirty fee; of space as Wfll as the roots of cor noccupy the three and a half feet of space. Cul tivation Is as absolutely necessary for the one as for the other. Culti vation will give thrift iO either and imthrlft without it. To produce a good chop of corn, break the ground eight inches deep and pulverize a fine seed bed. In cultivating the orchard we break three inches deep only on account of rootR, and make the same finely pulverized surface. This bed contains moisture to the very surface in a dry season. By this kind of preparation and a fine, level cultivation, we retain moisture to the tree-tops during a drouth, and consequently thrift of trees and large, smooth apples, fit, indeed, for any market. A hill of corn half culti vated produces small ears of corn. An apple tree uncultivated, set In pasture, for the same reason, pro duces fruit hardly fit for worms. The M tple Souffle. Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter, add three level tablespoonfuls of float and when frothy, also, gradually, on cupful of thin maple syrup. When the mixture bolls remove from thf ' Are and slowly pour over the well beaten yolka of four eggs, then folff In the stiffly beaten whltea of four eggs, and bake In a moderate overt thirty minutes or until well puffed' up and firm to the touch. Americas I Home Monthly. Steamed Beefsteak. w Cut pieces of round ateak In ft Mn venlent size for serving. Dip them in egg, roll In cracker crumbs, and brown quickly In butter In a very hot frying pan. Place the meat In a deer dish or baaln; make a brown gravY of butter, flour and water, with ealf to season, and pour It over the meat. Then steam three hours or longer, If there Is time. The meat will bo ten der and delicious. Veal Ib nice cooked in this way. String Bean Salad. Select young, tender beans, cut thf strings from both sides, then cut each bean In two lengthwise, then across. Throw them In cold water aa faat a cut. When ready to cook cover with boiling salted water, cook twenty minutes and drain, throw Into cold water ten minutes, then cover again with boiling water, to which two or .three tablespoonfuls olive oil have been added. Cook fifteen minute or longer until tender. Season with stilt and pepper and eerve hot for the first day. Put the beana remaining in the Ice box. When ready for th salad, drain free from liquor, arrange on lettuce leaves and cover with Frbnch dressing or sauce tartare. Washington Star. of this costume, nnd the hat was the only medium. The straight-cut suit gave a perpendicular line, to elim inate which a horizontal one was re quired, hence the wide hat; and this, by contrast with the rigidity of the suit, had to be ornumented with trim ming in broken HneB, so we had end less irregular loops and all kinds of fantastic feathers. Of course, then, when the hat trimming was regular and "set" the purpose of. this style of bat was defeated. Harper's Bazar. ' Fraulelu Rlobter haa been appoint ed lecturer on philology at Vienna University, the first Instance of a woman receiving such an appoint ment. ' To Relish Wife's Cooking. A doctor tells me of a note he re ceived from a woman i Ing that her husband, who waB about to make him a professional call, tound constant fault with the dinner ahe prepared for him. She appealed to the physi cian for aid. The r.octor examined his patient, who bad a slight attack of Indiges tion, aud told him to cut out iunches, to eat nothing but a Blice of toast and a cup of tea. The Bchemo worked excellently. OH course hubby returns homo lu the evening, eats everything In sight and votes his wife's cooking even better than mother used to make. Boston Record. put on and off a "garment of flosli" that is periodically blessed and banned by fickle fashion. Training and diet may do something, but these things take time, and the changin:; styles are always In a hurry. Not long ago a lady in a New York store who asked for something in the latest fashion was asked to take a seat for a few minutes as the fashions were then changing, What then must bo the late of the fair ones who are In vited to get rid of natural encum brances between dusk and dawn with the full assurance that they will have to replace them with a similar rapid ity? The Argonaut. Mrs. Rose, of Melrose. Mrs. Geraldine Farrar, the prima donna, attended a luncheon of debu tantes in New York. MIbs Farrar told the debutantes that there was happiness in work. 8he urged work upon all of them. Work, she said, would preserve them from degenera tion Into such a type as Mrs. Rose, of Melrose. "Mrs. Rose's type is too familiar," she said. "To show you the sort of type she is: Mr. Rose came home from business. Mrs. Rose lay on a couch. He aat down by her aide and said: 'What did the doctor aay, dear?' 'He asked me to put out my tongue,' murmured Mrs. Rose. 'Yea?' 'And he looked at It and said, 'Overworked.' " Mr. Rose heaved a long sigh of relief. 'Then, my dear,' he said, firmly, 'you'll have to give it a rest. 1 have perfect confidence In that doctor.' " New York Tribune. A Question of Values. In the ahow window of a well known furrier on Weat Thirty-fourth atreet there were recently displayed the beautiful skins of about fifteen hundred little ermine. They are pure white with the exception of ihe char acterlatle black apot at the tip -of the tall. They make an imposing dla play, which arreata the atteutlon of the many ahopplng women who pass through that fashionable thorough fare. The way in which these pretty little animals are caught U ingenious. They Crusade Against Plumes. Whether the particular means he hns adopted will achieve their object or not, there will be cordial approval of Lord Avebury'B crusade against the wearing of the plumes of certain wild or rare birds. It is Indeed strange that women, who so often lead the world In humanitarian sen timent, seem to have absolutely no feeling In this matter; what fashion decrees they obey blindly even j though their adornment Involves the destruction of the parent bird during the nesting season and the slaughter of the young brood. At the plume auctions held In London during the last six months of 1907 there were catalogued 15,7 42 skins of birds or paradise, some ll&.OOO nesting plumes or the heron, during the whole year 190,000 egrets were sold So much for the humanity of fashion; and there la a regrettable tendency to push the matter further, and to wear hatpins of hare'B feet, und such like horrible "ornaments." The pre servation of a beautiful animal is more Important titan the decoration of a hat in a manner which a little reflection would show to be repulBlve; but we are not sure that legislation will prove stronger than fashion. Wo men generally contrive to make a law look ridiculous when It suits their purpose; and acts such us that of Queen Alexandra, who refuses to wear oapreys, and has made It known that ahe objects to ladles wearing them who are In her entourage, will probably be of aa much effect aa a dozen bills. Laws are useless against the uneducated, and until thoae who design and thoae who weekly follow the dlctatea of fashion are educated to a sense of the cruelty their con duct Involves there Is little hope for the birds, which are the unfortunate victims of both. London Globe. r' fiaraH . eG Tomato Hance. Add to one cupful of hot stewed and strained tomato one tablespoon ful of butter rubbed with a teaspoon ful of rorn starch. Stir until smooth and thickened, add one-half teaspoon ful of salt, a few drops of onion Jules , and a tablespoonful of piquant sauce. If too thick dilute with a llttla boiling water. A richer sauce il made by putting a pint can of toma toes Into a saucepan with a bunch of seasoning herbs, salt and pepper to taste, and add one-half cup of water, Put over the fire, cook about three quarters of an hour, Btlrrlng often. Put a tablespoonful and a half of but ter In a saucepan over the lire with a scant tablespoonful of flour. Add the strained pulp from the tomatoei and a small cup rich broth, graduat ing the amount to make the satin I the consistency required. Washing ton Star. Egg Fritters. Three eggs, hard boiled, one table ' spoonful chopped cooked chicken, : pepper, one tablespoonful chopped i cooked ham, one teaspoonful of an chovy sauce. Cut the eggs In halves, lengthways, and remove the yolks. Pound to gether the chicken, yolks and ham is a mortar, add pinch of pepper, and replace as much-of the mixture in ths hollow of one of the whites aB till' : it; put the other half in Its propet place. Do this to the three eggs. 1 Make an additional egg with what of ! the mixture remains, and make the following batter: Batter. Put two tablespoonfuls of , flour Into a basin, add a pinch of salt, i mix well, add one tablespoonful of salad oil, three tablespoonfuls ol warm water and make Into a Binootb batter. Beat up the white of one egg stiffly and add It next. Dip one of the eggs in the batter to completely cover it, und put it Into smoking hot fat and fry till brown. Repeat. Serve, on a napkin with fried parsley to garnish. Boston Cooking School Magazine. METHODS OF ORAFTAGE. Other Implements have been tried tn cleaning up the fields aud keeping the top soil nice and mellow. But the harrow beats all of them. Good farmers have learned to slant the teeth backward, so that they will not catch hold ot trash or an old stalk and tear up the hills of corn. Those who commenced by using the harrow this spring just as the weeds were starting, and then kept on uslug it until the corn was big enough to cul tivate, have clean fields and mellow fields.. This has been with the re sult that those who have neglected their fields now find them almost as bard as a public road. Atter seeing aeveral fine fields or corn this week where the harrow was used two and three times over. I say stick to the smoothing harrow, aud you will have to "show me" before I will believe there' Is anything better. L. C. Brown, in Tribune Fanner. Triumph of Youth. A certain lino of exercises is MB, ommended to make children stronger tbau their parents. This looks like ft blow at the woodshed ceremony. The Wyumlotfe. Taking the country over, the two breeds most largely represented at the shows are the Plymouth Rocks and the Wyandottes. There nre no shows In which they are not repre sented and the clnssea are usually large and good. This prominence of the two breeds Is not without reason. They combine the utility aud fancy points to as great an extant as any breed, they have prestige and have been bred long enough to a definite standard to give the greatest play to thn talent of the fancier. Like the Plymouth Rocks the Wy andottes are a made breed, but the making Is now an accomplished fact and while there Is always room for Improvement the breeder knows what to expect and will not find more than the due proportion of culls from his hatches. The Shape of the Wyandotte. There has been a tendency among breeders to confuse Wyandotte and Plymouth Rook form both by breed ing the Wyandottes too long of body and more especially by breeding the cocks too blocky. The Wyandotte, as the Standard expresses it, is a bird of curves. The back is short and broad, the body la downfall of thousands of orchards commences when their foolish owners sow them to grass and turn their stock in, and If possible tramp them still harder than they were before. A belt or grass around a tree Is about as fatal as a rope around a crimi nal's neck, especially if it be Timo thy, the great robber of moisture. Put ill Some Early Corn. A few acres or early corn will come In mighty nice arter the pastures have been eateu down so that they offer a scant living. An acre or two of evergreen sweet corn is first rate to start off the feeding season with, and then, unless you have a very early dent corn, plant a few acres In some flint corn. This makes ideal stuff tor August reeding and it will tide over until the regular field crops can be used. This la a mutter or much importance this season, because many have sold their last year's crop down close and the pastures and the early crops must be depended upou to carry the stock up to tali. Mil let la another crop which will fill h) nicely after the pastures are gone. After the fine feed the pastures are now giving, stock will need plenty of green food to keep them going up to fall. L. C. Brown, lu the Tribune 1'aitner. Durable Wood. The most durable wood of which we have evidence Is that ot whlrh the wooden tombs discovered In Egypt were built and which ProfeB sor Petrle estimates to date from 4777 B C. They were most prob ably constructed from timber yielded by a apeclea of palm. Oak wood when one It haa passed a certain age becomee practically everlasting. Evidence of this is found in the roofs of Westminster Hall and of the cathedral at Kirk wall, which have lasted almost a thousand years. Hold Stone-Throwing Contests. In parts of .Swn--. land aioiie throwlng contests are held, handsome prises being given to those who throw a fair-sized rock faitbsst. II M I K i-r.. . ,71 n o u s e:k eepf. Never break eggs on the edge of a crock or pan. Use a knife instead; '. it la much easier. Watch your dish cloths and keep 1 them clean. Otherwise you will be j supporting a microbe paradise, j Keep a pumice stone by your sink. When there are brown streaks in your granite, porcelain lined or steel 1 kettles, rub them off with the stone. After wushing children's frocks, a hot Iron should never be pressed over the colored embroidery Itself, as this Is apt to fade the colors and spoil the look of the garment. When boiling cabbage, kraut, tur nips or other loud smelling sub stances, put a lump of charcoal or rod pepper pod In the kettle to neu tralize the odor therefrom. The backs and handles of ebony bruahes Bhould be rubbed over with a very little boiled linseed oil after washing, and then rubbed with a soft duster until every vestige ot oil is re moved. Egg Btaina can be removed from silver by wiping them thoroughly with fine salt and a dry, soft cloth. Dip the cloth in tho salt and then rub on the silver and the stain will soon disappear, leaving the silver bright and clean. To remove the odor or oniona trout fish kettles and saucepans in vhich they have been cooked, put in wood aahes or sal soda, potaah or lye; fill with water and let It stand on the atove until it bolla; then wash in hot suds and rinse well. If you will spread newspapera over your bed or dining table when you wish to cut out a dress or waist, you will never cut your table cloth or spread, and you will have a smooth surface to pip, your pattern against and save all scratches aud mars. To clean ironware, take two table spoonfuls ot concentrated lye to three quarts of water It will make pancake griddles like new and the cake wilt not stick. Set the griddlta or any veaael to be cleaned whare they will keep hot, but not hail, lot three or four hours. 4