THOSE THAT ARE LEFT. ...... -Mid n the onrush of the world; Neath blazoned conquest1! flags unfurled; Remember, when the foe's downhurlcd Those that are left I Not they who fell beneath thy power) Not they who helped thee scnle the tower; But they who mimed the tidal hour Those that are lcftl Not fewl not fewl nor yet to blame That never riches, power, or fame Came nigh to conjure with their name Those that are left! Not fewl Not fewl The god of chance, With careless hand and eyes askance Hurls, without destiny, his lance. Those that are left! The maid unsought. The cripple cowed. The child untaught. Man unendowed. The gray head, disillusion-bowed They are the left! Remember! Man who art a cod! When, head erect, thou walk st abroad Remember those who kiss the rod Those thnt are left! Stephen Chalmers, in the New York limes. OVE.RCONFIDLNCL. I in D n W ! mm sfiiwix 2Z5ES2SEi S5HSHSHSE5H.raSH5HSHSHSSS2SH dSBSHSHSI "It's the expert swimmer who usu ally gets drowned," said Jackson, throwing down the newspaper he tad been reading aloud, and gazing off upon the lake. "I insist that my boy learn to swim, but right there I stop. I don't want him to be what they call a 'crack swimmer." "What are your reasons, Fred?" I asked carelessly. "The expert is too venturesome," lie replied. "He overestimates his powers, takes chances, gets exhaust ed, or is seized with cramp, and goes down. Every one Bhould swim well, enough to keep afloat for a time in n emergency. That degree of skill Would save hundreds of lives now lost through complete ignorance of a very useful art. But everyone also should have a wholesome respect for the su perior power of nature. The expert loses that respect; the indifferent swimmer knows his limitations, and keeps within the margin of safety." "Your theory is certainly plausi ble," I admitted, "but how about your own experience? You're a crnck swimmer, and you have never been drowned." "To all intents and purposes I have been," he said, earnestly. "True, they revived me before life was quite extinct, but I had all the sensations ef a drowning man, and lost con sciousness as completely, if not as permanently, as it I had been dead. And I also fully illustrate the fool hardiness of the expert, precisely as did the lad mentioned in the article I have been reading. "The thing happened nineteen years ago this summer, while I was here on a visit to my uncle. I had won two swimming races that season, and felt as much at home in the water as I did on land. I think I can truth fully say that I had absolutely no sense of fear when swimming like the young fool that I was! "I heard that Davy Brown, father of Isaac Brown, you know, had set a number of lines for sturgeon out there in the lake, and I wanted to see how that type of fishing was conduct ed. When he and his son-in-law, Honry Simmons, went to visit them one morning, I asked and received permission to go along. "We rowed out in a heavy scow the, kind they used to draw their seine with and the trip took some time, deceiving me as to the actual distance. I estimated it at less than a mile, because their boat rowed like an ore barge; but we must have gone faster than I thought, for the distance to the bar is approximately a mile and a half. "I had on swimming tights, and the moment we reached the shallows on the 'old bight beach, as they call the bar out where you see the waves breaking I sprang overboard, The water at that point was not more than two feet in depth, and I waded across to where they had a spar as thick as my leg deeply planted among the rocks. It stood fifteen or twenty feet out of water. "The fishermen ' had a guide line leading straight out from the spar for about forty yards, to where one end of the set line was anchored. The set line, kept afloat by kegs used as buoys, eitended along the deep water outside the bar and parallel with it for a hundred rods, to where there was another anchor, similarly equip ped with guide line and pole. Brown and Simmons had three set lines, fixed thug end to end, reaching near ly a mile, or most of the way across the entrance of the bight. 'There was merely a light breeze at the time, and the low waves did not break on the shallows as they do now, so I was not bothered by them as 1 splashed along; but I soon found that where I had jumped from the boat was the shallowest part of the submerged beach. There also were gaps lu the bar, wide enough for ship channels, where the water was at least one hundred feet deep, per haps more. You can see three or tour gaps in the breakers from here now. "Well, I swam across those places, and along not a few other stretches, too, for everywhere toward the north' east shore of the bight the water was at least breast deep. Finally, when the eud of the last line had been reached, I climbed back into the scow and helped to row it to shore. Thus my first trip to the drowned beach was, as you see, without Incident. "The second day following this trip was a scorcher. The thermometer registered ninety degrees In the hade; and directly after my aunt's noon dinner 1 resolved to cool oft in .e laUe. - 1 - ' I walked the three miles to the beach, and when I reached there was "ripping wet with perspiration. In Plunged, with the smallest cosslble delay, however; and the only wonder u that I didn't have a cramp at the uuiset. i "Near shore the water was almost too warm, but onee out few rods, I had enly to let my feet down te strike a temperature that seemed arc tic by comparison. Tbe depths of the Great Lakes are uway cold. "I had been accustomed to bathing In the Atlantic, and thought I had swum in fresh, it had been only dur ing contests of limited duration. The difference in buoyancy is very percep tible, if you are not racing. I swam a hundred rods or so from shore, turned upon my back, and tried to float. In five seconds I was stand ing upright, treading water. "This was repeated again and again; but at last I learned the knack. and drifted easily for a long time perhaps an hour; much longer, in fact, than I should have remained in the water. The July sun was blazing hotly overhead, but finally a chill be gan to penetrate my flesh, and soon seemed to reach to the marrow of my bones. "I turned over, to swim ashore, when in an evil moment my eye tell upon one of the spars by means of which tbe set lines were guyed, and without thought, I started to swim out there, my plan being to stand knee deep in the shallows till warmed through, and then swim ashore. Dis tances on the water are deceptive, and it seemed to me that the spar was much nearer than the beach. santly. Just before the rain came-" and with it a slight lessening in the violence of the gale the highest wave of all broke over me with stun ning force. "As it descended, I felt myself fall ing and the spar falling, too. It had pried loose at the bottom under the impact, to which my weight gave added force. .Somehow I clung to the stick, which, held in leash by the guy line, rose and fell with the breakers, now banging its water soaked butt on the bottom, and again tossed high in air. It seemed as if the life would be beaten out of me by this pounding alone, besides which I could catch my breath only at intervals, and was half smothered. "The set line anchor dragged, and Inch by inch I drifted across the bar. The deeper water Inside no 'longer permitted the stick to touch bottom. This was a marked relief, till the anchor caught firmly against the out er edge of the bar, and the pitching became so violent that I was sure that I should be torn from the spar. "Suddenly, however, just as my strength collapsed, the pitching gave place to rapid drifting; the guy line bad parted. "About ten feet remained attached to the stick. I drew it in and began feebly to wrap It about my waist and the spar, to bind myself fast. I re member taking two turns. After ward I must have taken another and made a couple of half hitches, but I do not remember doing it. "I was drowning by inches and I knew it! I had no expectation of reaching the shore alive, for I was sure the breakers inshore would fin ish me; but I wanted the timber to keep my body afloat. "They say that when a man is drowning his entire life passes like a panorama through his mind. I doubt it; certainly nothing of the kind happened to me. Before the pole came loose, I had been too scared to think of anything except the perils surrounding me. After that my mind seemed sodden, like my body, and there was no consecutive thought, only blind instinct. "I felt as if an iron hand were bound about my chest. Then con sciousness floated from me. The last I remember was when the spar turned over with me, plunging my head be neath the surface. "It seemed only a second later, though a halt hour had elapsed, when I opened my eyes and saw Henry Simmons kneeling back at my head, A (3 Kero at tlx Pla?. PERFORMANCE of "The Heroes of the Riff" at the Novidades Theatre, Madrid, recently, gave rise to an un usual demonstration. Thn nlav contains nn entnnrin nf the defense of a cannon by a common artilleryman against a horde of Moors. The soldier kills four of the enemy, wounds a fifth, and then falls down exhausted, having lost the power of speech. While this scone was being enacted, amid the intensest excitement of the audience, a man dressed in the special uni form worn by the Spanish troops at Melllla tried to make his way down the aisle of the theatre, but being unable to get upon the stage that way gained entrance by a Bide door and making his appearance on the stage a moment later, dashed in among the Moorish soldiers, gave them a good hammering and carried the cannon off in triumph. While the audience was still wondering what it all meant, the soldier stepped out of the wings and made a speech. "I am the soldier who performed the deed which is here represented," he said. "My name is Pedro Cruz. With my own hands I killed four Moors, wounded a fifth and saved the gun, all for the honor of Spain. I lost the power of speech, but recovered it in the Military Hospital at Cartagena. I ha7e been promoted to .the rank of sergeant and to-morrow I am going to the palace to be received by the King." The audience developed hysterical symptoms of enthu siasm, interrupting the play by Bwarmlng on the stage and bearing the hero off on their shoulders in a wild tumult of excitement. New York Dramatic Mirror. 4 "I must have been nearly a mile from it, and the swim, in my chilled condition, proved very exhausting. To make matters worse,- a thunder storm was gathering in the north west, and the wind that preceded it began to ruffle the lake. The waves, converging on the bight, rose very rapidly there. Within five minutes I could hear them pounding on the bar. "Of course I should have turned back at the first thunder peal, but pride kept me going pride, igno rance ot conditions on the lake and of my own limitations. When at last I felt that I was making very little headway, and wag minded to turn for the shore, I did not dare. For the first time I was really worried, forced to the conviction that my strength would be exhausted it I tried to cover tbe mile of tumbled water between me and tbe bach. "I set my teeth' and kept doggedly at it, husbanding my breath and fight ing oft the sharp pain that kept re turning to the muscles extending from beneath my right shoulder blade down to my hip. For ten min utes I seemed to gain hardly at all, but I really waB going ahead, though slowly, for suddenly the breakers were on both sides of me, and the air was thick with spray. In a few sec onds I was clutching tbe spar, with my back turned to the wind. "It seemed as it the waves were high enough and extended deep enough to expose the sand and rocks between crests, but I could see noth ing but roily water, even in the troughs. I lowered my feet to touch bottom, and went down nearly to my eyebrows before my toes came in con tact with the boulder that were piled about the foot ef the spar. I gasped, climbed hastily up the thick stick, and looked about me. "Then I knew that, instead of swimming to the pole near which I bad alighted before, I had reached one farther to the east, where the water on the bar was deeper. But it bad then been only four feet in depth and was now nearly six. Were there tides on the Great Lakes? "There are such things, as I now know, although tbe rise and fall or dinarily is only a fraction ot an inch. But a northwest wind will raise the water two feet in this bltiht In a very short time, It it blows hard enough; and that squall was a record breaker. Even with my back to the waves, I soon became afraid ot being smoth ered. I climbed higher and higher up tbe spar. "The land was hidden, tbe sky bad become a dull lead color, splashed with black,, and tbe thunder and lightulng roared and flamed lncei- grasping my wrists and working my arms like pumps, to force respiration. I knew I had drifted ashore and been picked up by the fishermen, but it was an hour before I could converse with them coherently. "I was bruised and battered from head to foot, and was sick In bed tor several days. Simmons had seen me from the bluff and had dragged me out of tbe breakers, or I should have stayed drowned. "I am now one of the few good swimmers who have learned how helpless a man can be when he is really exposed to the fury of the ele ments. That, perhaps, is best of all; but only abeut one in a hundred would have the good fortune to ac quire my experience and come through it alive." Youth's Companion. The Laborer's Thanks. A tramcar was going down a busy street one day, and was already com fortably full when it was hailed by a laboring man much the worse for li quor, who presently staggering along the car between two rows of well dressed people, regardless of polished shoes and tender feet, says Tit Bits. Murmurs and complaints arose on all sides, and demands were made that the offender should be ejected at once. But amid the storm ot abuse one friendly voice was raised and a benev olent clergyman rose from his seat, saying: "No, no! Let the man sit down and be quiet." The discomfiture of the party turned to mirth when the drunken one seized his benefactor by the band, exclaiming: "Thank ye, sirthank ye. I see you know what it Is to be tight." Cause of Some Mysterious Fires. A man who has accumulated a great deal ot definite lnfermation about many things remarked to Tip recently that be believed many fires of mysterious origin have been caused by the carelessness of painters, pol ishers or decorators. Referring to a fire of this description in a Urge apartment house, be said: "Call up tbe Fire Marshall and ask if men in any ot those trades were at work in the building." The answer was: "Yes, painters and decorators had been working on tbe ninth floor." Now York Press. cJ-fes !gJj r e 2 2 o 2 o o o o 8 .5 ,K s. a O . ', Iowa has 1629 banks, or one for very 1S80 inhabitants, Kansas is next with one bank tor every 1600 people. A Cure For Nerves. The "nervy" girl will find that an hour's sewing is a wonderful nerve soother. She can sew in all her little irritations, her fancied Injuries, and generally become her normal self ?galn when she has finished a long seam. One of the most neurotic and ex citable women, the famous George Sand, wrote In praise of the soothing powers of needlework, and every girl who fries this simple remedy for nerves will doubtless confirm hor tes timony. Home Notes. Fran Bertha's Hotel. In the little town ot Essen, Ger many, is a hotel a first-class hotel at which tbe principal guests who put np there never have to pay for their accommodation. It is owned by Frau Bertha Krupp, the richest woman in Germany, and owner of the great Krupp works at Essen. She runs it at a loss of more than $100,000 a year, fhe hotel was built by Frau Krupp solely for the entertainment of the representatives of foreign gov ernments who visit Essen to superin tend the execution of orders. Ordi narily travelers sometimes can find accommodation at the Krupp Hotel, but only when the rooms are not re quired for Frau Krupp's foreign offi cial guests. -Coston Post. Tho New Waist Line. A stronger indication of the waist line that gives a basque effect is no ticed in some of the shorter coats, al though their fit Is still very easy. Then there are those fascinating Rus sian blouses whose influence in the long buttoning line which lends a military air In closer-fitted garments is felt about ninety-nine coats out of every hundred. Belts on these Rus sian shapes are straight and wide, ornament; not simply and merely fop decorative purposes. She has been trained to work. One president ot a New England Institution declare "the college! have no sympathy with the view that it is undignified to work; tather, the? believe that is beneath the dignity ot a human being not to work." The head ot another institution that id maintaining a high level in the edu cation ot women believes that the" higher education for women "is sub' stltutlng for the weak and vain am bitions ot what Is called society ami bltlons worthy of spiritual and Intel lectual womanhood." And anothed distinguished college , president ex presses the view that "for the ideally trained woman service to others la an essential condition of her life and growth. Contact with noble minds through study of books and personal association will make her eager to throw herself into the great struggle ot humanity. Snobbishness, clannish ness and self-seeking have no place where truth reigns." Not one of tbe college presidents concurs in that view which has at times being given expression, that a college training un fits women for domestic life for being wives, mothers and the super intendents of homes. In answering the question, "What kind of a woman should the college produce?" the head ot a Massachu setts woman's college replies: "Wo men like that mother of a family in a Western city who is commissioner of public schools, who looks well to the ways ot her household and yet Is a most valued and efficient public ser vant." The suggestion of anether of the commentators upon the college bred woman's mission 19 that "the college woman learnB to be adaptable, to work with deflnlteness and system, to think quickly and clearly and tc Browned Onions. Select onions of uniform size; peol, drop into salted boiling water and cook until tender, but not broken. Lift out of the water and stand in a baking dish. On the top of each onion lay a thin strip of breakfast bacon and stand in a hot oven until the bacon is crisp and the onions nicely browned. which necessitates their being worn loose and round, and this gives n quaint look that is most charming and entirely new, a cross between a Russian soldier and an 1830 school boy. Braiding in military designs is another coat touch that is rather im portant. Harper's Bazar. Men Bunglers ns Builders. "I looked at one house to-day, highly desirable In many respects, in which the kitchen and scullery were at opposite ends of a long passage. Cannot you realize that only a man could have been guilty of such an arrangement? The lack of cupboards Is another masculine omission, and even those that are put in usually are inconveniently placed. Men also are responsible for building most bathrooms far too small for real com fort. In houses, as distinct from apartments, they rarely make the stair ratlings high enough, the result being that most staircases are death traps for clambering children; and nursery windows often are made so h!gh that the little ones cannot pos sibly Eee out of them, while the room Itself too often is placed in a gloomy and sunless part of the house. So far as I am concerned," the house- hunter wound up, "we are uncom fortable where we are, and, from all I have been able to see, we will be miserable if we move." New York Press." . judge dispassionately qualities quite as desirable in the home as in the study or the class room." And another declares that the home, the church and society needs women who can think, who love the truth, who are courageous, who are public spir ited, efficient, eager tor service and arc, withal, sincere, gentle, sympa thetic and womanly." No, tbe sweet girl graduate is not merely a finished art work, however much she may look to be a thing perfect and com pleted when viewed across the foot lights as she appears in her graduat ing glory. Her commencement day marks a commencement in her life mission; and her life mission la not by any means, according to those who should be well qualified to speak for her, to be "the butterfly along the road." Baltimore American. FRIU. - r &3J . a Dressing a Girt. A very difficult problem to a mother is the dressing of the between age girl. The average girl of sixteen is not Infrequently a most attractive person, but requires most careful dressing. She has all the grace and charm ot budding womanhood, with some ot the gaucherie ot childhood. With abundant locks and bright pink cheeks quiet dressing is a neces. slty. None ot the laclr.eas of very young girlhood is possible, or she iooks overdressed. It trimmings are used, they must be of the simplest description, and, If posatble, self-colored. For the girl still at school there is nothing nicer than a navy-blue coat and Bfclrt, worn with various blouses and a simple bat. But there are times when other attire is necessary, and then it is realized bow bard it is to drees tbe adolescent girl. She must be simply garbed, yet, of course, de sires her clothes to be pretty. There fore, special consideration should be given to her wardrobe colorings, materials and style, being well thought out. Philadelphia Record. Ideals of Colleges. i In a recent number ot a popular magazine there is a brief exposition by tbe beads ot seven American col leges devoted exclusively to the higher education of women ot the ideals aimed at by the woman col legos and concerning the life mUsion of the college-bred woman. There is not a very great diversity of view among the seven distinguished edu cators in tbe setting forth of the results broadly aimed at In the higher education ot women. Sorvlce to her generation, to her race that, la a nutshell, is the ideal for their grad uates at which the woman's colleges are aiming. This thought of service and ot a highly trained capacity fori service Is expressed In practically, very one ot the papers contributed under tbe heading ot "What Kinds ot Young Women Our Leading Ami-1 can Colleges Are Aiming to Pro duce?" Th sweet girl graduate is a finished product, but not a society, Long-walsted effects appear In the new lingerie. Flowers ot different kinds and col ors are seen together. Foulard is coming in for something of its old-time popularity. Linings must be as soft as they can' be made and aa clinging. The popularity of the embroidery robe is more marked than ever be fore. Veils are many of them more ex treme in tbe slao ot tbe mesh than ever. Tiny white linen buttons are used on the new linen suits and house gewns. Black and black and white both promise to be fashionable veiling colors. Marquisettes, linen homespuns, all now appear in checks, both gun club and shepherd. An odd fancy of the moment is the use on dressy toilettes ot bells of var nished leather. The hexagon mesh Is the veiling most often met with, whether the veil be fine or coarse. The soft serges and cashmere are used to build traveling costumes for tbe warm days. Hand embroidery and pretty lacea ae tbe dominant notes In many ot tbe new blouses. Nets are again much liked for, transparent undorsleeves and gulmpe purposes in frocks. A new lace grenadine, more often called "net" than grenadine, is shown among the new materials. Narrow silk fringe is used to edge many of tbe sew straw bats, the ef fect being to soften tbe taoe. Billows ot fluffy materials and cob webby laces enhance nearly every lin gerie frock now being shown. It seems that the rabat Is to have another successful season, since it appears as a coat, dress and blouse decoration. , 1 A groat deal ot soutache uraldlng appears on tbe dressy broadcloth coats tor children ot from three to seven years.' The scarf, first Intended as a light covering for the head, now ha devel oped into a wrap sufficient for protec tion from bead to knee. Mercerlxatlon has reached an art, and the silky appearance given by It raises some of tbe erstwhile humble trimmings to a prominent place. . Keep the Figs at Home. There Is a fortune In hogs for all of us If the present prices hold until we can raise tbe valuable animals. It should be borne In mind, however, that In these later days it Is not safe to allow one's pig to roam tbe streets. Automobiles and thieves are thicker than they were a century ago. The back yard and the nearest vacant lot ought to give the porker sufficient room for comfort. Providence Bulletin. Items of Expense. There are items of expense to the tarm that should be credit rather than debits. To see farmers buying In the markets thing that could and should be grown on the farm shows lack of forethought. It Is no uncom mon thing for farmers living near towns to buy their garden vegetables, whereas every one of these can be produced at home. By growing these greater opportunities will bo given to purchase more of such as cannot be grown. Even fruit, especially the small fruits, are chiefly had In the market. Indiana Farmer. Cow Ration. A correspondent from Edgar Coun ty, Illinois, says that he has .plenty of clover hay, corn meal, wheat bran and middlings, and wants a dally cow ration for his twelve cows. A good doily ration feeding three times a day would be in quantity for each cow, all the clover hay it will cat up clean, and by weight equal parts of middlings and bran mixed with two pounds of corn meal, feeding a pound of this to each cow in tbe pro portion of a pound for three .pounds of milk each gives. It is always best to apportion concentrates in propor tion to tbe amount ot milk, and there foFe different cows require different amounts of these concentrated feeds, though each should have all the clover hay it will eat. Indiana Farmer. farm" literature In their dreams ot bow to return to tbe good old times when "bam and" was a part of the daily breakfast menu. In the opinion of Mrs. Osborn. A small City lot and little feed and care is all that Is neces sary to produce enough eggs for each family to break the Egg Trust, If the new breed of chickens lives up to her statements. Feeding For Butter Making. A good English dairy authority say that to a small extent rich fatty foods add to the butter fat content of the milk, but only by supplying material which the cow is ready to make cream of, a cows naturally giving poor milk will lay this fat on their bocks, and it Is probably useless to try to make a bad cow give richer milk. If it were not for Uils, It would seem somewhat meaningless to de scribe certain foods a Toutter-firoduc-ers or less suitable for butter making than tor milk-producing, ttiough tho foods are all useful for the latter purpose also. Peae and rye, for In stance, are apt to maks the butter hard, and so we find tnam classed a? third-rate butter foods fn Denmark, though both ot them are useful as milk foods. Butter making is so well under stood in Denmark that tt la Interest ing to see in what estimation differ' en,t foods are held for this purpose. Rape cake, oats, and wheat bran are held in the highest estimation; cotton cake, barley, and palm not cake coma next, peas and rye ranking last. It will be noticed that the best foods are highly nitrogenous, excepting rape cake, and not particularly rich in fat, the socond-clasH foods being superior In this respect. Richness of milk being, however, dependent on the individual cow or particular breed, tbe question may well be asked whether tt pays to use these foods in any quantity for all cows alike In a milk herd, rfihose that give the richest milk should have a A Small Greenhouse. P While moot greenhouses are expensive to build and maintain, it is possible for an amateur to have one at small expense, as an addition to the dwelling. Hotbed SMahes ooet from 83.25 to 13.60 each, and measuie 3x6 feet. If steam or hot water beating cannot be provided from the house, an oil stove will maintain a high enough temperature. The Cows and Tuberculin Test. In some of the extensive tests made on cows with the tuberculin test, un der tbe new regulation and laws re quiring it, about twenty-five per cent, of the cows reacted, and were thus found to be affected. Tbe tuberculous cow presents a vivid picture of disease long con cealed, slowly but surely destroying the tissue until the factor ot safety of some organ or structure of the body has nearly been destroyed. Dur ing the early stages of the disease the animal may appear to be healthy in every respect, and it is with these that tbe tuberculin test Is valuable. Tuberculin has been used by the experiment station of the Bureau of Animal Industry regularly and con tinuously during the last seventeen years. Weekly Witness. larger proportion of non-nitrogenous food, which may to some extent cheapen the ration, as tbe albuminoid ratio is enlarged. This later in the eame proportion for all the cows in a herd has been perhaps too rigidly, adhered to, and one of our leading dairy authorities advocates attention being paid more to tbe actual require ments of the cows rather than strict adherence to any prescribed diet. ;'-'5M Wide-Awake Fanner. Mr. Stephenson, writing in Hoard's Dairyman, from Iowa, says: "I be lieve I am safe in saying that fifty per cent, of the farmers to-day are fanning the same as they did twenty five years ago." And this too in a State where wide-awake livestock associations, farmers' institutes, far more' clubs and granges have been actively engaged in training the young farmer In the way he should go. Should this be a discouragement tor farmers to try to learn better methods? We say no, decidedly, Let us think ot the other fifty per cent. Are tbey not reaping the bene fit of tbe improvements from which the statistics of Iowa have been made. Who are getting the benefit of increased products of that great State? Not the fifty per cent, who farm as tbey did a quarter century ago. ITcns Sure to Lay Every Day. ' Mrs. John Osborn, of Clayton. St. Louis County, has joined tbe ranks of the foes of high prices as the wo man Egg Trust buster. After eight years research, she says, she origin ated a breed of chicken guaranteed to produce eggs every day in the year. Tbe only trouble with the new va riety is that tbe bens are so busy lay ing eggs they forget to set. Tbey are a mixture of Rhode Island Reds, White Leghorns and Blue Audalu slans. Mrs. Osborn grows enthusiastic as fhe describes the new products of the chicken world In this fashion: "Talk about your egg machines, here In Missouri, the realm ot the queen of the barnyard, they sink into ob livion In comparison to the new Os borns. They are the superior ot tbe poultry family a egg producers. "They have bad no time to go to poultry shows and have tbolr toenails manicured, feather powdered and their combs bathed In vinegar to en hance their beauty. Tbey lay egg every day whether they hate protty prize ribbons fluttering from - their coops or not." With a few hens, each laying one egg every day, it is not necessary for city resident to study "back to the Must Fe a Good Milker. For a cow to be worth keeping In a dairy herd she must produce enough milk above the cost ot her feed to pay a good Income on the in vestment. She must do even more than this. There are a great many cows that are mere boarders, and when tho test ia applied It Is found that so far as profit is concerned they are worthless, and profit is the ouly object In view. Why one cow will subsist on tbe same feed as another and yet give twice as much milk is a mystery that has not yet been solved. The cow Is a machine to take In grain, hay, fod der, etc., and out of this to manufac ture milk. The feed Is her raw ma terial, and she is the best cow which can take this feed and from it give the greatest return. She, of course, can give back only what Is first sup plied to her In a different form, but it is a characteristic of some cows to get out ot tho feed all the milk available while with others halt of it is wasted. While some breeds are better milk ers than others, yet it ie not alto gether a matter ot breed. Because a cow may be a Jersey, a Guernsey or a Holsteln, this does not signify that she is a good milker, but the individ ual cow must stand on her own mer its. It is true, hdwevtr, that tbe best milkers belong to these breeds. Uusually the Holsteln will give the greatest amount of milk, but for rich ness the Jersey is unexcelled. The cow should also be of good dis position and not be a kicker. If she is wild and easily frightened there will be times when it wiU be impos sible to get aU the milk, and the whole herd may at times be made restless. She should also be an easy milker. In a herd the bard milker 1 anything but satisfactory. And above all else she should not be broochy or a fence pusher, aud she should pro duce a calt every year. She should no go dry, unless turned dry, and she should have an even flow ot milk. Many cows produce a large quan tity of milk for a few weeks after calving and after that tbe flow grows gradually less until it cease alto gether. Size or gsneral appearance should not be given much consideration. Color Is ot no Importance eicept a a mark of breed. Wbat Is desired In tbe dairy cow is milk or butler, and the cow that will give the greater' amount ot this at the least expense I the bent cow for tbe dairy. H., in the Indiana Fa-nier. Canada water yielded last year bout 30,000,009 lobsters, bait of which war canned. (