I A NOTES C.ffIIARNITZ liIVEMIM CORK£SPCNMMCE SOLICITED U/\ J*T ' HEN FEVER. My Henny's pot the chicken craze. I'll lot you have the cue. He's cackling 'bout the hen that lays And crowing somewhat too. He's going to buy a hatch machine And send for high priced eggs. He's building coops and brooder things Most running off his legs. But that's the way 'tis every year. And when the season's done; There'll be the same old chickens hen As when the year begun. If your old man gets chicken craze, Just tell him he's a dear, For when he's got the chicken craze He's not out guzzling beer. C. M. B. THAT BRASS ROOSTER. Not the one on the weather vane, but the yellow quilled fellow that will soon haven brazen hackle and saddle feath ers, and you do wish him to kee[ white as snow. Can't blaine you, for white birds arc the fad—not simply because they 100 l pretty on a green lawn, lay eggs am taste for more, but our good cooks don't like dressed chickens that look like yellow cushions stuck full ol mourning pius. Yes, you are anxious to keep youi Hocks. Dottes and Leghorns suowj stay-white. You don't want your chicken house to look like a junk shop full of twe legged brass kettles. Well, brasslnes: Is simply a matter of too much fat The large breeds especially will put on fat if you feed them that way, am that way is generally yellow corn, am yellow corn is the main cause of brass! ness. A chicken owner growls out: "Tin greedy things won't lay. I can't make them lay, and they eat like hogs." Yes, there's "hog corn" scattered ev erywhere, and his White Itoeks are fal as hogs and yellow as butter. You'd think his hens would lay cori mullins. The trouble with many peo pie is they feed a fattening ration in stead of one for eggs. They feed al carbohydrates and no proteids. It's corn, corn, corn—fat and brass. Tlicii hens are great for the cook pot, but ni for nest. Are you the fellow that weighs his chickens every week and shouts thi extra ounce across to your next neigh bor, who gathers lots of eggs? Well the difference is just here—you raisi hen fat at 12 cents a pound, and IK produces egg 3 at 40 to CO cents a dozen lie uses less feed, his hens are whitt and healthy, and he has a good egj profit. Your corn bill makes you poor. Youi chickens are laying on fat for apo plexv, and your lazy hens and roosters look like a patch of goldenrod. Now, if you're not mad. listen longer Don't feed more than 20 per cenl corn—white corn for white birds, and not too much of that. If you have fed creaminess or brass into the plumage, feed it out, using nc corn for a month. > Cook pot panacea cures confirmee! brassiness. If your hens are very fat. starve there down and make them scratch for everj grain in deep litter. Feed little corn at the time when old hens molt and blood is in the quills of young chickens. Too much heat may affect the healtli of chicks so their feathers will noi come perfect, but we do not believe sunshine makes brassiness. When we have to pass parasols rouu'J to the Biddies and decorate our long tailed roosters with sunbonnets to keep off freckles we will adjourn sine die. CHESTNUTS. The complaints about fruit in poultry yards may lead to something entirely different. The fowls get most of the fruit that falls, and what they miss is fouled. At Irish Valley, near Shamokin, Pa., Is an Italian chestnut grove of 000,00 C trees that bear and a nursery of 130,- 000 young trees. The yield the past year was 2,000 bushels, which were sold at sl2 per bushel. These trees are all grafted on our ordinary young chestnut sprouts and grow on was ground. They are extremely hardy, not tall and require very little atten tion. At the same time they pay big profit. Is not this a solution of the question, "What fruit can we plant in our poul try yards and on free range that will not be spoiled by the poultry?" DO NTS. Don't use slugshot for vermin. It's a sure chicken and louse killer. Don't lose your temper at a contrary cluck. Urge her not to do what you want, and she will do it. Kemember she is n female hen. Don't envy the other fellow. When you see the birds that he brags up you ~ay laugh yourself full and tip your hat and apologize to your poorest cull. All Is not gold that's told. Don't rush the growler. If yon are doing growliug stunts g!) out and growl with the bulldog. He will teach yon some new- doggerel duets and give yon some choice lessons in backbiting. QUACKERY. Are you a chicken quack T Shake! We are glad you aren't a hatchet fiend. They tell you "it seldom pays to doc tor a sick chicken." Well, here are 10C big Hocks. They show signs of roup. You may lose a half dozen In treatment, but the hatchet remedy cleans up the coop. Yes, that was civil war surgery. "Saw off that leg," and off it came till legs and arms piled even with the window sill. Oslerlze your chickens? Well, we don't. The investigation of disease lias led to a system of symptoms, causes and cures for poultry ailments that's a blessing to poultryman and fowl alike. DON'T 3. I">on't quote Scripture to the man who swindles you. It's casting pearls before swine. Ilon't feed your chickens rot and ex pect them to be fit to eat and lay pure eggs. It's rotten. Don't carry chickens by the legs. It's barbarous business. Ducks are carried by the neck. Kubber! Don't sell salt, lime, glass or storage eggs for fresh stock. It's a mighty sneaky fox that never gets caught. Don't let your wife get the reputa tion of having all the chicken knowl edge on the place. It shows you're lazy. Don't pretend that you have good stock to make a sale. Chickens of that breed always come home to scratch. Don't get crazy if your neighbor's hen flies over the fence, especially when your "yaller" dog tracks all the porches In town. Hiss! Don't get chicken crazv and mort gage your house to buy Incubators. When the sheriff comes In at the door chicken fever flies out at the window. Don't get the chicken fever simply because the other fellow won a sliver cup. Not every honest fellow gets a silver cup, and all is not silver that shines. Don't get the blues if eggs drop In price. The farmer's pullets are mak ing their de' ut. But, If a manager, you are getti.ig more eggs now than ever, and the quantity makes up for I lower price. THE BACK YARD FANCIER. Is be a new bird? Xo; he is older even than his oldest hen, and she is related to the cock that crew thrice. Is he restricted to any locality? No; | be is everywhere. Ills rooster chal- I lenge in Maine is answered by a Shanghai in Porto Rico. Ills Plymouth j Hock's clarion to the sun as It rises from the Atlantic is shouted back by i the cocks of Honolulu and Manila bay, where they raise game chickens for re | llglous purposes. You have the back i yard fancier in your own town. He is so near that when bis hen cackles over a new laid egg it wakens the baby. Ills roosters crow so loudly on n Sun- I day morning that you are cheated out I of a half day's sleep. This gentleman of back lotters has thus far succeeded in confining the chicken fever to a small area. If it i succeeds in reaching the solar plexus, j he will soon have a bad case of poultry farm. His stock is "fair to middlin'" and generally provides eggs for the family cakes and custards and an oc casional roast for the preacher. Does poultry pay him? It does. If lie makes a little profit, his investment | Is small, and he can rejoice. If he Just makes the feed, ho can buy eggs and roasts no cheaper, and his prlnci i pal has waxed fat. If he falls a little j back, ho must remember that eggs ; from his own hens and roasts from his , own pens are more delicious and val ! uable than an unknown quantity. FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. i When you look round for eggs for j hatching, don't get the cheap kind. Too many Canadian chickens are ; crossing the line to suit some northern 1 fanciers. California business men are offering | Inducements to poultryraen to settle in i that state. A fine flock of White Log- | horns would look mighty pretty in an j orange grove. If you have done your best to get a \ hatch from that old claptrap incubator and only half succeeded, what's tho j use to try, try again? Buy a depend- i able machine and you'll quit swearing. 1 "I'm dirty, and John's dirty, too," re- J plied a lady when asked the age of her- j self and husband. In her case she j was dirty and yet clean, but some j poultrymen are never above being j dirty and yot are overdirty. Pennsylvania raised over 400,000\ green ducks in 1907. Old .TelT and the j University of Pennsylvania turned out I a drove of young green quacks, but ! they are now outdone. Cornell has cs- j tablished a chair of poultry husbandry, j W ill Old .Toff and the I'. of P. still keep their slow waddle, or have they enough quack specialists? When strictly fresh eggs are taken j to tho store tho grocer should allow an j even trade at the retail price. If the I pcaltryman drops below the retail egg I price, then the grocer should lower the price on goods exchanged. No fair dealer will demand two profits. A dog j in the manger is bad, a hog in the | hen's nest is worse, but a cross of dog and bog In a business deal is a blue I ribbon hybrid. j The prevalence of soft corn Is af ! fording a problem for farmer, miller, stock raiser and poultryman to worry i over. In some states half the corn Is moldy. We have saved ours by run- I ning it through tho power cutter and feeding it cob and all. But where's | the corn to come from next summer? i Tho duck men will yell the loudest, but these soft roaster fellows ought ; to leap for joy. CJ Kising In the World. j The mountain village of Artigue, In the I.uclior region, in France, is being gradually raised in elevation. Forty years ago the village was not visible from Luchon. Now it can be clearly seen and bills fair to become a strik ing object to the entire plain of Lu chon. It is believed that the moun tain ledge on which it stands is slowly undergoing a rotary movement. Golfer —Dear, dear! There cannot be worse players than myself! Caddie—Weel, maybe they're worse players, but they dinna play! At tho Wind's Mercy. "Scrogglns Is always boasting about his new balloon." "That's all it's good for." "What's all It's good for?" "To blow about."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Use For Them All. Tou have three pairs of glasses, pro fessor." "Yes; 1 use one to rend with, one to see nt n distance and the third to find the other two." There is nothing worse for mortals than n vagabond Ufo. —Hmner. I CHECKING| | 1 112 ... By TATLOH. WHITE ... $ CopvrtaM, 1908, bu E. C. Pareelb. <• T "Is it true that your father's bank cannot stand the run?" asked Sydney- Ware. Eunice Whitehead nodded. "Dad says that he cannot meet the run before the current funds will be come exhausted," she said. "That means that tho bank will have to be closed down. He Is solvent, but ho sent too much of the currency to town to be put out at the high interest they are paying now." "The run is only on the savings de partment," said Sydney. "That should not bother him much." "It will break his heart," she re turned, "if the bank has to close down even for a couple of days. Dr. Dunn ham says that ho Is afraid It will give father a shock which will leave its permanent imprint on him." "He can make his home with us If the bank falls," said Ware. "It may be for the best, so far as we are con cerned." "That's what I came to talk to you about," said Eunice gravely. "If tho bank fails, Syd, I shall have to give you up, dear. Father would never con sent to share a home with a Ware, and I could not leave him." "You were willing enough to leave him last week," suggested Sydney. "That was before the trouble came," she reminded. "Then ho had his bank and his friends. If he loses ono, he will probably lose most of the others, and my place is with him." Sydney nodded gloomily Thirty years before Joshua Whitehead and Cyrus Ware had been rival suitors for the hand of pretty Nellie Morton. White head had won, and Ware had never forgiven him his victory. Whitehead had then just founded tho First Na tional bank of Carrsville, and Ware had drawn his funds from the bank and hail vowed that he would never patronize the Institution. Such bank ing as he had done was transacted through an institution In the next town, but Ware had conceived a dis trust for all banks, and most of the largo fortune which he had accumu lated was stored In gold and bills and bonds in the huge vault In the knit ting mills, a vault as largo and as safe as that in the bank. But In the second generation the feud was not carried on. Eunice White head and Sydney Ware had fallen in love with each other and, realizing the uselessness of asking parental sane tion, haa agreed io eiope wu giveness afterward. To Eunice it seemed almost a pun ishment for her contemplated sin that the run on the bank should have com menced the very day they had set for their marriage. Instead of meeting Sydney with her suit case In hand she had come to tell him that her plate 1 was by her father In his hour of trou ble. | Mrs. Whitehead had died shortly aft er her little daughter was born, and Eunice had bravely striven to take the place of her gentle mother in her fa ther's house. She could not leave him In his extremity even for the man she I loved. For awhile they sat on the fallen trunk which formed the seat In their rustic parlor. Yalnly Sydney sought to urge the girl to his views, but he could not shake her resolution, and ' Eunice had just risen togo when there came the sound of some one crashing through the underbrush, and Cyrus Ware came into view. Ills eyes flashed as he caught sight of the suit case that Sydney had brought with him, and he turned to his son. "So It appears that you are going away," said Cyrus. "I suppose that this young woman is to be your com panion in your travels. She will need some one to support her now that her father has wrecked his bank." "Ho has not wrecked his bank, and I am not going away with Sydney," cried Eunice, with spirit. "i)ad is afrnid that he cannot meet this run and will have to shut tho doors, but he did uot —reck the bank. lie will be able to pay dollar for dollar. I was pohig to elope with Sydney, but now tny* place is by my father's side, and I came to tell Syd that I could not go." "But you were willing to sneak away like a couple of thieves and be mar ried secretly," taunted Cyrus. "I sup pose that the plan was yours and you entangled this boy." "That Is not so," said Sydney hotly. i"lt has taken me a year and more to persuade Eunice to elope. We knew j that there was no use asking either her | father or mine, and we did not see j why your absurd stubbornness should | spoil our happiness." | Cyrus stared at his son. Like most ! men of dominant personality, he secret, ly admired spirit In others. It was the j llrst time that Sydney had ever taken so bold a stand against a parental edict; and he felt a thrill of satisfaction even while he spoke. "I guess you'll find happiness without having togo to Josh Whitehead's daughter for it,"he said harshly. "I want a girl I can recognize as my daughter, not the child of a bank wrecker." Eunice sprang forward at the taunt. "You are a nasty, wicked old man."' she cried. "You know that you ar# saying what Is not true. 1 believe thtl you started this run because you knew that most of the country banks had sent their surplus to the city to take advantage of the money market. It is you who are a bank wrecker. I hate you!" She stamped her foot to emphasize her words, and something in the ges ture brought back to Cyrus' memory n far earlier day when these same words were spoken. He and Josh and Nellie had been out nutting—three children with no thought of marriage. lie had killed a bird with a stono and had brought It to Nellie, proud of his prowess. Instead of the praise ho had expected, she turned on him and scolded l)im for his wanton act. Eunice in her auger was very like her mother, and the whole scene came back ; v him as vividly as thoush it had been jr c» "wry any nwa of a remlnlscenw of forty years and' more. He looked into the eyes that were BO like those he had loved In the long ago and partly turned away. For the first time he realized why Whitehead had won. Nellie had admired his gentle ness even while she feared Cyrus' roughness. Perhaps, after nil, he, Cyrus, had been more to blame for his loss than had his old playfellow. "You two goon with your spooning," he said gruffly, anil they could not see that tho shrewd gray eyes were filled with tears. Cyrus stumbled blindly along tho half defined path that led to the road. He was living over again his boyhood days, and he found therein much to re gret. There was a howling mob about the bank. Tho employees of half a dozen big mills had token the day off to res cue their money from the fancied dan ger, and they clamored about the doors. As fast as those in the bank obtained their money they were let out and others were admitted. The tellers were paying out as slowlyas possible in the hope of being able to tide over the day. On tho morrow they might expect help from the city. Cyrus Ware stamped his way up the steps, tho crowd giving way before him. The watchman at tho door let him lu at once, and, without explana- j tlon, Ware pushed his way Into the president's office, where Whitehead i puzzled over long columns of figures, j lie did not hear Ware's entrance, and \ not until Cyrus' hand fell upon his ! shoulder did he look up. "Josh," he said thickly, "I've been a blamed fool for more years than I care j to remember, but that's no sign I've j got to keep onto the end of my days. ; I've got about $109,000 out there In my I wagon. I want to open an account." ! For a moment Whitehead glanced : into the other man's face and saw in nis eyes the inute appeal tor reconcili ation which Cyrus could not frame in words. Their hands met in a clasp , that wiped nway the memory of bitter years, and together they went out of j the office to where a guard of men stood over the boxes. Already the j news that Cyrus Ware was going to deposit had broken the rush, and the crowd had materially lessened. The two men stood on the step su- { periutendlng the removal of the cur reney. Cyrus passed Whitehead a ci-; gar. "I'm glad I've squared up old accounts in opening a new one," he said, with a ponderous effort nt care lessness. "You see, our young people are planning to get married." CHARMS FOR LUCK. Th* Sort of Superstitions Some Wall Street Men Harbor. Let all the dear readers, feminine fender, take cognizance of what fol lows, for surely the fairer sex is, after all, the stronger sex. Women know no such abject obedience to superstitious fears and signs as do the men. With a view to eliciting something of inter- I est, the writer had a chance to put a certain question to a captain of indus try. "Tut, tut," he replied suspicious ly, "you'd be getting me into trouble, would you?" With a promise that no names would be mentioned, he finally agreed to tell a thing or two. The question was, "Aren't men in Wall street carrying all sorts of queer things to try to change their luck?" In answer to this the writer heard some curious stories. One man of worldwide fame, for example, carries a cane In the center of which there is a slender steel rod. Circling the rod there are rlugs made of leather and of hard rubber, like the washers that plumbers use. Each seventh ring is made of leather from the soles of the shoes worn by the billionaire during what he considered his luckiest year. Elephants and pigs as lucky charms there are of course in plenty, but the , proper caper is to wear the animal : pinned Inside on the watch fob pocket. > Then there Is another great financier who carries with him a gold Ink well and would never sign a document with fluid from another receptacle. Once i upon a time, when he had, say, only a : picayune million or two, he signed a paper In a deal that doubled, then tre- j bled, his wealth. The ink used that day was emptied Into a long gold tube or well that ho now carries. The Ink was used tip, but to the well, so he thinks, the good luck power has been translated. Lucky coins pass from fa ther to son In several of the multimil Honalre families, and the man who in- | herlts them would never lie without j them. We have few secret drawers in flesks or doors In houses, as they had In olden times, but there are many se- | cret pockets in the suits made by 1 smart tailors.—Brooklyn Life. At One Fell awoop. 'Have you got any of those preparti tions for removing superfluous hair?" asks the man who enters the drug store with a firm tread %nd a set counte nance. "Yes, sir," answers the druggist. "Give me a pint. I want to use It on my head." "But, man, you haven't got any su perfluous hair on your head. You're nearly bald now." "I know it. And I've got so aggra vated and tired watchin»the confound ed hair leaking off day by day that I want to remove the rest of It at one sweep and have the agony over." Shakespeare Notwithstanding. "Is there any tiling In a ma me?" In quired tho man with mouse colored whiskers. "You can bet there is. Name a boy Stuyvesant or Van Rens selaer or Gouverneur and he'll never hold anything but a first class job. Nobody will ever dare ask him to swab windows or mop floors. And by the time he's forty he'll be bend of a trust company and director In twenty seven prominent concerns. Oh, yes; there's a heap In a name, lemme tell you."—Washington Herald The Infallible Man. Tho most dull and wlshy washy man tn all the world must be he who never made a mistake. But he Is double dyed when ho Trtll make no. mistake himself and lose sleep over the mis takes of his neighbor. Manchester Union. Men'i Waye. TV> often hear women criticised for their queer v.ays of dning things, but we rlw to call attention to the queei waya many good men have of not do I tag thin S».—lla!lock Knterprls# CAR) "OS THE S," Wisconsin Representative Tells How Good Bills Are Killed. EAGER TO AID CONSTITUENTS Circular Letter Mailed to Them, Which He Expect* to Do Some Good—Ac companied by Double Allotment of Beeds and Offer of Farm Bulletins. William J. Cary, who represents one of the Milwaukee districts In the house of representatives. Is keeping his con stituents thoroughly Informed about affairs In Washington. Mr. Cary Is serving his first term In congress. He had some legislative experience before coining to the capital, and accordingly In his three months' life ns a maker of the nation's laws ho has not been be guiled by the leaders. As a rule, the new congressman changes his Impressions of Washington when he has been' here a month or two. Along this line a story is told of a western representative who came to Washington some years ago breathing hostility to every kind of corporate wealth, especially railroad corporations. Six weeks later he was a changed man and confided to one of his friends that the railroads "are all right." lie con fessed that observation and experience had convinced him of the error of his position in believing transportation companies enemies of the public. "Why," he continued, "I'm for the rail roads, and, for all I care, they can make a roundhouse out of statuary | hall." j Representative Cary is not this kind I of a congressman. He is "on the job" for the people and has informed the folks back home that he has found a deplorable condition of affairs In Wash -1 ingtou, says a special correspondent of 1 the New York Post. He has discovered also, he says, the way that good bills 1 are killed. : In order that the voters of the Fourth Wisconslu district may have an ac curate account of his congressional stewardship Mr. CY.ry lias prepared a circular letter which he is sending out. In the upper right band corner of the letter Is a half tone likeness of the Mil waukee representative and below it the label of the typographical union. Mr. J Cary was a telegraph operator before ho entered public life and has Intro-1 duced several bills to regulate the af fairs of the telegraph companies. It appears from Sir. Cary's letter that his committee work in Washington takes so much of his time that he can not go into details in explaining what j he has found sinco he became a nation al legislator. He is a member of two commltlees, District of Columbia and ventilation, and acoustics. The last named meets on alternate leap years. Every senator and representative gets an annual allotment of 15,000 packages of garden seed and an equal allotment of farmers' bulletins. It was to accompany his seeds and bulletins that Mr. Cary prepared his circular let ter. Hear him: "I am writing u hasty note to Inclose with your seed and to explain that I oould not get all the varieties you wanted, as the government seed ware house burned down and ruined all the seed originally gathered. However, 1 Inclose a double allotment of every kind of seed In the seed department and hope you will find plenty to suit, if you need more, just write me. I In close a list of farm bulletins. If you want any of these, Just mark the num bers and send the list to me. You can mark ns many as you wish. "I find affairs in Washington just about as described in the campaigns. If some of the people knew what their representatives do here they would lie , astounded. It Is a terrible menace to the welfare of our country to see men here doing all they can to prevent bills going through congress for the benefit of the people, sneaking into corners to whisper to corporation lawyers and at tending dinners and receptions given by men who have special bills to pass Instead of attending their committee meetings for the good of the people. I have Introduced several gnod bills, one of them the farmers' denatured alcohol bill, which will enable the fanner to make alcohol out of the waste material on his farm and use it to light and heat his house, pump his water and run his farm machinery with the stuff he now throws away. This is explained '• j John Dickert's letter on the e-'Uorial page of the Fi io Press of Fob. 17. I will send you a copy of the bill and say more about it later, as I am too busy now with committee work to do It A plan of killing a good bill Is to call two or three committee meetings at the same time so that a congress man cannot get to them all, and they kill his L»II1 In one committee while he is attending the other. However. I j learned a few things myself while I ) was alderman and sheriff, and these j fellows have found out that they can not put me up a tree. "I Inclose newspaper whieli printed an editorial about me here. If there is anything I can get you here, just drop me a line. Please write and let me know If you get the seed." It is Mr. Cary's idea that a letter like this ought to help some. Have You Got "Mollycocidleitis?" "Mollycoddleltis" is the latest disease, according to I>r. H. VV. Wiley, chlel chemist of the department of agricul ture. In a speech at the University crab in Washington the other night he said: "The man who never has taken u drink of alcoholic liquor or the mac who says, with a supercilious air, 'I do not drink,' Is afillctod with 'molly coddlettis.'" The disease Is quite rare. A Cannon Anecdote. Speaker Cannon one evening stood In the reeelvlnK lino nt the Washington residence of Vice President Fairbanks passing kindly word and grip with friends as tboy c; me along, says the Chicago Post. At length his own daugh ter approached, and, drawing up his spare frame, he grasped her hand in formal fashion and Inquired, with a well assumed disinterestedness, "Your name, please?" "Lydla Plnkham," re plied Miss Cannon amiably. "Well, Lydln, my dear, we are well met." tbr ipeaker responded, "for 1 guess there'. Just about as much good In your rep t iles as there Is In m>- preeldi ntla. boom." ERRORS INJURS Lord Welby Points Out Ameri ca's and Suggests a Remedy. EXPERT COMMISSION NEEDED Let It Frame Laws to Improve Cur rency, Advises Great British Finan cier—Tells of the Danger In Having Panic After Panic. No man stands higher In the world of financial science than Lord Welby. He was Gladstone's right bund adviser In financial affairs. As a member of the first London county council he es tablished the existing system of financ ing the metropolis. For a score of years, as permanent undersecretary of the treasury, he practically con trolled England's financial affairs. Re tired now, he watches the world with the keen observance of intimate un derstanding, particularly the United States. To the New York World's spe cial correspondent at London he re cently said: "I have read President Roosevelt's recent message, and I think Europe regards him as a man of great force and ability and has confidence in his absolute integrity. You have great problems to solve and conditions to remedy. We have an Interest in what you do. Fifty years ago the financial world was divided into separate money centers. Slow means of communica tion caused each capital to be depend ent to a great extent upon its own re sources. "Now, however, the entire financial world is combined. The old centers are closely interwoven. What affects one affects the other. Therefore your financial panic and its causes are of much interest to us in London. If our financial structure had not been very sound I hesitate to think what might have happened to us at the time of your October crash. As it was we pull ed through practically without a fail ure. I will not say wo did not feel its effects. "It strikes me that you have serious need of remedying your conditions. You cannot goon having panic after panic every few years. It weakens both your prestige and your structure. America has wonderful natural re sources and has made wonderful prog ress. We divide that progress into two classes—the legitimate and the Illegiti mate. The legitimate you must care fully foster. It is very easy to over step the llue and cripple it. Ilasty, ill advised legislation often proves worse than no legislation at all. lam a firm believer in liberalism, in freedom of ' action, of too few rather than too many \ hampering laws, and, having found.tbe j best remedy, apply it. "There seems to be general agree- j ment that your currency system has ! proved inadequate, and various legis- ! iatlve measures are proposed to im-! prove it If I may venture a sugges- j tlon, I would say that beforo adopting | hasty laws It might be well to get the j advice of an expert commission on | what ia best to l>e done. Choose a body of men—distinguished men who understand the subject thoroughly and, j above all, men who have the confldcuce of the public—and let them draft the needed reforms. You have men who j are above personal interest. "To my mind, one of the greatest j evils of any nation is the influence of i pernicious lobbying in behalf of spe- j rial Interests. Having obtained the rec- | ommendations of your experts, enact j legislation lu accordance. Then the chances are that you will have fewer mistakes to correct than might happen after hasty action. j "You will pardon my criticism that one important thing you lack in the j United States is concentrated, forceful public opinion. lam speaking now In reference to what I call your illegitl ! mate pi-ogress. Your people do not seem to put into practical effect their condemnations. They permit evils to ' continue and patronize them because of the temporary profits they derive. They ; do not always withdraw their support and frown down upon practices that are wrong. You need that kind of pub j lie opinion which will inflict Its punish ! ments upon wrongdoers. This force need not always come from the general public. It may lie confined to a small circle. j "There is no law in England to pre vent a bank from devoting as much of its funds as its directors please to sup porting any stock speculation or enter ing a r'jky undertaking. But such things juickly become known to other bankf.s, and the practice is chocked by their disapproval. "The position of your trust compa nies, combining banking with trustee ship, seems strange. You have plenty of banks to afford ample banking fa cilities without the trust companies', which appear to enjoy rather wide lat itude. This condition, 112 believe, needs remedying. "Although the people of the United States aro exceptionally active and progressive, yet they aje curiously con servative in stamping out evil customs that have gradually grown* up. They hesitate to remedy and are slow to punish." Railroad Discrimination. The Big Four railroad —Cleveland, Cincinnati. Chicago and St. Louis has its foot in it good and proper at Tana, 111. The young ladies of the town are beauless now just because the Big Four time table has changed and the Sunday night train fails to stop at Shelbyvllle, 111. The rnilroad will either lie compelled to change the or der of Its trains or Shelbyvllle will have a surplus of bachelors and Pana will have an old maids' club In the near future. Took Kindly to tha Water. They tell this story of the experience of two Maine boys In trying to catch a woodchuck: They had tried quite a number of times to capture the animal, but un successfully. At last they decided to drown him out; so, procuring four pails, each took two, and they carried water for two solid hours and poured It into the hole in the ground In which the said chuck had taken up his abode. Getting tired, they sat down. After about half an hour the woodchuck cautiously left the hole and deliberate ly walked down to the brook and took a long drink of water and then scooted, much to UMI dUumst of tha two ho«* DIE INTERSTATE CLIIB Organization Near Chattanooga Is For Whole Nation. BOTH FOR LIONS AND LAMBS Prominent Men cf All Parties on Its Roster—Splendid Property Will Cost Millions and Be Miles In Extent. Preserves For Game and Fisli. »> amen s riage, near"Chafoinooga, Tetin., will. If certain large plana now afoot go through. become within a year or two the home of the greatest coun try club in America, If not in the world. The organization, which will be known as the Interstate club, has al ready been formed and Is founded on the Idea that there Is room In the United States for a great nonpolitical, nousectional association to which citi zens, big and little, of every state in the Union may repair for recreation and friendly Intercourse. The club will have a distinguished membership. Senator J. C. S. Rlack buni of Kentucky is president, and President Roosevelt, Vice President Fairbanks, former President Grover Cleveland and William J. Bryan are members. Some of the vice presidents are Secretaries Hoot and Taft, Speaker Cannon, Leslie M. Shaw, Truman 11. Aldrich, Joseph Sibley, Nicholas Long worth, Charles S. Towne, Robert J. Lowe and Senator McLaurln. The club is chartered under the laws of Tennessee and has acquired large tracts of land on Waiden's ridge, con tiguous to the Tennessee river and in the vicinity of famous Signal point. The site for the clubhouse is on a high plateau overlooking thirty miles of beautiful country. The extensive plans contemplate the erection of an amphitheater and the maintenance of fisheries, game preserves, golf links, polo grounds nnd a trotting track and the building of an electric railway from the level of the Tennessee river to the clubhouse doors. Engineers are now at work layinjr out within the club grounds an auto mobile boulevard that will be thirty two miles long and eighty feet r.\ : By reason of the vast tract owned by the club and the tableland formation the curves of the boulevard will be so few and so gradual as to bo hardly curves at all. Another plan Is to make the club members profit by certain locks and dams now being built across the Ten nessee river. The clubhouse site has been fixed at a point that will overlook what will be a three mile lake when the locks nnd dams are complete. By means of the lake it will bo possible for members togo from New York and other places clear to the club float in yachts. The initial outlay for improvemento will run into the millions. The club house alone will cast $1,000,000 and the automobile course $500,000. The club will be Inaugurated on June 25 at a banquet on the club property. Men of prominence will lie present. There is to be nothing exclusive about the Interstate club. Founded with the Idea that it should be nonpartisan and nonsectlonal, it will seel; to attract men from the country over. The ex penses of membership will be small, SSO initiation fee and about the same amount yearly dues. With a membership of from 250,000 to 1,000,000 it Is expected the club will have no difficulty In the way of financ ing Itself. All money received as Initia tion and dues will goto defray club expenses and to the reduction of such debt as th° ""•<*anization may assume at Its bogii. g. Although the club is nonpartisan and nonpolitical, its projectors believe it will wield a large influence in national and industrial affairs through its op portunities of informal discussion. Men of prominence and influence can meet there, talk there and obtain the opin- ions of others there without fear of committing themselves to anything and without fear of what they may say being considered official. Work on the clubhouse will probably be commenced next summer. When fin ished, it will on account of its south erly position be n convenient all year round resort for Its members. Man and His Sweet Tooth. "If you want to have that tradltio: upset about women only having a sweet tooth," remarked the stenogra pher who works downtown, "just gt into a quick lunch room occasionallj and watch the men who drink coffee or chocolate with their midday meals I give you my word I have seen not one, but many men, put six lumps oi sugar Into their one cup of coffee ot chocolate and then eat apple pie that is fairly covered with powdered sugar.' Impatient Husband (tired of holding his chin up)—lt's taking you an aw fully long time to fix this necktie. Laura. Patient Wife—You never used to complain about the length of time it took me to smooth out your necktie before wo were married, George Chicago Tribnne. mm mi A. Reliable TIN SHOP Tor all kind of Tin Roofing. Spoutlne and Canaral Job Work. Stoyea, Heatera, ltan«ao. Furnacaa. ato. PRICES TOG LOWEST! QDiLITY TEE BEST! JOHN HIXSON HO- 11* E. FRONT BT,