The Younger Set. (Continued from pace 6) roll. His family, I believe, ends there, floes It not?" "Yes, Mrs. Fnne." "I see. Miss Erroll Is naturally wor ried over him. But I wonder why she did not come to mo herself Instead of sending you as her errant ambassa dor." "Miss Erroll did not send me," ho said, flushing up. And, looking stead ily Into the smiling doll's face confront ing him, he knew again that be had failed. She smiled. "Como to me on your own errand, for Gerald's sake, for any body's sake, for your own preferably, and I'll listen, but don't come to me on another woman's errands, for I won't listen even to you." "I have como on my own errand," ho repeated coldly. "Miss Erroll knew nothing about It and shall not hear of It from me. Can you not help me. Mrs. Fane?" But Rosamund's rose china features had hardened Into a polished smile, and Selwyn stood up wearily to make his adieu. But as ho entered his hansom before the door he knew the end was not yet, and once more he set his face townrd the impossible, and once more the han som rolled away over the asphalt, and once more It stopped, this time before the house of Ituthvcn. Ituthven's greeting was a pallid stare, but as Selwyn made no motion to rise he lounged over to a couch and, half reclining among the cushions, shot an Insolent glance at Selwyn, then yawned and examined the bangles on his wrist. After a moment Selwyn said, "Mr. Ituthvcu, you are no doubt surprised that I am here." "I'm udt surprised If It's my wife you've come to see," drawled Ruthven. "If I'm the object of your visit, I con fess to some surprise as much ns the visit Is worth and no more." The vulgarity of the Insult under the man's own roof scarcely moved Sel wyn to any deeper contempt and cer tainly not to auger. "I did not come here to ask a favor of you," ho said coolly, "for that Is out of the question, Mr. Ituthvcn. But I came to tell you that Mr. Erroll's fam ily has forbidden him to continue his gambling In this house and In your company anywhere or at any time." "Most extraordinary," murmured Ituthvcn, passing his ringed fingers over his minutely shaven face that strange face of a boy hardened by the depravity of ages. "So I must request you," continued Selwyn, "to refuse him the opportunity of gambling here. Will you do It vol untarily?" "No." "Then I shall use my judgment in the matter." "And what may your judgment In the matter be?" "I have not yet decided. For one thing I might enter a complaint with the police that a boy Is being morally and materially ruined In your private gambling establishment." "Is that a threat?" "No. I will act, not threaten." "Ah," drawled Ituthven, "I may do the same the next time my wife spends the evening in your apartment." "You lie!" said Selwyn in a voice made low by surprise. "Oh, no, I don't. Very chivalrous of you quite proper for you to deny It "M-murdcrl" stammered Sir. Ituthvcn, like a gentleman but useless, quite useless. So the less said about Invok ing the law the better for some peo ple. You'll agree with me, I dare say. And now, concerning your friend Ger ald Erroll I have not tho slightest de sire to see him play cards. Whether or not he plays Is a matter perfectly indifferent to me, and you had better understand It. But if you como hero demanding that I arrange my guest lists to suit you you are losing time. Selwyn, almost stunned at Ituthven's knowlcdgo of the episode in his rooms, had risen as ho gave the man tho He direct. For an Instant, now, as he stared at him, there was murder In his eye Then tho utter hopeless helplessness of his position overwhelmed him as Ituthven, with danger written all over him, stood up, his soft, smooth thumbs hooked In the glittering sash of his kimono. "Scowl If you like," ho said, backing away Instinctively, but still nervously Impertinent, "and keep your distance! If you'vo anything further to say to me, wrlto it." Then, growing bolder as Selwyn made no offensive move "Wrlto to me," ho repeated, with a venomous smirk. "It's safer for you to fl'guro as my correspondent than as my wife's corespondent. L-let go of mcl W-what tho devil ore you d-d-do ing?" For Selwyn had him fast, one sinewy band twisted In bis silken collar, bold Ins; him squirming nt arm's length. "M-murderl" stammered Mr. Ituth ven. "No," said Belwyn, "not this time But bo very, very careful after this.1 And bo lot him go with an involun tary shudder and wiped bis bands fc sis handkerchief. Ituthvcn stood quite still, and after a moment tho livid terror died out In his face and a rushing flush spread over It a strange, dreadful shade curiously opaque and bo half turned. dizzily, hands outstretched for self support. Selwyn coolly watched him as ho sank on to tho couch and sat huddled together and leaning forward, his Bof t, ringed fingers covering his empurpled face. Then Selwyn went away with a shrug of utter loathing, but after he had gono and Ituthven's servants had discovered him and summoned a physi cian their master lay heavily amid his painted draperies and cushions, his congested features set, his eyes partly open and possessing sight, but. the whites of them had disappeared, and the eyes themselves, save for the pu pils, were like two dark silts filled with blood. There was no doubt about It. The doctors, one and all, knew their busi ness when they had so often cautioned Mr. Ituthvcn to avoid suaden and ex cessive emotions. That night Selwyn wrote briefly to Mrs. Ituthvcn: I saw your husband this afternoon. He Is at liberty to Inform you of what passed. Dut In easo ho does not thcro Is one detail which you ought to know your husband believes that you once paid a visit to my apartments. It Is unlikely that he will repeat the accusation, and I think there Is no occasion for you to worry. However, it Is only proper thai you should know this, which Is my only excuse for writing; you a letter that re quires no acknowledgment. Very truly yours, PHILIP SELWYN. To this letter she wrote an excited nnd somewhat Incoherent reply, and, rereading It In troubled surprise, he began to recognize In It something of the strange. Illogical, Impulsive atti tude which had confronted him In the first weeks of his wedded life. Here was the same minor undertone of unrest sounding ominously through every line; the same Illogical, unhappy attitude which implied so much and said so little, leaving him uneasy and disconcerted, conscious of the vague recklessness and veiled reproach. dragging him back from the present through the dead years to confront once more tho old pain, the old bewil derment nt the hopeless misunder standing between them. To lie Continued. The Needful One. Should poets cease their tender lays To warble write. I mean They might be missed In many ways. Yet cause no anguish keen. The populace would not grieve then Nor cry out In dismay. As It does when the useful hen Doth cease Its lay. Kansas City Times. The Financial Test. "Monee must be an unusually rich man." "Why?" "He says he doesn't know whether to get married or an automobile." Browning's Magazine. Back to Nature. I love tho rural life, b'gosh! I love the corn, the festive squash. And yet the town I cannot quit, So steer mo to the latest hit. Give me a front row seat, I say. And let me watch a barnyard play. Philadelphia Bulletin. A Better Chance. Nodd Have you seen Blltcr's new house? Todd No, sir. I thought I would wait six months or so until he got tired of showing his friends all over It. New York Herald. Has Made a Change. The red man smoked tho pipe of peace Ere ho had gained much knowledge. But now the noble red, you bet. Puffs his little cigarette If he's been to Carlisle college. Minneapolis Journal. The Latest Fad. "She teaches school, doesn't she?" "Yes." "What very plain clothes she wears." "Yes; she has to avoid all frills." Cleveland. Plain Dealer. Way Down In Dixie. A small boy living In Macon Was sent to a grocery for bacon. He blew In the "dough" At a vaudeville show, And his mother gave him a shakln. Chicago News. An Unhappy Combination. Hewitt It Is pretty tough, living from hand to mouth. Jewett Especially If you have a small hand and a large mouth. New ooiace For the Obscure. Though I pursue a lowly plan, For me one comfort cannot fall I know no secret service map Is grimly camping on my trail. Washington Star. A 8erious Matter. Little Son Papa, why don't you be long to a club like mamma docs? Father If I did, what would be- como of you? New York Herald. Too Nearly Followed. Ha took the busy little bee To be his guide along Life's pathway, but to cry at length, When near life's ending, "Btungl" Puck, Two Classes. "1 thought you said ho was an ex pert golfer?" '1 didn't mean ho played It. I meant he talked It." Houston Post. Ths Old Story. Typewriter she at 'leven per. Bookkeeper he and stuck on her. lit takes the burden, nothing; loath, Of earning grub enough for both. Baltimore Bun. Economy. Stella WhT do van want to marry? Bella Because two can lire mora ex nanatvslr than one. Naw York Ban, Farm and . Garden PRACTICAL DOUBLE CORNCRIB Well Arranged For Granary and Other Storage Purposes. A convenient double corncrlb may be fifty feet long, with eight foot wings and an eight foot driveway through the center. The space over the driveway may be used as a gran ary, access to the Bame being through large windows In each end of the building. Oats are particularly well suited to be stored In a place like this CHID WITH IiOBT OVEB DBIVEWAT. on account of their lightness ns com pared with other grains. Tho roof should be of the hip design, and on the lower slant cupolas every ten feet should be made, through which the end of the conveyor or elevator may be Inserted. In place of the four.cupo las one may be substituted which will ran the entire length of the roof, be ing closed by n hinged door. The second Illustration shows the end elevation of a doublo corncrlb, which is described as follows: This plan Is for a 21 by 30 building, with a dog house roof extension, which has four windows on each side, used ns holes to run corn Into, also for light. A chute at the end of the elevator con ducts the corn Into the bin. The chute Is made portable, so that It fits In ei ther space. The dog house has a door at either end, so that a conveyor can be used if desired. The dog house ex tension has three good features. First, it furnishes plenty of light nnd a good circulation of air; second, It affords nn opportunity to fill the crib from bottom to roof nnd from end to end, and, third, it furnishes a fine place to hang and dry seed corn. The foundation Is made of concrete, 0 by 0 at the top and 8 by 8 nt the bottom. DOUBLE CEm WITH CHUTE. started below frost line, and the Inner walls and driveway are also to be made of solid concrete. The dimen sion stuff is a matter of choice. For outer sills select (1 by 0, and for the inner or the solid walls 2 by 8 nn swer the purpose very well, laid down flat, with a 2 by G set on edge and studding cut out so they come out flush with the outside of the wall. For siding take the bevel edge crib sid ing, leaving a space of one and one- half inches between the boards. Apples In Boxes. This subject would be threadbare with all the discussion it has bad of late were It not for the urgency of the facts. The apple barrel Is by no means n satisfactory package, especially to the shipper of good apples, and iu spite of obstacles the apple box Is making progress. A larger proportion of last year's apple crop was sold In boxes than ever before. These facts came most painfully to the attention of cast' em apple growers when all through the winter months Oregon apples In boxes sold at good prices In all east ern cities, while New York and Now England fruit was a drug In the mar ket. It was a situation which could leave no doubt In the eastern apple grower's mind that something has to be done. Naturally the eastern grower, who sees bis market thus cut out from under him, thinks first of boxing his own apples. Ho considers also the fancy packing, trademarklng and oth er selling devices at which the west em men are so clever. All these schemes be must adopt, Imitate or Improve. But thcro Is one thing more, and a very important one, which must be taken Into the account. The east cm grower must grow better fruit. Eastern apples are conceded to be of better quality than Pacific coast stock, but tbo eastern grower has relied quite too much on this single fact. The western apples are allowed to have the best color and finish, but again the eastern grower has taken this est! mate too much for granted. The blgb quality of New York and New Eng land apples must be preserved, aug mented and then advertised. The fruit must be carefully band thinned on the trees in order to get a uniform grado for box packing. The color and ap pearance mnst be Improved by better care. Western methods of co-operative packing, shipping and selling must bo adopted. These aro large reforms here pointed out, and the eastern farm er is a hard subject for reform, but these Improvements have all got to be made. Otherwise the Oregon apple1 grower will appropriate the entire east era market, and the eastern apple grow era will go Into the milk business. tun Zumw MARY'S EDUCATED HEN. Mary had a little hen. With feathers whlto as snow. She flew across a garden fenco. Where hens ought not to go. Now, Mary was it pretty maid Her age was twcniy-tlve And Mary wasn't married yet, Bocause he didn't arrive. This hen had been a Vassar girl Who tried in vain to wed. Her soul had gone Into a hen As soon as she was dead. And thus this hen had brains, you see, And pitied Mary so. She flew across that garden fenco To help her catch a beau. A bachelor heard her fondelay And got the egg she laid. Ho followed home sweet Mary's hen Not thinking of fair maid. He handed In the big whlto egg And got a smile eo sweet That Mary's hen stood on one leg And trilled the band to beat. So this cute hen laid every day In the nest Just o'er the way. And the bachelor brought the egg right back And got more smiles for pay. One day she laid a double egg. Tho hint tho bachelor caught. So this Is what he had to say When home that egg ho brought: "Here are two eggs within one shell. Why can't wo two be one"" And Mary whispered: "Very well. Hero, talto mo. I am won." Before the veil falls on this tale Just get this truth down pat It pays a maid to keep a hen And not to nurso a cat. C. M. B. KURIOS FROM K0RRESP0NDENT3 Q. How do some bantnm breeders get the small stock they have at shows? Are they dwarfed with whis ky, as are some dogs, or are they starved down? "A. No. They select the smallest breeders, especially tho hens, and hatch late. Q My neighbor tells me my hens nre not laying because I keep no roost er. Is this so? . No. The rooster sometimes helps by aiding Biddy to hunt a nest and cackling when the egg's laid, but you can do that yourself and save the feed. Q. I just bought some pigeons, and three of them have an eye with a white spot in the center. Is this nat ural, nnd will it pass away? A. No. The dealer has sent you three pigeons blind in one eye from roup. Q. What breed has largest repre sentation at the big shows? .V. White Wyandottes. Rocks second. At the St. Louis exposition there were 872 White Wyandottes. nnd no vari ety of Rocks reached 500. At Chicago. New York and Boston they nearly always lead. At one Madison Square Garden show there were more Whlto Wyandottes than nil the Rocks put together. Q. Some of my Reeves pheasants have a sort of scaly leg that accumu lates in large knots on their feet and legs, crippling them, and I have tried sulphur ointment, glycerin, lard and coal oil, and I fall to get a permanent cure. I read your article on pheasants, and maybe you have tho euro for this trouble. A. Melt paraffin. When sufficiently cool pour over legs and feet and cover completely. Three applications a week apart will cure, sure. FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. Don't let your roosters fight. It's a poor fattening process and stops the laying. A torn crest grows slow ly. A torn car lobe or wattle or in jured eye may put your bird out of the race entirely. One hundred pullets were given to members of a California church, tho value of their winter eggs to go to the building fund. The preacher and of ficial board will lecture on "Winter Eggs and How to Get Them." and committees will visit the coops to see that tho fowls have proper care. Now, If there's nothing new under the sun, there's something new under the hen. Where next will the Amerlcnn hen get In her work? The S. P. C. A. had two dealers ar rested In Philadelphia recently for picking chickens alive. The one paid $50 and the other $20 fine. Such fel lows will get singed In the next world. The Fnnclers' Association of York, Pa., Is trying to get a bill through con gress to protect racing homers. The club claims that some of Its birds have lieen shot whllo passing over states v.lieie there Is no protection. When you find yellow tipped drop pings under the roost put lots of fine charcoal In the mash, and It will at once disinfect the whole digestive tract. Great strides were made in tho guinea Industry the past season. The Whlto African Is gaining on the Pearl These birds lovo horses and slip In to roost on the horses on winter nights. Nice and warm for the guineas, but not so nice for tbe hostlers. Conshobocken, Pa., lately arrested twenty-five geese for vagrancy and fined their owner $12.50. The fine not being paid, the geese wero returned to jail. A Pennsylvania gentlcmau on re turn from church took a dose of aco nlto In mistake for nltor. Ho swallowed seventeen raw eggs as an antidote, and after three hours' work the doc tors pulled htm through. He now tips bis bat to every ben, as all should do, Tho custom of some people to handle fowls over and over again Is a display of mighty mean manners and is on a par with the fellow who goes Into a store and helps himself to everything eatable In reach. When dressed fowls are graded and uniform there's not so much handling and haggling. CHOICE MISCELLANY Infant Widows of India. The East Indian papers record a ca rious case arising out of the terrlblo custom of Infant mnrrlagc In that country. Tho daughter of Justice Moo kerjec, a learned Hindoo, was married when she was under ten years of age, and she became a widow two months after tho ceremony. Though he could not resist the pnrlv mnrrlnire custom sanctioned by his creed, the judge 1 stood out against tbat other custom which condemns tho child widow to life long misery In her dead husband's "nmlltf nnrl ilnrAt-mtriAil rv Vin m ! married again. The husband's rela-1 tlves claimed and obtained a power of guardianship over her child, but be fore It could be exercised the second marriage had taken place, and there Is to bo a legal struggle to determine precisely how the claims of the dead husband's family can be reconciled with the living husband's rights. The judge's action will have the support of many Hindoos who are eager to break down a custom that condemns thousands of young girls to n life that Is almost worse than slavery. But the power of the older schools of thought Is great, and British lawmakers and administrators, though deploring the evils of Infant marriages, must shrink from Interference with customs which claim to have religious sanction. Old time Maine hunters are nothing If not resourceful. The Lewlston Jour nal tells of the novel way In which n deer was brought down. Being out cf buckshot, the hunter took the ball bearings out of his bicycle and loaded a shotgun shell with them In place of shot. It was not long after that he got sight of a fair sized doe and fired, kill ing her Instantly. Frederick MacMonnles Is to design the new $70,000 fountain provided for in the will of Mrs. E. N. Cole for New York city. He hopes It will be placed in front of tho city hall. "When they taunt us about our art In America," he said recently, "we have always that glorious city hall. We can point to that and say to our European crit ics, 'We, too, have architectural ances tors. " College and School. Bowdoln college has been placed upon the Carnegie foundation. nnwkshed grnmmar school, near Ambleside, England, where Words worth was educated and which wns founded In 1585 by Edwyne Sandys, archbishop of York, Is to be closed. The University of Michigan reports an enrollment of 4,530 students In nil departments and In a recent bulletin says that "when summer schools are not counted the university stands, next to Harvard, the largest In the country." Just Run Down. They gathered up the scattered man rrosi out the auto s track And pried his backbone Into lino ai.a .sew ed his fingers back. They Blued his car on once again and patched his broken nose And made a plaster cast to hold his some what twlstca toes. And as they worknd the victim uighed. Ho rose up In Ills bed. He groaned and felt his bandaged self. "Where am I at?" ho said. The doctors cheerily replied: "We picked you up downtown. Don't worry. You're all right you're just a little bit run down. Dallas News The Financial Genius. "Yes, madam; I will play one-two- three pieces on ze piano for twelf dol lar. An' so soon as I haf foenlsh I will go home." "But I wanted you to stay and con verse with my guests." 'Ah, eo! Zat will be twenty dollar extra." Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Believer All Right. "Are you a believer In spiritualism?" "Yes; the ghost walks every Satur day, and by Monday I have nothing left but a hallucination." Answers. Coasting. Swift as an nrrow shot from tho bow, Safe on our coasters downward we go, Over the bumpers, over the dike. Who'd have nn auto or even a bllce? Going like lightning, going like mad! Where was there ever such sport to be had? Trudging uphill, tho rope In one's hand, Happiest we of the boys In the land. Snow may be Icy, lco may bo wet Little wo caro for such trifles, you bet! Once at the top, wo are off In a jiff HI, there! Look out! Clear the track, will you? Biff! Lurana W. Sheldon In Judge. Ho Takes After Mother. The star pupil arose at the school en tertainment to declaim his piece. "Lend mo your enrs!" ho bawled, "na," sneered tho mother of the oppo sition but defeated pupil, "that's Sarah Jane Doran's boy. He wouldn't he his mother's son if be didn't want to borrow something." Tit-Bits. To Fault Finders. Tou have some right to talk about Outrageous fortune's stings If working for or mapping out Some plan for better things. But If to help yourself you fall And just complaining sit No one will care to heed your wall Or help you on a bit. Kansas City Times. Woes, of the Suburbanite. Ostend Pa, what is the "Suburban handicap?" Pa The lawn mower in tho summer and the snow shovel in tho winter, my ton. Denver News-Times. Twinkle, Twinkle. Twinkle, twinkle, little star. How I wonder what you are I Varthlr diamonds you surpass, Yet you may b only glass. If by any cbaaos you fell, Tbsrs's an unols who could tell. -New York Herald, ON WOOING BENT- John Hammersmith of New York to a widower In whose care have been left somo pledges of affection by his late spouse. These children arc in im mediate charge of his mother, and aft er returning from a visit to them he writes a friend that he must have the children with himself, that homo with out them is not home at all, that a housekeeper is not practical and that be must solve tho problem by taking onto himself another wife. He wants a good, sensible woman to take care of the house and train tho children in tho way they should go. He has in mind a woman he mot in Chicago, knew an hour or so and re members chiefly because he saw her holding a baby as ,if she loved it So confident is he that this woman will fa vor his suit that he warns his friend to prepare to act as best man. Then, he writes the woman as follows: My Dear Miss Maurice I am, as no. doubt you know, a widower with two children, a boy and a girl. My wife hu been dead two yean, and my children Save been with my mother. My little girt ' misses me sadly, as I do her, and It you could make up your mind to marry ma and make a homo for us I would show my gratitude by being as good a husband as I know how. Hoping you will con sider this favorably, I am, my dear Mtsa Maurice, sincerely yours, JOHN HAMMERSMITH. Those who know nothing about love will not be surprised that Miss Man rice responded In this wise: Dear Mr. Hammersmith Thanking you very much for the honor you have con ferred upon me, I must respectfully do cllne your proposal. Very truly yours, MART MAURICE. That would havo settled most men, but It only served as a spur to John Hammersmith. Meantime Miss Maurice takes occa sion to "drop a line" to her chum, Helen Wells, In which she says things that, could he have read them, would have made the amorous Hammersmith fancy he had stepped on a redhot stove Ud. She said she was "burning to write him a scorcher" rather warm language for a practical bachelor maid but exercised almost superhuman control. Still, she had an opinion that "If 'he reads between the lines his eye balls will wither." And yet this young woman "held a baby as though she loved It!" Well, Hammersmith evidently did read between the lines, but without tho optical shriveling predicted, for he again addressed his inamorata in hu mility and with profuse apology and hinted that bo was going on a journey to Japan and would like to take bis children and a wife along. This bait failed to secure even a nib ble. Indeed, It aroused all Miss Mau rice's sarcasm, and, being a school teacher, she had plenty. She suggested that he was acting in this matter of selecting a wife with less care than be would in choosing a horse, and she said that her "present employer, tho city," gave her a holiday of two months each year, which was more than she could hope to get from blm. Then John Hammersmith wrote his friend that he felt about a foot high and had a strong desire to kill Miss Maurice. But he took another tack in steadwrote a renewal of his proposal and was requested to cease bis endeav ors, that the decision not to marry him was final. And as if in afterthought Miss Maurice told him she was con sidering "another man." Hammer smith responded as follows: My Dear Miss Maurice Thank you for your nice, long letter. I couldn't quite make out the last of It. I am going to Chicago to kill the other man. Deter minedly, JOHN HAMMERSMITH. There is a pause here in the narra tive which fancy may fill. Again Miss Maurice addresses her chum, Helen Wells, and her letter is bo characteristic, so "eternally femi nine," that It Is worth reproducing: My Dear Helen Well, I am going to Europe sure enough, but not on a cattle boat. I am going as Mrs. John Hammer smith, and I am so dazed that I can hardly believe it. Mr. H. came to school one day looking disgustingly handsome. I looked tired to death and a fright. Wa went to the theater. Nothing was Bald. Came next night, and John Bartlett ap peared also. We played cards. I felt amused. Instead of a spinster of thirty two I told him that I was near forty I felt like a gay young thing of sixteen or ; thereabouts, with my two suitors. Com parisons are odious, but Mr. H. showed to so much better advantage than John, who was plainly jealous, that that queer organ called my heart took a leap In the New York man's favor. He came the next evening, and well, he wooed me as a woman of any age likes to be wooed. He Is willing to live In a flat and let mo' housekeep to my own heart's content, and I think I am going to be quite happy. Just think! I shall have a dear little boy and girl to take care of Instead of my little dog. Come on for the "bachelor girl" dinner. Never thought TA give one. We sail July SO. With love, MARY MAURICE. So tho wooing of a bachelor maid is not different from the wooing of any other sort of maid. When Hammer smith dropped his semlcommerclal propositions and wooed "as a woman of any age likes to be wooed" the cit adel capitulated, tho practical bache lor girl found she was vulnerable to the shafts of Cupid. And John Ham mersmith learned this old time losson: When a man would win a maid, don't write; go. Modem Culture. Half and Half. "An elderly spinster sat near me at the table d'hote one afternoon in Venice," said a returned trawler. "Turning to her niece! heard her say: "In Vanlee at butt Ah, lay dear, half the dream ot my youth Ss-uow fulfilled.' "Why only half, auntta? theToung girl asked. "1 counted on going to VeskVi sighed the spinster, on 'My wtdaac Journey.' " In His Uiw. "gfce married a photographer." "Is ha a good aaar "K has mm BafttyTt vM t