fMeresTflffW Women' Clubs. The advancement of women's clubs has often been discussed, and an edi torial recently In the- Federation Htil letln Bays the following: "The women's clubs have been studying American social problems for years, and there Is no part of the body politic, which they have neglect ed. Doubtless they supposed they were casting their bread upon the wa ters, as most reformers do, without worrying too much about the return. But their wildest dream could not have' anticipated such results as are now coming back to them. The attention which the clubs have recently attract ed, both in attack and defence, has led naturally to the subjects which they were discussing until at last the sum total of Interest in our doings Is al most beyond belief. As Mr. needier once said of another kind of success, we have set the tide to moving, aud now we need only stand upon the shore and see the waves come In. When the great dally papers all over the land began to be our champions and allies, as many of them have done during this particular year of grace, it was only natural that the magazines should begin to fall In Hue. And all of them have discovered that it is really a serious movement aud one worthy of attention. None the less is this true because, as the Baltimore 'American has remarked, we have been pursuing the even tenor of our ways without paying much atentlon to slanders or abuse. It would seem as though the day of slander and abuse Is about over for us, at least so far as concerns any source which Is worth considering." The Home. Married people would be happier, says the Boston Gazette: If home trials were never told to the neighbors. If they kissed and made up after every quarrel. If household expenses were propor tioned to receipts. If they tried to be as agreeable as in courtship days. If each would try aud be a support and comfort to the other. If each remembered the other was a human being, not an angel. If women were aa kind to their hus bands as they were to their lovers. If fuel and provisions were laid iu during the Ugh tide of summer work. It both parties remembered that they married1 for worse as well as bet ter. It men were as thoughtful for their wives as they were for their sweet hearts. If there were fewer silk and velvet costumes for the street, and more plain, tidy house dresses. If there were fewer "please, darl ings," in public, and more polite man ners in private. If wires and husbands would take some pleasure as they go along, and not degenerate Into mere tolling ma chines. Recreation is necessary to keep the heart In Its place, .and to get along without it is a big mistake. If men. would remember that wom en can't always be smiling, who have to cook the dinner, answer the bell half a dozen times, and get Tld of n neighbor who has dropped in, tend to s a sick baby, tie up the cut linger of a two-year-old, gather up the playthings of a four-year-old, tie up the head of a six-year-old on skates, and get an ' eight-year-old ready for school, to say nothing of sweeping, cleaning, etc. A woman with all these to contend with may claim It a privilege to look and feel a little tired sometimes, and n word of sympathy would not be too much to expect from the man who, during the honeymoon, wouldn't let her carry as much as a sunshade. Walking Up and Down Stairs. Do you know how to go up and downstairs properly? If you do you hare at your command one of the best exercises in the world. But if you don't know the 'art, stair climbing ' is oce of the worst exercises. Going upstairs is like riding a wheel. It is fun if you know how, and - In practice, and if the going is good. Walking upstairs is something few people do gracefully. In the first place, it requires a knowledge of the art of breathing properly. Then oue muBt learn to manage ono's skirts skil fully. How many women have stepped on the front of their dresses going up stairs? How many women can couut the number of times they have walked up the front breadths of their gowns? How many women have torn skirts and flounces and ruined em broideries and fringes? How many have fallen upstairs? Tour dress must be lifted out of your way, and lifted gracefully, and this requires deep thought and much practice. Bach skirt is a law unto itself, and you must learn a library of laws, one for each gown. The wide accordion plaited skirt ft I and the voluminous Dolly Varden re quire the services of both hands. One hand should lift the back of the dress; the other must raise the front. Long evening dresses can generally be lifted with oue baud, but it requires some skill. The skirt should be clinched right lu the middle of the front, and the hand should acquire the trick of taking in the whole front of the sltirt In a sort of double hand ful. With a quick motion you grab the front breadth Iu two different places and lift. You can now take a step upward without walking on your skirt. Walking upstairs Is splendid prac tice for tho physical culture woman, but she must learn its tricks. On this point a physical culturist said: 'i consider stair climbing the best exercise in the world, and It Is one of the few forms of exercise which can be taken bv the domestic woman with out Implements and without going out of doors. "She who Is going to walk upstairs, either for exercise or for grace, must learn six things: First, she must learn how to manage her skirts; the skirts play .a very Important role. I'nless she can lift her skirts and keep them out of her way, she run not walk up comfortably. "The second thing is that of posl- (Ion. Few wonuii like to climb stairs. and most women actually dread It. And the reason Is not on account of the exertion, but on account of the posit iou. "When a woman goes upstairs she bends double. Slip literally climbs; she never walks up. "Most women are too 'tightly gowned to walk upstairs. We have a little flight of stairs but Just for that purpose, and it is part of the curricu lum to go upstairs for ten minutes a day. "The pupil is made to mount and remount, and while she goes up she holds her dress in one hand and n fan in the other, or a spray of flowers, or something simple ami pretty. This Is to teach her grace and to give her a hint on how to perform this very sim ple feat acceptably. "There are rule3 for stair climbing. Don't go up as though you were try- lug to drag a ton of lead up a hill. Uo up us though you liked It. "Practice walking with the knees, upon a level surface. Lift your feet high. Now transfer your operations to a stalrcuse ami walk uptuirs the same way. You will find that It does you a world of good, this stair climb ing exorcise. 'There are doctors who advise their patients to climb stairs for the sake of health. The rule is to climb six flights of stairs twice a day. once in the morning and once in the after noon. "Don't try to climb at night when you are tired. You are not equal to It, but take Hie stairs during your springy hours. "Slalr climbing develops precisely the same muscles as bicycle riding. It calclies you in the calf of the leg. in the knee and lu the hips. You should keep on until all of these mus cles respond willingly. Then you will climb easily. "In gvmnasium work we let our pu pils mount a little staircase. Then we It't them climb off and on a block. Then we put them through a series of stunts, such as climbing a wheel and getting up a II 1 tie Iron lad der. . "Going up stairs Is excellent exer cise. It is good for your lungs and good for your muscles. And, If you want to become lithe and strong, go up stairs frequently." Kansas City Journal. Fashion Notes. Taffetas are much used with these fabrics and lend juttt the distinction that is needed. The empire styles are the best of the season and some of the smartest and finest of the empire models can be seen in the Imported autombile coats. All Empire cloaks should be fast ened with a very high belt of a color that contrasts slightly with the coat and matches the princess gown under neath. With the Empire cloak, whether an auto cloak or a walking clonk, there must be worn the tight fitting prin cess dress, which fits the figure and docs not make the waist look too big. The automobile sleeve is the fash ionable sleeve for the winter, being full, beautifully gathered at the shoul der and so arranged that It fits into the cut. making a handsome finish for the hand. There is a desire to get hold of hand woven materials, cashmeres and camel's-halr, which are still made by the Arabs in Persia and India, and which no machine has ever successful ly Imitated as to artistic variety and richness. ' - i r f HIH J. WW; Save Tea Leaves. Save tea leaves for washing var nished paint. When sufficient leaves have been collected sleep them for hall an hour In a tin vessel and then strain through a sieve. This water gives a fresher, newer appeurance to varnished wood thaii ordinary soap and water. haltdhilips7oi.-?JjKiu'losetl etalontaoln Removing Mildew. Mildew Is not generally affected by chemicals, though It sometimes yields to their uctlon. It may best be treut ed with 11 stiff paste made by boiling down Castile soap shavings, spreading a thick layer of this upon the stain aud scattering over it some powdered potash. Moisten slightly with water and bleach out on the grass. Keeping Candiid Fruit, Candied fruit, should always be kept In the dark to preserve Us rich color and flavor. Preserved and canned to matoes often spoil, or at least lose much of their flavor, simply from the action of light. Keep all fruits In a closed cupboard, or lacking that, wrap each can in dark colored paper. Jellies alone should be kept in a rather light place. Washing White Chiffon. White chiffon washes perfectly, hut a better way to clean It Is by a dry method. Cue two quarts of finely pow dered starch to oue of powdered borax. Spread the chiffon on a clean muslin, mid rub the mixture well Into it. Shake this out, and sprinkle' liberally with clean flour and borax; cover and leave over night; the next day brush and shake every particle of powder from the chiffon. It should be found quite spotless. An Apple Hint. One of the most wholesome dishes Is a baked apple. It Is delicious at breakfast as well as at supper. In fact, apples in almost any form are in valuable. For variety's sake try peel ing (he apples before baking them. Peel unci core them, fill the hollows with spice and sugar and bake long enough to give them a thin, crispy, crust. Sometimes a bit of butter Is placed on top of each apple before put ting In the oven. Serve them cold with whipped cream. Recipes, Corn Souffle Drain the water from a can of corn and stir In three table spoonfuls of melted butter. Beat four eggs until very light and turn with a pint of rich milk into the corn. Sea son well, beat for several minutes and pour Into a buttered pudding dish. Cover and bake thirty minutes. Re move the cover, brown the souffle and serve directly. Crape Catchup Wash two quarts ol grapes, pick over and remove stems. Put In granite ware saucepan, pour over one quart of vinegar, bring to boiling pout and rook until grapes are soft; then rub through a sieve. Re turn to saucepan, add 1 1-2 pounds ol brown sugar, one fablespooiiful each of cinnamon, clove mid pimento, one- halt tablespoouful of salt and one- fourth of a teaspoonful of cayenne. Cook until of the consistency of to mato catchup. Bottle, coj! und seal. Cabbage Salad The following rule for cabbage salad Is a good old "stand by" and excellent on the country sup per table: Chop a head of cabbage very fine, using the regular meat chopper, which will cut It up Into flue pieces of equal size. Soak the cabbage two hours in salt and water, then drain. Beat thoroughly four eggs, add one pint of vinegar and half a cup of but ler. Let it come to the boiling point, stirring It carefully to prevent the eggs from curdling. Then add a scant tablespoouful of pepper, a heaping one of mustard and sugar to taste. .Some housewives do uot like as much sugar as others. Stuffed Tomatoes The acidity of to matoes, which is always brought out with cooking, makes them particular ly welcome at this season. They may be served either with bread crumb stuffing or with a chicken forcemeat. Select touHitoes of firm texture. Cut a "cap" off the top of each and remove all the soft pulp and seeds. Pound to a paste small pieces of chic-ken, either cooked or raw. Measure the chicken. Add the same amount of bread crumbs to It, soaked In milk and to every cup ful of the mixture add a saltspoonfid of butter and an egg yolk, with pepper and salt to suit the taste. Some people may enjoy the addition of a pinch of nutmeg. ' Alsft add half a teaspoonful of onion juice and six chopped mush rooms. If the mixture is not moist enough, a little chicken stock or good gravy can be poured over the stuffing. Replace the "caps" and bake the to matoes in a porcelain lined or'enamel pieplate or baking pan. Cook them half an hour in a moderate oven. A simpler rule for stuffed tomatoes Is this delicious one: After preparing them as above, cutting off the top and tak ing out the Ins:de, fill with the follow ing dressing: To every two cups ol bread crumbs add pepper, salt, a bay leaf, ground or finely chopped and a slice of onion, also chopped. Moisten the stuffing with the juice and pulp of the tomatoes, which should be freed from s'.eds. Cover with small bits ol butter, yerve hot immediately after baking. The Immorality qf the Money Power By David J. Brewer. Justice of Uie Supreme Court, TTR nim-.it t-iur rpnmlna lwitli w I I man. Without honesty I together. And in spite nnauce l believe that the great ueart or. me Aiuericau peuiiio loves justice and square dealing. It looks with nlurm at the influence and with shame and humiliation at the Immorality of the monev uower. It rebels against Us domination and resents its lowering of moral Ideals and Its debauching of the conscience of the rising gen eration. It feels and confesses that such wickedness Is a reproach to any na tion. It yearns for a fresh baptism of righteousness. Nor does It pray mere ly; it will net too. It is going to protect itself against the depredations and debaucheries of tho money power by breaking down monopolies, giving every body a chance and holding all rich and poor alike to strict accountability to law and to a quickened public opinion. Next to honesty I should say that justice Is the cardinal virtue of society. Justice consists In giving to everybody his due. The tendency In every society Is for the stronger and the better favored to get more than their due. This Is the ever-present motive nnd argument for socialism, which contemplates an equal distribution cf economic goods. But I cannot convince myself that so cialism Is the goal of society. Socialism, Indeed, equalizes the distribution of the slock of goods on hand, but It does not, like the competitive regime, suc cessfully provide for their increase. And worse still, socialism fulls to evoke from the Individual the most and the highest of which the individual Is capable. What we need In America Is not the cast iron so cialistic policy of the doctrinaire, but the, infusion Into the present economic order of the social spirit the spirit of fair play and mutual helpful ness. And at least one step In positive legislation Is necessary. We should abolish monopolies and restriction which work Inequalities In prices or injur tlces iu the distribution of wealth. Perfect Justice in the economic sphere Is hard to realize lu fact or even to define In thought. But It certainly Is not the Interest of the stronger. And laws which give artificial support to the stronger should be repealed. The moral character of a people Is the culminating criterion of Its greatness. If the individual American Is honest and truthful nnd temperate and pure-, and Just and 1rave, and kind, the American people, whatever else they may lack, possess moril greatness which Is the principal constituent of any conception of greatness. And a nation composed of such citizens will bring this moral spirit and temper Into all Its relations with foreign government. m 0 &f Marshall Field and His Honorable Fortune By the lCdltor of ttie New Yorlt Post. ARSHAI.L FIBLD'S case lu the best answer to those who say that all objections to all rich men are born of the meanest motives. The denunlcation of certain men with vast possessions Is eome- "linies said to be only a manifestation of Jealously; the Insensate rage cf the Have-N'ots against the Haves. But we do not think so poorly of human nature. If anything, we believe the natural tendency of ordinary people Is too easily to assign all sorts of m g3 vlrture to men eminent for wealth; and when, on the contrary, we see tnem attacked and discredited, there Is always a reason for It. Sometimes the cause Is persiual something In the character of Sir Oorglua Midas, but ordi narily it is the sense of social justice asserting Itself. Men resent wealth or power of any kind acquired and. used without scruple and without remorse. They will cry out, we ure glad to say, when they see greed grown' great by the ruin of the helpless. It is, whether mistaken or not, tho belief that one man's riches mean uuother man's wrongs, which leads to the general contempt In which certain very rich men are held. Against wealth, as such, we see no evidence that there Is any real prejudice; but against fortunes created by tak ing unfair advantage of one's efllows, or by securing special legislation, or by disregard or the laws intended to secure equal rights for all, there always has been, and always will be, prejudice amongst rlglit-thlnkiug people In a demo cracy. It was against the "Interdicted gains" of "bread-taxed trade" that El liott, the "Corn-Law Rhymer," ptote.sted. Such enormous fortunes as his raise the old questions which 'philosophers and moralists have so many tlmejc discussed: "What are ihe limits of lux ury? How can vast accumulations of wealth in the hands of one man be Jus tltled?" The true answer lies in the use to which the wealth Is put. Pro fessor Sedgwick lays clown the general rule, to which Leslie Stephen subscrib ed, that the tea. is social efficiency. If great wealth makes Its possessor a more useful member Of society than he would be without it, then we need look no further for its justification. And when, as in the Instance of Mr. Field, the large fortune was honorably got, and millions of It devoted, as In the Field Columbian Museum, to .the education of the public in beauty and refinement, In ways not otherwise available, the usefulness and the honor of the rich man are placed beyond doubt or cavil. &F &f T Beneficial Results gf the Insurance Investigation By Harry A. Ciuiremancl. OW that the active part of m well to consider the beneficial results It has brought about. Its greatest beiiefa will be the lesson It gives to all men, rich and poor. In this age where men want to have a different code of morals for business and for the church, where men who want to bo considered honest, Chuistiun gentlemen throw their religion away when it comes to business, such a dlscl6sure as this pre sents vividly the errcr of such a state of affairs, whether the man be rich or poor. For It has shown the harmful results of yielding to temptations that are common to a:i humanity, such as making money in a way that cannot leg ally be proven to bo dishonest, although it Is necessary to quiet the conscience; using foul means wheu It would be difficult to use fair, lying when It Is hard to teil the truth, and any hiiuilu-r of those petty dishonesties which are so diffi cult to overcome. This all suggests itself to the general public in reading over this Inquiry, for, after all. the shortcomings of these gentlemen are so human that in the deepest conscience of every man who has or would have done tilings of the same kind the judgment of the public in this case will be a conviction to hi m. Then, too, thi.i Investigation has produced some material results. It has caused many of the men who were guilty of these irregularities in high places to resign under pressure of public opinion, although there Was no legal convic tion made. What a triumph for the public at large. These men, so arrogant and self-righteous under examination, who used every resource of their re sourceful intellects to vindicate themselves on the stand, at last found it neces sary to resign from their powerful and profitable positions. Another material result Is that the men who have taken the places of those who have resigned have found It necessary to make great reductions of expense, and In some cases to cut their salaried in half. We all should thank God for the Insurance investigation and Us result at present and to come. . - . Dr. Osier alks Simple Nonsense By Gen. Roger A. Fryor. Ft. OSLER has arbitrarily fixed a certain period, sixty year,at which a. man becomes old aud therefore Incapable of effective action in the conduct of life. The proposition assumes, correctly enough, that old age Is such a decay, If not paralysis of the faculties as renders a man Impotent, and hence useless to himself and to so ciety; and Involves, as a postulate, that at a specified time he Is in this sense and to tlfis effect an old man. D The fallacy of this reasoning was long since exposed. Time is no agent In reality does nothing and is nothing; is In fact only a compendious expres sion for all those causes which operate be in action, no cuange taices place in any lapse oi time. (Archbishop Whately a Annotation to "Bacon's Essays," Students' Edition, pp. 220-218). Whether, therefore, a man be old in the sense of senility depends not upon Jhe years he has lived, but upon the health and strength of his faculties of body and mind. If these be unimpaired and unaffected, he Is not an "old man." To ascertain, then, whether a man be competent to the exigencies of life W3 must look not to his years, but to his actual condition. And as that condition varies according to the agencies which have operated upon It, we observe that some men at eighty are really younger, i e., more efficient, than others at fifty. It Is obvious, therefore, that lii his proscription of tho so-called "old man" Dr. Osier talks simple nonsense. ' His remark, too, Is net only silly, but inhuman; inasmuch as it tends to justify aud aggravate that contempt for age which is a characteristic of the strenuous Amerlcau life of the present day. The student of history will in struct him that from ancient Greece to modern Japan communities have been prosperous In proportion to their respect for the counsels of experience. In thp llnlvarsa nnil In the heart Of and Justice civil society would not hold of the shocking revelations of our high the insurance Investigation Is over, it is in tlhe. Unless some positive cause A Uuettlon to Think Our. One of the farm papers asks the fol lowing question: "Are you keeping your poultry or Is your poultry keep ing you?" Providing that they think It over well that little question ought to be the means of doing n great many poultrymeli n lot of good. Look Into the matter for yourself, nnd. if "you are keeping your hens," endeavor lo innke such changes as will turn the thing nbout. If the "hens are keeping you," see lo it that they are well rc pald for their trouble nnd use every means possible to enable them "lo keep you" better in the future tlmn tliey have in the past. Weekly Witness. Wniliing Milk I'nlli, The milk palls should never lie al lowed to stand after being emptied. If It is not convenient to wash them nt once they should be filled with cold water, which v.i!l prevent the thin film, composed of the solids of the milk, forming eti the Inside of the pall. Once this film is allowed to dry on the pnil it is almost impossible to remove It. A frequent mistake consists In pouring' hot water into the pails be fore they have been rinsed out with cold water. The cJTect of this treat ment is to cause the film to adhere more firmly. Rinsing with cold water Is always the first process In the cleaning of metal milk vessels; then follows the ' washing and scalding. Wiping is unnecessary, as the beat of the vessel, after the scalding wntcr is removed, is sufficient to dry off the surface. Always leave pails so that the sun can shine into them. When buying tin pails see that Hie seams nre well filled with solder; they will be easier to clean, and there will be no lodging place for germs. A linlf-lnch fihnge is also desirable, thus preventing the bottom of the pnil from coming Into direct contact with the ground. Amer ican Cultivator. OTArrrnpplnff of Solid. It Is safe to say that every farmer, whose soil is not virgin soil, has had the experience of wearing out some strip of soil by overcropping, too little fertilizer or wrong methods of rotation. Some men need to be taught this lesson but once, and as soon ns a lilt of their soil begins (o show wear they build It up. i Men 'who are in a position to know claim that the natural supply of potash iu the soil is almost limitless, and we know that by the use of legumes we can add nitrogen to the soil nt small expense. It Is claimed, therefore, that phospljorie acid only need be bought, anil hence the cost of building up or rebuilding the soil is reduced to a minimum. This is doubt less so under normal conditions, but how many men so crop their soil that the plant foods are preserved in it In the proper proportions so as to be avail able for the growing plant. We do not know for u certainty, ex cept under chemical examination, whether or not we are getting the proper proportion of potash to the plant by cultivation, nor can we tell about the nitrogen, except as we may judge from the growing plant. Possi bly the result In the following crop, when we think we shall have done all that is possible for the best results, is a complete disappointment, nnd we be gin to scoff nt the scientist's theories. That we are gradually wearing out our soils can not be denied, and it is cer tainly a question worthy of considera tion that each of us look more closely Into how we are treating our soils nnd find some way of applying the remedy If we are abusing them. Indianapolis News. Alfalfa For Hnrl. Professor Melville, of the Utah Sta tion, says that in comparing alfalfa nnd timothy as roughage for horses, the results of six tests, under varying conditions of work, show that It Is not as difficult to maintain the weight of horses on alfalfa as on timothy. The cost of maintenance was greater in every case, except one, on timothy than on alfalfa. The appearance of horses In every comparison of alfalfa nnd timothy was in favor of the alfalfa fed horses by long continued alfalfa feeding. Attacks of colic nnd other digestive disorders can be prevented by a judicious syfteri of feeding. The amount of hay fed on most farms could be reduced one-half. It may be eco nomical to reduce the amount of hay and Increase the amount of grain fed to horses. It is evident from a study of the experiments, during four periods in which bran and shorts were used and during one when oats made up the grain ration, that bran nnd shorts ray be substituted for oats when the horses are fed alfalfa and timothy. Twenty pounds of alfalfa a day maintaios the weight of horses weighing neatly 1400 pounds when at rest. At heavy work, 32.02 pounds of alfalfa a day was barely sufficient to maintain the weight of the same horses. It is evident that there is a tendency to use all the pro tein, when horses are fed timothy, and no apparent waste of nitrogen when fed alfalfa. This waste is not consid ered serious here, as protein is not an expensive part of the diet. These re sults were those of a direct trial, but the surface indications of an Indirect trial: it may be that the conclusion is not well founded. Slnee red clover hay does not differ materially in nutri tive value from alfalfa, it seems prob able that the first might be substituted for the last, and with similar results, provided the first is well cured, sweet and free from must or dust. But If It must be fed, shake out all the dust possible anil moisten the bay. Weekly Witness. For the Winter Oiler. In many cellars in the country the space must be used for the storage of fruils nnd vegetables as well as for the other purposes for which cellars art generally used. In order that perishable nrllcles may keep In them to the besl advantage the cellar must; be capable of ventilation, but at the same time must be frost-proof. This latter can be brought about by the proper protec tion of the walls, banking up with soil will generally accomplish this, as well as the spaces around the windows. Nfl better method of cellar ventilation can be devised than that here 'described Build an air-shaft of two-inch planks, which are about a foot wide; they must bo long enough to reach from thi floor to near the ceiling of the cellar Cover the upper end with a piece ol planking. A hole two bricks wide and om m -Mr Atmm ti& mam Bffi brick long 1 made In the cellar wall, and n hole of corresponding size is cut iu the plank of the nir shaft, directly opposite the hole in the wall. Then, at the bottom of the shaft, next to or near the floor, cut out another piece about a foot square. Cover all the openings with wire netting, set the air shaft close to the hole in the wall and secure it In position. In the event of an unusually cold streak of weather, boards may be placed over the opening in the bottom of the shaft, or, better still, a number of newspapers may be folded and wrapped around the bottom of the shaft. The Illustration showl the plan clearly, so that any one can readily put It in operation. Indianap olis Xews. futile Feeding- Experiment. The following from some careful cat tle feeding experiments of one of the experiment stations will be found very iifferesting to cnttle feeders: . "In the second trial a lot of two-year-old steers on alfalfa and alfalfa hay made an average daily gain in 1SS days of 1.158 pounds per head. The gain made by a similar lot fed wheal hay and cured sorghum In addition to green alfalfa and alfalfa hay was 1.5C pounds per head per day, and by a lot fed some roiled barley In addition to alfalfa fresh and cured, wheat bay, and cured sorghum 1.87 pounds. "The third test was made with twa lots each containing eleven yearling nnd covered 48.1 days. The lot fed principally alfalfa made an average daily gain of 1.21 pounds per day, and the lot fed a ration of sorghum hay, wheat hay, etc., in addition to alfnlf:) 1.20 pounds. In the fourth test, which covered 522 days, four steers fed al falfa as a soiling crop, hay or both, In the different periods, made an av erage dally gain in the whole test ol one pound por head, as compared! with 0.98 pounds In the case of a lot fed alfalfa supplemented principally by sorghum hay. In connection with tbii test one lot of four steers was kept on alfalfa pnsturage to compare this meth od of feeding with the data obtained by the use of alfalfa as a soiling crop or hay. In 518 days there was an av- ernge daily gain on alfalfa pasturage of 1.01 pounds per head. From, the data included in the bulletin the con clusion was drawn that the combina tion rations containing alfalfa were about equal In feeding value to rationj of fresh and cured alfalfa. "In all cases the shrinkage whci steers were dressed was tnken lot Account, and the conclusion was reached that although the differences were small, yet this factor was slightly greater with the lots fed alfalfa com bined with other materials than os alfalfa nlone. "Since alfalfa, whore conditions are favorable for Its production, yields the most abundant and cheapest forage grown In the Southwest, the high per centage of protein may be disregarded, although theoretically a carbohydrate feed, such as sorghum or grain hay. should be fed with it to secure a more thorough utilization of the protein ol the alfalfa by the animal. Iu situa tions where alfalfa can not be produced to advantage, as with scant water sup ply and on excessively alkaline soils, carbohydrates rations may often be grown, especially of the sorghum class, wmeu in combination with alfalfa gives results about equal to those from the all-alfalfa rati cm. Sorghum rattan nlone are undoubtedly Inferior to ak falfa alone and in combination with alfalfa yield greater gains than when fed alone. "The quality of the meat from alfalfa fed steers appears to be about the same as that from animals fed- on the combined rations nsed. Animals fin ished with barley yielded meat of dis tinctly better quality, but the slight advance In price obtained did not make return for the barley fed. "Assuming the approximate average' and representative character of the forage used, the yields obtained, and the animals employed, the results ol these experiments indicate that nndei Southwestern conditions, where alfalfa may be fed or pastured all or nearly all the year, this forage is the most abundant and the cheapest feed avail able, giving as good gains of as good quality as can be economically pro duced." Indiana Farmer. As many as 4061 muscles have beet counted In the body of a moth. i I