In the Public Eye. WHOLESALE TRADE ACTIVE s n 4 60 A Sure Cure. The axe Is about the only sure cure for a hen that has acquired the habit of eating eggs. Southern Farm Magazine. i Frost a Pulverizer. The frost Is one of tho agents of the farmer for pulverizing the soil. Every clod or lump In the field la a detriment, according to Its size, as the finer the soli the greater Its feed ing capacity. i Cause of Distrust. Some farmers reduce prices of 'hay by the practice of placing Infer ior hay In the centre of the bales whenever it can be done. This 'Causes distrust on tho part of the purchaser, and he therefore resorts to straw, salt hay and other foods that can be used as a substitute for clover aud timothy. i Testing ICH'S. A simple method of finding out the age of an ei?g Is by means of the air space, which is situated towards the broad end of the shell. If the -egg la h.ll up between the hands be fota tho light in a dark room, the air space, is very small, but as age in creases it extends, until, when the gg is three weeks old, the air space is about a sixth of the entire egg epaee. With practice the nse can be told to within twenty-four hours. Vnlue of Dead Leaves. According to tests recently made In France, dead leaves possess a Ugher value as fertilizer for the land than ordinary manure. They are extensively used by the market gar deners about the city of Nantes. Pear leaves rank next highest in nit rogenous content, oak leaves come next and the leaves of vines lowest in value. Experiments have shown that forty-four pounds of pear leaves eighty pounds of poplar leaves, fifty one pounds of peach leaves, eighty two pounds of elm leaves and eighty three pounds of locust leaves are re spectively equivalent In nitrogenous content to 100 pounds of ordinary manure. Vine leaves alone are less valuable than manure. j- Water nnd Salt For Cows. Eight gallons of water a day is the average quantity required for a cow and the milk given is about eighty-seven per cent, water. In some pastures there Is no water, the cows being supplied night and morn ing, which forces each cow to drink four gallons at a time in order to be supplied. As the cow does not know that she must drink four gallons, Shejnay use less and she will reduce her niilkwupply accordingly. Extern have bei stations of addin LVe tests and investigations made at the experiment determine the advisability salt to the ration of dairy a result of these trials, it ended that dairy cows be cows. A Is recom given at east one ounce of salt per day. E ceptlonally heavy milkers .Will reqJire more than this. The uniform I results obtained with all oyed in these trials indicate that salt In addition to that obtained In their flood is absolutely essential to the continued health of a dairy cow, whileWoduclng milk. It is evi dent, moreover, that the amount of alt which must be supplied directly will greatly Wary in different locali ties, it belnglmore at high elevations and at placesremote from the sea. Splint on Horses' Legs. Splint is an enlargement of the cannon bone just below the knee, us ually on the inside, but it is some times on the outside. They are quite common on the forelegs; in fact, Dearly all horses that have seen much service have them, but they occasion ally come on the hind legs. The us ; Ual seat is between the cannon and Inner splint bones. Sometimes they attain the size of hen's eggs, but usu ally are quite small. They generally cause some lameness when growing, but rarely do so when hard. They result from sprains, strains or bruises Sometimes the splint comes on the surface and then it does not cause much lameness, but when it comes under the skin which covers the bone it is very painful. When splints come from bruises they may appear on any part of the leg. If noticed when tho Injury first oc curs, apply the following cooling lo tion: Muriate of ammonia, one ounce; nitrate of potash, one ounce; either hot or cold water, one quart. Apply three times a day until the Soreness is nearly all gone and then apply the following blister: Pow dered cantharides, one-half ounce; biniodide of mercury, two drachms; lard, four ounce, mix and rub in well. Give a couple of weeks rest. Feed on light soft food while idle. When the lameness and soreness to' the touch are excessive, especially if the nodule is small, the trouble lies next to the bone and requires an opera tion; me covering 01 me Done must e SDlit to allow the matter from the j3bflammatlon to escape, which will Alieve the tension. It is done by cutting a small hole in the skin and pushing in a thin, long blade and cutting the tough, thin bone covering over the lump. No change need be made In the shoeing. ; Money in Pheasant Raising. "One proof of the fact that there Is no country under the sun with as many people of wealth as ours," said the game fancier, "is found in the large number of English pheasants Imported to this country. "In 1904 the number was 160,000, and these were all for table use. Last year an increase of about ten per cent, in this number was report ed. The pheasant is a table luxury, and in England, France, Germany and Belgium they are reared by the thousands. "In America breeding is but In its infancy. In ten years, however, we may be producing enough to supply the local- demand, and prices will be cheaper than now. The cheapest one can be purchased now is about $2, and from that figure up to $10 or $15 is demanded. "The English and the Mongolian pheasants are game birds, and an in creasing demand for them for pre serves of clubs and wealthy owners of country seats Is noted. We have one breeder in the East who supplies from 2000 to 3000 a cason, and he has to Import many in order to fill all his orders. "The pheasant is a beautiful bird and by no means difficult to rear or breed. "Their plumage is in good demand for millinery purposes. Taxidermists pay as high as $8 and $10 for the skins of tho best marked birds. "There are varieties of pheasants that are purely ornamental. They appeal neither to the cook nor to the hunter. "Pheasants cost much in the win ter months. About September 1 the breeder adds ten per cent, to this price. This holds good until April, when they quit laying. The pheas ant is as hardy and as easily rearer as the turkey, but they are not do mesticated birds. With the pheas ant one is dealing with a bird that is still subject to the laws of the jun gle and eihibits many of the in stincts of the wild life from which they are really but a few generations removed. They are but cousins to the domestic fowl, and in habtts are more like the wild grouse and quail. The longer the breed has been in captivity the more docile and the bet ter layers they are." New York Sun. Husking Com in the West. A writer in the Country Gentle man gives some interesting facts re garding corn husking in the great corn belt. Up to this time genius of man has failed to Invent a ma chine that can satisfactorily remove the husks from corn ears and the work affords employment to a large number of men. Some fabulous stories are told of the number of bushels husked by experts. The wri ter says among other things: Corn huskers last summer were able to earn as much as $4.61 a day husking sweet corn. Husking comes pretty near being at least a halt year's job, sometimes more than that. The summer corn husking is done for the big canneries that are located in the great corn belt of Ill inois, for no State in the Union pro duces better sweet corn in such vast quantity. The towns in which the canneries are located do not begin to supply the help that was demanded. Largely Chicago was drawn on for huskers, and an army of them have been at work. Two hours out of Chicago on the Burlington road there Is a single cannery that cans about 100,000 cans of sweet corn in a sin gle day. This is at Rochelle, and there Is another one down on the eastern Illinois at Hoopestown. At the Rochelle cannery bands are paid fifteen cents an hour and three cents a bushel over forty. Some of the hands husked as much as 128 bushels in a day, and for the work the pay check amounted to $4.61. Scores of other huskers were doing great work. Very few of them earned under $3 a day. They are boarded In a big tent outside of the plant, and charged so much a week. It will not be long now before tha husking of field corn will commence. There is a tremendous crop this year, and a large number of hands will be required to take care of it. This job lasts well into the winter, and in some instances longer. The price paid buskers ranges from two and a half to four cents a bushel. Last year a young man in Bureau County is said to have husked 162 bushels and forty pounds in nine hours and a half. For this work be was paid $8.10 and was paid $20 on a wager that he had made that he could per form the feat. Hundreds of husk ers last year earned $3 a day and their board and washing thrown in. Each busker is required to drive his own team and crib his corn. Human hands, as in the case of sweet corn husking, are required to handle this gTeat task, for while many machines have been Invented to harvest corn, cutting it in the stalk in some instances, and picking the ears oft in others, men and boys are employed to do the great bulk of the work, using no other imple ment than the old fashioned husk ing peg strapped to the fingers of the right hand. Last year there was con siderable difficulty in getting all the hands that were required, and one of the results was that women tnrned out and helped do the work. Church and other society women, for the purpose of enriching their treasuries, tu. tied out in large numbers and hundreds of acres of corn in Illinois were handled in this way. Despite the fact that help was scarce last year, a great deal of it was through the elevators and on the rail before Thanksgiving. One sudden death occurs among women to eight among men. mm : vtm$mmm mm 'J BRIGADIER-GENERAL Military commander during the SHIELD FOR RADIATORS. Prevents Accumulation of Dust Upon Adjacent M all. It Is a well known fact that the air current created by heat from radia tors causes dust to be drawn from the floor of the room and carried upward, ultimately impinging on the wall. A portion of the duBt will be depos ited, therefore, upon the wall and in the rear of the radiator, while the re maining portion will be thrown back into the room. The purpose of the radiator shield illustrated here Is to Collects the Dust. prevent the accumulation of dust upon the adjacent wall, prevent dis coloration of the wall, and also to filter the air so that it will be thrown back Into the room in a purified con dition. This is accomplished by the hood attached to the radiator. This bood collects the dust, and when necessary can be cleaned and the dust removed. Philadelphia Record. - Fashions In Court. A fashion comes like Ceasar and Is seen and conquers. Of this latter kind is the new hat, a hybrid crea tion, half "Romney," half "mush room," and with a dash of the Sal vation Army bonnet in it, which the . . i. .iwicin-Hpimii l i 9 i " T PROFESSIONAL ETIQUETTE. The Undertaker (who meets the doctor on the steps of a hotel) -After you, slr!"Black and White. FREDERICK FUNSTON, American occupation of Cuba. Marchioness Townsend wore daily during the progress of her husband's case in teh Law Courts. The courts before Sir Gorella Barnes' crusade against sketching in them, had long superseded the theatre as a mise-en-scene of this case. Since the conclusion of this case, the "Townsend" hat, as it should per haps be christened, has dominated half London. The new creation, which is certainly a very becoming one for most faces, is broad and fiat, with a cloud of chiffon and lace for trimming, and a broad ribbon of gauze or chiffon hanging down be hind. It can "carry" feathers, bows and much other trimming, and prob ably will do so in the case of the ma jority of its wearers. London Daily Mall. ' Kaiser Awaits Our Invitation. Although it is well known that the Kaiser's feeling toward the United States Is decidedly friendly, he has too much regard for the dignity of his country and his position as its Emperor to accept an Invitation that was not the unanimous desire of the entire Union, or one instigated by a lesser person than the President Whether the President will ever In vite him, though, Is quite another matter. The Dusseldorfer Zeltung. Portable Saw Horses. In moving from one job to an other the carpenter will find portable saw horses a great convenience. Tho Plan of Portable Saw Horse. usual form of saw horse Is very awk ward to Btow away or to move. The sketch shows the construction of a portable horse recommended by a correspondent of the Practical Car penter. It vs, I ,4 i' if i ii ram r?y HeW' i A nm M mi , Big Holiday Business Has Not Inter fered With Brisk Demand for Staple Articles. R. G. Dun & Co.'s ''Weekly Review of Trade" says: ''Weather conditions accelerated distribution of seasonable merchan dise at retail but Increased traffic difficulties, freight blockades and the shortage of motive power not only retards business, but threatens serious results at some West "in points. Holi day trade has equaled expectations yet this large volume has not Interfered with the brisk demand for staple ar ticles, which depleted stocks to such an extent that wholesale trade exper iences usual activity for the season. 'The only noteworthy decrease In comparison with activities a year ago appears In building permits Most Industilal work is maintained at the maximum, mills nnd factories having so many contracts for next year's de liveries that inventories receive little attention. ''Scarcely any change Is recorded In prices of iron, the market having developed a little of the quiet that Is seasonable, although furnaces con stantly receive new orders and in some Eastern markets the week has brought out contracts for delivery in the closing months of 1907. ''Staple farm products have fluctu ated within narrow limits, no develop ments of Importance being reported. Wheat had the support of unfavorable crop news from Russia, but light grinding by domestic mills prevented any material Improvement and there was no speculative activity. 'Footwear producers report excep tionally good business for the season although salesmen have left the road until after the holidays. Supplement ary orders for spring goods have ap peared In fair volume and additional business Is noted in fall samples at the West. Most Eastern factories have orders covering full activity for sev eral months and prices are firmly maintained by the strength of the raw material market." MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat No. I red I 71 7; Kye No. a 7 73 Corn No 2 yellow, er 1M r7 No. yellow, shelled '55 SB Mixed ear 'M 57 Oats No. S white m 89 No. 8 white 87 SS Flour Winter patent 8 95 t 0) Fancy straight winters 4 00 4 10 Hay No. 1 Timothy is 75 19 M Clorer No. 1 17 S 17 74 Feed No. 1 white mid. ton UK 00 ygfti Brown middlings 91 00 to 50 Bran, bulk zl 50 2 0) iraw Wheat e Oo 8 51 Oat 8 00 un Dairy Products. Butter ElRln creamery I 19 19 Ohio creamery 'M 7 Fancy country roll 19 20 Cheese Ohio, new I I 11 New York, new 14 15 Poultry, Etc. Hens per lb I 11 15 Chickens dressed It H Kf gs fa. and Ohio, fresh 1W 3-1 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes Fancy white per bu.... 40 85 Cabbaue per ton 00 10 JO Onions per barrel 0J i 24 BALTIMORE. Flour Winter latent I I M 4 00 Wheat No. S rod 75 74 Corn Mixed 47 Bins M Butter Ohio creamery 81 V PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent I 8 J Wheat No. I red 77 JS Corn No. 2 mixed 4s 49 Oats No. t white JJ Butter Creamery "7 Igf s Pennsylranla firsts 26 ii NEW YORK. Flour-Patents I 1 !? Wheat No. t red ? Corn-No. " Oats No. t whits ? Butter -Creamery f. Kf g State and Pennsylranla.... 10 M LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. ixtia, J.4MI to 1.6O0 lbs M tS 10 I rlme, ,umi tol,uu lbs......... 4 7i bood, l.UiO to KDOii lbs ft 20 il Tidy. 1,060 to 1.160 lb 4 00 S 10 Fair, WlO 10 1,100 lbs 8 60 4 40 Common, 71)0 twrtu lbs Ou 8 60 Common to good tatoirn 74 4 00 Common to good tat bulls t BO 8 Hi Common to good lai cows 1 60 8 71 Hellers, 7U) 10I, louibs J0 4 2t tresb cows and sprinters 10 Oil 48 00 Thoro Isn't living who would hesitate a pound more if she knew a flour that would make she ever made before. In flour buying housewives place reliability before price, iney Know tnat more, and they pay it willingly. is just such a high grade HTeJ and the best flour in America. It costs the half a pound extra, but the extra cost makes it possible to give extra quality and will guarantee the quality of every bag or barrel , KING MIDAS FLOUR. I grocer about it. Sold by Quality Grocers Everywhere. SHANE BROTHERS CO., Philadelphia. nmeheary hog ( 45 I rime medium weights..... a 40 But heay lorkers. ........... 6 40 Uood light Vorkers...... g 40 rig, as 10 quality . e 40 Common to good roughs 5 85 Bt 4 0J Sheep. Prime wethers I 5 6 Uood mixed 6 2 tun miied ewes and wethers.... 4 4 t-tilifetinu common M 2 no Culls to choice lamun 5 00 Calves. Ve Calves j 03 Ueuty mid thin calves a 00 ft 75 ft 60 ft 00 8 60 7 i S 11 4 bi Shoot Fish With Arrows. In the South seas nnd In various groups of Islands In the Indian ocean the aborigines shoot fish with the bow and arrow. The art Is extremely difficult, as in taking aim at an ob ject under water the archer has to allow for refraction. If he were to aim directly at the fish as he see3 It, he would, of course, miss. Long prac tice has, however, made the natives expert In this sport. THE HALLS OP CONGRESS. Plans for a battleship to be the most formidable extant were sent to Congress. Secretary Shaw declared against a central bank in an argument before a House committee. The Senate has ratified a treaty ' with Guatemala for reciprocal pro tection of patents. Secretary of the Treasury Shaw advocated an elastic currency In his annual report to Congress. Secretary Root's State rights speech was criticised by many mem bers of Congress as too drastic. Mr. Burrows advocated the adop tion of the resolution holding that Senator Smoot is not entitled to his seat. Congressman Patterson, of Tennes see, hvlng been elected Governor, has resigned from the Fifty-ninth Congress. Senator Rayner, of Maryland, in a speech before the Senate, took issue with the President on the treaty rights of Japan regarding California schools. The House of Representatives unanimously condemned simplified spelling, and President Roosevelt will withdraw the innovation as he prom ised to should it fall to meet popular approval. Representative Reyburn, of Penn sylvania, a new member, goes on the House Coinage Committee, while Congressman Moon goes to Immigra tion and Enrolled Bills, all consid ered good assignments. Representative Foster has, Intro duced a bill to make all diplomatic representatives of this Government above the grade of Charge d'Affalres bear the title of American Ambassa dor, but this is not to affect the du ties or salaries of those affected. In open session Mr. Rayner spoke o the Japanese sehool question. The famous seedless apple or chard at Grand Junction, Colorado, which it is expected will revolution ize the apple Industry, is now well established and In full bearing, so that unless some catastrophe over takes It the Spencer seedless apple promises to become a distinctive na tional fruit of great merit. The or chard Is said to contain about fifty trees, ranging from six to fourteen years. While the variety is not ab solutely free from seeds, It Is prac tically so and there is only a sem blance of a core. It Is of very good quality and flavor, of a large size and an excellent keeper. NECESSARY TO GOOD COFFEE. Thorough scalding and airing of the pot, says an old; housekeeper, Is as necessary to good coffee as a good brand and proper making. While cof. fee is steaming in the pot, fill the nose with tissue paper to keep In the aroma. The coffee should not remain on the grounds more than a quarter of an hour. After that time, it should ibed rained off and put Into another receptacle to keep hot. Says the Minneapolis Journal: Fortunately neither Countess Castel lane nor the Duchess of Marlborough has any temptation to go on the stage. Ten per cent of Colorado's popula tion, 11 nas Deen estimated, is de pendent on wages earned by employes of the Colorado Fuel It Iron Com pany. a Housewife a minute to pay half a cent she could get a better flour more and better bread than gooa now costs FIL(0)lll!& flour the highest priced quality ts there. The It will pay you to ask ' A cent slight 7,