va j AND Fresh Air. Give tlie chickens plenty of good, freBh air these hot nights, even if you have to make a hole in the henhouse. Chickens that are cooped up in a elose atmosphere all nlghtand turned out in the cool of the early morning, will be fit subjects for colds, rheuma tism and roup. Farmers' Homo Journal. Roup. - ' The first thing to do upon discov ering roup 13 to Isolate the infected bird, put it in your hospital If you have one, and if not got busy and es tablish cue, for at this date nil up-to-date poultry plnntB have their hospi tal to v.':!rh nil ailinc; birds are re moved ml Uio lr.njoriiy are thereby saved. Farmers' Home Journal. V;i!;:o of Rivrcl ( lover. Sweet, clover generally consid ered a v. eul, ::yA under certain con ditions it h such. It," however, pro duces v,.l .'A'.' forage in sections south of t'::e clnv.-r l)e!t. Stock do Hot like it :'i ftr, i.ut th?y can easily become ri'.w.tt.d lo eat It either grepn or cured. Sweet rlowi' is biennial and dies after the second year, hence to keep a field seeded it will l)e necessary to allow a (rood portion of the plants to go to B??d in July. The greatest vnlife of sweet clover Is as a soil builder. It will grow on land too poor to produce anything else. It is commonly found growing wild along railroad cuts, roadsides and other places where the top soil lias been removed. In a few years it would reclaim poor land and make It capable of producing other and more valuable crop3. Weekly Wit ness. Catch Crops, Whether corn is cultivated level or In cheek rows, it Is always profitable to sow some crop at the last working. Whenever wo see a cornfield bare during the winljcr we think what a waste of opportunity. Sowing a catch crop at the last working of corn not only enables this crop to grow with out extra preparation, but it covers the land during the winter, which prevents leaching and washing of the soil, and materially increases succeed ing crops. There are so many crops that can bo sown at the last working of either corn or cotton that the wonder to me Is that any farmer should try to get along without using one. You can sow to advantage either crimson jelover. rye, winter oats or vetch. All of them usually give good results sown in this way, if enm ic i,ntoj , ' are an excellent crop to sow at the ,ha nr.c':'!"'t1'' untler irrSntlon ' east last working. Farmers who have had ! prn Washington. The western Wash experience state that the cowpoas in-1 ins:on ener,'ies are Produced without crease the yield ol the corn crop, and at the same tir.-.a make a most ex cellent quantity of feed, as well as Improve the land tor the crops to fol low. J. A. Ea:::hard, in Farm and Home. Rest Litter Tor Hens. We were once asked to visit a poul try farm where the hens were not laying satisfactorily to see if we could discover any reason for the lack of eggs. The work on this place was entrusted to help. The owner had the theory of poultry raising, but very little practice. He knew that the grain should be fed in deep litter. The men told him that there was straw in the houses, and what more could the hens want? "My . hens have plenty of feed," said the owner of the farm. 'They have plenty of water, grit, charcoal, and litter to scratch in, and yet in May I am getting only a one-third egg yield." , The trouble was- not far to seek. The litter was packed down so solid that It might almost as well have been a barn floor. The grain had been thrown on top of this till the kirds were surfeited, and grain was scattered in heaps on the floor and in the corners of the house. The yard had been picked clean, there was no inducement to exercise out Bide, and no opportunity luside, so the hens waxed fat and lazy. If tho straw had been tossed up each day, kept light so that the hens could scratch it about, and If the grain had been scattered on the bare floor and the straw kicked over it, the chickens would have been forced to scratch tor their living. The great advantage of leaves for litter is that they are too light to pack. A house twelve inches deep in leaves is ideally equipped for scratching. Lacking the leaves, straw is good, if allowed to pack. We thought we had found Just the litter we wanted one year when we saved the chaff from the threshing, but later found that the hens pick np' too much chaff with their feet, and the chaff was unwholesome as well as unnutrltious. ' Make some provision this year for litter and feed in that, not on It. Inland Farmer. Alfalfa Will Grow Everywhere. While experts have been declaring that alfalfa would only grow in cer- ST .r. mj tain soils and in certain climates H has proved its adaptability to nearly all climates and almost all soils. It produces with a rainfall as scant as fourteen Inches, and in the Gulf States flourishes with sixty-five Inches. It gives crops at an eleva tion of 8000 feet above sea level, and in southern California It grows be low sea level to a height of six feet or over, with nine cuttings a year, aggregating ten to twelve tons. An authenticated photograph in posses sion of the writer shows a wonderful alfalfa plant raised In the (Irrigated) desert of southern California, sixty feet in height. Satisfactory crops are raised, but on limited areas as yet, in Vermont nnd Florida. New York has grown It for over one hun dred years in her clay and gravel; Nebraska grows it in her western sand hills without plowing, as does Nevada on her sage brush desert. The deuieted coiton soils of Alabama and rich corn fields of Illinois nnd Miss ouri each respond generously with profitable yields to the enterprising f.-.nr.or, while lt.3 accumulated nitro gen and tho sub-soiling It effects are making the rich land more valuable and giving liack to the crop worn the priceless elements of which it has boon In successive generations do spoiled by a conscienceless husbandry. Coburn's Book of Alfalfa. Profit In Cherry Raising. An illustration of the possibilities there are in fruit culture in western Washington is seen in a brief dis patch from Stanwood, recording the fact that the cherry growers in that Foc.tion oil the country are closing their shipments after the most suc cessful season ever known. The late varieties of cherries, such as the lloyal Annes, brought the record price of seventeen cents a pound In the orchard, about eight cents more than the previous high price paid there. There is no fruit that does better on the deforested land of western Wash ington than the cherry, and nowhere in the world are finer cherries pro duced than here. The cherry tree grows to great size and benrs In this favored climate abundantly. There are forty-year-old cherry trees In this county which are loaded with this delicious fruit every year. A single old cherry tree has been known to hear a crop of 800 pounds in a sea son. At the price in the orchard of less than one-half that which was recent ly paid in Stanwood, the owner of a Puget Sound cherry orchard in full hta'-ing can have an annual lncomo from each acre larger than the high- est income earned from the best of irrigation, and will grow on lands of which thousands of acres are yet to be had at prices but a petty fraction of that commanded by lands under ditch in the better advertised fruit growing sections of this State. There could hardly be a better nnd safer Investment than tho purchase of a few acres .of logged-off lands in western Washington at the present time, clearing it and planting it to cherries. The man who has a ten acre cherry orchard in this part of the world, after it gets in bearing, will have an annual income consid erably higher than Is earned by the average professional man, here or anywhere else. If the land hungry, who have been so much in evidence in the recent rush to take up opened Indian reser vations, will look over the opportu nities open here, they will find thou sands of opportunities for homes. Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Weight of Egg. There Is a decided difference In the weight of eggs from pullets and hens, and of those laid by different breeds. These figures are approximately cor rect: Single Comb Brown Leghorns, pullets, 17 ounces per dozen; hens, 21, ounces. Light Brahmas, pul lets, 23 ounces; hens, 28 ounces. Black Langshans, pullets, 24 ounces; hens, 26 ounces. Pekin ducks, 35 ounces. . . Handling Fowls. It Is well to handle fowls occasion ally after they have gone to roost. It tames them. Also feel their crops and see if they are well filled, but not gorged. A little -grain thrown into litter at night, gives the fowls something to do when they come off the roost. If no rats are troubling, the morning feed may be put out in the litter when poultry bouse is closed for the night. Sunflower Seeds Useful. Soma sunflower seeds should 'be planted around edge of yards for shade, if no other is accessible, until a' few fruit trees can grow large enough for shade. Sunflower seeds are good for fowls, especially at moulting season, so be sure to plant a few every year. Get the large kind. Mrs. J. C. Deaton. France hag tor women. an aeronautical club ! POLE THE BDAL OF CENTURIES' EFFORT. For Three Hundred Years Adventurers Ha ve Risked Lives to Discover It Tragic History of Search Franklin, Do Long and Andre Most Notable Victims of Quest for the Farthest North , Centuries ago men made up their minds to reach tho North Polo and since then many have gone in search of it, to leave their bones whitening in the Arctic circle. Nono found It, but what they did find In Its sur rounding regions has had an Im portant place in the history of the world. That the quest for the North Polo has been more persistent and more extensive than the search for the South Pole Is obviously due to the fact that the Arctic is much nearer to the great maritime nations than Is the Antarctic and that its waters more nearly merge with those of the highways of the sea trade. The first incentive which sent ex plorers into the Arctic regions had ItB bawls In the commercial instinct. And this instinct had two phases. One was to extend tho limits of tho northern fisheries; the other a deBlre lo shorten thn water route between the ports of Europe and tho Orient, either by a northwest or northeast passage. But whilo these Incentives were predominating ones in the ear lier history of Arctic exploration, all of tho more recent ones have been in tho Interest of scientific research. It is not known who was tho first to venture Into the Arctic region tho region which, as the little girl wrote In her copybook, "Is chilly used for purposes of exploration." But as early as 1750 Froblsher made a voy age to the southern extremity of Greenland and the opposite American coast, and In 15 S5 tho strait forming the entrance to the Arctic regions west of Greenland was discovered by John Davis. In 1015 Bafiln and Bylot passed through Davis Strait and sailed up tho North Water to Smith Sound, discovering on the homeward voyage Jones Sound nnd Lancaster Bound, which were closed by Ice. Ex cept for the voyage in 1031 of Luke Fox, who sailed up Fox Channel to Peregrine Point, nothing further was learned of theso regions for nbout two hundred years, and Bafilu's dis coveries were almost forgotteu Lnst Century's Research. The interest in a northwest passage having revived, Commander John Ross, in ISIS, set out with the Isa bella and Alexander. He confirmed the accuracy of Damn's observations, nnd In the following year Lieutenant Parry, commanding tho Ilocla and Griper, sailed through Lancaster Sound. Some few years later Sir John Ross made another voyage In the Victory, and passed up Regent Inlet to the Gulf of Boothia; while his nephew, James C. Ross, traversed the southern part of Boothia and the Btrait named after him. A few years earlier, in 1826, Dr. Richardson had passed through Dolphin and Union Straits, and sighted Wollaston Land, part of which was afterward named Victoria Land by Simpson, of the Hudson Bay Company, whq. with Dease, in 1S38-9, passed through Deaso Strait, and the entrance of Simpson Strait; while Dr. John Rae, in 1845-7, explored the southern coast of the Gulf of Boothia from Fury nnd Hecla Straits on the east to LorJ Mayor's ilay on the west, and proved Boothia to be a peninsula. The successful though Ill-fated ex ploration of Sir John Franklin in search of a northwest passage set sail from the Thames on May 20, 1845, With the Erebus and the Terror, un der command of Captains Filzjames and Crozier, Franklin passed through Lancaster Sound, and, as was after ward ascertained, sailed up Welling ton Channel to Penny Strait and down Crozier Channel, returning to Beechey Island in winter. Subsequently the vessels made their way to the north west coast of King William Island, where Franklin died in June, 1847. The survivors, under Captain Crozier, started in 1S48 for the Great Fish River, and their remains were found along the route to Adelaide Penin sula. The expedition had, therefore, ascertained the existence of a sea passage from the Atlantic to the chan nels south of Victoria and Wollaston Land, leading to Bering Strait. Kane. After the Pole. Hopeful of finding some tidings of her husband, Lady Franklin, in 1852, sent out the Isabel and the Com mander, afterward Sir Edward Au gustus Inglefield. Steaming up the open water "stretching through neven points of the compass," he sighted what is now known as Cape Louis Napoleon, but 'he found no traces of Franklin, despite a long and diligent search. Twelve . months later Dr. Elijah Kane, in the United States brig Advance, followed In hiB tracks. Ostensibly Kane was on a Franklin search, but his real objective was the North Pole.. " He explored the sea which is named after him and en countered many hardships and met with numerous adventures. But he was no more successful at finding the Pole than he was in finding traces of Franklin. On July 10, 1860, Dr. Hayes, who bad Berved with Kane, Balled from Boston for Smith Sound, in the schooner United States, of 130 tons and a crew of fifteen men. His ob ject was .the follow up the line of re search opened by Dr. Kane. lie win tered at Port Foulke, about ten miles from Cape Alexander, which 'forms the eastern portal of Smith Sound. Dr. Hayes crossed Smith Sound in the spring with dog sledges, but his Observations are not to be depended on, and It is very uncertain how far he advanced northward on the other side. Ho returned to 'Boston on Oc tober 23, 1861. With the Ill-fated Jeannette expe dition began a series of Arctic trag edies. This vessel, vhlch had been fitted out In 1879 with the Intention of making an effort to locate the North Polo, was under the command of Lieutenant De Long, of the United States Navy. Lens than two weeks after, having entered tho Arctic Ocean the Jeannette bocamo solidly frozen In an Ice pack and never es caped from it. In tho grip of what was to prove her tomb, the luckless vessel was carried hither and thither by the drifting Ice. Eventually she was crushed and her people had to abandon her, forming a cr.mp on a nearby berg. This was In June, 1881. "About 4 o'clock the next morning," one of tho survivors wrote, "tho camp was aroused by tho man on the watch crying: 'Turn out if you want to see the last o? the Jeannette there she goes!' Most of us," the ghnBtly rec ord continues, "had barely time to rlBp, when, nmld the rnttllng, nnd banging of her timbers and iron work, the ship righted and stood al most upright; tho floes that had come in nnd crushed her slowly backed off, and as she sank with slightly accel erated velocity tho yard arms were stripped and broken upward parallel to the masts, and so, like a great, gaunt skeleton, clnpplng ls hands above Its head, she plunged out of Bight." Do Long's Trnslc F;it, The Jeannette had been provisioned for thrco years, but as no tidings had been received of her up to 1881, two other vessels were sent In search of her. One party, under the command of Engineer George W. Melville, of the United, States Navy, reached Yakutsk, and afterward found the bodies of De Long nnd somn of the crow. To quote from Melville's own narrative: "I Identified Do Long nt a glance by his coat. He lay on his right sldo, with his right hand under hi3 cheek, his head pointing mirth, and his face turned to the west. His feet were drawn slightly up as though ho were sleeping; his loft arm was raised with the tlbow bent, and his hand, thus horizontally lifted, was bare. About four foot back of him, or toward the east, I found his small notebook or ice-journal, where he had tossed It with his left hand, which looked as though it had never recovered from the act, but had frozen, as I found it, upraised." Perhaps no better picture of terrors of the Arctic and Its Btabblng cold can be found than that which Is given by Mr. Melville: "A cold, barren plateau, between a small outlying promontory and a bleak weather riven rock of red syenite reaching up to the skies, on whjch even the mosses and lichens would scarce grow. The raging of the wind and the pitiless sen, and the roar of the black water of the bay dashing over the ice-foot, made the lonesome picture look cold er and more appalling. Drifts of ice and snow choked the ravines and hol lows; but, saving ourselves end the famished, skeleton-like survivors, not a living thing appeared on the whit ened landscape. The region truly seemed to bo the most desolate on the face of tho earth. It looked as though the curses of 10,000 witches had descended upou and blasted it, and even the birds would not dare to take their flight across the lifeless land, lest they, too, fall victims into the death-gap below. "Struggling up the valley of death against the frantic wind from the low point to the westward of the camp, where we managed with difficulty to effect a landing In our whaleboats, we first came upon the remains of the winter habitation, a parallelogram of four walls about three feet high built of loose stone, the inside di mensions being eighteen by twenty two feet, with a tunnel or covered way facing the mountain to the southward. This hut had been roofed over with the whaleboats turned up side down and covered with the satis and tent cloths; the smoke flue made of old tin kettles bound with bits of canvas was thrown to one side, and water had risen in and about the ARCTIC TEMPLES OF ICE. A Crystal Palace Found Amid the Frozen Wilderness of Greenland. Changeless Arctic temples of Ice amid the icy deserts of Greenland were found by the survivors of the ill-fated Erichsen expedition to the North Pole. A crystal palace of su perhuman architecture vaster than a dozen cathedrals and Egyptian tem ples, resplendent with jewels and endless decorations of ice, is de scribed. Created by nature In a forbidding wilderness, It frightened and awed the explorers. The dreams of poets and the fancies of epic bards were surpassed by this vision nt colossal loveliness, whfch the painter Achton Fries, a member of the expedition, endeavored to carry away for the benefit of the dwellers in civilization. More than a mile in length, the lofty nave ot this temple was pierced at intervals with windows through which the gleaming sun rays sparkled wretched dwelling pine to a height of eight Inch, concealing much of the foul evidence 'of sq undid misery In which Its poor ocrupnnts had llvtjj. Cast-off fur nnd cloth clothing, pmpty tin cans, and the sickening filth of twenty-five men for nine months lny heaped and scattered about, a verita ble Augean scone." On August 11, 1881, thn steamer Proteus conveyed Lieutenant Greely and his party to Lady Franklin Bay. A house was built and they were left with two years' provisions. The reg ular series of observations was at once commenced, and two winters were passed without accident. Trav eling parties wore a!ao sent out in the summer, dogs, having been obtained at Disco. Lieutenant Lockwood made a Journey along the north coast of Greenland nnd reached a small Island. Dr. Pavy and another went a short distance beyond tho winter qunrters of the Alert, and a trip was made Into the interior oi Grinnell Land. Relief of Greely. As no succor arrived in the sum mer of 1 883 though relieving ves sels had been dispatched both In 1882 and 18S3 Lieutenant Groely started from Lady Franklin Bay with his men on August 9, expecting to find a vessel In Smith Sound. On October 21 they were obliged to encamp at Cape Sabine on the western Bhore of Smith Sound. A few depots were found which had been left by Sir Georgo Nares and Lieutenant Beebe, but all were exhausted before the Bprlng. Then came n time of Inde scribable misery, acuto suffering and death from slow starvation. When the relieving steamers Thetis and Benr finally reached Cape Sablno Lieutenant Greely nnd his comrades wero found just. alve. During recent years ther'? have been numerous efforts to solve the rlddlo of the north. Andre attempt ed It In a balloon and ndded another riddle the riddle of what becamo of him. Then the Duke of the Abruzzl, Nansen, Flala, and most per sistent of all, Commander R. E. Peary, nil essayed the discovery of the pole. Nansen entered the polar ice with the Fram in 1903, and throughout two winters drifted toward tho pole, but never near enough to locate It. Captain Cagnl, one of the Abruzzl party, reached to 86 degrees 34 minutes north, the most northern record up to 1906, but which was subsequently eclipsed by Peary. Following these came Walter Wellman, E. B. Baldwin and Flala. F. A. Cook, nnd once more that Indo fatlgablo searcher for the pole, R. E. Peary, both found it. There have been 578 expeditions directed against the North Pole and 61 agalnBt the South Pole since 1800. Great Britain leads with 107 north ward and 25 southward. Russia is second, with 105 north nnd 1 south. The United States Is third, with S4 north and 12 south. A Long Walk. He entered a Columbus car at the City Hall, and, not finding a seat, grasped a strap near tho door. Ho was an East Side New Yorker such as is met with on Houston street or Grand street. Ills shoulders were broad and set square on a broad back. A block further along Broadway the car Btopped to take on another passenger. "Move forward!" yelled the con ductor. . And he of the East Side obediently moved forward. At the next corner there were more passengers to board the car, and again came the demand: "Move for ward!" This command Issued so often that after a time, by moving forward the space of one strap at a time, the East Sider found himself nt the front door of the car. The car was then nt Fourteenth street. Some one there boarded the car at the front door and the conductor walked thither. At that time be spied the East Sider. "Say, I didn't collect your fare for this ride, did I?" he asked. "An' you ain't goln' to!" exclaimed the man. "D'ye call that a ride? Why, I walked all the way from the City Hall to here!" New York Times. The men of forty-nine, the Cali fornia pioneers, are rapidly dwin dling. There are now only seven members of the Sacramento Society of California pioneers. The eighth member recently died, and the sur vivors acted as pallbearers and mourners. on columns and cubes and immense clusters of stalactites like pendant jewels. Through the centre of the ice palace flowed a stream of water whose occasional ripple and splash ing fall broke the majestic silence. Far north it is possible that ice palaces and temples should endure without change longer than human structures of stone. The carcasses of prehistoric monsters have remained inviolate in Arctic tombs for thou sands of years, while granite pyra mids have worn away and Babylon ian civilization has been burled deep in the earth. Chicago Tribune. At present the monastery of St. Barnard costs about 19000 a year to keep up. This money is partly col lected In Switzerland and partly de rived from the revenue ot the monas tic order. (i I: SL ... n ' -.. ,.-7 I For Comfort. , Thor.e who care more for comfort than for personal appearance are ad vised to lot tho perspiration evapor ate from their faces and hands In stead of wiping It off. This wny cool ness lies. It lies so near In fact that , the rule hag to be followed with dis cretion, else a chill may be the result. Indianapolis News. Gasolene Stoves. When you decide to buy a gasolene stove, says a writer in Good House keeping, be sure to have it burned till UUltirtl 1L IB HUH), I'UIIIW. stoves are oiled, it seems, in order to keep them in good condition in th( store, nnd people have been burned . seriously, besides running the risk of firing the house, when using one for the first time. Health Hints. If one cannot copy the old-time women with their aromatic herbs, there are many things which can be used in the water to soften it and nifke It more refreshing. Among these is a lemon cut In slices nnd placed in tho bath ten minutes before using. A little bora:; will also soften tho water, or a bag about, five Inches square filled with half bran and half oatmeal. Olive oil Is an excellent fattener. Some can take a tablespoonful after neal easily. It stimulates and makes active tho digestive organs, clears the complexion, and r.iukcs the eyes bright and sparkling. Boston ller uld. A Dainty Pincushion. Among the many charming and at tractive novelties seen in the shops; one of tin daintiest was a neat little pincushion about sic inches square, covered with fino pique. It was deep ly scalloped around the edgo in such a way that they alternated, the big f.callops falling below to give the ap pearance of a double frill. Tho top of the cover, which had a white background, had a convention al design in Wallachian fcmbroidery done in several shades of pink. Iu tho centre was a large embroidered monogram. This pretty and convenient little noveity would be a most ripproprlate gift for the traveler who can not have too many dainty hand-made cushions. New York Press. India Relish. As the making of proprietary com mercial articles is usually a trade Becret, I am not able to tell you just how manufactured India relish is made. Here is an excellent rule, how ever, for its making: Chop fine a Email head of cabbage, six onions, twelve green peppers and two quarts of green tomatoes. Sprinkle over them one cupful salt and let stand until the next day. Drain off all the liquid and put the vegetables in a kettle. Barely cover with vinegar. Add one-half cupful mustard seed, one teaspoonful celery seed and one half cupful of sugar. Boil five min utes, take from .the fire and put in glass or stone jars. If you like the relish sweet, more sugar can be added. Add at the last one table spoonful English mustard. Washing, ton Star. fmrfie Jiitclien Lemon Sherbet. Boll two cupfula water with one cupful sugar; beat until cold. Add grated rind of one lemon and juice of three lemons. Freeze. Cucumber Salad. Peel two cucum bers and place them In clear cold water. When ready to serve cut them in two lengthwise and lay on a salad dish, flai side down. Then slice across without disturbing their shape and add French dressing. Filling For Washington Pie Beat the whites of two eggs stiff, add three-quarter cup confectioners' su gar and beat; then add two or three teaspoonfuls melted chocolate and one-half teaspoon vanilla. This Is also delicious as frosting on a custard pie. Orange and Rhnbarb Marmalade. Peel six. oranges and one lemon;: slice the pulp and cut the peel into shreds; put in a preserving kettle and add one quart rhubarb cut fine (about two pounds); now add one and one halt pounds sugar. Boil about one hour or until quite thick. Spanish Beef. Mince finely enough, cooked beef to make two cups. Melt two rounding tablespoons of butter, add one small onion minced fine; cook until light brown, add one-quarter cup ot flour and stir until brown. Add the meat, one cup ot beet broth,, one cup of strained tomatoes and heat well. Add salt and pepper and serve on a hot dish or In a rice border. Meat rie. Take scraps left from any kind of cooked meat and put in sauco pan with gravy. If you have it; , if not, cover with water. Season well, add one tomato, If you have it, and one tablespoonful of butter. When It is hot place in baking dish and cov er with mashed potato. The potato forms a crust for your pie, and it dotted with lumps ot butter and browned quickly you may have a tempting luncheon dish made of left overs from your day-bef ore's dtousr.