ried. of Captain Van Olin- Tre 3 indicative of a 208 engh | tower ita : A teil you, Ben, Stores—sails and such—and you | forever cussin’ } 8 posa we eottid got ‘emp ‘Your boilerd, gon o mean’ answered the engl- wi] troubles. Though, by nus. she Dye : | the deck he looked forward : ‘dozen dirty sailors #qutted dumbly on nedr, "sort o' mesn to mix her up with | : his wife faced cack other in anger. wiil be mixed up anyway if the Ud ever | contes off those pots below, We don't Olinda say, know but what he might welcome somes "| trouble like that Marriage is uncer- Ain in ita effects on some people.” | For thre days they stowed cargo for 8 run north to Portand, and the eap- { tain watched sperations withoot any susploton that his vocabolarie mate and tinkering engineer had couspired | asalost im for Lis own good. The last Case was lowered into the holl; the | last unruly bundle of iron blasphemed into its place and the San Antonio put { out into the channel and headed for the | Golden Gate. It was clear ard warm, Ltoried his wife A SY FE 1 Lo FAAS i | thundered, “jump down thers and clean and under the declining sun the bey | . | stretehied into a shimmering glory of 8 8% ha foo! with me, If : rm accidentally rock mp ; i bridge. yards trimmed to 8 bair, the 1 moles, dominesred over by iipey coal- fraft, and above through all the wonderful light of the | With a sestare of comprebsnsion | dnrgling, the ships lving in the stream with busy and about, and sun. of what all this was to be to her, shin Oh, Yan, how | love this!” That night Twizele sought Harris in | relatiog | the above event, asked his opinion on | the engine-room, and, after sparkling beauty. Mn Van Olinda answered ber husband's cull and i jeame up to the ridievlously small | a With quiet eves she waleh~ | | ed tha solemn ferry-boats trundle by, i in such condition? | “Now for new bollers ” | the speaking tube to the ens | to mes the engines. od most gallantly by the chief | motion of the steamer was very gn | tle, and the machinery ran smoothly Mra. Van Olinds | it. "Dye reckon he's going to run her i to suit himself?” he said in contusion. The chisf swung himself upon an “Who knows? he said “1 don't.” the mated admitted. “Well. Ill tell yo what | think. 1) gyn 4 Very apparent attompt at evas. | thing all women are very easy Han. | oj. . | died, it you know how to gt about | ir" “How do you go about 1°" Um-m-~soveral have wondirad,” said the engineer. “Personally, T have { an opinion that they're summat like dae | engines. Look after ‘om, keep ‘em rup. 20 for thas | ning In clear water, don't let em race POP 10 them, omselves slick. and--whatever oite ve oi do—never takes your eyes off ‘smi one minute, Coax, whesdle, pet, talk oiee. and never cuss Rave your coss fa place where it! do good.” | soncoaled any such feeling, if he ex. | pirienesd gE . | ofi-barrel lashed in the corner, and jit his pipe. finally. { "Is there any? : plode® | sort of gentle and woulan's explode The shinper flgnted vinlently, but’ is ums’ for iv enoed, “I Van ever cussow her,” the mate : “You're FACing now: shut of sieam, Sam. Ita not your business nor mine, | easionally,” he hinted. ; VON, yet. suggest if you Jkeonot he i ple-butter ought real topper,” 8 i feelity. 1 that'll keep things | stats, Eave you. Mr Van Olinda Inguired with 7 | a hole in it, bat I might pawch | MPs. Van responded the | tearing he had gone too far, ous solemnity, thanked her for marmalade, and destendad hastily to bis own realm. ; in? nee stories. and I'l suggest new boliers You bet: suggestion 's the safe way.” | So the conspirators parted broke out. “PH kit him sure ax I'm | | Samu! Twizgle ” course. it would come out more then, | Anyway. that fant the question. And | “We jlet me toll you | Hrtle affair. 2 Baf Mea that You se nod | his” Harris's voles was very gentle : SR Sond | He was talking for the skipper's bens i At. But retribotion was swift, The next day the chief left the en- . hipy, Come In. Mr “Marmalade!” grasped the engineer, Nea: I m making myself Is not “Yea” sha pecnle from lows kaow 10 make thires like that Tom morrow To going to make gpple-but- ter.” “Why don’t Fou leave I to 00k Y" he ask od. He dosn't knew an viiing, I'm going to get a decent,” “You Baven't Harvia?™ Anxiety have the donkey. eaid Harris, Eravely, 1 can't lot you boiler” for you” “18 it copper or iron? “Fm afraid It wouldn't do them. engineer It's iron, and rather dirty” “T'm sorry. Mr Harris, for all the cook's pats are too small do. even if it is from ives in charge of his assistant, and 5 | Smoked a pipe on the forward doe. | | Presently Lo thought he would took : | In on the cook and see how matiers | Progrogued in the galley. To his ttter 1 astonishment he found Mes Van Olinda | ; superintending some enlinary « | tion that was wholly Birange to : : Harris,” she said | ‘ehoerily. “come in, and try SOME nar malade.” : hustmad, : : I hope it wasn't an awfully big hole? § rool yet, bt i's good. Herve" She | handed him a piece of bread covred | ~ | with the deiertable press + 1 bit Into it wouderingly. 1 went on, “we how Brve. and he visitors were gone. . BM pense, | caplain apoearsd alone. | non-committal, snd handled a heavy | . #teel spanner gently. But his spe | the | breathed heavily. "To that dirty man? Why, { had | to tell him Just now to go and wash | joked shout someth Bia bana good kitchen.gird : a big kettle diywn Mrs. | engines, Cap'n Van Olinda. that ain't Call repair, “It's mot | hit ap bat me ecoulint make that heap of You know ape | iy to be made ia fore,” growisd the skipper. : You risk your wife down here and i. L don't want her death on my head Ben Harris, with & fave nr prostiet. An hour later the mate nme down. | too fall for speech. Harris, who was 8 | reading % novel with one exe on his cnzines, looked up at him imauiringly. “Anything Bapoened “Y¢ know, Ben, how Blthy the tose [Naver was i» i : the © - Way up the ladder he stopped. = Has | bmsilery te lean hroks, ; has already made a list as lore ax a i Ne et mo tail you, Ben Harris” he | went on with sudden temper | you ask me for anvéhing more. Ya wont get it while I'm bess | been into, and down she goes. Then i up she comes” . snginesr slowly. : Thers wouldn't he muel | hat hares Ji ion before the calves are (3 Roy Et open oul = They'd just i sid, while the button iw that is before it becomes aiisgched to contineed Harris i lowa ahi explained. warmiy, “that you'll get {nto troable i i quicker that way thas any way | know | : of. > ; | The mate teit foolish and started to- ward the deck. “We might su . Up extraordinary. Do tell, to think! 5 Spel oc that after living in & house with real | opera- | in horrar “What of it! Why, The talents Sovont for'ard, see's a new place she’ : “Are yo Hick?” "Go topside and look ™ With hie he mate collapsed. ~ Ben Harris shut hls book on a bit of | { Waste (10 keep the placed, : Blowly up the ladder, and want When he thrust | his head out of the door that gave Hn their blankets, while the cantain and | “Filthy hole." she heard Mrs. Vin “and those men sleeping there! 1 wouldn't put a dog into & celiar jike that” “Plenty good enough for deck hands!” her husband responded. "1 won't have it on this ship” rit “That's settled. Thut place bag got to be serubhe! and paint- ed before they set foot in it again ™ "But ~—" the skipper protested, “No ‘buts’ about iv* The captain glared around. an? | caught an uneasy grin on a sailor's faca, “Yon dirty scarecrow” he that out: all of ye jump! What d've | mean by keeping your end of the ship Fiy, now!” The sailors tumbled around, and tha engineer withdrew his head “That settles It,” Be murmured to himself That evening the captain called dawn eer, “I'm golag to bring my wife gown ; Is it all right?” “Sure.” With this answer, Harris caliod the. The captain and his wife were receive. | The and very svenly, five } wier and told him to wipe | | down tha railings an the indders, put one hand over the rough fist of her { husband. The mate turnsd modestly Away, but he heard her murmur: locked and adryirad. Harris had never approved of “won. folk messing arcing an engine” but he carefully on this oconsion “Nome in particular” sa'd Haris, | “Nons in partiealsr!” she sehoed. Not exactly explode” The Lollers gre ton Cassy. No, they he chief did not tapparentiy) fictive it, But (He steam would come ony i she sontinoed Yea, mwnm and kill whoever wan down hers Mrs. Van Olinda moved back hastily, badd steam Beat in our Bouse in| “but } knew it was daageraus “Oh, then you wouldn't mind this Why. I o'poss this would. | n't heat that house even if wa flred steam heat, you should cars to see | “1 fmagine.” the captain roared out | {after long repression). 1 immagine you think this ts funny.” i “Funay?” repeated his wife, “I don't sve anything funny aboar iv Oh yes, Mr. Harris, what was the funny kettle ! you promised to loan me i “T~lforget " stuitered the eugineer | "Ok, I remember.” continued Mrs, | Van Olinda, “it was the donkey -botler.” “The donkey-botler!” shouted ner | “Yen, to make apple-butter in. Hive | you put chat patch on it, Mr. Harris? "Exonse me, please” ssid Beer hastily. “I must ses thing.* He did not return the engl | 1 anne until his | But his moni wan A couple of hours later the | Harris loake rior was past fighting. and simply | "1 think, Ben” he | that vou might have ing els” “Look out for that main stsam. pipe. | I you lean on it itd I break, sure’ “Hang you and your engines! doa‘t You Keep them in repair?” “1 you can find anything about my satd. presently Why and rée-pair, show me ir Pve nursed your blasted pots and pans Just as long as I'm going wm Anybody cheap tinware turn a peanut-ronster | "Wall, why didat Toi say so bee “Say wo! Haven't | said so? Then "Bhe sams to be afraid of your lite | : She don’t know me. you ald lummox'™ | It might er to make apgnle-bafter in? I "Doss ale still want the donkev-boile ain't Rot any farther use for 10° The cantain turned away. bat Lair “Bon,” | pant Gow fin. PY be wit iE Twisela *11 2 naxt iH Bald Imeadly, in her ans tongue of what he wants “Don’t This is the history of ths reform of the San Anton’, a8 instituted by Ban- | Harris, engineer. and Samy ol mate. an Francico Argus; wed to rot white in i ; 4 da ie i wis J . i Tae 8 not satisfactory when | sractically “Is there any danger?” asked Mea, | | Van. as soon as she rocoversd from CEAdion a : her first curiosity, feed, the mize Af the ration (0 be dee breading purposes or fattene! ¢ LL Might the boller ex. responds the | t comes ont now, Of 4 : Sa B com B ot finer than to jet them grow up and the = Flin fully develop and then saw them i Off; Colipper. as this tends to trish and : hopossibie to degtroy horn has fully developed, ; | will continus to grow until the ani. imal has reached maturity and Eput in an sore of potatoes for | rather sandy, i Hikely ry M. Coburp as made a furrow Ia fow months 1 went fo | conversation, Be sngniredd, : jai, winler quarters tn Cpiige heat, AS soon as the lambs are weansd look over the ewes, pick out those thay | are getting old and those that dre v Ad cawing will cout only £1 a thousand, | poor milkers, Put those on 7ood pase {the market bofore winter, Pave | best ewe lamba. This method will re uit in vetier and better fooler which will return jarger percentages at profit Tes of Vageiatie Kowa, A bulletin from the Minnes ia sypor. ‘ment slation reports sects of vorious varieties of vegela- bles, whith in every case show beat results from the larsor seeds cage Of radish goods the plants from email seeds, which produead but 34 per sent marketable radishes, and those from large sends 57 percent While tiie was ‘he most marked instance, there was enough difference in many others to make the plump and larger oud worth at least 50 percent more | than the small seed, Rape for Ywins, i Accordiag 15 wits at the Wiveonsin oxperinenr station rope is the most kr cheavest prin feed : Ee a Re | hiotse was dis ” > i Arie, Yamal “8h Bis hog vard ard pro- | rang, and i Toey were found to be much superior s@listarinry Lait OF In fhe state whinuld plus Es 3&4 ba aregn Tor boos feild adininine vide hireenlf with a Ue tence IU should be sowed A inches ana-t and iach suecvanivn en off Hogs should pot be tumed upen a rape pasture until the plants pre iz 4 inches high, They phosil not § few rods of move Tepe the fold, Of ronan fed alone, tein hears A% it will Lot aleuat masin. Tory should be given in certain. amount of grain termined by the cos lition of the anl- mel and whether it le being kent for SC Pehorning Yeung Calves, We use stick cassie pitash for dee Poraing our calves. We moisten the interesting re. | sults from tests of Iarge and small Clark M3. Drake in New York Tribine, In the = dropntig bound | : under the gerclicn Here is room for Bb to 60 hens in witter, or even 70 if the care is sufficient. Ploor space may be economized by cari ful attention in ¥ & A balf- | fire, give them some grain, fatten ay | | quickly a8 possible and sem them tei tha Witter, If ons bss timber for shingles, the and the roof boarding reav be of jum- er subshie for nothing else * The bullding paper flared ander the hin. ies is a emall (tem, and the windows Bry be those that have served another A AS aE A BR rm n drills : onitivated after | Ha ated after avy. mountain any coulitry, where for. groveth has been eats Lgniinow o. to 2 dla ihe for mar 1 | Pus nose, Cover $19 or $15 {proved its great value, iy x3 E30 The whois cash outlay to a farmer for Buch & Ronse peed pol hs etantisl and 3 adapted to the needs of the one who keaps a nice lars Rock Demand: for the Mule, The last year has brought the mls ito groater prominetice than it has Wrge seed were rescy for garketing | Flour days earlier (hap those {rom the ever before oobipplel in this country, It is trues thar in some sections. pola | nis the cotton stites, the mule had Bren the great relimivs for ay kinds of farm work. and be and the nagro were responsille Top ghont all rhe work | Cdoge on Eouthern farms and planta. | tieos But tha great impetus giver to mols breeding was the war In South Afr. ca. It is a rugged country, very dry, and horses could not withstand ftw © peculiar climate Here the mile and soon the dnd trom the amiss | sopnusiary and ammgniram i the mules tonal ite plage. | ihe Borse in the paralior conditions statted by active cownalgniog ina BRE 8 very soarde, and highways sre | Here the peculiar capabiiis tien of tHe mule had ample rosn on haw themeelves aml the rest was wo sieatly In Lis favor. us compared with | bors, that It nay be regarded | sortie ala He will dee come & fixture in modirn aries, sod a8 erential 8s mE or amniunition The result hai bevy nm wonder fang inte crease in the Zomand Ie ate and s cerrespanding excansion in bresding | aud raising thets, The geaers) fur 28, who wiopped hirerdiong barses sone FORrS 850. as towy could buy horses cheaper than hey could raise thens, ary beginning 10 use mules on the i farm and fod they are great worsens, Potash and rab it well over the buts 1 loose be head. When fre ih vaostie used, no trouble will be exver). it the sticks dasnlve or iW they frequently lose their strength, "Weeks | [stock yards the pt Anh ; Bn i prefer to deborn cuives (Nis way rae | 40 not care to vse a dehoroing fever | brities the horn If the buttons are mt removed hes them wilh srs sasily cared for than horses and ritiaeh freer from disess The sales of mules #2 the Chicagd ji hg riisinely ixrge. Only Now there are condignments erect swore weak sud from 200 to i are frequently an sale at asco, They | rafge in size Trop: 960 to 1560 pounds wand [The former are denominated cotiem | Cmules, 88 ther are inrgely taken bye i Mutaera farmers for plantation work, {mand the heavy ones for track nar POSH, i I the latter line of work they ars | fore the calves are ihroe wesks oid. It ; will be "TiMealt and wemetimes almost are being ured mora largely from venir CR. the potash. Some peonle make the mis take of attempting 1o dehors thelr an- | mals with & saw or clippar before the | faenes™ will he the tesa { have The hora | ong : Alioget her | found the potaal freafieny sat. islactory when proparly dane —Profes- (he cow, but geasraliy the trouble a in | “sor Andrew M. Soule, of the Tennessee | ne . : 1% he temieratare is always changing. . Agricultural College, Potstons ino Dry Season, Some years aso | was living sine about firming nis Ha told Lmy own Sklpsnient: to prevail every PNR or {have muarh © 46 with the diMtenitton | in Souter New Jersey with sn old gnl- i dier friend who said he did not know! He asked me 10 and 1 inquired whither he favorsd deep or : i shallow planting, mae to use | as the ground was | and a severe drouth was summer, {| planted the potatoes deep weites Hen. in The Epitomist. AD ter plowing lind harrowing the ground | 40 Landis if, with a ght plow, (and after going once aseross ihe Axd I | turned round, and placing the plow in | {the same furrow made a trench deep fer than uwal for potatoes. Ir was a Eoow i i long time before any vines appearsd { a the sexwson was dry, but after a fow works they were growing ail right In work else. PD te Bde ress J LD eratnre i where, and forget all about the poia- | tien, hint gute late in the fall 1 vigit. ed my friend, and after some general “Maat dia Lyon do tw theme potatoss vou planted last spring” 3 2 beparator cream, Cand Mght in butter far. i displacing ordinary nak berees. anil to your. This mar be reganted a8 the tiaie age —~Michigin Parmer. DiMculitios In Churning, Wi Bear complaints of this kind fiom some quarier every week in the Why the butter doex not come, | na few instances, ba traced (0 Fen ray, the handling of the milk anil cream. crea petting chilled may Thy im i cauraang, San may bo m8 ton lew or too high a temperature, or pol | sooeh ar the sdwy may have ] I have in mi ker who teriedios the troub) a Ly putting & quart pips been milking a long time panda SEY poss] Bunter A oWaem water (nln six Quarts « ef with, then stepfaing the milk. Waning the | TECHN Ul 0 63 er 45 dugrons, even fall the warmest wextber, will lien breaks it shonid be coaled own, ani before toy attemvr is wade To wark Io owonid thers {8 suggest the following: nly nn spall portecniy sweet until there is enough | for a chupaiog, then mix well and heat irid Bohl at 18s tema until suflelentle t the cream 8 quits Reavy anu i iz fray? i dvr iet wi Mi egress, hat i quite thin Dettor he peed, : Warmed up to nearly if uot culte 89 I theugat Be was po | Ling to find fault about sopua hing, bat when | asked what he meant, he ree piled that he had gathered crop of potatoes Lplaee. The reason wus obvious; the Gee planting had just suited a sandy and an unusuany dry season. With a miny summer ind heavy land | the resuil would have biven different. pA ate eo SY Concerning Poultry Honeen, f temperature, the hest | ever raised on the | : jlarting vRYvEs. The temperatare of (he mont re Bea Hinks aloes the a churning two or a irri the thin a’ adie while v5 warmed ; 100 quickly aud churned the fat globe | From my experi“ace in providing : ar Lay a morwrsd wall high aah to be abuva all surface water and upon tole In fresh mortar ay the 8. Henoy plank will answer these sills build a gambrel roof I fs A mistake tO pat the roof upon pa Fiavad gs nond pot be aver 8 gbave the floor ang this is Luka tou ; high. laying hers biatid a pounilry house as fol | I Gusrters Cdhosla bn ba time, until the right temporsiae for churning a rea- after sack Upor | sonable leugih Le Itomakes the room ton hig to scone i upon the sijle. the | tutors pr 10 faet | oo i shurniong tare at Instead of a long and narrow house | I would build square: Heor space as 19x76 feet Diace two 20X20 feet is a Eood size and it gives nearly as much Bidens 4nd 4 tor tn the dou wud, | les will not come up to the required | CEP Bg hive dn nat fesvnme warm | i rearly as fast as the full pare Alter | Lringing by mi even temperatura, othe charnesg and iT 12 falls to show stene of of an Lour, the temparature vralesd one to two decreas ar 18 reached, of timmy chuage of the temiperatiee It Lave in be warms the proper fal, churning may up several degrees temperature iu gather a tedions fist tha next nee god the trothie will be I have known the HT oulties af uvEr, bmg churning to be removed by chang ; (ing part of the gra rations to corn Hiwal with the cob~V. M Conch, = The Epitomtat, feven in oxtratroplial latitudes The bulleing is wtibe | LA vy Ways, : The tolor of the stream is a pers ceptibly deeper Blus then that of the aeighiiring #04, this blueness form or 18 die 10 the high percentage of salt more intensely blue is ite color. Thos We someticies observe water of a beantl fandincked basing, where the juflug impeded. the perositaze of salt con tained is ralsed by evaporution above | the average. ; i Another important fact in connees ton with the stream is (ts almost trope ical temperature, die to the fact that {te high velocity enables it to reach the middie laMtudss with very little joss of heat. Upon entering its Hmits the : temnnsrature of the fem water frequent 1y showy & rise of 10 degrems and even ¥ear puve basen : a few Yours SEED a male went there (oF cule was 8 STE Ly : he found of great Leip. Lol as soon as ¢ the butter those who have troubls in this amount of | ream made sach Jay | would keep all | holike harning anc the crenm shold ba Fat to the reguired temperature for three hovirs befor : ws the | huid part and the fat globulis to be. Lise heated Srisaking within throes, may be got 10 this bmreras Ih eentury aod the sariier years of : the 1h an importance in the minds of (navigators that it po Jonger poOsseawg, {In those days the chronometer invent. od by Hurrison in 1765, was still an ex [periment Instruments were crude and namticnl tables often at fault. The (result wie that the determination of (the longitudes was iarzely a matter of after a YOyage Suespne i, a vonee! Crean the channel 10 America often Dee Ling ont of her reckoning by degrees ine stead of by minutes. The idea. first rogmestol by BPeslamin Franklin, that the master of & vessel, by slwerving the temperature of the surface water, oould Well the raetent of Lis entry ine tn tha Fale stv, and could hence Ax hin posiifon to within a few miles wag galled with delight. The method wax published In 1758 by Jonsthen ; Williams in a work lengihily entitled | "Thermoisetrical Navigation, being a | gerins of experiments and ohaery ations tending io prove that by arcertiising the relative heat of the sea water from (ime to Lime, the passage of a ship through the gulf stream. apd from deep wane into soundings may be dis. caversd in titie to avold danger” In ‘this work he makes the patriotic come cmartsen ab the gulf stream to a streak of red, white and blue sainted upon the surfais of the sex for the guldanes of American navicatsrs —~Natioeal Gee ographic Magnatne, BO I RE RA Wm a Ss Re Piltege Improvement, Whatever is the gust characieristis elecnent in the sconery of 38 plas should stand frst in the selene of to creative open spaces If there is 8 river, let there be an esnisrnde 8 tere race, 8 promenade or a drive treated gither formally or in patvralistic Evie, aR clrenmatancos may suggest. I there is a lane. let there he 8 lakes - side pleasire ground. If the regions 8 rolling wountry, let & charming vale ley sone be secured, with care to i9. “elude some sightly paint of view Hf . & town is spread upon the fiat prairie, C&8 Bo many hundreds sre in the mide dle west, let ts people not despalr’ of : opporiunity to vary what may seem 8 hopeless monotony in environment tive for a charming landscape. A spas cloas expimee of level verdure may be inclosed in besky margins, lke a bay with sylvies shores: on tho fur side of a vista may open ont into the wige | rural coutitry, with horfion even, low, and remote. aod gs restful as the in its nse of Breadth sad I it Is 8 factory town with Coeean Denon, stream will have a copsiderable resch of slack water that invites boating and Other aquatic pleasuring. As a rule the hanks of stich a plece of water can rendily be clearsd of the ugly intru- | gions that are apt to postess 8 peigh- borhiood of the sort; they can easily be mude {0 (lothe themselves with vem tation, and som resume a nates! wpe pearance. | A delightful popular pleas. Care ground may thus be created Syl ; vester Baxter on the Contury. A Rewing- Machine Squirrel, Did you aver son a squirrel run 8 sewing machive? [If aot, yout may, by lourneying: to Ext Fiftyginth street wheres an esterprizing sewing ms chive company bas hit upon this moved method of attracting attention to is Catore. The ererclse wheel in Phe mptirrel’s cage is attached by a leather band to the wheel of a machine, whic is about four fest distant. By means of this arrangement the muehine is started avery time the squirrel gets into hig wheel and turns it It is a peculiar fact that whenever the sputrrizl swarts his wheel to spin ning he leem his back toward ha street. Noyer by any chances doss | face the itrest until he pas finishes hiz little "stust.” Then he mans on into his cige and sits peering ont of the window as hough to see if any ole fund been watealng him. He breathes bard and acts tired after each In borious trip in ais exerciser, but seems to lke it, for de koepa it spinning al’ must canxiantly, Moreover, be Inuks sleek and as Mouph the added work were lust what a caged squirrel need ed to keep hin strong and healthy. As the sewing machine for whieh he furnishes the motive power {5 woll oiled and russ smoothly and easily perhaps the smurrel's work isn't as In harious as it ssems to be 1o the casual anivoker.— New York Timos A Necessary Siem, Jagrles—-What will be the next im provement ix wireless telegraphy? Wagzles—Iavesiing a now name ha Now York. Sun. : one of the standard references of the saitival novelista Tha depth of ole rontaiand, as compares! with the cold green water of higher atitudes, obser vation baving shown that the more wait weld in wolution by sea water the of fresher water being more or less 15 degrees. It was this fact that mye ‘lo the wiream in the later years of the The prairie itself may be made the mor water-poser, then above the dam the & ful blue color as for instance. in tos Mediterranean and In other nearly
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers