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^tumorous department. The Third Generation.?John Barrymore tells this story about his little nephew, Sammy Colt, the son of his famous sister, Ethel. This story illustrates how the desire of the theatrical artist for "exclusive business' is probably transmitted from one generation to another: "I was present one night last week when my sister was putting her youngsters to bed," says Uncle John. "She has reared them like old-fashioned children, and taught them to say their prayers at night. This night. Sammy hesitated, and there was a worried look on his face. He had got no further than 'Now I lay me,' when he stopped. " 'Say. muvver." he complained, 'I don't fink I'll say that prayer. I heard another fellow say It today, and if we aren't careful it will get all over town the first thing we know!'" Trouble Enough.?Miss Hodges, the Sunday school teacher, glanced around at her class as the song, "I want to be an angel," was being sung and when It was finished, she looked at one of the little girls and said: "Hannah, you were not singing that beautiful song, 'I want to be an angel,' with the rest of us." "No, ma'am," replied the child, shaking her head. "And why did you not sing?" asked the teacher. "Well, I'm not going to tell a story about It," said the litle girl. "I'm having enough trouble learning to play the piano without bothering with a harp." Artful Tommy.?Private Tommy Simshad had pneumonia, and had been for some time in the hospital, where they treated him so well that he was much averse to the prospect of being discharged as "cured." One day the doctor was taking his temperature, and while Tommy had the thermometer in his mouth the doctor moved on, and happened to tarn his back. Tommy saw his chance. He pulled the thermometer out of his mouth and propped it into a cup of hot tea. replacing it at the first sign of the medico's turning. When that worthy examined the thermometer he looked first at Tommy and then back at the thermometer and gasped: "Well, my man, you're not dead, but you ought to be!" Self Denial.?"Ernest," she gasped, choking back her tears, "father has lost all!" "Eh?" "Father has lost all." she reiterated, sobbing. "Not all?" he exclaimed. "Yes, all." "Never!" he said, bravely, pulling nuiBVil lugeiuer. ivu, mnauu, oun are left htm. 1 could not be so cruel as to take the last of his wealth." "Ernest!" "No!" Firmly he held her off. "Tell him. Miranda, tell him from me. that his generosity towards me demands that I leave what little lies In my power!" Her Dainty Spaach.?There was one young woman in the box party at the theatre who took no part In the noisy clatter and giggle. With her gaze Axed upon the stage, she watched the progress of the play, Indifferent to the gayety around her except that her delicate, aristocratic, finely chiseled features bore a look of weariness and a scornful smile curled her lips. At last, however, she turned her head slowly and looked at the other members of the party. Then she spoke to the elderly matron sitting by her side. "That chicken In the blue kimono." she said, "thinks she is the whole custard!" Of More Importance.?Mr. Arthur H. Engelbach, in his collection of anecdotes of the British bench, tells this story about Lord Braxfleld, who was among the last of the Scotch judges who rigidly adhered to the broad Scotch dialect: "Hae ye ony counsel, mon?" he said to Maurice Margot, when placed at the bar. "No." was the reply. "Do ye want to hae ony appointit?" continued the judge. "No." said Margot: "I only want an interpreter to make me understand what your lordship says." Help!?As an argument for simph spelling "Ohoughphtheighteeau" is as good as ever. Oh. you remember, stands for p. as at the end of hiccough: ough for o, as in dough: phth stands for t. as in phthisis; eigh stands for a, as In neighbor; te stands for t, as in grisette, and eau stands for o, as in beau. Thus you have p-o-t-a-t-o.?Boston Globe. Law of Heredity.?"1 hear a lot of talk nowadays about eugenics and the law of heredity. What is the law of heredity, anyhow?" asked the prominent club member of the president. "Very simple," replied the president. "The law of heredity is that all undersirable traits come from the other parent." News of the Settlement.?"A sawmill cut two men in two one day last week. Hope to be able to give their names in our next." "A big blaze lit the sky on the fur side of town the other night. It was too cold to go and see what caused it. Shouldn't be surprised to hear someone's house burned down." A Shaded Shade.?Says that patient observer the Ohio State Journal man: "One thing an old-fashioned man can't understand is why they advertise gloves and silk bloomers in the latest and most becoming evening shades, as if the shade mad*- any difference to those present." Versatile.?"What kind of work could you possibly do around an office?" "I'm a kind o' all-round handy man mister. 1 kin hold a door open light a match for ye, look out an' see if it's rainin". call a taxi, drop letters down the chute, an' tell folks yer out when ye ain't."?Life. Or Pretend* To.?Mrs. Kxe?Is your husband still troubled with insomnia? Mrs. Wye?Not so much. Whenever I hear him tossing around at night 1 tell him 1 think 1 hear a burglar down-stairs and he immediately dozes off. ?Boston Transcript. Don't Like Failures?Blobs?A girl has little respect for a fellow who tries to kiss her. Slohbs?Yes, especially if he fails to do it.?Philadelphia Record. ABOUT THE SOY BEAN An Important Crop for the Cotton Belt. GOOD FOR STOCK AND FOR MAN Interesting Article Prepared by W. J. Morse, Scientific Assistant. Forage Crop Investigations, Bureau of Plant Industries?A Crop That Has Been Raised in This State With Success; But Might Progress Much More. Introduction. The soy bean, also called the soja bean and the Manchurian bean, is an erect, rather hairy, leguminous plant, resembling somewhat the common field or navy bean. In China and Japan this bean is grown extensively, being used for Human rooa, ior torage, and as green manure. The soy bean is a valuable crop in various ways, and for certain conditions has many points of superiority over the cowpea that should recommend it to the average farmer. One of its most common uses is for hay, which is comparable to alfalfa and red clover in feeding value. As a pasture plant, the soy bean is especially valuable for hogs. It also makes an excellent ensilage crop with corn. The soy bean can be used to advantage for green manure, greatly increasing the supply of humus and nitrogen in the soil. The use of the seed or meal as a substitute for cottonseed or oil meal in the feeding ration has given excellent results. As a human food the soy bean should find increased favor, as it can be used in many different ways. In the growing and handling of the soy bean, special labor and machinery are not necessary, the ordinary farm equipment meeting all the requirements of the crop. The growing and harvesting it, and its freedom from insect enemies and plant diseases should encourage the planting of this crop. Adaptations. The soy bean has a wide adaptation as regards soil and climatic conditions. In general, the northern limit of its adaptation in the United States may be said to be that of corn and the southern limit that of cotton. In other words, it will succeed in the United States wherever corn or cotton are cultivated. It is especially adapted to the cotton belt, where the later and larger varieties, which give yields that make their extensive cultivation profitable, can be grown. Rabbits are exceedingly fond of the soy bean and often cause damage to small areas. The soil requirements of the soybeans are quite similar to those of corn, but the plants will make a satisfactory growth on poorer soil than corn. The best results, perhaps, are obtained on medium loams, although clay and sandy soils ma' * made to produce good crops. soy bean does not require a well lined soil, although a soil where .vater stands for a considerable length of time is not desirable. It is able to withstand a greater amount of moisture, however, than either cowpeas or corn. The soy bean is also decidedly drought resistant; much more so than the cowpen. Soil Preparation. Soy beans succeed best on a thoroughly prepared soil. The land should be plowed early and deep, fitted, and 1 then harrowed at intervals until the beans are planted. The young plants or soy beans are not able to pusn their way through a hard crust, as are corn and cowpeas. Thus, to Insure a good stand, the seed should i have a light covering of loose, mel- i low soil. Fertilizer*. The use of commercial fertilizers is recommended where sandy soil predominates or the soil is of a low fertility. Where fertilizers are used good results have been obtained by 1 using a dressing of stable manure or 200 to 300 pounds of acid phosphate and 100 pounds of muriate of potash. In using the commercial fertilizer it is well to apply broadcast before the beans are planted. Lime has bee. 1 found almost invariably to increase 1 the yield. Inoculation. Soy beans, like other legumes, when ] well inoculated add much nitrogen to i the soil. Natural inoculation now oc- 1 curs quite generally throughout the 1 soy bean region in the southern Unit- 1 ed States. In localities where the crop 1 has not been previously grown, how- 1 ever, it is advisable to inoculate. In- ! oculation may be most certainly se- 1 cured by applying soil from an old soy bean field, using 300 to 500 I pounds of soil to the acre, or by dust- 1 ing the seed with such soil before 1 sowing. 1 Seeding and Cultivation. 1 Soy beans may be sown at any time 1 after danger of severe frosts is over, 1 ranging from early spring until mid- I summer. In the cotton region two ( crops of the early and medium early 1 varieties can be grown in a single 1 season by planting the first early. As 1 a rule, however, the late varieties are 1 preferable in the south and should be 1 planted about the same time as corn. Soy beans are grown either in cul- 1 tivated rows or broadcasted, depend- 1 inp on the purpose for which they i are grown. The row method is preferable in weedy land and usually 1 gives larger yields of hay and prac- : tically always seed. The general prac- i tice for seed production is the row method. 30 to 48 inches apart. For i hay, soiling, or green manure., a drilled or broadcasted crop furnishes a finer quality of forage. In rows, from 20 to 30 pounds of seed to the acre are required; when sown broadcast or drilled, from 60 to 90 pounds. Soy beans are generally drilled with an ordinary grain drill. By covering the feed cups not in use the distance between rows can be adjusted as desired. The cotton planter has also been found satisfactory for use in planting large fields. For small fields the ordinary garden drill does well. Fader proper soil conditions soy , beans germinate in thre< to five days. As soon as the seedling plants appear above the ground cultivation may begin. Soy Iteans should receive at least three cultivations. Rotations. Soy beans may be combined advantaireously in many systems of crop rotation. The cash value of the se"d is sufficient to encourage the growing of these beans as one of the main crops of the rotntion. In the south, soy beans are adapted to practically the same place in rotations as are cowpeas. In some localities a soy bean crop is grown between two wheat crops and in other parts between two oat crops. Wheat, winter oats and winter barley may follow soy beans. Where a whole season can be devoted to soy beans in thf south, two crops of early varieties can be grown In place of one later variety. By this practice much larger yields can be obtained where seed production is the object. Mixtures. Soy beans may be satisfactorily grown in combination with other crops, thus affording a greater variety and a larger yield of forage. A mixture of soy beans and cowpeas makes a very satisfactory hay. Soy beans are more generally grown with corn than with any other crop. When sown in rows with sorghum or Sudan grass they have given very good re-1 suits. Varieties. At the present time about fifteen varieties of soy bans are handled commercially be seedsmen, the most important of which are Mammoth (late), Hollybrook (medium late), Haberlandt (medium late), Medium Yellow (medium), Ito San (early), Guelph (medium), Barchet (late), Ebony (medium late), Peking (medium late), and Wilson (medium late). All of these varieties, with the exception of Barchet. are suitable for hay and seed production The Barchet is especially adapted for hay and green manure in the gulf states. For seed production alone the Mammoth, Hollybrook and Haberlandt are to be recommended, while the WilBon, Peking and Ebony are better adapted for hay. Soy Beans For Hay. Soy bean hay makes a very nutritious feed and is relished by all kinds of stock. The chief value of the hay lies in its high content of digestible protein. Feeding experiments indicate that soy bean hay is fully equal to alfalfa hay. The use of this hay, which can be grown on the farm should reduce the quantity of feed which It is necessary to purchase. Soy beans may be cut for hay at any time from the setting of the seed until the leaves begin to turn yellow. The crop is best fitted for hay when the pods are well formed. Soy bean ha is cured much more readily than cowpea hay. The yields of hay range from one to three tons to the acre, and occasionally four tons are cut to to the acre. Soy Beans for Pasture. The soy bean may often be utilized to advantage for pasture for all kinds of stock, the most profitable method, perhaps, being to pasture with hogs, supplementing the corn ration. Corn and soy beans may be grown together and then pastured down. In this way the crop is not only profitable In feeding value but also in the Increase of soil fertility due to the manure and refuse vines. Soy Beans for 8oiling. Among soiling crops the soy bean has an important place. Having a high protein value, the crop may be fed to good advantage with less nitrogenous crops, such as corn, sorghum and millet. The great variation in the maturity of the varieties makes it possible to have a sucession of forage throughout the greater part of the summer and fall. Soy Beans for Ensilage. The use of soy beans alone a ensilage is not to be recommended. Good results are reported where soy beans and corn are mixed, three parts of corn and one part of soy beans, in filling the silo. This silage keeps well, is readily eaten by stock, and the animals show good gains in flesh or milk production. Soy Beans for Seed. Thus far soy beans have been a very profitable crop when grown for seed, but the industry has been developed mainly in a few sections, such as eastern North Carolina. The character of its growth, its uniform maturing habit, and its yield of grain recommend the soy been for seed production. Under ordinary conditions the best varieties of soy beans will yield from 20 to 30 bushels to the acre. The cost of producing the crop when the beans are planted in rows is generally about the same as for corn. In addition to the value of the seed, ranging from $1.25 to $2.50 per bushels, the benefit to the land on which the beans have been grown and the thrashed vines as a source of feed must be taken into consideration. The feeding value of soy bean seed, which contains about 35 per cent of protein, is very high and compares favorably with other concentrated feeds. For feeding to animals the seed is ground and used with some less concentrated feed. Experiments comparing soy bean meal and cottonseed meal indicate that soy bean meal Is superior to cotton see dmeal both for milk and butter production. When grown for grain alone, soy beans may be cut at any time from the yellowing of the upper leaves until all of the leaves have fallen. The plants should remain in the field until the seed is thoroughly cured. In harvesting the crop for seed a selfrake reaper or a mower with a bunching attachment will do very satisfactory work. With the taller varieties a self-binder can be used. If only a small area is grown soy beans may be cut with a sickle or pulled, tied in bundles, and flailed out when thoroughly dry. Soy beans may be thrashed with an ordinary grain thrasher, with a few adjustments. The cylinder should be run at one-half the sneed used in thrashing grain, but at the same time the usual rate should be maintained for the rest of the separator. In order to prevent splitting the beans some of the concaves should be removed. Special bean and pea separators are now on the market and do very satisfactory work. Soy beans may be thrashed in the field without previous stacking, or they may be stacked or housed and thrashed later. Kor the best results soy beans should be thoroughly dry for thrashing; otherwise much of the seed will remain unthrashed. Storing Soy Beans. After the beans are thrashed they should be placed in shallow bins or spread out on a Moor for a time. The massing of large quantities of beans, especially if they are not thoroughly dry, will cause them to heat, thus preventing germination. Under whatever conditions they are stored the seed should be examined occasionally to detect any tendency to heat Soy beans do not retain their germinative power as well as cowpeas. Germination tests indicate that It is not advisable to sow seed two years old without previous testing. Value for Human Food. Although soy beans as an article of food have attracted attention from time to time in the United States, thus far they have been but little used. The honns contain but a trace of starch and they are highly recommended as a food for persons suffering from diabetes. The numerous ways in which the soy bean can be prepared as human food should encourage its use. The green bean when from threefourths to full grown has been found to compare favorably with the buttej or Lima bean. The dried beans may be used like the field or navy bean In baking or In soups. When prepared In either ol these ways the beans require a somewhat longer soaking and cooking. The soy bean has been sold In this country to some extent as a coffee bean. When roasted and prepared it makes an excellent substitute for coffee. Soy bean meal or flour may be used as a constituent of biscuits, muffins, and bread; In fact, In any recipe where corn meal is used. In the various preparations inree-iuurwin buj uuui ui meal and one-fourth wheat flour are recommended. Soy Bean Oil and Cake. Soy beans, in addition to their forage and food value, contain a valuable vegetable oil. The yield of oil varies to a great degree with the variety, ranging from 14 to 24 per cent. The oil is utilized to a great extent in Europe and the United States for culinary purposes, as a paint oil, in soap manufacture .and in many other industrlee. The soy bean cake, remaining after the oil is expressed, is made up into meal and makes a highly nitrogenous food. Practical experience, supplemented by careful experiments, indicates the value of the meal as a food oil Lrfrisia r\f llva otnnlf GENERAL NEWS N0TE8. Items of Interest Gathered From All Around the World. The parliament of Ireland has passed a measure forbidding: the sale of all alcoholic liquors. There are eight candidates in the primary election contest to select a mayorallty candidate for Chicago. The Frick Coke company of Fayette county, Pa., on Monday, began operating its plants on full time and 1h now giving employment to 16,000 men. The annual pension appropriation bill was favorably reported to the lower house of congress Monday. The bill carries appropriations of $165,000.000. The schooner yacht Idler, owned by J. P. Jefferson of Warren, Pa., went to pieces on Diamond shoals, off Cape Hatteras, N. C., Sunday night. Fifteen lives are reported lost by the mishap. The National Stock Yards of East St. Louis, 111., have shipped 40,000 horses to Europe since the war began. The horses average from $140 to $170 each for cavalry animals. An Amsterdam dispatch sayB that the raid of British airmen on the town of Essen, Germany, last week resulted in the destruction of 400 motor cars by bombs dropped on the repair shops. By the will of Chas. G. Emery of Watertown, N. Y., who died recently, Chas. G. Emery, Jr., is to receive $50,000 from his grandfather's estate, provided he drinks no alcoholic liquors before he is 30 years of age. Harry K. Thaw Is again occupying a cell in the Tombs prison, New York city. The cell Is No. 220, on "homicide tier," and is the same cell he occupied during his trial for the murder of Stanford White, several years ag&. Wireless telephoning from-a running train at a speed of 40 miles an hour is now being done on the Lackawana railroad, covering distances of 30 miles. The first successful test was between Mt. Pocona, Pa., to Apalachin, N. Y. President Wilson and three members of his cabinet are to make addressee at the meetings of the Chambers of Commerce of the United States, which begins a three days' session in Washington next Wednesday. Although the Edison plant at Wesi Orange, N. J., was destroyed by fire on December 9, with a loss of about J2,000,000, the plant has been so far restored that production is now almost normal. Portions of the plant are working night and day. The Fidelity Trust company of Newark, N. J., on Monday, declared a dividend of 325 per cent on its capital stock of *2,000,000; of this, 275 per cent was in cash and 50 per cent in stock. Every employe of the company was also given a bonus of ten per cent of his or her annual salary. The United States supreme court has confirmed the sentence of the Federal district court of Philadelphia, under which Chas. M. McMahon, John R. Markley and other officials of the International Lumber and Development company are to serve three months to two years for fraudulent use of the mails. A Catasauqua Pa., concern, makers of horseshoes, has received a contract from the Russian government for one million shoes for Cossack ponies, besides large quantities of shoes for other horses. The horseshoe factory employes 600 men and is working night and day, the output of shoes being about 100,000 a day. According to reports to the senate by Secretaries McAdoo and Redfleld, ocean freight rates have risen in some cases 1,150 per cent since the beginning of the war. The report declares that if exports maintained the December level for one year, the increased rates would make a charge of $216,224,400 on American exports. A Washington dispatch says that the indications are that there will be no rivers and harbors bill passed by this session of congress. This is the measure that is characterized as the "pork barrel." The bill as reported carries about $20,000,000 less than when transmitted from the war department, and its opponents say there is yet much room for trimming. In an address in New York a few days ago, Dr. Manton M. Carrick of th? Jmorifnn Mcdicnl Association said: "Every year more lives were lost by accident and preventable deaths than have been destroyed in this country in all our wars since the Declaration of Independence. In brief, 600,000 persons die nnnunll.v from preventable diseases in the United States, while 1 SOO.OOrt are needlessly ill. Contempt of court sentences imposed on two reporters of the New York Tribune because they would not divulge sources of information of a printed story of grand jury investigations in New York, were on Monday, set aside by the United States supreme court. The newspaper men refused to accept presidential pardons in return for testimony as to where they secured their information. Different Standarda.?Richard Blxby's friends say he is a good fellow, and his wife denies it. Which do you believe? Robert?Both.?Judge. AVAILABILITY OF LIMESTONE I Experiments Show Results When Ground Coarse or Fine. ' One of the most important questions i concerning the use of ground lime stone is that of the proper degree of fineness. In recent years certain writers in the Middle West have asserted that if limestone is ground i finely enough so that the coarse par, tides are of the size of smalt peas, it will answer agricultural purposes. It has also been intimated that such limestone is more economical than the s finer product. This is based upon the r ! slightly greater cost of fine grinding. and upon the idea that the coarse 1 material will insure the presence of c ! some carbonate of lime in the soil for _ i a considerable number of years after . its application. It seems to be practically accepted c ' by all authorities on the subject of a lime for agricultural purposes that it 0 is only the very fine product which can be immediately useful. It Is also c well known that If enough finely b ground limestone is added to a soil u to fully correct its conditions at the . outset, the effects of such an application endure for several sue- a cessive years. It is also well recognized v that If too little finely pulverized ]j limestone is used at the outset, there ?H1I (nAtrUahltr ha o nnnoMorahlo shortage in the crop, even though s ample quantities of fertilizers are em- h ployed. This loss In the first crops may readily be sufficiently great to P pay many times over for the slight ad- a dltonal cost of finer grinding. c Some experiments have Just been . conducted by Hartwell and Damon at the Rhode Island Agricultural Exper- a iment station which shed a strong t light upon this question. Land of t very uniform character, but highly deficient In carbonate of lime was se- e lected for the purpose. Liberal quan- o titles of the same kind of complete t fertilizer were applied in like amounts , in all cases. Experiments were conducted with mangels and with carrots. 1 The experiment with mangels In t 1913 showed that for every 107 pounds t of crop secured without the use of . lime, there were 138 pounds, when all the lime was fine enough to pass a 10- t mesh sieve, but was too coarse to * pass a 20-mesh sieve; whereas, when a all of it was fine enough to pass a sieve having 80 meshes to the linear e inch, the yeld amounted to 389 v pounds. The following year (1914) e the yield of carrots without lime amounted to 175 pounds. The yield where the coarser limestone siftings a were used amounted to 314 pounds, v and the yield where the lime was all ? fine enough to pass an 80-mesh sieve was 563 pounds. In the former case the unsifted t limestone gave a yield of 279 pounds s of mangles, whereas the next year the j unsifted limestone gave a yield of 470 pounds of carrots. In this case the m i unsifted limestone had been ground so fine that all of it would pass through a sieve having 10 meshes to the linear inch. The finest grade of limestone, all of which was capable of passing a sieve having 80 meshes to the linear inch, was found to be slightly more effective, considering the total yield of the two years, than the same amount of lime in the form of slaked lime. These results indicate, therefore that very coarsely ground limestone, even If it is all much finer than has been mentioned on frequent occasions in the Middle West, is far less economical for general agricultural purposes than that which is more finely ground. This point Is particularly impressive when one bears in mind that the unsifted ground limestone produces but 270 pounds of mangels, whereas the fine product produced 389 pounds. It was found upon examination of the unsifted ground limestone that 56 per cent of it passed through a sieve having 80 meshes to the linear inch; 13 per cent, which was too coarse to pass through an 80-mesh sieve, passed a in.maah alftVA' nriH 12 ner cant nassed through a 10-mesh seve, but was too coarse to pass a 20-mesh sieve. These results show conclusively . that If the limestone had been ground so that all of It would pass a 20 or 30mesh sieve, Its efficiency would have been decidedly Increased, and by the additional grinding necessary to secure that degree of fineness, the percentage which would have passed an 80-mesh sieve would have been still greater than It was in this case. Actual tests in the field are the only true basis for drawing conclusions as to whether coarse or fine limestone should be used. In this particular case actual experiments support what ought to be evident, and they are in accord with the practical experience ns noted In progressive farming communities.?Dr. H. J. Wheeler, formerly Director of the Rhode Island Experiment Station. THE SIZE OF THINGS Time for Men to Take ? New Measurement of Themaelves The war must bring the glow of honest shame to the cheek of a good many persons who are made to realize how small they and their affairs measure against the reddened landscape. If the war has called a halt on the evolution of beauty in art and architecture, on private advantages and public utilities, on works of charity and wheels of industry, it has also called a halt on many a man's overweening and aggrandized estimation of himself. He must revise his scale of values. He must regulate the thermometer that takes the temperature of his passions. He must reject his false weights and measures, whereby he sought to cheat his own soul Into thinking his bargains fair. A new bureau of standards is set up, whose business is not physical but spiritual mensuration, calling a man's personal rectitude into account. The size of things as we see them depends on our own size. The Ant says to the man: "If every sand-grain seemed a huge stone, Should you fro walking all alone?" To little men, every contact is colossal. The letter "I" Is the Alpha and Omega of their alphabet. They are fond of recapitulating past chapters in which they think they played a large part. They name their empty honors. They form societies to pamper and dandle a petty dignity. One tires of their incessant lovesong to themselves, their one-string serenade. The great, surprising shock to the mere onlooker is that when issues of life and death are mooted, and the fate of a nation trembles in the balance, there still is time and room unywhere to quarrel over petty details of ways and means. Certain men cannot see that the deluge is after them and round about them, if they do not act at once; yet they must interpose minute and querulous objections in order to be heard. Men with enterprises of moment warmly awaiting them grow restive. Their work is tied down by little strings, like Gulliver lashed securely by the minute webbing of the Lilliputians. They gnash their teeth with impotent rage to find themselves frustrated by these petty affairs whose sum total comes so near to zero. Yet they must "be patient and proud and soberly acquiesce," making no fuss over the loss that delay brings in its train. There is no society for the Suppression of Unnecessary Noises that they can call upon to silence those whose loveliest music Is the sound of their own ( voices?lnsuppressible toastmasters at life's banquet, who want to do all the talking themselves, or at least establish a severe time limit for every one else. A really "big" mun can fill a pause j with a word or two that makes a detonation loud as thunder?though he did not shout, but merely spoke in 1 he ordinary tone of colloquy. He loes not rush to claim the credit for f >elng the beginner?he does not need -* o make haste to ascribe to himself r( he glory. He does not talk much, 7 >ut what he says is to the point. ? Whatever he wants, he wants hard ^ nough to go after It and get It, and f those who are supposed to fetch 8l or him are not sufficiently fast upon m heir feet?lo! he is there and back w ni lefore them; yet sometimes he Is j? trangely patient with their dilatori- ci less. The really "little" man is a dreamer >f dreams he never means to execute ^ ?an eye-servant careful to hold his re rerbal dress-parades as close as he s^ an get to his chief. His horizons ? ire small; he cannot follow the course if a dollar as far as a trained golfer ci an observe the trajectory of a driven A tall. His torpid imagination and his inillumined sympathy run into the ?1 ilood of every work in which he takes ? , part, and harden the arteries of d< whatever humanity and liberality may di Ive In its design. t The master of men does not lose Ight of the forest for all its trees; m le never is enmeshed in the mazes of le lapers on which words stand printed nd written; he cuts through techni- fi] alities as Alexander sliced the Qordin ai not; he divines unerringly the point, nd separates the chalT of the imma- ~ erial from the good, clean wheat of /*# 1 #*11 UI <1 Anrn lit* iiicauius ui an. 1110 w" rty is not permitted to tyrannize ver him; he is bigger and stronger h; han everything he owns: it is feelngs, not objects, that possess him, and y'( hese feelings are not the petty emo- al ions of jealousy, parsimony, vindic- H iveness, that sway the souls of lesser M ndividuals. It must be a nobler ransport, or it has no power upon ai ilm. It must not debase him to the ui lervltude of mean and base ideals, but ^ xalt him to the magnificent freedom U1 i-herein great souls abide. It teach- p s him to regard as small many things rhlch impress themselves on others cj is all-important. It humbles him vith the feeling that he is the servint of a mightier Power always, and fl, hat a success which crowns him In ci he estimate of men is not an apotheo- p is?he is still a man.?Philadelphia Q] ^edger. < ^^Add toils yield poor crops. Lime correct ^^^effective. Many of your crops need Lii m es, but Com, Cotton and Gra ^^^^^^^ultural Lime depends on two thi E^^H^^^^fineness of the grinding. We ^ ^^^bonates, ane the sample w condition. Valuable today lor pric I^BUQl^l IlK'X * | ' | ' Vi L , . ? fx-::. V.%: :|v ?%&%$$&&& lb? ;-< - >>. ?v%- 'v'-s; ' '%& 'Z '* / [, ' ' i:'y' : 'i A Stirring Romance ~-p rfthc mthf Kentucky Z? ^ gener; Mountains by a famili Do Not Fatl to Get ,015 the Issue With the exciten First ChapterI maxes You w ment ( The Call of the v.*asv.sw^v.v.%wav.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.x>X'>X<'!W Now Running In The E CHINESE LAUNDRY AM located near A. R. P. church, . and will do your Linen and ev ything in a satisfactory manner at >asonable prices. Give me a trial, f.t 4 t* CHARLIE LEONG. J1 Kinds of Good Insurance If you want any kind of good iniranee?the kind that INSURES, lakes safe, and the only kind that is orth 100 cents on the dollar?I am In ssition to deliver the goods and at as >w cost as the same class Indemnity in be bought at In this section. ABOUT BONDS If you need a bond as Adminlstra>r, Guardian, Executor or for any urpose for which Fidelity Bonds are jquired, I beg to advise that I repre*nt the United Statee Fidelity A uaranty Co., of Baltimore, one of the rongest and most liberal concerns in le business, and am prepared to exeite bonds "while you wait." BOUT LIVE STOCK INSURANCE I still represent the Standard Live took Insurance Company, and am repared to Insure Horses and Mules nder twelve years of age, against sath from any cause?disease, acci?nt, fire or anything else, to the ex*nt of one-half their actual value. About Automobile Insuranc*. I am prepared to insure your Autolobile, provided it has been in use ss than four years and has been taki care of, in the strongest and most beral companies in business, against re. Let me know about your Insurnee Needs. SAM M. GRIST, Special Agent. Farm Hardware IT LOOKS NOW like the weather as broken and PLOW DATS are on . V?.. .,.111 ic way. iuu nui piuuaui/ get uuig farm work before long. Suppose )u look around and see what you are ire to need In the way of FARM ARDWARE?Plow Stocks, Plow :olds. Heel Bolts, Backhands, Plow Ines, Trace Chains, Shovels, Forks, hes, etc., then come to us and let us ipply your needs. No use to wait ntll the day you are ready to start Dur work before you get things In lape to move. DO IT TODAY?Let 9 serve you. RIMERO COFFEE? Lots of folks will tell you that they in't get good Coffee any more. The ouble Is that they haven't tried our RIMERO?it is good?at least people ho use say it is the BEST they can nd and we believe they mean it, beluse they keep right on coming after RIMERO as fast as they use up the in they bought last Must be good, r they wouldn't do that. Yorkville Banking & Mer. Co. KThe Shine |l that Lasts i the acidity and make* fertilizers more ne directly as a plant food. Not only in crops need Lime. The value of agriings?the amount of Carbonates and the guarantee from 94 to 98 per cent Care shall be glad to send you will show the i Free Book on Lime a and ralaable book, liaiaf for Profit" IttrUa jroo why Lime pay* ? bow to S tret your toll?tod many other reliable facta. Send for YOU*, copy now. Remember, k*i free, THE G. C. BUOUO 1136 PaiBMtto Bld?. ^^^^^^COLUMBIA, S. C GRIPPING tale of red-blooded people country where feuds anded down from 9 _ ation to generation, writer thoroughly ar with these people. r of pathos and laughter, lent and powerful difrom beginning to end. ill enjoy every install* Cimberlands jDnnnnnnnnnnQnnnnnnnonnnnnonQQnnQrioooooQQM IV. nquirer. Kead It. I THE CITY MARKET WHEN it is something to eat you ' want, remember that the BEST BEEF there is will be found at the CITY MARKET, which now has on hand more than one hundred and fifty fine STALL FED BEEVES, and which at each slaughtering selects the finest there is In the lot, leaving the others to become still finer. THE Ci i v MARKET Is all the time a buyer of BEEF CATTLE, whether poor or fat, and pays the Highest Cash Prices. Whenever you have anything in this line let the CITY MARKET know about it The Proprietor also deals in Beef Cattle and he studies to nlpo BP C. F. SHERER, Proprietor. Fountain Pens (j A good FOUNTAIN PEN will help you to write BETTER, do more writing with LESS WORK and with more ^ COMFORT. When you are ready to W buy a Fountain Pen, It is ECONOMT to buy a GOOD ONE. That la the only kind you will And at SPECK'S? We sell the WATERMAN "IDEAL" and the PARKER "LUCKY CURVE" ?they are as good as ever has been made and probably the largest selling Fountain Pens In the world. They FIT the hand, they LAST, and they are PRICED TO SUIT. Let us show you?Glad to do so. wedding presentsno, we don't know of any weddings that are in prospect just now?BUT, when you need to buy a Wedding Present it is Just as well to remember SPECK'S?Here you'll And something to please and within the reach of all pocket-books?Keep SPECK In mind. T. W. SPECK, Jeweler B REAL ESTATE 4 LOOK! Now Isn't This a Nice SelecUon? The J. K. Hope Place: 70 acres, near Tlrzah, on Rock Hill and Clay Hill and Yorkvlile and Fort Mill roada 5-room dwelling; large barn; 1 tenant houses and other buildings; 2 wells? one at house and other at barn. Adjoins T. M. Oates, F. E. Smith and Mrs. Glenn. This Is something nice. See ME QUICK. The E. t. Carson Place: 186 acres; 8-room dwelling; 8-room tenant house; large barn; crib, etc. Plenty of wood. Adjoins W. R. Carroll and others. Now is your time to see ma Two Tracts?One 18 acres and the other 60 acres?about 6 miles from Yorkvlile on McConnellsvllle-Chester road. First tract has 4-room dwelling; barn, crib and cotton house. Other tract has one tenant house. Each tract watered by spring and branch. Plenty of timber. Good, strong land, and the price Is right Better see me. Town Property: My offerings here are very attractive. Can suit you elth- k er in a dwelling or a beautiful lot In .9 almost any part of Town on which to erect one. Let me show you. Geo. W. Williams real e8tate broker. m DIRECTORY OF YORK COUNTY A DIRECTORY of the White Men of York county of voting age, together with the postofflce address and occupation of each, may be had at the Bank of Clover, the Bank of Hiokory Grove, the First National'Bank of Sharon, the People's National Bank of Rook Hill, or from The Enquirer Office at 26 cents a copy. This directory contains more than 4,000 names, and is of especial service and value for commercial purposes. Published by L. M. GRI8T8 80N8. TAX RETURNS FOR 1015 Office of the County Auditor of York County, 8outh Carolina. Yorkvlile, 8. C., Dec. 1, 1814. AS required by statute, my books will be opened at my office in Yorkvlile on FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, ^ 1916, and kept open until FEBRUARY ^ 20, 1915, for the purpose of listing for taxation all PERSONAL AND ? REAL PROPERTY held In York ] county on January 1, 1916. For the purpose of facilitating the taking of returns and for the greater convenience of Taxpayers, I will be A at the following places on the dates _ a named. At Rock Hill, from Thursday, January 28, to Wednesday, February 3. And at Yorkvlile, from Thursday, February 4, until Saturday, February 20. All males between the ages of twenty-one and sixty years, except Confederate soldiers over the age of fifty years, are liable to a poll tax of 31.00. and all persons so liable are especially reauested to give the numbers of their respective school districts in making their returns. BROADU8 M. LOVE, County Treasurer. 3. t.f. til20th TAX NOTICE?1014 Office of the County Treasurer of York ^fl County. J Yorkville, S. C., Sept 14, 1914. G NOTICE is hereby given that the I TAX BOOKS for York county will % be opened on THURSDAY, the 15TH ) DAY OP OCTOBER, 1914, and remain J open until the 31ST DAY OP DECEM- vd BER, 1914, for the collection of STATE, w\ COUNTY, SCHOOL AND LOCAL TAXES, for the fiscal year 1914, without penalty; after which day ONE PER CENT penalty will be added to all payments made in the month of JANUARY. 1915, and TWO PER CENT penalty for all payments made in the month of FEBRUARY, 1915, and SEVEN PER CENT penalty will be added to all payments made from the 1ST DAY OF MARCH to the 16TH DAY OF MARCH, 1916, and after this date all unpaid taxes will go into executions and all unpaid Single Polls will be turned over to the several Magistrates for prosecution In accordance with law. For the convenience of taxpayers, I ear 111 oHon/1 #Al1nt?lna nloAAB nn thA ^ days named: A At Torkvllle from Monday, November 16th, until Thursday, the Slst fl day of December, 1913, after which date the penalties will attach as stated above. ^H| Note.?The Tax Books are made up by Townships, and parties writing about taxes will uiways expedite matters if they will mention the Town- * ship or Townships in which their property or properties are located. HARRY E. NEIL. Treasurer of York County. POSITIVELY ONLY FIVE SUITS PER MONTH ALLOWED TO MEMBERS OF MY PRESSING CLUB. EXTRA PIECES WILL MEAN EXTRA CHARGES. I have moved my Restaurant and Pressing Club to the Williams & Barnett Building opposite the 8hleder Drug Co., and am better prepared than ever to serve good meals and lunches. I have secured the services of Mr. D. M. Hawkins, an expert presser and cleaner and will guarantee satisfaction jj in the work of my pressing club. M yr Club members. Again?Only five m suits per month allowed members. H. D. DOHSETT, Proprietor. I'hone 149.