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Proper Seeing of a Picture Try to Look at It Through thm Ey*? of thm Artist Who Pointed It. By ChmH M ft CaM*. ,HB flnt aaceaelty for tkt proper mhi-ct t picture la to try Ml II (trough tu tjTM of Um artist who palated It Tlli ? la mot a usual method. Generally people look only through '?Hair <nn ajrea.aad Ilka or dlalika a picture according aa It doaa or doea not salt tbolr particular fancy. Tkaaa peopla will Ml you: "Oh, I dost know anything about painting, hat I know what I like;" which la their right way of saying: -If 1 I teat Ilka It right oC4 don't cara to ba bothered to Uka It at alL ; Such an attitude of naiad eats oae of from growth aad dereloptnent. for H li aa moch as to say: "I am Tory well aatlsled with myself sad qalte iadif firat to the experience* aad feellags of other men." Yet It Is Jest this f*et> IBS sad sxperleaoe of saother maa which a picture sires us. If you ooaslder a moment yoa will aaderstaad why. The world Itself Is a rsst panorama, aad ffeem It the pelater selects his subject ? aot the copy of It exactly, since It would be Impossible for him to do this, even IT he tried. How could he rep MMBt, for example, ea6h blade of ernes, esch leaf upon a tree? 80 what be doss is to reproseat the subject as he sees It, as It appeals to his sympathy or tatsfest; aad If twelve artists ntnM the same landscape the result would be twdlre different pictures, differing according to the way la which each man had been Impressed by the sceae; la fact, according to his sepsrate point of elew or separate way of setlag it, laflueaced by his Individual experience sad ?eeling . ? St. hUsholss. Sport and Health Sacrificed for Success % <*? tdltmr ofthm CMemgm Tritunm. LIP on an ?mmt Wrap i muffler around jour throat. Orab m place at (to rope ataaf the side o{ the flpld. Stamp yaur fMt te impthea wa rai. Light your cigarette tor die traction. Cough. ' Baeexe. Turn edgeways to the eharp wind. Shout anoouragement to the men who are doing the wwk an the gridiron. Catch pneumonia. But be carefyl not to enter Into the aport on your own account Remain a spec tator. Then you will he n perfect illustration of the wny in which font ball ass lata the nhTelnel develooment of forty-nine aat of mrjr Ifty itvdwu. TMi kttot ft fad agalaat football as a same. , It la a fact against football an laatfltutloo. Motkall aa a gnaw wu baaed ea sport and exercise. Football as an In cbkaOtt la bass* aa the desire to wfta. It was the des^fe to win that first put flpsflasstsaals aa college taaasa .It Is the desire to win that still Involves col lege teams la what Preeldeat Vftnaoa of Brown Ualversltx In the World Today galls "systematic prevarication" with regard to the qualifications of their ?Mashers. w It Is the desire to win that causae colleges aad ualversitles to send driim Mts through the preparatory schools to Induce young athletes to choose the aeene of their future stadles tor reasons entirely apart from mental or social imlopoMSt Finally, R la the desire to win that surrenders foot ball exclu sively to the few mea la each oollege who stand a chance -of winnings No one waata to play football aaless ha Is on the main team or the scrub team. And Aa man whe can mshe those teems are already the strongest and hsfeflthlest Ms la the oollsfs community. The desire to win Is absolutely distinct from the dartre to take exercise ar fa hare apart, tt brings lato the domain of sport and exerdse the alien wartdly luxlm that nothing succeeds like success. If su<pttoiTls not reached, wftwft the ww? FOtt hall Is, aa the whole, a spieadld gamq. All that It needs Is to be kept ? ?me, a gases for the average student, played by him for an hour or two la (fee afternoon for the sake of playing. British Municipal Ownership Bp Francis IV. Parktr. HE American who dreads municipal ownership for fear of its betas ueed to create political machinery and rob the public, and who declares that we must first establish the merit sys tem, may be astonished when he learns the extent of the de velopment of British municipal trading under these condl tloaa. Seeking to fearn "the other side" of municipalization in Great Britain, the investigator is at every turn referred to Mr. Arthur Kay. a dlatlDnilihtd i>iHr#n ???? ???? ? mt the great merchandising Aouse of Arthur ft Company, an the arch enemy of ?nnflclpallcatlon. He to president of the Citizens' Union and the Taxpayers' V>Bde ration. When asked, "Do you think Glasgow should own and operate its trams?" he answered, '^Certainly. The owning and operating of these tram ways. has beea highly profitable and thoroughly satisfactory, and accounting la correct, and qffcodr opposes it." "But you think the trams should ba operated for profit In relief of rates?" "Not at all. They should be run on a low factor of safety, aad proflta be ?ank in betterments or reduction of chargea." "But this Is socialism?" "Well, they call it socialism? municipal socialism.** And this from the gentleman who was to have given the final word against wsnlclpalizatlon! In Great Britain there Is opposition, not to municipal ownership as such, but only to Its excesses.? Tha World To-Day. How We Hear Our Own Voices 0 \ * By Dr. L. Laloy. ? ? ? F a person records on a phonograph a few sentence* pro nounced by himself, togethor with others by his friends, and causes the machine to reproduce these at the end of a brief period, It generally happens that he easily recognized his friends' vetoes, but not his own. On the other hand, the friends recognize his voice perfectly. This singular fact proves that every one hearB his own voice differently from others. As is remarked by Professor Exner. the rfifTrrnnr? 1M la the quality of tone. 1 i must be remembered that one hears his own ?voice not only through the air. as do bis auditors, but across ihe solid parts altuated between the organs of speech and those of hearing. The sound thus produced has a different timbre from that conducted to the ear by the air ?lone. * We may show this as follows: Take the end of a wooden red between the teeth and prooounoe a rowel eeatlnnously. Let the other end be alternately taken between tke teeth aad raised by another person, wheat the same" time ?lope iiis ears. Tke latter will ftadtkat every time he seizes the rod In bis teeth, Ike mod becomes stranger tkaa when it reaches his ear through the air alone, aad haea different quality. Tkescperlment may be varied by applying a wooden j red to tke larynx of tke pew so observed, and touching It from time to time im tke skssrver*s own laryas. As la the preceding case, It will be found that ' Ms paesape through a solid body aspments the Intensity of the sound and mod Hps Its paallty. N#we of the Day. Mor* than oae hundred horses la Chicago were victims of the fact that Christmas came this year on Sunday and was followed b y a holllday. The aalmals. dropping In their tracks un der stress of work h*.* died of spinal paralysis or were shot to end their soffsrlngs. Asoturta !? the technical trouble, resulting from two ceoaecu tlre days of inactivity la the stable and the eating of the earns working day ra tkm ?c oats aad corn. Odds and Ends. Telegraph Operator J. R. MathU m enped what might have been a serious Injury Tuesday morning at a quarter .after nine, aaya the Union Times. He waa receiving a message when on hear ing a eound, he looked up and aaw tha big clock, which is regulated by tha United States Ohacrvators, falling upon him. Fortunately be jumped away In time. The cloek waa demolished. It had In some way allpped from th? nail which held it la plao* t 'H S ? Ifet ? p tk bm|ai4 fowls that etajf About his rtibki doer. Bvt aliate the shadow* M yon strna Ars ehaagng *?7 , I own tM tinl'ti float ?m dresm? ? Pat owaa the water power. Mine is the manner of the rill Who*e ewest tones scrcr cease. Bat all the air with atsk fill ? Pit owas the flock of goeae. I own yon creamy summer eloal, That o'er the meadow floats Like some pare angel in a eh rood ? Pat owas those Berkshire shoats. Mine are these drops of dew that shine And fill my wild rose fall; These tiny violets are mine ? Pet owns that mighty hull; Where such things can he got for pelf, Pat tgays the finest breeds. I bold comfounion with myself? Pat hol<!e the title deeds. Pat riaqs when the mora is new. And so. Sometimes, do I; ! I see he has enough to do As 1 am aeosing by. Hk mascles*eeem to be of eteel. Bat mine somt times relax: WhUe he so stardy serins to feel, I let him pay the tax. J l(jr golden profits ne'er escape; I aide thc9 is my breast; Pat takes his gold in different shape And sticks it tn.hts east. I coant my trsaeans o'er and o'er Aa higher still they mount; Pat's go with tboee that went before To ewdl hie beak account. Fit owne that clover field in fact. And eo I sadly fear That love of nam will asake him act Joat ae he did laat year, <? * The i rliaena bloom I prised eo high He cot without remorse And sold the seed off by and by. And bought a Norman horse. ?i No men has wealth enough to buy My part in this domain; I would not sell my clouds and sk). My shadows en., the plain. I wanld not sell thte-goiden light, TMse iales the breeses tell; Got#' hat no power to buy my right?- - - For money Pat would eell. I frase at esse on every band. At our possesions fsir; Pat plows and sows and reaps the lend And keeps it in repair. So Pat doee me a world of good, While I do Pat no harm, And on these terma, well understood. We both enjov the farm. ?National Stockman and Farmer. The End of t He CHaafe, C was one of tfaoce dull, gray days of later aatuma, which ao often brings sud denly -to its cl<*e/a season of summer .wftrqith and The woods resounded sol* Mtghtaeee. ?ntniy a t every wind, the flHdi were a dull and expreeelonleee greon. There waa that unmistakable look of change Sn everything which affects tbe sensi tive nature as the subtle uiarke of age might do, noticed for the first Mmo ou aome familiar and beloved face. John Houston ? emerged from the woods and stood absently leaning up on his gun as he contemplated tbe loifg stretch of meadow land before him. He dreaded the tramp; undeniably he waa growing old. His mirror had affirmed the fact beyond contradiction that very morning? tbf lit tie square looking glass before which he had shaved him self In his own room In tbe one lnu of Mspleton.' Why had he come to this plsce? he Questioned. Ostensibly for hunting, but did be care for bunting? The boys would bare laughed to aee bis clumsy attempts at tbe came. He hod been wise enough not to bring any of them along. He was tired of his friends, wearied to the death of tbe club; worn to tbe verge of satiety with travel, and unre concilnble to bis bachelor apartments ?their liollowness was worse than tbe hollowness of tbe woods. He bad not even brought his valet, the innn bored him so with his automatic attentions. He wanted to go back to bis youthful days again, when wealth had been only a dream, but there had been something Infinitely better in hie life. His phy sician bad said that be was on tbe verge of a nerve collapse, and that he must have rest. He knew it waa not rest he needed, but stir? the stir Of life. Often In these days he was tempted to adopt a child. When Sammy Hous ton's wife died be had made a high bid for the little boy? there was something in tbe child's eyes that made blm think of what be bad lost out of life-* but Hamrny wouldn't let tbe baby go. "I know I'm poor," the young inau said, "but I can take care of my boy. He's all I've got to remember her by." He had not urged the matter, although he had felt his life would he more emp ty than Ham's without the child? Sam bad the memory of hie lere. He knew the men about town, the young men all envied him? longed to attain hie position, his wealth and so cial standing. He hoped they would keep ou doing so, and never know how small the whole thing seemed to him as he etood at tbe edge of the Mapletou woods this dark autumn afternoon. It had been misting at Intervals all day. and the thickly strewn leaves that In the morning had drifted on aromat ic blasts, first this way. then that, were quiet now. and sodden. Tbe wind was rifting again, the inist becoming keenly palpsole. John Houston knew It was setting in for a night of long menaced downpour. The rhenmatlc chills were creeping with Icy clutches up and down bis back. He felt lie must be moving, for a eiege of gout In a place like Mspleton would be unbearable. A? he started forward, something? a gray, feathery thing? started up from a lit tle pond .lust, below In the meadow. He put up his eyeglass; it was a goose. "But a goose Is better than nothing," thought he. "I can't go bnck to that landlord with nothing in my bag/* However, while he whs collecting his scattered senses the goose flew away, making good time, as geese fly, over the meadow. John Houston started In pursuit. "All my life I have been on a wild goose .cbastj" be thought "I hare tnHirf tt the mm castration of pupow ?||A lad MetMUted his husMnae f?i? Not she of them VNkl havo%wsasod that his pnrposs hsd fsiled.l* ths ?m thing he deemed of wii?ciiHtft>> irtrrM Suddenly bk tNad himself ip against t high board fence with a a winging picket gtto te It? ths goose hsd dls? sppesred. It ins mining torrents now. Hs opened ths gate sad steeped Inside. There wns a woman there a tall, ?lender mi? drtsaad In blsck. with s big flapping hat. She was feeding the geeee. As John Houston loskfd st her HI thought she might be thirty, or eren forty, for the hslr wss a dead gray under the blsck hat Bnt she csrrted the grsce snd sprlghtllness of her prime In her lithe movements aud vibrant Toice m she celled the geese -I shoot her. "I beg your psrdon. ma'am.** said ' John Houston; MI " "Oh!" she ssidv turning sharply. "are yon the man who frightened my geese so?" . < "I'm sfrsid I am." aald John. "Bnt yon are wet." she said. quickly, noting the disheveled condition of the msn. "It's a perfect downpour. Won't you come la and dry your clothes a bltr John Houston did not hesitate. With out reslialng it. he wss thinking of rheumstlsm and of the desolate room st the inn. He psaaed through the nest kitchen into the living room. And such s rostn! He hsd never thought' to aee its like in Mspleton. Long. low. with s bis slag fire at one end. it was filled with surprises of esay lounging Pisces, divans snd cushions. "Make yourself st home." ssld ths woman, motioning toward the biasing lire, "snd I will hsve Sarsh brew you a worm drink. You are chilled t? the bone." When she came back with s steam ing cup on s little trsy he wss stand ing before the fire. He had thrown soldo his cap snd hesvy hunting jsck et, snd wss holding in hia hand a pic ture he "bad picked up from the table. The darkness of night hsd set In, and with it the storm wss Increasing. The blsse leaped up from the open wood Are snd ahone on her as she entered. A woman never ohows to better advan tage than ^in the -firelight. The gray hair was sn Illumination ss' it. fell in girlish locks on esch side of Hie face. The face wss flushed with a delicate pink; her hospitality, bad been good for her-ohe: look?d~aimost yotinf. amobient John Houston did not speak. - There waa a look in hi* face the men in Wall atreet would have been aurprlaed to see. His lips were spittle drawn and white. but.when she advanced to aet the tray on the table before him he managed to bring a kind , of smile. Ho took *s step forward. "Agnes!" he .cried. Impetuously; "Ag nes, don't you know me?" The trsy tumbled snd the steaming liquid poured over the white hand, but she did not mind. "John!" 8be warn brMtlilefi. "John, where did you come from?" "From chasing your old gray |oo?,n he said. "All my Ufa since yon Jeft me I ha ye been on a wild goose chaee." They aeated themselves. Explanations were In order. The hot drink was for gotten. "Why did you run away from me, Agnes?" John Housfon asked. "Why? You must ha v.e known, John.' Robert, my brother? he defaulf ed. We were so proud of him, mother and I. WMtMl every oent of that aw ful Indebtedness? then, Robert died. We came here to bury our grief aud our shame. I was afraid of yop;-even of you. 'John? afraid of the disgrace." John Houston rone and stood before the lire again. How , handsome he looked? a man is not realty old at fifty. "I have been all my life on a wild goose chase," he cried, impetuously. She rose, too. the old humorons ten derness on her face and in her eyes. "But you have found your old gray gooae at last," she said.? Grace Allele Pierce, in Los Angeles Times. The Case al Mary. A member of the faculty of the Uni versity of Chicago tells of the sad case of a young woman from Indiana who was desirous of attaining social prominence in Chicago. 80011 after her arrival there she made the ac quaintance of a student at. the univer sity to whom she took a great fancy. Evidently It was at this time that she realized for the first time her early education had beeu neglected, for she said to :i friend: "I suii|>ose that, as he ia a college man, I'll have to be awful cnrcful what I say. What Ml I talk about to him?" The friend suggested history as a safe topic. To her friend's astonish ment, she took the advice seriously, and shortly commenced in earnest to "bone up" in English history. When the young man called the girl listened for some time with ill-con cealed Impatience to his talk of foot ball, out-door meets, dances, etc., but finally *he decided to take the matter in her own bands. She had not done all that reading for nothing; so, a pau?e Id the conversation affording the desired opportunity, she suddenly exclaimed, with considerable vivacity: "Wasn't it awful about Mary, Queen of Scots?" "Why, what's the matter'/" stam mered the student, confused. ">'y gracious!" almost yelled the girl fro- ? Indiana, "didn't you know? W ? . the poor thing had ^er head cut of Harper's Weekly. Th? Thtnga Winmr;, Motorist? "Are all the tools In the tool-chest?" Valet? "Yes, sir." Motorist? "Are all the cushions and lap robes In the tdnneau?" Valet? "Yes, sir." Motorist? "Is the tank full of gaso line?" * Valet? "Yes, sir," Motorist? "Have you brought down all our goggles?" Valet? "Yes, air.'* Motorist? "Well, run up to my room and bring the roll of bills out of tjie top bureau drawer ao that' we will have enough money to pay our fines. Then we shall be ready, to start."? Town Topic*. * - ? ? whim me was sjmanea , Otto llwn to kMM ia Oolon4? as the ''Pathfinder of the 9mm Joan" be cause of tbe stage and All roads ba built through tbe mountalna. One of hla staff* Uoaa waa orer Harebell rasa. He waa constantly cenaariiii bis driTtftf for being alow. Tbe result 'waa tbat emy man waa anaioas'to Set him alone in a atage and demon* atrate that they could go fast enough to please bins. ? ^ On* morning be watted at tbe sub mit of Marsbsll Pass for tbe t^e driven by Henry Burns, a reck'^tf driver, to leave for the foot. lie waa dressed .In a black salt flmt was molded to him, and on his bead vas a new silk bat, and his liaeu was spot lesaly white. He was tbe ouly paa aengor. / I ? "I'll give him the rjte of hi* lite," remarked Bqrusto the station men. Four of the best horses on tbe line were hooksd up, Hears stepped Into the stage with a fresh cigar In bis moatb, and Barns clambered on tbe box. He cracked bis whip witb u volley of curses, and tbe leaders nearly Jumped out of the harness. He sent tbe four down the serpentine road in record time, the stace banging against the side of tbe mountain, graving the edgee of precipices, whir!iug around sharp curves on two wheels, and bound la* over * rocks with .jars that raised tbe heavy vehicle three feet and lunged It forward with a bump tbat started every boh and nail. Tbe horses were 'white villi lather, but still Burns urged then on. At tbe foot pass Bt ns pulled up hla foaming and well-n^'h spent horses, and Hears climbed ?ut. His silk bat was a battered wreck, bla clothes were torn in a doaen of places, siul hla hands and face w|re scratched and bleeding, for he bad been towed about la the stage like if pea in a can; but his cigar was still dripped in his teeth. He said nothing, nowever, until tbe stage was driven yp to (outinue on lta way, when be retrtirked to Burns: "Henery, I tlnk 1 vill ride on fe out side rait you. I vis so lonesome inside I couldn't ket*j^ avake."? Sunday Hagasine. >s [of V* WORDS (OF WISDOM. Tbe man wl**. applauds tbe brave always thinks lo is ruumng over with courage. A man Is nvt| likely to yet honey from the rock wpien he is pounding it with his head., i . We should 1* a*5 eiireful of our^ words as of oup 'actions, and as far from speaking ill as pom doing ill.? Cicero. Ood haa tbe qeat pica for the best man, although then ct^noP always nee this until the work lsiflnisbrd.- H. J. Steward. | 1 Many a maqlwbo ifays for power to lift a world iliutx tit? eyes when be aces a poor woujiau ctruggling with a beary satchel. M The era ring fc^- sympathy is natural enough, and ill ought never to he treated harshly, loor taught of as n fault, but it QKVir betomes ignoble and very niobd.Weaise very selfish. ? Charles <>. imef I believe that tb&e h away, that no love, no life, goes eve from us; it goes as He went, thai it may come again, peeper and closer and surer, to be with us always evetfi k> the etid of the world.? George ilscikmald.. r?pntottra on tb* Inarwi*. Our population is on ?h?? increase ns never before, and there in not n shad ow of doubt that it will continue to steadily Increase, :it )ea.?t 'or tbe next lialf doxen years: and do reasonable mind can doubt the ?noriinu* signifi cance of this Increase in population? iu Its relations to the deinmds for the necessities as well an for tiaiiy of the luxuries of life. Four 'yetra ago we were surprised at the ceisus, which showed a population of J75, 1)00,000, but we soon came to regard stch a popu lation as a mere natter <>f ourse, and now we talk of 80,??00.00<? and seem to attach but little algnitlcaiic* to it. And yet, In 1010. If the percentage of In crease keeps on. we shall have a pop ulation of more thnn S8,0<i0.C00. When It In realized that in ihe last thirty* three years our population tins in creased 100 per cent., while that of all the world has increased bnt twenty live per cent., we get some Idea of what this expansion in our population means to the United States. And the Increase in population can have hut one effect, and that is to Increase our prosperity and niHterial resources.? Leslie's Weekly. The W*t?h -Maker '? Rerrtwu. The fourth Jewel screw o( a waleh is so small that to the naked eye it will not look like anything more than a bit of dust, and is probably tlie small est screw made. It mint necewnrily be perfect iu every respect, and the character of the workmanship required on It Is Illustrated by looking at it un der a powerful microscope, v/lien it is seen that the threads average i'<wi lo the Inch. It is exactly 1-400 of an Inch In diameter and over WOO could be packed in a lady's thimble w ith ease. Counting these screws Is lievet at tempted, of course, but 100 are weighed on a delicate steelyard and the total number of an joutpu^ is ar rived at by comparing th<| uro*s weight with tbe weight of tbesle. ^ich tiny ?crew* can only be madel^argc num bers by machinery, au<p|H operation attending their mamtfaf^H Is one of the most delicate thing#* ^Rratcbuiuk ing.? St. I>ouls Qlobe-IPenH-at. Natlv* fPotflLeia, The proprietor of tP>e J?ttnese tea ?tore on tbe South Sid h had b<eu much annoyed by the lucersaut hoyjjnK 0f his neighbor's dog tJndert his \indow while he wa? trying /to sleep. \ There came a nlgt't wiben hh\pa* tlfnce gave way, sjiys khv Rochvter Herald. ' \ He raised tbe wond^w, stuck hV head out and called to #>'8 neighbor: \ "Mist' Jones," h? ?4id, "woll you do the kindness f,r reajuest the hon orable dog that Iu *l?fr his honorable b&rk? If you don''. ''V /4os h, 1*11 knock his head off!" / The student of philioaophy will not need to be told *her? the native Jap anese politeness speaker left off and the demoraH*iDlt influence of Iila Attsricgo t c?ia# in, I AAmmm All i*ti and ben MBTirt. if mixed to before beiif applied to flw eoU. rsult In a lose of ammonia from the trapping* that greatly lessens the ?aloe. Put the ashes on after the ma nure has been mixed with the soil; the ammonia will be absorbed by It and re main for the use of the crop. Wood ashes make a valuable application to soils deficient In potash, and hasten the decomposition of cosrse manures. - Grow lit* ? Specialty. Some one has said "it la better to grow luto a specialty than to go Into it." There is a desl of wisdom in the saying as applied to the farm. Almost any line of work ia all right if well conducted, hut all wrons If it Is not. First learn how, then it will do to go in. A good way to learn a specialty Is to try it on a small scale and gradually increase. There are those who can comprelleiid the requirements of a line of effort without the experience, but they are not numerous. !>?*?'? Bar j tkt AalauU. , It is a loss of valuable' material to bury a dead animal. Cut the carcass up into aa small pieces as possible, placing them In a large box or cement ed pit, using both flesh and bones, as "well as the entrails. Dry dirt may be used to All the spaces between the pieces. Use one part sulphuric acid and two parts water, pouring the mix ture over the mass until it Is thorough ly saturated. In a few days the whole will be lit for uae. but little odor being noticeable.? Philadelphia Record. To Braw KM Po?t. rfet ti?c Ivro end posts three feet deep. Put an anchor in end of each. Between posts at the top put a two by four ivtlrk. Near the top of second post at tach a heavy double wire, let it extend bark iiear the foot of end post to an an chor, either n heavy atone or a -stick four feet lone with wire attached in inirtdie. Wlien everything la in place twist* wire the laat thing.? 8. P. Delano, in The Kpitomist. Car* of Comb Honey. * . As soon as comb homey ia sealed re move It from the hive, scrape all sec tions clean of propolis, tben put it di rectly Into shipping cases and close tight. Keep It In a warm room till time to sell, never allowing it to freese. as freezing it cracks the comb, aaya The Farmer, and when warmed again it begins to leak out. m.iklng a nasty, dauby mesa. Be sure your shipping case ia tight, ?o that auta, millers or ffiea cannot get In. Do not put honey in a cellar, aa the dampneaa bursts the capping*, the honey grows thin, loses its flavor and leaks >ont, while if stored in a dry room it wlll?4ipprove and thicken. Never pack two -colors of honey to gether or mix it. in the ahlpplng cases. Keep the white honey by ttself for a better price. Be very careful uot to pack any sec tion of honey having a single cell of pollen in It. for it surely #111 have an egg from u moth miller in It, which will hatch out a big ugly worm to spoil the honey. If you haven't shipping cases ready to pack the houey in as soon as taken off the hives, then store it in the supers In a dry, warm room, tiering them up as high as you can reach. After two week* fumigate with sulphur to kill any moth worms that may be hatching. Also repeat the fumigation once in two weeks till cold weather. Ship all comb honey to market before freezing weather if possible." Slock For Brooding. A word about selecting breeding stock. It Is doubtful if there Ik nuy branch of the poultry Industry that re quired so much good judgment a? the | selecting of the breeding stock, as they are the foundation of the industry. Pure-bred poultry practically has two value*. A bird that has nice feather markings, although deficient in retil business qualities, has u value wltli the fancier for exhibition. But the bird Hint is not so nicely marked, if plump and a good layer, in likely to make the best breeder, and i9 the bird that has the real business value. For where there is one bird sold for exhibition purposes there are 10.000 sold for what they will produce in the way of poultry and egg*. I admire birds with nice feather markings. But with my twen ty-five years' experience in raising poultry and egg? for market I have found that the highest scoring birds do not always make the most profitable breeders. A bird to be a good, profitable breed er should hnve a medium-sized and in telligent looking head, short beak, large comb and wattles (as they show health and vigor); short neck, broad back, broad, plump, full breast, medium short legH. wide apart, body medium length and not too deep, and with yellow skin. Birds of this type a* a rule niy good breeders and good layers, and as .dressed poultry they command the highest market price.? J. Alon/o Joeoy, in the Massnctiusetts Ploughman. RtodloM rrnlti, The common belief Is that the weed less orange was originally a freak fruit that appeared In Southern California. The real truth is, however, that the world is Indebted for it to the United States Department of Agriculture. It is wald that United States Consul Will iam P. Judson, at Bahla, Brazil, heard of seedless orange trees that grew rome distance away from Bnhln. Hp ob tained cuttings from the trees and sent them to the Agricultural Department Vat Washington. The department nur tured the sprouts carefully, and in time ^ss able to send buds from them to ?(wriil orange growers. Home of the groWers grafted the buds upon seedling stock, A California fruit grower was the flr?t to produce the seedless orange. From him other grafts were obtained, until at length the old seedling orange groves ware either cot down or r? grafted with the ace die? kind. Fruit irowwft who study their boat* new aclentiflcally know that wed to produced In o fruit through fructifica tion by the yellow pollen or flower duet that appear* ao abundantly upon tho stain ena of flowers. If the polleu could be kept away from the. stigma of ar fruit flower, might It not be that the fruit would atill grow while the forma tion of needa would be prevented? On that theory scientific apple, cherry, grape and plum growera have been working patiently and quietly. In In diana a woman farmer. Mm. Mary K. Groab. of Nobleavllle. has been endeav , orlng to develop a aeedlew tomato, nod haa at length succeeded. The Cruit la uncommonly fine from these seedlew tomato slips. In general, it appears that where the atrength of the plant haa not to go to the growing of aeed the fruit la of superior quality. In Colorado, similarly. John F. Spen cer. shortly after the aeedleas orango bad come to stay, began working over the problem of bringing out a aeedlew apple. He now anpouncea tba t*he- has attained hia object. The aeedless ap ple* haa at the end opposite the atem n slight hard formation' aowewhat^ike that In a navel orange, but no aeeda. Oddly enough. or perhaps it might have been expected, the seedless apple tree does* not have petalled blosaoms. The apples grow out from little buda like the calyx of a flower. But It wouM be a pity if apple blossoms whould bo done away with! A California fruit grower. I-othw Burbank. has for some years been try ing to get aeedlew plums. He haa suc ceeded to a great degree, but not en tirely. It Is odd that the plum seed la still retained, though its stony coating lias been nearly abolished. Mr. Bur bank believes that he will be able, af ter awhile, to get pluma that are alt pulp. Progress haa been achieved a ten In the direction of atwiltw grape growing, notably in Ohio. As fast as the growers develop anything new they report It to the poxnological department at Waahington. Mr. Spencer has sent a number of his seedless applea there. The best new* of all. however, will probably be that a aeedless Georgia .watermelon has been brought out aa the result of long and patient effort. A Southern watermelon without m>eda would be the perfection of fruits. Am far aa they 'have pianluptid the* me Ion experimenters have obtained a fruit containing only a few aeeds. It seema. only a question of time when we shall buy In the markets all tbeae fruits iu n seedlew state.? Christian at Work. Helps to Btglnaan, There Is a vast difference between ft loan who peddles poultry and one who breeds It. To be sure we have botk, but 1 truly believe that for the good of the poultry industry we should, by some mean* or other, drive ever; poul try peddler from the business. I am not speaking now of the liuek ster. whose business It is to sell ft ml buy poultry for market, but I refev to the persons who buy birds from Mber breeders and then peddle them from place to place under the name of the brooder of inch and sucli a variety. I can not nee what glory a man derive* from such a business. There lun.v bo t some consolation in the fact that be "beats" the other fellow at the allows, but what good doea that do the great jmultry fraternity ? Here is a man who has spent year* in bringing a breed of fowls to n blgli place in the poultry world, and when that man wins be haa a heartfelt wills faction that he deserved sll hv got. Can the peddler say so much? I realize that I am on debatable ground, but I believe it is a cause that needs wise handling. Suppose I scud to a prominent breeder and buy a flue cock, take him to New York, ond be wins. Who, then, is the real winner, inyself or the man from whom I bought the birds? And is it right to show a bird that you did not raise, or that does not have the blood of your own si rain In it us being your own? Here is a man who sells eggs to a man who in turn hatches and raises a lot of tine birds, and when fall <<oiues round the man who sold the eggs buys the birds ami exhibits them; in thin ease the birds are rightly his owu; I hey come from bis yards directly; they have his blood in them. I can soe nothing wrong in such work. I must say that It Is little wonder that much of the wind is taken out of the soils of the beginners when we come to see that it does not mean milch to buy birds thot will win. It then be comes not so much -a matter of who has the best skill in rearing poultry; not so much In the business for the pleasure one derives from being able to raise tine birds ns it is to moke money by buying ami selling them. ? it has been my observation that these "peddlers" soon grow tired of their own gome. Just so soon oh the money end of the business begins to lag that soon they seek some other business. Hut not so with the true fancier. Ho Is in the work for w lint pleasure there is in it. ami the money part becomes a secondary matter. A mon who Is now a prominent fan cier, once stood on the floor of o Mg show Just after the ribbons boil been placed, and not seeing first come to hi* , coop, said: "I am going home to work harder than ever, ond the fellows will find out that I can win yet." IIow did he do it? By buying the best bird Itv the land? No. By going Into his breed ing yards ond mating with care tho best birds he had and following it up till the result was birds thot wouUft win. That, man to-day finds muchf pleasure in what he has accomplished* and more than that, he finds a great deal of money in bis wallet. Thai world will reword a true man. !<et hlin who will peddle, but as for me 0 wont to have It sold that what I show! is mine ond not Tom Jones' bird. (Jo It. then, my dear beginners. Tlrer,^ in much room at the top. if you want to be a huckster, be one, but If o trua fancier, be one, and 1 surely heliev* the', every lover of fine hlrds will git* you the welcome hand when once joil put your foot on tho top round of th* ladder.? Wm. Harris Guyer, in ib* land t'oultry Journal, ^ .*?> ? -