Amateur Teamâ€"We once knew of a man that bought n good many con every year for hia city dairy. it was before the advent of the submit tent. and tor that reason he was very ex- cusable in using a more primitive mode. He would get the milk of the cow olerod for me 1nd not it over night in a goblet. If it showed a good ‘ thick cream in the morning. he bought the cow. provided her milking capacity was fairly good. Thia might do for can to be mud in n milk dairy. but it would be very unreiinbio for cow: to to mud in n «ulnar or for the ori- nta dairy. Thia, (or two rot-ma: nut. mo cream ia much more com- not than «has. and 1 out whole «I in ave-aim at an inch n to possible to feed through e long emu: goat the name as though the poatnree were green and without any increase of coat. It I: nieo mihle to feed through the long winter on a milk producing ration that in grown on the farm and to an cheap to green iteeii'. With the right kind oi ration for win- ter (ceding ii encourage! more of win- ter dairying. and consequently greater proï¬ts to the butter maker. This hunch of conducting the dairy in but one branch of what in known in in~ ten-ire farming. It in round to be in keeping with the idea of cutting down the acreage of the farm. and of putting more of both brain end brawn labor into those notes This nyetem is work. in: well in practice further out, "a it in put o matter of time when it will be found more thoroughly engratted into our Western wereâ€"Nehruira Wentâ€"ll Pall-nun. One of the foreman consideration: with the dairymn is the. matter of cheap nd elective food. in the West here. even at this comperntirely early dey. the cry in for more pasture room. A: e matter of net the absence of good plum-m [or the cows at about this time of the year. In a rule. in can» pinned about I good deal more in thin section then It in further But where they have learned to depend upon â€nothing better. It in now conceded hy durymen who have studied all sides at the question tint the corn iield will furnish more of the right kind of food for the dairy cow the: will the. mature. That in to any. turn the matures into corn Ielde and clover and nil-il- meadows. then prop-re the food for the cow! for every month the year around. and it will he discovered that milk and butter are produced at a lessened COIL This manner of feeding necessarily lrlngl into requisition the silo. By thin Ileana eererel sanctum are had. MI ulna-ton or um Ian at single pnrm barm- would attxxmt n hom Inn Alon. which to many wnu would be palatable to unbllnu thrm In the basement: of but baron. W0 mod to human that great utnw ulmln wore needed for tln noun of mm. tho nhol- tar of the not! lld tho pmtutlon of the manure. Now we luml our manuro dtmtly lo the Mldn. our com: am not let out when "my mutu- ulwlter. Ind the altar nhoulrt In mt Into lnrh length: at tho tlmo of thrashing. M: which run It ran ho hound In one-ml"! the usual com-v, and actually mt: lo" than to Mon! lt I'l, "limits-Pb".- dclphll Lodger. AI to the second objection. awry turner with llud enough to put on 40 or 60 com to too um will nuroly hue I Illo and cut his fodder and MI hay. Ind with it" nrnnmd hanging unclu- ran like MI cut Ind Irrou Mo barn- yard Into Mn (‘0' Inn with morn gnu-- flcllon than In the old wny o! ullnx mum- of hr and I‘M-arm o! fodder (Eton-n the dull Ind nnrrow mum. 43“! be built oi! light tim- bers. say 2 by 4 inch standing, balloon (rune. As the roof is narrow the rafters can be light and need no purlina. Board it with neat aiding and line it or planter inelde. With well ar- ranged windows and air ducte you have light and ventilation as thoroughly unâ€" der your control as in the living room ‘ of your house. Such a building as this can be put up for one-third the cost of a 55 by 60 foot bank barn and be inï¬nite- ly better as a place to houae cowl. TWO obiectlona will probably be arsed llalnst this single purpose barnmi‘lret. that you will need a large barn anyhow, (or the atoraxe of hay and grain, and. secondly, that it will be inconvenient to get the coarae provender from the stor- Iae barn to the cow barn. in newer to the tint objection I can any If I“ building. are to be put up, build them long and narrow. u in the cue or the cow barn before described, for the lame Iavlnx in the coat 0! the smaller alaed lumber can be made. Lumber or what we call yard aiaea ooata us 10815 P" thou-and. Sawed oisea coat 818 to $20. and quite large atlcke. which have to be 01 800d pine. may coat $30. Such a buildiu aa above indicated can be built of yard aim and would not coat over half aa much an a aquare hank barn at the Cheater county pattern of the aaine capacity. If your old horn in seed. take our your baaement atablea. drop your baya and lo increnao the flange ca- parity. A_..__A_ ‘low Baotou“! Fur-an Opal-u. 'l‘hll Morn-nun ol‘ tho Faunâ€"A Fun Ill-u .- to cl:- Can 0! “V. Block And roam-y. “INTERESTING CHAPTERS OUR RURAL READERS. DAIRY AND POULTRY AKE a building that. wili hold 69 cows, any 28 feet wide by 108 feet long and 14 test high. The ï¬rst story should he 10 feet. tor the cows, with a 4 foot lot: (or mealand cut lit- ter. A building of this width and size my“ 0,- nm «(was "iv an m. Scavenger Sheenâ€"The too common oplnlon In regard to cheep I: am they no but scavengers. “(I ma only to comma the weed- uml other waste- on no “I'll; but put of nothing coma “In It than II lo prover food. (to 9“ liquor provided, '0 ma These fowl: ere supposed to he ne- tlvec of Indln. though some say they originated In China. They are bred In Englnnd to some extent. The cocks weigh about four pounds. and the hen nbout two and one-half pounds. Silk“. Manly Miles has this to say of the above named breed: This breed. some- times called Silky. or Negro tswls, have a very peculiar appearance; their plumage being so unlike that of other iowls, as to he scarcely recognised as feathers: while the skin of the (owl is a deep violet color, almost black, the surface bones being of the sme hue also. which gives it a rather unin- viting look when prepared for the ‘ 1 table. The flesh, however. is very deli- cate and white. and superior to that of many breeds. The plumage has a soft. flossy appearance. the ï¬laments being separate or single, and has been repre- sented by ancient naturalists as re- sembling wool. In describing this peâ€" culiar breed of {owls some say. "They were covered with wool instead of feathersâ€; others my, they were cov- ered with "hair like eats." So now our iowlu, instead of being over“! in winter. are giving in eggs. inniend oi bean a sorry looking, de- jected. unproï¬table lot during the molt- in; perlod, they are wide nwnke Ind strong. and many of (hem go .9 g... u to give us one: "8MB"! at this time. The grain hill being ingely re~ «laced. ihe on; yield being lncreued and no ion from sickness. I" aid in‘ making our winter and spring record very encouraging. and no one could in- duce us to neglect the feeding of green hone freshly cut at all seasons of the year. FOR We haw now I lmlirr way of "ï¬ling. and moni uxcollmt result: have fol. lowed. W» ind mt 3mm bean in full’ quantity "cry olhvr day. and some at the limo, awry any. Tiny rm- lnu. penal". and wlih I good bone cutter they maiu- who-n rut huh rrrry day no nice A food thu we can only likes it to a nice rnro main to I hungry nun. The fouls love it. 'i'lmy thrlvb. and the chickens grow rapidly when led on it. The mineral pm or thin lood given chickens malerinl for their growing hours, and for ihn laying hen. the shells. while the mat. mm. mm juice: in these ml bones [in an- mm for the flash to the growing chicken and Interior of the as; In Abundance. Your: no. my: 6. H. Duh In Thu Ponllry Monlhly. the poultry bunloou lulu not In lucrlllvo In It I. It the plural llmo. During tho vlnlvr months. “though our poultry nu well molten-d and fed and mu can mod M keep the bullcllngl clnn. glvlng plonly of fresh valor. Mn. we found u the» cpl-ulna of (he mrlnx In had no rvmnnernllon [or our labor. In coat of lrnln. arr-pa. pol-loos. «a. for M- mï¬ul llu- Inmmu of em born. or at dllannt “mm and places. and tanks the mom nxnclly who than dona "rim or man. but with A luv u- ln or flno [owls ha may "‘0" mm- clrnllr dam to ham (M ronulu ap- proximatoly olllm. um. or whatever commmm or am cmlona recommend Mn; and It I- ale to any that It ll lmpoulblo for I judge to Icon (owl. III III, ronnldmme mun- _________ nu: uv-uu. cull)", nuke; or I! aim a week hu elapsed a few of the specimens Included In the twenty named meet him elsewhere. in II "netted to place them In the name notches min u a lost of his export lklll. ablmy Ind honesty. no matter '31.! chum may have been made In the circumstance. and condition: nur- roundlng themâ€"~- thing lmpoulblo. Ind m Ilka or union I: not found In all nature. I thing which ennnot be done whatever system of Icorlnx he he must be a phreuoioglst. I physio:- nomist, and a psychologist 0" hypnotizer. In fact, such I man cannot be iound. and therefore. W sort must be had to those possess!“ lower virtues. l! a Judge In required '0 . use a score card he will have between twenty and twenty-ï¬ve subdivlalona of a fowl to examine, each of which may be detective in from one to six or more Dllcen, and all such defects will vary in from one-ionrth to live or more point: in valuation, nut! in a class 01' twenty ‘ (owls his mind or attention. It In possi- ble. will be or may be brought into di- rect operation over 1,000 times. and "IN '8 “vetted is that he shall go over and over the same specimens time and tlme In!!! and hue the fault: exactly AMI.-. .‘ I. -i lion, in comparison to which the score card nflalr would be a. plzlny? Would it not furnish a pabulum for poultry writers to ventilate their literary at- tamments pro and con tor a long time? The judge, "to suit all. must be espeâ€" cially endowed wlth certain qualities. â€"0!!! Which might be mentioned well versed in the business, which means tact and experience; he must be qulck, agreeable. absolutely accurate, unwary- inns in Judgment, have a retentive mem- OI'Y. possessed of patlence. and to be able to measure up defeated exhibitors thick mlght really contain less button fat than one tour-nlxtoenths inche- thlck. Second. the cream In some milk me. very much slower than In other lots, due largely to the use of the hub ter slobule. l'nrerialntv of Search. A writer in Ohio Poultry Jourulfl Bays: There is no doubt but that the A. i’. A. can recommend certain per- sons as judges, and require them, be- fore that is done to he examined as to their qualiï¬cations {or such position. but in that event will all societies and associations employ them? It they did gotmould it not lead to another rebel- “nut" Poultry I‘M“. Possibly connected with this is the astonishing and hitherto nnoxplninad MIMI constantly Innaâ€"ad by the ex- plorer shooting up from behind the loo hmier and illuminating the ileum of this tar-on quart. of a. drill. Bach 1 display of tho “run, any: Barnum-cl. not plan on M‘ hymn-d in nil â€min-ho My; hula In W an It“ I He picked up e large number oi pr- ‘ net specimens right near the shore. These precious stones were lying around iooee. and he naturally obn- clmlen that. there are many more of them. Wherever garnets are found other precious etonen are not unlikely to be discovered, and people are telling it the Antarctic continent may not he one vent etarehonee of mineral wealth which mey exist there in “dreamed-o! qnnntltlel. One of the most surprising results of Borchsrevlnck's voyage is his report. of vast undeveloped mineral wealth. which in countless stores seem to lie waiting the hand of the miner in thin unknown continent. This Includes not only metals. hut precious atonen. The vast Ice wall whlch la the pecu- liar characteristic of this continent was seen stretchlng in both directions as far as the eye could see. In place. it towered 12,000 feet above the sea level. crowning great perpendicular rocks that rose from the waves. 0!: Win island vegetation waa diacovered so feet above the sea level. and Borehg'revlnck found plants which were never before discovered within the Antarctic circle. This island is about 350 acres in nine. and it will, an Botchgrevlnck. make an excellent land- ing place for all future expeditions to the vast continent stretching away at‘ its back. of the crewd-thln II I region wholly un- like what had previously been thought. In conditions no. pecullnrly adapted to my expfontlon. and what has I'- rexdy been lonml leads to the convicâ€" tion the! animal and even human llle may exln there In A degree never be- fore suspected. that no man has yet penetrated beyond the stupendous ice wall surrounding this unknown and mysterious contin- ent. a daring Norwegian navigator. the Columbus 0! the Antartlc. has Just re- turned and told of the wonderful things he found there. He is C. Edgeberg Borchgrevincil, and he in the ï¬rst white man to tread the ground of this vast. and hitherto unknown land. From what Borchgrevlnck saysâ€"and all of his statements are corroborated by the log 0! the ship and the members VIHAT THE EXPLORATIONS OF BORCHGREVINCK REVEAL- )no “at Storehoulo of Wealthâ€"MI: “a Found Within Thou 8.000.000 â€II“ -|'uluablo Illa-ruin on Pouch-lo- Ida-d. ANTARCTIC WONDERS. HE vast Atlantic continent, 8,000,000 miles in extent, has been receiving much attention at. the geographical congress assembled In London, and a‘ great. deal oi new: information on the subject has been secured. While it. is true WOFDERB OF THE ANTARCTIC OCEAN. > "It In better tint ninety-nine guilty ‘ persons should mm thin [but one In- nocent man should Inner." In lm clam to the jury the Mn “muted the conï¬nes. of the proposition, but added impugn-Ivan no] match: “'00-- mnemlmt'youtomII-hdu‘ tantrum have My M" < ‘ on another occasion. who: the evi- dence seemed to point conclusively to the prisoner's gum, but when the judge. from long experience. distrusted the jut-men's whdom. the counsel for the defendant said: Some years ago there iivcd in Ais- hems. a judge who was noted for the sarcasm which he dispensed during his administration of justice. On one occa- sion :1 young man was tried for steal- ing a pocketbook. The next case was for murder. The evidence in the larâ€" can case was slight. but in the other seemed to the judge conclusive. To his amazement snd' wrath, however, the Jury convicted the young men and sc- onitted the murderer. in passing sen- tence upon the convicted thief, Ines the dischsrge of the other prisoner. the judge said: “Young man. you have not been in this country Ions?" "No, Your honor." replied the prisoner. "I thought not." said the judge; "you don't know these people; you my kill them, but don’t touch their pocketbooks." Cape Adair Is In 71 degrees noun: m- llude. Borchgrevlnck thinh that ships could winter there. no that an expedi- tlon Into the Interior might be tuned thence In summer. Ashes um! Ian on demlted mum! the enter: In alternate lam. Ind be- tween these He strata of new. Molten lava may flow over the cmt of nine: without melting the snow beneath. Thus glaciers nre sometimes sealed up under the my" of lava. Volcanoes are built out of the prodâ€" ucts of their own eruption, being com- posed of debris piled around a. vent. In that strange land the mountains are‘actually hunt to some extent out of snow. Layers of snow occur between strata of lava and ashes. This 13 ex- plained by the fact that the ashes thrown out by volcanoes tall cold and form a. solid'cake. which Is one of the best. non-conductors known. Borchsrevlnck shot one seal or a ‘specles hitherto unknown, which seem- ed to have no external cars. In 1892 whaling vessels from Scotland tried to ï¬nd the whalebone producing whale in those seas, but without nucceaa, them there were plenty of “hump-backs" and \ “blue" whales. The latter, in great schools, jumped out of the water like salmon, so as to show their whole] length . From the Iouthweat. he an. nu streamers of light that into the heav- ens. making an Interplay o! gorgeou- colors that swung the whole gamut of the prismatic keyboard. It was at once awful and mangalllcent. . Previous navigators have described Antarctica as an Irregular man: of ‘ land. having somewhat the shape of a deformed root with a swelled ankle. The bulk of it is In the eastern halal-- phere. It In very lmperfectly deï¬ned on charts and maps. As good a guess as any of its area states the latter at 8,- 000,000 square miles. making the con- tinent larger than Australia. hen-um 0- an MD». on can: Dan in Kentucky the We in: lay themselves out to do the hand-cine min; by brides. Describing a recent wedding, en interim DIM in m- to fly: “The bride in l deal-Dime. ‘ebout the average height, with‘ en e:- ‘qnleiuly rounded form. are In t he: like a richly new lily. ï¬lm nui- lmo ey. of the brlghu I“, mu may lm'n heir. Incl enema- Ion The working mnn started to pn'n clnthlng In order to rain the money. when n mend suggested to hlln to hnve the company send tho prize money nun- nn the two pounds. He wrote to that elect. In Inner name I Iottnr nut- Ing that he need not lend the nanny. u I: had All been settled. But they hut n charge on their book: mum llm for "not-rm nnd other can of cnmncy." amounting to ï¬ve Ihmtm. Would be send thnt over hnmodtntoly for a- man. Coanngly he dld no. And mu 1 hard from the company afterwards. 1 In, no the Mm run, am Another com- petitor had lodged 1 comm-Int Ind claimed two pounds. I! be In: wllllng to buy the man out, lending two pounds by mm. the arm money would ho forwarded to Mm In full. of these "vi-dies works in that of I Working man who sent three shillings abroad in a content. A few dun inter ha received in reply I letter marked “Prints.“ ostensibly from Ill employ: of the foreign concern which olered in "revenge" in supply the Iii-lag word secretly for twenty shilllnp. or about 86. The deluded machine sent on the money and received the word. Short- ly Afterwards be m I letter from the company. saying that he ind ton. tnd that there were norm! hundrai dollars standing to his credit. The only trouble mum by 1.... Though "missing word" contents were declared illelnl six months or I ‘ year ago in England and were supposed :0 have been deï¬nitely stopped. they. , are still being carried on. Unfortunate- ly it is only the fraudulent one- that are now in existence. The “mining word contest†win so popnlsr [or many months utter it was introduced (hit it has been kept up even against the luv. It never attained any mat popularity in this country. A sentence was print. ‘ ad withone word left blank. and the ï¬rst person who supplied the missing word by mail got the chief prise. other awards being made up to a considerable Ium. Each competitor sent in some- thing like I shilling as entrance fee. and the total amount received in thle way, generally an enormouo sum, wen distributed among the winners. That ‘ was the way the competition went when it was managed fairly. But the most of the missing word games. if not nil of them, that am now running, are mnn- used on no such principle. The period- icals now conducting them are general- ly printed somewhere on the continent. and are scattered broadcast on British soil. in many cases they are not peri- odicals at all. but merely clrculna scaled up no letters givinx the terms oi the competition and the sentence to be completed. An instance of how one “â€1 "-th DIM h Inch-l AIM KISSING WORD 8WlNDLI'. Il- unu- ll'nntll wm *‘h bruthomman“ Mylnnmnttdypli Chla‘o MM till ' .m-mmtmm a. um «a mu I! Inuit cook â€on, “Th M , .. AM mam .. ,. #1 V m, 1' mammal-mum; ;V?‘“Tg ‘, «ma Ina-mm†’51? . mu. for) wan-r. m... The Gnu-rick That. m * "i puny, which vu organised i1 w undone. will com on u a. II- †Open noun. m ' i by." It. Bottom at!" on ' "M- ter’s clever pm "My." " all the thatâ€. are any: man. The attraction tint will be at m or“. am not to l matte m by Sidney R. mm, mum "Isl-h M' necessary In one at the «h In local fair, In watch 1 min! of“ an. Went 0! mm will It I‘D. DID-I“. I“ Daniel Frail“ writ. that If. 3. H. Morn ll Int-uni“ Ill far- I.- colpu u the Lyon- m. Now York. tn "The Prison:- d It...“ D. Bother: will to can Ian I: Dos-t0. flunk-giving a†II wobbly I. most pom-m day In (Map [Q I. nubile to VIII! the m m a mains and eve-Inc m I Olymple ...... Continua W Toul- ...... CoItlII-Il mm Hnmn'n .............. Pl'l M II. The Chat.- ........ Duly. I I. II I. 3. 81m 1'. Jack‘s .............. m Lyceum ........... . ....... Vim Schiller .............. Queen 1 u.- .......... Conn-Io.- m Hopklnl' (Soul's aw) .......... Frank Daniela In “TI. Wind d the NH." "um-riot ............ Dirt-t I“. Ann-mm ......... no mm III Academy M look ....... M M Mncoln ........ The Tin. 0m luonlc Temple. ......... . Vanni]. (‘Mno ....... (mu-Ion m liopil-‘ (Wad M) .. on" Mum-nou- In In! '0‘. (‘nlnmhln .......... ....Lllllu M Nook-fa .......... To. Inc! m ("and ......................... commonm Sunday all". 001:â€: “The Many World“ will follow nu- m-lly um Olnrd It (in Oil“ M; Homo. It M. Ma W" m} a alt-co lu madman hm III! : um I. am to mom with m In. ‘ 1« Ind brunt tau-nun. The W CHICAGO OPERA "Dullâ€"Don- nell, m almd Mu coo-1m found In their latest which a! (II. “The Minn-non." n non of M II Ilovo, through which Inca-c up rlmont pour- ": won-w Joy and u- llmmd m They open at :50 ON- cngo Oporl Home on In“: It“ with their an: bl. colony at whi- ty "mu. All tho my m “m' In new. and mot-l mm m elect- vlll be “mailed. ION" O. oomody hotter and mom than on Donnelly and Olrud Mn Ill 00 It“ soup. not: popular In no ml" During the presentation at no phat- ennlly ween-Ital musical Me. 0...- d7. "The Raina-Ion." I" the odd-cl sconory and oloculcll 01000.! M II Um metropolis 3'“! be arm by 0. company. Th: cut luclndu nth who-o mm" an synonym no menu, (My In: Ru. and mm. m Rour- brothers. Inn In. I.“ ll:- mond. Joule Outlaw, one. “I“. AM Inn-Hold, I" Vilma I“ Dar nolly Ind Olmd. ‘ MchCKER'S TREAT-lawmflll _ ' Homo-toad" begins the mum l†' week non Sand-y, Got. 31. â€The M ' : tioth Century Girl." I Immdor.hfllfl f with nuny apocloitioo, will loan ' brie! engagement on Sundoy list ' Nov. ad. Min Molly Fuller. will that mic role" beyond I doubt. oxooi oil 6! previous triumph. Bloomer: m It part or her costume. and without «up. it In chimed. Iho ouoooodn in import â€noting the mannioh woman to o lo- groo which has 1-me boon noon. I}, John 1‘. Kelly. will be tho Iliohool X0- Niunara, the man with tho political 3 pull, or whom it to sold. com- o lam every time he opono his mouth. Du Willloma in also o mambo: of mo oom- puny and play. tho port or o 0cm " promaoor. Hio Ger-Ion dloloot boo 'v " made him famouo and ho obonld col- ’ tribute a large than of the fun. on. prominent momboro of tho mm are: Harry Kelly, Thoma howlo II. Catharine Llnnrd. 'l'ho ihroo Kow- ihorna ulster. will introduce o wool-l- ty. “'l‘ho Bloomer Girlo." in union (to, mode A pronounced uncoo- lui III- nor in the amount Now York voodo- villo boom. The ohomooo will Io J numerous and the voicoo on ooid to ho huh and tho poroonnol churning. 0- the whole “The 'l‘wontioth County Girl" In cloimod to ho “to but nub min wont of it. kind on tho rood. I In: a. nan-zonal at Vubig ‘ 1! Play- llama I)!“ M m I Dim-u. Wand-III). III W“! “I in.) 62.3.00 :9. 5:5? . Flux-235‘ CHICAGO Conn-un- m Continuu- m Continu- mam ........ Pun M II. ...... only. I u 11 p. I.