â€w of BMW niche." E: Eu!“ lb ‘3'". m_ with!†four “en's mum mm. n (In M will: â€W m that dwells m and W cons. I)...†of "or It nods â€â€™3â€, W' (him my my ï¬lm to beavgniy W3: in“: lieutenant Boyd fle brigi I: who is won I: Keminglon mm- 01‘ birth in Am“, has om the m-ct was: with to bathe Ines: collec- -on~w'ive survive. specimens at West killed my himself and leg-tor Curing the-am- u we‘re mount but “cum last week. but" collect». q! m out o! Alfie.) at. one up! they bu China I! matie‘ftml'! W3 is at up It at South y museum. «manning the spoolâ€" alned with the unrest g a: and m 8N". the lam in): of Me. . ï¬lm-0V0? Ill. 10mm ï¬lm (in. 'ith the relief tone to my native collector n: he tamed the nucleus n. A: thcponuy beâ€" Ieoz, he gradually worked Kuhn“. nth; collec- muo- oa tho Ilia at ed Mr. ugh-.23.: gummy around. but to ‘â€"Now York 1'1“. - Ito 1 [buy Mam "pne- Itbcr afternoon. "I have I in Atria now tor nine that the government does â€ï¬‚aws in mn-ol-th'oavay mm conceals birds and The Geymn elm-gm do be colonial one: at Bar- ‘its ulcers to collect nat- ! specimens whether they ind though the" work In trough and tag". it u It sitting on 5 chair on!- ior on Sweat]: “nu. p; a cistr then the other he was approached by ll l been employed by him, how on a long deb-nth. [be parlance of (ho pro- N nay bit the hurt. _ I. this is {have {ad in 4 um. mahmm “Mr 51mm) â€- W, m I8 band ï¬lm"?! â€'9'â€- mson‘s “Itâ€!!! 7Ҡm In Wu. CW umh Ind W m n .u lhc Mann's WK y AID 'ro acumen. 3' In W! lam com- ‘ "min: mm: " While m My“. ï¬lo hi prom m“ be killed In 80mm“, [no non mm... .. ._ who but ï¬ction, It is u h an lawful to m Ina-tuck?) u ‘ v "I Vood- Illm not to b. Inn-a. z in Atria now tor nine {he has to be a Inchjsc “fl air German mm land Ipocimu of rm he asked Ir. Hum. in} lend bill I, m use It to sober up and [ck to his old an. fly, um an m m m" profuse expression he actor ra’markgd; :- Should III. nor-stain can be found al- ï¬ haven to heat Oliver Wénaen Holmes .* .r wim- m" with who-“h .- _ ’- "‘. g? 5? ._g .Iom‘ 1th hid \Vu', - v-v -. Rock'tord, la. correspondence Solicited. Thanks tor the’ prospects of a ï¬ne crop of turkeys and cranberries. The present drought in England is the most protracted and seven.- or any the annuity has ever known. A Missouri man lately sold the fruit on vim-um apple orchard for 38,000. Few crop: can beat this. And. now comes a man with 3 seed- less watermeron. This is all right; but how I: the melon to be propagated? The forage on any kid of fairly good corn is worth, it , shredded. not less than 815 at the present price of hay. A nonhuman who “was in a city telhrns that it. cosLs- mm 75 ovnts to keep a hen 1n tom. for one mar,- where he has to buy all'the toodconsumed by her. The latest estimam' of the spring when crop of Minnesota and um two Dakotas 13 138,000,000 bushels. One man located in the woods of Northern Minnesota has a potato crop this year which will bring him in the. handsome sum of $12,000. Forty-three million Russians living in the interior provinces of, that enunâ€" try are on the wrge of starvation owing to continued drought and crop failures If poem: the: King Corn Phillips coma out of his assignment deal in no sort of shape to so on with his corn smurf combine, whereby the price of this cereal was to be permanently W0 note that 26 I103! raised in Kan- sas an alfalfa and just topped qquith An investigation shows that there are but six varieties of "w timber grow- ing in the Philippine Islands of any value for export purposvs as cabinet ï¬it‘ï¬ezaï¬iï¬sbld WIS/Nor $25 per head. There are great possibilities con- nected with bogs and alfalfa. It will be out of plum and had form for the boarder to make any sligming remiflt about the primes on his hill 01 hr. this winter. tor prunes. with p0,- tatoeo, have passed into the‘ list 'of luxuries. The poking house trust of Chicago is a farm-aching organization. Last year they added to their meat inter- ests poultry and eggs. and this year they have buyer: on: seeking to control the apple crop at the “West. A farmer In a Western. state conclud- ed that he would his: a little less corn and grow some strawberries, so he set out a tour-acre patch last war and thla'year sold 22.000 quartalrom the ï¬eld. to! which he mceived $1,000. lnpmed methods at handling flax ï¬ber result in Eastern, buyers taking the wholecrop from the farmer. seed and ï¬ber unthrashed. they baling it and “ripping it to the mills in the hit. The prlce paid p'er acre was $22. (Copyright. 3901, by _ -1..-_J Petty thieving has taken a now turn this season over much u! the country in midnight raids upon the potato new. A man whom we know had an eighth of an†cleaned up in one night recently, , A Minnesota farmer during the ex- cessively heated harvest season of this you humanely fictt his horses in the barn and hitched his traction engine on to his harvester. cutting all his crop of infli grain by steam power. The" m an old man or Tobago; who lived on rice,‘ xmel Ind Iago, 'l‘lll.‘much to his buss, his physician said this: " "T0 3 3‘8. Hr, of mutton. you may go." > . Find the physician and the cook. . . _ _ : Ii has boen proved a possible J. S. Trigg.) PUZZLE PICTURE. thing I! A Jersey cow in Wisconsin consumwi to nuke a millionaire out of Just a com» mon, everyday famr med sold) in tlllinx “13:01] and producing crown and stock. Mlssouri has one and ll 1‘ nols two or three such agricultm :1 plutocfats. Some potato growers insist upon hi‘si- in; up their potatoes. while others gin the crop level culture. This sensor} w? drought the 'hill system *proved alum? fatal to the cro‘prwhiie potatoes de-r: pianted and given level culture in: '. good crop. Try some forage crop on the smxl grain stubble. Plow the; ground [.1 soon as harvest is compinted. Sow» corn, millet. cowpena, turnipsyglve dx ceilent satisfaction it there is sumcie '1 moisture to start them. Pastures w be short in many places, and unld supplementalcropa Ire grown .mu stock will have tovbo disposed ol’ 1 fore cold weather; Don’t permit tn†Farm animals will be proï¬table neg year. I Three logs or Afrlcnn mahogany, 2’. 'eet ln length and 32 Inches lndlamet ‘r sold recently in Loxidon tor the sum :3 85 500. and two other smaller or> brought $1,77L58. or $2,500 per 1,( 0 Keel. board mcasure. Common prairie hay baled is so!“ 1‘: for nbnut $10 per mu in nearly v‘ Watt-m cities and scarce“ that. Northern Minnesota are hundreds . thousands nt‘ tons of this sort of b a m be had for thn cutting, and a lot ‘V man are new busy cutting thls h: baling and shipping it, andvnfe maki , good money out 1)! theirfsï¬ec‘xdadon‘ g In the aid days when whisky 0011!!! he bought for 25 'n‘mts a gallon .: aw class row could he started at a b; rn raising or a caucus for less than dime but this is. beaten by the anSI 1‘ cheapness of wine In France. when gallon sells for lqss than 1 cent. mflno, sugar, mango: and pineapp s in tho world. which fact gives this litt 7‘ Island‘as a part 01 the Union a cum important placo. Pnrto Rico pmdm-ea the beast. tobami. If you borrow 9 tool of any kind In .1 your neighbor, be man enough to :I that it is properly returned when (16“ with it. and in as good shape as'w r you got it. It wears on a maufs pi : to [and a sharp scythe and get lt‘b wtth tho» edge destroyed by lmpro ' whomug. Dry seasons have one thing to I): 9'1: credit, and that the superior quaiity d all farm- prnducts grown and sans-9,. The entire hay crop of the Centrai W-ts'. wasszwrd ihis year hright and fragnmt and entirely undamaged. by rain. n insigniï¬cant item when in some s-‘zir sons it is more than half apoliegi. The greatest foe to a well stock ,1 tool chest on the farrr ‘ ‘ the pmpem i‘ v' of lmpovement and m less height 3 to borrow and never return An ob i - ing disposition is doubly valuable i 1 1 rural community where stores are tant and ready money scan-e but farmer who would not see his stoc i{of tools reduced lo-the vanishing n {pt would do well to follow Shakespea '5 adviceâ€"“Neither a borrower nor . a. lender be." ‘ As it Yooks to us what with UN ha Sam taking in a revenue of SSBDOH : mouth tram the when of ndultera 9! and bogus bum-r- and engineering a ï¬rst class lottery which he has made for the government’or his blg fault. it would'seem that he needs the :r“ - vice- - ' an evangelist. for be certain Is in no shape for the underukcr. When the public health and the pri- vate pocketbook run oounter of each other. the dear people had better be looking after their health. for prlvnn greed. unchecked. would kill off whofe l-ommunities if it could make a, dolor a head dblng \it. The adulteration ni' food products is a big enough quest on to justify the segious attention :Ln‘l radical action of the United States congress. Because the tools will buy and eat adulterated foods. it is still no reason why the rascals should he at- iowed to sell them. - ......... -- WV . ~. . 01112.76; hayg $7: aniline. t9; om. 810.80; gluten meal. $5.40: pasture. 35; toga], $49.95. She 88W 13.474 pounds of m k, chh mdé 740 pounds of butter, which sold for 25 cents per pound, 'amountlng to 8148, leaving a. net proï¬t of $98.75. This is Interesting as showing what a cow is capable of doing when at the right breeding an»: slyen proper care. , the (allowing amount of food during a pgrgogJot_one yggr: Bran or the value .__n-_- “A _-A- ~ An aged farmer or a Western state sent the followinx pathetic inquiry to the: census omce lately: “Our boy went afwhy 19 years ago. and we have not hard from him -since. I guess I am to-blam'e 101' it all. I worked him (.00 hard. and We often bad words about it until One day he told me he was going to be his own master.. and I guess he has. for he went, off. and we have never heard from him since. Could you help mother and I to ï¬nd him?" Every father can apply this to his own case. The stubble ï¬elds where the chlnch bug or any other insect pest hm; been very troublesome should be burned over when “dry enough to destroy any eggs they may have left there or that may intend wintering there. Then let the Weeds get a good start on the burn- :e‘d land, but not go to seed. and plow them in. Most weeds can then be kept down by harrowing about once in two weeks, but we would prefer to put on some crop to remain the winter and be plowed under to furnish vegetable mat- ter for another season. Thin will pre vent loss by washing or by the mineral matter iencking down into the soil. i Ruled Corn Fodder. Baked shredded corn fodder should conu- to the front this year with hay as scarce and high priced as it is all over the country. it is a’ most valuable forage for dairy cows and work horses, in point of nutritive value equal to the best timothy hay. One hundred tons of this fodder was sold lately in a. Western town at 810 per ton. Tin-re ls but one'dmwhuck to. its general intro- duction. and tint is the need of doing the shredding and ballng when the for- age is thoroughly dry; otherwise it will niold in the bale. ,, A farms-r coming into the houso at ovenlng picked'np his year-old baby. when the house cat jumped up‘ in his lap beside tho. child. Taking one of the baby's hands in his. he stroked pitssy’s fur the wrong way. to charging the (child with electricity that when the mother took hold of the child" drop- ped over insensibln‘ 'and apparently dead». The aid of a doctor was required to restore the child to consciousness. it is far better to let the baby pull the cat‘s tail than to stroke her back. Depnved Appetite; Animals. like men. frequently are the victims- of ' depraved appetites. Postmortem examinations of saline]: 'which die of unknown disease fre- quently show that a more of Meign and wholly lndimtible matter has ac- cumulated in their stomachs. We once lost a valuable mare whose stomach contained over three pounds of bun-bed wire. nails and similar trash. A render writes us from Pmnsylvania of ex- trarting a solid hail.of compressed hair .irom the stomach of a pig. We are asked why animals eat these things. it is probable that the cause will be found in the fact of the domestication of the animal, under which condition it is not left free to select its food by instinct and is thus deprived of ca- tain food elements essential to its health. We doubt It wild animals are ever thus affected. A green. raw country boy. the son at German parents. who lived on a farm. was then at the age of 21 a team of horses and a wagon and 82.000 ln cash to start him in ï¬le. We met this young _man~nve years later. the other day, and he told us that he owned 170 acres 0! llne land'tor which he had refused $60 per acre and 82.000 worth of personal property and owed only 32,000 all told, whlch debt he would wipe out this year. When this ca be done, it ls lolly to say that the da ' of opportunity is past for th: American boy. Land Hunger. The American people are nlways hungry for sold, nndfiny reported new discovery of the precious metni will start a stampede {Or the place inside of 48 hours. Then sometimes they be- comc land huuzry. and the "eagerness to secure .arms and homes is nlmost equal to that displayed byrthe gold seekers. The present is one or the times when the people the land hungry, evidenced by the scramble to secure homes in the lately opened in- dis}: reservations and the tremendous rush to the Northwest country. where cheap farms are mill to be bad. There are several reasons {or this epidemic or land hungerâ€"one, the plentiful“:- or money and the low [rate of interest: another. the constantly improving and cheapened methods of trmportnlion. which annihilnte distance and give great value to farm lands in hitherto remote and lnaccessable locations; on- other is the depleted fertility of much or the agricultnnl lands 0! the Eastern states, and still another reason may he found in the constantly growing near- city of desirable farm lands in any section or the wuntry coupled with a steady lnnrease of population which seeks a place to live and make a home. TREASURE ROMANCE. George the Fifth 1t Appean Eu! 3 Very Nut-row Escapo from 21nd- lng Himself rennllm. BOW KING OF mom MAT- BD P31188143. I] 1880. Paris Cormpondeme of . Wonl Truth: The history at the Duke of Cnnth'eriand'a fortune has just been re- lated by Herr von Hasaell. His father. George V. had a narrow escape of Ind- iag himself both kingdomleaa and pen- nileea. The state treaaum of Hanover were only placed In aaiety a few honra before Prussia declared War on the ex- cellent blind king. The person who saved the ï¬nancial part wu' Herr Klenck. chiei secretary of the exchan- uer. He had to remove 720,000 thalera in silver, 39.000 crown: in gold. worth about 30a each; 5:54.000 in Engllah bank notes, 5:36.000 in Prunian thal- era. £250,000 in Hanower hank notea. and $39,000,000 worth of Engliah. Dutch. French and other government: honda. The gold crowns werepacltedi in 79 wine tubs, the bonds in ten cheated the Hanover bank notes in balee. and} the thalers in cratea lined with tin.) This variety in packing Was to prevent notice being taken at the railway or the port of embarkation. where Prue-i sian agents were reported as on the lookout. These barrels and bales were taken by an ordinary goods train to an outlaying station. and then rapidly shifted to a special train that waa to go at full speed at Geestemnnde. it started at 11230 p. 'm. on June 15, 1866. But they had forgotten to order ata- tlonmaaters to keep the line lighted. and the enginemen had to creep along in momentary tear of an accident. The train was late tor the steamer that was ‘to take the treasure to England. The risk i taking it on board a Lloyd'a ; atea er. the Bremen. had to be run on the night of June 17. Kle‘nck grew gray in the two days 0! suapense. Prue- aian men-ot-war were hanging about near. the mouth of the Elbe. The Bre- men entered Southampton on June 19. and did not sight a single Prussian veaaei on the way. A um: who scrubbed noon waa sent by Malottie 11th the crown. jeuels In a cab to the queen of Hanover. She ‘ was then staying at Herrenhnnsen. The ‘ man 1n: given no lint. He perm-cur A Veil he: What we. intrusted to him, and that the Prussian were do: to ‘1 Hanover. The grand e‘hambei'nin had 1 hidden the crown jewelry and private money safe! in the palace. He rightiy 1 Judged tint it he sent them w‘l‘th an I once man merely, nobody wonid sus- l pect they were not trunks filled with ‘ clothes of the queen and witnesses.†There was a nut quantity of paper†’money in a traveling bu. into fliich! ‘ Malortie thm’at some satin shoes when ,3 he felt that the eyes of a scum mm ,1 be suspected was watching him. Count†and Countess {“11me eed to ,1! receive the Jewel: at their“ ‘ at ‘13 Blum‘enau. and send them thence tank sate keeping to the duke of Cambridge. 0 who is a Hanoverian in biood. birth'IaA the was born at Herrenhaueen). um!!!1 breeding. When it waa becoming un- :7 'snie to keep them. the count and count- ,' :1 ese seer-ted of! In a dogcart (or the port where they were to embark. She lied eight flvlem of diamonds. eeeh one fastened to another untll they all loun- ed one etrlng..twleted nround her body. and n dlunond stitched Into her hot. Her sleevee covered bracelets that were elltched on undmlevel, and extended from wrist to arm. A crown wee hld- den In a bl; be: of wool tor hnlttln; Dlnmond shoe-buckles were concealed In the count'n leggings. end his glued leather hnt held e tlere. ï¬le dlnmond- studded Icepler and lace crowns were Somehow the tidings tht the BN men had on board all the [old and ell- ver ofthe king of Hanover had got out there before the vessel Arrived. Doubt- lees it was telegraphed from Geestee- munde. Plots were already mode to rob it The king of Hanover's agent lost no time to defeat them by hiring s 'special train to London for the pre- cious urge. it arrived there before closing time at the Bank of Engluid. All was transported to the cellars there «by 1:15 o‘clock. A telegram in one { yord. "Safe." apprieed the king of Hon- over thst he was at any rote sued ' from beggar-y. The silver coins, eilow- i once being made for exchange. were nlued st £108,805. end lodged in Kiencl's name. The Prue-in thelen were transferred to a Welt End branch. where he had an account. not! to his credit. The duke of Cembridxe wen asked to take three of the gold crowns and debentures. but refused after hel hed taken the advice of counsel. 1! was ï¬nally decided to leave them whee they Were. at the Bani} of England. ii_-__-An‘ It lud been Impoulble to send nwny‘ the plate of the crown of Hnnover bo- fore war was declnred. TM: plate “"1! o! wlceleu value. wart from in in- trtnelr. worth an sllver. The grand chamberlnln. Malortle. mined n holau be mule. like nn Enxllnl cell-hole. un- per the stem to the grand entrust: d! the palace. It wnn scooped cm. by workmen placed In the teller. A ‘11! funds the door In. broka Mn. When the hole was lune ml: the pinto m packed In It in and. and ‘the‘ Mall relmllt. The ids o! the hill 1": lngenlonn. When the Pmdluu. me dug-s nlter. bent wlth unmet! flu-we‘ll that melted the mam-mm It gave no hollow sound. Th1: part 6! the klng 0'! Hanover} Mum remand hidden until December, 1893. when the pres- ‘ent Geruun envoy-or determined to act m were in the secret. they never bnathed a word at What They ‘knew. The late King George V m the hoâ€" loved of his flanoveflnnn. on the 1111!? of Launnsflu. which mm! to George V the royu‘l Ire-lure. Not a dale article val mining What is m rennfluflle 13 that. lhough many venous who ï¬ved all the]: day‘s Jo' Budd's Defense of III Old Oun- nunder’u lemon-y. tm th‘ ls Q0 Esï¬n>ar 239.! 9 'em. You can't buy 'en and you. t tease 'em uny. No use to try. It you want to save your spoon: you've got no. down the": don't ever declare war against the North an. These spoons staying up here in me will be a 105 to your memory." â€ad. In mm o! In their arguments :prouuu. the mm II.- were god .to trudge in: without tho sun that belong-d to their cud- ere are SWOO fem than an: Rhoda blunt. 312 waned it and took out a handful spun-3.03m: hurdleoteach '- graved “St Charles" ‘aWht do those look like?" demanded a. . Why. those are some of the W m my mndhther'l hotel!" m = you: man. "When an n on- I stole 'eIII." laid Budd My. no I know who this the rd of 'en nd we did it It the m «our lives. I! Genenl Butler hid known It In {Ild haxe had us mm; up. Now you I- bvk what you said about nun. i-te it back. or I will gunp'm both I the rail there.†mounted by the, glare In the «am of ~ old man. the boy: apologized for :r lusty woMs. Then the older nld: Sir. my (“her will my the price those old spoonp. I don’t know mu .e Gama emperor bu an!“ to French composer M. Ctnille aunt- n the order “Four I: Home" {or and science. > \ BUTLER SPOON â€031. gatherer st the end 0! the What- arldge, the longest in the mm 01 se. It I- built on [mum and 10 mm; (Wet a mile long. WheuM ‘1' Justice Peters. now retired. held t It Vii-met each April and Odo! ie never flawed 5 any to pus with. balling gm Jam Bagel at the col} x , It chat at the 013 mu amused ve much. for. u the non d wit. u: raconveur in lame. M u picturesqueneu of charter nor. my other nmibute. He know: In- :er every quaint old chap in tho Acw u.)- -.~ u..-â€" V nun n! the (100! of his lime. M King his pipe. Two young men. evi- -to pay their 101’. M (l., men on their shoulders and at nonnbenchntmsue otthc 111 for n moment‘e felt. Budd mt- Iy nked them whenve they but E BBC whither they were going. )ur home is in New Orlenne." all older at the young men. “We an ion in [line for the summer.†.17 toned In lieu m at at 32." «In B d. When w am?" When I was with Budd." netneuottheymmhhrm .- older one aid. with Intel Mme- ; of tone: We“, you cnn't be Very proud (I Ilt u: w - .... _- v- I: who never aw hm hm Mu jun back as the men and the women who N‘red from hll orders. And. bound. Role til the spoon out or my mu- m" hotel." He did. eh?" snapped paid. «no ‘5 the me of your grandam†ho.- ï¬f. n Budd 0! WM the ow ,‘maintut toll “them In luau. ha a more flunk: Me to route the story of his lite; um Just one i [rite me those memorials o! my adrather. They can be worth noth- more to you_ DOV." Let me tell you." replied Budd. "lint couMn't bring money cum in s mane wagon to buy one 0!. them. not a thief: I'm not, trying w mix. key by stealing. 1m them! plunder of war. and I’m going-to an. ill able can. an m on to m .’ paw put of this jewelry had the object of long [Nation be- a the crown of “mover and Britain. It was 0|:in left to anon. an autumn being Hun- :n and Build: Jurlau. They do- In favor 0! Hanover. TM'M ; nine yet". .9 E : round. as. brother. Thoma. {hken mo 3 Scotch My In LII. new and there arrived at mp- 3331 went upmln Into M- um an and brought down a heavy culv- chapter In his life la mu.- gh for most peopk. "Intro 11:. York Tribune. 1a was one 0'. twin hrouxen. HI: . After they bed become m the nth: traced ench other out end not. her required an Ina-mew- below 'could convene. John m lived m French-Cnnndlans I.“ h! m. gad not then learned to speak Buc- ‘the brother Ind a broad Scotch ac. that might bother even a Yukon 1- years John Budd but} been the 3‘5 died when he to In Intuit be two little shaver! were' um :90 by chlrlnble people. No on. y desï¬rod both 0'! the twins 1nd to my: were “unrated. John Budd ‘adopted by a [Punch-Cam y and was taken in? Canada at m; __-- And why not. you young snippet?" panda! Budd. with just as much erity. ‘ Because Bmler III at hawker of men a twin! and an old thick that. in He was. and the yon at Now Or. - -,.,._x_ 4.‘ n. a. Curios.†You just VII! 1 minute. you.‘ mm}- ,m o! th_e_ Duch- of Gun. much mohey l have with ram-1m: ll m It to you. every com. I! you