' NEW are wide hoâ€"ibillties for In. there. em†and towns are is develop-um: thon- ot electric railroad I‘ll! tandemâ€: ten-phone ed. “9 telephone sys- tbe-uhanuge over the tel-Mate «annular m flu. "rind It 00 any collide? lawn a ma ML My law-shuns. If by those in tailor!!! 1- mm mm coup-n- . But above an mus In ï¬nancial purity. 10'? so chepkllated and PO" Mme bureaucracy "m nape-v to the ordinary An most impossible â€- u-wâ€"vV. , mop-Inc sauna! by ï¬le ,teuhll'll ‘ ‘3 order .‘ Idin bmmm mmhotamm "WWW-m " 9'" i fluvial- o! t the can I]. ran A maestro-Immune! Mutual-hows)" F a man's eouciem can top: It} the ind mo hr I forgiven. Im- the "'00 M! m:- up, Colorado sent 0. tom. er to an In!“ w â€Int 01¢! 30 M um cm. cyan?! Wot! )1 L if "I! pm untamed » loan that 1 ne facilities mum 31;]. gland other manor uh. more property con- in asking mrdon (or (M 1.38:8“!dean- wrlnx to «than Mltmam no?“ â€and. lib-been" ï¬le: her no. Jana W Mather and 1 Bid with in! demand for telephone u I“ the can town: md hulls-u people m up- Ig to the point of nulls-- rl facilities. the sum]- nnrd (one: becoming Mbm“ â€â€˜3 '1' at on ;m=nt of iod. wen u mm mm- mution could be brought Mom of donatic econ- '1) have to be one o! the I consider“. MOLE J. GRAHAI. 5m I want to mke every: line- have proved very 10d. It will I It chem} 8| [dc not in Chin “with: I: for W9 ocdblmies 'er control u would ' â€(ï¬nd mists 1,664,600 acres at tur- nâ€; most of which crop is eaten by its “1.00300 sheep. as. Jemy bred male mi!" is a vealer pi predestination. and ten weeks ' mark the limit of his earthly we: cc. 71: only boys would take as kindly to inching wood as they do to bucking in .5 toothall saneâ€"hut they don‘t and u weakh’ producers i; is just now up and tuck betwaen than“ wells of Tens and the corn and hogs of the western states. "Ming “Q" will. No living man can award to risk his owl's! happiness by trying to milk a kicking cow of the three pounds of m: a week sort. A cord of oak wod coating 38 when )n for the stove is a much more expensive fuel than a ton of Hocking “my coal at the same price. m potato crop of 1901 is the mores; {it raked edin America. Enough sugar ed this year in )hchfgan to pro to supply all the )t persistent laya’s of large white are wanted, try the Houdans. 9w M towls are opposed to sitting on 1 principles. They, further, are “if: desirable table (owls. The quality of both the winter and smug wheat raised in this country the season is exceptionally good. The 5mm]: which cut short some of the ether crops Contributed to this result. Wherever corn is extensively raised. ms milked and hogs ted there the 1130 has a place, for a. winter ration 6! succulent food can thus be provided at (at less expense than by the growing or any root crop. Bad roads are popularly supposed to in» muddy ,roadsv but in many sections of the country the bad road is a sandy we and is the worst in dry weather._A Mp dressing of clay is the ,best cure for all! sort of bad road. flimmllk is worth 35 cents a hum-- am pounds to feed the little’pigs. which. when six months old. will sell at 8’? per hundredweight. or more than hauls much as the whole m‘xlk will bring to put ‘into 8-cent' cheese. Trance has 75 dogs for each 1,0000! Its population. In the locality where the writer lives there must be not less than 250 to each 1.000, and the hides of ninetenths- of them were intended by them“! for glove stock. It is claiméd that concentrated lye placed along the runways 0! rats will get rid of the pests. The lye sticks to their feet and but): thPm, and then they go to licking their feet, which is too much {or them. This is worth We are asked what becomes of the pork made-from the old Stags and 700- pound old hogs disposed of in the pack‘ In: house markets. The sailors on the high seas get them. thus nicely “IUS‘ trating one of the practical uses of the America: navy.. ., It country folk would visit with each other more. they would not give the ruidlaer. the politician .and the fake 13th! so warm a welcome. When per- sons have been left alone for a week. they’will welcome most any old codger who comes along. A cheap tread power. 90 arranged that the bull will have to mount it Correspondence Soliclted‘ Ben :re two yam of I . house. Can you tell what they M, 1901. by J. S. Trigg.) Rockford, In. , sugar beets will be narvest- eat in the southern part of to produce the sugar needed all the peoifle of that state. of large whim PUZZLE and Work it in order to reach his ‘ rod. «in almcst surelyjake the dg'vi! ,, : or tum. It the power is attached '3 a pumy he will do better and mow re- liable work than any Windmill. Che cow Is just as likely to be at $75 as another is at $25. It 1‘ pends upon the (gown A cow will make 400 pounds of butter year is cheap at that ï¬gure. whl other which will only make a. ca 11 manure pile; is dear at a. third A Missouri landigrd who had a r um- ber of tenants and whose lgnd was lo- cated where the drouth did its worst work the past season. made on re- ceipts in fun for this year's rent and sew. one to each of his tenants. This man is thus getting his tOmBSW‘Ii es- gmved before he dies. ‘ This was cruelty: He put calves on to one cow and turned t out to take drouth luck in the p: s and when thesé Were ï¬t {or the bu he put two fresh calves with th= When tall came, she was a more a ton. lnhumnity works hand it with greed on many a farm. The 1.0qund yearling steer for haly beef 13 a 860 product should be more .common than it an farms where blue grass, clov corn will grow. To produce hm ing is better than a high grade A: gus. When the {whim idea! of an : pt-iculq tuml' fair centers around .the unsa- Jional in the amusement line. : w ‘b as )midway fakes. dropping live (i \- s at- ;tach'éd to a parachute from a): 10011. glocomouve collisionsvaud bum] :' ts, It 'gwere better that the peopio £1. idvat {home and kept right on milkin :: *owa. â€ceding hogs and doing the fa] now- 1 iï¬g. “ money. There are much pleasure and ‘ good things to‘be got out of n In den. The writer planted string l turnips. seed onions. radishes aw tuce the lat of August, and on I? there, being no killing; frost, 1;: abundant liar-vest 0ne_â€"thlrd of the Western dnir do not obtain from their cows 9.: as the food eaten by the cows In a test made. with 100 patrox-:.= creamer'y. 30 kept their cows at a one farmer receiving 82.35 for dollar's worth of food fed with '- est stick in the lot only 60 cents, it you want to keep your hire l man. do not give him the kicking 1.1 to milk. Milk her yourself it yry: are too] enough to keep her and con m‘ence singing “My soul, he on thy ward." when you grab the pail and the l viking stool if you ever hope to shake ‘: ands with Abraham, Isaac and Jacol. Where, there are two~or mo r‘ men engaged In the work of the tan: it is an excellent way to assign the d .x '13 of the Sunday chore work 10 ext â€:1 in turn. leaving those 08 duty to h 1.' e the day to themselves. This is bett : than a dlvls'ron of labor, because ch01 r work and Sunday cleanliness and (, hing do not work Well togegher. . Of all the small fruits We 11 l the blackberry the most difï¬cult tn ‘alse. A friend tells us that we take t grad care of it and that it We just st am a patch on the north side of sum grove and just let it entirely alone w. vouid haw; all the blackberries we wa 1 He says the blackberry is just lixe: n Inâ€" dianâ€"can't stand civilization The grade certiï¬cate held 1;" thn pretty country school ma'am his noth- ing whatever to do as aflect in; her chances for exchanging it for u mar- riage certiï¬cate after she has ' tught about a year and a half.\ In tacx as we have noticed it, those with z: - third grade certiï¬cate are likely to :0 off ï¬rst. for beauty and brains a: 9 often strangers. The Golumbinn Bupben :7, We have an inquiry about ‘ie Co- lombian raspberryâ€"what it is 1 1:12. etc. it is the rankest growing of an: at the raspberry family. is propagator! from the tips and is a most proliï¬c buwrer of a large purple berry which in six", coiâ€" or and appearance is_ almost il‘Intical with the Shaffer. ' It possesses une ex- cellent trait in that if the bggym wood is cut back, say, to a foot iq 111'! :ht in PICTURE. s‘ Idea and x and ‘ oth- T‘ illed [tted hlch two hem lahy gar- ans. let- ' men and: oats. of a 1053 each ’00!- '13 of! September Days. '3 in} From the day when the first faint '3 “19 l flush of color is seen on than i of the big maple down by the creek in work 2 the pasture lot until the last of the ln-' hing 3 dlan summer days i: Novembes is the imost delightful n of the whole l year for the north country. As the sea- :-ieul-. ‘1 eons come and so they bring with them , ansa- no days, laden with so much of tender 'h naggrace. sentiment and rare beauty as s at-ithese, when the mysterious transition 'loon. ; takes place from the opulent and trop- ts, itiical summer to the days which mark id . at the decline of the year, when highway 'ows. . and field are robot! in the regal green llOW- and gold of the harvest time. Full of hope. new life and activity are . resurrection days of the spring. Still. 1 the f they painfully suggest the endless toil aimland endeavor of life-working. plant- 300;] 3ing. building. toiling. These merge in- Int a f to the torrid, forceful. electric summer no“, 3 days: when nature is . in a maiectic vould 3 powerful and tempestuous mood: Henvhen lightning flash. destroying flood n1n-.’and cyclone's path mutilate and mar . 1the face of nature and the work of man. Then comes a change; the ele- .. the.mentai war subsides, and one day by noth- : the. roadside you see the goldenrod in :, herébloom, and seeing it there comes to ’mar-’!-"'°“. a delightful sense that the strife :tught ; is over, that‘naiure is at last in â€a quiet as wogand restful mood. and you enjoy in a thirdere‘my' happy way. just as the sick :0 oflgWhO peacefully rest after the pain often fand agony of a disease that has at last lbeen broken and 1llbdlled. These are the days of recompense. Nature now v distributes her prises. pays out her div- idends. The. bending bougha of the ore '3 C0'i('hal'd. the great stacks-of grain and ‘3. 9m lhay. the gabble and cackle of the well '11 theistocked poultry yard. all the ripened fI'Onl ‘ products of faint. orchard and garden. 1'" Oflsuggest rewarded toll and labor's ‘3. col- recompense. May the beautiful story ntical ‘told each year by the goldenrod of the ' le ex~iï¬eld foreshadow for us all goidenrod wood ‘ days as we pass into the autumn time :ht in of life. and with its rest and peace may gthere com ea fruitful and abundant lharvest. a rich reward for the toil and endeavor of the summer days of ‘llfe -. forever gone! are available. The entiregindustrial status of the the south side stats of Georgia and South Carolina has been changed by the rapid exten- sion of 'the transmission of electrical force from the abundant water power available from the mountain streams. What the possibilities are in the area drained by the Mississippi river can scarcely be conjectured. It has been es~ timated that the energy capable of be- ing used there may be taken at a quar- ter of a million horse power per square mile and there are enterprises already' under contemplation for the utilisation of this enormous force along the course lof the great waterway and its various the ‘ tributaries. The development and utilisation of this new avenue for the production of force will have relatively an influence; himllar to that which resulted from thcl ilse of the waters of the Connecticut.“ Merrimac and other rivers in the East} during the early stages of our indus- trial history the fall of which was so great as to make them readily utilisa- ble for the manufacturing purposes Around these rivers grew'up prosper- ous manufacturing towns which mark- . ed the first epoch of our advance in this direction. instead. however. of the sphere of ac- tivity being confined to the immediate vicinity of rivers and streams, it will now be diffused over areas extending hundreds of miles from them and will be available- for enterprises of both small and large magnitude? Not alone in the United States will this new development be operated. for in Europe there are preparations being made to extend, the utilisation of this new factor of industry. in fact. in this respect Switzerland and Italy have both made important progress. while France is preparing to use the river Rhone in » a gigantic way for manufacturingpur- France has been suffering for some time from a lack of coal which has [caused her manufacturing interests to isuffer severely. She has already util- ized the faculties provided by the French Alps to supply about fifty fac- tories. which are using an aggregate of ’ poses. lick and :het the spring u: will throw out a profusn growth of new shoots which will bear a big crop of large and late mutumg trult. We have known a single mu of this berry to produce over one-halt bushel of trult. In the latitude north of central Iowa it Is safer to lay the vlnea down and cover them for the wln. ter. as it is not an ironclad Vadety, The Virgipia creeper as a decorative house and porch clipberï¬s just now (Oct. 1) in all its beauty. No tree or shrub will give for a brief season a more rich .or bizarre display of color. shading all the way up from blood red to maroon, scarlet, or!!!†and yellow- A testoon of it on a north side of your house will be awhoie cover garden for color and beauty. If you want some nice 0|"an Duane: to set out next aprlnz. Cut this year's growth of wood from the old bushesâ€"â€" the new shoots which have sprung from the rootsâ€"and stick them in a box oi‘ damp sand, which keep in the cellar. When spring comes. they will be‘rcoted and ready to set out This rule applies to any and all plants which may be propagated iron: cuttings. Just as soon as n ma sets to regard s cow as a machine instead of a pension bureau the better results. he will obtain. ,lee the ancient Hebrews. who ,were required to make bricks without straw. so a large per cent of the cows are required to make mllk without. proper food. Cows can make milk out oi.‘ straw just as the Israelites could make bricks without'it, but it is a hard preposnmn. 'There should he n weekly gathering o! n social' sort maintninedJn every country qomrnpnity during the winter months. it may'be literary. musical. terpsichorean- or just simply social. ‘ The mpre the people of a neighborhood see of each other the more they will think of each otherâ€"that is. generally speaking. Then the chance is thus, given for the boys to go home with the girls. and. that's worth considerable. One man whom we know has made. a great mucosa of hauling cut corn tod- der by waiting until-early winter and taking a spell of cold. dry weather. hauling the corn to the homeotend and running alternate bundles of corn and oat sheaves through an old thrashing machine. This plan entirely prevent- ed the heating of the fodder end the .shelled corn. and where the grain is fed out on the farm the plan hu much to recommend .it. Teat No. Test No. Test No. Test No. Test No. Test No. an;uâ€~ Just how‘th\nm0unt of butter let in milk affects the amount of cheese made (mm a given amount 0! milk was nice- ly illustrated by an experiment made at the late Wisconsin state fair. Two hundred pounds of milk were used in each of the folowlng tests. the able showing‘the-per cent of butter (at in the milk and the number of pounds of cheese made: _ - ' 'i'ééi Néï¬Ã© L'..... 5.00 24 Then the quality of the cheeso 1 proved in) still even greater ntto. Traces of Nebuc’hadnnur's pence hue been found among the min: of Babylon: A story In due tron the “oldest tub-Mum." Traces I Buttex\ Fit and Cheese. some like curl-an; bushgs E §§§§§s Pound: chose. ' 11 ' 13.04 16 16.30 21.60 24.80 INDUSTRIAL CENTERS CHANGES THAT WILL COKE THEOUUH ELECTRICITY. New Condition- Bdng Created Both Here und in Europe Thu Arc of Vast Impbrt. Ann Arbor. Mich. Letter: The! there is mgr-ï¬nal. revolution being consummated in relation to the db- trlbution of power for mauufncturlng purposes has scarcely yet Mme a per- manent idea in t_he public mind. ‘Thnt khis revolution ,will be of glgnntic im- portance to the world n: large end will lead to the gradual re-dletrlbution of manufacturing center: hes scarcely. yet become Ipnnnnt to our greet fluen- clere. The part that this change will play ln the mic-economic qua-“on ll perhnpe yet. more lndeilnllely under- stood. “.m- The coal mine In no longer the Arbiter. of lndustrinl power. , The running stream ha uken In place and through this med“ for the transmission of elec- tripe! energy there is scarcely any limit 9,0 m laminate distribution. The "hornetstng" of Nlmn Icem- hd to us to be a auntie project. It In. 0 mun cup In 1 movement which as not only spread through may m o! thoUnlted States but to may of the world as Well. Men- Erly has it been mphulud in locali- es where there In no coal "nibble, fxcept at prohibitive prices, for man. actnrlnz purpooet. . ,n4;-__‘- u- ~~~~~ -u '_.'-_.-v The most interesting and elsbonte works for power trnnsniisslon have hen nnderuken on the Paciï¬c slope where the coat cities are locsted at I. considerable dislnnce from where the waterfalls nre shunted. California particularly possesses I very dry cliniste vhich furnishes the most fsvornhle conditions for the (unl- mlssion of electrical energy. There the highest volln‘gen in use {or commercinl purposes hove been used nnd power trnnnnitted n ï¬nance 0! over, two hundred miles. - gh__ This has wrought tremendous chang- es in California. where coal is dear and where it has hitherto been believed that there was little field for manufac~ turing enterprise. Numberless enter- prises have sprung up and the produc- tive capacity of the state has been enormously enhanced. Similar results are being obtained in all the cities along the Paciï¬c coast where streams are nvailahle. The entireindustrial status of the stats at Georgia and Booth Carolina has been changed by the rapid eaten- slon oi'the transmission of electrical force iron the abundant water power available from the mountain streams. What the possibilities are in the area drained by the Mississippi river can scarcely be conjectured. It has been es. timated that the energy capable of beâ€" ing used there may be taken at a quar- ter of a million horse power per square mile and there are enterprises already. under contemplation (or the utilisation oi this enormous force along the course at the great waterway and its various tributaries. The development and utilization of this new avenue for the production of (orce will have relatively an influence bimilar to that which resulted from the use of the waters of the Connecticut. ‘Merrimac and other rivers in the East. ‘during the early stages of our indus- ;trial history the {all of which was so -s|__ -.ans__ unu- nunâ€"n, .â€" great a to make them mdlly uulln- bio for the manufacturing pm Around these rivers mv'up pro-per- ous manufactuflu town: which mark- ed the ï¬rst epoch of our adunoe In this direction. n.~-vâ€". Instead. however. of the when of ne- ilvity being confined to the handling vicinity oi rivers And ctr-am, it will now be dimmed over are†extending hundreds of mlleu from them ad will be available- !or cnterpriun of both smail and large pugitiide‘.’ . 4-.,AA_ _ n. GIG]. â€Gill. Iraâ€"u "lvâ€" w v_,,_ daya later the C-nontheâ€"old colt died that at lea-t 3.000.000 horse pow la % pleuriey. a veriï¬ed by n». G. W. being wasted among the atreama o 0 our, a veterinarian. who '- called. Alps which might be harnessed to the The next morning hie hunting dog die- service of manufacturing interests in appeared and two at her pupa died that France. Italy and Switzerland. ‘3â€, France. however. has the smallest But, one of the strange woman'- part of the water power available from pmpheclea remained now to he [Il- thia source u her share of the wealth- ï¬lled. Dr. Lei-berm had canned ho bringing atmml- econ about Mane teller-I. sooth-um A. ,,,,, a- .. .... an- ._A on Ilia ' HQ went “‘3‘. m torlea. which are using an nurture on 300,000 horae power and it is estimated Her purpose. hereto“. II to uae the Rhone which in It: course will {tarnish an enormous amount of power for mu:- ufarturins purpose}. ‘ . t, LA_A.4-‘ ulaxuu-u-g '_.,.-,,, Ireland my probably be beneï¬ted greatly by the mutation of this new means of prodgxglng ppvef: 7~~1n _-_- nu u..- v- r- _ The house oi lords,hu already unc- tioned 1 bill authoriting the formation or a compuy with I capitol of 32.000.- 000 to utilize the Inter- of the River Shannon for the purpose of matting electricity end to Inpply enemy {or lighting end po'er purpose- ovet Van am of 30 milu Mine from the power station. which will be fltmd four and n half mile. from Munich. The Limerick Truman compony is inter- eeted in the scheme end his unused to take its supply of energy in bulk. Under the hill onthorixing the (arms- tlon of the company the woth to be constructed will consist oi e short and m...“ ..-, .â€" 7 ~ In]?! plouruy. a veriï¬ed by n». 6. w. of he, gun. a veuflnarun. who I. mm. to the The next morning MI hunting dog du- m InInpeu‘edtndtwoother punctual that to carry tin mm 1:! the Shannon h the‘gmuu canon. when a nanâ€"a w feet a. owing!» um tin taken will be returned to the Shall†at a point about that?! above tip Intake. ‘ _ ‘ It is likely that may more river. In Ireland wfll be used In the tune nu- ner. thus amusing muturturlng h- duxtrles throughout the bland. As soon u.thls mam: new tug. ture of modern industrial aunt-ho has been fully developed the Indy: rial sums of many countries is ari: L'- chanxed. A: we have nld. ('9 falling water will supplant the 003‘ mm u a basis 01 manufacturing £72591“ng _ A Wanna of Beauty Who is 1 20": For Evil In England. MoKh When the We reached Europe LI Bell: Tern: and Bread went to Putt. and to alarm sucptcion lived In the me hotel. {119 other_ three con- WM. Quint-vane and Laos “I; up their shade in the work- man" quarts-I of the city. . Ulume Emma Goldman. who I: u m'creum'o of hysteria. LI Bell: Te- run In: no love to'r theatrical disphy, and only on are occlslozzs (11:5 to the puma-II. , In her early childhood her hther kept the penthouse It Ilolnet, and when the Ian her mum": home abmjé thc alley of the Dora she took up her abode with her maternal uncle. uhtu. In Torin. . . u- A- ‘L- [chm van tho moving spirit of the Inlnttofl und 3 despernte nip-mun. He in bnished ad ante to London. as his rectum; 0â€an . Her Influence was too mmeuc tar val: men no racist. The mania-er. Brood. ï¬rst met}.- In America it Do- cuinber, 1899. The deeth of Dr. Alfred C. umber:- er. at Louisville. K5,. 3 phyfldul. III the dime: of the veriï¬cation o! |_ number of renuhbk predictions Mbyemmflom mammal.†km only to him. The cue u an- mrhble one. The women m Inâ€" curred his (ll-plenum beam of MI um-o-u of I cue of diphthen In the neighborhood. and she called at M: of- lee to “With him Ill.†She and to bumm- 1’1:an Drop. According u Won him “Wlthln nlu am that ï¬ne nun wlll dle. the coll you mine will dlc, your Int hum do: will (ll-now, and then you will ale." And that m lt nu (muralâ€"‘1." vlmln ulna an. Valuation b m 2mm Ilsa Kn: actuator. when Dr. Lemons" wu m hnve murled‘ nut month. from in. Schwelmr. who kept house (or the bubelor physlcln. nnd by numerous Mead- !» illo- ha had rehud the lncldent. l The woman warned Dr. Lament tlut he Ind enemlen. 1nd told him no be careful. In I luv din the M “I; . But one of the strange women‘s prophecies manned now to be ï¬ll-7 ï¬lled. Dr. Leathers" had can-ed to‘ soon about fortune tellers. sooth-um" end the like. ' He went ï¬shing. but told the poo at his home can!" whatnunhedmlncuehedulot‘ come heck. . When the doctor went out 1! night not he hook I m with him. The time for his node! an meeting. rolled ground. The doctor vent. He seemed in ï¬ner mm- Lhu be m been for e week. He wu even joking end 1“;th About the My of the women. They were phyla; W “auction pluh_._" .- A. ï¬e-.. A- n. .ulruVIl I'â€"- “I bid IFolio." uld the m 9- Dr. mutter-Aka. -- 7,. Ann- A‘J. The phyllchn skinned 'Ih cult. The other. veto doing we we thing, ad nu um. nm to Mn. “Bk! two!" ma Dr. Mr .3. lust. and Win tell forward on the (able ‘1;â€" 1m prophecy of the scrum wom'u bud poeq (gluljad. It vu' a. 9131““ of a. “No â€max: unit or noc'rox QUEEN 02' AIM†Joni: mailman