MANY NEEDPENSION Hundreds of Old and Infirm Gov* ernment Employes. PLAN IS WARMLY OPPOSED Hard Fight Certain Before Any Re tirement Law la Paaaed by Con. greaa--Filibuster of Jamea Burke in 1778 Recalled. By GEORGE CLINTON. Washington.--The 30,000 clerks la tbe Washington departments still are deeply Interested In a movement to secure legislation from congress which will enable them when they have grown old In the service to retire on pensions. There Is a good deal of opposition In congress to any scheme for civil pensions, but England has old age pensions and civil pensions of a kind which recently seems to have appealed to many of the American law-makers, and it Is predicted freely In Washington that before many years the government employes will in the age retirement matter be put on a footing with the army and nary. There are' some hundreds of men, and women, too, In Washington who would be eligible for Civil pGDfllOQS ii the law were to be enacted. In the dally procession to the departments at the hour for beginning work there are many men and women moving along laboriously on crutches. Hundreds of others need canes to aid the halting steps and hundreds of others who need them get along without them, fearing that the use of them would be an open confession of weakness. Two Sides to the Question. There iqpi plan to retire every man and woman who has reached the age . of seventy years. If this bill should become a law some of these men and women who have reached the Psalm ist's allotted span of life will not have to take the trail that leads from Cap itol Hill to tbe poor bouse. There are two sides to this civil pension question. There are men who say that there Is no reason why the government employes should not have saved enough to provide against old age just as other men and women are compelled to take care against the future. The other side of it is that the cost of living is very high in Wash ington and that government pay Is none too generous. One thing Is to be taken for granted, there will be a hard fight before any civil pension law is passed by congress. Roosevelt and the Murchie Baby. The United States marshal for the district of Massachusetts Is Guy Murchie, a Harvard man, who was a sergeant in Roosevelt's regiment of Rough Riders. Marshal Murchie Is well known in Washington and the city heard not long ago with sorrow of the death of Mrs. Murchie, the marshal's wife. There are four chil dren in the Murchie family, ail under six years of age. When Theodore Roosevelt was pres ident he paid a visit to Hazard uni versity, where his son was to join a club to which hiB father had belonged before him and was to Join it with certain ceremonies in which the grad uate members were to take part. The president also was to make a speech to the Harvard students and the time allotted for his Boston and Cambridge visit was so brief that everything he was to do was timed and tabulated and there were to be no interruptions to the program. The president reached Boston and Just after tbe mayor and the governor had greeted him and the presidential thought was turning to the next affair on the program, Mr. Roosevelt re ceived a message, instantly he en tered a carriage and was whirled away to a Mount Vernon street residence. It was the home of Guy Murchie and in the parlor of the home were Mr. and Mrs. Murchie, a number of friends and relatives and Bishop Lawrence of the Episcopal church. There was also a baby, and the possible future Rougn Rider was to be baptized. It was the news of the baptism that took President Roosevelt to the Murchie home and there, good Dutch Reformed caurchman that he Is, he stood godfather and "did promise and vow three things" In the name of the babe at the font, a good Episcopalian babe and the grandchild of one of the greatest clergymen that the Episcopal ehurch has held in its communion. Dr. E. Winchester Donald, who died some time ago and who was chosen unani mously aa a successor to Philips Brooks by the people of Trinity church, Boston. Mrs. Murchie was a daughter of Dr. Donald. Filibuster of Long Ago. The other day in the house of representatives there was a filibuster on the passage of the steel tariff bill. The Republicans held that there was too much haste in enacting the legislation and they tried by ev ery known parliamentary means, and by some which perhaps were not par liamentary, to secure a prolonging of t he debate. Tbe Democrats during the attempted filibuster called attention tc the fact that when the Republican* were In the majority In the house they would cut off debate by the power which numbers gave them, and that today they bad no rightful cause to object to being done by as they bad dose by others. ( A fellow correspondent who Is pos sessed of some ancient records insists that "the same things happens oves and over again in congress." Then he has gone on to say: "The filibusters of today which are of frequent oc currence have their counterparts in the history of legislation ever since congress began." Thomas Burke of North Carolina 133 years ago conduct ed a filibuster in congress. For a time he had one follower, Edward Lang' worthy of Georgia, but only for a short time. "At about ten o'clock on the evening at April 10, 1778, the continental con gress 'took into consideration the draft of a letter in answer to General Wash ington's letter of the 4th. and some progress being made thereon, a mo tion was made to adjourn. It being ten o'clock.' - Censured For His Filibuster. As the story goes on, it Is discov ered that Mr. Burke, after voting for adjournment, declared that the others might vote as they pleased, be would "upon his honor adjourn himself;" and thereupon he Immediately withdrew, "by which means jongress could not pi£>ceed to business." Mr. Lang- worthy, the delegate representing Georgia, also withdrew. Congress sent a messager to find the absent members and to request tjiem to return to attend congress. When the messenger came hack he reported that Mr. Langworthy had said that he would return presently, but that Mr. Burke had replied that the devil might take him If he would come, It was too late and too unreasonable. The upshot of the whole business was the adoption of the following reso lution: "Resolved, That the manner In which Mr. Burke withdrew on the evening of the said 10th instant was disorderly and contemptuous; and that the answer then returned by him was indecent. That the principle upon which he has attempted to justify his withdrawing from the house is dan gerous, because it strikes at the very existence of th^ house, and, as in the present case actually happened, would enable a single member to put an in stant stop to the most important pro ceedings of congress." In these colonial days Delegate Burke was a true state's Tighter. He declared to the house that while It might be criminal in members of con gress to withhold their attendance when the public safety required it. "they are to be Judged and punished by the laws of the 6tate they/repre sent and by no other power." The continental congress declared that its resolution touching the case of Mr. Burke should be transmitted to the assembly of North Carolina, and there so far as the present historian knows, tbe case ended. Conserving the Bison. In the agricultural approprlatloh bill reported recently from the proper committee to the house there is an item of $17,000 whlcn will be used to care for and pro tect the bird refuges where wild birds may be unmolested, and which have been set aside by executive or der, and the bison or. as most people say, the buffalo, reservation In Mon tana. There is a good deal of Interest In congress attaching to the bison, and this means all through the country, be cause it has been appeals from the people which have stirred Interest in the congressman. In a Montana res ervation a government herd of bison ranges in virtually a wild state. Con gress was led to take action to buy and preserve these wild animals by appeals from the American Bison as sociation, of which William T. Horna- day of the Bronx Zoological park Is the moving spirit. Senator Dixon of Montana introduced a bill to set aside a tract of land containing 20 square miles. It Is located on the old Flathead Indian reservation, and the land, while making a fine bison range, is almost totally unfit for agricultural purposes. In other words, it is prac tically waste land. Wood Buffalo in Saskatchewan. Most people do not know that there Is still in existence a herd of actual ly wild bison. Little is known con cerning it, save the fact of its exist ence. How many animals there are and what their chances of continued existence, may be put down, at best, as a mere matter of guessing. Up somewhere in the northern part of the province of Saskatchewan there are a few left, possibly more than a few, animals known to the people as wood buffalo. The layman's belief Is that the wood buffalo and the buffalo of the plains are different species, but they are not. They are identical, except for the fact that the wood buffalo are a little larg er than their southern family mem bers. How long a lease of life the wood buffalo may have no one knows. HOW TO BUILD A SATISFACTORY AND CHEAP BROODER FOR LITTLE CHICI& TO BECOME 0NE-T0E0 RACE Scientists See in Evolution of Man kind the Loss of Present Physical Powers. The evolution of man has been the lubject of Innumerable hooks, speech es, articles, pamphlets and arguments. Professors have told us why we can not swim like the fish; why we have loat the tall of our immedate ances tors; and. in short, why man, in bis search for mental perfection, has lost or deteriorated in many, if not all, of lis physical abilities. Use and disuse tn regard to the human body works strange changes. In a speech before the Royal College of Surgeons. Dr. R. Clement Lucaa mentioned tbe grad- aal changes that were taking place In the human foot A number of years tgo, be pointed out, the gradual dis- ippearance of tbe little toe was get ting ahead of the text book, for while it had already lost one of its extensor tendons in quite an appreciable per centage of cases, on« of Its flexor tea- Sons was absent also. The great toe, lowever, bad undergone extraordinary development because the inner side of the foot was to catch tbe center of gravity in transferring the weight of the body from one foot to the other in walking. He ventured at the time to predict that If the world went on long enough, In perhaps half a million years, aa the useless outer toes, being less and less employed, would grad ually disappear, man would become a one-toed raoe. His Treatment. treated the ineligible young man who was visiting one of Jappy's girls in ntfher a cart before-the-horse fashion the other day." "What kind of a fashion was that?" "They shut the door in his fsc. be- fore he hhd a chance to rtim the belle." The Result. "Nothing here, sir, but soft drinks." "Just my bard lack." L B«M of brooder, made of inch boards, IS laches wide. 2. Sheet of calvanlzed Iron Sx5 feet. p 5. Strip lxl Inch nailed ail round the base on top of iron. 4. Holes 1x2 Inches, about three on two opposite sldaa. 6. Matched pine flooring nailed to strip "S." 6. Tin lard pall, hole* punched in bottom end sides and fitted Into * hoi* la pice flooring:. t. Door for lamp. I Hover, 18x18 Inches on tags • laches hlfh. By D. O. BARTO, University of Illinois. Even more important thaw the cor rect housing of laying hens and tbe breeding flock is the proper brooding of little chickens. For no matter how good the stock Is or how strong the vitality of the chicks when hatched, if they do not have right conditions in their brooding they will either die, or worse, develop into weak, un profitable fowls. The number of Inquiries which the writer receives about the selection of an incubator and how to run it indi cates that beginners think the hatch ing of chickens is the principal thing to be mastered in the poultry busi ness. This is a mistaken idea. Any one can learn to hatch chickens with almost any kind of an Incubator, but it will take care and skill to keep them alive and thriving until they are four or five weeks old. After that age it is easier sailing. There are as many different kinds of brooders on the market as there are incubators, and many of them are high-priced. The capital invested in brooders in many poultry plants is the heaviest single item in the busi ness and this tempts many poultry raisers to try to economize by repeat edly shifting the chicks from the brooder In which they were started into some makeshift of a hover or roop where the conditions are so dif ferent from what they had become accustomed to that the change proves diyastrous to them. It is better, when possible, to allow the chicks to re main for the first three months of their lives, at least, In the brooder in which they were started. ' In the selection of a brooder there are a few essentials that must not be overlooked. The features that I re gard as Indispensable In a brooder are: 1. Abundant supply of fresh air at all times. 2. Ability to fur nish plenty of heat when needed. pine floor. Bore three inch holes on two opposite sides of the box in the Inch strip between the two floors for air to pass in. In one end of the box (which will be the rear end) cut a door 8x8 Inches to slide the lamp under the iron cov er. The door Bhould be In the mid dle of the end and hinges on the side. Eighteen Inches from the rear end and midway between the sides cut a 6-inch hole through the pine flooring and fasten over the hole a common tin lard pall In which a number of nail holes have been punched through the bottom and sides. Make a light wood frame 18 inches square, set on legs 6 Inches high and tack on top of this a thin board or piece of heavy roofing paper. Around the edge of the frame tack a strip of woolen cloth (something which will not ravel), about 4^4 Inches wide and slit it into strips 3 inches wide. This is the liover to be placed over the per forated lard pall. The upper section of the brooder is made of another 16-foot board, the sides being 6 feet long and the endB 3 feet, but lie front end is 12 Inches wide and the rear only 8 inches, and the sides cut tapering to fit, giving a slight slope to the roof. Across the middle of the top nail a 3-inch strip 3 feet long and hinge two doors, over front and rear, to this strip. The doors, or covers, may be made of light 2-inch strips covered with a good rooftyg paper. Around the bot tom of this upper section nail a 2^- inch strip of wood beveled so that It will slip down over the lower section and hold the top part in place. This strip should lap an inch and a half. In the front end put a two light, 8xl0-inch window and a door 10x10 inches with a little run for the chicks to reach the ground. For heating, a small oil stove, 4- inch wick, with a font large enough to hold sufficient oil for 12 to 14 hours. 1. Side of top. 12 Inch In front, 8 Inch in back. 2. Windows tn front. S. Door for chicks to pass. 4. Hover. NOTE-- Door for lamp should be shown in other end of base; the flue for warm air (lard pall), should also be shown In back end of brooder, (plate I), 18 inches from rear, leaving front end for feeding snd exercise. 8lmple Toll. "Do you work by theoretical eate» lation ?" "No, ma'am; I work by the 4ar." 3. Construction which enables it to be easily and quickly cleaned and opened to the sun. 4. A roomy, well- lighted and comfortable compartment where the chickens may eat and take their exercise when the weath er does not permit them to run out side. I have had experience with a great many different kinds of brooders. A number of them with proper care can be made to do good work, but the most satisfactory brooder that I have ever used and the one which I am now depending upon almost alto gether is a simple, home-made affair that anyone who can saw and drive nails can make. The following de scription of its construction I think will be all that Is neded as a guide In building It: The brooder is made In two sec tions so that the upper one can be lifted off from the lower to clean the brooder or in moving to another place. Tbe lower section is made of a 16-foot board 12 inches wide, cut ting two pieces for the side 5 feet long and two pieces for the ends 3 feet long Nail these together at the corners and then nail tightly over the top of the box a sheet of good galvan ised iron 3x5 feet. On top of the iron sheet, around the four edges of the box. nail a strip of wood lxl Inch and above these strips nail a good tight floor of matched pine. This gives a double cover to the box with an inch space between the iron sheet and the Easily Answered. "These kids I teach aren't a bit slow." observed a school teacher yes terday. "In fact. I'm afraid they read the papers. Tbe otheT day 1 proposed the following problem to my arithme tic class: "'A rich man dies and leaves 11.- 000.000. One-flfth Is to go to his wife, one-sixth to his son, one-seventh to his daughter, one-eighth to his brother, and the rest to foreign mUftion. What does each getr » * A l a w y e r , " s a i d t h e l i t t l e s t b o y t o tbe class, promptly.' "--Case and Com- it or any strong-burning brooder lamp will be all that is needed for heating. Keep the floor of the brooder covered thickly enough with loose material, chaff, sand, or fine soil, to prevent the floor from becoming too warm for the chicks. I keep a thick layer of chaff in the rear and under the hover and sand in front where the little ones are fed. A brooder of this sort can be built for $4 to $6 and Is capable of caring for 100 chicks easily. By placing a middle section, 10 inches wide, be tween the upper and lower parts, the brooder will be capacious enough to bouse the chickens during the whole season and no other colony house need be provided. Facts About 8orghum. There are several varieties of sor ghum and where It can be grown well it makes a good roughage. It Is sown thickly and cut and cured as hay. If not sown thickly, it becomes coarse with a bard, woody covering to the stem. It is delicate when small and slow In starting but grows rapidly later and yields well. It Is sometimes used as silage, but this is not advis able wh£n com can be grown well. Sorghum is also low in protein and must be fed with concentrates high in protein. It should be cut after the heads are well formed but before ripe. Sometimes stunted sorghum or the second growth la fatal to cattle, hence is should be fed with care. That's Different. "Are you a friend of William Bilg- gins? That ne'er do well?" "I should think not. indeed I" "Then you'll hardly be interested to bear that he has Inherited a hundred thousand pounds." "What? Dear old Bill!"--TU-Blta His Trade. Old Sailor--Why den't you a preacher in your aeroplane? Aviator--What good would a preach er be? Old Sailor--Why, aint be a sky oik*? INCREASE IN NUMBER OF AMERICANS GOING TO CANADA Although Western Canada suffered, as did many, other portions of the west, from untoward conditions, which turned one of the most promising crops ever seen in that country, into but little more than an average yteW. of all grains, there is left in t!s<e farmers' hands, a big margin of profit Of course there were many farmers who were fortunate enough to harvest and market & big yield, and with the prices that were secured made hand some returns. Prom wheat, oats, bar ley and flax marketed to the 1st of January, 1912, there was a gross rev enue of $75,384,000. The cattle, hogs, poultry and dairy proceeds brought this up to 9101,620,000 or 21 million dollars In excess of 1910. There was still in the farmers' hands at that time about 95 million bushels of wheat worth at least another sixty-five mil lion dollars (allowing for inferior grades), besides about 160 million bushelB of oats to say nothing of bar ley and flax, which would run into sev eral million of dollars. There Is a great inrush of settlers to occupy the vacant lands. through out Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al berta. The reports from the Govern ment show that during the past year upwards of 131,000 Americans crossed the border into Canada. A great many of these took up farms, over ten thou sand having homesteaded, in fact the records show that every state in the Union contributed. A larger number, not caring to go so far away as the homesteading area, have purchased lands at from fifteen dollars an acre to twenty-five dollars an acre. The prospects for a good' crop for 1912 are as satisfactory as for many years. The land has had sufficient moisture, and with a reasonably early spring, it is safe to predict a record crop. Those who have not had the latest literature sent out by the Government agents should send to the one nearest, and secure a copy. A One-Ringed Circus. "There's a ring around the moon." "I guess the man in it is having a circus." HERE IT IS-- Something that will |N rough, soft wood floors the appsar- of the finest oak one*, do away with stwswitary carpets, lighten housework, soaks a beautiful wainscoting. In fact change aa old hotwe into a new one and yet t>* wlthla easv reach. «f everybody's pocketbcck. Think of it--a perfect imitation of oak, made of material* aa durable aa Iron and put up in rolls at a moderate Stop the Pain. The hurt of a burn or a cut stops when Cole's Carbollsalve is applied. It heals quickly and prevents scars. 26c and 60c by druggists. For free sample write to J. W. Cole & Co., Black River Falls, Wis. All things come more quickly to him who tips the waiter. LEWIS' Single Binder costs more than other 5c cigars. Made of extra quality tobacco. Few people would jump at concli sions if they could see their finish. CHILD'S HEAD A MASS OF HUMOR "I think the Cutlcura remedies are tbe best remedies for eceema I hars ever heard of. My mother had a child who had & rash on its head when It was real young. Doctor called lf. baby rash. He gave us medicine, but it did no good. In a few days the head was a solid mass, a running sore. It was awful; the child cried continually. We had to hold him and watch him to keep him from scratching the sore. His suffering was dreadful. At last we remembered Cutlcura Remedies. We got a dollar bottle of Cutlcura Re solvent, a box of Cutlcura Ointment, and a bar of Cutlcura Soap. We gave the Resolvent as directed, washed the head with the Cutlcura Soap, and ap plied the Cutlcura Ointment. We had not used half before the child's head was clear and free from eczema, and t4*. has never come back again. His head was healthy and h« had a beau tiful head of hair. I think the Cutl cura Ointment very good for the hair. It makes the hair grow and prevents falling hair." (Signed) Mrs. Francis Lund. Plata City, Utah. Sept 19, 1910. Although Cutlcura Soap and Oint ment afe sold everywhere, a sample of each, with 82-page book, "will be mailed free on application to "Cutl cura," Dept. I* Boston. It Is better to appreciate wisdom than to be appreciated by fools. NITE FLOORING Is made of an indestructible felt base beautifully col ored and grained by a special process, made poesibla by I reeent discovery. It is protected with a triple coating «T varnish which receives tbe brunt of the wear. Gal-va-nlte Flooring is easy to keep dean and will not crack, peel or blister. 1B absolutely damp-proof, vermin-proof, odorless and sanitary Makes warm floors in winter and smaller fuel bills. Put up in rolls 38 inches wideT*" Sold in any quantity by all first class dealers. Ask joat dealer for Gal-va-n'te Flooring or send to us for samples and a beautifully illustrated booklet. FORD MANUFACTURING CO. HORSE ^On^f DISTEMPER * HSMTC* what yon eeli or buy through the sales has about onee chance in fifty to escape SALE STABLE DISTEMPER, "SPCHN'S" is your true protection, your only safeguard, for as sure as you treat all your horses with it, you will sooK be rid of the disease. It acts aa a sure preventive no mat ter how they are "exposed." 50 cents and ft a bottle; M and 110 dozen bottles, at all good drugsristsi horse good# houses, or delivered by the manufacturers. SPQHW MEDICAL CO., Chfflit* and Bacteriologist#, fiUSHEJI, 1*0,, U.HA Write Now to wm Far Rates of Fare, FaO Inforaatien SUM In* Elustrated Literature about the sevea great Stales of America Prosperity Minnesota, Wisconsin Worth Dakota, Mjwtsjp ifdafco, Waaig lotto* aid Oregon. « toc»!e •(«»* "The Secwc Btfthway * •--the Standard Railway «>? tic Nortbvreaj. €S«t youHViendta f&rma colony* JflA low Sprit?# Colorist fvrefe effective <£aily Msrcfc 1st April IStfa Mtanutarip BUHMIIWW VWHI •IfiCWI •• fl rot mnd I bird TvM^ayt «f Mgfc CWrite BOW to &C|fi L. J. SKTCKER, Gtntrttl tmrndgrrnHm A*nt 140 NarHunt Pacific BmiUimg, St. Pmmt TO CUKE A COLD IN ON® DAV Take LAXAr Dmn1st« rein! QBOVH'tt *l*n TIVH B&OMO Quinine Tablet*. lf It falls to cam. B. W. nd money slsnatur* li on each box. The microbe of love Is often destroy ed by the germ of suspicion. 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