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The Signal, 1898-8-4, Page 7• • V,. OLA sy w fitASIIY This oommouplae• way of meeting riot he hod Intik s elbCT l and lin an- iseed Utterly: cal," add - "I b;lvru't fixed the tiros so after a "bort, uucowfurtahle pewee, Tit come back if you wish, you sqw But at that be erl�hint. lest ksettould utiytptdud The girl 1*u01t1 softly but quite 'Wend sign of ! $Qatar. • She was an ,}arllrut actress 100. • • Yen don't neem to know your own sad very clearly; not like you." ' "Some people teem to think 1 know t tee clearly," be auswerd, thinking tf hie mother's letter. people often wake blunders trying to guess one's wishes, I think." rte 4io sioUltw would detect a little serruos riug iu her voice, suggesting a sudercurreltmeaning, ning added: ut -of be toted suy,to 7 n s '•of course you'll just do as you like "bout coming back." ••1)o you mean you want to release me from my promise to stay a fortuight here?" ••; ttl_remember any direct prom- ise, Jaffray," she an;brered with the same ,dight unsteadtuem of tone. "But even if there had been a direct prowiae I shouldn't want to hold you to n— ▪ E1•" This word she spoke with em- pheginbut added) direotly in • lighter Been "+slor would Mrs. Iris Witt. I'm • "Do I understand you, Beryl"— "Who's that taking my name in vain? Beryl, 1 thought you knew me batter than to believe it posible ter any soul on earth td say what 1 would or would_ itt,t do flue minutes beton! I did it.. t bole I'm not eo commonplace as that yet." Mrs. De Witt laughed, not quite pleasantly. as she joined the two. The interruption irritated Sir Jaffrey greatly. 1t had Dome just at a point wheu the interview seemed working right round to an understanding. "I was only telliug Jaffray that I woe sure you would not bold him to AW.plesige...9 come and finish the time Shia pt$mfatid"tday imeai. "Indeed, but 1 would, and I will and de. Aud if be doeen'.t come it'll be tbs. worse for him and everyboeiy," she said, with significant emphasis. "in the first place 1 want moue explanation of hie going away at all." "Urgent private affairs is the lana' plea iu the service." "Covering auytbiug from • racket in towu to a secret love affair," said Mrs. De Witt, with a challeuge in her eye" and manner. "And I'm sure that can't be your case, Magog. „ "You're a very shrewd guesser." re- turned atturned Sir Jaffrey, with • look which the rhallenger understood. "Do you mean I'm right? But there's eget one here except Beryl, and there's no ;{stet .boat her," she replied. step- • ping boldly on to the thiuuest part of the ice. "ezoept, of course, Lola Craw - shay." Her two bearers winced et her bold- ael, and in the midst of the wowen- Jaffry,"she said to the barouet u moo as he had tekeu !!!x sent at the table, "we are punted. The dear little wom- an eau's wideritaud why you are •leav- tug Torquay euudouly. 1 did not kuow uu were leaving till she told we, you k now, ■ud else wants badly to know' why you are going. Will you tell ua?" There was nut u eestnre or expression In ber face ar manner to snggeet that Ow could know iuytbiug about iso Her attitude toward •bim was prectie1yts'hat it had elweya bueu, and her perfect self o0mwaud and cownoture pleased him. He took his cue item Ler rurally. lie mulled as he euewered: "1p she raking ugulu? Just now Oa the balcony out there sew weuttd to sug- gest that it was eumething about you, Misr Crawshay-'_ Lola laughed acion low, sweet laugh that made the men who were at the ta- bles within earshot look up aud turn rouud and feel suddeuly interested iu the doings of the group which cowslip ed three such pretty women and the dietiugaitbed looking meta. Mrs. De Witt rod Beryl were both perplexed by the conduct of the other two, and the former glanced quickly up to the facer of them Loth as if to find there an explauatiou, but she found nothing. "In here she hinted, as I tbiuk very unkindly. that there war some hoe- making ovemaking at the bottom of it, and that you were runwng away either with or from Mrs. Villytlra-4 ditiu.'t Irak! which. 1 suppose thud's not so?" Mrd. De Witt looked up quickly, ex- pecting to intercept a glum of muter - standing between Lola and Sit Jafftay, bot abs was disappointed. indeed tray. "Yu mean you to.tatlo* 0017 myself a• the present member of it, mud spy fa- ther because he was driven abroad. But wax there never a dark page iu the his- tory of your own family? Has every nue of your wife aueeetpr* been as good aud true a Stan es himself? 1 do not want W pain you withuuplrasatit "Moire of the past. Keough that 1 ask whether your Am f• worse on aced:out of the character mantle allowed Iw unkind thought to find a lodging in tuy mina," said'Or Juitray very suruestlj. "Dou'l may. wbut will leave u tame behold can't l:e..r e.....r., :• _, .: 1.. am going to worry. Try to re•uucile your: elf to Wit. Try to see that yeti a.• prejudiced, that you have 110 OSUea 10 dh'like Lehi except that she has come betweeu you and a plate %bleb yea have cherished. That is now impossi- ble. 11 would be the foulest treachery Mid cowardice tor me to marry Beryl iteeliug as 1 du toward Lusa. and you know how bitterly she herself would resent it. Uau't you do this for ane? You have done so much. Help me now eo.,t,Meiteppine4" of a lifeline). ", • stood iitokTup down it ber and then stooped aud kissed her. She eat silent for a minute and thea asked: "Where is Mies Crawshay?" - "With Mr. Vallyera at Mosecorube." "I will go and wee her Ltd awl thea tell you my decition.5' Aud with th:., the interview (lured. "Lola, 1 think you're one of the most daring girls 1 ever knew." said Mra De Witt suddenly. "You've&Balaklava pluck. You dash right in under (he teat fire and try to spike the gens while cazzaing- out her proposal, mud, urderieg her car- riage, she drove over at oucu to Mose- Wbaa Lola . bi)ard that f8ir 7afsaf t mother was Waitiupt to Nee her, she felt that there must be n tried efaeitaba.. ween them, but conccioas of-ber over the baronet she was coutldent of the i.ene. "My visit will be a surprise to you, Miss Crawshay," Reid Lady Waloote as- ue shelling you sight and soon as Lola entered the room. "I halm seen Jaffray today." 1fNot left, dear," returned Lada who It Is an honor at any rate, Lady was sitting at olio Tido of the "mull tat- Waloote," was the reply, calmly spoken. bhe alone with Alar. 1)e Witt on her •• When we parted last time," said right band at the bottom and Mrs. Vile—the old lady, "we were not fortunate in MORGAN HORSES. laereaelog rateroat East aud Wen la tea Nolle tiered. It ie • good sign for horseflesh it America that some noted breeders sof buyer' of fanny hackney and other int ported stock are at length turning then attention to the fine old American taw fly of Morgans. Some of these gni"title men, among them A. J. iceman of Penn sylvanite, have been lately elected mew berm Of the Vermont Morgan Horse Breeders' association. Sorioties ot Mot gam breeders are tncreaajug iu namhet and influence rapidly. Every stat, might afford to have nue. The eamtern jtlorgau societies have ' not se yet, however, ebews-tie-aetivit and strength d those in the welt ant yens' empty place batw•the herd. Sbe Olsbemihji; ti'I1?ttwwhtob attovied of ber Jaffray, who was at the bead. Sb pouted to the vacant place with a sweep agreeing very well. I trust we shall to batter friends uow." of tbe hand, which included also the 1' hope so earnestly," replied the baronet, and laughed. girl, ''and with that object we had bet - Mrs Lie Witt naderstood her, and a ter not touch on the same subjects, bad „ ate Qoulj t) as moweu , �(7T �diufel'�'Y th t t gather's �Tiooli advihT]tg 1' gond name. '. go c _ e. a was to name hot lithe? to cdpnge the conversation and lead it sad mother." away to matters which were not charged The old lady looked piercingly at Lola with personal refereueee. - ss she spoke, trying to detect any sops When they rose limn the table, Mrs. d artitlee, De Witt purposely linked her arm i0 ••i knew your father long ago," she Lole'm, aud, waiting with her dein the replied, "and I cannot but kuow what drawing room, returned to the attack. bas f::mily thought Of him. f do not What passed between you aud Sir want to say things topalu you, but this Jaffrey this atternoou, Lola, on the is not a moment for keeping silence for verauda?" she 'eked. the sake of avoiding delicate subjects. "My dear. there was nothing pasted I My son desired you to be hill wife, aud, between us. There wax nothing to Inas.as his mother, I wish to know mauy We were alone. " • unelected &tyype/trituce which is takes A CRIMINAL S S E N T I Int E N 1. thorn meas time to outgrow'. Sts Halted ata wsaety w ase RI. urteg Meter. "When 1 heard that my slater was dy- ing. all of the pelf...men In S4 louts would nut hese kept tun from seeing her. I would have giver) 'trey life rather than surrender that emend privilege!' • Thus Bloke Martin, 'alms "Mtarty' j}l tie hu wedges) her ragged elbow. be- tween artween bold'Mee loraaspbaked-US a?*r porter. Shea was arrested by Se Louis 4kte4 lye. a few mouths ago uu the charge of Idllug. ,fudge keattutly-sg the police own `:r.'• Wei ttvo-la.m oto leave the (ere He ciente out et exile for ettlarewull greeting front hie dylug slater. Shea a devotion. coat bite his liberty. -.tor the with)" found Molted be erne trust In the hold over pending Irattipurtalh.0 4 -thewurkhuusi eluent of the unserli} Sed puli..0 oourt judgment banging osnt Ida hoed. Rugged "MurS7" Shoji„ whose picture 1. in the rogues' gallery and who has for M Ie.ettt third at hie life leen branded or a crook, would sot prdln•rlly (e luukcd upon as the exponent of a noble princlpee. But ieveetlgtation shows it to be .a falai that:t ee'. return to St. Leuta In defiauoe Peabody •adthe whole laden dspartruemt was due alone to the loge b bore bla slater. Mn. Mary O'Neill of elect Mulleuphy *treat. elm. O'\NUI die') shortly after herr *stied brother nmihwd ber. It wex her fondest hope that aha might! be spared w ase Mau. she was in • dying condition when he kia•It by her leit.ide, but she was conscious. From the time he left the train-tbateurritt{I him to the pity e-i'i'aelnvd' llta .t,.D r e boss ire ited to run the gantlet of hundred's of polices. men, each officer being •wane of the exile .11 --ries not omit after the funeral. however. that he oura•ught 1111 aide ybux,ta not required =meld /e pinched off at ane early stage. It ja poor policy to allow them to gala strength aud the ' 'have tlo'• apply the knife tolut off large shoot", which moat haweirebbed dile Pleats of .at:Ot3-ateattl vitality, which might, with a little Carel.-har'm aien.nratewutrfted and Dat -4o' , better Use. We alas loo often see tOtha- toes allowed to run 1n a baphlizard gaanner overllV tilt trellises, a few *boots being tied its here mud there aud others out out with iso tegairtfon or syetew BuesyZen "'ways pay".. awl • to these it will result not only in. Larger and much better fruit, but will also' consid- erably increase the yfebt. Oersyseea -ie to take ap three shoots tram the b$toim tit each plant, tying them kerma foot- apart oot apart (the plants aryaet 1'Iteee t..talent j and keeping all aide shoots pinched off as they appear.. Lima leans, tbqugh taking oars of themselves once theylget a hold on the poled. should have • little aiwiitante at fret, one or two ties being lilt' that-ts _required. Ton.In,en7 glint* be lett around each pole. as they on y crowd one another and result in a great many poorly filled pods. Three planta to a pole 1s u a general ruluequite suffi- cient, but it is well to make sun, that they are pretty well established before thinning out to that number. A. early crops, such u peas, spinach, lettuce, oto., are cleared off the ground thbd1d be titled up and githr- witb plantings of bush beans. celery, beets, lettuoe or whatever is "brief wanted. American Uardeniug i. tb4 mann of the foregoing directions. and it also ad- - - v ~ret t�w_ aa-n11IQQ Lorbra. of all kinds and destroy r em as q possible. Paris green is the moat effec- tual reined where it can be taxed with safety. The asparagus beetle can quick ly be destroyed with thin, but it mast never be applied until after cutting is discontinued. The striped and spottee beetles which attack melons and cucum- bers may be kept in check by the lib- eral application of tobacco powder, wjj1 should be well applied under the life the uude'nide of the; leaf that the pests mostly harbor...1 "Your repartee is couveniently active tonight. dear. You know what I mean. What did he say? What happened? What was the reenit of the interview?" "The dead ashes of a burned out Are and—a good deal of cigar smoke," she answered with mock eenousness and laughing eyes. Mat. De Witt bit her lip. "You mean you won't tell me, Lo - 1a?" rhe said irritably. Ton leek ese.--Y-Mt from you, even about oor owu awoke. What do you waut to know?" "Did Sir Jaffray propose to you this afternoon?" asked heroompanion point- edly. In a moment the girl changed. She drew ber arm out of her friend's and with • manner which suggested that she considered the question had over- stepped the bounds of even the friendly footing on which they Were abe an- swered: "Surely you forget. Sir Jaffray, as you have yourself told me often, b all but eugaged to marry his cousin. Do you know him se little ae to think he conldlool with me_ ander those circum- stances, or me so little as to think - would let him? You've been wool gath- ering, my dear, tonight. --Dhow I under- stand what you meant at dinner. On my word I hope. Sir Jaffray didn't, of 1 should never look him in the face again. But I moat go to Idea. Villyeri Dow. Good night. 1 sba'n't come down again, and goodby if I don't nee 740 again." Aud before Mrs. DeWitt could • answer Lola had 'timed ber and. slipped. out of the room, leaving her as puzzled as ever, but yet certain that there was "something in it" and angry because NM ootid not Ind it oat. - In the -early afternoon of the follow- ing day Sir Jaffray strived at Waloote. His mother bad been" kinking forward with a little apprehension to the inter- view with hiss, knowing as she did his great tenacity of perpnte. She held No strong • conviction that • marriage with Lola would menu ultimate. dimat- ter, however. that she woe resolved to struggle against 1' to the end. But she could make iso impreeiion 0n Sir Jaffray's resolute determination. "I will marry no woe else," was the burden of hie case, and nothing eine "aha could say or plead would alter him. "Mother, I have oome net to hold out any proapeot to you that your wishes ccn prevail In thin," he said, toward the eMae of the interview. "I am sorry that von hold the opiuial you do, and I have listened carefully to ail you have said, but you have not changed nie one jot or tittle. A man most choose hie wife for himself. So it bee been eines the world was young, and to it always will be. What I have come to you to do 11 be tell you that the oomplieatioa to 'opted to ley coaatn Meryl, which yen and others have canoed, however unwit- tingly, and until now with my untortn- n.te help, yon and ()there are in duty loud to remove. Only yesterday w tour letters to Betel and RIP yhou in - nestled thatf'Maplies you, I don't believe Beryl does rare for mm as you think or would wish." „You are pledged to her, Jaffray," said Lady Waleote. "..o, I ata uot pledged. I hare ar- ,uieerd In • mistaken renew) While 1 yid not know my dun feelings. Thal is ell. i have never breathed ot.yleltile In lmed her het which conld sogR or that i wlehe d her to be my wife. You moat see ber and explain matters." Why?" "Reassume Mien (:nwahay will not hear • wnnl fm?n me while other pen pie ample my name with Beryl's She is meting a an honorable girl, of coarse, m this." Yea, 'Mim " returned lady Wal ,'0tw dryly. "Shewiwld he noCat wallay if she could atol do thee Rite knows hoe power over yea Elbe has infetaet.d yna, Jadray." "Mother. I Inv* never In ray Hb eon - He sat four or Rrr minutes to Gide thou oh?, airy pause which followed • lure* voice was heard. "Dinner in .rued, if you please." "For which relief much thanks, ib, Magog?" laughed Mrs. De Witt. "Bat it's only a respite, understand, Radii's! ton hungry to go any farther now." With tide they all went into the hot tel.tbe baronet hurrying away bohanp. things." . She pasted as if to await an expres cion of Liner'* willinguesiseo 1.11 her whet she wished to kno` ...i wt tied girl made 110 sago. "Do you object to my asking you Nome questions?" "1 think you should ask them of Mrs: Villyers," auiwertd Lem cleverly "1 have talked very freely with her. It you think she iscap.ulle. of introducing from CHAPTER IIL LOLA'S v'R'TOR4. "Isn't Mrs. Villycre coming, Lola?" asked Mrs. 0. Witt, se the three ladies eat alone, waiting for Bit Jaffray, Lola having joined them at the table. "No, dear; she has a headache," an- swered Lola. "Wants to avoid being questioned about her change of plan and sudden de- portees, I .uppoee," was the reply. "Very likely," said Lola calmly. "I never knew any one who shrank from a certain kind of ("otiosity more than she does. " " Yee, .h.'e a sweet tempered woman. She's no—what's that word yon use sometimes, Beryl?—so altruistic. That means helping others out of •ditch and keeping yn0r Iipe slowed, doesn't HI" "Not quite," returned Beryl. "Well, it's very convenient now at any rate," said Mrs. De Witt. "I'm really sorry the can't come, for I'm pos- itively curious abort the reasons for yner scampering off in this way, Lola, and just at the time Magog's off as well One of 7051 might be fnllnwing the other. I hope Dlr.. Villyeri has not blew �otting that. very stiff and proper eaporflu.r• et. him and i. running away from diorite" "i hope not, indeed," returned Lola, with earliest inm"eeeela quite equal te Mrt. De Witt's. "Shots the best of good creatural, and a love disappointment of the kind is the last thing ahs deforms Elbe has said nothing to me .boat It, but there, of nonrse, she couldn't, oonld else?" And Lola tnrned her large. lose trona eyes upon Mn. De Witt with an eapreaitna et real oo00ern in them. Not 1 don't think either of you'd eveh•ap enalid•sees e• sub a fabs je4," Bald Yrs. De Witt dryly. btu mailing vary straeetl. Beryl was .seed deeptte the under - eminent of interest there was in the d1a- ingn. far her, and she wailed "I don't think It's very probable," she said. "Well, 1f any caw ought to know you or 1 slafnld, Meryl. You've Lid all the lvmsdalo.. of Ma Ant boyhood and 1 most of thane of his atanhetd. " "The shoel•t plan is b stile 495 him- self," replied Isis "Mere he 11a Sir »o Ibis not au'ifTstt)levr ".:to. I ant uot uoubtiug her belief." "Zben you`dozbt my statements to her? le that it? 1 think, Ludy Walcott, we shall be wirer to ktcp uff tepee' of the kind. Stay true moment. Let ns put tho matter plaiuly. Your mole has naked me to marry him, aud 1 have reload. I have told him that 1 will not be his wife, that I will uot allow him even to pct much a queetiou to me, aud that t bold it for an Tumult so leug as he re- mains' bound, dirt rtly or impliedly, to his cousin aud my friend Beryl Leyees- ter. " "Ile told me that, but that is not alL" "All!" echoed Lola, as if mufti lee the word i1118- Donne wroath. - "You mean that itr>mt all, so tar as die is con- cerned. on n -. cerned. And wbat of me? Have you thought of me once iu all this—what sly feelings will be? Or do you thiuk, as be strum to think, that I am notely sosetbing to remote eucousjderud, un - esteemed, uncared for; .cmethieg fur you to come and examine and test aud approve or disapprove; tome cold anal leeliuglese thing, to be placed under the microscope of your family pride? Yon may forget, though 1 do not, that toy father's family is am old and as bobor able as your own, 'and that we do Dot recognize your right to precedence in any one respect sed only • title stud a fortune." Despite her prejudice Lady Wolr• ate could not help admiring the girl for her pride and courage. "1 know your family tree better than you probably, sod I have 'lever gnce- tioued the put history 01 its" she said. To bo crutimic& roxF:r. southwest. In Georgia, Tennoaaee and Illinois are horse breeding farina when the Diorgauk have been a specialty over a generation, just me pure bred and bine blooded Morgaus, too, ne those exhlbitec by the Verutout asenciatiou. eWT'ffrilffeoeffelfl Polo, Ills , Mr. Amos F. Moore ha' been rearing this breed for 113 year. From photographs which he kindly bac taken for us we reproduce two epeci mens (4 hie young amok, both of whic' took lest prise at the lad Illinois state fair. . The first picture represents Foxey beautiful yearling stallion. Foxey if i bright bay 14.8 hands in height, with a star in bre forehead and both hind feel white. All of Mr. Share's horses trace back three and tour times to Woodbury Sherman and Y'ooug Bulrush, eons le Justin Morgan himself._ l0 the second picture N amen Rorer, t gentle, spirited young ware now over F year old. : bo is a bay, 14 hands high with white bind feet. Both Foley eine Riney were sired by Fox River. -It may be mentioned that at a recent meeting of the Vermont Morgan Hors" Breeders' a ewoeiatinn the following rule• aisosnpj .the ajjmjssi horses n e'American ldoigith 'tis -.eters, litddlaboxs-SL.—_. ..._ First.—Any meritortoue stallion 01 mare that traces in direct wale line 1e Juatiu Morgan and has at leapt nee leis THEY FOUGHT NAKED. now Mecaile'e Marler• bashed est et 1tb ere sad 1st.. 11.4(1*. Clothed chiefly In eartrldge be•1!. Mo. Calla'egallant mart 1c.charg.•.1 rho riven fah at tivanhoteme Mediu*. ..Net sitw►- the time. as t'eraclondy described b7 Itud- 'yard Kipling, when Private Mulvaney and the thaw year men swam the lrawatl. and "tuk i.ungtungpen naked" has then been such a combat. It was shortly after the marines had been first Waled-. Though there have been reports that the Spanish had over 9.0ae) men In and .lout Oua,Wulaoro• the Americas hardly (cartel =al. er German Graeae. - an attw•k. Still guard. w. re petted in two We have had a number of messes of lines outside the Damp and a ',here watch kale ate. the young sprouts (tbiij kept. ear si nn T d i lytta_ { jQ� _ j�ar_hlewet swept the hillside with Iia searelt g t, nn kale or German greens that were raised of u fors dheIn overod. 'The mem got to from seed last summer and wintered mea , laughing at each other fix -peeing gooks, over in the field. The plants aro quite and the lemmatise atop grew that the rounds hardy, and uimally come through the in the brush were nunde by animate. So winter all right. Just as soon as the • tiring* leee.ed until Saturday afternoon. ground thawsout in spring new growth Suddenly a brvnthless Cuban was begins, and these sproataare very ten brought In by the guard. He was teem- bling with excitement and told a lively Disordered Kidneys. bet: they're the source of your iII ksatth and you don't know it. ft ire's hew vuu eau tell : - 1f you have Sack Ache or Lame Back. If you have Puffiness under the Eyes 'u($Wlflfng of the Feet. 1f your Urine cont.i+ia Sediment 01 any kind w' is High Colored and b catty. 1f you have Coated Tongue and Natty Taste in the Mouth. Headaches, 1f you have Ditty 51p ells, Drearla, FYeel Dull, Droway, Weak and Nervous. T hen you have Kidney Compdui,N. The sooner you start taking SOAK'S kIONEY PILLS thfrmore quickly will your health return. y ve cured thou- sands of casae of kid- n ey trouble during the past year. if you are a sufferer they can cure you. '. Kook nkat teb . about Doaa'e Kilda-eyall Pill. sen "6611°al*address, The Doan Kidne Pill rRAoc Co.. Toronto, oat. an une. We sow mrd in July right where we' tale' Slumlords! The Spaniards!" he . want the plant to grow and remain dna- • sol«•,tted. "Two huednl of them aro 1n I drag the winter, exactly in the same way the worts. They are mem( to shoot! as we raise meet of our lute cabbage, ' Look nut!" • making the rows three feet apart. but Ho wax not believed leaving the pistils a little closer. in the The work of landing the baggage had rows thou late, cabbages are usually ,lust been completed Some of the men were husy with the tents, while malty had planted. When the planta have some been given leave to bathe Ip an arm of the bay over a quarter of a collo•away The camp Keel( settled down to an Incredulous watt for what Mahoney, Nes -lite and the seep who had been sent out polluting Desirable Cabbages. would make out of the Cuban's alarm, The W iuuiugetadt is an especially when "pack, pack, pack )" the ,,harp met. desirable variety on light rode aud ter of meetern rifles elouo from the drnss 1 7 tropical brush t o r the header the lagoon. deed„4„0440..,".„.., �Wat�jlegt,lalc - oelleut for shipping long distunce•s, says Smith's' guard.► the tete 5 awl 1'a..rr. drains of this red ane ax early as the sound as Smith's men replied, drawing In Henderson. Fotler's Improved Bruns- for osiers as they fired. Neville's nren wick is a very exoellent variety to come could be R en going matingp i in a series' direction ruxnoof in after the Henderson and forms large, thotiri g by volleys as they went Mn firm heads. •11 Wakefield, Henderson '"'honey's squad l the double quint nude and Fotler't Improved Brunswick are for a hillock eonunending the tnrranra .owed at the mime time, they will mme Up from the sea ,'41,14 running a line of into marketable c uditiou in the order nakd men, grabfll"R their eart,lnew and named, aud one will succeed the other tailing intoplant se Colonel Huntington very closely. A very good variety for late nee is Fotler's Improved Bruns- wick, wbieb matures $ fine large head and is vary certain to head. Winuing- stadt in light roils is the most certain to Porn" beads, but .tn good 1aa�.lams` • larger Leading variety is better. _____ 118('HANI(•a' INSTITUTE. ISODLI1ICH )(DCHANA'4' INSTITUT■ Lrltaat• LIBRARY treet rand square Rutstatrs).t Id, ems Opel; hum 1 W e res., and from T rot-11c— TN Ey oM-11c - `sawn 11100 VOL'$ 1N LIBRARY, Initspnj Dull . Weekly:8e Illustrated Palpate.. e;.wt lN.. ),g1sp1♦ SMII• TI =1RT 0111111.4 -14411 Graz,dngllres ass of Library owlWoo8eadtai. - ilipiaatlon for mwarskdp r.cslvad w OOL .rrel e' 71.111 I Il Secretary. Hamlet. flares a teen. .11AL► A\EASY TIM 'Al' LEAST HE MADE THE WAS14010 TON GIRL THINK 90. -lb. Reporter'. Dally Dallas as Tor Her Wessel( with All the Glowing Itaaaloallo. Do.. as Write. as H. name.. size. leave but one in a place and culti- vate same ate cabbage.—T. Greiner in Farm and Fireside. Ina EY. ty-fourth of his blood, provided the dam and tbe sire's dam be of approve. speed or roadster blood. Seoond.—Any meritorioet saint•i having one thirty-second or more of thi blood of Justin Morgan, provided the dam and the sire's mire and dam dee 01 approved speed or roadster blood. Third.—The produce of a sire ane' dam both registered in the Mornah register. fi.ttlea Mwtrlmne,Iwlly fleeted. "A large percentage of what is ordin- silly called love in 'trout ee safe n golds In the choles of a oompunlon as n !froth would be trustworthy Illumin ,cion In the Intricacies of a deep forest on a (mrk night,” writes the Hey. Charles H. Parkhurst, D.D., in the Ladies Home .ionrnal. "I am well aware that It 1s uuuh easier to raison about these things In the abstract than 1t 1s to keep one's head oval and one's temperature regulated In w season of severe expoaure; but go much of the sucoeee or failure of n young man's after life depends on the way to wheel he uta matrimonially planted that It seems well worth while to preempt the ground with as much rational cnnalieratinn as pneslhle. if • man has Mnnatomed himself to canner the ground with rime earlmieneae before the snrhptlhle moment arrlves there will be more likelihood of his thing able to ride the storm wane*" breathe without that loss of ship, oars" and crow." all e.d.vs»d. Mier G —Ok, come see this beauttful sunset' Oruffty—Rtnff 1 I can't waste my time gaging at a lot of young army withers equet.t.ing ",04104.—Philadelphia North American. _ Plant SersYese. itis /sense. Professor Shaw has told ua Bow, 9' planting successive crops of mate et., peas, rape. cors, rye and srrghnm, 1 • was able to grow enough fodder on tit • acre to produce 550 pounds of tamh The greet value of sbrgbmn as • sum mer forage plant Ie that it fairly de lights in the hot, dry weather which i" death to many of our grass plants. Cort will also parttime t . large amount of food in hot w. ether, but it will no• grow up when eat or pastured off, wbib sorghum will give a second or even 1 third Drop. it it reasonably mate to as same that, for six or eight weeks dur dug the xonnner, the pastures ou ger," ferns will n. t provide a fair living fo' the stock. If you welt until the pasture,, fail without providing food subetitntee, you will be obliged to hay grain or keep the stock in a hall starved condi- tat -tally by taking off the flower' before s nada seremsvt to fn,IIeate s urging Iatly tion. By darting now with creme they rade. Seed prodttatino, much-moreApparently the SpinInrIe matte s thent fodder corn, millet, oat., snrghem, etas exhausting than flowering, w111 then be reed sort of showing and ran just as son 700 can carry the stock along without prevented. and the vitality of the plant •s sergeant Smith's guards. Is'gan ate fire tronhle. Wesball plant oats, sorghum, increased numberof blossom bods for • nr twothinks .1 is men bagged s'n will be directed to the formation of au Brnith but n.1 Sps1114n1 .ere found later bloom I Gba hash. I11I Hnlf an hour afterward Colonel Hunt M Cease of Trouble he Dahlias. tit" ington reformed his men on the crest of the hill, having Maus -people fail with dahlia. aster *Paten up the both for,a i mile &rimed, Kull call ehowud every noon and cosmos hroug of a stem of ■ balm the nt, and not • wound wee reported earn through the Item just below the surface of the ground. One first notices the injury done the plants by the leaves wilting during the heat of the day A correepoardent of Vick'a Magazine happrngmeaive Chillicothe (1).5 women. and found a remedy for this trouble in party *op lively. pioneer' Is heard In dulcet green • 1 nae a level terapnnnfal of eerie feminine toper on the electric lines of that green to three gallons of water and ap ply it freely around the Dollar of the plant Pone enough on to well wank the earth for three or four incbea deep arrood the stem and repeat once a week. Ams end Rete.. Artiobokes do best in rich, loose sail, where there is an abundance of Minns and decayed vegetable matter. Tomatoes raised from seed vary frotq season to season. They grow readily from cuttings, and Rural New Yorker therefore Peggeet' that when we tend one plant that is in every way more eat tafactnry than others the only way to perpetuate it with certainty is by cut- tings. As the two are commonly used a eul- tivator in a better machine for irrigat- ing than a ppriukling cart. The culti- vator, if rightly need, aavee mnixture, while thesprinkling cart ix more likely to he the martin of wanting it, mays Pro - feasor Green of the Ohio station. masse War. 'An allowance L som.thing 11ke • 14 tea„ "1100 sat" "A man nen pot his wife en 1t, but he est't mike bow sty on."—Coned Col. A eeansee iseseet Rirasts►. "When 1 wormed if bar, shd aakd int i11 was w new row/milt " • "What did she mean?" "Bete warded se know if 1 had over par tleipated In an engagement hefola."-17491 a was Record. eratO.od Tower et Y. WktiU. "Newspaper men always seem to me to - .,,entrancingly mysterious things, you kwaw, iur f - "ifttfterWWi1nge 'fe tun maiden to one of 'air. "I never std through wondering just how they do— how they And out theca queer things that we rend In the repose, you know. Now, 1 suppose you just walk around, .nd when you see anything or hen, something you lust write it down and have tt printed 1e your paper. •1.ni that the way it's dune?" "Precisely. None of -us hes any bees, top wan, head knocker or anything like that of retiree. iA, plot as we please, all of ua. Never get any foetructlun■ from anybody. When we want to writ, we just ware, and what we write goes. We don't pay any attention at all, you know. to the "ditor, the managing editor, tba city editor and e11 the rut et that drew. Just do aiytblog we like, wrAi anything we dike, roast .lo botiy we like (°r don't ,like, rather) and have a good time all around Now, I'm a reporter, you see. Well, herr * about an ayerngseda7 for me •I get up about I1 O'clock In the fore - nom, after having taken abntwlate and a ' roll In heed, and put myself to the hands of me man Me teen nnbhea shaving ss d 0111,5 aim yp ee'lr5,eiie. boor •ad.l!!►'0.4 men, o1 twt"'tRktcau! jay iweemmamew loess the thlniut besets r - now O17R to AKINEe 7000KT ATOt'ANTANAMM hued hie orders, getting a formation In senile -trete behind the brow of the hill and waiting to pee how much force would de- velop agnlnst him. A fav Spaniards hod been seen near the The 8e0oeteet Rosas. head of the lagrwfl when the fleet theta Undoobtelly the moat entiefactory dwere id nft�dlcntethe mattering rifle l erey ks elan' of roses for general pienting, as dens Huntington moved line est or The National Stockman remarks, to the rimed the urn to kneel end his n gave the Hybrid Remontant, sometimes, though cour•rAnd re fire Incorrectly. termed Hybrid Perpetual The�" ierlry.�tii gun.tnikcdas 11 the urn They are not perpetual bloomers, a1- were ractfd'Adrli e t rune 1 parvule df though •number of them come peaty �ttniA Thou watt n.• Togged firing with' what wrought up because all of the r• near it. Underliergrable,9Mditionxof :fit "ahem, and the naked turn were as •ortere have declined ty wails big Asa ion, weather, eto., tbey will send up ready an the nest - few ble..km awey bevelled a ning. d the But there was no definite mark to ehoni .,T•„ nave enc managing editor en M. After the first showing at long range Mit a Spaniard wee ren, and the torn banged away at waving bushes or where thea yea ear before you. On my way down town -1 always walk for the sake ot the eserclse—i arae usually detained a bit by sumptuously attired ladles who can't re- sist the temptation to glop their carriages when they saw me In order to And out What's really taking place In the upper errata. Before goteg on down to the office I usually drop In for • nenute or so upon Mr McKinley, who generously Wailes from umbarreeeing me by commenting at too great length upon how much he liked my etuff In yesterday's paper. "1 nod haughtily to the managing di - tor ns 1 pees tato ray suit of orientally for- rel..hed "three and spend ten minutes or me In meeting "ver the pile of rented, violet hued votes that always awalt my atten- tion. I1II� this time there's usually word to• em`ao--Wjl' ai i-Ei'ocltlpt murder itaV--^"- been committed somewhere over in the _ t nlpthesst. I shun over to the sane a alt• crane, stepping at my fioriet's for a flesh hnutlnnlere on the way• end get the tants Then 1 return to the °filth In • hronghem, Gent eftw me by the managing editor, aud dictate shat i't. ascertained about the neer to • :100 word • minute .►erthaud man. If the n!urder haan% been quite bell enough to suit my eengul- miry thaw., I tuueh It up a whole let rind mike it look pretty had for all hands witsad ftp 1n it. Then 1 smoke a couple at Penia cigarettes In the eseludon of ""7 sites and gold offee, teasing o4 a 1en:11ng editorial or so upon theCub.n question oe Hawaiian annesetion sal smoke just to keep from being bored. "My trap 1. ■1 the door of the oMee Iry %hie time, and i tine Ielo 1t and permit myself to be whirled up to the capitol. I move around among the legislators for an kour or to, warding off their anger In- qutrlee as to what's going on .t the vireo - tire nutrition se hest 1 eon. i trent them all Impartially, to es not toexcite potions? atnong them. After • half hour siesta, duringwhtrh I recline on rnorevv-o leath- er conch In ens of the ,'nada', committee rams., 1 am tooled hock to the ethos, where I end the managing *hoc mems - new shoots after flowering in June and yrodace • moderate crop of nates later in the reason. This will Demented ma - millet and onwpeu for mummer feediu end shall also nee the Halite of early ve rietiee of meet eorn for this purpose Now is the time toprepare to dodge the drought.—Rural New Yorker. - If you have a pasture growing tip U weeds or brier bushes put sheep o• -i two or three ..•rani. Than pat ent/r'O' some other kind of stock rad the Syn ed Changing the kind of stock on a panin: %bent every two years is excellent bar' for the paster'. and the stock. VEGETABLE GARDENING. T,alelna Plasse, R..lseites. fibeeklse and Drivelling Ia..eta. 15 is very tmpnrtent that training he began at an early stage with .nch enb jests as require it Tomattea prnMhly reagnirw more attontinn in this. r0mpe t than any, getteral vegetable grown The them not Ming of .uAleisnt "trental to "nppnrt themeelvet long. they are easily tbrnwn down by wind or rain and OM* nn their side the pointe will tnrn in an upward direction is a few boors' time, thus oansiag • bred which rendere theta awkward Ian tie ap and gives there a n the men put on their unlfonua We_.. Oe.daet T$ la 0•sa. �_ -. e A new fleld of labor le naw Inv�edb7 To kill warms on cabbage pure, fresh pyrethrum, commealy called Persian insect powder or bnbach, should be dueled over the plant when the dew is on, repeating the application when nee unary. In the Bank of England there are lb•ny allows ingots which have lain as- bwcbod for nearly 100 Team A bora Mathe,n•tlelas. •' Dinkey doesn't know hie lettere well," explained his mother to the new teach!, "hut he's qulnk In learning figures" "What a this, dear?" asked the teaches pointing to the letter A "Hat's • 11 pare mad togedder," prompt• (y responded Dickey —Chicago Trib uns rlty anter both (rent to.lug their job., 1 volunteer ti go sad 'tent!' the Ire. and dray overwhelm tee with their grst.fuil thanks. Then I rest luy mind by verities a few brilliant short editorial paragraphs. If there's a big crlmleal trial 1n progress, I take a run hv.r to theeo rtbouee to sea that the pulp le conducting the case 10 that the man tip.. paper wants convicted shell be convicted. On having the rourt- house, feeling the need of a b11 of eerie - Hon, 1 mouthy hail a cab and "teen?! one HO two burnt orange at-erl'iiy team *11om. by legation ladle' or eabinil ministers' daughters. "1 hive to be ua my rosette on thew as- Milbna, for 411 01 the hellos depend open Alflor the laugh esoteric information oat. Iltaature, art and pe.o 1 furim. By this %leve 1, act somewhat wearied, so I gener- ally telephone to the editor that 1'11 not Mara to the pfticeand Instruct him to let me know by openl•l mounted msaienger'1 anything big happens, .ddreaiing me, of Course, at the 1111 club, where I have my 'bombers. "Then I deme down here end maks my deyolre to you " "Why, how perfectly, •nitanleally he•e- only'" •zelalmd the tesudful 'baldsn "And hew deep you must hays to bel"— Weshington Star. The !nevem. tat In India ie leder. •• AtrtMtM theme. T all enema.+ of MT and upward, And "Dawdle hes a gond head. Two maws then only two. men en 700 t-nmra within gen ha ta d $1001 me anrl„jsIt turned a . rope. bedew e(1 • west "Well?" "Then he borrowed $100, andI b•vee'1 ea tbis .tags."—Detroit Pres �rara it'. had form to drink too nano► when at Atelier alit iia had taste 1s the • ea