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Show NO PUSHER Purifier Is Needsd Success In Western States During ths Pest Few Years Has Attracted ITALIAN INVENTED A DYNAMO Much Attention. WITH RING ARMATURE. Places It Is Cheap. This drawing shows a derrick stacker which is different from any I hava yet aeon, writes Alfred Peterson In the Farmers Mail and Breeso. It will build n stack twice ns long as the length of the arm, as high as the mast, and as wide as the arm Is long. The skids C are made of S by 14 Inch plank and the hue Is 7 feet wide. The bracu are I by 6's and should be still further braced by cross bracu not jlven In the drawing. The hole In tha platform H is S Inchu larger than the diameter of the mast which allows the mast to lun over towards the stack so the load will carry Itself to any place on the stack. The nut Is a telephone pole 35 feet long and rests on a pivot on the skids. The arm B Is a smaller pole 35 feet long at the Inner end of which a crotch shaped Iron holds It in place against the nut. From this PACIHOTTI BARLEY In Poultry Houasb In Barns, Hog Pens and Othar One Future of Implement Shown In Illustration la That It Always Drops Load In Cantor. FARM CROP GOOD USES FOR WHITEWASH Everybody should know how to mix a good whitewash. It Is needsd In the poultry bouse, In the barns, looks well on the fences, hog pens. etc. It Is a purifier because It Is antiseptic and deodorant It Is cheap, looks well, and when rightly made and put on Is AS DRY (By H. B. DERR, Agronomist In Chars of Barloy Investigations. U. B. Department of Agriculture.) Barley has generally not been con- But He Let tho Discovery Slumber, sidered a dry land crop, but iti sue and Seven Years Later It Was cost In tho western states during tbi by Gramme, the Huspast few years has sttrsctsd attention tling Belgian. to Its possibilities for that purpose. In a good preserver. ths northern great plalna and Rocky At a moment when an admiring The standard "government white- mountain corn Is a un world echoes with ths achievements of where states, wash is made as follows: Black a furnish ar one Italian electrical Inventor, there half bushel of quick lime In boiling certain crop, barley will excellent feed for all kinds of krm passes from tho earth In deepest obwith It covered Just water, keeping snlmals. This fact haa already given scurity another Italian to whom the water during the process. Strain this, nn Impetus to the growing of Hv arte and sciences are also under oblithen add a speck of salt dissolved ir the gation, and the contrast la dramatic, warm water, three pounds of ground stock, especially hogs, throughout mountain ths Scientific American remarks. Innorthwest. In tha Rocky rice boiled In water to a thin paste, and Pacific coast states hooded, oi cidentally, it may bo noted that tho f pound Spanish whiting, and a beardless, has long been grows country of Volta by some curious procbarley pound of glue together In warm water. for of which it furnishes an ex- ess of heredity or continuance always hay, Mix these thoroughly and let stand cellent and highly palatabls crop, near holds her owa in the Industry to which for a few days. Apply hot Coloring value. Volta gave hut only the student matter can be added If desired. Dry ly Inequal to alfalfa In feeding Colorado, knows that alongside the gleaming Utah, Idaho, eastern for are this used purpigments paint Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Tex-a- name of Marconi may also be set those pose. to reallxa of Pscinottl aud Ferrarla. Another good outside whitewash is ths farmers are beginning Aa far back aa 1884 tbs gentle Italadvantages of winter barley ovet made as follows: Slack a half bushel sown aa crop. ian physician Paclnottl Introduced tima spring grain barley of lime In boiling water as described Winter barley, being fall sown, bai idly to public notice a email electro above. Add to this after straining .he advantage of an early start In magnetic machine, with toothed ring two pounds sulphate of sine and one the spring and will frequently produce armature, which, he pointed out with pound salt dissolved In water. If you a crop where spring sown barley may prophetic Instinct, was available both want a cream color, add three pounds foil At present there are but two se a motor and aa a generator. And be of yellow ochre, or any shade may forms of winter But when grown In ths then nothing happened! given the whitewash by adding differ west, tha square-hea- barley Tennessee wlniei the celebrated Gramme dynamo with ant paint pigments. round-heand Utah winter. Tha lta ring armature arrested universal Another good whitewash Is made officetheof bureau attention, seven years later, the unobgrain Investigations, thus: Proceed as In second formula of of ag- trusive professor dug up his treatise plant industry, department of a half whit above, but add pound of and bis machine and showed beyond a has number a riculture, developed ing In addition to the sine and salt. other winter forms which were dis- doubt he was entitled to the credit of Dilute to proper consistency with shim In 1911, and results will be the discovery, although he lacked the This wash will tributed milk. Apply hot watched with Interest. essential driving power to turn It Into stick well for outside work. No single variety, either epring or a device useful to mankind. The best way to apply whitewash Is There perhaps Ilea the lesson of his with a spray pump. It can then be winter, eeems to be adapted to the region. Amang the career. We need physical discoveries rubbed in with a brush If desired, entire winter Tennessee winter, a and reverse those who seek the truth though a good Job of spraying makes beared forme, barley, has so far, for Its own sake. But mankind with an even coat given best results, and Hannchen, a keen Instinct saves Its warmest acone-hal- d d aeml-nri- d d d beared aprlng barley, leads yield In the Dakotas. Among tbs spring forms, Manchuria, Neat and Strong Splice May Be Made Qatsml and Odessa are the best Among the hulleaa varieties Himalaya by Use of Little Instrument (Quy Mayle), Black hulleaa and NeShown In Illustration, pal ( White hulless), give the best The neatest and strongest splice results. With ths exception of sandy and can be made with this little InstruDsrrlck Stacker. ment. It Is made of a strap of Iron very alkaline land, barley can ha crotch a rod panes up and around ths one Inch wide and .Inch grown on a variety of aolle, but the mast over the Iron catches marked I. thick. One end Is cut narrow and la beet results are generally secured on The arm Is raised or lowered by muni bent Into a hook large enough to fit the prairie or alluvial loam solla. Barsf the rope F. At the upper end of the neatly the largest wire to be spliced, ley Is a more certain crop on alkaline mast Is a large ring to which guy ropes says the Iowa Homestead. At the oils than la either wheat or oats. E are fastened. The derrick must be sides of this two notches are filed, as The crop requires a mellow seed solidly guyed when In use The rope D shown In Fig. 1. In Fig. 3 the splleer bed. If the land Is plowed It should be la for bringing the load In place on Is seen In position on the wire. The Immediately harrowed to conserve the the stack. Q Is the rope to which the arrow Indicates the direction In which moisture. In many localities best rehorse Is hitched. The feature of this sults are obtained when the land Is foil plowed and left rough until spring stacker Is that It will always drop the load in the center of the stack wbeth-e- r and then disked and harrowed. When at the ends or In the middle. A there la a tendency to blowing of the soil, granular soil Is preferable to the stationary arm stacker will not do this. This stacker may be successfuldust mulch generally advised. The yield and quality of barley are ly used on a windy day and will handle as much bay In a day any considerably influenced by the kind of seed sown. Tha seed should be thorboufhlen one. e oughly cleaned and graded before sowing. Large, plump seed will produce IMPROVED SEEDS ARE BEST strong plants, which, In the struggle tor existence that always follows seedOne Quart of New Variety of Corn ing dry land crops, will be more likely Would Grow Enough to Plant Big to survive than will plants produced from email, shrunken seeds. Acreage at Small Cost Tha fanning mill should bo found on (By 11 W. KELLEY.) every farm, hut when not available would I believe that every farmer s simple yet highly Hfectlve method Bnd It profitable to devote a certain for cleaning and grading the seed is Excellent Wire 8pllcer. portion of his farm to growing eeed to Immerse It In a tnb of water and for the coming year. In this way he stir thoroughly. All the light, chaffy A of to make turn to the splice. pair could buy seed uch year and plant It and diseased grains, as well the on his test grounds and grow all that large pincers or a vise should be used of wild oats and other larger portion two hold to wires the the between would be required for his next years roils while turning the splicer. In weed seeds, will come to the surface crops. Fig. 3 the splice is shown as finished. and can ha aklmrted off and burned. new of One quart of some variety If the seed waa smutted, adding formfield corn would grow enough seed to The length of the hsndle may vary. If Is be used for net wire, alin at the rateof one pound to 40 the splicer to plant quite an acreage and tho cut of effeccannot be longer gallons of water will be handle the course, would be comparatively small. A peck than the width of the mesh. Other tive in preventing its further wise, six or seven Inches Is at?out right for No. 8 wire; the length of the handle should be reduced for tho sake of coiv "Haltering thf Colt. venlence. "When traveling on the road with tha mare, halter the colt to her aide." and so say I, but change the side each time, for If led In this mannsr often and always on ths same side, the colt Is very apt to get to going slightly sideways, says a writer In an I knew a valuable colt Rye may bo cut for hay and used exchange. ruined In thla manner. for all classes of live stock. The demand for agricultural exFranklin Waa Dry Farmer. perts far exceeds the supply. Poultry manure is particularly good Ben Franklin waa a dry former, for for forcing the growth of onions. be wrote: now deep while sluggards Carefully Selected and Prepared. Stock raising Is the best Insurance sleep." of some new kind of potatoes would against an Impoverished agriculture A clover sod turned down makes furnish seed for quite a patch next year. One bushel of seed oats would an excellent foundation for a corn furnish enough seed for a number of crop. Use nitrate of soda or liquid ma acres tho next year. This would give the seed an oppor- nure for crops that are growing tunity to become better acclimated slowly. t Whenever a farmer gets the auto and he could select the best seeds for Treat the herd boar with kindness home use, which Is an opportunity that feTer he at once becomes a good-roaand also with considerable caution. comes seldom to a farmer who buys preacher. Even the hoga like a variety of feed Worn-out- " manure from old hot seed from the seedmen who sell It from the general crop which Is raised beds Is Just the thing for mushroom and will do better if they can get it Rigid culling is absolutely necessary beds in the cellar. by farmers especially for them. Then there Is always an opportunKeep the stables and the yards If you would keep the flock In the The turkey hen, having hatched out ity for a farmer to sell choice seed clean so that files and Insects have iter brood, will prove herself the best oats, corn or potatoes to his nearby no breeding place. To kill Canada thistle In a field, of mothers. friends for a better price than his genThere la no animal that responds so eral crops will bring. The time is put tha field In some cultivated crop quickly to good feed and treatment coming when good seed will be better and keep the weeds down. In a territory cow peas aa the pig. appreciated by farmers. The beat tims to cut tho tails, as are mostly grown with corn, sowing well aa to castrate, ia when the lamb la broadcast and otherwise. Cultivating Potatoes Lets. The Virginia truck experiment staBeg; borrow or buy all the wood a week old. During this month and tho next tion has found that the best results ashes you can to use in the garden; fowls start molting, and they ahonld In growing potatoes are obtained work It well Into the solL If the house Is damp scatter some have some ipeclsl attention until the where the soil la kept level during lime about period, which generally lasts about the earlier cultivations, but as the dry ashes and six weeks, la over with. season advanoea earth may be worked They are good absorbents. A plant of Swlsa chard sown adjoinshow which are of If there toward the vines by means plants pap winged cultivators la order to keep the tubers tlcular vigor save the seeds from ing tho poultry yard will supply greens all summer, provided the thoroughly covered and free from sun them to be used next year. and If your plants grow tall spindly fowls are not allowed to eat It more scald. an hour a day. It has also been found best to con- thin them out Do not be afraid ts than a neighbor or friend a choice Haa season In them cut as at late the go courageously. tinue cultivation of fruit of which you would ss possible. Many eastern Virginia Reverse ends of window blinds oi variety like a tree? During August you can bottom when worn becomes until curtains cultivators not do stop growers It on to stocks of your own. Get two or three weeks before digging Is It gives them a new lease at the arl bud him to give you a few "hud stlcl v" down. ftarted. two-rowe- EXCELLENT AS WIRE SPLICER .In d one-eight- h tuli. 1 u FI&.& fnd Garden Notes Farm d corn-growin- g 4 air-slak- claim for those who also mska discoveries of soma avail In adding to the length of life, lta Joy, Its possibilities and Its conveniences. Had not the hustling Belgian, Gramme, come along with his famous dynamo and sanguine French backera. Paclnottl would have let his model lumber forever In museums and cabinets, Just where many things the world Is waiting for linger now. The fact that T. Paclnottl so little realised what he had done and what hla really la great Inventive ability meant, shown by the curious fact that the work and the studies of his later years were devoted to vine culture. If he did anything significant there the records of our time fail to show It, but meanwhile the glorious torrent of electrical Invention haa swept on so feat and so far. to many people even this bold recognition of the amiable doctor's genius may seem a bit superfluous. Early Aeroplanes. Not ao very long ago a delver among literary antiquities turned up a notebook of Leonardo da Vlnd'a in which appeared sketches of aeroplanes, and now comes an amusing Frenchman with citations to prove that Dante must have flown. They are genuine citations. You can find them for yourself in the seventeenth canto of the Inferno, where Dante and Virgil go riding on the back of an Immense beset. Which is obviously poetic license meaning an aeroplane. Says Virgil to Dante: "Thou hast need to how strength and audacity; then to tha alleged beast, Describe a wide circle In descending. Says Dante: "The beast continued to descend, lowly, slowly, turning as he went down. I was aware of motion only because of the wind that whistled around me and over my head. I ventured to look down a moment, but waa chilled with terror." Q. E. D. ... ... HEN ws bavs nothing eta that . we can do for tha good of man kind, and are ao poor that wa hava nothing alaa that wa can glva. wa can always and evarywhera glva klndnesa. Kindly aympathy In another's Internets, kindly judgment of hla efforts, honeat pity for bis mistakes and failures, sincere pleasure In hla successes these are always In our power If we are not too to bestow them, and these will do so much to fill ths days with sunshine and tha future with radiant hops. . APPLE DISHES. Thors is no sauce quite like the green apple sauce, which is prepared ss soon as the apples are large enough to cook. Tho skins are tender, and ao wa leave them unpeeled, and sweeten them Just before taking off. Many like to put the sauce through a sieve, before serving. Fried Apples When the Duchess apple is about half grown they begin to be good for frying. Core them without peeling, cut in half Inch slices and fry In hot fat; sprinkle generously with sugar and add a shake of salt and paprika. Turn carefully with the pancake turner to keep them in shape, as an extra vegetable. Apple pie la too well known, except to mention. There is none excels it When well made and served with cheese it Is a popular pie. Apple pie a la mode la simply apple pie served with a spoonful of Ice cream on top. Fried Apples and Onions. This Is a most appetizing dish for those who enjoy onions. Cut up tha apples as for stewing. Slice a few onlona, a third aa many aa of apples, or Just one for flavor. Fry the onion in the hot fat add the apples, removing the onion before It geta too brown, or adding some water to cook them all together. Season with salt and If the apples are sour, a generous measure of sugar. Serve ss a garnish for pork chops or A very good filling for a cake, and one which keeps Its flavor, Is tho following: Grate a good-alse- d apple, add n white of an egg It to tho and a cup of powdered auger. Beat until stiff. This makes a pretty dessert served with a thin custard poured around It The ways of serving apple In dishes Is legion. Ae salad, a combination of diced apple, celery, nuts and salad dressing makes a dish most welcome and refreshing. Apple sauce cake Is one in which a cup of lifted apple sauce takes the place of eggs. A most satisfactory cake to keep. well-beate- and I, Juat you and I lauah Instead of worry: grow. Juat you and I, kinder f wa should and sweeter-heartePerhaps In some near k good time might he started; then wliaf a happy world 'twould be For you and I, for you and I. b' XOU Should d. Veal, to be wholesome, should never be put on the market until six or eight weeks old. Younger meat ia apt to produce serious disturbance In th digestive tract. Good veal may ba told by Its pinkish colored flesh and white fat Veal should be thoroughly cooked, and being deficient In fat, pork or other fat should be supplied. Veal Pie. Cook until tender a port tion of the leg or shoulder; cut In bits, add a few slices of fat alt pork, add cream to cover. Sear eon and put a cover of biscuits over the top and bake. A little onion adde to the flavor of thla pie. Chicken pie may be pieced out very satisfactorily by cooking a piece of veal with the chicken. The flavor can hardly be distinguished from chicken. Veal Birds-- Remove the bone and akin from thin slices of veal taken from the leg. Pound until a half-incthick; cut In pieces An inch and a half by two and a half, each piece making a bird. Chop the trimmings of the meat, add a piece of fat ialt pork,, two or three small cubes to each piece-obird. Add equal parts of cracker crumbs moistened with egg. onion Juice, lemon Juice and seasoned with alt and pepper. Spread this mixture over the pieces of meat, roll up and fasten with two-tootpicks put In to resemble the-legof a bird. Brown in a little hot butter, cover with stock made from, tewing the bones and bits of akin, and cook twenty minutes, or until ten der. Serve with a white sauce poured around the birds. The white sauce Is made by cover lng the meat with cream after dredging well with flour. Veal Loaf, Put a knuckle of veal with a pound of the meat and one onion Into boiling water and cook slowly until tender. Drain and chop the-mefine, season with salt and pepper. Garnish the bottom of the mold with hard cooked eggs, sliced, sprinkle with parsley and cover with a layer of the meat; repeat, then pour over the meat liquor reduced to a cupful Press and chill ths-mea- h r PRAY you. O excellent wife, not to cumber says Emerson, youneir end me to get a rich dinner for this man or this woman who haa alighted at our gate, nor yet a bed chamber made ready at too great a coat. Tlieae things. If they are curloua In, they ran get for a dollar at any village. But let this atranger. If ha will, In your looks. In your accent and behavior, read your heart and earneatnrea, your thought and will, which he cannot buy at any prlre In any village or city, and which he may well travel fifty miles and dine pa rely and leep hard In order to behold. Certainly WHAT TO HAVE FOR LUNCHEON. let tha board be spread and let the bed be dressed for ths traveler; but let not In theae Aa variety ! the spice of life, we the emphasis of hospitality lie things. on somelookout are always for the thing new, or odd, or unusual In the ICY DI8HE8. eating line. There Is no excuse for ODAY Is your day and mine, tha only day we have, the day In which we play our part What our part may signify In the great whole, wa may not understand, but wa are here to play It and now Is our time. This we know; It Is a part of action, not whining. It ia a part of love, not cynicism. It is for us to express love In terms of human helpfulnesa. Thla we know, for we have learned from sad experience that any other coureo of Ufa leads toward weakness David Starr Jordan. and misery. monotony In .the summer months, Killing With Electricity. The French people, scientists as when there are such good things from During hot weather there Is no more well as owners of slaughter houses farm and garden. refreshing dessert or main course acCheese Omelet. Soak a cup of companiment than the ices and sherand consumers of beef, mutton and pork, have become interested in experi- bread crumbs In two cupfuls of milk; ments for the more humane killing of add a pinch of soda, half a teaspoonful animals especially for food product! of salt, a pinch of cayenne and a teanot only to save the creatures from spoonful of melted butter. Beat two unnecessary pain, 1ut to better the con- eggs, add to the bread and milk and dition of meats which go to the con- add a small cup of grated cheese. Bake In a bet oven until light brown. sumer. When one has a few pieces of leftDr. 8. Leduc, who has been conducting the experiments at the abattoir In over steak, cut In small pieces and onion which has Nantes, has killed by electricity a add to a good-sizegreat number of animals oxen, hulls, been fried In hot fat. Dredge the oncows, horses, hogs, sheep, calves and ion with flour before frying. Add a dogs using a current of 110 volts, cup of tomatoes and sufficient water with an Intensity of from 40 to 80 to keep from burning. Season with milllamperes. The current was Inter- paprika and cook slowly two hours. Goldsn Rod Egg. Prepare toast, rupted 100 times per second, passing of a cut in squares or circles. Cook a few uch time during second. The result waa satisfactory, eggs in the shell until hard; the numbut no detailed report has bun made, ber will depend upon the number to because ths experiments are to bo serve. Make a cup of rich white sauce followed up at the abattoir at Rogens-bur- g by cooking together two tablespoon-ful- e each of butter and flour, adding and also In Germany. the flour when the butter is bubbling hot Then add a cup of milk or thin Valuable Document Stolen. a half teaspoonful of salt and In the Spanish capital the police cream, a few dashes of paprika. Chop the have arrested a Frenchman named whites of the eggs, add them to the Gaston, on a charge of stealing price- sauce. Butter the toast and pour In historic documents Paris. He over the white sauce. less Put the egg attempted to eell three documents, rtcer and sprinkle which wer seised by tha police. They yolke through a sauce. over white the were the secret treaty between Loula XIV. of France and Philip IV. of Spain, algned In 1G59; the marriage contract Recognized an Omsn. of Marla Theresa and Louis XIV, when Apropos of ths new third party, Clifthe latter declared, "The Pyrenees no ford Plnchot said In Chicago: longer exist! and a parchment of the tell you a story tnat Is a good "I'll Emperor Charles V. The Paris men. ' A 4tull Moose booster was had notice of lose the of given police vslklng through a railroad station these document!. elth a Bull Mooss banner on hla arm erhen a crowd of 8cotch immigrants Economy a La Mode. tethered about him. "There's an economical girl for you." "Tecks, what's thatr said an old "Aa to howr lady. There's naethlng like Mist in lunch every day." "Eats a Peebles. "Tea; she's trying to save 30 to "That's a mooes, ma'am1 tanner hearer buy a willow plume." d s-- i-t bets. For a dinner of roast lamb, the following la excellent to accompany -- the meat: Mint 8herbetBruise the leaves of a bunch of fresh mint and pour over It In a large bowl a plot of boiling hot auger sirup; add the Juice of two lemons, the rind of one and a cup of shredded plnapple. Freeze. When half frozen, add the whites of two egga beaten stiff. Freeze to the consistency of white snow. Combination 8hsrbet- - Fbr this one may use a cupful of two or three kinds of canned fruit Juice, choosing those that blend well. A cup of raspberry - Juice from preserves and a cup' of pineapple sirup Is a good one to combine; add a teaspoonful of lemon Juice and a pint of sirup made by boiling together live minutes a cup of sugar and a pint of water. When cold, add a teaspoonful of vanilla and mix all together. Freeze quite stiff and then add the white of an egg beaten stiff with a tablespoonful of powdered sugar. 'Hoots!' she'crlej. That beastia a moose? And then, turning to her friends, she said. 'Laddies, If this Is sn American moose, what must the rets out here be like I A Correction. We want a stanflanf began he Impassioned orator. "Pardon me," Interrupted the one wtlc candidate. We've got standard 'n-v-renorrh. What we want la tret, to constitute the rank and m bearer" o f -- oer!p |