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Show Hew Veriattee ef Cere. got th0 full force of the current We believe the ordinary farmer There were thirty lamps on the cirOne of the most distinguished edu- should give a good deal of thought to cuit above me toward the square and 1.858 e has of and cators the the eorn of country he grows, varieties recently A R1SINO STAR IN POLITICAL CAN STAND ONE 1,000 VOLTS each lamp is forty-fiv- me. volts, tobefore of Dr. James that it will pay him to experiment In death Just in the went away volts passed through OF ELECTRICITY. FIRMAMENT. O. Murray, dean of Princeton univer- a small way with new varieties, uys It happened I looked at my watch, for was southWallace's some Dr. born of Farmer. experiAfter wu hungry and wanted to get o my Murray sity. gone Due ef Cleveland, Okie, Is m dinner In time. It wu 11:30. When That tk. Ftopl. ern parentage at Camden, S. C., on ence he will be able to cross IntelliAlttod to lorn, ef tk. fra I to of 1om tbe Wslwfl Ceadnetor November 27, 1827. He obtained his gently for a special purpose from year came to I was sitting on the root Klactrte mid Baallr Kill Anybody TMr Ubar They AIM Bailee la lterary education at Brown univer- to year and get about what he wants. ust a little hunched up. I looked at Mlm. ChauM for Korlvlog. my. watch and It was 3:80. Now, I sity, but prosecuted his theological Corn originally was a Mexsemwe at Andover Theological product, coming, dont knov If I came to before that studies believe, from Mayor Jonea of Toledo la a peculiar ico. It has been minwide then went off again, but the flrat and ta a into Immediately When the New York dispatches angrowing Entering figure In the political and public life inary. of climate, and hu developed a nounced that an electrical worker had thing that I really remember wu became pastor of the ruge of Ohio, and of the nation aa well. isterial work, bechurch great of varieties. In fact, It received a shock of 2.000 volts and looking at my watch when it was 830. number DanIn South Ha la a Christian socialist, who attar Congregational he remained from Is more variable than any other grain, lived the query was raised concerning I felt a little strange, hut It didn't where vers. Mass., haring been elected mayor of Toledo 1854 to 1861. He was then not merely with the climate, have any bad effect on me. I went pastor for varying by' the combined votea of the laboring Hour years of the Prospect Street ut with the soil, and In selecting seed how much electricity a man can stand. home then, but it didnt shake my Conclassea and the church-goin- g corn it is not safe to reach over a wide Hampel set a circuit in. screwing a nerve, and the next morning bright and elements, at church Cambrldgeport, gregational proceeded to apply to the conduct of Mass. In 1865 he was called to the range of latitude. If you do, the corn loose screw on' a trolley switchboard. early I went back to work again. It was said be received the mentioned public bualneaa as far as possible the Brick church of New sill be confused, so to speak, and not number of volts. John Dunn of Cleveknow golden rnle principle which has distin- York Presbyterian how when to long to grow nor A NEW POETIC STAR RISES. city as associate pastor with Dr. guished his prlvata life. His Ideas, if Gardiner ripen and get In out of the way of land, 0., places tbe number at 500, and advanced in then Spring, to sufficient asserts not is that this revolutionize generally adopted, would A new poet has arisen. His name Is Dr. frost The farmer who Is selecting the social and labor conditions of the years and falling health. After the seed corn with the idea of grain pro- kill In many cases. Dunn has. had Edward became Dr. death Markbam, and he Is a school Murray duction should select the variety that some twenty years experience In takcountry. He adrocates and applies to Spring's went 1875 In teacher Dr. Oakland, Cal. He has beea In sole Murray pastor. his own business tha eight-hoday, to Princeton to take the Holmes pro- will grow him the greatest amount of ing shocks while at work and is In a writing verses of merit for a number Dunn is known pays his employes good wages, enters grain, large ears, and as many of them position to know. name Is familiar to of belles lettres and Eng- as his associates as- - the human of years, and his The farmer who Is growamong possible. sympathetically into their personal fessorship who read the leadwhich of lovers to literature the lish and poetry language concerns and contributes financially corn to feed cattle In the shock lightning rod. He fears no 500 volts ing of the he had been elected by the trustees. should aim to of anybody's electricity. He denies ing magazines and newspapers and personally for their social enjoytotal the grow greatest some attention of dead of 1886 office the faculty amount of food, which he will find in that Hampel, the New Yorker men- .country, and who pay the In ment and Improvement of a ears tioned, stopped any such enormous In the conduct of the vast Interest of was created during the last years large number of medium-size- d McCoshs President administration, and a finer quality of fodder the re- voltage. He coyly admits that he himhis business he has the enthusiastic elected its first sult of thicker self took 1,350 without losing more of every employe. In ad- and Dr. Murray wasoffice he remained planting tban la Justithis incumbent In fiable when growing exclusively for the than half s day. He has hod so many dition to their regular wages for eight hours' work, he pays them a yearly to his death, continuing also to per- grain. The fanner who grows eorn for trolley wire shocks that he has trouof his professorship. summer feed for stock should select dividend from the profits of the busi- form the duties ble In remembering them all. ' Here the a corn that is a has and ness proportioned to their wages. Be was also the vice president of early large la what he has to say on this topic: board of trustees of the Theological amount of leaves like the Evergreens, enteran means It la impossible for a man to receive Every legal holiday and so on to the end of the type that a shock of 2,000 volts In tainment or excursion for the emany powerwill produce him the largest amount house in the country, for no street ployes of his factories; If In summer, and get in out of the way of frost. It car line uses out of doors; If In winter, Indoors. such a powerful current. should, therefore, not be an early va- Here In Cleveland the year ago he purchased a piece of land voltage Is 600, the Northern grown variriety such the tha suburban with adjoining his factory, put a landscape of exception eties are likely to be, nor yet a late gardener to work and transformed it one like the large corn from the South. lines, which run up to 750, and this Is into a park, with flower beds and windWe think our readers will see the point the custom throughout the country. ing cinder paths, with seats and That New York man got a shock of In this at a glance, and it should govbenches under the trees for older peo600 volts, but that la powerful enough, ern them in determining on the varieple and swings. Maypole, tennis court ties of corn to plant this year. One let me tell you. . I had It once and I and games for children. Then he thing we urge especially, that they look know. It was about twelve years ago. opened the gates free to the families out for their seed corn early, as in when I was working for the Cleveland of the poor of Toledo. He named It I was large sections of the country the seed Electric Lighting company. Golden Rule park, and every Sunday In office' the J. John of is hopelessly damaged. Shlpherd. wiring summer then an good music and down on Superior street, when the pogood speakers. Mayor Jones was born As IntoMlIm ud FiruHnl Faatnra. liceman on the beat told me there waa la Wales la 1846,. and came to the Wallaces Farmer: Mr. Frank Seck-le- r, a loose wire on the Brooklyn track. United States with his parents when 3 EDWARD MARKHAM. of Iroquois county, Illinois, writes So out I went The wire was dangling us that he hu a farm in Harrison down almost to the ground. years old. His pannts wen very poor It was as to his produc. and It was necessary for the son, when county, Iowa, on the Missouri river alive' and very dangerous, so I said to the author as well To the tion. old enough, to go out to work, and he majority of readers, howbottom, that he has no pasture on that I would cut enough off to keep It he unknown until quite been ever, hu bear "I upon my body today jays: lame, and that he wants one right from hitting anybody, while tbe poJAMES ORMSBEE MURRAY, like 'the marks of the injustice and wrong when, Byron, he awoke recently, will become that away later liceman telephoned to the company permanent twice delivered the and seminary, find himself famous. to one 18 of child labor." When morning years old course of Stone lectures In that insti- on. The land is now in wheat stubble about It There was a big crowd about A the short time he heard of the Pennsylvania oil fields tution published and papers he to ago wishes know what to da We and everybody thought I would be in Litin 1893 on one his latest and poem, would and went to Tltnsvllle, which place he erature and in 1895Skepticism greatest burn off first stubthe wheat killed If I tackled the wire. I caught on "Religion in of man a writer which reached with IB cents In his pockets. Literature." His ble, then plow the land rather deep, hold of the wire and was Just about stamps the published works In' and which placed six five found work and seised the or already turn Inches hu and genius, the to cut it, when a newsboy came runclude the lives of Dr. Francis Way-lan- uy In the first rank of modern poets. that were presented and In 1870 William Samuel and Professor weed seeds nnder. We would then sow ning along. Hello, Dunn,' says be, him a mixture of oats, barley, spring wheat 'what are you fllcame himself an oil producer. In G. L With It is entitled The Man with the Hoe," going to do? Chase, a church hymnal, entitled and 1886 he 'came to Ohio and entered the winter about rye, taking that he reaches up and grabs me by and Is based on Millets famous pdcte';-Sacrifice of Praise," and contribuof what would be a proper sow- the leg. Now, he was Since the publication of this Lima field, and since then has followed tions to periodicals. Princeton college standing on the lng. ing of each, and at the same time sow track, and the minute he grabbed me poem Mr. Markham hu received thouthe same business successfully in conferred upon him the dehonorary Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana. He gree of doctor of dlvllnlty in 1867, and six or eight pounds of timothy, four established a circuit and I got the full sands of letters from admirers from pounds of mammoth clover, four made several Improvements in appll- - in 1885 he received the section of the United States. A honorary de- pounds of common red, and if the land force of the current Of course it waa every ances for producing oil, and establish number of Eastern magazines havs reof doctor of laws from his alma is Inclined to be wet my imaglnatlon.but I swear to you a pound or two just ed In Toledo a factory for the manu- gree heard the machinery In the quested permission to publish It, and I mater. He was eminently successful of that alsike, and give these the same covhandsome This fac- as an Instructor and wu facture of his inventions. power house out In Brooklyn buzzing havs made Mr. Markham generally retory brought him for the' first time garded as the most popular professor ering that would ordinarily be given away. The shock made me grab my offers for future work from his pen. the grains. We would then sow uven into contact with the labor conditions of the Edmqnd Clarence Stedman, the briluniversity. His success In his pounds of blue grass, mixing it with pllera with such a grip that I bent the liant of the city. He studied the social poet and critic, who long ago If I had department received a worthy tribute sand or sawdust, so as to get an even curved handles straight Mr. Markhams genius with hailed problem and determined to do what when the trustees named the new distribution, and harrow this In with a taken hold of the wire with the other Is he could to better the lives of his emparticularly enthuslutlc ovsr enEnglish professorship recently As soon as aide of the pliers up It would have his latest harrow. light smoothing and both socially, financially ployes, poem, and has written him dowed for him. the grains will furnish a full bite, we been different, because all my force a ' He had the full sympathy and letter long commenting on the qualwould pasture and continue pasturing would have been exerted f n cutting the of his wife. He announced this of and warmly praising the poem ity until harvest time. The pasturing will wire. But this way, the harder the KsMoth Xnii rule; Every man is entitled to such It the more the current wire. I gripped On Feb. 8 a Swede and his. partner, keep down the grains and give the a share of the product of his toil as I visited the poet at his home ou Domin- grasses a chance, and with an ordinary Fellows who have had shocks say they claim on their while marking live will enable him to decently and Nineteenth street to learn at first hand season you should have a fine stand cant let go. Thats because they In such a way that he and his chll ion Creek, discovered, according to a of of the genesis of a poem something clover when the grains are dona We havent presence of mind. They give mamdren may be fitted to be citlsens of Dawson newspaper, a body of a so profoundly affected the that hu would turn then oft braced feet In. stock I the Just until against the my the tree republic." In 1836 he estab- moth forty feet below the surface. about If even then a half dashboard and pulled with all my thought of thousands to whom a few lished the wage dividend system, and The story was that the body was In a stand September. of blue grass is obtained it will might, and somehow I got loose. But weeks ago Prof. Markham wu a has maintained It ever since. The perfect state of preservation. Unfor- thicken says Henry A. Newberryin os fast as the cloven go my fingers, where one of the handles stranger," first was wred on Christmas day, and tunately there were no scientists in out Thisup Is rather full Oakland the Tribuna "I found a mam seeding, but lay, were badly burnt That was only the cash was accompanied by a letter Dawson to examine the body, but, ac- we presume our whose is as charming personality wants correspondent double that breathing a spirit of true Christian fel cording to press statements, it meas- a pasture that is worth something, and 600 volts, but Ive had bis cordial and unpoetry. Dignified, yes, more than double Jthat. About affected, bis keen but Since then the employee ured 44 feet long. Its right tusk wu this is the shortest and easiest lowshlp. kindly eyes ire way to nine years ago I was working all alone ' have been guests several times at his broken, but its left tusk wu perfect, so get it. with the lambent flame of a genalight We had Perkins block. two ou the was probable that the right great house, which their work has that It tle ud gracious soul. That Prof. Ulet and oata. ' wires running across Seneca street Markham helped him to build and where the men tusk may have been snapped off in thar ia not only a poet, bat a Millet should makunquestionably be and I wu pulling up the sag and fall that caused Its death. The tusk scholar well, is attested by the apwhich remains measures 14 feet 3 looked upon as a staple crop in the ing new Joints. Now, when we are of the room Into which I wu pearance inches in length and 48 Inches in cir- Northwest, says the Farmer. It is one working a wire we have what we call a ushered. Books are rangof our moat certain reliable and crops. cumference. The flesh wu covered 'Jumper.' . That is, we take a short ed completely aroundeverywhere, room. His the We sow can It somewhat later in the with woolly hair 15 Inches long, of a library is a splendid one, and reflects grayish-blac- k color. The neck wu season, much after the fashion of a Its owner's discriminating taste in catch and when sown time in crop," short and the limbs long and stout, we poetry, philosophy and literary critiare reasonably sure of a catch of the feet short and broad, and had five cism. the Some persons are now sowseed. toes. The flesh wu cut and tasted a of oats along with two ing peck sweet Mammoth flesh has been of millet per acre. From the California Tlmbar. luted on other occasions. It is very pecks combination a larger amount of crop The on first visiting timber writer, unfortunate that an expert geologist can be obtained milthan yards in northern Europe, could not was not upon the ground at the time let alone. The oats by growing will reach that get rid of the impreuion that the of the find, it is of considerable im- stage when the grain Is round timber wu all culls or wuta fully formed portance. by the time that the millet is ready to A raft load of logs in the Gotha river be cut. And the mixture makes a valin Sweden was thought to consist of The Probable Kraiaa. uable amount of nutritious food. It telegraph poles. It happened to be Mrs. Hornbeak It is a pity that Jas- would seem to be a law of plant growth a collection of small Umber even for per Doolittle has amounted to so lit- that more will be retained by the soil there, and a visit to the Pacific coMt tle since he graduated with high hon- where a suitable combination of plant of North America, soon after, still ors at the academy. The title of his Is grown than where only one kind is further emphasized tbe enormous diforation was Hitch Your Wagon to a produced. Mr. E. D. Childs of Crooks-toference In the timber resources of the MAYOR JONES OF TOLEDO, one of the most extensive dairyStar," and I remember how eloquent two countries. Soon after arriving In and their wives or sisters were treated he was so that everybody kept saying men In the Red River Valley, has Sr a Francisco there was encountered social equals what a bright future he had before practiced growing millet and oats thus by Mr. and Mrs. Jones as tbe street a squared beam of fir in wire It about and the twist of would be. him. I wonder why he hu never fol- for some time, and is pleased with the piece more than 100 feet in length, being we lowed out that motto himself. Farmer results. The one crop would seem, as long wire at one place and then Room. to a factory In course of e nothauled of Qihib'i Drawing and It a twist were, to be the complement of the make good long loop If the queen hylds the drawing room Hornbeak Oh, I guess he did. In a it It around this same long wire some ion. Following this beam to Its desin person the woman presented re- certain way. Probably he hitched his other. distance up. This makes a new cir- tination a woolen factory then being moves her right-han- d glove, places her wagon to a star, but forgot to put in on A Bod. Potatoes Rye cuit for the current, and then we cut built It was a matter of astonlshmsnt hand beneath that of the quein am the end gate. out the following, which the first wire between these two places to find all the longitudinal beams or gives kisses her majesty's hand. When one may be worth trying: "To those who and go ou and do whatever we have to stringers" of tbs same length. This . I of the princesses holds the drawing The Eye Lees. have trouble with potatoes getting do. I had taken the slack of the first astonishment wu Increased when the ladles only courtesy and omit There is one portion of the human V ) room, through the summer, I will say: wire up and was putting the Jumper contracter said: "We never bother the hand kissing. The courtesy Is not body which continues to Increase in weedy If yen sowed a piece of rye this foil, on the second. Just one end of this about dimensions, and just order what alow and measured.bat should be quick size throughout life, and does not A secUon feet In plow up enough of it for your potato had been twisted around this second we want" and gracefuL Full Instructions as to ceau with the attainment of maturity. ground next jipring, and you will wire when I got the shock. I had my diameter, cut from, a sight redwood tree, one's dress are always given at the This is the crystalline lens of the neither be troubled with weeds nor pUers In my belt at tbe baek and some- completed a new Impression of Amerlord chamberlains office. Ex. yc. bugs." ican forest timber. how they touched the first wire and ' THE LATE DR. MURRAY. MU JONES OF TOLEDO. HE IS CURRENT PROOF in f ; semi-tropic- al s ur u u opportu-wreckttl- es d, one-four-th ao-clal- . u u . u n, potato-grow- I ' . I i j ; ' er |