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INTew York City.?Such a negligee as this one will appeal to every. woman who likes a tasteful and j e(^ becoming vet thoroughly com- j (j(1 fortable morning garment. The j slightly open neck and the short j sleeves are delightful to the wearer and are really graceful and attractive W( _ rJ as well. The negligee can with equal t01 propriety be utilized as a separate garment to be worn over any skirt or be made with skirt to match for mornings at home. It will be found sai suited to all the pretty simple wash- in I able materials, but as illustrated it is m made of dimity with bands of plain pe colored material finishing the edges, st: The negligee is made with the T1 fronts, back and sieves. It is tucked pi over the shoulders and the front gi f edges are tucked on distinctly novel sli lines. The sleeves in place of being re i 6eamed under the arms are over- sit lapped at their upper portions and da cut after the same manner. Shirrings ad at the waist line regulate tae fulness at and over these shirrings the rtbbon of is arranged. The quantity of material required ? for the medium size is three and one fourth yards twenty-four or thirtytwo and one-eighth yards forty-four inches wide, five and seven-eighth yards of banding, two and one-half yards of ribbon. I Corselet Skirt. The clrirtK hrmicht well ahnvp the waist line remind one a good deal of the corselet skirt that was done to death two or three years ago. It must be noted, however, that the new models do not show the seams of the old style corselet skirt above the waist line and defining it, but the material i falls perfectly straight without curve to below the line of the hips. This is a model that amateurs should hesitate to attempt and women not quite sure i of their carriage should never by any I chance adopt it. / Satin Coats. Il Satin coats are to have a bij; run ^ for coats that are unlined or that .. have bright, thin silk linings. The pongee coat' for traveling is as popu- fc lar as ever. In natural color with h; black satin or moire collar and cuffs, se and sometimes revers, the black piped fc with a bright color, often red, many T; such coats are shown in the ready-to- ec wear departments. Good Combination. A jja.UK Ul'JttUClUlU CA1U, UldCA ca velvet, satin or ottoman coat with ty Napoleonic collar and cuffs, embroid- pi ered with gold and the inevitable tti pleated jabot and high neck ruche fc< with the towering hat, nodding with tii rich feathers, strike the high water ty mark of this season's styles. li: Very Deep Hems. Often the so-called hems on lower ge of skirt will be a foot or mora ep. Starchless Lingerie. Those who have begun again to ?ar dainty lingerie have it launred without starching. Daytime Jewelry. A good rule to follow in the wearg of jewelry during the day is to ?ar only so much as is necessary to oper gowning. Turnover CoICars. Turnover collars should be made ite deep and with two embroidered bs in front, which will cover the sterlings. The under tab is about e inches long, and has a button>le at the,top. This fastens on the liar button. Bright Colors. While as usual the great demand is r pale colors in evening coats, the :ing for bright colors, such as cerise d coral, leaf greens, lilacs and yeltvs, as well as for blacks made essy high-colored linings and Orital embroideries, is markedly exiplified in the costumes of many. ie nale and neutral colored wraps e given more character by bands d other touches of black velvet or ongly contrasting trimmings, while many of even the most delicately lored wraps the lining is apt to be contrasting color, much darker ip ae than the outer material. Five Gored Walking Skirt. The plain gored skirt is always a tisfactory one, and just now it is the height of style. It is especially j]l adapted to -walking and it is escially to be commended for the reet costume and for the odd skirt, lis one can be made with inverted eats or habit back and is shaped to ve snug fit over the hips, with the ight flare at the lower edge that is quired by the latest fashion. The Je gores are fitted by means of ;rts and the skirt will be found an Imirable one for the heavier washile materials, as well as for those wool and silk. The quantity of material required ir the medium size is six and onexlf yards twenty-four or twentyiven, three and three-fourth yards ?rty-four or fifty-two inches wide, be width of th? skirt at the lower Ige is three and three-eighth yards. Typos of Gowns. The dress ideas of the moment arc irried out in two entirely different pes of gowns. One is the ultra incess dress?more often the latter lan the former, for the divided )dice and skirt permit the introducon of the high waistline. The other pe is the draped dress made in soft, mp, body!es$i materials. Bacteria in Milk. 1< Milk may be heated and the bac- f( teria contents killed in this way, but ? the pasteurizing temperature does not f kill all the bacteria and a higher tem- *c perature necessary to sterilize ren- a ders it more or less indigestible. Not b all forms of bacteria are harmful, in ^ fact, some of them are necessary. The " trouble is they are so small it is im- n possible to get personally acquainted 0 with them, so cannot tell our friends' ** from our enemies.?Epitomist. 14 c< Dairying Not Overdone. ^ There are so many by-products aI from the dairy that the business of a' j ci i dairying can never be overdone. Besides milk, butter and cheese, we have powdered milk, which may be shipped at little expense and kept for weeks in good condition, and other ai constituents of milk which are being w exploited in commercial ways for the a manufacture of artificial ivory, paints and a good many other commodities " that until recently have never been ^ associated with dairy work.?Epito- c mist. te Fast Walking Horses. It is claimed by those who have 0l trained many horses that, taking the r{ colt when training first begins, they st can be trained to walk over four miles p] per hour. The talking gait is the _ most important 'one to the farm and road horse. The mistake with many In training young horses is, that they are too soon put to trotting, which is a gait they more readily learn than 8 ; fast walking. A farmer who has long | trained his own colts to fast walking ' tells us that his horses with the corn cultivator do one-half more work in . the corn field than the horses of his i neighbor that were never trained to a rapid walk. In these times of scarce j hpin nn thp farm that is an imnortant consideration. Y( It is only a question of a little pa- ^ tiance and persistence in training co'its or young horses to walk fast, if I th?>y are well bred. Good breeding cones in here as well as in other ' things, as a well bred horse can be . trained in any gait better than others. . j ?Indiana Farmer. . lo Selling SoU Fertility. W Everything we sell from the farm w represents a certain amount of soil fertility. The one exception, perhaps, p] l? butter. It is difficult to trace but- 0j ter fat as a direct drain on the soil. g( It is said that a ton of wheat re- p. moves between eight and ten dollars' worth of soil fertility, and that the e{ farmer never gets it back. Of course, a| there are ways or placing it by the proper rotation and stock raising, but the dairy farmer who sells butter or c? cream, stops the leak before it happens. 0, The difference is the wheat farmer ^ sells the raw material, while the dairy farmer sells only the finished product Jn the shape of butter, and pork, if ^ he feeds hogs, or cattle, if he raises Cl calves with the skim milk. If part of the skim milk is fed to chickens, so that eggs and poultry are sold, the manufacturing process is carried still further and the material sold off the farm carries a very small percentage of fertility with it, j in fact, the raising of the poultry supolies more fertility than is sold a good j many times over.?Epitomist. , Fat and Partially Fat Sheep. ^ It is altogether probable that many n) stockmen will feed sheep this fall for 0] the first time, and they may not be ^ acquainted with all the conditions jy leading to the best and most promisIng situation in feeding lines. The qi j first thing to determine will be what ^ j to buy, says the Homestead. Will it sl: be thin sneep, or tnose mat carry more flesh? Thin sheep will gain more than fat ones, the general thrift g Df the two classes being equal. Thin | swes will gain from one-fourth to one-third more than those in good flesh, and this probably explains why the thin, good-mouthed ewes are 1 sought more than those in better con- ' dition. It is a well-known fact a among sheep feeders that females as finish much more quickly than males, although thin two or three-year-old wethers will make rapid gains. We have said that thin sheep will t take on flesh faster than the sheep that is in good order, and we may say qi that it will require more time to fin- ol ish them than those that are partially p fat. Young lambs usually require si more time to finish than older sheep, because they grow considerably under fattening conditions before ti they begin to finish. Old Western ir sheep are hardier than lambs, and tl this will hold true in the field as well as in the feed lot. Older sheep are n not nearly so liable to gorge them- n selves on green feed or so liable to over-#at while in the feed lot. ^ The feeder should make up his w miitd that when he is feeding thin sheep it will be necessary to feed them a long time. If sheep are to be c fed only a short time, they should be r' partially fat when purchased. Thin ewes can be started by turning them 1 in corn fields, grazing them on good pasture and by feeding fodder. Intelligence of Ants. It Dr. Howard, tne enter 01 tne uu- j u reau of Entomology of the Depart- fj ment of Agriculture, were not well s] known over at least two continents tl as an eminently practical scientist, 0 whose intelligent and aggressive p, work has saved from bug ravages ci millions of dollars' worth of agricul- d tural produce, his story of the intelli- o gence of ants, as observed in the b greenhouses of the department, were r< certainly consigned to the "nature ai faking" class. But knowing the doc- ci tor's hard-headed successes the yossi- ti ble imputation falls to the ground, d As the story goes, one of the green- fi houses of the department is ire- n: quented in considerable numbers by a medium sized black ant, attracted by the presence of mealy bugs and plant lice on the hot-house plants. As is well known ants are especially fond of the nectnr secreted by tr^ose insects. Some years ago a colony of ti Liberian coffee trees were started in n the ereenhouse. At the bases of the ! ' " 1 I ;aves of these coffee trees ca:i bd | Dund very small nectar-secreting J lands. The ants soon discovered thi< j ' nd sipped the nectar. Then the ; ? lea seemed to occur to some clevet | I nt that these nectar glands would j J e the best place in the world for the | ? lealy bugs to live and grow fat and ! I 1 consequence secrete a great deal 1 J lore nectar than they would if left i n other parts of the leaves. But J le nectar glands on the coffee tree ? ;aves were each too small to ac- j jmmodate even one mealy bug. So f le word was passed around and the ? nts gnawed thp edges of the glands 1 nd enlarged them so that each would | jpport a good-sized mealy bug, i hich the ants then carried to it. I he mealy bug throve exceedingly. | he gland was enlarged still further ? ad a whole family of mealy bugs' I as raised in the same hole. Thus I custom grew up and many such J reatly enlarged glands were found I > " + + V?/-> info raoninc Q i I ct 1CW JLIKJJLI111D, bUC aubu ?VU^?U0 v? [entiful supply of their beloved nec- J ir. Here then, said Dr. Howard, I as an ant apparently taking advan- * ige of an opportunity which was % ew not only to the experience of the I idividual but new to the experience ' I the race, and if we adopt the most J :asonable of the definitions of in- . 1 inct, there seems to have been dis- ' layed intelligence of a high order. i -Indiana Farmer. j The New Strawberry Bed. ? Considering the ease with which a J nail bed of strawberries can be { rown we wonder why more farmer* ? d not grow them.r | "We read of renewing old straw* | ;rry beds, which is all right, if it it ? le best one can do, but owing to in-- 1 set enemies and other causes I would | at recommend the renewal of an fl d bed for the ordinary farmer. } We change the bed from year to | I ;ar, here and there over the garden, j J ying to get as far away from insect ! j ?sts and fungus diseases as possible, j I As soon as we plow for garden j < uck we plow enough for the netf j } ;d. We lay off the bed in rows four I iet apart with the garden hand cul- " vator; in this way we back up a ose spot every three feet, as we ? ould for a cabbage plant, only rger. We then go to last year's bed, hich by the way is young and has ey sver fruited, and dig up good hardy | fo ants, and when we can find enough j ov t them, we dig those that are not co Ding to bloom, for they will at once I wj -oduce runners instead of the bloom, j We like to have a hunk of dirt to j tch plant. If conditions are favor- i fa 3le we do not water when setting, : otherwise we water them as set. i He We' use a pan or shallow box to ; Lrry the plants from the old to new ] m 3d. If for some reason we delay 1 jr bed until the fruit is set on gr ants, we clip off runners and fruit ; ems. We cultivate frequently with hand J )e and one-horse cultivators; good le* lltivation means much towards sue!SS. Cv We throw the runners around for thi rhile, then allow them to set, beeeen tht rows, and widen as the sea- j,a ? --a-?? ? "TTT V.?? potroral M1T1. r>n >n SQVUIICCb, YV 11CU ocrviut * %**? ww >rs get set, it will necessitate pull- '?i g out by hand some of the weeds. We experimented some with va- w< eties, but soon found two varieties in, bich suited us and stayed with tham. ne of these deserves especial atten- ; on; it is a seedling which originated ! j jar here, and was named by the ' -iginator, '"Hoosier." It has very j j ?avy foliage, is hardy, runners free- I very large berries, abundant ar jarer, the berries are of excellent m uality, but are strictly a "home use" Tj ;rry as they are not firm enough to ^ lip. | One season, four squaro rods ! m elded fifty-three gallons.?Abraham BC ros., In the Indiana Farmer. ' et Farm I*otes. j Be Why is it that so many iarmers Ba eglect to provide water for their Dgs? Hogs need a drink occasion- g{ lly when they want it, just the same <j( 5 anybody else. j 81 An entire grain ration is not so j U] ?sirable as a mixed ration of vege- tc ibles, meat food and grains, the lat- v? ir botn wnoie ana grouaa. . u> The scratching shed docs not re- J m nire to be anything elaborate. Any cs Id building may be utilized for this Is urpose just so there is plenty of se inshine, no winds, and a dry floor. "W Give hens an extra allowance of in rain at night, scratching it amongst ca le litter, so that the fowls can be cc iduced to exercise before they get 01 leir regular breakfast. j Give the mother sheep the most \ ourishing ration you can. They eed It for milk. Wheat bran is jod; clover hay is nice. Plenty of ater and some roots now and then ill help out. Ti The best preventive of garget 's * ?? st ean, careful miiKing ana a vigorous | .lbbing and kneading of the affected art ot the udder at the first sign of ouble. Three or four days of such eatment will usually ward oft the v" isease. Salubrious Tombstone. Nobody ever dies in Tombstone, nless ?they brought it "with'm" or at ill into a six hundred foot vertical so aaft, or buy an automobile, or "sass" ar leir mother-in-law, or try to thaw | efl at powder, or mistake cyanide of | k? otassium for sugar, or start off a la suuty seat removal racket. Some ] I ie of old age, some old partners j G< f Daniel Boone, but none have ever j s<? een known to die from physical ir- wi jgularities contracted in Tombstone, i Tr side .rom the above mentioned luses, and occasionally an abnormal ghtness about the throat, superinuced by a coil of manila rope, or i su om a cold caught through a hole en lade by a .45.?Tombstone Epitaph. ^i) do Choosing an Automobile. ""You want aspeedycar.of course?" as "You bet." ! 6.v ?.,?? ?i ? t..,, j ^n now (IIJUUL <X Ulll-tllUlUCi . "Oh, I don't keer to go after pedes- I ians to that extent. Just gimme a I p0: lachine that, will get 'em on the flat." ' -Pittsburg Post. I ! Bii ??? : TO GET ITS I | ALWAYS B B tj/ L DK Mv </MJm flv iBIrl W jBF. I INBr fyjf ^^7 CMrJ ;^J . a BPsSBBiPHWiBBHBHBBCvi ?i I IT CLEANSES THE 3 j ACTS NATURALLY KIDNEYS. [ ASSISTS | CONSTIPA1 I DISPELS CC I A REMEDY APPROY 1 OF KNOWN COMPONEh ! FOR SALE BY I ONE SIZE ONLY,REGULA Where It Landed Him. In t With a dazed look in his bloodshot es the man who had been on a jag r a week or more and had wandered er the country In a half delirious done$ ndition without knowing where he Balsan is going came to himself. ye*" * He was in a stange city. ? Everything around him looked un- When miliar. we sha "Officer," he said, stopping a po- At ^ :eman, "what town is this?" ' The "Anaconda," answered the police- made i an. "Then I've got 'em again!" he Compo oaned.?Chicago Tribune. Wins J ???? gjflts fo $100 Reward. $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to g| Lrn that there is at least one dreaded disse that science has been able to cure in all Mrs. W stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh teethin ire is the only positive cure now known to tion,a! e medical fraternity. Catarrh being a contutional disease, requires a constitutional latment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken interlly, acting directly upon the blood and mu- -1 us surfaces of the system, thereby destroy- not d< g tbe foundation of the disease, and giving You I e patient strength by building up the con- . tution and assisting nature in doing its >rk. The proprietors have so much Faith pation its curative powers that they offer One pat mdred Dollars for any case that it fails to t <fe re. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. , rake Hall's Family Pills for constipation. jormg Lnd It's Snch a Little Thing, Too. whole T ^or.Vi fn? POlintl 1*11. JUUgglUB uinuc a miu ucwu iv> i up-town subway express and year. issed it by the tenth of an inch. hen he walked back to the centre of 'WT e platform and stopped. "I've forgotten something," he uttered. "I know I've forgotten imething." J Now, Mr. Luggins' arms and pock- / s were so filled with bundles that it emed utterly ridiculous for him to ,y he had forgotten anything. "Yes," he continued; "I have for- ^ )tten something. But what in thun;r it is I can t make out. It s not S isan's hair ribbon, for that's in my > pper vest pocket; it's not Ann's j oth paste, for that's in my lower kS :st pocket, and it's not Bobbie's col- ^ rs, for I'm sure h stuffed them in ^ y hat. Now, what in the dickens in it be? It can't be the stove pol- how e h', or the picture wire, or the bird :ed, or the sample package of Peeled rire i rheat, or the tdothpicks, for they're this bundle; and it can't be the and g irpet tacks, or the spool of No. 40 itton, or the bottle of marking ink, lege, i the colored postcards, for they're 1 in that bundle. Maybe it's?yes, jng to l heaven, that's it! I've forgotten J'?0.1, ^ * j , T -Z thick i ' buy the piano!"?Judge s Library, it com highly If vou No Escape. * slst In Temperance Gentleman ? "Tom has'ci imkins, if you continue like this * lere is only weeping and gnashing in lines' ore for you." Bright The Incorrigible ? "Ain't (hie) remed< )t a tooth (hie) in me 'ead." Go a'; Temperance Gentleman ? "My ft faiii lend, teeth will be provided."?Lon- your e >n Tatler. . For Making It Pleasant For Him. OH "Gentlemen, said the toastmauter the banquet, "we have listened to W me excellent orators this evening, ^yeo id I am sure we have enjoyed their ject?; forts very much. I have purposely -'5 ye: ;pt one of our best speakers for the at, and after you have heard him CENT know you will be glad to go homo, and ( jntlemen, I have the honor to prent Mr. Ketchum A. Cummin, who post ill now address you."?Chicago c ibune. First Aid. ^ The telephone bell rang in the con- Jr lting room of a doctor who wa? an | thuslastic cyclist. In his absence j | 3 assistant answered it, and said the ;; ctor was out. j j ta "Will you tell him," the voice <; ked, "that Mrs. Thompson has a J? mkhana coming on and wants to j > ow if he can do anything for it?" "I will tell him the moment he < J 011 mes in," the assistant answered, j [ ul leanwhile put a bread poultice on 13 and renew every two hours."?Tit- & ts. tENEFICIAL UY THE GEi SYSTEM GENTLY 1 AND BENEFICIA LIVER AND B< IN OVERCO* riOK PERMANI ILDS AND HE; ED BY PHYSICIA1 IT PARTS AND KN< EFFECTS. ALL LEADING Df R PRICE FIFTY CEN r 9 # ieven years sleeping sickness in i has killed no less than 200,000 out j| apulation of 300,000. Safe and Sure. 1 ng medicines recommended and en- J by physicians and nurses is Kemp's i, the best cough cure. For many egarded by doctors as the medicine " ikely to cure coughs, it has a strong n the esteem of the well-informed. 1 Kemp's Eals&m cannot cure a cough ' ill be at a loss to know what will, ggists' and dealers. 25c. I first attempt to steer a balloon was j n Paris in 1784. . ^ A Domestic Eye Remedy unded by Experienced Physicians. 1 ma to Pure Food and Drugs Laws, y Friends Wherever Used. Ask Drug* r Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murine. v shilling turned out by the English . sows a profit of nearly three-pence. inslow's Soothing Syrup for Children g, softens the gums,reduces infiammalays pain, cures wind colic, 25c. a bo ttl e. A Hard Prescription. ! Doctor?"Young man, It will ' 3 for you to stick in an office, nust get outdoors?must have * By the way, what is your occu- 1 i?" j lent?"I am an aeronaut."? * ? . 0 jlish mercantile marine, which | more than one-half of the , world's shipping, brings that * y about $450,000,000 every 4 NY.?21 I iilnAv 1U1KVJ Ulment snt every person who coffers wltH r >rm of Klaney ailment, no matter < any remedies they have tried, no how many doctors they have con, no matter how serlons the: case, to tfnnyon's Kidney Remedy a trial. Ill be astonished to see how quickly eves all pains In the back loins rolns cansed by the kldileys. Yon >e surprised to see how qnlckly uces the swelling In the feet and ilso pufflness under the eyes, after a few doses of this remedy. You 0 delighted to see the color retnrnyour cheeks and feel the thrill of i and pood cheer. If your Urine Is or milky. If It Is pale and foamy, If ^ lalns sediments or brlckdnst. If It Is colored or has an offensive smell, urinate frequently, you should pertaking this remedy until all sympdlsoppear. We believe this remedy jred more serious kidney ailments ill the Kidney medicines that have- j impounded. Professor Mnnyon b$- that the terrible death rate froqL"'' 's Disease and Diabetes is onne? i and will be greatly reduced by tins | j t once to yonr dmeglst and purchase !l le of Munyon's Kidney remedy. If j \ 3 TO give PHTisiacnou jl wiu muuu i noney.?Munyon. sale by all druggists. Price 25c. 1 IICKENS EARN M hether you raise Chickens for fun or p e best results. The way to do this is ffer a book telling all i book written by a irs in raising Poultry, [ J > experiment and spend C| > conduct the business? A 'S in postage stamps. Jure Disease, how to it, which Fowls to Save I about even-thing vou must know on t PAID ON iRECEfPT OF 25 CENTS ook Publishing House, 134 <\N IMITATION T PATTERN THE K There was never an Imlt&Uoi tors always counterfeit the gen hat you ask for, because genuine i iltatlons are not advertised, but d dlity of the dealer to sell you son iod" when you ask for the genuin< i the imitation. Why accept imlta ne by insisting? [EFUSE EVflTAT] . SB ?m i EFFECTS, J IUINE, I I _ . k . . m nWBffnfflffifiimiBnw I fet promptly: j I lxy ok the owels: i fing { 7VTIV* f ? | caches: \ ns because ! i )wn beneficial \ | tUG GISTS TS PER BOTTLE j Aboht $5,000,000 worth of quinine s consumed annually the world over. Mother's milk ^ will supply the jaby laxative enough, if (he takes a candy Caacarefc tad the laxative will be natural, ientle, vegetable?just what baby aeeds. Try one and youH know ivhy millions of mothers use them. Vesi-peckat box, 10 teiii-ri 4ra#*ct?r?s. Pm?!? ww ?M Million hut monthly. HI srZZs MOTHER CRAY'S JT% SWEET POWDERS VP FOR CHILDREN, A CerUio Onro for Feverlshneaa* Dleordejre, and Deatroj Mother fitn Worme. TtaBrak ap C?lA flWScfe. A. I OLMSTED. LeRoyjN.* 'ion monthly CTnVINIf I A wonderfnl new selling dIUwInlV. gtove Blackln* bat will never born off. Nothing els? like It In the rorld. Sells at every home. Agents are telegraphing Man.'Write to-day. Hayden-Oritdn & Co., Toledo, O r>POPfi Y NEW DISCOVERT; ^ ^ givM qnlcjt raliaf and corse ?r?t cum. Book of testimonial* i 10 dan' traatrnfM free. Dr. H. X. GKKJtN'8 SOU8.B01 B.Atlaau.Ga. bOO buy? serviceable automobile. 1906 model! * / O sacrificed. Reo, flSO; White, $250. Bargain jbt 214 free. Rulto Aoehct, 1535 Broadway. n. y, 51 . , A SAVIN8 IN SHAVINS ? It's nothing more or less than extrara. H g%nce to pay a big price for a safety-razor. The only part that counts for anything H Is the blade. Bat good blades-even the W best of blades?don't warrant the price usually demanded for the razor. H The biggest part of what you pa/ for H the regular safety-razor is for the frame and the box-details that dont figure at ail in the razor's value. VT't't Prove this for yourself. f|| ^ EF In STAMPS brlnprs you fcfli; one of these marvellous w Razors, postpaid, by maU BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 134- Leonard Street, New York. Ytji I n Kiev i,f You Know Howto UnCI Handle Them Properly rofit, you -want to do it intelligently "and to profit by the experience of others. you need to know on the subnman who made his living for and in that time necessarily much money to learn thebest for the small sum of 25 It tells you how to Detect f/vr Were ar?r^ nlQn for for Breeding6 i^urposes. and he subject to make a success. SENT IN STAMPS. Leonard St., N. Y. City. AKES FOR ITS>, *EAL ARTICLE }\ i made of an Imitation. In#- )j uine article. The genuine Is vj, irticles are the advertised ones. {{) epend for their business on the J J! lething claimed to be "just as \ i; >, because he makes more profit j [ tions when you can get the gen- \ !/ fAVTO GET WHAT YOU < LUillJ"" ASK FOR! " LvvCvvv vvvv vvvv vvvC