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Plenty of Good Milk. chii The sow's value depends so largely }'ea on her ability to furnish plenty of good milk that we cannot afford to uov give her corn alone. She cannot give an<^ as much milL or good milk on corn alone as she can on half corn and an Siv< added portion of middlings, oats or car< ? moi other grain, witn grass or ciuvet ui other vegetables. ? Farmer's Home dro Journal. Fever in Sheep. 1 A foundered sheep will he in a con: high state of fever and stiff all over. yea It will stand up but little and seem *acl in great pain. Ordinarily sheep do or not become foundered except when fed 6et from a self-feeder and they are diffi- cau cult animals to treat when they do tho overeat. The only remedy is to phys- or ' ic with Epsom salts or pure raw Iin- Por' seed.?Farmers' Home Journal. *10t inst i Best Single Food. Corn is our best single feed for hogs, but it is too rich in fat and too ^epoor in protein to make a harmoni- * eous and steady growth. Pigs fed corn alone thive for a little while, get J[ou very fat and then seem to stop grow- v0 ing. . thej tt>? h?Vk-w fo fid r?nrn tn nics j that have all the grass or clover they will eat between meals have found ef' that they can make good pigs without ro!l ' any other feed.?Farmer's Home . . Journal. baii ??? C0UJ Cotton Seed Meal For Swine. The supposedly toxic or poisonous eno. effect of feeding cotton seed meal to the | pigs comes from giving it In too large eno amounts. Recent tests in Arkansas kee! show good results to all ages of pigs ^ if the amount is properly regulated, give i For continuous feeding the following frui allowances appear to be within the we danger limit: Pigs under fifty ting pounds, one-quarter pound per day; the pigs from fifty to seventy-five pounds, wea one-third pound per day; pigs from Vjne seventy-five to one hundred pounds, frui | four pounds per day; pigs .rom 100 not to 150 pounds, four and one-half are pounds per day. thei Where the cotton seed meal forms t a part of the grain ration there er : should always be an equal amount of evei wheat bran to supply bulk. Cotton l seed meal supplies the elements lacknn/1 m o v ho for? JII& XU LUI li Uicai oiiu uiuj W profitably in connection with it at the rate of one part of the former to four to seven parts of the latter. It is never safe to allow hogs free ac- an cess to cotton seed meal, hence it should always be mixed with the grain ration and fed so they will not y w seet more than the amount stated. ,.or jj * line Temporary Sheep Fence. One of the best portable fences,for wqo use in soiling sheep is made in pan- lgnt els with supports, as shown in the .. sketch. Panels are ten feet long, cr0J J? free ^ and CJI )P ^7 tot ^ i Mar win Movable Fence For Sheep and Hogs. f?UI - hog t -Finn A & r\ f fn?r-inr*h hnorrl Qnlirilv mix nailed together. After this fence is mat once put up, sheep are not likely ,to thrc overturn it. A fence three and one- *nt? half feet high will tun most flocks.? ban Farm and Home. shoi sun, Poultry in the Garden.- it si S In a bulletin from the Massachu- t^1CM setts station J. H. Robinson tells of prei the many ways in which poultry may spre be useful in cultivated lands. In the call( cornfield until the ears are ripening; w^c they will keep the asparagus bed in pns good tilth and free from insects from amc the time the cutting is discontinued: tlie raspberries and blackberries until sum fruit is ripening. On grass land where but one crop of hay is cut each turI year poultry may be kept on the land from the time the hay is taken off. C0Ul Some of the best mowings I have seen mar in this State are those that are cut and but once a year and poultry kept on A s them with the second growth so pos< strong it really seemed a waste not to fun cut it. Of course too much poultry ^ y\y\ frrocc Ion/? will rnin it i c? CII01 VI* SI aJO 1UUU n 411 I U1U AV. A 14V1V< 1?J / nH a medium where the land and poultry alike profit. An orchard furnishes niar an ideal place for poultry. It gives on|^ shade as well as a grass run, and the 1 birds destroy many insects. Whether s?r* in field, orchard or garden the fowl f that has an opportunity to do some- ? thing for itself is saving labor for its sor owner, saving on the feed bill, and que under proper rostictions is actually fro' doing work whic'l otherwise he would in have to hire done. It is also keeping air' in good physical condition, and thus m01 saving anxiety and extra care that a,e go with unthrifty stock, to say noth- *u01 ing of the losses steadily occurring ie^ among such stock. all A Woman's Poultry Profits. Goodall's Farmer tells this little story of a woman s success with poultry. Her way of not giving her busi- nea ness away even to her husband is tre( . _ r?l?n quite unr.sua' for her sex: v-11" "I confess I never paid much at- ert3 tention to the hens my wife kept, and I,re indeed thought it rather beneath a Kaz man's dignity to Jook after chickens, stai until I had ray eyes opened to my * folly," remarked a farmer recently. tru< "Sir years ago the drought in ourse< tion cut my crop-; .-o close that when wn' I went into tho winter I found mysell mo' short of ready cash after settling up ^ie the season's business. I don't like to aT1(1 borrow from tht? banks and had begun to believe 1 had to face a hard J,ur situation. On^ night. my wife said to 1)1-0 me: 'I <.a:. let you have some of my ai'a egg and chicken money to help you ^0T out.' 'Much obliged.' 1 replied, thinking ?he might have >aved up / $25 or even $50. But when she gave the me her check for $500 I felt like- plai crawling undfr the barn She had mil actually cleared up ST00 from her tioi J v : i c. -' At.', _j !w . :ken yard in three and one-half rs without saying a word about Do I look after the chickens iT? Indeed, yes, and every man : boy on the place also has orders carry out madame's wishes and j her all the help she needs in her j of the hens. I know they are ney producers and that neither fight nor floods affect them." Rotting of Tomatoes. 'here has been a great deal of iplaint about tomatoes rotting this r. It is a dry, black rot that atcs the blossom end about the time just before the tomato begins to ripe. Some people think it is sed by too much dampness when tomatoes are close to the ground; iy vines being too thick. My exience is that it is dry weather and 1 sunshine that causes them to rot, ead of the wet weather. When I I imed my tomatoes to a single o and tied them up to stakes, j / rotted a great deal worse than J r did when I let the vines run and j down to shade the tomatoes. If j have noticed, those that come up j lunteer" around the fence where ; r are shaded from the sun are gen- j ly the first ones to get ripe and j the least. So you see it is not j iuse they are shaded that they | I | /hat caused the tomatoes to rot so this year, I think, was on acat of the hot sun and dry weather n they first began to ripen and bei the vines had gotten thick ugh to shade them. As soon as rains came and the vines got rank ; ugh to shade the tomatoes and j p them damp they quit rotting, ature knows what is best and has J in the tomato a vine to cover her > t from the burning sun. When ! try to improve on nature by cut- ' ; away part of the vine to let in I sunshine we ruin the fruit if the ther is hot and dry. And the,' )s that are not trimmed will bear t of a better flavor, the tomatoes being so strong and sour as they when the sun shines directly on j * his is my experience and we nev- j fail to have plenty of tomatoes ; 1 when our neighbors have none, j . O. H., in Indiana Farmer. . Saving Manure. eferring to the loss of manure re- I ing from careless or thoughtless j dling, H. Leigh Hunt tells Coun- ; Gentleman readers to bed cattle j horses, calves and pigs abundant- j ith straw, leaves or sawdust, both j the comfort of the animals, cleanss, and for the absorption of man- j .1 elements. For use directly in | cellars, muck, leaf mold from the ds, turf or dry earth are excel- j . Sawdust is often the most eas- i obtained, but on land where root ! >s are to be raised it will, if very ly used, cause a fungus blight, or ). Of itself it has little value, ig usually of soft wood, but will j )rb the liquids readily when dry, | this makes excellent bedding. ! .lid manure is available at once, j the more quickly it is applied j he land the bettec; but the solids [ it go through a process ?f decay j >re they are ready for the plant. j lure on which hogs have run all J ter is so valuable, largely on ac-1 it of the working over that the j s give it, when it is plentifully j ed with straw or other bedding erial or a quantity of corn is j >wn amongst it, its dinintegration j particles is much hastened. Much ! dling improves manure, but' it ! aid never be allowed to dry ih the j After being applied to the land, j liould be harrowed in at once and : oughly mixed with the soil to j rent loss. If left for days after ading, as it often is, it dries and j *s and loses half its value. One ] i has never tried it will be sur- 1 ed at the first trial to see the j mnt of manure wasted by turning j cows out at night during the , imer. Knowing that they fed litduring the night, I had my cows , led into a small, dry yard, where ; r could be in the fresh air, but Id not wander. Each morning a i goes over the yard with a shovel throws the droppings in a pile, aelter of old boards on four green ;s protects them from rain and , As oiten as needed, tne neap ; Irawn out and used. This dally re keeps the yard clean for the le to lie in at night, and saves ly loads of fertilizer. It takes r a few moments of time each day. [o manure loses more from expo; than that of poultry. It is very.] in ammonia, and this escapes I i the air and goes to waste. Ab- j >ents under the perches, and frent. even daily, cleaning of tfcr pping boards, storing the manure receptacles that largely exclude will insure a fertilizer of much e value than when the droppings i allowed to lie on the floor from | ith to month, as occurs in many houses. f farming is iO be made profitable, these little leaks must be stopped, i Long Snake in a Tree. Vhile walking through the woods i r his home and gazing into the j 'tops for a sight of a squirrel, j irles Batchficld, a farmer of Libr township, near Millville, was unpared for the sight that met his e. and for a time was somewhat tied. 'itteen feet from the ground, proling from a hole in the tree, Mr. | chfi? id mi .v the head of a snake, I) tLv ton&'.ie darting out of its ith. JJ:it? hfi?'ld promptly killed j snake which measured seven feet | eight inches long and was about' i inches in diameter at the largest" t. of the body. The color was wn. with bars a short distance rt of a lighter color.?Newcastle TnrH?ir**jr?r?]ic A3 * >v c v;s.jji(]ins to Government experts, fcrcat Saltan S-\a. although in ix3k fifteen miles wide and forty cs lonj;. will dfcappear by evapo:?. 3 t'j. ]??; . ' " ' BEiB Profes.or Thomas Jamieson, of ' Aberdeen, is m?.king himself very anJ noying to orthodox science by insisti ing that plants take their nitrogen j from leaves and not from roots. I , A pulse counting watch has been | invented for the use of physicians and ! nurses in London. The watch indii cates, without mental calculation, the | number of beats of the pulse in a j minute. Asbestos houses are much used In Australia, says Popular Mechanics. It j is stated that they are not only fire; proof, but impervious to water, unafj fected by heat or cold and of high in| Fulating properties. Still another favi orable feature is the fact that it is not attacked by white ants or other insects that abound in southern countries. During the last twenty years the lakes of Russian Central Asia have ! shown a steady rise of water level in the entire region between the fortieth parallel and the trans-Siberian Railway, and from the Caucasus to Chinese Turkestan. Within this period, or since 1885, the Sea of Aral has risen about %ix and a half feet. The phenomenon has accompanied a period of augmentation of rainfall, and J. de Schokalsky thinks that it hae now attained its maximum. F. de Mare has invented an application of the mercury ^apor-lamp to the sterilization of water through the bactericidal properties of the violet and ultra violet rays which such lamps emit. The water to be sterilized is led through spiral tubes round the lamp, which is in' the form of a long glass tube. On its way it is subjected to the action of the rays streaming through it, and then it passes into a sterilized receptacle. To remove solid impurities after the sterilization the water may be passed through an ordinary filter. A substitute forgutta percha, ebonite, celluloid, amber and other insulators, has been invented by Dr. Bakeland, president of the American Electro-Chemical Society, from whom it takes the name "bakelite." It is prothr/mch tlip rnnrtpTiKfltinn of formaldehyde and phenol. It Is said to be an electric insulator of the first rank, insoluble in all ordinary dissolvents, and not melting at high temperatures. In chemical constitution it closely resembles Japan'ese lacquer, the compositibn of which has always been more or less of a mystery. With the assistance of Messrs. H. d'Osmont and Montpillard, Mr. Payle, a French photographer, has succeeded in obtaining interior photographs in the colors of nature by the use of magnesium light. The exposures are, of course, instantaneous, and the success of the experiments is based upon the employment of a special powder composed of magnesium and phosphorus. which burns with great rapidity, and specially colored screens. The photographs of moving objects are said to be surprisingly perfect in all their colors. The operation is performed as in ordinary photography with magnesium light. That is to say, the lights in the room are left burning when the exposure is made. WHY JAP BABIES ARE WOOD. They Escape the Ordeal of Wearing Uncomfortable American Clothing. "Americans v/onder at the amiable temper of our Japanese babies; the real marvel is the measure of good nature which the "American baby manages to retain after all he is called upon to go through in dressing," says Adachi Kinnosuke, in The Delineator. "How on earth can the most perfect of saints, let alone a baby, be expected to retain his Christian virtues! His legs and necksare twisted into all sorts of double knots three, four times a day, that they may be squeezed through a tight-fitting shirt. When I saw, for the first time, an American baby dressed, I thought that, compared to it, the Anglican and Catholic Church ceremonies were of a mere 'ring-a-rosy' simplicity.; Our baby clothes are certainly simpler. Incidentally they are wide minded and wide sleeved enough to let a baby grow in them without its putting up a ring fight. "Baby dresses are cut, along general lines, the same as.the kimono of the grown-ups. Only for the baby the sleeves and skirts are longer and wider in proportion, so that they will cover the bare feet; besides protecting the bare hands, the long sleeves save faces from heartless scratch "After the first hath, the nurse takes oht an undergarment, fits it into the inner side of an outer garment and then lays the dresses, thus fitted, upon the soft padded mat floor and simply and naturally puts the baby into the open folds. No screams. What excuse can the baby have to yell? Simply a matter of dress? nothing more. But see what a difference it makes in life! To the American mother the century old hysterical fit of screaming so terrifying to her; to the JapanesH mother, perhaps, the sweetest melody on earth?*he mellow cooing of content." Good Co nr. "I'll give ye'two a week,"' said the' country merchant. ' "I can't live on less than four," declared the ambitious boy. "Ye don't know what ye can do 'til ye try, John. Try it on two for awhile. It will make better reading fer your biography when ye git ricL." ?Louisville Courier-Journal. His Proof. Skeptic?' How is Peary going to prove that he 'nailed the flag to the Pole' any easier than Cook?" Doubter ? "Why. Peary brought his hammer home hira."?Rochester Herald. ' In Vienna it is uofepsury for a I man to get his wife's roiixeist btlorf lie may ascend 'in a baMccn. \ , T ? L. -JL ' i||SSmart Fr i iiiihhmiih New York City.?The blouse w] shows no visible closing is alwa] pretty and attractive one, and model includes the new deep, nar chemisette that is so attractive becoming. It is made with the sleeves, too, that are cut off to s pretty close fitting under ones of i ' material and it is equally well adi i ed to entire gowns and to the sepai i blouse. In the illustration it is m of silk cashmere with trimming banding, chentfsette and under slet of tucked chiffon. Almost all the coming materials are soft enougt , be tucked, however, and for the ch Isette and under sleeves lace, net i muslin, and, indeed, all pretty v ' y % . i u I \ ' terials of the sort are appropriate. The waist is made over a fit lining and consists of fronts and b with the chemisette. The lining closed at the centre front, the w Invisibly at the left of the front. ' sleeves are tucked to give a novel i becoming effect and arranged o the linings, which are faced to f( the under sleeves. The quantity of material requi for the medium size is three i Beven-eighth yards twenty-one, tw ty-four or twenty-seven, or two ya forty-four inches wide, with thi fourth yard eighteen inches wide the chemisette and under sleeves i two and one-fourth yards of bandi Duiuvucr;, ! Fashionable correspondence pa is of various textures and shac There is the kid finished, paper oak grained effect, whicfir\ comes sheets and envelopes of tgio sizes' i is exceptionally smartf^he cr bared weave witn a white%r colo border resembling the finishing o hemstitched handkerchief; what known as French dimity, white, gi blue and buff linen; a thin, fine qi ity of lawn, which appears in ma mauve and dawn pink, and linen i glace fabrics which have envelo | daintily embossed in embroidery i terns. Herringbone weaves, showkig < duroy and pique effects, are steac gaining ground, as they come in t A AnnKln eKn/loe O Ywl in i three customary sizes. Satin, lx i finished and linen fabric station ' 6f note, letter and commercial s may be conveniently purchased in form of a writing tablet which is j; vided with an envelope drawer. Among stationery novelties small hh< rts of crossed barred wo; engraved with the first name of writer and intruded only lor <-or i sjuindenco with intimate frien j featherweight sheets. accompanied ! gray lined tissue envelopes-, for f | eign correspondence, and "ha i note" p-H]<< r, with perfumed ^uinn I edges, M'hi'-h provides an pnveh I when properly .jlded. ? N^v. Y( j Herald. Military Effects'. TL<- Russian Oossaefc and the m tary effects hid fair to h:iv ;; str<1 ' rogue In miilinery.. ... \ ei^' - ills of Fashiwyjjll^ "t out tiich Batiste Hats. ! hou ''s a Hats made in fine batiste are enjoythi'b jDg a remarkable vogue. Ii row last anf* Pannier Revived. Mr ?ew There Is a persistent rumor that ?.w the old-time pannier will soon be with ? thin . rp us again. _ A Loi Blue ana wrnre. s A rough sea-blue pongee with cer1 broken line of white is very trim in a tailored suit. The coat can be finished bu: with a handsome lace collar. A military effect with soutache is chic on a jacket" front. tri Velvet Novelties. ^ V New velvets are the moire, which. ~ t\ closely resemble the texture of baby |fl lamb, and then there is a crepon vel- j J vet with an irregular rib. Velvet l\ lj| brocades and also polka dotted velvets Jr* \l are among the novelties. J M ?r??? ' , fJ New Reticules. k [J The newest bag to be carried with '/ the white gowD, in which the hand- 4 j kerchief and other small and neces- ' f sary articles are kept, is of Irish ' crochet. These reticules may be made of two round medallions carefully crocheted together, except at the top,' where an opening is left. Knotted cords are run through tho top, by ** which the bags are carried. They * may also be made of hand-darned filet Jjj net and Italian filet doilies. 1 apt rate Exercise Suit. "a ade The exercise suit makes an im- || ; of portant feature of the modern ward- M ;ves robe, for women long ago learned thai M in- a few moments given over to system- || i to atic exercise is one of the greatest oi i || ^m- all aids to perfect health and sym- | ||? and metry. This suit is simple and prac* jpj ^ withal and can be ^ 1 t utilized either for the gymnasium 01 .ted in the home. In the illustration it is ack made of light weight serge, but all ; is the materials that are used for suits aist of the sort are apjrrppriate. The The knickerbockers or bloomers are comand fortably full, yet, simple, and the >ver blouse portion is made in conformitj irm with the-latest style. The three-quar- i ter sleeves are those in most general red use, but long ones can be substituted, and if preferred. en- The suit consists of blouse and rds knickerbockers. The blouse is made ee- with fronts and back and is finished for with a belt at the waist line. The v ind knickerbockers are laid in pleats at eg. their upper edges and are joined to a waistbands, and these waistbands are buttoned onto the band of the blouse, s so that there is no possible danger of parting, no matter how active an ? Per hour may be enjoyed. les. i The quantity i>.' material required I f'?r the medium in right and onei".: eighth yards tw.>nty-sev<-n. five i-ards I >!)}.; forty-fnur or four .v;irdi? fifty-two 1 ; inches wide. *? ii I ? tatistiQs prove that the coffee habit is the increase in this country. ake a hint, do 7onr own mixing. Hough Rats, being ail poison, one 15c. box will sad or make 50 to 100 little cakes thac I kill 500 or more rata and mice. It's the (eatable exterminator. Don't die in the ise. Beware of imitations, substitutes . catch-penny, ready-for-use devices. ndia's export trade in spices amounted ; year to over $46,600,000. s. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children thing, softens the gums, reduces inflamma* l, al lays pain, curea wind colic. 25c. a bottle. he world's greatest brewery is in St. lis. top guessing! Try the best and most tain remedy for all painful ailments? mlins Wizard Oil. The way it relieves soreness from sprains, cuts, wounds, ns, scalds, etc., is wonderful. rhe women are planning to beau1 Topeka. Well, nothing will conbute as much to that end as a ger display of good looking girls. Topeka Capital. N.Y.?44 iFTER SUFFERING ONEYEAR ired by Lydia E. Pinkim'cVflnrfl+oKlflr nmnnnnrl Ill J S T V^blHUIb WIlipvUUU Milwaukee, Wis. ? "Lydia E. Pink m's Vegetable Compound has mad? Bme^a well ^fo man, fromfemale trouble and^fearful ^amsk female trouble, an^ advised ^an^opera akham's Vegetable Compound made i a well woman and I have no more ckache. I hope I can help others bj ling them what Lydia E. Pinkham's jgetable Compound has ffone foi i."?Mrs. Emma Imse, 838 First St., lwaukee, Wis. The above is only one of the thouids of grateful letters which are nstantly being received by the nkham Medicine Company of Lynn, iss.f which prove beyond a doubtthat dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comund, made from roots and herbs, dually does cure these obstinate disses of women after all other means ve failed, and that every such sufng woman owes it to herself to at ist give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetai Compound a trial before submitig to an operation, or giving up pe of recovery. Mrs. Pinkliam, of Lynn, Mass., vites all sick women to write r for advice. She has guided ousands to health ana her vice is free. no Ideal PALATAL ^Orea.nof Bthartlo B ** ?, Castor Oil L.DBKK LICKTHB 8P00M. Re)i?TnPl?tul?ncjr, Correct lof, AH* DIjwtloo. 2S0? ALL DKT3001STJW Can be umesta disease, 1 ^^fl^KwnKSSlNHDfllon 111010 foal'0ntj MEDICAL CO.ft V/ One of the strong features of I Automatic Sit irhich makes smoke impossible, e i novice. Permits instant remova There is no danger of turning mokeless device prevents it. This means a perfect, odorles: ort, cheer, and satisfaction. Beautifully finished in Japan < sgs, base and top stamped out < ?aluminum metal window frame: lever hot. Made in various styles Every Dealer Everywhere. If Not A to the Nearest STANDARD G (Incorp Zhicks Dc If Not, Learn Why P Less Tnan the Value YVbetber you raise Chickens tor fun o the bent results. The way to do tbia is r a book telling all you need to kBOw p made bis living for 25 years in Kaisini ixperiraent and spend much money to l< the small sum of 25 CENTS in postage t ;ase, bow to Feed for Jiggs, and also fc Purposes, and indeed about everything ess. SENT POSTPAID ON RECETP1 OOK PUBLISHING MOUSE. It is no use ac you have the G< having the Go advertise. / j: ; r r \' \ r. . * *. " ' v " ' ::<? An aching back is instantly relieved by an application of Sloan's Liniment i This liniment takes the place . of- massage and is better than stick^ plasters. It penetrates ? without rubbing?through the skin and muscular tissue right 16 the bone, quickens,the 1 blood, relieves congestion, and i gives permanent as well as ^ l >_r . i temporary reiier. Here's die Proof* Mr. jlLs c. Lke, of 1100 9th St., 6. E.,Washington,D.C., writes: "Thirty f years ago I fell from a scaffold and serfously injured my back. I suffered terrl- , blv at times; from the small of my back all around my stomach was just as if I had been beaten with a club. I used ' every plaster I could get with no relief. , Sloan's Liniment took the pain right out, and I can now do as much ladder 1 work as any man In the shop, thanks to Sloan's . ; Liniment Mr. J. P. Evans, of Mt. Airy, G&., . : ill ays: "After being afflicted for thro* ) years with rheumatism, I used Soni Liniment, and was cored sound and veil, and am glad to say I hsrren't been > troubled with rheumatism since. My I leg was badly swollen from my hip to my knee. One-balf a bottle took tb? pain and swelling out." * Sloan's Liniment gjjg > has no equal as a Ul's- . I remedy for Rheu | matisra, Neuralgia or any pain or I stiffness in the muscles or joints. 1 wl I Prices,25e^50c.and $1.00 I AC Sloan's book oa I > horses, cattle, ibeep, 8 _IM JlirJL and poultry sent LHUS2&3 free. Address . - I Or. Earl S. Slon, ;|*2S?| * Boston, Mass., U.S.A. HflHpi rM > We ALL Know I mtMMM That there are Opportunities prtoentea now, in the speculative and Investment fleM, for tbe ? I quiring of Larre Profits, for the acoumulatloo of Porta nes. i V FEW or usUNDCRSTAND I just how to go about it. We TELL'You through THE COPPER CURB AND MiNMG OUTLOOK ~ ; < 72 Trinity Place. N. V. City. A 32-page Weekly* D& voipd to Mines. Mlnlns and Curb Stocks. Send for YREE SAMPLE COPY. H^Tbompson's Eye Watei Germany is to have an English theatre OLT> DISTEMPER V^-i| andled very easily. The sick are cured, and all others la ble, no matter how "exposed," kepi from having the jy using SPOHN'8 LIQUID DISTEMPER CURE. Qlre ngue or in feed. Act* on the blood and expel* (ens* ms of distemper. Best remedy erer known for mare* la bottle guaranteed to core onecase. 80c and (1 a bottle; Odozen, of druggists and harness dealers, or sentexpress nanofacturers. Cut shows how to poultloe throats. Oar tlet gives everything. Local agents wanted. Largest ;> jrse remedy In existence?twelve years. Ihamlsts and Bicttriotoglsts, Ooahan, Ind., U. ?. A. / . jJ I * , v * / Jve Heat From the moment you strike match and touch it to the ck, a powerful live heat radi;s from the _. ' _ 'ERFECTION Oil Heater j 'Equipped with Smokeless Device) lich burns for 9 hours with e filling of its brass font, rich holds 4 quarts. the Perfection Oil Heater is the new tokeless Device yen when the heater is handled by I for cleaning:.. the wick too high?this automatic -4^ smokeless heat that carries com; ' 3r Nickel?no cast iron to break? of one piece of steel?damper top > that heat will not tarnish?handle and finishes. < t Yours, Write for Descriptive Grcular Agency of the f' t >IL COMPANY orated) ?ing Well ? torn a Book Costing of One Chicken. r profit, you want to do it intelligently unit , to protit by; the experience of others. \\? on the subject?a book written by a man g Poultry, and in that time necessarily had ;arn the btst way to conduct the business? itamps. It tells you bow to Detect aDd CureMnrbpf whinh KViwIn Shvp fnr Hrwvl. you must know on the subject to make a I' OF 25 CKNTS IN STAMPS. , 134 Leonard St., IN. Y. City. Ivertising unless | x>ds, and no use ods unless you , 55/ . k