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THIS COUPON GOOD FOR ONE DOLLAR ii presented before October ??tL wo will ac cept thin coupon UK part payment on any Holt of elolheti purchased of ott at UH face value, ?1.00, Only one ceujH>n accepted. 03 jeach ?wit enid* itv '.. UJ MiUvM AMERICAN TAILORS. Our made-to-order garments have no superior anywhere, and. few equals-the first garment we make for you will be proof enough to convince you. . 'i 11 J . j \ '. ; ti yT? i ii ; ! I ' ' '. ! $15.00 UP American Tailors ON THE SQUARE. Our $2.00 Hats Are Wonder?-See Them 1 (--i-! i m ?-1 i. J . j;.f '.f fen ?9 13 L>) ?-.*:.iv': - ri - . . Treat : pp" " Ijour ""'I' "J^^^fej Wife to l^^^g^ wiien it comes to STOVES and RANGES wd are, as usual, right here with the big gest stock, the greatest yane^tjlmd the lat . es satisfactory improvement ...s ^ ?Nc-1 GET READ^o? JACfe rfw^OT^^* Don't wait ^W^fifl^ \ TTm wlien our stove men are soHousy that w<? H u ^iVaji't set up your-Weate^'promptiy; Buy K7??ncw- and be ready for wint?frX?ur H??ter? f 1 JB? are made in sizes to fit all conditions and l^pofck?t books. St?Ft?T f?VX |3*W. I Efficiency is oin* motto and satisfied ? I customers our ideal. Jfel'^Sullivan Hardware Co. I Anderson? S. C. Belton, S. C. STHEIR Si'rFEB?NG ENDED ? sssjaaagssa^^a Hundreds Of your neighbors are SL*i? tl S???? ' 'Rca^.was not buft . Joe Person* ^e^ed?0? t??fr ' it a " Jrfi?, Lt iLb ...z JJ blood and enWch) tbeattteVglvltig ?uld ?10 HaTOITlS. O? tile WOOO GO that all. dMarnbadlyo?ttBcAOD? could .loetuiniOitji?,? .<><-".?. ??{,-.-?? ^1a?dj;??.'I work properj^when ,^aii.iwaa1|dpne.,expect to see everlasting * troubles. .a^t^-'W W^^?t' ?ST*T*] tadiS E ?. it doesn't ni*ft-?%^tor. irt??n^ ,,,:1elt'takes time to ac trouble is <leid-?nt the idlgwrtlbn,^ .he* <;.< nolTw?U^r^ '' " "v w'-'l nerves or the akln,,)ljBa#H1o? dt a? ls cornnlish thll?65 titOf the fact that Mie VWM!^*T not CU1"F110" *nT, KOi.nl enough orV . praftlve* poisoned, MM gr J* Jiu Or course you cajrnWt?^ell, digest VUgntJ, ^ what yu eat or ??tf In^sfhik: as long *P|?-% U? J*\l^^??*lm?k>i aa what ought to fitmJ your nerves . L/Oll I Dc QlSappOltll tone and. your dlgfu?ffn jenexgy and j ?r i . . . strength is poisoned every -ntnote of eu il 11?? TttSt inSeitlOF the day. Get the blood rtsrht. Moses c m ? ? said "It ls the lire.*"^ft?raTne blood ? ot VOUF WP.nt ad. dOeS? ? is rjgiit you live. ?. ? Here is what otis1 ut1 jiuw ?iighbors accomplish wonders. declares: "A few years ago I was a ?.iii. terrible sufferer from blood poison. All thin eve kaine If the skin would be brakenfrom any . ^>*? UllllgS UCill^t kl would llcluand burn- and, develop eqUaL- qjjB ,:Want, OU. im^JWW^if^m zwoftklfafrand to the f Mn bottles and it cured mo." Mfc? a^v..'. Ht Medlin, Weldon, N. C. ?Otftti,. ?Wy our druggist cannot supplyjrou. KSo^^^TO^? ^ ' - - ? --? ^Sg you this remedy. .. ^ ?., j fflftane Wseh-KIdaey Tron?le Causes ?PF? I?T OI^PF? ~ Y V-.CU&yyp-iiiC ~ , SPEC i AL OFFER K don't take long.jf?r i?&f ?ndk I wi? furnish your appl'er oats at Bder troable to give you a lame |10o per bushel and Fulgbma oaU at Bk, ar.d even worse, if not Checked. ... ?. . . ", . :W, H. T, Strtynge, GalnlssVnio. Ga., $1-35 per bushel, sad will give yon 10c tm fairly down on her 'back with per pound tor cotton In payment for WKhey trouble and iuflammed bbtdder. AB? says: "J took Foley Kidney Pills Ramo sHRd now my hack ts stronger than tn These oats wero .raised by me and Mfeer*^-??.!!?^T^ W ?ne and wortWhat money HP^*^ * Vow will Oad^Kp,^ \mBt1 " Fills because they always office of The Fretwell Company. This ??Pip. They contain no habtt forming offer good for Immediate acceptance, f~Yv&*- ^?5?*4^W?^ ,!?;,'ui ' j J. J. FRSTTWELLk ST. JOHN" ST. JOHN* Methodist Church where splendid UNCLE DAV To HON. JUL It is Purely an easy task to praise I a friend, but to praise him wisely, is not easy. There are a great many who loved Julius E. Bogga, looking on as I write, and 'their affection Xor him will mak?'them severe critics. They will hardly let the right, intention ?excuse poor work. Nevertheless, as! he was generous himself, it may he hoped that his friends are generous also, and that they will read tlu "linea between tho lines," and so iul r<ll that Which is lacking in this at tempt. The most of those who will read ! these words knew him by thought, if I not by sight. He hud a wide ac rqualntance, aa the sorrow at his I death was made known. It seems ; that those who did know him nearly were apt to speak of him to others. There are people whom you meet and forget instantly, who speak and no one listens-people with the minus sign-nothing to give. If you re member them at all it is that they borrowed something. Julius Boggs had life and that abundantly' threw off Hgt and heat like a sun. Men remembered thal they had met him and his saying did .aol pass away. ."His presence MB a festival." He tiffed^ ono ?w,a low mood on tp rlsydg grounjk ^V''" Men caught pour&? abd, good cheer Lh>. contact' .witt aim - ^ \A ; / J I Vftt.tV reconciled ?lfrJ tV being hu man. ? Ja the sun, O, Frenchman,! lest to visit re, said j the Chief oTTJHNLllinois to Pere Mar quette. Our friend had this ' power to 1 brighten a dull landscape ; to lot the light* IU arid chase away the shadows. Nature made h'm a welcome guest In homes add' hearts of men. y&OKgs! ^t-rr on? orthose who, when they die,' make the world seem thinly inhabited. He. waa'not'as other men lara. The niajorlty of all who have lived to middle age have declared thatl that there waa no use In it-that life was a barren errand, no gain In doing I ic, except weariness. Perhaps they all started with a ; purpose to pick berries for market, but before noon they locked in the | pail, and had so fow, that-they con cluded that they might as 'WeTT'cat" them, and did it, and ?o'have' gone" gone home ashamed. ;>'. Thoreau says . that "the boy, .gath ere materials for a temple, and thei\| \ when be is thirsty, concludes.; to build woodshed." We are, most of US, acquainted, with that boy. We'shall see him putting his head on his head? ind thinking of his childish purpose, the 'behutjj .Of ithala**!'-the Sanity pt it.- Then ihevceaeee to grow"and be gins to wither and to shrink. But there "Was jone, among -us -, who had i not made titi* failure and fall. Our friend kept bia *tart" "Blessed are; they, that ^sar' the joyful sovmd/, Bogga had an ear for it, detected/ it, whore ? we hear oUly; the" .doleful,, Haw;, quick, waa .hut- r?co^t?on., Ju>w .prompt Jd* praise ot any^lfeg'ajood in the work (.Of* his fellows. ; The childhood of Bogge was In tb* I days or the uack log, the forestlck ind the tallow candle. Days of the ?tage drivpr and Walter Seoii's noy [OOOOOOOOOOOOf NEAL'S CEEKK SLYVS. fc 0 el [9 O O O; O O O O O 9 o Bl ton, September 28.-Pastor Htott] administered tho ordinance of bap tism Sunday at thu place to 16 young | converts. Th?* large throng was at tentive and the service, waa very, Im pressive* ,. The ,'pastpr> -sermon Waa appropriate and was very much .en joyed. He* spoke on Christian Ser vice;, and> all' who de. as*, be directed, win rejoice hath*aera.aaA/hereafter',., Many: of the congregation, were com pelled to remain outside the ?house during service. . B????d* those being baptised Sunday four others were re ceived into i the church/ by letter mak ing a total of 17. . But. thia ts only & partial resvU cr ? our meeting:, and ! believe Its meta Ibera will live sorer to Ood hence forth. Mr. W. C. Burris?, who was se-! Iriousiy ill ?asl week, hr' much improv ed* HHt many friends will rejoice | lat this news. A cow belonging to Mr. Eugene ! Kay broke one of ber limbs last .reek, but as a result of careful attention, lt ls believed that abe will /soon bel well. Miss Addle Holland and her broth |ar> Willie, , are attending the high | 1 achool. Those operating the ginnery at thli j ar? having smooth sailing with j \ S CHURCH MTTSTCILW?. AN?toLSON!. S C H c Hi m II rev hui ?H now In progresu. KS TRIBUTE WS E. BOGGS -i-i j els. T?tere war little to read, and tli at lit Ho wai good. I think some thing of] the charm of his manner, was duel to those early associations. He was old fashioned. The memory of old stories read in the firelight was very bright in him, and gave his con verratloq the glow of. the early times, when we did hot nave to im I port a man from Switzerland in or Ider to find a niau who had no time Ito makeiimoney. I do not know that I can prove to a stranger and an unbeliever that Hoggs waa a mau of genius. I be lieve that all who knew kim felt tba! he was. The work that some mon are permitted to do hi greater than they are. Wo trace the works of Shakespeare back to the poor player, and cannot so account for them. And again, some men are greater than their work; what they do is only a sign. Boffgs was never brought into action. ?T?tere were reserves In him tbat were never called to the front. He died. Reaving a mass of unfinished business.-. Ho thought lite, was a long : unmier Hay . It Was nhl for .him even a .short winter day. Who thought ?hat. he would be called at noon? He w?s? thoroughly human, and so lifad faults. But if the Haws had all *een ground out and gronnd down, he) would -still'bc pf rare size. His fault} ?wero or the kind that nv.ke us sorry ,and not angry. With great gifts comb great danger*.'! ' v? Julius Bogga is not What-he ought have been; but whew you ' told hun so, it wa$ no newe to him Y it was c thought familiar en ought. J 'Some men need a logical argument to convince them that they -axa sinners. They are so prudent and sly in concealing their sin (from others that tthey forget where it Ila themselves. Hoggs Was not ot that kindred; never numbered ?ai discouraged his conscience by disputing lu voice, but confessed judgment. Nature . forbids some , people to be generous ip Judgment; but there ls always a chance for an attempt to be just. There's a choice in sinners. We would rather have the prodigal ?on for a neighbor than his older bro ther. Aad 1 Judge from the parable that we agree with Christ. Let us if';sk at one another at our best and believe that so we shall appear at our last. .( The face of Julius Bogga ls before [me as I ..rite. None more kindly un der the sun. Children believed in it, and old men? You can't deceive in stinct and erper lenee both. You can't wear a < good face sixty years without a good heart. v. i The li pep are craven from within. There la.no beauty.at that.ago, except oka1 beauty of thought. The fashion thatMt'fWenrg .reveals the .tagt* ot the spiribJ -1 , ,'?afciff aa1$d; >hai,aball.?J read to you.' he aii^wered. '.'something from Paul. I . Want 'something that ha* meat in It J** And, .^q'Vas read to him tba* wonderful 'Hff.^enth chapter of Paul'a letter'td th? C?^ni^ians. With these word's'for hts company-rod; and staff to comfort him on hhs Journey through the! valley or the1 shadow of death-wa have, in -sorrow and hope, bidden "Adieu" and " .'lil We Meet ?Again." il Ml Illili I ll i I lil! ll the machinery, and their business in creased considerably tho past week. These are .busy days on tne farm, and hired labor Is Ju ?. eut ?emand in this section. In addition to cotton farming many ot our. farmers are now making syrup and\gathering hay. Mr. md M rv. Eugene Mitchel ot j Westminster spent the week-endrwHh | relatives here. ' The follqwlng dined 'with Rev. and Mrs. J. T., Mann Sunday: .Rev. p. W. Hiott dr fcasley; Mrs. J, ti. Kay ?and children, Vernon ahd Blanche, o? Midway, and Mrs. J. P. Dunlap and sons. Fred land Whitfield. Mr. J. B. McCoy1 has just Install |ed a ginjabd grist mill at hts home. Mr. Watter ?rftte > ot Birmingham, Ala,-, ls here with his parents. Miss jpasl*' King, and her -? brother. David, ,of Trinity abre ~ waok-?nd I Of Mr. and Mrs.. ?. B. Me ir. Haskell Kay mid family ** Bel-' ?ton spent Sunday hero with rela tive*. Mr. Clifton Erskine has accepted a position in Mr. A. V. Shirley's auto shop at Belton. We wish hun success. " As has been announced through the papers, next Sunday ts the day set apart by President Wilson aa a day of special prayer In all our charchas .(or peace throughout thc world. It jwiH bp well for tho thur, chea that do not hare preaching setv ; rice on- that day to heed the request il* their ItoieW ?*ftt??d*v1 IX.-October and June hy O. HENRY GceyrWd. 4911, ly DocUedty. Pa* ? Ce. THH captain gm?ed gloomily at bis sword that hung upon the I w&li. In tba closet near by was stored bis faded uniform, stained and worn by weather and serv ice. What a long, long time lt seemed since those old days of war's alarms! And now, veteran that he waa of his country's strenuous times, he had been reduced to abject sun jnder by a wo man's soft eyes and smiling Ups. As he ? it in his quiet room he held in his ua?d the letter he bsd just received from her-the letter that bad caused him to wear that look of gloom. Ile reread the fatal paragraph that had destroyed his hope. . "in declining the honor you -nave done me in asking me to be your wife, I feel that I ought to speak frankly. The reason I have for so doing 1B the great difference between onr ages. I like you very, very much, but I am sure that our marriage Would not be a. happy one. I am sorry to bave to re fer to this, but I believe that you wlU, appreciate my honesty In giving you the true reason." The captain sighed and leaned bis head upon bl? hand. Yes, there were many years between their ages. Bot he wo-j strong and rugged, be bod po sition and wealth. Would not his love. "Dent Ules K so hard, pisase," sha said gently. bis tender care and the advantages be could bestow upon ber make ber forget the question of age? Besides, he was almost sure that she cared for bim. The captain was a man of prompt action. In the field he bad been dis.-, tingulshed for bbl decisiveness and en ergy. Ho would see her and plead his cause again in person. Age! Want was lt to como between him nnd.the ope he loved? . pl . '??->?? In two,hours he stood ready.''In light marching order, for bis grastest but tle. He took: the train for the old southern town in Tennessee \vbere jibe) UvadV ? Theodora Deming was on the steps of tba handsome, porticoed old man sion enjoying the summer twilight when the captain, entered the.gate and came np*the graveled walk. She met him with a smile that wss free from embarrassment As tue captain stood on the step below ber the difference in their ages did not appear so great He waa tall and straight and dear eyed and browned; abe waa in tba bloom of lovely -womanhood. *T wasn't expecting you," said The odora, "but now, that you've come you may ale on tba step. Didnt you get my letter?" "7. did," said the captain, "and that's why I came. I say, now. Theo, recon sider your answer, won't wu?" Theodora smUed sort' upon. him. Ho carried his yeats wit. She was really fond of his atr?igtb, his whole some looks, b|P uiui.iinesa Perhaps If"- 9 "No, no." she said, shaking har head poslttvalys "lt's out of the question. X UKO you a whole !pt. bot marrying won't do. My a?e and yours are-but don't make me say lt again-I told yon in my letter." Tho captain flushed a little through the bronze on bia face. He vms si lent for awhile, gazing sadly into the twilight Beyond a lina of woods that he could see was a field where th? boys In blue bad once bivouacked oa their march toward tho sea. How long ago It seemed nowt Truly, fate and Fa ther Timo bad tricked blas sorely, j oct a few years interposed between hlmsei%nd faspptnees. Theodora's hand crept down and rested tn the clnrp of bis firm brown one. She felt ot least that ?wattman* that la akin tb love. "Don't take lt ?o hurd, please," abe ?aid gently. "It's all for the best I've reasoned lt out very wisely all by my self. Some day you'll be glad I didn't marry you. lt would be very nice and lovely for awhile-but Just think! In on'!y a few short years v\hat d'Tcrent tastes we would have! One of us would want to *it by thc fireside and read, and maybe nurse neuralgia or rheuma tism of evenings, while thc other would be crazy for balls and theaters and late suppers. Ko, my dear friend. While lt Isn't exactly January aud May. It's a clear case of October and pretty early in June ' "I'd always do what you wanted me to do. Theo. If you wanted to" "No. you wouldn't. You think now that you would, but you wouldn't Please don't ask me any more." The captain had lost bis battle. But he was a gallant warrior, and when ho rose to make his final adieu his mouth was grimly set and his shoulders were squared. Ho took the train for thc north that night On the next evening be was back In his room, where his sword was hanging against the wall. Ho was' dressing for dinner, tying his white t?o1 Into a very careful bow. And at the same time bo was indulging in a pen sive soliloquy. " 'Pon my honor, I believe Theo was right niter all. Nobody can deny that she's a peach, but she must be twenty eight at the very kindest calculation." j For you see, the captain was ouly nineteen, and his sword had never been < drnwn except on the parado ground at Chattanooga, which was as near as he ever got to the Spanish-American' war. HOW 0. HENRY CHOSE HIS FAMOUS PEN NAME. Speaking of his start as sn author, O. Henry (Sydney Potter) said to a .reporter: "I went to New Orleans and took up literary work In earnest I .pent stories to newspapers, weeklies and magazines all over the country. i Rejections? Lordy, I should say X did have rejections, but I never took them to heart I just stuck new stamps on the stories and sent them out agata And In their journeying to and fro all the stories finally landed In offices where they found a welcome. .1 can say that I never wrote anything that sooner or later, hasn't been accepted. : "Aa for rejections, take The Eman cipation of Billy,' aa good a story as I ever wrote It was rejected no lers , ?ian i thirteen times. But, like all the . rasfc't* finally landed. "It wan during these New Orleans days tbat I adopted my pen name of O. Henry. I said to a friend: Tm going to send out some stuff, I don't know If lt amounts tp -mu?h- so 1 want to . get a literary alias. Help me pick, out , a good one.' Ho suggested ;that we get , a newspaper and pick a name from tlie first list of notables that'we found iii it In the society columns we found tba account of a fashionable ball. 'Hers we haye otu* notables,' sold he.1 We : looked down the list, and my eye light' .^d Oti.da narpa Henry. T??sf?i -io for ,a' ljisjt'/n^me-' said'I. 'Now for a first I jin m e. , I. went something short Hone I of your three syllable names for ma' 'Why don't you use a plain initial let tar, then y aaked my friend. 'Good,' said L 'O is about the easiest letter written, and O lt la' "A newspaper once wrote and asked ni? what the O stands for. 1 replied. .O stands for Olivier, the French for 'baver.' And several of my stories ac cordingly appeared lu that paper un der tho name Olivier Henry. ,c ' ?fter drifting about the country I fi?ally came io New York. Oilman Hall, then tbe editor of Ainslee's Mag azine,, wrote mo saying that if I would ncou)o .ip.New York be would agree to tfaJkftJfl.SOO worth, ol' stories annually at the rate of $100 a story. This was ipt a tima when my name bad no mar ket value. 1 ' ' ? "Yes; albee 1 ou mc to New York my I prices have. gon?> up. I-now get 8750 for a story that 1 would have been . giatf to ?get fi.* for in my Pittsburgh 'V.*TWi)bo'rs ore Just like other mer ' chaut*-they -want to boy at lowest prices. A few years ago I was selling stories to n certain magazine at tba rate of 6 cents a word. 1 thought there wa? a chance that I might get more, so J boldly asked the editor for 10 cents a word. 'All right' said be: Til pay It' He was lust walting- to be aaked." "t gee a story thoroughly in mind be fore I sit down at my writing table. Tiitn I wr?br lt out quickly und with out revising lt mell lt to the editor. In thut way I am able to judge my stories as the public judges them. I've seen ?tories In print that I wouldn't recog nize as my own. "Yea. I get drf apella Sometimes I can't t pm, out a thing for three mon tbs. When one of these spells comes on I 1 quit trylnjg to work sud go out and see something of life. You cs n't writs a story that's got any life in it by sitting at a writing thblo and thinking. You've got to get out Into the street}, into the crowds, talk with people and feel the .rush and throb of real life-that/a the stimulant for a story writer. "When I first came to New York ! spent ? greet deal of time knocking1 around tba streets. 'I did things then thst I wouldn't think of doing now. I used to walk at all hours of tba day and night along the river fronts, through Hell's Kitchen, down the Bow ery, dropping into all manner of places and talking with any one who would hold converse with me. I here ?eyer met any one yet from whom I could not learn something. He's had ooma exporten ces that I have not baal: be see* the world from hi* own viewpoint But whatever ?ls? you do don't flesh a pencil sad notebook. Bl thor be wilt ?but up or he will become a Hall Cain*." DAIRY WISDOM. ?9 Tho pare h red cow carriss a great possibility of reproduction of the quettUt* or Ly- ani-esiors. In her the power of heredity pre dominates because she ls bred for that particular line. livery one who ls interested in dairying ls not necessarily a dairyman. The folly of keeping low pro ducing cows should be so ap? parent thnt such cows would bo shunned ns th lc ve? and robbers., - Tho way tp secure a good dalry herd |s to breed lt ?nd produce. lt on the form rather than to/de pcud upon purchases every SSSM son. j , , ...... Tl - rilo r.vii i1 ilr.ring ?Vwsy?J gd together, 'the 'silo, when rightly used, will help to make tho cows more profitable. O .i?y*M *9tVl ?fol WEED OUT LOAFERS ' FROM DAIRY HERD (Prepared by dairy division. Ignited gutes department of a:.i kulturc] The work of testing tho' dalry herd ls most interesting und produces many surprise*. .Many .of tho Ouest appear- u : <. lng cattle wlU be found to be.tbe.poor> . cst producers? while son? cl^the*aii^'"r^r~^ mais .thought to he se robs - will ' bo worthy of n placo lu tho <&ntrtrueted ? '^'b't herd. No time should- be lost th dis posing of thc unproductive cows. A market cop read Hy be hod for those-*~ In good condition, while the ..mpney.,^ ... received' ifpr their ?ale can be mon. t ' . wisely expended Iry purchasing a sfro ,? and two or more dams of a dalry ? breed. These new animals should not be purchased without first knowing their record of production. If the time, labor und expense of car ing for the poor cows In the dairy herd were utilized in the care of tho better animals the results would bb wonder ful and the profits manifold. Think of caring for half the number of cowa in your herd and getting twice ns much profit from their maintenance. " Ty cow should be given a tborong. test under the most favorable condition?, and, If then found wanting, tho sooner she 1? disposed cf thc better, rio cow , . should (he:condemned before testing, for the anima! that luck? quantity yielding may produce milk containing a high percentage of fat. Many cows that once were great pr.. dueers may now have passed their has-''. ~'H The Holstein cow ls crowing in favor wherever her qualities are , known. AS an economical producer of milk and butter abe ls tn the front rank. Indeed, the admirers . of tb? Holstein say she ts unequaled In her ?peelaity. The pure bred Holstein shown was bred and la owned by th? University of Nevada. In a, aoven uar test ah* gave 336.0 pounds of milk containing fourteen pounds of butter fat when but one year and eight months of age. ? . . I.I. I . '."Ull.^ vq vi fulness. ' Generally the milk flowt.ia* li?ia li creases until the animals are seven years old. Than tba yield re malos?, nh ~>oei.*l>*'lame nnUl the ^wtlfthtJgttVui ul ?ai when there U> e. decrease, Ort?iuuiily a cow ls, ?at tterja&rt^ between th?, ajes . > of,rix and ten years."j, ".,-,,...*, a^Win-. tua The winter season ls now near.- csa ? lt costs considerable mpreiftA.n^taln^d the hera then during tbaaaxpanay and' tnji fall months. The sooner the poor cowa . < can be disposed of tho better lt wlijl be . for the dairyman. Look upon the .pb? cow as a liability and not aa an asset, and the sooner she I? got rid of the better. Coat of Silos. Tbe initial cost of a silo Ia what stops a great many farmers when they gr* urged to consider the economy of the silage method of feeding ?hs corn crop. From |200 to $1,000 may be spent oh a silo, the stave si'^ to hold a hundred tons coming clos. - the smaller figure and the best types of monolithic Silos of trix ty feet heights costing the lar*** sum: Mt sitos can be built for Ids?' than this, the mam cost being chiefly labor, which the owner may contribute himself at some slack period. 1 Ration For a Dairy Bull. A Very good grain ration for a bull ls a mixture of equal parte by weight Of ground oats and bran, w^s Hoard's, Dairyman. If the droppings of tho animal seem somewhat dry, from a half to a pound of oilmen! may be fed dally. A bull weighing from l^SOC to 1300 pounds In service w?l require from she to eight pounds ot the grain mixture mentioned. In connection with this let (be animal have all the alfalfa desired. ? ? : ?? liq ?lil I fr- ;( jj ?:< When to Peed S ?Iago. Tba silage may be fed just as apon as the silo ls ailed. It is sot necessary to wait for lt to ripen or lo cure, hut if there te ss abundance of pastare you may walt ss < long as one of tba mort conven?esfc Ad Viwliy adaptable feeds that can be found any where.