University of South Carolina Libraries
ALL BROKEN DOWN. Ho Sleep?No Appptlt**?Just a Continual Barkache. Joseph McCauley. of 144 Sholto street, Chicago. Sachem of Tecuniseh * Lodge says: "Two years ago my im health was complotily broken down. My back ached and was so lame that at times v I was hardly able to > dress myself. I lost E^^BKISv ^ m* aPPpt'te aI1,i was unable to.sleep. There f&k seemed to be 110 relief , until I took Doan's Kidney I i ls: but four boxes of this remedy effected a complete and permanent cure. If suffering humanity knew the value of Doan's Kidney Tills they would use nothing else, as it is the only positive cure I know." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 ^ ts. Foster-MilburnCo.. Buffalo, X. Y. Parisian Information Bureau. An information bureau has recently been naugurated in connection with the University of Paris, and is considered an excellent innovation. The bureau will afford information on all j matter connected with higher educa- i tion iu Paris, whether in government I or private institutions. Those who. j In this country or elsewhere, are con- j tempting entering tee university, i and who have spent hours in trying to deriyt some tangible idea from calendars and class syllabuses will appre- ? ciate the useful purpose which would be served by a bure%u of this character. v FITS permanently cured. No fits ornfrvoufr- | ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great j NerveRestorer,*itrial bottleand treatise frea Dr. R. 3. kuxe.Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa, There are twenty-four crematories in the United States. I do not believe Tiso's Cure for Consump- , tionlKts anequal for coughs and colds.?Johx F.Botkb, Trinity Springs, Ind.. Feb. 15,1900. j Railroad salaries in Japan average about j $12.50 a month. Measuring Sunshine. Surebine is *o rare in England that the government takes great care to measure it. The official summing up ets eocQ-Hc? ciinchiro fihn\rs LSJ1 AJVU OO 4V^UiUd UUUW.....V that all districts in the British Isles, with one exception, fell short of the Average. The exception was England northwest, including Manchester, that curkxasly had an excess of fifty-seven sunny hours. In Scotland north, west and east the deficit was eighty-one houn, forty-eight hours and 133 hours. England northwest and east were short 107 hours and 139 hours, while in England s^uth and southwest the, deficit was sixty-eight hours and 115 hours. The Midlands were behind by ninety-eight hours. In Ireland north and south the shortage was eighty-one hours and 113 hours. Commonly the islands in the English Channel have a large share of sunshine, but last year thry went short by 1-35 sunny hours. Thr devil's guns cannot be trained on those who stand on the mount with God. ideot Milwaukee, Wis., Business Woman's Association, is another one c' the million women who have been restored to health by using Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. 14 0&A.R Mrs. I'lnku am : ?I was married for several years and no children blessed my home. The doctor said I had a complication of female troubles and I could not have any children unless I could be cured. He tried to cure me, but after experimenting1 for several months, my husband became disgusted, and one night when we noticed the testimonial of a woman who had \ been cured of similar trouble through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vejjetabic Compound, lie went out and bought a bottle for me. I used your medicine for three and one-half months, improving steadily in health, and in twenty two months a child came. I cannot fully express the joy and thankfulness that is in my heart. Our home is a different place now. as we have something to liye for, and -11 /in. f <-> I.vdia nu VWC VlCUlb *o vtuv VV ?? E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Yours very sincerely, Mrs. L.C. Glover, 614 Grove St., Milwaukee. Wis." Vice President, Milwaukee I Business Woman's Association. ? $5000 forfeit if original of ubooe letter proving genuine mm cannot be produced. So. 42. HERE IT IS! Want to learn all about" a Horee? How to Pick A Out a Good One? Know^LJU*^ Imp cfections and so*^ V I Guard against Fraud? \ ) , Detect Disease and Bf- . /if""1 "1 \ ' feet a Cure when same f \ /if is possible? Tell the W %. 1 ' Age by the Teeth? What to can the u:.- 1 fervnt Parts of the Animal? How to 1 Shoe a Horse Properly? All this and j other Valuable information can be oltairiod by reading our 100-PAGE ILLUSTRATED HORSE BOOK, which we ;vih f forward, postpaid, on receipt of only ? c cents in stamps. v ROOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 I^onard St., N. Y. City. t Y? SOUTHERN / d? D>-(c * TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANT K Seed Wheat For Neat Year. The Progressive Farmer often has occasion to cull strong and valuable farming articles from Wallace's Farmer, and in its last issue we flml another editorial whi li we must pass on to our readers. Says Dr. Wallace: "If the farmer is to succeed he must keep a good lookout ahead. His p.ans necessarily take in one or more years' work. He must have a definite system of rotation, should know where he is to put wheat and corn the next year and the year after, and in what years / ..ri iin to-ld* should be down in grass. If lie is to improve liis crops h< must improve bis sew' from year to year. "Sowing wheat, whether for winter or spring, is a good ways off. bit it is not too early to call iiis attention ;o the method in which lie will secure the best seed. Whether lie is growing wiiitet wheat or sprint; wheat be Should, in our jv.dgim lit. seieet tile best acre. <>; live acres, according to his requirements. while ii is yet growing and ripening in the lields. and when it Is fully ripe cut and staek it. and put it in bis barn by itself. He should let it go through the sweat, and when the proper time comes thrash iv by itself, taking care that there is no mixture from previous thrashings of any kind of either inferior seed or foul seed. "Before seeding time comes he should provide himself with a good fanning mill, a grader if possible, and without regard to waste or expense, blow out and sift out all small, immature, light weight or damaged seed. He should next provide himself, If the fanning mill is not provided with them, with some screens that will allow all !,*? core taciirncl mnl nluniUOSt rAvcpw iuv ? vtj ?M ?...... k' ? ?, grains to pass through them. and these alone should be used for sowing his seed for the crop of next year. If time does not permit him to make this care-1 ful selection, this final sifting, for the whole of his seeding, let him carefully j sift out enough of the larger seeds ! to sow a part of the field from which ; he intends to take his seed for the I crop two years hence. Let him put this on his best land and give it the most thorough culture. If any of our readers will pursue this policy for five years, they will not complain of seed wheat running out. "Why do we suggest this method? first, because the largest grains usually grow on the largest and most vigorous stalks or stools. They have a habit of growing large, and this habit, like all other inherited tendencies, is exceedingly valuable to the man who wishes to grow a large crop. Secondly, the larger amount of starch and gluten stored in the grain as food for the germ after it has begun to grow will push it forward rapidly, giving it a vigorous start and enabling it to I withstand climatic and oilier influ- j enees that would tend to weaken the plant. A great deal depends on the plant getting a good start and growing off vigorously from the very beginning of its existence. "There are among our readers many retired farmers and those past middle ago with more or less leisure time on their bands. It will pay these men to follow a method involving considerably more labor than the one we have suggested, but which will produce the very best results; namely, spend some time in their wheat fields when the grain is about ripe and select by hand the largest and best tilled and most perfect heads, enough of them to produce a peck of seed. Plant this by itself, and note results. By following this up for a few years a variety of seed can he procured vastly superior to the seed which they have been sowing, in fact, almost a new variety. It is possible in this way to greatly improve the type and quality of any sort of wheat or other grain, and develop what is really an improved type, much superior to the stock with which they began. This has been done many times a-nd can be done by any good farmer who knows a good head of wheat growing on a good, vigorous stalk, when be sees it."' What It Will Tout. It may be that some of our readers, who have not yet grown a crop of lri.Mi potatoes, are considering the matter of putting in such a crop next winter IT i.i 1 liov will nrnhnblv liinl some interesting in formation in the ! following estimates from the Hustings j rarmer and Trucker: l!y request the following estimate of pluming Irish potatoes based on having everything done as published. t)ne of the sirsi things that a prospective settler would naturally want to lind out. before locating in Hustings or any other locality, where he proposed to gain a livelihood by cultivating the in?il. would be the character of the products grown, and the cost of their cultivation. As Irish potatoes is the main money j crop t'iv.vn here, although many other Minor Events. The autcmobilists' own book la crthcoming. It is entitled, "The Compete Mortorist," and has been pre)ared by A. B. Fiison, one of the most nthusiastic and accomplished young Irivers of puff-snorters in England, tudyard Kipling has contributed one hapter, and there is another from the >en of C. N. Williamson, part author >f that remarkably successful automo>ile romance, "The Lightning Conducor." ?"t 'ARM : /IOTES ?)< ?> ER. STOCKMAN AND TRUCK GROWER. f crops arc grown with profit, the cost of planting, caring and harvesting this crop is of the greatest interest. Mr. W. II. Krwin. one of the pioneer potato growers, and who has successfully planted potatoes here for fourteen years, gives the following estimate of putting in an average crop of ]>otntoes in the spring on one acre of ground: Seed, at <!'. per barrel ?12.o0 I Fertilizer 25.00 Labor .">.00 Fifty barrels, at twenty-five cents .. 12.."0 Ham sting and delivery to the depot, twenty cents per barrel 10.00 StL'.OO : : ? i j The average price received hy grow1 ers rjiitju'i's from s."? 10 .<4 per barrel for ' No. 1 potatoes. and from to *"? per ' barrel for No. ? potatoes. 1 The range of production is from i j thirty to seventy-live lv.rrels. although j j in many instances siiil bettor results { | have been obtained. <'.rowers geiterally. however. prepare to care for rifty j barrels to the acre. Mr. Envoi's crop I last year, which was an "off year." | averaged him fifty barrels to the acre J I in a crop of sonic sixty acres. Mr. Erwin states, however, that it is not quite fair to charge oj> the entire cost of tho fertilizer to the potato I crop, as the mound without further fertilizer produces a generous second crop of sweet potatoes, crab mass hay, cow peas. corn, velvet beans, or other crops that can be matured and taken, out in time to allow planting the same ground in tho spring. it is of interest to know that Mr. Erwin lias olanted Irish potatoes sue cessfully on the same ground for thirj teen consecutive years, besides occni sionall.v putting in a fall crop of potatoes on the s_~no soil, and there appears to be no diminution in the yield. How to Get tho Model C.iw. Query: How are you to get this cow? In order to get her in perfection, you must go back to several generations of grandmothers. For if they 1 have not a record for making butter and superior milking qualities, even , a good mother and sire will not always j redeem them. A line of great perform- ' ing grandmothers is the true secret of | breeding. You may also Lave the best I mother in the world, and unless bred j to a dairy she yoa may get a much j poorer cow than herself; hence the i truism, "The sire's seventy per cent, j of the herd," and by a dairy sire I [ mean one with those long lines of 1 grandmothers on ooth sides; all must i be record cows on both sides for sov- ! oral generations. The sites should ] have practically the same dairy points ' as the cows, his daughters follow him instead of the .lame, as usually with well developed rudimentary teats, and general feminine appearances, except the head and nock, should be more masculine. Remember one of the often quoted fallacies about the dairy cow is, "That the corn crib cross is the best cross for a cow." Many young breeders fall into this sad error, chiefly, I think, because when at fairs ( and other show places they see fat i count so much. This may meet with ! approval by beef feeders, but should ' never be allowed in judging a dairy \ co'v, for she very evidently cannot do ; both, turn her feed into beef and but-1 ter at the same time, and it usually costs as much to make a pound of beef as it does a pound of butter, and we all know which is wortu the most in the market. It is blood, i. e., proper breeding that tells r.t the milk pail and butter table. You can Increase your flow of milk by feed, but not the contents of butter fat. To do that vou liuiKt liiivr> the nrnner lino ef hree<lmo? to fix tfie butter fat; process of assimilation and evolution. Many a cow has been discarded because she would only give two gallons of milk per day, and a cow kept that gave four, yet the two gallon cow made the most butter. But what we want Is the four and 1 c-ight gallon cow, and then see by proper breeding she shows up four to five per cent, butter fat, then you will have a paying cow. The two gallon cow gives too little even if it is live I per cent, fat, for she will only make about three-quarters of a pound of butter. when the cow wiili a large flow ' often compensates if she has only < three per cent, butter fat. as her offal milk can be fed to the calf. pigs, fowls, etc.?I. C. Wade, Ilabrrsliam County, Ga. flood For Orchard*. Cultivation should cease in the orchard and bush fruit patches so as to j encourage ripening of the wood. Honor* For Tlii* tYotrau, i Madame Clare Traverse, a native of France, but for twenty years a resident of Denver, Col., where she has taught French and has had a great i influence over the French who live in ] the State, has just received the decoration of the Legion of Honor, conforms upon her by tbe French (lovcrnmeut. I Odds and Ends. The London County Council, according to the London News, in its official explanation of 22 Theobald's Road, W. C., as the birthplace of Dis- ' , raeli, makes the following statement, 1 which, though all right, reads a little ; queerly at first sight: "Benjamin was i born on December 21, 1804, and unless his mother was away from home at i the time, this event must have taken ] place at the house In question." j IIF. LOVES AXIMALS. The Tuakur of Kalamazoo Is a friend of the placid zebu. He pets tigers at random. Drives cheetahs in tandem, And rides into town on a gnu. SO LADYLIKE. 'Does your wife ever say anything she is sorry for':" "No; she's sorry if she thv-sn't ?ay anything."?Cleveland Leader. LITERALLY. ' What's the most recent intelli-1 jeneeV" "That of Jones; he has just,recov? j :>red from an attack of insanity."?Now ' Orleans Times-Democrat. ItRKEZY. Kctchum A. Omnmiii?"Weil you've Jucceoded in raising the wiiul. What | ire you going ti? do now':" Orville Ardup?"I'm going lo blow 1 myself.'*?Chicago Tribune. ALL HE WANTED. "I don't want poverty, an* I don't i ivaut riches," says Brother Dickey. "All I wants is pleuty political campaigns an* eanderdates runniii' de year roun*!"?Atlanta Constitution. IIIS SOURCE OF INSPIRATION, j "He writes the most realistic war j scenes in bis books." "Yes, poor fellow! His marriage lias ' helped him that much, at any rate!"?' New Orleans Times-Democrat. AN HISTORICAL INCIDENT. ILjnnibal had just fallen from his elephant. "I wish I had my touring car here," i he muttered. "I'm sick of these trunk lines."?Cleveland nam-jjeaier. WHAT THEY MEANT. 1 !:*>>* > i She (thinking of the uogs)?"Ugly lit-' tin things, aren't tlieyV" lie (alluding to the children)?"Oh, I wouldn't go as far as that. Rut per-' haps if you dressed them differ*! eutly "?Punch. NOT EXACTING. "Did I understand you to say that: your husband was anxious to have a political career?" "Xo, he ain't particular about the ca-_ reer. All he wants is an office."?Chi-' ? cago Record-Ilera 1 d. HER CALENDAR. "How long have you been here?": asked the girl who had just arrived at | the summer resort. "Oh, only three rings," replied the other girl, holding up her hand?Chicago Record-Herald. GOOD FOR SORE EYES. Professor (in medical college!?"Mr. Skate, which color irritates the opticnerve least?" Mr. Skate (usually broke)?"Green, sir?at least that of the long varietv."? I fltiAmnnf I C* r\v% miArnlu I.TS' {Initio ' Uiuviuuu 14 wauiivi uur .* ? i vw^v.* EXNTJ. Tired Tatters?"Dis pap?r tell* erbout a feller wot died from ennui.'' Weary Walker?"Wot's dat':" Tired Tatters?"It's de fec-lin' wot comes to a man when be iri;.-5 so lazy ilat Ioatiu's hard work.*' ? Chicago j News. BEFORE AND AFTER. "Love," said the wbiskerless youth, "renders one oblivious of time's flight." "Yes," rejoined the man with the absent hair, "but marriage and the arrival of the grocery bill on the first ot each month soon bring one back to earth again."?Chicago News. j PRETENSES. ' Batcheller?"I've conic to the conclusion that marriage is just a game of pretense." Askuui?"IIow do you mean?" Bnteheller?"Well, half the man-it d ( men I meet pretend they're perfectly happy and the other half pretend they're perfectly miserable."?Philadelphia Press. HER RIGHTS. "Onions are good for indigestion," said Mrs. Black. "But I have never told my husbanu." "Why don't you let him try them?" asked Mrs. Brown. "Because I'd rather have liim have indigestion, and I think a man's wife has some rights in the home."?Cincinnati Commercial-Tribune. The Umpire's Revenge. "No, Mr. Wilson," said the beautiful | girl, coldly, "I realize that you are ; good and ldnd and true and noble; | that your prospects are bright, and j that there would be no objection on j the part of my family. I think I might ' make you a good wife, and I know that ! you would be kind to me. I have a ; little money saved up, and with that j and your salary for the season we might live comfortably in a little cot- ' tage somewhere, where, after the ' games, you could come home and mow the lawn and work in the garden. It would be pleasant, I admit, but I can : never be yours?never, never!" "Look here, young lady." said the baseball umpire, calmly, "one more such bunch of back talk, and I'll fine you ten dollars for delaying the game." Then he ca'led "Time!" and went on. i Scotch Wisdom. The fountain of content must spring j np in the mind; and he who has so mup Kuowieage or unman nature as to seek happiness by changing anything hut iiis own disposition, will waste his life in fruitless efforts and multiply the griefs which he purposes to remove.?Scottish Reformer. ? *100 Reward. 5100. 'ihe readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at le:i9t one dreaded dis- ! ease t.iat seieneo has been able to eure in all ; itsstages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh ; Cure is the only positive core now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, recptin a constitutional r treatment. Hall's CatarrbCure is taken inter- 1 nally, a 'tingdirectly upon the Mood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy- j fngthe foundation of the disease, and giving . tho patient strength by building up the ten- ! stitntioa and assisting nature in doing its | work. The proprietor? have so much faith in ; its curative powers that they offer One Hun- I dred Dollars fornny case that it fails to cure, j Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Chf.set & Co.. Toledo, 0. , Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Ordered a Cab Far Out to Set, A Chicago traveler, looking for pastime, utilized the wireless telegraphy equipment of one of the ocean liners, i on his return trip to New York, to order, while he was yet 200 miles at sea, a coupe to meet him at the wharf at a certain hour. Around the World "I have used your Ftah Brand Slicker* for yean In the Hawaiian Islands J and found them the only article that suited. I am now In this country ' (Africa) and think a (Treat * deal of your coats." < (hams on srrkJCsnoa) The world-wide repute- ^wgurn? I tlon of Tower's Water- '\V"4-?0 ' proof Oiled Clothing * ' assures the buyer of i the positive worth of " " ail garments bearing /><UlI)i^ this ;!?? of the Pish. /?? DmM* A. J. TOWER CO. Boston, U. S. A. TOWER CAN/.DIA CO., LIMITED Toronto, C^iada att /S) BEST FOR' MHlhCl GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel trouble* blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowel*, fo pain* after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin ant regular!y you arc sick. Conatipatioa kills mort starts chronic ailments and long years of suiferi C ASCARET3 today, for you will never get we right, Take our advice, start with Caacarets money refunded. The genuine tablet stem pec booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Coropa f GENTLEMEN 90 years of sn food record, OUR SPECIALTY I Consultatl< Write or call. All DRS. LEATHERIVW Cor. Marietta and Foray! 0i: c l " S~*HICKEJVS Ef you cannot spend years and doll; buy the knowledge required by cents. You want them to pay tb them as a diversion. In order to handle I tning about them. To meet this want we of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 25c a man t\ ho put all his mind, and time, ar en raising?not as a pastime, but as a busii ty-tlve years' work, you can save many <'I; earn dollars lor you. me pomi is, u^.n. j l'oultry Yard as soon as it appears. an<1 teach you. It tells how to detect and cu. ? fattening: whifch Fowls to save for breed you should know on this subject to make ] live cents in s amps. LiQOAi. PUB'-.'tiHING "V. ====== bbbbbp^HJ^^k1si' i Dropsy! j RtfflovK all inrrintiK '? OlbM ( days: ellects a permanent caw , <1 in 70to 6o<iav-. t'ltilliratturat '5i* ^ givciifree. Nothii>KO.n bcfuireF HSI? Write Or. H.H.fi Wr> Son* 'L. Specialists. Boa B Atlanta. BR # ELIXIR. BABEKJ* The Quick And Sure Core for MALARIA. CHILLS. FEVER AND LA GRIPPE. It is powerful Ionic ud appsjiaei Will cure that tired feel in* Fains in Book Unto and Head. la a ourt-ly vegetable eotepei.Ml aa2 contains No Quinine or Araenle. rtejiiirH ty KI.OCZ?W*Kl A CO., Wsaklaftor.. P.O. ^ MONARCH STUMP PDM.n. Wiil pull rt-foot stump withnaH 'telp. Guaranteed to starxl a xt-alB 9BC3? "f *0.000 Its. CataUxrne ajv? dl?JjHPRS nunts address MONARCH * ^1" URCBBKR CO.,UB?Tr?..Ifc RIPANS T.\nr*.BS are Uaa bops ?Jyw iMD pcfe-i <ti. -ine ever node. A tak \ / mtHB dred miliio..#of them hare beenaoM I" r-single year. Constipation, hcurV >.w Ayl burn, rick in ads. bn, ulsajwiw. tad * '^HLjcliVP brratb.nore throutaud ererjr fflncw , r ^mr^ onsimr fr .in a disordered sktmuS WHr are rel'ereil or cured br RipnneTake uie*. one Will (reueir.i/y gwe n jet wlthta twenty minuter. 'ih-lKe >-cnt puckatviacTX'ugfc tor an ordLoirj occasion. Airilrjggirtt toll tbeui A uSncc?Mn Trtiiing BchooL ?oldey College is a Basinet* and Shorthand khool that make> a specialty at t raining ita itudents for "BUSINESS 9UCd*88." l?9cra*> * mtes with two flrma. Stuoenta Imst flaoe 'ia to New York. Write for catalogue. AddatMB joldey College, Box 'AuOO, Wilmington, ML loMorfBllndHoriM^l-SgSSKWa lore Ey*\ Barry Co., Iowa City, Ia,ktT? a mm mm So. 42. i Ifl SMir*IUllAtllUIFlULLr^Br Bi Bev. Cough Syren. Tastes 3oolU* Q TYI in time. Sold by droastetn ? PV Ijpbfel 1 rHE BOWELS 4 mm CANDY 4 . CATHARTIC ^ppe^KMcltis^Mousnrsa7t*dSeath^S^p ul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, J dirtiness. Whac ycur bowels don't mors ; people than all other diseases together. It I ing. No matter what ails you, start taking I 11 and stay well until you get your bowels today under absolute guarantee to cum or e I C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample a*4 ny. Chicago or N-w Yoi w. job JE "OTCUBE YCB? ccessfnl praocloe is a pretty Don't yon think? IS CURIN6 "TO STAY CURED". ' Peculiar to Men. nn and Kxsnilnstloa Free. correspondent* treated confidential. \N & BENTLEY, / :h Su.. Atlanta. Cs. * L, Douglas '3.50 SHOES :st uglaa makma and amUa mom umn'm hoea than any othan manufacturer nsrfd. Hie r-u.soh W. I . Douglas $3X0 shoes an- tha oilers in the world i? Uec-anse of their excellent siyla, iuj and superior wearing qualities. If i <x>old sliosr difference between the sdio- * made In my factory ana f o'her mil* suit the high-grade leathers used, yoa iimler-iand why W. I. Douglas Si-'O shoes cost 'nosB ke, why i'mv hold their shape, ft !?-tter, wsr lonmsk re of greatiniunsie value than any other fa.U) snoa - market r<>-1 ?v, and why the sties for the year eodidj . HOt, were $6,263,040.00. D-iiigiss tri?r*ntees their raltte by stamping bis naM) rice on tie- ta:otn. l/?>k for tt ?take no mbstitntS y shoe di-ilew everywhere. Fust Color EvciiU ucely. snperinr In Fit, Consfort and Wear. ire worn n.Lh.ig'it PJM ihoet for /he ><ut tve/re yryym iA.?ohit, / //n<f them tuprrior rear 'o n'hert ' >'<> lr>.00 to P OO." f. Mrft E. b p', i'o'i.. '"..v. In'. KTtnHe. Rirhnumd.VSn ,. Douglas uses Corona Colfskin In histUI re. Corona Colt is conceded to be the finsM itent I.eat her made. sit.sp run catai.oi.ck giviko yn.l rastltccTjow NOW TO ORt?:R BT XAtU W. L DOUGLAS, Brockton, Naok idm MONEY u you *?r? them hH**iiv.ni nuntri You cannot d0 thls inlcss you understand them and know iow to cator to their requirements, and ..... I^Qrnini hv oirnortunei*. so you must others. We offer this to you fortmly J6 % leir own w ij even If you merely keep 'owls judiciously, you must know some- ' ure selling n book giving the experience .) twenty?flve years. It was written bp id money to making a success of Chiclfness?md if you will profit by his twe?ilrk' annually, and make your Fowl* on must be sure to d-lect trouble in tt?c ow how to remedy it. This book WiBi disease; to feed for eggs and also far ing purposes; and everything. Indeed, It profitable. Sent postpaid for twenty*i IIOL'SE, 134 Leonard St., NewYdrkCHp : * a