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r jf AGRIGOLTDRAL1 ^CWl ??? eS f^ tl For a Swampy ri?ce in tlie Xard. a Many yards ami lawns have low. a wot or moist places, which it does not p pay to drain, and in which ordinary ti plants will not grow. Such persons e are to be envied, as they have a class a of flowers which are denied in their y best form to others. For the wet spot ti use the Japanese and German iris. t< Montbretias. Heicheria Sanguinea. a Caladiums and Flags. The soil can be a well enriched by working in well- ti rotted manure and leaf-mould. They can be protected over winter by put- p ting on brush first and covering it with straw. The Cabbage Plasla. This is a light green worm, having lighter stripes running the length of the body. It is about an inch long. a As the legs are at the ends it forms ^ a loop when it crawls. The moth is a dark gray, and as it ties at night and -v on cloudy days, it easily escapes detec- ^ tion. The larva feeds on a variety of plants, but is most injurious to the a cabbage, from its babit of tunneling h . through the heads. The natural ene- * ! mies are similar to those of the imported cabbage worm. They may be ? destroyed by kerosene emulsion or " pyrethrum. g Onion Mnjrpot*. l'i The adult is a two-winged fly which c lays its eggs on the bulbs. The larva d eats into the bulb or root. In about tl two weeks it grows to the length of c; * nearly half an inch -when it pupates k in the ground and comes forth to lay n eggs for the second brood. Various remedies have been suggested. A hen g and chickens is one. Sowing radishes b with the onions is another. The eggs 0 will be laid on the radisli roots a which may be pulled up later and dis- n I posed of in some way to kill the grubs. a Turpentine mixed with sand or saw- n dust and scattered along the row at e I the time of sowing the seed is highly a recommended. k v e, Points on Care of Lambs. If the lambs are to be docked this work should be done when they are ' about two weeks old, in order to aci complish it with the least amount of injury. At tins aire tne loss 01 oioou will be small and the lamb 'will nurse ; as well as usual. After they are fully recovered and are doing well on tbe mother's milk, begin to teach them to eat grain, and this app.'ies to lambs that are -iot docked, for if the lambs a,re to Le brought to maturity and con- ? g sequent profK' early they must get a good start. See also that they are put ' on good grass early, for if they have learned t. eat grain, though but a small quantity, the grr.ss will help r\ them properly to digest the grain. Remember. the quick grown lamb gives , % just that quality to the meat so much ! | desired by the consumer, so that every 1 | effort should be made to raise the lamb properly. ^ % Early Pe?s. 'h The first crop usually planted in the 11 < farm garden is one of the earlier var- *3 | ieties of peas. On account of the hardi- ~ ness of the nlant no amount of cold weather will do much injury after the j peas are once up. but when planted extremely early a part of the seed will rot in the ground, causing many gaps in the row. Early in the season usually there Is little nitrogen in the soil and the plants grow very slowly at first, i? A little nitrate of soda applied in the row at the timo of sowing will hurry the growth of peas. The market value ^ of the crop depends largely upon its earliness. The kinds which do not re| quire bushing are most popular for farm use. The late kinds often do not produce a crop until warm weather comes, and for that reason are often 'Q attacked by blight, which may be pre(w vented by spraying with bordeaux mixture same as for apple trees. ir Raiftinc Crops For Horo. The hogs of this country are being tl p ruined by continuous feeding on corn. ^ ^ In some sections to such an extent has ^ this been carried that the animals are ^ | being raised at considerable loss. Hog ^ raisers should understand that the anImals in their care need protein to ob- ^ ^ tain the best results, just as much as | cows need protein. If alfalfa or elov- j Ier cannot do grown 10 auvantage, try ( cowpeas. or. if your land is too good , for such a crop, and you want some- j thing for summer feeding which will t< supply the needed protein, try Canada f field peas, which can be readily grown ? on any good land. The best plan for raising this crop is to set tne peas at the rate of a peck an acre, plow them under two of three Inches and sow a mixture consisting of a peck of oats, a peck of barley and one-third of a bushel of wheat to the aore. This will make a good growth and furnish aa abundance of food containing protein for summer feeding. Season For Spraying. The bordeaux mixture is recognized as the most reliable of the mixtures ! used for spraying fruit trees and plants as well as vegetable plants, and all growers are now familiar with tiie formula. The causes of failure in spraying are generally due to lack of thoroughness somewhere in the work. The materials mav not be Dure, the mium Insed may be faulty, or the spraying may not be thoroughly done or not done at the ri^ht tluie. any one of ^ which faults makes the spraying more u or less ineffective. S( When poisons are to be used it is best to use them in connection with the t< bordeaux mixture. Those who are e.\- t, perienml in spraying have found that >s the three-eight inch hose is the best for r( use on trees, for it is not so hard to t< handle it either attached to a pole or j| from a ladder as the heavier hose. In v eprayinp see that the larger branches of the tree and the trunk as well are t covered thoroughly: in short, do the work thoroughly, leal' and branch, and it will be found that spraying pays. r Plant Fooiln l'o? Fruits. j t While it is. of course, recognized that i a the soil must contain the three plant Fh foods in more or less varying quanti- ] n ties, more or !e?o of one of the three g reust be applied yearly for the best re- t suits, Undoubtedly there is much fer- p tiJiaw ?>vnc.ontlv irert ,nid cenwal- \ ; because the grower does not undeiS tand the value of regular applications, j ut puts on great quantities one sea- j uu and none at all for several seasons hereafter. Nitrogen is one of the plant foods ; liat must be cautiously handled when I pplied to fruit growing soil, and there I re few soils in pood condition which equire more than 100 pounds of uirate of soda yearly. Potash, bowevr. .s greatly needed by most fruits nd may be applied in large quantities rithout much danger of injury to the ; ree or plant, although the better way : 3 use it. either the sulphate or muri- ! te. is in lots of 100 to 150 pounds an ere each and every year. Applied in liis way. fruit raised on fairly good i)il will give better results for less exense than by heavier applications at >nger intervals. Younir Turkeye. In raising young turkeys keep them j ry and guard against lice. The mites re not the only ones that attack them, ut the large head lice destroy many. ,iee pass from the mother to tho oung. When the young turkeys are atched dust both the young turkeys nd the hen with fresh insect powder nd rub a drop of olive oil on the eads. Do this ouce a week. Feed ie young turkeys every two hours; ley do not eat much, but eat often. !eep a small box of ground bone here they can get It, and some wa- \ >r in which the young turkeys cannot | et wet, as the least dampness will be [ ital. If they droop, look for lice, as early one-half of the young turkeys ie from that cause: search closely on ie skin of the heads and necks. Be ireful, as too much grease of any intl is injurious. The coops and runs lust also be cleaned. They must not j e fed until thirty-sis hours old; then ive curds and stale bread, the bread eing tirst dipped in fresh milk. Rolled ats may be kept in a box for them, nd finely-chopped hard boiled eggs lay also De given. .<\n egg, -jroKeu, | nd added to a gill of fresh warm j lilk, is excellent, but should be thick- | ned with bread. CLopped onions may | Iso be added to the mixture. The tur- ! eys may be given anything they will i at, but they are very dainty and will > ot accept all kinds of food. Cracked orn and wheat may be kept before liero. Until they "shoot the red," ,'hich will be when they are ten or svelve weeks old, they will be tender, ut after that time they will be hardy nd then may be allowed to forage or themselves. The good care at first 1 keeping them dry and free from lice, ill bring the loss down to a minimum, t may be tedious work, but nothing ays uetter tuan r. goou crop 01 iur- | cys. How to Make a Fence. Will Adams, in Home and Farm, ives the following as a good way to lake a fence: First 1 dig the boles l sand one rod apart, sixteen inches eep: put in post, which if fifty-eight iches long, in clay. I sharpen the I osts and drive them down, leaving j Drty-two inches out of the grouuil j his will take 320 posts to the mile. Have a gauge, as shown in picture, I :ade of three-quarter by three by for- j r-four inches long, with slats sawed lilI I' ? " I>I ej5 (a) gauge. . i one side to hold -.r\Yo in place while i is being stapled to post. Brace well ; ie first post and staple first wire to i then you will want another post race about eery 100 yards; put the ire up tight. Some prefer barbed ire altogether, but I think to use onie slick wire makes a better fence >r the same money.To make a fence that will keep cate, sheep and goats I use six strands | f No. 12 slick wire, and one strand of | arbed wire, putting thin, slick wire at j be bottom, and the barbed wire on jp. Tut the first wire six inches j om the ground; then next fine wire : ve inches apart, and one barbed wire J B Q 44?*? *' i??y K r "*?T{ 1 J I m ;? II fl I (I ?.. . . .) 1 j * i i ff ) \ j I > 1 UU ) :j 4,1 ' ' I ' SECTION OF FENCE. (a) Gauge, (t) Post, (c) Wire stay. iue inches from the top. Slick wire j inkt.s a fence forty inches high with | t'veu strands of wire, and requires ' bout 400 pounds of wire to the cjuar- j ;i\ or 1UOO pounds to the uiile, at a ust of about $."(? per mile for wire and ! laples. or about one-third the cost of ; wuly woven fence. Put in stays be- j iveen the post out of No. 20 wire, and j t is eounl to a post. Cut tnis small j l ire up into pieces forty inches long, ; nd forty pounds wiP put a stay beween every post for a mile. Xusaian Friers. A white Russian priest must be mar- j leu, uui iif Viliiiiui man v ii scvuuu | iuie. If bis wife dips Le nuist enter | monastery. Hence the Russians tell j jany stories of the extraordinary venns to which the priests resort in I narding the health of their wives. If | tie priest's consort sneezes a mild j anic ensues in the household.? j V'orld's Work. New York City.?No coat yet devised is more generally becoming than the Eton jacket. This one is eminently v simple at the same time that it is a "?' ^? ??"""" ^ ETON JACKET. smart and includes a narrow vest, a yoke that is extended to form trimming bands at the front and the full 0 sleeves that mark the season. The or- a iginal, from which the drawing was M made, is of old blue veiling with the T vest of ecru lace applied over cream a colored cloth and trimming of braid. P but almost countless combinations can be made. Fancy braids are greatly used for the little vests. Persian bandings are exceedingly effective, genu- " ine Oriental embroideries are hand- rj some and both braiding and embroidery or silk or cloth are in vogue. The jacket consists of fronts and ^ A Late Design b; back with the best, that is arranged b: under the front and neck edges, and si is fitted by means of shoulder and un- b; der-arm seams with the single dnrts o; that are concealed by the trimming, b Over the back and shoulders is applied b the yoke, that gives the long shoulder ii line, and the band extensions cerve to T outline the bust. The sleeves ar** wide b and full below the elbows and are fin- ti ished with flare cuffs. tl The quantity of material required r< for the medium size is four and one- si Quarter yards twenty-one inches wide, j si two ami one-eightli yards forty-four f< inches wide, or one and three-quarter yards fifty-two inches wide, with one b and one-half yards two inches wide ti for vest and eight and one-half yards t< of braid to trim as illustrated. a CJ The Flnt Bow. J There is no doubt about it; the flat f( bow is distinctly the thing this season. Bl That is, for millinery. Because of its g; flatness it cannot be made of ribbon wider than two inches. You simply f( make four loops, two long and two jS short, place the short ones on top of S( the others and bind the bow in the _ centre with a piece of ribbon, in which there must not be the slightest crease. Then it is a fitting decoration for the under-brim of the modish chapcau. The Lace Bolero. The all lace bolero comes in nicely for bodices that have seen a season's service. The addition of a few velvet ribbon bows about tin- neck, front and j sleeves make all tbe difference in tbe ' world in|the appearance of tLe waist, and often it can be used fur second best for another year after such treatment. Some Oilil Poclc?;ts. v Odd little pockets of plaid silk, lined with oiled silk, and Laving a Gap like an envelope to be buttoned, are sbown for traveling cases, with different compartments for tbe various toilet articles. Wasii-c'.oth cases are made of tbe saiuc materials. Some of these Lave the owner's monogram worked in tinsel cord. A P!:i!<Vtl Scarf. A plaidVd crepe scurf o. pale green, with a design of peacock's feathers on ? the two ends on natural colors, is at- y> tractive. Aiong the sides there is a ai border of the ejes of the peacock w feathers ol In Infinite Variety. i Cfl Of shirt waist materia] there is a m ariety to choose from. The flannels h,? re much the same in color and design th s last season's. Roman stripes, plaids, tripes and figures are seen. The eavy cotton materials are very pretty bis season. They are mostly white, th ut a few good colored ones are to be j di ad in small checks, stripes and plaids. , hi i 01 Latest Sateen Underskirts. ; gi The top of the flounce and the dust; Co utile of some of the latest sateen un- J st erskirts are boned to give the neces- tr ary flare now prescribed by fashion j gj rith the wider outside skirts, as it is ai laJmed tJbat the true Parisian swing st an only be given the instep length a ress skirt by the use of an underskirt, a: -*hich is stiffened in some way. , ta ? ! ej Elaborate Stocks. j,. Stocks are always tempting. It I eems as if the future season could not : p. nfrJA r\T*nonrtf ttllt it fllwflTC rfftAC i UlUV l~L? V | ' I co^li b* JL/ Ub 4 b 14< II My w ??WVW, tocks this season are most elaborate, ^ rith embroidered stole ends of the to ame material that tbe stock is made 1 f0 f. Smart stocks in black and white a mbroidery on a white background jj ,'ith round steel buttons are new. j 0f Luce Veils. j . Long lace veils are becoming drapeft m ver bats and tied on tbe side. These PC re forty-six inches long, and only as ^ *ide as the ordinary tulle or net face 0f eiJ. Dotted net veils of the same size > ro re edged witb lace, and are very ; retty. Misses' Blouse Eton. The blouse Eton remains the favor* ^ e coat for young girls in spite of its i m ivals and is very generally becoming i fr ) girlish figures. This one is eminent- | tt] simple and suits both the general j eJ rap and the suit, but is shown in ! cc / May Manton. j; I m ! M' Of w y s rcm-n seeded voile and matching the | - T-+- ^Pl,^ 1 *-*?-? n linn fHVPTl i nil. A lit: iuii? OUUUJUU ? I j* the extensions provides the droop ! f tlie season and the full sleeves are j (0 oth st-lish and comfortable over tbe ; j? ig ones of the fashionable blouse, be- j lg loose and ample below the tucks, i ^ be model is trimmed with Persian | p( anding. which is exceedingly effec- i ^ ve, but the finish can be one of many | ^ jlngs. When liked the fronts can be I ()? )lled open to form revers, as in the j A nail sketch, the facing b?ing plain ! ^>r lk, lace or other trimming as pre* j -rred. | te The blouse is made with fronts and | ^ ack and is elongated at the shoulders, j ^ je full sleeves being joined to the ex- j ^ ?nsions. The lower edge is gathered ; ud joined to the belt and the back i in be made to blouse slightly or be | |r rawn down smoothly as may be pre- j rred. The sleeves are tucked and j Litclied with corticelli silk and are j fithered into cuffs. g1 The quantity of material required >r the medium size (fourteen years) (0 : three and one-eighth yards twentyin/--iif,c widp one and one-half '' v^ ttr MISSES' BLOUSE ETON. irds forty-four iiio-es wide, or one I)f ul three-eighth yards fifty-two inches s'] ide, with two and one-quarter yards dc " bamliiijjr- - w i_: - fr1 To Promate Bay'' to "Bea Hudson Bay is the third largest in- ^1 osed marine area in the world, beg next in size to the Mediterranean ?a and the Caribbean Sea, and a bill 's ? now before the Ottawa Parliament t change its name to the Canadian wor ?a, "for good political and national asons, and to assert Canadian su emacy over the waters of the bay as i id the adjoining territory." Ameri- ?f * in whalers from New Bedford, Mass., e practically the only people who *n 1 ive frequented the bay for the last Pres lirty years. cov< Japanese Army Uniform. The Japanese army uniform is likfe A e Americans' before khaki and olive of 1 ab came into vogue. Generally it is tost ?avy, dark blue, with long, hooded ing rercoats. The infantry is distin- ploj Jished by red trouser stripes and the; at markings; the artillery has yellow or c ripes; the medical corps, green; the try ansport service, light blue; the enneers darker red than the infantry, H id the cavalry have red trousers of riped on the seam with green and aro short jacket trimmed with yellow. II arms of thi- service wear the same FI11 blue cap trimmed with yellow, :cept the imperial guard, -whose caps Dr*: iv>e red decorations. The imperial lard is a division drawn from every a irt of the empire and supposed to present the flower of the army. In e other divisions an effort is made One keep men from the same district f gether. A division is commanded by fee{ major-general (there are no briga- all < er-g^nerals). A division is composed ^P1 two brigades, each in command of senior colonel. A brigade consists T two regiments of infantry, a regi- ^ac( ent of cavalry, a battalion of engin- 21111 rs and a battalion of artillery. The m ggest salaried non-commissioned teet Beer is a "first class sergeant," who tion ceives $4.45 per month.?Tokio Cor- a spondence, in Detroit News. woi P Belt of Calm at Pacific End of Canal. At the eastern extremity of the canal Sam e difficulties which a sailing vessel ^ iay expect to encounter will arise drir om a superabundance of wind rather ? inn the lack of it. At the western :tremity, on the other hand, these mditions will be completely reversed. A Upon emerging from the canal into ftn ie Pacific Ocean a vessel will enter i extensive belt of 'calms and light Pi rs, which render navigation Dy sail ore tedious than in any other freicnted portion of the sea. The width . ! tliis region varies?at some points / ide, at others narrow. In that por- /3 on of the North Pacific included JS >tween the American coast and the ? eridian of 120 degrees west it 9 aches a maximum extending in lati- ? ide from a point one or two degrees teJS jrtl) of the equator to Cape San Lu- ^ is. the southern extremity of Lower nlifornia. In both approaching and T1 aving Panama, irrespective of the tr.d >rt from which or toward which Wa tund. a sailing vessel must of necesty navigate a greater or less width an(j ' the belt of calms, and in estimating . j, ir a given voyage the saving of time inv !fected by the use of the canal the j - - I tnn May arising from this cause must not i 1 neglected.?National Geographic j cau agazine. . a ft bo I taki A Soft Snap. ^ Ex-Senator Mason, of Illinois, accord- 3LJ g to the Troy Times, was seated with j party of friends in a Washington ! ^ ii> tie evening when the circle was i jjqj lined by the son of a big Western capi- j j9W list whose main aim in life seemed *** i be a continuous jubilee. He was | M ' that class inelegantly known as jutters in," and it was soon evident lat his presence was distasteful to J| le Senator. "My old man doesn't put W 3 a cent for me," said the young man, E splaying a, fat roll of greenbacks. J ['m on my own resources." "How do you manage it?" asked one j ' f the party. "You must have some rt of a 'snap.'" "This is my 'snap,'" said the gay i (erulthrift, impressively touching his J hid. 1 "And there's not a softer 'snap' in ie world," assented Senator Mason. a A Negro Minstrel's Biography. ^ In connection with the close of the ng reign of negro minstrelsy at St. imes' Hall, we may note that one ,rly minstrel, Ralph Keeler, wrote s autobiography. It originally ap>ared in the Atlantic Monthly, in | '(if), under the title of "Three Years I Negro Minstrel." He afterward ex- j I bi inded it into a volume of "Vagabond , I Pj dventures." Even then this form of | | st itertainment had apparently seen its i I ? ?st days, for Iveelor's opening sen- ! I m nee is: "Negro minstrels were, I | fLilijik. more highly esteemed at the 1 ? me of which I am about to write than ; icy are now." In 1S7.3 Keeler went | I Cuba as a special correspondent. V id there vanished without leaving a ace.?London Chronicle. A Courteous Cuntoin A door key hung outside a house in (j0 iveden is a sign the family are not at j . )me. The custom is more courteous I 1S callers than the American practice j allowing the visitor to "find out by I scertainiug" through futile bell ring- j t g or button punching, but it requires ! f greater confidence in your fellow d an, justifiable, perhaps, in Sweden. Si Cost of Hauling Freight. ' The cost of hauling a ton of freight mile on Great Britain's greatest rail- : how ay is 1.45 cents; on the Pennsylvania, fQr rty cents, and on the New York Cen. , - - ? kno aJ, ioriy-oiie terns, SlOO Reward. S100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to irn that there is at least one dreaded dis- Oi se that science has been able to cure in all " * stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh irt is the only positive cure now known to e medical fraternity. Catarrh being a conitutional disease, requires a constitutional ^ ?atment. Hail .? Catarrh Cure is taken inter- j I Jly, actiagdirectly upon the blood audmu- i i us surfaces of the system, thereby destroythe foundation of the disease, and giving ! L e patient strength by building up the con- ^ ?? itution aud insisting nature in doing its < irk. The proprietors have so much faith iu ( ^ il. fP. - L(?n I ji. i curative powers luiu nicy uut:r w u i_- jiuu- bi ed Dollars forany case that it fails to cure. ! d(1 for ii?t of testimonials. Address H F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold I y Druggists, 75c. Take .Hail's Family l'ills for constipation. Tl>e Teacher Interested. Hra "Miss Biggs is interested in you.. BL i." "How so?" "Why, to-day. after H ie bud told me seven times to sit M wn ar.d behave myself, she said she ! oiidered what sort of a father I had." ^|| - - ? Qneer Discovery In EztBTatlon, le foundation for the equestrian ue of Lafayette, at Paris, which t United States presented to France, I nished. When excavating for it in n Gardens of the Carrousel, the s kmen came upon some excellent t ding stone cut and faced. It is ? eved that this stone was intended 1 i foundation for a gigantic statue Capoleon III. should he return vie- ^ aus from the Franeo-Prusskin War. :he hurry of the flight of the Em- s ?s the stone was hidden away and t ?red up. s Objects to Sending Paupers. bishop whose diocese includes one :he slum districts: of London, proed at a charity organization meetagainst sending any of the "unerased" to Canada. He declared that j had neither brains nor tenacity haracter to contribute to any indusin which they might be engaged. : Is said that thirty-eight per cent, the habitual drunkards in London women. N. Y.?24 rS permanently cured. No fits or nervousi after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great yeRestorer,Atrial bottle and treatise free R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. .'s an awful handicap for a girl to have Ladle* Can Wear Shoe* size smaller after using Allen's Foote, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes r. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching , ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At Iruggists and shoe stores, 25c. Don't act any substitute. Trial package Fbee by 1. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.' here is more steel used in the manu:ure of pens than in all the sword and factories. rs.TYinslow's Soot hing Syrup for children hi ng, soften the gums, reduces inflamma, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c.abottlev t man knows less after marriage than a man does before. Iso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible licine for coughs and colds.?N. W. xel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. machine for condensing sea fog into iking water has been invented. REE to WOMEN k Large Trial Box and book oi inductions absolutely Free and Post* i, enough to prove the value ofc .v*Sn/>TTVvSI^* c er> pr> 11 lAiiiivo I Pcxtlne is in ponder ^l water ? con-pc bonous andfarsuperior&cSkjufd X&KKF ontlsepticc containing alcohol which irritctes Iw' v\B inflamed surfacce, and ? ?^rTMft have cc cieaneieg propyf $) eriics. The content? H ?,? J^H3 ?* e' ci3' ??x mckee B4 ^ JtSM'i more Actrsvptk: SoJu Wt^Q8:L 2oe?- further?hac more iHL j<( uses in the family acid ^ <3oe3inorego(x!tbor.a^y ilSs- antiseptic prepaiatioc you can buyhe formula of a nciec Boscor- ehysctaric I used with, great success as a Vannai jh, for leucorrhoa,, Peivic Catarrh,, Nasal arrh, Sore Throat Sore Eyes, Ccts, I al! soreness of mucus cremfcrarve, a local treatment ot fomaio ills Paxtine is aluable. Used as a Vaginal 'Wash we llonge the world to produce its equal for roughness. It is a revelation in cleansing , healing power; it kills all germs which se inflammation and discbarges. II leading druggists keep Paxtine; price, 50c. x; if yours does not, send to us for It. Don't j a substitute ? there is nothing like Paxtine. 'rite for the Free Box of Paxtine to-day. JAXT0N CO., ? Pope Blag., Boston, Mass. I PAY SPOT CASH FOR m"Y LAND WARRANTS aed to ?o'diwrs of any war. Write me at onceN'K H. KEQEK, Barth Block. Denver, Colo DHDCV NEW discovery; n?? WT ^31 I qolck relief and entm wrrvt Book ot Mtlmoolali ud 10 dnya' treatment ?. lit. B. a. OHKEM'B SORB. BoxB. Atlanta. Qa. H CURES WHERE All ELSE FAILS. El7 | jd Best Cou?h Syrup. Tastes Good. Use M 71 In time. Sold by drurel'M. I?? i I HI Ml I I I II I IMIIII j UARANTEED CUKE for ali bowel troubles ood, wind on the stomach, bloated 'Dowels, fo lins after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin anc gularly you are sick. Constipation kills more arts chronic ailments and long years of sufferi ASCARETS today, for you will never get wel ght Take our advice, start with Cascarets ;oney refunded. The genuine tablet stamped joklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Compa 11 ? mm I nil Ihickens Earn If You Know How to Handle Whether you raise Chickens for fi it intelligently and get the best res o profit by the experience of others, you need to know on the subject?a who wade his living : ^ _ * Poultry, and in that I to experiment and spent In I the best way to conduc tamps. I Smaji sum 0f 25 cents in i It tells you how to D r to Feed for Eggs, and also for Mar Breeding Purposes and indeed abo w on the subject to make a success. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 10K PUBLiWiNG 134 Leon a r rwi A Gallant Botterman. "When the Queen of England, dauglier of 1he King of Denmark, was the 'rincess of Wales, she attended one fternoon, a food show. At this food how ther? was a display of butter hat pleased the Princess of Wales Teatly. She praised the butter, and to ts exhibitor she said: "Denmark sends up the best butter, loesn't it?" ^ "No, your royal highness," he anwered, gallantly. "Denmark sends us he best princesses, but Devonshire *'?|| lends us the best butter." SORE FEET | enns I UU1UL HANDS) One Night "M Treatment | with M r\n\rmi UJ11 lull A Soak the feet or hands on retiring in a strong, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP, Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA OINTMENT, the great skin curfc and purest of 'r| emollients. Bandage lightly in old, sott cotton . or linen. For itching, burning, and scaling eczema, rashes, inflammation, and chafing, for redness, roughness, cracks, and fissures, with brittle, shapeless nails, this treatment is simply wonderful, frequently curing in one night. Complete Tluraor Cor*, conrirting of CtTTCTSA JtuolTi-nt, Me. (In form of ChocoUte Coated Pit:., iAc. per vial of 60), Ointment, iOc., Soap, 'lie. Depot!: London, 27 Ch.rterboute Sq.; Piri?, A Rue dc U P.i*; Bo?ton, 137 Columbui A?e. Potter Drug 6c Chem Corp., SoU Prop* of Send for " Huw tc. Cure Evtry Humor." FlPftIC I Ml JOBTN W.ITIOBBIS, SLBiaiUni Washington. D.C? ^Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Ex^mlH?!1 U.B. Fenolon Bureau* mt BOWELS ^ VH m mH flfi jy iMfl V^ H| CANDY k CATHARTIC ^u&r , appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad ul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, I dizziness. When your bowels don't move people than all other diseases together. _ It ng, No matter what ails you; ctart taking II and 3tay well until you get your bowels today under absolute guarantee to cure or I C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and ny, Chicago or New York. 50a i Money! [ *] i Them Properly. ^ J in or profit, you want to HUfer ults. The way to do this We offer a book telling Wy book written by a man I for 25 years in raising MpjH lime necessarily had much money to learn t the business?for the postage stamps. etect and Cure Disease, ket, which Fowls to Save I ut everything you must V