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Reset Hens. It won't hurt to reset hens when they are well cared for while sitting. Give all the whole corn and fresb w&ter they want, sharp grit, some greens, or a chance to eat grass, and a dry dust batb. Also keep the nest j clean, and the sitters rid of insects. ?The Farmer Should Know. Among .the many things a farmer should know is how to improve his soil so as to continue to produce paying crops. It is easy to let the farm run down. Continuous cropping with- I 5 out supplying me ieruiuy inat uus been removed is ruinous. The farmer needs to have knowledge of soil chemistry to determine what elements, and how much of each, the crops he grows are taking from the soil. Knowing this he knows what and how much fertilizing material he must supply to keep.his land in good condition.?Indiana Farmer. Why Hogs Root..-It is said by observers that a hog roots in the ground for alkali which it finds in the soil and which aids him in digestion. Nature helps him out in this way when man is foolish enough to neglect him. In the amount of carbonaceous food that we feed the hogs, there is too little phosphate for them. Anything that we throw to the hogs, whether lime, bones or oyster shells, seem to be greatly relished and seem to be a great help to them in digesting their other food and promoting their general health. Tankage is an excellent food to prevent the sows and pigs from having an appareat craving for uncommon foods like bones, old leather and also killing chickens. It also aids them in getting more nutriment out of their other food by keeplnsr thpm in a healthv condition A I good plan is to satisfy the craving for ^''something different" by planting a patch of artichokes, which will give them their fill before putting them ?n clover or grass.?Indiana Farmer. Milo a Good Crop. The campaign being conducted by the Colorado Agricultural College in an efTort to get milo generally grown as a feed crop on the plains of the State has called forth a great deal of inquiry concerning this crop. Milo belongs to the family of plants called sorghums. The sorghums are divided into two large groups?the sweet or saccharin sorghums and ibe nonsaccharin sorghums. These differ chiefly in sugar content and yield of seed. The sap of the saccharin sorghums is sweet and the nonsaccharin sorghums have no sugar in the sap. Milo belongs to the nonsaccharin group of sorghums. It resembles Kaffir very much in appearance and habits of growth, which is quite natI ural, considering it is a close relative of Kaffir. It is frequently called milo maize, but this name is incorrect, as it Is not a maize. Milo"grows erect, with thick, short' jointed stalks, attaining an average ueigui qi irom iour 10 seven ieei. Tne grain is borne in heads at the top of the stalks. These heads reach a considerable size and are relatively short and compact. Where the stand is thin, the heads get very large and turn downward by their own weight. With thicker stands the heads are smaller and stand erect.?Alvin Keysey, Colorado Agricultural College, Fort Collins. Cultivating Alfalfa. The foremost method of cultivating alfala is with the disk harrow, one of the most excellent farm implements ever invented. Alfalfa sown in the fall is almost invariably helped by disking the following spring, with the disks set quite straight, so as not to cut the crowns, but to split them. It is usually well to follow this disking with tooth harrow, with its teeth set straight. Occasionally in a dry summer the disk may be used to great advantage after the second, and possibly the third, cutting also. Many disk their alfafa fields every spring, and some after each cut ting, others doing so only once in two or three years, owing to weather conditions and the conditions of the alfalfa. In some instances the common barrow is used instead of a disk. The disking has several beneficial effects. It splits and spreads the crowns, causing more and consequently finer stems to sprtag up, affording hay of the most delightful quality, easily cured; it loosens the soil about the crowns, conserves moisture and destroys the weeds. There need be no fear of killing the plants if the disks and the [ harrow teeth are set straight and weighted or otherwise adjusted to give direct and steady forward movement. As an implement for the cultivation and invigoration of alfalfa | the disk harrow has no equal, and its frequent use by those who know it best is deemed quite indisncnsable.? ICobnrr's "The Book of Alfalfa." Lessons For the Colt. A young colt is a joy to a child's heart and an object of much interest interest in the beautiful and graceful in nature. A foal's very attractiveness, like that of some specially interesting children, endangers its future value and usefulness by being spoiled in the bringing up. A little effort at the right time, along with good judgment in handling and training a foal, will practically make the future process of breaking unnecessary. The most essential thing for the celt to learn early in life is that man is its complete, but well meaning, master. When the colt ir but a few days old have a strong and trusty man make friends with the foal, then carefully, but firmly hold him fast * . ' | by putting an arm around his neck near the shoulders, the other back ol and around his buttock. The youngster will then make the struggle of his life, but for no reason should he be allowed to get his liberty until he becomes passive and has learned that he is powerless. This lesson will never be forgotten and will convince him beyond a doubt of man's supremacy without inflicting any pain or injury. Another early lesson should be the haltering at about ten days or two weeks old, when the colt is normal in form and strength. Give the lesson if possible on the ground where there is a good soft sod to prevent slipping and bruising. Tie him to a solid post with rope enough to allow his head to nearly reach the ground. If the first lesson of holding by the arms has been well performed the haltering and fastening will not meet | much opposition. Some early stable lessons that ' * ' * ' "* 1_ X ? V/V snouia D6 laugm are ii&nnijg iuu iua< to promptly stand over from side to side of the stable, to promptly back to the length of the halter or step up to the manger at the word, to readily give his feet for cleaning. These lessons should all be given just a little at a time at the noon hour, on rainy days or any odd moments, so as not to exhaust or discourage the foal.?A Farmer, in the Indiana Farmer. I . A Model Colony House For Poultry. A good size to build a colony house ,is 7x12 ft., which it large enough to accommodate 30 to 40 fowls, yet is not too heavy to be drawn by a pair of horses when it is desired to move it to a new location. Below are given the details for constructing a colony house of this size, as recommended by the Oregon Experiment Station. The runners are made of 3x6 in. x 14 ft. rough material and act as side sills for the house. They should be beveled at the ends, in order to slide easily. The cross sills are 3x4 in. x 7 ft. They are set 2 in. into the runners and 12 in. from the ends, and fastened with % in. bolts. When the siding is put on vertically there is no studding used. The plates are 2x3 in. x 12 ft., halved at each end. To the plates are nailed the 1x12 in. x 5 ft. side boards, and these are battened with 1x3 in. stuff. The siding is nailed flush with the top of plate and laps 3 in. on runners. The roof is one-third pitch, or 2 ft. 4 in. at peak from top line of plates. There are five pairs of rafters, cut with a 1 in. plumb cut at plate. The roof boards are 1x3 in. material, set 3 in. apart. The roof is shingled and laid 5 in. to the weather. The front is covered with 1 in. mesh wire. The cornice is made of 1x8 in. boards and projects 5 in. outside of walls. The frieze board, 1x4 in., is nailed jip tight against the cornice. The door is 2 ft. x 6 ft. and made from 1x3 in. material. The nest platform is 2 ft. from the ground. It is nailed to a cleat on the side of the house . and braced from top of runner. The platform is 22 in. x 5 ft. The nests are made of 5-gallon oil cans, the top and part of front being cut out, 2 in. is left of front to hold in nest mate*~ * 5 - ??o + fnn txtV?ir>V\ rial, ana it small onip HI. Lwp acts as a brace. Over the nests is fitted a sloping top, which keeps the chickens from standing on nests, and The colony house recommended by th< Oregon Experiment Station is 7 x 12 ft in size and will accommodate thirty or forty fowls. helps to darken the nests. The dropping platform is made of 1x8 in. shiplap, is 2 ft. 6 in. from floor in front and 2 ft. 9 in. in rear. The slope permits the board to be cleaned more readily. For the same reason the boards should be put on from front to rear. The perches are made of 2s 3 in. material, set flat. They should also be level and about 12 in. from dropping board in front.. The roots are set 18 in. apart. Bill of Lumber Recyiired. Sills (runners): 2 pieces 3x6 in. 3 14 ft., rough. Cross pieces: 1 piece 3x4 in. x 14 ft. rough. Plates, rafters and roosts: 134 lineal ft., 2x3 in., sized. Siding: 13 pieces, 1x12 in. x 10 ft.; 4 pieces 1x12 in. x 14 ft. Cornice: 54 lineal ft., 1x8 in. Base: 52 lineal ft., 1x6 in. Ridge and nest platform: 20 lineal ft., 1x5 in. Frieze and corner boards: 80 lineal ft., 1x5 in. Battens and trimmings: 330 lineal ft., 1x3 in. Dropping board, nest cover: SO lineal ft., 1x8 in., ship-lap No. 2. Shingles: 1000. Cost of lumber: $14.50. Hardware. 5 pounds Sd. cut nails. 1 pound Sd., wire finish. 2 pounds 6d., wire finish. 1 pound IY4, in. brads. 3 pounds 2d. shingle nails. 18 ft. poultry netting, 1 in. mesh 2 ft. wide. 1 pair 4 in. T hinges. 1 lock. Cost of hardware, $1.60. Paint. 1 gallon creosote shingle stain. " gallon paint. Cost of paint, $2. Cost of all material at Corvallis, $18.?House and Garden. . j the new oceanograph { It was formally opened recen | research and allied sciences, It has b< himself a keen oceanographist, who b j pursuit of his hobby. The opening wai different European governments and , | Black and White. Commemorates First Blow Struck For Texan Freedom. The Gonzales monument, which was designed by Coppini, San Antonio, says The Houston Post, shows a giant figure of a Texas frontiersman, with rifle in hand, and is to be cast in bronze in New York. The pedestal will be a red granite block from Bur | net County, nine feet square. Tne | full height of this monument will be i seventeen feet. There will be a bas ^ " The Texas Frontiersman. relief bronze plat for the pedestal, showing a number of Gonzales citizens defending a small cannon, which Mexican troops are trying to capture, and showing a defiant placard, "Come and take it." This monument, under contract, must be delivered October I. The actual cost of the monument will be about $5000. Royal Autographs. A collection of imperial and royal i autographs on a pane of glass has been given by King Haakon 1.0 the museum at Copenhagen. The pane originally belonged to a window of the royal Danish express, and a great many years ago the Emperor Alexander III. engraved his name on it with his diamond ring. His example was followed by the present Czar, the late King Christian, King Edward, 1 Queen Alexandra, King Haakon, King George of Greece and Queen Victoria of Spain.?Tit-Bits. Tailor's Carelessness. The young woman sat plying the 1 needle. A coat of her husband was 1 in her lap. As the husband appeared 1 she said, fretfully: "It is too bad, the careless way the ' tailor put this button on. This is* the ' fifth time I've had to' put it on for 1 you."?Youth's Companion. "KENTUCKY'S II THIS VIEW WiOWS THE WESTER FRANK Women Back Unwritten Law. Basing their c.ppeal on the "application of the unwritten law to wom> en," the Era club at New Orleans, one of the leading women's organizations of Louisiana, has called upon all other organizations of women to pledge their support to secure the exoneration of Mamie McLoughlin, charged with murder. MissMcLough- i lin shot and killed Hu,?h Smith, a j wealthy saloon proprietor, when she met him, accompanied by another , young woman, on St. Charles avenue, , New Orleans, recently. i IMM? M?H EC MUSEUM AT MONACO. | ' ' - : > . '* " ^ . , .. ;. . ^ \v '? /" . 'V - ... . si M tly. Devoted to marine zoological! 3en erected by the Prince of Monaco, as traveled all over the world in the 3 attended by representatives from the I the principal scientific societies.? I Checker Jumping. In the upper row of the diagram four white and four black counters are placed alternately. It is possible, by moving these counters two at a time, to arrange them in four moves as they stand on the lower row. Can j you do this? Checkers are handy for i solving this puzzle on a paper ruled | as solution in diagram. . ?"^?t ' 5 - ? 5 o T g 9 10* |?|?|?|?1@H?H 11 JiiJi j + s a r 9 9'ra* njsMsmm>The counters are changed in four moves only, moving two at a time as follows: Move 2 and 3 to $and 10. Move 5 and 6 to 2 and 3. Move 8 and 9 to 5 and 6. Move 1 and 2 to 8 and 9. Veteran of Balaclava. There died atPortsmouth, England, recently troop Sergeant-Major Linfvrtln n-rvo nf tho few nnrvivnrR of the tamous charge of the light brigade at ' Balaclava. Lincoln, a fine old man, standing over six feet, was born at Cambridge ninety-five years ago, and served through the Crimean campaign. He led his troop in the famous charge. Hl9 horse was shot under him, but he captured a riderless one?that of Capta;!n Nolan, who brought the fatal order and was shot down early in the charge. Lincoln soon lost his second horse, which was shot under him, and, without a scratch, he fell sprawling among the : wounded and dying. Before he could get on his feet he was gripped by some Russians, frog-marched to Var and questioned about the EngltBh forces, but he refused to give any information, though threatened with the knout. _ Lincoln spent a year in Russia and used to declare that he had been in every Russian prison. Ha reached England through an exchange of prisoners.?Indianapolis News. - Ohio's Governor. IlipEraP^ - ^ "** ;< p JUDSON HARMON. MEW CAPITOL. Mmmhbshmmm : . ' - -,N FRONT OF THE BUILDING AT FORT. To Move $118,000,000. Twenty-five million dollars of gold, silver and greenbacks, as well as $93,000,000 in securities were moved in one day from the Continental Na . nonai Da.nK 10 ine commercial j\ational, Chicago. The transfer necessitated the use of scores of policemen and private guards. The two banks have been merged. i AufcomobileE in Manila, T There axe 400 automobiles in u?? La. Manila. iHflMHRMHMHI A Meat Dish of Rice. A meat dish of rice that is not so widely known as it should be is" prepared as follows: One cup of rice, well washed and drained, two cups of tomato, two sections of garlic, two large, hard onions, chopped fine, one green pepper, if procurable, if not use four pieces of canned, sweet peppers. Salt and pepper to taste. Hot water to cover thoroughly. Take three tablespoonfuls of lard or butter and heat in a pan. When smoking hot put in the garlic, onions and peppers, all of which 1 should be chopped fine. Add the rice and cook for five minutes, not allowing the mixture to brown. Ada tnen tne to- | matoes and seasoning. Stir and cook five minutes longer. Pour in hot water to cover and draw the pan to the side of the range just where it will simmer for half an hour or until the rice is well cooked.?Mary Starbuck", in the Boston Post Carried Mutton. A bottle of curry is a good thing to have in the kitchen, for a bit of cold meat not particularly palatable in itself may be made into an attractive ( dish for luncheon by a dressing of this sort. Curried mutton is particularly good, and mutton when cold is always rather a problem to the housewife. Slice several small onions and i fry in butter until they are golden brown, being careful not to let them burn. Take out the onions, and add to the butter some gravy or stock, two teaspoonfuls of curry powder and a tablespoonful of flour, -rubbed in to i make a smooth paste. Lastly stir in j a small can of tomatoes and the fried onions. Have ready some rice, which has been cooked In plenty of boiling salted water until tender and then drained in a colander. Bank the rice on the outer rim of -a hot dish, arrange the slices of meat in the centre and pour the curried mixture over Ihem.?New York Tribune. Salt to Cook Vegetables. If one portion of a vegetable ie cooked in pure water, the other hall in salted water, a decided difference is perceptible In the tenderness of the two. Those boiled in pure water are vastly Inferior, and, in many cases, will be almost tasteless. Salt brings out the delicate flavor of cauliflower, cabbage, potatoes, peas, beans and practically all vegetable. Onions cooked In water without salt can be rendered almost tasteless. As salt increases the temperature of boiling water above the average temperature of pure boiling water Its rnnkine- advantage is at once appar nt> Salt in cold wa^er Is used to drive Insects from vegetables growing above ground. They instantly release themselves from the leaves when they are plunged in salty water and can be rinsed off. Celery is improved by standing it in slightly salted water for one^half hour before it is served.?Indianap* oils News. | Tissue paper drawn across top of soup will take fat off. When a rug or carpet is scorched , by a cinder from the grate, paint the | spot with water color and camels- : hair brush in the same shades as the , rug. Very often all the onion flavor that Is necessary to make an appetfzing dish is to rub the dish with the cut onion before preparing the mixture, whether salad, sandwich, souffle, or whatever it may be. Sometimes it is difficult to make oreamed fish, crab or chicken that is later to be baked or fried take the seasoning. The taste of all condiments will be brought out if a suspicion of onion is added to the flavor ng. Take a tiny glass bottle and tfe a piece of silk over the mouth and leep It in the work basket. When a leedle is broken, push it into the bottle. It cannot get out, and it will ?ave many steps to find a safe place to dispose of the dangerous sharp pieces. i A housekeeper who dislikes dishwashing saves her empty cardboard poxes, lines them with paraffin paper ind bakes her c*kes in them. She I ?ays that the cakes do not burn and :ome out mucb nicer than when jaked in pans. For a burglar lock for doors take a stiff piece1 of wire, about five or six nches long, bend it to look like a hair pin. When the door is locked for the light put the wire over the knob, :hen insert both ends through the top )f the key. Ink, fruit or vegetable stains on ingers are inexcusable, as they can oe easily removed. The quickest ?radicator is a piece of pumice stone rept on the washstand. Wet before ;sing and rub steadily, but not vigarously. or the skin may suffer. There are many times in doing little repairing about the house that Master of Paris must be used. Rejnember when mixing it up not to ise water, but vinegar instead, as the vinegar makes the plastor harden oetter and keeps it from crumbling, is it frequently does when mixed with *rater. Never hang a waist or jacket by a oop at the neck. The proper thing )f course is to use a hanger which vill keep the garment in shape; but : n lieu of thia tbe next best thing is to )lace loops in the armholes and in langing stretch the garment from toe hook to another. MAPLliNi WILLY WAS TOO LIBERAL Oversupply of Alcoholic Stimulants Disturbed Schedule of Funeral Arrangements. Dean Ramsay's memoirs contain an anecdote of an old woman of Strathspey. Just' before her death she solemnly instructed her grandnephew: "Willy, I'm deein', and as ye'll hae the charge o' a' I have, mind now that as much whisky is to be used at my funeral as there was at my baptiam." Willy, having no record of the quantity consumed at the baptism, decided to give every mourner as much as he wished, with the result that the funeral procession, having to traverse ten miles to the churchyard on a short November day, arrived only at nightfall. Then it was discovered that the mourners, halting at' a wayside Inn, VioH reatoH tho r>nffln a nnrt left it there when they resumed their journey. The corpse was a day late in arriving at the grave. RAW ECZEMA ON HANDS "1 had eczema on my hands for ten years. I had three good doctors but none of them did any good. I then used one box of Cuticura Ointment and three botttes of Cuticura Resolvent and was completely cured. My hands were raw all over, inside and out, and the eczema was spreading all over my body and limbs. Before I had used one bottle, together with the Cuticura Ointment, my sores were nearly healed over, and by the time I had used the third bottle, I' was entirely well. To any one who , has any skin or blood disease I would honestly advise them to foOl with nothing else, but get Cuticura and get well. My hands have never given me the least bit of trouble up to now. . rf "My daughter's hands this summer became perfectly raw with evzema. She could get nothing that would do them any good until she tried Cutl^ C11? ClU'tU OlitJ UBCU tUUlUitt ACSU1VQUV and Cutlcura Ointment and In two weeks they were entirely cured. I have uaed Cutlcura for other members of my family and It always proved sue-: cessful. Mrs. M. E. Falin,. Speers Ferry, Va., Oct. 19, 1909." - ' It Was the Otner Way. "Mr. Jones," said the senior partnet In the wholesale dry goods house to the drummer who stood before him in the private office, "you have been tolth us for the paat ten years." "Yes, sir." "And you ought to know the rules of the house. On* of them Is that no man of ours stall take a sldo line." "But I hav? none, sir." "But you have lately got married." "Yes; but can you call that a aide line, Mr. Jones?" "Technically. It may not be." "You needn't fear that having a wife In going to bring me in off a trip any sooner." "Oh, 1 dont It is the fear that having a wife at home you'll want to stay out on the road altogether!" Seeking Comfort * 'Tve got a long way to go and I'm not used to travel," said the applicantx at tVin rflllwnv office. "I want to be Just as comfortable as I can, regardless of expexjie." "Parlor ear?" "No. 1 don't care for parlor flxin's." "Sleeper?" "No. I want to stay awake an' witch the scenery." "Then what do you want?" "Well, If it wouldn't be too much trouble. I wish you'd put me up in one of these refrigerator cars I've read so much about" What They Did With Them. An American who spends much of his time in England tells of a cockney who went t.o a dealer in dogs and thus described what he wanted. "Hi wants a kind of dog about so 'igh an' so long. Hit's a kind of gr'y'ound, an' yet it ain't a gr'y'ound, because 'is tyle is shorter nor any o' these 'ere gr'y'ounds, ; an' 'is nose Is shorter, an' 'e ain't so slim round the body. But still 'e's a kind o' gr*y'hound. Do you keep such dogs?" "We do not," said the dog man. "We crown 'em." How would it do to try the experiment of going to the erring with love, Instead of law? Wouldn't It be a step nearer to paradise? 7 " _ .?s; No Trouble? A Saucer, A little Cream, and Post Toasties right from the box. Breakfast in a minute, and you have a meal as delightful as it is wholesome. Post Tcasties are crisp and flavoury?golden brown, fluffy bits that al- I most melt in the mouth. "The Memory Lingers" POSTUM CEREAL CO., LTD., ' Battle Creek, Mick , - } AXLE GREASE I Keeps the spindle bright and V free from grit. Try a box. I Sold by dealers everywhere. I STANDARD OIL CO. (Incorporated) A JTAVUB thn la ano who wane M 1 etnas or ranlUm. Bv diuolriag granulated saga la m ?rarer*nd adding Maplelue.adellcioujiynip la made and aayinp better than maple. Haplelo* _ la sold by crocerB. Send ?o sump fox sampla and rooipe book. Craacant Six. Co.. 8?fOa. . $$ It's the experience of every man that' be wants a lot lie doesn't get and gets a lot he doesn't want ; i : $ Mrs. Winslow's Soothing- Syrup tor Children teethin#,softens thegnms, redncesinflftmrna ion, allays pain, cares wind colic, 25c a bottle What's become of the hookworm fake? Gone out of Stiles? 'When will they get Into Stiles again? Eh, Dr. Stiles? For (led, Itching Eyelidi, Cyata, 8ty?s rr Falling Eyelashes and All Eyea That-" v "?| Need Care Try Murine Eye Salve. Anep-. : tic Tubes?Trial Size?25c. Ask Your Druggist or Write Murine Eye Remedy Co, * v' . Chicago. . ' * Young girls ought to make the mjpjifti of their birthdays, for in after years ; they cease to have them. ,. Playing the Market. "Curhroke never pays for his meat until a month, afterward." "So I hear. Prices i'n the meantime . go up, and he feels as though he'd made something."?Puck. > ' , . Why She Brought It Up. "Do you remember," she asked, . ) "that you said once that unless I promised to be youra the sun would : cease to shine 7.' ' ' "I-don't remember it now, but I suppose I may have said something. J of the kind." , "And have you forgotten that you assured me that unless I permitted v ' you to "claim me as your own the moon would fall from her place In the heavens?" ,, "Oh, well, what if I did say sof Whv do you want to bring that up, now?" "I merely wished to assure you that I'm sorry I didn't shut my eyes and \3j let her fall." NOT JOKING THEN. 'K 7 Helen?I never know when yotu ^ friend Oruet is joking and when he it "*J in earnest / r4 Henry?He's In earnest -jrhen ht , ( H tries to borrow money. I l i 111 k l 11 k IK^I BAMnMMnHM >f 1 I V Mi 9 9 ?(B 9 I 4^1 ' liifaMaiaM afiiEHyiBBra ' 11 mm BftHWraTO sjii ;inriin^ifn|?U ft Pit rSfllnHi * Callous the bowels with harsh' cathartics, and you'll need physic always. Help them gently, with candy Cascarets, and you'll need them rarely. Once learn tlie difference " and you'll never take a harsher laxative than these. &s Vest-pocket box. 10 cents?at drugstores. Each tablet ot the genuine Is marked C C C* . Automobiles THE WHITE CO. have eevenl exchange cars which must be sold at once. Tits means a dowerfulsmooth running, fully equipped Anto mobile at rock oottom |,rloe. 8250 to flOOO, They ar? in perfect runnixm; condition axuf a demonstration will be riven to a buyer. Do>'k mla? till# opportunity. Call at once. THE WHITE CO., Broadway at 62d St., New York* UES&EB Will rednre Inflamed, strained, swollen Tendoni, L^gameoti. Muscles or Bruises, Cure th4 LnmeneM and stop pain from a Splint. Sid* Jlone or Bone 8pi?rtu No blister. no ualr gone. Boise can tM Died. >2.00 a bottle. Horse Book 3 E free. ABSOBBiyE, JR., for mankind, II asd ft Bedures (trained torn llgaoenta, enlarged glands, reins or muscles?heals ulcors?allays pain. YouJ droggiitcan supply and give references. Will tell too more If yon write. Book Free. Mfd.oalyby " W. iJ. XOUSO, f. D. I., S3i Ttmtfs Bu, SpHj??tU, Mtm MACHINIST APPRENTICES WANTED DKU w n oc anAnrc, nro. L.W. BOYS 16 to 18 years old, Grammar School Education. Four years course. Technical Instruction included, write Brown & Sharpe Mfg. Co, Providence, R. L, u. s. A. ' DROPSY NEW DISCOVERY . * gl.n rtitof Ml srM iMtdM. Bosk ud 10 Days' trmtimt Free. Dr. H. H. Q1XE3T8 60> 5. Ua B. XtUmta, 0*. IIITFftlTC Wat?o?K,C?lew*n,W*fl>. PATENTS w. N..ur NEW YORK, NO. 33-1310.