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1 I ALWAYS I CALL FOR A CIGAR j *feY ITS NAME RUAniPUfiH ij Ui??EtiU MEANS MORE THAN ANY OTHER NAME B20WN BANDS GOOD FOR PRBSBNT8 "tuim Seller la tfca World." * i Sour Stomach "Sowd C?iif?rft? end h<l like ? new men. I have lei ii j ? ?nff?rer (rum dyaprpaie ami sour einmach Che the laat two yeara. 1 haro been taking medlwee and other druga. but could find no relief orUy " r a eh-.rv time. I will recommend. Caacarota To vmy frienda aa the only thine (or Indirection and oar xamach and to keep the bowela In good conitl<ire. They are very nice to eat." Uarry Ktuckley. Mauch Chunk. Pc Best For jm Th? Bowels ta?ea&<^ caw d* cathartic Palatable, Potent. Taate Good. Do Good, awi'i Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. lDc. Mc.Mc. Nerer ejtd la bnlk. The genuine tablet atamped COC. Vnaeaulaeil to core or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 599 1BUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES So. 2. fAVI.OK'SCHEROKBK RKMF.IlTOF Sweet Gum and Mullen 3? Nature'* Croat remedy for Cough, Cold. 4Trui?|>, Con no nipt Inn, and In all throat trouble*. -SteiruttKiat, 25c , bOc. *ud 1100 per bottle >1codoo Window in the Post Office. Oownis of times In ha Jonp term of wrifcro Postmaster Van Colt was asked 9m r.lianKO the number of the principal fje5ia?*ry window In the money order dtesnrtynent to some other number than No money 1b ever paid in at * Ocit window, but orders for hundreds <oT dollars, which are cashed at the mao. window, have passed through it wrory business day for a great many ynskrr. "Sorely you don't believe in that thirteen foolishness?" was the Postmasier's joking reply, whenever he opokon to about it, and the hoodoo arctraber remained. Not long ago a rr<An asked of the clerk behind tho window; *"l>o you flnf *hat 13 a hoodoo?*j Thv; clerk looked tip quickly. "I -sbonldn't like, to say whether I do or aoV bo said. "A good many persons tew naked me that question." "Well," said the questioner, "perttajcat 1 he influence will get around to tlbct old man some day, and then he'll ffusit ft is."?New York Press. atatutica of Billiards. Taxation enables many curious taftV* of statistics to be compiled. It weald probably puzzle tho best of English statisticians to guess even approximately at the number of bilWard tables in use in England. There oo snrh difficulty in France, where th* billiard table is a taxed luxuryaad its relative frequency in cotnmenrs of all grades of population and wwallh is made the subject of calculat tons as elaborate as thev am in. I jQBStous. In all France there are J?.67f? hilliaTd tables, divided among 1K.G01 communes, and realizing more than X 10,000 In taxes.?London T?tlifts. LOYAL. Miss Gradwate look odu with her chocks painted red and the of hor face ao white?" *"Yes." "*T>on't you suppose she knows that jwrcrple notice it?" ?Of course she does. Those are her s-ollege colors."?Cleveland .^laii BeaiVer. ALL DONE OUT. ' ?cternti Joshua Heller, of 70T. South XXalnui street, Urbana, 111., says: "In tfcv fall or INPP after taking Loan's KxSncv Pills I tol.l A&XilX "the renders of this ftope that they had niievcil me of kid- V rsrj trouble, dispo.<cd of a la in 9 /ts/ Ewes with pain y : (p 1 across my loins and / jT B fter.cnth the should- SI sler blades. Dur- ifl* S" >ij$: 'he interval / M v which lins elapsed LJf / I have had occasion . jj?*A <? resort to Loan's Kidney PHla when M ItKffififa'-y I noticed warnings a*raw* ??f no attack. On each and every oceacuon the results obtained were just as satisfactory as when the pills were fir*' brought to my notice. I just us emphatically endorso the preparation to-?l?.v ,u I did over two yearn ago." i Fosler-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., proprietors. For sale by all druggists, price bO cents per box. A well known physician of Berlin. Or. chard t, has given to the world a Kew Year's gift which should be of Svrat value at the present time when tBbe struggle for existence is harder tfcan over, says a cable dispatch. It canttists of a new Herutn which does arvrav with tiredness and enables a man %? *<> on working Indefinitely without prftint exhausted. Dr. Welchardt amltes his wonderful preparation from tObct muscles of rabbits which have 9mm made to keep on running until <*11 rely exhaurtcd and on the verge sf ctlh^ne. EIGHT MEN KILLED I Fearful Boiler Explosion On An Ohio liter Boat VESSEL WAS A COMPLETE WRECK An Entire Side of the Towboat Defender Was Blown Out While Nearly All ( the Crew Were Asleep and the Sur- i vivors Were Compelled to Plunge Into the Icy Waters. ( Huntington, W. Va., Special.?Eight nen are known to be dead and three seriously injured, the result of a boiler ] explosion and fire which destroyed the , tow boat Defender here early Wodnes- , day. The dead are: i Perry Spender, mate, Point Pleasant. Horace Wetzel, watchman, Pittsburg. 1 James Seeso, lamp trimmer, Wells- ' ville. Albert Hamilton, fireman, Pittsburg. j Mike Stafford, fireman, Pittsurg. Thomas Duffy, fireman, Pittsburg. j Will Wetzel, deck hand. George Kldd, deck hand. j Injured: Ira Ellis, second engineer; i Robert Holland, fireman; Robert Manu, 1 third cook. The defender was owned by the 1 Monongahela River Consolidated Coal and Coke Company, of Pittsburg. Capt. ' James Woodward was in the pilot ( house at the time of the accident, and with the exception of firemen, engineer and the watchman, the remainder of j the crew were asleep. ! Blizzard In New York. New York, Special.?New York Cit> and all the surrounding country Wed' ! nesday was in the grasp of the most ( severe storm of the winter. Traffic of all kinds was hampered, trolley | lines were tide up and the streets. ^ swept by a gale driving before it fine ( snow that cut like sand and piled in . great drifts, were practically impassa- ' ble. Railroad trains from all points j were delayed from a few minutes to three hours, and the elevated lines ' were operated with the greatest difficulty without regard to schedule.. At < sea the conditions must have been be- < yond description, but no disaster has ( been reported. In the harbor, the on- j ly point where observation could be. bad. an immense sen was running and several great liners and smaller vessels tugged all night at their chains 1 in the semi-sheltered spots where they had sought refuge Yrom the storm. 1 What may have happened off shore to < any luckless craft which had to face i the fury of the gale, only time can tell. 1 All over tho city, morning found ( trolley cars blocked in the streets, , great drifts piled against them and preventing them from moving an inch. ' In many of the cars were snow-bound 1 passengers, who had remained in the i cars all night rather than face the i I J ? - u.i&Miiu 111 ?u ullu'ii:[ii 10 waiK id rueir | homes. Four serious fires during the night, two of them calling for two alaVms each, gave the firemen and their < horses their most bitter experience j of the winter. In one case, just before dawn, and when the storm was at its height, the occunnnts of several tenement houses in the upper East Side 1 were routed from their beds and ! forced to flee half-clothed to the storm- i swept streets. In this case 64 horses, 1 which were quartered near the tene- ] ment house, were, burned to death. Pedestrians were compelled to force their way through the unbroken drifts to the transit lines, only to find that J because of the complete surface car tie-up. they had another trudge to the sub-way stations. Every station along the sub-way was packed, and the trains were jammed. Although thousands of homeless unfortunates were given shelter by the various charitable organizations Tuesday night, more than a score of men. overcome by cold, were found lying about the streets early Wednesday. All of those probably will recover under treatment. $5,000 Worth of Whiskey Lost. Columbuia, S. C.. Special.?A hoop ou the Richland Distilling Company's 5,000-gallon capacity tank broke Wednesday afternon and all of the contents, worth over$3,000,were lost, save the little the employes scooped up with buckets from the floor, which was covered a foot deep. One man narrowly es. ii....i .1 ? -? ... Iilis iiiUMiiru 111 i III* llt'lllgW OI | \v hisUoy. Coif Payers' Left Shoulder. The right shoulders of persistent golfers' coats have to he padded, for golf develops the left shoulder so r.hnormally th;.t, without this padding, the young men would look a little ucforined. In drlvlnv. the player's right arm and shoulder only guide the ball's course; it is the left arm and shoulder that do the work, llencc the excessive left side development, to counteract which it is sometimes necessary to put In the right shoulder of the cont padding an inch deep. Tailors can always tell a golfer by this peculiar development of his left shoulder. Sometimes young women play enough to got uneven shoulders, too. The deformity, though, Is rare among young women, whereas anion young men it is common. FAR-FETCHED REASONING. "Why do yon say that Gamblcy is no good simply because he wears a suit with large checks?" "Well, do you like the checks?" "No." "Do you know anybody who does?" "No." "Well, don't you call a man 'no good* , If no one will ondorso his checks?" ?Cleveland Plain Dealer. A New Hampshire Plan. Governor Bnchclder, of New ITninpBblre.'snys: "Within a day's ride of our summer capital. Mount Washington, there are 10,000,000 people. We would like to have at least one-tenth r>f them visit us every summer, and in order to get thein and keep them as long as we can. we are planning to improve our highways so as to make a good impression on our visitors when they arrive on foot, by horseback, by looat, by bicycle, in automobiles, palace far or steam yacht, 'they are welcome; they are all welcome, r.tid the welcome is equally hearty for one and all." In order to enable the visitors to see the Staie of New Hampshire, the Governor has appointed an engineer, who is at work mapping the roads of the State, and under the Jovcrnov's direction a comprehensive system of permanent road improvement is being outlined with much exactness before a dollar is expended in Its completion, us to clearly show where the permanently Improved roads are to begin and end. and the expense to the State for their construction, together with the annual expense of maintenance. The improved highways will aim to permeate every section of the State with at least a well ballasted, well [trained and well surfaced gravel road, whose cost, using the present roadbed for a base, will be from SSiK) to $1300 u mile. On this calculation, appropriating $100,000 a year for six years, the State would have at the end of that time GOO miles of the best roads In the world for light travel and mountain scenery, traversing the State from its entrances at the southwest to the White Mountains. It is intended to llvide the cost of completing the roads between the State, county and towns, the same as in New York. The Governor says there is no more mystery lbout building roads than about building houses. Use common, practical, business sense and conform the cost your highway to the kind of travel for which it is desired. If the Governor of New Hampshire can get 1 .[>00.000. visitors to come to the State luring the year and leave $10 apiece lie has provided for the spending of SI0.000,000 within the State during Ihe summer months. Who can estimate the amount of money which would be spent in New York State's lake and mountain region if this State jnly had a system of improved highways and a Governor as heartily in interest with the subject as the Govern* ?r of New Hampshire? Would not r*e have 3,000,000 people spending $20 each and leaving in the State during Ihe summer the sum of $<>0,000,000, as igaiust the $10,003,000 estimate made in New Hampshire??New York Tribune, Vaintr Improved Machinery. Improved machinery and new methods were introduced in Massachusetts ast year, reducing the cost and in creasing tne emciency or tne roads. Formerly gravel roads were resurfaced by hand. The gravel would be spread to a depth of from three to six inches. Iteally a new road would be liullt. This would require mouths of packing, and the roads would not be in good condition until this process was somewhat completed. Now a marhino is used for distributing gravel. The new treatment can be given for the small cost of from ?10 to $15 a mile. The machine is used also for I spreading sand. On the surface of macadam roads the sand is bettei binding material than the dust from the stone, for It is not so liable to be blown off by winds. With a machine, a cubic yard of sand can be distributed in a minute and a half. The coinmlssio i has also introduced a system for using the road material which is near at hand in all towns. In the case of heavy clay roads the plan has lieen tried of digging out the centre to a depth lower than the frost will reach. The cut is made gradually less toward the sides, so that there is a V shaped trench. This is tilled with coarse stones or $toues from useless stone j walls in tlit* vicinity, to a depth of j about eighteen inches in the centre I and six or eight inches at the sides. I The best material which Is conveni-' on fly near is listed for covering. If j good gravel is not to to be had, then | earth is put on. It will work down only part way, leaving a practical drain at the bottom. Such a road is not acted upon l?y frost, and the cost varies from $500 to $1500 a mile, probably not averaging $1000, while the cost of macadam is from .$5000 to $10,000 mile. From twenty-live to thirty miles of this rough stone road have been built in Massachusetts this year. Tuo CkIk In Crmrtery. The lit tit* village of Parkville, on the Hartford road, a few miles north of Baltimore, Is agog over the discovery of tuo fact that two cats are hurled in the churchyard of Hiss Methodist Episcopal Church, beside tlie grave of the late Theodore II. Rice. husband of Mrs. Sarah Rice, who now resides on Central avenue, this city. To add to the excitement created by the discovery, the church trustees accused Mrs. Illce of burying the cats there with her own hands, and she docs not deny the impeachment. Indeed, she acknowledges killing them. ? Pittsburg Gazette. A Ivuusas man claims to huve a swarm of bees that made twenty pounds of honey in three dry a. CAUGHT BY THE TIDE. fhlof Had to Givo Himsolf Up or Bo Drowned. "Honest John' Corbett, the veteran city jailer, has probably arrested as many criminals In his time and engaged in as many desperate lights as any man In the police department. Last night while seated in the police station he told of one of the first burglars he ever arrested in Seattle. "In those days," said Corbett, "we didn't have any uniforms, or anything like that. I was walking a beat away down where the Grant street bridge is now. 1 saw a burglar, as I believed, with a bundle under his arms. I took after him, and he ran. "The tide flats were just as muddy then as they are now, and that thief ran out into the mud. The tide was cloar out. I lUHn't -T - v " "nt it/ 5CI an over mud, so I shot a few times at the burglar. I shot away all the shells I had and missed every time. I quit then. I waited there on the beach, keeping even with the burglar when he moved, until the incoming tide drove him in and I got him. It was either jail or drowning, und that fellow went to jail.?Seattle Post-Intelligencer. A LOVELY COMPLEXION N?? York I.ndr I'roroi That Krery Woman Mar llavn It by Vilnc Cntlrura Soap. Mrs. K. Tteiohenberg, wife of the wellknown jeweller of 146 Fulton St., New York, says: "I had a friend who was justly proud of her complexion. When naked what gave her such a brilliant and lovely complexion, she replied, 'A healthy woman can be sure of a fine skin if she will do as I do. use plenty of Cuticura Soap and water.' She insisted that I follow her example, which 1 did with speedy conviction. I find that Cuticura Soap keeps the skin soft, white, and clear, and prevents redness and roughness." Dog Cemetery a Failure. All Souls' day in Paris revealed the fact that the dog cemetery, established here four years ago. has proved a dismal failure. Only a few wreaths and several bunches of chrysanthemums ornamented the tombs on the solemn day, and the few visitors to tho cemetery seemed afraid of being seen paying their respects to the graves of their deceased pets. Irrlcatlnn In Dakota. A proposition is now on foot to irrigate certain parts of North Dakota and. eastern Montana whereby the government is to put in irrigation canals and | the seniors an- !<? pay $23 an acre for the service, payable in ten annual installments of $2.30 each. 6tvtf. of Ohio, Citt of Toledo, ? Lucas County. f Frank J. Cheney make oath that he It onuiui )iuii.um ui IUO mm U( r. j. I/KINIY <K Co., doiug businoss in the City of Toledo, County ami State aforesaid, and tliut said llrm will pay the sum of onk hundrku doi,j.arh for each and every ease of catarrh that eaunot be cured by the use of Hall.'!* Catarrh Cork. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my . ????, presence, this 6th day of DocemJhkai.. !- ber, A. D., 185J6. A.W. Gleason, ' ?.? ' Notary P'tblir. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and nets directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take if all's Family Pills for constipation. The Itrnl Kgrotlat. "Father,** said the small boy, "what | Is an egotist?" "An egotist, my son. Is a man who \ has the impudence to think he knows j more than you do, instead of giving | you credit for knowing more than he | docs."?Washington Star. NO CHANCE FOR BUSINESS THERE. Mrs. Knooliwed?Norah, what Is that loud-voiced man .n the alley calling out? Domestic?"Rags an' old iron," j mem. Mrs. Knooliwed?Tell him wo don't want any.?Chicago Tribune. FITS permanently cured. No tits or nervousness after first day's use of I)r. Kllno's Great Van..U..o*. ?It?.' I Dr.R. II. Klixk,Ltd., S".1 Aroh st., Philt.,Pi. J .V* early aa IK73 the first commercial in- i stitutc was established in Tokio, Japan. A Ouiranl'ttil Cure For Piles. Itching. Mind. likedirig or Protrudine : lhles. Druggist* will refund money if I'a/o Oiiitnient fad* t" cure in to 14 days. 30c. i I'nder a new rule women inspectors visit the public schools of London. Mrs. TVfnslow's Soothing Svrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inlluminntion, allays pain, cures wind eolic, 26c. a bottle Paying visits by airship is the latest fashionable novelty in Paris. l'iso's Pure Is the best medicine we ever used lor all affections of throat and lungs.?W*. O. Ehiislkt, Vanhnri'ii. 1ml.. Feb. 10, ltKK). 'J'he latest fad in London La to hold pajrer chases in motor ears. To Curt* n t'obl In One Hay 'lake Laxative liromu Quinine Tablets. AH druggists refund money if it tails to cure. K. \v. (drove's signature is on box. '23c. A small, fat sheep will always bring a better price than a large, poor one. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'* Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. Sold by oil druggists. SI. Mail orders promptly tilled by Dr. K. Dctcbon, Crawfordsviile, ind. Dryness is one of the requirements in the production of the lineal wool. Odds and Ends. A speeits of sheep common in Syria is so encumbered by the weight, of its tall that the shepherds fix a piece of thin board to the under part, where it is not covered with thick wool, to pre\ent it from being torn by the bushes, etc. Some have small wheels affixed to facilitate the dragging of these boards after them. The tail of a common sheep c.r this sort usually weighs fifteen pounds or upward, while that of a largo sperlea after being well fattened will weigh fifty "pounds. _ 2 ? ? d v\ i warning symptoms will soon - prostrate a woman. She thinks woman's safeguard is Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compounds "Dear Mrs. Pixkuam :?Ignorance and neglect are the cause of tratold female Buffering: not only with the laws of health but with the cnanco of a cure. I did not heed the warnings of headaches, organic Eins, and general weariness, until I was well nigh prostrated, 1 knew I d to do something. Happily I did the right thing. I took I*ydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound faithfully, according to directions, and was rewarded in a few weeks to find that my aches and paina disappeared, and I again felt the glow of health through my body. Sine? I nave been well I have been more careful, I have also advised a number pt my sick friends to take Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable- Compound, and they have never had reason to be sorry. Yours very truly, Mr9. May Fairbanks, 216 South 7th St., Minneapolis, Minn." (Mrs. Fairbanks is one of the most successful and highest salaried travelling saleswomen in the West) When women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful menHtTuation, weakness, leucorrhoea, displacement or ulceration of Iho .vomb, th&febearing-down feeling, inflammation of tho ovaries, backache, bloating (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration, or aro> beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faint new, lassitude, excitability^, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all-gone" and " want-to-beleft-alone " feelings, blues, and hopelessness, they should remember there i(S one tried and true remedy. Eydia E. Plnkham s Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for yotfr need the best, "Dean Mrs. Ptxkham:? For over two-year? iflwwa I suffered more than tongue cau express with MWm* Sidney aucl bladder trouble. My physician pronouneed my trouble catarrh of tlio bladdery TAv caused by displacement of the womb. 1 huil ? nfifsf ?.m frequent desire to urinato, and it was very iiainggj ant* lumps of blood would pass with tha TStffl E5 urine. Also had backache verv often. fy "After writing to you, and receiving your tlMPl "*=>J / reply to my letter, I followed your advice, and x feel that you sod Lvdia E. Pinkliam's Yegoj table Compouud have cured mn. Tlio J *"S\ medicine drew my womb into its proper / V Vs \ Plaoe> and then I was welL I never reel / \)] \\ any pain now, and can do my housework. * ]// with ease.'*'?Mna. Alice Laxox. Kincaid. Mis?. V Ifo other medicine for femalo ills In the world has rewivad och widespread and unqualified endorsement. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for addeok She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. vCnnfl FORFEIT If ?? cannot forthwith prodnce lb# original Icttera and signature*oT _W^||||I| aboro taatiinonLala, which will prove their abeolute Kniiuinaitaaa. ^UvUU Lydla K. Plnkliam Medicine Co.. Lynn, Mon. i?T i ?fc C AAA BANK DEPOSIT U'vJbVFVr VP Railroad Faro Paid. 500 y FHKK Couraea Offered. DBUBBflHI Board at Coat. Write Oulck WpjBflBRw GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE,Macon,Ga. ^ ^[jf] WArrrri>-!= ?a"~ Statu, ?tlMBi?n to ?Ml fSPOKT 'nrue lin? Tobacco: permanent Poaitioa. i; aat^. ni a a rt' . .? CENTKAL TOBACCO WdKK.SCO..Penick?.Ve. 1130115 rMllterS SDil DlStT1 UHfOTS ^k. niPAVSTMJrMSarothebe.tdya- | WE GUARANTEE THCM'. n*?th prp.uk medicine rrer midc A tiun- BEWARE OF IMlTATIAiue. ilred mlliio aof th m l.aT? been no I n.WRRfc Of IMI I ? FIOIH5. 1 Wrtt# for Vrlr" *ud c.?tow anitiKr from a dl?ordflrpd ?U>nuu:h GANTT nFQ. CO., fUiciia, <4*. >ffiWT nro relieved or curo<t by Kjtuuui TsU>- { uIbi. On* will RancrftllT sr< v? noliof 1 - ? vltbinrolnuto*. Th.-fl*e e*ntp*ckaKe?euougiK | to,r iii..rdia?rj AlUIrutfi^nt? lOhil WHjtC^k i and millstones .....3W8MMK:.. i fORN II in need of Corn- Kit! u* Mill>' '. /* 85 VfEl C )**> will find it l> your f V?'' GOOD POTATOES \ -1 I*llJLL.O inlereit 1o correspond with W BRING FANCY PRICES \ ? CAROLINA MILLSTONf. CO. ha , . kg ! Ctavron, N. C. M.rviUcr?i",TpKaKSr~~-0 CORN MILLtt Irotn <b. Tom.uoes mc-lon*. CAbliaitr, turnips, lettncv B JXW . ?in (Art, all vnjeiahlri remove Ui*c quaiiu- CJ (^LOOfS C_> CJ ~Ci fl *1' Cjr ff*/i*? ties of Pou&U from the soil. Supply B Potash I ?-k liberally by the one of fertilitarrt containing I ,, .... . . . _ not Irst ih.in 10 per cent, .actual I'olash. I f5;.n, , InfimnOAn'O Cijft llfofnr ' more profitable yi.kls are sure to B WrJi,o I Ilu!I1pS0ll S tjU W3IB| j, < lur pamphlets are not advertising circulars B booming Mierial fertiliser*, but contain vaiu- H nug -?r able information to farmers. Sent lree for tie: ?1 rvfM5??ui e^?nn ?,.<?<*/? asking. Write now. g ,t? I il GERMAN KAU WORKS H ttT.lu* '*'} * ., RT New York?93 Navwur Street, fir W M tajji. brdrMMu!!' 1*4 ?^B3EEaa3GS3j3S?^l SCHICK E NS EARN MONEY B '?/ * ? unless you understand them nnrt know _ a ~ ??? how to cater to their requirement a. an?t you cannot spend years and dollars Icamlni by experience, so jou must buy the knowledge required by others. We offer this ti> you for only 23 cents. You want them to pay their own way even If you merely keep them as a diversion. In order to handle Fowls Judiciously, you must know something about them. To meet this want we are selling a book giving the experience of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 25c.) twenty-five years It van written by a man who put ull his mind, and time, and money to making a success <?f Chicken raising?not as a pastime, hut as it business?and If you will proilt by his twenty-five years" work, you can save many Ohteks annually, and make your Fowls earn dollars for you. Tho point Is, that you must be sure to lletect trouble. In thi Poultry Yard as soon as It appears, and know how to remedy It. This book will teach you. It tells how to detect and cure dlscgac; to faod for ogra and ulso for fattening; which Fowls to save for breeding purposes; and eve ything, Indeed, you should knew on this subject to make I* profitable. Bont ) or .paid for twentyttv? cents In sUunps. BOCK FUB.* 'SaILNC HOUSQ, IB I^onaiC St., NcvrlorkCIt*