University of South Carolina Libraries
Sharps and Flats. Emile Robin, the aged vice president of the French Society for Saving the Shipwrecked, has not only done a great deal for the association, but he also assists similar societies in other countries. At the recent meeting of the allied German society it was announced -that M. Robin had again sent a , handsome sum?$7.000?the interest on j which was to be divided among old I mariners and widows and orphans. j There never yet was an audience so small as to deserve a small sermon. Lipton's Gallantry. That Sir Thomas Lipton is much of a Chesterfield needs no confirmation, though this story, which is added testimony, shows that he happily turned a well-worn joke and gave comfort in defeat. Among his guests on the Erin one day before the races were sailed was a fetching miss of seventeen who wished him a sweeping success. "I'm confident I've the better boat," said he. "And yet one should not always be too sure." "Yes," she assented coyly. "There's -? > Ko?Tfoor> tha run and the mauv a &n^ ucvuwm ?mv --r Lip." "I would be amply compensated Tor defeat," he replied, with a bow, "if the slip were a slip of a girl like you." ?New York Herald. TORTURINC PAINT Half This Han's Suffering* WonM R?r? KlUnl Many a Person, But Uoau'i Cured Him. A. C. Sprague. stock dealer, of Normal. 111.. writes: "For two whole years 1 was doing nothing but buying medi^ X eVe.r su^er^a* bad tbat 1 coul(i -tT-cooM a. o. spbaguk. not ride a horse, and sometimes was unable even to ride In a ear. My condition was critical when I sent for Doan's Kidhey Pills. I used three boxes and they cured me. Now I can go anywhere and do as much as anybody. I sleep well and feel no discomfort at all." A TRIAL FREE-Address FosterMilburn Co., Buffalo. X. Y. For sale by all dealers. Price, 50 eta United States Battleships. Our oldest battleship, the Texas, has a length of 301 feet and a displacement of 6,315 tons. The new Maine has a length of 388 feet and a displacement of 12,500 tons. The Georgia Is to have a length of 435 feet and a displacement of 15,000 tons. The California, Just launched at San Francisco, has a length of 503 feet and a displacement of 14,000 tons. The Texas has a speed of sixteen knots an hour. The California is to hare a speed of twenty-two knots, or is to be, in spite of her great size, a faster - ** w xt?w v^-lr snip man uie Diwm<u w ium, and as fast a ship as that greyhound of the sea, the Columbia. Is it fair to expect to get gold out of a sermon when you only put copper into the service? WE CURE DISEASES OF SEN Wegua-antreaqnlck and lasting cure in at &?? of 8 P E C 1 F I C Kill iTl BLOOD POISON, byh>wd|m stricture,yaricocele. weak back, .prostatic trouble and all di8eases peculiar to men. also all ^h'vag^ nervql's, kidney, bladder and recdiseases and rheumatism. Imnnrtant Drs- Leathcrman A Bcntley IlllflUl tdlll ure on|y specialists in Atlanta who treat their eases themselves. Wrjfu if you cannot call and describe TV i lie yOUr troubles and receive by return mall, free of charge, our diagnosis blank. best home treatment. Consultation Free. Everything confidential. Drs. Leathermaa & Bentley, Cor. Marietta and Forsyth Sts^ X ATLANTA, GA. Hours: 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. Sunday: 10 to 1. FREE SAMPLE or "THE STORY OF MY LIFE AND WORK." Bjr Booker T. Washington. a Bend as y?nr name and address. Wa want 70a to hava a copy of thle autobiography of the greatest living Negro for the purpoeo of Introducing It In your community. It la a VI. ** l*$s?to ^||B P so"*isend ?t coce for j. l. lacnoLS* ca* rUlng Prior 81.00. 015 Austoll BniWln*. Brelnese? when you think or coins off to school, write for College Journal nod Special offer ot ?ha >* dins Bualaeea and Shorthand ^cbools. Addrvat KINO'S nillXKH COLLE6K. Kulelch. h C.. or CbaHatte, X. C. f We alao teach Booskee?ln? Shorthand. Hie . he i.aW.1 80. 36. DropsyII Removes all swelling in 8 to so days; effects n permanent curt in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment riven free. Nothingcan be faire* Write Or. H. H. Grttn's Sons, SaroJalltta. Bu AttentatM SOUTHERN / a? D-C TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANT K: Burr Clover and Bermuda. To the stockman of tlio South the securing of permanent pasture is the problem that claims his thoughts by day and directs his dreams by night. Thousands of acres of good land in the South are not available for pasture for many months each year, as no rotation of grasses has been found that can be successful)}" applied to these lauds. To a man coming South from the Central States these fields are like starvation staring him in the face. Many grasses flourish throughout Georgia. Alabama, Mississippi and the Carolinas, such as Bermuda, orchard grass, crab grass, Johnson grass, oatgrass, but no satisfn Anmhinotinn s\f tlflS! PVPV X rt V IVI VV1U U1I1U UVII V *. %UVvv ?,w been found to .make permanent pasture. I am willing to admit that the subject has not been as scientifically studied as it should be, and advantage has not been taken of valuable gras>es like orchard grass, herd's grass and the clovers, except in case of a few progressive farmers here and there. On a recent visit to Wilkes County. Georgia, I saw a sight that did a Virginian good all over. It was a field of burr clover. I never on our most favored lands in Virginia saw a finer stand of clover, and I never saw red clover as beautiful as this. It was dense, uniform, healthy looking and very vigorous in growth. I never saw this clover before. I at once investigated it. It was a low clover, growing much like white clover, with handsome leaves marked with two black spots. It had a small yellow bloom. I asked if it had tubercles on the roots. The man had never heard of these things. I dug up a bunch and found the tubercles bunched thickly just below the crown along the upper roots. I asked if this clover did not make the laud rich. I was told that fields that grew this clover for a few years produced heavily. I did not wonder. It is green by January 1 here in Georgia and 'grows luxuriantly, enriching the soil all the while till about June 1, then it literally dries up and there is no more of its beauty to be seen until the next January. It is au annual and the I most certain self-seeder or wnien i ever I heard. It is easily transferred from one held to another by simply raking over the ground after the plants have dried and getting together the dried heads and some of the soil containing seed. I brought some of the tubercles home with me and am conducting experiments with them, which I hope to report later. As to the value of the clover for pasture. I found that the hogs were just up to their eyes in it, and were looking sleek and nice. The only really nice sheep I have seen in Georgia that have been in the State for a number of years were a bunch of Dorsets I found grazing in this clover field. They looked healthy and good. Their skins were as pink as cherries. Cows seemed to eat it, but not so well as the sheep and : hogs. Hors?s do not like it at all. It j is of no value for hay. But uow to the suggestion that came to me. On an adjoining farm to this I found there-another beautiful field of j the clover. It seems to grow every! where down there. In walking through I this field I found among the clover Ber! muda grass. I asked if it interfered j with Bermuda. I was told that after I June the Bermuda had entire posses' siou. The life of Bermuda pasture in this section of the South is from May i 15 to the first heavy frosts, about Dej eember 15. Bermuda grass must al ways be a disappointment to the stockI man, because it is dead all winter and : will not make pasture before the midI die of May. Give Bermuda grass sun. j rich land aud a fair chance and it will ! certainly thrive in the South, though it J may be necessary to get onto its ways , a little. Why have we not a great opI portunity in this combination of burr j clover and Bermuda grass? The burr j clover takes possession in January and ! nourishes amid Bermuda roots, cnriclij ing the soil all the while. As it begins to die away in May the Bermuda takes possession and holds it till December 15. This is the most perfect fit I have ever known. Only about three weeks without green grass. There is hope yet for the stockmen of the South.?H. B. Arbuckle, Dekalb County, Georgia, in the Breeder's Gazette. *Vi-tiiltv on a Cotton Farm. I N. D. G.. Rose Hill. Miss., writes: I own some pine sandy land here in East j Mississippi that will produce about j one-third bale of cotton per acre without the use of commercial fertilizers. I want to bring this land up to one bale per acre, but don't like the idea of feeding too much stock. My laud is level, with good top soil and good clay subsoil. I do not see why I can not bring up my land rapidly by planting one-third or one-half of my land in cowpeas every year, the balance in cotton. changing every year, using .100 pounds of acid and 100 pounds of potash per acre on both. 1 wi-h to leave coin out. as I have some rich prairie Odds and Ends. The sea gull makes a splendid living barometer. If a convoy of sea gulls flies seaward early in the morning sailors and fishermen know that the day will be fine and the wind fair, but if the bird* keep inland?though there be no haze hanging out toward the sea to denote unpleasant weather?interested folk know that the elements will ha unfavorable. ? 'ARM filOTES. D<1 > ER, STOCKMAN AND TRUCK GROWER, Jt land a mile away for corn, or I can ex* change peas for corn in the market I will plant oats 011 prairie land for feed in place of corn, which will save cultivation of a corn crop. Please give me your ideas ui>on my plan. Your suggestions relative to a rotation for the purpose of improving sandy land and increasing the yield of cotton seem to be all right. There is no reason why your land, possessed as it seems to be of a good subsoil, should not hold the commercial fertilizers you propose to use satisfactorily. Phosphates and potash do not readily leach from the soil, and they are not dissipated by fermentation as is the case with nitrogen. Acid phosphate and potash are the two elements in which a I ~ 4. 1:1-^1.. i,/-v SailUY SUll IS IllUSt imt'U uu uvux.iv IIb and that you would need to supply in a commercial form. You can obtain all the nitrogen needed and whatever vegetable matter would prove benetkial to your soil through the cowpea, thus utilizing the nitrogen in the air at a very small cost to you as compared with the commercial product. Besides that, the cowpea will improve the mechanical condition of your soil. A short rotation, such as you propose, should work very satisfactorily for a number of years. It seems to me that it would be better to bring grass in the rotation at some period and give the land a test and a change. While you might go ahead and grow cowpeas and cotton for years to come it is a onesided system of cropping, and the land will sooner or later rebel against it. By using three or four years' rotation and bringing Bermuda or some other grass that you could use for hay or pasture on your land, the chances of maintaining soil fertility and increasing its cropproducing capacity for an indefinite period are much better in my judgment. The commercial fertilizers you propose to use are exactly what we would recommend, and tne system 01 soil improvement which you desire to follow is one we have advocated for several years. The cowpea is indeed the clover of the South, and it is too bad it is a mistake to utilize the cowpea alone, as it renders the land light and friable, and especially in sections of the country where the soil is inclined to wash, the damage from leaving the land uncovered in the winter is very serious, but when rationally used the cowpea is one of the most valuable crops that can be grown in the South. With rich prairie soil to grow your corn and oats on with cowpeas for grain or made into hay you should be able to feed all the live stock necessary to work your land and probably have a surplus of these crops for sale. Therefore it should prove a success, and the treatment of the land proposed should certainly result in an increased yield of cotton.?Professor A. M. Soule. Composition of a Ration For Dairy Coirs. C. R. B., Chattanooga, Tenn., writes: Please advise me what per cent, of fat and protein the following mixture would contain: One-fourth cottou seed meal, one-fourth wheat bran, onefourth cornmeal and one-fourth distill/if-c. rli-ir nrrain 111 n rip fl-nm brewers' 1VI o malt. With regard to your suggested ration for a dairy cow, answers Frofessor Soule, I beg to make the following statement. The following table gives the amount of digestible protein, carbohydrates and fat in a ton of cornmeal, wheat, Iran, distiller's malt and cotton seed meal: Cr.r boProtein. hydrates. Fat. Cornmoal 158 1334 SG Wheat bran 244 724 54 Distillers' malt .. .372 742 34 Cotton seed meal..744 33S 244 Four tons of the mixture contains 151S pounds of digestible protein or twenty pounds of protein per 100 pounds of the mixture, or approximately two pounds of digestible protein to each ten pounds of grain. This would be the right amount of grain to feed to the average dairy cow and the balance of the protein required should easily be obtained from the roughness it would be necessary to feed her. Cno hundred pounds of the mixture would contain forty pounds of digestible carbohydrates and five pounds of digestible fat. This would make what is known a? a high protein feedstuff, aad it should make a satisfactory grain ration for the dajry. cow when fed with the right amount of roughness. ????? '!>. Firlillzevt For Orchards. Teach trec9 are large consumers of potash, therefore all the wood ashes that accumulate on the farm should be broadcast over the peach orchard. After a day's washing the suds or water with the soap in it will be healthful to the peach tree. Phosphates and potash are the principal fertilizers to apple and peach orchards. In fifty years the suicide has increased in Great Britain by 200 per cent. News of the Day. The Australian Postmaster General recently invitea competitive aeaigus mi post cards to be printed and issued by his department for use throughout the Commonwealth. Premiums of $50, $25 and $15, respectively, will be paid for three series of 12 designs; each adjudged by the Postmaster General to be first, second and third in order of merit, in the case of each State. The designs will consist exclusively of Australian eubiects. Flowers In the Arctic. Dr. Schel. the geologist?a member 01 the last Svcrdrup Arctic expedition ?recently delivered a lecture before the Geographical Society of Christlania on the vegetable life of Ellesmereland, in 78 to 79 degrees of northern latitude and separated from Greenland by Smith Sound. During the summer tracts of the lowlands are covered with Arctic flowers. A mountain slope of one of the bays was completely covered with the violet-colored flower stalks of the species saxifraga oppositifolia. In the rocks remnants of plants were discovered, the species of which to-day are found in much warmer climes?for instance, in Australia. Dentistry by Phonograph. One of the leading dentists of Pari? is using the phonograph to lessen th? pain of tooth-pulling. When a patient is seated in the chair, he places the phonograph tubes to the ears and and allows the instrument to work foi I a little while. Then he administers I tho anaesthetic, and finds that the patient becomes unconscious much more quickly and easily, and requires much less anaesthetic than was form erly the case. Not only that, but h can perform the dental operation without interruption, and when the patient recovers consciousness tli after-affects are inconspicuous. A dispatch from Saratoga to the New York World gives a dolorous account cf the state of affairs at "The Springs." The suppression of gambling at the famous resort seems to have suppressed the summer desire to go there either ior purposes of health or recreation. As a consequence, where there used to be gay throngs in the hotels and upon the streets, there is now but a crippled and decimated array of visitors. The sports have hied themselves to safer playgrounds. FITSpermanentlycured. No fltsornervousdsm after first day'* use of Dr. Klino'e groat NerveUestorer, atrial bottle and treatise fro* Dr. 11. H. Klikk, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. The International Seamen's Union has [ 40,000 affiliated members. Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.?W*. 0. Endsley, Yanburen, lnd., Feb. 10,1900. Neuralgia is said to be successfully treated in Italv bv the use of blue light. * A "Success" Training School. Goldey College is a Business and Shorthand School that makes a specialty o.' training its students for "Bl'SINESS SUCCE-S." 129 g-rad nates with two firms. Stur.ejits from Georgia to New York. Writr/ur cataloffuf. Address: Goldey College, Box liUW, Wilmington, Del. One of the largest and most noti< ea >le busings signs 9een anywhere is thvt t f .he National Casket Co. on their mamm >th new factory at Nashville, Tenn.. made on a wire frame with aluminum letters six feet high and one hundred feet long, which can l,e read from a long dis anee by day, ; n' wlen reproduced in <l?ctric lights, can t>reau even further at night. This is the concern that is called on to furnish Caskets for the most prominent people everywhere, including among its recent orders, Caskets for Presidents William McKinley, Benjamin Harrison and the late lamented Gen. John B. Gordon, and yet whose goods can be had through the smallest undertaker in every town. From the fa.-t t'int they are called on to,furnish Ce-k ts for the best citizens everywhere, there must be some merit in their claim that their goods ara the best, and the Soufh should be proud to have a branch of such a high class establishment within her borders. A Volume of Statistics. The volume of statistics just issued j by the London County Council contains some interesting figures bearing on the condition of London. The most remarkable fact brought under notice is the steady dec line in the birth rate. In 1867 it reached a little over 36% per 1.000, while in 1902 it fell to a little over 28 per 1,000. The death rate in 1902 was the lowest ever recorded except that of 1901, which was slightly less. ;; ODD botanic <> I;: DiDIDIBLOOD BALM : i o The Great Tested Remedy for the speedy is 4 > and permanent cure of Scrofula, Rheuma- I ? I o tism, Catarrh, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores. Erup- <> I < > tiom, Weakness, Nervousness, ana all 1 ;; BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES. J; ' . l It is by far the best building up Tonic ar.d , > 0 Blood Purifier ever offered to the worM. It . y makes new. rich blood, imparts renewed vi- ( ( ! .. tality, ana possesses almost miraculous . > T healing properties. Writ* for Bo*k Of Won- . . ., derful Cures, tent fre* on application. . > .. If not kept by your local druggist, tend (( .. $1.00 for a large bottle, or Sj.oo for tut bottles, . , and medicine will be tent, freight paid, by . > 41 BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga. < < > < LAZY LIVER j "I find Caa carets so good that I would not be without them. 1 wae troubled a great deal with I torpid liver and headache. Now since taking j C as carets Candy Cathartic 1 (eel very much better . I (ball certainly recommend them to my friends as the best medieiue I have ever seen." | Aana Basinet, Otboro >1111 No. S, Pali Hirer, Mass. wwuikMnwtiib Pl??i?ut. P?!*tafjlt, Pot?nt. T**i? Qeod. Do Good Naver Stcksn, Weaken or Grip*. Me. 8e,Me. Kerei told In bulk. The gennlna tablet tramped C C 0. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. Oot flHWUAL SALF. nil MILLHM BOXES HERE IT IS 1 Want to learn all about. J? a Horse? How to Plck,>T^ Out a Good One? Know i|k? an Imperfections and so*^ X Guard against Fraud? I I Detect Disease and Ef- J \ I feet a Cure when same y \ [ \ is possible? Tell the w # " Age by the Teeth? What to can the DifI ferent Parts of the Animal? How to ' Shoe a Horse Properly? All this and ! other Valuable Information can be obi talned by reading our 110-PAGE ILLUS' TRATED HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, postpaid, on receipt of only 2i : cents in stamps, i BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St., N. Y. City. I i /j im&jm'A ! 61 ills / - Miss Hapgood tells of Fallopian and Ovar and escaped an awful | Lydia K Pinkham's \ "Dear Mrs. Pinkham:?I suffere ! doctors called Salpingitis (inflaminatior ritis, which are most distressing and p surrounding parts, undermining the a ! forces. If you had seen me a year ago, I Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, a: Ballow complexion, and general emaciat person with me as I am today, robust, wonder that I ieel thankful to you which restored me to new life and hea! from an awful operation." ? Miss Ibe Windsor, Ont. Ovaritis or inflammation of the ovariei ovaries may result from sudden stopping o tion of the womb, and many other causes. with the ovaries, indicated by dull throbl by heat and shooting pains, sr^i ld claim ; core itself, and a hospital opera'Ion, with i ! neglect. "Dear Mrs. Pixkham:?lean t i my life, and I cannot express my en " Before I wrote to you telling no two years steady and spent lots of mor failed to do me any good. My r^ses I "I will always recommend your w these few lines may lead others w] remedies."?Mrs. T. C. Wilijldsen, Such unquestionable testimony prov ham's Vegetable Compound over dii Women should remember that Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass^ aboi Roanoke college foryo A Select and Limited College fo 24r Teachers and Offtc LAST YEAR THE MOST SUCCESSFUL IT AW, A CnwvAnnHlnflPC lueai J1UUIC OUIlVUUH?U9n, MM.w 8END FOR CATi R. E.HATTO/f.A $20.00 TO $40. Being Made selling "500 Les Mm book of legal and business torn ~C^k Cempendlum of plain and otoj i yjm\ Calculator and Farmer's P.eckc A complete aet of Interests, G meets of CISTERNS. Timber one volume. Over 472 page'. I It is a complete business sit I MM SIMPLE, PRACTICAL an'I M and (trie can sell as well as ( ^BRbOM One agent In the oountry a?t week. Agenta bare canvassed BftaittB Selling price SI.50. Liberal dl lafactloD guaranteed (or mon.-y Circulars free. HI ACADEMy, for BOYS f J* HocKotlle. Md. IDEAL TRAINING SCHOOL. HOME LIFE. INDIVIDUAL CARE AND INSTRUCTION: FITS FOR UNIVER- ^ 8ITY OR LIFE. ADDRESS, ~ W. P. MASON. U. S. N. A.. PRIN. * t ||i0 coHpixxi?j ijl * < WW? 'iVII-SOSJi. 9 5 .77^1 torrair fllBf\R f ! ., ! W2S'30?ABCK. 7WHIM^S 5 ?? a wa\mscwfcCQ*?M*?$>. | ? ^ \ CHARLESTON. S. C X ? * & IatroBtXrew&?ir ?taii mmumtf ?m 1? * Atlanta College of Pharmacy. Greater demand for onr graduates than we g can supply. Address, DR. GEO. F. PAYNE, 1 Dean, 40 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga. welS1 *"?"22 Thompson's Eyt Wattr I f^HICKEMS you cannot spend years and dolla: buy the knowledge required by 01 cents. You want them to pay the them as a diversion. In order to handle Ft tning about thtm. To meet this want we a of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 25c.) a man who put all his mind, and time, and en raising?not as a pastime, but as a busim ty-flve years' work, you can save many Chi earn dollars for you. The point Is, that yo Poultry Yard as soon as It appears, and kno teach you. It tells how to detect and cure fattening; which Fcwls to save for breedii you should know on this subject to make It Ave cents In s'Atnps. EOC5^ PLB 'DICING I how she was cured ian Inflammation? operation by using regetable Compound* id for four years with what the i of the fallopian tubes) and ovalainful ailments, affecting all' the institution, and sapping the life before I began taking Lydia E. nd had noticed the sunken eyes, ed condition, and compared that >/] firftll TT.11 WAIllH Tl/*. I ilCAl l/Jf aiiU TTOiJU JVU nv?uu mw and your wonderful medicine, 1th in five months, and saved me nk Hapoood, 1022 Sandwich St, s or fallopian tubes which adjoin the f the monthly flow, from inflammaThe slightest indication of trouble bing pain in the side, aocompanied posr Instant attention. It will not l11 its terrors, may easily result from ruly say that yon have saved atitude to von in words. w I felt, I had doctored for over tey in medicine besides, but it all did not appear in that time, and i much pain. I would daily nave spells, headache, backache and lown pain, and was so weak that ird for me to do my work, sed your medicine and treatment ed, and after taking three bottles ,E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Comnenses appeared, my womb fcroume, and I have been regular ever nee. I used fourteen bottles of ydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable ompound and Blood Purifier jgether, and am now restored to erfect health. Had it not been for ou, I would have been in my grave, onderful remedies, and hope that ho suffer as I did to try your R. R. No. 1, Manning, Iowa. , es the power of Lydla E. Pink? teases of women. ; they are privileged to eonsuiv it their Illness entirely free... UNG WOMEN, Danville, Vau r the Higher Education of Women. ers ?All Specialists. IN HISTORY OF INSTITLTION. Low for Adrantages Offered. ALOGUE. . Vh. T)? President 00 PER WEEK" " Tt li i >-i)HiDl.te h?mA. OS. A complete Legal Adviser?* complete mental Penmanship; a complete Lights lag iner. 'rain. Lumber and Cotton Table*; measureLumber. Loo and Bine of Ormin, etc.. la 250 Illustration*. icator; brought hope to every purchaser. PLAIN; 500 igenu wanted at oace. Bo ye men and women 1 46 copies in one day. Another 210 In 0M I all day and eoM a oopy at every bona scounts to agent*. Send 25c for outfit; aab? refunded). KRTEL, JENKINS A CO., ATLANTA, OA. OR MALARIA, CHILLS AHO F?VER f W TAKE HLIXIR 8ABEK, ^ Known a? I over America aa the ?ur? cat cure for all malarial diseases and a pie*' utlve against Typhoid. Prepared by XOCZEWtKI A CO., Washington, D. C. fir- writt for testimonials^ilLLBORO' SP&INGS ^ * College For Young L&diec. seated in the AUe?han'ea Elevation, tS00 feet ry. pure air, and a variety of mineral w at era alver>ity, oelleflate and preparatory aonraea social advantage In voice, plaao. eloeutlom aai t. new England Conservatory method* Tern "S*- h?<ni Kent. 57 1MI. AddnS OKAHA MBA\'ID?)\, Bnilatu Mir." !Ulk?r? Iprlaif, B?tk Caaatjr Tlrfl^la So. 35. lflSUUflUlt |3 B?at Coogh Sfrnp. Taste* jood. UN r/| to time. Bold by druggt.u. r?l R N MONFY If y?u *,v? thera he|Piv.n nuiitf i You cannot d0 thl# ii?s vou understand them and know iw to cater to their requirements, and rs learning by experience, so you must there. We offer this to you for only S sir own way even if you merely keep twls judiciously, you must know somere selling a book giving the experience i twenty-flve years. It was written by 1 money to making a success of Chickess?and if you will profit by his twencks annually, and make your Fowls u must be sure to detect trouble in the w how to remedy it. This book will disease; to feed for eggs and also for ng purposes; and everything, indeed, profitable. Sent postpaid for twentyHOUSE, 134 Leonard St. NewYorkCity