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{Rear Admiral Hlchborn PhiJip Hichborn, Rear Admiral United States Navy, writes from Washington, D. C., as follows: " After the use of Peruna f or a ohort period, 1 can note cheer/ully recommend pour valuable remedy to ny one who is in need of an invigorating tonic. "?Philip Hichborn. v No remedy ever vet devised has received ouch unstinted eulogy from so many renowned statesmen and military men as Tenuis. Oar army and navy are the natural protection of our country. Peruna is the natural protection of the army and navy in the vicissitudes of climate and exposure. If you do aot derive prompt ana satisfactory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. Hart man, giving s full statement of your case, and he wOl be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hsrtman, President of The Bart man Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. . v^SHSntM So. 40. <K AAA BANK DEPOSIT OJvJI^V/vFVr Railroad Fare PakL 500 7 FREE Courses Offered. RKB2!?HSJ77^EF2 Board at Cost. Write Quick GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE,llaco#,Ga. In Great Britain rncng the women workers there are 80 auctioneers, 6 architects, 3.071 brickmakers, 3,830 butchers, 54 chimney sweeps, 1 dock laborer, 5,170 goldsmiths, 9,603 printers, 754 raHway porters. 117.640 tailors and i veterinary Burgeons. THE STRAIN OF WORK. Beat of BmUOItp Out Under the Burdei of Oatly Toll. Lieutenant George G. Warren, of No 3 Chemical. Washington, D. C., says -It's an honest fact that Doan's Kid ney Pills did m? were not true I wou'(* not recom' was strain of ? brought on kid ' J ney trouble and weakened m-y ' back, but since using Doan's Kidney Pills I have lifted 000 pounds and felt no bad efTects I have not felt the trouble come back since, although I had suffered for five or sir years, and other remedies had not helped me at all." For aale by all dealers. Price 50 *ents. Foster-MilburnCo.. Buffalo. N.Y. Turtle Has Town Scared. Brewer, Me., people are staying In at night for fear of a 3^-foot turtle which has -escaped from captivity and is said to be more dangerous to meet than a bull dog. HERE IT IS! Want to learn all about t Jfk ft Korse? How to I Out a Good One* Know Imperfections and so" Guard against Fraud? ,/?fj Detect Disease and Effeet a Cure when same jp * #1 la possible? Tell the,',<m / 1 AS? by the Teeth? What to can the Different Parts of the Animal? How to Shoe a Horse Properly? All this and other Valuable Information can be obtained by reading our 100-PAGGJ ILLUSTRATED HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, postpaid, on receipt of only 21 <&nU in stamps. BOOK PUB. HOUSE, t m HWMtfc. N. T. City, ( Southern Wheat in Georgia. The following timely article by Director Redding of the Georgia Experiment Station, applies with equal force to other Southern States, and, especially those immediately contiguous to Georgia. "It may be added that there are j many locations in Southwest and Easi Georgia, say as far as the line across the State from east to west and fifty ; miles to the south of the cities of Au- i gusta, Macon and Columbus, where wheat may ue sown witn reasonable prospect of success. So far south and towards the sea, it becomes doubly important that a high elevation and a clay soil be secured, and aa early maturing. rust-resisting variety be sown.' A field from which a crop of cotton | or of tobacco has just been removed is j well suited for wheat. A crop of cow peas or clover, of which the vines have been converted into hay. or depastured by cattle and hogs, leaves the soil in j just the right condition for wheat. Con- i sldering however, the advantage of a system of rotation, and the demands of other crops, it is perh"os a better prac tice to sow wheat aad otner smaii grain after corn. If the corn field be well cultivated and sown in cow peas at the last plowing, the corn cut and shocked and entirely removed from the land it is just the place for wheat or other smail g^ain. VARIETIES OF WHEAT. "The station has made no extended or elaborate tests of varieties of wheat, but such as have been made indicate that the variety commonly known as 'purple straw' or 'blue stent,' so long cultivated in different parts of the I ! iSouth, is probably the best variety, all I things considered. There are two sub I varieties, one a red. the other a white; .wheat, but the red variety seems to be jthe most hardy and reliable, j "The early May, of which there were : I nicn tim cut. vnriptipR?the 'red' Mav ' I ...OU - . ' and the 'white' May?was long a pop-: ular .wheat, largely because it was I i early and less likely to be ruined by I ! rust. "Among the recognized standard varieties the Fultz and Fulcaster have been quite popular in most places in , the South when sown, j "It is universally known that rust is the. great and almost only enemy to wheat culture in the South. This fungus is apt to be developed during a hot, moist spell of weather in April or May, j or when the location is far south and \ at a low elevation above the sea. No j preventive has yet been found for rust.! All *hat can be.done is to select a soil that is known to be the most favorable for wheat, which should not be moist and low-lying, but rather elevated and dry, plant only an approved variety, fertilize liberally and leave the results to weather conditions that are beyond our control. TO PREPARE THE LAND. ! "Of all the varieties of small grain., wheat is the most insistent on thorough preparation of the soil. The land should be well broken to as great a depth as if for corn or any other staple crop, and four or five weeks in j advance or rowing. At any rate the surface soil after such breaking, should be harrowed and rolled until in a thoroughly pulverized condition. Wheat delights in a mellow, fine seed'V?orl WHEN TO SOW. "The almost universal belief is that i the seed should be sown ahout the time when the first killing frost occurs, or ! from the middle of October to the middle of November, acording to latitude. | Wheat is more likely to be injured by j ; insects when sown too early than are ,oats and other small grain. The regular grain drill will invariably give bet- j ter results thau when the seed are i plowed in or harrowed in. But many J farmers will not find it expedient to' ! incur the expense of such a machine, j Very satisfactory results may be se-! cured, when sowing only a few acres, j by first getting the land in fine smooth condition and then sow the seed in shallow drills made with a small plow, | from eighteen to twenty-four inches apart, sowing the seed by hand through j a 'guano trumpet." About one to two! and one-half inches below the general! surface, is about the proper depth for, the seed to be deposited. "One bushel Is about the proper; quantity of seed for one acre of welladapted and well-fertilized soil, when sown with a drill machine or in furrows j by hand. The seed, however, may be cut in with a cutaway harrow, and many of the fine crops made in 1&98 were thus sown. FERTILIZERS. "Long experience has taught the farmers of the country to believe that there is no fertilizer for wheat equal to stable manure or cottonseed, one or the other, or the two combined. Most of the large yields have resulted from the use of a liberal application of one or the other of these home manures. Long before the use of guano and | chemical fertilizers was known in this ! country cottonseed was considered the I all-sufficient for wheat, and stable ma-i nure was equally well known and ap- i preciated. Now stable manure and cot-1 ton seed are each what is called a ni- > trogenous fertiliser, becuase each owes ' iti effectiveness and value as a ma- j nure mainly to the nitrogen that it j contains. Raw-bone meal has long been 1 effective and popular fertiliser for: wheat in the northern States and in ! England, and it was once thought that its effectiveness was chiefly due to the ' phosplu ric acid of the bone. Later ex- j perience however, has suggested that ' it i3 the nitrogen of the raw bone that rices the work rather than the phosphoric acid. "But careful experiments have1 shown that phosphoric acid is a nec-! essary ingredient in a mixed fertilizerj for wheat. Mid the few tests made at. the station farm confirm those made ; elsewhere, in fact, a so-called 'comMhsor Events. The executive committee of the Lincoln Republican National League, a colored political organization of which James W. Pope is president, met last Thursday at Washington and decided to issue a call for a national convention of the league and its auxiliaries at Charleston, W. Va., on Oetober 1/0, lor the purpose of arranging for as active canvass of the colored voters in , all States and dcubtfuj Cougresiional dlefrJcfc. n Department ] plete' fertilizer, or one containing phosphoric acid, potash and nitrogen, will generally give better results, es< pecially when the soil is old and worn, and when liberal fertilizing is desired. When a very slight application is intended potash may be left out, and even phosphoric acid, applying only a nitrogenous fertilizer, or one containing a minimum of phosphoric acid and potash. Such a fertilizer is stable manure and also cotton seed, the principal element being nitrogen. But on worn or thin upland? a more complete and better balanced fertilizer is requir- ' ed. Moreover, many who wish to grow wheat have neither stable manure ; nor cotton seed. "For general use on the soils of middle and north Georgia the following formula will give good results: Acid Phosphate 14 per cent 200 lbs. Muriate of potash 50 lbs. Cotton meal 500 lbs. 750 lbs. "The above would analyze about as follows: Available phosphoric acid. .5.40 per ct. Fotash (Kl'O) 3.33perct. Nitrogen 4.66 per ct. "The formula may be varied according to convenience or circumstances. For instance, if a farmer wishes for any reason 'o use. cotton seed instead of meal, he may substitute for the latter two and one-half times as much cotton seed (whole or crushed); or if he has a cotton seed huller and wishes to use the kernels, or 'meats.' instead of meal or seed, he may substitute one and one-quarter times as much of the kernels. "So. also, four times as much kanit may be used instead of muriate of potash. "Such changes or substitutions would not materially alter the relative proportions cf the three principal plant food elements, and would frequently prove more convenient. In each case the gross amount required to produce the same effect would be AAnoMAPQKlA ncrrwl hut thn omnilTlt of acid phosphate remainig constant there would be no difficulty in determining how much of one modified formula would be equvalent to a given amount of another. "In practice it would be better not to apply all of the nitrogenous ingredient at the time of sowing. If cotton seed meal be used, one-third may well be left out and an equivalent of nitrate of soda applied during the last weea in March in the form of a top dressing, for it has been found exceedingly effective. So then an ideal fertilizer for wheat would be as follows: Muriate of Potash (at sowing time) 50 lbs. Acid Phosphate(sowing time) .200 lbs. Cotton Meal (at sowing time). .350 lbs. Nitrate of soda (in the spring) 75 lbs. "The above is subject to any of the modifications already suggested. "The top dressing of nitrate of soda should be applied after tie plants 'get into the boot,' or a week or ten days before the first heads will appear, and when the soil is in good condition, as shortly after a rainfall, but when the plants are not wet with dew or rain. Simply scatter the nitrate evenly and broadcast over the surface. It will soon disolve and sink into the soil, and its effects m the darker color and In.creased luxuriance of growth will usually be manifest within a week. TTAtir TA nDWTTI?\Trp OMTTT n\j vv 1 w r v a uiuu i. "Every old wheat grower knows atout smut, and how to prevent It by the time honored process of soaking I seed wheat in a solution of bluestone, which will be presently described. But not many are aware of the fact that the product of wheat from smut-infected seed is not simply damaged in j quality, but the yield of sound wheat I is thereby lessened by more than the | mere proportion of mere smut grains, j In other words, a bushel of smutty | wheat may produce only ten -bushels i cf grain, smut and all. while if the ! same bushel of wheat be properly dis| infected it might yield a crop of twelve [ 01 fifteen bushels of sound wheat. It ! is therefore of considerable import! ance. from the standpoint of quantity I of yield as well as from the ordinary i consideration of quality, that the seed! wheat should be properly treated. "The old method of treatment conj sisted in soaking the seed wheat over night in a solution of one pound of | bluestone dissolved in enough water to i cover about five bushels of wheat, or | about three ounces of bluestone for each bushel. The same solution, by the addition of mere water and bluestone, in the same proportions, may be used for another lot of wheat. Later, and strictly scientific experiments, show that a much weaker solution will be ^i.ualIneffective. One authority says: 1 his consists In immersing the seedwheat twelve hours in a solution made by dissolving one pound of copper sulphate (bluestone) in twenty-four gallons of water, and then putting the seed for five or ten minutes into limewater, made by slacking one pound of good lime in ten gallons of water.' The same authority goes on to say: The wheat does not grow quite so well as when treated with hot water, but the difference is inconsiderable.' "The hot water, or Jensen, treatment for the prevention of smut consists essentially in steeping the seedwheat in water maintained at the temperature of 132 degrees to 333 degrees for one 01 two minutes at a time and repeated six to eight times in the course of ten nsinutes. stirring and draining Iretween each immersion. "The treatment is equally effective as a treatment of seed oats to prevent smut (or hiister). If a drill machine is to be used 'or sowing tne grain it will he necessary to dry it after the soaking. If to lie sown by hand, the wheat may be dried sufficiently by stirring in- j to it a few pounds of slackened lime j to each bushel." Odds and Ends. "There are fifteen symptoms of drunkenness," said a medical witness in an English Police Court. The judge hastily fined the defendant $3 and called for the next case. James Bryoe, M. P.. the distinguished English author, arrived in Boston last Thursday on the steamship Saxonia from Liverpool. Mr. Bryce plans to stay in this country until after the Presidential election, of which he mcflM to mate a stady. ( m^muwu mm mm * wTti tTm mum ? rm | HOUSEHOLD 9 * 9 ! ? ???? MATTERS t iwA'/Awww.v.vmv Keep* Off Files. Flies will not settle on windows that liave been washed in water railed with a little kerosene. Orchid For the Table. "The orchid," says the House Beautiful, "supposed to be suitable only for the table of the millionaire, is really an economical decoration for the householder of more moderate purse, since, with care, it keeps its beauty and freshness for weeks at a time." Three of them make an effective centrepiece for a table. Broom Holder. A broom and dustpan holder *s a handy contrivance which the houseclnintv corou'c tn fVto troll uh^iir live feet from the floor and then has it ra.ly for service. The broom handle is inserted in a U-shaped hook and is held there by its own weight, which creates a pressure against the thin edge of the hook. It can be removed instantly. The dustpan is hung en a spur projecting from the lower end of the hook. Refrigerator Hint*. Keep the ice compartment full of ice. The more ice the greater the economy. Ice saving schemes are absurd, defeating the purpose of the refrigerator. It is the food that is to be kept instead of the ice. Keeping the iec in the siek room or at a picnic is another nutter. Overripe fruits and vegetables are a menace to the health if ''eft in the refrigerator. A. cellar or otner damp spot is i-o place for the refrigerator. On the other hand, it should not be put out of doors unprotected. If much ice be used on the table and for other purposes, an authority advises a storage box for extra Ice. it suouiu oe spongea out oiten wiui warm water in which a little soda has been dissolved, and the drain should not be neglected. Should ants get into a refrigerator a saucer of tartar emetic mixed with sugar and water should be placed there. It will drive them away. Do not think of covering the shelves with cloth or paper any more than you do the ice. There must be good circulation, with consequent melting of Ice, to preserve the food therein. That Front Yard. Country people have the opportunity of making their surroundings beautiful, but how seldom do we see an attractive dooryard in the so-called country towns? In many places even the grass Is not allowed to grow up and beautify the yard. The chickens are turned out and become the scavengers?they roam about at will, doing more harm than good. Most farmers leave the cultivation of the front yard to the women of the household; this is not right, for although they can plant the seeds and bulbs and do the weeding necessary, they are not able to do tbe rough work that generally is required to bring about an attractive yard. Unless the soil is excellent and will produce a good crop of grass the yard should be plowed, enriched with dressing, then seeded down with grass seed and clover. Care should he taken that the young grass is not tramp led upon and lias a good, vigorous start. Such a lawn will last for years and give the owner much satisfaction. But a poor lawn may be enriched with dressing of hard wood ashes, seed may be sown in bare spots, and while this may not give such a beautiful lawn, it is often done, as one dislikes to plow up the yard?it is so unsightly?and it must be done early in the season to give best results.?Agricultural Epitomist. items j|l Batter Bread?One-half cupful of boiled hominy, half a cupful of white Indian meal, two eggs, one cupful of ni^. m:;o toaspoonful of salt, two teaspooufuls of baking powder and onefourth cupful of melted butter; beat well; make in a buttered earthen dish half an hour. Gooseberry Jam?Top and stem the gooseberries; to every pound of fruit allow one pound of sugar; put the gooseberries into the preserving kettle and barely cover them with cold water; after they are well boiled to pieces add the sugar and cook half a'n hour; put into jars and tumblers, and when cold cover with paper. Celery Root Salad?Bare the celery roots; then put thorn into cold water for twenty minutes, then put them in a stewpan. pour cold water over them, j add a little salt and cook until tender; noiir off the water: cut the roots in slices and when cold pour over a French dressing made of one toa?i>onnful of salad oil and three teaspoonfuJs of vinegar, a little salt and pepper to season. Okra and Rice?Wash and slice sufficient okra pods to measure one quart; cut half a pound of rather lean ham into dice; scald, skin and cut in pieces four tomatoes; put with the okra in a stewpan; add one medium sized onion (sliced), and one and onehalf cupfuls of water or stock and one sweet pepper chopped fine; simmer half an hour; add calt to season; pile hot boiled rice In the centre of the platter, and jjour okra ar.eund it,, - ' - i FITS permanently cure*. K? fits ornervon-:ies.s after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great ferveltestorer.titrial bottleaud trtatise free )r. It. II. Kline,Ltd., 98 J Arch .-St., Phila., Pa. Missionaries are at work in L'47 of tbe failed cities of China. Mao's Cure is the best medicine we ever used brail alTections o; throat and lungs.?Wii. >. Endslky, Yanburen, lnd., Feb. 10, 1900. Among the Japanese one divorce takes 'lace for every four marriages. One of the big problems before nnchmen in the South we* t Is the rekivenation of their ranges. Over tocklng has practically killed out he grass la many sections and this a bound to decrease. TTie holding lapaclty of the ranges. Similar conI it ions exist in parts of the North* Irest. The range does not need a rest io much a* a change. Diversification a the solution of the problem. tary Parkdaie Tennis Club, Chicago, from experience advises all young girls who have pains ant sickness peculiar to their sex, to use Lydia E. Ptnkham's Vegetable Compound. How many beautiful young girls develop into worn, listless ana hopeless women, simply Because sufficient attention has not been paid to their physical development. So woman is exempt from physical weakness and periodic pain, and young girls just budding into womanhood should be ssrefally guided physically as vrell as morally. Another woman, Miss Hannah E. Mersfcon, Collings wood, N. J., says: " I thought I would write and tell you that, by following your kind advice, I feel like a new person. I was alnrava thin And t* >?H ia weak | that I oovld hardly do anything. Meng struation was irregular. " I tried a "bottle of your Vegetable Compound and began to feel better right away. I continued its use, and am now well and strong, and menstruate regularly. 1 can not say enough for what toot medicine did for me." ? 96000 farj^k It frlfin*! of abovo lottor proolo^ fonolnonott oafaqt f* protietd. Lydla E. fMnkham's Vegetable Compeutid will care any woman in tne Land, who staffers from womb troubles, inflammation of tt&e ovaries, and kidney trembles. MEfCWATCH A New Revel We offer something different, better tha in this city. There Is no patchwork about oar treat We do not treat a.! diseases; bat we eure t are cure hi all oaaa* ssoepted for treatmen Write if you eanaot a oil and describe y< %i charge, oar diagnosis blank. Coosultatl Doctors Leathe Hours 8 a. m. to 8 p. m. Pnr U. Sundays 10 a m. to 1 p. m. bull ITlQ j uuauui yvu mft w www uww Wood, wind oq the uom#eh. Moated boweU pnini after eating, liver trouble, sallow akia regularly you are tick. Conrtipetioo kills n starts chronic ailments and Ions years of am CASCARETS today, for jrsu will never got right Take oar advice, start with Cascar mooey refunded. The genuine tablet stats booklet free. Addtaac Sterling Remedy Cot f*HICK.EJVS you cannot spena years ana a buy the knowledge required 1 cents. Tou want them to pay them as a diversion. In order to hand! thing about them. To meet this want \ of a practical poultry raiser for (Only a man who put all his mind, and time, en raising?not as a pastime, but as a bi ty-flve years' work, you can save many earn dollars for you. The point is, tha Poultry Yard as soon as it appears, and teach you. It tells how to detect and ci fattening; which Fowls to save for bri you should know on this subject to mal 2vs cents Jn stamps. BOOK PUB*-T8HI BEST BY TEST | j "I have tried all kinds of waterproof it clothing and h&ve never found anything I at any price to compare with your Fill Si Brand for protection from all kinds of Bj weather" fi .The tame and address of the wnier of this unsolicited letsar raay he had upon application.) A. J. TOWER CO Th.Sr.efth.R* , Boston, U.S.A. <0WIS9 1 Ai TOWER CANADIAN llRB0*? i CO.. UMITED J ~ A Toronto. Canada '&fi i Maim / Warn,it* Wtt Wtattor OhtMtf HI THEHESSLER /Wg*gj jjjft pnivad by an > r nT^S ^ Sonvaalr Be^ Ji tons fm mm Vs spplioatiorvA BUBAL MAIL BOX bMUl a'snal price. II. 1L Hesaler Co., F.O.a?i B44B, Wrracnae, ?* Dropsy II jflfcV. J Remorea *11 swelllag ia ttM? P* / days; effects a permanent (MB if jm' /V in 30to 60 days. TrialtrestaMM . * given free. Not ding can be Wv Write Dr. H. H. ffraoa'a 8w*_ 'd ^srj 1 ?Hl. SftMisllttA Mi Attaota^m ELIXIR. BABEK Tba Quick a.ad Sara Can far MALARIA. CHILL*. FEVER AMR LA GRIPPE. It is a powerful tonic and appetiser win core that tired feaiinr. Palas In Back. Uaeta and Head. Is a purely vegetable eomaoaaCjHE ^ ' contains Jto Quinine ar Arsenic. Prepared hp r J KLOCZIWIEI A CO., Waahlaartna. Bl?. > A "ftncceaa" Training ScbooL Goldey College Is a Business and Sborthaa* v School tbat makes a specialty at tnlpiiftt tudents for "BUSINESS-SUCOESS." INnaA nates with two Anns. Students from Gee*"- A itia to New York. Write for eatcdegm*. Addreaar fl Goldey College, Box ikOO, Wilmington, BoL -.A Q Beat 5oo?h Srrnp. *?>>* ^oo3TtJaa Q Q la time. Sol* Or drocsiata HI VPiSS IpinirnFi mfr NaM?r*BllndH*ri?sK?3i?2S?23 | Sort It*. lanrOt^ImCtlj.li^kfttNnMl HOUR BEALTHl J ation for Men. n an7 other specialists or medical MM Ma , ^ ment. The core is perfect and puimiwn^ ho?e ire treat. A prompt, permanent sal t. Nothing but c arable eases accepted. >ur troobles and raoatr* by return maM,, tmi - on free. rman & Bintley, rietta and Forsftt Sit, ATLANTA. EL~- j \ THE IDWELS ^ | V OAMST y \ CATNARTM 3?TTp^?4!dtir^bilkIu?nr?r^^^^*^^"^y i, foul month, headache, Indication, plmplea, and dlssinesa. When your bowela doa t moo* *, lore people than all etbtt diseases tof ether. It.I ?a| (ferine* Wo matter whax oils yoa, mart takiaa - ~ well tod stay well uq^jjrou get your bowel* M eta today.nader atjolaiejguarantee to cure or |- , ipod CCq, Nryv^sfliB-buUc. Sample aad K1 npany. Chicago og 50* W f.L, Douglas S3.50 SHOES SS. Dougtaa makes end sella mere jmadim 1 ahomm then any other manafamtmma M wertd. The reason W. L. Douglas $*J0 shoes a?Ms test stivers in the world is because of their exccfleat aM^ ' titling and superior wearing qualities. If I eouM snap - i 1 the differaaae between tbfc enoes made In my faiiaiy M ose of otner mak.es and the high-grade leather* used, pa Mid understand why \V. L. Douglas $3.:o shoes coat?p- , 1 make, why they hold their shape, (It better, wear hna md are of greater Intrinsic value than any other $SJ* mmm -, >n the market today, and why the soles for the yeas <afeg. \ aly 1, 1JW, rrere v $6,263,040.00.. L. Douglas guarantees their raine by stamping has sa**nd prUe on the honom. IxK>l( for It ?take no snbMMai% old by shoe dealer) rery where. Fast Color Eyetitx am iscltuicelg. Superior in Fit, Comfort and Wear. ' 1 hart tcom W.L Doug to.1 S3.50 shoes for the tost Itceimt saw* with aboolutf action. ! find them superior in fit^mmdSMa and tcear to others costing from $5M to $7.00." It. 3. Me CUE, Dept. Coll., C.d. Int. Revenue, Rickjutmd,f)? V. I._ Dnnelfla r.ua t1 nrnnn (TAltabln In fiUCaaa. shoe*. Corona Colt It conceded to be the flaaife Patent Leather made. ^ 3BHD FOR CATALOGUE OirnCrt FULL IXStEUCTTOSS ^ HOW TO Oi:l>tr. BY MAIL. ? W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, f EARN MONEY kw,g??-g unless you understand them and kn*tr how to cater to their retirements, mtm ollars learning by experience, eo you raudk by others. We offer this to you for only K their own way even if you taerely kot? e Fowls Judiciously, you must know somi ve are selling a book giving the expellees* 25c.) twenty-flve j ears. It was wrlttee Mr and money to making a success of Cbldfcuslness?and if you will profit by his tiw%Chicks annually, and make your ,t you must be sure to detect trouble to th* know how to remedy it. This book n ure disease; to feed tor eggs and also ftr sedlng purposes; and everything, lndsefc. te It profitable. Sent postpaid for twea*yNG HOUSED 134 Leonard St., NswTorkCt^.'.1 . . iJ