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N fc ? FARM-ORCHARD** Along the bottom lands of the llrazos and Arkansas rivers the cotton stalks grow so large that It is almost as much work to clear the laml for a new crop as it would be to clear it of hazel brush. If 110 man asked or could get credit and all paid spot cash what a nice old world this would be to do business in. Wliilo .. ............ 1 1 ? f< UIIV nuvu It nu iu IIUHIU IJ\T lUdll UU Homo, tho poople'as a whole would be bettor off. One of tho best ways to pot rid of quack grass is to seed the Held down with clover and give It a pood coat of fertilizer. The clover -will then prow so dense and heavy that It will choke the quack prass out. Even where corn cannot be successfully grown barley, peas, millet pround, clover and blue prass will, with skim * milk, make lots of pork, a nd^ mighty good pork, too, and any country where these things can be produced should raise hogs. We have a young friend who pot his home In shape, furniture anil domestic equipment all complete, before he pot married, which Is so much better than hiking off to some justice or parson to get married aud then goir* to live with the old folks. A good many men in the west in trying to produce both beef and butter on their farms do well with neither. The two interests are always and forever clashing, and most men will make a better coral>lnntl?j>i? wltl? tlio at*ur nnd v 'be bog or the cow aiul tbe bog-. A great deal of very careful, scientific I anil thorough work is being done in the 1 strtes or Iowa nnd Illinois In the effort to improve thq quality of the corn. Al^'O'uh.by the use of selected and pedltwenty-BYc onsurta-jwaviJus l-ep'orted from Illinois. It is but reiterating a baidheaded truth to say that any man is a fool to ship to any commission house which offers more than tlie going prices for a product, nnd still men are being bitten in this manner all the time because their greed nnd avarice are better developed than their common sense. A lady who died recently In the east left by will to her husband $100 per month .and her cat and dog $.">0 per month. From this It would appear that the deceased lady thought just twice as much of her husband as she did of her cat and dog. We know of cases where it Is just the other way. The kind of roads a whole lot of people are clamoring for will cost the taxpayers not less than $.1,000 per mile. It has taken 200 years to get this kind of highways in Europe, nnd the people there have been further favored with nn abundance of pauper labor onH A mllltoMtf 1.-1? nuu it ujiiiiuij nttioaii/ tu ih"h> IIUIIU them. Wo made the discovery this spring, In connection with n belntcd spell of winter coming tlio Inst of April, that the fruit buds of the apple, cherry nnd plum will endure nt least 11 degrees of frost, provided it comes before tlio buds nre open, and go through such ordeal without injury. Iiad the bloom been fully opened such freezing would have destroyed the fruit buds. A MEASURE OF MERIT. Union Citizens Should Weigh Well this Evidence. Proof of the merit lies in the evidence. Convincing evidence in Union is not the testimony of strangers, but the endorsement of Union people. That's the kind of proof given hero. The statement of a Union citizen:. J. It. Porter, printer, employed on the Progress, living on South Church Street, says: "I havo never felt hotter in my life than I have since I used Doan's Kidney pills which I procured at Holmes Pharmacy. I was a great sufferer from hackacho for a number of years. My trouble was right rtcross the small of my back and the pain was ^sometimes so severe that r thought my 4back would break i n't wo. I have plaster'ed it, and rubbed itpintil it was all raw, onrl rtrtn maaj hi iuiorj hid ?#? onltn rxf VMV v? ?j viiw III nj?i IVJ \r k all I coukldo, nothing seemed to help mo. I road about Doan's Kidney Tills and got them. Half a box relieved tnc, and the use of two boxes entirely cured me." For sale by all dealers. Trice 50 4E:ent8 per box. Fostcr-Milburn Co., utuffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United Htates. Remember the namo?lX)AN'8 ?and take no other. D?0*0*0#040*OC^ 0*0404040*0 I TWO IJSf |! i EJTILE | 5 2Jjv arci Lindsay O 5 Coleman X j1 (,'opi/r'crM, />j/ 2'. C. McClure O L <>0$0*OK>?0<00*0^0^0*0*040 The fall rnins liail sot in, and the mountain town, nestled in u basin that j on ail sides was fringed by groat hills ! that pushed against the sky, was at its 1 ugliest when Koitli came. I lie had boon ordered to lids particular spot by his physician and had boon fortunate enough to secure the classes In Kuglish at the big. ugly red brick j Kelioolhoo.se proudly spoken of as the ; college by the townspeople. In the llrst ("ays of his coining, tired : out by the unaccustomed^ restraint of i the schoolroom and the monotonous i drip of the rain on the roof, he more ' than once tlung his things together, determined to risk everything and return to his chosen work and to his world, i But his doctor's threat, that vague and ! awful threat of what might befall, held him. I And suddenly the Indian summer had slipped down on the gorgeous woods and tilled them with poetry and glamour and languorous joy. It was ! late afternoon, and a woman's voice, i gentle and roflned, was calling: "Prudence, come in. 1 need you." Keith laughed?a not too pleasant laugh. "So do I," he declared. V Vllic.l llolliilni'ulv "-ait'i'l 'I""' ? 1 through the open window. "1 won't," it sulci. "The sun's slipping behind a far mountain, the woods lire painted, the valleys are spilling over with gold mist." Keith's laugh rang out as it should, and he went to tlie window to view the young person. It was a young person, of course. Hut she was gone?caught up, maybe, on the curled up edge of the crimson cloud that was sailing straight into tlie sunset splendor. In the gossip that rippled round the boarding house table that night lie heard that a widow and her niece who were to spend the winter in the cottage next door had arrived. Keith was @ ___ IIE ALMOST HAN UPON TIIF. OWNER OP TUB DELICIOUS VOICE. a silent, unsociable fellow, but lils heart leaped unaccountably at the careless words. It was the name, he assured himself, a name full of dignity and repose, that attracted him. That night the name cniue between him and the letters ho wrote home. It danced on tlie pages of the compositions he corrected. Prudence?it was a delicious name. "I'll be hanged if I don't believe I'm bewitched," said Keith Irritably, lie got up, went to the mantel and took down a picture. "You've got a rival." lie had formed the lonely man's habit of sometimes speaking to himself. "She's not In the least like you. Iler name Is Prudence." For the hundredth time Keith looked Into tlie smiling eyes ar.d wondered why a beautiful and cultured girl such as the picture declared her to be should take this holdenish way of making a man's acquaintance. y Fancy a man returning from a long day's hunt in the Maine tvoods to llnd a girl's picture lying, face up, on the cot iu Ids tent, lie h;ul secured and secreted it before it was noticed. lie felt a peculiar reserve about it. There was something in the pretty, proud face that helled the act. Across tho back of tiie photograph the words, "When I ain near again and you fall to visit me, I will not leave you my picture," were written hurriedly. Keith carried the picture home with him, framed it prettily and set it on his bureau, lie took a singular delight in the study of this face. Sometimes In the midst of his hair brushing he would snyv'T!l find you some day, you beautiful disembodied Impossibility," of as he tied his ernvut: "Your eyes are ser'ous tills morning, Miss Daley Miller. Ilave I met with your disapproval in nnv wav? Tliev are beautiful i'v?? I ' 1 tlillik they nrc like gome violets that grow in n corner of my mother's garden." In the time Just passed, when life seemed all rainy days and stupid grammar classes, Keith fled for refuge after the day's work to his quiet room, and there, looking at the picture through clouds of smoke, lie found himself twenty again and a lover. Keith did not meet the girl next r, door, although ho caught glimpses of hur. If ho went out, sh<? oanio In and | vanished through the doorway; if ho , came in. slio fluttered up the village street. Keith was fairly ashamed of tlie Interest lie took in lnr movements. It seemed so flagrantly unfaithful to Ids picture, lie grew apologetic and put tin* pictured eyes In the bottom of Ids trunk. I Hut a morning came? a sparkling, flawless morning?when, turning a corner suddenly, he almost ran upon the owner of the delicious voice. She was walking rapidly, and her face glanced Into his and beyond him. She swept past?a glowing, sumptuous beauty. Keith put out his hand and steadied himself against a friendly rail fence, lie didn't try to understand. As the days passed he mu'ijpd his prejudices. And another late afternoon came when the gentle voice called: "Prudence, come hi. I need you." , Kcitli got the picture out and spoke , sternly as if to an Invisible culprit: j "You've boon a conceited fool. You ! don't understand it- in all probability! you never will?but she's pure gold." One morning the girl stopped in front of him and held out her hand, saying: = "I'm not a bit conventional"? Keith's bounding heart settled into his shoes, as though he didn't know I llO fiwt hmlii't oi.hiI nmxlliu casing It. "I'm sure you know uiy name. I've just had a letter from Hob Grahamc, ' uiy cousin, asking inc to make frioutls ' with you," she laughed adorably. "You s were iti Maine with him, he says. I f was there for a little while. We wore roughing it, too, and were not faraway. I cauie by your camp one day and left ' Boh a picture which he hasn't appro- 1 dated enough to acknowledge. The ' cook showed me his tent." ' "Your eyes are just like some violets in my mother's garden." Keith hadn't safd it aloud. He hadn't said. lunch of anything. His blood surged in ! his veins and sang a piean of triumph. ' He understood, and she was pure gold. ' The girl, pitying his timidity?Bob J Graliame had said he took no stock in ( girls, but that it would be a charity to 1 brighten him up?talked on. 1 "You must hate being hero. It's hard to drop out and just give up for awhile, 1 isn't it? I had planned such a full, ' beautiful winter. Funny that both of ! us should have got pneumonia and he exiled. We must clicer each other. A 1 year isn't long. Bob says you are lonely. You must come in and let mo cook you something on the dialing dlsli. I nusn, i*'nu eating with himself, "I'll call you Prudence, and then I'm afraid there '11 he an awful row." 1 "Why, you do want to come"?they had reached her gate?"1 see It In your eyes, you poor, hungry, forlorn man!" There's a wonderful light that comes sometimes at evening to the hills. It creeps from base to crest, changing from pink to purple, from purple to red, milii an is nre ami giow ami glory. Walking in this sunset radiance late one afternoon Keith stopped at his own gate, lifted the latch, opened it wide and said: "Prudence, eonie In. I need you." Prudence smiled, the tender, adorable 6mile Keith loved. SernionH Mmle to Order. "An English clergyman makes a business of syndicating sermons," said a drummer who had Just returned from London. "IIow do you mean?" some one asked. "Why," explained the drummer, "tku clergyman writes a sermon, and then he prints about forty or fifty copies of it, and ho offers to one preacher In each of forty or fifty towns the exclusive use in his own town of the proiluct'on. The price of the sermon to each man is only 5 shillings, but If fifteen or twenty men take lt'^t brings in to the symlicator, you see, aht?ut 100 shillings, or $2.">. And since the sermons are so s*t that one can be done in a f morning that Is pretty good pay. The symlicator advertises his sermons In a religious paper. The notice reads: " 'A clergyman of experience and niodcrato views wlio distinguished himself during his univorsity course In di- ( vinity ami English composition will furnisli original sermons in strict ac- $ cordunce with tile Cliurcli of England in good print at shillings each. Only one copy will he given in any diocese. I A specimen will he seut if wished for. | Sermons made to order on auy required I subject 011 reasonable terms.' Philadelphia Itecord. An Ilmiext SlrrnU. Humor makes its nppenranee In queer places, but one would hardly expect to find it at the door of a house of correction. An unfortunate fellow was taken before a Justice of the peace in Milwaukee, charged with stealing a quantity of wood. There was not much of a defense to offer, but an attorney who knew him volunteered to say a few words to the court in his behalf. The attorney began his talk, and, warming up to his subject as bo proceeded, Anally succeeded in making a good plea for leniency. The Justice, of course, found the prisoner guilty, but j[ let hint off with a sentence of thirty I days in the house of correction. When | nit- cuiuiiiiiuiiMii iia<i oeen mndo out It wns discovered that there was no constable present, so the lawyer said to ! the prisoner: I "John, you know where the house of correction Is, don't you?" "Yes, sir." "Well, here's 5 cents and thl3 paper. > You take a car and go out there an/l give them this paper, and they'll let frou In. Will you do it?" "Sure!" And the funny part of this story from j t'.ie Milwaukee Hentlnel Is that John . lent his word. " I 1 I i -t'! iiuiilftiikt, i rtftiff ^ * -i & Long Hair "About a year ago my hair \v- s coming out very fast, so I bought a bottle of Aycr's Hair Vigor. It stopped the falling and made my j hair grow very rapidly, until now it $ is 45 inches in length."?Mrs. A. B Boydston, Atchison, Kans. \ ! i>ui?l rar^s^aantTM:.. ? mam.1 iwiiwtiw?w1! There's another hunger than that of the stomach. Hair hunger, for instance. Hungry hairnccds food, needs hair vigor?Ayer's. This is why we say that 0 Ayer's Hair Vigor always | restores color, and makes J the hair grow long and | heavy. SI.CO a bottle. All drtifsisls. If your druggist cannot suH y you, Q send'us one dollar and wo will oxptcss 3 yoti a bntftie. llo sure and givo tlio na.mo jj of your i?arc"t exoross oUioo. Address, C. A YKIt CO., I.ov;eU, Mass. 8 GYPSY RETICENCE. II Wn* \nt I'roof Iprsl.i.sl I'linrle* (iodfrr) t.v!a:i<l. Charles Hodfrey I.- Ian 1. author of he "Hans Itrdtmanu" ballads, h:ul a mssion for studying the race of gypsies aiul at the same time great human lympatliy with tin in. The fact that to was the greatest living auiliority on lie gypsy tongue and customs gave iim littie pleasure compared with the lcliglit of being hailed as hrotltor by rypsy horse traders at English fairs ind gypsy musicians in ltussia and \ustrta. One day in Philadelphia* he met throe lark men whom he knew to be of an indent stock, lie was qliite sure that they could speak a language whleli contained roots of Sanskrit. lltndoo ind Persian. Yet they would make no lisplay of it. They would, like their race, deny all knowledge of it as well is the fact of their gypsy blood. He addressed them in Italian, and they answered fluently. Lie changed to obscure tongues of the east, and igain they replied. "Have you got through all your languages?" he inquired at last. "Yes. signor. all of them." "Isn't there one left behind wh'.eh rou have forgotten? Think a minute." "No. sjgnor; none." "Snrtiow. you nave ?m. | (he basket." Roland looked the man fixedly in the eye and put a question In Romany. There was a startled glance from one to tlie other and then a silence, lie asked them, again In Romany, "Won't you talk with a gypsy brother?" That opened the gates. They shook his hands In great emotion and tried to tell him how happy they were in having met some one who knew them. ?Youth's Companion. Mo on So iicrst i t loss n. The eclipse of the moon is full of jorteiit to the Macedonian Mohammedins. It indicates bloodshed. It is net with reports of firearms, and the imams call from the minarets the faithful to public prayers in the mosques. This recalls in a striking maimer the practices of many savage md barbaric nations. The great nations of Asia, such as the Hindoos and the Chinese, still cling to tlie belief in the eclipse monster. The latter meet it villi prayers, like the Turks. Ilut even 11 civilized Europe, both ancient and modern, one finds numerous proofs of this superstition. The Romans came to the succor of the nfilictcd moon by Hinging firebrands into tlie air, by the dure of trumnnts niul ilio i-lnnc r?f jtuzcn pots. The superstition survived through tlie middle ages into a very ate period. France, Wales and Ireland >ITor many instances as lute as the seventeenth century. I'nilrr Water. "What was the trouble?" "lie couldn't swim." "What has that to do with Ids fallire?" "lie got into a company where the itoek was nil water."?Exchange. Easy Pill 8 Easy to take and easy to act is that famous little pill DeWitt's 8 Little Early Risers. .This is due to ft the fact that they tonic tho liver in- 8 stead of purging it. They never gripe 8 nor sicken, not even the most delicate D lady, and yet they are so certain in 1 results that no one who uses them is I disappointed. They cure torpid liver, 8 constipation, biliousness, jaundice, 6 headache, malaria and ward off pneu- | Lmonia and fevers. 1 PRPPARSD BY 1 1 S. C. DeWITT A CO., CHICAGO I Don't Forget the Name. EARLY RISERS Dr. R. M. Dorsey, Specialist n diseases of the EYE and EAR and OPTICIAN. Successor to II. It. Good ell. Uexauder's Music Ilall, Spsrtanurg, 3. C. 47-lyr. 'II. 1-11 The skr'ke ar.Uy^V^. i^rd was quick to note the avail ~v of the barbed wire fence as jus place for hiiu to impale his victims .. mil. The paper said that he was a ricti farmer; hail half a section of good laml, lots of stock, line home and all that; that he went to town, filled up on whisky and then went lioinc and thrashed his good wife. Now. there is 110 use in cussing the saloon keeper in such a case as this, but instead this old duffer should be given thirty days at hard labor in the county jail in spite of his standing and money. This would cure him. It will cure nine out of ten of such cases. If the public highways did not border every man's farm and were confined to a few loading thoroughfares through a county it would be easier to got good work done on such roads. Some men are so narrow and seltish that if any money is paid by them for such a purpose they want it applied on the highway in front of their lands even if three teams did not travel the road. Th* main traveled roads should he first ' put in good shape; then when this is done the byroads can receive attention. lie called at tlr* farmer's house, praised his < rop and his stock and his children, with the result that ho got the granger's name signed to an order for a twenty dollar map or atlas of some sort. When he came t > deliver the hook the fanner's wife, a muscular female, went for the little sandy haired agent with a ;?>!; r and made him canoe! the ord -r. Wb'-n the t Id man came home lo suppm* there was a family scene which vr * are prevent;* 1 from properly describing in tlmse notes and can only say that the o!d man looked ^ tiled when he went to bed. Oiiturrh of the When the stomach is < v< needed; when food is taken into it that fails h> ligest, it decays and inflames the mucous membrane, ex p. sing the mo ves and causes the glued* to Hereto v.u-uu. nstead of the natural juieos of digest ion. I'll is is called Catarrh <T the stomach. For years I suffered with t'atuih "! the Momaeh, rinsed by imligt stion. D e'.o:s and all medicine* failed t > b: n lil me until 1 used Kodoi P\>prpsia Cure.?J. IC. Itbea, Cuppeil, Tex. *( 1 I by 1'. Puke, 1 i;c grnu 'Cav?! ! 11 It* I'h'Kt i'tinii Iti it* old fashioned Term the menu was usually written large on cards of such imposing dimensions that room lur one oiliy COURI Ul1 lOUMll ;ll CiU'll iMul of tliu board. I a (hi? us-. .11.oval ti ;.- .i'.i m fii'lj-yiJua must have tnedkeva) dinner was a mil. '~!T mr--1 prises. It was divided inlo ?ourses. as arc our own dainty meals. lint whvr as nowadays the'diner has a general idea that llsh will follow so:.;i and that on Iroo is succeeded by ivlove. and can conceive generally the sort of demand that each course will make upon his appetite and digestion, there was no possible nr^nin.it as to what was going :o happen at an early I-higlisli dinner, and close study fails to reveal the existence of any principle of arrangement. Discrediting: nn Astrologer. A certain king,, says a tale from the Persian, asked an astrologer, "IIow many years of life remain to me?" The wise man replied, "Ten." The king became very despondent and betook himself, as one stricken with a sickness, to bis bed. I lis vizier, who possessed great wisdom, sent for the seer and in the king's presence asked him, "How many years have you to live?" lie replied, "Twenty." The vizier ordered that he should that very hour lie executed in the king's presence. The king was satisfied and commended the sagacity of his minister, and no longer attached any importance to tlio astrologer's saying. Cur^s Eczenn, Itching Humors. H 'picidby f.*r old, chrome, cases taki 'o iv ic libcd Halm I' gives a healthy o >d fcupp'.j L-i t! e nIT-cted pints, laals ill the s-oivs, eruptions roabs, scales; cops l he aw ful itching aid binning ol c7. ma, swellings, suppurating, watevy s i es, e.'c. I >i ugiist-1, ?1. Sample free u.d prepaid by wiiiii g 15'ood lhiltn Co., Vil nda, Ha. IV>cril?i: timiMe and fiee '0< dical advice sent in sealed h tier. An t iiforioi?:?(c Hoc-!inc. r,. y ^ rJxJ>Vf j_ __ ^ '" 1 -I ?Host on (ilobe. !Y<?1 Wllllo'n S'.'iiili, Mnfhor WIIIli- Vrtii miicit utnit ncl'ltirr I papa questions, l'on't you pec they an noy lilin? Willie?No, lua'ain; it ain't my qttestlons that annoy him. Mother -Willie! Willie?No, ma'am; it's the answers he can't give that make him ntnd.? Philadelphia Record. To Cure a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Ttromo (Quinine Tablets All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove1* frigaatuie on each box. 35c. 0 ly KAIIM MOT11KRS l-'IFTY YEARS AGO. Looking back lifty years, it would seem that the mother 011 the farm iu those days must have had a linrd row to hoe. She usually hud a large lam ily, and she not only had to make tlio clothing for the family, but spin the yarn and weave the eloth out of which it was made. She had to look after the * sugar making, the hog killing in the rare of the meat, the soap making, had to bake in a brick oven and cook at an open fireplace, and the good Lord only knows what she did not have to do besides. 1 tut it must be remembered that she belonged to no woman's club, did not bother with fashion magazines, put her children to work as soon as they were weaned, made no angel's food or frappe and was happily rid of nearly all the heavy burdens which women in these days place upon themselves at the dictate of style and fashion. She usually lived to a good old age. a good mother and a splendid type of womanhood. Today the farm mother buys her family clothing largely ready made, she runs a sewing machine, cooks on a steel rnnge, gets all the meat from the butchers, makes neither soap nor sugar and does not have as many children to euro for, and for nil that is quite likely to be an invalid und under the doctor's care at fifty. POTATO POWT3H AMI LIGHT. J lie* insigniucani potato Dais mir to become for (iormany what the corn plant is to America?n creator of great national wealth. The tuber thrives remarkably well in that country, and the animal production is very large. Heretofore its uses, aside from its edible value, have been confined to the production of starch, glucose sirup, potato Hour, dextrin and starch sugar. The two recent inventions of the Welsbacli burner and the gas engine, strange as it may seem, have opened up new uses for the potato in the shape of potato nleohol, which can he produced In unlimited quantities to sell at retail at about 17 cents per gallon. This alcohol used in a lump with a mantle produces n wonderfully brilliant light, rivaling the electric arc light in intensity, while used in the gas engine it affords a very cheap motive power. The brightest minds in th<> empire are engaged in developing this thing, which bids fair to make a groat nation independent of botli coal and petroleum. ni VFlLEBEES AM) CLOVER SEED. Y\'e are asked what relation the bumblebee sustains to the production of developed. This bee is tho only one of Ills tribe which has a tongue long enough to reach into the deep set petals of the clover bloom after its sweets ' "?iiu i'i>1*1 jijflp the tlower. Xo clover New Zealand until (ho ?... introduced into those countries. The i ui iiii-i iu<i'in.? m niiiui.' as in wuy nus bee duos pat as n usual thins fertilise the blossoms on (lie lirst or June crop of clover, this crop rarely containing any seed. We think that this 111113* he explained b.v the fact that but few of the bees survive the winter, their little winter store of 1101103' often being destroyed 1)3' vermin, and not until the new swarms appear are the3"?in snfllcient number to properly eover\ clover field. SOniEit SIGXS. There had been a snowstorm And some hard frosts and a lot of discouraging weather the last of April. True, the robins were nesting and the grain fields were greening up and the cows were out to grass, but the leaf buds and the fruit bloom were waiting and waiting for the niercuiy to touch 80 before they would get down to business. Ma3' 2 wo woke to hear the song of a red breasted grosbeak and the aria of a brown thrush in the top of an elm tree, and then we heard the shrill eliirp of the martin and the twitter of a brown wren in the peak of the wood house and that evening heard the chir-r-r of a tree toad and knew that summer was right at hand and June roses, skeeters, commencement, picnics and the iceman close at hand. ( KRAI, RR WARDS. Tho man who works tho soil, who Is brought into daily touch with nature, is always having revealed to him new mysteries-and new beauties and wonders tho while ho works, just as tho student of the Bible or Shakespeare is constantly rewarded with hidden treasures of literary beauty. Wo slmcerely pity tho man who, working tho soil as a business, can never see anything but tho dollars in the harvest. When one wants to know and learn. Nature is a most kindly teacher. She speaks a varied language, and none does she try to teach so patiently and well as him who lives the nearest to her heart, ller textbooks ore object lessons, crop failures her punishments, abundant harvests her certificates of graduation. Wild. COST *50. With land worth $7."> per acre, corn worth 35 cents, hay $0 and hired help worth per month and board, it will cost about $"><? to produce a thirtymontli-old steer weighing 1,300 pounds, and the breed of the animal will determine whether there will be any profit in bis production. If be Is a scrub and brings $1 per hundredweight he will be raised at a loss; if a high grade Shortborn, Doddle or Whlteface and brings $<> there will be a profit. About nil the 1DQQOU nntl upnflfc noOAolof a/1 *** I * U i----* iinouviUit'U TV 1 ill UW1 production are connected with thla proposition, niul the worst of it Is that there are so many iaen who will not believe it until tliey have tried it. V' v