if-: ‘ U'ii fc-'." Kik" DAIRY AND POULTRY. INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READER8. How SucraMful Farmer* Operate Tbl* Department of the llnmeitead—Hint* A* to tb* lare of - Lire Stock ami Ton I try. A New York Pouttrymen. , At the Wisconsin Round-up institute held at Monroe lust week. C. E. Chap inun. of 1’eruvllle, New York, made an address on poultry raising. He Is a young man and has been in the busi ness but n few years, but he exhibits the true instincts of a business-like poultryman. Only about six years ago he begun to keep poultry. His first movo in tho business wus to rodu-L everything to figures, to know Just how many ho had, how much they cost, how much feed they consumed, how many eggs they laid, and how great the profits on all his fowlB and on each fowl. It may be an encouragement to our poultry-loving reuders to know his record for one year. We will take tho year litftO, which he began with 000 hens, partly brown and pnrtly white Leghorns. Ho has settled down to the Leghorn fowls, believing them to bo the best layers. The record will bo of great interest to those that take interest in the laying capacity of each breed. Some have put the Leghorns ns low as laO eggs per year, while most books that give tho capacities of tho breeds, set the standard at 200 eggs. This lat ter figure lins long been regnrded as very Inaccurate, though doubtless a nock could he bred up to that point by careful selection. For tho entire year tho 600 hens lay on an average 164 eggs each. These eggs brought on an average 21 Vic por dozen, the total receipts for tho year for eggs being *1,800. He must have bred a large number of birds and have bad numerous cockerels to sell, as nls receipts for stock sold was $170. The manure from these flocks had a value of *270. This would be 45 cents per fowl for each of the 600, but it probably represents tho droppings also of all tho new stock produced. Tho total receipts were *2,240. The expens ?® wefe: Cost of feed. *660; labor, *300; Interest on money invested, in fowls and buildings, *50. This gives the total expense as *1,070. The not P*1®*** of ‘he **oc't *or fbat year was •1,1 i 0. Thfi nflt nrnflt nnn Kl«4 _ £v. Ite 91.95. . '{.h,8> i1 c?urB«. was not done by letting the fowls hustle for them Mlves, as they are compelled to do on many farms. The birds have been well housed and well fed. The houses are well and warmly nuilt, each one holding about 100 fowls On® of the houses as Illustrated on a chart, had the following proportions: Length—Thirty feet. Width—Twelve feet. Lower story—Six and one-halt feet wall or posts. Upper story—Four feet to plates. Windows—2x2 feet on one end, on side 4x2 above and below. One Idea brought prominently to the front In the diagram of Mr. Chapman Is that too much light should not be given, especially on the south side. For this reason the windows are small and few In number. The reason as advanced by Mr. Chapman Is that the poultry house should not undergo rapid changes of temperature In the winter. When there are large expanses of glass on the south side the winter sun pours through them, heating the rooms to almost a summer temperature. The fowls also place themselves In the di rect rays of the sun and so bask In a July warmth. But when the sun goes down the temperature falls with great rapidity, falling frequently far below tero. This dally and nightly change is of great injury to the fowls. After being heated up in the daytime they are unable to so well endure the arc tlo cold of the nights. Fowls bad bet ter be kept at a low temperature than to be forced to endure It halt of the time. This will be a new Idea to some pouttrymen, but appears reasonable. However, the advocates of houses with glass exposures on the south will say. anH liiatlv thot 19 n *... «_ > ,« - » » • -- — j uvuoc UC constructed with double walls and storm sash In addition to the first sash the rooms will retain through the night much of the heat they have acquired during the day. The houses of Mr. Chapman have ventilators, but we learn he haa discarded the use of them, boarding them up. v We give the table of his feeding ra , tion, which Is as follows: 1. Morning, by weight, all they will eat. one-half bran, one-fourth corn, "ft ft one-fourth oats. Mix with milk or IS boiling water. One pint of salt, two qqarts of charcoal. One bushel clover , hay cut fine. If no milk add sixteen pounds of meat. f 2. Noon, whole grain by measure; ft-' two parts oats, one quart buckwheat, one part wheat. Feed one part to every fifty hens in chaff. 3. Night, whole grain by measure. Same as No. 2, all they will eat u . 4. Drink, milk or pure water. 5. One bushel beets or other green IX' feed per day. For chicks his ration Is as follows: A cake—Sour milk, salt and soda; stir In sifted feed till it Is very thick and % * bake. If It Is all right it will crum . . ble when broken. P>\ 2. Cracked wheat. X, 8. Milk or water. .V Besides these are oyster, clam, sea shells or bone pounded or ground Road dust or sand Is given in desirable quantities. gftft It should be remembered that the ra ft* tion for fowls is for 600 hens. We jft; ! would not like to have any of our readers feed a pint of salt to a small ft ft flock._ Small Home-Hade Cheese. Nice, small cheese may be made for home use In this way: The milk of two cows may be set at night in a deep pall in cold water. This will check the ris ing of the cream. The morning milk may then be mixed with the milk of the previous evening, after it has been | warmed to the same heat as the new milk. The rennet, of which one ounce is enough for 100 pounds of milk and 3ft 20 pounds of cheese, is stirred In the warm milk In a proper vessel. This is covered and left until the curd is made, I and becomes tough enough to be lifted ] ft with the finger. It is then cut by a ! long-blntled knife Into square* of an Inch, so ab to liberate the whey. When tho whey has partly separated It Is dipped off by means of a shallow’ dish without breaking the curd. The whey Is then heated to 100 degrees and (s poured on to the curd, which is cov ered to keep In the heat. After hnlf an hour the curd will become tough enough to lift without breaking, when the whey is all drawn off and the curd Is broken up with the hands and heaped to pern it more of the whfiy to drain off. This will take up half an hour. The curd Is again broken and the whey care fully pressed out by hand, so tho cream may not escape. It Is then left another half hour, when it Is again broken and Baited at the rate of two ounces of llnely-ground salt to seven pounds of curd, and is placed In a v/ooden hoop or mold, lined with a clean cloth dipped lu the whuv. The curd Is pressed into the mold firm ly, and noeds no weight or pressing. When it has settled in the mold, it is taken out in the cloth and set on a board and turned once a day until it has formed a crust. It should then be rubbed with butter and turned occa sionally during the curing, which will require two or three months in a tem perature of about 60 degrees.—N. Y, Times. Inrulmtor Egg*. The Farm-Poultry notes that somo breeders of good repute are offering sittings of eggs at prices which are right for good stock, and in addition, advertise incubator eggs at a very great reduction by the hundred. Sit tings will be priced at $2, $3 or $5, per haps, while the Incubator eggs from the same breeder go for, say, |6 per hundred. The inexperienced buyer who wants to make a start in poultry knows something of the reputation of tho breeder and the strain of birds, and seeing the eggs thus advertised argues to himself that there is no use in paying sitting prices when the prices by the hundred from the same flock are so much cheaper, and bo he orders the larger quantity at the lower price, sets the eggs, hatches out fifty or sixty chicks and is grievously dis appointed. .The eggs are culls, of course; they are ifrofn birds that the breeder would not sell or use himself for breeding stock; they are simply fertile eggs that will hatch a fair per cent, of market chickens of the breed named, but they are not what tho buyer expected to get. The buyer is disappointed and the breeder suffers In reputation, for whenever the former speaks of the latter to others it will be to the effect that he bought some eggs from Mr. - and they hatched out scrubs. A breeder when he sells “in cubator eggs,” should, tor his own sake be sure that the buyer knows what he is getting, and Is getting what he wants. There Is no wrong in selling “Incubator eggs," provided the matter Is under stood, but there should be neither de ception by the seller nor can he for his own sake afford to permit self-deception on the part of the buyer. Bacteria In the Dairy. An exchange contains the following: “An alleged Joke Is now current to the effect that an old lady troubled with obesity went to consult a physician. ‘Madam,’ Bald the man of science, ‘you are troubled with an excess of adipose tissue.’ ‘Gracious!’ said the old lady. ‘I wonder if that is what makes me so fat.’ We are told that certain kinds of bac teria produce certain kinds of flavors in butter, and certain other kinds of bac teria produce sour milk, and certain conditions bring forth certain kinds of bacteria. Now all this is an old truth in a new garb and sometimes we do not recognise It any clearer than the old lady recognized her surplus fat under the name of “adipose tissue.” When we ask the scientist how to kill the bacteria that produce sour milk he will tell us to apply heat to the vessel after removing all the milk adhering to the vessel. This is what we do when we wash and scald in the old fashioned way; and similarly when we inquire what to do to produce the bacteria that produce the line flavor in butter, he will give us the same instructions that any good dairyman would give us without reguru w science, mieiiigeui uuiryiuen have demonstrated that in order to get good products from the dairy it is nec essary to observe certain rules, and now scientists are telling us why it is neces sary to observe these rules. We should aim to make ourselves master of all the information the scien tists have to give us, as such knowledge can not fail to be of advantage to us, but we should not follow blindly everything the scientists tell us, unless experience and hard common sense are on the side of the scientist Too ratty Foods. In conversation with a party not long since the question of feeding poul try came up and several expressed themselves very decidedly against withholding the corn or buckwheat, emphasising his views with the state ment, “A hen knows when she has had enough as well as a man.” This was true, perhaps, but did not touch the point It an animal is fed an excess of fat, no matter the source, it is stored on her body. A certain quantity is ne cessary to supply the fuel and provide for the wastes, but over and above this the excess goes on to the body. It shows itself especially on the intes tines, around the gizzard and in clog ging the body, infringing on the space necessary for the action of the natural functions and particularly preventing the formation of eggs. If this food be continued there is sure to result a fatty degeneration of the liver. Pale combs, black combs, dead hens under the roosts in early morning, loss of the use of their legs, are all symptoms of this one disease the result of overfeeding fattening food. Without doubt the loss in this direction is greater than any other in the poultry yard.—Ex. Lady Cake.—Take two and a half scant teacupfuls flour and after sifting mix well with it one heaping teaspoon ful Royal baking powder and sift again; add one and a halt teacupfuls powdered sugar, blended with half a teacupful of butter; beat the whites of two eggs to a froth; add gradually to the flour half a teacupful of milk; follow with the sugar and the butter, and next the whites of the eggs, finishing up with a teaspoonful of the essence of nlmon.l. Bake in a hot oven for three-quarters, of an hour. ... { GRAND OLD PARTY. MORTGAGES NEITHER A CURSE NOR A BURDEN. the Calamity Hofflir'i Pet Boyle a Creature of the Imagination—The Old Holdiere Sacrificed to Benefit the Fifty-third Congreea The progress of the Investigation of mortgage Indebtedness In Minnesota, by the bureau of labor, has been followed by the St. Paul Pioneer Press with In terest. It is now complete; and the re sults exhibit conclusively that mortgage Indebtedness Is not the curse and burden upon the farmer that the calamity howl era would have It. On the contrary, It appears to be the regular and well un derstood means by which the poor man acquires and Improves his holding; Increasing where the Increase of new settlement Is largest, and decreasing In the older portions of the state, as farm ers begin to put their savings Into the paying of debts Instead of Into better ments. The mortgage foreclosure Is a bugbear to the city speculator and city investor, and to a few of those who deal In acre properties not only for Im provement but for a flyer In the market. To the actual farmer Its terrors are mostly Imaginary, save where there has been drought or the chinch bug or the hailstorm or some other destructive visitation of unpreventable calamity. The total farm mortgage debt of Min nesota, according to Commissioned Pow ers' investigations, was about $39,000, 000 on the first day of 1890, being an In crease of between $3,000,000 and $4,000, 000 in the preceding ten years. But not only were these years of vast develop ment to the state, years when an enor mous acreage was added to its tilled area, requiring the Investment of much new capital, but they were years in which the farmers had added to their resources improvements and machinery to the amount of $3,826,690, and live stock valued at $26,820,862; while the value of their properties had increased over $146,000,000. It is estimated that the foreclosures on farm property In 1892 and 1893 were from 40 to 50 per cent less than they were ten years before. At the present time the amount of fore closing Is very small. The older agri cultural counties are putting money in the savings banks. In the newer there Is the same struggle for existence that there must be wherever man attacks the raw resources of nature without capital of his own. But it is a struggle against aetit than it la tor an as sured independent livelihood; and it is one which, with intelligence and indus try, Is In no wise in doubt. Mr. Powers has done a valuable service to the state In collecting the figures which show the promise of Minnesota agriculture under conditions which were far from the most favorable. Mr. Cleveland, “Pesdiiead.” A president of the United States, espe cially one who Is rich, should be ashamed to practice the “deadhead” business. Mr. Cleveland, however, seems to be as callous in this respect as in others. If reports are trustworthy, his recent duck hunting trip was undertaken wholly at the expense of the federal treasury. He not only employed a government vessel on his Junketing expedition, but he took navy officers and an army sur geon along with him. What right has Grover Cleveland any more than another public servant to appropriate a government vessel and the time of government officials to his private purposes? So far as the army surgeon Is concerned, the action of Mr. Cleveland is contemptible. This person Is stationed at Washington in order to give the families of army officers medi cal attendance free, and while he is away from duty these officers are com pelled to pay for medical services out of their meager salaries. Mr. Cleveland might Just as well put his hands In the pockets of these men and abstract for his own benefit the sum which they are thus forced to pay. There Is no excuse for “deadheadlsm” on the part of Mr. Cleveland. Beside being wealthy, he receives $50,000 a year from the government and the UBe of the white house for a residence. In ad muon, a president of the United States should set a better example than trying to "beat his way." Such a thing may be tolerated In a tramp, but it is totally unbefitting the chief magistrate of a great nation.—New York Advertiser, Robbed from tb# Pensioners. ‘ But for the robbery of the pensioners by the present administration the ap propriations by the late congress would have exceeded those of the so-called "blllion-dollar congress" by forty seven millions. As it is, the late congress appropriated live millions more than that which received the billion-dollar label. Mr. Cannon has shown up the matter in a very striking light, but did not go far enough by half In fixing the responsibility for the detestable work where it belongs. Grover Cleveland has received much abuse for the tenacity with which he has clung to the members of the cabinet who he called around him. Half the country could not understand what he wanted of some of them at least, but it has been demonstrated by the incidental outcroppings of time that he knew what he was about. He had business for Car lisle. and he had a special Job for Hoke Smith. How well they have performed the wishes of their master everybody knows. And with a half-way decent re gard for their faithful services he could not part with them now. This pension robbery was of vital im portance in the carrying out of the pol icies of Mr. Cleveland. With the general impoverishment of the people it would not do to have it go on record that his congress spent more of the people's money than any that had ever preceded it. There was no other source in which such an enormous reduction of expense could be made at such little cost to the democratic party. Besides, the amount necessary to take In each case was com paratively small, and there would be no great interest like the trusts, backed up by money, to protest against the sum mary way of raising the wind for demo cratic buncombe. It took nerve to carry, out tbe plan, and it was best to have it in the hands of a man whose prejudices would naturally assist him in preserv ing the rigidity of his backbone. Hoke Smith got the Job, and did his work so well that the last democratic congress will go into history with an expense record under the billion mark_ but only by a scratch.—Kansas City Journal. Almost a Veto. The country in Just made aware of the narrow escape It has had from a great calamity. It is given out on the RL.horlty of a “cabinet officer” that on Sunday, March 3, the president was on the very brink of vetoing the sun dry civil and general deficiency bills, and then summoning a special session of congress. What particular items in the said bills excited his animosity and stirred his indignation we are not told. It Is not often that the president al most does a thing and doesn't do it. He is not constructed that way. When his mind is once set in motion in a given direction it moves with a good deal of momentum and is not easily arrested or turned aside. Hut in this case, it would seem, the cabinet, which was in session, rushed In and threw themselves in front of the president, so to speak, and derailed him and saved the country. It gives one the "cold shivers” Just to think what a narrow escape we had. We have heard of children playing on the slopes of Vesuvius, heedlessly pluck ing flowers, while the imprisoned giant below is turning himself restlessly, pre paring to vomit forth floods of scorch ing lava. So heedless and so uncon scious were the denizens of the capital and the people of this country on that critical Sunday morning—Detroit Trib une. Anything Is Posalbe. What with mediating with two wars in Asia and Africa, repressing a half dozen revolutions In South America and the West Indies, and nursing a howling neuralgia simultaneously Secretary Gresham is as busy as a cat with six skillets to lick. There is really no tell ing what complications in the diplomat ic relations of the country may not arise under these trying circumstances. Another Kind of Poverty. A Washington dispatch asserts pa thetically that Secretary Gresham is poor. That may be, but it is not on account of his poverty that Mr. Gres ham is not popular. It is because his administration of the office was poor that he fell from such esteem as he once enjoyed. They Look the Other Way. The free-traders are exercising un wonted forbearance. They have never once charged that strike of 200,000 Eng lish shoemakers to the tariff, as they would have done had it occurred any where save in free-trade England. The Country Drrithei Freer. It Is now safe to look for a Bteady Im provement In business. There will be no more tinkering with the tariff, and no'ihore monkeying with the currency, which is to say that the menace of a democratic congress has been removed. As a Memento. An addition of three-quarters of a million a year to the national interest account is one of the things by which we shall remember the first half of the Cleveland administration. Mew Version. "For lo! the winter is past, the rain is over and gone; the flowers appear on the earth; the time of the singing of the birds is come, and the voice of the cuckoo is heard no more in our land.” Mo Veterans Meed Apply. The duties of mail weigher could easi ly be discharged by old soldiers, but few veterans will waste time and postage by applying to Mr. Wilson for any of the 400 positions to be filled. Profit by Our Experience. Canada, with a debt already upward of $300,000,000, is scarcely in the right condition to try a “tariff reform” experi ment, if one is to judge by the present plight of the United States. How Did They Manage ItT Five thousand people are subsisting on free soup in New Foundland. This seems remarkable, considering that the democratic party has not been In con. trol up there. SWEET CHARITY. Th* poor Woman’s Appeal Wrung; a Ready Response from the Mechanic. It was in a Main street restaurant. The clerks from the neighboring stores and offices began pouring in for dinner. While the waitress put a lamb-stew din ner. with coffee and pie, in front of the writer a man came in and sat down op posite, says the Cincinnati Tribune. By his dress a casual observer would have put him down as a mechanic, but his hands were as soft as a woman's. He ordered milk and rolls, and when he had about half finished a young woman came in. She was poorly clad, and, hesitating for a moment at the first table, she took courage, and going close up to the table she spoke to the man who was eating a big dinner. With a frown he answered "No!" She was disappointed and her looks showed it. Then, her eyes falling on the mechanic with the soft hands, she went up to him, and with a voice that seemed full of sorrow she said: “Won't you help me. sir?” “You bet I will. I'm a poor man and I’m not eating a big dinner (with this he turned and scowled on the man who was), but I'll help a poor girl from starvation.” This speech, in a rather loud and ex cited voice, attracted the attention of everybody in the room and all saw him lay a quarter on the table. The young woman’s gratefulness seemed to render her speechless. She took up the money in an embarrassed manner, expressed her thanks, and started to leave. Every body had a coin in his hand by this time and as each handed over his donation he scowled on the man who had refused. The poor young woman went out and the “mechanic” with the soft hands, having finished his milk and rolls, paid his bill and left, the hero of the hour. The writer followed and a few yards up the street two familiar figures met his gaze. They were the young woman and the man who had ordered milk and rolls. The pantomime was brief and plain. She dumped a handful of small change in his hand and they started down Main street together. Ad Old gtsger’s Advice. Old Player—When next you try you want to forget everything but that you are on the stage. Amateur Slipupp—That was just the trouble; I did forget everything but that. a J'i;. <•;- ... V- - -W. -v*i: 'J.. vsk . ■ ‘ • • . • '• weak • 5. nerve Indicate as surely as any physical symp tom shows anything, that the organs and tissues of the body ore not satisfied with their nourishment. They draw their sustenance from the blood, and if the blood is thin, impure, or insufficient, they are in a state of re* ▼olt. Their complaints are made to the brain, the Icing of the body, through the nervous system, and the result of the general dissatisfaction is what we call Nervousness. This is a concise, reasonable explana tion of the whole matter. The cure for Nervousness, then, is simple. Purify and enrich your blood by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, and the nerves, tissues and organs will have the healthful nourishment they crave. Ner vousness and Weakness will then give way to strength and health, That this is not theory but fact is proven by the voluntary statements of thousands cured by Hood's Sarsapa rilla. Read the next column. I • "With pleasure l „ffl lU- J Sarsaparilla has helped For several months I could DotN sleep on account of heart trouble Prostration of the Nervi For three years I had been doeJj could not get cured. I rccei«7 v'l while, but not permanent ginning to take Hood’, SarTjl was a change for the better H time I was feeling splendidly , '* well and am able to do work J. kind. If I had not tried Hood’s Si I do not know what would hare! me. I keep it in my house all th» u other members of the family take? say there is * eM Nothing Like Hood', Sarsaparilla. I have highly tK0 and one of my neighbors has co„? taking it. I recommend Hood’s i at every opportunity.” Mbs s il DOCK, 404 Erie Av., Williamsport pj vania. Remember 1 w Hood Is True s Sarsaparill the Only Blood Purifii J I it’s lorillard’5. Ifs much the best! _ , 0**nj**»: I,Regarding prospects for tho romint y«ir. “F. **!>• to double our la*t year** output of Aer ®r> •< tenet, at too haw don* m i/m ixuf, nU tomiif* four out of every tmemty-Jtc* windmills that art sold. Sine* commencing ike sale in 1889, WB HAVE BOLD A BO IT 500 AERMOTOR8 We do not attribute thia fairly good record entirely to onr ef forts, Vat to the superiority of the good* which you make. Buie ill k Davii. Urbane, 111., February 18, 1895.” ’ Ontuiu : We bought and put up Aermotor No. J, and out of the first fifty which yon made we had thirteen, flineo that time we have told about 400 AERMOTOR8 In«« ■™*li fwrttory ia repreeented the history of the Aermotor and the Aermotor Company from the beginning to the present “°“r- *_T**5.hl*lory *■ of unbroken triumph. there have been but few Aside from the Aermotor other windmills put up enough with which to show the infinite su Asrmoter in design, finish (all galvanised lien), and ability te ran when all ethers stand We should have sold more. supplied with wind peared, it beim in our territory—just compare and periorityof the workmanship, after comole* and do effective work idle for want of wind, bnt thia region was wall when the Aermotor ap. to Chicago, and had for for ten or twelve of the strongest windmill eom* within 50 miles of us. HAS COMB FROM MB OTHBR (JSSATIfiFAC* ABBMOTOBS. Too say year surpassed any pre* about onwhalf, and that last year’s output the .. , - * - -- *■.« «« for otir portion of it, for the Aermotor never stood.farther shove all competitors in repu* tv to day' 8mii“ * BaieuT, Marengo, IU.f peared, it being only flft miles yean been the battle ground largest, best known and Sanies, all being located IlCH OF oct it81 am PLACIKO WOODS! AND TOBI WHEELS WITH you have during the past vious yoar’a record by yoa expect to double your coming year. Count on us February 35, 1895.*' Thenaxt Aermotor ad. will be of pumpe. We shall offer for $7.50 A $15 thr.. w,T f.rc pump, ill daalen ahould haw It or can nl It pump, ill daalara limit haw It or can ,«t It tonUatthat prleo. illiarnotormrawillhav.lt. Ilia week !? w ?t.wlU V1** °”' m*»irtlaam.Bt ot (alvaoiaad ataal traka at 2lt taut, par (alien. Th.y naithar ahrlnk. leak, mat, •atmaka water taaaa bad. Aarmotor Co., > "COLCHESTER” SPADING BOOT. BEST IN MANKRT. _ BEST IN' FIT. BEST IN WEARING J QUALITY. The outer or tap sole ex tends the whole length down to the heel, pro tecting the boot In diff ering and in other hard work. ASK TOUR DEALER _ FOR them ana don’t be put off With inferior fronds. OCH.CHK8TKR RUBBER CO. WALTER BAKER & CO. The Largest Manufacturers of PURS, RICH ORADE ns AND CHOCOLATES SuCLOn this Continent, hare rscalTst "HIGHE8T AWARD8 from the great Mistrial anil Foul EXPOSITIONS Unlike th« Dntch ProccM, im Atk» |lies or other Chemicals or Djto are need in inr of their ore Deration*. *n*ir acucioua UltfiAIWAST I'UCUAil ftMOiUMJJ f«nua boIuMb, ind coat* lets than one cent* cop. •OLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER ft CO. DORCHESTER. MA88. Beeman’s Pepsin Gum, InE PERFECTION OF CHEWING GUM. A Delicious Remedy For all Forms of INDIGESTION. CAUTION—Sc© that the aamo Beeaaa la on each wrapper. Kach tablet contains one vraln pure pepsin. If the fuxn cannot be obtained from dealers, send & cents ISSraBSaiuci, 10 ROTS ?* w*™» W*«TD. amr JV liy i Pfcl mm Wu7 ur oomwl—Ion. ckn» ImI fin *xiiai«Ukw V. imh WU The*# pattern* retell In fashion buun tai • for 36 to 40 cant* each, but In order to iucnMilhi mend among stranger* we offer them to ttu era of this paper for the remarkably low priatfa lO rent* each. Postage one cent eitn. J The pattern* are all of the wary UtaHHeM •tylee and are unequaled for style, acflhrtcyofMj pllolty and eaonomy. For twenty-four jttn M pattern* hare been used the country onr, M| eorlption* and directions—as the number of M material required, the number aidnamacte ferent piece* In the pattern, how to cut and Dim the garment together— are sent with act w with a picture of the garment to go by. Th*B torn* are complete In every particular, thin Hr separate pattern for every single piece ofth« Your order will be filled the same day it U r«*» | Every pattern guaranteed to be perfect. Lambs' Tba Gowk. Pattern No. 6331 ii cut incite ri*.: 3*, 34, M, S3, 4t and 41 inches bust roan"] Here is areiy d“* II Ul B ' with front of crimps « Bilk In pale pink. 8*** ■ white. . Full gntdu»te:1 ‘""J of lace crow the ibow the full #qu«™ J0*1". outlined with F^®J* satin ribbon, lonf*"^ of whieh fall from™*** t at the left front / arrangement la title 1 liningi that«•! l center front Tbe J* PUull front can alto »»» tj to clore In «nM*v*2 "shoulder and leftfrt*" rosette as here «• crush collar of *»“ the neck. Th« tion. o( the ■**; fecert with the crief* » > foil Empire P"®,111ZZ pon itendteff oel When not um the crimp**®* 6331. uMUWWPr - j front can he fathered or plaited. Aooordl ■Ilk la much need tn thle way M* Wok combi nations of lace, net. crepe, de-sole and silk, taffeta, cashmere or be decorated to suit individual be found a good model'for eotton fabrlrt, yoke, collar and bretelles can be omitte The retail prioe of this pattern Is 33 cento Boys’ Shot Waist. Pattern No. *354 h cot * aiae*, yU: A, •, t, 10 and 18 years. ■u.i, tu; a, a, a, «v *• .,vi Sttlped out!nf flannel make thU _I h!<> ffarment for boys. Buttons or studs are used ii'j closing; tbe tand at the waist line being provided with large: | buttons which will support the knee trousers. A Byron collar fortable ehlrt sleeves are 5354 slashed at the back, provided cuirTWAS® with sneer and under facing BOY 3 oHl with upper and under facing: and completed with cuffs that 0r are closed with buttons and buttonho preferred. ... nr wt»hout■ The waist Is Intended to wear with iUC wain IB IUWUUBU w '•»— • _ or blazer as the weather and circumste cbecked' It can be attractively made up in »t » : l»in |»ro»7e. cambric, glngbim, ranch flannel In blue, gray or mueJ The rvUk.i price ot pattern Is 2»eetlM' Mima* Wjubt wtth Vest Fbost. eul in Hum •!•*>, Tin: 1*. »‘“"‘.SuS »»'2 .tun of fTfJS M«* cloth i. tan* »hown 1" fronts, »’•"*„ nIot. * trlnin.lnKth*tJ»w & r»ver*1?d'^n «JIoon in S^11' Z.~\a .ha.iei. i. ft i0ld joodi 2 The noveltJ <• lines the pi* bines .he:e’”'™^V brown b«tn? — chemH^J of 0303. furor of m wnlto or colorol U f W stylo wm KSSbylh. mod.,^ tailor fashion, or Qe'!; retail price of pattern l» --’E"’**' ...«««*OOUPCW*^^ j JKPgffi gl” and wiw1 w Either of ‘^P^eipJo- w cefe? to any address OP™ E“S;?Voupoa a.A •iimp or utAmna wne to any address upon E“Sg'coup® surer or stamps wh*n^ntf^'P05 dosed -with order and one tea , with your address. _. ™TrS* t Address OOVVOMP*4£jfe**S> nr r.oo> »°* Patents Jrad8;IS Bnamlndtoo^nd bvrntloD. ftltteDt”