FARM FACTS. FRUIT AND POULTRY. From the Household: Poultry may be either an advantage to the fruit grow er or an intolerable nuisance, depending on the management. There should be a reasonable relation or proportion be tween the flock and the capacity of the fruit plats In a range. Ready control of the flocks should be maintained, and then if they are used as rangers they can gather a vast amount of insects and vermin from the vines and bushes. The fruit plat should be large in pro portion to the number of the flock per mitted to range in it. We have always had all manner of trouble with breeding egga when the flock had only a limited range. They disappointed us with ref ence to high scoring points, well-feathered toes, and the like, and the los of eggs waa heavy in hatching and the chicks weak when hatched, aa might be expected where the start in life has been disadvantageous. Liberty, the de velopment of the rustling quality and the variety of food found on a good range count for much in the vigor and vitality of the breeding stock, and yet feeding for rapid growth Is much less detrimental when the fowls have large range than even the most skillful feed ing in contracted quarters. If fruit Plata and vegetable gardens are used as range they should be so used that the fruits or vegetables are not Injured to any great extent; with care the dam. age the birds do need be but slight. There Is no better Insect destroyer than a flock of fowls and no better food for them than the insects which would oth erwise be injurious in the orchard. Ev ery fruit grower, who is also a producer )f poultry, should study to make one in dustry help the other, and take such pains aa will prevent them from mu tually injuring each other. THE TIME TO SELL, From the Farmers' Voice: In deter mining when is the best time to sell, the different conditions under which the farmer Is placed must be carefully con sidered. Generally, under what may be termed average conditions, the best time to sell Is when a product or ani mal is fully ready. But many farmers are not In a condi tion to feed an animal to full maturi ty and must sell at least a part of their pigs and calves while the are still growing. With pigs especially the farm er who cannot grow a large amount of grain will find It to his advantage to sell his pigs before they are sufficiently matured to fatten. Of course they must be in a vigorous thrifty condition in order to sell at good prices. But with good pasturage and a very little grain, pigs may be brought to average of 125 or 150 pounds at a low cost, and If thrifty the farmer who can grow good crops of corn will be willing to pay good prices for them. The breeder and feeder makes In this way a good prom and the farmer that buys and fattens for market secures a good return. But when a hog or steer is fully ready to market there Is no profit In holding for a rise in the market. After a cer tain stage of fatness is secured, any gain beyond that Is secured at a gradu ally increased cost, so that in a ma jority of cases the rise In the market is not sufficient to cover this, while there ia always an Increased risk of loss. With products, In storing for better price there is the risk of loss, the In terest on the money, the shrinkage by waste and drying out that must be considered. In a majority of cases it will require a considerable rise to leave any profit. It Is not always the animal or product that sells for the largest amount of money that pays the best profit, as the cost must always be from wht is received to get the profit, so that holding and selling at higher prices is not always as profitable as it seems. HOW TO SAVE TIME. National Stockman: If proper care Is not exercised in keeping all milk uten sil perfectly sweet and clean much milk will be lost by souring and much time wasted in washing cans, palls, etc., in which the milk has soured or dried on the sides. It is frequently the prac tice at creameries to leaves the weigh cans, milk and cream vats, and tanks unwashed for several hours after us ing, not realising that the delay causes extra labor. At the Kansas Agricultural College dally a few day ago a number of sam ple bottles were necessarily left un washed until the next day. It took Just three times as long to wash them as It ' did on other day when they were washed as soon as the milk was thrown out In washing milk utensils they should first be rinsed out with cold or tepid water, then washed In water aa hot as the hand can stand and finally scalded thoroughly, and then If possible set out In the sun. If more care is used In cleaning the palls, cans, etc., there will not be so much sour milk sent back from the creamery; the patron will feel happier and so will the creameryman. WEEDS GOOD TO EAT. rlew York World: 3o out on any farm and see the farmer hoeing away at the weeds that threaten to choke his crop. You may hear him say things that wouldn't sound well about the weed. The dandelion Isn't the only weed eaten by people who know what' good to eat. Take wild chicory, the plague of the farmer. It makes one of the finest salad served.plquant.tender and wholesome. Chsrlock or wild mustard, Is another bane of the farmer. He . doesn't know that as a pot herb it can give a soup a delightful flavor. The dockweeds how annoying the whole family are! Yet the broad leaf variety and the curly leaf are used all oyer or aa table veritable. There's pokeweed, commonest of them all. In France it 1 cultivated. It take Its place with sage, thyme, par' ley and bay leaves as a flavoring for soup. Everybody In America hates a nettle and can't see what use It is. In Scot land, Poland and Germany tender young nettles are boiled as greens. The Germans boll them with other vegeta bles to give them a piquant flavor. Purslane is another weed that can be treated the same way. Most people think milkweed poison ous. It is a medicinal vegetable, with a delightful flavor all of its own. The young leaves, when they are Just in the right condition, are a cross between spinach and asparagus, and in a salad are delicious. Sorrel fettlcus and chevril are looked on as field pests by ninety-nine out of every hundred farmers. The hundredth one picks the choicest leaves from these weeds and sends them to market.where they find a ready sale for salads to be eaten with game and for flavoring herbs for herbs they are and not weeds. THE FEED AND THE OOW. Dairy World: There is considerable In a cow's possibility to give a good quantity of rich milk, but it is easy to have that possibility ruined by poor feed and care in bringing up and de veloping. On the other hand, no amount of food and care will induce a cow that gives thin, poor milk to turn about and give milk which Is rich In solids. Good feed and good care will help develop many cows that have been neglected, but if there Is any decided improvement it will be made with cows that are born to be good, but have not lost the opportunity. To get the most out of any cow, good or bad, good feed and care are necessary, but It is the good cow that gives the best return when well fed and cared for. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Onions should always be boiled In hard water salted, because the lose much of their flavor and aroma if boil ed In pure soft water. Hard Sauce for Pudding Beat to gether one-half cup butter and one cup powdered sugar until creamy. Heap on a plate and grate nutmeg over it. When applied to a hot pudding this melts and becomes liquid. No better covering can be found for the milk or the cream Jug, the opened can or the gravy boat, when set away with their contents, than a paper pulled over their mouths. Scalloped potato and shirred eggs are food for either supper or breakfast. Scallop the potatoes in a dish that car be put on the table; when done, spread a few bits of butter over the top, cover with eggs, and return to the over six or eight minutes. Remove, season with salt and pepper and one-half teaspoon ful of melted butter to each egg, and serve at once. Systematic physical exercise and edu cation should be conducted in summer In the open air. The plea that It is too hot to work or play games is a poor one. Brisk, vigorous exercise on a hot day will sometimes make us better able to stand the heat. Our blood needs stirring up to make our system work better. It opens the pores of the skin, and the blood throws off the waste ma terial better. The result Is we are less affected by the heat that if we rested all of the time and did nothing. CAUSE OF SOFT BUTTER. New York Witness: Borne butter that Is made In summer. Is often soft or mushy, though, of course, mest of it is solid and of good grain. The reason why the soft butter is not ef the same quality as the hard Is that it is not made in the same manner which, of course, includes the handling of both the milk and cream. The softness of the butter Is generally due to the tempera ture being too high, and this is wny soft butter Is the rule in most dairies during the hot months of July and Au gust Perhaps the reasons why the diffi culty is not overcome Is lack of con veniences, pressure of other duties, and In some cases Ignorance. To overcome all this keep things cool. Have the cream at the proper temperature and if you cannot secure the means of making it so. It would be better to give up tne Mm. of maklns: butter during the sum mer, for it would be a great deal better not to make poor butter, even ir you are Interested In the smallest kind of a way, for It will ruin your reputation, and this once done it will be next to Impossible to build up any kind of a business lnelther butter or cneese. Churn the cream during the morning would no doubt be the best at a tern nemture of about 66 or 68 degrees, for this will prevent Its becoming mushy. A soon as the butter comes In lime granules about the size of grain of wheat It Is time to stop the cnurn. Rhiild It look milky and not float well. pour in sufllclent cold water to make It float. Having done this, draw off tne combined water and buttermilk and pour In more cold water, almost filling the chum, and then revolve the churn rapidly about fifty times. I had this Illustrated to me a few weeks ago at inailtiit. and the result was a lot of butter with each little grain standing out separately, extremely nrm in t:x ture and ready for salting. The employers' association, represent ing from $7,000,000 to $9,000,000 of local capital, has been organized in Spokane, Wash., to resist any demand of organ ized labor In the city which It mem bers may regard as unjust. The lum ber mills, breweries, flour mill, treet car companies, electric light company, gas company, water power company, factories, merchants and moneyed in terest are all represented In the asso ciation. THE POWER OF MOTHER'S VOICE A mother sang to her child one day A. song of the beautiful home above; Bang it as only a woman sings, Whose heart is full of a mother' love. And many a time in the years that came He heard the sound of that low.sweet song; It took him back to his childhood days; It kept his feet from the paths of wrong. A mother spoke to her child one day In an angry voice that made him start A if an arrow had sped that way And pierced his loving and tender heart. And when he had grown to man' es tate, And was tempted and tried, aa all men are, He fell; for that mother's angry words Had left on his heart a lasting scar. By Charles 8. Carter. HOW TOMMY WENT TO A CIRCUS Prudy, In the Little Corporal Maga zine: Billy had a wonderful stock of patience. To be sure, he had very little to try It, for, as be never had to go through with any washing or any brushing or curling to speak of, he saved up all his stock to spend on more Important matters. This special morn ing, he had waited at the alley gate, with his sticky face pressed against the bars, waiting and watching for nearly an hour In the vain hope that Tommy would make his appearance. As for Tommy, he was in the house, trying to harness his kitten to baby's little tin express wagon. The trouble was that whenever kitty heard the wagon rattling behind her, she turned around, quick as a flash, to see what was coming, and so Tommy had to be gin all over again. He gave It up at last and kitty crept away under the lounge to lick her fur into respectable condi tion, and Tommy sauntered out the deer, quite undecided what to do next Then Billy's patience had It reward. "Cmover here, Tommy," he called; "want t' show you something." Tommy came down to the gate; like Parley, the porter, he only meant to look through, but when he saw the doors of the livery stable all splendid with red and yellow posters he marched straight across the alley before he stopped to think. "It's the clrkls." said Billy. "It's over by the soap fac'try In a ten more'n a mile big; an' there's elfunts, and ranga-tangs, an' camels hlgher'n a house, an' monkeys, an' everything." "I saw monkeys to the musement," said Tommy, twisting his short neck to get a good view of a picture that was pasted on sideways. "Ho, 'tain't like them things," said Billy, scornfully. "The elfunts dance en one leg, and they have a horse that can read the paper and fly In the air with a man standln' on his pack. My brother Sam seen 'em." "I'll ask my uncle Jim to take me," said Tommy, "or nelse papa." And so he did; but he found, to hi great disappointment, that neither of them approved of the circus at all, so be was forced to console himself by ad miring the pictures. "I know the way," suggested Billy, temptingly; "you Jest come down to the corner, an' I'll show ye.' " Tommy did not mean to go any farther, but when they reached the corner there was a big store In the way and they had to cross the street to see plainer. Then they walked along a little farther to see some gold flsh In a window, and then to see what a wooden Indian was holding out in his hand, and then to examine some red velocipedes. until at last they came to the street cars Right at the corner there was one'wlin allttle flag on top, that ald. in big letters, "TO THE HIPPO DROME." Neither of the boys could read It, and If they could have done so. they never would have guessed What It meant. But Billy knew that the car with the flag went to the circus, so be said : Le" get in." And foolish little Tommy got right in. There was nobody Inside, but pretty eon the car began to fill up, and soon after they started, the conductor came through for tickets. "Who pays for you, bub?" he said to Tommy. Papa, nelse Uncle Jim," said Tommy, promptly. The conductor looked around In quiringly, and Tommy explained. 'They didn't come, too; we're goin to see the clrkls, me'n Billy." 'Haven't you got any money?" asked the conductor, smiling a little. "Course, I "sh fink so," said Tommy, "in my tin savings bank; and a dollar beside of It, only if lost down the frlgerator hole to the parlor, where the warm comes up." "I've got more'n that," said Billy, "only I borrowed it to sam, and he don't never pay me." "They're running away, the little rascals," said a good-natured-looking man to the conductor. "The best thing you can do Is to put them off at the next corner, and tell them to go home." So the conductor put them off pres ently and told them to run straight home or the policeman would lock them up, at which Tommy began to cry, but Billy was not In the least troubled. "Come on, Tommy," said he, boldly, "we're 'most there now." "I want to go home," whined Tommy. "My mamma say you're a bad boy, and I mustn't 'soclate wld you." "You've got to come," ald Billy, tri umphantly, "'cause you don't know the way home. My mother says you ain't nothln' but a big baby, with yer curl and yer white stockln's." Tommy quailed at once before this awful sarcasm and walked meekly along by Billy until they actually reach d the ground and found, to their dis may, that people war expected to pay for going to a circus. Half suffocated by the dust, trampled and Jostled by the crowd and frightened out of their wits they Anally made their way to a vacant lot behind the tent, and sat down to rest and think what to do next. The fence was covered with an awful picture of a man In a cage of wild bests, and Billy's courage revived as he looked at it. "Tell ye what," said Billy, "If I was a top o' that fence I could peek in." Tommy looked up hopelessly at the high fence, and made no remarks, but Billy began at once to make search for a board, and finally secured a short one which he managed to drag from under a pile of rubbish, and leaned it against the fence. The first attempt at mount ing brought him down with a sprawl to the ground. "Jiggles too much." he explained, wiping his mouth on his Jacket sleeve. "You'll have to sit down and hold it steady." "I don't want to," said Tommy; "I want to go borne. My mamma wants me.' ' "You hold It," said Billy, "and I'll tell ye what I see, and then we'll go straight home." So Tommy sat down and braced his back against the board, and Billy man aged after a good deal of Jumping and squirming to reach the top of the fence, where he hung suspended by his knee and elbows. He could see a good deal, much more than he expected; but, un fortunately, a tall man on the Inside of the fence saw him, also. "Here, you little rascal," he called, "get down from there," and he reached up and rapped Billy's Angers with the end of his cane. Billy would have been very glad to get down, but his legs were too short to reach the board by which he had mounted, and so he dangled about for a while, until another rap on hi fin ger forced him to let go and drop to the ground, where he lay crying with pain and anger. Tommy cried, too, for company, and the noise soon brought a crowd about them. First, some idle boys, who began to tease and torment them, from the same spirit in which they would have tied a tin pail to the tail of an unfortunate dog. Then a man who advised them to go home; and then a fat old peanut woman, who had seld out her stock, and who scattered the rabble of boyB with a few hearty cuffs, and pouncing upon the two children, dragged them out to the sidewalk. "Now," said she to Tommy, "tell me where you live, my little man." "I live at papa's house," sobbed Tommy, "wld mamma and Uncle Jim." "He lives on Oak street," said Billy, beginning to recover his spirits. 'I'm taking care of him, and I know the way home I guess I do," he added, looking around a little dubiously. "You come along with me," said the woman; "I'm Just going that way my self." And she kept hold of Tommy's hand, as she waddled along very much In the style of a rocking chair out for a promenade. When she reached the corner of the alley, she released Tommy, and the young gentleman went home without a word to Billy, who crept into the livery stable, feeling decidedly crestfallen. "O, here he come, ma'am," said Ellen, rushing down the yard, and seiz ing Tommy by the hand. "Yer a nice b'y, now, to be scarln' yer ma into fits with yer vagabone ways!" And as she talked, she dragged Tommy along and presented him to his mother, saying: "Here he is, ma'am, all safe and sound. I knew he was bound to turn up." Tommy's heart smote him, when he saw how pale his mother looked, and he laid his head In her lap and began to cry, penitently. "Where have you been, Tommy?" asked his mamma, laying her hand gently on his head. 'To the clrkls, wld Billy," sobbed Tommy. "And you ran awayl O, Tommy, mamma thought she could trust her little boy," said his mamma, sadly; and at that Tommy cried harder than ever. They had a long talk about It, and Tommy was very much disposed to lay all the blame on Billy; but hi mamma preached him quite a little sermon from the text, "My son, if sinner entice thee, consent thou not," and after awhile he began to see that hi part of the wrong lay in the consenting. "But Billy's a real naughty boy, mamma," he added, "and I Ank I'd bet ter not play wld him, cause he's always 'tlclng me, and I might consent." Mis mamma thought so, too. QUAINT FEATURES OF LIFE. An old soldier in a Michigan town, who had a leg amputated ten year ago, had it burled In a coffin In the cemetery and funeral service held over It, at which he wept profusely. Ever since then, all through the summer months he ha placed flower each week upon the grave. A new Idea for the bill collector comes from Louisville .where Manuel Corslco, a retired organ grinder, being unable to collect three months' rent due on a house he owned and had leased, took his Instrument to the house and played It steadily until the tenant, assisted by suffering neighbors, raised the money owed and paid It. This new method In the case in point required only three hours. A young man In Buffalo, from some Impulsive freak, took it Into his head to save all his cents. He wearied aftet two years, when he got 1,200 of them, and tried to sell them, but nobody would buy even at 80 cents on the dollar. Some shopkeeper Intimated that he might have been robbing poor box, and the agony of the young man U not to be measured by a ctgar boxful of cents. f ALL TKKM period opens Monday moroloK, Sept. 3d. WOBK AND HOARD. We fares ii siui.onu wiin a piaue u work lor ineir Doara. lou can attend itii ooilrge for one-i lha uiouey required to gu elaewbere. Send us 25 names and addresses of young people la oiu iii h uuiaeEg euueauou, aua get our college weeiciy one year Tree, our new can ireeto anyone. Address, KOHKBOUCH BROS., Omaha, Neb. OUT OF THE ORDINARY. Paris has 2,000 fortune tellers. Russia's railroads cover 29,000 miles. Australia boasts cowhide horeshoes. London Is importing ice from Nor way. Emperor William's stable cost $2,000, 000. Five million roses are required to pro duce one kilogram of attar of roses. The Emperor William is said to be the only living sovereign of Europe upon whose life no attempt has yet been made. Danish lighthouses are supplied with oil to pump on the waves during a storm. The largest mass of pure rock salt in the world lies under the province of Galicla, Hungary. It Is known to be 550 miles long, 20 broad and 260 feet In thickness. Every alderman in Grand Rapids who voted from the street railroad fran chise and stood for re-election In the re cent municipal contest was defeated by the labor vote. One railroad in Massachusetts claim to have six locomotive capable of run ning ninety miles an hour. The Amer ican locomotive is at the top in a class of it own. The municipality of Birmingham, in England, erected 4,000 dwellings for ar tisan. Occupants and the city are sat isfle dwlth the new scheme, rents being cheaper, houses better and the town's treasury has been fattened. There are 1,200,000 acres of forfeited railroad land grants In Texas, chiefly in the two counties of Brewster and Pre sidio in the western part of the state on the Rio Grande border. These two counties, having a Joint area of 6,000 square miles, have fewer than 3,000 in habitant. i Milwaukee IN GOING TO POINTS EAST or south of Chicago or Milwaukee, ask your local ticket agent to route you be tween Omaha and Chicago via the CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY, the shortest line between the two cities Train via this road depart from the Union Depot, Omaha, dally, connecting with train arriving on the the Union Pacific Ry., the Burlington, the F., E. & M. V., etc., Magnificently equipped trains, palace sleepers and chair cars, dining cars, buffet library car. All trains lighted by electricity. For fur ther Information regarding routes, or rates, etc., call on or address F. A. NASH, Gen'l Western Agt, 1504 Farnam St., Omaha, SPECIAL RATES EAST via QUINCY ROUTE. For the G. A. R. encampment at Phil aaelphla, the "Qulncy Route" and "Wabash R. R." will sell tickets Sept 1, 2, 3, geed returning Sept. 30. Stop- ever will be allowed at Niagara aFlls, Washington and many other points. For rates, time tables and all lnforma tlon, call at Qulncy Route office, 1415 Farnam st. (Pax ton Hotel blk.), or write Harry E. Moores, C. P. and T. A. Omaha, Neb. FLYO-CURO will protect your stock from file and mosquitoes. It 1 very easily, quickly and economically ap plied witd our dollar sprayer and is really no expense to use, as saving in feed and extra product will more than pay for It use. Send $1.00 for sample can ana sprayer, races reduced for '91. Geo. H. Lee Co., Omaha, Neb. Stammering Omaha Stam merers' Institute, RjtmffP Rib Omu. ba, Neb Julia . Vaughan. Drs. Searles St Searles CnM All m of Prl ntji Wain No failures. Weak men caused by errors of muth, excesses and dl- llllt&tlnv drntn. mi vmA tn mtMv miM1 f 1. ...... rhoea and syphilis cured In earliest possible time. Write. If cannot, rail. 110 So. 14th St., Omaha, Neb. Dr. Kay's Renovator, fsrA sample, free book and free advice how to cure tt" r!3 "I cases of dyspepaia, constipa tion, bilious head sehe, liver, kidneys and lunt diseases. Kerned; by mall for 5 cents and If Dr. B. J. Rty Medical Co., Saratoga, N. V. B i mm IF flWL TB8 OUR NEW "LITTLE GIANT" li H. P. GASOLINE EKGIKE, WUKTH ITS WEIGHT IN GOLD TO Haw Ma t l. . " T. WV",M iion -aM-aJSjr id moo.; m" TOrm'pjfiTao 'atS' absolDtely safe. We make all ilses of OaeoilD Iom, rromlH tfasroaw for circular and neolal srlcoa " w power. FAIftOAflKS, J3048D MALARIA AND FEVER. At this season of the year the phere teems with malaria. The that cause typhoid and malarial fe are not only In the air but in the wa you drink. The weak and debilitate become an easy prey to these germs, i tney have not the vitality to them. Now Is the time to fortify year, self against these diseases. The follow ing symptoms are Nature's danger sig nals: tired and weak, no ambition, loa of appetite, coated tongue, headache. Indigestion, constipation, de net gat restful sleep, and general run-do wm feeling. If you have any of thess) symptoms, beware! Do not delay, bat attend to your case at once, before malaria or fever have fastened thsk grip upon you. xnousanos nave pre vented a fever by timely assistaaea with Dr. Kay's Renovator, thoroughly cleansing their sluggish system from germs of disease and impure mattes; and avoided large doctor' bills. Qui nine will not cure you, nor prevent fever. Dr. Kay' Renovator will, as It renovates the entire system. It elim inates all malarial poison. By this pro cess the blood becomes purified aa every organ is toned up to a healthy and vigorous action. If taken now, at may prevent months of illness. Jajaf think how much this mean to yoaj Dr. Kay's Renovator is sold by drug-" gists, or sent by mall on receipt eg price, 2Scts and $1.00, or six for tiM, by Dr. B. J. Kay Medical Co., Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Send symptom for i advice and free illustrated book- James J. Dailey, foreman of the Phil adelphia Ledger and treasurer of UM Printers' Home, died last week. It mainly through Mr. Daily's efforts ' the original donation was made bT Messrs. Chllds and Drexel of SU.tksj which was the nucleus for the found tion of the magnificent Printer' Hesa at Colorado Springs, Cala. Time probably never tells more ceptlbly on a man than when he trios to steal upstairs at 4 a. m. and tfca alarm clock goes oft and awakens all better half. Chicago New. We're going to Hot Springs, S. D Via the Worthwesterp Line, 3ce Place Low Rates Wagner Palace Sleepers tlmost to the doors cf the principal hotels. Bat Springs 1 the place to go this sea? on If jon need rest, health or plearai J. R. BUCHANAN, a P. AT. A., F. E. A M. V. R. R, OMAHA. NEB. SHORT LINE East, West and South. DOUBLE DAILY TRAINS. "MM ANn FsjEg RKCLINIM CHAIN CAM OH NlOHT TftAIH. QUICK srnvier t 8T. JOSEPH and KANSAS CITY. ffnfci, ull ipnwtiiHsj wsnsi sjl m. m. adsit, ami ruMSftr Irtst. IT. JMIfl. M. COUNTRY PUBLISHERS COMfY OMAHA. VOL. 3. NO. 40-'09. E7E8T 8T0CIIU ARB FAIX3L . mYV Wlgajn DU Wvi & CO., omniiA, rlCD. A b iRSI