bEP&eis Z 5 rsg,T- -V -v ;iV. ju'jfc-, - - jZi.Y"'i!" artf .' f " -W "'- r '. X3K-. && JCiSr -WCin N ", K-, jW5!a!SBBV c- smswkt v Ml m m m ! 5" ft o Cggy- "" 'atmaTaB rfj"V aBaBBBal "aaaBBVn Ur.de Sam Says: This Is America's Grtattst Spring Mtdicint. Take It Nov to Sharpen , Your Appetite. Vitaliz Ycur Blood. To Overcome ThatTired Feelinf. Go to your druggist and get a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla and be gin to take It today, and realize at once the great good K Is sure to do you. Hood's Sarsaparilla It America's Greatest Serine MeJIelae. Padercunki. the famous pianist, was civen an oration at a recent concert in tendon. It had been announced i hat it would be bis only appearance this teason in that city and the ball was crowded. Heaaty to Ml Own blood aaeaus a clean skla. No twenty without It. Caacarets. Candy Cathartic cleauH your Moon and keep It clean. Iiy rtlr iia? tmthe lary liver and driving all impu rities from the body. Benin today to banish lilmnirs. laiils blotches, b ark bead, auil that h'.rkly bilious complexion by taking Catca-ii-is beauty for ten cents. Ail druggists, ha llsf scilou guaranteed. 10c 25c 50c Peter was probably a married man or be wouldn't have learned to hz so quick at denying things. Mrs. Wlaatow'a Heolhlar JTea rir rhiklrea teethlBaj.cAfteuii tbe imajs.reJiwe toSara tnttion, alia pain, cum wiodcotir. 23 ceataabottle. Nearly 40 per cent of the population of Siberia are Russian exiles. Jhake lafte Tear Sbeee. Allen's Foot-Ease, a. powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smart ing feet aad instantly takes the stiag out of cons aad bunions. It!s the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot-Base makes tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, .tired, nervous, aching fet. Try it to day. Sold by all druggists and shoe uteres. By mail for 25c in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Qlmstod, Le Roy. N. T. ' tfbnt commit suicide: its a crime punishable with imprisonment. Star Tobacco i tne leading brand of tfce world, because it is the best. Don't mind a little thine like slan der, it will rub off when dry. Xo-Te-Bac for Firty Cent. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak txicn strong-, blood ruic 50-l. All druggists. - Cardinal (iiilums, in his recent speech before t'..t New Orloaus Press Club Raid :f he were to slve any ad- ice to a public min. the most valuable lie could offer would be "Aiwavs Ite frank with the reporters of reputable ini . ? If ilH'i' DOCTORS DON'T DENY IT. The frank testimony of a famous physician. Wfeea tir.Aver announced his Sarsapc villa to the world, he at once found the Thvtcia his friends. Such a remedy wh'p what they had looked for. end they were prompt to appreciate it merit and precribe it. Perhaps no medicine known a patent medicine i n cenerally ad ministered and prescribed tv phvsician an ivr. Aver's SarsapariUa for blood disease, and dieaes of the skin that indicate a tainted condition of the blood. K xperience has proxed it to be a specific in soch diseases, and sores o! long standing, old ulcers, chronic rheumatism, and many ether like forms of disease hare yielded to the persevering nse of Dr. Aver's Saraapar ilia afterother medicine had ntterly failed. ThetestiraoniaH.received from physicians to the value of this remedy wonld fill a volume. Here ia one leaf signed by Rich'd H. 1-awrence. M. D., Baltimore, Md. "It afford me pleasure to bear testimony to the success which vour preparation o'f SarsapariUa has had 'in the treatment of cataneous and other diseases arising from a filiated condition of the blood. Were it necessary. I might give you the names of t least fiftr individuals who have been enred of long-standing complaints simply bv the administration of Pr. Ayer's Sarsa-pa-rilla. One very remarkable instance was that of a qniteold woman who had lived KtCatonsville.near thiscitv. She had been Massachusetts is the third state to substitute electrocution for the cal lows. New York and Ohio are the oth ' v or two states that have adopted iL . No woman ever has snch perfect con e lldence in her husband that she never tries to catch him in a trap. Why is it that all the rogues manage to get into the other political party? r. Kay's fttt-mtor, n! s:a. coastiemtioa. liver and kidney Oiseases.bii- i.ousccj-s, neadacke. etc. At druggies 3jc& ft. FAIRBANKS SCALES TATam.cumm. Lt.1 Tkebntm fcrto arae.rtcBM Tor trcsv ZWL Ml BaSHlA, u, raacax, a. a lUlADttV! V ejEickmUrraaalcnK BATCmfTfe MASON. PENWICK - I Bkaaw' -L I X Cammml TTOtL "" a'U llmmK JPOMMELI aKerpsasttrioasMnaJiiefeTlV fecayarym we hareest storais.V Vie jfmmi nwamipol-it. AskfaraP iter Fisk Brand I'oiinpct Slicker I X Kb entirely new. If not for sale icr)B0' year losnu writ f or catalocic5 stBt A. J. TOWER. EViMofuKUsjllV Wonnmmpnmmtwmmm m Mmwm "aa aaaaaaaaar . m. caaaaaa Baaaaa. arts, asisw naa, laaajaamttiai skuata. astf W- - MTMnTft "tAtON. FENWICK V We '- FMlmU"JlmlfktAWflCNOC.Waea- aVk Wf-'' w !.. C. Bi far 3ffm r-T R' taliuastyw&tfctar-atcatirraa.lxnaeitrcfYacea. d9& EST mm tj?V 1 a ' ? mm TfiflJmmBVmmFAVmHB IwJmmm? ' A mmmnr mmmmr - aa - aVmmmm? asm mn&aw- mmmalmmmmVmYammmmmmmmmBJmmmmmmmammmmT mmmnAmmaT rnV. mkmkm$Am11kW3ltBVR00&4MMMmMm9 msK? mmmBf'''''BmS99amaCmBa9!? JNamnWBBJj mmmVm AaaammaftaaAftJaLm Jr-jammmB- Hi? v MtmmkmKkmttkmfmMmklmtZtM9WMEmkkm axwwamnrnmaV en mm jmmna7BaBBBaVamw" msfe" ' iBMPJPJpJpffHmmmmmmmmmmmmml aVVaDmJlxamnmnyiPea al ffi: - 'TamB WIPammmmaTr mmr- j- . t.t Ilk' . - - . - o - - ' mmmmti "Wri'TaiamTTfiaiiiiaUi i Ti -" iflmsmmm . . s zp? . ..:wi' t- jl"- .....r -,. Ti-,- , ;!, . ,., . v ...... - ,.? Threw awe of our battienhlne. the Httaott, 1Mmuu4 WlecwMtn. ate rapidly tMrftafctnfc toward the time of launfching, ihlii the fan they will be reniy f put lato the water. These ve ten were provided for by act of Con gress approved June 19, ISH, the 1IJ1I notaf going to the Newpport News Shipbuilding company for f2.595,Orft, the .Alabama, for S2.C5MM. going to Crumps', aad the Wisconsin for $2. C47.twt, going to the Union Irom Works of Sun Francisco. The shine combine structurally ;hc best features of the Iowa aad the Kearsage, having the high freeboarl of the former aad (he moderate draught of the latter. Taking one step belyond the advanc ed dab ide. the women of New York have organised a .Masonic Lodee. The Masomeases. who use the rltnal of the Irst woaiaa's lodge, founded in France in 178. and of which the Em press Josephine was a member, met in a real lodgeroom, fate and the Masons being kind to them. The principal requisite for membership in the Man hattan Mystic lodge the name the women bve chosen, is that one must be the wife, widow, daughter, sister or granddaughter of a Mason. Not long ago the Dublin Independent published the following obituary no tice: "Smit oa the 28th iast, Amy Jane Mary Smit. eldest daughter of John and Wilhelmina Smith, aged 1 day and 2 hours. The bereaved and heart broken parents beg to tender their hearty thanks to Dr. Jones for his unremitting attention during the ill ness of the deceased, and for the mod erate brevity of his bill. Alo to Mr. Wilson for running for the doctor, aad to Mr. Robinson for recommending mustard plaster." rslMilMM Wcaltk. The "mineral wealth" of newly found mining regions largely run by syndicates is In too many instances a fable. The products nearer home are surer and promise more rewards. No one will go unrewarded in the matter of improved health who use regularly Hostetter's Stomach Bitters for ma laria and dyspepsia. Don't presume; but if you've got to do it always presume for the best. A E4itr Sayr, Tk editor of the Rirertoa. I.. Inde pendent write: -I am indeed eated to cay that your raedt?inea are tfca best I bare ever tried for atoatack troubles -one of the mokt borribla dlseaccH fash is keir to. I bad been afflicted with the trouble for four yean or more in an aggravated form, aad during- the last two vear, not withstanding 1 bad treatment from noted pbyM'ciaas from diffeieut localities. I kept gectiug worse and wcrae, un:il life becraa almost unendurable and ia realilr a tor ture. J.utkily. I was induced to'try lr. Kay'n Renovator. After ing a balf dozen iiackajrez, 1 am actually feeling like a new person. 1 believe suntiing human ity can lie beneatted tberebv, 1 wiilinglv matter the goo J tidiagr. Again, 1 say, I believe your remedies for ttoaaacb trouble' ' are the best ever" put on the market." 4tomack Trouble'' can Le cured by Dr. Kay's Renovator when all other remedies fail. It renovates and removes the cause an J the riiteabe in cured. As a Spring Mediriae it Las no equal. For constipa tion, liver and kidaev ditease it efferti a permanent core. A valuable book sent rree. Druggists sell Dr. Kay's Renovator at ie. aad fl, or six for 15, but if they do not have it, do not take auv substitute they may rmx is "jnst a good" for it has no equal, oucauget it from us bv re turn mail. Dr. B. J. Kay Melicart'o., Omaha, Neb. Don' think because a man has a big bead that it is necessarily long. eat Tebaece Spit ana SsMka Tear Lrf Any. To quit tobacco cisily and forever, tors ma;, ectic. fuil or life. mrre. and viper. take No-To-Bac. tbc wender-wr rker. that makes weak mee strong. Alldragffifts.36corfl. Curccuaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co.. Chiraco or New York. IKin't believ all a man says about his neighbor or half he says about him- scIL -iat ' ib Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. 20 for Sets. afflicted with the rhensnatism for three jearf. and had taken as she had informed ine. more than one hundred dollars' worth of medicine to obtain relief, yet without any beneficial remit. I advised her to try a bottle of Dr. Aver's Sarsaparilla and told her that if it failed to do her good. I wonld refund the money. A short time after, ward; I -learned ttiat it had cured her, and a neighbor of hers similarly amicled was also entirely relieed of his complaint by its use. This is the uaivetra! result of the administration of your Sarsaparilla. It i withoat exception, the bet blocd peri, fier with which I am acquainted." There i no other similar medicine can show a similar record. Others hate nu tated the remedv. Thev can't imitate the record. Dr. Acer's SarsapariUa hrs the friendship of the ph sician and the favor of the familv. because it cures. It fulfills all promises made for it. It has healed thousands of people of the most maliarart diseases that can mutilate mankind. Nothing has ever superceded it and coth ing ever will until a medicine is inrr that can show arecord of cure" gtc&ter in nnmber and equal in wonder to thoe wrought bv Dr. Acer's Sarsaparilla. Pr. Aver' Cufebook, a story of cures told by th'e cured, is sent free on request bv the J. C. Ayer Companr, Lowell. Mass. Write for it. Don't strike a man until you arc stir: he deserves it and then be sure he Is smaller than you p.re. To Care coast tpattoai Fetcrer. Take catabirts Caady Cathartic. Iflr or St liCCC. fail to mre. dnierists refund mosey. Don't think ben use a man is a po lice man that be is always looking for trouble. iso's Cure lor CousumUton is the lt of all coagh urv. Wettre W. Lotz, Fa- baciier, L., Augusts, Ijr.. It is estimated that there are more than 39.ee professional cooks in New Yorh. The chefs of the hotels and popular restaurants earn from $3,000 to 9 12.000 a year. It may sound strange, but it is a fact, that the great majority of Gotham's kitchen kings are Irish, and find employment in the homes of the upper middle class at salaries ranging from $18 to 30 a week. A Vanderbilt chef who received $10,000 per annum is now running a swell restaurant in London. A wild son of ex-Governor Desha of Kentucky, was, years ago. convicted of murder, pardoned ly his father and disappeared. He is now one of the most eloquent preachers in the Ha waiian islands. Go to your grocer to-day and get a 15c package of Grain-0 It takes the place of cof fee at the cost. Made from pure grains it is nourishing and health fuL i!AMPFIRE SKETCHES. COOD- SHORT STORIES THE VETERANS. FOR taved Fs tMm km tecMmt T the altto f cttyaHarg P tttlsa ffraaa ' tlM Amy a4 Xa7 aagrlca Is K The OM Kavy. The captain steed on the carronadet "First lieutenant." says he. "fend all my merry men aft here, for they must IWt te aae; t haven't the gift of the gate, nay sons because I'm bred le the sea: That ship there fa a Frenchman, who meana to fight with we. And. odds bobs, hammer aad tonga, long as I've been to sea. I've fought 'gainst every odds ami I've gained the victory! "That ship there Is a Frenchman, and if we don't take she 'Tis a thousand bullets te one that she will capture we; I haven't the gift of gab. my boys; so each man to bis gun; If she's not mine In bait an hour. I'll flog each mother's son. And odds bobs, hammer aad tongs, long as I've been to sea. I've fought 'gainst every edds-aad I've gained the victory!" Wc fought for twenty minutes, when the frenchman bad enough; "I little thought." said be. "that your men were ef such stuff;" Our captain took the Frenchman's sword. a lew bow made to he; T haven't the gift of the gab. monsieur. but polite I wish te be. And odds bobs, hammer aad longs, long as I've been to sea. Tve fought 'gainst every odds-and I've gained the victory!" Our captain sent for all of us: "My merry men."' said he, "I haven't the gift ef the gab. my lads, but yet t thankful be: Teu've.done your duty handsomely, each man stood to his gun; It you hadn't, you villains, as sure as day, Td have flogged each mother's son. For odds bobs, hammer and tougs, as long as I'm at at. I'll fight 'gainst every odds and I'll gain the victory!" Frederick Uarryat Saved m ree life. "A most pathetic as well as one of the most heroic incidents of the war of the rebellion occurred on the irat day of the battle ef Gettysburg." said Judge Thomas J. Mackey of South Carolina a fw evenings ago. "Lee never Intended to give battle at (bat point, where the Federals held vantage ground, but was drawn into the battle by a question of shoe, this last point may seem strange, but It is nevertheless tine. Pettlgrew's North Carolina division was barefooted and got permission to go into the town of Gettysburg aad get a supply of shoes. The soldiers there met a federal force and became engaged hotly. Each side re-enforced heavily, and the battle ended with a decided advantage on the part of the Confederates, who hold the field. "As General John B. Gordon's bri gade was advancing, during the heat of the battle, he saw a federal general ly ing wounded and apparently , dying right In the path. He dismounted, and raising the head of the wounded ofllcer, which lay in a hollow, placed a knap sack beneath it. He then gave him some water and whisky to revive him. . He Inquired who he was and was in swered: "I am General Francis Barlow of New York " 'What can I do for you. general?' asked General Gordon. 'Have you any last wish to intrust to me?' "'Please take a package of letters from the breast pocket of my coat, said Barlow, In a weakened voice. "General Gordon did so. " 'Now,' said Barlow, 'I beg of you to read, one to me, for they are from my wife and I wish her words to be the last I shall ever hear.' "While the shot and shell were plow ing up the ground, General Gordon read aloud the letter of a noble, patri otic woman to her dying husband. When he had finished reading it Gener al Barlow requested him to tear up all the letters, as he did not wish them to be profaned by the eyea of strangers. "General Gordon bade him good-bye and hurried forward to overtake his command. He then sent a flag of truce by Messenger to General Meade at bis headquarters. The messenger was informed where Mrs. Barlow might be found. On receiving General Gordon's note she hastened to her hus band oa the field of battle under fire. She fouad him, and, under careful nursing, be recovered -health and strength. "General Gordon and the brave on cer whom he succored on the field of Gettysburg met again about fifteen years after the date of the incident I have related. Gordon was then a United States senator from Georgia and Barlow was attorney general of the stale of New York. At a dinner given by Mr. Potter, a representative in congress from New York, a gentleman was Introduced to Gordon as General Barlow, or New York city. "Gordon scanned him closely and observed: "Was General Barlow, the brave soldier of the union army, who was killed at Gettysburg, related to vou. sir?' " 'Though not with literal fidelity to historic truth, yes. sir, very closely re lated.' was the prompt reply. 'I am the General Barlow who was killed at Gettysburg, and I recognize in you the General Gordon whore soldiers killed me.' 22 JJil" "..?r" 2" ?! eaca otaer suca coraiai proofs of mu tual esteem as served to illustrate that no heads clasp so warmly, at least amonff Americans, as those that have sheathed the sword, after having drawn it in battle. "This incident serves to emblazon the truth of General Lamar's utterance in his speech upon the death of Senator Charles Sumner, delivered ia the house of representatives, when he said: 'Americans, know one another, and yon will love one another." DesertlM awe Cemmeav The recent arrest in Jamaica of an alleged deserter from a warship la the Brooklya navy yard was rather aa un usual event ia this neighborhood. Sometimes soldiers stray from Willets Point or sailors from the aavy yard, get drunk aad overstay their tiate, bnt that ia aa offense hardly to be called desertion. The service of Uncle Sam has become much more attractive of recent years than It was In the past. Ban-tag the chance of getting into the commaad of a brutal Oaacer. the wearer of the blue has a pretty good apaortanlty to profit by his enlistment Of coarse the pay Is small, but the soldier or sailor Is "fouad' aad has little need of spend ing money. The service Is excellent for the health, especially la the case ef who have suffered from too much whisky. The astablkduteat of post schools. where enlisted atea amy repair the de fects af their early education, ta a good thing far the Tommies ami Jackiet.'It is tntta possible far aa ignorant. shouldered and canaaainUva young fel low, saarcely kaawlag his A. B. C'a to be turned out at the end of a term of enlistmeat In the army a taller. Trigger, hanaeomer asaa, with a fall cheat, a gotd education, the habit of command aa .a petty oflker aad enough money saved to embark ia tome small kaal ness for hlnueir. FertlttMle mi TarkWi SeMlen. An English surgeon, Dr. Ryan, while serving with the Turkish army in'the campaign of 1877-78, saw n marvelous exhibition of the fortitude that resists nain aad aaataina with cheerfnlaesa a violent physical shack. The surgeon's .first capital operatioa was performed on a Turkish -soldier whose knee bad been shattered by a shell. He refused to take chloroform, aad the surgeon took his leg of above the knee. He never groaned nor uttered an exclamation, hat smoked a cigarette during the operation. When the Tur kish captain came around with hi note-book to take down the name, agt and regiment of each wounded man this patient answered quietly an ques tions, though the surgeon was stitch ing up the flap of skin over the stump. At the first battle of Plevna Dr. Ry an worked all day among the wound ed. In his book, "Under the Red Crescent," he records that in all his surgical experience ho has never known men to exhibit such fortitude under intense agony as did these Turk ish soldiers. The recovery of the wounded, consid ering the unfavorable conditions under which they were treated, filled him with wonder. Their injuries were ter rible, but their splendid physique, un impaired by intemperance, enabled many of them, after a few weeks in the hospital to resume their places in the ranks. "I never saw a private soldier under the influence of liquor during the whole time that I was in the country." writes Surgeon Ryan. "There were many of these men whose lives I could hare saved if I could have persuaded them to take stimulants; but it was impos sible to get them to touch alcohol, even as medicine. "The principles of their religion for bid the use of alcohol, and the humble Turk clings so tenaciously to bis re ligion that he would rather meet death itself than violate its precepts." Many of the wounded lost their live: owing to their religious belief that the loss of a limb would prevent them from entering Paradise. They refused to submit to amputations, preferring to die rather than to live maimed. Oneer Way te Cross a Stream. Travancore, except the main trunk toads, only possesses village roads, which go as the crow flics, acres streams and over hill and dale. To Europeans who have to travel in this country the fording of a river is not euch pleasure as it is to the natives; their clothes would no doubt dry quick ly in the burning sun, but it is very possible that they would con tract malarial fever, not to say rheu matism, by following the example of the natives, off whose bodies the water runs as easily as off a duck's back. The illustration shows the bishop of Trav ancore and Cochin while on tour, be ing carried across a stream by his coo lies; his fellow-missionary is await ing his return. "With our arms em bracing the necks of the two front men, our legs carried behind by two others, with two more aiding as supports for fear we should break in two in the middle, we were carried across really deep places like logs," was the de scription given by one of the travelers. LlacelB Feared 11 U Wire. At a recent dinner in Boston a form er resident of Springfield, III., told a story of Lincoln, which is sufficiently characteristic of the man, as the coun try remembers him, to be unlike most Lincoln anecdotes in being true. The relatcr said: "The fire ho3e company of Springfield was very proud of Us well-equipped fire apparatus, and, de siring to secure some extra supplies, subscription papers were sent around. The small boys, myself among the number, were given a share in the work. I went up to some dU2ty rooms over a grocery and entered the law of fice of Lincoln. He asked me number less questions, and I had to tell him all I knew of this fire brigade and its mem bers. Then he said: "Well, I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll go home to sup perMrs. Lincoln is generally good-natured after supper and then I'll tell her I've been thinking of giving 850 to the brigade, and she'll say: 'Abe, win you never nave any sense? Twenty dollars is quite enough.' So tomor. T - ". ?. i "i i your $20." Milwaukee Wisconsin. Uaeela'a Speataaeoua Wit. From the San Francisco Argonaut: A delegation of preachers from Chi cago once waited upon President Lin coln to urge the issuance of the eman cipation proclamation. The spokes man urged. the claim with ecclesiastical dignity by saying: "The Lord sends this commission to you. President Lincoln." "Perhaps so," he replied, "but isn't it strange that He should send His message by way of Chicago?" To another delegation urging imme diate action, he said: ' "If you call the tail of a sheep a leg, how many legs will the sheep have?" "Five," replied the spokesman. "No," said the bothered president, "it would only have four. Calling the tail, a leg wouldn't make it one." When sick with the varioloid he told, the doctor that he was "glad that now he had something to give which the ofllce-seekers did not want." T laawre AtteatUesk "Did you ever make the embarras sing error of mistaking n guest for a waiter?" "Me? No. I find It a good plan, though to mistake the head wait er for a guest" Indianapolis JoumaL "I wish that I could acquire a repu tation for being bright." said Willie Washington. "There Is nothing easi er." answered Misa Cayenne. "All yon need do is to say yoa have beard It before whenever any cne eke says aay thlagf clever." A , v. . ' A man resembles a ball of twine when he is wrapped up in himself. 'BmmiamBVBarmL e r3mPtiil if' MM I afaml!fiBmg tfgWmfmumtfmKC! - I srTVWlSf'iP ' f DAIRY AND POULTRY. INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. lew Saceemral Farmers Operate This Orpartaaeak ef lira Farm A Few tXnts aa to the Care of lire Steek Fealtry. The Hca the lacabatoh . Whether a farmer shall nee a" hen or aa iacubator for hatching his chicks will depend largely on the volume' of his operations. If he. keeps enjy a dosea er so hens it certainly will not pay him to depend on an Incubator, bat if he expects to raise several ua dreds hens a year, as we believe every farmer should, it will be advisable for him to secure an iacubator as soon as he can. Incubators can now be pur chased very cheaply, and the Invest ment will be a permanent one, for it Is probably true that so far aa one man's life Is concerned Incubators nev er wear out An Iacubator will nay for Itself many times In the course of ten years. Not only so, but it will save much labor. And, while buying. It Is better to get a large machine. A big flock of chicks is not so hard to look out for as a nnmber of smaller flocks, aa one can readily Imagine who has had much to do with sitting hens. The comparison of the hen and the Incubator shows that much, of the pre ponderance of testimony is on the side of the Incubator. Who that has had to look after a dozen sitting hens has not wished that all of the hens could be combined into one big hen and that all of the chicks could be put into one flock? This is one of the most valuable things about the incubator. One can raise from one to two hundred chicks at a time and have the work all in a bunch. Another advantage is that the lice can be finally exterminated. In fact if a man begins right and takes care of his poultry as be should there is no reason In the world for ever hav ing a louse among the poultry. If all of the chicks are raised In incubators. This alone Is a consideration of vast moment. When we use hens for sit ting it Is generally Impossible to ex terminate the lice. At least, even if they can be exterminated by extraordi nary methods, they seldom are. Some time ago the Farmers' Review sent out inquiries to Its readers as to the cause of losses In the poultry yard. The re plies showed that more chicks were lost from lice than from all other causes combined. Thus the incubator removes at one stroke the greatest cause for mortality among chicks. Probably the second greatest loss among newly born chicks is being trod den to death by the old hen. We some times hear people say that no one can care for a chick as an old hen, but the fact remains that the hen is so stupid that she will stand on a chick till the life is gone, even though the little one keeps up a constant peeping as long as it can. Instinct does uot take the place of intellect. The writer has frequently lost the larger part of a brood through the stupidity of the old hen. This is especially true of heavy hens for mothers. With some of the heavy birds it is no unusual thing to go out to their nest every morning and find "another dead chick." So we believe that it will pay the farmer to substi tute bis own intellect for the instinct of the hen. This he can do in the pur chase of an incubator. Of course, like all other things, the running of an incubator must be learned, but this is not a difficult thing to do, provided one will listen to the advice of those who have run them for many years. It Is not at all necessary for one to learn entirely in the dear school of experience. The main point in an Incubator is to keep the tempera ture right, and to see that when the chicks come into the brooder they have enough beat to enable them to make a continuous growth. The Air of the SUM. Too little attention is paid to the air of the stable. Yet there are two rea sons why the air should be kept pure. First, fpr the purpose of preserving the health of the cows; second, that milk drawn in the stable may not be polluted by the bad air. In the spring and sum mer and fall it is an easy matter to thoroughly air the stable in day time. Open all the doors and all the windows, letting In the sun as well as the wind. The work of the latter will be the more effective if care has been taken to keep the manure cleaned out, and if arrange ments have been made to have the urine run off into tanks below or out side of the barn. The less the air is allowed to be polluted by these means the easier will it be to keep the whole inside of the stable clean and sweet smHIng. One of the greatest obstacles to pure air is tbe usual system of handling the manure. That is, a bole is cut in tbe side of the barn through which ta throw out the droppings. The pile on tbc outside accumulates from month to month, and by spring has become a source of foul smells that penetrate into the stable through all the cracks, windows and doors. The manure pile against the side of the barn is a relic of barbarism, and must be banished, both for the sake of cleanliness and that it may no longer be an offense to the eye. Once dispose of the manure question and it will be possible to keep the barn in a cond.cion, that will make clean milk the rule and not the excep tion. If we are to have clean smelling barns, it will be also necessary to have clean cows, for when cows are so badly kept that their flanks are plastered with filth, we cannot hope to accom plish a permanent good by opening the doors to the pure air. Stinking cows will shortly again make bad the air that has been but recently purified. Clean cows may be bad by construct ing the platforms where they stand, so that they will keep clean, and by building stalls in such a manner that tbe cows will be compelled to stand straight It will cost something to arrange the cow stable so that the air can be kept pare, but It will save money that would be spent in doctoring the cattle. It will also save now and then tbe life of an animal. Recently, on a bis dairy farm In Illinois, a very fatal disease broke oat, resulting in the loss of scores of good animals. Investigation showed that the trouble bad begun with filthy stables, and that cleanly methods were not introduced till it was too late. KseeUntee U Heef Cattle. (Condensed from Farmers' Review t?ien egraphk Report of meeting of Kansas State Board of Agricalture.) ' Prof. C. F. Curtis of Iowa spoke on practical excellence in beef cattle. Last fall n railroad man in Iowa had made the statement that there were S0.000. ft bushels of corn stored along the railroads In that state that could not be marketed at a profit Things have changed some since then, but there is little doubt that something like tbe tame conditions exist now in Kansas. Within his memory there had not been n tine when the outlook for cattle rais ing was better than at present. lie then gave an illustrated talk on tbe liferent breeds aa beef producers. As wa lava previously reported this talk. we will omit It mow. The aahjeet of alaa la beef per poaad of 'feed waa Q."-In yoar experlMenta at the Iowa experimeat statlaa Is It net saawa that cattle havlag the same breeding aad the aame age differ greatly aa to tie comparative galas they can atake oa the aaase food? A. Tea. sir; there are differences, hat those differences are more la nenced by the manner of feeding than by tar breeding 9t cattle. We have found -that a coarse-bred animal will makejBore gala than a flae-fieshed an imal. Q. What advantage do yon find in the Shorthorns over the Hererords? A. Well, we have asade some expe riments and have aot fouad much dif ference. Sometimes our experiments have been In favor of oae breed and sometimes of the other. I do not think that we have carried our experimeats far eaangh ta he able to say for a cer tainty which la beat Mr. Norton Yoa spoke of that three or four year old Hereford steer gain ing more rapidly than some steers of another type. Did he not eat more? A. Yes, sir; the big steer Is always able to make a better gala thaa a small one, bat It costs asore. Q. Will It pay to buy Mexican steers for feeding? A. I would not advise It aa a general thing. Q. Ia their any difference between the Herefords and Shorthorns aa to their grazing qualities? A. I am not prepared to express an opinion. Mr. Potter. I think there will be more money lost la going to Mexico and other places for feeders than we are likely to make up for some time. They will put these cattle and their expen sive feed together end lose both. Proreesor Cothell. being called on. said that he agreed with Professor Cur Use as to the amount of gain certain animals would make, but that there was an immense difference In Individuals as to the Use they could make of the same food, even when suck animals were of the same breed. A Member. Some years ago some of the farmers in my vicinity bought some Texas cattle for fattening purposes. But with the Texas cattle they bought also the Texas fever and it worked gen eral havoc. Many of the fanners that botjght those cattle had been getting along well, but some of them lost so heavily through the fever that they Went out of the cattle business alto gether. That experience should be a lesson for all. Mr. C M. Beeson spoke on the possi bilities and probabilities of Western Kansas. Western Kansas Is now being used for purposes which nature intend ed It. Nature designed that part af the state as a grazing region. Bnt the im migrants from Illinois and Ohio had In their mind's eye the pleasant homes they had left, with orchards and grain fields, and. expected to reproduce the same conditions In Western Kansas. But the lessons of experience, thoagh costly, are never forgotten. And the attempt at farming with grain as the only resource has been proved to be an expensive failure. The possibility or success In Western Kansas has been changed into a certainty. Some Suggestions About Moltf. In the Produce Review Mr. Geo. Still son says about storing tubs as below: I have just been reading your remarks regarding moldy tubs. I find the great est trouble Is where they are stored before and after packing. Many cream cries are infected with mold, and thor oughly seasoned tubs stored in or near them soon become Infected. Besides not one cooling room In fifty is clear from it. If stored in there but a sbort time tubs are infected. Steam will not kill tbe mold when once in the wood. I don't believe anything but fire will exterminate It I find many unused cooling rooms filled with tubs when not In use, which I always discourage. There are very few cooling rooms that are good for anything but to keep flies away from articles. A good Ice cool ing room made by Stevens, tbe butch ers' supply manufacturer of Toledo, I think would be good for creameries. It is the best dry air meat cooler I have seen. I am glad to see yon ventilating the subject but I don't think yon gire force enough to the storage room where tubs aro kept before and after filling. Many store them in cellars, damp and musty, unfit for use. Dry storehouse or loft Is preferred. Dirt in Milk. Quite apart from tbe numerous micro-organisms which may be contained and thrive in milk and from somcof which, despite tbe great est amount of care, the liquid can never be totally protected there are other bodies which frequently find their way 'into what may even then be commonly called "pure" milk. Tbe following substances, for instance, are stated by Professor Grotenfelt, of Fin land, to have been found by him in unstrained milk fresh from the cow: Particles of skin, small pieces of wood fir leaves and shavings, parts ef in sects, linen and woolen threads, cob webs, and other substances which may easily float in the air. The commoner impurities, however, are 'small par ticles of manure, which more common ly fall into the milk during the process of milking, tbc amount generally vary ing with the state of cleanliness of the hind quarters of the cow. Tbe Dairy World. Air-Washed Milk. Our personal practice for some years In preparing milk for bottling showed conclusively that the passing of n 'current of cold, pure air. washed in the way suggested from every particle of dust or impur ity, did have a good result, which was proved by the fact that milk so air washed, as we might say, kept sweet in the equally well prepared bottles for four days longer than the unaerated milk. This practical evidence ef the advantage of proper aeration and cool ing, by pure, cold air. goes to show that if well done. In a ecientllc man ner, the aeration of milk is useful for this purpose at least; and if so. it may well be believed that It will be found useful for the butter maker. Country Gentleman. Handling a Colt In handling a colt,' Its instincts snd tendencies should nev er be lost sight of, such as klckingv striking aad running nway from any thing it conceives to be dangerous. Its faculties of seeing, smelling and bear ing are very acute, and are given it for 6eif-preeervation, which is the first law of nature. The experienced trainer will be patient, aad not require too much of n colt at the start, but grad ually bring him In contact with all imaginary dangers, until it learns from experience that they are harmless. No thoughtful or intelligent person will ever abuse a colt for being afraid of anything, for it simply intensifies Its fear and makes matters werse. Two Sides to the 'Game. An old farmer said the other day that every cow should be fed and cared for accord ing to what she earns. An old Ger man who heard him. said: "Veil, der cow she understand dot game yooat so veil r,s you. She gif yoost 'cordin' ta kat she git. Hoard's Dairy man. -S - . 1 -J - " fC-i'SLfeaI MRS. PINKHAM TALKS art TJrfftd to Prapara for this Woadtatol Bervotottoa ai thw Economy of Their Ufa Btood-lfra. Wataoav - TeDa Row SXa Was Hairjed. wm1 r Ra J aa-aaa fJ fHM dnmlmmmw JA 'frJtMmmmmmm afmmafimValamaU ftmmUJ WmTaW n4aVi. armgRk"! rnvWaWgiataUJ III aLHw mVammf . ' "eLXaV tTgn IsTTw mmrmV m .rtamaSw a ahw UUi v II Read this letter f.-om Mrs. Pf.lla Watson, 521 West 5th St., CmcinaatiOhio. " Peak Mrs. Piskuam: I have been using Lydia E. Iinkham's Vegetable Compound for some time during the change of life, and it has been a savior of life unto me. I can cheerfully recommend your medicine to all women, aad I know it will give permanent relief. I would be glad to relate my experience to any sufferer." Ask Mrs. Mnttasi's Alvke-A Wttxa. lest Uidcrstasls i Wmfft Us AAAA44a44,,4aaat(iaiaaaaaA 4 HmaSt aaaaSp' aWarSma LT?vl a Hansard mmmmaaLaTaTmit BS5 R aYamVamssVflBaBPmnaTWm avsH d mTVnmsVaSBammaafeaBkjr w-?:. "n ml anrj afmmmmmmmTx It-'' jl 9 ib" manmsBBsa WJBi tja?w I antauBawamsiifMiK I pfC 4 mml M mmmat flnmW nmmmm mmnr I IS- 9 Lml aarAasaanmamamnaiiafg IatF t H tF ARf ft rtUi lIMCn. I jfrC 4 i n n am t Vs-" A FROM FACTORY mmmamWJgJWn. MUiaaamrjaaajfla" )W i BBjaaaammMia y vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv We male fine f?unya. Bns;Ic. rbartima anil Krail W3ra. Ourjcotxl'l'ave lieen laterally kixmn tthe irailcfc-jran. We now aril Utct to lfc wrr at 1Hnl rrW. The hie ill Imrer r refers to deal ith tl-e fcrtorv. Ilr-cetaof usflaet 'tt!fyly Our responsibility has been established by 2 1 years of fair dealing. In buying a Hartford You know your bicycle is all that is claimed for it. POPE MFG. CO Hartford, Conn. Catalogue bet from any Columbia dealer, or by mail for one 2-cent all nan. WEHAVENOAGENTS tat hare ioM direct to the ra mmer for 2' jar at wkole. aa:e pnera, atviar rim to umtrtpnftr. lram ir r.xrrjiiiag wsmutti llSrtylesorVebicler. - rylra f I lunar. Tea Buries. KS u STP. 8crrj.f.-.3tair. Cama rt?. liaeto. Traar. Warna tttr. Srwog-Kcad Sa. IT. Sarrry Hararac. Prto-.tatU. jtcwduMUaaa-BC natcas. ocai nr cuuuurr "A BRIGHT HOME MAKES AMERRY HEART." JOY TRAVELS ALQNG WITH SAPOLIO Why icn't a graveyard the last meas ure a man resorts to? Hall 'a Catarrb Cure Is taken internally. Price, 73c. Whv is it that we seldom see an au-i burn-baired old maid? Ectacate Year llarwets With Caacareta. Candy Cathartic cure constipation forever. 10c..:Qc If C. C C. fail. CTvggisUs refund money. Why aren't stenographers notes fig ures of speech? lathe eldest ami beat- itwUlbreakapaeoKlqvleMr taaaaay Ibtar else. It Is alwaya reliable. Try it. Why isn't courting an check suit? heiress a Spaaaaaaaaat "M Ftrftct Type efthe Hihtst Ontertf Saa ffaiaa a as AVaBaaAaBaaf .aaaaai " tm S'voiantc in awauiwranwrw. HaiiefBaicfs&rt Breakfast (ocoa Absolutely Pure, Delicious, Nutritions. .ctnicsTieiifEcaTtcif.. Be sore that you get the Geaaice Article, made at D0RCHE5TE. MASS. by WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. L Es7aLilat 1730. Aa mVaal 1 ar-'BB5laBA B 1 IxSIU ABOUT "CHANGE OF &". At no time Is woman more liable to physical and mental dangers with hears of suffering than at the "Tan of Life.' Tho great want in woman's system is ability to properly adjastitself to tlsemew conditions. The ratlet, monthly, of Moedf is now being diminished and carried into tho body for the supply food of its later years. Daughters, yon can now to some extent repay your mother scarry care. Shansast be spared every possible exertion. Yoa must helpher bcai her burdensandaaude ties. Thicriticaltin5safelyover,shewill return to renewed health and hapfiness. That so many women fail to aatkdpatef in iscnangcthos happtly, isowiaf:m4 merely to lack of care, bnt to igno rance. There is, however, no eachne for ignorance when experienced,. ad vice can be yours free of' all coat. Write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lyan, Mass., she has helped great aumhera of women successfully through the Change of Life, aud she will help yon. Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Com pound Is tho best tonio for ateriae changes. It works harmoatoaslj up on all these overwrought organs, in vigorates the body and drives off the blues. IRONING MADE EASY. HAS MANY IMTATfflS, MIT NO EtUAL. I nlS Olai CIl scientific priaci- pics, by men who hare had years ef experience in fancy laundering. It I restores old linen and summer dresses to their natural whiteness and imparts a beautiful and lasting fini&h. The only starch that is perfectly harmless. Contains no arsenic, alum or other in- jurious substance. Can bo used even for a baby powder. ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT Aft TAKE N tlMCR. TO USER DIRECT. ONE PRICE. ONE PRtFlT. work at Ica price than aprnts ak for low crane x rblclr. We ktp anywhere, aubject to examination. WBlUTtK.:i lxril cars KanaG'lly,M..orUoafcen. Ind.. aa may anil pnrchaer. Sentl for eatelcvjiic with price alalnly prlataii. rrs rasa. Write tmlar. Wc !! Scw'oe Machine and the WMts BKiru a well. AllatWaaieMiarrim.. iLLCeea. niaurwhereyouUTe,7Hiaieaot too far awar to lo hns!ne with oa anil arc money. AiMrew, EDWARD W. WALKER CAKR1AUK CO.. CiOSHKW. TXDf AHA. r Vedette Saipaay- cxaauoauoa. z4 VilX .'irire. tm .V..eSrrT. Frier. with SPtmaWBlBaBaaawmfcKimiB(HH(S . B UtaMCMSf aUoaratyka. !?. tpmudtcaatn.a Jtl SL W. 3. PatATT. BWy. BLKaTABT. W. N. U. OMAHA. NO. 18.-IS0S. Vhen Aesveriag Advertiscaests WmSLy 'ketira Tkis Tascr. TAPE WORMS "A ajtpa aaeffaai efacatSeeei fajtS awaaw as least cane oa tbe scene after an laaina ! CASCARKTS. This I am sure kaa meed ay bad health for the past three year. Iaaaatfu taking- Cascaretn, the only cathartic wermy eC notice by eeasiblo people." usu. tv. jsowxaa, uairo, jsssb. CANOV CATHARTIC TaUeCaMJM lfT'nial Plesaaat. PalataMerWat. Taate See. Be Good. Never Slekca. Weaken, or Gripe. Me. ae. Mr. ... OURS COMSTIPATIOM. ... HtHlaa; Baaafr Cianu .Illini.aHiat.aewVate. MM aLTataUft M? UV"V T lraf w-w-ww mmnwovmmm leaai IT rOQTfi To get ear new Ca- Wfa0 I O aiogae. Haadrensof aaaBwejaajaaa, people save haa tVVa I flllVVt tlreds of dollars se lect In jr Furniture, Draperies, etc., from It. Scr.d for It, It give? prices aad pictures. ORCHARD WILHELX CARPKT COL, 1118 Dooglas St. Oaaaaa. Neh. L our ir Min&e&eta Hui ur- scry Stock. 3 elai Good m v Mfprv wk- Startnowand be first In the flew for all nanw Tbe Jewell Xracry Cot, Lake City, Jaaaav MYivtate MULE IKCK Write CAST. O'FARREIX. I Mas Nrw Vera; Avema WASHWTwW,.C. Or. Kefs Lug lata ."aSfng. it .am ted with) eufw yea. aae 1 WANTED PENSIONS 4 s a e 3 e 0 e 9 A nnmaaamaamaamaMmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammm .-,tifV jPhpaLAjMe3-'gCprfjfgCir fa aiJaaavlfetJtm'iiaaVrf 'aVaaMlBlmSiaaiMtffiaBaaam'aaameawffliatfaaafcafcyK f. JhhA -ar3A TrvaVfc imt && t C Saat- a ,- wr1- th J ,aTTfr. af - 'fcif h Kfk flTatfvltfVlairiarar jaaBs A'etm ajafciaiBJBBeBBBwMra' E -Tmmmmmmmmmmmmmml,'aidBMmammmimmwnwWm