-i x rTt 4 . -a.-.rw Atyt T'r'-2'?.i.lJ' . jT''" ., - sc'Jj-. v;- -'srTswsr V! 1 f- ..t i- - ! . F- f. Ar- - ' I- r P 1L Tke osdon Daily Mall publishes a letter frcn Tokoboma describing-the "growth of anti-American feeling In Japan." The writer says: "This de velopment is due to the harsh treat seat the Japanese have received in Hawaii and to the belief that the United States will stop Japanese im migration to Hawaii. The feeling is calculated to lead to a deplorable war of tariffs and to retaliatory restric tions.' The occupants of a balloon a mile high command a radius of ninety-six miles. A Blood Trouble U tftttt tlrei feeling Mood laeka vitality , as richness, and hence you tell like a lag guv all day and cant get rested at night. Boot's Sarsaparilla will cure you because It will restore to the blood the qualities It needs to nourish, strengthen and sustain the muscles, nerves and organs ol the body. It gives sweet, refreshing sleep and Imparts arw lite and vigor to every function. Fmt !-" In the spring I would have ae appetite and would feel tired and with at ambition. Took Hood's Sarsaparilla la small doses. Increasing as I grew stronger. Tfcat tired feeling left me and I felt better In every way." W. E. Baku, Bos96,MIlford,Onio. Hmmofm Smrsmtmrlllm Is the Best Medicine Money Can Buy. Pre pared by C. I. Hood A Co., Lowell, Mass. The true pessimist wonld rather be rrong than happy. Are Tee. ffelae- Alleals Feet-Baa? It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting. Burning. Sweating Feet, Coras and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c Sample sent FREE. Ad dress Allen S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. T.. Thou who would'st give, give quick ly. In the grave thy loved one can re ceive no kindness. 20.00 A WEEK AND EXPENSES toageatssellingourbonseho'd goods. Selloa sight. Write C. U. Marshall Co., Chicago. The principal business of one gener ation is the training of the next Shaw. Hall's Catarrh Core b taken internally. Price. 75c Pride is increased by ignorance; those assume the most who know the least Gay. Re ora the canasa that make your hair llfalea art gray with Pabkkx'b Hair Balsax. UlSDcacocx's. tho beat cure (or corns. IScts. The fruit derived from labor is the sweetest of all pleasures. Vauvenar gues. For starching fine linen use Magnetic Starch. Those readiest to criticise are often least able to appreciate. Your clothes will not crack If yon use Magnetic Starch. In great straits, and when hope is small, the boldest counsels are the safest. Try Magnetic Starch it will last longer than any other. Sometimes a noble failure serves tht world as faithfully as a distinguished success. Dowden. The Stolen at Wasblnatea. On May 19th, 20th and 21st the Big Four, C. O. will sell round trip ex cursion tickets to Washington at one fare for round trip. For maps, rates, etc, address J. C. Tucker, G. N. A., 234 Clark St, Chicago. Even the girl who marries for love doesn't always get it Dropsy treated free by Dr.'H. H. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga. The greatest dropsy specialists in the world. Read their adver tisement in another column of this paper. Why can't we have civil bank cash iers as well as civil engineers? Solomon was the wisest man. Who was the wisest woman? 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 if 1 i out glm jua ORACT-O. It Stiffens the Goods It Whitens the Goods It polishes the Goods es all raiments fresh aad m first bought new. Try a Sample- Package) You'll like it if you try It You'll buy It If you try It. You'll use It If you try It. Try It. Bold by all G "8T. LOUIS CANNON BALL." Leave Omaha 5:05 p. m.; arrive St Loais 7:66 a. m. WHERE ARE YOU GOING? SCANT SKCIAZ. SATES EAST. OB SOUTH. Trains leave Union Station Daily for Kansas City. Quincy. St Louis and all Faints EAST OR SOUTH. HAL RATES to (PLUS $2.00) many Sooth an Points oa 1st and 3rd TUESDAY (EACH MONTH. All information at CITY TICKET OFFICE. No. 1415 Far am Street (PAXTON HOTEL BLK.) r write, HARRY E. MOORES, City Passenger and Ticket Agent. wen. - YLM. Mt Aceesteo e 1 Sjh2?a2aL29SSRES's ssss33p'aWBeaB HaCaeUea Omaat tW.N.IL-OMAHA. '. ! t-ift i FSSSPCSOffaZmT I w-sDDDDH I .mc . jmaathsaiynB mmiwsea 'El w wbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbi m E"r . "smr" tMM8M8sM89M8t8ttr A new story of Kitchener is said hy G. W. E. Rasaell to be "probably not so very far astray." Cecil Rhodes made more or less trouble for the mili tary authorities in Klmberley, ami finally Col. Kekewich one day helib giaphed Lord Kitchener that Rhode's interference was getting unbearable. Kitchener's prompt answer was: "You had better put him in chains!" Henry Perrine Townsend, a well known New York lawyer, a native of Illinois and a Californian pioneer of 1849, is dead, aged 74 years. THE LETTER WAS GENUINE Aad Ceatataed Facta A r leaa Settled hi Western Caeae needed with lacjatrlrs. A short time since a letter appeared in these columns signed by Mr. W. H. Klnkade of Alameda, Asslnlboia, West ern Canada, which caused that gentle man to receive a great many inquiries, most of them anxious to know if the letter was genuine. To a large num ber of the. Inquiries answers were sent, but it was impossible to reply to all. We take pleasure In submitting to our readers a specimen of replies seat by Mr. Kinkade: "Yes, the letter dated December 22, 1899, supposed to have been written by me, which you saw in your local papers, was genuine and contained facts. I will say of the information received from the Canadian Govern ment Agents prior to coming here, I did not find a single untrue stateme'nt The Canadian Government is honor able and its Agents dare not misrepre sent this country or they would lose their Jobs. There is quite a bit of land for homesteading yet, a very lit tle close to market, but mainly from 6 to 20 miles from stations. The coun try, hereabouts is a prairie, nearly level, slightly rolling, not a rough country b7 any mear-s. Homestead entries cost $10: on land that has been cancelled there is a $5 cancellation fee extra and in some cases an inspec tion fee of $5 and where the former occupant has made any substantial improvements there are small amounts to pay for improvements. This is a poor place for a poor man unless he has brains and muscle and 'git aad grit,' but with these requisites he cam succeed. The population of this part' of Asslnlaboia has doubled during the past two years. There has been as much prairie broken the past two years as was already broken previous to 1898. C. P. R. land (odd sections) joining homestead land sells at S3 per acre. Improved quarters within four to five miles or town sell at $1,000 this spring. This is not a Garden of Eden at all, no man need think he can come here and get rich in a short time with out much labor, but if he will work and be saving he can soon be an in dependent farmer tilling his own soil and getting good returns for his labor. "We burn coal, which costs us $1.85 per load at the mines, which are 20 miles southwest of us. "People with stock and machinery should come in May so as to have all June to break in. Those who expect to work for wages for the first year or two should come by the end of July to work through harvest and threshing and then go to the coal fields and work all winter and by spring he could be ready to Improve homestead. "A quarter section of railway land sells at $3 per acre. The interest is all figured up and a man has about $71 to pay cash, and If he breaks at least 10 acres first breaking season his $21 interest for the first year is thrown off and the second fall following pur chase he has $69 to pay and then $60 to pay for S more falls, which makes a total of $611 the quarter costs him, including all interest Paying for a quarter of land that way is like keep ing a life insurance policy paid, only it does not take so long to do it By a man homesteading one quarter and buying another quarter gives him a chance to have a 320-acre farm all his own and have it paid for In ten years, and after that he is sure of aa easy living if he is any good at all. "(Signed) W. H. KINKADB." The number of languages and dia lects spoken in the wor.j amounts to J.064. Magnetic Starch is the very best laundry starch in the world. A director of the Standard Oil com pany has recently published in The Independent an article declaring trusts to be good for the workingman. To the May Century, Andrew Carnegie of the Carnegie company, which rivals the Standard Oil for first place among the world's great corporations, will contribute an essay taking the same ground. In this article, which bears the title "Popular Illusions about Trusts' the great steel manufacturer argues that the evils of trusts are gen erally self-corrective; that no trust can live long unless it secures a vir tual mononoly of the commodity it deals in; and that "the only people who have reason to fear trusts are those who trust them." The entertainment of royalty costs British society each year fully 2,000. 900. Vn. WlMlaa Intu.. For cAlMrea teethlar. softeaa the gnaia, edaeet la kiwiiMlof.aUrjspaUk.caraswtedcoUc. c a battle. In the Review of Reviews for May, there is editorial comment on Admiral Dewey's candidacy; on the government of Puerto Rico under the law recently passed by Congress; on the proposed government of Alaska, and on the developments of the month in financial and industrial circles. Other topics treated in "The Progress of the World" are the rush to Cape Nome, fox-breeding in Alaska, the April elec tions, the epidemic of strikes, the opening of the Paris fair, the military operations in South Africa, and the Delagoa Bay award. There is every goat i St Jacobs Oil 1 I ' $ RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA LUMBAGO SCIATICA for the rest of the amoaat reasoa is k dees care. saoaa nmnomivt I 1000 CAMP-HOKE SKETCHES. SOME SHORT STORIES THE VETERANS. FOR Ureas Wan free UMte Aaesher. Kxeleatre Mm t the G. A. B. . Jtosaaatle la the Phllleatees. Jest ftef the ittlr, at ether (Old Favorite Series.) This Is a song of the American Civil War. Just before the battle, mother, I am thinking jnost ot you. While upon the field we're watching. With the enemy in view. Comrades brave are round me lying. ' Filled with thoushts of home and God. For well they know that on the morrow Some will sleep beneath the sod. CHORUS. Farewell, mother, you may never Press me to your heart again; But oh! you'll not forget me. mother. If I'm numbered with the slain. Oh! I long to see you, mother. And the loving ones at home. But I'll never leave our banner Till In honor I can come. Tell the traitors round about you. That their cruel words, we know. In every battle kill our soldiers By the help they give the foe. Farewell, mother, etc. Hark! I hear the busies sounding Tls the slfiial for the fight Now may God protect us. mother. As He ever does the richt Hear the battle-cry of "Freedom," How It swells upon the air; Oh, yes. we'll rally round the standard. Or we'll perish nobly there. Farewell, mother, etc. reat Wars Wnm Uttle Chi Although war, as moralists teach us. Is the last argument nations" should resort to in settlement of their dis putes, it has frequently been brought about by trifles light as air, little inci dents from which have resulted awful sacrifice of life. "With what streams of blood has the failure of a few drops of Ink been avenged!" Those were the words of a great writer lamenting the bitter war between Poland and Sweden in the seventeenth century. The king of Sweden, in reading a dispatch from the king of Poland, noticed his own name and titles were followed by two "etceteras," while three were append ed to the name of the king of Poland. He took this in such bad grace that he declared war. and the strife was car ried on for six years. It has frequent ly been stated that the accidental spill ing of a glass of water caused the ter rible wars of the Spanish Succession. The circumstances of too occurrence were as follows: At a great state ball in Paris, Mrs. Masham was holding In her hand a glass of water, which was spilt over the Marquis de Torey.where at he, thinking this premeditated, took umbrage. Recriminations followed, disaffection set in between the English ambassador and the French govern ment who came to loggerheads. Hence the war. Plutarch relates how the smell of butter brought about a war A lady of Sparta went on a visit to the wife of a nobleman In Thrace; but the visitor was scented with sweet ointment whereas the Thraclan lady had used butter, which was then only used as ointment or medicine. The difference in the smell created a dif ference of opinion, and the quarrel ended in war. The loss of a teapot once plunged the empire of China in civil war.' which lasted for nearly a hundred years, devastating the land, and causing the destruction of thou sands of lives. A great Chinese po tentate was traveling in an obscure re gion of the celestial domain, and he, like the man going down from Jericho, fell among thieves, who robbed him of everything, including his beloved teapot An appeal to. the Chinese em neror resulted in the speedy return of all the goods, except the teapot; but having great influence at court, the nobleman persuaded the emperor to send a body of soldiers to recover it When the soldiers arrived the Inhabi tants of the districts which the ban dits infested took sides with the lat ter, and, the faction spreading, the whole country was ablaze. 8tlll Another Explosive. Safety in use, so far as the user is concerned, and hideous devastation to the foe are the ideals In war explo sives at which the world's war bu reaus are aiming. Marslte, the inven tion of Mr. Hathaway ot Wellsboro, Penn., is said to be the safest ot the high explosives yet known. The ord nance bureau of the United States na vy is investigating the material, and the preliminary tests are said to have been highly favorable, says the Lon don Times. Marsite is supposed to !e a nitrate compound, although its com position is the secret of its inventor.In appearance it resembles dark colored clay, and it is said to be as safe as clay to handle. You may with im punity pound it with a hammer or rasp it with a file. You cannot explode it by coneussion, and if you set fire to it it merely sizzles for a moment and then goes out But a percussion ar rangementfailing that an electric current will do all that the most ex acting military man could ask. A quantity of marsite in a four-inch shell was put in an excavation In the ground. Over the hole was placed a scrceen of steel an inch thick, above which a wooden structure was built When the electric current was turned on a terrific explosion occurred, which tore a hole in the steel screen and burst the shell into thousands' of frag ments. Placed between cakes of ice to demonstrate that the explosive is not affected by cold, 0 the explosion tore the? ice to pieces and cast fragments high in the air. It is claimed that the shell may be safely fired' from a gun with ths initial velocity ot 2,000 feet a second. 'tie KarHacr. A number of romantic matrimonial alliances have been made by veterans of the National Military Home, Day ton, Ohio, but none quite so sensation al has occurred as the recent marriage ot William H. Post, a popular mem ber of the Home Drum Corps', to Mrs. Elizabeth McWilliams, of 165 Haw thorne street Dayton. Veteran Post is one of the three youngest members of the. home, being but 52 years of age. Joan Holden being the youngest 51.' aad- John Goldeh. 53, the oldest of the trio, all musicians. Post came here from Marion. Ind., where he owns con siderable valuable property. His bride is bis senior by nine years, the mar riage license showing her to be 61. The sensational part of their court ship and marriage is the fact; that the bride actually had to run away from hone, like many younger ones do, in order to get married, her daughters vigiroosly opposing the match, and threatening, so It Is alleged.' to lock their mother up la order to. prevent thercoamunmatioa of her wild iafatu- atloa for yawag Veteran Post Sae seat her clothing to the aoase of her soa Joha, who slid aot object to the marriage, whither she afterward re paired anbekaowa to her daagaten, aad was duly married to her soldier lover by Her. J. V. Poorman. The bride owns valuable Daytoa property, which the daagaters. It is saM.thoagat would slip from their inheritance If the mother married Post, hence their opposition to the match. Bnt the old lady was too smart for them. The bride in a bright comely, well-preserved woman, looking not a year over 59, while her husband would pass eas ily for 45. He entered the service of his country as a drummer boy at the age of 11 years. He had three broth ers killed in battle, and is the only surviving member of a once extensive family. First te Sacgest. the . A. K. The Rev. Wm. J. Rutledge of Jack sonville, 111., died recently, aged 86. He Is credited with being the first to suggest the Idea of the Grand Army of the Republic, which was afterwards carried into effect by Dr. Ben F. Ste venson. Mr. Rutledge was born in Virginia and married in 1843 Miss Louise Stratton of Pike county. He was the father of twelve.childreneven of whom survive him, and although scattered all over the United States, all attended the funeral. Mr; Rutledge had been in' the ministry for fifty-six years and at the time ot his death was the oldest member of the Methodist Episcopal conference. For the last six years he had been on the superannu ated list, but did not give up active work. Mr. Rutledge served as chaplain of the Fourteenth Illinois infantry ,Gen. Palmer's regiment, for nearly four years. For seven years he was chap lain of the Illinois state penitentiary at Jollet by the appointment of Gov. Oglesby. He also served as chaplain of the Illinois Soldiers' Home at Quin cy for four years under Gov. Flfer. He was also a member of the first board of trustees of the Northwestern uni versity at Evanston and It Is largely due to his influence with the legisla ture that this institution today enjoys many advantages over other schools ot like character. Troops la the FhUleplaes. Adjutant General Corbin has pre pared a statement snowing the strength of the troops in the Philip pines on the 1st of April, the date ot last returns. According to the state ment there were on the date stated 63, 585 officers and men there. The total strength of officers and staff Is 2.730, of whom 2,610 are regulars and 120 volunteers. There are fifteen general staff officers, of whom all but one are classed as volunteers. The total ca valry force Is 3,507, of which 2,411 are regulars and 1,096 volunteers. There are five regiments ot artillery, all of the regular establishment and num bering 2,228 officers and men. There are forty-one regiments of Infantry, agregating 55,120 officers and men, of which number 24,133 are regulars and 30,987 volunteers. Including all classes there are 31,382 regulars, ot which number 968 are officers and 30,414 en listed men, and 32,203 volunteers, of which number 1,356 are officers and 30,487 enlisted men. A DtstlagaUhed Soldier A distinguished Scottish soldier has passed away in the person of Field Marshal Sir Donald Stewart, who died recently at Algiers. Sir Donald Stew art was Lord Roberts' senior, both in years and experience, and he was also his predecessor in the Indian com mand. The two men served much to gether and were lifelong friends. The commander-in-chief In South Africa, in the press of a serious war, must feel keenly the loss of his old comrade. Sir Donald Stewart began his military ca reer at the age of 16, when he joined the Bengal staff corps. From that time onward he missed no opportunity of distinguishing himself. He was a man who. bad many friends, and .was one of the best known and best liked of all the Scotchmen who have risen to emi nence in the army. Projected Sasssaer JIaaeayers. Extraordinarily persistent rumors were current in Moscow that on Rus sian Easter Sunday the czar would is sue a manifesto containing an ultima tum to Great Britain demanding that she conclude peace with the Boers forthwith under threat of occupying Cabul andd Herat If Great Britain failed to comply. This report was connected by some persons with the fact that no reservists were allowed to take unlimited leave, but possibly the orders to the reservists were connect ed with the projected summer maneuv ers in the central provinces in which 200.000 troops will participate and at which Emperor William Is expected to be present Weak Gaapowder. Gunpowder was not always as pow erful an explosive as it is now. In the time of Cromwell, for instance, it was so weak that the plstoleer was advised not to discharge his weapon until he could place the muzzle of the pistol close to the body of the enemy under the cuirass, if possible as he would be sure not to waste his pow der. Effect of I.)dd!te Taper. The vapor given off by lyddite when it explodes has an extraordinary effect on the hair and face. When the Brit ish troops took possession of Cronje's laager the Boer children.of whom there were about 22, presented a curious ap pearance. Through the effects of lyd dite their hair and faces had become quite yellow. Grew Haadsosae While A!eer A physical culturist ot authority claims that not even worry will make a woman grow wrinkled and old so rapidly as sleeping with her head on a high pillow. To grow young, healthy and beautiful while you sleep, lie on your back with your head on a level with your body. Her theory is that during the day, when the head is held ia its normal position, the mus cles of the face drop, and when the tis sues are lacking in strength and the skin flabby, wrinkles come, says the Montreal Herald. At night the drop ping of the muscles should be counter acted. They should be lifted up. By sleeping with the head on a level with the body, the drooping lines, which give an expression of care and age to the face, will in time gradually disap pear. Dfeseead Iasared far Sell An mormniK ritamnnri fmn iriv. ley will be shown in the jewelry sec tion of the Paris exposition.' It was found shortly before the war began and is said to be finer than the -Regent, the Shah, the Grand Mogul or the Koh-i-noor. It has been insured for 82-000.000. FASH AND GARDEN. MATTERS OP INTEREST AGRICULTURISTS. TO Vste-Date RIats Aheat Cel- Uvatlesi er the , Sell aad Yields Thereef Hertlealtare, Ylttaaltar aad Fleriealtare. Ceaserrlar afaaare. In common with other things that are under control of trusts there has been a sharp advance, in the price ot chemicals that the farmers use for the manufacture of commercial fertilizers or that the manufacturers use In the making up of commercial grades. This Is said to be especially true of the materials that contain nitrogen. It therefore behooves the farmer to look after the fertilizers he has on the farm. By the ordinary manner of handling manure at least half of the nitrogen is lost One-half of the value of the excrement from bur cattle and other stock is in the liquids, which on many farms are not saved at all. Ni trogen especially abounds in the liquids, as is evidenced by the am monia they throw off. We want again to urge that every farmer take meas ures to save these valuable products. I he farmers that have manure piles that are exposed to all weathers and that have no arrangement to save the liquids should at once stop the waste. It means hundreds of dollars to the pocket of every farmer. Remember that the manure pile is not only as sailed by the rain but by the air, and the latter helps to deprive it of its ammonia a form of nitrogen. It is not enough to prevent manure from leaching and washing, It must be kept from drying out and thus losing its ammonia, or a large part of it Horllcnltaral Obserratloas. A well cultivated orchard on deep rich soil should send down Its roots much deeper than an orchard not cul tivated. Consequently it should be able to stand cold better than trees in uncultivated orchards. It Is true the frost may go deeper, but the root should outstrip the frost Mr. John McDonald of Michigan says: "I learned last year that fruit trees standing in grass winter better than those well cultivated. A great many apple and pear trees died last summer owing to the hard preceding winter." The general conclusion that Mr. McDonald draws from that experi ence is not well founded. It all our winters were like the one of 1898-9 we would have to stop cultivating our orchards, and we could then state as a general proposition that cultivated trees are liable to be frozen out be cause the frost can strike In deeper and stay longer. But that winter was one of exceptional severity, and it Is doubtful If we will have another like It for 50 years to come. The ground was bare and froze deeply. Probably in some sections the roots of the trees did not thaw out till after the buds and leaves had appeared. But we must figure on ordinary and not on extra ordinary years. An orchard planted now may grow to maturity and fail with old age and be succeeded by an other orchard that will likewise dis appear from old age before we have another winter with conditions iden tical with the one named. Cultivation is desirable, and we will have to take our chances on the unusual winter. e S. T. Wilkinson of Branch county. Michigan, sends the following to the State Board of Agriculture: All apple orchards in this vicinity that had been both cultivated and sprayed bore a full crop of fine apples. Most or chards sprayed and not cultivated had a partial crop of fairly good fruit, while but few orchards not sprayed had more than 10 per cent of a crop. With peaches I have experimented some for three years with some varie ties in same plot and set at the same time. The first crop in 189S from the cultivated portion bore 50 per cent of a full crop of fine, large, well formei fruit while the uncultivated trees bore 20 per cent full crop of second class fruit Cultivated trees killed by last winter's freezing, 60 per sent; uncul tivated killed, 2 per cent. Have reset cultivated portion and cultivated whole plat All have made gool growth and look fine. I think that it pays to cultivate judiciously all peach orchards and sow rye or some other cover crop about August 1. Heel in with dirt all trees under bearing age at least one foot high, as our winters re very likely to be bare of snow, and would both cultivate and spray all apple orchards. Potash and Starch Potatoes. The Connecticut Experiment Station made experiments to compare the ef fect of muriate with that of sulphate ot potash on the starch content and field of tubers. The potatoes were grown on very poor soil which was iressed with 400 pounds nitrate soda, 315 pounds acid phosphate and 120 pounds of muriate or sulphate ot pot ash. The yield was increased from 43 to 228 bushels ot salable tubers per acre. Doubling the potash, applying 240 pounds per acre, increased the yield only twelve bushels per acre over what was produced when 120 pounds were applied. Muriate produced a somewhat greater yield than sulphate, but the tubers contained slightly more water and less starch than when sul phate was used. The evidence In re gard to the relative effect of sulphate and muriate of potash on potatoes is somewhat conlicting. Most of the ex periments made in this country and Europe show that sulphate produces better tubers with less water and a slightly higher starch content, but the difference Is slight Some German ex perimenters, Pfeiffer and others, have recently published results of experi ments showing that pure muriate has no injurious effect on the tubers, but impurities, noticeably chloride of mag nesia, are influential in depressing the proportion of starch. Treat Oats for Sssat, The sowing of oats without first treating the seed for smut is a cause of great loss to farmers. This loss is far greater than one would suppose without investigation. Investigations in Illinois show that the annual loss to the oat crop in that state is from 5 to 47 per cent, with an average of about ten per cent This means abo.U 1.500,0000 bushels per year. One rea son why the loss to the oat crop from smut is underestimated is that many of the smut heads are whipped off by the wind and so are unnoticed, but at harvest time the stalk that, is cut is bare. Then again the stalks affected by smut are frequently dwarfed and do not show among the other heads, even in the sheaf. Then, too, smut sometimes exists-: without being rec ognized, it being 'set down as blight This loss can be entirely prevented by treating the oats with hot water, dip- plag the seed oats la water for five minutes at a temperature ot l?w to 137 degrees. For this work a kettle Is seeded as well as two barrels aad a thermometer. Oh barrel shoald cca tala warm water and another cold water. The oats should be sacked la qualities ot one to one and a half basaels. The kettle should be Urge enough to hold one bag at a time After the bag of oats has remained for the specified time in the kettle ol hot water it should be lifted out and dipped at once into the barrel of cool water. The barrel ot warm water Is used to take off the chill from the oats before dipping in the water at 132 de grees. If the day be warm thi3 pre caution will not be necessary. The oats .can be sown at once by hand without drying. Ctlllxlaa Windmills. In parts of Kansas and Nebraska the farmers are utilizing their wind mills to irrigate small patches of ground near their homes for garden purposes. In some cases indeed these patches include not less than ten or twelve acres of ground. There are numerous windmills scattered through the middle west that should be more fully utilized than at present. At some of our experiment stations irrigation has been tried on strawberries and vegetables with very good effect Even a quarter of acre brought under irri gation should give good results. This will be found to be easily accomplish ed where the soil is sufficiently clayey to puddle well. The cost should be small, as the water used is surplus water that would otherwise remain unused. In the states near the Great Lakes the effort should prove effective for tne reason that the rainfall is usu ally quite good and the supply of mois ture in the ground practically inex haustible. The soil water is within a few feet of the surface, while in the regions west of the Missouri the soil water is frequently 25 or more feet below the surface, and the problem ,.f lifting becomes great Branch lr. This is called also hemlock, calf kill, leucothoe, dog laurel. It is a poison ous shrub, evergreen, two to four feet high, with thick, tapering, sharply saw-edged leaves and numerous clus ters of small, white, tubular, ill-smell- FM. XL grsaeh fry (tmuathSe eateat)i a foweriag fcrsach; ft, trailing capsules set 4Urd aataral sits. ing flowers, which appear In April or May. It grows abundantly, often forming dense thickets along the stream banks in the Alleghany moun tains from West Virginia to northern Georgia. Forestry Exhibit ia Paris. The exhibit of the division of for estry for the Paris Exposition is now complete and on the way to Paris, it will be one of the most novel of the government exhibits and will ba wholly distinct from the commercial features of lumbering to be shown in another department The display will be in the form of a hall or pagoda, the walls of which consist of large trans parencies illustrating American forest conditions. These walls will be double snd illuminated by Interior electric lights. The pictures range in size from 3 by 5 feet to 4 by 6 feet There will be two transparencies 6 by 10 feet, portraying groves of red fir and Cali fornia big trees, two of the most im pressive American trees. A point will be made of the relation of forestry to agriculture, and such subjects as pro tective forests, the use of trees in pre serving water supply, the manage ment of woodlands, etc., are fully il lustrated. The extent of the timber resources ot the United States will be shown by pictures from all important lumber regions. The distribution of forests will be shown by maps. Twenty of the most important American woods will be represented ty sections of trees. Sheep Stajcrers. This is a disease due to the form of one of the tapeworms of the dog (toenia coenurus), which becomes located in the brain or spinal cord of the sheep. The sheep becomes in fected while pasturing where the eggs of this tapeworm have been scattered by dogs. The dogs in turn are in fested by eating the brains of sheep containing cysts. The symptoms in the sheep are stupor and involuntary muscular movement The pupil of the eye usually becomes fixed and tho sight or hearing is impaired. There is no inclination for food, and the ani mal loses flesh rapidly. If the para site be located in the side of the brain the animal wirl turn its bead to one side, and is liable to walk in a circle. If located in the middle, the movement will be irregular and jerky. Some times the breathing is very difficult due to the location of the cyst in the medulla, which Is the center of the nerves controlling respiration. If the cyst is located at the top of the bead the skull over the cyst will enlarge and become soft in about a month. The cyst may then be removed through the operation of craniotomy. The brains add spinal cords of sheep that have died of this disease should be burned or buried so deeply as to be out of the way of dogs. Wolves, coy otes and foxes are also capable of spreading the disease. Silage for Sheep. Silage is good for sheep as well as for other farm stock. The time Is not far distant when sil age for sheep will be provided for summer as well as for winter use. The sheep have to become accustomed to it to eat it readily, but that is the case with the dairy cow. The men that have tried to! feed silage to sheep and have failed have generally abandoned the attempt too soon. There are 53.000 acres of most beau tiful forest within the confines' of the Yosemlte, General Grant and Sequoia national parks of California. e55. 1 vl i MsJi Jr New York's Rlehtst Clah. The latest aaaaal report ot the Ual versity dab la that city shows a cash surplus for the year of 156,403.08, after aa investment of 12.019,000 in a new club house, which is not only the finest clubhouse in the United States and perhaps In the world, but is also the most beautiful building in New York's finest avenue. Its income for the year was $414,153.43. Its expenditures were 1357.749.35. It has 2,973 members, and the pressure for admission is great IN THE LAKE COUNTRY of Northern Illinois. Wisconsin. Min nesota and Michigan, there are hun dreds of the most charming Summer Resorts awaiting the arrival of thou sands of tourists from the South and East. Among the list ot near by places are Fox Lake. Delavan. Lauderdale, Waukesha, Oconomowoc. Palmyra. The Dells at Kilbourn. Elkhart and Madison, while a little further off are Minocqua, Star Lake. Frontenac, White Bear. Minnetonka and Mar quette on Lake Superior. For pamphlet of "Summer Homes for 1800." or for copy of our hand somely illustrated Summer book, en titled "In The Lake Country." apply to nearest ticket agent or address with four cents in postage. Geo. H. Heafford. General Passenger Agent, Old Colony Building. Chicago, lit In beginning the second year of his editorship of the North American Re view, Mr. Harvey makes It clear that, so far from lowering the standard he has set for that great magazine, he aims at even higher achievements than he has yet accomplished. It is safe to say that there is now no publication of its kind in the world which com pares with the Review in its prompt and illuminating discussion of the more important topics ot the times, and in the commanding authority of its contributors. Carter's Ink Is the Beat lak made, but no dearer than the poorest. Has the largest sale of any ink in the world. There is a church in Boston which is popularly known as "the church of the holy beanblowers." in allusion to the fact that on its tower are angels with trumpets at their mouths. An other goes by the name of "the church of the holy thermometer." because there is a big thermometer on its front; and still another is called "the church of the kindergarten steeples." because it has one tall spire surround ed by several small ones. And an edi fice in New York was called "the church of the holy oilcloth." because the ornamental tiles about its towers closely resemble pieces of floor cover ing. FlTSPvnBaaeBtSjrCniM. JCoflti or nrrroaram after Srt da' use of Dr. Kline's Uirat Xrrr Krstorer. Send for FKEB SS.Oe trial bottle and treatise. Da. S. U. Kuss, LU-.tJl Arch St., lattatt;lpkJa,t-a. Let us believe neither half of the good people tell us of ourselves, nor half the evil they say of others. De Tear Feet Ache and BaraT Shake into your shoes Allen's Foct East, a powder for the feet It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns. Bunions, Swollen, Hot and Sweating Feet At all Druggists and Shoe Stores. 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmated, Leltcy, N. Y. The English workingman has working days. !78 Send for "Choice Keclp. by Walter ltalcer ft C-u Led.. Durcbecer, Mass.. mailed (res. ileatloo th!i paper. Settlers are beginning to flock into Manitoba in large numbers. I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consumption has en equal for coughs and colds. John P Boykk. Trinitv Springs. Ind.. Feb. .5. 190ft. The locomotive of today weighs about 120 tons, and haul3 from 1,200 to 1,800 tons. If you have not tried Magnetic Starch try it now. You will then use no other. There are five automobile clubs in Belgium and their combined member ship is 740. Use Magnetic Starch ithasnoequai Sawyer Was a Peacemaker. Few men were in public life at Wash ington longer than the late Senator Sawyer, and few ever exercised the in fluence that he did. He was a great peacemaker." He had a remarkable talent for bringing antagonists to ppihpr. He nrobablv adjusted more quarrels and decided more disputes than any man who ever lived in Wash ington. It's a lonely day in a yellow dog's life when nobody tries to kick him. ALABASTINE Ts a dnrablo and natural coment bose wall coating. In 5 lb. paper packages, mado ready for nso In white and fourteen bcaitiful tints by mixing with cold water. It is a cement that goes through a process of setting, hardens with ace. and can be coated and rccoated without washing off its old coats before renewing. ALABASTINE Is entirely different from all the Tariocs Icalsomines on the market, being dnrabli end not stuck on the wall with glue. Alabastim customers should insist on haTi'ng tho goods i: packages properly labeled. They should rejec: all imitations. There is nothing "just as good." ALABASTINE Prevents much sickness, particularly throat and Iang difficulties, attributable to unsanitary coatings on wall?. It has been recommended in a paper published by the Michigan Stuto Board of Health on account of its sanitary features: which paper stronglj condemned kalsominrs. Alabastine ean bo nsed on either plartered walls, wood ceilings, brick or canras. and nny ono can brash it on. It admits of radi cal changes from wall paper decoration, thug Kocnring at renwinablo expenw the latent and best effects, Alabastine is manufactured by the iUitofiK (otparj o(0rl Ms. ! Instructs and interesting booklet Basiled free to all applicants. "ja-- -jw- Tf jy -r T w aWawawawawawoo Examine the Package ! In view of the many misisacing ana unscrupulous imnauojia ui . a Chocolate " which have recently been put upon the market, we find it neces- 5 sary to caution consumers against there attempts to deceive - . " and to ask thern to examine every package they purchase, and make sure that it has on the front a yellov label, with our name and place of manufacture. WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., and cur trade-mark If vour crocer does us know, and we will ! ia W TBADCBUUM getting it- Send for a copy of our Cnoict Recipe book, mailed free to any ap plicant who mentions this paper. WALTER BAKER & CO. : CSTSSUSMCO Caaadlaa Aaaesatlea. . J. J. Ford, a native of Ohio, bow liv ing ia Toronto, says: "It will take two or three generations to produce the kind ot people that will consent to the annexation of Canada to the United States. Mind, I do not say this from a Canadian's standpoint I am speaking as a former citizen of this country and one who has the Interest of the United States at heart But I say that annexation is out of the ques tion for two or three generations yet to come." Serious I Us ot Women ihofmrnuUm a Omi vmry thmgs ikmi rv way promptiy to Lymm Em weMjeimmaw Utmrh ulcmrmtloms, I thS9 arm thm mosHlon, Lydk E. Pmkhain's VejetaUe kmm a wonderful ofmbsotutm ctrms c troumios a ommmtmmt smrimm of SMoommmmm for thirty yemrsm Tkoohmmdm ofwomem vouoh for thm Their letters oenstmntly mmpeer ht this p-mmer ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little liver Pills. Marat Bear Signature of 5ee Fac-aaslfe Wrapper Teay i FMIEAUUC FMM7HMESS. nMUMSKSS. CARTERS mix IVER PILLS. FMTMPIBUYtl. RM CMTSTIPATrM. FMSALUWSUI. ratTMECMrlUlM ti&Insniy-Vetacalmv&eSel USBJBXJS1 CURE SICK HEADACHE. SACRIFICE SALE First Glass Music. BO PIECES. $2. For alsiy itay we will aeml FIFTY PIECE OF FIKT CI,.VS, FIII.I. MIZKU, high crntte, alnndaril Vocal aad I&nlraaaralal ZltL'SIC, carefully nrlrcted, tarladlag Males, Durts, ((anrtrltK, Wntlzrs, Polkas, Opera, Negro .llelodlra, I!yni:us elr., etc., charges prepaid by pout or rxprmm to any part of the United 8tntcn or Canada, upon receipt of I we ttollaniu rash, ammo or aaaaer order. The reyniar price of taWaaiiaie la 82(. Address FKAMC1S WAYI.AND tJI.E.N A: CO., 1 19 Broadway, New York City. . L, DOUGLAS S3 &3.5Q SHOES jjfiffj? SWo rth $4 to $6 compared,. win oiner mages. Jjaiorsed by ever l,uoo,ouo wearers. TheamuiM hare W. L.I UougUs name and price I stamped on bottom, lake 4 no substitute chimed to be as good. lour dealer should keen them if not. we wilt send a pair on receipt of urice and iw. extra for carriace. Stste kind of leathers 'sue, and width, plain or can toe. Cat. free. W. L DOUGLAS SHCE CO.. isz-Mm. Miss. IN 3 OK 4 YEARS M INDEPENDENCE SSUREI I! you ta'c up jour homes in Western Can m!a. the land of pnty. Illustrated pamphlets, srivini: experiences of farmers who hare be romo wealthy In grow ing wheat, reports ef fl.?"if,"c fttiv ar.il full !.. ...... i. i.t .. , . . !if...ff .allnrLV mtj ran ho had on application 10 the Superintendent of Immigration. Eeoartment of Interior. Ottawa. Canada, or to M. V. Bcnsett, 801 New Ygrfc XAln illdjr. Oicaha, Neb. ALUMINUM CREAM SEPARATORS anl up prelate rhuruc. Toe MTn- tor I cave worK penectiy. u. iiani. Allegheny O..Pa- CIrrularsfrec; wrli mitrkly. ;iHHON-HTKWAKT AfFU. COm.ila,l'a. nDADCVm DISCOVERY; plves "als9 nufc!cr;1!efandcurcawoTt caeit. Jtook of te'lmm!alr, anil 13 DAYS' treatment f SUE. BE. 2L U. 6SICS-3 SOSS. Bcb K. AUaaU. . - (.- ft a Dliaeaw usmu mschmrgms, mmmk- &uc70'z Km y auacrom WM GEiwm - DORCHESTER, MASS.. S "La Belle Chocolatiere" zSti not keep the genuine article, please let endeavor to put you in the way of '" . . . .... d Limited, Dorchester, Mast. 1TS3. T- A -4 " Ct- ' Ma?-- y