<
W*» ln»plr»d Orator.
. which he vroucht al hi* »crnion». The 1 exptuuBon i> ««> be lognd -in two ranees. There wa* in him the conAwaOtmicM of an artist. One can see this in such in»ii;nifirant itiatiers as the character of hi' handwritinc and the hnld) of his ordinary expn'oon as in familiar letters. He was not merely a | wan of tasie. exquisitely modulated for ! 3f i the appreciation of all jornts of art. it j M1
music be "excepted—a
tula* for taedlar Miock.
farmer must make his own
rules for feeding, as the amount of food required by animals, cron when
the same breed, and ot nearl] ne ace and weight, diffcni t 3omc animals are very dainty, t
riftTand his. first efforts in'yout'h pte- j othem will accept any-
dieted for him a literary career Hut ; fered. The standard rufes for there was in him emphatically that arcordln* to live wclsht are t »>hich now .and thed lilts an artist into ■ to a cert «j n pjtept, but tn nl - > h « «^ion oi inspiration ■namely, i „ herds aomn.ahInM^will'ea posseuton. J i more thtin others^hence the wants of
' H«*> oar in* iiiark to Dial#. | each individual
A true type of the Southern nrffTO ' entered the oflicc/oPfattyCommissioner Shechv o( NejvYork. and.' laying <1.
each individual musl_j>e observpd-ant the animals fed tteorulngty^' 1
the Inlets should be located In the walla near the ceilings, the outlets tn tbe'floor on the same aide of tbe'room aa the inlet ' In .natural ventilation. wtae.re cold air Is brought In. the Inlet* should be In the walls near the floor line, the outlets tn the ceilings, roofs
or walls above.
The Inlet and outlet moet commonly mot with is the abaft or duct. In lla construction there are certain general rules that should always be observed. A round sjtaft la preferable to a square one. aa it has greater carrying capacity, there being no dead corners. A smooth one it better than one
tat Is rough, t snt, nil other a
adltlons tl
» !. _ 0 -“ ^ ysy.sr i
. large t means'that you ^re assessrd for (crop of grass ehcry year unless the $£5,000." land is well manured or treated with •'Bom. ain't you foolin'? Who eft de fertilisers. Grass Is the foundation for ole nigger all dat money?" . ! all other crops, as it not only proNo one leit you money. That n °l'f r j duces pasturage and hay. but furnishes ■ewu that you are to Ik laaed ^ ^ ^ ^TuaKUnc* of the-crops “Taxed? Why. boss, down m Vtr- ; that follow. When the land Is In grass ginny dey ain't taxed niggers >inee de , it U really mulched and humus accuwar. Is I under arrest?" | mulatss. The ehadlng of the soil by ' "No. -Ceruinly not.” the grass is beneficial and the roots go “Den I'se gwine right back to ole , 3own dM . p , nto the subsoil for plant y.rgmny. bosy. Dey don t tax nigger. ^ ^ broutht w ^ Mrfacf .. down dar no more! i ^ t i, e pi^ts and thus ren-
d available Tor another season.
The burglar doesn’t shine.
makes hay while the sun
1 deposit* ' Jr-red a\
Mann for t*a H
l hens like s variety of 3 sufficient exercise and
a will bc.mt
pest For the Dowd*.
sstata, cur* you without a gripe or pain, ter on a varied diet than on one:madc «saataa, prtt up m metall oxae, *vary tab- j J5 bens: Sunday, breakfast, mash; ''iSto 0 * 1 °" “■ 1 llnnic. one pound green cut bone; supK * uo “' 1 per. one quart wheat; Monday, break-
fast. mash; dinner, a little whoa:
sr abcut 10 a. in.; sup-
t bone; Tucs-
Insurn action a duct should be as short and straight as It Is possible to have It. Those of too great length are usually useless unless nrtiflclal boat be used In them, to crente a circulation of air. Thore placed on
where the sun
placed on the north side. The Introduction of angles should be avol'cd m much os possible. Each right angle put In reduces tne velocity of the current onehalf. When It becomes neccrsary, as 1*. frequently Is. to change the direction. a rounded elbow may be us. good advantage. It being claimed that It will not lessen the velocity sc much, there being no square angle for the sir to strike against.—J. B. Paige, in American Agriculturist. / *
Death
from HuDdllng !>rtl1it*r*.
In vlewsof the general use of boue dust as a fertiliser by farmers and gardeners, the following case of anthrax.Is of Interest Anthrax is a very .
jueh bet- ) falal disease due to a special bade- j me mad.- I r * un - M usually occurs in animals, 1
chiefly cattle; but rometlmcs the germ ' gain* entrance Into the human body, j and almost Invariably causes death. ] Owing to the trades in which it usually occurs, it Is commonly known as wool j 'sorters' or rag pickers' disewe. This ! irfan was a fanner, who had some ] flight -itching .oruptlon on the chest. ! which he frequently • scratched. Far | two weeks before his death he had been engaged In sowing different kinds of grain along with-srtlflclal manure In the shape of bone dust, his bands, of course. Were covered.with the latter, anff-lio frequently used them for rcratching. In s few days he noticed n small pimple. This gradually grew larger and became swollen and inflamed. The skin grew darker, being almost black In patches: his face was dusky and livid; he suffered (rreatjr from difficulty of breathing and died four‘days after the onset of tie disease. The physician who had charge of the case, after a careful examination of the -possible sources of Infection, concluded that the man bad InfedUd
scattered In litter _
_ do not belknre Plso’s Core lor Coosnaiptioo - per. one pound green bu as equal !or cousin and cold..-Jos* P. ‘T . .
is-equal lor ec a. Trinity spr
.. Feb. 18.11
acy D often nrceasary: last year]* say not Bt Uili year's necU*.
Bapptnca* cannot t« bought, but one of the greet hindrance* to It* attainment cen be n* moved by Adun'sTepeln Tuttl FrattL When an old gentleman proceeds to spoil the icy'slide the small boy doesn't led like-saying peace to his ashes.
- WHAT IS OVARITIS?
A dull, throbbing pain, accompanied by a sense of tenderness and heat low tomb in the side, with an occasional Shooting pain, indicates inflammation. ' Oo■examination it will he found that the region of pain'shows some swelling. This is the first stage of orarT ‘ •inflammation of the ovary. If that of tout house lealrs, my sister, you h it fixed at once; why not pay the ■ respect to your ofcn body ? J VoU need not. you ought not to let ■ -yoOTrif go. when one of your own sex holds out the helping hand to you, and .will advise you without money, and without price. Write to Mrs. Pinkham. Tyan, Mass., and tell her all your syx
lay. breakfast, mash: dinner, one juxrt oats scattered in litter at 10 a. m.: supper, one quart cracked cojn: Wednesday, breakfast, green tut bone: dinner. 1 one plat barley scattered In litter; snpptr. one quart wheat: Thursday, break.ast. masb: dinner, buckwheat Mattered in litter: supper, one pint cracked corn; Friday, breakfast. mash; dinner, green cut bone; tupper, mixed grain; Saturday, breakfast. mash; dinner, chopped vegetables; supper, on* quart cracked corn. To prepare the mash. take, equal parts of bran, ground oats and corn meal.- with one-tnlrdar much clover. >ne large spoonful of pulverised charroal and a little salt. Pour boiling wg.tcr over it. cover and let it steam over night Mix the vegetables in it
ingi.
egetaiblcs. any*
Use
before .feeding.
one of which will do tor feeding, onions sparingly. Do not mix mash too soft, but have it crumbly. Feed while warm and give warm water to drink in cold, weather.—New
England Homestead.
Worth!*** L»c4 Mm
LION COFFEE A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH OP ALL! DLIND MAN’S, BUfP Is a good *-* gome to ploy. But you cannot afford to ploy It with coffee.
Know what yoa are drinking! Know what yen purchase!
Uncover your eyes and see
whether you are getting
LION COFFEE or some cheap glazed substitute that has been treated with polish-
ing materials, in order to hide imperfections. Look at the package! Is a lion's head on it? LION COFFEE is the coffee
of purity and strength. Try it once.
Watch our noxt advartl**mant.
In every pact .-.ye of LION COFFEE you will find *'fully illustrated and descriptive
list. No housekeeper, in fact, no woman, man, boy or girl will fail to find in the list some article
tribute to their happiness, comfort and convenience, and which they may f
er of Lion Heads from the wrappers of our one pouni
in which this excellent coffee is sold'
which will coni
simply cutting out a certain nui packages (which is the only foi
tact, no woman, man, boy or their happiness,^comfort and <
Heads from the
convenience,
they may
have by id sealed
WOOLSON SP1CC CO.. TOLEDO. OHIO.
eluded t nelf by i
the skin on his chest. The
obvious moral to ee drawn Is that crest
ibould be usc^ In hsndllng arti-. manures, and that especial pre-
cautions should betaken when there
contact with-the ft
miter.
, .. large swamp near Lima. N. Y.. | <rhlch a few years ago was not coasld- ! crcd worth «$S per acre, has been drained at considerable expense and Is now considered worth from $100 to 11200 per acre. It has been mostly dej voted to growing the two crops of celery and onions. These swamps may be used for many years without applying fertiliser, as the muck is a deposit of decayed vegetable matter further enJ rlched by the washing ot fertilising matter from the surrounding higher lands. Celery and onions both like , this kind oif soil, and the onions can /^i>nd their fibrous fcedlagrooU down as / i.deep as they pleas* There Is another
advantage in growing these two crops !'vltlng tuberculosis, do not tpler
i be scarcely too ; damp or poorly ventilated stable. *lery short of j I think that bovine tuberculqi
round for days propagated more extensively 1
i is T>rcvcnted ,by the the mediums of ur'mnltary rcater than any other drainage, and consequently if
. J-oliowme i* a tetter ■ too-much water for the onions
tool . woman who is thankful for , „ nV . „
Molding a terrible operation. •V*Iwas sufferir ~ ' -
Wlnt*, Dalrylnc-
Dnring the winter months a vis* 'dairyman will always give bis cows
winter care.
* 1 mean by this that his attention to his dairy will not be governed by the
vagariM of the weather.
Some'ynrn let their milch animals run promiscuously over the fields,
*ry bright or warm day during the cold season, but even If they own and control cows It would be a misnome-
to call such persons dairymen. I wish to place a groat emphasis on
the Importance of warm housing, and
' watering of cows
Friend—Why do you wear those
fearfully old-fashioned collars?
Winkers {a man of affairs)—Because when the washerwoman 'sends them to
anybody else they send them back. Next to charity - is the ap[
"By the way,” asked the strange:, "are women permitted to practice at the ‘“-feSSSTSL* o,.,,, who happened to be a retired salt keeper from Kansas, "you can’t .keep 'em from doing it when they take a
notion, be gosh!"
. Her experience in ilia is greater thai
together^ T much mtflfctt
absolutely
time.
e can h for^ the
flooding'the grour tich is -prevent
L Hiring person.
ing to such
from ovarian trouble that my physiHan thought an operation would be “Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comppjwwl haring been recommended to use, I decided to try it. After using ■everal bottles I found that 1 was cured. My.entire system was op, and I suffered no more wil
<xa Aston. Troy,:
regular feeding
from now until grass grows again. On account of the possibility of 4n-
derate a
There
bovine Uibcrculqrls is
propagated more extensively through the mediums of urtnltary stables
there Is ; than any other cau*.. Of course the Ions the cel- winter months when 'the rows are
ery will make a good growth, while tn | closely confined gives rise to the most a hot and dry season like the past. danger In this direction, the celery crop may be small, but the Pure, healthy mfTk must be obtained onions win make all the better growth ; In order to make first-class butter, ro •sncT' yield a tremendous crop. 1000 ^ you see the hygiene of the stable Is all
ihels to the sere having beep grown 1 ImportAuL'-
somo plots there. It Is said. Thus. 1 Healthy cows cannot long remain so to yield a profit, more In unhealthy .surroundings, nor when
sz i-; Dr. BulPs Cough
Byrup
If one crop falls to yield a profit, more In unhealthy .surroundings, may be expected from the other, ws^ie ; fed or watered Irregularly.
In an ordinary season both may do : Never trust the care of your eows he celery finding vater enough to a cheap or Inexperienced hand;\that surface, and the deeper rooting : 'is. if yon are In the dairy business tor' onions plenty lower down. ^ - improvement In milk products aad for
' — - - persona] profit
fv*»*r Loeatie* of Fan* UuiMiBSB.- The dairies throughout the land that When stables run east and west and ; arc paying the best profits today are the animals are arranged In two rows those that are minutely supervised in facing a central passage way. those an* ' every detail by their owner*, bnals upon the soma side get the j The dairyman who assists In his own benefits of all the sunlight while those 1 milking, and personally doee or as-
. Vopon the north side ge^ none at alL !'«l*ts In aHof the enre and feeding of raise them success- I ,n combination barns used for storage his cows. is. if he it truly In earnest.
! a»<i *»**-'- — •*' ’—* seldom forced to declare UAt dairying
Is a failure.
Mix plenty of energy into your dairy work this winter, and .never go to bed •t night without feeling absolutely certain that every cow in your stable is not hungry or thirsty, or forced to He upon a damp, filthy floor and breathe
* Choice Vegetables always bring high prices.
fully, a fertilizer
tiinihg
ptasK should be used.
Exposure Qhnm GRIP a Foothold end UnmMod
Or. Greene's Nervura
Cures GRIP W £V*ry StMtjm and Restores Physios! Vigor.
r Ciy| — i%i| 1=
SlSb It wards off^lhe at-
tack in the beginning,
and it drives the germ from
the blood.
Do not think these arc mere statements. They aro abso-
lute facta.
For the condition which follows Grip—theAveakened, prostrated condition so well-known
'hero—J)r. Greene's K<
and certa
orides those
. blood which have been preyed upon by the Grip germ, and restores full 'J strengthening vigor to the cir-
culation.
Mrs. F. W. Grant, 490 Central Ave., Dover. N. ft., says: “ I was acrervly attacked by Grip, whlcfa. aftcr^u kxig [griodoftarKNi, oroua proatroUoa. irasiag beard of the wonderful curativo proper:ie* ' in Dr. Groone'a Nertmu
• ,Ie ' • ‘
every whero—AJr.C vura is the true restorative. It pro:
tits in the bl
Hary 4001 «*rrant» male bal master*.
Vr»*t~l—At On re! -
Ks'rarttoo <«aot Ubsra'lty. ~
blood and a togire it a botUa I wi before the
nerve remedy, I concluded
is graatly imjxxrretf and
third bottle wuf goo* I was aid* to bo about my 'work as usual X can apeak only in the. highest terms of Dr. Greene - * Ner-
FoHUy Yt* Against
Systpnt it GHp^vtttb Dr. Greene's NERVURA BLOOD AMD NERVE REMEDY, WMoh NEVER FAILS to Ward Off GRIP'S
cpnleast
and stable, where the cattle ■ under the scaffolds. It is better t*
them the southern than the northern, for
oft
not offset sJhe stt:
m dtoect
to the wide range
rived from dTract sunlight upon the j animals or the dtainfnctiug action -ft
la the storage of vitiated air.
tiao should be take* to guard ag> contamlMtioo of the alr of the • or the air introduced Into it to th« place of ths teal oir reasoved.
'building.
ateo of pate air pa d
stable warmth do sot sacrifice venMtattoa. hot happily combine the two. te the sad th~* **—-
1 *1 snu
*• nm <*■ a*.
Ave., t'finenrtfrmm, a-a. "Time bottfas of Dr. GncMh Nervura bto«l and eaUrata cored ,jdo of i of G n p and bilious fever, long braa a -victim of Grin attaodaot agonies. I ooi '.T not »tter^ to basneaB on arvount of the lot*. Vly of tbo pains in my limbs *tvi ■wH ww. .a daily sufferer from severe attacks of rnrwesfdlrei-c area in the bead, and extrnnrfwrakneas. The paint in *0y ta<k, my limbs, and my bead wyro oi erpon#*tw and *:—'**♦ beroad sadtoancsL My wife bad fregarat^ urged me to surrey ou the cfTe-tsrf the gist tcUle
te Bervura and *000 was out' entirely well. Mrc. Fox and
it a great prevEoti vs for G n>uc
Dr .Greene,
r;lf yooara tbo rna-down cooditloa which follows ft. Yon
^PgaAt.ApVICTFyEEta GRIP SUFF^EgS^-^Wrlte to
«W fitbr. Oramseta advice’ahstlutely free, aadttvriilpotetosdtoyoa’ the MOfteta rood to health. Deot put eft dotagthts, hot writs to^sy. h
nrr
wiuoHesm
IJWsted
rientr MMtimimt mtui
^ s
new
MunuTUMima wa u.
dUWsMis—ihra. CMS
Tlicrci are limes when ode *1 speak gently, but as a rule it ik n
/ All rood* areal It* t« lTr» DtlS.a* l|i*jtcolnr all fiber, u: Boiu by all <1runrt*f.
Relei c- Ptoeards Ural* Pnrw* :i -redlcli*. Hcxsl-'# Couch Gu" of talna miiy lb-Bi IrU of drnv* Bod d>-fl-b C-onp, DionrlillfB.Pn-uir.oniantid D i-Mberin. SOrta. .SKMSfiS^isaRasss
>Blnrr Ne*.!*
C.rler’t Ink Ex Trion e «rn» cxce'lenci.
tius «iu~«iK3r offu aa mak. UaCHMiaSfCUHLH IT PAYS SL«f^“ "
• • ; ■ . ■ . •
-it ;
•hbiiaG*.:.-

