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Show i n r A ' w V if liTMjiimfni nr f " , jtfhgjbauAi. ?. 3LjUfe-.- What Everybody Says. live stock FoYTo'r v. mom- I have bees suffering with severe pains in the small of my back and kidneys ; had tried a number of remedies but without The Dark Before Dawn. Commercial and Natural Starters. Oh, mystery of the morning gloam. Of haunted air. of windless hush! Prof. G. L. McKay: I am asked to wonder of the deepening dome state which I like best, the commercial Oh, Afar, still far, the mornings flush or natural starter. For tbe average My spirit hears, among the spheres. The round earths rush! maker, I believe the commercial startwill er give the better results. But A single leaf, on yonder tree. tbe intelligent maker who baa taste The planets rush hath felt, hath heard; and smell well cultivated, will be able And soon all branches whispering be! That whisper wakes the nested bird to select milk and prepare a starter eong of thrush, before the blush that will produce flavor equal or su- The Of dawn the dreaming world has ever perior to any culture on the market. etlrred When the good Lord created the earth. old moon wlthere In the east He provided everything that was nec- The The wlnde of space may drive her far! essary to bring about the best results In heavens chancel waits the priest Dawns pontiff-prieswithout any artificial means. We the morning star! yonder, lo! a shafted glow usually find that when thorough clean- And The gates of g fall ajar! liness is observed In everything perScribners. taining to the milk, that the right species of bacteria are present to give e A Incident. the most perfect flavor to the butter Several months ago, when Departand cheese. Milk becomes Impure ment Commander Weber of tbe Grand from an external source. If I were Army was In looking Chattanooga asked to give a definition of a natural after a site for the Ohio monument to at I find the it her soldiers who fought at Mission would starter, present, a difficult thing to describe. For In- Ridge, he met a Capt, Smart. Incidentstance, one man has a dirty, leaky vat ally, In the conversation. Commander which Is loaded with foul bacteria Weber spoke of the charge of the ready to contaminate the purest Union forces up the ridge, and of a cream. Another man will have Im- Confederate battery which tried to properly cleaned churns and pumps, escape, but snagged one of its guns filled with undesirable bacteria, and on a stump. ' He spoke also of one of still another washes his butter with the boy3 of bis company who dropped impure water. a red cap near one of tbe batterymen. salts. There Is the over-riphand separaSmart gave him the address of . In this connection the experiments tor cream which some' makers have to Capt Capt. Dent, who commanded the batsuccessful the of contend with. These are all starters reporting feeding to him cane molasses to over 400 work of their kind. One man uses butter- tery, and the commander wrote rehorses at a sugar plantation in the milk and calls It a natural starter. receiving the following interesting ply: Fiji Islands are of interest As high Another uses sklmmilk caught from I commanded what was known as as 30 pounds of molasses was fed per the average milk as It comes from the head dally at different times, but the separators, and he calls It a sklmmilk Dents battery at the battles of and Mission Ridge. My batration finally adopted consisted of IB or natural starter. Another will go not far to pounds of molasses, 3 pounds of bran, out and get the milk of a fresh cow tery was on the ridge and and 4 pounds of maize. In addition and allow It to sour, which U also a the left of that part of the Confederate line which was opposite Orcfiard green sugar cane tops were fed. The natural starter. Some will use whole-milhealth of the horses remained exceand some will use cream, and Knob. My battery was divided when1 llent Molasses did not cause diarrhea, they will come under the head of the assault was made on the ridge. but rather constipation, which was natural starters. Most makers would had two guns at the left of a public counteracted by feeding bran. Feed- get about the same results If they did road, and four to the right of said I think the road was the Shaling molasses effected a saving of over not use any starter as to use the kind road. low Fork road,, but am not sure. I 345 per head per annum. However, I have just mentioned. had six brass Napoleon It was believed that such a saving guns, and lost five of them in this was possible only by reason of large Milking at 8unny Peak Farm. D. W. Howie thus tells how the battle. . . quantities of waste molasses and I feel satisfied from your descripvalueless cane tops available on the milking Is done on Sunny Peak farm, tion of tbe battle that It was my batspot In discussing these experiments near Milwaukee: The first thing we do is to wrap a tery that fired on your flank, or at the following statements were made: For working horses the sugar in cane heavy blanket around the cans which least a part of It. As soon as the asmolasses is a satisfactory substitute are to receive the milk. By so doing saulting column got under the hill so for starchy food, being readily digest- the milk is enabled to retain its heat we could not reach them by front fire, for a very long time. This prevents we turned our guns so as to lnfllade ed IB . and pounds can be the necessity of warming it again for the assaulting column as much as posd given to a working horse with advantage to the health of the the separator and calves. The next sible. One of my guns, the one nearanimal and to the efficiency of its procedure la milking. Each milker has est the road, got away. When I found his own cows. The poorest milker, as the fire so heavy that I could not work. It produces no undue fattento ing, softness, nor Injury to the wind. a general thing, Is given the easiest hope to escape that way, I tried The high proportion of salts in It has cows to milk and the best milker gets take the guns over through the underno Injurious effect An albuminoid the hardest ones. This may not seem brush. but saves It and time also fair, preI remember the axle In down as low as 1:11.8 has proved highratio going vents the chance of spoiling the hard of one of my guns caught against a ly suitable for heavy continuous work when a sufficient quantity of digest- milking cows that, though they may Stump. I tried to have it lifted over be hard milkers, are nevertheless ex- the ible matter Is given. atump, as the ground there was cellent cows In every respect." I have quite steep, and got the front axle Cement Floors and Rheumatism. noticed that good milkers are born over, but before we could get the hind From the Farmers' Review: We use and not made. If a man has any conover your people got very close a cement floor for our station herd, siderable number of cows to milk for axle and opened fire, killing, as I now reand I am acquainted with two of the six months and at the end of that time member, one man, and wounding sevmost dairies in this part of la not a good milker you may rest asothers. I was with this gun, and the country that also use cement sured that he never will be one. Each eral a bullet went through my coat sleeve. floors, and as far as I hare been able man feeds his own cows their grain ra- Tbe gun, of course, was abandoned to see there has not been a case of tion as he milks them. The milk berheumatism In our own herd, and I ing weighed by the milker, he, of there. red The cap which your people have beard no complaint from the pro- course, Is In the best position to know found there belonged, I think, to the of the other dairies. which of his cows should have the prietors there his name was It is true, I think, that cement will moat feed. Some are fed just before man killed When I say he was killed- - I sometimes cause sore feet, and for they are milked; this takes their at- Schaub. was shot through the neck he this reason It is necessary that more tention away from the milker and they know and tell, and judging from the way the Sledding be used than would be re give down freely, standing quietly at blood spurted, I saw no chance for qulred on a wood floor. On the other tbe same time. Others, if fed while him, and we left without ceremony. hand this bedding is not wasted as it being milked, become ao engrossed "My Impression 1b that the officer .goes Into the manure, and a wood floor with their eating that they forget who rode the white horse fa that bat4s bound to become saturated with everything and step forward and back, tle was Gen. Patton Anderson. Gen. mrine and give off more or less odor now stretching tnelr whole bodies to Anderson was afterward very badly during the hot weather. As far as get a good mouthful, now drawing wounded In the battle of Jonesboro. any knowledge goes I would prefer back to chew It, thus greatly annoying He died a few years ago In Memphis, the cement floor under every condition the milker. Such cows are generally Tenn., but went into the army from that occurs to me at the present time. fed after being milked. We arrange It Florida. C. F. Doane, Dairyman, Maryland bo that when the milking la being done My battery was reorganized, but the cows all have their grain either with only Experiment Station. four guns, and I waa in all , in front of them or in their stomachs. the battles from Dalton to Atlanta, From the Farmers' Review: I have ana waa wounded July 22, 1864, in the had very little experience with cows How About Your Well? battle of Atlanta the day Gen. Mcstanding on cement floors and have Tbe following, taken from a docu- Pherson was killed and later was not aeen any case of rheumatism re- ment Issued by tne Michigan State wounded In the battle of Nashville. I sulting from It I am of the opinion, Board of Health, anouni receive the was also In the battle of Pittsburg lltowever, that cement floors without thoughtful attention of every one: Landing, as soifle of your people call It plenty of bedding, might cause rheu- "The most scrupulous care should and was wounded there. matism. Where bedding is at all be taken to keep the present sources The war is over. I have a son in scarce, I believe it would be wise to of drinking water pure, and to pro- the navy who took part in the on cement of the top place planks cure future supplies only from clean war a few years ago so H. E. Van Norman, Associate Profes- sources. Tbe general water supply of you see he fought for the flag in that sor in Dairying, Purdue University, cities and villages 1b a matter of war, if I did follow the stars and bars Indiana. great concern; It should be procured In the war of 1861-65- . The original name of the Dutch Belt- from places where there can be no S. D. Dent, Eufaula, Ala. ed cattle was Lakenfleld," from probability of Immediate or remote In a postscript the captain aays of Laken, a sheet to be wound around contamination. outThe the battle of Mission Ridge: the body of the animal. "One Incident of the battle you may break of typhoid fever at Plymouth, Pa., where over a thousand cases and recall. As your column advanced up Development of Young Piga and fourteen (114) the hill just opposite where one secMuch of our success In hog raising, one hundred Iltion of my battery waa posted, which both as to economy of production and deaths occurred. Is apparently an lustration of how great a calamity wsb to the Confederate left of this how we of on quality product, depends on the column with the care for the young pigs after weaning, may follow the fouling of a general road. In firing we cut down the only lire, water a of the lnflladlng supply by discharges W. J. Prof. old The Fraser. saysays I remember, left standing. as sick with When fever. tree, person typhoid ing that feed is half the breed" is there Is no general water supply, nor The tree fell Tight on the advancing true, if we include the methods of much may be done to column, and, as It rolled down tbe sewers, good feeding. Feeding largely on food that wells the abolition of cess- steep hill, it carried with It one man, protect by tends to produce fat, without sufficient In the and privy vaults, by the use of who had evidently been caught exercise being given, will often change pits of that The tree. of picture the limbs freIn the earth and privies, by a little Yorkshire into a thick, fat type, dry as he was carried down by the or may cause such a derangement of quent removal therefrom of all their man Is very vivid In my mind." . into wells unsuspected by those tree the digestive organs as to founder the drain use who water. Should the typhoid ytuug pigs. This is a most serious fever Think Railroad Rats Too High. discharges pass into such a condition, and will render them profitThere Is a good deal of comment In an outbreak fever of privy typhoid less. Indigestion may show itself by Grand. Army circles In the East over a those from water the among using the pigs falling in flesh, loss of appewell would be likely to what the comrades regard as too tite, roughness of hair, scaliness of neighboring occur. If such a well were the high a rate established by the rail stun, teeth becoming black, etc. The source of the general water supply of roads for the trip to the National last condition is otten thought to be a held in San Fran city, typhoid fever might soon be Encampment, to be the cause, rather than the effect It dolcisco in August Seventy-threis There there. epidemic the with is, together others, but an lars from New York is regarded as reason of to water the good suspect of evidence injudicious feeding. In too high. They cite the fact that the case some young pigs become so fat a woll whenever a vault is situated Christian their Endeavorers, when that they die from what is known as within a hundred feet of it, particu- international convention W8S held In nuif In cases the soil all be in larly tood porous. "thumps," proper ami exercise will prevent, and, in a meas- merous Instances fluids from excre- San Francisco, were given a rate of veterans have Massachusetts ure, remedy them. "Prevention is bet- ta have leached Into wells from much $52. and a matter the taken seriously, up ter than cure. greater distances; and it has been committee of six will be appointed to proved that a well thirty rods from a Feeding Grain to Milk Cows on Pas- cemetery received water which had act with the Department Commander lower rates, ture. filtered through the soil of the ceme- of that state in securing if possible. A meeting of the present From Farmers Review :V This is tery. contaminated Dangerously not a dairy section, in fact, there is water may be and often la found to be and past officers of the Department of Massachusetts and delegates was not a cheese factory or creamery in ' the county, yet I have been, for many clear and colorless and to have no held In the state house In Boston rebad taste, The noted Instance at to consider the subject. It years, though on a limited scale, a Lausanne, where the cently Switzerland, was resolved to ask Commander In dairyman, and have made it an unvarying practice to feed grain at all discharges from typhoid fever pa- Chief Stewart to use all proper Ininto a small fluence to times when cows were giving milk, tients were thrown get as good rates to San is that a reasonable stream, which disappeared by sink. and my opinion Francisco for the week of August 17 grain ration never pays better than ing into the earth and gravel and as was given the Christian Endeavor when the cows are on pasture, evtn reappeared about half a mile distant the best of pasture, and in the latc as a mountain spring, the clear water society. suswjner when grass usually becomes of which caused typhoid fever in one Colored Man Was Grateful. short the milk flow can be, in great hundred and forty-four (144) permeasure, kept up and the cows will reI had a pleasant reminder of the main in good condition, always ready sons, is Instructive, and Is worthy of war the other day, said the Captain. for business. Hugh Greig, Knox note as Illustrating how the disease "It came In the shape of a silver Hinty. Illinois, may be spread. as Horse Feed. Sugar The beet chips, diffusion residue, and other obtained in the manufacture of beet sugar, consist of the sugar beet from which a considerable portion of the carbohydrates has been removed, says a bulletin of the Department of Agriculture. The total amount of nutritive material is fairly large. present,- however, These products, properly speaking, are also coarse fodders. Molasses, which consists almost entirely of carbohydrates (sugars), was used ah early as 1830 as a feed for horses, and has recently attracted considerable attention in this connection. When used for this purpose It is usually sprinkled on dry feed, being first diluted with water, or it is mixed with some material which absorbs it and renders it easy to handle, such as peat dust, or with some material rich in nitrogen, as dried blood. In the latter case the mixture more nearly represents a concentrated feed than the molasses alone, or molasses mixed with an absorbent material r molasses is also only. used as a feeding stuff. It differs from beet molasses in that it contains glucose in addition to cane sugar, and has a much smaller percentage of I ! t, War-Tim- Cane-suga- e Chick-amaug- a k , 1,270-poun- V .... - well-know- n e L1C j cream pitcher and sugar bowl, acletter, by a companied which my people liked very much. The letter abounded In references the significance of which was apparent only to myself. After one of the hot engagements of the war I came upon a young colored man who had been between the lines and who waa like a man paralyzed. I spoke reassuringly to him and hurried after the retreating enemy. In the evening some of my men brought the young negro into camp, and as I passed tbe group I heard the boys explaining to the young fellow that he was free and could do as he pleased. They wanted to know what he, was going to do about it, and Intimated pretty strongly that if they were In his place they would take the Job of cooking for a certain mess in their own company. As I passed the colored man came toward me and stammered that he didnt know what the massas meant, but if he could do as be pleased he would do whatever I wanted him to do. He became my cook and man of all work at company headquarters, and remained with me to the end of the war. I took him home with me and In due time established him in business. Then I came West, and after my location in Chicago did not hear from my protege for thirty had years. He, in the meantime changed location, had prospered in business, and after thirty years waiting sent me the silver creamer and sugar, and a letter testifying to his gratitude and affection. I liked that, you know, and I was as glad to hear of his success In life as I would be to hear of the success of an old comrade In arms. Chicago Inter Ocean, Daughters of Veterans. On Memorial Day, 1885, five school girls, none .of them being over 16 years of age at the time, stood at the gate of the cemetery at Massillon, O. and watched their brothers, the Sons of Veterans, taking part in the observance of the day In the official capacity of their society. Why cant we have a society to be called the "Daughters of Veterans? interrogated one of the girls of her companions. Why cant we! they all responded. The idea had no sooner had Its origination than the girls set to work with a will and a vigor to organize a local order, and soon their number was Increased to 14 girls and they became the charter members of not only the first society of Daughters of Veterans In the state of Ohio, but In the whole United States. Tbe girls were encouraged by thetr parents and soon the society was Incorporated under the laws of the state as Is any other lodge or society. The growth of the order has been slow but gradual and it bids fair in a few years to become an organization of great strength as any descendants of a veteran may become a member of the order, thus permitting It to perpetuate itself. Few Fraudulent Claims, Every now and then Is heard a remark to the. effect that many applicants for pensions are frauds, or that are many claims made by soldiers befraudulent, and tbe unthinking lieve it The last report of trials and convictions for one year shows there were 226 convictions, against 158 persons, as follows; Soldiers and sailors, 11. Womens roll Claiming as widows (after re marriage), 22; bogus widows, 11 claim as mother of soldier, 1; false witnesses, 4. Civilians record, mens cases Attempting bribery, 1; 2; false certifications, 231;. false claims, 22; false personation,. 1;. forgery and perjury, 24; prosecuting claims while a government officer, 3. Offenses also against pensioners Embezzlement from minors, 1; charging illegal fees, 15; personating government officers, 13; retaining pension certificates, 2. Only eleven soldiers and sailors, appear In tbe above list, two of whom were deserters, and one other served , y, In the Spanish-Amerlca- n war. Grand Army Notes, The fifteenth annual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic of the Department of Georgia was held, at Fitzgerald, Ga., on Saturday, March 21. Every one who uses Doans Kidney Pills free trial has a good word to say for them that-whthey are most prominent in the public eye. ' III. Chicago, When I received ths ample of l)oan'i Kidney Pills I wss suffertneterribly with my back, was siek snd unfit to do anything. The . several remedial Aching back, am eased Hip, back and overcome. loin Swelling of the hot rather tafitod th. two' boxes?,'andmn limbs and dropsy .ign. vanish. brick-dussedland t trouble made m They correct urine with riad to state that - wors. Before I bid after taking the two ment, high colored, excessive, pain in passboxes of filial was tng, dribbling, frequency, bedwetting, relieved pains, , thsft mtn Kidney Pills dissolve and remove J1 CUPOLA Jli SKETCHEr SunE D mims bypon - jd Pn Relieve heart calculi and giveL pulpits-t- o tion, sleeplessness, headache, nervousness. Uklng these pma it waa Impossible for HOPE FOR THE HOPELESS. FREE ma to get a full night'a aleep, hut I am not experiencing any difficulty In this re- -, pect bow. Yours truly, Jobs E. Kka-mb- r, 2423 W. Main Street. (Fpreman Tobacco American Co.) , Abb rdzrx, W ash. Co, Buffslo, H. T. I had a bad pain in roarva-Mmav-a Please tend me by mail, without e barge, my back ; I could Doan's Kidney Pills trial box hardly walk or alt 1 could not down. Name- write for sample, but box got a fifty-ceand of druggist, they have made me all State .. mail to right. N o other med(Cut out ooupon on dotted lines and 1 icine did me any Co, Buffalo. K I) . Acs. Carl-- , Medical Advice Free Strictly Confidential. East 85 When Fate Juggled protoplasms, more attention was paid anglers than poets. The deduction Is Invulnerable. Does not Isaak Walton say: "Angling is somewhat like poetry, men are to be bom so." and are there not more fishermen than poets? Occasionally we see a man that Is both a poet and an angler. You will recall Longfellows vultures that come not singly! Such a man Is to be pitied! Between getting an inspiration and a bite, and his friends can never tell whether he is about to start fishing or go into a trance. This combination of bobbers and metre is supposed to be the author of that touching, bit of verse we have so often quoted on the rolling river bank, our lat BL, I couldt .Lp at night Had to get ns six or eight times, ana the urine wee so red, would almost think It waa part blood there waa athick land, sedilike brick-du- st ment. I cannot tell one-ha- lf that I ( auf. fered, nor how good I (eel now tha( I am cured by Doans Kidney Pills but here I years , lxty-ai- x old, able to da my own work, feeling well as I did twenty years ago, for which I thank Doans Kidney Fills ten thousand times. Mr. E. T. Gould; 914 W. Lake Stiret. Doans Pills curs when other fail. A LITTLE TOO REALISTIC. Electric Light in Ancient Palaces. Kaiser Wilhelm has concluded to modernize some of his old family castles by putting In electric lights, Musical Conductor Compelled to "Call Down Strenuous Singers. No man has a better' opportunity ora The absence of for the use of sarcasm than a musical e worm cavorting In our grimy hand: ances hitherto conductor, and in this respect few perhas conveniences these When the wind is in the north, caused great discomfort and the Ger- sons excel T. E. Morgan, who Is Skillful fishers go not forth. When the wind is in the south. man emperor will make the improvetraining the New York Festival choIt blows the bait in the fishs mouth. ments first in the Berlin and Potsrus for the production of Elijah," When the wind is fn the east, In one dam palaces, in spite of the protests of Mendelssohn's masterwork. 'Tie neither good for man nor beast. When the wind is in the west, a lot of antiquarians in his court portion of the oratorio occurs the line Then It is the very best! When the works now in progress are The earth was shaken, which U In youthful days we swore by the flnlghe(1 the emperors palaces will to be sung very softly. Mr. supposed auwe above, but suspect the have all the modern improvementa on Morgan was shocked to observe- that versifithor of mixing some very bad the American plan. the passage started off ,and ended on cation with a bit of Indian lore. For the shaken with a blast which near. consolation we now turn, not to the This Will Interest Mothers. ly shook the house. He called a halt r and his windy poemette, Mother Grays Sweet Powders for ChildI You shake too loud, he said. ren, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in but to good old Walton, who says: Home, New York, Cure Fevertold you that the passage should' he "We may say of angling as Dr. Childrens ishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, Boteler said of strawberries: Doubt move and regulate the bowels and destroy sung softly. It Isnt necessary really New could God have made a better Worms. Sold by all Druggists, 25c. Sample to shake the earth, you know. less S. , N.Y. A. Olmsted, Press. FREE. LeKoy Address York berry, but doubtless God never did; and so (If I might be judge), God KNEW WHEN TO QUIT. Art Critic Stirs Connoisseurs." never did make a more calm, quiet. Giullo Bonola, the Innocent recreation than angling.' Saw the Point In Pol Italian art critic, has Just finished hit All this Is mere musing, preface to Judge Promptly iticians Advice. investigation in regard to the Sants a thought that is time to get your Cecilia of Donatello and the results One of the most hospitable citizens tackle and fish Into stories fishing Accord. wiH presently be published. of was of Falls Sioux Fuller Judge shape for a hard campaign. If posIn the to the IntroBonola, Ing was He Court. the Supreme sible, Invent some new lies, but if British museum, which to regarded as originality has the spring malaria, duced to the presidents attention Santa Cecilia, to nothso disguise the old ones, that they with the following Incident of hto the original The critic asserts ing but a copy. will not be recognized. You may re- career: The Judges made a strong campaign that he has found the authentic origicall the farmer who admonished the hunters not to shoot rabbits on his to get the legislature to raise their nal In Padua. farm unless they had long tails the salaries. The bill met with great opCHEAP PASSENGER RATES. short-taileposition. Judge Fuller, who had no ones were all his. to went small From Influence, up Ogden and Salt Lake via political We are not so grasping. Once upon time we were fishing and a large Pierre to see abont it He was met Santa Fe route. June Missouri river and Intermediate bass accidentally swallowed our boat by one of the leaders of the party. How about this thing?" said the points and return, 332.99. chain. Two years later we caught a Chicago and intermediate points t fish In the same waters that had a Judge. and return, 344.59. Judge." said tbe other politician, natural look about him. We cut him SL Louis and intermediate points open In search of landmarks, and gravely, you better drop this salary and return, 339.50. would you believe It? we found onr bnsines3. I tell yon as a friend. You Final return limit, September 8) don't want It to go through. It to not 1903. boat chain; but It had rusted dreadIn Interest. 3 TRAINS DAILY. your fully. In fact, the action of the water Why aint It? For further Information and for had so affected the Iron links that Dont you see. Judge, explained rates to points other than above, apply they had entirely disappeared, but the C. F. WARREN, nice round holes were preserved as the politician, that if we pat the sal- to Salt perfectly as when the fish swallowed aries of the Judges up to the figure General Agent, 411 Dooly block. Lake City, Utah. them. you want, the people will tarn around As previously stated, we are not and elect real lawyers to the bench." Lesson in Chaplain Milburns Life. The- point of the story to that the grasping. We ask only this story for ft was of the late William H. Mifc our own during the present season, Judge dropped the amendment at burn, tbe blind preacher chaplain ft to a modest story, and we cleave once. New York Sun. of the house, and afterward of ths to It only because of fta strict allegTHOUGHT HE HAD HELLFtRE. Senate, that William R, Morrison iance to truth and veracity. We would Mr. Milburn to a man once said: ask, that during the coming summer, Old Gentleman Imagined He Was who fears God, hates the devil and this He be not infringed on. If necesGetting Practical Leison. votes the straight tlckeL Mr. Mill sary, we will apply for a patent. Dr.. Talmage used to tell a story burn's life Illustrates what one css Do you recall the fish story of At that period when he was about an old presiding elder who had do In the face of hardships. He was sauce. totally blind before becoming of calling Cleopatra babe and getting a great fondness for tabasco became a Methodist clergyman, her rouge on the end of his probos- Not always able to get Uhls on hto cis, they went fishing together. The travels through hto district, he car- successful lecturer and author, keepwind was In the north that day and ried a bottle- ef ft with him. This he ing at his work until a few months Antony spat on his hook, in vain. always had placed on the table of the before his death at the age of eighty. The newspapers were read to him. Fearing disgrace fn the eyes of bis In- hotel where he stayed. One day an old rustic sat opposite every day and he kept fully posted offi amorata, he ordered a lackey to dive with a fish and place It on bis hook. the venerable elder at dinner and passing events. ol helped himself freely to the comThen, with great manifestation Hall's Catarrh Curs prowess, he landed the fin. The hoax pound. He got a big dose of It In was discerned by Cleopatra, and next fact, It took some time for him to Is taken internally. Price, 75fc. day when many were assembled, she recover from the effects. When he ordered a diver to place a dried her did finally stop coughing long enough THE ONE THING LACKING.. Tbe, result was to talk, he glared at the elder and ring on hto line. lota of and I've said: heard had after the laughter boisterous; preachers British Tourist's Complaint of a DC but you are the subsided, the fair charmer remarked preach about heU-firficiency In Canada. Leave fishing to us first I ever seen that carried ft about Go, general! In the smoKlng compartment of th petty princes of Pharos and Canopus, with, him. Montreal express the other day two your game to cities, kingdoms and Texas Cotton Production. British tourists were talking; with a provinces!" Texas now produces more cotton New York traveling man about their 5 5 than Georgia and Alabama, the next impressions of Canada, from which Picnickers and other lovers of bo- two largest cotton states, combined. country they were returning evidently logna sausage, should awake! Omnl-o, after a long journey over 1L BE INDEPENDENT. over the It dog! danger bangs Yes, one of them was saying, la proposed to fill him full of dynar Canada is a delightful, place. Th mite and throw him to the sharks la Rt Easy to Shake Off the Coffee country to wonderful, thepeople art HabiL Havana harbor. The act will at once and hospitable to a degree; charming There are many people who make the clubs are ripping and the Niagara pain the canine lover and raise the price of summer lunches. The atten- the humiliating acknowledgment that Falls are all my fancy painted them tion of the Society for Cruelty to they are dependent upon Coffee to to be. And when I get borne I mean Animals and the Association of brace the, up every little while. to tell every one I know that they to is called Stutters the dire Bologna These have never learned the truth must really come out and aee ft all. situation. about Postum Cereal Coffee which But, If you will allow me to make one makes leaving off coffee a simple criticism, I must say there to one 5 5 5 A country editor, noting the fight matter and brings health and thing lacking. They haven't a good A bit of cheese in the whole hloomlng against the shirt waist for women, is strength in place of coffee ills. greatly perturbed lest the fair ones lady of Davenport, Iowa, who used place. return to We Postum Food Coffee for five years to are surprised. competent to talk upon the subjecL Alabama's Advantages. She says: With the single exception of wheat 5 5 5 I am a school teacher and during growing Alabama to a better- location The George Washington extra when I thought I needed for the small farmer than Kansas or has been found In Virginia, to be work I braced to In used up indulge Nebraska to. Both the climate and ft was sticking In the frame-worof strong coffee of which I was the soil are favorable, and man can Eves fruit stand and was found by rich, fond and upon which 1 thought work out doors all the year If necesthe original Roosevelt man. It was very I was dependent sary. Lands can yet be bought on Immediately expressed to the PresiI began to have serious heart palreasonable terms and ia South Alar dent, care John Burroughs, Yellowstone Park, as a reminder that we pitation and at times had sharp bams there are many thousands of want the truth, and nothing but the pains around the heart and more or acres where the timber has less stomach trouble. I read abont all been cut otL This land can truth, about those mountain lions. Did 8ome try- or Mr. Pres-didn't shoot em, you, hardly be excelled for ' vegetables, you ped coffee, took up the Postum and fruits and all of the grain crops exIt worked such wonders for me that cept wheat, and recent experiment 5 5 5 many of my friends took It up. have ahown that fair wheat crops caa In a short time I was well again, be grown. If alt the One country editor advertises R advantages po for sale. Another remarks even able to attend evening socials. aessed by Alabama were properly baby-caAnd I not did miss my coffee at alL made known to borne seekers oof that country editor number one is tempting Fate. Number two says he I Now I can truthfully say that I havs state would get many thrifty and advertised and sold a cab once, and been repaid fully for the change I farmers who now flock later had to pay five times the sale made. I have no indications of heart the better advertised WesL Monk disease and not once in the past four gomery (Ala.) Advertiser. price for a new one. The experienced years have I had a sick headache or will please testify! bilious spell The Worth of an Automobile. 5 5 5 My father, 78 years old, to a The possession of an automobile An Indiana woman owns, operates enthusiast, and feels that hto multiplies tbe contents and sphere ot and edits a newspaper. Her help to good health In a large measure to due a mans lile by more than six If ha feminine of the gender, and there to the 6 cups of good Postum which previously kept a horse, and by much being no devir on the force, she has he enjoys each day." Name furnished more if he did not This to the a cute little angel to wash rollers, bjr Postum Co Batte Cree,. Mlch of the English editor of World but she isn't much of a success she j There is a reason. Work. cant learn. to chew tobacco. y - poet-fishe- well-know- n bas-reli- d age,-bu- t 5 us E. D. Bacon, department command-e- r of the G. A. R. of Alabama, has Issued general orders from the1 Birmingham, Ala, convening the fifteenth annual encampment of the department at Birmingham Ala., on Tuesday, March 24. The members of the Roanoke and Newberne Association held thetr annual reunion at the Grand Army Hall In Athol, Mass, on Saturday, March 14. The meeting was well attended. James Oliver is president and R. L. Doane secretary and treasurer of tha association. bead-quarte- rs, Raising Fund for Encampment. An effort Is being made to raise a fund of 3100,009 to pay the expenses of the coming soldiers reunion In New Orleans. One contribution of 31.000 has been made, and is the largest thus far. Three of 3500, one of 3300, and five of 3200 have been made. . The Union Veterans Association has given 310, regretting its inability to give more, and saying: We are prompted to this action by the kind treatment always accorded us by the Confederate veterans dur. ing our residence among you. Postpone Meeting Till October. The Society of the Army of the Tennessee has decided to postpone Its meeting In Washington. D. C., from May to October 15. This action has been taken on account of a desire to have the President present at the unveiling of the statue of Gen. Sherman. - hard-boile- d shirt-front- - cherry-tree-hatch- ' prao-tlcall- 1 0tllan b Pos-tur- Confederates to Meet Yearly. It is proposed to have a yearly reunion of the South Carolina Confederate veterans so long as a sufficient number survive, and that It be always held In Columbia. n esd-mat- e |