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Show the weeders may bo attached In stead of the cultivators and the Deafness Cannot Do Cured ths t'ilc(.u, ob w.r la p"rii.o fcfn ih u litai anbyulUitir4 ..nltuil.nl remJ!r. rumJrtiir. l roodiil'fi t Ilia ly x m rtnnol fu-- r. ear.lby U only l n-se- IN THE FAR NORTH. Many ground between tho rows of garden Horses Find Sustenance Under ' " of 8now. Feet little truck with stirred very up kept a tnncou llnliiii of the guhin Tul. Wbrn hi u bat a a ruinliiluif aun4 tr lm trouble. Tho spaces between tho A recent book on tho Kiondlko countub I JiiMmnt'il wiicti li la cim4. IrafM jwffmbraruirf.aitit In bo rows treated rnay try says: In November, 1893, horses strawberry data la Ilia rruli, atl uula Ilia Itidaimnailonraa takeo out t4 ibla tuba ritr4 u lia normal cnll-.o- , newtho samo way. This tears up tho were left to dlb on tho trails and In brariiu will ti 4tiruy4 rrrari ulna out i t wn aro caurt by I aiarrti, wbli b la nutbluf ly setting plants between tho rows, Dawson. Thero was neither work nor InUaiuail oinIHIii of Ilia aurfaraa. tuiWaanwill whero they aro not wanted, and cause I feed for them. Horses wero offered of (lira On llunUrrS Jioliara t or any f 1. The amount overrun of depends b rtirrd by raiarrtil that cannot a thrifty growth of vines In tho rows, to me for their keep, but I refused. h n. f..r clrruiara, frea. upon (a) a thoroughness of skimming, whero 'r JUli'iCaiarrlt I'ur. V. J. Cilfc.NtY A tu., Toledo, a . These samo horses wandered up In they aro wanted. (b) completeness of churning, (c) gen P"( by prufff4la, V, Tho housewife should see that her the hills, whero tho snow was five Taka lull's kami:y rilia for cni!pailua. eral leaks In crcamorics, and (d) upon husband invests In a wheeled boe, as feet deep. They brushed tho snow composition of tho butter manufac WAYS OF WILD CREATURE3. it will make It the more certain that away with feet and nose, finding lustured. cious whortleberries, blackberries and 2. Churning In a warm room and her garden will bo taken caro of. If Victim Who Preferred Those by Easy thero is a good-sizeboy on the j!ace raspberries in great quantities. Tho. tho cream of tho raising temperature on Their Fellows. Prey ho will tako a good deal more interest lowest authentto record at tho bar-- , and to wash cause .water tho butter racks was 57 degrees below zero. Yet In a recently published book on become softer and in In keeping down tbo weeds If be has in tho Into unlto lumps, W. S. spring tbo horses were refishing. llodgson, an English which condition It bolds and retains some wa y of doing It other than with claimed by their owners and looked. sportsman, argues that when a fish molsturo to a greater extent than tho implement, tho boo. of the salmon kind, or a pike, takes a when butter is It pays to keep on band thoso imple- Infinitely better than when turned out . firmer. to die at the beginning tf tho winter. real minnow Impaled on a flight of 3. An increaso In the slzo of gran ments that lessen labor, and tbo more This was aiesson as well as a revolt hooks or a manufactured thing re- ules duo to overchurning Increases the so, as the tlmo that can bo but on any tion. During the summer of 1899 ono piece of work Is generally so limsembling a minnow the flsh Is moved molsturo content and only gradually wero Imported Into tho Klonhorses deJess by a desire to eat than by a ited that, if It Is not done within a to a Into small extent By churning In dike numbers and 1,200 of them sire to kill. He derives this lrapros-slocertain time. It will not be done at all. tho of content molsturo butter lumps, from the fact that a salmon or a passed the next, winter In transportIs Increased greatly ing men and supplies from Dawson to trout, llko a pike, will leave a whole 4. Butter overeburned should bo not the mines. The dogs were almost enshoal of minnows undisturbed, and In curd too the buttermilk, as much tirely superseded and their value rush St an impaled minnow, or a phan milk and aro This sugar formerl $150 became merely nomiIncorporated. A critic of tho book says: tom. In cannot and bo removed, readily nal; for a good horse, after all, could Fish Surely this Is very flavor instances tho it Injures pull a ton over tho smooth icy trails and birds of prey, like human beings, many and of butter. a labor that would require three keeping quality to averse and tre unnecessary trouble, 5. The molsturo content of .butter as It Is easier to catch a wounded sleighs and twenty dogs. t can the be regulated by controlling creature than a fresh one. a peregrine It Pays to Read Newspapers. A report of the Trogress of tho Beet will take an Injured grouse or a pike temperature, the amount of wash wa Industry in 1903, prepared by Cox, WJfc., July 4. Frank M. Rusa tethered or spinning bait wjien it ter, and degree of churning In tho Sugar U. S. the of Department of this place, had KMney Disease sell Agriculture, comes in his way, not because of tho wash wator. Inan shows been has there that, so bad that he could not walk. lie C. Tho richer tho cream is at the Instinct which leads wild animals to r crease or in the number tried Doctors treatment and many difkill tho weaker brethren, but from time of churning, the more moisture the natural tendency to take the the butter obtained will contain,, pro- factories In the United States from 43 ferent remedies, but was getting at the close of 1902 to 5C at the be worse. He was very low. goods tho gods provido you In the viding all other conditions are alike. He read In a newspaper how Dodd's 7. When all other conditions are the ginning of 1904. Fifty of these were In shape of a cheaply earned and easy I meal It may be added that old B&me, butter, from pasteurized cream operation during tho campaign of Kidney Pills were curing cases of guides of northern Wisconsin hold contains about 1 per cent less mols-- 1903. t According to the . report tho Kidney Trouble, Brights Disease, and crop of 1903 amounted to Rheumatism, and thought he would with Mr. Hodgson that the muskel-lung- e lure than that made from new cream. sugar-beea more little .than 2,000,000 tons har- try them. . He took two boxes, and now 8. The degree of ripeness has very strikes the bait ordinarily only when he feels savage and desires to little If any influence upon the mois- vested from 242, 57C acres, the aver- - he is quite well. He says: I can now work all day, and not age yield being about 8 tons to the ture content of butter. kill something. acre. The farmers which feel the tired. Before using Dodds Kid- all 9. If It were possible to keep prices I for beets .from the, different ney Pills, I couldnt walk across the Danube Salmon for Thames. conditions alike the fullness of churn received An attempt Is being made to put the will have no Influence on the mois- factory companies ranged from 34.50 floor." Mr. Russell's is the most wonderful to $5.C0 per ton, the average being ture content of butter. Danube salmon In the Thames. case ever known la Chippewa Counreturns The cent $5. 18 10. Butter can contain average gross nearly per new remedy Dodds. Kidney This to the farmers were, therefore $42.50 ty. moisture without any apparent Injury TWO STEPS Is to the commercial quality of the gut- per acre. The estimated cost of grow- Pills making some miraculous ter. It requires a keen observer and ing beets by Irrigation is $40 per acre, cures In Wisconsin. The Last One Helps the First. and In sections where irrigation is not A sick coffee drinker must take two a good Judge to fault butter containFOREIGN WARES IN CHINA. as much as 20 per cent, without necessary $30. If $35 be taken as the ing and to of troubles be his rid get steps the use of a special test, when mois- average for the whole crop of 1903, Increasing Demand There for the strong and well again. the average net profit to the farmers ture has been properly incorporated. Products of the West. The first step is to cut off coffee abto 11. In order avoid leaky butter, was $7.50 per acre. In some of the The Chinese peasant is no longer solutely. areas, the returns were content Incorporated sugar-bee- t That removes the destroying ele- the moisture should be and to burn bean, oil; he wants very much higher than this general ment The next step Is to take liquid during the churningshould bewashing In scores of humble Laos) salted average.. As In the .production 'of kerosene. food . (and that Is Postom Food Cof- process. The butter I saw American lamps, costing hpmes and worked in the absence of water In other crops, much depends on the sea- 20 fee) that has In it the elements na- the rupees, apiece, and a magistrate chum and the drain hole should son, the character of the land, and the proudly showed ture requires to change the blood me. a collection of 19 kind of fanner who grows the beets. pe-- 1 the left be working open during white or from of these pale pink corpuscles shining articles.' Many farmers have cleared from $25 ' to rich red, and good red blood builds The narrow' streets of Canton to $50 per acre. The best, result on good strong and healthy cells in place with German and American ' record for 1903 was secured by a of the broken down cells destroyed by of private ' farmer of Otero county, Colorado. He" chandeRefsJ and myriads coffee. With well boiled Postum Food houses' throughout the empire, are grew one acre of sugar beets at a cost Coffee to shift to, both these steps of about $37.50; the yield of beets was lighted ,by foreign lamps. are easy and pleasant. The experiThe desire of the Asiatic to. possess 33 tons, for which he received $158, ence of a Georgian proves how imhis net returns being about $130. The foreign lamps is equalled only by ..hisare. both deportant amount of sugar made from the beet passion for .foreign clocks. The count-ed,27 From 1872 to the year 1900 'my mand for clocks Is Insatiable. I 1903 was 240,604 tons," as comof crop a has afflicted that been I In ,the private apartments of the. wife and , had both garden Every farmer pared with 218,405 tons from the crop of China and my wife 19 in with sick or nervous headache and at should have a wheeled hoe of some oft 1902, and 184,605 tons from that times we suffered untold agony. We make. There are many different kinds bedroom of the" empress dowager were coffee drinkers and did not knew on the market and a man can suit of 1901. Within the past few years while cheaper ones tick to the delight-- 1 how to get away from it for the ttihit himself somewhere, both in regard to there has been a remarkable increase ed wonder of myriads'. of humbler peo. Time Is In the percentage of stigar in the ple.- 'Century. Is hard to quit. shape of tool and price. cent But in 1900 I read of a case simt money, at least in America, and a man beets. A few years ago Important to Mothers. sugar was the standard. Last year lar to oufs where Postum Coffee "was cannot afford not to have a tool. that of sold to Exanjtne carefully every. bottle f C ASTORIA. used In place of the old coffee and a will save half of his time In the work in many cases the entire crop a factory averaged 15 to X8 per cent redy tor totaata -- d cud,.., . complete ure resulted, so I concluded of taking care of the garden. The There Is a that. many, new. to get some and try It. greatest obstacle the farmer has to factories willprospect be.built in the next year . Bears the The result was, after three days meet in trying to keep up the work two. or Many .improvements are beSignature of use of Postum in place of the coffee of caring for a garden is the mass of and methods in made machinery I never had a symptom of the old thrifty weeds that come up in a night, ing In Use For Over 30 Years. of and. used in the handling The Kind You Have Always Bought. growing, two or one five months I in had and; if neglectr for trouble and days, the beets. 'The by beet produced pulp fs a 'Tt forest. It gained from 145 pounds to 163 pounds. become a mink Experience Taught Him Belief. factories is used by the farmers as . My friends asked me almost daily long Job pulling them out by hand and A story regarding a converted canwhat wrought the change. My an- it is a hard job working them out with feed for their stock more generally nibal is told in the English papers. A swer always is, leaving off coffee and the hand hoe. But with the wheeled than heretofore. negro clergyman was entertained at hoe It is different. As soon as the drinking Postum in its place., tea by the president of a college. Tho Men that raise breeding animals to guest, who came from west Africa, We have many friends who have weeds appear, or before, the worker can walk down the rows pushing the sell will find 4t profitable to have retailed some particulars of his early ;been benefited by Postum. ji As to whether or not I have stated wheeled hoe before him, and quickly their farms forthe raising of a par- life, when a lady asked him how ho breed In one neighborhood, as the facts truthfully I refer you to turn the soil and destroy the weeds. ticular became a Christian. The story of . The buyers can attracts this the Bank of Carrollton or any busi- Most of these hoes have several sets afford to pay buyers. Jezebel he converted me, answered; more for stock when the ness firm. In that city where I have of fixtures that go with them. The animals can be cheaply transported you know, we are told the dogs did lived for 'many years and am well plow may be taken off as soon as the on account of the purchasers being not touch the palms of her hands. known. .Name given by Postum Co., Work of the first preparation of the able to make up a car load. Well, that convinced me of the truth land Is over. The cultivators may be of the narrative, for we never eat the JBattle Creek, Mich. put on and these will be of service till The peach crop of Georgia Is to be palms of the hands in my country. Theres, a reason. Is thoroughly pulverized a very large one this year, if we may They are too bitter." Look in each pkg. for the famous the ground md till the dry weather comes. Then Judge by present outlook. little book. The Road to Wellville rniii-rij- Molsturo in Buttor r itiiH-ou- s 4 d . , i old-fashlonc- d , n i . Yields of far-fetche- Sugar Beets - beet-suga- 1 1 - , t . . - - - V.. - - - are-brillian- t - ; -- V-- - . 12-p- er J . -- -- - r.-- v-t- he ' t V |