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Show to ct ::evar,roat,i : e;t and DAIRY AND POULTRY. m,, ir cheapest tjloa.:';.ini,ta-t.oU a t rt? ' 6ruX's ju.jt i is io for Alaska,'tjand Illoud.i.s, dues nut a k adv:-or von A ton of Oil ha i n obt i re CHAFTEPS FOR go, tat yo.i will had INTERESTING ti the j Seattle s faeihrits, m ; , ri! er; er.enea the of a Mil le v.Laic e READERS. RURAL OUR erv lowe-t- . rnsorpassed and prices t ; .huii on stat inosu. for Fifty Cent. iujfiu.ew Seattle is the cl' ef . it . e,f are If ow Guaranteed t ta'oo lintut circ, waalc Operate ThU Sure Tut Furucer o Ad:ru. ted Ptr.l ,creau. t Ft niLii by hi prot. Ai dress Chaml erof t'uuirjer. ee."i lo..Vask. Farm tfc t lew of Department Xan class is the name of a t.ew pnbtoff.ee of Care Sunk I.ie as to the Hints Tt.e a is of auS l: ; it.ve Asia, .Africa ('.s in iruiniu an South Amur or. tad Poultry. Iteadart.e Ouiokly Cured. Can't Tobi'o I a a 5t& Tear Lilt ftwa?. Dr. Davis eha never fails, 23c co and frr'fr otei. lViscflUhiu Dairy School Toqxati'. d .Mr itkf Su-- 'l nrv t.c, full or A baby is all re ht, hut it never takes liac tiYW on It; u vr.- r ;hu.L Ten weeks of the three months' term men are nr n.; Ail u. ugi.t. NV. or of the Wisconsin LViry Sehocl hate the place of a bull pin t j a '.nun Ad UjiS t a d pi tM Book now passed, and students as well as inw ( hu...' ' o ork. Keu.e .y Sterling Star Tobacco Is ti e brand of structors are lecomms so well ee- the world, because it is the best. Don't play c uis w tin a u om m w o has quainted and thoroughly intere ted m No woman hater is a single u.u:i. innlnir wiv. tho'r work that they are ;ih to part. The present class of 113 students, mostly from Wisconsin, but many from other states aud Canada, is the largest attuiunee in the history of this sc1 'he dairy school building was dnc;gncd and equipped for the accommodation of ICO students, at au of a; out J10.000. Tast experience They save has shown that for various reasons some few students are alvas ohl.yel to leave before they have completed the course, and in anticipation of this 115 to TThen a father writes that yours is the a common P. yer were allowed to enter. We were obligb a pnvMcuin. Tuediciue in the worin. bet you tan presented Sarsaparilla allow sometmrg ior scoinn? extravaIt is a common e pci lence to se a i ed to ask about twenty more men who illow the use of a few bottles cure gance in the statement if you kno-- that fur admission to wait and come the medicine so praised, cureu a loved of this oreat blood punfvim medicine applied ot disease and restoied to her llecause, it is a a pecihc r all forn's of daughter next home have already regisyear, has its origin Mood disease If 'hsea-the nearly lost. The best medtered for next winters term, and any icine in the world tor oa is the medicine in bad or impure blood. Dr. Ayer's that cures yqu. There cant be an thing one wishing to enter the school is acting directlv on the hloud, rebetcer. Xo medicine can do more than moving its lupuiuies and pivmg to it to apply early for admission becure. That is why John S. Goode, of vitali zmg energy, will promptly eradicate fore our accommodations are filled. Oriick, Mo., writes iii these strong terms: the disease. feature of Dr. A? ers SarsapaThe great Dr. Creamery and cheese factory operators rilla is the ra lical cm cs thftt result fiom Sarsaparilla is the best medicine inAyers the world. Mv dcughter bad a its use. Mauv medicines cnlv suppress are about equally represented in numthev pash the pin:; les down relapse after the measles, due to taking bers in the pnsent class. cold. She w as neat ly blind. and was obliged under the skin, they paint tl.e t remain in a dark room all the tune. with subtle ursenica compounds, but the The doctors could give her no relief; onc disease rages in the veins lil c a pent-uScarcely a year passes without the them directed me to give her fire, and some day breaks out in a volcomintroduction of some new ideas in butSat saparilla. Two bottles cured herAyers canic eruption that eats up the bodv. Sarsaparilla goes to the root. It pletely. ter and cheese making. This year, in Ayers makes the fountain clean aud the waters addition to the uiual instruction given The thousands of testimonials to the are clean. It makes the root good and value of Dr. Ayers Sarsapaiilla repeat the fruit is good. It gives Nature the in practical butter making in the over and over again, in one form or another elements she need 3 to budd up the brok en creamery cheese making in the cheese the expression: The doctors gave her down cons ltulioti not to brace it up with no relief; one of them directed me to stimulants or paten it up on the surface. milk lesting in the laboradepartment, Curcbook, and learn give her Dr. Tvers Sarsaparilla. Two Send for I'r. Tverscures ebccteu bv this tory, and milk and cream pasteurizamore about the bottles completely cured her. It is a common experience to try Dr. remedv. Its sent free on i equeut, by h tion in the pasteurizing room, the WisAjers bar&apaiuld as a lst resort. It is J, C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. consin curd test for detecting milk injurious to the quality of full cream cheese, lias been explained and used constantly by the students. Pasteurizing milk for butter making is also a Vtr tvv i'vziyjp j; vywc new feature of the instruction this .TA5 ' " J't whiter. During the past summer we made considerable butter from cream which was pasteurized atVr separation, and then ripened with a ccmmercial starter. This butter was packed in the Australian boxes as well as the common sixty pound tubs, kept in cold d storage until winter, and has been inspected by the students now at the ft school. A complete outfit for pasteuri izing the milk and skimming it while hot, as well as instruction in ripening the cream from such milk and making the butter from it, has been added to the equipment of the school this winter. Mr. H. E. Schucknecht of Minnesota has been with us a few days and given the students the benefit of his experience in this lice of work. onk ijvy. i Ta.,e La vat ;es i bK'ATTir, rn u -- 5e , e , tio s I illy n e j ton-'u- v Wa-h.n- No-To-- h-- s gt i 1 11 Anti-IL-- 1 a D - -- o- vk i . 1 vv ! A DOCTORS DIRECTIONS. -e a daughter fron blindness. he 44 om-de- te 1 eyes-gh- e t Sars-aparil- a, ad-iae- d 44 c omidf-xio- 1 p IRONING MADE EASY. . - ? . ii 'j--x Although these continuous pasteurizing machines, which will heat from to 10.000 pounds of milk per hour to the pasteurizing temperature of 155 degrees F., are not primarily intended 4 k for pasteurizing milk or cretm to be U'J REQUIRES NO COOKING sold directly to the consumer in pint ' and quart bottles, a practical test was CUFFS STIFF AND KICE MAKES COLLARS made of the keeping quality of the cream and skim milk that came from t the separator at this high ternpei ature. 3 Pint samples of both the hat cream and "Aq ii' hot skim milk were taken directly from the separator and cooled in the CNE POUND OF THIS STARCH WILL GO sterilized glass milk jars, which are AS FAR AS A POUND AMD A HALF yv OF ANY 0IL1EM STARCH commonly used for retailing milk to the consumer. These samples were ii UTActured cooled at once to about 50 degrees F the jars wrere covered with paper caps , and left in a room at a temperature of about 65 degrees F. Six trials were n made in this way, by taking samples J. .WmJ JkwtlllJi e of the hot skim milk and hot cream di.red on solentltc rl r'e hv iven ho 'iu hrd yer.ra of prartloal evrorlPnot In fancy rectly from the separator on six differThis star-- h 1? old linen i.ml ,u ' .ucr e c, ;,i ihe r natural nhltcncts and imparls a beautiful and ent days. It was found that these pint laundering. . It re.tores cmlv that la t hatutics,. containing neither araeuic, It n tl,p ci h t.iauitf.i'-turrlusting rein sterilized a der. en m - MPJJJEraM-OS- "U.C.HUBINGER Bf03.C? Kioxuxjova. few Hweh,Cox3;4 La ifc. pf (1 llnl-n- alum or any other suimtrUiB fnjunoua to linen and can be tn.etl s1 For Sale by All Wholes?-A0 BOOKS, STATION CRY ; fur samples, kept bottles, mained perfectly sweet in every case for four days. Some were sweet after five days, but most of them had a slightly sour smell and about 0.3 per cent acid on the fifth day. baby pon rrui Retail Grocers. grromroRaBaumvaBiminB'iBrfieKtrasasstiSis PERIODICALS. Co formerly l)cra Teepluun or rre A. K.huiu distance tele; hone ('o.. Patrons & Doraa Bool halt LpLp ( iiy, ami in a few hours obtaoi No. We prepat transup to dac good, at n puces. n i d ght a "tic es port ; on on iniRC'dlanoons hooks on heavier oiis We and give 'Oil special pimps a complete stock of books on al Stibjer s inI carrj an e hool and eacher. vanous bu'!ipis. Fil and l'raver b oks: Kimlorgarien supplit'. Ulbce and Blank hooks; Cold and FouiVa n pens: I Wodibnsrand tioli-da- y nthitaj. Typewriter supplier. We aNo cnvr.ve and pnnt to novelties ci order, Conespo,'rbM.c itnd hoeiCty fatatiunci j. fsatislaetiou guaianteed. . 1 ;W d bo'-si- nsD . . ..u &s73tKSBSsaotft&arazBfr!ii2XJLmjtm vs;: oRRfp PAYS y. Na3' L..'aM nr nV- - r-T- f h3 E'Z3 l ;?S, ii k WILL ILEEP YOU DRY. If 7 rc j!;! 13 l its ct yBE3TSCALE3 'ZT' iyraC5P2iSRS23E: V 1 k Dont be fooled with a mackintosh jp S' or rubher cat. If you vantacoat fc x 3 that vi d km p you dry m the hard-f- i. storm buv the Tish DrandS Sjest Slicker. If not for sale in yourKv.town, write for caalou? to , , v3 A. J. TOVER, Boston. Mass. ,, L b tjCTSSD WEOT SVTUfiCci"RavaS,4!fiS i ' Vt JO iS ES Or CIMGHAMTOn N. Y. 'r J I 7 0 4 'C- ii :1 OATSrS'u, WHEAT wi cat at tpcalro.and 2 bus. Oats, 173 bus. Harley, and 1GOO 5 Howto grow ? iui! Totutoes iruviied f se bur per aero, 2x1 ereat ci you with 11 rarin Seed fcamples. aiepne, ma. unori receipt of tins notice and Pc rf S Kilzer Seed Co., UCrosse, Wisw. t DnopsVlrjr re eh t wt WWVU'.U CHVWVVW ca-p- end tor treatment i bwi k ox H i vH l l KOfrFMASi, jrw ".J n. libS Vbiint Vhen u. and WMISKSY H3iTS. . i'ook h Ki . PR. J. i UabrlU B dif. I HU APO,iL! hi v x ITT-ky LLtUh ;,ii,h S.'rnp. T timp. Sold hv ? days Pr. ILH.'.EU SSMj:s. A.Unia, MORPHINE IT COVfiRY: el ana 'm.v ui aiiil I O T,yTr ; WO rAiLS. X, .,'-- J uru.-Hi.'-'- VI ;" Advertisements Answering Mention This Taper. f D Kintny Schilfaicfs Best baking powder ouht to sell for twice as much as the next best. 628 H FT J b ei., JnF3 K ; r, v w, uw- - Teopla That Are r 3 S H lor Sick or Just DoattSd il N d Feel Well. A DOSE. ONLY OKE FO Pltruies, cures Headiche, Pyeptpsia and or by m ill Costive.iess. ZCjct, a box it drugc,..-timplei Free, address Dr. Besaiha Co. 1'hiia. Fa. Rmno3 s An experiment on mottles in butter was made by adding sora of th' ripened cream from one large vat to each of three churns, two cf them box churns and one a combined churn ar.d worker. The granular butter in one box churn was washed with water having a temperature of 40 degrees F., ar.d in the two other churns the temperature of the wash water was 60 degrees F. After standing in this wash water about ten minutes a part of the granular butter from each of the two box churns was taken out, worked without salt and a 20 pound tub filled with Putter from each churn. The remaining granular butter was sailed, worked and a tub filled with the salted butter from each churn. The next morning these five tubs of butter wcr ,xamind. Pi was plainly noticeable that the unsalted butter from both the 40 degrees F., and 60 degrees F. wash water was of a perfectly uniform, een color, with no suggestion of mottles or wavy color, but their color was of a considerably lighter shade of jellow All than that of the salted butter. the tubs of salted butter W'ere slightly mottled and uneven in color, but no difference in the amount of mottles could be detected between that from granular butter washed with water of 40 degrees F. and the one in which the tempera ure of the wash wak-- wa3 GO r HAITIAN PECULIARITIES. degrees F. The mottles were caused ly the salt alone. Tb Whul Population Sometimr It an E. H. FARRINGTON. Without Knowing Why. Madison, Wis. When a fire breaks out In the town almost all the stores close, the troops Eoult rv Kuof. stand under arms, and few except the Too little attention is paid to the and the people near the place firemen poultry r..:ige, uhkli we often call a cf or.fi.gration venture out into the poultry j?rd. It is the custom of ?trB,''s, the r. on tM most revfarm.rs to think that the yard is a are movements started in olutionary thing of h.tle moment. On firmi where the poultry hae the run nf the ths manner, says lieslie'g Ydeekly. whole pi e this article does uot apply. While tire draws the attention to some the remote part of Put there are many farms and as they are always 'conspirators, should be more, where the poult to stoim the arsenal try are kept shut up through a good calhd, attenij and the prison, liberating and arming part of the season. In such a case it its inmates. Many a diageious crimwiil pay to a range so large that owes Lis libtrty to au incident of tue iowls w gie :ii not he able to eat all inal Another pc uliur feature thp grass that glows on it. There is this nature no economy in restricting the range of the constant excitement is the couruderiv ed from (ourir, the and feeding grain. Grass is one of the woid for run when everybody French fed. be can ds fe. that cheapest in the starts to run. I rememstrepts Just how large the range should be one well ber that happened in Port au will depend on many things. Cue of these is i he rkhr. b ,if the and the Prince, the capital, about five years luxuiianca of the , ioiii of grass on ago, when the situation was comparaTwo yoitnsr men quarit. A e have seen new lands that had tively quiet. a reled about woman, met nuir the just let n rodeo:, cd fiom a scrub oak . c, drew tlicir levolvers and market pi v that thin here the soil was to furout, This caused a a small ih.vh cf fowls would in a few fP'ed at cech ctlur. !c uy denude of grass a panic in t"e market balls; everybody if the land has Icon commenced to rim, in order to got igB j,.ni. d cult. vat pud has a c nul blue grass home. Nobody know what had hapsod on it, and is in th.iung condition, pened; nobody knew what was going to happen; those who hud not heard it is Safe to Say ill. t too area will .sustain in fair ciuihaun three times as the shots, seeing the others take to La..i,y fowls as ihc yard spoken of, as their heels, also ran for the shelter The stores closed; being reclaimed fiom a scrub oak of their homes. foic-s- t and left wi.h nothing but tLe strong detai hments of troops patroled the streets, headed by the chief of pooriginal nondescript grass on it. lice, the commanih rs of the port, of of an acre land Suppo.-- e you give to fifty iowls. Will it not pay? We the town and of the "arondissement," and finally the president himself, being think it will. In the t.rat place the returns from it will be witnout cost to in doubt as to the outcome of the af-- j fair, left tlm palace and rode through yourself. There is no plowing, no sowing, no cultivating, no reaping and the streets at the head of about 250 threshing. Almost the entire returns cavalry, with their carbines on their finger on the trigger, will he profits. The grass that grew thigh and who were followed by a battalion of on it will have been turned into meat and eggs, 'i he hens will keep healthy, infantry. Only one man of the party and the saving to the l.fe of the flock besides the officers was without a rifle; will be quite an item. Then, too, most he carried on his head a soapbox full of farms are so situated that the giving cartridges. All this had been caused of an acre cf ground for such a purby a few shots exchanged between two a matter. not is la many men! They were promptly arrested, pose great cases it would remain partly vat ant but the majority of people did not' know until next morning why they anyway. ran. As to fencing the yard, this need not It is indeed quite natural that he a great qmvlion in this age of cheap they should look for shelter at such a wire. The larger the lot the less will time; for justice (and sometimes it cost to feme it per square rod. always summarily dispensed, Thus, if a lot be two rods long and two is particularly high handed at the time rode wide it will take eight rods ol of a couru. A similar march which fencing to go around it. But if the President Ilyppolvte made through the lot be four rods long and four rods streets at the head of his troops to wide it will take but 16 rods to fence quell the May insurrection of 1TJ1 coat it. If it be eight rods wide and edght a good many lives. However, had the rods long it will take only 32 rods to revolution been allowed to spread, thoufened it. On this presumption the first sands of Haitians might have fallot will be 4 rods in area, the second len. IS in area and the third 64 rods in area. Four foot woven wire fence may THE ARTIST AND HIS WORKbe purchased at 40 cents per running Hi Mfe Is On Dong' Furrmlon f rod. On this basis the first lot will Problem. cost for fencing each square rod, 80 The life of a painter, above all, of a cents, for each rod will require two portrait painter, is one long succession linear rods of fencing. On the lot that of such problems, varying wit-- the naia four rods square the cost for fencture of the subject in kind and de.gree ing each squill e rod will be 40 cents, of difficulty,' says Scribners. It folas each square rod is fenced by one lows naturally that his processes must linear rod. For the third lot the cost too, inquiring a longer or shorter vary, w ill be only 20 cents for each square time in the working out, for which, rod. will serve him. In If no infallible rule So we might extend the figures. rate of the maLibor the mechanical the lot were JG tods square the cost be chines may gauged with cerpulse would be 10 cents per rod. If it were of rumpletion acmoment the tainty, 32 rods square the ost would be five fixed b"fore!i?rd. But it ! rod cents per square. If the lot curately so in art. There all depends upon were 61 rods square the cost would be int conditions that seem to be hourly 128 rods 22 cents per iod. A lot mood of the artist; his The changing. cost would cents per square square scheme attempted, or of the distrust rod. Finally if the lost were 230 rods in it; the stata confidence entire his of a be would rust only square the of his his nerves, general health, cent for every square rod of land. of of state even the the weather, all nay, of opThis shows the economy great eration!;. The big lot is the cheapest, affect his work. One day it advances well, hut on the next everything consult red, and this is esin to impede hln and he gains Of course in the steps true fencing. pecially Philistine Tim scoffing we do not suggest that anyone build a nothing. and halts ascribes these retrogressions rods The 256 figures hen yard square. are given to impress the truth of a to the weakness of the artistic temYet they are due to the great principle that we caoDot afford perament. work rather than to the workman to Ignore. This is one of the great reasons why to the f.u t that he follows an art and it would be desirable to keep fowls in not a trade. No artist can he entirely large flocks were it not that they are exempt from this oppressive influence, more likely to become the prey of which arises afresh at each new effort diseases of a contagious nature. A with as many heads as Hydra. There large range i3 always, desirable, but it are those, indeed, who estimate tha value of their product by the depth and is difficult to have a large range withnumber of the despairs it has engenout having a large flock of fowls. dered. In some yards the large range furnishes the fowls with a goodly supply islic forth Bride. Kosr E.ottf of fresh mrat in the form of grassA St. Louis belle, Miss Nellie Lee hir.g what a large hoppers. It is Hull, introduced a unique feature on number of these insects Inhabit a the occasion of her marriage to Mr. ingle acre. If the acre patch be ex- William II. VvBsing. After the cerehausted ly the inlustry of the hens, to renlrnish it. mony, while the bridal couple were a few hours suffice their preparations for travelNot only grarshonprrs but hundreds of making bridesmaids were not idle. the ing, worms and and infest varieties of hues several rose jars full ohtained They journey through this field, falling a of the dried petals of all the American swift prey to the feathered sentinels. roses which the groom hid "With the green grass and fresh meat Beauty bride three times each week sent the the fowls rie kept healthy and happy the period of their engagement during and continue to maiiifcnt their content Thtse numbered 1,060 months. six by a voluminous product of eggs. roses in all and made a vast quantity of rose petals. As the bride and groom HitohIh, walked from (lie stairway to the door fvj Send in the egg records. We doubt they were vigoroirly pelted with these instead of the usual not that many of our readers have been fragrant keeping a clo.--e account of what their rice. The costliest and most unique hens have been doing, and we are gift which the bride received was a sure it will be of interest to others square box of heavy glass, mounted in Within to know what records have been made. gold and set cn a standard. In making reports, give the names of it were $3 and ?10 gold nieces to the whether the amount of 8700. and in o r.e corner wa3 breeds, numbers, an fowls have been kept penned up. If a small card, which read: Pin morey the feed ration can be given it will be from Grandpa Hu'l. St. Louis an item of added inter, M. ( . hr-i- ' Port-au-Princ- per-ha- ps od . t tln-i- ' Ii self-criticis- m s, mis.-files- , 1 |