Show a nr nJiiffijftltt V TO CURE A COLD IK ONE DAT LKtiTe Drone Quialue Tablet AM Orugists refuud the monev If li fell to our M SEATTLE unquestionably beat and DAISY AND POULTRY cheapest starting point and eutflttiag station for Alaska and Klondike does not ask or advise you to go but you will find INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR A ton of oil has oeen obtained from th Beattie’s facilitios stocks end szperisnce the tongue of a single whale OUR RURAL READERS unsurpassed and prices the very lowest No-Tostate et nas own Klondike its Washington for Fifty Cant Guaranteed t baooo habit cure make weak Beattie is tbs chief city Btrangsrs arc Haw Successful Farmers Operate This Public Comfort Bureau men ttron blood pure Wolt All Srotectsdby of Commerco druggists Beattie Wash Department of the Farm— A Few Nameless Is the name of a new postofflce ae to the Care of Live Stock Hints Is The egg plant a native of Asia Africa in Virginia wed Poultry and South America Head eh Quickly Cared ea’t Tebae tplt sat tasks Tssr Ids Assy Dr Davis newer falls 85b Te quit totaeee easily Ml bnrn k m(-ael- le Wisconsin Dairy School Kotos full ef Ufa serve end rUror trko Ten A baby is all right but it never takes weeka of the three month' term wonder-werkthe Iktl makes weak men strong All druggist Me or 11 Curerunraa-tee- d of the Wisconsin Dairy School have the place of a bull pup to a man Booklet and sample free Address now 11 passed and students as 'well as InStar Tobacco ta the leading bread ef S tor ay Kamady Co Chteaco er New York structors are becoming so well acthe world becauae it ia the best Don’t play cards with a woman who has quainted and thoroughly Interested in No woman hater ia a single man winning ways their work that they are loth to part The present class of 115 students most-B Anti-Headac- aa er A DOCTOR’S DIRECTIONS They save a daughter from blindness When a father writes that yours “ is the best medicine ia the world" you allow something far lecuiiag eutrava- in the atateaicatif you knew that Riac medicine so cured a levtd cu praiatd daughter of dittatc aad restored to her the eyesight nearly leat The best medicine ia the world (or yeu is the mediciat that cures you There cau’t be aaythiag betser No medicine eaa de taora thaa cure That la why John 8 Oende of Orrlck Mo write ia taeie straag Dr Ayer’a Sariaparilla la the beet medicine la the world My daughter bad a relapie after the meaeles da te taking-col11 8he was aearly blladaad was obliged all the tim rtmaia la a dark The doctors could glva har no relief sue of them directed me te give her Ayer Sarsaparilla Two battle cured her completely" The thoueaads of testimonials to the value of Dr Ayer’ lanaparilla repeat over aad over ugaiu ia sue farm er another the expression: “ Th dctr gave har no relief eaa f them directed m t Two give her Dr Ayer’i Sariaparilla Dottles completely cured her" It i a comtau experieac to try Dr Ayer’s Sarsaparilla as a last rsort It is rm to a common experience te hrva Dr Ayer’s prescribed by a physician Sarsaparilla a “ comIt is a commas txprince to plete care" follow the use ef a few bottles ef this great bleed purifying medieiae Because it ii a specific fer all (arms ef blood disease If a disease bee it origin in bad er impure bleed Dr Ayer's acting directly ea the bleed rets it moving its imparities aad giving vitaliaiag eaargy will promptly eradicate the disea Th great letter of Dr Ayer’s Sarsaparilla ia the radical cure that reealt Irens its nse Many medicinea only inpereaa disease — they push the simples dawn under th shin they paiat ta cemplaaioa with eabtl arteaical compound hat th dieaaa rag ia th veins like a pent-uroilSara-aparil- a p yeenic empties It Ayer's Sarsaparilla fee to th rest make the fauatrla clean and the waters are clean It makes th root good and th fruit ie geed It gives Meture the elements eh aeede t build up th broken down cexetitutlea— net te brace it ap with stimuleata er patch it up oa the aurfac Sand for Dr Ayer's Curabaak aad laara mare about th cures effected by thia rem ady It’s sent free ea request by the J C Ayer Co Lowell Mass "IRONING MADE EASY" ly from Wisconsin but many from other states and Canada Is the largest attendance In the history of this sehool The dairy school building was designed and equipped for the accommodation of 100 students at an expense of about (40000 Past experience has shown that for various reasons some few students are always obliged to leave before they have completed the course and In anticipation of this 115 were allowed to enter We were obliged to ask about twenty more men who applied for admission to wait and come next year Some have already registered for next winter’s term and any one wishing to enter the school is advised to apply early for admission before our accommodations are filled Creamery and cheese factory operators are about equally represented in numbers in the present elass Scarcely a year passes without the introduction of some new ideas in butter and cheese making This year in addition to the usual Instruction given In practical - butter making in the creamery cheese making in the cheese department milk testing in the laboratory and milk and cream- pasteurization in the pasteurizing room the Wisconsin curd test for detecting milk injurious to the quality of full cream cheese has been explained and used constantly by tbe students Pasteurizing milk for butter making is also a new feature of the instruction this winter During the past summer we made considerable butter from cream which was pasteurized after separation and then ripened with a commercial starter This butter was packed in the Australian boxes as well as the common sixty pound tubs kept in cold storage until winter and has been inspected by the students now at the schooL A complete outfit for pasteur 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 tbe 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 line of work - Although these continuous pasteurizing machines which will heat from to 10000 pounds of milk per hour to the pasteurizing temperature of 155 degrees F are not primarily Intended for pasteurizing milk or cream to be sold directly to the consumer in pint and quart bottles a practical test was made of the keeping quality of the cream and skim milk that came from the separator at this high temperature Pint samples of both the hot cream and hot skim milk were taken directly from the separator and cooled In the sterilized glass milk Jars which are commonly used for retailing milk to the consumer These samples were cooled at once to about 50 degrees Ft the Jars were covered with paper caps and left in a room at a temperature of about 65 degrees F Six trials were made in this way by taking samples of the hot skim milk and hot cream directly from the separator on six different days It was found that these pint' samples kept in sterilized bottles remained 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 03 per cent acid on the fifth day 00 INVENrpT HAKES COLUB AND CUTFS STIFF AND NICE B5 WHEN FfB3TJB0UGHt f W ' 7 NO COOKING REQUIRES W ‘ ONE POUND OP THIS STARCH WILL CO AS FAR AS A POUND AND A HALT OF ANY OTHEB STARCH gUTACTUM OtlYiy CHUBINGER BR0SC9 This stsrrh Is prepared on scientific principles bv men whs bar had years of practical experience In fancy laundering it restores old linen and summer draoaes to their natural whiteness aad Imparts a beautiful and finish Ie Is starch the manufactured that It lasting only perfectly harmless containing neither arsenic stlum er any other substance Injurious to llaen and can be used area for a bsby powder For Sale by All Wholesale ansi Retail Grocers BOOKS STATIONERY AND PERIODICALS Telephone or write A R llerge A Co formerly Parsons A Derg Book Co long distance telephone No 212 bait Lake City and In a few hour obtain at city prices W prepay transap to date ongoods mlscellaneousbooksand light arllclos portation and give you special prices ou heavier onea W carry a complete stock of books on all subjects la various blueings School and Teachers' books and Klndergarieu supplies' Bibles and Prayer book Gold and Fountain pens Blank books Office and Typewriter supplies: Birthday Wedding and Holiday novelties etc? We also engrave end print to order Correspondence and Society stationery (Satisfaction guaranteed lit PAYS THE LEAST MSNEY - JONES OF BINGHAMTON W Si Y N wvwwvwvwvwvw vt fJSH si Don’t be fooled with a mackintosh or rubber coat If you want a coat that will keep you dry in the hardest storm buy th Fish Brand Slicker If not for tale In your town write for catalogue to A J TOWER Boston Mass WHEAT400 MTSaSSLs Wheat at 40c a bu and 231 bus Oat 173 bus Harley and 1600 bus Potatoes per acre See our great catFarm Seed samples alogue mailed you with 1 up on receipt of this notice and too stamp Sialser Heed Co La Crosse Win w n nDODC V cases A WVVWIW NEW DISCOVERY si V quick relief aud cures worst Bend for book of teetlmonlale and 1 0 days’ treatment Free Or llHmuitviisuiis Atlanta Ua MORPHINE and WHISKEY H4BITS OPIUM HOMKCUHE iiOKfc'flABi Hook FKKE DK Uftbellt Bllg CHICAGO J s f't 2x1 Bow to grow 1 J WILL KEEP YOU DRY FRAYT BEST SCALES- TH! C Schillings Best un-salt- ed baking powder ought to sell for twice as much as the next best gag ILL u r e for IilGUHH’S That Are Sick or “Just Don’t ONSUMFVnON ega Peel Well” PILLS P I S OASNBC GUH£S Beat Cough In WHtrlfc ALL tLbb FAILS Syrup T antes Good time Sold by dnigglnts Use ’or People ONLY When Advertisements Mention Thia Taper Answering Kindly An experiment on mottles in butter was made by adding some of the ripened cream from one large vat to each of three churns two of them box churns and one a combined churn and work-e- r The granular butter in one box churn was washed with water having a temperature of 40 degrees F and 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 Butter from each churn The remaining granular butter was salted worked and s tub filled with the salted butter from each churn The next morning these five tubs of butter were examined It was plainly noticeable that the butter from both the 40 degrees F and 60 degrees F wash water was of a perfectly uniform even color with no suggestion of mottles or wavy color but their color was of a considerably lighter shade of yellow than that of the salted butter All the tubs of salted butter were 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 temperature of the wash water was 60 I ONK FOR A DOSK Removes Pimples cures Headache Oyepepila and Coetlvoneas 26 cts a box at druegf t or by mail Semple Free address Dr Bosanko Co Fhila Fa degrees F The mottles were the salt alone by E Madison Wls H FARRINGTON 1 Too little attention is paid to the poultry range which w often call a poultry yard It is the custom of farmers to think that the yard is s thing of little moment On farmi where the poultry have the run cf the whole place this article does not apply But there are many farms snd perhaps should be more where the poultry are kept shut up through a good part of the season In such a case it will pay to give a range so large that the fowls will not be able to eat all the grass that grows on It There Is no economy in restricting the range and feeding grain Grass is one of the cheapest feeds that can be fed Just how large the range should be will depend on many things One of these is the richness of the soil and the luxuriance of the growth of grass on 1L We have seen new lands that had Just been redeemed from a scrub oak forest where the soil was so thin that a small flock of fowls would in a few weeks completely denude of grass a large yard But if the land has been cultivated and has a good blue grass sod on it and Is in thriving condition it is safe to say that the area will sustain In fair condition three times as many fowls as the yard spoken of as being reclaimed from a scrub oak forest and left with nothing but tbe original nondescript grasB on it Suppose you give an acre of land to fifty fowls Will it not pay? We think it will In the first place the returns from It will be without cost to yourself There Is no plowing no Bowing no cultivating no reaping and Almost the entire returns threshing will ue profits The grass that grew on it will have been turned into meat and eggs The hens will keep healthy and the saving to the life of the flock will be quite an item Then too most farms are so situated that the giving of an acre of ground for such a purpose Is not a great matter In many cases It would remain partly vacant anyway As to fencing the yard this need not be a great question in this age of cheap wire The larger the lot the less will it cost to fence it per square rod Thus if a lot be two rods long and two rode wide it will take eight rods ot fencing to go around it But if the lot be four rods long and four rods wide it will take but 16 rods to fence it If It be eight rods wide and eight rods long it will take only 32 rods to fence it On this presumption the first lot will be 4 rods in area the second 16 in area and the third 64 rods in area Four foot woven wire fence may be purchased at 40 cents per running rod On this basis the first lot will eoet for fencing each square rod 80 cents for each rod will require two linear rods of fencing On the lot that is four rods square the cost for fencing each square rod will be 40 cents as each square rod is fenced by one linear rod For the third lot the cost will be only 20 cents for each square rod So we might extend the figures If the lot were 16 rods square the cost would be 10 cents per rod If it were 32 rods square the cost would be five cents per rod square If the lot were G4 rods square the cost would be 2 cents per rod A lot 128 rods square would cost 1 cents per square rod Finally if the lost were 256 rods of a square the cost would be only cent for every' square rod of land This shows the economy of great operations The big lot is the cheapest everything considered and this is especially true in the fencing Of course we do not suggest that anyone build a hen yard 256 rods square The figures are given to impress the truth of a great principle that we cannot afford to ignore This is one of the great reasons why It would be desirable to keep fowls in large flocks were it not that they are more likely to become the prey of diseases of a contagious nature A large range is always desirable but it is difficult to have a large range without having a large flock of fowls In some yards the large range furnishes the fowls with a goodly supply of fresh moat in the form of grasshoppers It ia astonishing what a large number of these insects inhabit a single acre If the acre patch be exhausted by the industry of the hens a few hours suffice to replenish it Not only grasshoppers but hundreds of varieties of bugs and worms Infest and Journey through this field falling a swift prey to the feathered sentinels With the green grass and fresh meat the fowls are kept healthy and happy and continue to manifest their content by a voluminous product of eggs Egg Records the egg records We doubt not that many of our readers have been keeping a close account of what their hens have been doing and we are sure it will be of interest to others to know what records have been made In making reports give the names of and whether the breeds numbers fowls have been kept penned up If the feed ration can be given it will be an item of added Interest Cr ' t HAITIAN PECULIARITIES cveed Poultry Range Send in fS Whole Population Sometime Baa Without Knowing Why When a fire breaks out in the towa almost all the stores close the troop stand under arms and few except th firemen and the people near the plaea of conflagration venture out into th streets the reason being that most rev olutionary movements are started iaj this manner says Leslie's Weekly While fire draws the attention to som remoto part of the "conspirators" as they are always called attempt to storm the arsenal and the prison liberating and arming its inmates Many a dangerous criminal owes his liberty to an incident of this nature Another peculiar feature of the constant excitement is the couru — derived from courlr the French word for run — when everybody In the streets starts to run I remember well one that happened in Port au Prince the capital about five year ago when the situation was comparaTwo young men quar- -' tively quiet reled about a woman met near the' market place drew their revolvers and fired at each other This caused a panic In the market halls everybody commenced to run in order to gat home Nobody knew what had happened nobody knew what was going to happen those who had not heard the shots seeing the others take to their heels also ran for the shelter of their homes The stores closed strong detachments of troops patrolei the Btreets headed by the chief of police the commanders of the port ot the town and of the “arondissement" and finally the president himself being in doubt as to the outcome of the affair left the palace and rode through the streets at the head of about 250 cavalry with their carbines on their thigh and their finger on the trigger who were followed by a battalion of Only one man of the party Infantry besides the officers was without a rifle he carried on his head a soapbox full of AU this had been caused cartridges by a few shots exchanged between two men! They were promptly arrested but the majority of people did not know until next morning why they “ran” It is indeed quite natural that they should look for shelter at such a time for justice (and sometimes injustice) always summarily dispensed is particularly high handed at the time A similar march which of a couru President Hyppolyte made through the streets at the head of his troops to quell the May Insurrection of 1891 cost a good many lives However had the revolution been allowed to spreadthou-sand- s of Haitians might have fallen Th j -- Port-au-Prin- so-call- ed THE ARTIST AND HIS WORK Ie One Long Succession of Problems The life of a painter above all of a portrait painter Is one long succession of such problems varying with the nature of the subject in kind and degree of difficulty says Scribner’s It follows naturally that his processes must vary too requiring a longer or shorter time in the working out for which no infallible rule will serve him In mechanical labor the rate of the machine’s pulse may be gauged with certainty the moment of completion acBut it Is curately fixed beforehand not so In art There all depends upon conditions that seem to be hourly The mood of the artist his changing distrust of the scheme attempted or his entire confidence in it the stats of his nerves of his general health nay even the state of the weather all affect his work One day it advances well but on the next steps in to impede him and ih gain Philistine The scoffing nothing ascribes these halts and retrogressions to the weakness of the artistic temYet they are due to th perament work rather than to the workman— to the fact that he follows an art and not a trade No artist can be entirely exempt from this oppreesive influence which arises afresh at each new effort with as many heads as Hydra There are those indeed who estimate the value of their product by the depth and number of the despairs it has engendered Hie Life self-criticis- m Wishes for the Bride Louis belle Miss Nellie Le Hull Introduced a unique feature on the occasion of her marriage to Mr William H Wissing After the ceremony while the bridal couple were making their preparations for traveling the bridesmaids were not idle They obtained several rose jars full of the dried petals of all the American Beauty roses which the groom had sent the bride three times each week during the period of their engagement — six months These numbered 1000 roses in all and made a vast quantity of rose petals As the bride and groom walked from the stairway to the door they were vigorously pelted with these fragrant missiles instead of the usual rice The costliest and most unique gift which the bride received was a square box of heavy glass mounted in Within gold and set on a standard it were (5 and (10 gold pieces to the amount of (700 and in one corner was a small card which read: “Pin money from Grandpa Hull”— St Louis Republic Roee Leaf A St f t f V L - J IHJ |