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Show KS Did H nil But. I - Another snore. Then he shook . INTERESTING our Mini od him. once pungled up to the extent of 5 for the first and only time in hia religious Chicago Tribune-- I'm AU tBitrini. Is the remark of many a nervous Individual. He or she will soon oes.-- e to talk that wav after beeinnin and perMing la roure of Huateuer a Stomach Nothin like H to renew strength andhitter. anus-tu- e and good digestion. Ir checks Inroad of malaria, and remedies liverthe conHtipatlon, dyspeiwia, rheumatism and kidney disorder It Is In eiery sense a great household remedy. Cleaning Pars. Ermine and sealskin are best cleaned with soft fisnneL Rub the fur against the grain, and when it y has been thoroughly lifted and reversed, so to speak, dip the flannel into common flour and mb lightly any spots that look dark or dirty, (shake the flour well sod rub with s clean dry flannel until the flour la all removed, ha hie, chinchilla, squirrel and monkey skin may be very nicely cleaned with hot bran. Get a small quantity of bran meal and heat it in the oven until it ts , quit warm. Rub stiffly into the fur and leave for a few minutes before shaking to free it from the bran. Mink may be cleaned and freshened with warm corn meal, and, like the other short-haire- d furs, may be done without removing the lining. But the longhaired furs are best ripped apart and freed from stuffing and lining. Those w ho may not care to go to the trouble of taking fur garments apart will find that the simple remedies described will gro a long way toward making the jackets and capes look clean, even if not ripped apart Good Housekeeping. Pronunciation of Bicycle. The constantly growing bicycle fad calls attention to the large number of cates of mispronunciation of the word There is a certain class of bicycle. people, particularly New Yorka fashionable set, who insist upon giving the y a long sound, as in cycle, forgetting that a prefix or suffix often changes the sound of the vowel y (Mill others go to the other extreme and give the y" the sound of ee, but the best usage makes the y short and pronounces the word But even among those who give the y the short sound there is a disposition to place the accent on the second sylable instead of the first, where it belongs. When a word comes Into such common use as bicycle, it is well to learn to pronounce it correctly. Troy 'Junes. Coes Cosfh Balsam Is th ftod best. It will break an Co)dquteto r It U aiw&yt roWbie. Try IW MitLiuc ! China silk crepon to craped like mourning crae and printed with small, bright HewL at to ths Car of Live Poultry. $130,-000,0- pi OTHERS from the recovering illness atchild- tending birth, or who from the ef--I fectsof disorders, pupils. The exports of butter from the United States in 1892 were 15,047,246 pounds, and of cheese 82,100,221 pounds, with a combined value of $9,835,000. The suf-S'f- er derangements and displace- ns were rapidly securing the London market for until some of the dishonest exporters began shipping filled cheese and selling it for full cream cheese. This deception has been a severe blow to the American cheese in l. Europe. The English statistician, places the total annual dairy production of the world at 1.946,000 tons, and that ef the United States alone at d of the 610,000 tons, or about entire product. But these figures only indicate the importance of the dairy Industry In this country and the necessity for some department of the government that can give especial attention to it and publish reports that will enable- the public to secure an intelligent knowledge of its production, as they have regarding the general condition of agriculture and the animal Industry. ments of the woorgans, manly will find relief Dr. Pierce's and a permanent cure in Favorite Prescription. Taken during pregnancy, the Prescription HAKES CHILDBIRTH EASY by preparing the system for parturition, thus assisting Nature and shortening labor. The painful ordeal of childbirth is robbed of its terrors, and the dangers thereof greatly lessened, to both mother and child. The period of confinement is also greatly shortened, the mother strengthened and built up, and an abundant secretion of nourishment far the child, promoted. thelr-ehees- Mul-hal- one-thir- - IMIrjr Hotter mi, I Mff DAILY 1 flit - ounTainlaKc 'write jar full: PLAAT WORK Lee Hj ww tfcfm aril CREffl SEPARATORSI B W7 to tM UItm. Ob xnotkor last iiuniDar at thB . tor Maoovkllo, mt firtorvo nod Boo Free. Utvta A aamON US Mill. COaa Minterwri At akvva iu aooa IXCO. lii w AD . t. tor Sale. DVStore la Aaesl Jewelry ICl'iCI III li lalal I I mL VAIc- More to the HJark W.tcta Bill. Mock about M.OOO La BH.OVO 111 wn per month. U giveaverage nine m secured no) e. or will trade forestAd tires . 1 Bo S77. praSrnwi. ao i. ; JEWELER, 1, i;. OmuUm-d- C. oe niio ti.ia pater. - . I j de results follow. ,1 laid n and- - tha audk ence of a sure preventive, but I do not suppose I will ever get that $500 for be claims he has the whole future to prove whether or not I am right, and that is a long time to wait. Be that as It may. I will tell my way to the readers of the Farmer gratis. When I first turn my cows out In the spring, and that la after the clover in the pasture has got a good start, they are given their regular feed of ensilage, clover hay, bran and meal first. Then when they go out they are not hungry, and they eat but little of the green clover and that not greedily. At night they are put In the stable and fed good clover hay and a 6mall grain feed again. If the weather Is warm they are turned out agdln for the night, but If cool they are kept in during the night, and after being fed turned out In the morning. My cows are always put in the stable and fed some nice early cut, well cured clover hay, and a small grain ration, twice every day all summer, no matter what the pasture is. They always eat some. Since I commenced this practice many years ago I have never had the least symptom of clover bloat, while my neighbors w ho give their cows nothing but pasture have at times suffered badly from bloat. My cows do better In giving milk on account of the feed they get in the stable. It is also economy, I think, for. with land worth from $50 to $100 an acre, pasture Is dearer feed than feeding In the stable. If one has young cattle he does not want to take out of the pasture and put In the stable to feed, a good way to do is to have a stack of clover hay In the field where they can have free access to it. One will be surprised to see the cattle leave the rank green clover two or three times a day and eat greedily a few minutes from the stack. Cattle know something, frequently much more than we give them credit for, and will take care of themselves pretty well If given a chance. Even a straw stack where they can come from the green clover and get at it, will help some. It the pasture has a variety of grasses, such as timothy, blue grass, wild grass, etc., aside from the clover, and these In abundance, there will rarely be any trouble from bloat. I wish to say again that a sure preventive of bloat (it may er may not be the only sure one) is to put the cattle 4n the stable twice a day and feed them all the good dry hay preferably clover hay they will eat. Do this and you can turn them Into clover at any time at any stage with perfect safety. Poaltrr Kjilpptng Coop for - H. B. L., writing In lncf Tennessee Fancier, very sensibly says: This to a very important Item In shipping fancy poultry, as there to a great deal of kicking on express charges. You can very easily make a nice, neat and substantial coop of pine boxes picked up about stores, by splitting slats say about 1 tacked or IViJjiclLvtide.half inch-thicto good bottom, then cover with cheap domestic, leaving top open ami tacking on enough slets after putting your fowls in to keep them from jumping out. A coop on this pattern necessarv to hold a trio of fowls would not weigh over three or four pounds net. I received a trio of 8. L. Wyandottes a few days ago from a point in Georgia; they arrived In a coop large and stout enough to ship three good sized hogs inritwas about 254 feet square, made of green oak and green plank 3 inches of an inch thick, covered wide by with coffee sacking, and weighed net 2254 pounds. The express charges on coop alone would have been $1.50; the chargea-o- n coop and the three birds w as $2.50 or nearly as much as I aid for the trio. This kind of shipping is out of the question and Is enough to keep any one from ordering fancy poultry any distance off. They can, in most cases, pay for the fowls, but to think of paying from $1.50 to $10 per hundred pounds on old gum planks knocks them out. Express rates are high enough at best, and wpuld advise shippers to make coops aa light as possible, hut stout and securely nailed. Express messengers, as a rule, try to handle such class of freight as roughly as possible, when It would be very little more work and trouble for them to handle with care. I am an express agent myself, and know Just how they do; they will throw a coop of fowl or basket of eggs at you rather than hand it out to you. Be careful to make light coops, but at the same time eubtontiali lt .will jay you la the long run. San Francisco Egg Supply. Poultry and egga to the value of $2,500,000 are Consumed by the people of San Francisco, each year. Strange aa it may of this consumption, seem, as ts quantity, to supplied from the east, chiefly, from Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri. Think of it! A million dollars going out of the state annually for what might and should be profitably produced at home! And San Francisco is by no means the only place in California consuming eastern eggs and poultry. Every city and- - larga town in the state contributes to the revenues of eastern producers of the same commodities. It Is safe to say that the extent of this ridiculous contribution of California to eastern producers Is not less than $2,000,000 a year. This, at least," is tbd estimate of ao eastern expert who has- carefully Investigated the subject. Pacific Rural ds - ng - ..... lnl tlo pii,?etion 4 flose tected Bloat. The time has nearly arrived for cattle to bloat when turned on rank clover C. P. Goodrich In pasture, write Soon farmers Michigan Farmer. and stockmen dairymen wi.l be the agricultural asking through papers what to' do with their cattle when they bloat on clover. I know this will be bo for it is so every year. In places In WDeons! last jeer therj were serious Tosses from this cause. At oner, farta.cta'. read an excellent paper on dairying in which he mentioned this trouble and said he would give $500 to be assured Is against loss by it in the future. It to Ull rtsht.to.aivisp uajn.5 lie Trocar bring relief In such cases, but frequently the trouble is not .discovered or the remedy la not applied in tlaieandfalal two-thir- (KAyilbei t Faya. de jrfbrnvjJic DAVIS that high-gra- Market quotations and notes are liabutter-makble to mislead the wouid-b- e In one respect. He observes that the highest quotations are for choice creamery grades, from which he ooncluden naturally that the private s dairy-iwholly out of date. Yet, notwithstanding the general market quotations, it Is a fact that tu. highest price are received lor private dairy butter of fancy makes, which never reach the wholesale trade at all, but are sold directly to consumers. - brands ithe price For these gilt-edg- e obtained,! Often surprising. As an illustration, the butter from Allllwood farm, in Framingham, Mass., is sold to Boston private customers .at eighty cento a pound. Tfaia 4s one nf,h largest dairjTfarm to th whtOo region, keeping about ISO cows to supply contract trade in fancy tnflk and butter. The butter cow are ajj high-graGuernsey, Including eeane of the best stock in New England. To get this fancy pries great pains have to be taken with the -product, beginning with the care of the cattle. clean acod are cardThey are kept very food to given not ao ed regularly. The much for quantity aa quality, consisting of choice hay and Indian meal. No other grain to given except a little eM Tbo milking frooeea linaeed meal must tie done in a cleanly manner, after which the milk la strained through no lew thm seven thicknesses. Tha same extreme care ia taken in the whole process of making the butter, ao that the big price to to part offset by the additional labor and bother in the various detail of the manufacture There are many private dairies, tboa-aanof them, which make a grade of Press..; tutter that sells to a private trade for more than the best creamery. . It ia 5ft capacity ef Italy only the ordinary greles which flnd exceeds that of any other nation. It is million ihelr way Jnto the general market and six hundred and seventy-fiv- e for dairy hut- - onfwJTons annually," , determine the quoL-tirn- s er r, rkefci L 1 mini Mock one-thir- ers , READERS. - ti K UlBUHti, Mar, c lane scon, wrne "1 find Hall's Catarrh Cure a valuable remedy. " Irrutfxiste sell It the. ' ftoiar DISPATCH FROM say Washington that a dawy jlivi slonTiaa been created in the bureau of animal industry of the agricultural deand that partment, it win bborganlxed about the 1st of CommentJuly. ing on this a Chicago taper . says: The purpose of this division will be to collect and disseminate Information about the dairy Industry of this 'ountry. The wisdom of such a department cannot be questioned when we consider the wonderful development of the dairy industry in this country In the last twenty years. Its growth and development have been ao phenomenal that it is almost impossible for dairymen to keep track of It and secure the statistics necessary to show the production of butter and cheese. The first creamery in Illinois was established at Elgin in the year 1870. Two or three years later the agitation was begun in Wiscconsin, and later the movement spreud to Iowa. The first butter from the Elgin creamery sold In Chicago at 10 cents a pound above the market price. Before that time Illinois had been obliged to send to New York and other eastern states for her dairy products. Ir. 1892 the number of pounds of butter sold on the Elgin dairy board ot trade was 30,496 2S4; the number of pounds of cheese, 7,113,735; the cash received for butter, 37,725,725.23. and for cheese, $589,560 94. There were represented on the Elgin dairy board in 1892 .100 creameries, leaving 266 creameries in the state not reporting their sales there. Taking the summary of the Illinois dairy product for 1892, prepared for the worlds fair, we find that the value of the milk was placed at $21,024,000; the value of condensed milk, $1,022,000; Illinois milk sefit to St. Bouts, $402,960; butter and cheese sold on the Elgin board of trade $8,315,286.29; creamery butter and cheese sold outside the Elgin district, $6,927,519 06; dairy butter, $31,000,000; value of skim milk for feeding purposes, $7,000,000, making a grand total of $75,691, 7G5 35 for the annual dairy product of this Btate. It was further estimated In that year that there were 1,600.000 cows In the state of Illinois, and that the dairy industry represented a capital of $336,000,000, with-- , out including condensing factories or manufactories of dairy supplies. The Importance of these figures can be seen by comparing them with the report of the Btate board of equalization, which shows for the same year 324 stock companies, aside from railroad corporations, that represented a combined capital of $115,210,043, or d about of that Invested in the single Industry of dairying. In Wisconsin W. D. Hoard estimates that there are 700,000 cows, producing 350,000,000 gallons of milk annually and representing a capital of from to $150,000,000. The income from the dairy Industry In that state Is about" $31,000,000. Wisconsin regards the industry so Important that it has established a state dairy school at a cofit of $40,0(10, which has about 100 that Mr. ruddleston at deli-tatel- RURAL FOR Sacesfuk termer Operate Tlt Ie part men t ot the Farm A tsw ns36 - CHAPTERS to pay in the production of really butter. Mass. Ploughman. How Huddleston," he said, you can t make a sneak out of this game, lun- gle up-- or riL thrq.w.. ymt.. mi af.Ahw. ""w It is recorded ter. Private dairies can still be made DAIRY AM) POULTRY. Arizona Fete had been called upon in ti.a absence of all the deacona and other qualified church officer, to pass tt.e contribution basket. In a teat half way down the middle aisle sat the wealthiest man in the congregation, fast asleep. Arizona Fete stopped when near him, held the basket under bis nose and waited. A soft snore was the only contribute n. He touched him on the shoulder. c,ua There A 11 A In (htraxo. American meats is at foreign ports, but no 8as has ever been de- - it on record as as none of complaints were Her Sustained. these The fact to our toreignfrade ts largely a matter of politics, Ben representing different nations gfit together and say: 'H you will c jet In sugar free we will admit your n ctlS of failure to make a ere retaliation, and this is serting that $ i It it. In thesfe answer words P. D. Armour I fa aM b jhACihat bureau animal industry is not doing its wort of inspection properly. So far as the assertion that diseased awhnala and meats rejected for export are put on the market for hcroe fwiwinpiloo Is concerned, Mr. Armour denied It vigorously and referred to ths work of the bureau In thla city under charge of Dr. Meirln. i J Every housekeeper wants to know the best things to eat, and how to prepare them 1 a!) tfaer J COOK BOOK FREE. 1 ia 11 i' JT lRyolBakeiLandPCoofcJlitT . iff J t i r Contains One thousand --every kind of cooking. Rudmani, New-Yo- rk Free by mail. Address -- mentioning. this paper, lTPj Hires weeks ago . ther . wera three distinct systems of inspection of 3 useful recipes for $ Edited hy Prof. Cooking School. (writing plainly), - live stock and meats In Chicago. The federal Inspection w aa confined to animals and meats intended for export, and a force of Inspectors was constantly kept at work in the pens and slaughter houses where this branch of the trade is handled. The state kept several veterinarians at work solely among live stock for the purpose of animals Conf.derst Potaf. itsatpa. condemning lumpy-jawe- d The Little Olrl'a Preyew with the exclusive object of stamping Persona who have kept any qf the A little girl la a Pennsylvania town, out a contagious disease and not for the old letters they received in the south in saying her prayers the other night, purpose of keeping bad meat off the during the war might do well to lvo,k w aa told to pray for her father and market. In addition the city had a them over. The loufederste govern- mother, who were both very Ul, and force of health officers whose duty It ment authorized the issue and use of tor one of the servant, who had loat was to see condemned animals were local postage stamps, and nearly every her huaband. She faithfully did aa the destroy ed, and to make frequent rounds city in the south ut one time had ita was told, and then, impressed with the of local markets to seize and tank own stamp Many thousands of these dreary condition ot things, added on d down bad meats. This And now, l weie used, but ao rare are they now her her own account; division of labor worked all right so --that they bring high prices There la God, take good care of yourself, lor if -far as federal Inspection for export was among collector a keen demand for anything should happen to you we New concerned, but the live stock exchange them, and an idea of what they will should alt go to pieces Amen. officials found certain sharpers who had bung may he gatheied from the report York Time. been making money by trading in of a sale which occurred recently 1 Make Tear Owe BlUerat diseased animals could not be stopped the rooms of tne Philatelist society, On receipt ot 30 cent In U. B stamps, 1 New Ixx'al Confederate York. stamps will od to any address on pecksg by any ordinary methods. As a result the exchange adopted stringent rules sold at follows: Athens, (la, 140; four Dry Bitter. One package makae- . of varieties the Bton Rouge (La.) 5 one gallon beta tonic known. Cars atomof which brought about a Mat.'iO 77 ana ark. kidney aiseeass, and is a greet eppe respectively; the state, city and stock yards officials, cent, 41, blood 50 and 171; tirer and purifier. Juat th medicine and the lumpy-jawe- d trade Is now well con, two varieties, for (3 ad for spring snd summer. 25c. nt under control, with every prospect of Lenoir, N. C. , - s2, and Mobiles cent, nred store Address Gaa ' O. Bvn-s- ir black, 0.60, As lien goes on these your drug being completely stamped out SB, Grand Rapid. MlchT" in increase curiosities will probably authorities Recently the federal A Good Fencer. of escape value. They are already beyond the found there was a loop-hol- e col Mr. Hardtack (who has Just disfor unprincipled men In the handling reach of everybody but wealthy ' of bad meats in other states. For In ieclors. Atlanta Journal charged. Mr, Jackson) You want a recommendation, eh? You are absostance, the dealers who succeeded In TobacoStinkmg Breath. from diseased animals It good for nothing. How can 1 away rnrrv lutely but alvrava around, to Not getting pleasant nerve demjfing power conscientiously recommend you? the yards could ship them out of town dun l lompare fcslth llie unit lotiacio cei ul work ntebt ami day to Mr, Jackson Well, sah, you might with little fear of detection, as the InLull ee. ioa niBlie ou weak and Imnoient exof to confled the was meats lit mleixRt In wt wor1 and hwk irll llie jea'aay datye tink Mr. Jackson would -spection ll. No To Hu ta a aura, prove invaluable In any position (1st llrac. port and local trade. Out ot this has Mur, cur Ouaranirrd ljr lirurgtu e'er- - he's capable of fillin'. Scribner's, come a new system of by quiui lltloil torn I Tebatuo Silt or Hook, lure. which the federal, elate and, city InSmoke Tour Lite Away "Jrw. Addrcta It the Baby ts Catting Teeth. Heutody Ux, hew YBni t Ly or UUtago. spectors ail work together, and the sod ee tht old Hi voll (Hod rmwdjr, Haw b Wttwow's Suotiq (Taw fur CSUdna TMiatue- only trouble now known Is that the Tolvgraphla MUiakoa. rigid watch has driven the disreputable The telegraph ha Indulged In many Tbe trouble with culture to that it baa to dealers to smaller towns where there to witticism theexpenae of the mem atop at th surface. no inspection. Of the work, Dr. Mel- bet of bothat houaca of parliament. It vin, the federal veterinarian In charge Zaaaoae Msgls Corn transformed a class leal allusion to VirnaM 10 or Mmoy rofumdod, Ak year of the Chicago office of the bureau of has 1 a to and Brutus" into cat and Inigtol (ter il veto trtc U cent animal Industry, aaya: used celebrated the by phrase I am sure there to no ground for brute; the late .Mr. W. Por.ter in a speech on forCoarse linen in ecru shade U much used boatiug gown. complaint so far as Chicago la conhis Irish policy, mauvais subject and cerned.. The new system is working village ruffians" into Pandering aav-ng- e - Borrowed troubles are the heaviest. " r " Impossible nicely, and it is well-nigand village ruffians;" tried in the have at ho for any diseased animals or meata to balance and wolkrr eheald always found wanting Into tried Ferry aw No Stun Tunlo. I, , tl . i.f t arfcer (lienor inspecget out. I have twenty-eigin Aha balance and found panting; owe.louoo. uei tot txd. aeokago-- , eold. tors continually at "work in the yard the cow wa cut In halves into "the Armur crepon, or armure with era; looking at live stock before it to sent cow was cut lulo ealvea, and the to faxhionable anddurab a marking, to the abattoirs. Then 1 have six vetmilitia is a great constitutional force at into the militia erinarians and twenty 'assistants What part of a houie to th darkest? The a creat constituThe houses. work in the slaughter tional faree." Macmillan's Magazine. part near the eajTti. Btate ho, I believe, five Inspectors. Xew le I So Ume ta ear year Caras Th Ladle. ' How many the city employs I don't altk Ilia tore trua U uk- -t .oin o nwfirtirU. fire Uk to (So Let. euuiforl The effect jour dr i,gi lot and perfect safety know. We all work together. If one of pleasant Ve'vet rapes are fashionable lined with my men finds diseased animals or with which ladles may use the Calimeats he reports to the state and city fornia liquid laxative, Syrup of Figs, cloth and cloth one with allfc. inspectors, snd there to no let up until under all conditions, makes it their cannot apeak too blah v of Tlao's Cur the bad stuff has been condemned and favorite remedy. To get the true and forI Consumption Mat. Faavx Moans, 213 of look name for the the genulna article, tanks. We the into put W. Cd fet., New York, Oct. 2V. 1194. rendering Fig Syrup Co., printed Dear watch the pens, the slaughter houses California the bottom of the package. The flerh to an enemy to aufferln?, Le and the gates, and I don't think any fiesh. The man who would lead other, must caute suffering to an euemy to the bad animals or meats get out. first learu bow to stand alone. n swond-hsBilliard table, I, for aa'e A novelty tailor button fa made with a cheapi Apply tooradiireee, H. CrAstv,,s'-6- 11 fvoea tl Fay to Exhibit Fowl? Ke't H. 12th Omaha. Ht., metal rim and ?ws through and through. lt Is very evident that It pays our best and largest breeders, or we would not see them at so many shows In a 1 80? See single year; bu do they derive the The benefits? who No. person greatest has only a few birds, none of them ever having been scored, to sure of getting more benefit than any one else. Why? It to worth more to them than the cost of entry to know what their birds will score, and did they wlq a prize. It is hard to estimate what tha benefits will be. It will depend somewhat on the number of birds they have for sale, aa they will be able to realize nearly double the amount they could have dona had they not shown any bird-- .. I might say they will be able to do this, although they did not win any prize. I hare in my mind an old gentleman who bought one sitting of eggs last year because his wife was bound to raise some chickens. He entered nine of these birds, four cockerels and .five pullets, from this hatch in the' Chattanooga Poultry show mucb the at the cost of $3.50 for entry fee. They being about seven months old, and in strong competition, of course he won no prizes. However, he has since sold 7Tmm?nnmTmmntrnutTTTnnnnfTnmTinT wnnwwmmwnmmnniTWWiWTHwr two of these cockerels for enough more than he asked for theta before the show to pay for entry, and has disposed of May Manton two wore at a very good price, giving n nice him a e profit on his Investment. Ho not being In the chicken business, E ts Cast rettaras far 1 CawSa. Wkts tba faunas Balwvr 1 naan Coat AMlUassl far raautga his neighbors were inclined to laugh te at him for presuming that he had any fine chickens, consequently, be gives the credit for tales to the poultry show. t iff f tbree-heade- Hts-kste- np-qu- s ss !." ht el-- o ht 1 that round red tin Uats Climax Plu' Its its lorJllards. best! Very Latest Styles Big Poultry Farms. Dr. Green,- - on Long Island, Lake Winnepiseogee, New Hampshire, has $120,000 Invested in the business, and $115,000 of It represents the accumulated returns from an original Investment of about $5,000. He has 15.000 laying hens. 4,000 laying ducks snd thirty Incubator of 600 egg capacity each. The annual product of chickens and ducks is from $120,000 lo $140,-00- 0, and the buildinga'and yard are very extensive. Gov. Morton of New York has $60,000 Invested in the poultry business, and Havemeyer -the sugar king to another large producer of poultry. They both find it a profitable aa well aa an Interesting business. There are dozens of other large plants scattered through the East The business has been reduced to a fine system, and has been rid of the unpleasant features that characterize the Ordinary slipshod methods In vogue among farmer and others who have not studied it up thoroughly. Ex. -- -- To prevent the possibility of contagious dlsesAe spreading through ths use of the telephone. Parts physicians d recommend the ue of a spt dally antiseptic paper - 6345. 6323. Xo.tMW.yiva (M vUl, ft, M, fc4 wmwto. t 0, M. M Fw Vt in V wk-r- X PPMora. rot nbrnku vte vti w COUPO tti orSorfor oa or ttk wow o pack eottor wSoral, aillu irit oocroil Vis a H Ml- - Ft 4m a. irrowilawi j ttM th Olvo I t , S, vtai n, 4 tf m, 7M cos ) a s 1ST. iv M ooat yatMnw IswaSUo yatra pool aaly le roatv, Mtwot AiMrmm, law ao rniwo toy COUPON PATTERN COMPANY, XWW TOM. M. 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