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Show I TUB TIMES Br Tub Tint Pcbushixg CoaraaT. r.N. riNN m uim i COALVILLE, v t 1 . xui. UTA1L AI) w nn p. YETEItANS'CORXETi: POULTRY" nam, who led his brigade to support Strongs In th darkness Puma,,, made the horrible mistake of assailing TO INTERESTING BELONGS CHAPTERS FOR DEPARTMENT THIS the bastion held by hi friend. OUR RURAL READERS. ' SOLDIERS. THE OLD Shelling a Iort. Bombardments are very terrify!- -, How Sorrowful Farmers Operate The f Hlvoase Sum Good Short Merles but small arms do the killing. V elonxiS Departuvat of the Farm A Few Used sad eirlf During the bombardirent of FriiLr-lrksbur- g at to tbe Care a t Lire Stock Dials Wfcea BaUle ef poa the field only one pltizen of the ton Poultry. sad wa killed. Vicksburg was often umbr Repaid Wu TSrmteaed. bombardment during two years, ar I ANADAS REPRE-sentatlpri r to the siege only two persor in DenTHOU-J- j were killed.. Shells were thrown LEVEN . mark reporta the sand dollars Yyer Charleston during the whole periodIn)J - expended by the the war. but only a few person were starting of a new Grand Army of the fatally hurt. dairy enterprise In Bortera fleet of fifty men of war bomubl!c for ft stawhich that country, tue to Gen. Grant, barded Fort Fisher all Christmas ee cf gives promise inonChristmas was all and which tt day tM, dy, profitable, proving Us tended to place throwing into the place IQJMO project) A similar-syste- m hall at and killing three confederates. Statuary might prove valuMarshal Baxalne's statement that After the capltoL of hi soldiers were struck by misable In this counthe atatue had been where th pro-dumade it was brought siles of the enemy during the siege of try, the' rotunda Met I Incredible. to could be If Sarah Bernhardt was so much Imto th beat of tha capltol and there partially undistances long transported boxed. Soldier after soldier who had pressed by the recent shelling of ltln markets. In tbe Tbe point starting war Janeiro she what have felt could would served with Grant during the merDanish a was when industry she have witnessed the bombardrmnt looked at It In amazement and said that a about experiago, to chant, began of year FortMorgan by Farragut? Fur It bore no reaemblancv whataoever twelve days and nights the firing was menting In this direction by taking tbe hero of Appomattox. The Joint sen3o0 great guns were Danish milk, which la peculiarly delilibrary committee of the house and pro- kept up. At times statue cate and rich In flavor, freezing it by of when tht-all Incessantly firing, except whoae approval ate, I posed to be placed In Statuary hallwas ceased action to rest the men and tod the use of Ice and salt, and sending the pieces. It In barrels, by rail and steamer, to necessary, viewed the atatue which Tet the loss of life was small, and at London, On Its arrival the milk proved Intended to represent Gen. Grant, snd then unanimously rejected 1L They Fort Powell, which place he bombarded to be as sweet 'knd well tasting as If held that It did not In any way look as for twelve days, only one man t.a It had been just drawn from a cow In a magnifiis killed. Itself statue he did. The cent piece of work and beautifully done, But in an the history of the war the the middle of Sweden. The milk was so the defense of Fort riumttr the only trouble with It being that unwill ever etaiiJ much in demand and proved so profitable an article of commerce that the exthe most memorable. For four year sculptor, J. Franklin Simmons, was able to catch the likeness of the great that confederate fortreas was porter immediately took out a patent to almost incessant bombardment by the on the shipment of frozen milk from general. The statu could be used States heaviest artillery In the world. T.ie Sweden and Denmark to London. He represent a general of the United monuRev. John Johnston, now rector of a then sold the army and might be useful a a but patent to a stock comment In some national cemetery, churth In Charleston, was major of with large capital, which on Feb, not In the fot t. He tells us that pany to past It ofT for Gen Grant would 1 last, bought one of the largest Sweddo. The Grand Army of the Republic during the la. I two years of the ear has a marl le on its hands and has had over (6,000 cannon shot and shells we;n ish creameries, converted It Into a It parked up again, but It still remains thrown into the wot k. Southern Ida.' factory, and having put In a special In the, rotunda of the(cjp!tnLh'e axim . freezing apparatus, began on May 1 visitors to town look at It and ask the the export of frozen milk in large quanguides what the two Immense ,bo:.es 'the tint I lag In liithtuoud. tities. are. What the Grand Army of the Charles Wheaton, retired captain When the milk is received from the will do with It la not known, but United States anny, leferrlng to a Hag farmers. It Is pasteurized, that is, at present they have a great big white which was floated In Detroit on last heated to 167 degrees Fahr. and then elephant on their hands, for whichof they Memorial Day by Captain Foster," say the dehave no use. lly the nilslake there Is an error with crediting Captain immediately cooled off to about 50 antt Is now grees sculptor Statuary hall loses what would Fahr, the freezing Foster s flag with being the first Amerhave been an attractive addition to Its ican commenced. of the milk Is filled Half Cacarried Into Richmond. flag Discrowd of celebrities. Washington into cans and placed In the freezing apptain Foster said the flag was floating patch In Brooklyn Standard-Uniofrom the steamer Commodore Perry, aa paratus, where It will be thoroughly she led the advance for the fleet up frozen in the course of three hours. glories of Balt Hun. the James river and Into Richmond on The frozen milk is then filled Into barmore a battle of July 21 was the date 9. lMSi Captain Wheaton say a the rels of April pine, the only kind of wood that Getor talked about than even Shiloh Confederates evacuated Richmond on can be used. The barrels, however, are tysburg. It decided nothing. Neither the night of April 2. 1865. and that army was whipped, III point of fact, but about 7.30 on the morning of the Jrd only half filled with this frozen milk, the balance filled with the unmost of the soldiers In both were tre- a part of tne Army of th James, frozen milk. being mendously .scared, Napoleon said, I commanded by Major-Generl, G. date from RlvoU," a battle by no means This way of packing has proved to enteret and Richmond, bis first. Some of the great soldiers of carrying American occupied flags. This was war- be the only practical one, as part of Bull from dated have war the might ty a week before Captain F otter the milk has to be frozen In order to Run had they cared to. One who had reached thefe on the Commodore Pfrry. keep tbe whole cold, and part haa to Ricketts B. Hleketl. was peneral J. According to Captain Wheaton, the be la flowing state in order to get the won a regular brevet and a generals first Richmond American entering barrels' exactly full, which Is necestar for gallantry In command of a bat- were the colors flag of a squadron of the sary in order to avoid too much shaktery. His, waa one of tbe two batteries First Massachusetts Cavalry, co- ing up on the that fought so gloriously for the Henry mmanded by Major Atherton road, by which the cream Stevrnx H. House bill. Buffer an accident lby would be turned Into butter; the floatmarshal. provost -- v. might have turned ihe tld there. All ing masses of Ice at the same time prewas going well with them until a vent the unfrozen milk in setting the In gray approached and was Killing Ills First Han cream. Milk which Is treated In this The killing of a brother man, even w about to be deluged with canister, when nti has proved to keep quite fresh for rememthe Is In battle. a painful thing to the chief of artillery declared that 26 days. Every barrel holds 1,000 strangers were friends. Several Union ber. A soldier of the late war thus a week there regiments wore cadet gray on that vividly describes 1 his firee experience;se- poundLs of milk, and fteia.Th gutiawrti heULLholv Are, but ..My first man saw but twenty for- will be shipped 50 barrels, making in all about 100, 00Q pounds of milk a week. tha men In gray did not They pep- conds, but I shall remember him ever. I was standing by my gun when pered the batteries at close range, cutThe milk la shipped to Newcastle,, ting down every cannoneer and killing a confederate Infantry soldier rushed and from Aere y rail to large manumany of the horeea. Ricketts' lieuten- bp. I whipped out my revolver and took facturing chle! where It Is sold In the ant was killed, and he himself terribly rewounded. Lying where he fell, he was him through the breast He tossed sp itreets or in retail stores. It ia soon cared for by southerners be had his arms, gave me the strangest look ported that the patent hag been bought known in the old service; his wife Joined In the world, and fell forward upon Aid for Ireland also at a cost of over $200,-00which proves how much The stock him, and with careful nurgjng saved face. He had blue eye brown curling his life, Sherman tried to r Attain Hen- hair, a dark mustache, tnd a handsome company expects from this new enter ry House hilt. It was thereh he lost Col. face, I thought the Instap 1 fired lhatI prise. HighCameron of the Seventy-nintIn dashed have loved that man If I had should among landers. This regiment Spoiling Hatter After It ! Madfe Ricketts Idle guns and tried to set them Known him. I tell you this war Is a Dairy writers frequently caution going again, but finding the enemies' terrible business. Youths Companion. decided to Ore too severe Cameron against placing butter where It will absorb the odors or flavor from the charge. "Come on, my brave HighTrolley Tunnels. Hypothetical landers!' he shouted, and started for decaying vegetables. The worst thing Is as popular trolley-ca- r The parly the timber where the Confederates lay here a In other cities, but It remained about this Is the need of It. Butter In cover. He was shot dead. It la asfor Baltimore wit to Invent an attraet-tv- e w ill absorb odors, not only from stale serted that Wade Hampton ahot Camerones, and novelty for the trolley ride. Last vegetables, but Trdm-eeuon to avenge th "death of a nephew ar says the Ialtlmcre American, a they impart to the butter a flavor that week, Sixty-nintIn also of the the hands of comprising a due pro- destroys or overpowers the true butter Sherman's brigade. Taking rifles from party offorty, gay youths and maidens flavor. A case la In mind just now. portion men the Legion tbe hands of hit started for a ride chaperoned, properly And officers only. The writer was supplying butter to the Hampton aimed at On the return trip a memto Glyndon. he was a crack shot his seat and had a former owner of this farm, and one ber suddenly left charged with SherThe Sixty-nint- h consultation with the day planned what was Intended for a whtspered long Private man at the Henry House. whoso subject he refused to pleasant surprise, so, before the cover motorman, Keefe of Meaghers souavs company to hl curious companion, al- waa nailed down, some nice apples carried the green flag out after the divulge stimulated by the mischievous with a delicious aroma were placed in though. bearer fell. Keefe was wounded while twinkle In his eye, they plied him with the package, separated from the butter down but he shot the banner, defending merrily v. ent Che tar till, and a layer of salt. two assailants, making a third prisoner. qr.rUons.Oir byft doth circle all at once, the motorman sang out: was on the other side. Bartowwas th Confederate hero of th top of this hill look out for Tbe surprise At Bull Run. Being driven from a battery the tunnel! Word came back that the batter waB he had captured with the Eighth Georin looks, grain and ever) thing but members of The the mystified party fine gia, he led up th Seventh and was looked at him and one another In flavor; that waa not agreeable. killed In the charge. amaxement, for no tunnel could they reNew, some butter has an unpleasant member on the toad. But when the top flavor that never was near a rosy apple, of the hill waa reached they shot into and there waa a possibility that the Tha Deadly Breach at Wagner. July 18, 1863, Strongs Union brigade qqlck darknesa, for the motortnaa had cause should be sought else here, but carried a bastion of Fort Wagner and turned off the electric lights A peal of time came a later report snying held It for four hours, engaging In the laughter rosy as the It Re was wised, butter waa excellent after the A that most terrific struggle of the kind In his- and. then all over the enr arosa soufids had been removed. layer surface an nature on located of which beach the waa osculatory the pertory. Wagner This suggests another point: . Conof the channel of Charleston harbor. plexed chaperone could not locate, but The guns of Sumter raked the shore were pacified whin told the g.ri .er sumers should have a suitable place to In front of It, making approach from only kissing their hands In deference to Keep butter after they get It, If the Six tunnas were surface Is all the time exposed to the th Union linen extra hazardous. Wag- tunnel customs. ner held 1,000 men aheltered In bomb-proof- s, passed and filially the m tinman cried odors oLvegetables and kitchen flavors armored with sand. The assault out: best of will soon Last tunnel before we reach the unclassified, theand tbe butter took place at night. After Strongs line maker will be off flavor, get were tunnel and the was much time city!" unanimousbad formed for attack suspicion of furnishing butter lost In passing to the front the Fifty-fourt- h ly voted the best part of the Jolly rfd. unde will not keep. Agricultural that Massachusetts (colored) ta bead Epltomlst the charge. Led by the gallant Captain Kespect Hi Trolly Wire. An Auburn is under obShaw, the blacks made a glorious fight, but fell bark repulsed. Shaw waa killed ligations to an electric light lineman Chirk Dying la the Shell. at the ditch. The preliminary charge for saving him from ah electric knock our Judgment, three principal In drew th Confederate from their cavea, Sunday. The wa thlags lead to chick dying In the shell, and when Strong column, led by the down bis lawn with the garde wetting hose namely egg not uniformly fresh, eggs New York and Sixth Con- when he became suddenly Forty-eight- h possessed to necticut, moved, If wa struck by a shoot" at 4he electric trolley wire and that are pot well fertilized, and a lack -e caand enfilading he would have done it but lor the of sufficient heat. withering direct, Are. U was terrible,"- says General timely arrival of the lineman, who adAt all times, and under all clrrum-stanee- t, Taliaferro, the commandant In Wagner, vised him notto. Since then he has the eggs Used should be as but with unsurpassed gallantry th consulted eminent authorities In elecas It is possible to have them. fresh the breasted storm and trical matter, and they all Federal soldiers him Very early in the season eggs have to rushed onward to th glacis. The Con- that It la a dangerous thing tell t0 piy be saved frr several day In order to federates, with th tenacity of bulldogs with. While It ta not absolutely Wru;n but and a fierce courage aroused almost Jo that a peraon throwing water on an get enough to fill an incubator, cooler-peri- od madness, poured from the ramparts and electric trolley wlre'Trom a garden hose fortunately during this of A yer, they can be kept In eafety embrasures sheets of flame and a tem- would get a shock, the electricians f,y for two or three weeks, and perhaps pest Of lead and Iron, yet their Intrepid they dont care to try it. The stream assailant rushed on Ilk waves of the of water and tbe nickel faucet longer, providing they ar turned often sea by whose shore they fought. They excellent conductor, and the make an to keep the yolk of the egg enough probabiliThe Rev. Dr. A. J. ties are that the fell by hundred a. who person front settling against the lower side of such aim, Palmer, the historian of the Forty-eight- a gun at the trolley will wish he hadnt shell end adhering thereto. As the the was one of the Tor or 800 who Lewiston Journal. season advances and warm weather forced their way Into one bastion of the comes on, eggs can not pafely be kept work. He stated that 4uo or 500 fell I wouldnt give 10 cents a yard for all that long. It I theoretically and practhere; that 00 escaped back to the Union lines after the folly of bolding on the pedigree Ja this world. if a man tically true that the germ in an egg, has got a level hed on hn shoulders, was apparent, and that 140 who peras soon as the egg Is laid, begins to sisted In holding out were, after" four and an honest hr.rte in hla buddy, h lose Its vitality. At a given time this hours' desperate fish tins, overpowered ha get all thu pedigree I am ia stirch vitality becomes so far diminished that, and taken prisoners. Strong fell mor- - ov. r although the chick may start to form A L The bicycle and cdrset don't go tbe same trip. . ea Dtidcs Sre somewhat envious because bloomers dont bag at the knees. Pi ve General Campos Is still licking the boots off belligerent Cubans by tele graph. ' Two thirds of all the letters written in the world every day ae written la tha English language. .T e A six feet long has been unearthed at Troy, N. Y. Its owner must have been a power In hTs ward. Jaw-bon- Late reports from the Chicago civil service board say the members srs suffering from an acute attack oMmpedl-tntof action. nt Judging from newspaper pictures, the Bannock Indiana are gentle creatures who wear sklrta and- have never heard of the new woman. A Rochester law firm has discharged Its stenographer for appearing In tbe office In bloomers. She probably used ttiamoad-framtypewriting machine. e Cornelius Vanderbilt has 1,100 chick-ena- . This Is a pretty good start, and, with proper management, Mr. Vahder-bl- lt may succeed la making a decent living. Hr. Richard Croker thinks there Is a of corruption la CngUe'n politics. If there la a man who knot's corruption when he sees It, that man good deal la Croker, There were four founds In tha fight llf.' hhd Mrs. Corbett. First, matrimony; second, acrimony; third, testimony; fourth, alimony. This is a "k nock-oat- " for Jim. The people of New York, for some resson or other, are discussing the propriety of changing the citys name. A "Cleveland paper appropriately suggests that they call It East Chicago. The natural result of tha movement la beginning to make itself felt In the, West, A man In Muncle, Ind., la string hit wife for divorce enr the grounds of cruelty and neglect. It la tbe turn of the tied. new-wom- Mrs. Henry Miller la tbe wife of ft prosperous farmer and lives within four miles of Portland, Ind. She wen Into town last week for tbe first time In fifteen years. It would be safe to say that si; dHn't wear bloomers, " ' '' In ascribing all the mysterious this hemisphere to Holmes mistakes w 111 te avoided by remembering that he haa been la Jail sod out of the mysterious disappearance" promotion business for some months. Those five Ohio legislators who refused to aceept salaries for tbe year because there had been no session of the assembly may have figured on reaping ft much larger reward from posing In dime museums as political freaks. . English authorities are of the opinion that Americana do not enjoy sport. Dont they, though? These authorities should see tbe enjoyment tbe Americans derive from a new cockney. They can make sport of things the English never could make anything ol 50,-0- ct lc al regl-nje- Wiet-ae- nt 0, nd h, Mrs. Sarah Twogood, one of tbe few rematnlng pensioners of tbe war of 1812, In which her husband served, celebrated her 92d birthday at Rockford. She la still active and 111., recently. healthy. This Is one Instance of where the too good did not die young. Jerry Coleman, n widower with tea children, was married the other day to Maggie Fitzgerald at Green Bay, Win. At first we thought that Maggie was getting the worst of It. but come to find out ebe was n widow and also had ten children, which make a pretty eve match. But what long dining- tooni table Jerry will have to have! iK-dw- e Joh.my Weldon, cashier of a savings bank at WHISmauUc, Conn., pocketed $30 M0 the other evening, locked up the bank, straddled a bicycle, hurriedly left town on the road leading to Canada end hasnt been beard of since. Depositors to the number of 3.200 are anxiously awaiting to learn Ills new address. Is announced that an agreement bag been concluded at Faria between It Americans and Russian petroleum firms by wblcb all the kerosene trade of the Mediterranean, Sweden, and Norway will be given to Russia, In the remainder of Europe Russia Is to export 15 per cent and America 65 per cent of tbs kerosene needed. Thus is one of tbe necessaries of Ilfs, monopolised by a trust that cor trots tbs ottbtrel-ne&- a of the whole world. Jcba Radmacher, of Westphalia, Mlcb., wa la tbe habit of beating hi Wife on alight provocations. This provoked th Ire of the neighboring white-cap-s, who quietly took John out Into the neighboring wild wood, where be wa made to dance to the tune the old row died on. Finally, he promised faithfully that he would henceforth bo kind and gentle to Mrs. Radmacher. and now they are telling around Westphalia that there la no better man In YeLDiere are town to bis family. these who still think whltecaps never do jnurb good. - h, Ai... he hTttrrefr tn of 103 degree, the embryo wilt die be- fore the chick is fully formed. As th egg grows still older the vitality of tbe germ will so far diminish that It will not start to form at all, the egg becoming stale and the process of decay setting in. An incubator, therefore, can be run correctly in every particular and th result be a very poor hatch, with many chicks dead In the shell, simply because of weakened germs and stale eggs, on account of tbe age of tbe eggs used. It ia well Known that weakly breeding stock on either the male or female side, or both, or breeding stock that la over fed or too fat, will produce imperfect fertilized eggs, the germs being weak. When egg from such stock are used, th result will also be chicks dead In thfe shell stall stage of devel- Seasltle Thing on Earth I a human servo. Tblh la a itate of health. Let It become overktralned or weakened, and i he tensltlveneia la locreated tenfold, tor mean or overwrought nerves, iiovirt-- tr Momaih Bitters M tbs best tonic m since It Invigorates and quirts tbem at the Hint time, it also pM.ev.rs suprrlatl) efficacy In djr.prp.Ja, consilps-malariand kidney coiuplalnia, rheu matism and neuralgia. Tbe Art of Breathing. It is perhape on of the signs of tho times, to those alert for indications, that the art of breathing .has become more and more a subject of attention. Oculists os well a physiologists go deeply into tho study to a way hardly to be touched upon here. Physician have cured aggravated cases of insomnia by regular breaths, . patients have been quiet-idStubborn forms of indigestion made to disappear. A tendency to consumption may be overcome, as some authority has within the last few years clearly demonstrated, by exercise in breathing. Seasickness, too, may bo surmounted, and the victim of hypnotic influence taught to withstand tho force of en energy directed against J him. There is a famous physician in Mun-is- h who has written an extensive work upon the subject of breathing. He has, besides, formulated a system by which, asthmatic patients are made to walk without losing breath, while sufferer from weaknesses of the heart are cured. At Meran, in the Austrian Tyrol, hi patients (almost every royal house of Europe is represented) are put through a certain system of breathing and walking. The mountain paths are all marked off with stakes of different color, each indicating the number of minutes in which the patient must walk the given distanoe, the breathing and walking being in time together. As the cure progresses the ascents are made steeper and steeper. 'l be wisest men have never In any age teen the best men. exi-tenr- e, al long-draw- n lever-stricke- n opment. It is the same with the human family, we find in every neighborhood consumptive children born to soma parents, while other parents are blersed with strong, robust, vigorous offspring. These facts sre pretty well understood in regard to the human family, but few Incubator operators take them Into consideration or attach much importance to them In their efforts to hatch large numbers of chickens artificially and in this way enlarge their profit In raising poultry. In this matter, as In all others, it ia the reasoning, thinking person who solves the problem first and achieves success. The third cause which results in chicks dying in the shell at different stages tif dc'clopment is the one first named In this article, a lack of sufficient heat to carry on, at a normal rate, the process of chick development. By nature's process it requires a given amount of heat, a given length of time to build up the chick In the egg. In artificial incubation this amount of heat and this period of time should be Every man is full of philosophy whit h he Id unable to apply to his own necessities. imitated as closely as possible. Another matter that should be menThe angler forget hD lines, but th tioned In tide connection is that of ven- amateur poet, may never. tilation. Home claim, among them Fanny Field, that the chick in the egg, before It hatches, needs no more air than an unborn kitten does. This Is the complaint of many at this season. theory has been easily refuted by sealing up Incubators hermetically tight, The reason Is found in the fact that the and by varnishing eggs that were nerves sre weak and the body In a feverish and unhealthy condition. Tbe series placed under hens. In no case where he restored by Hoods Sarsaparilla, the air was shut out from the chick In may which feeds tbem upon pure blood, aud comtbe the egg, did chick succeed in this medicine will also create an appetite, ing Into the world alive. Tbe egg itself and tone up the system and thus give swret refutes this "no air" theory, for In the aud refreshing sleep and vigorous health. large end of every egg Is a good sized air space. It was no doubt placed there for the use of the chick after it reaches Is the only true Wood purifier prominently a period where it begins to breathe. in the public eye today. $1 ; six for (5. The moment a chick breaks the shell HnnHa Pills. harmoniously with lloodntiarsapviUa. 86o and before It comes out, we find It ftJUUU 9 breathing vigorously. It is known that HIGHEST AWARD the shell of an egg ia very porous, thus WORLDS FAIR. to frtsh the into air air pass allowing space quite freeiy. Reliable Poultry Journal. Cant Bleep I Hoods Sarsaparilla Milk a s Fire Extinguisher. A queer claim has been sent to a number e! the companies having de A fire broke partment in Chicago. out In a creamery In a Wisconsin town near Madison, owned by John L. E1- -, verson. The water supply was soon exhausted and 2,300 gallons of milk stored in the building were used to extinguish the fire. The Companies have, therefore, received a claim from Mr. Elversou for $64 for damage done to building and the loss of 2,300 gallons of milk. A similar case is reported from Ste. Vlctoire, in Canada. The Rev. Abbe Noyseux and his parishioners extinguished a fire In a barn by using milk stored in the creamery. A fire in Cleveland In February destroyed the dwelling of William Woodford and by the use of 700 gallons of wine stored in a w Ine cellar he succeeded in saving that building. The value of this wine was $300, and this has been allowed him by the insurance companies, which recently paid Their proportion of the loss. The property was Insured for its value, and the companies therefore paid In the neighborhood of $100 for the wlne used in putting out the fire. All sorts of liquors have been UBed for fighting fires In addition to water. Recently a fire was extinguished in an ink factory by throwing The contents of several vats of ink on the burning building. In this case, however, no insurance was carried and tbe ow ner got no pay for the value of the stock destroyed. Ex. ohe-thi- rd l hot 1 Cooking ButterT" One of the laws of Massachusetts regulating tbe sale of oleomargarine provides a fine for anyone who sells oleomargarine to any person who asks for butter. Recently an agent of the dairy bureau of that state went into a store in Holyoke and called for butter. For the purpose of conveying Information to the salesman as to the kind of butter which he wanted, be qualified his request by calling for cooking butter. The merchant furnished him oleomargarine, and was convicted in the district court ' His case was appealed and tried in the superior court of Hampden county. Judge Hopkins Instructed the jury, says the New England Farmer, that if they found that cooking bur-te-r was an article of commerce, separate and distinct from butter, they should acquit the defendant If, however, they found th1 "cooking butter was merely a kind or variety of butter, and that oleomargarine therefore was sold when butter was called for, they should return a verdict of guilty. The Jury after struggling with th easg all the afternoon, finally were unable to agree. Light Brahmas. The light Brahma are practical fowls, and the Yankee farmer or poultry man stands by them, because thcyare fairly good layers; and for broilers no other fow 1 caq excel them. - They fatten very easily. They must he kept active, for a fat r, and of no Brahma ben is a earthly good but D consume food. If Brahmas are properly fed and kept at work, they are among the very best winter layers; hut no breed is ao easily spotted for that purpose (unless it be i the Cochin). EY. t fovF.a THE BEST PREPARED SOLD EVERYWHERE. JOHN CARLO A SONS, New York. DR. WINCHELLS TEETHING SYRUP Is the best medicine tor ell diseases Incident to children. It regulates the tmwcU; asslris dentition; cures diarrhea and dysentery In the worst forms;cures canker acre throat ; Is a certain pro- ventneof diphtheria; quiets and soothes all pain Invigorates the stomach and bowels; correct sail acidity;Dowill cure griping in the trowels and wind not fatigue yourself aud child with colic. sleepless ntchts when Hiswdhin your rach to cure your child and save your ow a strength. Dr.Jaqueg German Worm Cakra destroy worms & remove them from the system Prepared by Eaonert Proprietary Co., Chicago, III. SOLO BY ALL ORUGQISTS. PROFITABLE DAIRY WORK Can only he accomplished of tools and IVTth a Davis rator on the sure of more butter, while milk Is with the very bes appllancei Cream Sepi farm you ar and bette thesklmmei cable feed make no mil a will take to get a Davis. Real Illustrated catalogue mailed fees Agents wantei DAVIS ft RANKIN BLDG. & UFO. & Cor. Randolph ft Dearborn Sts., Chicago. ECUCATIQ3AL. AGflD&My OfTflE SAGRE.D HEART Th win Gf lrurtr Hob to tW Attdemr, eondurtd by ih heiitflonj of Ut tecitd Hert, embnrfi lh hcl Ian of subjects & ary weontttun and sduratfua. Propriety of d?p tmeat, pei tonal Aiasr tbs print pies of tnuimiity ar ofr ttiHsq mr attention Extend ground af for4lhspuH svsry facility Isf useful bodl y ihsir health U of constant o k tods, t la tick they ar sttrn i sriih ma tenul car Fan tei open lusaday, Sepi. For further pa tlffiiiira, aidrsM t ad jsrtf tt Ac my IHKMPKHIUh, , ftcr4 Heart, at, j JusM-ph- Iowa College of Law Offers special Adrantft.rs to youny person become Lawyer. For cialofu wiMilnjt wrli rof. V, g, McSctt, Moines, low A UTAlOGOe ft. rtqpctpqaonfimnra IfNSION.fiZ&fitfS.VV UltffiS'lLteTOCSLVSlSlt hlasi war, jm attaieefe IIBinr M hllllDel I FIO I jAJRT'alou. R. Fa.wr, I Oro.IAL bus tlM. iuxskaMor.k. Y. w, 3. A hen I., 1 Omaha 33, IMS. snswerinc iSvertlnemenu kindly mention tLU paper. non-laye- Uwtfto In ttmtk 1PE tv fimsnrstm. NSUMFhTIO v |