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Show v. V A Disappointed Du Bow much doe the government allow toe?" Mid a citizen to the income tax collector. ' "Four thousand dollar, Mid the DAIRY ANI) FOULTRY 1NTEPESTING CHAPTERS OUR RURAL READERS L t i Here it a, statement of my income, then." and he handed a paper to I mic llo taruura Operate this ho looked at it hams representative, Department of the I i'm I eur Him and then observed with some watiuth as tii, the tare of Lise Mock ml of feelingr You bare no occasion to file thiw. roullr. It shows an income of only J1.20U. lou dont need to tile a statement unless I' S T EI) H E your income is f 3,50Q or more Didnt you Myths law allowed me states consul at - j i 1 4,000? Yes VValV my Incorns - was 1,SW atu file so that the got eminent Can fire me the difference, which 1 fipwre out to be $2,800. When do 1 qajs ,Chtn-Kian- g that the use of ju TtuU'U-tn- g eggs has been known and practiced in. China for nt get It?" After much expostulation the citizen wm led out into the cool air. Pittsburg Chronicle. several hundred years It Is a large and profitable Industry, but the apparatus used is of Tha Cabby's Wall. A dealer. - t does cot prevent selling skim milk on account of this standardv established, but provides a heavy penal-tfor not niaikiiig the cans in which it it fot whole milk is oldr-- o when it u skimmed Another provision that will interest the shippers of this section is that the contractors shall clean the cans before returning theta to the farmer. This is a provision that would hardly seem necessary, jet there is no quest ion but what the farmersare put to an immense amount of trouble and labor to put the isns in condition to hold milk after they have been knocked about for several daj's In the summer time with milk left In them, which gets rancid and fairly decayed. TWlnteTesttnfermtsnnr of chi law hi the perce nfuAs of solid and fat that Js provided for as standard. 'It would hardly seem, necessary to provide so low a standard as even 2.7, but 3 per cent is certainly giving even the poorest farmer and the poorest cow a chance to come into the procession and be acknowledged first class. Elgin Dairy Report. for-scit- Philadelphia cabby" delivers himThe very primitive self of this bit of philosophy: description. lie Halting Uailn on Cows Devil ain't aa black as he's painted, an' hatching house Is usually a long shed, The question of raising lambs on a woman ain't always as blond as she s built of bamboo, the walls plastered with mud and thickly thatched with cows' milk has been discussed to rome bleached. Ua cab drivers ha6 de of doin' everybody, but nobody straw. Along the ends and down one length In the National Stockman. Writdont know how often we gits done up side of the building are a number of ing in that paper J. M. Jamison Mys: The first point necessary to make It ourselves. An data straight, see. round straw baskets plastered with Why, only la6t week two ladies done mud to prevent them taking fire. A a success is to have plenty of milk, end me up out of aix hours. I'd been drivin tile forms the bottom of each basket. It is best for the lamb grower to make lm about town all night. About free Upon this the heat aets, a small fire- calculations ahead. We now'have over repu-tatio- n o'clock in de piormn (ley stopa me in front of a little street an' tells me to wait while dey goes in to make a call on a lady fr'en. I was a little boozy myself about that time, an I waited an hour, see? bhow up? Naw!" Milestones Ou the Roed Tbat leads to health are marked In thi memory of those who, at regular stage and persistently, have been conveyed thither by Hostetler stomach hitlers, a potent suv off of nuture In her place being below each basket. Upon the top of the basket there Is a straw cover, which fits closely, and is kept shut during the process. When the eggs are brought they are put In the baskets, the fire Is lighted beneath them, and a uniform heat maintained. In four or five days after the eggs have been subjected to this temperature they head of lambs, the oldest about two weeks old. Have lost several, but 'still have more than a lamb to the ewe. Have not had so much cows milk we would have liked, but have saved quite a number of lambs by its use. We bought a half gallon coal oil can, changed the spout from the top to near the bottom on one side, made end of SO efforts lo throw lll&ry the yoke of disease Malarial kidney, rheumatic and bUlious trouble, constipation and nervousness their departure hen tills lienlgnant medicine Is reburied to for their eradication them to suck. If such a thing Is not. at hand a little cloth may be rolled up nuj have a strong piece of cloth tied ovr it and over can spout, whieh will j quite as well. To do well the lamb should be fed at lei t eight times a day for the first two weeks aud alwavs on fresh milk. After this, it may be gradually dropped down to lne or six times. When three or four wteks old may have the milk for drawn three times a da, but for a louple of months the milk should al-- t te warmed up to 100 degrees every time the lamb Is fed. an-w- er as Outlook for C'ftttl. steer- - ars not sa scuree just now as they once were In llutiilred-dallar- ., Aa rnwarrantable Interruption. the 'markets, but none oT theui 'havo been found to be scrubs up to date, j says the Nebraska Farmer. And it is believed that figures relative to the pro- - J ductlon of this class of cattle will show ( the most economical way to the manu- - j facture of good beef. The situation la ROYAL BAKINO POWDER CO., 10 WALL certainly one full of encouragement to T., NEW YOAK. the producers of high grade beef cattle. There 1b one thing about the cattle business that distinguishes It In a ladlgaaat, Pro(rM ef Medical Seleeee. marked way from any and all other There used to be an old porter at a and Inoculating have beGrafting meat producing Interests. This thing Is come so general in the medical profes- certain Irish railway station who waa the fact that it requires years to readhave brought about such more remarkable for independence of and sion, just an unbalanced state of affairs as to excellent results, Mys the Brooklyn character than attention to hla dutlea requirements of trade, whereas In the Kagle, that the whole of medical prac- On one occasion two of the director ccse of hogs or Bheep It only requires tice in the future may resolve itself were traveling over the line and ip months to do this. There is at present into these forms of treatment Then ticed that the name of this station wao on acknowledged dcflelt in numbers of wilt the physician go about with a hy- not called, the neglect being- the more good stockers and feeders In the coun-tisyring and a little box of serious a it was a Junction.- This waa podermic there is a marked shortage of fat vials of lymph and a small paper of made the subject of complatntrnnd who was delinquent, was cattleas all know, and the herds of grafts, and life will have no terrors breeding cattle throughout the entire unleM one has so many disease at once promptly brought to book and repricountry have suffered decimation In , that he has to carry eight or ten vac-- manded. their ranks from the fact of unprofitable cinations on his person at one time. Own RtUarst , Mnk Yob prices for young stock. All these things Last week a New Jersey boy who had On receipt of 80 rest to U. 8. etsmpe, t have been going on under the noses of celebrated the fourth of last July by will eai to any addreee one package Bte-LLreeders for years, steadily but surely carrying lighted fire crackera in hia Dry Bittere. One package makes pocket, bad over 10,000 pieces of one gallon beM tonic known.1 Cura item s groat appeakin grafted on him, and be is doing so h, kidney aisaanea, and well that with 15,000 more It la believed tizer and blood purifier. Jat the medicine 2&c. at summer. and needed for epring that h will recover. About 200 men etore. Addreee Uo. O. and boys have yielded up their precioua your drag Grand Kapids. Midi. cuticles to accomplish their result, and to do le th will boy willing perhaps Hie Itnekledge. vs much for them some time. Teacher Now, Charlie, tell U wfcst Tobacco Destroys Vitality you know shout Crtesu. Nervous system paralysed by nicotine mesas Charlie Dudes wear- - em in their lost manbood, weuk eyes, and a pants. Columbus City and Country. look and feeling that rots life of pleasure Tobacco 1' lne root of ntunv an Impotent a guaranteed cure II -- (nan's Camp Oar lee wit h Ol jreetrl aa symptom, and y, that will make you strong, vigorous end happy in more wavs than one Nii guaranteed and sold hy Druggists every here Hook, or Smoko Your Life titled "Don't Tobacco Address Sterling llouieJy Co., New Away. York or LLkago said a private but would you was the crime of 1673? said the orator, abruptly, after a few moments' awkward hesitation, "we cant have the meeting interrupted by malicious ene- Tlva Old Man's Ida. said Mr! Jason, stopping Chicago Record. girl with them Kissing must be ta'gh the same as into a gingham snnbonnet, low bad to do when I wm a cry Probable. Washington Star: Y'ouhave brought new sunshine into my life, he said rapturously. Do vou mean that, she asked timidly. Of course 1 mean it Can you doubt me?" Oh, of course I know you wold n't intentially misrepresent, lint you know a young man so often thinks a girl has brought sunshine Into Tits life when, in reality, it's only moonshine. 1 Journal. e The word owes no man not willing to work for it. s bring who fe WE GIVE AWAY- Absolutely free of cost, for a LiniTED TinE ONLY, Tha People Common Sense Medical Ad river. By R.V. Pierce, M D , Chief Consulting Physician to the Invalids Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, a book of over 1,000 large pages and 300 colored and other illustrations, In strong paper cover to any one sending at cents in one-cestamps lor and postage only. Over 6vo,ooo packing Book Doctor of comes this complete Family already sold tn cloth binding at Tegular : Address ( with stamp. and price of Ji.yx this Coupon) World's Disfkivsabt Medical Association, No. 66j Mata Street, ttuffalo, N. Y. Arker$ HAIR BAL8AM Chanm mad WwufM taxunant tb tali, fiMtor 0n OQLfefml Dolor. l( ktif feting. jn a kaa moo, tLikmlirai " lasrlaim,. aujBUua. -a , iMtT u. x. i - owAhAvertlavmeat V, hen snswerlk od meatkia ttiia pat'- - kindly Sore er To grow In grace, we most wot as pray. h m well nt sleeves on It the Dati? is Catting Tenth. tunneling I sue and me Ut M sad Una like a fel- WuuLOWe Sootnun Srnvr tor CUldrenrwnr, Teething. boy. ft ui b.-- nt-fe- HitcA-eac- be at n Inderrerna I. a alia.la remt if, toe torn. nnewa.a,ia mm at urugglat. pteusui. Madras walking a SUSSEX HEIFER. are taken carefully out, ofle- by one, to a door, in which are a number of holes nearly the size of the eggs. They are held against these holes, and the attendants, looking , through them, are able to tell whether they are good or not In nine or ten days after this, that Is, about fourteen days from the commencement, the eggs are taken from the baskets and spread out on shelves. Here no fire heat is applied, but they areFovered over with cotton and a klnd"of blanket, under which they remain about fourteen daj-- s more, when the young' chicks break their shells and come forth. The natives enin this business know gaged exactly the day when the young chickens or ducks will come forth, and are ready for their arrival. They are generally sold two or three days after they are hatched. . - Pomfi Fmiltry !CKttnn. western poultry raiser makes the following observations: The Inside arrangements of a henhouse should be made movable, so that In cleaning out or whitewashing, the nests and roosts may be easily carried outside. A childs broom 1b far better to use In whitewashing than a whitewash brush. We keep lime where our fowls can have free access to it, and almost any time In the day there may be seen one of two or more fowls picking over the lime pile. Charcoal hi another essential; the fowls need It; sharp grit they must have or they will not remain healthy very long. Many a chicken dies with cholera, simply for the want of grit, or gravel. I am often asked which Is beet to set h ns, on or above the ground. I think there is little difference where she ie placed; if she has good fresh eggs and is not molested she will probably make a good hatch. A setting ben ought to have a nest large enough to turn around In, but not so large that ehe can not gather the eggs up under her and keep them soug and warn; if a nest is so flat that the eggs keep rolling out from under the hen every time she mores, they will get chilled one at a time, and the consequence is a poor hatch. Setting hens should he dusted heavily w ith tn-- sect powder two or three time daring the three or four weeks It takes her to for Ilee bring oft a brood of chickens, cause a great uneasiness - to setting hens. A A ruiZE-AVIJkNK- IN ENGLAND FROM FARMERS' REVIEW. f- a woman died at Albany, N. s number of years been possessed with an uncontrollable desire to swallow all sorts of indigestible substances. A record kept by the physi dan who performed the autopsy gives the following as a list of the article hairfound in her stomach: Fifty-o- n pins, 10 needles, 3 darning needles, 33 nails of all sizes, two screws, 8 pieces of an iron rod three inches long and h of an inch thick and 3 rolls of hair. Solvs." "laaaoa'a ICagi Cora Warrmntad ta cvm w man Mfunttada Aak ItvmM fwr it trim II oeuu. Every time m m!ooq 1a lioetued, the devil's cb&in ie made one link longer For tale Bmisrd'lstus, ebson. Apnlvtoor sddrsss, U. c, Awx. til a 12th Bt. 6raaha, Jiso. truth to. pictur., sad you hsip UoJ 1, speak. In spout eo the rag wrapped around It under the nipple would not slip off when tied. Buy the best rubber nipple to be had. Cut small hole large enough for the milk to flow freely from the ran. The cow from which the milk Is taken should be as near fresh as possible. She should at any rate be In full flow of milk. Do not like to use the milk from a stripper. When the weather is very cold we pour boiling water in the can before starting to the barn, empty water out of can and milk into the can. This plan gives the milk to the lamb in the best possible shape, unless the lamb is taught to suck the cow. It is not a very good plan to milk file cow at all hours In the day and night, but when the can Is filled from vessels at the house there is trouble with the cream In the nipple. At the start the lambs should be fed every two hours, and this would doubtless be better for the lamb as a continued practice, hut it is too much trouble. We gradually widen the lime belweeS teeding to four or three times a day and once or twice each night. It is not worth while to try to raise a lamb on sklmmilk. W'e feed the milk whole as taken from the cow; do not dilute or add anything to it. The lambe should have bran and other ground feed as soon as they will eat We feed them milk till they go out to grass and a few days after. The success of this hand raising depends entirely on the care and liberality with which they are fed. With a limited amount of milk and feed the lambs wilt be limited in their make up. This spring we have used the cow's milk so far principally as a starter and help for weak ones. Sometimes tle ewe's milk Is scant for a day or two,-and with the help of the cow's milk the lamb starts off stronger.' When necessary to raise a lamb on cows milk never take it to the house. Leave It with the flock. 'About the hoe it will Te have soon become a nuisance. taught them to drink milk from a vessel the same as a calf, and this is lens trouble where many are to be fed. But if the eew is milked into the vessel and there is froth on the milk they will not drink it On the same subject J. S. Woodward says: The main difficulty In raising lambs on cow's milk id that not enough care Is taken to got as fresh a cow as possible, and then the lamb is fed too much at a time, mad not oftea enough while very young The milk of the ewe is richer inthan that of the cow, and to successfully raise lamhr on cow's milk the milk should be freshly drawn from the cow each time the lamb is to be fed for two or three weeks at least and the cow should he just fresh, and if a teaspoonfu! of granulated sugar be added to. each pint the lamb will take It better and do better on it. The milk should be wanned up to 100 degrees end not more than one gill should b fed at one time. An old fashioned lamp filler, a can with a long spout, is a good thing to use for feeding them. A rubber nipple cr a rubber finger cot with a small hole punched in the end drawn over end of spout and tied on makes a good teat for drifting along toward the day of reckoning that is now about at hand. We congratulate the breeder who has had the foresight, perseverance ahd good fortune to have been able to hold on to his good things through thick and thin, through good report and evil report, for at last the day appears to have dawned when It will be possible for him to reap his just reward for services that have been steadfast and true. With the up- ward trend of the market producers should be quick to secure the very best breeding stock at their commftnd, find farmers who keep ft class of cows ealeu- lated to raise calves for tha feed yard must now bear in mind more than ever before the saying that the bull is half 0 JS' ff.rmer buy the bull on sight you. Higher prices will be the rule all around in the very near future. W"?1? The Creamery In Vermont Cream-eripare a great help tn Vermonf it Many farmers who are Incompetent os salesmen, or who make inferior butter that does not bring the highest prices, loose money constantly until they turn over the cream to some good creamery, and thus get rid of the re. I no sponslblltty of manufacturing. tice they then began to pick up. Getting a check regularly every month, they are able to add one more cow to the herd occasionally, and if they are discreet enough to keep only the best cows in the best way the farm's capacity for supporting stock la constantly Increased, and along with It the owner's Income. The old plan of making butter in the family and selling it to local merchants is a relic of the oid times that should havq-p- place in modern agriculture. The merchants pay all they can afford to, and many don't want the butter at the price they pay. Where all thq butter of a community Is made In '.one place, with correct appointments for Its uniform manufacture, it may be depended oh to bring fair prices In distant markets. Eugene - Noyes. 1893 $150,-000,0- 00 Cauliflower for the market should be ent so as to leave about one inch of the stem on, and trim off the leaves even with the Bower, Pack In bushel boxes holding one dozen heads, or one Jayer, with face turned up. - n h, for. )rtUtaUUi ol iwl ! from CokU. K mU TU tautaftr e&c quickly ftbeurUwl mA v relief k partvie I applied Inlo M-- h' so rlt apt ft obt- -, Frtee flo struts at lit uegitt or by ami. Elf IK0TEISS, trw 83 Warren 8t.f Hew York HIGHEST AWARD WORLDS FAIR. . THE BEST PREPARED v SOLD EVERYWHERE. JOHN CARLS A 50NS, New York. ... 4 For Sprains and Bruises and all Painful Accidents, st. Jacobs on in flLL KINDS OF SFORTSt i ... Is the professionals first choice of a remedy always. 4 4 4 4 444 444 - 44 444 44 4 4 4 4 4 KTALL ABOUT THE SILVER QUESTION.-V- U COINSp FINANCIAL I ! --vSeilOGL Do you want to understand the Science of Money? It is plainly told in...... -- COINS FINANCIAL SERIES to This U a glorious opportunity or the entire series. - jeom-men- nd one-fourt- o Dogs at Work One of United State ts consuls la Belgium in his report upon the fact that in that coun- i try no dog is allowed to be idle, being as regularly used for beasts of draught as horses are here. It is estimated tn 4 Belgium that ten don wUi wccompilHn aft much work as one horse, and they even more powerful than the horse j fa proportion to their weight, as mey compute the load for the average horse at four times his weight, and for the Single dog or nalr Of docs at aix times hie or their weight It Is estimated that the dogs In the United States ought to earn for the country at least annually, and to do so would be greatly to their advantage; as their vlciousness would disappear, and the danger from rabies be greatly lessened. Ex. ti6 ftiomiU Stomach. Woman Y., who had for di-i- ds for Milk In Maaaarhaaotta. has The legislature of Massachusetts In process of passage- - a bill providing for varying percentages of fat as a standard for different months in the year. The standard aa proposed in the law is 13 per cent of total solids, with S.3 per cent of solids not fat. and 3.7 per cent of fat Another provision of this law is that during the months of May, June, July and August the standard Is 12 per cent of total solids, with 9 per cent of solids notfat and 3 per cent of fat. v Milk Inspectors are provided for, who have the privilege of inspecting the milk shipped from the country, at the depots, or in the possession of the Standard tee. rrnr CATARRH w Ion IS 4 la a ' J Teed-r- C.U.UlernOix.keW Ueea,(J Fine I86t I Lire been a Mothers wh Save Bird Harter Ginger Tania preat tuffonr from eabnrh. S tmorjihan other tmdt-dln t rroar.ln.iMih r avary term of ulitrv and w.aluthss i laid u is I tried gigs Cream Balm, and to all appearances m Tb Engagement Broken. cured. Terrible hetuUuktt 'Aoityti A Frankford bard wrote a poem to frt, i thick J And bmp art pma- - 1F.J! his inamorata which was published in leaf Major United a suburban paper. He Mid her mouth Volurthnsand A. A. waa like a cowslip. The printer spaced V. it, and it read cow's lip." Unhappy hcurral, Hugalo, A. bard! Philadelphia Record. HALL'S CATARRH CURE I a lllqud and is taken Internally, and acts direetlv upon th blood and mucous surfaces of Uir system Send for testimonials, free. Sold by Druggists Jie. V J. CHENEY ft CO., Proprs , Toledo O. old-tim- t'tiA ttped HaeU and Zaee, Cur CluilaUM.HUn.ai, Flso's Cur for Conaumtioba has ssvtd many a doctor's bill. S. F. Haspt, on Hopkins lTocs, Baltimore, Md., Psa 8, M, Gosh! the corner and fuming to get another Death is tb open door to Ure opporlook at the young woman passing by. tunities. "Put that man out, Salting a Corpse. One of the most curious burial cus toms still existing in Ireland and in bomersetshire. England, is that of placing salt upon the breast of a corpse as soon as it has been properly "laid out on the cooling board. In England, where the custom still prevails among a people who hoot the imputation of being superstitious, it is claimed that it is done in order to prevent air from getting into the corpse, and thus swelling and bloating IV Campbell and Moresin both refer to the pracsuperstitice as a survival of tious burial rites. They quole largely from ancient writers to prove that salt as an early Christians all regarded emblem of immortality and eternity, and that on such accounts it was anciently used in the manner shove mentioned. Harman is authority for the statement that the early Germans not only put salt under the tongues of their dead, but also put little cylinders of rock salt in the right hand of the sick as soon as it was learned thatsuch persons were near death's door. In most heathen countries, where all kinds of superstition prevails, salt is used at a charm in frightening away evil spirits, and it is alleged that the Patagonians frequently strangle their children to death by forcing salt down their throats to drive out devils. Economy requires that in every recriptcallingr. rsfiall ; beusci will go further antf make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome -- "1 beg your pardon,1 citizen in the audience, mies. Eport pure ABSOLUTELY i . iissssa Food -- The hand which attempts to 6trikt us now. said Ward Ioliticus, as he waved his arm defiantly over the assemblage, is the same hand which perpetrated the crime of 1873! what ft. UtestO.E. Cor. Bra-XET- ii, tkf mind telling Highest of all in leavening strength. No. t of our strlee Is BtNrriM.tni akd hr Anhbiahop Walsh of but tin. i pages. Aa able docu- Ireland, bevenlg-elgnment; Q cento. Kft a Coins Hakd Boon, by W H. Harvey. Deal with the elementary principles ef money sttd smile ike. Forty six pages: 10 rant. , No. 1 Corns Fihaucul School, by W. H. H Array. Illustrated ISO page and 64 Ulue- tratWins. o subject soordnarr gi bool tor cenunUeratartu 1l It ie rellnNo leziitoolt the of the tnttsee. thralntely a to facts and Utrarca, ud llto moat lu " entertain big boo oa the subject of mnBrJ PohwsUnd. Prim, beet edition, paper, ved cover two color. POocnta Fopu.nr edb tkm, is rams cloth, it ut No. c, am or two Natioss. br W. H. ftarrer A novel of as panes A kneiorr y of demonetization and that gives tba depict tt evU spirit and ittHuetue that hv narked the dent rue toe of American prtnpentv. A and Instructive boo. It, holds the reader with wonderful Interest from begln-nlto erd. Popular edition tents, extra quality patter to cents; la cloth. SI idLv No. ft CHAPTsiui os biLtsn. Judge 110 pages. A Henry G. Miller of Cblcjro look suitable for all thoughtful renders of tu Atoney question, paper duly, 23 cents No S. TO Dat. toms FiSASOAt. School Conn bced byW.lt. tsrvey. llltt-- t too rated, pages and 60 Illustrations It ts s history of Coin, the little flaanc cr. rine Is dial.- bis lectures to Ckuttgo 'jtimpif5ethniieii at l ,Jt secure one copy SENT POSTPAID..... rated to th vender of Cota s Fnrixcina. School, aud should only be read by those th "bcbool. Every voter In the Untied blnies should rend 1l Popular edition. cents: better paper edition. M cents; cloth, a SI HO After May I, lH, all persons ordering Coins. Financial School" to Date coin In cloth, will tex Hehool Continued, tile two books printed together tod bound la cloth for 11 DO, rent postpaid. Th two books tugetbtr make tb most complete .treatise oa. the subject ef money ever prated. Oar ft peel! OMnr. We rand th following four hooks nostpaldR fnrtlOO- Bimetal! tern and Monometallism kS cents), ( oln Hand 1 ook (10 ten lei, Con s fV esoi-la- ) School rto cent edition!, and A Tale of' Two Nations (60 cent edition) l M for 11 00. In ordering then, ray Net No. I. of books We also furnish for II W Bimetallism nodi Mbnometall.am till tents', Coin s Band Book (10 cental Colo Pinnnrial Nchool rented! tlont, A Isle of TwoNutions (2S rent edition). Chapters tn Nllvir 3cent ednlrnt, ard Ip Lens Financial School Continued edition), S6 lor fl 00. In orJennr th rooks contained ta Luis lust offer. My set Net t, of 6 books" lorouy of th foregoing took or offers remit. In stamp r. troucy order, express picflice letter, bank draft or curren.v, but Do hot ns personal checks, os tb bunks. ehrge dus lor collecting the tkorixt agents Address GEORGfi GURRIBR 1 or-e- regt-ter- ed General Acnt 194 8. Clinton St., Chicago, III. |