A ANA SASS so i ——————— i. sin OS PO so - son BRA C—O: FTAA a AI Twas then turned out and packed for | BROKERS IN INVENTIONS, shipment. a p—- — Uisappearance of the Unserupiions Specs FEEDING AND REARING CALVES. ulator—Odd ideas. The dairy cow Chimney to Cost $50,000, Dencon Shaw's Philosophy. Deacon Shaw's philosophy in Peabody News: The other fellow's alway % looks Casy . x ’ Ii don’t amount to much it is some else's fault, of course Ah » 9 men have fought for a bluffing would have the work you ong [Lots oe point when gained it. * * 2 The workman always has the | biggest pile of “letters of recommenda A gigantic chimney, which will cost $50,000 and will be 360 feet in height when ¢ ompleted, is in course of erection for the Oxford Copper Works Com pany, near Bayonne, N. J. The chim ney is intended to distribute high in the air the smoke and gases which hither- to have hung over Kill von Kull and New York Bay. The work of con- ¢ struction is being done from the inside, | Hon. * % %* You sce thimgs every a small elevator carrying material to | day at which you sneer, but you would | the workmen. The huge stack, built of | ¢ry i you read about them in a novel radial perforated brick, will weigh 3600|* * * A good way to keep from cry BLACK OR YELLOW tons when completed, Ing 1s to place a dollar in front of you | WILL XEEPYOU DRY It will be the largest chimney | and look at it steadily in the worl the | est being stac 4 great HOTHING ELSE WiLL | 2» the world, fie largest being » stack [4 | LOOK FOR ABOVE TRADE MARK TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES - CATALOGUES FREE SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS A.J TOWER CO. BOSTON. MASS. ie law of recompense is ever in | Stewart and Girard, The latter s eration olorado miner has | tyne. collected hard lal rand 3 alle no: m hieves in Boston, but |gicrif oh ha Dr. Bull S Cough h 2 | 3 n not Chm im gianc fo } whic} C Li ' m i 1 aston capitalists who | Syrup i! should never suckle { her calf for more than three days. | Bome advocate taking the calf away as soon as dropped. According to Pro- knows, are sense; left to realize great profit from their work. They offer a nolden opportunity to business men, who are not slow to take advantage of i Two types of men make their liv- One is the legitimate broker of inventions, 1 are not 80 many speculators as there to he 20 years ago. Mi: fortunes out The most one who Iuventors, as deficlent in themselves every one TT business LIME IN WHEAT AND STRAW. they seldom There {8 only about a pound of lime fessor A. M. Boule, of the Tenn in 1,000 bushels of wheat, and about Experiment Station, the calf should five pounds in the straw. The entire| gq... 1, py tnered betore it 1s taken mineral matter of a thousand pounds from the dam. This clears tae akin of | of wheat, after the water and volatile effete’ matter and i matters have been driven off, may be circulation. It rondensed into about thirteen pounds, this be in a Including the lime, soda, magnesia, ,,.4 .ondition and this aids in the de- potash, etc. This may vary according y of its strength. After it is to the soll and variety of wheat, \ velopment but as g “ of simple-minded Inver | wheat contains but little lime it bie y that other foods, such done, the calf may be removed with le that of should be used in is ‘ f notal ht ten patents both wheat and corn. Poorest inventor other the " a ing out of hie materially aids the is very important calf is 1 second as | BPeculator, the thing tnat here done, as the weak - § Tide] T t mnare mage fhe Law Of Recompense. it to compare those tors CARE was from a $2 £3) vears cleared nea poor fellow and In {| necessar as the legumes, with out suffering. In all stances it ; : JOUR rh should receive the fir ’ y a grea connection in Washington for the : next ten This + purgative trum. contains 1 iy A milli Cures a cough or cold at once and in Conquers croup, bronchitis, grippe and consump % J in nature . 4 . mining thieves in - . . dollars on the in tuis country i \ x? 5 7 ' canal of GROW MORE CORN : and Sure. than any laxative known, Its action is marvelous, its effect immediate, No remedy will cure constipation and quickly and with absolute! y no discomfort as Hunyadi Janes Average Dose: One-half glassful « Every druggist and gencral wh > in the world sells it. for the full name, "BLUE! Label with ‘Hunyadi Janos, Red Centre Panel. Sole Importer: Firm of ANDREAS SAXLEHNER, 130 Fulton 5t., N. Y. TLLIONS of Women Use CUTICURA SOAP, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, the great skin cure, for preserving, puri- fying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chalfings, in the form of baths for annoying feritations and inflammations, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women and mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nur- sery. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and beautifiers to use any others. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleans- ing ingredients and the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicatedsoap is to be compared with it for preserving, puri- fying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic folle! soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery, Thus it combines in ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, viz.1 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, the BEST skin and complexion soap, and the BEST toilet and baby soap in the world, Complete —— and intornat Treatment for very | H @ticura £5 Ps EE Sh THE SET, $1.25 Specific Directions, A Genuine Income ¥ od Bodies. t of Thousands pol Thousands. | Health and Strength are Within Your Grasp. Strong and Well, f Brain the Great Restorative and Nerves. and verywhere weaken our finally k, and the energy ¢ and life and from right source, will be shattered n heart failure, death tration, Beware of auch known druggist, ton, 328% Park Charles Avenue, from ners following letter telli way “Some time ago I was prostrat my nerves and « to ge taken ffered terribly ould get no gleep fearfully exhausted, in torr i ¢ condition fa, and 1 « id eat hardly jon. | su with I used several medicines but with. be mal: Being in yo drug busi and having had many in the highest terms Nerviura blood and remedy, | determined to try it After taking only one-half bottle | be feel much better “1 slept soundly at night, and my After taking . I ate three gouare meals not the slightest dis were perfectly strong apeak Greene's and had My nerves cured of all my troubles. “Out of the respect "bear the manu. and nerve remedy, and my desire to have the sick and sufferir ~ made well and strong. 1 unhesitati~~ly say that this medicine fa the best and most wonderful remedy known today. “It does just what is sald of it, it cures disease. Don't hesitate to use it, sufferers, for you will never regret it You will be made well and strong.” As this letter ia from a dealer in medicine, his word fs authority on such matters. Everybody knows that Dr. Greeng's Nervura blood and nerve romedy is the great leading medicine of the age. Take it and you will be made strong, healthy and vigorous, Doctors recommend it because it ia the prescription of a physician, and because they know it cures. Dr. Greene, the most successful spe- cialist In curing nervous and chronie diseases, discovered it. He can be consulted free, personally or y letter, at bia office, 356 W. 14th Bt. Now York The farmers who are feeding out timothy hay, ana seeing nelr eign bors ] selling load aft ile their lition milk ood price, RB od CON EIVINE morte how i the ut utter was AYE The milk ter was made was th gle day and was eight patrons have beeni not and good care i" th milk. They must cool and is drawn from keep the milk at a low temperature in a clean, well-ventilated room. They not, however, let it freeze As milk was taken in at the every can was carefully before it was poured iuto tne can. It was heated tu of eighty to eighty-five patrons take i aerate 11 2 soon as it the cow the cream- examined weighing a temperature uegrees nd T crea 4 y cooled to seve The cream was then cooled t «A per cent. of good whole milk starter added. The secure uniform ripening was tested with the and when thirty-seven cuble centi- to fifty-six degrees and placed in 2 churn. The proper amount of butter color was added and churning began. it took about fifty minutes to get the butter into granuie# the size of wheat grains. The buttermilk was then drawn off and the butier washed twice with water of tne same temperature as the buttermilk. As soon as the butter had drained well, it was salted at once at the rate of one and one-eighth ounces of salt to a pound of butter. The churn was then revolved slowly #0 that the salt would become properly mixed with the butter. As the churn is a self-working one, the rollers were started at once and the butter worked three minut+s, It was then allowed to stand one hour, when It was again worked for three minutes. The butter doht Bilt r Crop farmer more to grow undred pounds five pounds of taining phates, mineral potash, lime, magn« soda, ete, all of whic from the But for the wheat commands a ready price ket, and is in demand over the whole world, the straw would be of equal value as the grain i on the farm. The fodder from corn is more costly to produce than the grain but the grain is the marketable por- tion. The farm is the place for the ‘1 $011 in mar considered as foot or which is too bulky for transportation, but the fact ers to piace a low value upon them and allow much to be wasted that could be rendered serviceable, If an article can be reserved for future use, or can be added to the farm, it is sold in reality Just as surely as if sent to market, and every ounce of such product that is ap- propriated to a special purpose, with the view of deriving a return in the future, is disposed of in a manner simi. lar to a sale. The transaction may not be a cash one, but it is an investment, and brings a profit as large, and often isrger, than when products are sent off the farm to market. Philadelphia Record. Man proposes, but judging from the number of bachelors he often gots left. # BOY CHORISTERS. Which the Choirmaster hes His Choir. Subtle Ways in Replenis { 4 ¥ ins Od Of an ex- unfamiliar. 1 courage- perience 8 When the i OUR Ones art MW 51 1 : half of them will be So that the found worth the promising hundred recruits have dwin master AinIGE. three under hie choir ‘8 eve, to a meager five or six. Thankful for this sca least, he begins trainin pany. A single rehearsal, and more excuses begin to come in boy has decided that rehearsals take too much time from his play. That boy has chanced to mention the choir practice at home, and for some reason or other his parents withdraw him; and so on until even the scant remain- der of the original array has sunk to a mere two or three, and, with a sigh, the choirmaster thanks the propitious fates for these. Then the naster begins to exercise his ingenuity in other directions. He offers a bonus to the members who will bring in other boys. Sometimes this device works admirably; the flourish- ing choir of St. James' Church, of which Mr. Henry Hall is master, is F maintaned almost wholly in this man ner. In other instances, a boy will persuade his friend to remain until the bonus is paid, and then, having receiv ed his share of the reward, the new re- cruit departs again on his way. Truth. then This the A Fish Story. “What sort of language does that ignorant codfish talk?" asked the lobe ster of the sea urchin, “Oh, I suppose it's some kind of Fia- nish,” replied the urchin. —New York Commercial Advertiser.