STRAINING THE MILK. The ordinary fine wire strainer does not remove all the impurities from milk. In additien to straming through wire, milk should be also strained through four thicknesses of butter cloth, may be fastened to the wire strainer with a tin ring to slip over it. soluble impurities will with the milk. pass A SMALL SILO. | cattle a sufficient of food. For fifteen head ‘of silo ten by ten fect will hold ensilage to supply ter. The silo should be strong, as there is considerable lateral pressure. June is an excellent time for growing ensilage, and it is the cheapest food that produced on a farm for live stock. can be | S FOR SEED. crops that may be A will pro- wng them being GROWING CROP ‘There are grown ior vide food for pot sO severa millet, fl ower, If they are of as fodder, through a feed cutter and ding, or thrown nothing will be lo be valuable for the rghum, these but | but if used fo manure heaj while the seed will wile the seed will MITT i poses de sired. KILLING CUT WORMS, The poisoned bait for cut made by mixing at the rate of one poun of Paris green po nds. of | the latter first but dry enough to crumble. 3 little sugar or to it mor mix cut green cl t, that birds may no it up, but the parts. Put spoonfuls or along the rows where very plenty, worms wil be found dead there not it where + poult Larger anit to up en but it is better to bury We do not ky would d estroy the Boston Cultiv worms to hity noistened a Ls make above are fit Of IL just bet prefer use me Hass ok pic evote te h 1s no small 4 are negiect 3 semble a wilder a grox er tO with shade gates and shrubl dead but little evade to ‘plant edge of the yar by m the best of shade ung ed ness re trees walks bery should be pruned, trees ren shade, | v : thav ny as the : uriantly bushes around are 1 and Epes lly as as th bs are and erfectly unsightl should grow If the view i ai r pass freely, + h 8 scessary f proper ; janmtary c 115t : ' 1c low ilo p 1€ young tre ing no of the gr ‘ 1 sep} $ HINOS und thus WOOD AL WAYS HAND. While wood ste are not as rion on the farm as in former years they will always be used by many house- wives, particularly in timbered sections Where woad stoves summer or winter, th 3 sity of constant and supply is apparer to anyone who has for years used ood | for heating purposes. Many farmers | neglect wood cutting until too late for | working up the summer supply. As a resalt the wood pile often low and in many cases housewives have difficulty | in getting enough. This difficulty can be easily overcome by using power saws and preparing the stove wood the latter part of winter or in early spring, when work in the field is impossible. Most farmers now have 8 windmill, a threshing engine or a tread | power for other purposes. By expend- ing a little more money and securing a | good saw, the matter of preparing the. | summer wood supply will be a small | item. The saw formerly was an expen- | sive part of the outfit, but manufactur- | ers have put cheap and effective ones on | STOVE ON Yes Com - : ther + CILET In a liberal is the market, and there is now little excuse | for not having a ldrge amount of stowe wood always on hand It may not pay a farmer to purchase an outfit simply for his own use, but as | in the case of a man who buys a thresh- ing Machine, a corn sheller, a corn shred. der’ and the like, one farmer can do the | worl for many families. The outfit can be ‘placed in a low wheel truck wagon and easily moved from place to place. If the threshing engine is not available, a two-horse tread power is the most satis- factory for sawing stove wood, kind can be operated by three men. Where a steam engine is used, as high as forty cords a day can be sawed. Sticks! of cord wood are sawed into three pieces | to fit the common cook stove, In addition to the many power saws on the market, there are quite a number of improved hand saws, which greatly | lighten the work for the men who oper- ate them. There are many forms of these advertised extensively, All of them have their good points. They are vastly suverior to the old buck saws i i i being not only more rapid, but les | England Home- | stead GROUND BONE AS FERTILIZER As a fertilizer for certain purposes ground raw bone deserves a high place if it is the genuine article, and is very! Much of that which is sold for that purpose is not fine enough | only requires too long to be come available, but in some cases nevet becomes $0, as it seems to become coated or glazed over so that the acids of the | soil cannot act upon it. The bone is adapted for a fertiliz for field and not not lizer -rops, or for general uge upon light soils, table matter it is good for seeding down | to grass, as its decay in the soil may re- | quire years during all of which time it is | feeding the Yet we think we have found better results from using | it around grape vines and the bush fruits | in any other way. There is nitro- | 1 enough so that when used in the | early spring it will promote a good rowth of fruit and a juicler and better | red fruit than would grow without | certainly lacks potash, and unles soil its effects would be using half of muriate potas make wood The must depend t grass crop. 1 than gC | im- | about the of the hy ise to number hardy. and | 1s generally RTANCE OF GOOD CULTI VATION most +d Ga Ww her n the y Su GC. 0% WORN BY WOMEN. The women of Greenland are limited COLORS which are typical of their position life. A single girl may wear a married woman, whose husband is liv- ing, blue; a widow, black, and a convict green, There are no prisons, a dis- tinguishing ribbon is necessary to mark those who are outcasts among their fel- lows. £0 A GLIMPSE OF “THE DUCHESS.” AMERICAN To my attractive Paris tea-rooms, them, may be seen m sentative fashionable of the day, and from to time En glishwomen whose names on many tongues. I saw the Duchess of Marl- borough there the other afternoon. She was in her royal rning, all black, and is an exceedingly tall and slender young woman, with an incredibly long neck and a lelicate, pretty face I was surprised, had heard she was pretty Bonner's Paris Letter. of all the Here, if knew any of the repre- Frenchwomen and characteristic one time arc "e mou stall, for Ge ne inc ralc A SINGER'S CHARMING HOME. Mme. Melba's re Cumberland charming homes in Lor saloon, which aroun King Edward, wus of famous artists Palace of Versailles. The divas apartments are very beautiful quaint diamond mirrored and ac partition that divides her dressing-room and bathroom was designed by herself The bed, which is placed upon a stan and fitted with a draped priceless lace, is the One Dauphin of France of royal state T he room is of amt piece bears a Ewers of of the general decor room and through are countless place 1s Se from own The ijustable Canopy on whic his pent amber tort large rarest Sevres gilt, 1 tlvpe SLVET solid greatly m head-gear able Little points and the entire pincappie black cher are im visibl i or The he same ® it ¢ i ed cr p great i 3 i y pigs those that root ire turned tt as s0O0n as Roots generally digest Study the animals. his respect—gener It is said that soft butter can died by feeding the cow some potatoes. It 1s at least worth a trial dai are in 1¢ pastu ugh $ clover effect ® sposition men they are old enc 3 and vegetables or have a ial wrgans of the he hay | benefic upon the ve « and di are of i in | nature They ike ally differ. Jur ¥e th be reme- should look out for “milk factory” as any other manufacturer does Every dairyman just A dairyman who does not use a sep- arator gests only about seventy-five per cent. of the butter-fat that his cows have given him Lawn clippings make green food for poultry. an excellent Never mix fresh warm milk with that which has been cooled. In hot weather cover the milk cans, when moved in a wagon, with a clean If you have not an abundant supply Immediately after furrowing, feed the nothing but slops, not swill, to A milk-tester will test the cows and test the dairyman as well. He can find out just how much butter-fat he is get- ting and can figure out if his butter ac- count agrees with it, If milk is stored, it should be held in tanks of fresh, cold water (renewed | enough to prevent forming a thick cream { layer. The Street Railway Journal is author. ity for the statement that there is not a that is not adding week by week to its gross earnings, which is accepted as con- clusive evidence of the general prosper. ity of the country. DESIGNS CHURC DOWS SHE A woman in Milwaukee mal reputat winning wealth by designing and church windows. She not signs the windows a design in colors upon ths the some assistance hers elf young wi and 13 m only na reproduces the glass, but with manages the the colors are burn- Marie Herndl is the artists name, she 1s now making her fortune. Before coming to this country she a reputation in Germany and from the fir she received important commis- At the World ed a window geventeen by six feet, which she received a medal and diploma 5 1 = maae as windows depicting scenes in the life of Christ for a church in San Francisco. She has been at work on this for a year take two years altogether to complete it. FOUNDING A COLLEGE OF MAT- RIMONY. The most important freamed of is about to be established in Chelsea, England. It is to Le called the College of Matrimony, and the woman who has pursued the requisite two years’ course of study will be graduated as college yet long to a full-fledged wife. had found frequent opportunity to know in his experience as a teacher that the hi on a un country. The special course which is being planned for the College of Matrimony is designed with a view to making home life a business. The school for wives is gauged for the homes of the comfort- able middle class in England, though the range of studies is so complete that its graduates will be liable to catch many us wealthy man, for the curriculum of studies embraces not only cooking, dressmaking, millinery, needlework, laundry and general housewifery, but deals with physiology, medicine, physical culture and all that relates to health and the treatment of ordinary diseases in the family ~Boston Globe. 3 ad march through an unknown | GIRLS PACK TRUNKS FOR A LIV. ING, “Packing trunks for a living is not an original with me,’ said | Blanche Minton, looking up from seat on the floor beside { which she was busy filling. “Of course the incentive was | necessity of making some money, idea | article begin, when I read a newspaper about a girl who earned good a ‘bride's assistant.’ One duties was i od was such a good one that I thought { what a fine thing it world | we if every: body would pack did remembered how the { disliked to pack, and in | thoughts traveled to the | palatial hotel just down the { where 1 was boarding, half an hour after reading about the ‘bride's assist: : cided as to a profession, “Having made up my mind I at et out to offer my services to the man ager of the hotel. 1 told him my plans about packing trunks for guests hotel and asked him to recommend me He advised to have engraved, stating my te he would see that they office and o would mu of “us as she some way ped ple and in less the I had de ant,’ mc me some cards rms, and said were 1 1" i distributed wh st pr them and schedule owner) the riments ers wh y the hotel mar ny celerity. Ane ink tis impress; in ey ery one his belongin gi are about all 1 have adde of trunk packing described paper article to which 1 referred “1 see no reason why cvery large h uld not need the services of : acker { in the news have ymparatively few women travel with their meet the th to pack } rd-Herald Broad many thin gowns, shaped collars are worn with Dotted Swiss is again to enjoy a vo. There has never been found a satisfactory subititute for this delightful material Quite a feature of the season's modes in floral garniture, is the use of mul titudes of the tiniest form of “pompon” or Banksia rosss Silk gowns are always useful and at to be rather a fad of the miomens t Red parascls sing such a gay note mer resorts that they are chosen by many because of their decorative possibilities Pleated skirts are everywhere in evi and many of the satin, taffeta and peau de sole boleros are pleated to correspond, the stitching added, giving Linings are growing very important Colored foundations are almost univer. sal, and an idea that is growing in favor is to line the ruffles on a skirt with some Few rufdes are put on straight around the skirt. The line is broken by points or curves or a graceful gradation Whk: the high line of trimming is used still in the back the trimming in front is not as low as it was last year. King Edward Has Many Cuests, A very noticeable circumstance is the number of distinguished peopte-—politi- cal, official, diplomatic and sccial-who have dined with his Majesty during his visit to Windsor Castie, says the London Free Lance, This is especially remark able because during the last reign the late Queen more often dined with her family alone in the sm~ll dining room called the Oak Room. The King, how- ever, has introduced the practice St hav- ing 8 good-sized dintuer pasty every day. ! 4 bos 9 £0 5 ODD ROMANCES IN HONEY, | —————— CASES SETTLED BY THE TRE URY'S REDEEMING DEPARTMENT, Work of Feminine Experts—A Memory PEAT CHANGED INTO ELECTRICITY. Cermans Will Utilize Ensrmos Deposits of Turf Fuel. r the for tran tion is Accomplished~ Continental Bills Offered For Redemption, There was received a division of the Treasury the Washington Post, an famning a mas hard, but nce been water 4 { roeriiah 3 Of greens: 1 wir STOWInNg ror ompanying explained stance had once been had be found : the storm at Cralves fered fi r reden i np i 5 res nw » there was receive MPress " on 1 he won «dempt ACNE and the rety turn nils were the South 1 mney, Ignorant elsewhere, people in and particularly fre in large quantities of Con believing the Government will redeem them The Government negroes, send 1 balls, sl quently federate formerly held that was not entitied « it redeemed, and when turned into the Treasury it was kept there for the owner. This rule has now been changed profits, colored man took to the Treasury twe £30 notes, which he said he had found on an ash heap. Although badly soiled negro got the $100. Another Washington negro not long ago took to the Treasury a large pack of bills, the ground and were badly water-soaked the pieces and patching them together the resurrected roil was more than $3. 500. The negro explained that he had buried the money to get it away from ap went to the place of burial to get out 3 emall amount he found that the entire store had beea ruined. The work of identifying mutilated money is not always pleasant. One day jagt week an instalment was received from Florida, with the explanation that it had been damaged in the fumigation of a house where a man had died from «smallpox. Money found on people who have been drowned is frequently re. ceived, and its condition is usually such that it has to be picked to pieces and the fragments pasted on a backing of paper. The odor from money received is often offensive, and while working ot a particularly bad job Mrs, Brown am Miss Smith frequently burn incense or their desks. The history of the redemption divisior of the Treasury is calculated to explode the theory that paper money is a grea! spreader of disease germs. An average of $1,000000 of paper money in its very worst forms of dirtiness is handled and counted three times every working day in the year, without serious results. UNI AFF iid be {er i #y Proposes it bread A wom her phere of village to bet £10 her ildren, and on the The mind ETOWS when occu ~ perpetually with trivialities A reading is a good tonic. of ignorance we do we beiray ourselves — ray by compass servant on the west by her allments, Ci lothes 1 ia by ch south by her PT shallow course of solid Uy ua not know when An Ancient Custom Preserved. From time immemorial 2 most extra ordinary custom has been observed on Mondays at Hollaton, in Lei- cestershire, and to-day is to be no excep- tion to the general rule. In order to re- to indulge in the doubtful pleasure of But before loaves have to be scrambled for. A huge wooden bottle, bound round with iron rims and containing ale, is thrown on the ground and the men of the neigh- boring village of Medbourne have to wrest it from the Hallatowan grasp. It is hardly necessary to add that the strog- gle is invariably provocation of a good many casualities of one form or another. When the battle has been won the victors drink the contents of the bottle. The bottle to be nsed to-day has done duty for just one-half a century, Mere Opinion Love laughs at locksmiths, but is gen erally willing to seriously consider the combination of the safe, 1: is a wise doctor who knows when to quit calling around. 1f the eyes are the windows of the soul a good many people keep their shades drawn. hicage Record-Herald,