EFFECT OF SOIL. assist to a fertility to the Rains and snows i i 1 m adding soil, extent pounds of ammonia sulphuric per acre chlorine acid and are all the amounts acid. ' ' +} mania prougit to the though are not large, KEEP ONLY COWS PRODUCTIVE A cow that ; quarts of give the reason that ' 3 the sixteen (in that two the suria as hest should be d below and i's s¥ ills 15 Ing soil thrown on vine yard { twelve inches ixed up wn on the version of the the vines will have rich nat and put top ' SOM, sot] and make 4 - «41 i sis a growti y Hig gt I here are other complishing thi iarge holes and 3 “ meth *of partially $ result. One throw the rich sol be tow and the subsoil on the 1 wp. Another 15 10 trench mn narrow 1houst feet wide and deep, reversing the ¢ i rows two 51 SO And still another is by plowing with a follow after with a subsoil plow. method might do in louse, rich or sandy Sl, over digging holes. It is the cost of that must be considered in going mto the business on a large scale. costs about per acre, 73 in {he Epitonnst, WHERE THE TROUBLE WAS. tes, but without success. He claimed worming it would be on the verge of acidity, In passing his house one af. teznoon just as I had finished my day's wars cans, which had stood in the hot sen since early morning! The next day I tld my delinquent patron that [ had discovered the source of his trouble, and that if he would still continue to aerate and cool his milk with the same assdu- ity, and in addition see that his me: cans were thoroughly washed and scald. ed with boiling water before 8 o'clock every morning I would be almost willing 1 guarantee the quality of his milk, He did so, and we had no trouble there- alter, Even with the best facilities, coupled with painstaking efforts, it is sometimes very difficult to preserve milk quality for twelve or eighteen hours in hot weather, Many fly to ice. and depend upon that solely. But this does not nec essarily tmply good dairying. If one is upply of ice it is a valu matters, but it should be used circumspectly. Do not milk down suddenly with ice be- fore that milk has been thoroughly With pure air except in the most sultry and “muggy” have no of preserving juality without the help of ice. possessed of a aer- surrounding, and weather, | fears t ould simply aerate 11, and thus cool same time. —Dr. G. E ka Farmer, BEES AS BLIGH] ve thoroughly elect + When wasn ulturist has frun and make hie It cost tren every if done The spraying should be so thorough on every tree and on every side and tree this way will the tree absolutely guarded against attack. 1 fertiiiz- ing with ashes and manures should be in the same thorough and Not a load of either wasted. Only much as the trees and vines need should be weed, and some years the soil may get so full that nothing but a litle stirring and plowing will be needed. We do not wish to overfeed the coil lest it should get sour. Trees growing on rich soil, supplied with ashes. potash and phos. phoric acid, will grow so thriftily that they will not be very susceptible to the attacks of insects and blights, They form their own protection in the strong, vigorous growth of foot, trunk and im American He has for it the he reset and factory Ist:t the : i i irge re Salis snray the wiil fray “ HILICA UY $e SOT york and Ci part of the Only in eeu that no inerct is mitesed ’ we 1 ie Sey Cultivator. The sun spot was a little late in get- ting into the hot-wave proposition, but when it did arrive it made up for lost time by promising four years of size zing weather, —-— Soin About one-half of the world's require. ments of camphor is produced in For. mosa and about one-third in Japan. DOLL AUTOMOBILE COSTUME. Dolls as well ; saople | + taker molor wd affectat Your main obj mieresting wi keep vourself you direct the general cons is A wonderfully interesimg ACC You change in ment. learn to note the « facial expression. i of an eyelid or the tells you a ANger, detects no thought, Movenest You ses dishike, where Your +1 nterest, ther aly own mind acts more quickly thoughts of others vre of feeling that not wholly selfis power to to put the you Yots have the pleas adquireinent 1s gives resery YOlls vou the wnders sh ELABORATE GOWNS. Dresses of every kind are be more elaborate than ever, and the de mand for good quality dress materials whether of the leading cotton or wool, 1s une of this season's fashions. Very littl trimming is being used, but ail the better are decorated with good features clas 4 quality lace, tucking and pleating of a louse or a skirt for afiernoon im many cases so artishieally and kil possible for the inexperienced to orpa- ment her own dresses in thi way, can be purchased at so much the yard already tucked and pleated or intersected with insertion lace in an endless variety of designs. The price, of course, de- pends on the amount of labor expended. Some very lovely effects are being ob- tained from the convents of Austria and Switzerland in the way of open work thin transparencies of rich quality lace and white Japanese silk, or French lawn, for making up into blouses, Some of THE HEALTH OF CULTIVATED WOMEN. Judging from the ill among of cultivation, it i | tural to suppose, that they are physical- found wollen na (ly weaker than men; but locking further { afield, one inevitably comes 10 the that physical inferiority result of SOX, Con clusion not i» ine but something harmful of life, avages the strength and endurance in their manner Among the 1 i + i woman seems equal to that of man, and caf ri 4s a general work FASHION NOTES a popular color \ eat S, CHANCIAMCE, ¢ Pa 1a mn pastel OTe Leghorn and quently 3 1 tite gowns they accompany dyed prodicted that brows be 3 ' color in the aut It fas is seed Hen ver and zibeline tones will all | white lace of i irge trimmed ribbon an Tog ties merely with blag vel d perhaps on antique gold nanteni, are much worn by sna men A hat in straw with a larger crown blue around the sna folds, and the ribbou banging in short crown, More and more luxury is appearing in the dress of the season, Not only semi- precious but precious stones are sel in parasol handles, and jeweled butions are Well-dressed wonien abroad are wear- ing Panama hats of the finest straw, trimmed with a siple band of velvet around the crown and short loops and ends in the back. The charm of the hats is in the quality and simplicity, The “endless chain” idea has been ap- plied to the lorgnette chain with un. doubted success. The chain is made to move easily through a loop which is at tached to the swivdl catching the lorg- nette. By this means a breakage is pre- vented if the chain <hould be caught on TIME LOST IN SLEEP, | A Cood Part of a Man's Life Civen Up to Loafing and Dreaming. “I read the es by the British ence 10 tunate prepared re Lovernment wi ongevity among men army said a gen 15 fond of mathematic much m lemathening cage how {pl 15, 4 jedan custard, table, Is Very White Iiome Companion, nce 10 in the Canines of Old. { a gruesome exhibit, yet of particular value to the archaeolo- Here upon a portion of their na- lie the mortal remains of the of the ancient village of This old “Baur 3 any projection, whic so often happens. rchaeo More i eight hundred years must have elapsed since Baum was inhabited. The | dwellers there were the most skillful ar. | tificers in bone as well as in stone, and | the patience they exhibited in the fash. | ioning of bone fish hooks and other uten- | sils are a striking object lesson to ns | to-day. One of the most important dis- | coveries is that of the skulls of dogs very like a bulldog, and of bones which were gnawed by these same prehistoric | canines, The question of Indian dogs is | still somewhat obscure, and this js an | important contribution to our knowledge | on the subject, London's Smoke Cloud. A writer of Locomotive Engineering is responsible for the statement that London's cloud of smoke is visible at Lockinge. sixty-four miles distant, It is estimated that the unoke cloud of Lon. don represents 6000 tons of coal in sus. pension every day. The passage of this cloud over any district leaves a dark de- posit on the surface of the ground. The new metropolitan railway of Paris ix now said to be carrying a daily aw- trave of 115.000 passers. + portrait nly $40,000 ern us exhan There 3s ressling S3ve When removed by the of energs been necessary 10 depend food that h en This has saved the that de led to a moral cager intellec physical health, human im- provement lies through the elimination of the peailential organ of digestion. For the perverse and criminal we need not laws, but a surgical operation, face- tiously observes the Philadelphia Record, is bu iis follow fec : x . f hae IVE fpesiion and nas regeneration, to a tual state and to periect 0 i} Le more Ww Way to A well known doctrine governing trade-mark law is that no one can apply the name of a district or couniry to a well known arlicle of commerce, and by so doing obtain an exclusive night others inhabiting the same district from However, where a geographical name has acquired a secondary significance, ite nee in that sense may be protected by restraining the use of such word by others in such 3 way that #t would amount to a fraud on the public, and special meaning has become attached It may be granted, therefore, that the manufacturer of particular goods is en- titled to the repuissic they have ae quired, and the public is entitled to the means of distinguishing between those and other goods; protec- tion is accorded against unfair dealing, whether there be a technical trade-mark or not, The essence of the wrong con. sists of the sale of the goods of one manu or vendor for those of
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers