ye we, ee? etre HORSES IN SPRING. Most farm horses are idle winter, and into spring work with poft muscles. At this time need more care than many owners will give. Work pushes and the feeling fs the team must for th feed by helping to ged der for planting as rapidly as ble. It is no fault of the horses they have been made soft months of inactivity, and they must be sea soned to hard work if the owner would treat them fairly A few during £0 they pay winters ground in or possi that by jays hard work in the first warm spell of spring can flesh that ing throuzh the summer wii repla Moderation in few weeks iz repaid by a grain ater on, work the season Wintoring farm horses on bulky ratiun may We part of the time, Lond Ww need a rest from heavy but the cut heavy feed out work the mode more and by as ¢ ral * ART month pi work nrine fag of spring be given good grain ' ing They oid Tw annual re thirds ly Thes should be Thu abundant manured 3 they fail of havi supplies. It is known o fthis fruit have from fifteen to wenty FEATS G1 M Hess, in well will ug that never HEIFERS young WITH in raising EXPERIENCE My experience heifer calves runs back forty When the calf is first born | stuck the mother till the milk is good some five days if in winter I tle it close mother then teach it to drink mother's milk twice a day. gradually adding a small of wheat middlings, increasing the amount as the calf grows older. Put. ting some bright hay veach, ft will arn lo #'his is necessary to extend of its stomach. When take to a yard where exercise and pick grass. voung calves out with the dairy fear fng it will learn to suck other cows let it to its its in ie cat {it dover sSO0n i the the calf be the in it given start must from the amall dairy. Balt quantities in its milk until this stops. In hand ling the calf when young I don’t pet ft much. This will make it ugly when It becomes a mother. [ always practice kindness. 1 have had good success in raising calves to become mothers. Then comes the breaking the cow to be milked. This must be dona with kindness at all times. If i i is disposed ck. nevet but strap around her body forward of her udder This is my way be milked; her " buckle a strong unish of breaking cows t« Bg they will soon give up and Tall 3 f anguage kindly | i I have broken in a good many, and generally make of them naturally bad dispositions hard to overcome. One must conquer { WwW. Kel the Epitomist CARE close come g » If one is patient gentle cows have This is Some COWS fO OF FOWLS of a long, 1 cold having ance that should be given 3 usted by a confinement and con and if they not “1 Pe are exha are GROWING WITH PROFIT There has been due in s0il not majority improper ascertain to a PLUMS many failures in part to setting suited to them, of the varieties. The what varieties section successful growers growing, and if will be wise to foliow e. During a recent meet growers one of the most growers of plums in the Go said that he had tested all promising varieties catalogued, obtaining varieties from Europe and had finally dug all his trees ex cept the Reine Claude He grows piums market, and the Claude anited umers it is a sty the but trees on in the cases, to tion of Way best suited what are similar it thelr exampl ing of fruit get] best to out in such section is ont for Moregver not grow Ons ng, neailay tree, In general, this man advised against local markets. Those who are inter ested in plum growing would do well to examine into merits of the Reine Claude if it is not among the sorts they now grow. It is one of th good old sorts which has proved Hs value in many sections through long years — Indianapolis News the A In the schools of Rhenish Prussia a change of stockings and shoes Is pro vided for the use of school children who arrive with wet feet. nS HEARTS DO If the gobs poor i18 Over only look abead wou.d wipe ber eves VWhot would ghe see? W thing, she 1 find out heart had ~ot broken at rushed and 1 WwWoLi boen bruise past the not break For another, no do 80 mean there sOrt What and KAY ize of oO 2 de le And more boet £4 wii eat gymnasium may be that a rati gymnasium exerci but { do you Lhasa b Now it of mild will do you good that it will will the ridiculous apparatus modern gymnasiu'n is injurious, If you could stretch horizontal bar in your play a game of tennis class ourse 408 uso found in you consider it vour duly to back yard, or while But the fact is your from too much food, ficient pabulum. If instead of a de the experiments thing it is that the greater amount of strength and endurgnee come cating a small amount of highly nu. may be mixed with the too much and what they eat is imperfectly mast cated and is not affected by the gas. tric juices. It "is passed into the stomach in such a way that the diges. tive juices can not get hold of it. The system graduaily becomes clogged with waste mailer, the bowels become distended, the muscles flabby, the res piration and heart action feeble. There is no reserve strength in the body to draw upon and the slightest unusual exertion briags a sensation of complete exhaustion, Most experi ments have becn amg the most erate amount food, taken thre¢ the appetd 13 not keen al ing completely and thor ily produces trength, fe DRIVING IS HEALTHY EXERCISE In hege avs of aihletic women seems open ich confront she ghall sport por FASHION NOTES H vy embroidery but alway ape work and «1 real demand Those long gloves of vioie kid etrike wit] note ith the white © viol dress permissible to make yom thin raia It is qui loth gown frivolous w behind are mmer sof bow bunch Stim the han fall nnder frocka petticoats for all the su something Silk orchids in violet and purple are among fiest hair Rieeve musty lovely «ha naments uffles Rave moved np the ghoulder elhow tight cuff the in with a long rest of the way . 8ilk drop-skirta are no longer part ft a separate silk petticoat A voke of lace will carry the cloth gown's usefulness later into the season than would be possible otherwise 811k gowns bath for afternoon and evening are to be worn more the com. Ing summer than for years past Instead of the little touch of black on white once accoun‘ed smart, a quaint little touch of biown is favored by those who know Ashes of rose, dove's breast shadow mauves are colors sought after in silka and much en 3 h 3 =. VA GREEN Put and wher ito ale ig of m shel ad Season and abont pepper the butt DO gmall onion t t each of summer Aavors alt and er fron pan; COVer: ana pepper to the wats add bolling the just befor ve! tablespoonful o level tablespoonful of flour gether over fire; #tew pan and 8s talekened: serve the gravy season; d and pu water IW on OTs over pan and hours add and bber nto the ing and straining {o ae over the liver BROILED SWEETBREADS Cover the wwoetbreads with cold water: allow them to #tand hall ar hour, drain, cover with wate and simmer twenty minutes plunge them in'o iced id water what sated. Allow ten minutes, wipe them very with a sharp knife split in half length wigs. Broil over a ‘sar, hot fire, turn ing whenever they begin to drip ready upon a deep plate melts ter, well salted and peppered, mixed with catsup. When the eweeibreads are done to a fine brown lay them in this preparation, turning ‘hem over several times. Serve on toast a plece of sweetbread on each. Pour on the hot butter and send to table, boiling some them to le in thie College girls attended a murder trian) at Beaver, Pa. an an incioent of thelr training, As they did not earry flowers to the Xilier they showed less ne of training than others of their OX. 14.7500 10.00 FALLOW Que dinla SiR COTTONSEED ‘rime Crude nominal; POTATOES —Firn § S504 4.00, Jergey, 1 ind Western, tweets, 1.8500 CABBAGE i 575 A SACKS, York. « vk Dressed yee!, steady, 1 RISC per pound for native side hoice beet, at 83ic. Exports, today. 1,386 cattle, 10 sheep, and 8,200 quarters of beef CALVES-~Common to prime veals wold at 4.50 to 800; city dressed veals, at Ria 121i SHEEP 11 . AND LAMBS yominally steady: lambs more and strioc higher: good to ambs sold at 6.120.285 CATTLE nominal, 4.2804 O medinm 1.5000 5.00 1 feeders, 280004.25. COWS teifers, 200004.50, canners, 1.7 halls, 2000 400; 2.500 Texas fed steers, 4000s 00. SHEEP Good to 2.750 5.40; native lambs, Sheep active clionem Chicago steers, i prame . IVES, weithers, 4.500 2.00. choyee . WORLD OF LABOR An effort 18 being made to organize a union for garment workers in New sibany, Ky The team drivers’ international body bas over 100,000 members and Sys local unions. The trade vnions of Chicago contain 13,000 women. Even the scrubwomen are organized. Painters and paperhangers at Des Moines, Iovva, are on strike against the open-shop rule.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers