sRELS chick FEED Whe the Ose lots twit parts or fi The mili gntil ant . ¥ Ng 1-4 v PERa-NONR = . #4 b= May the er the harmf Rew.y principe them bog? corn gtrychn burrows poison 88 was and dead ved ¥. 1 danger of poisoning is used as the the surface, Traps for ing n in most of the hardware Nearly all of thm y tl a spring coil which, drives a number of the ground and Some experienc traps will lead to but trapping is a cess than poisoning Moes are usually } more is when meat wg lie close to cate! moles are word mus ne 1 jig In thie early afte noon AL tin shor: period of § the morn ne ul fork when thay at ani- al being loca 1 hy IRerving the movement of ground abovi them. If water is allowed to run into the horrow and fill it, the animal the to the surface to avold drowning, and may easily be killed. The oue time Killed a female and young at one such operation. lawns and grassplots by moles prompt roliing with a heavy By continued repetition of this moles will be driven away, at temporarily. least Sk an CHOOSING A GLUOD COW We want a living machive to con. # ¥ = The produce a meet nrodit prof cerial 10 » BiVe a and capacity ability to hand rive Hie body, I £ a tomach, the irritants in food, such as lobilia, pilocarpin, iustard, cal Brown alao searin, second-crog induce an exce treatmont re moval of the caus i treat ment seems to be necessary, simple aairingent } uth may be used, such as vinegar and water, borax, borac acid, sulphate, or tine ture iron Two drams f any of the above in a quart of water. Dr Farrington, Virgloia.~- Indiana Farmer, t furth washes for the "i mn of chloride, of & THE CALVES that year, were and dropped within which should have quarters by them 14 winter They } i “1 1a a similar man her i : oder animals, with the fioor on which they stand of a length to correspond with their size. One or ‘two might run in a pen loose, but where there are more it is better to have them confined. They will do better in this way, and there will be no danger of their injuring each other, Besides they become used to being handled and are more docile They will sot forget the first winter's treatment and care. EN Thibet's 6,000,000 people have to sup | port an army of 430,000 priests, whe produce nothing but beautifully Hlum' | nated copies of the sacred writings, Ther nold all the ‘public offices. i ¥ FAVORED COLORS IN MIL : LINERY. to THE one oi it in a greatet of a dark tea-leaf the be but variety Brown continues favored now is shades most colors Fiown One of brown these is green figure on ft is a beautiful that did not given for the season color, and articularly effective felt dark dark taupe beauti with gold in or with green 1 a broad brimmed hat ail ti oOo ambit on template for her The quiet pogition ing his rather id knowledge of pathy with %is alma and has rounded out and supple keen intelligence that Th velt was endowed with phase of their life—and ly have been many di has ever had the scheme of living or otherwise than S80 that there § growth in and bili A knowledge and in culture The i of the day have been thoroughly discussed at home, the books moment have been gone into and dis cussed in waiting times when there wag pot public office to fill and when life was much simpler than at her part for Mrs HOvarving has don enthusia PoOWwe ¥ 10 mak a quiet, has intellect & pot been ady ples | { WwWols i of the tH the 5 firegoent day HINTS FOR MOTHERS it will be found a great convenience to have a low chair to sit in while bathing the baby. If this is not at hand take one of the commdn Kitchen chairs and bave a few inches sawed off the legs. It is not nearly such a strain on one's back if the stooping over the tub can be done from a low seal, says The New England Farmer An infant should not be given any food containing starch until it cuts its teeth. Btarchy foods include corn, flour, tapioca, sago, rice, potatoes, ole. any of these until Hs teeth are cut. Wa must never allow ourselves to that what s¢ us may POrtRAnCce {Oy forget of of the fms De Hitle the im- portance portanc mst vital ir tes character {forming before us Obedience should should 1 er underts ighbor matier wa nee is card fo had a motto, attitude ike dinner r one ¥ Each her hin the brief UNSELFISHNESS OF WOMEN Much has been sald and much more written in recent vears about the self frivolity much, and By ishness of fashionable women in fact, that only a word In their defence. that in all that goes to make up womanhood the fashionable set women whom to know is a liberal edu cation Chicago has just furnizhed such an iliustration in the person of one Of He host Hit daughter, an wavalid for years, | was recently stricken with smallpox | and removed to the pesthouse. The mother, however, refused to part from her child, nursed it back to health and strength, and then stricken herself by the dread disease. i, S——— FASHION HINTS. A pretty and sensible fashion is the trimming of walking suits with fur. Ermine is used as a lining and revert and cuffs will be bordered with mink or other short haired skins. Embroidered bands will decorate some of the smart hats, with chenille for the principa: trimming. he What the War Means to Japan By Jihei Hashiguchi. DWEVER ances, the the nat , Japan (Rl will afford Yay ready the An enterpris i % inn Boys, Grow St By aan Authority on Transmitting Power by Electricity ansmission the and thence advanced by At the last pause. Up to that point it is com wires » l.ouis Bell. the very beginning of power ir pressures were three thousand volts, fifteen, and 3 Fas n to Wo OF five, ten, {twenty thousand thers to io a brief insulate the t their supports on glass or that the electric current will not escape But at increased pressure the very alr about the lines begins to pay the electrician false A faint blue glow surrounds the wires at night, at point of support into pale, shimmering brushes To control thiz little brother of the lightning new and intricate forms insulating supports had be devised, ingenuous structures of porcelain sometimes nearly a and a half in diameter and weighing twentydive or thirty pounds Armed with these protesting as it would, down Tite CReY “0 poOTCeiain insulators ic to any injurious exient rian every * » of it fool engineer could hold the current, sputtering and to business, and his success is in no wise more forcefully attested than in the following bland announcement which openod one of the papers read at St. Louis ‘In discussing the conditions which affect and limit the constants and operation of high-teansion lines, pressures of over 30.000 volts und lines of over fifty miles in length only will be con sidered Af ‘the present moment the re sre ten or a dozen plants working regularly at $0,000 volis or more thee oo four of them at more thas 50,000 volts — Harper's Weekly. the i - a RA SAA AMR Se culprit, remarked, with lofty compo gure: “No, not very pretty, but rail ‘ir smear!” One On the Gues Two tashionable women were re cent.y calling on a new neighbor, and while awaiting her appearance, a lt tle gir! came into the room, evidently bent upon the rescue of a doll re cently abandoned there. Naturally she was viewed with some curiosity, and one of the eallers, secure in the child's obviously tendor age, spelled a jow-volced comment: "NGt very pretty” To her horrot, the smal maiden paused on the threshold, 1nd, fixing a contemptuouy eye upon the Saved for Mis Funeral. A dear old man of 65 has been given provizional relief by Lambeth Guard fans, though he bas had £35 in the savings bank for twenty years. The old man would not allow the money 10 be touched, as he eaid he did not with to be buried in an ugly "pauper box,” but in “a nice, comfortable collin of his own."—Rernold's Newspaper,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers