DAIRY NOTES. Fix up things for summer. The best breed of dairy the one that has the most intelligent care Good masters and common COWS often but if reversed expect failure. It is better for concerned to have a fitted expressly for him. Do not let the the frost-bitten both the COWS succeed, and all yard your sire stable and dairy cows feed on pastures. cow and pasture. have ready milk house VOU not i g are disli £ youn; by Provide gprin ked calves, warm place them milk at a degrees in avoid the calf prevalent months. proper quant th 3COurs during DIVERSIFIED FARMING f these days of progre In culture we hear a gre diversified farmis better really contained in ville (Mo.) a 310 prize agricultu largest n grown on his Rosie example means could the Stree a Ww pr of Irish potatoes, kinds of onions potatoes cabbage, squash, Weekly Wi OCK BREEDS Durham ST The known everal dif. ferent ran the of 12 certain to a color line } because prize all strain horn of the East has exist. The milking breeds h their place In the West, are found many very good ml shorthorns, having eral generations along milk conforma’ tion lines. They approach closely to a dual purpose i great trouble one can outcome will be ful dairymen are keeping animals of known power of reproduction, havihg dn assurance of raising young things that will be equal or sueprior to the original stock. In other words, from the milking type we are safe in ox pecting what we must have for profit. able milk production. The Alderney is not recognized day. Bhe never had a herd book. Jerseys and Guernseys are the Chan nel Islands breeds. If you are to con- | tinue in the dairy business you do well to change. Get large Jerseys, and then do not breed them fo calve | before two and one-half to three vears old, and you will soon have cows | that will sult you.~~(H. E. Cook in the | Tribune Farmer.) stock today is a8 shorthorns There are strains ete, result families fancy d from short to ve taken however, king RY nearly ceased been bred for quite The no the ght. animal. lies in the fact that safely predict just what So the more thou toy CANADIAN FARMERS PROTECTED, | The Ontario Minister of Agriculture submitted a bill, to the Dominion Par | Hament which declares that po one | shall expose for sale any seed of ce | reals, graeses, clovers, or forage plants | they are free from any seads following weeds: Wild mustard warlock, tumbling mustard, hare's * mustard, ball mustard, field penny. wild bind ragweed, 38 Or stink weed, rennial ragweed, oats, weed, pe SOW thist 2, great purple cockle, cow cockle, orange hawkweed, or paint rye, y cont such seed and of ining ith the nams« he Kind the How Russia Makes Madmen AS MO ue priest Zolotnit sonore th hie mes i $83 thing f nothin i" thirty-two y tone cage Dir. E. J. Magazine Dillon, Arper A Marriage That Isn't. A certain iad * a Count and a certain both married thro oung of thirteen, Franch in they and The first marriage took a church in London, the before Registrar at Dover, these being only English marriages, do not avail. Then came a marr by a French provincial Mayor, which the parties thought had the knot, especially gave her con turns that the guardian not oon and has been otit Ly the repentant who declares that the bride is not the nobleman, geog and various other hide BUD eC times 15909 ye § | 3 1902, or thoug they were, but N8eives bachelor |en the two Age At Inst safely tind is the 8 mother wnt now ont had flaw bride's bride's #onted pointed mother, groom rapher, legal 8i80, the Journalist himself to be. If two French people can come involuntarily untied in this have been triply spliced, there is ob viously more reason than ever for English people who are contemplating tain that all is legally correct.—Lon- don Pail Mall Gazette, Ant Trees transplanted at night are more likely to live than those trans planted in the daytime, IN PASSING. and hi “% ¥ cyclone (16 nrougn Susannah Ind sl ha she, 8l Jones Un a “Aln't it } zy 7" said “Well | hd od HEY ( daughter adeiphia Ledger. HIM MORE OF 1 t ea oO 3 @ vx 11 f his call te very not as home but that's than sim yo A DISTURBER. “What a nice little boy,” sald the ter, wh was making a call, and shake hands, my minis won! Naw!” My graci “Naw! I had face washed jist -eiiladeliphia Press sen napped the nioe little boy. Don’t you like me?” git me hands an’ us! IN HARMONY. “Yes, sir,” price of ice will summer. You there has been a poor ice crop this winter.” “But you deal in artificial ice,” ar gues the patron, “Certainly. Necessarily, 1 have to put up an artificial excuse."--Judge. woe, THE JUVENILE MIND, “What is an impulse?” asked the teacher. No answer, “It's something that comes to you suddenly. Can you form a sentence containing the word? Any one may answer.” “A snowball is an impulse, ventured the timid little girl with the curly tiair. Chicago Tribune. § ——————. —————— 1 he Population of | the Farth is 1,400,000,000. | i | | One Million | Die | Annually y ( . C Catarvh. E'niversally Praised 4 ir : : . x » «iv RIE fara Suwocessful in North and South Ps 5 ¥ Het is Img arked ita carver hore i Standard. Peruna » a staz rid over It cures catarrh by erad * #yEtem Permanent Cure, It obviates the ent and ts rele Ler Without a Peer. No other remedy has 80 « { earth as Peruna In Every Tongue, ated Lhe whole in all languages its glowing test ale Written In all climes the demands for Peruna Cee ONLY WAY TO GET IT. Woman Had With to Take Her Damages. Jackaor x Lawyer Along check for ti jected $30.1 il. the wor lawyer She What ‘*8he n Jackson." What Me Phillip Verr Jim's Baby,” ha from Liked Best Mr : Mighe “"Bruver only toly haunts-—the mining He tells an amusing anecdote his old acquaintances, a miner of more than This man, it had Fn in’ some savings to the 8t, Louis exposition 4 overheard a author of ia a visit Western camps of one of eiycation “yt. wealth geomas on a While mark that about the he This he had had explained it eonincide th “Well trip there he re the most impressive thing fair was ensemble to him, and in a con iend, “what the fair?” med a thoughtful at the and Baltimore It was whole toot it.” he said Wonderful Change ina Night<in a Month Face Was Clear as Ever« Another Cutienra, Unre by I had eons mths, during ne | was in the are of physicians. My face was so dis figured 1 could not go out, and it was going from bad to worse, A friend recommended Cutienra. The first night alter | washed my face with Cuticura Soap, and used Cu- tieura Ointment and Resolvent it changed wonderfully. From that day I was able to go out, and in a month the treatment had removed all scales and scabs, and my face was as clear as ever. (Signed) T. J. Soth, 317 Stagg Street, Brooklyn, N. ¥.” for five ma on Lae ace which ti Development of Butter Industry, In 1898 the butter hauled over the Mtaneapolis & 8t. Louis railroad, was 400,000 pounds. Last year it was near ly 14,000,000, the gain coming wholly from developments of creameries along that railroad, TTT on pr mE | dn Extensive Laboratovy t key i From Hawaitl A Cuban Minister [eerprsr | ads oT “ BGA, » rel ot . ¥ We bave 75.000 mes of routes postal The U. 8. Dept. of Agrienlitare its heartiost yielded in 19 from 150 to 30 acre in 30 different States, and ba you, Mr. [EET : = Bpeltz or Emmer, above Nustrated, ves 80 bushels gram and four tons hay per acre. it's wonderful. Sal seeds are pedigree seeds, b careful selection to bag yields ’ cine nnnes 50,000 The Salner's a Grass Balzer's Ped and this notice to the John A. Co., La Crome, is, A an British Cruiser Fast. Mrit 1% ’ sd calied "az ITS MERIT IS PROVED RECORD OF A GREAT MEDICINE A Prominent Cis Tells dow Lydia E. Plukham's Vegetable Compound Comp y Cured Her i Woman The Vegetable great good Lydia E. Pinkham's : is doing among the w America is attrac ting the atten many of our lead ng scientists, and thinking people gener ally. Lompound r men o won of | The following letter is only one of many thousands which are on file in { the PinkYam office, and go to rove { beyond question that Lydia BE. Pink- | ham's Vegetable Compound must be a remedy of great merit, otherwise it could mot produce such marvelous pe- sults among sick and ailing women | Dear Mrs. Pinkham FY About nine months ago | was a great suf. | ferer with womb trouble, which caused me | severs | (quent battles of itl was entirely cured beartily recommend your Compe i splendid uterine tonic. It te Shand athiy. iar and without pain If you have su menstruation, any _iatul sch, indigestion, bloating, lencorrhosa, flooding. nervous prostration, dizei- ness, faintness, ““don't-care” and “ want-to-be-left-alone * citability, backache .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers