A ; ra ) £5 (IARDEN BUYING FERTILIZERS, While barnyard manure is, and will remain all time, the main rens ance of the farmer for fertilizing, enough animals the or for not are kept on dinary farm to furnish enough manure to keep nothing .of the cultivated land, to say standard of production must therefore cal plants food, known as are now manufactured and 8 guara profit done? ‘ee hi some fine ral and we C1 a week In its was given * and night, noon the anin given a st of second-grade Not a full 1 means, and the pigs fe were and a few gweet potatoes ration by any off in weight, woek the but at the end of the was gone and they would anything offered them From then on the corn ration was cui down ‘=o that it was about one-half a full ration, and we more skim milk, root and and we can not see but what mals are all that any ration have made them, and they are tainly in excellent condition jo corn-fattened when the time comes. — Indianapolis News, trouble cat used crops roughage, the anl would cer MONEY IN BROOD SOWS. Some recent sales of some very common sows and pigs for what gooms to me to be very high prices opened my eyes to the possibilities of this business and I recall several oth- er times when they sold very high. Some of these sows brought several times what they would If fed out, For fustance, sows weighing from 150 te 180 pounds with litters of from six to nine pigs bring $20 to $26 while a few with larger litters ruled higher Fattened out they would not have brought ten or twelve dollars and would have consumed a great deal more of feed If we would lect some of the sows out of the herd fead and them considerabls , oro with less over Be that we are to breed to a good boar, could be feed can fine old brood sows that and could consider Many a money made and less work Often too, we buy i some their ay QO are on marxet they are wi LO thao use MAKING IN madae on ago, and royal example i primiti raki fields Servia is rise, take their and go to the is brought hnapps, work. Their meal to them for And at noon and again in the evening, work until on and on they the they often sunset life goes As to politics tie When all aghast at the Macbethian plot that startled Servia from its dozing-—the murderer of a king and queen and a handful of courtiers—~the peasant ah his head at the bad business and left it to his duly elected repre- in the Sobranje, or Parila- who should next be the culpable were to lit- on really care world looked decide king and how be punished Servia is suffering from a plague of butterflies and the government has offered a reward for thelr extermina tion. The fields throughout the coun- try are white Instead of green, be- cause of the clouds of insects, There are men who would rathe: be attached to a ball and chain than to an apron string You can buy a Jot of trouble with a $2 bill-—i7 you invest it in a mar. riage licens ys. About the only sure way to keep a secret is to not have a secret, The Real Enemies of the People By Fugene V. Debs, " gary as the industrial “boss 8 well establisifed is the political and quite as nece 4 bosg,"” I he oxi oclal system ting ness is to run the politica achine, not in people, or even of any pa the private owner of tl economic of the and niust, therelio chinery s to obtain control of gov nt I'l spawned In to tha 1 abolis few the people No must no ‘1 The Lus Ad For Wealth. rrr NW he Frits leaa For The etirem tof Every y Has By A.Y. or &F Why War Must Be. By George William Coale % 1 ¥ I once much of it ha Meanwhile conntiry Lu Kk it. 1@ prospect is (acco authority) before long and typhoid combined Cancer is the on disease medical s« recent years, it i { as relentless and as de hitman 1860 (according to census figures) it des re 53 ives in States: in 1900 it killed 29.475 of our «i nume one third There had been some growth popul and so, in Conve the official statement in different eight persons out of every malady in 1800 claimed sixty Nobody, it seems, is exempt and the weldo ‘ ST % from Among every i cancer victims Cancer 0 Eudect to It equently attacks the than the forty-fi vears of age one is destroyed who reach that ott Own cha most sons, pox lie alley every who Une in Thus it is eaay are much twenty-one men 10 Hgure than men period of of escap Magazine enough your 10 cancel js more liable Pearson's and green afghan inet Aye “It's no finding fault "0 aunty, your own work is what's given you, even if it isn’t what | so much than anything you wanted,” said Miss Palma Saw does!” groaned the niece yer, adding enigmatically, “and some “Ssh!” whispered Miss Palma. “It's times, after all, it turns out to be” | a terrible homely one, but it's extra “Illustration aunty, at once!” cried | size She never comes here, yon Miss Palma’s niece, who had long | know, so next fall | shall grow one o gince grown accustomed to her meth | those fall cosmos bushes, cover it up ods of speech nights with that afghan, sell the “Well,” sald the old lady, “1] blooms to Willy Green, that's wanted thought Mrs, Lane wan'4 «lye me an | me to grow one the last three years amethyst brooch for Christmas [It | for his stand in Boston, and buy me would have just fitted out my black | an amethyst brooch with the money silk, and she'd asked me, and I'd as | for it much as said; but there when [ had “Anyway, 1 Kind of mistrust Mra my mouth all made ap for that pin, | Lane's taste in brooches; 80 you see if she didn’t go and give me a red | 'm fixed out just complete!™ A Gift Horse. Hse with when better she A fet Jlossoms,” “The BShut-ln Women She Edy A rightened here ht Knox, at COD ough Joy shove lookout i WOOgs and becoming things not have ren, ofie $ even infants with well meant trations of affect im them. This open show how distasteful i hild Marianna Wheeler Bazaar EXTRA CHARGE FOR PARINGS CUCUMBER “Talk about mean men!" claimed a girl who was lolling on and at a rt I met champion mean one last summer wad the landlord of a where | stayed for a little place on the pear the New was a dreary tended to stay were ex. the the He beach res Ie a couple of Maine Hampshire spot, and though { in all summer, two enough for me Well, and wind were ruining my skin. Cucumbers formed a of our diet, so [I asked the the house if I might have the {0 make a face wash, After that once a day a plate of cucumber parings was set on my bureau. | made cu cumber cream and dabbed {1 on with great joy. But when 1 went to pay my bill 1 found fifty cents tacked on, with several words [1 could not de cipher. 1 questioned the landlord. Me explained that 1 had asked for con cumber sking and had got them: that he fed his hens on the table refuse, and if ladies wanted sking for thelr complexion he would have to buy chicken food. He thought the chick. ens had missed a half dollar's worth of nourishment through my facial ex. periments. Well, my thoughts were weeks COnsL, weeks the ily white big part and strong—but | paid the fift New York Press long cents WOMEN IN B English (41 ladies of title still little fling In the world of trade. Now It is Lady Colin Camp- who and stands as a ty doctors Mil deco old her in having thelr Comes " ' household ng are Y long ago their na not 10 wear Eugenie, paying warning, wore the her life, ws, has been One the the same, and was a a large who Lae all, no from free INFLUENCE OF lining: hiffons have CLOTHES saved my soul, cultivated my con credited remark of regarding clothes the light of cov finally expanded into expan give frivolities. "All my life I have been a nobody,” was the way another woman who had married rich express. ed the same idea, “until 1 got into my first $300 gown. The moral elevation, the social assurance 1 derived from the chiffon and pearl embroideries: on that gown changed me from a ner vous, constrained, retiring individual, accustomed to taking a back seat, get: ting the toughest steak at breakfast and doing the chores, into some One with a veice and an influence.” Gold F! sm Rhodesia. The output gold from Rhodesia during January was valued at $778. 465, and was the highest yet recorded. have science,” is the a a woman who afte: for ering years merely in