vi INTERESTING To NTA w ES IARMER “Wit E Compan) Carl strange pow the with ewoet the line towel hair facial brush: pin a small You comm fions w weial brush Don't rub facial hair line when using it on ag it fills the fi prevents cream iliciles wil) stance and Don’t use or proper strong alkalies to the color, shampoo too fre to keep hair fluffy. Don't linzer con the bathing and allow the saft t hair, the he 5 p hafter ’ dry in everybody's advise and things to your halr CITY'S AUNT ON THE TRAIL OF A TAX-DODGER | Willlam Hart, writing about Chl. | ecago's Five Malden Aunts The! American Mags tells how f them. Miss Margaret Haley, added millions of to the sf the city of Chicago. “Miss Haley was a teach. er,” says Mr. Hard, “the leader of | the Teachers’ Federation, The sal aries of the teachers had been cut The reason given was iack of money. Why a lack of money in a city like Chicago? Among other explanations Miss Haley discovered the Union Traction Company, the gas company, the electric light company et al They were paving no taxes on ihe value of their [Iranchises, Miss Haley went down to see the dtate Board of Equalization, They adn't like her. They sald afterwards in zine | dollars income school that with a woman in the reo it and ment them wable ut here was tact. Miss Haley Court and se ease at made smoke embarra dificalr to 1 their and ire feminine Supreme mandamus back t ration the State Board shared it were levied franchise ublle utility cor And they day to added income ‘hey nee moliifisd hey AND STOCKINGS. and sSH0es8 ov ¥ 1 1 could be matter on beauty gimnle have they y enhance the the If masic fitting each scene it is enacted doubled, and it Is For in- during the Lang for the Baby" Ages everyone and of colored lights thrown greatl tableaux played while being the pleasure Is not a diffi stance, “Auld Lang Syne” Ne, ‘Long, “Wedding March” and “Hush-a-by of the “seven” gerved and the thing to do “old age” or Age wifehood” the for the first Frappe was vas delighted with ment entertain: ——— A a Most Unkindest Cut, With reference to the humors of rgoclety” reporting, Melville Stone tolls of the account of a wedding pub- lished in a Kansas paper. The story, which described the mar riage In the usual flowery adjectives, econclitded with this gyrprising an- noupcement: “The bridegroom's present to the bride was a handsome diamond brooch, together with many other per's weekly. i ————— In Bengal in 1904 the ratio of insane was 2.93 per 1,000 population, against 24.71 in England. l { i | | ON THE WHITE EARTH RESERVATION, Get Farms on Mortgages—Half-breeds Released From Government dianship an Easy Prey to Schemers ~Citizenship a Curse to Them. With the minds of the 5,000 Indians White Earth Reservation, in Minnesota, muddled by liq their the on the Northern and of do uor sight Dy eyes dazzled } of money, the valug they not appreciate, the allotments recently given to ing into If the maintained, Indians ast the ior the p are full-fledged citizens liquor easily hecome ea WILD HORSES IN A CHASE. Sport of the Vaqueros in Eastern Washington, 3 ; ald was weaned horses glves un meanness, fleet old or sheer, wiltry bred from. the me are the ha: sition we ever get up ‘And yet, while there's a agai are the hardest the they to capture, zest about chase that a true rider never tires of nerve, like a right out of cold fisherman who has with big-mouth blacks in a mill pond “One . the April, we were sweeping Saddle Moun- tain for the wild herd. We spread our men well, arranged to give them fresh mounts at proper intervals, and by nightfall had nine hun- dred wild horses rounded up But even at that a herd of one hundred or one hundred and fifty of these young Arablan bloods could not be captured, in spite of our craft and efforts, “They composed what Is known througheut that gection of the State as the ‘wild goose band.’ They all run from white to gray or spotted black and white in color, The herd’ gets its name from the prevailing color and from the straightaway runs which these transplanted halfsong of the desert make when pursued. When 4he herd leaders started to make a break we riders had to give way or be overturned, and the best and freshest mount in our bunch It gets the rider on his fight with a silver bass affects a heen fooling water, Saturday, about last of we about could not keep pace with the worst of dozen rods is a beautiful sight line o swiftly or silde hem, even “It long { butte taking a that would hurl any cept a mountain goat for a to gee the rounding a down other gray passes animal ex the jut these hall-Agrabs footed, If possible, than goats Thus far few them ever have known the slip of the lasso the neck Washington u int into the Of over APPLE TREES 80 YEARS OLD. Indians at a Historic Michigan Spot. Planted by i the wand the Indians eigh ago, when spot was an ervation burying ground, two ap on near stand side by side iawassee River mammoth AND A FAUCET, River for a Drink. » . (yr thn Liguified Air, of liguified alr bheon $2 quart, soOveries made {it #ih liguified alr and ell it at about the same as ammonia, which Is exceedingly cheap Air, or atmosphere, is turned into a liquid at a temperature of 312 degrees below zero: thus liquid air is the cold ost thing known to science, We call attention to this subject owing to the fact that liquid alr must become a great factor in refrigeration. Liquid air will make it possible to preserrve fruits In cold storage with greater opge and success than heretofore, Liquid air will be used to cool rooms hot days in Summer, and for vari ous practical purposes. Since in 39 degrees above zero and liquid degrees below zero, will {dea about the coldness of Pour liquid air on the ice boil at once. ~Green's. Fruit The price has pre but Pe ye. 1g SM 1 w™ OUSLY oid Lh recent di have gible to manufacture price on ice only alr get liquid air and it will Grower, a o 312 some you Having supported himself as a ped dler for seventy-five years, James O'Dwyer, of Kilmihil, Ireland, who 1s now 102 years old, has, for the first time In his life, been compelled to ask for relief from the Kilrush Board of Guardians, Hon. Thomas W. Bucknell, of Prov. idence, R. 1, is known as the “cham- plon monument raiser,” having start ed more monument funds end assisted at more monument dedications than any man in the country. Arp m— ® ORCHARD -and® Af Av = {TARDEN i CROW—THE FARMER'S FRIEND OR FOE. claimed that the crow Is THE the ground that it S8IUEgs 8s friend on the feeds largely wire worms, but on the grubs and which Lo is BO injurious Crops, J that this estimable bird friend of the try keeper Crow however this may be it certain t The be called a of prey, in the general accej ance of the YOrous, wulrd pangs of omniverous most anythi may upon not is none all th “A more th ile a : 1 of ¢ 1Orease In weir then the nsideration mongrels, 6. yrices for fresh the months us. of 5 CRER ually prevail November, January and February During these four months the mongrels laid only 364 eggs and the Leghorns, 1,028, or practically during December, WHAT THE BILO WILL ACCOM PLISH. It is the testimony of hundreds and thousands of the more Intelligent farmers throughout our great and broad land, who make it a practice to matters, that ensilage has practically become a necessity in the the woman longs for it and doesn’t try a little work of that kind on her own account in in the minor making up of a ration to be fed to a cow producing milk in the dairy. The number of silcsg is being Increased yearly, and there is no getting over the fact that it has come to stay just the samo as the milk tester and cream separator. The true value of ensilage is fast becoming known and appreciated by both farmers and feed. ers, and it does not take them long to find out that the use of ensilage means a reduction in the cost of pro ducing either milk, butter or cheese, and this means that the Income from the farm is increased just so much. When ensilage and cows are properly handled it is almost next to lmpos- who FOR ROUP head in ick nti is it will effect a sure time B. Freeman Danger in Old Scrapbooks. 1 r menace reasons they har. oid pages are pasted iq WCTAD Woks a1 a or several than any other sides, making them thick and They are broad, and their bindings behind but accesgible on After turning gneezing, head colds have often resulted being suspectad. was a scrapbook of colored fashion plates from 1853 to Another was filled with news paper clippings of §° war between the states. They were prized and fre. quently read but colds almost invari ably followed. We gent themeto a bindery to be fumigated and rebound. uneven _ - ™ apld oropale are seldom easily ss doors, and over the pages, and hay fever without the cause our library tables shelves dition use a carbolized paste; paste only on one side of the page; keep them behind glass and provide them with oil covers Do not let paper Use preventives as with all old books whose pages The largest incubator in the world has just been completed at Pembroke, N. Y. It holds 15,000 eggs. It does the work of 1,000 hens, or of one hen sitting constantly for tem years. Three horses were riddep by girls in recent races at Tokio, and one of the gifls won. Both of the other girls ll well,