bo) ”, ne 0 ~ ¢ > CARNES po ASPARAGUS. elghteer y Will n ion There i8 no garden complete without an asparagus bed. A bed 4-25 will supply an ary family with this healthful and appetizing food. i give information an as paragus bed large home use If for market enlarged, the Also if for be set 1x3 or { $ bed, foot half tl for fifty d starting enough for the bed being the acre can be | Acre W tons © The charac culture the same, marset roots feet a while for use, the should inches from the south apart Sele the picket wi sunshine, T black, sandy and ble, First heavy stone and i be YO ground in the with rotted Prepare your cover coat of Work ground at leas the the If be spring well Ne seedsman, and Do not plants, as they work nure. soil the shoots work rotted manu xt secure two 3 {OOF & P. and care shased at Do not rome up the ft and fr sun are * Tr - $1.00 per cut meet in from weeds can which bed. be is After the give the bed horse manure, as ground can never be made toc Asparagus, and it produce a crop. Sometimes 1 threatened bs In such cases freely over the with well established a for for many wavs of | the Article i Premium in the Indiana Farmer test. dew. An will last table.- THE PEDIGREE ALONE WON'T DO The pedigree is all i i selecting breeding kind. In more neglected In word of cautic Boss, of the Minnes young stock breeding cattle breeders the padigrde of an lack of feed nanageraent do, but a w the mone; 1ey inv Of acrubs can Mzay bres that in stock like,” just as 3 viduals as from ge ve This is Sty evidenéed by the number of s du tnd that ar often seen in | RK Breeding herds { who sends a mail It is ter of doubt whether or not by pure bred Is re likely to br scrubby offspring wn is Jernh without pedigree. The fact the good lines have been concentr for some generations and that fort has been made to keep mal pure in breeding emphasizes the | helper likelihood of begetting like and scrubby pure are the result unless the inferiority of the pa-! tors, rent is due poor care rather than poor breeding { 8 The pure bred pig that is likely to be a cause of damage in | Lond the breeding herd and | to injure the reputation breed which may be unfortunate enough to | possess animals of this deseription The only pure bred pig that should be used as the breeder is the one that is gooll as an individual and whose ancestry have been good individuals. the i ical, Fy vex 14 Bs £14 HeRILigu fart ing ividuals od of t Me one wrecked the a mat the scrub of ing | washed the that ' at even opped, ited | meq, an ef- | the the ani 4% + iige ty at the breeds laid out to to the a ne o dealers mn is scrubby | of the owner, i of any “By ( vorite « go horr It is Shakesj of fairly w ordinary 1 pounds good clover ell COW al © 1 ake a balance an 1e¢ ration of an and that will vield ‘Lil furnis f sil farmer avi an fifty bushel from eight rage coy ays acre of Ae, who has corn of ter and *, or clover that tons of figure Reed on a ing the or alfal meadow two three on on while In the of our pe ivzed and mution i hay d ra ¥ Tol yOid this and will hay ($41 lef win- of the Ping the » in hat remoy this ed ; ion combine that or again, y ha rias ) i8 Lhe mest pI I, and nutri the agreeable present use, Woo! From a Wreck, been witne he nels Soon after part of a Ereat of fore Amo WOO W on the shore all work schools were closed, and iidren flocked in the work of gathered by fed in plies by each of the col mount of work they {f the wool has been sold in the Liverpool Daily Graphic “By George!” Mark Twain's sxclamation—Mr. E. D which he raps oui when ( move him to expletive ove or xi 1a yCOTRE is Ors ware and the the I of the the un Nas as tha to al the ler to fa on. packer, | sapeakin GROWING PROTEIN FEED. { We have many times called atten. ! tion to the fact that protein foods, so | “golly, Cock!’ g world, For "By George! "w the old the old adj “gosh,” and It is simply “by ura- grown far more cheaply than they cost in the market. On this subject Wal- | “8¢, ldce's Farmer also says: The experience of the last thirty | Coeur years has shown that a balanced ra- | St tion can be grown on the farm without the purchase of any feeds containing + protein, as, for example, bran, oll | meal, or cotton seed meal. It has gall a Globe, for ours ever Lion defeated in de Saladin Ee locomotive claimed to on The “ Worrying Habit.” e orrying abit. By Nixola Greeley Smith. ve a guaranteed remedy for “worry” ep to enjoy of pleasures and a rebelliou much anything or and former} for 1 POWErs ine | oy or ng it along couraged in world had youth, could it Work and the invallc ind the and of m ban Ligl preventiy given wWOrny loved cies or prefer philo Only the fi reward that te: On her day life and healt} height fng what and d and des; matiey Ww hich and no oe Money Getting. By C. W. Willis, Editor of New England th (roc: fortunes” sgaond yon 8al not flatly & Women Who Boast of Their Faults By Phyllis Dale again she ram hears le sore tur fter some peri +h Laks Anuor nnger Girl themselverg for hav flaunt the smart things they and merited Young men ing and how nearly fell ask to brag about The man who funny to of us selence smarts, But wholesome than throwing of imperfections repeat reprima how de were In i1 yom with pr and sick they their dosks Jus never admits he | 1 » ’ can't fors the mors bouquets at New York oF or Paranoiacs Should Be Restrained Wm. Hirsch, Eminent insane-as) those ¢ who ret toothaches an sensible and to ourselves because & he is Alienist ums By Dr, HERE are more paranolacs out of the than in them. They are subject to no deter them from crime. In punishment and reward, and the paranciac who knows that he will be deprived of certain comforis if he does a certalu act will avoid doing it. It seems barbarous to put an insane man in the electric chair, but with the right man in charge of the criminal prosecution there is always to be found a way An honest district attorney, Hke the one we have, will not go out after a man’s life when he ie in such & plight, but will appeal under the law which says no man who is in capable of understanding the risk he is running should be on trial for his life. Paranolacs who delibgeitely shoot down people they believe to be enemies are not to be let free on the community. One might just as well go to the “Zoo” and uncage the lions, tigers and hyenas and prisons pun nat will tend to insaneasylums then 8 A system of 500,000, This now amounts to 32, CS AS UPI HR AHO OIA. Eight years ago Norway began to put away a certain percentage of the wh coin profits coming to the State from liquor A Chicago man has left his dog a selling for an old age pension fund. | life Interest !s an estate of $20,009, i S6TOVE-COOKED MEAT GETS TRULY DONE TO A TURN. It is Only Here and There That On of These Oid-Time Appliances | Been Making its Revolutions Befor a Glowing Range. honorable svolutions forgotten, thi “trophied” 1 the i ut for some CArs a few of our 1 d by Once nits of not were tu me a water existing BOW er where iral through that pur brought for the be sure still. A well ap- perfect did not stand kitchen contained a and designed and armory of all sizes OCCaRions of a8 many facility with which the range i be extended necessitated spits of different lengths; vision of good cheer could inspiring than the sight with three or four spits . Purposes front coul at an® no more of glowing fire, doing wholesome duty before it, each charged with the sum total of the feast fected by the Introduction of the €radle spit, a contrivance by which the necessity of piercing the joint was avitded for poultry, and so<alled bird spits, bigger brethren, and on which the small deer of the larder were brought to their most delectable posing turkey, from the most delicate neck of venison to the sober solidity of the sirloin, the spit worked ite wonders upon all, with a result only too feelingly recorded of the time. The power of the gpit was doubtless shaken by the ingenious contrivance known as the "bottlejack.,” which for the smaller domestic roastings an #wered extremely well. But a greater change was imminent. The general substitution of the “kitchener” for the open range was a direct blow to that fine old institution, the roast. We can. not have everything, and the “hot plate” is doubtless a convenlence-it has, indeed, become a necessity--in cookery “as she is taught” and prac. ticed today, The whole arrangement fg so comprehensive and compact, it forestalls so many ideals of the thrifty housewife, and performs—or promises to periorm--50 many functions at the time, that the kitchener § come to be garded as a kind of But to speak of its missus belong same model i has fair Oven as #4 Our joint re godmother “roaster is a the for fq sful, to ” terms, e | | inferior % now of order of meats which aiso we . Fiat it would be * » 40 contend that y the glory tablished London Never Asle Secret Man's Cla Are, Where Watley ms Or Holes What Not to Ask the Captain. of tourists : Atlantic You'll ever cross | asked { times. The) | “ “Were you ever shi An) How deep is the water here thege wrecked whales in this ‘What tips are usually given, and whom?” “*How many the Atlantic™ “ "What is the best remedy for sea to imes have you Cross ! sickness? “ “Why are you always painting this ship™ ‘Will you let me come up on the | bridge some time? “Po you remember my cousin who crossed with you in the spring of "05% “**1 suppose the passengers ask you questions, don’t Bulletin, ia great many stupid tisey T"—Philadelphia Man's Precious Rib. having asked a sup : woman was made from ths | rib of a another | bone, he gave her the following gal iant “She was not taken from the head i lost should rule over him nor from his fee! lost he ghould trample uncn her she was taken from his side that she might be his equal; from under his arm, that he might protect her; from near his heart, that he might cherish and love her. — Houston Chronicle. A geon why young lady mis in preference to answer ghe nit For over a decade the school aun thorities of Lucerne have examined the eyes of all children entering the public schools. The examination has gradually been extended to other or gans, and since 1902 a well arranged and complete medical inspection has been In operation.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers