SOME FACTS ABOUT BUTTER. Production butter is in self an upon a clear understanding of scientific prin- ciples undoriving dairy business, Prominent among these fundamentals a of good it dependent i} Wire, re the working knowledge of the anat- ! fology the dairy | acquaintance with roduce the best quantity and milk are concer are omy cow and a th that will ie 20 Ia mid tha whe 0 aad the phys of rough tie foods Pp results as the Brad f ped Not ey farm is adapted this fact woman making and | shown the great butter that find farm to the city there is a decld- ery Hitter is clearly by quantities of inferior their way from the | | i king knowledge. brought into Id not possibly to make to make the poor ire on the erean wards the butter rough working and important palatable is from OKO Walter well heen heroming weeks without Good iter shoul nearly standard! | per cent: {including | cent a8 nossibhle the make up: casein galt) 3 per « The demand greater than Dutter ash water 11 p for good butter is and as a natural result, the are corrsaponding'y higher. The careful dairyman can | nake a very good profit from his herd from the sale ¢f the butter produced, and at the time he can easily maintain the fertility of his farm by means of his dairy animals —H. § | Chamberlain in the Indiana Farmer. | per cent; ont: or ever, prices same FARM NOTES Dimpnezs in the house must not be gllowed. Remember also that | fresh air is a tonie, and that poultry of all kinds will do much Letter if | their roosting quarters are well ven tilated. Gireen bone and scraps of waste ean often be bought at the butcher shop at a reasonable price, and this makes an excellent feed for ponitry If given to them while fresh. Never feed de caved meat, 5 When the ground is frozen and snow covered where do your biddies procure their grit, or teeth, unless you have thoughtfully provided it? Some farms are all picked over, and there Is no grit to be found there, even in sumer, It is a mistake to try to keep too Boulter pouitrsy many hens for the room you have. Better drop off a lot the ter, In the of them and give You will be! the hens. house rest a chance do and will building the roosts too high high fowls injuring 80 do not have Aa foot twa There is danger of themselves flying dowy trom a high roost, the heav birds. Old AYE O or is enough especially ier late and unless they hens commence laving ff early. Old hens, valuable as bree considering the entire Very lers, are ) . Keep, profitable to i 2 record throughout If the hen will not pay for her ir should made giaughtere | : IN eggs, he yield a and her sho 1 6% i being to profit by } X y . & 8 have proved tion will iment condi eat, on three ounces of DE, TWD ound ounces o mn than | I find the Ayviesbury healthy fing table bird, and first mat For the latter largely in uck requires very much on than the chicken, and is far legs liable te disease, and it is equally as profitable. 8 more So, why not Farmer's wife in Indiana af more naturally and vigorous, a good layer, class fon purpose England Ket bred loge loge rajse the Farmer WHITEWASH THE HOUSE An application of whitewash to the house, roosts, dropping walls and ceilings should al’ be touched, is a strong factor in in the egg output. The appli cation is made more efficient as 2 germicide, insect and (disease destroy er by having a little carbolie acid ani oil added to it. Use the wash hot and thin, forcing well into all cracks and crevices with a strong spray pump or good brush. Repeat the application every three or four months. Time spent in this brings gid returns, Try the investment and _ be convinced Farmer's Home Journal, POULTRY boards, coal An Indian Arrow. Dr. Whipple, long bishop of Minne gota, was about to hold religious aor vices at an Indian village in one of the western states, and before go Ing to the place of meeting asked the chief, who was his host whether it! was safe for him to leave his effects | in the lodge. "Plenty safe.” grunted the red man. “No white man In a bundred miles from here.” -<Argonaut, i If each Individual In New York! City owned an equal portion of Its real estate he would be worth in land $1,520, according to the assessed | valuation, J THIRT hy * NTING ) Rm Pros- Momb: British East Africa -1 Mombasa is preparing already to wel- | Theodore Roosevelt, and his | coming has given a decided impetus | to the interest in the present hunt- | ing season The Governor of the Lientenant-Colonel Sir Sadler, is arranging a program of | welcome and entertainment for the! distinguished visitor, but in spite of these arrangements the greeting to Mr. Roosevelt will be more to the! great sportsman, whose fame is well known to local hunt than to the former President East African sportsmen were high. Iy gratified to learn that Mr. Roc velt had d the offer of the ay- thorities t rant him a special hunt. ing licen would have permitted him t game to an unl tent instead of nfining himself to . Py I y come protectorate, | nes Jam Hayes | rend vag reius o kill iii imited ox- the two hippopotami, Lions vermin no license to kill them is The white population hag heard mueh of Mr personal and in a quent references to are being made : The rains are late this year heavy fall is expected (the regular time the “big rains” fs from the! end of January to the end of April) The prospects for good hunting this season fre considered excellent. Many | of the settlers in the ing dis tricts, realizing the increasing eat in pre of the comin © license cinssed of Roos oking the “big and a for outly i ’ inier. he spects for gport bee g of Mr. Roosevelt, Was goen iv at a oo f Port R. J. Cuninghame, 8 noted English big game hunter and field naturalist, who is to be gulde and general the Roosevelt party, has been here for some time completing preparations for the trip into the wilderness as well as the shooting and collecting excursions along the line of the railroad He is selecting and hiring native porters for the ax- pedition He takes only experienced men who are known to be COUrageous and to sgreatphysical strength The “'safari’’ kit—in other words, the camp nent for the the open———is arriving from London, and all will in readiness when Mr Roosevelt grrives The railroad car used on the line as far Port Flor- ence by other distinguished visitors ‘ganda, such as the Duke of Meck- the Connaught, the the Abruzzi, Joseph Cham- Winston Spencer the use 10 of DOS $ equiy work in be AR lenburg Duke of he Duke of and 111, is bel Roogovel rything points a British East Africa and riain Churel Mr Evi £ refitted for successful ¥ In Ugan- for The natives peaceful, game is plentiful and waiting come the CARCTLY 1 wr people are TAME HUNTING, SAYS ANOTHER. Captain Smiley Says Many WHanters Have Made Lions Gun-Shy. Captain A.J have served Brigade in the Boer hunting grounds Roosevelt plans thing but the The Cal said Francisco, who San Smiley, with the Irish says that ex-Presiden his is to the nare n and tame thnt have ! which Roc without baggin * says he hag wri ative § Rome, [tals The General in m= | mand at Messina, who is the removal of dead the number bodies still burial at about 60,000. Most lie several feet deep under bish from fallen houses The work of clearing from the streets is proces slowly Not more than 200 bodies are removed and buried any day when the work is carried on without interruption for twelve hours The prevailing bad weather is hampering the work greatly and often stops it, as the rain changes the debris into soft mud, which the first sunny day | hardens to the consistency of cement | the i awaiting of them of the rub- » we bev la the debris seding very on i : : f i : DR. LYMAN ABBOTT'S to of Of bodies rate at The break this clearing it a week passes without being extracted, and at the which the work iz being done more than a year will be required before all the victims in Messing are buried. For some unknown reason the wants to keep this a ge. n attempt to send the story by wire some days ago failed, owing to the activity of the press censor. It is probable that the Government now realizes its mistake in recalling too soon the greater number of soldiers and sailors engaged in the work of burial. nd workmen have pickaxes instead with vels any soldiers Away #4 ten and a SEVEN RULES “" Brookiyrn.— “the feminine type “1. Discard all shoes the size of possible “2. She must of work. "3 pass by paint and powder not which makes walking well nigh im- are her servants. “8. ng 7. She must be industrious, motherly and a true friend.” Continuing, Dr. Abbott said: sympathetic, energetic, enthusiastic, else, She be- If the ideal Russian Drugged and Left to Per ish in a Roman Boarding House, Rome, Italy.--The body of a Rus- sian, Viadimir Tarasoff by name, was found in a trunk in a boarding house, locked up in the trunk, it is believed, for twenty-three days. A medical examination indieated that the man, who was about thirty yoars of age, had been drugged and placed in the trunk, and that he had died of suffocation. Two Russians visited him shortly before his disap Juaranes. There Is no clew to their entity, Proof That He's Nearsighted Unfits an Oyster Bed Watchman, Trenton, N. J.—The Civil Service Commission received its first request for the removal of an officeholder here, It came from an oyster wer of South Jersey who objec to a watchman, saying: "He fsn't a watchman because he is nea: . A nearsighted watchman can’t the work. 1 know he is nearsighted, be- cause If he wasn't he could see his own father and brother stealing my oysters t "The watchman says complainant is merely sarcastic, i a —————————————; Sp DANCE modern THE PATINEUR One cannot imagine a in the bowing dropping partner of a almost to in anodern dress, centre ballroom, and before modern on wo and of the floor then his rose. 2] absurd the one Knee Such men's uigite as those tures 1 to time when tollettes ff 4 { The he women of today i . { + nl modern who is not al man, ce ruffles shoes, finds it gold buck. difficult in the to be even model of ace danceg his conventional evening thes dance is suggested him feel conspicuous moment # that makes the al a oF aimost say hope for a ern becomes nan We can perhaps hardly rn of the stately minuet: Ale an . » g +4 roa ¢ pointed out ne dress of x iid » would rob Omen « have saya Harp cert gent time weak redo ive AlN the afternoon while women many thamselves their friends home but one day in two weeks. In any French women tially preserve the charm if the tom established by Mlle. de Scudery, who achieved her success by simpla means which are quite within the reach of every American woman Her small house in Paris stood in a garden full of fruit bearing trees sur rounded by tall shrubs and bushes, ‘onversation-—that finest of all the cianss who occupations ' have permit seeing serious the ns pieasure of Cage CEBOET. “Use gay and gossipy, according to the weather wae fine they tock a turn in the garden gathering and eating cherries when the fruit was in sen. kon. In short the day was truly and in all simplicity a day at home. The averag:s American » oman lives of the unexpected guest: whether she is making preserves, writing books, baby she is always under the strain ly in small towns, to be in the house and not to receive the unexpected guest is to convert a friend Into an enemy. What woman in what small American town cannot provide as much for herself and her frienda? Let her try it and see what benefit she will reap from thus ordering her relations with the world New Hay. en Register, FASHION NOTES. Gold tissue will be very much used for sleeves and yokes. Satin of the palest pink ls the new for evening wear, Abandoned is the f eather VOning wear Frocks may be butt BOE for e oned front as weil as th shirley poppies are a trimming for black Most of the embr BULODE 18 A device t ing darning The almost oO sepa Ottoman as a riva I ipular, in u I LUssore “Puffed out very full at the back” in hair and maognent t¥ g “ rEg the : : PF 106 Filet net stockings is lsle in Silk are the riage f the nhroiders te on wini fo re effective ps are only when or happl New Yor slightly pa centre ¢ y ’ $b i a 4 3 5 FY Lae ons ol amusement emot be ox ness are to pressed - Press THE WELL-BR seen ED I have Americans of all so in public you there is much to learned by both men and women The little touches which fashion dic and private, assure deficiencies in the fundamental train ing, and often the table manners of a modestappearing man or woman Were vastly superior to those shown by a group of richiy-dressed diners Breeding is un observant eves-—go is Fashion allows a woman to loll ever is balanced between the fingers Refinement frowns upon such behav! There and steel, using the napkin and of the and glass, leaving change, and with which fashion vever the habits of wellbred persons at home and abroad —New Haven Reg. ister, » Hope Springs Eternal, He was addressing a crowd one Bun. day moming on the quay at New castle, “1 can safely say that no man ever attempted to bribe me, gentlemen” sald the speaker, “Don’t be downhearted, old chap, your luck may change.” shouted a man in the crowd —Tit-Bits 3 i 5 &
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