A GLASS FACTORY. How the Glass is Melted, Rolled and Blown. Liability of the Workmen to Burns and Blisters. Entoring a glass factory, the first ob ject which attracts attention is the great central furnaces in which the glass is melted. The most unobservant person will have noticed that ordinary glass presents itself in three aspects— brown,green and stainless white or flint glass. The former tints aro due to the presenco of iron- oxide in the sand, which is one of tho priucipal ingredi ents. When colorless glass is desired the iron has to be eliminated, or the color masked by suitable means, and it is a noteworthy fact that a proportion of iron in the sand too small to be in dicated by the most delicate assay will impart a distinct hue to glass. Diflar ent metallic oxides impart different hues; thus tin or arsenic will render the product white and opaque; gold will givo a ruby red; copper, in tho form of black oxide with a little iron ore, will yield an emerald green prod" uct; cobalt-oxido a blue; manganese a purple; oxide of uranium a yellow, and so on. It follows that where colorless glass is desirod the greatest caro has to be taken to insure the use of sand in which the metallic oxides referred to aro distinguished by their absence. The furnace takes up quite a large part of the room in a glass factory, and is circular in form, to enable the opera tors to approach the pots from all sides. As these melting pots are of large size (seme aro 55 inches in diameter) and have to withstand continuously a heat which will easily melt iron or steel, it follows that they have to be made of well-kneaded, tempered and annealed fire-clay. There is a glorious uncer tainty about the life of a melting pot. It may givo way and break up in eight hours or it may last for months. Iu any case the sides wear through and get thin, in tho lapse of time, from the ab sorption of the clay into the vitrified molten mass within. Just so long as a good pot can be patched up and forti fied it is kept in use, but when a pot has to bo removed, no matter under what circumstances, it moans a hot, hard day's work for all hands. The first thing is to dislodge the broken fragments of the pot, or the whole affair bodily if not broken, by battering-ram blows directed with a gigantic crowbar into tho interior of a furnace heated like unto that into which Shadrach, Meshech and Abednego were cast in tho days of old. When the work is com pleted the new pot, already annealed and heated to whiteness, has to be placed in position, and as the pot and contents may weigh many hundred pounds, the ordeal is necessarily a severe one. Burns and blisters are every day occurrences in a glass factory. It is a busy scene, this interior of a glass factory in full blast. About a hundred hands, men and boys in nearly equal proportions, are employed. First au operator sticks the end of a long iron tube into a glowing white hole and draws tho instrument forth with a glistening gelatinous looking mass at the end. He rolls this mass actively for a few moments on a flat slab called a ''marver." The marver is placed in a slightly inclined position on a wooden slab, and the rolling of the glass on the surface, easy as it looks, is quito au art. While the glass is still in tho soft, pasty condition, the operator blows it nlightly and guides the lump into the interior of a mold closed by a treadle, blowing it all tho timo. Tho trans formation is almost instantaneous, and ■when the pressure ou the treadle is re leased the tube is withdrawn, with a "full-blown'' bottle at the end of it. As already remarked, this bottle mould is an American invention, and the sav ing in tho case of cheap goods is very groat. The bottles are annealed—a process of re-heating and gradual cool ing—and finished off at tho necks, etc., by manipulation at the "glory-holes" smaller furnaces. In another part of the factory the visitor witnessed the making of carboys, or the huge jars employed to hold acids and 1 quors in bulk, the final shape in this instanca also being given by press ure in a suitable mold. Tho carboy, before being taken to the annealing furnace, if detached from the blowing rod by a dexterous flip on the neck with a stream of water, which cuts off tho carboy as cleanly as if a knife or a file •were used. A similar expertness is ex hibited by a neighboring workman, who, before expanding the "gathering" of molten glass into a carboy, examines it critically to detect iaws and impuritie 3 undiscerniblo to an ordinary eye. Those flaws are picked out with a hot iron tool, just as a coou would extract a plum or cherry-stone from a mass of dough.— San FrancUco ChronicU. Superstitions of the Hindoos. The Hindoos are early risers. In the warm season—extending from April to October—they sleep either upon the housetop or in the courtyard, or in the veranda if rain should be threatening, and are usually up at 6 o'clock or ear lier in the morning. In the cold weather, when they slesp within doors, they rise late, but are out before 7. Rising in the morning, when but half awake, the Hindoo repeats tho name of Rama several times. Happening to yawn, he immediately fillips his thumb and middle finger, though ho does not know why. Ho prepares for his morn ing toilet. He plucks a twig from tbe bitter Neem tree, breaks off a span length of it, crushes one end between his teeth and extemporizes a tooth brush. Ho next draws water fr om tho well in the yard with an iron bucket, and prepares to wash his hands and face. This is quickly done. 110 then throws on an extra garment, the thickness and texture depending on the season and weather, lights his hooka, takes a few pulls with his ouphonious hubblo-bubble, and is ready togo out. With a passing "Rama, Rama," to friend or acquaintance, and a neighbor ly gossip by the way, ho repairs to his place of business. Whilo going he will sedulously avoid those signs and •sounds which may augur ill for tho day. Should one sneeze, or should he hear the cawing of a crow or tho cry of a kite, or should he meet an old man or one blind or lame, or see a cat cross his path, he would be greatly distressed as to the day before him. On tho other hand, if a fox crosses his path, if he hears a gong or shell summoning him to worship, or if he meots a Brahmin with his head uncovered, ho would rejoice, hailing it as auspicious. Somo aro so superstitious that if any evil portent oc curs on the way they return home, have a smoke or chew a betel leaf, and pro ceed afresh. Otters Tobogganing. On the north bank of Trout Run, two miles from Blakesley, Pcun., a steep knoll rises from tho edge of a deep pool. The spot is a great resort for otters in winter, and Samuel Price, who hss watched them on many a bright moonlight night when the temperaturo was several degrees below zero, tells about how tho furry follows frolic there. If tho pool happens to be frozen over the otters gnaw and dig a hole in the ice at the foot of the knoll. Then, one after another, they all plungo into the pool, get their fur full of water and skip up tho hill. The water drips off on the way, and freezes as soon as it strikes the ground or snow, and in a little while tho playful otters havo a regular toboggan slide as slippery as ico on a steep hillside can be. When the slide is completed each otter takes it) turn at sliding down the knoll "kerplunk" into the pool, and they keep up the sport until daylight, catch ing a trout now and then and eating it on the bank. One night last winter Mr. Prico trapped a full-grown otter at the slide. He has it yet, but he has not been able to tamo it very much. —New York Tribuna. A Singular Discovery. A singular discovery has boon mad» on tho Fiji Islands. A disease had caused much havoc on a banana planta tion, part of which was on a flut near tho seashore. The sea swept into this section, remaining about an hour. All tho plants were killed as fnr as the standing stems were concerned, but vig orous young shoots came up freely from the roots, and were not only quito free from disease, but soon began to bear much larger bunches of fruit than the older plants ever did. Tho planters took the hint and experimented upon a number of badly diseased plants which tho sea had not reached. They cut down the plants, and, having stirred the ground about them, poured from one to four buckets of sea water over each. Tho rosult was that, while the parent stems withered, vigorous young shoots came freely away without a sign of disease. Cologne Cathedral. This superb edifico holds the first rank among German cathedrals, and is one of the most magnificent buildings in tho world. It was, according to the common belief, begun in 12-18, and progressed slowly till the sixteenth century, when work upon it was for a timo abandoned. It fell raoro and more into decay until Frederick Will iam IV. began its restoration. It was consecrated 600 years after its founda tion. Work upon this edifico has been vigorously prosecuted within the last few years, and it is now completed. Externally, its double range of stu pendous flying buttresses, and the in tervening piers bristling with a forest of purpled pinnacles, strike tho be holder with awe and astonishment. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Man's highest happiness will not be reached till he is doing all he can for man. He who puts a bad construction on a good act reveals his own wickedness of heart. Thore is not onough justico in the world to prevent the right from occa sionally getting left. The wise carry their knowledge as they do their watchos—not for display but for their own use. Tho good that men do may be in terred with their bones, but tho coffins of some mon are not crowded. Wit is healthy only when mingled with sense, as hydrogen is a necessity in pure air, but when alone is a poison. When a man hath forfeited tho repu tation of his integrity, he is sot fast, aud nothing will then servo his turn— neither truth nor falsehood. Troubles spring from idlenoss, and grievous toils from needloss ease. Many without labor would live by their own wits, but they break for want of stock. lie is a great simpleton who imagines that tho chief power of wealth is to supply wauts. In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred it creates more wants than it supplies. liight actions for the futuro are tho best explanations or apologies for wrong ones in tho past; the best evidence of regret for them that wo can oiler or the world receive. To think well of every other man's condition, and to dislike our own, is ouc of the misfortunes of human nat ure. Pleased with each other's lot, our own we hate. Changing the Color of Birds. The following is from the proceed ings of tho Berlin Physiological soci ety: Starting with the observed fact that canaries fed with cayenne pepper acquire a ruddy plumage, Dr. Sauer mann has based upon it a scientitic in vestigation of canaries, fowls, pigeons and other birds. From these ho ob tained tho following results: Feeding with pepper only produces au effect when given to young birds bforo they moult; the color of the older birds can not be affected. Moisture facilitates the change of color to a ruddy hue, which is again discharged under the influence of suuliglit and cold. A por tion of the constituents of cayenne pepper is quite inactive, as, for instanco, piperin and several extractives; simi larly, the red coloring matter alone of the pepper has no effect on tho color of the feathers. It is rather the triolein, which occurs in tho popper in tar;;»s quantities, together with the character istic pigment, which brings about tho change of color by holding the red pig meui of tho pepper in solution. Glycerine may be u ed inst ad of trio lein to bring about the same result. Tho samo statement holds good with regard to the feeding of birds with ani line colors. The red pigment of the pepper is also stored in tho egg yolk as well as in tho feathers. The first ap pearance of tho pigment in tho yolk may bo observed as a colored ring four days after the beginning of the feeding with tho pigment dissolved in fat. After a further two days'feeding tho wliolo yolk is colored. Cold Waves Aro predicted with reliablo accuracy and p*opl«* liable to tho pains and ache* of rheumatism dread ©very change to damp or stormy weather. Although wo do not claim Ilood's Sarsaparllla to be a posltlv;* specific for rheumatism, tho remarkable cures is has effected show that It may be taken for rheuma tism with reasonable certainty of benefit. Its ac tion in neutralizing the acidity of tho blood, whloli ibthe cause of rheumatism, constitutes the svsrat of the success of Hood's Sarsaparllla In curing this complaint. If you suffer from rheumatism. glv» Hood's Sarsaparllla a fair trial; we believe It will do you good. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by C. 1. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Xass. 100 Doses One Dollar N Y N U-1 RMIWAY'S Kill RELIEF. THE GREAT CONQUEROR OF PAIN, For Sprain*, Ilrniae*, Ruckacbc, Pain in the dhrnt or Midm, Headache, Toothache, or any other external pain, a lew applica tion* rubbed ou by hand* act like magic, cauning the pain to instantly ntop. For Congestion*, Cold*. Bronchi tin, Pneu monia, Inflammation*, kiheuinatlam. Neu ralgia, liUiiibago. Sciatica, more thorough and repeated application* are necessary. All Internal Pains, IHarrhrca, Colic* Kpa*mn, Nauaea, Fainting Spelln. Nervons nea», SleeuleaaneMn are relieved lnntantlv. and quickly cured by taking inwardly *2O to HO drop* in halt a nimbler ol water. 50c. a bottle. All Druggists. DADWAY'S n PILLS, An excellent and mild Cathartic. Purely Vegetable. The Safest and Best Medicine In the world tor the Cure of all Disorders ofthe LIVER, STOMACH OR DOWELS. Taken accordiug to directions they will restore health and renew vitality. Price 20 ou. a Box. Sold by all Druggists. The total area of New Zealand Is 66,- 000,000 acres; of these, 7,284,752 acrea were in 1888 under crop or sown grass, 357,359 acres were underwheat, 336,474 under oats,nnd 27,912 acres under barley. Between 1878 and 1888 the amount of coal raised advanced from 162,218 tons to an output of 613,895 tons. Buffalo Bill contemplates taking his Wild West show to India. Certain In dian potentates who visited Paris this summer advised him to do so. Kntltled to the Best. All are entitled to tho best that their money will buy, so every family should have, at once a bottle of the best family remedy. Syrup of Figs, to cleanse the system when costive or bil ious. For sale in 50c. and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. PIGS have been known to live to the age of thirty years; the rhinoceros t r > twenty. A Family Gathering. Ila'.'e you a father? Hnva you a mother? Have you a son or daughter, pister or a brother wbo has not yet taken Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Luniks, the guaranteed remedy for the cure of Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Croup and all Throat and Lung troubles? If so, why? when a sample bottlo is gladly given to you free by any druqrgLnt and tho large size costs only 50c. and SI. TifEonly Armenian newspaper in the United States is published in West Hoboken, N. J. Deafness Can't be Cured By local applications, ns they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure Deafness, and that is by con stitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of tho Eustachian Tube. When this tube get« in terned you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be de stroyed forever; nino cases out of ten are | caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by Catarrh) that wo cannot euro by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. OmwiT & Co., Toledo, O. ACCOHPINO to official statistics Marseilles's traffic has nearly doubled since 1670, | " Why need it be?" we say, and siizh When loving mothers fade and die. And leave the little ones whose feet They hoped to guide in pathways sweet. It need not be in many cases. All about ns : women are dying daily whose Uym might have i been t-aved. It seem to be a wide-spread opin ion that when a woman is slowly fading away with the diseases which grow out of female and irregularities that there is no help for her. She is doomed to death. But this is not true. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- I vcription is constantly restoring women nf | Tlicted with diseases of' this class to health and ; happiness. It is the only medicine for their i ailments, sold by druggists, under a positive \ttoirante*. from the manufacturers of its giv ing satisfaction in every case, or money paid for it will be refunded. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, the original and only genuine Little Liver Pills; 25 cents a vial; ono a dose. A emeus elephant sold in Philadelphia the other day brought SI7OO. The saving in clothing where Dobbins's El»-c --tric Soap is used, is ttcentu times the soap bill. , it is no new experiment, but has been sold for -4 years. To-day just as pure as in 1865. Try | it. Your grocer has it or will order it. TWENTY- ONE deceased persons have been I cremated at Kosedale, Cal. Oregon, the Paradise of Farmers. I Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant crops. Best fruit, grain, grass and stock coun try in the world. Full information free. Ad dress Oregon Im'igrat'n Board, Portland, Ore. We recommend "Tansill's Punch" Cigar. FSnMmYANDTBWAirfEifrff RHEUMATISM. For XO Yrarf. Pilot Knob, Mo., September 8,1888. I suffered with chronic rheumatism in my knees and ankles for twenty years and had to use crutches. J was treated at times by several doctors, but was finally cured by St. Jacobs Oil. Havo had no return of pain in three years. HENRY P. TRAVERS. AT I>RUOGISTB AND DEALERS. THE CHARLES A. VO6ELER C#.. Baltimore. ML Ely's Gream Balm , Is the best remedy for suffering from COLD IN CATARRH, Apply Halm Into each nostril. ELY BROS., SC Warren St, N. GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST. j "By a thoroujeh kuowlodfco of the natural lawf which govern tho operations of digestion and nutrl- I tlon, and by a careful application of the line proper tlos of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Kpps has provided I our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured bev ; erage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It Is by the judicious use of such articles of diet j that a constitution may be gradually built up until 1 strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. ! Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us I ready to attack wherever there Is a weak point. ' We mav escape many a fatal Hhaft by keeping our selves well fortified with pure blood and a properly ! nourished frame."—"Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Soli I only In half-pound tln% by Grocers, labelled thus: I JAMES EPPS dk CO.♦ Homoeopathic Chemists, LONDON, ENGLAND. IK YOU WANT A WlttK MAT you want I the IfKST, wnich means a **ll A KTMAN.' Don't be befogged by comparison, but buy tnc ST AN OA KII Instead of article compared. HABIT. Only Certain and easy CURE In the World. Or. Ul lUIYI .1. 1,. STEPHENS. Lebanon, o DETECTIVES Waoterl »hr*wd men to act under lnatractlona In Seer#: SerrSN wof Representative! rc-oelvc the International Deterilva. (irannau'a Warning Agaiait Prand. Orannan'a rocket Gallery of I Noted Criminate. Ttaone intereeied In deteetive buetoeaa, or doalr ' In* ?•» be detectivea. Bead atamn for particular*. Employment for aU. URANIUM DETKCTIYKICMAB CO. Arrado, Claeinaatl. O. NORTHERN PACIFIC. LOW PRICE RAILROAD LAROS & EE Government LANDS. I MI 1,1.10NS OK ACKKS In Mlunenota, -Norc.i l'akota, Molilalia, Idaho, WaslilUßUm anil Oregon. ..y.P.B publications with map* dcucrllilng ttie OCSU rllli bent Agricultural, '..razlnx anil I'lm brr I.audn now open toB«ttler«. CHAS. B. LAMBORM, AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT DR. LOBB i North ft< iltreutli *51., I'nuodelpnia, l'a., for | me treatment of Hlood Poisons, tiklu irruption*. I Xvervoua Complaints, Bright'.* Disease, btrioturca, lin potency aud kindred diseases, no matter of how i lonK htamlln* or from what cause originating. , M r ~i'eudays' medicines furnisnod t>y mall CilaJC [ beuii fur Boole on SPECIA 1« Oleeaeea. rlillfcs — m l presciino r.na fully o«* dorse Big (3 as the only specific for the certain euro I AHP'L TO 6 of thlc divaae. I Mpboaraatccd not Ml Q. H. IN GRAHAM, If. !>.. ! RS csossUrtsw* m Amsterdam, N. Y. SSB Mr« only by the havo sold Blf O fot uB51» « i—* many yearn ana it haa UJtfnao CksaUW vW tho best ol iati«- UA Faction. | D. R. DYCHB A CO.^ j BoldluDruurUt* THE FASTEST TIME ON RECORD, In the direction of the neareit drug-store, is not too fait for a person to make who is troubled with any of the Myriad forms of dUeue resulting; from a torpid or deranred liver and its attendant impure blood, and is, therefore, iu need of that world-famed and only guaranteed blood-purifier and liver invigorator known as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. Every form of Scrofulous, Skin and Scalp Disease, Xczema, Erysipelas, Salt-rheum, Tetter, scaly, crusty, itching, burning and tormenting forms ef skin disease, are cured by this wonderful remedy as if by magic. Sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee of benefit or cure, or money refunded. All ScroAilous afections. as Fever-sores. White Swellings, Hip-joint Disease, Old Sorei and Ulcers, yield to its wonderful cura tive properties. It promptly conquers Indigestion and Dyspepsia. It is a con- ' centrated vegetable fluid extract. Dose small and pleasant to taste. Contains no alcohol, don't inebriate or manufacture topers; is free from syrup or sugar, and, therefore, don't sour or ferment in the stomach, interfering with digestion ; as peculiar in its wonderful curative effects as in its composition. There is no other medicine at all like it, either in composition or elect. Therefore, don't be fooled into accepting something instead, said to be " just as good." If substitutes are "just as good," why don't their vendors guarantee them to do what they are rccommendea to, or refund money paid for them, as we do with all who buy "Golden Medical Discovery?" For the very good reason that such a plan of sale would bankrupt the manufacturers of any but an extraordinary remedy like the " Discovery." To purify the blood, invigorate the liver, promote digestion, and build up both flesh and strength, it is unequaled, whether for adults or children. WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Proprietors, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. T. < or * t OI'J'JUR-HIJJ for an incurable case of - Afc. - •- Catarrh in th. Ho.d by the proprietor* of BR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY. SYMrTOIM OF CATABM.—Headache, obstruction of nose, discharges B7 fallinr into throat, soaaeiiaaM profuse, watery, and acrid, at other*, thick. SI x-w tenacious, nauoou*. purulent, bloody, putrid aad ofenaire; eyes weak, rio*- |LiI *J[jr inff in Ml*. deafaaas; offanatvo breach; MAIL and t«ato impaired, and gen eral debility. Ooiy a few of tb»n ayiaptoma likely to be present at once. Dr. Safe's Remedy cures the wont oases. Only St oeota. Sold by everywhere. • DK. KUEUI.£K'« FAVORITE COLIC lUIXTURK for all domectic anlmau, wlllioureMoul of every 100 caaea of colic, whether flat, ulent or spasmodic. Rarely more thaa 1 or J doses necessary. It does not coa atlpate, rather acta aa a laxative and Is entirely harmlesi. After - 1 vears <>f trial In more than 3000 oases, our guarantee Is worth something. Colic iiiunt ho treated promptly. Expend a few oenta and you have a euro on hand, ready when needed, and perhapa save a valuable horse. If not at your rtrugglst'j enclose 50 eenta for sample bottle, sent prepaid. Address Da. KOKULER Jc CO.. Bethlehem. I'm. 1 use Dr. Koehier's "farorite Colic I We cheerfully recommend Or. Korhl Mixture" right along with success. It it I «■'. "favorite Colio Mixture." WouUl the cotie mtdxeine I Aaw rvrr Jcen. I not be without it a* iotig as we hava ISAAC MOOG, Horse Dealer, I horse*. ISAAC MOSES & lIRO., Brooklyn, New York. | Sate and Exchange Stables, f.aston, Pa CD A 7CD•, rnniitnepcsoc BEST IN THE WOELD II II Lfl V » arms. The nnest small ARMS HKV proet the Genuine. ' Sold Ererywhere. | erer manufactured and the Mai ~ first choice of all experts. 1 Coll Rt«ir, 1 Baad Ring, 1 suae Mm, X T\u, Manufactured In calibres 32,33 and 44-100. Sin- ©SJ i'Bihn 'j§""Sc,.,,Hk......v.t....riirMU...at M .le or double action, Safety Uammerless uud vSSS' 10s. AUSTIN CO., Ntm Havsa, Ct. Target models. Constructed entirely of heat quul- iuuiHuia ity wrought steel, carefully Inspected for worx- J- climate, valley of crop, and chrcula^ iree. 1 liOft. tSptA, lisnd tsm r, are often sold for the genuine article and are not l,utlc Kockt Arkansas, onl -. unreliable, but dangerous. The SMITH .* , WESSON Revolvers are all stamped upon the bar liTtft WONOCRCUU rel with firm's name, address and date of patents 1 fitlffD jTL rUAlril lIP I • * nd ar ® teed perfect In every detail. in- LUDUIIU I WNFTL slat upon having the genuine article, and If vour frj.i'Jl dealer cannot supply you an order sent to address nr riiDMiTiisr /fyT*'below will receive prompt and careful attention. JS rUMWI»umt . Descriptive catalogue and prices furnished upon ap pUc'Uon - SMITH & WESSON, AND yMentlon this paper. Springfield, MSM. SINUE STUDY. book-keeping, Business iproMi )r - II thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars iree. ▼a totSl at th. gafiKSA ITiTr DCC Br T»"'' College, 457 Main St.. imffalo, N. V aodlb'p C^di V tO -Vl f•nill ll iIFMB inM J »"" WuVOUHISi Eld fory»grpciAL rasa l'Suco«M#Wlly prosecutes Claims^ logne. Namt good* d«ind. VMZ MUTBBX, I L»te Principal Examiner U. Pension Buroaa. LCBUBO MVCk CO., 14ft N. *th SC. FhUeia, P% ■ 3 jrn In last war, 16 a* Unfruitful Egjs, Broilers, iL. When to Sot for Choico What to Feed Young IvS • T Fow> *> C,l ' c ' ls ' J? UW »/' what to Mod lor EMS. How to Arrange Coops, | What to Food to Fatten, Handling of Eggs. To Got Rid of Vermin, About Watering Chicks, / TT About Incubators, Arrangement of Porches p > r V >1 _ . „ To Prevent and Cur. I . Raup. Abortion, Choi- \£JT A3 \ Pip Llco.Scal, Leg., era, Gapes, Ac., Ac. VT | . Indigestion, Ac., So. CARE OF TXTEKETS, BITGKS, GEESE. The best Chicken Book for the money ever offered. No one with Fowls can afford to be without It. Sent poatpald on receipt of 25 cents In silver, postal note or stamps (1 or 2c.). BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 134 Leanard St., N. Y. City.