What I* tile Dairy Type? The most profitable dairy cow fs one tiiat has no tendency to put on flesh has a good appetite and a large stomach, indicating great consuming and assimilating capacity. A cow with this conformation is said to be of the true dairy type. Wheat Chaff as a Mulch. Wheat chaff as a mulch may seed the land with wheat, which will be sure to grow in spring when the mulch Is removed. Strawberries should be mulched with straw or loaves, using cornstalks to hold the Btraw. Planing mill shavings are ex cellent If they can be obtained. Best Soils for Sheep. Sheep will not thrive on all kinds of soils. Some breeds are very active and will thrive in large flocks, but the large mutton breeds require good pas turage, and will not give satisfactory results if compelled to work over large areas for all they get. All sheep should have dry soils. Foot rot will always occur in a flock that is kept constantly on wet lands. Kale as Food for Stock. The thousand-headed kale is a va riety that is highly esteemed in Eng land as food for stock. It forces lambs as rapidly as does rape, and It Is claimed that it never causes gases In the stomach of an animal. The Seeds are planted early, or the plants may be started in a hotbed for an early supply, being transplanted as Boon as the season opens. It is termed ihousand-headed kale because the stalk supports a large number of small heads. In this country .the Essex rape Is preferred, and it has been tested in all sections, especially as food for sheep. Changing Seed. There Is yet much to be learned about the matter of increasing crops by obtaining seed from other sections than that where it is to be planted. At the lowa Experiment station they obtained potatoes from Canada and planted them by the side of seed grown upon their own soil, from the 6eventh crop of that variety grown there. They obtained 754 bushels per acre from the Canada seed, and 109 bushels from the home grown seed. Yet the results are not always that way even with potatoes. It may be Said that generally home grown pota toes do not produce as much as seed Brown farther north, but it is not an Invariable rule, and some successful growers would not trust their crop to seed which they had not grown and saved themselves, and say that when they have tried it home grown seed has always produced the best crop. The results of one experiment do not prove a case, and we need more, with a thorough knowledge of how the crop was grown, and seed selected in each case. We need to know if forc ing a crop to grow and mature in a shorter time, either by a richer soil or coaler climate, or both, will make the Seed more prolific.—The Cultivator. I'ot* and Trellit*es for HOIIRC Plant*. We often see a blooming house plant with beauty marred if not ruined by the old tin can in which it grew, or the dirty rag or twine string which ties it fast to a splinter or piece of fctick which serves as a trellis. Many plant enthusiasts declare that they have better results with the tin cans than with the regular clay pots. This may be true, and the cans can be transformed into ornamental vessels, combining cheapness with beauty, lardineres are too much of a luxury for the average housewife to own tnore than a pair. By getting a supply Df crepe paper the cans can all be transformed into dainty jardinores. Cut the paper in strips with enough to extend from the top of the can, and around it. Then tie some bright col prod cord about the can, one piece an inch from the top. By running the bottom of the paper between the thumb and finger and stretching it, It will flare out. By pulling out the paper midway between the cords, Stretching it, and creasing it, the full bens in the middle will be made. The top is finished like the bottom. This Is not expensive and is certainly an Improvement over the old rusty cans. Where a plant is of such a nature that It requires a support of some kind, get someone to make a ladder of smooth wood and paint it white, brown or green. Fasten the plant to It with some colored twine, in har mony with the color of the plant, pot or frame. This is much better than picking iip a broken branch and tying up the plant with a carpet rag. For mo, the prettiest flower loses its charm if treated in this way.—Maud Steinway, in Agricultural Epitomist. The Blood of Our Stock. There is a common saying that we live by our blood and on it, and if the blood is impure our systems starve! If too rich we break out In disease and Buffer, but if just right at all times we enjoy perfect health. This Is so true that physicians try to get at the root of all diseases by purifying and feeding the blood. If this is kept In good condition and in healthy circu lation most diseases will be thrown off and the system thereby will be saved many sufferings. A good deal if not all this practical wii'dom is applicable to the live stock which wo raise on our farms —tho cows, pigs, sheep ana poultry. Tttt blood is the all essential constituent that makes good or bad animals. Let that get out of order and then th« door is thrown open for all sorts ol physical disorders. There is hardlj a disease that cannot be traced bach directly or indirectly to the blood Even the colds which the animals suf fer with would never have been coix tracted had the blood been all right It the blood had been pure, rich and in good circulation the animals would have been able to throw the cold off, or never to have taken it at all. Consequently, we need to pay a lit tie attention in the winter time to feeding for blood, and for seeing thai it is all right. Richness of blood sometimes means impurity, and thai is not to be desired any more than impoverished blood. Animals that are shut up in close winter quarters and fed heavily on rich foods will inva riably have thick, sluggish blood which may cause fevers and other troubles. Swine cholera owes its ori gin to feverish, thick and sluggish blood. When turned out in the clovei lot, they keep their blood cooled off, and they rarely suffer from cholera We cannot afford to feed our stock with too highly concentrated food in winter unless we can give them daily exercise sufficient to counteract the effect of this and feed them also with roots, vegetables and other green things. If we do. trouble will follow sooner or later, and then the mischief is done. It is much easier to upset the system of an animal than to cor rect it and bring it back to a state of good health. The danger confront ing us now at this season is that of heavy feeding with not sufficient va riety either of food or exercise. Neither can be neglected, and a good stock of roots is an excellent thing to begin the winter with for daily feeding.—William Conway, in Ameri can Cultivator. Taking Composite Milk Snmplei* The modern creamery and cheese factory uses the Babcock test for de termining the richness of the milk de livered by each patron. The most common and satisfactory method of paying for the milk according to its test is to take a small sample of each lot of milk every day, pour this into a covered glass jar containing a small amount of some preservative and at the end of a week or ten days test this composite sample. The essential fea tures of the process are given in the following directions: Provide a pint or quart jar or bot tle for each patron. Label each bottle with a number, giving the same num ber to a patron on the milk recording sheet. Composite test sample bottle 3 made for this purpose with a tin cover and numbered brass tag wired to the neck of each bottle can be obtained of creamery supply firms. These sam ple bottles should be placed on shelves within easy reach of the weigh can, and protected from the light. A preservative is put into each clean bottle to keep the' milk from souring, until testing day. Pulverized potassium bichromate, corrosive sub limate, borax or preservaline can be used for this purpose. Some of these preservatives are putin tablet form, each tablet containing the necessary amount to use in one sample. After each lot of milk is poured into the factory weigh can, a small amount of it is dipped from the can and poured into the proper sample bottle. These samples are usually taken with a small one ounce tin dipper, a samp ling tube, or from a drip in the con ductor spout. Each lot of milk sampled must be sweet, containing no clots, lumps or curdled milk, or small butter gran ules. The sample should be taken just as soon as the milk is weighed, and while it is evenly mixed. Con tinue adding a sample of each patron's milk to his particular jar every time he delivers milk for a week of ten days, then test this composite sample. The composite sample jars should be kept covered to prevent loss by evap oration, and in a cool dark place. Every time a new portion of milk ia added to the jar it should be given a horizontal rotary motion to mix the cream already formed in the jar with the milk, and to rinse off the cream sticking to its side. Unless this is done every time fresh portions of milk are added to the jar the cream on the milk becomes lumpy and sticks in patches to the side of the jar, thus making it nearly impossible to even ly distribute this cream through tho entire sample. Composite samples having patches of dried cream on the inside of the jar are the result of carelessnes or ignorance on the part of the operator. The test of the composite sample takes the place of a separate daily test and gives accurate information regarding the average quality of the milk delivered by each patron during the period of sampling. The weight of butter fat which each patron brought to the factory in his milk dur ing this time is obtained by multiply ing the total weight of milk delivered during the sampling period by the test of the composite sample, divided by 100.—Report of Wisconsin Experi ment Station. A Gr.at C'liitngn tn Bonton'n Btr«t». One of the greatest changes that have occurred in Boston is the trans formation of the overcrowded thor oughfares around what was known as "Scollay's buildings" into the spacious pleasant area we now call Scollay square. All of the original Is gone except the distinctive appellation, anil what has existed in some form for two centuries has vanished "like the baseless fabric of a vision." —Ameri- can Cultivator. P'FeR I'nlque Set of Window Curtain*. A beautiful and unique set of win dow .curtains for a red room suggests many possibilities in this line. They are of deep cream net. almost ecru, with embroidered edge and border in crim son. Of course any shade of embroid ery may be used, and a pretty effect gained by employing the dominant note of color '.n the room. These cur tains look well either hanging straight of draped back with a colored silk cpujj to match the embroidery. The Mustard Hath. When baby comes in from his winter playtime, sneezing and coughing and showing various Indications or having caught cold, try a mustard bath foi warding off future trouble. Tie two ta blespoonfuls of ground mustard in a email piece of cheesecloth, and put it in a tubful of water, as hot as one can comfortably bear. Rub thoroughly af terward, and get the patient to bed as soon as possible, to gaard against more cold. This plan of taking a mustard bath when the usual indications of a severe cold present themselves, Is equally good for adults, but it is especially rec ommended for the little tots, who eo often expose themselves thoughtlessly during playtime. The Care of House Plants. Many people have poor success with house plants because their houses are too good. They are kept at a uniform £ieat by hot air furnaces, which fur nish a heat, and the rooms are so carefully closed against cold in the winter that not a breath of fresh air gets in. Plants need pure air, and they need moisture for their leaves as well as for their roots. The woman who has a few plants in the kitchen where they get the steam from the Laundry work, and where the outer door is swinging open often, or windows are opened to let out the heat or odors, will have thrifty plants though she de votes but little time to them, whilo they may fall to grow well in the ba£ window of a modern comfortable sit ting room.—American Cultivator. Tlie Skilled Marketer. No woman is a thoroughly skilled marketer, until she has learned to discriminate between the various cuts of meat and to pick out a tender chicken. Even in buying squabs, one cannot be sure she is getting what she as!s# for unless she knows the marks that distinguish the squabs from the old birds. lii tfirst place, the color of the flesh and of Uie legs should be noticed. Young pigeon Jp.ave stout, fresh colored legs that are cmooth, while the flesh of the breast is ot C light red shade. In the old pigeons this red has changed to a dark tone and the legs are dark and thin. There is a difference also in the skin, which is thicker in the old birds. The feet of the squabs are limber and the eyes full and bright. What is known as prime mutton signifies mutton cut from an animal that has been allowed to run and feed out of doors. In selecting mutton, notice whether or not the fat Is white. It shoula be abundant, white and hard, while the flesh should bo juicy and firm and of a clear red color. —New York Sun. Pot Roast of Venison —Cook, in an Iron kettle if possible, a rib roast of venison of three or four pounds and two slices of fat salt pork in as little water as will cover it. When the meat Is done and the water all boiled away set the kettle on top of the stove and brown on both sides nicely. Turn of ten to keep from burning. Red Cabbage Pickle —For each quart of vinegar allow one-half ounce of bruised ginger, one ounce of whole black pepper and a very little cayenne. Take off the outside leaves from the cabbages, shave them fine, sprinkle with salt, cover and let stand 24 hours; then turn into a colander, drain well and put into a jar. Boil the vinegar with the spices and when cold pour it over the cabbages. Keep airtight and put In a dry place. Creamed Eggs—Boil four eggs 20 minutes; make a cream sauce with a cup and a half of milk, a tablespoonful of butter blended with a tablespoonful of flour, a half teaspoonful of salt and a shake or two of white pepper; press the whites of the eggs through a pota to ricor into the sauce. Have ready half a dozen nicely toasted slices of bread, cover with the sauce, then cover with the yolks of the eggs and put through a ricer. Garnish with a few sprigs of parsley. Apple Orange Marmalade —Core and slice 20 large, tart apples. Allow for every quart one pint of water. Add the thin peel of one orange, cover and boil until tender. Place a sieve over • bowl, pour in the apples and let drain without disturbing. Allow for each pint one pound of sugar. Peel four large oranges, remove white part and seeds and set aside. Boil apple Juice till very thick, add oranges cut Into small pieces and cook until a drop re tains Its shape on a plate. Putin glass )ars and cover like jelly. The applo pulp may be used in pies. llow's Thlsl mtm We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. We, tlie undersigned, have known F.J. Che ney for the laHt 15 years, and believe him per fectly honorable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion made by their firm. WEST & TBUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WARDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- Ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Hall's Family Pills are the Best. No man is so obstinate as to refuse €o give an automobile the right of way. THE DUTY OF MOTHERS. What suffering frequently results from a mother's ignorance; or more frequently from a mother's neglect to properly instruct her daughter I Tradition says "woman must suf fer," and young women are so taught. There is a little truth and a great deal of exaggeration in this. If a young •woman suffers severely she needs treatment, and her mother should see that she gets it. Many mothers hesitate to take their daughters to a physician for examina tion ; but no mother need hesitate to write freely about her daughter or herself to Mrs. Pinkham and secure the most efficient advice without charge. Mrs. Pinkham's address is Lynn, Mass. Mrs. August Pfalsgraf, of South Byron, Wis., mother of the young lady whose portrait we here publish, wrote Mrs. I'inkliam in January, 1800, saying her daughter had suffered for two years with irregular menstruation had headache all the time, and pain in her side, feet swell, and was generally miserable. Mrs. Pinkham promptly replied with advice, and under date of March, IKOO, the mother writes again, that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cured her daughter of all pains and irregularity. Nothing in the world equals Mrs. Pinkham's great medicine for regu lating woman's peculiar monthly troubles. TheHon.Geo.SiarrWrites No. 3 VAN NESS PLAC K, NEW YORK. DR. PADWAY-With me your Relief has worked wonders. For the last tlnee years I have had frequent and severe attacks of sciatica, sometimes extending from the lumbar regions to ray ankle, and a: times to both lower limbs. During the time I have been afflicted I have tried almost nil the remedies recommended by wise men and fools, hoping to find relief, but all proved to be failures. I have tried various kinds of baths, manipula tions, outward application of liniments too numer ous to mention, and prescriptions of the most eminent physicians, all of which tailed to give me lelief. September, at the urgent request of a friend (who had been afflicted as myself) 1 was induced to try your remedy. I was then suffering fearfully with one of my old turns. To my surprise and de light the first application gave me ea.«>e. after bath ing and rubbing the, parts affected, leaving the limbs in a warm glow, created by the Relief. In a short time the pain passed entirely away. Al though I have alight periodical attacks approach ing a change of weather, I know uow how to cur> myself, a-id feel quite master of the situation. feADWAVS READY RELIEF is my friend. 1 never travel without a bottle in my valise. Yours truly, (>EO. STARR. Emigrant Commissioner. fNMfc Sold by all Driiffl.ts. It AD VI'AY & CO., 53 Elm Street, New Verb Why She Wanted to Know. The liiiin m;!io knew rnnny tilings was instructing the new and verdant sten ographer as to the use of the vnriou3 office appliances, oiul finally introduced her to the speaking tube. "Now, see," said the other man; "you put one tube to your ear and the other tube to your moutli, then whis tle." "Into which one do I whistle?" asked the guileless stenographer. "Heavens!" cried the man, "which one do you suppose you whistle in, the one at your ear or the one at your mouth?" "That was what I wanted to know," said the stenographer, "for I whistle as I sing, entirely by ear."—Memphis Scimitar. Cold Storage For Cut Flowers. One of the leaders of fashionable society in Philadelphia has among other table decorations a silver epergne for flowers to fill which costs ss(l. The owner has discovered that by setting the rare orchids and roses in cold stor age they will remain fresh for a month. She is quite elated over the fact that these flowers have served to adorn three dinner parties I & Speedy, Prompt and Sure. I Acts quicker, never gripes and obtains better results A than any laxative known. Its action is marvelous, its effect Immediate. No remedy will cure constipation and biliousness so quickiy and with absolutely no discomfort as Dr Hunyadi J&nos Average Dose: One-half glassful on arising In the morning;. RV Every druggist and general wholesale grocer In the world sella it. laV a£ If for the full name, I f)| IIP Label with AOn "Hunyadi JAnos. | DLUC Red Centre Panel. tola It porter: Firm of ANDRBA3 3AXLBHNER. 130 Fulton St.. N. Y. FALLING Save Your Hair with Shampoos of And light dressings of CUTICURA, purest ol emollient skin cures. This treatment at once stops falling hair, removes crusts,, scales, and dandruff, soothes irritated, itching' surfaces,' stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots with energy and nourishment, and makes the hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp when all else fails. MILLIONS USE CUTIGURA SOAP Assisted by CcTicmtA OINTMENT, for preserving, purifying, and beautify ing the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and healing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itcliings, and chafings, and for all the pur poses of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women use CUTICURA. SOAP in the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, and excoriations, for too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily sug gest themselves to women and mothers. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and beautiflers, to use any others. CUTICCRA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CDTICCRA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicated soap is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines, in ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, viz. : TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, the BEST skin and complexion soap, the BEST toilet, BEST baby soap In the world. Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humor. Consisting of CUTICUR* SOAP (Sic.), to cleanse the skin of crnsts and scales and soften tfae thickened cuticle; CUTICURA OINTMINT (60C.), ■ll I 11*11 B"2a to Instantly allay Itching, inflammation, and Irritation, and soothe and %UtlVUl U heal; and CUTICURA Rrsoi.TENT (50c.), to cool and cleanse the blood. A BINOLK BIT IS often sufficient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring. TUC CCT tl 0 U Itching, burning, and scaft skin, scalp, and blood humors, with lois or I (It Ok I i n)l*i.w hair, when all else falls. Bold throngnout the world. In Mexico prisoners are allowed co smoke in court. Dr. Bull's Cough Cures a cough or cold at once. Conquers croup, bronchitis, | Mlii grippe and consumption. 25c. J V B "TENSION Washington, Mi.cl Successfully Prosecutes Claims. ataPrinotoal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. yrs In civil war. 15 adjudicating ciaims. atty since HDADCV KB* DISCOVERY; dn. L/ | O I quiok r»li«f »»d iuh wont o.ttii- Book at tMUmonUU. and lO day.' tn.tni.nt rrte. Br. 1. muHM».la B. AtU»U.«. ADVERTISING gIAPKM Greatest. Cheapest Ptti on Eutk lor Sheep, Swlae. Ctllle, Wm bt worth 1100 to you to rssd what | Salwtr'a catalog says about rape. Billion Dollar Grass will positively Disks you rich; 12 tons Broniua,Peaoat, Spelts (400 La. c0rn,260 For this Nottae and 100. we mall big cata'og and 10 Farm Seed KoYelties, fully worth HO to get a start. Fnr 140. 7 splendid vegetable and S I brilliant flower seed packages sad catalog. | UEBSHDCft. u SBH ■% a WITHOUT FEB: ■ 1 HTEMTV nnlem .ucreMful B>l| I Ell I Send description; ■ « I 81l I W ■ndiretfreepplnion. ■ MIT.O B. STEVENS & CO.. Esfal>. iwti. Div.S, sl7-14th Street. WASHINGTON. I>. C. Branch offices: Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit. FREE ELECTRIC BELT OFFER* only BIKIJIM iITIUiT. innSIQOI «• CU»KMT BLBCTKIC IlilV t« uj md«r of this papar. Ml boils* awlliaw aa« raaadlas fsiL QUKSK 1111 tw mora than Mallmaata. OIL! BVIICIU for all aarroaa dissaiss. waaknossaa and dlaordara. For oomplat* aaalsd oon Adan tlal catalofua, tat this ad aat aad a all la aa* AIAW. ROEBUCK A co.. oniosao. _ |S| Bait Coach Byron. Tama Good. taH