citn .fUi 1LV -r- f Whan t'noil U Itwat. Food li best when It contain a tft rlety of constituents. Phosphates sup ply tlio Rrotli and waste of tho bones; organic matter rich In gluten, albu t men, legumen, etc., are thn flesh formers, and manor containing suRar, starch or oil supply the carbon, or Tat. The foof to be perfect must contain all the elements necessnry for tlio ob jects Bought. n tirnwlntr. Nut growing lit profitable, but Is requires years to bring a nut tree to well; henre only young farmers are a stago of growth where It will pay induced to devote land In Hint direc tion. Walnuts, chestnuts and butter nuts wttll linpiovc with cultlTation. In a few yeurs walnut trees will bo so scarce Mint the farmer who has a grove will secure his own price there for, the timber being exceedingly valu able. K.rp the Cew Cin. While the udder of the cow should be washed at. every milking, to Insure perfoct cleanliness of milk, yet the cow should be kept where she will bo clean. The dairyman who allows bis stalls to be In such condition that the sides of the cows become plastered with filth and teats smeared with tlio muck of the stalls Is guilty of neglect. The use of straw for several successive days and nights without change In a mistake. If shredded corn stalks and cut stiaw are put In the stalls ev ery day, using only fresh material, there will bo leas lalor to perform than when an attempt Is niacin to econ omize with the use of old material. Korp Only Ilia Ural. It Is poor business policy to keep any number of bens In the flock thut have shown themselves unprofitable. A close observation will soon disclose the sluggards, and all such should at once be removed from tlio flock and prepared for the table. Old hens are always In demand for thn table, and It doea not pay to keep one that does not lay, especially during the winter mouths when grain must lie purchased. An experienced poultry man Is soon able to pick out tho layers, their gen eral appearances Indicating to the prac ticed eye their worth as producers of eggs. Those that lay have bright red combs, sparkling eyes, and a busy, hustling appearance, that denotes a useful life. The drones go around slug gishly, apparently contented to wait ,for feeding time, rather than search through the straw for scattered grains. Select all such, and by a few days' ex tra care, prepare them for market and let the surplus food be saved. Home and Farm. Kplnff Rlip Fre from Paraaltaa, Sheep are subject to a number of ex ternal paiasites, most of which are spread easily. In order to prevent spread of the troublo, tho sheep should be dipped at least twice a year. If a flock become InTocted In any way, quarantine it at once so that It will not transmit the trouble to other sheep. Any of the dipping tanks so widely ad- vertlaed is -satisfactory, as also tho prepared dips. The dip must be deep enough in the tank so that each sheep is submerged and obliged to swim sev eral feet before getting out. See that the wool is thoroughly Boaked end ev ery bit of skin moistened during the dipping process. During cool weather the dip must be kept hot by means oT a small fur nace or heaters prepared especially for this purpose. In using a dip be sure and select one that Is free from any thing which will injure the fibers of the wool or be poisonous to the sheep, time dips are apt to be Injuralus and Bhould be avoided. The dips should be kept at a tomperature of from 100 to 110 degrees. Car of Work Bonn In Wlnlor. A great many farmers have a large number of horses ywhlch work hard during the spring season and during the autumn when the land is being pre pared for fall crops or being full plowed for spring1 crops. As soon as this work is completed they have little or nothing to do until next season. Just how to take care of these horses during that period is a problem. One of the most serious features is the change Irom hard work to Idleness without careful attention to feed. The farmer seems to forget that the amount of grain Should be restricted gradually. If -this is not done, indigestion will surely result Give only a small feed of grain but let tho animals have a liberal supply of roughage. If pas ture is available, let them have some grass, but do not compel them to live only on green crops after a summer of dry, substantial feed. . There Is frequently much difficulty In feeding new corn and sometimes new oats to these animals. If a ration con' sisting partly of new and partly of old crops can be used, there will be little danger of bad results. A littlo later in the season when the weather becomes cool and when corn fodder is available, the ration may conBlBt largely of corn fodder with a little grain. It does not pay to allow the animal to become thin, but neither is it profitable to reed expensive grains. Experiment a little and see if a good maintenance ration cannot be secured from corn fodder, clover hay, using possibly a little oats and corn. If alfalka is available It may take the place of grain to a large extant The treatment of colts during the (all and winter Is different These an imals are growing and must be given oats, clover hay or brnn, so as to sup ply material for building tip bone and muscles. A corn diet la a little too heaUng for colts, but there Is little flhrm In feeding some corn. If a few roots, such as carrot can be secured and kept for horses and colts during the winter, tho result wilt be entire ly satisfactory. For horses and colts not at work, a very warm barn Is not necessary. Any one who has bad experience In winter ing horses knows that animals allowed to run In the opim field with a warm shed will do very nicety. A heavy growth of bnlr results, which Is a great protection In cold weather and also when tains are frequent. The pute air In these open fields Is a fac tor In the henlthfiilncas of the herd during the winter. American Agriculturist A Tnlk nn faint ftntlnna. Many products of farms are sent ftjwny, and often come back again to bo uwd on thn very places upon which they wcro grown. Tho fanner sells his whent mid buys the bran therefrom to be used as food for Block. The va rious experiment stations have given special attention to thoRo feeding Bluffs during the past 10 years, and affirm that It Is one of the tnont Im portant matters affecting the Interests of farmers, the New Jersey station hav ing Issued a special bulletin on the subject. The purchase of feeds, either to supplement homn-grown produce or to provide the entire amount of con centrates needed, requires that care should be exercised In order to obtain the most economical lesults. It Is now fully recognized that feeds rich In protein should be added to the home grown products ir they are to bo util ized to the best advnntnge, since, un der average conditions, tho crops grown of both grain and straw contain so great an excess of the rarhohy dtales, or starchy substances, as to niako their exclusive use wasteful. Tho feeds that are best adapted to this end those rich In protein as a rule tonfjHt of residues from thn manufac tures of some specific: product from tho seed of grain, as, for example, or oil fiom the cottonseed and tho flax seod, starch or sugar from corn, beer from barley and flour from wheat, rye and buckwheut. All of theso feeds, which include cotton seed meal, linseed meal, dried brewers' gialns, the gluten meals and feeds, and tho various kinds of brans and middlings, are very much richer In thn compound protein than tho original Beeds or grnlnB, because the oil, starch, olc, extracted leave the substances rich In protein. In order that valuable. Information may be furnished the farmers con cerning the protnln foods offered for sale the station sampled and analyzed the Btock of dlffornnt dcnlnts, begin ning as far back as 188G, which showed that, as a whole, they wore of average good quality. A study of the compo sition and value of dried brewers' grains Bhowed the products to be rich in the compound protein, being an ex cellent food for horses as a substitute for oats, and a much more satisfactory product for dairy cows than the wet grains. In regard to the gluten meals or feeds It was shown that, while all wore derived from corn, there were four distinct classes first, the gluten feeds, which consisted of the entire leslduu. Indicting the hull, skin and germ; second, the gluten meals, which did not contain the hull or germ, and, therefore, were still richer In protein than the feeds; third, the corn oil meals and cake, which consisted of pressed corn, and were proportionately richer in fat than the feeds or meals; and fourth, the corn bians and corn germs, which consisted chiefly of the hulls and germs, and were poorer in both fat and protein than the others. Buyers should aim to purchase from rellablo parties, although investiga tion shows that but littlo direct adul teration baa been attempted, but there are variations In the quality of foods of the same name which may place an inexperienced buyer at a disadvantage. Various tables, showing the average protein and its value, have been pub lished, recommending that all such foods should be sold under a guaran tor, the farmers, when buying feeds, to select those which furnish the pro tein the cheapest, as this Is the sub stance desired more than any other when the feeds are purchased for the purpose of enriching the rations made from home-grown produce. While it is impossible to obtain feeds which' do not contain more or less of the other compounds fat and carbohydrates the purchase Is virtually that of pro toln. Protein foods, however, must be used with care. Cottonseed meal, glu ten meal, linseed meal and gluten feed may be fed in larger amounts than some of the others. The Chicago glu ten and the cottonseed and linseed meals should be used in rations for dairy cows nob to exceed two to three pounds per day. A comparison of their composition shows that the glu ten meals, at an average cost of $18.75 per ton, furnish the protein at a less cost than any others, while cottonseed meal, atj an average cost of $15.T0, third in order, and linseed meal fourth, at an average cost per ton of $28.85. Other points, however, should be con sidered, such as their general adapta bility and their content of mineral con stituents, and if these are taken Into account cottonseed meal come first, linseed meal second, gluten meal third and gluten feed fourth, much depend ing, however, upon the prevailing mar ket prices at time of purchasing, as prices fluctuate. Philadelphia Record. A Sjiupatnatl Saatlinant. "I'm crazy about muBlc!" said the girl who always uses an exaggerated form of speech. "After hearing you practice," said her father, "so am I." Washington Star. ftovspiqu) HINTS llillnlv for del Inn, Utile fftchet hsgj of thin Bilk may be hung unobtrusively upon the backs of chairs to s'tpply a Taint, elusive scout to a room, If that Is lilted. These should lie filled with dried leaves of sweet geianliim, lemon verbena and lavender mixed, or of thn lemon ver bena alone if that delightful odor Is preferred. They make aweet sachets for the handkerchief box or the linen rlotet and the bureau drawer. To Miiko n Cork Fit. To mnkn a small cork lit a large bot tle, and vice versa, It Is common prac tlcn to trim thn sldci of a cork when It Is too laign fur a bottle. (Icnerally the knlfn Is dull, and tho cut Irregu lar. A simpler way Is to cut a weclgo shnped piece out of thn cork at Its low end. If the cork Is very large, cut out an additional .wedge at right an gles to the first. This will make a perfect ncill-spllllng stopper. To Waalt I'lUnara. To wash n pillow or bolster, double a sheet and sew onn sltto and ends to gether, leaving an opening on one end a little moie than thn width of the pillow. Open thn pillow, sew the two together, nnd shake the feathers Into tlio sheet. Wash thoroughly In soap suds, rinse, wring with tiimhltin and dry In the suiishinn, shaking often to lighten thn Tenthers. IWom returning tho feathers to thn tick, coat the In side with thick flour pastn and let dry, or what Is better, rub tlio Inside sur face with melted beeswax so the fluff aud feathers will not work through. Tim Selom-rt fit Nulling. One hundred years ago Count Rum ford pointed out that In Munich, where his experiments in cookery were made, water boiled at 209 1-2 degrees, on oc count of its elevation, while In 1omlon It boiled nt 212 degrees. This means, according to Iliiugnt, that boiling wa ter Is hotter In London when It bolls. She thinks that to boil a thing tho only way Is to boil it hard; the more tho water spouts from her double boiler or splashes In her kettle, the more the food Is being cooked. To muko the water bubble moio fire Is needed more fuel Is consumed. If you can in any way succeed In the assimilation by Ilridget of some common sense in cookery your coal or gas bills will be smaller. Perhaps you might prove to her by an experiment. Place a piece of meat In each of two boilers eqnnl quantity of water and same weight of meat. After thn water In each has become boiling hot, place one boiler over a small flame, and the other over a red hot cover. Tho latter will or course boll vehemently enough to please Bridget, and tho other will keep at a condition where the surface Is only spasmodically rippled. Htie will be surprised that both meats will be thoroughly cooked at the same tlmo, while the latter will be much butter cooked. Lot It be remembered that violently boiling water Is no hotter than water boiling hot Doshlor Welch, in Oood Housekeeping. Sweet Potatoes Remove the skin from boiled sweet potatoes, cut them in long slices and put them in t'a fry ing pan with plonly or butter; dust them with salt, pepper and plenty of white Bugar; turn them carefully and cook until nicely browned. Boiled Cod Choose either head and shoulders, or a small whole fish; after having cleaned it well, put it into a fish-kettle with warm, salted water; let It boll from 25 to 30 rolnutca, or longer if the flh Is very thick. Serve on a hot dish covered with a fish dolly, and garnish with slice of lemon and parsley. Stewed Squash Pare, seed and quarter. Cook in boiling water, salt ed!, until soft. Mash in a colandor. Rub through it and put back Into a saucepan, with a tablespoonful of but ter rolled In flour; a few teaspoonfuls of milk, pepper and salt to suit taste. S'tlr until it begins to bubble, then pour into a deep dish. Buttered Parsnips Wash and boll In cold salted water from three-quarters to an hour. Skin and cut into round, thick slices. Have ready in a saucepan a tablespoonful of butter, and one tablespoonful of flour, previ ously rubbed together, and two table spoons of milk. When It boils up put In the paisnlps and shake over the fire until smoking hot Serve hot In a cov ered dish. Chicken Salad Mince the white meat of a chlckon line, then chop the white parts of celery and prepare a dressing as follows: Rub the yolks of hard-bollod eggs smooth, with a spoon; put to each yolk one teaspoon ful of made mustard, half as much salt, a small glassful of strong vino gar and a tablespoonful of the best olive oil. Put the celery in a salad bowl, lay the chicken on that, then pour over It tho dressing. Lettuce cut small may be usedl in the place of cel ery, but the. latter Is much more delic ious. Cut the whites of the eggs In rings to garnish the salad. Dresden, Germany, has set a com mendable example by placing clocks in all the electric street cars. Ask Why 5yrup.of Fks the-bst family laxative- It is pure. It Is gentle. It la pleasant. It is efficacious. It is not expensive. It is good for children. It is excellent for ladies. It is convenient for business men. It is perfectly safe tinder all circumstances. It is used by millions of families the world over. It stands highest, as a laxative, with physicians. If you use it you have the best laxative the world produces. HAD A HOUGH EXPERIENCE. An English Newspaperman Got Into All Kinds of Trouble. 7 nomas J. Mlnnlck, an English newspaper man, sought glory by Im itating tlio old-time Amorican re porters trick of having himself locked In a l!ch;Ian niadhouso to so euro a sensation. Tho doctors, how ever, "got on" to ThomnH and to teach him a lesson riosod him with vomiting powders. Next he was put on a diet of sour herrings and no wntor; at nL'ht ho wasn't allowed to aleop and when bo complained ha was told ho had a tumor in his brain and wan Imagining ill treatment, j to would feol bettor as Boon as the tumor was cut out. When Anally tho honors tried to chlorororm him and inndo preparations to operate upon lilni, Thomas disclosed his Identity Hut the doctors would not let him off. They sent him under guard to the po lice station, where he wna booked as an Imposter and for obtaining tho county's cliurlty under false preten Oil has been discovered oozing from the banks of tho Coon river, noar Ornnt City, In Sao county, la. A quart or the oil sent to Ames col le-ge for analysis is said to have been found to be 80 por cent pure. Many School (Dlillilran Ara Sickly. Mother Orny's Hwnot Powders for Children, used by Mother (Irny, n nursn In ChUdrnn's Homn ,Nw York, brunk up Col-U la 'it hours, euro FevnrlHhnau, lmtliatlon, Htomsnb Troubles, TonthlfiK Iiinordor and Destroy Worms. AtsllilniK(lU','ffifl. Haraplnmnllnd Fata. AddnB Allen B. Olmatod, l.o lloy, N.t. Monterey, Moxico, is to have an electric railroad syatem thirty miles long, calling lor ai; expenditure of $0,300,000. flow's TliUT W ollor One Hundred Dollars Reward for say ciim of Coinrrh that eonoot be eurad by Hull's Catarrh Curo. F. J. CacssT k Co., Props., Toledo, O. Wa, thnundoralgned, bavn known P. .Che ney for thn lust 16 yoara, and bolien him per fectly honorable m all business transactions and ilnanulally able to oarry out any obliga tion made by thoir Arm. Wiit 4 TaoiX, Wholesale Drngglats.Toledl, Ohio. Waldiko, Kixsix&MiBviif, Wholesale Druj. Ktsts, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, aot Ing directly upon the blood and mueon sur faces of the system. I'rlcn, 75o. per bottle. Sold by all Drufrttists. Testimonials frfce. HolTs Family 1'Uls are the bast. The United Irish League claims to have 1,326 branches. FITS permanently on red. No tits or nervous, no after Unit day' una of Dr. Kline's Ornnt NorvnllMstorur. t'i trial bottlnand treatise freo Dr. B.U. Klihb, Ltd., 831 Arch St., l'blla.,ra. A lovers' quarrel often serves to break the monotony of happiness. Mrs.Wtnslow's SoothingHyrup for children tonthlni;,softiiu the gums, reduuoa Inflamma tiou.olluy puin.cure wind colin. 25a. a bottle It is much eaaicr to expound the truth than to noil a lie. Piso's Oar cannot be too highly spokenat a a cough our. J. W. OT.aian, Kia Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. , I'M Hearing, a s rule, i more acute with the right than with the left ear Old Sofa. Backs of Chairs, etc., can be dyed with Putnam Fadeless Urea. The English language is spoken by 115,- 000,000 people. Gennins stamped C C C Never sold In bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell ''something just as good." tamps or rnlo. gluug- 1110, Uctultth Av.. K. K. nDADRV"1' DISCOVERT; sine UllUrCl f qmek nltof ana wa wont Book cat amuDonltli aa4 10 Sara' trwlBnl sr- B. a. a. saaui's aosa. sua. Aiiaaw, o. V'Tbofflpion't Eyi Witir 111 I Hill "luna. O.ily Dlutlpiiiry of t I II 111 I uurly Ul ll;i-liwll liny .llarllUlT "rdaand varum wllb U.-ti-llllllllll nltiuua. In.lrn.il u w,-U IWUilll ait auitialnir. l'rl- 1(1 i4 NO NOON HOUR. The Passing of This Brief Rest Period In Busy New York. "Thero Is no noon hour In tho low er part of Manhattan," New York, snld an old restaurant man, who has supplied luncheon for business men nnd clerks for over a scora of years. "We used to do soven-clghths of our business botween noon and 1 o'clock, but now tho luncheon hour extends from It to after 3 to after 4 In the Wall streot soctlon. I can romomber well when in all offlcos and business houses work ceasod at the stroke of 1.?, and was resumed at 1 o'clock sharp. Now the noon hour Is ob served only In shops and factories. In oflle.es and commercial bouses work goes on continuously under the present day pressure of business, and the clerks and other employes go out for luncheon In relays, bog In ning as early as 11 o'clock, end with this change has come a shortening of the luncheon hour In most oases to three-quarters of an hour sometimes to halt an hour. The chiefs and em ployers, as a rulo, cat lato most of them about 2 o'clock, and down In Wall street the brokers seldom get luncheon until after the exchanges close." Strongest Jail on Earth. Graham county Jail, at Clifton, Arlr., Is unique. It comprises four large apartments hewn from the solid quartz rock of a hlllwlde. The en trance Is through a box-like vestibule built of heavy masonry and equipped with three sots of steel gates. The floor of the rock-hound tail is of ce ment, and the prisoners are confined exclusively In tho lamer rooms. Some of the most desperate crim inals on the Southwest border have been confined in the Clifton jail, and so solid and heavy are the barriers to esoapo that no ono there has evor attempted a break for freedom. The notorious Black Jack was there for months. The wall of quartz about tho. Jail is 15 feet thick. Clifton is one of the igreat copper mining camps in A .-I zona, and has the rep utation of toeing as depraved a com munity as yet exists on the frontier of civilization. In summer tho mer cury there frequently rises to 120 in the shade, and in the winter never goes below 40 degrees. Built Thousand Years Ago. Captain Francis Tuttle, of the rev enue cutter Boar, during bar recent trip in the Arctic seas, found a house built by human beings probably thousands of years ago. It was par tially embedded in a cliff fronting on the ocean, 15 miles southeast of Point Barrow. The cliff rose sheer 70 feet above the ocean. Forty feet above tidewater and 30 feet from the top of the cliff one end of the house was exposed. The ribs of an enor mous whale were used for a frame work, and over these skins had evi dently been stretched. "Bush" Doctoring in Jamaica. "Bush" doctoring in Jamaica Is a mysterious practice to which grave penalties, as well as rich profits, at tach. Its chief exponent has Just been fined $75 for breach of the med ical laws, and certainly cannot com plain of the wording of the indict ment. His plan was to stand his pa tients along a platform, "mutter in an unknown tongue," and to figure out the diagnosis In the sand with a lUok. -Am Because Its component parts fire nil wholesome. It acts gently without ttnplensnnt after-effects. It is wholly free from objectionable nubstatices. It contains the laxative principles of plants. It contains the enrminative principles of plants. It contains wholesome aromatic liquids which are ngrccable and refreshing to.thc taste. All nre pure. All ore delicately Mended. All are skillfully nnd scientifically compounded. Its value is due to our method of manufacture nnd to the orginnlity aud simplicity of the combination. To get its beneficial effects buy the genuine. Manufactured by UTOIftflA pGVRlJP San Francisco, Cel. Louisville, Ky. New York, N. Y. tOB BALM BT Alt LEADING DHV0V18T8. '"v:'i''.i'vi - '':;! - WOMAN'S RIGHTS IN RUSSIA. Novel Hotel Planned for Cars of Women's Health. Tho latest development of tho woman's rights question In Kussln has taken the form of a novol pro ixwal planned by the "Socloty for tho Care of Women's Health." It Is pro posed to build a kind of a hotel whore only women may live, and of which the shareholders are to bo exclusive ly women. Shares In the compuny will be subscribed for In the form of rout for rooms, and at the end ff ten yoars, by, which tlmo the shares will lie fully paid up, tenants will be al lowed to snbjoet their apartments on condition that the new tenant is al so a woman. The building will be designed by a woman architect, and only women vervants will bo allowed to lie employed there. The rules of the establishment with regard to the exclusion of men will be strict, re minding one, Indeed, of the cloister regulations of tho Middle Ages. The building is to be commenced in the spring. A New Cold Field. Fish, golj and whales abound along that portion of the North Siberian ciasrt woatward of Retiring straits. Wonwerful stories are coming from that soctlon concerning the abund ance of each. If all these stories are true there will be a rush of gold seekers and whale seekers. The Russian government has already farmed out the control of gold terri tory to prospecting companies, and they are hard at work. That govern ment prohibits anyone else but Rus sians from catching salmon. There are no labor laws to restrict Chlneeo labor, and large numbers of coolies are being hurried there to freeze and work for thoir living. Litter for horses and cows Is to be made from spent hops at Dublin. Moth er "My mother was troubled with consumption for many years. At last she was given up to die. Then she tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, snd was speedily cured." D. P. Jolly, Avoca, N. Y. No matter how hard your cough or how long you have had it, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is the best thing you can take. It's too risky to wait until you have consump tion. If you are coughing today, get a bottle of Cherry Pectoral at once. Tatat tbc I Uc, He. II. All ro rlil. Coiuiilt yonr doctor. If lw mm taka It, tho do aa ha nays. If h talli you not to take it. then doo't taka li. Ha knuva. Laaia 1 with klcn. w are wlUln. J. O. AT Eft CO.. Lowttll, Mail. P. N. U. 8, '03. E i tuna. Sold br drulau. I I ':'"7i"!7r Destiny of Csnsda. Canadians have organized a Prefer onco League, with the motto, "Can ada," the members pledging them stdves to buy Canadian products and manufactures "when the quality Is equal to, and the cont not In excess of, foreign articles." Unfortunately, those conditions soldom, if ever, oc cur. Tho manifest destiny of Canada Is to become part of the United States, so ss to offset our acquisitions in the Southwest. The sooner the fact is recognized and tho nobler motto, "All America for Americans," adopt ed, the better for both countries. ST. JACOBS OIL POSITIVELY CURES Rheumatism Neuralgia Backache Headache Feetache All Bodily Aches AND CONQUERS PAIN. Capsicum Vaseline PIT IP IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES. A Buhatltata fnr and Hnj.rlnr to Mnatard nraoy oth.r plat. ami will net l.lut.r iha moat .l.-ll,-.ii ilk In. 111. pain allayiiiiraiiil rurwirn itialltli of tli Hiirllrl.or. in.liirfiil. It will atop th. louth arh nt on.-, and rell-v. hata.-u. and H- latli-a Waraniiumondll aa Ilia lat and aaraat aitarnal roiiutHr-trrltant kiuiwn, alan a. an a&lrual rvuiadv for nam" In III. ,-linat and atmnaiUi aud all rh.u-uiatl.-. unraiinc and a-i.u-y -uui lahita. A trial will i.r..vowliat w..-l.l:ii?.,rlt, and It will ba found to 1m Invaliiahla in Hi. boila-lioM. M.nr oaoula aa "I t la tua Int uf all your pr..rtli4i vm'VM I rl.-., I. rnt, .t all dnnrKlala, or olhar daatura. or liy ..nillnif tuu aioin:nt to iu ill poalana atauiua w. will -n.l roo a tub. hy mull. So arllc la ahould Im .ni.tud br th ruhlln tmlM Jim am oarrtua our laixil. aa utliarwla 11 1 u fl 17 State Street, New York City. I pkturaatma. nmlthfoi nn,i r-i... r note awl, abundant wutw. dnwet ttuaa-t-A portadon ararj-wnara. ad vaotaaM U d.-wi bao-1: .vj lnujumnAUCtuaMtlMwa...i. r F ' ' 1 rainaotoaicT. UMi.a v 1 ..... I ' . kla. All product nsoto hioniiat imadlu, ajir? J mraaariy. wril tor onVlal kUimrauuf: - 1 iKorm lnloraaaiiua and C ancnpUonaiMaoautlaiteaoii aillrult and airrl t enltunUaabwrt to TTannam faiiaHii I uif wwwhw,whh be. bacnaaaat. Ci. PATENTS H W T l.onar.Wwih Inaton. O.O. Sand tor circular. A food iila war Batk swa WlTifclFORHIA