tyfe"'.,'i(J,i fMKa w i JSM a yum 1 i ' ii r L l IiWWW liWi .m. limn 9,1 rW MIMWIMWrff! Mhi'Uiir Young Trees. Newly set troeB, save the cherry, houtd bo severely cut bark. A good tart la half the race, anil nowhere floes It have more significance than In the now orchard. With proper pruning, cultivation and fertilizing sou may reasonably hope (or a strong, vigorous and healthy tree which will bo able to give returns In Fay of largo yields of luscious fruit. Lowell noudebush, In the National Stockman and Farmer. ) . Cilvc the Chirks Dry Quarter. Our chicks, somo thirty, have been remarkably healthy and vigorous this summer. So havo those ot a neighbor, who has three times as many as we. We are not specially successful chicken .growers, nor are our chicks exempt from that univers al peBt lice, but we have scarcely loBt a biddy yet. We attribute our success to the dry season and dry quarters. Tho fowls have plenty of yard room, but no grass for the little fellows to run into. If we were go ing Into the poultry business on a large scale we should locate the coops on sloping ground, and keep the surroundings clear of weeds and grass till the chicks were halt grown, and able to take care of themselves. A fool hen, in a big grasRy yard, can kill inoro chicks than all her eggs are worth. Indiana Farmer. l Feeding Work Horses, " Experience and observation teach US that horses that are at work Should be fed at regular Intervals, and after eating, a half hour's rest given to a tired animal, as it ie hurt ful to require tfiem to work on a full stomach immediately after eating. If ,work horses are fed every five hours the meals are digested pretty well In the Intervals between eating, and so the horse is in much better condition (or work. A horseman says that most people know how a bucket ot .water will stop a race liorso, but few think how the overcharged stomach affects the lungs of a horse whon at ,work. A horse when fed while heat ed, and out of breath cannot digest Its food, and the result is diarrhoea, or curiously enough, the extreme op posite in the form of colic or indi gestion. Indiana Farmer. Keep Cultivator Working. Farmers havo learned that tho cul tivator has other uses besides keep ing down the weeds; true, the weeds arc destroyed by the process, but the Judicious stirring ot the soil incites growth and consorves tho moisture In the soil, which Is of immenso ben efit to the plants later in the season When prolonged droughts are likely to eilnt. Again, cultivation means Increased crops, hence tho work ia one which may bo done with profit. In tho orchard cultivation, very shallow, mainly for the purpose of conserving tho moisture In tho soil and breaking up tho surface which Is likely to bake, pays full as well as with a cultivated crop, and It is especially valuable when combined with the cover crop, the seeding be ing dono in late July or early Aug ust, and the cover crop plowed un der in tho spring to add humus to the soil, something much needed by most soils in which trees are set. Indianapolis News. Fertility Must He Kept. It i3 estimated by somo of the lead ing agricultural chemists that the world's supply of phosphorus, a very Important and essential element of plant food, and without which no plant can bo grown, will, under our present wasteful system of agricul ture, be exhausted within tho next & fty years. The stupendous waste of soil fer tility that has occurred in this and other countries in the, past must be speedily checked. This" means that a new system of agriculture which economizes the plant food in the soil without diminishing the yield of the crops produced, is being developed. In other words, this system will take thought of the future as well as of the present productiveness of the land. This means that the farmer of the future must be acquainted with the soil aad understand how to manage it so as to secure the largest yield with the least injury to his land. H. J. Waters, Columbia, Mo. V Fertilizers on Home Garden.' TtlA lM.Utn1 f..t!tt. 11 that the amateur wants answered are just these: What to use, in what quantities? Most of the articles and all the books on fertilizers lay special stress upon the food values and costs. .Though of great Importance to the farmer, these details are only of mi nor interest to the amateur. The great problem for the home gar dener is how to get earlier, larger, better fruit, vegetables and flowers. There are three great plant foods, nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash. The one most likely to be deficient In the soil is nitrogen. The trouble Is that the salts that are available for the plant are so soluble that they are quickly washed out of the soil. Stable manure gives nitrogen In small quantities over a comparative ly long period, and is valuable on that account. Its vegetable matter :( giving bumus and holding water) Is also an important factor, render ing It especially valuable on light or sandy soils. Many people have a notion that a black soil must of necessity be a rich one. But, on the contrary, U may be almost devoid of nitrogen, and so stands in need of some fertil izer. Whilst It Is true that garden soils In general have a sufficiency ot both potash and phosphoric acid In them, the chances are that these two food materials are to a certain extent "locked up" that Is, they are not Immediately avnllable to the plant, and are only taken out by slow de grees. Therefore, the amateur gardener will find that tho bcBt all-round fer tilizer for him to buy Is one with aa abundance of nitrogen, and moderate quantities of the other two bus stances. Of course, for large opera tions, spcclnl compounds ot fertilise ers are an economy, and, while tho same thing holds good in theory oa the small scale, yet in practice, as the amount involved Is so little, It Is wiser to havo one all-round fertilizer. Succulent vegetables particularly will thrive on nitrogen. It makes them grow rapidly, and that means ten derness. Potash is used to improve the quality. Fhosphorlc acid helpB to build the tissue of the plant. What a fertilizor contains enn always be ascertained by reading the analysis which must accompany It. Look only for those throe terms. Don't regard anything else. How much to use? Of course, the answer largely depends on the grade ot the fertilizer. Stable manure can be spread on three inches thick. A pound ot nitrate of soda is sufficient to cover from eighty to 100 square feet. Cabbage in the Garden. The farm housewife who spends Rome time cultivating cabbage and less over pastry will bo ahead at the ond of the year. Hoeing, even, is not such hard work as some imagine, If the ground has been jproperly pre pared. It has been well Bald that freshly turned sod Is good ground for cabbage, and Boll In which It was grown the previous year Is about the poorest; the latter clause should be emphasized it club root has Invaded the premises. The old German rule ot "two fertilizers to one dirt" still holds good; for cabbage ground can scarcely be mado too rich. And to economize this fertility It Is best to manure In the hill, thoroughly mix ing it with tho soil. Any well rotted stablo manure Is good, but nothing Is bettor than poultry droppings. For winter cabbage the srwil may be best planted in the hill, putting in four or five seeds, and reserving only tho most thrifty ones as the plantB attain the sizo for transplanting. This will usually give a surplus for filling vacant places, and perhaps supply a neighbor. For early use It is best to start seed in boxes. Trans plant at evening or on a cloudy day, lotting the boxes In which the plants are be thoroughly wet for several hours before, in order that tho stems may become full of moisture. With these precautious they seldom suffer the check in growth that becoming badly wilted is sure to cause, riant deep, and firm the earth about the plants. Hoe often enough to keop tho weeds down and tho soil light. Earth kept light and porous absorbs more moisture and is loss Ruscoptible to drouth than when compacted. If the heads incline to burst, tip them partly over, thereby breaking some of the roots. Should this not avail, use them at once. They will soon be fit only for stock. ' When the white butterfly appears it is time to guard against cabbage worms. Soapsuds sprinkled over the plants are often effective. Vood ashes are a still more forceful rom cdy. Hellebore and parls green are said to be harmless until the cabbage begins to head, but I'll go without cabbage rather than use any that has been bo doctored. Destroy all co coons found; they are frequently seen clinging to board fences or un palnted buildings in the vicinity. Salt and water or flour dusted over the plants when the dew is on are standard remedies. Early cabbage will be out ot the way In time to make room for celery. Even where a second crop Is not expected from the ground it is wise to feed the stump and refuse leaves to stock and remove the entire plant, which may, if left, become a harbor for Insects of fungous growth. The main thing is to start right, h ertillze and culti vate to Induce rapid growth, and in sects will do llttie harm. Bessie L. Putnam, Conneaut Lake, Pa. Farm Notes. Anything which checks the growth ot an animal for a single day is a loss of a day's feed and a day in the time of maturing. Remember, to grow bone, muscla, feathers and flesh a varied diet Is necessary, and the food must be of the very best, whatever is used. Do not tempt your hogs by placing them In a ramshackly old pen. Make the pen good and strong. After a hog once gets out, it Is hard to keep him In. Be sure to have suitable gutters around the upper side of the coops that will prevent all possibility ot water running In the coops during heavy sudden showers. Hogs and growing pigs may be turned into the orchard where they will have shade and can eat the early falling fruit. Hogs are about th only stock that can be turned into an orchard without doing some dam 5i Illi fil'i s- Pi! ! , i II' 1: rji ', A 'it , a wMm I rMIII 11 m i .. W i l: " i i " " - r - MaL ml THE STOKE FEICHT DRUG CO., REYNOLDSVIIvLE. SPORTING BREVITIES. A Western college professor says that football promotes anarchy Axtoll, 2.12, n trottin:? stallion, once sold for $105,000, died at Torre Haute, 1ml. nanjitHliighl, the famous Indian cricket player, has become the Jam of Navanasar. F. O'Xeil'H Pcnarrla won the $10, 000 Grand Union Hotel stake at the Saratoga race track. Mike Dwyer, famous race track plunger, died of a paralytic stroke at his cottage at tho Brooklyn Jockey Club. Clarence M. Peacock's Pirate won the Glascow and $1000 champion ship motor boat trophies at Fron tonac. Lady Gail Hamilton won the fast est race ever trotted on tho Potigh keepsle track, gaining a record of 2.06. King Edward cabled his congratu lations to Mr. F. M. Smith for his vic tory with the sloop Effort in the King's Cup race. By defeating Bryn Mawr in the final game of the series. Myopia won the Point Judith polo cups. Tho score was 12 to Martin Sheridan threw the discus 137 feet 11 inches at Celtic Park, New York City, beating his Olympic record by 10.2-3 inches. Charley Daly, the former Harvard and West Point football player, and generally considered the best quarter-back that ever passed a ball, has resigned from the Artillery Corps to engage in private business. Englishmen are laughing at the Idea that they are fast losing their prestige in athletics. They say other countries can occasionally wrest championships from them, but that their tight little Island has more men of muscle to the acre than any other country on earth. Except as a decorative feature in fox hunting, stag hunting and the like, the horse has made hla exit from po lite literature and,', appropriately enough, the equipages which he draws have gone lumbering after him, prop hesies the New York Mail. Hereafter we shall find the faithful friend of man exiled to dialect stories and pas' torals which tell ot circuit riders in the Southern mountains, shrewd, kindly horse traders, simple-minded peasants or that life In "ye olden time" which we have been wont to associate with pictures of English stage coaches and ruddy-faced squires armed with pewter mugs and long churchwardens. '1 US ifelBfiam IPUsV . Vf Vh 'M W Wfl If VttF &. 1M SrfT I1BV.VV SJIh tVR WU If '1 Ml 14 a kr H A ' y y iffliii tsmmm I .'.1 1 1 ! Lklli I ' lii'I 1 1 M!m1 I 19 1 .ilT.M1 EjI lM MhIIiII! m L! L '11!' Hi riEtll 1 ! ! ri.liil1 kll'l ' I 'Li' II Ii t-ti : IllM i ! LLEIil LLl'.mI m sVIHl III J k. aw Q , , ; .in, , I ', : . r m', , it :' r. ! . U','iT m ' in i i 1 i 1 i hi 1 1:; Ltmi!! J, "I'm 1 1 i ih' 1 1 hi i,' JFtwrirrtrr v m 1 . MLon, i;"' ' i i , i n t v 1 i 'nnii!jt.ntiY ;: , WHBHSHBWJIMS! J. h, .IWIMIM l lll ,i uDM The World's Greatest Cig'ar Outlet THERE are more than two thousand National Cifjar Stands to-tlay; each an established local enterprise owned and conducted by a local resident, but with all their buying power concentrated into one tremendous co-operative whole, two thousand stores that buy as one, yet sell individually and inde pendently. This is the greatest retail cigar outlet on earth, and consequently the greatest purchasing power ever known in the history of the tobacco business. What this concentration of buying can accomplish by its huge operations, its cost-reducing methods and its straight-line distribution from producer to con sumer, is well evidenced in CUBA-ROMA Jl Clear Havana Cigar at 5e. This cigar is of a quality that has never before been bought by the smoker for less than 8 for 25c. The saving of 8c. on each cigar is merely the saving of two or three intermediate profits which the National Stands, by producing their own cigars, have eliminated ; plus much saving in rent and selling expense. This saving is shown with equal effect in all the cigars sold by NatiorJQl Stands. Among them arc : Black and White: sXtttiZ 5c College Days i B"'"'"1"' 6 for 25c A . A first-clan ririmettlc cigar jirejentinc J fnr OCr liaaa I superior wurkiiuiiisliip V7X JV. Stirling CaStleS riiic,clearllavanacigar,10c.qualitv Gc ' La Idalia t Chot!:ar"In 3 for 25c. and up It isn't a National Cigar Stand NKWSV GLEANINGS. Navy chaplains want more pay. One person in every 1200 Is blind. Spain is enjoying a business boom Over 32,000 autos are registered In Now York. Pernla is to have a Constitution and a Parliament. Japan Is determined to construct a large mercantile navy. . Demoralization Is spreading In lira Russian army and navy. Owing to the failure of the Labra dor fishing season a fish famine is likely. Mr. Root spoke In Argentina In fa vor of a union of hearts In all the Americas. The Oyster Bay (N. Y.) tax asses sors increased the assessment this year by $1,000,000. Captain Richmond Pearson Hob son thinks it would be' easy for Ja pan to capture the Philippines. Within three weeks nearly thirty tons of gold specie have been trans ferred from England to America. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Workman, ol Worcester, Mass., climbed a mount ain In India more than 23,000 feet high. The rules of settlement adopted by a number ot fire insurance companies amount to a practical repudiation ot their San Francisco obligations. Landrat von Uslar.whom the Kais er sent to German Southwest Africa to discover water with the aid of bis divining rod, has located fifty-three springs. , In South Africa the tension be tween negroes and Englishmen is in creasing. Not only are there occa sional outbreaks of rebellion, but a general condition of unrest and ex citement. The suffragettes ct mngiana ue had one of their meetings broken us by outsiders, and now know how It is themselves. Mr. Kelr Hardle, wac had come to address the strenuous sis ters, notes the New York Press, climb ed a high picket fence and took to the tall timber, but it. is refreshing tc note that Mrs. Sal.'lvan, one of tho leaders of women's rights movement, stood her ground manfully and knock ed down two male disturbers of the peace with her clinched fist in an et orl to restore order. They're finding thorium in tne Island of Ceylon. You can't keep any thing hidden now that the rage of In vestigation and exposure is In full cry. Is the comment ot the Kansas City Star. c om , MM ml unless the Mational' Emblem is in NOTHING PITTSBURG EXPOSITION Opens Wednesday Evening GREATEST MUSICAL PROGRAMME EVER PRESENTED CREATORE August 29 to September 8 THEODORE THOMAS ORCHESTRA September 10 to IS SOUSA September 17 to 22 NEw iND tuc oniuu uinnnnDnue STARTLING in i. nuraMH mrruunuiuic KNABENSHUE AND HIS WONDERFUL AIRSHIP "Destruction of San Francltco" United States Government Display Magnificent Exhibit ol the Resources of the South "Around New York" Vito graph Moving Picture Enormous Ferris Wheel One Faro for Round ADMISSION A Hiawatha clergyman preached s rather exhaustive sermon from the text, 'Thou are weighed In the bal ance and found wanting." After the congregation had listened about aa hour some began to get weary and went out; others followed, says the Kansas City Journal, gTeatly to the annoyance of the minister. Soon an other person started, whereupon the preached stopped his sermon and said: "That's rlsht, gentlemen; as fast as you are weighed pass oat" In London's underground railway 11 has been found that very few men will spit on the new and bright lino leum with which the floor ot the cars are covered. King Alfonso Intends to Introduce golf In Spain. A remarkable thing about his playing Is that when he makes a bad stroke be smiles, say only "hi!" ' ,151! I ftt the window LIKE IT" AUGUST 29 HERBERT September 24 to 29 ELLERY'S BAND October 1 to 6 DAMROSCH October 8 to 20 Where will be ehown wonderful featt by man and animal Trip on All Railroads 25 Cents The novel is as valuable a form as any offered by law or science for showing conditions aa they really ex ist. Statutes and statistics are not the only terms In which facts can be leg itimately expressed, declares the Chi cago Post. But inasmuch as all ways are open, the man who selects the one that offers most license must be judged by the highest standard of sin cerity, veracity and ability. By holding sun spots responsible for volcanic disturbances, scientists bring us back to the old qutution, "What are we golax to d u'.:vjiit if!" suggest the Wil. 'h :i Spain Is the only country that has a coinage bearing a baby's head on It Coins bearing the babv head ot King Alfonso were issued la 1SSS. The Canadians are discussing tae advisability of annexing Jamaica.