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on eee: cone anmmenanenme emer CANADIAN CREAMERIES, How They Are Operated and Made te Pay the Farmer. A corre- spondent ofa Brown City, Mich- b>. | igan, paper writes as =| follows: “An in- dustry advanta- North which is geous to Alberta, Canada, and is truly a boon to the farmers, is the establishment of creameries by the Government at regu- proving the very settlers of lar distances apart. The Government furnishes the entire plant, puts it in and operates it without direct cost to the farmer. From the sale of the but- ter the Government retains 5 cents per pound, the balance going to the farmer, This is continued for three years, when the government turns over the plant and business to the farmers, giv- ing them a clear title of it. Thus these creameries are put in at a minimum cost to the farmer and paid for in a way that he least feels it. When we were there butter was selling at 21 and 22 cents per pound. Cheese factories were being es- tablished, too, along the railroad and much of the freight loaded on the cars on our return trip consisted of butter and cheese, as it was in the best sea- son for milk. The produce found a ready market in the mining and lum- bering towns and districts beyond the Rockies, through the British Columbia country, where it was, we were told, difficult to supply the demand.” The Klondike is another field now open to the Western Canadian farmer for all produce of the farm, and the officials in the Department of the In- terior, Ottawa, Canada, are kept busy sending out literature describing this great agricultural country. The agents of the Government throughout the United States are also supplied with literature, which they distribute free. es Effectuaily Done. “Do you have your shirts done up at the laundry?’ asked Hojack. “L do,” replied Tomdick, “and it re- quires only about three washings to do them up very exhaustively.” yobilinaaimesieaieaaes Do You Dance To-Night? Shake into your Shoes Allen’s Foot , a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Chilblains and Sweat- ing Fe At all Druggists and Shoe amples sent FREE, aoe Allen S. Olmsead, LeRoy, N, Pittsburg Improvements Completed, The improvements that the Baltimore & Ohio rowl have had under way st Fittsburg for the past fifteen months have been completed with the exception of a small amount of paving between the tracks, which will be done in the sprinz. The line now has splendid terminals at that point and sufficient trackage to handle the vast amount of business with not only economy but with celerity. ‘Th changes cost in the neighborhood of $450,000 and consist of a new yard at Glenwood (one of Pittsburg’s suburbs), a double track trestle nearly two miles in length, the changing of the line of road leading into the passenger station and the building of new freight yards near that point. Man's Infallible Guide. Conscience is the voice of the soul; the passions are the voice of the body. Is it astonishing that often these twc languages contradict each other, and then to which must we listen? Toc often reason deceives us; we have ont too much acquired the right of listen. ing to it, but conscience never deceives us; it is the true guide of man; it is tc man what instinct is to the body which follows it, obeys nature, and is never afraid of going astray.—London Echo. apping Fellow. Biedad thought you said your son was a strapping fellow! why, he is not 5 feet tall.” Wiggin: No; but he teaches a coun- try school.”—Truth. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. ‘To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag- neticr{ull of Ife, nerve and vigor, take NovTe- Bae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c. or $1. Cure guaran- teed. Booklet and ‘sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Prt Salt in Coffee. A few grains of salt sprinkled on cof- fee before adding the water brings and improves the flavor. There is more Catarrh in this section ef the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local reme- dies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment pronounced it in- curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hali’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from ten drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio, Sold by druggists, T5c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Almonds and Smilax. A good deal is said and written abou, society, but all there is to it is salted almonds and smilax.—Atchison Globe. Coe’s Cough Balsam Is the oldest and best. 1t will break up a cold quicker than anything cise. Itis always reliable. Try it. The Two Main Classes. “I see that Timmins is getting out another novel.” “Historical or hystercial?”—Indiana. polis Journel. All Kinds of Seeds. The attention of our readers is call- ed to the advertisement of the John A. Salzer Seed Co., which appears else- where in this issue. Those who expect to make any seed purchases will make a mistake not to write this concern. They are thoroughly reliable, and are the largest seed growers in America. It iy advisable to make seed purchases without further delay, as the season is rapidly advaneing. The John A. Sal- zer Seed Co, will send their interesting catalogue for 5 cents in stamps to de- fray the postage. They have made numerous offers this year, whieh de- serve consideration, DAIRY AND POULTRY. INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. Mow Successful Farmers Operate This Department of the Farm—A Few Hints as to the Care of Live Stock and Poultry. A Brittainy Butter Farm. One hears so much nowadays, writes a correspondent of the Globe (Eng- land) of the excellence of foreign but- ter, and of the inferiority of the home product, that it may perhaps be inter- esting to get an insight into»the sur- roundings of one of our many compet- itors in the manufacture of this useful article. It is true that Brittany by no means stands first on the roll of for- eign manufacture. So much so, in fact, that a great deal of its butter is sent to Denmark to be reshipped thence to England, and so come intosthe English market under the prestige which right- ly attaches to the Danish product. This, however, is by the way. The fact re- mains that a large quantity of Breton butter goes direct to England, and is sold as such on its own merits. Those who use it are prepared to maintain its superiority over that made at home. Let us take a glance at the Breton farmer and his surroundings, and see if this be so. Take almost any bigh road in Brittany—very excellent they are, too—and you will soon arrive at a green lane leading out of it. A most Picturesque lane it will be. Possibly it will lead between high banks, thickly studded with pollard oaks, beneath which the swine will be greedily munching acorns, and an old woman in a white cap and a blue dress will be herding a solitary cow, or a flock of geese, or a mixed crew consisting of a cow, a sheep, and a couple of geese, and, as a matter of course, she will be knitting busily. Or it may lead down an avenue of chestnuts, whose fruit is common property, and you will see two or three women, and twice as many children, stamping the nuts out of their prickly covering with their wood- en sabots. The chestnuts form a val- uable addition to the peasants’ homely fare of bouillon, black bread, and the inferior potatoes. The best are given to the pets of the family—the pigs, to- wit. This plain fare is washed down with copious draughts of cider, tea and coffee, being luxuries which smack too much of extravagance to the thrift-lov- ing peasant. It is not too much to say that saving is the one absorbing pas- sion of the women, and only rivalled in the men by their love of strong drink. The lane will debouch into an open field, where the men will, suppos- ing it to be October, be seen shaking down the fruit from the apple trees, and the shout which may possibly greet your arrival will be, not a tribute to you, but in honor of their having just finished a tree. On these occasions the cider mug goes round, as, indeed, it will on beginning the next. As there are many trees on every farm, and farms on every hand as well, a Bacchanalian festival appears to be in progress, what with the continual shouting and cheer- ing (one farm answering another) and the state of drunkenness which bere vallg everywhere, eae But let us enter the house itself, and see the actual surroundings in which the Brittany butter has its origin. Here you will find no cool, cleanly dairy; on the contrary, there is a mud floor of the dirtiest description, sometimes with puddles of water standing on it. You go into a room, which, from its table scattered with unwashed cups and plat- ters, from its array of cupboards (some- times of priceless oak), from its “close” beds which line the wall, is evidently the living and sleeping room of the family. Here, from an oak chest, you will see Madame, in the whitest of caps, in strange contrast to her surroundings, take several terra-cotta-colored earth- enware bowls full of milk. These she will skim, and then she will pour the skim milk into a tub for the pigs. If you watch closely you will see a fair quantity of black dirt dribble out of the bowl with the last cupful of milk. She will then churn the cream in a churn shaped something like a bottle with a stick in it, which works up and down. But perhaps the most disgusting feat- ure of the performance is that, instead of wetting her finger with water when she is making up the butter, she moist- ens them with her tongue. This is an eradicable item in Breton butter-mak- ing. People have tried in their own houses to make their “bonnes” use wa- ter, but unless the mistress actually stands over her servant the latter will at once return to the old familiar habit. The butter, when made, is of good flavor and color, and is palpable enough to those who are unacquainted with its manufacture. Near Quimperli there is a laiterie, or dairy, where everything is done on improved modern principles, and the proprietor asks and actually obtains three francs a pound for the article he produces. This, in a country where butter fetches from half-a-franc to one franc at the ordinary farms, speaks volumes for the estimation in which common cleanliness is held, and how extremely rare it is. The better class of residents in Brittany will not drink bought milk on account of the dirty habits of the peasants who pro- vide it. When the sanitary arrange- ments on English farms, the cleanli- ness which prevails, and the inspection of dairies is taken into consideration, it seems strange that anyone can prefer using foreign butter to that made at home. For the consumer knows ab- solutely nothing, as a rule, of the con- ditions under which the foreign article is produced, whereas he can be toler- ably sure that every possible precau- tion is taken in his own country to en- sure cleanliness and the absence of con- taminating atmosphere, to say nothing of the health of the cows themselves. Swill-Fed Hogs Killed By Soap. V. A. Moore, in Bulletin 141, Cornell €xperiment Station: It is a common in the investigation of animal diseases to occasionally find outbreaks of-a pe- culiar nature among swill-fed hogs. By these are meant herds of greater or less size, usually kept near or within | the outskirts of our villages or small cities, and which are fed upon the kitchen refuse, often including dish wa- ter, collected from hotels, boarding houses and private dwellings. The cause of death in these outbreaks is, in this state, at least, usually attributed to hog cholera. The basis for this pop- ular diagnosis seems to be in the sim- ilarity of certain of the symptoms man- ifested by these animals to those of hog cholera, such, for example, as diar- rhoea and partial paralysis, and the fact that a majority of those attacked die. The course of the disease is ir- regular, deaths occurring in from a few hours to several days after the syMDp- toms appear. During the past year I have had occasion to make investiga- tions into the nature of several of these outbreaks of a supposedly infectious disease. In a few of these epizootics hog cholera or swine plague was easily demonstrated. In certain others, how- ever, these or other infectious diseases could not be found. The animals were usually fed the kitchen slops collected from hotels and boarding houses. The tissue changes in the animals exam- ined were atypical of any known dis- ease, and notwithstanding the bacte- riological examinations which were made, together with animal inocula- tions with pieces of the diseased or- gans, the cause of death remained un- determined. The post mortem exami- nations showed in nearly all of these animals enlarged and dark colored lymphatic glands, especially those of the mesentery. The blood vessels of the mesentery were very much distend- ed with blood. The liver and kidneys were usually not affected, but occa- sionally these organs were involved. Where there had been marked nervous symptoms the brain was much congest- ed. Occasionally the lungs contained areas of collapse. The intestines were, as a rule, pale, and the mucous mem- brane seemed to be abnormally shiny. The negative outcome of these investi- gations suggested that possibly our methods had been faulty or that some unknown conditions existed which had obscured the cause of death, and that after all the popular diagnosis of an in- fectious disease was right. Against this theory was the fact that the dis- ease did not spread from the affected herds to others, although, as a rule, precautions were not taken to prevent its dissemination, and in some in- stances the neighboring herds were most favorably situated for contracting the disease if it had been contagious. In certain of the outbreaks the exceed- ingly filthy condition in which the pens and yards were kept suggested, in the absence of a knowledge of definite, specific agents, that the animals had died as a result of their unsanitary sur- roundings and unwholesome food, a hypothesis which in some instances is still entertained as being highly prob- able. However, we were still confront- ed with the problem that in many gut- breaks neither a specific infectious dis- ease could be found nor the exciting cause of death pointed out, Although it Was apparent that the cause of the deaths was to be found in the food, the feeders of this kind of swill failed to see why they should discontinue its use. Naturally they felt that if we could not find or demonstrate the nresence of the destructive agent in the swill the cause of death must be something else, probably hog cholera, for thousands of hogs are annually raised upon this kind of food. Fur- ther, the plea that such garbage was not’a suitable or even wholesome food for their animals availed nothing, for the reply was, that usually their pigs thrived upon it. Early in the summer, in conversation on this subject with Mr. W. F. Davey, an enterprising farm- er living near Brewerton, N. Y., he re- lated the circumstances concerning an outbreak of this kind in which he had traced the cause of the trouble to the soap used in washing dishes. The swill, including the dish water, was collected from three small hotels and fed to a herd of swine. Ina short time the ani- mals began to sicken, and many of them died. Upon inquiry it was found that in- the hotels large quantities of powdered soap were used in washing the dishes. This was stopped, and no more animals died. Later in the sea- son Dr. J. A. McCrank, of Plattsburg, told me of an outbreak of an apparent- ly infectious disease among swine which had come under his observation and in which he could not make a positive diagnosis. In the investigation of its cause he found that the hogs were being fed the swill, including the dishwater, from a hotel. Upon inquiry he found that powdered soap was being used in large quantities. The swill from this place was stopped. and the disease disappeared. In following up the line of inquiry which these expe- riences suggested, it was found that there is among the more enterprising farmers a quite general belief that these soaps, when given in considera- ble quantities, are injurious and even fatal to hogs. The concensus of opin- jon on this subject, together with the more definite observations of Mr. Da- vey and Dr. McCrank, appeared to be so conclusive that it seemed important to ermine by careful experiment to whai extent, if at all, powdered soaps can be considered as the cause of deatb in this class of outbreaks. Farmers’ Children.—It is to be re- gretted that so many of our brightest and best young people are seeking other occupations than farming. Some of them, doubtless, are choosing aright. But we believe that many who are go- ing to our cities and large towns, espe- cially those who are going from farms, would do much better to give their! time and labor to the cultivation of the j experience of those who are engaged } soil.—Practical Farme Nearly an 7 tte It was a dark night Slowly down the marble steps into the garden stole a lithe figure of per- haps 240 pounds. In her hands she carried a small par- cel. It was a Saratoga trunk. She was clad only in garments, with the exception of her hat, and shoes and stockings. She glanced carefully around, and seeing no one, she took a step for- ward. “Ah, ha!” Foiled!” It was a deep cry of triumph. A large man of 5 feet 3 inches sprang from the bushes and seized the maiden. In spite of her struggles he bore her into the house, a glow of victory in his eyes. Was it a stern parent ruthlessly pre- venting his daughter’s elopement? No. It was @ calm suburban citizen, and he was preventing his new cook from jumping her job.—New York World. Objected to the Mr, Hogan (from Limeri: not mind the threats av ‘im as much th’ insultin’ style av his remarks. Mr. Grogan (from Galway)—And fwhat did be say? Mr. Hogan—He says to me: “Hogan,” says he, “tis a great notion oi have to jump on you and knock your face into shape.”—Exchange. A BENEFACTRESS’ KIND ACT. From the Evening News, Detroit, Mich. Mrs. John Tansey, of 130 Baker Street, Detroit. Michigan, is one of those women who always know just what to do in all trouble and sickness. One that isa mother to those in distress. Toa reporter she said: “I am the mother of ten children and have raised eight of them. Several years ago we had a serious time with mydaughter, which began when she was about sixteen ears old. She did not have any serious illness but seemed to gradually waste away. Having never had any consumption in our family, as we come of good old lrish and Scotch’stock, we did not think it was that. Our doctor called the disease by an odd name which, as I afterward learned, meant lack of blood. “It is impossible to describe the feeling John and I had as we noticed our daughte1 slowly passing away irom us. We finally found, however, a medicine that seemed te Most of the Time She Was Confined to B help her, and from the first we noticed a decided change for the better, and after three months’ treatment her health was so greatly improved you would not have re- cognized her. She gained in flesh rapidly and soon was in perfect health. The medi- cine used was Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. Ihavealwayskept these pills in the house since and have recommended them to many people. I have told m ny mothers about them and they have effected some wonderful cures. “Every mother in this land should keep these pills in the house, as they are good for many ailments, particuiarly those arising from impoverl hei or. diseased blood, and weakened nerve forcs,” Logic Class in the Stininary. Professor—“Mits C., give me a ample of a true conclusion drawn from two false premises.” Miss C.—‘“Logie is an easy study. That’s false. I don’t like easy studies. That's false. I don’t like logic. That’s true.’ “Class dismissed.”—New York Tri- bune. Not Inconststen “I’m afraid of you,” a esaid Miss Kit- tish to Mr. Callow, saucily. “That's stwange,”’ replied Mr. Cal- low. “A few miutes ago you—aw— said that you were afraid of nothing, doncher know?” “Well, what of that?” BETTER THUAN A SILVER MINE. The editor estimates that the in- crease in yields had by the American farmer by planting Salzer’s Potatoes and new creations in Wheat, Oats, Corn, Rye, Grasses and Clovers th@ past year amounted in round numbers to $50,000,000. The reason of this is Salzer’s farm and vegetable seeds are bred up to big yields. Salzer is the largest grower of grasses, clovers and farm seeds.in the world; 100,000 bar- rels potatoes, $1.50 a barrel and up. Just Send This Notice with 10 Cents to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and get their great catalogue and 11 packages farm seeds, positively worth $10, to get a start with. w.a.n. Mrs. Catharine Watts of Quakertown, Pa., is 107 years old and can thread a needle without glasses. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets Candy Cathartic, cure constipation for- ever. 10c. 2c. If C. C. C. fail druggists refund money. Wildcats are numerous in Monroe coun- ty, Ky., and are a terror to the inhabit- ants. AN OPEN LETTER TO MOTHERS, We are asserting in the courts our right to the exclusive use of the word “CASTORIA,” and “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” as our Trade Mark. I, Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannis, Massachu- setts, was the originator of “PITCHER’S CAS- TORIA,” the same that has borne and does now bear the fac-simile signature of CHAS. HE. FLETCHER on every wrapper. This is the original “PITCHER’S CASTORIA” which has been used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years. Look carefully at the wrapper and see that it is “the kind you have always bought,” and has the signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on the Wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas, . Fletcher is President. March 8, 1897. SAMUEL PITCHER, M. D. Shoes made of porpoise leather are ab- solutely impervious to water. Soothing 8; Yona the guase.reduoestnflam- mation.allays pain, cures wind cole. % cents a bottle In Puerto Limon, Costa Rica, the whis- ky is so bad that the yellow fever will not attack anybody who drinks it. Mrs. Winslow’: For children teething,so! n ex- | | Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has been sovereign Sarsaparilla. application and with various blood could do, the sores would not heal. well ever since. Get Ayer’s is the name to remember when buying Sarsaparilla. Dr. nearly | 50 years. That is why it is acknowledged to be the It is the original and the standard. The record of the remedy is without a rival,—a record that is written in the blood of thousands, purified by its power. “T nursed a lady who was suffering from blood poisoning and must have contracted the disease from her; for I had four large sores, or ulcers, break out on my person. I doctored for a long time, both by external Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, thinking I would give it a thorough trial. six bottles had been taken, the ulcers were healed, the skin sound and natural, and my health better than it had been for years. I have been I had rather have one bottle of Dr. J. C. Ayer’s Sarsapa- illa than three of any other kind.”—Mrs. A. F. TayLor, Englevale, N. Dak. curing people right along for medicines; but in spite of all that I At last I purchased six bottles of Before the Sarsaparilla. Delicately Approached. “Mister,” said Meandering Mike, “would you like to have all the money you wanted?” “Of course I would,” was the natural reply. “Well, then, I kin approach you as man to man, an’ tell yer all my feel- inks. It’s a good deal to to be able to depend on sympathy an’ co-operation in advance. All de money I want fur de present is 10 cents, which is some- thin’ that I know you could help me to without missin’.”—Washington Star. A Gloomy Outlook. “I think there will be increased suf- fering in the Klondike this winter.” “Why?” “Well, they say that every new party of gold seekers that arrives brings a fresh batch of popular songs.”—Puck. A New Crazy Sect in Connecticut. A lot of fanatics in the state recently immersed an old rheumatic woman bodily in the water to “heal her” as they said. She nearly died in consequence. How much better it would have been to have treated the poor old woman for her in- firmity with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which not only cures rheumatism, but prevents kidney complaint and remedies dyspepsia, constipation, liver trouble and nervous prostration. Give it a systematic trial. A pear tree 258 years old ornaments the yard of Charles H. Allen in Salem, Mass. This year it bore two bushels of orange pears. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Ca- thartic cleans your blood and keeps it clean by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all impurities from the body, Be- gin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets— beauty for 10 cents. All druggists, satis- faction guaranteed, 10c, 250. 50c. Adapted Himself to Circumstances. Proprietor—What in the world are you taking alum for? New Clerk—Want to contract my stomach so that I can live within my salary,” Read the Advertisements. You will enjoy this publication much better if you will get into the habit of reading the advertisements; they will afford o most interesting study and will put you in the way of getting some excellent bargains. Our adver- tisers are reliable; they send what they advertise. The Russians rarely drink stimulants without eating a snack with each drink. Star Tobacco is the leading brand of the world, because it is the best. Frozen milk is an article of constantly increasing sale in the warm countries of Europe. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. SOc. $1. All druggists One of the hymns in the hymn-book of a church in Toronto has been arranged to fit the tune of the song, “Put Me Off at Buffalo.” usness after Peek @ Jpmmoantog t H. Kine, Ltd..931 ‘arch St, io Puiadelphis, Pe Pwenly aaron onions, the combined weight of which was sixty-five pounds, were raised this season by J. R. Douglas of Albany, Or. TO. CURE A COLD IN ONE Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. 25¢ Kangaroo tails, imported from Austra- lia, sell for $3 a dézen in London. They make delicious soup. There was a dispute about the result of ; a horse race in Goshen, Ind., and it was decided by a kodak picture, which un- erringly revealed the position of the horses at the finish. Immediately Disproven. The philosopher stood at the third- story window and said unto the mul- titude: “The stream can rise no higher than its source.” Whereupon they turned the hose om him.—Indianapolis Journal. No Place for Her. “Going to the card party Thursday evening, Miss Flighty?’ “No; and I’m sorry; but I’m posi- tively unequal to it. How absurd it is that no eee are invited!” ties. SLICKER wg) W Keeps both rider and saddle per- < fectly dry in the hardest storms. PRX | Rept foe cree Ask for 7 Fish Brand Pomme! Slicker— J it is entirely new. If not for sale in S your town, write for catalogue to ‘A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mas. J For maps, pamphlets, railway rates, ate, and full information concerning this country. enjoying exceptionally pleasant climate and continuous good crops, apply to BEN DAVIES, Can. Gov't Agent, 154 East Third St., St. Paul, Minn. E. Walter, LeRaysvili, Pa. astonished the world /i0g250 bushels Salzer's corn; J. Breider, 173 bush. barley, and P. Siunot, 196 bush. Salzer's oats TRIAL. ined . TI a DROP. SY Me osrovenv ere gases. send for b>0k of testimonials and 10 days” treatment Free. Dr. i, M. GREBN’S SUNS, \tianta,Ga, “forecyen,usot Thomnso! ENS ON eenanae Pata seed Bureuts rain last war, 13, in the South. Cheap. Easy Terms. Free Cat. W.H.Crawford & Co., Southern Coloalzers, Nashville, Tenn. voy) CURE YOURSELFY U discharges, tnflam: ir if ste unsere. ™ of mucous membranese paa[Prevents contagion. “Painless, and not astrin~ CHewicaLCo, gent or poisonous. ‘Sol NO MISTAKE, sicsanss nave peon NEURALGIA» re you ae tut eats fe for AERIS, Send for stove cai Send St. eierak strictly Pure White Lead $e pound. ‘Mew Road Carts Shia set 100, v0 outs {ease pope catalog FREE—The souowmne eee on receipt of 2c each to bela ip pay WE HAVE NEW COOK STOVES svrestitce% sew steel ists ageon thom ROBER’ 25 to harness, b asere sud tones ie om ge b aercersucal implement eine b cata., drug cata. stovecata. cont nine ing 728 pages and Surrey HOUSE, Mi Minneapolis,. Miu. rer tt