ht-rear-OU hr, Ietrtrit Rim. Are satisfy†l, bot also the . on this anreet list, should - .al "mien. r r-latioqt to nal meeting " -t* â€mac‘s lion than I any “W d. It a... nation od u, tow, " - hard " n. no " -.., nun h“; leading Fat Pole. kr " Junk-nan per" :.r 1hr whinkrn " hmr inn Iliwlp- s, I} ahort F------ _ L00N. iMPlRE. by the Naval , ,itamiard any: Canada, in - nee and km '1'!"le Side, - His Wife es are Mieeted rad-3&0. The Day. I that he CM rrying 0- . a... R butt]. m n. D. S TOUR. BY FISH. " to no co.- I of "mutt." _ bell. ard tho ,t' unruly!“ for the '0.- lmly. until it in! out ol tho t Nan Srhuinl SUNDAY. " touch. Hiding: WORD. Brands lav- t do not gm mud. an, " . Pttrt of thb Martin In I). " done mys H nu not I M... "t arm tut the QIN- Ind nlo'lil’, Id .. q. WI, .1 his line. and that to In! ly the rod I†and not. hiya y the in, [hi "I the mun. Humid with it. fret - rmhel'i of tbe ‘am Sellout“. Uadrid. [ht- P Hotel Wu. h "ll'mtt trm James _ e (Idem; " done so. h; NIH ilk the up. which he "I." I Mk " Ian.†Gtbbam. 'uww but. .. The t†minim: Minnm h. men, hor- tht of pv- A? col-try. hen-"I'- t you an n k to think 1mm" the way into an you , " his Pic-cu Ham-or- um " .lirigihlo INI'O'. m. irattette n! - I IIIQN' In!" half " W patrh from the art At this time the commander of Cu. Mia's militia forces wu Col. Alan Mac- .Nab. of Hamilton, Canada, and he or- tdered the capture and destruction of like "Caroline" by n f1otilU of yuvl lboats, under Capt. Drew, " midnight um Dec. 29. 1837. Hi- orders were to up.“ no one. Approaching the peace- :hl "Caroline," they IBIWM “Friends" Ito the watchman who called out, :‘Who goes there?" Swinging like wild out. upon the "Caroline'." docks, they mur- dered the duping men, only two of whom escaped, being great heroes, but who were fearfully wounded. They wen 1m Capt. Gilmnn Appelby and Capt. 'Charles Harding. who curried I cutleu wand on bis temple to the grave. But ‘for those two new men. not a " would have survival to (lentil). the Madly (Buffalo Times.) '" V mint. Wells put the "Carolina" at levying people back and forth from Fort Schlusser to Navy Island. which he considered a good money-making ven- ture. The captain started honest, but ls. gave in to tise inducements offered him, so history says. by the belligerent" who were disgruntled men from both Canada and the States, and in 1837 it was rumored that the island held 7,000 of these gathering retainers. and that he was taking them supplies. The United States, along the borders of Lake Erie was not idle, as it had fine companies of militia in training, com- manded by General David Burt. The loyal British also built a garttroat, the "Mines.†in Chippewa Creek, and the English" Navy was called on to supply than for it. Capt. Drew, n. N., was on. of the onions. tttinistrstors. This vesting of power in the English government by the colonies is Britain’s return from her investment of confi- dence and generosity to the conquered republies in 1902. Another eignifieont thing appears in the South African eonstitutton9he dis- position of the negro problem. That South Africa has a negro prob- lm: in shown in the percentage of black “History as She is Wrote†by Grace Carew Sheldon. m and the new nation will begin it. formal populatim among the {gut colonieI._ In existence. some plates they outnumber the White! And the .itptitietutt big thing about ten to one. the c?nstittttion---npart from the tnet The problem there was much more that the colonies have agreed vulnntar- Berious than in tthe United States. Also ily on the unionuis the power that the frrm the lactathut the blacks, except in colonists plams in the English 80"?!†. lezislative contentment at Cape Town. either nembli THE NEW SOUTH AFRICA SHOWN' IN HEAVY JDTTED LINES. AND TWO MEN WHO HAVE WORKED TO CREATEJT. DR. JAMESON ON THE RIGHT AND GEN. BOTHA ON TllEth. l \ England mar Ippoint the governor- zenenl of the new colony. which is to be called South Africa. Thi governor- tteneral will get $50,000 a yen. This troverm"Ntenem1 apopints ndmilr Mum-rs who shall be the executive or (icers for each ot the four colonies. The governor-general names eight of the forty senators, who serve ten years. The provincial administrators name the And low Grout Britain receive- her toward. . " out o! In South Atria. in being tae rue-t new Mull: Ttation-a In I hourly u populous u ml! Canada, ' I nation of Will And Dutch working' together. In the my jewel of the Bri- i tint crown. I Fattrrish Cape Colony ands Natal and Dutch Tun-val 3nd Grunge Free State have joined to form one country. They have agreed on a constitution and , Hid it More the imperial paliiament.‘ An noon " rliameitt can (lipase of: the budtret 'll,ril', tariff nrgumenta, the 1 constitution will doubtless be "titled; A 1th1"e'p,ett Ild generous policy P"vai1ed. Tho two republics were 1c- eupted u colonies and moved to govern then-elm. New Engusspeaiit//jiiirii u was. no do. of . bitter, bloody W. Great Wu had the two sturdy Dutch "patties, Grunge Free sate and the, Tram, down tad helpless. There lollowed much titan-don in parliament u to how they should be ruled in the luturo. um!) mbli In THE CAROLINE. percent; 1M_t§e_elou of . bitter, " without the govern solution can min] or the of tt on can be passed ID " the provincial as being reeommendm if get-um! or the ad Nation Forming in Africa provincial Twenty-five or more, men, some quite unattached to the “Carolina's†crew, as passengers often took a night's lodging upon her for want of to hotel at Schloap Ber, were murdered in 'their sleep, and the hawsers cut, the ship ignited and sent adrift to pas sever rthe Cataract of Niagara, and not one of Capt. Drew’- men were wounded, sh’owhg that no re- aistanoe was made. A prominent Buffalonian named Dur- fee was discovered in the morning with a bullet in his brain lying prone on the wharf. MacNab was knighted and Drew given a Post Captainey in 'the British Navy for their prowega. - lat-th, of which perpetrators was, ' d---d Yankees.†He who use: his legs is thereby em abled to use his eyes. NUure in all moods is the companion ot him who walks. A network ot sun and shadow, or I maze of muddy pools, lies before his feet. His cheek tetls the Jmpaet_oi kindly breezes or harsher rain." The bend in the road lures him onward and fills him with peaceful conjecture. A pleasant comrade at his side seem: not amiss to most, though Hazlitt and Ste. venson out their votes against it, do- elaring that the full tulvor of a walking tour is best gained by politude. Steven- son letter analyzes moods, but Hazlitt is the more lyric. He was among the first of Anglo-Saxon blood to sing the open road.--h%w York Evening Post. Red. “‘e-k. “'eury. “’atery Eyes. Relieved By Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murttte For Your It" 'rroubieg. You \Vltlouko Murine. t South“. 50c At Your 19ruttttists. Write For, Eye Bookl. Free. Murine Eye Rummy Co., Toronto. Guzzler-"1 like to see a girl tan- ned with sunburn." Wigwag--"You must have a dark-brown taste even when feminine beauty is concerned." For Cecil Rhodes is now regarded " a prophet. . In eomiir to' thir agreement about forming the new solony, there was a long debate. ParGof the people wanted a loose federation. The rest wanted ' real union with a fentralized govern- ment. The advocates tot the latter plan non. _ In reaching the agreement the men who had fought each other bitterly with gum Ind bayonets ten years ago, work. ed hand-irrhand far the common good. The impetunus Dr..'Jameson, whose spec- tacular raid not is, fires of the Boer war, and latterly president or gremier of Cape Colony,'trorked with ieneral Botha, who fought the British so bit. terly In the war. "It's for the bigger they any; "the Smut} Cecil Rhodes dreamed This arrangemengt mtut--tulryed may The problem there was much more serious than in tthe United States. Also from the fact that the blacks, except in legislative goeemmeut at Cape Town, and the treat of the judiciary at Bloem. fontein, eapitaliot the old Orange Free State. Another peculiar problem had to be met by the framers of the constitution -. capital. All the chief cities bf the colonies wanted it, of course. So it was divided. The seat of executive govern- ment was planed at Pretoria, the old capital of the Transvaal, tho seat of Also four senator! and répranenta- tires we to be uppointed in the genenl Assembly who will be Ipn'nlly the re. presentative: of the blacks. They dull be men who are closely in touch with the needs and internal; of the black peo- ple in the new colony. They shall re- commend meuuros for them to the w wmhlies. No restriction as regards color were placed in the constitution. But certain quaMeation. as to property holding nnd education exclude all blacks except the better class in Cape Colony. Here'l the way the “new constitution naked the problem: pom of Cape Colony, nu tango and densely ignonnt. uniorthy to be in- tmsted with tself government. They were anfirs Ind Zulu. . Walking ggor r South outh _Africa the war cry of the Noguartcr. Kill the -new in govern local jealousiea. agreement about Africa,†of which aTor full three years I hove suffered the torture of biliousncss, constipation .snd stomach disorders. I had terrible pains in my head. My appetite faded l any, sad when I did eat anything it disagreed and made me very sick for hours after each meal. The active pains in my stomach and the dizzy headaches I had to endure almost set me wild. Some times nttacks came on so severely that I had to go to bed. I would feel [so worn, depressed sud utterly miser- g able that for hours I wouldn't speak to , my family. My system was poisoned i with wastes. and nothing helped me till i I used Dr. Htuuilton's Pills. Without (this grand trystern-eleaning remedy I i would still be sick, but each day brought me better health and spirits. I was cured, and made as strong. ruddy and healthy looking as one could wish, and will always use and recommend Dr. Hamilton’s Pills. He had never ben to sea. before. "Cari vou keep anything on your storGa.f"pe ship doqtqr y.rkef., .. ""ciiii',"i'ir,""rTe -risiuriied feebly, "noth. ing but my hand."-Suceesis Mags» zine, Tfoiiair" 1trGUiawyT2. 'edit, first." - _ Wi1son's Ply Pads, the best of all fly killers, kill both the flies and the disease germs. Tommie's Manners. $'Mher--"My son, will you have tart or custard for desert?" Tommie (brieily)-"Tart." Father (encouragingly hoping to re- call the boy's mpnneyir-'Tart, what?" The current required tor working the apparatus is either half of that of an or- dinary battery r,r--after due reduction through proper regiu,a.nces--the current dorived from the electrin mains. Being enclosed in a box entirely hidden from the burglar, the cloptngraph cannot por sibly be harmed by the latut---From “Machine Identifies Thieves," in Sep- tember Technical World Magazine. son, will direct its-e]! trutotmitieauy'to. wards the contact, that is, towardi the thief, and, after having opened the ob. jective shutter, will ignite the magnes- ium powder intended to supply the ft/tle' and "win "'crse the objective .ufler t tt View ha. been takvn. run-1 ox- changv the film, get a new portion of Row er ready and register the exact our. The whole of these divers C'?,,","?),',.",.'. is completed in less time than s requir- ed to describe it, the nppamtul being immediately ready for taking anothcr view, as soon as tlu, intruder touehes some other conract, and so on. Like an invisible detootiro. the cloptogmph thus follows any motion: of the thief. in or- :lgr to repare a set of authentic and ilf,,%U2 documents, to assist the po- lir-c in their search tor tho criminal. As soon as a stranger penetrates the room, a photographic camera, under the action of some contact, involuntarily and uncommiusly cymbal by_t.he por- Catching Thieves by Machine the latest Triumph The room to be protected by the clap Lograph contains a. system of wires my] contacts that are properly distributed over the windows, doors, rates, em, be. ing connected with all objects of value. 0“-qu Thousands who are in an ailing, low state of health need nothing else but Dr. Hamilton’s Pills. They cure blood disorders, pimples, rashes, bad color, biliottsuess, liver stomach and kidney troubles. Mild, certain and sate. Be- ware of imitation, and substitutes; Me. per box or five boxes for 'l.00 at all dealers or The Catarrhozone Company, The eleptogrtrph, as may be inferred from its name, is an apparatus for the recording of theft, which automatically photographs those who break into office or house and accurately registers the hour of their visit. their Kingston, Ont, thing Had Dininess, Bad Breath, Head- ashes, Bad Color, Poor Appetite. Dr. iiatilttrtt's Pills Cured Quickly Those who doubt if constipation 1nd chronic stomach trouble can be cured, need only read the striking testimony of Mrs. B. C. Curran. of Westport, to know that even if all else had fail-ed certain cure attends the use of Dr. Hamilton'" Pills.. "ttiMntlm For "use Years" A NEW DETECTIVE. WHY DOGS GO MAD WHEN CHILDREN DON'T Here is I powerful story in a piclti'sV. ' These dreadful summer day: make all nature yearn for water. As doctors will tell you. "The greatest in the ‘world is water!" . Human beings. children especially who exist in the bake-oven streets ot the cities. get quickest mtiet this heat and burning duet throng copious draughts of refreshing water. In the torrid season it in " vation. , _ . _ ' But.not a bit. less do animals crave: water g such periods; And of all Amman, dozs are the moat “an. 0.. o-" Mun-Or “new tHrur 're on a; mu“ _ wt . _ . That Was Something. T393311 33F? For the poets, satirista, and humorist: reformers, novelists. dramatists and playwrights show a duration of M years and essayists 40 years. Musical compos- ers show 41 years. while actors and trt. ists average 42' years. Histowians and divincs average 43 years. jurists 44 years, and naturalists 45 yours.- Physi- cians and surgeons strike an average at 4tl Years; astronomers and mathemati- cians 47 years, and inventors 49 years. While in the vast majority of cases it was found that declining physical and mental ability progresses with equal pace to the end of lite, there looms up some striking instances of remarkable mental vitality and virility, standing out,, like beacon lights of hope, tar be. yrmd the period of normal decay. VANDERBILT A "WIZARD" AT 80. In the world of eommerq Commodore Mr. Dorland concludes that had these men rounded out lifetimes of 50, (30 or Tt years, they would have dune men better work than that already accom- plished. He believes that these men had only begun to Show the wonderful possi- bilities of their minds, and had they been permitted to lire longer. doubtless still greater and more brilliant achieve- ments of mentality would have been placed to their walk. It is probable that then the average age of the mass- terpiece would be nearer 60 than 50 years. F The figures regarding the duration of mental activity in these 400 records are most interesting. The average is found to be 40 years. For the thinkers it was 30 years, and for the workers 41 years. Chemists and physivians average 41; dramatists and playwrights. poets and inventors, follow at 44 years; novelists give an average 48 years: explorers and warriors, 47 years; musical composers and actors average 48 years; artists and divines occupy the position of equilibri- um at GO years; essayists and reform. ers at 51 years; physicians and surgeons line up with the statesmen at 52 years; philosophers give an average of 54 years; astronomers and mathematicians. satir- ists and humorists reach an average of M years; historians 57 years; and nat. uralisas and jurists average at 58 years. This average age of 50 yours for the masterwork ls seen to be misleading when it is remembered that the 400 lives analyzed include many that were snuff- ed out prematurely. Byron, Shelley, Keats, Poe, Mungo Park, Christopher Marlowe, and Thomas Chatterton, and many more, completed their life work before the age of 40 years. The records give an average age of 50 years as the time for the performance of the masterwork. For the workers the average age is 47 years, and for the thinkers, 52 years. . MERE ENUMERATION AN INSPIRA- TION. "Merely to enumerate the names of those distinguished men," says Mr. Dor. land, "beeomes an inspiration. Involun- tarily we duff our hats and with rever. ent mien note the proceseiun as it passes before us, a. magnificent army of genius and mentality." W. A. Newman Dnrland he“ We pro- longed scientific investigations, and finds no 40 or 50 your "dead line." He abal- ishes the "dead line" and establishes a "live line" with undreamed-of pormitsilt_ tive Mill ahead. He produces abundant ovidenve for the tronelusion that it is the mature genius that has revolution- ized the world. Mr. Borland points to the reeorO of 40 men famous in all lines of intellectual activity. They fall into two main groups, the thinkers and the workers. In the tint. class are found philosophers and natural scientists; in the second. those whose intellectual activities cul- minated in same practical and visible application of their lines of thought-- Inventors, and warriors. Of Grains: Geniuses Phulueed Late in Life. "Take theeum of human tuthieveraent in action, in science. in art, in litera" ture; subtract. the work of the men tabove 40, and while We slmuhl miss gloat treasures,even priceless treasures, We would practically be where We are tn-day. It is 1lifficv.lt to mum a great and far reaching conquest. of the mind which has not been given to the world by tl mar. on whose back the sun was still shining. The effective. moving, vit- Mixing work of the world is done Ire. twoen the ages of 25 and 40.' When have the world's chief workers end thinkers performed their greatest aehievements? What is the age of men- tul virility? . Prof. oiler, not long able address. said: MANY MASTERPIECES FORTY YEARS THE A VERAGl-l (By Ada May Kreeker.0 555." 'tist,, EEC-‘3‘ ago, in his notf tr sue. â€5‘14. _ C/ F " rig . stir,. tict, ‘2‘; £7? i 'git "kkt'liiiii'i'i'iilii'i" w. "toâ€; t - ... ' a _ J " J. Quiney. Saturday evening, shot and killed tt good sized black bear just within the city limits and adjoining Point Grey. By dint of bud work And a novel arrangement of a bicycle brain was car'ted from the bush where he was found dead this morning a mile down the dusty road to 12uiney's home. The animal measures over four feet in length and weighs over two hundred pounds. It had been stealing chicken- and giving trouble tor a year past.-- Vancouver correspondence Portland the- gonian. HOT WEATHER MONIHS KILL umr CHIlDREN If you want to keep your children rosy, healthy and full of life during the hot weather months. give them an occasional dose of Baby’s Own Tablets. This medieine prevents deadly sum- nwr complaints by cleaning the “0th and bowels; or it cure: the trouble promptly if it names on unexpcctedly. . The mother who keeps this medicine on hand may feel as safe as if she had a doctor in the home. Mrs. C. C. Roe, Georgetown, Ont.. says: " can heartily recommend Iiaby's Own Tablets as a great help to baby during the hot lum- mer months. I have used them for sum- mer troubles and am much pleased with the result." Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Laplace, dying at 78, said with his last breath: “What we know in noth- ing: what we do not know is immenle." Browning wrote with undimiuinhed vigor until his death at 77. In this galaxy are not wanting the names of octogenariaus. Cato at this my began the study of Greek, Plutnrch began his first lessons, in Latin, and So. autos learned to play on musical in- struments. Gladstone Megan his great Mldlothiun campaign at 80, and beeame premier for the fourth time at 83. Goethe completed "Faust" at the “me age. Hahnemann married at 80 and was walking at N. Tennyson at 83 gave the world one of the most beautiful swan snngs in his "Crossing the Bar." . John Wesley at 88 preached ulmost Prcry (lay and still held the held of Methodism. Pope Leo XIII. showed no signs of intellectual decrepitude when he died at 93. Cheoreul, the great scientist, was busy, keen and active when death called him at the age of 103. TORONTO Humboldt postponed until his laven- ty-sixth yea! the beginning of the crowning task orhis life, the "Cosmos," which he successfully completed in his ninetieth your. 'joseph. Jefferson was as effective in his roles, at " " when at the height of hit phypical power. Galileo, at 73. made his last telescopic discovery. 1nd Thiern, at the same age, mtalnlisholl the French republic and he- camc president. Verdi at 74 produced his manterplm, "otello." and in his eightieth veer wrote “Falstaff! whit-h was (-qunlly brilliant. Holmes " 74 published 4u'n medtettl es- says. at 79 publishml "Over the Tea. cups," and died at the ripe age of 85 years. Longfellow at 75 wrote him imposing mrditatiom "Hermes TtGmegistus." At tho samc agi- Disraeli published his "Amenities of Literature." tl three vol- llnw work. and that notwithstanding total blindness for three years preeed. Henry Clay " 75 was utill a lender. Binnan-k was lowed from the cturncel. lcmhip, and Thurman at the same nge WM noruinated for the vice-presidency of the United States. ine Many a man Masses the food who doesn't pay the butcher. woroworth- was appointed to the lawman hip at 73, and lived to Bee his eighth-tin birthday. , __..“_.... .. u...“ mm... mu conning no ttei" . " We" been“ only whaling min. and bums. 'tt wk?!“ $rugT.e.1ttt1c!ae1 " u" i TitireFWi", when aira "ttIra-r",; of Tip. inure-sod the mileage of his road from IN to l0,000 miles, and added about one hundred millions to hi, fortune. Grote, in his 7ist year. began his work on "Aristotle." Ind said at this period: "I am sure that my intellect in as good as it ever was." . Handel. nt 72, blind for the hut six you†of his life, composed his oratorio, "Triumph of Time and Trust," and died at 74, working until the last. CortNS,S2!tE,isr? PU7NAMitrFii'iNLEss - CORN EXTRACTOR Yam can pantie SOME “MERE YOUTHS" AT " A Chicken Stealing Bear. . m ia ititTyir.. t Anr '0rprelt.',rr - - -_r--r.. leave. no nut, â€cord being nude in 1901, when Ms.- 000,000 tool; the edge off n poor non: yield. The effect of this great crop comin‘ um two yeua of small yields ha. stimulated basin“. u olnewhore re- counted; it cameo in time to repleninh the depleted stocks an (anal, galleria, elevntora, mills, warehouses and “one. The lemma are the mono gratifying be. cnnaa the year opened uetpgopitiotuly.-- "Crop and Busineaa Report" of the Com- memnl Notion! Bank of Chicago. PROSPERITY IN SIGHT. It in no longer neoeaanry to speak in cautiou- tenn- of faint and attend lignn ot industrial revival. Tho evi- deoa of improving conditions is too abun- dant and conch-in to be (nimid. The movement ha: developed so rapidly due. in‘ the last three month, nnd now in- cludea no many linen and has gained and: Iona-tun that, with fundamental condition nil (notable. a "lap. in no longer to be (and. The induuiu of modern society Ire no interdependent that starting the machinery from . Itch of inaction in like carting an eight- home deem; it in dimeutt " first to get then pulling when but when they "" [Ii-ed moan-nun can the tres members are orept into line 1 the noon keeping step no! pulling their share of the load. All of the ligm that denote rising prouper"tty end ell the condition pre- cedent “a " hand. The wreck-p ot the panic has been eleamd any; the apprehension which it "and have duatttV “font up]. at My Yielde of the great cereals this year no nt e bumper record; the final de- termination will be required to give it lint or second plece with the 1900, when wheat. coin and on. ere molded by the Agricultural Department “pept- ed 4,627,000,000 bushels. The yield of wheat per new wee only exceeded once in recent yeen, the 5(3th of 735,- 049,000 fella little below the 1906 crop of 735,200,000 bushels, which wan the eeoond urgent crop ever gethexed, the neon! being nude in 1901, when 746,- 000,000 took the edge oft e poor 00m About the most wasteful method ot handling manure is the old one of gutting it into small heaps in the smyard. Fully halt the potential fertilizing value of the manure. as it is vowe by the animal, is found in the salts dissolved in the liquid por- tion; the full effect of neither the solid nor the liquid portion can be realized except when used in connec- tion with each other. When the liquid is allowed to flow away in the stable or yard, or where it is dis. placed by rain and separated from the solid portion, whether in the yard " field, it carries with it these fertil- izing salts, but when it is merely eve orated they are left behind and stilrcombined with those of the solid po_rtion_. There are only two ways in which manure loses its value. Ahte in by leaching by rain, and the other by heating. which nccompmies chemical action. When the manure is heaped in the field, or elsewhere in the open, both there a encies "tseein their work. The rain falls upon the heap, and washes its more suluble end valuable constituents into the ground immed- iately under and nruund the heap, and bacterial action begins in the heap, freeing its nitrogen and turn- ing its phos horns and potassium into more soluble lurnis, to be washed down by the next shower. The best way to handle manure is to collect the liquid by abundant ab- sorbente. spread it at once. and as oerfeetly even as possible, and " low the sunshine and rain to do their work. Sunshine will eve rate the water, but that is all, nnrthe rain which follows will redissolve the salts and wash them into the entire surta‘ce of the soil, where they are needed, and not simply into little spots here end there. Understanding the nature and value of manure. the need of thTTh, distribution becomes upper. ent. When it is spread with the fork there will inevitably be lumps in one The following table Ihowa the num. ber of pounds of nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash in a ton of (rah urine from horses, cattle, sheep and swim: _ Phol. Nitrogen. Bcid. Petal Swine ... ... ..... 9 2 10 These figures also show that the great value of stable mmuro lien in the liquid parts. Practically all the potash in passed in the liquid form. and the most useful part of the nitro. The decomposition of barnyard man- ure can only take place in the pren- ence of moisture. and it we can with- draw all moisture the residue will preserve ts Iertilizing qualities indol- initely ,und when moisture is evapor- ated from the manure heap it carries with it none of its fertiliu'ng qualities, but goat! into the atmosphere simply '"...rutery vapor. In a. ton of liquids from n cow there are 12 pounds of nitrogen. As nitrate of soda contains 16 per cent. of nitrogen, the liquid manure is as strong as a solution of 75 pounds of ultra“ in 1,925 pounds of water. if we consider the potash in the liquid manure. a barrel of water of 40 gal- lone, weighing 325 pounds, if made equal in strength of the liquid. would contain about 12 pounds of nitrate of sod: And seven pounds of muriate of potaah. While this would force crops think of pouring mrdwdwoiwdiwdod it s rinkled evenly, no one would LII) ?t..pot.trine. out lay the. pailiul. The liquids contain the richest and most soluble parts of the manure-- the only parts, in tact, that are com- pletely digested. The solid drorw Kings do not cause any quick growth, cause they are not only ow in nitrogen, but what they do contain of this element is not soluble. and thus cannot force growth at once. Nit- rotten is found in our [utilizing ma- terials in three turnur--nitrau/, am- monia. and organic. The first is the soluble form, in which plants use their element. The others are changed more or less slowly into the nitrate or soluble form. . - -"t -r~â€" --~-----v "v-r is the most valuable constituent. This gas is constantly being termed so long as the manure lies in moist heaps and is as constantly rain; from the heaps into the air. Tire drying of the manure takes away from it only water, leaving all the actual plant food be. hind. The complete removal of the water will leave' the manure in bet- ter rendition for preservation than before. lace and bare Tots in nnotBer. thus Posing part ot t . possible effect in one Inca by excess and in another, by Jelll'LT This requires to be guy-deg unjust. Farmers generally du not realize that the pungent. but invisible gas that escapes trom the manure heap 1“].4 -- A, I II A- w--. C""""""""'""'""""'"'""'""", I THE FARM i CONDITIONS OF THE CROPS HOW TO tiANDLE SFABLE MANURE. i, HAY FEVER The beat outfit for frog raining in - or more “allow pond: or round" filled with {nun and other WOW plums. It I ould be no Initiated that the wnur out In partially drawn off no u to fuiliutc the labor of muting. If, u in often the out, the you “My nboundn in from, they In ol-ply pm- tected and left for . year or In to prongs“. It food doe. not M nhundnnt. the owner thrown in Ii†onrthwonm, u the frog in A cal-ivor- oun Ania-l, And prefers the feed, who- ther wormu, larva or inn-rem. in“ and in normal, living condition " not: exist in the use" they on p either living or in the form of v, which hush when the in" be... warm in ApHl.--P+hr Win. the future with an optimum and w- age born of knowledge at the vendor- ful ream-cu at this country. “was In bare of "up“: goods .“ tho cou- try has gnu/u up to in mum. and equipment. At this opponun Q. h inn-(unto . new on at [hm-pd†(some. the beat .ll-rould crop em pm- dnoed in this oo'ttttrr-A?rot, and Bull'- neu Report of the Commercial N.ti-al Bunk of Chicago. It in in Fume that the frog In tirat generally and for food, and it in inthat country that the industry of no; Int-- ing has been moat largely dcvolopd. The green frog aim chm-Cum: throughout Praaee wherever than - mnbel. patio or no!" mum ot river. or up that eontain 1nd or slightly braid“: water. In the tonne of an an“ dinner at“ recorded in Mr Algernon West'. Mm lectionu," the late Admiral tgir “my Keppel, who served in the navy m The [oighill dinaptteared. but the - luu worn by tailors had than - h the inning of the pip-ail! --greeh N lurrr "collected being II we“ . blue cloth in pet on the “'0 - den to keer the gnu: off M M The mil dinptmul. but the - Inn town a this .--+ M Aiward'B. Voorhees, laud of the New Jersey Agricultunl apartment. much. in a pamphlet he bu just killed MI- mendu the yearly nppliuu'on at lime. It is shown {hit-through . but ot lime the growth of crop. in hoo- has utislnctory. clover bu mm to be W†ducting in may inane“, and "on on. and corn have not [inn PrqtitatrU N- harm. price; that he would apply No “no u a fine state of dividoa, and that, M the Ind In no longer molly adj, Imln Applicuttono at frequent titan-h will give more utishctory return. than large appnc-lionl at longer hm.“ Going on the gnu-union that punt give Jersey farmers and truck." “I open for suggestion in way: of harm- iytr tht pIodyetietot glut; tend, Pr- "Farmers are Mal-d " “In,†to goel on, â€u to (I. In» TU' Stti ing the needed line. They u to them unions kinds at burned and crushed limestone, burned or on“ oyulcr Shelli, by-products from mm and gun plants containing quantum " lime. mining ncid phocphotc u out. of I.- monk. Moreover, It would In but u. to limo the [sad Mandi-w, 50M an Punting of tho potato crop, lost "a - velopmont of potato scat, be 0W but ttttt on the crop Uter pom are "vested. hue; that he will and the a...“ source of supply in mm can“: the Info“ mount of netml “no (or nctunl in. 3nd munch) for the ("on (lfl'fflllillitltlit Oder rum-diva my attord â€our, relief. but (bun-town can In, Fever so that it wilt - Mun. " i- guns-Item to do this, and about“ it fail your mom,- will be rettm6ed. Two moutlu' trratmeM, who 'UAV, trial nine, one. All Drum-h or “O Catarrhoaone (Runway, Kingdom Ottt., and Buffalo, N. Y. "The subject. ot lining in made not! complicated still by tho Che-kid “I' partition and market value. at the dil- ferent limes. Some “an all In but.†for half the price of OHM", yet it - that the lime with We loved “my price in not Kimmy the chap-u, not that with the highoat selling prim a. dearest." "Hnllly. it Pa'", and spa t the farmer will __ It trroftt.at" to Fulluwiu is n more detailed ouuin of his tsuggestions with regard to the and lime.. rqt is only neeeuury to run-1hr ll this connection that limo thou“ not I. spread an top of heavy 'frMt of In. mnure, nor pin-4 with I _ irer, cor The only radical and lasting cure. for Hay Fever, Hay Asthma & Bronchitis is "In â€chiming “ump- or very and clay soils it may be manly to My three or four tum, " time- even nun. of water Inked or air linked “an to nuke the Inn! fit tor the WW!!!“ growth of cultiuud crop. "A: to the time of Indiana, no htrmer may consult his cannula-co " this respect. The lime my in w on sod or on full plowed Mud in the hu {all or winter, it my he cpl-ad In burrowed into the Boil in an only spring or it my be diatribe!“ by “In of the (ermine! drill shortly helore nod- just indicated min- in iio, you} we may apply correspondingly smaller amounts once in two years, or even annually. his advantage of the smaller and no" In- quent applications lira in the tact that the soil is not allowed to â€one so markedly deficient in lime, as It = times bieomee in tin or six yuan I intensive methods at cultivation. rur- thermore, the ,smaller quaettitNs may I. readily distributed by means at the ter. tilizer drill without involvia‘ much " ditional labor. ing, "Under Ouch circumuneel it will ul- wuyu be wiu to add enough line " the first bee to correct the emu.“ Wt}. In 0&1" will the amount: "un In much "null". In huvy clay m not mu-kedly avid, 2.000 to 2.500 Gia; at water ulnked line ittrtiitf, one. in an yen- will prove Ill Scum. Edmund] L500 to 2,000 patina: nuy be neon- mended for loam will and Moo to I†pounds for light undy who. Whore an Illkéd lime, crushed lune-bone or onâ€! shells are used the quntiuu may '00 safely Incremd by one-quarter or on.- third, and where nlhlfn is to he “uh- lied by onehatf or more. TELLS FARMERS HOW TO APPLY LIME T0 SOIL. ir" Free oeytir". tt. “Iâ€. to "Emily, it JPd "reuiu of applying the gun-INI- Frog Industry In France. Origin of '.ilors' “Han. ES