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PKOPEIl rilESSURK IN CHEESE MAKING.
A frequent mistake is to apply too
strong pressure at first to the newly
hooped curd. The pressure should be
gradual, and the snug squeeze only given
after several hours. The white whey
tnat starts from a severely pressed curd
is rich in butter fats, which will net ap¬
pear if the curd is allowed to settle
firmly in the hoop before strong pressure
is applied. The facts go to show that
the average full cream cheese has parted
with far too much of its fats in press,
vats, drainers and hoops, and is often
found to be a half skim when it reaches
the consumer. Great hue-and-cry is
raised over tlie idea that it is commer¬
cial wisdom to take out a pound of but¬
ter fat to each hundred pounds of milk,
which tests four and one-half per cent,
fat for cheese making. The cheese is
no better that has lost that amount of
fat in manufacture than is another
cheese from which has been skimmed an
equal amount, and the balance of the fat
retained by skillful manufacture. A
little care at the beginning of the opera¬
tions will always prevent such wastes
and result in a better product.—Ameri¬
can Agriculturist.
A VETERINARY VIEW OF CRUELTY.
The following is the report of a com¬
mittee appointed by the British National
Veterinary Congress for the purpose of
further considering the subject of cruelty
to animals from a veterinary point
view, and publishing a declaration in
the name of the Congress on certain
practices and painful operations on
animals.
Lameness may be painless or painful.
Those cases where the lameness passes
off with exercise are pritna facie cases
that are accompanied by pain—this
specially applies to cases of navicular dis¬
ease and spaviu. In such cases horses
ought not to be worked, and when
worked it is cruelty.
The practice called twitching causes
acute pain and is frequently unjustifi¬
able.
Burning gas for larapas is cruelty.
Knocking out wolf teeth is cruelty.
Extracting temporary teeth save for a
surgical reason is cruelty.
Docking and nicking horses are cruel.
Marking and branding animals when
necessary, should be performed by the
quickest and least painful method.
Worming the tail, docking and crop¬
ping the ears of dogs are unnecessary and
therefore cruel operations.
Operations of vurious kinds are fre¬
quently performed on animals by igno¬
rant persons,and much cruelty is caused
thereby,which ought to be publicly dep¬
recated and prevented by law. All pain¬
ful operations not required for the good
of the animal operated on are of a cruel
nature. No operation causing pain to
au animal should be performed by an
unskilful person. All necessary opera¬
tions ought to be performed iu a scien¬
tific manner aud by the most human
methods, in order thereby to prevent the
infliction of unnecessary pain.—Western
Agriculturist.
LAMINITIS, OR FOUNDER.
Founder may arise from various causes,
such as continued bud shoeing, freezing
of the feet, overexertion, a sudden chili
irom drinking cold water when heated,
or overloading the stomach with whole
hard corn or other grain. Iu the initial
stages there is usually a stiffness of one
or both fx'ont iegs, and by careful exam¬
ination you will find that the feet are
feverish and tender aud this is why the
mare moves about iu her endeavor to re¬
lieve the pain in her legs and feet. Re¬
move her shoes aud poultice her front
feet until the fever subsides and teuder
ness is entirely removed. Warm poul¬
tices are best during cold or cool
weather, but in warm weather cold ones
are preferable. Give the mare twenty
drops of tincture of aconite in three or
four ounces of water to allay the fever,
aud repeat the next day if the fever con¬
tinues unabated. Keep the mare’s stall
well covered with clean straw for bed¬
ding, and encourage her to lie down as
much as possible. Give steamed or
boiled corn or oats while under treat¬
ment, aud when all signs of fever have
subsided put on a bar shoe it the soles
of her feet are at all teuder; if not, allow
her to run out to pasture duriug warm
wetither until the stiffness disappears. If
you cannot afford to give the mare a rest,
then apply the warm poultices to her
front feet as soon as she comes in from
work in the evening, leaving them on all
night, removing iu the morning, after
which wash in warm water and wipe dry.
Also give her a few doses of the aconite
aud work her as gently as possible, re¬
membering that she is in pain aud every
step only increases her misery.—New
York Sun.
FARM VXD GARDEN NOTES.
The grape loves sunshine.
Soapsuds are good for most garden
plants.
Fruit for market, as a rule, is not well
suited.
A rich soil is necessary to secure crisp
vegetables.
Flowers cost little in summer and are
always a joy.
Never allow the hens to drink from
stagnant water,
If a lawn is to be made, prepare to
sow the seed early.
A slow but healthy growth is desira¬
ble in a fruit tree.
Potash is an essential element in the
soil of an orchard.
Don’t be in a hurry to pull the mulch
off from your strawberries.
The goose eggs set under a hen should
be turned every other day.
Farming in the garden works badly,
but gardening on the farm is excellent.
Manage to plant trees in some way
along the fence, if no other place is
open.
For raspberries, the richer the ground
the larger and better the quality of the
berries.
From this time on through the summer
the average farm butter does not pay for
the making.
Manure from the pig pen is one of the
best that can be used around the rhu¬
barb plants.
“Two is company and* three is a
crowd” applies to triplet lambs as well
as to lovers and the gooseberry.
Shrewd flockmasters put to use a ewe
that has lost her lamb by making her act
as wet nurse for lost or discarded lambs.
If they are picked regularly during the
season geese should average a pound of
feathers each, and this should make them
pay.
Hay that is cut, cured and housed be¬
tween daylight and dark does not often
lose its sweetness by being sun burned or
water soaked.
Often when the lambs are doing well
one is apt to think a little extra feeding
will make them do better, but this gen¬
erally proves a mistake.
Most of the disease which is reported
each year among sheep is the direct re¬
sult of exposure, neglect, starvation and
unhealthy surroundings.
It may not pay the majority of farmers
to make a specialty of dairying, but in
connection with other products it can
readily be made profitable.
Why not train the calves to lead and
train the boys to lead them, and if well
followed would often save much trouble
in the handling of the cattle.
Both the animal and vegetable king¬
doms are subject to the same laws. Seeds
as well as stock may be improved by
careful selection and breeding.
The advantage of barn cisterns cannot
be over estimated. Providing water foi
the stock, they prevent water trom the
roofs filtering through the manure.
There is only one way to run a dairy
successfully, aud that is to make a busi¬
ness ot it. The farm must be adjuuct to
the dairy, not the dairy to the farm.
Give the boy all the hard jobs and the
chores that you doq’t want to do your¬
self, if you waut him to leave the farm.
It is a pretty sure way to accomplish
this.
On a majority of farms milk could be
used with more profit in feeding it to the
pigs, poultry, and calves than in making
it into butter and selling it at ten cents a
pound.
Are you thinking of feeding corn and
making “big” hogs for next winter’s
market? If so, you have not observed
that “light bacon” hogs are the ones that
bring top prices.
If you plant a field of sweet corn, in
order to experiment a little with green
soiling this fall, don’t have it a half mile
away from the stable. A fiiend of ours
who did this iound that soiling didn't
pay.
When the farmer finds his cattle with
a husky cough he may attribute the same
to indigestion from over feeding. Cut
down the supply fifty per cent, for two
days and the result will be immediately
beneficial.
The man who wants to buy a Jersey
bull aud who has not made a study of
pedigrees will have to trust a good deal
to the honesty of a reputable breeder to
supply what he needs. A trade-mark for
honesty is valuable property whether one
sells bulls, fertilizers, or flour.
Careless aud unkempt attendants who
force cows into filthy stables are respon¬
sible for the inferior if not poisonous
milk served to customers. Clean sur¬
roundings conduce to good health,
whether of man or beast. Time con¬
sumed in making a cow comfortable will
be as money in the dairyman’s pocket.
It is not a new fact, but yet .a remark¬
able one, that if a fruit tree, apple, pear
hr cherry, be stripped entirely of its bark
in the second week in June a new sur¬
face of bark will- immediately take the
place of the older one. It is believed
that the chief growth of deciduous trees
in our part of the world takes place at
midsummer.
In tlie Bank of England.
*' *
An English journal says that the doors
of the Bank of England are now so fine¬
ly balanced that the clerk, by pressing
a knob under his desk, can close the
outer doors instantly, and they cannot be
opened again, except by special dariDg process. and
This is done to prevent the
ingenious unemploved of the great, me¬
tropolis from robbing the famous Insti¬
tution. this and
The bullion department of
other great English banking establish
ments are nightly submerged in several
feet of water by the action of the ma¬
chinery. In some of the London banks
the bullion departments are connected
with the managers sleeping room3, and
an entrance cannot be effected without
setting off an alarm near the person’s
head. day
If a dishonest official during the
or night should take even H3 much as one
from a pile of 1000 sovereigns the whole
pile would instantly sink and a pool of
water take its place, besides letting every
person in the establishment know of the
theft.—New York Tribune.
A Lesson--Perhaps.
Sharp Father—“I believe that hand
some stranger has fallen in love with
you, my dear.”
Extravagant Daughter — “Do you?
Why?” Father—“I him gazing sad¬
Sharp saw dress have on.”
ly at that extravagant you
—New York Weekly.
The Usual Result.
She (wearily)—“My head aches aw
fully.” been doing?”
He—“What have you
She—“I’ve been trying to decide
whether that bargain I got to-day at a
bargain counter is a bargain or not. ”
For impure or thin Blood, Weakness, Mala¬
ria Neuralgia, Indigestion, and Biliousness, strength,
take Brown’s Iron Bitters—it gives
making old persons feel young—and young
persons strong; pleasant to take.
Luxury shortens life; comfort prolongs it,
especially ease of mind.
Ladies, broken ladies, and think the of disappointments the engagements you
have con¬
sequent to others and headache. perhaps Bradycrotine also to yourselves,
all on account of will
cure you in fifteen minutes. Fifty cents.
Bef,cham’s Pim.s act like magic on the
liver and other vital organs. One dose relieves
sick headache in 30 minutes.
$ ^■4 i
n
<>
COPYRIGHT 109,
It's flying in the face
of Nature to take the ordinary pill.
Just consider how it acts. There’s
too much bulk and bustle, and not
enough real good. And think how
it leaves you when it’s all over !
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets act
naturally. They help Nature to do
her own work. They cleanse and
renovate, whole mildly but Regulate thoroughly, the
system. it, too.
The help that they give, lasts.
They’re purely vegetable, per¬
fectly harmless, the smallest, easiest,
and best to take. Sick Headache,
Bilious Headache, Constipation, In¬
derangements digestion, Bilious Attacks, and all
of the Liver, Stomach
and Bowels are promptly relieved
and permanently cured. One tiny,
sugar-coated Pellet for a gentle
laxative — three for a cathartic.
They’re the cheapest pill you can
buy, for they’re guaranteed to give
satisfaction, or your money is re¬
turned.
You pay only for the good you
get. is
This true only of Dr. Pierce’s
medicines.
“German
Syrup”
My niece, Emeline Hawley, was,
taken with spitting blood, and she
became very much alarmed, fearing
that dreaded disease, Consumption.
She tried nearly all kinds of medi¬
cine but nothing did her any good.
Finally she took German Syrup and
she told me it did her more good
than anything she ever tried. It
stopped the blood, gave her strength
and ease, and a good appetite. I
had it from her own lips. Mrs.
Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn.
Honor to German Syrup.
J thi P --?omad A ®Yr L fn S d
. -.'WjgfWi pur.ty the blood, are safe and ef-I i
a fectual. The best general family, i
• ^ ) medicine tenown for Biljooscess.. i
t J of Psinnii Appetite, Dijrestion, Mental Pimples. Depression, Sallow • a
j every symptom Complexion, disease resulting: Tired from Feeling:, fmpui’e} and#
or
J to blood, perform ora failure their proper by the functions. stomacb. liver Persons or intestines® given to J
a after?
^ over-eating: li meal Price, are benefited by takinpa TA
4 ea dress THE RIPANS by CHEMICAL mail. 1 srross ; 1 Spruce bottle 15c. St..N.Y. Ad-1 Z
• CO ..10
• Ag’ents H anted: FIGHTY per cent profit. 4
ill
a i m
Wh
B If
Em m /ft
IM m
02*13 ENJOYS
the method and results when
of Figs is taken; the it is and pleasant
refreshing promptly to taste, the Kidneys, acts
and yet Bowels., cleanses on the
colds, head¬ sys¬
effectually, and fevers dispels and habitual
cures
Syrup its kind of Figs is the
duced, remedy pleasing of the ever and pro¬
to taste ac¬
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for sale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any have reliable hand druggist will who
may not it on pro¬
it promptly for any one who
to try it. I)o not accept any
CAUFQRN1A FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N.Y.
•YOU NEED NOT FEAR
that people will know your lvair is dyed if
you use that perfect imitation of nature,
1 ■
It imparts a glossy color and fresh life to the
hair. 1’rice, @1. Office, 39 Bark Place, N. Y.
*
rA- LITTLE
i mmM Ut
TRAD
1)0 NOT GBIPE NOB SICKEN.
Sure ACHE, cure for SICK HEAD¬
impaired gland's. digestion, consti¬
1 pation, vital torpid They arouse
M Bh ziness. Organs, Magical remove effect nausea, Kid¬ diz-
20 neys bilious tuidbl adder. on Conquer
sOO nervous dis
orders. Establish nat¬
ural Daily Action.
blood. Beautify complexion by purifying
Purely Vegetable.
The dose is riecly adjusted to suit case, as one pill can
never be too much. Each vial contains 42, carried in vest
pocket, like lead pencil. Business man's great
convenience. Taken easier than sugar. Sold every¬
where. All genuine goods bear “Crescent”
Send 2-cent stamp. You get 32 page book with sample.
DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., St. Louis. Mo.
r
Risi ^ • fSSfe U W
-OVE JN V
SfT ;t'T :
DO HOT BE DECEIVED ~--- - (
with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain
the hands, injure the iron, and burn off.
The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Jirilliant, Odor¬
less, Durable, and with the consumer pays lor no tin
or glass package every purchase.
A Sample Book Cake of Dermatology Soap and 138
.page on
and Beauty; Illustrated;
'Facial /Woodbury? Soap SapSr SWawh S^fiasealed on and Skin, Blood for Scalp, diseases 10c.; Nervous sent
$|j»raDisfigurements, also
§|BIi|Birtk like
Warts, Marks, India Ink Moles,
TjgjJPowder and
aS yrtk/J Marks, Scars, Pit
• tings,Redness of Nose, Su
l perfluous Hair, Pimples.
AND J|[)NA|$P ijWAhJohn Dermatologist, H. Woodbury, 125 W.
Bggjfc..
waaie^SY MA1*- S or by letter.
a
PISO’S CURE FOR
Consumptive* and people
who have weak lungs or Asth¬
ma, shonld use Plso’s Cure for
Consumption. It has eared
thousand*. It has not injur¬
ed one. It is not bad to take.
It is the best cough syrup.
Sold everywhere. 85c.
' CONSUMPTION. „
LOVELL DIAMOND CYCLES
For Ladles and Cents. Six styles * a
Pneumatic Cushion and Solid Tires.
Diamond Frame, Steel Drop Forgings, Steel W
H~| Tubing, Adjustable Bali Bearings to all running parts,
■*CcvmY including Pedals. Suspension Saddle. Pa.rtic nls.r_
3JAX0N0 7A Stri ctly HIGH GRAVE in Every
«k.L Kpf Send 6 cents in stamps lor oar 100-psee iUiStrated cats
Bitreie Catalog.. fr£k 7 | logne ofGaas, Rifles, Beroirers. Sporting
JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO., Mfrs., 147 Washington St., BOSTON,
3 ? WINSHIP MACHINE CO,
ATLANTA, CA.
-/ o 1 *> o i Cotton Gins m Cotton Presses
.1 Ill-Packing, Down-Packing, Self-Packing. ^teel
A inches ami 3 inches in diaw t ' ter - Car d
“I Our Cotton Cin with New Patent Revolving it cost
Straightens the Fibre and improves the sample s°
mands the Highest Market Price.
ALL THE LATEST IMPKOVEMEN i L^tett
Gins furnished with Revolving Heads when
WRITS FOB CIBCCLABS A>‘D RB1CSS.
[A PRIZE PICTURE PUZZ
'-.’.UK -i:z fc -
i 1
l
7mk m %
Sr, 7
7
C w
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g
SMI
Diamond some Silk Dross Ear-Rings Paftern, - varll^
color; the fourth Coin ,6 WatM?
to a Silver
and many other prizes in order of merit V*
competitor must cut out the above pmzb e |
distinguish the three girls' faces by markingacS pj ctu
with Ba&feawa® lead pencil on each, and enclose 5 rjrj same S
envelope is postmarked first will be awarded Toth! th,
first prize, and the others in order of merit
person sends ng the Inst correct answer will be zivm
an elegant Gold M atch, of fine workmanshm
and first-class timekeeper; to the next to the last
pair of genuine Diamond Ear-Rin-g. >
the second to the last a handsome Silk Dress
Pattern, Coin 16 yards in any color; to the third
to the last a Sil ver Watch, and many
other prizes in order of merit counting fromth.
last. WE SHALL, GIVE AWAY (shfuij
100 VALUABLE PREMIUMS
there be so many sending in correct answers). No
charge miums. is The made for boxing of the and loading packing 0 'f pre
names prize winnttj
will be published in connection with our advertise¬
ment in leading newspapers next month. E«t»
premiums introducing w ill he given to those who are willing tj
assist in our medicine. Nothing is
charged for the premiums in any way, they are
absolutely Ford’s given Pills, away to introduce and advertise
Prize which are purely vegetable and
act Bowels, gently dispelling yet promptly Headache, on the Liver, Kidneys and
Fevers and habitual Colds,
constipation. cleansing the system They thoroughly and cure
not gripe, small, are sugar-coated, do
d*se, and purely very vegetable. easy to Perfect take, one pill*
follows their are As the reliability of digestion
use. to our com¬
pany, we refer you to any leading wholesale drag,
gist or business house in Toronto. All premiums
will be awarded, strictly in order of merit and with
perfect satisfaction to the public. Pills are sent by
mail post paid. When you answer this picture
puzzle, in. Address kindly mention THE FORD which PILL newspaper COMPANY, you saw
it lington SL, Toronto, Can. W*
AN ASTONISHING
TONIC FOR WOMEN.
McELREE’S
OF
It Strengthens the Weak, Quiets the
Nerves, Relieves Monthly
Suffering and Cures
FEMALE DISEASES.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST ABOUT IT.
S1.00 PER BOTTLE.
CHATTANOOGA i'ED. CO., Chattanooga, Tend.
Dr. S.C. Parsons,
Blood Purifier.
Cures Syphilis, Itch, Hi>
mors, Swellings, Skin v*
eases, Rhenm atism, Pimpkk Cstarrk
Scrofula. Malaria, Kiting
Fevers, Liver and
Diseases, Old Sores, Erup •
ions and all disorders result¬
ing irom impure blood.
i Price $1.00.
SOLD by DKCOGISTS
A*’**’*' Dr. S. C. Parsons, '
Physician” telle how to get well and keep
of charge, address with stamp, ^SavannaPy^
DR. S. C. PARSONSf —
BETTER DEAD
THAN ALIVE- death. Jarett 1 ue
Dutcher’s Fly Killer is certain a „ r8 *
tracted to it and killed at once.
s;s;,a 5 ,“:s;s -
A. N. U.... ......Twenty-five./j:
...