4 . SOUTHERN r SD3: TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANTER, " Cheap Feed For Milk and Butter. H. G. DM of Roanoke, writes: "Please tell ins the best feeds for cows to produce milk. Do you advise feed ing cottonseed meal, and in what quan tity?" v Answer: The very best food for a dairy cow is good bluegvass. You can produce milk more cheaply in this way and with less trouble than by any other means. Of course, bluegrass is not available all the year, and for the win ter feeding of the cpw somesuti- tute ior grass must: ue luuuu, iu dairy cow gives her best results when receiving a succulent ration. For this reason silage is considered one of the best winter feeds for cows! Silage, as you know, may be made from corn, sorghum, cow peas, clover or other farm crops. The greater part ol the silage used is made from corn. This is because of the large yields ob tained, and the economy with which the crop can be produced. "When the corn is well eared and glazed, and some of the lower leaves beginning to fire, it is in condition to be put in the silo. The silo may be constructed on the same principle as a water tank. The idea is to exclude the air and prevent t fermentation, xne green corn -ut up fine and run into the silo and packed down firmly, and Avill then keep for long periods, and can ue leu 10 ww& as needed. When silage can not be had, roots are often used, but root crops can not be produced as economically in the South as silage, and the climate does not favor their growth as much as it does further North. It will pay you iifcpo siin. if you are feeding a fl considerable number of cows. 11 if you are without a silo, the qnes- I 1 ,..-.1,-c- i oolf infn eniUP ITlPthod liUll iWWi. of feeding economically at the present time. If you can obtain an abundance I of corn stalks to be shredded or cut up, tins wm iurmsu u i-amj gumi wu" ness for your dairy animals, provided you feed along with say twenty pounds of fodder, ten pounds of good clover hay besides some wheat 'bran and cot tonseed meal. In order to make the shredded stover more palatable, it may be sprinkled with water and the meal scattered over it and the whole mixed together with a fork. This will neces sitate the animals eating up much more of the shredded stover than they otherwise might do; and the produc tion of cheap milk and butter depends very largely in making the cows con sume a considerable quantity of dry roughness, which always provides the cheapest part of the ration. If you cannot obtain corn stalks, you can, of oourse, feed your cows on mixed hay and grain. This is often an expensive ration. If with your mixed hay you can secure some clover or cow pea hay, it will provide a better variety for the cow. As to the concentrates, you mayx feed .wheat bran at the rate of six to eight pounds per day for each thousand pounds of live weight, and to this you may add two to four pounds of cotton seed meal. Cottonseed meal may be fed with perfect safety in reasonable quantity to dairy cows, and as it is so rich in protein, an element which -the cow requires for the economical pro duction of milk and butter, it furnishes a cheap and excellent supplementary concentrate to wheat bran. If wheat bran costs you more than S25 a ton, you can feed one-half corn and cob meal and one-half cottonseed meal. In this case you would not feed over six to eight pounds of the mixture per day to a thousand-pound cow. If you find it difficult to secure corn meal, you can u?e one-third wheat bran, one-third middlings and one-third cottonseed meal to advantage. The amount of grain that should be fed to a cow will depend on. her milk flow. If she is giving three to five gallons a day, she should be fed liber ally twelve to fifteen pounds per day. One must use judgment in feeding a If cow, and no definite rules can be laid down. Where the cow is giving a small flow of milk, six to eight pounds of grain per day would be sufficient. Corn and other fattening-grains should not be fed as the sole concentrates to dairy cows. Andrew M. Soule. Corn Stalks on Iand Now, if you will permit me a small space, I will give some farm experi ence. The rops are all gathered and stored away; the harvest was a bounti ful one for we who tried to help our selves, and we should all be thankful to our Lord, the giver of all blessings, tor such favors. Wheat and rye are sowed, and now is the time to start out for another crop. If any of you intend to raise corn in land that was in corn last season, 1 fvill tell you how I treat stalk land if Fou wish to get rid of the stalks. Do iot burn them, as the manner of some s, but take a good sized one-horse turn plow and run two furrows in centre of l jpiddle, turning the dirt each way to- News of the Day. The ministere des finances at Athens, Greece, will receive proposals for fur ishing a yearly sunr.lv nf rierarette na- er tO the Government mnnnnnlv sirl- nnistrat on. E Physicians live longer than other ofessional men thai Ife being over 60. Only 7 per cent die Cn;uiuis, wmen snows that they ara carefully against infection. Over per cent die of nervous breakdown heart trouble. r f4 STOCKMAN AND TRUCK GROWER, ward standing stalk (I mean second furrow in bottom of first furrow) as deep as one good mule can pull welL Then cut stalks down with hoe or scythe and lay each row of stalks and all weeds and grass in this furrow. Then turn on one furrow from each side with a large : two-horse plow. Then let it stand until planting time, while the high ridge stands up and a small bar between and the furrows open. The cold, hard, freezing will Veachdefcpjf in. the ground than if flowed level. . " .....;. " ; ;v v' ; ; ' ; At planting time, Use lii long, straight plow with two mules drawing it. Run one furrow on each -"ide of ridge where stalks were buried, but do not turn them out. Then with two mules turn out l-emainder of old ridge. Now take cutaway harrow and cut down the ridge to the desired height, riant on or just beside of stalks and you will make corn if you cultivate well, x Now as to the inoculating material sent out by the Government last spring for cow peas, I received a package and used it on black cow peas on laud that was in rye. Turned stubble, har rowed and sowed with drill, some treated and some untreated, and found no improvement by Inoculating, but the dry weather caused rather late sowing. Now I sowed land in wheat; will notice the same plats of land to see if any benefit to wheat crop or not. Hope to hear from some others who used the inoculating material. R. C. Whiten er, Burke County, N. C, in the Progressive Farmer. Reclaiming Tand. A considerable per cent, of the best arable laud in the South is to:day al most entirely unproductive. It is those lands lying along rivers, creeks, branches, that have been cleared of their forest growth and have been cul tivated but for some reason have been allowed to grow up in weeds and bushes of one kind or another. Near ly all of this land is rich and if put in first-class shape would produce a bale of cotton or fifty bushels of corn with-, out any manuring. Most of this land, all, is set in Bermuda grass, and if nothing else, but if it had possession there would be a most magnificent pasture or meadow capable of produc ing 50 worth of beef, pork or mutton to every acre of it. If used only as a meadow it would yield from two to five tons of the best hay in the world. It is a pity these lands are not put in condition to do their best for they would be the most profitable part of the farm. It is true it would" take a lot of hard work to get them back in perfect shape, a lot of mowing, grub bing and chopping that the average farmer is not able' it seems to bestow upon it. It would pay well to clean up all patches even along the branches and creeks. Such as are not set in Bermuda could be used for sugar cane, if desired. There is so little good land on the farm to-day the best should certainly be reclaimed with as little delay as possible. Florida Agricul turist. ' The Market Fowl. Mr. r. II. Jacobs, editor of The Poultry News, crowds a large amount of sound common sense into a-very short article as follows: The market fowl is an insignificant object with those who advocate . the standard, and they boldly proclaim their destestation of any mongrei grade, or breed that is not recognized by what they term the "infallible guide" to success with poultry. ' Our standard friends may be sound enough on the standard requirements, but we will say to them that when they begin to build up the breeds ac cording to the standard by pulling out the pillars that support the -poultry structure the falling ruins will crush them as well as those whom they despise. Like Samson, they will die with the Philistines, for the founda tion of the standard breeds is the mar ket poultry. But for those who "keep chickens" the fancy breeders wduld have no markets for their productions, and admitting that they displace the scrub altogether they must create newer kinds or find the markets all supplied. The question as to the profit ableness of a breed and its use as a "thing of beauty" must be discussed in Its plainest sense. To retain the standard and keep up the purity cf the breeds it must be demonstrated that profit is sure to result, and unless that is done the labor will be but thrown away. The Best Pallet. If a pullet has been early and care fully reared, its most prolific season is its first winter. The second year, as a whole, is quite as profitable, however, because the fowl eats less than when growing, and the first half of its first year there are few, or no eggs, while laying is maintained all through its second year. Prof essor Thomas Shaw. Current Events. N. L. Penn, the last lineal descendant of William Penn, is dead at Hartford, says the Boston Globe. He was once the leader in the most exclusive cir cles in Philadelphia. He fell in love and married. - When -a few years later his wife and her baby died together the world seemed to drop out from under him and he lost all interest in it. His body will be sent to Philadelphia for burial. . Thus ends the noble line of Penns. Sharps and Flats. ' Men who serve God to escape Hell . would serve any devil who promised them .'Heaven. It's a good deal easier, to catch the preacher's errors in pronunciation than his appeals for the collection. When God has burled your sins it is a sin to dig them up again, even though it be only to show them to your friends. The man who made the biggest fool of himself at election will be the first to denounce the' excitement of a revival. THREE YEARS AFTER. Eugene B. Larlo, of 751 Twentieth avenue, ticket seller in the Union Sta tion, Denver, Col., says: "You are at liberty to repeat what .1 first" stated through our w Denver papers about Dban's Kidney Pills in the summer of 1899, for I have had no reason in -J the interim.' to change my opinion-of the remedy. I 4 was subject to severe at-, lacks of : backache, al ways aggravated if I sat long at a desk." Doan's Kidney Pills absolutely stopped my backache. I have never had a pain or a twinge since." Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N, For sale by all druggists. Price 50 cents per box. Story of Terrapin's Memory. That Br'er Tarrypin haa memory is proved by a story told by Young D. Hance, who owns the birthplace of Chief Justice Taney, on Battle creek, in Calvert county. Mr. Hance keeps a small boat under a mulberry tree on the shore of the creek, and on going to the boat early one morning he noticed a dry land terrapin busily engaged in eating a few mulberries which had fallen. Mr. Hance, wishing to assist Br'er Tarry pin in getting his breakfast, gathered some mulberries and pitched them to him one at a time. In a very short time the terrapin began to catch the berries in his mouth exactly as they were thrown to him. Every day after ward a slight knock on the side of the boat would bring the terrapin but for his mulberries, and Mr. Hance often took his friends and visitors to see his pet. On one occasion a fresh young man threw a piece of tobacco to the terra pin instead of a mulberry. Br'er Tar rypin retired at once in disgust, and for days afterward refused to come when called. Although Mr. Hance finally induced him to come again for his mulberries, Br'er Tarrypin remem bered the tobacco and would never ap proach unless Mr. Hance was alone. Baltimore Sun. DOG HAD NOT FORGOTTEN. Stung by Bee in Puppyhood, He Cher ished Resentment. "Something must have stung your dog," said a resident of this city to a suburbanite, whom he was visiting a few days ago. as he noticed the an tics of a large collie which, after snapping frantically at a flying in sect, lowered his head and carefully licked his right forepaw. "No," replied the owner, of the dog, "that is only a little delusion of his. When he was a puppy a bee stung him on that foot you see him attend ing to, and ever since he has cher ished a standing grudge against flying Insects. Apparently the sight of one not only arouses his anger, but re calls most vividly his. first experience with one, for each time after run ning after one, whether he catches it or not, he stops and tenderly licks the place where he was stung two years ago. As far as I know he has never been stung since then." Phila iclphia Press. Woman Shot Deer from Carriage. The other day Mr. and Mrs. Daniel -ott of Houlton drove up to B planta tion and while Mr. Iott was a short distance in the woods after partridge. Mrs. Iott, who was sitting in the car riage, spied a large buck deer at the edge of. the clearing and immediately brought her rifle to bear upon Mr. Deer. He dropped after receiving one cartridge Lewiston Journal. HABIT'S CHAIN. Certain Habit Unconsciously formed and Hard to Break. An ingenious philosopher estimates that the amount of will power neces sary to break a life-long habit would, if it could be transformed, lift a weight of manytons. It sometimes requires a higher degree of heroism to break the chains Of a per nicious habit than to lead a forlorn hope in a bloody battle. A lady writes from an Indiana town: "From my earliest childhood I was a lover of coffee. Before I was out of my teens I was a miserable dyspeptic, suf fering terribly at times with my stomach. I was convinced that it was coffee that was causing the trouble and yet" 1 could not deny myself a cup for break fast. At the age of 36 I was in very poor health, indeed. My Sister told me I was in danger of becoming a coffee drunkard. "But I never could give up drinking coffee for breakfast although it kept me constantly ill," until I tried Postum. I learned to make it properly according to directions, and now we can hardly do without Postum for breakfast, and care nothing at all for coffee. "I am no longer troubled with dys pepsia, do not have spells of suffering with "my stomach that used to trouble me so when I drank coffee."" Name given, by- Postum Cc.7 Battle Creek, Mich. Look In each pkg. for: the famous little bookj "The Road to WeIlYille."v . i ; y. Lift of the Heart. Whn we stand with . the woods around us ' ' And the great boughs overhead ' When the wind blows cool on our fore- head; --.- And the breath of the pines is shed When the, song- oxrthe thrush is rine ipgr . Wonderful, rich, apart Between the sound and the silence Comes a sudden lift of the heart. . When we seek with the clearer vision That grief the revealer brinea For the threads that are shot torethfr .In, tiieaci?8e.wroVh.t web things, And find that pain is woven Into love and Joy and art Between the search and the solace Comes a sudden lift of the heart. And when life's farthing candle Gutters and flares and sinks: When the eye no longer wanders " And the brain no longer thinks: When only the hand plucks idly At the sheet till the spirit part Does there come between living and dy ing sudden lift of the heart? Atlantic. The Censor In Italy. A most amusing incident took place last week, which shows fhe absolute absurdity of the censorship in Italy. The great actor, Ermete Novell!, now in South America, has a son who lives in Florence, to whom was born a bouncing boy. The young Novell!, in haste to let his father know that he had made him a grandfather,, tele graphed: "Ermete Novell!,- Buo'no? Ayres: Boy. Enrico." Several hours later he was called to the telegraph office, where the following conversa tion took place: "You know we could not let your dispatch pass." "Not let it pass! But why, if you please?" "You know you said It was a boy" "And if I did, what then? Is it not true?" "Well, that is what we do not know yet." " "What! Are you crazy? I know it!" "Well, anyway, public .order de mands that It should not be made public." . "Made public! Am I making it pub lic by telegraphing to my father? And, in any case, what has the birth of my son got to do with public order? Excuse me, have you all taken leave of your senses?" "Your son?" gasped the other. "We thought you were telegraphing about the queen!" Dm if the war correspondents says that he and his associates spent most of their time at headquarters reading novels. We suspect that their favor ite book was "Forty Liars, and Other Lies," says the Washington Post. PsyrUo'oy f the Setting Hen. The hen patiently "sets" only through the overpowering pressure of a mys terious creative impulse that masters her restless impulses to be outside scratching and cackling, instead of working for posterity. Boston Her ald. S10O Keward. 109. The readers ol this paper will he please.Ito learn that there is at loast one dreaded dis ease that scieans has bedti able to cure iu alt itsstaes, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrb Cure is the only positive care now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh beins; a con stitutional disease, require? a constitutional treatment. Hall's CatarrhCurdistaiceniuter nally, actin-jilirajtly upoa the blood andmu coussurfa jm of the system, thereby destroy ingthe foundation or the disease, ami givin? the patient strength by buildins; up the con stitution and asslstiasr nature in doincr its work. The proprietors have so much faith in Its curative povrer3 that they offer One Hun dred Dollars Torauy case that it fails to cum. Send for list of testimonials. Address P. J. CHKKEr & Co., Toledo, O. Sold bv JDrussjists, 75 Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation Iiofty Statue. A huge statue of the Virgin has been successfully placed on the summit of the Dent du Geant. a raountaiu in Italy 1.1,000 feet high, near Milan. Di vine service was performed on the summit in celebration of the event by the vicar of Oourmayeur. Buy we are TOE mm mum Uses, Po-ru-na f or Cpjigho, Golds,. Grip and Gotarrh--fl Congroosihon'o Lolfer. In every country of the civilized world Sisters of Charity are known. Hot only do. they minister to the spiritual and intel lectual neetfs of the charges committed to their care, but they also minister to their bodily needs. With so many children to take care of and to protect from climate and disease, these wise and prudent Sisters have found Peruna a never failing safeguard. Dr. Hartman receives many letters from Catholic Sisters from all over the United States. A recommend recently re ceived from a Catholic institution in De troit, Mich., reads as follows: lir. & B. Harttnati, Columbna, Ohio; Dear Sir: The young girl who used the Peruna was suffering from lar yngitis and loss of voice. The result of the treatment was most satisfac tory. She found great reliefs and after further use of the medicine we hope to be able to say sfie is entirely cured. Sisters of Charity. The young girl was under the care of the Sisters of Charity and used Peruna for cataarh of the throat with good re sults as the above letter testifies. Send to The Peruna Medicine Co., Co lumbus. Ohio, for a free book, written by Dr. Hartman. y) DEST FOU TDE COUE ffPVSh Y1! CANDY ly GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, pains after eating, liver trouble, aallow skin and dizziness. When your bowels don't move regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. 'No matter what ails you, start taking C ASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay well until you get your bowels right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to cure or money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and oooaiex iree. oare oternog nemeay company, i;nicgo or Mew York. 50a Hybridized Eden Watermelon in checks 4 feet by 4. Produces two to four SO to 40-1 b melons to hill, thousands peracre Write for method such production. Ohlnug, very swesi; Arm rind; 1eMt shipper, best seller, commanding 35 per cent premium. Sales proven by my handlers, Jirown A McfaIiHn. Philadelphia. Penn. 4 oz. package hy 10:1 il, postpaid, for $1. Price large lots 011 inquiry. L. A. STONEY, Allendale. S. C. noUBIhidHorses ore Eyes. Barry Cx, Iowa City. Ia.. have a curs curt 0 Get Premiums with Your Baiting Powder Good Luck Baking Powder and get the beautiful premiums offering absolutely free. Good Luck is unquestionably tfcev purest baking powder possible to manufacture. Bread made with it .; is light, white, wholesome aad nutritions. It keeps longer and better : than other baking powders and raises the batter quickest and very thoroughly. Good Luck is only 10c a pound. By giving the best at the lowest cost Good Luck is bow being shipped in car load and train load lots to all parts of the country. It is the idea of getting these beautiful presents free, in addition to the high quality and low price, that makes this a remarkable premium, offer . Baking Ppwdep is packed in 6 ox. and 1 lb. cans. The coupons necessary to get the ; many useful gifts," are printed on the label ct each can. Cut out these coupons. SaTe them. A few of them will get you a hand-; some free premium. For details read the little book to be found in every can. Don't forget to ask for Good Luck next time.- ,. SaTe worry, sare money, and last but not least saTe the cou oons and ret the beautiful gifts. If your grocer doesn't sell it. send us his name and we will see that you are StrfW Qrii 15000 LUCK EAKIH6 POWDER r tVT HUT DHt WM MP . I,. I n.. tM AMI I I it UM K VALUABLE AMTICll. UI 1 1 I EACH CAN. Hrwi: Tn( OCMmci 11. iotfmpwiwrfcci,iiiiw. ET. " f-i 1 I mi fr-r" -ff i .r p y , .i ii r ' I This is the coupon found on every can. ' SOUTIIEnN r.lANUFACTUIUNG CO, QZCHSIONDb VA. The following letter is from Congress man Meekison. of Napoleon, Ohio: The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.: Gentlemen: "1 have used several bottles of Perun. and feel greatly benefited 'there by from my ca tarrh of the head, and feel encour- -aged to believe that its con tin' ued use will fully eradicate a dis-. ease of thirty years standing. David Meekison. David Meekison. Dr. Hartman. one of the best known physicians ' and surgeons in the United States, was the first man to formulate Peruna. It was through his geniu3 and perseverance that it was introduced t the medical profession of this country. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna. write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case . and he , will be pleased to give you his valuable ad vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman. President ol The Hartman Sanitarium,. Columbus, O. John White & Co ' LOUISVILLE, KY. EaUbllihed 1837 HlghMt Krkt prie ir rmw FURS and Hides. rauritoa. 80.1. supplied. 1 jAfrC W r W f Jf T . . S 1 JSi m -r s vmu rm-T i a - m - - t