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* i Stenographers | Furnished by our Employment Department I I I : I I ■ ■ , Male or female, to operate any make of machine. We carefully examine all applicants, and save you time and trouble. Let us know what machine is used, character of work to be done, and the salary you want to pay. We will meet your require ments promptly. No charge to either party for this service. Smith Premier Typewriter Co. 1637 Champa Street Denver, Colorado. I s I I i I 1 I Telephone or write us. I I i 1 i I & 'S Hullo, Central Give me 33 »» t 99 Hullo! K i « 99 That you Charley? Bill. I was down 'nd thot I*d look at some of them Sepra tors.'' "Oh! You were? "Hello! This is to Portlan" this week J ' J Well, what ones did you see?" "Oh! three or four kinds; an" sa'can't some them fellers talk, tho', that sell 'em ! They all have the best, but g<sh! a pile o' difference Sara sed clean some of 'em, and some of coldn't lift the bole out, and durned long you couldn't see o'nt when looking inside. Ha! Ha. finally seen the one von Empire. Gosh ain't it a hummer. EMPIRE CREAM SEPARATOR CO t hes's she'd never 'em she ■ i ! ■ J one was so totner end Hul we I snoke on. th* 44 Second, street Portland Oregon I i iaaiaaiaaaaaiaa*aaa:*î3aaaaaaaaaa'3t*Pii*E»Hi*:*[*i*w*cNiaiaia:*ia:*ia**i»a | * j 3 I ' 3 A a r. k IDAHO MEAT COMPANY. r. J r. A E E CALDWELL, IDAHO. Dealers in all kinds of Dressed Meat. try in Season. r j r 3 r Fish and Poul j E A r. A A E A r. A CHAS. BLACK, Manager. A E A I r. ■* i EEEEEEEËËEBEEBEB EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEBEEEEEEL EEEEEEEfeEEEE 50 YEARS' experience I A Trade Marks Designs Copyrights Ac. quickly Ji- nrohablv patentable. ConimuniCR* Ilona's tricti y con fl dein 1 al . HANDBOOK on Patenta Uol i 8 /,iv Oldest airencv for securing patents. Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. y&PZnr S&L Sold by all newsdealer KilNN £ CO 361 Broadway, NfiW TOfK " Branch Office, 623 F St. Washington. D. C. A ANDERSON, Auctioneer. st. Boise, Idaho. 1403 17th Residence Southern Pit Games Is devoted strictly to Pit Game Fowls Now is the time to subscribe, dollar per year. One Sample copy free. JEFF FLEMING. Blakely. Ga. P, (j. box 4. N. B.—1 also breed the celebrated pit games: vincibles. Grist Champions, Warhorses Georgia Blacks, etc. catalogue, illustrated in mention this paper. f< il lowing Fleming's Di Send for new and colors 11 For Drunkenness, Opium, j 1 . - Morphine and I Y^fhwr Druo Using, _ ^theTobacco Habil ^ and Neurasthenia, ■ a t*A THE KEELEY ul v INSTITUTE, <i Vnce -rV-Iy .ouiideatia' Owifelii, ill. , I wMûm. -■ V, ■•vâéT? I y va'.' 'r i. '/ W-'Wr tmk QL JJÇr F--, - r/y m o j uCggCOOOOOOC. 'OOOc ooxwO % / Preparing a Starter. Oscar Erf, in an address before In diana dairymen, said: The preparation of a starter is as follows: Select three or four pint tars of the best milk that comes to tae creamery, or, where opportunity affords, select the milk from several good cows; cover these jars and set them away in a warm place until the milk has coagulated. From these select the one that has developed the best s. arp, acid taste, free from dis agreeable odors and gas bubbles, and that snows a solid curd. A can of skim milk then temperature not exceeding 175 deg. F. for twenty minutes and cooled to 75 or 80 deg. F. The selected jar of milk is then added, and, after thor oughly mixing, the cair is set in a place where the temperature can be kept at 75 or 80 deg. F. for twenty-four hours. A wooden tank, large enough to hold seven or eight times amount of water occupied by starter can, answers the purpose well for keeping this starter at a uniform temperature for a long time. The en tire amount of the starter should be and the the jhoured at ue etc ot lu.s lie, appa ently of the same flavor as that ol the original selected jar. starter is uw ready for use. and an amount equal to 7 or 8 per cent of tue cream to be ripened is added. By ahuii g one or two quarts daily to Irish pasteurized milk it can be per petuated to ti e extent of eight to ten the cleanliness and In order to keep the family at the -eash< re we've got to stay at home land swim in the millpond. The days, dependi the care tauen in on pasteurizing the skim milk. This method of preparing a starter Quite /nvariabiy brings good results. of;en. however, sampler methods are proposed for preparing starters, such as leaving some cream in the vat and rum irg the fresh cream with it, or h> adding buttermilk to the cream; t ese cannot be recom-mended, for .ail in producing the UUl they too oi.eu '..called ttavu. BILLVILLE AT HCME. it u ' n a dollar a There's nothing like being in stvle ■ d oüowing f'e fashion, but its pret • hard to la. and faith in to-mor.ow. keen heart is— the sher bath:*'g in Wells' Homo is only whe > the f" ) que"t!y .vrem waiting for a m mo"! is hangirn dan.e to o.ieckse a mortgage. :* round • ** bile we were millpond one day las; wee . an alliga niade as if he would «wallow us. but he was probably reminded of the whale'« un ortunate e- ne n-ure with jomh. and gave if up as a bau job. ft or Constitution Atlanta Sensational Exposure of Fraud. A dog was playing a piano in a cir eus in Yorkshire England, the other day. when om> of the audience called out "rats." The dog immediately va rated his seat and "went for" the But as the piano kept right there is some question as - a:a Lai ability. on playing to the dog HAD A WRONG EFFECT. Impressive Sermon Confirmed Lis tener in Evil Ways. The little English vicar of Hexton, whose objection to high church ritual ism brought him recently into con flict with Bishop Potter in New York, sat one day drinking a brandy and soda in the cafe of the Fifth Avenue hotel. A group of reporters surrounded him. Ope of the reporters said: "Why don't you try to down ritual ism, Mr. FiBIngham, with sermons rather than ILh violence?" The vicar smiled "Sermons," he said, "have an effect always, bpt too often this effect is the opposite one to what the sermonizer intended." "How do you mean, sir?" the re porter asked. "I'll illustrate to you what I mean," said the vicar. "I once had a parish ioner who was a miser. For this man's benefit I preached one Sunday a strong sermon on the necessity of charity, of philanthropy—a sermon on the duty and the joy of giving. The miser, at whom I gazed often, seemed impressed. "Next day I met him on the street. " 'Well, John' 1 said, 'what did you think of yesterday's sermon?' " Tt moved me deeply, sir,' he an swered. It has brought home to me so strongly the necessity of giving alms that, honestly, sir. I've a great mind to turn beggar.' "—New York Tribune. ; I A Philippine Experiment Station. The United States government is establishing an experiment station in the Philippine islands, part of tae staff has reached the field, and a botanist, an agrostologist, an expert in soils, a superintendent of the farm and helpers are there at work. The experiment farms estab lished by the Spanish government were visited -t was found that many of the buildings nad been destroyed or been allowed 10 go to pieces, while the tools and farm machinery had been stolen or rendered useless through neglect. Already a number of farms have been es ablisaed, one of which has 9.U0U cocoarut trees on It. American machinery has been in troduced, and natives are being taught to use it. About 700 intelligent native farmers have been given an aggregate of 18.00U packages of seeds and set to experimenting. Though naturally a fruit producing region fruit growing has been entirely neg" lected in the yasr, the people being Already a willing to take waat nature gave. The experimenters will accomplish great things along this line. Field tillage and stock raising are to he stimulât I ed. in spite of C e rinder pest, which has been working navoc among the draft animals. Of the 70 million acres million are the government, which ; shows how little attention agriculture jj as so far received. Under wise direc tion. the Philippine arc.iipe'ago will become a great agricultural common wealth. | 0 f land in the island, €5 owned by , Smut is a disease of grains in which the kernels assume a dark brown ■black appearance, or are converted ! into masses of blackish n -wncr. It is which are Th°«e absorb or caused by parasitic fungi. propagated by «por^s. ' ri the juices of the plants to which they are attached. Tbe "pea c >rnn" is a • r resembling fh.ee sum)' c r M>e ?» t * I T • I * • ill OI 1 H, middle being the log hni