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STRONG COW HALTER. Very Little* I'rHCtire Will Mnlf Our Familiar Liioiimli l 1 • It nltli >iiccca. Take a rope of desirto >i/<- a.nd lei fih, if Fin. 1, and bond two loops as at A e haltei Ju B. so the long part be toward F, and tie the loop at B so F can slip easily through the loop eith*rwa> The rope fr.m A to U If to go over the 'T* 1 r"""" /**\ XM_ c __ (P ,V ‘ f c ~ i rope row MAi.ri i. ho>e Now tak> ti re , I) to go over the top of the h**a and Is> It In the loop at A. Fi. 2 and tie that loop t" the rope f), E. F can w ■ rl; fr* • '•> in. Joop D To use: Draw E from Fm> qe to have it latve i non ah to let It he easi ly put over top of l.eai. Cover toe* and E under rhln. and then tighter by pull ing F till the head-tall I- as close as v. mted Avery litt ■ pra< tire wlllmal e one familiar enough to sinsfull\ use Jt With Ifr the .-ft 111.- halter wo. worn on m •. ea.r h no .renw J Will Sud tuth In Epitomlst. DIFFICULT CHURNING. §\ rf pi (i j* 1 1 r Milk Wn mm Will ** I\ r h I'robkiii I hut lliu \ri#l %Ihi> Hut If rmuUrrs Looking over farm papers during cold weather. <ne frequently (H>Jlj**' h I tig ur.e th - VV llftt 1H I h** merer with m> :.utter? 1 have caurr-'d ac-i ;r:. i a:.d It won’t iwrt of another and rh**n did not get butt*r. Ve hv>- sait*-d the ww and chacge-4 ihe;r but. it make* no n own i •; r < p ■■ irm --only ’he - x bi t tu* n Ik also from 'he free ■ a es he w nn tH It Is rtrurned A soon ai strained w# wt It on the i e unit! th* s :rfn >• 1* wrlai led, ?* *n *•< • :n a ■* .rm p!u •• until the cream rts*-s Unless the weather ?s bitter ■■ 5d the pantry ts generally warm en oh I hare, if Very cold, rebev*-l the nil!!:, say In 13 h* r- and it haa’ened the cream ns Inv iut !f "©ij h y, no* a warm place to keep your mil’ set about it imme diately to coniru< t one, if nothing more than a few <heive behind the • • • from a large o’ i fashioned ■. ish stand, put In shelves hung a curtain In front brought It to the ntov - s-t her milk ln-ie and had no rnora trouble all winter AVI en (he cr> ;tn la resdv slim It, stirring wall ev< rr *inie anv Ik added and (mot a day s*-l the . nuni In v. trru wafer, and rm word for It vou will f ■ 1 Ia point in wln’er In o. r ' uli trig that Ii an tell by the 100 l k of 1 1 • cream whether It wl’l <hurn or not Rrald the hum w< 11 and have the cream at ahn tt r.fi degree In winter and It should tome In from .’h to minutes Cream from Jersey cows 1° apt to be harder to churn than Iront ordinary cows Ohio Fk truer Irj Mil tlr from MtfT. Within a few \> .us I'pcim !i inven tors have fotmd a u.iy of iiki’ Ing Iml lat lon Ivory out of mill:, so It re ported The attempt to do th . |,m hei a frequently mole hut 'he ics'dls have not before been entirely at is in*' >ry It ia and( land that tUia Iml tailon ivory Is being ■(■.( ; V-i- for hair brushes. nnpMti rings. combs, tops for walking "Id a • v , forth The Ivory Is made h’ converUne th* ran it In the mij into what Ii n iwn &“ la> tlie, and the variety of asms to Mtii' h this ran he put are limitin' rattle !' ht< ; nif it a a tf-ni-t t f<r fiiinlftn f * KFifl tj.rt? f*\ * p. |H*U P:i si f• • ■ ■ It ff ,f git int’ The lead of th, indu-Ty I*' Ixdret, France II n lain 8 In lies mihniil Ml Hi. The I'Hinsvlvsn a exp-rlmi-nt .uron finds little diffl t!• y in raising prln r dairy calve* without mil after f{■*>> arc IWO wee's rld Th< I 0.-t Ilf id Ing calv< on a e 111 il, (• t. |, u the time they ran he |<■ or a hay and yraln ration iir w'on Mine 1.1 r r montht’ oh* m<d cot i■ • t On .p. | well-bred dairy ;• ■ , wl .r r <1 n i . . they cost and arc tin only tc ic - i, v which a milk dairyman can ia.se hi herd to a high ttamlard ■ ■ . ir.'d Farmer fir t/u ini f t, rn for < oh* Indian corn when ground, la a most valuable food and In n,. •< : It ia one of the cheapest that . k t • need hy the dairy/?.an It i . .>■ y and color to the milk It Is a v-ri 1 < ,n food and must be fed In Minjun ion with aucb food as bran or o I .and Injr cows on It for an extend* 1 ii without 1? is balanced by omc t ~ feed Ilk* bran, cottonseed eo to put fat on the carca/e- It . the friend of the btjtiem <r the milk eeldr Valai ■ > I. , . ia Farm and Home THE CI'EE C E WE FAT. Must of Hie l-;\peuntie \ nrteile fler |bk tt 1-UtrelKti l abel Ar# Mail© In I bla ( ouatff. Many who pride themselves on tbair gastronomic taste speak scornfully of American cheeses, but in perhaps nln* cases out of ten they rat and prats* as an excellent example of the foreign product a cheese that never crossed the Atlantic. Camembert and Brie, according to a recent writer, are the only soft cheeses which are Imported in any considerable quantity, and they arc sometimes manufactured in tlie United States. It Is conceded that American-made Camembert and Brie are not so good as the foreign article, but the cheese makers of New York and New Jersey have come at length to produce admirable Roquefort and good imitations, if they may so be called, of tunny o’her famous foreign ti‘ c,<s At the V. I.aoh.ila experiment station much attention has always been paid to cheeaemaklng ami the various problems connected with the Industry Tin- station has studied the manufacture of Edam cheese and can produce a cheese little If at all Inferloi to that of Dutch manufacture Fran-h i he. i makers, with the conservatism characteristic of rural Europeans, have negle ted to adapt their products to th; American market, and the Brie cheese from abroad, for example, come- in a large disk, which makes It Inconvenient for use and expensive for ;i 11 ex. ept those who consume it In Di e quantities. whereas the Amerl cau Brh* Is made in instill . akes of a size convenient, for family use The ip- of 11 jrgonzola cheese, which Is ■ 111 Itujmrted, Is rinnh less than It would b* if this cheese were made In; smaller sizes Only two or three English cheese* an now Imported in large quantities, j and the so-called English dairy cheese. 1- a American product. Mean-i while, enormous quantities of Anted-; .in it. (tC are exported to Greet in i’tin Some English chee.semahers, | P owing the lend of Americans, per- ! haps, put up their products In jars The de of cheese In small Jars and sn ill packages has grown to b a great In 1 istry In the United R'ates. 1 ;r the iho e thus prepared Is con venient and extremely palatable A ording to the writer referred to Gen. an and Swiss cheese, l.lmbuiger, ft r tnatan e, are Imitated here, though >* sue ssfully than sonie others it.. American made Neufchntel u a satisfactory product, and Is eaten In large quantities As to Italian ch -cacs ttjty ate made without any preton <• of con'ealroent wherever there Is a con* .■rattle Italian quarter though rbe Initiations are not lil;ed by the Italians ther:.-.-’ v-es and cheap Italian dlrs at? a m.torted In great quantities Up to-Date Farming. EFFECTIVE CALF HLAB. It Dora Not Inlcr tc re ivhh omrlnii nml llnf \ pf)’ I IMli- with lug lii '1 niugh*. Th< accompanying Illustrations rep r.s. ni a c.i f blah made of No. Iti wire It ;■ natural size for a mall calf. Any- WUIB CAI.F m.AH in ,> .an n .1.. It with hammer, rise and pliers The points should be made sharp This blab does not Interfere with Rru/lng It .!<><■.■ Interfere wltii fiH-illng In I loughs to some oxunt. Wic re the calf is put on grass then b no i,. *<l of removing It until the time whiui th.* calf Is w.-aned. John C Bridgewater, In Farm and Fireside. Ff#il i itm I nlff n l>) Helm; f< l twice h ilay th# cows are more < •<mt•>!l•*l than If fail oflener in Dmlp dabs several Mitu's a day. It not mly makes inure work, lint keeps tbs ows on tin constant lookout for some thing to eat And I for one. do not 'are to have them haw lt>u at me ev in 11 mI pass before them It c-m that the way of f< e<iln k cows that 1 have mentioned. Is the most natural Cows in |m uirr will out until they are satisfied, tin n He down ami thorough ly ma ii •ale (I t f.,.,• 1 they hare paten It Ik then ilipv do their best They do not generally fill n [> more than twlre ida 1 , then-lore In winter we find houiit dully the seme u unhrr of limes 1) W Howie .1 1 In Farmers' lie view Ainifiol from I'tHiMofa The n-* if io! -i*. a|i ohl to 1 1 rnlah 111 it hea' tnd motive power has been dewloj’d vi iv rapidly and to a very > • (Jen d". • ilinti' ‘ oim .. tii <ons of potatoes a year and use for human food stock food and atari h only about Hfi.OOO.OOO t• ■r■ e The remainder Is converted Into all oh'il and uaed as a power generator for both land and ws'er motor* and for too • * heating and lighting Thal fol<’ol vapor is burned |j rs* In chan deliers and lamp* and glv. u a vtry bright light Hi districts dtstsn' from mill's ft is flsaper than coal It 1* claimed fhat a ton of potatoes will ene/at* ki lii.ii li andla power or home power as a ton and a half of anthtsclt coal The quirkest fruit to give re'urtia is strswb<-rrle and it lorn , t • i> in ihe season It bring* mom i at a time when needed THE BROWNLOW BILL. Interfiti of (Jovf rnnifnf Wfll (o*r4- ed, Hot a Potent Incentive to Local Action. One objection that has been urged Xgalnst the appropriation of money by the government to aid In road-building fa that the members of congress would engage in such turmoil and unseemly •Strifes as are now witnessed in securing appropriations for rivers and harbors. This could not be the case under the Brownlow bill, for it provides that no state shall receive in aid of road con struction out of any money appropri ated for that purpose a greater propor tion of the total amount appropriated than Its population bears to the total population of the United States. To Il lustrate: If $20,000,000 should beappro proprlated. MasMchuaett.- would receive approximately, $735,000; Alabama, $497,- 000; Tennessee. $524,000; Michigan, $534,000, and Maryland, $311,000. However much work may be done by either of these states, It rould not re ceive more than Its proportion of the amount appropriated. Nor could any community In the several states com plain of another for trying to secure the premium offered by the government In tailing prompt and effective action In raising local funds to meet, the require ments of the government. It would be a contest, not between states, but be tween different counties of the same state, or between different subdivisions of townships, but the bill makes It im possible that there could be contests be tween the states themselves. This bill Is well guarded, also as to the expenditure of the money appropri ated by the government. Application must first be made by the officers ha' tng Jmrl diction of the public roads In any state or county or district to the direc tor of the bureau of public roads for co operation in the construction of a pub lic highway. After the application is made with the required resolution the director of the bureau of public roads must have the route investigated to de termine whether such a proposed road would be of sufficient importance to receive national aid. If If should heap proved by the director upon Investiga tion then maps are to be prepared, plans and specifications made, the width of the road determined, together with an estimate of its cost. A second application, w-lth resolution, Is then made by the local authoritleand filed with the director, In which assur ance Is given that such road or a section thereof shall be constructed according to the provisions of the act. The dl recior then advertises for bids for the construction of the road, and the con tract Is awarded to the lowest respon sible bidder, or It may be awarded to the state or county or subdivision. The di rector may then Issue his warrant on the treasurer of the United Slates, but his warrant shall nut he In excess of 80 per cent of the work performed, and in nil cases the government shall hold back 2o per cent until the entire work has been finished. To anyone who will study closely the provisions of the Brownlow bill It will be apparent that the Interests of the government have been well protected In every particular. The value of the hill Is the beneficent Influence If will exert upon local action Experience has shown that something Is necessary to stimulate local effort In the matter of road building. The history of the con s’ruction of roads In all European conn trh hows that no good permanent free roads have ever been built by local as sessment or taxation SIMPLE GRADE LINE. \\ Hli 11 n \ p|il Icn I lon n Ormlr of Any Hr *I ml lull to llir Hod Cnn Hr Kslnbllshrcl. To establish the grade of ditches and drains, take a well-seasoned, straight pine scantling and use It for the base of a triangular frame. The base, ab, should he one rod long; the upright side, ac, Is formed of two light strips so that a plumb line may hang between them suspended from c a UKI.IAHUS lilt AUK UN the point Place the frame In an up tight position, level the base and mark the point upon the base at which the plumb hangs, It will always hang to this mark when a h Is level, but nut otherwise Now to test whether a ditch Is level, place the frame upright In the bot tom of the ditch and if the bob comes to the mark, the ditch Is level at that plai e To eHtal’llsh a grade of any desired fall to the real say four Inch es to the rod tack a block of wood to the under side of a b and when the hob cornea to the mark, the base will be level and Ihe ditch will have a tail equal to the thickness of the block —(,' L Smith, In Farm and Horn* The Ksrmfr In (hr City. The country man who starts for th city must expect to find It difficult to make a living there He has every thing to learn He can Judge what mean* hy observing the city man who koik Into the country to work In both Qu H it Is the dlffiiiilt work of adapt ing oneself to new surroundings 'I hs young man who gfies to tbo city to make a fortune and to enjoy Ufa gen ■ rally finds himself so busied In mak ing a living that he has no time to en lo* Ufa.--Midland Farmer BIG SALE! Nov. 2nd to 14th Bargains on the following Pianos Organs Sewing Hachines Violins Mandolins Guitars Accordions Zither Sheet riusic Hu sic Rolls, Husic Stands, Etc. Manitowoc flusic Comp’y 913 South Kighth St. Opp. Scliuette Bros. SCHOOL SCHOOL BOOKS SUPPLIES We can fill your wants in the School Supply Line, giving you only the best goods for the money the market pro duces. Chas. F. Fechter’s SOUTH SIDE BOOK STORE. 820 South Eighth Street. Manitowoc, Wisconsin. Get My Prices On Storm Sash I carry a very large stock of Storm Sash on hand in all regular sizes, and bought them in carload lots can sell them at right prices. I have something entirely new in Coal Stoves. Pret tier than anything you ever saw and the greatest fuel-savers ever made. Emil TeitgerTs NO MORE BLACK DIAMONDS. floppl> Still Eitata, Hut Electrical!jr Manufactured Article liua Ku tlrely Kcplacrd Then*. The trade in carbonado, or Brazilian black diamonds, which, so late as five years ago, waa worth nearly |4,000,000 a year, Is at present practically dead. These stones, first discovered In 1843, are a kind of black, opayue and Irnper leclly crystallized diamond, found only in Brazil. They are less dense than the white diamond, but actually harder, and were found of Immense value for mounting In the steel crowns of rock boring drills. It was the electric furnace, worked by the tremendous water power of Niagara, which pul an end to the carbonado trade, nays Stray Stories. A mixture of sand, coke, sawdust and salt melted together in (his amazing heat resulted in the formation of masses of beautiful crys tals, ranging from blood-red to pale blue These have been named carborun dum They are almost as hard as the diamond, and indestructible in adds to which the diamond yields. They cost less than a quarter of carbonado, and ao have displaced it. Doesn't Respect Old Ag It's shameful when youth fails to show pro|ier respect for old age, hut just the contrniy in the case of Dr. Kings New Life Pills. They cut off maladies no matter how severe ami irrespective of old age, Dyspepsia, Jaundice. Fever. Constipation all yield to this perfect Pill JAc. at Henry Hin ridis Drug Htore f x========w ii ■ ~ | i I I | ! ii I : j ii i I u NEW IDEAS ON SUNSTROKE. After-Ulaner Work In Stagnant Heal I’rotlurfi Kklib nut lon—Women Are the Want Sufferer*. ‘‘Stagnant Indoor heat 1b more op pressive than outdoor heat.” writes Dr. F. L. Oswald, in the Home Science Maga zine. “Indoor warmth, intensified by stove fires, often approaches the horrors of the Calcutta black hole, or the swelter den of Dante's‘lnferno;’ and to that com bination of discomforts civilized men doom their sisters and mothers, in midsummer the sunstroke wards of New England hospitals are crowded with male patients, who often have worked only on the shady side of the streets, and with a still larger number of women, who can not plead guilty to outdoor Imprudence of any kind. They have been overcome by the heat, and In nine out of ten cases by the afternoon heat of 111 venlllatfd kitchens and washrooms, dining-rooms and nurseries, by vitiated air cooperat ing with the exhausting effects of a high temperature, at a lime when the resist ing ability of the system was Impaired by the exigencies of digestion. Inothei words, sunstrokes and all their pre monitory symptoms are the effects of hard after-dinner work In warm weath er." Something For Nothing In any of our readers are troubled with constipation, billiousness, sick headache or Indigestion cut out this notice and present it at Henry Hinri- hs drugstore and they will supply you with a sample bottle of Kc (in Tonic Laxative Syrup free. He (Jo is a sure cure for these diseases. DR. TURBIN Of Berlin, Germany, the Expert Specialist and Surgeon. Who has visited Manitowoc for the past SIX YEARS, Once p Month, will again he in Manitowoc, Friday, Dec. 4th AT THE WILLIAMS HOUSE. Write or Call for our Money- Saving Bargain Price List DU TURBIN, TDe Specialist CURES ALL CHRONIC CASES. Why? Because be gives his entire attention to these cases. All Cases He Undertakes Guaranteed. vniiNin If y° u ure with ITILIS nervous debility, stupid ness, or uro otherwise unfitted for busines or study, caused from youthful errors or excesses, yc u should consult this specialist at once. Don't delay until too late. MIDDLE-AGED AND OLD MAMKIMH There are thousands of you i InIiIMIXD troubled with weak, aching backs and kidneys and other unmistakable signs of nervous debility. Many die of this diffi culty, ignorant of the cause. The most obstinate oases of this character treated with unfailing success. AI p nicp ACPC of delicate nature—ln “hL DIJLnJLJ flammations and kindred t 'unities—quickly cured without pain or incon t jnience. rATAPRH which poisons the breath, '- , rM I stomach and lungs ami paves the way for Consumption, also Throat, Liver, ASDW DAIMTC f Ist—'The doctor Rives Ids rDn rUllUO! ad--All business conducted Id—Names and pictures never published unles's are his friends. tijnimn your troubles if living away from city. Tti msands cured at home by correspondence nUIIL mui medicine sent a* directed. Absolute sn-reoy in till professional dealings. Address iV Istters, giving street and number plainly. Send stamps for list of questions. DOCTOR TURBIN, IQ3 Randolph St., Chicago, 111. Do You Know that you are making 1 a mistake by not hav ing - your dental work done at our parlors? We give the best of satisfaction for the money. We are making spec ial prices for the last and only time. After Dec. Ist we will positively raise our rates. We are so busy, and are becom ing so well known that we will charge our regular rates al ter that date. Sot of Aluminum teeth.slo.oo Set of Kubber teeth .. . .7.00 Gutta 1 *ercha plates ... $ 00 (lold Crowns 5.00 Gold Fillings I*oo up Silve Fillings 75c Porcelain Fillings 50c Teeth extracted for. ...2Sc These prices are un til 1 )ec. 1 st, only. After that date we will raise our prices. Boston Painless Wisls 522 S. Fighth St. ()pon 9 a. m. until S p. m. For 5a ie Lot Hlacki-inith mli h with dwvllinu npMiiifH Itarn, nil in icxnl condition. For twirticnlnrs in*|iiir* of Cn \s. Lk.itkknkan. 01515 Hhoto. Wi. Heart, Kidney, Bladder and all constitutional and internal troubles; also Rupture, Piles, Fistula, Dyspeps'a, Diarrhoea and all diseases of the stomach and bowels treated far In ad vance of any institution in the country. BLOOD AND SKIN Scrofula, Tumors, Tetter, Eczma and Blood Poison thoroughly eradicated, Itaving the sys tem ; n >i strong, pure and healthful state, I AniF* If you are suffering from persistent IjnlylLJ Headache, Painful Menstruation. Uterine Displacements, Pains in Back, and feel as if it were impossible for you to endure your troubles and still he obliged to attend your household and social obligations. There are many women doing this to-day. However, a jr*‘at many have taken treatment of this spe cialist, and he can refer you to those who have been cured by him. Give the doctor a call. He can give all the encouragement in the world and will cure you If you trust yourself to bis care. personal attention tc each individual case, on a professional basis and strictly confidential requested to do so. 4th—The doctor’s patients isisr hover Brothers MERCHANT TAILORS. M A N n (>\V < >C’ WISCONSIN Domt Be Fooled! @The market is being flooded With worthless imitations of ROCKY MOUNTAIN To protect the public we call especial attention to our trud mark, printed on every pack age. Demand the genuine. For Sal* by oil Drug^istl a, CmCHtSTER’3 ENGLISH Pennyroyal pills I Orl|inJ and Only Genuine. NAFF. A!wv reliable Ludle*. >k Drugfial V I fur CIIICIIKSTKK*S ENGLISH >y <ln ICFH and (.old metallic boxes sealed S-v —TVJJ3 with blue ribbon. Take no other. Krfaae >K'I lluniiertiua Nubatll utlona end im I in } I ~ fly lion*. Huy of your Druggist, or wod 4*. in I W stamps fur PurtlculHra, Teatlmonlnls \ Ifa and “Relief for I .ml lee,"n Uttmr, by re- L r turn Mull. 10.000 Testimonials. Sold by / all Druggists Chlelirster t'hrmlealCe., Mratlon this paper Madlaon Hqunre, I*lll LA.. FA. The Pilot for job work ALL DUE TO PHOTOGRAPHY. Hun Hie Art Ila* Very Curiously Worked Injury to the Trade la Commercial i'e rt I Users. The idea that the spread of photog raphy could do severe Injury to the trade in commercial fertilizers, aud espe cially to the conversion of raw phos phate Into plant food, seems at first sight absurd. Yet so ii is, and in this way, says Stray Stories. Phosphates and bones, to be made available as soil improvers, must Lu tieated with sulphuric acid. Now, sulphuric acid will dissolve most metals as easily as water dons sugar. Platinum is almost the only metal upon which it has no effect. So, in spite of their great cost, man ufacturers have generally employed re torts made of a platinum alloy for the concentration of sulphuric acid. These retorts used to be made in Paris aud cost $8,500 to 118,000 apiece. To-day such a thing as a platinum re tort would cost literally a fortune, for platinum, owing to the Introduction of the platfnotype process In photography, has gone up from about five dollars an ounce to the present price of |2O an ounce, it is indeed nearly as costly as Business Men realize the fact that Dr. Turbin can be depended on to fulfil his prolclses In every respect, and the doctor has among his patrons seme of the most prominent business men, who are his best friends