University of South Carolina Libraries
i y.:-..;- 'H \ Electricity on tlie Farm. Ail interesting example of electricity as applied to farm work is now in operation at a Scotch farm. The whole of the usual farm machinery, such as tbreehing, sowing, corn threshing and iit?v arp driven bv an electric motor. The electricity ie generated by 'water power, the turbine wheel which drives the dynamo being about 1000 yards from the farm. The electric current is conveyed by underground * . wires to the house and farm, in each of which a storage battery is placed. These supply the electric current for lighting and motive purposes when the machinery i6 not working. The whole of the mr.nsion is illuminated ' * by electric light, and an electric motor is provided for pumping the water for L domestic purposes. ?New York World. The world contains about 7,000,000 Hebrews, about S,400,000 of whom dwell in Russia and 1,700,000 in Ausagl^M Pnro and YVbolewome Quality " ?- ? - ? ?i ?v.? i? commends W JIUUlll. ws vm.im inc. liquid laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs. It is pleasant to the taste and by acting gently on BUS the kidney, liver and bowels to cleanse the sysiem effectually, it promotes the health and 9n comfort of all who use it, and with millions it UHw is the best and onlv remedy. H| We Ctu-c Rupture. mm No matter of how lone standing. Write Kk for free treatise, testimonials, etc., to S. J. Hoi lens worth & Co., Owego, .Tioga Co., K. Y. Price $1; by mail, 81.15. Hjf Rev. H. P. Carson, Scotland, Dak., says: m " Two bottles of Hairs Catarrh Care completeW |y cared my little girl." Sild by I >r'i ggist8,75c. Hatch's Universal Couch Syrup is a Positive cure for Croap. 25 cents at droggists. Impaired digestion cured by Beecham's Pills. Beecham's?no others. 35 cents a box. ! If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson's Eye-water. Dructrists sell at 25c per bottle. I VOTE FOR HOOD'S For I am satisfied it is (+ an excellent remedy. I ^ f I have been a minister of 1 v . I \ the M. E. Church forty \ years, and have suffered Mof 1416 years with [/ rheumatism and I ^dyspepsia, sinco f taking tour bottles of i Hood's the rheumatism ffd?w P Puff*7?*) js entirely cured, my ap' petite i? <?ood, food digests well. And I have pained several pounds.' Rkv. W. R. Puffer, Richfcrd, Vr. HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA CURES. . HooJi Pills cure biliousness. 25 cents a box. 1 K Y N U? 3it ^German i Svtud" ' ' U JL ' Just a bad cold, and a hacking cough. We all suffer that way sometimes. How to get rid of them is the study. Listen?"Iam a Ranchman and Stock Raiser. My life is Tough and exposed. I meet all 1 > .weathers in the Colorado mountains, jl sometimes take colds. Often they are severe. I have used German Syrup five years for these. A few doses will cure them at any stage. The last one I had was stopped in \ ,24 hours. It is infallible." James j A. Lee. Jefferson, Col. <H manuikiA flccU WAKNINU Which nature is constantly giving in the shape of bolls, pimples, eruptions, ulcers, etc. These how that the blood is contaminated, and some assistance must be given to relieve the trouble. (JHB1 Is the remedy to force out these poiBons, and enable you to . GET WELL. 1 MI have had for years a hnmor in my blood, which made me dread to shave, as Rmall boils or pimplee would be cut, thus causing the sbavinpto . fee a groat annoyance. After taking three bottles .' fWM my face is all clear and smooth as it BAQKol should be?appetite splendid, sleep well, and feel like running a foot All from the use oi S. S. S. . Chas, Hbaton, 73 Laurel st . Phila. (' Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free . SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. FRA7FR AXLE j * - m mm m mmmmmm Bestinthe World!f||ir AP Get the Genuine !|ill|Bf|\p Sold Everywhere !*" IfcFl nniTBC nilDCn SEND ror KKEE Circular Mill ? fit UUittM J. N.Klein,Bellgvllle.N.J DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME. GRAVEL! GRAVEL! GRAVEL! URGE AS A GOOSE EGG. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. T. Gentlemen:-*! was under the care of different physicians for nearly two years; tried every doctor in our town continued to suffer and decline until I was a physical wreck. The most learned phyBic* hg \ ians made examinations jpg jgf and pronounced my case W| one of Gravel or Stoue \ in the Bladder, and said A y that I would never be any better until It was removed by a surgical operation. ^Hp? ?b' * what next? vWr/ Every one felt sad; I myself, gave up, as an operation deemed to us all certain death. 1 shall never forget bow time ly tbe good news of your SWAMP-ROOT reached me. I send you by this same mail a ample of the stone or gravel that was dinsolved and expelled by the use of your SWAMP-ROOT. It must have been as largo as a good sized goose egg. I am feeling as well to-day as I ever did. I kept right on using SWAMP-ROOT, and it saved my life. If ' any one doubts my statement I will furnish , proof." Labokne Bowkhsmith, l Dec. 26th, 1892. Marysville, Ohio. * Dropsical Swelling, Cold as Ice. "Swamp-Root" saved my life after 1 had Buffered everything but death. I send you my pho- -Autograph and this des- jAzr ?afcv. enntion of ray case and you can use it if & \l idy hands were as if, "|l yJ cold a1; ice; tire would V fS? ft Jj not warm them. vL I . J" Jjf y Dropsical swellings w \/tr\ r -'llf of the lower limbs; I J|p - Y'ii ' T a'iT f could not button my >1 t shoes. Exertion com- AiaflM pletely exhausted me; death seemed so verv near. The swellings have pone and ?> all my troubles have disappeared. My health ia better now tban it has been for years. "SWAMP-ROOT" made the cure. Tell doubting ones to write me I will tell them , all about it." Mrs. R. J. Cctsingeb, Jan. 15,1893. Marietta, Shelby Co., Ind. *?WAM"nAt DrnKK*"?5 50c. & $1.00. H " Guide to Health" Free. ConM jU A \ sulfation Free. I" fW * DR. KILMER & CO.. Binohamtqn, y. Y. * * ?S<aT Or. Kllmtr's PARIUA LIVER FILLS. [i?au2*?r Art thtBest I , tf Pilto, 8 cents. / ' - ^ r,. DRENCHING HOGS. The most successful mauner of drenching a hog ifl to turn the animal on its back "with head no. and after administering the drench, pour warm water in the nose to make the hog swallow. There is another easy way. Put the hog in a crate, tie a string around his nose, and he will sit down. Have a cow's horn rejidy with the medicine in it. When the animal ceases to squeal insert the horn in his mouth and he will drink readily.? American Farmer. BOXES AS POOD. There is no doubt about the value of bone meal for promoting the growth of chickens; but for old fowls, to increase the egg supply, fresh bones crushed or ground up should be given occasionally. The fresher they are the better, because there is always a certain amount of fatty animal matter about them which is highly nutritious, and this is not to be found in the ordinary bone meal. The bone food should only be given occasionally, not more than twice a week at the outside, and in pieces not larger than a pea.? New York World. IDLE LAND. If there is any land upon the farm which is not earning anything it is a direct menace to the prosperity of the rest of the farm. The taxes and the interest on its cost go on just the same as if it were earning something, and this detracts from the net profit of the whole. Often these idle and waste places are but a harbor for vermin and weeds, or if they do not become so it is because there is a constant expenditure of labor to keep it clean, and thip labor might be far better expended in the cultivation of some crop. It will pay better to clean such places up once for all and put them to some use. Most of them are capable of some good. Not infrequently they would serve admirably for a timber tract.?Chicago Times. WOOL BALLS IN LAMBS' STOMACHS. The presence of foreign substances in the stomachs of animals is not atalf infrequent. The causes of it vary. Sometimes they are due to the animals licking themselves or each other in the crvrinnr wKon Viftir iq qVi-nrr an/1 lambs often pull the wool from the sheeps' udders in the act of sucking. But sometimes it is due to indigestion, by which an abnormal appetife is produced and the animals pull the wool or bite off the hair to satisfy this unnatural appetite. The same cause leads animals to eat wood or other rubbish, chew bags or harness, and some swallow earth, and this gathers in balls in the stomach with undigested grass or hay. This, of course, increases the disease of the stomach and soon produces failure of appetite, emaciation, diarrhoea, or prolonged constipation. Then follows the common partial paralysis due to the disorder of the nervous system resulting from malnutrition, and the animals stagger about, falling and lying disabled, or unable to stand on their fore or hind legs. The remedy is difficult, as the collec tion of hair forms a ball or wad that cannot pass the opening into the bowels or collects in these and stops the passage. The only remedy is prevention by closely watching the stock, clipping the wool from the udders of the sheep and thoroughly carding and brushing the cows and horses to remove the loosened hair and prevent'it from being licked off.?New York Times. TJN SOUNDNESS OF HORSES. The horse is our most useful animal and yet comparatively the least cared for, if one is to judge by the number of these animals afflicted TCith unsoundness which a little care and thought on the part of their owners ijrigkt have prevented and might even now, in many cases, cure. Horses are liable to contract thrush in the frogs from standing in manure and urine, and yet their owners will persist in stuffing their feet with dung in order to keep them moist. Why not use linseed meal poultice, which is fn nn/l Aiol nc tt^II 0 Tr> oaic auu ucucuciiu no n via au wuua tion, change the feed or turn the horse out to grass. There -would be fewer lame horses if this point were seen to. Sprung knees is another form of unsoundness which generally has its source in heavy toe-weight 6hoes or in standing too long on a hardwood floor. Turning the animal out to grass and re-shi eing it with even-weight shoes wili effect a cure if taken in time. Curbs and puffs are other defects which can easily be avoided with a little thought. Avoidance of strains is all that is necessary. Sweating, blistering and compressors will generally remove curbs. Puffs are more difficult to deal witli. Attention to these points will keep the animal in good health and enable him to do the work for which he is kept. It will also enable the farmer to realize more for the horse if oompelled to part with him, for the keen-eyed buyer readily detects these blemishes and drives a bargain accordingly.? New York World. SHINGLES AND SHINGLING. It is a matter of no small expense to. keep the roofs of farm buildings in a i ?-i x-'-i.i. 1 -A _ nr x _r souna ami li^ih uuuujuou. nuui 01 proper selection of shingles, of proper care in laying them, and in protecting them from the weather, are responsible for much of the cost which often seems a burden. Tk* saying that what is w?>rth doing ao all, is worth doing well, is eminently true of the selection, laying and care of shingles. In the first place, it is false economy to buy, or have made from the product of one's own wood lot, shingles of inferior quality, full of sap, or of a coarse, porous, or shaky nature, which per. .. ' I mits water to enter the grain, sood i' U ending us useiuinese. \\ \ Roofs soon become almost -worthless through carelessness in laying the shingles, joints not being properly "broken," and water thus let in to cause rapid decay. Another point ie that an unprotected shingle, even a good one, severely exposed as it is to the action of the weather, has vastly less durability than it would have if covered with some moisture-proof material. Even a cheap quality of paint will prove a great protection. If paint is thought to be too costly, there are often materials to be had that will well repiy applying to the by J newly-laid shingles, or to use as a dip Mo. before they are laid. Tar, crude, wlt^ petroleum, whitewash?all these are r^ev efficacious, if properly and thoroughly Hog applied. Such applications mean &rev better looking buildings, and roofs that will long outlast those not similarly P*e(* treated. 10 ' Tt i'o mnflli Vio+tor in I IVriS at least, to use shingles, underlaid by '8 thick building paper, upon the -walla of farm buildings, instead of clapboards, as the former are warmer, and, ^ if well laid, and painted, or stained, will look better than clapboards. In . e 3 any event warmth ought not to be sac- ^ rificed to looks, and shingles certainly * afford far better protection against the entrance of cold air. than do clapboards. The great point in the use of 6 the former is to secure good quality, to lay them with great care, as regards joints, and to properly protect the wood from the action of the weather. Such care will be repaid in the durability that will thus be secured.? American Agriculturist. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.1 4 Breed up, not down. mil. Never buy a delicate horse. - iju The Guernsey is less nervous than w the Jersey. / I Most trotting-bred colts have to be / f taught to trot. I k A cow should not go dry for more man mree or xour weeKB. i Cleanliness connts in the stable, as well as in the household. U Thorough cultivation is necessary in order to obtain large crops. Have you not yet learned that poor horses are very expensive luxuries? Keep the horses' feet clean and you will rarely be troubled with thrush or canker. Fowls should never be given fer- cons mented food, or anything that is cu^ j spoiled. pretl Some legislation is desirable to pifo- the t hibit the use of unsound animals in is pi, the stud. will Food for chicks should not be wate sloppy, but just wet enough to be koui crumbly. Sheep may be turned on the wheat field late in the fall without injury to rpj. the crop. 30,0< Pools of stagnant water should never the i be permitted in a field where the cows oneare pastured- surff There is more profit in raising one form first-class foal than a dozen of the whic common class. distfl Berries intended for market should be picked as soon as the dew is off, but never when wet. : .*?. _ , . , 14,Ul There are two kinds of money producing sheep, the mutton sheep and gjfln the wool sheep. jj Improved quality is in demand. It near is quality that fills the pocketbook the i and not quantity. in tt The lice on the colt can be got rid num of by brushing the animal down with by s a little kerosene emulsion. woul Water for young chicks should be so oo?rC! arranged that only the beaks can enter the drinking vessel ffg1 m . . __ , ? _ _ ions* 'I'tta honrlfinmp wp l-mflT7>norl hnrooo . - ? ? "?? W0UJ will always sell for more than double e^er< the price either will bring separately. jf The eoot of both wood and coal is read very valuable manure, on account of a die the sulphate of ammonia which it con- amei tains. yard Every weed draws some moisture pipe from the soil, and at this time of the Paci year the vines need'all they can get to quar ripen the fruit. the ? If the hens stop laying at this sea- Pom son it is beet to let them rest, ag eggs an ftI are cheap, and they will lay more when f?E eggs are higher. kno? An excellent fertilizer for cabbage rate is nitrate of soda. If mixed with water frOEQ and then applied, the effect will be wou] noticeable in a few days. fiUCj1 Keep everything about the poultry likel house clean at all times. More dis- azin< ease is caused by the filthy condition of the house and yards than by anything else. . i There are no plants which can give , rrrftofor mfprcnaf fn tVio nror^^n fhftn f.ViA A n*vuvv'1' ww ?v, WMW y hardy herbaceous and the bulbous ones, ^ and we cannot too earnestly advise i I their culture. \ \ Whether you are picking cucumbers ! for shipment or pickling, the best ^ plan is to pick six days in the week. This keeps the size uniform and in- P creases the bearing. p? A good grain for fattening sheep is Jf shelled corn one-half, barley or rye one-quarter, all by weight, or still better, substitute one-fourth of corn ujne with cottonseed meal. I Briars, alders, patches of burdock, \ V sourdock, sorrel, and numerous other ^ plants of bad and persistent character I may bo readily destroyed by cutting i , J and repeatedly salting, especially if < sheep or cattle have access to them. ^ Corn, potatoes, and other small crops ^ should not be plowed after they attain '\?. any size, as the damage done the roots jg-, injures the plant more than the plow- Jt ing helps it, but very shallow cultiva- }r J tion can be continued for some time ^ yet. This will keep down the weeds f?rd make the soil mellow. ? _ ; / V i.? A Handy Radish, [erp, ie the picturc of a red radish t was sent to the St. Louib Republic jte- I jj| V klr. John A. Hogue, of Holcomb, lie resemblance to a left hand l "its five fingers twisted by gout or imatism is most striking Mr. ue says this queer freak of nature ir in the garden of Mr. William on, of Holcomb, "who has a cripleft hand, which the radish seems have tried to duplicate. From t to tip of middle finger the radish : inches in length. Parrot's Feather. lis is one of the most attractive of aew -water plants. It is a droopplant, and should be planted in a ir tight hanging basket, so that soil can be kept very -wet and the ir allowed to stand on the surface, long, trailing stems of this plant Jjjjt parrot's feather. iet of whorls of exquisite, finelyfoliage; and the effect is very by when it droop6 gracefully from rides of the banging basket. If it anted in a shallow tank or lake it run about over the surface of the r in a charming manner.?St. is Republic. jne Atlantic Ocean. le area of the Atlantic is about 30,000 square miles, less than half irea of the Pacific, and between sixth and one-seventh of the total ice area of the world. It would . o filfifl miloK in diameter. h is rather more than double the ince from Liverpool to New York. i depth is much better known than of the Pacific, and averages more 2000 fathoms, probably about 50 feet, or about- two and twolu miles. The height of Mont c is about threo miles. 113 cubic contents are therefore ly 80,000,000 cubic miles, bo that Atlantic could be contained bodily ic Pacific nearly three times. The ber of cubic f^et is 117 followed eventeen ciphers, a number that .d be ticked off by our million is in 370,000 years. Its weight is 300 billion tons, and the number illons in it is seventy-three trillA sphere to hold the Atlantic d have to be 538} miles in diamit were made to fill a circular pipe lung from the earth to the sun? itance of 93,000,000 miles?the di;er of the pipe would be 1837 s, or rather over a mile; while a of similar length to contain the fic would be over ft mile and threeters across. Yet the distance to ran is so great that, as has been ted out, if a child were born with rm long enough to reach to the it would not live long enough to v that it had touched it, for sensapasses along our nerves at the of 100 feet a second, and to travel l the sun to the earth at that rato d take a century and a half, and an abnormal infant is an uny centenarian.?Longman's Magi. The Real Thing. Veil, now, this is what I call r. gen ?snap.'--Judge. WOKliS OF Nothing ifl old but, the mind. Thought its the fertilizer of speech. "Vehemence without feeling is but rant. A woman's judgment is usually cut bias. Justice to one is mercy to thousands. , 1 We forget in labor what troubles us in rest. Happiness is not the end of life; character is. The beautiful is beauty seen with the eye of the soul. The test of civilization is the estimate of woman. The mountains of youth are the molehills of age. T.ife in a miabion tn Bfirvft ! to most it is a submission. Soap and water don't make an honest liand any less attractive. When people once begin to deviate they do not know where to stop. The poets judged like philosophers when they feigned love to be blind. A man does more toward making fate than fate does toward making him. No padlock, bolts or bars can secure a maiden as well as her own reserve. The truly brave are soft of heart and eyes, and feel for what their duty bids them do. If all men had that which they desire many would not have that which is now theirs. Old friends are best. Sing James nsed to call for his old shoes, for they were easiest for his feet. , The firmest friendships have been formed in mutual adversity, as iron is most strongly united by the fiercest flame. Good advice is one of those injuries a rwnr nnif nnofliVtlfi wuu;u o tS""" ? ? to forgive, but at all events to forget at once. If we could Bee in ourselves that which we see in others, as others can see in us that which they do not see in themselves, where woidd we be at? About Alligator Pears. "Those are called alligator pears," said a Fulton street fruiterer. "They are grown in Florida, and constitute one of the most delicious fruits which we get from that famed region. Try one." The reporter picked a pear out of the case and examined it with no little curiosity. It looked like a cross between a mango apple and a green pepper. There was nothing in its appearance that suggested any reason for the name it bore. The surface was almost perfectly smooth and quite soft to the touch. Its odor resembled that of a fresh fig. "How do you try it. ?" The fruiterer cut it open with his pocket-knife. It was pretty nearly all pit. Onderneath the skin was a layer not mdre than half an inch thick. This narrow slice comprised the eatable part. When thus laid open it would have passed for a small nutmeg, cantaloupe or musk melon. The reporter scooped out a piece and tasted it. He didn't like it and said so. ' I suppose one has to try it very often before he acquires a relish for it;" was his remark as he passed the pear back to the donor. ' 'It's plain to see you've never lived in Florida," said the latter. "Folks there consider it a great delicacy, and many of my customers would rather have it than the finest melon the market affords. As for myself, I could Gat half a dozen of them at a meal,'" j and he proceeded to dispose of the fruit with a gusto that convinced'the reporter of his sincerity. "At any rate," he added, handing over the pit, "keep this." "Do you mean that I should plant it?" "No; it would never come to anvthinc in soil. Fill a class to within an inch or two of the top with water. Suspend the pit in it, leaving the upper portion of it exposed to the air. As fast as the water evaporates add more, taking care to see that at least ' one-fourth of the pit is covered. Then give it plenty of light, and in the course of a few weeks you will have as beautiful a household plant as you want to see."?New York News. Recalling a Mailed Letter. To recall a letter once mailed is almost as difficult a task as to take back an assertion once uttered. The sender must appear at the postoffice and is handed a blank to fill out. In this he must state when and where he mailed the letter, how it was addressed, must describe the envelope, state the amount of postage prepaid, and testify "that the above mentioned letter was written by me, or by my authority and I desire to recall it for tfce toiiowmg reason ?ana men staie the reason, which is usually, "mailed by mistake." He must then sign hie name, so that the handwriting may be compared with that on the letter, and sign a receipt. If the address cannot be shown to be in his handwriting, or printed or typewritten, he must describe some peculiarities of the envelope sufficient to identify it. If he is unable to do this the letter is refused unless the postmaster knows the applicant and is satisfied concerning his good intentions. If he is satisfied he asks for a statement concerning the contents, and the applicant is then obliged to open the letter and read portions of it in the postmaster's presence to i>rove that it is the one '10 described. But if tho letter has been Rent awav the process of, recalling it is still more difficult. A similar blank has to be filled out, and a minute description telegraphed at the sender's expense to the postmaster at the office of its destination. If discovered in time the letter is then intercepted and sent to the department at Washington with a statement of the case. Why should ftnT one want to recall a letter so much J as to take thia trouble? Wei], there was one case at the local office recently where a valuable deed was mailed and the sender received information that satisfied him that the sale should not be made. In another case an important contract was sent, and information received immediataly after made it imperative that it should be revoked. ?Springfield Republican. Scotland's Precious Belt. The belt of the sword of stats o Scotland has been restored to its y1 >c( in the regalia of Scotland in Edinburgl Castle by the Marquise of Breadal bane, the Lord High Commissioner t< the General Assembly of the Church o Scotland. After (the battle of Dunba: it became necessary to place thi regalia of Scotland in a place o greater safety than Edinburgh Castle and it was removed to the stronj Castle of Dunnottar, where Sir G Ogilvy defended it. He had, how ever, only forty men and could no hold out, and he allowed his wife t< remove the regalia from the castle. I Highest of all in Leavening P< Rdfol JL % j&gm ABSOLL " A Handful of Dirl Hay Keep Yaw D SAP DAD WAY'S ? PILLS, Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Cause Pe feet Digestion, complete absorption and heaithfi regularity. For the cure of all disorders of it Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Jiervot D jeaaes, Constipation, Costiveness, t LOSS OF APPETITE SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, DYSPEPSIA. OT Observe the following symptoms followii from diseases of the digestive organs: Const]patio Inward piles, fullness or the blood In the head, acldli of the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of fooi fullness of weight in the stomach, sour eructation sinking or fluttering of the heart, choking < suffocating sensation when,In a lying posture, dir ness of vision, dots or webs before the sight, fevi and dnll pain in the head, deficiency of persplratlo yellowness of the skin and eyes, pain In the sld chest, limbs aol sudden flu"hes of heat, burning the flesh. A few dos? of RADWAY'8 PILLS will free tl system of all the above-named disorders. Price, 'Jfic. a Box. Hold by Druggist*. Send to D*T RADWAY & CO.,No. 32 Warren 8tre< Hew York, for Book of Advice. An agreeable Laxative tod Nx*v? Towra Sold by Druggets or sent by mxlL 25a, oGa and $1.00 per package. Samples free. If ^ VA The Favorite TOOTS P0W9H ftU JElwfortheTeathand Breath, 26a I THE KIND I MRS. OLIVER CHKRREEB, _ p| MiUODe, JJ. V. a H I On Crutches 10 Years! | heating sores that a would not heal .1 H CURED! CURED! I Dak a Samapabiij^ Ca : _ W 3 GENTLE.VEN:?1 with to testify to the efBcacya gol DANA'S SAKSAPARILLA. _ n. H For ?ercral yrtui I have been tufTering from aH Sbad Blood JDIaorder called by different^ Sname* by the teven) Phyiiciani who attended me.B but which baffled the .killI of them all. JtaUgj Stacked my fkee, EA..TIBf > AWAIh THE P1>JE8H, and leaving ?, I* *""! SBi-iinnlng tore, which nothing would heat. J ? Salao broke out on my llmbaa a FEVI?E HSORE. For monrni 1 wai confined toB Smy bed and have been unable to waltc s Without crutrhe* for over ten years. =g. M LaA Fill 1 purchased tliree btittlca of & . DANA'S 9 1SARSAPARILLA | BofD.vt.Bro*. It helped me from the Iliyt.fS II took it faithfully, ond 1 can now attend tog my household duties ond walk u "l am rote that my ea?e It u near a miracle aig anything that happens at the 1'retent day. ?~ I am very tlncerclv vuurt, St Malone.N.Y. MRS. OUVER CHEERIER g| Bchemtr. which li a itrong endommfnt of ycurgg valuable compound We believe her rtttwntnt tafli H| be true In every respect. We an mj re*^ecl',,"^jnT,^j{08 9 fMalouc, N. Y. Wholeale k Retail Druggirtt. S Dana Sar?aparllla Co., Belfast, Mains. I| WORN WIGHT AND~DAY. . Holds the worst rai> H fan lit i with ea?e ub' t? KS' CLASTIC :er all circnmi<tances, A 9*L T T? TT ?! C wa I AOJUTJUsST, j toajoKt, . H NewPat. Jn-piovciren) 5 c^',y ^niuit. Cat. end ru m for 0 r y Mr- v^Telf-nnau-uremeiit i^iurely U neali'd. G. V. Koiixe Sift:. (Fxncrrm) Co..',u Erondtvay,X.Y.Chy. Ta ni"dealfa mi uirTfl e b; ct n e! 1 For IndJgcMion. lilllousuc?e, H ? Headache, ConmlputSon, Itad Complexion, Offen>>ivc Mreath, itWjR * a.id all ii?crdc: t ul tho Bicmach /cT'SCMflft ? Liver and Bowel*, /uNyiflJfcSo^^) b f RIPANS TABULES : c*t Kently yet proiuf.tly. Ferfci't l^lKUv'T<y11V>y | d: ?t. !iou folIowB their u?e bold t "by c'rusrpistsorFeKt bymull. Bex WhRv 5(6 rials/,75c. Package 14 boxes) $2. ^?U?^ i, b Kor tree samplesaddrefK t' A? in ?U,?A?fewJ1'0-' > Conicmptlvei hdO pjopie H J? ho have weak "udbs or Astn- H ma. ihoald use f\eo a Cure tor |H Consumption. It das eared |E tboniondi. it lias not injur- B ed one. It is not bad to lake. H It is tbe best coupb syrup. was then buried underneath the atones , in Kinneff Church, -where it lay for * several years. When it was restored a Sir G. Ogilvy, for some cause not explained, retained the sword-belt. 3 It was discovered in 1700 built into f the garden wall of the house of Barras, r near Stonehaven, and since then it had been handed down from father to f son as a precious relic. ? Picayune. ? The British school of water color ? painting is deemed the best in the world. t Salvator Bosa was one or the ear3 liest and most vigorous landscape t painters. ' _ ~ . i' i$l )wer.?Latest U. S. Gov't Report I Baking I Powder TELY PURE be a Houseful of Shame." ; louse Glean With yLiiv_ a "'^3 '(M # with Pastel, Knamels and Paints which state Sb? I ib tunas, injure the Iron ano nura red. I The Rising ttun ritove hollsh n brilliant, Od? I leaa, i>urabie..aad the consumer pay* ^or oc Mb I or (lass package with every purchase I ? * " ' Do Yon Bleev Peacefully? { . ?<ITIfl| I HARD TO FIGHT ? One's ways np; to make a fortune out of notb z log. Still, men have done It?nay, do It dally; J s and It Is to be done by persevering ly be*-lng ? patiently rebukes for inexperience until we galu wisdom from experience.'* ' Bnt those who " survive the struggle " will J cdmlt that their success Is largely to be attribn- 5 ted to the peremptory discipline they hare,en- ? forced upon themselves of moderation, exercise if? and BOUND SLEEP. For sound Jeep a | | Pilgrim j 5 5 Spring | ,i?l 11 Bed ! ie Is the prime requisite. It needs only to be seen J for a true appreciation of'Its peculiar qualities: ? of 60MN0l5s8CE.NCE. ? ,? It is made of highly tempered steel wiiv. Is the h PERFECTION of EASE, and *111 last a UfX-J i - 2 TIME. Beware of cheap mndo common wire , imitations, " for they are not what they seem." ? Exhibited at Ko. tl Warrsn Street, Mew York; * So. 3 Hamilton PJ*oe, Boston. A frn* mIa K? all t?Ulvla tWltfa. 9 1/vwimSprj^^l K v No. 501 J:5>! ^^gSfSTERED i Pee Brnaa Tng neglatered Tr?d?rauil oo all a Genuine Pilgrim*. tend lor Money 6arinz Primer. Fr#*. " ' 2 Allaa Tack Corporation. Boaton. J 5 Warxhod?*i?Boeton, New Tort, Philadelphia, 5 Chicago, Baltimore, ten Franoiaoo, Lynn. J Factoeim?Taunton, Kaaa.: Kalrharen, Maae.: i Whitman, Maaa.; iJuibury, Maaa.: Plymouth. KM S 1 taaaaeaaaaaaaeaaaaaaeeaaaaeaaaaaeet L MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS I WITH THOMSON'S Mi . SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. Ho tool* required. Only a hammer needed to drire anii clinch th>m caaiiy and qnickiy, tearing tho cJinob abaointtiy amooth. H^qairing no bo e to be made lo the leather nor tmrrlor the Rireie. Tbey aro atrooff, loach and dnrable. Mlluona now in nae. AO lenirtn*. uniform or aaanrted, pot up In boxee. Aak yoor dealer for then, or tend 40c. la atampa (or a box of 100, aaeorted ilxat. Maa'fU by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFQ. COc, VALTH1X, 3LAMM. m Common Sense H TKUjyH ^^6&Can be opened while ^ WfUekedtothoweilwiU* ~w oct warring it or tcartna carpet and atral-inf touts e?f T pulling trunk forward. The Dm P^TI ^nLelxfoltdcomers protect tb? f V lid from be inc knocked off lo 11>B rough handUBfc. EU*^J^3fl Ifyonr dealer hasnt them H write for catalogue, FREE BEgfi?j2M F. U.PALICA CO., i;ooo,ooo=s^ - A Dulcth BAXLBOAO Compi.nt In Minnesota. Send far M&pa and Circa* tara. Xher will be sent to you FREE. A6d?? HOPEWELL CLARKE. Land CommlMloper St. Paul Mine? mm m m Chickens Money IF YOU OIVE THE* KELT. You cannot do this unless you understand them and know how to cater to their requirement?; and you cannot spend years and dollars learning by experience, so you must buy the knowledge acquired by otners. \Ve offer this to you ror only 25 cent*. ' YOU WANT THEWTTO PAY THEIR /. OWN WAY, " i even If you merely keep Ihem a* a diversion. In or uer to nau.ue Fowl# judiciously, you must know something about then). To meet this want we are selling a hook giving the experience / flnlv 4EA of a practical poultry raiser for \ will J tuCi ! iwer.t.v-flve years. It was written by a man who put all his tniiKl. and time, and money to making a success of Chicken raising?not as a pastime, out as a business?and it you will profit by his twenty-flve years' work, you can save many Chicks annually, " Game Oiicient." and moke your Fowls earn dollars for yo?. The point Is, that you must bo able to detect trouble In the Poultry i'ard as soon as It appears, and know how to remedy It. Tills book will teach you. It tells how to detect and cure disease; to feed for eggs and also for fattening; which fowls to s?ve for breeding purposes; and everything, Indeed, you should know on this subject to make it protttaole. Sent postpaid lor twenty-five cents in stamps. Book Publishing House. 134 1<K0.N4K8 si- X. V. City. . ?