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v< w Riding1 Without a Horse. An ingenious man has invented a laddie machine for the acquiremen t Df a perfect seat and self-confidence *s an equestrienne within one's own borne. It is Baid that many ladies ce overcoming timidity by means of this home practice as a prelude "to learning how to ride" the veritable equine back. i By a skillful mechanical arrange ment the movements of a horse in ^ walking, trotting, cantering or galloping are imparted to a saddle, upon which a lady or gentlemen may sit with perfect comfort and safety, blandly confident that, although they are enjoying to the full all the pleasure and health-giving motion of riding on horseback, there is no fear of their mount rearing, or bolting, or kicking, or jibbing or behaving like the famous trick horse from the circus. J The motion obtained from the sadBle, as in actual horse riding, is vertical, and produced by the rider rising Ion the stirrups or footboards as if Beated upon n horse, and under all the conditions, whether the motion be gentle or that of a trot or gallop, the rider is perfectly secure in his or her Beat, so that all the advantages of real horse exercise can be enjoyed with none of its inevitable risks.?Chicago (Mail. The Biggest fcloose. ! I heard the other day an amusing lale of of a certain well-known English nobleman, who had imported two emus with the hope of breeding from jthem, and on leaving his estate for town left also Btrict injunctions that ' * ? ' i ? ? jthe greatest care snouia do xaicen 01 the lady emu, if she produced the desired egg or eggs. The egg arrived in due course, bnt, as artists have found before now, the lady declined to [ 'Bit." The steward, however, however, was an ingenious man, and thought of a substitute, but his powers of composition were by no means ion a par with his inventiveness, and he announced the interesting event to his master in the following terms: i "The emu has laid an egg, but we were in a great difficulty, as she would not sit on it. I did what I thought ' T V was best, ana in your jjoruemp b ?ueence I have placed the egg under the ibiggest goose on the estate."?Pall Mall Gazette. A Bank Failure. 9 AN INVESTIGATION DEilANDED. < > A general banking business is done by the human system, because the blood dej posits in its vaults whatever wealth we may gain from day to day. This wealth is laid |up against "a rainy day " as a reserve fund ?we're in a condition of healthy prosperity (if we have laid away sufficient capital to jdraw upon in the hour of our greatest need. (There is danger in getting thin, because it's ja sign of letting down in fcalth. To gain in blood is nearly always to grain in wholesome flesh. The odds are in favor of the terms of consumption, grip, or pneumonia, if our liver be inactive and our blood impure, or if our flesh be reduced below a Jiealihy standard. What is required is an increase in our germ-fighting strength. Dr. .Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery enriches hloofl rind mates it wholesome, stoos the waste of tissue and at the same time (builds up the strength. A medicine which will rid the blood of its poisons, cleanse and invigorate the gTeat organs of the body, vitalize the system, thrill the whole being ,with new energy and make permanent work of it, is surely a remedy of great value. But when we make a positive statement that c>8 per cent, of all cases of consumption can, if taken in the early stages of the disease, be cured with the "Discovery," it seems like a bold assertion. All Dr. Pierce asks is that yon make a thorough investigation and leatisfy yourself of the troth of his assertion. By sending to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.. vou can get a free book with the names, addresses and 'photographs of a lar^e number of those cured of throat, bronchial and lung diseases, as well as of skin and scrofulous affections Ibythe "Golden Medical Discovery." They also publish a book of 160 pages, being a medical treatise on consumption, bronchitis, f asthma, catarrh, which will be mailed on aeceipt of address and six cents in stamps. HIGHEST AWARD ro] WORLD'S FAIR, m (IMPERIAL 'Dyspeptic,Delicate,Infirm and | AGED PERSONS ihheSAFESTFOOD IN THE SICK ROOM"FOR INVALIDS : ra ^'0 convalesceh-is "^3 F~OOD <?'Nursing flothers,Infants/ CHILDREN is SOLD by r-zfjm druggists. ^ john caole ."-sons. new york. i woven wire fencl^mj i ssw^,.&sm?88b?ra i , best Woren Wire Fence oa\/\/\/\/\/\/\S M I ! e&rth,horso hlgh.bcU BtrongyVyA/vvyA U < pig1 .and chicken tight, '"ruW\A B =?5=^13 to 20c. A ROD?| . /*V a m.n and boy can make %<><><%. from 40 to 30 Rods, * HC><><>< 'day. Orer 50 dlflerent styles H . ^ C ) ( J C J'Cittloiroc Free. Addrew, H K^yJK, ^>< KiTigLMaw BROS., M ^^^^^^^^Jldgevine^ndiana^J nBiiDev^ liHllr & V "- -sr"".'.. F 81 vBr V B curtd miny th?u. land cases P'? onced hopeless. From first dose symptoms rapidly disappear, *?d in ten days at least two-thirds or all symptoms are removed. BOOK of testimonials ?f miraculous cures sent FREE. Fen DAYS TREATMENT FURNISHED FREE by mcll PS. Aft QBEOit ?>?.Atlanta,6s. SPRING FASHIONS. I PARISIAN STYLES NOT CLOSELY ] FOLLOAVED IN AMERICA. Skirts Growing Wider for Warm Weather Wear ? Organdy the Coining Craze ? Decided Change In Sleeves. "T" ~T~ ERE is an item, called from a celebrated French au| I thority, that -will, Bay6 a ?"~ fashion writer in the Washington Star, create some little con- , Bternation in la mode circles: "It will take American women tbe usual six months to discover that the preeminently huge sleeves and the immense flaring skirts they hear such fairy stories about are not, and have not been, the vogue m .Paris, iuouerately large sleeves and gracefully flaring skirts, not excessively wide, have prevailed and are still la mode, and are likely to continue also to be . favored by the most celebrated ateliers e in France for months to come." I American modistes are telling their e deluded customers that skirts are e growing yet wider for spring and s summer wear, and that eight yards around will be a modest limit. The 1 test of this celebrated French au- j thority and its illustration? do not 11 agree, however, and the women are i c pictured in petticoats that flare like e those of a ballet dancer. Truth to c tell, women do not pay a great deal of t FASHIONABLE CLOA attention to the letter of fashion any- t how. They take the suggestion and i drees it up to suit their individual f needs, and that makes American i women the best dressed in the world. ^ American women, as a class, have not s worn the excessively wide skirts com- t plained of by tne .t rencn antinomy. The well-groomed woman has too much sense to go to the extreme in anything. It is true that the skirts are going to be wider, but have you seen the fabrics that they will be made of? Why, they are bo sheer and fine that big sleeves and crep0x. you will be able to draw the whole skirt through your finger ring. The stores are full of the new summer goods. Organdy will be the craze, if the counters will tell the truth, and anything prettier than organdy can scarcely be mentioned. It comes in all the daintiest and most delicate shades, and is drifted over with bouquets of blossoms that are so real looking you almost think you can smell them. Most of the designs are g large, but a few are small and deli- ^ cate. A single violet, or a Jong- ^ stemmed crocus with a leaf or two. 6 The purple iris i6 one of the favorites, and an exquisite half-blown moss rose is another that attracted universal 6 attention. These organdies are to be ? worn over colored slips, and will have a great deal of ribbon garniture, and , quantities of lace. By the way, lace . will be more worn during the summer than ever before. The always favorite Chantilly will be in the fore front. . For the organdies and mulls, 6ome delicate white laces are exhibited, which have net tops, with boiders of v Milanese, Spanish and Pompadour patterns interwoven in bewitching de- T signs. The Vandyke laces will be as much in demand as ever, but will come in the soft Chantilly patterns. ? The new French lawns are as charm- J1 ing as can possibly be imagined. They come in very fine quality and at rea- , i-i- - rr t, ? a t bUUUUJe pui;co. -lug uunci uatiu^o i take one back to great-grandmother's ? day, and it seems as though there | onght to come from the lavender and i ? santlal wood scents that used to cling j !, around her garments. Delicate shades j ? of green predominate, and pick, real j1 plush rose pink, comes next. Helio-j trope in its varying shades will be as ? much worn as ever, and blue seems to have taken a new lease on life, too. Of course the silk mulls and dotted 0 Swisses ars out in force. They will 8 have colored slips also, to match the ' c riHVinnc wi+V* fliam nr lift I ^ worn in all their virgin purity, if so desired. To wear with these organdies and lawns, and with sheer white goods, are ribbons with bouquets of flowers em- ; ti broidered on them. At least, theyjc* {4^ i'j ??.. and some others lock as i o V hough they had been done in water :olors they are so exquisitely lovely, [f it were possible to make ribbons any nore the vogue, these pretty flowerSPKING STYLES IN HATS. prinkled designs would accomplish it. rat as ribbons are already worn on sverythinor everywhere, one can only that a new nhase of them has been idded. There is a decided change in sleeves. Chey drop?or they droop?just as rou like to state it. For ball gowns, hey 6imply slide right off the shouller, a$ in the design, which represents t bowknot sleeve of lisse caught in the ;enter, with a flower or any fancy hing you like to put there. Some | . K AND COSTUME. jodices have straps of velvet or ribbon rnssing over the shoulder well to the ront. The "drooping 6leeve" has not nuch in its favor, unless you have a rerv fine pair of shoulders. Its effect, is will be seen, is to lengthen the houlder effect by showing the upper irm, and to broaden one across the just by making the puff widen out at he elbow. This puff in some of the rery latest sleeves is three yards tround. This sleeve, on a woman who sould wear sackcloth and grace it, will, )f course, make a stylish appearance; jut on a woman who gets her ideas of vhat is stylish from the magazines of ler modiste, and makes no effort at idaptation, this sleeve will look like ?- - ?* ?!_ _*? xill X ? J i.~ Zt ,ue mifcuiiiej, nu \iu yci uocu iu m. Crepon is the gown goods of the present moment, and unless there is a -apid change in sentiment it will be vorn all the spring. It coihes in wool, lilk and cotton. It costs a fortune 'or the finest, and a few cents for the cheapest, and it all has a singularly liBtinguished air. They come in plain md fancy weaves, in colors and in )lain black. For spring tailor-made gowns for ;raveling and street gowns canvas and jasket cloth effects in light-weight Tools will be worn. They will be itrong rivals of English serge, but vill probably have to end by dividing 'avor with the serges, since nothing nore durable for all-around purposes vas ever invented. The serges come vith a silk stitch shot over them in a sontrasting color, which is a very irettv novelty. All the spring maerials are inflight shades, green and irown with red being the favorite :olors. Silk-warp henrietta will be corn lor nouse gowns ana more cereaonious wear outdoors. It will be sombined with silk or satin, and the tylish garniture will be paseemenerie. Mohairs and fancy poplins will >e worn more this season than for ome time past. Many of the newer designs show a imulated overskirt, but the overkirt itself is only a suggestion. The avorite ekirt is perfectly plain, flaring ,t the bottom, smoothly fitted around he hips, and just escaping the floor n that jaunty French fashion. It is porn with a bodice of some fancy aaterial. Bodices will continue to be he medium of any frenzy in fancy hat their wearer may chance to dream bout. They are rich, gaudy, giddy, iome of them are eiegaut. To wear rith the skirt over these bodices, the 2ton jacket of the same material as he skirt will hold its own all the prinK and summer. For dressy wear he Eton jacket will be fashioned of ace and passementerie. The flat Dutch bonnet is hideous, mt it is here. It looks like a pan ake on a spree. It squats down on he head behind, just above the knot 1 hair, and suddenly bulges out an he sides in rosettes or bows or artiicial flower?, and sprouts up in front a a surprising and very disconcerting aanner. Another phase of it is a ;igantic bow with rows of immense lalf-blown roses along, back of and bove the ears. There is nothing else f it worth mentioning. One of tho pring shapes in a walking hat is rather hie. It has a rosette right in front nd a row of loops drooping a little ver the brim above with a rosette of elvet above each ear. Montana's increase in gold producion last year is nearly seventy-five per ent., the receipts showing an increase f 18,46S fine ounces of gold. The Coldest Winter. The most notable thing about tl spell of cold weather through whi< we have passed is its widespread i tensity. All Europe has been in tl grasp of the ice king, and his anti mnra talto/1 aVinnt thftn those any other monaroh. In far Asia Ja anese sailors were frozen to dea while training their gunB on the Cb nese forts and fleet at Wei-Hai-W< and even in Northern Africa snow f< for the first time in so long a pern that grown men gazed at it with wo; der. What does it all mean? Scientie have been at work for years to figu out a law of climatic and weath changes, and their conclusion is th it takeB between thirty and thirty-fi years to get from the extreme of he to the extreme of cold. Just why tt is so they can not tell, but their del ing into the old records convinc them that there is some natural.law work and that sooner or later it w be discovered. Five years ago a Swiss prof esse Brueckner by name, published a boc called "Climatio Oscillations Sin 1 7nn M on/1 ofi?onrrr?1 rr rmrrVl Yli'fl At *,UV> ?****, o?*?uBvV w? culations made it appear that one the calmmating periods of exlrei cold woald come around about tl time?perhaps in this very year? be followed by gradually increaai: warmer weather, which is schedul to reach its highest point about t end of the first quarter of the n? century. While we think of our suffering we may, therefore, turn for consol tion to 1925 or 30, and revel in t anticipation of the mildest wint that we can secure in this latitude. New York News. To Clean Clothes. According to the American Anal] the proper way of restoring old cloth is as follows: Take, for instance, shiny old coat, vest or pair of trouB? of broadcloth, cassimere or diagom The scourer makes a strong, wai soapsuds, , and plunges the garme into it, souses it up and down, ru tne dirty places, ana 11 necessary, pu it through a second time; then rin? it through several waters and hangs up to dry on the line. "When near dry he takes it in, rolls it up for : hour or two, and then presses it. 1 old cotton cloth is laid on the outsi< of the coat and the iron passed ov that until the -wrinkles are out; b the iron is removed before the etea ceases to rise from the goods, el they would be shiny. Wrinkles tb are obstinate are removed by laying wet cloth over them and passing ti iron over that. If any shiny plac are seen, they are treated as t wrinkles are?the iron is lifted whi the full cloud of steam rises ai brings the nap with it. Cloths shou always have a suds made specially f them, as in that which has been usi for white cotton or woolen cloths li will be left in the water and will cli; to the cloth. In this manner we ha known the same coat and trousers be renewed time and time again, a have all the look and feel of new gi merits, uooa orcaacioin ana us n low cloths will bear many washinj and look better every time because them. A l)og Who Was Not to Bs Dared, A dog story has come to the write ears, which, though not within ] personal knowledge, is vouched for him in an entirely trustworthy wa A certain dog, which was growing o] was in a barn one day with his masti The two were np on a haymow fr< which a sloping ladder led down the barn floor. Tho master walk down the ladder, but the dog we around by another way. "When t aog reacnea me Darn noor 111s mam began to say to him somewhat tani ingly, "Poor old fellow! Dare: walk down the ladder any mor Daren't walk down the ladder Whereupon the dog, with a qui glance at his master, walked clear i the ladder to the top, and then turn around and walked down it agai The proceeding looked very muoh li a deliberate demonstration on t dog's part, to his master, that he w still capable of walking up and do\ a slanting ladder. Did the dog unde stand the taunt, or did he merely cat< the words "down the ladder," ai take the utterance for a comman which he dutifully proceeded to obe; No one will ever know, probably, sin the dog himself can give no accou of the matter.? Boston Transcript. Ingonious Thieves. Thieves of Upper India are gene ally very smart when it comes to t! squeeze of capture,and the care whii native burglars take in the way precaution against surprise .phenomenal, writes a cerresponde of a contemporary. They are usual most painstaking,and a friend of mil one morning awoke to find that ] had been "looted," and at given int? vals the places of exit had been la out with broken bits of bottle so th if the man had been disturbed ai pursued the glass would have in i probability brought the pursuers i smartly. They, themselves, knowing 4ts po< tion, would have avoided it and g away comfortably. House burgla all carry a wallet of fine 6and, and handful of this thrown over tl shoulder into the face of a would-1 capturer is warranted to postpone tl pursuit. In the case above mention the highwayman was a little extrav gant to part with his blanket. Th generally bring the enemy up wi the ample folds of the turban, whi< 1? -1 ? - r xt i ; A ~ rareiy IUIJM 11 tue mbhuiu^ xo uu. adroitly.?Bombay Gazette. |j ^-?HE U. 5 fl l<0> cially re S3 inn* Dmi an iif& * w T j? others in leaven || It is the best an ROYAL BAKING POWDER What Can Be Done With a Cent. be A few years ago the Episcopal ohnrch ;h of a small Maryland town was in want n- of an alms basin. The oongregation tie was for the most part poor, and few 1 cs in nnmbers. The minister in oharge of appointed a young girl a committee of p- one to collect subscriptions. The th amount needed was $5, for an alms ii- basin costing that much had been ii, heard of for sale by a more proBperons ill parish, that had outgrown the one )d with which it started in life. n- The young woman's first call was at the store of a well-to-do merchant, its Asking something from him for her re fund, she received the following roer ply, spoken in a very grufl voice: "I at can give you nothing;" but as she ve turned to leave, ne ackiect: "mere, at you may have that if it will do you lis any good," and suiting the action to v- the word, threw down on the counter ies a cent. Mortified and abashed, her at first impulse was to leave it where he ill thrown it, but better judgment prevailing she picked it up, thanked him >r, and left. >k Without going further she returned ce home and told her mother that she *1- would not risk for anything more and of run the ohance of such treatment a ne Becond time. "Take the cent, my ris dear," the mother said, "and show to what you can do with it." She folng lowed this advice and bought a small ed china doll, and, dressing it in some he scraps which she had, sold it to a sxt friend for her little daughter. Havinrr iiir>rpfuap^ her nanital 400 ner cent.. j8, she invested it in a spool of cjochetla ing cotton, with which she worked he several small articles, and the sale of \er these brought her in $1.20. This was, ? in turn, nsed to purchase cotton material, ont of which were made several dresses for small children, that netted, when sold, the desired 85, when the alms basin was duly bought. This story was told to a lady of ftS Socialiatic views, who was constantly a complaining that she was not rich, and saying Bhe could lay so little by " it was not worth while to save; the :n* answer wafi: "Yes, she got her S5, but what a lot of work she had to do.""s Kate Field's Washington, ts Z.___ Compliment to the Do?. ly A very delicate compliment was an lately bestowed by a dog lover upon the intelligence of his Skye terrier, de The owner of the dog was sitting in er his office apparently alone, when an nt acquaintance entered. ,m "Glad to find you alone," said the [bo visitor, "because I have a confidential tat communication to make to you, whioh a no one else must hoar." be "Hold on a minute!" cried the ies other, checking him. And then he he called out: ile "Here, Spot!" id A. small terrier crawled out from Id uiider the table, wagging his tail, or "Go out Spot!" said his master, ed' The dog went out. nt "Now then," said the owner, "you Qg may go on with your confidential ve communication. Now we are alone." to ?Detroit Frke Press. nd ir- A hundred head of sturdy ranch el- horses were recently sold in Denver, js, Col., for $90 and the freight, of No Snch Thing. The quality of endurance of or indifferent to what in other men produces shock or re r'fl pulsion is said to belong to men without [lis nerves. There is no such thing and cannot to be. The finer the physical development the ? keener perhaps is the sensibility to pain. V Let neuralgia put on its harness for a raid 1<J> and get after such men, the nerves will be 3r. found all quivering at once. And so this Dm malady works, a creeping ugly foe to health x bent on torture and misery, until it meets its onHnothw St .Tn/?nha Oil which cures and ed conquers,'quickly, surely.' Scotland's Roman Catholic churches have 352,000 members. ,e* Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root cures 3** all Kidney nnd Bladder troubles n't Pamphlet and Consultation free. e j Laboratory Bingham ton. N. Y. 1" Java is the Malay word for land of meetck lnga up There is more Catarrh in this section of th? gfj country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be n. incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure uO with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. aa Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and i herefore requires oonstitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, man?r. ufactured by F. J. Cbeney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, ', is the only constitutional cure on the market. JQ It is taken internally in doses from lOdrops to a(l a teaspoonfnl. It acts directly on the blood , and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer d, one hundred dollars for any case it falls to ? o cure. Send tor circulars and testimonials " ' free. Address * ce F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Qt EVSold by Druggists, 75c. Not an Experiment. The use of Ripans Tabules for headaches, dvsDensia and other stomach disorders is not an experiment but an assured success. They ,r. will do all that we say they will. be Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup tor children .u teething, softens the gnms, reduces inflammaJ , tlon, allays pain, cures wind colir. 25c. a bottle 01 Karl's Clover Hoot, the great blood purifier, 18 gives freshness and clearness to the complexnt ion ?nd cures constipation. 35 cte.. 50 cts., 1$. ly Actors, Vocalists, Public Speakers praise nfl Hale's Honey of Horehound ana Tar. " Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. , srt Widest Canal in the World. id The Chenab Irrigation Canal in the at Northwest Provinces, India, is said id to be the widest canal in the world, ill It is 110 feet broad and will be injp creased to 200 feet broad when finished. The head works are at Kanki, }i- where a shutter dam about one and an ot eighth miles long extends across tbe ,rs river. When finished the main chana nel of the canal will be 450 miles lie long, while the principal branch be channels will have an aggregate L- 1 lU onnn ?r.^ +kQ T;ilan.a I Lit? Ul AVUU milbO) wuw vuw ed branches will be about 4000 miles j a- long. Already 250,000 acres are supey plied with irrigating water, and the th completed work is expected to bring j ch in a revenue of about sixty-five lakha ue of rupees per annum.?New York Ad- ' vertiser. >. Government offijports ROYAL Bak- || vder superior to all 5| ing sirengui. (Bulletin ij, A['lDtft,p. j<#.) d most economical. [1 CO., 106 W ALL 8T., N EW-YORK. WK S8SS^SSSS?SSS ? Jj ' ?? \ . 1 . A.'v: Spring Me Is so important that you should be sure to got THE BE3T. Hood's Sarsapa- sc riila has proven its unequalled merit by al its thousands of remarkable cares, and m Ithe fact that it has a larger sale than hi any other sarsaparilla or blood pari- ac fier ihows the great confidence the I Ipeople have in it In fact it is the ir Spring Medicine. It cures all blood H diseases, builds up the nerves and tl gives such strength to the whole system hi nL.i I.J 1- IL (Ui t/v Itiai, ttB OLlt) ittuy pubo n( ill ooomou tu i it make me anew." fi If joa decide to take Hood's Sarsa- I jtarilla for your Spring Medicine do o not buy any substitute. Be sure to get | n HOG Sarsai Home, Sweet Home. "Home, Sweet Home," Payne's song, was originally a number in the opera "Clari, the Maid of Milan," a production brought out in 1823. The opera was a failure, and nothing is now known of it save the one song, which became instantly popular. Over 100,000 copies were sold in the first year of its publication, and the sale in one form or another has been constant ever since the first appearanoe of this beautiful theme. The melody is a Sicilian folk-song, and was adapted to the worde by Payne himself.?St. Louis Globe-Democrat. 4 I ONB BJVJOY? j; Both the method and results when jj Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant \\ and refreshing to the taste, and acts ? gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, ? Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- 5 tern effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual ' constipation. Syrup of Figs ia the Ua lrJn/1 AVAH umjr loiiicujr vi no auiu vv?* ^/*v duced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial m its effects, prepared only from the most healthy ana agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figa is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL LOUISVILLE, K1.. NEW YORK, N t. ^^g^ilOPTORECoreil" Pi POSITIVELY l_,tt " S 8 v HOLDS RUPTURE Worn night and day. Haa lTllI'lii^f an Adjustable Pad which m- M can be made larger or ^ W \3 'M smaller to nult changing condition of KUPTURE. t PATENTKD. Illu.i. Cat. sent securely < sealed by Q.V. HouaeMfg. Co. 744 Broadway,X.Y.Clty t f DAVIS HAND OR POWER > CREAM SEPARATOR ' One-third more butter and of higher . quality than by other known systems. ! 8AVE8 MONEY AND LABOR 8lses from 1 to 1,000 Cows. Pamphlet Mailed Free. Agents Wanted Davis & rankin bldg. and mfo. CO.. Bole Manufacturers. Chicago. Ill There's x~\ Hard /Sf / ft M fpiisl -> CONSH III Cures Where All Else Fails. 1 |||| TASTES GOOD. USE IN TIME*. Vo "Don't Put Off Till 1 ties of To-day." SAPC mm* dicine "I was all broken down in health*' i weak and nervons I was hardly }le to be np. I had severe pains in y side, and headache. I wonld often ire to stop when going np-staiwoa ;count of DalDitation of the heart. had no appetite and a distressed feelig in my stomach. I resolved to try food's Sarsaparilla. I took tvro bot- \:'0 es and have not had a spell oi sick 4 eadaohe for four months, feel well, ork all day and eat heartily. My iends remark how well I am looking. think all nervous, ran down people <> v Light to take it, especially nursing LOthers." Mas. 8. Ashwobth, Eaton, Q. ID'S sarilla Utt year w*coramence<l an elatjorate plan *t idrtrtMafl, ' Wt before w* were half through^ Ol:I ADVKRTISMK* rl MSlfFliBED. Why T Becitu wB ffllll 0TBBWHI1JMB HITH BU6UE88. There ?u but one thin* todoi withdraw Ji? advertiaing and (lavoU ctfry energy to fillioc the ocdeo rilh which wa war* flooded. Thia wo did, tod handled with aaaonabla promptneea a i-oat unprecedented vrar'a hnilaeea. WITH fcflubged KACTORI&S, ISCRKiSXD F1CIUTI1& 'Jp lrd TWKKTY BRANCH hothes FRUfl WHll'b TO ms> rniBCTB ocb eooiM, w* cam bow cam ran. tutw :uflK. Last year we eoold not reduc* prieea Lecauae we ><n on) pelled in aomoway to limit the demand for Aermotor gaoda. Ve would hare been latitfled with lower pricee, but why treat* i demand which wo eoold not aupplrf We have mad* 0?* 1), leavieat purchaata of (tael and material bought in America tfcla -ear, and at unprecedented prieee, and have made terma Le leal era which enable them to make unprecedented price*. In quality, character, variety, finiah, and acceaaibility t? . 'jsl 'all at oca of gooda and repair*, we art without competitor!. n our plan of adrertiaUif I art year, we propceed to farnUh '. : : "> V] ?*dcuttcrundtrcert*inconditiontfor$16. ForreaaoM(tat*4 ' ' -v" hart we did not oom| lete the aJvertiiinr, ar.d the feed eal> y w er waa not put out. We now propoee to make amende I* } ,yj he following manner: We will announce in thia paper our ? IXW AXX-8TPU. TBKT sffkeiqb FEED CLTT1K, WOBTM , ;,jjj $40 at $101 aih with order, f. o. b. Chicago. Only one to on* peraoo, bete urniah addreuea of ten neighbora who ought to hare aoa*. hint in our line. Cut, deecription and (nil Informal inn i? ,i larding it will appear toon. Wt ttptciallf dairt to _ m caution yon againttpaybtf > ' jjsjk tttuictprtcttfor wind-outfit!. Thi trmjtslow onOuvartoftht ASZmfiA dealtr to ottrrkaryt it rent. $10 addrri to At Ugiti?mtt iHe* it $10 eltnr to tht ' j / ireptr priet and arti- fEflBOP (U, write u?jf "1 jC wr ntdt and you ?<U it proltcUf. w# re, and alw-iys have been "believers in low prion. lecaose ot the prodi|ioai?flp^ ostpat of oar factone* wo '. ?3 r? enabled to have sncdalj Jlooli for each piece. sad l? hui reduce the hand labor II on it to merely plrkiBf ?y he material and laving it I 1 downafeln. So email k?* ecome the coat of luor pat I I on the material whlth ? ell that it la not worth! 1 mentioning. We have b* ome the largest dealera in I I aaterial in the CO a c try r ? he material, of coarse, be- ft, J| ing roads op In tfceforaef - ' ' 'ilk leel galvanliad-afurcom- R\ rk pletion windoilli, toweri tilting and fixed), taska, M\ ?1 pompe,?e., To such aa atent haa thla become true, I I* and to auch an extant has he price of oarfooda (and My ViM on th?t account the t*I< . me of oar business ran- H/4 \\M dered competition lmpo*> A* ble), that FOLK UKflE ffliUHHM. CONCIKSS ARE BCTlM v , ?? iiRirt towers or, rs this tub. tuit doit u- - Jm ACSETTE IAEE THE OSI.T ABSOLUTELY RELIABLE A? *KE TOWKRj recu se THEY CAlt rft OF CS CHEAPU " ' IIAS TIIEY CAN IUILDI BECAI8E WE ALONE ARE PEE. ARM) TO CAI.YAKIZE ETERTTHIHfl AFTER IT B CO*. LTfED, AKU COEPLZTE EYKRYTHI5G XX AC FLY SI ART. These coneerna aro wise, for, even thoujh they mar no* irnlth the best of wheele, the wheel will have the beet of enp. ' m[ orti. Send to ue your name and addraae, and thoee of yaw "< !j eighbors who may need something in our line, and thereby d* irm a food torn. The Aermotor Co. la one at the ntoet eaeew il linnineaa enterprises which haa been launched In recent mes. In succeeding advancements will be diacuued and mad* - ' ' ' cor the linee on which that succef* haa been worked ooi, It ' !%} as done by a farmer's boy. A careful following of these ad rrtlMmenU mav snggett td some other farmer's hoy a career. I wmotor Co., ?U?*?sll*nu?e?eBta.,Okie** S YX U-11 W. L. Douglas $3 shoerslsfieji. ^0^*3. cordovan; 1 awm AWM ^ nUNCH&CNAMCUJmCALF. flUk.Jlfc*-'3"F|N? CALF&KAnsmb^ 1 '' vrjm tig ^3.W POLICE,3S0LCS? . Jm wmtnasss* Tfadflty *2. * i.g BOW'schmSmei ^i|^S?hj!.S?5&yrS?36L - VKOCKTOICMaSSc Over,On* Million Poofle wear the - /,vv^f W. L Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the best value for the money* They equal custom shoes In style and fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The price* are uniform,?stamped on * ! ? Prom $i to $3 saved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply you wo can. 1 BaphatI, Angalo, Kobena, Tasse The "LINENS'* are the Best and Host BoonowV *1 Collars and Cuffs worn: they are made of fins sloth, both sides flnliibed al'.k^ and bein? revacsfc Ten CoUftra or Fits Pairs of Cuff* for TmatrTtra 3ents. * t A Bample Collar and Pair of Caffs by xnaQ fee UtM >sti. Hime style and &iz?. AddreM revxbsible collar compajtt, 7 Traaklla 8t., New York. ? Kilby St, Bottoa. r)ENSIONw?b&?'""?% E&fiSSS5tt?!SW.?aSl?!Sa 9 t war. 13>41n^lorinf *tty tlno Work on Hand when you try to wash J without Pearline. Your r hand? show the hard f\ work; your clothes vjT show the wear. nr pMrlinft is harm. less to the hands or fabric. It saves the Rub, Rub, Rub that ^ wears ; it saves the work that tires. It is cheap, safe and convenient. Get the best, en you get something to wash rith. Soap has been but line is. re Pearlins Spoil the Wash & OH " Wethink Piso'sCURE for CONSUMPTION is the K h only medicine for coughs." 1 BP ?JENNIE PINCKARD, ? Springfield, 311., Oct. 1, '94 SYRUP. LD BY DRUGGISTS. US VTH. ro-morrow the DuBuy a Cake of >LIO . . .if? , ; ?&?