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** Treed anvl Larnl Owner* ill Enelanrt, I By the general laws of England, oak, ash and elm are "timber," if not younger than twenty years, or so old that a good post cannot be cut from them. What constitutes "timber" varies slightly according to locality. But when a tree is proved to be "timber," a person who has only a life interest : ? Ion/1 if rrrnwa nnnn PfinilOt Cilt Ill IUO 1UUU a i V ? v.. _ _ it down, unless it be on an estate cultivated solely for the production of saleable timber, or unless he has a special agreement giving him power to do so. A mere life tenant may not even cut down trees which are not "timber," but which woxild at the age of twenty years attain that dignity. Larch is not "timber" in any case, and may be cut by the life-tenant at will. A man is not bound to permit a neighbor's tiee to overhang the surface of his land, and may at auy time, and without giving notice, remove the offending branches. Botanists differ as to the poisonous nature of jew trees. There are many instances both of their poisonous anil their harmless effect when browsed by horses and cattle, but the partially dried clippings of yew are certainly most dangerous. If a yew-tree overhangs a neighbor's land, and his horses eat the yew without trespassing, the owner of the tree is liable to pay for any injury th$ horses may sustain. On the other hand, if the horses or cattle cannot browse on the tree without putting their heads over the fence, the owner of the horses must bear the idse, for his ..animals have trespassed. / Answers. \ Eathinc in Ye Olde Tytneg, In these (lays of universal tubbijjg, it is interesting ttfWJffi-'ftre eurious notions about bathing, in vogue in former generations. In a sketch of the childhood of Louis XIII., in the Atlantic Monthly, his tutor writes under date of August, 1608: "The Dauphin was bathed for the first time; put into the bath, and Madame, his sister, aged six, with him. The Dauphin was seven years oux ai me time." In his fourth year he had his feet washed with a damp cloth; when t he was six, they "washed his feet in jL. tepid water in the Queen's basin for first time." ^ What Shall We Have For Dessert) This question arises In the family dally. Let ub answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared In 2 mln. No boiling! no baking! Simply add a little hot water A set to cool. Flavors: Lemon,Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. The average telephone girl has a large collection of rings. To Care ? Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Qrixiss Tablets. AH j druggists refund the m<iney 11 11 iwiswcum. E. yf. GbOVZ's signature U on each box. 25c. Some people flsh for compliments with hated breath. We will Rive $100 reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall's Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Props., Toledo, 0. There are 30,000 more exhibitors at the present Paris fair than there were In 1889. FITS permanently cured. No fltsor nervousness after first day's nse of Dr. Kline's-Great Nerve Restorer.*^ trial bottle and treatise free Dr. R. H. Kuxe, Ltd., '331 Arch St, Phila., Pa. St. Helena is distant 1140 miles from Africa and 1800 miles from America. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflammation. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle. O *. . An unsuccessful apartment house i9 nsu . ally a Hut failure. Jcll-O, the New Deucrt Pleases all the family. Four flavors:? Lemon. Ornnee. Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. lO cts. " The people who ride cbainless wheels should look out for chadless dogs. Cleveland, X. C.. Feb. C. 1900. Five years aco I purchased a bottle of Frey's Vermifupe, " i he Best in the World." Send me another bottle. Enclose ~>c.?\V. J. Young. Some men are shortsighted who don't vear glasses. MORNING * TIREDNESS Is a serious complaint. It's a warning that Bhould be heeded. It is different from an honest tired feeling. It is a sure sign of ( rxinr hlnnrl Von mii fMirn if hp mftklno? your blood rich and pure with Hood's Bar- , Boparllla. That Is what other people dothousands of them. Take a few bottles Of this good medicine now and you will not only get rid of that weak, languid, exhausted feeling, but it will make you feel well all through the summer. Tired Peeling;?"For that tired and worn out feeling in the sprine, and as a strength builder and appetite creator, I have found Hoods Sarsapariila without an equal." Mrs. L. B. Woodabd. 283 Ba.lou Street, Woonsooket, R. I. Hood's Sap;'m, Is America's Greatest Blood Medicine oavc^Laum and write for list of premiums we offlsr free for tbem. j HIRES Rootbeer^ The farotite I DON'T STOP TOBACCO SUDDENLY It injure* nervous system to <lo w. Qlpfl PIIDfl la the only cure that Keally Cure* DBIlU'UUnU nd notified -you when to stop. Sold with e guarantee "th?t three boxes will cure any case Bipfl PIIDfl in vegetable ami harmless. It liaf DAuU'UUflU cured thousands, it will c ure you Atall druggists or by mall prepaid, sl.oo .1 Im>x, 8 boxes, 92.50. Booklet free. Write El'KEKA ? CHEMICAL CO.. La Crosse. Wis. ~ ~ a. ir (?,? Ott pu D|I r you have not used Dani kijj : -^r II r ^ Suiie Pile Coke, or you i I Ibh W would not have tbem wow. The only Guaranteed Cure. No detention from business, no operation, no opiuin or morphine. * 12 Suppositories 50c. or 24 and box of ointment ?1 .00 postpaid by mail. Send for book of valuable information on Piles, FREE.whether you Dse our remedy or not. THE DANIELS SUKE PILE CURE CO.. 2&4 Asylum St,. Hartford. Conn._ HPODCY NEW DISCOVERY; (fires n. \# <9 I qtrck relie' and ciir?s w.u-st eases* Book of testimonies mid 10 dn v?* treatment Vr?c. Br. M. 8. BBEEN'BSOSB, Box B, AtlaaU. <Ja. ADVERTISIN& 'iSS'SJS. S Thompson's Eire Water | MRICIIMl. 1 & & Celery in tlie Gurdeu. No garden is complete without ft good Bupply of celery. Sow a few seeds in a hotbed or in boxes in* the house, then in Julv transplant to rows in the garden. These should be about one foot apart in the row and the rows four or five feet apart. This can be set between rows of early peas or beans and the ground thus made to produce two crops in one season. As soon as the first crop is removed give thorough cultivation. For blanching, the soil i_iay be thrown up about the plants, or if you have a few old tiles these can be slipped over the bunches of celery and they will whiten nicely. One Objection to SoLlInc. The chief objection to soiling is the very wastefulness that the system is supposed to avoid. Suppose a cow will eat 200 pounds of gross a day while roaming over a pasture and destroy a lot more. The damage she does is soon repaired by the weather, but suppose you cut this 200 pounds of crass and nut in a mancrer for her. She goes at it in fine relish until she begins to get full, and then the mischief begins. She wisps it about, roots and noses it over, slobbering over it until in the end she absolutely refuses to eat any more of it,, though it is not half gone. I doubt if anybody :n the country itf making a success of soiling.?Farm and Home. To Destroy Bote Leaf Inaecti. * The small whitish insects which suck the life out of rose, leaves are jrose hoppers, which are frequently found on the lower side of the leaves. It is said that if attended tp before they are fully developed they can be easily destroyed by dusting tie infested plants with ftlug BhoSpWhen fully grown they aril-very persistent, and several appUcation'sr^ve to be made in order to.&ill themi and even then absolute riddance.:$8-.doubtful. Aphides propagate/so ^ipkly, and and in numbers so mairoraroly great, it requires close ' keep plants moderatelythem. The secret is to beti^^BrflM^tof them, or perhaps before''they arrive, for there are very "few not attacked before the season advances very far.?Meehan'W Montm-J;. Cultivator Shield. ;''[<) i'i&jr In cultivating born it is .small it rennires th? trrAfttAat 'oMft ^lbt to cover up or roll hard hjmjwWflwt on the tender sprouts. The shiw3fi that come with cultivators toe very uncertain and unsatisfaotortr in-their work. For several years, we h.sve tried this trough and find it a most satisfactory device. Take two hard-w'odit*inch bcavdB, eight inches wide and abonifive '<L ' -i JAZPJiUViSU yu*"+. OJWJBJUl/- I N I IJ^ ! If'i I I I J feet long; and fashion theforward end of each in the shape of a sleigh runner. Then take a 2x4 the same length as the beards, and bevel the edges ill each a way that wheal the boards att&nailed on they will spread ont at thfjbjottom until they are about eight inch'&l apart. This trough is to pass,x invei$$d, over the corn row, between $he shovels of the cultivator: its aloniai^trides catching the loose soil anoifcaving it lying loosely next the'eorn, Tbut never on it. To fasten this trough to the cultivator, bore an iach hole: through the sides near the front'ena^prti jnst beneath the top 2x4. Through these run a small, strong rope ana tie escu enu to the cultivator in*1 such a way that the trough will be kept a#!ttle in advance of the shovels. Itdj>$best ^o leave the rope play loofctfy , through the trough, as it would otherwise upset in turning at the end of the rows. The illustration shows, ?the construction exactly. Make your handy devices now, before the busy time comes.? Jim I. Irwin, in Ohio Farmer. Push tl e Calves Ahead. The calf makes the cow. If good cows are desired or stock is to be improved, it is through the calves that it may be done most effectively and cheaply. The spring calves should not be confined to pasture, and this generally poor, but should be fed ] with unstinted generosity. The rule ' should be to feed calves -with the i greatest liberality with the best food, f and to push them ahead the first year 1 of thtir life and never relax the gen- 1 erous treatment till the old cow gives i up business. The animal is the ma- < chine through which the food 13 1 changed from a cheap material to a i muoli more valuable one. Thus the milk feeding should be f continued to, the age of five or six > months, somei- dairymen say all i through the coif?B life, and doubtless 1 this is why should not the ' food that makes a good cow be still i employed to1 maintain her? It has 1 fypen proved, by practice in many dairies that the skimmed milk makes I fifty per cent, more return when fed to < cows than by any other way of disposal. 1 But it is certainly good for fcbe calves, ] a il 3 I j tending to give men; a gooa, stroug i frame, a wdll-developed digestive function, ability to diBpose of much i food to advantage and well-developed i vital organs, thus building up an ani- ' mal fully supplied with every facility i for making profit for her owner in her 1 after life. But with the milk a gen- I erous allowance of grain food must be given.?Henry Stewart, in New England Homestead. i Care of I'rooder Chick*. Brooder chicks should have a little yard at first, which should be enlarged us they grow, but care should be used to have no corners where they can congregate in case of a shower or at 1 bedtime instead of goiug into the brooder. I find il best to feed brooder chicks four time6 a dny, with extra relishes thrown in. At euch feed give only as < much as will be eaten before the next < feedine time. To provide exercise bv i scratching, there ia no better grain for them than millet seed. For the main part of their rations, make a Iwead as follows: To three cups of sour milk or buttermilk, add one heaping teaspoonful of saleratue. a little | salt and cayenne pepper; stir into this equal parts of corn meal, heavy shorts and bran till it is a stiff dough. Bake it in a deep dish so that there will be as small a proportion of crust as possible. Keep in a coo!, moist place, as it soon sours in warm weather and is then unfit to feed to chicks. Animal fs\.\A iyy oAmA mnaf lio anrmliarf. iWVVI All OUUiU iVAAAA LUUUV wv else some of the chicks will pull the down from others and eat it. They should have charcoal occasionally, coarse sand or rock, pounded quite fine, and plenty of green stuff. Lettuce, young cabbage plants, tender clover heads, are all excellent, but they should have two or three feeds of this a day, for they soon tramp on and spoil what they do not eat. Millet seed, wheat, cracked corn are goocif for dry feed and should be scattered about the runs for them to pick at. The first thing as soon as it is light in the morning, feed the chickens. The last thing before going to bed at night take a'lantern and look at the thermometer in the brooder, for as the outside air grows cooler after sunset the temperature iu the brooder will decline.?S. E. Cadwallader in American Agriculturist. Moisture In the Soil. The finer the soil the more moisture it is capable of absorbing and retaining. Moisture cannot and does not penetrate into heavy, tenacious soils, and when clods in such soils are not pulverized and become dry they retain their dryness in the centre during the entire summer. When land is made fine and free from clods the water does not so readily flow back to the surface, nor is it so rapidly dried up during the season, but is delivered to the surface in proper proportions. The moisture which is inclosed in the interstices of the soil and which accumulates in large quantity when land has been plowed in the fall expands and contracts during the winter, according to the temperature,and many of the ooarse portions are pulverized; but in spring, should the plowing of a field composed of heavy soft'. be performed and the work followed by dry weather, even the harrtivr Bometimes fail to reduce it. Ploving^d harrowing must, therefoxe^be qj&ne at proper times, and the judginenro? the farmer must be exeroised to guide him. The condition of ? ah sin 1/3 ha cimilor fn tV?af ve. quired for a garden. With a small garden, where the spade and rake are used, care is taken to make the soil as fine as possible. A field should be considered as a garden on a larger scale. It requires more labor on a garden plot than for a field,but the garden produces twice as mu2h in pro* portion to area as the field. Labor bestowed on a field, bo far as the preparation of the soil is concerned, will bo amply repaid in the gain of yield in the crop. The soil always responds to good treatment?a fact which at one time gave rise to the claim that a well-cultivated soil re- i quired no manure, whiih claim, how- i ever, is not correct; but cultivation without doubt largely increases the i yield. . 1 - 1 A Portable Self-Feeder* ~~ A correspondent of the Breeders' Gazette describes a self-feeder sue cessiuiiy usea on nis larm. xne frame work is all bolted together, as nails will not withstand the strain pulling the feeder from one field to , another. The runners are made of heavy 3x10 oak planks, each sixteen feet long and placed Gi feet apart. The runners are rounded at both ] ends eo that it can be pulled either ] way. Nine 2x4 joists, each nine feet long, are bolted onto the runners, j about two feet apart. These joists j are then fastened together by 2x6 < joists, which project over the runners ( far enough to support the feed trough. ] The trough is built about the width \ of a scoop. This permits of easily re ?ro j> i Mi r? 1 li.. -O . v?u A ' *tr-^ J PLAN FOR A HOMEMADE SELF-FEEDER. ( noving the grain from the trough ^ jhould you choose to do so. This, j iowever, is seldom done. The bot* ^ iom of the feeder is built high in the V** *1*1 1A n-nA olnnao fft fVi A 4rnfl ffll jjxuvtio auu oivj^&o ww vuw *wwt m )D either side. The roof projects a little over the sidles and measures ibou; fourteen feet from eave to eave. A door or cover is provided at either side for the feed trough. If one has 30T7B in a lot at night, but wishes waives to grain from the feeder during the day, he can Bimply drop the lid when the cows are in the lot and raise t on turoihg'them out, Calves can :ben eat oats or shelled corn or whatever you may have in the feeder for them. Out'therafters for the floor Dut of faortieen. foot 2x4'si making them each 3} feet long; thirty-six rafters dTthis sort will be needed for the bottom of the drop on the aides. After the feeder is sided up with shiplap or flooring, the roof of 1x3 sheeting is put on, which is afterward covered with shingles. It is a Rood idea to put several braces across the feeder from eave to eave. Bolt those to the 2x4'?. Strength will be given to the structure by running a Lalf-inch rod the length of the feeder and making fast just below the grain doors. The feeder is about sixteen feet long, and has a capacity of about 1000 bushels of corn. To\al cost, including lumber, labor and hardware, will be about $50 or $60. From fifty to sixty cattle can be fed at ono of these feeders. Have slides in the trnnc/hn ho thft amount of crain can D . ~ -- o | j be adjusted to the kind of feed. \ Flossie?"Mamma, I think this 1 cream is bud." Mamma?"Well, my | jhilcl, I'm going to whip it in a minute."? Yonkera Statesman, |kHollSEHoLD To Clean Marble. Take two parte of washing soda, one part of pumice stone, and one part of finely-powdered chalk, sift it through a fine sieve, and rinse it with water. Rub the marble well over with the mixture until the stains are removed; then wash with soap and water. To WmIi Balr-ltrnihei. Hair-brushes should be washed in hot or t?pid water, to whioh soda or ammonia has been added. The brushes snould be dipped in and out of the water till clean, taking care that the backs and handles do not get wet. After rinsing in clear cold water, put them in the air to dry;they should never be dried close to the fire, or the gristles will become discolored. A Test For the Oven. It is the wise cook who sets herself to master all the moods and tenses of her oven, since on the proper'degree of hept depends the success of more than one dish. The paper test is old bat dependable. If a sheet of thin white paper, put into the oven, turns black and blazes up, the oven is too hot. To reduce its temperature place a basin of cold water inside. If, on the other hand, the sheet of paper quiokly turns yellow and burns in a few minutes, the heat is right for roast meats. Puff paste comes in for this sort of an oven also. When the paper colors a trifle more slowly, the heat is right for bread and all yeast mixtures. Pound cakes and all rjch cakes containing much butter take a moderate oven while rich fruit cake requires still a degree less heat. Never on any account slam the oven rlnnr wIiiIa hokinnr for xrnn orA nnlt? too liable to ruin the most carefully made dishes by so doing. Da?t Should Be Deatro/ed. The modern housewife has learned that feather dusters and other flirting brooms and brushes merete ?oatte: the dust and germs in her,|hbn8e, in stead of removing them. She is now being told by scientists that to shake her rugs aud carpets, beat her draper ies, etc., is undesirable. The duel flies in near-by windows, her own perhaps, and is again disseminated. The idea of housekeeping to-day it to destroy dust. Carpet-sweepers, covered dust-pans, and cloths are the implements to be made use of, and the dust thus gathered should be burned, or, in the case of cloths, washed out. Back of this care, however, should come a wise choice of houshold belongings. Simplicity should be the fundamental law ol their selection. Have the things needed for comfort and use in simple, easily cared for designs; for pure decoration, only a few very satisfying things. Gewgaws as a rule ars useless, and may be dispensed with. Tho Best Disinfectant*. The best disinfectants are pure air and sunshine. Without the aid of these disinfectants the most pqwerful chemicals used to'purify a pest place may prove of no avail. It is more necessary that a houso should be ventilated than that the waste pipes that lead into it be trapped. A strong solution of potash and boiling water poured down the sink and into waste pipes will disinfect them sufficiently for the season. If about four quarts of boiling water are poured over five nan fa? wnrf.li r\t nnnroro a on/1 f V\ ck ar\_ t lution scattered over the ground where the garbage pail has sat daring the winter, and into cesspools or any similar spot that needs disinfection, it will be usually all that is necessary, provided air and [sunshine can also reach the place. It is not safe to ;rust the eyes; tbat which looks clean nay be very unclean, out there is isually a foul odor to any spot need,ng disinfection. fey RECiPES : J Salad Dressing ? Sir eggs well jeatea, one-half teacup of melted jutter, one of vinegar, one of suear, )no coffee cup of cream, one tableipoon of mustard, salt and a little :ayenne pepper. Set in a double joiler and stir until it thickens. Botle and it will keep a month. Sausage and Macaroni Pie?Cook welve sticks of macaroni in boiling lalted water until tender, drain and >our over a little cold -water. Fill a imall, deep battered dish with alterlate layers of macaroni and sausage neat, season ing each layer with salt, jepper and chopped parsley. Moisten vith good slock, cover with puff paste Liid bake for about half an hour. Cream of Peas Soup?Cover two mpfuls of peas with cold water, cook intil teuder. Bub half the peas trough a sieve. Scald one-half pint >f milk.' .Rub one tablespoonful of mUti? and one of flour together. Add he floured butter and milk to tbe trained peas. When the soup thickins add a capful of cream, the re nainder of the peas, pepper and salt. French Rarebits?Butter an earthen lish and lay in the bottom a piece oi mttered bread. Sprinkle on this a ayer of crated cheese, and a layer of | mttered bread, and continue in the lame tray until the dish is filled. Beat wo eggs, mix them -with a' cup of nilk and pour over the bread and sheese. Bake until lightly browned. Oatmeal Pudding?To one quart ol lew milk add one oupful of cold poridge or one-third cupful uncooked >ats, salt and sweeten to taste, flavor vith stick cinnamon, or, if preferred, idd one-half cupfal dried currants. Place i& a moderately hot oveu and lake two hours. When about half lone, Htir in the crust already formed, | ind it will form another sufficiently jrown. To bo served either hot or jold with whipped emni. ... h .. . . , . v . {' v TVtay They Lowt the Boat. "You know how the commuter hates to miss a ferryboat," said the woman, "and you also know how crowded the streets are leading toward the ferries at all hours of the day. Crowds of men and women, too, hurry over the crossings under the very noses ol horses, dodging the trolley cars pushing and scrambling in that eternal rush to get along and lose no time j about it. But the other day I saw a I regular small-Bized throng lose a boat | is a totally unnecessary manner. "Just as I reached the curbing on one side of a street that lay between : me and the ferry, I noticed a little ! line of men and women pausing non- i chalantly on the near side and in a j moment I saw what was the matter. j A funeral procession was passing slowly along with plenty of room be- j tween the carriages for folks to get across. But the folks thonght differently about it and waited for the last carriage to get by." "Did you go right on across?" some one asked the woman. "Oh,* well, I?well, I just waited, too," she said.?New York Sun. ? i / It's peculiar that the biggest expenses in married life are the little ones. The number of families living in one room in London cov. j 400,000. persons. f What do the ! Children Drink 7 Don't give them tea or coffee. Haye you tried the new food drink called GBAIN-0 ? It is delicious and nourishing and takes the place of coffee. The more Grain-0 yon give the children the more health you distribute through their systems. Grain-0 is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee but costs about \ as much. All groc?rs sell it. loc. and 25c. Try Crain-O!1 Insist that your grocer glvea 70a QBAIH-0 Accept no imitation. ?i???Mfmmrn??? II bW tancc axles, brass bashed robber head ^springs, broad cloth trimmtngs, lamps, curtains, sun-shade, pole or shafts; same as retails for |50 to *75 more than oar price. Onr price, 8110. exclusively. For 27 yeais we 1 VKI for the same money, or the sa: > Xo. 707? Extension Top Surrey with Rki ; double fenders, lamps, curtains, storm I &2Jt apron, pole or shafts; Is as fine as retails for i |30 more than onr price. Our price, 8SO. |j; Elkhart Carriage r without them. You will find al you will be well by taking? To any needy mortal suffering frosnbow, Sterling Remedy Company Anlotnoblllng In the Sondac. A regular automobile service has been established in the Soudan be! tween Kayes and Bammako. The trip : is made in five days. By this service ! the Senegal is brought into connec! tion -with the Niger, the district j passed through being one which had ! not been reached heretofore by water | or by railroad, on account of the j rapids of the Senegal and the mountainous mass called Fauto-Djalon, which separates the Senegal from the Nicer. Do Tour Feet Aclic and Bnrn? Sbnke Into your shoos Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or Dew shoes foel easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, 3wollen,Hot, Smarting and Sweating Feet lad Ingrowing Nail?. Sold by all druKt?l9ts led shoe stores, 25 cts. Sam pie sent FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. I. A Merino ram of Vermont lineage sold it the last cattle fair at Montevideo for *486. ; am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved nylife three years ago.?Miis. Thos. Robins, Maple St., Norwich. N. Y., Feb. 17,190J. Uncle Sam Issued 2,500,000,000 two-cent itamps in 1898. The Beit Preecrlptlen for Chilli rod Fever Is a bottle of GHOVB'B Ta8T*i.iM ^hill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine In i tasteleu form. No cure?no pay. Price 50c. About thirty cities In Wisconsin are supilied with water from artesian wells. Special Rate South* The Southern Railway announces one tare i he round trip on dutes named below for the I following occasions: Chattanooga, Tenn.? 'Cumberland Presbyterian Church, May 15-18: good returning May 36. New Orleans, La.? Travellers' Protective Association, May 19-21: good returning May 29. Atlanta. Ga.?General Assembly Presbyterian Church, May 15-17; Sood returning May 29. Charleston, S. C.?Naional Educational Association, July 3-8, 7-9; good returning September 1. For full particulars address Southern Railway ticket offices, 271 ana 1185 Broadway. Alex. S. Thweatt, Eastern Pa&senger Agt, 1185Broadway, New York. The pickpocket sometimes follows his vocation just to keep his band Is. W.L. DOUGLAS 83 &3.60 SHOES BMP 4B.Worth $4 to S<6 compared jm\ with other make* j /] \lndoned by over '--r- fl A CAI S 1,000,000 wearer. M ' tt I ixSlk( genuine have W. L. fcf7 < Vl < I /? DougW name and price /v I V\ "ft 'tamped on bottom. Taxe MHKl Jr I VU$ no aubititute claimed to be M mB as good. Yonr dealer A. Cfl ihould keep them m. ?JB not, we willMtid a pair on receipt of price ana tlWv extra for carriage. State kind of Jeatb?, ust ySjJiize, and width, plain or cap toe. Cat trw W. L DOUGU^ ?H0f CO., Brocktaa, Mast mmamam m TO R | that there Is money j"~ ! saved Id bqylnft I! direct Item (lie II Manufacturer^^- I The profits between the man- * nfacturer and consnnier are large. ^ We Save You these Proflls I ' : pri We are the largest manufactur- ****** l OM t\4 Vn)iI/>1A0 an/1 TTovnoaa in ttifl m vi a vi v vuiut^a nuu umiuvw * * * v*?w n lave conducted business on-this plan, me quality for less money than the dea ' We Ship Anywhere For Examination. "We make 178 styles bf vehicles j j I: and 65 styles of harness. This advertisement .^will ap- : : pear only a few times. You may | ,/ be reading the last insertion. r ? t Our large Catalogue ; shows every Vehicle and Har- j : ness we make and gives prices, gj j;, IT'S FREE. fjs \ and Harness Mam KHART, INDIANi a * m IB sB HB No matter how t health, good heal joyment. Bowel pains th in all oth yoo get a good through the blood of people are doctc 0 started with bad get better till the 1 1 4 ?i ? . \ now it is?you ! M / I suffer with a sligh \ Ky\( l\ij mouth mornings, j ll I r during: the day?! J) 11 V worse untill the I -rrl loses its charms, ai *^?3 lias been driven to bowels with CASC slightest irregulari natural, easy mov RETS tone the b and after you ha wonder why it is [1 your other disorders commence to j 2 IDEAL LAXATIV iDY CATHARTIC :1 troubles and too poor to buy CASCARETS i Chicago or New York, mentioning advertiser "v"' si 4 The Pinkham | Remedies *? for disorders of thm feminine organs have gained their great renown Ofl/I AMAtMHAfffi 00/n Aa. mmMMwm mmmm cause of the permanent good they have done and are doing for the woman of this country? ff all ailing or suffer* Ing women oould be made to understand how absolutely true are tho statements about Lydla Em Plnkham's Vegetable Compound, their sufferings would end a ' Mrs? Plnkham counsels women free of ohargem Her address Is Lynnp Mass Tho advioe she gives Is practical and honest. You can write freely to her; she Is a woman, V/rtfJdyfor8^? U A I Anil AUII i n 0. n miikiMniH(vnikk3?rcvcil Grippe and Liver Diseases. Q. KNOWN ALLDBIICCI1TI. VwCf Jjd in time. Sold by drcgglstg. EASON 1 V*. 81?Pneumatic Wagon with No. 1 ! 0 Inch Pneumatic Tires; 24 and 36-ln. S!?\ teela, foil ball-bearing axles, Bailey body af"?l fpa and shaft couplers, fine Whipcord irmftm minings and high grade finish; Is as fine a? Alls tar $76 more than our price. Our SAJ^l !ce,campletevrlthhlghbendshafca,8115 My orld 'selling to the consumer We give yo i better quality jgft ler, jobber or supply agent. r%gf F?. MX?Fancy Bugi^ with figured jljS* ish trimmings. It complete In every war tfjfcN I aa fine aa retails for (35 more than oar It 171 -n_ ce. Our price, with (halt*, #85, l^w factoring Go. || ?????? r VliVW pleasant your surroundings, 1th, is the foundation for entrouble causes more aches ard tt diseases together, and when dose of bilious bile coursing; life's a hell on earth. Millions >ring for chronic ailments that bowels, and they *ill never jowels are right. You know ndglect?-get irregular?first t headache?bad taste in the md general "all gone" feeling beep on going from fcai to suffering becomes awful, life id there is many a one that suicidal relief. Educate your CARETS. Don't neglect the ty. See that you have one rement each day. CASCAowels?make them strong? ve used them once you will ! that you have ever been jet better at once, *nd soon rw ww i ALL DRUGGISTS we will :end a box free. Address nent and paper. 421