S———————————— The Od One of good deal delights in te x onttace who runs in a day's drive oi "Si arp as a tack,” mer ‘Always some one tries te and then he can get and in fewer words th: heard talk 1 saw a Man Got Even. man come from the city. He i but was feeling his opened up on ing, ‘Hello, circulation a bump on a tion g the andlora granda ‘your Don't set ai log. I want accor tor man and beast.’ ‘Where's the man? chap in a flash.” Oat 3 by frame Of id Ie Say i, ge nd here nmoda Desperation. Aunt Dinah—H folks in Alabama has made three st deide inside of Aunt ow? Aunt shoat, tried to vote.” Ruth—] Di binlen KRIUKCOU DO YOU FEEL LIKE THIS? Pen #1] am nervous well inch in mv whole body I weak at mj 1 and have gestion horribly, and ion of the heart, and | am This headache backacl me, and yesterday I nearly had ics; there is a weight in the of my bowels down all time, and pains groins and thighs: I cannot sleep. walk, or sit. and I believe I am diseased all over ; ne one ever suffered This is a descrij cases which « attention daily 1» inflamed and ul- crated eondition the neck of the wom¥ can produce all of these symp- *icture for Women, 80 there is not a am so alpitat losing flesh . ss} and nearly bear the do. ition of thousands of wry Mus. Jonny WiLL: AMS should allow perfection of absolutely no poz. illiams « has been entire and misery by Vegetable Com- of Mrs toms, and no woman herself to" reach such a misery when there is need of it. The trait in this sketch, Bnglishtown, N.J., cured of such Lydia E. Pinkham's und, and the guiding Pa— of Lynn, Mass No other medicine ha for absolute cures cine is ** just as good.” want a cure should in Lydia E.. Pinkhun pound when t! Anyway, writ ham at Lyn your trouble WEATHER WISE | / / OTHERWISE! W HY DON'T YOU WEAR subje t of our Mrs. © illness advice ‘h a record her medi- * AND KEEP DRY?) BEWARE or IMITATIONS. LOOK BCR AX ABOVE TRADE MARK | CATALOGUES FREE Showing Full Line of Garment i Landi AJ.TOWER CO. BOSTON. MASS 5 | MASS. £0 A ne, ne po Spring Cleaning Made Mueh of the terror of avoided by proper weather shoul lected for v supply of all ned de d urtioles Ivory Soap will he found beat for 1 winds and Moos: ¢ n moking the Varker Unsy. pring cleaning ma preparation, Fettled } td bog the work in itishyrmicwa house clean a: weep of about a quarter of fa en made by several Eng mpanics A gentleman w i » above amount gid not agree tives Accordingly he pur. al annuities, but made a bad for only a week elapsed be- purchase of the last annuity of the gentleman, Thus the money g into the insur- collers., lis relatives get insurance © i sessed ti ith chased | investment, tween the | and the death whole of the ance companies’ nothing. his rel sever Mo ———————————— Hach package ol IPoTNAM FADRLESS Dyn 'olors either Silk, Wool or otton perfec tly it one b roiling. Sold by all druggists, According to recently published tics Berlin possessos now more te.ephones sialis than 50,300 like the w than tne queens o The wi wre smaller orker bees, r males. RCT Wasss, How: ¢ Thies, red Dollars Reward Any case of ( 1 that cannot be curad by Hall's Catarrlh Cure F.J. CHENEY & Co., Props. Tol the undersigned, have kr i153 ye We offer On lie last srable in i Arry out any obliga- i in made by th firm, | WEST& TrUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Tolede, : y io, a. ALDING, & Manvrx, K INNAN Wholesale be Th ‘0, Austraca there wn or every 109 mn If You Mave Dyspepsia 1d no mone Dr. Sho P. Racine, Box 14%, for six bottle if Dir, Shoe raf{ive; e Press pas . If cure 1, &, 18 is pay §o be The Am~ Are the groatesi ' Many cases have boon « small doses of Crab Or ricom People Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup fo gums, re ires wind colic tion, allays pain, « r of igesti IML RIWA YS 1tti Frutdd Noah's Deficiency. oC nation in the world. for the full name, AS Label with Red Centre Panel, | BLUE Our 160 page illustrated cata. logue. FREE the trap, Winchester Factory loaded shotgun shells, “NEW RIVAL” “LEADER,” and “REPEATER.” A trial will prove their superiority. tat pares od ap a TEE i paore 1 he 4 iicosiug price world for will not UNION MADE, with ho » Donglne, lv FERTILIZERS VERSUS CROPS The use of commercial fertilizers hi prevented the falling off in the ages of staple crops in the East, yields of which were decreasing every year, duce sufficient manure on a large to retain its fertility, and more fer- tilizers should be used. FERTILIZING THE SQUASH. Such crops as squash, cucumbers and melons should have all fertilizers ap plied by broadcasting over the of the ground. If manure it will also give good results into the soil, although well-rotte« in ] is will ass SOIL. FOR surface applied if work- is ed manure plants at FOOD FOR BEES the we fly, meal When bees gron ither Is warm give them wheat or for id corn the smother them CONVENIENT ftanti oe governed choice GRADE seems to De that MOTHERS when who have herds by the use have ceeded better have tried to effec SPECIAL CROPS One of devoting that he is more which often without ma produce at less coat he might put 3 ue o & things as he § tO use at home ys them sald f ir if he We wuld grow his own supply of of garden vegetal and produce his if not his seem again much time to variety fruits, anid eggs It may devote vies and small own pouit iy and butter grain to acre of on f or as much as to but work, most of us have to, for profit there is in it, and there are few things on the farm that will pay better for the capital invested and la bor done than a well- ~cared-for garden and poultry yard.- American Culti- vator. milk § » #t the an gardens as Ur of Eva acres to the three cowa, an wr rye bo WOrk of ain, hens or of gr fifty care we tho A HOUSE FOR SIXTY FOWLS. I am planning to build a hen-houae 10x36 feet, divided into three pens, each 10x12, each. five feet rear, 50 that twelve foot of lumber will work without waste. Shall double board this with three-fourths inch hemlock boards, with paper between, also paper roofs ing, Bhall have either one full win- dow or two half sliding windows in each pen with a three-foot door, open- ing outward. 1 expect to keep the doors open nearly every day and when shut at night It will be warmer than If there ware more windows, Will lay the sills on a stone foundation and fill in with sand or dirt for a floor to be kept well littered with chaff. Shall sell off or use for the table the hens in one pen every spring and ise that pen for chickens, disposing or the roosters and keeping the pullets, or 25, in the same pen to avold the Menity of changing them around. The xt year clear the next pen and so on, keeping none I will have one male pen and use the eggs =. 100 feet of three only for seas over years in the sitting It oneaed beat hem nails and inzgide fixing i cost to ith New up $50. Ed Engl ! and ome WEEDS Ww 5 edd should in the ARE OF BOME BENEFIT. are everywhere, Their pres cause alarm. They choke field, annoy the gard- in the meadow, spring roadside, rob cultivated ence the wheat thrive up plants injure the crops by and shading, make the difficult, while value as food Yet they orough cul A new ar by the nutriment, clean of do- are of of seeds ost for most weeds cme he frequent which nefit, for induce th more and tivation helps crops ival of weed watch been removed, The end longest and it to the top when The 1 on a diagor ed against a tree with a saw #0 that when one for end, | have and one-half at t half at the After planing the sides and taking a shaving off fr orners and sandpapering to the holes plac split side is reversed two pieces one end one other om the remove slivers, ah bored wit Inch lower mild good extensio none t those nes i a holes are too end, bu seven-eighths or even three juarters for the last two or three. My all been m from the butternut tree, and they are lighter than oe have ade butt of a Strong yak In working out the have them larger in the ends. The rounds hould fit snugly in the holes at both ends, so that when the ladder is finished it will be almost like one solid plece. 1 al- ways eplit the ends of the rounds af- ter they are all in place and sawed off and thea drive in hard wood This makes the ladder feel very firm and stiff. It should not be 1ecessary to say that the wedges must 80 sel as not to strain the wood lengthwise of the grain. The bottom rounds should be the longest and grow shorter to the top. Made In this way, it will stand more firmly when In use and be easier to place on end. To make it still more secure, the end rounds and several between should be well pinned with hard wood ping driven into small holes bored with a bit. Such ladders, If kept painted and housed when not in use, should last one a lifetime. ~<A. W. Cheever, in New York Tribune. rounds enough and much rounds 1 would the middie than “4 al he Last Survivor of a Famous Wreck. J. Jolinson, who died recently in Liverpool, was the last survivor of the famous wreck of the Berkenhead, the troopship that went down in Simon's bay In February, 1852, when only 184 men out of 633 got to shore. The troops stood drawn up under arms on deck till the ship sank. THE OLD-FASHIONED KIND BE HAD NOW. Prices Charged That Would Haya Made Qur Crandfathers Stare New Fashions in Oranges - The Season's Fruit Supply ~Hot House Peaches. “If you mind proprietor caters NOT TO want a rare fruit expense, buy apples of a retail New York's “Hothouse to trade, strawberries I give you can't get fir price "Some of them first, they and they rot at ti The are { my look haven't while you but hem and the wow we sell a : Tie good they but then one ought not of ther, after the trip have make. You know we get them from Cape Town, South Africa They come hy way of England, and we sell them for $10 a dozen. “Pretty soon hot house peaches will in from Massachusetts, and sell as low as 85 or $6 a dozen. “Grape fruit is fine and cheap this season, and pineapples are unusually good. The pineapples are cheaper than they used to be, too. You can get a good one for from 50 cents to $1. The early strawberries are another out-of. season fruit that is finer in quality and lower in price than it was former- ly. ilorida berries that used to sell for $1.26 a box are going for 65 cents a box r and they are much larger hothouse peaciies as should be this season. to expect much they to in come berries used to be. some proposition this winter. They have been shrivelled and small and tasteless, yet they have brought big da and are worth 75 cents a pound. “Asparagus is. plenty. The green hothouse asparagus from 111i nois is worth $7.50 a dozen bunches, hunches, bunch. you know, “Mushrooms? seems to have gone to raising mush- rooms lately. The market Is flooded with them. ply. But after all, the price of firat- class selected mushrooms hasn't dropped. They are still worth 81 a | get the Ho pound all mali Hig A Desing fou cr the nore NEW USES FOR Machinery Invented to uzbie Produ men Lave meas Ww ande the the were alte of Jews in the Roumanian Army No Jewish soidier in the Roumanian Army to a commis sion, however brave and loyal he may be. The saying is that as long as he is with the flag he is a soldier’ When he ceases to be he becomes a Jew again. Even If he enlists for a second term of service he does not, like others who do 80, earn a pension thereby. An army surgeon, if he be a Jew, and the best surgeons In Ronmania are Jews as a rule, only ranks as a common sol- dier, whereas his professional inferiors rank as officers. No Jows are ad- | mitted into the military schools, and, however high the scholastic or Unie | versity distinctions and grades of a Jew, he has to serve as a “ranker” for three years, instead of being let off as a “volontaire” with one year's service. Such is the treatment aceord- lod to the 30,000 Jews belonging to the active hrmy and reserves of the Rou- | manian State.—The National Review, The Man's Way. When a man finds a woman for | whom he thinks there's nothing good | enough he asks her to take him. Philadelphia Record. &ix rich bachelors, of New York City, are going to erect for thelr exclusive | occupancy, at an expense of $400,000, a gorgeous aps=t=ant establishment, | Now York evidently needs a bachelor Lax can be promoted
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers