Pistols and Cownrdice. There is nothing so calculated to make a confirmed coward of a man as carry- ing a pistol. —————— ong Hair ‘“ About a year ago my hair was coming oui very fast, so I bought a bottle of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It stopped the falling and made my hair grow very rapidly, until now it is 45 inches in length.”’ — Mrs. A. Boydston, Atchison, Kans. There’s another hunger than that of the stomach. Hair hunger, for instance. Hungry hairneeds food, needs hair vigor— Ayer’s. This is why we say that Ayer’s Hair Vu always restores color, and makes the hair grow long and heavy. $1.00 u bottle. All druggists. If your druggist cannot supply you, send us one dollar and we will express you a bottle. Be sure and give the name 8 of your nearest express office. Address, J.C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. i i TOOTH POWDER The best that Money and 25° Experience can produce. At all stores, or by mail for the prica HALL & RUCKEL, New Yonx. SPEED! A high-grads tire, to be worthy of its name, should possess four virtues — speed, easy riding qualities, ability to wear, case of repair, G & J Tires have all these virtues. When punctured, take off the outer cover, re- pair the inner tube and go on your way in a jiffy So simple a child can do it. Catalogue freez d&J TIRE COMPANY, ladianapeolis, Ind. ! $8.00 one ui we SUYS hest made 80 Lb. Platform Scales ever Sold. Well made. WILL LAST A LIFE TIME. FULL Size Platform. Catalogue free, JONES (ME PAYS THE FRE FHT MNGHAMTON, ¥ ¥ P NEW DISCOVERY: gives D OC S guiok rele’ and cures worsh of testimonisis and 10 days’ treatment Free. Dr. K H. GREEN §S0NS, Bex B, Atianta, Ga ish ‘In f every description Has ’ SCALES - isfaction Guarantesd, Write for prices JESSE MARDEN 8 Charles 3 ,BarTiwons, Ma Gold Medn! at Buffalo Exposition. McILHENNY'’S TABASCO | ADVERTISE IN THIS iT PAYS PAPER, UN U3. Ftaficted with Thompson's Eye Water $2000.00 GIVEN A Fustidivus Dog. “Yes,” said the manager of the defunct Uncle Tom's Cabin Company, “it was our dog that broke ip the show.” “The dog, eh? What was the ter with him?” “Too fastidious. You never saw such a hound in your life: You know the play, of course. We tie a piece of meat in the folds of Eliza's frock and that's what draws the dogs after her when she runs across the blocks of ice. Well, what do you think this dog demanded?” “Can't imagine.” “Porterhouse beefsteak, sir, and with the tenderloin left in! Yes, sir. How's that?” And you couldn't fool him. He wouldn't chase Eliza a foot unless the meat was a choice cut. No, sir. And, by gum, sir, our company had to live on liver and bacon so that blamed dog could have his steak. Yes, sir.” “The demand was too much for you, was it?” “No, it wasn't. That is it wasn't un- til he began to insist upon mushrooms with his steak, Then we just t up our hands and quit.” mat- hrew nic Dramatie Critlelsm. Two young men sat through the first act at a local theater, then adjourned to a neighboring tavern for refreshments, The acting was bad and would have ex- cused the use of stimulants by any but the players. When about to re-enter the building only one could produce his re- ack. all right” “You said he of the check remembe He's with nswered the “but he may have person the convincing } here and hasn't 3 i an poiite, ¢ other Against All Precedent, four 107 1 very A Beautiful Trait. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's uee of Dr, Kline's Great H. Krixg, Ltd Was probably Greek } , naphtha and Mre. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 28¢ a bottle Now VIMO DL they a grass-cutting au e in Piso's Cure is the best medicine we aver sel Wa, 0. Expsrxy, Vanburen, Ind, Feb. 10, 1800 first made in 1840. Their ens Were * to-day is 1,500,000 a year, inst when enough actual BN Potash 18 in the fertilizer, Neither guantity nor good quality possible without Potash. Write for our free books giving details GERMAN KALI WORKS, #3 Nassas Se, Mew Yark City PER DAY AWAY! Fa iug brands of our To appreciate onr offer, That wo are giving $2000.00 day for tags, to fix the sou. by imi desoriptio.s of will be farnish tors. Fall tage oo rEg ¥i EXHAUSTING SEED CROPS. It is the seed that exhausts the land of plant food. A grass crop that is al- lowed to produce seed tgkes more from the soll in mineral matter than two crops cut for hay while the grass is young. DRILLING OF SEED V8. BROAD- CASTING. The drilling of seed Is known to give better results than broadcasting. At Cornell University, when oats were broadcasted, the yield was thirty- seven bushels per acre. On another plot the seed oats were drilled in with an ordinary hand-wheel drill, the rows hoe between the rows, was sixty-one bushels per acre. This too much labor, but as a large area can be worked with a wheel hoe in a day the Xtra yield gave a fair profit. a wheel result with The to be ny seem THE USES OF FROST. Almost in every schoolboy country places knows that it needs a frost to ripen burrs, and the shells of the shagbark and other hick- ory wits and the hazel nuts. The same is true of the butternut and the beechnut, as well known in our markets, but much liked by the boys who ean find them. The value of these for food is scarcely it should be. They are almost cream, and most of them for be dried after The far. most excellent little value until it has week of frosty and the same f persimmon of the the chestnut not nuis appreciated as as ing well in them free, which makes jelly, is of but had about a nights and days, may be southern uneatable until it has makes the woked mash. wt when fee 1 4: late in the ev It is In t that the hens are kept is no better way than hustle for gra and Farm ening iportan and there have kind busy them - Home to in of some PACKING COMB HONEY IN SBC. TIONS. The demand for comb honey neat and clean sections of weight, ruther than the two-pound sec. tions that were used at one time. In Mins raising, or that contain pollen, the hon- Is made very low. Buyers do not want die it, because it must be cut out and weighed when In the fullsized frame, making a sticky, dirty job, with what seems like much waste. But no buyer wants less than a section that is sup- posed to hold a pound, and zeldom in- sists on seeing It weighed If it Is ovi dently just as the bees filled it. If so packed that the sections all appear nearly equally filled there is no grumb. ling or sorting over to find the best, and no lots rejected as not being as good as was bought last time or as neighbor Smith bought. Beekeepers who sell comb honey should remember this, but when the consumers can feel confident that the extracted honey is pure and unadulterated most of them will prefer to buy that. A few deal ers and buyers may be induced to try a cheap article, but they seldom want any more, and It hurts the sale for good honey. Better sell such at whole sale, at a low price, to bakers, con- fectioners and others who can use iit without injuring the reputation of good honey, : —————— THE WISE MULE, A man who has had much experi- s ence with mules says that measured by the standard of human wisdom, the mule has more Intelligence, in. stint, or whatever else you may choose to call It than the horse has ever shown, One of the best evidences of this is to keep out of danger and at this game his muleship has the horse “beaten by a mile,” In the jargon of the race track. You may drive a horse one of the Iligois training grounds, but you will never find this the case { with the progeny of the ass and the { mare. He 1s an excellent judge of his town capacity, and not only will he | stop when one attempts to drive him to an extreme galt, but he will back up in the traces, if Another thing, you may drive a horse into water, or fire, and he will never attempt to soldier or remostrate, but with the mule he will go nowhere that there is a chance of gettiug burnt, nor will he advance just as soon as he sets foot on soggy soll, or quickeand, — Horse World. also CORN AS A FINISHING FOOD, Bulletin 100 of the Department of Agriculture says: Bo long as a pig is making a fair gain on feed of which | he gets one-half by grazing, It is { usually profitable to keep him, but {after he reaches salable maturity, is in marketable condition, and draws a {large portion from the crib, he should | be sold at once, | Usually it is better have | ready for market as early as Novem: | ber, or December, and it rarely pays | to feed through the winter for making pork. Summer feeding is cheap, while | winter feeding is expensive, {rowed in the Spring should weigh from 200 to 260 pounds by Fall, and if the maket is not unusually depressed, it is better to let them go rather than feed to hogs ¥ in the If good # assured through the entire lower prices grazing | winter, and grain is not too expensive, rar spring. winter feeding Is sometimes ~ | | BERVANTS GROWING BCARCE. Mrs. HA. M.! Youmans, president Wisconsin State Federation of * of opinion that unless some radical] changes are made, domestic service | wili soon become so expensive that | only the wealthy will be able tc ge] cure servants. She states that the wo- men who are willing to undertake housework are becoming fewer every year, CARE OF THE HANDS, Before washing the hands rub ov thoroughly with a few drops of pv glycerin, which will remove stains a dirt. Then wash with a good to soap and tepid water. Also have a lution of borax always ready in a tle, und into the water you are g 10 wash In pour as much as will én it. If pegple would only use more and te it by dissolving in bolling witer, they would most cleansi@ig and that it kee skin soft. 3UT. IF NEED B JIBEDIENT. in Norway hav For FAITHFU many usually prevail in the Spring. but : dinarily I to breeding animals and the fall For last corn is undoubtedly the best which wholesome, is better winter the igs # the few weeks of ing feed, is 11 produces i ir of flavor, prime Hogs can be fattened cheaply on many meat good and other feeds, but the meat is modified by the feed consumed during last 8iX or elght weeks Feeding iil nore for the finish should n than ten r hogs are had feed to tage on few weeks of with of he year. of 2% and 1 3 t average upward ages for the year. e that no number will justify their needs less bushels 1 SACK Hh « ter, a | daily yalanced ration and. good | tary surroundings, there is little dan- | fecting them seriously A mere or three times a year to your hogs can- not be considered a guard against dis- ease, any more than one or two unor- | human system on a restricted kind of food for the same length of time. There is no substance in its natural harmful if free access is given at all | times or at frequent intervals, In the | mineral impregnation of cos! the hog gets a certain element that is known better to his own instinct and composi- tion for the beneficial results through mastication. 1 may be fooled and meet a gurprize some day in the shape of hog cholera in my herd by placing such faith if coal, but for the present I will make it the “battle guard” against swine dis- pase in all its forms until convinced of its inefficacy J. E. Haynes, mn Swine Breeders’ Journal. i Budapest's Fake Paims, There is a demand in Hungary for Florida prepared palms, according to a Siberian prison. The cynical John OF iver Hobbles has a childlike faith in a ccess, Eleanora Duse is sustained by tiny image of a hideous Hindu god which she wears as a charm. Amalie ssner, the miniature painter, wears a jwet rag and then sticking it back in- cik's favorite Arab to propitiate the hérsehair from the mane of some patrons will have detected a waiter what seems to him to be a graceful | small copper crucifix wrought in a of art.—Washington Star, i } ¥ 3 irawback « He night, ar wa i la. it COS month for Magazine, ON Two ant their neck claims thd them. M ing with { Harry B, i ani neighbor into the o en's pets One of when it years ago extraordn antelope some tw Wyo. T feeding t ter of th blizzard. tame, rest weny baby antd the hou couple o graceful ate as a the hous would co One 4 for HOOT telope on Injured dress its tame :