A Largo Fruit Farm. One of the largest fruit farms this Bide of the Kooky Mountains, accord ing to a recent bulletin of the West Virginia Experimental Station, is tc be found on the foothills of the Blue Ridge in Jefferson County, of that State. In 1887 Becker Brothers set out 33,000 peach trees, since which time eight adjoining tracts have been added, until the fruit farm comprise* 2400 acres in one body. The planters have not stopped with peaches alone, but they have a large area in grapes, quinces and cherries, besides Americar and Japanese plums, apricots, Japan persimmons, nectarine, English wal nuts, Italian chestnuts and paper shell almonds.—Chicago Herald. Clarence Smith, private secretary tc Collector Hendricks, of the Port ol New York, proposes to organize » society to be composed of men who art or have been conspicuous as private secretaries to leading officials of tilt Government. Among those who have been asked to join are Secretary oi War Lamont and General Horace Porter. The latest record-breaking time be tween Bombay, India, and London it thirteen days. Hall's Catarrh Cure is n liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly on thu blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Writo for tes timonials, free. Manufactured by F. .1. CIIKSEY & CO, Toledo, O. Beecham's Pills instead of sloshy mineral waters. Uoecham's—no otliers. cts. a box Hatch's I'niversul Cou«b Syrup is a Positive cure fur Croup. cents at druygists. it Is Not What We Say But what Honfl's Sftrsaparilia DOBS that tells the story—Hood's Cureß Mtsa Lizzie May Davis , Haverhill, Mass. After the Grip Nervous Prostration —No Help Except in Hood's "Have been sufTeriuK for 2 years past with Nervous Prostration which was brought on by a very severe attack of grip. Had Cold Chills almost every day for nearly 8 years. Have now taken, on tho recommendation of my druggist, 3 bottles of Hood's Sarsaparllla. What 5 doctors of both Boston and this c!ty oould not do, those 3 bottles of Hood's Sarsa parilla have done for me. I ani now well an»l Hood's partita Cures ran walk without a cane. I feel grateful to Hood's Sarsapnrilla, as I believe I should cot now be alive if it were not for tiiis medicine." Mtss LIZZIE MAV DAVIS, Haverhill, Mass. Hood's Fills net easily, yet promptly and etß cicutly, ou the liver aud bowels. cents. ' An agTeenble laxative anfl NBHVE TOKIO. Bold by Druggists or sont by mail. 35c., 50c. ana SI.OO per packo;?o. Samples freo. ITA VTA Tho Favorite TOOTH tOWBW By IS. for thu Teeth and Breath, 25a. "August Flower" Kiglit doctors '.rented me for Heart Disease and o'ic for Rheumatism, but did me no good. I could not 'Bpeak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stonirch distressed me. I could not sleep. I had taken all kinds of medicines. Through a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green's Aug ust Flower and took it. lam to-day stout, hearty and strong aud enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life and gave me my health. Mrs. Sarah J Cox, Defiance, O. ® Unlike the Dutch Process iNo Alkalies her Chemicals are used In the preparation of r . BAKEIt & CO.'S reatfastCocoa which is absolutely pure and soluble. lias tnorethan three times e strength of Cocoa mixed ith Stare.;, Arrowroot or i&ar, aud is far more eco nomical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED. Sold by tJrorern everyirhr re. W. BAKER &CO., Dorchester, Maw Wr. Coridn & Co., Owego, Tlojq &?%'. V about to •Kpcrien'o painful order! Jm7 attendant vycn Tn © n t, losf.e ti jf, km I both mother :* ■:t pRADFIELO REGULATOR CO.. ATL.T-T. CI. T.ATK CABBAGE PLANTS. It is not necessary for a crop of lute cabbage to start the plants in a hotbed. Make a place out doors as rich and mellow as possible, sow the seed in drills rather thinly, and cover nights to keep in the heat. It is very im portant to make a rapid but stocky growth. This may be done by putting nitrate of soda in the drill row and transplanting each plant once if not more times before finally setting it out where it is to make a head. Plants thus treated are worth double those grown closely crowded in the matted bed.—Boston Cultivator. GROWING TOTATOES. To grow potatoes, select the best soil you can get, avoiding ground that is liable to overflow, clear off all tho trash, and if the ground is not very rioh apply a good dressing of well rotted manuro and then plow as deep as you can. Then harrow until the soil is in good condition. Then as soon as danger of frost is past plant for early crop. First of June plant peach blows. When ready to plant take a plow and run deep furrows three and cno-half feet apart. Cut your potatoes in pieces, one or two eyes to the piece, drop eighteen inches apart in these furrows, one piece in a place. Then take a hoe and cover, putting an inch of soil over each piece. Cultivate as soon as tho plants aro well up and keep filling in the furrows, and you will not be troubled with weeds in tho rows and will not need to do any hand weeding. Cultivate once a week till they bloom.—New York Observer. THE cow's CCD. The cow's cud is a quantity of the food that is brought up from the first stomach after the food has been swal lowed and tho animal is resting and has time to remastieate it more com pletely. Between the first and second stomachs thero is a receptacle about five inches long and the size of the gullet. A portion of the food is pressed into this part of the gullet and is brought up into the throat and mouth, where it is chewed slowly. This food may be seen ascending the gullet when the cow is ruminating. The cud is not any distinct thing, ns some suppose, that may be lost, but is simply a por tion of the food which comes from the stomach in the way described. When a cow is said to lose her cud, nothing is lost or dropped, but by reason of indigestion the action of the stomach is suspended, and it is restored as soon as the trouble is removed by any simple medicine. The most effective is a dose of a pint of raw linseed oil or melted lard.—New York Times. FERTILIZERS AND COW-rEAS. The manner of properly treating and applying fertilizers is yearly receiving more consideration among farmers. On this subject the Georgia Experi ment Station tells Southern farmers that the best results can only bo ob tained from concentrated fertilizers by using them on tho best lands, and not by scattering them at the rate of 100 or 200 pounds to the acre over a large, worn-out plantation. Nor should the mistake be made of applying large amounts of concentrated fertilizers on worn-out land. Tho larger the appli cation the more important it becomes that tho land should be in the best pos sible condition, such as it would havo been left in by a good crop of small grain, with thorough and deep plow ing and harrowing. Tho practice of sowing cow-peas is strongly urged for renovating the soil and for hay. Nitrogen is the most im portant element of plant food because it is indispensable to the plant and is deficient in all worn or partially ex hausted soils. It is the most uniformly effective element of a fertilizer for all grains, grasses and cotton. While the most expensive, if bought in the mar ket, it may bo drawn from the air by cultivating such plants as clover, pea nuts, vetches, burrclovcr, lucerne and especially the cow-pea, which, if prop erly utilized, will be more valuable to the Southern farmer than red clover has been to tho farmers of the North and Webt.—New York World. BREEDING BOWS. A sow that is a good breeder should be kept for several years, or until she forms somo bad habit, of which unruli ness and eating her young aro the two that give most trouble. When the sow gets her full growth her litters will be larger, healthier aud more uniform, often without a single titman. In the first litter, especially, if the sow be a young one, there will be two and sometimes as many as three pigs that are either dead at birth or aro so un dersized that they are not worth rais ing. A three or four-year-old sow, farrowing two litters of pigs a year, will often give moro profit than an average cow, and not cost so much to keep nor so much labor to care for. The chief care with a breeding Bow after she gets her growth is not to let her get too fat. She will have an enor mous appetite, br.t it should bo satis fied, except when she is suckling her young, with the coarsest feed. Skim milk is good, but not too much of it. With this mix bran or fine middlings, and then let tho bulk of tho feed be roots, beets or rtangels in winter, and a rr.n in the aprio orchard or a clover lot in BBEiicce.'. ! r f allowed to run in pastv.ro ono w two seasons old sows be come oreasiy, breaking through fences and s'ates, an 1 going where they pleaso. Tfcat is tne fault for which most of them hq-.T to bo fattened.—American Cultivate". ELECTRICITY IN AGRICULTURE. Attention has recently been directed to the application of electricity to farm ing operations, and the designing and introduction of suitalilo dynamo-elec tric machinery for this purpose would no doubt bo profitable both to the manufacturers and the farmers. Early ?u 1892, an electric power system was installed at ihe farm of the Agricultural Esperinieut btutiou, Auburn, Ala.., the current being brought from the college laboratory by a line three-quarters of a mile in length, conducted by the stu dents themselves. A ten horse power motor was used for ginning and press ing cotton, thrashing grain, cutting up feed stuff, etc., and gave entire satis faction. In every community where there is water power, electricity could be economically generated and used not only for the above mentioned purposes, but also to run saws, planing machines, pumps, lathes, grindstones, cider presses, sorghum mills, churns, sewing machines—in short, for everything re quiring power. What farmer would not welcome the exchange of smoky lamps for electric lights ? The arc light may also prove useful in market gar dening, some recent experiments made in France having shown that it has a marked effect in stimulating plant growth when sunlight iB not to be had. Where sufficient water power is not available, windmills might be used in connection with a system of storage batteries. Such a utilization of the wasted energies of nature would put off the coming of tho coal famine that threatens future generations.—lnven tive Age. CULTIVATION OF WILLOWS. Inquiries are received concerning tho culture and marketing of willows for baskets and other goods. Notwith standing the basket willow does well in this country, five-sixths of the quan tity consumed is imported from for eign countries. Tho prevailing opinion that only low land is suitable for willow cultivation may be the cause of so little attention being given to it. Low land is best, but high land is good. It is certainly far better than land where there are stagnant pools or too much water. For the growth of willows the land must bo treated similar to that in tended for the planting of corn. It must be plowed in the fall and loosened up in the spring. The field must be kept free of grass and weeds. The willow cuttings are planted in rows twelve inches apart. Tho rows should be three feet apart and a culti oator and hand hoe used to keep down the weeds. Tho plants are cuttings from two to three year old Willows which are cut one foot long, measuring three-eighths to one-half inch in thickness. With a stick or iron rod holes are made in the ground and a cutting introduced so that ono or two buds remain above the ground. The first year only a few sprouts will spring from each cutting. Every year in March the switches are cut close to the stem before the sap shoots into the plants. Tho switches are tied in bundles about ten inches in diameter and placed in two or three inches of water, remaining thero until tne latter part of April until tho sap has risen and small leaves and sprouts have appeared. This sap loosens the bark which can be removed very easily by being drawn through a wooden fork similar to a clothes pin. Willows must be dried in the open air. They are then bundled to weigh about fifty pounds per bundle. About 30,000 willow cuttings aro necessary to plant an acre. The willow reaches the greatest production in the third year, and with proper care and good fertiliz ing it will continue to yield good re sults for many years. Dry peeled willows are worth five to eight cents a pound, and green willows with the bark on them are worth SI 4 to »18 per ton.—Farm, Field and Fire side. FARM ANI) GARDEN NOTES. Pigs should suckle till ten weeks old. Tho flock enjoy summer as well as winter comforts. Have a syringe handy when the foal puts in an appearance. Are there wast places in the pasture ? Give them a coat of manure. There are family traits and like nesses in sheep as much as "humans." No, no ! "Everybody can't be a good shepherd ; they ain't made that way." Salt and wood ashes in reach of hogs aro beneficial. Good for horses also. Never refuse a good cash offer when you have anything of the horse kind to sell. Many a man is a success as a wool grower and can't tell why to save his life. Feed oil and cotton-seed cake. It is best for sheep, for the farm and for you. One thing can be relied upon about sheep manure—thero are no weed seed in it. A few short, sharp brushes dovelop speed much faster than miles of slow work. Have some pasturo held in ease you need it further on when dry weather comes. The neglect givcf) the chicks now cannot be overcome with good care by and by. Make your flock what your wifo is— the best, prettiest, and tho envy of everybody. Health, comfort, neatness are the things to be sought when building a poultry house. Is your experience that cooked or soaked corn is better than dry, hard corn for hogs? Little chicks enjoy fresh water to drink. Give them some, even though you provide milk for them. Soft coal oinders and charcoal from wood or cobs shouldbe among the "ap petizers" kept on the hog's bill of faro daily. Tho aluminum sulky, weighing from eighteen to twenty-five pounds, is said to be coming along with the two-minute trotter. Minnesota has passed a law making it a criminal offense to dock a horse's tail according to the hackney senseless and cruel fashion. If you are raising chicks for the eggs they will lay don't keep the cockerels till fall, sell them as soon as large euvugh for broilers. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. WOOLEN APRONS. Woolen aprons are recommended either to cooks or other women who are constantly about a hot stove. The aprons may be made from a light weight, loosely woven woolen, and are certainly a wise precaution against those accidents from lire that happen every few days. At the large stores there are ready made woolen petticoats, the cheapest of which are fifty cents, that may be cut open and used for aprons. They need only be used for cooking and ironing, and the gingham apron used at other times. Washed in water containing a little ammonia, they are as easily cleansed as aprons of cotton. —New York Post. SPRINGTIME GREENS. Spinach is one of the springtime vegetables that should stand near the top of the list in healthfulness. But it is seldom properly cooked. It should bo thoroughly, perfectly freed from sand and dust by many washings, in cold water, and then putin a close saucepan and covered closely, without one drop of water, over a moderate fire. In an hour or more it will be perfectly cooked; then it should be drained and chopped, and butter and salt added. The old fashioned way was to almost drown it in the liquor from corned beef—and thus half its nutriment and medicinal properties wore lost, and the other half so disguised that the luscious leaves might just as well havo been cab bage, or any other sort of "greens." Young beets and the "foliago thereof," are considered line by many; but wo have been told, anil found it true, that if tho leaves aro held up to the light, looked through and examined, so much life is seen between the outside and the lining of them that no ono will care to oat "beet greens" thereafter. Our own eyesight is generally convincing.—New York Independent. HOW TO COOK A STEAK. This is tho proper way to cook a beefsteak : Tho first requisite is to get a steak that has been kept long enough —the proper time is two months. The very sight of this as it comes from the refrigerator would effectually deter any woman from buying it, for it is covered with a repulsivo mold and looks as though it were fit only for the garbage wagon. Tho butcher and the beefsteak expert know better. Tho sides and ends trimmed off, meat of a dark, blood-red color is dis closed. This should bo sliced about two inches thick, tho end known as waste cut off, leaving tho solid tender loin and sirloin. The trimming of a porterhouse takes about one-tliiril its weight. Reduced thus, the steak should then be liberally seasoned with salt and pepper. A test of tho con dition of the steak is a pressure of the finger. If it is tender the impression remains 011 the moat. Prepared thus the steak is placed on a common broiler and putin tho gas stove, the flanio of which is above and from one and a half to two inches from it. It takes about twenty minutes to cook such a steak—ten for each side. It should be cooked slowly, for the meat has just come off the ice and take? time to get hoated through. The dripping-pan beneath catches the juice that used to fall in the coals and burn the steak. The juieo is afterward poured over the steak, and its saving is possible only by the gas stove. This manner of cooking steak is being adopted by *ll of the best restaurants in New York. Besides the charring of steak by coals and dripping grease, the heat cannot be kept uniform under any other sys tem than gas. Natural gas is considered the beet.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. RECIPES. Strawberry Custard—Make a custard of one pint of milk, the yolks of throe eggs and four tablespoonfuls of sugar. Set it aside to cool. Beat tho whites of the eggs until stiff, add to them four tablespoonfuls powdered sugar, anil beat again until stiff and white. Put about a pint of strawberries into a glass dish, pour over the custard, heap tho whites in spoonfuls over the top, dust with sugar, place in the oven a moment to brown. Serve ice-cold. Strawberry Dumplings Make d dough as for short cake, roll into a thin shoot and cut with a large round cutter; put three strawberries in the center of each round, fold the dough over so that you have a neat dumpling. Stand these dumplings 011 a buttered plate, place them in a steamer and steam twenty minutes. Serve with a strawberry sauce. Meat Turnovers Stew tho dry, tough portions of cold roast beef until tender, letting the water stew nearly all away. Chop fine, and mix with it twice as much hot mashed potato, and te each cup of the mixture add a tablespoonful of green tomato pickle, minced fine. Add salt to taste, and moisten with meat water. Shape into flat, thin cakes, brown in sausage fat, and turn when brown on one side. Noodles for Soup—Beat three eggs well without separating, add three tablespoonfuls of milk and as much flour as tho eggs and milk will mix; roll out as thin as possible, cut into strips and dry half an hour. Boil for twenty minutes in plenty of boiling, salted water, drain dry. Brown deli cately in a frying pan with one table spoonful of butter. Tripe Lyonnaise—Cut up half a pound of boiled tripe into neat squares. Put two ounces of butter and a table spoonful of chopped onion in a frying pan and fry to a delicate brown ; add to tho tripe a tablespoonful of chopped parsley and a little strong vinegar, salt and cayenne; stir the pan to prevent burning. Cover the bottom of the platter with tomato sauce, add the con tents of the pan and serve, A Pocket Life Line. Lieutenant Brunei, of Dieppe, France, in 1874, introduced a pocket life saving apparatus, of which over 3500 are now in use in France, where they save on an average 285 lives an nually. Tho apparatus consists of a small wooden float with 100 feet of stout cord wound about it. One end of the cord is attached to a small but efficient grapnel armed with four small hooks. Tho whole thing weighs only five ounces and can be sold at a profit for half a dollar.—New York Adver tiser. The United States have about 1700 different and distinct railways. Attacked by Wild Hogs. J Charles Stoll ' a pioneer settler of Hungry Hollow, lie is only forty-seven years of age and there are many resi dents there now who are his seniors, but he was the first man to turn the virgin soil of that prosperous section of Yolo County. During all of Mr. Stoll's residence in Hungry Hollow he never experienced a more thrilling adventure that oc curred to him last Tuesday. Arming himself with his rifle he went for a hunt among the chapparal and under brush that abound in the neighboring hills. He had not proceeded far before he started up a drove of wild hogs. At first he imagined he had aroused a den of bruins. The hogs made a vicious attack, and drove Mr. Stoll to tho boughs of a tree. Not until he had killed three of tho brutes did the rest take to cover and permit him to descend. He returned to his home, secured tho services of a hired man and a wagon and returned for his game. Arriving nt the scene of his adventure, ho was again set upon by wild hogs. Of course he was safe in the wagon, but the horses were not only paralyzed with fear, but liable to be crippled by tho vicious attacks of the hogs, so Mr. Stoll concluded to beat a hasty retreat and leave his game to be devoured by vultures and wild beasts. —Woodland (Cal.) Democrat. The Traveling of Roots. Nature gives a curious instance of the traveling of roots. While a coun try house was being demolished it was noticed that large quantities of vege table fiber adhered to parts of some of the wulls. Further scrutiny revealed the fact that tho root of a wistaria had entered tho dining room by a small chink of the window near tho ceiling, and on removing the paper from the walls the whole of the plaster around the room was found to be covered with a fine net work of rootlets. The most singular part of the discovery was that not a trace of the intruding growth was visible on tho paper inside the room, which had been constantly in habited.—Chicago Record. London devours every year 400,000 oxen, 1,600,000 sheep, 500,000 calves, 700,000 hogs, fowls innumerable and 9,800,000 gallons of inilk. Brighest Part of My Trip. The New York fa»hion correspondent ol a Southern paper gives out the following : A lady writes : " I have read your letters for a long time, and have often envied you the opportunity you enjoy of seeing the beau • tiful things you describe. I used to think, when I read of those charming dresses arc\ parasols and hats at Lord & Taylor's, that theirs must be one of those stores where a. timid, nervous woman like myself, having but a few dollars to spare for a season's outfit, would be of so little account that she would receive little attention ; but when you said, in one of your letters a few months ago, that goods of the same quality were really cheaper there than elsewhere, because they sold more goods in their two stores than any other firm in New York, and that because they sold more they bought more, and consequently bought cheaper, I determined, if I ever went to New York, I would goto lord & Taylor's. " That long-waited-for time came in the early autumn, and I found myself standing before that great entrance, with those won derful windows at either side. I summoned mv courage and entered, as 1 suppose tens of thousands of just such timid women as I have done before. My fears were gone in an instant. The agreeable attention put me at my ease at once, and I felt as much at home as though I were in the little country store where my people have ' traded' for nearlv a quarter of a century. " And now, as 1 wear the pretty things 1 purchased, or see them every day and find them all so satisfactory, I think of my visit to this great store as the brightest part of my trip to New York." Dangerous Game. Ralph J. do Mayne, tho English hunter of big game in Africa, when in San Francisco recently on his way homo from India said that he thought the American grizzly and an infuriated ele phaut were more dangerous than u lion, but that the charge of a rhiuoo eros was the most dangerous of all.— Chicago Times. Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 60c andfl bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS 112 THOMSON S mi SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. Ho tool* required. Only a hammer needed to drive •ml clinch them eaally and quick Ir, leaving the clinch abeolutely amootb. Hequl.tng no ho:e to be made In the leather nor burr for the RlreU. Tber are Mreai. tough and iurakle. Million* now In uae. All lenitthv uniform or aaaorted, put np In baxea. Aak your dealer Mr Itieaa, or eend 400. la atuape tor a box of 100, uaorted slaea. Man'ol by JUDSON I. THOMSON MFQ. CO., WALTHiM, MASS. " IHVINTORf of anything made of wood aaataled ■ financially or otberwli* to patrol or plae« on roar* keu Address Wrn. H-Ulsou, 112. V. Jlo» 817», >.K.C. What the Phonograph Will Do for Music. C iced"' ts power of musical re productioi means of wax cylinders, which are bt.m cheap and lasting, the imagination may tun riot without ex hausting the field opened before one. Besides giving musical pleasure past computation to the million, it will do wonders for the musician. First, it will offer the composer a means of in dicating his wishes concerning time and expression compared with which the mentronome and all printed direc tions and expression marks of the pres ent aro but the clumsiest of make shifts. Secondly, it will become a 1 Be on your Guard. I ® If some grocers urge another baking K powder upon you in place of the "Royal,'' i it is because of the greater profit upon it. || This of itself is evidence of the supe 4, riority of the "Royal." To give greater m $ profit the other must be a lower cost j£ ® powder, and to cost less it must be made Hy H with cheaper and inferior materials, and |$ thus, though selling for the same, give ||> ® less value to the consumer. $ To insure the finest cake, the most |> ® wholesome food, be sure that no substi |, tute for Royal Baking Powder is accepted >■. 1 Nothing can be substituted for | | the Royal Baking Powder | 1 and give as good results. 1 MBS. MII.LY FERGUSON, Troy. N. T. The follow!nit tribute to DANA'S pow&r over OLD CHRONIC COM PLAINTS, wan sent nn by Urn. Groom of the well-known "GROOM'S PHAR MACY," 129 Congress St., Trou, N. Y.: Gentlemen I have been troubled with LIVER COMPLAINT. (OXSTI I'A TIOX and DYBPKPMA (or u long time. I employeil the beat Doctors In the city; they tola me 01(1 Chronic Complaints were bard to rare. Their medicine did ine no good. 1 stopped taking it and bought n iKitele of DANA'S BAUSAPAKIL- I.A. Before I hart taken half of It I felt better. I have taken three bottles of DANA'S S ARS APARILLA! anil am better than for years. IT 11 AS DONE WOXDEHN FOR HE. I can vat anything I want and It does not distress roe in the least. Your* truly, Troy, N. Y. MBS. Ml' LY FERGUSON. lAHA SARSAPARILLA C 0„ BELFAST, ME. N Y N U—*l | |Do You Slesp Peacefully ! . ' \ "Business is; the art of Living; {l,y I uyijitr and selling. 90 men must get J # money by it. It is it pity so m»ny fail to 5 112 r.'<> that honesty is the best policy. Call- J Jin things what they are not is a wrong in * t every way, delusive and dishonest." 4 { What advantage can there be in calling J t a common wire imitation bed as good as a * ' Highly Tempered Stool Wlro J [PILGRIM (SPRING BED? \ » The buyer is sure to find out that it is * j not. Such dealers are sure to lose caste J {ant} custom. The "PILGIIIM." is the# | best bod made. SEE IT, and you will be J j convinced. I £ Exhibited ftt No. .11 Warren Street, New York; £ » No. 2 Hamilton Place. Boston. # 9 For sale by all reliable Dealers. £ t Hoe Brass Ta« Registered Trademark ou ull J Z Genuine Pilgrims. J p Send for Money Saving Primer, Free. i | Atlas Tnck Corporation, Boston* { J WAREHOUSHS —Boston, New York, Philadelphia, J C Chicago, Baltimore, San Francisco, Lynn. S | # FACTORIES—Taunton, Mass.; Falrhaven, Mass.; a # Whitman. Mass.; Duxbury, Mass.; Plymouth, # 112 Mass. J ■iPiieiAMJOHN W.WOBKIS, ncnaiuni Waihlnfcton, D.r. WoSuccessfully Prosecutes Claims. ■ LatePrlncipal Examiner U.S.-Ponaion BtiFfau m 3yrsiula«»t war, 15adjudicating claims, atty since. S4OOO 110 ME for each applicant; rich, heathful Texas. ED. ANDERSON (CO. TreasK Austin, Texas. ■ Plso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the ■■ Best. Kaslest to T'se. and Cheapest. 60c. ET. Bazeltlne, Warren, P*. gj n_Pfl II • I viffiianco is tne prion ut uowiy" xtolu iour-ier,-Brea aepre. CTLII MA I dators and would-bt tespoilers of your lawm, unleal (T ]Lll I■ HI protected by a t-l =jTEEL< hm\l h'Minfc- MA y m>*M|UiiU' i t Or do Utjsiness? ' , Send .i postal caul to receive free a tfioSt ,* , unique prospectus of the greatest business and , , money making bonk ever published, by Nath'l , C. Fowler, Jr., the eminent business expert, , Jwith introductory letters by Col. A. A. Pope, founder of American bicycle industries; Gen. 112 C. H. 'l'avlor, the great daily paper publisher 4 B. T. Williams, the leading shaving soap , 112 maker; C. J. Bailey, the f.uiums rubber brush , l manufacturer; J. K. Pitclier, Gen. Man. U. S. , , Mut. Accident Assn.; Arteuias Ward, of , "Sapolio"; M. M. Gil lam, Ad. Writer for , , John Wanamaker; J. F. Place, Rochester < t Lamp Co. ; O. Uiardot, Treas. Franco-Ameri- , ! can Food Co.; E.G. Hubbard, Treas. lurking I Soap Mfg. Co.; Franklin Murphy, Pres. 9 , Murphy Varnish Co.; A. O. Kittrcdge, Editor ( l Business; W. L. Douglas, the pioneer &3>oo j I shoe man. The Trade Company, Boston Mass. j I iifMi Jp.U;.-'' -1M ®S?t9" .m i :WfiSSl@9 JPBB Tho IS ami < ami I'ced Cooker Combined. Compietest of outfits for a ia'ry farnr.:r. Th:, machine hss an attachment which, when the bowl has been taUenout, isdroppeil into the Separator so that a be'.t can run to the churn. Writs for further o-.riiculars. J -vis fl ltantln Rlclg. and Mfq> fio.. 240 t.) S3l W. i-alce St., Chicago, 111.. Manufacture all kinds of Creamery Machinery and Dairy Supplies (Agents wanted in every county.) any one donbta that we can euro the moat ol>- BLOOD MISOM a C TV ■ paitlcularH and Investl tin »nolal backing ij 9:00.000. When mt*rcnr>-, io>!ide potaasinni, surhiip »rllla or HotSpriags fall, wn pru-.rantoo a euro—nml our Ma -io 1 yphllena Is the on!y thing thnt will euro permanently, P sitive rroof uont sen*«d. free. Coo* KKMKUT Co., Cbloigo, Ul. Illustrated Fubiication#, I I hi MH Idaho. Wubingtco and Onsen, ttvi FREE GOVERNMENT" | AND LOW PRICE | I ft|f|*■ jffl. LANDS ay Tho best Arricultuml, Orwing and Timber Land* now open t > evttlevs. Mailed FREE. Addr«a« »H. U. I.ASBOKN, I. < N. 112. 1L It., St. »*•*■?- Garfield Teas; CorauUnun savM gortj™ 1 BIIU Bam pie tree. Oabi >ei.d Tea Co SMW .«4thSUH.X. Cures Sick Headache GOITRE CURED AIIIHSfI Morphine Habit Cured In 10 OPIUM &*?