Kentucky loads the Southern States in the production of tobacco, with a crop of 221,880,000 pounds. Gratefal For. Help Derived From Hood's Sarsaparilla 44 1 am profoundly improved with the raed'- cal virtues of Howl's .Sarsaparilla. I was threatened with cancer, and tllsagree abl© eruptions on my back and other place*. The cancer was ajmeariuff on IUV lip. Provi dentially I obtained a bottle of Hood's Snrs'i parilla, and by the time it was gone, the bad symptoms had nearly all disappeared. 1 have used four bottles, and I believe it has Saved Me From Premature Death. 1 am now almost 7ii years of a*e and g irork like a titter. And I know that llood'H Sarsaparilla has had much to do with my vigor and strength." Kkv. o. 11. Power, X9SI Han over Street, Chicago, 111. HOOD'S Sarsaparilla CURES Hood' i I'll Initio tht; best ufter-<l timer l'ills, *£• ulst dlgc* ion, cure headache. 25 cents. "German Syrup" My acquaintance witli Boschee's German Synip was made about four teen years ago. I contracted a cold which resulted in a hoarseness and cough which disabled me from fill ing my pulpit for a number of Sab baths. After trying a physician, without obtaining relief I saw the advertisement of your remedy and obtained a bottle. I received quick and permanent help. I never hesi tate to tell my experience. Rev. W. H. Haggerty, Martinsville, N.J. • Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-ROOT *M. H. McCoy, Van Wert, Ohio. Acted like Magic! Suffered Years with Kidneys and Liver. LIFE WAS A BURDEN! Mr. McCoy is a wealthy and influential citi zen of Van Wort, and a man known for miles around. See what he says "For years I was a terriMn rufferer with Kid ney and Liver trouble, also ncrvoUM pros* t ration and poor lienliti in (reneral. I was nil run down and life a burden. I tried pnj fclciniiM and every available remedy, but round no relief. Was induced to give Swamp-Hoot a trial, which acted like magic, ami to-day 1 am entirely cured am! as good a man as ever. It is without question the re,: "' d > in tl,( ' world. Any one In doubt of this statement can address me." •».i "■ M CCOY, Van Wert, Ohio. Guarantee —T*pe conteota of One A' b AFt Bottle, if you hit not lieneflted, I'niff- S* \ v/ "' refund to you the price paid. v M lnvallit.' Oqlilc to Health** and ' Consultation Free. r ' Kilmer ,1' Co.. Biiifthnmton, K. Y. KO OT At SOe. or »1.00 Sine. Dr. Kilmer's Parilla Livet Pills AKE THE BEST I 42 Pills, 25 cents. Looking Better feeling better— better in every way. There's mSD more consolation in that chan well people stop to ponder. To back flesh and ( spirits is every- Scott's Emulsion of pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypo phosphites is prescribed by lead ing physicians everywhere for ail ments that are causing rapid loss of flesh and vital strength. Scott'* Emulsion will do more than to stop a lingering it fortifies the system AUAiKST coughs and colds. Prepared by Scott A Bowne. N. Y. All drupelets. Nature should jWwjMkjßftjH be assisted to gsaaaartfi" i throw off impnr'- CURES ties of the blood. MALARIAL ♦♦ jSTjiV'P.f.g^Ji * * • Po|S||N arsKcte LIFE HAD NO CHARMS. r r three year. I .11 troubled v. ith m«l>ri>l poison, *■l" fl C 1;' ft auvappetita to fail, and 1 W.ft greatly re duetdH Sesh. and lifelost.tll itachatms. I tried mer curtal.od,. H«lMr,li,V„l r.rifrrt, I could set no relief. I I>ottle«of ttii pr better health than ever. I. A RICE, Ottawa. Kau. Our book en Hlood ard Skin Disease* mailed free. 1 SwifT SfCCIHC CO.. ATi-AMT*. as. raOEDY FOR CHOLERA. A remedy for chicken cholera is as follows: Two gallons of water, one tablespoonful cayenne pepper, a lump of alum size of a hulled walnut, a small handful of fine cut tobacco; boil well together, then thicken with meal and bran, half of each; make it like thin mush. If any are too sick to eat, thin it and pour down their throats. It was never known to fail. It should be administered as hot as they can eat it, feeding a few times every fall at moult ing time, as it assists them greatly in regaining their lost plumage.—New York Independent. DRAINING HILLSIDES. Drain tiles can be used with profit in much hill land. Wet weather springs are a nuisance and often cause considerable loss in a crop when the water is allowed to seep through the soil below them. I huve found the ex pense of draining such land light, as the tiles need not be laid over two feet deep and need not be large. By con necting several springs with one drain the spring water can be cared for with one pipe, and the surface waters from rains will run off the land as usual. It is not always an easy matter to find the vein of water, but it is of course always at the upper edge of the wet spot, and when it is found a stone catch basin should be made to enable the water to enter readily. If the water passes below the end of the tile without finding it, it may seep through the sticky clay for a rod or more before entering, and the valve of the drain is partially lost. It is quite possible that thorough tiling of much hill land is ad visable in order to let the air into it, but as all cannot afford to do this the suggestion is that these fertile wet spots be relieved of the spring water anyway, thus enabling one to culti vate earlier and to grow a good crop on the spots that usually are either bare or produce only a stunted growth. —New England Homestead. BREEDING DRAUGHT HORSES. English draught horse breeders have given more attention to size, power and strength than any other breeders antl have the heaviest draught horses in the world. The Clydesdale breeders in Scotland were the first to start a draught horse stud book and they have made pedigree their chief cornerstone. French breeders have made action and beauty of form their aim. They care not so much for size and still less for pedigree. The Belgian breeders be lieve they have the model draught horse amd have carefully maintained their type for generations. The American draught horse is being evolved from these breeds with good, heavy draught size, with style and action to suit our markets. European breeders have been developing their model draught horse for a hundred years and have made the draught horse their national breed and the agricultural horse of all Europe. American farm ers, too eager for experiment and im patient for success, have tried all the breeds, have crossed and mixed them to their heart's content, and then di luted with trotters and coachers and find we lack the chief element—size. Let us now adhere to line breeding, to sires in the same stud book, anil grade up for a larger draught horse with size and weight in the collar, with all the beauty of form, style and action we can get, but we must first get size to make draught horses; thousands of our little grades have beautiful forms, but with 500 pounds more weight would make them double the price. Start now for that extra 500 pounds; try for the 1800 and 2000 pounds, and you will better appreciate the mistake of stopping with one or two crosses. Breed to the best pure bred sires and grade up to the top. Never sell a good mare, however tempting tho offer. Keep them to do the farm work and raise fine draught colts.—Western Ag riculturist and Live Stock Journal. NOT A HEALTHFUL SMELL. It is almost a universal belief in this country that the smell of manure is healthful. Becent investigation by the Board of Health of New York City demonstrates that such belief rests on a fallacy. Some English hygienists characterize "mews," as stables are called over there, as hotheads of dis ease. The Board of Health of New York City have been collecting statistics since July 1, 1892, on this subject. During the investigation 3596 stables were visited and their Banitary condi tion and the mortality occurring in 10,266 houses with a population of 241,670 people, including 33,325 chil dren less than five years old were noted. The houses were all within fifty feet of stables. The results are formulated on an estimate of 1,848,413 population and the figures are against the healthfulness of stables. The be lief that scarlet fever and diphtheria are fostered by the proximity of stables is borne out by the investigation. Whooping cough, that is generally be lieved to be beneficially affected by the stable effluvia, had the same mortality near'stables as elsewhere. The in vestigation proved that phthisis and acute respiratory diseases are de cidedly more fatal near stables than elsewhere. The importance of this in vestigation to farmers is to point out the necessity of care in placing their stables close to their dwellings. An other point is the recklessness of men coming direct from the stable to the house with their clothing reeking with the effluvia of their oontact with ani mals, thereby engendering disease for which there is no appreciable cause. The investigation points out in un mistakable terms the occasion for the malignant character of many disorders that have puzzled the medical world. Itß teachings are that greater care ihould bo exercised by all whose avo cations call them to stables, not to enter houses until they have been in the air a sufficient length of time to dissipate the odors that their clothing Absorbs in such places. —American j Dairyman. FARM AMD GARDEN NOTES. Quince trees do well at a distance of eight or ten feet apart. Remember, the Boil cannot be too deep and rich for asparagus. The pasture will be spoiled if the stock are turned out on it too early. Black hogs are supposed to stand the rays of the sun better than white. The Enhance strawberry is a variety that is productive, hardy and long lived. Weeds are the enemies of the farm, as dirt is the enemy of the house. Keep clean. The prize-taker is the name of a new onion which is very favorably re ported. In broadcast seeding germination is more rapid on rolled than on unrolled ground. Give sucking pigs a little sweet milk now and then. They will grow more rapidly. A rich, sandy loam, tinderlaid with gravel, with good drainage, is best for potatoes. Potatoes are said to shrink greatly in storing if dug before they are fully developed. If your fowls have the range of the farm and have access to fresh water they will need but little care. If weeds are too high for Rheep to reach to top, break them, so the top is within reach, and notice results. Sheep, too, have cranky ways that can't be cured. Make up your mind to humor them as much as your wife. Practical, successful sheepmen talk altogether too little, and those who know nothing practically say too much. Vegetables can be sown on the southern side of a fence some weeks before they can be on the north side. Go slow in turning cattle and horses out, and await the drying of the sur face and a better growth of the herb age. Thin, old and feeble ewes should not be required to raise lambs. It is as much as they can do to live them selves. Cows should never be allowed to suf fer from thirst. A constant supply of fresh water should be at all times ac cessible. Potatoes are worth one-third as much as corn in nutritive value. The price determines the question of feed ing them. In hot weather sheep lay in the shade during the heat of the day and feed after the sun is down. Humor this notion. If yon mean to sell spring chickens sell them in the spring, not in the fall for eight or ten cents a pound and lose money on them. Wherever wheat can grow rye will thrive. It is a more hardy plant than wheat, and not so liable to be affected by changes in the weather. The high prices for hogs last winter are likely to injure the farmera Everybody will goto raising them, and tho bottom will drop out of prices. Don't stop tho winter ration ofl short as soon as you see the first glim mer of green grass in the pastures. There is not a great deal of nutrition in the very young grass. Because bright timothy hay and oatt are the best feed for horses it does not follow that they would not like a change from it sometimes, or that they would not do better for such a change. The farmers who are successful are those who never lose sight of the fact that the farm is the home, that every thing done toward beautifying and im proving tho place is enhancing its value. A soil well prepared prior to plant ing, sound seed, clean and level cul ture—these are the things that bring good potato crops. Wly3n all these are observed, and the bugs kept off, there is not often a serious failure. It is poor policy to always sell the best animals. Good stock to breed from, a good dairy co*v, a good farm horse, will pay you t own, as well as anybody else. Keep the choice and utilize their wholo earning power at homo. A first-class tomato must have the qualities of earliness, good size, smooth and cylindrical shape, solid texture, productiveness, freedom from black rot and cracking about the stem. The Matchless is said to combine most of these points. When you turn a horse out to pas ture take off his shoes and give the feet a chance to spread and grow. It would be a great benefit to the horse often curing severe cases of lameness. If the shoes are left on, the horse will probably become lame. Horse radish starts to grow very early, and is always left in the ground over winter. If the green shoots are allowed to appear the quality of the root is injured. The root should not be allowed to grow a second season, as it will be tough and fibrous. The previous season's plants should be all cleared away and new ones set. Acidity After Eating. To correct acidity after eating, let a bit of magnesia the size of a large pea dissolve in the mouth and swallow it. The acidity has everything to do with spoiling complexion and temper. The face is the index to the condition of the internal economy. Lime water may be beneficial for poor digestion, or licorice drops, or a third of a tea spoonful of baking soda in a half a glass of hot water, flavored with tincture of cinnamon, which is a good stomachic in itself. These should be tried to see which suits. It is often best to alternate these simple remedies for the same case.—St. Louis Star- Sayings. The whole of Manhattan Island wa* purchased from the Indians for sixty Dutch guilders, "some of them," it ii said, "being of a doubtful metal." HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. APPIxK-MERINGUII FIB. Fill a lined pie dish with stewed ap ples and bake till done; or, line a pan with paste, pare and quarter three or four nice tart apples and spread on the paste, sprinkle with two tablespoonfuls of sugar and small bits of butter; mix one tablespoon of flour, one teaspoon ful of essence of lemon or lemon juice, two tablespoonfuls of sugar and three or four of water, pour over the apples and bake till they are thoroughly cooked. Then spread over the pie a thick meringue made as follows: Beat the whites of three eggs to a froth and sweeten with three tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, flavor with vanilla, and beat till it will stand alone; cover the pie three-quarters of an inch thick with it, and set back in a quick oven till it colors a deep golden brown. The pie as made above can be served with out the meringue, to be eaten warm with sweetened milk or cream.—New York World. STRAWBERRY ROLLS. Sift one-half pint of flour into a bowl, add half a teaspoonful of salt and a teaspoonful of sugar; rub a tablespoonful of butter into the flour, the more thoroughly the better, and add a heaping teaspoonful of baking powder; stir until all the ingredients are well mixed. Beat one egg with out separating, and mix with one cupful of milk ; add gradually to the flour in the bowl, and roll into a thin paste. Brush the "lady lob" sticks with melted butter; cut the dough in to strips one inch wide and ten to twelve inches long, wind the dough strips carefully around the sticks. When they are placed in a pan ready for baking, brush down the centre with egg (white and yolk mixed), sprinkle with sugar, and place in hot oven. Mash one pint of strawberries for six rolls, with four tablespoonfuls of sugar. When the rolls are suf ficiently browned, pull out the sticks carefully, and stuff with a goodly quantity of berries. Sprinkle with powdered sugar, and serve hot with cream.—New York Observer. VEGETABLE SALADS. Vegetable salads are among the most acceptable dishes that can bo prepared for a spring or summer repast; they tempt the appetite and impart a flavor to the rest of the meal. While the art of making and serving them is very simple, care should be taken in their preparation. The dressing for a variety of vege table salads is the same, yet different flavors may be delicately added, always being careful that one does not pre dominate over another. It is very important to have only the best ingre dients, as wilted vegetables or inferior seasoning will not make good salads. The quantity of oil to be used is rather difficult to decide, but two tablespoon fuls to one of vinegar is the usual pro portion for plain dressings, while more is required for mayonnaise. Lettuce salad should be dressed only with oil, vinegar, pepper and salt. Salads are rendered nmcli moro at tractive when prettily garnished with fresh green leaves, vegetable blossoms, rings of hard-boiled eggs, sliced lemons, and fancy designs cut out of radishes, beets or turnips. The dressing should never be added to the prepared vegetablo until ready to serve, when the salad should be stirred as little as possible in order to retain its freshness. The vegetables best suited for salads are lettuce, asparagus, dandelion, celery, cauliflower, water-cress, beets, string beans, cabbage, potatoes, cu cumbers and tomatoes.—Harper't Bazar. I I HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Cold tea cleans grained wood. Matting should be washed in saH and water —a pint of salt to half a pai) of soft water. A mixture of two parts of sweet oi to one of turpentine applied with 112 soft cloth polishes furniture. French chalk wet with cold watei and applied for twelve hours will re move grease spots from wallpaper. To clean mahogany, wash it witl warm water and soap; then apply bees wax and sweet oil and polish with cha mois. Air bolsters that can be inflated t< any size or allowed to be as limp anc flat as a broken football are the coolesl cushions for warm weather. They cos* about SO and can be as elaborately cov ered as one pleases. To sweep a carpet in weekly clean ing, mix a quart of cornmeal with o little water, slightly wetting it. Aftei spreading it over the floor, sweep vig orously. This will brighten the colore and clear it of dust. To clean and destroy grease spots on paper use gasoline on the affected part; with a soft cloth. It is surprising how rapidly the stains will disappear, and the paper will assume an aspect quite fresh and new under this treatment. Chijimi cloth, the popular Japanese stuff that has been selling in bine and white patterns, comes now in soft grays, heliotropes and pinks at the original price of fifty-five cents a yard. It washes perfectly and makes light summer curtains, cushion coverings and draperies. Gilded frames can bo cleaned by gently wiping them with a fine cotton cloth dipped in sweet oil. In the sum mer when flies are troublesome, wash the frames in water in which two or three onions have been boiled. This method will not deaden the gilding, but will insure for them a good lustre. To remove grease stains from carpets mix two ounces of ammonia, two ounces of white castile soap, one ounce of gly cerine, one ounce of ether. Cut the soap into small pieces and dissolve it in one pint of water over the fire, then add two quarts of water and the other ingredients. This should then be mixed with more water in the propor tion of one teacup to ono ordinary sized pailful. A Small Fortnne in Apricots. A. E. Newby will make a small for tune this season out of Ventura apri cots. It is said that he bought 200 tons, for which he paid sls a ton, or say $30,000. He will make tons of dried fruit, worth $240 a ton. After making expenses he will doubtless clean up $30,000 or $40,000 out of the venture.—Ventura (CaL) Free Press. Diversions ot an Empress. Prom "The Empress of Austria," by ' One of the Ladies of Her Court, in Harper's Magazine, we quote as fol lows : During the entire summer which fol lowed her son's marriage the Empress seemed unable to shake off her melan choly forebodings, and it -was only when she went to Godollo that the free and invigorating country life in a meas ure restored her peace of mind. Every morning she attended mass as early as five o'clock, and after drinking a cup of black coffee without milk or sugar, she mounted her horse, and accom panied by one of her ladies-in-waiting, galloped off through the magnificent park, which is traversed in every di rection by broad, sandy avenues. Changing horses several times in the course of the morning, she would re main in the saddle until noon, after taking a cold bath, she would sit down with her lady to a simple lunch eon, consisting of very rare steak, dry toast and a glass of Montrose claret. Towards four o'clock her majesty again went out riding, returning only just in timo to dress for dinner. It is useless to say that ten or twelve weeks of such a life were sufficient to exhaust the forces of the strongest lady-in-waiting, who, moreover, was obliged to be per petually on the qui vive, impervious to fatigue, and always in the best of humors. The Empress used to retire at nine or ten o'clock, and then we were accustomed to assemble in the private apnrtments of Countess Goess, the Grand Mistress of the Robes, and to remain there until two or three o'clock in the morning, laughing, chatting, smoking cigarettes and even sometimes dancing with the aides-de camp and gentlemen-at-arms an duty at the castle. The Empress's affection for her ladies-in-waiting very much depended on their skill in horseman ship. To those who rode well she was exceptionally kind and indulgent, but had no sympathy whatever with those who were not perfect horsewomen. A ({iicer Way ot Advertising. A queer way of advertising wares has been created by a Sixth avenue taxidermist who occasionally has real live things to sell. Last Friday while walking past his shop I perceived a stuffed alligator in the window with a sign in his mouth to this effect: "You can have my little brother for $5, and he is 110 fake." I stepped inside, and sure enough there lay a livo allegator with its most salient feature, the mouth, wide open catching flies.— New York Advertiser. Don't Deceive the Children. Beware of trying to deceive children. How often must parents be taught this lesson ? "Why, mamma, you've got a gray hair in your bang!" "Yes, dear. That came because you were so naughty yesterday." "Oh, mamma, what a naughty little girl you must have been to grandma I All her hairs are gray."—Demorest's Monthly. The Scotch herring fishery is now the greatest in the world, employing 12,000 boats and 100,000 people. Our Cent fioltl l'nprr Pep Bolt. * Kin<*. 2cts., Ilcts.; emhosHori, 4cts.; Ingrain. Five Cents; mild border le. a yard. 100 Sam ple*, nil prices for 2c. stamp. Rked, Wall Paper Jolilwr. Rochester, l'a. To CI en n»r the Nyatein Effectually yet gently, when costive or bilious, or when the blood is impure or sltiKKUh,to per manently cure habitual constipation, to awak en the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity, without irritating or weakening them, to dis pel headaches, colds or fevers, use Syrup of Fig*. J. C. Simpson, Marquess, W. Va., says: " Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me ot a very bad case of catarrh." Druggists sell It, 75c. .Mornings--Beecham's Pills with a drink of water. Beecham's—no others, 3S cents a box. For Pneumonia, no other cough syrup equals Hatch's Universal. 25centaat ilriigglsts. If afflicted with sore eyes uso Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle. Irfights to ftjll. It-wim itt 5&i% ayd (to n^( "' C^queit>f? R SWAY'S** READ! RELIEF. cvan AMD riltlKTl Cold*, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joint*, Lumbago, Inflammation*, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Frostbite*, Chilblains, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CUKF.BTHE WORSTPAIIfS In from one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR Alter reading this adver tlaenient need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. ! Belief u a Hare Care far ""'■'V.'V,', That Instantly stops the most excruciating pain*. at Ihvb Inflammation, and cure* Congeatlona, whether of the Lunga, Stomach, Bowel! or other gland* or or gaua, bj one application. A half to a t. ii«i«ionfnl In half a tumbler of water will In a few minute* cure Cram pa, Spaama, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Nervouaneea, Bleepleaaneea. Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Dyaentery, Colic, Flatn lency and all Internal pain A. There la not a remedial agent In the world that will cure Ferer and Ague au<T all other Malartoua Blllouaand other ferera aided by RAD WAY'S gysjjlp- <!»*«* «» KADwiY g HEADY Fifty centa per kettle. Meld by Dragglata. BK gpn TO B«T RAD WAY'S. _ An agreeable laxative anflNrar* Tomo. BoldbrOrusKifta or aent by mail. 36a, Mo. and SI.OO per package. Bam plea free. VA HA The Favorite TOOTS KWVWM wk\J H.W for the Teeth and Hreetli.sßo. The True Sardine. Sardines are a small fish of the her ring family that are caught in vast quantities on the west coast of France and to a less extent along the shores of Portugal. Their flesh is very delicate. The sardines are salted or preserved in olive oil or butter and put up in tin cans for shipment to all parts of the world. The larger-sized sardines are calle 1 celans in France and pilchards in England ; their shoals are preyed upon by codfish and especially by por poises. Little fishes of many other genera of the herring family are called sardines, among them being the ' 'Span- I I There pre a 0 | | # few people left \ who still follow antiquated methods of raising $ £ bread, biscuit, cake and pastry with home-made * i mixtures of what they suppose to be cream of J tartar and soda, compounded haphazard, | :J | but there are very few | The best housekeepers use the Royal Baking $ 5 Powder instead. Its scientific composition insures ft | uniform results. By its use alone can the finest C | flavored, most wholesome food be produced. To jjj | any housekeeper who has not used the Royal Bak- •?' £ ing Powder we would like to send our Cook Book, * | free. Mark your request "For instruction." | Royal Baking Powder Company, * x 106 Wall Street, New-York. | I Do You Know That Thero is Science in Neatness. Be Wise and Use x SAPOLIO I THE KIND I THAT CURES! || WESLEY BTKRRY, e Morrlrtown, N. Y. ■Kidney Trouble for 12 Yean, U Completely Cured. Sdama Samapabilla Co., fli Mebkm i—For year* I have been badly afflicted with Kidney Trouble. Two years ■■ago I had "La Grippe," which letticd in sray back. At tiiuo« It wa« hard work for me to tot is around. Laat Feb. I had another attack of ** La ■Grippe," which left me 10 bad I coul<l Stmrdly set aeroaa the room. Our mer g chant adVived me to try a bottle of " DANA'S IB BARSAPAMLLA I did so, and have token three bottlri of.SAR -BAPARILLA and one bottle of DANA'S PILLS, and I am COMPLETELY CURED. So trouble with Kidney at no back- M achej (rood appetite, ana 1 never felt bet- d tcr In my life. You may publish tht» if you wi»h, =5 aa every word || MorriMown, N. T. WKStEY STERHY. S Gknth —Wo ore peraonally .fqnalntcd with Mj fl| Story, and know nil statement! arc true. - : Beapwtfullr, A. 112. aC. F. McNKIIX. mj Dana Saraaparllla Co., Belfast Maine, if ODITDC PIIDCn iA ' v " tOH circular ■ UllntbUntUJ. J«. Klein. Belleville,X. J NY N D mgm MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS ISl* WITH 11 THOMSON'S M || SLOTTED mm^m CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only * hummer needed to drive •nd cilnrh Ihrm easily end quickly, leaving the clinch absolute!/ smooth. Requiring no hole to be mnde In the leather nor burr for the Rlveta. toty are ■lrani, leuk and doreble. Millions now In use. Xll lengths, uniform or assorted, pat up In boxes. Ask your denier for Ihena, or eend 40c. In stampe for a bra of 100, assorted tlsee Manfd br JUOSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO.. WAWHAM. mam. WORM WIGHT AND DAY r « Hok!« the worst nip- H ***•* ©••* un <ai clrcumntanrnw. HL V R ir«« H t AMUTURT, A Jf. ■£"**• h New Pat. Improreneai 5* m # Illuit Oat. and rule* tot M*4l\ f-measurement seourelj ieal«d. O. V. Bourn Mfg. iTooo,ooo^i^ a A Dn.ITH RAILKOAD COMTAKT In Minneeota. Baud far Map* and Circu lar*. Tbey will be sent to joa FREE. Addrene HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Ooaunieelone r, St. Paul. Minn ish R»r<line" of tho West Indies. Th« menhaden, a little fish caught in great quantities on the coast of New Jersey, is called tin; American sardine. It is put up in oil and marketed as a sub stitute for the genuine sardines first uhove described. But many of the so called American sardines are Tile things, preserved in cottonseed oiL— -Bt. Louis Republic. Ilats for the summer of nearly every sort, and as variously trimmed, arc to be worn. And the most extraordinary combination of colors appears in tho decoration. with Past*"*. Enamel* and Paints which stain who hands, injitro the iron and burn rod. The Ilinint? Sun Store Polish Is Rriiliant, Odor less. Durable, and the consumer nays for no tic or glas* parkAg* with every purchase. jLTinnimanjuiiißmiJin^ | C -o x'ou ; leep Peacefully ? H 5 IN THE2 5 MAD STRUGGLE 5 J i»r wealth, do not lose sight of the fact tbai J nei rss Is not worth the price paid for It, If It ha.«* U H'.etii obtained at the expense of your health. H , j The eFfence of wisdom Is first, health: second, JJ C moderation; third, wealth. To have health you £ I 3 must hove sleep. To have xleop )uu only need e J | PILGRIM I fsPRINC | 5 BED, | ? which Is the highest attainment of tne 3of t>ed*makiug. □ U it in made from Highly Teimiercl Steel Wire. U His the PERFECTION of EASE, and will last r r l SLIFETIME. Beware of cheap made commo 3 l wire imitations, for "they are not what the; > C Exhibited at No. 31 Warren Street, New York, C r No. 2 Hamilton Place, Boston. 3 For sale by all reliable Dealers. 3 L See Brass Tag Registered Trademark on allt p Genuine Pilgrims. H H ifend for Money Saving: Primer, Free. Jj J Ailnn Tnck Corporation, Jlovton. J L WARF.HOUHK.s-Boston, New York, Philadelphia,C p Chicago, tynltimore, San Francisco, Lynn. pi S FACTORIES —Taunton, .Mass.; Fairhaven, Mass.:"J C Whitman, Mass.; Dux bury, Mass.; Plymouth,C J Mass. J I C3T Send 6c. in *tamp» tor ioo>page I I illustrated catalogue of bicycles, guns. I I and sporting good* rf evcrv description. I I J.hn .. Ar~. W.| W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE H<3Vttp. Do you wear them I When next in n6ed toy * pair, they will give you more comfort and servic for the money than any other make Best in .© WOlid # ♦ 5.00^*^3.00 MJOJB \*?, S !L ' 43 50 550 » *2.00 *V. BP*^«l r8 " UWf# ♦2.50 *^ ,^Js2.oo ♦2.25 T. m. *1.75 .. _ M ft jk/mmi ron BOYS W. L. Douglas Shoes are made in all the Latest Styles. If you wan* u fine DRESS SHOE dn'i pay $6 to SB, try my $3.50. $4 or $5 Shoe. They wilt fit equal to cus tom made ar.d iook and wear as well. If you wish to economize In your footwear, yoa can do so hy purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes. My name and prteo Is stampeid on the bottom, look for It when you buy. 1 ake no sub stitute I send shoes by mall upon receipt of price,' postage free, when Shoo Dealers cannot juppiy you. W. h. DOUQL.AB, Brockton, Hail. Sold br INVKXTOHH or anything made of wood financially or otherwise to patent or place on mar- Vet. Adilreia Wm. Mattlson, J". O. Box SlI'J, N. V. O Anailll Morphine Habit Cured In lO IIVIIIHto 20 dura. Sn par till eared, tf » lUffl DR. ) STEPHENrf. Lebanon.Ohio. II CoMtiwptlvei and peooie ■ B .tio-iar. weak cinn or Ann ]■ ■ rm. ihonld nsr 4*ieo'.Cnr» tot Bf ■ ~m,.uinpti«n. ft e«re4 ■ ■ tkoa«M>«a. It M' not Injur ■ ■ad unt ft la rot bad to taka ■ ■ It la tba boat «cm«fc rrt'm- B
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers