It is Knitl thftt on nn nverago every ohuiupagni' ei»rk in utilized for threo ueparnto bottles before it «ets broken or thrown aside ns UHCIPSH. Kuglisli waiters get about fifty eeutn a pail for tlienf from tlio manufacturers and twenty-flvo cents a }>nil for HOIIII water Corks. When N'nlure Needs nsnlnlnnee it m»y l» lw«t «<> render It promptly,>mt one should remcmlior TO MHO oven the most iwrfcct remedies only when needed. The !<>'»! iiml most simple and gentle remedy H the Syrup of Flits manufactured bytlieCnll l'urnia Kin s\ rnp en. ncnfueia Cannot be Cured liy lnrnl Application*, as (boy can not rencli tlio diseased port ion of Iho ear. There is only one vrny t«> euro DeafiicK*, and that in by constitu tionfil remedies. l)eafno*n Is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous liniiiK of tlio Kustarhiaii 'lube. When this tube gets in limited you have a rumbling sound or imper fect heiirintr. and when it Is entirely closed Deafness is tlio result , and unless the ititlam matlon can bo taken out and this tubo re nt ored t" its normal condition, heurinu will be destroyed forever; nine cases out ten are eaiised by catarrh, which is nothing but un lu llunied condition of the mucous surfaces. We will i:lve One Hundred Dollars for any ease of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that eau not lie cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Seud for circulars, free. _ „ , , F. J. OtTKNKY & Co., Toledo, O. Si?" Sold by DruggUts, 75c. A Uciiuliliil Moiivrnir MIMIIIII Will be sent with every lottle of l>r. l/orlt'i I,rluln ironii Curt, ordered by mall, jost paid. . R io els. Addres-I. lloxsie. HnlTnlo, >.'. V. Beechnut's Pills with a drink of water morn inn?. Heci-ham's-no others. 3S cents a box. Sure throat cured at once by Hatch's Univer sal Coimh svrup. :.'5 cents nt ilruwists. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaao Thomp son's Kj c-water. DriiifnUtasell at 'Sir p< r bottle. Eating in Haste At, times while serving as constable and deputy sheriff brought on dyspeptic trouble, although 1 was natural- S |y healthy. Klght 1 months ago 1 com- IdlBK menced taking Hood's '-''B9? 112 ' '"arsiipatllln. It has \W. * ? [ cured my dyspeptic L) I troublo and set me I-Jh- " V J J hack in my age about VjjH NT l" t, '>'" years. I advised cH x^l' jgg 11 olhers to take llood's jftigjltiimfrL I Sarsaparilla and they * now rejoioo over the Mr. Sluinnvay. KOO ,i ..jtoct. It has had upon them. My wile had suffered from severe headache<, general prostration and loss of ap jietite. She has I ikon two bottles and her head Hood's s v> Cures 1M now free from pain and slio Is enjoying ex cellent health and renewed btrongth." S. Siii'Mwa v, Webster, Mans. Wet HOOD'S. Il»np|;vf Cough and Asthma. For ionsumfi* , /»' •ith' sno rival; has cured thousands where II other* i« 'td will cure you if taken in time. Sold t y I'rui{gi«ts on a guarantee* For Lame R-.ik or Chest ua Slin.OFl SPLASTER. ascts. CJULO H/S/% CATARRH O^^bulMP^Remedy. nave you Catarrh / Tlilsr. rnedy is irimriin teed tu cure JIU I'rice £Oct». injector free. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies -OK— • Other Chemical* are used at tho xJsS preparation ol W. BAKEIt & CO.'N jj , Breakfast Cocoa Itl i which in ah»ointi'ly EM ' r |4Mtv nmt Bolubie. > ! | U lias imtrt than three timet hiui .j, ArrawriNit of i.oiuicai, costing 1 1>* than one cent u CHfu It I* deltt lous, nuuft»hliiK, and MAdILV l». t Sultl »»| bfuor* rtri)«li»r«. W BAKHK & CO., Duruhvttor, Mut Old Time vl Methods « of tn-atinu' CoI tl hand Coughs were rk n lui'i don the n|4 pit-.on, NN c now know lLy that '■ fet»linu a told i* good doctrine. Sciiti's Emulsion of tod liver oil with hy|>o< j)li< >1 lint 's, .1 lit 11 fat-food, lUH > til' lllir I Htul'lioui cotll4h wlii ii oidiiwtry 11it «li mi ha*' i nit ii ri. i mi to i.>L ; ( any to ditf«-si. Vour slrenvfll»^ VVCif »" '• i/i • / I'll! ifIUIW *t»Mt to MEASUREMENT OP HAY IN A STACK. Hay settles in the stack quite slowly on account of the elasticity of the grans stems. It is a matter of guess work wholly how much it may settle, but in a month it may settle one-tenth in the height of the stack and more slowly after until it stops. New hay stacked twenty-four hours only will weigh more than a ton for 100(1 cubic feet; after a month tlie weight of a ton will be about 000 cubic feet.—New- York Times. MI'LES Foil FAIiM WOHK. The mule is useil much more than the liorse in the South, probably in part because Southern laborers are not to be trusted with the more spirited and valuable animal. A Southewi planter mentions iim advantages of mules over horses: Tlieir feet are smaller, so they injnro the crops less when working in them, and can be used in closer rows than horses; they are less liable to disease, are better feeders, being less fastidious as to what they eat, endure hardship better, are not so easily injured and are steadier to work at the plow. The experience of most Northern farmers with mules is that, however serviceable for work on the farm, it is less pleas ant and less safe to work among them, (iood horses are none the worse for the farm, because they require better j care than the mules will put up with. —Boston Cultivator. RAISING CALVES. A calf to each cow can be raised on skim milk and a little additional food. A calf may be fed skim milk when one week old, with the addition of one gill of boiled flaxseed, increasing this ra tion gradually to a pint per day when four weeks old, and then adding fine middlings or corn and oats ground to gether, or a pint to one quart of oats uugrouiid. Flaxseed gruel, with plenty of skim milk, will produce a very line growth, leaving the calf as mellow to the touch as if sucking the cow. A calf two months old will gain three pounds per day on this ration. The oil taken oil' in the cream can be replaced for oue flfth of the money value of the cream. Butter dairymen may raise a calf to each cow iii>ou the skim milk and u little additional food as indicated, and get one-fourth to one-third as much profit out of the butter. Selling but ter robs the land of nothing valuable —only carbon, which has no manural value. Mirror ami Farmer. THE FXCKI.IiENT I.IMA 111:AN'. The Lima beau is the best flavored and largest variety of the beau family, yet it is not raised for the market in any large quantities on account of the trouble and expense of getting poles for them. The villager has to buy poles for what he plants, and the sum expended for tlieiu often exceeds the income from the vines. Those farmers who have timber on their land are gen erally too busy, or think they are, to bother with pole beans, so they plant some of the bush varieties that are not half so good in flavor and yield very poorly. For the benefit of those who like Lima beans and do not raise them because of the trouble of providing with poles, we give the following plan of a trellis, which answers every pur pose fully as well as the old method : If they are to be raised on a large scale two heavy posts may be set at in tervals of forty feet, the full length of tin' row, being sure to brace the end ones. Then plain wire is stretched from jiost to post. As the vines are very heavy, it is best to strengthen it by putting two or three pieces of ordi nary three-inch board. Then loop a ktrand of package twine from the top wire to the lower one. These twines should be about sixteen inches apart. Very little trouble is experienced in Uiuking til.- vines follow the wires, and no tying is necessary. This trellis will last many years, and we think it is it griait improvement over the poled. American Farmer. t'l.AVriNii Till: ÜBAI'E. Fxperit need grapemen everywhere I urge deep planting and it is a lesson one must learn sooner or later. We may think it uii absurd thing to plsnt | a sine a foot and a half or two fa 11 deep, but unit we do we may as well | let grapes alone. Nearly all planters recommend at least the former depth, ami it is u cus tom followed ill the oldest (.Tape eoiiutrii . Not only is it uii all hut tiiiiversul met hod, but in some of the Ithiiie count in* all surface routs ale cut otf by thrusting the spude down uloiigsidi tin- vine, so compelling the |ilulit t ■ li'id its entire sllfctelieiiiv ill 1 the sl|l<- ill. Without a l< ep and thorott; h tin purutloli of tlie Mill "111 vines will In iioth short liit d and unproductive I>l MII.HK< mil t be*ecnr> lif aee. »mt\, for u Krupe will not iii bu. w< t 112. et, nor Will !• rllJl/llltf I lie Mlbm.jl 1m ot the lia-t IIM to loiik a* water remain 111 ll Ho* t" > Willi Ill* wboli soil to th dl ptli >•' 11l . I MMe fool If, HI til tini . .01, ait important mull, i. I In,.it |.n»»lli|l |m done 1,1 till Ire, but toplo «uc ki.i btt'dii », Hue*, all I lit' sunt 11 the first season the ground will be levelled lip. Don't forget to get tlio vines down, down near tlio bottom of the prepared holes, for most of tlio failures in grnpo growing result from surface prepara tion and shallow planting.—Florida Agriculturist. POOR PAMTt'RES. Good pasturage is essential to suc« oessful dairy farming in most section# of Now England. On a large propor tion of the farms these pastures are not and very many of them cannot be cultivated, and, as a consequence, these that are stocked with cows are slowly being depleted of their original fertil ity, and brush and weeds take tlio place of nutritious grasses. A short time since the writer passed through a hilly town where sheep rais ing was formerly the leading farming industry, but after the collapse of the Merino boom the farmers changed from sheep raising to dairying, and for the past ten or twelve years cheese making has been their specialty. For a few years this line of furiuing WHS profit able. Tlio pastures furnished an abun dance of feed, and the cows gave a gsod flow of milk with small cost. But things have changed. Many of the pastures now are overgrown with weeds and bushes, and produce but little good feed. Farmers are obliged to buy large quantities of grain to keep up the flow of milk through the sh-l mer months. The grain bills absorb the profits and keep the farmers in financial straits all of the time. The only practicable way out is to try sheep raising again for a few years. .Last spring I turned a ilock of sheep into a pasture that was so overrun with weeds and daisies us to furnish but little feed for cattle. To-day not a weed or a daisy is to bo seen, and the sheep and lambs which are long wooled, Costwold and Leicester, huvo done finely-. In two or threo years I expect the pasture will be entirely free from weeds and daisies and ready for cattle again. A good Hock of .sheep well eared for should net the owner at least 84.50 per head in wool and lambs, and with special care much more may be realized ; allowing fifty cents per head for grain would give you a return of $4 per head of cash in lmud. Iu the town referred to the annual average receipts for the milk of the cows at the cheese factory is about #3O per cow and from this must be subtracted the grain feed.— New England Farmer. FAR\f AND GARDteN NOTES. A good mulch keeps down weeds. Mixed grasses make the best pasture. Milk as quickly and quietly us pos sible. The curl in the pig's tail is a sign of health. Kmall eaters are almost ulways poor milkers. Large crops are not always the most profitable ones. Liquid manure will force crops ton | rapid maturity. The best quality of meat comes from j the pig, not the hog. Bulky food should always be fed with concentrated food. Pigs iu the orchard will consume wormy fruit and insects. Change the quarters and pasture ot your sheep occasionally. Too much wood is a prolific cause of the nou-fruitage of trees. A creamery should not be started on less than three hundred cows. > Oil meal is a concentrated food and | should be given in moderation. The more flowers are picked, the ' more flowers the plant will bear. lluspbcrrics, with the exception of Blackcaps, can be planted iu the fall. Mulched tomatoes produce larger I crops than those that uro not mulched. I A little extra work iu mellowing the ! soil will give a larger profit when the | crop is harvested. Market gardeners are preparing the ] land and sowing turnips and lettuce f>>r tin' lute market. Those kinds of cabbage which have i J (Inn, close heads ure the least injured > by the cubbuge Worm. > Turnips will produce larger cropN ! will II Weeded, but they will do well oil 1 tli average ground if uot cultivated. Tlii John by shrinkage of vegetables ' stored in cellars is very great; some claim it to lie us high us forty per ? 1 eelit. 1 To get the best results with rasp la ri'i. i, cut out old wood aud all weak stulks us so,,us U4 the beariug seusou is , Alt' r till) potato vines have died down, tile bug* thut Wire ou them are upt to uttacit the other plants,especial ly Ihi ctffplautl, but tlies r,ui In- killed b> applyi uk I'uris green. tile* ill Smn|ir|e>« Coal, i John B. C laments, of the I'laisty l'ire Clsj Coin! any, sacured un option 011 IHMIIIihwm of cu;il laud iu the Uucbila Biser district in Arkansas •sin h may go far toward solving the , smoke qui si ion It 1* w list is kliowii noli 1 e |i , e il It i'MU I».J bunted Oil tli it >r 111 It p4tl»r Without |{lkll!;{ til I"lenient Its* be. II alt. i tie 1 plop. Ily lo| .1(1, |line, slid lis* If. I »tt. 1 til ii I in th> ( Lii tv works, ll' Ul Wale tllss* Works, It,. I'- lulleii Works and other plaet ■ \ .Lip.l.tilt of it la lo lit lil'elVcdut lie -I I.. Company . MO|k», to |.< 1, 1.1 |(l, |, 11 cowl !• ion ltd ill a largr tie | I III' s< lit 1.. lI. H loll) 111 o Incites t ill It eot.Uui. lw< lil.t |« 1 eenl of 11, which hat 1.. .it lottlt • |o Ih. tH) • 1 .I'll 11. 11..1 11, palltt \ I'SI ft , psli.l i ,11, it U b..ph... I 11. a ill. sit I « ibiitill. 'l to all lltUlt" t 1 t . it..l 1, 1 it,th. painl It nil ' » Silt a» tt u 1 I I list I Until It l.utll, I I llyl.: 11l til ,11 HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. BASED CHICK**. An appetizing wayito cook chicken is to cut it in,pieces, l I u»ll) ul Malillatliiii*. Tin largest and most dally innate inaiisiiili 111 the world Is said to be that ■ owned by l.ui l Muii known Mount I stiiart. It la di at ribe ) it* follows; Il coVe rs nearly ton aort a, and la built ! | 111 llollile atyle [ the walls, till lets and bttbollli r Hie built |>l almie I'll.) III! IllellSt) liwt r 111 the eeutle tif (tie build I ing la I'J'l let I high, ailli a bait-out run ltd the tup I lie balls are eon timet.d entirely of marble and ala iitwiti , all 110 rooms ate tlnialud in JiaktigaU), tost *• od an I w.ilnul (be j ■I • plat 1 • alt all ear ted maiUiettol mil.pie deaigiw l it. flat ! ><..4 of bla fairy palaee la toil known, but ll i a estimated al mole Hialt #», 'itlll,llt»il . I'lit git-ait *1 natal imli. in in (ir»alami», a. t. I so. I I Queen Victoria has about forty pet Jogs. Her greatest favorites are col lies. The Queen of Corea has a lady phy sician who gets a salary of $15,000 yearly. Tho Crown Princess of Sweden is trying to establish women photograph ers in Stockholm. Por the privilege of wearing trou sers the French Government charges women a tax of from $lO to sl2 a year. The Queen Consort of Siani owns a wonderfully beautiful thimble. It is shaped like a lotus and made of solid gold, studded with diamonds. Mrs. Henry G. Newton, the wife of a New Haven lawyer, was tho first woman in Connecticut to register os a voter for the coming school election. Among tho ladies who own solid gold dinner services are Mrs. Astor and Mrs. Andrews, of Now York, and Mrs. George William Childs, of Philadel phia. Miss Amyo Reade, a niece of tho novelist, Charles Beade, has followed in the footsteps of her uncle to the ex tent of writing twd novels, "Ruby" and "Zie.-ma." Among 1110 many decorations worn by the Queen of Portugal is a medal which was conferred on her several years ago, when she threw herself into tho Tagus to save her children. The British Medical Association has at last admitted women as members. The principle was approved last yeur, J and this year the by-law excluding women was formally expunged. Miss Lucille Rodney, who won a wager by walking from her home in Galveston, Texas, to tho World's Fair, counting ties all the way, made SSOO by tho way, selling her photographs. Queen Victoria proposes to erect a | cairn in memory of the marriage of the Duke of York. It will bo in Scot ! land near the ono she erected in re membrance of the wedding of the j Prince of Wales. Grecian women possessed twenty-two j kinds of footgear, which may be I classed as those which cover oil the 1 foot up to the onkle, and those which j simply tied on the top of the foot with [ wide ribbons or straps. A co-operative household, compris ing forty connected dwellings, is to j be established in Cleveland, Ohio, j The cooking and laundry nro to bo ] done in one house, and the expense is to be divided among tho families. Mrs. Arundel-Colliver began service in the London Postoffice as a tele j graph operator, and has just retired from the head of the Clearing House department (and a salary of $10,000), of which she has been chief twenty -1 two years. Five ladies have been sent us official commissioners of education from Great Britain to the World's Fair to examine the American school exhibits and see : what features of our system of public instruction can be adopted with profit in England. Miss Ella M. Grubb, who has been elected Superintendent of the Schools for Adams County, Illinois, is only twenty-eight years old, and is the first woman elected to the post in that county, which is one of the most pop ulous in the State. There are 110 women lawyars in the United States, and eight of this num ber have earned tho right to practice before the Supreme Court. To ac quire this it is necessary to hove prac ticed three years at the bar, without a flaw in that career. Mrs. Taylor, of Littio Washington, Penn., is called among her neighbors "an artist iu oils." She began by making a few careful investments in the Pennsylvania gold tields. She has -old these at an advance, bought others tnd is now worth $11,000,000. Another of Queen Victoria's oldest servants has just died. This time it is \V. H. Gower, who was "yeoman of the silver pantry"' at Windsor Castle. Yeoman Gower has been intheQueenV service for over half a century, and was much esteemed by his mistress. The favorite handkerchiefs at pres ent arc of India linen almost as sheet as mist. They have hemstitched edges about half an inch wide, wit! the initials or monograms euibroidereii in one corner. The lettering is deli pate and tho design is worked in out line stitch. V yoke having the square neck effee' will shorten the oppart nt length o Your waist, as also will an empire belt Slender uruis tire luado to appeal larger by covering with sleeves vert full at the top and sloping toward thi arm, but not choicly detlniug the aru until the wrist is reached. F.mpress Elizabeth, of Austria, late ly built, at an enormous cost, a mag nitieeiit marble villa at Corfu an i'hriateued it "L'Aellilleion " lb 1 Majesty bus made the follow mg co.li .•il to her will: "I wish to be interre nt Corfu, near the river, so that tht • waves can continually break 011 im tomb." Mrs. Vrthur Htaiiuard ("Join I Strange W inter") will ill the full uiukt hi r appearance 111 a new light Ac cording to the liotiilon l,iterar\ World "she hits juat concluded a novel of « theological bent, upoll which slut luti bent owed 1111 immense amount o pallia," The book will be loaned i two volumes. A small Marin Antoinette tlcliu 1 formed lit three little gathcret tloiilices in wheat niollaelllln tie solo I liis lit-h 11 is moveable ; it 1* llinuutet •Ml a sittull silk ribbon fusteuetl tilt tilt '• inside a it.l fust nt upoll the ctti**gt with tilt: aid of kolue piusin bijouterie I'bis happy combination permits tin plaelltK of this 111 Ile tlclill tiH different wait unit a. liuik fruit h til. , Hindi a- utulb.ut ttaalurllum. dahlia n»< wood, pt Inula and grape red. ar« Ulgeli imported in tt-lt.l tall. 1 elotb silks bl ucadt« j and tlhlH.it Sea name, ate lit... eiili.i. but tie familiar tub* will give the lUttdlalea a more liil« 111 4eut lib-1> ol iln ruliua tints Van 1 d.k., -aw da I ami fitalaigm alt oak and 11 fits b tulumii kjr i» a daik j .liter lint thai eouiluit'" a. II aith mant of lie Uta autumn coin la. I !* 3 £> npHE ROYAL Baking 3! !C A Powder surpasses all S* others in leavening power, in Jj£ purity and wholesomeness, 3 •> and is indispensable for use wherever the best and finest 2 food is required. > *f. jf" All other Baking Powders contain *fi ammonia or alum. ROYAL BAKING POWDEn CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. fit? A «i» A Ss A A A. Tailor-Made Orlef. According to one ot the authorities the period of mourning for n father in-law is twelve months, ten months blank, two months half mourning; erape is seldom worn, though the (•rape period was formerly six months. For a parent the period is the same as above. The longest period for a brother is six mouths, five months I black, one mouth half mourning; the crape period was formerly three j months; it is now almost discarded, j The shorter period is four months ; black, no half mourning. The period j of mourning for a father-in-law is often shortened to six months when relatives reside at a considerable dis tance from each other. All of which prompts the remark that the world ! would be made more cheerful and sensible if "mourning" garments | were discarded altogether.—New York j Journal. Miracles Not Ended Yet. WHAT A MINISTER SAYS OF SWAMP-ROOT. Sagoville, N. Y. May 12, 18ft?. ! Ccntlomcn: —For years I suffered with ! tlililmy and liver t rn ii h 1 p. Doctor , after doctor treated 1 mo with no avail. I i grew worse and wns • in despair of ever be- ' ingany better. What agony I endured when 1 the attacks came on, rolling oil th<- tloor, I screaming and half crazy! Nothing but morphine would quiet me. It seemed death would I*' n relief from my suffering. My stomach wus in a terrible , condition, food, what little I ate, distressed me, my complexion waa yellow; bowels con- i stipated; I was only able to walk as far as the | front porch. A friend recommended your Swamp-Hoot. 1 began to take it at once. Swamp-Root Cured Me. After passing off from my system a fearful amount of poisonous matter, imagine my Joy j to And I was decidedly better. My improve ment after that was rupid and uninterrupted and in six months I was completely cured. Hev. Wm. H. VauDeusen. At DrugEhta, SO eelit mid M.OOSIip, I "Inrnlids' liiiid,- to Hulllli" free < vnsultatiun trve. 1 Dr. Kilmer & Co., - liinghauiton, N. Y. R. R. R. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF CURES AND I'RKVKNTH : Colds, Coughs, [ Sore Throat, Hoarseness, StifTNeck, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Headache. Toothache, Rheumatism. Neuralgia Asthma, Bruises, Sprains. Quicker Than Any Known Reme ly. So matter how \ iolent or excruciating the » am the Hbeumn'lc, Bedriddeu. Inflrui, i'rippled. Nervoas. Neuralgic, or pro*-rated wit i discuses may suffer RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Will Afford 111*1 itut Kn«e. INTERN ALLY-A half to a teaspoon ful In half a tumbler ol water will in a few minutes cure Cramps, Siwsins. Sour Stomach. Nausea. Vomiting. Heart burn, Nervousness Sleeplessness Siek Headache, l)»arrhiea. Colic, Flatulency and all Internal pains. Therein not ;i rcniodial in the worlil that will cure I'uvor and Anno and all other Malarious, Mllioiis and other fever.-, ictled by RADWAY'S PILLS,- ",ui. kl> as RAD WAY'S READY RELIEF. , Fifty cent* per llotile. Sold li> l)rtitfKi«l*. j U HI Wfl TO UKT K lOH \ \ ■THE KIND i I IUNIM C. Ktjl.l IWtuy, j ■ HEUmu\l xiraiK m •FAINT AND WEAK FROM* ■ RHEUMATIC TORMENT £ I DANA'S. " I SIMS v■» tt'ANlt I i ■ ||» rt< * ,\\\S • Z s\its vr.\itll\ ■ W» .t. hii I P«ih m ® m m 9 u.n, t). V«'tlll * .1.. p " Thrift it a Qood Riviniw." Qratt Saving RtiulH Fram Qlaanlinatt and SAPOLIO Chief Magistrates ol Ancient l.reeco. The chief magistrates of Athens wero enlleil arclions. At lirst the office was lifelong and hereditary : afterward for ten years, finally annual and elective. There were nine annual arelions, and none were eligible l>ut eitzeim who could prove three generations of freo ancestors. Every candidate must also i prove that be had no physical defect; ] that he had been dutiful to his pa ! rents, had served in tlio army aud ; possessed property to support the dig i nity of the office. Bribery was pun | ished by compelling the one bribed to dedicate to the gods a statute of gold equal in weight to his own body. j The defensive armor of the Assvri i utis consisted of u metal helmet, a leather coat of mail and a shield ; the 1 weapons were spear, sword, bow and dagger. I Do Hoi lk Dunn ul i I with Pastes, Fnamol? nn<» Paints which stain the I i I hands, injure the Iron and burn red. I j I The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor- I I 'ew, Durable, ami the consumer pays for uo fin I lor glass pockage with every purchase. 1 I© 25 K POULTRY YARD JMioh Pa K ,„ 4oth Edition. Writ* ten tivc years after I had learned MBHRi to make Hogs and Poultry a suo ces>. A pi:tiu, prartieal system, easily learned; tl.-Tribes all or theirdlsewsrr. and their nmodiM, jJ(Qrs>' How to mukr lima lay Keen. Cholera, trapes and limip you need not have Price, tfu\. one cent a year for roy experience. You can learn it in one tiny. With it a rKKK Catalogue; Sj varieties Illustrated. a The Bent l( libber lloot t niveute I tor Kariu< I cr.-. Miners. It. K. haini- and others. Th» outer or ta;» >ole extcuds the whole 'etwth ««f the >ole dowu to the heel, protecting the shank in ditcnltu. digging aud other work. 11l >T lx YIH It HI % liKK FOIf Tll£X. MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS fAMT't | THOMSON'S SLOTTED " CLINCH RIVETS. No c- Only i lairmor needed t drive and e in.-a thilit > aai \ and «inick'.v, .oa» ik* the clinch at ao'iiU'iy Muootlu kftjiarii c n«» li«» < to l>e -nude in fWxt4il»#*ior burr i<>r i"C Hivets. 1 .irv «tr«»nir« toiaicla and «liai't«l»le. -Mil .. ;i> n,»w i\ us*. Ail ;eni;tTis, unitvVm or a«t.»rtevl, put up lu ■« xe<. A*k your dealer l'«»r r - nd *'V. >u •taiups tor a of U\', »ut>•. Man iU by JUDSON L. THOMSON Mf-G. C 0. 112 WAi/riiAi. n.p»i 1,000,000 ' A P. 'ltt halv.kOAi> wOMFaxT .n Minnesota, tkui lor uud Clfou* ara They will D« )eut .o f>u FREES. AdoreM MOPIWk.I CLARKE. • »uillouun - i iter Pau> Mini** PHILAD A BIRD FOOD C° ' v BIRD: BITTERS. '•* '• » rr"*i«»*«d '• • f,M * »<'•*"' ' ■' " t 1 Of ttifvi H k fro* li rat at i . N 11 1 * 1 » ra* IBLOOO POISON ISr. ~H i A SPECIAL ft. I 'VIHHHHHHI # > «i». *.r> .p •-»'!* IJ H k-u Ilmot. a> tt < .4»l«dvt *' % ' *>i l» »h. a>« thi*< 4 thai Will eurv t - (MOtUllf. »' uo- »r fatal w 11** i, fai i «■« a I. wKt'* 1 t•• «'!.'» • »#>» llj- A H ioTA * MMIU M«OIC^N^ , | Kwr IntilgMilfH liilU«w.»»«. It m»»A ihi iAMtLY neiiaifi ZORA ASTOR I % \ |llt« »!»*• *» «l I h ...i tv Ml % I »%T %II ■ at d |*« i 1 1 1 I H ii H J a »ofe