Riding Without a 11 or so. An ingenious man has inventod m saddle macliino fur the acquirement of a perfect seat and solf-confidenoo as an equcstrienna within one's own homo. It is said that many ladies aro overcoming timidity by meaus of this homo practico as a prelude "to learning how to ride" the veritable equine back. By a skillful mechanical arrange ment tho movements of a horso in walking, trotting, cantering or gal loping aro imparted to a saddle, upon which a lady or gentlemen may sit with perfect comfort mid safety, blandly confident that, alcuough they are enjoying to tho full all tho pleasuro and health-giving motion of riding on horseback, there is no fear of their mount rearing, or bolting, or kicking, or jibbing or behaving like tho famous trick liorse from tho circus. The motion obtained frotn tho sad dle, as in actual horse ridinyr, is verti cal, and produced by the rider rising on the stirrups or footboards as if seated upon a horso, and under all tho conditions, whether tho motion bo gentle or that of a trot or gallop, the rider is perfectly secure in his or her seat, so that all the advantages of real horse exercise can be enjoyed with none of its inevitable risks. —Chicago Mail. The Biggest (Joosc. I heard tho other day na amusing talo of of a certain well-known Eng lish nobleman, who had imported two emus with tho hope of breeding from them, and on leaving his estate for town left also strict injunctions that the greatest enre should be taken of tho lady emu, if sho produced the de sired egg or eggs. The egg arrived in duo course, but, as artists have found beforo now, tho lady declined to "sit." Tho steward, however, how ever, was an ingenious man, and thought of a substitute, but his pow ers of composition were by no means on a par with his inventiveness, and he announced the interesting ovent to his master in tho'following terms: "Tho emu has laid au egg, but wo wero in a great difficulty, as she would not sit on it. I did what I thought was bost, and in your Lordship's ab sence I have placed tho egg under tho biggest gooso on tho estato."—Pall Mall Gazette. A Bank Failure. AN INVESTIGATION DEHANDED. A general banking business is done by the human system, because tlie blood de posits in its vaults whatever wealth we may gain from day today. This wealth is laid up against "a rainy day " as a reserve fund —we're in a condition of healthy prosperity if we have laid away sufficient capital to draw upon in the hour of our greatest need. There is danger in getting thin, because it's a sign of letting down in health. To gain in blood is tiearlj' always to gain in whole some flesh. The odds are in favor of the germs of consumption, grip, or pneumonia, if our liver be inactive and our Mood im pure, or if our flesh be reduced below a healthy standard. What is required is an increase ill our germ-fighting strength. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery enriches the blood and makes it wholesome, stops the waste of tissue and at the same time builds up the strength. A medicine which will rid the blood of its poisons, cleanse and invigorate the great organs of the body, vitalize the system, thrill the whole being with new energy and make permanent work of it, is surely a remedy of great value. Hut when we make a positive statement that 98 per cent, of all cases of consumption can, if taken in the early stages of tlie disease, be CURED with the "Discovery," it seems like a bold assertion. All Dr. Pierce asks is that you make a thorough investigation and satisfy yourself of the truth of his assertion. By sending to the World's Dispensary Med ical Association, Buffalo, N. Y., yon can get a free book with the names, addresses and photographs of a number of those cured ofthroat, bronchial and lung diseases, as well as of skin and scrofulous affections by the " Golden Medical Discovery." They also publish a book of 160 pages, being a medical treatise on consumption, bronchitis, asthma, catarrh, which will be mailed on receipt of address and six cents iu stamps. HIGHEST AWARD [-up WORLD'S FAIR, m Imperial 'eggs* Dyspeptic,Delicate,lnfirm and AGED PERSONS THESAFESTFooOin THE SICK ROOM FOR INVALIDS * Nd convalesces^- 13 F'O 013 MOTHERS, INFANTS^ CHILDREN IS SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. JOHN CAR LF &SONS*NFWYork. I WOVEN WIRE FENBESSS? Whj pay 60 to 90a a rod torU VVVVmjA fence when jou can make the KKyKVHK best Woren Wire Fence onK/\ earth, horse high,bull stron K t S\/'\v\s\s\s\J\ plff 1 * m * n and boy can make > £ s£ - » C Frea. Addreee. DROPSP^ Hi ■ ■« cured many thou sand cases pre a Mured hopeless. From first Hose symptoms rapidly disappear, •ad in ten aay* at leist two-thirds of all wmptoms are removed. BOOK of testimonials af miraculotK < tires sent M|| a ffimiaara DAMPNESS FATAL TO CHICKS. One thing that is absolutely neces sary in the broiler business is n warm house entirely free from any damp ness in which to rear the youngsters and in which the heat cau be con trolled. The brooder should bo kept at a higher temperature than the rest of the building.—New York World. HOW CELERY SHOULD BE KEPT. Celery may be kept in the best con dition in a cellar, packed in barrels, with tho roots ns tlioy wero taken from tho ground. Somo of the top leaves should bo trimmed off, and tho plants should be packed closely in the barrel, so as to exclude tho light. If some soii is taken up with tho roots, the celery will go ou blanching with out shrinking aud keeu succulent all tho winter. Or the plants may be kept in tho grounil, whero they were grown, if they aro banked up with earth high euough to exclude the frost, and may be taken out as may be needed for use. In this way tho qual ity is improved.—American Farmer. SOIL NITROGEN FROM LEGUMES. Clovers, peas, beans and other legumes aro remarkable in the fact that thoy grow well without nitro genous fertilizers. It has recently been shown that in tho many nodules on tho roots of these legumes there nro numbers of minute fungi which live with the lost plant in a state of symbiosis, anil, absorbing nitrogen from tho air iu the soil, furnish it to the green plant. Tho experiments at the famous Rotliamsted Farm of Sir John B. Lawes have coufirmed those of Hellriegel, of Germany, in showing that by one watering of a sterilized sandy soil growing legumes, with a large amount of watery extract of soil containing tho nitrogen-fixing fungi, there is induced a marked develop ment of the leguminous nodules on tho roots, with a gain in plant nitro gen and an increase growth of tho crop. The leguminous plant itself does not appear to nssimilato freo nitrogen, tho gain probably being due to the fixation of nitrogen by the microbes in tho root nodnles, which thus furnish nitrogen compounds to the higher plaut. Tho known largo amounts of nitrogen compounds con tained in legumes, and the nitrogenous fertilizer they add to the soil is probably duo to tho fixation of the free atmospheric nitrogens by the organisms in tho root nodules. These results have an important bearing on the treatment of tho sandy soils of tho Atlantic coast and elsewhere.— New York Independent. GARDEN MUSINGS. Tasteful arrangement of the vege table garden adds much to its useful ness and pleasure, writes G. A. Wool son. Every intclligant man knows that tho benefits of a well-ordered kitchen garden aro spiritual as well as physical. "God Almighty first planted a garden," comments Bacon and truth fully adds, "gardening is the greatest refreshment to the spirit of man." As order is heaven's first law, a more fitting jjlace for. its exemplifica tion cau hardly be found than the small area of real estate devoted to the good things of tho earth. A rough map of the ground with plans for each separate crop definitely marked there on is a great convenience if tho plant ing of a garden is to be delegated to hired help. Keeping such maps from year to year is quite likely to insuro rotation of crops beneficial alike to soil and produce. Well-kept paths are a necessity, not a luxury as many suppose; they should bo so arranged that visitors can "take in the sights" without personal con tact with "brag crops"—for what garden or gardener, worthy of the name, is not sot up over somo luxuri ant growth which he justly attributes to his own superior management, and spreads himself accordingly ! All tho pride a man takes in his garden is permissible, for the lesson of his in feriority is duly impressed upon him by protracted tussels with persistent weeds. Through tho center of my garden runs a four-foot path, some times dignified as the "Boulevard," but oftener dubbed "Bean Avenue," us it is llunked on both sides by beans poled and otherwise. This walk is kept hard and clean, and is trodden by many feet which might otherwise bo stepping on vines and other low growing crops. Points of compass are also important but oftentimes ignored. Vegetables will doubtless grow in "kiterin' " rows but the annoyance to sober mathematical eyes leads most peoplo to consider straight rows worth the trouble, even imperative where a cultivator is to be used. Vegetable gardens are usually ample enough to take in surplus seedlings from hot bed or flower garden ; a few pansies tuoked into a vacant squash hill from which malodorous bugs have departed, are often sufficient compensation for tho pies wo are not likely to get. Tropical touches are of much inter est in the midst of commonplace plants. lam often surprised by regal calactiumswhich appear in unexpected quarters from apparently worthless bulbs thrown out in the spring and plowed under. Likewiec a oastorbean Hppreciatcs good soil and is u fitting terminus for plebeian avenues de scribed. Anything out of the ordinary attracts attention not only to itself, but to its surroundings, and is a whole some incentive towards order and neatness, which the young especially nppreoiate. Many a boy will find lioeing the garden less laborious if he feels a twinge of family pride in the green things growing.—American Agriculturist. NUT PLANTING. To the amateur planter, says a writer in Garden and Forest, no class of the larger seeds of trees and shrubs causes more disappointments and elicits as many quest/ ons as do the various kinds of l'ruits known as nuts. The cause is generally a lack of knowledge, oi proper treatment or carelessness. It does not seem to lie genernlly under stood, although tho fact has been stated over and over again in horti cultural journals, that many of theso seeds retain their germinative power for a comparatively short time after maturity, unless they find the proper conditions for their preservation. Tho acorns of tlie white oak, Qnercusalba, for instance, often crnck and sprout and show the so-called root before the frnit falls from tho tree. If these acorns are gathered and allowed to dry for a few weeks beforo planting, it is unlikely that any of them will grow. The same result follows in na ture, if they fall on ground whioh is hard and dry and continues so for some time afterward, but if the ground is moist, the radiole or incipi ent root will soon enter it and be se cured from drying, unless the soil it self should bo deprived of moisture. What is true of tho white oak is true of other species, although often in a much less marked degree. Some of the black oak group, for instance, bear acorns whioh are slower in ger minating and appear to preserve their vitality better under adverse condi tions. It is destructive to the vegota tive power of all acorns to collect them in the autumn and keop them uncovered in an ordinary dry room to be planted in spring. But any of them may be preserved for months if sim ply packed or mixed with moist, but not wot, sand, soil or moss, and kept in a cool temperature, such as would prevail under a light covering of leaves or soil in tho open air. Simi lar treatment must be given to hazel nuts, chestnuts and to beech nuts. In all cases care should be taken to mix in plenty of soil, or to place the nuts in layers so that they do not touoh each other, and any tendency to heat and consequent moulding should be guarded against. Butternuts, walnuts and hickory nuts will not grow read ily, or at all, if allowed to become thoroughly dried or cured, although the kernels may preserve a fresh ap pearance for years after germinative power is lost. They will, however, keep their vitality much better and longer than acorns under the same conditions. As a rulo, direct planting in tho open ground as soon as the seed is col lected into be preferred, wherever practicable, for most kinds of nuts and accrns. Among objections to this system are (1) tho liability of the larger nuts to destruction by squirrels, of the thin ner shelled oues by mico and some other rodents, or by birds; and (2) the action of frost in heaving the nuts out of tho ground. Whero the depre dators can be guarded against, tho heaving action of frost may be obvia tod by a covering of leaves or boards laid over tho seed. Some growers aim to plant after hard freezing weather has sot in, because thero is then less liability to disturbance by animals. In this system of planting an extra quantity of seed is required to allow for failures or mishaps, just as is the rule with many field crops. Walnuts, hickorios and oaks gener ally form long tap roots, and some persons consider it an advantage to have the seed planted where the trees are to remain permanently, as it is generally found expodient to cut the tap root when transplanting. When the seed is planted where the tree is to remain, experiments have shown that these undisturbed trees make a much faster growth, in their early years at least, than thoso whose main roots have been cut. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Teach the horses to walk fast until it becomes a habit. To rest properly after a hard day's work horses should have roomy box stalls. Thore is no place for tho scrub. Only utility horsos are worth pro ducing. Mild days in winter are a good time for pruning and making cuttings of grapes. Considering tho small amount of time devoted to tho poultry, the profits are very great. Every moment spent in properly making and packing butter for mar ket is a good investment. If the harness is vory old and dry, soak it in lukewarm water for half an hour, then rub in neatsfoot oil with the hand. Corn-fed hogs should be given char coal to correct tho acidity of the stomach which results from such in digestible feed. In England the buyers ol poultry always look for the five toes whioh is the peculiarity of the Dorking and Hotulan breeds. When a kicking man and a kioking cow get to wrangling, we oare little which whips, though our sympathies are with the cow. Different horses requiro different treatment to render them traotable and obedient. What will cure one horse will spoil another. It is pretty difficult to accurately judgo the quality of our own butter. Wc are prejudiced witnesses. Let somebody else pass judgment on it. If a horse is bad tempered he is apt to keep his ears thrown back. If he is a kicker his legs will be scarred. If his skin is rough his digestion is not good. The feeding and milking of tho but ter cow operates just as tho training and racing of the horse. It tends to fix the performing habit, and heredity tends powerfully to transmit all fixed habits. For treo wounds various things are used. Perhaps the best thing is tar, long used by Professor Sargeant witb excellent results. At Kew Gardens coal tar and enrbolio acid is used with entire success. The Chinese kill 10,000,000 dogs an nually for foyd purposes. The Coldest^WlnDrr. Thcmost notabVo about 'the spell oficold weather thnough which wo have (passed is itsi widespread in tensity. All Eimope Tias\been ui the grasp of'the ice king? ,and his antios are nioreitalked about than those of any other'.monarch. In Car (Asia Jap anese sailors wero frozen to death while training their (gunsjjon the Chi nese forts and fleet at Wei-fclai-'Vtytei, and even in Northern Afr#ca|sno\\ foll for the first time in so laug,. a ] period that grown\men gazedlat it fwith'won der. What doos it all v mcnn? Scientists have been at work for years to figure out a law of olinnstiic nml*weathcr changes, and their concfl'tsiou is that it takes between thirty and thirty-five years to get from the of heat to the exitremo'of cola. up and down, rubs the dirty places,,and}if necessary, puts it through a.secambtime>; then rinses it through stjveral (waters* and hangs it up to dry on the line. When nearly dry he takes it' in, Tolls it up for an honr or two, and tuon presses it. An old cotton cloth is laid on tho outside of tho coat and tho iron passed over that until tho wrinkles are out; but the iron is removed {before tho steam ceases to rise from the goods, else thoy would be shiny. Wrinkles, that ure obstinate are removed,by laying a wet cloth over them and passing the iron over that. If any shiny places uro seen, they are treated »as the wrinkles are—tho iron is lifted whilo the full cloud of etoam rtoos aud brings tho nap with it. Clotlvs should always have a suds made specially for them, as in that which has'ljeen used for white cotton or wooden (cloths lint will be left in the wnier and will cling to the cloth. In this 1 manper we have known the samo cant and trousers to be renewed time and timo again, aud have all the look aud feelijof new gar ments. Good brcaifcloth and its fel low cloths will bear many washings, and look better every v timet because of them. A Dog Who Was Not totlte Dared. A dog story has comae toitlie writer's ears, which, though not within his personal knowledge, is vouciheid for to him in an entirely trustworthy way. A certain dog, which was gro«wiug old, was in a born one day with his master. The two wore up on a haynjow from which a sloping ladder led down to tho barn floor. Tho master walked down tho ladder, but thofdog went around by another way. When the dog reached the barn floorfiiis master began to say to him scnmew&at taunt ingly, "Poor old fellowfl Daren't walk down tho ladder ( »ny more! Daren't walk down thol ladder I" Whereupon tho dog, with a quiok glance at his master, walkedfclear up the ladder to the top,\aud tljemturned around and walked down it again. The proceeding looked very much like a deliberate demonstration on the dog's part, to his master, that\he was still capable of walking up amr down a slanting ladder. Did the dog under stand thotaunt, or did he merely catch the words "down the ladder,"* and take the utterance for a command, which ho dutifu'ly proceeded to obey? No one will ever know, probably, since the dog himself can give uo account of the mattor.--Boston Transcript. Ingenious Thieves. Thieves of Upper India arei gener ally very smart when it comes'to the squeeze of capture,and the carewihich; native burglars take in the way" of precaution against surprise is phenomena', writes a correspondent of a contemporary. They are usually most painstaking,and a friend of miino one morning awoke to find that/he had been "looted," and at given inter vals the places of exit had beenplaid out with broken bits of bottle sojtthat if the man had been disturbed! ,and pursued the glass would have in all probability brought the pursuers up smartly. They, themselves, knowing.'its posi tion, would havo avoided it'and got away comfortably. House burglars all carry a wallet of fine sand, and a handful of this thrown aver tho shoulder into the face of a would-be capturer is warranted to postpone the pursuit. In tho case above mentioned the highwayman was a little extrava gant to part with his blanket. They generally bring the enemy up with the ample folds of tho turban, whioh rarely fails if the lassoing is done adroitly.—Bombay Gazette. sjj *HE U. 5. Government offi- p H (9 cially reports ROYAL Bak- jS 8 ing Powder superior to all 5| others in leavening: strength. SJ It. (BulUUn IJ, Ag'l Dt/'l./.jqf.) lSj LSM It is the best and most economical. §! ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. Wlut Can Be Done With • Cent. A few years ago the Episcopal ohuroh of a email Maryland town was in want of an alms basin. The congregation was for the most part poor, and few in numbers. The minister in oharge appointed a young girl a committee of one to collect subscriptions. The amount needed was $5, for an alms basin costing that much had been heard of for sale by a more prosperons parish, that had outgrown, the one with whioli it started in life. The young woman's first call was at the store of a well-to-do merchant. Asking somothing from him for her fund, she received the following ro ply, spoken in a very gruff voice: "I can give you nothing;" but as she turned to leave, he added: "There, you may have that if it will do yon any good," and suiting the action to the word, threw down on the counter a cent. Mortified and abashed, her first impulse wis to leave it where he thrown it, but better judgment pre vailing she picked it up, thanked him and left. Without going further she returned homo and told her mother that she would not ask for anything more and run the chance of such treatment a second time. 'Take the cent, my doar," the mother said, "and show what you con do with it." She fol lowed this advice and bought a small china doll, anil, dressing it in some scraps which she had, sold it to a friend for hor little daughter. Hav ing increased her capital 400 per oent., she invested it in a spool of croohet ing cotton, with which she worked soveral small articles, and the sale of these brought her in 81.20. This was, in turn, used to purchaso cotton ma terial, out of which were made several dresses for small children, that netted, when sold, the desired $5, when the alms basin was duly bought. This story wns told to a lady of Socialiatic views, who was constantly complaining that she was not rich, and saying she could lay so littlo by it was not worth whilo to save; the answer was: "Yes, she got her $5, but what a lot of work she had to do." Sate Field's Washington. Compliment to the Dog. A very delicate compliment was lately bestowed by a dog lover upon the intelligence of his Skye terrier. The owner of the dog was sitting in his office apparently alone, when an acquaintance entered. "Glad to find you alone," said the visitor, "because I have a confidential communication to make to you, which no ono else must hoar." "Hold on a minute!" cried the other, checking him. And thon he called out: "Here, Spot!" A small terrier crawled out from under the table, wagging his tail. "Go out Spot!" said his master. The dog went out. "Now then," said the owner, "you may goon with your confidential communication. Now we are alone." —Detroit Free Press. A hundred head of sturdy ranch horses were recently sold in Denver, Col., for SOO and the freight. No SIICII Tliinir* Tho quality of endurance of or inili(Terence to whot in other men produces shock or ro pulsion is saiil '.o belong to men without nen'ffl. There is no such thing and cannot be. Tho liner the physical development the keener perhaps is the sensibility to pain. Let neuralgia put on its harness for a raid and get after such men, the nerves will be found all quivering at once. And so this malady works, a creeping utfly foe to health bent on torture and misery, until it meets its antipathy, St. Jacobs Oil, wliioh cures and conquers, quickly, surely. .Scotland's ltomin Cnthollo churches havo 852,000 members. Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-ROOT cures all Kidney and liladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Blnghamton, N. Y. Java is the Malay word for land of meet ings. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than HII other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to ba Incurable, for a (frent many years doctors pro nounced it a local disease, mid prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. ■ Science liasproveu catarrh to be a constitu tional disease ana therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, man ufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from lildrops to i a teaspoonful. It aots directly on the blood jaud mucous surfaces of the system. They offer •one hundred dollars f.r any case it fails to tcure. Send for circulars and testimonials '.free. Address • F. J. CnENKY & Co., Toledo, O. [SySold by Druggists, 75c. Not mi Experiment. The ÜBC of Ripans Tubules for headaches, dyspepsia and other stomach disorders is not. an experiment but an assured success. They will do all that we say they will. Mrs. Wins low's Soot hint? Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. '.'sc. a bottle Karl's Clover Root, the «reat blood purifier, gives freshness and clearness to the complex ion and cures constipation. 25 cts.. 50 cts., 1 i. ACTORS, Vocalists, Public Speakers praise Halo's Honey of Horeliound and Tar. Pike's Toothache l)roi>s Cure In one minute. Widest Canal in the World. The Chenab Irrigation Canal in the Northwest Provinces, India, is said to be the widest canal in tho world. It is 110 feet broad and will be in creased to 200 foet broad when fin ished. The head works are at Kanki, where a shutter dam about one and an eighth miles long extends across tbe river. When finished tho main chan nel of the canal will be 450 miles long, whilo the principal branch channels will havo an aggregate length of 2000 miles, and the village branches will be about 4000 miles long. Already 250,000 acres are sup plied with irrigating water, and the completed work is expected to bring in a revenue of about sixty-five lakhs of rupees per annum.—Now York Ad vertiser. Spring Medicine Is so important that yon should be rare to got THE BE3T. Hood's Sarsapa rillft has proven its unequalled merit by its thousands of remarkable cures, and the fact that it has a larger sale thau any other sarsaparilla or blood puri fier shows the great confidence the people have in it. In fact it is the Spring Medicine. It enres all blood diseases, builds np the nerves and gives such strength to the whole system that, as one lady puts it,"lt seemed to make me anew." If you decide to take Hood's Sarsa parilla for your Spring Medioine do not buy any substitute. Be sure to get HOOD'S Sarsaparilla Hoinc, Sweet Home. "Home, Sweet Home," Payne's Bong, was originally a number in the opera "Clari, the Maid of Milan," a production brought out in 1823. The opera was a failure, and nothing is now known of it save the one song, which became instantly popular. Over 100,000 copies were sold in the first year of its publication, and the sale in one form or another has been constant ever since the first appear anoe of this beautiful theme. The melody is a Sicilian folk-song, and was adapted to the words by Payne himself.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. IS[ ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy if its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to sal and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figa is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 10UI8VILU. K*. new YORK, N V Kwi rfV«j q M POSITIVKI.Y WornnlKht au«l day. Has aD Adjustable Pad which M can maf,e larger or ¥r M smaller to suit changing condition of RUPTURE. FATESTF.D. Illtift. Tat. sent wcurely sealed by G. V. House Mfg. Co. 744 Broadway, N.Y.City 112 DAVIS HAND OR POWER CREAM SEPARATOR One-third more butter and of higher quality than by other known systems -BAVEB MONEY AND LABOR Hires from Ito 1,000 Cows. Pamphlet Mailed Free. Agents Wanted DAVIS A RANKIN BLDG. AND MFO. CO.. Bole Manufacturers, Chicago. 11l There's jQ Work on Hand Hard /•%ric It saves the Rub, Rub, Rub that >\\l wears > saves l ' lc wor k 1 \\ I \ \\\ that tires. It is cheap, safe \ 1 \ \v .'\JjjT and convenient. Get the best, I I I \ |wr when you get something to wash k. /' / wr with. Soap has been but ' j/ Pearline is. /jrfM Spare Pearline - Spoil the Wash ll It I Ift AlinP Wethink P,,o'eCURE ll |1 I |l|l'U II 11 II L for CONSUMPTION is the MM | 11 | || |K ■■ only medicine foroongha." I nou o uunLsss. ™£-£sj Cures Where All Else Fails. BEST COUCH SYRUP. TABTEW GOOD. |)HK IN TIMK. WOI.P BY DHt'OOWTI*. "iS CTH. ||| " Don't Put Off Till To-morrow the Du ties of To-day." Buy a Cake of SAPOLIO "I was all broken down in health, so weak anrl nervous I was hardly able to be up. I had severe pains in my side", and headache. I would ofteu have to stop when going up-stairs on aooount of palpitation of the heart. I had no appetite and a distressed feel ing in mv stomach. I resolvo Ito try Hood's Sarsaparilla. I took two bot tles and have not had a spell of sick headache for four months, feel W J! 1 , work all day and eat heartily. My friends remark how well I am looking. I think all nervous, run down people ought to take it, especially nursing mothers." Mas. S. ASH WORTH, Eaton, O. Laatyear we commenced an elabonte plan or advertising, tot Iwfore we were half through. OI'K AUVRKTIBPJKNIB PIMAPFIARKI). Why? Became WF. * HIE OYKKtt IIK1..TIKI» WITH There was but one thing to do: withdraw the advertising and devote every energy to Ailing the orders with which we were flooded. This we did, and handled witU reasonable promptness a most unprecedented year's business. WITII F.!iI,AR«FI» KAT TORIFS, IM IIKAHKH KA< ILITIK.H, TWENTY HIUNCII IIOI'MKS FHOtt Willi II TO IMS TKIRITE OI'R GOOD*. WE VAN KOW < AKE FOR ILL WIIO (DIR. Last year we could not reduce prices because we were compelled in some way to limit the demand for Aermotor goods* We would have Iteen satisfied with lower prices, lint why create • demand which wo conld not supply? We have made the heaviest purchases of s'e«l and material bought in America this year, and at unprecedented prices, and have made terms to dealers which enable them to make unprecedented prices. In quality, character, variety, finish, and accessibility to full stock of goods and renalra, we are without competitors. In our plan of advertising Inst year, we proposed to furnish a feed cutter under certain conditions for sls. For reasons ststed above we did not eomi-lete the advertising, and the feed cut ter was not put cut. We now propose to nuke amends in Ui A following manner. We will announce in this paper our RRW ALL-STEEL TEHT 81 FEHIOR FEED CI TTEH, WORTH S4O "i 510 cash with order, 112. o. b. Chicago. Only one to one person, he to furnish addressee of ten neighbors who oncht to have some thing in our line. Cut. description and fnlt information re* Carding it will appear soon. W7 etpecia tlu to caution you against paving esreestire prices for >c%nd mill outfits. The trmuta tion on the part of the dealer to overcharge it treat, $lO added to the legitimate price i$ J JO clear M JBrMVSffl profit tn ,ht dealer. To be erne thai you get the propter price and arti- JOBMRgr * clt, write us of your needs and you WjMT %HU be piotected. We are, and always have been •®~bflicver* in low prices. Because of the output of oar factories we are enabled to have I 'tools for each piece, and thus reduce the hand labor I M on it to merely picking up the material and laving it I I down again. So small has become the cost of labor put J lon the material which we sell that it is not worth! ■ mentioning. • We have he oome the largest dealers in I H material in the country; the material, of^ course, be* K. J| ing made up in the form of (tilting* and fixed), tanks, /% pumps, etc.,To'such an extent has this become true, ■ ¥ ■ and to such an extent has the price of our goods (and ■> »n th .t account the vol sible), that FAI R I.AKIiK WIKUMII.I. tIiSVV. it KM AHKBt Yi.MJ TIIKIH TOWEK.S OF IS THIS YEAH TIIE* IM) IT HE CAUSE WE RAKF TIIE OXI.f ABSOLI'TELV RELIABLE AND BAFR TOWERi BEt'Al SE THEY CAN BI'Y OK I S CIIEAPEK THAN THEY TAN Bl'lLlii BE( A! SE WE AMMR ARK PRE PARED TO UALVAM'/K K* FRY Til INO AFTER IT IS COR FLEXED, AND CORI'LKTR EVERYTHING EX AC N.Y 111 OIIT. These conoerns ore wise, for, even though they may not furnish the tost of wheel*, the wheel will have the tost of sup ports. Send to us your name and address, and those of your neighbors who may need some-thing in our line, and thereby do them a good turn. The Aermotor Co. is one of the most success ful business enterprises which lios been launched in recent times. In succeeding sdvertiseinents will be discussed and made clenr the lines on which that success has been worked out. It was done by a farmer's toy, A careful following of these ad vert isementa mav suggest to some other fnimer's boy a caieer. *«rmOtOr Co., 1 - lh i ICasiwell A KillMiureSta ,Cklea B e. N Y N U-1 1 W.L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE HT roit AK?NO> CORDOVAN; JBF TK rHIKCHiENAMLIEO CALF. ©£ ,'A?4.*3SP FINE CAUAKANGAM# KIH ♦3 *S POLICE,3 SOLES. 60 52. WORKINSMEN', Tgfc J -EXTRA FINE- * 9 * BQVS'SCHOOLSHO£i WNTjli Afiitijyl SENDTORCATALOSUE —BROCKTOH^MASS. Over On* Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Slioes Alt our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the beet value lor the money. They equal custom shoe* In (tyleand fit. Their wearing qualltlee are unsurpaued. The price* are uniform, •••■tamped on sole. Prom $I to $3 laved over other makea. If your dealer cannot supply you we can. Baphafl. Angelo, Kaben», TOM« Tbe "MTTEKE" are the Beet and Most Economl eal Collars and CUFFI worn ; they are U;«de of ft n« eloth, both sides alike, and heiog reversi Blß. one collar Is euual to two of any other aind. Thei/ fit tcfl\ wear well ami look v»ll. A BOXO; JEN Collars or Fire Pairs of Cutis for Twenty-! iv« A Simple Collar and Pair of Cnffs by mail for Bil Ceuta. Name style and size. Address aEVKBSIBLE COLLAR COMPAKT, 77 FRIBULBST^NEWVORK^^^L7KLLBYBT^BOSTM. HI LILNNM-MHN W.JUOIIHIS, IjEilldlUll Washington,!>.<', WoSuocessfu Ily Prosecutes Claims. I Bureau. ■ iynlalMt war. 13syndicating claims, atty aloe*