j Young Girl : Saved! So remarkable are the fads; so strongly are (hey substantiated; so important are they to all who are suffering, that there is no necessity of publishing them under the disguise of news or other false colors. I. tt jAirVD ywMHMkfisD D U-TOin II IK I.. i k" w than Frutk B. Trout. i ... mm la rjcllrw in rKe I L. Tn,. VitbW Pink Piflj,n4 ooth.Utttosyso. 'ViUiKns Pink PUi trod ti Hit bit daughter. c,vl her when eminent physidsns Luted! wow . ... ..a . Jl gratitude 01 in Bwrinniumn f 2ls the world hk story Uut others a ins a v . T hid to Uk oar (UuthUr mHm to hmt kttlth. Sh K, to fail swsy an fecaau pale and f jj sh wu to mu um would. v own WJ - .s wu fltota the wclehci . I ..kuaJrlaaa Bald ahc mlvtlt out L-1 hut ihit It would ao doubt tctmi- JlaeoMumpom. Sit wu erowins; www wt "The medlCU vnaowm nu nniiwre !r skill, we nM mta su ine well mown r i n.llw I Inau a boa of Ur. Pink Pills fafpik People and look thenj borne I her. Before sba fud Ukea ail of the test box wc notided a change for the better. "She gained strength daffy. "Every one noticed the change: I bought two more boxes. Whan she bad taken them the was strong enough to leave her bed, and m lest than six naonths was something like herself. MTo-day the is entirely cored, and is a big, strong, healthy gtrll weighing 130 pounds, and has never had a sick day since. MI know Dr. Williams' Pink PlDi saved my daughter's life and I am glad to re commend them to the world.'' To further verify this statement Mr. Trout made affidavit to its touthfulnejs before Robert B. Hull, Tr, Notary Public. The last decade of the nineteenth cen tury has been marked by tome of the most important discoveries in the history of the world. None have done mere to benefit mankind than Dr. Williams' Piflfc Pills for Pale People. Some of the cures effected by this wonderful remedy almost equal the miracles of old. Diseases lonf supposed incurable have succumbed to their potency. The paralysed have walked t the weak and ailing have stepped from their beds well and strong. The evidence is irrefutable. The fact stands supreme that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are the greatest blessing ever bestowed on suffering humanity. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by druggists throughout the land. Great Reduction Sale of FURNITURE! For Ninety Days ! The Undersigned Offer The Public Their EN- TIRE STOCK OF FTJRNITUK UtTHK GREATEST 8ACRIFICK EvEB KNOWN IN CENTRAL PENN SYLVANIA. We are uot feelliuK. out, but we do this to increase our Hales above any pre LintiN veiir. we kIvph lew oi tne prioen ns follow : kit Wood Chamber Suit $14.00 Cotton Top Mattiem. 2.8 fc-rri Wood Chamber 8ultx Kl.O'j: Woven Wire MattreHH 1.75 r . i i. o m in nn . c.-t. f oa llMHIUe Will OUIIH) O A iriilT i . iv . I ini 111 11 iiinn i.'. kh Purlor 8uit 80.00 Prop Ttililen, per ft. 0 MihhIi'ii C'liairei per net 2.00 I'lutforin ItooKcri- 2M I liiKtuck, everything in the furniture line. Including Mirrors, Hook Cat.ed, uVrkN Si(leboar(lM,Cu)loiir(lH, Centre THhlen, Fancy Ronkern, Kubv Chnira lVMllier 1'illowB. LoiitiLreH, Couohes. DoniibtrnvH. Hlnks, Hull RartKB, Cau. Kent (Jlutim Que, medium aud cheap furniture, to suit all classes. FPrlivs reduced all through. Come early and nee our stock before' irlvliiit pour order, and thud nave IS to 20 ier ceut. ou every dollar. lcial Attention Uivun to Untlertakinfr & hmbahuiii. MlKFLlNIUUtOn. P FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT J iNSURANCB.kC SNYDEK'S OLD, AND KELIABLE Gen'l Insurance Agency, SSLINSGR0VE, SNYDER COUNTY, PA- I:-lmor 7V". sSriT'ciorr, Agont, Sucnsir to the late William H. Snyder. Tim T:n .V.r pbI!..i nf Itxlinblh TiiHiirnnen in r.-nrnKPr.ti'il in llin follow- lie list of Stnndnid CouiDauieR. from which to make a htlectiou. None 'Butter the WorUl over. SMV., l.M'TIO.y AHWETM. FIUE-KovhI, Liverpool, Eng. (iuclading foreign ussett-) $43,000,000.00 HHrtforif of Hartford, (Jonn., (oldest Auiencnu tJo.) H,t-J5,7.tt.a Vbfuiiix, KartforJ, Codu. :.,rH8,058.07 Coutinental, New York, '!,754 .1)08 72 a xt-.... v 1. ii )jn iViu U' ueiiiiHii Ailierirnn, ie luit, 'j,w,wo.cx LIFK-MutualLifelns. Co. New York, !r2()i.'j38,983,00 ACCIDENT EmployeiH1 Liability Annurance Corporation, Accident lus. (Jo. hubscnbe.l Capital ot 5d, oo.uoo.oo Firo T if., utiil Ai.ii1unt. liukii nci.untoil nr. t.hfl lowiHt nnuuililn ruin, inti. ihed by a ntrict rear to mutual safety. All jut ciaiuiH promptly ami tifHctorilv ndjuHted. Iiiformation iu relation to all clnHHen of Iusur- nce i.rnmiit'lv fnii.itih.wl FTArTt W SNYHKIt. Ai?L. Tde)bo No. 182. Office on Corner Water & Pine Sts. SelinKsrove, P STOVE -NAPHTHA Tlio Cheapest and liepi Fuei . ... ohe arket, With it you can ran it vapor store tor one half cent per hour, (.tive ns a call and bo convinced. Scboch & Stahlneckor, Middleburgh. Pa TOE FOMIE TOLD.:. RurtuKAKE totEfmno and WONDERFUL tCttHCS. "AQUA EIOLOOYJ' m (hilt nut tatmx n which nun nruu oah rrwr ma tooutAnu u hmetoux ' n mmmm ismmrUm! Eania I IkHlbMlwMiMlHWii 1 mm, nmt kat f fautrt m. A IIN0LI ANSWER fHV LEAt YOU TO THOUMNOS Of DOLUIt. Sm4 it MM tat fin OMt tm t MMk M4 I viU lamMM? man wa amaiai Mnawat maiafM iw um. aaa anaa iaH aw ar raiaui. mmmm XHt0JUSTR3LOCXa, look Box 403, PhUmdolphlm, Pa. f WW w Swaaiaa laiduw la aM mMm H. Blva4MsnH)NMaattaMiaNkaM A MODEL COW STALL. cth4 ( raatralBs Wklrk Allows MaeltVlttt) mmi Tt Coallaes tk Cow Booorolr. The stall which. In my experience, has the (rretet number of good points ls modlflosUon of Us rigid stanchion. ; It Is merely a small stanchion hnng . at top and bottom on small links of Strong chain. It Is a Yankee Inven tion and, like many others of the same j kind, a good one. This method of fas tening allows much freedom to the cow and yet confine her enough to al low of use in large stables. There is no weigh on the cow's neck; she can turn her head and lick herself as wedl as if In the pasture, and yet with all this freedom she keeps clean If prop erly bedded. And In all stalls there should be a partition between the cows. This is SMALL GREENHOUSE. A Bel to Than WIsbIbs to Moko sv tart aa Florists la a Small, Hodoat Way. The plan of a greenhouse here shown Is intended a a help to those who would like to start as florists in a small way but who are not able to do so be cause the ordinary greenhouse Is so very expensive. A trench is dug along the eastern side of dwelling house; if It has a cellar six (set deep the trench should be two feet wide and f our feetdeep; a door la cut in the cel lar vvull (m), and the trench should be boarded up on the side opposite the' wall to prevent earth caving In. A door is placed in the south end and ff K s, rtt-H12 Ik. SANTED-BRAIN W WANTED 8KVKRAI. TIU'ST WORTHY lai..v'M M " ' peraons In ula to minnire our bust aTrarnruiaitMvUTta!nl,Jo tniliinn. ttati" I rnu n tlmlr n .! n.i.v I.. i i. WUait!Jiiv ukftM Tslskwk toit U tt; I mainly office work oonUuckd at home. Holary ttL71!"',,M,l WntsH9.tv. latrsignMOO year and exponaea-deflulta Vaj.Lj.' !?t ysststf rnttot yw 14tu: bonnilde, no more, no lea anlnry. Monthly K ' wSiiTT!1 fcferratrllJwptn M References. Knclose ani.adiln.ert a'amped ?,2,IfMtar'lits!rl-Ji. T-rTrV' envelope, tferhcrt JC II . :(., I r .. MODEL COW BTALL. best made of IVi to IVi-inch surfaced lumber, and should be four feet high at the highest point and extend two feet In front ot the oows and from three to f ou feet behind tha manger. The mange I like to have 19 inches wide ot the bottom, 2 feet high and two feet wide at tha top. Each stall should be from two feet eight inches to three feet slk Inches wide, depend ing somewhat on the also of the cows. We are building them three feet throe lnca.ro for Jerseys and Guernseys. A covered gutter behind the cows is the neateet arrangement, but rather tpene:Ie: to put in and to maintain. Jt shoald be at leaat 18 Indies wide and deep, and covered with iron or wooden bars placed 1 or two Inches apart. An open gutter not over four tnetjes deep and 18 Inehea wide In most coses gives the best satisfaction. The platforms on which the cows stand may vary In length from three feet ten Inches to five f ert, andit Is general ly advfeaMe to make It In varying length toaccotnmodate.large or small eowa. A oeroeat floor and a tight gutter is best nwj cheapest, bot where the oows trtaitj It shoald be planked. Water may bo furniNbed In Iron cups for eirery cow or two cows, or In n tmng'h run rilsyr In front on top of the manger Edwin C PowXl, in National Stock man. HOW TO DRESS CALVES. Ity FollowlBeT Taeoe latatractloaa Much Dlaapotntntomt aad Money Caa Bo savod. Cofvea from, three to six weeks old arjd weighing about 100 pounds, or, ray, from 80 to 120 pounds, are the moat dostroMe wrtght for -shrpment. Tfie head should be cut out, so as to leave tho htdo of theheadm the skin, en ye an exchange. The lege should bo cut off at the km?e joint. The ea t rafts should all be removed exoept hig the kidneyannd liver, which should not bo taken out. Cut the carcass open from the neolc through the entire tengtb-orm head to bumgnt. If this rsdonhey are-not ao apt to sour and spoildurfng hot 'weather. Many a fine carcass has spoiled in hot weather be cause of its no being cut open. Don't warih the carceM ott with water, but wipe ft out with a dry oloth. Dont rtip until tho animal heat fs entirely otrt of the body, and never tie the co cats up in a bag, aa this keeps the air from ctroatatanff and rpakee the meat mora ltabro to beootno tainted. Mark for shipment by- fastening a shipping iag vo ioe ni no leg. caives uncrer so pounds ahotild not be shipped (00 1 pounds the minimum weight In the Chicago market), and are liable (o be condemned by the health officers as , onflt for food. Merchants, too, are liable to b flne for violation of the law. Very heavy carves, such -ns have been fed cm'buttenrniUi.-,nevr sell well In our nwtrket they are neither veal nor beef.-Itorat World. Good MliktasT la an Art. Almost anybody can milk a cow, but there are frwwnocandoltasit should be dose. It la ad art, and the man who can do KpToperly U worth TDore to tne dairyman than, airy other help. Jhe art of nrflklng Is to draw it out stead ily quickly (by no mean's hurriedly) and oomsletely. Scarcely any two cows are exactly alfke in disposition an;d In tne; obaraoter or nature oi their tast and udder. Soma are hard to milk toA bare very small. apSrtdrts; some Irsva tender teats; some cows are very easy to milk; nd som'e.cows are dsH, whie others-are lively and very nervous. ifekola TfHd and Farm. " . Lot aN'Uiy i SXI voa , Aloae. Some naon tha (Bgo we looked Into the question, of the use of. bofncl'c acld p'reaervatlvea In better, and' became fully oomrtneed that It would be very unwlsa for tiie butterm)iken of this country sto litrqduca auy foreign mat ter Into their product in order to give the Kilter keepipg properties which ft did sot posseas iq ltsif. Later ue relopments have not lessened the deep ness of this conviction, nor. furnished the slightrst ground upon which we mlgBt modify our. pnsltion. X. Y. j ; B d c 8 m OBOUND PLAN OP GREENHOW8E. steps lead up to it. This door can be used untH the extreme oold weather seta In; then Itahoold be fastened un til mild weather returns. A cask of water is kept at the north end of the trench, and tools of all aorta should hang from noils driven Into tho aide of the dwelling house. This little greenhouse may be built as long or as short aa kbe builder de tires and the size of the main house will allow, but it should be six feet wide. It gets a good deal of heat from the bouse. Two holes are cut through Into rooms where fires burn all night throughout the winter if there la bo I i. A - ;1 1 I" END VIEW OF O.REENHOUSE. furnace. Thta greenhouse is built in, the usual way in every other inotance. In the ground plan diagram a a la the wall of the house, b the trench, o the step leading to the outer door, d the bed for plants, e tho door in cellar wall, f tho water cask, g g tho cellar, h tha outside door. In the end view is shown tho hoase- wall at 1-1, sashes as j j, k trench. L plaot bed, m dwelling house floor) n. cellar floor, o hole cut into the sitting' room. This little house would be ot ratoe to a market gardener aa well the prospective florist. It should bo built on tho eoetern. side of the houso, with the ends north and south; tire bed for the plants shook! bo four feet wide. With no. other brat thou tirat derrred froto the. honse it would be necessary on the. cold nights to cover the giacri with mate or shuttens if, however, there Is. a furnace In the cellar and a register set in the wall this wouldnotbeDecee- sary very of ten. Form and Dome. LOW-HEADED TREES Their KataaaJlr Spaeadina Hmt ot QravrtU Will Keea Theas Pror. tal for Years. A great many fruit trees will be set, next spring, says Nebraska iVsmer. One of the most Important points to be ooneidertd Id planting is to trim so. as to make the fruit. tn product Ive nnd its fruits easily harvestod. The, old Idea that fruit trees should, be. trained to branch np six or more feet from the ground, so as not to get in the way of plowing, has long ago been, proved a mistake. It is the fruit an. the high tree that la mosttexposed to winds and which as windfalls brings less, than hali what It Is worth if carefully pick d by hand. The low-bended tree will come Into bearing earlyi and its naturally spredtllng habit of growth, will keep it fruitful. Under trees thus! managed there can, of course, be no; plowing, but they will not seed lt Otbss is easily suppressed by 'the shad a of low-Jcodd trees, and a little mulch spread under the trees wfll'kfep thai soil always moist enough for. a thrifty growth of roots. Most of the fruit on low-headed .trees can be harvested from the ground, or by sH.andlnc on, short eteniadders, leaving very lit tie. lo "be got by climbing -among the) branches. Tbe dairy shonjd "be regarded erf every farm as a good source of 1nJ nn TiT"nfl annorfllimii W W W W WWW WW WWW "Take it back I told you 'Battle Ax.' -Every man who has once chewed Battle Ax or who has made up his mind that he will chew it will not accept any substitute. There is a peculiar excellence in it that can only be understood and ap preciated by trying it. No matter what brand you have been chewing, Battle Ax is better, and if you will try it you will say so yourself. Remember the name m when you buy again. PLUG It is impossible to promise particular features that will appear in the "AMERICAN MONTHLY" during the coining year, for it is, as the Bookman says, " a great monthly newspaper." As such, it prints for its readers an Illustrated account of the notable things which make the history of the month, of the political, the economic, and literary happenings which are of value to intelligent men and women. The Editor's "Progress of the World " tells suc cinctly an illustrated story of the monfh. The "Leading Articles" give the best thought and information of the current magazines in five conti nents; the contributed articles furnish the character sketches of the man of the month, and give timely discussions by authorities on any question of immediate serious import. The result of this comprehensive effort to edit In one monthly volume the Information needed by intelligent people of " live " instincts is best gauged in . the opinions which the readers of I " We know o( no rrvlew published, In this I country or In Europe, which combines so success fully as me ambruan monthly ma alertness, timeliness, anil enerry of ourrulism with the Bound ludgment, carefully weighed opinion, exact knowledge, and well-chosen English of tha purely literary periodical." 7 ne Oulkk. For.. 25c. SPECIAL OFFER The current number and the two preceding- issues. . . . . . the AMERICAN MONTHLY have seen fit to express. These are thinking business men, clergy men, editoss, lawyers, professors, engineers, the wide-awake women of America. They write that the AMKUAJN IWUIN 1 "IS Indispensable " t 44 is simply invaluable " I 44 is a generous library in itself " t is " a historical cyclopedia of the world "i "the best means of aid for a busy man " ; "the best periodical of the kind we have ever had") "a triumph of editorial gtnfns"t "the world under a field-glass," etc, etc i SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $2.50 PER YEAR ADDRESS American Monthly Review of Reviews. 13 ASTOR PLACE, NEW YORkI Agents "in Money TUIh Is the opportunity of a life-time. Agfuts are inuklnK SOW lo aiAO a wt'ck.fcu -ir FITZHUGH LEE, iTuTiute Consul Ocneral to Cuba, writes book on CotaSpaii War. We have on pram for enrly Issue, Oontral U e's own Htorv nt Ciiluk mid tUe HpnnlNli Wiir, lo lio print nerd In a ntilthtttlif litl hook of over M0 piiKl'P, Ut Indira in Hlv.u aud HltuoHt 0ND HUNDRED ILLUSTRATIONS. This Is tho only authentic work pultllnhHl on Ihn one piiIiJitI occupying the nil mix of I lie entlro civilized world. OUTFITS HEADY- WsTK Lose no tluie, net nl once. Write lor lull partic ulars to THE 1NTENAT10NAL SOCIETY, 91 93 Filth Ate. Mew York. PitbHilier "r General I.re'N Hook. Oursuthorlrdidlxirlliuti rs ora located In nil partB of tbe U. 8. T-i.'1-lin. WANTFD PKVKRAL THU8TWORTHY pPnxma In tlila atuta to msnaK our liual nexa In their own and nrarliy cnuntlia. It la mainly office work conducled at home. Hnlnry tralKnt t'JOO a yenr and espenaea ilcllnite, bonallile, no more, no Iraa rnlnry. Monthly 8"..V Heferencca. Kncloae a relf-Mldreaaol Iiojh1 cnvulopo, IIerbrt E. Hera, I'rr.t., Dept. M, Chicago. 9-IB-lOt. PT $1.50 PER DAY. A WRW KNF.HOETIO QKNTLKMAN AND Lsdles Wanted lo CanvsHS. Above aala ry cuiir- an'eed. ''' or nfldrpaat 1IOHEKT I'OMA", ',;'. i i I ' ,; I'll.' ', t I i ' . I, v Look! Look!! Look at youpself when you buy clothing at my store, I keep coi -fitautly in stock the best and llneBlr line of Hats and dents' Clothing Furnishing Goods, Underwear arL Cape. Call to sue my ntock. W. H. BOYER'S BROTHERHOOD STOFC SCNBCHY, - - - PENSA, Wanted-An Idea ttanlaat SnnS Masi ths tnaV KHn Willi r1C Write JOHN WK.DDr.KIIUKN CO., Patrnt Attg Who can i Mint alias Shins lo Pt ' - fi "V-J" ,' W " JXl i-i..,...-4'-'--"-' -t- reaenln n AnK . ) ' mm - "1 - court .V.VW-a.iif u