i i i ... . . . 1 r 1 '11 o ) YOU GET U? WITH A LAHE BACK ? u r" 1 to everybody who reads the new. ur ii l . sbnAI !Ll ta am lo know of the wonderful . . cures itimob nr jr. bLrtf I Kilmer's Swim -Root. . thtrtkkW. Itvr - ana fiiaddar remedy. ! It is the met medW i eal Iriunak a tK - tiH teenth century: covered eiter years of j ectemiiio researca by Utt- Kilmer, the em- aoht kidney end bled- der specialist, and la rfully successful la promptly cwiar s . ii - ' . w . Uck, KMinow eiaaaer, uric, acid trou- i and Brlgm s uisesse, wnicn is tne worst .lb iAnri trouble.: l :' I -. , i - Dr Kilmer's Swamp-Root Is not roe- , . .1-1 I- ... II t I . t amended tor evory mini uui u jou nave kkj- Ever or bladder trouble H will be found -A-remedy you need. It has been tested Ljominy ways, In hospital work. In private ice, among mo neipiessioo poor 10 pur- relic' and has proved so successful in case mat a special arrangement nS -to mtat oy wnicn an reaoers 01 inis paper La hive not already tried It. may have a Urie bottle sent free by mail, also a book r ' i . c- . is... x i . Cine wore aooui .awsmp-rujoi ana now 10 id out II you navo kiuiigt or eiaaaer irouDie. 'hen writing mention reading this generous (n this paper and f mi your address to . " 1 fti e .vr-n KilmCr at IOa,DlnK- EiTTTwW - Ciiiii.L aaa nti,n, N. I. no Kst miir fifty cent and Homoc sam-ROTtv. Likr sizes are sold by ail rood drutrrt3ta.e ARK WANTED. I We are u the market for a large lactity of Roc Oak and Hemlock Lrii. For prices write )U North American Tannery, LewistowD, Pa. xwnaw ' so If )0 r apart a t Taa tka Olitrm WaaU aiava The first cranberries of th season come frjm Cape Cud. ' It "ytum her that craaberry cultivation waa inaug urated at .the beginaliur t the last century. ' Cap 4 iuraiahee a large proportion of the best befries and about twtbirda t the total crop of New England. Next iswfttlume f productiTenesa ' coiniJ (ew Jersey. Part of the state's crop is made yp of wild cranberries). 1 These are some times picked before' they have began to color, then spread an. the grouad and exposed to the son 1 for' six weeksv Jt Is claimed that lri this way a deeper color is secured.' Following New Jersey comes New York- berries, moat of .which, are grown on Long Island. These, as a whole, are particularly rood berries. large in size, and, for that reason. attractive. The cranberry is the one fruit whose quality is held second to its appearance. . There are cranberry bogs hi Wis consin,. Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa, Indiana aa northern OWo. The western berry seldom finds its way east, for the borne demand is as great :ei the supply.. For this reason the eastern berry 6ften finds its way well toward and sometimes beyond the Mississippi. Generally it is of bet ter quulity, for the production of western berries gathered from wild vines is large. " Every year cranberries are shipped to Europe and statistics -show a sternly increase of exportation. It Ib only natural that this increase should occur, because the American craii berry is superior to the European. Eng-lund receives most of its cran berries from Norway and Sweden, but they are not nearly as irood as the American product. Perhaps poor O 1 Jl flJlmlJJJ (J We live by our blooH-'antJ it We thrive or starve, is our blood, is rich 01; j)oor. ..i There is nothing else to liv on or by. . :j When strength is. full i and spirits high, .we 'are 'btfjn- re freshed, bone muscle "aim Lnin. in body, and mind, . with cojt? tmuilflow 0 rich blood ' This is health. v, When weak, in low spirit, no cheer, no spring, when ix s is not rest and sleep is no1 sleep, we are starved ; our bloo is poor; there is. little - mitri mcnt in it. ' " . Back of the blood, is foor to keep the blood rich. W hoi iit fails, take Scott's Emulsioi of Cod Liver Oil. It sets tin ivhole body going again mar. woman and child. If yon have not tricl It, wnd for free iauip'.i ts agreeable taste will surprise you. SCOTT & llOVXE, Cl'icnikts 09-4iJ Pearl Btrcet, New York. Joe. autl Ji.oo; all druggist. PKOTEcr Your Ideap. Consultation free. dependent on Success. Et.l86 4 1"nlity has caused the cranberry to Milo B. Stevens & Co., 819-J4th St., ; 61 o w Iters Worse. l!jnr things happen to us all which lis just as well to laugh about as cry LklK iiad Mai- about disap pointments, unfor t u n a t e coinci fccts, the disparity between Inten In ind performance. You might as I take them as a part of the day's Imonth's or year's experiences, and Ifhffrfu.ly as possible charge them Iprofit and loss. At any rate, srrum- nd whining are not going to nfe them, ajid the expenditure of btioa in those .npfortoaat 48 lack in popularity abroad. - Certain it is that nowhere is this berry bo Washington, popular as In the United States, where the quantity consumed is larg er tnnn the reRt of the world uses. Newark (X. J.) News. St. Louis has a peculiar sect iu the shape of a community of snnd-eaters, composed of 75 men and women. The sand-eaters take every day a spoonful of sand. They believe that grit is nec essary In every animal, and that many stomach troubles are due to the ab sence of grit in the stomach. It occurs to us that it would take some little grit to begin with to take a grit diet. GRAFTING MADE EASY. Ituwn East Method Which Ila Never Failed to Produce Fairly SatUfactorr Result. In grafting a seedling one r r.v years old the gralt is put on ju.-, above the ground and but one cutting is used. To craft a tree to chancre the fruit is another matter and in stead of cutting the tree off below the limbs tfcree or four of the Jower and two cuttings or grafts are placed in each limb. Should the operation prove successful the following year all the branches above the graft: may be removed with little danger of losing the tree. A tree of most any age may be grafted in this way and in a few years be in good bear ing. The grafting outfit is simple, comprising a lackknife. small saw and ,a dish of grafting wax. In se lecting grafts only the last year' growth of new wood should' be chosen. Figure A shows how to make the scion. They may be several inches long and contain two or three buds UrniisT are cut off lirht op ten Inches u-uj unni you ior retrieving your I from the trunk or the main branch rs. indeed, says the Boston ichman, it often turns out. that the sppy and disagreeable mood into one Is thrown by a disappoint It a severer loss than the thing wnich he complains. Many a ma woman has brought into the circle a sour visage and a morose rrorer some unfortunate occur and has c'ouded the home at ere and sown seeds of alienation fm those who should love ch tad stand together. The result ill-nature has been utterly dis- fwuonate to its occasion. Proba i. ..i.i , , uowug iuu mucn ie expect a who has been refused by the lad v heart or a business man who has good bargain, or a woman who kmii caught in the rain wearing wst bonnet, to be exuberantly out ever! in the case of such fortunes philosophy may come am, and teach us not to make a patter worse f'glit of an editor to curtail or Btory whichhe has purchased of the ia 1'kely to be bet ter defined than it is at the nreeent atby the discussion of Mr. Hall i-ternal City" in the, law notes the Book Buver. ' course, been many instances w author of the first rank has ws story purchased and. tlion a or, as he would call it.tauti- o suit the taste of an editor's Jhere is much to be snirt " "V. ?n I U 1U1 LilC I Iktl ithor. t Pi U . Will 11 l'v THE SCION AND STOCK. each. The bottom end which Is to be inserted into the limb should be wedge shape. Figure B gives an idea how the limb appears with a split top in which the grafts are set. Two cuttings should be plnced In each limb to be sure of a good stand. After they, are plnced lu position some orchardists bind them in place witn com or twine to make them secure before the grafting wax is np- Tilietl. T his finRwpra nn n enfAminrd ho deliberately buvs a storv but it is not absolutely neceaanrv. K reading it when he has an op- In placing the scion it is important ' to do so. That practice is 10 ,,nve 11,6 inner bark of scion and 11 par with buylnjr a piir in a at come together so that the sap f horse without a wl flow "0,n the tree to the cut- h method of editing after the -,", ,A,tcr,.tb1i" it"ne the wax r expensive and vexatious. In 7. , '? 4V"D J"""."r of small article, this doe. no! ! 1 ,P.t J" "l'' eT" int-iv ! ... .. . i"" t wilier, jsiiuuiu oil ine ""us uko ine same extent. ,t.. v. , , ... , . r . , . I et,lllB io rRcr 11111:9 hiioiuu ue I.. . proauces waat he con-1 pruned away. Oranire Judd Fnrmr. o--'j or wronir y. a mec nf In..n . . - I , J oojects to have it done Asparagus on the Farm. I J 8 manipulator who has One" of the plants most servl. f C0Innierclal point in view, or able in the farmer's garden is os 'J"'g of certain public. Ming librafy is riot necessarily -ine chaplain of the Four- rntry held a Bible class H men shortly after their a. fc . . 1 from Tientsin to rekinir. ft. ha ant. . , mil purugua. unco wen established an ospnragus bed la perpetual, if it Is handled right after it comes into bearing. Fifty plants will supply an ordinary lamiiy with, oil the asnnra gus tips tney can use. lhe plants should not be set closer than 18 inches in the row, and should not be nnrinlfted to trn In aiterl. . If IYia ' hehlnd." One VOUnir man ra 'nermlt.terl in rlnon snJ oil r nve-ceot American Bible the ground they will send up innum- "w merit. "Ymi tra erable atalks and these mnbn trnuM. Id, "when wa atarteri fn in asparagus growlnir. This can be P'W. Itwent through a year's Preveuted bT cuttiag out the sprouts "". two years hlkina-' in ths ' " "",lv" I V AW. WtlAlt ADS.VM. r.1.1 are set, cutting for use may begin .. . v.v, , VM lnlra teooa Each da- aW the 1- vreraesra 10 say: "Uh 'snronts should ha cut. If ..U V - ' , ony hi -xau taTt of them A hunter who got caught in an ice floe above Niagara falls was rescued by a man who threw a rope to him from Willow island, but his boat and gun and a fine lot of ducks went over the great cataract, leaving him to wonder whether life is worth living, after all. Chronic Constipation Cured. The most important discovery of recent years is the positive remedy constipation, cascarets Candy for Cathartic. Lure guaranteed. Genu ine tablets stamped C. C. C Never sold in bulk. Druggists, ioc An assembly of women students at a leading college was. astonished last Teaehlaa- as a weelt to hear a fa V , mous educator say: ' ' "Take up teaching as a life work er let It alone. He added that the field of education was dread y overcrowded with women who look upon their occupation not as a serious profession, but as a remunerative means of filling in their time between graduation and marriage." The edu cator's theories doubtless were sound enough, but is his advice practicable? How can a girl who chooses the profes sion of teaching be sure that it can bs her life work. Must she deliberately renounce all hope of being married? Must she resolve to turn a deaf ear to every suitor? Is an intellectual wom an to be barred from the profession by the possibility that she will marry, and , on the other hand, is a successful teacher to refuse to marry because she feels that her first duty is her chosen vocation? These are questions, ac cording to the Milwaukee Sentinel, that the educator would find difllcult to answer. An effort to increase the proportion of men teachers has been made recently in various parts -of the lountry, but it is likely that women will always predominate in public school work. The gentle sympathy and in exhaustible patience of women fit them for teachers in the lower grades where it Is impossible for men to compete with them. In the higher studies they are also most successful, for they bring to their teaching a singleness of purpose and nn enthusiasm rarely found among men.. There will always be many women teachers who do not marry, but the majority will seek homes of their own. The well-trained teacher should become a wise mother, She should be able to supplement the work of those who instruct her cliil dren at school. The famous educator's advice is good Indeed when construed in-its largest meaning. Teaching is a life work with every woman if she ac cepts her noblest duties and fulfills her highest destiny. Msta of 14 masMkea, Caatatalasj Hlaeaa)rsaaw r David Bankln, of Tsrkio. Mo, owns Ua tartest cultivated tract of land ia iha world, says the Cincinnati Ka qnlrer. To those who have never vis !'d a large ranch the methods secea mrf to Berry' on the tast amooat of !vrk wq14 era great problem. Mr. Rankin owns 14 ranches, contain ing 2,000 acres; 700 teams and 230 men are required to operate the daily "" wor m tne ousy season while Mm crops are under cultivation." Each anca has an overseer, who Is required to make a monthly report and to sub mit the same to his employer. ' The recoras of the past year's work over all the ranches show that a total of 7,539 head of cattle had been sold for S172.520 and 8,249 head of hogs for $111,848. The total clearance for the year 1900 amounted to $100,000.- The expenses, including interest, reached the sera of $91,851.13. The most profitable ranch is the one looked afte r by Foneman George Ross, whose yearly report contains the fol lowing statements: Number of acres, 3,280; cattle, 1,328; net proceeds from cattle, $14,598.00; hogs, 1,232, cash for tne same, 117,054.19; expense per acre, $1.39; corn bought, 98,720 bushels. Mr. Rankin Is a close observer and soon picks out the good qualities of his men. He is pleasant and accom modating, daring and energetic, which qualities have won for him the wealth ne now commands. Besides l.U fsrms he has nn interest In several banking concerns, but to these latter he gives little attention, and spends most of his time riding over the ranches to see that proper care is being given the stock. Sometimes he lends a helping hand In pulling a steer from the mud; again he will assist in building a shed lor the fattened hogs. NAMING THE FARM. A Coninieadntile Fashion That la Growing; In Favor In the It oral Districts of the West. The farm ought to have a name. The boys will love it more, and others will respect it more if given this dig nity. After giving the name, mark it in. a prominent place. The cut sho.vs a unique way. Haul a pictur esque bowlder to one side of the main for Infants and Children. CMtorU ia a harmless substitute for Cantor OIL Pare gortc. Drops and Soothing Syrup. It ia Plesvssvat. It contains neither Opium Morphine nor other Mareotle aubstance. It destroys "Worms and allays FeTerlshaeas. It .cares Diarrhoea and Wind Colic it relieves Teeth ing Troubles and cures Constipation. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, givlns; healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought sears tne Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Tut OtTHH COSWSWTTT MUmiST STUtCTj WtTfUH ClTT. Liberal Adjustments- Prompt Payme HEWIErV.BEFI H. HRRVEY SCHDCH. GENERAL INSTANCE AGENGV SBIiXZvSGBOT PA. Only the Oldest, Strongest Cash Companies, Fire, Life, Accident and Tornado. flo Assessments No, Premium Note3. The Aetna Founded A. 1)., 1819 Assets 11,0 ,13.88 " Home S53 " 9.83 .6284 American " 1810 44 2,40 ,81.3 The Standard Accident Insurance Co. The New York Life Insurance Co. The fidelity Mutual Life Association. Your Patronacro is sillclted. (4 DURING HOT WEATHER -e. BLUE FLAME COOK STOVES Jin.... n..L..i ii Hoii nocnesisr ' NAME PLACED ON STONE. entrace. With a sledge hammer and cold chisels cut a smooth fuce upon the front, and either cut out the name of the farm or paint it on the smooth face with black paint. A granite bowlder will work best. Orange Judd farmer, Before the date of inauguration day Is changed the house will have to agree to Senator Hoar's resolution setting it on the last Thrusday in April, and then the proposed amendment will have to be submitted to the legisla tures of the states and agreed to by three-fourths of them. Now that the doctors have succeeded In removing a man's brain to cure dis ease, for which fact we have the word If the Chicago Sun, it may be that those who find it an incumbrance in this world to be possessed of that commod ity can secure the necessary relief. A Mammoth liar Farm. Five thousand acres of swamp lnnd In Oregon, says the Hay Journal, will be reclaimed and made to produce hay, if a project set on foot by a live stock company shall prove'succcssful. This company has built a dredge, with which it proposes to dig a ditch CO feet wide and nine feet deep through the center of the swamp which covers a large proportion of Molhcur county. By menns of this ditch it is proposed to drain the swamp and convert it into a irrent hay field. It is estimated that 100,000 tons of hoy can be produced annual ly, where now nothing but swamp grass flourishes. A San Francisco company has secured a contract to operate tho' dredge, and it is esti mated that two years will be re quired to complete the ditch. Collar, of Strawberries. There are three methods now fol lowed by tho best growers, known na hill culture, the hedge row and the half-matted row. 5y the first, plants are set from 13 to 13 inches apart in tbe row, and all runners kept off so that no other plants can form. The heilfre row method consists in having plants from 0 to 13 inches in the row, with runners kept off; and the huK-matted row method is to plant in t'le usual manner with plants 13 to 3U inches in the row, the first run ners that appenr just where wanted, until there is a row about 13 inches wide, with plants not more than six Inches apart. After the row is filled in this manner, keep the runners ofT, as in the hill and hedge row method. --Uurul World. How Weeds Are Scattered. They may be introduced and. spread with seeds of grasses, clover and groin ou the farm. By live stock- carried In the hair, fleece or feet; or by passing Into the excrement. By unground feed stuff purchased in barnyard manures drawn from town, in the packing of trees, crockery, baled hay nnd straw, by wagons,' threshing machines, ete. Oftentimes by plows, cultivators and harrows, by railway trains, or boats, by birds, squirrels and mice, by water or brooks, rivers and by washing rains. WICKLESS SAMPLE, 5AFE .4 uy 'obfe- Kevs. rjOOKINO under tbese circumstances is a pleasure. Tho Rochester u i L.imp (Jo-.Htftke their repututiou on tho stove in question. Tbe befet evidence of the eatmfnetion enjoyed is testimonials galore and du plicate orders from ail parts of the world. '. Send for literature, both for tbe "New Rochester" Cook Stove and the "New Rochester" Lamp. You will never regret having introduced those gcoda into your house hold. The'Rocheser Lamp Co., ; ace anJ 33 Barclay St., New York. New-York Tribune Farmer FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FARMER'S FAMILY Established lo lsil, for over sixty years It was tlis NKW-YOHK WEKKI.V TKIHIWE, known und read In every Mato In tlio rnloo. on November 7, lain, n was changed to tUs a IiIk'Ii class, up-to-date. Illustrated agricultural weekly, tr the luruier and his his tamtly rnicia 91.00 n year, but, you can buy It fur les?. How ? Uy subscribing through jour owo favorite homo newspaper, The Post, Mlddlcburif. Pa. Holh paiwre one yenr lor only $1.50, bend your order uud money to the Post. Sample Copy free. Send your ad dress to NEW-YORK TRIBUNE PARMER, New York City. SPECIAL SALE -?f CARPETS, MATTING f RUGS and FURNITURE. I There la a tribe in Central Afrlaa among whom speakers in public de bates are reauired to stand while orating, and to speak onW as !?y the YLi'. ided by litUo lonr as ther can .t.nj . !down op fitting snow. And ia count- other ways. Tia an enemy that doeaUT.ar Bew.ls Wltk Casaaraas. must ba fouffht without nnartae. till ii w TIK1E LABG PLETE LI ST AMD MOST 6 mm DISPLAYED IN! X ( Marked attractiveness in digu and color aud excellent quality T of Jabric, combined with the reasonable prices, make our carpets T conspicuous. At this time attention is called to the new season's $ f patterns of the well-known Wilton's, Axminsters and Tapestry x Brussels. The latest effect In Ingrains, llag Carpets in all styles ; X and prices. t Our stock of new ruKNl 1 UKt is es- J i pecially pleasing. We also have a fine I line of baby Carriages ! .W, H. FELIX, . Lewistown, P I Valley Street, em oava q pa urown awav.- " " " r 1 i f"ooa'"n vni i j ..m? VyaaasaaaaaBBSBS- - .... 1 ."- , I 7 tllji..,