: 0 fe ———— “ Newer Do Things by Halves.” Sometimes the condition of your health could be de- scribed as half-sick and half- well. You may not be ill enough to go fo Led but too dll to be happy or efficent in your fiome or your business. Why not be wholly well? Your dragged- out, tired feeling is due to poor blood and nothing else, Make Your blood rich by us- ing Hood's Sarsaparilla. It works fo perfection; there is nothing like it. Tired Feeling — “My husband would come home from work so tired he _could hardly move. He began taking “Hood's Sarsapariilz and # cured him. Ii cured my girl's headaches.” Mrs. A. J Sprague, 57 Qak St., Fall River, Mass. B Cures all Throat and Lung Affections. COUGH SYRUP \is SURES Dr. Bull's Dills cure Dyspepsia. Trial, 20 for 5G. A Much-arried Chinaman. The case is mentioned in a Chinesas paper of a native, aged 40, who hag married and divorced 35 wives, anq ig now married to the thirty-sixth. He was first married at 18, and the rea- son assigned for this extraordinary ex- ample of inconsistency is that he has a younger sister of extremely jealous and rancorous disposition, who, from the moment that a bride enters the house, institutes a system of persecu- tion which soon drives the unhappy woman to ask her husband for a dis vorce. Cducate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartie, cure constipation forever, 10¢,25¢. If C.C.C, fail, druggists refund money. The salary of the mayor of Munich has been raised from $4,000 to $5,000 a year. Se “Tea” School. The oddest school in the United States is now in daily session at Pine- hurst, Summerville, S. C., says the New York Journal. Uncle Sam’s paternal and financial part in the institution makes it of interest to the nation, It is situated in the heart of the tea lands about Summerville, and its odd feature is the curriculum. Under the super- vision of a competent teacher thirty South Carolina pickaninnies are taught the three old fashioned R’s— “readin’, ’ritin’ and ’r’thmetic”’—and tea picking. And the last is not the least important study. The rapid de- velopment of tea raising in the South has received additional impetus from the announced intention of Sir Thomas Lipton to invest $500,000 in tea cul- ture in South Carolina. Sir Thomas is familiar with the soil and climatic conditions of the state, having at one time worked as a laborer on a rice plantation in Georgetown county. The United States Department ot Agriculture is taking a lively interest in the “tea school,” and has given it financial aid. Woman's Kidney Troubles Why trifle with health when the easiest and surest help fis the best known medicine in the world ? ! Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound | is kmown everywhere and thousands of women have been cured of serious kid=- ney derangements by it. Mrs. Pinkbam’s meth- ods have the endorse- ment of the mayor, the postmaster and others of aer own citys Her medicine has the endorsement of an un- numbered multitude of grateful women whose letters are constantly printed in this paper. Every woman should read these letters. firs. Pinkham advises suffering women free of charge. Her address is Lynn, Masse | | beet me to pay fora $ NICHT IN THE SPRUCE. one knows what these promises amount to,” laughel Ellen, as she told Aunt Keturah, who was sitting up in a prodigious flannel *“‘Gone!” AuntKeturah laid down the spool of silk she was examining. “I hope she’s not ill. That cough | sounded ta we exactly like consun p- tion.” “I don’t know whether she is ill or not,” said she. ‘But it wasn’t on account of ill health she left. She { was discharged for tearing a lace fan point lace, over white satin, worth { - She was compelled to pay the | full value besides. Mr. Balcombe is | very particular about such things,” Ellen Purple -colored deeply. ‘““But are they quite certain that she did tear it?” asked Ellen. ‘Oh, she denied it, of course,” said the girl. “They always do. But she was responsible for the goods under Ler charge, of course—and if she didn’t tear it who did? That's the question,” i ““I ean tell you,’ | quietly; “I did.” | “You, miss!” The girl looked at | Ellen as if she thought her partially insane. Aunt Keturah was almost equally amazed. ‘My dear child,” said she *“f don’t | think you know what you are say- ing.” ‘Yes, I do,” said Ellen, peremp- torily. he has allowed herself through lack of moral courage, to fall into an error whose consequences were more serious than she had imagined, aud she was determined to re ress it as far as possi le, “I was looking at that fan a week ago,” she | went on, ‘and through my careless- | ness in shu‘ting it one of the sticks tore the lace. Where is Mr. Bal- combe? I must explain matters to | him. If anyone should yay the $25 itis I. And Miss Lowe must have her place aguin.” ‘“Juite impossible, miss—the latter, I mean,” said the pert girl. ‘Her | place is filled. There is always plenty of girls glad to get in here.” Ellen wrung her hands. ‘Oh, auntie!” said she, ‘what shall I do? How shall I undo the mischief I have wrought?” Aunt Keturah turned to the shop- | girl, ““‘Can’t you give me her address?” said she. ‘‘We can at least go and see her.” | And the upshot of the interview was that Eliza Lowe was engaged as seam- | stress and companion to comfortable | Aunt Keturah at a salary that seemed truly regal to her. Mr. Balcombe | sent a stiff note of apology, inclosing a check for 525, which was daly made good by Miss Purple—and Eliza thonght the millennium was at hand. And Ellen Purple carried the point | lace fan, skillfully mended by an old | woman who made such needle-lore her | business,’at her wedding with Mr. | Middleton, ’ said Ellen Purple, IN AN APRICOT ORCHARD. How the Frait Is hered, Dried and Prepared for Market, As soon as an orchard of apricots comes into bearing, advertisements | ave inserted in the newspapers of ad- joining towns for women and girls, Thonsands of women leave their domestic duties, taking with them | their families, to engage actively in the sheds of the ranches, cutting the fruit for drying, after the men have collected it from the trees. | Sometimes 500 people will be en- gaged upon a large orchard. Rules and regulations are laid down for their conduet; the women and girls sleep in the tents provided at a low rental by the management, and either cook for themselves or board with what would be termed in railroal circles a ‘‘boarding-boss.”” The men, not so many, occupy some distant part of the orchard. The sole requisite being the ability to pick and cut fruit, an aggregation of humanity representing all classes of society, from the im- pecunious English family with eulti- vated manners and aristocratic connec- tions to the nondescript who travels from town to town in search of em- ployment, is collected together in industrious activity for the revenue to be derived. | Fach woman has a small tray in front of her, and, after cutting the fruit with a knife, she lays it open on the tray. Each tray is furnished with a raised end; when five are filled they are piled up, and the operator shouts “Tray!” whereupon an attendant ap- proaches, punches a ticket with which she has been previously furnished, and takes the five trays to the sulphur house. | The women are paid 10 cents a bos, ‘each box containing €0 pounds of fruit. All fruit has to be placed in | the sulphur house for several hours | for the purpose of bleaching it, or | causing it to retain its natural color, as well as to destroy all insect life that may remain, otherwise the sun would canse it to turn black. The trays are then carried out and placed upon the ground under the steady rays of the glorious California sun. Should clouds be hanging over, the trays are placed one above the other until that | great purifier and dries of the uni- verse, old Sol, makes his appearance. The fruit requires from three to seven days to dry. At the end of this time men go out into the orchard with what are callel ‘‘sweat-boxes,”” and | scrape from the trays all the fruit into | these boxes, in which it is left until fully dried. Finally it is hauled to the store- houses and piled up in heaps, perhaps 1 10 feet high, awaiting the eye of the $FOR FARM AND GARDEN. ® VO IOUT Grain for tl:e Sheep. Some breeders do not feed grain to their ewes except at breeding time, but there is ha dly a doubt bat what a farmer would gain financially in the end by feeding it in small quantities all the time. If you use corn there would not be much loss, and certainly time saved, by feeding it in the ear, for it is ciai ned by a great many that it does not pay to grind the grain fed to sheep. The Currant Worm Giving Trouble, A correspondent from California writes saying that last spring her gooseberries had small worms or in- sects inside before they were ripe and asks for a remedy. The worm is no doubt the one known as the currant worm, which attacks currants as well as gooseberries. about an ounce of hellebore to three gallons of water and spray the plants liberally with the mixture. This treat- Weekly Witness. The Use of Sweet Clover, In an address at Sedalia on soil renovation by Dr. H. J. Waters, dean of the Missouri agricultural college, it was said thdt the common sweet clover is not the pernicious, dange:ous weed 80 many seem to think. It can be easily killed out by mowing twice a year for two years, he said, and it is one of the most valuable soil renovat- ors known. It will grow and thrive on land too poor to grow clover or cowpeas, and it is especially suited to build up the millions of acres of flinty hills that are now absolute waste, growing up in brush. Expzriments made at Colnmbia show that in this quality of soil sweet clover is move valuable than the ordinary clover. After a fe v years of sweet clover, such soil is built up to a point where it will grow other renovators. In such lands it can be easily seeded and will smother other weeds, and in addition it will furnish as a by-product large quantities of honey. The Hen and Her Care. Every keeper of pouitry should hav a light, warm house and one that is convenient for feeding and caring for the fowls. It should be built in a warm, sunny place, where it will be protected from the cold winds. The front of the house should be to the south, and it should have windows | enough to admit plenty of sunlight, as | the sun will help warm it in the win- ter. There should be a walk running the entire length of the house on the north side, so you can feed and get the eggs without going into the pens. water tank should be made in the shape of a drawer, so you can pull them out and keep the birds from getting into their feed and drink when you are feeding and watering. The nests should also be made so that they may be drawn out as you do the feel boxes. The windows are to be cased, the same as they are in the hous: so that there will be no cold wind enter- ing. Cold draughts are sure to make your birds sick and stop them from laying in winter. Suggestion to Fruit Cultivators, Many of the tender or half-hardy varieties of raspberries and bla berries would endure our severe win- ters much better, if in the late fall the cultivator was run between the rows, throwing the earth toward the stems, and in effect 1idging or hilling up around them a little. This loose earth forms a muleh which prevents fre- quent freezing and thawing, and i has the great advantage of being a mulch that can be quickly and cheap- ly applied, compared to the labor of ringing mulching material from other places and putting it in place. To be most effectual it should be done as late in the fall as possible, and if de- layed until some morning when the ground is frozen an inch deep, oi about that, it will be none the worse, as the success depends much upon the earth that is thrown up being light and voius. The fall trimming, pruning and cat- ting cut of old or superfiuous canes should be done before this, as it facil- itates the working among them, and all the wood removed should be taken away and burned to destroy any in- sects or their eggs and any fungous diseases that may be on or in them. We do not doubt that similar treat- ment would be beneficial to the half hardy roses and many of the shrubs on fhe lawn, excepting that some of them are better trimmed in the spring. But the hilling up around them will help to protect their roots. - Keep Your Stable Light, ‘When in a darkened stable the iris, or brownish curtain around the centre of the eye, expands so as to admit the passage of sufficient rays of light for distinct vision, but on emerging into the glare of day the same aperture im- mediately closes or grows less, a smaller quantity of light being neces- sary under these altered circum- stances. Any person who has felt the pain and inconvenience of coming suddenly from a dark room into the full blaze of day will readily conceive As a remedy use | The feed boxes and | | | | | | to go about with hoods on so they | n Deafoess Cannot Be Cured could not see, and to be shut up i by local applications,as they cannotreach the | ?. disease rtion of the ear. Thereis only one | dark places without food or water for way to cure deafness, thatis by constitu- { a week or more. Itis not necessary | tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in- + flamed condition of the mucous lining t to resort io cruel methods to break up a hen that wants to sit, says a writer in Blooded Stock. What is wanted is to turn the desire to sit into the desire to lay again. vantage to have them broken from wanting to sit and have them lay four or five eggs only to again become broody, which they will do if they are not cared for as they shonld be. The reason for this is that the conditions which caused the hen to Lecome broody have not been changed and | | they cannot Le changed by force. WkLen a hen becomes broody it means that the egg-producing capacity of | her system, for the time being, has | become exhausted and that recupera- | tion is needed. The first step to such recuperation is rest, and being an in- | | dustrious bird, they feel that they | might as well raise a brood while | resting as to fool away their time. | rm id underground rail Some animals and birds may be stimu- lated to do that which is not natura for them, but is it best? The tired | horse may be urged on by the aid of a | ment is pretty sure to accomplish all | that is required of it.—New York | whip. | Eustachian Tube. Whe | fect hearing. and | Deafness is the result, : 1t will Le but little ad- | JETT 00; 3 hot Ni | caused by | inflamed cor Ve will gi | us answeritto-d: : . | and healthful de A practice that is recommended by | boiling! no baking! Simply add a little hot flamed you have a rumbli mation can be taken out, z stored toits normal conc ne cases « ch, which is nothing but an 'n of the mucous surfaces. e¢ One Hundred Dollars for any ness (caused bv ca that by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send ce. case of Di cannot b for circuls NEY & Co. Toledo, O. Seld by Druggi Hall's Family Pil re the best of the United ¢ Mexico is « tes’ best customers in the sewing machine line. Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag- netie, full of life, nerve and v take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worlrer, that es weak men strong. All druggi c or §{. Cure guaran- teed. Dooklet and mple free. Address Sterling Ren ago or New York Berlin, Germany, is to construct an ay costing $235,000,- 000. What Shall We Have For Dessert? This question arises in the family daily. Let Try Jell-O, a delicious . Prepared in 2 min. No some thoughtful breeders which will | water&settocool. Flavors: Tamon One, | break the hen, and at the same time | Raspberryand Strawberry, At grocers, 10c. have Ler in a good condition to go | right to busiaess, is to place one egg | under her, leiting Ler sit for one week, feeding her once in two days daring the time as if she were really sitting on a whole clutch. Bat very little food will be needed on account of lack of exercise. At the close of the week place her in a coop with a Painters in the car shops at Knoxville | are working 15 to 17 hours a day. | — Mrs. Winslow's Socthing Syrap for children eething, softens the gum reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. Zc a bottle. The average toy makers in Saxony makes about one cent an hour. The Best Prescription for Chiils slatted bot'‘om raised a few inches | and Fever is a bottle of GROVE'S TASTELESS | from the ground, for a couple of days, | } . + and she will lose her desire to sit and | iu afew days will begin laying in | earnest, Items of Interest to Farmers. Kcep charcoal and salt where the fattening hogs can have easy access to them. Breed the young sows so that they | | will farrow their young litters in the | | spring after the grass has come. | That the hog is a filthy animal is | | the fault of its owner. Hogs prefer | cleanly quarters and will take them | when they can get them. | Only a small amonnt of cornmeal should be used in feeding the pig, and | it should be combined with other feed | that makes bone and muscle, Growing pigs must have exercise, but not too much of it. If they run | over an extensive range they cannot | be kept in sufficiently good condition [ to give the best resalts. | It takes the least feed from the time | of weaving until the pig is finished | for market if it is kept always in good | condition. If it loses that condition | there must be extra feeding and longer time to bring him up to it again. | To raise them profitably the pigs | should be kept in good health aud | continually growing. There is some- | thing wrong in the breeding cr care if [ the pig cannot be made ready for mar- | ket by the time he is ten months old, | The scraps from the table and kitchen and vegetable waste, fruit { peelings, ete., should all be utilized | as feeding stuff. The pigs and chick- | ens will eat them, and they furnish a | variety, and the kind of food that is | needed. | | When the weather is cold and wet remember that a portion of the feed is | employed in keeping up the animal | heat, and that consequently more feed s needed at such times. Well-shel- ered, clean, dy, warm quarters, | economise feed. i t — | Too Smart a Dog. it was one evening not long ago when everybody had been trying to | outdo everybody else in telling of the | wonderful sagacity of animals he had known, or seen, or heard of that Rev. | Dr, Herrick, U 8, AA retired, told | this story. On any less authority I | confess I should have had my doubts ag to the truth of it, but Dr. Herrick | actually knew tke man to whom the ! thing happened. It was about a dog, of course. The town, I believe, although I am not quite sure, was Atlanta. Dr, Hervick’s friend was driving along Peachtree street when he met the man who owned the dog, on foot, Dr. Herrick’s friend immediately invited him to jumpin and take a ride, | The dog’s owner said he would go with great pleasure if he only had his gloves with him. ‘Shall 1 drive around to your office" and get them?” asked Dr. Heirick’s | friend. “0, no,” said the other. send my dog for them.” So he called that wonderful dog, made signs to him, showed him his | hands, and sent the intelligent animal | off to the office to fetch what was most | frequently in contact with his hands, his gloves, of course. The dog was gone only a few minutes. When he came back he had something in his | mouth, and he was wagging his tail merrily. He had brought the belt | from the stenographer’s waist.— | Washington Post. “I'll just The English Grunting Habit. An observant philosopher, who has | lately been devoting considerable at- tention to the study of modern man- | ners, has been much struck with the habit of grunting and 1seudo-cough- | ing which is growing among both sexes, and threatens to become a pub- | laundry stareh, | self an object of envy also. CHILL TONIC. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price 50c. Late statistics show that in London more than 300,000 families earn less than seventy-five cents a day. Try Grain=-0! Try Grain-0! Ask your grocer to-day to show you a package of GraiN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. Children may drink it without injury as weil as the adult. All who try it like it. GraIx-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but is made from pure grains; the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. 2 the price of coffee. 15c. and 25¢. per package. Sold by all grocers, Pottery-makers in Great Britain and the United States of America are draw- mg up a price list to govern prices in both countries. How Are Your Kidneys 0 Dr. Hobbs’ Sparagus Pills cure all kidney ills. 8am. ple free. Add. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N. Y. All bicycles are taxed by the French Government. Jell-O, the New Dessert, Pleases all the family. Four flavors: — Lemon, Orange, Raspl y and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 ¢ There are 7,431 miles of railroads in Mexico. > To Cure Censtipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10¢ or 250. 1 C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. During the present year 25 important conventions will be held in Cleveland. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. All | druggists refund the money if it fails to cure, | E. W. GROVE’S signature is on each box. 2c, | Boston's municipal debt increased $3,- | 000,000 last VITALITY low, de by Dr. Kline’s Invig. trial bottle for 2 weeks’ tr: 1d. 931 Arch St., Philadelph: ted or exhausted cured ating Tonic. FREE 81 neut. Dr. There are 347 women blacksmiths in England. a Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar- tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by | stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- urities from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug- gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. A sold reserve is being accumulated in India. I believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my boy’slife last summer.— Mrs. ALLIE DOUG Lass, Le Roy, Mich., Oct. 20, 1894, The principal undertaker of Green- ville, S. C., says that in the past six years he has buried in that town the bodies of 73 persons who met death by I violence. You Can Have it Also. The lady whose linens you envy, uses “Red Cross” and “Hubinger’s Best” It is easy to make your- Ask your grocer, he can tell you just how you can get one large 10c. package of “Red Cross” starch, one large 10e. package of | ‘‘Hubinger’s Best” starch, with the prexinms.. two beautiful Shakespeare panels, printed in *wrelye beautiful col- ors, or ono Twentieth Century &iri :ul- endar, all for 5c. A deaf mute runs a barber shop in Topeka, Kansas. on _- Worthless Stuff / Whata lot of trash 1s sold as cough Red, Rough Hands, Itching, Burning Palms, and Painful Finger Ends. One Night Treatment Soak the hands on retiring in a strong, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. the night, old, loose kid gloves, with the finger ends cut off and air holes cut in the palms. For red, rough, chapped hands, dry, fissured, itching, feverish palms, with shapeless nails and painful finger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful, and points to a speedy cure of the most distress- ing cases when physicians and all else fail. Sore Hands 8 Years Cured. Pain So Intense Would Nearly Twist Fingers From Sockets. Hands Water Ran Through Bandages to Had to Walk the Floor Until Would Fall Kline, Founded 1871. | Puffed Up Like a Toad. ran out, and wherever there was a [it that happened at least ten times. 1 am 5 shoeing, and [ would My hands puffed up v water from my hands ran y i tomers refused to look at my hand. I had a friend take me to the doctors e a solution of something to bathe my hands. I went to another doctor, I think, for a year. Teh —_ not shut up the sc. to Salzer vorsej =fnia tae |v: vee consisting of CUTICURA Soa The Set, 81.25 and humiliating skin, sealp, and blood humors, In the country it is hard te get help for the house- hold work. Wives, mothers ana Jaughters who do their own work should have the very best of everything to do it with. Ivory Soap is the best: it cleans quickest and is easiest on the hands. A WORD OF WARNING. It floats. Fingers Would Peel Like an Onion. Doctors Could Not Cure. Bight years ago I got sores. Z 1s, commencing with a burning sensation on my fingers and on top o ~ © hand. When I rubbed them, you could see little white pimples. I£.° "ze twisting my fingers out of their sockets. I had high fever, and cold chills ran over me, and so I kept it going until step had to walk the floor until I fell ands peeled like an onion, te finger nails got loose, and the water ie pimple there the burning fire was — “endl thw -1, shop, horse- PN s I found your advertisement in a Utica news T paper, and I got the CUTICURA remedies. As soon as I used them I began - er using a small quantity of them I fifty dollars for a cake of CUTICURA I would not suffer any more CASPER DIETSCHL dv. on crane fue “ugh the bandag —There are many white soa »s, each represented to be ‘just as good they ARE NOT, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar an Ask for “Ivory Scap and insist upon getting it. COPYRIGHT 1898 BY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO. CINCINNATI d remarkable qualities mr mi rie Wear, during was entirely cured. Soap if I could not get as I did, for the whole country. ER, Pembroke, Genesee Co., N. Y. Complete External and Infernal Treatment for Ev P (25¢c.), to cleanse the skin of crusts and scales and soften the thickened cuticle, CUTICURA OINTMENT (50c. y to instantly allay itching, inflammation ) , and irritation, aud soothe and heal, and CuTicw RA KESOLVENT (50c.), to cool and cleanse the blood. A SINGLE SET is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, with loss of hair, when all else fails. POTTER DRUG AND CHEX. CORP., Sole Props., Boston, U, 8, A, * about the Skin, Scalp, and Hair,” free, diessing gown and her hair in a por- | Critical buyer. cupine state of curl papers, to hear her niece’s report of the ball festivi- ties, ‘“‘but they are very nice at the “¥ have been g CASCARETS andas | time. And he is so agreeable, auntie.” Saji] any SHOVE MXalive they ave simply wos Aunt Keturah smiled and patted and our Millions of Women Use Cuticura Soap i for lighting a sta i lic nuisance wherever two or three 2 the necessity fo ligh Inga able in Exclusively for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of | | in | fhe movers a UE a, § cures. The hollow Too Smart a Dog. | the proper manner. This is too often | men or women are gathered together. crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and 1 | it was one evening not long ago | neglected in confined stables, and the | When nobody has anything to say. drum makes the soothing red, rough, and sore hands, in the form of baths for anoying irritations, inflam. when everybody had been trying to | consequences are most distressing to | some one begins an affected cough, | mations, and chafings, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for 2 + e 5 i is - i 3 i ¢ 3 ative weaknesses, f any sanative antiseptic CPOs vhich readily s outdo everybody else in telling of the | a human observer. The roor horse, | which is mozrely the indication of a loudest noise the Donnie moakie ae TTY Tuy sunseby Darnoses which rondily suave wonderful sagacity of animals he had ! Jed suddenly out to his work, shows | mind with nothing in it, or makes a | ' ei nothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, stoma cep MINA NAGEL, ‘ » 1137 Rittenhouse St., Cincinnati, Ohio, Get your beauty sleep, my love, , said she. “‘It don’t hurt a tough old pine knot like me to keep vigil all After | Tllen’s lov 1v fi z : . . and nursery. No amount of persu n can induce those who have once used it to use eh ullen’s lovely flushed cheek and sent known, or seen, or heard of that Rev. | his pain by unmistakable signs, stum- | 2uttural grant, to prove that its au- | bi est advertise- any other, especially for preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair of ir A Fonderfully 2 her to bed. Dr. Herrick, U. 8. A., retired, told | bles, and runs against anything that | thor is still alive. The correspondent 88 children. CUTICURA SOAP combines deli mollient properties derived from Cur . the great skin cure, with the purest of cleans ng ingredients and the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicated soap ever compounded is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautif ving the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign this story. On any less authority I | may happen to be near, until the eye | con'inues: confess I should have had my doubts | has in some degree accommodated it- as to the truth of it, but Dr. Herrick | self to the 1 ew circumstance under “If people do not exer-! cise a little relf-restraint and check | his pernicious habit we shall soon be | al ment often covers hl or domestic toilet so: pensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes £ night—that's one of the numberless actually knew the man to whom the | which it is placed. cal’ed a nation of snorters and grunt- | worthiessness. of the toilet, 1 ery. Thus 3 omiines in ONg SOAP af oo Tce viz. ec advantages of being old and tough — thing happened. It was about a dog, of Nor is this all. By a continuance | ers. On Sunday last I was at church | Si f ETL Ee the Dawe skin snd conplexion Soup, the BEST foffet en Zest but it don’t agree with peach-blossom course. The town, T believe, although | of this change from darkness to sud- | and immediately Fehind me sat a wom- | ixty Years Oo 1 ] i : = - a | complexions and eyes 1fke hazel | I am not quite sure, was Atlanta. Dr. | den daylight the eye becomesseriously | an with her young children, and d h : Teas Hore oe Pee8036606000£0080008 rains. stars.” g : Herriek’s friend was driving along | injured. The retina, or sensible ner- | during the s:rmon, to which TI was | cures an suc testi- NE: 2 FOR 14 CENTS either The next morning Aunt Keturih | pepchitree street when he met the | vous expansion, becomes deadened listening intently, my thoughts were | h { 11 DRinleny, fk 3 We wish to gain this y ear 200,000 vhole = aud Ellen went shopping again, in the man who owned the dog, on foot. | and more or less useless; the horse's | distracte i by the woman behind me! mony as the to ow- tn FAR Lr pin, Pkg. City Garden Beet, llc Pleasant, Pala le, Potent, Taste Good 1 Pkg. i , solor . chic ; oy : : : es 2 : | Pkg Earl'st Emerald Cucumber a Palatable ! od. bo | snug little claret-colored coupe which Dr. Herrick’s friend immediately | sight is injured; he starts and shies at constantly grunting—possibly the doc- | “ Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10¢, 25¢, 50c. Aunt Keturah hired by the month J ¥ We will send anyone addicted t, Oplum, $ \ 1 habit, trial treatment, free ofcharge, mn fii ing have taught us 22 kf ot Pt oh mana LAAT ee of La Crosse Market Lettuce, lee Vat, + : : 2 : - . p : : | st remarkable reme scovered. “ Strawberr n, 5c CURE CONSTIPATION. . ! 1 ; invite1 him to jump in and take a ride. objects which he sees imperfectly; and | trine hit her too hard. Her children | tal Principle & Slotors tuowi. “ 13 Day Radish, 16e a . . RAT y > 3 . : x ¢ . 3 . 5 | Tr ses solicite: nfidential correspondence “« RB R ng Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York, 815 | 11 = a Be ghhoring very Salis ry The dog’s owner said he would go | many a rider who has received a dan- | {ollowed suit. When asked on the | y : STL] Barly Ripe Cabbage, 10e = Sr need sewing silk,” said Aunt what Ayer’s Cherry SORE Pectoral will do. with great pleasure if he only had his | gerous injury has had to thank his in- way home why they grunted, the elder | gloves with him. attention to this simple causes =gtber | of the youngsters replie!, ‘Mammy ‘Shall I drive around to your office | than any vicious habit of the animal, grunts, so do I.’ ”.—London Tele- Kists to CURE Tobacco Habit. | Keturah, ‘and yon're always want- ing Java canvas or worsted, or some such fol-de-rols, and the good fresh 8 ¥0.TO-RAC Sold and guaranteed by all drug- Worth $1.00, for 14 conte” Fi Above 10 Pkgs. worth $1.00, we will mail you free, together with our nk ON 10 DAYS TRIAL. Aluminum Rust Proof Cream § A 310 a ize. ‘Up-to-Date’ Chu 1 15 cows, prices &7 to $10. They make Ba re butter, (Catalogue until rer tox ch, 3 THEMILLION DOLLARPOTATO Err fa ott : and get them?” asked Dr. Herrick’s to which it has been attributed. | graph. 11a o Sepasaton sizes 1t0 15 cows, price ESALLER'S wittion ou Can POTATO oe { Mo ieee a) 5a SX ai won t o eit ter of us any harm, | friend. Blindness is almost certain to b Een ra ad a most stubborn cough om § OR Fe ities ice &1dc, Catalog tells—ko also about Sal. I'll go bail! : | “0, no,” said the other. “I'll just | caused by inattention to the above a se for many years. It deprived me 5 know when you once try Naizeris i pu nian i “Let's go to Leigh & Balcombe’s,” send my dog for them.” caution; but even blindness itself is A stick of wood cut from the trunk of sleep and made me lose flesh 13 par gents Dont 2560 Prizes on Salzer's 1400 rar- ch J Potatoes, $1.20 and suggested Ellen. “They always have al of a small tree by the keen teeth of a RE orm on Ly est earliest Tomato Giant on earth. C~ So he called that wonderful dog, less dangerous to the rider than im- rapidly. I was treated by many 5 man- S you hear from us. We 'BOSSE, bbl. Send this d 5c. | i 3 >, Ivor a » re on 5 S Dal JOHN A, BALZER SKED (0., LA CBOSSE, WIS, od i Coby Tor B13 Cataman To IC0 450. § the prettiost and newest shades of | made signs to him, showed him his | perfect sight. In the first case the | P€aver has been presented to the free, eminent physicians, but could get Edens : rervih here?” > rg g museum by Joseph Paquet. It will fi : consumer where we have no agent, snr clo JOHNA SALZER SEED GLA CRO Ewis[] | everything there? : hands, and sent the intelligent animal | horse is forced to trust entirely to the | * BIE bY Jose; quet. : | no permanent relief. I then tried GIBSON.STEWART MFG. CO. Eom ae fe “I'm sureI am not particular where off to the office to fetch what was most | bridle; but in the latter objects only ue no Dovelty 0 such a have Sshed Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, and I be. GIBSONIA. PA. - 2 : GUARANTEED | we go,” said Aunt Ketural. | voauently in confoot witli Is, | half distinguished terrify and startle, | 21008 streams frequented by beavers, gan to get better at once. I now = UMION - with ne fee une Th chanced to ge to ti 1f- equ Bb J in 00 > < with his hands, > 3 J > 2 ®, .» | but beavers are becoming SCAl'Ce Now. 1 cell 1 sh 3 E ’ $3 & 3.50 SHOES MADE. less successful, €y chanced lo gc to the se bis gloves, of course. The dog was | though they would under ordinary thie or on 8 Y> sleep well, my old flesh is back, " A= Worth $4 to $6 compared fiers advertised | same counter where, hardly more than | gone only a few minutes. When he | circumstances be passed without an Se Pre : 9 1san0s of people in and I enjoy myself in every way Cures Coughs and Colds. 2 with other makes. £ B® vice as to patentability. ond for “Inventors a week ago, they had purchased the | came back he had something in his notice. —F. D. Coburn in The Horse Sashes end of iy beay: at theage of seventy-four.”—R. N. Consumes KILLER es emer Primer. ALOE TH SA D.C. Tose eol tan i, od 3 pert mish with | mouth, and he was wagging his tail | Useful. 2% or ol a Mans Fall Mills, Tenn, Feb. 7, Se | ) i Suh > a icago, roit. a proiasion o mock jewe ry, came Ti ; , a —— e 4 2 : York, « 1899. 1 E ; gives e? e « L. t the ¥ ng Fi , - forward to wait upon them sndreceieo eo a She Deis Breaking up Sitters, hese the stick will be very interest- 93 Df po or To ives wore Pat ARTERS ENK orders. | Wosbinetin Poot y Some find the breaking up of sitting | ing. Jn t how large a tree a beaver Free. Dr. . I. GREEN'S BONS, Box b, Atlanta, Ga, picu- 3 “You're not the girl that helongs | a oe hens a very difficult thing ta do, and | or beavers can cut down only an old — = P NU De he best ink made, but no dearer here,” said Aunt Keturah, bluntly. A Bargain. they really think they have to torture trap) er can say, but it is no trick at | » 2 oe ne Q BR Oh re : he Ipoh Goan tho pont “The ps oir o 0. | May—How on earth did you com, | the hen in order ta make her abandon | all for th m to fell an ash or alder It's the do-as- ou-would-be- San YX SETYTY TE ; H ivi Revie to ants e kind of leather, ck at ee The pale gil that coughed so. | EY 3 . $ a oo : u AFTSREROIVEY Si OTM | oN joo or comes, Site kind of leathe, apted Well began 1a half done, So weit] | Where is she?” | to accept him? her desire to brood, We have known | tree six inches in diameter, and they done-by cough medicine, Try CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAIL Sa | er SZ [DOUGLAS SHOE C0., Brookion, Mass. Pit yon would reap woil. So» : The pert miss tossed Ler head, | Fay—Oh, he looked sq cheap when oultry men and women to duck the | have better luck than the average 25-tont Tord Best Cough Syrup. Ta te ? | coomeveLers 18 ee OY as i Bh | “Oh,” said che, “you mean Eliza | he proposed I couldn’t help taking | hens in water several times and then wood-chopper in falling trees in the |@ 3 25-C¢ Ottlc. i 3 | Hamicted with { Thompson's Eye Waier - GREGORY & SoM Busiehesdam, | | Lowe! She's gone,” j him!—Philadelphia Press, turn thew loose; have known the hens | direction they desire, sore eyes use 1 lems : > { ; " ~ t i a. TN p> Pl EN Fd na , nl “ . > : > 4 7 3 ; |