GRANULATED cork and bltumei pressed Into blocks is used for pav Insr the strecls of London, elasticity bolnß Its chief recommendation. Hood's^Cures tmend Hood's Sarsapnr il In and Hood's Pills. 1 have suffered very tuucb Sick Headache^ and two '.joxes of Hood's terrible disease. 1 know Hood's is tbo best medicine I eve r t ok." Mas. H. M. LATUM, Pino Vallm-, N. V. (LET HOOD'S. Hood's i'illscure itver I .'lt. 25T-rufs per IHx. ' R N U UA -UA ||TFIE WALL PAPER MERCHANT \ UITU SELLS THE BEST, Oml lis THE CHEAPEST WALL PAPER Hood Pnpers ;i*. and sr. (,'old Paperssc., *♦•. and life. Send •ic. Miunps I'm- stiiuplos. 541 Wood Hi reel, l'iit*bu t-uli, I'n. gVWIFTS SPEOIFIO • • For renovating the entire svstem eliminating Lll Poisons from thi blood, whether of scrofulous oi malarial origin, this preparation has no equal "For eighteen months I had an eating soro on my tongue. 1 was h „7Pr treated by lwst local physicians hut obtained no relief; tho sore nraduallv crew worse. I finally took S. S. S., and was eiitirelv cured after using a few bottles." SC. B. MCLEMOKK, Henderson, Tex. Treat ise on Blood and Skin Dis eases mailed free. The SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. "German Syrup" Just a bad cold, and a backing cough. We all suffer that way some times. How to get rid of them is the study. Listen —"I am a Ranch man and Stock Raiser. My life is rough and exposed. I meet all weathers in the Colorado mountains. I sometimes take colds. Often they are severe. I have used German Syrup five years for these. A few doses will cure them at any stage. The last one I had was stopped in 24 hours. It is infallible." James A. Lee, Jefferson, Col. ® ITHE KIND | J ' MRS. Cll.iyrit eiiKltl:rr.n, if | On Crutches 10 Tears! | ■ EATING SORES THAT Y WOULD NOT HEAL !§ 9 CUKE I)! CUBED! 9 HDANA Sarhapahili.A CO. : B J | l Obntlkmkn —I wish TO tottify to the efficacy 5§ HOF DANA'S SAKSAI'ALTLL.L.A. * GJ fH For eevpral yeur 1 linv.- Im-i-ii ruffrring from h| RR®"'! I*lOD lliOI'il-I- I-ALLRIL by DIFFERENTIA m| tin tors by the several Pbysii-lans who utt-iulid mc S| HEbut which liafll<-| tli*M|| ~f them all. It ut-H A ways B I II I' ' I'l'Hll. IHI'I leaving N p-TMntenffifi aore, which iiotliinu would heal. ItSi liiw^ mirS" n,v fevekl ■ FOR months I win I <)■ WHIT 11 M (*ri It* Hl* for O' ,U WALKS Lat F*ll I purchased three hottiVof*' B DANA'S w SARSAPAIIILLA 1 of Dovi* Bros IT HELPED me from the FLI-F.S I TOOK it fuithfiillv, MID I .MI now attend t<> Uutlcnaiid walk, AS WELLB anything thnt luipp'ens nt the PRESENT *'l Mnlone. N. v. " MILS. O'LLVKU CIIKKRIKR. £■ S GR.NTI.KMEN:— We enclose teatinionlul of Mrs IS SC'herrier, which is a strong endonwment of yourl! - . '"' V " HRR "TLENIMT T<>B ; , We lire very rcp-ctXnlly roitra, GG B Malone, N. Y. Wholesale A JUdailVruggUt* S G| Uana Sarsaparilla Co.. Belfast, Maine. §| Waterproof WORLD 11 j vi JLI ■ pr./cf, and will K"CP you dry LA tho hardest norm. The nrv. POMIL PI. SI.I< KELT Is a perfect riding coat, and cover* the entire saddle. Hewn roof Imitations. Don't ,buy a eo.it If the ,4 l''ih Brand" is not on it. JLLTI-tra ,tcd Cut.ilnct'C IN P. A. .1. TOWKIt. Bust- -n, Mars, ; wli'i I'AST-M. rnaimds mid Pa'.nfs which st.nln (he linn la, Injure tlu* iron and hum rod. The Klsln,' Sun Stow p.iiisn Is If. minnt. Odor ! leas. Durable, ami tho consumer pajra for UO tin J TREATMENT OF INJURIOUS INSECTS. In general, noxious insects must be combated as soon as their depreda tions can be seen, but Herbert Osborn and L. H. Pammel of the lowa sta tion, recommend that as soon as blos soms fall, apples and plums should be sprayed for codling moth and plum curculio. Spray strawberry plants if infested with slugs. 111 early summer, plant lice may be numerous on plums and cherries, he sprayed with kerosene emulsion. In July, spray potatoes with London purple or Paris green, if infested with potato beetles. In August anil September, cabbage worms may begin to appear, and can be treated by spraying with hot water, or with pyrethrum in water, or as a powder. Cherry slugs aiul the leaf eating caterpillars and other insectsoll plums and other trees may be sprayed with London purple. Kerosene emul sion may be used directly on the in sects, and will kill nil it touches by en tering the breathing pores.—American Agriculturist. OFF COLOR OF CHICKS. If you procured eggs of pure bred fowls, and the chicks seem to differ and appear of various colors, do not be dis appointed, as the chicks will be of the proper color when matured. Of tho black breeds of fowls, such as the Lang iihnns, Black Minocras and Black Span ish. the chicks nearly always have a large proportion of white on them when hatched. It is an old saving that the more white on the chicks of such breeds the blacker the plumage at maturity. We have often noticed broods of Wynndottes or Indian game chicks, no two in the broods being alike, and dif fering so greatly as to lead an inex perienced person to suppose that the chicks were mongrels ; yet when they came to maturity it was a difficult mat ter to select the best one in the flock, so far as the plumage was concerned. Brahmas, Cochins, Plymouth Rocks and other breeds may also bo classed among the uncertainties until the chicks are well advanced, and for that reason breeders often receive complaints from customers in regard to their hatches ; but the breeders simply advise them to wait a while, when the matter rights itself.—Mirror and Farmer. HOW TO MAKE CHEESE AT HOME. Have a tinman solder a faucet near the bottom of one end of an ordinary tin wash boiler which will hold five or six pailfuls. Fit a movable tin screen inside about three inches from the faucet aud extending about the same distance above it, which shall hold the curd away from the faucet. This, with a long wooden paddle, is all you need order especially for the work, except cheese cloth, rennet and a cheese press. ►Six pailfuls of sweet milk, with tho cream all in it, will make about fifteen pounds of cheese. It need not be of one milking if it is perfectly sweet. Put the milk in the boiler on the stove and heat it to eighty degrees. Remove from the stove and add the rennet. The tablets are easiest to use and the directions accompuny them. When the milk has coagulated, which will take place in ten minutes or less, it must be cut to the bottom of the boiler each way, making about two inch squares. The whey will begin to start, almost at once. Sink a small dipper into it slowly, and the whey may be removed gradually until two quarts or more have been collected. Heat this rather hot, not scalding, and pour it over the curd, stirring it very care fully. When at 100 degrees open the faucet and allow the whey to drain cut, dipping it out from the top as be fore described. When drained, sprinkle half a teacupful of dairy salt on the curd and crumble and mix it thor oughly with the hands. Have a square of strong, loosely woven cloth wet and placed in the cheese hoop, which should lie the size of a peck measure, j Press the curd into the hoop, adjust I the cover, after the cloth has been ! folded 011 the top of the curd, and sub- I mit the cheese to gentle pressure. Prepare a bandage of cheese cloth I large enough to go around the cheese ' and wide enough to nearly cover the I ends. Lay on the ends another piece and sew to the piece around the cheese. Keep at seventy degrees in a dry room. Too much salt or too much scalding when heating the curd hardens the cheese, while careless stirring starts the "white whey" and allows much of the butter fats to escape.— New England Homestead. PROFIT IN TORE. itli pork at its present price, al most any man can feed his corn, or other grain, to pigH and make a satis factory profit, declares S. Woodward, of New York. But times will change ; pork will again go down until it will be so low that the very best skill will be required to get any'profit out of its growth. If it be wise, now in the midst of almost universal peace, for the Nations to spend such vast sums as they do, ia preparing for war, how much wiser for the farmer during this time of prosperity in pig growing to study the subject so as to be prepared i when the evil days of low prices come again. It is surprising to see how little thought the averago pig grower gives to the matter of ehonn produc tion of pork. Although there is some change in the direction of killiug lighter pigs, yet the great bulk of the po.vk still coming iuto the markets is ' in heavy carcasses which were fed mostly on corn. Now this is neither the most desirable, nor is it by any means the most profitable pork. On a recent visit to the Wisconsin Experiment Station at Madison, Pro fessor W. A. Henry, who is a born ex perimenter, showed me some experi ments now being made, and the un published results of some already made 011 the same liue of pig feeding for most profit. If the farmers conhl see what I saw, and realize fully the great importance of the principles that con trol animal life, and then follow them, they would save very much of what is now ignorautly thrown away, and would more than double the profits of pork making, by reducing to its lowest limit the amount of food now used as a maintenance ration or simply food for support. The Professor has demonstrated, beyond doubt, by a series of careful experiments, that the maintenance ra tion is in equal proportion to live weight, or nearly so; that while a 100- pound pig requires one and one-half pounds of food (one pound of wheat middlings and two pounds of corn meal), simply to keep it without gain or loss, a 500-pound pig, under like conditions, requires five pounds of the same food for its support. He further showed that about three pounds of this same food, in addition to either ration, made one pound of pork. Now, were a man to try to make pork with these pigs, with the one he would get one pound for each four and one-half pounds fed ; with the other 110 would feed eight pounds. For comparison, suppose the mixture were worth S2O per ton, or one cent per pound in the case of 100-pound pigs, his pork would cost four and one-half cents per pound; in the case of a 500- pound pig it would cost eight. Or, to put it iu another light, suppose ten pigs be fed four and one-half pounds of feed each, or forty-five pounds in the aggregate, they will give a gain of ten pounds of pork. In other words, with these pigs forty-fivo pounds of feed will give ten pounds of pork. Now, if the same food be given to pigs weighing 500 pounds each, it will feed just nine of them five pounds each, hut as with pigH of this size it takes five pounds as the food of support, no gain would be made. The food would he simply thrown away, so far as fat tening purposes go. If these nine larger pigs be fed to make one pound of gain each, it would require twenty seven pounds extra. This added to the forty-five pounds, maintenance ra tion, makes seventy-two pounds of feed to make nine pounds of pork. It will be seen that these experiments of Pro fessor Henry show that the mainte nance ration, while not exactly in pro portion to the live weight, is approx imately so. They show that while it I took one and one-half pounds to sup I port the growing 100-pound pig, thai one pound per hundred pounds wai sufficient with the 500-pound pig. Thif is easily accounted for by the fact that there is less proportionate amount o! exterior surface in the larger pigs, no growth, aiul probably less activity. But carrying this proportion in thodi rection of a pig still smaller than 100 pounds, it would probably require with a pig weighing twenty-five poundi nt the rate of two pounds per IOC pounds, or about onc-lialf pound ot food as n inaintenacc ration. If this be true, it would then only take three and one-half pounds with this pig to grow one pound of pork. Further experiments by Professoi Henry show very conclusively thai corn or corn meal is, by no means, th< best food for pork growing, thougt good for fattening. Wheat middlingi he found much better than corn alone. He also found, by careful experiments several times repeated, that 200 poundi of corn meal and 1582 pounds of skin milk produced as much growth as 50C pounds of the middlings meal mixturt and a better growth than 500 pouudi of clean'corn meal. In this we see thai five pounds of ski in milk are aboui equal to one pound of ineal. The les son for the pig feeder in the experi nients is to feed young, thrifty pigs and to feed them 011 a mixture of core meal and wheat middlings, and nevei to feed them beyond 150 pounds rlressec weight. —American Agriculturist. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Lettuce is a good food for the poul try. Do not feed the poultry unless the> need it. The eggs should be gathered at least j twice daily. ! A good dust bath is a necessity fox healthy fowls. Give the chickens plenty of fresh air and sunshine. Milk, either skim or butter, is ex cellent for chickens. Pigs grow well on grass, clover being especially good for pasturing them on. The amount of eggs laid is largely governed by liberal but wise feed ing. I Filthy quarters are responsible for i the greater part of the so-called hog cholera. Give the hogs plenty of pure water and they will not drink out of their wallows. Cnbl,o g p, sunflower seed, millet nn.l Kiir'.'linm ); -o excellent feeds f or chickens. THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLJD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. The Dude's Downward Path Always# Fresh—A Dash of Modernity—Thei Road to Popularity, Etc., Etc. The irrepressible dude, very eary in life, Falls in love with each maiden he sees. In fact, he no seoner gets down on his lip ThaD he's apt to got down on his kndes. | —Brooklyn Life. ALWAYS FRESH. He—"What a fresh complex ion.'Miss Flirtie has."' She (rival belle) "Yes, fresh every/ ilav, I believe."—New*York Weekly. A DASH OF MODRRNITY. Van Arndt—After all, \to get back to < old authorities—"what's*in a name 7"' Maid Marian—"A hyphen, if it's an aristocratic name."—Puck. THE ROAD TO POPULARITY. F "What is the secret of your 'enor mous popularity?" "I have always laughed at another/ man's jokes."—Chicago Record. THE BED WAS ALL RIGHT. • Mrs. Hashdish—"l hope you Wound your bed comfortable, Mr. Clover." Mr. Clover—"l s'pose it was, but I it's more than I can say for mjsclf. 'jji -Inter-Ocean. j CAUTION. t Mrs. Younglove—"Shall you expect I me to bake my own bread?" Mr. Younglove—"Just as youl pre- i fer, dearest; but you needn't bfpther ■ about baking mine." WHEHE IGNORANCE WAS BLIKFL Com—"lf Charley was BO stupid and j mistook the fireworks for shootinji stars, , why didn't you correct him? Mamie—''Becausehe kissod ime every/ time he saw one."—Puck. ' HIS LAST KICK. Tillinghast-—"Nixon always was nl great kicker." Gildersleeve— "Yes? What\waa kicking at last?" Tillinghast—"Tho bucket. "—(Truth. I , FROM LACK OF EXERCISE. ' Askcn—"What kind of a fe4low is Dumleigh?" Tell—"Well, Dumleigh is nifellow who, if he were to think twicejjbefore he spoke, would lose the use lof his voice."—Puck. J THE SECRET OP I F. Blimmer—"Salt watejr bfrthing i strengthens ft man wonderfully." Doctor Knowit—"Shucks! What | does him the good is the s ercercise he ! gets while wriggling out of/ his damp.j bathing suit." AN IMPRACTICABLE SITQGJISTION. 1 Mr. Bridie—"Don't yofci think it • would be a good idea to f'harge your 1 girl for all the china she breaks?" Mrs. Bridie—"How can I charge her for it when I dare to i charge her with it!" 1 i / WHY SO NAMFT>. "This is angel cake," 'remarked one I of the boarders at Mrii. Hashcroft's | ieedery when the desert was reached. "I know,"roplied tho one addressed. "Why ia it. so called?" "BecMUse of its fatal effects, I sup pose." —(Pittsburg Chronicle-Tele-, ( graph. A BIG ALLOWANCE. "You must let tho baby have iune cow's milk to\ drink every day,"'said i the dootor. "Very welt, ,if you say so, doctor," said the peapSexed young mother; "hut I really don't see how he is go ing to hold it) all."—-Indianapolis Journal. A BETTFJT SCHEME. Junior Daw Partner—"We must take j' jur head clerk into partnership. He I has had half a .million dollars be- ! : tjueathed to him.*' _ Senior Partner "Partnership !j J Never! Wo mustrpnrt with him on good terms and getyhim as a client " 1 1 —Truth. 1 i A PRELIMINARY! HKIRMJBH. "Now that you areiengaged, daugh ter, don't you think it would be well for you to learn how to cook njrul take care of a house?" "Oh, Edward is very well /satisfied indeed with our cook, father, and thinks our house just lovely."—Once A AVcek. THE TRUE DRESS REFORMER. Bass—"My wife is such)a busy lit tle woman ! She gives hervwhole time | nearly, to dress reform." Cass—"Dress reform? Oh, yes, Jj see; making over some of her old duds." Bass—"That is what I said."—Buf- t falo News. ANIMAL LIFE. Doolittle Goode —"How did you spend your vacation?" Somers Holliday—"Oh, I led a dog's i life!" Doolittle Goodo—"No! What did you do?" Somers Holliday—"Lay around and slept."—Puck. A BUSINESS HEAD. Old Bullion (on his death bod) "All my property is willed to you, but I'm afraid my children by my first wife will make a contest, ami then the law yers will get it." Young Wife—"Don't worry, my love; 1 can easily fix that. I'll marry one of the lawyers."- New Yo'k Weekly. WORDS', WORDS, WORDS. City Editor- "You've got the ac count of that woman's suffrage meet 'ing, have you. What's that big roll ol I paper under your am; ?" f Reporter "What they said at the meeting." City Editor "And that slip of paper you are twirling in your fingers?" Reporter—"What they did."—Buf falo Courier. TOO MUCH EDUCATION. Teacher (Waif's Night School) — "■Now remember. A diamond is pure Carbon. Shoe blacking, by the way, i lH>ys, is made of carbon, and the shine [or glisten is due to millions of tinv j diamonds." Gentleman (the next day)—"l want my hooks blacked. How much, boy ?"' I Hoy—"l don't know, boss. I hain't had a chance to iuquire the price o' diamonds this mornin'."—Good News. A SELFISH WORLD. George—"No matter how things go —the poor always suffer." "Jack—"Yes, the nabobs who own railroads don't think anything of run ning over a poor raan'6 horse." "Yes, and the man who can nfford to own a horse runs down the poor fellow on a bicycle." • 'Just so. An the fellow on the bi cycle runs down the poor chap who lias to walk." "That's is. the man who walks stumbles against the poor cripple who goes on crutches." "That's the way. And the cripple on crutches spends most of his time ! jamming his sticks down on other peo ple'H corns. It's a sadly selfish world. '* i —New York Weekly. WISE WORDS. j Do not peddle your principles for u living. j Tears are the tribute of humanity tc its destiny. ' There's many a leap twixt the boat and the slip. I Pay as yon go and save enough tc ■ 'come back on. | Do not permit the good luck ol i others to discourage you. I A wise man always keeps ou hand enough resignation for any emer gency. A rational nature admits of nothing that is not serviceable to the rest ol inaukind. For his bounty there was no wintei to it; an nutumu it was that grew more by reaping. Nor for thy neighbor* nor for thee, be sure, was life designed to be j draught of dull complacency. I Some will always be above others Destroy tho inequality to-day and it I will appear again to-morrow. Covetous men need money least, vet most affect and seek it; prodigals whe need it most do least regard it. I To an honest mind the best per j quisites of a place are the advantage! j it gives to a man of doing good. How Far Did lie ltldci I A group of gentlemen were gatheree ( about the desk st the Arlington Ins' j evening, says the Washington Post . engaged in earnest endeavors to flgurt ■ out a mathematical problem brouglr I over by a prominent young member o the New York Bar, wiio stands to Josi $1(10 on a wager if his own solution ii wxong. Here it IN : A column of troops twenty-five milei | long is ordered to a point twenty-fiv miles distant. A courier starts Him ultaneously with the rear of the col I | limit and reaches the head thereof 1 I Keturning he meets the rear of tin I column at the point where the heac originally was. Both the troops auc the courier are to travel at a uniforn rate of speed. How many miles doei the courier traverse? It looks simple. The youug Xev Yorker said it was simple, and that ii didn't take a mathematical sharp t( | figure out that the courier journeyec jjven fifty miles. The mau who mad* J the bet with him was a Philadelphiau | and he called in Professor Thunder, t teacher of mathematics, said to be tin greatest expert in the Quaker City The Professor figured at it awhile and I said it was plain that the courier eov I ered over fifty miles, but just how much more he wouldn't undertake tc say off hand. The man from Gotham was not sat isfied with the Philadelphia professor's conclusion, so on reaching Washing ton ho hunted up Professor George Hill, the Clerk to the House Irrigation Committee, and an expert in math ematics, who in turn referred him to Professor Woodward, of the Const and Geodetic Survey. His answer was sent in and appeared Rt the bottom of n long sheet ol algebraic equations. It was 603 miles. And still the New Yorker is not satis fied. Before giving up the 8100 he i going to have the opinion of the pro fessor of mathematics of Columbia College. It will take no less an author ity than that to shake his belief in the correctness of his own ciphering, which he admits was not done with the help of quadratic equations. A Welf Earned Testimonial. The captain, chief engineer, chief officer and carpenter of the .-teanm" Prodauo, have been presented with a testimonial by owners nnJ underwrit ers. The steamer was going from Cape Town to Australia with 50,000 caseH of petroleum and 500 kegs of gunpowder. When 600 miles from land a fire broke out in the cross bunker, wnich was separated from the argo space by a wooden bulkhead two oid one-hall inches thick. Captain I'rotter and liis officers, instead of ; undoning the vessel, went down t lie bnnken, and at the ricU of their ives, got tic burning coal out -Xow fork Dispatch. Pnndfcs In the German Army. Referring to the recent order of the German Emperor with regard to the dandyfied irregularities which had be come common in the German Army, a correspondent at Berlin calls our at tention to the fact that the Kaiser him self is not altogether free from affecta tion of this kind, iwasniueh as he him self sets the fashion of '"bangle" wear ing. In most of the many portraits of the the bangle is brought into special prominence by the position of the arm. But though addicted to the ' bangle he never condescended to the earring, which formerly was very com monly worn among his officers. In the time of Frederick William IT. when the German Army was resting on the laurels of the great Frederick, dandies flourished in great numbers, among the officers, in spite of severe i official condemnations of foppery. Tho I monstrosities and extravagance differed I but slightly from those of to-day— sharp-pointed toes, ridiculously high I colors and short overcoats without seams. Fatter-day exquisites have also adopted the plan of crowding on tho finger as many rings as possible—he who can carry the largest number on i the ring fingers and ut tho samo time beiul his finger being considered to i have tho bluest blood. —London Globe. 1 Suicide ismucnmc re common amojg soldiers than among civilians. I Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report. ROYAI Baking- K v, Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE " A Handful of Dirl May baa Houseful of Shame." Keep Your House Clean Willi SAPOLIO IK. KU.MICK'S SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME, GRAVEL! GRAVEL! GRAVEL! LARGE AS A GOOSE EGG. Dr. Kilmer A* Co., Binghamton, X. V. Oontlemen: "I was under the cure of different physicians for nearly two yen if; tried every ; doctor in our town continued to suffer and decline until 1 was a pliyntenl wreck. The most learned physic -3t ians made examinations j |gf and pronounced my enso j \ in the Bladder, and said ' A that I would never he any j v n Furgical operation. 1 I^ou f?ht what next? 1 \YEvery one felt sad; 1 myself, gave up, as an operation eccmcd to us all certain death. 1 shnll never forget how time ly the good news of your B\V Iff P-IIOOT reached me. I send you by this same mail a i sample of the stone or gravel that was dls- 1 solved and expelled by the use of your ' SWAiTIP-IIOOT. It must have been as large as a good sized goose egg. I am feeding as well to-day as 1 ever did. 1 kept right on using SWA.HP-HOOT, and it saved ray life. If any one doubts my statement I will furnish | proof." IiABORfCE IJOWKKSMITH, Dec. 2Cth, 180?. Marysville, Ohio. Dropsical Swelling, Cold as Ice. "Swamp-Root" saved ray life after 1 had suffered everything but death. I send you my pho tographand tnisdes criution of my case and you can use it i r fflßpl Hi. you wish. ky f vSa My liaiuis were as T V] cold as ice; th e would could not button my all my troubles have disappeared. My health is hotter now than it lias been for vear. "sw A HP-HOOT" made the cure. Tell doubting ones to write UP 1 will fell them all about it." MRS. It. J. CITTRINGEH, Jan. 15, 18P3. Marietta, Shelby Co.. Ind. PWAUn 11 500. A SI.OO. 5vV "Ouide to Health" Free. Con w II j* \ sultation Free. oßr DM - KILMER & co . BIWOHAHTO!., K. Y. RO OT Dr. Kilmer's PARILLA LIVER PILLS. -- '..• Are Ihc B.t I 4'! I'IIIr, 23 iviit*. KO FRAZER AXLE Bestinthe a Get the Genuine £| **sp Sold Everywhere !s*Sil3 vrL': &i . ft IMIJNKV IN CHICK F.N!,. MJ iy& iras-asstf /WT , >**• <•" how to detect and TT V"* to fi; d f or e gg ß | f°' f V 11 n * r 1 ' 1 ' '• (owl , .- *OOI r. t uZlSl' {V i.'L.Vi'"". cu# . GOITRE CURHD C' liiiUlin Culipgr. New Allien*. O Total cost SCW per week. <or *IK free. A.W u.MAMH, Pre*! MARRIAGE PAPER Sg^'Js^^ UL'NNKLS' MOM'IILV, TOLEDO, OHIO. Pure anil Wholesome Quality ' ommends to public approval tho California I'Quid laxative remedy. Syrup of Figs. It la pleasant to tho taste anil \y acting gently on ihe kidney, liver anil bowels toeleanse the sys tem efactually, it promotes the health and romfort of all who use It, and with millions it Is the best and only remedy. A 400 pound sea lion was captured on harbor buoy at Tacoraa, Wash., lately. More than Is 000,000 men stand ready foi ! battle in Europe. We Cure 11 nature. ! No matter of bow long standing. Write for tree treatise, testimonials, etc., to S. J, 11 ol lens worth A* Co-, Owcgo, Tioga Co., N. V , l'rice $1; by mail, sl.lO. ! Roaches in Hrazil, attack children, and , sometimes adults. Rev. 11. P. Carson, Scotland, Dak., saysr ■ " rwo bottles of Hull's Catarrh ('ure complete i Ur cured my little girl," Sdld by Druggist3.7sc. Carp and eels don't move so much as a fin all winter. Hatch's Universal Cough Syrup is a Positive euro for Croup. 25 cents at druggists. A leech lias three jaws, which form a triangle. __ Impaired digestion cured by Riochim's 1 Pills. Hecchnm's—no others. 25 ceil'* a box. | Missouri leads the world in lead produc ! tlon. J If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp* eon's Kye-wati-r. Druggist*soil nt:r.o por bottle. The mocking bird, like the bull , hute* j red. • Do You fcleep PeacefaHyl ♦ "IT IS# nARD TO FIGHTj 5 One's wnyw up; fo make a fortune out of -noth- • • lug. still, men tin ve done It na.v, do It dally;* • and It Is to lo done by porsoveringl.v Dealing ♦ • patiently rebukes for Inexperience until e gam ♦ J But those wlio " survive the struggle " will J • admit that their suecesA Is largely to be attribu 0 • ted to the peremptory disc pllue they have en ♦ • forced upon thene-elves of moderation, exercise • J and SOL ND SLEEP. For sound sleep a • •Pilgrim {Spring : Red , g ,R die prime requisite. It ne-ds only to be seen • § form true ®ptreeint toil r.f It", peculiar quul'i i--- * • Of fM>MN<ILFS( F.N i K ♦ • If is made of highly tempered steel wire, is the • • I-! CM < •! ;. |\ . r I \ ! . and XN ill hot a I IFF ♦ • I IMF. Beware of cheap made ennimon wire! • ImitutlonH, •• for they are not what they seem." • Exhibited at No. :tl Warren Street, New York; ♦ • No. if Hamilton I'lare, Boston. ♦ J For sale by all reliable Dealers. * 5 • | :l No. 50) '°A ! ■*~2.{?'STERED TRAD^2^— • • ———— ' • e Fee Brass Tag Heglstered Trademark oa alia • ueuulue Pilgrim*. ♦ t J send lor Money Saving Primer, Free. f ♦ A tin* Tnelt Corporation, Boston. J J ♦ NVABEHOUSICS— Boston, Now York, Philadelphia, ! ♦ < hlcago, Baltimore, San Francisco, Lynn. o • FACTOKIKS—Taunton, Mass.; Falrhav.-a, Mass.; o |* W hitman, J1 uhs.; Duxbury, Maas.. Plymouth.* I J Mae*. o p N 0 a-i *O3 | MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS . SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a hammer needed to drive nn I c in-'h them easily and quicklv, leaving the rlmclt si'fo uivly Muooth. itequlrlng no hoc to he made in the leather nor burr tor the Klvets. Thoy arc atrong, tongli nnl durable. Millions now in use. All lengths, uniform or assorted, put up lu hnxes. Ask yur dealer for tlietn, or srn-1 the. In •tamps tor u box ol 100, assorted sues. ManTU by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFQ. CO., XVAI.TIIAM, MASS. 1000,000 for sale by the SAINT PAUT. A DULPTH RAILROAD COMPANY iu Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circu* lars. They will be rent to you Addn,, HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commiaeioner, St. Pau 1, Minn. WORN OMCHT AND ( DAY. _ (rATKNT-Hn.) ( i,."!*! r. . AN "DE'aL FAMILY MED Tc "n £1 | For luiUiechtlon, ltlllouaocAs, | Ilcatlttl llv, loilßtlpMlloil, fiwd .t'liiuplcAlon. tlffvmhr llri-ath, ■ ■ and all diaorders of tbo Btomaoh, / r ,7v®Bd * Liver and Bowels. . I Rlf-ANS TABULES f^vsTZs)/' - S't g'tidy yrt promptly. IN A fe- < y'd.-uggistH or pent bymd) 'BOT ho i.Kg- I boscH,, fj. - Irur 11 e Kamnlce-uadreHß 1 L - J J! JL ,A i S New York. P A TV,N r l\ T BAb r M\l:K> Fx., It i i\ I l 1 o. and advice ns to pati'iHoh ; . of Invention. Send for Inventors Guide .i how ro j- • a patent PATHICK O'FARREI.T.. W'AaiiiNoruN. P.l'. fr-'j who hava weak lungs or Asth- HH F; j (Vnsumptlon. It has cured Cj Hi tbonaanda. It has not Injur- R ll is the best coagb syrup. K( Hold erarrwhara. tJc B|3gHaiia2aoH^H
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