Nervousness And gastric dyspepsia caused me much suf fering for years. About a year ago I had the grip. I bad no appe. tlte, could not breathe ••sily when lying dawn and could not eleep. A People naid I looked L | like a walking ghost. ■R) / Hood's Sarwvparilja waa I yJ reoom mend oil and one 1 l-7n bottle brought on an ap- iwsx. * A&& ( petite and enabled me m to eat without any dis tress afterwards. Since 2UL bW taking six bottles I hare Mrs * Humrlll. net had any fltg, can breathe oasily and sleep. Ik short I oall myself perfectly well. I would Hood's",'"""Cures not now be alive but for Hood's Saraaparilla.' Mrs. 9obiu O Rumhu.l, Royalton. Vt. Heed's Pills act easily, yet promptly and nffl olently, on the liver and bowels. % coats. FN U Ai 'WM Your AND * y YOUR Strength rundown system n ® BUILT UP AND Kenewed reorganized./ A few bottles of 8.8. S. will do it. If you are troubled with a depress, •d, languid feeling, and lack of energy, your bloodlsnot right, and needs purifying. nRKH Will thoroughly clear away all im gCHBTtWH purities and impart new vigor and lifejo the whole system. "I have used your medicine often for the past sight years, and feel safe in saying that it is the best general health restorer in tbo world." F. H. GIBSON, Batesville, Ark, Oar Treatise on Blood and Skin diseases mailed free: SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY Atlanta. Ga. Unlike the Dutch Process Qj No Alkalies jFV Other Chemicals MP/are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & CO.'S I IpeakfastCocoa ffl if?, which ia absolutely HI ' U'lfilVl and soluble. M 1 Hill] It has more than three timet ■M ' fPI rail the strength of Cocoa mixed J *1 Cls with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far more eco nomical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easict DIOESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorohester, Matt. " THE KIND THAT CURES DANIEL C. EGGLICSTON, Corinth, N. Y. HELPLESS AM) SUFFERING, FAINT AND WEAK FROM RHEUMATIC TORMENT, DANA'S. I Dana Sahbavarilla Co.? ® GfcNTi.EMKN.—I am years old, by occnpa-ls tion a fanner. For the last 5 years I have been aBB Mrent rufferer with Kheuniiitlim, at timea I could not atlr my arm. A3= ronitai.t pnln in my shoulders. One arm w*iN| so bad that my fingers were drawn outoff=s shape. Was al> afflicted with a burnings sensation in my atomach with severe pains. !■ would be faint and weak, ao I could hardly 3= ■it up. I have taken DANA'S ~ SARSAPARILLA | and my atomach ia WELL, no pain in myH shoulder* and anna. lam indeed grateful. == Youri truly, DANIEL C. EOGLESTON. mm The above testimonial waa tent ua by W. K.Si Clayton, the w.-11-known Druggttt, Maple St., 2 Corinth, N. Y., which la sufficient guarantee thatM It ia true. > Dana Sarsaparllla Co., Belfast, Maine- jjf Old Time vji Methods of treating Colds and -pAa Coughs were |ypw based on the lujHp "idea of sup- _ pression. We now know that "feeding a cold" is good doctrine. Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil with hypo phosphites, a rich fat-food, cures the most stubborn cough when ordinary medi cines have failed. Pleasant to take; easy to digest. AU drnggiwta. rtO'W E#V 'Trtst .■ Waterproof idHpfcf' Coal SLICKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER ll warranted water proof, and will keep you dry In tho hardeat atonn. The new POMMEL SLICKER Is a perfect riding cost, and oovera the entire saddle. Beware of Imitations. Don't buv a coot If tho " Fish Brand Is not on It. Illustra *,,b,tt„s free. A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. BAKED CHICKEN. An appetizing way to cook chicken is to cut it in pieces, as if for a fricas see. Dip the pieces in beaten egg and then in tine bread crumbs. Season with salt, popper and minced parsley. Put them in the dripping pan with bits of butter over them, and a little water in the pan. Bake slowly until they are done. Put the chicken upon a hot dish, make a rich gravy of the con tents of the pan and pour over them. Garnish the dish with parsley. —Boston Cultivator. PLAIN WAFFLES. One quart of sifted flour, two ounces of butter, one teaspoonful of salt, one half cup of yeast, or half a compressed cake, three eggs, one and one-half pints of milk. Rub the butter into the flour, add the salt, then the milk, which should be scalded and cooled, and then the yeast. Beat thoroughly and continuously for three minutes; cover and stand in a warm place for two hours or until very light. Then beat the eggs separately, add to the batter first the yolks and then the whites; let stand fifteen minutes. Have tliq. waffle iron gradually and thoroughly heated. Dip a small brush in melted suet and brush the iron until every part is well greased'. Pour the batter into a pitcher so that you may fill the iron quickly. Open the iron, pour the batter froift the pitcher into the iron until you have covered the elevations, close the iron quickly and turn it over. Bake about two minutes or until a nice brown, then re move them carefully, place on a hot dish and serve quickly.—New York World. DELICIOU9 SUGAR COOKIES. Delioious sugar cookies that are BO rich that they will keep some time are made by beating a cupful of butter and two of sugar to a cream. Beat the yolks of four eggs until light, and add them to the butter and sugar, then add the beaten whites. Mix thoroughly and quickly, and add just enough flour to make a stiff paste. 801 l out as thin as possible without breaking, cut and bake in a moderate oven. Cookies are more tempting when baked a delicate brown than when white. Jumbles made with sour cream are also excellent. Cream a cup ful of butter with two of sugar, and add a cupful of sour cream to which a teaspoonful of soda, dissolved in a lit tle hot water, has been added. Sep arate the yolks and whites of two eggs, beat both until light, then mix them, and add to the other ingredients. Add enough flour to make as soft a paste as can be rolled, not a particle more. Roll as thin as you can without break ing and bake in a hot oven. The grated rind of a lemon added to either will improve the flavor.—New York Post. CO SOU KNOW? Do yon know that bread ernmbs cleanse silk gowns? That ammonia will clean and bright en carpets? That a heated bag of salt will relievo neuralgia? That salt will kill weeds if applied in quantities? That the pineapple is a valuable aid to digestion? That the herb tansy is a sure pre ventive of moths? Tliat the best dish cloths aro made from grass toweling? That salt and water is the best anti dote for a mosquito bite? That sweet clover hns the reputation of being abhorred by flies? That salt as a tooth powder is better than almost any dentifrice? That coffee and tea stains arc re moved by boiling hot water? That the best way to polish window glass is with a piece of chamois? That white goatskin rugs can be cleaned by washing, or with naphtha? That common dry salt cleans marble thoroughly without injuring the sur face? That nothing made with sugar, eggs and milk should reach the boiling point? That oilcloths last much longer ii a thin coat of varnish is applied once a year? That flowers keep longer if cut with a knife and scissors than they do il picked? That articles of plate which are not in daily use should be put away in green baize? That white of egg will remove a fish bone from the throat, if beaten and given at once? That two or three geranium leave? added to erab-npple jelly v.'iil give it a delicious flavor? That a few pieces of beeswax put up with silk or woolen goods prevent them turning yellow? That berry stains on damask will dis appear if soaked in milk before send ing to the-laundry? That inkstains can be removed bv dipping the spot in buttermilk and rinsing in clear water? That a pinch of cream of tartar put in with the whites of eggs when being beaten will moke themstiffer? That if vaseline or butter bo ap plied to tho skin immediately after a blow of any kind there will be no dis coloration? That a piece of tallow wrapped in tissue paper nnd laid with furs or other garments will prevent the ravages of moths? Silken fabrics should never be kept folded in white paper. The chloride of lime which is used to bleach the paper causes n chemical change iu the silk, and injures tho color. MEASUREMENT OF lIAY IN A STACK. Hay settles in the stack quite slowly on account of the elasticity of the grass stems. It is a matter of guess work wholly how much it may settle, but in a month it may settle one-tenth in the height of the stack and more slowly after until it stops. New hay stacked twenty-four hours only will weigh more than a ton for 1000 cubic feet; after a month the weight of a ton will be about 900 cubic feet.—New York Times. MULES FOR FARM WORK. The mule is used much more than the horse in the South, probably in part because Southern laborers are not to be trusted with the more spirited and valuable animal. A Southern planter mentions as advantages of mules over horses: Their feet are smaller, so they injure the crops less when working in them, and can be used in closer rows than horses; they are less liable to disease, are better feeders, being less fastidious as to what tliay eat, endure hardship better, are not so easily injured and are steadier to work at the plow. The experience of most Northern farmers with mules is that, however serviceable for work on the farm, it is less plens ant and less safo to work among them. Good horses are none the worse for the farm, because they require better care than the mules will put up with. —Boston Cultivator. RAISING CALVE.7. A calf to each cow can be raised on skim milk and a little food. A calf may bo fed skim milk when one week old, with the addition of one gill of boiled flaxseed, increasing this ra tion gradually to a pint per day when four weeks old, and then adding fine middlings or corn and oats ground to gether, or a pint to one quart of oats unground. Flaxseed gruel, with plenty of Bkim milk, will produce a very fine growth, leaving the calf as mellow to the touch as if Bucking the cow. A calf two monthH old will gain three poundH per day on this ration. Tho oil taken off" in the cream can be replaced for one fifth of the money value of the cream. Butter dairymen may raise a calf to each cow upon the Bkim milk and a little additional food as indicated, and get one-fourth to one-third as much profit out of the butter. Selling but ter robs tho land of nothing valuable —only carbon, which has 110 munural value.—Mirror and Farmer. THE EXCELLENT LIMA BEAN. The Lima bean is the best flavored and lnrgest variety of the bean family, yet it is not raised for the market in any large quantities on account of the trouble and expense of getting poles for them. Tho villager has to buy poles for what he plants, and the sum expended for them often exceeds the income from the vines. Those farmers who have timber on their land are gen erally too busy, or think they are, to bother with pole beans, BO they plant some of the bush varieties that are not half so good in flavor and yield very poorly. For the benefit of those who like Lima beans and do not raise them because of the trouble of providing with poles, we give the following plan of a trellis, which answers every pur pose fully as well as the old method • If they are to be raised on a large scale two heavy posts may be set at in tervals of forty feet, the full length of the row, being sure to brace the end ones. Then plain wire is stretched from post to post. As tho vines are very heavy, it is best to strengthen it by putting two or three pieces of ordi nary three-inch board. Then loop a strand of package twine from the top wire to tho lower one. These twines should be about sixteen inches apart. Very little trouble is experienced in making the vines follow tho wires, and no tying is necessary. This trellis will last many years, and we think it is a great improvement over the iioles. — American Farmer. PLANTING THE GRAPE. Experienced grapemen everywhere urge deep planting and it is a lesson one must learn sooner or later. We may think it an absurd thing to plant a vine a foot and a half or two feet deep, but unless we do we may as well let grapes alone. Nearly rll planters recommend at least the former depth, and it is a cus tom followed in the oldest grape countries. Not only is it an all but universal method, but in some of the Rhine countries all surface roots are cut off by thrusting the spade down alongside the vine, so compelling the plant to find its entire sustenence in the subsoil. Without a deep and thorough pre paration of the soil our vines will be both short lived and unproductive. Drainage must be secured if necessary, for a grape will not endure wet feet, nor will fertilizing the subsoil be of the least use so long as water remains in it. How to enrich the whole Boil to the depth of at least one foot in, in the vineyard, an important matter. It may possibly be done otherwise, but to pro mote a good healthy growth of vine and fruit, there is to my mind no way at all equal to ploughing in good com post, either of muck well dried out or of parings of low rich lands, iueluding wire grass, hushes, vines, all the small growth. Such a compost made tip j with hardwood ashes and a sprinkling of bo:>,e, distributed all through the soil by repeated ploughings, will give | you wood and fruit. I Now, in preparing to plant, throw | out wide, open furrows, or dig holes atl j least three feet wide and a foot and a half deep, and put in a generous snp- I ply—a bushel or more—'of the sumo compost. Mix it with the best surface soil, and in that plant. You cannot fill up at first; let the upper roots bd covered three or four inches, and for the rest successive hoeings as the vines grow will suffice, and by the close of the first season the ground will bd levelled up. Don't forget to get the vines down, 1 down near the bottom of the prepared holes, for most of the failures in grapq growing result from surfac* prepara tion and shallow planting. —Floridd Agriculturist. POOR PASTURES. . | Good pasturago is essential to sue cessfnl dairy farming in most section*) |of New England. On a largo propor i tion of the farms these pastures are not and very many of them cannot be cultivated, and, as a consequence, these that are stocked with cows arc slowly being depleted of their original fertil ity, and brush and weeds take the place of nutritions grasses. A short time since the writer passeel through a hilly town where sheep rais ing was formerly the leafing farming! industry, but after the aollnpsc of the Merino boom the farmers changed from) ' sheep raising to dairying, and for thd j past ten or twelve years e-iceso making 1 has been their specialty. For a few years this line of fnrmiqg was profit- I able. The pastures furnished an abuu j dance of feed, and the cows gave q ; good flow of milk with small cost. But) things have changed. Many of thd ! pastures now are overgrown with weeds and bushes, and produce but little good feed. Farmers arc obliged tci buy large quantities of grain to keep up the flow of milk through the sum | mer mouths. The grain bills absorb | the profits aud keep the farmers ill I financial straits all of tho time. Tlv only practicable way out is to try sheep raising again for a few years. Last spring I turned a flock of sheep into a pasture that was so overrun with weeds and daisies as to furnish but) little feed for cattle. To-day not a weed or a daisy is to bo seen, and thei sheep and lambs which arc long wooled, Costwold and Leicester, havo done finely. In two or three years I expect, tho pasture will bo entirety free from weeds and daisies and ready for cattle again. A good flock of sheep well) cared for should net the owner at least' $1.50 per head in wool and lnmbs, and' with special cure much more may bo' | realized ; allowing fifty cents per head ! for grain would give you a return of ($1 per head of cash in hand. In the town referred to the annual averago receipts for the milk of tho cows at tho cheese factory is about S3O per cow nud from this must be subtracted the grain feed.—New England Farmer. PARM AXn GARDES NOTES. A good mulch keeps down weeds. Mixed grasses make the best pnsturo. j Milk as quickly and quietly as pos | sible. | The curl in tho pig's tail is a sign of I health. | Small caters uro almost always poor j milkerß. | Large crops are not always the most profitable ones. I Liqui 1 manure will force crops to a rapid maturity. | The best quality of meat comes from the pig, not the hog. Bulky food should always be fed with concentrated food. I Pigs in the orchard will consume j wormy fruit and insects. | Change the quarters and pasture of : your sheep occasionally. I Too much wood is a prolific cause of the non-fruitage of trees. I A creamery should not be started on [ less than three hundred cows. Oil meal is a concentrated food and should be given in moderation. The more flowers are picked, the more flowers the plant will bear. Raspberries, with the exception of i Blackcaps, can be planted in the fall. Mulched tomatoes produce larger 1 crops than those that are not mulched. A little extra work in mellowing the ' soil will give a larger profit when the i crop is harvested. Market gardeners are preparing the land and sowing turnips and lettuce for the late market. Those kinds of cabbage which have firm, close heads are the least injured by the cabbage worm. Turnips will produce larger crops when weeded, but they will do well on the average ground if not cultivated. | The loss by shrinkage of vegetables ! stored in cellars is very great; some claim it to bo as high as forty per 1 cent. To get. the best results with rasp berries, cut out old wood ami all weak stalks as soous as the bearing season is 1 over. j After the potato vines have died j down, the bugs that were on them arc j apt to attack the other plants,especial ly the eggplants, but they can be killed by applying Paris green. Dignity or the Court. I The following Incident, which Is vouched for as fact, Is told of a judge who had a lofty Idea of his own legal capacity, and was at the same time anxious to sustain the dignity of the court. A murder case was before him. There was no (Jlreet evidence as to the perpetrator of the crime, but the Individual arrested was well known, and, Indeed, confessed the crime. When brought Into court, the Judge cautioned the prisoner not to commit himself; that he must remember his rights as a free citizen; and that, above all things, he must not inter rupt the proceedings of the court. After this friendly warning, tho judge went on to state that he, the prisoner, was accused of having, on such a date, shot the deceased. Upon the prisoner broke in "Well, an' so 1 did." The judge was much annoyed at the Interruption. "Hold your tongue, sir," he ex claimed. "Have I not told you not to com mit yourself, nor to Interrupt me. I shall commit you for contempt ol court If you do so again," he added, sternly. He then repeated the accusation, upon which the prisoner again broke In "I have told you afore that I killed——" The judge's indignation was In tense at this second Interruption, and be demanded, angrily "Mr. Sheriff, what Is your evi dence?" "I have nothing butcircumstantial evidence, your honor, and the pris oner's own confession." "Then," said the judge, "I discharge the prisoner on this accusation, but commit him for contempt of court." Ventilation. Just as sure as a man begins In the poultry business with a number of fancy chickens, he wants "a nice hen house with a cupola on it," which ho explains to you, Is for fresh air. In this many make a grave mistake, says R. K. James in the Portland Transcript, as a top ventilation In a hen-house Is of more injury than no ventilation at all. Especially is this so in winter. Hot air Is lighter than cold, and consequently rises to tho ceiling. When there Is an opening in the celling this air escapes and the cold air takes Its place. Under these circumstances It nan easily be seen that a hen-house with a top ventila tion Is always a cold one In winter. When ventilators are put In they should come down to within one foot of the floor, and will then take out foul air without removing the warm air. Most houses In this country need no ventilation, as they are open enough to insure a good circulation of fresh air at all times. If as much attention was paid to getting warm houses by the average farmer as there Is ne ventilation there would be less complaints of swelled heads, roup, and many other diseases too numer ous to mention. I'arera- or a Famous Detective. Vldocq, the great French detective, was born in Arras in 1775. lie began life as a baker and early became the terror of his companions by his athletic frame and violent disposi tion. At the same time he was a notorious thief, and after many dis graceful adventures he enlisted in the army. In 1700 he returned to Paris with some money, which, however, he soon squandered. Next ho was sentenced at Lille to eightyears' hard labor for forgery, but repeatedly es caped, and in 1808 he became con nected with the Paris Tolico as a detective. His previous career en- him to render Important services, and he was appointed chief Of the safety brigade, chieliy com posed of reprieved convicts, which purged Paris of the many dangerous classes. In 1818 he received a full pardon, and his connection with this service lasted until about 1828, when ho settled at St. Mande as a paper i manufacturer. Soon after the revo lution of 1830 he became a political detective, but with little success. In 1848 he was again employed under the republican government, but he died penniless in 1857.—Commercial frazo.tt.a DetfnrM Cannot bo Cured by local application*, as theycannot reach the diseased portion of ihe ear. There is only ono way to cure Deafness, and that, is by cotntitu tionnl remedies. Deafness Is caused by an in flamed condif ion of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you 4iave a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can bo taken out and this tub© re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out ten aro caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the vnucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dillars for nny rase of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can mot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send fer circulars, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. fVftold by Druggists, 75c. The first magazine for the blind was printed by Rev. W. Taylor ii London in 1855. When Nature Needs assistance it may bo best to render It promptly,but one should remember touso even the most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most s mple and gentle remedy is the Syrup of Figs manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co. Tho Israelites learned surveying from the Egyptians who had practiced it for ages. Sore throat cured at once by Hatch's Univer sal Cough Syrup. 2> cents at. druggists. Tne average height of clouds is a mile or rather a little more. fleecham's Pills with a drink of water morn ings. lteecham's- no others. 2ft cents a box. A peer cannot resign his peerage. J f afflicted wltli sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye-water, Druggies sell atSJftc nerbottl* pwwwfwwwmwfy^ £ / THHE ROYAL Baking 3 A Powder surpasses all others in leavening power, in gp purity and wholesomeness, an d is indispensable for use wherever the best and finest food is required. jjj All other Baking Powders contain J ammonia or alum. BOYAL BAKJNQ POWDEB CO., 10 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. rear-*- ;fg A Amenamont Adopted. A member of the House of Com- ' mons had been paying attention to a young lady for a low? while, and he had taken her to attend the House until she was perfectly posted on its rules. On tbe last day of the session, as they came out, he bought her a bouquet, saying: "May I offer you my handful of flowers?" She promptly replied: "1 move to amend by omitting all after the word 'hand.'" He blushingly accepted the amend- { ment, and they adopted It unani- ' mousiy. Thf Stork. The Arabs have a superstition that the stork has a human heart. When j j one or theße birds builds its nest on i a housetop they believe the happi ness of that household is insured for j that year. Miracles Nof Ended Yet. i WHAT A MINISTER SAYS OF SWAMP-ROOT. Sageville, N. Y. May 12. 1893. j Gentlemen: For years I suffered with t kidney and liver trouble. Doctor after doctor treated ing any better. Wlmt rolling on the floor, ■creaming and half c rs*y l Nothing but morphine would quiet j mc. It seemed death would boa relief from my suffering. My stomach was in a terrible condition, food, what little 1 ate, distressed . me, my complexion was yellow; bowels con stipated; I was only able to walk as fur as the front porch. A friend recommended your Bwamp-Iloot. 1 began to take it at once. Swamp-Root Cured Me. After passing off from my system a fearful amount of poisonous matter, imagine my joy to find I was decidedly better. My improve ment after that was rapid and uninterrupted and in six mouths I was completely cured, j Rev. Win. 11. Van Deuaen. i At DrnggUte, 50 cent and $ 1 .OO Sl/.0. i "Invalids' Quid* to Health" free-' onsuluttiin free. Dr. Kilmer k Co., - Blnghuwton, N. Y. 1 ; "German Syrup" I must say a word as to the ef ficacy of German Syrup. I have used it in my family for Bronchitis, i the result of Colds, with most ex cellent success. I have taken it my self for Throat Troubles, and have I derived good results therefrom. I therefore recommend it to my neigh bors as an excellent remedy in such | cases. James T. Durette, Earlys ville, Va. Beware of dealers who offeryou "something just as good." : Always insist 0:1 having Bosckee's | German Syrup. ® Cures Coughs, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Croup, Whooping Cough and Asthma. For Contain I Hon it has no rival; has cured thousands where all others failed; will cure you if taken in time. Sold by Druggists on a guarantee. For Lame Hack or Chest, use SHI LOII'S PLASTEK. a s cts. CHJLO H'S/\CATARRH E M E D r ! I I AfcTTTE WALT. PAPER MERCHANT \ BflfiTH SEELS THE BEST . OBVII I H THE CHEAPEST WALL PAPER Good Pnocr-Sc. nnd 5c Gold Pncr 5e . Vc. and 1 Or. Bend se. -'inapt f-r mi niples. 541 VV.:odßir i t. Pittsburgh, Ph. PHILAD'A BIRD FOOD C'C' te'? Utri. mixed with the drinking wai.-. e' he OIrCU R flood of swept melodies, nn l: I in " * BITTERS ' facti *.-o produced in • t-" minute* h, ' nt '*> "*!!'. p ' Bird book JTrss. Bird Fond Co., 40d N. 3d Ht, 1 blld a, la. j Br>( >.oo j .won'.' 1 a i^fr^™'.N^ e TV*iS l "viri'V!:n L-i • "Thrift is a GieJ Revenue/' Great Savings Result From Cleanliness and SAPOLIO True ana Appropriate. There was one hymn of which Par son Black was especially fond, and which BO accurately expressed his seutimenta that he made use of it on all possible occasions. One of these was the funeral of his most prominent deacon, who, though act ive in the affairs of the church, had, in the business world, a reputation for sharpness and closeness that was ■ not wholly enviable. The services were drawing to a close. Parson Black rose slowly from his chair, and, in a voice of sepul chral sadness, said: "Friends: Before removing the r mains of our dearly beloved brother from this house to the house ajip'int ed for all the livln', let us join in j slngln' the 24"th hymn: "Bellevln', we rejoice To see tho curse removed." ■ |?ketch'of myYifef etc. V.*!. AS?iVi'vK IH LK,'KI" | Vr.; i J '. Tlio Brut k uhber Boot ever Invento I for Farm- I *r, Mluors. H. H. l aud- and others. The outer or i tap nolo extends the whole length of tho nolo down to the heel, protecting the shank In ditching, digging and other work. BF.ST cnmlliy tlt l oughoiit. AM\ VBI It IHM.I.U Fu Tllk.M. rN 11 4 £ 'V3 !JD HARNESS I WIT II THOMSON'S SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a liarumur needed to drive 1 sn.l clinch them easily and quickly, leaving tho clinch I absolutely mouth. Requiring no ho e to bo made In the leather nor burr lor the Hlvots. They arc ntiong, touuli and durable. Millions now in use. AU j lenstns, uniform or assorted, put up In boxes. Ask your dealer for (Item, . r soml 40c. la . stamps for a box ot 100, assorted sizes. Mau'fd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., r WAI.THAJL, MAfiH. LAN ID EA L FA MI LV MEDTcTN El ■ For Indigestion, lilllousnr -a. Headache, Constl|utloji, Biol 1 I Wor Iree samples addresH L.. J' -Mm !L C -. NCW Y ° rk - f i ruin nnn acres ° f lan^ !• for sale by tho SAINT PAUL . A DULUTII KA i lkoau COMPANY In Minnesota. Beud for Maps and Circu lars. They will be Lent to you FREE. Address HOPEWELL CLARKE, I'nd Commissioner, St. Paul. Minn. PATENTS.!.!!;? of Invention. Send for Inventors (•ulde.or howtoget ■ pat nt PA i Hit K < 'I kRRELI. W ashixoi >i, D.() U who have weak lungsor Asth- ■■ ■lt is tho best cough syrup. ° HI ■irViim' S "1 B i