More and Greater Are the cures produced by Hood's Sarea parilla than by any other medioine. If you are suffering with scrofula, salt rheum, j hip disease, running sores, boils, pimples. | dyspepsia, loss of appetite or that tired feeling, take Hood's HarsapariUa. You ; may confidently expect a prompt and permanent cure. Its unequaled record is due to its positive merit. Itemember ! Hood's Sarsaparilla Is tii©beat—ln foot, the OneTrae Blood Porifler. Hood's Pills i MYSTERY SOLVED BY SCIENCE. ; Microbes Can Draw Nitrogen from the Air end Give It to Plants. I Besides buying well-selected fertll- ; Ixers, the progressive farmer of the fu ture will nlso provide himself with bot tled billions of the microbes which en able plants to obtain nitrogen from the air. It was a long puzzle to chemists to learn how nitrogen Is absorbed. It wns elenr thai under ordinary circum stances plants are unable to appropri ate directly front tile air the nitrogen they absolutely require for their growth. The air In the pores of the soil contains plenty of It, but the roots are not capable of causing It to he come a constituent of the sap or liber. I Leguminous plants, such as beans, peas, and clover, require a great deal j of nitrogen, and It was of special In terest to provide them artificially, If possible, with tills important constit uent. The mystery was dispelled by a re cent discovery that the roots of plants j capable of absorbing nitrogen bear lit tle protuberances, and It Is through these protuberauccs that the nitrogen Is taken In. Further study with the | help of the microscope reveuled the fact that the protuberances contain millions of bacteria, and that It Is these bacteria that absorb the nitrogen and give It to the roots of pinnts In a form In which It can be used by them. To the activity of these beneficent bacte ria. plants—particularly leguminous plants—owe their vigor and perhaps their existence In their present form. ' The plant life In this view. Is a result, In Incidental product, of the vital pro cesses of microbes, a million of which could swim with comfort In a single drop of water. The next step was to ! Isolate, by methods with which bac- ! terlologists are familiar, the varieties of bacteria suited to each crop, and to breed them artificially In paying quan tities. This has been done. A German firm r breeds seventeen species of bacteria of the nitrogen-absorbing species and sells them to agriculturists In bottles under the name of "ultragln." A bot tle containing some thousand billions of the useful bacteria and selling for 51.25 will "Inoculate," it Is said, an acre of ground. The experience of far mers with "ultragln" is too brief to qualify them to speak with certainty of its practical utility. Some have ob- j talned encouraging results, while oth ers have not. It has been on the mar- ! ket less than a year and began to be i used too late In the sea son for a fair test. "Nltragln" ought to be used be , fore it Is two mouths old, and Ms vital- j Ity Is Impaired, If not wholly lost, when J It is four months old. It must be kept ; In a cool place, and Is best applied, per haps, at night, since It Is Injured by ex- : posure lo the light. Its function Is to ' assist germinating seeds and small roots to put forth the desired protuber ances. It Is accordingly useless for growing plants, and In soils already well sup- ; plied with nitrogen In the required form. Under favorable conditions sev eral experimenters have obtained, It Is J said, excellent results. Cereals have ; not been found susceptible to lis lnflu ence to an appreciable extent. Much remains to be determined as io the ex ! tent of Its utility. It Is yet undecided, It seems, whether the seed or the soli Is lo be Inoculated—whether the seed should be mixed with the gelatine con 1 taining the "nltragln," or whether the "nltragln" should be mixed with a | quantity of the latter scattered over the area to be treated. In any case, i agriculturists have In nllragln an In- ' terosting subject of experiment.—Bal ttmore Sun. wny Not t.rotv Heels'.* Germany lias 1,1)00,000 acres of land In sugar beets, and France has 1,700,- 000. Ten or twelve tons of beets can ' be grown to the acre and will yield a ton of sugar. One million acres of sugar beets give a crop worth $50,000,- 000. One million acres in corn at pres ent prices give a crop worth $6,250,000. Why not grow sugar beets?— Leave- I worth Times. W▼??VTVTTT y f W V T ▼ W\ A A Aii Ayer's is the name to remember when / \ buying Sarsaparilla. It has been < curing people right along for \ more than 50 years. That's why. > Precise. ! One day a boorish client entered a lawyer's office and found him writing. The stranger took a seat, and after In forming the lawyer that he had come | lo consult him on a matter of some Im > portance, observed, "My father died and made a will." ! "You say," remarked the lawyer, writing steadily, "your father died and | made a will." "Yes. sir, my father died anil made a will." | "Humph!" still writing and paying no attention. I "I eny, Mr. Call, my father died and made a will." ■ "Very strange!" writing and not no i ticlng his client. | "Mr.-Call, I say again," taking out his purse and placing a fee on the ta ble, "my father made a will and died." "Oh, now we may understand each other." said the lawyer, all attention; "your father made a will before he died. Why didn't you say so at first? Well, now, go on, let's hear." Webster and Clay Italic the Wind. The recollections of John Sherman, the tallest and thinnest man In Con gress, do not embrace the best story of Webster and Clay. Both were great money-makers, and both were forever In the hardest financial straits. One day Clay went to Webster and said: "Got any money, Dan? I want $250." "I was going over to borrow that amount of you," said Webster. "I am dead broke." "World' where we can raise it? We need SSOO between us." They formed themselves In a commit tee of ways and means, und after much thought evolved a plan. "Clay, If you will nuike a drnrt on me tit thirty days I will indorse it, and we can get the money at the bank." The draft Is in a' Washington bank nt this day, bearing both signatures. The two "old bo.vs" got the money and the next day were skirmishing around for more.—New York Press. A New "Ad" Scheme. Advertising threatens to break out In a new place. Many barber shops In this city have recently received front a corporation, officered with inen of dis tinguished surnames, a circular pro posing an Ingenious enterprise. The company writes to obtain the privilege of posting advertisements on the walls and ceilings of barber shops at sucli points as shall come within the range of vision of persons thnt submit them selves to the hands of the barber and bis assistants. It Is lite hope of the company that the barbers will yield U p their wall space in return for so many shares of stock per chair in the com pany, and the glittering hope is held out that when the business Is once well established the stock at a par value of $lO will pay dividends of 50 per cent, annually. It is announced that the busi ness is already established In 3,000 bar ber shops in Philadelphia.—New York Sun. A Kare ltird. The rarest species of bird now ex tant, and one which Is almost extinct, has Its home In the Jungles of South Amerlen. The ornithological curiosity Is known to science as the palamedra cornuda, and to the common people as the "horned screamer." As a rara avis nothing could excel the cornuda, unless It should be the accidental discovery of a living moa, or an epiuornls. But few of the bird books even let you know that such a horned paradox ever existed, let alone telling you that living specimens of the queer creature are oc casionally met with. The only one now In captivity In North America, If the writer was not misinformed, Is that belonging to the aviary of the Philadel phla Zoological Gardens, and which ar rived 111 this eountry about three years ago. The eroature is about the size of a full-growu turkey hen, and of . n blackish brown color. One of its dis tinguishing peculiarities is a ruffle of black and white which surrounds the head. Old-Time Scotch Obituary. The following death notice appeared In the Edinburgh Weekly Muguzine of March 2, 1775: "Feb. 12—At New Iteay, in the county of Caithness, much regretted, Francis Tait. parochial school muster there, in the one hundred and second year of his age; a man of an athletic form, of a saturnine complex lon and ids size about six foot. lie lived chiefly upon vegetables, wns n favorite of the muses and nt times drank freely. He was no less distin guished for ids piety than for the good order he observed in his school, for his easy method of teaching and for infus ing into his pupils a laudable spirit of emulation, lie retained his senses to the last." I>eptli to Plant Potatoes. The wet weather this summer is causing a good many fields of potatoes to rot. In all such cases the rot is most prevalent on potatoes planted shallow, and which. ;therefore, pro duce their tubers near the surface of the ground. The reason appears to be that the fungus germs are very easily washed from the leaves to the tubers when they are near the surface, while if set deeper the germs lose their effect before the tubers are reached. As the shallow planted po tatoes sunburn badly in hot, dry weath er, that is another reason why pota toes should be planted deeply. The only objection to deep planting is for the very earliest, when the soil is cold and wet. But even then the deep planted potatoes will not rot in the ground if planted whole, or if the cut pieces are well dried before being put in the soil. It is more labor to make a deep furrow for jjotatoes, especially if they are planted on a sod. But if the jointer plow is used, and four or five inches of loose soil is turned up, the furrow into which the potatoes are to be dropped may easily be made that depth. It does 110 harm to ridge over the pototoes when covering them, pro vided the ridge is worked to a level be fore the potatoes come up. To RHIHO Duck* Successfully* George Pollard, of Pan-tucket, R. 1., litis been in the duck-raising business for the past five years, and, last sen son raised 5000 ducks, as well as 800 chickens. His sticpess in duck raising since the start has been greater than that of most beginners, and he now has the business on a substantial anil profitable basis. Mr. Pollard says that the foundation of success in this business lies in the breeding stock. More failures oeenr on account of the breeding stock being weak than from any other cause. The best of stock, unless kept properly, will soon get weak and worthless, says Samuel Cuslrman in Rural New Yorker. When mating breeding ducks in No vember, he provides a drake for every five ducks. Later in the season, about the last of May, a drake should havo as many us six or seven ducks. For breeding, he prefers ducks and drakes in their second year to those raised the same season, although a part of those used are young stock. No ducks arc kept, however, longer than two or threo years. No whole grain is fed the breeding ducks. He gives them a mixture com posed of three parts of wheat bran, three parts eornnieal and one part beef scraps. One part of a cheap grade of flour is'also added to keep the mass to gether. This makes it scatter less and prevents much waste. It is mixed with hot water in winter to take oft' the chill, but not to cook it. Sound cab bage is also bought and fed, as well as boiled turnips and clover. Crushed stone or grit, the same as is fed to heus, is kept by them all the time, as well as crushed oyster shells. In cold weather the ducks are housed at night, but they are invariably fed out of doors every day in winter. When snow is on the ground, a place is cleared in front of the house for this purpose. Eggs are not secured in any number until December. Although the ducks are allowed the run of their yard dur ing the laying season, nine-tenths of the eggs are laid in the house. They do all their laying by ten o'clock in the forenoon, after which they "are given free access to a pond or swimming place. Mr. Pollard has tried nest boxes and stalls as nests, but finds theni of no advantage. The ducks are liable to rush from one end of the room to the other and the whole flock nre liable to go slam bang against them and pile up in them, if they happen to be iu their course. The house floor is covered with planer shavings, and the ducks nmko their nests right on the floor, and less eggs are broken or lost than under any other plan followed. Planer shavings suit Mr. Pollard best for bedding, though they hurt the value of the ma nure. Cotton dirt is excellent, and is, also, of value as manure. Dairy Notes. On many of the larger dairy farms there is now a problem which seems to bother the dairymen. What shall they do with the old cows? A farmer seldom cares to keep a cow to moro than ten or twelve years old, and if ho has kept her highly fed to stimulate a large milk production, he may think it best to dispose of her much earlier than that age. Butchers will not pay much for old cow beef, though it may be well fat tened. In fact, they value them so low that it scarcely pays to feed au extra bushel of meal to fatten one after she has dried oil'. In Some country towns butchers will not buy them at all. Some farmers get such cows tested with tuberculin aud sell them to the State, it is said, but not all will do that, and as they cannot keep their families [upon cow beef the year through, it is n serious question how to dispose at the surplus. . Shall they let theln. go to the city markets at $lO or sl2 per head? Or would it be cheaper to kill and bury them? What is the difference in value be tween a good cow capable of making 300 pounds of butter or morn iu a year and one that will make not more than 150 pounds? What should be the difference in price? There are herds that have even higher records than 300 pounds, and individual cows that would exceed 400 pounds in a year on just ordinarily good feeding, and herds that with nearly as good care do not come up to 150 pounds per head. We say nearly as good care, for as a rule the man who has and keeps such cows does not feel interest enough in his business to take much pains with them. He is apt to be sure that "farming don't pay," and that "jit costs more to keep a cow than all you can get out of her," which is true, in his case, at least; but he has got cows in some way, perhaps by inheritance, perhaps by purchase, and lie has fodder to be used up in some way, partly bog hay, partly English hay cut late and dried until it has lost all juiciness and flavor, and there are the corn stalks that the cows manage to pick some leaves from when they are taken to the barn, and there is some grass among the bushes and rocks in the pasture, and so he keeps the cows to turn all this into a little manure for his fields, which need it badly enough, and takes what milk he can get, and grumbles, but does uot try to get better cows or better feed. We all know that sort of farmer, or have known him, for they are dying out, and their ohildren usually have left the farm for other business and not one would go back to it if it was given him. That is the sort of farmers that keep 150-pound or possibly 100-pound cows. If they needed to buy another they would not lie willing to pay over $25 for her, oud would not put on another $5 for the best cow in town, but would go a dozeu miles farther to fiud oue for S2O. But the man ,who has a 300-pound cow is by no means satisfied. He be lieves there is a profit in keeping cows if he can only get the right sort of cows. If he has to buy a cow he would like one better than any he has now, and the higher the price asked the farther he will go to see it, and the quicker he will buy it if he cau see indications of the qualities he desires. But he likes better to raise the calves from his best cows and from the best bull he enn get, and feed them up to maturity, with the object of makiug them better thau the parents. Having good cows he feels that he ought to give them good care aud good food, and if he makes butter lie has so much that he must have the best ap pliances for the work, and follow the most approved methods, and seek the best market. The difference then is more than the difference in getting there whether you take the electric cars or take a seat on the stone wall. It is the difference be tween advancing or moving backward, between prosperous farming nud fail ure. The 150 pounds of butter a year at present prices will not pay for even the poor keeping and little care we have described as being given to that kind of cows. The 300 pounds will pay for much better food nud care and give a little income besides, aud the 400-pound cow will yield about as much income as a thousand dollars iu the bank, beside paying for good hay and grain. If the man with a 150-pound cow gets a living, he earns it by hard work upon the laud or elsewhere, and pays for the luxury of having the cow. If he has a largo herd of such cows, he needs a good income from other sources to support them. At the prices of hay and grain near the cities and large towns of N'ew Eng land, it costs not less than S4O a year : to feed a cow and shelter her in the winter. That will require 200 pounds of butter at twenty cents a pound. In the more rural districts, hay nnd pas- I turage being cheaper, and with good ' hay and corn ensilage grown upon the farm, it may be done for S3O, but cer tainly not for less. It is then for every farmer's interest to know just what his cows are doing j for him, aud if he cannot make them approximate closely to the 300-pound limit, to begin the process of weeding ; out the poorest aud obtaining better, even if the cost is much higher.— 1 American Cultivator. Insects That War With tho Mosquito. , There are two natural enemies of the mosquito, the dragon fly and the spider. Tho latter, as we know, wages constant warfare upon all insect life, and where mosquitoes are plentiful they form the chief diet of their hairy foe. The dragon fly is a dostroyer of, mosquitoes in at least two stages of life. The larva dragon fly feeds upon tho larva mosquito, and when fully de veloped the latter dines constantly upon the matured mosquito. The dragon fly as a. solution of the mosquito J pest question is uot satisfactory, for ' while there is no serious difficulty to bo encountered iu the cultivation of dragon flies in large numbers, yet it is manifestly impossible to keep them in the dark woods where mosquitoes abound, the hunting ground of the "darning needle" being among the flowers nnd dry gardens where tho sunshine prevails. For this very im portant reason the scheme of hunting one kind of insect with another must he abandoned as impracticable.— [ Washington Star. AROUND THE BEND. I There comes a time just once n week When nothing matters much; I'm waiting for a step I know, A smile, a voice, a touch: "He's coming, coming," slugs the wirt. With sweet, prosaic jar. For Dick, my Dick, dear fellow, Takes a common, five-cent car. | , But never maiden rich and fair 'Mong cushions satin fin\ i In gown of silk and laces rare, i Had dearer love than mine. Bo every Saturday I wait The happy moment when His car comes swinging round the bend. And Dick has come again. He glances up: I know it, though I will not let him see; For not yet may I tell him ; That I love as fond as he. Then comes the bell's far tinkle And the maid's reluctant feet. And then I hear him on the stair, And then at last—we meet. My heart beats so I cannot speak, He thinks me coy and cold; It is because of depths of love The which 1 have not told. But when the autumn leaves are crisp, When snow has come again, Dear Dick will bo my own. my own! Perhaps I'll tell him then. —Cora Stuart Wheeler, in Woman's Hom Companion. HUMOR OF THE DAY. "Time flies, you know." "Not al ways. It is now possible to make a century run."—lndianapolis Journal. He—"Do you believe in woman taking man's place?" She—"Yes; in a crowded street car."—Philadelphia Record. "MissHighsee is a beautiful singer, isn't she?" "Very. That was what made her singing endurable."—Wash-1 iugton Times. He—"l love you better than my life." She—"Considering the life you lead, I cannot say that I am sur prised. " —Staudard. Mrs. Howso—"Did the butcher aond the lobsters?" Bridget—"He did, mum, but I sent them back. They svuzn't ripe."—Brooklyn Life. "I never did have any head for, mathematics.'' "Um! I have always understood that at home you did not even count."—Cincinnati Enquirer. j Hope is whispering "All is well!" Busy men do uot deny it; Some are bringing wheat to soli, Others are digging gold to buy it. —Washington Star. Friend—"Does your town boast of & baseball team?" Suburbanite— "No. We used to boast of one, but we have to apologize for it now."— , Puck. "Say, old man, you are so absent minded, I believe you are in love!" Hobson—"Me? Oh! ho! ho! hoi Why, don't you know I'm married?"— Puck. "I hope, Ophelia, that you are not 10 foolish as to call yourself a 'wash lady.' " " 'Deed I don't, Miss May. I sails myself a lauudry lady."—lndian apolis Journal. Jack—"Howistyour sister getting m with her singing lessons?" Cissie —"Well, papa has taken the wadding out of his ears for the first time to day."—Fliegende Bhetter. "There is one queer thing noticea ble at all picnics." "What is that?" "The man who makes the most fuss about carrying the basket always eats more than anybody else."—Chicago Record. "It looks like rain," said the milk man to the lady of the house. After examining the milk, she came to the conclusion that it must be either rain or water from the pump.—Norristowu Herald. He—"For my part I can't see why you women should waut to ape men, myhow." She—"Oh. anything for a little change. We've been making a monkey of him long enough."—Cleve land Leader. He—"There is one thing to be said ; about the Scotch dialect stories now j floating about." She—"And what ia that?" He—"They may be the same I old stories, but no one will recognize them."—Youkers Statesman. Landlord—"Did they discover the identity of that petrified body which was found in the valley yesterday?" New Yorker—"l don't know; but I think it was a man from whom one of your waiters refused tOj take a tip."— Judge. "Say, paw! is it anything to brag about when you don't do something you can't do?" "I'm inclined to think not. Why do you ask?" " 'Cause I've just been readin' that cherry-tree story 'bout Washin'ton."' Detroit Free Press. Surgeon—"Hurry up. Get the in struments in readiness. We'll ampu tate his leg." Student—"But it seems to be nothing more than a simple frac ture. I should think the leg might be saved." Surgeon—"Certainly it might; but don't you see that he's un conscious?"— Cleveland Leader. , Old Mrs. Ivelley entered tbe parlor unexpectedly, and spoiled a very nice tableau. "I was just whispering a se cret in Cousin Jennie's ear," explained Jimmie. "lam sorry, James," said the old lady gravely, "that your eye sight has become so bad that you mistake Jennie's mouth for her ear." —Boston Traveler. Railway Capital. A recent writer has drawn attention to the large amount of capital and skill belonging to the English nud Ameri can people which has been invested in railroads. There are 181,717 miles of railway in the United States, ia , Europe, out of the 155,284 miles of railway, 20,977 are on British soil. In Asia, out of 26,890 miles of rail road, 19,700 are British. The British railway mileage throughout the world is 74,129 miles. When we add the figures together we find a total of , 255,846, or about three-fifths of the railways of the world belonging to the English speaking race. And this is, of coarse, independent of railways under other flags which are due to English or American dapifal or skill. CLEVER ADVERTISERS IN PARIS. Even Quick-Wittccl Americana Might Be Given Pointers. The recently notorious Harrison Bis '■ tors first came into notice as an adver tisement of a play, "The Fairy's Well," run by Owen Ferree in New York, and while hardly more than babes were seen every day riding in an Irish jaunt ing car through the streets of New- York. That was ton years ago. All these methods are common enough in t the States, and much more frequently used than sueli of the public as Is not '■ familiar with the business section of I the city knows. Now hear how it Is I done in France: "To-day," writes a Purls correspond ; ent, "on the boulevards I came across I a wedding party, which, to my aston i Ishment, drove up in u splendidly ap pointed equipage and alighted in front of a fashionable restaurant. The men i were in evening dross. The bride had on her orange blossoms and veil; a pret ty bride she was too. Everything about the party was au fait. They took their ( seats on the terasse and, of course, n crowd at once began to gather near them, for while bridal parties are not an uncommon sight in Paris, still, as a rule, the blushing bride hides herself discreetly in some far-off, obscure res taurant, rather than flaunt herself in the face and eyes of the boulevards Sipping their ahsiuthe, the party chat ted and laughed aud the gaping people , about them drank in every word. They talked in unconscious audihleness, and ' , every word they said was simply a | glorification of the Montmnrtre cafe ' That done they passed on to their next staud." Yet even that has not yet discounted 1 the manner in which Yvette Guilbert was advertised last year. At that time, during the racing season, long light overcoats became the fashion in France - those startling affairs that reached to the heels, and only became slight and elegant figures, although In Paris at ; that time almost every smart man who , ' could wore one. Never more than half < a dozen over came to Huston. At that i time one constantly met on the streets I I In Paris a dozen well-dressed men • wearing these coats. They wore silk hats and patent leathers, aud had field ! glasses swung over their shoulders. They looked so clean, so happy, so alto j getlier attractive and correct that j everyone stared at them—and envied ' them—until the leader shouted out j "Yvette Guilbert," and the rest of the i crowd responded "To-night— o'clock— at La Seala." The snap being given away, the crowd marched on, laughing ' and jesting, to attract another hearing. ' aud like Frenchmen they played the ' part well. It seems to me that after that it may well be claimed that the French want no lessons from us.—Kos ton Herald. Hlatn's It lug. Slam's outspoken monarch is to visit Queen Victoria at Wiudsor Castle next summer. He will go to Europe iu Ids j 2,500-ton steam yacht Mahn Chakri. which was built for him in Scotland four years ago. Cupid steals a base every time lovers look at the moon. How'* This ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot btj eared by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo. (). We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Che ney for the last 15 years, aud believe him per- 1 fectlv honorable in all business transaction" , and financially üble to carry out any obliga- ' lion made by their firm. WEST & TKUAX, Wholesale bruggists,Toledo. Ohio. W A Liu NO. RINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally. act- Inn directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent. free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists, llali's Family Pills are the best. Try Graln-O! Tr/Crain-O! Ask your grocer to-day to show you a pack- | age of Graiu-O, the new food drink that takes 1 the place of coffee. The children may drink ' it without injury as well as tho adult. All ! who try it like it. Graiu-O has that rich seal 1 brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the mostdolirate stomach re ceives it without distress. One-quarter the ; Srico of coffee. 15 ct. aud 35 cts. per package. , old by all grocors. Fits normaneutly cured. No fit* or nervous- 1 UOM after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $:! trial bottle and treatise freo Dn. R. 11. KI.INK, Ltd.. KLL Arch St.,Phila..L'a. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums,reducing inflammn • tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 35c.a bottle. | For Whooping Cough. Piso's Cure Is n sue- , ceasful remedy. M. P. DIETER. T'7 Throop Ave., | Brooklyn, N. Y., Nov. 14, 184. Solid Comfort for every Columbia rider. No worrying or apprehension about safety or speed. Col umbias are justly famous for their superior strength and mechanism. ' 1897 Columbia Bicycles STANDARD OF THE WORLD. £TO ALL ALIKE. 1897 Hartfords, . SSO Hartfords, Pattern 2, . ' . 'jf- t , . . 45 i hartfords, Pattern 1, ... . . 40 POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. • "t If Columbian arc not properly represented in your vicinity, let us know. fit A tube like this used in Col- Is just as strong as one like Which in turn is just as strong umbias of this of as one like this of „ „ „■!!,!■WWII M—IIIIHHI I 'A Fair Face May Prove a Foul Bargain," Marry a Plain Girl if She Uses SAPOLIO I In a Duck. I A cluck shot by Edwurd Jack son, of Atchison, had a ulnc-pound lish in its I esophagus. J THE TURN' OF LIFE ' ' Is the most important period in a vvo ' man's existence. Owing to modern methods of living, not one woman in a ! j thousand approaches this perfectly natural change without experiencing -1 a train of very annoying and some | times painful symptoms. | Those dreadful hot flashes, sending the blood surging to the heart until it seems ready to burst, ami the faint • feeling that follows, sometimes witlx i nerves arc crying out for assistance. , The cry should be heeded in time. L.vdia E. l'inkham's Vegetable Compound was prepared to meet the needs of woman's system at this trying period of her life. I The Vegetable Compound is an in j vigorating strengtlicner of the female organism. It builds up the weakened j nervous system and enables a woman to pass that grand change trium phantly. | It does not seem necessary for ns to prove the honesty of our statements, but it is a pleasure to publish such grateful words as the following: " I have been using Lydia E. Pink liam's Vegetable Compound for some time during the change of life and it has been a saviour of life unto inc. I can cheerfully recommend your inedi i cine to all women, and I know it will ! give permanent relief. I would be iglad to relate my experience to any sufferer."—.Mas. DKLLA WATSON*, 524 West sth St., Cincinnati. Ohio. REWARD. , A friend of mine had the mtsforcuna to low sev eral of his Pigeons and asked me to advertise for their return. Each bird had a metal baud on leg marked an fellows: LSO7H 81742. 811771, CI7MI, C1762J, CI 76*8. ('24844 C 24363. 01840. F117, FSM7. F629H. F6*. F6842. FMfltt. K4H63 Pigeon fancier*, kindly look through your lofts for above birda A liberal reward for each bird returned. J. Fit KIND, 04 .Morion Street, New York- WANTED EVERYWHERE—Parmer* HL m chunk's to sell directly to their own . Ins* or industry. No mere toy or novelty, hut an actual luoor-favlng Hoist by • pans of wht.'h one man j can do his Butchering, change rigging o-f wagon, put up buildings, put away hay ami grain, stretch wire fence, hi n He stoue and logs, aud o.her work Heretofore requiring ex'rn help. Address, TUB BCKK MFG. CO., Cleveland. O. G1 15T RICH Quickly, Sent! for Book,"In ventfon* rwautotl." Edgar la.e k Co.. 246 broad way NY KLONDYKE IS ALL RIGHT. Address. Broker BRN A'BLOCK.lJMver'.'Vol'? >e * UOn * Member Stock Kuthange. Suite Symrs Uuiidlng. U II U LW IV Wril n°R *n o v*!" Oh nmlcmi 1 Full Information (in plain wrapper) mailed"irM* ' INVENTORS! ";X VSLZZL I advertising •' No ii.tant no pa,-," Prims, .usdala, gre.t linha., ate. W. ilo a regular plnt laisinMa | ixnv jer*. Advice free. Highest referencea Write us. WATSON B. COLEMAN, Mallei. , tor* til patents, Bu2 V. Street, Washington, D.C. How to Sell Mss. * their manuscripts in print should sand to tb* I • S. Authors' Ivvcliiingc, IST, Broadway. NY. tor uironlur which sets forth means of making copy I which publishers will buy. Instruction to young | writers. Composition, punctuation, etc- taught. AGENTS wanted, ladles and gents, to sell our fast selling household necessities every where. Brand new. Immense sellers. Steady .lob. Big pay. Hub Novelty Co., Indiauapolb.lnd I TO KLONDIKE , Send :r.eb for book on Alaska, i The Standard Co., Mound City, Mu PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHNW MORRIS, MSHIN6TON, 0. C, Lata Principal Examiner us. P.axton Bur..a. iijrr,. in laxt v at, 1, unjujicutiua olaiaui, x'.-.j. man. : I* AIIO C DCURED AT HOME; .n.i anr„, J. B. HABBIS tOO, Dit 40 '97. m Rest (