When to Use Flioftpliatcn. The tendency of phosphate to revert to insoluble forms when brought in contact with dry earth makes it neces sary to use it only in places and at times when plenty of rains will supply the moisture to keep its plant food in condition for use. Hence phosphate is much more effective used 011 fall - grown grain, or on the crops planted very early in the spring. If a long spell of dry weather follows its appli cation the phosphate will revert so that water,alone will not again dissolve it. Hut in soils which contain any organic matter the water they contain must have an excess of carbonic acid gas, which is derived from the decay of plants. It is this carbonic acid gas in spring waters that makes them bubble up as they come out of the earth and adds greatly to their palatableness. Iu their passage through the soil these waters have come in contact with much carbonic acid gas, and have necessarily absorbed a part of it. But on lime stone soils this spring water has already absorbed as much lime as it can hold. Consequently it is less valuable to make phosphate of lime soluble than is ordinary rain water which has ab sorbed its carbonic acid ga3 directly from the atmosphere only. The best effects of superphosphate of lime are to be fouud 011 laud that is low, moist and full of vegetable mould. This usually has but little lime, and jvliat carbonic acid gas its water con tains is free from that mineral. This is very important. The value of super phosphate consists very largely in its excess of phosphate over the lime it contains. So soon as more lime is added, this excess combines with sul phuric acid, which must exist in all superphosphate. This makes it mere ly sulphate of lime. Hence the prac tice of some farmers in extending their high-priced superphosphate by adding to it of gypsum or land plaster is a great mistake. At its best, the super phosphate contains all and more of this gypsum than the soil requires. To add more only puts the whole of the phosphate into a condition where it can only be dissolved when brought into contact with carbonic acid gas, or some other equally powerful solvent. Both potash and salt are excellent for top-dressing land on which phos- ! phate has been drilled with the grain crop. It is not best to try to mix these and drill them together. The super phosphate in moist soil will help the plant best alone. Besides, both salt and potash draw moisture from the air so rapidly that when mixed with phos phate they make it too wet and sticky to drill evenly. But applied in spring or fall, phoßphated winter grain, either salt or ashes, will produce a very re markable effect in enabling both the grain crop and the grass or clover seeding to utilize the phosphate ap plied the fall before. Salt especially should always be used on phospliated land in the spring. It will be all washod away by winter and spring freshets if it is applied in the fall. Practical Sheep Husbandry. The sheep should be clipped clean about the hind parts, lest filth may gather aud attract the blow flies. A mixtnre of glycerine and fish oil in equal parts is excellent to smear those parts sheep as a preventive of fly blow. I Never force the sheep to jump over bars or fences half let down. Their weak shin bones may be snapped like glass rods by catching between the j rails. The hateful flies will soon be at work. Prepare for them by using tar on the sheeps' noses; it drives off the flies by its smell; or the flies stick in it. If mixed with grease of any kind, half and half, it will be less apt to harden and dry. While at pusture the sheep should have acoess to salt. A flock will visit the salting place twice a day regular ly. Salt is a good tonic and prevents indigestion which produces destruc tive diarrhoea, all the worse when the weather is warm. Plant a bit of fodder corn, none of the sweet kinds, in readiness for the weaned lambs by and by. It is food and cool shelter for them. Plant iu rows thirty inches apart, and plant ten inches apart in the rows. By using tho succeeding early kinds one may have fresh feeding all through the summer and up to frost. Before the flock is turned out for the summer, the feet should be put in the best condition. The sole should be pared and the toes clipped, other wise there may be trouble with sore feet. It is a common impression, it can not he called a belief, that sheep do not require water. A flock that has access all the time to it will drink several times a day. Ewes from which the lambs have been taken Bhould be examined twice a day to avoid injury to the udder. It is as necessary to dry off a ewe as it is to dry off the cows. Stocking of the udder is also a bad thing in warm weather, on account of the danger from blow flies, should the udder fester and discharge matter. In docking lambs it is always nec essary to draw the skin up toward the root of the tail before the cut is made. The cut is best made by a pair of shears, so that it shall not bo too smooth; a common pruning shears is • good thing to make the cat with, as a rough wound does not bleed much. But the bleeding may be checked any how in a short time by applying a little powdered blue-stone, to the wound and drnwing the wool over it by means of a little tar. This is all that is needed. Overfeeding is one of the worst dangers to which a lamb can be ex posed. To feed the ewe two ears of corn over a quart of bran and a hand ful of oil cake three times a day will be sure to make trouble with the lambs, not to mention feeding a pint and a half of cow's milk a day. Ol course one wants to do the best with a pure-bred lamb, hut it must not be killed with kindness. One of the special traits of the pure-bred sheep is that they do better than the oommon ones on the same feed. Reduce the ewe's grain; don't give musty hay, and give no cow's milk to the lambs. The condition of the newly born lamb is due to that of the ewe. A weak ewe will bring a weak lamb or a dead one, and the cause of the weak ness may go back for some time. Give tho weak lambs some cow's milk, fresh and warm, and give the ewes a bran mash with two ounces of linseed meal in it. Diarrhcea in yearlings may be treated by giving only one single tea spoonfnl dose of castoroil inorningand night for a few days. To make a ewe own her lamb put a little salt with some sugar in it on the wool, and put the ewe in a narrow stall, and tie her. Enclose the lamb in the stall with the e^e. Sheep are hardy animals, and if kept dry and well fed will thrive and enjoy life in the coldest weather, be iug naturally provided with a warm coat that is impervious to the cold if it is only dry. A dark, warm stable is as a dungeon to them; they will pine and fret and in this condition a sheep will not eat. The confinement of your ewe is doubtless what is the mat ter with it. The feeding, too, is not sufficient, and that the ewe declined the rations mentioned shows it to be a sensible animal. Some grain is most desirable for sheep in the winter. It acts well on the bowels, while only dry fodder, unless it is the best of clover hay, is not enough to keep them in good thrift. If only four ounces of grain is given it will do much good. Oats is an excellent grain for the flock. —American Sheep Breeder. Poultry Pickings. Pullets do not fatten as rapidly as hens. Keep the drinking vessels out of the sun. Wheat is one of the best egg-pro dnciug foods. Coarse bones in a fowl indicate coarse meat. After the breeding season is over sell the roosters "Darkness in the comb of a fowl in dicates indigestion. Good blood will tell in fowls as well as in other farm animals. Using a good spray pump is a quick way of applying whitewash. If ohicks are allowed a free run on light, warm days it will add consider ably to their vigor. New blood in poultry is the basis of beauty, vigor and prolilicness. Intro duce it at least every two years. One object in keeping poultry is to use them as agents in converting grain into something more valuable. One good way of provouting disease among poultry is to breed away from it; get stock that is free from disease. A point always to be observed in shipping poultry to market is to see that it never gets in later than Friday morning, as there is not much selling to retailers Saturday. They lay in their supply the day before. Keeping the best of the early hatched pullets, and especially those that are from hens that are good layers, is one of the cheapest and best ways of im proving the poultry on tho farm. But in order to lessen the liability of mak ing a mistake, in a majority of oases it will be better to select out the number of pullets desired to keep, and then mark them in some way, so that in selling off the young pullets there will be no mistake. A little care in this line at the right time will help ma terially in securing better pullets. How tli© Moon : Flxen Soft ('rnb Prices. The prices for the soft crabs are governed largely by the phases of the moon. The sloughing season of the crab is after the dark of the moon, in creasing as tho moon nears its full. Operated upon by the unvarying law of supply and demand, as the supply becomes more abundant at the moon's full, prices often drop to ten or fifteen cents per dozen, while at other sea souß the fancy prices at from sixty to eighty cents are received. —Philadel- phia Reoord. Thirty-Nine Years In Bed, Though Well. Not every one who has come to a conclusion concerning the pleasantest way of living has the courage to live according to that oonviotion, as did a Devonshire (England) woman who has just died. Thirty-nine years ago she decided that the most comfortable place to spend her time was in bed. To bed accordingly she went, and, al though strong and healthy, in bed Bhe remained during the rest of her life> HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. Flowers For the Table. The housekeeper has often been em barassed by the difficulty of arranging Bhort stemmed flowers as a centerpiece for her dinner table. The long, tall vases and beakers are of no manner of use, nor is a bowl much better. The florists, however, will sell perforated wire shapes made to fit over the mouth of any bowl. The shapes rise in the center and fall away evenly to the sides, as the top of a loaf of bread. The perforations are large enough to admit the stems, but keep the heads of the short stemmed blossoms from fac ing through to the water below. Fresh Air For a Bed-Fast I'atlcnt. "As all tho world knows, there is no more perfect means of ventilation than au open tire," writes Mrs. Burton Kingsland, telling how to nurse the sick, in the Ladies' Home Journal. "It is continuous and attended with no danger of draught. A more equa ble temperature is obtained with wood than with coal, and the thermometer should bo frequently consulted in a sick room. As fresh air is the best tonic, it is said that a window may be opened at the top on a sunny day, no matter how ill the patient be, if in the oponing a wooden frame covered with Hannel is fitted. The air strained through the woolen material is de prived of all power to harm. An um brella covered with a shawl makes a good screen when the windows are open, the patient being sheltered un der it as if in a tent. A folding cloth horse may also be utilized as a screen frame. As a person lying on his back is deprived of the protection of his eye-lids from the light, the blinds and curtains should be adjusted with re gard to that fact. A room a little shaded is more restful to a person in illness, but if a patch of sunshine can be let in somewhere in the room it makes a cheery spot for him to turn to if so minded. The Italian proverb says: 'Where the sun does not enter the doctor does.' M Jelly Making. The three jellies advisable for housekeepers to make late in the soa -Bon are quince, grape and wild plum —the last named being finer for gamo than any jelly made. The method of making, after the juice is procured, is the same for all. Measure the juice and boil for twenty minutes; add a pint of granulated sugar—which has been heated in the oven—for each pint of the juice, and as soon as it is thoroughly dissolved skim aud fill into tumblers, each having in it a sil ver spoon to prevent cracking. Jelly BO made will never fail. To procure the quince juice, just sover the parings and cores left from the preserved fruit (from which all stems and defective parts have been left out) with cold witer; boil until Boft, mash and drain. An equal weight of tag) apples may be added and eanked with the parings. The point in grape jelly is to have the grapes at their best stage, which is just when they are red, before turning purple. Ripe grapes, of course, can be made into jelly, but it is not nearly BO fine in flavor or color. Stem the grapes, add a pint of water to six quarts, heat slowly (mashing them), and boil gently until all the juice is freed; strain. Wild grapes make a fine jelly. The wild plums must be covered with cold water, brought to a boil, gooked to a soft mass, and strained.— Ella Morris Kretsohmar, iu Woman's ILime Companion. Itecipes. Apple Hankies —Pare five large, tart apples, remove cores and fill the cavities with grape or quince jolly. Arrange on au earthen pie plate, sprinkle the apples thickly with pow dered sugar aud strew over them grated cocoanut. Cover closely and bike in a moderate oven till tender. 9?rve with whipped cream. Bread Pudding—One coffee cup of bread crumbs dried and rolled fine, one tea cup of sugar, one quart of milk, one teaspoonful of ginger, a little salt, three eggs, saving the whites of two. Bake. Then spread jelly over the top, and a frosting over this made of the two whites of eggs, and one table spoonful of sugar, and return to oven to brown slightly. Tomato Salad —This is prepared in two ways, and is one of the most at tractive salads made. For both these the tomatoes should be round, large and solid, and must be pared without scalding. They must be kept on ice until ready to use, then make little nests of lettuce leaves on a flat dish and put half of a tomato in each nest. Put a tablespoonful of mayonnaise ou each half tomato, and serve immedi ately. "Raspberry Charlotte —Soak one third box gelatine in one-third cup cold water until soft. Pour on it one third cup boiling water, stir, add cup sugar aud cup juice from canned rasp berries. When the jelly begins to harden, beat until light; add the beaten whites of three eggs and the juice of a lemon. Beat stiff and pour iu mold lined with sponge cake, or in cups with a tiny fancy sponge cake in the bottom. Serve with cream. A Good Plain Cake—Dry half a pound of flour, aud when cold rub into it three ounces of dripping or lard. Add one teaspooful of baking powder, two ounces of moist sugar, a teacupful of currants aud half a teaspoonful of ground cinnamon. Make all into a stiff batter with milk (sour if possible), and bake in a steady oven till a knife inserted into tho cake will be quite bright and clean when drawn cilt. N. B.—Au egg added to the above in gredients will, of course, improvo the cake. The greatest length of England and Scotland, north and south, is about COS miles. Things Worth Learning. Remember that it is a mark* of good 1 breeding to thank a person for a gift : the day it arrives. Acknowledge an invitation for din- I ner or luncheon the day it arrives. Thank your hostess for your visit the day you return home. Either leave your card or write a note to a friend as soon as you hear that frleud is ill. Keep sufficient paper and envelopes ! on hand, so your notes can lie written at once, and remember that a dainty note is the hall-mark of good breeding. An Indian Actress. An Indian girl Is playing Puck In Marie Waluwrlght's production of "A Midsummer Night's Dream." Her uuuic Is Ollie Heath, and she was born and raised among the Cheroke tribe. Sus sequently she attended a seminary and there gained her first knowledge of , stage art. A Light Lunch* Benny Bloobumper—"Oh, papa, the goat has swallowed a Roman candle!" Mr. Bloobumper--"That's nil right. Fie merely wanted a light lunch."— Life. A GRAND WORK Helping Tired Mothers and Giving Rosy Cheeks to Children. Thousands of tired, nervous, worried women have found strength, health aiul happiness in Hood's Sarsnparilla, which purilies their blood, strengthens their nerves and gives them good appetites. Pule and puny children nro given rosy cheeks and vigorous appetites by tho great blood onriehing qualities of Hood's Bar- , saparilla. It is indeed tho mother's frion.l and it may we'l have a place in thousands of families. Be sure to get Hood's. Hood's Pills with Hood's Jarsaparilla. 1 Permanent Paste. Soak an ounce of refined gelatine in cold water for an hour, then drain off J and squeeze out the water as much as possible. Put the gelatine in a jelly pot and place the pot in a pan of hot water over the fire. When the gelatine j has melted stir in slowly two and one half ounces of pure alcohol. Put in a j wide-mouthed bottle and cork tightly. This glue or paste will keep indefinite ly. and can be melted for use in a few minutes by setting the bottle in n basin of hot water. As it contains a very small percentage of water, it affects the gloss of the prints but little and dries almost immediately.—Harper's Round Table. Tough on the Doctor. Doctor—l'm surprised to see you on so soon. Patient—-Yes: the dog upset the modi j cine you left for me. There may be lots of nice men in tin , world,"but the bill collectors don't nice 1 them. pMLUsSI^I fHAIR RENEWER] Drives off old ape; restores lost color \j\'£ yj to the hair; gives it Ifr the richness and gloss of j® youth; preventsbald- (M Xlorlon Sired, New York. CHREWD INVENTORS! w patent Agencies advertising pri7.es, medal", "No patent no pay " etc. XXedo a regular patent bus iness. Low fee*. No chnre lor ud vice. Highest references. Write us. WATSON K. COI.KMAN, Solicitor of Patents, 902 F. St., Washington, D. C. am f% ■ ■ M ■ ■ u AKDB can bo saved with 11D11 la If sM'.ft # 2SsJS liny OVI ° l,r * {or habit. Uliy llil Writ. Kenova Chemical _ „ Co . <4 Bread war, N. Y. Full Information (in plain wrapper; mailed free. e(9|. COR ('an be inn tic working for us. •la 10 IwO Parties preferred who can give BCD UfCCIf their whole tiiue to the business. rCll TV CCA Spare hours, though, may 1> prol itatily employed. Hood openings for town ami city "work a well as country districts. J.K.OIFFORD. 11 and Main Streets. Richmond,V Young Ladies zsi. Our now S'2" typewriter w ill do the woi k of n flui machine. Send r<>r circular. Agents wanted In West era Pa. W. H. Watson, Ml Fnn Itklg, lMitsburg, Pa. JAA" LOOK AT THESE DUMB BKI.I. LINKS. M.Watkins & Co. CAT AI.ODI'K FREE. PROVIDENCE K. I. SagpH HP# Heat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Ueo gS in time. Sold by druggists. I*l PN V 41 '97. I Good Ingrain Carpet, 200. pc-r yard. f ] Heavy UruesolsCurpet, 48c. per yard, fl For tbo asking, wo mail you. free of J all charges, our new Colored Carpet. 4 h Catalogue, which shows all goods In 2 j lithograph colors. You can mako your j selections as well as if you were hero j I at the mill, and save from 60 to AO per ] cent, profit you are paying your local I dealer. If you wish quality samples of j carpet, send Bc. iu stamps. 1 Julius Mines & Sen, ; BALTfMORE, IWB. m Fieaee mention this paper. | Buried with His Money on Him. Not long ago a miserly person, who had been teased almost to death by Ids heirs, endeavored to cheat them out of his money. Before he died he left positive instructions that he should be buried iu a certain suit of clothes. His wish was carried out, but after the funeral his surviving relatives could find no will and no money. Finally one of them suspected that the old man had served them a shabby trick, and suggested that the body be ex burned and the clothing examined. This was done, and the coat, waist coat and trousers were found to l>e lined with Hank of England notes.— Chicago Record. Courting after marriage- Applying for a divorce. How to Laundry Fancy Linen. To wash embroidered linens so as not to fade tho colors, fill a tub half full of warm water, to which add a little Ivory Soap. Wash each piece through the suds <*are fully, rinse in blue water, to which a little thin starch is added. Hang in the shndo lo dry. Iron on the wrong side, press ing down heavily t3 bring out the stitches, thus restoring their original beauty. ELIZA R. PARKER. Drafnei* Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portions of tlie car. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tioual remedies. Deafness is euused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, und when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam jntttion can be taken outund this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will lie de stroyed forever. Nine eases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will givo One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by c atarrh) that can not lie cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. I use Piao's Cure for Consumption both in my family and practice.- Dr. <. W. PATTER sox, lnkster. Mic h.. Nov. S. IWI4. POMB-SHELL. SURE-SHOT. ■J 1 very one should buy this beautiful picture, in lo different colors. ItOlh OF ALLS. Nt gI.OO Kncli. Delivered tree, size uo x 2* inches, painted by band and copied from the originul painting, vei ned at ML'O.OIM). Kvery tuii.il> should have one. Don't miss It. Send money by mail, postoffice order, or check, ut < tirrisl;. Money returned if not satis factory. MANH ATTAN I'l IJLISH I N; CO., (11 Warren St., Cor. W. ilroaiitvu>. N. V. KLONDYKE IS ALL RIGHT. But why pay fi o* a than, fo* stock with nothing but "talk" to back it, and a.ooo miles fron home? 1 r/ill sell you dividend paying Colorado Gold Mint Stork for 15 csnts a share, in 1 erdficaies from 100 shares up. Ottier stock i in proportion. Address. Broker BEN A. BLOCK. Denver, Colof Member Stock Exchange. Suite 306-7 Symts Building. ~ npo GIVE MORE than is promised has always been the practice of I'l^J v -v,-,, A The Companion. The two hemispheres have been searched for attractive matter for the volume for 1898, and the contributors for the year ' /iJßgSft include not only popular writers of fiction, but some oi the most eminent I %.) 'yjjß&f Statesmen, Scientists, Educators, Explorers and Leaders of Industry. 1 I wiffSm """ Companion | v f • '* / The *®Howinf partial list of contributors indicates the strength ant* J j iters. 5 Mr. Oladsione has contributed an Important article tor the oeit ' '• Zan * w |!!,„ , Mrs. Burton Harrison |J* %| vMr'i volume of The Companion, to be published M#ry E. Wllkidß Max den Carruth 1 y In the New Year's Number. and more than one hundred others. | * r\nrx /V 1 I 1 r\ S NEW SUBSCRIBERS who will cut out this slip and end it at once with $1.78 for a year's aabecrlption to Tbo V%k %>( JK I / AI L, Il\ II I Companion, will paper free every week from the time aabecrlption le received to January 1. 1898, and a fall ' %,( |n Twelve Colors c COMPANION ART CALENDAR for 189S in twelve colors, and embossed in gold. It will be foand a 1 J superior production to any of the famous pieces of Companion color-work of previous years. It is a superb W~* Trt MPW ) ornament for the home and a costly gift—Free to New Subscribers. It 4iorer. S'Jlrial bottle and treatise free bit. K. H. KI.INK. Ltd.. Uill Arcli St., Phiia..Pa. Mrs. Winslow'K Soothing Syrun for children teeth inc. Eof tuns the Rums reducing inttu Dona tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. li&c.u bottle. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye-water. Druggist* sell at£sc.ner bottle. A NECKLACE OF PEARLS WWjSM Is a beautiful possession. If a woman owns KB flßrara&p one. and if a single pearl drops off the string', w Good health is a more valuable possession II f than a necklace of the most beautiful pearls, AJ I yet one by one the jewels of health slip away, I and women seem indifferent until it is almost / To die before you are really old is to suffer premature death, and that is a sin. It is a sin because it is the result of repeated violations Pain, lassitude and weariness, inability to SggijjsJ KBV sleep, dreadful dreams, starting violently from sleep, are all symptoms of nerve trouble. ■ You eannot have nerve trouble and keep your health. In ninety-nine cases out of a I Ws/* hundred the womb, the ovaries and the bladder J j yjg£* are affected. They are not vital organs, hence / I Wr" Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coin- • I pound, by building up the nerves and restoring woman's /$r ' or K an * sra to its natural state, relieves all these trouble some uterine symptoms. In confirmation of this we, by permission, refer to the following women, all of whom speak from experience: Miss CEI.IA VAN ° HORN, 1912 Sharswood St., Philadelphia, Pa.: Miss GRACE COLLOKD, 1434 Eastern Ave.. Cincinnati, O.; ■FV *s¥s) 1 O 1 1 ISABEL OBKRO, 220 Chestnut St.. Woburn. Mass., JBJJS-WJB I O I MRS. A. 11. COLE, New Rochelle, N. Y.. and many others For special symptoms Mrs. Pinkham has prepared a Sanative Wash, which will cure local troubles. Give these medicines a trial. I fe*-—Write to Mrs. Pinkham. Lynn, Mass., if you are not quite / satisfied ; you can address private questions to a woman. >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 >74 I J I Keep in Good Ton | during the winter. Riding will d° J\ 3 © it, and a Columbia bicycle will do it best in 1 1 1 I 'li lit ' i I IIM © of all. You can depend on a © 5 Columbia Bicycle I to give you plenty of winter exercise and just as good service J, *' .. Ufr ,i as it will in summer. . W © STANDARD OF THE WORLD & means that Columbias are the patterns for all others. Jj* ® $75 t0 all alike. ® © Hartford Bicycles, B,u,, ctS, ,Kt| * SSO, $45, S4O. © © . POPE MFG. CO., Hartford Conn 1 v If Columbias arc not properly represented in your vicinity, let us know. @©©©©©©©©©©©© © © © © © © © © © © © © It Was Before the Day of SAPOLIO They Used to Say "Woman's Work is Never Done." Jim and John. ' Jim and John were townsmen and chums, and went out to see baseball. It was a red i hot aftornoou. and the bleachers were like frying-pans at breakfast time. Jim had a bald head and John had a crick In the back. They sat for on underdone roast and laughed at everything. Jim s bald spot was a shining mark, like a brass door-plate. A stray ball, fierce und sharp, from a false bat. struck the spot and ploughed a furrow, i ft dazed him. Jim's eyes and face looked like a sick owl's, and John laughed. He laughed an hour straight along. The game ran late into twilight. Meanwhile John had shed his coat, and a cool, damp draft got in its work on his back. Tho time came lo leave, but John couldn't. He couldn't bend or get up. Lumbago had set in In its worst form. He laughs best who laughs last, and Jim had revenge. But they got down town to Jim's room, when he said. "Here's something all those athletes use for hurts and ailments, und it's tho best known euro for lameback." He rubbed it on John's back and some on hiH own head. They were both feeling cured and com , fortable from tho use of St. Jacobs Oil, which Jim always kept in a handy plaoe. He was a sport himself and knew what was best. They went to bod. John laughed in his sloop. Both rose in tho morning fresh as daisies: then Jim laughed at John. There is a Class of Pcupl* I Who are injured by the use of coffee. He ' ceutly there has been placed In ull the grocery stores a new preparation called (irain-O.made I ol' pure grains, that takes the place of coffee, i The most delicate stomach receives it without distress, and but few can tell it from coffee. It does not cost over one-quarter as much. Children may drink if with great benefit. lf cts. and 35 cts. per package. Try it. Ask for • liratu-O.