FARMING BY MACHINERY INVENTION FAST MAKINC HUMAN LABOR OLD FASHIONED. Almost All the Operations of Agriculture Now Performed ltetter and More Quickly by Machinery Than by Mau's Hands—A Century's Progress. "T* ABORIOUS toil for the cnlti- I f vator of the land is rapidly J V becoming a thing of the past. The term "horny-handed till er of the soil," within a few years will be relegated in the United States, to the vernacular of the poet. Automatic labor-saving maohiuery is supplanting the necessity for bodily labor in all agricultural processes from the turn ing of the sod to the harvesting of the crop. What little manual labor is re quired is devoted to supervision of the working parts of the various ma chines employed. In 1800 not a single cast iron plough was in use. The plow was home made—of wood covered with sheet iron. The man with the hoe was the laborious cultivator. There were no mowers, reapers or self-binders driven by horse power. Grain was scattered by hand and harvested with the sickle or the scythe. It was threshed on the barn tloor and ground into flour full of impurities, in rude grist mills, driven by great over-shot water wheels. In 1901) the plowmun uses a sulky plow upon which he has a comfort able seat from which to guide a pair of horses. The machine does the rest. The reversible sulky plow is equally adapted to stony, rongb, side-hill work or level ground. In the former case it turns the sod with the slope, in the latter it leaves the ianu without tracks or dead furrows. For this work a rightand left hand steel plow is mounted upon a steel beam, one be ing at right angles with the other, and easily revolved by unlockiug a band lever at the rear of the driver, the weight of the upper plow caus ing the lower to rise. Each plow has an easy adjustment to make it cut a wide or narrow furrow, and is raised ont of the ground by a power lift and set in again by a foot lever, so that the operator has both hands with which to manage his team. An adjustable seat enables the driver to sit always in u level position and on the upper most side in plowing side-hill land. In a few years horse labor will be dis pensed with for moving this machine and some auto-power substituted. "USING ELECTRIC MOTORS. It may be if electricity is employed that the farmer will be able to sit smoking his pipe on his porch with a switchboard before him and control many plows. With electric motors applied to all agricultural implements a single man may be ablo to plow, harrow, fertilize, sow and harvest his cops with no expenditure whatever of bodily labor or one cent of cost for the hire of human hands. In earlier days the harrow was a crude home made square or triaugular machine, on which wooden, and later, iron pegs were inserted. In some cases a log drawn to and fro was employed to level the furrows. In these times farmers use sulky-harrows of every imaginable form and device according to the local condition. There is a pulverizing harrow, clod crusher and leveller combined in one machine. This crushes, cuts, lifts, turns, smooths and levels the soil all in one operation. It also prepares a perfect seed bed and covers the seed in the j best manner. The operator from his seat on the machine effects all of the I processes by turning a lever. Then j there is a ball-bearing disk harrower ] with dirt-proof oil chambers. The J machine does everything but supply the driver, automatically, with a glass of water. There is no more laborious kind of farm work than the spreading of ma nure; so much so that in farming on a large scale it is diffioult to procure labor for the purpose. This can now be dispensed with. A machine called the manure spreader doss all this work. It is drawn by horses and op erated by one man. It breaks up and makes line all kinds of manure and spreads it evenly upon the land in any desired quantity. It will spread very coarse manure, cornstalks or wood ashes, or guano—in fact, any mannre or fertilizer, fine or coarse. Provided with a drill attachment it distributes compost direct in the drill before the seed is sown. It does everything in the manuring way ex cept to hurl epithets at the mules MACHINE FOR PLANTING EVERY CROP, i When it comes to tho planting of crops there is a machine for every process from tho sowing of cereals, seeds and tubers, to the setting out of plants. For grain or grass there is a driving broadcast seeder, which is at tached to an ordinary wagon. It also distributes 'all kinds of dry commer cial fertilizers. It allows of the sow ing of seed of any size. Then there is a grain drill, driven by horse power, in which the quantity to bo sown is easily regulated by a lever. It is also provided with a land measure or clock which is adjusted before beginning the day's work. It is fitted with hoes which can be instantly changed by a lever, even while the machine is in motion, to run either straight or zig zag. For grass seeding the hoes can be adjusted to distribute the seed in front of or behind them. There is al so a fertilizer distributing attachment. There is still another grain seeder which weeds as well as sows. The riding corn and beau planter is a re markable machine. It opens the soil, drops seed, covers and marks the next row at one operation. It drops corn in hills from nino to forty-eight incheß apart, or t&i- ensilage or fodder in a continuous drill. It drops alter nately, if desired, a hill of corn and a hill of beans from nine to forty-eight inches apart. It also distributes fer l&Uzer in a continuous drill at the same time the seed is dropped and both are covered by the single opera tion at any desired depth. For the planting of tnbers like the potato there is primarily a machine that divides the root into halves, quarters or any number of parts, separates the eyes and removes the seed ends. It does the work of ten men. . When it comee td the planting there is employed an automatic ma chine drawn by two horses; the driver occupying a seat at its front. It plants whole or cut potatoes at any distance apart desired. It drops the seod, covers it with moist under earth, and marks for the next row all at one operation. It also sows fertil izer, placing it just below the seed, after sufficient earth has been mixed with the former. It is provided with steel runners or discs to cover tho seed and these yield to all irregulari ties of the soil. For the transplant ing of plants, such as tomatoes, cauli flower, cabbages, celery, iu fact all plants that do not require to be s„t nearer than one foot apart, the auto matic plant settiug machine will cover from four to six acres a day. An automatic check valve fitted to a tank attached to the machine lets water flow through a hose extending iu he hind the shoe or furrower, just before settiug tho plant. The fiow can he regulated from one to six barrels an acre. CULTIVATORS FOI! EVERY PLANT. Formerly when the . crops were planted and bad begun to grow farm ers and vegetable gardeners bad to ply the hoe vigorously in order to loosen or cultivate the soil, and to keep down weeds. This was hard work and moreover where growth was rapid and rank it involved hiring ex tra labor. The talent of inventors has reduced the fatigue of this agricultural function to a minimum. Most of these machines are light and opeiated by man power. There aie others in which horses are nsed. Those who employ call them the greatest labor savers of the age. There are some provided with a number of spring steel teeth which while they do not injure the plants loosen and uproot the weeds. These are more on the principle of the harrow. There is a machine for cultivating and hilling celery. It is through the use of these devices that celery is marketed in such perfect couditiou, with every stalk bleached to its very top. Potatoes are cultivated and hilled up by a special machine that does the work of many men far more thoroughly and ex peditiously than human hands can ac complish it. There are many ma chines combining hoe, cultivator, rake and plow. The latest machine plows, furrows, covers and hills; there are rakes for shallow cultivation, fining, levelling and pulverizing the soil; there areoultivator teeth for deep stirring of the soil, and flat lioes of different widths for loosening crust and cutting off weeds. Every growing plant except cotton is now provided with a cultivator that does away with an immense expendi ture of human toil. As yet no ma chine has been perfected that picks cottou with the discrimination of man. The difficulty to be overcome is to avoid injury to mature cotton balls that are growing on the same plant with those that are immature. No doubt some method will be found that will overcome this defect. Then tho Southern darkey will find his services no longer so eagerly sought for as they are at present. LABOR-SAVING HARVESTERS. Machines to harvest crops come iu every variety to perform a special function. Everyone is familiar with tho mowing machine. It has driven the scythe on'- of use. Formerly there were men whose trade was confined exclusively to the use of this imple ment. None is following it to-day. The same is trne of the reapers and binders of grain; a single machine wiil do the work of twenty or more men. The old-fashioned flail to thresh grain is now a curiosity. The rattle of the power-thresher is a familiar j sound in autumn to every resident of a farming country. Tho sulky hay- I tedder will thoroughly turn and spread four acres of cut grass in an hour. This can be repeated so ofton that in a single day tho crop of hay from that amount of laud can be cured and j stored. In loading the crop, human j hands are no longer necessary, except | to guide the team that draws the ! wagon. The machine liay-loader will pat on a load in five minutes. It takes the hay direct from the swath, though it will rake and load from light windrows. There is a labor-saving machine for every agricultural process, most of them automatic. Farming in tho future will not be synonymous with toil. What heretofore the farmer j has expended in the hire of labor hs will devote to the purchase of ma chinery. This does not consume food, j neither does it sulk or throw up a job j at the most inopportune moment, nor J strike for higher pay. Tho farmer of the future will be more or less a man of leisure. The machine will do the work. Tho weather, however, as in j tho past, will suffice to make him a j man with a grievance.—NowYorkSan. ; Presidents Wlio Were Murons. Seven Presidents of the United States were members of the Masonio j fraternity—Washington, Jackson, Polk, Buchanan, Johnson, Garfield and McKinlev. Washington was Mas- j ter of his lodge at Alexandria, Va. f Jackson was at one time Grand Mas-1 ter of the Grand Lodge of Tennessee, and Buchanan was JDeputv Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Penn sylvania. A 1-lglit Cits, Twelve pounds only is the weight of the new automatic machine gnu under experiment in the United States Army. It fires 450 shots a minute and can be carried by one man Surgeon O'Reilly's Malaria Care. j Colonel O'Reilly of the army, sur geon-in-chief at Fortress Monroe, has been snccessfnl in his treatment of soldiers who have returned from Cuba and the Philippine Islands saturated with malarial poison. Several officers who snllered from fevers dnring the Santiago campaign have had periodi cal returns of those complaints. They J come about once in three or four ! mouths, each time with increasing severity, but Dr. O'Reilly, with sim ple treatment, has given most of their permanent relief. He takes a drop of blood from one ear of the patient, and if, under a microscope, he discovers malarial germs, he prescribes Fowler's solution of arsenic in such doses as the micro scopic examinations suggest, the average being five drops threo times a day after each meal. If the eyes of the patient water the dose is.reduce!}. After two weeks of this treatment the blood is examined again and usually found • entirely free from malarial germs. If not, the treatment is con j tinned.—Chicago Record. Too Frank. A clothing merchant in lower Broadway had a big lot of suits of clothes that he had bought at a bar gain, and by putting a price of sls on each he thought they would 'seli rap idly, for they were of exceptionally good value for that money. He put one of the suits on a form and set it in frout of his store with a sign about its neck which one of his smart clerks had painted on a piece of cardboard. This announced the price. Then he and his clerks prepared to do a rush ing business. The hou-s passed and no one came in to hny the snits. This canscd the merchant to wander, and at length he determined to go out and take a look at the sample suit and the sigu. This is what he found on the sign: "These suits, sls. Tliey won't last long." Pedestrians passing by saw the sign and smiled at its frankness. The merchant tore the sign from the suit, and the clerk who designed it started ont to look for another job. —New York Herald. Children* Children'do not see the world as men and women behold it. The flow ing integument that surrounds the soul is us yet tender and translucent. The light from beyond shines more easily through its filmy veil, and in that light the things of nature are melted into a glamour snch as older eyes are too dim to perceive. The world of childhood is newer and more beautiful with life; the sun is more radiant, the ether is more buoyant than in the more sombre and tho darker world of after-life. Heaven and earth, as it were, tonch together,and just beyond the thin and misty veil of separation spirits walk and rustle, and their whisperings sometimes, haply, reach the tender car without its hearing to understand the words. Tho two spaces are but a hnnd's breath apart, and it may easily be but a step from one to the other.— Howard Pyle, in Harper's Magazine. The Turning of tho Leaves. No pen can describe the turning of the leaves—the insurrection of the tree-people against the waning year. A little maple begau it, flaming blood red of n sudden where he stood against the dark green of a pine belt. Next j morning there was an answering signal from the swamp where the sumacs < grow. Three days later the hill-sides as far as the eye could range were afire, and the roads paved with crim son and gold. Then a wet wind blew and ruined all the uniforms of that l gorgeous army; and tho oaks, who had held themselves in reserve, buckled on their dull and bronzed cuirasses and stood ont stiflly to the last blown leaf, till nothing remained but pencil shading of bare boughs, and one could see into the most private heart of the woods.—Rudyard Kipling, in Marker's Magazine. Married the Wrong Coniile. Apropos of the recent death of "Old Sagar," a famous Yorkshire, England, ex-sexton. Dean Pigou tells the follow ing story: "Sagsr once wrongly grouped one or two wedding parties, ] and an aged couple who had no inten- j tion of being married were joined j together. When spoken to about the j incident Mr. Sagar remarked: 'They j haven't long to live, and I didn't think it mattered very much.' " On another occasion Mr. Sagar locked up a bride until the bridegroom had raised the marriage fees, the sum presented be- i ing insufficient. Kiigli*h "I" is Selfish. In the opinion of one Frenchman, English orthography furnishes a cine to "the superiority of the Anglo- ' Saxon." He is successful, the French man says, because he is selfish, and a proof of his selfishness is that he : writes of himself with a capital I. Frouehiuen and Germans are content with the small letter. The Spaniard uses a small y in yo, but honors the person he addresses with a capital. The Japanese have no word for I at all. Unsettled. "Can you tell me what sort of weather we may expect next month?" wrote a subscriber to an editor; and according to the Cumberland Presby terian, the editor replied as follows. "It is my Belief that the weather next month will bo very much iike yonr subscription." The inquirer wondered what the editor meant, till ho happened to think of the word "unsettled." Every year a number of boys are sent from Siam by the King to Eng land to learn different things. One learns upholstery, one learns type- I writing, one lenrns languages, on learns science, and so on. IMACINARY ILLS. Bal Sickness Make. Ita I'reeence Known By Unmistakable Signs. j j It is probably within bonndH to any I that a large proportion, if not fully J i one-half, of the troubles which af -3 flict mankind are wholly imaginary, or at least greatly exaggerated. A considerable part of every physician's r J practice consists in the treatment of ; ! minor ailments, and of diseases ; j which exists only in his patients' im j agination. ! If this were all, and the only result , of too much introspection and notice ' of supposed symptoms were to in j i crease the physician's income, there | would notbe so much tobe said against it. But unfortunately, imaginary dis -5 eases cause a great deal of suffering I —as much as, if not more than, the j real troubles of which they are the counterfeits. ' ; There are few more wretched ob , jects than the confirmed hypoohou- I dnac, whose days and nights are spent i in counting his pulse, lookiug at his : tongue, noticing every liutter in his chest or little shooting pain in his head, and reading medical books and the circulars of quacks. Sucli a man is perhaps more to bo pitied than the victim of fatal disease; for white he may live longer, his life is barren of happiness as to he scarcely : worth the having. j There is almost no disease which ; one who makes a constant stnay of every little unusual sensation cannot imagine himself to have, bat heart disease is perhaps the one ofteuest : simulated. It is so easy to count tho pulse and to imagine queer sensations in the chest, and the rythm of the heart-beats changes under the slight est provocation, especially if there is a little indigestion, that nothing is simpler than to imagine oneself the subject of some serious disease of this organ. The habit is thns formed of watoh ingone's symptoms; and, once formed, it is most difficult to overcome, j The best protection against the ac quiring sneh a habit is education in childhood. Parents should never ap pear solicitous, nor take notice of every little ache or paiu with which a child runs to its mother. A sharp stitch in the side does not always mean pneumonia, nor a stomach-ache appendicitis, and children should be taught to disregard little discomforts. If a child is given n very slight sup per and put to bed when it complains, it will soon learn not to exaggerate j small ills. Real sickness usually makes its presence known by nnmisfakable signs, and there is slight danger that a manly disregard of minor ailments, and a refusal to be frightened by them, will lead to the neglect of any really ' serious results. WORDS OF WISDOM. Tho special dangers which beset our neighbors seem so much more terrible than those which beset ourselves. The | latter are but pardonable weaknesses, we think, hut the former are mortal ( sius. There is a kind of knowledge from which many persons shrink. It is that which involves certain duties and re sponsibilities that they are not willing to accept. Courteousness, courage and confi dence should be united in every be lievcr; the gospel requires thom and provides for them. Love is the wondrous angel of life that rolls away all the stones of sor row and suffering from the pathway of duty. Nothing can bring you peace but j yourself. Nothing can bring you j peace but the triumph of principle. ! Let ns be of good cheer, remember ing that the misfortunes hardest to bear are those which never come. The entire object of true education j is to make people not do the right | things, but enjoy the right things. | Four things come not back—the spoken word, the sped arrow, the past life, tho neglected opportunity, i Let us be content to work. To do the thing we can, and not presume to fret because it is little. If there is any person whom you dislike, that is the one of whom you | should never speak. Wire Nklls nnd Old Nulls. J Careful experiments made at Cor- [ nell University are said to show that: "First, cut nails are superior to wire nails in all positions; second, the main advantage of tho wire nail is duo to its possessing a sharp point; third, if cut nails were pointed they would be thirty per cent, more efficieut in : direct tension; fourth, wire nails with i out points have but one-half their or ! dinary holding power; fifth, the snr- J face of the nail should be slightly j rough, but not barbed—barbing de- j ; creastß the efficiency of out nails about thirty-two per cent." The pointed end enables the nail to enter wood without breaking its fibre ex cessively, thus preserving its grip. A serious defect of wire nails is their readiness to rust. They are made generally of a sort oC soft steel; and steel rusts more readily than some I other forms of iron. In some parts cf the country, it is said, shingles put on with wire nails drop off after six or eight years.—Baltimore San. American Wing Victoria Cross. An American was one of the first to win the Victoria Cross in the South African war. He is Charles J. Spruce, a native of Kenosha, Wis. A few years ago he went to South Africa, in time to be a member of Jamieson's raiders. After the raid he returned to this country, but when the war be gan he went over to England and en listed in a cavalry regiment. He won the cross by rescuing a wounded com i rade. i The wheat crop in Manitoba is ex i pected to exceed last year's by 2,500,000 bushels, and the oat crop by 600,000 I bushels. Wkat Shall We flare Far Dewertl This question arises in the family dally. Let us answer It to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared In 2 mln. No bolllngl no baking! Simply add a little hot water A set to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Baspborry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. Padua's pilgrims to Rome for the jubilee will make the journey on bi cycles. Do Your Feet Ache and Itnrn f Shake into your shoos Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or n*w shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Ilunlous, Swollen, Hot, Smarting und Sweating l eet and Ingrowing Nails. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample sent FItEE. Address Allen S. Olmstead, Leßoy, N. Y. Morocco is famous for its fine mules. The best come from Fez and are worth S2OO each. Plso's Cure !s the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs—Wu. O. Ehdsley, Vunburen, lud., Feb. 10, 1930. Nevada has a population all told of 45.761 —about one-fourth of the aver age congressional district. The Beit Prescription for Chills fna Fev er la a bottle of GnOVK's Tastkmcrc CHII.L TONIC. It is simply iron ami quinine In a tameless form. No cure—uo pay. Pries 50c. The 33 largest towns of England and Wales have a total population of nearly 12,000,000. Dyspepsia Is the bane of the human sys tem. Protect yourself against its ravages by the use of Legman's Pepsin Gum. The bakers' strike has revealed the fact that London's baking is nearly all done by Germans or other foreigners. H. M. Norton. St. Taul. Mir.n., says: Flense sen.i me one bottle Prey's Vermifuge for en closed 26c. I cannot get a bottle in this city, i T he population of Edinburgh is now 1 witsiin about 1,000 of 300,000. Jell-O, the New Dessert, Pleases all the family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange. Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 eta. Cigarettes are smoked almost exclu sively in Germany, Austria, Russia and Greece, and generally through Europe. Better Blood Better Health If you don't feel well to-day you can be made to feel better by making your blood better. Hood's Barsaparlllu is the great pure blood mnker. That is how It cures that tired feeling, pimples, sores, salt rheum, scrofula and catarrh. Get a bottle of this greut medicine and begin taking It at once and see how quickly it will bring your blood up to the Good Health point. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Blood Medicine. ! BO O If Q f SAMPLES of O different *1 Tn ." books worth 81.50, and illustrated Catalog sent to Miy address for 80 rente, stamps. Try us W. A.NftKRMCH, 480 Went 88th Ht., N. V. P. N. U. 2?, 'OO. DON'T STOP TOBACCO SUDDENLY LS'Sh^ri:.7i^,.V^'S,". o .BICO-CURO and notifies you when to stop. Sold with a guarantee that three boxes will cure any case BAGO-CURO At .11 (lrugciais or by mull prepaid, & I .<W) a liox; 3 beam. ,2.50. booklet free. Writ. LIiHEKA CHE.MI LAI. CO., La Crosse, Wis. BILE BLOAT ''Tlf, Puifs under the eyes; red nose; pimple , *v M ■ blotched, greasy face don't mean hard drink illl lr xMW®!! always as much as it shows that there is If I F Willi BjLE IN THE BLO °D. It true, drink- II if v ~ nirarl* ove r-eating overloads the stomach, IJII s v j y - tS ;I|l but failure to assist nature' in regularly dis r |§gP| posing of the partially digested lumps of food ,j /wPfffl that are clumped into the bowels and allowed 111 /// ' i 1 to rot tbere, is what causes all the trouble. !| ll . \ * CASCARETS will help nature help you, and §t}}'< ' V/rWmw wi !! keep the s V stem from filling with poisons, mm t will clean out the sores that tell of the sys- Jr V-- J .>'* JJ tern's rottenness. Bloated by bile the figure \\ // | becomes unshapely, the breath foul, eyes and ? I skin yellow; in fact the whole body kind of r A 1 fills up with filth. Every time you neglect to J help nature you lay the foundation for iust *""*■ such troubles. CASCARETS will carry the cured or satisfied you get your money back. Bile bloat is quickly and permanently COE^ED CANDY CATHARTIC —' 2 % c - 0c ; DRUGGISTS I o any needy mortal suffering from bowel troubles and too poor to buy CASCARETS we wiU send a box free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York, mentioning advertisement and paper. 420 j I YOUR- COWS PRODUCTION I will he increased -'0 j er cent, by ufin* our aluminum Cream Separators ami up-to-date churns. $4 up. 10 days trial. Catalogue free. Address, t.ib •ou-btewart Mlg. Co., Giiwuuia, l a f The fire department of Chicago has 98 steam fire engines. Hall's Catarrh Onre Is a liquid and la taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Write for tes timonials, free. Manufactured by F. J. Ciiknky & Co., Toledo, O. I Denmark claims that there is not a ; single person in her domain who cannot I read and write. Fits permanently cured. No fit* or nervous ness after tirst day's use of I)r. KlineV Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise tree. Dr. K.II. Kli.nl. Ltd. Uol Arch StPhila.P* I California will raise 125,000,000 pounds | of prunes this year. Mrs.Wir.slow'sSoothlnpPyrap forchildreu | teethinc, soltens thegum. reduces inflarama j tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. The Chicago city architect has made plans for a mansion for stray dogs. To Cnre a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Uromo Qcininr Tablets. All druggists refund tho money If it falls to cure. B. W. GaoVK's signature Is on each box. 25c. About 50 cities in Wisconsin are sup • plied with water from artesian wells. H. H. Grebn'B Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., nro the only successful Droppy Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer in advertisement in another ouluwn of this paper. "THE MESSIAH" ON THE PLAINS Annual Musical Event of the West That Attracts Thousands. ( "Because of Its surroundings, and uplifting by its earnest methods and teaching, the Easter performance of "The Messiah/ by the Swedish ttfldriy at Lindsborg, in central Kansas, is each spring one of the interesting events of the west," writes Charles M. I Harger in the Ladies' Home Journal. "A musical festival that, out on tho j comparatively sparsely settled prairies, I can bring together 10,000 people dur j ing holy week, many of them coming j j 200 miles, must be excellent indeed. 1 The growth of the audiences in this j instance, year after year, indicates a thorough appreciation of a worthy rendering of Handel's great oratorio. The Swedes are a singing people, and the religious sentiment is strong in their hearts. The one cherished day for this colony of perhaps 3,000 fami j lies is Easter,and the chief glory there of is 'The Messiah.' Four hundred I men and maidens participate in these J renditions. The orchestra numbers 58 j pieces, and is supplemented by a three- I manual pipe organ. The leaders, dl j rectors and soloists are all members j°f the Lindsborg community, and : teachers in the college there." Parrot Died of Grief. Elmer, Pa., telegram to Philadelphia Times: A parrot belonging to Captain Theodore Jones, of this place, died a few days ago, and the owner is satis fied that the bird died from grief. Mrs. Jones recently died, and she had an i attachment for the parrot, which I helped her to while away many hours. I Soon after her death the bird began to droop and called for Mrs. Jones rc peatedly until it died. A MlHoc.vnlHt'* Suspicion. During the interval between the sec- ! ond and third acts at English's last ! night the program showed that the or- j chestra would play "The Spider and i the Fly." It played Mendelssohn's [ wedding march. Now, a suspicion ' might arise—but, of course, only in j the mind of a misogynist.—lndianap olis News. HPODQV NEW DISCOVERY; riven i* r V ■ O T quick relief end cur*, wc ret Seee. Booh of teetimnnieJa end 1(> ilnve' tieetmei.* rc. Or. H. B. Q&KEH'S IONB. Box B. Atleete, Bk. Thompson's Eye Water LIKE MANY OTHERS Clara Kopp Wrote for Mm. Flnkhanfti Atb vice and Tells what It did for Her. •• Dear Mrs. Pinkiiam :—I have seea so many letters from ladies who wers cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's remedies that 1 thought I would ask your udvies regard to my condition. I have been doctoring for four years and have taken different pafc- M lEtf m ®dicines, but jKSkjuk received very littlo benefit. I am troubled with back Vwsßf ache, in fact my Sff w * lo * e bod y aches, fml' m9t stomach feels sore, W I fIV by spells get short f * of breath and am /y . ,\®' very nervous. Men lif f tl strua^on 18 very ir / \]J 11 regular with severe I \ bearing down pains, \> cramps and back l V ache. I hope to hear from you at once."— Clara. Kopp, Rockport, Ind., Sept. 27, 1893. "I think it is my duty to write a letter to you in regard to what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for mo. I wrote you some time ago, describing my symptoms and asking your advice, which you very kindly gave. lam now healthy and cannot begin to praise your remedy enough. I would say to all suffering women, Mrs. Pinkham's advice, for a wo mantyest understands a woman's suf ferings, and Mrs. Pinkhain. from hf \ vast IVkperience in treating female can givu you advice that you can get from 11,9 otlicr source.' " —Clara Kop£* Rockport, Ind., April 13. 1699. Try Crain-O I Try Grain-O! Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure gi ains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. $ the price of coffee. 15 cents and 25 cents per package Sold by all grocers. Tastes like CofTea Looks like Coffee Insist that your grocer gives yon QUA IN-O Accept no imitation. mmßßamammmmammmmmoK fe W. OUT!) For yonr family'• comfort U % HIRES Rootbeer L tons°of lro bU rfl ™° re J 1 than Jk \^cn AIU I gßHaaB O a MEST.he'.E ui EISETA; ■ BteCoiliSjriu ¥ . Taeteemjod. Ceo g.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers