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I I 3m THIS FARMING WORLD, op PRACTICAL INTEREST AGRICULTURISTS. O The InoKtoatir I\ow a Lively Industry—One of the rroRU of Keopla? Sheep—II iracsses ShouJd BO Made to I Jt Horses— Brief Jiotes, Etc. a in a is I Ch'cfcens. In the New York Tribune P. H. •Jacobs crives a detailed account of the ms smaller ones or 20 0 to 40 0 each. The are an incubato hous 16x16 feet, of mugh. boards, lined in side with building paper, and a brood attached seventv-two feet long, (or L400 chickens, 100 to an apartment. Various patent incubators are used -with success, and also a home-made ooe oper ted with hot water. Each brooder section has a "mother"—a taV one yaid &qu re on adjustable leg-s, with a curt sin about it cut in strips, and is he ited by hot-water pipes under tne floor in a pipe-box, which supplies pure warm water. Chicks are to'd when they veigh about one and one-half pounds. Aver age weight is: Four Reoks, ton ounces «hc weeks, eighteen ounces. eight weeks, one and one-half pounds. They are sold dressed, the work being done by «-dressers' at 5 cents per chick, being bled, picked, but not scalded, tbrown in ice water, then packed in barrels and boxes, without wrapping. Prices vary from 20 to 40 cents per pound, selling seison being December to June, bast in April and Mc-y. In regard to breeds, the Leghorn proves very desir ble. both pure and as a cro&b. Tne chictes are mora meaty *n the breast, nnd eggs from hons moated with a Leghorn male are more fertile. When the lirahm* chicks weigh one pound eight ounces, the Leghorn chicks wi'l weigh one pou .d feeven cunces. Crosses of same are good, buffc chicks are tender, Houdan and Lanjrshan ci oss is one of the best. The main points are short legs, com pact body, plump breasts, fat oa each side of spine. Color of legs is uot noticed. Cost of outfit for 1,500 chicks is about $1,000. The business requires close attention and cannot bo intrust ed to hired help. It is not an easy p~rbmt for women, yet several hive been \cr successful. Hamraonton has a mild climate and a sj.r.dy soil, and gapes are unknown. I is within reach of live or bix markets. More broilers are said to bo raised there than in any other place in tnis county fr Europe. raisitjgr of chickens by incubators at .,„,i .„ ,, \. 4. •a -NT and will oat more varieties or ve^eta Bammonton N J. I a eighteen estabUhment (seven run by women) \UrQm While 98 per cent of good egg's can foe hatched, the average ib nearer 6J per cent, owing cruelly to the difficulty of procuring good eg?s in winter, so that the cost of a chick frobh from the shell may very from 6 cents to $1. Th average lens in broods is about 15 per cent. The chicK3 are "mothered' ior twenty-four hours, then fed rohecl it oatmeal, or a cake made of corn, oats, bran and middlings, se soned with salt Small grain is giveu a 3 sooa as ttiey can eat it, and then the cake is scalded instead of baked, and the mid dlings omitted. Mashed potato o» turnip 19 allowed, bat no green food, except a cabbage to pick as they grow larger. Little meat is use J. Stale oread, broken crackers and refuse pop corn nre used to vary the diet. At a month old they arc fed four times a d^p scalded mixture night and morn tog, grain other times. Food cost* 5 .cents a pound to produce ono pound of broiler, up to three or four pounds. 1 tfcreat. troubl ing. Ono of tho best ways to brinsr up an old barren field to a good stale of fer tility is to turn a flock of sheep on it, *nd let them roam about it. Feed them quite liberally, and they will spend the rest of their time in grub bing up noxious weeds, and in tramp ling bushes to death. In a rough pasture lot the sheep will first select "the wild rose bushes, ragweed, bur docks, and hazel bushes. After those have all been killed off they will look fet for grass, and in their grazing they ilajr.«i wall trample over the whole eround so thoroughly that they will make it I AGalUnSlijer. •smooth and even as a lawn. In this Mrs. Barnschoot (relating experi 'woncthey perform another good sor- ences in India)—And there I was They deposit a largo amount of aloue in the bungalow, and the tiger -solid and liquid manure en the land, was wandering around the verandah, which their small feet trample and endeavoring to make his way in." t^ress around the roots of grass where f'* Mrs. Robinson—And weren't you ft can do the most good. afraid, dear? l.! Only a limited number ol sheep. 1 Mrs. Barnschoot—Oh, no! Captain 'however, are needed to perform this Barnschoot had told me that it was a .d"uty. If largo flocks aro kept the.' ra m-oatinj tigei* so, of ojuris I was 'Mioi ooly destroy the v.ced? ayu, bstehv?), not ia tha le at, aLu'insd. —Thi Jestjr. I^Jl^vX lut turn with equal avidity to the grass and destroy that. too. Th land in&tead of being enhanced in fertihlv is then reaily run down and ruined. Over-stnclced sheep fields are the bane sina ruin tion of many farmers, and such a catastrophe sao ill be avoided as bankruptcy. A £hos There is often greater pro It in a small flock of sheep, especially oa a small farm, than tlura is in a larje one. Sheep uva excellent scavengers I 8 a a Ql a With total capacity of over 30 000 1 1 1 ", *u «i,« 1 1 lively and quick to gather fulen fruit «hickbuildingten every weeks, besidesr numere and will eat the earliest sin ill win 1 falls that hojs will irdly t^a:h, though half starved. Almost every farmar keeps A few pigs to evt wnat nothing els* will. might well keep few sheep for the tm S3 with better*a??urinc3 th wo iti not ei anytiing thai eauli iajure the quality of th3ir ra it. Harii©9sei to it A nica adjustment of tae hirness to cause it to lit will save galled shoulders anJ other injuries It a bin ,ular fact that farmers who are careful to have their own clotain? perfect fit should be indifferent to the onlferinjd of their wording horse* O many larms the teams are ofien changed by sale of old and purchase of new but the old harness is retained. Many think the essential pjint in fit ting a coiiar is to have it go easily over the animal's head. Each horse should have bis own harness and when he is ^old his harness should go in the bargain. Agrico a A to A dressing of 10 to 12 bushels of air slacked lime given in tne fall, to a failing meadow, will act as .. vigorou& restorative. Rye for soiling in tho spring may be sown up to November, the later the sowing the more seed is to be used, up to four bushels per acre whe» sown early in November. me is mope soluble in cold than in warm water in the proportion of 3 to 1. Hence lima is always used as a fertilizer in the fall so that it may be come available througa the cold weather. Now tnat drills Lave been invented for boring square holes, it is to be hoped th it there may be no moro round bolt3 in any farm machinery. These round bolts are an aggravation and cause a waste of time that a farm er can ill afford. E-jpeiience the past season has shown that green clover may be stored safely in a tight barn, if it is put in layers with dry straw inter mingled alternately. The straw ab sorbs the moisture from the clover, and acquires an improved flavor wuile the clover cures green nd sweet with out mold. The.e is a diversity of opinion in re gard 10 the feeding down of meadow^ in the fall. Geneiaily thio is thought to be desirable, but when it is doae, tne droppings of the animals should ue spread and the bunches of sineaten herbage should be cut, so as to leave the held in good co iditiou for mowing the odo.viug jcar. it a a N One Profit of Keeping: Sheep. Not the least good obtained from keeping sheep is the continual increas ing of the fertility of the fai on which they are keot. Mutton and wool are valuable products, a when due atten tion is paid to raising the sheap for these pioJucts, they may be ido very pioStablc, but when these aio merely incident .Is of sheep raising the •farmer mu^t look elsewhere for part payment. No other animals can com pare with sheep for enhancing the fer tility of the land 01 which they aro kept, and if for no other reason than this a small flock of sheep should be owned by larmers. Then, in aJdition to tnis, fresh mutton of the best quality I dislodge them after they ar3 in the may be had at pleasure, which for ground. The mountain ash i» a-notner farmers far in the interior Is quite a One year old peach trees should not bo pi nted until spring the norther 1 states with tvvo-yeai-old oaes it is different A very good si^c will ba found in Alexander, Eai\y York. OIJ mixon, Smock, Crawford and Susque hano. A goo I word can be said for the Vergonnes grape. Of a somewhat lighter shade than Catawba, it is of most excjlleut flavor. Though ripen ing early it is a good keeper, beingr in good condition Ion* after Christm is when it is preserved in a cool room or cedar. As the Ni igara grape bccoui3s more widely cultivated, its popularity in creasss. When first brought before the public, bee mse of much of it= fruit being cut before it was ripe, it is thouoht to lacs: sweetness. Timf ha-, proved this incorreot, a id it stands to day as the be^t white grape for gener al use. When apple, d^vo-rf pei or quince trees aro leuuved from nurseries, see tint there are no borers in the trunks before planting. Taey ra easdy got at then, but it is a difficult thing to tree which the borers find deiight in How to Weir Sal Here is Mm?. MoJjeska's opinion on the arrangement of color: '"Red worn below the face deadens the complexion worn above the face, hightens the com plexion. If, therefore, a woman wishes to subdue the color in the cheeks she should wear .1 red )wn or plenty of red ribbons about her throat: on the other band, if she wishes to give her face a certain touch of color. a a a floff(jr3 NOT BLOOD BUT JUICE. An Adrsata.-- with Bed iii 11 at GJ ae Very Kcar lelas? my. •3%54e ,, A writer in the Forest *anl Stream relates the experience of a family be sieged bv loyennei. in the course of which this inc dent occnrrel: At I st th^s Jndiaas stopped firmer and we could not get a glimpse of them. Caveniss sfiid: "Well, old woman, that was a close ciU but I am hungry, so get something 11 eat." 4 ore aarl thev re A 1 them -at in the milk house, except that piece on the table, and that belongs'to Dick. He has had nothing to eat since yesterd and he fights as well on an eraptv stomach as you uns do on a fuh one." remarked Mrs. Ca veniss, smoking. "I'll get you some coffee and hi-cuit, though." Marion siid. "i'l go and get meat Igue-.s the Injuns i- gone." Manual labor. Eaiy MatVma*'i,s. "It is 90 76-100 miles from Philndel phia to New York." said the teacher. "A cat crawls into the hollow wheel of a fi eight car in Philadelphia the wheel is thirty-one inches in diameter how far does the cat tr ivel while the train goes to New York "About twenty-eight feet." said the smart bo at the foot of the class: it was our cat and she climbed out of the wheel and got run over bufore the tram pulled out half a car-length. When the train got past she looked like a map of the fur-producing region of the Hudson Bay territory, spread out over But the morning hour having'ex pired, and it being the teacher's day to faint, and the time having arrived, she too.c up the business on the speak er's desk, and proceeded with the reg *ular order.—Robert J. Burdette. /rStartlinj Ti .e took off his bi_r wnite hat and distance from the place where their put it before the open door on a stick formation begins. Thomas Stevenson, for a reply, and a dozen bullets hit around it in a secoad. "Do vou want to go out there. Bud?" he asked with a wolfish grin. I aiu't a raid to," responded Ma- rion, "and I can Cx so I won't get hit 4'All man." form 400 miles lrom the ship you are Marion, without reply, proceeded to I' 8 shoot, and when Marion started Let us suppose, now. a wave 400 feet thev made it very interesting in length and 88 or 40 feot high rush for him. He had a st^ak in one hind along at 27 knot*. It overt ikes a and a can of peaches in the other and wave making about 20 knots, wh^n he got into the house he said, with a height of 25 leet and a length with 1 horrified expression on his face, shot in the hand." He held up the pea*h c%~x hand and then looked silly. One of the gentle red men had put a ball through the cin. not touch- ing him at all, and when the juice ran every one Knows, never slaeken speed into his hand he thought it was blood. We joked him a little, but saw he was mortified, and Mr3. Caveniss proceed ed to got dinner. If the public school has failed to emphasi/.g live importance and di?nitv asp**1'* over 30 miles per hour. of labor I believe it is due rather to overs ght than intention, savs a wr ter in tho American Agriculturist. The schools have largely been controlled by col ege-men. the minister, lawver and doctor, and their voiy credence among the young is rn illu»tr ition of the apparent suprrioritv of tho pro fessional class. I sav apparent for I do not think minv professional men are willing to be e'assed among the idle, my tbink thev are among tho hardest workers, but farmers' sons meeting school sune'nnteud^nts or committee men of tl class in school are likely 1.0 imagine otherwise Cer tainly not all school minafrers look upon manual labor as degrading, though I have known one who warned a class of bovs never to be caught at it. certainly think school books would be improved if they contained less in regard to profit on trade and interest on money and more concern ing the real soorce-j of wealth. I knew one te cher of agrioulture in a state oolleqe who begun his courso by a lesson in farm superintendence or farm management. I would sooner the hinds of a boy WHO hid learned bis trade by beginning as a bov on th1? farm thin to one who knew only what he hid learned under sueh college pr fe»5 r^ atfchut. Admianon. **Wbat becomes of all the stale caady?" was asked a well known con fectioner., **It is male up into fresh candy." There is not an ounce of waste about confectionery. You like chocolate canme's Well, they con t. iu more scraps than any other candy. They are especially adapted for this on account of their dark color. They were first male by a coifectioner who receive! the inspiratijn from his gre.-vt stock of stale sweets."—From the Jour nal of U&e.'ui lavent'ons. Been Wrlttea A. Great Deal of Iiuseu.e Has h^r r* About Them. ^"'V •*," All sorts of no isense has been writ ten about waves "mountuu hi,*h." The trnt 1 is th it wh3n a shio is plung ing down the bicx of one wave a is a me tiras heeled over till her rail is close to the water, ta next wave looks as if it would sweep com pletely over the ve3»el and therefore appe irs as big as a mountain. Lieu tenant Qu ltrough says: "W find re ports Heights of 10J feet from hollow to crest, but no verified measurement exists of a height »lf as great as this. The highest reliable measurement* are from 4ri to 48 leet—in itself a very remarkable height. Waves having a greater height than 30 feet are not often encouotered The height of wind waves is governed by what is died the "fetch." That means their author of the "Lighthouse Illumina tion.' and father of the well-known writer of our day, Robirt Louis Steven son, gives the following formula as applicable when the fetch is not le-s ln,L1J S1 a neither." wave in leat is equal to 1.5 mul iplied light, get tho meat, then." said the squire root of the fetch in Mrs. C., "but I'm afra you will get nautical miles." Lyt us suppose that ohot and we can't afford to lose 0 *n miies: "Th height of the a vv'ind the wav began to 13 8 ke up a with a shirt, a pair of which multiplied by 1.5 gives 30 feet overalls and a hit Then he unfolded as height of the waves around the his p'ans to us. Tisre was to shove out the dummy and draw the enemies' fire. Caveni 9 and I weroto return it, and Marion was to run to the milk house. When he wanted to comeback he was to put his hand out so that we Iecky is of the opinion that these are coull see it. ana we were to go to firing- caused by the increased force of the while he in for the houso. took wind in the squalls wh eh area feat only a butcher knife. We drew their of every big blow. Now, waves fire by exposing the dummy, and then travel at a rate which is the result of we went to cracking away at the smoke their size. Waves 200 feet Ion from of the guns while he ran for the milk hollow to hollow ivel about 19 knots house. He got there without a scratch, hour those of 400 feet in length but when his hand came up and we make 27 knots smd those of 600 feet showed the doll again, Lo wouldn't sq-iare rojt of 4J0 miles 20. ship. Now it is well known that in every storm there are occasionally groups of three or four waves consider ib'y larger than tho others. Contain forward irresistibly at 82 knots, of 200. The two seas become ono forming at the moment of their union an enormous wave. Just at that mo ment they meet one of ihose steamers called "ocean greyhounds," which, as unless it i3 absolutely necess iry for sa'ety. She is butting into the storm at the rate of say eight knots an hour. She runs plump against a great wall of water whiea seems to rise suddenly out of the general tumult, rushing at her with a height of 45 feet or more Taere is a fear ul crish forward, c comp nicd by a deluge, and as the tons of water roll off the forecastle deck, it is found that damage has been done, and the ofifcers ou watoh enter in the log the interesting fact th it the steam er has bcea struck by a "tidal wave." New Tor Electricity. II. L. Lu km invented an admirable system of extinguuiun.j tires b/ elec tricity Mr Luf cm proposes to mod lfty the present system of automitic sprinklers by the UJO of a motor and pump and a comp'etj system of &p' ink ier piping. On ch floor, or in any number of places on the floor, are aced in co iveaient positions push buttons for the stai ting of the motor and pump, and the opening at tho same time of any valve required. In a theater, formstan e, sets of switches controll ng the entire house, could be loea ed in any number of places about the bu'ld.ng. On the discovery ol a fire, say. in one of the dressing 100ms, the sprinkler-could be started in the room lorn* any of Uie respect ive switchboard-*, or in the 100m itself.' In the same manner the exits and lobbies could bo tilled with streams ol water, which would allow of tue es cape of the auJience, even tnoagu the fare should be i'J3nn,' a.o md them. '1 he complete a *d m^tantaojoa* coi trol of mas&e-. ol water thus dned. and the ability to localize their flow, suggest possibilities of lire extinction which will materially increa&e its case and certainty. TR-hat E 0 Did Wi tin II 1. A religious soc ety worshiping not many miles from New Lonion. Conn., decided to build a new churc 1 this sea soa, and the pastor, among others, wa chosen to solicit funds. He did hi work very 7.3a ou ly, taking not oniy widow's but the children's tea as well. 'ihis energetic pastor has ciass of children in the Sabbath school, and one Sunday, not long since, while instructing them, he compared himsell to the Good Shepherd and then in quired what the latter did with his flock. One bright-eyed little fellow prompt ly replied: "He shears them!" Al within hearing smiled at this answei except the paator. 4,4 An Infant Fh3nom333ti. Visitor—Can your baby talk anj yet? o* Mamma—Yes, indeed! Baby, saj Bub/—Oogle g-oogle. "Now say a "Ooffle google." &' TNowr say 'how d'y' do' to tlie lad^ W^Qogte troo^le." "r^M a **Bes its "ittle heart, it Ian talk inos ai djad as mimmd tan." -£. A Bright iT,r,„ m.t/l DanJel O'Connell was at one time lo!enHng a man accused ol murder at Clonmel. The circumstantial evi dence was so strong ajrainist the prisoner that the jury had already determined upon their verdict of fzuiltv, when the man supposed to be ftAD COMPLEXIONSABY honor sai,d the foreman, "he'» guilty he stole mtyt bany mare«thre»e. year.s ago."—San Francisco Argonaut. eultuate idleness while the women knit. Children ot 10 years a so bit in thp doorways and knit.—Cor. Lewiston Journal. *a&--•-*sB»fc-* WpRiern Union t^lecrapli operators in S Pnul to th reniBtateraent the men liMharRtd for being members of the brothei hood "Perched upon 1)^(1 ot Pal'as. or better yet. on me li.mdv s%ol th isensilile honse Keeper tins her bottle of Dr. Hull's Cough S.irup. nml when the child has a dii-tres-HU conpjli or a tout croup sue cuies the hitie one in no tune. "What de precher talk 'bont to-dav biud derJulm^?" "Oh. he lelled 'bout Mim-nn bentdem Plnl stines, en. jou know I mow crv to tink dem poor creeters couldn't get no Salvation Oil. At Fresno. CaL. Joseph L. Stillman, who Bliot Theatrical Wanajrer Fiwke. has b^en fo'ind umlty of muroer in the first degree and sentenced to lie impnsonment. DB, FRANK POWELL. (White Beaver) will open an ofGce in St. Paul, next Jan. Di seases of women exclusively. %m There hn been introduced into he French chamber of deputies a bill impo-in a heavy ax on crehts and titles ot nubility. Mind Reading, You can read a happy mind in a happy countenance without much penets»itmn. This is the sort of countenance that the quondam bilious sufferer or dyspeptic re lieved by HoKtetter's hiomnh Bittersweais. Yon will meet manv such The great stom achic and alteiative UIMI provides happiness ior the malarious, the rheumatic, the weak, and those troubled with inaction of the kid neys and bladder. Bill Moore wantel to dig a well, so he plowed a lot oi land and planted it in oats. Every day he watched the oats, observing the spots that showed greate-a moisture. Finally he ^elected a spot nnd sunk a well. At twenty-four ieot ho had a fine stre .111 ol water—said to be the be^t wdl iu the coun ty. Oher farmers in the vanie neighbor hood have tailed to find water at '200 leet [Atchinson Globe. Ia a complaint wh ch affectb nearly e\ on body, more or lees Itoiiginates in a cold, or succes sion of colds, combined with impure blood Dis agreeable fow from tho noso, tickling in the th oat, offensive broath, pain over and between the eyes, ringing aud bursting noises in the eara, are the more commoa svmptomrf Citairh is cured Flood Sarsapanlla. which Btrikes di rectly at its cause by removing all imparities fiom the blood building up the seased tissues and gi\iHg healthy tone to tho who esystoin Sarsaparilla Soldbyalldinggisth $1 M-sfor?l. Preparedonly I HOOD & CO. Lowell Mass 100 Doses One Dollar by Sirea to return their Verdict at once I world-wide celebrity, it is ineomparaulo as ami iharr AiA «,« 1 ,,*• :4. '. Skjn 1'nnf\IngS ap. unequalled tor the Todefe a SO "Alt it W as O O and without a rival for the Nursery 4.1 7 sittly perfnmed, CCTICUBA S O AP prodnces the, ]Ud*rP "i a a t»«t. clearest sk and soltert hands and!^ W hnw ron a Pwvente infla^nraation and clogjpnK t»w •«^u IU HOW a I pores, the a W of pimples, blackheads, and prisoner be guilty? "Please ver 'ostoomPlexio"ald,f,"s»ratk)nfi.whiie it admit* iior»«T., J'-,»UiSyeiii-«-cl I -se BAttle IMIs They also r*l c\e Dm tress froa. Dy»|cj«ia,Iii digestion and 1 oolleam Eating A perfe rem edy for Dunnes* Name DrowHincHR, Bad Tout, the Month. Coi»c: Tongue P-un in th« 811 roiti I I E TII* recrnlate the ROYTOIH I'ur^lv Vep tnlile. Prlou Cents CAETSB HEDICIN3 CO., KEW Y022. Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. A Liberalsamp'e assortment for 2 Ovei 2 0 ra/e Kinds, V\ in ametpr, from Congo. hma, Indnu and other oist Very beau lint, many colors Tor Pins. Bfinglespnd Ointments Make beautiful decorations. No teacher needed Large shells of 1 1, A"? r/^ '"formation and catalogue free .1. MI,LIJ( & CO Ea«l© n, a S E I feALSAM" mm^MllMm ^m GjrSPEn,"'»'SI«u BED- perpaXaee,wntpr«fcp"lcl,wHIi f,l giticura Soap*t 4 I in 8 wlth tn ijermaa country on Sunda after- ^h^e^letters wrcniai for«ta.jjp Samples of work O O I ™^«,..»".~+ _. -^^.- I -Octb.Morlau Co Salom. Ohio iioonre\eais rows ot women sitting! On bpnellPS in Irrmr. ni +li« /«•-«..„„ A I E S uu iriiuies lroilt he OttagPS 1 \^at the Iolarite Cancer lunrmarv lola. aupaca. knitting. The men" drink brer and Co-Wl8 LADIEfi $75.00 to $250 00 i. "R"FW A lll^nRlIousltC(f'fii tuUr*»B«l»«-.»J,nfrt.UU,for's.|it-iinr«. j.l.lri^4 PR.SXYD1J.K. X^ck Box i&I. ClOeaso. ni. in THE VAN DUSEN-HARRINGTON CO GRAIN a notations. Exccnte orders Chicago, New York or Milwaukee. jt^sj-/ WSSBsnk f?£DK«H- AND 3 1 HUMORS.* j& WITH PIMPLY. JT" 1 Wotchy, oily skm, Red, Rough Hands, witkjgt mnrueiea Waa brought into COUrt, 1 thaps pnmful ting ends anu shnpeless nails, alive and nnlmr Tl»u in».ir -.. .,Q l*» 1 and nmple Baby hmnow pivveiiUd and cored' unnurc. 1 lie jury *US ie- CUTIUTBA SOAP. A maiveloua b.au Jfier 081 W a is ii Absoinlpy pnre, de'icarely methearwi, exjiji-^ »c.« 4-uLr -i*I of no comparison with other -km soaps, and a ol toilet and nuvia seriyn soapsd. Fale greatenro than tho combined sale of all other skin soaps Price, 25c. S nd for "How to Cnre Skin Diaeas s." Address POTTE DRUG AN CHEMICAL COB I FORATIOV. Proprietors, Boston, Mass. A an W a Knitting It I were asked to present, in one word the characteristics of the Ger" JOHNSON'S SWEET CIDER, Johnson** man womenlshould employ the word PnoeBCidercViuega JOHNSOX. Kishrttnk«»e "knitting work." A drive through 1 nn Aching sides and back, wpak kifneys, and rheumatism relieved in one minate by the CCTICURA ANTI-PAIM PLASTER. 2 5 Pnre Both pare goods. Write fox- Pab" P-»»Wtein experience nnneeessary. Plain or Cured withont the nee of the Kinfa W fo book of treatmentW A trial paelago by mill Jo KuflVrers. Br SCItlFhHAN.St Fanl.Xlna IJ O N .iUOSn IS, Wnglaington, D.e* 'Successfully so Claims Late principal Examiner S Pension Bureau. 3 yrs ia last war, IS adjudicating cJauns, atty since. I Reduced 15 to 25poundspur month by huniiio--8 herbal ixn»edi«&. Ko starxing, no- i«t c„«^« inconvenience. Ounfident KU. _ena 0c for aroulni-s and tehtunomals. Address. DK. O. W. V. bVMlEO, SU fct_te Ht_ UUeacoJUl. 9nfo nnd Sure. Send 4 for W OMAN S SAhR GUARD." Wilcox -DccUla P__B~ PSW can nsve sm feet solid. coinftirt. P,uni lei free. Srtm- ple pkg., 10c. H*edi_«) he inoet Kleg-nt Blood Purifii Li*n li rl(-orator, Tonic anfl Appetizer known. ThofimtRitter* ooutai-iug Iron ever adrer D»edinAmerk_ 3 F.ALLKK.I)ri.i id.i^,C_eouat.Ht.P_ul,Ulit_. ln\ entor' 8 id e, or Howr to obtain PATENTS PENSION S a Patent, sent free. A I O A E Att I^aw. WAshington a The is a it I u. 1M\\ Dependant wld o« and parentfl are in eluded. If vonwlHhvonr claim and Sucoesslull write to A a S A N N late (ominissioner ol Penbfons. Washmsrtoii. C. O N can ado working for us. Persons preferred who can furnish a horso and give their whole time to the business Spare mo ments may be profitably also A few vacancies in towns and cities. JOHNSON &CO 1000 Main St.. Ulchmond. Va FAUMS IMPROYKD and UM3IPR0VED WILD LAD8 TIMBER LANDS CIT1 and VILLAGE PBOPERTI. Send full description price and terms want the address of e\eiy person having property of anj kind for t.ale or oi hange We can sell offered at fair pi ices, and are allowed a reasonable time to perfect a sale Pro iert\ of c\er des cription foi sale in neaih e\erv f«tate and Ter lfoiv Sec our ist before rri-ibasmg, Addrewi CbRTlS A.LDWARD& 1NV dmorp rated) 5126 Itobert St ,S Paul Minn E rorLOSTorF«IJtSrG EtAKKOOD? Gerjrid and KEB.V0US DEBILETT: TK ^t31111038 «£Bnd7and Mxnd- Effechi bi S a E a Older "ffoana, Bobatt, Kobla MiSHGOn roily ReslomS. How to Eolanr* Btrennthen WTAK.VSnEVlLOrED ORUkSS A PARTS of fiOUT. AlMolutelT onfelllair UOMB TWUTHKNT-KoDenu In dny. Den tctdfr trom 41 Stetrx, TerritarlM. and lorrlgaCaontrlM. Toncu wrlt»them. Book, toll axnliinatlon, anrt proofs oatlod Uealed) tree Aadrou rR|£ ptmteL CL. DJ«"/110. «. t- tntrodncc them, one In every County or town fur Di.slied reliable ]K.r»ou8 (either sex) wlio will promise to snow it. titckdoi- Mutlv iivx lioxiUt, h.Y. City, When It Storms "Wcnr Woonsocket Hubbcr Shoea. -They'll kcop -your feet dry and warm. They'll preser\e health aiid save doc tor's bills. Made from best Rubber, by skilled workmen, over correct lasts, they'll fit your feet and give you ser vice. See that they are stamped °r Iwbbers «^Td nnder othw XJJU ¥l Jj.J.liJ-1 li-Qnd« Inai^twiWoonsocUetltnbbet Jloots nnd Shoes. 'I he\ re the best 8old even wli"i«. Jliiiirraetnml t\ tlie WOOXSOCKKT ltUBUtJl CO, 1"BO\ int^c L, II1 Send for Cataloroe. COMMISSION. MINNEAPOLIS. -**,DULUTH SELL BY SAMPLE., Prompt Betwrns. Write r*c d" sin,_ .ota jral, ,ie JT New perb