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t, A BABY'S THOUGHTS. 0 psh*w! I wish that I could talU I sauce these people ool. rtteu.-h them how to treata helpless uaby ua tllC.Y Should. So far as 1 have looked around I don't see what prevents IticBi' grown tip people using Just a little com ne n sensn. Titty smother me with blankets, but I wouldn't dure to kick, For when I do they always pile them on me twice as thicK. HI could talk I'd tell them all a pointed fact or two. They know a baby's helpless. I'll cry, tuat'a what I'll do. Alt no, I hadn't better cry, 'cause when I do it brings Some par.-goric, castor oil and lots of awful things. 1 want to *row up right away, and whnn I'm big enough I'm going to make my nursey take a waole lot the stuff. And sometimes when I tell them there 8 a pin a sticking rne, They say I've not the colic and thev dance me on their knee. There's some folks say a baby N a \e: v con stant care. Well, some folks n#ver ™ctl: half we oabie* have to bear. Chicago Heruld. WONDERFUL. CLOCKS. Marvelous Machinery Usod for Keeping Time. Clocks Made Wholly of lee. Straw. Paper or Hardened —Minute Tim® K««p«ri, Oue of Which a King Wore 9* **i» Kar. Five hundred and eleven years ago, in February, 1H7H, Ilenry Vie, or, as some authorities give his name, Henry de Wyck, the "Nuremberg' Wizard," set Up the first clock, of which we have any authentic record, in the palace of the King1 of France. Charles V. was King Of France at the time (although he did not survive the erection of his wonder ful timepiece more than a year and a half), and Nuremberg, "the cradle of Europen invention," was the mistress of all the high mechanical arts. Legend ary accounts and casual allusions of Yarious authors to mechanical contriv ances for the measurement of time es tablish the fact almost, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that the clock was known Some years, perhaps centuries, before the historical effort of the ingenious and deft-fingered Do Wyck. It is known that Frederick II., who died in l'i51, was at one time presented by the Sultan of Egypt with a time measuring contrivance provided with wheels and a bell. Dante, who died fifty-eight years before De Wyck, set his wonderful "time-teller*' going on the regal palace of the French King, in three separate passages of his works alludes to a striking clock. So, too, Calmct, who wrote in ll'JO, speaks of a Striking clock used by the Cisterian monks. History is history, whether right or wrong making it worse than heresy for a writer to go beyond certain pre scribed limits. As all the "authorities" concur in giv ing to this Nuremberger of uncertain name, and still more uncertain nativity, the honor of being the original clock maker, 1 shall follow a time-honored precedent and accord to him esteem which clearly should be divided equally between several inventors who lived and toiled in the dawn which followed In the wake of the night of the Dark Ages. Conradus Dasipodius of Strasburg, who perfected his wonderful astronomi cal clock in 1573, is believed to have been the first to apply his skill to the marvelous in clock-making. The best description of it is that of a traveler who spent five hours a day for twenty-one days carefully inspecting e?cry part of it before attempting tc gfive to the public a pen-picture of its wonderful intricacies. Although couched la the peculiar language of tho times, and abounding in odd and unseeming expressions, the description is other wise remarkably clear. He says: •"At Strasburg I spent almost a full month, putting in a half day each day for three weeks, studying out tho curi osities to be found in the strange clock invented by one Conradus Dasipodius. Before the main part of the clock stands a globe, which shows to perfection the motions of the heavenly bodies. The heavens are carried about by a mover once every twenty-four hours: Saturn, by his proper motion, is carried once about every thirty years .Jupiter in twelve. Mars in two the sun. Mercury and Venus in one year, and the moon once oach month. In the clock itself there are two tables, one to the right, the other to the left. These show the eclipses of the sun and moon from the year 1573 to the year 10-34. A third table occupies the middle of the space in tho clock's interior. This table is divided into three parts. In the first part a Btatue of Apollo and Diana shows the course of the year and the day thereof, being turned once about in the course of twelve months. The second part Shows the year of our Lord and the equinoctial days, the hours of each day, the minutes of each hour, and the sec onds of each minute, besides Easter and all other feast days and the dominical letter. The third part of tho table has »geographical description of all Ger many and France, a plat of Strasburg and the names of all those who assisted in building the clock. In the middle frame of the clock there is an astrolabe Showing tho signs through which each planet passes, and also statues of each of the seven planets upon a round piece Of iron, lying fiat, so that every day the statue of the planet that rules the day COines forth, the others being hidden within the frame. Above these there is terrestrial globe, which marks the quarters, the half hours and the min utes. There is also th? skull of a man and two statues of small boys, one ot whom turns the hour glass every tim* the clock strikes, the other contenting himself by putting forth a rod. Above these, in turn, are statues (allegorical) "»f Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter. "In the upper part, still above the last named statues, are the figures of tour old men the?o strike the quarter ||ours with their hammers on a gong. Christ, with a spear iu his "f three-quartsrs but in the fourth quar ter tin* figure of Christ retreats and Death strikes the hour with a bono. As soon as he finishes striking he falls in a heap and all the chimes are set ringing. "Twice each day the image of a ccwk which sits on the top of tho framework rises, flaps his wings and crows aloud." Williams' "Rarities of Mechanical in genuity" says that it run continually for two centuries without repairs. "Rhineland Tales" makes a statement Strangely to the contrary. It says The inventor's name was soon on every tongue and members of the guild from Basil tried in vain to purchase the clock. Strasburg became alarmed lest the maker (name not given) should sell it to a rival city, and made sure that it would not leave the town by purchasing it and selecting a chapel in tho cathedral for its re ception. The Hasil emissaries were much enraged, and demanded that tho inventor make a duplicate of his wonderful machine. He agreed to the i position, but the Strasburg au thentic s would not permit the master artist to construct another clock on tho same principle. Tne inventor declared that his talents were his own, and that he would not ask the leave of any one to exercise them. This aroused the ire of the presiding magistrate, who ordered that the clock maker have his eyes put out. He asked to bo allowed the privi lege of adding some final improvements to his work before his light was shut out forever, and the request was granted. I.ong and tenderly he ga :ed upon his crowning work until the revengeful magistrate gave the surgeons orders to pierce the inventor's eyeballs. Nerved to madness, and knowing that his time had come, the gray-haired artist snatched a Spring from the clock. The works be gan to whiz, the weights fell rattling tc the floor, while the bell pounded out hundreds of hours in the course of a few minutes, breathing out its final sound in a tone of despair. The inventor, whom tho surgeons had blinded while the clock was wrecking itself, stood erect and cried out at the top of his voice "Rejoice, proud citizens, in my work: the clock is destroyed, and my revenge is complete." Tho clock, according to the authority last above cited, was silent for nearly two and a half centuries, when it was fully restored by a young I'arUian arti san in 1S4-J. From the above accounts it is safe to conclude that there is really a wender ful astronomical clock in the Strasburg cathedral, but it would be out of the question to decide with any degree of certainty by whom or when made, and what its past and present condition. It is a sad commentary on the unreliabili ty of history that the story of such a wonderful inventor and his work should have become a mere legend in the short space of three centuries. It is a well-known fact that the great emperor, Charles V., was a skillful watch and clock maker, as well as a diplomat and ruler. After his abdica tion, Charies retired to the monastery of St. Just and occupied his entire time in studying the mechanical arts, being delighted beyond measure at his success as an artisan, in what was then, as now, the most skilled of the handicrafts. That he was head and shoulders above tho common bred tradesmen may be in ferred from the fact that at that early date, when the art of watch and clock making was in its infancy, he construct ed a striking clock small enough to be worn as an ear pendant, and which for perfectness has never been equaled. This wonder is still preserved among other monastic relics at St. Just and is viewed by hundreds of ambitious young clock makers, who wish to become per fect in their art, each year. It is less than three-fourths of an inch tall and only half that wide, yet it has forty-two and springs, to say nothing of the nine teen pieces of which the case and alarm are formed. Charles kept his clocks ar ranged around the sides of his ceil on shelves and his watches on a plush cov ered table in the center of the room, all except his marvellous pendant clock, which he continually wore in his ex royal ear. ISefore its destruction by the French soldiers in 1(593, the Heidelberg clock occupied a prominent place in the dome of tho Town Hall. As the hammer struck each hour the figure of an old man, almost life-size, opened the door and walked out in full view of tho streets below, removed his hat. bowed and returned to his niche. As he eloscd the door a cock flapped his wings ami crowed Father Time made some blind strokes with his scythe while some soldiers dressed as French and Hermans foughton a platform below. At midnight and noon the chimes played national airs, and once each twenty-four hours the life of man was illustrated with figures depicting the seven ages. The astro nomical charts and diagrams were said to have been even more intricate and complicated than those of the Strasburg clock. The French soldiers debated the matter long and earnestly before destroying such a marvel, until they saw tho French soldiers in the automat ical fight on the clock's platform over come by the Gorman troops, after which they willingly ruined both clock and hall. Early in the present century a Lon don oloekmaker of great wealth caused a marvelous piece of clock work to be contracted and given as a present to the Emperor of China. The body of the clock was a chariot, to which was at tached, in imitation of Cupid's outfit, two tiny doves. Behind a figure of Mer cury seemed to be aiding the dove horses in the task of pulling the lady, the umbrella and humming bird, which vent to finish up the curiously designed affair. The lady stood in the front of the chariot, covered with the umbrella, which rested on two tiny columns of gold, holding in one hand the face of the clock, and two ribbons attachc-d to the heads of her birds with the other. The humming bird, which swun^ be neath the clock face, acted as a pendu lum and continually moved from right to left in seeming perpetual eestacy. The statue of Death, a hideous looking The umbrella above, although to all ap ikeleton, cotnes out to strike at each pearances not at all connected \vith the fuarter, hut is driven oil by a statu® of clock-wori, was in reality the bill wburb the t!f and hammer struck upon. The birds in front were fixed upon spiral springs whi'-h kept them moving all tho while, conveying a sort of jerking motion to the lady's hand which held the ribbon, which, in turn, seemed to bo imparted to the humming-bird pendulum below. Mercury opened his mouth and rolled his eyes at the end of each hour, the birds fluttered with renewed activity, the small lady wagged her head, while a small gold dog at her feet barked lustily. The maker spent five years in constructing this unique rarity, and claimed to have been at a mor,eod out lay of over £3,000 sterling. There is the wonderful i- e lock set up in the ice palace of the Empress Catherine, of Russia, all the wheels of which were made of pure ice. This, curious and uulikelv as it may soem. is a historical fact. The ico clock kept kept time fourteen daya before the wheels froze toge:hi". The lo.i-year clue, at tin tho straw clock of br. l' i clock made by the Vulcan pany of London, the bread hv the Peruvian Indian and sent as gift to the priest of Milan, Italy, the v-heels and case ma It-entirely of hard ened bread. A half dozen other rari ties come to mind bu e-e will not permit enumeration. John W. Wright, in St. Louis Re pub! .-. Paper (.'on clock mad" INFLUENCE OF FICTION. it l»ois Not liiimiiit to as Much as Some Would Hive I'M Uelle.e. Tie- time being one in which fiction has triumphantly assert its supremacy over every other form of literature, it is not strange that it has occurred to more than one thinker to inquire how far the conventional views of the influence of fiction upon morals and life is the cor rect one. There are those who hold that the aim of narrative is simply to enter tain, and there are those who hold, on the other hand, that its true fi net ion is to instruct, a view in which thev find themselves much supported by the fact that so much of the greatest teaching of the world has been dotie in the guise of parables. There is perhaps a third school who hold some sort of a moderate and very likely most rational view, but no body ever pays much attention to mod erate views, so that the-e do not really count for much. The age is one of whie'i wo hear every day that it is px-eedingly materialistic, and to thi- i- not infre quently added the charge v even art has come to be looked at fiviu its util itarian sides, so that one expects to fin i that fiction has come to the vehiiv of instruction in the practical details life. To be logical, novels nowaday should be simply disguised treatises upon some practical phase of life and asa matter of fact such some of them are. Whatever may be theory, however, in practice the reading of fiction does not put one in a frame of mind to receive instruction. Wo have never been ablo to believe that there is much good in the strictly practical realms of human affairs. Tho utilitarian is so far outside of the province of art that art does not touch it even when it strains after it, but only gets outside of its own domain without compassing that of the other. If good is to be done by fiction it must be done in the realms which belong tc its own domain. The reach of the talc must be toward the imaginative, the in tellectual or the ethical. Even then it there be a conscious and obvious inten tion to teach it all goes for little. Fic tion must lead by being, not by preach ing. But, quite aside from what flctioii might or might not be theoretically, i* the question what it is in it# influence. As a plain, everyday matter of fact, fic tion is usually a matter of amusement, pure and simple. People read and for get what they are, what encompasses them, and the things that wear life out if looked at too long or too closely, Iu other words, it may as well be accepted as a fact that fiction is whatGeorge Eliot was fond of calling "opium eating it is one of those things which dis guise the taste of life and transform one from a mortal into a dispassionate being so far as realities are concerned, by absorbing the attention upon un realities. Of course, if meanwhile fic tion is what it should oe, and appeals to its readers through its proper sphere, its influence may be high and good but the conscious purpose of the reader is only to bo amused. It follows that the fiction which is intentionally didactic is least of all likely to effect its purpose. It is precisely when they do not know that they are being preached to that people are most influenced. The ago is one of unbelief and doubt, and it is k comfort themselves in their restlessness that people so generally take to the reading of fiction. If the tales they read repicture for them the same world they are trying to escape, are they so likely to be elevated and cheered as if they are shown the ideal and the possible'. Theories are all very well, but in the presence of the great fact that mankind can only be led by its inclinations, not even its convictions proving in the long run a very powerful tractor, is it not wise to reach them through their prefer ences in other words, to reach them in the only way in which they can be reached effectively? A Word About Iiilp Wishes. Idle wishes are those which begin and end with themselves. They lead to no effort, they develop no energy, they in augurate no plan of action. It would probably astonish most of us could we realize truly how many of our wishes were of this character. Sometimes they relate to a past which is irrevocable. Men wish that they had inherited prop erty, or a healthier constitution, or bet ter tendencies that they had been brought up under better auspices or trained with more care or uislo n that they had made different decisions, or pursued different courses, or been led by different advisers. Such wishes, while they naturally glance upon us as unavoidable regrets, should be but the passing guests of a moment. Save as they may suggest improvements for out future, they are useless and exhausting. —Farm and Fireside. —The metal of a politician is known by his ring.—Rome SeutineL THE FARMING WUKI.D. DIGGING A WELL. Device by Wlitdi a Difficult Job He .Made Kany. Any farmer who has to dip well ireads the tusk, for it is a disagreeable uid heavy job to dig the dirt and stones and ivise' them with the accumulated water that must be kept out of the wuv. I had occasion to dig one eight or nine years ago, and I struck a large volume if water, which came in great quan tities, before tho well was half way iown. I put up a frame, as shown in Fig. 1, and with the aid of a horse, the work was reduced to a minimum. To put the plan'in practice, put up two posts, one near the well and the other far enough away so that there will be room for the well and a place for a wagon or cart the space between the two must therefore be from 1:' to 10 feet. Bore two i. •'••. -.1-. f: lil"' frotn the i ,r ir».n ""-l like that on which the hay-carrier in trie barn runs. On top of each post make a mortise and in it insert and spike fast a round pole of sut'.icient size to hold the posts stitllv apart: put in the iron rod and screw the nuts up tightly. Then put on the hay carrier. Guy the posts on each end with ropes well fastened or pegged to the ground, and al-a put a good bmce against each post so as to make the con trivance very strong and well staved. Saw a molasses barrel in two: firmly nail or bolt to the bottom of a half-bar rel a l' or -2-inch oak-plank t) inches wide, and cut axles from the 4 or ."i inches extending over the sides of the bottom for the bail to work on. Cut a or 4-inch piece of hickorv or other tough wood and halve i' ore a hole through each end for 1:i- axles to go throujrh: then ImmmI it th° barrel and I. il on he ax aiid ii.il 111• •::i in FIU. 2. place with wooden linch-pins. Nearthe top of the bail put^a stiff bra -e, for when the tub is loaded the bail will press tightly against its sides so that it can hardly be upset, and it should be upset easily. Fasten a wooden block on one side of the tub for the bail to rest against when the tub is full, and bore a hole through the top and put an iron bolt to stay the bail. In unloading, pull out this iron bolt, give the tub a light push and it will upset into the wagon beside the well. With every thing in good working order a well can be dug very quickly. In the figure shown 1 represents the well, 2 tho posts, 'A the beam at the top, 4 the braces, 5 the ropes, li a hay-carrier. 7 the bucket, 8 and 9 tho pulley rope. In T-igiivn •, is the hail. 2 ihe brace, the axles and 4 the iron bolts. Rural New Yorker. FARM STOCK. IT will not do to keep a young and spirited horse standing in the stable too long without work. He must be kept, in exercise, even if only turned out on a lot. Pi'oKiTMii.i. feeding must be steady feeding—in spasmodic feeding the feasts may do actual harm, and the short rations surely entail loss. Do not tram one day and starve the next. I i is a mistake to use a cheek-rein i«d hard bit to hoist the head of a horse up out of the natural position especially when at work or hauling a load. The suffering it causes the animal is in tense. "Fmk.d more oats this year," advises Rural New Yorker. "There is no rea son why oats should not be fed with profit to all kinds of stock, cattle, sheep, pigs and poultry. We do not mean fed exclusively, but fed in combination with other grains and fodders." BUIOIIT oat straw is one of the best fod ders we have for horses, and preferable to poor hay at all times. The best way to feed is to run it through a cutter anil mix bran and ground oats with it. It should be slightly moistened so as to make the ground feed adhere to it. Thk future development and useful ness of your cows will bo greatly in fluenced by the treatment given them while calves. Oats and clover hay are the best feed for growing stock. They are both very cheap, and it will pay to feed liberally for the next six months. Tin rapid growth of ar animal when it is young wi:I bo an advantage to it l».*.er on in life. Tho greatest propor tionate gain with animals is diiring the first year. If tho .young stock is kept In thrifty, growing condition tho first two years the greater proportion of work required to secure :i profit will have been performed. IN feeding and fattening hogs it is important to have a lot as near of the same size, weight and quality as possl ,ble It will sen for a prj{,f, t)ian A PRESSING NEED. A National L.ibratory R«»R not to dition When Nebraska summoned Dr. Bil lings to her State University it was with the intent to set in motion lines of investigation which would redound di rectly to the great material good of the stock-raiser, and now that the results of his three years' labors in this field are beginning to be understood by tha farmers of that State there is a unani mous demand for the continuation of the work whi'-h he inaugurated and which was brought to a close by his re 'irement.. At the Missouri State I'ni si-sit y. Dr. Paul Paquin, one of tha .iblest of the younger generation of vet rinarians. has begun what promises to Failures in the use of vaccines may mean failures of the manipulations or methods of tho laboratory, but they can not disprove the efficacy of the princi ple of prophylaxy. It has been tested too extensively in Europe for any doubt on the subject, and we can not fail to succeed here under proper conditions." This is testimony broad and sweeping of the value of inoculation as a prevent ive of the communicable diseases of live stock which add such risks to the in du-try. Wo do not believe that Dr. Liautard would make such positive statements concerning the efficacy of this means of prevention without hav .ing the solid facts on which to rest them, and if he is correct in his posi tion the call comes to the experiment stations with a clearness and emphasis that admits of no denial to inaugurate the investigations necessary to the per fecting of these protective measures. This work must be undertaken. A Na tional laboratory is needed, and it is also demanded that competent workers be placed in a number of our stations with ample provisions for the exercise of their best efforts. The more the sit uation is studied the more derelict del those in charge of our stations appear to be in not, having already instituted investigations of this nature. iale-I,nt i-li. The illustration of the gate-latch is reproduced from "Fences, Gates and Bridges.*' While the latch is not, convenient as manv that prevents stock from opening th# gate. For a gate that opens both ways, extend the mortise t,o the opposite side of the post a.id put in another bingo, making a double latch. WHENEVER a fertilizer is applied the benefits therefrom extend into the sec ond arid, perhaps, third and fourth years. There are always some portions of the fertilizer that are insoluble, but which become available after the lapse of a year or more. As certain plant- re quire particular plant, foods, the second crop may be more benefited by the f,.f tili/.r-r than the first, much depending on the composition of the fertiliser. OHIO is waking up in the matter of road improvement. In ono day recent ly four bills wfre introduced in the Legislature each having reference to an improvement of the roads of a single ounty. They do not s. a lot of various size* and weights. If when fatted there are a out and kill for home use or dress for I Htniil] ono*tt I ""uy. moy clo not. seem, however, to or on- of pxi rasize. the lot n ill sell for "j4*1* l'r(Wossed so far as to contem mure in the average if you tako these a Mm. InvMtlj®» tloa of DISEASES of It is cause happy t'l" lie like to AUIIIIHU. the credit of the genius of our advanced agriculture that scientific investigations of the diseases of ani mals have been carried on in only two of our State experiment stations in ad to the work in the Agricultural Department at Washington. It is be coming day by day more apparent that scientific investigators work to greater advantage when they have as checks the results of the investigations of collaboratenrs. Our most experienced bacteriologists and pathologists have yet much to learn in the study of germ diseases, and the opportunities for mis take in their conclusions are so great that substantial advance is best assured throujrh com^vurison with results worked out by others in the same field. er as an investigator but with thc-se ex experiment stations i into this field which !l vest igation. Prof. he American Veto -.his to say on tha ai y number of that be a brilliant care of animal disi.i-•-. '•options our S: it' have n"' ve»» i. so sadlv need-" Liautar i e 1. .r i inary Review, n.• subject in the 1 magazine, whi-•! commends to tne of those charged our experiment st "S.t-.stied as vv of i, -great value of Pasteur's discov er.'-. and of the immense benefits which misrht be derived from their proper improvement, and the incalcu lable advantage which the veterinarian and biopathologist. might confer on tho profession through their application to the animals entrusted to their care, wo have again and again pleaded for tho introduction of a systematic and general practice of preventive inoculation in the treatment of the contagious diseases of our animal patients. We have urged our brethren to enter upon a course if experiments in that direction, and wo have imported and offered to furnish our coll":e'-"s gratuitously with a sup ply of a for inoculation, and wo have a: :.-t earnestly asked of our friends -,siio oave charge of large experi mental laboratories to work, prepare, .est and furnish the profession with tho viruses and cultures which are now know n beyond possible and rcabonabln doubt to protect animals against tho dangers of infection and contagion. To this day, however, our exertions havo remained almost entirely fruitless. Breeder's Gazetio ?r''n"''al law which will operate U'r Ser^'r^rho^ u: i l, a lll- b-neflt of all. itv~r ard th6 •1, 11 I N„t v I)oor N iv the i i ,iv she al w seettu| 'She enjoys life •onteiited woman, -hang -i.l i es with I she made ttu .u i lintum her env.v, and this is whuti -Happy Of course 1 am tVr'i' feet health. My dear Mrs tells tne why i//n are not 1,. suffering from functional a was a martyr to female\\u but Dr. Pierce's Favor t, cured me. as it wil!,\ou if v-uw is iiu-ntuitC' to give satisfi.-ii case or price i$l.UI) return-i ,J0HN tlCfciort Sr Dlt. PlEWE's Pell ts n headache, constipation and 1 driw pouus it otl CI IS U 'g' Ifilue the yd tli -i gin l*:iJ SOMB men's heads ARE So shadow from a brick wall w:j. concussion of the brain ^'t p: How s TlilgJ TVe offer One u ml red I twIT any case of ('utan-h that can ,^*ei by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure F. J. CHUNKY Co I'ri.i.s Wo, the undersigned, h-ive't.,'.' Cheney for the last fi! teen years"'''' him perfectly honorable' in transactions, and financial ai,v oijt any obligations made b" the'rf*-i W est \r. 1 ruax.W holosale Iii-tiffp'^a^ Waidihg, Rinnan it M.u\,li 'wV toil ll Druirtrists, Toledo. Olno H.ci s Catarrh Cnre i„ takn:" ,l«W*il aftmijuirivTly on tho hli•-! s ni» 1 faces of the system -'V Price. OK-, per bottle. THE temperance advocate think* glass which is wromr side up \t is ,, up. ushirigron Star The ft A Pontoon Bridge, Uicoiuv wagon and loot bruise nsa® souri River between S-..H1X tuarck. .vK» miles Homesteaders piWSttnc the Sioux lands recentIv ceded to i{ eminent, should goby w.t\ i.f lands are very tortile, !l.e stnij-HKJ* ^JACOBS is one (I.VIK-I.AICH. To enre I.iliotirneu' Malaria, l.iver e: niij certain i BILE impi*. with men., maker winter than wear knd I ar do in summer. |V paradise. Horses, cattle and sheqifilWiBr* a perfect ion. Tho farmer may do. JSfed in groivinir corn, wheat and tlax. rs time 1 I serious 'twderaMon with the con.! of at'.otis: have been for v ara get a 1 rev home Addm™"" Homesteader*' I'nion, lVrre, So.B»*• w full information free. plosioi o Evrar man has h, rWn parties e«pec:al,\ tne .et«. w.,o.-e ways area "P* Ki' America,. titoae-i 1 psrtle The IllueH. Nfdiy. Tl..a is a svnoiiym lor ttai 2 harassed condition of the mm»l vfei its oriirm in dyspepsia All Hie mv.- A® »pt that, under tne name of the "oluesffsltoii devils." -III :,TIII:S" imil "n ... •»-»«_ torment, the dyspeptic almost ei* •lit, the dyspeptic ahi uii-h when attacked wit it i! Stomach Bitters, that. latcs SIH-SS. cons! fever. i .ey (Mmpiaii.'s "PIT thete's n 10I1 riches iu tru: WV9 se IP* !u ttfttt ie i» the Aoux &»if pi Ittasd, a pi -y Mked vo-.r tr vour Y oil Hens SU e[-A CurH^Bfcni Backac 1 could hardly walk bnrk suiter \I rul fng iennaneiuly cured tailed to do so. na Backar Them BackacJ* ®01"1 *i v "nobls igenc i blood li KKi*:D. urni E. I ml. FcV vet* ot :n iontiiieJ to Cioverdnie, From a hnd rold JKIHIN and 1 guflered irreatlv i r.-niM h.-i'i'iv m-.vc "Man. Oli, which enrol i a. I 'I Ml 1' When the Liver li crowilfd or ctc" with a mass of impurities, its tc l-ccomrs slnr' .incl difficult. PlMf 'Ol.th'* 1 ilca.lai he, l'au. 1:1 5»uf, 1'ired Soldi) rs ing and Geix ral Weaknen mw) resulting, if unchecked, Broken wa Sr.iai'' befSl V toilfc When you have these a few th'srs of uie .til No lo it Price, 25 cents. Sold by all dnfgi lOM li and prrnarrd only h* Fleniinif B' iate ((Ti l'.ttsb irtfh, I'.i. Ilcware ut MW- |WJjjv fciu made iu St. Louis. twtn* To Restore Tc*' and Strength W»ia to the System when weakened by Met, La Grippe or any other Illness, Ayer'sSarsapafi" is positively unequalled. Lowell, Mass. pr Get the BEST. Prepared by Or. J. C. Ayer & Full bta ol |nn u I to 08 imi |e 1 I'MJ the SMAI.I, SIZK to •. ./cent-, per t»ttie KI88INC cent? (.ci s or stuni|»o. -M1TII I U E Jul Da I IK 1. Sti When I 111V -urc I il" tint mean mere:I? 1 for a In,to una I le li I hern o'OC nolle*! rui-.v I -IV.- nir-'le 11"' 1 l.F.l'SY orKAM.INUSK'KNKSSalite '•"Xjw-..1r»^tno* Hint. ,4.' the wor^t eure. K.'iiil at one for r.si'e" ft"*' my inf ,110.1.- rrfiH'dy. One Meron" It. i i Itoo r. M. IVIII-1 Sir* **-NA3IE TLLLH T*A I'SILT A.AR* LLM* FOU I I' IS to U• i.iii *"*3 19 HI LKiniMi KoO# I* Pd*** AU. cot*mint. tu