Or, in other words, Hood's Sarsaparilla, is a universal need. If good health is to be expected during the coming season the blood must be purified now,. All the germs of disease must be destroyed and' the bodily health built iy>. Hood's Sar saparilla is the only true blood purifier prominently in the public eye to-day. Therefore Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best medicine to take in the spring. It will help wonderfully in cases of weakness, nervousness, and all diseases caused by impure blood, llemember, "My little girl.has always had a poor appetite. I have given her Hood's Sarsa parilla, and sincejl have given it to her she has had a good appetite and she looks well. I have been a great sufferer with headache and Rheumatism. I have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla. I am nOw well and" have gained in strength. My husband was very sick and all run down. I de cided to give him Hood's Sarsaparilla and he began to gain, and now he has got so he works every day." MRS. ANNIE DUNLAP, 385 E. 4th St., S. Boston, Mass, True Blood Prominently in the Public Eye To-Day J* The Lowest Kates Ever Made to the South Will be in offect'via tho Louisville nn.1 Kiisliville Railroad OH Ma rob 3. April "2 and SO, 1S95. Hound trip tickets will l.e sold to points in Iventufky. Tennessee, Alabama,. Mississippi. Georgia and West Florida, and one way tickets to Florida at about half the. regular ratey. A.sk your ticket agent about it, and if. he chn not sell you, excursion tickets- write, to O. T. At more, (leneral Passenger Agent, Louisville. Ky., or Geo;. Lu Cross, N. W. P. A., Chicago, 111. •t, "V -;,,Sla<le;]to.Wofki' •- "XL Scdfclimau, litis 'invented a illread- epimiing a pn rat us, and is said to have trained two mice to work it. The mechanical principle of the contri vance is a small mill \yliicli is operated by the paws of the mice. They can each wind on and off from 100 to 1120 pieces of thread per day, and to do this they must supply a motor power by which a course of 10*4 miles could be traversed. It is asserted that the mice perform this task daily without apparent fatigue, and that a half penny worth of Hour furnishes them with food enough for live weeks. During that time the little animals have spun about 3,850 threads each, a yard and a half in length. .... .The. twinkling of the stars forebodes bad wea.ther, because it shows that there are aerial currents of different temperatures, thus probably indicating atmospheric disturbances. "HELP!/' A WOMAN'S DESPAIRING CRT. It is Heard. A Prominent Actress Escapes Great Danger. [SPECIAL TO OUB LADY READERS ] How startling is a woman's cry for help! " What can I do ? Whore shall knows not. This today from every I go?" She cry goes out city, town, and hamlet in this country. It comes from women who are Buffering tortures o;f body and mind from some form of female complaint. Many, through natu ral modesty, do not consult physicians, for many dread their examinations. They know not where to seek for help. This alarming con dition of things is simply wrong. The peculiar ailments of £'] women are curable, '> and in most cases very speedily. Lvilia ^ E. Pinkliam's genius ,, and liberality have ^ given to every woman a sure and consistent means of relief. * No woman should ssffer when she can obtain free advice. She can state her case fully to Mrs. Pink- ham, woman to wo man, without reserve, and the answer will come from one of her own sex. Be one of the vast army of women who write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., and preserve your health. " Only a woman can understand a woman's ills." A prominent actress, in a "letter to Mrs. Pinkliam, says:-- - " . . . Y o u c a n n o t i m a g i n e t h e f e a r ful Condi lion I was in when 1 first wrote to you. I was simply of no use to myself or any one else. I had worked hard, and my nervous system, was shat tered from womb trouble and travel ling constantly. I ran the gauntlet of doct ors' theories, till my health and money were rap idly van ishing. . . . I'm all rigit now, and am gaining flesh dailj I follow your advice faithfully in everything. Thank you ten thousand times for what your knowledge and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound have done for me." The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. HE WAS A "BUFFER.* DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). "iHe has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is war ranted when tne right quantity is taken.- When the lungs are affected ^it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label.. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will C^use squeamish feelings at first. ' No change of diet ever necessary. Eat toe best you can get, and enough of it Dose# one tablespoonful jn water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. N. U. ' , No. 17--95 Mr*. WlnnIow'H SOOTHING SYBUP for Children teething; soitens the (turns, reduce8 inflammation, aliayt paiu. cures wiud oolUj ."ji&nts a bottle. Sans; Froi'd^m a Typical Knglish Sentry While on Duty. A certain popular general takes de light in talking to young soldiers espe : chilly when he is not recognized." One day a Lancashire recruit was posted as a sentry on the General's quarters. One of the servants gave him something to eat: A moment later, a short, elderly mau, attired in a tweed suit and gait ers, with bis billycock over his eyes, came up.: , ;" . "What dost ta want lieerV" said the sentry. "Oh, I belong here," said the stranger. "And what are you doing, eating, sen try?" "Xaw. I'm not. If tha had been two minutes later, I wild have been fair on to job tha knaws." .! "What have you got--bread and ham V" "Xaw. guess agin." "Broad and beefV" "Xa.v, it's not;- guess llgin," said the sentry. » "Well, then, it's biread and mutton." "Eh, tha's reet. Willi tha ha a bit?" "Thanks. 110," said the stranger. "But as you don't appear to know me, try. and guess who I am." \ "Eh, tlui's a' reet. Tha's general's groom." "You're wrong: try again." "Well, tha luoight be the general's butler." "No, but you are getting nearer." "Eh.! thow moight be th'owd buffer hissolf." "Right," said the stranger. "I am the old buffer himself." "Eh!" gasped the sentry, shaking vio lently, and holding out the food. "Howd this while 1 gie thee a chuck up ('present arms')." The genral turned away to hide a smile he could not suppress at the sen try's confusion. A few days hater, at his inspection, the general said he had met men at different times and places who failed to recognize him, and hoped it would not occur in future. Our Lan cashire lad. who expected to get severe ly punished, was heard to say: "He's not very big. but he is every inch a soger, tha knows." j The Arabs of Sinai. Each night we called a council after dinner and discussed many things With our people. Our hunters were sum moned. and while .Tosepii interpreted, their swarthy faces peered through the tent door into the light, and when the conference"was over they received a handful of tobacco, coveted even more than food. These men were as anx ious for a-successful hunt as we could desire, but their advice was not al- \\ ays sound. They liked children, and think that if they have observed a tiling once, it will always recur. I11 my opinion, the sinister reputation which has, to some extent, attached to these Arabs of Sinai since the tragic murder of Prof. Pal mer at the time of the Arabi rebellion, is undeserved. They were probably induced by secret mes»agcs frflm Cairo te regard his mission to obtain camels as an act of war, and they treated him ;uid( his companions as they and their people have always treated their enemies. 1 found them trustworthy. They drive a hard bargain, but. this ratified, the conditions are kept faithfully. Their goats are tended on the moun tains by the unmarried girls, a sure sign of good manners. My daughters soon found that they could wander, unattended; for many miles from camp, secure of an unaffectedly gracious re ception from any casual tent dweller that they met. Could this "be said of an\- civilized country on the shores of the Mediterranean?--E. X. Buxton, in the Nineteenth Century. Here's a Porker for You! The town of Bridgeton. X. J., is not much given to boasting, but it modest ly steps forward and claims the record in the line of.hogs. A monster porker was slaughtered there a few days ago tliatotipped the beaia at 1.0^4 pounds. It was 7Vii feet long, measured <> feet ti inches around the giptli and 18 inches through the back. The Evolution , Of medicinal agents is gradually rele-J gatingtheold-time herbs, pills, draughts and vegetable extracts to the rear and bringing into general use the pleasant, and effective liquid laxative. Syrup of Figs. To get the true remedy see that it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale by all leading druggists. A DOR Ate His Nose. Harry W. Seymour, of New York, is suing a restaurant keper/ for $(10,000 because the hitter's dog bit off Sey mour's nose and ate it, TOPICS FOE FARMERS A DEPARTMENT PREPARED FOB " OOFC RURAL FRIENDS. The Need Of Irrigated Fields on Many Small Farms **- Some Agricultural Brancbejs that Are Not OyerdonCr=_ The Fruit Crop--Farm Notes! - - Irrigation on the Farm. The need of irrigated fields on many small farms is felt by the owner every dry season, but where there is no regu lar organized system it is sometimes expensive, nnd in other rnnrn out of the question to attempt irrigation. But where 'ponds or streams of water are located-on the place, or evon sorac dis tance off i>n; anothBr property, the water can be led to the fields by means of pipes, and then distributed over the land to suit the needs of the crops. The cost of this would be very little. A pipe, or even a wooden water-trough, could be constructed so that the water would flow iu a series.of ditches or re ceiving ponds. Brooks and streams of water can be tapped very easily in this way, so that the running water will hot be entirely wasted while the farm crops are dying for thirst. In each in stance, however, the farmer must use his judgment as to the best method of getting his water to the tields^ - Then the water can be .spread over the fields by some of the approved methods of irrigation, On fields that are. nearly level the greatest difficulty will be experienced iu getting the water to run equally throughout the field. One way to do this is to construct ditches 011 either side of the field, and bank them up a foot higher than the field. At right angles from these ditches parallel rows for the vegetables should be made. The water should then be run into the banked-up ditches until it overflows. At eVery row the water will run down in a stream, and secure force enough to carry part of it at least to the middle of the garden: Similar streams coming from the oppo site direction will meet in the middle, and in this way the whole ground will be flooded,with water when needed. To obtain water in this way it may be necessary to construct receiving ponds higher than the level of the field. These must be tilled before the drought and when the spring floods are high. If the pond is naturally several feet higher than the field, the slope will be sufli- cieut to dispense with any such artifi cial reservoirs.--Germantown Tele graph".* Crops Profitable to Raise. There are a few branches of farming not overdone. There is so little buck wheat raised that the flour sells at 5 cents a pound. Then there is a greater demand for good sorghum than there is a supply. Flax is very high when you want to buy; why not raise some to feed? It will improve the stock. Fruit raising is not overdone and potatoes will bring a paying price if the crop is well tended. Grass seeds and clover- seed bring living prices. Cabbage is hard to raise, but it pays to raise for market. There is money in cheese at 15 to 20 cents per pound. Stock your farms with cows, build a creamery and sell milk. There is more money in it than making butter. It pays to raise sweet potatoes. The navy bean sells at o cents per pound and is scarce. Seed down your farms and pasture stock at To cents per month. Farm bet ter what you do farm, raising the best. Read the papers and raise the crops that are, scarce, for they always com mand a good price. Vote for the party that will set the manufactories going, and my word for it, when all the people get to working they will take 10 eating and they will make way with much of the surplus and at better prices thau now.--Farm and Home. 15IOO Howard, 8100. The readers of tilts paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one Ureaiied disease that science lias been able to cure In all its staces. and that Is'catalrrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the med ical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional requires a constitutional treatment. Hall s Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, actin"; directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and pi vine the patient strength by budding the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith In its-curative powers that thev offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Send for list of Testimonials. Address. F. .1, CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. 8^-boid by Druggists, 75c. 1 - Our Fruit Crop. s The fruit crops of this country in crease With every year's planting, and yet the supply is unequal to the de- maud. The quality of'th" fruit deter mines tiie latter. If it i- >.,1, not only is the demand for hon onsumption greater thau in any oih< r country in the world, but so also is the foreign demand. The reasons for this are ap parent. The farms of the Unted States are in the main owned by those who occupy them, and they plant for all time, without any fear of being dis possessed of their improvements. The growth of an orchard is a work of time, and only the owners can afford to plant large,orchards. When their fruits are gathered and placed on the market they present attractions to the people, the consumers, of such a character as to lie perfectly irresistible, hence more fruits are purchased for home con sumption and more consumed every year. But then the same qualities that commend and make them popular here at home, that is to say size, quality, beauty and cheapness, ^pmmmd them to people abroad, make them popular, and increase the demand. In Great Britain alone the call for our fruit increases every yeaj\ and this year, if the crop is only what the pro ducers expect, it will be greater than ever, and many ship loads of apples and other fruits will go there**, The great thing to be looked to, however, is the prevention of injury by insects and fungi. Too many have neglected this in the past, and hence had only small, disfigured aud wormy fruit, lack ing in character, attractiveness and ap petizing qualities, for which there Is no demand at home or abroad.--Col- mau's Rural World. \ Goats Paying Better than Sheep. A Missouri farmer writes in the St. Louis Journal of Agriculture that he finds goats profitable for rough land filled with weeds aud bushes. He has had goats for four years, and they have destroyed the bushes, sumach and small persimmon trees. His hogs have he.aa free from disease, while all around him farmers who did nojb keep goats lost most of theis hogs by cholera. The writer says that the meat.of young goats is bettdr 'tlian mutton. The wool of sheep is now worth so little that the question is worth thinking of whether a few goats may not be kept with profit on rough land uiisuited to culti vation in some of the Eastern States. We produced bushels of corn. in 1893 1,010,400,130 WE have not been without Piso's Cure for Consumption for 20 years.--LIZZIK FISKKELI., Camp St., Harristiurg, Pa., May 4.181(4. Cows Going Dry top Long. It pays to take extra paltys to get all the milk from cows. They need plenty of good food, too. A little carelessness in milking or in feeding has doomed the owner of a„youug cow thus treated to the penalty of keeping her three or four months for nothing every year all the remainder of her life. The young heifer's teats are not large, and it is young heifers that are most apt .to be neglected. ' The careless milker says that their milk does, not amount to enough to pay if or clean milking. That is where such a man makes ,a mistake. It always pays to do the best work. ' •< The Horse's Foot. . :< ; Rev. W. H. H. Murray once laid down a rule In regard to trimipiug a horse's foot that every horsenian in the world should cut out and paste in his hat "Never," he says, "allow the knife to touch the sole of> a horse's foot, nor the least bit of it to be pared away, because nature needs the full bulk of it and has amply provided for its removal at the proper time. Sec ondly, ^ever^allow^kjoi^ to be piit to tiie frog, because nature never pro vides too much of it to answer the purpose for which the Creator design ed it, and the larger it is the more swiftly, easily and safely will the horse go-" Best Soil for Cherries. Cherry tree roots naturally go very deeply, and the trees need a soil that is thoroughly iiriderdrained to at least three feet in depth. If planted where they come in contact with stagnant water the fruit will mildew or rot. Many cherry orchards planted on low ground suffer from too-much wet The high and dry ground where the trees thrive best "is, apt to be delieient in mineral fertility. There is no kind of fruit that is more benefited-by~nrplen- t if ill supply of potash'than is the cher ry., It should be given every winter,' and will then be ready for tiie cherry tree roots to take up the following sea- sou. JBEST |» THE WOBUR OYAL BAKING POWDER is the purest ^nd strongest baking powder made. It has received the highest award at"the U. S. Gov't official investigation, and at all the Great International Expositions and World's Fairs-wherever exhibited in competition with others. It makesjhe finest, lightest, sweetest, most wholesome bread, cake and pastry. More economicalthan any other leaven- THE RISING SUTf STOVE POLISH in cakes for general blackiug of a stove. , THE SUN PASTE POLISH for a quick ' ^-.--afier-din-ner-shiue, applied and pol- ; ishg,d- with a cloth. | Morse Bros., Props., Canton, Mass., U.S.A. irtg agent. Insects in Peas. To destroy bugs in seed peas put the peas in water, and the bags and injur ed peas wiir rise to the surface. Skim them off and destroy them I'our off the water and spread thr- peas to dry. Pea$ that have been attacked by wee vil should not be used for seed, not only because such seed may not germi nate. but also because more weevil will be produced to attack the crop. Keeping Hens Laying. Xo hen will lay an egg every day in the year. Even those that are non sitters will not do it at seasons when they are moulting, and there is usually a rest of a day or two, if not longer, between the different hatches, when tiie natural time i onies for the hen to sit. The time of moulting may be shortened by care and good feeding, giving the hens the kind of food, meat, etc.. that is required to make their new coat of feathers. Warm Water for Von tie Stock. It may be disputed whether it is nec essary to warm water for older ani mals, but all young stock should have water with the chill taken off of it to drink in winter. The digestion of young animals is weak, and drinking ice-cold water makes it worse. It is this cold water that makes rough, star ing coats on calves and colts, no matter how well they may be fed. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. 108 WALL ST.* NEW-YORK. The Courtship of Miles Standish. Encouraged by the hearty welcome given to these two American poems. Longfellow, in 1S5S, published a third, "The Courtship if Miles Standish." In this he told uO pathetic tale of parted lovers'," l'i'or duTlie' draw oil the quaint lore of the red men; lie took his story from the annals of his own ancestors, the sturdy founders of New England. As it happened, he himself Uike his fel- 'ow-poet, Bryant) was a direct de scendant of John Alden aud Priscilla, the .Puritan maiden, whose wooing the narrated. "The Courtship of Miles Standish" is only less popular than its predecessors, "Evangeline" and "Hia- wa.th#L;" all three have been taken to lieart$Dy the American people, all were composed during the brightest years of the poet's life, when his family were growing up about him. when he was in the full possession of his powers, and had already achieved fame.--St. Nich olas. Roots in Transplanting. We had occasion some years ago to remove a thrifty barberry bush. It has never recovered from the shock. It was too old and we destnmMl too many of the roots, in proportion to the top that was left, and it lias merely lived without making growth of any consequence ever since. It is a lesson to be more careful of the roots than the top iu transplanting.--Epitomist. Rain Tree. In one of the Canary Islands there is a tree of the laurel family that rains down occasionally in tiie early morn ing quite a copious shower of tears or water drops from its tufted foliage. This water often collects at the foot of the tree and forms a kind of pond, from which the inhabitantsof the neigh borhood can supply themselves with a drinkable beverage that is absolutely fresh and pure. Jjike a Machine, Which kopt In order runs smoothly and regularly, so the bowels keep up their action If measures are taken to keep them In good working order. This infer?, of course, that they are out of order. The surest recourse then Is to Hostetter's Stomach Hitters, a laxative mild but effective, which Is also a remedy for dyspepsia, malaria, rheumatism, nervousness and kidney trouble. Tortured Worse than Tantalus. Mrs. Scribbler (impressively}--What-• ever you do, never marry a newspaper man. School chu ill--Why not? Mrs. Scribbler--I married one and I know. Every night my husband brings home a big bundle of newspapers from all over the country and they 'most drive me crazy. School chum--The newspapers'? Mrs. Scribbler--Indeed they do. They are just crammed with the most aston ishing bargains in stores a thousand miles away.--XeflfeYork Weekly. UNWISE POSTPONEMENT. Feeding Green Rye. Rye pastures in late fall and early spring are used in the same manner as when the ground was covered with grass and the animals are allowed to help themselves. This is a mistake. Green rye is composed mostly of wa ter, and is very laxative in its effects where the food used during the winter has been dry. , A little rye, however, is bene.ticial. but it should be. used care fully and with judgment. We have not a debt of $('>.<KH).(<00.000 like France, nor yet of £587,000,000, like England. Only about one-fifth of uir country- is straight up and down, like Switzer land. A baby sin has no more right to live than one that is old enough to vote. on seetis use < seecteggjld lots la rg(*£eeds am Pumpkin, Squash and Melon Seeds. In selecting pumpkin, squash or mel on seeds use only those having small of them. Those bearing iiid but few in number are the male kind, and will produce but little, if any at all. It has long been known that there is such a thing as male aud female in the pumpkin, squash and melon growth. I have made this a rule for many years, aud it holds good.--Indiana Farmer. Banging Grapes. It is some trouble, but the bagging of grapes to preserve them from rot, fun gous diseases and the attacks of bees and birds is a sure thing, aud In- who values his fruit will not be slow in do ing it This should be done soon after tiie bunches are formed. Farm Notes. Wheu blackberrying, many a large- fruited sort is met with, which, if trans planted to the" garden, would be as good as any of the cultivated sorts. Some of the best-known ones were introduced iu this way. It will now delight the Western farm ers to learn that a worm has appeared to attack the Itusian thistle. The worm appears in large numbers and suddenly disappears. Its habits ^ivill be studied at the experiment stations. Unless the surface is very uneven and the soil light and-porous but little fertility is wasted from manure drawn upon the field when fresh, even when the grouud is frozen or heavy rains in tervene. Thus on many farms, where the surface is level or only slightly roll ing, manure may be spread at almost any time of the year. A horseman advises to never allow a horse to stand on hot, fermenting manure, as this will soften the hoofs and bring on diseases of the feet; nor permit the.3old litter to lie under the manger, as the gases will taint his food and irritate his lungs, as well as his eyes. ^ If a horse balks, do not whip him, but let liinrstop and thiulc it over. After a little reflection aud a few tosses of the head he will often start of his own voli tion. Talk to him kindly, pet him, loopeh a strap'or a buckle, and he may forget his obstinate spell. An apple or a bunch of grass from the roadside may win him. Reducing the amount of food is not economy in feedingrfis the product may be reduced correspondingly. The true way to economize in feeding is to have animals that will yield the greatest quantity on a certain allowance of food, and to give them all the food they will consume as long as they are giving a profit What ail ordinary man eats and the way he eats it would ( be enough to give dyspepsia i to an ostrich--unless the os trich were wise enough to as sist his digestion from time to time with an efticieut combination of vegetable ex- ; tracts. S u c h a jj'preparation is ' Dr. Pierce's > Pleasant Pellets. -T| They are the pills par excellence 'for those who sometimes eat the wrong things and too much. They stimulate action in all of the digestive organs. They stop sour stomach, windy belcliings, heartburn, flatulence and cure constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, in digestion, sick headache and kindred derangements. Once usee! they are always in favor. Neglecting a Duty Which Ought to Be Done Now. On general principles there is no more foolish method of taking life easy thau by deferring an obvious duty. Especially foolish is the per son who postpones the work of cleans ing his blood. .There are many rea sons why this work should be done in the spring. This is the cleansing sea son. and the blood needs cleansiug be fore all things else. That tired feel ing is due to a vitiated condition of the vital fluid. The pimples and other eruptions which appear are indications that the blood has become loaded with impurities which should be expelled at once. Iu no other way can health be maintained. Now there is but one true blood purifier prominently in the pub lic eye to-day, and- that is Ilood's Sar saparilla. By taking a few bottles of this great blood cleansing medicine the bodily health can be built up so that' when the warm weather comes the system will be able to resist the debiliatiug effects of the heated sea son. Those who start with good health iu the spring, given them by a thor ough cleansing of the blood by Hood's Sarsaparilla, will be likely to pass through the summer without serious illness, and when the autumn conies they will find t hat they are supplied with strengtWsyhich they had never known at tlrsrt seasou before. The work of cleansiug the blood, in the spring is one of the most important duties of the season, because pure blood means good health, and good health is essential both to happiness and to the highest usefulness in the world. Gave His Idfe lor Liove. Walter G. Nicholson, of Milwaukee, Wis., fost all his money in speculation and, fearing that his wife might come to want he committed suicide. He had carried an insurance of $20,000. Every "Cause but the Right. One. Your heudnehe: You lay it to every cause but the true one--indigestion. So few jieople know what indigestion really is. Hardly know they have it. The cure is Ripnns Tnbales. A single one gives re lief. Ask your druggist. There are thirteen miles of book shelves in the British Museum, Eon- don. Cold winds roughen and chap the skin. Glenn's Sulphur Soap softens and re unites it. "Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye," Bla -k or Brown. .r»0c. FOR ALL THE ILLS THAT P/MM 6flN BRING ..... •ST. JACOBS OIL As CURE IS KING; /Nike wit!) ACHES i t) Everything. "IF AT FIRST YOU DON'T SUCCEED, ' TRY SAPOLSO RUB A DUB A US. ,F> THREE MAIDS ATTHETUE* AL L U5I N Q SA N T A GL A U S SOAR MI L L I O N S D O T H E S A M E , fi • . • Sold everywhere. Made only by THE N. K. FAiRBANK COMPANY,; CHICAGO^ QTE&>^e *ur_ •TP jrnlsh steel tanks W f with covers, all gal- fvanned after completion/. T In nests of ten, 8 to 12 feet\ r high and 30 to 30 inches in\ diameter, at 2,sc. per gallon.L They do not ruat, shrink, leak, glvel taste to water, nor allow foreign sub" t stances to got In. They can be put] In garret or barn and thu9 are protected! Ifrotn feezing. They take no setting/ ^p, ore- cheaper than wood. Tank/ substructures Of all sizes made to order.' Send for price list and ' ^designs forsubatructure arid ^ orna,mental water supply. /V >WAERMOTOR CO. JDHICACO. $£ &'i:S : j Did you ever stop to think how completely the Aermotor Do. made the modern windmill business? How it has monop olized this entire line of manufacture because ct it* ideas, inventions, designs, qualities and prices, or forced others to be Itteral (and srrwlc imitators f Witness the steel wheel, the back geated pumper, the high geared powei ftiill, the steel towers, fixed and tilting, the galvanizing of work ' after completion, the grinder centrifugal feed, the improved irrigating and other pumps, the all steel pole SAW--one of the most popular tilings xve ever pot oat --the steel storage and stock tanks. Everything vtc h»T»! touched weluve bettered, and cheapened. It is the thing w*' bave delighted in and it hr«s paid. We have established a scor» of branch houses, so as to'have'all theso good* tiear those wbo want them. The Aerm/for Co. hashut ofie more ambition, ft wants to build and fill one more new building. It ha? 2 acres of land at its present location unoccupied by buildings. It ex-- pects to commence in June to cover that 2 acres with a single building, 7 stories high. This will give St U more acres of floor space. Then tfhen the t>ublic demand requires more goods than can be produced with this added space, it will reftwe to extend further. uake any effort. It will have done its shars to supply that/l^tnand. It will then turn away all new comers. I'NTIL TH 4 YTIMK IT FXPECT8 TO CONTINUE TO SUPPLY THE WORLD WITH THF GRFATFli PAEf OF its WI3D WHEELS, T0YTRR8, URIXftEUS, FEED CUTTERS, PUBP9, STEEL FR4HE BUZZ 84WS, STKBL STOHAG* ASD *TOcl TANKS, STEEL SUBSTRUCTURES, ETC- ETC- tlAL- VAUIZED AFTER COMPLETION. IT WILL CONTINUE TO DEAL MOST LIBERALLY WITH THE PUBLIC, FURHISII RE- PAIRS AT A LOW PRICE. AlCD HE TIIE GREAT MODEL n*D POWER AND WATER SUPPLE AKRHOTOR COn CHICAGO. aUARE-NEAUNG WT ICSE OK THE WORLD. Beecham's pills are for bit-' iousness, sick headache, diz-; ziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, tor pid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples 5 loss of appetite, etc., when] caused by constipation; and' constipation is the most fre-; quent cause of all of them. One of the most important things fo» everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than half the sickncss in the •world,especially oi women; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book,free at youi druggist's,or write B.F. AlleuCo. ,365Cana*. St., New York. Pills,io<? and 25^ a box. A,nnunl sales more than 6,000.000 boxe«. I teas afflicted with ca tarrh last autumn. Dur ing the month of Octobcr I could neither taste nor smell and could hear but little.. Ely's Cream Balm cured it.--JMarcus Geo. Shautz, Rahway, X. J. m CATARRH KL.VS CREAM HALM Opens and c eanses th® Uasal Passages, AUavsPain ami Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Protects the Membrane Irorn Colds. Re stores the Senbes oE lasto and Smell. Xhe Ualm la Quickly absorbed and rives reliet at ouco. A particle is applied Into each nostril andis agree able. Price f»0 cents, at druudibts or by mail. BROTHERS, 66 Warren Street. New York. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE IS THE BEST. FIT FOB A KING. CORDOVAN; FRENCH &.ENAMELLED CALF. ;4.*3SP FINE CALFMOww/woa $3.60 POLICE,3S0LES. $2.$I.7=BQYS'SCHQ0L5H0E5L * LADIES * "sest'O0"®0^ BROCKTOitMASS. Over One Million People wear tha W. Lo Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the best value for the money. 'le end fit. _ . surpassed. The prices are uniform,---stamped on sole. They equal custom Shoes In style end Their wearing qualities are unsui iJwm $s to $3 saved over other makes. If yoor dealer cannot supply you we rr.n. 4 n PAYS FOR feWiSl % | I I I i n 1 0 0 h i g h g r a d e J L _ fek III Papers in Illinois, |n m in| |T| iD I \ 1 : T or we can insert a m • | I ; It 3 times in 1(375 country III I U I M papers for H SEXD FOR CATALOGUE. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER I XIOX. 03 South Jefferson Street, - Chicago, ill- NO MORE HITCHING STRAPS! New invention, adjusted to linos; can't be lost, stolen or forgotten ; it is out of sight aJui doesn't interfere with horse, harness or vehi cle. Do you drive a horsa ? If %>, send for & HANDY HlrCHER. Once used, YOU won't j a.rt with i t for ten times its price. With full direc tions l'or2Se. Rochester Novelty Co., Koch.,N.Y. YOUR MONEY BACK IF YOU WANT IT1 PATENTS. TRADE-MABKS. Examination and Advice as to Patentability of In vention. Send tor Inventors' Guide, or How to a Patent. PATRICK: O'FAEBKLL. Washington, D. C. DO YOU WANT WORK lor spare time with GOOD PAY? It so YOU will, .never regret sending stamp toy nartic ilarst to 1.. E. •lohnaon. 511 A St. IN. E- Washington. I). C. Acres of Land for S3le at Auction. May 15. is<5. in small tracts to suit purchas er. Income from' this l»ud iu 1894 was over tso.wxi For fu-ther into' mat ion write Geo.W. Pfutsman; Hoopeston, ill. CTJT?13TT"t7,T>TX A man of Experience. kJ-ElJCiX JLr Highly Recommended, age L-ti, »auto ajjooitiou u-ohepheid. Addr»>s A. WICKSOS, SttKI.Hl KNE. VT. PATENTS Thomas P. Simpson, Washington. D. C. No att's fee until Patent obtained. Write for Inventor's Guhle.' S. N. U. Xo. 17-93 1j» writing to Advertisers, please do not (ail to meitpon this paper. Advertisers like to know what mediums pay them best. Best Cough Sjrup. Tastes Good, use in time. Sold br druggtsta.^H : C N S u M P T I E N '