i t Tul'AL NEWS 3 ftHTAININQ TO F A Ft M I.ND HOME. THE ...... ...j, j 4j, 4oruiaj; City Hot mi -1 tie l)e and Ahum of Wind.- tir'uSB" ow to Renovate a Prairie I'MstiH-ffiBrlef Farm Hints. . W inturlnir lloraea. Farmers within fifteen to twenty mllcst of tlie city will And It a profitable business to winter city homes. The usual charge la $8 per month for horses buttered up, and $8 per month when kept In box-stalls. Those having plen ty of straw, fodder and hay will And this method of disposing of It much more profitable than hauling It to the city. A large quantity of manure la made, and this should be hauled and spread as fast aa made, over the tim othy meadows. The manure, If proper ly bandied, will pay for the feed and rare of the homes, and the money , re ceived for their board will be clear gain. The Lancaster County fanners, who fatten beef cattle for market, say they are satisfied If they can get mar ket price for the corn and hay fed to the cattle, and the manure pays for the labor. Wintering horses is much bet ter than feeding cattle, as there Is no money outlay. It requires a cash cap ital of TKK) to $000 to purchase and feed twenty to twenty-five head of cat tle, as they must be heavily grain-fed from the time they are put up to fat ten, until sent to market. In selecting horses for wintering, care must be taken to get only healthy ones. The boarding horses should not be put into the same stable with the farm horses. Baltimore American. paralus Is not built for the purpose of Kettiug nourishment out of tee. Now, why not turn over a now Iinf and foi d the skim milk so as to get all out of It Unit there Is In It? What is the wo of lotting anything go to waste that can be avoided, even If wheat Is a dollar? Savo nil we can. If we hud a hole In onr trousers' pocket, and every day penny dropped out, how long would It be before we had that hole sewed up There are dojsens of holes on the farm that leak out -more than a penny, but only because we cannot see the pennies roll out we go composedly along the even tenor of our way as If we had pennies to burn. I us recollect that every time we feed Ice-cold milk to either pigs, chickens or calves we are losing pennies, and forthwith resolve we will do so no more, It Is a good plan to occasionally look over tlie farm and see If there are any unseen pennies go ing to waste. Stockman and Farmer. C 13 u U ist i Li ' EMC CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED IN CLIMATE.- Use and Abnae of Windbreak. The beat use of windbreaks is to plant them around dwellings and other farm buildings. There can be no doubt that they are great alleviators of the cold winds, whose force is broken and whose cold Is moderated by connect with living trees. Some warmth comes trom the tree even In the coldest weath er, as Is evident from the thawing away of snow around tree trunks. But there tre places where the windbreak may cause an Increase of cold even while breaking the force of the wind. When there Is only a slight breeze blowing, It often comes from a warmer atmos phere, and may thus when unchecked prevent severe (reeling. When the sky Is unclouded the cold of the upper at mosphere settles In valleys and behind windbreaks, while it Is moderated on hills or other places where the wind has free course. Corn and Cob Meal. corn meal la very heavy feed, and unless cut hay or straw Is given with It the meal Is apt to cake in the stom ach. Not even the animals with strong' est digestion are able to digest whole corn meal, especially given uncooked, as It usually Is. Cooking swells the meal, and If cooked dry It Is filled with air spaces, which keep the meal from massing together in the stomach. When corn Is ground on the cob, the cob being lighter, also prevents the massing. There Is also some nutriment In the cob and Its superior digestibility makes It better for feeding to animals that chew the cud, and are thus enabled to eat more and less digestible food. Thus corn and cob meal mixed with cut feed la better for fattening cattle than la whole corn meal. But horses cannot get enough nutriment In their feed If the cob Is used. Corn and oats ground together are better. Hogs, also, should have corn and oats. Sheep are rumi nant animals, but they have such strong digestion that they do better with grain not ground, adding some wheat bran or whole oats to make the feed lighter, and also to supply some other than the carbonaceous nutrition In which corn meal abounds. Ameri can Cultivator. ANY A scene in The Slocum Laboratory, New York: The Discoverer demonstrating to Medical Men and Students tlie Value and Wonderful Curative Powers of his New Discoveries. NOTE. All readers of this paper can have Three Free Bottles of the Doctor's New Discoveries, with cotimlete directions. by sending their lull address to Dr. Slocum's Laboratory, 98 Pine street, Now York City. Renovating a Prairie Pasture. - On a falling prarle pasture, reported npon from Kansas station, the seeds of several tame grasses were sown af ter cultivating the surface with a disk harrow. The tame grasses were crowd ed out by the prairie grass, and it was concluded that the proper way to reno vate native pastures Is to take off the stock, harrow the surface early In the spring and leave the pasture to itself. f organs for Cowf, My wife and I have been milking a small herd of Jerseys for ten or twelve years, making from 2,000 to 2.500 pounds of butter a year, selling most of It to private families in the city of Richmond, at 25 cents the year round. We use a portable creamery and swing churn. For two years past, we have raked sorghum to tide our cows over the dry fall months, and if the drouth does not come. It carries them Into the winter. Last year we fed It until the middle of February. For two months " past we have fed our cows a bushel of chipped sorghum and four quarts of bran at a feed twice a day. They seem to be doing well on It, though they get very little grass and will not eat clover bay to do any good. I do not know how well balanced the ration we are feeding Is, but I do know that cattle and horses eat sorghum better than any other forage I ever fed. We are now adding one-fourth bulk of corn meal. I drill the sorghum with a wheat drill, using one and one-half bushels of seed to the acre. As long as I keep cows I shall raise sorghum as one of the foods. Hoard's Dairyman. Mixed Feed for Horses. The Dairy Commissioner of the Do minion of Canada says; "I have found the beet results to be obtained from us ing such grains (a mixture of peas, oats, barley and corn; or a mixture of peas, corn and bran) ground fine, and soaked for not less than thirty hours before they are fed. l think hogs should be kept so as to permit, and even cause, them to take a good deal of ex ercise until after they weigh more than 100 pounds each. In the growing of young pigs it Is Important that they should receive a dally allowance of skim milk for six weeks or two months after they are weaned. Skim milk Is the great flesh-forming or muscle am: bone-forming food; and if the young pigs are stunted in these regards at that time they cannot be developed into the best class of hogs, no matter whaf breed they may be of. In my judgment It is highly important that the quality or Canadian bogs, in regard to propor tion of lean flesh and firmness, should be maintained and Improved, If the beet customers for hog products are to be secured and retained." Ontario Farmer. Supplies of Horse Radish. There Is no reason why any one who has even a small patch of land should be without horse radish at any time from late fall Mil spring. Once planted in fairly good soil It brings a crop ev ery fall without any labor except that of digging it. The root is good any time after the leaves are frozen down in fall until new leaves start In the spring. It is best to dig the whole bed over every fall and put all the sizable roots In the cellar and keep them moist There will be enough small roots left in the soil to make all the growth the land can bear next year. If fully grown roots are left in the soli they be come stringy and rough after the first season, t'nlisa grown for sale a small bed of horse radish is therefore better for family use than a large one. Cutting; Hay for Sheep. While It Is true that sheep have so good digestion that it Is not necessary to grind grain for them. It is better that the hay they eat should be cut into i mall pieces, not to help digestion, but that they may eat it without waste. The sheep is very dainty about Its food. It will pick at long hay, pull It about and get more or less of it under Its feet. Then it will almost starve rather than touc j what has been soiled. There Is enough of saving of the hay to make this worth while. If it Is clover hay, what the sheep does not eat readily may be fed to cows, putting a little salt or meal on It, to give It better relish. Set the cutter so as to cut 12-lneh lengths. The sheep with a deep feed ing trough will not waste any, and will do as well with half the weight of hay as Is usually fed uncut. Potatoes as Pood. It Is surprising that now when pota toes are dear, as compared with what they were the past two years, that they should continue to be as largely used as ever. The nutrition In the potato Is nearly pure starch, and It contains very little of the (ttrengtb-glvlng nutrition that people require to do any kind of work. Even of starch there la only 15 to 18 per cent., the remainder being water. It is a profitable crop for the farmer to grow, for In no other can he sell so much water at generally so good a price. Starch Is also difficult to di gest, and Its excessive use In potatoes, bread and cakes Is more often the cause of Indigestion than any other cause that can be named. The fact. However, tnat much salt Is used on po tatoes makes them probably more eas ily digested than starch In other forma Fraach Wrnan a Huslnesa luera. Miss Anna L. Bickneli writes an ar ticle on "French Wives and Mothers" for the January Century. She says : In the families where the father con ducts any business the wife becomes his best olerk and usually his cashier. The wives are exceedingly intelligent and acute, extremely sharp at driving bargains, and accurate in keeping ac counts. They are their husbands' part ners in every sense of the word", and it is wonderful to see how they acquit themselves of such a multiplicity of duties. Self incompletely annihilated; and if weak health is mentioned, it is never an impediment to what they have to do for their children or their hus bands, but is mentioned only as a dis agreeable accompaniment to a necessary fatigue, without an idea of using it as n excuse for shortcomings. COULDN'T MAKE IT. The bull that tried to butt down a bridge, and the goat that tackled an anvil, couldn't make it, and were knocked out, bruised and bleeding. From such bruises down to pin-head blue spots they are curable, easily and surelv. The men who get the worst bruises always get the best cure. They make it every time. There are riirlit wov's and wrong ways of doing things, us the bull and the goat found out- The best cure for a bruise is St. Jacobs Oil. The right way to cure is to use it and Imd out. Blind fishes, two inches long, similar to those found in the Mammoth ouve, have been taken from a well belonging to Mrs. Jennie iirieten, at Russell ville, Ky. DESTRUCTIVE STORMS ALONG IRK COAST. Jams Bain's Heroism. James Bain, chief engineer of the ill-fnted Bteamer State of Florida, not only risked his life, but deliberately sacrificed it, to save a woman. The distnster was most pitiful. The steam er oollided with a bark in mid ocean, and both vessels sank almost immedi ately. Only two men were saved from the bark, and only a handful of passen gers and part of the ship's company from the steamer. Bain was safely in one of the life-boats, which was about to cast off, as there were as many peo ple in it as it could hold. At that moment he saw a woman at the steam er's rail. She was. too dazed to move. The steamer's deck was almost level with the water. Bain deliberately left his place in the boat, stepped onto the steamer's deck, lifted the woman over the tuff rail, placed her on the seat lie had occupied, cast off the boat, and went down with the steamer. Kvery Day Heroism, by Gustave Kobbe in tlie January Century. AT LAST! I la sens m cm. Remarkable Discovery of an American Medico- . Chemist. ITS GREAT VALUE HUMANITY. TO How Every Reador of This Paper May Ubtain the New and Free Scientific Sys tem of Medicine CORRESPONDENCE-ADVICE AB- SOLUTELY FREE AND PROFES SIONALLY CONFIDENTIAL. ' Edward Marsden, a student in Lane Theological Seminary, at Cincinnati, is tho first native Ahiskuii to receive an education in any of the states. He has studied law, theology, mechanical engineering and has learned the trades of carpenter, bricklayer, house painter, tinsmith, piano tuner, clouk repairer, book-keeping and typewriting. "Walter Haker A Co.,of Ihuvhi'ster.Mass., IT. H. A., have given years of study to the skilful preparation of cocoa and riincolat. and have devised machinery ami systems peculiar to their methods of trea'l i.ient, whereby the purity, tmlatabilitv. and liiirh- est nutrient characteristics are retained. Their preparation are known the world over and have received the highest indorse ment from the medical practitioner, ihe nurse, and the iute lliin-ut htmsekeriHir and caterer. There in hardlv anv food irHluct which may be so extensively used in the household in comliiimiicm with other food as cocoa and chocolate; but here again e urge the importance of purity and nutrient value, and these important points, w feel sure, may be relied upon in linker's Cocoa and Chocolate." UuMic and llvoitnie (lateUe. In the number of murders Italv leads Europe. In the number of suioides 1 Kussia is ahead. NS,seajssi,s "A Perfect Tpe of tho Highest Order at excellence in Manufacture. " Reports of maritime disasters alon the enast some in thick and fast. Vi onle who -so down to the sea in ships" should bear in mind one thin in particular, namely, that it is highly desirable to take atonic a suimlv nf HdHtMrin,'. Stomach Bitters as a remedy for sea sickness, Kauaea, dyspepsia, biliousness, couailpation, malaria, nervousness and kidney trouble, all succumb to its benelicent and speedy action. PERSONS WORTH KNOWING. French's bust of the late General Walker, which was secured through subscriptions of undergraduates, was presented to the institute of technol ogy, of Boston, on January 6, the first anniversary of General Walker's death. Forty musicians of Kansas City have conceived the design of giving practi cal expression to Shakespeare's opin ion that music hatb charms to soothe the savage breast, and will give a per formance on each buudav afternoon to the inmates of the workhouse. Archibald, the name given to Bis marck's grandson, in honor of Lord Kosebery, is the favorite name of the ftoeeniarya, as James is the favorite name of the Salisburys, Mont roses and Abercorns, Charles of the Hichmonds, William of the Portlands and Anthony oi tne enaitsourys. Chief Judge Andrews, who retired from the court of appeals of New York on January 1, was elected an associate udge of that court in 1870. In 1881. hen Chief Judge Folaer rersigned to enter the cabinet of President Arthur. Judge Andrews succeeded him, and nee that time has not missed a dav of active service. wani&Go:s Breakfast Absolutely Pure, Delicious, Nutritious. ..Costs Less Titan QUE GEHT a Cop.. Be sure that you get the Genuine Article, mad. at DORCHESTER, MASS. by WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. ESTABUSIIID I7I0. SVrSl Governor Btiahnell, of Ohio, gave a pardon to Ralph Winters-gill, a life prisoner, on Christmas day, which was promptly refused. Wintersgill ia now 70 years old, and has served 80 ycais. In declining the pardon he Kiid' the state hail unfitted him for life, and that he did not care to go back in his old age to a world that had forgotten him and preferred that the state should continue to care for him to the end. AN OPEN LETTEfTTO MOTHERS. We are asserting; In Ihe courts our riulit to the exclusive use of the word "CAsTOKIA," and WTCHK RS CASTOR! A," as our Trade Mark. I, Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannia. Msssschusett. was the originator of" I'lTCHKK'SCASroKIA," Ihe same that has borne and doe now bear the fac-slmile signature of CHA. H. I'l.K TCIUCR oa every wrapper. This is theoriglnal " 1'lTCIlEK'ft CASTORI A " which baa been used iu the home of the mothers of America for over thirty year, look Carefully at the wrapper and see tlmt it is thi kind you kavt alwayt tauthl, and has the iignature of CHA8. H. FLETCHER oa the wrapper. No one has authority from rue lo use i my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher la President. March S, iHy. 8AMCBI. WTCH11R, UJk John M. Penniman has been for 50 years a member of the Boston police His age is 75. Workers In the wide, uiirxptnrrd Held of modern chemistry are tlnil)' astounding Hie world with new wonders. Professor ami layman vie with each other In their coin. lu'cndable efforts lo lessen the ills ol human. Itv Vestertliiv it w-ua Pnstrur and Km it. and tinhtv It I Klncuiit, with a new discov ery which Is the result of year of rarvful study and research. Foremost anions' the world s itrentest chemist stands T. A, flueum, of Sew York Cliv. His researches and experiments. imtietitlv carried nil fur vein's, huvfl 1 tltlllv cutiniuiited in result w hich are proving us uctim.ciui to immunity a tiioiiiscmerii soi aiivrlicmisl.amleutor iiiiwiern, uiseiturts which lor vean had been directed toward the discovery of a positive cure for t'oii- silmptiim, were finally successful, and nl ready his "new scientiliv system of niedl cine" has, by its timely use, permanently cured tln.il.v, ids of iippareitlly hopeless cases, and it seems necessnry and humane duty to tiring such tact to tlie utteiitlou ol all invalids. The medical profession throughout America mid Kurope am almost unuiiiliui. in me opinion l lis i iieuriv an plivsicui ail ments naturally lend t the Kcnemtioii of consumption. The alHtcted die In the short, cold days of a inter much luster than ill 111 Inliir. hut (lavs m summer. I he Doctor has proved tlie dreaded dis ease to be rumble beyond a doubt. In any climate, and has on tile iu hi American ami Kuroiieaii laboratories thousand ol letters of heurtlelt gratitude from those benelited or cured ill all parts of Ihe world, ,o one navmg, or llireiitenen with, any disease, should hesitate a day, but slioulil write at once. Fuels nrov that the Doctor has discovered a reliable and absolute cure fur Consumption ( Tuberculosis) nd all bronchial, ihmat, lutis; and chest trouble, stubborn cougiis. cutarriiai amotions, ncrof. u In. general decline and weakness, WfttKLY MAHKiiT l.ETTEH, Itrsh, and all wastlua loss nf eouililioua, and to IK demonstrate it wonderful merits, he w ill send Three Free Hotlle (all different) ol HI ew I Mscovene, with full instructions, to any reader of this paiier. mniply writ lo T. A. Mlorum, M. C, 1st Pine str.iet. New York, giving full aildresa. There is no clmryc for CorresMiiitlence. advice strictly professional and conliden. tuti. Knowlnif, as we do, of the timlouMed etneacy ol J lie Mis litn !ysteiu of Medicine we urge every sufferer to take advantage of tms niosi uiivrai proposition A system of medirnl treatment that will cure cutiirrli, lung troubles and cmisuiup. tiou is certainly good for-uml w ill cure -any wasting disease that humanity 1 hew to. Please tell the Doctor, when writing, that you wad hi generous offer in our psjr. force. Manly Power Iice on Calve and Ticks on Sheep, When putting stock up for the winter every animal should be examinedand what vermin Is found on It should be destroyed. During the summer,, while stock Is at pasture, the animals will re lieve themselves by rubbing their bod ies on bare soil wherever they can find It. There Is no cheaper Insect exter minator than road dust. Wherever stock has access to the public highway It will lie in the road and roll, so as to expose all parts of the body to the dust Sheep in summer will lie In the fur rows, as we have often seen them when put in to pasture down a field that Is being plowed. That destroys most but not all the ticks. In barns and stables there Is no such chance for stock to rid Itself of vermin. Most of the lice and ticks will, after a few days, settle on the animals that are thin in flesh. Rub grcflAe freely about the head, neck and shoulders, where the vermin will be I most plentiful, then feed liberally so as to put some iuslde fat under the skin, which will prove the best preventive of any return of these parasites. Feeding Bkim Milk. There Is Just as much nourishment In ft pound of skim milk at a temperature of koto as there Is in a pound of milk at W) d'reea, but the calf or the pig will f.ii! to get the same amount out of the fr-. --;i Willi as It will out of the warm milk, ss;uj;--Sy tcas Iw tiigesUve ap- Gronnd for Onion. If the frost doea not prevent so doing plow the plot of ground for onions and leave It rough, so that the frost can pen etrate It. When a warm day comes spread fine manure, and plenty of It. on the plot and work it well into the soil with a harrow. As onions are put Into the ground very early In the year one cannot prepare for the crop too soon The main points are to have the land worked deep and fine and to use decom posed manure that is free from stalks, straw or other litter. Pays to Hake Good Cheese. It requires about twenty pounds of milk to make a pound of butter and eleven pounds of milk to make a pound of cheese. More labor and care is nec essary to make cheese,. however, but good cheese brings a high price, espe cially when the parties making it ate known a reliable and make a spedul. ty of a choice article. o Value of Drainage. When the land la well drained the water In the sol goes down and the frost penetrates deeper, thus assisting in pulverizing It. When the spring comes the air gets down and the soil becomes warmer and better fitted for plants. An undralned field la always cold, and Is a loss to the farmer, ss such soils will not give satisfactory crops. More SUilerate hod-earrlers reach the top of the ladder than men with col lege educations. A dull, throbbing pain, accompanied by a sense of tenderness and heat low down In the side, with an occasional shooting pain, indicates Inflammation. The region of pain shows some swell ing. This is the first stae of ovaritis, inflammation of the ovary. If the roof of your house leaks, my sister, yon hv tt nxed at. once; why not pay the same respect to your own body ? Write to Mrs. Plnkham, Lynn, Mass., and tell her all your Her expert- ence In 1 treating V female ills V la creator than any other living; person. The fol lowing from Mrs. Anxik Curtis, Tlcon deroga, N. Y., is proof of what wo say; " For nine years I Buffered with fe male weakness in Its worst form, I was in bed nearly a year with conges tion of the ovaries. I alao suffered with falling of the womb, was very wean, urea an f,ne time, had such head aches as to make me almost wild. Was also troubled with leucorrhosa, and was bloated so badly that some thou c-ht I had dropsy. I have taken several bot tles of, Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound, and several of her Blood Purifier, and am completely cured. It is a wonder to all that I got well." Plso's Cure for rnniih,i.iin , iu.H Ood-seiid to me.-Wm. B. McClsllaa, Chester, Florida, Kept. 17, lti!. I Russia 's population has increased during the last 100 years a fraction less ; than 1,000,000 annually. ift.h?i"" w'm2: W il o'hersTsenrlnsstamr, rnbrticulara of King Holomon'a Treasure, Ihe O.M.y renewer of manlv h siu.v '. tllEMIOAl, t.U., P. O. Bus 717, I'hlladelplila, Ha. The Strength, Activity and Brain Ja MoxlGiliZlZ ..., I... Power of Man hood are Restored an Ameircan restaurant. to Weak Men Who Use Doctor statsopowo, ciTr ToIiDoj - J r. . I M'CAS Cot NTV. I " Sanden'a Electric Belt. FiKj.:HiFvn,akeoatb that h t the sruiorearineroi we tlrmol T, J. Chunky A Co.. floinj business In the City ol Toledo, County aii.l State aforesaid, an t that the sslil Nrm will pay the sum ol (ink n iikiiuvi, i . .A, .' ; ' 2u'hi,;."I.1v,rr cT"t tliat cannot be vj .uc UM wi s;aTARHK CHUB. Sworn to before me and ubserlbad nty presence, this sth day of December, A. D lelif. ITTi A. W. (il.KAWiS iAti Notary Public. .,,l.''Jl1,'."Urrl,J"., uk'n internally, nd eta directly ou the blood ami mucous snrlace of the ssteui. Kend for testimonial, free. V. J. CIIKVIrv l. Hold by driimtlst., Tlie. v"" w' Wall's Family fills are the best. '':) ,.t.h.M.'toP?,i.HOM" ,'"UCT ANW rilHI rOOD. THE OLD STORY OF LOVE AND LIFE, AS TOI.O I! TH HKW BOOK, "COMPLETE MANHOOD." TA?,"nl hfW mtn pronounce th! work the mean of their physical aulvatlon. It rive the latest c.u.niiliclacUconMrnlnir aiarrlsKe. . J-id!."ir!lw. th onIy fr"0" method of at. Uminir fullest natural wanly vliror. It point out Horn Treatment (or ill a, eesseamid Kauai disbarment. . , It show how to curs nsrvousnesanop. bssness, despondency. 1 ki , L.- .i 1 'i """''" cc""iy." the a.lilresa r j , , UUIIKIO, f,, Y, Om.- Of Pnwntliir, m.arn l l rmm i,ot. 7 1.7 Ut'liainuesoi ' Blare hnlldliis, fortUnd, OtvgoS.J " What will Iailler do with lila wheat Is the intention Unit Is evidently bother! t5 twdws mor tVrti it In l,llU, "n lias about, 8,000,000. ImuIihIi os,0 wheat, lie is also long about 4,000. 000 bushels Wity. if i,tu, W1MJt enough to ninko him tlin power lu the mm kut, and It dimuiuls upon how hn handles it as to the extent of his profit or loss. If trada fulls off lie will be Corned to keop tho tmirket olive, ), did during October and November, by trading on both sides. If outside peculation li;orcuse he will certainly have the beat of it. Tliern 1 a S9 liortuco in Mar, which gives him a chance to scalp tlia market on liberal ttmla to hi profit, Titer is talk of trail getting Into July, and leaving May alone. This might kelp the short sellers by prolonging the thns of da livery, but figuring on th probable looks, the chances for large supplies by the last of July art deui. Icily poo, for bear. Were tho tru.ia to twitch to September and leave the intervenlmt months alone, Loiter would be left with his oneh and May in a position where it would not be easy to swing large line at a profit, and tits wheat might have to be shipii out to find market for it. All the question sr being ditKMissed by th traders and nearly every one lias a different theory. Those who stand between the stieon. hitor and consumer, th cash liamllrs smith millers, si e almost tot man bullish on wheat, and are talking higher prices, Kim predicting $1.25 for May. Armour and Wear expect turn iucr win win out in good shape. They flgtir nit the milling demand reaching such pmpnrtiou that, com bined with the exKirt lmelness, It will absorb the stocks no readily in the e son that the oah holder can dictate price. Th question of supply and de mand becomes a factor. This, how. ever, has not always In th past been a benefit to the bull. Last winter and spring th cash demand Was heavy, stocks wer light, but th visible was ,mi0,0l!00 bushel mor than at pres. cut. Miller bought th wliout readily and decreased prices steadily, but in the fac of the reduction price did not ieioml, owing to the lack of pocu! lion. A supply and demand market is generally a slow affair, and tt may not be an exception this year. 9 s" wair nans L IU tiPiSffian grow paying crop bean tby'r frb and a I war th b). f alvrywbr. Refuse substitute. Btlck to Ferrr' leads and prosper. IsM Seed Annual fret. Writ lor It 0.H.FIflflYC0.,0!r.n,a1lcli. f.JW.MJiJMIJUlll).. MIHJJJSJJ..IJjiii,J),l.,!li nsguiaior tor rjisktnec u r pe r, t ' S; mua or strong. Mr) Kvery Belt tiM An electric ttna- pennory free for Dr. Sen den Electric Belt ! tnrl&v th n. knowledge meant of recovering the power of menhooo. It nils toe nerve with new life; It Incre-iaei the brein power, end removei all the weakening effecte of Jnditeretlonf, excetiee. etc., in feet, re lores your trongth, Are You Weak? It will cure ner voile debility In env fnrnv in electricity U the life ef the nervee end makeg , them eirong. It check all waste of power in f vti v uvea. v wurvraj iuuii UU Ulftnuer troubleei rheumatism, lane back, etc. Bend for onr medical work, Utuitrated, "Three tiuiei vi nou, ire( jiuarese SANDEN ELECTRIC BELT CO. 5 Was Washing too St., rortlaad, Or, Plrau mention thit Paptr. u?u!.,Un BJnl 0-ce!. uiially very llghteolorerl and ol heavy bo.iy, la made from B,..7'... ... ,'"''' ' "lade '""n t. r; " "lr'c"r pure, it I lor sal ,L a h .V grM'"r". 'a cns only. Manufae. ; a. ' "io i,ust evRUP i:o. All van. nine "tra Cm-oVa nrin," have the miirfiaE turer' name lithographed on every can. A school for training young colored men in agricultural pursuits is about to b established in Tuekecgee, Ala. ILLUSTRATED - CATALOGS o Buell Lambersori IHO FOfWT c.T Portland. Or, I It Wronir? Get It Right Keco It Kisht Moor.', It.ve.i.d Kemedy wllldolt. Thr .-....,... jumeei Mtier. (lot It Irom ... ukiiibi or any wholesale drug house from Stewart A Holme Dro Co., Beam,. ' N0ITrHtPtN f YOUR LIVER Klin? fXJf1? "!! '"call" Oold or Wiv.r , -...,. '."0IUIII10D,(J(,HO. r , , r w 9 ,T WfflM. nLunOLOBPim For Accident or Sicfcn, for Klon dilcer, Traveler, Rancher or family. Pike S5.55. WtCflMPoriyjr. WHEAT? Hake money bv aucceaful eieuiatlon In Chicago, We tiv and Mel wheat on mar tia. Fortuneft have been made on a small bc-ginnlng by trading Jri fu tures, v rue lor mi naructuarH. tiest oi ref erence given, Hevfjraf yearn' experience on th t.mrnKo noaro oi i raae, ana a voorounn anow ledge of the biiKlne. Hend for onr free refer ence book. DOWNiNO, HOPKINS A Co., Chfraffo Board ef Trade Brolcrt. OlTlcei fa Portland, Oregon and Seattle, Wash. I j Best l ith oyrup. 'iV.. I . in umo. lF nr ,t rslLS. iood. T7w f j eveevvvvvrvrvvvvwrvw rwr L " CH LDrTEN TSfcTI . w Orwl tor cbiuirert v&tttMux . llmmhw a ens tho Kii)ni. allavK )l twiin, curf wttM out;, k ttio bi-at ror.nir for &.rrinm 2aut flf eiiU , IHIW.1. J If 1 1 lit" IM"K5 Ol Alt, 'k.. ,ww rwrw h?m tin Cfilia.astft- .in i a :J It II FX wrlllni to V) saautloa tltia pi No. ft, . ad vertisera, pli I WW , I "XI ( Ir- ' I v v) r H t J Hercufe$ Special actsal horsfipower) Price, only $I8J. OOWER PROFIT Power that will save you money and make you money. Hercule Eneinc are the cheapest power known. Burn Di.flate 0i,! 00 dairy or farm Machinery, they have no equal. Automatic la action, perfectly safe and reliable. -"wiy Send for Illustrated catalog. Hercules Qas Engine Works Bay St., San Francisco, Cal. pspvr. rorllaad Market. Whpat Walla Walla, T4(878oiVal. ley and Bltiestetn, 77CS 78o Msr busheL Fuur Bust grrvlo. 14.25; grabata, 13.40; iiXrlhio, 13.115 wr barrel. Uuta Chuic white, MSytodc; oholo gray, 83t!ao pr bualiel. - Harlor-lf eod barloy, 1 19 (it 20; brw- dig, 20 per ton. Millaiiff Bran, 117 per ton: mid dlingx, $11; shorts, IIS. Hay Timothy, llsi.SO 18; clorer. 110(411; California whaat, I0; do oat, til; Oregon wild hay, fr$tO par ton. I'Vs n i aas'c pr dosn. butter Fancy creamery, 65(60oj fair to goo.1, 4fi(!aUc; dairy, 40tj(60c ier roll. Chwse Oregon, 11. Wo; Young America, ia,c; Califurula, 8(I0o per pound. Poultry Chickens, UiUml, II. 75$ 8.SJ jmr doaon; broilars, 3.00(J.5O; gMms, fl 60 ($6. SO; dunks, 4. 00 8. 00 lor doaon; turkey, live, 10c per milled. Potatoes Oregon Bnrbank, 88(3450 per sack; weot. l. 88 )r cental Onions Oregon, new. ml. 0i yel low, 80o Kir cflntal. flops 8 (3 Ho per ponnd for new orop; 1890 crop, ()0o. Wool Valley, 14(4160 per pound; Eastern Oregon, 7 8o; mohair, 20 32o per pound. Mutton Grow, best ahonp, wether and ewes, 3. CO; drecset) mutton, 8o; spring lambs, u ',0 par pound. Hoc Hrose, ehoie hnavy, 4.00; light and feeders, 8.00(i4.0O; dreiid, 4.808.00 per 100 pounds. Beef Oross, top steera, $3.78(38.00; cows, f . 60; drMd beef, Ai do per pound. Veal Large, 4!8o; small, eji'tj 80 per pound. Seattle Market. Butter Fumy native creamery, brink. 28o; ranch, lB(18c. Cheese Native Washlniftou, 13o; California, Oto. K)gs Fresh ranch, Dflo. Poultry Chickens, lire, per ponnd, liens, lOo; spring -chicken, $..80 8 00; ducks, a.B0(p.7S. Wheat Feed wheiit, per ton. Dots Choice, pr ton, (Haso. Corn Whole. t23: eraoketl. not inn. 133; fed meal, $33 per ton. iiarley Kollod or around, ner ton. $a2; whole, $23. Fresh Ments tiolne dressed beef. steers, 6ci cows, 6.o; mutton sheep, 7o; pork, 6c; veal, small, 7. Uresh Fish Hnlilmt. Bra 80: salmon. 8c; sulmon tro! 7foIOi; flounder and ole,4; ling co.1, 4(88; rock cod, oc; smelt, 4c Jfresh Fruit Ann s. BOtaOOo nor box; peacheB, 7880o; prunes, 86(840o; Pears, 75cfl per box. ia Man Frauelsoo Markat. Wool Nevada ll(ai8c; Oregon. (Sic; wortnorn 78o per pound. ops laaifjc per pound. Millstoffs Mlddllniis. I20ftl28: Cal. Ifornia bran, 17.60j818.60 per ton. Onions New red. 70r480o: do new silverskin, 3.00a.,5 per cental. Eggs Store, 2),c ranoh, S7 81c; Eastern, 18(318; duck, 10a per dozen. Citrus Fruit Orsnirea. navels. l.808.7B; Mexican limes, 4.00( 4.80; California lemons, choice, 13.38 8.60; do common, B0c(fl, 88 per box. Uieese Fanoymild. new, 12 c; fair to good, 7 & 8b per pound. , potatoes wew, In boxes, 8885e. Hay Wheat, 11180 18; wheat and oat, 118(2)14.60; oat, ill18;rlver bar ley, 7S8; best barley, til (813.80; alfulfu, 1011; clover, fl0ll. Fresh Fruit Apples, S6oiJl.8S P' large box; grapes, 88ffl40o; Isaholla, 60(875ci peachas, 60o(fl; pears, 7Bo 1 per box; plums, 80(4300, Butter Fancy oruaniprr. 82 Mot do seconds, S981o; fnncy dairy, 8o; good to choice, 8tt(S87o per pound, The French admirers of Balswo huve etermlned to erect in his honor u - splendid monument In the city 0 Tours, the place of his birth.