PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND j'ni irt 1 1 ' i n' 1 m 1 '.tt . Resnlts proye Hood's Barsaparllle the best blood purifier, appetiser tod nerva touto. in tact Carsaparilla h the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists; P. Tbe Best Remedy In the World .Males People Well. you rm?'mm 1 Hood's Pills care all Liver 111. Si oenta. Iowa almost from the date of ita ad mission hat been oalled the "Hawkeys state." Hawkeys was the name of a noted Indian ohiel The Elkhart (Ind.) Telephone Com pany is retailing "helloa" at five oenta per day for residences, and seven cents for basincss houses. TALC ABLE FRANCHISE SECURED. The franchise or easy direst Ion -one of the most valuable In the gift of medical science con be secured by any person wiwe enough to ue Hoetetier'i Stomach Bitten, either to cui press growing dyapepala. or to uproot it at ma turity. Bilious, rheumatic end feTer and ague sufferer;, perrons troubled with nervousness, end the constipated, shoald also eecnra the health franchise by the same means. Pure lead has been found some thirty feet under the grountd near Chester, IlL . A company has been organised to mine it. I never used so quick a cure as Flso's Cure tor Consumption. J. B. Palmer, Box 1171, Seattle, Wasn., Not. 25, 1895. Professor Vaoghan claims to bare invented a telephone by which conver sations can be carried on between New York and London. The peat bogs of Great Britain and Ireland are estimated to contain fuel equivalent in heat producing to 4,000, 000,000 tons of coal. FITS. All fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Kerve Restorer, No fltsaftertbeBrst day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, oa Arcu ou, rouaaeipma. ra. Tax Gkbmia lor breakfast. jf j! Gladness Comes With a better understanding of the transient nature of the many phys ical ills, which vanish before proper ef forts gentle efforts pleasant efforts ' rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge, that so many forms of sickness are not due to any actual dis ease, but simply to a constipated condi tion of the system, which the pleasant family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt ly removes. That is why it is the only remedy with millionaof families, and is everywhere esteemed so highly by all who value good health. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact, that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness withont debilitating the organs on which it acts. It is therefore - all important, in order to get its bene ficial effects, to note when yon pur chase, that you have the genuine arti cle, which is manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all reputable druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, laxatives or other remedies are then not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, one should have the best, and with the well-informed everywhere, Syrup of Figs stands highest and is most largely ved and gives most general satisfaction. Blood Poison. Contagious Blood Poison has been ap propriately called the curse of mankind. It is the one disease that physicians can not cure; heir mercurial and potash remedies only bottle up the poison in the system, to surely break forth in a more virulent form, resulting in s total wreck of the system. ' Mr. Frank B. Martin, a prominent Jeweler at 926 Pensylvania Ave., Wash- -. ington,D.C.,says: lrV .' I was for a lnno time nnder treat merit of two o( - the best physi cians of this city, for a severe case of blood poison, but my condition grew worse all the while, not withstanding the (fact tnat tney S charged me three .M I Vi 11 i H Hnllafsi My month was filled with eatine sores: my tongue was almost eaten awav, so that for three months I was nnaole to taste any solid food. My hair was coming out rapidly, and I was in a horrible fix. I had tried various treatments, and was nearly dis couraged, when a friend recommended S.S.S. After had taken four bottles, I began to get better, and when I had finished eighteen bottles, I was cured sound and well, my skin was without s blemish, and I have had no return of the disease. S.S.S.saved me from a life of misery." S.S.S. guaranteed purely vegetable) will cure any case of blood poison. Books on thediseast and its treat ment.' mailed free by Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. In writing to advertisers don't for get to mention tiii paper. t ( 1 "4. If I Wv3 V ssfT.' ; t. -jswiwi li a mm Making; Orchards Pay. The accompanying Illustrations, en graved from photographs taken at the same distance so as to preserve the exact relative proportions of each, tell the whole story of the difference be tween., care and neglect of a young orchard. Each of these trees Is the riO. 1. WKLL-CAKED-rOB TBKX. best not a representative, but the best tree to be found In the orchard from which it la taken, though the larger (Fig. 1) is more nearly representative than the smaller (Fig. 2). The tenants on five adjoining farms owned by one man, were furnished with a hundred or more trees to the farm. Thus the trees were all planted at the same time, in similar soil, and from the same lot of trees, so that the only difference must come as a direct result of the planting, and after-care received. In the best of these orchards there was no stinting in digging the holes. The roots were carefully spread, and the soil, mixed with stable manure, firmly packed about them. Every winter the ground has been covered with manure taken directly from the stable, a few extra forkfuls being thrown close about each tree, and during the summer the soil has been cultivated in truck and potatoes. These orchards are no w seven years old, and In this particular one only several trees have been lost, In spite of the extremely dry summers, though I know of one of the orchards which has but twelve trees left and VIO. 2. NEGLECTED TBEE. none of those of value. American Agri culturist ' A Homemade Garden Boiler. The illustration herewith shows a handy garden contrivance that can be made in a few moments. A sectloa Is sawed from a round log, and its surface smoothed. Two round bits of iron rod are driven Into the center of eaca end, and the roller is ready to take the place of the wheel in the wheelbarrow, the latter being unshipped for this purpose. The special value of this arrangement is that no new frame nor handles are GOOD OABDCff BOLLZR. klSaVA.w vated shallow and the surface kept level to fall of yielding a good crop, but we have seen many pieces half ruined by running a deep furrow between the rows Just as corn was coming Into taa-1 seL This exposes a larger surface to j the air to be dried out, and If any rain falls it is sure to run in the furrow and do the least possible good. needed for tbe roller, and that the bar row can be weighted to give just tbe pressure desired. Growing Peppers for Market. In every neighborhood there is us ually a good demand for garden pep pers about tbe time vegetables are be ing put up for pickles. We have known farmers who have made a good busi ness growing a few hundred pepper plants, and selling the produce not only to neighbors, but through grocery stores In the near-by city or village. Tbe plants need to be started in a green house, and unless tbe farmer has one of these useful conveniences it will pay him to purchase tbe plants of some commercial seed and plant grower, who will sell them by the hundred at cheap er rates than a farmer can afford to grow for himself the small number that he requires. Shallow Cultivation for Corn. Nearly all authorities now agree that only shallow cultivation should be given corn, and that this should be done so as to leave the surface nearly or quite lcveL This Is tbe best way to save the moisture in the soil for the dry time tliat is pretty sure to corns when corn is sarlnf . Ws nsvsr knew corn culti- Buck wheat After Buckwheat. i The buckwheat crop la more often I grown in succession than is any other, ! In part perhaps because it is often put j on land that cannot be prepared for ' other crops earlier in the season. So ; there is no alternative when the sod Is j once broken up but to sow buckwheat j until the land can be reseeded. Ws I have known timothy seed sown with . There Is one true specific for diseases buckwheat, in July, and making a fair j arising from Impure blood and a de stand when the buckwheat was cut j bilitated nervous system, aiid that is early In September. On dry uplands Paine' s celery compound, to generally clover Is sometimes sown with buck- j prescribed by physioisns. It is prob wheat and gets sufficient foothold in ably the most remarkable remedy that the soil to endure the winter. But ' the sclent Ifio research of this countrv wherever the land Is too wet to allow any other crop than buckwheat to be grown on It, there Is no use trying to grow clover. It may make a show in the fall all right, but will Inevitably be lifted out of the soil by freezing and thawing the following winter. Silver Fpangled Hambnrga, After twelve years of breeding and carefully testing nearly all breeds of thoroughbred fowls as egg producers, I give my preference to the breed shown here. I have carefully tested them for twelve years and In one experiment they showed their superiority as fol lows: Ten hens and a cock of Brown Leghorns, Laced Wyandot and Silver Spangled Hamburgs were placed in has produced. Prof. Edward E Phelps, M. D., LL. D., of Dartmouth college, first prescribed what is now known the world overai Paine's oelery compound, a positive cure . for dys pepsia, biliousness, liver oomplaint, neuralgia, rhenmatism, all nervous diseases and kidney troubles. Fur the latter Paine's oelery compound has uoceeded again and again where everything else has failed. Street railway rails In Memphis, Tenn., are being welded together with molten steel. DEAFKESS CANNOT BE C IKED ILL. HAVE NOTHING; BUT THE genuine: Tou will find one coupon Inside each two ounoe bag and two coupons Inside each iburounoebagorOlaokwsU's Durham. Buy a bag of this eelobrated tobacco sod read tbe coupon which lives a list of valuable prsssnts sad bow to get them. fCKWElfSl 1 . " ''" '1 ' ' ' f By local applications, as they cannot re' h the diseased portion of the ear. There l only one way to mire deaf ucM.aud that is byvonstitntlnn al rvmedlei. Deafuow is c iird by su liill'imi l condition of the mucous lining of Kuninrh hii Tube. When this tubeceis Inflamed you nave a rumbling sound of lmrrfec;i hearing and when it is entirely oloMd deHtiiws is the result, and unless tbe inflammation run be taken oui and this tube restored to It normil co dltion hearing will be destroyed foie'er; nine eium out ol ten sre caused by catarrh, ablaa l nothing but an Inflamed condition ol the We will gle One Hundred Pollnrs for sny I ease of Deafness (caused br catarrh) that cmi f ttnthMrl h tlall'i Catarrh llii... U..n.t f..r circulars free. IT. J. nifKNBV A Oft..T.ilml,i. o I Bold by Drwtsrists, 76c. ; Ball's family nils are the best. To be perfectly nrooortloned it is ' claimed that a man should weigh ! twenty-eight pounds to every foot of his height HOITT'S SCHOOL FOB BOYS blOH BUKD SI1.VCR SPANGLED HAMBCBOS At Burlingams, Ban Mateo County. Cal . la ... t U . . .1 .. I. i . I , id uuo ui hue iuuei fc(iuriru)En, carriuf nuu practical "Home Schools" to be found on the Faoitta ooaet. It prepare boys for any , university, technical school, or 'for a tivt I business; is accredited at the 8tute and Stanford Universities, and under the able separate yards, fed the same and cared for exactly alike. Eggs produced: May. June. July. : management of x Btate Supcrintciiiletil 2I5 '54 v-,7 ! Ira O. Uoitt. Ph. ranks ainonir the tint S. S. Hambu.'gs.., Brown Leghorns ..204 183 Laced Wyandots 125 125 K The Hamburgs gave more egys per 1 day and during July were becoming j fat, while half the Wyandots .wanted 1 to sit. The Hamburgs continued to lay, j showing no signs of broodlaess und ; laying nearly as many eggs during Sep-1 tember as in May. During the prevl ous year the eggs from twenty Ham-) burg fowls sold for $50.35, making a . net return over cost of feed of $1. 13 per ben. This is a handsome fowl with ! silver white plumage, each feather cud-, Ing with a most beautiful spangle. They are a small fowl and very light : eaters, consuming only about half ns much as the larger Wyandots. They are non-sitters, active foragers stand confinement better than any other breed I have yet tried. Leslie Stewart in Farm and Home. schools in the Unite! States. Ke-opens August . -Mtmng ana seienttjie itm. Mrs. Slawsoo's EconouilM, "My wife," said Major Slawson, "can beat the world at economy, but it would be money in my pocket to have her oth erwise. Invariably when she bays a new gown she gets a yard too little at first, then she buys more stuff, and bus enough left over for a new waist To save that, she buys usually a skirt and sleeves of anothor sort, although she may be perfectly certain she will have no use for an extra frock. But that is not quite np to her economy in ectitig. We asked people to ta the other night, and two of them failed to come. So to save the ice cream and fixiuus they mM ! ought to have eatou, Mrs. .Slawsou ate 1 vnem uurmu, niu'r 1 aaa reiugeu rue i Job. The result was five days iu bed, , with $30 spent for doctor and urnac and the ice cream was only CO cents a Best Quality! Largest Size! Lowest Price! 0 !. ... (fmM .. iv. 11 1 1 'i?!' If. rA a5- J ft I I rsr- ivT Yc-' I In V 'ill AVkW. wJt,-i.v.-.-li.a,l.Mii,i it fi'iVt-jfm, 1. iHlMt The Quaker Bath Cabinet Tlirkl.ll Italha at IIiiiiib. Dry Hteam llaltia at Itnm. M-illcalfU Hath as Homa. nnipniir Haiha at Main. Care of tbe Colt'a Feet. When farmers raise colts they usual ly work tbe mares more or less during the following summer, and for con venience they generally shut tbe colt In stables. These have usually boa rl tr cement floors, and tbe bard, unyield ing surface is often very injurious to tbe feet of the colt. It does not hurt the feet of old horses so much, because they are generally shod, but the colt's feet are unprotected. A run in pasture Is always best. If closer conaneni.mt is necessary, some small enclosuro with an earth floor not compacted should be provided. , This precaution will 11 (Id much to the value of the colt when it cornea to working age... , Weeds in tbe Hill. - Even when harrowing corn over the surface is done there will be occasion al weeds that will escape, and by two or three repetitions of the harrowing they will be well rooted. Some of these will be in the bill, where the cultivator run through the rows both ways can not reach them. In our opinion it paya to stop the cultivator wherever such weeds are seen and pull them out. It is true the corn may grow nearly as well, but the weed in the hill will extend Its roots to the middle of tbe row, and all the plant food It gets will be wasted. Hand labor with corn has gone out of fashion, but it pays to do some hand labor after the cultivator has done all It can. ! quart. "New York Journal I Gnat Egga. j The eggs of the gnat are arranged by ! the parent insect in tbe form of a raft j which floats with its concave sirio v.- i permosL If npset, it speedily rendjtv ,u ; itself and cannot be kept undur tiio j water. At the proper time a valve in the lower part of each egg opens and 1 the insect escapes into the water be ! neath. " ' A Digging Fish. The digging fish is a native of the lakes and rivers of central Africa, j When the dry season approaches, it bnr rows in the mud at tbe bottom of its 'residence to the depth of two or ' three j feet, goes to sleep and awaits tbe retarp ! of the wet annann.-OhicHan Chrroiir'n j Scientific, Durable, Cheap, Heat, Light, Portable, Simple. j Folds into Small Space. A PEBMfcKEMT tXD VALUiELE LWUBI j SUNT COM I'LKTK with full Instructions on Kccelpt of Hlx Dollars (SO 00) SSSTtS! QUAKER BATH CABINET 00.,:: Local Agents Wanted Everywhere. Liberal Terms. WOMAxT ui liiiui vi ri uiuiii s r nunu, it lg mimmmm fol in relieving the backaclie-.headaches ll ' fjO i which burden and shorten a woman's women .testily for it. It will give health and strength The very remarkable and certain rwuei given woman by JlUOHE'l) JHB.V JiALJiU iiliMKI) Y has it) van Uniformly success and weakness life. Thousands oi and make life a pleasure. For sals by all druiroisWSi''",,'Yr T" BLCMAUEIi-f'liAMi DliUO CO., Pobti!ad. Aeenta! W LJ Seaside ana Country .Gowns need j - . , Duxbak Orchard and Garden. Coal ashes are beneficial to clay solL Testing seeds will save much time and vexation. , . 1 Currant and goosberry busbes should be pruned every year. Be ready at the first opening In the spring to set out trees. All trees should be transplanted be fore the leaves start out. It Is best to cover all wounds made Is pruning with paint er oil FR AZ E R c Rif ki e BEIT IN THE WORLD. Val I V Is. M O C Its wearthgqaalltlessreunnrriasi'el,tttii tlljr outlasting two boxes of any nther braml K e bom Animal Oils. r TIIK OlOtJfNK. KOH BALK BY OKKGON A NO OsyWASHINGTON MKItf'HANTS-iai and Dealers generally. : oo roe waht to make mosey? ixz torvBf;: lug conntry agencies. We sre offer Inn won1 r(nl Inawtemenls for tbe bsiulllns of the Htiimlitr '. Sewing machine. Anybady with ,iHitnhi' sense can sell them at the iri:n quote, and we guarantee every niHClilite sold. Wrltll for full pnrtliilnr4. We ftsnt an agent In every town on the i'aclflc Count. No Is the time to take up the work, anil yon cmi ' materially to our Income by A "lug o, dress, Standard Sewing Machine Ho., 1 6th St., Ban Francisco, Cal. BIAS VELVETEEN BINDING on their skirt edges. It is rain proof, sheda water and never turns grey. . it your dealer will not ', supply you we will. : lamplas thawing labels and material) mailed frit. " Home Dressmaking Made Easy." s new book by Miss t mma M. Hooper, of th Ladles' Horns Journal, f bis ibat you ? ! Hairs yim e frtllni 1 f wciabt la the SlanacS-Hlaatlni ( lurrarina Halca llHof WIlld -Vooilt- i l"of f.md-R .Ur. ' eraafr-HHrttiara- Baa Taata la the ' Moatt Is tha Mara. Im-I'lltalln af ' M,art,i)o,iolla Una.- a af Stamach Cankartd Hoatb I Oaa is tha Bowtla , Uoa f lia.fc-.' IcSIa Apcatlia . DtpraaHd, Irrluhle Canilltlas tl Iks i MlnS- Dlaalnaaa- Hcadacha Canatla- uaa ar viarrkaiar FOR PEOPLE THAT ARE SICK or lKf....1?"' Wall," WsUlVER FILLS are tha Ona Thins to uas. Only One for a Doae. ' Said by Drurstata at 23c. a box Samplas mailed free. Addraaa Or. Bosanko Med. Co. rhUa. l's. sent for 25c, pos'.ago paid 8. H. A At. Co., P. 0. Box 699, N. V City. FOR CHILDREN TIKTHINQ - rssaUbyetlDraawtatfc t !ata a kattta. 1 AGENTS WHNTED, " Cenflemeti, in every town, for oaeof the beat selling nrtlnli s maile, t!i.ed by every man, woman ami child, i frederlcks Mllltary Tooth Kru.li with Tongue Cleaning Attachment. Kndnrscd by all lh leucllniv phvaleluna and denrlata. Bend 15c. for mmi.le. Kutallsfor 'i&o sndiVlc. WILL A KINK CO, Market Street, Han Kranclsco, CsL SURE CURE for PILES ''" hi oiiim, nisiiiir rrnirnainf rusi midM mh M (ia.ai a ar l'mira'1 nt r tti Bu-HAM.aa'n PI IB BFMfnv. au.n. iL-h. atNcrba tuuioia. A pflJirlir. oiira. (:imui.t, ,.nt fraa. rrlaa (usiaia suu. CilUSAWiO, i-hUawPav This yaa hare DYSPEPSIA Tlckcr'i Dyspepsia Cablets. by mall, prepaid, ea recalat af at aanta "M ARI.ra It.H.rr H.,1.1 l.n,i.i v ' ": .".! ailltcrwl horribly fri.ni .lvii,,.l. l. Aikir'ai'nii i.i. I.L...I. . i ... ' ' . ' -.a i Miwaia.imvacmartme." , ACKKR UEIIICINECO., 6 18 CksabaraSt, S T.' r ) ?ij .1 1.,, nU'TliHtrWHtlir'aTni-St' iAli if-! ft. . I 4 Bat Co.mli Sirup. TaateaUoud, Caa I 1 i l In time, floii tT1nitia. 15 v. N. P, , V, o, 000,-8. F, N. V. No. 738 !'V,