Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 17 July 1897 — Page 7

WISE WOMENi-

ne

Drink

.»r-.v

^ho Heed tho First SympItoBw of Nervous Derangement.

Special from Mrs. Pinkham A dull aching pain at the lower part back and a sensation of little of heat, or chills running down ne, are Symptoms of general •nmlf derangement.

If

these symptoms are not accompajed hy leucor t®&, they are( icursors that akness. I is worse folly neglect tese sympUs. AnywoW of coinfoil sense will _ke steps to arc herself. Jshe will realise that |er generative system in need of help, and iat a good restorative medicine is [positive necessity. It must be a medi-

with specific virtues. As a friend, I woman friend, let me advise the use |f jjvdia E Pinkham's Vegetable impound. ]f your case has progressed so that a Lublesome discharge is already established, do not delay, take the Vegetable Compound at once, so as to tone Ip your whole nervous system you an get it at any reliable drug store, fou ought also ta use a local application. or else the. corrosive discharge Trill set up au inflammation and hardning of the parts. Mrs. Pinkham's native Wash is put up in packets at 5 cents each. To relieve this painful ondition this Sanative Wash is worth Its weight in gold.

MKS.GKORGE W. SiiEPARD, Watervliet, Y., says: I am glad to state that [am cured from the worst form of fenale weakness. I was troubled very nuch with leucorrhcea, bearing-down bains and backache. Before using Urs. Pinkham's Remedies it seemed hat I had no strength at all. I was pain all over. I began to feel better ifter taking the first dose of Vegetable impound. I have used five bottles, nd I feel like anew woman. I know other suffering women would only it, it would help them."

TryGrnin-O! Try Grain-O! Ask your grorer to-day to show you a fcackape of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink without injury as well as |he adult. All who try it like it

JUAIN-0 has that rich' seal brown of llocha and Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stom,ch receives it without distress. Onejtotirth of the price of coffee. 15c and 25e ler package, sold by all grocers.

I Atibaitrr In scarcely more Immaculate than the com•taton bffauti ed with Glenn's Sulphur roap tiiU's Hair and Whisker Dye, black or brown, 50c.

Lauah

HIRES Je.eP. Rootbeer, /Cobl-Drmk

msA"/RES

Well-Drink

^^funhirat

FITS

I

HIRES ootbeer.

permanently Cured. No flta or nervousness after

VI

ilrst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve ReI ,.Son(l for KIt r. tu.oo trial bottle and treatise. U. II. KLINE, Ltd., YYI Arcli Street, Philadelphia, l'a.

PATEMTQ H.

8.

WILLSON & CO.,

Wium

11 Jq ^injrton.D.C. Nochargetfll patent "obtained. AO.pace book Tree.

t*'-*,

'f-

Sounii ltcuoni for Approval. several copent reasons why the medirecommend and the public prefer catharti/o

Stor"acli

..

nssl»ts

PUKE,HEALTHY BLOOD MEANS BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION.

Intestinal Microbes Poison the Blood When the HowelH-are Constipated*

Driv®

Buy and try Cascarets to-day. It's what they do, not what we say they do, that will please you. Send for booklet artd free sample. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago, Montreal, Canada, or New York.

The trout in Maine streams are larger and more plentiful than for many years.

STATE OF OHIO, CITY OP TOLEDO, I LUCAS COUNTY. FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is the senior partner of tfie firm of F. J. Cheney & CoM doing business in the city of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum'of One Hundred Dollars for each and every case of' Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's' Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney.

Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1896. A. W. Gleason, -J SEAL Notary Public.

Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free.

AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS.

PITCHER'S CASTORIA,"

DR. SAMUEL PITCHER,

ms the originator of

March 8, 1897?

on

Allen's Foot-Eas*?, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting feet, and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tirixi. aching feat. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores, liy mail for 25 cents, in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.

3©^

C'***

Bitters above the ordinary

U. I v®' ?oes

n°t

(irench and weaken the

rather than forces nature to

is botanic and safe, its action is never 5«rS ^'n,Brnal earthquake like that pro-

VM™ F,

^rasVc Purgative/ For forty-live

J! it has been a household remedy for liver, stomach and kidney trouble.

Germany makes 2,000,000 false eyes annually.

BEAUTY IS BLOOD DEEP.

Them Out by Making

V" vV', tl»e Liver Lively. "Beauty is skin deep." That is wrong. Beauty is blood deep.

v'

A person eonstipated, with a lazy liver, bilious blood, dyspeptic stomach, has pimples and liver spots and a sole leather complexion.

No one with a. furred tongue, a bad breath, a jaundiced eye, can be beautiful, no matter how perfect are form and features.

To be beautiful, to become beautiful, or remain beautiful, the blood must be kept pure and free from bile, microbes, disease-germs and other impurities.

Cuscarets Candy Cathartic will do it for, you quickly, surely, naturally. They never grip nor gripe, but make the liver lively, prevent sour stomach, kill disease-germs, tone up the bowels, purify the blood, and make all things right, as they should be. Then beauty comes oi itself and to stay.

F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O..

Sold by all Druggisis, Hall's Family Pills are the best. £he deepest coal mine in Belgium is near Lambert, 3,450 feet underground.

Neglect of the hair often destroys its vitality and natural hue, and causes it to fall out Before it is too late, apply Hall's Hair Renewer, a sure remedy.

Los Angeles, Cal., claims a population of 103,000.,

Fot Lung and Chest diseases, Piso's Cure is the best medicine we have used.—Mrs. J. L. Northcott, Windsor, Ont., Canada.

Mexico's government has been asked tc rid the country districts of horse thieves.

Free Farms for Young Men In Manitoba, Assiniboia and Alberta. Millions of acres of the finest grazing and farm lands. Coal in abundance. Taxation light. Low passenger and freight rates. Write for information. C. J. Broughton, 232 Clark street, Chicago,

The Brazlllian government has a standing offer of a prize of «.a0 0(X) for the discovery of a sure remedy for yenow fever.

Shako Into Your Shoe*

Kas., the owner of a tree having plucked three this season.

What Do the Children Drink at the Table Coffee and tea are injurious they get tired of milk or water, and there is but one other thing to give them, that is, Grain-O. a new food drink that takes the place of coffee and tastes so much like it thftt even the parents can't tell the difference. It is the opposite to coffee, for instead of breaking down the nervous system it builds it up, instead of making one bilious it keeps the whole system in a healthy condition. Grain-0 is a delicious table beverage made of pure grains, having the rich seal brown color of Mocha or Java. Grain-O is not a medicine, but a food drink that every one likes, and every one of the family can drink •without the least injury. It costs only about onequarter as much as coffee. Sold by all grocers, 15c. and 25c. per package.

WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE ... EXCLUSIVE USE OP THE WORD

"CASTORIA,"

AND

AS OUR TRADE MARK.

of Hyannis, Massachusetts,

"PITCHER'S CASTORIA,"

that has borne and does now °n

bear the facsimile signature of wrapper. This is the original

"PITCHER'S CASTORIA,

used in, the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years.

LOOK CAREFULLY

the kind yon, have always bought Sp

tond has the signature of ficZ&JCtM wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except 27ie Centaur Company of which Chas. 3.' Fletcher is

Do Not Be Deceived.

Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies

it), the ingredients of which evctl lie does not know.

"The Kind You Have Always Bought"

BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF

Insist on Having

The Kind That Never Failed You.v

the same

eVery

which has been

at the wrapper and see that it is

on

^xe

LEGJIORXS THAT SIT.

The Leghorn is a non-sitter, but the Bitting propensity is not entirely lost, as Leghorns will sit if they are too closely confined and are fed too highly. We have known them to make the best of sitters and mothers, and they are also somewhat pugnacious, defending their young bravely against all enemies. When a Leghorn becomes broody she must not be condemned because she is inclined to bring off a lot of chicks, for she is not at fault, as the conditions of management govern the matter.—Farm and Fireside.

TO MAKE A PERMANENT PASTURE, It is very doubtful if it will pay any farmer to spend the needed money to make a permanent pasture, such as we read of being kept up in European countries, unless the land is to be irrigated, when the work may be done with ease. Otherwise one of our hot, dry spells in summer may so injure the grass as to ruin the meadow. The work, however, is done' as follows: The land is first summer fallowed, to get rid of weeds then riohly manured and fertilized then reduced to the finest tilth by repeated plowiugs and hnrrowings then sown with such a variety of grasses as will renew themselves as far a? possible without seeding, these kinds being those with spreading roots mostly. The bulk of the grass is Kentucky blue, meadow fescue, rod fescue, fowl meadow, redtop, oat and rye grasses, of each about twenty pounds. This seeding makes a thick growth, and the well-prepared soil soon has a thick sod on it. Then this is preserved by frequent fertilizing, moderate grazing, and fresh seed occasionally.—New York Times.

CULTIVATION AS A FERTILIZER FOR WHEAT. Experiments in wheat culture through five years, at the New York Cornell University Station by I. P. Eoberts, indicate that on strong or clayey lands it is often more economical to secure available plant food by extra culture than by the purchase of fertility. In many strong wheat soils there is more plant food than the variety of wheat grown can utilize, though enough may not be available to produce a maximum crop. In changeable climates the wheat plant is so handicapped at times for want of suitable climate conditions, that it is unable to appropriate much of the availablo plant food in tho soil, and hence is not often benefited by additional nourishment. The wheat crops in the experiments proved unable to elaborate more food than the amount furnished by the soil under the superior culture given some of the plats. The fitting of tho land for most croiDS is done so badly that under certain conditions even a moderate amount of. manure or fertilizers may not only fail to increase the vield, but may be positively h'nrmful to the wheat crop to which they are applied. —American Agriculturist.

THE MODERN ORCHARD.

A change has come over public opinion.s The thick setting of trees in orchards has been largely abandoned, and wide planting is the general practice. Such excellent re-. suits have been obtained' from" the change that many progressive farmer? havo gone still further. Observing that the trees at the ends of the orchard were always the most flourishing, they naturally set to work to discover the cause for the difference. The explanation was soon found in the greater amount of air and sun the end trees received, and the more extended feeding grouud for "the roots.

Nowadays the tendency among progressive growers is to plant a single row of trees arcund a .field, and a double row directly across the centra of the field.. This gives.eaeh tree the advantages formerly possessed by the end trees alone. It also makes the orchard less dispersed than it would be if the centre double row were omitted, and offers facilities for cultivating and gathering the fruit as speedily -as possible. It.would seeim as though the day for planting treeq in blocks were past, and that did fashioned orchards were doomed.— New York' World.

BUSINESS METHODS IN FARMING. Every crop planted on the farm, every animal bought and every man hired is an investment, involving sound business judgment, in both the planning and the management, to insure a profitable outcome. Too often crops are planted, or stock raided, simply because other farmers raise them, without regard to the cost, the market or the adaptability to the particular farm and its equipment. When planted, to account is kept of the expense, and not even an estimate is made of the cost, but tho crop is sold as soon as harvested for what it will bring and the crop repeated the next season. While it would sometimes cost more than the crops were worth to keep a detailed set of accounts with each crop, still a simple businesslike set of farm accounts will furnish the data whereby the profitableness of particular crops, or stock, may be closely estimated, and thus furnish a safer basis than guess-work for the abandonment of the crop, or for changing its treatment. Many parts of the estimates made for one year or field would answer for other year a and fields. Whether accounts are

1

V-

kept with particular fields or crops or not, there should be an account opened with the farm, and others with household and personal expenses. By taking stock each year it can be determined whether the farm has been profitable whether the improvements have exceeded the repairs whether personal pleasures have been too extravagant, and whether the household department has been economically carried on. Of course there should be an account for every person with whom a credit business is transacted, for everyone admits that memory utterl/ fails in keeping an accurate record of such transactions. Treat the farm as a person and see whether it Can be credited with a fair balance of profit every new year. If farming is a business, then the keeping of farm accounts will pay.—American Agriculturist

ACCIDENTS ON THE FARM.

While it is as desirable to employ a veterinary surgeon in cases of severe sickness or dangerous injuries as it is to employ the family physician at times, it is well to know what to do in "emergeucy cases," when something must be done in less time than it would take to get the regular doctor to the spot, says a correspondent of the American Cultivator.

O.ie of these cases is that of choking, which frequently happens when roots are fed without having been cut. If the obstruction is not large and has passed well down, it is often possible to move it further along by gently pushing down with a stick. A whip handle rounded a little at the end is a good instrument for this purpose. One person should hold the animal's head, so as to bring the mouth and throat in a straight line, and another should use the stick, and at the same time work upon the obstruction from the outside, rubbing it downward. Push firmly but gently on the stick.

Another method is to put a stick about as large as one's wrist across the animal's mouth like a bridle bit, and tie it fast so as to oblige it to keep the mouth open. This will sometimes cause coughing, so that the obstruction will be thrown up, or will facilitate breathing until mucous enough has gathered around it so that it will pass downward. If the obstruction is not far down, the animal's mouth may be kept open by a horseshoe or by blocks between the jawB, and one with a small hand can reach down and withdraw it. Unless something is clone soon the animal must choke to death, and time is of more importance than skill.

Cuts that produce profuse bleeding are another sort of cases that need attention before a surgeon can be secured. If the blood comes in jets at about the interval of a heart beat it iB from an artery, and a tight bandage between the wound and body should be applied, then a stout stick placed below and twisted until the blood flows but slowly. If the one who puts it on knows enough of the course of the arteries to bring the knot directly over it it will hasten matters, and this should be a part of tho education of a farmer.

If the blood flows in a contiuuoils stream put a wide bandage directly over the wound to keep the edges together, drawing it tightly as can be done with the hands. A handful of cotton, or even of^green grass, under the edges will assist, or one may hold the edges together while another goes for a doctor. We have seen a horse's life saved in this way when the legwas badly cut by the mowing machine, and a man's life saved by the first method when a bullet had cut the artery of the arm above the elbow. In neither case could a surgeon have been brought in season.—Coleman's Rural World,

FARM AND GARDEN TTOTK3.

Do not feed grain as an exclusive diet. The most i-nocessful trainers are the tireless workers.

If your fowls are not looked after, do not expect too much' from them. Pullets and yearling hens are the ones to put your dependence upon for a sure profit. Yp

Breeders will find more money in raising fewer animals and giving them a little training.

With beekeeping and fruit growing combined two crops may be made from the same land.

It is said that colic produced by eating honey may be cured by eating a small piece of cheese.

Little chicks need feeding every two or three hours, but aj they grow older the time may be lengthened.

There is no real rivalry between the trotter .»nd the hackney. Each is good in his place, which is one that the other cannot fill.

The importance of the maternal ancestry is now so generally recognized that this is called the broodmare age of trotting breeding. V*

For growing berries of all kinds select well-drained soil on which some hoed crop was produced last season, potato ground being best.

Extracted honey requires less skill, but there is more profit in producing the best white comb, for which there is always a demand, and which never suffers from competition with a cheap it

CAIIKIE

BOILS, BOILS, BOILS SURE AS THE COMPASS

They Came Thick and Fast-Till Cured by Hood's Sarsapariila. "My brother had terrible boils on the back of his neck. As fast as one would get better another would come. He became very much emaciated, and began I taking Hood's Sarsapariila. One bottle made a great improvement, and when he had taken two bottles he was completely cured."

D.

EKVIN,

Mound City,

Illinois. Be sure to get

Hood's Sarsapariila

Hood's Pills cure s'ek lieadache. 25 cents.

SFELREE'S

op

QARDUI

WOMAN'S RELIEF

for monthly pains in the sides, hips, back, neck, shoulders, head and limbs.

These pains are symptoms of dangerous derangements peculiar to women.

McElree's Wine of Cardui corrects these derangements, cures Whitesand falling of the Womb, relieves Suppressed Menstruation and flooding, quiets the nerves and brings happiness to afflicted women.

For Sale by Medicine Dealers at ONE DOLLAR A BOTTLE.

NEW PRICES

ON

Columbia l!imkis

The Standard of the World.

REDUCED TO

1897 COLUMBIAS Best Bicycles made, 1896 COLUMBIAS REDUCED TO Second only to 1897 models,

$75 60 50 45 40 30

1897 HARTFORDS REDUCED TO Equal to most Bicycles.

HARTFORDS REDUCED TO Pattern a,

HARTFORDS REDUCED TO Pattern i, HARTFORDS REDUCED TO

Patterns 5 end 6,

Nothing In the market approached the value of these Bicycles at the former prices what are they now?

POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn.

Cataloguo free from any Columbia dealer by mail from us for one 2-cent stamp.

fivimaiaivimainimanniniMimBiwiiaiMimwimmmKiMiniwiniMiwiNiniwiKiwiitiwiwiniMinmiiaiinia

neper Disappoints

Reliable and Stylish Fabrics

fashioned and cut by artist#* and made by

frt*.

Trade-mark guarantees «sd —Tsui All dealers can supply you If they wilt— If they don't—wc will teu you whers yo« tuptflsa. BenAfer "£rom Fold to Salons/' ovr gift to readers of this paper—MAILDT*

mmm

Mdros KolmBrotftcrc, e*««L

SOLS MANCffACTU&Uta.

No Sick GbiGkens

and PLENTY OP BOOS, wlm* WtlU* ftootltr Poultrg Vtm*«r is nsed. A positive cure for Cholera, Gapes and all diseasesof Poultry. 25ca pound at *rmg~ (fiste or 5 lb packages aentfcy ns prepaid for $1.00. "HintBOO Poultry Keeping-," seat free.

WELLS MEDICINE CO.» Lafagttte, lafl~

yaPZSSQ

S 75

SO

"Western "Wheel *Work& -0MAKERC Cff/CAGO /It/MOtS

CATAL9GVE FREE

CURE YOURSELF!

USE BIG 1 for BP»I»II discharges, iiiftajnauUimMt \J irritations or ulttM»tacai»

set •uittur*. of mucous ntH^rsiMk [IPraTcsu common, l'aiuless, and not

H1T1»

l\lHEEv*NS0HtHIO»L0O: ««nt or poleoDon*. •old by DroccWS

1

or cnt in rlain vrai**. by nprcn, prepaid, far 11 .no, or 3 bottfaa. t&Ift. CI Circular nut

PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS.

Kxamlnation and Advice us to I'alontatjility of ivnentioji Send for Inventors' Gultle.or Hon to Get Patent. 1'ATHIOK O'FAintisi.u, Wasli iuRton. D.C."

Penmanship, English Branches Book-, keeping. SUMMER SCHOOL—Electric Sans elevator. Positions secured by ooar graduates. Enter now.—INDIANAP-• OLIS BUSINESS UNIVERSITY,

E. J. HEEB, President.

0PIUMH^DRUNKENNESSNVFLWLMLIVMCAREDLALOUSONARI.WL

Csrsl DR.J.L STEPHEN8.1.FBi wiMMHHKfc.

9lr». Wiik»ioiv*«BooTHiNo Syrup ix viaftVlron eethiug, nofteun the u*im retiucuH iutyuttuuitlkjfttl* MVM pniii cm-swiml coliic 25e per txUta.

Indianapolis Directory.

PATENT LAWYERS.

V^SteveiiHon Bldg. I.cag Distance 'PboneUH

LOCKWOOD.

Mr. Oeo. W. Hervey, the Editor of

V. H.. 415-U8 L.emjke BttSg-

Opposite Poslofllce. 'Phone 1208.

H.

P. HOOD & SON. Hooms23-30 Wright Btk 0854 E. Market St. information Free.

PATENT SOLICITORS.

E.

T. S1LVIUS & CO.. Patent Solicitor* Suite 18 Tulbott Block. Free l'luoiiblet..

PENSION ATTORNEYS-

FITZGERALD

& DKLP,

A A W W a O a a S

1 |^H EB has been restored to health after

g**- years of suffering during which time the three best physicians of the state failed to help him. He had indigestion so bad that be could never eat wore than two y*-" meals a dayt and was obliged to carry morphine with biin to relieve paroxysms of pain. In one attack he lost 22 tb in nine days. Three packages of Dr. Kay's Renovator mcured him. For lack of space we can give only short extracts from his letter but ire urge all to send for full report of this case and many others who had failed to get help m-••• from physicians or any other medicine, until they took Dr. Kay's Renovator. MT.

Hervey wrote: "1 consulted three of the best physicians in-the state but they filled to -^2" give me relief. My stomach was sore and sensitive. 1 was induced to try*

Dr. Kay's Renovator,

and it is eight months since I commenced its use and I now have no symptoms what- 1 ever of my old trouble. I have iecommended it to many of my friends-for stomach trouble and I think all have reported relief." Dr. Kay's Renovator has cured s» y*"* many of the worst cases that we consider it a certain cure for all cases of dyspepsia, constipation, liver rnd kidney diseases, and all nervous and blood diseas&s, headache,. f"" biliousness, etc. AT THIS TIME OF YEAR it should be raken by every one -*& to renovate and invigorate the whole system and to purify aui enrich.the blood, giving f*"* to the whole body ikl I I ETC

take. Tone up your lwBe WW kill

ant* v'S°r-

mm

^limtuiniuiiimiiinutuatmauumamaamtummaauK

"Forbid a Fool a Thing and That He Will Do." Don't Use

Koom 47 journal*

lodg.. Monument Plate. Indianapolis

UUKES WHEHfc ALL ELSE FAILS. jst Cough Syrup. Tastes Good- IT* in time. Sold by druggists.

I.N.U. INDPL'S NO. 23 '97

ISIGK HEADACHE! u«. I

Poisonous matter, instead of being thrown out, is reabsorbedioto the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue, it & causes congestion and that awful, dull, throbbing, sickening pain.

REMOVE THE CAUSE BY| STIMULATING THE LIVER,

I Making the poison move on and out, and purifying the blood, The effect is ALMOST INSTANTANEOUS.. I A It ICQ whose sensitive organism is especially prone tosick headaches, DO 5.

LHUltv NOT SUFFER, for you can, fay the use of CASCARETS, be

i^f^r Relieved Like Magic. -I

5? wwmmmwmmmwmw id

1

It is easy and pleasant to -4r''

system fo,: the spring work. Sold by

f*" druggists or sent byynail for 2scts and $1. BOOKLETS treating all diseases ana JB special booklet on Female Diseases, ALL FREE* Address Dr. B. 1. Kay, Medical y*"" Co., Western Office, Omaha, Neb.

SOLD BY DRUGGISTS.

•im -M

f?

'Js

Mi