Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 October 1891 — Page 7
As good as new —that’s the condition of liver, stomach and bowels, when Dr. Pierce’* Pleasant Pellets have done their work. It’s a work that isn’t finished when you’ve stopped taking them, either. It’s lasting. They cure, as well as relieve. And it’s all done so mildly and gently 1 There’s none of the violence that went with the old-time pilL One tiny, sugar-coated Pellet’s a gentle laxative—three to four act as a cathartic. Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the stomach and bowels, are prevented, relieved and cured. As a Liver Pill, they’re unequaled. They’re purely vegetable, perfectly harmless the smallest, cheapest, and easiest to take. They’re the cheapest pill you can buy, because they’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. You only pay for the good you get. Can you ask more? That’s the peculiar plan all Dr. Pierce’s medicines are sold on. IVORY SOAP 99S Pure THE BEST fOB EVEBY PURPOSE: > It is an old-fashion notion that medicine has to taste bad to do any good. Scott's Etnulsion is codliver oil with its fish-fat taste lost —nothing is lost but the taste. This is more than a matter of comfort. Agreeable taste is always a help to digestion. A sickening taste is always a hindrance. There is only harm in taking cod-Kveroil unless you digest it. Avoid the taste. ijiSouth gch Ave-tie, Your druggiilkeeps Scott’s Emulsion :>f cod-liver Oil- nil druggists everywhere do. £i. DONALD KENNEDY Of Roxbury, Mass., says Kennedy’s Medical cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of 40 years’ standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, except Thunder Humor, and Cancer that has taken root Price si.so. Sold by every Druggist in the U. S. and Canada Em Catarrh CREAM BALMyS^I IS WORTH ■JCATARBYqI 8500 TO ANY MAN, PWfEVER g'A Woman or Chili! suffering from y .e, CATARRHBdgIi “e?r mU WOTEVER A particle is applied into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists or bp mail. ELY BKOTHEEB,S6 Warren Street NeV York, " - I AH HOT WELL ENOUGH TO WOM/‘ Thi* U a daily event In mllli, shops, factories, ttc. When those distressing weunesses and derangements assail you, remember that there ia a Remedy for all of them. We have on record thousands of such cases, that hare been restored to vigoroni health and live* of usefulness. LYDIA E.PINKHAMS Compound has stood the test of many years, and Is to-day the only Positive Cure and Legitimate Remedy for those peculiar weaknesses and ailments of women, all organic diseases of the Uterus or Womb, and Ovarian Troubles, Bearingdowu Bensattons, Weak Back,Debility, Uterus Amors, Displacements of the Womb, Nervous Prostratioß, etc. Every druggist sells it as a standard article, or sent by mall,ln form of Pills or Loses ges, on receipt of SI.OO. K. Rinfcham Mod. 00., Lynn, Mas*. 1
REAL RURAL READING
WILL BE FOUND IN THIS DEPARTMENT. Agriculture the Baals and Fonndatlon of All Wealth—A Home-made BarrowCare of Farm Animals—HouseholdOrchard and Garden, Etc. Dignity of Agriculture.
SGRICULTURE is the basis, the foundation of all wealth, and the . other pursuits are \ so closely con- \ nected with it \that their prosL#)perity depends I upon thfe success \ J° f farming. There is not only !|P n o antagonism •-j between them, ■jy. but they are K mutually benefleial to each A other and the utmost good feeling
should exist, and they should endeavor to promote each other’s interest. No portion of the cummunity needs higher intellectual advancement and more refined culture than the cultivators of the soil. They occupy a proud, high, and honorable position and they should make it greatly sought after. The youths of the country, instead of abandoning agricultural pursuits, should seek them and endeave to make them a source of profit and give them high improvement. In this way they will have culture and refinement as well as health and pleasure. Let the intelligent, progressive, and practical farmers in every neighborhood meet on some Saturday afternoon in every mQnth to consult and advise with each other. Let them give in public meetings the results of their experience, show how to increase the fertility of the soil; to cause greater productions and to improve their live stock. These meetings will become schools of instruction. They will be pleasant and agreeable, as well as instructive, and will enable the farmers to get the benefit of each other’s experience. I know of no better method the farmers can have of improving the agriculture of the country and of making it profitable as well as agreeable. How could time be better or more delightfully spent than at these meetings? They are not held for the purpose of advancing the political interests of the men engaged in them, and enabling them to get some office by ■creating antagonism between the different classes of the community, hut their object is to advance the interests of the whole community and to improve agriculture. None but intelligent, progressive and thrifty farmers can be expected to take an interest in these meetings. All such, by uniting together and acting in concert, will exert an influence, the happy effects of which will be felt throughout the whole region in which they exist If they need any pecuniary assistance to keep up the association, it can be obtained by voluntary contributions made by the members at such times as not to feel them.—Exchange. Home-made Corn Harrow. This, for effective work, cannot be beaten. Take four pieces of good plank, 2x6 inches, and ten feet long; soak in water thoroughly; then drive
two rows-of 20-penny wire spikes into each plank, about two inches apart each way; now bolt three pieces across these, as shown in cut; attach an evener with three chains and you have the harrow made. Corn can be harrowed till two or three inches high with this harrow, without injuring it, and, therefore, is superior to the common harrow for that purpose. —J. W. Armstrong, in Practical Farmer. Farm Proverb*. Use dlligeaaoe, integrity and proper improvement of time to make farming pay. Do not have more live stock than you can keep well. House ail things as much as possible—animals, utensils and crops. When you are offered a fair price for your produce do not store it for rats and speculators. The more comfortable you can keep your animals the more they will thrive. A good cow Is a valuable machine; the more food she can properly digest the greater the profit. A few roots daily to all the stock are as welcome as apples to boys and girls. Iron shoes on sleds last a lifetime and are cheaper in the end than wooden ones. Replace the bars where you often pass by strong gates, and then wonder that you did not do so before Although in draining land thoroughly your purse may be drained, yet the full crops that follow will soon fill it again. Always give the soil the first meal; if it is well fed with manure it will feed all else — plants, animals and men. A borrowed tool if broken should be replaced by a new one. A sense of honor in such matters is much to be commended. How Much a silo should Cost. In reply to a question how much a silo should cost, it is told In a bulletin issued from the New Hampshire Station that the day of costly silos is past, and it is this fact alone which enables the rapid extension of this system of storage. A wooden silo keeps its contents with less loss than a stone or cement one, chiefly because of the penetration of air through mortar and cement. A silo built independent of the barn, having its own frame, roof, etc., can be built for $1 per ton of capacity, if above seventy-five tons capacity. If built in the corner of, the barn the cost of material and labor will be about one half that sum, but on most farms when F'«re is lumber, and where
much of the work can be done by the farm help, this cost can bo reduced almost, if not quite, to an actual cash outlay of $25.
LIVE STOCK.
Wires to Sell Hojjl. When to sell hogs is a mooted question among farmers. One writer advises to sell hogs when the most money can be got for the least outlay. The ups and downs of prices we cannot control, hut by careful attention to the feeding and use of scales we can tell closely whether we are making corn into pork at a profit or not. ilf not, there ought to be a change of ration or an immediate sale of marketable stock. It doesn’t pay to hold beyond the time of profitable growth and fattening. successful feeders believe it pays best one year With another to sell- the pork when the highest point in gain has been reached, letting-the question of probable higher prices alone. Corn used in keeping over fattening hogs will make twice as much pork if given to other animals. It is a losing game to hold for an increase of price as a rule. Make all the pqrk you can out of your corn in just as little time as possible and then market to the best advantage, is the advice of the Cincinnati Commercial. Care of Farm Animals. The most practical and valuable information that can be brought to the intelligently practical farmer is that which relates to the care and management of farm animals. But few farmers have any solid data of facts to draw upon derived from their own experience. To know just exactly which costs the most to produce, a pound of mutton or a pound of beef or a pound of pork is something not more than one farmer in a thousand can tell, for the 999 never keep exact records. All of them can guess at it, may be, quite closely, but It is guess work after all. To be sure they put their money up on their guess work, and embark in mutton feeding, beef feeding, or pork feeding, and many say they ought to know all about it as long as they are in the business. It is true they ought and they would know If they did not have such an universal contempt for keeping exact records. Here is where the English and Scotch farmer excells his American cousin. He is trained in the art of keeping books and records. He is not considered a good safe farmer unless he can show what a thing costs. That is just as great an advantage to the earnest thinking farmer as it is to the manufacturer. The dollars the farmer is to earn runs the gauntlet of 111-luck and accident to as great an extent as the manufacturer’s dollars. He should not be loaded down with an extra per cent, of carlessness and indifference to sound rules of business proceed ure. Heat Horne to Sell. The American Agriculturist states that horses to be sold in the New York market for “general purpose” will bring the best prices when they conform as nearly as possible to the following standard: A good steed, bony head, full, kind eye, prickedefcrs, good crest, oblique shoulders, short on back, long on belly, somewhat arched at coupling, well ribbed up, heavy boned, short, flat legs, compact, active, blocky, good tempered and a good walker. He should weigh from 1,000 pounds upward.
THE DAIRY.
* Pay aa You Go. The creameryman who goes into a community and pays the cash for his milk just as fast as it is delivered at his door, the same as any other business does—or ought to do—will establish himself on a firm basis of esteem among the farmers, and will be supplied with the best the dairy affords, besides insuring the eternal good of all the people of his neighborhood. The fanner and dairyman has to wait too long for returns. A cash basis would benefit all concerned. It is easy to deride this idea, and say that It is impracticable, chimerical, etc., but this does not make it so, nor will it convince us that it is so. Every line of business is hanging too much on the farmer’s capacity (now nearly exhausted) for indulgence, and it is high time for a radical change. Pay as you go. Dairy Note*. Still another milk-testing apparatus is announced, called the Hutton. The United Kingdom of Great Britain has 9.2 people to one cow. We have one for every 4.3 persons. Niagara is the name given a butter cooler exhibited at the show at Bath, Eng. It consists of a water-tight chamber around which cold water is made to flow. A condensed milk plant is to be put in at Newport, Me., at a cost of $50,000 to consume the milk of 4,000 cows. Several others are to follow if this one succeeds. Filled cheese is still in the market in Chicago and the Farmer’s Review of Chicago and a correspondent of the Wisconsin Farmer both advocate a national law against all such frauds. Milk drawn from an Inflamed udder will almost invariably, if made into butter, develop an offensive odor, resembling decaying meat.," Such milk is unfit for use. Do not'feed it even to pigs. Pour it on the manure pile. If a man is a criminal who robs your puree, in what category would you place the one who robs you of that which is dearer and more precious than money—your health?. Look out for-the one who seeks to sell you any of the so-called compounds that are guaranteed to prolong the keeping qualities of milk. They are slow hut sure destroyers of health. Some complaint is heard that the dairymen who have had the milk feature of the Columbian Exposition in charge have dubbed four breeds—dairy breeds—and shut out the rest. Guernseys, Jerseys, Holsteins and Ayrshire are the lucky breeds. They must be rather exasperating to the Shorthorn men if to no others, in view of the position the breed has oo copied in this country.
ORCHARD AND GARDEN.
A Good Marker. 1 To make a neat soil marker, says Popular Garden, take a piece of board an inch thick and two inches wide, and of any desired length; draw a
line down the center of each side and one edge, and with a plane or sharp knife pare it down to a sharp edge; fasten a handle of convenient size and length at center of strip on the upper edge and the device is com. pletc. Grasp tho handle firmly, press the sharp edge into the earth, and you have a straight, even drill of uniform depth for sowing. By marking and cross-marking, as in corn planting,
you have even spacing for pricking or transplanting. To mark off the distance to next row you might also put on a runner at one side, fastened to rod of iron passing through the marker, as shown in lower figure. This runner can be adjusted any distance and do perfect work. Of course handle and marking strips can be made any length from a few inches to several feet. After trying one you will probably make several of different sizes. Horticultural Bints. The Pearl tuberose, besides being dwarf and having larger flowers than the common one, is earlier blooming, the flowers opening a couple of weeks before the other. Dahlias are easily kept'in winter-by being placed in a cool Cellar, free from frost. The roots must not be allowed to become so dry as to shrivel up. The sweet gum is one of the handsomest of ornamental trees. Its starlike leaves are admired by all who see them; and when autumn comes they assume a scarlet color, rivaling the scarlet oak. Many of the earliest flowering herbaceous plants, if taken »p and potted in the fall, will bloom nicely indoors in the winter time. Columbines, violets, saxifrage, creeping phlox and blood root are among them. Hydrangea pariiculata grandi-jhra, Deutzia gracilis, Japan snowball, Spircea Thunbergii and Persian lilac are nice things to have in flower in pots in early spring. Dig up from the open ground and pot them before tho ground freezes.—Practical Farmer.
THE HOUSEHOLD.
Water aa a Disinfectant. It is a fact that appears to be not generally known, perhaps because it may not be generally credited, that pure, fresh, cold water is one of the most valuable of disinfectants, inasmuch as it is a powerful absorbent. Every sick room should have a vessel of clear water frequently renewed, placed not far from the bed, or even beneath it. This not only absorbs much of the hurtful vapor, but-by its evaporation it softens and tempers the atmosphere, doing away with the dryness which is so trying and depressing to an invalid—or even to well persons, for that matter. It has frequently been shown, by actual experiment, that troubled sleep and threatened insomnia are corrected by so simple a thing as the placing of an open bowl of water near the sufferer’s couch. Of course it hardly need be said, after these matters have been considered for a moment, that water which has stood for any length of time in a close room is not proper for drinking purposes. Good Housekeeping. Polite Table Manners. Soup should be eaten quietly from the side of the spoon; never from the point. Do not use your knife to serve yourself from dishes from which other people at the table are to take food. Do not sit sideways on your chair or on the edge of it. Do not drink tea from your saucer or pour it into the saucer to cool. Do not leave your spoon standing in vour tea cup, but take it out and lay it in the saucer. Do not wait on yourself before older people or any guests, who may be present, are served. Do not shove the dishes along the table, but take them up carefully and pass them.
Do not use your napkin fora pocket handkerchief or the back of your hand for a napkin. Do not use your knife to convey food to your mouth; that marks you as from the backwoods at once. Do not leave the table before the conclusion of the meal, without asking to be excused. Do not monopolize all the conversation with talk about the crops if you arc a farmer, or about the jelly that will not “jell” if you are a farmer’s wife; neijther should you eat your meal in solemn silence, but make the conversation general and of interest to all present. Do not eat fruit in a mussy or unpleasant manner or spit the stones, skins or seeds into your plate, but remove them from the month with your thumb and fingers or with a fork or spoon. The table is not the proper place to clean or pick the teeth and toothpicks should not be placed on the table in a private house. Make no noise with yonr mouth in 4 drinking or eating; it is a sign of ill breeding.— Farm and Home. .
Would Oblige His Friend.
A well-known Atlanta man, (says the Constitution,) who died recently, was ill a long time before the end came. When he became aware of his approaching death, he called a friend to his bedside and asked if he knew a minister whose name was mentioned. “We11,.1 wish,” said the sick man, “that you’d go to him and tell him I’m going to die; and ask him to preach at my funeral.,”! Thq, friend went tq the minister’s house and found him sick in bed. Nevertheless, he delivered the request. “TeU my good brother,” said the minister, "that I’m mighty sick myself, but I’m getting better, and if he can manage to hold, on to life untilT get up. I’ll preach his tuner&T sermon gladly.”
A Bret Harte Story from Real Life.
It was a tender-hearted American who saved the murdered Severn Cisneros from burial in a pauper’s grave. When he visited the undertaker’s where lay the bodies of murderer and murdered, he was perceptibly under the influence of liquor. “Say, pard," he said to Carl Schussel, “that gal died afore she wanted to, didn’t she?* “Yes, sir." “And that feller there murdered her?" “So it is said. ” “And ye’r giving him a big burial?” “His friends are. ” “Ye’r say the gal’s got to go to the Potter’s Field?” “I am afraid so.” “Where’s her mother?” “She has none. ” “But she had one onc’t, and she's got to havo a square deal and be buried right Here’S *2O to got her somethin* to wear what’s fit to be planted In. Here’s »20 to get a better coffin with, and here’s-slu for a broken wheel of flowers. Let’s not have It said that old ’Frisco gives the murderer a biggor send-off than that poor girl what he killed. Good by, old paid ” “What’s your name, please? This is an act of rare generosity. ” “Ilave a drink, pard, but my name's my own biz.”—San Francisco Report.
Come to Stay.
The terribly aggravated form of influenza, which phyaiciana on the continent of Knrope designate as *la grippe," seems to have effected a permanent lodgment this Bide the Atlantia. It makes its reappearance m soon as the eool weather Bets in, and not infrequently during the summer months. In the spring it is rampant. Npthlng checks its first attack, or so effectually counteracts Its subsequent ravages, as Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. The fortifying, invigorating influence of that beneficent tonic protects the Bystem against the dangers which beset a feeble physique and a weakly constitution consequent upon abrupt transitions of temperature. It clffußes a genial warmth through the diaphragm, wbioh is the best corrective or preventive of a chill, and is a means of neutralizing the effect of exposure in damp or rigorous weather. In dyspepsia, liver complaint, oostiveuess, rheumatism, malarial and kidney troubles it Is never resorted to without good results.
The Latest Way.
There is, in SL Paul, a certain preacher, of Hibernian antecedents, who considers himself to be in direct communication with the well of English undofiled, and is generally credited with the possession of as rich a brogue as can bo found anywhere in Tipperary. Some mention was made of his peculiar pronunciation at a church meeting, which greatly angered him. He immediately galled upon one of his leading parishioners, and, after complaining of the injustice done him, asked him whether, in his opinion, a singlo trace of the brogue was to be observed in his speech. “Well,” his friend answered, “if you wish to deny it, I should advise you to do so in writing. ”
The Only One Ever Printed-Can You find the Word?
There Is a 3-Inch display advertisement in this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine 06. This house places a “Crescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for It, send them the name of the word, and they will return you book, BEAUTirCL lithographs, or SAMPLES FREE.
Derivation of Caucus.
As the rise and fall of the nations of antiquity may be traced by the study of comparative philology, ao the history of any art or industry is inflected in that science, and the number of words which are contributed by a given profession may, to a certain extent, be taken as a measure of its importance. Thus the most influential guild of colonial times was the ship calkers of Boston. In those days a meeting of the calkers was usually held to decide upon political or other questions and was called a “calkers,” hence our Latin-lookiugr word *\iaueug.” n It gives us pleasure to rofer to the advertisement of Dr. W. H. Tutt which appears In our columns. For over tweuty-five years Tutt’s Pills have been before the public, and each succeeding year their valuable properties become better appreciated. They now stand second to none for'tbp relief of that much abused and overtaxed organ, the liver, and for the removal of that cause of so many ills, constipation. They are used In every civilized country, and carry with them voluminous testimonials of ttelr safety and efficacy. Tutt’s Liver Pills should have a place la every household. The medical adviser of a friendly society In Bath advertises that he will undertake the medical treatment of all and sundry at the economic rate of two seats weekly for adults and half prlie for children. Will Need a Cushiow.—The man who alts down to wait for Somebody's old shoes will need a cushion, and it ought to be a thick one. Such people are usually dyspeptic with a bad liver, and should use Dr. White's Dandelion to arouse tbe sluggish liver and put a little new life into them. It overcomes that feeling of weariness, purifies the blood, and make* the weak strong and vigorous. Saxe-Coburg-Gotha has a law fining the father of a lad below the age of 18 or a girl less than 15 years old 130 marks for going to a ball. A. M. PRIEST, Drngglst, Shelbyvllle, lad.. "Hall'S Catarrh Cure give the best of satisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonials, as f c “ r *» «v«ry ons who takes it." Druggists sell It, 75c. It takes contact with other people to make us acquainted with oursekves.
Health Ys th»t state when all tb« organs of tbo body perform their function* In regular and efficient manner; and to remote any obetrnctlon to inch action ie the proper duty of. medicine.. Hood’s Sarsaparilla gites health by purl tying the blood, toning the stomach and bowels, and lntlgoratlng the kidneys and liter. Tberelore, If you are In poor health, take Hood's Sarsaparilla. HOOD’S PILLS —Best liter intlgorator and cathartic. R ‘liable, effective, gentle. Price 25c. SHILOH’S i CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Great Cough Core is Without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorised to sell it on a positive guarantee, a test that no other cure can successfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insdicm* disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH’S CURE, Price lo cts., w cts. and sl.oo. If your Langs are rore or Back lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 eta. | ■ tm A IfAKESU give* instant P LES psas
Commendable.
An claims not eonsistant with the high •haraeter of Syrup of Figs are purposely avoided by the Cat Fig Syrup Company. It acts gently on the kidneys, liver and bowels. cleansing the system effeotnally, but It is not a oure-ail and makos no pretensions that every bottle will not substantiate. Out in Kansas a man has been compelled to pay a fine of SSO for kissing the hand of a beautiful woman, who objected to the familiarity. Ip you were to take the conceit out of sdme people the remains would dofy identification. FITS.—AII Pits Stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Norite sfter ttretdmy's use. MsryellouH cures. Treetlse end (LOU trial bottle free te Fit esses. Send u> Dr. Kline. Ml Arch St. Phils.. Pa.
R. R. R. DAQWAY’S (I READY RELIEF. CUBES AMD PBkVXNTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitis, Pntumonla, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, inflammations, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Frostbites, Chilblains, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING* CURES THE WORST PAINS in from one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after reading this advertisement need any one BUFFER WITH PAIN. Railway'* Ready Relief la a Sure Cure for Every Pain, Sprains, Bruises, Fains In the Duck. Client or Limbs. It was the First anil la the Only FAIN REMEDY That instantly stops Uie moat excruciating pains, allays Inflammation,andcuvesCongestions,whether of the Lungs, stomach. Bowels, or other glands or orgma, ny one application. A half to a teaapoonCu) In half a tumbler of water will In s few minutes cure CrampH, Spasms, Hour Htorasob, Heartburn, Nervousness. Sleeplessness, Hick Headache. Diarrhea. Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency, and all Internal pains. There Is not a remedial a»»nt in the world <list will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Bilious and other fevers, slued bv UADWAY'N FILLS, qu'ck as RAHWAY'S READY Fifty Cents per Bottle. Sold by Druggists. V RE SURE TO GET RADWAk'B. B' ArM HeHveXohiC El Sleeplessness Cured. IV lam glad to testify that I used Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonio with the best sneoesa for sleeplessness, and bellove that it is really a great relief for suffering humanity. E. FRANK, Pastor Bt, Bsverln, Keylerton P. 0., Pa. A Freibyterlnn Minister. Psoma, 111, September, 1600. Bays Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonio has become a household necessity in his family. It is invaluable for nervous disorders, la easy to digest, and has no bod after effeots. A. REIN HARD. FlutitPOKT, 111., Oot. 96, 1800. We used 12 bottles of PMtor Koenig's Nerve Tonio for nervousneaS, and fonnd it to nave the desired sfleet in every ease. DOMINICAN BISTERS. Pliri*—d Valuable Boole en Nervous LULL Disease* sent free to any address, rK r r and poor patient* can also obtain | lllmlM this medicine bee of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend ejtor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind., sinoe 1818, and now prepared unde* his direction by tbe KOENIG MED. 00.. Chicago, 111. Bold by Druggists at SI per Dottle. O for It A Large Blue, >1.70. 0 Bottles for *9. _____ , ,1., SPIELDTIA^ resioreeComplex ion t cureaConstlpul ion. WWWWwwwwwww _ THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD I I TUTT’S • •tiny liver pills# • lißTe all the virtue# of the larger ones I A equally effoetlvei purely vegetable. V Exact size shown in this border. OOOOOOOOOM A Dog Without a Tail U not half as absurd as a Fanner with no Scale. Run your farm on business principles -buy and sell by weight, and when you buy a Scale buy tbe best, which is always the cheapest. For Circulars free address only JONEB OF BINGHAMTON, Binghamton, N. Y, Psaniylvani* Agricultural Worki, York, Fa. Fargubar’s Standard Engines and Sdw Mills. Sent for Catalogue. Portable, Stationary, Traction fri A . wend Automatle Engines a specialty IMt-|jE~yVto\ B Warranted equal or puperlor to , I any made. MdStTEfB^BSScSTtakPs. HIH riLLO
About seven years ago I had Bronchitis, which finally drifted into Consumption, so the doctors said, and they had about given me up. I was confined to my bed. One day my husband went for the doctor, but he was not in his office. The drtiggist sent me a bottle of Piso’s Cure for Consumption. I took two doses of it, and was greatly relieved before the doctor came. He told me to continue its use as long as it helped me. I did so, and the result is lam now sound and well —entirely cured of Consumption.—Mrs. P. E. Baker, Harrisburg, Illinois,' February 20, 1891. I have had Catarrh for many years, but never found anything that did me any good until I concluded to try PiSo’s Remedy for Catarrh. After using it a few times I found great relief, and would not be without it now.—Miss Belle Woodruff, Lawler, lowa, July 21, 1891.
HtlTt WIMTED 01 SALARY
“August Flower” *' I have been afflictBlllousness, “ed with biliousness _ “and constipation Constipation,n f or fifteen years; Stomach ;, ,first ° ne and thcn “another preparaPains. “ tion was suggested “ tome and tried but “to no purpose. At last a friend “ recommended August Flower. X “ took it according to directions aud “ its effects were wonderful, relieving me of those disagreeable “ stomach pains which I had been “troubled with SO long. Words “cannot describe the admiration “in which I hold your August “ Flower—it has given me a new “lease of life, which before was a “ burden. Such a medicine is a ben- “ efaction to humanity, and its good “qualities and “wonderful mer- Jesse Barker, “its should be _ , “made known to Printer, “everyone suffer- Humboldt, “ing withdyspep“sia or biliousness Kansas. % G. G. GREEN, Sole Man’fr,Woodbury, NJ. fiF IRON Stonic ®w?», B s22?.'OTi!a dlsordor, build strength, renew appetite, restore health and vlgorofyoiKh. Dyspepsia, Indigestion. thatttredfecU ing,absolutely eradicated. Miml brightened, brain powor increased, | | Ik IF A bones, nerves, muo. I lIIILA dies, receive new force. I HII IT 1 suffering from complaints peLHIIII si culler to their sax, uslugtt.ifud . a safe, spoeily cure. Return* rose bloom on chocks, beautifies Complexion. Sold everywhere. All genuine goods bear “Crescent.’’ bond usU oent stamp for 3‘2-p*ge pamphlet. OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. LouU. M*. GOLD MED AL, PARIS, 187 a W. BAKER & CO.’S II Breakfast Cocoa _ from which tbe excess of oilVflHWkWlg boa been removed, I> absolutely/ pure and it it soluble. Hfim. No Chemicals ml ifll UlMi ere used In its preparation. IP Ini' It Uj lift baa more than three ttmn the--111 | lif Infi strength of Cocoa mixed with, H2IW | I |ll Btareh, Arrowroot or Sugary ■InIII HI ll * Dd ** therefore far more ecoStj] I I /111 || nomieal, costing lees than one Halt j II [||[J cent a cup. It la delicious, nourlshlng, strengthening, baiilt DtoxsTßO, and admirably adapted for invallda aa well aa for person* in health. Bold hj Grocers ererywhere. W. B AKER ft 00.. Borohaiter, Mmp' O RATEFUL—COMFORTING. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge of the natural law* which govern tbe operations of dlge.tlon and nutrition, and by a careful application of (he fin* properties of welt-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epos has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flaroufod beverage wbioh may save us ' many heavy doctor.’ bills. It Is oy the judletout use of suoh articles of diet tbatsooastUutlou may be gr dually uullt up until strong enough to resist every tondeuoy. to dlieata Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around unready to attack wherever there it a weak potato We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure Mood a-d s properly' nourished frame."—"Otofl Service (iaeette.'' Made simply with boiling water or milk. field* only In half-pound tins, oy Grocers, labelled thus: JAMES EPPS <k CO., Homoeopathic Chemist*,. LOSPOK. MHHASP. lIUNIHS CENTRIt TRAIN Daily at 9.00 p.m. from .Chicago. New and elscant rfefeys Em © ©FITFOLKS REDUCED BWUMBSi WANTED! TRAVEL. WepavMO
c. A, 0. No. 44-91
