Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 November 1891 — Page 7
Granddaughter of a King.
The grandchildren of Charles X. of France, the little Duke of Bordeaux and his sister, are described by their governess, Madame de Gontaut-Biron, as bright and winning litt e people Their society must have been a welcome distraction to Charles X. during that trying time when it was becoming evident that he could not please the French people and must abdicate the throne. An instance of the strange intuitions which children sometimes have is the remark of the little princess when she was told that her uncle, Louis XVIIL, was dead, and that her grandfather wai king. “Dear grandpapa is king,” she murmured; “so much the worse for history. ” She once overheard the King sav to Madame de Gontaut, “Everywhere, especially in Paris, there are intrigues against my authority. I assure you I cannot endure it. I shall leave h( re and put the key under the.door.” This somewhat figurative expression had no sooner escaped the King than the little girl asked the question which an older person would hardly have had the courage to put: “And after that what sha’l we do, grandpapa?” The King left the rcom without replying. A few minutes later a crowd gathered before the Tuileries, under the window of the King’s room. They were looking at a placard which the "litt'e princess had written and hung out. With some difficulty they made out the childish handwriting, and read: : HOUSE to let. : The King had been taken at his word. The King was amused by the wit of his little grandchild It was not long before the royal family was compelled to flee from the palace. On one of the last days of July the palace of St. Cloud was filled with soldiers, wounded and dying of hunger. In reply' to the addresses of the Duke of Angouleme they cried, “Give us bread. We have had no bread for three days.” The little Duke of Bordeaux and the princess took a leg of mutton from their table and went down among the soldiers. “Take this, friends,” they said; “it is our dinner; take it all, even the side dishes ” The next evening the royal family had taken refuge at Rambouillet, The little princess could not sleep for hunger, Madame de Gontaut having been able to find her only a fragment of bread to eat On the next day Charles X, abdicated the throne. When raids are frequent, “coppers” are active.
cdrriuam.aao Stopped - the progress of Consumption. The best authorities agree that it’s a scrofulous affection of the lungs. If taken in time, and given a fair trial, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery will effect a cure. Thousands have been saved by it—thousands more are putting it off till too late. For every form of Scrofula, Bronchial, Throat, and Lung Affections, Weak Lungs, Severe Coughs, and kindred ailments, it is a positive remedy. It’s guaranteed to do all that’s claimed for it. If it doesn’t benefit or cure, in every case, your money is returned. The “Discovery” is the only Liver, Blood and Lung Remedy that’s sold so. Think what a medicine it must be! Especially has it manifested its potency in curing Tetter, Saltrheum, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands. World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Makers, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Great Cough Cure is Without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a positive guarantee, a test that no other cure can suc--cesslully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home tn 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 insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH’S CURE, Price io cts., 50 cts. and SI.OO. If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh’s Porotls. Plaster, Price 25 cts. Ely’s Cream Balm | WILL CURE WCATARRVoI cmRRHPqg Apply Balm into each nostril. ELY BUO3- 56 Warren St, M. Y. AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY or commission, to handle the New Patent Chemical Ink-Erasing Pencil. Agents making WSO perwe-k. Monroe Eraser Mfg.Co,. La Crosse, Wig. Box 831. mmrn Ss®-” HLALTa HLLFi.It. ss na stamp tor copy to Hie editor. Dr. JOHN H. DYE. Buffalo. N. Y aeigai PBIVWIO3V* - Dae mil SOLDIER!)! M disabled. S 2 fee for increase. 26 years experience. Write for Laws. A.W. McCormick * Boms, Washington; D. c. <fe Cincinnati. O. 41 fiT A month and board, or highest comS 1 wi on r,, and 80 days ’ cred.t to aKC'its. P. W. Ziegler & Co.. St. Loom Mo, nil FO IHBTANT RELIEF. Cure In 15 darn, I# 11 |i\ ftevtneiuruii. No purge. No Solve. No I I LEO P% | ■ *■ A A NAKKSIS gives instant i S < « I gl reliet, and is anINPALHI 1 II ■ R BLE (UKE for PILES. M Price, tl; at druggists or | .I by mall. Samples free. L_ L U Address "ANAKKSIS,” * * BozZilS. Kxw You Crrr. r ■ I Consumptives and who have weak longs or Aath- H mi. should use Plso'a Cure for H Consumption, it has cured K thensasdt. it has not Injur- ■ ed one. It la not bad to take. ■’ It ia the beat cough ayrnp. » ■ "T
HOME AND THE FARM.
A DEPARTMENT MADE UP FOR OUR RURAL FRIENDS. limping Accounts on the Farm—A Post Driver That Can bo Made at Hbme—Good Breeding Sense—Points About Boas—A Good Wator Filter. Book-Keening en tho Farm.
his farm from the mortgage. His wife, keeping her accounts of receipts and expenditures for butter, eggs, poultry, dry goods, groceries, etc., acquires business knowledge and sagacity, and at her husband’s death does not find it necessary to call in a stranger to act as administrator, who like a leech, sucks the life blood from the estate—the joint earnings of husband, wife ana children—and finally, with the aid of lawyers and court fees, perhaps leaves the wife and children in absolute want. No, her knowledge of business principles enables her to administer her own affairs. The boy who is permitted to earn his spending money, and taught to keep his little accounts and compare receipts and expenditures, will the earlier learn the value of money and apply his wits to live within his income. Such a boy will not accumulate debts for his overworked father to pay; neither is he so likely to fall into fast company or fast living. He is educated for business, and will be able to hold his own in the battle of life. The girl who has her allowance and is taught to make accounts, will appreciate the value of a dollar and use discretion in its expenditure. A young lady once told her lover, when he proposed, that although she loved him she would not marry him until he had SIO,OOO. He was somewhat discouraged, but went to work to obtain the money and the girl. A few weeks later she inquired how he was succeeding. He replied; “Very well; I have saved $17.” “Well,” replied the lady, “I expect that will be sufficient; we may as well get married.” We hearso much in this day about practical education. But practical education is that which practically fits hoys and girls for the active duties of life, and any education which falls short of this is neither practical nor complete. Fit a child to earn a living and you do better by him than to give him wealth. Fit hftn to appreciate and care for property before he is safe to be entrusted with a legacy. A Post Driver. The accompanying plain engravings show, says Farm and Home, a most effective post driver and one that can be made entirely at home excepting the weight and hook.
A block of iron weighing forty to fifty pounds is required. Sometimes a chynk can be bought for a song second hand, but it will be cheaper usually to have it cast. Its essential features are a ring to hoist it by, and grooves in the sides in which to slide the tongues attached to the uprights. To have the dump self-acting the hook must he made of the precise pattern shown. Any blacksmith can reproduce it. The hook is pulled down to the weight resting on top of the post and siipped into its ring. As the weight is hoisted the hook-ring will be seen to remain at the lefthand end of the slot as in Fig, 1. When it has reached the height at which it is desired to drop the weight, the long tongue of the hook trips against a rod or slat extended across thi? frame for the purpose and is pulled down. This act lets the weight slide to the left and the hook-ring to the right in the slot, as in Fig. 2. The woight is instantly freed and falls heavily on the post. The driver wijrks on the principle of a railroad pile driver. Thirteen-foot planks are firmly biaced on the front ends of stone boat planks held together by irons and bolts eight feet from the ground sa they will not interfere with the p<j«ts being driven. When being diawn from one field or farm to another the boat planks are connected in front and behind by hooks made of heavy wire. This prevents their spreading. Two pulleys are made of double thickness of inch board with the edges chamfered before they are bolted together The grain of these boards is placed at right angles the one to the other to prevent splitting. One is hung at the top of the upright to receive the rope direct from the weight book, and the other at the rear end of the boat planks on a brace. A horse draws the machine along astride the fence row, and the posts are held in place by the uprights while being driven. Any hoy can raise the weight by pulllag on the rope at A. Good Brooding Sense. One of the most profitable things a farmer can do is to set squarely at work to post himself on the established principles of breeding farm animals. At the present time, and in the full blaze of the intelligence of the nineteenth century, we believe that not one farmer in a hundred has made such a study. It is mortifying,
in the extreme, that, there is such a vast amount of ignorance on these imDortant questions. Of all men on earth the farmer should be a wellposted breeder. Of all men on earth he ought to have a library well stored with what the wisest breeders have said or written. Yet 99. lOOths of our farmers are absolutely at sea on the question: How to breed a dairy cow? or: How to breed for mutton? or: How to breed a valuable roadster? Not only these, but there are plenty of other questions connected with breeding, such, for instance, as inbreeding to a certain extent. We* hear farmers every day talking against inbreeding, and declaring that no good ever came from it. Now had these men eA T er studied the question as they ought, had they read the history of all the leading families of our domestic animals, they would see that breeding potency has been always established by more or less of inbreeding. There is a mass of knowledge that the breeder must know if he becomes successful in breeding, which the average farmer seems to think is of no value to him. Yet he is the man who must raise the farm animals. He is the man on whom all progress, honor and profit to the community and State in this particular must depend. As he averages in knowledge and skill so will the country or State average. If the average farmer breeds from grade Sires, and has no clear, well-defined ideas of the tools he is using, and their effects, the result will be just as it has been. The low average of milk production per cow is due mainly to the low average of breeding sense and judgment among the farmers in that line. The average cow is just what the average farmer has made her. Certainly no man hut he is responsible for her. There will never come any reform, any improvement of the knowledge and fortune of the farmer, until he changes his habits, and becomes mere of a student. He must use his mind, and to his knowledge, enlarge his judgment, in short become a more intellectual man. With too many study and thought is distaseful. But every time they are punished for it. The mysterious forces of life, the deep problems that lie in the great question of breeding, never unlock their secrets to the man who will not think. If he would think wisely toward expression, he must study the experiences of others. Every sunken reef has been discovered at the expense of a costly wreck. The record of the reefs, as well as the clear water, constitute the literature of breeding as well as navigation. Wliy tho Boys Leave tlie Farm. The answer is self-evident—per-petual toil in good weather all through the busy season, and perpetual loneliness in bad weather and most of the winter season. The time when the farmers have leisure is, in half the country, the very time when they cannot get away from home by reason of their isolation and bad roads; yet such is the hunger of the heart that the boys revolt against this unendurable loneliness and even now often walk miles through the Dain or the snow to spend half a day in sitting around the stove in the country store. Already, in many sections, the young people of both sexes have broken through the barriers and established farmers’ clubs and little societies of one sprt or another; and improved roads have done much to aid this relief. But why should not this natural tendency he reasonably directed, and all ages and* both sexes enjoy their long winter evenings together?—John W. Book waiter, in the Forum.
10 one who has not noted the results can fully appreciate the value of bookkeeping to the l farmer and his Ifainily, says a Jwritcr in Farm land Fireside. He l is not found complaining of hard times, because he discovers the small leaks and applies the remedy. He saves himself from em- ' barrassment and
LIVE STOCK.
About Hock. Generally the profitable sido of feeding hogs is that which makes the growing pig most comfortable. One advantage in feeding wheat middlings made into a slop with skim milk to hogs is that it will give a better proportion of lean meat. That their is considerable in the management is shown by the fact that while some are making a fair profit others are losing money. If a hog is out of condition there is a cause, and to effect a cure one of the first things to do is to ascertain and remove if possible the cause. In feeding for growth only give sufficient to keep in a good thrifty condition, while in fattening they should have all that they will eat up clean. * Nearly every year good cured hams and bacon sell readily at good prices and pay the farmers a better profit than selling the hogs when fat. Have both the sow and boar in a good thrifty condition when mating to breed. If this is secured they will impress their offspring with constitutional vigor. It is not good economy to feed all sizes together. Divide up according to size and feed accordingly; it is a great waste of feed to do otherwise*, while a part of the pigs at least will not do as well. The best time to fatten hogs is reasonably early in the fall. At that time a better grain in proportion to the amount of food given can be secured. A good sow should raise two good litters of pigs in a year. One in the spring to fatten and butcher in the fall, and one in the fall that can be fattened and marketed the latter part of spring or early summer.
THE DAIRY.
A Questional) e Procedure. Cows that are large milkers and fresh in milk when turned to pasture should be milked three times a day instead of twice. They are hearty feeders and have plenty of paunch room, and having been bred and developed almost with the one object of turning fodder into milk, their production is limited only when they can hold no more. Contrary to a common opinion, by so doitig the milk obtained will be of a better quality, as’ well as Increased in quantity. When anything greatly disturbs the cow the percentage of fat in her milk is lessened to even a greater extent than the milk flow. This has been proved by repeated tests, when tbev have been worried by dogs, abused by ill tempered milkers, or in any way frightened or excited. Perhaps the fever in the blood burns out
the fat, or causes it to be absorbed into the system. But whatever the reason the fact is abundantly proven and as over-distention of the wellfilled milk-veins and glands cannot help but cause pain, this will explain why the milk is richer in solids, and especially in butter fats, than when it is drawn out twice.
THE POULTRY-YARD.
FdMlinc: Soft Feed. Soft feed is not natural to birds—that is, wet and sloppy materials—as nature provides them with the means of reducing the hard substances. We have fed hens on glass, broken flint, powdered china and other substauces, but the gizzard ground them to an impalable powder. Hard, sharp substances assist the gizzard in grinding the food and the process is such as to pass the food slowly into the digestive organs. When the crop is filled with soft food the work of the gizzard is lessened, and the process of forwarding the food too rapid, the result being indigestion. It may be noticed that when a full meal of ground grain is given, the hens at once they remain in a state of inactivity until the crop is emptied of its contents. The Ideal Fowl. The ideal fowl is a very practical sort of a bird. One that is plump, fine-flavored and quick of growth, that is what any one wants in a broiler—a good roaster with heavy breasts, tender flesh. As layers we want hens that will begin to lay when six months old, that will lay eggs two ounces each in weight, with rich, yellow yolks. Every hen should lav at least 100 eggs and rear a brood of chicks the first year and a half of hei life. This is not wanting too much, but there are many fowls kept on the farm that fail to come up to What constitutes good, practical stock. It is a poor policy to retain poultry which does not retain an equivalent for its food. —J. W. Caughey, in Agriculturist.
THE HOUSEHOLD.
How to IMnko » Watnr-Kilter. Chas. Wilson, of Winmetka, 111., has contributed the following to tho “Short Cuts” column of the Practical
the bottom of keg. Inside I put a four inch layer of coarse gravel, another of sand, same thickness,, near a layer of pulverized charcoal, and this covered with a piece of cheese cloth, to catch any coarse material. Gravel and sand, of course, should be previously well washed. I fill my keg from the cistern; but the waterspout from the house could he connected with it. Cost of filter is very slight. Social Hint* A young woman unconsciously struck the key-note of covcrsational ability, in her comment the other day upon a friend: “I like to talk to him,” she said emphatically; “he makes me think of something to say.” The ability to draw out one’s compan. ion in conversation is far greater and rarer than the possession of fluency in expressing one’s own opinions. A persistent talker, even if brilliant, becomes tiresome after awhile. Said a clever hostess, planning a dinner which she wished specially suecessful: “I can’t ask Mrs. S., though on some accounts I shoald like to; she talks so unceasingly that she soon depresses the company.” A man expands the same idea a little more when he said he had enjoyed encountering a person slow to awaken the spirit of a conversation. “There is no game,” he says, “in these brilliant people, who, meet you alert, manysided, responding instantly to every subject suggested. All you can do is to go down before them; while the other sort it is a pleasure and subtle flattery to one’s skill to rouse and develop.” To Cool a lle<l-Room. If the sleeping-room is warm, it may he cooled for a time by wringing large pieces of cotton out of water and hanging them before the window, says the Ladies’ Home Journal. Leave the door open, and as the air comes through the wet cotton it will be cooled. This is a good device for cooling a sick room; the cloths can be wet again and again. Keep the gas turned low during the process of undressing and sleep without a lamp, unless it is a tiny night lamp.
The Doctors Unmasked.
But, if the editors are unmasked tonight, what shall we say about the doctors? If vou are finding out by his poor words and halting manner how little and unimportant the mysterious “we” of a big newspaper may be, what do you think of your own exhibition ? There are, here present, at least a dozen of you from whom I myself have heard the most solemn and magisterial instructions as to how one should live. Avoid late dinners; avoid crowded rooms; eat simply; drink sparingly; don’t smoke —three courses for your dinner and a single glass of wine; keep your dining room cool,avoid draughts,be sure to have the air pure and fresh, never sit over an hour at table! Ah, yes; those are familiar formulas. Every one of you remembers them; every one of you has given them a thousand times, and taken a good fee for it every time. Now we’vo got you out from behind the screen. This must be what you meant by it. This is where the fees go. The united skill of 200 doctors, concentrated upon the single problem of hygiene, how to produce for themselves the best and most wholesome way of dining, has resulted in this. Well, well; it may be naughty, but it’s nice; and we are more obliged than we can tell you for being shown at last, so satisfactorily and on the highest medical authority, just what “Plain Living and High Thinking” mean.— Wkitclavo Iteid, at Holme*' banquet.
It • consUtutlonal tnd not t local disease, and tberefore It cannot be cured by local applications. It requires a constitutional remedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla, which, working through the blood, effects a pernanent cure ot catarrh ly eradicating the impurity which caua a and promotes the disease. Thousands ot people testify to the success of Hood's Sarsaparilla as a remedy for catarrh when other preparations had failed. Mood' Sarsaparilla also builds up the whole system, and makes you feel renewed in health and strength. All who suffer from catarrh or debility should certainly try Hood’s (sarsaparilla. *1 have u-ed Hood’s Sarsaparilla for catarrh with satisfactory results, receiving permausSil benefit trom it* J. F. Ureas an. streator, HA
Fold by all druggists. »1: sir for tv Prepared only i|l L. i. HOOD & CO.. Apothecaries. Lowell, Maas. 100 Doses One Dollar
It is a fact that is not generally known that falso teeth have to be tnado to suit the complexion if satisfactory results are desired. A dentist walking on Chestnut street called attention to this fact as he passed a lady who in smiling showed a beautiful sot of the whitest of teeth. “Those teeth are too white, ” ho said. “She is a blonde and ought to have bluish whito teeth. A brunette can wear clear whito teeth, but blondes should have bluish or croam-tlntod. ” Then lie mentioned that a friend of Ws had put in a set of perfectly white teeth for a lady who is fair. Ho did it against his own judgment and only aftor tho lady insisted strongly on it Sho wore the set a few days "and went back, saying tho teeth were too conspicuous. She took a dark set tho second time, and they can not be told from natural ones. In all, dentists have as many as thirty different shades in falso teeth and have to exercise much caro in the selection.— Philadelphia Inquirer.
It Is with feelings ot regret that we announce the failure of hosts ot people troubled with inaction of the kidneys to take effloient means to renew their activity. This failure is most disastrous, for a complete wreck of the organs themselves must eventuate if timely means are not taken to re-establish their seoretlve function on a basis of aotlvlty and regularity. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters renews both, and prevents ultimate and fatal disaster. Ai it is one of the funotione of tho kidneys to strain from the blood, in its passage through them, impuritlee prooreative of dropsy, rheumatism, and gout, an early Impetus is all the more needful to be given to their operations when tardy or ineffectual. Tho unmedlcated stimuli ot commerce do not answer this purpose. Use the Bitters for dyspepsia, malaria, constipation and biliousness.
Farmer: Not feeling disposed to pay SB.OO for a three-q u a r t crock filter, I filter my water with a ten -gallon keg and ordinary water cask,» as .shown in ’sketch. A I number o f j one-quarter . inch holes are bored into
Tho anecdotes connected with the free list would fill a volume. One day, when Nestor Roque plan was tho director of tho Opera Comique, ho was handed a card of a gentleman whom ho did not know from Adorn and who had called five and-twenty times. The visitor was admitted, and very politely but persistently clairaod his free pas-es, which had boon suppressed. His grandfather had an opera performed in 1803. Roqueplan asked tho visitor to hum an air of said opera. The young follow could not comply with tho request. “Well, monsieur, I am still more ignorant of your grandsire's music than you are, so you must admit that your request is an unreasonable one.”
One of the popular paintings at the Few York Academy of Design was a yard-long panel of roses. A crowd was always before it. One urt critic exclaimed: “Such a bit of nature should belong to all the people; it is too beuuttiiul for one man to hide away.” The Youth’s Companion, of Boston, seized the idea snd spent $20,000 to reproduce the painting. The result has been a triumph of artistic delicucy and color. Tho Companion makes this copy of the painting un autumn gift to each of its flvo hundred thousand subscribers. Any who may subscribe now for the first time and requests it will receive “The Yard of Roses" without extra charge while the edition lasts. Besides the gift of this beautiful picture, all now subscribers will receive the Companion lreo from the time the subscription Is received till Jan. 1, including the Thanksgiving and Christmas double numbers, and for a full year from that date. Every family should take this brightest and best of illustrated literary papers m addition to Its local paper.
A would-bn literary woman, whose enthusiasm for Lord Byron’s poetical works has led her to name her two boys Harold and Manfred, recently bought u little dog to which she gave tho name “1 enhance. ” Replying to a visitor’s comment upon the singular namo of the animal, she said, knowingly; “I named him for Byron’s dog. Don't you remember the line where tho poet says, ‘Perchance my dog will howl?’ ”
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHUNKY & CO., Props., Toledo. O. We, tbe under eigne 1, have known F. J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Tbuax, Wholesale Drupelets, Toledo, O. Waltuno, Rinnan h Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, aotlng directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tbe system. Testimonials sent free. Price 750 per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Alpine Glaciers. A recent survey has established the number of glaciers In the Alps at 1,255, of which 240 have a length of more than 4% miles each. The French Alps contain 144 glaciers, those ot Italy 78, Switzerland 471, and Austria 462. Th* Only One Ever Printed—Can You Find the Word? There is a 3-lnch 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 Co. 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, beautiful, lithographs, or SAMPLES FREE. An advance guard of the Salvation Army has pitched Its tamp in Deadwi od and Is throwing up fortifications. Theso warriors will venture almost anywhere, but thev have been a long while making up their minds to tackle Deadwood. The Bla< k Hills region is not what it once was. It Is those having a penchant for spinning long yarns whose tales ought to be docked. FIT&W—&JI Kits stopped tree bv lJr.ivnne s urea* Nerve Restorer. No Kits after first day’s use. Marvellous cures. Treatise aad s*.oo trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. W 1 Arch PbiU~ Pa.
Catarrh in the Head
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Shades in False Teeth.
Disastrous Failure!
No Claim on the Free List.
"A Yard of Roses."
Perchance.
How’s This?
| laborin^men^^taic^care7l 1,088 OF TIME IS COSTLY I ■ V THB QREAT REMEDY FOR PAIN. I 11 rheumatism, I Sprain*, Bruises, Cats, Wound*, Soreneta, ft Stiffnees, Swelling*, Backache, Nee- [ ratql*, Sciatica, Bum*.
*1 have bean taking Hood's Sarsaparilla for the past four years at intervals. I was troubled with catarrh, and the nkediciue effected a perfaot aura, I take it now wbanev r I feel debilitated, and it always fives me Immediste strength, regulates the bowels, and glvea an excellent appetite* Lzvi Campbell Parker bur/, W.Va. "My daughter has had catarrh for nine years. Sha coughed and expectorated so much that every one thought she had consumption. I tried everything I heard ot. but gained no relief. I sent her to Florida in September for the winter, and there her friends advised her to use Hood'« Sarsaparilla. She wrote me that ehe had taken three bottles, and never (ait so good la her Ilfs.* Mbs. McKbioht, UB wtlihtfhe sea Street, Newport, Ky.
Fold by all druggists. »1 j six for IV Prepared sat? by C. 1. IlOOi) A IX)„ Apothecaries, Lowell, Maes. 100 Doses One Dollar
mu* ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleiaaut and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidpeya, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy ana agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities oommeud it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and 91 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to tiy it. Do not jwscept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO, CAL. UUIBVILLE. KY. HEVY YORK. N.t, Common Soap Rots Clothes and Chaps Hands. IVORY SOAP DOES NOT. Baby is Better SHE GOT BIOS IN THE NIGHT WITH CROUP. WE ALL THOUGHT SHE WOULD DIE. MAMA GAVE HER DR. WHITE'S PULMONARIA AND IT CURED HER SO QUICK. \This great medicine is a safe and certain specific for Croup, and should always be kept in the house where there are children. It is the most wonderful oough remedy in the world. Three sixes, 35 ots., so eta. and sl, and every bottle warranted.
B **§§?* H WcToHiC Sal Blc«pl«*sues* Cured. IV I am glad to t»*tlfy that I used Factor Koenig'. Nerve Tonlo with the best lucoe.i tot ■leepleisnei*, and believe that it ia really a great relief for .offering humanity. B. FRANK, Pastor St. Severin, Keylerton P. 0., Pa. A Presbyterian Minister. Peoria, 111., September, 1880. Bey* Pastor Koenig’* Nerve Tonio ha* beooma a household neoesslty In bis family. It i* Invaluable for nervous disorders, is easy to digest, and has no bad after effects. A. REINHARD. Freeport, 111, Oct. 26, 1890. We used 12 bottles of Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonio for nervousness, and found it to have the desired effeot in evert/ case. DOMINICAN BISTERS. pnfF-A Valuable Book on Nervous LULL Disease, sent free to any address, [Hr [ and poor patients can also obtain | HLb this medicine ftee of charge. glkla remedy has been prepared by tbe Reverend aftor Koenig, of Fort Wavue, Ind, since 1876, and mow prepared unde*-bis direction by tbe KOENIG MED. CO.. Chicago, lIL Sold by Druggists at ai per Bottle. 6 for *5, Xante Size. *1.75. 6 Bottles for S 9.
m THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD I • TUTT’S • “tiny liver pills# • have all the virtues ofthe larger ones; A equally effective; purely vegetable. S Exact size shown In tills border. ••••••••••a
“German Syrup” For Throat and Lungs “ I have been ill for Hemorrhage) “about five years,. •‘have had the best Five Years. “ medical advice, “and I took the first '* dose in some doubt. This result“edin a few hours easy sleep. There “ was no further hemorrhage till next “day, when I had a slight attack “which stopped almost immediate“ly. By the third day all trace of “ blood had disappeared and I had “recovered much strength. The “fourth day I sat up in bed and ate ‘ ‘ my dinner, the first solid food for “two months. Since that time I “have gradually gotten better and* “ am now able to move about the “bouse. My death was daily ex-j “pected and my recovery has been 1 “ a great surprise to my friends and ' ‘ the doctor. There can be no doubt “about the effect of German Syrup,j “ as I had an attack just previous to “its use. The only relief was after ‘' the first dose. ” J.R. Lougkxiead, Adelaide. Australia. • ft Cures Colds, Coughs. Sore Throat, Croup, nfiuenxa, Whooping Cough, Itronohltis ana Asthma. A certain cure fur Consumption In flint s' sure, and s sure relief In advanced stages, us# st imee. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Hold by uesiers evsiywbsre, Lsrgc bott.es, SO cents snd 11.00. sis LIVER U PILLS do hot gripe mob bicker. ■■A Bure curs for SICK HKADACHK, Impaired dl*..tlos, con«tl- . p.tton, torpid glands. Theysrouw vltsl Organi, remove naune. diia slneai. Magical effect on KldU nevs ami bladder. Conquer I a & 3 V W arid Paiiv actios. Beautify complexion by purifying blood. POBiLT Vr.oxTASL*. The doae la nicely idlueted tonilt cum. op cm p)tl esa never be too much. Each vial contalne 42, carried in veot pocket, like load. pencil. Business man's (rest convenience. Token sailor then augST. SoldOVtrywhere. All fanuine (code rear “Oroapent." Bond S-eent atsmp. You get M page book with maple OR. HAETER MEDICINE C0.,1t. Unit, IILmOIS-ag^^Ske-CENTRiL TRAIN' Dolly st (.00 p. m. from Chicago. Now snd sltcsnS toft Bib Hbbbt Thompson, the , most noted phyatclsn of England, says that more tbaa Y half of all diseases come from BjjfeMK errors in diet. ® end for *' re ® Sample of *rflel<l Tea-to 313 West strect > Ncw v ° rk cit iGARFIELD TEA M ofbsd latinncsres Sick Headache, rest ore»Compl»alem)C»sr»» Constipation. jßfiUiJi WRY/ F ite‘ DETECTIVES Weutad io every eouoiy to act is the Secret Service tiud.r Inetractlone from Copt. ..rauoao. ex.chief Deteellvet as Cloclcnall. Sapebeoca sot neccaiary. Kal.hU.bed II /ear.. Pattteul*r.* 1r- Detective Barcas Ce. 44 Arcede, Cloclonatl.O. The ucthode sud opcrotlcnec I itilo Soreae tnecatlfatcd sod found itwml ky United Btctee flererhaeht. WFMQIAM IOHS w.noßßis, IICIIOIUII Washington, D.C. B 3 yrs in last war, If syndicating olalma, stty aiuoo. ©®FIfFOLKSREDfICiD PATENTS! ■ass—S—ms, wASHINGTON. l>. . . U- A- b- ->o. 45-01 WHEN WIUTINO TO you saw the adverUeemeU re- . ."“OJHER*. » WAW^OU!» watch carefully your daughter’s health. When the appetite falls, or there is a grow ing nervous irritability, extreme lassitude, emaciation, the Voice trembles, the step is irresolute, eyelids droop, and expression languid, then devote on* hour to a thorough investigation of the cause. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S Compound acts promptly ia such cases. It is a Positive Cure and Legitimate Remedy for the peculiar weaknesses and aliments of wonuSrn Druggists sell M» or seat by mail, in form of Pols or Losenges, o* receipt of Lfffia K. Pinkham Mo*. Co.. Lynn. Mam.
