Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 November 1891 — Page 7

Peace on Earth

I* not th* boon von«h«*te<l to the chronla, nervoui invalid. Blight nolle* ttertla him, odd and unexpected sensation* perplex him. Be neither sleeps soundly nor eat* heartily, he is almost invariably troubled with dyspepsia. What should he do? Begin and pursue sys* tematlcally a course of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. With digestion fortified and food assimilated, strength returns, the nerves grow tranquil and the zest of life returns. A blessed consummation, indeed, and not only effectually but pleasantly wrought by th* Bitters. Biliousness, malaria, rheumatism, kidney complaint are also prevented and cured by this sovereign regulating medicine. Try it at once If your nerves are out of order, and if their weakness is perpetuated by the existence of disease. A superb appetiser and nromoter of sound repose. Rome has twenty-five Protestant churches Beware of Olntm-nts for Catarrh that Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians,'as the damage they will do is tenfold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheoey & Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, and acts directly upon the blood and Kus surfaces of the system. In buying i Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. ;aken internilly, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Che ney & Co. WSoId by Druggists, price 75c per bottle. Theiie Is a newspaper in London ■which is printed in scented ink. FOR BRONCHIAL, ASTHMATIC AND PULMONARY COMPLAINTS, “Brown's Bronchial Troches" have remarkable curative properties. Sold only in boxes. FITS.— AII Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s use. Marvellous cures. Treatise and. 62.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St., Ph Ila.. Pa.

: !CBW Zu’s a sign that you need help, when pimples, blotches, and eruptions begin to appear. Your blood needs looking after. You’ll have graver matters than pimples to deal with, if you neglect it. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery prevents and cures all diseases and disorders caused by impure blood. It invigorates the liver, purifies the blood, and promotes all the bodily functions. For all forms of scrofulous, skin and scalp disease, and even Consumption (which is really lungscrofula) in all its earlier stages, it is a certain remedy. It’s the only one that’s guaranteed, in every case, to benefit or cure, or the money is refunded. It’s a .matter of confidence in one’s medicine. ' It is the cheapest blood -purifier , sold, through druggists, because you I only pay for the good you get. Can you ask more? The “Discovery” acts equally well all the year round.

“ All she lacks of beauty is a little plumpness.” This is a frequent thought, and a wholesome one. All of a baby’s beauty is due to fat, and nearly all of a woman’s —we know it as curves and dimples. What plumpness has to do with health is told in a little book on careful living; sent free. Would you rather be healthy or beautiful? “Both” is the proper answer. Scojl 1 & Bowne, Chemists, 13s South sth Avenue, New York. Your druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsion of cod.liver cfl—all druggists everywhere do. |i« # ea Perfectly Well. V KtrxicoßE, Dubuque Co., la., Sept., 1889. Mils K. Finnigan 'write.: My mother and lister used Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic for neuralgia. They are both perfectly well now and never tire of praising the Tonic. Bock Island, 111.. Nov. 26. 1868. I had been a sufferer for eight long yesjs, when Bev. Neumann, of Davenport, lowa, called my attention to Koenig’s Nerve Tonio. I would know a few moments beforehand that I was going to have a spasm. When it would come on, my head would turn sideways, my eyes roll about, my hands clutch and hold tightly everything they came in contact with: I would froth at the mouth. When I came out of the spasms, I would look wildly about and faU asleep a few minutes. Koenig’s Nerve Tonio had the most beneficial effect, and I am thenkful for the boon the medicine brought to me. TILLIE SIMON. WISPP—A Valuable Book on Nervous LULL Diseases sent free to any address, rnr r and poor patients can also obtain I IlLaLs this luedicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind. since 1874, and Uaow prepared unde*- his direction by the KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, HL fkdd by Druggists at Bl per Bottle. Sforifi UrreSlralUi. 6Bottle.for»9. OWN n to FRUIT GROWERS’JOURNAL aw Cobden. Il'- lor free samp’e copy. IVORY SOAP 99- Pure. THE BEST fOR EVERY rURfOSE.

HOME AND THE FARM.

A department made up for OUR RURAL FRIENDS. Good Seed. Good Soil and Good Cultivation Requisites to Success—Live Stock Notes—A Dairy Well— Household and Kitchen. Three Requisites.

GOOD seed, good soil, and good cultivation are the three requi- . sites toward atX taining success \i n agriculture. \ All three of these jare largely within Jour own control, k / and if we neglect any of them we' have no right to ■-j coujrjain at the result. Ttlse’asy" Sg to determine -Y whether seed is xK good by testing a '•lsmail quantity

before planting. A small box of moist earth placed in a warm corner will tell the story quickly. The seeds should be counted before they are placed in the soil, and if at least 75 per cent, do not germinate the seed should be discarded., Good soil is also within reach of all, to at least some extent. However poor the farm may be as a whole, we can find some portion that we shall be able to bring up to a good state of fertility; then upon this portion it would pay to expend our major effort, practicing intensive cultivation hereon until We could find means and opportunity for improving the balance, And good Cultivation is within the reach of any able bpdied man, for a good, short, and simple rule for the fAHh is to not attempt to cultivate more than you can cultivate wellWhether it shall be a large farm halftilled, or a small farm well-tilled, is the question before the great majority of our farmers to-day. We believe time will prove latter to be the best.—Farm Journal.

A Cheap Silo, “You may build a small silo in the basement of a barn at a iittle expense,” says The Country Gentleman. “The inner wall, separating it from the rest of the basement, should be a stiff frame or studding to which the boards may oe nailed; and if the rest of the basement is but little exposed to the frost, a single thickness of boards would be sufficient, provided it is made air-tight by matching, or by a good cover of tar building paper; but a more thorough and safe way would be to apply two thicknesses of boafds with the building paper between, which would afford protection from frost in all ordinary instances.. The boards would last longer if a heavy coat of petroleum i£ applied to them on both sides. The bottom of the silo must be well drained; and it should be on a level with the adjoining cow stables as a matter of convenience in feeding. Any good fairly durable lumber will answer, and the contents may rest on a dry, well-drained and well-leveled and beaten bottom, or the bottom may be of hydraulic cement.”

LIVE STOCK.

Warm Barns for Fattening Stock. In an experiment made in feeding two lots of pigs of equal age and weight, one being in pens in a warm barn, and the other being in open pens out of doors, the following results were obtained: From Nov. 27 to Feb. 5, in the warm barn one pound of pork cost 4.78 pounds of corn, and in the outside pens one pound of pork cost 5.92 pounds of corn, a difference of about 25 per cent. But during the very severest weather for four weeks, in the warm barn one pound of pork cost 5.71 pcPunds of corn, and in the outside pens it cost 11.32 pounds of corn, or nearly double the amount. Experienced feeders say that the effect of cold weather upon fattening stock is more marked upon other animals than it is upon swine, and if it takes twice as many pounds of corn to make a pound of pork out of doors as it does in the barn, it will certainly require as much more, and perhaps twice as much, to make a pound of beef in a -stable where water will freeze as it will in one Where there is a moderate temperature, not lower than 50 degrees, and also that the same amount of feed given before the weather is very cold wilt make much more fat than it will later in the season.

Good for Sheep.

Sweet ensilage and roots in moderate quantities are good for sheep or cattle. But give them just as much sweet, early cut hay or clover in addition twice a day as they can eat, with just as much provender as though they had no ensilage. Green corn or clover ensilage, like turnips, is a good appetizer if fed in warm barns, or when the weather is mild out of doors. As for feeding it to any stock entirely and making a success, I believe it is impossible. Don’t think I condemn ensilage. Ido not any more than turnips, but do not put too much confidence in and expect too much from ensilage. It is impossible to get any more out of a jug than is put into it or to have your check honored at the bank for more than you deposit. Sheep should never be pastured on the same land more than three successive seasons, unless they are pastured with cattle. The better way to manage sheep in the summer is, unless your pasture is entirely free from coarse or water grasses and bushes, to let a few young cattle run with them. Have the pasture so arranged that you can give the sbeep a fresh pasture, at longest every third year. Let the cattle, or the plow, follow the sheep, and so keep up the rotation.—EL C. Burleigh, in Farm and Home. Some Bone Don't!. Some one has compiled the following regarding the care of horses under the supposition that if a horse could talk he would say to his master: Don’t hitch mje to an iron post or ruling when the mercury is below freezing. I need the skin on my tongue. DonZt leave me hitched in my stall at night with a big cob right where

I must lie down. I am tied and can’t select a smooth place. Don’t compel me to eat more salt than I wan’t by mixing it with my oats. I know better than any other animal how much I need. Don’t think because I go free under the whip I don’t get You would move up if under the whip. Don’t think because I am a horse that iron, weeds and briars won't hurt my hay. Don’t whip me when I get frightened along the road, or I will expect it next time, and maybe make trouble. Don’t trot me up hill, for I have to carry you and the buggy and myself, too. Try it yourself some time. Run up hill with a big load. Don’t keep my stable very dark, for when Igo out into the light my eyes are injured, especially if snow be on the ground.

THE DAIRY.

‘ A Dairy Well. For ordinary use, the well should be dug six feet by four square, with a gutter or groove down one side eighteen inches square. It should contain two or three feet of lasting water. It should be in easy reach of the kitchen, and attached to the house if possible. The curbing should be no larger than the well. A which fits inside of the well, slides up and down between two timbers, which rest on the" botlorn "of the vfell, and are long enough to reach up three feet above the curb. These two timbers should be planed. The framework'of the platform has a board nailed on each side of It, forming a groove which fits on the upright timbers at each end of the well. This makes it rigid and keeps it level. The circular black spots on the platform represent openings for vessels. The piece that holds the wheel, over which the rope passes to the windlass, is prolonged so that when the platform is just even with the top of the curve, an iron pin is inserted through it and the top bar of the platform frame, and holds it there. There is another rope and two wheels. The rope has a heavy

weight attached to assist in raising the platform from the bottom of the well with heavy loads. These weights go down into a box formed of four wide planks, which occupy the gutter, or grove. One lid opens up against the weight-box, and fastens with a thumb-button. The other is hinged so as to hang down by the side of the curb when open.—Gleanings in Bee Culture.

Dairy Notes. If you have no pigs, no poultry, no calves on the farm feed the skim milk badk to the cows. Don’t fail to get in some early corn near the feeding place. When the pasture fails you will find use for it. Upon the premises of the successful dairyman will be found thrifty cows, suitably bred and adapted for the work required of thein. A Canadian farmer, who lost a small pig, after long search found him drowned in the cream can. “So,” he said, “poor piggy’s creamated.” Hoard’s Dairyman says: Creamery butter is that made from the milk or cream of two or more herds of cows. Dairy butter is that made from the milk or cream of a single herd. The income from the cows furnishes the farmer' cash receipts steadily throughout the entire year, which cannot be said of any other branch of farming, excepting perhaps the poultry.

THE POULTRY-YARD.

Two Breeds In a Pen. It is a fact that the great number —millions—of fowls in this country may be found in small flocks, mainly, from ten to fifty in number, says Poultry World. To be sure, there are large establishments where fowls may be counted by the thousands; but the villagers and small farmers, each keeping a small number, make the aggregate poultry census swell to large figures. Many of these small-scale poultry breeders, having limited room at command, desire to keep one of the nonsitting breeds —Leghorns or Spanish —for eggs; but cannot raise chickens with these, and are somewhat troubled about getting sitters. It is an easy matter to manage this affair. There Need be only one apartment and oqe flock. Obtain a sufficient numbei of Brahmas or Cochins for sitting apd let them run with the Leghorn tons and cocks. The eggs of these sitters being brown, may be, readily sorted out from the white ones and used for cooking. The pure white eggs of the Leghorns or Spanish may be used for incubation when the instinct moves the Asiatics to sit —and that will surely come to pass. These sitters may, preferably, be of small size for the breed; large hens being more clumsy and more liable to break the eggs. Plymouth Rocks hardly ever lay eggs so white as not to be distinguished from Leghorn eggs, and they may serve the purpose of sitters; only they do not come to time quite as surely as Asiatics; but they are faithful and careful. A Cochin mother has the very best intentions, yet she may trample out the life of her young. Late hatched pullets are best for this purpose, on account of their small size.

THE HOUSEHOLD.

Cider Without Apple*. The National Druggist gives the following formula for imitating apple cider as closely as possible: Powdered catechu Sparta. Alum 6 parts. Yeast 32 parts. Boney 640 parts. Water. .. 1.. 12.800 part*. w Let ferment for fifteen days in the sun (or other warm place,) then add Bitter almonds 8 parts. Cloves 6 parts. Burnt sugar..... «.»*.. 32parts, n Good Bourbon whisky 384 parts. LetstanlTa day or two, and rack off. If it be too sour, add honey, and if too sweet, add acetic or citric acid to suit. The above makes a “cider” difficult to tell from that made naturally from apples. A good cheap imitation may be made as follows: Twentydive gallons of soft water, two pounds tartaric acid twenty-five pounds of brown sugar and one Dint yeast are allowed to stand in a warm place, in a dean cask with the bung out, for twenty-four hours. Then bung up the cask, after adding three gallons of whisky, and let stand fpr forty-eight hours, after which the liquor is ready for use. —.— . Hints to Housekeepers. The oftener flour is sifted for sponge cake the lighter the cake will small piece of sulphur placed in the cupboard or drawer will drive 3fit§. The flesh of fresh fish should be firm, the gills should be light red,and the scales silvery. In making a mustard plaster for a patient with a delicate skin, use white of egg instep'of water. Wash: mirrors with Warm suds, then dust with whiting from a muslin bag, and polish with chamois skin. Hard soap lasts much longer if dried for several weeks before using it. It is also less hurtful to the skin. To prevent the smell of cabbage permeating the house while boiling, place on the stove a dish containing vinegar. Brooms dipped for a few minutes in boiling suds once a week will last much longer than they otherwise would.

THE KITCHEN.

How to Cook Water. The late Charles Delmonico used to talk about the new hot-water cure. He said the Delmonicoes were the first to recommend it to guests who complained of having no appetite. “Take a Cup of hot water and lemon and you will feel better, ” was the formula adopted. The lemon juice takes away the insipidity of hot water. For this antibilious remedy the caterers charged the price of a drink of their best liquors (25 cents or more), and it certainly was a wiser way to spend small change than in alcohol. “Few people know how to cook water,” Charles used to affirm. “The secret is putting good fresh water into a neat kettle already wartp, and setting the water to boil quickly, and then taking it right off to,use in tea, coffee or other drinks before it is spoiled. To let it steam and simmer and evaporate until the good water is all in the atmoSpher and the lime and iron dregs only left in the kettle, bah! that is what makes a gieat many people sick, and is worse than no water at all.”' Every lady who reads this valuable recipe of a great and careful cook should never forget how to cook water.

Mental Kitchen Scales. ’Pen common-sized eggs weigh one pound. Soft butter the size of an egg weighs one ounce. - One pint of coffee A sugar weighs twnlve ounces. One quart of sifted flour (well heaped) one pound? One pint of best brown sugar weighs thirteen ounces. Two teacups (well heaped) of coffee weigh one pound. Two teacups (level) of granulated sugar weigh one pound. Two teacups of soft butter (well jacked) weigh one pound. One and one-third pints of powdered sugar weigh one pound. Two TABLESPOONS Of powdc cd sugar or flour weigh one ounce. One tablespoon (welf rounded) of ■•ift butter weighs one ounce. One pint (heaped), of granulated Lugar weighs fourteen ounces. Foub teaspoons are equal to ,one tablespoon. . - Two and one-half teacups (level) of powdered sugar weighs one pound. Teaspoons Vary in 'size, and the new ones hold about twice as much as an old fashioned spoon of thirty years ago. A medium-sized teaspoon contains about a dram. One tablespoonful (well heaped) granulated coffee A, or brown sugar equals one ounce. Miss Parloa says one generous pint of liquid, or one pint of finely chopped meat packed solidly, weighs one pound, which ft would be very convenient to remember.

A Burglar who had risen to the head of his profession one day called upon a Lawyer and said: “I have come to demand the protection of the law.” “You shall have it, my friend—fee $5.” “Last night a man named Jones, living on Seventeenth street, shot at me,* continued the burglar. “And what were you doing?" “I wae about to crawl into one of his windows to pack up his silver and take it down to the Safe Deposit Company’s vaults for safety.” “Truly, such ingratitude must be rebuked an-' punished,” said the Lawyer. “We will have him arrested forthwith, and, though he may defend his silver against Burglars, he cannot defend his greenbacks against the law.” “Didn’t you know any better than to behave as you did last night at the party?” inquired Col. Biceps of CoL Calkins; “you made a regular fool of yourself.” “I did, did I?” replied Calkins. “Most assuredly you did. I was really ashamed of you.” “That’s all right. You say I made a fool of myeolt That puts the whole responsibility of being a fool on my own shoulders. Now with you it is different The man who would blame yon for being a fool would blame a nigger because his hair curled.”— Cheek.

A Pleasing Sense.

Of health and atrengtb renewed and of eaae and ccmfo.t follows the use ot Byrap of Flga. as it acts tn harmony with nature to effectually cleanse the system when costive or filllous. For sale in 60c and *1 bottles by all leading druggists. A wealthy man in California has recently torn down several costly houses In order to convert his lands into wheat fields. „>*■

The Only One.

'lhe Chicago, Milwaukee and St Paul Bailway is the only line running solid vestlbuled, electr|clighted, and steam heated trains between Chicago, Milwaukee, St Paul, arid Minneapolis. • r , The Chicago, Milwaukee and St Paul Railway is the only line running solid vestibuled, electric lighted, and steam heated trains between Chicago, Omaha, and Sioux City. The Chicago, Milwaukee and St Paul Railway Company now operates over sixty* one hundred miles of thoroughly equipped road in Mllnols, Wisconsin, Northern Michigan, Minnesota, lowa, Missouri, South and Nqrth JJukota. On all its through lines of travel the Chicago, Milwaukee and St Paul Railway runs the most perfectly equipped trains of sleeping, parlor, and dining cars and coaches. The through trains on all its linos are systematically heated by steam. No effort is spared to furnish the best accommodations for the least money, and, in addition, patrons of the road are sure of courteous treatment from its employes.

It Pays to Read the Papers.

Especially your county paper, for often through thia medium business chances and opportunities are presented that might otherwise entirely escape your attention. For instance. B. F. Johnson & Co.. Richmond, Va.. have an advertisement In this paper that will prove of especial interest and value to a large number of people hereabouts.

The Only One Ever Printed-Can You Find the Word?

There is, a 8-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 theih the name of the word, and they will return you book, beautiful lithographs, 0T SAMPLES FREIj, A Timely Suggestion.—Some folks soem to think that dyspepsia means piety, und others Imagine themselves good simply because they have a bad liver. If these suggestions apply to you, gentle reader, we would advise you to get Dr. White’s Dandelion A Iterative at once. It cures dyspepsia, regulates the liver and overcomes that feeling of weariness and lassitude. Very large bottle for a dollar, and every bottle warranted. If afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it 2Jo

The Full Prospectus of Notable Features for 1892 and Specimen Copies will be sent Free. ft' S Brilliant Contributors. ft S Articles have been written expressly for the coming volume by a host of eminent men and women, among whom are K) S ' The Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone. Count Ferdinand de Lesseps. Andrew Carnegie. Cyrus W. Piel*, ft A The Marquis of Lome. Justin McCarthy, M. P. Sir Lyonr Playfair. Frank R. Stockton. ft V Henry Clews. Vasili Verestchagin. —W. Clark Russell. The Earl of Meath. Dr. Lyman Abbott, ft J . Camilla Urso.— Mrs. Henry M. Stanley, and One Hundred Others. ft, The Volume for 1892 will Contain S Nine Illustrated Serial Stories. 100 Stories of Adventure. The Best Short Stories. ft-' Articles of Practical Advice. Sketches of Travel. Hints on Self-Education. ft J j Glimpses of Royalty. Popular Science Articles. Household Articles. ft’; t Railway Life and Adventure. Charming. Children's Page. Natural History Papers. ft , J 700 Large Pages. Five Double Holiday Numbers. Illustrated Weekly Supplements. Nearly 1000 Illustratfonsu ftr> hi W AFf I FREE TO JAN. I, 1892. T |_. fti- l rS fl fQ|*n To New Hubocribers who will cut ont and eend ua thia all* with name | ||IQ \||H K S HI Hill and address and gI.TS we will send The Companion Free to Jun., IHO‘J, I |||q ■■llll K . S IS BMI W and for a Full Year from that Date. This offer includes the THANKH. • ■■■* K Q 5 f HaAAA ’’ We will also send a copy of a beautiful palntlus, entitled “A YARD OF J fll I Ts |T K $ fit KIIkHX ROSES." Ito production has coat TWENTY THQUBAND DOLLARS. 411(1X1 / 4 IL 0 Ul IIUUUUI StnA Cluei, PMt-qJlea Ordrr, or RtgioltroA Lttior al oar rfiS. Ailrtu, Ullll V L (Ml ft* X 4B The YOUTH’S COMPANION, Boston, Maae. ft;

DONALD KENNEDY A Of Roxbury, Mass., says Kennedy’s Medical Discovery 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. bold by every Druggist in the U. S. and Canada. - ■*. THAT RUSSIAN Half a million AmeHdan citizens have petitioned the Czar to infuse a little more of the milk of human kindness into his treatment of his people. There was no difficulty in getting people to sign them. Sldnfey Smith once defined English charity to be as follows: “A seeing B in distress, feels a strong impulse to make Cgo to his assistance.” It was easy, therefore, to get the signers; now the question is, who will deliver it. It is not quite as easy to get audience with the head of the Holy Greek Church and the Czar of all the Russias as it is to walk up to the President of these United States and slap Him on the back. Still if the bearers of the petition would begin by saying that, in view of the awful destitution that bow prevails throughout the empire and the prevalence of “the gripjpe,” it would be well for the government to send a supply of Reid’s German Cough and Kidney Cure to the provinces, this might secure the committee a respectful hearing, for it would show that they were actuated by a sincere desire to help that suffering people. For sale by all druggists. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111.

Ely’s Cream Balm COLD 111 HDID.FM Apply Balm into each nostril. FLY BKOH. M Warren ht. N. Y. —E_S22£_!s IM Illustrated Publication., with "[ILL MAPS, describing Minnesota. K ► !■ North Dakota, Montana. Idaho, I Waeblngton and vreaon, the Free , Government and CHEAP M pIXTsLMDS Beet Agricultural, Grazing and Timber Land, now open to settler.. Mailed FREE. Addreea fill I, LAB Mil. Land Com, NP.H.R, St, Paul, Minn.

Catarrh Hood’s luraojMiritfw, JBelnp o ConaHfutienaf Remedy, Readily ReaeAee and Owree It. *A cense of gratitude and a dealre to benefit thorn atUictsd prompts m > to recommend Hood’. gareapar.lla to all who have catarrh. For many year. I waa troubled wlta catarrh and indlseatlo i and genoral dtbll.tr. I got ao low I could not get around the house. I tried about everythin! I a,w recommended for ca'arrta; but falling tn ever,- Instance ot tains relieved. 1 became Very Much Discouraged At last I decided to take Hood'a Bar .perl la and began to set relief. I have no* uaed. within two yean, ten or twelve bottle, and I feel better than I hava for yean. I attribute my Improveme it wholly ,to the na« ot Hood's Sarsaparilla MM. Chas. Rnxz. corner York and Pleasant Bta. Hanover. Penn. Hood's Pills— For the liver and bowels, act easily yet promptly and sHclantly. Price the.

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 successfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home ib 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., co cts. and gi.oo. If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts. J THE AUEST m MllSl J • TUTT’S •tiny liver pills® • have all the virtuea of the larger ones 1 equally effective 1 PIUTOIy Exact size shown in thia border. ■m ■ ■ ■■ m ANAKESIH gives Instant rill I fl relief, .nd in »n INFALLIIII I V BLE < UllE for PILKH. ■W N ■ Bm W Pru e. »l; si drngglHtH or 1 0 ■ ■■■— wr Box IMI6, Naw Yoax Orrx. D A TFNTft Quickly Obtained. No atty's ■ M ■ dw I w fee until patent is allowed. Advice K Book free. CLOSE FATERI XSC'V Waeh.D.O.

fiSrUVER PILLS DO NOT 6BIPE NOR SICKEN. VMM Snra ears tor SICK HEADACHE, Impaired dlgMtloa.eenatlpatlon, torpid glands. Theyaronw W vital cruna, remore nsuaas,diag zine... Magical rff.et on KldJ U neve and bladder. Conquer 3 bilious nervous disBeautify complexion by purifying blood. Puastr Vzarraata. The does la nicely edjuetod to an It case, aa one pill ean sorerbotoo much. Each rial contain, 42, earned in vert' pocket, like lead pencil. Buaineas man’s gnat convenience. Taken eaaler than auger. Bold everywhere. AU genuine good, boar "Cr.ao.nt" Bond t-oent rtatnp. You get M page book with asmpto. P». HAITH MEDICINE CO., It. Loult. Ihb_ THIS IS THE ONLY SCALE 6 TON- '6O. Reliable , Accurate , Durable'. BEAMBOX-BRABS-BEAM-IRON-I.EVERS; ADDRESS .JONESeims THE FREIGHT*FOR TERMS. BINGHAMTON, N.tt Ladles can make BIG CASH Prof t. by securing snbacrlbers 'or the loading, oldest and best Ladies' Homa and Faahion Magaaine in America. A pro 11 table and pleasant occupstion, that any lad' can engage in. and maintain bsr dignity. For lull pardeulars send us your name and sddrei. on a portal card. It yon want a full outfit and sample copy, nod IB cents, or we win send tor threw months for SB cents, that you may know and appreciate it. sxcsLenciea. Always address 80DEYT LADY'S BOOK, loz WISBB, Phlladslphla.Pa - Our improved Embroidering Mamakes Kux. w.th yarn orra a. Fine Embroidering wl h silkorr.ephyr.. Circulars and term, to Agts,free. Machine, colored pattern book, milten pattern, samplea of work, cat., price lists, directlosa, etc. all by mall for Sl.'O Sail.taction gnarantsed or money refunded, E. ROHS *C I. Tolodo. O. M&f soncTfoßS restereoComnlexlea ituraaCraatlpstlen. •aS lw Brt» teiS »an» » tot Mw kgSg. ■ Ptoo’s Remedy fbi Catarrh to the M Beet, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. | fay druggists or sent Bfo. KT. BsasttM. Wssaetb Rte H

“August Flower” Perhaps you do not believe tbene statements concerning Green's Aitgust Flower. Well, we can'tasdte’ you. We can’t force convict&winto your heats orraedDoubtlng Seine into you throat. We don’t Thomas. want to. Themoosey is ; yoisrs, and the misery is yours;and until yonane willing to believe, and spend the one for the relief of the other, they wiß stay so. John H. Foster, un Brown Street, Philadelphia, says: “ My wife is a little Scotch womans thirty years of age and of a naturally delicate disposition. For five or she years past she has been stiff? ring from Dyspepsia. She Vomit became sobad at larit that she could notrit Every Meal, down to a meal bet she had to vonrit it as soon as she had eaten it- Two bottles of your August Flower havecured her, after many doctor sfiriled. Shecan now eat anything, anxiestyoy it; and as for Dyspepsia, she docs ent know that she ever had it-“ •

L DO YOU 1 IGoughl I balsam I

It Curea Col<la, Cough a. Sore TlirowZ. CrwoM liifluenicH, IVhooping Cough, BronchiUa an* Aalhina. A certain cure tor Conanmptioaa la nnt g'ageH, and a mr- relief In advanced atHjcra. JW atnn>-<-. You will aee the oxcoilo it effwtaiM*' taking the ilrat doae. Hold by dea>or» avwwWhewa. Large hottie., W cent* and 11.00.

G RATEFUL— - EPPS S COCOA BREAKFAST. / “By a thorough knowledge ot the nMtorafi'ltwarr which govern the operations of digestion and Mfote tl >n, and by a careful sppllo atlon of the flaw pry. tick of weli-S 'lected Cocoa, Mr. Epns kss provided our breakfast tables with a delicately •aroused hew srags which may save us many Usery ilooScsto’MM It Is by tbs judicious use of such arttoise of dtob that a constitution may bs gr dually ouMt spnNl strong enough to resist every tendency tedSaeaste Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating svnuad ufl > ready to attack vrherev.r there to a weak pa ate We may escape many a fatal shaft by keoffiggagrselvss well fortified with pure blood and a sswptofF nourished frame."—“Civil Santa Gasetta.. Made simply with boiling water or mlkL Faflfo only in half-pound tins, »y Grocers, Iktfellaal tours'. JAMES HPl’ri 4c COu Homaopathte Ctatodb I.OSUOX. JCXOLAMD. _ _____ KS TV RET 1/Wfc ISO Adams St., CHICAGO, MS. Cures for Life all Cbronlc.Nerrous Disesaea. Oto ganio Weakness. Be.htnlness. Umltn-se to MaBM 100 Frequent Evacuations ofdhn Bladder. Stajsszr nesa. Book “LIFE'S SECHET ERRORS, wiksOtoSStion List, fort-cent stamp. __ _ $l5O to $2 bo A MONTH. oat. Adapted to town or country. N» MaMtS medicine orcheapjewelry. Splendid opeafogfiarM, the right person. Uoarti Jobe are aewswaM and don't wait long for takers. Ivnifß you can spare but a-few hours a week, write at■ once to B. F. JOHNSON A CO.. Richmond. for inrormatioH>ab<mt the blggeat tisln* asaM earth—eomething that will vpeu yoursyeenadH. p W FAT FOLKS REDUCES WAITED! STONE A WELLINGTON, M.dle-<s£ a n. u. .so. «at-wa VrrHEN WRITING TO ADVEKTMSBM it please say yon saw the advePtteaaasng In this paper. ' Ql Zv/x “WE ARE HAPPY, EHIMY BOW We are happy because of our glorivn*. health; for Health, my boy, Is Haanl> ness.” LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S Compneni possesses those health-giving propertied •»■ important to both 'mother and child. It tothe only Legitimate Remedy and TW tive Cure for those peculiar weaknesseenad ailmenta incident to women. Every Drug girt Bella it as a standard article, er mt by mail,.in form of Pills, or Lozeuggss •• receipt of SI.OO. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers lettsss dl* inquiry. Enclose stamp for reply. Lpdia B. Fiawmm MM.