Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 December 1891 — Page 7

Keep out disease by keeping in healthy action the liver, stomach and bowels. There’s a pleasant and a sure way of doing it. It’s with Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They’re the best Liver Pill ever made, and a prompt and effective remedy for Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the stomach, liver and bowels. They cleanse and renovate the system, quietly but thoroughly. They regulate the system, too—they don’t upset it, like the old-fashioned pills. These are purely vegetable and perfectly harmless. Ono “ Pellet ” a dose. They’re the easiest to take, and the mildest in operation—the smallest in size, but the most efficient in their work. Tjjey’re the cheapest pill you can buy,'because they’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. Yd* only pay for the good you get. Can yon ask mope ? That’s the peculiar plan all Dr. Pierce’s medicines are sold on.

IVORY Pure. THE BEST FOR EVERY PURPOSE, j ■ ! - , —, Vile cod-liver oil has lijst its vileness in 'Scott’s Emulsion and gained a good djal in efficiency. % It is broken up into tsy drops which are covered win glycerine, just a& quinine in pills is coated with sug&r or gelatine ~-Vou do not get the taste at aJL. The hypophosphites of lime and soda add their tonic effect to that of the half-di-gested cod-liver oil Let us send you a book on careful living —free. Scott & Bowne, Chemists, 13a South sth Avenue. New York. Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver all druggists everywhere da. flk q DONALD KENNEDY 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 Cafiada.

“MOTHERS’! FRIEND” 1 i: Makes Ghild Birth Easy. | Shortens Labor, * Lessens Pain, • ■J; Endorsed by the Leading Physicians, § Dook to “MotherM” mailed. T’IIJEH. » |; BRADHELD REGULATOR CO. • ! i i ATLANTA, QA. « J! SOLD BY ALL DRUQOISTS. 5 J tXWMMaMMMMtMUMMWIW GRATEFUL—COMFORTING. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST. “By a thorough knowledge of the natural law* wh ch govern the operatl >ns of dlge-tlon and nutritl m, and by a care, ul applic atlou of the fine proper* ties of wel -s lectel Cocoa, Mr. Epos has provided oar breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured beverage wntoa may save us many heavy doctors' bills. Uis oy the Juiiciou* use of such articles of diet that a constitution may oe gr dually ouilt up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds or subtle maladies ar<* floating around us reaily to attaoc wherever there Is a weak pout. Ve may escape manv a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well for tide 1 with pure blood a d a properly nourished frame." —"Citrii Service Gazette.” Made simply with boillnt water <r mll'c. Fold only In half-pound tins y Grocer*, labelled thus: JAMES KIM'S dc CO.. Homoeopathic Chemists, . LOWPOW. Enolanp. ff% I a I ■ A NAKESIS Rives Instant till - E 9 relief, snd is an INFALLI- \ RLE i UHE for PILLS. I ■ Price. $1; at druggists or | I ■ by mail. Samples free. I ILL Address “ANAKESIS” * *** ** Box 2*16. New York Crrr. QTnXT 9 Kenil svMProMs to utL OAvUt BROWN, yew York ■ Plso’s Remedy foi Catarrh Is the MB Best. Easiest to Use, and Cheapest, J(j ■ Sold by druggists or sent by nail. | Me. E. T. HaselUne, Warrtit Pi. ■

HOME AND THE FARM.

A DEPARTMENT MADE UP FOR "SUR RURAL FRIENDS. Reoretarr Rusk on the Nctdi of Fannwrs— Invast Your Surplus on the Farm- Largo Profit, from One Cow—About Poultry— Uouieho d Hints and Decorations. Needs or the Farmers. Now, as to the ignorance of American citizens not farmers regarding the needs of agriculture and the conditions of the farmer, says Secretary Rusk in the North American Review, I must in this respect ask my readers to take my statement on trust, as that of a man who has had special opportunities for judging and who is conscientiously convinced of the necessity for absolute sincerity on this subject. I ask the reader to take my word for it that, great as is the ignorance of the average farmer in regard to business matters and city life, it is no greaterthan thatof his city brother in relation to things agricultural, nor indeed is it so great. This being the case vc find ourselves confronted in thepresentgrave economic emergency with a serious condition of affairs. We have a patient sick with a disease our physicians do not understand; as a result the side man and his friends, blinded a little, perhaps, by suffering and sympathy in their efforts to arrive at a true diagnosis, yet endeavor to secure relief from suffering by such means as they can command or devise; and who shall blame them if, in the absence of physicians who know something about the case, they are perhaps misled into the adoption of certain nostrums? The farmers at least know their own condition; and of what use is it to decry the remedies they suggest if ignorance of their true condition and of their needs makes it impossible for you to suggest one? For the last twenty-five years you have been giving the farmer and his needs little or no thought; you have been letting agriculture take care of itself and him. All other classes, all other interests and industries, existing though they do only by reason of the fact that agriculture has called them into existence and supports them, have received your consideration, have been the objects of your special study. Is it surprising then, that, as the re--suit of your selfishness, the farmer should be indisposed to trust any one but himself? Even when you talk to him fairly, he detects at once that, while you talk well and know much about many things, you know little or nothing of him and his surroundings. If, on the one hand, the farmer lacks business training and experience in affairs, you, on the other hand, who have both, lack to an even greater extent, and in a most pitiful degree, knowledge of agriculture, acquaintance with its followers, and famailiarity with their needs and conditions.

luvest Your Surplus on ths Farm. When a thoroughbred or a highgrade cow will make SIOO worth of butter in a year, and a scrub cow only makes S4O worth, while it costs buu little more to feed one than the other, money invested in improved breeds of cows, or in a pure male from which to raise up a herd of grades, will pay better returns to the dairyman than can be obtained from bank stock or railroad shares or Western Farm mortgages. When a small extra investment in better seeds and more liberal manuring will increase the crop without increasing the labor of cultivation, or when extra cultivation will make an increase in the money return four times as great as the expenditure; when better tools will save their cost in one season’s labor, while with care they will do good work for five or ten years, then is the time when the farmer can make money by spending money. When the expenditure of $25 or $35 per acre for tile drains will enable a Held that now yields less than $lO worth poor grass a season to produce $35 worth of the best, and fit it for the growth of any crop that will yield profitable returns, it is economy to spend money, and so it is when a similar sum or a smaller one will so renovate an old pasture which now only feeds about one cow upon six acres, so that it will give more feed and better for six times that number.—American Cultivator Handy in Hatcherlng Dogs* Chester J. Broen, of Grinnell. lowa, illustrates in The Stockman a simple and very easily made device

for scalding and lifting hogs. With the lever as shown one man can handle a large porker with comparative ease.

THE DAIRY.

.Losses frotp Poor Manufacturers. In the dairy business, especially where cheese and butter are the staples, the farmer is a manufacturer, and the salableness of his product depends largely on his skill. It does not all depend on this, however, for the proportion of butter and cheese that is wholly unfit for food is often so large that it detracts from the price the best would bring if it were not weighed down by this inferior stuff, which only competes because it goes under the same name as that of good quality. It is much gained to have the fraudulent compounds, oleomargarine and the like, branded for what they are; but the work will not be complete until the poorer qualities of butter are ruled out of the market as unfit for human use. Rancid butter is not even good for cooking, as, however it may be disguised, it flavors whatever it is cooked into, and thus lessens the demand which using good butter for cooking would increase. In many places poor butter is so generally used for making butter crackers that they are discarded for milk crackers by all having any regard for their stomachs. This is only one of many ways in which the use of poor butter lessens the demand.—American Cultivator.

Washing Batter.

Most butter makers wash their butter when in a granular state in the churn. They do this under conviction, horn of long experience, that better results follow this method, than by using the old method of working out the buttermilk. It has long been demonstrated that water in no way injures the flavor, grain or keeping qualities of butter, but that it washes out all caseous matter and other impurities which might injure it. If the butter comes soft the water in going through it has a tendency to cool it and harden the granules so that it will pack better and be in better condition for salting and working. The superiority of this method, says Farm and Home, is shown in the fact that butter made in the counties of Orange, Courtland, Delaware, and Chemung, the great butter districts of the Empire State, commands a higher price in the New York market than that from any other section of the United States. Nine-tenths of the dairymen in these counties wash their butter.

THE POULTRY-YARD.

Hera’s for the Drinks. Where it is not possible to have running water in the yards and henhouses, says a poultry raiser in Farm and Home, a never-failing fountain the birds cannot foul is next best. It is easy to make one, using an old keg. Even a flour-barrel or half-barrel will serve for some months. Bore two holes in one head. In one place a pipe for filling. The other is for the escape of air as the water goes in. Cork both holes tightly after filling. A piece of half-inch pipe set in tightly whan the tank is dry will let out water fast enough l’or a large flock. This pipe must be just a little lower than the edge of the drinking-trough. When water has filled the trough deep enough to cover the end of the

pipe, no more will flow out until it has been drunk. By having the trough project into two yards one tank will supply both. If the waterbarrel Is shaded in summer the drink will be relished better. The trough should be raised from the ground high enough to prevent the scratching of dirt into it.

ifreetl lor tl»e Host. Do not try to use more breeding stock than you need. It is often a great temptation to breed from inferior fowls when there is a good prospect or good demand for eggs. You may make sale of the eggs from those superior fowls you are keeping, at the same price as those from the' prime breeding stock, but you are de- 1 ceiving your customers first, and' losing their custom last. The success of nearly all old breeders is in a great measure due to their observance of a rule never to breed from any but the best.

Poultry Notes. Never allow the fowls to go thirsty. Above all things keep the hen house clean and well ventilated. Don’t forget that green food should be fed to fowls when confined. Save the best birds for next year’s breeding and send the others to market. If your hens lay soft-shelled eggs, they are probably too fat. Put them at work scratching. Don’t forget to keep your chicks away from the hog pen. Hogs have a weakness for young chicks. Remember that cockerels as well as pullets are “spring chickens.” The next spring they will be “old roosters,” worth about half as much i;i market as hens. Young poultry should not be fed with the older ones. It will always pay to keep a coop and provide a board or shallow trough in order to economize feed. The effect of damp ground and stagnant water on fowls—especially on young turkeys—is well known. Fatal diseases follow as inevitably in those cases as with human- exposure to miasmatic exhalations A dry gravelly spot is absolutely necessary to healthful conditions.

THE HOUSEHOLD.

A Tr.foU Calendar. The trefoil pieces, says the Farm and Home, are cut from thick bristol board and painted the color of a

clover -leaf, the markings being shaded with care. Then cut two clean, even slits in each leaf arid insert a • pale* green ribbon of the same width, with the day of the week, the month and the day of the month

painted at regular distances upon them, as shown in the sketch. The ribbon must be fitted so as to move easily in the spaces. This is a pretty desk ornament to be made for a fair or for a gift. Make the Home Neat. The surroundings about the farmer’s home should be such as to make it attractive. There is a money value in neatness in fine lawns and plenty of ornamental as well as of fruit trees, especially in the localities where si*nmer boarders from cities make their residence. The city ' visitor wants to be where all the surroundings are of a cheerful character. Doubtless the repellant aspect -of many farm homes is one reason why

they attract only those wh# ear* money by farming, and in these days this'class can only pay a low price for land. So far as he can do so without extravagant aypcnditnres, the farmer should seek to attract wealthy purchasers, and selling to them fit up other farms in the same way.

RemOTlnc Stain*. To remove fresh fruit stains from table linen, covfir quickly with powdered starch, or pour boiling water lrom the tea kettle upon them. Finely sifted wood ashes will re. move medicine stains from silver spoons. Egg stains on silver can be taken off with fine salt and damp cloth. On fabrics that will not he injured by it soft soap will take out paint stains much better than benzine, chloroform and similar cleaners. A weak solution of oxalic acid will remove bad mildew stains and iron rust from white goods; ordinarily, mildew will come out if wet with so*i milk and laid ih the sun. Use oxalic acid with care, as it is poisonous. Diluted hartshorn takes mildew from woolen goods. Grass stains are obstinate, but soft soap and baking soda will generally overcome them. Wet the stain, rub it freely with the soap and soda and let lie a short time before washing. Wheel grease on wash dresses can be removed with soap and water. Ii the spot is pretty old, wet it first with kerosene oil.

Ilonaehold .Notes, Vinegar bottles may he cleaned with crushed egg shells in a little water. To BiiiGiiTEN carpets wipe them with warm water in which has been poured a few drops of ammonia. A good liniment for inflammation, rheumatism,%wellings, etc., is olive oil well saturated with camphor. A good cement is melted alum, but it must never be used when water and heat are to come in contact with it. Fine shavings from soft pine wood make a pleasant pillow. They have special curative virtues for coughs and lung troubles. Clean collars on woolen jackets, men’s coats, etc., by sponging with ammonia and water, then with alcohol, then rub. dry with a flannel cloth. Copper kettles may be cleaned and polished by taking a lemon, cutting it in two; dip one of the pieces in salt and rub well over the copper. Hyposulphite of soda is recommended for cleansing tarnished silverware. It is applied simply with a cloth or brush dipped into a saturated solution of the salt, no powder of any kind being necessary. In two or three rubs all tarnishes are removed.

An eminent English authority writea as follows as to tlio value of trees in protecting land and stock: When plantations and strips of woods of considerable extent are so arranged as to obstruct the wind in its course, shelter is afforded both to cultivate and pastnro land, and in appearance as well as productiveness the character of tho estate undergoes a thorough change. It cannot be doubted by any one acquainted with tho losses whicli are frequently sustained on high-lying farms from nipping frosts and withering winds, that in cold, late districts shelter is of the greatest value to the farmer. Various kinds of crops are liable at the time of flowering to be seriously injured, if exposed to strong winds, nnd frequently cereal crops, which are just beginning to ripen, suddenly assume a prematura whiteness after being loosened about the roots by severe wind-storms; the crop is imperfectly developed, and the farmer is the loser. Shelter will to a very large extent prevent this evil. Then at harvest it has been found that a line of plantations, running transverse to the wind, though at a distance of half a mile, has materially diminished the lo#s from sliedd ng. Along the eastern coast of Great Britain a proper increase of shelter would not fail to mhl several bushels of grain to the yield per acre. Tho value of shelter for pasture stock is no less deserving of careful consideration. It is well known to veterinary practitioners that cattle grazing in liigti and exposed situations are generally more disposed to consumptive and cutaneous diseases than animals pastured on low and sheltered farms. The pasturage, even when sheltered in a very partial manner, is both earlier and more nutritive than if exposed to the full effects of unchecked winds, and in th.hr haunts flocks rarely fail to indicate the situations which are really bepefited by plantations, either npar at hand or as a considerable distance. It appears, therefore, conclusive that the relation that exists between forestry and agriculture is a very intimate one.

The Philadelphia gentleman of the last century, if lie were a man of fashion or means, wore a three cornered cocked hat heavily laced. His lioir was done up in a cue, and its natural shade concealed by a profusion of powder. His coat was light-colored, with diminutive cape, marvelously long back, and silver buttons engraved with the letters of his name. His small clothes came scarcely to the knees; Iris long stockings were striped, liis shoes pointed and adorned with huge buckles ; liis vest had flap pockets, his cuffs were loaded with lead. * * * When he bowed/ to the damsels that passed him, he took half the sidewalk as he flourished liis cane and scraped his foot. The historian proceeds to convince us that the dress of the lady, os she grayely returned his salutation and courteaed nearly to the earth, would seem no less strange to us. “Those were the days of gorgeous brocades and taffetas, luxuriantly displayed over cumbrous hoops, which, flattened before and beliind, stood out for two feet on each sftle; of tower-built liats, adorned with tall feathers; of calash and muskmelonbonnets, of high wooden heels fancifully cut; of gowns without fronts; of fine satin petticoats, and of implanted teeth.” It appears that in 1784 this curious custom of transferring teetyi from one woman’s jaw to another had been lately introduced in Philadelphia, In an advertisement yet extant one La Mayeur announces to his fair but. presumably mature patrons, that his business is to transplant teeth, and that he has within the six months jnst preceding transplanted 123; and he assures those having front teeth for sale that he will give two guineas for every sonnd one brought to him.— McMaxteru' History.

Entitled to the Best.

All aw> entitled to the best that their money will buy, so every family should have, at once, a bottle of the bast family remedy. Syrup of Figs, to cleanse the system when costive or bilious. For sale In 600 and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. There Is nothing better than benzine to clean grease from maohineryor clothing. To clean greasy cloths, put the benzino on the greasy spot and rub the solution out before the benzine has time to evaporate and leave the remaining in the fabria

A Chamber of Horrors.

The apartment to which the unhappy wretoh is confined by inflammatory rheumatism is indeed a chamber of horrors. Appalling aro the tortures inflicted py this agonizing complaint, and those endured by persons suffering from milder forms of it are severe enough. Obstinate as it in its mature development, it is surely ram* ediable at the outset with Hostotter's Stomach Bitters, an infinitely sater an well as more effective remedy than the poisons often used to subduoit. Alwaje Bbould it bob me in mind by thoso seeking relief from rheumatism, that, though conquerable in the incipient stage, it is not only stubborn but dangerous when fully developed, on account of its tendency to attack tho vital parts. This consideration should lead to the early adoption of curative measures. The Bitters will overcome malarial, kidney, dyspeptic and bilious trouble. Dr. Albert Shaw in a recent, lecture at Johns- Hopkins University predicted that tho adoption of (ion Booth's methods would result In completely stumping out the slums of London within twenty years.

Deafness Can’t Ho Cured

By lccal applications, as they cannot reach th» diseased portion ot the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the rnuoous lining of the Eustachian Tube. W hen this lube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when It is entirely closer! Deafness is the result, and unless Ills inflammation eirn be taken out and this tube restored to its noun'll condition, hearing will bu destroyed forever; nino cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfiicos. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by Catarrh) that we cannot cure by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send lor circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO„ Toledo, Ohio, Sold by Druggists, 75c. For paint to stick to zlnk uso tho following wash: Chloride of copper, 1 part; nltruto of copper, 1 part: sal ammoniac, i part; water, <l4 parts. This coat Is loft for 24 hours before applying tho paint. A CORE for neatly all tho common Ills—what, doctors? Pshaw! Tuko Beechnut's Pills. For sale by all druggists. 25 cunts. In Corea sheets of paper pass for money. One sheet brings one quart of rice, or twenty sliocta a piece of homp cloth.

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

There is a 3-lnch display advorthemont in litis paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. Tho same Is true of each new one appearing each voek from Tito Dr. llartor Medicine Ca This house places a ‘‘Crescent" on everything they make and publish. Look for It, send them the nattto of tho word, and they will return you book, uisAimrub uthoguapub, or SAMPLES FREE. DESERVING CONFIDENCE.—There Is no article which so richly doserves the entire confidence of tho community as Brown’s Bronchial Troches. Thoso suffering from Ashmatlc and Bronchial Diseases, Coughs, and Colds should try them. Prlco 25 cents. Will Be There Sure.—ls you sell potatoes front a measure with a false bottom you will find on the Judgment day that the measure will be there, too. If you buy u bottle of Dr. White's Pulniotiurlu you will find it the best cough remedy you ever Used uud full scripture measure. “Time Is money,” said a poor fellow, as he pawned a clock. EinsT a Cold, Then Biionchiti -. Chook the first with Hale's Honey of Horehound and T>u. Pike’s T. otuachi Drops Cure in one MlUute, FITS.—AII Fits stopped free bv Ilr.Kllne's Great None Restorer. Nn Fits after first day’s use. Msrvenous cures. Treatise and *Z.OO trial bottle free to Fit eases. Bend to Dr. Kllue. lUi Arolt at.. Polls., P*.

FARMERS: LOOK OUT! Jw Ton are exposed to sudden changes of tempera Id re, and to Injuries. ST. JACOBS OXZ. Cures RHEUMATISM, S?!lwl! , £i« BR HJ BEB ’ CUTB » wounds, Boreneßß, iI,?w?«? S, » BWELL,NOB ' BACKACHE, neuralgia, SCIATICA, BURNS. ’ A PROMPT AND PERMANENT CUPE.

A NATURAL KEKSDT FOR Epileptic Fits, Falling Sickness, Hysterics, St* Titos Dance, Nervousness, Hypochondria, Melancholia, Inebrity, Sleeplessness, Dizziness, Brain and Spinal Weakness. This medicine has direct action upon the nerve centers, allaying all irritabilities, and increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It is perfectly harmless and leaves no unpleasant effects. FItPP-A Valuable Book an Nervous LML L Diseases sent froe to any address, fHr f and poor patients can also obtain | llbl* this medicine fhee of charge. This remedy baa been prepared by the Reverend Saetor Keen Ik. of Fort Wavne, lnd„ since ÜBS, and mow prepared under his direction by the KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, 111. Sold by Druggist* at 81 per Bottle. 0 for so, Tern She. 01.75. 0 Bottle* for SO. Tkt Oldttf Mtdicint in tkt World it probably DR. ISAAC THOMPSON’S Mmsm, jqimxist ecrlptlon, and has been lu constant use for nearly m century. There are few diseases to which mankind are subject more distressing than sore eyes, and none, perhaps, for which more remedies have Ijesn tried without success. For all external Inflammation of the eyes It Is an Infallible remedy. It the directions are followed It will never fall. We particularly Invite tbe attention of phvsldans to Its merits. Few sale by aU druggists- JOHN L. THOMPSON, SONS k CO., Tbot, STY. Established 1797. • •••••©•••© THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD I TTJTT’S • •tiny liver pills* • have all the virtue* of the larger one*; A equally effective; purely vegetable. V Exact size shown In this border. ••••••••••• © m FIT FOLKS REDUCED / Mr*. Alio# Maplo. Or«gon. Mo., writ** i \ \il I i “Mr weight w»*B2) pound*, now it U 196, b redaction of 12b lb*." For circular* addre**, with 6c„ r.O.W.FA.NVUKR. McVickar’.Tb-etr*. Chicaao.lU KANSAS FARMS WKS Lar eat crop* sal,ed. Buy alarm, Oetcrlttlve Ust ire-. CHAa. R. WooiXfiV, Osbornk Kas. PH co r I Llo gfr? patented h U fTf* * ~*' * W fee until patent 1* allowed. Advfe* a- Nook foes. (UK HTUI »CCT Wzah. U.G

Kill the Cause Of Catarrh and You Have Permanent Cure Diseases of long standing roquiro persistent treatment to effect perfsot cure, and this is particularly true ot Catarrh in tbe hea i. This is a constitutional disease and therefore require, a Constitutional Remedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla. Local applications, like snuffs and other tnha'snts, can at beßt sire only temporary relief, as they reach only tho result and not the rouse ot tbe disease. The latter Is fonnd in tbe impure aint in the blood, which Hood o Be aaparlUa removes, and thus tho benoflt from this medicine is permanent. Many people tesUfy lo cures ot Catarrh by Hood', Sarsaparilla. N. U. « hen you a k for Hood’s Sarsaparilla D n't be induced to buy any other. Insist upon Hood's Harsapftrill*—loo Doses One Do lar. 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 suecesalully 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 insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH’S CURE, Price lo cts., cts. and ,00. If your Lungs are sore or liack lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Piaster, Price 25 cts. DADWAY’S n PILLS,

Hie Great LiYer and Stomach Rsmedy, For tbe cure of ell dißorderaof t*e Blomnob, Liver. iio*rln. K dnaya, Bladder.Kervoua DUeate*., Lomu of Appetite, 11-nimobe, Coni* lpation, Co>-tiveut-MM, Ju* oigPMtion, DUlou*ue*4H, Fever, luHatmnaiion of tbe 1) wo h, Pile*, nn<l alt ueraußciueiiu ot liio htoVnai Vlhoeru. Purely v<g» tab)*, ooiitfeiulhg uo mercury, nmioralu. or deletoilouH druifH. PERFECT DIGESTION WnWtf »»r. Film every morning, about leu oTkoox, as a uinner pill. By so doing SICK HEADACHE, Dyspepsia, Foul Stnmucb, B Mnuaneaa, will bo avoided,»ud tbo food that 1m eaten oiifribu’u itn pomit-lm'tc properties for thonmpport oi tbe na ural wnn»e of the body. Air Observe the following symptoms resu tli g from DUeiMeof the IXtreat*vcGrp*u«: Cotistlp itioti, Inward Mies, FnJiueiH of the D nod lu the H« ad, Acidity of the B omnee. Naunea. Heaitburu, lUsauAt ot Food,Fit Ini b or Weight in the Stomach, hour KruciatieUM. hi kits or F ut vrli g it the Heart, ('hoklutf or HutTocati 'ix hem** Mona w hen in a tying poHtnre. DlmueMH of Vision, Dots orWt bs beuuv tho Bight, Fever aud DuT Pain lu the Head, Deltoleocy ot Peraplratlon, Yeiiownys of ti e rdnti and Eyes, Pal n In ilie Hide Cnee . Limb*, uud BudUen F ueheH ot Heat Run lug iw tho r t»«*li. A few dunes of HADWA V’S PILLS will free the ay-tem i f an tb« hi ovemamed dlsm cl. r*. Pile e art cts. per box. Bold b.v all drug H«t*. tend a Utur stamp to Dlt. lUIHVaY Jt, CO.# No. 80 Warren httvet, New York. OSf lulonnatlon wo» th tltons nds will be *«*nt to yon. TO THn PUBLIC: lie Mur. •nd »-k for RADWAY'H, and »ee tuat tbe name -HADWAY" is on what you buy.

THIS IS pBONBfMftH WASTPn ! MKN TO TRAVEL Wnimi-wao naniLUi to SI UO a mouth sn/l expenses. STONE & WELLINGTON, Aludisun, Wilt.

THE DEATH KATE. Thirty-live millions of people die every year, taking tho entire population Into account. Many of these perish from some sort of lung trouble that can be cured. The reason that they are so fatal Is because people do not uttend to them in time. They take cold, but pay little attention to it, thinking that it will soon wear itself out. If it docs, It so weakens the lungs and respiratory organs that it only prepares bke way for another attack. Any cold can be ccwed if taken In time. Take llkid’s German Cough and Kidney Cure and stop your cough at onoc. This gtcat remedy never lhils. It is mild and soothing, and, as it contains no poison, it is impossible to give one an overdose. See that you get the genuine article. Ask for “Reid’s” and take no other. Any druggist will get it for you, if he has not got it, if you insist upon it. Sylvan Remedy Co . Peoria. TH. psT BILYTRUE lON >NIC ■y BLOOD, regulate ITS, rc-tnove LIVER bttlltl strength, renew >. restore health and a youth. Dyspepsia, lestion, thatUreufccU absolutely eradicated, Ind brightened, brain .power Increased, bones, nerves, mnsI ■■■■LlT cles, receive new force. law snfforlng from complaints peLHbJILi) cellar to their sex, using It. find ' a safe, speedy cure. Ret urns rose bloom on cheeks, beautifies Comploxion. Sold everywhere. All genuine goods bear ‘Crescent.*’ Bend ns i cent stamp for 32-page pamphlet. P». HAUTE* MEBICIMI CO.. St Lootz. Mo. Agents Make $5 a Day DU rt bn log samples and seUlug our Mediclnal a-d Toilet Soap to om lies. l-»d e. an .Ii ut.emeu. hstap esfr-w. CuorrsS: ■ rgp. 195La-i»ll*-8t„Ohlraro UfiHMArSH

“August Flower” “ I inherit some tendency to Dys> pepsia from my mother. I suffered two years in this way ; consulted a number of doctors. They did me no good. I then used Relloved In your August Flower and it was just two days - , when I felt great relief. I soon got so that I could sleep and eat, and I felt that I was well. That was three years ago, and I am still firstclass. I am never Two Days. without a bottle, and if I feel constipated the least particle a dose or two of August Flower does the work. The beauty of the medicine is, that you can stop the use ofitwithout any bad effects on the system. Constipation While I was sick I felt everything it seemed to me a man could feel. I was of all men most miserable. I can say, in conclusion, that I believe August Flower will cure anyone of indigestion, if taken Life of Misery with judgment. A. M. Weed, 229 Bellefontainc St., Indianapolis. Ind.” ©

f couch] KEMP'S I balsam I

If CiireA Colilm, CouirliA. Bor© Throat, Croup. Jiiihion/it, Whooping; Cough, Jlruncliltlfi uud Ahtliiim. A ccrtalu euro fur ConMiutipUon in H'ttttfH, uud * ►ljr- reliflf in lulvtinml nlnoi-n. Um© ut "ii You will m«© tli« oxrello >1 oflout otter titlcing (!•© lli'Ht ilomo. Huid by ueu.ttin uvmywhcru. Uilie no it ft • cent* ipo ti HR. __ _ GOLD MEDAL, PARIS. 1878 W. BAKER & CO.’S Breakfast Cocoa _ from which th« axes,, of oil inlF'ko, boan removed, la abaolutely pure and ij|pa|| f« soluble. mI M r ° Chemicals flfl | I VY, are U,ed in ite preparation. It 111 r l ift hne more than three timee the ill I mU strenpth of Cocoa mixed with Kn t Ull kiurch, Arrowroot or Sugar, jjji j I Nil and la therefore fur more eeo* Km ! I ill 11 Domical, costing tree than one 111 ill U cent a cup. It le delicious, nonr» lahing, •lengthening, mill diqbited, uud admirably adapted for Invalid* at well aa for portent In health. Sold by Oroeer, ererywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorohester, Mass

ILLINOIS-di^^CEIITRU ’Mim SOLID VESTIBULE TRAIN Dally ut 0.00 p, m. from Chloogo. Haw and eleemnt equipment, built expreselr for tale eervloe. Irtln lighted throughout by gua. TlekeU und furtheriuior* ...... - GARFIELD TEA u~ rcsloresComplex.onicaresCan.tlpation. I" DC C WcssiiS&^S lIL L I tlorernmoiituud 1 Northern I AAin v Pacific R. R.LHIiUu Ho,t Agrleultnrtl. Graying ana Tiru"eO,ano* now open n, settlers. Ma<’rd Flt Eli. Andres* cull. UiIODI, Uml Com. N.P.ii.R.. Bi. Paul. Minn. Mb. . Our improved Kmla-uldoring UaPgaHw!chliio mokes Russ w in yarn orra ai Fine Erobrolclenn* wi h silkorzepNWVr y;-H. C reman, slid teim, to Asia.tree. Machine, colored pattern book, miw ten pattern, samples of work, eat., price I sts, directions, eic.. all by mail for Al.'O BstTsfuction guaranteed or money telanded. K.JIOBB A C Toledo, O. f 1% wantedlaeverytownandCo. Steady work. No 13 risk. No Capital. NoKxp. needed.. Write t* ■ “ Hi»tort«sl I*wb. Co., Vhllndetnhla, Pa. L .PRIVATE W ISO Adorno Bt., CHICACO, ILL. Cnresfor Lite a_l tihrrtnle. Nervoxui Diseases, Organie Wetkue**. Bi-h uln.sa. Ufl itu hs lo Marry. too Fretitteot Eva-tiatloni Of lh- fflldder Uirrat^ P““'v tS’eS-laaotts. wM 1 Qac» t'on 1 ,)•**. for 4 -re t -Atfi up. and WbNmt, i| om any st in-nt Wr UN whatever,sendJ | ra»KAt,TH HELPER. lILfUI run. Dr. J. H. DYE. Burrs no N. Y. C. N. U. .via 50— til \\T H P7N WHITINO TO ADVKItTISKRS. Vs please Stir you saw tbe advertisement 111 this saner. “CAN I ASSIST YOU, MADAMV* Tills is an everv-day occurrence; she I* taken with that “all-gone” or faint feeling. Tho cause of this feeling is some derangement, weakness, or irregularity incident to her sex. Instant relief may always, be found by using LYDIA E. PINKHAM'Sc.Tp?u£ It is the only PoaftfvfiCnr* and Legitimate Remedy for those peculiar weaknesses and ailments of vdoroen. Every Druggist sells it, or sent by mail, in form ofTills or Lozenges, on receipt of Si-00. i»T=29S±a.’2SS2|SlSis:sS: Lrti. a. PlnkK.m Mm. CO.. Ljrnn. Mu.