Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 52, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 January 1892 — Page 7

iHif Shut the door against disease. Danger comes oftcnest through impure blood. Keep your blood in order, and you keep in health. For this, nothing equals Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It invigorates the liver, purifies and enriches the blood, and rouses eyery organ into healthy action. By this, means it cures. Every part of the system feels its naving influence. Dyspepsia, Indifestion, Biliousness, Scrofulous, kin and Scalp Diseases even Consumption (or Lung - scrofula ) in its earlier stages, all yield to it. It’s the only Liver, Blood and Lung Remedy that’s guaranteed to benefit or cure, or the money is refunded. Trying terms to sell on —but it’s a medicine that can carry them out. “ Golden Medical Discovery ” contains no alcohol to inebriate, and no syrup or sugar to derange digestion. It’s a concentrated vegetable extract; put- up in large bottles; pleasant to the taste, and equally good for adults or children.

IVORY SOAP 99>°° Pure. - * 1 i * .1 >.\ ' f ' THE BESf FOR EVERY PURPOSE. Cod-liver oil suggests consumption; which is almost unfortunate. Its best use is before you fear consumption—when you begin to get thin. Consumption is only one of the dangers of thinness. Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver-oil makes the thin plump, and the plump are almost safe. Let us send you a book on careful living —free. Scott & Bownk, Chemists, *39 South sth Avenue, New York. Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil—all druggists every where do. sl.

DADWAY’S n PILLS, The Great Liver and SLomand Remedij, For the cure of all disorders of tbe Stomach, Liver. Bowels. Ki dneys, Bladder. Nervous Diseases, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Cons ipation, Oohtiveness, Indigestion, Biliousness, Fever, Inflammation of the Bowels, Piles, and all derangements of the nterual Viscera. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or deleteilous drugs. PERFECT DIGESTION 2M.JTWS2 way * Pilis e\ery morning, about ten o'clock, as a dinne# pill. By so -doing SICK HEADACHE, Dyspepsia, Foul Stomach, Biliousness, will be avoided, and the food that is eaten • ontribute its nourishing properties for the support of the na ural Waste of the body. JOES“ Observe the following symptoms resulting from Disease of tbe Digestive Organ >: Constipation, Inward Piles, Fullness of the B ood in the Head, Acidity of tbe Stem act*. Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust ot Food, Fu lness or Weight in the Stomach, hour Eructations. Mukirg or Fail! eriLg of the Heart, Choking or Suffocative Sensations when in a jying posture; Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs beiore the Sight, Fever and Dull Pain in the Head, Deficiency of Perspiration. Yellowness of tbe bkin and Eyes, Pain in the Side. Ches . Limbs, and Sudden F.ushes ©t Heat Burning in theF e^h. A few doses of RAD WAY’S PILLS will free the system cf ait the a* ove-named disordtrs. Price 25 «ts. per boa. Sold by all drugsist*. fcehd a letter stamp to DR. RAD WAY & CO., No. 32 Warren Street, New York. 4S“ Information worth thousands will be sent to you. 1C THE PUBLIC: Be stir* * nd ask for RADWAYU and tee that the name “HADWAY" is on what you CHILD BIRTH • • • • • • MADE EASY! “ Mothers’ Friend ” is a scientifically prepared Liniment, every ingredient of recognized value and in constant use by the medical profession. These ingredients are combined in a manner hitherto unknown “MOTHERS' • FRIEND” • WILL DO all that is claimed for it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to Life of Mother and Child. Book to “ Mothers ” mailed FREE, conot taining valuable information and -.■voluntary testimonials. SentbT .—press on receipt of pric.ft.fiO per bottle BRAD FIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. 6a. SOLD BY > T,T. DRPQOIBTB. [■ flPf" {Unatratod Publication «,with ULL MAPS, describing Minnesota, Rf f North Dakota, Montana, Idaho. 11L 1_ Washington and Orecon, the Free ■ Government nnd CHKAI'M Pa N o o ulo h p. n R .LANDB Best Agricultural, Grazing and now open to settlers. Mailed FREE. Address CIU. »■ UMIOIUL Lsnd Com, N J.K.R. Bt. Paul, Minn. ■ ■ ■■ ANAKESIB gives Instant ■1 ■■ B || relief, and is an INFALLIV" BLE CUKE for PILES. wpw | | ■■ Price, tl; at dragaists or by mall. Baronies free. I U Address “ANAKESIS,” ■ ■ il W Bor atlfi, Na-ar Voaa Pitt. s"•[■ a month nlary. Salespeople, either sex, ■ I. wanted In every town and Co. Steady work. No f 3 risk. No Capital. No Exp. needed.eWrlte to • ** HUtorieal Pab, Co.. Philadelphia, Pa. ■ Plso’s Remedy fbt Catarrh la the I Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. | ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mall, I Me. &T. Haaeltlne, Warren Pa. ■

AGRICULTURAL TOPICS.

A FEW SUGGESTIONS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. Good Results froth *1 liorottghly Dried Seed--How to btioot a lleef-Vslnn of Corn Meal lor feetluiR —l oultry Notes— Household and Kitch«u. Thoroughly Vttied Se#<! rmn.

ALL seeds have to he thoroughly dried in order to germinate well. jjN We have known seasons when much rain pre--1 \ vailed before harvest, giving the wheat grain a a solt. moist —yu' herrv when it Jv possessed comy paratively poor germin a ti n g powers, and in pS* 5 * such seasons wheat of the

previous year’s growth y '•aided best. Corn more than almost any other grain is liable to be poorly dried at planting. It is a large grain, matures late, and sometimes only dries as the moisture freezes out of the grain, which almost always injures the germ. Sweet corn and the large Western Dent corn, that have long, deep grains and heavy cobs, are most difficult to dry out thoroughly, and from these come niost complaints of poor seed. All these complaints could be avoided by hanging the ears Intended for seed by the chimney, where it comes in contact with warmed brick whenever a tire is lighted. Some farmers who have smokehouses put the com in a loft, above the bacon, and they claim that corn thus smoked grows better than any other. It is likely that the extra drying such corn gets rather than the smoking it receives accounts for its superiority. Some years ago we grew sweet corn for seed for a practical seedsman. It was a large variety, and the season being cold and wet. at harvest-time, we suggested drying it in an evaporating house. It was kept at a temperature of 110 to 120 degrees above zero for two days, and in that time every bit of moisture seemed to have dried out of it. This corn, the seedsman informed us, made the most satisfactory evergreen seed corn he had ever had. We understand that kiln-drying seed corn ip i evaporators is now commonly practised by seed growers, and it deserves to come into general use, if the heat is not kept too high. It is better to take a day or two longer than to have the seCd-room above 140 degrees.—American Cultivator. Slio.tlng a Beef. Many will tell you to shoot “right between the eyes.” A correspondent of the Practical Farmer says, however, that this' is a mistake, and has

Get in position with gun cocked, finger on trigger, and muzzle elevated, and wait for your opportunity. Then glance over the sights, and shoot quick at the point where the two lines drawn from eyes to horns cross.

Groundless Fears. Since the days of Malthus fears that the world’s population would increase beyond the capacity of the earth to support have been common. The latest scare of this kind is by Mr. Ravenstein, a member of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. He computes that in 182 years the earth’s population will increase to 5,850,000,000, and this would give 207 to each square mile of the 28,000,000 of fertile lands. It is quite likely in light of recent agricultural improvements that much land now counted as desert will be cultivated and improved long before the era of short rations predicted for earth’s inhabitants. Besides, no account is made of food from the sea, which has as yet been scarcely drawn upon for sustenance. Nobody has yet found out the possible productive capacity of a single acre of land. In ail tropical countries bananas will furnish food for a human being for a year from an extremely small amount of land. So far in the world’s history the increase of population has always been accompanied by increase of human sustenance, which is the basis of improved civilization. What has been will probably continue to be for an indefinite future.

LIVE STOCK.

Corn Meal for Feeding:. A correspondent asks for the comparative value of corn and cob meal feeding, that is the corn ground in the ear. We have before published the experiments made with feeding meal of this kind in New York and Connecticut, and have published the experiments made in feeding it was found that corn and cob meal proved at the Kansas Experiment Station. In these instances of feeding,it is equal to pure corn meal. The reason generally understood for this is that pure corn meal fed alone, lies too compact in the stomach to be well utilized by the fluids, and that loss comes in this way, while mixed with spongy cob meal, it is more nearly utilized, digested, and assimilated. There is general agreement wit®: the meal should be ground very'fjue—both that of the corn and cob- The finer the hard woody fiber is brokeh' down, the more easily and more, nearly it is digested. While experiments with feeding cob meal above have shown but a moderate per cent of nutrition in it, yet mixed by grinding with corn, it has been found as stated, and for the reasons given. Experiments have shown that the fevered and unhealthy conditions of the stomach when feeding corn meal justifies this conclusion. For this reason it is advised to mix wheat bran and cut hay with pure corn meal. This reaches about ; the same end that cob meal does when mixed with it. But it has been deemed that the 2£ to 3 j«r cent, of nutrition in the cob meal

is justification for grinding it with the corn, and especially so when hay and bran bring good prices. • Bor.es Shedding Their Coats. The time when a horse is exchanging the covering of hair he has worn a year for a new one is critical. While no apparent evil result may be seen, it necessarily follows that the animal must appropriate a considerable share of the food it eats for supplying the draft that nature makes at this time. Horses will shed their coats much more quickiy if well fed, and with somewhat laxative food, in order to prevent the horse from becoming constipated, as it is apt to do on hay or other dry feed. It used to be common for farmers to have the moulting season to continue all the spring, and finally finish their new coat after grass comes, so that they can be given some-green feed. A much better method is to feed liberally, and if only dry feed is given add a little oil meal to the ration. This makes a glossy coat, and the oil meal gives more strength to horses at work than feeding corn, which will make a glossy coat, but one that will not stand hard work. Feeding corn is indeed the reason for the common prejudice against getting the old coat off too quickly. A liberal supply of oats must be given horses . which are working while shedding their coat.

About Dehorning. Farmer HaafT says: “No man consults his pocket or the welfare of the cattle, who uses shears lor dehorning. Just as well use shears on cord-wood and expect no splinters as on a cow's horn. No man living ever did or will shear off a horn three or more years old without crushing the bones, and if sore heads do not .follow 1 crushed hones then I am not an authority on dehorning.”

Herefords as Dairy Cows, “A novice” inquires if Herefords are fairly good for the dairy. The milk of the Hereford cow is very rich in quality hut the quantity is small. She is not intended for dairy purposes. That is to say, if the object is principally milk and its products, it would be better to select some of the distinctively dairy breeds. If r we wisn to produce- beef, and the milk is of secondary importance, the Hereford is as good as any cow if not better. Yet it is but fair to say that not long ago a man who is engaged largely in the dairy, said that he wanted no better cow than the Hereford. But we repeat, the Hereford is a beef breed, and as long as we keep that fact in view and act accordingly, we shall not be disappointed. The llolstein-Friesian or the Jersey would give better satisfaction as a dairy cow.—Western Rural.

Cream from Many Fans. “He that would get milk in the pail and butter in . the churn must first put them into the mouth of the cow,” is an old and true proverb and will not admit of any variation. It is not advisable to use sour buttermilk as a starter, for any fault in the butter will not only be perpetuated but increased by this system. The same applies to sour cream not especially ripened by itself from day to day. Balancing of the nutritive value is the great principle of food composition for cows, hut Prof. Robertson, of Canada,-says he has found payability of the feed of more importance than a strict adherance to the balancing of the nutritive ratio. The average specific gravity of milk is about 1030. The difference between this and 985 brings the cream to the surface; it is so little that the cream makes haste very slowly. The globules never all come to the surface. Other circumstances being the same, the largest ones rise quickest.

resulted in much useless cruelty. Drive the animal quietly to the place of execution. Don’t lose your nerve.

Feeding Hens on the Farm. It costs the farmer less to producq eggs than it does one living on the suburbs of a town or village, as the hen on the farm can pick up about one-third of her food. A bushel of wheat or corn for a hen one year should be sufficient, proviaed she has opportunities for securing grass, seeds, etc. She will lay, under fair conditions, ten dozen eggs a year. As to* how much profit to expect, says Farm and Fireside, it will depend on the cost of the wheat and the price of the eggs. The bushel of wheat will cost the Eastern farmer about sl, but in some portions* of the West the cost may not be over 50 cents. At the same prices for eggs the Western farmer has the advantage of cheaper cost, hut as the Eastern farmer has the advantage of prices, his opportunities are better. Each section possesses advantages and 'disadvantages, and when the fatmer sells his eggs he should be prepared to know exactly how much expense was incurred. If eggs sell for only 10 cents a dozen, when wheat is 50 cents a bushel, he secures a higher price for his wheat by converting the wheat into eggs through the agency of the hens. Eggs have the advantage of calling for cash in the markets, and they can be produced in the winter season, giving immediate returns, which is very different from being compelled to wait from one season to the next. Feeding the hens on the farm is to take possession of the waste places with the hens. There is food to be secured that is not in the grain-bin. Every clod turned over by the plow affords a little, and the young grass and weeds, the seeds of grass, the rakings of the farm, the scattered grain of the barn-yard, the stubble in the fields, the scraps from the table, and the manure heap, all afford the hens privileges, and the eggs laid by them during the summer season cost the farmer little or nothing. The low cost of summer should be considered and the average made.

Poultry Motes. Get several boxes and barrels and put them near the poultry coop in a dry place, where the droppings can he stored for use. They are worth $1 a barrel to a gardener. Hens like coarsely ground oats mixed with bran or middlings as a soft feed in the morning. It should always be scalded and fed comorft-

THE DAIRY.

THE POULTRY-YARD.

ably warm, but not hot Nothing 1| more nutritious. Geese feathers sell as high as 50 cents per pound when clean and sorted. If more would keep geese they would soon realize the profits actually to be had from a fioek. Fall is a good time to buy them cheap. Gravel or sand can be placed in barrels for use in winter When grit is hard to find and dig. Place it in a suitable receptacle where the chickens may obtain enough to keep them in good condition. The moment, you attempt to crass a lloudan and a Polish to improve the former you miss the mark. Iloudans are one of the oldest and most accurately bred fowls and require no crossing from outside blood. Cochins, notwithstanding their excessive size, are good layers. With a comfortable coop they may be depended on for eggs during cold weather. They are hardy and less subject to severe sickness than many other breeds. . Grain foods are more or less lacking in lime and mineral matter. On the other hand, nitrogen, carbon and mineral matter are abundant in bran. There is no better food than bran in a mixture, ground with oats. It makes hens lay.

THE HOUSEHOLD.

Th« Family Doctor. Coughs and Colds. —An oldfashioned remedy for a cold: A warm “stew,” getting into bed with covering well tucked in, hot brick to feet, and drinking abundantly of hot teas until there is a dripping perspiration, to be kept up an hour or two more until the system is relieved, and then to cool off very gradually in the course of another hour, is dirisively styled “an old woman’s remedy;’’ but for all that it will break up any cold taken within thirty-six hours; it will promptly relieve many of the most painful forms of sudden disease, with the advantage of being without danger, gives no shock to the system, nor wastes its strength. Mumps. —Keep the face and neck warm, and avoid taking cold. Drink warm herb teas, and, if the symptoms are severe, four to six grains of Dover’s powders; or, if there is costiveness, a slight physic, and observe a very simple diet. If the disease is aggravated by taking cold, and is very severe, or is translated to other glands, physic must be used freely, leeches applied to the swelling, or cooling poultices. Sweating must be resorted to in this case. Erysipelas. —We have found sour milk, buttermilk, or whey therefrom, an excellent remedy to apply for the erysipelas as a wash. Also to apply glycerine twice or three times a day; it has a soothing effect. We have many times applied the milk hots And found it allayed the inflammation better than cold applications, and far less troublesome than poultices.

Maxims for Housekeepers. Every bee’s honey is sweet. The house showeth the owner. He that is at ease seeks dainties. Anger at a feast betrays the boor, In a good house all is quickly ready. Everything is of use to a housekeeper. As the year is so must your pot seethe. Many a good dish is spoiled by an ill sauce. The biggest calf makes not the sweetest veal. Never haggle about the basket if you get the fruit. He that saveth his dinner will have the more supper. There is winter enough for the snipe and woodcock too. Squeeze not the orange too hard, lest you have a bitter juice. When the stomach chimes the dinner hour don’t wait for the clock. They who have little butter must be content to spread thin their bread.

THE KITCHEN.

Cakes and Cookies. Ginger Snaps.— One cupful of molasses, one egg, one-half cup sugar, one cupful lard, one small spoonful of ginger and one of soda, and flour to work up quite stiff. Roll thin, and bake in a moderate oven. Cinnamon Cookies. —One egg, one cupful of sugar, one cupful molasses, one-half cup lard, one spoonful each of soda, vinegar, and cinnamon. Roll thin, and bake quickly. Always salt any article where lard is used in place of butter. Water is better than milk in most cooky recipes. Hickory nut meats are nice for the top of sugar cookies. Molasses Cookies.— One cupful of sugar, one cupful molasses, one cupful lard or butter, one-half cup hot water, spoonful each of soda, ginger and cinnamon, and flour to roll thick. Mark into cards, sprinkle with sugar, and bake. In the recipes calling for molasses, the best New Orleans must be used in order to obtain the best results, and that, must never be used without soda. Ginger Drops. —One-half cup each of molasses, sugar, lard, and boiling water, one teaspoonful of albm dissolved in the water, and one Spoonful of soda. Add ginger and Cinnamon, and flour to stir very stiff. Place dabs as large as walnuts on tins, sr they will not touch; place a raisin on top of each. Bake in a moderate oven. If properly made, these are a good substitute for the “frosted creams” so generally liked, and may be made far cheaper than they are sold. Coffee Cakes. —One cupful molasses, one cupful coffee, one cupful butter, one egg, one spoonful and one cupful seeded raisins. Nut meg or cinnamon to flavor'. Flour to roll about one-half inch thick. Cut in round cakes, sprinkle thickly with sugar, and bake slowly.

A Tennessee law prohits the sale of loose cotton between sunrise and sunset, the object being to protect planter* from the theft of their cotton by night. Under tliis law- thirty indictments were returned against G. N. Trust, doing business near Memphis, who had been buying loose cotton at night from colored men whom he knew had stolen it. Six negroes who testified in the cases were held for perjury.

The Most Pleasant Way

Of preventing the grippe, colds, headand fevers is to use the liquid laxative lemedy Syiup of Figs, whenever the system needs a gent'e, yet effective cleansing. To be benefited one must get the true remedy manufa turod by ihe California Fig Syrup Co on y. For salo by all druggists in 5Cc. and $1 bottles.

Died of Dinners.

“D'ed of Dinners” should be the Inscrlptio • on many a public man’s gravestone, as a waning tj rising generations Those who k o\v say that .1 ustice Matthews’ fatal illness ,vas brought ab ut by dinners The Supro i e Court allows no recess for lunch. The result is that our jxtlon snatch b'tes as best they can and go home so hungry that they are roady to swallow evo ything tet bes re them at dinner. What isn't put before diuer>-out in Washington isn t worth ta king about. Tho problem of long lifo is merely a question of what, when and how mu h to eat and drink Kato Fiold s Washington.

Taken for a Crank.

A aemi-flendiah delight often aeema to posses* people of strong nerves in sneering at those with weak ones. The irritability of the nervous htpochondriac is ridiculed us natural ill temper. The very geuuine and distressing symptoms from which he suffers are made light of. “He" or “she is a crank 1“ is the cheerful sort of sympathy with which the nervous invalid meets lr in the uutoellng and the thoughtless. At the laumtimeno o mplaint is more defined and real, nune has u more easily explainable origin when it is obronic. Imperfect digestion and ami milation are always acoomnanle.i by nervous debility and anxiety. Build up tho powers ot assimilation and digestion with Hortetler's t-tomoch bitters, and nervous symptoms, sick headaches and a generally feeble condition of the system are remedied. 1 euiembor that tearful ravages an produced by la grippe among weekly, nervous people. Hostetler’s norra.lt Bitters cures it, and pi events malaria, rheumatism, and kidney complaint.

Odd Desire of an Escaped Prisoner.

Thj members of th t Pennsylvania Penitentiary 1 oard were astonished a few day's ago while in sossion by tho aupearanco of a man among them who stated that he had escaped from tho State Prison eight years ago and now wanted to surrender and servo out his time. An investigation showed Ills statement to bo true. lie rofused to give any reason for bis action in surrendering.

Deafness Can't Be Cured

By local applications, as they cannot reach the discs sod portion ot the car. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an Inflamed ooudition of the mucous Unlug of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed, you have a rumbling sound or iinperfeot hearing, and when it is entirely Closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation con be takon out and this tube restored to its normal condition bearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are oaused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give Ore Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that w« cannot cure by taking Hall’s Catarrh Cure, bend for circulars, tree. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Bold by Druggists, 75c.

If wo have any virtue In us, did it soring up In an hour or a day? If wo havo any wisdom, did wo pick It up in a lump at some particular turn of our experience? No these signs and fruits of inward life are the outcome of long, slow-working causes, running back through all our years: including all that wo dreaded and bewailed, as well as all tliat we wehomed and enjoyed: including also iho outward und inward life of our struggling ancestors, and, the long and broad evolution of humanity. We must follow the hint; we must make each step an onward one. We must not interrupt our own progress.

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

There Is a 3-inch display advertisement in this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each vook from Tho Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a “Crescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for It, send them the nam« of the word, and they will return you book, buautiyul lithoguai'iis, or samples free. Noble tlvough’s are apt to lead to nob'e deeds. Evil thoughts will surely lead to evil deeds; therefore wo aro In honor bound to suppress evil thoughts promptly and so firmly that they cannot again dawn within us. AN EXTENDED POPULARITY. Brown's Bronchial Thochkh have for many years been the most popular article in use for relieving Coughs and Throat troublos. A soldier at El Faso, Tex. , played base ball so well with a local club that his admirers purchased his release from the army and engaged him as a star. Actors, Vocalists, Public Bpkaeehs recommend Hale’s Honey of Hobehodnd and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure In one Minute.

For Extracting Honey.

A Canadian has Invented a < entrtfugal extractor for honey. It leaves the comb clean and Intact. An Aggravating Sorb Throat Is soon relieved by Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant, an old-time remedy tor Bronchial and Pulmonary affections. Opinions should be formed with groat caution and changed with greater. Ik you are constipated, bilious or troubled with sick headache, Beecham’s Pills afford immediate relief. Of druggists. 25 corns. Capability runs a poor race with influence. FITS.—AII Fits stopped tree bv Dr.KHne's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day's use. Marvellous cures. Treatise aud tv.oo trial bottle tree to Fit cases. Scud to Dr. Kline. Wl Arch St.. Fulls.. Pa.

I • WITHOUT AN EQUAL. • rrjACOBs mi 1 J 'I rheumatism, TRADE w^^^fe, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, I Sprains, Bruises, Bums, Swellings, Hfuuic?, Allay^ Breda^2^9 or by moIL*ELY BHOH.,^a

• •••••••••• m THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD l TUTT’S • •tiny liver pills# • have all the virtues or the larger ones i equally effective; purely vegetable. W _ Exact size shown in this border. GARFIELD TEA S: ggtfA. Mallei »Uk

Used Crutches Terrible Sufferings from Sait Rheum T have h»d salt rhenm.and for s year one at my legs, from the knes down, has been broken out very bsd:y. When ] commenced t> take Hood’s t-arsap*. rifle 1 was worse than I bsd been before, s pert ot the time being unable to walk without crutches. On tski-ig Hood's Sarsaparilla, improvement was so mark d that 1 continued until 1 had taken threi bo ties, and am now better than for years. The Inflammation has ail left my leg and it 1b entirely healed. 1 have received so great benefit from Hood’s Sarsaparilla thstl concluded to write this voluntary statement.* F J Taurut, Ridgeway, Mioh.

This GREAT COUGH CURE, this success(ul CONSUMPTION CURE is sold by druggists on a positive guarantee, a test that no other Curt can stand successfully. If you have a COUGH, HOARSENESS or LA GRIPPE, it will cure you promptly. If your child has the CROUP or \Vh6OPING COUGH, use it quickly and relief is sure. If you fear CONSUMPTION, don’t wait until your case is hopeless, but take this Cure at once aud receive immediate help. Large bottles, 50c. and f i.oo. Travelers convenient pocket size 25c. Ask your druggist for SHILOH’S CURE. If your lungs are sore or back lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plasters. Price, 25c.

gjgg^g El El ▲ NATURAL RKNHSSY FOREpileptic Fits, Foiling Sickness, Hysterics, St. Titus 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. mPr-1 1 Valmabto Book an Norrnaa LULL Diseases sent Tree to any address, fK| f and poor patients can also obtain I lllmbi this medicine free of charge. This remedy ha* been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wavne, lnd„ since 187 a ana Is now prepared under hit dlreotton by the KOENIQ MED. CO., Chicago, 111. Sold by Druggists >t *1 per Bottle. 0 for SO, tmrsre Hlse, 51.78. G Bottles for SO. __ DONALD KENNEDY Of Roxbury,Mass.,Says: Htrenge cases cured by my Medical Discovery come to me every (lay. Here is one ot J'ara’ysla— Blindness—and the Grip. Now, how does my Medical Discovery cure all there! I doh’t know, unleaa It takes bo.d of the Hidden Poison that makes all Humor. VinaiNiA City, Nevada, Hept.A, IHBI. Donald Kennedy Dear Htr: I will state my cose to you: About nine years ago I was paralysed In my left side and die beat doctors gave me no relief for two year*, and 1 was advised to try your Discovery, which did its duty, and In a few months I was restored to health. About tour yean ago I became blind In my lelt eye by a epotted cataract. Last March I was taken w Ith La Grippe, aud was confined to my bed lor three months. At the end ot that time, as in the rtart, then it struck me that your Discovery was the thing for me; o I got n bottle, aud before it wee bait gone I was tbit to go to iny work in the mines. Now in regard to my eyes t as I lost my lelteye, and about six mouths ego mv right eye became affected with black spots over the sight es did the left rye—perhaps some twenty of them—bait since I have been using your Discovery they all left my right eye I ut one; and, thank God, the bright light ot heaven is once more making its appearance >ll my left eye. lam wonderfully astonished at it. and thank God and your Medic*! Discovery. Ynnra truly. Hank Wbit*. ~ THE lILOOD. , "The blood thereof Is the life thereof” says tho Scriptures. Tho effort all remedies that aim to heal diseases that attack the Respiratory organs Is to put the blood in proper condition. The lungs remove tho carbolic acid; the kidneys remove the uric acid. These two organs purify the blood. When you take cold both these organs are affected, the kidneys no less than the lungs. You cannot have a cold on your lungs without Its affecting the kidneys also. Now, if you will take Beid’s German Cough and Kidney Cube, you will have a remedy that ministers at once to these two organs, restores them both to activity, and allays tho inflammation. It is the only cough remedy on tho market that does this. It is on this account the best. It is particularly good for children, because it contains no opiates, and there is no danger from an overdose. Get it of your dealer. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111.

WAMTEII! men to travel. w.p.y*«o AnillßS Morphine Habit Cured in 10 orateful-comfortinq. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST. “By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern tbe operation, of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful appllc ation of tbe fine propertie. of welcarlected Cocoa, Mr. Epn. bos provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured beverage which may save us many bury doctors’ bill*. It It 6y the Judicious ate of such article* of diet that aooastltutlon may be gr dually balM up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease; Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around ut ready to attack wherever there la a weak point. We may eeespe many a fatal shaft by keeping otlrmlvea well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished tram#."—“OivU Service OantU. •• Mode simply with boiling water or milk. Void only in half-pound tins, oy Grocers, labelled thus: JAMBS rFeST Sc CO.. Homcsopathle Cbemlsta, Lojcdox. gxauexD.

“August Flower” Mr. Lorenzo F. Sleeper is very well known to the citizens of Appleton, Me., and neighborhood. *He says: “ Eight years ago I was taken “ sick, and suffered as no one but • “ dyspeptic can. I then began tak- " ing August Flower. At that time “ I was a great sufferer. Every* “ thing I ate distressed me so that I “had to throw it up. Then in a “ few moments that horrid distress “ would come on and I would have “to eat and suffer For that “again. I took a ~ .. “ little of your medHorrid “icine, and felt much Stomach “better, and after “ taking a little more Feeling. “ August Flower my “ Dyspepsia disappeared, and since that time I “ have never had the first sign of it. “lean eat anything without the “ least fear of distress. I wish all “ that are afflicted with that terrible “disease or the troubles caused by “it would try August Flower, as I “ am satisfied there is no medicine “equal to it."

t DO YOU m |C/OUCrH| I DON T DELAY | HEMPSJ

It Cure. folds, Cough*. Nora Throat. Croup. Jiitluoe/u, Whooping Cough, lironohitl* and Anthill*. A certain cure tar Consumption Is Orel atone*. and a Mir * relief lu advanced atHgra. jus* at mice. lou will nee the excellent effect after taking the llr.t done. Hold by dealers everywhere. Large bottle., flu oen ta and 11.00,

H®fLITTLE £3f LIVER H; PILLS VISE no NOT OBIPE nor sicken. Bur. core for SICK HEADACHE, Impaired dlgertloa,conitt- , pntlun, torpid glands. Th.yarouM H vital orgain, remove r.ui.t, dtaB linen. Magleil effect on KidU WIR ncvH end bladder. Conquer 1 _ billon* nenroni dlatx A orders. Eitabllah not--8 w ural Daily Action. Beautify complexion by purifying blood. Imu Vxa»TAßi.i. The don b nleelyidJust»dtotul» eon. seen* Dill earn naver batoo much. Each vial eontaine 43, carried in veet pocket. Ilk* lead pencil. Buxines* man’s great Convenience. Taken eerier than eugtr. Holdevsrywhere. All genuin* good! bear“Cruc.nL” Bred 3-cant itarap. You get S 3 page book with aampla. OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. SI. UuU. Mr. GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 187& W. BAKER & CO.’S II Breakfast Cocoa CTbagtJl from vphlifo the exem of oU TTfiJNf*T- ' *“* bmm romove *b It obtain fitly pun and ft it tolublt. jf hWi JSTo Chemicals flff I I ||UH »«■« uied In It* preparation. It tH M l ill bu mnre tfian three ttmtt tht 111 I UH| strength of Coco* mixed with Ml 1 1 llil B,urch ' Arrowroot or Sugar, ffljj | I l|| and !* therefore far more «ooEH I j| 111 lil totting leu than on* U If || |1 U cent a cup. It Is delicious, nourlahlng, atrcnglbenlDg, iaiilt DlM*tid, and admirably adapted for Invalid# aa wall a* for peraona In health. Bold by Grocer* everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass rILLo PATENtsawisttsfL^a Advica V Book free. StOBI PATENT »»C’T Waah..D,o. © ©FAT FOLKS REDUCED oVn*te M w^&°p».n M o o w’it , Sia . Oiu* approved Embroidering Ha. ghlng. makes. Hug* with yarn or rev*. Embroidering wl b Bilk orzepbyra. C. rcularH and teilu. to Agfa, free. Machine, colored pattern book, miw ten pattern, aatuplea of work, cat., lirloe I ate, dlreotlona, etc., all by mall for (l.’O Satisfaction guana* teed or money refunded. E. IIOHH to 0.t.. Toledo, O. The Oldest Medicine in the World it prottblf _ »»- ISAAC THOISPSON’S r nSiunmnsdremt.. aorlptlon, and ha* been In constant use for nearly a century. There are few diaeaaes to which mankind are subject more dlstreeaing than sore eye*, and none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been tried without auocees. For all external inflammation of tbe eyes It Is an Infallible remedy. If the dlreo tlona are followed tt will never fail. Wepariloalarly Invite the attention of phyßlclan* to lta merits. _Jm SlßifflEr 1 ® NJ*! VB?ET \9 I, -.private W ISO Adams Bt., CHICAGO, ILL. Cures for Life a’l Ohronto, Nervoua Dleeoeea. Orgame Weakness. Bavhtnlnese, Dndtn<-«* to Marry. ■t oo Frequent Evajuetlonr of the HUdler. Btrrea- ?**“• Book “LIFE’S SKCHEf EKKOfIS, witu QueT tton I.l«t. for4-cent stamp. C. N. U. No. 2-92 ‘ WHEN WRIMNfI TO ADVERTISERS, VV please .uy you aaw the udvertUemeai In tai» paper, "A YOUNG WOMAN AT FIFTT,’’ Or, as the world expresses it, ** a well-pro. served woman.” One who, understanding the rules of health, has followed them, and preserved her youthful appearance. LYDIA E. PiNKHAH’S <£SEES goes to the root of all, female copiplainta, renews the waning vitality, and invigorates the entire system. Intelligent women of middle age know well its wonderful jiowere. j All Druggists sell it as a standard article, or sent by mail, in form of Pills off Lozenges, on receipt of *I.OO. Lydia (. Plnkham Med. Co., Lyaa. M -ti