Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 February 1892 — Page 7

Used up. It’s the only way to use some things, but it’s a bad condition for a man or woman.' It means disease. Take Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. That means health. It invigorates the liver and kidneys, purifies the blood and cleanses and renews the whole system. 'For all scrofulous humors and blood-taints, and even consumption (or lung-scrofula), if taken in time, it’s a positive remedy. It’s ■&. guaranteed one. In all diseases of the liver, blood and lungs, it’s warranted to benefit or cure, or the money Is refunded. No other medicine of its class is sold, though druggists, on this peculiar plan. You can judge why.' You only pay for the good you get

IVORY SOAP 99 oo Pure. THE BEST FOR EVERY PURPOSE. “ I Hate to Oh, Woman! False modesty ASK and procrastination are responsiMv Doctor.” ble for ™" ch . of J youir suffering. ' 1 We can excuse the delicacy of the young, !but there is no excuse for a woman who neglects the freely offered assistance of a woman. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the product of a life’s practice of a woman among women, and an unfailing cure for wonjan’s ills. It removes at once those pains, aches, and Wf weaknesses, brightens wjrgK vgwHg the spirits, and invigo- 1 / W rates the entire system. yjy vis An unexcelled remedy for Kidney Troubles. All Druggists sell it, or sent { by mail, in form of Pill* or laoaenge*. on receipt of 81 .00. W J.iver Pill*, c. Corre•pondenc® freely answered. Address In confidence. r _ r Lydia £. Pinkham Mbd. Co., Lynn, Mass. ~ / Wi Em St. Titns Dance Cared. VIII SAN Andreas, CaL, Feb. 8,1889. My little boy, IS years old, was taken sick with what is called St. Vitus Dance. He had not been able to go to school for two years. As soon as I read yonr book, I sent for two bottles Nerve Tonic and two bottles Iron Pills, and before the sooond bottle and pills were used np the boy wae restored to his natural health, and Is attending sohooL MICHAEL O’CONNELL. Walnut, 111., Oct. 7,1890. I have been suffering for years with beadaobe and last May I had it continuously for two days, and the third day I fell into a fit (apoplectic fit, the doctor called It). I sent for a bottle of Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic, and it did me more good than 1 oan tell, and I felt very thankful to God, the giver of all good, and to that remedy. I did not have another fit since. .MRS. SARAH GONIGAN. A •Valuable Bodk on Nervous LULL Disease* sent free to any address, r Iff f and poor patients can also obtain | IlLaLa tills medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wavne, Ind., since ISM, and Is now prepared under his direction by the KOENIC MED. OO v Chicago, 111. Sold by Druggists at 81 per Bottle. filor Soi Large Size. BJ-3S. 6 Bottles Jar 89. Young Mothers! We -Offer You <a JZemedjf which ilnsures Safety to Life of Mother emd Child. “MOTHER’S FRIEND” Mobs /Confinement of ita Main, Horror andUish. After uslngonebwttle of “ M other’sTYleud-*! •Buffered but little pain, and did not experience that weakness afterward usual in such cases.—Mrs. AsmeGaqe, Lamar, Mo., Jan. 15 th, 1881. Sent by express,charges prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.50 per borne. Book to Mothers mailed free. B&UDFIELD HEGCLATOR CO., ATLANTA, GA. COLD BT ALL DRDOGIBT3. •«•••••••• •Tuff sTiny Pills* enable the dyspeptic to eat whatever A w ho wishes. They cause the food to os•si m llate nml nourish the body, KT>ye A appetite and develop flesh. Price, 26 cents. Exact size shown in border. »>»>«»»♦»• nn rrt sssxfjfE'HSffi V" BLE CUKE for PILES. ■# I ■ KS » Price, 11; at druggists or LiJ M L -A«£ B j|r» ■ ■■■ ■■ Bor 24tfi, New York City. A A BB- TAFT'S ASTHMALENB I MIVB —f^|lDE|h never fails; send us you* address, we will mail trial WlHlCUbottle nWPr THIDB-TAFT 130*.M.C0..80CHESTtE,H.T.r K£E [best polish in thewobldT] with Fastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the Iron, and burn off. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril-, liant, Odorless, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. HAS All ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS.

REAL RURAL READING

WILL BE FOUND IN THIS DEPARTMENT. Oaring for a Bide Properly—Hired Men on the Perm—Feeding Pigs—Live stock and Dairy Notes Orchard and Gulden— Household and Kitchen. Blred Men on the Farm.

rHE daily papers have had a good deal to sav, of . late, about tle S. terrible risk •A farmers run in taking their hired men, of ' whom they know next to nothing, a into their families. Some of ff them go so far as V to say that the whole plan is wrong, and should give place to otherarrange-

ments, says the Massachusetts Plowman. On large farms this is often done. A separate table and lodging house is provided for the hired men, and they have no more to do with the family ot their employer than do the operatives in a factory with the mill owner’s family. On small farms, however, when located at a distance from town life, the farmer must at present, and probably for some time to come, board his help in his house and sit at the head of the table in person. This custom has prevailed so long among our country people that it will not easily be changed. There cam be no question whatever, that the average farmer is altogether too careless about trying to find out what sort of a man he is welcoming to the hospitality of his home; a man who is to become a member of a refined and Christian family should not object to be required to show that he is worthy of the confidence that must needs be placed in him; and the farmer who does not take pains to learn whom he is hiring is neglecting his most evident duty to his family.—Stockman.

The Gave of tildes. Farmers kill more or less beeves for home use or to sell in their nearest town or city as dressed beef. Beef is low and it should be the aim of each one to get out of eadh animal all that is in it. To do this we must begin with the outside —the hide. If a hide is taken off and properly cared for it will often bring a fifth or fourth as much as the dressed carcass. If taken off improperly and neglected it will bring very little. A hide ought to more than pay for taking it off. After the animal is dead turn it up on its back and run a sharp knife along the carcass as indicated by the dotted line in the first illustration.

To do this thrust the knife, point foremost and edge up and run the slit-the entire length of the carcass, from the chin over the breast in the line of the naval to the tail. Then slit the skin of each leg from the cleft of the foot to the central slit. If these lines are followed the hide will be the right shape to care for when removed. The horns do not go with the hide—nor does the tail bone —the tail and ears do. After the hide is removed spread it out as in the second illustration. Cut off all

pieces of fat .and flesh, (for W you are not an adeptrvou -will probably either have some such pieces on the hide or 6ome holes in it, and it is better to have meat than holes, as very flight cuts, especially at or near the center makes a badly “damaged hide” and It likewise damages the price badly) and sprinkle the flesh side with salt. Fold the hide flesh side in .and put where it will not freeze.

If the above is too much “bother” 'it is very likely the hides you remove will be the shape of the one in the third illustration, and probably it will be “hung to dry” in the same position and the price you will get—well it will be hard to get any price that will pay. Take care of the hides. —Stockman.

LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY.

Feeding Pis* the First Three Months. To have good strong pigs, says W. A. Harris in Farm and Home, the sows should be in good flesh, but not over-fat, when the pigs are farrowed. After farrowing the sows must be liberally fed on corn; bran and shipstuff or whole oats may be used instead of the bran and shipstuff. As soon as the pigs begin to eat, which will be at about three weeks old, give them a trough where the sow cannot get at it, and put a little sweet milk in it. Give them but little at a time at first, as what is left will get sour and not be liked by very young pigs. As soon as the youngsters get to coming regularly for their feed, stir in some shipstuff and bran, with a little linseed meal, increasing tbe shipstuff and bran as the pigs require. Whole

oafcs Is an excellent feed, and pigs will learn to eat it while quite young. It is well to feed some corn, say onethird of their feed, and, if the weather is cold, one-half. To make good growth pigs should have about all they can eat, and if not more than one-third of the feed is corn they will not get too fat .to grow well. Feed equal quantities, by measure, of bran and shipstuff, made into a thick slop with milk or water, and feed it before it sours. Feed corn and oats whole and dry after the slop. Pigs ought to have a warm and dry place to sleep; it must be dry. To kill lice rub petroleum where you see’nits. Lastly, don’t expect pigs to grow without liberal feeding, for that is impossible. JLive Stock jSotes. f It is better to keep different kinds of stock separate. That Is especially true if the cattle have horns. Feed the high priced corn to low priced cattle and that will make both corn and cattle worth more. TriE breeder who neglects to make the brood sows comfortable is not only cruel but is • an enemy to his own pocket-book. Some people who give the cattle the best of care neglect the hogs. The hog will repay good care as well as other kinds of stock. Guard against constipation in swine. The fat forming foods tend to produce costiveness. The opposite kinds of food tend to prevent it. While calves can be wintered on roughness alone, a better growth can be secured by feeding a little grain, especially in severe cold weather. Don’t be a ninny and feed one big feed once a day, and imagine it the proper thmg. Put yourself in the animal’s place and there would be some kicking. Foamlnc In the Churn. An Ohio subscriber, says the Stockman, is having lots of trouble with his churn or rather in his churn. The cream foams and produces no butter. He feeds his cows corn, fodder and clover hay and uses the cream at a temperature that used to bring good results—still he gets no butter. See that the cows have free aceess to all the salt they want every day. If they have not had this privilege in the past give each an onnee the first day, then miss a day and give another ounce; miss a day and let them go to a trough or box and help themselves. Keep the milk above freezing, 55 degrees is a good temperature for winter. Skim the milk in twenty-four or thirty-six hours and hold the cream not more than three days, thoroughly stirring the whole batch when new cream is added. Let it all be together twenty-four hours before churning at 62 to 65 degrees. Have the churn as warm as 62 degrees when the cream is put into it, and churn at a moderate rate—not too slow, and the butter ought to come.

Vagaries of Cranks. There is no vagary so wild, no folly so absurd concerning milk and buttermilk but that some crank is ready to commend it and support his commendation by the authority of science, says the Jersey Bulletin. The latest that we have met with is the statement that “most springs and wells are impregnated with enough lime and sulphur to hurt the keeping qualities of butter.” At least nine-tenths of the water used in butter-making in the United States is from springs or wells, and it is rather late in the century to begin talk about such water impairing the keeping quality of the butter. The fellow who wrote the quoted words has a ease of water on the brain.

Difference in Cost. Prof. Whitchcr, of the New Hampshire Experiment Station, says the Dairy World, finds that the milk from his herd costs an average of 2.74 cents per quart on good feed. Thfe best cow produced it at a cost of 1.95 cents, while the milk of the poorest cow cost 4.26 cents. On a richer ration the cost from the best cow was reduced to 1.32 cents, while vyth the same cow fed on a poor, innutritious ration, the cost went up to 5.35 cents per quart. Let In the Sunlight. Don’t keep the cow in a dark stable. Eternal gloom will affect a cow as surely as it will affect a human being.

ORCHARD AND GARDEN.

Setting Out Trees. It was thought best twenty or thirty years ago to set out trees or .groves around orchards, hut we have found out by experience that it was not best, for several reasons. First, they shade the orchard too much, and second, they prevent, too much, the circulation of air among the fruit trees. This causes the fruit to grow small and scarce. Farmers should set out trees of different kinds to shelter, not their orchards, hut their harnyards and their feeding lots, by so doing they could modify the temperature a few degrees and save some feed and prevent a great deal of suffering to stock. Again, farmers on the large prairies of the West and North should set out trees or groves for farm use, for firewood, posts and other purposes. If the people of this generation don’t need it the people of the future generations will, for timber is getting scarce up North in the pineries and other places. A few hints in regard to orchards: A young orchard should be plowed and worked a few years and planted to potatoes or other truck, then seeded to clover, never to timothy, for that makes the ground too soddy and dry. None should use their orchards for pig pens and pasture too much, as it packs or hardens the ground too much around the roots and often causes the trees to die. Better build a chicken house in the orchard and let the chickens pick up the insects. Go Slow. Some of the best fruits we have are those whose merits have been slowly recognized. It is a safe rule to be shy of much lauded new fruits. Even where the eulogium is justified so far as concerns one locality, the fruit may be good for nothing elsewhere. This is the case now with some excellent, well-known kinds, which fail in a few localities, though doing well generally

Frntt Rotes. Potash Is a favorite diet for peaches. The ashes of trees burned for yellows may be safply applied to growing stock. If the trees sent you are somewhat dry do not be too anxious to plant them at once, but bury them in fine moist soil. Have you a definite idea of what sort of a top you want for your young trees? Get it before pruning. Don’t cut haphazard merely for the sake of thinning. Nener buy of a tree peddler unless he can show his authority to represent a responsible nurseryman. The most satisfactory way is to buy of the nurseryman nearest to you if he is reliable. The Moyer gratie is being planted for market extensively in Western New York, where it succeeds admirably. It resembles the Delaware in color and flavor, but has a larger berry and bunch and ripens much earlier. There are in the United States 4,510 nurseries, valued at $41,978,835 and occupying 172,806 acres with an invested capital of $52,425,669. Of the acerage in nurseries 95,054 acres are used in growing trees, plants, shrubs and vines. By the use of a little intelligence and labor, fruits in great variety can be produced on nearly every farm without the outlay of a single cent. It is not .difficult to raise trees and vines of the best kinds from cuttings or by budding or grafting.

HOUSEHOLD AND KITCHEN.

Heart ache. Dr. Haire says he has cured many victims of sick headache with the following simple prescription: When the first symptoms of a headache appear, take a teaspooonful of lemon juice, clear, fifteen minutes before each meal, and the same dose at bedtime. Follow this up until all symptoms are past, taking no other medicines, and you will soon be freed from your periodical nuisance. Sick headache is the signal of distress which the stomach puts up to inform us that there is an over alkaline condition of Its fluids—that it needs a natural acid to restore the battery to its normal working condition. Lemonade without sugar, plain lemon juice and water, is a grateful and medicinal beverage for a person of bilious habit, allaying feverishness and promoting sleep and appetite. Nervous headache is said to be instantly relieved by shampooing the head with a quart of cold water in which a dessert spoonful of soda has been dissolved.

Som« Tested ffeelpws. Rice Dumplings. —Pus your rice in a stew pan, and pour on each cup of rice one gill of milk; stand it near the fire where it will keep hot but not boil. As soon as it has absorbed all the milk, pare your apples, take out the cores, and put the rice around them instead of paste. Boil them until the apple Is soft. They should be tied in dumpling cloths. Lemon Pudding.— Pour a quart of boiling milk over U pints of bread crumbs. Put the mixture into a buttered pudding dish, stir in a teaspoonful of salt, cover closely with a plate and let it stand half an hour. At the end of that time, beat into it three eggs and a teaspoonful of lemon extract. Beat it until it is perfectly smooth, and hake it in a hot oven about three-quarters of an hour. Creamed Oysters. —One pint of milk; when boiling, add two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch, salt and pepper, and one teaspoonful of butter. - Take fine powdered crumbs, and scatter over the bottom of a well-buttered dish. Put a layer of oysters, then of cream, next crumbs, then oysters, cream, and so on, having crumbs on top. Brown, or rather cook as for escalloped oysters. It is a change from the latter dish. Creamed Onions. —Put a dozen onions in a pan of cool water and take off their skins. Put them in a saucepan of boiling water with a teaspoonful of salt, and boil them until tender. In the meantime melt in a small sauoepan a tablespoonful of butter, add a teaspoonful of flour, and when it froths stir in half pint of milk, stirring until it boils: now drain the onions, pour this sauce over them, and set them where they will only simmer .gently until dinner is ready.

The Secrets Revealed Through the "Windows of Character."

The great engineer Stephenson was once asked the mightiest power in nature, and he said that it was a woman’s eye, for it would send a man to the ends of the earth, and that same eye would bring him home agaih. Some •eyes are so liquid and deep that Emerson fitly calls them “wells into wliich •one might fan.” Others, lie says, have no more expression than blueberries. Some are asking eyes, some assertive, some prowling, some full of bayonets. ■“The eves of men converse as much as their tongues, with the advantage that the ocular dialect needs no dietionary, but is understood all the world over. Each man carries in his eye the exact indication of his rank in the immense scale of men, and we are always learning to read it. The reason why men do not obey ns is because they see the mud at the bottom of our eye.” It is said that gamblers rely more upon the expression of the eye of their opponent to discover the state of the game than upon anything else. Bushnell tells of a preacher he knew whose eyes were “six-shooters,” keen, gray, individualizing, loaded with thought and emotion, and leveled at each hearer in turn. There was no special merit in the style or substance of his speech, but his penetrating eye made every one feel that eye-bolts were shooting surely and swiftly into the very soul. Of some eyes Sliakspeare says: They are the books, the arts, the academies That show, contain and nourish all the world. Brutes are kept at bay by the eye. The tamer and trainer govern, by a glance, creatures that could easily crush them did they know their power. So tnat the human eye is a weapon of defense and assault of incomparable power. “Next to the voice in effectiveness, ” says Cicero, “is the countenance, and this is ruled over by the eyes.” In Delsarte’s system there are 729 expressions of the eye, grouped as follows: Normal, indifferent, morose, somnolent, contemptuous, deeply reflective, surprised and resolute. But, as in music, so here, the chromatic scales and gamuts of expression beggar all description.— E. P. Thwing, in Phrenological Journal.

Industrial Department.

Tho Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Company’s 6,150 miles of road traverses a vast territory, rloh in all tho resources that insure industrial success. | The Industrial Department is con--1 versunt with the Iron, Coal, Lumber arid Tanbark, the Water Power (both river and artesian) for factory and electrio I power purposes, the markets, tho transportation and financial facilities, and other interests on the lino pertaining to industrial development, and disseminates information concerning same. A number of new factories have been ; induced to locate—largely through tho instrumentality of this Company—-at enterprising towns on its lines. | As the interest of the Company is to , secure the location of industries at places where the surroundings will insure their permanent success, the information furnished a particular industry is pertinent and reliable. In the Eastern States and In other parts of tho world factories are so congested and distant from the actual market as to result in iieree and destructive competition. That the West is taking a place as one of the great manufacturing territories of the world is forcibly impressing itself upon discerning and enterprising manufacturers. Steps should bo taken by such while the field Is as yet not fully covered, and while inducements are still being offered, to locate in the Wost. Individuals or companies wishing to embark capital in Western Industry can ; find a profitable field. For particulars relative to industrial advantages on the line, address Luis Jackson, Industrial Commissioner, C., M. & St, P. Ry,, 160 Adams street, Chicago, 111. A Maryland fanner picked a specimen of fruit which looked like an apple, but contained not apple seeds but a poach kernel.

Right or Wrong.

Which win ye have V It does »eem aa It tome folks prefer to have the lait condition of ,the liver rathei than the first. They perpetually doae themselves with purgative* totally without virtue a* alterative of liver trouble. Hostetter's otemach Bitters is the suooeßsful candidate for the people’s choice, and yet, popular and well known as It Is, thote arc unfortunates who keep on trying the drastic remedies of former days. It ie to the Intelligent portion of the publio that tho well known and long tried properties of tho Bitters appeal. Reason should be fulded by experience In the matter of medloaion. *The best guide to our feet la the lamp of experience,’' said a great patriot of ths early revolutionary period, and the eiolamation is pregnant with truth. For over a third of a century the Bitters daily has met with the indorsement of people Buffering from liver complaint, malaria, constipation, rheumatism, debility and troubles accompanied by dyspepsia. Latterly it has declared ltseif and been thoroughly approved as a remedy for "la grippe.” An Arkansas pig lias a scent equal to a dog’s. His wonderful instinct saved his owner’s child from drowningone day not long ago.

Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury,

As mercury will surely destroy the sense of emell and completely derange the wholo system when entering It through the muoous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescript loos from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do Is tenfold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Ball’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken Internally, and acta directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure 1» sure you get the genuine. Xt is taken internally, and made In Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. JWBold by Druggists, price TOc per bottle. The greatest pleasure known is to do a good action by stealth, and have it found out by accident. Any book in “Surprise Berics," (best authors), 25 cent novels, about 200 pages each, sent free, postpaid, by Cragln & Co., of Philadelphia, I’a., on receipt of 50 wrappers of Dobbins' Electric Soap. Send 1 cent for catalogue. In all Spain there are only 3,231 children in the Sunday sohools. Don’t Irritatk your Lunor with a Stubborn Cough, when a remedy safo and certain as Dr. D. Jayno’s Expectorant cun be so easily procured. Sore Throats and Lungs are speedily helped by It A number of New York Chinamen ride the bicycle. . Bef.oh am h Pills have been In popular uso In Europe for 50 years, and are a safe, sure and gentle remedy. 25 cents a box. There are 300,000 blind peoplo In Europe.

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

There Is a 3-lni.'h display advertisement in this paper this weejt which bus no two words alike except one word. Tho same Is true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine O©. This house places a “Crescent” on everything they make Rnd publish. Look for It, send them the name of the word, and they will return you bqok, beautiful iathoouaphs, or SAMPLES FREE. “I have been occasionally troubled with Coughs, and In each case> have used BROWN’S BRONCHIAL T KOCH EH, which have never fulled, and I must say they are second to none In the world." —Felix A. May, Cashier, St. Paul, Minn. Danoeh Ahead Signalled bt a Cough Is averted with Hale’s Honet op Hokkhound AND Tab. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in coe Minute. If afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Issue Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it 21©

ELYS Catarrh CREAM BALM IS WORTH W CATARBVoI 8500 I§^ D, ""f*] TO ANY MAN, PiM^EVERWjF JtjA Woman or CkildMb” & Mjflerlng from CATARR#Iii •r SNUFF. HAY FEYER A particle Is applied Into eaca nostril aud Is ogreoao 1 e._p^ilit- at Druggist* or by msll. ELY BHOTHERS. 96 Warren Street. New York. R A D W AY’ S 0 PILLS, I&e Great Liver and Stomach Rsmedy, For the cure of mil disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels. Kidneys,Bladder.Neiron* DUeiier, Lo»s of Appetite, H-aa*cbe, Con» lpation, Coetlvenes*. Indigestion, Billon,news. Fever, Inflammation of the B iwela. plle-. and all derangements of tbe nteroat Viscera. Pnrely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerale. or deleterious drugs. PERFECT DIGESTION way .< Pj jih every morn mg, about len o'clock, aa a olnner pill. By ho doing SICK HEADACHE, Dyspepsia. Foul Stomach. Biliousness, will be avoided, and tbe lood that Is eaten .outribnte its nonrnhl ng properties lor the support ot the na ural wsaie of the body. IST Observe tbe following symptoms resulting from Disease of tbe Digestive Organ-: Constlpition, Inward Piles, Fnllneso of tbe B ood In tbe Head, Acidity of the Stomsc" Nausea. Heaitburn, Disgust ot lopd. Fu lntSi or Weight in the Stomach, four Eructations, rlukirg or Pint erirg of tbe Heart, Choking or Suffocatl'i* bensstions when in a lying posture. Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs beiore tbe Sight Fever and Dull Pain In tbe Head, Deficiency ot Perspiration. Yellowness of tne bktn amt Eyes. Pain in ihe Side. Cnes . Limbs, and Sndden F.usbes ot Heat Burning in tbs F e-b. A few doses of RADWA Y’S PILLS will free the system of ail the at ove-named disord- rs. Price 25 cts. per box. Hold bv all drng/tst.. tend a letter stamp to DK. RADWAY St CO., No. 82 Warren htreet. New York. IST Inlormation worth ihons-nds wll) be sent to you. TO THE PUBLIC; Be sur t >nd ask for KADWAY'B, *nd tee that the name "HADWAY” is on what you m ffIFIT FOLKS REDUCED Mr*. Alio* Maple, Orogon, Mo m write* i \ til / i "My weight wa*B2o pound*, do wit is 1S&

The Ladies.

The pleasant effect and perfect safety with whioh ladies may use the California liquid laxative Syrup of Figs, under all conditions, makes it their favorite remedy. To sget the true and genuine article, look fqr the name of the California Pig Syrup Co., printed near the bottom of the package. Watches are set to pocketbooks now.

SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION CURE-

This GREAT COUGH CURE, this successful CONSUMPTION CURE is sold by druggists on a positive guarantee, a test that no other Cure, can stand successfully. If you have a COUGH, HOARSENESS or LA GRIPPE, it will cure you promptly. If your child has the CROUP or WHOOPING 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 and receive immediate help. Price 50c and SI.OO. Ask your druggist for SHILOH’S CURE, If your lungs are sore or back lame, use Shiloh’s PorOus Plasters.

Beauty often depends on plumpness; so does comfort; so does health. If you get thin, there is something wrong, though you may feel no sign of it. Thinness itself is a sign; sometimes the first sign; sometimes not. The' way to get back plumpness is by careful living, which sometimes includes the use of Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver oil. Let us send you —free—a little book which throws much light on all these subjects. Scott fit BowNS.Chemlals ijj South jth Avenue, New York, ' Your <fnigliMTckeHiSeott’*l!mul»lon ofcod-Uvsr oil—sll drugghls everywhere da. ft. a * Ik THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND l»f COMPLEXION IS BETTER. Hy doctor soya It seta gently on tho stomach, liver and kidneys, and Isa pleasant laxative. Tills drink Is made from herbs, aud la prepared for use as easily as tea. It Is called LANE’S MEDICINE All druggists sell It at SOc. and *I.OO per package. Buy one to day. Lane's Family Medicine moves tho bowele each dag. In order to be healthy, ibis Is necessary. the Owen Electric Belt AND APPLIANOE3 F °R MEN AND WOMEN CORE TONE MANY WagM UP THE DISEASES SYSTEM WHEN AND ALL RESTORE OTHER LOST KtMEDIES VIGOR. GET ONE. ONE. PH. A. OWN, A GENUINE CURRENT OF ELECTRICITY Is generated In a battery on the belt, end can be applied to nny part of tho body. The current can be mode mild or strong ns the cose may require, sind Is absolutely under control of the wearer at all times. OTJH ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE Contalni fullest information regarding the cure of Acute, Chronic and Nervous Diseases, Sworn ’Testimonial* with portraits of people who have been cured, Price List and Cuts of Belts and Appliances, and how to order, published in English, German, Swedish and Norwegian Languages. This Catalogue, or a Treatise on Rupture Cured with Electrio Truss, will be mailed to any address on receipt of tlx cent* postage. THE OWEN Electric Belt and Appliance Co. Main Office, Head Salesrooms and Only Factory, 205,207,209,211 STATE ST. Cor. Adams, The Owen Electric Belt Building, CHICAGO, ILL. New York Office, 826 Broadway, Cor. 12th EL THE LAMEST ELECTRIC BELT ESTABLISHMENT IN THE WORLD. When writing mention this paper. ELECTRICITY VS. STEAM. In an interview in the New York Herald the other day Chaunccy Depew told a reporter that in twenty-five years he expected to see electricity replace steam as a motive power for railroads and steamships. This is probably correct. The old methods are giving way to the new. Many people think, for instance, that there is no connection between the lungs and the kidneys. Modern science has shown that they are both members of the excretory family—that the kidneys remove the uric acid from the blood, the lungs remove the carbonic acid from the blood. If the kidneys are affected additional burden is thrown upon the lungs and they break down from overwork. Reid’s German Cough and Kidney Cure treats both the lungs and the kidneys, and by restoring them both to their normal condition relieves the patient from a cold that settles upon organs and that if neglected will produce dangerous results. Get this great remedy of any dealer. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111. PATENTS! PENSIONS! Send for Inventor’s Guide, or How to Obtain s Patent. Send for Digest of Pension and Bounty JLaw*. PATRICK O’FABhELL. Washington, D. C, Dll TP Remedy Free. INSTANT HUltr. Final yll f N cure ia 10 days. Never returns •no purge: I ILL.U no salve: 110 euppo-itorr. A victim tried in valu every remedv; has discovered a simple cure, which he will msll free 10 bis fellow unTeiera. Artdress J. H. KEEVKB. 80x8290, N.Y.City.N.Y. ■ Ptso's Remedy ibi Catarrh Is the HH Best. Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. \ ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mall, I ■a IT. HoaelUne, Worm* Pa. * ,

‘August Flower” My wife suffered with indigestion and dyspepsia for years. Rife became a burden to her. Physicians failed to give relief. After reading one of your books, I purchased a J bottle of August Flower. It worked, like a charm. My wife received immediate relief after taking the first dose. She was completely cured — , now weighs 165 pounds, and can eat anything she desires without any; deleterious results as was formerly the case. C. H. Dear, Prop’r Washington House, Washington, Va. ©

SOUGH I don't delay fl KEMP’S I BALSAM*

It Cures Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Croup, InlUieMr.H, Whooping; Cough, Bronchitis and AaMuna. A certalu cure for Consumption In Amt s’ages, and » mtv relief In advanced sluices. Use at im *. You will see the excellent effect after Inking the llrst dose. Bold by Ueaierseverywuere. Large better, 90 omits and tl.oo. fir liver Hi PILLS DO ROT GRIPE NOR RICKER. Burs curs for SICK HEADA I'll K. impaired digestion, constl- , putlou,torpid ifluiKlH. TUeyarouw vital organa, remove tiuuara, dlza •in""*- Magical effect on Klfl\3 DUVN and Dladder. Conquer 3 blliouN uurvous cIIm- »; order*. KaUbllih naU 3 w w wry Daily action. Beautify complexion by purifying blood. FIISItLV VgaXTABLK. The does 1. nicely adjusted to eult esee, ae on. pill can never b.too niuoh, Etch vl.l oontsln. (If, carried In vert poeket. Ilk. lead pencil. Business man’s (not convenience. Taken easier than eugar. Sold everywhere. All gnulna goode bear “Oreeceot" Bud I-out itajnp .You fat Sll page book with nmpla OR. HRRTIR atpiCINR CO., St. l»ul«. S»_ Wort.o« oft her lUrLc Tlmboror mn ordinary ttrub In one and ft bittrmlnnto. ft cltan awMp of tiro aura* at a sluing. A mau, a boy and a borae oftu oparato it. No htary ahalu* or rodi to handlt. Thaerop oo a fanMoma the first jotr will pay for tho Machine. You oan not afford to pay taxes on uoproductlye Umber land. Clear it. rate# a bountiful crop with Uee labor and iwraperato your eld worn out land by naeturtac. ft will only eoet you a poatal card to eend for an iilunrated Cataloguo, giving prior, term* and toetlmontal*. A4dr«is tho Manufaotnrere. JAMES MILNE it SON, SCOTCH amt, lOWA. GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878. iw. BAKER & CO.’S Breakfast Cocoa _ Irom whioh the exoes. of oil oHe ho. boon removed, It absolutely pure and if it tillable. v JVo Chemicals a are used lo Its preparation. It EA has more than three timet the m etrenffth of Cocoa mixed with H Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, !|| and Is therefore far more eeo--111 Domical, ceettng lete than one 'lMcentacup. It Is delicious, nonr■fl Ishlng, strengthening, iasilt digested, end admirably adapted for Invalids ae well as for persons in health. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorohester, Haas. f FAMOUS ODELL TYPEWRITER j Itlg used by wry Ketul > evory Public • school i» mxmx eradopting it: .. _ Kditors and «>' u°v- ■' nm. nl 0f- ... • . " : : ■■ J ('. ■ n [Hint. • -->***l*l »«•»' v u ”, m a n I * ** 1 <i • I <pi*a No teachm relOhecß i'erioi iwr 16 txtrn.] qulrwi; will do your work Id one hour’s practice. Sent lo any town in the U. 8. forll duponit f balance C. O. D. mibJect.to trial. Order now urul jret the Ajreucy. ODELL TYPEWHITER CO., 361) to 34ft Dearborn Street, Chicago, UL orateful-comfortinq. j EPPS’S COCOA BREAKFAST. “By s thorough knowledge of the natural law* whioh govern tho operations ofdfgevtlon and nutritl m, and by a careful application of the fine properties of weU-sdected Cocoa, Mr. Epos baa provtidtd oar breakfaet tables with a delicately Savoured beverage wnloh may save as many Heavy doctors'Jillls. It la 0/the Judicious use of such articles of diet that aooaecttutloa may be gr dually oujlt up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there 1* a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood a-d a properly nourished frame."—' “Oivu Serotoe tfattUe.” Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only In half-pound tin*, ny Grocers, labelled Urns: JAMBS EPPS Sc CO.. Homceopathle Obemista; _____ Loxdoh. Ekolasd. GARFIELD TEA of owd euuagfiurtt Sick Headache; rostoreaComplexion; cax-es Constipation. linrr 1 f^bßeatlons,with Hrr ■ ILL WsebmgtonandUreeoti, the Free Government and CHtAP ea 1 Northern I AII ft V Pacific R. R.LnnUu Best Agricnltural, Grating and Tl m* e rLsna» uow (men to settlers. Mailed tuxv Addresa CUB. 8. UtltOH. LtndCom.NP.h.lC^Patfl.iSna! fTDIIIIi Mor F hIIMI Habit Cared lo lt> UrlUW^feiVH^rL^o^ C. N. IT. Jtd. * -p* t ■ —— ' 1,1 WHEN AVKITING TO ADTKKTfSKRg, >0 “ ,aW tbe *««verttoeMS3