Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 10, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 March 1892 — Page 7

<k~ . T Krpt vp for years —the offer that’s made by the proprietors of Dr. Sago’s Catarrh Remedy. It’s addressed to you, if you nave Catarrh. It’s a reward of SSOO, if they can’t euro you, no matter how bad your case, or of how long standing—an offer that’s made in good faith by responsible men. Think what it means! Absolute confidence in their Remedy, or they couldn’t afford to take the risk. A long record of perfect and permanent cures of the worst cases—or they couldn’t have faith in it. It means no more catarrh—or SSOO. If you fail to be cured, -you won’t fail to be paid. But perhaps you won’t beliove it. Then there’s another reason for trying it. Show that you can’t be cured, and you’ll get SSOO. It’s a plain business offer. The makers of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy will pay you that amount if they can’t cure you. They know that they can—you think that they can’t. If they’re wrong, you get the cash. If you’re wrong, you’ll rid of catarrh.

THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MV COMPLEXION IS BETTER. Mr doctor rajs It acts gentlvon the stomach, liver ana kidneys. and Isa pleasant laxative. This drink Is made from herbs, and Is prepared forme as easily as tea. It la called LIME’S MEDICINE All druggists sell It at 50c. and SI.OO per package. Buy one to-day. Lane’s Family Medicine movea the bowela each day. In order to be healthy, thia it necessary. Advice Countless letters are rei. ceived by us from ailing Ailing Women t« _ world, seeking rTee. advice. All are , _ * answered in a prompt and careful manner, giving each the benefit of the great library of reference compiled during a woman’s life’s work among suffering women. These are the largest records costeerning Female Complaints in the -world. Thousands of women have been benefited by Mrs. Pinkham’s advice after all other treatment had failed. Don’t throw away this chance. Write us about your case. It will cost you nothing, and may £ive your • life. Your letter will be received and answered by one of your sex. Correspondence strictly private. We never publish even a letter of testimonial without the person’s unqualified consent. Correspondence freely nneweied. Addreee In confidence, LYDIA £. FLnKIIAM MJLD. CO., LYNN, MASS.

Recommended an the Bent. IX Lb Mass, Plymouth Co., In., May, 1889. I suffered from temporary sleeplessness from overwork for two years, for which I used Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic, and can recommend same as the beat medlalna for similar troubles. P. BORNHORST. | Radom, 111., Sept., 1889. The Bey. P. Sebastian writes: Koenig’s Nerve Tonio has produced a wonderful effeot here In a case of a girl 9 years of age, who hod euileptto fits dally since her first year, sometimes 9 times in one day. Nothing seemed to help her, but after the first spoonful of the Tonio the attacks disappeared forever. Joust, I]L, March 10,1891. Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic has been used for the past 12 years with satisfactory results by our Bisters troubled with nervousness. BISTERS OP ST. FRANCIS. mrr-A Valuable Bpok on Nervous L lib L Diseases Bent free to any address, 1 ft T W and poor patients con also obtain | lII.In this medicine free of charge. This remedy bos been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind., since 1875, ana unowprepared unde'his dlreotlon by the KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, fll. Bold by Druggists at SI per Bottle. 6 for 83. Lorre Sloe. 81.75. 6 Bottles for S 9.

Kennedy’s Medical Discovery Takes hold in this order: Bowels. Liver. Sidneys, Inside Skin. Outside Skin, Driving everything before it that ought to be out. You know whether you need it or not. Sold by every druggist,and manufactured by DONALD KENNEDY, _ WOXBURY. MASS. ■ ■ mrn mm AJtAKESISrI.eMnBtant nil ro mm II ■■ Prioe, $1; at druggists or iILIC ms

| BEST POLISH 111 THE WORLD, j

siM

BO HOT BE DECEIVED^" - ™™ with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and born off. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. HAS Ml AHWAL SALE OF 3,000 TflBS.

REAL RURAL READING

WILL BE FOUND IN THIS DEpARTMgN^. Bow to Hake* s Good Arch for Maple Sugar—A Convenient Door Combination— The Cattle Industry—Make a (food Garden, Etc. A Good Arch for Maple Sugar.

/"r\HE first essential Is to locate it near a stream, that water may be always handy for washing and lA\a rins i n & Pans, J iV? tubs, etc. Next il a foundation on L-j natural bed rock, T a or laid in a trench t, .dr below frost acjY tion. The pit |\Jv must be deep j/k enough so the ashes can fall WJ&W* through for good draft Entrance to the chimney

from the pit should not be at the pit bottom and all the way to its top, hut from the top of the pit only, so the draft will carry the flame always along the bottom of the pan or evaporator. If cold air can pass between the flamfe and pan bottom more or less heat will be lost and wood wasted. Make the top of the arch exactly level and even, so the pan will fit closely and sap be of even depth all over its surface. A course or two of brick will be found handy here, but flat stones will do. Arch and chimney should be closely mortared to insure good draft and economize heat. Of course bought grate and other things are handy, including the cast-iron arch, but superior maple sugar can be made without these things. A Door Combination. One of the most convenient things on my farm is a stable door and its attachments. Frequently 1 want to leave it open six inches nights to create a draft for the comfort of the horses. To leave it open wide wouxd endanger them because of roving stock. A 6trap securely fastened inside has a slot cut in it. This is slipped instantly over the head of a screw on the outside of the door and nothing can open it until the strap is lifted and pulled. If on driving up I desire to tie a horse a moment or to fasten one while rubbing him down, this strap is supplied with a snap. Placing it on the bit and buttoning the door he is secure and cannot rub his bridle nor gnaw, as at a fence or post, as he is at right angles to a flat surface. The button is a home-made

treasure and time saver. It is made of well-seasoned white oak, is the shape shown and seven inches long. The right enclis the heavier an" Ties on another screw head. It turns loosely on its pivot The upper part of the left end is beveled. When one desires to open or close the door the button is merely tilted, the door passes its beveled corner and it falls kt once into a horizontal position again.—L. J. Simpson, in Farm and Home. Affricui. ural Noted. Scald your hog just as soon as it is done bleeding. Keep the stables clean and let the horses and cows have a good bed. Improve the roads, lessen the fences, save the manure. How many acres do the fences on your farm waste? How is the road along your farm? Can it be'improved? How? Potatoes are best kept in a cool place—just above freezing is a good temperature. Poor roads are the heaviest tax most farmers bear. Reduce the tax by improving the roads. Good roads, clean culture and a few fences will help on the day when farming will be more profitable. How did you find the school the last time you visited it? Any improvement since you were there before? What did your fence corners produce last year? Are they going to be used the same way the coming season? Did you ever figure on the amount of corn you could raise on the land used in fences and the waste land they make? Sow clover and you will not only get the finest hay that is ever fed to animal, but you will enrich your ground at the same time.

LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY.

The Cattle Industry. There are very few farms in our whole Country where the cattle Industry may not profitably be made to supplement the cultivation of crops. If the products of the soil are converted into beef, milk, wool, pork, etc., by intelligently feeding them out to good stock, the farmer may calculate in getting the ultimate value' that' is contained in them. When sold from* the farm the products pass through the hands of various dealers and manufacturers, each of whom procures some profit. By feeding the farmer turns manufacturer himself, and, besides this, he saves one important element of value (the fertilizing properties) of which no one else would take any account. To farm without stock entails one of two things—the buying of commercial manures or the constant deterioration of the soil. It shpuld not be difficult for any man to determine what course to pursue, in the face of such an alternative.—Wisconsin Agriculturist. * To Prevent Los, ol Profit*. The market reports quote light hogs about one-half cent higher than heavy hogs. By light hogs are meant those weighing less than 200 pounds when dressed and by heavy ones, 200 pounds and over. The ex-

pertinent stations have very clearly shown that the heavier a hog weighs the more it costs for every pound of gain. The Massachusetts experiment station, in a series of experiments extending over five years, found that New England farmers cannot make money by raising pork at 6c dead weight with pigs weighing over 175 or 180 pounds when cressed. The experience of hundreds of practical farmers has been the same. Yet thousands of farmers persist in raising 300 and 400-pound hogs. They know that every pound of gain over 200 pounds costs all or more than it brings in, yet they persist in feeding their heavy hogs. At a recent institute a farmer asked the expert who gave an address on feeding swine, if there was auy money feeding 80-cent corn to a hog weighing over 200 pounds. He said that he could raise his hogs to 200 pounds all right, but in getting them from there to 400 pounds he lost money. Of course he did and he knew it, yet the habit of feeding to this weight was so fixed that he would not change. The farmer will feed his 400-pound hogs until he dies, but his sons have either left the farm distrusted with it, or else go in for making money by new methods when they get in charge.— Farm and Home. Chopped May for Cow*. Some extended trials have been made of chopped and unchopped hay for milch cows, and the results give no evidence that there is any grain from cutting the fodder. It is necessary to have a wide range of tests made before the general fact that it never pays to chop feed is fully established. It is a fact well worth knowing.

THE POULTRY-YARD.

Poultrr on tho Farm. Most farmers consider poultry on the farm more of a nuisance than a benefit and only tolerate fowls on the farm because the old womep like to have them around, writes Aunt Betsy, in “Farmer and Breeder.” Such men either forget or ignore the fact that the good house-wife and her chickens supply most of the necessaries such as coffee, tea, sugar, etc. —yes, and i know more than one place where they supply the tobacco also. Were it not for this despised, source of supply the husband would have to provide the hard cash for the “store goods” or go without them and any one that lives on a farm knows that there are times when it is difficult to get ready money. But fresh eggs and poultry will always bring the cash no difference what time in the' year. But there is a class of progressive farmers who have discovered and will acknowledge that poultry Is of great value on the farm, and every year we find a few more going into the business and trying to “grade up,” as they call it by having a few thoroughbred roosters. We find a few more willing to take poultry papers and learn from others that have made it a success, nut it is very hard to get some people out of the old rut. “You can’t tell me anything about raising chickens, the old jdung hill is just as good as your thoroughbred. The trees are good enough for hens to roost in.” The hen is kicked about if she comes into the barn, and all she gets to eat is what she steals; then if she don’t lay —“Chickens don’t pay.” Try building a hen house, one that is comfortable and warm, give the hens the same care as other stock gets, supply them with green food, such as turnips, onions, and potatoes, sometimes cooked, and at others simply chopped or mashed; plenty of charcoal, lime, gravel, or broken shells, all of which the farmer can get with a little trouble generally on his own farm, and then with plenty of milk and fresh water, my word for it, they will pay better than any stock you have on the farm. Poultry Noto«. In fowl-culture, nothing can take the place of a “keen eye” and a “quick mind” to see that “all is well,” Gather your eggs as soon after laying as maybe. They are liable to become broken in the nests and eaten bv the hens, thus laying the foundation of a very bad habit. The farmer must breed white fowls. They are just as good in every respect as dark ones, and better in this feature, viz: their appearance upon the meat stand in market Is fine and clean, their pin feathers being white, are not noticed, whereas every dark pin feather is sure tostand out in bold and ugly relief. Perhaps your flock of poultry needs new fresh blood for its invigoration. If so the sooner the matter is attended to the better. A good male bird has considerable value and therefore it is folly td expect to obtain such, save by the payment of a good price. A real good fowl is cheaper at $5.00 than a poor one is at 75 cents or SI.OO. Absorbents are of great value to the poultry house. Dry loam, smuck, coal ashes, etc., are splendid for “taking in” not only moisture and dampness, but also the various noxious gasses, such as ammonia and carbonic acid gas, which are always present in greater or lesser quantities. j\. pure dry atmosphere is essential to health.

ORCHARD AND GARDEN.

Make » «»ood Carden, No man Should spend his labor and time over so large an acreage as to fail in making a first-class garden. In this much of the satisfaction and often no Attic part of the profit of country and farm life consists. It is rather disheartening for the city resident who goes into the country during summer for fresh air and tbc fresh home-grown small fruits and garden vegetables to look into back yards and find tin cans carelessly thrown away, which show that even for such common table luxuries as tomatoes, green corn, and often green peas, the farmer and his family have nothing better for him than he could himself buy at the retail grocery. If farmers wish to attract other men to their business, as it is clearly their interest to do, they must in every way make farm life as pleasant and enjoyable as possible. Labor-saving machinery enables the farmer to take life easier •if he will. He complains that low pricc9 for staple crops take off all his profit. Grow less of these crops then, and devote a larger share of time to

fruit, especially the small fruits, and to garden vegetables. So soon as the farmer grows enough of all kinds of vegetables for table use in their season, he has procured luxuries that only wealthy men can afford. As he thinks over what he would have been obliged to pay for such table delicacies, the harder lines of his life fade away. It seems worth while to live on a farm, and when he gets to feeling this way it Is ten to one that he falls into the habit of marketing snrplus he does not need, and thus after a few years develops into market gardening the natural way. First make a garden that will supply your table with all garden delicacies, and if there is a surplus it will be sure of a profitable market—American Cultivator. Manuring Hearing Apple Trees. It Is generally conceded that bearing apple trees need manure. But if a tree that has been in blossom is manured some year when no blossoms are formed, its growth is often so stimulated that it takes a year or two for it to get into bearing again. At this time of year it is easy to notice by the buds what apple trees will be in bearing this year. Manuring these cannot be a mistake, as the fertilizer will mostly go to perfect the fruit, yet leaving energy enough in many kinds of apples to form the buds for a fruit crop the following year.

HOUSEHOLD AND KITCHEN.

Framing Picture*. I had some handsome pictures and steel engravings which were useless because unframed, and frames such as I would like would have cost more than I could afford. After thinking it over I made up my mind to try what I could do, “I'or,” thinks I, “If I have lived to be 35 and cannot frame a picture satisfactorily, I had better resign in favor of some more ingenious person.” I went to a kind of jack-of-all-trades who sells perfectly plain pine moulding at almost nothing per foot and got him to cut out the pieces for me in a miter box so that they fitted perfectly in the corners. Of these I had enough cut for six frames, not for six pictures but for two. One narrow moulding flitting the picture, another fitting the first frame, etc. I took these homo And carefully put them together with brads, taking particular pains to get ■ each one as strong and firm as possible. The one intended for the out-’ side was then enameled in white, sandpaDered and gone over again, until it was a perfectly smooth, glossy surface. The middle frame was carefully covered with white velvet, not glued, but put on with flour paste, which kept wet long enough to allow of the velvet being “plastered” to fit everv groove In the molding. The Inside frame —only half an inch wide—was silvered, going over It three times to ipsuyo a perfectly even coat. It was lots of work, but the cost was very little an(l the resnlt satisfactory. Another, a winter scene in oils, was framed in a broad moulding, enameled white, and while it was still damp, diamond dust was plentif«lly sprinkled Florence H. in Farm and Home. Vulnabln Hint*. Mushrooms are very rich In nitrogen, and are very nutritious. They are easily prepared, and very palatable. Unless you know the edible ones from the poisonous growth, it is best mt to risk gathering them. We do not think the use of corsets objectionable when not worn too tight. A well-fitting corset is a great comfort as every woman knows. We have woth Thompson’s glove-fitting corset for ten years, and consider It perfect. Give your child dally warm baths, simple food and plenty of fresh air, and it will do better than when dosed with soothing syrups. ' Lemon pie made without milk is much richer and better than with it, but requires more butter and eggs. Salt-rising bread is sweeter than yeast bread. To make it, scald half a pint of new milk over night, thicken with 'Corn meal, and set in a warm place. Stir with the meal a pint of flour, a tablespoonful of sugar, a teaspoonfnl of salt and a pinch of soda: thin with warm water and set by the Are. It should be light in two hours. Sift a gallon of floor, put a little salt jn it, with half a teacup of sugar and a tablespoonful of lard. Moisten with 'the rising, work well, set to rise, work again, put In pans, let rise, and bake. For Ilia Cook. Vanilla Sugar Candy.— Two pounds of granulated sugar, twothirds of a cup of water, one-third of a cup of vinegar, butter the size of an egg, one tablespoonful of glycerine, two tablespoonfuls of vanilla. Boil all except vanilla, without stirring, twenty minutes or half an hour, or till crisp when dropped in water. Just before pouring upon platters to cool, add a small teaspoonful of soda or cream, of tartar. After pouring upon platters pour over it the vanilla. This can be pulled beautifully white. Make In stripes and cut with shears. Golden Cream Cake. Cream three-fourths of a cup of butter,, add slowly two cups of sugar, add four eggs, one at a time, without first having beaten them. Beat well. Mix two teaspoonfuls of baking powder with three cups of milk. Bake in layers. This makes a yellow cake, which is more attractive with cocoanut filling. Apple Cream.— Stew half a dozen tender apples, mash them to a pulp, whisk the whites of six eggs till they are very light, and as soon as the apples are cold add them to the egg* with five ounces of pulverized loaf sugar. Whisk the whole till it will stand up when placed on a dish. Serve It with sweetened cream flavored with lemon, vanilla or wine. Sago or Tapioca Soup. Onequarter cup sago, one cup cold water, one quart veal-stock, one cup hot cream, two eggs, yolks, salt and pepper. Soak the sago m cold water an hour, then pour on one pint of boiling water, and cook in a double boiler. When tender, stir it into the hot veal-stock. Let it simmer ten minutes, add the seasoning and cream. Beat the yolks of the eggs light, and mix them with a cup of the boiling broth. Turn into the tureen and stir briskly as you pour in the hot broth.

Progress and Prosperity,

Wisconsin' has within the last few years undergone a wonderful change, and is to-day one of the most prosperous and productive States in the Union, and what has made it so? Why, because her rich fertile lands are well adapted and produce large crops of wheat, oats, com, barley, rye, potatoes, hay, flax, hops, and tobacco; beoause her lumber, and timber trade exceeds that of any State east of the Rooky Mountains; beoause of her enormous manufacturing interests, the quantity and value St her live stock, saying nothing of her mining products, fisheries, and enormous waterpowers. This Is a desirable State for settlers intondlng to looate in the Northwest. The Wisconsin Central Lines,'as its name would Indicate, penetrates the center of tho State, and tributary to its lines are the choicest farming and timber lands. Among tho many thriving oltles and towns along this popular route are Burlington, Waukesha, Fond du Lao, Oshkosh, Neonnh, Menaaha, Waupaoa, Stevens Point, Chippewa Falls, Eau’Claire, New Richmond, and Ashland. For tickets, maps, and full information address Jas. C. Pond, General Passenger and Tioket Agent, Chicago, 111. A new class of farmers Is about to be created by the Hungarian Government, which proposes to divide crown lands into estates of between 200 and 2,000 acres, and farm them out to the gentry who have lost their family estates and been reduced to poverty.

Frightful Shipwrecks.

Stanch ihlp* strike and founder, the fierce winds and inountainom wave* eweep nob e mariners’ "hearts of oak’ to shlpwreok and to death, vet that does not prevent the lubberliest landsman from risking his Ilfs on the s ormy Atlantic In the role of tourist or commercial traveler. But if he shall reach his destination safely he will soaroely have escaped some of the qualms of sea sickness, unless he takas with him Hostetter s Stomach Bitters, that lnimit. able speclfle for nausea. Bad water on long trips Is a threat to the voyager, but this may be depri vod in a great measure of Its disordering effeots upon the stomach, bowels and liver by the Bitters. Agalnrt the prejudicial effeots of malaria, bad diet, fatigue and exposure it 1* also j affloaolone. It averts, moreovei, rheumatism and kidney oomplalnts. Don’t travel oh sea or land without It, Greene: “I find It cheaper to court summer girls In the winter and winter girls in the summer." White: “How do you make that out?” “Things aro always a little oheaper out of season."

How’s This?

We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any caee of catarrh that cannot be onred by taking Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY * CO., Props., Toledo, O. We. the undersigned, hevo known F. J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carryout any obligations made by their firm. West A Truer, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Welding, Rinnan A Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. Ohio. Hall’s Catarrh Curs Is taken internally, noting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Prloe, 7So per Dottle. Bold by all Druggists. Let ub have faith that right makes might, and in that faith let us to the end dire to do our duty as we understand it.‘

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

There !■ a 8-tnch display adverttsainent In this, paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same Is true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine do. This house places a “Orescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for It, send them the name of the word, and they will return you book, beautiful lithographs, or samples nuu. Now u the time to treat Catarrh of long standing. Ely’s Cream Balm reaches old and obstinate eases, where all other medicines fstl. Do out neglect procuring n bottle, os la It lies the relief you seek. , Rev. H. H. Fairall. D. D„ editor of the lowa Methodist, says .editorially, “We have tested the merits of Ely’s Cream Balm, and believe that, by a thorough oourae-of treatment, It will cure almost every case of catarrh. Ministers asm class are afflicted with bead and throat troubles, and catarrh seems more prevalent than ever. We cannot recommend Ely’s Cream Balm too highly.” Apply Balsn Into each aoatrtL It Is Quickly Absorbed. Oivas Relief at once. Price 50 cento at Druggists or by mall. ELT BROTHERS, 58 Warreu St. New Fork. One-half of the world doe* not know how the other half lives, and it Is just as well that it is so, tor a great deal of scandal la thereby saved. “I have In my employ a mu who has been a victim of periodic headaches for yesrs, has tried all kinds of treatment, and I have tried various remedies on him. Your Bradycrotlne helps blm more than anything ever did.” O. D. Kingsley, M. D., White Plains, N. Y. •Of all Druggists. 60c. In 1890 the Monte Carlo gaming tables brought In a clear profit of £480,000, and last year the amount re allied by the proprietors—a limited company—was £450,000. C raoinA Co.. Philadelphia. Pa., will send, postpaid, for 2 Dobbins’ Electric Soap wrappers and ten cento, any volume of “Surprise Scries,” (best authors), 26 cent novels, about 200 pages Send 1 eent stamp for catalogue. Accident insurance 1 policies ought to go with some of the Imported English plum pudding, Help Yourself roOsi Rid of that Cough or Cold, or auy Asthmatic or Throat Trouble by using Dr. D. Jayne’s Expectorant - —— - - ■ ■ - - t When all other modes of extravagance fall our fashionable famines should try spring lamb. Bebchau’s Pills will cure constipation, keep the blood cool and the liver In good working order, price 25 cento a box. Some of the poorest men on earth are those who think they own millions. Don’t Tun.* with Affections of the throat and longs. Take Rale’s Bomkt of HonaHOUND amd Tab. Pike’s Toothache DbopsCoiu in one Minute

ypson _-SCIATICA. R^cKAcbes Aches, •lrSSff^L.

CHEAPER THAWIMBB hl „ st , HARTMAN WIRE PANEL FENCE. 1 T * D ,‘° AN „ B1 ’ c * ner * l Western Seles Agent, 80S Stete St., CHICACO. Loslov-Satlos Wm 00, Bt. Mo, AytnUtor ßoothahi Mlwoorl and B«ti there UUnoir

A SLIGHT COLD, If negleeteh, often attacks the longs. Brown’s Bronchial Troches give sure and Immediate relief. Sold only In boxes. Price 25 cento. Miss Let-tie Huntley Is the sister of Mr. W. 8. Huntley of Cortland, N. Y., a well-known carpenter and builder. Her frank statement below gives only the absoluto truth concerning her illness and marvelous recovery by the aid of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. She says: “C. I. Hood A Co., Lowell, Maas.: “Dear Sir: Twelve years ago I her an to have hemorrhages, and four years ago became so low that the physlolaut told me There Was No Hope and 1 should soon die. I oould not be moved from my bed. Under my faoo were napkins contlnnally reddened with blood from iny mouth, I could eat nothing and had no aotiou of the bowels for a week. The dootori said the cause was uloers In the stomach. At thia time my mother said she wanted to make one more trial, and asked If I vrould lake Hi oil'd Sarsaparilla. I told her it would bo A Waste of Money but finding it would oomfort her, I began taking It, . In a few days the bloating began to subside, I seemed to feci a little stronger, but thought It only fancy. I was so weak I oould only take ten drops of Sarsaparilla at first. In two weeks I was ahle to sit up a few minutes every day. In a month 1 oould walk aorass the room. One day I asked what they were to have for dinner, and said I wanted somethlughearty. My mother was so happy she o’l*d. U was the First Time I Had Felt Hungry for Two Years I kept on with Hood’s Sarsaparilla and In six, months was as well at over in my Ills. It Is now four years sinee I isoovored, and I hare not bad a day's slokness sinoe nor any hemorrhage. If ever a human being thanked the good lord on bended knees It was I. I know that Hood’s Sarsaparilla and that alone, unquestionably saved my lire.” IT you aro Bl.lous take lfood’sFllu. ~ £ ONU ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual oonstipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to tho stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy ana agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 60c and |1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO, CAL, UWISYIUI, KY. NEW YORK, N.Y.

SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION && CURE.

This GREAT COUGH CURE, this succesifal CONSUMPTION CURE is sold by druggists on s positive guarantee, a test that no other Curt esn stand successfully. If you have a COUGH, HOARSENESS or LA GRIPPE, it will cure you promptly. If your child ha* the CROUP or WHOOPING COUGH, use it quickly sod relief is sure. If you fear CON. SUMPTION, 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 Shuoh’s Porous Plasters. YOU NEED NOT FEAR that people will know ynnr heir Is dyed if you nee tluot perfect imitation of nature, Tuffs Hair Dye It tmpartsa ftloaay color and freefi life to tho hair. Price, 11. Office, 39 Turk Place, N. Y. WEDDING (UK [UK. rFStU T** 00 tb V ty i®! «TWEDDING sod CALLING CARDS change and new liabion* In thj.riaaauf voals are brought cot. The new -trie* for Hie preeent eeafi? 1 .attractive. Our etork embraces *>». ft IheUteet dealra, many of whirh are ».,»y CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION,

“German Syrup” William McKeekan, Druggist at Bloomingdale, Mich. “ I have had the Asthma badly ever since I came Cut of the army and though I have been in the drug business for fifteen years, and have tried nearly everything on the market, nothing has given me the slightest relief until a few months ago, when I used Boschee’s German Syrup. lam now glad to acknowledge the great good it has done me. lam greatly relieved during the day and at nightgoto sleep without the least trouble.” 9

(DO VO VI 1 OOUCH I Don't DELAY I KE^ P 'S I BALSAM I ’"Ko'j'VJ

{t Cure* Colds, Cornells. Sore Throat, Crowa, Hfluonzii, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis tad Axtlmm. A certain cure for Consumption 1b finii and n Mire relief In ailvum-ed Hinges. um »t once. You will see tho exrelle.it eflSat alter taking the llrst dose. Hold by dinners o wiry where. . Lsrgebolt.ee. Si cents and 51.00. Jay Gould. Even riches has its drawbacks and sorrows. Jay Gould started for Mexico in his special car to try and find some relief from the cares of business, but ho received an intimation, It le said, that if he extended his trip Into that country 1)0 w«a likely to be captured by the revolutionists and held for ransom. This shows us that too much money may bocoraq a burden. We congratulate our readers on the fact that few of them are annoyed from this circumstance* They oan be as happy, however, ns if they possessed millions. If they take cold* let them take Reid’s German Oouoh and Kidney Cure. This great remedy excites the kidneys to action,. relieves the lungs from their burden, assists tho digestion, relaxes the bowels, and will cure pneumonia, rheumatism, or any other malady that attacks the excretory organa. Get it of any dealer. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, HI. ONLY TRUE £3? IRON ffTONIC UUorJerrWlU! atrongth, renew appulito. restore health sad vlgororyouth. Dyspepsia. Indigestion, that tlroa/eef* lint absolutely eradicates, Mlnrl brightened,brsla iß*r«s«sa, LIU It) _ “*• miti* ■menu co„ «l lonn, *+ American Traveller. MM li'.d, flnl.li—t. -.iglil 41 ’if price, g7B. Wo «leo bare same machine with SO met wheel,, price SOS. ■ We are elec manufacturing Baby Co»cbf«, Reclining Chain, Invalid Rolling Chain. Refrigerators, Ac. Liberal diecounta and ipeclal Inducements SIS given to the trade. LUBURG MANUFACTURING CO., 3?l-3<0 NO. Bth 9T„ PHILA., PA. 1” E) liila WMCIV. OitS. , X.T.Iw ln^< GARFIELD TEA -3: reitereeCemplMienicnrwCenUlpaUei; A AFUTA I Male or female, without bneiAbtNld J SrTney"rsSWbo2?« LMpKvSC|pBiiRPEJ[R! s? .ass NfcEk b 6orS#i2 QENSBON IwluMniuoa^nlfll ■ lyrstnloetwar, 16 adjudicating nlalms, ettyalnek Dll TP SXSfc&i IMTRRT REUEf Ftnaf rII r ) * ur6 * 1 w*. Se%* r rnttinut: no pamt I llwitoU no NftiTf>: up HUupO'Jtorr, a victim tried ■S» v li u v, evi m rem f» d / : ha * a simnlo cur*, dreee J. U. HELVES, Box 3X90, N. Y.t’ity.N.Yi © O'FAT REDUCED | Writ* lor Lews. A.W. McCouxiOX A Son*. W**hin«ton. fa. C. A Cinci.n.natx, O. NEW BUSINESS;£^££& * cf very feS?* No iMveatmwt, ocMy push. Moowy In thfr. MacmaikA Co., DmnA BLATREIiiHiS* oHUiaaaag«is» U- N. U, - r ■ No. IS -pa WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, ta thtf£S£r? r TOU “ w tkß “dvcrtlaemeM IConennaptlvee and people ■ who have week lunge or Asth- ■ ma. should nee PteS’s Cor# for ■ Consnmpttom. It hes cured ■ tbouuudi. It ban not injur-■ ed one. It Is not bad to take ■ It le the be,t cough syrup. ■ Sold everywhere, tee.