Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 October 1892 — Page 3
Tasks That Must Be Done.
Nature has assigned Important tasks to tbs liver and the bowels, and being mutually dependent npon each other for the regular and adequate discharge of these tasks, a cessation of work by one causes the other to lapse Into Inactivity. Tfc tasks of secretion and evacuation must be performed, or the system is poisoned and disordered. Moreover, fatal inflammation of the bowels or abscess of the liver are apt to. ensue If inaction of these organs Is allowed to go unheeded. The dangerous tendency should be checked at the outset with Hotstetter’s Stomach Bitters, an antl-bilious specific tnd laxative without a peer. Never does this medicine cause a qualm of the stomach or uneasiness of the bowels. It does its reformatory work pleasantly though with reasonable activity. It i revents malaria and rheumatic disease, kidney complaints, and relieves dyspepsia and nervousness.
First Tomatoes in Yankeedom.
It has only been eighty-one years since the first tomatoes were introduced Into America. The original plant was cultivated as a vegetable curiosity at Balem, Mass. Mbs William Murden, 197 Third St, Albany, N. V.. gives It the meed of praise, as follows: “I have used Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup and find it has no equal- No family should be without it” The father of Rabelais, the French satirist, was a servant in an inn, or, some say, an inn-keeper. b. K. COBURN, Mgr. Clarle Scott, writes: *1 find Hall's Catarrh Cure a valuable remedy." Druggists sell It, 75c. Manners are the final and perfect Bower of noble character. FITS, —AII Fits stopped tree by Dr. Kline's Greet Nerve Hastoi er. No Fits after first day's use. Marvelouß cures. Treatise and (2.00 trial bottle free to tit casea. Send to Dr. Kline. SSI Arch St.. Phlla, Pa.
THE MOST STUBBORN
Bkin and Scalp Diseases, the worst forms of Scrofula, all blood-taints and poisons of every name and nature, are utterly rooted out by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. For every disease caused by a torpid liver or impure blood, it is the only remedy so certain and effective that it can be guaranteed. If it fails to benefit or cure, you have, your money back. Eczema, Tetter, Salt-rheum, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Enlarged Glands, Tumors, and Swellings, and every kindred ailment, are completely and permanently cured by it.
Advice to Ailing Women Free.
careful manner, giving each the benefit -of the great library of reference compiled during a woman’s life 1 * work among suffering Women. These are the largest records concerning 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 save 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 l * unqualified consent. CJoumpnndencc fYeelr an nr ered. Addreec In confidence. JLYJMA PIXJOIAM M E.li. «CO., LYKX, MASS,
Did you ever see a sickly baby with dimples ? or a healthy one without them? A thin baby is always delicate. Nobody worries about a plump one. If you can get your baby plump, he is almost sure to be well. If you can get him well, he is almost sure to be plump. The way to do both—there is but one way — is by careful living. Sometimes this depends on Scotts Emulsion of cod-liver oiL We will send you a book on it; free. Scott ft Bow*e,CHemi«t», i j, South sth Avemw, New York. S« a vegetable compound, made entirely of roots ana herb* gathered from the forests of orgia, and has been used by millions of people with the best results. It CURES All manner of Blood diseases, from the pestiferous little boil on your nose to’the worst cases of inherited blood taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism, Catarrh and Skin‘Cancer Treatise cm Blood and Sirin Diseases mailed free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. Bile Beans Small. Guaranteed to ours Bilious Attacks, Sick. Headache and Constipation. 40 in each bottle. Price 25c. For sale by druggists. Picture "7,17, 70” and sample doee free. <!. F. BHITH A CO., Proprietors, NEW YORK. [best polish in the world.} with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn off. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. HAS AN ANNUAL SAl£ 0F3,000 TONS. ■ 1 ni(: ■*■!■> ■ - M,lf -
HOME AND THE FARM.
A DEPARTMENT MADE UP FOR OUR RURAL FRIENDS. Convenient and Economical Hay Feeding Floor—Keeping Frost Out of Cellars—A Flea for Improved Highways Pune Water for Stock, Etc. A Sliding Farm Gate. There are still large sections of country, in which even cheap gates are rarely to be seen. The rail fences have to be laifl down every time a field is entered. The hinge gate requires some skill to make, and the posts used must be heavy, and well and firmly set. The illustration of a very cheap gate, engraved after a sketch in the American Agriculturist,
shows a gate that any farmer, who can use a coarse saw and drive a nail, can readily make. It is designed for a place where small stock are restrained. For a full gate cut the cross pieces of the same length as the f'rout, and add two more hoards. There are two posts for each end of the gate, and they may be just the ordinary post, with no extra bracing, as the gate slides on the cleat nailed to the hack posts. It will be observed that the back posts stand so that the cleat can lie nailed to the front edge of one, and the hack edge of the other, giving room for the gate to he swung around toward the side of the post furtherst back. When the gate is closed the front end rests on the cleat nailed to the front posts. A barbedwire may he stretched across the top. Uveixlolns the Small Fruit Business. To the Massachusetts Ploughman a writer makes the inquiry: “Don’t vou think the small fruit business is in danger of being overdone?” Just the same danger that exists in every other kind of crop; when there is an appearance of money in it, there is a rush in that direction. It is overdome, prices go down and many leave the business until prices come up and the same is repeated. There was a time when apples were in great demand and large orchards were set; with the increaseof production there came a downfall of prices, blasted hopes, and many fine orchards were destroyed. It is well to hear in mind that in the ease of small fruits, and of the large ones too, that there is no danger of overdoing the production of fine fruit. Put specimens of acknowledged excellence of any product upon the market and there is no danger from the competition of inferior supply. With a very flush market there is always a sale of the best at good prices, but the poor article has to suffer and quite frequently goes begging for a market.
Countless letters are received by us from ailing women in all parts of tb« world, seeking advice. All are answered in a prompt and
Feed tlie ft|raw. In all industries, the use of the byeproducts is a great source of profit. The straw in grain growing has much food value. To cure straw in the proper manner the grain is housed in good condition, or is so stacked that the weather will affect it but little. When threshed, it is put up in neat stacks winch will shed rain, if possible, placed under shelter. If in stacks, when the feeding season arrives it is so cut down with the hay knife that only a portion of it may be uncovered at a time. This applies more particularly to oat and barley straw, the feeding value of which for farm stock is considered to be worth half as much as timothy hay, pound for pound. If about two quarts of line salt per ton of straw be applied to straw at threshing time, it will make it more palatable than if not so applied, or, in feeding,a weak brine may be sprinkled over it, when the stock will eat it with more relish. The beards of barley straw are considered by many objectionable especially when the stock is allowed to feed from the stack, or from racks in the open air where the wind whisks the beards about, often endangering the eyes of the animals. Should a beard lodge in the eye, a pinch of fine salt thrown under the lid will cause a copious discharge, and the impediment is usually thus washed out, but if not, a second application will remove it. Most of the beards can he separated from barley straw by removing, at threshing time, a twoinch cross section from the straw carrier allowing the beards to fall through. The chaff is a valuable constituent of the oat crop, and should be carefully preserved for feeding purposes.—American Agriculturist
Wheat aid Rye on Corn Stubble. Many farmers plant corn stubble to wheat and rye, and are usually in such a hurry that three rows of shocks are placed together and the balance of the field sowed. This plan necessitates running over the seeded land to secure the. corn and stalks, but the worst feature is. in leaving unseeded strips across the field, which are useless to the crops. Weeds are allowed to take possession of the strips, and, until the crop of grain is gathered, the field indicates the shiftless farmer. It is not much trouble to haul off the shocks to the barnyaid or to an adjoining field, setting them up in rows. They are then more easily husked. The husked corn is nearly all in a body, and is more easily secured. The stalks and all litter of leaves and husks are then more easily gathered up and saved for future use. The grain and straw that can be produced on these strips will renay many times the expense of hauling off the stalks. If possible, haul the stalks to a pasture, or meadow lot, and thus insure cleanliness in husking. Stock will eat the broken leaves. Keeping Frost Out of Cellars. During the coldest nights of winter, says a correspondent, I keep a thermometer in my cellar, and when there is a probability of the temperature falling below the freezing point
A SIMPLE GATE.
I keep out the frost by placing a lighted central draft lamp on the cellar floor. The flame is turned low so that but little oil is consumed, and, if necessary, it is raised toward morniDg. I have not banked up the house on the approach of winter since trying thjs expedient, and have kept out the frost with much less expense than was required in banking up the foundation walls with earth and straw. The heat thrown off by a central draft lamp is very great, in proportion to the size of the flame, and could be utilized to protect house plants in the windows and those stored for winter in cellar or cold-pit. A lamp of this pattern can also be attached to a window dox, so as to give bottom heat in starting early vegetables, flower seeds and cuttings, thus giving the amateur many of the conveniences of a greenhouse or hotbed. Why Should Cows Be Tested? The question may well be asked why cows should be tested. It is to determine the quality of the cow. Animals vary very much in their power to secrete milk, and also vary as to the proportion of butter fat contained in the milk product Two cows fed upon precisely the same food and in equal quantities may vary largely in the butter product Again, two cows so fed may give precisely the same product, while if the food be Increased, the milk or butter product of one may be also increased and in the other remain unchanged, for the reason that she has reached the limit of her production, while the other has not In that case—where the limit is reached —the use of any extra or additional food is simply an unnecessary waste. As more and more light is thrown upon farming operations through the medium of experiments, the farmer can discover the importance of the exercise of good judgment. Food that is giving no returns is simply wasted w icn fed to an animal. Floor for Hog Feeding. The floor, says Farm, Stock and Home, is built adjacent to the corncrib for convenience in feeding, and is just the height of the bottom of a wagon bed. When it is necessary to load hogs for market the wagon is
HOG FEEDING FLOOR.
backed to the platform, the end board taken out, a gate ip the fence opened, and without noise or trouble the pigs are enticed into the wagon. In feeding, only so much com is thrown on the floor at one time as the hogs will eat up clean. The floor is cleaned off every day. The bogs are not fattened on corn alone, bus are turned out night and morning to taxe their corn ration on the feeding floor. Peas, while they last, and steamed ground feeds make up the; between times rations t» the fatten-; ing hoga A Blanket on Your Farm. No tillable land is ready to go through the rigors of a winter until its covering is clean, free from patches, | and clear of vermin. We cannot say too much on this subject, because it is of vital importance. Rubbish of all kinds is but a harbor of vermin. Chinch bugs, white grubs, wire worms,! all have their several habits,hut they have one in common they harbor under rubbish. Now, if you want the delectable satisfaction of sleeping sound the coming winter, free from all fear of insects, mildew or lungus next season spend every moment possible in clearing up the farm before winter comes. Make the inclement elements next winter kill your bugs, or the life giving elements of spring and summer will repeoplo your land and ruin your crops next season. Use the elements as your destructive police —Exchange
Dehorning Law SuVt. Some time since a humane society suit was entered against E. E. Ilaxen. Beaver County, Pennsylvania, for cruelty in dehorning cattle, it being held that the defendant was guilty of violation of law in this treatment of his herd. The case has been owe of special interest and has attracted widespread attention, both because of its intrinsic importance and the bearing it would necessarily have on the future of dehorning in this State. The trial came to an end in a victory for the defendant, the judge holding that the intention evidently was to benefit the cattle; that the charge of cruel and wanton treatment could not be sustained by the evidence produced.—National Stockman. Let Work Bo Well Done. It is not what we do, but how we do it that affects results. A small matter well attended to is better than a larger one conducted with inaifference. “Whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well.” This applies especially to work upon the farm. If a repair ot a machine is necessary, let it be made with a view to permanence. A disregard of this principle has resulted in much damage and sometimes severe accidents and loss of life. To keep all implements and vehicles in repair is one of the important duties devolving upon the farmer. Setting Strawberries. It was formerly supposed that in order to secure success, strawberry plants should be set early in the spring or in the fall; but all that is necessary is favorable conditions. We set in the month of .Tune and gave a good watering, and had no difficulty in making the plants grow, which are doing nicely. The principal point to be observed is to set when the soil is sufficiently moist as to compact around the roots, affording them an opportunity for taking hold of their feeding ground.—Ex. Go ext tor Pears. There are some varieties of pours tnat under some conditions of evil are greatly injured by cracking. In a conversation with Prof. Chamberlain, of the Storm Agricultural School In Connecticut, he mentioned the dis-
covery of a remedy that has proven very efficacious fh' preventing snch cracking, and it consists in a free sprinkling of air-slaked lime on the surface of the ground under thotree It has been tried in a number of cases and has not been known to fail. Pur© Water for Stock. Live stock should be furnished with pure water. If they are now obliged to quench their thirst for the greater portion of the year from a pond or slough hole, this condition should be changed by the use of a well and pump. The water can be raised cheaply and in sufficient quantities by a windmill. General Farm Note*. An excess of manure is injurious to grapes. Late cucumbers usually make the best pickles. Keep your watering troughs scrupulously clean, For fruit trees one pound of poison to two hundred gallons of water is the proper amount Take time by the forelock and always be in readiness for the next work on the farm. Sheep restore to the soil a larger proportion of the elements they take from it in grazing than do any other stock. Old, sound hay, and a liberal ration of oats, with a very little corn, is hard to beat for the farm work team. Jf Lime is the best absorbent that can be used in the poultry yard and house. It destroys bad odors and kills disease germs. Milk and cream are very susceptible to odors and should not be kept in cellars where there is anything that will contaminate. Keep a strict record of your feed bills, egg records and sales of poultry, and at the end of the year sum up. It will prove that keeping hens pays. If farmers would study the many ways in which clover can be made a paying crop they will sow a larger acreage next year than they have been doing. The American Cultivator says that Hungarian grass is not only a good hot weather crop, but succeeds on land that in early spring is too viet for cultivation. The policy of taking evcrjrthing from the land and adding nothing to it will eventually result in bankruptcy, no matter how good the crops may be for a while. Good roads increase the value of live stock, land, and living generally. If a horse can do one-third more work on a good road, then his value is increased one-third.
Poultry Pickings. If you buy an incubator get a good one. All breeds of fowls have certain points in their favor. IViULTRY fife early risers and need their morning meal early. The comb of a Howl may be conridered as its health indicator. Get the guineas to roost in or near the poultry house; they will act as guards. Ducks raised especially for market thrive better without a pond than with '©me. Mix a little flax seed ©r oil meal with their ration oiow in feeding the moulting hens. When fowls are kept in large numbers the risks of <contagi©us diseases are increased. Poultry must have every daycare, and judgment must be .used In the management. Better do a little and >do it well rather than undertake to do too m uch and fail to do anything well. So fab as it can be avoided, nothing tnat will cause dampness should be used in the poultry house,
MlsceUanooug Recipes. Balloon Muffins— Take one pint -of flour, half a pint of water and half a pint of milk; beat thoroughly with an egg-beater; have gem irons hot, grease and fill them two-thirds full. Bake in a quick oven twenty minutes, or until light and browned. Use no saltor baking powder. Ckab Apple Jelly. —Out the apples to pieces, but do not pare or remove the seeds. Put into a stone jar, set the jar into a kettle of hot water and let it boil half a day or more, then turn into a muslin bag. Hang It so it will drip; do not squeeze it. Allow one pound of sugar for one of juice. Pickled Ontons. Select small silver-skinned onions, remove with a Knife all the outer skins. Put them for three days into brine that will float an egg. Bring some vinegar to the boiling point, add a little mace, whole red pepper, a few bits of cinnamon bark and a tew cloves, then pour It hot over the onions which have been well drained from the brine. Peach Flummery. —Line the bottom of a glass or porcelain dish with slices of stale cake not more than an inch and a half thick. Make a boiled custard out of a pintos milk and the yolks of four eggs, and just before serving pour it over the cake. On this spread a thick layer of peeled, sliced and sugared peaches, and over that a meringue made of the whites of four eggs beaten stiff with four tablespoonfuls of sugar.
Whole Tomatoes for Winter Use.— Fill a large stone jar with ripe and perfectly sound whole tomatoes, adding a few cloves and a sprinkling of sugar between each layer. (Dover well with one-half cold vinegar and one-half water. Place a piece of thick flannel over the jar, letting it tall well down into the vinegar, then tic down with a cover of brown paper. These will keep all winter, and are not harmed even if the flannel col lects mould. Clams and Rice. —Chop an onion tine, a small piece of ham and pork chopped, add a little saffron water, a bruised clove of garlic, one cup of tomatoes; fry all these for a few minutes uhen add a pint of small clams, shells and all. after well washing them and opening the shell a little; steam with the dish covered for half an hour, then add one cup of well washed rice and about one pint of water and a teaspoon of salt; cook until the rice is done.
WHAT OF THE WEATHER
FOSTER’S FORECASTS TELL THE STORY. A Severe Storm Accompanied by Electrical Disturbances Will Cross tbe Mississippi Valley About October 31—Cooler Weather Will Follow. Cool Weather Comluf. My last bulletin gave forecasts of the storm waves to cross the continent from 24th to 28th, and the next will reach the Paoiflo coast about the 22th, cross the Western mountains by the close of the 30th, the great central valleys from October 31st to November 2d, and the Eastern States about November 3d. This will be a severe storm, and at Its greatest force while crossing the Mississippi Valley. An electric storm will probably accompany this disturbance. causing many difficulties in the telegraphlo service. Thlseleotrlo storm will probably be at its greatest force about Nov. 4 or 5. The coal wave will cross the Western mountains about Nov. 1, the great Central valleys about the 3d, and the Eastern States about the sth. Local Forecasts. Weather changes move from west to east across the continent, and each local forecast Is made for within 250 miles cast and west of the magnetio meridian mentioned, and for all tho oountry between 25 and 50 degrees of north latitude. These local weather changes will occur within twenty-four hours before or after sunset of the dates given: SANTA FE, DENVER AND BRACK BIRDS MERIDIAN. October—30— Warmer. 31 — Storm wave on this meridian. November—1— Wind ohanging. 2 Cooler and clearing. 3 Fair and cool. 4 Moderating. 5 Warmer. GADVESTON,KANSAS CITY AND MINNB* AFODIS MERIDIAN. Ootober—30— Moderating. 31— Warmer. November—1— Storm wave on this meridian. 2 Wind ohanging. 3 Cooler and clearing. 4 Fair and cool. 5 Moderating. ATRANTA, CINCINNATI AND RANBINO MERIDIAN. October—--80 — Fair and 0001. 81 — Moderating. November—1— Warmer. 2 Storm wave on this meridian. 3 Wind changing. 4 Cooler and olearlng. 6 Fair and 0001. Copyrighted 18»2, by W. T. Foster.
The News Aftermath.
Count Eugene de Hartiges Is dead at Paris. The President has pardoned eleven convicted polygamists. Vlce Admibad Deinhabd, stationed at Wllhelmshaven, died of paralysis. Boies City, Idaho, will be supplied with hot water from a natural geyser. Widbiam Linoodn, a bank teller, died of hydrophobia In New York City. Serious floods are reported la Italy. The lower part of Genoa is Inundated, W. H. Johnston, a printer, Injured in the street-car aooident at Cincinnati, is dead. The Omaha Road has lnauguara|ed a dally through train between Duluth and Chicago. Twedve thousand quail were killed In Bartholomew County, Indiana, on Saturday. The business portion of Johnstown, Licking County, Ky., was almost destroyed by fire. The Dominion government will maintain separate Catholic schools at the expense of the State. Rosooe Marble, colored, was hanged at Lafayette, Ga., for killing Rev. Nohemiah Witt. The steamer Butcher Boy struck a snag in the Coos River, Ore. The passengers barely escaped.
Homebeekebs are crowding into the Crow reservation, which has been thrown open to settlers. John McEwen, ox-superintendent of the Albany penitentiary, died of asthma of the heart, aged lit) years. The eltizens of Kokomo, Tnd., are being supplied with free fuel and lights by rival gas companies. The public schools of Hamburg are opened, and direct communication with Heligoland has been resumed. John Evans, a convict at the Lincoln (Neb.) penitentiary, was fatally shot while attempting to escape. The cruiser Charleston, while entering the harbor at Han Diego, Cal., struck bottom, but received no serious Injury. The Derhorn mine in the Cripple Creek district has been fold to T. F. Walsh and associates, of Denver, for $400,000 cash. FotJB hundbed bales of cotton in the hold of the steamer Hpringwell, at New Orleans, were damaged by Are. The ship was uninjured. Heinbich Daniels, supposed to be a resident of Toronto, Ont., committed suicide on a railroad train near Binghamton, N. Y., by shooting himself. The Briggs heresy prosecution has resulted in the Union Theological Seminary withdrawing from the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church. Trustees Yotjnghhsband and Fontaine, of the Iron Hall, were overlooked in the recent prosecutions, and their cases will be taken up when the Graud Jury meets again. Pleasant McCov, a member of the McCoy faction of the famous HatfteldMcCoy feud, was convicted of murder In Pike County, Ky., and sentenced to life imprisonment. Bobebt P. Wilson, one of Buffalo’s distinguished lawyers, died after an illness extending over several weeks which baffled the skill of eipert physicians. He was 52 years old. Pbof. E. B. Andbews, of Brown University, Providence, K. 1., has been appointed delegate to the International Monetary Conference, vice F. A. Walker, who was compelled, to resign. A pbematcre explosion of fireworks at a Democratic rally in Bt. Louis, Mo., fatally injured Michael Batchford, a candidate for the legislature, ana Fritz Mar quart other 3 were painfully hurt. Two Keeley cure hospitalshave been destroyed by fire at Aspen, Col., within a short period. The proprietor of the last institution was notified that he would be assassinated if he reopened it. Col. Thomas Mclntybe, Sergeant-at-arms of the Louisiana House of Bepresentatives since 1879, and a veteran of the Confederacy, died of paralysis at his residence in New Orleans. He was 63 years old, a native of County Cavan, Ireland. A wall fell on a gang of men at the Gleason & Bailey mill, Beneca Falls, N, Y., killing George Ziegfried, aged 67, Michael Mansell, aged 65; Michael Conroy, aged 52; Patrick Martin and Patrick Conroy. Ail five of the men who were killed leave large families.
When Nature
Needs assistance it may be best to render It promptly, but one should remember to use even the most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy is the Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co.
Coming to the Point.
There are »ome subjects which, the more they are explained, tho more, In Tennyson's phrase, they are “darklier understood." A lecturer on theosophy had concluded a long and careful address, and said to his attentive audience: “If there is any question which any one of you would like to ask, I shall bo pleased to answer it." For a moment there was silence; then an earnest-looking gentleman rose and said: "I should like to know, Profossor, whether anybo iy has ever discovered a reliable cure for warts.”
HALF-FARE TO SEE WESTERN LANDS.
Lut Chance Till* Tear. The third and lust Harvest Excursion will be run to especial territory—Oklahoma and Indian Reservations and Texas. The Great Rock Island Route runs Into and through these reservations, and 1s the only road that touches those lands, lately put on the market. See hand-bills giving particulars, and remember the date la Oot, 35, (or Chicago and points to and Including Mississippi River, and one day later tor Missouri River polnta John Sebastian. ‘ G. T. and P. A., Chicago, 111.
Important to Fleshy People.
We hßve noticed a pago article In the Boston Globe on reducing weight at a very ■mull expense. It will pay our readers to send two-cent stamp lor u copy to Betlna Circulating Library, 86 E. Washington street,.Chicago, 11L
Fine Playing Cards.
Bond 10 cents In stamps to John Sebastian, Gen’l Ticket and Pam. Agt, Q, It I. & P. lt’y, Chicago, for a pack of the “Rock Island’' Playing Cards. They aro acknowledged the best, and worth five times the cost. Send money order or postal noto for 60c, and will send five packs by exprots, prepaid.
Have You Asthma?
Dn. K. Pchiifmann. Bt. Paul, Minn., will mall a trial package of Schlffmann's Asthma Cure fvtt to any sufferer. Olvea Instant roller In worst cases, and cures whore others fall. Name this paper and send address. Pope John XIII, was Imprisoned during an insurrection and dlod of chagrin. Ir you are oonstlpnted, bilious or troubled with sink headache, BoechuiA'a Pills afford Immediate relief. Of druggists. SB oonts. To endeavor to forget any one is the otrtaln way to think of nothing else. How ABRUBD TO < ItOAK AND WHKKZB With A cough which Hale's Uonkt ov Hobuuound and Tab will oure. Plus's Toothache Dbops Cure In one Minute. Stephenson built, In 1814, a locomotive with slx-mlle speed.
King XH|qttM|g3 or Medicines la what I 1 consider Hood'* Sarnaparill*. For 0 year* I wa* E/ conflned to my bed with whits swellings and sore*. To my Win. A. Ulir. great Joy, when I began with HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA the eoree toon decreased. I kept taking it for a year, when I wa* so well that I went to work, and elnoe then have not lost one day on account of atoknea*. lam always well and have a good appetite.'' Wm. A. Latin, » N. Railroad tit., Kendallvtlle, Ind.
HOOD'S PILLS are tbe beat after-dinner Pills, uslst digestion, cure hesdsehe and biliousness. DADWAY’S n PILLS, The Croat Liver and Stomach Remedy, For tlie core of all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels. Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Headache, Constipation, Costiveness, Indie osrton, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Fever, Inflammation of ihe Howols, Piles' ■usd all derangements of (he Internal Viscera. Purely Vegetable, containing no Mercury, Minerals, or Deleterious Drugs. Price, 88c. per boa. Hold by all Druggist*. DYSPEPBIA. DR. BADWAY'B PILLS are a cure for this compleint. ,'lhey restore strength to the stomsch end enable It to perform its functions. The symptoms ol Dyspepsia disappear, end with them the liability ot the system to contract disc sees. Take the Mledlelne according to the directions, and observe wbatwe say In "Eelms end True" respecting diet. . WObservo the following symptoms resulting from diseases of the digestive organs: Constipation, Inward plies, fullness of blood In the bead, acidity pi tbe stomach,nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, full, neasor weight of the etomach.sour eructations,sink'! ing or fluttering of the heart, choking or autrocsiihi sensation when In a lying posture, dimness of vision, dots or webs brforo the sight, fever and dull pain in the bead, deilclency of perspiration, yellowness ot the skin and eyes, pain lti the side, cheat, limbs, and Hidden flushes of heat, burning In tho fleah. A lew doses of KAIiWAY'H PILLH will free tbe system of all the above-named disorders. Send a letter stamp to DR. RADWAY k 00.. No. 83 Warren Street. New York, for -Falsa and True."
“HOTHER’S \ FRIEND” / is a scientifically prepared Liniment and harmless; every ingredient is of recognized value and in constant use by the medical profession. It shortens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to life of Mother and Child. Book ‘•To Mothers’* mailed free, containing valuable information and voluntary testimonials. prep ‘ w ’ “ " ce,pt BRAOFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atluta, Gi. Sold by sit drugsistg. S RHEUMATISM NEURALBIA Plain, common sense fifty-page treatise on origin, causes, nature, varieties, prompt relief and almost Infallible cure, sent for 6c. nickel. No sumps. Write to K. N. 8 GABLES, New Haven, Con a. LIENTION THIS PAPES wunss to tsviiTMiu. SSxr" tUI sa-!LSKH*L‘ l ii: Be port Office, JIM Broadway, New York. mwMffitaafgsat&aatg SSiLflj ■fftSlfiZSiaai ESS
pTAR°Vo ym
Uir All you have guessed about life insurance may be wrong. PAY K you wish to know the JJIL truth, send for “How and POST- Whv,” issued by the PENS ■nr MFtUAL LIFE, 921-3-5 ChestAbL out Street Phila<telsbjt>
‘August Flower” “What is August Flower for ?* As easily answered as asked. It is for Dyspepsia. It is a special remedy for the Stomach and Liver. — Nothing more than this. We believe August Flower cures Dyspepsia. We know it will. We have reasons for knowing it. To-day it has an honored place in every town and country store, possesses one of the largest manufacturing plants in the country, and sells everywhere. The reason is simple. It does one thing, and does it right It cures dyspepsia® IMHT THE NEXT MORNING I PEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND ttf COMPLEXION 18 BETTE*. Hy doctor soys It sots gently on th* stomach, liver andkldnsys, and t«a pleasant laxative. This drink la made fromjherbs, and Is prepared for use as easily LAME’S MEDICINE All drugrlatß Mil II at 60c and $1 par package, ts yew cannot ft, •and you addrm for a fra. sample. !**.'• Kamil; HadleTna nam Ike kawela oaah day. la ortlar to ba baalthy, thlt la neca* iary. Addma OIUTORP. WOODWARD, Laßor, N.Y.JI tafess&l iIHN Coat frsg WORLD ■ SUCKER The FISH BRAND SUCKER Is wsrrsnted waterproof and will keep you dry In tho hardnt storm. The new POMMEL HLU.'KEK H a perfect riding cokt. and oovere the entire suddlo. Uo were of Imitations. Don't buyaooat If tho “Fish Brand" U noton.lt, Illu.trsteq Catatosue free. A, J. TOWER, Boston, Mate. Two Great Remedies. The human citadel la open to attacks from two sources, and, aside from accidents, these two are the avenues from which all of the maladies that afflict the race spring. The first of these are what are known as the excretory organs. These are the lungs, the kidneys, and the skin. These suffer from congestion, which takes the form of colds. Starting from what Is called a cold, tho maladies that result are widespread, ranging from a cough to consumption. They attack all ages and all stations. No one Is free from these troubles. There is, however, a remedy that Is a safeguard. This is Reid's German Cough and Kidney Cure. It contains no poison, but it will heal any form of lung trouble, or any malady that arises from a cold. The other class of diseases arise from derangement of tho digestive organs, and result in constipation. When the bowels do not act, the stomach soon refuses to digest the food, and we are troubled with Indigestion, fever, and a long train of disorders that embrace a wide range of maladies. The Laxative Gum-Drops will correct any difficulty of this sort. They contain nothing deleterious, tut are safe and pleasant. Get them of any doeleiv A Sylvan Remedy Co, , Peoria, Til. 1
nil IL tJLLIL PRINTING OFFICE OUTFITS at reasonable rites and upon liberal terms. Wain won Psbtiodlabs. CHICAGO NK WHPAPKH Elouth Jefferson Street, Chicago, I EWIS* 08 % LYE I Powdered and Perfumed. JLe (FATMTKD.I The itronaut end purest Lye made Unlike other Lye, it being e fins powder end packed in a can with removsble lid, the contents are always ready for nse. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 90 minutes without boiling. It is the beat for oleansing waste-pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, eto. ••• e eele ee I !••••« eeTsji e e eeeeeeeV $40,000,000 Cerasd by tbs Bell Telephone Patent ta URL Tour Invention mey be valuable. Von should protect it by patent. Address for tall and Intelligent advice. Ass 9f aHar/t, W. W. DUDLEY * CO., Solleltors of Patents, Pacific Bldg., ga F Bt. H. W„ Washington. D. C. Jisestoe this paper, ©Q FAT FOLKS REDUCED *te^ t “w , sVpSS5x.^’H« GA.ffiijr£T£4^ rial oreaCom pi exTon t ear«« Con «t I pat I oiu Bmitm fm boW M» ««• Utk Um*, Nw lot PATENTS! PENSIONS! Send for Inventor's Guide, or How to Obtain a Patent. Send for Digest of Pension and Bounty Leva PATRICK OTAJKbELL, Washington, IK C. VICACNtSR AND HEAD NOISES CORED llCflr bvPeci ’• lovUibl. ter Cuabfon*. Whiner, heard. gtjcMwfu] wh«n sll Tvm.dle. f.Il. Sold Cfvrg Hr V. Uiscox. S6S H*wsy. N .X. WiOv for bwk •< Fwots TKM
C. N. U. No. 44 -9? WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, Tv please say you saw the advertisement In this paper. ■ Plso’s Bemedy (bt Catarrh is the ■■ B-et. Easiest to Pse. and Cheapest | | Bold by druggists orient by mail, J
