Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 December 1892 — Page 7

Don'*!— If a dealer offers you a bottle ot Salvation OH without wrapper V labels, o» In a mutilated condition, doa*t touch it—don’t buy It r,t any price, there Is something wrong—lt may be a dangerous or Worthless counterfeit. Insist upon getting a perfect, unbroken, genuine package. Be on your guard!

The pretty Mexican girl is not obliged to lie awake nights trying to decide which of two lovers she will choose. She knows' that by the next morning there will be only one left.

Thebe is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases pat together, and until the Hast lew years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it monrable. Science has provon catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional care on the market. It is taken Internally in doses from ten drops to a teaspoonfni It acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENHY & CO., Toledo, O. AS-Sold by Druggists, 750.

Artificial. Granite.

The raw material is made up of pieoes of glass, enlica, etc., which are partly fused in a furnace. After this fusing operation, chips of china, porcelain, enamel, or other similar vitriflable matter—together with pigments if desired —are added.

“ How I Wrote Ben Hur,”

told by Gen. Lew Wallace, Is one scrap from the voluminous and superb programme of eminent writers and interesting articles whloh The Youth's Companion announces. It retains its place in 650,u00 families by the versatility and the instructiveness of its general articles, the high character of all its stories, the brightness of its illustrations. Then it comes every week, and one gets a great deal for 11.76 a year. The price sent at once will entitle you to the paper to January, 1894. Address The Youth’s companion, Boston, Mass.

Waterproof.

A patent has been obtained for the manufacture of waterproof paper. It will be no uncommon thing by-and-by to carry ices home from a confectioner’s in paper bags, but care should be taken not to sit upon them while riding in your four-in-hand. Anv person sending S 3 for a club of three yearly subscriptions to the St. Louis Weekly Globe-Democrat will receive one copy free for a year. Address GlobeDemocrat. St. Louis, Mo. Consolation, when improperly administered, does but irritate the affliction.—Bousseau.

Important to Fleshy People.

We have noticed a page article In the Boston Globe on reducing weight at a very small expense. It will pay our readers to send two-cent stamp for a copy to Betlna Circulating Library, 38 E. Washington street, Chicago, IIL An evil at its birth is easily crushed, but it grows and strengthens by endurance.—Cicero. Jayne’s Expectorant is both a palliative and curative in all Lung Complaints, Bronchitis, etc. It Is a standard remedy for Coughs and Colds, and needs only a trial to prove its worth. Temptations are a file that rubs off the rust of self-confidence. —Fenelon. Go. twice as far as liver pills and cure ofiener -Small Bile Beaua Two new mica mines have been lately opened at North Groton, N. H. Small Bile BeaDS will cure U. Compound cylinder steam hammers are being adopted In certain factories.

—. A SUNSHINE i comes, no matter how . ' '//'■ dark the clouds are, when, S N.,—'' the woman who is bornd ___[ 1 down by woman’s troubles J • turns to Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. If her f / life is made gloomy by the L&OS&S&- chronic weaknesses, deli4SSwj£**" r ( cote derangements, and JSS _«’ painful disorders that af'ltoi;, flict her sex, they are comfltl pletely cured. If she’s ■ >1 overworked, nervous, or /y y fgsgj * “run-down,” she has new v / MBH > life and strength. ' ng&si “Favorite Prescription’’ Bgajal is a powerful, invigorating tonic and a soothing and vnc- strengthening nervine, ‘■"purely Vegetable, perfectly harmless. It regulates and promotes all the proper functions of womanhood,’ improves digestion, enriches the blood, dispels aches and pains, brings refreshing sleep, and restores health and vigor. For every “ female complaint" and disturbance, it is the only remedy so sure and unfailing that it can be guaranteed. If it doesn’t benefit or cure, you have your monev back. ■ liVlCi v H It Cures Colds.Coughi.Bore Throat,Croup.lnflanza,Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advaneed stages. Use at once, Yon will tee tha excellent effect after taking tha first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Largo SO cents and SI.OO. I> A Or, as the world expresses " it, “a well-preserved Vntinrr woman.” One who, unY UUI1& derstanding the rules of J health, has followed them, vV Oman and preserved her youthful appearance. Mrs. at Plfty Pinkham has many cor- _ respondents who, through her advice and care, can look with satisfaction in their mirrors. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound goes to the root of all female complaints, renews the vitality, and invigoratesthe system. Intelligent women know well its wonderful It is the successful yoKjk product of a life’s work vRsJ of a woman among S' women, and is based upon years of actual practice and expense. All Druggist! sell it, OT sent by mail, m fofm of Pill# or Lozenges, on receipt of® 1.00. wWwwßßm LSrer Pills, Corn*■pondcnce freely answered. Address in confidence. r _ * . Lydia - E. Mro. Co., m _ s|_ The African Kola Plant, aEGtßis DIM S-fl discovered in Congo, \N eat MIIII m Africa, Is Nature’s feu re Cure for Asthma. Care Gaaranteed or No Ps»y. Export Office, 1164 Broadway. New York. >'orlj»ra© Trial Case, FREE by Mail, address SOLA IMPORTING CO., 132 Vine6t.,Clnctiuiatl,Ohlo. MENTION THIS PAPER wuw w»itin*» tu aoviitiiuv I the hands, lnfctro the Iron, and bum rod. I The Rising Sun Stove Polish is BrlQlant, Odor-1 I less. Durable, and the consumer para for no tin I I or glass package with every purchase.

REAL RURAL READING

WILL BE FOUND IN THIS PEPARTMENT. How to Build Board Fences Economically —Give Attention to Details—To Prevent Washouts in Grain Fields—An Effective Game Trap—Notes Etc. Board Fences. Every farmer who builds board fence knows that the main cost is the posts and digging the holes and setting them. If we buy first-class locust posts they cost 20 to 25 cents each, and it takes two for each rod; and if we set cheap posts they rot off in a few years and the fence must be re-built More than fifteen ago, writes Waldo F. Brown in the Practical Farmer, I invented a fence which supports itself without posts, and I have had it in use on my farm ever since, and it has given good satisfaction. I call it a selt-supnorting truss fence, because it requires no posts; but to make it perfectly safe in exposed situations, stakes should be driven down in the notches be-

tween the panels after the fence is set up. The drawing above gives an idea of the fence. The panels can be made in the barn or shop, all ready to be put up and this is an advantage, for rainy weather can be utilized in making it. The boards are nailed to uprights o? hardwood two inches square, and beveled at the top, so that when the panels are leaned together these bevels will exactly fit each other. In setting upSjlhis fence the panels are leaned towards each other, with the foot of the uprights from two and a halt to three feet apart, and then short boards are nailed from one upright to the other, to hold the fence in place. Fig. 2 shows an end

view of the fence, which is one of the trusses which takes the place of a post, and nb b are the short boards nailed across from one upright to the other, to hold the panels of the fence together. A stake, three inches in diameter, driven in the ground flat against these short boards, and a nail driven through each board into it, makes the fence as firm as if there were good posts set in the ground. I have some of this fence made only three boards high, with a barbed wire stretched above it and fastened to the stakes, and this still further reduces its cost, for a board 16$ feet long costs as many cents, but a wire of this length only 3 or 4 cents. It

Is not best, however, to make this fence in panels 10 feet long, as they are awkward to handle and will sag a little. 1 like to make a fence with panels just 11 feet long, as then three of them make just two rods, and by buying a part of the lumber 12 feet long and a part 14 there will be a very little waste, as the ends cut off can be used for the short stay boards on the trusses. Fig. 3 shows the threeboard fence with the wire above. To Prevent Washouts in Grain Fields. If comparatively level fields are sown to wheat or rye, furrows should be made that will quickly carry off all the superfluous water, says the American Agriculturist. Tne furrows should follow the the lowest portion of the field, even if it be a tortuous course. It is best to do this immediately after seeding, but it may be done at any time before the ground becomes frozen solid. Of course, some of the grain will be destroyed, but by scattering, with a fork or shovel, the upturned soil, only the plants in the immediate channel will be lost, and this precaution often saves ten times that amount being drowned out or stunted in low places. If grain occupies the steep hillsides, furrows should be made from the lowest places leading down and horizontally around the hill, thus conveying much of the surplus water to the direct portions. If the furrows are gradually sloping, washing will, he prevented. If the hill is qujte Steep several furrows sqould be drawn, thus diverting heavy rainfalls into several channels* with consequent less danger from washing or overflow. A Blanket of Snow. A winter covering of snow for the fields, grass, or grain, is extremely beneficial, preventing deep freezing of the soil, keeping the plants and their roots at an almost uniform temperature, and the almost daily freezing and thawing that occurs on land not thus protected. The covering of snow should be made as uniform as possible by placing branches of evergreens or any other obstruction about the open spaces in fields and especially upon the knolls and other elevations where the wind sweeps away the fallen snow. These obstructions need not be placed in position until the ground is frozen solid, when other farm work is not pressing, and should there be an open winter the protection afforded by the obstructions alone will amply repay the labor and expense. Attention to Detail*. Careful attention to details very often is the turning point between a profit and a loss. This is more noticeable where the competition is strong in the farming line, while prices are low and fluctuating. Hence make the best use of each day. Have the men do some work that tells to advantage. Do nor- let crops go to waste, but secure them promptly

when matured, look after the stock while at pasture, give the work animals healthy food, feed regularly, and do not water them too warm. If the harness, vehicles, or machinery have any weak points, repair in time and do not wait until a break occurs that may cause hours of lost time in a busy season Keep the fences in good repair, thereby saving your own crops and keeping on good terms with vour neighbors. Fell crops and stock when a fair price can be obtained. It a neighbor has stock for sale cheap and you have the pasture, or feed, to still further add to its value, then make a deal. Trad imr sharpens, the wits, and makes one more observant of honest opportunities. When to Water a Horse. Dr. C. E. Cary, B. S., D. V. M., of the veterinary department of the Dakota Farmer, says: “The horse’s stomach is small, and if water is given immediately after feeding, a great portion of the food is washed beyond the stomach before the gastric digestion has occurred. Thus’a great part of the food is lost and, in many instances, is liable to induce indigestion, eta Always water your horses before feeding, and never water them for two or three hours after feeding, and yon will save food and have stronger and healthier horses.”

A Game Trap. Here is a trap, as described in Farm and Home, for catching anv game that will take bait. For the. bottom use a board 16 inches long. The

sides should be 12 inches long and nailed or screwed to the bottom so that it will project 2 inches for the' foot to rest on while setting the trap, Use two standards 16 or 18-inches long, which are screwed to one end of the box. The middle piece is a round stick of hard wood to which is attached a coiled, spring. The fork may be made of wood or iron and is for catching the game when the trap is sprung. A piece of seasoned hickory is used to attach the bait on, as shown in the cut. This holds the trap up when set and lets it down when the bait is taken. Underneath the fork are fastened a number of spikes or pointed irons to njake sure of holding the game. Winter Dairying. With proper facilities, there can be no question but that winter dairying pays better than summer. The cow must be kept over anyhow, and the additional feed required for the production of a flow of milk is nearly all returned in dairy product. With the right kind of feed, the right kind of cows it being assumed are already secured, it is easy to turn out a choice article of butter at a season when it is scarce and commands a high price. Besides, there is not the press of work in winter that there is in summer, and the cow goes dry at a season when it costs least to keep her. Another point in favor of winter dairying is urged with great force. The well-kept cow that has given milk through the winter is wonderfully stimulated in her milk flow when she comes to grass, and her milking p*eriod is prolonged. The increased flow for the year is a valuable consideration.— Mirror and Farmer. All Around tlie Farm Mark all the grain bags. Make your farm productive and it will pay. A rich soil is an essential item in the growing of good crops. Churn at as low a temperature as you can and wash the butter grains with cold water.

Linseed and cotton seed (cake or meal) is excellent, but all oily foods are liable to cause moulting. A wheat crop of twenty bushels per acre at 75 cents per bushel will give some profit, but it is much better to raise thirty bushels. Corn fodder, put in shocks and left in the field during a good part of the fall and winter, loses from onethird to one-half of its feeding value. When your birds have bowel disease change the food for a day or two and change the grit* OpeJialf the troubles are from lack of sharp, hard grit. The farmer who raises uniformly good crops does not suffer much from the fluctuations in price. The good crops pay a profit over production even when prices are the lowest. By judicious feeding, well-bred 2-year-old steers may be made to weigh upward of two pounds for each day of their lives. At that rate of gain beef production can be made profitable. '**• Corn is the great food for fattening. There is nothing equal to it for making hard, solid pork that commands the highest market price. Swine, however, will be able to digest more of it, if allowed turnips, potatoes, carrots, or beets and some bran instead of nothing at all but corn. Too much corn will make them “cloyed.”

Farmer* and Fertilizer*. There are truths in connection with farming that are known and have been expressed many times, and yet are of a character that require repeating over and over and over again, so as to keep them constantly before the minds of farmers. One of these is a want ot knowledge of the requirements of the farm as relates to the application of fertilizers. Most of the States provide through their experiment, stations for the determination of the fertilizing value of the various compounds that are thrown upon the market, and so far as this goes is of service and a protection against undiscoverable frauds that might otherwise be practiced upon the farmers. But with all this, are they exercising as great care as they should in the selection of the goods they use? The requirementsof the soil should be fairly well uuder-

stood, and then a better estimate can be made of-«iiat is best adapted to the soil to which it is applied. There is another point that ought also to be considered, that various fertilizing elements exist in very, different forms, which present very different commercial values as well as fertilizing values. It is important then that the farmer should become sufficiently acquainted with these values in the different forms in which they may be found, so as to be able to judge of the desirability of a fertilizer. When, as is the case in the State of Rhode Island, the difference between the selling priee and coinmercial prices ranges from $30.33 per ton to the small difference of two cents per ton, it can be seen how much may be saved by the application of a little knowledge,—Germantown Telegraph. _ . Sheep Shearing*. * To keep sheep healthy they require a frequent change of food. *• Especially when on dry feed sheep need a good supply of water. Care should be taken to clean out the mangers of feed racks regularly j Look over the flopk and sell the sheep that show the least improvement. Inferior sheep are often a drug when good sheep sell readily at good prices. Never allow sheep to tn frightened or run bv a dog or in any way be disturbed. If any of the ewes have poor teeth it will always pay to feed them ground feed. A sheep kept thrifty will shear a heavier and better fleece than one poorly kept In commencing to feed grain -to sheep, feed a small quantity at ttrst and gradually increase. The farmer that is too carclss to give sheep good care will do better with some other class of stock. Sheep of different ages and conditions should be sorted into different lots and the weaker ones have a little better feed. With comfortable surroundings, which inmlics dry, warm shelter and regular feeding, a small amount of grain can be made to count.

How to Make Working; Mitten*. Bed ticking is the principal and best material for home made working mittens, although they cau be made of old nags or overalls. A. The full round thumbless cut shows the back side ot the mittom. B. The palm and the frontside of the thumb. This should be made double or it can bo faced with soft leather, for this Is the part where all the wear comes. C is

the top part of the front side of the mitten and thumb. D the mitten complete. First sew B and C together, forming the thumb and the front side' bt the mitten, and then to the back (A), making the mitten complete. This is a much handier and better pattern than the old method, because there is no thumb to set, which is the hardest paYt of the joD. The face can be replaced when worn out, also.—Practical Farmer. Keep the Woodbox Full. A year’s supply ahead of seasoned wood is what every farmer should have, and then if by their own efforts they keep the wood-box as well as the woodhouse full, how much tribulation would the patient wives be saved! The Housekeeper. Grate and bottle odd bltsof cheese ready for use Onions keep best when spread out on a dry floor. Prick potatoes before baking to allow the air to escape. The tone of the piano is not so good when it is set back against the wall. It is stated that cheese will not mold if wrapped in a cloth with elder vinegar. Place a lump of camphor gum with the silver ware to keep It from tarnishing. A Good wav to clean stovepines is to rub them well with linseed oil while they are warm. Cork that has been boiled may be pressed more tightly into a bottle than when it is cold. One of the best remedies for bruises, where the skin has not been broken, is arnica and sweet oil. Coffee grounds can be used to fill pin-cushions. They should be put In a bag and hung up back of the stqve until they are perfectly dry. Mrs. Bottoms writes to the Ladies’ Home Journal: “I am tired of seeing all the flowers at weddings and funerals; we need a few between. ”

Blue jbans makes an effective soft cushion cover when embroidered with white silk in conventional designs, and trimmed all around with a ruffle of the stuff. In France, instead of using starch on table napkins, after they are washed and ironed, they are dipped in boiling water and partialiywrungout between cloths. They are rapidly ironed with as hot a flat-iron a 9 possible without burning them. Does the point at the back of your waist persist in curling up when you sit in the car or even in an ordlnnry chair? If so, sew two inches of black elastic on the under side, leaving it the least bit tighter than the dress iust over the whalebone, and see how it will hug the top of your skirt

Provisions for a Day’s Shooting in Texas.

One gallon of whisky, three fried duck*, one of cocktail, four loaves of bread, one bottle of wine, three pounds of bacon, one bottle of whisky, two dozen eggs, one jug of whisky, sausage and ground coffee, one pint of whisky, coffee-pot, one demijohn of whisky, cheese, sugar, pepper-sauce, two bottles of snake-medicine, one canteen of whisky, ten pounds of Irish potatoes, one- Small keg of whisky, three lemons, four pocket-companions full of whisky; also, some cigars and a coil-oil can full of whisky, in case of accident to the glass and stone- -.are packages.— Ureham {Texas) Danner.

Do You Wish the Finest Bread ind Cake? It is conceded that the Royal Baking Powder is the purest an<J strongest of all the baking powders. The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweetest, most delicious food. The strongest baking powder makes the lightest food. That baking powder which is both purest and strongest makes the most digestible and wholesome food. Why should not every housekeeper avail herself of the baking powder which will give her the best food with the least trouble ? . Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal, as they invariably contain alum, lime or sulphuric acid, and render the food unwholesome. Certain protection from alum baking powders can be had by declining to accept any substitute for the Royal, which is absolutely pure.

America's Natives.

This description of the natives as they appeared to the English colonists in Maryland was written in 1663: "They are very proper tall men of person: swarthy by nature but much more by art; painting themselves with colours in oyle, like a darke red, which they doe to keep the gnatts off. As for their faces they have other colours at times, as blew from the nose upward, and red downeward; sometimes contrariwise, in grate vnriette and in very gastly manner. They have no beards till they come to be very old, and therefore druwe from each side of their mouthe, lines to their cares, to represent a beard. "Their apparel generally is deero sky ns, and some furre, which they wear like loose mantels; yet under this, about thoir middel, all women and men, at man's estayte, were roundo aprons of skyns, whioh keeps them dooontly covered, so that, without any offence to chast eyes, we may converse with them. All the rest of their bodys are naked, and at times some of the youngest sort of both men and women havo just nothing to cover them. The natural witt of this nation is very quicko and will conceive a thing very redily. They exoell in smell and fast and huve far sharper 6ight than wee. If these people were once Christians (as by some signs wee have reason to think nothing hynders it but wante of langundge) it would be a right vertuous and renowned nation." • .

Trained Nurses in Great Demand.

Princess Christian has issued as appeal for nurses who are willing to devote thomselves to the care of patients who may be siezed with cholera, and to obey the call of duty at a moment’s notice. Her Royal Highness says: “The Invasion of our country by one of the greatest of human scourges calls for the concentration of all the resources whioh science, forethought, and energy can enlist. I am happy to know that the public departm 'nts, forewarned and forearmed, have already taken such steps as must remove all ground for unreasonable panic, and secure, not only the confidence, but also the welfare of the public. To their hands the execution of hygienic precautions and the organization of medlcui relief may well bo trusted; but there remains a sphoro of aotivlty whioh it is the special office of women to fill. The trained nurse should be found at the side of every strloken victim, whether rich or poor. This end cannot be attained without careful and intelligent organization."

Are You Squirming?

And is it pain that causes yon to sqnlrm? Rheumatism will make anyone wlnoe. Counteract it, as you oan readily do, at the outset with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, whioh expels the rheumatic virus from the blood and promptly relieves the tortures that it produces. The evidence in its behalf on this point Is ample and conclusive, and embraces the deliberate affirmations of many medioal practitioners. Like all standard preparations, the Bitters deserves a persistent trial, which, if it receives, the happiest and most thorough results may be confidently anticipated. For malarial, kidney and liver complaints, neuralgia, nervousness, indigestion and loss of flesh and appetite it Is a world-famous remedy. Convalescence after deblllatlug ailments is much facilitated by it.

Electricity.

A well-known electrician pledges his scientific reputation to the accuracy of the following observation: If two glasses of water be placed, one upon the north pole of a powerful magnet and the other upon the south pole, in four or five minutes the former acquires a slight alkaline reaction, while that on the south pole becomes slightly acid. We eat too much and take too little outdoor exercise. This Is the fault of our modern civilisation. It is claimed that Garfield Tea, a simple herb remedy, helps Nature to overcome these abuses. THROAT DIBEASES commence with a Cough, Cold or Bore Throat. « Broom's Unmchtal Troches " give Immediate relief. Sold only in boxes. Price 25 eta.

Snow Maggots.

On the Icy peaks of the Himalayas, in India, there is a “snow maggot” weighing nearly a pound, and excellent to eat.

Mr*. Sarah Muir Of Minneapolis. "I was for a long time a sufferer from Female Weakness and tried many remedies and physicians, to no good purpose. One bottle of Hood's Sarsapa-. rilla made so great a difference in my condition that I took three bottles more and found myself perfectly well. X hare also given Hood’s Sarsaparilla to the children, and find that it keeps them In good health." Mas. Sabah Muir, aos 16th At. 80., Minneapolis, Minn. HOOD'S FILLS cure all Liver Ills.

Bagpipes.

The bagpipe, the favorlto Scotch and Italian intrument, was invented by the Greeks 200 B. C. Tub disagreeable operation of forcing liquids Into tlie head, and the use of exciting huulTh are being superseded by Ely's Cream Balm, a cure for Catarrh and colds In the head. I have been a great sufforor from catarrh for ton yeurs; could hardly breathe. Home nights 1 could not sloop. 1 purchased Ely's Cream Balm and am using it freely; It Is worjclng a cure surely. 1 have advised severSl|Brlonds to use It, and with happy results In every case. It Is the medicine above ull others for catarrh, and It Is worth Its weight in gold. I thunk Ood 1 huve found u remody I con ive with safety and that does all that is dimmed for it. —B. VV. Hpeyy, Hartford, Conn. Wpply Balm iuto each nostril. It Is Quickly Absorbed. Clivus Relief at once. Price 60 cents at Druggists or by mall. ELY BROTHERS, 60 Warren Bt., New York. No woman ever admirers a man so much after he has mado a confidante of her, and told her of his lovo for another woman. Restore the comploxlon by cleansing the entire systom. Small Bile Bonus. After a man has become rloh in a town, people who disliko him begin to look mysterious when the question Is asked how he made hlB money. FITS.—AII Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Mental er. No Fits sftnr Unit day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and £.OO trial bottle tree to Fit oases. Band to Dr. Kline, tel Arch Bt„ l’hils, Ps.

mu ONE 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 constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and 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 50c 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, uuuviue. ky. new YORK. m.% Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Boro Throat. Sold by *ll Druggists oa ■ Guarantee, Fora Lama Side, Beck or Chest Shiloh's Porous Plaster will give great satisfaction.— «J cents. IMlljiyi Cures SickHeadacne MENTION THIS fAF*R waee vam.e <o nmnuu. V%rilQinMJOH>vv.inoßßis [KllOlvlv Washington, D. C. ■ Lett*Principal BzAtnintr U.B. reniion BureaOs H ivralalaetwsr, 16 adJndkaMßf claims, atty slues. 31 MENTION THIS PAPE* -n» nmu r* ...ssmiu REAUTIFIII curious eccentricities are illuxtrsBCHWIirUL ted In Dr. O. P. Brown’s unique niICFM 1 SOS SHAKESPEARIAN ALUUCCIf AiANAG. One or more sent for friends on receipt of address on UIBIC postal. J. OIBKUN BROWN. 47 IHRD 3 Grand Street. Jersey City. N. J.

Ml IClf* Anyone can play the Piano or Organ WIvOIV WITHOUT*A TEACHER! at once, without tho aid of a teacher, and the price aiked for it Is a mere trifle when com».r2l t! th tf!*l! M ' t . ,obed * rlT ® d - J h ® of flattering testimonial, whlch harecome gratultonriv^tTthe publUhere from perjone who are using the Soper In.tantaneou. mueic. epeak none too figldyoflte merit Prlee, SI.OO, Including Set of Ten (10) Pieces of either Chnrch Music or Popular Airs. Address, SOPER MUSIC, 62 World Building, New York.

nni HU Morphine Habit Cored In lO OPIUM DR?J. StlpHEn£ Kb™oS!ot!& UCNIION Hi lb J'APJCK rnu wmitimw to a dvbmtmmmm. WANTPH! mkn to travkl. w e p» y m&o * to 9100 a mouth and expenses. STONE Jfc WELLINGTON, Mwfiflon. Wli MENTION THIS PAPER W M w Kir ,.. to advietusiu. LI PPI NCOTT’S Now stands in the front rank of monthly publications. Each number contains a complete novel, as well ta a liberal quantity of miscellaneous matter. One year's subscription gives a volume of nearly 3,000 pages. The best writers of the age have been secured, and new features will from time to time be added, which will give to Lippincott's a distinctive place of ita own. Tor full prospectus address LIPPLNt OTFH MAGAZINE l'tnlid»iphis * eta. single aamber; Rr.- *z. <ea« ter ssmpl/ r .

“German Syrup” My niece, Emeline Hawley, was, taken with spitting blood, and shej i became very much alarmed, fearing j that dreaded disease, Consumption.! She tried nearly all kinds of medi-! cine but nothing did her any good, j Finally she took German Syrup and | ; she told me it did her more good! than anything she ever tried. It! •topped the blood, gave her strength I and ease, and a good appetite. I had it from her own Ups. Mrs.' Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn. Honor to German Syrup. O THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BOUGHT AND NEW AND mV COMPLEXION IS BETTER. Ky doctor says it sets gently on the stomach, liver and kidneys and Is a pleasant laxative. This drink Is mado from herbs, and Is prepared for urn as easily as tea. Miscalled LANE’S MEDICINE All druggist* Mil il at SOe and $1 par paokaga. If y«« cannot tat It, land your addrau for a fraa nun pi*. Laaa'a Family HvdlaiiM aiavaa Ika bowals n»rh day. In ordar to ba h*althy, this U aac—tary. Addrau ORATOR Y. WOODWARD. Lkßov, N.Y. P MENTION THIS PAPER wmbn warrmo to abv»anasaa.

Croup.

It is a fact that pigeons stiffen from something very much like the 1 croup. A false membrane forms in their throat and suffocates them Just as It does with children. The rcasom grown people do not suffer from! croup is because the inner part en-l larges with advancing years and! thus prevents the membrane fromj filling the passage. If your children! get croup, give them Reid’s German! Gough and Kidney Cure. It is the best thing in the world for this malady, and is the only one that you can give again and again without! any danger, because there is no' poison in it. Any druggist will give it to you, particularly If you insist upon it. Druggists are human, like other people; you want to tell them exactly what you want. The small bottles are twenty-five cents, the larger ones fifty cents. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111.

Unlike the Dutch Process (T& No Alkalies Other Chemicals are used In the preparation of dOgC w. BAKER & CO.’S I iMßreakfastCocoa EU ¥f Bltft which it abtoUit.lv f) BOtn purt and soluble, HI mUII 11 bte more lban three t imes MB mm |(|l| the strength of Cocoa mixed BHi WKwVls with Starch, Arrowroot or and is tar more economical, costing Itts than one cent a eup. It is delicious, nourishing, and BASII.Y DIOUTKD. > ■ ' •eld by fl-orsrs sverywhsrs. W. BAKER & CO,. Dorchester, Maas. '■ fill: ILI lift Du For SECOND-HAND PRINTING MACHINERY and allow liberal prices for the south In exchange for new. Our stock of Cylinder Presses, Job Presses, Paper Cutters and Ose Engines Is the largest to be found In the city. If yon with to trade or buy let us bear from you. We have bargains to offer. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION. 87 to *8 South .Je(Person Street, Clileaio, lU. l^SißlSf DROPSYUP cases pronounced hopeless, From first dose symp. toms rapidly disappear,and in ten days St least two‘birds of all symptoms are removed. BOOK of iMv^SsneßariSvax m.». ». mu t mi mtmim mini cteetu C., R. I. aP.R. B. Chicago. TEN CENTS, In stamps, per pock for the silckeet cards youp ver shuffled. For lino you will receive free bgr express ton pecks. mimtlon this raraa nu nugie to ininsn." AOEJITS WANTED 01 SALARY Monroe Eraser Mannfsct'lag Oo„ XfftO, LaCrosee. w£ MKimON THU Mm wwm. warn.. i» iwwtwm. © W FIT FOLKS REDUCED -taWTION THIS MB* veaa wuiut n ioumui.

C. N. 1). .No. 51-94 WHEN WHITING TO ADVERTISERS, please eay you saw the advertisement in tills -*aper. I Consumptives and people who have weak lsngs or Aath- ■ ma, should m Piso’s Curs for Consumption. It ban enred ■ thonsanda. (t baa not injur- ■ ed one. It is not bad to taka ■ It is tbe best cough syrup, & Sold everywhere, tie.