Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 52, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 January 1893 — Page 7

People call it backache and do nothin! tor it until the doctor is called and he pro* Bounces it rheumatism. It they had used Salvation Oil in time the doctor’s bill could have been saved. On the shield of Achilles, described by Homer, were represented the earth, the sky, the sea, the sun, the moon, all the constellations, two cities with crowds filling the forums and armies besieging a town, besides battles, single combats, rural scenes, pictures of home life, dances, cattle herding, lion and bull fighting and a vast variety of mythological subjects.

Btate or Ohio. City or Toledo, 1 Lucas Cochtt, f **• Fbane J. Cheney mak.s oath tha t he is tie senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney A Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall'b Catarrh Cube. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886, , A. W. GLEASON, ■j seal, j- Notary Public.

Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts direotly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY <fc CO., Toledo, O. US-Sold by druggists, 75c. Paprika is a trifle stronger than white pepper, and while it has not the biting quality of cayenne has a more exquisite flavor than either when used in cookings Cure for Colds, Fevers and General Debility, Small Bile Beana 25c. per bottle. In bleaching, linen loses one-third its weight, cotton, one-twentieth. FOB THROAT DISEASES AND COUGHS use Brown’s Bronchial Troches. Like all really good things, they are imitated. The genuine are sold only in boxes.

*BIX POINTS, out of many, where Doctor Pierce’s Pellets are better than other pills: 1. They’re the smallest, and easiest to take—little, sugarcoated granules that every child takes readily. 2. They’re perfectly easy in their action—no griping, no disturbance. 3. Their effects last . There’s no reaction afterwards. They regulate or cleanse the system, according to size of dose. 4. They*re the cheapest, for they’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. You pay only for the good you get. 6. Put up in glass—are always fresh. 6. They cure Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, Sick or Bilious i Headaches, and all derangements of tha liver, stomach and bowels.

0.V15 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 m 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 91 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 FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N.Y.

It Cans Colds,Cougli«,Sor« Thro»t,Cronp,lnflu«««a, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in adranoed stages. Use at once. Ton will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Bold by dealers everywhere. Large bottles 80 cents and SI.OO. w Hf AHTFI) ! MEN TO XRAVKL. We pay *SO vn n ■ fcli s to *IOO o mouth and expenses. STOKE A WELLINGTON, Madison, Wia. MtfTiOW THIS PAPER wsss wairtso re .pvtnaiu. A #1 FIT FOLKS REDUCED ff\ Mrs. Alice Maple, Oregon. Mo., write* I \ ill / l "My weight was 320 pounds, now it is 106, s reduction of lat lbs. M For circulars address, with 6c., Ox.O.W.F.SNYDER. MoVickor’s Theatre, Chicago. lU. MENTION THIS PAPER wasa warn., to «.T«an..a., Cures Consumption, Couchs, Croup, Bore Throat, Sold by all Druggists on a Guarantee. For a Lame Side, Back or Chest Shiloh’s Poroui Plaster will give great satisfaction. —as cents. | BEBT POLISH IH THe WOBLpJ stain the hands, injure the iron, and bum red. The Bising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase, B*3 Ml AWMUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOMS.

HOME AND THE FARM.

A DEPARTMENT MADE UP FOR OUR RURAL FRIENDS. An Ideal Farm Wagon—Kerosene Emulsion for Sheep Sealk-Value of Fertilizers In the Orchard—Matters of Interest to the Dairyman. An Improved Farm Wagon. A correspondent of the Rural New Yorker gives an illustrated description of a farm wagon which he considers an ideal. The front wheels are three feet two inches, the rear four feet high. The axles are of 2-inch round steel bent to right ankle cranks at the wheels. The cranks are eight inches and are held in horizontal position by spiral springs adjustably connected with the wagon body, front of the wheels, allowing the body to be lowered eight Inches, the length of the cranks.

The wagon body rests directly on the axle close to the crapks on boxes in which the axle roils in response to tension placed on the springs by the load or draft. The sides of the body are fully strengthened against lateral pressure by the fenders, which also furnish additional width increasing the capacity of the box or body. Truss rods prevent the sagging of the center of the body. The side openings are closed by boards cut to lit and secured in place by springs. To remove the hoards, press the springs and raise them. He says, you will see many advantages at a glance. The spiral springs are very light, carry the load very steadily and act as spring whiffletrees in starting a load. The cranks are perfect equalizers, as when one wheel meets an obstruction the spring at the opposite wheel shares the resistance The wagon, though light (900 pounds) has carried over 200 loads of from 2,000 to 3,000 pounds. No bolster or reach is needed. It may be cheaply built and it is certainly a pleasure to use it, for when loaded it is only eighteen inches from.the ground. It is wholly of my own construction except the wheels. The woodwork I made and put together during leisure hours, and I also made the patterns for the irous, which a blacksmith made and put togetbes under my supervision.

Sheep Scab Cured. Kerosene qmulsion has been found by the South Dakota Experiment Station to be an effective remedy for sheep scab. The scab is caused by a small mite. This insect is very hard to kill as is shown bv the fact that two specimens put in a solution 93 per cent alcohol showed signs of life lor nine and fourteen minutes respectively. The emulsion was made by dissolving ten pounds of hard soap in twenty gallons of soft water heated to the boiling point, after which five gallons of kerosene were added. The mixture was then pumped briskly through a spraying pump into the vessel. The violent agitation caused the materials to emulsify in about five minutes. After standing a few minutes the kerosene about a pint in all, rose to the top of the emulsion and was taken off. The emulsion was diluted by the addition of fortyfive gallons of water, making about 7 per cent, of kerosene in the solution. Care was taken not to dip the sheen while free oil was floating on the surface. Seven sheep was dipped. The animals were in all stages of affection by the scab, some almost naked from its effects and barely able to walk. Although the sheep dried off slowly not the slightest damage was done the wool, in fact the emulsion seemed to have cleansing properties. On examination twenty-four hours after dipping, the sheep showed no live mites. Two days after the first dipping one of the worst infested animals was examined closely with a pocket microscope and only one live mite was found. The cost of the dip is not large. Flowering: Bulbs for the Window. Freesias. Hayacinths, Tulips. Bermuda Lilies, and Callas are the favor-' ite bulbs for window culture, and they will amply repay in beautiful and fragrant bloom all the trouble and expense they make. Some of the other bulbs, not so well known as those named, are iully as desirable and, in some situations do better. The Alliums are of this class. They will grow and blossom under most unfavorable conditions, simply requiring a moderate amount of heat, air, water, and light. Calochortus or Butterfly tulips are not so well known for window culture as some other bulbs, but they are grand flowers for the window, retaining their beauty for a long period. The varieties of Narcissus, especially Polyanthus (Paper white) and Poeticus (Poet’s narcissus) are desirable bulbs for window culture.

A well-known, but often forgotten, point in bulb, culture is that after potting the bulbs should be placed in a cool, dark closet or cellar to root; jvhen the top begins to show through the soil or from out the point of the bulb, it may be brought to the light and gradually he given more heat until it comes into full bloom. The better rooted the bulb before being brought into the light and heat, the better will be its flowers. While most bulbs are planted and potted during September and October, one may pot during Nouember, aud, if proper care be given, feel quite sure of having an abundance of bloom during the late winter months. Of Interest to JDairy >nell *' There are three special lines of dairying, and from these it will generally pay the dairyman to choose some one and follow it steadily, rather than to combine the different branches, says Hoard’s Dairyman. The three divisions are: The retail trade or shipment of milk, the manufacture of butter and the manufacture of cheese. The cow that is the best for one of these is not the best for the other two, and, consequently, the stock should be selected in the first place with particular reference to the branch of business that is to be followed. The man who has a

specially good butter herd cannot afford to furnish' milk to a cheese factory, nor to ship his product to a city to be sold with low grade milk from all sources. Find out what you want to do before you begin to build your herd, and then follow that impose steadily, and you will be apt to come out all right Changes In Sheep Husbandry. It is well to contrast the present status of our sheep industry with what it was a few years ago. and then to consider the causes that led to the changes which have so readily and timely given a relief to the depressed situation. If the signs of the times are properly read, the next few years will witness the most important changes in the financial and social side of the agricultural question in this country. If the small farmers with a few sheep can obtain satisfactory results, as they do now, m competition with the large farmers they will hold on to their land, if perhaps a lew acres, and stop the absorption of small holdings Dy the larger landowners. This competing of small farms of the East with the virgin soils of the West in general farming, in the production of corn and wheat, is impossible. This unequal contest has resulted disastrously, but with the central, controiing markets at the very door of the Eastern farmer he can compete in special products like mutton.

Handy Door Chock. A door check is a blessing in every house, especially where there are small children who so often get their hands and feet bruised by the accidental shutting of a door. This check, as shown in Farm and Home, prevents it. Ais the main piece, which should be made of any kind of iron and must be screwed to the lower corner of the door. Bis the spring that presses down the shank G against the floor and prevents the

door from going shut,. Dis the lifting knob that fits in the shank C and is used to put it in or out us use. E is a stub made of rubber that fits into the lower end of C and presses against the floor. The entire mechanism is covered by the oval piece A. The knob D works through the slot in A and the piece E is pushed out at the lower end. Fertilizers for Orchards. A bulletin issued bv the Agricultural College of Michigan treats the subject of fertilizers for orchards as follows: “As a fertilizer we have made use of unleached wood ashes. On most soils no other fertilizer need be used for a number of years, but on light or exhausted soils the application of perhaps twenty loads of decomposed stable manure, or, if this cannot be obtained, of fifty pounds nitrate of soda and 200 pounds of fine ground bone per acre which, with 100 bushels of ashes, will make a complete fertilizer. In case the fresh ashes cannot be obtained, two or three times the quantity mentioned of leached ashes would nave a marked effect. Wood ashes would have a tendency to solidify and compact the soil, hence they are excellent on light land, but care should be taken not to use them to excess on heavy soils. Sell on Old Stock. The Indiana Farmersays: “Farmers do not retain animals after the period of profitable use is passed from any special affection, but, simply because they do not recognize the fact that they are on the down grade. Go into the barns and fields of men whe are thoroughly successful stock-raisers, and you will find mainly young animals; very rarely any that are much passed their prime. On the other hand, look over the stock of men who think that live stock does not pay, and you will eften see the reason plainly written in the too great age to which animals are kept.

How Clover Dries Soil. Any one who has broken up a clover ley for summer fallow in early June knows that on hard or stony soil the land quickly becomes unplowable except by putting a new point on the plow every day, and often every halfday. The great amount of moisture which exhales from an acre of growing clover is the reason for this. Cut the clover, and at least a ton of water would exhale from it in twenty-four hours. But the wilting which follows cutting is really a Drevetitive of evaporation, as it closes the pores through which moisture escapes from the living plant. Dairy Notes. Develop the dairy hu’l by feeding just as you seek to develop the heifer. The fastest way to make money in the dairy, is to keep always weeding out the poor cows. Three beef animals can be grown and disposed of while one butter animal is being fully developed. White specks in butter may be caused by allowing the cream to stand exposed to the air without stirring it Don’t forget to give the cows access to good shade; if there is none in the field make a shed for them to gc under. A dairy lesson, and often a bitter one, is to see ooe's neighbor making a third more butter in a year and with fewer cows than oneself. Breeding, care, feeding. These things tip ,th< scale.

Poultry Pickings. Never fatten breeding fowls. A cement floor is good for the poul try house. Keep fresh water oefore your fowl! constantly. Sunflower seeds promote lay in; and good health.

SCIENCE AT HOME.

Simple Experiments for the Family Cl role. Carve out of a raw potato a cylinder of the diameter of the upper portion of a lamp chimney of good size and about ah inch tall. Then with a quill toothpick pierce in this cylinder four cylindrical holes oblique with relation to the axis of the large cylinder. Our picture shows you the place and the direction of the holes. Then take the chimney and close the largest end with the potato thus prepared. At the top of the lamp chimney fit

THE HYDRAULIC HORSE RACE.

on another potatoe cylinder, or a cork pierced with cylindrical holes like those below, and this time each hole must have each axis vertical and not oblique. Then through a vertical hole in the center, pass a string to suspend the apparatus. Catch the string below the cork by passing a match through it. Attach the upper end of the string to a nail in the ceiling, or to the chandelier which hangs above your center table. Meantime put a lamp shade over the glass chimney and force it down to the largest part: .then suspend all around the shade little horses and riders cul out of paper. Place a bowl on the table, directly under the lamp chimney, and porn water into it through the chimney’s upper end. This will set the apparatus in motion at once. The water passes through the holes in the cork at the upper end. fills the tube and runs out at the oblique orifices in the potato. The whole thing then begins to turn with great rapidity, and you have a hydraulic racing match before you. The little horses and riders will move around merrily. When you pull apart two panes ol glass which were stuck together by syrup or copying ink you will notice that the viscous liquid is spread out over each pane, so as to form very delicate and artistic aborrescences, like the impressions of fossil algte. You will he surprised at the number ol beautiful and graceful designs which you can obtain by this pressure of two panes together over any sticky substance. Our picture gives the facsimile of a design obtained with

THE IMITATION ALGAE.

printer’s ink. An impression can readily be taken from these design! on the glass, which may be varied a 1 will by moving the panes in various directions.

The Parson’s Teeth.

There is a story of a clergyman whe had taken temporary duty fora friend and who had the ill-luck to injure his false teeth during the week, says the Manchester (England) Times. The plate was sent to the dentist’s for repairs, a faithful assurance being given that it should be duly returned by Sunday’s post, but the dentist 01 the post proved faithless. With the assistance of the clerk the clergyman managed to stumble through the prayers, but felt it would be useless to attempt to preach. He therefore instructed the clerk to “make some excuse for him and dismiss the congregation.” But his feelings may be better imagined than described, when, in the seclusion of the vestry, he overheard the clerk, in impressive tones, thus deliver the “excuse:” “Parson’s very sorry, but it Is his misfortune to be obliged to wear a set of artful teeth. They busted last Wednesday and he ain’t got them back from London to-day, as he was promised. I’ve helped him all I could through the service, but I can’t dc no more for him. It isn’t any use him going up into the pulpit, for you wouldn’t understand a word he said, so he thinks you may as well gc home.”

A Scotch Courtship.

On the shores of the Moray firth—the spot need not be more specifically localized, says Chambers’ Journal — there is a flourishing little village of some 1,400 inhabitants, consisting chiefly of fisher folk. The young man and maiden do uot court in the orthodox fashion. Tneir method ia much more prosaic, and what is characteristic of one case may generally be accepted as characteristic of them all. Theie is, of course, an occasional instance of genuine old-fashioned courtship, but that is rather a rare ■ xception. “Mother,” said one young man on his return from a successful herring fishing. “I’m goan to get merrid.” “Weel, Jeems, a’ think ye sh’d just gang an’ ask yer cousin Marack.” And, as he had no particular prefer- ■ nce, he went straight away to ask her. “Wull ye tak me, Marack?” was the brusque and businesslike query which he tut to the young woman in the presence of her sister Bella. But Mary had promised her hand' to another that same evening. “I canna tak ye, Jeem,” was her reply, and then, turning to her sister, “Tak ye ’im Beliak!” And the sister took him.

Good News, If True.

An extensive bed of deep-water oysters has been found, it is said, in the Sound, about twelves miles from Seattle, Wash.

Pay the Price of the Royal for Royal only. Actual tests show the Royal Baking Powder to be 27 per cent, stronger than any other brand on the market. * If another baking powder is forced upon you by the grocer, see that you are charged the correspondingly lower price. Those baking powders sold with a gift, or advertised or sold at “half the cost of Royal,” are invariably made from alum, and are dangerous to health. Every can of Royal Baking Powder contains a ticket giving directions how to obtain, free, a copy of The Royal Baker and Pastry Cook, containing 1000 of the best and most practical cooking receipts published.

Entrapped

A correspondent sends to the Youth’s Companion hn account of a rocent occurrence that carries with it its own lesson. A young man in a small town became a member of an “endowment” society—one of the mushroom “fraternal orders” of which there have been so many during the past few years. “Ye’ll never see yer money again," said spme of his friends, who thought he was"a fool to believe the promisos held out. “Oh, yes. I shall. You see." Sure enough, he did see it again. After paying out about S4O altogether, for admission and assessments, his certificate matured and he received SIOO. Then those who had sneered at him snd predicted (hat ho would lose all hastened to join so prospoious an order. They paid the first fee and one or two assessments, and then a court ordered the affairs of the concern to bo wound up. There was not on hand half as much money as would bo needed to pay baok to the members what they had invested, to say nothing of interest or profits. A part had gone io redeem a few certificates—lust enough to lure In new members; another largo part in comfortable salaries to the officers. Borne of the endowment societies have not yet heeomo bankrupt. But they are all founded on a fulso principle, and are sure to come to grief in the end. For they could keep their promises only in case a large proportion of their members became discouraged and dropped out Then, of course, the more promisos It keeps the sower will be the people to be discouraged, and thus the moro certain will be its failure to pay batik all its members. Beware of the man who promises you something for nothing.

The First Law of Nature.

This self-preservation is acknowledged to be, and people who adopt against the encroaohea of disease a genuine medicinal safeguard, accredited by experience and the sauotion of plivsielans, afford a happy Illustration of the wisdom of the saying, in the health they restore and continue to enjoy. Among maladlos, against the growth of which Hostetter's Stomach Bitters affords efficient protection, diseases of the kidneys and bladder are fraught with the utmost peril and exhibit great obstinacy when opposed by ordinary means. The Bitters oan and will subdue them. No testimony is stronger than this. Used at the outset and persistently, the best results may be expeoted. This medicine also eradicates liver complaint, oonstipatlon, dyspepsia, malaria, rheumatism and nervonaness.

First American Casting.

The first iron casting made in America, a kettle, cast at the Saugus Iron works in 1682, has been presented to the city of Lynn by J. E. Hudson, of Boston, a lineal descendant of Thomas Hudson, the original owner of the casting. Thomas Hudson owned sixty acres of land on the westerly bank of the Saugus river and sold it to the Iron works company. He claimed the first article made and received this kettle, which has been preserved through two and a half centuries In perfect condition.

Giv« Attention to the first symptoms of a Lung Complaint, and check the dreaded disease In its lnciulency, by using Dr. X). Jayne’s Expectorant, a safe, old-fashioned remedy for all Affections of the Lungs and Bronchia.

Storehouse of Knowledge and Sweets.

When the schoolhouse of the Gallagher district, in Mason Valley, Nev., was opened after the summer vacation It was found that bees were in possession of the desks, and it is claimed that about 300 pounds of honey were taken from them. Liver Complaint cured by Small Bile Beans. Henry VIII., England, wore cloth stockings, but had a silk pair for Christmas and Easter.

Food Made Me Sick “First I had pains In my back and chest, then faint feeling at the stomach, and when I would eat, the first taste would make me deathly sick. Of course, I ran down rapidly, snd lost 23 pounds. f tMI My wife snd family were fl much alarmed, and I ex- | Ka peoted my stay on earth ] fiA MjlPj would be short. But a & friend advised me to take Hood's Sarsaparilla, soon my appetite oam< back, I ate heartily out distress, gained two *• Ah ® r ’ pounds s week. I took H bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla and never felt better In my life. ToHood’s >■""”« Cures day I am enred and I give to Hood's Sarsaparilla the whole praise of It.' C. C. Asia, grocer, Canlsteo, N. Y. HOOD’S PILLS cure Nausea, Birk Headache. Indigestion. Biliousness. Hold by all druggists.

|U| 4 | OIO* Anyone can play the Piano or Organ IfIUOIV WITHOUT*A TEACHER! The NEW YOBK W#_BID" nri: One of the wonder* of the nineteenth century I* Soper’* Instantaneous Guide to the key* of the piano or organ—to tench »ny person to plsy upon either piano or organ at one*, without the aid of a teacher, and the price a*ked for ft (fll.OO) i* a mere trifle when comparedto the benefit te he derived. The thousands of flattering testimonials which have com* gratuitomly to th* publishers from peraoa* who arc using the Boper Instantaneous music. speak-nonetao highly of it* merit Price, SI.OO, laeUdlflfl Set of Tea (10) Piece* of either Church Meric or Popolar Ain. Address, SOPER MUSIC, 62 World Building, New York. if YOB ME aoiia to r-1 \ \ Be sure and get your tickets by the If II I ( 1 SX QUEEN A CRESCENT and K. T., ■ I>. M I lE-M ■ A va. A (ia. Ky*. It won’t cost yon ® ™ ® WwW any more. You will get there quicker. Ton will meet and trarel with the very best class of people. Your surroundings will be as luxurious as money can procure. We hare five complete and really magnificent trains running daily between Cincinnati and St. Augustins. These trains are the only Complete Vestlbuled Trains from Cincinnati to the 80UTH. You will ■aye nearly half a day in time. This line is 110 Miles Shortest. There are no charges on limited trains and yon get the best to be had. Don't pay the same price and pnt up with inferior service. Pullman Bullet Sleeping Car leayesXonisvUle 7:55 a. m. dally oyer the Louisville Southern to Burgin, where it is attached to and goes through to Florida on the Limited. Theee train* run through Chattanooga. Atlanta, Macon and Jacksonville, making direct Mnnectlon with Fast Mail for Tampa. AVFor rates or further particulars address I. 8. EDWARDS, 8. P. Aft, Q. t C. Routt, Cincinnati, Ohio, OB ASX TOUB HOME TICKET AGENT FOB TICKET Via QUEEN A CRESCENT RQUTE.

W. Hakeu A Co. 's Breakfast Cocoa Is a very comforting drink as the woather grows colder. One of Ha special merits, giving it a great advantage over tea and coffee, is its heat-giving quality; It fortifies delicate constitutions against the cold, supplying an easily appropriated fuel for those internal fires upon the adequate support of which health and happiness depend. W. Baker & Co. ’s Breakfast Cocoa may therefore be especially commended as a morning drink, aud many people who are liable to sleeplessness have found that a oup of lttakon hot on going to bod brings a sound and refreshing sleep It, is absolutely pure, and It Is soluble. Unlike the Dutch process, no alkalies or other chemicals are used In Its manufacture.

Wealth of New South Wales.

Without oponing a single additional seam, thero Is probably enough coal In view in Now South Wales to enable 10,000,000 lons to bo put out annually for some years to come. This amount is moro than double the present production. If you wore to see tho refuse from whloh puper Is made, the chemicals that are used, and the various processes that it is put through you would put a piece of buttered muslin in the bottom of cake tins and the like.

Important to Fleshy People.

W« have noticed a page article in tbs Boston Globa on reducing weight at a very stnull expense. It will pay our readers to send two-cent stamp fora copy to Uetlnu Circulating Library, 36 E. Washington street, Chlcagd, 111. Cr.SATU.iNKSB, exercise aud diet are the cardinal virtues of good health. Take care of the first two, and If you know how and what to eat you need never be HI. It H claimed that Garfield Tea, a simple herb remedy, overcomes the results of wroug living. Fortune is sometimes kindest when she frowns. Indigestion relieved by Small Bile lhmns. Uncle Bam has 475,356 telephones. FITS •—All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Or as t Nerve Itestoi <sr. No Fits slier drat (lay’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and gilt) trial bottle iron to Fit esses. Bend to Dr. Kline. Kil Arch St., Phils. l*s.

THREE TROUBLES. Three things which all 8 workingmen know give the most trouble in their hard-strain work are: Sprains, Bruises, and Soreness. THREE AFFLICTIONS Three supreme afflic3tions, which all the world knows afflict mankind the most with Aches and Pains are: Rheumatism, Neuralgia and Lumbago. THREE THINGS 3 to do are simply these Buy be promptly and permanently cured by the Vos?Vt\ use of Vg/ilkX Ely's Cream Balm RT*3| WILL CUKE ■CATARBVoI C*TABBHPffi| Apply Bslm into each nostril. ELY BROS, MWsrrsn fit. N. Y. TAKE NO CHANCES of being robbed by hotel snd bosrdtngbouwi keepers. Annusl subscribers to the largest snd most popularweeklles in the world-tbe Saturday Blade snd the Chicaoo Lsdukk - receive certificates entitling them, when they visit Chicago to see the World'll Fair, to the /cm au'Haiu* al competent persons In securing rooms in hotels and boardinghouses which are healthy snd respectable snd charge, the lowett price*. Valuable time snd money wfll { thus be saved. Subscribe at ooceior one or both of these fsmous Illustrated weekly papers; tIM par annum; sample copies sent free. Address the publisher. W. D. BOYCE. lIS k 117 Fifth A*.. Chicago. _ MENTION THIS rerun »»«» wEfTl.e to .s.»fn..»T The Oldett Medicine in the World it probably Hit. ISAAC THOITIPSON’II rJMVISm MSHWttk pro sc not ion, and has been In constant use for nearly a century. There are few diseases to whloh mankind are subject more distressing than sore eyes, and none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been tried without success ForeU external Inflammation of the eyes It Is an Infallible remedy. If the directions are followed It wfil never fall. We particularly k 00.. Taor, N7Y. Established ITU. lasimis Cures Constipation MENTION THIS PaFER whin wamwa to ibtutuiu.

‘August Flower” “ I am Post Master here and keep a Store. I have kept August Flower for sale for some time. I think it is a splendid medicine.” E. A. Bond, P. M., Pavilion Centre, N. Y. The stomach is the reservoir. If it fails, everything fails. The liver, the kidneys, the lungs, the heart, the head, the blood, the nerves all go wroug. If you feel wrong, look to the stomach first. Put that right at onbe by using August Flower, It assures a good appetite and a good digestion. Unlike the Dutch Process £j& No Alkalies Other Chemicals wMBy are used in tho npPwO preparation of gwr w. BAKER & CO.’S I llßreakfastCocoa In |~\- Vi u ' ,llrh t* absolutely HI ! IfifH pure and soluble. Hi 1 flfll It bus more than three times ran I mlm 1 ! r.f| the etrength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far more economical, eoeting lets than one cent a eup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easily DIGESTED. Sold byfirocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Man. THE NEXT MORENO I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND ioY COMPLEXION 18 BETTER. My doctor says It acts gently on tho stomach, liver snd kidneys, and tsa pleasant laxative. This drink la made from herbs, and Is prepared for use aa easily as tea. It is called LANE’S MEDICINE AU druggist* sell it at ftOe and $1 par package, ts yea cannot get it, eentl your aildree* ror a free lample. LaaeV Family ■•dlalaa wove* tne bonnle each day. In order to be healthy, this It neoa*~ uury. Addreie ORATOR P. WOODWARD, Laltov, N. Y. P MENTION THIS PAPER when wiitim to auvaamaM. C ures Scrofulai Mrs. IC. ,1. Rowell, Medford, Mass., says her mother lias been cured of Scrofula bythousoof i four lmules of |9gH| after t-ivlnc bad | mill'll oilier tre jiUBBI atment.and being reduced to qul te a low condition i of heulth, as it was thought sbo could not live, i INHERITED SCROFULA. \ ——«<■ Cured my tittle boy of hereditary KHKfI Hcrofula, which appeared all over aeMMi bis face. For a year] had given up all hop* of his reoovery, when finally I wan Induced to us* g-Jf-ITA few bottlea cured him, and pMHB no symptoms or the disease L. Mathbrs, Mathorvllle, Miss. Our beck on Blso J sad Sldn niwnno. nulled free. , HWIST grscinc Co., Allaain. On. MY NAME IS MISERY.

This is the reply that Spartacus makes to the proconsul when he asks him his narpe. It is a reply that half the people can respond to, so prevalent are dyspepsia and stomach troubles. When you feel that this is your condition, do not lose time and waste yous vitality in fretting, but get a box of the Laxative Gum Drops and take them according to direc-: tions. So mild and pleasant are they that you are not conscious that you are taking med-| icine. You are cured without being aware of it. They come in two sizes—the small size tent cents, large size twenty-five cents. Any druggist will get them for you. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111.

ERIl Pf* Illustrated Publications, FREE GOVERNMENT A .Sir LANDS WTh. btti Agrlsnltaral, arising **d TlsslMr"^ .suit now dma to pettier*. Mailed FBEE. AdSnae a. AAMBOag, L**4 U-.. 1. r. 8.8., St. Paul, Bias. MENTION THIS PAPER w*sx warns* V* immw. jjjff All you have guessejTabout life insurance may be wrong., PAY If y°a wish to know the, nno i truth, send for “How and POST -Why-” issued by the PENN lf»r MUtUAL LIFE, 921-3-5 ChestAbL. nnt Street, Philadelphia. HCNQION JOHN w.sioßHis, |Kll9lVra Washington, D.cl if guceewfuny ClaUm. : I stniSt™, 15 adjudicating claim*, i MENTION THIS PAPER warn warn** to maiwa ■'SjAeaas&iis.w&aanrt C.. R. I. *P. R. R.. Chicago. TEN CENTS, in stamps, per pack for the slickest cards you e ver shuffled. For SI.OO you will receive free by express ten packs. MAM'IUN THIS PAPth .m warns* ss'*ars.'msai * BEAUTIFUL tr * uiustnr ** fc **'' * *■ tea In Dr. O. P. Brown's unique MICCM 1593 8H A KhSPEAMIAN ALUUttH >‘AN \C. One or more sent for friends on receipt of address on MIDIC postal J. GIBSON BROWN, K IRRD « Grand Street Jersey Citv. N J OPIUM SSlfitSsSsiS MENfION IHlb r*m en» warns* tv C. N. U. No. X—93 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, IP wleaee say yoa saw the advertisement la this paper. ■^l ■ CaaeaaipUwee and people ■ ■ who have weak lungs or Aith- ■ ■ me. should use Ptso’s Cere for H ■ Consumption. It has eared H ■ thousands. It has not Injur- H ■ed one. It Is no* bad to take. H ■lt is the best eeogh syrup ■ gold everywhere. —a.