Democratic Sentinel, Volume 17, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 April 1893 — Page 7

¥ms testimonials which the mail brings In every day run thus: “Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup cured the baby of croup;” “It cured me of a most distressing cough;” or “it cured my little boy of sore throat.» “We could not do without It.* Spread the News. m An electrical expert says that It would be dangerous for a woman wearing crinoline to cross electric car tracks. YOU CAN SEE IT, perhaps,one of Dr. f _vv Fierce’s Pleasant (,/?> / Pellets but you 7 *r can’t feel it after /\\ VvL jT /fj) it,s taken - And I tiCr yet does y°u II -A \ lM\ more good than .U v l ll /A’ J»ny of the huge, .« old-fashioned vl s * pills, with their VMt . griping and violence. These tiny Pellets, the smallest and easiest to take, bring you help that lasts. Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, Sick or Bilious Headaches, and all derangements of liver, stomach, and bowels, are permanently cured. fA square offer of SSOO cash is made by the proprietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, fcr any case of Catarrh, no matter how bad or of how long standing, which they cannot cure.

I «£ 1 1 1 .,* Jnli / will Miss Eva DkCamp, Danville, 111. Saved From Suffering. The Gratitude of a Lady Cured by liekapoo Indian Sagwa. Danville, 111., Oct. 28. I feel it my duty to express my gratitude lor what the Kickapoo Indian Remedies have done lor me. I was suffering with Neuralgia, and had to stay up every night for weeks. At last I sent lor a bottle of Kickapoo Indian Oil, and in less than ten minutes after application I was relieved. I continued fts use and also used Kickapoo Indian Sagwa at the same time until Entirely Cured. Many of my friends have used your Remedies for different troubles, and find them to do exactly as advertised. I believe everybody who is suffering should use them, as we are all brothers and sisters In Christ. I will answer any questions as to what with the help of God they have done for me. Yours respectfully, Eva DeCamp. KICKAPOO IHPIAN SAGWA. And all Kickapoo Indian Remedies; Sold by Dealeiti

I" DO YOU | IK OUCH 1 DON T DELAY fl) IkeM ps | |B A LSAM|

It Cores Colds,Coufths,Sore Throat, Cronp.lnflusn**,Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and • sore relief in adranoed stages. Use at once. Ton will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Bold by dealers srerj'whsro. Largs bottles 60 cents and tLOO. B DADWAY’S n PILLS, Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Cause perfect Digestion. complete abaorptiou and healthful regt» larity. For the cure of all disorders of the Stomach Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, DIZZY FEELINGS, BILIOUSNESS, TORPID LIVER, DYSPEPSIA. PERFECT DIGESTION will be accomplished bv taking Eadway's Pills. By their ANTI-BILIOUS properties they stimulate the liver in the secretion of the bile and its discharge through the biliary ducts. These pills in doses of from two to four will quickly regulate the action of the liver aud free the patient from these disord-rs. One or teoof Radway’s Pills, taken dally by those subject t > bilious pains and torpidity of the liver, will keep the system regular and secure healthy digestion. Price, 25c per box. Sold by all druggists. RADWAY * CO.. NEW TORE.

A Pure Norwegian Oil is the kind used «. in the production of Scott's Emulsion Hvpophos- jjm phitesof Lime and I If Soda are added If for their vital es- "^Tiy. [refect upon nerve and brain. No mystery surrounds this formula—the only mystery is how quickly It builds up flesh and brings back strength to the weak of all ages. Scott’s Emulsion will check Consumption and is indispensable in all wasting diseases. Prepared by Boott t Bowne. N. Y. All dm agists. BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD.

RlE’NcTnff

■with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injore the iron, and born red. The Rising Sun Store Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish. lAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS*

AGRICULTURAL TOPICS.

A FEW SUGGESTIONS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. Relative Cost of Wheat and Potatoes— Injury Done by Plowing Wet Soil—Care of Farm luiplement*- and Low Prices. _____ A Convenient Wool-Box. By using the wool-box shown in the Illustrataons, which are reproduced from the American Agriculturist, one man can tie, the flee;es as rapidly as five or six men can shear them. The hox i% constructed as* lo lows; It is live feet long by one foot broad aid deep. The bottom is divided into five pieces, each one foot square. The center and two end pieces are hinged to the tw<i side pieces—as seen in the diagram, Fig. 1, while the two squares, one each side of the center piece are hinged to the latter only, so that they, may be raised towards each other and' at right angles to the sides. At one end is an upright piece, one foot square, firnjlv fastened to the bettom. Upon the upper edge of this piece is a spring clasp which holds

FIG. 1. WOOL-BOX OPEN.

the sides in place when they are raised. The -two erectahle bottom pieces are held upright, when the box is closed, by springs in (me.of the side pieces. . These springs are made of good strap-iron, and are fastened on with screws. There arts holes in the side piece through which the ends of the spring ; pass while the end pieces are being raised. The clasps on the stationary upright end piece are so constructed that when the knob is pressed down the clasps are raised off the sides, thus allowing them and the movable end pieces .to fall back, when, after being threaded, they are ready for another fleece. The frame, or table, is separate from the wool-box. It Is four feet wide with a board one foot wide fastened on the top at fh£ back edge of the frame, shown in Fig. 2. This leaves three feet in front to lay the open box upon. Eight pairs of hinges are used in putting the box together. The bottom pieces of the box are cut from one board live feet long. The movable end pieces should be sawed off diagonally, like a miter joint ro as to let the edges rest on the stationary end pieces and thereby avoid danger of sagging the hinges, and prevent the boards from becoming uneven when the box is open. The twine,is laid in grooves cut in the various pieces at proper distances, as seen in Fig, 1, Tying a fleece in this box is accomplished as follows: The fleece is i laced on the open box

FIG. 2. WOOL-BOX CLOSED.

/engthwise, shorn side down. The wool is next pushed about as close together as it grew on the sheep, and the legs and belly-fleece are lapped over. Now one side of the box is raised, thus rolding one side of the fleece from one end to the other, the other side of the box is raised immediately after, with a like result. The fleece at this stage is roiled up from one end to the center, and the movable end leaf is raised to keep it in place while the other end is being rolled and the last movable end leaf raised, thus forming a square. After this the ends of the strings are drawn tightly over the already compact fleece and tied. Finally, the knob on the stationary end pie?e is-pressed, releasing all the boards of the box, which fall open, leaving on the center piece a beautifully packed, square fleece.

The Cost of Wheat and I’otatoes. My plot of land is nearly square and j costs no more to cultivate than an i oblong piece of equal size. The I original growth was a mixture of yel- I low birch, fir, and cedar with a clay J loam soil, it was broken up in the ! spring of ’69, with furrows 7 inches ! deep and 16 wide, harrowed three j times, planted by hand with rows of j potatoes 33 inches apartand 14 inches between the hills, cultivated three tirtids, hoed once by hand and hilled with a hofse hoe Total expenses l including 41 bbls seed and 500 lbs phosphate were 847.25. Total receipts were 109 bbls potatoes at *l.lO anil 35 bushel small at 18 cents. Total receipts $128.20. Cost 15J cents : per bushel to grow, selling price j 42 1-15 cents. Total profit $78.95. The second year the land was plowed soon after the ’B9 crop was dug. In the spring eight corns of j good barnyard manure were thrown ' broadcast and harrowed twice with a \ disk harrow, then plowed the second time, harrowed with a spring tooth aud planted with an Aspinwall planter. Hows 33 inches apart, hills 13 inches. The seed was cut to one and two eyes, but in the first year to three and four. From some cause 25 per cent, of the seed fai.ed to come ud, but the high price helped to balance the account. Total expenses, included 24 bbl seed, manure and 300 lbs phosphate, were $42.30. Cost of raising 164 cents per bushel, selling price 45£c. Receipts from 65 bbls at $1.50 and 75 bushel small potatoes at 25 cents were $116.25. Profits $73.95 or $5 less than in the previous year. The third year the land was plowed in the fall of ’9O, harrowed twice in the spring of ’9l and sown to wheat of the Lost Nation variety. It was harrowed twice after sowing, once with a spring tooth and once which a common spike tooth harrow, harvested with a Wood self binder and threshed with a horse power machine Total expenses were sl6. Receipts

from 33 bushels wheat fit $1.25 were $47.50. leaving protit of $31.50, The cost of growing the wheat per bushel was 42 1-10 cent. —Frank E. Brown. Plowing Wet Soil. In the spring some farmers are always In a great hurry to start the plow, because they are anxious to get through seeding. If the soil bo wet and sticky, they are, in the end, the losers, for soil that is worked when wet, if of a heavy, clayey nature, will certainly dry out hard and compact To make a hard ball of clav, one dampens it and presses it firmly together. Plowing clay soil when wet performs the same operation on a large scale. If such land be plowed very early, and is frozen two or more inches deep, the damage done is considerably modified, as the action of frost tears apart all the compact portions under its influence. Frequently, on gravelly soil, or. that thoroughly underdrained, the plow may be properly started a week or ten days earlier than on clay land immediately adjoining. Portions of fields are often in pioper,condition for plowing when the remainder is thoroughly watersoaked. Advantage may be taken of this condition, and, if fields are low, the lands may be marked out by plowing one round; the water draining into the furrows will allow one to plow the rest a week sooner thau it not so manipulated.

Eggs and Low Prices. It is an old maxim that hens always lay when eggs are cheap. We may add that they also begin to lay when food is cheap. The matter of price is always viewed from the highest standpoint, yet it is doubtful if there is a greater profit In winter than in summer. During the winter the hens require care and labor, and all of the food must be supplied; but in the summer they pick up insects, seeds, fallen grain, and have all the green food they desire. If a flock of active hens are placed where they can forage over a large area, it may safely be said that they will need no food from the hands of their owners at all, and the eggs are almost,if not wholly, profit Then again, a hen will Jay two eggs in summer when she may only lay one in the winter, and when the propper view is taken of low prices for eggs it may not appear so discouraging as to look at the matter by comparison with winter. It is the profit to be secured, and that depends not on the prices, but on the cost Exchange.

Orchard ami Garden Notea. Plow the garden as soon as possible, that it may be frozen after plowing. This will make it easier to cultivate during the whole season. If radishes do not do well in your garden try putting a coat of creek sand on a bed and mixing it thoroughly with the same hulk of rotted stable manure. Coal ashes will answer the same purpose as sand. Lettuce may be sown at any time, as it will grow if sown in the fall. When well started thin out the plants to six inches apart and they will then cover the ground, and be much better than if allowed to grow quickly! Peas may be sown very early as it does not hurt them if the ground is frozen after they are planted. If sown early they will get such a good start that they will not get caught by the dry weather of early summer. All the brush, dead weeds, and trash should be raked off the orchard and put in heaps and burned, as piles of such rubbish serve as harbors for mice, moles and insects to breed in; besides they look badiy if not disposed of. Currant bushes should bo so pruned that they will grow into an open bush, as they are inclined to grow up in a thick clump. This fruit is just beginning to attract attention as a profitable one to grow for market purposes and he who plants a liberal plot to them will not lose anything by it. Gooseberries are too much neglected. Their liability to mildew has been against them for years, but ■ow we have varieties that show but few traces of this tendency [and they are coming to the front rapidly, both as a green sauce and as ripe fruit for dessert Industry is probably the best variety yet introduced.

Miscellaneous Receipts. Breakfast Bacon.— Cut the bacon into thin slices. Grease a broiler with a little of the rind and put in the bacon. Set the broiler into a dripping-pan and put them in the oven. ,Cook until the bacon is crisp, and drain on brown paper. Virginia Mincemeat.— One pound of suet scraped flue, three pounds seeded raisins, two pounds currants, picked and washed; one and threefourths pounds of citron, sliced fine; two quarts pippin apples, chopped; two pounds of sugar, one and a half pints brandy, one pint of wine, three pints of cider, one teaspoonful black pepper. Plain Mincemeat.— Twp cups of meat, four cups of apple, two tablespoonfuls each of salt, cinnamon, aud allspice, two cups of brown sugar,one cup of raisins, one cup of currants, two cups of sweet pickle vinegar, or one cup of water and the juice of four lemons. Chop the meat line, also the apples and raisins after stoning them. Cook altogether until the apple is soft. Escalloped Apples.— Cover the bottom of a pudding dish with bread crumbs aud bits of butter; then a layer of thinly sliced apples with a sprinkling of sugar, nutmeg,or cinnamon. Repeat until the dish is filled, with a crumb laver on top. Bake slowly, adding a little water if it seems dry. Keep it covered until partly done, to prevent its becoming too brown. Serve with cream aud sugar. It is delicious. Apple Pie. —Tart, juicy apples make the best pies Place the sugai on the under crust to prevent the juice boiling out. Slices the apples very thiD, put bits of butter and a sprinkling of flour over the top; aisc a little cinnamon or nutmeg, and a tablespoonful of water, unless the pies are very juicy. Moisten the edge of the under crust so that the upper one will adhere to it. Bake slowly. In making a thick, jucy pie, these precautions are necessary to prevent the best part of the pic from remainm| in the oven.

CHEAP GUNS.

They Are os Untrustworthy as a Cheap and Nasty Watch. Things made to look like guns fire sold for as low a figure as $25, but I want no suoh “gas-pipes” at my shoulder. As the ohefip watch keeps time In a fashion, so does the cheap gun perform. It will kill birds fairly well for a time if held straight, but it will not stand continuous use, and It may contain a flaw or flaws in the barrels, which the owners of it may not detect until too late. When the cheap watch wears out and breaks no great harm can result; but when a shamdam gun concludes to spread itself it —well, that is another story! If I had a fair young son, full of promise and with a tew ounces of gray matter scattered through his intellect — if I took pride in the boy and dreamed of future Presidential candidature or high position In church or state for him—just about the last place on the Lord's earth where I’d want to see him stand would be before, behind, or alongside' of one of those infernal machines known as a cheap gun. He might load and fire it many times with no other result than a crack, n smoko, and perhaps a dead bird or animal, and he might also only fire a few times, but once too often, and go single sculling across the River Styx, in consequeneo of his-sup-posed-to-be-snne parent’s criminal folly in giving him a weapon to use which was liable to blow a head or arm or a few sections of hands off him at a most unexpected and unfavorable time.— Outing.

Free Trip to Chicago.

Separate ’ W-O-R-L- D- ’6 F-A-I-R and use the letters to spell ns many words as you can by using the letters as many times as you wish, either backwards or forwards, but not use the same letter lu making any one word more times thau It appears lu “World’s Fait ” It Is said seventy-five small English words can be spelled correctly from the ten letters contained In “World’s Fair.” Example: Wad. waif, soar, Idol, etc, If you are good at word-making you can secure a FREE trip to the World’s Fair and. return, as The Scott Seed Company will pay all expenses, Including R. R. faro, hotel bills, admissions to the Columbian Exposition, and SSO In cash for incidental expenses, to the first person able to make seventy words from the letters contained ‘ln “World’s Fair.” as above. They will also give a FREE TRIP to the World’s Fair and return, with $25 for Incidental expenses, to the first person sending sixty words ns above. They will also give a FREE TRIP to the World’s Fair; and return (without cash for Incidental expenses) to the first person sending putt y- five words. To the first person tend In; fifty .Words will bo given SSO in cash towards paying expenses to the World’s Fair; to the first Bending forty words will be given 325 in cash towards paying expenses to the World's Fair; to each of the first five persons sending, thirty-five words will be given {lO In cash; and to each of the first ten scoring thirty words will be given $5 In cash. Only one prize will he awarded to the same person. Write your name on list of words (numbered) - and Inclose the safne post-paid with fifteen United States 2-ceut stamps for a large package of our Choice English Cjttage Garden Flower Seeds. This combination Includes the latest and most popular English flowers of endless varieties (same as will be contained In the elaborate exhibit of English flowers at the World’s Fair). This “World’s Fair” Contest will bo Carefully and conscientiously conducted solely for the purpose of Introducing our b uslness In the United States. You wlll'rocetve the BIGGEBT value In flower seods ever offered. and If you are able to make a good list of words and answer promptly you will have a first-class opportunity to secure a free trip from your home to Chicago and return. We ure spending a large amount of money to start our trade In the United States and want your trial order. You will be more than gratified with the result. Send to-day. and addross THE SCOTT SEED COMPANY. Toronto, Cananda.

What It Means.

Most men who Insist upon ten hours' pay for nine hours’ work do not stop to think what this means to the employer. Supposing a factory employ fifty hands at $2 a day, which in slo an hour for ten hours’ work. ‘ Therefore, nine hours’ work means giving each man 29 cents a day, the fifty men $lO a dav, or $3,000 for the three hundred working days in a year. But that is not all. In order to turn out the same amount of output, the manufacturer must make up this one hour by hiring one new man for every nine men, or five new men for the fifty men. The five new men, at $2 a day, cost $lO a day, or another $3,000 for the three hundred working days, a total of $6,000, or 12 per cent, extra cost on an output of $50,000. If the manufacturer does not mako up the lost time by hiring new men, his pay-roll has, nevertheless increased $.1,000 a year, while the output will have decreased 10 per cent., because of tho one hour in ten granted the men. It means, again, additional space or additional, machinery for the five new men, which represents another 3 per cent, at least. Thus you see that the demand for tin hours’ pay for nine hours’ work, which looks so Innocent on its face, amounts to 15 pfer cent, extra expense on the cost of goods, when the average profit is only about 6 per cent. Therefore, except this is made a universal rule everywhere, any manufacturer granting it will simply be wiped out by the competition having this 15 per cent disadvantage.—Furniture Worker.

Ate Up Her Collars.

A well-known New-Yorker of convivial habits has for years Indulged in a rice pudding upon his return home late at night. The cold pudding Was always left on the sideboard by his good wife. The other night, in the dim night left" burning low, he spied his favorite dish and ate the contents. The next morning his wife miesed seven lace collars she had left in the starch over,-night, and she is now threatening to Bu# for limited divorce, not beoause ift the loss of the collars, but because her husband says that they tasted Just like her best puddings.—New York Metropolis.

Tory[?] to Destroyers.

Thirteen torpedo-boat destroyers are to be added to the British navy, to be 180’feet long, about 240 tons displacement, and of 3,400 horse power. Their armament will consist of one twelvepounder and three six-pounder quickfiring guns, and five eighteen-inch torpedoes for use in a bow tube, and two revolving tubes amidships.

Deafness Cannot Be Cared

By local application*, a* tlfty cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only on* way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is by an Inflamed ctudition of the mucous lluJHk sis the Eustachian Tube. When this tnbe gets lulsmC you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect bearlog, and when It Is entirely closed Deafness 1* the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tnbe restored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases ont of ten are oauted by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mnoous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any ease of Deafness (caused try Catarrh) that cannot be cured by taking Hairs Catarrh Cure. Bend lor circular*, free. F. 3. CHENEY * CO., Toledo, Ohio. fidTSold by Druggists, 75c. - ,

Contempora-ies.

“The shark Is the oldest type of fish,” said the country school teacher. “Not any older than fife* sucker, I guess,“ remarked the boy whose father had signed a lightning-rod contract that afterward turned out to be a promissory note. —Washington Post. Ig tour blood poor? Take Beeeham’s Pills. Is your liver out of order? Use Beecham’s Pills. 25 cents a box. The hottest place in the United State* is Death Valley, 140 degrees.

Pure grape cream tartar M forms the M m\m IPW A the Royal exclusively. Nv The Royal _ I imparts that peculiar sweetness, flavor and delicacy noticed in the finest cake, biscuit, rolls, etc., which expert pastry cooks AfeSOlilftCly declare is unobtainable * by the use of any other * W leavening agent.

To Be a Good Neighbor.

To be a really good nolghbor demands the possession of many excellent qualities—tact, temper, discernment, and consideration for other people’s feelings; and, if we possess all, or some of these uualltlos, innumerable and never-ending are the benefits wo may confer on each other, and a great deal of pleasure will be the result. But, becauso we are neighbors, wo need not necessarily be close friends. Wo may be friendly enough to enjoy the pleasure of doing them little kindnesses and receiving the same in return. Being kindly disposed to all by no means implies that our house is to be open from morning till night to visitors. The typioally good-natured person, who is at every one’s beok and call, is likoly to bo greatly imposed upon and to please no one really; one must be able to say “No," and to decline being made use of by every me. *

An ingenious Expedient.

“On my way homo from a Western trip I stopped at Duluth,” said a traveler. “The thermometer registered 10 degrees below zero, but building was going on lust the same on a dozen brick buildings, one of which was an ofllce building to cost three hundred thousand dollars. In the East wo shut up shop in the building line in freezing weather, because frozen mortar loses its temper aud is worthless. But out there they lay hot brick in hot mortar; it sets boforo freezing and when set it’s all right. The bricklayors on a building work as close together as possible, wearing protectors on their hands. Beside them are little furnaces and metal-lined mortar tubs, beneath which aro fires. The brloks and mortar are heated hot and laid. A brick, you know, will retain heat for a long while.”

What Is Money

Weighed against that health it so often falls to buy? Dross Indeed. While we can none of us claim a total exemption from that greatest of all 111 b to whidh flesh is heir—ill-health—we may do much to lessen the ohanoes of incurring it, and this not alone by the adoption of suoh sanitary measures as are to be found in daily exercise, regular hours, prudence in eating and drinking, and a wholesome diet, but also oy resorting to judloious preventive medication when the system is threatened by unhealthful influences. For Instance, residents or sojourners In malarious localities should nse llostetter’s Btomaoh Hitters as a defense against chills and fever, aud persons who incur much out-of-door exposuro should employ it as a safeguard against rheumatism- Travelers in the tropics find it Invaluable also as a means of arresting liver oomplalnt and oonstipatlon, and counteracting the debilitating lntluenoe of a torrldicllmate. General Saussier, Military Governor of Paria, la one of the three French officers who refused a parole by the Germans In 1870, and escaped from tho enemy’s oountry. .... Exclusive of poatofflees, there are over 74,(W0 offloes under the FedeiaJ Government FITS-—All Fits stopped tree by Dr. Kline's O' el l Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s use. Mar. velous cures. Treatise and 12.00 trial bottle free to iii easel. Sena to Dr. Kline, 081 Arch St.. Hills. Pa.

Hood’s Cures i _________ Even When Called Incurable Terrible Siege,Bolatlc Rheumatism Mr. Arthur Simon I ' Of Galatea, Ohio. “They said I was Incurable, the doctors did, but the result has proven that Hood's Barespartita was able to cure. J bad Sciatic Rheumatism and was oonflned to my bed six months. Three physicians did not help me and I Was Given Up to Ole. When I was In t his terrible condition, unable to move hand or foot, I began to take Hood's Sarsaparilla. The first bottle had s little effect, and while taking tbe second I gained eo rapidly that I could sit up In my chair. My system had been so run down by other medicine that it took me quite a while to recuperate. By the time I had taken four bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla I could walk around, SDd now, as I have taken six bottles, lam ured and can do a good cay's work. 1 do not feel I can praise •Hood’s Sarsaparilla enough." Abthub Bimom, Galatea, Ohio. Hood’s Pills are tbe best after-dinner Pllla, assist digestion, care headache. Try a box

JWllM’ Coat ftSR WORLD I SUCKER The FISH BRAK'D SLICKER Is warranted waterproof, and will keep you dry ln.lhe harden atom. The jew POMMEL SLICKER la a perfect ruling cost, and cover* theentireaaddle. Bewaihof mutations. Don't buy a coat If the “ Plah Brand" I»j>ot on It. Ulnttrsted Catalogue ftee, A. J. TOWER. Boston, Man. ; IdirnoM THIS FI PER warn warns, vo mum. Cures Consumption, Couchs, Croup, ws Plastsr will gin great aatUfaoioo /—*j cants.

A Smart Girl's Lecture.

A 10-year-old girl roads a lecturo to tho young mon in a Lincoln County paper. She exclaims; “Why do the young men of Edgocomb do so much loafing t Go to work! Push ahead! lam but a young girl; I have clothed myself and got monoy in tho bank, and only 10 years old. I lay up more money every year of my life than any boy or young man within a radius of three miles of my home. When they get a dollar they go io a dance and go homo a dollar out. My father Is üble to support me, " but I choose to support myself. I advise all girls to cut oloar of those loafing boys. Give them a wldo berth, and never many a man unless ho is able to support you. And never put your arm through the handle of a rum jug.”— Lewiston (Me.) Journal.

The Evolution

Of medicinal agonts is gradually rolegating the old-time herbs, pills, draughts and vegetable extracts to the rear and bringing lntd general use the pleasant and effeotivo liquid laxative, Byrup of Figs. To got the true remedy see tha’, It is manufactured by the California r ig Byrup Co. only. For sale by all loading druggists.

The Mythical "Fountain of Youth.”

Bimini was a fabulous Island firmly believed in by iho Indians of all tho Antilles, though they could glvo no further clew to Its location than that It lay some hundreds of leagues north of lllßpaniola. On tills island was the famous “Fountainof Youth,“the waters of which would rostore youth and vigor and givo perpetual health to the most decrepit of tho human raoe. It was tho search for this fountain that lod Ponce do Loon and Fernando do Boto to Florida, on tho coast of whlqli the island was g< nerally thought to bo locatod. SUFFERERS FROM COUGHS. SORd THROAT, etc., should try “Broum't Bronchial livc/us," a simple hut sure remedy. Sold onlu in boxen. Price 25 cts. Make monoy your god, it will plaguo you liko tho dovil. —Fielding.

PROMPT, COOP WORK. B' —— RHEUMATISM. Mr. Wlllet F. Cook, Cimajohnrle, N. Y., writes: " Awoke one morning with excruciating pains In my shoulder. Tried various rellefß for sudden pains without effect; went to my office ; the pain became tnsufterame t went home at n o'clock and used ST. JACOBS Oil.', effect magical, pain ceased, and at i o'clock went to work; cure permanent.” NEURALGIA. Little Rands, Wis. red with inch Interne neuralgic pains In the face, ahe thought she would die. ’She bathed her lace and head with ST. JACOBS OIL, sad It cured her In four hours. CARL SCHEIBE. FREE POSKmES Rend us at onoe • photograph or tintype of youraelf or any member of your hmlly, living or dead, and W e will make from same one of our enlarged life-like portraits together, with frame complete, ABSOLUTELY FItKK OP CHARGE. This offer Is made m order to Introduce our portraits and frames In your vicinity, fbr one of our line portraits placed In your home will do an more good than any other advertisement. This offer Is made IN GOO!) FAITH and we will forfeit ONE. HUNDRED dollars to anyone sending as a photograph and not securing his portrait and frame FREE os per this Offer. We guarantee the return of your photo, so have no fear of losing It Address all your letters to gationnl Portrait Horlety, S 3 and MW. ltth Htreet, New York, N. Y. References: All banks and xoress Cos. In Now York and Brooklyn. Put your name and address back of photo. WHEN IN WANT ° F A TIF rt+i'' ADDRESS J.l. CASE THRESHING MACHINE CO., CATALOGUE FREE. RACINE, WISCONSIN.

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