Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 17, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 May 1894 — Page 7

( AbJifrnAitstatt \ .''\. \Wffit Husband and Son Impure Blood, Boils, Carbuncles, Rheumatism “My husband was afflicted with bolls for eight years. Last spring bis neck was nearly covered with little bolls, which grew in number and size until they turned to carbuncles. Everything the doctors did seemed to Aggravate the Disease. He at last bought a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and when he had taken half of it his neck was well and he has had but one pimple since. The remainder of the medicine I gave to my twelve-year-old boy, Willie Massey, who had been afflicted with Rheumatism from his infancy. After he had taken a half bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla It seemed to do him so much good that we concluded to give it a fair Hood’s s ?>Cures trial in the spring. My husband purchased four bottles, and together they have been taking it for over a month. .Now my boy, instead of creeping around and crying with pain in bis legs as he used to, can plow all day or run and play as lively as any children." Mbb. John Altstatt, Ozark. Arkansas. • - ' " ' ' ■ I' ' I Hood’s Pills are hand made, and perfect in proportion and appearance. 25c a box. n'■ini i i i What Goes to Make Paper 1 . <'■ Paper can be made out of almost anything that can be pounded to a pulp. Over fifty kinds of bark are employed, while old sacking or bagging makes a good article. Paper is made oat of banana skins, from bean stalks, pea vines, cocoanut fiber, clover and timothy hay, straw, fresh weeds, seaweeds and more than 100 different kinds of grass. Paper has been made from hair, fur and wool; from asbestos, which furnishes an article indestructible by fire; from hop plants, from husks of any and every kind of grain. Leaves make a good strong paper, while the husks and stems of Indian corn have been tried, and almost every kind of moss can be made into paper. There are patents for making paper from sawdust and shavings, from thistles and thistledown, from tobacco stalks and tan bark. It is said there are over 2,C00 patents covering the manufacture of paper. Do not allow yourself to read a moment in any reclining position, whether in bed or on a sofa.

It Don’t Cost Much To get well. Only a dollar or two and a little faith. The case of Mrs. Lillie Meyer, of Brooklyn, N. Y., is an example. JT S,:s Some time v y ago she beJ\ *= t sharp pains vj * n h er abdowj. ' bearingdown feeling and pains in "* her hack ’MaS.LILUE MEYER.-f* ‘ Qj She tried doctors, and got no relief. At last, a friend told her of Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound, and, after using it, the pain left her, and menstruation now comes without suffering. Your druggist will tell you what a great medicine this is, and the price is only one dollar. You see, it don’t cost much to get well. It will expel tumors from the uterus in .an early stage of development. °R. KI LME R’ S kool* threat K | DNn LIVER *22 * The Spring Tonic Makes thin, pale, sickly people well and strong. La Grippe Cures the bad after effects of this trying epidemic and restores lost vigor and vitality. Impure Blood Eczema, scrofula, malaria, pimples, blotches. General Weakness Constitution all run down, loss of ambition and appetite, nervousness, tired and sleepless. At Druggists 50 cents and SI.OO Size. “Invalids' Guide to Health” tree— Consultation tree. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. DAD WAY’S II READY RELIEF. CUKES ANU PREVENTS Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, Headache, Toothache, Asthma. DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURES THE WORST PAINS in from one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR atter reading this advertisement need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. all Internal pains, cramps in the Bowels or Stomach, Spasms. Sour Stomach, Nausea. Vomiting, Heartburn. Diarrhoea, Colic. Flatulency. Fainting Spells, are relieved instantly and quickly cured by taking internally as directed. There Is not a remedial agent in the world that will enre Fever and Agao and all other malarious, bilious and other fevers, aided by RADWAY’S PILLS, so quiejdy an RADWAY’S RELIEF. Fifty cents per bottle. Sold by Druggists. MSIr ul SAFETY bicycle. J.E.PgSiman,s w.sth, Cln. 0. |ely’s CREAM BALM 50 CENI£ A|Z

HOME AND THE FARM.

A DEPARTMENT MADE UP FOR OUR RURAL FRIENDS. Where a Partnership Is Advantageous— Improved Method of Setting Beau Pole*— Broad Tire# on the Farm—A I tuque Table Cover. ————— * Sticking; Lima Beans. An ingenious plan for setting bean poles in the most effectual way to prevent them from being blown down by storms is shown in the illsutration from an American agriculturist. A forked wooden spike made of seasoned younjLffak or hickory, about one and onefhalf inches diameter and two and one-half feet in length, is driven slantingly into tne ground by means of a tough, hardwood nialet. After a heavy rain, when the ground is wet as deep as required, give the spike some taps with the mallet ta loosen it, then grasp it where the branches fork, withdraw it, and insert the bean, paching the soil with

IMPROVED METHOD OF SETTING BEANPOLES.

the small end of the mallet. The stakes or poles are set in the grond, as seen in the sketch, the two outer ones slanting to cross each other. The pole in the middle is shorter aifd set vertical to reach the two which are crossed. By this means when the vines reach the point where the poles cross they will entwine themselves so strongly around the three poles, that with the strong base they have and the firm hold in the ground, a hurricane could scarcely blow them down, and the beans will flourish well. '.The Right Kind of Pnrtuerzhlp. As a rule, partners are not advantageous in moderate enterprises. One exception which will be admitted bv the ca*reful thinker is where a father can take bis son or sons into partnership with him, and thus start them in life in a business way. Such arrangements are often best for all concerned. The father may need the push and dash that young blood will put into the business, while the son or sons may need the steady, guiding hand of the lather. Old men frequently fail because of their too conservative way of doing business, while young men make failures because ,of taking too great risks or lack of experience. A partnership of this kind is but a natural combination, and if properly managed, leads to great success. In a business depending upon the public for patronage, a firm of this kind has much in the name to recommend it. No matter how dishonest and tricky men may be, there are few who care to teach their children to follow disreputable methods. A firm composed of father and son is therefore regarded with much favor by the public. There are exceptions to this rule, also, but in most of cases it holds good. A man generally has enough manhood about him w> recommend him to strangers who .is considerate enough with his own children to take them with him into business enterprises. There are but few things that indicate honesty, integrity, >and a noble purpose more than this. But the advantages of such copartnerships are not always found in the financial side of the question. Neither is it necessary to be engaged in a business that depends upon the outside world for success before such arrangements can be made to advantage. An undisputed and well defined interest in a few acres of grain, a colt that may develope into a valuable horse, or a bunch of pigs that can be turned into money in the future, may awaken an interest in the mind of the boy that would change the whole character of his life. The reason there are so many poor business men among, farmers is simply because they have never been taught business. There is no better way to teach boys business principles than to take them into partnership and develop their minds in the right direction. Give the boys a chance, and it will be their fault if they fail. Otherwise it will by yours.—National Stockman.

Caro of Horses. Driving horses are frequently injured, but never by judicious driving. The injury results rather from neglect of proper care and attention alter driving and while unemployed. A driving horse may be injured for a want of providing sufficient exercise. The limbs of the animal and the hoofs may become injured by the animal being confined several day’s in a narrow stall with no opportunity for'exercise; and this is likely to be further aggravated by being obliged 'to stand upon a plank floor, although it is better to stand upon the bare floor than to stand upon a mass of bedding that is liable to fermentation and injury to the feet. If the horse is to be confined constantly in the stable by all means give it sufficient room to allow perfect freedom in moving about, exercising the legs at pleasure Germantown Telegraph. Avoid watering or heavy feeding after severe exercise and when warm. Many animals are seriously and permanently injured by carelessness in this matter. The animal may be given a little hay to eat while cooling off sufficiently to receive a grain ration. A horse that has been exercised and become wet with perspirajtibn should not be hitched in a draught of air, especially in a cool tempeiature; much care should be exercised in this direction in winter and the animal should not be allowed to strand for any length of,time, unless properly blanketed or suitable totection ris afforded. Stable

blanketing in winter should be Jodi, cious; in case of severe perspiration occurring from severe exercise have an old blanket to use unless all perspiration has ceased and the animal becomes dry, then apply a dry blanket. —Exchange Broad Tiros on the Farm. Some of the Massachusetts towns are giving a practical support to improving the country roads by ordering that all town garbage wagons, watering carts should use the broad tires on the wheels. Nothing cuts up a road so badly as the narrow tire on the vehicle that is sustaining a big load. This occasions the horrible ruts which destroy often the best roads during certain seasons of the year. The use of broad tires by the farmers is to be urged everywhere, especially in this State. When the farmer does this it will be a big advance toward the solution of the goo<* road problem. It will be a saving to every farmer if he would make it a rule that the next time his heavy wagon goes to tne smith’s he will have a wide tire replace the present nariowone. The result would be a great saving in wear and tear to horse, wagon, and harness.—Albany Argus. Keep the Garden Clean. One may have a garden practically clear of weeds if he will begin and persevere, keeping at it the whole summer, letting no weed get past its first seed leaves. Then they are easily killed by a light, sharp-toothed steel rake drawn over the soil not mure than one inch deepi If the ground is examined the young plants may be seen on the surface like short white threads, and one hour’s exposure kills them. It is a good plan to use fertilizers in the garden, and for the other and bulky matter get decayed leaves from the woods and swamp muck, mixing them with lime and oomposting them with the house wastes for the year before the manure is wanted. This is spaded or plowed In the i'ajl, after the crops are gathered, and it will serve every purpose of stable manure, without the risk of sowing seeds with it Remedies for Smut. The prevention of parasitiediseases of cereals by t eating them before sowing or planting has been found useful by many who have experimented along this line. A slight coating of coal oil given to seed peas in the autumn is said to destroy the pea weevil. This causes the crop of the following season to be almost free from this pest. A somewhat analogous remedy has bebn disco.veied for smut in wheat and oats by Prof. Jansen, of Denmark, only that heat seems to be the effective agent in these cases. The remedy is simply to immerse the seed Wheat or oats in water at the temperature of 135 degrees to 140 degrees. The crops grown Irom seed thus treated have been found to be entirely free from smut The remedy has the merit of being both cheap and simple.—Exchange. A Unique Table Cover. A new design for a small table or stand cover is always welcomed by lovers of fancy work. A most effective cover has a design of chestnut

CHESTNUT BUR DESIGN.

burs worked on fawn colored cloth. The burs, in this instance, are made of an olive brown shade of silk in the pompon style, and sewed in the places designated, th* leaves and stems being embroidered in silk. Trim with fringe the color of the cloth or of the darkest tone used in the embroidery. Odds md Ends. A new, soft paint brush is a good thing to dust carved furniture with, as the bristles will penetrate the deepest crevices. Never sleep with a bright light shining directly upon the eyes. They should fa e the darkest and most restful corner in the room. To clean nickel-plating, polish with a paste maoe of vaseline and rouge, and wipe the polished surface with a cloth moistened with vaseline. A beefsteak cut an inch thick will be cooked rare in ten minutes. A mutton chop cut three-fourths of an inch thick will cook in eight minutes. Veal and pork must be broiled slowly and for a long time: There should not be a trace of pink in the fibers when the meat is done. The chops should not be cut more than half an inch thick. They will be done with twenty minutes’ cooking. A new use has beetFfbund for potatoes. Paint can be made with them in the following manner: A pound of potatoes is boiled in water and afterwards mashed; tiien, being diluted wjth water, they are passed through a fine.seive, two pounds of Spanish white and two pounds of water being added.,A iLilk-whlte color results. Various other colors can be obtained by the use of ochres and minerals. The advantages of the paint are cheapness and durability, as It adheres well to wood or plaster, and does not peel, . ' , . A New York paper furnishes, a suggestion for the cleaning of straw hats. It is. this:; The white sailor hats of any of the family maybe cleaned and whitened by rubbing them with lemon juice. Cut the lemon in halves and rub vigorously, first laying the hat on a clean doth, on a flat surface, so that it will not get out of shape. After using the lemon, brush the hat thoroughly with tepid water containing half a teaspoonful or borax. Remove the hat band, or cover it‘in cleaning, so that it will not be discolored. . .

Feeding the Jackals. ■' A strange ceremonv is carried on at t certain temple lying in a belt of swamp and jungle*at the foot of the Himalayas. The author of “Indian Memories," who visited the place at sundown, says that she found the ' priests in perfect silence, engaged in i oking large eakes before the temple. Then they sat down, still silent and itolid, as if ignorant of any unacjustomed presence. 1 As the last rays of sunlight died off the temple, a man of extreme age, ilad in white robes and closely shaven, I-sued from the shrine. It was the chief priest Moving slowly forward, he took up a bronze hammer, and began to strike the bell. Very sweet and deep was the note: the whole glade rang and vibrated with it At the sound, all the priests rose and l moved solemnly and in dead silence round the quadrangle, bearing with ■ them their nuge cakes which they broke up as they walked, and depositeii them on the stones and tree-trunks, I ind the steps of the temple. A rustling sound made m s turn. A jackal, I big and plump, brushed past me,' with i an upward curl of his lips, and a look ' of surprise and resentmsnt in his red- . bronze, gleaming eyes. . Simultaneously, from every lane and passage in the darkening thicket, came ! 3the*r jackals, singly and in pairs, and ' dlled the spaue before the temple. Boon the feast was spread. The high : priest ceased to toll the bell, and at a ' shout and wave of the hand, every • jackal trotted, without rivalry and without snarlin* or confusion, to what was evidently his accustomed place in the feast, seized the "cake in his jaws, turned and disappeared through the thicket In vain did I fee the priests to learn the meaning of this strange bounty. “It had always been so,” was their answer.

A NO-TO-BAC MIRACLE

PHYSICAL PERFECTION PREVENTED BY THE USE OF TOBACCO. An Old-Timer of Twenty-three Years' Tobacco Chewing and Smoking Cured, and Gains Twenty Pounds In Thirty Days. Lake Geneva, Wis, May s.—Special. The ladies of our beautiful little town are making an interesting and exciting time for tobacco-using husbands, since the injurious effects of tobacco and the ea-e with which it can be cured by a preparation called No-To-Bac have been so plainly demonstrated by the cure of Mr. F. C. Waite. In a written statement he says: “I smoked and chewed tobacco for twenthree years, and I atn sure that my case was one of the worst in this part of the country. Even after I went to bed at night, if I woke up I would want to chew or smoke. It wac not only killing me but my wife was also ailing from the injurious effects. Two boxes of No-To-Bac cured me. and I have no more desire for tobacco than 1 have to jump out of the window. I have gained twenty pounds in thiriy days, my wife is well,'and we are indeed both happy to say that No-To-Bac is truly ‘ worth its weight in gold ’ to us. ” The cure and improvement in Mr. Waite's case is looked upon as a miracle—in fact, it is the talk of the town and county, and it is estimated that over a thousand tobacco users will be using No-To-Bac within a few weeks. The peculiarity about No-To-Bac as a patent medicine is that the makers, the Sterling Remedy Company. No. 4,5 Randolph street, Chicago, absolutely guarantee the use of three boxes to cure or refund the money, and the cost. $2.50, is so trifling as compared with the expensive and unnecessary use of tobacco that tobac-co-using husbands have no good excuse to offer when their wives insist upon their taking No-To-Bac and getting result in the way of pure, sweet breath, wonderful improvement in their mental and physical condition, with a practical revitalization of their nicotiz.ed nerves.

Think.

A little thoughtfulness goes a great way in the home, as well as in the larger social life; and the more close and intimate the association, the greater the need of this thoughtfulness in. little things. There are few things so trying as the constant neglect and forgetfulness of trifles. Many a greater fault, many a serious error even, fails to give as much actual trouble, and produce so much discord in general, as the habit of never returning the thing that is borrowed; of undue delay in answering notes: of neglecting to perform any and all of those “trifles light as air” in themselves,but which,in the aggregate, make up so great a sum of human happiness. In fact, there is no more exasperating trait than thoughtlessness in trifles. It is even more so than in larger and more significant matters. The important affair can well he spoken of and recalled duly to mind, but the unimportant one is often difficult to discuss. One feels disinclined to ask another to do the thing that should have been done without asking. Carefulness in small things will do more' to promote an atmosphere of harmony in the household than almost any other one thing.

The World’s Columbian Exposition Will be of value to the world by illustrating the improvements in the mechanical arts, and eminent physicians will tell you that the progress in medicinal agents has been of equal importance, and ar a strengthening laxative that Syrup of Figs is far in advance of all others. Krupp, of Prussia, claims as the result of his own experiments that while only 10 to 15 per cent, of heat unite are utilized in the modern steam engine, if the coal is powdered to an impalpable powder and exploded in Cylinders, after the manner of an ordinary gas engine, 75 to 80 per cent, of the heat units may be realized. I |lf you can’t pay for a thing, don't buy it. If you can’t get paid for it, don’t sell it. So you will have calm days, drowsy nights, all the good business you have now, and none of the bad.— Ruskin.■ IN 1850 “Brown'e Bronchial Troche*'' were Introduced, and their success as a cure for Colds, Coughs, Asthma, and Bronchitis lias been unparalleled. “A dying man can do nothing easy” were the last words of our immortal Franklin. A diseased man can do nothing well, are words equally as true. Tut melody of music is divine, but it is no more enchanting than a young girl's faee made supremely beautiful by the use of Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. —.I —-—. Value of Great Britain’s Land. •" Since the beginning of the present century the land of Great Britain has doubled in assessed value. Shiloh's Cowsumptiom Cum is sold on a guarantee. It cures Incipient Consumption. 'lt Is the best Cough Cura 28 cents, M cants and 81.00.

Highest of all la leavening strength.—UlMt U.L Ger. Feed tw Powder absolutely pure Economy requires that in every receipt calling for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST.. NEW YORK.

The Name of California.

Dr. Thomas E. Slevin, in a recent lecture before the Geographical Society of the Pacific, said: “The word ‘California’ was first used in a work on Spanish chivalry published in 1510. This work was an alleged history of the adventures of ‘Amadis of Gaul and his son Esplandiatn.’ It was of great length, and divided into a large number of short stories, one of which was the manner in which ‘Califla, the queen of the island of California, a country inhabited only by women, who lived as amazons and had gold without end,’ saved Constantinople from an attack by the Persians. This story, as well as others, was widely road by the people of Spain, and by many regarded as fact. Among the stanch believers were the moml era of the Cortez expedition, who, upon landing upon the peninsula of Lower California, imagined they were on an island which, ’owing to" its apparent riches, they named after the Tabled isle, and Cortez himself called the naw country ‘California.' ”

Did You Ever Meat a Truly Good Man ■ No doubt you think you have, but we'll wager a dime or so he did not have the rheumatism. If ho did, he ewore occasionally, and no man oan be truly good who swears occasionally. Health, nerve tranquility and morality are apt to go hand in hand. Painful apasmodio diseases like rheumatism and neuralgia ruin the temper, make one morose, peevish and rebellious. This is a sad fact, but It la none the less true. Drive away the pain, mollify the temper, restore tranquility of mind in cases of z rheumatism ami neuralgia with Hostetter's Stomsoh Bitters, an anodyne and tonic of comprehensive range and effect. It healthfully stimulates the kidneys, bladder, stomach, liver and bowels when Inactive, and induces sleep and appetite. A very quieting effect, not an unnatural, stupefying cue like that ot an opiate, ls|produced by a wiueglassful before retiring. It is incomparable in malarial disease.

Women Wear Prince Alberts.

In the annua! dross parade the bonnets are not a circumstance to the new style in Prince Albert coats for ladles, says a New York dispatch. That. i'n the lattest craze. They are now teen on Fifth avenue every afternoon, at ,the chamber concerts, at 4 o’clbck prayers, at the art galleiies, and in Central Park, and they were worn Easter Sunday with the new bonnets and boots. These coats differ from the men’s in having rcund instead of straight skirts. Mon are comparatively slab-sided, women have hips which necessitate drapery with more or loss spring. A fair descendant of Peter Cooper has the credit of bringing out the Prince Alb ?rt. Decision of character will often give to an inferior mind command over a superior.—-W. Wirt. In this world,truth can wait. She is used to it.—Douglas Jerrold.

djpffi C 7 AU >! »z wWi'III

From away up in British North America comes the following greeting to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Chief Consulting Physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y. Mrs. Allen Bharrard, of Hartney, Selkirk Co., Manitoba, whose portrait, with that of her little boy, heads this article, writes as follows; “ I take great pleasure in recommending Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription for ‘falling of the womb.’ I was troubled with bearing down pains and pains in my back whenever I would be on my feet any length of time. I was recommended to try Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, which I did with happy results. I feel like a dew person after taking three bottles of it. ” As we have Just heard from the frigid North, we will now introduce a letter received from the Sunny South. The following is from Mrs. J. T. Smith, of Oakfuskee, Cleburno.Co., Ala. She writes: “I was afflicted and suffered untold pains and misery, such as no pen can describe, for six years. I was confined to bed most of the time. I expected the cold hand’of death every day. I was afflicted with leucorrhea—with excessive flowing—falling of the womb —bearing down sensation—pain in: the small of my back—my bowels costive-smarting, itching and burning in the vagina, also palpitation of the heart. When I began taking your medicine I eould not sit up, only a few minutes at a time, I was so weak. I took Dr. Pierce’s .Favorite Prescription three times per day, I also took his ‘ Golden Medical Discovery ’ three times- per day and one.of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets everv night. I have taken seven bottles of the ‘ Discovery,’ seven bottles of the ‘ Prescription ’ and five bottles of the ‘ Pellets.’ I took these medicines seven months, regularly, never missed a day. These medicines cured me. I feel as well as I ever did in my life. Four of the best doctors in the land treated my case four years. They all gave me up as hopeless—they saidT could not be cured, and could not live. Through the will of God, and your medicines. I have been restored to ths best of health?* Yours truly,

Dr. Galezowski, the famous Paris oculist, will receive $25,000 for his visit to Persia to attend to a son of the Shah. Larger sums than this have been declined by English practitioners. The lata Sir Morell Mackenzie refused $30,000 to go on a professional trip to New York and Anderson Critchett did not accept $35,000 to visit India to treat one of the native princes.

Electric Wires.

Some writer very aptly likens the nerves to electric wires, and the general working of their system to that of electric cars. A man who “slips his trolley” like Mr. Jeremiah Enev, 1812 W. 1-ombard st, Baltimore, Ma., will need something bettor than even a galvanic battery to set him all right. Mr. Eney found that something in the following way. “1 suffered,fl he says, “a long time with neuralgia in tne head. I gave St, Jaeohs Ollafair trial and am entirely cured.' 1 Jn- this way the great remedy acts-os a motorman to restorb broken wires, and set the system to perfect action.-.,

Quinine for the Million.

Quinine for the million Is being circulated in Bengal, thunks to the Government ptjhetne of supplying small, cheap packets of the drug at village postoftiw. The quinine is made up in ilvo-grain packets, and over 200,000 a month are being sold, as the remedy is thus within the rea h ot people in the most out-of-the-way districts. HALL'S CATARRH CURB Is * liquid and la taken Internally, and acta direotly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, Write for testimonials, free. Manufactured by F. J. CHENEY « CO,, Toledo, O. Nothing violent, oft have I heard tell, can be permanent.—Marlowe.

FThdse—-- '|T Pimples J Are tell-tale symptoms that your blood is not right—full of impurities, causing a sluggish and unsightly complexion. A few 1 bottles Of S. S. S. will remove all foreign and impute matter, I cleanse the blood thoroughly and give a clear and rosy comI plexion. It is most effectual, and entirely harmless. I Chas. Heaton, 78 Laurel St., Phils., saysi—"l have had for years a humor in I my blood which made me dread to shave, as small boils or pimples wonld be cut 9 thus causing shaving to be a great annoyance. After taking three bottles of face l * all clMr and ’ mooth M lt should be—appetite splendid, sleep well and feel like running a foot race, all rom ( he use of S. S. S. aftjg Send far Trwds. <m »“<wl and Bbls DUaa. mltod frw. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO, Atlanta, fll. W

Mrs. W. O. Gunekel, of Mo. 1481 Boma Seventh Street, Terre Haute, Indiana, writes: “ I had been suffering from womb trouble for eight years having doctored with the most skillful physicians, but, fiwtinjr only temporary relief from medicines prescribed by thorn. I was advised by a friend to take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, which I did, and found, in taking six bottise of the 'Prescription* and two of the ‘Golden Medical Discovery,’ that ttf. has effected a positive cure, for which words cannot express my gratitude for the relief from the great suffering that I so long endured.” Yours truly, As a powerful, invigorating, restorative tonic “Favorite Prescription ” improves digestion and nutrition thereby building up solid, wholesome ‘flesh, and increasing the strength of the whole system. Asa soothing and strengthening nervine, “Favorite Prescription” is unoqualed and is invaluable in allaying and subduing nervous excitability, irritability, nervous exhaustion, nervous prostration, neuralgia, hysteria, spasms. Chorea, or St Vitus’s Dance, and other distressing, nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease of the womb. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency. Even insanity, when dependent upon womb disease, is cured by it. i Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a scientific medicine, carefully compounded by an experienced and Skillful physician, and adapted to woman’s delicate organization. It is purely vegetable in its composition and perfectly harmless in its effects tn any condition of the system. , For morning sickness, or nausea, due to pregnancy, weak stomach, indigestion, dyspepsia ana kindred symptoms, its use will prove very beneficial. Dr. Pierce’s Book (188 pages, illustrated-) on “Woman and Her Diseases,” giving successful means of Home Treatment, will be mailed in plain envelope, securely sealed from observation on receipt of ten cents

<' Lovely Complexion. 1 < ’Pure,Soft, White Skin.; i I i Have you freckles, moth, black-heads, i ) i I blotches, ugly or muddy skis, eczema, < , I i tetter,or any other cutaneous blemish? i, i ) Do you want a quick, permanent and ah- I > ( i solutely infallible cure, FREE OF COST < 1 i * to introduce it? Something new, pure, ( > | i mild and so harmless a child can use or < > i ) drink it with perfect safety. If so, send ( , tyour full Post-office address to i , Mias HAGUIE K. MILZTTK. 1 • J ‘IM Vbse Street. Onetautl, Okla.' • < .a AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. A, ) Unlike the Dutch Process CA No AlkaUes Other Chemicals are used in the YHflryf preparation of W. BAKER & CO.’S | mßreakfastCocoa ffi yMffll whieh ie absolutely jH I wIW'VI f’«r« and soluble. Hl MKmhil Ithaamorot/ianthreetimae BB JBIWH t* B strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far more economical, coiling leee than one cent a eup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easily DIGMTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W, BAKER & CO.. Dorchester, Mass. ■iS RBOM sting from the money and price n. Every ! no aubati•rs for full tr complete s and gen:nd for 7/OiAi/qfiff giving instrucUone how to or. der by mall. Postage free. You can get the best bargain* of dealer* who puah our ahoca. gßßfeaa ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■BC'iiarlcsluwu, Maia

S-'TjDDPESJ'ffie. . House Poweu. vwiklging MILL’.®' -Self Feeders /UIffiMTZD e/WUO6Uf Mum /»££ IHI!WWIFE OA *“ OT «EHbwvooiJO " IM W ” C IT AND PAY FREIGHT. £3r?*ISMtBr.\IA Bon oar 2 drawar walnut n oak taa. BerLViala “•/grorad lllgli ira Blaaa'Mwlng mwhlM MU T 7 B® flnlabed, nkkol platad,adapt,d U lirbt . IIA'IM »M work: tuaruauad for 101 mm; wllk LFT JR AMamtl. Babbie w ladar, S,lt.nm«lasCylto. _ *** r Bka<tl *> Half.Saltlag Noodle sad a eomplata 2 n,KO MW Is PM. World’, fair Modal awardad machlna aad atiaab. ■Mia. Bay from factory and mm daaln’S and amt’a proSia. gDCC *■* TWi o** ’“d "** lodlay tor macblaa or lam frM r nEC aaUlagva, taatlmonlala and allmpoMof lb, Wnrld’a Fair. OXFORD MFD. DO. 842 Wttiii Ari. CHICADOJLL, STEAM ENGINE™.™ 850 Racine Buller and Engine, 850 This machine la second-hand, but has been overhaulad. Don't write unless you have the cash. Address CHICAGONEWSPAPER UNION, P 8 ffl. Jefferson St., CHICAGO. A 4 A Mill 100 high grade A . " |w«stino SEND FOR CATALOGUE. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, 98 South Jefferson Street, • Chicago, Hl. ■■■■■■ A Pack of Plasrinar Caardad I rfhft Ws*CTnMGSI Hallway trom Chicago and St. Louts FWlL’VlreglW to all points Northwest, West atid 1 '’'JOSH Southwest. Send 16 cents innostage WHHBMSI lor a lull deck to P. 8. EUS-HB.QeBr eral Passenger Agent. Cmoaoo.llx. Or N. 6. No. 10-04 AATHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS. tnthtfS“ C .*r r ’ r °“ “ W th * M< * verU, “ )me “* Bl—’- - ■. . B ~ u-ts Intima Bold by ArwyiMa MR