Democratic Sentinel, Volume 21, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 February 1897 — Page 3
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot -roach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an lnfbuned condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is mftaraed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it Is entirely closed. Deafness Is the result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this, tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine eases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which U nothing but an inflamed condition of Hie mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh; that canoot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars; free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. jy Sold by Druggists, 75e.
Irrigation in China.
Since the year 2627 B. C.—ten years after the accession to the throne of Hoangti—or 4,523 years ago, the Chinese are known to have irrigated their lands for agricultural purposes.
New Dine to Washington, D. C.
The Monon has established a now through sleeping ear route between Chicago and Washington, D. C., by way of Cincinnati, via Motion, C-, H. & D., B. &O. S. W. and B. & O. Railways. The Bleeper is ready for occupancy in Dearborn station at 9 p. in., and leaves at 2:45 a. m. daily, arriving at Washington at 6:47 the following morning. Schedule in effect Jan. 2-1. As the sleeper goes through without change, and the hours of leaving and arriving are most convenient, this will prove altogether the most comfortable as well as the most picturesque route to the national capital. City ticket Qtfice, 232 Clark street. Depot, Dearborii station.
Woman Suffrage in Sweden.
In Sweden women vote for all elective officers except representatives.
Dane’s Family Medicine
Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Trice 25 and 50c. A French astronomer is of the opinion that the red glow of the planet Mars is caused by crimson vegetation. He thinks that the grass and foliage there are red, not green as they are on earth.
No-to-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No-To-Bac regulate or remove your desire fur tobacco? Saves money, make* health and m .nhood. Cure guaranteed. 50c and si. all arm-gists. “My dear fellow, she is an angel. How exquisitely lovely her complexion is. They say she uses Glenn’s Sulphur Soap.” If you want a reliable dye that will color an even brown or black, and will please and satisfy you every time, use Buckingham’s Dye for the Whiskers. Plso’s Cure for Consumption has been a godsend to me.—Wm. B. McClellan, Chester, Fla., Sept. 17, 1895. There is wealth ir. < ontentmeut; power in patidfiee, and joy in being grateful.
Prepare For spring. It is a trying season. If it finds your blood impure, imi-overished, weak and thin, you will be tired, du'.l, languid and an easy victim of disease. Do not wait till these troubles overtake you. .Take a course of Hood’s Sarsaparilla now. This medicine wi.l fit you For Spring It will, make your blood rich, pure and nourishingcure that tired, nervous feeling, enable you to sleep, give you a good appetite. Thousands have been saved from or cure! of disease and thousands are kept in good health to-day by Ilocd's Sarsaparilla. It will do as much for you. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Best—ln fact, the One Tree Blood Furlfier. HrtnH’c Pillc cure Diver Ills; easy to 1 IOUU S ‘MIS take. ea«v to operate. 25e. DAD WAY’S n PILLS, purely Vegetable, mild and reliable. Cause perfect dlcomplete absorption and healthful regularity, or the cure «f all disorders of th • Stomach, Livei; owels, Kidneys, Biadder, Nervous Dis a c-s, LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, BILIOUSNESS, TORPID LIVER, DYSPEPSIA. PREFECT DIGESTION will be accomnHshed by taking Had way’s P. lls. 11 tbeir AN i I-BILIOUS properties they s lmu-ate the liver in the secretion of Li bile and Mh d SCharzo through the bll ary ducts Th so pills !n gob s of from two io four v\i l quickly regulate the ;;c.ion of the liver and ireo the patient from these disorders One < r two < f Kaiiwa.’s Pills, taken duty by those subject t> bilious pains and torpidity of the liver.'will keep the system regular and securo ne .lthy digestion. Price, XSc per box. So dhv ail druggists, or by mall RABWAY St CO., 55 Elm Street, New York. CUTLER’S POCKETJNHALER. Catarrh, incipient conm P l lou ana bronchi* months* time by our COU | JrSe - ° f lreatlnell L wjl smith & co. *• PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHN W. MORRIS, WASHINGTON, D.a Lata Principal Examiner U. S. Pension Bureau, 8 jt®. in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, a tty. dll
A Cougher’s Coffers may not be so full as he wishes, but if he is wise he, will neglect his coffers awhile and attend to his cough. A man's coffers may be so secure that no one can take them away from him. But a little cqugh has taken many a man away from his coffers. The “slight cough ” i 3 somewhat like the small pebble that lies on the mountain side, and appears utterly insignificant. A fluttering bird, perhaps, starts the pebble rolling, and the rolling pebble begets an avalanche that buries a town. Many fatal diseases begin with a slight cough. But any cough, taken in time, can be cured by the use of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, More particulars about Pectoral iq Ayer’s Cq rebook, s<s put*. Sent free. J. C. Ayer Cp., Rowell, M W . '
TRULY A FREAK.
The Do no Represents Bird, Beast, end Reptile. The most wonderful freak yet discovered is a product of Patagonia. The head and breast are distinctly birdlike. The beak is that of a carnivorous bird. The plumage Is that of the bird of the tropics, bright red and green predominating, but all the colors of the rainbow being there. The legs, although covered with down and feathers, are distinctively animal-like in shape, the toes be-
BIRD, BEAST, AND REPTILE.
ing tipped with sharp claws. The leg and foot is like that of the raccoon. The tail Is In shape a reptile’s, narrowing down to a point at the tip from the size of the body. It coils Its tail like a snake, and looking at that end alone one would take it for a reptile. The tail is also covered with down and very small feathers, which present a scalelike appearance. The queer bird is known as the dono.
Current Condensations.
The zircon has been found in California. The opal has been found in New Mexico. Alabaster exists in seventeen different States. The Venus’ hair stone Is found in New Mexico. Serpentine exists in New England and Virginia. In 1890 the United States produced 161,754 short tons of lead. Our deposits of borax are believed to be practically inexhaustible. The heliotrope has been discovered in New Mexico and Georgia. The United State* has 115 medical schools, regular, eclectic and homeopathic. A great number of New Hampshire trout have been stocked In several California streams with good results. Lead colic has been treated most successfully in Paris by administering large doses of olive oil. In chronic cases sixty grammes of oil a day were given with excellent results. Teachers in Baden and other parts of Germany a hundred years ago were so poorly paid that they used to go about singing in front of the houses in the evening to earn a few extra pennies. The total coinage, gold and silver, of the reign of Henry 111. was £3,898; the total coinage of the reign of Victoria up to 1892 was £544,100,000, of which £812,300,000 were of gold and £231,800,000 of silver.
The Sulftm of Turkey nearly always dines alone. Tables, plates, knives and forks are eschewed. He uses only a spoon and his fingers, thus fishing out tkj food from little saucepans placed on the floor. Toronto unions demand of aldermanic candidates that they shall vote for the abolishment of the property qualification for aldermen; union wages on city work and the abolishment of the contract system on city work. Lucinda Bedford, an ex-slave, who died in Nashville, Tenn., at age of 94 years, left a fortune of considerably over SIOO,OOO. Her old master, William Bedford, who died before the war, set her free and left her his fortune of about SIOO,OOO. A Massachusetts thief has been systematically stealing canary birds. The theory is that he carries a ladder, opens second-story windows, as these are usually left unfastened, quietly unhooks the cage and carries off the songster. The police have not yet apprehended him.
At the close of the year 1892 there were in Switzerland 556 electric lights run by waterfall power, 53 plants for electrical transmission of power, 121 accumulator or storage batteries and 1,056 other dynamos and electro-mo-tors. The number of incandescent lamps run by water power was 115,926, and of arc lamps 9,716. Dr. Stuhlmann, who is traveling in Africa, has come upon a tree whose fruit gives out a tallow-like fat. The tree is one of the largest in the forests of Usambara, and the fruit is big and heavy, measuring a foot in length by half a foot in diameter. It is a new species of the guttiferi. The natives call it mkani, but the botanists name it Stearodendron StuMmannl. The Russian authorities have intervened in behalf of the nightingale. The police of Kiew found some bird catchers who were on their way to Moscow with 600 nightingales in cages. The bird catchers were captured and fined and their little victims were taken to the Botanic Gardens and released. It is said they rose in the air iu song, which was responded to by the other birds around.
LOVE AND MONEY
CHAPTER XXVIII. For a few moments the Captain maintained a sullen silence; then came his reply, in a hoarse, trembling voice: “I consent; I will go,” he replied. VThere is no one now in this infernal Vountry for whom I care. Gladys i» dead.” “Yon promise me that you will never pain my mother by your presence?” “I *ever wish to see her again,” he replied almost savagely. “She is nothing, never was anything, to me.” “The more false, cruel, and wicked you!” she cried. “You give me your promise that yon will not return to England?” she continued. “Why should I, when Gladys is dead?” he mqaned. “For my part I promise to keep your secrets—the blackest my heart will know; and I will see that you do not want for money. Your punishment I leave to heaven.” And without another word, she turned and left him.
For long hours afterward he sat on, stunned and bewildered. Desolate, shuddering, with the brand of Cain on his brow, he sat until the sun had set, and then he wended his weary way back to Ouldale. , Late that same evening, as Lady Culdale was going to her room, she met Captain Wynyard in the hall, looking so haggard and so ill that she cried out in genuine alarm. “Hqsh, Lady Culdale!” he said in a hoarse whisper. “I want you to grant me a favor. Take me to her room and let me stay with her awhile. I have something that I must say to her.” Lady Culdale felt alarmed at his strange words and his wild looks. “Will it not pain you too much? You are already very ill.” “No; I must see her. I have something I must tell her.” “He is going mad!” thought Lady Culdale. “Oh, how I wish that I had never asked him here!” Not the faintest suspicion crossed her mind that Captain Wynyard had had any share in the death of the woman whom he professed to admire so deeply. “I will go with you,” she said, gently; and she led the way to the room where all that was mortal of Gladys Rane had been placed. “Do not come in with me,” he said; “leave me awhile—alone with the dead;” and he closed the door. Lady Culdale, although frivolous, was a kind-hearted woman, and the terrible event that had happened under her roof had sobered and saddened her. She did not like to leave the unhappy man, for she did not consider him in a fit state of mind to be left alone; so she waited outside the door. Never while she lives will Lady Culdale forget the sounds that came from that death-chamber —the passionate torrent of words, the heart-broken weeping of a strong man in agony. She endured until she could endure no longer; then she opened the door and quietly went In.
He was kneeling, with bowed head, by the side of his beloved Gladys. What he said will never be told; but Lady Culdale, after a short space, took him gently by the hand and led him away. “Hush!” she said to him. That same night, late as it was, Captain Wynyard left the house, and they never saw him again. The usual formalities followed; an inquest was held at which the verdict was “Accidental death;” and then one of the most lovely and brilliant women of her day was laid to rest. Lady Kinloch felt the blow severely, for she had deeply loved the girl. Her indignation had been great on finding Captain Wynyard had been visiting at Culdale with her niece; but she said nothing. It was useless then, for Captain Wynyard had disappeared and Gladys Rane was dead.
CHAPTER XXIX.
Rood Abbey was looking its fairest when Angela reached home. She found her mother still weak and ill, but Intensely thankful to see her once more. She clung to her, weeping bitterly, and beseeching her never to go from her again. She was so gentle, so patient, so resigned, that Angela’s heart adhed to think how much she had suffered. “A thousand times welcome home, my darling!” said Lady Laura. “I do not know why you went, and I am satisfied that the reason should remain untold. It is all right now about the will—Mr. Sansome destroyed it,” ‘‘Thank heaven! But, mamma, you are looking very ill! Have you been ill since I went away? I have not been absent long, but it seems like years i” and she sighed as she remembered how much of horror and distress she had witnessed during that short time. They were walking together afterward, Lady Laura leaning upon her daughter’s arm as they wended their way among the fragrant garden-beds. ‘‘Mamma, darling,” said Angela, "I have much to tell you, if yon think you are strong enough to "bear it. What is the dearest wish you have now?” There was a sweet pathetic dignity in Lady Laura’s face as she turned to her daughter. “Heaven pardon me, my dear,” she replied slowly, “but my greatest desire now is to be left alone in peace with you. I am weary of the suffering that has been mine of late.” “Your wish is granted, mamma,” she said: “that is the one piece of good news I bring you. For the rest of your life you are free. Your daily martyrdom is ended. Captain Wynyard will never return to Rood.” Though jt tyas the very desire of her heart, the gentle woman trembled when she heard the words. “He will never return, mamma. You are free from him forever. He will leave England, apd we shall fie troubled by him no more." “Is it true, Angela," asked h>ady Laura —“really true?" *fYes, mamma, quit* true,” she answered. “Then I thank heaven! For, though I loved him with my whole heart, he never ioveg me; and he haa blighted all that
BY CHARLOTTE M. BRAEME.
was brightest and best in my life. And now I shall be free. His pretense had grown into torture that was greater than I could bear.” Angela clasped her arms round her mother’s shrinking form. “Yon will be my care new, darling,” she said; “and you shall miss no lovo. Try to forget him, and let him pass out of your life without regret.” “I do not regret him," sighed gentle Lady Laura. “I shall be happy in the thought that my martyrdom is at an end." “I have something more to tell you,” continued Angela, “that will grieve you in spite of all that you have suffered. Poor Gladys Rane Is dead!” “Dead!” repeated Lady Laura, greatly shocked. “Gladys "Rane! Oh, Angela, how terrible.” Then Angela told her mother how the Captain had been visiting nt the same house with Miss Rane; but she did not betray his secrets, never hinting at the true cause of Miss Rune’s death. Lady Laura believed, as every one else did, that Gladys had accidentally fallen into the lake. That was a day of great excitement and agitation to Lady Laura; but in her gentle heart was nothing but regret for her dead rival.
* CHAPTER XXX. Two months passed before Angela wrote her note and sent it to the address given to her by Lord Aricigh. It ran: “I am staying at Eastbourne with my mother. We are at the Queen’s Hotel. When you come, ask for Miss Rooden.” He arrived without an hour’s delay, his heart on fire to urge his suit. “At last!” he said; “and how I have longed for the day! And, my darling, before I ask you to be my wife, let me repeat that your secret Is safe with me. My dearest wish is that you fehould be Lady Arlelgh. 1 promise you never to allude tothe subject of your visit to Brantome again.” “I wish,” she said, gently, “our friendship had not begun as it did.” “Forget that," he said, laughingly. “You had, I am sure, good reusou for all that you did. We will date our friendship from now, and the first proof I ask of you is that you will consent to be my wife.” “Ask me two months hence,” she replied. “That will simplify everything.” “Will your answer content me theu?” he asked. “I think it will," Angela replied. And he knew his point was gained. It was some surprise to Lord Arlelgh to' learn that the “young person, Mrs. Bowen’s guest,” whom he had learned to know and love as Miss Charles, was the renowned beauty and heiress, Angela Rooden. The course of true love ran smoothly in their case, and when, in November, the engagement was announced, everyone pronounced it to bo a most suitable one. Lady Laura was delighted; and when the Countess of Arlelgh came back from Italy with Lady Maud a happier family was nowhere to be found. Lady Arleigh could never understand why her son would engage nn entirely fresh staff of servants at Brantouie Hall. Mrs. Bowen retired with a pension, good situations being found for the rest. Angela understood her lover’s motive, and thanked him in her heart for his kindly consideration. They agreed that at present they would not go to Brnntome. “I love the Hall,” she remarked, "but I shall always dislike the lake;” and her lover considerately had it drained and filled up. Soft green turf now marks the spot where Gladys Rane met her death. Lord Arleigh himself was no* sorry to have all trace of the lake removed, for it was to him the reminder of a grave. After their marriage Lord and Lady Arleigh spent the greater part of the year at Rood Abbey, nnd with them the gentle lady whose heart had been well-nigh broken, but whose martyrdom had ceased. When Lady Arleigh’s little son and heir was born they went to Lady Laura and asked her what name he should bear. She thought of the true, noble love she had once known, and answered, “Charles.”
So upon the fair old Abbey, with its smiling park-laud, deep peace fell once more. Lady Laura Wynyard rapidly recovered health and strength, and, though she was never quite happy again, her life was at least free from the cruel pain that had blighted her second marriage. She could never rectify the great mistake of her life, but her martyrdom had ended. Leading a quiet and peaceful life, as time rolled on she forgot the handsome Captain and his cruelty, and thought more of Sir Charles and his Unvarying affection. The Captain was well provided for, A liberal Income was settled upon him, and he took up his abode at Monaco, where he led a life of reckless extravagance and dissipation. On the fourth anniversary of the death of Gladys Rane the Captain met his death by violence, being shot by a notorious French count in a quarrel over a gambling transaction. Lady Laura lived to a good old age, and, though her declining years wore made bright and happy by the love and affection of happy grandchildren, who never tired of Rood, time failed to blot from her memory the story of her martyrdom. (The end.)
Careless Diction.
We have all heard of a piano for sale by a lady going to Europe with rosewood legs, but the following In relation to the cure of “gapes” In chickens Is certainly most remarkable: “Then when the chicken breathes," says the Informant, “I force the double horse-balr down Its windpipe as far as I can, twist it rapidly, and pull It up slowly, bringing with It two or three red worms about an inch In length and the thickness of a pin. I begin to market them when they weigh about three pounds to the pair. To prepare them for the market l bang them up by the legs, etc." Now, why should any one begin to market red worms, even when they weigh three poutfdS to the pair? And, as to hanging them up by the legs! Well, there’s no accounting (or tastes 1 And those worms must be of a most pecpllw hfee4l
THE INDIANA SOLONS
The Senate Wednesday, after an allday debate, passed the bill amending the general election law, substituting a pencil for the stamp now used in marking the ballot; preventing fusion between parties by providing that the uame of a candidate shall not appear more than once on any ballot, and prohibiting a candidate from withdrawing after his name has been certified to the election board. The bill was passed by a strict party vote. The (Senate also passed the caucus bill repealing the preseut metropolitan police laws and substituting one under which the new Republican Governor may appoint police commissioners for such throughout the. State. The Republicans in the House passed the legislative apportionment bill agreed upon in caucus.
The lower branch of the Legislature Thursday passed the bill providing for the creation of a labor commission aud for the arbitration of labor troubles. There was but one vote against the bill, and it is believed it will pass the Senate. The bill provides for a commission composed of two electors appointed by the Governor. One must have been for ten years an employe for wagea at a craft, aud the other must have been an employer of men for ten years. The commissioners are authorised to appoint a secretary at a salary of SOOO a year. In case labor troubles nrise the commissioners are to put themselves in communication with the parties to the quarrel and endeavor to bring about a settlement. In case of no settlement the commissioners aud the Circuit judge of the county In which the trouble arises shall compose a board of arbitration. The bill provides that the commissioners shall receive $lO a day for time actually expended, and the neeessury traveling expenses. There goes with thu bill au appropriation of $6,000 for 18!)7, and the same amount for 1808. The entire afternoon in the House wus occupied with a discussion of the bill presented by Representative Jones, the only colored member, providing that children of colored parents shall be admitted to the white schools of the State. Under the preseut law they ure supplied with separate schools in the larger cities, und are entitled to enter the white high schools. The House adjourned without having reached a vote on the bill. The Senate passed several bills of minor importance. Gov. Mount approved the bill creating a Superior Court circuit of the counties of Howard and Grant, and appointed Hiram Brownlee of Marion, late candidate for the nomination for Uulted States Senator, judge of the new court.
The bill of Gabriel Jones, the colored legislator from Indianapolis, providing that separate schools for colored children be done away with, was recommitted Friday by a majority vote for au amendment to the effect that where colored schools were not provided colored children should be pdinitted to the regular schools for white children with equal privileges. The bill establishing a new mathematical truth in squaring the circle was about to be passed by the Semite when the point was raised that the Legislature had no power to declare a truth, and it was indefinitely postponed. The ?.tate Superintendent has accepted the demonstration, and it is understood will introduce the same in Indiana text hooks. The demonstration allows thut the tlnio.honored multiple of 3.141(1 plus, by which the diameter of a circle is multiplied to find the circumference, should be 3.2. Dr. Goodwin, of Solitude, Posey County, the author of the rule, lias his formula copyrighted not only in this country but also in seven countries of Europe. No final action wus tuken Saturday by the House upon any measure. The Jones measure, concerning admission of colored children to public schools, wus recommitted after a long debate. The Senate passed the Wood bill to iucrense the salaries of the commandant and adjutant of the State Soldiers’ Home and to increase the maintenance fund from a per capita of $lO per month to $12.50. The Senate Self bill requiring township trustees to file their annual statements with the Auditor, the O'Brien bill providing for certain improvements in the Supreme Court Librury, and the Shively bill appropriating $5,000 for a statue of Morton in tile Capitol at Washington, - were pasHsd. The most important bill ueted on was a cignrette bill which had passed the House. It was amended so that the prohibition of sule to minors does not extend to all tobacco aud cigars. The Stato Board of Commerce bill for a commission to revise the laws relating to local jovernment was sent to third reading ns it passed the House, with nn amendment offered by Senator Houghton striking out the second section, which provides for tho payment of the expenses of the commission up to a limit of SI,OOO l year.
Cycling Apparatus.
It is from Russia this time that there conies a curious cycling apparatus. It is a sort of bicycle for police service which rolls upon the rails of a railway line. In reality, the word “bicycle” is a misnomer of this apparatus, which rests upon three wheels. Through its two principal wheels it rests upon the rail to the right, but is kept in equilibrium by a metallic arm terminating, on the rail to the left, in a small wheel. It is a crude apparatus, moreover, the two heavy main wheels of which are connected by a compact body, the various parts of which are roughly shaped, and which weighs no less than one hundred and ten pounds. The machine is actuated both by the arms and legs of the rider.
Names from the Days.
It is a peculiarity of Ashanti that the common names, seven In number, corresponds to the days of the week. “Kwalse” Indicates a man born on Sunday, “Kudjoe” on Monday, “Kwablna” on Tuesday, “Kwaku” on Wednesday, “Yao” on Thursday, “Kofli” on Friday, and “Kwainina” on Saturday. These are all accented on the Anal syllable.
Your Foot Gear.
Shoes are, in every part, machine made. It is said by scientific authority that there is no department of human industry in which machinery and the subdivision of labor hnve been brought to greater perfection than in the manufacture of shoes. In the great shoe factories, thero are women employed whose business the year round is to sew one seam and one only. Eveu the metal eyolets are placed in position and clamped by a mechanical device. Many schemes have been devised for a universal language, of which “Volapuk” is among the latest. About the beginning of this century an enthusiast proposed a universal language of which the numerals should represent the sounds. The Bushmen, or low-grade Hottentots, on the plains of South Africa, have a language which has been proved by Gamier to be a close approximation to that of the higher apes. It consists of hissing, clicking and grunting sounds.
Twins in Size, Shape and Activity.
This Is what those Important little organs, the kidneys, are when healthy. In disorder they may differ In all three particulars. Disease usually destroys them successively, not simultaneously, and one may be active while the other la aeml-paralyxed. Give to both a healthful Impulse, without exciting them, with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which forestalls such dreadful maladies as Bright's disease and diabetes. I’se the Blttera, also, for malarial, bilious, rheumatic, nervous, bowel and kidney trouble. It Is admitted by most divers that twenty-five feet Is about the limit at which they can see under water. Whin bllloui or costive, eat a Uaacarat, candy cathartic. cure guaranteed. 10c. 25c.
* Like rust on polishedjnetal LCI I ♦ J Blights and Crimps the Nervous System. ♦ | L ! keQll onrust St. &acobs Oil j » removes the blight and cures the pain. 7 YCATHARJIG CONSTIPATION^^ llellll' DRUGGISTS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED!? c,r ® eosstlpatlos. CascsreU are the Ideal Laxs- , nUuV/iiU i Dili UURilßliluuU fire, never grip or gripe, sot raasa easy satarsl reisltsi Bia- i pie and booklet free. Id. STEUMNW REMEDY CO.. Chicago. Montreal, Can., or Ken York. til. i KObastTnej IT WON'T RUB OFF. i SttfttVloWfiSorfltifglSlJit f IA D A OTIUF to * v up »- permanent and artistio A LAdAoi INt i For Halo by Paint Dealers Everywhere. IFF £ Tlßt P* rd " howln * 18 deairable tints, also Alabastlna # “Thoughtless Folks Have the Hardest Work, but Quick Witted People Use
SAPPHO Luxuriant meadows ar* the f*rm«r*« delight, und vrr mixtures. No need of waiting a lifetime for a yield tlous hay J>*’r acre. Halser Is the only beadsman in America growing grasses and clovers for seedl operates over 5,000 Keren, and produces only live, vlgorons, fresh, big yielding Grass and Ulover Heeds. 209 BUS. OHS! 173 BUS BURLEY PER URE. nlogue Is full of them, all sworn to. For 10 Cent* In Stamp* or Silver. We will send, upon receipt of 100, IS Farm Seed JOHN A. SALZER SEED C 0. u fl°, ME
REASONS FOR USING Walter Baker & Co.’s Breakfast Cocoa. wEti-jpc 1. Because it is absolutely pure. 2. Because it is not made by the so-called Dutch Process In : it 111, which chemicals are used. fi! i'll 3. Because beans of the finest quality are used. In IMM ® ecause * s made by a method which preserves unimpaired ; <! ffi ** ie exc l u ' s ' te natural flavor and odor of the beans. ; H ! 5* Because it is the most economical, costing less than one cent Hml Brim Be (lire that you get the genuine article made by WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Matt. Established 1780. * • t MTTttttttitttttttitttiittin An elderly lady living nt Fordham Heights, a part of New York City, and who was known to ba a warm advocate of Ripuns Tubules for any cuso of liver trouble or Indigestion, said loa reporter who visited her for the purpose of learning tbe particulars of her case: “ t had always employed a physician and did so on the last occasion 1 had for one, but at that time obtaine d no beneficial results. I had never had any faith In patent mcdWnes. but having seen Rlnans Tabules recommended very highly in the New York HtralJ, 1 concluded to give them a trial, nnd I found they were Just what my case demanded. 1 have never employed a physician since, and that means a saving of $2 a call, A dollar’s worth of Ripans Tabules lasts me a month, and I would not be without them now If It were my last dollar.” At the time of this Interview there were present two daughters who specially objected to their mother giving a testimonial v.-bich should parade her name in the newspapers, but to this tbe elder lady argued : “ There may be other cases Just like mine, and 1 am sure I take great pleasure In recommending the tabules to any one affected as I war. If the telling about my case in the papers enables some other person similarly affected to be as greatly benefited as I have been, I see no objection.” And the daughters, familiar with her case and knowing how earnestly she felt about the benefit sho had received from Ripans Tabules, decided that their mother was quite fight.
1 PTIIIII 1»<- TAFT'S ASTHM A I.KNK ASTHMA cured Never raito. Send vi ur'ddreA We will mail a iris' b .tile 1> Ul |> DR. TAFT BROS.. 4S Ha St.. Kocbesler, N V. | |\LL PATENTS. TRADE MARKS. Examination and advice as to Patentability of Invention*. send for Inventors' Uuidk. or How to On a Patbnt. Patrick O’Farrell. Washington, D.C.
Coughing Leads to Consumption
Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day Bodge* a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays or* dangerous. When men begin drinking, they generally atop thinking. Mrs. Winslow's Soothijio Srstrr for Children teething: sol tens tbe rums, reauces lnflsmnsatica. allays pain, cures wind colic. * cents e bottle, Jdst try a 10c box of Caa arets, candy cathartic. Onset liver aud bowel regulator mane. Ciaciam Mimn.ate Iver, Sidneys and howela New er sicken, weaken or trli a 10c.
«CURE YOURSELF! rritations or ulcerations >f mucous membranes. Painless, and not astria- , gent or poisonous. Sold by Druggists, or sent in plain Wrapper, Circular sent on request. - c. n. u. ■ vaMUn VTHEN writing to advertisers I please say yon saw tbe adviftliwwd In this paper, > c" .
