Democratic Sentinel, Volume 21, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 May 1897 — Page 3
A Sure Deliverance.
JCet instantaneously, It Is tni«, bat Id ■ short space of time, persons of a bilious habit are saved from the tortures which a disordered liver is capable of Inflicting by Hoatetter's Btomach Bitters, as antl-blllons medicine and aperient of the first rank. The pains In the right aide and through the right abonlder blade, the sick headache, nausea, constipation, and saffron hue of the skin, are entirely removed by this estimable restorative or tone to the organs of secretion and digestion. Equal parts of lime water and sweet oil well mixed will form a kind of ■oap which is very efficacious in taking out or removing inflammation, as well as for healing wounds caused by burns or scalds.
Impure Blood “I have found Hood’s Sarsaparilla an excellent medicine. My lltUe girl was afflicted with eczema for seven years and took many kinds of medicine without relief. After taking a few bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla she was cured.” Mas. Emma Fkanklin, Honeoye, New York. Get only Hood's, becauso Hood’s s Si, Is the Best—ln fact the One True Blood Purifier. Hood’c Dillc aru the best af’er-dl ner lIUUU & pills, aid digestion. 25c.
puftsl PE|lthJ ||||llj Every ingredient in j]j*||S MBi 1 Hires Rootljcer is health liShK fIHII giving. The blood isflns|l mSut improved, the nerves MSB HB| soothed, the stomach J|Mj benefited by this deliciousHfia? ■ hires! Mil Quenches the thirst, tickles ||g ■ the palate ; full of snap, sparkle vH ■ and effervescence. A temper- ■ ance drink for everybody. n ■ Hade onlj by The Charles E. llires Co., I vm cos is and pßsmrra Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza. Bronchitis. Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints. Lumbago, Inflammations, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, FROSTBITES. CHILBLAINS, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, ASTHMA, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURES THE WORST PAINS In from one to twenty elnutee. NOT ONE HOUR after reading thle adverlemeut need anyone SUFeER WITH PAIN. A half to a teasp xiuful n halt a tumbler or water will In a few minutes cure Cramps. Spasma, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, 9:ck Hoadaclie, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency, and all Internal pains. There Is not a remedial agent In the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all ether malarious, Bilious snd other fevers, aid il by IUDWtVS I*H .1,8, so quickly as R VI)WAVS RKAUY RELIEF. Fifty Cents per Bottle. Sold by Druggtstn. RADWAY,& CO .65 Elm Street, New York'
B» Jfl HARTFORD, KL ISi fSB Jgs CONN. Btel B Catalogue free Hki * rom ,^ ca^ers > by mail for one a-cer.t stamp. ALABASTINEwhat, A pure, permanent and artistic wall-coating ready for tne brush by mixing in cold water. FOR SALE BY PAINT DEALERS EVERYWHERE, _ n -_ i A Tint C3rd showing 12 desirable tints, fkp (■ also Alabastine Souvenir Rock sent free • •* *• •“ 'to any one mentioning this paper. ALABASTINE CO., Grand Rapids. Mich. CFsar EARN * BICYCLE V 600 ,lM< * Wheel* All [ _TafciV #VV Makes. Good as new. $5 to /&{\\ *§&&&. sls» *» ew Grade ’96 /S\\i l//W\ models, fully guaranteed. sll t 0 Special ClearL\KaH| ing Sale. Shipped afly- ■ where on approval. W/MSSJi We w 'h give »responsible apt. W/7/! uJr * n each town free use of sample \or wheel to Introduce them. Our reputation is well known throughout the country .Write at oaee for eur special offer L. 8. MEAD CYCLE CO.. WabJtsb Avenue, Chicago. IIL PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Examination and advice as to Patentability of Inventions. Send for Inventors’ Guide, or How to Get a Patent. Patrick o'Farrell, Washington, n.C.
Aliave been uslngA I Ayer’s Pills for tliir- \ fe?S||£=s£jgg|y \ \ I teen years, and find \ / that notliing equals i \ \ / them fer indigestion. I \ \ I They are tho only relief I \ lg?3|g?~=s3ga \ \ I have found In all these 1 \ \ I years for the suffering of \ J \ / dyspepsia and indigestion. I \Vtlf I Mrs. Mattie S. MiTcnF.ni, V v*' / Glad Ilill, Va., Peb. 21,189 C. I / “I have been using Ayer’s \ / / Pill* for years for bilious- \ / f/ \7 il I ness and constipation. X find \ / / V / I them very effective, and mild in \ I, i 1 V I I action. They suit my system in \ V' . \ \ \ 4 / every respect.” John F. Asil- 111 \ V\ j ley, Pelican, La., July 19,1805. I I V \ WEIGHTY WORDS ii U AYER’S PILLS. %
AN IDEA FROM AFRICA.
Cupboard for I’se Between Kitchen and Dining Room. Yankee notions of convenience are not so confined to Yankee- land that a description of a household contrivance from far-away Africa would fall to prove interesting to housewives. In a Morocco hotel, whose stone walls are very thick, there Is a long dining-room and a kitchen adjoining. With a direct communication between the two rooms, both odors and sounds might pass disagreeably between the
two; this Is, however, obviated by a revolving cupboard or dumb waiter placed between the two rooms. The wall Is about 18 inches thick. By permitting the cupboard to project slightly into the room, a circle of two feet and a half or three feet is secured. This is occupied by a revolving drum or cylinder four feet high and divided into two shelves. There is an opening down one side only. When this is toward the kitchen the closed back of the cylinder faces’the dining-room, and, aa it is made of highly polished mahogany, and the cupboard opening la finished at top and bottom with window casing, the appearance Is not at all bad. When the cook has placed the dishes for one course upon the two shelves of the drum a touch of the Auger whirls It noiselessly about, and tint waiter on the other side has only to take the dishes off.
Current Condensations.
In New York the average number of persons to a dwelling Is eighteen and one-half. Many of the mediaeval churches were originally constructed to serve also, when occasion required, as fortresses. The Pasteur institute in Paris is still as popular a resort for hydrophobic patients as It was when the fame of the scientist's cures by Inoculation was at the flood-tide. The Chinese have bred a whole colony of goldfish, each having two welldeveloped tails aud two sets of anal fins. Biologists say It would be equally easy to breed quadrupeds with eight legs.' In Wyoming Is a mound of rock and earth standing alone in the middle of a plalu, called Church Butte. It is of most fantastic shape and looks in the distance like the ruins of some grand old cathedral. A Danish author told Dr. Felix Oswald, of the case of a relative who would steal from himself. He used to tiptoe Into his own pantry and make off with uncooked prunes, raw onions or anything of the kind. The flagstaff upon which the first secession flag was hoisted in South Carolina when the State seceded in 1860 is still standing. It is fastened with iron cuffs to the gable end of an old storehouse at Skull Shoals postoffice.
An ingot of gold weighing ounces and worth about SSO is made by the gold beaters into sheets so fine that it would take 48,000 to measure an inch in height. By the labor of beating the gold acquires a value of S4OO, making over 26,000 sheets of gold foil or gold leaf, as It is usually called. Pages at the English court, appointed at the ages of 13 or 14, are mostly the sons of distinguished officers in the army or of high dlgnataries in the royal household, serve usually four years, at about SI,OOO a year, and are then presented with commissions in thg army, unless turned down for some cause. It is pointed out that the only mechanic burled in Westminster Abbey is George Graham, a native of Cumberland, the inventor of the deadbeat escapement, the cylinder escapement and the mercurial pendulum, besides sevral other improvements in apparatus useful in astronomical tvork. He was buried in 1751 and his funeral was attended by all the members of the Royal Society. No theory or hypothesis which has commanded general acceptation has yet been suggested for the explanation of the aurora borealis or northern light. What is known is this: The direction of auroral Jets or rays and the position of the crowns have a connection with the magnetic meridian, and*the aurora produces great magnetic perturbation. Therefore It seems evident that the theater of its action is the atmosphere, and that the agent to which its development is due is electricity, Influenced in some unascertained manner by terrestrial magnetism.
glffßcmotrulicgfutiitcl J. W. McEWKN, Publisher. RENSSELAER, - - - INDIANA.
LABOR UNION TRUSTS.
MOST POWERFUL OF ALL THE GREAT COMBINES. Ex-Fenator Ddmnnds Declares They Are the Worst of All— Chicagoan's Determined and Successful Effort to Die—Memphis Shortage Made Good. Edmunds on Trnsts. At the dinner iu Philadelphia given in honor of the former ambassador to Itjtly, Wayne MacYeagh, ex-Seuator George F. Edmunds received a cordial welcome. He touched a responsive chord when he spoke on the hostility that is now prevalent to trusts. He declared that the hostility was all one-sided, inasmuch as it ignored the great labor trusts. This is what he said: ‘’Somebody has said something iu the course of this evening on the subject of our economy, of the intensities of the concentration of various trusts, sugar, oil, tobacco and rope trusts. We find in the newspapers which print anything and everything anybody wants to say many things we don’t say, iota of things about these trusts. But have they got (hem all? Where is your plumbers’ trust? Where is your plasterers’ trust? Where is your carpenters' trust? Where is your every trust of labor and organization in every human industry that exists in the United States? There came under my observation in your city of Washington a touching illustration a few years ago. I had occasion to employ a plumber to do a small piece of work for me, and, during the progress of the work, he asked me if I could not find a place for his son in one of the departments. I asked him why he did not take his son into his own establishment and there teach him his trade. He said —I can hardly state it without emotion myself: ‘Senator, I cannot do it.’ I said, ‘Why?’ ‘Why,’ he said, ‘file Plumbers’ Union only allows two apprentices in the State front a certain district, and my son cannot get in.’ I said, ‘Why don’t you teach him your own trade in your own shop?' and, gentlemen, the reply he made was this: ‘Why, Senator, if I did. I could -not get a job in this whole city.’ Is not that a trust which is wrong? Well, that runs through every trade.”
DETERMINED TO DIE. Chicago Man Shoots Himself and . Falla Thirteen Stories. Prof. W. F. Mittmann of Chicago shot himself in the head and then threw himself from the balcony of the thirteenth floor of the Chamber of Commerce building to the main floor, where his mangled, lifeless body was picked up by the police a few minutes later. He left an explanatory letter declaring that his life was made unbearable by the extravagant tendencies and quarrelsome nature of his wife. Mittmann was 38 years of age and lived with his wife and 3-year-old daughter at 1149 North Clark street. He was a dancing master by profession, but owing to business reverses had been compelled to seek other employment to aid in supporting hia family. He conducted a dancing academy at 631 North Clark street, gave private lessons at his home and during the day worked as a collector for Bunge Bros., coal dealers at 616 West Lake street. About seven years ago Mittmann was the dancing master at the Germania Club aud later he opened a large hall on the West Side. This venture resulted in financial loss. Mrs. Miittmaun was found at her home, North Clark street, and had not been notified of her husband’s action until several hours later. She denied that she had ever quarreled with her husband. She said he had often said he was tired of living, but that she thought nothing of his talk. She said his business affairs caused him a great deal of worry and led to these remarks.
Athletes of the Diamond. Following is the standing of the clubs of the National Baseball League: W. L. W. L. Baltimore .. .20 0 Brooklyn ....13 14 Pittsburg ..-.16 8 Louisville ....12 13 Cincinnati ..19 10 New York... 10 12 Boston 16 10 Washington .. 8 17 -Cleveland ...15 11 Chicago 8 \9 Philadelphia 13 14 St. Louis.... 6 22 The showing of the members of the Western League is summarized below: W. L. W. L. St. Paul 22 8 Detroit 13 13 Milwaukee ..17 11 Minneapolis. 12 18 Indianapolis 15 10 Kansas City. 10 19 Columbus ...13 11 G'nd Rapids. 7 19 Another Viet tn of Cigarettes. William R. Ross, the 15-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. William Ross, of Stockton, N. .7., committed suicide Sunday byhanging himself. The boy was in good spirits when his parents started to church. On their return they found him hanging lifeless. He was addicted to the use of cigarettes, for which he was chided by his father. It is believed that he could not break off the habit and in despair took his life. Made Mia Shortage Good. The case of R. B. Armour, formerly postmaster at Memphis, Tenn., charged with embezzlement of Government funds, has been nolle prossed by the United States District Attorney, for the reason that the entire shortage, amounting to several thousand dollars, has been made good. Fhot by Her Son, Mrs. Diana Wundling, near Pomeroy, 0., who was shot by her son, Silas, because she demanded of him a log chain he had borrowed of her, died twenty-four hours later. The murderer, who is in jail, when told of his mother’s death, remarked stolidly: “Well, she ought to have kept away from my house.”
With Assets of $600,000. William Tarr, the well-known Kentucky farmer and distiller, assigned with assets of $600,000. Tarr & Co. also assigned with assets of $60,000. The failure is the largest in the State in recent years. Broke the Quarantine. The consignment, of adulterated brandy has run the San Francisco blockade which Food Inspector Dockery thought lie had placed upon it, and is said to lie well on its way across the continent. Roaring Furnace Reneath. The mines on the upper level of the old Scotch Hill, near Newburg, W. Va., are on fire and threaten the existence of the town, which is built over the mines. The fire was started years ago by malicious persons and has recently grown so large that the residents have become alarmed. Bank Teller l onnl Dead. George A. Taylor, a teller at the Third National Bank of St. Louis, was found dead in a room at the Normandie Hotel. He had committed suicide by slxooting himself with a revolver. When found Taylor, who was a married man, had In his hands a letter from a woman.
SPURNED BY SPAIN.
CUBAN REPORTS SHOW OLNEY OFFERED MEDIATION. Senator Foraker Springs a Sensation by Making Known Diplomatic Cor-respondence-Secretary's Plan for Pacifying the Island Is Disclosed. Given Out In Secret. Sensational developments marked th« Cuban debate in the Senate Wednesday. It was disclosed that President McKinley aud Secretary of State Sherman had given to the Committee on Foreign Relations certain information furnished by our consuls in Cuba, and requested that the names of the consuls he kept secret, because of fear that they would meet with violence, in case their identity became known to the Spaniards. Several Senators complained because confidential information had been given the Foreign Relations Committee, while it was withheld from the Senate as a whole. Then Senator Foraker submitted to the Senate copies of correspondence between Secretary Oluey aud the Spanish minister of foreign affairs a year ago, in which this Government proposed to Spain the use of our good offices in bringing about peace in Cuba, with continued Spanish sovereignty, a proffer which Spain rejected, with the plea that “there is no effectual way to pacify the Cubans upon the condition that they first submit to the mother country.” The pressure of the Cuban question, says a Washington correspondent is becoming so great in various directions that it is difficult to see how some action on the part of this Government can be much longer delayed. Growth of the feeling in favor of direct intervention, without wasting more time in useless resolutions of recognition, was indicated by two powerful pleas In favor of interference by this Government for the purpose of putting an end to the war. These speeches were made by Senators Lindsay of Kentucky and Foraker of Ohio, nnd both were stroug aud impressive. Thus the Cuban question is gradually assuming an acute form nt the capital. There Is not much difference of opinion as to the proposition that the United States has a duty to perform in Cuba, and that In all probability the only solution of the problem is intervention on terms which will save Spanish pride nnd give Cuba a free government under the protection of this Government nnd without war between Spain and our country. The real difference is between those who wish to go at this delicate task in an orderly, cautious, reasonable way, doing everything possible to avert war, while still pressing on to the main point in view, and those who would rush Into war at the drop of a hat or the firing of a pistol. There is some surprise that the administration should have given the official copies of the correspondence which took place between this Government and the Government of Spain a year ngo concerning mediation or the use of our good offices. That the administration had a purpose in permitting this correspondence to become public just now is generally accepted, and the purpose was, iu the opinion of most Senators, to show the world that this Government had already attempted the mild form of settlement called good offices, or mediation, but to no purpose on account of the unwillingness of Spain to accept our kindly intentions. The inference is that the administration wishes it known the next step In the matter which the United States may take with a proper regard to its own dignity is direct intervention. Annexation or a protectoracy might naturally follow intervention, for if Spain and her colony he separated order and pence must he secured in some manner. But a desire to meet the responsibilities of the United States iu a strong and unselfish way, to suppress a useless and apparently interminable war and avert human suffering, is the impelling motive. The agitation indicates that a great deal of history is to be written during the coming six months.
KENTUCKY MAY BRAND THIEVES
Kxtraordiuary Bill Introduced in the State Legislature. There was recently introduced in the Kentucky Legislature a bill providing for the branding of all burglars who were committed to the penal institutions of the State. The measure directs that nil such convicts shall have the letter “B” branded on both cheeks during their incarceration. The purpose of the father of the bill is to forever separate such criminals from honest, men nnd prevent them from hiding their past. The bill has man/
MARKED FOB I.IFK.
supporters and mauy enemies. Chief among the latter are the optimists who believe that criminals can and will reform under proper influences and circumstances. In such instances, they claim, the branding would be an outrage. It would prevent their living a decent, honest life, even if they were so inclined. It would also, they argue, drive men to more desperate crimes after their release, for the brands would bo a barrier to a life of anything save crime.
FLOOD OF 1897 OVER AT LAST.
Relief Work Practically AbandonedLoss Inti mated at $14,520,000. The rapid fall of Ihe Mississippi at all points from Memphis to the gulf gives notice that the flood of 1897 is over. It is now conceded by all the engineers, State as well as national, that there is no longer need for any fear from high water. Not even from the rise which comes down the Mississippi in .Tune. The Mississippi will have fallen so by June that it can take care of any rise that may come down from the Ohio or upper Mississippi. It has been decided also to abandon all relief work, except in a few localities. The colored relief committee at Vicksburg has disbanded because its services are no longer needed. The refugee camps at Natchez and Vicksburg have been broken up and the refugees sent home. An estimate of the actual damage done in the loss of stock and crops, houses destroyed and swept away, and railroad track injured is: Louisiana, $1,975,000; Arkansas, $4,325,000; Mississippi, SB,220,000; total, $14,520,000.
Playin' Possum.
‘•Playin’ possum” comes from the fact that the possum will feign sleep or death when poshed Into sudden danger of being captured. But pains and aches neTer play that kind of a game. They never try to fool anybody, and go to work to wake up people, leaving no chance to feign sleep. On the other hand, there Is a remedy known as St. Jacobs Oil that will Jull a pain or an ache so that it won't wake up again In the cure that follows Its use. Pains and aches are great or less in intensity just in degree as we treat them. Prompt treatment with the best remedy—St. Jacobs Oil—prevents their Increase and by curing prevents their return. Everything is gained by taking pains and aches in time for a prompt and perrna neut cure, and there is nothing better than the use of St. Jacobs Oil.
The King of Siam's Palace,
The palace of the King of Slam is Inclosed In high white walls which are a mile in circumference. Within them are contained temples, public offices, seraglios, stables for the sacred elephant, accommodations for 1,000 troops, cavalry, artillery, war elephants and arsenal and a theater.
Then Sleep Soundly.
You can’t afford to lie awake o nights. Nothing compensates for loss of sleep. Eight hours of good sleep every night is what you need if you hope to keep healthy nerves In your body and a clear head on your shoulders. Yet you cannot get rest enough while you persist in drinking coffee. No habitual cofTee drinker can depend on hit sleep. Why not break off the coffee habit and drink Graln-O in place of It? Gigilu-0 Is made from pure grains, has the rich seal brown color of Mocha or Java, Is nourishing and palatable—a food drink—without auy of the noxious properties of coffee. Having used It a short time you will prefer it to the best coffee that was eyer set on your table. Two points gainedhealth promoted, money saved. All grocers. In packages at 15c. and 25c. Herod the Great loved Marlamne, his wife, so devotedly that when be was summoned to Rome by Augustus to answer certain charges made against him and was afraid he might never return, he left her in care of three trusted servants,' with orders that If he himself were put to death by Augustus she was to be immediately killed.
Drunk for Twenty Years.
A correspondent writes: “I was drunk on and off for over tweuty years, drunk when I had money, sober when I had none. Many dear friends I lost, and numbers gave me good advice to no purpose; but, thank God, an angel hand came at last In the form of my poor wife, who administered your marvelous remedy, 'AntiJag, ’ to me without my knowledge or consent. I am now saved and completely transformed from a worthless fellow to a sober and respected citizen." If “Anti-Jag” cannot be had at your druggist, It will be mailed in plain wrapper with full directions how to give secretly, ou receipt of One Dollar, by the Reuova Chemical Co., 00 i>roadwny, New York, or they will gladly mall full particulars free.
The Czar's Exercise.
The health of the Czar Is excellent. He has nothing the matter with his brain, but Is keeping himself training by getting up at daylight anO running five furlongs, a verst, dally, timing himself. He amuses himself by shooting crows while riding a bicycle at high speed.
Shake Into Your Shoes
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for ttao feet It cures painful, swollen, smarting feet, and instantly takes the sting out of corns aud bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot-Ease makes tlght-flttlng or new shoes feel easy, it Is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. Try It to-day. Sold by all druggists and sboe stores. By mall for 25 cents, in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address. Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
English Cycle Trade.
England Imported $770,000 worth of bicycles and exported $2,305,000 worth during the first three months of this year, the first year In which account has been taken month by month of the trade In wheels at the custom house.— London Answers.
Ponder Over It.
A prominent building owner, with years of experience, gave the following instructions to his architect: “I hare had my experience with kalsomine and other goods claimed to be just as good as Alabastine. 1 want you to specify the durable Alabastine on all my walls; do not put on auy other manufacturers’ dope, If they furnish it for nothing. Alabastine is right, and when I cease to use it I shall cease to have confidence in myself or my own judgment." England has turned against Its own sparrow. The birds are being slaughtered wholesale by the farmers, especially in Yorkshire, and great disgust Is expressed at the matter of their taking ofT. The Board of Agriculture refuses to protect the birds.
American Ingenuity.
American ingenuity has always been a wonder to foreigners. We know of no better illustration of It than is displayed In the manufacture of guns. For instance, the repeating shot gun made by the Winchester Repeating Arms Co., > Jew Haven, Ct., which retails for about S2O, will outshoot foreign hand-made guns costing twenty times as much. This has been demonstrated time and time again. The leading shots of the country appreciate this and have put aside their expensive guns for the less costly but better shooting Winchester. The large illustrated Winchester catalogue is sent free upon request People never think of whistling In Iceland. It’s a violation of the divine law.
There Is a Class of People
Who are Injured by the pee of cofTee. Recently there has been placed in all the grocery stores a new preparation called GRAIN-O, made of pure grains, that takes the place of coffee. The most delicate stomach receives it without distress, and but few can tell It from coffee. It does not cost over one-fourth as much. Children may drink it with great benefit. 15c. and 25c. per package. Try It. Ask for GRAIN-O. It is said that Mme. Pompadour used to spend SIOO,OOO a year in perfumes. When the scalp is atrophied, or shinybald. no preparation will restore the hair; in all other cases, Hall’s Hair Renewer will start a growth. London theaters employ about 12,000 people. I know that my life was saved by Piso’s Cure for Consumption.—John A. Miller, Au Sable, Mich., April 21, 1895. wp» MUou» or coMln. out a OMcarn, «ao at catfeariie, curs guaranteed, ioc, S6a
No-to-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No-To-Bae regulate or remove your desire for tobseoo? Save, money, makes health and manhood. Cure tuaran.eed, 50c and sl, all druggists. February counts among Its anniversaries of birthdays Melancthon's, Abraham Lincoln’s, George Washington's, Susan B. Anthony's Thomas A Edison's, and others, distinguished and otherwise. JCST try 110 c box or Cawsreu, candy cathartic. On•st Urer aad bowel regulator mod*
Motherhood. y\ _ A mother who is in good physical condition trans mits 1 BBR IE *"t to her children the blessings of a good constitution. The child fairly drinks in health from its mother’s * Fy : robust constitution before birth, and from a healthy , Is not that an incentive to prepare for a healthy jgA ... Do you know the meaning of what fijb yVt is popularly called those “long- A / yC« Ings," or cravings, which beset so J&SOlfeA \ I *A. many women during pregnancy? There is something lacking in the mother’s blood. Nature cries out Fv and will be satisfied at all hazards. " /I v/vrlH- yfWB One woman wants sour thin J*' v another wants sweets, another wants salt things, and so on. W/T' /' . The real need all the time is to n enrich the blood so as to supply \ nourishment for another life, and jUh \ to build up the entire generative Wj , jl \ system, so that the birth may be jm / 't \ Kl possible and successful. !■/ i 1^ If expectant mothers would fort- V ' \ yx 4/ >/ I lfy themselves with Lydia K. Pink- If/ * • ■' ) *■/ ~-****^' ham's Vegetable Compound, which f / for twenty years has sustained * thousands of women In this condition, there would be fewer disappointments at birth, and they would not experience those annoying “ longings.” • In the following letter to Mrs. Finkham, Mrs. Whitney demonstrates the power of the Compound in such cases. She says: “ From the time I was sixteen years old till I was twenty-three, I was troubled with weakness of the kidneys and terrible pains when luy monthly periods came on. I made up my mind to try Lydia E. Piukhum's Vegetable Compound and was soon relieved. After 1 was married, the doctor said I would never be able to go my full time and have a living child, hs I was constitutionally weak. I had lost a baby at Beven months and a half. The next time I commenced at once and continued to take your Compound through the period of pregnancy, aud I said then, if I went my full time and the baby lived to be three months old, I should scud a letter to’ you. My baby is now •even months old.and is as healthy and hearty as one could wish. “ I am so thankful that I used your medicine, for It gave me the robust health to transmit to my child. 1 cannot express my gratitude to you; I never expected suoh a blessing. Praise God for Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound, and may others who are suffering do as I did and find relief, and may many hotneß be brightened us mine lias been.”—Mbs. L. Z. WiUTJfEt, 0 George St., E. Somerville, Mass.
f The Man tihoisßaising sKfCro, | j —realizes that the harvest time Is ahead. jP W Ideal farming comprehends not only the growing of the tallest grain—the 0k 'W& most tons-to-the-ocre of hay) the best farming—the farming that pays must tjß) /S' contemplate something more than this! for there is a harvest time, and lust In dc\ proportion u . crop ir evtd tucctulully, rprrdily *nd rconomiully, in jurt Harvesting Machines ore the profit-bringing kind) they are built for long wear, (W 0. hard work, light draft, and in short, to satisfy. There are other kinds that Jl don't cost os much, but theta's nothing cheaper than the beat. gs McCormick Harvesting Machine Company. Chicago, \S OH The Light-Running McCormick Open Elevator Harvester, K The Light-Running McCormick New 4 Steel Mower, § <UL The Light-Running McCormick Vertical Corn Binder and U The Light-Running McCormick Delay Keeper for eale everywhere.
/Qandy cathartic vabcaTWfo/ X^cimcoibuwioir^ as* sotruosists ißrnmi plo sad booklet fretb 14. CTKBUKO BBHKDT Sontred. Can., or^fi «w Tort. 111. REASONS FOR USING Walter Baker & Co.’s t Breakfast Cocoa. t. Because it is absolutely pure. 2. Because it Is not made by the so-called Dutch Process in which chemicals are used. 3. Because beans of the finest quality are used. A Because it Is made by a method which preserves unimpaired the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans. 5. Because it is the most economical, costing less than one cent Bo aura that you get the genuine article made by WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorcheitcr, Mate. Established I7fo.
YOU WILL REALIZE THAT “THEY LIVE WELL WHO LIVE CLEANLY,” IF YOU USE SAPOLIO
#75 SSO "Works - t/ot. makers^ CHICAGO H L //VO/S CATAL9GVE FREE ENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. tBmkVSBSI .'MSSEWit a Tie. la feet war, 15 adjudicating claims, ally. line*
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Is tttcen Internally. Price Ts cents. A descendant of Rob Roy, the fanning Highland outlaw, died In a Scottish poorbouse. Mr*. Winslow's Sooth r to Stxcv for Child.-** toothing: gotten. the Bums, rrances lafi.mm.tlo*, sUars pain, cures wind colic, a ctau . bottle. Cleans stlmn.tte Im, X dneya sad bowel* Kw rr. eken. weaken nr grlro. 10*
*CURE YOURSELF! U» Bln Q for unnatural liacbargca, inflammations, rriiAiom or ulceration* >f tuucoui membrane*. Painless, and not aatriu- , gent or poUonoua. Said by DrurgUla, or aent In plain wrapper, by express, prepaid, for $1 no 6r3boltlea.t2.TS. _ Circular aent on request. (JCT Dipl] nulctly. Send for-DU#lnventions Wantvt I nlvn y od." Edgar Tate A Co- 246 B'way, 5. Y. ~ C N. V. Ko, aa -97 IUHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS VT please say you MW the adrurttolTS—> ia Oua paper.
