Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 28 June 1889 — Page 6
't4
p|l/ l!111
$
5 S?
1
I
i-
8sp?\'
SK-
E"
UJUUk
Horse Sheets keep horses smooth, clean and ready for driving.
The owner of this horse spends an hour a day cleaning him rather than buy a Horse Sheet.
5/A Ironside Sheet
The Strongest Horse Sheet made.
5/i
S^
ih
I
Lap Dusters
Fait Colore will trash.
SA
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54
Horse Covers
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5/&
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Aio tliu Best *nd Strongest.
Don't get stuck with poor Horse Sheets. If your dealer don't have
54 Ironsides Sheets
DR. KILMbK
ask him to
order some for you. (Copyrighted iSir,, by Vfc. AVP.ES «i SONS.1
nn Kit MPR't Stop
that Cold, Cough,
ftnd
foklinff
in
,^ Throat!
Arrest that Catarrh,Bronchi tist or Asthma. Tills
Remedy relieves quickly, Cnrcs permanently. It prevents Decline, NiglitrSweets iitiil death from Consumption. igrVrepared at
SAVES YOUR LIFE
PR. KILXKR'S
1 DISPENSARY,Binghnmton, N. T. I Letters of inquiry answered. Guldo to Health Sent Free).
Sold by lrugglet».
To Care a Bad Congh
Use "Dr. Kilmer's Cough-Cure (Consumption Oil). It relieves quickly, stops tickling in the throat, Hacking, Catarrh dropping, Decline, Nightsweat and prevents death from consumption. Price 25c. Pamphlet Free. Binghampton. N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by all druggist.
I.D.&W.
KANSAS COT
AND ALL POINTS WEST. LT. Indianapolis, Ind 3.51 p.m. 11.00 p.m. Ar. Decatur, Ills 9.05 4.00 a.m.
St. Louis, Mo 7.45 Springfield, Ilia 10.25 5.55 Jacksonville, Ills 11.36 7.12 Qnincy, Ilia 10.45 Keokuk. Ia 11.50 Hannibal, Mo 2.00 a.m. 10.40 Ar. Kansas City, Mo 9.20 a.m. 9.30 p.m.
3•vl
CI
II
TDAItl Has Parlor Coaches to
li Mi I nMIll
Decatur, and Elegant
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a
Jno.
IP
8.
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To Quiney, Ills., or Hannibal, Mo., without leaving the train. Reclining Chair and Sleeping Car space renerved at I.. D. & W. Ticket Office, 99 8. Illinois St., under Surgical Institute, Indianapolis.
Lazarus, H. A. Qherrlcr, Dal raw.
Aunt.
Ctt/ IlekM i|nt
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To Care Heart Disease
Use "Dr. Kilmer's Ocean-Weed Heart Remedy." It regulates, corrects and relieves the most distressing cases. Price 50c, and $1.00. Pamphlet Free. Binghamton, N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by M. C. Quiglev.
JSMm
MONQN ROUTE
»g)l tOP1gVmt.itWMBMT CW CACO 8T.(Ca-
ALWAYS GIVES ITS PATRONS Cha Von
Worth .of
ZhalrKanarty Taking Them and
Chicago Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati
Louisville
PlJLLNAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR CARS AUTMINS RUN THROUGH SOIJD Tickets Sold and Baggage
Checked to Destination.
(TOtt Maps and Sims Tableo If you mt to tM mora fulljr informed—all Ticlw,.\««»ta Oonpoa (HiMn limttwi~w
KMWM
V.O. MoCOBMIOK, «. F. I. A|t, Ohltacf, III*
A CASTAWAY.
Who Didn't Enjoy Himself as Robinson Crusoe Did.
New York Sun
If boys did not get the idea of going to sea, the supply of sailors would by and by give out, but I do not believe that one boy out of twenty who has grown to be a sailor came by the occupation legitimately. The majority of them ran awav from home to go on their first voyage, and would have been glad to quit the sea forever before they had been out a week. I had the romantic idea of the average boy, and I ran awav to sea, and the reason I became a sailor was because circumstances afterward obliged me to be. I sailed for the best part of sixteen years, shipping in all sorts of craft and with all sorts of crews, and it was rarely that I found a sailor who would not have gladly traded his his occupation with a wood sawyer. The romance is all in the books. A Bailing crafr., either in port or on a voyage, is surrounded with any thing but romance.
I found, too, that almost every boy I encountered on shipboard had a Robinson Crusoe life for his pet theory. He was aching to be cast away on some uninhabited island, and he had it all planned out how he was to live on the land, ltwas my fortune to be thus cast away once upon a time, and I will give my experience in order that the boy readers of the Sun may draw conclusions. There was also a curious coincidence connected with my adventure which will bear relating.
We were on the run down from Yokohama, Japan, to a port in Cochin China, on an English tea brig called the Russell. Our course lay to the south down the Pacific to the island of Formosa, f.nd then around into the China Sea. It was the season for squalls, and the first four days out gave us plenty to do, although we made good progress. On the evening of the fourth day, just as twilight was coming on, a sudden squall laid us almost on our beam ends, and while in that position we were swept by a sea which carried me overboard. I don't suppose I was even missed for the next quarter of an hour, and I was no sooner in the water than I understood that the brig could do nothing for me. No craft leaves a man to drown if there is the slightest show to save him, but I knew the brig had her hands full with the squall. I was near done for before I got a breath of air, and I had not yet pulled ray self together when I flung out my arm and touched a solid object. It proved to be a cage containing about twenty live fowls, which had fetched away, and I wasn't over five minutes in making fast to it by means of my belt. By the time I could look around the night had come down and the brig was nowhere to be seen. The squall lasted about twenty minutes, and then passed away, to be followed by a steady breeze durine the entire night.
I had no idea that the brig would return to look for me, pnd the best thing I could do was to make myself comfortable. The water was warm, the night balmy and starlight, and the sea was not heavy enough to annoy me much. I had every hope of being picked UD the next day, as vessels were numerous on that route, and so, taken all in all, I was not in despair. I was driven to the west at a steady pace up to about midnight, and then a queer thing happened. I Was on top of the coop or cage, which was buoyant enough to float me afoot above the surface. It had no doubt been iashed to the deck by a rope or two, and portions of these ropes might have been trailing underneath, or it may oe that in going overboard it had entangled a rope. At any rate, at about midnight there was a sudden commotion under and about me, and then my craft started off at almost railroad speed. I have an idea that a big shark came nosing around after me and became entangled, but it might have been some other large fish. Whatever it was, was fast and acting as a tug, and the way he towed that cage along the surface was a caution. He tried diving, but he could not pull it under, and seeming to be more frightened by this discovery he set off with increased speed.
For at least three hours the shark, or whatever it was, ran to the west at a rate of speed which could net have been less than 'en miles an hour, and the first flush of day was in the horizon at my back when there was a shook and a crash, and I went end over end off my boat. To tell the truth, I was asleep. I had been towed so steadily and rode so easily that I went to sleep without knowing that my eyes had closed, struck out and began swimming, con fused and frightened by the shock, but I had not made a hundred strokes before beached myself on the sand and saw that I was ashore on an island. I sat down to wait for daylight, and when it came the situation was plain. I was on a thickly wooded island, and two hundred feet irom the beach due east of where I stood was the wreck of the hencoop entangled in a coral reef which now and then showed its head above water. Between me and the reef the water was ten feet deep and quiet enough to float a canoe.
Off the southern coast of Japan are a lot of islands called the Lieon-Khieon group. All o( them are inhabited now, but at that time only the, two or three
a common sailor, but it did not take me a gre&t while to figure out that I had been cast ashore on one of this group. Had I started out to become a second Robinson Crusoe, I could not have chosen abetter location to begin business. The climate was perfect, the island loaded with various wild fruits, and fish were leaping up all around me. My first move was to take off my wet clothes and hang them up to dry, and while they were drying I made a breakfast from wild fruits. After getting into my clothes again I took an inventory and found myself possessed of a sheathknife, a plug of tobacco, three or four buttons and a few Bilver coins. Had there been a wreck to draw on, as in Crusoe's case, I should have been more cheerful. I then eet out to survey my domain, and by noon I found that I was on an island about two miles long and one mile across. It was a regular grove' with high and dry ground, and an abundance of fruits and berries. In that walk I found the wild tea plant,potatoes, maize, onions, cabbages, rice, turnips, mulberries and bananas. There were plenty of birds, but I did not find a reptile or wild animal of any sort.
The island was a paradise in almost every sense, but long enough before night I was greatly troubled in my mind as to how I was to get along. A young sailor with a hearty appetite craves something more solid than wild fruits. I wanted a fire, and 1 had no means of procuring one. I wanted company, but even the birds avoided me. I wondered how I could make a signal, and what kind of craft came that way, and how far to trie west the other islands were, and before night I was so homesick and broken up that I was ready to Bhed tears. I crossed the island twice during the afternoon, looking more particularly to make sure there were no snakes, of which I felt an awful dread, and, as I failed to find any, I made my bed that night under a tree on some boughs cut ofl. I slept fairly well, and my second breakfast wt,s again made of iruits. When I had got my fill I determined to make a fire. The novelist of to-day will have a cast-away youth rub two dry sticks together for a few minutes and start ablaze but I got the dryest sticks I could find and rubbed until I was completely tired out, and I could not even blacken them. I got some dry moss and struck stones together but the moss would not ignite it. Theree-quarters of the day was spent in efforts to get a fire, and then I had to give it up. A smoke would have been the best signal to a passing craft, but as I could not get afire and as I had no clothes to spare, being in my shirt sleeves when I went overboard, I had to aoandon the idea and hopfe that some native craft would touch the shore
I had landed midway of the island, on the eastern shore, and the spot was as pleasant as any other locality. Therefore, on the third day I built tne a comfortable shelter under the trees, and settled it with myself that I was in for it for some time to come. Twice that day I saw sailing vessels to the east, but miles away. I also went to the south, west and north Bides of the island, and piled up shells on the beach anove the tide mark and placed sticks on top of them pointing my way. Whoever landed would be apt to see them and understand that some one had been castaway.
A week passed, and no craft came near. At the end of five or six days I was thoroushly tired of my feed, but there was no change, unless I wanted raw fish cr flesh. I could have made a
fljittt
out of vines and caught some fish, 'driiiould easily have killed some of the birds with a club, but the absence of afire was the drawback. Few men get less sound sleep than a sailor. Many a time I have promised myself a slumber of a week at the end of a voyage. I ought to have slept like a stone on my island as there was nothing to make me afraid, but-I was more wakeful than on shipboard
About the middle of the second week I had an adven.ure which quite broke me up for- the next day or two. Having seen no sharks within the reef, I had taken a swim in the clear, still waters every morning. On this morning, soon after getting out of bed, I stripped off and jumped in with a great splash, and began floundering about. I was about to strike out for the reef when I saw tbe dorsal fin of a shark between me and it. and I turned and landed without loss of time. As I looked back something struck at me, and fell short by only a foot, and I leaped away, just in time to avoid another feeler of
a
ways afar off. I had become so sick of my fare that I scarcely ate anything, and th.6 lazy life became a positive disgust At the end of the fourth week I would have agreed to work one year at digging without pay for a passage to civilization. On the second day of the fifth week there was a gale and a heavy sea from the east. At about noon on the third day a shin's yawl nearly full of water, but containing a woman, diove ashore almost at my feet. There was a heavy surf, notwithstanding the coral reef, and had I not been on hand the boat would have be pulled back by the undertow and carried out among the rocks and smashed. The woman had lashed herself to one of the thwarts, and was nearly exhausted with hunger and exposure, It. was little I could do for her except to give her water and food, and it was sundown before she could tell her story. She was the wife of Capt. Bradburncf another English tea brig, the Constella tion. I was coming down the Pacific when washed overboard. She was going up. A gust or squall heeled the Constellation over, and she was boarded by 9 sea which swept Mrs. Bradburn and tWo men away, and took with it the boat and a lot of deck raffle. The men she saw struggling as Bhe got hold of the boat, but they were doubtless drowned. Itwas almost dark, as in my case, and she also drove to the west. How she got into the boat she could not remember, nor was she clear as to how long she had floated. She thought it must have been a great deal longer than I figured.
It was three days before the woman picked up her strength and courage,and by that time I wao ready to leave the Uland. The mast and sail belonging to the boat had been stowed under the thwarts and were safe, and all I had to do was fill a number of the big shells with fresh water, of which, as I have forgotten to state, there wa9 a fine supply on the island. We lefc in the morning, heading to the south, and at three o'clock in the afternoon we were picked up by an American ship called Happy Home. She was bound up for Japanese teas, but that same day we signaled an English ship coming out of Shanghai and bound home, and Mrs. Bradburn was transferred. That was the last I ever saw or heard of her, though I know the ship reached England safely. I was a roving sailor, with no home or address and no matter how badly her husband wanted to thank me, he knew not where I was to be found.
Dangerous Ground.
ilan Francisco Chronicle.
They were getting a kindergarten lesson. The teacher took them as very simple subjects. She touched a table. "What is this?" "Wood." "What is this?" she asked as she touched the fender. "Iron." "What is this?" and she took up an acid bottle. "Glass." "What is this?" and Vne touched her watch chain. 'Rrass," said one small boy, and she changed the subject.
Pointer for the Beardless Youth. Norristown Herald. Anna Collins, of New York, was threatened with such a growth of whiskers that she consulted a doctor, who put her under treatment for their removal. She afterwards sued him for damages, alleging that his treatment had produced a lull beard on her face, Smooth-faced young men who want a beard on their faces should consult that doctor and try his treatment for the removal of whiskers.
Some idea may be formed, of tbe vast quantity of water discharged by South Fork Lake into tbe Couemaugh Valley when compared to the flow over Niagara Falls. Estimating the Niagara supply at 33,00i\000 tons of cubic feet per hour, and taking the measurement of the lake to have been miles long by 14 miles wide, with a mean depth of 30 feet, we have the enormous volume of one trillion of tons of water, which would require thirty hours in passing over Niagara Falis.
THE
monstrous
devil fish. I could plainly make him out on the bottom, and he had come within an ace of getting hold of me. The shark, which was folly sixteen feet long, advanced toward the beach, and as he reached the spot where the devil fish lay a row began. The shark was seized by at least two of the feelers, and in the first moment he was rolled over and over. Then he pulled himself together, and for tbe next five minutes the water was churned to fury. I think the shark got the best of the fight, as he made off after awhile seem ingly unhurt, while pieces of one of the feelers came ashore to prove that it had been severed from the body by the shark's teeth.
The second week passed, and a third and a fourth. During this time I Were
tfefSP
sighted tnanjr
W
SILENT IiA\D.
The Silent Land.' What undefined desire Wakes to these words, like to the lambent ft re Seen over marshland wastes, at dead of night Flickering afar in wtird, uncanny ilight!
Tbe Silent Land, which poets love to name' Mykterious region, where the present frame Of all that is, beyond our fancy's rmge. Doth yield itself to supersensual change.
The filent Land, where dread as olden fatps. Vague, K»mbrc tliadows guard the entrance gates, And where glide through the vapor sudden gleams, As 'twere, a spectral day's suasetting beams.
The Silent Land, whereon the wa,:i sun-slow Spreads, as a red moon o'er plains of snow. Upon which birch trees lean across the tracks Where wolves arj wont to race in fami»hel packs.
The Silent Land, a broad domain, so still vt«to That its deep qniet gives the heart a thrill, As when night fowl sail by on noiseless wing. A thrill uon as no sound hath power to bring.
The Silent Land, which stretches on and on Dim outlined as ibe mlst-veil"d hills of dawn Vitas where human vision humbly gropes
Midst ttie long cypres* boughs that gloom the slopes.
The Silent Land! No breezy and yet what watts Are these which pJsy about the portal shaft1*. Chilling the white-lipped wanderer,* who wait To pM the boundry the unknown State? —William Strutheis.
SOMETHING NEW. The Patent
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lOOBaautffol Pftturaa.
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aH
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a J/'ullness or
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Tho*a aTC tWG8tcd Ot OHC€. Swt til-
»r 'X^ina of the Itend, Vertiyo Sacrai ri.iun 12, la. 14, and Dizzinessarepromptiy »r che lower iin»b«. cured. For Nervous Headache and Insomnia or Nervous
The
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5/A Clipper Fly Nets
Tsuniter*.
Eqsal to Leather at Half tb* Cait.
100 other styles of S/A Horse Sheets and Fly Nets, at prices to suit everybody. For sale by all dealers. If you can't get them, write us.
U5/At
#ors£
BLANKETS
ARE THE STRONGEST.
NONE GENUINE WITHOUT THE aW LABEl Manufd by WM. AYKES & Sows, Plillada., w* make the famous Horse Brand Baker Blankets'
KILMER'S
is
in con
stant danger of Apoplexy, Shock or Sudden Death 1 Tii id liemetly regulates, relieves, corrects and cures.
Prepared at Dr. Kilmer's DlsrEssAMY, Bingham ton, N. Y. 6far. Letters of Inquiry answered.
Use "Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Kidney Liver and Bladder Cure." It relieves quickly and cures the most chronic and complicated cases. Price 50c and $1.00. Pamphlet Free. Binghampton, N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by M. C. Quigley.
DR. KLINE'S
GREAT
NERVE RESTORER
Back
view
Wakefulness,
it ia a specific. It brings sweet repose and refreshment to the tired Itrain. lt is particularly adapted to Nervous and Jielieate ladies.
Overworked Jtusiness Dten, with a Shattered Nervous Hustem, rt quire it. J'ersons in tered Nervous ftystem, require it. from Xf«# elief. The entire Ne-r-strengthened, and anew vigor imparted. For J'alpitation ami Muttering of the Heart, loss of Memory, Melancholy, Aversion to Society, Confusion of Ideas, Un-
Dreams.Fainting Spel ls,Hysteria,
mothering, Fear and Dread of Comrny Hanger, Sense of Self Destruction, IJyhtHeadedness, Dots or Specks before the Fyes, Blotched Face, and all Despondent Symptoms,resulting from Overwork,Excesses and Indiscretions: It Work* Jfnnders. It is %n fact-THE GREAT NERVE RESTORER.
It is prompt, sure and safe in its action, nearly always and asif by magic, arresting all Fits. Epilepsy, Irritable, Excitable, and Unsteady Nervous Affections by first day use of the medicine. A trial is conviction. No Delicately fh-ganized Nervous System should ever be without it. It is not an Opiates Does not contain Narcotic Foisonsp ft or does it disagree with the system. For full particulars send for Free Treatise to
R. ZZ. KLINE, M. D.
931 Aroh Street, Philadelphia, Pa* Price, $1.00 And $2.00
See Druggists,
Jonc»— "What are you talkMing about t" Smith—"What everybody talks about they O toy that for nrlyhf* 111*jj" rut, Kidney, Liver or
Bladder Complaint* thin S. remedy has no equal." T? It ffoea Itlflit to tbe Spot tgrPrepnred at Dr. Kilmei's
Disiiensai-y,Binghoniton,N.Y
O
wir»
VIB RATOR
HE Grain-Saving,Time-Sav« ing, Money-Saving Thresher of this day and age. AS More Points of Exclusive
W
O
Guide to Health (Sent Firco).
$5.°° Sold by lrnggl»t8. fj
To Gu re Kidney Troubles
Is a Marvelous Medicine. For all XHseaset of the
Brain, Heart&Neryous System.
IT IS THE GREAT
Nerve Tonic and Sedative. Tan Sper ifir for all Sensitive, Irrita Ir ,Extrltahle ami Spnsmod ie Nerve. Affections Jf'its, Kpilvpsy and nil yervouftne.su. Thin rrtnetlif nets Directly untl tipeeifienlly upon the limin and JVerve Centres it restores lost Action of lite Urn In:
.. and Vitalises the Nervous
of
the brain, .»
^iul oonl mil It* branches SystCMl. AI %S •hawing the posterior
di
einedv for Convulsions,
{K"'.Zwe.u»*n.br*or' "hi Catalepsy nud Chorea or .St. uerres throughout the body. Its JSpUepsy, or Fnlllny of the Kinu .y.tem. s, Sichness are truly Mnrvrl:^,alo.rJ,.o,h.r'*c. ,U ous, the Spasms beiny in• hiiiiiB. 4. nhim of ti» stantly stopped, /tram onhoe. s, »n^iriexvi.gC8tion
1
Superiority than all otheas combined. VERY Thresherman and Farmer is delighted with its marvelous work.
E N E
OT
only Superior for all kinds of Grain, but the only successful handler of all Seeds. NTIRE Threshing Expenses (often 3 to 5 times that amount^ made by extra Grain Saved.
ORKMANSHIP, Material, and Finish beyond all compariaon.
IBRATOR owners get
1
R"
One of every five we meet has some form of Heart Disease, and
Machinery. Send for pamphlet. Address yfir.
fankakee
\R0UTE
CUWf
Magnificent Parlor Cars on Day Trains. SPECIAL PULLMAN SLEEPERS OM yinht Trains bet. Indianapolis and Chicago.
a niilfl Afl close connection made with all
AI LnluAuU
for
IT AlftllllKlkllTI
ktfD|
Lettera of Inquiry answered.
11» Guide to Health Sent FKKK.
Mother, Wife, Daughter. These dull tired looks and unpleasant feelings speak volumes. "Br. Kilmer's Female Remedy" builds up quickly a run-down constitution and brings back youthful beauty. Price $1.00. Pamphlet Free. Binghampton, N. Y. Sold recommended and guaranteed by M. C. Quigley.
.r
the
best jobs and make the most Money. NCOMPARABLE for Simplicity, Efficiency, and Durability.
BYOND all rivalry for Rapid Work, Perfect Cleaning, and for Saving Grain. ,EQU1RES no attachments or rebuilding to change from
Grain to Seeds. BROAD and ample Warranty given on all our machinery.
A
RACTION Engines Unrivaled in Material, Safety, Power and Durability. UR Pamphlet giving full information, sent Free. It tells about this great EVOLUTION in Threshing
SRI 8g§
..m
I THE POPULAR LINK BBTWKBM Cincbnati, Indianapolis^
LAFAYETTE AND
C.I.STL&C.RY.
CHICACO.i
iUttfftoa
The Entire Trains run Through Without Change. Pullman Sleepers and Elegant Reclining Chair Pars on Night Trains.
the West and lortbwwt if
close connection made for
in Cincinnati.with the trains of the C.VT.&B. K.K. (B. A O.), N.Y. P.& O. R. R. (Erie), and the C.C. & I. Rv (Bee Lint), lor the East, as well as with tKe trains of the C. S. O. & T. P. Ry (Cincinnati Southern), for the South and Southeast, gives itan advantage over all its competitors, for no route from Chicago, Lafnyotto
or
to
lt
Indianapolis can make
connections -without compelling these
submit to a long and disagrc transfer for both passenger and ba|
eeable omnibus gg»ge«
Five Trains each way, dailfcxcept Sunday. Tlirce Trains way •n Sunday, between IndianapaD* and Cincinnati. .—- Through Tickets and Baraaw Checks to all Principal Points canoe obtained at any
Ticket Office, C. I. St. L. & C. R^"' *lsovV'a. the line at all Coupon Ticket Oflices throughout the country.
Aerenli"
IXDIAXAPOLIS, ISO. LifiTHI*,
JOHN
EQA9U
Gen'l Pass'r and Ticket Agent*
CIKCIHIAT1.0.
gggeoild fiOLOWATCH Sold for #iOO unFREEMeatyWarranted.
til lately. Beet |SS watch in th* world. Perfect timekeeper. .Solid Gold Hunting CaM* (elegant and magnificent.
Both ladlee'and geuta'sUea with worka and caaes at equal *alaa.OKE PEBSOS In each locality can •ecara oj
DR. ELLIOTT'S
Medicated Food,
A Sure Cure for all Diseases in
HORSES,
Cattle, Sheep and Hogs,
Arising from Impurities of the Blood, and from Functional Derangements.
A DEAD SHOT ON W0RM8, AND A CERTAIN IEVENTI0N & MOO CHOLERA.
#5s
FUSE.
Hour tollpoulblat
We answer—we want one son In .ach locality, to keep to i,-,4
Ihatrhomes,and»bow to thosawly^l.acomgleteUne^afogf «dnaUe and very asefol UOTJSKHOI-U MAMPf.ES. •thesa samples,aa well as the wateh,we send free,»nU a.—
them in your fcm« for tnooUii mil «hown lh««
toSJU who mar ba« called,they gSSjg
aurroundtnff country. This, the most wonderful offer erar known,is made In ordor that our
sampjesmay
bepawed at aaom
sh.r. thev can be seen, all over Amorlca. Write at once, aw •ake'sure of the chance. Reader ft will be hardly a nyJ1™®*!* fcr you to show thesamplsa to thoee who may ™nd your reward will be most satisfsctory. which to write us coats bat 1 cent and after youkuow alljll yow To not carTto go further, why no barm ^tone. •end your address al onue. yon can secure FMEK ona wn* heat solid gold watches In the world and our large nne« COSTLY HiMPLBS. Wa pay aU aapgaa^'OKSifr £uras* OK0.8X1M80N Ctt, Boa M* POBTLASD, MAJ**
