Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 29 October 1891 — Page 3
Peculiarities of Froncfc firead. fl*arie Letter to Chicago Pest. ii
In Paris bread is indeed the
fhe
[rinding apparatus that can stand test of years on this bread can stand anything.
5ispelsdigestion,
Worn-out,
"run-down," feeble women, need Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Il builds them up. It's a powerful, restorative tonic, or strength-giver —free from alcohol and injurious drugs. The entire system is renewed and invigorated. It im-
roves enriches the blood, aches and pains, gives refreshing sleep, and restores flesh and strength. As a soothing nervine, it allays and subdues hysteria, spasms, and'all the nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease. It's the only guaranteed medicine for women. It does what is promised or it asks nothing. It gives satisfaction, in every case, or the money paid for it is refunded.
That's the way its makers prove their faith in it. Contains no alcohol to inebriate no syrup or sugar to derange digestion a legitimate medicine, not a beverage. Purely vegetable and perfectly harmless in any condition of the system.
SHILOH'S
CONSUMPTION
Elacing
\o-—
CURE.
The success of this Great Cough Core if without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos* (tire guarantee, a test that no other cure can sue. Cttsfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, aie
a Sample Bottle Free into every home the United States and Canada. If you have Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH'S CURE, Price lo cts., «o cts. and |l.oo. If your Lungs are sore or Back lamcy IN Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts.
1
It is an old-fashion notion that medicine has to taste bad to do any good.
Scott's Emulsion is codliver oil with its fish-fat taste lost—nothing is lost but the taste.
This is more than a matter of comfort Agreeable taste is always a help to digestion. A sickening taste is always a hindrance. There is only harm in taking cod-liver oil unless you digest it Avoid the taste.
Scott
&
Bowmb,Chemists.
133
Mew York. Your druggist
South th Avenue.
keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver
flA—ail druggists everywhere do. (1.
Common
Soap
Rots Clothes and Chaps Hands.
IVORY
SOAP
Bis
1
*.
DOES NOT.
mi
1
1'staff
of life." It is carried about the streets without even a string around it. Women clasp the long rolls affectionately to their bosoms and rest the ends against their hair. Men forget that it isn't a cane that they are carrying, and rap the end of the loaf on the pavement as they walk. I saw a little boy in the dirt by the Seine using along piece of bread for plaything. Presently he wiped it upon his dress and took a mouthful. 1 saw a woman sitting on a bench in the Luxembourg Gardens cosily hug.ging a great round loaf—without any wrapper, please remember. We Ixeard angry voices before our window, and beheld a woman thumping •a man with a fresh baked roll. It broke in two, but the woman beat a tattoo on his back with the pieces. When we go to buy bread we are 'tempted to ask: "How much is it a yard?" We are sure the French people never die of lockjaw, for any
W
r.
1
What the Government Stations Are Doing For the Farmer.
J. G. Speed In Harper's Weekly, Fai'mers in the older State9 are spending millions of dollars annually for commercial fertilizers. la this country, as in Europe, they have become a"n absolute necessity on wornout soils but to make them profitable it is necessary that they should fit the wants of the soil and crops for which they are used. If a farmer buys potash for land which abounds in potash but needs phosphoric acid, lie of course loses. The fundamental principle in the use of commercial fertilizers is to select those materials which supply in the best forms and at the lowest cost plant food which the 'crop needs and the soil fails to furnish.
In order to enable farmers to find out the wants of their own soils and the best way of supplying them, and at the same time to get light upon the properties of soils in different sections of the country, a number of experiment stations are introducing soil tests with fertilizers, which are largely conducted both by the stations and also by individual farmers on their own farms. Of course many of the experiments are failures, but many practical men who have engaged in this work have declared that they have thus learned a great deal which is practically useful and highly instructive.
The results of these tests in general show that "'soils vary greatly in their capabilities of supplying food to crops. Different ingredients are deficient in different sous. The best way to learn what materials are proper in any given case is by observation and experiment. The rational method for determining what ingredients of plant food a soil fails to furnish in abundance^ and how these unfurnished materials can be most economically supplied, is to put the question to the soil with different fertilizing materials, and get the reply in the crops produced. The chief use of fertilizers is to supply plant food. It is good farming to make the most of the natural resources of the soil and of the manure produced on the farm and to depend upon artificial fertilizers only to furnish what more is needed. It is not good economy to pay high prices for materials which the soil itself may yield, but it is good economy to supply the lacking ones in the cheapest way."
Probably the most valuable work these experiment stations have done has been to analyze these various com merial fertizers which are offered for sale by manufacturers. In some of the States, in New Jersy, for instance, the fertilizers are analyzed and the qualities of chemicals compared with what the manufacturer claimed that the composition contained. So as to make this perfectly plain, the money value of the chemcals found in each sample is noted and compared with the price charged by the manufacturer. Some startling results have been shown One I fertilizer selling at $25 per ton would be found to have a value of $28 another, selling at $40 a ton, would be found to be worth only $15 and in one instance I recall the manufacturer charged 43 a ton for his complete fertilizer and the chemist found that its actual value was only $2.50.
Bulletins like these have certainly done great good, for they have warned farmers from buying inferior chemicals, and they have compelled manufacturers to keep their compositions up to the advertised standard. When there is more universal education among the farmers it will only be necessary to express the value of fertilizers in chemical terms. We have the authority of the United States Agricultural Department for the statement that in the States where experimental stations have long been established the greater number of the farmers now need nothing more than these chemical terms to guide them in selecting the the special fertilizers needed in given cases.
The Letter That Came at Last. Washington Post. Some strange things are discovered about the Postofflce Department, and the dead-letter office is a vast storehouse of epistles full of wit, humor and pathos. Dory Cool is a farmer who resides in Saunders county, Neb., a fewzpiles of Fremont. Sixteen years ago Miss Harris, of Bryan, 111. wrote him a letter he
3
Why Dr. Price's Baking Powder is
Superior to all others.
No great efforts are made by other manufacturers to procure and use pure materials. Itis true that one other company has the facilities, ,-J but its greed and cupidity induced it in an evil hour to use ammonia, in order to swell its profits. Hence the Price $ Baking Powder Company stands alone in its fight for a pure
baking powder. No other article of human food receives greater care in its production, or has attained higher perfection. Dr. Price's Cream is surely a perfect baking powder. Free from every taint of impurity. No other article used in the kitchen has so many steadfast friends among the housewives of America.
EXPERIMENTS WITH FERTILIZERS
r-i'K''-Ail-
not get until long after it was mailed It was evidently impossible to fine him, or the letter got stuck some where in a postal car, or fell into a? obscure corner In some poStafiiuft At all events the epistle finally founc its way to the dead-letter office, where it remained for a period auc was then started out upon a fresl journey.
On the 22d of this month Dor\ Cooldrove into Fremont, Neb., after his mail. Among the letters given him was that written by Miss Harris years before, on the 8th of May, 1875. It had been sixteen years, four months and thirteen days reaching its destination. The strange part of this story is that Mr. Cool and Miss Harris have been maried several years and have a number o! children, the eldest being upward ol fifteen years old. Unlike the usuai story of this kind, the two separated by the non-receipt of the letter, and two hearts were not an guished when they found out "whal might have been."
were not
Scene in a Country Grocery Store. Tramp (entering)—"Say, could you let me have a glass of whisky! I have no coin wid me, but I'll give you five stamps, if that'll do."
Grocer (to get rid of him)—' "'All right (pours out the whisky) here's your whisky."
Tramp drinks it, smacks his lips, stamps five times on the floor and walks toward the door. The grocer shouts at him to come back. Tramp returns. "What do you want?" "My stamps, of course." "Didn't I give them to you? "No, of course not." "Well, here they are again." (Stamps five times more.) "Ah, I see ha! ha! Well, that's a pretty good joke, but I'll tell you what I'll do I'll give you a quarter to try that on that fellow across the street there." "Sh! Why, he just gave me 50 cents to try it on you."
THINGS WORTH KNOWING.
Coffee cake should be wrapped while warm in a napkin and there re main until cut.
One-third of a teacupful of molasses is a good substitute for a wine glass of branc'.y in fruit cake or pudding.
Buy bar soap by the quantity il you wish to be truly economical. Stand the bars on edge, one above another, with as much open space as possible between them. They will then dry out and last almost twice as long.
When any recipe includes the juice of one lemon, tn& quantity used should be four teaspoonfulls, as both the size and juiceness of lemons vary.
Those persons who find it necessary to hold any object nearer than fourteen inches from their eyes, who find that their eyes become dry and itching on reading, need glasses. Persons under 40 years of age should not wear glasses until the accommodating power of the eyes has been suspended, and the exact state of refraction determined by a competent, ophthalmic surgeon. The spectacle glasses sold by peddlers and by jewelers generally are hurtful to the eyes of those who read much, as the lenses are made of inferior sheet glass, and not systematically ground. No matter how perfectly the lenses may be made, unless they are mounted in a suitable frame and properly placed before the eye, discomforts will arise from their prolonged use. Persons holding objects too near the face endanger the safety of their eyes and incur the risk of becoming near-sighted. The near-sighted eye is an unsound eye, and should be fully corrected with a glass, notwithstanding the fact it may need no aid for reading. The proper time to begin wearing glasses is just as soon as the eyes tire on being subjected to prolonged use.
Is Dancing Sinful?
Texas Sittings. Parson Gridly is very much opposed to dancing. He said recently to a young lady of his congregation: "Are you one of those giddy girls to whom dancing tis
a heavenly pas
time?" ''No I don,t think that dancing is perfectly heavenly, "*she replied, demurely. "Ah, that's right." ""Dancing is not perfectly heavenly," continued the young lady, *'for you see it comes to an end too soon, but it is very muc,h like heaven as long as lasts
Can Readily Detect Counterfeit. A man who handles much money soon becomes accustomed to detect counterfeits "because thejr don't look right." In four cases out of five he can not, without close inspection, give any better reason, but the first impression is quite sufficient, and an error is comparatively rare. A money-handling instinct, if there is such a thing, can be developed into almost preter-natural acuteness, so that, at a glance, one bill will be accepted and another rejected. Detecting counterfeit coins, however, "by the feel" is all nonsense. A smooth quarter of standard silver coining from the hands of a perspiring man is just as greasy as the worst pewter. The only way to detect a coin counterfeit is by the ring, and this is infallible.
as Never Omit That.
Epoch. Dr. Pitter—Then you could do nothing whatever for the patient?
Dr. Paresis—No except send in my bill, of course.
Poor Fellow
Puck. "Has he no aim in life?" "Oh, yes: but he's never had a shot *tit,"
To curd a severe case of colic take a teaspoonful Cf salt in a pint of water drink and go to be& This is one of the speediest remedies knO^ii. It will also prove efficacious in reviving a person who seems almost dead from a heavy fall.
Vapor Poison and Its Antidote. The morning and evening mists that pervade the atmosphere of malarious localities cannot be breathed with impunity, A safeguard is needed to render harmless the dangerous mi* asmata with which they are impregnated, The surest, safest defense is Hoatetter's Stomach Bitters. It is an antidote to the poison which has already been inhaled and borne fruit, an adequate preventive of its harmful effects, No preparative for breathers of miasma-tainted air or drinkers of malaria-poisoned waters like1 the Bitters. It completely neutralizes the otherwise irresistible onset of the aerial foe. Settlers on newly-cleared land, excavators of
canal routes (notably that on the Isthmus of Panama) Western pioneers and emigrants—in short, all subjected to malarial influences in air or water find in it a benign remedy, an effectual safeguard. Disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels, "la grippe," rheumatism and kidney complaints are remedied by the Bitters.
When an
naturally.
author isn't read, he's blue
Jacobs
'J- "'j Thanks to the tord. XII St. Paul,Minn., October,
Um
Sold by Druggists at 81 per Bottle 6tor8S TaTgg Size, SI .75. 6 Bottles for »9«
GQATEFUL-rCOiwrOrtriNG.
EPPSS COCOA
BREAKFAST.
"By thorougn knowledge of tbe natural lawi which govern the operations of digestion and nutr/. tl n, add by a care.'ul applio atlon of the fine propel ties of woL-Siflected Cocoa, Mr. Epos has proTldi our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured bev' ferage wnloh may save u* many heavy doctor^ bills It is oy the Judicious use of suoh articles of dltJ that a noustltutioa may bs gr dually built up unt! strong enough to resist every tendency to disease Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around u-i ready to attack wherever there is a weak po:nt» Wa may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping our-, selves well fortified with pure blood ad a properly nourished frame."—uCivtl Service Gazette.''
Made simply with bollla? water or mult. Sola only In half-pound tin*, oy Grocers, labelled thus: JAMES EPFS «St CO., Homoeopathlo Chemists*
London.
England-
Eli's Cream Balm
QUICKLY cubes
COLD ih HEAD
Price OO Cents.
Aoply Balm into each nostril* Ely Bros.,58 Warren St.,N Y.
I
aakemore
thaa when
lMDPf/fS
Am well pleased
^Health
I caa churn butterla tea minute* with the Little Cyclone. A. R. HKRLJIAN. Red O.k, Iowa. I like Tour churn. JULIA A. MANN, CcntervUlage, Ohio. Thecburn works good. J. B. BRtlM, Rockdall. like tho Cyclone Terr
muoh.
aot part with
mad*. C. C. IRWIN, Paddeek, Neb.
batter and better butter, by using the Cyclone, from tbe samo amount er
I u«e the daaher churn. MRS. IIA RO A RET CORV.IrUsb
Iks Utile Cyclone Is a "Jim Dandy." Q. W. HVSAW. Big Springs. Tiui. The Churn I.Jcat as you
reconimendedjt.
CHS. BRODBRSM,
Is that state when all the organs of the body perform their functions in regular and efficient manner and to remove any obstruction to such action Is the proper duty of medicine.
Hood's Sarsaparllla
Gives health by purifying the blood, toning the stomach and bowels, and invigorating the kid' neys and liver. Therefore, if you are in poor health, take Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Hooo's PILLS—Best liver invigorator and cathartic. Reliable, Effective, gentle. Price 83
SvfofjHc
ON^ 3EJNJOYS Both the method and results when 3/rup of Figs is tpken it ia pleasant find ftfcghing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headiches and fever* and cures habitual cofliftpatioifcv Syrup of Figi ia the only remedy bf its kind ovef pro* duced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the atomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy ana agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known.
Syrup of fin is for sale In 50o and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIB SYRUP CO.
MAN FRANCISCO, CAU
UUISVILLE. KY. NEW YPItK.
LOST TIME. Newton, 111. From
to
matism of the hip. I was cured by the use of St.
Oil.
1890.
I recently had the opportunity of testing tha eelebrated Faator Koenlg'a Nerve Tonic in a very severe case. A p«or widow to whom 1 have frequently given aid and assistance In my capacity as City Missionary, snnt her 12-year-old daughter to me one evening to procure necessary aid while she was relating her destitution and stating that her mother, was now nearly totally blind,
poor child suddenly feU Into an
epileptlo fit. I gave her two bottles of your medicine, and the girl Is now well and happy, and the rapport of her aged mother. The Lord be tha&kea I think that such a ease as this redounds to yeux honor and to the glory of Him above, who has given you the knowledge to prepare sudh a blessing for suffering humanity.
A & 1BU8GBBB, Missionary,
OteeftAv*. i—A Talnable Book «n Nervous Diseases sent free to soy sddress, and poor psUents can also obtain this medicine flree of chart#.
FREE
KOENIG MED. CO.. Chicago, III.
1885—abctit
1863
22 years—I suffered with rheu
T. C. DODD.
1 "ALL RIGHT! ST. JACOBS OIL DID IT."
TB& best natured man down town is tke man who has women folks at home to grumble at.
Those who have worn down their teeth in masticating old, tough bee will find that carbonate of soda will remedy the evil. Cut the steaks, the day before using, into slices about two inches thick, and rub over them a small quantity of soda. Wash off next morning, cut it into suitable thicknesses and cook. This same process will answer for fowl, leg of mutton and any other meats that are tough. Try this plan all ye who love delicious, tender meat.
Lay apiece of charcoal upon a burn, leave it there one hour and the burn will be 1 oiled.
Deafness Can't Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu-1 tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely olosed 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 cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. 1 We will give One Hundred Dollars for any lease of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that we .cannot oure by taking Hall's Catarrh Onre. Send for circulars, free.
P.J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75 cents. Just about this time Salvator Is asking Guatemala: "Is it warm enough for you?"
FITS.—All Fits stopped tree br Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first days use. Marvellous cures. Treatise and 2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Sand to Dr. Kline.931 Arch St.. Phlla.,Pa
A
Philadelphia man claims that he will shortly fly without the aid of wings. It is conjectured that he will start from a bank,
No Opium in Piso's Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fail. 25c. There are times when even the milk of human kindness takes a turn and is liable to sour.
BEND FOR ELE6AHT
with the
10
Tho
"August
Flower"
a reduction
Coldln tile Head it has no equal.
It is an Ointment, of which a small nostrils. Price, 60c. Sold by dr Address. E,
IndianapolisBusinessUniversitY
noiMiinftvittrt CM* VTlinV TST.nfff ftfPflRWl
40 PER CENTUFF! fi~New Departure.
In order to scatter our Churns more extensively over the conntry, we ha7e decided to give the consumer tho benefit of onr wholesale oar load prioee. For the next sixty days ve will try tho experiment of selling direct to the consumer, and in order to give them the most liberal offer ever made, we propose to sell our churns at 40 per oent off.
The Cyclone leaves old
ehura
Tbe
r»l.ehnrn yea sent me.
JIANNKTTK MoDOWELL, Adallne, W. Va.
Orcleatsurpasses aortbiag
eharn
M. TODD. Madeira. Ohio.
Like tbe Cyolone wry well. D. g. GATES, Hill View, N. T. Mj wife leys the Cyolone
Is
the
nloeit
churn made, fiho would
It.
I like yoar churn it Is the beet ever
P. B. WOODRUFF, Chadnra,Neb.
(Ires perfect
srtao,
Blpple.fa.
Oernaala, Pa.
I like the Cyclene very amoh. MBS. B. ORBT, Sunrise city, illna. The prists ef tbe Charns, faoiadlae Thermometers, are as follows: Gallon Churn, 11.00, 6 Gallon Otrara, IMS.
saUslhctfoa.
I like tbe churn can da
in
trtceu
II Is all yon
"I have been afflict*'
Biliousness, ed with biliousness .. .. "and constipation Constipation, for fifteen yea^s first one and Stomach .,
another prepara.then
Pains. tion w^s suggested '4,tome and tried but "to no purpose. At last a friend recommended August Flower. I* took it according to directions and "its effects were wonderful, reliev"ing me of those disagreeable stomach pains which I had been troubled with so long. Words "cannot describe the admiration "in which I hold your August
Flower—it has given ine a new lease of life, which before was a burden. Such a medicine is a benefaction to humanity, and its good "qualities and "wonderful filer- Jesse E}aricerf "its should be "made known to "everyone sufferiug with dyspepsia or biliousness
Printer, Humboldt, Kansas. 9
8. G. GREEN, Sole Man'fr, Woodbury,N.J,
GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 187a
W. BAKER & CO/9
Breakfast Cocoa
from which the excess of oil has been removed, X* absolutely pure and it is soluble. No Chemicals are used In its preparation. It has more than three timet the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch,, Arrowroot or Sugar, and la therefore far more ecenomical, costing less than one centacup. It is delicious, nour I ishing, atrengthening,
Masilt
moBSTES, and admirably adapted for Invalids as well as for persons in health. Sold by flroeera everywhere.
W. BAKES & CO.. Dorchester. Maw.
A Dog Without a Tail
ts not half as absurd as a Farmer with no Scafa. pics—buy and uy a Scale buy the
Ituu vour farm on business principle •ell by weight, and when you buy a Sc best, which is always the cheapest.
For Circulars free address only
JONES OF BINGHAMTON,
Binghamton, N. Y.:"
.-Kjwfeil ijijpitit
n» w. tioa., M.,t* luqiM tl Overcomes result*.
road sMiancnrM Sleic Headach«| Cowi nlaxinn earesGoaitlnatien.
AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY
commission, to handle the New Patent Chemical Ink Erasing Pencil. Agents making $50 per week. Monroe Eraser Mf'g Co., La Crosse. Wis., Box 831.
DOUBLE Brtich-Lwdir $7.99.
MFlESn.M
All kinds otteape* than ehtevther*. at*
fore job buy, teil
staoif) for illostratoi Catalogae to Th* fevillACItnralCl* 1B6 Mwim 8tre«t,
PISTOLS 75® ClzxainnaU,Okle.
the smallest pill in THE WORLD.!
•TINY
S
LIVER
prLiiS®
have all the virtues of tlie larger ones A equally effective purely vegetable. W Exact size sho\ra In this border.
A\AUKsla *».*"? relief, and ia ail BLfc UltE for
&FAT
,iUWt»US1i,"'i'ifi
tet
Price, 91 at drnwists of cldress "AKAItESlSi OX2I1A Saw io« Oi**.
FAT FOLKS REDUCES
Maple. Oregon Mo.,
wotrht was aao pounds, now it U1M
1 nduc'tloa of ft.. n«i i.'.\aak
"OUIS BAGGER"&C^£r{Fr.°mo''£ftiotw-tt..1£%sflwi?aciroulni*w1"MeViekar'iit»]2SlafjtHiot w^KD'CPATENT SOLICITOUS
on elean piece whits blott'n? paper sen4 with aice.B-'X.occuyation. Microscope mav* nify 8J.000 times, se id free particulars
SPIT
row rtismrt X. N. Oaowui, Torre Haute,
nil
rQ^®TANT^R|UCF^Curein18
FOB CATAiuiH.—Best. Easiest to use. is immec"
cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure Is certain, lor
particle is applied to the sts or sent by mail. Hazbltink. "Warren. Pa.
POSf*OVVIC8t
UBMlttli piwiwaaiviin*
upequalcd in the success of its graduates. HEEB & OSBORN,
Proprietors.
clear behind. HORACE P. SAXTCM,
Qbelbiirae. VI.
I ever saw. I ehorn and gather butter
ia itx
minute..
J. C. ren tes,
MRS. HKNRY ST ASK,
a churning In ten
The cbara is the beet one I ever saw. T. B. ADAUSON, Bolivar, Pit. Nj
ThoCveloneeyuloolscsthecreamJIntobutloi'inajilly.
slalia It la
28 Ghtilou Cfeurn, tiO.OO, SO Gallon Ohorn, $18.00. Bead Postal or BipreasMooey Order tor tho above aamaal, leu W per .eat. and get a eharn that will ast yea a lifetime. BTXEL PULLSY AND MACHINE WORKS, SOLE MAKERS, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. ?. B.
FIomo
prowrro this, fior It will not appwur
Odeiea,
or twenty minutes. J. A. KELLY,
Nik.
GWndaie,
Kr.
minute*. F.
tKWllT, Hardeunurg,
The churn give, perfect eatiilhc^lea. J. H. FORD, Holland. Texas. I liko tkeefiurn very muoh. JKSSB WILI.IAMS. Big Rapids, Mlcb. I churn now with so much less labor. B. P. DAllVKV, Blkln, Md. The Cyolone beats r.ny cburo we ever tried. WILLIAM McBKOWN, Carthage, Onr little girl BOW eburna
Xnd.
Kateld.ll,
IIL.
W.
MANN, Bud ton, Mtchlgaa.
6.
My wife owkss mora,and mors solid batter, than she ever did
before. W.
be. I would net lakedeabla the ceatefO.andWHITR,
SaetUvlUa,
M.
It be without
OorCeft,Teaafc.it
O N A A S O N
1
Gallon Cham, 18.00, 10 Gallon Cham, $7,001
acata.
