Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 36, Number 15, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 December 1893 — Page 7
AND HELPS. -Ha hud Hominy: One cup boiled rrtb. one cup sweet milk, two table MIOOIIS butter, oiio tablespoon Hour, i ne touhpoonnu uauinL' pnvyiler, two (.pjfh heuten separately, Put in whites last ami naice in miiiui pan about tlireo IiK'lieh Iteep. A breakfast or dinner dbli. Detroit Freu I Voss. Ilrido'ttCulce: Wliitosof twelve c'l'l'.s, three eups Miliar. Mimll cup butter, one cup sweet inillc, four miuui cups Hour, half e p corn-March, two teaspoons haldiitf powder, lemon to taste. Adding ono cup citron .sliced thin anil dusted with Hour, makes a beautiful citron cake. Christian at Work. -squash Soup: IVel and slice thin enough Mimsh to fill u pint bowl, lldil in one qimrtof salted water till it may he ruhbed through a sieve. Wlien Miiooth, add one eupful of cream, one pint of eold gravy, u cup of boiling water, and a tahlespoonful ,of butter und Hour rubbed smooth. Jloil up once and serve. Housekeeper. - liouehees do Harnes: Mix with six egg a quarter of a pound of supar, three ounces of potato-Hour, a little alt. and a pinch of dried orange-flow-p., heat them together well, and liartag buttered a tin, lay your pas to on it. and bake it in a pontic oven for a ipiarter of mi hour; when done cut it in pieces, about the size of a crown piece, and glaze them, mask them accruing to your pleasure and dry them In the oven. Kami and Fireside. Stewed Lobsters: Pick the meat from one large- or two small lobsters in Miiall pieces. IJoil the shells in a pint i water, a blade of muco and pome white pepper corns. When all the strength has been extracted from the theils and spice strain the liquor. Hub tin' coral and green and white fat 'month in a few tablespoon fnls of incited butter, add the juice of half a lemon. Add these ingredients to the itrain liquor, put in the lobster meat, let it boil up once and serve. Huston lt.ulget. - ream Chocolato Custard: Scrape one-fourth of a pound of the best chocolate, pour on it, a teacnpful of boiling water, and let it stand by the fire till it has dissolved. Heat eight W very light, omitting the whites of two. stir them by degrees into a quart of cream alternately with the melted chocolate and three table spoons of powdered sugar. Put the mixture into eups; set these into a pan of li.it water ami bake for ton minutes, or unil firm. Serve cold with whipped cream. boston Budget. tircen Almonds: Two hand fills of fresh spinach, well washed drained, unit then pounded; when very line, press it through a napkin; ict the jmce drop on n dish, which place on a hot stove: as soon as it begins to boil, take it on", stirring it constantly, till the green curdles, then pour it through a horsehair sieve, and when well drained strain it through a silk sieve; the juice thus obtained will give the u.moiids (which must be nut in a few at a time) a clear and even green color. Farm, Field and Fireside. I'liolilon Wlilnprr. Candied Chrysanthemums are the fashionable iloral sweets of the moment A decided decrease in skirt widths is a noticeable characteristic of autumn fatuous. (pal earrings, surrounded by small d.anioiids, are being more extensively worn than ever. sil bodices in Paisley designs are coming into favor and lire very effective with braces of lace over the dhoiilOers. Velvets and bengalines will be used for coats and so will cloths, the newest . ' which are rough cheviots in plain colors and in mixed effects. New hasquu bodices are pointed as a niie Tlvcy havo im umbrella back or an slashed ih tabs each of equal length 'n .some form, others graduated and uiadc sere nil inches shorter on the Mdcs.-X. Y. World. A I.ouiikIiib Pine. Kvery household needs a lounging I'laee, and the following' plan can be '""pied wherever a restriction it lands would place a regularly made i.i out of reach: Huy an ordinary I mm woven wire springs. Cut oft the legs two inches and remove the bead and footboard. JJuy a hair mat tress to fit, and cover it with cretonne. outtonfng it down at intervals of four uieiics like a cushion for a scat, TÜfck box plaited flounce of the cretonne nronml the edge of the cot on the four i hush me top wltli narrow p'"p. Make four or live feather pillows two. feet square, and cover them Ii manorial that will contrast pretIJ'.v with the cretonne. The result of these .simple directions .will evidence '" irutii of Womankind. my opening remark. A Ilangi-roni! Habit. I'oo murh can not be said in regard jo t ho danger of putting small article " lje mouth. A great many person ilelessly l0( Cf)ins p5ns ind othcr rtieles in their mmtih M'i, f,n r:lize that an ordinary coin which hi w'i'n in circulation for a score of vein "'1 passed through thousands of hnm? ....... v m "v ) " t ot ,lly ,Urt ,Mt hoM t Ronns of tke foulest diseases. Not v,ars "S he public was horror- ' hy tlu'' lpatI df rf clergyman ro, !t cork ,vhch wnR RU(1(lcnly 1;,ou.n ni-i ins windpjp,. by a fit of couehinir. II. I , ,,' ") n f cougning. 'lVns.!,u,(li"frin his Hps ns .nanT a l . , ' V1"1 Paring medicine from tnati Who vas H11...1 i... t....i..i ..j t'icks tilllCII lli 1 1 .1 ! 1.. l . 1 inom,. . i . nn ..wining in n Si I"? w,,,ch wur Wow Intohi v vU'ckly.
HOME HINTS
neivin. .
sin involn,,tnPy spa.m of the throat ie-t. v nl time Cil imilar acci- , i'ribunp.
THE FARMING WORLD. STONE FOR MACADAMIZING.
Meal itinl Cm I M,im-h iuiiI h'lri--l HU" tin, Stulln fur Horn" I'll 1 1 !) kirponrn riturn nl it SI m pl, C'riiMliur. An important item in the making of a macadam road is the obtaining of broken stone of suitable quality and size. It should have careful consideration, since it relates to the wearing surface of the roadway, and upon the quality of the stone uat-l will largely depend the life of the macadam crust and its smoothness. A hard stone should be used; not hard in the sense that it is brittle, for many brittle stones are quite unlit for use as road menu, inn raiiier stone of a tough texture, such as will resist the abrasion of wheel tires and the crushing force of heavy loads. Trap rock is generally regarded as excellent. As commonly found It 1 1) KAI. SHAl'K-j A XI) SIZK8. Koueh. cuM! pieces of btonc tirnken by hand. Thrse are the shapes ami sizes which road-niaui-rs seek to obtaiti, but they tire rarely lounu in ice cyeryuay atone map. breaks in the crusher with a loud, snapping noise which suggests great resistance, and if properly handled it is easily broken by machinery to a fairly uniform size. Limestones are both good and bad " he softer limestone wear rapidly. lorin a roiul on which mud quickly col lects, and roads of softer limestone yield readily to the action of the weather. The upland or mountain limestones, on the other hand, are fre .quently well adnpted for use as road . i ... . mown, iiicy uinu quicKiy ana make a smooth ail durable roadway. The rubbing and wearing of limestones form a dust which, when weU becomes a sort of mortar, filling the little spaces between the pieces of stone and consolidating the entire roadway into a solid and sometimes into u durable crust- Some of the best liiaestoncs are lounc an uie uevonian aaa tne older Silurian rocks. tiranite is generally inferior because of excessive brittleness due to the feldspar contained in it; but syenitic ItHAI, SHAl'K.AXn 81ZK8. Crrcfjular pieces of machine-broken Atme drawn from actual stxclment taken atirvntlom from Htoiio luajx These pieces, by their rough surfaces, h'iow the ImnosslbUity of ohtalnlnR straight tir.es of fracture or refc-u-lur-hliii)MMl pieces by tho ordinary proex of crushing stone for roadnuklni;. pranite often makes .an excellent road metal. Sandstones arc generally inferior; bet some sandstone. contain iron, which hardens and toughens them, and in these eceptionnl enses sandstones may Iks used to advantage. ricld Stoue and er Stone. Tte cocstruction of a macadam road in any fiwen locality generally Involves tlrj use. of material found near at hand, and where a local quarry does not exwt, field stone and sl-uio gatheced I rr.j-:tiNo thr ciit'snnc Dreaklng onlJtiary Held mono wltt a crusher. "Jaw" from tho hods of rivers and small . streams mny be made to serve every purpose. Many of the stones and bo witters thus obtained are of trap rock, and In general it may be said that alt hard Held stoacs and river stones if broken to a proper size, will make fairly good and sometimes very excellent road metal. No elaborate test is required to determine the hardness of any given specimen. A steel hammer in the hnnds of an intelligent workman will reveal in a general way the relative degree of toughness of two
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or more pieces of rock. Field stone and river stone offer an additional advantage in that they are quickly handlwl, are generally of convenient sire, and are more readily broken either by hand
or ny machine than most varieties of j rock which arc quarried iu the usual way. Hreaking the Stone, It is a simple tasit to break stone for macadam roadways, and by the aid of modern inventions it can be done cheaply and quickly. Hand broken stone is fairly out of date and is rarely used in America where any considerable amount of work is to be undertaken. Stone may be broken by hand at different points along tli roadside where repairs are needed ieom time to time, and by crimlnels confined in penal institutions who could not b otherwise prolitably employed; but die extra cost of production by this method forbids its being carried on where extended work is undertaken. Hand broken stone is generally more uniform in size, more nearly cubical in shape and has sharper angles than that broken by machine and is undoubtedly superior to the machine made road metal; but the latter, when properly assorted or screened, has been found to meet every requirement In breaking by hand two steel-faced hammers of different weights are used. One. weighing from live to six pounds, is used for sledging the bowlders and large pieces into smaller sizes and the other, a small steel-faced hammer weighing about one pound and having a strong flexible handle, is used for breaking the stones into proper size for use on the road In breaking by hand a skilled laborer will break from onehalf a cubic yawl to three or four cubio yards per day, according o the skill of the workman and the toughness of the stone. Of the toughest stone one-half a cubic yard will sometimes supply a full day's work; but ordinarily stones will be broken at the rate of one to one and one-half cubic yards per day. Limestones break somewhat more readily, and mny be turned o-;t at the rate of two cubic yards per day. while field stone and river stone, when found in convenient sizes, can be broken by hand at the rate of two and one-half to four cubic yards per day. Good Roads. . GARDEN AND ORCHARD. Plant trees as deep as they grow ia the nursery. Tun chief value in dwarf pears is their early bearing. Dwarf pears require a" light soil and a light pruning every spring. McLCiuxo is of benelit, whether the planting is done early or late. A iu:ki soil-is necessary to a good garden, but care must be taken not to bring to the surface too much subsoil. Dead branches on fruit and other trees are not only unsightly, but thty are a draft on the ritality of the tree. Onions set out in the fall should be well mulched as soon as the groaal freezes hard enough to bear up a wagon. Trees set out in the fall should be carefully mulcked as soon a-s the ground freezes hard enough to bear up a wagon. 3N removing dead branches care iftiould be taken to make the cut close rnd smooth. It a stub is left it will not heal overceadily. The wild herrv is the hocae of the tent caterpillar. The safest remedy k to cut off and burn infested branches as soon as tliey make their appearance Hen Hauls. Crime' golden. Stark, wintersweot. Paradise, Mewart's goldeu. Kink's rambo. ami quite a list of standard apples are said toienr gocerally iu the even numbered rear. ONE or tvro careless fruit growers in a neighborhood will keep up a bupply of the tent caterpillar to infest all the orchards fjr a mile or tworoucd. It is only by thorough. carae.t work that they can We eradicated. The cherry is less troublesome to grow tnaa almost any otner kimi of fruit. All that is necesury is to plant out the fees carefully and thun let them alore. Cultivatioc is really cn injury, by inducing a fco spreading growth. As sooras the irround ircezes aanlm and vegetables that m pulled out should hirve a covering if coarne ma nure, strrw or other cwrse litter as extra protection during the 'winter. The windiws of the cellar hould be clo-ed up. St. Louis Kepctblic. Tim egrs of the tent caterpillar are laid in clusters on shoots of rather les than half an inch in diameter and are fastened together with a kind of glue that protocts them fnm Abe weather. As they are easily seen wi winter the best plan is to cut off -all infested branches mid burn them. A. K-lf-Surkloc The nukvmce of havinjr a cow w ith this vice it. such as to imu:e it almost useless ana, unless the cww is a.good one, it wuuiii ie iteiier ia maue ui animal into beef than to worry with jit If the cow, Jfiowever. is worth keeping In Milte of this bad habit, it may U 'controlled in this way: Tke head k . ... . , i titled wltli aoinrnin nea;si.ii, navinf a strong ring under the jaws. A strap is worn by the cow around .the lntdy immediately behind the shoaMer. A A ring is litte!! on thb strap under the brisket. A sWrut hickory or cak rod, hat ing a snap hook at each end, 3s then fastened to tlw rings and pzneil Ktween the fore legs, so that tiu' cow can f.!cd, but casnot reach her udder. Tim Cur f Orrhanl. The only way Ut keep up an orrhird i in nlnnt Mime Xrres every year. Most pt-ople neplect tnis, and when they tlo nlant the trees tlier .set them too clos together, .so that tUe roots intertwine ami iruit proiineiioa j chcchpi. pie trees should be tct nt least thirty ' fect apart each way. It h a mistake to hnnjp.i'e an orclianl will take care of itH'lf, Trees require the attention of the owner just as well as stock or farm crops, and neglect will be repaid In the same fashion. If you are not willing to pive proper care, it is belter to cut the trees down and plow up the land. J It I useless to expect to get sotoetbiBi' for nothing
viUf.U; SMART KIDS.
Pakknt "What is the difference baIwceu the regular and the irregular ' Greek verbs?" Tommy " You get iwico as many lickings learning' the irregular ones." Visitor-" iWt you wish you had a little brother, Hobby?" Hobby "Well, long about peach time, 1 think one lit tie boy in a family is enough; but 'lorn; about spanking time, there ought to bo two ol us." Amv AsitfiiLATZ (enishing the nextdoor little girl with a display of her m . . Knowledge ol style "W en von eat ycr meal at night do yon call it dinner or supper?" Tessie (of the alley tene ment "He calls it lucky." Safktv i.v DiST.v-Ncn. Johnnie, of Chicago "Pop. how far is Xcw York from here?" Father "About a thousand milei" Johnnie "I guess that's why Kew Yorlc talks about us so loud and mean." Detroit Free Press. Prkcisk Maidrn Aunt (trying to amuse ICatc. who has corne to spend the day) "Oh. see pussy washing her face!" Infant (with scorn) ".She's not washing her face. Site's washing her feet and wiping them on her face." Match en asd Maiciies. Johnnie "Mamma, I beard the preacher say today that matches were made in Heaven. Is it so?" Mamma "Of couie. Why not?" Johnnie "Well, I don't see any use lor matches. Theras no there." CUPID'S WAYS. night Yoctu "Ihit we'll love each othcr for ever and ever, anyway." Maid "Algernon, say not so. Who knows? We may be married even yet." Detroit Tribune. II i: "Yon are very provoking! You talk as if our engagement were not going to result in marriage." She "You are more provoking. You talk as if it were."-N. Y. Herald. SwnirrGnx "The man I marry must hi both Vrare and brainy." Adoring' Youth "A'hC-nCe xverc out sailing and spset, I saved you from a watery grave." "That was brave, I admit, but it was not brainy." "Yes. it was; f upset the lioat on purpose." Tid-ISits. Mi'GGi?.s (recently married, showing his apartment) "This is a wardrobe where my wife hangs her clothes, and this is another wardrobe where my wife hangs her clothes." Hilter "Where do you hang your clothes?" Muggins "Oh. I don't have any now." X. Y. Herald. A Delicate Distinction. "Is it true that Maude Tlyppc received a proposal from old Stochson?" "It Is. He told her that if she would marry him he would settle $.".000 a year on her. pay for her dresses, and give her a trip to Europe once a year." "That wasn't a projajsal. It was a preposition." Indiu, polis Joernal. OF GENERAL INTEREST. Ducks are the mw effective destroyers of grasshoppers. HuTTEr.n.iES regularly mijjrate north and south like birds. Soft hands iaüicate a character lacking energy ae force. Coi'YRHJHT does not prevent a poem or song from being parodied. Goli alloyed with twen ty per cent, of alurainura takes on a brilliant ruby tint. The golden candlesticks used in ta temple at Jerusalem were supplied with pure olive oil. THE MARKETS. New Yokk. Doc. 16. UW. rATTTJE Native Pi eer fl ß 5 'W ß 4 IS in- -MMUiiar fa KUn'K-Winter Wheat a 10 & WUKAT-No. S HcJ ...... C4,., COax No, 2 &. IIV iat Mem JUlxt-U ....... 3 lOKK New Me II jg ST. LOUIS. ft 35 it 13 1 rOTTfMir-MKMliak' HKKVES-shipplKx Steers .. MrdiBm IIOOs TinlMo SHect SHKKT Fair to Choice KIXJL'K I'ateal Katar to Ktra Do WHEAT-Xo. 2 Ke.1 VVlBter... OOK.VNo .-MIiwL OATS-No. 2 K l ?o I, St. it H Vi 4 U 4 Ol 4 1J 2 W 3 m 2 20 .s is 3 W a si 2 H '-"ft 34 2S 33?Ä 2Tl IT ft it TUUASCO-I.C. - - 6 M V, U W? Iaf Hurler ioui f i .n ilfe.":::: " S S " ä Ki;t;S- Fresh 21 13 71 t t 5 00 3 a so I o rOKIC ütan.Ianl Me? mewj. IIACOX-Clear Kilt LAlto-'riiscStrscn CHICAGO. CATTI,n Shlpplnc HOtIS -Klalr So Oia'ce SIIKKI Fair to Choice FLOUK Winter PaUnt .... ifi 3 P5 ft es tf. 2T5 fc 3 Tt ft'. Swine luteal. WIIEAT-Na 2 Sprlus Xo. 2 Ketl. . COKN-Na 2 (A a i OA1-.Vt. 2 . .. lOIK-3Jesnew VZ TJ mi KANSAS CITV. CATTLK Shlnplne Steers ... 3 SO 1 r, is & it UOC.S All Grades 4 6U (t WHKAT-tXo.2 Kol. OAT Ne. 2 OOKX Nu. 2 XKW OUI.KAXS. FIjOUK ItlshUraile : COKN- No. 2. OATS-Weeters-HAY-Ctoal.j rOKK -Ne Mes-i H.U OX SW UOriON-AliildllRtf CINCINNATI. WHEAT X 2KhL a)KX-No.2MlxeU OATS-No. 2 Mixed I'OKIC New IWHAI.OX Clar HI ... CXmON-JIIik'ilns SO 3 14 l Vi ut H 4 W . . tniEsr Yotr can't eat without that unconfortable reeling of fullness or drowWnesw tftcrward, then it's tinw "B "6on raji. xeep a vtol of tbent cverr bearrr mml ItV tirne to taae fhera. too, whenever joa -ie ivuiot." Töey re upcciuc for MUoutaeiia. Tbey art wosderlHliy upon U.?T' fKr-cotd PeUrts the ""Hest, thu aleaanfeat to take, and the wm. awmu m ifieiriraTs absoluWr aad fvaaefiij v oht Consüfatic, Jawxllce, m m Jd,mton''i&: or MüfotM litadaelMa, ßotsr tHoniacb.aad every tirtsr, waack, twi bowel HsorJcr. Chronic Naaal Catarrftu Huh. Mrs: "l was utrerlnt from chronic ' tg Oy" Hfedr. aa4 1 aai M; to
Takeno Substitute for Royal Baking Powder. It is Absolutely Pure. All others contain alum or ammonia.
High-Hark Chain. A contemporary paragraphcr speaks in commendation of the current dispo sition to furnish dining-rooms with high-back chairs. Dining-room chairs ought to be thoroughly comfortable, but nothing is gained by making them high enough to support the head, or in running little steeples up along each side of them in the vicinity of the sitter's ears. The head is too busy in the dining-room to need much support. If the chair backs reach up to the shculder-blades they are ouite hkrh enough. It they go farther than that they tempt diners to slumber at the table, which is bad manners. Another objection to the very high backed chairs is that waiters or waitresses of ordinary stature find them a serious hinderauce to the prompt distribution of fool. A short waitress can not take a short cut over a chair back four or five feet high. She must steer her dishes around the corners of such chairs, and that is more of an inconvenience and detriment to good waiting than most diners realize. One day this summer at a hotel where highbacked, twin-spire chairs prevailed, a waiting damsel made a pathetic comphint of the extreme weariness she had in her arms because of the con stant lifting of dishes over the high uacics Of thv dining-room chairs. Harper's Weekly. She Kail to ftlve a KrHlon. The other dvy I was told of a little girl who attended a distribution of prizes given by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. She had won, you must know, a book as a reward for writing the best essay on the subject given, and with the other successful childreH'was undergoing a viva voce examination. "Well, my dear," said the gentleman who had given away the prizes, "can you teli roe why it is cruel to dock horses' tails and trim dogs' ears?" "Hecause," answered the little girl, "what God had joined together let no man put asunder." Leisiu- Hours. Iffl World's ralr Photo for One Dime. The Chicago. Mihvaukco & St. Fa Railway lus made an arrangement with first-class publishing bouse to furnish a sencs of tjcautiful World's Fair pictures, ot a large sixe, ut the nomi nal cost to tho purbeea published. Thu Boriea would ho worth at least twelve dollars if tho pictures were HOtpublialicd In such Iar&o quantities, and we are thcrcforoablo to l'urnbh these works of art far only ten cents. Rem, your money to George H. Eeafmn, encral Passcn.r Agent, Chicago, MilKtuteo ä St. Paul liailway, at Chicn are, 111., and tho pictures will boscnt promptlyte any spocitiwi address. They will make m fcindsomo holiday gift. Free Once More. -A person Who has ltfen it rhrnnti- vi'Wlm tJT constipation, Is to be ewmTatulated upon Che adoptionof Hostetter's Stomach Bitters a a means of freeing bis bowels from tho bondage of this tyrannocs disease. Tills 'liberating medicine docs iti work naturally, without griping, as violent purgatives do. Use it to throw off tho shaekles of malaria, dyspepsia, rheumatism aad biliouaaess. "Trotteu "What's the matter, Chollv?" Cholly "I dou't know. 1 donX feel like rnysclf to-day." TroteT-"Whv, Cholly. Ict me congratulate you."" Brooklyn Life. Cocons Axn Oolds. Tbosc v'hn arcsufTcrIng Irom Coughs, Colds, Soro Tiuroat, cU, should try Brown's BnoscntAt Tuocucs. Sold only i n Uxrem. prias contA. As a rule, there is actbing touvo wearing
"""t vmy icn cents lor H portioilo Ol sixteen illustrations. Nothing so handsomo in reference to tho World's Fair has br.fnro
ALL ACHES OF JOINTS, NERVES AND MUSCLES ST. JACOBS OIL WILL CURE AND PROMPTLY HUSTLES.
A
"TJ Teiltllcrs and rome unscrupulous grocers will tell yrm. rSI-ÄTjrTQ -f0 "this ts as p,ool is" or " the tame as rearline" IT'S . JLJK VV CLX FALSE Pcarliac is never peddle;!, if your crocer tends
y.a aa imitation. Ik: hoacattneJ it &sri:. l,00O,0OC ACflES Or LA KD for&lc br tbeäAt.NT Ftvt A. tcLcrit lUiLnoio 1B7 vuiiiecilo you Ulm HOPEWELL CLARKE, Ua-i CmamlMilotHt, HU Tul. Mian. Ä" COLCHESTER"
i RUBBER C0.'5 SPnDIN6 BOOT" MVMWMtaPkCtaMArlM. I
U
Miss May Yates, who had charg of the Vegetarian Federal anion el (rent Hritain at the World's fair up te the time of her departure for EnglaB some time ago, has decided to return i America to enter the lecture field i behalf of the cause of vegetarianhuau.
Explouons of Couching arc stoppad fef Hale's Honey of Horchound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in oneatfaat JlLCSTtn "Do you mean to sav that I aw a liar!" Blister "I hope that'l could mrt do so unKcntlcmanly a thine. But las you catch my Idea.' Boston Transcript. R K. Conrr.N-, Mgr., Claric Scott, writeat "I nnd Hall's Catarrh Cure a vuluasLs xa edy." Drugj-'ists sell It, 75c. "Yotr ought to be very proud of your wife. She is a brilliant talker." uYoi'n n'Rht, there." "Why. I could listen to hm aU night." '! often do."" Texas Hlftiass. "I sen signs of an early spring," said De small hoy. softly, to himself, as ho saw Uta teacher sit down on tho point of a tack which ho had nlaccd uuon tho toacher'achair.
a9l3isavBaBF3i LV v'
KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement aa4 tends to personal enjoyment vkea rightly used. Tho many, who lira better than others nnd enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more proasptly sdapting tho world's best producta tv tho needs of phygical being, will attet: tho value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in tka. remedy, 8yrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its prcaentiag in the form most acceptablo and pie itant to the taste, tho refreshing and traly benefickl properties of a perfect laxstive ; effectually cleansing the syaUa. dispelling colds, headache aa4 tsT. ui permanently curing conrtiytiam. . It has riven satisfaction to Biill3a&M met with the approval of tb iediwl'1 profession, because it acts the KMaeys, Liver and Bowels without waak- -eoiBg them and it ia perfectly fre fMi every objectionable eubstance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all 4rag gists in 50c and $1 bottles, bat it k Manufactured by" th6 California. Fig Syrap . Co. only, whoso name is printed oa crery package, al?o the name, Syrup of FSjja, and lieinf well informed you will Mt accept any substitute if ofiexed.
Ely's Cream Balm Cleanses tho Nasal Passages, Allays Iukfc and Inflammation, XlcHtorc tho Senserof Taste and Smell. Heals the Bores. Applr IliilmlntopnclinotrH. KLY UUOä.,Ui Warrva St, N.V. m liwMwal (by fna. Thsonnd, O. V. I-' UMVI1VR. M V U.h ThAilMiiifl mA. li Im - - m A . . . . .... . . -. . m rtm ... m a mrvmm MoVickor'H '-L'latr, ClilcaaH
if
What do you Wish for, in the way of easy work? You can have it, if you'll use Pearlind. With anything you can think of, that water doesn't hurt;
the easiest way to wash it or to. clean it is to take Pearlific;. You can't do any harm, bydoing away with that.wcaöaij' rub, rub, rub. Besides, with a most everything, there arc special reasons why you sliotild use Pearline. For instance: There's no shrink to flannels,, if they're properly washed vvidi it , 4Gr JAWikb 1-VI.K, JJtw Toffc. -ih. hiifdt.M, unit l; (ncumailetlrrf. n;10:"-ln.H-i!.MIrt . OfUiimrii'l. Jy.i. fonxertirr to rniimttif.b Ci' J loaufiodtutfrr. KNltilll'CYCLKCUl.I9u. YOUHB MEH rooil tltuntlnn. Write J, I). naoffn.attUl'a.XMb. VIHX tu jlttA on mm tmmm, ..Kalla M rl.l.i:i,aifl M 'omsmm kit ctsc f ails. a B In limn. ild hrdni3at A. Jf. K. B. 147. wc.v wittTiNa rm aTEariiKRa WM 7a m mm AH'
