Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 38, Number 4, Jasper, Dubois County, 4 October 1895 — Page 7

AGRICULTURAL HINTS. HOME-MADE VINEGAR. Homo W KiijrBo-lloii Wlilili .Muy Vtur i.f I'm rile I llcni'llt. The Mibjoot of Hie muUiiiffof vinegar at tioine has beisn one which lint, hocu dihcu.ssed at M'ltto length, hilt perhups the experience- given below mnygivu home now Miggoslifins to Utu reader, writoH Junniu Kalu hi the llotinckoopur. The old ways uf making thtsarticlß which lh lit for use on the table, by the nUI of molasses, or huifitr and yeast, b probably well known Ut all, also the abominable way of making it with the use of acids bought of druggixts; but an entirely, to me, new way, was disclosed the other day. It was to take a cabbage leaf and soak it in molasses, lay in the bottom of :i keg or crock, or whatever is desired to use to hold the vinegar, and then 1111 up with rain

water and set iu a warm place till read j" for use. The Kirne person who told me of this way also told me of another, which was not made so clear to me. but may be familiar to others. It was -to pour hot water over grape seeds, and when they had soaked for some time till all the juice was extracted to pour this into an old vinegar keg and set away for some time, ami the result is said to be a nice vinegar of a beautiful red color. My experience tells me that honey is a good foundation for vinegar if given plenty of time. One thing 1 learned after long trials, and much spoiling of good vinegar, or what would have been good vinegar if left alone, and that is that it will not be good vinegar till a "mother" has formed, and this forms on the top, like a bluish scum, and when it becomes thick enough, it will sink to the bottom. I, thinking this was mould, removed it with a spoon, and it formed again and was removed again, and my vinegar was spoiled. The quickest vinegar and the best I ever mafic was from some over-ripe fruit. It was not in any way rotted, of course, but it was too ripe to be of any use to put up. I dropped each piece into a crock and poured warm boft water over them, till the crock was well filled. This was set in a warm place, and in less than a week it had begun to form the "mother." An exchange says that the vinegar made from the washings of jelly crocks and dishes and such "truck1' is more or less dirt, but I think that any housekeeper who has her dishes clean and clean water in her kettle, can, to advantage, use this otherwise waste material, and not hare dirty vinegar, cither. HARVESTING CORN. A Hand Cutter Wliicli U Said tu Do Very I(hiI1 Work. Now that the corn crop is ready for harvesting the question as to the best method of cutting it has to be considCOKX CLTTKB. ercrl. There are machines that do the work expeditiously by horse power, but in many cases these are entirely out of the question and a hand-cutter has to be employed. A good one is fchown in our illustration, taken from the Ohio Farmer. The edge half of the blade is corrugated crimped by being passed flatwise between two ridged rollers and the blade is ground to an edge from one side only. The result of this is an edge serrated and toothed like a saw, but the cutting edge of each tootli is smooth like that of a knife, and the blade can be sharpened on a grindstone like any knife. The advantage of this knife is that it sticks wherever it touches, and it cuts. too. It requires only half as much effort to cut a hill of corn with this cutter as with the smooth cutters. POINTS OF POULTRY. The l'lcturn Show Whrw the Different l'artn Ar I.ornletl. Expert breeders, of course, know the "points" in poultry, but among everyday farmers and average people whe raise poultry a comparatively small number are well informed in this respect. The illustration shows a rooster with the different parts numbered, and appended below the name of each opposite its number: 1, comb; face; 3, wattle; 4, deaf-ears, or earlobc; 5, hackle; 0, breast; 7, back; 8. saddle; 9, saddle hackles or feathers; 10, sickles; 11, tail coverts; 12, true tail feathers; 13, wing-bow; 14, wing coverts forming thi "bat;" 15, secondaries, lower end, forming the wing or lower butts; IG, primaries, or flight feathers, not aeeu when the winpf U clipped up; 17, point of breast boae; 18, thighs; 1, hocks; 20, lega ot hanks; 21, apur; 2a, toe or clawA. h. TL UomaalcaiL

MONEY N TURKEYS. fciiiCCrhtliitH KoiC'tr.lliiK Hie I'l t-il and Car or Yniiit'; IWrilk. If new blo.nl were brought into the flock every year there would be fever complaints of youn' turkeys being delicate. The truth is that these birds have been too mueh inbred. The easiest and quickest remedy for the trouble is the Introduction of wild blood, which gives the desired Htaiiiitm. When the y-ung turks are Jirst hutched thej. lue ehickcrs, require no food for the lirst liven ty-f'ur hours, but the mother should be given a little corn to keep her on the nest. Afterwards feed them some milk curd squeezed dry or bread dipped, but not .soaki d, iu milk or slightly moistened with egg. Later on they may be given scraps from the house, wheat.eorn, bread nndgreen bone. Always feed on a clean board, and allow them as mueh as they will eat up clean in the space of a quarter of an hour. Korthe tirst three weeks they should be fed three or four times a dav; afterwards three times

dailv will Mttlhie. Of course they must , CLlmX ilrially of naralvs-la. My father also . . . . . , i... r ... i l. i. ...... ..ij-

bc supplied witn pien iy oi water ami gravel. As soon as the turks seem strong and the weather is origin and warm, they may be allowed to ramble about, but must be got home at night, or, m case of a shower, as damp is extremely fatal j to them, After4hev reach the stage i known as 'shooting the red," they are hardv, and need but -little attention. l!ut for the Urst throe, months they I 1 need to be well eared for. Lice are as fatal as damp to young birds. As soon as they are hatched, the hen should be examined for lice, which arc certain tobe transmitted to , the young ones. The large lice will be found on the head, neck, under the wing and also on tha flight feathers arouiut me qums on me wing. nine : oil or melted grease should be well rubbed in and the hen thoroughly ' dusted with snuff or insect powder. The same should be done to the turks when they are about a week old, and a drop of oil rubbed on their heads. This should be applied with discretion, as too much grease is fatal to them. not first absolute freedom. About a month be-, fore marketing thev should be fed lib- ! erally with as much corn as they will cat, Old corn should always be used, as green corn is indigestible and often retards fattening, if it does not eaus? actual loss. X. V. World. HOW TO CANDLE EGGS. It Itciiulrr CoiildTHl)li- 1'rurtlce to Kleid In This Operation. Have a room as dark as you can or use a box 12 by 1C inches in size painted black inside. Stand on its end and open one side S inches from the bottom. All above 8 inches closed, set box with this open side toward you and set the light in it Xail a piece to bottom, uuder front edge, with the top of box back, this will enable yon to see better. This box can be used in any place, though it is better in a dark place. Take such light as you hare; the best candlers use common candles. Take two or three eggs in loft hand and the eggs you candle in right hand, and hold htdeway between you and the light, as close to the light as you can, und let it rub against one of the eggs in left hand; some are quite particular nbuuUthiti, as the eggs reflect the light through each other; turn the egg round until you are satisfied you have tested it. Take a strictly fresh egg as a standard to judge by. If a place like the vacuum in a mason's spirit level appears on the upper side us you turn the egg. it is not strictly fresh; though if this vacuum is small and the egg is all right otherwise it may be comparatively fresh. A dark or black spot indicates a poor egg; the. white of stale eggs also looks thin and watery. Hemember darkshelled eggs are thicker shelled and do not candle as easily as white ones. You can only learn by breaking suspicious ones, and it requires much practice to excel. Charles W. McQueen, in Farm aud Home. CARRYING HEAVY LOADS. It In Dour KuMly with the Aid of Short, Stout Ladder. To carr3" produce such as a quarter of beef, a dressed hog or other meat or produce, at times disagreeable to handle, there is nothing more 'handy I.AM1K11 roll CAltltVlNU IIKAVV I.OADg. than a short, stout ladder. Persons unaccustomed to carrying heavy weights, says Hichard Jones, will find it useful, for its construction, the side pieces may be six feet or more in length, two to three inches wide and an iuch thick. The rounds or crossplcces may be one foot apart, the length corresponding to the width of the ladder. The side pieces should be of strong, hard wood, free from knots, and the handles shaved and sandpapered smooth. Such a ladder is frcnuentlv used by tnarkctgardeners when removing garbage. Decaying leaves, stumps, dirt, etc. are shoveled into a box resting on the barrow, lifted and carried to the compost heap. R. J. Uilliard, in American Agriculturist. ItnWIiig Sheep for Mut ton. The mutton breeds of sheep grow so npidly compared with scrubs as to ab most surprise those who have not used them. Such breeds as the tlx ford Downs, .Shropshire and Hampshire Downs will gain from Vi ounces to a pound a dav the first year, if forced by high feeding. It has been demonstrated by actual tests that lambs can be made to attain HW pounds live weight when 100 days old, nnd individual rams, fed for the purpose ol gaining as much us possible, bar reached 370 pounds when 1 year old. ram wa exhibited at the Centennial tipoaltlou that weighed 425 pouud

Turkevs are great loragers, ami can- ( men retire irom muvuni-;. i1" '-"

be kept in confinement. Alter tue , S , " co.istai idurrfulness

three months they should be given I ' llinl in,N nf friends. He siys that

A PAltALYTIC CUJilSD.

Bis (Iraailfutlirr, a Ittvolutlontcrj' Kotille, ml Ills fiitlinr Until Died of I'araljrtU, Vet (lie TMiit (leiHTutloii Ii Cureil Tlio .Method. rrom thr Merui t. Jlotton, Matt. Llko a thunderbolt from a clear fchy. Ftrolieef paralysis canio to Mr. Trank T. Ware, the- well-known Hestern auctlonect imd uijraiser, at 2a."i Washington street llu went to bed one night fdxmt six years Ho, seemingly iu robust health. When hu awoke his leit s.du van stiffened by tin deadening of the nerves. The interviewer sought out Mr. Varo to pet the fai ls, lie gave the interesting particulars Sn his own way: "Tho Urst Blioek camo very suddenly vvhilo I was asleep, but it was not lading in Its effects, and In a few weeks 1 was able to bo about. A few mouths after, when exhausted by worlr and drenched with rain, 1 wont homo in a very nervous state. The result was a second and mora severe shock, öfter which my left arui aud leg were practically helpless, "My grandfather, who was a soldier lrtlu ItVwntiitlimarv War. and lost an arm in j tho struggle for Aineiicau independence, died of naralvsls, attliough it was compli cated with other troubles. and o 1 bad some knowledge of the fntid character or tho disease which Is hereditary Iu our family. After tho second slioclc 1 took warning, for, in all probability, a third would carry me off. recommended tö me, audi tried ail the remedies that seemed likely to do auv good, electricity, massage and specialists, but to "Almost everything mmcr mo sun was "Thoonlv thine I found that hchifd ma was Dr. Williams' Pink l'ills.and 1 verily believe that It it hadn't been for those pills i 1 urnn d hiivti been dead vcant r.t'O. i V I Kt ni h:ivn u sliirlit reminder of the i at attack six years niro. My lcSt arm Is : 'not as strong as the other aud my left foot nn Vi, llCtkMl-lll Ufr ,iJ 4W ----- ----- " walk a Rood distance, talk as easily as ever, and my general health is splendid. I, am really over seventy years old, ulthough I am generally taken to bo twenty years r.-,,;-,,,- thnntlmt. ' 'ThcPink Pills keep my blood in pood condition, and I believe that Is way 1 am so W..11. nlthoutrh cm erf illness may Help. "I havo thought of it a great many timc3 nnd 1 honestly helievo thut the 1'iuk Tills havo saved niy life." Mr. Ware has every appearance of a perfect! v healthy man, and arrives athlsofllco promptly at eight o'clock every morning, ultbouch bo has readied nn a;.'i when many n his opinion both his father and gnuulfuther could have been paved lr l in uns !,! 1un rvlltfllllllliU' lit thllt tltllC. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Palo Peopla contain all tho elements necessary to giva new life and richness to tho blood and restore shattered nerves. They may be had of all drugpisi- or direct by mail from the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Bclienectady.X. Y., atWc. i,er box, or six boses for $3.50. I'rUUrRra Limited. Sharptongue I am surprised to find you riding hi a parlor car. Graball trail way hog) lluhl I'd like to kno.v why? Sharptongue No matter how hard you trv, you can't occupy but one scat. N. Y. Weekly. I'rovrd an AllbL Police Commiiiioticr 0Toole, all these witnesses say you were dntnk and riotous on post at twelve o'clock last night. Policeman OToole ll'n a loi, sor. I wruz aschlapc at the toime. N. Y. Journal. Mudo No IHfTrrence. Passenger This train is nearly ona hour behind time, Is it not? Conductor Yes. Hut that's all right. We'll get in in the usual time. Passenger What time is that? Conductor Two hours late N. Y. World. Terrible Situation. "Ugh! I had a dreadful nightmare last night." "Whv. vou do look bad. What waa it?" "You know I owe my tailor 1150 and I dreamed that I went up to him and paid It." Chicago Hccord. w Ilia Vrlvnte Opinion. "Do you think the bicycle is wicked?" asked the earnest young woman. "My dear sister," answered the ministerwho had only taken three lessons, "tho thing is positively depraved." Pittsburgh Dispatch. Not Very Connollnc Van .Tay Miss Meeks called me fool. Do I look like a fool? Milllcent No, you do noL I don't think she judged you by your looks. Brooklyn Kngle. A Declaration. I will not piwa my Sunder suit. ' My watch, my chain, tny scarf pin, na: Mv books, ray overcoat, tny flute. BccauKC-l'vo pawned taem lang ago. Judga A VERY SIMPLE T1IINO TO DO. -Life. Thn Bright Hide nf It. Patient 1 nm very miserable, doctorj I have no appetite whatever. Doctor You are in big luck, now that everything has gono up so in price. Texas Siftings. Occupying Some of It. "There's always room at the top," btifzedthcfly nt church, alighting on tho bald head of sleeping Deacon Ironside and proceeding to take a Btroll. Chicago Tribune. Grave Dilemma. Old Lndy (during the hard times) We'll have to trust l'rovidenco for something to cat, bn( 1 don't know what in tho world we are going to do for something to wear.-Judge. A Citae f TruiL Mrs. Impocuuc-I think the weathaf will bo lovely to-morrow, and I treat wc can take a drive. Mr. Itnnecune Well, f we do, it will We an all-around of truat.- If. Y.

HOME HINTS AND HELPS. Colored starches of delicate tintsecru, pale pink, green or blueare hold to use in the laundering of white muslin und lace curtains, to which articles they impart the desired shade. Consomme of Mutton: I'lnee twelve mutton shanks, jt:e pound of lean beef, and an onion, with four quarts of water, in it saucepan, and allow to sim-hum-for four hours. .Strain off. When cold place on the Ice to harden, or it limy be taken liquid. Harper's Kazar. Tea liiscuit; Make nice soda or cream b!cnlt; roll out half as thick as for common biscuit; spread with four teaspoon futs melted butter and sprinkle on half cnt sugar. Holl as compactly as roll jelly cake. Cut roll off into one-Inch thick slices. Lay flat on tins and bake. Mrs. Minerva Nicolet, in Chicago Ilecord. l'inenpple Ice: l'are good, ripe pineapples und cut out the eyes; grate them and pass the pulp through the colander. To one quart of this add one and a quarter pounds of sugar and one pint of water; beat the whites of two eggs to a stiff froth and add the above little by Utile, beatlntr well to mako

them mix, then freeze. X. Y. Ledger. I (linger Cake: A cupful of sugar, I one-half cupful of butter, and two eggs, dissolve one-hair teaspooniui or soda in one-half cupful of milk. Add about two cupfuls of flour, in which sift a teaspoonful of cream tartar. Add also a tnblespoonful of ginger. Hake slowly about three-quarters of an hour in a square baking sheet, and when cool make two layers and spread cream between them on top. A little grated cocoa nut dusted over before serv ng is an improvement. Farm, Field arid Fireside. Reform in the Iledroom. We .shall be a healthier and happier race when the double bed is banished. The light iron or brass bedstead with a mattress that can be easily aired and kept clean, is the bed that ought to be generally used. And the heavy comforter ought to he banished with the double bed, for it belongs to the niT rvi liin rim! iL oacKwoous. i ne ueu ctiverixi oar w ,, - , . ti.i,,., . cellcnce is n lightweight blanket that , , 1 F I M 1 1 . I i..i s soft and white. Tucking the bed clothes tightly in is another custom handed down by dwellers in Arctic wilds. The practice of making up a bed and making it almost airtight Is as unhealthful as It is unclean. Mary Porter Langley.inOrange Judd Farmer. A Favorite Cake: '1 wo eggs, one cup of sugar, four tablespoonfuls of milk, one-fourth tnblespoonful of baking-powder and a rounding cupful of flour. Heat the yolks of eggs and sugar together, add the whites well beaien. then the milk in which the salt is dissolved; lastly the bakingpowder and flour well mixed together. Make in two round pic tins, lined with buttered paper. When cold, spread the. lemon butter between the cakes, and sift sugar over the top. This cake is better on the second or third day after baking than when fresh, therefore very convenient to make when preparing for au unexpected guest The quantity of lemon mixture is sufficient for two or three cakes, but we usually make but one, keeping the filling uutll we want another cake. Western Rural. AUTUMN WOOLENS. Htjltah Fabric for Fall Ctitumri fer the I.adlen. Roujirh-surfaced woolens are imported for the first autumn gown.. These come with knotted bourette threads aud in boucle effects in loops of mohair: also in irregular weaviug so open that it seems too sleazy and light for winter gowns. This light weight is, however, well considered in view of the heavy silk liningsand other accessories of soft woolen skirts. New .Scotch tweeds are a melange of colors without the suggestions of checks used in summer tweeds. The quiet and grave grounds of brown, gray, or mixed black and white, arc enlivened by occasional threads of bright green, vivid red or glowing orange. One of the most novel effects among the importations is a wool fabric resembling Turkish towelling, the threads projecting from the surface very thickly, and divided by stripes or slender lines of plush, or velvet placed an inch and a half apart. These are very attractive in violet or damson shades striped with bright green velvet, or in golden-brown wool with dull green plush lines. That there may be variety in winter outfits some very aoft and fine camel's-hair twills arc imported in plaids not too large, and usually of a single color, mordore, prune or green with black. Other twills of dark ground have a design of diamonds, or of stripes in black mohair loops that are as glossy as silk. Mediterranean blue with black, plum color and black and the popular green or brown with black are the combinations most used in these boucle wools. Harper's Uazar. I'rulla to Milk ,Iitm. The jrol housewife who is laying up a stock of goodies for the cold winter days will appreciate a hint about preserving fruits. All varieties of berries will be found excellent for jam. They should he picked over carefully, weighed and mashed and put into a kettle with half a pound of sugar for every pound of fruit. The boiling should be alow, and constant Mlrrlng Is necessary to prevent sticking. The fruit and sugar should be cooked together until thick and smooth, hut never stiff, or the Jam becomes marmalade. If tlio berry seeds are objectionable the fruit should be rubbed through a sieve before cooking, leaving the pulp and juice free of seeds, thus forming a seedless jam. Figs, quinces, plums, apricots and oranges make a Ifood jam. Cooked in clear water until tender, washed and put into a kettle with sugar and set over a fire aud boiled until thick, any of these fruit yield fine results. All jam should be put Into small glass jars, covered closely and set in a cool, dark place. Chi earo Chronicle.

Highest of til in Leavening Power. Litest U. S. Gov't Report

Df&h( Baking Powder

ABSOLUTELY PURE

English lawyer do not often die millionaires, according to the figures compiled by the Daily Telegraph. The estates of 37 judges who have died during the last five or six years averaged $!! 15,000, those- of 20 barristers 5153,000. nnd those of 44 solicitorsS'SS,000 each, the average for 101 lawyers estates being S 25,000. This does not mean the accumulation of professional incomes alone, for many of the men in the list had private fortunes and a number of the solicitors succeeded to business that had beeu In their families for generations. Eight only among them are left as much as a million. A statistician of the German government determined to make an investigation of the superstition regarding Friday as an unlucky day. He has given the world a book of queer tables and Agares, which prove that it is Monday, and not Friday, that is the most fatal and unfortunate day of the week. The best foreign fur for hat-making Is produced in northern climates. Russia. Sweden. Norway and the Do minion of Canada, together with Siberia, are said to produce the best felting furs. Tnbicfo'i Triumph. V.vfirv inv wa meet men who have ap1 interest in life, but they chew and smoke all the time and wonder why tho sunshine is not brluhu and the sweet birds' mhir sound discordant. Tobacco takes awav the iileaures of lifo and i lonwi irr-itntpil nervo centers in return. Nft-Tn-Kne is the casv way out. Guarani - - v. - ...n ,i ,. teed to euro and mako you well ana strong, by druggists everywhere. This famous "new woman" hjtill charming appears, Bho's "advanced" in ideas, Hut never iu years. Washington Star. Piso's Cure for Consumption relievos tho most obstlnato couglis. itev. v. uucu muelleu, Lexington, Mo., Feb. 24, 'SH. nrt Tfinr mi-mlcs to read vour works In order to mend them, for your friend is so ?,mrh Hie vour second self that ho will Judge too much like you. Pope. Mnn YlvrrKT. Jack "Ahl You are tmn dnn-itfr nf Eve." Jess "Indeed 1 am not. Vo go back only to WiLiaai the Conqueror." rucK. THE MARKETS. New Yokk, September 28. lt5. CATTUi NutlveSteers..... I 3 So eil S 10 COTTON Mlilcllim; FLOUU-Winter Wtieat, WHKA'f No. 2 KcU COHN Nu. -'. WATS No. S.. POKK Nuw Mess. r ijati COTTON M Milium 1 1 Ii U V lis l"n ticy S too rs Medium HOUS Klr to Select MlliKr 1'alrtoClioice FLOCK lu tenia Fancy lo Cxtr&ilo.. WI1KAT No 2 tturi Winter... COHN No. J MlxaU OATis-No.'J KVli-No. S TOIIACCO Lur Leaf Hurley HAY Clear Timothy IIUTTKIC-Cliolrn Oalry KtSUS Fresk POKK Standard Mess UACON-Ucur Kit) tiAKU l'ruuu Steam CH1CAUU CATTMC Stilppus ........ HOISS Fair to Choice. blllilil'-FuIrW Ctioice FLOUK Winter Patents..... Sprlnc 1'atcnls.. .. W11UAT No. -J Sprint No 2 lie A COUN'-No. 2 OATS No. i'OKU Men (new) ICVN'SWMl'V CATT L 12 S h I ppi n e S leort . . . . UOCiS-All (Jrsde. ... . .. 6 it 3 O) 0 75 U 10 Oj UK) 4 "0 5 TO SO-J 3 Ut SO S f 0 4 05 4 IS 3 i 3 15 5 W r?H poo ... ) . .. 300 is 4 VI a 12 "o c 13 OJ 10 tl i-ja 8 ttt'.ift II a es 4 2 75 a 11 a n it 1 -r 3 7; 3 JKJ 3 75 lf o:t 32. s -- 4 li 63 IWIi 336 31 75 3 Of 3 "S CO CI 3; H'ii S 12HH 3 r ft 3 rn a 624Ö IV U ... 'a WUCAT-No.i Heil.. OATS Na 2 COKN .Nu 2 Ni:W KLHAN'! FLOUK HlKh Grade 3 00 .s 20 IT SJ , COKN No. 2.. OATS Western. HAY-Clioice ß 18 Ml 8 7 rouiv xew Jiess UACON bides ... COTTON Mi. dilute I.ICl'-VILLH WIIKAT No.JKcvl (new) . . COKN-No, 2 Mlied fc? OATS No. 2 Mixed POKiC New weis. UACON-Clear KlU COTTON MJJliu the to it now, fastet ever.

iPgnVbater's Internationai !s faaaSP ' SecMr of th e " UnnbridI." nAnnarvü O aaaaaW ! ffManelard of th VS. Porres) cotrt, T.K. nor rrtau oev.M4 1 (S H Ut , awlyaUcaootbooU. Cffaf iliilVyMlMawai1slielniitTiwrH. g 3s ' THE BCST FOR PRACTICAL PUR-OSES. t o BH It is easy to find the word wasted. a H Q It is easy to ascertain the pronuaciatioa. ? lH It is easy to trace the growth of a word. l (I H It is easy te learn what a word atcaae. X BBbPcj. c. Mcrriaaa Ca.,raWleteeriHt

1

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than

grows and its patrons increase in number Hundreds off millions of "packages have been used by bright women who want to make wishing easy. m

and its

Baiterx Btrar.rcr "What arc ther Ivr.ca-

ing him lorl" Outck lirop lan-"At-temptcd suicide " lästern Straflrer "Tber might just as xvell have let him kill 'daiself.H Quick Drop Han "No, sir-ec. The boya out here don't believe iu a feller bei celfish."-Lifc, Art thou In misery, brother! Thea I pray be coraiorceu. m ay grow ssaa away. Art thou elatodf Ahl ba cot to gav; temper thy Joy: this, loo, iiiaU away. Paul II. Ilayne. Beat of AU To cleanse tho system in a gentlo and truly bcncnciai manner, wncn wio epnagu comes, use tho true and perfect rcmc.y. Svrup of Firs. Ono bottle will answer lor afl tho family and costs only M cents; he largo size fl. Try it and be pleased- Manufactured by tho California Fig Syrup Co. only. What nrodts us that wc froai heTcn de rivo a soul itamortal, and with looks erect, survey the stars, if, like the brutal hlndwe follow where our passions lead tbe way! Drydea. Keep Tonr Weather Wt Opea. Fraud loves a shininir mark. Occasion ally spurious imitations spring up of Hosteller's Btoinach Hitters, the proat American family remedy for chills and fever, dyspepsia, constipation, biliousness, nervousness, neuralgia, rheumatism and kidney dieorder. These imitations are usually fiery local bitters full of blRli wines. Iok oui for tho firm sicnature oa the cenuine label and vignette of St. George and the Dragoa. "De fac" said Undo Eben, "dat some men gits erloiigby ies iierteadin' tcr be wise shows w-hutergoodt'ing wisdom r'aUymur be," Washington Star. IUtl'a Catarrh Core Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 73c Ir vou can bear all your small trials yo will never break down under your great aces. Texas Siftings. "Tna onlv thingldoa't like about Mise Peeler is her bathlnp suit." "That isat much against her." life. TtrrrwAM's rn.u f or constlnatkiH 10c rtmI SV, Get uio b.xk at your druggist's and gm by it, liookJrec. Vanity Grcville. is a poisoa of agrccableaeee.FoRTtrr Feeble Lnnrs Apalnst "Winte with Hale's Hnnev of HorchounJ and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure la or n ndnute. A urr of case Is a difficult pursuit.-Cow-pcr. ASSIST NATURE a little sow and tbea in Tcnoving- ofeadinp matter froei tbe stomach and bowel and you thereby avoid a multitude of dijtressiag deraafreaienis aid dis eases, and will have less frequent need of your doctor's service. Of all kr.owm agents for this parpose, Dr. iterce'e Pleasant Pellets are the best. Ose wed, ther are al wars Im favar The Pellets cam biliousness, sick and bilious headache, duziaess, costiveness, or consdnation, sour stom ach, loss ef appetite, coated tomcue, indigestion, or dyspepsia, windy belching, heart-burn," pain and distress alter eatin ff, ana incrcu acnnKcaau ut liver, stomach and bowels. PROFITABLE DAIRY WORK Can only bo accotaplkkes wRl tbe very of tools and . apviu With a Davis W Cresa Sepa rator on tho jbM trm J0 sure of more Wm "" butter, while taesluaaeat milk Is aval- HM aabte feed. Farmers will H BsakeBOBrtaUketopeta Baaä DaTliIllustrate.) Bt catalegaa mailed tyx.il Aseotswaated DAVIS RAXKIW BLDO. 4 MF. OO. Csr. Rtndslsh A Newra SaCktcaes. 1

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Out of sorts and no wonder. Think of the con dition of those poor women who have to wash clothes and clean house in

old-fashioned way. They're

tired, vexed, discouraged, out

01 sons, wnn acning oacks and aching hearts.

Ihey must be out of their wits. Why don't they use Pearline? That

is what every woman who

values her health and strength

is coming to. And they're coming

h.very day, Pearline fame

JetraaL