Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 40, Number 2, Jasper, Dubois County, 17 September 1897 — Page 3

METHODIST REVOLT.

Th juration of Kepreneiitatliin Iii the yuuilr.imial ( tinfrri-iiic The I Memlirra I'm I In- KrrUlil. Mini 'I'ltejr Will uihiki i iiih i MMMWMtaMaa wiu ti BlliiUterlal IIi.iIhtii A National t'uiivmMm r tin- i.aity i.ihciy la la CMIsbV ( tili (.,Si j)t. 10. The 1 innh-iUiulil say a: Klt'lliou lias broken out in the M tu. i it Episcopal ehureav, The laymen duiiiaiiil I'ljual ivpifseiitatioii with the niiiie ten ti 1 1 1 graal tjuadraBolal Laglslatur of tin- i-li ii n il. I Iiii i- liim-fi have tin- iitini.sUT.s vuli'ii dm tin- iUfit . n Mid defeatad it, end ti" laysaai have lust nti'iice. The church will Im liruujfht faoe tu fai'i" uil n eck with ii re vol I thai will probably overshadow (be question oi vviuiu'ii delegates ill tin' jfi-liiM'ul eonfcreooe. Representative of I be PeoB eyi vania ami Ni-w Jena eoafareaaes huvi' issiied mi aihln ss for tin- changfe lvtMuiiiiy laymen of Imiiuiiu iuive eulletl a stati- eooeeol Um Ui meet at ladlaoapoii next Wednesday to consider the question. Alnyeoiiviiitii.il, represent Log .the Cincinnati oonfaranoa, sent greeting's last wreek to the Indiana convent ion, ami uracil the culliug of a uational con vent ion. The laymen of the Central Illinois conference have called a convention to Mel at I anton September 17, and that min ting will probahly take action on this inest ion. Another biff convention will ie bsld in Baltimore next moutli, ami if not tows tailed by the Indian' apolis convention it is expected to issue a call for a national convention of Methodist laymen to make plaus to bring the ministers into Um Under the rules of the church each OOOfereOOC is entitled to one ministerial delegate to the gene ltd aoafamaas for every 45 eierjfjmeo. Bach conferMice is entitled to at least one lav delegate, hut in no ease can it have month an two. In the -eiicral Conference at Cleveland, last year. 15,000 ministers hail 89 representatives, while the 'J. "0.1,000 lay members of the church had hut 100. in Indiana MM pn-achcrs had seven representatives, while 00,0)0 laymen ha.l hut l o. Inder this system many small conferences have a disproportionately largv representation, while the larjfe conference that con tri hutes heavily to tin- support of the church can have only one delegate more than the .-.mall conference over in hina or imlu., that h is to he supported by money sent from Anieriea. There is little doubt that a national convention of laymen will be held, ami it promises to bruitf out many ol the most prominent members of tlnr church.

THE FARMING WORLD.

WATER FOR SHEEP.

lalaaa It la Absolutely l'nrt Ihr Klork III M- Ori liimlrd. Water ie directly absorbed into the stood with whatever impurity inuv be 'ontuined in it. It is to Home extent trained or filtered of w hut it may have f solid mutter not dissolved in it, but whatever is held ' solut ion, and soma of what it may have that in SOi di lolved to Home extent, oes irto tin Mood with it. Thus impure water p- .sons the very fount of life, suys American Sheep Hreeder, and carries It. to an uniinal what may be the most injurious to the health of it. There are, however, some injurious matters existing in water which are more i specially deserving of notice mi uccount of their ver y deleterious efTeeis, SUCfl as the tfggl or ffernis of organic matters, either vegetable or animal, as the spores of various minute plants, ami the embryos rf the most deadly parasitic animals. Ot these tuny he ineiit ioned the (CI Uli of epidemic diseases due to the prowl Ii In the blood of minute plants derived from these germs, and the deadly parasites such a-- tin- liver 11 like, the various Intestinal worms, and the ova of many tape worms. All these may be taken Into sheep in water drank from stream:; or springs or most frequently from Stagnant ponds. One of the most frequent sources of infection is the overflow in" of pastures by streams lato which a lnrpe extent of manured lands may have been drained, or into which the wastes of towns or cities have been discharged. On this account the shepherd cannot exercise too preat caution for the protection of his Book, or estimate too highly those most favorable localities where t he streams flow dow n uncleared mountain slopes, from the primeval forests, or where the spinpopulation has never defiled the soil with filth and Impregnated it with the perms of disease. Nor can he estimate too hlghl the pure artesian fountain flowing from far down below the sources of impurity, and supplying the flocks with whoUsonie drink. And in the choice of a raupe or for a farm for the rearing of a flock, this pol nt is to be considered first and last as being of th M st paramount importance.

MOVABLE CORN CRI&

Umtm aa a Small Vrriula t'aaaot At task Its luateat. One of the handiest things for the fori; grower Is a convenient place for the storage of corn for curing, wlien it La nut to he sold and hauled directly from the field. For sewral years the Massachusetts agricultural college at i mllSIS- baa nand smull corn cribs as illustrated herewith. They ere set up in a.iy part of the field or together in rows. If corn is rotated on various fields therribs are earned on tenuis from the old to the new corn field

THE SANTA FE WRECK.

Latent Known Coni-eniliiK t,l" DsOS o Injured. Kmpouia, Raa., Sept. y. Twelvo known dead, one missing (probably incinerated) and 14 injured, two of whom will likely die, is the record of the terrible head-on collision on the Santa Fe. as known to-night. Even now it is not positively known that the list given is complete, as it is believed that several were burned to death and nothing left by which they could be recognized. The bodies of 11 persons have Im-cii found in the debris, three burned beyond recognition. Wm. Frisbee, of Topeka. engineer of the east-bound fast mail, who was last night reported among the injured, expired during the day, ami Michael Mctilade and It. A. Dor an, postal clerks, were found to have been wrongly placed in the list of injured. Nothing could be found of the remains of Wells l-'arpo Express M. sseug r J. F. C. Sauer. A handful of charred bones taken from the wreck, however, are supposed to be his. Near them was found his watch. Human ghouls delved in the Imming wreckage and plundered the baggage ami mail sacks which strewed the ground. One tried to snatch a watch from the breast of an Hmporia doctor who. weak and nervous, was creeping slowly out of the debris. He had strength enough 1. ft to hit the brute a blow in the face which made him turn with a curse and sneak away. Mul sacks were dragged into the Corn fields and rifled. The report at the Kansas City post ofliee is that practically all of the mail on both of the wrecked Santa i'e train" was dest ioed. One pouch, however, for southern California on the westbound train No. 1 is said to have been saved This train carried a large mail from New York city to California. Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona. No official report has been received here. llehind the west-bound train that was wrecked was a freight train. Its engineer stopped at Eating for orders. He said yesterday that the red light, the danger signal, himg out by the operator there to warn the west -bound passenger to stop, was burning so dimly and the glass was smoked so badly that he could not see it till he had left his cahantl gone (dose up to it. The dimness of this light was probably the cause of the accident Tile engineer of the east-bound train could not sec the warning signal as be rushed past, and pulled the throttle w ide open and sped on for Kniporia, seven miles away. The night operator at Eaing, whose duty it was to see to the signal lights, was a new man at the place. He had only lieen on duty there ten days.

DIRECT ROUTE TO FRISCO.

fh Hants Fe Wilt Hot i ,y Acquiring- a New Line. JoUAJWtMaNnMi Cal , Sept. 10. It ii feted on good authority that the railroad soon to be built, connecting this place w itb Kramer, will eventually pass into the hands of the Santa Fs company, .lohnannesbtirg is to he. the terminus fur te present, but within the next few months the road will be continued t . connect with the Valley road at or near hakersfield. This will give the Santa Fe a direct routs to ass Ftaucisco.

MO VAHLE COHN CRIB.

when empty. The crib (a to b) Is 1Z feet long and (a to d) 7 2-:.' feet h igh, 5 3 feet w ide (g to h) and ttt feet at the bottom (e to f). From a to i it is Infant, s to o 2) inches, c to d 6 feet and h to i 14 inches The three floor frame lengthwise joists are of 4 by 4 inch material 12 feet long) while the f ron t , cen ter I B d rear end cross pieces are of 4 by 6 inch it u fT. BaCS house stands on posts, is strongly made and well shingled. The door occupies the entire front end, leing Miiarr; slats are placed across the door inside as the crib is filled and renn ved as corn is taken out. It is lest to invert a pan on top of each poet before building or setting the crib on the posts. Hats and small vermin will then be unable to pet from the ground into the crib, provided snow in winter Is kept clear. Albert Itisiug, in Farm and Home.

FARM WATER SUPPLY.

HAULING CORN FODDER. Dra? Mmle 141m the One la flSlWH Naves Letts of Work. The dray portray ed herewith is ninde of eight 6-inch 10-foot fence boards, as shown at a a, etc., with one 6-inch fence board 7 feet long, crosswise underneath in front, b. On top in front is a 2 by 6 7-foot long piece, c, with 1 V-inch bolts 5 inches long througt

iiii i r r i ft a I if! ! i In 111 1 1 r

CORN CROP DRAY.

a, b and c. On the rear of top is another piece, d, just like c, through which and the boards a, are run 8 V 'n'n bolts 3yt inches long. The heads of all bolts ure underneath. Itore two holes for stakes, e e, near the outer ends of hind cross piece d. Fasten by chain in front, and half the terrors of fodder hauling have disappeared. A cross ection is shown at the right of the illustration.Farm and Home. I'rrvrntlna l ag Kntlna. If an egg is broken the hens will er; it, and it is by eggs being broken '.lint the hens learn the vice, as they ucvti eat eggs unless they first find one broken. The only way to prevent t lie hens from laiing eggs aflcr they i SIC begin is to make a nest with a top, coin pelling the hen to walk in to reach the nest, and have the box raised ten inches from the floor, so that the heu n not stand near the box to eat the K?S- When she goes on the nest she cannot do any harm, aa she must coine off and stand up to eat the eggs. Farm tnd Fireside.

Winter Orala After Potatoes. Wherever the potato crop can be got off in time for seeding with fall grain It makes the very best seed bed. No plowing is needed if the weeds have been kept down. It is only necessary to pile the potato vines in heap and burn them, starting the fire in a brush heap If the potato tope are too green to burn readily. A great dal of plant food is developed after growing a crop of potatoes. It is largely nitrogenous, as the polnto crop Is chiefly water and rarbon, with some potash, which is paastly found In the potato tops.

Turpentine tiond for Roup. Spirits cf turpentine have leen usetl la a remedy for roup with excellent remits. It is given in half tenspoi.nful doses, oner a day, mixed with sweet ail or cotton seed oil, in the projKirtion of one part turpentine to two of the Istter. It is also excellent when used aa an ointment for swelled heads or eyes, and is one of the best remedies for gapes, a few drops only being necessary for chicks. It will alao prevent lice if freely uaed on the rooata and over she floor and walla of the poultry houasv- Farmers' He view.

St

Hun to Construct a Iteservolr

Huili-mtr t ost. On every farm where if windmill is used the additional cost of storing water other than that required for stock is little, and the expense of two or more windmills is less than the losa from drought. Where there is Hindi rnte rainfall the supply of moisture necessary to assist through a dry period is but little, and excellent results liavs been obtained by the use of large tanks, but a small reservoir can be constructed at a moderate cost. A tank ten led high and ten feet in diameter holds O.hTi gallons of water; but as a reservoir can be provided to hold ten timea that much at but little more expends the storage supply could be made ample. This does not imply that one ia practicing irrigation, for to do so large storage reservoirs are necessary, hut at a small cost the fanner can protect himself to a certain extent ugainst drought. On fields of corn that have been grown by listing the centers between the rows were opened with a one-horse plow and water conducted so as to flow down the drains. Hefore the ends of the row s are reached the ground becomes well saturated, and a small piece piay be irrigated each day. it must not Vie overlooked that the caaoity of the tar.k does not limit the supply, aa the ponies can furnish morewa ter than the farmer may wish to use, ai.d as a tank or reservoir may be drawn off and filled several times during the season the amount of water used will be considerable. Attention is called to this matter, as the cost is but little, and farmers will find it an advantage to experiment in that direction where it can conveniently be done. Troy (N. '.) Times.

HINTS FOR FARMERS. Reil direct to the consumer every dme you can. The young man can never buy a farm cheaper than now. Tlie crop of winter apples will bo much loss than last year. Corn stalks that grow unreasonahly big are all talk ami no com. Sorghum should never be planted until the soil is perfectly warm. Bubaoiliag means more rapid drain äff' al'd better storage for rain. The fanner who plants more corn than he has teams to stir the soil ia uuvv ise. The red kaffir corn combines a large ie!d of fodder with the largest yield of grain. Heavy rains compact the soil and cultivation separates it so that it can absorb air. We see it stated that wood ashes and common salt mixed with water muks a good cement. The most fertile soil on earth cannot grow crops without moisture to diasolva the food elements. The only way to tell if plaster will do land good is to try it. Plaster ia very uncertain in Its action. The tomato worm has resumed business. Cut him bj two with s pair of sheep sheers or scissors. If wheat and oats ground are harrowed immediately after harvest, the loss of moisture will be prevented, until the ground can be plowed. Fue pails of water are absorbed by one stnlk of corn, if tbe roots can find the water, and they will penetrate far an I near to get it, if they can penetrate tbe soil. Western Plowman. lalnstaklBK Work W'las. Did you ever see a cahinetma ker flnuah a fine piece of furniture? When the materüU comes from the saw It is simply rough lumber. When planed it is reasonably smooth, but far from being finished; much sandpapering, rubbing and polishing must follow before tfte job is complete. The more work lis puts on the better price he will receive r the article. So w ith the wheat field; the plow leaves the ground rough, and there must follow much planing, rubbing and poliahing. The better finish we put on the more profit in the crop. sVarrinultural Epitomise.

WORK OF THE POETS. Bar cess. I built a palace by a troubled sea. Broal walls of spotless whit and turrets tail. Orsat colonnades, the towers of mine owi etrenKth. I did ad ilresm my pslare fslr could fall. But, at the open Kate, an angel knelt. And, sorruw that 1 knew not of. bewailed. "Come, friend," I cried, "rejoice In my

eueres. " "I we,-!.," was tho renly, 'that thou hast failed." When months had com and g-on. I saw the walls Of my iuor palace blackened by the flame, tts mlKhty towers In ruins at my feet. My bead was bowed In sorrow and in shame, And at Us shattered gate I knelt anc wept. My an, id friend now stooped a palm to press Upon my brow. Rhe bade me look shove. "Kejolce," she cried, "In this thy flrt success." Pittsburgh Dlspstch. Ahseat Yet Preeeat. The holme is empty coldly, strangely still. I go from room to room and hesr no sound. No busy foot. Intent on household tak. No clinch of needle In Its tireless round. And yet lure lies the work, but yesterday Stic planned to make so perfect and complete. And here a rage half written, with the pen, Beside a scrap of verse, most atranj-ely sweet. These autumn leaves she gathered yesterday And massed their mottled beauty In a vase With feathery erasses and cool, fragrant ferns; These alters lay beside her glowlriR face. A ribbon here, a dainty kerchief there Her very presence speaks from all around. And yet I cannot see her graceful form, I call her name, but cannot hear a sound May Morrison, In Housekeeper.

THE HEAT PLAQUE OF AUGUST, 1806. Plnkham'n Explanation of the Unusual Number of Deaths

Prostrations Among Women.

The great heat plague of August, 189, was not without its

lesson. One could not fail to notice in the loiiir lLstaof

the dead throughout thia country, that so many of

the victims were women in their thirtiea, women between fort five and fifty. The women who succumbed to the proj tracted heat were women WaMNM energies Were exhausted by sufferings pecuoar to

their .sex; women who, taking no thought

of themselves, or who, attaching no im

portance to first sv in ptom.s, allowed their

female system to become run down.

Constipation, capricionsappctite, restleaane forebodings of evil, vertigo, languor, and weu neas, especially in the morning, an itching

sensation w inch suddenly attacks one night, or whenever the blood becomes overheated, are all warnings. Don't wait too long to build up your strength, that is now a positive necessity I Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound has specific curative powers. You cannot do better

than to commence a course of this grand ' 'medicine. Hy the neglect of first Kymptoina you will see by the following letter what terrible suffering

came to Airs. raig, and how she was cured : ' I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Conspound and think it is the best medicine for women ha the world. 1 w as so weak and nervous that I thought I could not live from one day to the next. I had prolapsus uteri and leucorrhna and thought I was going into consumption. 1 would get so faint I thought I would die. 1 had dragging pains in mv back, burn

ing sensation down to my feet, and so many miserable

feelings People said that I looked like a dead

oman. Doctors tried to cure me but failed. I had

given up when 1 heard of the I'iiikham medicine. I got a bottle. I did not have much faitii in it, but thought I would try it. auo it made a new woman of

no. I wish I could get every lady in the land to try it. for it did for me what doctors could not do. " M us. S am is Chaid, I'.aker s Landing, IV

ar.ai

vT..a7

asffQ

Malting m the Vlngs. (Amateur Theatricals.) I stand behind s painted tree, And watch my long-haired lover flev From fearful Ills that threaten him. fie la so handsome, such a lord. By all the gazing girls adored, For his sake pretty eyes are dim: But he thinks not of all these things. But of me, waiting In the wings. And now behind the footlights bright I stand amid the dazzling light; The people all applaud and shout. A painted face bend over mine, And calls me "love" with raptures fine; But let not my own dear one doubt That 'tis to him my whole heart sings To him who's walling in the wings. And now together, hand in hand, A robber and a queen we stand. And gaze into each other's eyes. Though he's an outlaw bold and bad. And I'm a queen dethroned and sad. He has no curses, I no sighs. This Is the joy the evening brings Together, waiting In the wings. Marion Kvans, in Century

Whea Cindy's Goae. Ef Cindy's gone the shadders creep An' picture her the way she 'peared When she was here. I Jes' can't hot p From feelln' mighty weak an' skeered Per fear nhe mightn't fin' her way To this ol' cabin 'neath the plna. An' aftah all the weary day Steal into deae brack ahms o' mine Ef Cindy's gone de mock-birds sit An' seem to mope de hul day long. Dey Jes' raln't set den haht to twit De'h pow ful sweet an' lovisi' song; De chickens don' act as dey should, Deh's suthln lackin' sho'n you bo'n. An" eben possum don" taste good, Ner hoe-cake, when my Cindy'a son. When Cindy comes bark home again De banjo strings begin to twitch, A-wsItln' fer her voice, an den My fingers seem to sort o' itch To press heh to my haht an' see De St luv In heh bright eye shine My own, my honey, still she be, An" rests In dese brack ahms o' mln. -Boy Farrell Greene, In Chicago Inte Ocean. A gammer tbowtr. The wind that has bn playing with the tasseled heads of grain. Now sounds a sudden warning moan that tells of coming -ain. And all the running, creeping folk, ana all the folk that P.y. Are filled with consternation a they hear the warning sigh; And Into holes snd rrevlces, In frantlo haste and fesr. They run and cra I and hop and fly, and quickly dlnappear: The squirrels to UMtf BOStS have gone, the hoes gone from their food. And safe beneath . rhubarb leaf a hen has clucked her brood: The butterllien have left the air, the crickets left the grass. When like a bnath the raindrop fall. and like a breath :y pass. And thin the gclde.i ic.in returns and drives the mint away. And all the croe; leg. flying folk com back to work or play. Frank Ii. K-sreet. Ja N. Y. Independent THt MARKETS.

A It ii l ii eil Iteputatlon. "An-' you say," said the Sympathetic Pereon, looking down from the elevatum of the dmustep lipon the latcht applicant fof suburban charity, "that you liave hoiieatly dom your best to hnd employment ?" "I huve, madam " "You have a regular vocation?" "I was formerly an expressman." "In what i ity 'r'' "In BoKton. ' "Hut, surely, at thia season of the year you ought to find work saoogh a an expressman in a large city like Boston." ".Madam, ymi tin not know Huston. You have heard of the Hncehante? Yes? Then it is only SSOSSSary to tell you that 1 am one of the expressmen who earned her to the tat ion." "Bot I do nut see " "The faet bees me generally known, lud im nrOM thai mosasnt I have ceased to be respectable. There is no one in Huston who will now employ me." Boston budget. Fits stopped free and permanentlv cured. No fits after tirnt day's use of Ir Kline' Great Nerve Restorer. Free$2trial buttle & treatie. )r. Kline. 083 Arch t., l'hila., Pa.

New York, Rep tern bet ll, m7i.

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4 Ml ' I 0 40 M a 4M $ n im t& 4 . tou S i .... as .... et tft ....

CATTt.V ft ' reS rv Cotton MMdllag Fl. i It v Inter Wheat Win; at No. Had OUIIN No. '.' OATS NoJJ PUUK N( Mess st LOOMS Oiri'ON mi. idling Jtltt ICS aassrs Ciiwh mi. I lleireri. CAIAT.S r head) HiH.S I' ail to Select Sill. KT I mi In Choice

KI.OL K Puti nt fi W

I lear mul St ruudit WHEAT No I Med Wialai DUN Nu. I Mued OATS Nu. !i ...... ttYK No. I 1CHA IX) I.uim Laf liurinr hay -Clear Tloiotnj hi tt i K Choice Usiry KOOS Fresh .. Pi IKK Standard (new BACON clear Kit Lai; 1 1 Prime Smam eill' too OATTtiK- Nut i ?e Steers. .... Hi i ,s i im to I laoloa HHKKP fun lo Choice. Ki.oUK Winter Psteats .. SiiriiiK Pete wiikat Nctsprlna ... No ': Med tu.-wi .

COKNf No. I OATS -No. t POItlv Mini (new i I 66 KANSAS erf V CA TT MC Nativ Steers V HOOM -AllOrades I 75 WH KAI Nu H.ir.l CS OATS No. 2 White OOKN-Not tt NSW i IKLMAMS

n. It'll -IlVIi-ir.i.le i 'i HIN Nu. t i ATS Western H A Y holce PO Os i Hi) Me m HA0)N Sides corruN MMsiiai LOCISVILLKi WH F. T No Red COHN Noll Mixe I (ATS No ! MI eil 1'OltK New Mf BACON Clear KID ( Hl TON -Middllnc

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7 r in .1 A in ;.S 4 V 3 l 10 4 71i I Ol 2.' , 20 IM) s Ml 1 KP y Mi 14 9 2.S

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a Ii4 I (O, x u rft f 20 a 4 1 U I 27V

4 7f 1 fi ,T) SS (ff V t 2M 14 Vi Ut Ki UI ;. ?., . a r ea 7 Hfl 32 4$ 14 an ft. 2 IV b :w vi in oa J U TS ' m

A Sundayachool Interruption. Cleriry man "St l'aul made one error, my dear children." Juvenile -"Did it let 111 a run?" Truth.

I use Piso's ( ure for Consumption both in my family and practice. Dr. O. W. Pattereon, lnke'ter, Mich., Nov. 5. ISM.

Nothina makes a woman so mad as for an

Other woman whom she doe not like to

make a dress like hers - ashington Dem ocrax. To Care a Cold ia Oae Dar Take LSSStifS Uromn Ouinine Tahlete. All drugtjists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. We never value money as much as we do right after having spent it foolishly. Washington Democrat. Hall's Catarrh Car Is S Constitutional Cure. Price 75s. Nobody is too poof to have lace curtain Washington Democrat.

Where lie t(rrril with lllaa. "Wh.it ' rVbatt" I late old man choked with indigna

tion

"N oil vv.-int to steal mv child from me. ta

roh me of Ray daonjitar? hy sir!"

Hi- raiie i.'"t the ui per hand ot hint, ana

he gasped Mime ni'je

IL.11. at 1- no 11 in c tor you; The voting nun wan petfectly sahav

"1 1 bet it iii':." ;ie saiil, alowly: "and if anvhodv says otherwiM. there'e liable to he

trouble.

In the f.iee of Hiieh "uhlime gall what

the old man do?-I'm It.

Great minds may run in the same rbaav nel, but tin re ia p!i nty of room for mora. -Washington Democrat. Mere Ilnuülrs of Nerve. Some peevi-h, qaanasMS people stuas mere bundles ui nerve. The leat sou net agitates their aaaaoriosss and rutties their tempert N" doiil.t they ate Ixirn eo. Be may not tln-ir BsrvasnansH he ameliorated, if not entirely relieved? rmpiestionably, and with Uostcttsr's Stomach Hitters. Bf cultivating their digestion, and inenrhaa more cuniili ti ition of the food wita this sdmirsbls correi tive. they will experience s speedy sad eery perceptible gamin

nerve quietude liyspepsia, ouionsne

constipation and rheumatiton yield to Bitters.

Autobiographical. The elf made

was n(ie.ikiug. He said "My father w&a a raiser of hog. There was a large family of u" -mid then hi voice was drowned by tae applause. Life. CHEAP EXCURSION RATES WEST

Tla Barllngllngton Root. One fnre plus H is) for the round trip a Nehrsska. Kuiihsk St Pähl, Minnoapolkv Black Hills, certain jiortions of Iowa, Coeoraiiosiid I 'tah Sept euilier 7th. 21t. October 5tb and lth Ask your ticket agent fear ailditionnl information L W. Wntui, Uauaral fasbeuger Agent, St. Louis, Ma , A Natural Infcnce. "Did you hear whatWhimpietun's htle Ikiv said when they

showed him the twins "No; what wa

if" "He said 'Ihere' Mamma has gettin' bargain again.' "'l it Hit.

The Blue and the Gray. Both men and women are apt to feel a little blue, when the gray hairs begin to show. It's a very natural feeling. In the normal condition of things gray hairs belong to advanced age. They have no business whitening the head of man or woman, who has not begun to go down the slope of life. As a matter of fact, the hnir turns grny regardless of age, or of life's seasons ; sometimes it is whitened by sickness, bnt more often from lack of care. When the hair fades or turns gray there's no need to resort to hair dyes. The normal color of the hair is restored and retained by the use of Ayer's Hair Vigor. Aver' Curebook. " tory of cure told hy the cures.' toe page. Iree. J C. Ayer Co.. Lowell. Ms.

LAZY LIVER!

YOU KNOW WELL ENOUGH HOW YOU FEEL WHEN YOUR IIVPD TV"NT AfT.

va t aa v a-Tw -w Bile collects in the blood, bowels become constipated, and your whole system is poisoned. A lazy liver is an invitation for a thousand pains ana aches to come and dwell with you. Your life becomes one long measure ol iMit.liilSttr AnrtrAnrir an A Karl fee tin or.

' ' ACT DIRECTLY, and in a PEsbbbbbV aa m . s-k w T T a rTWT Iff A HTHTT70

CfZhkAfyh nf ON THE LIVER and BOWELS, WlslVWWawVlsL eleansinff,purifyinff,revitali:inff ev

ery portion ot the liver, driving an he hilt from the blood, as is soon

shown by INCREASED APPETITE for food, power to digest it, and strength to throw off the waste. ALLDRwoujTs. MAKE YOUR LIVER LIVELY! 10c , age, 0oc. MaasaaMSSsaassasa

tneBsaaaasseSawssaswafsasasSana BEFORE THE DAY OP SAPOLIO THEY U8ED TO 8AY "WOMAN'S WORK 18 NEVER DONE."