Ligonier Banner., Volume 35, Number 31, Ligonier, Noble County, 1 November 1900 — Page 3

" mcw’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarzh Cure. : F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactiéns and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. : ]V&(Tiest 0& Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toedo, O. Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. . Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price 75¢c. per bot}le. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. : g Hall’s Family Pills ara the best. —_ Fireworks give a very appropriate reception to a firebrand.—Town Topies. R et i LD Nowadays the office, bowing gracefully to the inevitable, seeks the boss.—Puck. —_— . “How do you know he is a great pianist?”’ “I have talked with him.”—Town Topics. — e A great many people “make fun of you.” Dor’t give them any more occasion than you can help.—Atchison Globe. Kissing was tabooed by the Essenees. The latter are all dead now, but we understand that the former is still in fashion.—Star of Hope. —————.———»—- Do you whine? Do you make others miserable, as well as yourself? If you must whine, do it in the seclusion of your own room. You have no right to be a publie pest.—Atchison Globe. s o His Meaning.—“ What do you mean when you say she lampooned her husband?”’ asked the magistrate of the witness. “I mean she threw a lighted lamp at hin” the witness explained.—Pittsburgh Chron-icle-Telegraph. =e ; : “Pon’t you find that Mr. Aster’s poems,” said that young poet’s misguided admirer, “arefull of wordsthat burn?” **Weli, no,” replied the editor, ‘I never put them to that test; I'merely drop them in the waste basket.”—Philadeiphia Press. If you have been smashing around with a club, you must have remarked that that way of acting has its drawbacks. Try the other plan; say kind things occasionally; do kind things occasionally. Be considerate of others, and people will like you better; vou will suit yourself better. — Atchison Gilobe. — e A little wealth has little wings, and large wealth has large wings. The humming-bird and the-albatross or the condor, and all between, can fiy. An improvident person who has but small means is necessarily improvident in a small way, but give him wealth and he would be improvident in a large way. Wealth has never yet been tethered tor 2 long period. It finally breaks its gyves and is gone.—Chicago Interior.

f‘{ :":j\‘ ’: ; Twoßig Pains seem to b‘e tfie heritage of the human family everywhere, viz: ’ - i Rheumatism and Neuralgia but there is one sure and < prompt cure for both, viz: St. Jacobs oil t. Jacobs 01

ST, VITUS DANCE

Three great and complete cures effected by Dr. Greene’s Kervura Blood and Merve Remedy,

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_ Mrs. J. A. Ferre, who resides near 905 Main Street, Hartford, Conn., says: , : ““ My daughter Lulu became very ill with St. Vitus dance over a year ago. ¢ ame so bad that she lost the use of her right arm and side, and we thoug‘;:t :ty;me tigme s}?? ew‘::fl‘:l lose her speech. Her tongue was almost garalyze_d. she was so bad she could not feed herself, and at night she would get so nervous I had to sit and hold her. I tried several doctors, but they did not do her at:iv good. I did not find anything that would help her until I tried Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy. She is now, by the use of this medicine, entirely cured." C. H. Bailey, Esq,, of Waterbury, Vt., writes: ; *‘l am more than glad to write about my little daufhtcr. Until a short time ago she had always been a very delicats child and subject to sick spells lasting weeks at a time. She was very nervous, and our family doctor said we would never raise her, she was so delicate and feeble, We tried many remedies without the least good. We felt much anxieti' about her, esgecially as’ no doctors could benefit her, and had great fear for her future. learning of the wonders being done by Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, I determined to give it to her. She soon commenced to improve under its use, and rapidly gained in every respect. She eats and sleeps well. and her nerves are strong. The medicine has done wonders for her and it is the best we ever knew, I recommend Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, to everybody.” Mrs. J. Learmonth, of 776 Broadway, South Boston, Mass., says: “At ten years of age my daughter became affected with a nervous condition which soon developed inw’m. Vttm’w It% pronounced bghe attending physician to be a very severe attack. The mouth mumw«u& rto one side, the hands and arms were resttess: ‘W _Her limbs also were weak; her ankles bent under her so that it M'"t‘ha t impossible to walk ’f She was hat she would screa églenllmosj_ f&fi:dmtln% Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood -fl& ; "j‘m& bottles entirely cured her, She is now thisteen years old, and has been well ever since, and to-day is a picture of health,””

Fate of His Ligaments, “Yes,” said Mrs. Brown,*‘my son Thomas has had an awful time playing football, But Tom’s quite a hero. fie wrote me all about it. He said the professor at his college told him he had only three ligyments in his leg. Them three ligyments are what hold the foot onto the leg. Well, Tom says that a year ago he bruk his first ligyment, that’s the outside one, in playin’ thet iame with Purdoo. Then in playing the Shampain unjversity he broke tixe second ligyment right short off. And jest last week in playin’ with some college from Indianna he bruk the third ligvment, and now there ain’t anything on airth holdin’ that foot on except skin.”—Chicago Tribune. : ; ] —_——— ‘When You Go to Florida you enhance the pleasure of the trip by gommg over the Queen & Crescent Route and its connections via Cincinnati. Careful attendants look to your comfort. Your meals (a la carte) are not surpassed in the best hotels. Your rest is unbroken on the smooth, rock-ballasted roadway. You are not: annoyed by change of cars. Fatigue vanishes before some of the finest natural seenery in America. Winter Tourist Tickets are sold at reduced rates. Why not write us about it? Only 24 hours Cincinnati to Florida. Direct connections at’Port Tam{m and Miami at Steamers Wharf for Key West, Nassau and Havana. We quoteratesgladly. Handsome printed matter sent free to inquirers. W. C. Rinearson, Gen’l Pass’gr Agent, Cincinnati, O. e A Draw at the Very Waorst. Pepprey—That was a fierce fight you had with Gussie. He claims he licked yvou. Cholly—Oh, the boastah! It’s twue- he wumpled my cwavat dweadfully, but when it was all ovah his coliah was fwightfully wilted.—Philadelphia Press. EXCURSION TO CALIFORNIA, Comfourtable and Inexpensive. Our parties leave every Wednesday from both Chicago and St. Louig, joining at Denver. Then past the grandest scenery in the world, over the Rio Grande Railroads. A few hours’ stop to see Salt Lake City, and on via Ogden to the coast. A special agent is in charge of each party, and the tourist sleeping cars are comfortable and exquisitely clean. Let me give you full particulars. Write and inclose 6 cents in posta%e for our beautifully illustrated 72-page book on California. F. E. Bell, City Passenger Agent, C., B. & Q. R. R., 211 Clark street, Chicago. Too Much for Him. ; ‘Dpcto_r——W hat! Your dyspepsia no better? Did you foliow my advice and drink hot water an hour before breakfast? - Patient—l tried to, doctor, but I was unable to keep it up for more than five minutes at a streich.—Chicago Daily News. Homeseelkers’ Excarsion Tickets. - To nearly all points in the }lni,ted States on sale‘at all ticket offices of the Chicago Great Western Railway on the first and third Tuesdays of Octo{)er, November and December, at the very low homeseekers’ rate of one fare plus $2.00 for the round trip. Tickets good for return within 21 days from date of sale. Persons contemplating a trievwill save money by calling on any Great Western Agent andy obtaining detail information regarding the homeseekers rates, or addressing F. H. Lord, G. P. & T. A, 113 Adams St., Chicago. e s An iceman was the only person who possessed sufficient coolness to meet and dispateh a mad dog on a Pittsburgh street the other day. = o e To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggistsrefund money if it fails to cure. 25c. e e e It is said that an ordinary brick weighs about four pounds. Nevertheless, the man who gets hit with one imagines it to weigh about four tons.—Norristown Herald. kLR Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken of is a cough cure.—J. W. O’Brien, 322 Third Ave., N.. Minneapolis. Minn., Jan. 6, 1900. el “I understand that you are a distant reiative of the wealthy Goldmans?”’ “Yes.” “How distant?’ “As distant as they can keep me.”—Philadelphia Record. —_— _ Carter’slnkisjust as cheap as poor ink and is the best ink made. Always use Carter’s. ‘ ———— g e There is only one place where gold rusts, and that is in the heart.—Ram’s Horn.

" : &0 °’J;,'; (Bwegy Wa 26 K= H "“‘\.“ e R &% ULt T W b 7 3et o 4 P imo Y S SRROL <~ @RL& g S ‘,v’ . / 1 75 T T s ; e Lo s AN INSECT BREEDER. A Useful Centrivance Where Chickens Have to Be Kept Constant- : ly in Small Quarters, Here is a grub and worm-breeder for chickens in small quarters. Build a rack four feet square, as in illustreation, the sides being made of narrow slats nailed to the frame, six or eight inches apart. Im this frame place a

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layer of two or,three inches manure, then a layer of earth or rich locam, and next a layer of mill sweepings, shgrts or.bran, each layer the same thickness. Repeat until the rack is filled. ' Grubs and worms will breed in abundance, and, seeking the edge of the rack, will become the prey of the fowls.—Orange Judd Farmer. . IS EASILY CURED.

Feather-Eating Hens Are Not Viciouns But Victims o:tva Disease That Yields to Simple Treatment. ‘ The New York Experiment station recently .published a bulletin on “feather eating” among fowls. The report makes a number of observations on this habit, suggesting that it is the result of a lack of nitrogenous matter in the feed and citing experiments where fresh cut bone, Jean meat, etc., were fed. ‘The vice,” the report says, ‘“is very uncommon among fowls that have exercise and a variety of food, and it is most economical to.prevent its appearance by careful feeding, but as the spread is rapid even under a ration which does not ordinarily seem to encourage its development, the vice should be stamped out by the death or removal of the first offender.” The editor of the Farm and Dairy, New South Wales, calls attention to the fact of the failure to mention the trve cause of ‘“feather eating.” *“lt is now a well-known fact,” says the editor, “that feather eating is due to a minute parasite (sarcoptis laevis) which feeds at the roots of the feathers, thus irritating the bird and causing them to pluck out their own feathers. Where feathers are pulled out by other birds, it is due to the presence of lice, for which they are searching.” ; - The prevention and remedy, says the editor, are simple, as th€ rhite disease is contagious. Isolation of the affected bird is the first step, especially if it be a cock. The mites yield readily to treatment of one part of creosote to 20 parts of lard or vaseline, well rubbed into the affected parts.

HOW A HEN FEEDS. In Her Natural State She Delights in Consuming Hours in Obtaining a Full Meal. . Observe how the hen feeds when out on the range. It is first a blade of grass or leaf of clover, then a short chase for a grasshopper or cricket, says Wallaces’ Farmer. She now discovers a soft spot in the ;soil which she believes worth investigating, and sets to work with the mining tools which nature has given her with a view of finding out if it is “pay dirt.” A fuzzy weed head is in her path and she stops to shatter down a few of the ripened seeds. She‘is drawn away from this repast by another grasshopper, which springs down in front of her and jumps away again just in time to save himselr from the dash which she has made at him. In place of the grasshopper which she didn’t get, she nips another clover leaf or blade of grass. Thus the hen feeds a little at a time and consuming hours in obtaining a full meal. It seems that people who see this every day might know that throwing down a measure of shelled corn on a bare spot is not the proper way to feed the hens. And those who do this will receive conclusive proof that there.is something wrong with their feeding during the time of year when the hen has no choice of fooa, but must live on what is given her -by the owner. "

BUZZINGS FROM BEEDOM. Good results in queen-rearing are to be expected only when the colony is strong enough te swarm, and when honey comes in freely from the fields every day, or when the keeper feeds his bees freely. Bees do not use older larvae if younger be present., ‘ Bees prefer to build a long deep comb. They build downward in preference to sidewise. o Experts estimate that an acre of buckwheat in bloom _ will yield 25 pounds of honey a day. French apiarists use “glossometers,” or tongue measures, of several pat‘terns for measuringsthe length of the tongues of their bees, in order to de‘cide what flowers they can work on -most successfully, : ~ Bees crossed once with the Cau‘casians .are reported to work red ‘elover perfectly. If this be true, it is important, for it wiit add a new ‘source of fine honey to the list. t Robber bees may be fought with carbolic acid; This acid has an odor repulsive to bees. A mixture of it rinf‘g:nter sprinkled at the entrance of Eghfié,wigtprevent the robbers from wf hile the occupants of the hive w f"’fi on their way inf@n‘«’!l

SENSIBLE BEE TALK. When Properly Managed the Apiary Pays as Fair a Profit as Auy Other Farm Industry. It costs some 40 to 50 cents a hive to use full sheets of foundation in all the frames, and about the same for each super in the section boxes. What is the gain? There will be little or no drone comb. The useless drones in a hive will consume more than 50 cents’ worth of sugar in a season. The more drones reared, the less worker bees there will be to store honey, says the American Cultivator. The workers which would occupy the space that the drone comb fills might store 50- cents’ or a dollar’s worth of honey in a season. Much horney would have been used up in making the comb for which the foundation is a spbstitute. We think we speak within bounds when we say that every half dollar’s worth of foundation jused in a good colony will add from onje to three dollars to the value of honey gathered in a season, and when one is working for extracted honey so that he can put the empty combs back, the gain may be more. In this connection we would repeat the advfce given before—allow drone comb conly in the best colonies, those that are gentle and good honey gatherers, that these qualities may be transmitted through the male parent of the workers as well as througk the queen. There has been little gttention paid to this by even the best bee= keepers, but we think it is important, and if it has not beéen proven so, it is time some one did”prove it. Do not allow the bees to be crowded for room to work in and store their honey. When a super is from one-half to twothirds full, raise it up and put another under it that they may work in both. By the time the top one is capped over, it will be time to put a third one underneath it. With plenty of room there will be less tendency to late swarming.

LIFE ON THE FARM. It Must Be Elevated So That Its Name Shall Cease to Be a Synonym ‘for Drudgery. A great deal has been said about the hardships endured by farmers’ wives, but how much harder do they have to work than mechanics’ wives? The pouliry and the dairy comprise all the extra work, and these may be as much or as little as desired. The farmer’s house does not require half the care, his apparel needs less attention, ‘his fashions are simpler, his table is easier supplied and with far better material at little cost; the children are not kept indoors, but go free as the birds, and, as they grow older, how many less /'temptations! The husband is not away all day, but his home is his place of business, and many are the ho‘idays a farmer can take without his business suffering. The time for very hard work on the farm has gone by. It is not as it was fifty or a hundred years ago, whend little machinery lightened the housekeeper’s daily work. Then the farmer’'s wife wove all-the-cloth .wern by the family, besides doing the cooking over an open fireplace. Now the housework is less arduous, the sewing is quickly done, and much time can be given to gardening, visiting and mental improvement. If we would have our young men and young womsen realize that farming is the noblest occupation on earth we must give the calling more dignity, elevating it so that its name shall cease to be a mere synonym of drudgery. Home life can be made very pleasant, even -on the farm.—N. Y. Weekly.

SIMPLE WAGON JACK. It Is Easily Made at Home and Fae cilitates the Oiling and Cleaning of Vehicles, The pieces, a a, are ci 2 by 4-inch stuff 22 inches long and sawed so that piece g, which is 2 by 4-inch, has room enough to go between them and is inserted in the end of c. The two pieces, b b, are also of 2 by 4-inch size, 17 inches long and sawed in the

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shape illustrated. The pieces a, a, b and b are joined together with one-half-inch bolts, as shown by the dotted lines. The piece, ¢, is 4 by 4-inch and 51, feet, on which the wagon axle rests when the jack is in use. The spikes, ¢ ¢, prevent the axle from slipping. .- chein is hooked to piece. a and fastened to lever g to hold lever when in use. A one-half-inch bolt is used through a, a and g. Another bolt is placed through the joining ends of g and c.—Eugene Fels.ng, in Farm and Home. s

Big Success with Sheep. ' Every little while we come aeross accounts of men, who, in a small way, have made splendid money out of sheep. One of the latest is that of anlowa man bought some Cotswold ewes two years ago at $3 per head. He kept them until they raised two crops of lambs for him and sold them for $4.25 apiece. The first year their fleeces averaged 111, pounds, the second year 12, One crop of lambs brought $5.60 per 100 pounds, the other $5.50. All the owner did to fatten them was to give them corn husks and timothy hay and let them run in the yard where he was fattening cattle. They picked up corn enough for themselves around the troughs. . A Texas Woman’s Invention. Harriet R. Feniey, of Dallas, Tex., has invented what horsemen all the ‘world over have long sought—a nailless horseshoe. According to the Scientifie Americanatread-plateisemployed, proivided with a superposed hood, both bisectedattheirfront. Thetread sections are hinged together. Upon the treadplate a wear plate, comprising two side plates and a toe-plate,is secured. The hood is fitted on the exterior of the animai’s hoof so that the tread plate is drawn against the bottom when the hood is in place. All injury is avoided ‘to an animal thusshed.

WHAT JONES THINKS. '/ Lt i Chairman of the Democratic Com« . - mittee on the Qutlook. The Anti-Imperialist Movement Haa Taken Hold of the American . People—Fear of Govern=ment by Trusts. In a letter to the New York Herald under date of Oc’(obegil 20, Chairman James K. Jones, of the democratic comimittee, says: “I firmly believe Bryan will be elected. 1 think a large majority of the American pecple are opposed to the reelecticn of McKinley. 1 think the public conscience has been aroused during the present cam=paign to a greater degree than.ever before. It is my opinion that not since 18¢0 have the people been so impressed with the gravity of the situatjon. - ““When such republicans, patriarchs and partisans as George S. Boutwell, of Massachusetts; Senator Wellington, of Maryland; former Senator Henderson, of Missouri; Gen. Beatty, of Ohio, and hundreds of others that could be named abandon their party under the profound conviction that the reelection of McKinley would endanger the republic it is safe to say that the same thought and fear have found lodgment in the minds of the pecple at large. “The anti-imperialist movement, in my judgment, is deeper and more protound at this time than was the mugwump movement that defeated Blaine in 884 or the gold democrat movement that contributed so materially to the electicn of McKinley in 1896. In 1884 and 1396 bnly objection to candidates, or purely domestic issues cépable, of being ‘remedied at any time, influenced the electorate. Now the very. foundation of the government is in danger the scepter is in sight—and the uniformed soldier at-every street corner, on €every highway, with conscription acts and forced drafts as accompaniments, are things of the future that must be crushed or encouraged at the ensuing election. Ninety per cent. of the gold democrats will follow the example of Olney and Bissell and vote for Bryan. ; ‘““The super friendly relations—l will not say alliance—between the tory government of Great Britain and the administration of McKinley, which led to our government notoriously sympathizing with Great Britain’s cold-blooded destruction of the two South African republics, has supremely disgusted many persons and added to the evidences of the imperialistic tendencies of McKinley and his advisers. ‘“‘But while the preservation of the constitution and the principles of the Declaration of Independence form the-paramount issue ‘of the campaign, purely domestic questions are not lost sight of. The American people, as a whole, are satisfied that the great trusts have control of the republican party and that the only hope of regulating or controlling these monster corporate aigregations is by returning the democrats to power. | ‘““The negroes, who have long held the bal~ance of power in such states as Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, are breaking away from the republican party. The colored men fear ' imperialism and can see no hope for their future in a government by trusts. The colored men of Illinois, Ohio and Indiana have made republican presidents, but northern colored men are never rewarded with office when the republicans are in power in Washington. The offices are given to southern negroes in payment for work in conventions, while the colored men in the doubtful or republican states are ignored. During the democratic administrations northern colored men received the offices. The drift of the colored vote in the north to Bryan is much larger than is generally supposed. ‘““These are some of the reasons why 1 feel satisfied with the presént outlook and why I believe that Bryan will be elected. “JAMES K. JONES, [ "(ihairman Democratic National Commitee.”’

N Y ” DENOUNCES M'KINLEY Captain O’Farrell, Former Republican, Decries Imperialism. Z X ‘Stumped for the Republican Ticket in 1896 But Love of Liberty Has Caused Him to Turn to the Support of Bryan. At the Iroquois club in Chicago a few nights ago Capt. Patrick O’Farrell, of Waghington, formerly an ardent republican, but now enlisted under the standard of Bryan and Stevenson, explained that as a patriotic American he found it impossible to take part in subduing a liberty-loving people. In the course of his speech he said: ‘“The real issue of the present campaign is imperialism,” said he, ‘“in spite of the fact that our republican friends are striving to push the financiul issue to the frent. When the hornse is on -fire it is not the provner time to quarrel with your wife over the best way to lay the carpet. When I pass along Pennsylvania avenue nowadays I read an imaginary line across the front of the white house, with these words staring me in the face: ‘Hanna, McKinley & Co., wholesale and retail dealers in Filipino slaves.” This is the issue of the campaign and the people-are not to be fooled by republican bluster and side play. ‘““They talk about Bryan flooding the country with silver, should he be elected. On September 15 there were $425,611,000 silver certificates in circulation, and only $2,848,129 silver dollars free in the treasury. On September 22 there were only $1,800,000 in silver dollars, and still we are told that it is with these that Bryan intends to flood the- country and place it on a silver basis. Secretary Gage reminds me of the Artful Dodger in ‘Oliver Twist.” After Dewey had entered Manila bay there was nothing too good for Aguinaldo, but at the present time he is a murderer and scapegoat because he refuses to be made a slave. ‘““We supplied the Filipinos with arms and called them our trusted allies. Gen Anderson ;consulted with Aguinaldo and informed the ‘war department that he | was a brave man and of great assist- : ance to the American forces. Now we are told that the Filipinos are savages, in spite of the fact they had free schools before we did, maintain universities and read and write their own language. The McKinley administration denies that it 'i{s engaged in a war of aggressioh and they proceed to slaughter the Filipinos. I do not believe in denouncing Jesse . James and Dick Turpin and then inviting ‘them to tea. v o | “Four years ago I was paid $5O a ' night for stumping the country in the ' interests of McKinley and this year that sum might be doubled if I would but . consent to set aside principle and throw off my love of liberty. During this cam‘paign I am devoting my services to the democratic party without a dollar of remuneration and must say that I feel quite at home in the democratic camp. At the instance of McKinley the governors of states no longer have the power to issue commissions to the velunteers. They are now United States volunteers and the president is engaged in dealing out commissions to the sons and nephews of senators and congressmen.” - ——The “trust” originated in the greed of capitalists. From the beginning it was not only known that the cost of producing -the article would be lessened, but that the cost to the econsumer would be increased. There is not an article on the market, the product of a “trust” plant, ~which does not cost from 25 to 100 per cent. more than it did before ‘the “trusts” crushed- out the indi"Mfifi!fimfiflfilt’“fi'm fore the declaration that the cost of

A Noted Knight Templar Owes HisHealthto Peruna.

Colonel T. P. Moody, a prominent Knight Templar, is well known in every cit{in the United States west of Buffalo, N. Y., as a Jeweler’s Auctioneer. In the city of Chicago as a prominent lodge man, being a member of the K. T.’s and alsc of the Masons. The cut shows Colonel Moody in the costume of the Oriental Consistery K{asons, 32nd degree. 15 In a recent letter from 5900 Michigan avenue, Chicago, 111., Mr. Moody says the following: R - N *‘For over twenty-five years I suffered from catarrh, and for over ten years I suffered from catarrh of the stomach terribly. - ¢“I have taken all kinds of medicines and have been treated by all kinds of doctors, as thousands of my acquaintances are aware in different parts of the United States, where I have traveled, but my relief was. only temporary, until a little over a year ago I started to take Peruna, and at the present time I am better than I have been for twenty vears. ‘¢ The soreness hasleft my stomach entirely and I am free from indigestion and dyspepsia and will say to all who are troubled with catarrh or stomach treouble of any kind, don’t put it off and suffer, but begin to take Peruna right away, and keep it up until you are cured, as you surely will be if you persevere. '

“My wife, as many in the southwest can say, was troubled with a bad cough and bronchial trouble, and doctors all over the country gave her up to die, as they could do nothing more for her. She began taking Peruna with the result that she is better now than she has been in years, and her cough has almost left her entirely. The soreness has left her lungs and she is as well as she ever was in her life, with thanks, as she says, to Peruna. Yours very truly, T. P. Moody.

Catarrh in its various forms is rapidly becoming a general curse. An undoubted remedy has been discovered by Dr. Hartman. This remedy has been thoroughly tested during the past forty years. Prominent men have come to know of its virtues, and are malj‘i”fifi public utterances on the subject. Tosave the country we must save the people. To save the people we must protect them from disease. The diseasethatisat once the most prevalent and stubborn of cure is catarrh. If one were to make a lisi of the different names that have been applied to catarrh in different locations and organs, the result would be astonishing. We have-often published a partial list of these names, and?the surprise caused by the first publication of it to all people,. both professional and nonprofessional, was amusing. And yet we

{ ! A TRIAL BOTTLE FREE. The letters pour in. Yes, simply pour in upon us in our daily mail, in a flood which is | surprising. It seems as if every person ' the United States had a physicaltrouble and knew ‘‘s DROPS’? wouid make the cure. - i Everybody suffering from ill health has the inclination to write for a bottle of “5 DROPS.” . . Our enormous mail is the wonder of the age. : We are flooded—simply flooded each morning with letters containing $l.OO for a bottle of ‘5 DROPS,’’ the wondrous cure for the terribly f)ainful diseases, Rheumatism, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Sciatica, Neuralgia withstand all other medicines but yield on the instant to ‘5 DROPS.’’ Within a day of getting *5 DROPS” and using it, your disease begins to disappear. Thousands of men and women, who see their suffering friends on every side gladly relieved ] of their suffering, write us in haste. Hun- ! dreds of testimonials from grateful correspondents reach us daily. ' To enable all sufferers to test this won- | derful remedy,\we will send free a trial bottle onrecgipt of two 2-cent st mps to pay for mailing.\ Large bottles of 800 doses | $l.OO, sent prepaid by mail or express. | ‘5 DROPS?”’ is a preven-' tive as well as a curative, for the following diseases: Rheumatism, Sciatica,Neuralgia, Gout, Dyspepsia, ;mm_n“ Backache, Asthma, Hay * Fever, Catarrh, Liver and Kidney Troubles, Sleeplessness, Nervousness, Nervous and Neuralgic Headaches, Earache, Toothache, Heart Weakness, LaGrippe, Malaria, Paralysis, Creeping Numbness and - kindred diseases. i I Worite us in haste and stop your suffering. Agents wanted. ot SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO. 160 Lake Street, Chicago, 111. |

Q 0 l l “ 0 L 20 OI'D Sioes P3~ UNION MADE If you have been paying 84 to &5 for shoes, = = atrial of W. L. Doug- e~ 8 las 83 or $3.50 shoes e@_ S will convince you that g 7 they are just as good 22 in every way and cost iy from &1 to $1.50 less. T A Over 1,000,000 wearers. A W ;-':_ . &oA R i ks WE o 3 ek U sbt 3 iE USE o 0 ; ® \ay One pair of W. L. Douglas frASTCOLORS B, Sdor $350 thoau:sljwlll ; ¥ o will positively outwear R\ EYELETs 2 two paln'oyfordinar‘ y 1':0" wn T 5 .'. 33 or .s'?.s ".\ by "m,‘ T T‘h IR 088, L Pttt Weare the larfest makers of men’s 83 and 853.50 shoes in the world. We make and sell more 83 and $3.50 shoes than apy other two manufacturers in the U. l)S | The reputation of W. L, Douglas $3.00 and £3.50 shoes fo: BEST style, comfort, and wearis known BEST everywhere throughout theworld; | - - They have to give better satisfacs3.so tion than other makes because 33.00 ' the standard hes alwaye .?en SHOE. placed so high that the” weafers SHDE. expect more for their money : than they can get elsewhere. ; THE .L. Do ad $3.50 ’ shoes are sold than an otrggrnmnke is b:gs:::e.a'l‘ul’ng ARE THE BEST. Your desier should keep ~ them ;- we give one dealer exclusive sale in each town. Take no substitute! Insist on having W. L. ~Douglas shoes with name and price stamped on bottom. If your dealer will not get them for you, send direct to llgfimz. enclosing price and 25c. extra for carriage. § N e r . a W L o 708 &u) Brockton, Muse, This question arises in the family every day. Let us answer it to-day. Try sta b oy a delicious and healthful dessert. { med in two minutes. No boiling! no | king! add boiling water and set to cool. .Flavors:—Lemon, Orange, Rasp_betry and Strawberry. Get a package | _at your grocers to-day. locts, = 4 :g. Balve cures Chroni %m&fi;gm é e-a:i-g«‘ v 4; st i Lt ;:t :‘ms‘fifif# ?

M A~ A .%71 ’/ S . p 4;3.' . ): 2 4 :;”/_'.‘ J)/‘U'///,:/ : /“'fl#//‘/// : :’f/ / z g % e ez » G o e A %2 o 5\"% §k 7 ST ESa : 7 78 8 e e o 0 1 W\ bt \\ o Sk o\ ZHt A N\ P 2 NEE a 1 NN\ | ’//f ?// 0 Va 7 o o Vi L\ N / /*///// \ / //‘/ S e - = == "C P Moody, of Chicago, Had Catarrh Twenty-hve Years anzl : Was Cured by Peruna. have never- enumerated all of the diseases which are classed as catarrh. It must be confessed, however, to see even this partial list drawn up in battle array is rather appalling. If the reader desires to see thislist, together with a short exposition of each one, send for our free catarrh book. Adgxl'lqss The Peruna Medicine Co., Col\fmbus, 10. »

{ l LOW RATES SOUTH . VIA l‘(,'J'll(.'«A(.l(lé': EASTERN ILLINOIS l RAILROAD. Winter Tourist Tickels are on sale daily via the above line to all the winter resorts in-the South and Southesast. These |- tickets are sold at very Jow rates and are limited for return until May 31, 1901. Homeseekers’ Tickets are on sale on First and Third Tuesday each month, to all the principal . points South and Southeast, at one fare plus $2.00 for the round trip. Tickets are limited for return 21 days from date of sale, * One-Way Settlers’ Tickets are on sale First and Third Tuesday each month, to many points in the South and Southeast at greatly reduced rates. If ;you are contemplating a trip to the South or Southeast advise any agent of | the Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad, { who will be pleased to quote you rates, ‘ send you time tables, make sleeping car | reservation and give you any further information you may desire. ' C. L. STONE, { Gen. Pass. & Tkt.-Agt., Chicago. QS Qp% Double s‘ Daily , @ Bervice : Nfewl(llnefi'i%Rocb ! ord, Dubuqu . Waterloo, F ox?E - Dodge and Coun- : 41,_90?9 cil Blufts. library-smoking-cars, sleeping cars, free reclining chair cars, . dining cars. Send to the undersigned for a iree ' copy of Pictures and Notes En-Route illustrat- . -ing this new line as seen from the car window. | Tickets of agents of LC. R. R. and connecting | lues. A, H. HANSON, G. P. A., Chicago. I All kinds of Job Work, Book Pages, = 2 etc., Electrotyped or Stersotyped in ' the best manner known to the trade, at reasonable prices. Send for circular describing our patent improved Base for electrotypes or stereotypes. COMPOSITION | Reading Notices, etc., set up in Long - Primer, Brevier, Minion or Nonpareil . much cheaper than you can do it by - hand. Also composition for Special Editions, Pamphlets, etc. - -~ We solicit your orders. A. N. KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO. .71 West Adams Street, Chicago. N ' ~ ‘READERS OF THIS PAPER . BESIRING TO BUY ANYTHING - ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS ° SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING . - WHAT THEY ASK FOR, REFUSING . ALL SUBSTITUTES OR IMITATIONS. e BE = Dr.Willlams' Indian Pile - Ointment will cur% Blind, -, Bleeding - and tching s Piles. It absorbs " the d - : ~ tumors, allays the ItchE < ing at once. acts as a 3 mmee.uvoa ‘n;ot:'l'}l f:.' - . and’hchinfiof the private matl ‘on _recel o{ u?‘?: e::u snfl '.l?'rb%: 1&4@% O Prope. CLEvELAND, Giro: HO! FOR OKLAHOMA! B rertbe e RKOW A CHIE R devated 1o infor: mnio;.‘ about these lands. ?::q year, $l.OO. h,:::glo A ity Ut ety iEK § MR, P o D @ '\ NEW DISCOVERY; gives DROPSY & i v B SRR 0N LR RN Eak L

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