Ligonier Banner., Volume 36, Number 12, Ligonier, Noble County, 20 June 1901 — Page 3
UL /@'; AR A St TR LIRTES,
STRONG BEAN TRELLIS. ©On Modern Truck Farms and Gardens . ¥t Has Supplanted the Pole . of Days Gone By, The old-fashioned bean pole has or is rapidly becoming an obsolete factor in bean growing on the modern truck farm and garden. In some sections poles are not even to be had. Trellises are especially designed for bean and pea vines, but are rather expensive for general or extensive use. This is my method of handling tall growing peas and pole beans, particularly limas. The first essentidl is to have perfectly straight rows. To insure this, stretch a garden line over finely prepared soil, and lima beans are placed by hand, eye down, every eight or ten inches along the line, hold-
ing and pressing in the bean with the thumb and forefinger and covering lightly by a simple, single movement of the three remaining fingers. After cultivating and hoeing once or twice, solid posts are set at both ends of the row, two to three feet deep, depending upon the- length of row and Ppossible amount of prospective strain, and from six to seven feet hiech. These end posts are braced with double strand of No. 8 or 9 wire, running from top of post to an imbedded anchor of stone or chunk of wood or post driven into the ground at an angle of about four to six feet from posts. Stakes or Posts are placed at intervals of from 30 to 50 feet along the row, same height of end posts. A No. 11 wire is then run through, first at the top, fastening on each. of center stakes with wire staple, loosely driven, secured at one end and made perfectly tight with fence or wire stretcher. A second run of wire is placed on bottom of posts £iX to eight inches from the ground. Grape or light wool twine, either two or three ply,-is now put on these wires from bottom to top and fastened with loop or knot, which are six inches apart to prevent shifting, as shown in lower figure. The'strand over “i” in word knot is passed up back of wire, brought over above, then in front, un€er and up, back and up and over in front and between line wire and the first circle over. Most of the vines will get hold of the strings without training and any that do not may readily be placed on the twine by hand. Hoeing and herse cultivation may be carried on until beans come in bloom. Rows should be four feet apart. The pods are more easily gathered from this arrangement than from poles. The original gost is but little more than poles, wh%e the galvanized wire will last a lifetime. Peas may be grown on this plan as well as beans. Twine-and dead vines should be stripped from wires at the end of season and wire coiled for another Yyear.—R. M. Winans, in Farm and Garden. :
SORTING APPLES PAYS. | A Fact Which Intelligent Fruit Growers Should Bear in Mind All | the Year Around. _ | Market peculiarities have to be met and their demands satisfied. The man that sells apples should always sort them, for he will find a readier market for the different sizes if sorted than if sold together. No one appears to Tfancy a lot of little and big apples in the same lot. Buyers are governed by different motives in their purchases. Some well-to-do buyers want a uniform lot of large apples of good color, and will pay an advanced price for them. But many people prefer apples of medium size or below providing they are well-colored. This is especially true of the heads of families of children, where apples are purchased in quantities of a peck at a time. A peck of big apples is soon used up, while a peck of medium-sized or small apples will last longer eand give the children more satisfaction. The purchasers of these apples prefer them even at the same price they might - have to pay for the large ones. Another very large class of people purehase small apples. "Chey -are the keepers of boarding houses and hotels, and the purchases by these people are very large in quantity. The boarding house keeper knows that, as a general thing, each guest will eat only one apple, whether large or small, and as a matter of economy the small fruit ~ is purchased. These things show the necessity of sorting all fruit like apples.—Farmers’ Review, ‘ Butter-Making at Home, Milk should be set in a 'perfectly clean, well-ventilated place, wheié nothing else is kept, and the room so constructed that.the temperature can be regulated as desired. There should be another room where the cream can be ripened and churned and the work of the dairy performed. Very few farmhou#es have proper conveniences. The cellar is often used to set milk in and the kitchen used to ripen the cream and do the dairy - work; the cellar is all right if it is not used as a general storeroom for the honse. Bad surroundings and bad company are fatal to fine buttermaking.—Midland Farmer. . Poor Pasturage Cauases Loss, Poor pastures do not pay for the reason that it is to the interest of the farmer that his cows secure an abundance of food at the least cost. The animals should not be compelled to work for their food on the pasture fixtra?pling the ground in the search for grass. As soon as a pasture does not supply an abundance the catile should be taken oft and *fi !l@f*fl* iR s e
LOOKING FOR NOVELTIES. Uncle Sam Constantly Introduces New Fruits and Vegetables from Foreign Countries, . Have you ever eaten a crosne, & stachys or a vegetable marrow? These are some of the new fruits and vegetables which the agricultural department is about to introduce into the United States. ' Some time ago congress appropriated $20,000 to collect valuable fruits and vegetables in foreign countries. An expedition was sent to Italy and other Mediterranean countries in search of new foods. The vegetable marrow is the most familiar of the lot. 1t is a sort of summer squash and looks like a large green cucumber. It is eaten before it is fully ripe, and is digestible. The department suggests that it should be served with meat. The finest marrows come from Algeria. . One of the most important finds was the crosne, a little-known Fren“(;'egetable. It comes originally fronf Japan and looks like a string of large -beads. These beads or tubers are two or four inches long and about aslarge as one’s finger. The plant is boiled or fried and served with meat. It is extremely hardy and will grow in any ground. A new variety of strawberry was also found. It is known as the “largefruited, ever-bearing strawberry.” Ordinary berries will yield only a few weeks, while the new variety will preduce for months from the same stems. A new muskmelon has been.brought from Smyrna which is said to be superior in sweetness and flavor to anything in this country. An attempt is also to be made to introduce the pistache nut into general use. In Italy this nut is more popular than the walnut. ' L Several superior varieties of asparagus, lettuce and onions were also } brought back from Europe.—N. Y. ' World. )
- HINTS FOR GARDENERS. Sugar corn planted the latter half of June generally finds an empty market and sale at profitable prices. It may follow peas or other early market g‘ixrden crops. Green clover malkes an ideal mulch for raspberries and blackberries. Spread it two feet cach side of row, sufliciently deep to cover the soil and keep it moist. This is only practical on small patches. ' For the green pea louse Thorburn’s catalogue recommends spraying or sprinkling the vines freely with cold water. We have always noticed that lice thrive in dry weather, but are scarce in wet seasons. : One very effective way to check the ravages of the stinking squash bug is to search for him and murder him on sight. You will find the oval, golden yellow eggs in clusters on underside of leaves; destroy them also. A circular issued by Burpee, the wellknown seedsman, states that maggots can be kept from destroying onions by sprinkling along the rows of growing plants sand scented with kerosene. Stir half pint of oil into ten quarts of sand. , The toad is the truckers’ friend and should not be molested in the garden or field. Fully nine-tenths of its food consists of insects that are injurious to plants. We should fergive our friend for taking in the other tenth that is beneficial to our crops. The ‘timely and proper cultivation of sweet potatoes by horke power renders hand hoeing unnecessary. It is an expensive mistake for a grower of this crop to neglect cultivation until weeds get such a start that pulling by hand and hoeing must be resortel to. '—Farm Journal.
CHEAP MILK COOLER. Anyone Having Some Old Brick and a Small Amount of lngénuity Can Build One, A few years ago, being in need of a tank for cooling milk in cans, and finding that a metallic or wooden tank would be quite costly, I built a room 6xB feet in one corner of a small ice
E-Q === _orverflow = \“a..._- , k’afer e e HOME-MADE MILK COOLER.
house. The walls between the room and ice were double boarded and packed with sawdust. Then I built a tank of brick across one end of the small room and cased it up with matched boards. The cut shows the framework of the chest. Any one having old brick ai¥ a small amount of ingenuity can build one at a very small cost. It does its work as well as an ice chest costing much more.—Orange Judd Farmer. ' Beans Do Well in Sod. ; A Michigan reader asks me whether white beans will grow well in sod. A good clover sod is always one of the best soil conditions preparatory to such crops as corn, potatoes and beans, Corn usually does first-rate on newly turned s 6&. I usually plow the sod land in the fall, and then work it up with pulverized (disk), spring-tooth harrow, etec., in spring. Sometimes cutworms will be very bad in sod ground, but by planting plenty of seed we can always succeed in getting a full stand. . Usually I prefer to -plant corn as a first crop after the sod has been turned ' over, and beans or potatoes afterward. But I see no reason why white beans should not do all right on a freshly turned sod.—Farm and Fireside. Fighting the Cabbage Worm, The cabbage worm is hatched from an egg laid by the white butterfly. Numerous remedies have been proposed, but the best method is to destroy as many of the butterflies as possible. Hot water, saltpeter, black pepper, etc., have not given satisfactory results. The kerosene emulsion will prevent attack, but it leaves an odor on the ecabbage. For a small patch insect powder is excellent, but it must be used frequently. Paris green is used, but consumers object, fearing its poisonous effects, though it is claimed a 8 a safe remedy.
TRADE REVIEW. . Improvement in Volume and Tone s Helped by Weather and Crep Conditions, New York, June 15.—Bradstreet’s says: “Reports to Bradstreet’s show a further improvement in the volume and tone of distributive trade, which had its inception in the better weather and crop conditions. Following the check given to thé crop damage enthusiasts by the June crop report, which can hardly be regarded as -other than brilliant for wheat, comes assurances that the conditions on June 1, good as they undoubtedly were, have been further improved. What lis true of the smaller cereals is also largely the case as to corn, though the latter is backward and needs warmth. Cotton crop prospects. have likewise been improved, though the low condition is. apt Fo ‘offset some. if not all, of the increase in acreage. R. G. Dun, & Co.’s Weekly Review of Trade says: ‘‘Confirmation by the agricultural buream of recent private estimates of the wheat crop has given to business a tone of greater confidence. Retail operations both east and west are larger, and distribution of merchandise by the wholesale .trade is increasing in dry goods and boots and shoes. The labor situation is gradually mending, with the appreciation of the fact that in some directions manufacturers would be glad of a temporary shut down of works. Wheat declined to a more reasonable level with withdrawal of speculative support. The government report of condition of June 1 was chiefly responsible. A crop this year equal to the greatest ever harvested was indicated by the official statement, and as department figures have generally proved below the final yield, there was heavy selling of options, with a fall below 80 cents for cash wheat at this city. Foreign buying promptly decreased, with the prospect of more satisfactory terms. Notwithstanding somewhat lower quotations for corn, the provision market has developed much strength, and pork products at the west are receiving the attention of speculators to an unusual extent, mess pork rising to $15.75 here. : “Failures for the week numbered 179 in the United States, against 162 last year, and 23 in Canada, against 21 last year.”
BIG BOATS COLLIDE. Ferryboats Crash in the Easst River, . New York—Loss of Life Is " Feared. New York, June 15.—The wooden side-wheeler Northfield, which has been in the service of the Staten Island Ferry company for the past 38 years, was rammed Friday night by the steelhulled propealer Mauch Chunk, used as a ferry boat by the Centralrailroad of New Jersey. The collision occurred just off the Staten Island ferry slip at the foot of Whitehall street, and in less than 20 minutes afterwards the Northfield, which was crowded with passengers, sank at the outer end of the Spanish line pier in the East river. A few of the Northfield’s passengers were hurt in the accident, and the police believe that some lives were lost. Capt. Daniel Gully, of the tug boat Mutual, who saw the ferry boatscrash together, says that immediately after the collision between 25 and 30 of the passengers leaped into the water and that many of those perished. Capt. Gully also declares that he is sure over sa hundred of the Northfield’s passengers were drowned. The captains of other tugs who were early on the scene, however, are inclined to think that the disaster was not so serious ‘as regards loss of life. Thus far no dead bodies have beenrecovered. The question of which boat had the richt of way was the cause of the disaster.
TRAIN KILLS FOUR. Bugzy Struck at Grade Crossing at Flint, Mich.,, and Oeccupants . Crushed and Mangled, Flint, Mich., June .15.—The DPere Marquette passenger train due here at nine o’clock Friday struck a double carriage at . the MHamilton avenue crossing in the suburb of Oak Park and instantly killed four well-known people. ; The dead: : Maj. George W. Buckingham, Flint. Miss Abbie Buckingham, Flint. Mrs. Thomas Applegate, Adrian. - . Mrs. Willlam Humphrey, Adrian. Several factory buildings adjoin the track at Hamilton avenue and prevent a clear view of the track. Maj. Buckingham drove directly in front of the train, which was traveling at high speed. The pilot of the engine was broken by the force of the collision, and the bodies of two of the ladies, terribly mangled, were fourd on it. Engineer Wiggins says he had sounded the whistle for the crossing and the first he knew of the carriage was when his engine struck it. Mrs. Applegate and Mrs. Humphrey had been guests of Maj. Buckingham during the state G. A. R. encampment which ended Thursday night.
- INDICTED. True Bills Returned Against Five Men in the Grand Rapids | Waterworks Scandal. Ev Grand Rapids, Mich., June 15.—Five indictments were returned Friday by the grand jury which has been investigating an alleged water works scandal. The names of the indicted men are: Thomas F. McGarry, Stilson V. MacLeod, Lant K. Salsbury, Gerrit Albers and Henry A. Taylor, of New York. The result was no surprise to those who had kept track of the investigation, but it was expected there would be a dozen true bills. returned, among them a number of aldermen. , : : Salsbury, MacLeod and the othersl were arrested Friday afternoon and arraigned in the superior court. Salsbury is charged with receiving a bribe of $25.000 from McGarry and $75,000 from MacLeod. Albers is charged with offering a bribe of $3,000 to ‘Alderman Renihan. Albers pleaded not guilty. Yukon River Open, Seattle, Wash., June 15.—The Yukon is open from end to end, according-‘ to news brought down by the steamer Dolphin, which arrived Friday. The ship brought down $40,000 in gold dust. The presence of $7,500,000 of gold dust in the banks at Dawson has caused a renewal of speculation as to what the total output of the Klondike will be this year. Estimates range from $15,000,000 to $25,000,000. Veteran Passes Away, Indianapolis, Ind., June 15.—Gen, Frederick Knefler, president of the board of regents of the soldiers’ monument and colonel of the famous Seventy-ninth Indiana regiment in the eivil war, died Friday night. He wan ‘one of the most prominent men in In-} diana. He has been an invalid for several years., o
~ REALM OF RELIGION. 1 The American Bible society is preparing to issue editions of the Seriptures in 20 different Filipino dialects. ‘ The pipe organ in Zion’s Lutheran‘ chureh, Spring City, Pa., was built in 1791 and has been in use ever since.{ “Its tone is that of a modern instrument,” writes a correspondent vvzhcol has heard it. : In South India the native Christian community has attained a population of 608,878. Of these 159,797 are communicants. Since 1878 the community. has more than doubled, and the communicants have grown threefold. } Rev. George Grenfell has been commissioned by Robert Arthington, :a wealthy man of Leeds, England, to establish a chain of Christian missions across Africa. Mr. Grenfell has long been a friend and confidant of the king of the Belgians. Rev. Edward Everett Hale, of Boston, said recently: ‘“When I was a young man studying for the ministry T came to the conclusion that it was a good time to retire from the pastorate of a church when one got to be 40. When I got to be 40 I changed my mind and thought 50 was the proper age for retiring; then I later came to see things still differently and decided that when I was 60 I should drop the work. But I don’t give the matterany thought now.” Impressed Upon His Notice, The various features for which the Lackawanna Railroad has become noted are involuntarily impressed upon the notice of the passenger, who realizes the luxury of hotel or club appointment in the electric lights; the smooth-running journals of the wheels; the extraor@mary cleanliness made possible by the use of anthracite coal, avoidmg all dust and nauseating smoke; the consciousness of being always on time—which comforts force an ease of mind and body most favorable to the enjoyment of the unsurpassed scenery through which its lines pass. 1t is but the natural sequence that the Laekawanna is prosperous in like degree to its excellence of service, and its warm friends are equal in number to its whole list of patrons, for once to test its service means an ardent admirer and friend earned for the road.—Van Etten Breese. GRS a 0 . Danger in Old Sayings. “What a fine head your boy has,” said an admiring friend. : “Yes,” replied the fond father, “he’s a chip of the old block—ain’t you, my boy?” “Yes, father; teacher said yesterda}fl that I was a young blockhead.”—Stray Steties. PERANERECR NG Cao S ! The Nickel Plate Road - _ offers the following low rates to the PanAmerican Exposition at Buffalo effective June Ist and: good during the entire summer: One and one-third fare for the round trip good going date of sale and return limit available for 15 days. Onedfare plus $l.OO west of Cleveland, and one fare Cleveland and east for the round trip good going date of sale and returning within 10 days. There will also be coach excursions on Tuesdays during June, July, August, September and October, at one cent a mile traveled return limited to 3 days including date of sale. For particulars, etc., write, wire, }:hone or call on nearest agent, or C. A. sterlin, T. P. A., Ft. Wayne, Ind. L R : No Eye for Home Comforts. Mrs. Muggins—My husband is the most unreasonable man alive. Mrs. Buggins—What has he done now? *“l’ve been at him for six months to buy some new furniture for the parlor, and he has just paid $40,000 for an old seat in the stock exchange.”’-—Philadelphia Record., g i Yellowstone Park. : Extended tour, leisurely itinerary with long stops in the Park. Private coalhes for excfu,sive use on the drive. Pullman sleeping and dining cars. Established limit to number going. Escort of the American Tourist Association, Reau Campbell, General Manager, 1423 Marquette Building, Chicago. Colorado and Alaska tours also. Tickets include all Expenses Everywhere. Train leaves Chicago via Chxce:]go, Milwaukee & St. Paul R’y, Tuesday, July 9, 10:00 p- m. et e s Mystery. A woman enjoys nothing better than to read a letter in the presence of other women and smile occasionally.—N. Y. World. el SORN T e _ Do Your Feet Ache and Burn? Shake into your shoes, Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes Feel Easy, Cures Corns, Itching, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Smarting, Sore and Sweating Feet. All Druggists and Shoe Stores sell it, 25¢c. Sample sent FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. —_—————— “That’s very rough on me,” as the maiden observed, when her unshaven sweetheart kissed her.—Ally Sloper. ; — Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W, Samuel, Ocean Grove. N. J.. Feb. 17, 1900. _——————— The fool man and the wise trout are slow at catching on.—Chicago Daily News. L — e Cure and Prevent Pneumonia. With Hoxsie’s Croup Cure. Infallible. 50e. —_————— . All is not gold that is sold'as such.—Ally Sloper.
SOUI" Stomach g . Back up a sewer, and you poison the whole neighborhood. Clog up liver and bowels, and your stomach is full of undigested food, which sours and ferments, like garbage in a swill-barrel. That’s the first step to untold misery—indigestion, foul gases, headache, furred tongue, bad breath, yellow skin, mental fears, everything that is horrible and nauseating CASCARETS quietly, positively stop fermentation in the stomach, make the liver lively, tone up the bowels, set the whole machinery going and keep it in order. Don’t hesitate! Take CASCARETS fo-day and be saved from suffering! ; d ‘:)J:y: i e e bre'. o 1| ‘After ¥ was induced to try CASCA- |, . , : RETS, [ will never be without them in the ¥ . 3eqr | house. My liver was in a very bad shape, | obv' : d and my head ached and I had stomach trou- |}, e i 21 ble. Now, since taking Cascarets, I feel fine. aich | My wife has also used them with beneficial | mea ‘ y s he | resultsfor sour stomach ™ 4 Yoo . Jos. KREHLING, «ad 1921 Congress St., St. Louis, Mo. | play " - at e I re a 4 f | WsMl D e b |99 : BEST FOR BOWELS AND LIVER. THIS IS £ Py A ‘ S r—T AR G RK wn'LEYDU oy , NEVER SOLD IN BULK.
. GUARANTEED TO CURE all bowel troubles, a&mndleltl-, billousness, bad breath, bad blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, llldl‘pe-tlon. pimples, pains after eating liver trrouble, sallow com= plexion and dizziness. vfiien your bowels don& move rt‘afularly you are gettlnz sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. t is a starter for the chronie alhnenl: and lon: ‘year- of flergfg that come afterwards. No matter what alls you, start taking CASC B today, for you will never gel well and be well all the ¢t ’f until you put your bowels right. Take our advices start with CASC S today, under an absolute guarantee to cure or money refunded. : 445
HUNKS OF SOLID FACT. = Cryolite is a mineral found in Greenland. Skating was a sport of the Northmen in prehistoric times. ‘ Egypt was the first country to have a military organization. Umbrellas were in use in America before they were in England. In ancient times black inks were made of soot and ivory black. Lettuce was introduced into England from Flanders about 1520. The invention of the organ is attributed to Archimeces, about 220 B. C. : The Phoenicians and the Greeks were the first to place much dependence on naval warfare. The mace was a weapon anciently used by cavalry of most nations. It was originally a spiked club, usually of metal, hung at the saddle-bow. In the Brookfield {(Mo.) white schools the sexes are represented by exactly the same number. There are just 699 each of the boys and girls. The month of June owes its name to Junius, which some derive from Juno, and others from Juniores, this being the month for the young, as May was for aged persons. The judges of the. New York supreme court have resolved among themselves hereafter to permit no person called for jury duty to be excused upon the request of a third party. He must appear and malke his excuses in person.
PLAIN STATEMENTS OF FACT. An Ohio grower has succeeded in growing hickory nuts with shells so thin that they can be broken by the hand. The human windpipe is composed of 16 or 18 cartilaginous rings, united by exceedingly flexible ligaments. It is estimated that the average cost of crime through taxation in this country is not less than $3.50 per capita of the entire city population: + It is estimated that the fire insurance companies will lose an annual income of nearly $1,000,000 by the decision of the big steel trust to carry its own insurance. . Nearly all the motormen employed on the new trolley lines in Buffalo are young Canadian farmers. The railway officials say they are the most satisfactory of all their employes. : A florist of Newark, N. J., kept what he believed to be a valuable watchdog chained in his greenhouse in Elizabeth avenue as a protection against thieves. One morning thieves mnot only carried off yaluable plants, but also stole the watchdog, chain, collar and all. The Picturesque Pan - American Route to Bufialo is a very appropriate designation of the Grand Irunk Railway System, which has made the most ample preparations to accommodate visitors to the kast this summer. : A new train was inaugurated June 2, known as the “Detroit and New York Express,” which leaves Dearborn Station, Chicago, at 11:32 a. m. The equipment is new and strictly up-to-date, every comfort of the traveler being provided for. Meals are served a la carte between Chicago and New York at any hour to suit the convenience of patrons. From Detroit the train speeds eastward, stopping en route at Mt. Clemens, whose waters are famous the world over, leaving the State at Port HuronZ and entering Canada via the great “St. Clair Tunnel,” that marvel of engineering, passing during the night through the important cities of London and Hamilton, crossing the magnificent single arch- double track steel bridge over the Niagara Gorge, arriving at Nijagara Falls, N. Y., at 4.25 a. m., where stop-over may, under certain conditions, be made without additional cost by deposit of railway ticket with a%ent. ! Buffalo, the Pan-American City, is reached at 6.15 a. m., where stop-over is granted on tickets to points beyond Buffalo, on payment of §l. g The trip east of Buffalo via the Lehigh Valley Railroad through the lake region of New York State is like passing through a fairyland of beauty. The view of the historic Wyoming Valley from the mountains which arise on either side is strikingly beautiful—one which the traveler will long remember, even when gazing upon scenes of wider fame. . . At South Bethlehem connection is made for Philadelphia, which is reached at 3.47 D om. New York is reached at 433 p. m, a most convenient hour, as it allows ample time to reach hotel or residence, dine leisurely, and enjoy the whole evening in the city. For sleeping car reservations on all trains, and for any additional information, ap{{)ly to J. H, Bur%:s, City Pass. and Ticket Agent, 249 Clark St., corner Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, 111.
Motherh o » ~";>‘ T‘V‘-h: " $5 00 0 PR S ’\‘ 3 S‘\u _ SIS PO® | REWARD /‘;; /] 0/ "i/;,”" : RN Ly o~ Fal 'w =3 Owing to the fact that Haaty \\‘ -"f?- 5 A someskeptical peoplehave £y [t o [ %4["% = ‘ \ from time to time quesR 0.é%” )’.‘( . S22\ tioned the genuinessof the R\“ % 4 22N \\Q% v :\ testimonial letters weare @ VRY - 8 y&" /é 7 Q\y ey o ~ constantly publishing, we | .}g/»;,l\ NS LA 0, | have deposted withche B\ S é/?fl SR FEE W | National City Bank, of s R Rl SAR 7 IR Ss%a N Lynn, Mass,, $5,000 which bR 'f B 1 | / s . D wgl be paid to any person V) ) A P ; ill show that the XN PP ] Toiog i ; % 7 N /7 . g testimonials are pb. ufl’«"” “"D /AL 4 m ‘ not genuine, or were pub- ( " ' P \\\\\ lished before obtaining - -‘( r // 1 \PI the writers’ special per- § N : — ’," A9y mission. —Lypia E. % 9 / i S PINKHAM MEDICINE Co. =W i AR, SN : == 7 7 e A\ SN i \\ S =1) i 4 5 \ \\\\{ Ty 5: g 5= "’ : \ \\\‘ \\ & A s ~ < "\-‘! . 5 : RAN N ; = A}A\L. & K 5 \ S Y 7 AAN —= NN 4 \‘.\\ et \\\ A\\ o - :
How shall a mother who is weak and sick with some female trouble bear healthy children ? . ’ - . How anxious women ought to be to give their children the blessing of a good constitution ! : Many women long for a child to bless their home, but because of some debility or displacement of the female organs, they are barren. i | Preparation for healthy maternity is accomplished by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound more successfully than by any other medicine, because it gives tone and strength to the parts, curing all displacements and inflammation. o ' Actual sterlllt.{ in women is very rare. If any woman thinks she is sterile, let her write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., whose advice is given free to all expectant or wouldbe mothers. _ Mrs. A. D. Jarret, Belmont, Ohio, writes: *‘ DEAR MRs. PINKkHAM :—I must write/and tell you what your Vegetable Compound has done for me. Before taking your medicine I was unabie to carry babe to maturity, having lost t;:{i——one at six months and one at seven. The doctor said next time I would die, but thanks to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, I did not die, am the proud mother of a.six months old girl baby. She weighs ninetden pounds and has never seen a sick day in her life. She is the delight of ogr home.” Mrs. Whitney’s Gratitude. *“DEAR MRS. PINKHAM :—From the time I was sixteen years old till I was twenty-three I was troubled with weakness of the kidneys and terrible pains when my monthly periods came on. 1 made up my mind to try vour
A R i e S eRt L W, W L A NN < N 2 ge® R T & g “2 N R ol L or 7 FALRR 'r:,l MRS.L.Z WHITNEYo® BABY
cess in the future as in the past, ;na—m“a_y_t;a—.r;y-iaa;fiés f)é-'.-)-r_i_gfife;fé&—é mine has been."—Mgs. L. Z. ’&m’rNEY, 4 Flint St., Bomerville, Mass.” The medicine that cures the ills of women is Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
visr FPAN-AMERICAN %, THE EXPOSITION BUFFALO EAST LAKE NIAGARA FALLS® | | . M . LOwW — s(o‘ acHicagh RATES - (RIE BUFFAL, ; . & LA " t K : FREQUENT TOLED ~O;‘.*,;. ; TRAINS _ * CLEVELANL LAKE Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry.| ! Full particulars on application to F. M. BYRON, General Western Agent, CHICAGO ‘
A Broad Hint, Mr. Staylate—Aw—Miss Dimples, you have such dreamy eyes, doncher know. . Miss Dimples—No, I'm just sleepy; that’s all.—Ohio State Journal. - A.N. K.—-A 1870
G‘UARANTEI]; TO CURE: Five rs ago the first box of CASCARETS was sold. ow itisoversix nl.nroo:boxe- a year,greater than anx similar medicine in the world. ’i’hln is absolute rmraf t merit, an our best testimoniale We have faith, and whHli sell CASC absolutely fllaranteed to cure or money refunded. Go buy today, two boxes, s:g em o fair, honest trial, as per simple directions, and if you are not satl after unlnf one 60¢ box, .{eturn the unused 50¢ box and the e—pzy box to g- by mail, or the "I!F‘ fro m you purchased it, ,got-fi your v nnek, tflc:r lr"’lth l;ofi-.m“nke on; lee‘-l-ao n.nela what « . - ea W ckly ow an u will biess the da; rst ! use vX i RIS Ll RO O O e s kess starbe
se i A e R R ON e ML G- gl e e - Vegetable Compound, and was soon relieved. ' The doctor said I never would be able to go my ~ full time and have a living child, as I was con- ~ stitutionally weak. I had lost a baby at seven - months and half. The next time I continued to take your Comipound : and I said then, if I went my full time and my baby lived to be three months old, I should send a letter to you. My baby is now seven months old. and is as healthy and hearty as any one could wish. I cannot exprese my gratitute to you. I was so bad that I did not dare to goraway from home to stay any length of timwe. Praise God for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ComRound; and may others who are suffering oas I did and find relief. Wishing you suc-
Live Stock ana Miscellaneous Electrotypes..
In great variety for sale at the lowest prices by A. N. KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO., 78 W. Adams St.g CHICAGO.
