Ligonier Banner., Volume 39, Number 6, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 May 1904 — Page 3
= WOMEN’S WGES. Much of women’s daiiy woe is due to . - kidney trouble. Sick @ kidneys cause back- § W ache, languor, blind i g ) headaches, dizziness, )é.' /7 insomunia and urinary &b troubles. To cure R - yourself you must . A cure the kidneys. BEMEN Profit by the experiRN cnce of others who RRemeeaßd have been cured. . PRSI Mrs. William W. BRI Brown, professional AN nurse, of 16 Jane St., PR Paterson, N. J., says: R PRGN ‘'] have not only seen CQgpvems® much suffering and many deaths from kidney trouble, but I have suffered myself) At on€ time I thought I could net live. My back ached, there were frequent headaches and dizzy spells, and the kidney secretions were disordered. Doan’s Kidney Pills helped me from the first, and soon relieved me entirely of all the distressing and painful symptoms.” A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which eured Mrs. Brown will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. Address FosterMilburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all druggists; price 50 cents per box.
WAL
K’hawking and Spitting, Dropping Into the Throat, Foul Breath, "CURED’
THROUGH THE. BLOOD
| By Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) TO PROVE IT, SAMPLE SENT FREE,
Botanic Blood Balm [B. B. B,] has cured to Sta;;' cured more cases of Catarrh than allothers remedies combined, 8,8.8. kills or destroys theawful catarrhal poison in the biood which causes the symptoms, and thus makes a perfectlasting cure of the worst.old cases ! SYMPTOMS. The poison in the blood produces bad. offensive, fetid breath,badteeth,and sickness of the stomach;fn some casos vomiting up clear phlegm; enlargement of the soft bones of the nose,affecting sense of smell,ulcera~ tiens of the mucous membranes, hawking, spitting up lumps, weak stomach, nose bleeding, headaches,snorfng while asleep, stopping up of the nose: thin, hot tlood, all run down, specks flyit.g before the eyes,low spirited, etc, Botanic Blood Balm [B, B. B,]forces its way through every, blood vessel and vein, expelling all catarrhal poison that stands in its way, permanently removes every, symptom and thus makes a perfect cure, 8,8, B. sends a flood of rich, pure blood direct to the affected parts, giving warmth aud strength fUSt where it is needed. Deafness. Ringing In'the Ears, Head Nolses. Nearly all cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrhal Poison in the blood. The air passages become clogged by catarrhal deposits stopping the action of the vibratory bones. Thousands of sufferers from even total deafness have had their hearing permanently testored by taking B, B. B, for catarrh. B, B. B, graduaily removes the catarrhal deposit from the air passages, tlius making the nerves of the ear - respond to the symptoms of approaching deafness and catarrh. 8.8.8. never fails to remove ringing in the ears or head noises imra few week's time. If deaf or hard of hearing try Botanic Blood Balm B. B. B, It may be the very remedy your system needs. OUR GUARA NTEE.—Take a large bottle of Botanic Blood Baim(B.B.B,)as directed onlabel, and when the rlsht quantlv Is taken a cure is certain, sure and lasting. If not cured your money will promptly be refunded without argument. " Botanic Blood Balm [B.D.DB.] is Pleasant and safe to take. Thoroughly tested for 30 years. Composed of Pure Botanic Ingredients. Strengthens: Weak Kidneys and Stomachs. cures Dyspepsia. Sold by all Druggists, $l. Per Large Bottle,with complete direction for home cure. Sample Sent I'ree by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. ‘Describe your trouble, and special free medicaladvice, to suit your case, will be sent in sealed lettes, v ‘ 3 : ; ; e - T —— JEST AND JOLLITY. | The street swedper isn’t a financier, but he can raise the “dust.” Gold hunters believe that “it will all come out in the wash.” A girl doesn’t always look nice enough to eat when she’s in a stew. No girl appreciates her beau at his full value until some other girl tries to appropriate him. ] * “Moving cost me over $4OO this year.” ‘“Rent higher?” “No; my wife has been_ trying to outdress a rich woman who lives next docor to us.”—Chicago Journal: _ . “Sometimes,” said Uncle Eben, “a man, gives hisse’f credit foh bein’ resigned to fate when he has simply set‘tled down to bein’ good an’ lazy.’— Washington Star. “Ah, there, my japonica!”’ cried the Russian picket to his rival across the stream. ‘“‘Ah, there, my czardine!” cried the picket on the other side.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. : The Japs are very kind to the cor_respondents, after all. They give them free leave to go into details in their accounts of the geisha girls and earthguakes.—lndianapolis Journal. ; “Who is that awfully freckled girl over there in the corner?” “Why, that's Miss Bullion, the great heiress.” : “Aren’t her freckles becoming?’— Cleveland Plain Dealer. e “Do you remember,” asked the teacher, “how many peopie came over in the Mayflower?” “I don’t remember now,” replied Johnny, “but pa says there must a been about 15,000,000, unless there’s a whole lot of liars in this'country.”—Chicago Record-Herald. -“ Until Too Stiff to Bend Over. ‘“When I drank coffee I often had sick headaches, nervousness and biliousness much of the time but about 2 years ago I went to visit a friend and got in the habit of drinking Postum. * “I have.never touched coffee since and the result has been that I have been entirely cured of all my stomach and nervous trouble. : . “My mother was just the same way, we all drink Postum now and have _mnever had any coffee in the house for 2 years and we are all well. : “A neighbor of mine, a great coffee drinker, was troubled with pains in her’ side for years and was an invalid. She was not able to do her work and could 130 t even mend clothes or do anything at all where she would have to bend forward. If she tried to do a little hard work she would get-such pains that she would have to lie down foi the rest of the day. : “l persuaded her at last:- to stop drinking coffee and try Postum Food Coffee ax_ld she did so and she has used Postum ever since; the result has been that she can now do her work, can sit for a whole day and mend and - can sew on the machine and she never feels the least bit of pain in her side in fact she has got well and it shows coffee was the cause of the whole trouble. i , - “I could also tell you about several ~other neighbors who have been cured. by quitting coffee and using Postum in its place.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. e - Look in each pkg. for the famous little book, “T-;he Road to Wellvme.”_ |
MEN WHO MAXE THE NEWSPA_PERS OF NEW YORK. HEARS?‘ AS A CANDIDATE Is Still an Unknown Man to the Metropolis Public—Munsey’s Experience in the Newspaper Field—Other Gossip. ; R TEW YORK.—The i & . appearance of Wil- ~ ‘ . | liam R. Hearstasa é Ol presidential candi.'/‘o‘! \ §didate has brought = ‘ ,':"_’A | his personality be- > 2 ’\' fore “the puglic in ST :-:-—P s - 5 way that 50 years L. 5 k= of conducting mulet ,// > | tipie newspapers . / > . scould never have et .' Lsd doLe. 7’ ~,fl Yet to the public, T\ & S %ven in New York, g,_§)\;, he remains an un--12|65 4 \\\\\ known man. He is Y ot recognizead B upon the street, as ' s Depew would be. He does not seek or court personal publicity. Withal, his face and figuie are of the type that pass unnoticed in a city that draws from all parts of the country slender, smooth-faced men to manifold industries and walks of commerce. : ; Smooth-faced, I have called Mr. Hearst. He is about 40 years of age, and his slender figure and boyish appearance give him the look of even greater youth. Some one of his numerous retinue of campaign managers has issued a lithograph of him that shows the face lired and seamed like that of a middleaged man. In that respect it is not aportrait. Mr. Hearst’s years sit lightly upon him. The cares of .a vast and complex business of publication simply ‘do not for him exist. He has the power of disassociation; of leaving to subordinates work that does not personally appeal to him. In matters that do demand his attention he is capable of a devotion to detail that will drive a night editor crazy. g
Mr. Hearst has young men about him. Mr. Arthur Brisbane, who has been much named of late as Mr. Hearst’s adviser and literary man, is of about the same age and of the same smooth-shaven facial type, though much more careworn in appearance. Still, Mr. Brisbane was already past 30 when, happening one day to attempt to enter the casino at Monte Carlo as a visitor, he was stopped by the watchful attendant, who informed him that minors were not permitted to enter the famous gambling hall. ‘The Monte €Garlo men, being Savoyards and pronounced brunes, very often take northern blond men as younger than they really are. 3 Mr. Brisbane is only one of a brilliant group of men whom Mr. Hearst has had at times gathered about him, and whose services have had much to do with the circulation of his newspapers. Mr. Chamberlain, Arthur McEwen, Ambrose Bierce and Willis Holly are a few of the men who have written the stirring editorials attributed to Mr. Heéarst by those who do not know how a great newspaper is really edited. . : I am not sure that Mr. Hearst does not owe more to Mr. Carvalho, the astute business manager of various of his papers at various times, than toany writer whatever. Mr. Carvalho and Mr. Brisbane have been close friends for 15 years. They were asscciated in practically their present work upon the World until seven years ago, since then they have been the ‘“‘steady team” of the Hearst establishment. The Queer Fate of the News. 7 R. FRANK MUN- : ,\/:" \ SEY is another [‘\A\\ young looking 7..,/,\&%*13 Yy Dnewspaper man of - T m | New YOrk and oth- ._;,,« N ‘@,‘/ » er cities, though XRN @*hp one whose success ({ N\€ g, B has been less than \ 2 [ Mr. Hearst’s. B Mr. Munsey was Niel the first man "in = N & America to try the v v “tabloid” form of , | | journalism, pubL lishing the old Star T for a few weeks in 5 e small page form : a 8 ‘The Continént.”” Only newspaper men remember the experiment. Munsey had at that time already won and lost more than one respectable competency; wealth soon after dawned for him with the success of Munsey’s Magazine. His more recent venture with the Washington Time:%the Boston Journal and the New York News has proved a less easy road to fortune. The case of the News is instructive. This paper was long ago the personal organ of Mayor Fernando Wood, he whose claim to immortality chiefly rests upon the inspired remark that “We must pander sometimes to the moral sense of the community.” Which, as Wood wasa Tammany mayor duringthe war, was a conc®ssion. Afterwards the News was run for years by Col. “Bill” Brown, who was also in the Tammany confidence. It made money right along arfd had the largest circulation in the world. Its 150,000 daily buyers were the standing marvel of newspaper men. The paper was chiefly bought by those in humble circumstances and paid more attention to prize fights than to pink teas. W. E. Harding, of the Police Gazette, was long its sporting editor, and was supposed to have much to do with its SURCess.
‘When. Col. Brown died his widow still had in the News a profitable property, though Its circulation had been whittled away by the Sun, World and Journal, one after another establishing evening papers of great enterprise. However, the paper was sold to Mr. Munsey for a substantial price and was worth it. Every step that he took to “boom” it has precisely the opposite effect. He changed it from an afternoon to a morning. edition without consulting anybody. Not being a newspaper man, it never occurred to him that there would be any difficulty about the press franchise for telegraphic news. There was. He changed the Sunday edition into a Saturday afternoon edition, and when that was worked changed it back again, confusing the few remaining readers who dropped away rapidly. : So presently the strange spectacle was
seen of a paper which had been greatly improved, which published excellent matter excellently written, clearly printed and well illustrated, with a cir‘culation of one-téenth what it had been when the paper was not so good, but was at least consistently managed. In a single year, Mr. Munsey is supposed to have spent nearly a millicn dollars, including the purchase price, upon the News, up to the time when he publicly announced that he was ready practically to throw it away, to suspend publication without day or date. That is the other side of the newspaper story, good to tell when one speaks of the wonders Mr. Hearst has wrought with practically unlimited money and nerve. Even these qualities do not always win. Mrs. Brown, it is sad to say, did not come through the year much better than the purchaser of her paper. She was one of the unfortunates who purchased considerable quantities of the “busted” shipbuilding trust. _ - What Can Be Done. L= VT Mr. Hearst is . )) not ‘the only man et who has ‘“done A @ things” of late in (‘l § New York jour- : \& 4 nalism. ’/4‘\ % ) Mr. Adolph Ochs, (’}\ _“‘;v.,,( coming from Cpat- \ "-‘f"‘ Sy tanooga, took over . : “’7’, D the New York P WU Times, for 20 years \7?\\% a hopeless prosp(JSition. Now he hasit . " on -a paying basis, O, = runs in connection = with it the Phila- = delphia Ledger and <Lz - Times, consolidated into one strong paper, and has been beating the town with Jap war news obtained in partnership with the London Times. : " The new proprietor of the Globe, which started as the Commercial over a hundred years ago, has worked it up to over 100,000 circulation in a few months. The manager of the Mail and Express, son of the Poet Stoddard, is a young man. Young Mr. Howland is practically at the head of the New York Herald, where his father was so long business manager. - The ‘‘down-stairs men” qf the World, the managing editor, the city editor; the Sunday editor, are all men under 45.. S Anything unusual in Philadelphia journalism naturally -has something to do with obituary notices, which havealways been a specialty of Quaker City Journalism since Mr. Childs used to print the poetical variety in- the old Ledger. Death notices are valuable in Philadelphia. Therefore, again, they were eagerly sought by the competing papers. A ‘‘cut-rate war” was the result; and of that the equally natural outcome was a trust. :
Go to any Philadelphia paper nowadays—it makes no matter which one—to secure the insertion of a ‘‘death notice” and the charge will be three dollars, and all the papers publish it in justthe same form. Thus Philadelphia is assured of its favorite reading matter. : The “Original Delmonicos.” bl HE death of Miss 2 ) F\\ R ose Delmonico ; l ‘ left New York’s : # - most famous res- - {8 taurant still with- ] N 2 out a masculine ED= /-7 owner. \\,\2‘ -4 /J"\ A\ Three-fourths of T (.7 the estate of Miss R7N Delmonico’s will LR gges to her niece, ~‘ o Jsephlpe Crist i\ -\ Imonico, the oth- ; —— er fourth to her g“z‘,‘ ' nephew, Lorenz T/ .. Crist Delmonico. N . The famous old firm still maintains two, and only two, houses, the downtown branch on Beaver street and the one which, on the corner of Fifth avenue and Forty-fourth street, faces its newer rival, Sherry’s, in the fight for smart patronage. ) X In no way that I could name has the effect in New York on the growth of great wealth and the habit of ostentation been more manifast than in the matter of costly places of dining. Where Delmonico’s had not so very long ago almost a monopoly of expensive banquets, it has seen the industry divided among 20 places, while its own share has not decreased. The Holland house, Sherry’s, the Savoy, the New Netherland, the ‘Majestic, are but types of a score of ho- | tels where it is impossible to dine from the card at a moderate price. The table d’hote dinner, costing $1.50, is almost contemptuously regarded in such places as ‘‘cheap.” The Cafe Martin, on the site of ;the old Delmonico’s, relegates its table d’hote diners at that price to inferior quarters on the third floor, far from the music and gayety; and taxes 25 cents per person extra, those wheo do not order wine. This, indeed, is a common practice. .
In the race for distinction, the competition seems to be not to cut prices under other competitors, but to get them higher. Delmonico rates are slow to change; and the famous old house still enables two persons, who order with care and judgment, to get somethirg to eat for about three dollars. Delmonico has no fixed-price dinner, and, of course, no absurd tax upon those who do not order wine. It is not now, as once it was, the highest priced restaurant in New York, but it is still an institution, after having enriched three generations of the original family. | At the other end of the line there have sprung up a multitude of cheap places where an excellent luncheon served in courseés may be procured. for 25 or 30 cents, or a dinner for 35 cents up to 50. At the latter price not a few houses include a pint of poorish red wine. Sixty cents buy an excellent dinner with wine at any one of a number of houses that have an established reputation for the excellénce of their cooking. I have often seen the Italian ambassador, when in New York, taking his dinner at a 60cent restaurant where the ‘“ravioli” is excellent, the “spaghetti” cooked to a turn and blushing with just the right quantity of tomato sauce, the “fritto misto’”a combination to make the mouth water. : i New York rivals Paris as a city where one can either pay a great deal or a very little for a dinner—and in either case dine well. . o OWEN LANGDON. Handicapped. - - “He can’t tell the truth'if he tries.” “Oh, yes, he can. But he tells it in' such a way that it seems to be g lie.”—Broocklyn Life.
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CULTURE OF HORSERADISH.
How to Obtain the Best Results with a Crop That Always Is a Ready Seller. :
Horseradish is grown from sets or cuttings planted in the spring in rows two and a half to three fect apart. The gardeners here usually plant between rows of early beets and cabbage. I should prefer planting by itself if possible, as better care can be given earlier in the season. The soil should be just what you would select for good parsnips or carrots; a Jdeep mellow soil fairly well enriched with good stable manure plowed in. The sets are the side roots of the plant, usually from the size of a lead pencil up to nearly as large again. These are cut in lengths of about five to six inches, and
1 ) B\#{ {l : ’ tQ( y : ). \ \\( /I{. &\ : (u‘ : j\\i TYPICAL HORSERADISH ROOT. as the root is of nearly if not: quite uniform size the smaller or lower end is sharpened by a slanting cut. This end is put down in planting. A small iron bar is generally used making the hole, about one and a half inches deeper than the cuttings, the crown of which should be one and a half to two inches below the surface. Cultivate and hoe often as soon as the rows can be seen through. "A good fertilizer of eight to ten per cent. of potash, seven to eight available phosphoric acid and four per cent. of ammonia scattered along the rows and hoed in at second hoeing will greatly improve the crop. The roots. are dug the first season late in the fall, and pitted for winter and early spring sales. The side roots should be removed and cut in lengths of five to six inches fpr planting; this can be done in the fall before the roots x?re buried for winter. The cuttings canl be tied in bunches and buried until spring, as frost does not injure them; they may be planted as early in spring as the ground can be worked. The roqts are generally washed. The cut shows a small root taken from the ground this spring, to show how the side roots appear. These side roots are often one tc one-‘and’a half foot in length, and I think sometimes more. If the main roots are well grown and trimmed they appear something like a barrel of small parsnips in market.—E. E. Burwell, in Rural New Yorker. P
COMFORT FOR THE FAMILY.
Every Farmer Sh‘oulc_l Have a Ga.x"den in Which to Raise Vegetables ) and Fruits.
It has been asserted that the farmer is the most backward fellow in the world, so far as looking after his own comfort is concerned, and that may be stretched to include the- comfort of his family. There is no question that the farmer and his family should be the best fed people in the world, but are they? Some are and some are not. Some have gardens, orchards, flocks of poultry and every‘thing that can add to the comfort of the farm home. Most do not. Yet at the back door of every fgrmhouse is a nice piece of land that, with a little care, would yield many Kkinds of comfort to his family through every month of the year. The farmer that does not care to go into fruit raising unless he can make it a commercial operation is losing sight of one of the chief joys of raising fruit—that of having an abundant supply for his own table. What a pleasure it is to see the children and the women of the household reveling in their ripe fruit, both' at picking time and at eating time! : But the things that would make a commercial orchard and a commercial berry patch unprofitable will not militate with the establishing of such for the supply of the family. Often the commercial fruit enterprise is a question of markets, but with the home orchard-there is no question of a market. The fruit patch, whether it includes vines or trees or both, is a source of health to the whole family, and a delight to the younger members of the family that they will remember in their latest days.—Farmers’ Review. ! > ‘
Evergreens as Windbreaks,
There is no other wind-break equal to an evergreen. Everyone will admit that, but the number of evergreens planted in shelter belts is exceedingly small. The popular idea that an evergreen is a very hard tree to make live is an erroneous idea, as a number of our stock farmers who have tried it, and know what they are talking about, will testify. ‘The horses, the cows, the hogs, the sheep, and even the chickens, cry out for a wind-break, and there is none other so good 4s a belt of evergreens.—Woman’s Farm Journal.
Maryland Adopts State Aid.
Maryland has just joined the list of states working under the state aid plan. The legislature has appropriated $200,000 to aid the counties of the state in improving their roads. The distribution among the counties is to be made on the basis of road mileage. Maryland is also the first state to observe a ‘“Good Roads day.” The day selected was April 15. Director Dodge, of the office of public road inquiries, was the orator of the day at the celebration given by the state agricultural college, y . L
TREAT DAIRY. HELP FAIRLY.
Employers Willing to Do the Square Thing Can Always Get Reliable Assistants.
In an address to Missouri dairymen, Robert Pethbridge said: Successful dairying cannot be' carried on where labor is short, or where the hired help is lacking. In my travels I find this to be a great complaint among dairymen that they cannot get help, but I am sure it is mostly their own fault, for I can name many successful dairymen who have no difficulty in that line, because their help is treated in a proper and business-like manner, such as fair wages, regular hours and liberal treatment. He must compare the dairy help with the city laborer in wages; they will vary in different parts of the country in hLours of labor; the city man has his ten hours daily and pay for overtime, whereas the country man as'a rule works longer hours and no pay for overtime. This is one of, the great objections of the man working on the farm, for I have known by experience that many a day I have been at work 14 hours in the field with a team and previous to that did the milking and feeding of ten cows and four horses, and thea at night have to do the same thing again, when I ought to have been studying or taking some recreation io improve my mind and body, to render it better fit for the duties of the morrow. Liberal treatment will do ‘more to bring employer and employed together, than wages. The giving of a cottage with a garden patch and allowing them to keep a cow for the use of the. children in addition to the weekly wage gives the country employer the advantage over the city and more work can be acconiplished and your man can be relied on, which js very important. In the hiring of labor, there are many good dairy hands coming from England, Ireland, Germany and Scandinavian countries, who are glad to get a job when they arrive in New York, and they naturally seek an employment agency, and those who wish to hire this class can make "application, and they will not be disappointed if they are willing to do the fair thing. :
THE CARE OF FARM MILK.
Some Valuable Suggestions That Are Worth Carrying Out During the Coming Summer.
Are the patrons of butter and cheese factories prepared to cool their milk during the coming summer? Don’t expect that running it over some aerator, where the only cooling it gets is from the air, will do much good. In cool weather it will. In warm weather such treatment will do more harm than good. Exposing warm milk to large tin surfaces is a fruitful medium for contamination with germ life. In other words, I am sure that air contact alone is of no value, and may be positively harmful. Where a sudden lowering of the temperature takes place when exposed to the air results may be eminently satisfactory, even though germs may be present, the low temperature retarding their development. If the aerator is kept scrupulously clean—and, by the way, it is one of the utensils that gets the least care-—and the operation is performed in a pure, clean atmosphere, I have no protest to make; but, as ordinarily done, in close proximity to a stable, near the corner of a barn where there is an air current carrying germ ladefi dust, there is danger of contamination, and a protest is necessary. There is one safe, sure way to care for nigh’s milk where hauling’is done once a day. Use 40-quart cans, standing them in ice water immediately after the milk is drawn, occasionally stirring until the milk is cooled to 60 degrees. I will guarantee, if sufficient care is exercised in milking and in strainers, and if pails are clean, that this milk will make good butter ar cheese. ' This old notion that milk had an animal odor or cowy flavor has been buried since farmers have come to practice cleanliness in milking and to keep the cow manure out of the milk pail.—H. E. Cook; in N. Y. Tribune-Farmer.
DEVICE THAT NEVER FAILS.
Sure to Cure Any Cow Addicted to the Pernicious Habit of Drinking Her Own Milk.
A light and handy device to keep a cow from sucking herself is made by fastening a rope-around her body just behind the forelegs and then taking a
\\S o J é Y, / » i \ 7 e:s - | oo NN = ! M £ S Tt =73 — .-S;t_f "*}z. ST | Wl T e ;- T : DEVICE THAT ALWAYS CURES. board 214 'inches wide and long enough to reach from the cow’s horn to the rope; make a curve in one end to fit the horn; bore a hole in each end of board; place the curved end against the cow's horn and fasten tight against the head with a string; then tie the other end to the rope as shown in diagram.—A. N. Horn in Epitomist. ' Fraud in Dairy Business. Through the newspapers, and in private letters from breeders, come continual reports of criminal negligence, adulteration ‘and substitution in the dairy business. In Seattle, Wash., a whole dairy establishment was recently arrested and charged with manslaughter, the specific case being the poisoning of a little girl who had drunk milk alleged to contain formaldehyde, and died presumably from the effects. of this preservative. Poisonous preservatives, butter color, and other substances to ‘“make’ dairying easy” and make frauds possible, will surely meet the condemnation of public opinion throughout the universe.—Rural World. : i
"PERUNA, i oe eqpnations
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Most of the Ailments Peculiar to the Female Sex are Due to Catarrh of the Pelvic Organs. .‘—0“0-0 - o—o-o—o-0-0-0-0-0-—O-0-90-0-0-0-9 ¢ "‘Rachael J. Kemball, M. D., 334 i Virginia St., Buffalo, N. Y., is a{ graduateof the University of Buffalo, t class 1884, and has been in the practice of medicine in-that city sincet then. She writes as follows: i ‘‘My conviction, supported by i experience, is that Peruna is a valu- ; able preparation for all catarrhal } affections. I have taken one bottle ¢ of Peruna myself and just feel fine. ; I shall continue to take it.’’-Rachael J. Kemball, M. D. ; GB- B G BDD )BB P PF B )ol=Bß oD
Peruna has cured.thousands of cases of female weakness. As a rule, however,before Perunaisresorted toseveral other remedies have been tried in vain. A great many of the patientshave taken local treatment, submitted themselves to surgical operations, and, taken all sorts of doctor’s stuff, Wi‘,hout any. result. The reason of so many failures is the fact that diseasespeculiarto the female
sex are not commonly recognized as being caused by catarrh. These organs
Female Trouble | Not Recognized | } as Catarrh.
are lined by mucous membranes. Any mucous membrane is subject tocatarrh. Catarrh of one organ is exactly the same as catarrh of any other organ. What will cure catarrh of the head will also cure catarrh of the pelvic organs. Peruna curesthese cases simply because it cures the catarrh. Most of the women afflicted with pel-
CITY STORE FRONTS For all kinds and sizes of Store Buildings. We furnish all material entering into the construction of Store Fronts. Write us about your proposed building and state dimensfons and style of front and we will send vou, FREE OF CHA RGE, an elegant Blue Print Plan,and quote you an extremely low price on one of our popular 8 s B AUTIFUL, EVERDLASTING: mmmmmm—m— Modern Store Fronts. We give you all the style of an elegant New York or Chicago store at moderate cost. Send for C’nnlozue. ) : SOUTHERN FOUNDRY CO,, Owensboro, Kentucky.
~ The oil stove is more useful than the ice cream freezer.—Washington Star.
Shake Into Your Shoes Allen’s Foot-Ease. Itcu re!fiiainful, swollen, smarting, sweating feet. akes new shoes easy. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores. Don’taccept any substitute. Sample FREE. Address A. S.-Olmsted, Le Roy lg Y. Py st bt ol o A peanut has no legs, but we have often seen a peanut stand.—N. Y. Weekly. ONE DOLLAR WHEAT. Western Canada’s Wheat Fields Produce It—Magnificent Yields—Free 4 Grants of Land to Settlers. The returns of the Inierior Department show that the movement of American farmers northward to Canada is each month affecting larger areas of the United States. Time was, says the Winnipeg Free Press, when the Dakotas, Minnesota and lowa furnished the Dominion with the main bulk of its American contingent, Last year, however, forty-four states and districts were represented in the official statement as to the former residence of Americans who had homesteads in Canada. The Dakotas still head ‘the list, with 4,006 entrtes, Minnesoia being a close second with 3,887, but with the exception of Alabama and Mississippi and Delaware every state in the Union supplied settlers -who, in order to secure farms in the fertile prairie country of Canada, became citizens of, and took the oath of allegiance to, the Dominion. Last year no less than 11,841 Americans entered for homestead lands in Canada.
From the Gulf to the Bcundary, and from ocean to ocean, the trek to“the Dominion goes on. Not - only the wheatgrowers of the central Mississippi welley, but the ranchers of Texas and New Mexico, and the cultivators of the comparatively virgin soil of o= lahoma, are pouring towards the pro_ductive vacant lands of the Canadian North-West. It is no tentative, halfhearted departure for an alien country that is_manifested in this exodus; it has become almost a rush to secure possession of land which it is feared, by those imperfectly acquainted with the vast area of Canada’s vacant lands, may all be acquired before they arrive. Tnere is no element of speculation or experiment in the migration. The settlers have full information respecting the soil, wealth, the farming methods, the laws, taxation and system of government of the country to which they are moving, and they realize that the opportunities offered in Canada are in every respect better and greater than those they have enjoyed in flf land they are leaving. Canhada can well afford to welcome cordially every American farmer coming to the Dominion. There,is no question but that these immigrants make the most desirable settlers obtainable for the development of the prairie portion of the Dominion. Full information can be had from any authorized Canadian Government Agent whose address will be found elsewhere. The Russian population of Siberia now numbers not far fgom 8,000,000,
el "‘l3// D G UL 7 'fli! . -“\é\\‘,\\" T4t : X /\;<}\' . )QE‘Z?'—? f.‘ LT N\ S \% %\\f- </" — 2 - i #77 7, 2 T e .
vie diseases have mno idea that their trouble is due to’ecatairh. The majority of the people thinkthat catarrhisa disease confined to the head alone. . This is not true. Catarrh isliable to attack any organ of the body; throat, bronchial tubes, lungs, stomach, kidneys and especially the pelvic organs.. Many a woman has made/this discoveryafteralong siegeof useless treatment. She has made the discovery that her disease is catarrh, and that Peruna can be relied upon to cure catarrh wherever located. . 2 If you do not derive prompt andsatisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. . ‘ . Address Dr. Hartman, President of '(l)‘he Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, hio. -
’ DONT - sorees - 'zmas GET WET!zme A§K YOUR DEALER FOR THE MADE FAMOUS BY A REPUTATION L\ EXTENDING OVEDP MORE THAN & (% HALF A CENTURY. K] 5 TOWER'S garments and 4754 %) \\ hats are made of the best // /= "4 A\ materials in black or yellow for all kinds of wet work. : " THE SIGN OF THE FiSH. : i - Tév‘viz£%xirv‘"n..n."r‘éi'é’fi‘r’o‘."'cfiu W. L. DOUCLAS $4.00, $3.50, $3.00, $2.50 st SHOES rHiiorlo. W.L.Douglas shoes are worn by more £ = men than any other £ _ make. The reason ;»;--‘; \, is, they hold their _ 3 /'9 shape,fitbetter,wear s longer, and have QR g rle ate 111' intrinsic Tl value than any R B other shoes. x=f-=.f ‘\,«, Sold Everywhere, R / v",,;,"'-"\ Look for nameé and price on bottom. Douglas uses Corona Coltskin, which is everywhere conceded tobethe finest Patent Leatheryet produced. Fast Co'or Eyelets used. Shoes by mail, 25 cents extra. Write for Catalog.’ W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
'S TABLETS PISO’S TABLETS The New Boon for Woman'’s Ilis. e e ILENT suffering from any form of female ' disorder is no longer necessary. Many modest women would rather die by inches than consult anyone, even by letter, about their private troubles, PISO’S TABLETS attack the source of the disease and give relief from the start. Whatever form of illness afflicts you, our interesting treatise, Cause of Diseases in Women, will explain your trouble and our method of cure. A copy will be mailed free with a Generous Sample of the Tablets, to any woman ad_drqsslng : THE PISO COMPANY Clark and Liberty Streets, WARREN, PA.
BRIDGE WHIST RULES IN RHYME BY H. C. DU VAL EASY 78 kiMemait THE BEET WAY TO OBTAIN A : THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE OF THE GAME. FOR SALE BY ALL NEWS DEALERS, PAFRAETS BOOK CO., TROY, N.Y. PRIOE 25 CENTS. >
WAR 1861--"65 =n : SURVAI!_O.P_SE N 'll"IION l : AGE PENSIONS. Unher recent ruling of the Commissioner of Pensions every soldier of above war who served ninety days and was honorably discharged is entitled toa pension of $6 a month if over 62 years; $8 if over 65 years; slolf over 68 years, and $l2 if over 70 years. NO PENSION, NO FEL! Write at once, JAMES F. MULLALY, Attorney at Law, National Union Building, Washington, D. C.
=\ A\ // () /% == N e q oy \ >'A\ ';R\ ' ‘&\éf( /‘\ X - e \~ /» ".'Z% "// ,fl) NS = I Z) // . \ \\\\J g i'l s ) . )‘\\‘//( { I\“l( b '\.“ % \ ),4,, - C 2 / =54 : 577 . E ) oL 5 ;;, ‘ o ‘e S A - *\ 2 To cleanse the skin of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle, gentle applications of CUTICURA Ointment to instantly allay itching, irritation, and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and mild doses of CUTICURA Pills to cool and cleanse the blood. : - A §ingl"e SET, costing but One Dollar, is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring skin, scalp, and blood humors, eczemas, rashes, itche ings, and irritations, with loss of hair, from infancy toage, whenall else failse Sold throughout the world. Cuticurs Soap, 25¢., Ointe B e i 0 Do L ondie. it DRt house Bq. Paris, 5:1%; :lren h(‘l:»:;»x ;s%?r;':&;geg‘;‘:mbu A;;‘ g:r::ic;o?l:?fi‘he Great Humor Cure.” A Large Trial Box and book of ine structions absolutely Free and Poste paid, enough to prove the value of PaxtineToilet Antiseptic , 23 P: AL, porm T dhecie e TN water — non-poisonous s o and far superior to liquid A P mmsegtlcs conteining f S | sicohol which irritates ;,4 k 3 il:‘aalv‘:'l,:etzodc:l'el:nsln 1 .:d S E'G SNI ertics. The congt'e’:n&. A q. of every box makes 3 s ; more Antiseptic SoluDY jif tion — Jasts longer— P! il a goes further—has more 2P e S N 2 antiseptic preparation you can buy. The formula of a noted Boston physician, and used with great successas a Vaginal Wash, for Leucorrhcea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane, Inlocal treatment of female ills Paxtineis invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we chal)onie the world to produce its equal for thoroughness. Itisarevelationin cleansin and healing power; it kills all germs whicg cause inflammation and discharges. All leading druggists keep Paxtine; Yrice,mc. " abox; if yoursdoesnot, send to usfor it. Don’t take a substitute— thereisnothing like Paxtine, ‘Write for the Free Box of Paxtine to-day. R. PAXTON CO., 4 Pope Bldg., Boston, Mass,
50,000 AMERICANS Were Weicomed to
'Western -~ Ganada
. S WEaADS
i Théy are settled la‘nE settling on the Grain and Grazing ds, and are pros off | Perous and satisfied. f Sir Wilfred Laurier recently said: “A GERPCL Y | new star has risen upon the horizon. - :%d is toward it that every immigrant B ) _who leaves the land of his ancestors to . come and seek a home*for himself now ~ e\ -|| turns his m”—%nnu-. There is 1 - -»77%/ ROOM FOR MILLIONS 24 7 +? LS gl | F'ILIIXEI Homesteads gven <Y ¥ | away. Schools, Churches, Bafle A ways, Markets, Climate, everyo -%l| thing to be de.ired. *_ . For a descriptive Atlas ang other in e formation‘n&ply to SUPERINTENDENT IN S MIGRATION, Ottawa, Canada; or autho- ** # ]| rized Canadian Government Agent— C.J. BROUGHTON, 430 Quiney Building. Chi . d.C. DUNCAN, Room 6. IQI: i!..‘..u':fi... l-':1::'.,.n.. lad, K. T. HOLMES, 815 Jackson Street. Et. Paul, Minn! M. V. McINNES, 6th Avenue Theater Block, Detroit, Nieh, T. O. CURRIE, Room 12, Callahan Block, Nilwaukee, Wis, | ).} | s : ~ The Deloach Patent Variable Friction Feed Saw Mlll with 4 h, p. cuts 2,000 feet per day. All sizes and prices to suit, Shingle Mills, Edgers, Trimmers, Planers. Corn and Buhg ~Mills, Water Wheels, Lath Mills, Wood Saws and Hay Pressese - Our handsome new catalogue will interest you. | _DeLoach Mill Mfg. Co., Box 837, Atianta, CK. 114 Liberty Bt., New York, N. Y. 514 Third B¢, 5t Louls, Mes ACRES intractstosnitthe 500,000 chaser. Prices rantlngtronkgny cents to $5.00 ger acre. Terms of sale are ‘cash, These are betterlandsand finer locations than similar public lands anywhere in the “§ United States. For further information, address EDWIN A. WILDEY, Lard Commissioner, LANSING. MICHIGAN. FREE HOMESTEADS in Eastern Montana. No bettersoilin America for Wheat,Oats Flax, Corn and Barley. Hay in abundance, good water, -ample rainfall, plenty coal free. No stones or stumps. Land gentl¥ rolling. gecnre 1680 acres freesy then buy adjoiniag land for from $%2.50 to #8.50 per acre; eaty terms. Cheapexcursion rates, ‘;gxrul;,l‘zl he bestch%‘noe gol nig &? »ecur&:l atxood home e money. Kor particulars and facts write, WM. Bl’l‘(}kll’.‘. &r.non. North Dakota. - ANTED AT ONCE—Cooks, Waiters, Wait~ resses, kitchen help, buss boys, dish washers, S :!e;nrtculgs, 'fiaf' hu!:ds ard mug’c&m on account of World's Fair enterprises. Good w o RT3 SRETLN ey gries,, Qo LoUts e e e e e on t 62, —-Civil War; oron PE'SWI‘ Nllt?‘s%fi;r, and for widows. Kuvm:i records of most lqyni soldlers’ service, and ages Obhio men. 39 years pragtice. Laws and advice FREE, A. W. McCORNMICK & SONS, 518 Walaut St., CINCINNATI, O, el R e e S A e i p T T 48-page book FrEE, A EN s hig hest“references. FITZGERALD & CO.,Bex K, Washington, D. G
