Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 26, Number 9, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 4 May 1904 — Page 3

CATARRH

K’hawklng and Spitting, Dropping Into the Throat, Foul Breath, THROUGH 0 THE*, BLOOD JBy Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) TO PROVE IT, SAMPLE SENT TREE, Botanic Blood Balm [B. 8.8.] has cured to stay! cured more cases of Catarrh than all others remedies combined, 8.8.8. kills or destroys the awful catarrhal poison in the biood which causes the symptoms, and thus makes a perfect lasting cure of the worst old cases SYMPTOMS. The poison In the blood produces bad. offensive, fetid breath.hadteeth.and sickness of the stomach;ln some cases vomiting up clear phlegm; enlacgement of the soft bones of the nose.affecting sense of smell.ulceratiens of the mucous membranes, hawking, spitting up lumps, weak stomach, nose bleeding, headaches,snoring while asleep, stopping up of the nose: thin, hot blood, all run down, specks flying 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, B, B, B. sends a flood of rich, pure blood direct to the affected parts, giving warmth aud strength Just where it is needed. Deafness. Ringing In the Ears, Head Noises. 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, gradually removes the catarrhal deposit from the air passages, thus 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 in afew week’s time. If deaf or hard of hearing try Botanic Blood Balm B. B. B, It may be th© very remedy your system needs. OUR GUAIM NTEE.-Tak* a large bottle of Botanic Blood Balm( 8.8.8.)as directed on label, and when the right quantity Is taken a cure is certain, sure and lasting. If not cured your money wj|^romnth^^reftjndedMwithmitji|gtHnen^ Botanic Blood Balm [8.8.8.] 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, sl. Per Large Bottle.with complete direction for home cure. Sample Bent Free by writing Blood Balm Cos., Atlanta. Ga. Describe your trouble, and special free medical advice, to suit your case, will be sent In sealed letter • 0 .

JEST AND JOLLITY. The street sweeper Isn’t a financier, but he can raise the “dust.” 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 fiver S4OO this year.” “Rent higher?” “No; my wife has been trying to outdress a rich woman who lives next door to us.” —Chicago Journal. “Sometimes,” said Uncle Eben, “a man gives hisse’f credit foh bein’ resigned to fate when he has simply settled 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 correspondents, after all. They give them free leave to go into details in their accounts of the geisha girls and earthquakes.—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. “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, a whole lot of liars in this country.”—Chicago Record-Herald.

SOAKED IN COFFEE 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 ail my stomach and nervous trouble. “My mother was just the same way, we all drink Postum now and have never 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 not 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 pain3 that she would have to lie down for the rest of the day. “I persuaded her at last to stop drinking coffee and try Postum Food Coffee and 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 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 Cos., Battle Creek, Mich. Look in each pkg. for the famous little book, “The Road to Wellville.”

PISO’S TABLETS The New Boon for Woman’s Ills. -<, , - SILENT suffering from soy 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 affHcts you, our interesting treatise, Cause of Disease* in Women, will explain your trouble and 1 our method of cure. A copy will be mailed free with a Generous Sample of the Tablets, to any wdman addressing THE PISO COMPANY Clark and Liberty Atrcata, WARREN, PA.

MODERN FEEDING METHODS They Cannot Be Put Into Practice Without the Use of an Up- - to-Date Self-Feeder. I have found a self-feeder almost Indispensable to the best results In finishing steers. Fig. 1 shows the framework of the one I use. It Is boarded horizontally with matched drop siding. Feeder is filled at and. The corn enters feeding trough through slot IVi inches Wide and 10 or 12 feet long at floor line

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END VIEW OF FEEDER. between studding on sides, which are 2 feet apart. These slots have drop, boards to close when necessary (see Fig. 2) as anew lot of cattle must not be put on full feed at once. Trough, which Is open entire length building, Is built on jnds of floor joist, having no other support. Trough is slanted from building to edge, as shown at b, with beveled strip an angle next outer side to avoid sharp corner and collection of slobbered feed to sour and mold. Sufficient Incline is

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Fio.2. THE FEED GATE. given lengthwise of trough to quickly drain. This feeder may be readily moved by team from place to place, runners shown at c, substantially braced by 2x6-inch pieces to 2xß-inch floor joist Small door may be provided In end for removing any left-over supply at end of feeding Beason.—J. D. Gayle, in Farm and Home. NOTES FOR BUTTER MAKERS To Secure Satisfactory Results Cows Must Be Well Fed and Utensils Kept Clean. Keep dairy cows In a good pasture; give them plenty of pure water to drink; give them plenty of pea vine and other nutritious hays, and about five pounds of cottonseed meal per day. Keep the cow and everything used in the dairy clean. Strain the milk through two thicknesses of cheese cloth as soon as milked. Skim by means of a separator. Put the cream into a refrigerator where the temperature is 45 degrees. When the cream is sufficiently sour, strain through a wire-gauzo strainer Into a barrel or box churn. Add sufficient butter color to give the butter a nice straw color. Use a dairy thermometer at all times and have the temperature of the cream at about 56 degrees In the summer and 60 degrees In the winter. Do not fill the churn over one-third full. Revolve the churn crank just fast enough to cause the cream to fall from one side of the churn to the other with full force. Stop the churn as soon as the butter particles are about the size of wheat kernels. Draw off the butter milk and wash the butter first In oold brine and then In cold clear water. Remove the butter from the churn, add an ounce of salt for every pound and work until the salt is evenly distributed.— Southern Farm Gazette. Cost of an Improved Road. Replying to an Inquiry In the Gazette as to the cost per mile of sixinch gravel road surface laid with roller, S. C. Lancaster, of Madison county, Tenn., referring to some road laid In that locality, says: Part of the material used comes from southern Illinois, and part of It has been obtained on the Tennessee river, about 50 miles east of us. A 12-foot road, with gravel laid six Inches in the center and four Inches on the side, after rolling complete, costs, approximately, $3,000 per mile. This varies somewhat with the nature of the grading and the distance the material is hauled by wagons. This season we are arranging to haul our material from the cars to the roads with traction engines and especially constructed steel cars, and we expect to reduce the cost considerably over team hauling, and hope to be able to build a 12-foot road for approximately $2,800 where the grading does not exceed SSOO per mile. The Chinese are perhaps the most lightly taxed people In the world. In China all the land belongs to the state, and a trifling sum per acre—never altered through long centuries—ls paid as rent. This Is the only tax In the country, and it amounts to about 2s. 6d. per head yearly.

A MIGHTY STEP FORWARD. The General Introduction of the Telephone Has Proved of Considerable Profit to Farmers. The time Is not far distant when nearly every farmer will have a telephone in his house, to be used, not only in his business, but for convenience and pleasure as well. About five years ago the wholesale introduction of the ’phone in the agricultural district commenced, and now it is considered an essential part of farm equipment by at least a half-million farmers. It is particularly useful to large farms and cattle ranges and to the truck farmers near the large cities and in the south. The advantages are many, and the cost is slight The telephone enables the farmer to keep In closer touch with the markets than even the daily papers permit. He is thus able to take advantage of a rising market and send on his produce or stock, or hold off in the face of declining prices. Out in Illinois last year buyers from outside began to clean up the broom corn at S6O a ton, when a telephone manager called up the farmers on his line and told them the market was rising rapidly. The result was that before the season ended they got $240 per ton for their crop. The telephone is of great benefit in time of danger from frost, as it enables the farmer to receive the frost warnings disseminated by the weather bureau from 12 to 36 hours in advance of the threatened freeze. Information of this kind to be of value must be received at the earliest practicable moment, as it takes time to prepare to fight frost, and a few hours’ delay may mean tfye loss of an entire season’s profits. The telephone on the American farm has come to stay, and its advent marks' a distinct step forward.—Midland Farmer. VOTED FOR NATIONAL AID. Senate Committee Will Report in Favor of Uncle Sam Helping Improve the Highways. The friends of national aid to road improvements have achieved their first general victory in congress. The senate committee on agriculture has decided to report favorably on the Gal-linger-Latimer bill, which is a duplicate of the bill introduced in the house by Representative Bro*;nlow. The vote is reported to have stood six to one in favor of the measure. Four democratic senators, Bate, of Tennessee; Money, of Mississippi; Simmons, of North Carolina, and Latimer, of South Carolina, and two republicans, Foster, of Washington, and Quay, of Pennsylvania, voted for a favorable report. The only vote In opposition was that of Senator Proctor, of Vermont. Before voting on the hill the committee adopted several amendments affecting the distribution of the road improvement fund among the states. One, which was,insisted upon by Senator Foster, of Washington, provides that SIOO,OOO is to go to each state, and that the balance Is to be divided In proportion to population. Another amendment provides that In making the distribution according to population tlje cities of over 10,000 shall not be counted. This amendment is likely to provoke strong opposition, on the ground of Injustice to those states which contain large cities. It will be charged that this provision amounts to very much the same thing as “taxation without representation.” On the whole, however, this report must be considered as a great forward step, and an Indication that ultimate success will be achieved in the near future.

ACCURATE LAND MEASURE. It Is Quite Ensy to Make and More Effective Than the “SteppingOff” Method. Having much land measuring to do requiring greater accuracy than just “stepping it off,” I made the simple affair shown in cut. The manner of construction is there made plain. Use

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USEFUL LAND MEASURE, hard wood pieces; five-eighth or threefourth by one inch is heavy enough. Have lower roints exactly five feet six inches apart. Round head of handle. Grasp top lightly in hand, holding at side, whirl handle to bring rear point to front, moving off in direction to be measured. Continue to revolve measure, changing points in advancing, It takes three lengths to the rod. —Robert Fredericks, in Farm and Home. Feeding Cows in Summer. For summer feedng, while a complete system of sqiling would be profitable, still with the present scarcity, inefficiency and high price of labor, most of us will pasture our cows in summer. We all ought to prepare fdr a drought by having on hand plenty of aoilng crops to supplement the pasture. For this purpose nothing is as cheap as corn silage, but even with this, a succession of other soiling crops will pay well. Rye, clover, peas and oats, sorghum and corn make a good succession.—Farmers’ Review,

HDE-DII-NA A VALUABLE PREPARATION,” rC nU IlHj WRITES DR. KEMBALL,

Host of the Ailments Peculiar to the Female Sex are Due to Catarrh of the Pelvic Organs. Rachael J. Kemball, M. D., 3S4j Virginia St., Buffalo, N. Y., is a I graduateof the University of Buffalo, • ' class 1884, and has been in the prac- J tic# of medicine in that city since 1 then. She writes as follows: “My conviction, supported by j experience, is that Peruna is a valu- i ible preparation for all catarrhal' affections. I have taken one bottle • of Peruna myself and just feel fine. J I shall continue to take it."-Rachael t J. Kemball, M. D. j

Peruna has cured thousands of cases of female weakness. Asa rule, however,be fore Peruna is resorted to.several other remedies have been tried in vain. A great many of the patients ha ve taken local treatment, submitted themselves to surgical operations, and taken all sorts of doctor’s stuff, without any result. The reason of so many failures is the fact that diseases peculiar to the female

sex are not commonly recognized as being caused by catarrh. These organs

Female Trouble Not Kecoarnlzed as Catarrh.

are lined by mucous membranes. Any mucous membrane is subjecttocatarrh. 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 cures these cases simply because it cures the catarrh. Most of the women afflicted with pel-

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W. L. DOUGLAS 84.00, $3.50, $3.00, $2.50 WVgg SHOES THe E WORLD. W.L. Douglas shoes /■ N. are worn‘by more Mb men than any other jpg;...,—. XI make. The reason KfA’j&v, iM is, they hold their Y 1 arc shape,titbetter,wear W longer, and haveg|BijL greater -intrinsic value than any Sold E very where. Look for name and price on bottom. Dougin* uses Corona Coltskin, which Is •very where conceded tobctlie li nest Patent Leather yet prod uced. Fast Cos or Eyetets used. Shoes by iiihu,2* owns extra. Write for Catalog. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.

IDOXOU 1 COUGH J Dd N'T DEL AY M BALSAM I

It Cores Cold*, Coughs. Sore Throat, Croup, Influenza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Large bottles W cents a&d SO cents.

vic diseases have no idea that their trouble is due to catarrh. The majority of the people think that catarrh is a disease confined to the head alone. This is not true. Catarrh is liable to attack any organ of the body; throat, bronchial tubes, lungs, stomach, kidneys and especially the pelvic organs. Many a woman has made this discovery afteralong 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. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory 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 The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio.

DONT GET WET! ® ASK YOUD DEALER FfiD THE SLICKE:P MADE FAMOUS BY A DEPUTATION OVED MOPE ** HALF A CENTURY. % Pvv TOWER'S garments end /7s? VSjjY YV hats are made of the best /j /irV A\ materials in black or yellow ‘I I j \ 1 ' for all kinds of wet work. 1 1 1 SATISFACTION IS GUAPANTFED IF YOU SUCK TO THE SIGN OF THE FISH, * A. J. TOWER CO..BOSTON. MASS..U. 5. A.

BRIDGE WHIST RULES IN RHYME BY H. O. DU VAL |T AQV TO LEARN AND ELMO ■ TO REMEMBER THE BEST WAY TO OBTAIN A THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE OF THE GAME. FOR SALE BY ALL NEWS DEALERS. PAFRAETS BOOK CO.,TROY, N.Y. PKICI 28 OSNTSi

i MICHIGAN LANDS CAA AHA ACHES in tracts to suit the purwUUfUUU chaser. Prices ranging from fifty cents to £5.00 per acre. Terms of sale are cash. These are bet ter lands and finer locations than similar public lands anywhere in the United Siates. For further Information, address JED WIN A. WIIiDEY. Land Commissioner, LANSING. MICHIGAN. SURVIVORS WAR 1861’65, ATTENTION! AGE PENSIONS. Under recent ruling of the Commissioner of Pensions every soldier of above war who served ninety days and was honorably discharged Is entitled to a pension of ft! a month if over C 2 years; $8 if over 65 yours; sloif overoß years, and 112 if over 70 years. NO PENSION. NO FEE ! Write at ouce. JAMES F. HULL.iLY, Attorney at Law, National Union Building, Washington, D. C. FRFF HOMESTEADS in Eastern Montana. No better soil In America for NVheat.Oats Flax, Corn and Barley. Hav in abundance, good wa.er, ample rainfall, plenty coal free No stones or stumps. Land gently rollin’.’. Secure If© acres free; then buy adjoining land for from to fcW.SO per acre; easy terms. Chcitne veurH<m rates. This is he best chance going to secure ageod h me tor little money For particulars an l fl.c:s write, WM. RITC'IIIE, Grafton. North Dakota. PEAICIfiSJC on age at 62.—Civil War; oron dlsa- ■ tnOiUllO bilily, any war. and forwidows. Have records of most loyal soldiers’service, and ages of Ohio men. X) years practice. Laws und advice kkee. A. W. HcCORRICK A BOMS, 618 TTkatt Bt., CINCINNATI, O. WANTED AT ONCE-Cooks. Waiters. Waitresses. kitchen help, bus® ihur. dish washers, electricians, stage hands add mus'dans on account of World's Fair enterprises. (>od wages. Apply to TIU'ITI A BURYLIS, SOT Market St., BT. LOUIS,Mo. Q A T ET A] T Q 48 page 1 ook fuke I' I Hill I highest references. KTTZGK&ALD 4C0.,8x K* Washington. D. C.

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mm Os the Skin and Scalp Speedily Cured by Baths with fttlcura YSQAP* 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 t cleanse the blood. A single SET, costing but One is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring skin, scalp, and blood humors, eczemas, rashes, itchings, and irritations, with loss of hair, from infancy to age, when all else fails. Sold throughout th, world. Cutlcura So*p. 25c., Ointment, 50c., Resolvent, 50c. (in form of Chocolate Coated Pills, 25c. per vial of 60). Depots: London, 27 Charterhouse Sq.; Paris, 5 Hue de la Paix ; Boston, 137 Columba* Ave,. Potter Drug It Chem. Corp.. Sole Proprietor*. OST" Send for “ The Great Humor Cure." FREE to WOMEN A Large Trial Box and book of instructions absolutely Free and Postpaid, enough to prove the value of PaxtineToilet Antiseptic

Paxtine is In powder form to dissolve In water— non-poisonous and far superior to liquid antiseptics containing;: alcohol which irritates inflamed surfaces, and have no cleansing properties. The content* of every box make* more Antiseptic Solution lasts longer—l goes further—has mor® j uses in the family and doesmoregoodthanany antiseptic preparation, you can buy.

The formula of a noted Boston physician, and used with great success as a Vaginal Wash, forLeucorrhcea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and aii soreness of mucus membrane. * In local treatment of female ills Paxtine is invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash w® challonge the world to produce its equal for thoroughness. It is a revolution in cleansing and healing power; it kills all germs which, cause inflammation and discharges. All leading druggists keep Paxtine; price, 50c. abox; if yotirsdoes not, send to us for it. Don’t take a substitute —• there is nothing like Paxtine. Write for the Free Box of Paxtine to-day*. B. PAXTON CO., 4 Pope Bldg., Boston, Mass. 507000 AMERICANS Were Welcomed to

Western Canada during last Year

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They are nettled and settling on thoGrain and Grazing Lands, and are prosperous and satfeifled. Sir Wilfred Laurler recently said: ‘A new star has risen upon the horizon, and is toward It that every Immigrant who leaves the land of his ancestors fa come and seek a home for himself novr turns his gaze"— Cuuada. There is ROOM FOR MILLIONS FH.BB Homeatends given away. School,, Churches, Railway,, Markets, Cllmute,everything to be desired. For a descriptive Atlas and other lir formation, apply to superintendent lir migration, Ottawa, Canada; or autho* rized Canadian Government Agent—

C.J. RKOI'GIITON, 4SO (Jolnr; RuUdlnfr. Chleato, 111. I. f. DI'XCAN, Room 0. Hl* Four Rutldlmr. Indiuns|>t>lla, lad* K. T. KOknKS, 816 Jack.on Street. St. Paul, Mina. '!• V. HfIXXKS, nth Areaue Theater H'aek, Unroll, Ilfh, T. O. ( UKUIK. Koum It. Callahan Block, Mlleaukee, WU. Sato mills The Os Loach Pc'crit Variable Friction Feed Saw Mlit a .v!i I h. i>. .-. ts l-.U-J teet per day. All sizes and prices to suit. Shingle Mil.s. I :-r Trimmers, Timers. Crn and Bulur Mills, Water Whee.a, Lath Mi.2s, Wood'Sswsand Hay Tccscs Oar handsome near cataiog’te Mill interest you. DeLoech Itfll Mf->. Cos., Boa 887, Atlanta, Ca. 114 Liberty 01, &• Vork, >. Y. 6, third Ok, bk —■!_ ft, ~ A. N. K.-A 2020 J S I mfI"ALL JIS^AILS J | M Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use UJ in time. Sold by druggists. |Kf si4a.