Pike County Democrat, Volume 24, Number 38, Petersburg, Pike County, 2 February 1894 — Page 7

FARM AND GARDEN. FOR , MODERN BARNS. Two Simple Device* Which Save Lot* ok Work and Worry. In the barn was a root cutter which works well and may be easily made. Two pieces of 2x4 ash scantling are nailed together in the form of an X. Two of these X’s are used for the frame. Cleats nailed across the bottom hold the frame and serve for the support of tho box a (see Fig. 1), which is under the cylinder to catch the cut roots. The end pieces are V-shaped, and made of two-inch plank, with a hole for the cylinder to turn m. Inch boards c C jare used to side up the hopper. The 6haft is made of a turned bard wood

riG. L—A HOMEMADE BOOT CUTTEB. stick, and is fix inches in diameter. The cutters are made of henry band iron which is ground to an edge on one ' side. They are shaped like a staple, and after the ends are driven into the shaft are 1M inches wide and 1}£ inches high. There are 12 cutters placed in diagonal rows, 1K inches' apart and the same distance from the ends or sides. The distance between the sides of the hopper and cutters is About -ene-half inch. There is no bob* tom to the hopper, the cylinder occupies its place. The hopper holds about one-half bushel, and the roots can all be placed in at once. A balance wheel Would, help in turning. Tlie cut, Fig. 1, wifi 1 explain it. Coming from the barn I noticed a bar Of ikm with a 13-inch roller on it. ‘ “What have you there?5’ “That’s a device for saving time in unloading hay. The bar is nbieed About one-half the distance the*team

FIG. 2.—A SIIOKT CCT FOR THK HAT-FORK. has to travel from the barm. I drive the team out to and around the bar and back to the barn. When the car has reached its destination the team is at the barn. The rope is unhooked from the team and the car runs back quickly without waiting for the team. ” Fig. 2 shows the method of fixing rope, car, fork and “time-saver;” A, car; B, rope; c G. pulleys; E, bar and roller; F, distance traveled by team; g, track. —Rural New Worker. ^ FRESH ’FARM NOTES. Why not put up enough ice to last all or part of snext summer, if it can be > obtained? Don’t neglect the farmers’ club. Attend, take part, and get „all the good possible out of it. Also support the local library society. Plowing for next season’s crops during winter not only aids the destruction of insects but puts land in good condition foreulture. One of the most important points in agricultural operations is thoroughness of culture. This applies not only to corn and other grain crops, but also to small fruits, young orchards, etc. Selecting and planting the best farm seeds will increase the quality of grains and grasses just as selecting good breeding stock improves the farm herd, and we afll know what splendid results have been accomplished in that line. Other business men are cutting off all needless expenses, and it is advisable for farmers to do the same thing. Make all the tools you can yourself and save bills iq that direction. Do your own repairing,* and get rid of unprofitable stock.—Orange Judd Farmer.

The Selecttea of Oats. Careful feeders of Worses know that in feeding oats, especially the whole grain, much depends aqpon the nataro of the hull or chjaff. It is not always the heaviest grain which gives the best results That which is much above the standard weight has most often a Tough, gritty chaff which so acts on the ^stomach as to expel much of the grain £n au undigested state. The hull, however soft its texture, is always laxative, and a moderate degree of laxativeness is beneficial, especially to breediug animals, but there is no gain in passing through the heaviest grain in a nearly •whole state. Better use a light grain, which will be more thoroughly digested. It is commonly supposed that the oat which sells for the highest price jis the best feed, but it is not always the case.__ v The Successful Farmer. The successful farmer of to-day has always a little to sell. It may be a few dozen eggs, a few chickens, a fat- lamb or calf, or any on# of a thousand and tone it rifles that he and his family always keep growing. The result is that when he sells a drove of cattle or bogs, the money either goes into permanent improvements or into the bank instead of to paj for fancy groceries that were consumed the year before. Farming is a profession. There are very few successful farmers who would make successful bankers, and Still fewer successful bankers who would make successful farmers. —Jiural Wort4 i .

GRINDSTONE FRAME. Hovr to Utkc One from the Frame of an Old Cord Bedstead. The farm grindstone'^ often hang in tuch a shabby apology for a frame that its usefulness is impaired, and it becomes a dread, both to the one who turns and to him who desires sharp tools, for he cannot grind a scythe or ax well when*a rickety frame prohibits grinding to a true beveL Not only should thp frame be made solid by the uk of heavy timbers and bolts, but it should be put together so accurately and firmly as to appear like a single block of wood without joints or possibility of moving. This can only be accomplished by careful mitering and thorough, work generally. A good grindstone frame can be made from the of an old cord bedstead, by

FRA MR AXD FITMAX FOB GRINDSTOXB. ingeniously sawing two pieces of a length sufficient to admit the stone between two heavy cross cleats firmly screwed to the top of the former pieces, as. shown in the illustration, from a sketch by Hollister Sage. Then proceed to miter the ends. Four inch boards of sufficient length for legs are then bolted to the supporting timbers, : and these legs are afterwards well braced by cross pieces. Where friction ; wheels are not in use the stone can be made to run just as well on short pieces of hard wood notched to hold the axle in place. The head of a worn-out Take is good for this purpose, 1 the places formerly occupied by teeth serving for screw holes to hold it upon the frame. Every grindstone should , have a short crank and treadle attachment, and every one who grirds withj out power should learn to turn his own stone while grinding. The iron pitman rod which comes with the grind- ; st^vn^axle as an attachment is undesirable’ because it is liable to friction, jVear. and consequent loss of power. No other device equals the pitman made of wood. It should not be over half an inch thick, and should be bored with an augur. This hole should just admit the head of the crank, and from j it running upward should be a slot just wide enough tfco take in the smallest portion of the crank. When the pitman is slipped over the crank head it will at once fall into place, and will never come oil without being taken off, which may be done instantly. Kept well oiled, this pitman will last many years. It also runs more pleasantly and more easily than an iron pitman, producing less friction snd no noise.—-American Agriculturist. A TALK ABOUT BEE£. Xho Germans and Italians Described by au Kxpert. Wherevcrr civilized man has made his home, bees have been introduced. The Italian and-German are the two races which haveibeen domesticated, and the species -Apis Mellifica, to which they belong, was not native to the American continent. Though the German race is unost widely distributed, it is not more ancient than the Italian, ac-cording-to Aristotle and VirgiL The reason »Germans are more numerous is supposed to be due to the energy and inigration of the people of northern Europe. Prof, tfook says: “I have found by repeated ‘experime n ts that the tongue of the black worker is shorter than that of tbs Italian worker^ and generally less hairy.” So it follows that the Italian is;a better‘honey gatherer bej cause it has better equipments. Italian | bees may be.' distinguished by their

three yellow hands. Every bee will have these if the colony be pure. The queen will often have the entire base of her body yellow. The workers always wear the three golden bands, i and the drones vary, sometimes being* strongly marked and sometimes indistinctly. ' The underside of their bodiet is usually yellow.—American Farmer. In Defense of Uie Skunk. There hre special reasons for the protection of the skunk. No animal is more useful to the farmer and gardener. and through them to the whole community, for no other destroys the grubs which kill our grass, our strawberries and other fruits, oair rose bushes and other flowering plants. These grubs are the larva) of the doo bug, or June beetle. They are large, white and very voracious, living under the soil upon roots of grass, and fruits, and flowers, up9n which we are expending much labor. I never allow one killed on my farm, and save my chickens from them by extra care in this direction, for which I am fully recompensed by the cafe they take of the June bug grub. In parts of the country where hops are extensively raised, the skunk is carefully encouraged and protected, so well is his value understood.—Boston Transcript. ^ Feed makes a great difference with any breed. Even common pullets can, by feeding from the start, be brought to laying a month or six weeks earlier than they otherwise would.

ANE V ENGLAND MIRACLE A BA road Engineer Relates His Experience The W iderfal Story Told by Fred C Vose Ad His Motber-ln-l<aw to a Bel rter of the Boston Herald— B th Are Restored After Fears of Agon|.

[From the Boston Herald. 1 The vr t health-giving results already attributed y the newspaper:} throughout this country id •Canada to Dr. Williams’ “Pink Pills for 'ale People” hare been recently suppleur itecPby the cases of two confirmed invalids n one household in a New England tow i . The names of these people are Fred C.1 ose, his wife and his mother-in-law. Mrs Oliver C. Holt,ofPeterboro,members of t i same household. To the Herald reporter who was sent to investigi e his remarkable cure Mr. Voss said: “I m 37 years old, and have been railroadi % for the Fitchburg for 15 years. Since bo hood I have bee n troubled with a weak sto inch. For the past 7 years I have suffered rribly and consttantly. My stomach woul not retain food; my head ached constant! and was so dizzy I could scarcely stand; m eyes were blurred; I had a bad heartbur and my breath was offensive. 1 had pfays *ians, but they failed to help me. My appet be gave out, and four years ago 1 develope 1 palpitation of the heart, which seriously affected my breathing. Had terrible pai s in my back and had to make water m ny times a day. I finally developed rh< lmatic signs and couldn't sleep nights. If I lay down my heart would go pit-a-pat .t a great rate, and many nights 1 did not cl >se my eyes at all. I was broken down in ody and discoura ged in spirit, when some tir e in February last, I got a couple of boxe. of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Before I li d finished the first box I noticed that the alpitation of mjr heart, which had bothered me so that I t:ouldn't breathe at times, began to improve. I saw thatin going to my home on the hill from the depot, which , was previously an awful task, my heart di i not beat so violently and I had more btt ath when I reached the house. After th second and third boxes I grew Better in- c ery other resi’tect. My stomach became stronger, the gas belching was not' so bad,«i f appetite and digestion improved, and my s eep became nearly natural andundisturb? L I have continued taking the pills throe times a day ever since last March, e id to-day I am feeling better than at any ti le during the last eight years. I can confidently and conscientiously say that they hav i done me more good, and their good eff( -ts are more permanent, than any medicin<-1 have ever taken. My rheumatic pains iu 1 sgsand hands are all gone. The pains in he small of my back, which were so bail a: times that I couldn't stand up straight, have nearly iill vanished, and X find my kidneys are well regulated by them. This is a -effect not claimed for the pills in the circi ar, but in my case they brought it about. am feeling 100 per cent, better in every sfc pe and manner. ’’ The >re lorter next saw Mrs. Holt, who said: “I am 57.years old, and for 14 years gast I have had an intermittent heart troule. Th i ce years ago I had nervous prostration, by which my heart trouble was increased o badly that I had to lie down most of the time. My stomach, also gave out, and [ had con tinual and intense pain from tbe back of my neck to the end ofmy backbone. In 14 weeks I spent $300 for doctor bills and medicines; but my health, continued so miserable t'n it X gave uu doctoring in despair. I began to take Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills last winter, and the first box made me feel fever so much better. I have taken the pills Since Fet ruarv, with the result of stopping ^ptirely he pain in the spine and in the region of the liver. My stomach is again normal, and the palpitation of the heart has troubled me but three times since 1 commenced the pills.” An analysis of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pill9 -shows that they contain, in a condensed form, all the elements necessary to give mew life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an uafailing specifit f or such diseases as loco motorataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after: effect of la grippe, palpitation of the hear , pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness either in male or female, and all diseases resulting from vitiated humors in he blood. Pink Pills are sold by all deale s, or will be sent post paid on receipt of >rice, (50 cents a box,orsix boxes for $2.50—they are never sold in bulk or by the 100) by i ddressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co.,-Schenectady, N. Y., orBrockviile, Ont

Pu rer of Electric Searchlights. Prob; bly not one person among & hundred have even an approximate concept ion of the illuminating power of one of the great modern -searchlighte, md it is only vaguely understood that it must be something enormous. As a matter of fact, with the project ng reflectors in use which serve as multiplying factors for the actual ■candle power of the electric are, the illuminating capacity of the beams is-1 suing from one-^of the large modern search] ights has been placed at the equiva ent of something over two hun dred n ill ion candles. Just what this means is not easily realized, though a popula r measure of the lighting power is afforded by the statement that, under favorable atmospheric conditions, one of these large lights cab be seen nearly a hundred, miles away, and will illuminate objects at a distance of almost Ivanty miles with sufficient clearness t > make their examination possible -with the aid of a fieldglass.—-Cas-sell's Magazine.

“Street Sixteen.” The beautiful calendars sent out by G. I. 3ood & Co., of Lowell, Mass., have attracted much attention in all parts of the country. The calendar bears the head of a lovely girl, “sweet sixteen,” lithographed in delicate colors. Over eight millions of these calendars were made. C. I. Hood & Co., as is well known, are the proprietors of Hood s Sarsaparilla, which is everywhere a household word on account of the wonderful cures that have been effected by means of this great blood purifi ssr. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is made in a building which is the largest in the w orld devoted to the business of maki iga medicine, and this great industry has been built up within a few years by the absolute merit of Hood’s Sars.' parilla. —-YWashington Pudding: One and one- i alf cups sugar, two tablespoonfuls ratter, four eggs, eight tablespoonfuls .weet milk,two teaspoonfuls cream tart; r, one teaspoonful soda, two cups flour Bake in four tins; put fruit between; eat with cream.—Farm, Field and Preside. “I cppose ycu had a high old time in Europe ” “Yes,” reolied the returned tourist, “I w is done up at Monte Carlo, held up in 1 the J ppenines and laid vpin Rome,”—Wash* Ingti, n Star. I

DURING hard times consumers cannot afford to experiment with inferior, cheap brands of baking powder. It is NOW that the great strength arid jptftity of the ROYAL stand out as a friend in need to those who desire to practise Econ

omy in the Kitchen. Each spoonful does its perfect work. Its increasing sale bears witness that it is a necessity to the prudent—it goes further. N R 1 ! • K.J'm Grocers say that every dollar invested in Royal Baking Powder is worth a dollar the world over, that it does not consume their capital in dead stock, because it is the great favorite, and sells through all times and seasons. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 1C« WALL ST., NEW-YORK. . ^ ^ a. A AlA A At A A. AA A A A Itl A. (If A i!L A. (VADAdAO «

Wonderful Gen*u< “I declare! Louisa is a perfect marreL” “Tell me liow you discovered it.” “She makes the.loveliest >read lever .tasted.” “There’s nothing' marvelous about that.” “I don’t know. Louisa ittended a cooking-school for two .vinters.”— Judge. ? S5.SOO from Ten Acii?». [K] -■ A. M. Lambda market gi.rdener in Pennsylvania, cleared $5,8d0 on five acres of cabbage and five acres of onions. The reason of this, h 5 says, was because Salzer’s seeds are so extremely early and wondrously productive; Lightning Cabbage and King of the Earliest Onions he had in the market three weeks ahead of any other homegrown sorts, and consequently received fancy prices. ?Salzer sends 35 packages earliest vegetable sped;, sufficient for a family, for SI, postpaid, i If you will cut this out and send it with 6c postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse. Wis., you will receive their mammoth catalogue and a trial package of "Get There, Eli,” the sixteen-day radish. [k] “There’s one thing I didn’t like about the circus-said grandma, “and that was the magjhat twisted himself all out of shape— I never did admire these extortionists.’’—Atlanta Constitution. “Have you met that elderly girl that Smith has married? He says she is a sample of Virginia beauty.” “A sample! 1 should call her a remnant.”—Vogue.

THE MARKETS. New York, Jan. 29, CATTLE—Native Steei^......| 4 40 @ COTTON—Middling. 7%<& FLOUR—Winter Wheat. 2 80 <fr WHEAT—No. 2 Red....... i.... 65»s@ CORN-No. 2. 43 ® OATS—Western Mixed_... 34 @. PORK-New Mess.. 14 25 ® ST. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling. ® BEEVES—Shipping Steers... 4 40 <§, Medium . 4 00 ® HOGS—Fair to Select .. 5 15 <& SHEEP—FairtaChoice..j ... 2 75 @ FLOUR—Patents. ... .... .... 2 65 @ Fancy to Extra do.. 2 20 @ WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter. ® CORN-No. 2 Mixed....?.. 33*® OATS-No. 2. ® RYE—No. 2. 48 ® TOBACCO-Lugs.... «50 @ - Leaf Burley.. 10 00 ®i HAY—Clear Timothy. 8 50 BUTTER—Choice Dairy. *6 (f> EGGS—Fresh .i‘,. & PORK—Standard Mess (new). .... @ BACON—Clear Ribs... @ LARD—Prime Steam ..i...... 7*@ CHICAGO. 1894. 4 60 8 3 50 66* 14 *3 35* 14 75 CATTLE—Shipping..A.. $7? @ HOGS—Fair to Choice. 5 SHEEP—Fair to Choice. 2 50 ® FLOUR—WinterPatents. 3 55 <a> Spring Patents. 2 15 %, WHEAT—No. 2 Srnng. % No. 2Red. .. .... ® CORN-No. 2. ® OATS—No. 2. @ PORK-Mess (new). ... IS 12**® KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers.... 4 00 @ HOGS—All Grades. Ti......... 5 00 ® WHEAT—No. 2 Red. @ OATS—No. 2.1. 28ia® CORN—No. 2. ® NEW ORLEANS. FLOHR—High Grade . 2 90 & CORN-No. 2....;.A.42 ® OATS—Western4. 36 HAY—Choice .. ® PORK—New Mess......:.v .... ® BACON-Sides.... ® COTTON—Middling.. 7*@ CINCINNATL WHEAT—No. 2 Red. CORN-No. 2 Mixed. OATS-rJIo. 2 Mixsed.. PORK—New Mess.. BACON—Clear TOTTON—Middling.4 25 5 45 54* 29 31* 3 40 421a 36la V6 00 14 00 7% 7* a»a 37* 31 13 5»

—Sir George Lewis, tlie famous Lon- ! don lawyer, it has been said, l|novvs j enough to hfing half a do;:en of the j biggest men in .the city. He said the other day: “I have not kept a diary for over twenty years. When I fouudthat my business was becoming so confidential I determined that t would never chronicle another thing; so %vhien I die the confidence of Londl?tt jS3cietv will die with me.” There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last lew years was sup posed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced itin .urable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co„ Toledo, Ohio, is the only con stitutiorr&l cure on the market. It is token internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It aets directly on the blood “and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. pF“Sold by Druggists, 73c. Hall’s Family Pills, 25 certs. 1Voci.d Be Needed.—“Tell the publisher to order a ponnd of hyphens riirht away,” said the foreman of the composing-room to the clerk. “Why?” “The editor lias a lot of society people snames ho wants to print.” *1*11 Live a* Long as I Can,” Is the burden of an old song. If you want to live as long as you can, counteract premature decay, if you areyoung-or middle aged, orGessen the infirmities of life’s decline if yon are growing old, use Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, a genuine recuperator of vigor, and a helpfu* stay and 4olace to the old, the weak and convalescent. Incomparable in bilious, dyspeptic, rheumatic and malarial complaints. Fuss without Feathers.—“I’m onto your little game!” said the indignant guest, sending back the English Sparrows the waiter had brought him for reed birds.—Chicago Tribune.

Robert Smith (brother of Sydney, anil familiarly cal ed Bopus) was a lawyer and an ex-ad vacate general, and happened oa one occasion to bo engaged in an argument with a physic: an touching the merits of their respective professions. “You must admit,”' urged Dr. -—“your profession does not make angels of men.” “No.” was the mtort; “there y ou have the best of it; yours certainly gives them the first chance.*’— Bala's Journal. There is no more effectual remedy for Coughs, Colds, etc., than Brown's B» ; uial Taocni s. Co d oniy in boxes. Correct —“Which is right, Mr. Railroad‘a quarter of six? or ‘a quarter to six!’ “I'm sure I do net know, Miss Lovely, I always say ‘fire forty-five.’ ** Like Oil Upon Troubled Waters is BWfaH* Honev of Horehound and Tar upon a cold. Dike's Tootha.-he Drops Cure in one minute. Calling a woman's dress a dream a a perlite way of saying that the cost of it gives her husband thenightmare.—St. Paul News. A8 A CLEANSER of tho blood, rotbing sweeps as clean as Dr.‘. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It at* - tacks all scrofulous, skin and scalp disessap; in tho right wav—by purifying the bl od. Scrofma in all itsvarious forms, Eczema, fitter, Salt-rhaum, Erysipelas, Boils^Carbuncles, Enlarged Glands, Tumors and Swellings, and every kindred ailment, ore perfectly and permanently cured by it. PIERCE Guarantees a CURE.

Dr. Fierce : Dear Sir—I write in regard to your great Golden Medical Discovery- 1 had Eczema and ulcers on the legs. Previous to this affection I had had Dropsy af er the Grip. I now feel perfectly well since 1 took the u Discovery." My legs are all healed up and I feel like a new man. I cannot be thankful enough to you for vour “ Golden Medical Discovery ” has saved my life. ' IKED PESTLi NE.

Mr. P. Pestuk*. -

Jiiexanat, crroeaee vv>) Jt*

Sure Sure for Sprain^ Bruise or Hurt l sST.JACOBSOIL You’ll Use tt Always for a Like Mishap.

OELJABLE K.SEEDC, INSURE SUCCESS O A COMPLETE CATALOGUE , of all Standard Varieties ai d the near t hi nan of merit mailed free to all interested in Flowers, Uardruiui or Farming. You will not be disappointed in the purity •r vitality of oar Seeds. Onr business has stood tho test of 4» years. T»LANT SEED COMPANY, 81? North Srd Street. • ST. LUl'IS, MO. erXAXX THIS PATER irej Use roseate. W. E. IiOtTGLAS S3 SHOE nils custom work, costing from to $6, best value for the money the world. Name and price stamped oa the bottom. Every pair warranted. Take no substitute. See local papers for full description of our complete lines for ladies and gentlemen or send for //- lustrated Catalogue giving instructions how to order bv mail. Postage free. You can get the best bargains of dealers who push our shoes.

<*6

Are tell-tale symptoms that your blood is not right-full of impurities, causing a s luggish and unsightly complexion. A few bottles Of S. S. S. will remove all foreign and impure matter, cleanse the blood thoroughly and give a clear and rosy complexion. It is most effectual, and entirely harmless. < Chas. Heaton, 78 Laurel St, Phila., says:—“I have had for years a humor in my blood %hich made me dread to shave, as small boils or pimples wonld be cut thus causing shaving to be a great annoyance. After taking three bottles of my face is all clear and smooth as it should be—appetite splendid, sleep well and feel like running a foot race, all E from the use of S. S. S. SWIFTSPECtne CO, Alaata. Sa-i luus causing snavmg HH Scad for Treatise an Blood end Skin Diteucs mailed free.

HUM’S MT1-IIEMUTW ANTI-CATARRHS! CHEWING ARB RUNS Cores and Presents Rheumatism.Indigestion, i I Dyspepsia. Heartburn, Catarrh and Asthma. 4, Useful in Malaria and Fevers. Cleanses the < r I Teeth and Promotes the Appetite. Sweetens the Breath. Cures the Tobacco Habit. Em, M . dorse ! by the Medictl Faculty. Send for Mfc' '15 or 25 cent package. Be convlneed. »> Silver. Stamta or Postal Note. t I GEO. B. HALM. 140 W, 29th St., New To*. UU ie 80 ACRES w*b^. Fine Farming Land 3 Ilil IhHIips Co., Wisconsin, mBm il U wm Be SOLD at a BABfiAlK. n-i- i. L. miaow HRivsPAraicot* r Or 9316a !4»touhmSt,«tena. ewsra of ii&ltfiUsas. NOTICE . a AOTOORAPH^/ ©F GENU!ME mas. NEEDLES; SHUTTLES, REPAIRS. ■VtUJH THIS PUBimt Bm rwatua f For all gewingMachine*. I Standard Goods Only, j The Trad* Sopptle*.. ] 'Send.for wholesale price 1st. Bi.klock M'y’wCo, {. Hit Locust st.SLLouiaJtfe

Consumptives and people ■who hare weak lings or Asthma should use PUo’s Cure for Consumption. It has sorad thouassade. It hi * not isjurov! one. it is not J»d to take., it Is the best cough syrup. Sold eTerywher*. *5e. ^iSO'SyCUfE ; FOR A. N. K., B. 1485. trnzN wurrao to ak'V EftrmERs putua state that yea saw tbs Alverttaesaea* It Sht* IWKP , ' : ' .1