Pike County Democrat, Volume 24, Number 44, Petersburg, Pike County, 16 March 1894 — Page 7
THE STATE AT LAKGE. Interesting Information from Towns in Indiana. Broken Up at Lut Lebanon, Inch, March 8. The last of the famous 'Patterson gang of horse thieves and burglars has been captured, and Tuesday the entire band of eight were behind the bars. Their chief, Homer Patterson, was arrested in 1892 and given a long sentence. Three weeks ago the rendezvous was discovered only 2 miles east of this city and the officers surrounded it, capturing Elza Ambury, who had been selected to succeed Patterson as chief; Jesse Arborgast, Charles West and Elmer King, all well-known crooks. Jesse Hall was caught a few days later in the act of robbing the house of John Day, of this city. Elmer Flemming was lodged in jail Tuesday morning after an exciting chase.
Threw Dice for the Girl. Fort Wayne, lnd.. March 8.—The marriage of R E. Crout, alias Willard, and Miss Myrtle Shields last week, after an acquaintance of only a Je.v hours, is developing some sensational features. Two brothers of - the youngwonfan came here from Payne Tuesday and consulted Prosecutor Coleriek in the matter. They allege that Crout has a wife and child living in Chicago and that he is a bigamist It develops that Crout and a friend, “Jim” Loomy, of Chipago, threw dice for Miss Shields and Crout won, and, going to her, introduced himself as Willard. Debate with Their FUt*. Columbus, lnd., March 8.—During a debate at the St Croix schoolhouse Monday night a small riot was, caused by the officers levj’ing and enforcing a fin1? of a few cents on two of the members, -who claimed that the fine was .the work of spite and that the offenses of other members were overlooked. The two sides ranged for battle, which ended by two brothers, Louis and Emery Eobinet, being selected to settle the affair bj* personal combat. . Louis battered Emery in a most bai'barous manner. Crank Lockett Up. \ Indianapolis, lnd., March 8.—Mayor Denny had an exciting adventure with a crank Tuesday who threatened to blow up the courthouse and all city officials unless the unemployed in the city were at once given remimerative employment. The man refused to give his name, but claimed to be a labor agitator recently from Chicago. He rushed from the mayor’s office to carry out his threats and was captured and placed iu jail. Fnudg for County Treasuries. s Indianapolis, lnd., March S.—Attorney General Smith got a decision from the supreme court Tuesday that the legislative act requiring school corporations and trustees to pay into their respective county treasuries the unexpended balance at the end of each school year is constitutional. This will result in §100,000 or more being paid, every county in the state having held buck the unexpended balance. Will Be the Largest File Works. Anderson, I*d., March 8.—Contracts were let by the Arcade File Works company Tuesdaj7 for a 40x250 addition to the company’s present plant. The addition, like the present building, will be of brick and stone, and four stories high. When in full operation the factory will be the largest of the kind in the United States. Six hundred men will be employed. Cutting: Down Eipeo«e|. Fort Wayne, lnd., March 8.—The Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne & Chicago railway is reducing expenses to the lowest possible figure, and Tuesday it was decided to take off two regular passenger .trains each way. The accommodation trains between Chicago and this city and the accommodation trains betwen here and Plymouth will ndt be run after next Sunday. Tarred and Feathered. Fort Wayne, lnd., March 8.—At Edgerton, this county, James Erickson, 70 years of age, was dragged from his house by a mob of 100 masked men and given a coat of tar and feathers. Erickson, it is alleged, assaulted a young daughter of James Meriter last Sunday night Meriter severely whipped the old man. _ ; Death of au Indiana Jurist. Peru, lnd., March &—Judge Lyman Walker died suddenly of heart disease Monday night at Laporte, where he went a few days ago for his health. Tie was 57 years old, and one of the most prominent jurists of northern Indiana. The remains will be interred here.
Tax la««» Advanced. Indiana poms, inti., March 8.—Advices from Washington say the supreme court has advanced the Indiana tax cases which involve the constitutionality of the law of 1891 for hearing March 26. Railroads are the appellants against the state treasurer. Must Cease Work Muncie, Ind* Marclj b. The humane officers of this city have announced that all boys and girls under 12 years of age inust cease labor in the factories and mills, as the statute directs. Hundreds are working in the f actories here. Death of Dr. Powell. Mitchell, Ind., March &.—Dr. J. E. Powell, of the firm of Burton & Powell, who had his skull broken by being thrown from a train on February 24, died Tuesday morning. Over the Falls. Niagara Falls, N. Y., March Edwin Whitney, a young boy, saw the body of a woman on a lar^ e cake < f ice go down through the rapids off the American shore Tuesday morning. Whitney’s statement is substantiated by several men, who described the body as having on a dark dress and could partly see the face. The body la}' on the cake and must have been lifeless. It passed over the American falls and went down under the iee bridge.
FARM AND GARDEN. SIMPLE WAGON JACK. On« That Is Not Only Easily Mad* Bad Our illustration is of a very conremen t and easily constructed wagon jack. The base or main piece is a 2x4 inch scantling four feet long. The top or notched stick, is 2x3 inches of about the same length. At each end of the base and on each side bolt pieces 2x13^ inches. Let one set be about 18 or 20 inches high and the other 26 or 30 inches Fasten the short pair so it will be stationary, but the other pair must be so it will move backward and forward. Arrange the lever so that when in the position As shown at A, the notched Also Easily Used. J
A WAGON JACK. stick will be nearly horizontal. Then place the jack under the axle of the wagon. Bring the lever to the position shown in B. This will lift the wheel off the ground and if the jack has been properly constructed the lever will remain in position while the wheel is being taken off and the axle greased. Make the top and upright pieces ot some kind of hard, strong wood—the lighter the better. The bottom can be pine.—Orange Judd Farmer. | | _ - WOMEN AS FARMERS. Many of Them Have Been Successful Beyond Expectation. The state of Michigan has an unusually large number of women engaged in agriculture, due, probably, 19 the fact that in the fruit beltsdhe culture of small fruits is especially adapted to the work of careful women, needing scrupulous cleanliness, close attention to detail and economy of management so neeessary to success. Of course, many women are farmers because they were left by father or husband with a farm on their hands, yet there is an increasing number turning deliberately to farming as a vocation as the problem of how to make a living confronts them. It is said that few women have ever failed who have seriously attempted to make a living from the products of the soil, a fact perhaps not strange when we consider that a deliberate choice of the profession of agriculture would scarcely be made by a woman unless she had a real love for the work which implies some knowledge of its principles. It is a vocation, capable of immense possibilities, and for a healthy woman of executive ability and some business training, there is no better field. Several cattle ranches in the far west are successfully run by women, and the states of California and Florida are dotted everywhere by attractive places where woman is the presiding genius ! outdoors as well as within the walls of the bright home. Dairying is yearly attracting more women. It is a business paying rich rewards for careful, intelligent labor. Faithfulness, kindness and cleanliness, traits common more to women than men, will prove most effective * in a business that produces goods that rise, rather than fall, in times of financial depression. Butter, milk and cheese, if of high grade, are ! ever in increasing demand at full prices. Best of all, if a woman succeeds in this difficult profession, her work must be judged from a man's standpoint. Farming is essentially a man’s occupation, and she will be counted as a successful worker entirely independent from so-called woman’s work.—Womankind.
FACTS FOR FARMERS. Or course every dairy farmer has laid in a, supply of ice for next sum* mer’s use. It is something you need in your business. A creamery, when rightly conducted, is a blessing to any community, but it takes a good while for some farmers to see the point Mvch has already been said about the sanitary condition1 of the cellar, and now is the time to carefully heed past advice In that direction. Cream sometimes becomes bitter if raised in pans at a temperature too low for the milk to sour. Milk in pans should be sour in thirty-six hours. One important point in the care of poultry is sharp grit, and un less fowls* have this grit to properly grind their grain food sickness will ensue. ' Keep your laying hens busy. That Js, give them exercise by throwing their grain feed upon the floor and covering with chaff, cut straw and the like. Have all kinds of seeds ready so there will be no delay when planting time comes. It is a good plan to try the seeds and be sure they" will grow. Economy in feeding the animals while the farm tools are exposed and rusting is more extravagant than any S3rstem of reducing expenses with stock. There is not an overproduction oi everything. Some crops may be abundant, but there will always be something o#*which the supply is less than the demand. Early peas are hardy and can stand a light frost, hence the land should be ready for the seed early in the season, so as to have them ready for market or the table as soon as possible.
ECHOES OF EUROPE. Geneva has a watch school. The annual consum >tion of wine in France averages twdfcty-three gallons for each person. In the past eighty- ugh t years two thousand Louis Lefev es have received criminal sentences in ’ranee. iT is said that the number of people who die inside the city limits of London every year would rill a cemetery of twenty-three acres. London has only one death per year where it used to have our. The great falling off in mortality is due to the better drainage recen ly introduced.< Queen Victoria has already reached and pciSScd the Biblice 1 limit of man’s ≥aheis in the seventy-fourth year of her age and the ftfty-s xth year of Iter reign. During last year the underground railway of London c sxried 85,589.855 passengers, and earnec £668,062. This was a million fewer passengers than carried during 1892, a falling off attributed to the depression in trade. The lakes of Switzerland are great settling beds for glacier mud. Every one has a gray river f owing into® its upper end, a blue rive - leaving it at the other. Eleven miles of the head of Lake Geneva have beer filled up witt the gray glacier grit o: the Rhone.
HASH AND REHASH. There are sixteen c -emation societies or incorporated companies in the United States. , i Mississippi has just passed a law conferring’ the right of suffrage on all home holders without regard to sex. New Year (January 1) will happen on Sunday but once during the century; that will be in 1899. * The diadem of the Russian Empress Anna contains 2,536 large diamonds and a ruby valued at 8600,000. Sir John Lubbock, who once kept a queen bee for fifteen years, declares that the test proves that the eggs were as fertile at that age as they were twelve years before. From Arizona for three 3’ears past has come the earliest etr load of American raisins shipped east. The season there is ahead of that of southern California and the atmosphere is peculiarly suited to curing raisins. A single match requires from 1-200 to 1-100 of a grain of phosphorus for its production, yet the consumption of matches is so large that it is estimated that the total of 1,200 tons is less than the amount consumed-in Europe in their manufacture. VARIED AND INTERESTING. New York is the third largest city in the world, London being the largest and Paris second. Pennsylvania spent $492,628.90 for the care and treatment of the indigent insane in her well-managed asylums during the year ending November 30, 1893. The old Lincoln hom estead in Larue county, Kj\, has been bought, by a syndicate of Kentuckians, who will convert it into a park end'present it to the government. The governor and executive council of Massachusetts have abolished the system of Thanksgiving day pardons for life convicts at Charleston prison. Men pardoned hereafterVill leave the prison quietly and none of the other convict^w-ill be aware of their good fortune
THE MARKETS. © New YOfiK, March 12. CATTLE—Native Steers.$ 4 35 @ COTTON—Middling... © FLOUR—Winter Wheat... L... 2 80 © WHEAT-No. 2 Red .L. 61ft© CORN-No. 2. 43ft© OATS—Western Mixed_.... 88 © PORK—New Mess . 13 OJ © ST. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling. 7ft@ BEEVES—ShiDping Steters... 4 15 @ " Medium . HOGS—Fair to Select.. SHEEP—Fair to Choice. FLOUR—Patents. Fancy to Extra do-• 2 20 WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter... 541 CORN—No. 2 Mixed.. 33 OATS—No. 2.j.. RYE-No. 2..J. 47 TOBACCO-Lugs. 4 25 Leaf Burley,. 6 00 HAY—Clear Timothy.. 8 50 BUTTER—Choice Dairy . 14 EGG S—Fresh . . ' PORK—Standard Mess (new). BACON—Clear Ribs. © LARD—Prime Steam. 6ft© CHICAGO. CATTLE—Shipping. 3 25 © HOGS—Fair to Choice. ,.i. 4 60 © SHEEP—Fair to Choice. . 2 75 © FLOUR—Winter Patent ;. 3 55 © Spring Pants. 2 15 © WHEAT—No. 2 Spring..1. © No. 2 Red.. .... @ CORN-No. 2. .... © OATS—No. 2. .... © PORK—Mess (new).. ..11 30 © KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers... 3 25 © HOGS—All Grades.I . 4 65 © WHEAT—N<k 2 Red. ...'. © OATS—No. 2..L...... 29*9© CORN—No. 2. © NEW ORuEANS. FLOUR—R2gh Grade... 2 85 © CORN-No; 2. © OATS—Western. 37%© HAY—Choice .... . 16 00 © PORK-NewMess.. © BAGDN—Sides.i. © COTTON—Middling.. . 7ft© LOUISVILLE. WHEAT—No 2Red., i. » 56 © CORN—No 2 Mixed...,.a 38 @ OATS—No. 2 Mixed . 82 © PORK-NewMess.....!. 12 25 © BA CON-Clear Rib.... 7ft COTTON—Middling 1894. 4 40 7ft 4 00 63ft 44ft 13 50
Highest of all in leavening strength.—Latest U.S.Gai. Food Biport. ABSOLUTELY PURE Economy requires that in every^eceipt calling for baking powder the Royal shal]l be used. It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW YORK.
Explained. Airs, llinkey—When I called on the doctor this morning he had on the dressing gown you made him. Mrs. Minkey—Oh, how nice! Mrs. H inkey—'Yes. He said, when the bell rang, he thought it was you.— Truth. ° *16 Bm. 8 I,bn. Oat* from One Bo*. Seed. This remarkable, almost unheard-of, yield was reported to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., by Frank Winter, of Alontana. who planted one bushel of Great Northern Oats, carefully tilled and irrigated same, and believes that in 1894 he can grow from one bushel of Great Northern Oats three hundred bushels. It’s a wonderful oat 20 sorts field corn, yielding 80 to 130 bushels p*r acre. • [k] If you will cut this out and send it with 8c postage to the above firm you will receive sample package of above oats and their farm seed catalogue, [k] She—“This is so sudden, Mr. Bondly. You must give me time.” He—“1*11 discount it five per cent, for cash. How does that 6trik© your’—Detroit Free Press. Disastrous Failur*! We can mention no failure more disastrous than that of physical energy. It involves the partial suspension of the digestive and assimilative processes, and entails the retirement from business of the liver and kidneys. Only through the good offices of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters can the restoration of its former vigorous status be hoped for. When this aid has been secured, a resumption of activity in the stomach, liver and bowels may be relied upon. The Bitters conquers malaria and kidney trouble. In Lawyer's Office.—Senior Partner— “Shall we go out and take something!” Junior Partner -“From whom!”—Vogue,
—Man has been so cruel to woman that it is certainly remarkable that he has boned her fpr his rib.—Galveston News, Which WUI Ton Be A farm renter or a farm owner? It rests with yourself. Stay where you are and you will be a miter all your life. Move to Nebraska where good land is cheap and cheap land is good, and you can easily become an o wner. Write to J. Francis, G. P. & T. A., Burlington Route, Omaha, Neb., for descriptive pamphlet. It's free and a postal will bring it to you. , J , A max who drives away customer!!—the cabman.—Texas Siftings. A slight cold, if neglected, often attacks the lungs. Brown’s Bronchial Troches give sure and immediate relief. 25 cts. Wheneyer you want invisible blue, just ■| try to find a policeman.—Lowell Courier. How Mr Throat Hcrts!—Why don’t you use Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar? Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. Indecision is a robber with a dagger under its cloak.—Ram's Horn.
the. Da Long A Hook & Eye*/ Richardson & > DeLong Bros. Philadelphia. / See that * \
hump? QO Tr»de-H*r'i Keg., Aft. 19.92.
ALL ACHES OF JOINTS, NERVES AND MUSCLES ST. JACOBS OIL : WILL CURE AND PROMPTLY HUSTLES, ‘Wofre fhe/V^ef’rter” ■ Wash day a pleasure
BUT NOT UNLESS YOU USE rnsT at PUREST .BESTS
SOU) EVERYWHERE >3 THE N.K.FAIRBANK COMPANY. St Louis. THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN. SAPOLIO
BBMta_ The perron planting Salser’a Seeds nerer knows of hard times. •mncA iinnhl* m)l IVv U ifAi kA I orther'n'$6r own-Seed fill n%5ai2£r SHt)
Blood Skin Eruptions and similar annoyances are caused by impure blood, which will result in a more dreaded disease. Unless removed, slight impurities will develop into serious maladies. SCROFULA, ECZEMA, SALT RHEUM ARE THE RESULTS OF I ham for ( jut* time been a sufferer from * severe blood trouble for which I took many remedies that did me no g odL I have now taken four bottles of wiih the most wonderful results. Am enjoying the best health I ever knew, have gained twenty pounds and my friends say they never saw me as we)L X am feeling quite like a new man. JOHN 8. EDELIN, government Printing Office, Washington. IX C. TnatiucmEi od and Ski* Diseases maiU d free to a*vaddr*e*. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO, Atlanta, Oa.
no BHra CHEAP 2SU R. and m rnrr GOVERNMENT ‘■Vf rntt MillioBS of ■ H ACRES in Minnesota, ■ Ml North Dakota, Montana. Idaho, Washington and Oregon. PUilLtCA* TIONS. with Maps, descrlbi ng tine farming, frnlt, hop, grazing and timber lar ds Mailed FKEE. PB gewM; Fwl*r«dfti» Agent • B. GROAT, jj_ |». |j. |{.4 st. Paul Mina. CyWhta writing mention this paper No. 41. IRTHERN PACIFIC and LANDS WISCONSIN LAID FOR SALE. IS TIMBER 0 NEEDLESSHUTTLES, REPAIRS. trwm ran rtrtt nm tha* Tor all SewingMit chines. S I’iSDABii Goons Only. 'The Trade Supplied. £ end for wholesa le price 1 st.Blklock M'r'o Co., f 15 Locust »t. St.Loul s Afo leatwha
intCirtTES, IT MOWS 1TBAT IS CWOK8, R IHCWW WUAT SUOrLD BS10*150, R iSOWS IX 1DUKS WHA» IT Sltoru* Dth. Because of this it has an enormous factory, end Tara* aw» an enormous quantity of roods, and eoort y*xl*. The other follow is a used-to-be. baa Wen, or mgh» have Wen, had hw known, but bo didn't know It is ail at the part. Bn ha* mess is in the gone by. Oars is in the present, the futnn. Bis consolation is found in the darkeys statement. "It's batter to be a has-been than a nebbcr was." After we hare dan* and are doing a thins and it is k>iown io W the only thing *e> do. certain little ptpinc soicea are heard supine. “We can da* if you will pay us enough money to do it." Wo nado the Steel Windmill business, medo the ssodel In which the best of our imitators can only hope to remcMy approach and in their endeavor to approach it are Mill weakly w perimanting at the expense of the user. But to return to ear enormous outlay for gslranreinc. Why did we do itt Tbs reason is this. WB Itt ll.B THE BEST WE KSBW. BSCABW. USd or COST, and we Wins ore know better than anybody. V« know that thin tselal, exposed te Ike air, wUl art las* ni lln galvanised, bat if properly galvanised, will last scores ad years. Barbed wire galvanized will last #» years, siad W prawtically as food as new. How lonf does it last painted I Brt the barbed wire is an eifhth of aa inch thick, while earn# eC the steel used in. the vaneu of windmills it from a thirty*, second io a sixty-fourth of an inch thick, and therefore weufcs last only from a fourth to an eifhth aa loaf at the barbed mb**, other things Wing equal, but they ara not equal; the ahead metal has holes punched through it and la meted to tkiahar and more rifid pieces. The vibration of the thin part* at ene* tracks the part* around the rivets, and water at once gets in and rust quickly eaha away the thin parts. Some have Used falvaniaed metal and pat in black rivets. This of course is not sa good as painting sinew the cut edge of the galvanised metal it exposed and is in no way protected WE RVIUi EOB THX V ACES. Wa wouldn't salt Sana peer painted wheel, nor oaa /ABi made of arttal gnlsnn lied before betas pat together yen weald pay lanllp
tin Beetle , motor Wheel to alt netted up,eompitted and deputed (V^ of root and impurities.
if u Mm iMMrwf tn melted tine and aluminum and left there until it lecomae as hat as the metal 'ir and until every crack, cranny, crevice, pore anil opening etf every tort is /tiled, elated np ami saturated srith the maUteametal and the whole It pieces composing the section become soldered and icelded together- as one piece, thru yon hose some thing that it strong, enduring and reliable. It uwyiwiwH do, and small doers cannot afford to do tt. We leep dbtmm of sine and aluminum melted from one year's end to another, but ice have business tnomh^so that ice can afford to doth. One word about the nature of galvanirmg The stiver? sUl coating which lilts ever? pure and covers every portion of tha Aermotor Wheel, Vane and Tower it sine and aluminum whan it is first put on, but which, after standing for a time ferae, with the steel, a chemical combination or alloy which cannot bn melted and is practically indestructible. The 5th advertisement in this senes will show a 4-Wheel Steel Truck, weighing 175 lbs., which will carry 2 tons, and of which we use 500 in the Aermotor Factory. It will be found almost indispensable on any farm or in any warehouse. Tor 2 copies td this advertisement, which is No. 4 in the series, and $3.50 rash., sent in immediately after the appearance of adv. No. 5, we wiU deliver f.o.b„ Chicago, ooa of these Trucks or forward trunk branch houses, freight from Chicago added. Where we can, we shall make liberal offers to accept copgea of these advertisements in pars payment for Windmills. If yom have any thought of usings windmill this year write ns of once, stating what you will need, whether Pumping or Geared. and it possible we yill make yon a liberal offer. The Aermotor Co. proposes to distribute *600, CASH, IN PRIZES for the best essays written by the wife, son or daughter of a farmer or nser of a windmill, answering the qnestiem, “Will SUOrLO I CSE AN AERXOTOR I” For condttMDshe competition and amounts and numbers of prizes send tee pal* ticulars to the Aermotor Co., Chicago, or to its branches, it Sam Francisco. Kansas City, Lincoln, Neb., Sioux City, lawn. Him* neapolls. Buffalo, or C5 Park Race. New York City. Aera>etm% Pumping and Geared same price, All Steel, ail GalvanizadsA6ar» Completion, delivered free on cars at Chicago and shippad *• anyone, anywhere, at the foHowina price!. 3-ft. 825. 12-ft. 850. JQ-ft. 8125. “COLCHESTER” OPAOING BOOT v JPISc^v # *
For FarmorsV Minors, R. R. Hands and others. TUe outer tap sole e«cn<%?the whole length of the sole down to the heel, protecting the shank us ditching, digging, and other-.work. Best quality throughout: ASK YOUK BEAMKfor tlyrn. The Greatest fled seal Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONAtt KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred; cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is alway sexperienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken, When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and alwavs disappears in a. week after taking it. ftead the iabel. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tabiespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. jWall Papers! Send Scents postage. Will mail yon the largest aw!', best selected line of samples at lowest prices in TJ. S. PARQUET FLOORS—Book of. Designs mailed on. application. JiEWCOMB BROS.8T. LWITIS, HO. arNAMI THIS FAPS5 wry tteejeoertla , Ordinaries. $5; Si-inch Safeties. $6 and $10: 20.28 and 30-inch. $15: 28-iach Pneumatics—old. $25: new. $a#L Racers. WO. Boy direct and save dealers' profits. Solid* converted to pneumatics. $18. See the XRISMT SSCIKREB. Cat. fro. Knight Cycle Co., 301 S. 14th St, St touiw Consumptives and people , who have weak Jungs or Asthma. should use Ptso's Cure for Cohsumptios. It has cured thousands, it has not Injured one. It is not bad to take. It Is the best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. »Sc, Emassmi A. N. «... B. 1401. WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEAS at •tat* that yaa saw the Advertisement la thha gaper.
