Pike County Democrat, Volume 24, Number 50, Petersburg, Pike County, 27 April 1894 — Page 7

USEFUL AND SUGGESTIVfc. 1 —Cottage Podding.—One teacup of •agar, three tablespoonfuls of melted batter, one egg, one teacup of milk, two heaping cups of flour, two tear spoonfuls of baking>powder. Bake in • fluted tin. Serve with wine sauce.— Boston Budget —Old-fashioned Cookies.— Half a pound of butter, half a pound of sugar, stir together until they are as light as cream, three eggs beaten very light one ounce caraway seed mixed with a cup of flour. Knead chis in and then add as much flour as is needed to make a rather stiff dough, roll thin and cut in fancy shapes. Bake in a moderate oven. Sprinkle with sugar if desired. —Prairie Farmer. —Mock Terrapin.—One cupful of liver which has been cooked slowly in a little butter and water and cut into dice. Put the yolks of three hard boiled eggs, rubbed through a sieve, into a sauce-pan, with one-fourth cupful of butter, a little salt and pepper. Stir smoothly, and add one-fourth cupful of canned mushrooms and one tablespoonful of lemon juice or sherry win4. Add the liver and serve. —Good House-keeping.

—scalloped salmon.—rick very nne a can of salmon,= rejecting all bone, skin and oil. Stir with this one wellbeaten egg, one teacupful bread crumbs, a teaspoonful minced parsley, pepper and salt, then add a half teacupful melted butter. Either place in individual buttered scallop shells^ dr place the whole in a baking dish. Dot the tops in either case with bits of butter. and brown delicately in t^e oven. —Orange Judd Farmer. —One of the handiest pieces of furniture about a kitchen table is a thicklipped oyster shell. It makes a much nicer pot and skillet-scraper than an “iron dish cloth.” The chain arrangements which are used for that purpose are all abominations. They get full of infinitesimal bits of cabbage, burned potatoes, bits of fried onion, broiled steak and the like, and only a bath of concentrated lye and the application of scrub brush will clean them. An oyster shell can be kept as clean as a silver spoon. —Stuffed Potatoes.—First select potatoes as nearly of a size as possible, but not very long. Peel them, cut off one end, and scoop out the inside of each potato, being very careful not to break it When scooped out the walls of the potato should be nearly an inch thick. Make a nice filling of cold roast meat, bread-crumbs, finely-mixed onion, salt and pepper to taste, a little Iftnade mustard, and a large spoonful of butter. There should be about equal quantities of meat and bread-crumbs. Mix all well together and moisten with one raw egg. Season each potato with pepper and salt, and fill it with stuffing. Cut a nice little slice off the end of each potato so that it will stand upright and be firm. Brush every potato over with a little melted butter, 1 set in a baking tin, and bake for about thre-quarters of an hour. Serve with thick brown gravy.—Woman’s Home .Journal. —Stuffed Ham.—Take a mediumsized ham; wash well: put in a boiler, cover with plenty of cold water, add one dozen whole cloves, one blade oi mace, and one bay-leaf. Place on the back of the stove, and let come gradually to a boil; let simmer fifteen minutes to every pound. Make stuffing of one pound of bread crumbs, onehalf pound-of butter, one teaspoonful each of ground ginger, allspice and celery salt, with one-half teaspoonful of ground cloves and mace, one-half grated nutmeg, two table-spoonfuls of mustard, one-half teaqup of brown sugar, and three well-beaten eggs. Mix all together, and moisten with cream. Gash the ham (do not skin) all over while hot, and fill the places with the dressing. Rub over with the beaten white of an egg,and dredge with grated cracker and brown sugar. Set in the* oven to brown. Serve with champagne sauce.—Harper’s Bazar.

BOTHERED THE SHOWMAN. The Only Genuine Mermaid Made Unreasonable Demands. “This here show business,” said the dime museum man, “aint what it is cracked up to be by a long- shot. A man’s alius runnin’ agin things that do him up.” “What’s troubling you?” inquired the advance agent “Why, that dura mermaid of mine is gettin’ me into debt over my head. Now, you know, I’ve eot the only genuine mermaid on exhibition. She’s a maid of the sea, she is, a living example of the storied nymphs of the wave of old, as my programme says. I pay her a big salary an’ she puts all my other attractions in the shade. It would pu$ your eyes out to see the way people look at her. I tell you she’s the greatest freak in the business, an’ the best of it is she is genooine. But, to come down to r cases, as I wuz saying, she ke^ps me in hot water all the time. There haint a day that I don’t have to do somethin’ special for her. I don’t dast refuse, for I can’t git along without her these dull times. Sometimes, though, she makes me crazy by her unreasonable requests. What do you suppose she wants now?” “Couldn’t imagine,” replied the advance agent, “unless it’s fresh sea water <3very day, or something like that.” “Huh,” said the dime museum man, disgustedly, “that would be easy. That dura mermaid don’t waul; a thing but a pair of these new white kid slippers;.”—Buffalo Express. A Revised Version. It happened in Sunday-school. The jub.ject under discussion was Soldmon and his wisdom. A little girl was asked to tell the story of Solomon and the women who disputed the possession of a child. She timidly rose up and answered: “Solomon was a very wise man. One day two women went to him quarreling about a baby. One woman said: ‘This is my child,’ and the other woman said: ‘No, this is my child.’ But Solomon spoke up and said: ‘No, no, ladies; do not quarrel. Give me my sword and I will make twins of him, so each of yon can have one!”—Harper’s Magazine. .

80LSVILLE MIRACLE. Restoration of Philander HytLe from Paralysis. Helpless and Bed-Ridden—His Recovery from ThU Pitiable Condition—A Remarkable narrative. [From the Syracuse Standard.] During the past few months there have appeared in the columns of the Standard the particulars of a number of cures so remarkable as to Justify the term miraculous. These cases were investigated and vouched for by the Albany Journal, the Detroit Sews, Albany Erprt** and other papers whose reputation is a guarantee that the facts were as stated. Different schools of medicine and spme of the brightest lights in the pro* fession had treated these cases, unsuccessfully; and their recovery later on, therefore, and its means, have created a profound sensation throughout the country. The Standard has published the above accounts for what they were worth, and are happily able to supplement same to-day by an equally striking case near home. The case is over in Madison county, at Sols vi lie, and the subject is Mr. Philander Hyde, who told the reporter the following:

“I will be 71) in September. I was bora in rirookfield, Madison county, where all my life was spent until recently, when, becoming helpless, I came to lire with my laughter here. My life occupation has been that of-a farmer. I was always well and rugged until two years ago last winter, when I had the grip. When it left me I had a sensation of numbness in my legs, which gradually grew to be stiff at the joints and very painful. I felt the stiffness in my feet first, and the pain and the stiffness extended to my knees and to my hip joints, and to the bowels and stomach, and prevented digestion. To move the bowels I was compelled to take great quantities of castor oiL “While I was in this condition, cold feelings would begin in my feet and streak up my legs to my back and would follow the whole length of my back bone. I could not sleep, I had no appetite, I become helpless. While in this condition I was treated by a number of prominent physicians. They did me no good. I soon became perfectly helpless and lost all power of motion even in my bed.h X “The physicians consulted pronounced father’s case creeping paralysis,” said Mr. and Mrs- Johnson, “and when we brought aim home he had to be carried all the way in a bed. The doctors said they could only relieve the pain, and for the purpose he took a pint of whiskey a day for three months, and morphine in great quantities. When he began taking Pink Pills we stopped giving bim morphine or any other medicine, and :ut off all’Btimulants. In ten days after father began taking the pills, he could get aut of bed and walk without assistance, and bas continued to improve until now he yalks about the house and the streets by the aid of a cane only.” “Yes,” said Mr. Hyde, “and the pain has gone out of my back and the numbness out af my legs. I have no more chills, my digestion is good, and I have an excellent appetite.*’ And then, after a pause, “But, ah, me, I am an old man; I have seen my best lays, and cannot hope to recover my old vigor as a younger man might, but I am so thankful to have the use of my limbs and to be relieved of those dreadful pains.” Others in Solsville are taking Pink Pills, notably the mother of Abel Curtis, who is using them with satisfactory effect for rheumatism, and Mrs. Lippitt, wife of ex-Sen-ator Lippitt, is using them with much benefit for nervous debility. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain in a condensed form all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood, and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, SL Vitus’ dance, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache! the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, and that tirea feeling resulting from nervous prostration; all diseases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities and all forms of weakness. In men they effect a radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses of whatever nature. These Pills are manufactured by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and Brockville, Ont., and are sola only in boxes bearing the firm’s trade-mark and wrapper at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, and are never sold in bulk or by the dozen or hundred. Heavy Kits of European Soldiers. The German emperor recently issued orders directing- the weight of German infantry soldiers’ accouterments on the march to be reduced by fourteen pounds. But, compared to the soldiers of the other armies, the German foot soldier is not by any means overburdened. He now carries a weight of sixty-one pounds, but in future he will only carry forty-seven pounds, or the same weight that is carried by the Austrian soldier. The burdens borne by the infantry soldiers of the other principal European nations ai<e as follows: British, sixty-two pounds; French, six-ty-two; Swiss, fifty-nine; Italian, for-ty-three. The Russian soldier is more heavily burdened than any other, for a foot soldier in the array of the czar carries a weight of over sixty-eight pounds.—London Court Journal.

Slot Machines In Ancient EgyptAncient Egypt is “looking up” in every way. Some of its contrivances appear to have been quite .up to date. Actually, they had already more than two thousand years ago what we call “a penny in the slot” for the extraction of something useful, pleasant or otherwise desirable. Heron, the philosopher of Alexandria, describes an automatic machine which he asserts to have been in use in the Egyptian temples for a long time past, even before his time. By throwing a piece of money in the slot the worshipers received some consecrated water through a valve. The stature or stand, the two armed lever with its closing valve and the other details of the machine are all correctly described.—St. .Tames’ Gazette. " Naval Armament. > Vice-Admiral Lefevre, French minister of marine, estimates that by about 1905 the type of ironclad now being constructed by the nations of the world will have reached its apogee, naval armaments along present lines will be completed, and the nations will have armed, for the sea, up to the limit. The naval budgets will, he thinks, attain their maximum by that time, and will then diminish for some time. This is figuring along present lines. A complete revolution, like that of the introduction of steam, would he needed to upset the calculations.

THE FARMING WORLD, SIMPLE BEE FEEDER. Am OnpatMtod Invention Which In Well Worth Trying. Many successful bee-fteepers are com* polled to feed more or less every spring to stimulate brood-raising and to supply the needful food for the bees during the long. cold, spring rains. Dissatisfied with the various forms of feeders in general use, Dr. O. S. Brown has invented one which he describes in the American Bee Journal as follows: Soft wood, like pine or poplar, is to be preferred For ;the bottom use a block 5 inches wide by H inch thick. To this nail edgewise as a rim strips 1% inches wide inch thick. This rim should be theexact size of the bottom. Fasten by hailing through the bottom into the strips. Lastly, get out a block 2 inches by IX inches by K inch (1 usually take a piece of oae of the blocks, which I saw off the rim, for this), and nail it flatwise in the center of the bpttom on ths same side the rim is nailed. Be certain to nail in each corner of the block; then bore a hole through its center and bottom with a % inch bit This is for the bees to enter the feeder. Cut a piece of wire cloth (such as is

BEE-FEEDER. used for fly-screen) 8x5 inches, and turn % inch down on each side, so that it will the better hold the tacks. Tack this over the rim upon the top of the feeder. Heat some beeswax or paraffine quite hot, and at the same time heat the feeder until it feels warm to the hand; now pour the wax, or paraffine (paraffine being- the best), into the feeder, and slowly turn it until every part of the interior is in thorough contact with the hot material. Pour out all that is not held by the wood for future use. A feeder thus coated will neither sour nor leak the sirup, which is very essential in spring feeding, as the feeder is much more liable to sour in spring stimulative feeding than in fall ‘ feeding for winter stores. To place the feeder upon the hive, 1 remove the chaff cushion, and with a sharp pocketknife make two V-shaped incisions in the burlap or oilcloth, each incision being about one inch long and the two being separated about threequarters of an inchat the widest point. Turn back the flap, thus made and place the auger hole m the feeder directly over it. This opening should, of course, be directly over the cluster. . To fill the feeder with syrup I use an ordinary teapot of large size, having a long spout Tt only takes a moment to lift the cushion, pour in the hot sirup through the wire cloth and replace the cushion and pass to the next hive. It is surprising how soon one person can feed twenty-five to fifty colonies in this way, and speed is hot the only feature. You disturb the bees but very little; you are not troubled by stray bees coming out at the top of the hive; neither do you admit the cold air into the cluster to chill the brood; and yet you have the feed just where you want it for comfort and ease of access for the bees. AMONG THE POULTRY. For fattening fowls cooked food is better than raw. Overstimulation will result in enfeebled offspring. Milk in all its forms is most valuable as food for poultry. See that your breeders are healthy, vigorous and of good size. The Black Minocra lays the largest egg of any of the Spanish family. The choicest capons are the result of a Dorking cock and an Asiatic hen. Chickens require warmth and sunshine and will not bear overcrowding. Every farmer should make a point of attending the nearest poultry show. It is attention to the little details that makes a success of poultry keeping. The hen that lays well is one that is moving around and scratching all the time. No medicine or stimulants are necessary for healthy birds in good condition. 1 The most important matter in raising the chicks is to give them warmth enough. There is no better fertilizer for the garden .than the manure from the poultry house.

A Chance for Cooperation. If six men in any community should put $1,500 into a stallion their neighbors ought to stand by them to the extent of giving them their patronage. A good stallion is an object of public interest and the public ought to show its appreciation of an endeavor on the part of such a club to improve the stock. If a community refuses patronage, form your club, buy your stallion and use him exclusively in the club. Don’t buy an inferior horse whatever you do. Better breed half the mares to a good stallion than all to a poor one that is free Make war on poor stallion serv- ! ice, even though it mean sacrifices in many directions. The old brood mare must go if she is physically weak and liable to transmit this weakness to her offspring.—Farm and Home Cora for Fall Feeding. In regard to green corn for fall feeding. says an Indiana dairyman, our experience is that a large variety of sweet corn is the best. It produces most milk, is the most palatable to the cowhand gives the milk a better flavor than any other food we have used; green clover and ensilage coming next in order fqr flavoring milk. If green feed produces milk cheaper when we can g et it, the closer we come to it when we can’t get it, the better we are off. Therefore, early-cut hay and ensilage made from ordinary field corn are the chief factors in producing mil* cheap in the winter.

Housekeepers Should Remember. The Goverr ment Chemists., after having analyzed all the principal brands of baking powder* in. the 5 market, in their reports placed the “Royal” at the head of the list for strength, purityand wholesomeness; and thousands: of tests all over the country have further d emonstrated the fact that its qualities are, in every respect, unrivaled. Avoids all baking powders sold with a gift or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal, as they invariably contain alum, lime or sulphuric acid, and render the food unwholesome.

“Now vou may tell the court the circumstances of your husband’s disappearance,” said the attorney to Mrs. Persimmons. “Well, sir,” replied the good lady, “he went out one morning, and it wasn’t more than half an hour till ne never came back.”—Harper's Bazar. Rich Aunt—“It seems to me as if you only came when vou needed money.” Poor Nephew—“But 1 can't come oftenpr.”— Hallo. He—“And would you marry a poor poet?” She—“I don’t see how I could marry a rich one.”—Life. SlOO Reward, 9100. The reader of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly on the blood, and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. Cheney & Co, Toledo, O. UPSold by Druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Puls, 25 cents. --- h' Sometimes a man feels the lightest when he has a heavy load on.—Glens Falls Republican. [ The Skill and Knowledge Essential to the production of the most perfect and popular laxative remedy known, have enabled the California Fig Syrup Co. to achieve a great success in the reputation of its remedy. Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the universal laxative. For sale by all druggists.

THE MARKETS. © » New York, April 23, CATTLE—Native Steers.$ 4 40 @ COTTON—Middling. . 7!i@ 5"LOUlt—Winter Wheat. 2 75 @ WHEAT—No. 2 Red. #234® CORN—No. 2. 44 @ OATS—Western Mixed.. 39 @ PORK-New Mess... .. 14 25 © ST. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling.. © BEEVES—Shipping Steers... 4 00 Medium. 3 60 HOGS—Pair to Select.. 5 15 SHEEP-Fair tq Choice.. 3 50 FLOUR—Patents.. ... .. 2 85 Fancy to Extra do.. 2 25 WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter... 54Vi CORN—No. 2 Mixed. 3654 OATS-No. 2.. RYE—No. 2... 53 TOBACCO-Lugs. 4 50 Leaf Burley. 7 00 HAY—Clear Timothy . 9 00 BUTTER-Choice Dairy.. 16 EGGS—Fresh. 8H® PORK—Standard Mess (new). 13 00 <$ BACON—Clear Ribs. 7*@ LARD—Prime S team —,. CHICAGO. CATTLE—Shtpping. 2 75 @ HOGS—Fair to Choice.. 5 00 © SHEEP—Fair to Choice. 3 0.. © FLOUR—Winter Patents. 3 55 C-4 Soring Patents. 2 15 © WHEAT—No. 2 Spring. 59*© 4 No. 2 Red. 59*® CORN-Noi 2.:. @ OATS—No. 2. fm PORK-Mess (new) . 12 67*© KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers’... 3 20 @ HOGS—All Grades. 4 85 © WHEAT—No. 2 Red . © OATS-No. 2.. 33 CORN—No. 2 ... 35 - NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR-High Grade. 2 85 © CORN—No. 2. © OATS—Western. 39ia@ HAY—Choice. 16 00 © PORK—New Mess. @ BAA’ON—Sides. © COTTON—Middling.. © LOUISVILLE. WHEAT—No. 2 Red... 571*® CORN*—No. 2 Mixed... 41 >9© OATS—No. 2 Mixed............ 36 © PORK—New Mess. 13 25 © BACON-Clear Rib. 714© COTTON—Middling. © © 1894. 4 75 7* 3 60 64 45 40 14 50 7% 4 60 4 35 5 30 4 50 3 00 2 65 55 36* 33 Vi 55 11 00 16 00 11 00 19 814“ 13 12* 7% 7* 4 65 5 35 4 90 3 70 3 90 59*9 5954 39 32* 12 70 4 50 5 15 57 33*9 3519 3 25 47 40 16 50 13 8719 7* 7 58*9 42 36* 13 50 7* 7*

Hicks (in the graveyard, reading a tombstone)—“Sacred to the memory of Thomas Slendermind.” Wicks—“Yes; isn’t it riliculous? Slendermind was the most forgetful fellow that ever lived.”—Boston transcript. / A max doesn't get much done when working around the house. Every few minutes be is reminded of something for which he must scold his wife, and that takes time.— Atchison Globe. a _ “Shall I Ever Be Strong Again?" Many persons suffering from chronic lack of vigor ask themselves this question in vain. They have neglected the one sure means of conferring what they lack and long for. In a very brief time, if they would but use Hosietter's Stomach Bitters, they would find their appetite and sleep renewed and strength revived. The Bitters will also surely remedy dyspepsia, malaria and liver complaint. Ordinary beer is sold by the barrel, but bock, notwithstanding its goat emblem, is not disposed of by the butt.—Philadelphia rimes. Great Novelty Free. A very unique and handsome nickle plated box for carrying postage stamps in the vest pocket will be mailed free upon receipt of eight cents for postage. Stamps accepted. Address C. B. Ryan, A. G. P. A., C. & OR’y.. Cincinnati, Ohio. Looking at it in a practical way a congenial soul is a bedfellow who will agree not to eat onions except when you do.—Atchison Globe. Fcr strengthening and clearing the voice, use “Brown's Bronchial Troches.” “I have commended them to friends who were public speakers, and they have proved extremely serviceable.”—Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. No man who is wedded to himself ever wants a divorce.—Dallas News. Pusasant, Wholesome, Speedy, for coughs is Hale’s Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. For form’s sake—wearing a corset.—Lowell Courier.

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SUBURBAN M| JOBS '

its ear n ana heavens. Our Sleet has beratruxt in Bany a till and tower* nboeo everythin* everywhere. W« are industrious be rend anjtrunt. aver known, tioce we work M boors a (lay and Kora than MS da; * in tha year, Va ara untir* !r* in our vigilanco —Ik stand over you day ana night. we are acotioirncal be* yond anythin* on tha earth or in the heaven*, as wo tak into our systems " abaeiutelynoit but thin air. Write qukk. ere an pans; last.

The Greatest fled Seal Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. BONALD 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 always experienced 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 always disappears In a week after taking it. Read the label. 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 tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Drqggists.

Ely’s Cream Balm WILL CURE CATARRH ^PriMSO^BtoJ Applr Balm lntoeach nostril. XLT Bto.,KWuna St-N.Y.

Those. Pimples Are tell-tale symptoms that your blood is not right—full of impurities, causing a sluggish 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 1 humor in my blood which made me dread to shave, as small boils or pimples wnnld be cat 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 | from the use of S'. S. S. Scad foe Treatise an Blood and Skia Diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO, Atitnts, THE POT INSULTED THE tKETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN,

Extreme, Chronic, Torturing Cases of

NEURALGIA

ABE CURED BY ST. JACOBS OIL. PROMPT AID SURE. Curette Soap.

Bright H0USEMYE5 No Other. the Best. Purest •

Soi0 Eveeywhere 13 T> tie IILH1MI GfflMs#*

, W.I.DOBGIAS M8HO! (equals custom work, costing from t $4 to $6, best value for the money in-the world. Name and price T on the bottom. Every rranted. Take no subettSee local papers for full description of our complete ‘ ' ties for . adies and gentlemen or send for Ji~ Instr died Catalog*! giving instructions _______ how tow. der by mail. Postage free. You can get the bad hat gains of dealers woo posh our shies. IQRTHERN PACIFIC and N( ACRES in Minnesota, North Dakota, Montana. Idaho, Washington and Oregon PUBLIC A* - - --- 'rmins, frnlt. rnrr GOVERNMENT rnLL Millions of LANDS (tJ*Whm writing mention ihi* paper Ko. 41. ^AAH I I iAIf STAMP2JI0 OUTFIT. laUUU LU Vr\ t AlpkabM.tSdeiilrs. Powder, Pad. and a copy of Home Benttflil °n embroidery. Stamping, etc., mailed on receipt of W cents. AGENTS WANTED. Write fcr jpwroculars. ■FAR1SHAMM, IT tv. 14th Street. SEW TURK. •S-HA1U THIS rATKawmrtlmtyMvtSa PI S Qv3 CU R CTO Cencnmpt ivea and people who have weak lnnga or Asthma, should use Plso’s Cure Tor Consumption. It has eared tkosaasdc. It has not Injured one. It is not bad to take. It ts the best oongh syrup. Sold everywhere. Uo. BB A. N. K., B, fl«M WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PUMI state that yea saw the Advertise ment ta tMa