Pike County Democrat, Volume 25, Number 10, Petersburg, Pike County, 20 July 1894 — Page 7
THE FARMING WORLD. WATER FOR POULTRY. Simple Device for Keeping the Supplj Clean and Wholesome. A very simple arrangement for keeping a dish of clean water near the fowls is here illustrated. For keeping the water clean it is not necessary that the pap should be set in a frame attached to n fence, but a box with the four sides removed and strips nailed on can be set in any part of the chicken coop, thus providing water that is clean and wholesome. It is convenient, however, to keep the water hhfK enough so that ants and inseets may not crawl into it readily. For this purpose a small section in the fence may be removed and the head and bottom of the box nailed to the r-»,FT
KEEPING WAT:;K ('LEAN F(VR EOl'I.TEY opening1 above the ground. Small •slats o( wood can then lie nailed as showu^in cut, being set fap enough apartso that the poultry can get at it easily. Care should be taken that the pan tills the fralne in which it sets; it would, in fact, be better to make the frame of the same inside circumference as the outside of the pan. In this way the poultry would be sure to get enough of its contents. The slats should be made smooth that they may not hold the leathers or tear them. These should be set about two -and one-half inches apart. Set the pan on two small sticks that the bottom may not wbar and grind through.—Grange Judd Farmer. ______ „ i- FEED FOR POULTRY. Some llreedu Need More Corn and Grain Than Other*. Proper feeding is the most important subject connected with poultry keeping, and to a lack of knowledge of it many failures may be attributed, lo feed for good results one must of course consider the characteristics of the breed he keeps. Brahmas. Cochins and other Asiatic breeds easily become over-fat, and in a state of obesity will produce few eggs, and these often unfertile. The medium-sized breeds are less liable to this trouble, aud the Leghorns and other active breeds are almost free from it. A quart of solid food to a dozen average fowls is considered about a proper feed. Feed but little corn to Asiatics,- as they will surely become too fat with a liberal supply of it. After the maturing of the garden truck and after it has been gathered is a good time to turn the garden patch into a run for fowls. The fowls will destroy innumerable irorms and insects injurious to vegetation, especially if the ground be first plowed to bring all the insects to view. Then the birds will delight in the remains of vegetables left on the I ground and in the corners of the garden. A “garden patch” should have a good chicken-proof fence to exclude the fowls when their presence would be injurious and to coufine them to the run after the above plan, at least for a time.
NOTES FOR SHEPHERDS. Cold, wet weather and lambing1 time tr© the two crucial points in success- , ful sheep raising. Of all stock on the farm, young lambs are the most difficult to push without a set-back. Corn and clover hay will produce some first-class sheep in the fattening pen, and at a handsome profit. A flock of well-fed and well-cared-for scrubs is preferable to the san^e number of half-starved purejireds. One of the facts4hat cannot be too often repeated is the importance of a clean skyi for healin' and wool growing. > By using care in feeding, a rapid gain may be secured at comparatively a low cost, and if the lambs are kept gaining steadily they can be reedy for market early. An exchange .remarks that the flbck*naster«(Should not expect the sheep to have riSore sense than he has. The flockmaster always has more sense than a sheep, but once in a while the flockmaster does not use his sense. In feeding corn the greatest care .must be exercised not to overfeed. To obtain the greatest po usible gain in the shortest time it is a] necessary to » feed all the animal can digest. This ‘.happy medium can only be ascertained . by the closest observation, and, positively, with only one attendant.— .Farmers’ Voice. Reducing the I’oultry Stock. Reduce the stock to a minimum as soon as the hatching season is over and the hens cease to lay, unless such as may be molting. During very warm weather, - crowding the poultry in the poultry-house at night will be favorable to the propagation of liee. When the hens are not comfortable they will not lay, Send the males and very fat hens to market, as they are not only useless now, but will bring less later on ia prices. All pullets that are backward, and which will not mature in time to become winter layers, should also be disposed of. In fact, keep nothing that is not needed, and save expenses by lessening the number of fowls, which means a proportionate increase of eggs from the remainder— Farm and Fireside. Live Stock the Sheet Anchor. Stay by your live stock, no matter how hard times get, and if there is anyone on earth who will be able to live with comparative ease you will be that on£, fox when stock husbandry fails there will be but ,Uttie show for anything else
ELECTRICAL HARVESTS. Dynamos Slay Soon Part of Agricultural Machinery.^ The farmers of the future will use electricity—dynamos will become a part of agricultural machinery, like plows or thrashing machines. And the hard work that sti ffens the joints and hardens the hand of the husbandman will be done in great part by an electric current, which will not only harvest the crops but actually make them grow. Remarkable results have been obtained from experiments regardingthe influence of eleericity on the growth of pldij^ts. Prof. Speehneff, of Kiev, by an arrangement of polles connected by wires condensed atmospheric electricity over the inclosed area: and the ordinary grain crops grown within the inclosure showed an increase from 28 to 50 per cent, in the weight pf the yield of grain and from Hi to 60 per cent, in the weight of the straw. Potatoes showed an increase of only 11 per cent., but they were from a parasite, which devoured the wnelectrified crop. By exposing plants at nights to the electric light, thus supplernenting sunlight, assimilation and growth became continuous, with consequent great increase in the produce; but it has to be noted that, as in plants under normal conditions, assimilation and growth alternating at different periods of the day, the great development of tissues under; the double influence cannot be entirely beneficial. Prof. Speehneff also tried the effect of electrifying seeds before planting, and found that when they were subjected to the furrent for only two minutes the rapidity of their growth was nearly doubled. In France the De Meritea system of treating wines by passing currents of electricity through them has been officially tested and reported on favorably. This treatment is found to mellow and preserve healthy wines and to arrest deterioration in those beginning to give way. Alcohol has also been experimented with, showing a considerable hastening of the maturing processes, the obj* tionabie fusel oils, which render new spirits almost undrinkable.^being rapidly converted into complete alcohols.
THE CHESTER WHITES. Origin of the Breed and Some of the Good l'oiiit* It Possesses. This is purely an American breed, having' originated in Chester county, Va.; hence the name. It is a very popular breed, being much prized on account of its size and the ease with which the swine fatten. In size they rank with the largest breeds, weighing at six months from 200 to 225 pounds, and at maturity about 700 pounds. They have broad, short heads, long, deep bodies, strong, straight backs and heavy hams. The hair is heavy, generally wavy and
PRIZE-WINNING CHESTER,WHITE SOW. snow white, and the skin soft, white and thin. For this reason they hare no place in the south, where all the white breeds of swine are liable to sun-scald. The Chester Whites are good rangers, although on account of their satisfied disposition they are very easily confined; even old hogs very seldom become breachy. As breeders they rank with the mos^ prolific; mature sows nearly always farrow ten to fifteen or more pigs. They make excellent mothers. The prepotency of this breed is most marked. These hogs always give good results, either when kept pure or crossed on other breeds.—N. Y. World. To Kill Worms In Pigs. Worms in pigs, says the Rural New Yorker, come from eggs, some of them hatched within the animal and some outside. This is but one of the different stages through which these insects pass and is a provision of nature for perpetuation of the species. The pigs should have a liberal diet of green food, roots, grain, and, if possible to be had, buttermilk is excellent Let the bowels be cleansed by a dose of castor oil. There are several vermifuges, some of them specially adapted to particular parasites. Common salt, where the animals may have access to it at will, is excellent Oil of turpentine, 10 to 20 grains, calomel, to 1 scruple, or asafcetida, % to 1 drachm, the dose varying according to the size of the animal, are good. Tartar emetic and sulphate of iron given for six successive mornings, followed by a purge, may be used. Sometimes a concentrated solution used as an injection is of service. Cost's! Wheat Production. The .department of agriculture issues a summary made from estimates?of 25,000 farmers of the west and northwest. and of 4.000 experts of the department on the cost of growing wheat. The average cost per acre for the region eovered is §11.09, while the average for Wisconsion is more than a dollar higher, or $12.98. Ground rent is the heaviest single item, and is estimated at nearly §0 per acre. The principal items of cost have remained about normal during the past four or five years, being slightly higher where any change is noted owing to increase of cost of labor during the prosperous times from 1890 to 1893. During that period, however, the price of wheat fell nearly one-half. As a result, either wheat production must be restricted or a large part of it must lie done at a loss. The wise farmer gets out all the early-hatched chickens he can, sells all the males and keeps the pullets fbr eggs for the Christmas holiday trade.
A MIRACLE IN MISSOURI. The Achievements of Medical Science Far More Wonderful Than the Magic of the East. The Remarkable Experience of Post Mw ter Woodson, of Panama, Mo.—For Ten Tears a Cripple—To-Day A Well and nearly Man. [From the Kansas Cit7 Timo3.] The people of Rich Hill, Mo., and vicinity, have recently boon startled by a seeming miracle of healing. For years one of the best known men in Bates and Vernon counties has been Mark M. Woodson, now postmaster at Panama, and brother of ex-State Inspector of Mines C. C. Woodson, of this city. The people of Rich Hill, where he formerly resided, and of his present home, remember well the bent form, misshapen almost from the semblance of man, which has painfully bowed its head half to earth and labored snail-like across the walks season after season, and when one day last month it straightened to its foil height, threw away the heavy butt of cane which for years had been its only support from total helplessness, and walked erect, firmly, unhesitatingly about the two cities, people looked and wondered. The story of the remarkable case has become the marvel of the two counties. Exactly as Mr. Woodson told it to a rimes reporter, it is here published: “For ten years I have suffered the torments of the damned and have been a useless invalid; to-day I am a well and hearty man free from almost every touch of pain. 1 don’t think man ever suffered more acuto and constant agony than I have since 1391, The rheumatism started then in my right knee, and after weeks of suffering in bed I •was at last relieved sufficiently t6 arise, but it was only to get about on crutches for five years, the ailment having sottied in the joint. Despite constant treatment of the most eminent physicians the rheumatism, 1 grew, worse, and for the last four years I have been compelled to go about bent half toward the ground. In the winter of 1S9J91, after the rheumatism had settled into its most chronic form, I went to Kansas City upon advice of my brother, and for six* weeks I was treated in one of the largest and best known dispensaries of that city, but without the slightest improvement. Before I came home I secured a strong galvanic battery, this I used for months with the same result. In August, 189.2, I went to St. Louis, and there conferred with the widely known Dr. Mudd of hospital practice fame, and Dr. Kale of the city hospital. None of them would take my case with any hope of affording me more than temporary relief, and so I came home, weak, doubled with pain, helpless and despondent. “About this time my attention was called to the account of a remarkable cure by DrWilliams’ Pink Pills for Pale People of locomotor ataxia, rheumatism and paralysis .1 ordered some of the pills as an experiment. When I began to take them, the rheumatism had developed into a phase of paralysis; my leg from the thigh down was cold all the time and could not bo kept warm. In a short time the pills were gone, and so was the cane. I was able to attend to the duties of my office, to get about as a well and strong man. I was free from pain and I could enjoy a sound and restful bight's sleep, something I had not known for ten years. To-day am practically, and, I firmly believe, permanently cured of my terrible and agonizing ailment. No magician of the Far East ever wrought the miracle with his wand that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills did for me.’’ To verify the story beyond all question of doubt Mr. Woodson made the following affidavit: State op Missouri, ) __ Couxty of Bates, { I, M. M. Woodson, being duly sworn on my oath state that the following statements are true and correct as I verily believe. M. M. Woodsox. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 3d day of March, 1891. Johx D. Moore, .Votary Public. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People are manufactured by the Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and are sold only in boxes bearing the firm’s trade mark and wrapper, at 50 cents a box orsix boxes for f '2.5(PBear in mind that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are never sold in bulk or by the dozen or hundred, and any dealer who offers substitutes in this form is trying to defraud you and should be avoided. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills may be had of all druggists or direct by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co.
TABLE CHINA. Some of the New Notions That Delight Housekeepers. There is no part of the household furnishing in which the general "Woman takes more interest than in her supply of china. In selecting a dinner-set choose delicate patterns in soft, light shades, for bold, decided designs and colors are certain to lose their attractiveness when frequently seen, and, be•sides, they will greatly hamper the choice of flowers for decorative purposes. A decided change has lately taken place in the designing of dinnerdishes, and it has been on the side of daintiness'''’* and the artistic beauty. The fish-platter has rounded square ends; and instead of the monsters of the deep that were once to be seen on its center, there are now pretty designs of shells and seaweed.. Neat dinner sets of German china contaming one hundred and thirteen pieces are now offered in tasteful patterns at prices that bring them within the reach of people of very moderate means. There are many small pieces for the table, which are very effective when chosen in rich colors or odd designs. Thus, the olive dish may be of brilliant red ware, the butter plates in leaf-shape veined with gold, and the celery dish a long, low and narrow bowl of sparkling glass. Such unique adjuncts lead a touch of origiuality to the table without detracting from the general effect of quiet refinement.—Delineator. Useful and Pretty. A stylish and becoming garment combining the ease of the jacket with the dignity of the coat, is what *s now known as the “Lennox” coat. It is closely revered, and completed by a waistcoat and chemisette, that combines well with any make of overskirt. Tan-colored cloth is the most popular, with revers of brown moire, and waist coat of changeable moire, in blue or brown. I have recently seen some very attractive suits of block serge with Waistcoats of white cl- th moire. The handsome waistcoat cloths which formerly could be had only of the importers are now to be found on sale in all the city stores, and, indeed, in most of the country shops. They are strong, heavy fabrics, mostly silk and wool, in brocades, checks and pin-head dots. Any other desirable color may be found. —N. Y. Advertiser.
USEFUL AND SUGGESTIVE. —Poor washing-suds over the root* o? your plum trees; the curculio will die instantly. If the suds is poured around the roots of geraniums, roses, etc., their beauty will be eahanccd tenfold. —Chili Sauce.—Six large, ripe tomatoes, one large onion chopped, two peppers chopped fine, one and one-half caps of vinegar, one tablespoonful each of brown sugar and salt. Cook slowly an hour and a half.—Woman's Home Journal. —Tomato and mutton pie.—Putter a deep dish, put in a layer of sliced tomatoes, then a layer of mutton cut in rather small pieces, sprinkle lightly with fine bread crumbs, and season with pepper, salt and bits of butter. Continue until the dish is full, having the crumbs for the top. Bake an hour and a half.—Boston Budget. —Sour Cream Dressing.—One cupful of sour cream, one tablespoonful of sugar, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, one teaspoonful of salt and three tablespoonfuls of vinegar. First mix the salt, sugar, and a very little cayenne pepper together, add tne lemon juice and vinegar, stir perfectly smooth, put in the cream, stir well, and set in a cool place.—Ohio Farmer. —Egg and Wine.—A tablespoonful or more of good old Madeira wine, or sherry if a more acid wine is preferred. Break an egg into a glass and cover the egg with the wine, or make an eggnog by beating the egg thoroughly, adding the wine and sugar, and last the white of an egg beaten to a stiff ■ froth. The first way, taken between ! meals, if the patient can bear it. is better and more nourishing.—Good Housekeeping. —Cherry Ice.'—Stone two pounds of ripe eherries, mash them, let them stew for a few minutes with a little ; water and one-half pound of sugar,, and pass them through a fine sieve into an earthen pan. Pound a handful of the kernels and put them into a bowl with the juice of two lemons. Add one pound of sugar to the cherries, and strain on them the juice of the lemons i and kernels. Mix well together and froze. Serve in glasses.—Housekeeper. —Cherry Pudding (Boiled.)—Three eggs, four heaping tablespoonfuls flour, one tablespoonful butter, one pint of milk, one pint stoned cherries. Make the flour into a paste with a little milk; add the rest of the milk, the butter (melted), the beaten eggs, a pinch of salt, and the cherries. Turn into a greased mold; cover, set in a pot of boiling water, and boil steadily for two hours, filling up the pot with boiling water as that around the mold boils away. Turn out carefully and serve with hard sauce.—Farm, Field and Fireside. —Lobster Fareie.—Make a ver}* rich drawn butter by adding to a full pint of boiling* milk two heaping tablespoonfuls of flour rubbed smooth with a quarter of a pound of butter. Stir till thick, then add the meat of two medium-sized lobsters chopped quite fine, and a can of French mushrooms drained from the liquor and chopped. Season highly with salt, red pepper, mustard and mace. Mix all thoroughly and let it stand for an hour. Fill into tjie shells of the tails and backs. Sprinkle crumbs over the top, dot with butter and bake a nice brown. Serve in the shells’and garnish with parsley and slices of lemon.—Ladies* Home Journal.
MIND-READING. When the Wife Wilts the Husband Un- „ consciously Obeys. One Saturday evening' recently the gentleman whom the story names pondered as to just how he could best “fool'’ his wife, and decided that it would astonish her greatly if he carried home a box of candy, for as he was not personally fond of confectionery he had probably never made her a present in the sugar line before, his gifts generally being of more valuable character. Providing himself with a box of bonbons, he started home, and arrived there ifi company with the candy and a chuckle in advance at the expense of his wife and- the state of surprise she would be in on opening the package. "Here is something for you,” he remarked, handing over the bundle. “Yes,” she replied, without even looking at the box, the character of which was concealed in brown paper. “It was very nice of you to bring me this confectionery from S.'s. I was wishing all the afternoon that you would do so.” Here's another account of mind acting upon mind. 'A young lady was extremely anxious to obtain a pair of mcmsquetaire gloves to match a certain lavender gown, but could not find her size—5 3-4—in the desired shade. After visiting several shops, she went home to fret because the “lovely new suit” would not be ready for wearing until the gloves could be sent from the distant city, and the dance came off the very next evening! In the meantime a certain young man had been racking his brains for a suitable gift for “her” approaching birthday. They had been engaged very long, and many of her tastes he was only able to guess at. Strolling aimlessly into a shop on the ■very afternoon that she was fruitlessly searching for gloves in the rival establishment of the village, a bright idea from nowhere in particular darted into his mind, and he recollected that it was' allowable to give gloves even to girls with whom one made trifling bets. It was only when the pert clerk inquired, “What size?” that he began to be bewildered. And then his state of “phase” did not last long. Picking up a pair of suedes from a box open on the counter, he recklessly ordered them wrapped up, and that very evening the gift, in a velvet-lined box, and accompanied by a big bunch of violets, was in the hands of the young lady. “Oh,” she exclaimed, delightedly, the next time he called, “the gloves were exactly what I wanted! But however did you find out that I wore 5 3-4, and that I was having a pale violet frock made for the assembly? Did your sister tell vou?”—Boston Journal - 5 ®
Take no Substitute for Royal Baking: Powder. It is Absolutely Pure. All others contain alum or ammonia.
A- — Perfumed garters are among the luxurious devices by which the aesthetic girl shows she is more daintily clad than most folks. Possibly she has several pairs, being careful to wear yellow ones with black hosiery and black ones with tan. These garters are made from watered ribbon about an inch and a half wide and solid silver buckles if the garter is linked, or both buckles and stocking clasps if a supporter is preferred. The ribbon is doubled over a layer of cotton and sachet powder, and the wearer, if very fastidious, may have her name engraved on the silver buckles, so if she should lose it there may be some chance of its return, bridal garters must be made of whitefrilled elastic with silver or even jeweled buckles and knots of real lace. A Kansas man who lost five hundred chickens that were aboard one of the stolen trains has entered suit in the United States courts for the value of them. He wants to recoop, so to speak.—Philadelphia Ledger. “Don't you consider Miss Bonbv rather dull!” said one society man. “Well,” replied the other, “after the manner in which she cut you this morning I can’t say that 1 do.”—W ashiugton Star. In the commonest human face there lies more than Raphael will take away with him. —Carlyle. THE MARKETS. New York. July 16. CATTLE—Native Steers..* 4 23 © COTTON—Middling. © FLOUR—Winter Wheat. 2 60 © WIIE AT—No. 2 Red. © CORN—No.2. 475h© OATS—Western Mixed_.... 52 © PORK—New Mess. 14 01 ST. LOUIS. ; COTTON—Middling... .•. 7 © BEEVES—^Shipping Steers... 4 30 © Medium. 4 10 © HOGS—Fair to Select. 4 75 © »HEEP— Fair to Choice. 2 2a © FLOUR-Pateats.. 2 80 Hi Fancy to.Extra do.. 2 20 © WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter... © CORN -No. 2 Mixed... © OATS—Nc.2. © RYE—No. 2. M © TOBACCO—Lugs.w 4 50 © Leaf Burley.U 7 0> © IJ AY—Clear Timothy. 9 50 © BUTTER—Choice Dairy. II © EGGS—Fresh..© PORK—Standard Mess (new).. 13 3754© BACON—Clear Rib. a.. 7X© LARD—Prime Steam. © CHICAGO. CATTLupipiguSE—., 2 50 © HOGS—Fair to Choice_... 4 80 © SHEEP—Fair to Choiei. . 2 5 > © FLOUR—Winter Patents. 2 80 © Spring Patents.. 3 10 © WHEAT—No. 2 Spring.56*4® No. 2 Red. © CORN-Ng. 2.. © OATS—No. 2. .... © PORK—Mess (new) . 12 52)4© KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers.... 3 50 © HOGS—Ail Grades .. 4 80 @ WHEAT—No.2 Red. 48 © OATS—No. 2. © CORN—No 2. 36 © NEW ORLEANS FLOUR—High Grade. 2 83 © CORN—Ha 2. © OATS—Western. 50 © HAY-Choice. 16 00 © PORK—New Mess.; © BACON—Sides.. .... © COTTON—Middling. © LOUISVILLE WHEAT—No.2 Red. 53 © CORN—No. 2 Mixed. 50 © OATS—No.2 Mixed. 54 © CORK—New Mess.. 12 75 © BACON—Clear Klii. 8)4© , X3TTON—Middling.. . • • © 1894. 5 00 754 4 30 c59)4 4-O/s -5254 14 25 7)4 4 80 4 50 5 0> 3 25 2 90 2 60 53 .4154 M i» 16 0> 12 :0 13 50 8 6* 4 GO 5 10 3 50 290 3 60 58 56)4' 42 48 12 55 4 60 5 09 49 32 S654 3 10 58 51 _ 17 00 13 62)4 854 6?» . 54 51S 555, 13 125 8)4 7H
Wife—“What a singular man yon are, to be sure. Whenever we nave company I have to do all the talking. You have absolutely nothing to say.” Husband—“ You are mistaken, my dear. I have plenty to say, but 1 never get a chance to say it.”—Washington Fair Rider (to Cholly, who has just, “taken a header” from his horse Hi trying to Jump the fence)—“I hope you’re not much hurt, Mr. Gosling?” Cnollv (bravely) —“Not at all; pardon my haste in alighting to open this gate for youl”—Harper’s Bazar. No One Mourns the loss Of the treacherous, long abiding, deceptire symptoms ot kidney complaint. But the return of regularity is hailed when, with the aid of Hostetter’# Stomach Bitters, the wise disciple of common sense who uses it perceives a return of regularity. Use the Bitters iu malarial, kidney or dyspepsia trouble disorder of the bowels, nervousness or debility. “I shall celebrate my twenty-second birth day next week,” said Miss Giddey to her dearest friend. “I suppose you 'forget it when it came around eight or nine years ago,’’ was Miss Fiypp's reply.—Harper’s. Bazar. * V The Ladies. The pleasant effect and perfect safety witt* which ladies may use the California liquid laxative Syrup of Figs, under all conditions, makes it their favorite remedy. To get thetrue and genuine article, look for the name of the California Fig Sy rupCo., printed neax the bottom of the package. “That's too bad! My wife has gone andf put my handkerchief in the wash, and I an> positive that I had tied a knot in it to remind me of something!”—Fliegende lilac tter. . ? Hall's Catarrh Cura Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 75c. Good natural rivalry in business is all right, but it is carrying things a trifle too far when an undertaker starts in with the avowed intention of laying his competitors out.—Buffalo Courier. It is positively hurtful to use ointment for skin diseases. Use Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye, 50c. A howling swell—an ulcerated tooth.— Texas Siftings. LIKE A THIEF IN THE NIGHT, Consumption comes. A slight cold, with your system in the scrofulous condition wat’s caused by impure blood, is enough to fasten it upon you. Consumption is LongScrofula. You ram prevent it, and yon can cure it, if yon haven’t waited too long, with Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. For Scrofula, Weak Lungs, Bronchitis, Asthma, and all severe, lingering Cough* Pierce guarantees a Cube.
Mrs. Lincoln.
Heron taring uio “Discovery” 1 vwdA have four or five bad coughing spells every day ana would ccugfc up mouthfuls of solid white froth, and before I took one bottlo Ik stopped it. X could oak walk across the rooaa with the pain In myr back and sides: but man the pain was all gone, and I could sleep well as night. My general health Is much better since taken the “Gofcbro Medical Discovery “ although I have
obliged to work Glen Atman, Huron Co, OnL
AND ECONOMIZE YOUR TIME,HUSBAND YOUR (STRENGTH ft INCREASE YOUR PLEASURE BY USING CLAIRETTE SOAR BEST,PUREST a MOST ECONOMICAL SOLD EVERYWHERE JKADE Kf THE NK.FAI RBANK COM PANY. St.Loos, THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE; THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS., SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN,
Headache, indigeation. office work, no
Knijrht Special. eM I A pottn in steni, I to b» »uie. i
Take jour money. Here goer f jr green ftetds
'Rey I'Wetl, tnig •:« exhil-; armtiOu. Knight make* a good wheel
/ v^i "V rh’it ritle niak> > me feet like a fourtime winner.
mm wmmmrgsxim Catalogue free if you mention thi* paper. tf»r rt t**L Sent to. approval on receipt *5. Jttueirr Cyqu Co*. MX. 14th St, 8t lout.
Consumptives and people who have weak lungs or Asthma, should tue Piso’s Cure for Consumption. It has eared |h«ntandt. It has not Injured one. It is not bad to take, it is the best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. S&c. :•'! .consumption; A. N. K., B. 1509.
