Pike County Democrat, Volume 28, Number 18, Petersburg, Pike County, 10 September 1897 — Page 7

FACTS ABOUT ALASKA. BitiscU From • Utter From Got. Brady of Alailu to Secretary BIIm Only a Small r.rrenUce of Tho*. Who Roach Skaguay Will Got Aero** the Divide. Washington, Sept. ♦. — John CL Brady, governor of Alaska, has sent to Secretary Bliss a personal letter, in which he gives some interesting facts about the rusli for the Klondike region. Gov. Brady has been identified with the Alaskan interests most of his lifetime, and is known to be very conservative in his opinions. Writing from Juneau, he says: ’‘Steamships are passing daily for Skaguay loaded with passengers and supplies. The news just out of Klondike by reliable men is calculated to raise the excitement to a higher pitch. The shipment of dust by the mouth of the Yukon will be all of two and one half tons. Rich finds have been made well up in the sides of the mountains, and the old saying that •Gold is where you find it and silver runs in veins’, seems to be emphasized in that district “Conservative estimates are that there are .\000men a tSkaguay and along the trail of the White pass. But a few only have gone over the pass with their supplies, and only a small per cent of the number can get across. Some parties are dividing up and will try to seud over supplies, while the others will go into camp until spring. The men who are coming are fine fellows, and 1 greatly admire them.

A PROSPEROUS SEASON. Prediction of George M. Coffln. Acting Comptroller Of tbe Treasury. Wahhisotok, Sept. 4.—Mr. George M. Cottiu, acting comptroller of the curreucy. is confident of a tut>st prosperous financial season for the United States in the near tuture. lie said to-day: “There is every evidence that the ‘ United States is accumulating a vast amount of capital of its own. and this goes to show that soouer or later, if it is not already so, this country will be .financially independent of Great Britain or any other nation. “The current rate for demand loans in New York is li* per cent., against a slightly higher rate in Loudon.and it is not at all improbable that under these circumstances New York bankers are loaning money in Loudon. “The national banks of this country - now hold about 8160.000.000 over aud above the sums required by law as a legal reserve. The same condition of affairs undoubtedly exists in the other banking institutions through the states of the union. There has been a wonderful accumulation of capital in the savings banks. *1>ue result of this enormous accumulation of capital will be lower rates of interest for the future. I am sure that this will come and the opinion is shared by many bankers throughout the country. 1 do not believe that we will see again as high rates of iuterest as have prevailed in recent years.” A PLAGUE SPOT.

Th« South Anrrlrtn (told Fl«ldi a (loot, to Nlay Away From. Denver. Col., Sept 4.—Geo, \V. Adams, of Cripple Creek, has arrived in this city from the gold fields of South America. Fourteeu months ago Adams left this city to try his fortunes in South American mines, lie went to the gold fields, 300 miles from ; Georgetown. in company with eight Americans, remaining there 11 1 months. Of the entire party of nine, j he alone escaped death from the fatal fever. One, by one he saw his cotupan- j ions die of the terrible disease; saw a hole scooped in the ground and their bodies, twisted from pain, i covered with earth; was attacked himself twice with the malady and all ] but died, aud fiually, after seeing the i last of the eight die in agony, he be- ; came terror-stricken and fled from the country, a country from which, he says, not one out of 75 white iueu ever returned alive. THE PEARL HUNTERS. All Other ituslnrae Neglected to Hoot Fot the Orms. New Orleans, Sept. 4.—A special from Helena. Ark., says: The pearl hunting industry which has been exciting the whole country ia spreading all over this end of the state. The St. Francis river, from the mouth of the river to Jeffersonville, is lined with white people and negroes, all engaged in unearthing and prying opdn the richly-laden mussel sheila One young tnau brought a small bottle of pearls to Helena taken from Phillips bayou, a tributary of the SU Francis. They are darker in color than the ordinary pearls of commerce, but are handsomer shapes and of good size. All of the ! chain of lakes in the hitherto j waste St. 1- raacis bottoms are full of these pearl-bearing mussela aud it is ; expected that the whole country will j soon be engaged in the business to the. ! detriment of crop gathering. One ; piauter said that he expected to have difficulty in securing hands to pick his ■ cotton on account of the pearl excite menu Asearraga's Failure. Maputo, Sepu 4.—The newspapers of this city say that Premier Azcarraga has failed in his efforts to reunite the warring sections of the conservative party. At ths OrriBM Autumn Manrairn. Uamhi ko. SepU 4.—The German em- | peror and empress, the king and queen > of Italy and the Italian minister for j foreign affairs Marquis Visconti Venesta. arrived here, in order to be present at the autumn maneuvers of the German army. A Costly Firm New Yoke, Sepu 4.- Fire totally destroyed the machine shop and car house at Thirty-sixth and Church ave* aue,Brooklyn.belonging to the Nassau Electric Railroad Cow, and entailed a lorn* at $100,000.

THE FARMING WORLD. WATER FOR SHEEP. I'iIch It la AbaoUtelr Pare the Floek, Will Be Decimated. Water is directly absorbed into the stood with whatever imparity may be .contained in it. It is to some extent strained or filtered of what it may have ol solid matter not dissolved in it, but whatever is held in solution, and some of what it may have that is not dissolved to some extent, goes into the biood with it. Thus impure water pcisons the very fount of life, says American Sheep Breeder, and carries into an animal what may be the most injurious to the health of it. There are, I however, some injurious matters existing in water which are more especially ] deserving of notice on account of their very deleterious effects, s ova as the eggs or germs of organic mutters, either i vegetable or animal, as the spores of various minute plants, and the embryos of the most deadly parasitic animals, j Of these may be mentioned the germs j of epidemic diseases due to the growth | in the blood of miuute plants derived from these germs, and the deadly para- | sites such as the liver fluke, the various i intestinal worms, and the ova of many ! tape worms. All these may be taken i into sheep in water drank fi om streams | or springs or most frequently from ! stagnant ponds. One of the most fre- ! quent sources of infection ?s the oversowing of pastures by streams into which a large extent-qf m; lured lands may have been drained, or into which the wastes of towns or cities have been discharged. On this account the shepj herd cannot exercise too great caution for the protection of his lio-ek. or estimate too highly those most favorable Realities where the streams flow down uncleared mountain slopes. Irom the primeval forests, or where the spars? population has never defiled the soil with filth and impregnateJ it with the germs of disease. Nor can he estimate too highly the pure artesian fountain flowing from far dawn below the sources of impurity, and supplying the flocks with wholesome drink. And in the choice of a range or for a farm for the rearing of a flock, this point is tob? considered first and last as being of the mest paramount importance. HAULING CORN FODDER. Dray Bade I.Ike the One In Picture Save* l.ota of Work. The dray portrayed herewith is made of eight 6-inch 16-foot fence boards, ns shown at a a, etc., with one 6-ineh fence board 7 feet long, crosswise underneath in front, b. On top i,n front is a 2 by 6 7-foot long pieee, c. with $ Yfc-ineh bolts 5% inches long through

CORN CROP DRAY. a, b and c. On the rear of top is another piece, d. just like c, through which and the boards a. are run 8 holts 3y» inches long. The heads of all bolts are ^underneath, .Bore twt> holes tor stakes, e e, near the outer ends of hind cross piece d. Fasten by chain in front, and half the terrors of fodder hauling have disappeared. Across section is shown at the right of the illus tratiou.—Karin and Home. Preventing Egg Eating. If an egg is broken the hens will eat it. and it is by eggs being broken that the hens learn the vice, as they never eat eggs unless they first find one broken. The only way to prevent the hens from eating eggs after they cnee begin is to make a nest with a top, compelling the hen to walk in to reach the nest, and have the box raised ten inches from the floor, so that the hen cannot stand near the box to eat the rggs. When she goes on the nest she cannot do any harm, as she must come off and stand up to eat the eggs.—Farm ind Fireside.

\YInter Grata After Potatoes. Wherever the potato crop can be got iff in time for seeding with fall grain j it makes the very beat seed bed. No j plowing is needed if the weeds have j been kept down. It is only necessary j to pile the potato vines iu heaps and j burn them, starting the fire in a brush ! heap if the potato tops are too green j to burn readily. A great deal of plant food is developed after growing a crop of potatoes. It is largely nitrogenous, as the potato crop is chiefly water and carbon, with some potash, which is mostly found in the potato tops. Turpentine Good tor Ronp. Spirits of turpentine have been used is a remedy for roup with excellent remits. It is given in half teaspoonful doses, once s day, mixed with sweet oil or cotton seed oil. in the proportion of one part turpentine to two of the 'alter. It is also excellent when used is an ointment for swelled heads or eyes, and is one of the best remedies for gapes, a few drops only being necessary for chicks. It will also prevent lice if freely used on the roosts and over •lie floor and walls of the poultry house.—Farmers* ficdaw.

MOVABLE CORN CRIB. kata ud Small Verntla Caaaot Attack It a Coatcata. One of the handiest things for the corn grower is a convenient place for the storage of corn for curing, when it is not to be sold andl hauled directly from the field. For several years the Massachusetts agricultural college at Amherst has used small corn cribs as illustrated herewith. They ere set up in any part of the field or together in rows. If corn is rotated on various fields the cribs ire carried on teams from the old to the new corn fie!4

MOVABLE CORN CRIB. whfn empty. The crib (a to b) is 12 feet long and (a to d) 72-3 feet high, feet wide (g to h) and 3*/j feet at the bottom (e to f). From a to i it is 5%feet, a to o 20 inches, e to d 6 feet and h to i 14 inches. The three floor frame lengthwise joists are of 4 by 4 inch material 12 feet long. wh^Ie the front, center and rear end cross pieces are of 4 by 6 inch stuff. Each house stands on posts, is strongly made and well shingled. The door occupies the entire front end, being square; slats arc placed across the door inside as the crib is filled and removed as eorn is taken out. It is best to invert a pan on top of each post before building or setting the crib on the posts. Rats and small vermin will then be unable to get from the ground into the crib, provided snow in winter is kept clear.—Albert Rising, in Farm and Home. FARM WATER SUPPLY. How to Cunitrnrt • Reservoir at • Moderate Coat. On every farm where a windmill is used the additional cost of storing water other than that required for stock is little, ami the expense of two or more windmills is less than the loss from drought. Where there is moderate rainfall the supply of moisture necessary to assist through a dry period is but little, and excellent results have been obtained by the use of large tanks, but a small reservoir can be constructed at a moderate cost. A tank ten feet high and ten feet in diameter holds 5,875 gallons of water; but as a reservoir can be provided to hold ten times that much at but little more expense the storage supply could be made ample. This does not imply that one is practicing irrigation, for to do so large storage reservoirs are necessary, but at a small cost the farmer can protect himself to a certain extent ngaiust drought. On fields of corn that have been grown by listing the centers between the rows were opened with a one-horse plow and water conducted so as to flow down the drains. Before the ends of the rows ure reached the ground becomes well saturated, and a small piece ttiay be irrigated each day. It must not be overlooked that the capacity of the tank does not limit the supply, as the pumps can furnish more w titer than the farmer may wish to use, and as a tank or reservoir may be drawn aff and filled several times during the season the amount of water used will be considerable. Attention is called ta this matter, as the cost is but little, and farmers will find it an advantage to experiment in that direction where it can conveniently be done.—Troy (X. Y.) Times.

HINTS FOR FARMERS. Sell direct to the consumer every iuie ycu can. The young man can never buy a farm cheaper than now. The crop of winter apples will be much less than last year. Corn stalks that grow unreasonably big are all stalk and no corn. Sorghum should never be planted until the soil is perfectly warm. Subsoiling means more rapid drainage and better storage for raiu. The farmer who plants more corn than he has teems to stir the soii is unwise. The red kaffir corn combines a large yield of fodder with the largest yield df grain. Heavy rains compact the soil and cultivation separates it so that it can absorb air. We see it stated that wood ashes and common salt mixed with water make a good cement. The most fertile soil on earth cannot giow crops without moisture to dissolve the food elements. The ohly way to tell if plaster will do land good is to try it. Plaster is very uncertain in its action. The.tomato worm has resumed business. Cut him in two with a pair of sheep sheers or scissors. If wheat and oats ground are harrowed immediately after harvest, the lots of moisture will be prevented, until the ground can be plowed. Five pails ot water are absorbed by one stalk of corn, if the roots can find the water, and they will penetrate far ani near to get it, if they can penetrate the soil*—Western Flowmdn. PstsiUklas Work W tni. Did you ever see a cabinetmaker finish a fine piece of furniture? When the material comes from the saw it is >mply rough lumber. When planed it is reasonably smooth, but far from being finished; much sandpapering, rubbing and polishing roust follow before the job is complete. The more work he puts on rhe better price he will receive for the article. So with the wheat field; the plow leaves the ground rough, aud there must follow mach planing, rubbing and polishing. The better finish we put on the more profit iu the crcp.— Agricultural Epitomiet.

LATE CYCLING APPLIANCES. In a recently patented bicycle brake k rod runs from the brake spoon up through the head of the machine, ending in a metal cap shaped like the upper side of the handle bar, on which it fits when forced down. Bran and a liquid* to moisten- it with are used to close punctures in a new pneumatic tire, the flakes of bran lying loose in the tire and effectually sealing an the interior any small hole through which air may leak. A new?/-designed trousers guard for bicycle riders is in three sections which slide over each other and can be drawn outward to form a circular clip when in use and pushed together until only one- j third size when closed. Elevated cycle tracks for use in large cities are formed of posts set m the ground to support a paved track and side guards, the invention being also intended for use in connection, with elevated railways. To prevent the stealing of bicycles a new lock is formed of a single piece of tubing serving as a1 strengthening brace for the frame, with a sliding bolt in one end, which fits between two teeth on the sprocket-wheel and a keyhole in the opposite end, in which the key is inserted to operate the bolt. Hill-climbing on a bicycle is made easier by a new attachment which consists of a toothed ratchet wheel placed on the hub of the front wheel with a chain geared to a wheel on-the handlebar to revolve by pulling up on the bar a short distance and then lowering it, the ratchet allowing a backward movement of the gear wheels and chain.

PEOPLE AND PLACES. An -unci* of William Dean, Howells lives near San Francisco and practices as a physician^ He has gained considerable reputation as a portrait sculptor. He is more than- 70 years old. A peculiar feature about Miss Ingelow’s life was that she never entered a theater and an equally remarkable one about herself was that she claimed that she could remember events in her life from the time she was 17 months old. Mr. Blackmore, the English novelist, has recently celebrated his seventyfirst birthday. George MacDonald is 72, George Meredith and Mrs. Oliphant are each 68. Miss Braddon is 59. Sir Walter Besant 58, Ouida 56, and William Black 55. Prince Alexander of Battenberg will spend his holidays at Osborne, where there are capital bicycling runs. The roads in the demesne are so well kept that it is delightful to ride on them, and it is possible to get a run of about seven, miles without leaving the royal estate or going over the same ground. There are also good lines of route all ove? the island. A London firm proposes to publish shortly a “Life of Sir Charles Tilston Bright.” the distinguished engineer and pioneer of electric telegraphy, whe was knighted when but 26 years of age for laying the first Atlantic coble. The work, compiled by a brother and son, is based largely on the diaries kept by Sir Charles Bright and reads like an autobiographical narrative of truly stirring events. It will be issued by subscription in two handsome volumes and the number printed will be strictly limited. THE REIGNING STYLES. Cotton crepe draperies in Persian patterns splashed with gold. Brilliant-red—eoquelicot and roi— satin waists, self-trimmed. Piece velvet for bias sashes with short ends held by a buckle. Pompadour hair rolls and odd shell combs under the same name. ^ G&uffred silk in curving cross effects in light and brillian-t shades. Silk mousseline scarfs edged with os-trich-feather trimming or marabout. Small fancy gold, silver, steel and enamel buckles for collars, belts, bows, etc. Shaded metallic-ribbon belts with gilt and turquoise, steel or enameled buckles. Tiny empire corsets of fancy silk scalloped and lace finished on the upper edge. Fall and winter blankets with borders of odd colors, as well as the standard shades.___ ,

THE MARKETS New Yokk. September 4. I*K CATTLE—NatlteSteers..• 4 40 IMS 32*4 COTTON—Middling. • *•,© 7* FLOUR-Winter Wheat. 8 55 © 5® WHEAT—No.2 Red. © 1 ** COKN-No. 2. © 3** Oats—No.2... © »» FORK—New Mess. 10 25 4*10 75 ST. LOUIS COTTON—Middling.i.. O 7*4 BEEVES—Steers... 5 25 <3 5 25 Cows and Heifers... 2 75 40 3 75 CALVES—(per bend)7 50 © 10 50 HOGS— Fair to Select... 3 75 © 4 50 SHEEP-Fair to Choice. 2 75 © 3 75 FLOCK—Patents. 4 #5 © 5 10 Clear and 'Straight... 3 00 © 4 75 WHEAT-No.2 Ked Winter... 97*4© 98 • OKN-No.2 Mixed... © 27* OATS—No. 8-..... .... © I** KYE—No.*. 46 © 40 TOBACCO—Lugs.. 3 00 © » 60 Leal Burley............. 4 50 12 00 HAY-Clear Timothy . 5 00 © 9 10 BUTTER—Chou-e Hairy. 13 © 15 EGGS— Fresh ... © 10*4 POKE-Standard (new)-- .... © 9 50 BACON—Clear Rib.. .... © 7 LAKH-Prune Steam..'.t .... © 4% CHICAGO CATTLE—Natl»• Steers..... .. 3 90 © 5 55 HOGS—Pair to Choice.. 3 90 © 4 # SHe.EP—Fair to Choice... 2 25 © 3® FLOUR—Winter Patents. 5 00 © 5 80S Spring Patents. 5 20 © 5 60 WHEAT-No. 2 Spring. 95 © No. 2 Ked (new). 95 © CORN-No. 2. 30\© OATS—No.2. © POKE—Meas (new).... . 5 90 © KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Native Steers. 3 75 © HOGS—A11 Grades. 3 90 © WHKAT-.No. 2 Hard. W © OATS—No. 2White .... 19 © CORN—No. 3. © NEW ORLEANS FLOUR—High Grade-.. 4 75 COKN-No. X... 38 OATS—Western. 25 HAY—Choice....... M 50 PO IK-OW Mess.. BACON—Side*... COTTON—Middling-.. 7 LOUISVILLE WHEAT—No. 2 Red. 96 © 97*4 CORN-Not Mixed. 31*4© 32* OATS -No. 2 Mixed. 19*4® 21* PORK-New Mess. 9 37*© » 00 BACON—dear Rib.. .. 7)*© T% COTTON—Middling. 7*4® TH

THE HEAT PLAQUE OF AUGUST, 1896. Mrs. Pinkham's Explanation of the Unusual Ntuxlber of Prostrations Among Women. The great heat plague of August, 1896, was not without its lesson. One could not fail to notice in the long lists of the dead throughout this country, that so many of <j the victims were women in their thirties, ».

women between forty-hve and fifty. The women who succumbed to the protracted heat were women whose energies were exhausted by sufferings peculiar to i their sex; women who, taking no thought j of themselves, or who, attaching ho im- j portance to first symptoms, allowed their * female system to become run down.

constipation, capricious appetite, restlessness, tj forebodings of evil, vertigo, languor, and weak- ' ness, especially in the morning, an itching sensation which suddenly attacks one at

night, or whenever the blood becomes overheated, are all warnings. Don’t wait > too long to build up your strength, that is now a positive necessity l Lydia E. ^ Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has specific curative powers. You cannot do better

man to commence a course ol this grand ' ' • medielne. By the neglect of first symptoms yon will see by the following letter what terrible ■iitTni iaj — came to Mrs. Craiir, and how she was cured i

“ I have taken Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable pound and think it is the best medicine for the world. I was so weuk and nervous that 1 I could not live from one day to the next. 1 ^ lapsus uteri and leucorrhoea and thought X ing into consumption. 1 would get so faint I I would die. I had dragging pains in bv ing sensation down to my feet, and so many ^feelings. People said that I looked like 'woman. Doctors tried to cure me, but failed. I L_ given up when I heard of the Pinkham medicine. £ got a bottle. I did not have much faith in it, thought I would try it, anu it made a new wonsv

me. I wish 1 could get every lady m the land to try it, for it did for me whafc. doctors could not do.”—Mrs. Sallie Craig*, Baker’s Landing, Pa,

A Rnlued Reputation. “And you say,” said the Sympathetic Person, looking down from the elevation of the doorstep upon the latest applicant for suburban charity, “that you have honestly done your best to find employment?” \ “I have, madam.” j “You have a regular vocation?” s' “I was formerly an expressman.** “In what citv?” “In Boston.* “But, surely, at this season of the year you ought to find work enough as au expressman in a large city like Boston.” “Madam, you do not know Boston. You have heard of the Bacchante? Yes? Then it is only necessary to tell you that I am one of the expressmen who carried her to the station.” ■ “ But I do not see—” “The fact became generally known, madam. From that moment I Have eeasea to be respectable. There is no one in lioston who will now employ me.”—Boston Budget. Fits stopped free and permanently cured. No fits after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Kestorer. Free $2 trial bottle & treatise. Dr. Kline, 933 Arch at, Phila., Pa. A Sundayschool Interruption. — Clergyman—“St. Paul made one error, my dear children.” Juvenile—“Did it let in a run?** —Truth. I use Piso's Cure for Consumption both in my family and practice. Dr.TI. W. Pattereon, Inkster, Mich., Nov. 5, ISM. Nothing makes a woman so mad as for another woman whom she does not like to make a dress like hers.—Washington Democrat. To Core a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. We never value money as much as we do right after having spent it foolishly.—Washington Democrat. Hall’a Catarrh Caro la a Constitutional Cure. Price 75a. Nobody is too poor to have lace curtains. —Washington Democrat.

Where He Agreed with Bh ' 4‘What l What!” The irate old man choked with is tion— ou want to steal mv child faun i le of my daughter? Why surf—* rage got the upper hand ef lif iped some m<we— il is no name for you!” e young man was perfectly -j.ju bet it isn't,” lie said, slowly* * , __ anybody says otherwise there’s luiiktelh> trouble.” jin the face of such sublime gall1 tlje old man do?—Puck. Great minds may run in the sane riel, but there is plenty of room lor us Washington Democrat. Mere Bundles of Merten. Some peevish, querulous people mere bundles of nerves. The least agitates their sensoriuins and railtes tempers. No doubt they are born may not their nervousness be if not entirely relieved? Un^_ and with llostetter's Stomach’Bitten. __ cultivating their digestion, and rimaas more complete assimilation of the feed an this admirable corrective, they will uyaience a speedy and very perceptible nen’e quietude. Dyspepsia, constipation and rheumatism yield he 1 Bitters. Autobiographical.— The self-made wet was speaking, lie said—“Aly father was a raiser of hogs. There was a large family mt * us”—and then his voice was drownedhy tW applause.—Life. CHEAP EXCURSION RATES WEST' Via Barltnffllngtea One fare plus 12.00 foe the Nebraska. Kansas. St. Paul, Black Hills, certain portions of orado and Utah. September 7th, Sisk, ber 5th and 19th. Ask your ticket additional information. L. W. 1 General Passenger Agent, St_ A Natural Inference.—"Did] a yon hen ----- . —id whew showed him the twins?” “No: wha it?” “He said: ‘There! Mamina in gettin* bargains again.’ ’’-Tit-Bits. Whimpleton’s litie boy sau

The Blue and the Gray. Both men and women are apt to feel a little blue, when the gray hairs begin to show. It's a very natural feeling. In the normal condition of things gray hairs belong to advanced age. They have no business whitening the head of man or woman, who has not begun to go i down the slope of life. As a matter of fact, the hair turns gray regardless of age, or of life's seasons ; sometimes it is whitened by sickness, but more often from lack of care. When the hair fades or turns gray there's no need to resort to hair dyes. The normal color of the hair is restored and retained by the use of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. Ayer’s CuSebook. •* a story of cares tokl by the cared." too pages, free. J. C. Ayer Ca, Lovell, Mass.

LAZY LIVER! YOU KNOW WELL ENOUGH HOW YOU FEEL WHEN YOUR LIVER DON’T ACT. Bile collects in the blood, bowels become constipated, and jots* whole system is poisoned. . ■ A lazy liver is an invitation for a thousand pains and aches to come and dwell with you. Your life becomes one Ion; me 1 mar «f imtabilitv. desoondenev and bad feeKn?. WWWPWIWi

ACT DIRECTLY, and m aFECULIARLY HAPPY MANNER on the liver and bowels; cleansing, purifying, revitalizing ercry portion of the liver, driving all the We from the blood, as is soon »UJiU UMM

shown by INCREASED APPETITE tor food, power to digest ami strength to throw off .the waste* _ _ all drl:3oi5T5. MAKE YOUR LIVER LIVELY I IOC , 1JC., 30c. il BEFORE THE DAY OF SAPOLIO THEY USED TO SAY "WOMAN’S WORK IS NEVER DONE.”