Pike County Democrat, Volume 30, Number 9, Petersburg, Pike County, 7 July 1899 — Page 7

A GOOD FLOOD GATE. . S» It Wm Comtractcd Three Year* Ac* aad la Still Reported la Es> oelleat Condition. Hie flood fence or gate shown here^Yfith is os good a one for ordinary / creaks as can be built. One I con* structed over three years ago on a particularly vicious little creek is in as good condition as when first built. Two good-sized posts will be needed, the length depending on the nature of the bottom. If sandy or gravelly six feet is none too deep to set them. If the bottom is soapstone or shale, very hard, four feet will be deep enough if care is taken to prevent the swirl of •water from cutting the posts out. I dig the holes in hard places by using dynamite. Bore or drill a hole within

c' FLOOD GATE IN POSITION. a foot of the depth post hole is wanted, charge with iya pounds of 40 per cent, dynamite. If you do not understand using dynamite, get some one who does to shoot for you, as this will make the hole under water without any trouble, and much quicker than one can dig it in soft soil with a spade. The holes around the posts should be filled with bow'lders tamped in solidly, using large ones on top. Hare your blacksmith make four irons as shown in the upper part of illustration and at a, from old wagon tires. For rods I used old*, buggy axels, the shoulders holding them in place nicely. I find six poles make a good height for the gate and are about all one can get on the tael without haying it made longer. I have seen this gate made by boring holes in the poles to slip over axel, I >but I prefer having the smith make ! clevises, b b, etc., from old buggy tires long enough to reach up on poles a foot with holes for spikes; give generous" room between end of pale and rod so the ehd of the top poles may be put'on the ground at d without cramping. Space the poles with wooden pump piping or blocks of ■wood bored—these must be put on before spiking the stirrups fast, or use wire (e), as shown in cut.—Orange Judd Farmer. HOT WEATHER SERMON. Kinety Per Cent, ot Sommer Discomfort Is Doe Directly to One’s Imagination. A great deal of discom fort that comes : with hot w’eather is in reality iinagin- j ary. We worry about the hot wave i - and think about the burning temper- j ature so much that we imagine it is I _• much more uncomfortable than il real- \ v ly is.

io begin with, we should eat according to the weather. Oreal foods and fruit for breakfast and vegetables eggs and milk make a good variey from which summer foods may be selected. The man who fills up on steak or roast beef or meat of any kind is only building a fire by which he himself is roasted. The drinking of ice water is an- I other way to make the weather seem j hotter. Drink lemonade, if you will, or root beer, or mildly acid drinks of any kind that are wholesome, but do not drink ice water if you would'lie comfortable while worldng in the sun, and preserve good health. When the weather is extremely hot and you have become very warm from work, about the best way to get cool quickly and safely is to dip the hands and arms half way to. the elbow in a pail of water fresh from the well. The hands should not be held in the water constantly, but dipped :in and out, leaving them in about half a minute at a time. A delightful sense of coolness soon comes over the "body and such a cool hand and wrist bath is very refreshing. The best way to combat hot weather Is to accept the fact that it is hot and take it calmly. We must endure it whether we worry or not, and if we must be in the sunshine it will not cool the air a bit to get into a Stew over the heat. Daily baths, 'plenty of sleep, not too much meat and little thinking about how uncomfortable we may be will help amazingly.—Farmers’ Voice. Beaatr u Well a* Profit. I think many people fail to obtain pleasure in cultivating their gardens because they regard- their plants only from & business standpoint, and do not appreciate them as objects of beauty. As long as it costs but little, let us cultivate the love for the beautiful, or the esthetic side of our nature. While perhaps the most of us work our farms and gardens for the {tecuniary profit, yet we may often, vyhen planting for profit, so plan that it will he ornamental in appearance. We shall get more enjoyment from our work, and our life will be better for having cultivated a taste for the beautiful and attractive in nature.- -Michigan Farmer. Secret of a Good Road A road is maintained The cheapest and best, When its base is well drained And its top is well dressed. —Good Roads.

HIGH-PRICED FRUITS Tker A*c the Revolt •( Careful Plant* tag auA Cultivation and Hat ’ •f Chance. Every fawner who can get the highpriced fruits to market is sure to make h success of orcharding and gardening. To do this it is necessary to till the orchards early and continuously. It is not chance that brings the best fruits into bearing early, but good handling of the trees and intelligent foresight. To get high prices for fruit the tilling' must continue throughout the whole season, even after the fruits have been harvested, for then it is necessary to prepare for the next crop. Many are not willing to pay this price for good fruit, but they cannbt be had in any other way. In planting and cultivating an orchard this object should be kept steadily in mind. If it is for profit, methods of culture and harvesting must be followed that will give the best results. There are too many orchards of a medium class in the country. They produce an indifferent crop of fruit any time through the season, and usually the crop is reudy for harvesting when the markets are glutted, and prices very low. It is much better to raise the fruits that will come in a little earlier or a little later. Ifow to* do this is an important question that must be deeided variously in different sections. I should divide my trees and vines into three general classes, and cultivate' each one differently. First, I should have the early bearing varieties. Of these I should select the1 earliest marketable kind, and give them all the forcing possible. A few days may make all the difference in the world. I should try to force them so as to get ahead of everyone else who had trees of the same variety. Second, I should have a class of tfees that ripened the fruits in the middle of the season, but they should be selected with reference to the size and quality of the fruit. I would limit the number to increase the size and appearance of the fruits. Fancy fruits will bring good prices

when the market is nooaea wun eneap grades. Third, I should make a list of late bearing trees and vines. These, like the early varieties, should produce marketable fruits. ^ I should endeavor to prolong and postpone their season of bearing as mueh as possible.—S. W. Chambers, in Journal of Agriculture. APPEARANCES COUNT. The Mpn Who Packs His Fruit Attractively la the M»« W1»Q Makea Fate Profits, When there is anything like a full irop of fruits it often occurs that the markets become overstocked and the price drops so low as to give little or ao profit to the owner. At the same ame large quantities oHruit are being lold every day. In a majority of eases it is the better appearing fruit—that which is put up in neat, convenient packages and that presents an inviting ipperance—that sells first and best. The inferior is whaft is left, if any. The grower who is careless in picking ind sorting his fruit, who pays but little attention to the kind or appearance of the package in which it is sent to market, is the worst sufferer. It is this ;lass of- fruit that is passed by when there is an oversupply. When there is a scarcity and the demand exceeds the supply almost any kind of fruit will sell at some price. But with plenty of good fruit the poor grade won’t sell at a low price, if it is sold at all. In all cases it pays when picking the fruit to sort carefully, grade according to quality, and with small fruits especially it pays in addition to send" to market in attractive packages. The difference in the cost is small, especially as compared with the better opportunities of selling, and the higher price it is possible to realize, and this is more important in a year when there is a good supply of fruit than at any other time, although a difference in favor of the better fruit is made at all times. But usually it is only when there is a Scarcity that poor fruit is marketable. The grower who carefully sorts his fruit and takes pains in sending to market in a way that will be attractive to the customer not only realizes good prices, but does good missionary work in encouraging the consumption of fruit.—Farmers’ Voice. USEFUL GARDEN CRATE. Indispensable Where Vegetables or Fruits Have to Be Carried from » Garden to Cellar. A useful garden crate, handy fot gathering vegetables, fruits, etc., and carrying to house or cellar is shown herewith. Such a crate, being broad

HANDY GARDEN CRATE. and long, will hold a large quantity of fruit and still permit of very shallow piling, which affords the best of ventilation. Sides and ends are of seven-eighth-inch boards, with slats of one-half-inch stuff.—Farm and Home. The American Gold Finch. The American goldfinch or wild canary is as beautiful as it is useful and as a weed destroyer has few equals. It confines its attention very largely to one family of plants, the compositae, uud is especially fond of wild lettuce, thistles, wild sunflower and rag-weed. It is so often seen gracefully poised upon thistles that it is commonly called the thistle bird. It is also very fond at cultivated sunflower seeds.

PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL. A student boasted mice that he »>ad studied in a very short time a treatise on anatomy, but, said he, MI skipped the arteries.” Without in any way ignoring the social demands Miss Elise W. Clews, daughter of the New York banker, has found time to win the degree of doctor of philosophy at Columbia college. Dr. Hartland Law, of San Francisco, has declared in a public lecture delivered there that women ought to propose marriage as well as men. He says this would result in 50 per cent*, more marriages. A young woman whose leg was broken in an accident on the Orleans railroad in France has received $8,000 damages on the ground “that her value ! from the matrimonial standpoint had I deteriorated” through the damage done I to her. | • A paper published in Paris recently | contained the following unique advertisement: “A young roan of agreeable i presence, and desirous of getting mar- ; ried, would like to make the acquaint- | anee of an aged and experienced gentleI man who could dissuade him from tak- | ing the fatal step.” Frank Buckland. the naturalist, when I collecting information about White, of ! Selborne, met with an old lady who pro- | fessed to have seen him, “a white-haired old gent whg used to walk about his garden with a crocodile.” “Wasn’t it a tortoise?” suggested Buckland. Theold I lady admitted it might have beep “one i of them furren birds.” Henry Probasco, of Cincinnati, is a millionaire who has for some j'cars acted on the Carnegie saying that to die rich is to die disgraced. He made a fortune in the hardware business, and has expended some $700,000, in philanthropic and charitable activities. He once lived in a fine and pretentious residence, but has now come down td a small house which he rents. A story at the expense of the colonial secretary is going the rounds. Mr. Chamberlain, when a little boy, was playing one day with his sister at a game of “battles”—each child having a regiment of toy soldiers and a popgun to fire at the enemy. The little girl’s sojdiers went down quickly under the brother’s heavy firing, and he was proclaimed the victor. Thoughtful child, he had glued his men to the floor!

HIS DREAM JAGS. liter Leave the Same Effects In the Morning: na Real Ones, "I am one of the people who ought never to toueh a drop' of liquor,” said the only man of the group who had not yet told a story. “It doesn’t bother me at „the time, but the after-effects are terrible. The least indulgence disorders my nerves, upsets my stomach and makes me actually ill for days. As my physician puts it, 1 am constitutionally intolerant of alcohol, aud, this fact dawning on me half a dozen years ago, 1 determined never to taste it under any circumstances. Since then, entirely against my will and without the slightest desire to do so, I have gone on three terrific sprees, and suffered such torments afterward that it unnerves me even to think about them. It happened, each time, in the most peculiar way. | Fully-two years had elapsed since I had taken a drink, when one night 1 dreamed that I was with a party of four gentlemen in a large room, apparently jmrt of a restaurant. Why we had assembled I could not tell, but it all seemed perfectly natural, as things do in dreams. We were celebrating some great event and were in jubilant spirits. As we talked and joked, the drinks \Vent round and round. I remembered my failing, but the occasion seemed to justify a lapse, and I cast caution to the winds. I conversed with strange brilliancv. and so did mv comnanions. Odp

of them was an elocutionist, and recited threadbare old poems in a way that made them new and thrilling. Another sang ballads in a wonderful tenor voice, sweet as distant bells. 1 | myself tossed off a shower of sparkling l epigrams and said things worthy of Shakespeare. All the while we drank. As the hours passed my comrades one by one succumbed and slid under the table. At last the elocutionist and I were left alone, and he was just beginuing Marc Antony’s oration when 1 , awoke. It was daybreak. For a mo- | ment 1 lay still, collecting my thoughts and smiling at my fantastic vision; | then I essayed to get up. The instant I stirred 1 was aware of a splitting head- ; ache. My eyes throbbed like wounds; | I had a dark-brown taste in my mouth, 1 and a hideous, indescribable nausea. In brief, the old symptoms were all on hand. It took me a week to recover, and my doctor upbraided me contin- | unlly. 1 did not dare to tell him the | truth, for fear he’d think 1 was crazy. Since then 1 have bad two other dream ja^s, just like the first—same room, same company, same finale. I dread them unspeakably. Otherwise I am a teetotaler.”—>i. O. Times-Democrat. Stole a Fortune In Diamond!. A hole in the right heel enabled a negro workman in the diamond fields of South Africa to secrete and steal gems to the value of $273,000. These I he expressed in small parcels of fruits to a cousin in King William Town, in the extreme south of Africa, from which place both recently departed for England.—Chicago Inter Ocean.

ON WIFE-BEATING. 4m ArkaaM* Police Jutlee’i mmotV■ Ipoa SeMtcieiic aa Ok" aoxloaa Offender. In fining a man $100 for whipping hi* r.ife Judge Freer, of Fort Smith, discoursed as follows: “I am opposed to wife-beating. I have no respect for any man who will beat a woman. I am not like the St. Louis judge who saw extenuating circumstances in a wife-beating case, A man has no right to whip his wife. That is not what he married her for. No, sir, he married her to love and protect her. Doesn’t she see that buttons are put on his clothes? Of course she does. Doesn’t she see that his cellar button doesn’t roll under the dresser, and if it does, doesn’t she get down on her knees and. fish it out for him ? Of course she does? Doesn’t she cock his meals for him, and have themV'^afiy for him when he comes home, and doesn’t she sit up sewing for his children or stay all night watching them when they are sick? Of course she does. And what has she done to be beaten by him? Nothing at all. Very often she makes the living and he gets mad because she doesn’t make enough to enable him to wear silk ties and patent leather pumps and fill himself t > the | brim every night and roll home and tumble .into bed and snore off his d runk like a hog. “I tell you what'it is, I can ex end no mercy to the man who gets d unk and makes a beast of himself. I can have some sympathy for the man who steals, because he is often compelled to dp it. I have a feeling for the nan who asks for ‘hand-me-outs’ or who has to sleep in box ears, but when it comes to a wife-beater, I am lost to all sense of mercy. Say, do you know hat I never had a man before me charged with wife-beating that thatman did not have an ugly mug on him? Well, that’s a fact. It takes some ’considerable nerve to sandbag a man or to hold a man up, but what nerve does it t ake to beat a poor, weak woman? Bah! I get hot all over when I have one of those cases before me. I feel just like taking the man by the nape of the neck and kicking him clean out of to’tvn. I run up against a good many hard

propositions while sitting on the bench, but the hardest is the wife-beater. I am not going to have any mercy on that class of people. I am going to drive the;, sword of justice into them deep and break it eft. I am going to lam bast them with all my might and main. I aria going to salt al,l the freshness out of them, and if they do not get what they deserve it will be the fault of the law and not of me. “I will fine that fellow $100. I am glad of it. I would have been just twice as glad if I had been able to fine him twice as much. The man who beats his wife wants to get out of the jurisdic - tion of the Fort Smith police court, at least while I am on the bench, if he doesn’t want to get into the consomme away over his head. I stand squarely on that platform, gentlemen, and there is no backwater which will rim me off.*’ —Memphis Commercial Appeal. COERCING A RELUCTANT HEN. At First She Was Averse to Raisins a Brood, Bnt Now She’s “Settins” AH Rlsht. Down in Missouri lives a boy who likes pets. He began with a pair of pigeons that he got in a trade for a dog that he had traded a knife for. His parents allowed him to keep the pigeons until they multiplied »so that there were pigeons all over the place. Then he sold the pigeons and bought a goat that ate the clothes off the line every Monday. He was compelled to dispose of it, and traded it for a pair of game chickens. In a week there wasn’t a rooster left in the neighborhood; the game rooster had killed

them all. His father took the game chickens for a ride one night and lost them three miles out in the country. Three days afterward the boy brought them home, but he never told anyone how he got them. And so he fought for his pets one by one, his dog was lost, his lamb stolen, his rabbits ran away. He has come down to one old hen. Recently he bought a “settin’ ” of eggs. A “settin* ” of eggs is as many as a motherly hen can hatch into chicks. He had made up his mind that his hen was lonely and needed company, and what so companionable as a batch of iittle chicks to scratch for? The hen, however, had different views, and didn’t want to sit on the eggs. But he was not a boy to be stumped by a hen—he had borne too many losses already. He put the eggs in a box, in which he had made a nest of hay. Then he planted the indignant hen on them, put a board in which he had bored a lot of airholes over her and left her to come to terms. That night his big brother kicked off the box and set the h en free. The next morning the boy put her back, and put some bricks on the board, for he thought she had raised the board and released herself. The brother kicked both bricks and board off that night. The boy replaced hen and board again, and again they were kicked off. Then he got a board and made a hole in it for the hen to poke he head through, and nailed the board to the box. Once a day he ti kes the board off and chases the lien around the yard for exercise, and twice a day he carries food and water to her. What’s the use of trying to discourage a boy like that?—Kansas City Star.

Ac Was Patient. Rosy McShane was a fairly good maid-of-all-work, but, like most of her kind, she was woefully slaxdc in caripg for her own room. * Her mistress was ill for two or three weeks, and on recovering .*he went up to ltosy’s room, and found it in a state of dirt and disorder beyond description. Very indignant, she called Rosy, and said: •“Rosy, I don’t see how yo u can stand It to have your room like this!” “Ah, thin, ma’am, but 1 was iver a patient person.”—Harper’s Bazar. „ Rapid Transit for Microbes. Mrs. Wiggins—John, I don’t know * what we are to do. Charley got to playj Ing around the telephone to-d«y, and I actually called up those Higgins young | opes, and talked with them at least five j minutes before I found it out. Wiggins—Well, what’s wrong in that? | “What’s wrong in it! Why, the Hig- ; ginses are just coming down with the measles, and here I’ve been working , and watching all the time our children are awake Jo keep them from getting j exposed.”-=Up to Date. Klsslna Hands Forbidden. It has hitherto* been the custom of the | children attending the public schools i in Austria and Hungary to kiss the hands of their teachers on arrival and ; departure. This has now been forbidf den by a ukase just issued by the im- ! perial board of education, which bases J its decision on a declaration of the sanitary council.—Chicago Tri bune. ? Strong; Evidence. j “There has evidently been a reform in our city administration, despitethe talk of corruption that we hear.” | “What leads you to think so?” | “I saw six n5en working on the street this morning, and there was only one i boss to look after them.” — Chicago I Evening News. Not an Enthusiast. “How are you going to get out of going to war, Shakey? You’re young, ■ strpng, healthy and active.” “That’s right. But I’m not a saft, man i to send. I might do an immense amount | of damage. All battleships look alike I to me.”—Detroit Free Press. V*

\ the Markets. New York, July CATTLE—Native Steers ..$4 90 $ COTTON—Middling .. 6 FLOUR—Winter Wheat I.. 3 40 6) 4 WHEAT-No. 2 Red .. 79*3' CORN—No. 2 .. vi OATS-No. 2 ..... H FORK—New Mess . 8 75 to 9 ST. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling . @ BEEVES—Steers . 3 50 CP Cows and Heifers. 2 50 (•« CALVES—(per 100) .. 4 50 fi> HOGS—Fair to Choice...... 3 45 SHEEP—Fair to Choice .. 3 75 pLOUR—Patents (new) ... 3 65 Clear and Straight. 3 00 WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter 74\# CORN—No. 2 .. OATS-No. 2 .. G> RYE—No. 2 .. .... @ TOBACCO-Lugs .. 3 00 to 8 Leaf Burley ... 4 50 to 12 HAY—Clear Timothy ...... 9 00 to 12 EGGS—Fresh ................ .... to! BUTTER—Choice Dairy .. 12 @ FORK—StandardMess(new) .... to 0 BACON—Clear Rit> ......... .... to LARD—Prime Steam . to CHICAGO. CATTLE—Native Steers . HOGS-Fair to Choice .... SHEEP—Fair to Choice .. FLOUR—Winter Patents . 3 65 # Spring Patents .. 3 40 to WHEAT—No. 2 Spring No. 2 Red. CORN—No. 2 Mixed ... OATS—No. 2 .. PORK—Mess (new) . 7 40 to 8 KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Native Steers .. 4 40 5 HOGS—All Grades —1. 3 40 to 3 WHEAT-No. 2 red . 69 <S OATS—No. 2 White . to CORN—No. 2 . 32}&g) NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR—High Grade . 3 60 fp 4 CORN-No. 2 .. 43Vatf OATS—Western .. 32 to HAY—Choice .. 16 00 @10 PORK—Standard Mess .... 8 75 @ 9 BACON—Sides .. 5%<@ COTTON—Middling . LOUISVILLE. WHEAT-No. 2 Red. 76 *) CORN—No. 2 Mixed.. .16^ ' OATS—No. 2 Mixed . 26 to FORK-New Mess . 8 75 <@ 9 BACON—Clear Ribu . 4 00 C 3 50 49 3 25 to What a Little Faith Did FOR MRS. ROCKWELL.

[LETTER TO MSS. PINKHAM NO. 69,884] “I was a great sufferer from female weakness and had no strength. It was impossible for me to attend to my household duties. I had tried everything and many doctors, but found no relief. “ My sister advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, which I did; before using all of one bottle I felt better. I kept on with it and to my great surprise I am cured. All who suffer from female complaints should give it a trial.'’—Mbs. Rockwell, 1209 S. Division St., Grand Rapids, Mich. From a Grateful Newark Woman. “When I wrote to you I was very sick, had not been well for two years. The doctors did not seem to help me, and one said I could not live three months. I had womb trouble, falling, ulcers, kidney and bladder trouble. There seemed to be snch a drawing and burning pain in my bowels that I could not rest anywhere. After using Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash and following your advice, I feel well again and stronger than ever. My bowels feel as if they had been made over new. With many thanks for your help, I remain, L. G., 74 Ann St., Newark, N. J.”

— Lane's Family Medtclne. Move* the bowels each day. In onJar to be healthy this is necessary. Acta j the liver and kidneys, ache. Price 25 and 50c. The pleasure in talking too much m short hved as that of eating heavily on weak stomach.—Atchison Glebe. Hall's Catarrh Car* la taken Internally. Price 75c. Man once ate the cream, hut now they cremate the man.—Chicago I>aily News.

An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., illustrate the value of obtaining- the liquid laxative principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing- to the taste and acceptable to: the system. It is the one perfect strengthening laxative, cleansing the sv t *:a effectually, dispelling colds, head^iea and fever* gently yet promptly t nd enabling one to Overcome habitual constipation per^ manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and substance, and its acting on the kidneys, liver and. bowels, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. - In the process of manufacturing fig* are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plant*, by a method known to thp= California Fig Syrup Co. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package, CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP COC BAN FELANOT JCO, CAL.

Aid* Digestion. Regulate* the Bowel* *1 Teething Easy TKETHIS & Believes the Bowel Trouble* of Children of Any Age nod Costs Only » Cents. Ask Your Druggist for it. If not kept by drugs! to nell *5 cento to C. J. MOFFETT, M. B ■ »T. lOt l*. MO. BAD BLOOD "CASCARETS do nil claimed for then* i"'1 »truly wonderful medicine. I bare often wuhed for a medicine pleasant to take and at task found it in CascaretfcStnca taking them my blood has been purified antf my complexion has ImProved wonderfully and I feel much better In every **k Mrs. Siuji K. Bl'bUARS. Luttreil.xexuu _ Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. D* Good, Merer Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c. ioZ ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... S*”1* T tout; Ii« Ynk. SB tnteed by alt dray-' • Tobacco Habit' S0-T0-BSCs?",*“,j gists to The Benefits __J>f an accurate and correctly made CTCU1 CHAIN can not be usea ured in words. Don** worry along with a cheap caain. when for Hl.GO issjssgz “ PEAdo m » sent on receipt of price, postage paid. Stater ' of links and wicith, whesWr S*K. % or 6-16 eenteca CLINTON CHAtN WORKS* Id* *eetk Clinton street. Cklean. I HEADERS OP THIS FAPEH DESIRING TO BUT AST THINS ADVERTISED in its columns SHOULD INSIST UPO. HAVING WHAT THET ASK FOR. REFUSING ALL SUBSTITUTES O l IMITATIONS. •• Tv. I ANY EX-UNION SOLDIERS Ml - are entitled to atditional lanas, and assign th*ir right. We will give full* -- information Upon ai olication. Address,. reo. f.Campbell A Co.. Feller, ms Bldg.. St. Louis.Vo EDUCATIONAL. NEW HAMPSHIRE MILITARY ^ CADEMT A. N. K.-B 1768 (THEN WHITING TO ADVERTISER* please state that yoa aw the Advert la a* meat la this paper.

MISS ILLS I They Act Directly GnMfle the Stomach. ON E BOSE ■*i:i do more good than 30 doses so-called Little Liver Pills. Send lor sample*. 1SCHUHDRUC CO, Cairo* UK

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