Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 May 1894 — Page 7
- z'TX- A BAD tempex e'ZZtfc f and a bad. liver—--I you’ll always find ’ffiggglS Jy \ v yA Make a note of this, \ (j and see if it isn’t /I ‘ iX, -/z true,—'; '.. • > \ 1 I Now, why not give “ v* Vj’tv iAA y our naturally sun- _. 'yf $/< || 'fts !I J’disposition a ’ Z TZ All At/ chance? Dr. Pierce’s .x' Tl_ -z Pleasant Pel lets ■will do it for you. They correct your disordered liver, clear up your system, and make life look different to you. They do it in a pleasant way, too. They’re the smallest, the easiest to take, and the most natural remedy. Keep a vial of these tiny Pellets in your vest-pocket. They’ll give you a permanent cure for Biliousness, .Jaundice, Constipation, Indigestion, Sick or Bilious Headaches, and every derangement of the liver, stomach 1 and bowels. —r~ The ma kers are so sure you’ll be satisfied that they’ll agree, if you’re not, to return the money. For twenty-five years these Pellets have * sold on their merit. Why buy other pills, ■when P. P. P. are “guaranteed” ? There’s nothing likely to be ‘ ‘ just as good.” Lydia IZr\ // E. ' Pinkham’s Vegetable v Gjmpoimd cures irregularity, / Suppressed or Painful Menstruations, Weak, ness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility, Kidney Complaints in ■either sex. Every time it will relieve Backache, Faintness, Extreme Lassitude, “ dpn’tcare” and “want to be left alone ” fee 1 ing, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy, or the “blues.” These are Bure indications of Female Weakness, some ■derangement of the Uterus, or Womb Troubles. Every woman, married or single, should own and read “ Woman’s Beauty, Peril, Duty,” an illustrated book of 30 pages, containing important information that every woman should know about herself. We send it free to any reader of this paper. All druggista sell the Pinkham medicines. Address in confidence, LYDIA E. I’inkham Med. Co., Lynn, Mass,
Lydia E. Pinkham's Liver Pills, 25 cents. . The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY, HONALO 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 rases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He Las now in his « possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for bcok. A benefit is always experienced from 'tile first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. \Vhen 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 tlie 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 ft. •Dose, one tablespoonfulj,n water at bedtime. Sold hv -ili Driigrists. \
Young Motbers! We Ofi'er Tou a Remedy which Inouret Safety to Life of Mother and Child. "MOTHER’S FRIEND" Robo Confinement of its Rain, Horror andßitk. Afterurfngonebottloof “Mother’e Friend” I Buttered but little pain, and did not experience that wenkue.a afterward usual In such cases.—Mrs. Asnib Gxqx, Lamar, Mo., Jon. 15th, 1891. _ _p«nt by express, charge* prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle. Book to Mothers mailed free. BHADFIIXB REGULATOR CO., J ATLANTA, GA, BOLD B’Z ALL DBUaaiSTa.
II ill II I with Veg et n ble JJ XL (JX U X Remedies. Have cured many thousand eases pronounced bopeoss. From first dose symptoms rayidy dis ippear, and in ten days lully two-thirds o? all symptoms are removed. BOOK <»t testimonias of miraculous urea lent HIEE. Ten Davs Treatment Famished Free by Mail OR. H.'ll. GREEN & SONS. SPECIALISTS, Atlanta, Ga. 1 Ann nna acres of land l.vVv.vUv for sale by the Saint Paul I -r— i & DuLuth Railhoad Company in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circulars. They willbe sent to you FREK. Address, HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, St. Paul, Minn. B Indianapolis w USINESS UNIVERSITY Sending College ofßnilucu A Shortband. Bryant & Stratton. Established 1850. When Block. Elevator day and night. 10,000 former students holding paying positions. Widely known. Our endorsement pasa. port to best situations. Great railroad, manufacturing •nd commercial center. Cheap hoarding. Large facui- & Individual instruction by experts. Easy payments, ter now. Write today for Elegant Descriptive Catsus and P-inor .• srldress pvr° v. OR BORN. [ELY'S CREAM BALM CURES iFl7i (PRICESO CENTS, ALL DRUGGISTsfcL&Iffi
r. . - - - They Got It Too Early. Tho friends of nn Indiana man whc died three months ago chipped in for a monument, and just got it the other day ami rubb; J up the eulogies.on hh virtues and integrity when he was discovered to be an SIB,O K) defaulter an<; to have been a bigamist. It is well enough to wait a year or two on those things.—M Quid. It is said that the natural gas of Indiana has been the means of bringing into that state more than $20,030,001) in oa pital and fully 10,000 mechanics.
FARMS AND FARMERS.
For the Bee-Keeper. | In making purchases of bees many ire apt to select the light and bright zolored Italians. With these we have never had as good success as with the darker strains. The best comb honey producers that we have found have been the hybrids or halfbloods. The only drawback attending these is their vindictiveness. They are tnore vicious and will not bear the handling that the full bloods will bear. We have had pure Italians that were exceedingly pentie, unless pinched or injured in some way. These will always defend their hives successfully from the moths. No one will be troubled with these pests, who will handle the Italians, This is a decided advantage and will justify every one to invest in the Italians. They are equal, if not superior to the blacks, as honey gatherers. They stick better to the combs and are in every way easier handled. The finding of a black queen is in many instances quite an undertaking. This is generally an easy task with the pure Italians. Let no apiarist be found napping, and the honey flow strike him unprepared. Now is the time ; ' awake from all lethargy and indolence, and engage in active preparation for handling swarms with dispatch. Set everything in readiness that can be done at present. Have hives made and painted, honey racks on hand and shipping cases ready to receive the full sections. If you have not a hiving box already, get one made at once. You can make it yourself. Get four boards of light’lumber, the lighter and thinner the better, eighteen inches long and six inches wide. Make them into a box, put one end in, and let the other lie open. Bore auger holes in all the sides and end piece, say one inch size. The more holes the better. Put this box on the end of a light pole, some twelve or fifteen feet long and you have a good hiving box. — Wm.Ballantine in American Farmer, Spring Management of Pigs.
tn the spring after grass and clover starts is one of the bery best reasons for securing a good growth at a low cost. This holds good with all classes of stock, and pigs are no exception. One of the principal advantages that pigs farrowed in the spring have over those that come at almost any other season is that with plenty of grass and clover the sows are able to supply the pigs with more and better milk, while as soon as the pigs learn to eat they will make a cheaper and better growth than at any other season. It is usually best to keep the sows in reasonably close quarters until the pigs have made a sufficient growth to run about well, which will usually be by the time they are, ton days old. Then they can be turned out and given the range of a good pasture. The feeding of the‘sow must be liberal and the material must be of an excellent nature in order to enable her to supply her pigs with plenty of milk. With both the suckling sows and growing pigs, clover is a better feed than grain, and while a very fair growth can be secured with grain or clover alone, in nearly all cases a sufficiently better gain can be secured by feeding grain in addition to make it profitable. But the grain must be of a character well adapted to the securing a good development of bone and muscle rather than fat. No one material is a complete ration, that is, it will not supply all of the materials needed to maintain a good growth at the lowest cost, and for this reason a combination of materials will in nearly all cases give the best results. But a different ration is needed for growing animals from wha.t should be given when fattening for market. So that bran and oil meal, ground oats or ship stuff will make a better feed, both for the - sow that is suckling a litter of pigs and growing pigs. Whenever the pigs begin to show a disposition to eat, a place should be provided where they can eat to themselves, and they should be fed regularly, increasing the rations as their growth and condition demand. But in the spring is not only a trood time to secure a good growth for young pigs, but it is also one of the best seasons to fatten, and especially when the pigs have been kept in a good, thriving condition during the winter. If thrifty with good pasturage, a month or six weeks of a fattening ration will be all that is needed to make ready for market, and this can be done at less ebst than if grain alone is depended upon.
Change of Food. Spring is the best season of the year for eggs and chicks, provided the hens are fed properly. Many people continue at this season the food given during the winter and then wonder why the birds do not lay. They might as well continue their fires and heavy clothing and feel surprised that they are disinclined to work. The cure is to be fouid in a change of diet. During the winter carbonaceous foods, as fat producers, were needed to sustain the heat of the body, but with the coming of warm weather this kind of flood should be greatly curtailed and nitrogenous
foods supplied in its place. A combination of the itfro is essential, as the carbonaceous food supplies the yolk of the egg and the nitrogenous the albumen. ' .............. Two of the most valuable of the nitrogenous foods are meat and bone. Fat meat must be avoided, as only the 1 einFwill aceuniplish the purpose intended, and this must be used carefully, as a hen will grow fat much quicker on meat than on corn. If skillfully fed the results are most satisfactory. An Unwelcome Insect Stranger. The United States Department of Agriculture will soon issue,an emergenoybulletintreating of the San Jose scale of California, sometimes called the pernicious scale (Aspidiotus Perniciosus Comstock). This insect, which is the most serious insect enemy which the fruit growers in California have to contend against, first made its appearance in the Eastern States last year, when it was found in the vicinity of Charlottesburg, Va., and the State Boardof Agriculture of Virginia with the help of the United States Department of Agriculture, has jus* completed a series of fumigating experiments which it is hoped have practically destroyed it in that locality. It has just been discovered in two other Eastern localities, at De Funiak Springs, Fla, / and at Riverside. Charles county, Md. In the latter locality it has severely injured an orchard of 300 peach and apple trees. How the insect was introduced into these three localities is not yet known, but it was probably brought upon nursery stock imported from California, and sold by Eastern nurserymen. The seriousness of this condition of affairs can hardly be exaggerated, and active measures will at once be taken to destroy the insect in all localities where it is found. It become? at once a matter of the
utmost importance to ascertain whether the insect is not present at other points hitherto unsuspected. The United States Department of Agriculture urges upon all fruitgrowers the importance of making immediate examinations of their orchards to ascertain whether or not this insect has made its appearance. The insect itself is a small, flat, round scale, a little lighter in color than, the bark of the tree, and will be found most abundantly upon the younger limbs and twigs. It is at this season of the year about oneand there is in the middle of each scale a small, elevated, shiny, blackish, rounded point./ Sometimes the center of the scale appears yellowish. The wood underneath the scale is apt to be discolored and somewhat purplish. When the insect is abundant the bark is completely hidden by a close layer of these scales, which are then hardly distinguishable to the naked eye, and give the appearance of a slight discoloration or a slight roughening of the bark. No other scale upon apple, pear, peach, cherry or plum, possesses-these characteristics, and the insect ought, therefore, to be readily distinguished when present. ■ ' - Fruit growers finding this scale in their orchards should at once notify the department and sene, specimens. The emergency bulletin, which will give a full account of the insect, together with the best means to be used against it, will be sent to all applicants as soon as published.
Just What He Needed.
From the Scotchman.
An old woman of a thrifty turn of mind lives in a village far away from any town. Some time ago her husband lay very ill and the doctor had said he had not more than a week to live. The old lady had to go to town to have her husband’s medicine made up, and thinking it would "save her a second long journey, she took the opportunity of buying the cake and wine for the apparently inevitable funeral. On her return home the dying husband in terrogated her thus: “What did you get in th’ toon, ’umman?” “I got yer medicine made up.” “An’ what else?” inquired the invalid. “Weel,” hesitatingly, “as it’s sae far to toon, I thocht I micht as weel buy the cake and wine for the funeral.” “Gie’s a taste, lass.” She cut a piece of cake and gave him a glass of wine. He liked them so much that he asked for more, and finally consuming all the cake and wine he —recovered.
The Mild-Mannered Man.
Indianapolis Journal. The mild-mannered man tried, for a.few moments to transfix a waiter with his glittering eye, but his hypnotizer seemed to be a little out of order, and finally he had to beckon to the menial, Iwho softly approached. “Excuse me," said the man, “but do you use gas or coal out in the kitchen?’’ < ■— “Uses gasy” said the waiter. “It is paid for by-the year, ain’t it?” “B’lieve it is." “Don’t cost no more whether you burn a whole lot or just a little eh?” “list the same, san.” “Then since it won’t put the house to no 'extra expense, I wish you would bring me a cup of tea that really is hot. This here ain’t hardly got the frost thawed out of it.” A young man from Austin, Tex., representing the syndicate that wanted a carload of marriageable girls from Boston has gone to that city to urge the Mayor ‘to hurry up the consignment.
ASIDE from the fact that the l cheap baking powders contain alum, which causes indigestion and other serious ailments, their use is extravagant. It takes three pounds of the best of them to go as far as one pound of the Royal Baking Powder, because they are deficient in leavening I g as - ' There is both health and economy in the use of the Royal Baking Powder. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES, Aluminum cabs are to be tested in Paris. Every trade in China has its patron saint. Wife selling is still common in central Russia. In New Zealahd cats are used to destroy rabbits. Over 50,000,000 people speak the French language. A bushel of sweet potatoes yields a gallon of alcohol. Indians believe that mirages are caused by evil spirits. Many years ago, in Scotland, capital punishment was by drowning. Knives and forks were not in general use until the seventeenth century. The lakes in the Himalaya region of Thibet are the highest in the world. An international cat show has just closed a very successful season in London. England commands the gateways of many seas and most of the great gulfs of the world! A New York- dealer in men’s furnishing goods displays a sign reading ’‘Shirt Constructor.” It is believed that in the future hay will be so prepared that it will be fit for the food of man. A Liverpool clergyman preaches such drowsy sermons that lately his feet go to sleep while he is in the pulpit. Interest in the short story does not lessen, if the contents of the great magazines are an indication. In the four numbers of Harper’s Magazine afready published this year there have appeared twenty-six short stories, besides a farce by W. D. Howells, while six complete tales are announced for the May number, with the, first half of a two-part novelette. This ennmeration does not include the short stories with which the “Editor’s Drawer” in Harper’s is introduced, although they might with propriety be added to the list, si ce they have been contributed by such writers as Thomas Nelson Page, F. Bopkinson Smith, and Ruth McEnery Stuart Ninety short stories printed during a year by a single monthly magazine goes a long way toward showing that the branch of literature in which American writers have excelled is not yet a lost or an outgrown art.
In Olden Time
People overlooked the importance of permanently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient action, but now that it is generally known that Syrup of Figs will permanently Cure habitual constipation, well-in-formed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but finally impair the system.
He Gave ’Em Plain Talk.
A Rushville (Ind.) minister is said to have made the following remarks to his congregation in his Sunday evening sermon: “Before the stewards up the collection I would like to make a few remarks. There are over two hundred persons in this house, counting saints and sinners, straight and crooked, male and female, not including the crying babies. If each person here thinks my sermon worth the price of a glass of beer or a nickel cigar, five red cents or a dime, let them pay that amount. If each pays a nickel it will make a total of $lO this evening. This repeated every Sunday in the year would pay my salary. A sermon that is not worth a nickel is not worth coming to hear. A person who will beat the iSord, the preacher or a printer, is a goat, of odor the most odoriferous.”
Shiloh’s Consumptive Cure is sold on a guar antee. It cures Incipient Consumption. It is the best Cough Cure. 25 cents.so cents and 11.00
Why should officials spend thousands shooting dynamite balloons, when any ordinary teamster can draw rein?
To the Sailor a yacht is superb, but how much moi e lovely to the landsman are the rosy .hecks of y-i mg ladies who use Glenn’s Sul. piiur Soap
Did you ever notice how idiotic the smile of» pretty girl is—when it is directed to’vds some one else?
Rilling on the Cowcatcher.
“I have ridden on every conceivable part of a train that it is possible to ride on,” said Arthur L. James, a railroad man, to a St. Louis Globe-Democrat man, “but I don’t think I will try to ride on the cowcatcher of the locomotive again. I tried it once last summer, and that was enough for me. I thought I would ride there for a few miles just for the fun of the thing. Everything went all right for the first few miles, and we were going at a pretty lively clip, when, turning a curve, I beheld several cows standing in the middle of the track just ahead of us. There was no way for me, to escape from my position, sol just shut my eyes and held on. I’ll Bet a thousand thoughts flashed through my head in the few seconds it took for us to reach the spot where the cows were. I just got one glimpse of a huddled up figure before we struck them. Then there was a thud, and in an instant the front of the engine looked like a slaughter house. I was drenched with blood. How I escaped without being knocked off is a miracle. The engineer, at once stopped the train, and I was mighty glad to leave my perilous perch,. I changed my clothes fora pair of greasy overalls and a jumper that belonged to the fireman, and made the rest of my trip in the baggage car.”
The largest shark ever seen on the Pacific cbast was recently caught at Monterey, Cal. It is forty feet in length, and weighs about 50,000 pounds. Don’t drown sorrow in drink. Hang sorrow!
The Yellow Glow of the Horizon,
Painted on the sky by the setting sun, is beauti ful. Not so the"sallow saffron of a face tinged with bile. And oh! the unspeakable discomfort that bile in the wrong place produces. Twinges in the right side and under the right shoulder blade, nausea, vertigo, sick headache, constipation, faulty digestion. Not in an instant can the symptoms of biliousness be dispelled, but persistence in the use of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters will eradicate them, restore digestion and regularity of the bowels, and counteract tendencies to more aggravated complaints, which an interruption of these functions begets. Rheumatism, inactivity of the kidneys and bladder, neuralgia, and Inability to sleep are also remedied by this genial preventive and restorative of nerve fores and tranquility. As an antidote to the poison of malaria, it is unfailing and prompt. A wineglassful three times a day.
And now hens begin to cackle their tuneful lay. HALL’S CATARRH CURE Is a liquid and is taken Internally, and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. Sold by Druggists, 75c. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Proprs., Toledo, O. About the most thorough illustration of true philosophy is the English sparrow.
BIG SIXTH JUBILEE.
Annual Excursion to Seymour via Pennsylvania Lines. For the Big Sixth ahnual Jubilee special excursion tickets to Seymour will be sold Wednesday. June 6, for morning trains over the Pennsylvania Lines from Indianapolis, Louisville. Madison, Rushville and intermediate ticket stations; return coupons valid until June 7 inclusive. For time of trains and details sethandbills or apply to nearest Pennsylvania Line ticket agent. Van Bsaam—What quiet eyes Miss Manchester has! Shindiss—Yes; so widely different from her chin!
Free to Invalid Ladies.
A lady who suffered for years with uterine troubles, displacements, leucorruoea and other irregularities, found a safe and ample home treatment that completely cured her without the aid of physicians. She will send it free with full instructions how to use it to any suffering woman who will send her name and ad dress to Mrs. Rev. A. M. Turner, South Bend. Indiana.
An umbrella, like wine, must improve with age, for it is more serviceable when used up.
OT. JACOBS OIL cuß h E*“™ U PAINS ANO ACHES. r =J r^r^r =^ r If IS ESPECIALLY VALUABLE IN THE DR. TREATMENT OP ji _ Dropsy n H Aid PflFI S Bright’s Disease ' I j.ii.mcLAian t> WeakneS3 I b ■■■vat Calculus or Gravel ! I VFR -Retention of Urine i - ■■■ ■ w Incontinence of Urine n and Diseases of the Prostrate Gland k ifißiirv mill Irritation and Disease of Bladder ; KluNtY dALIvI Irritation and Disease of Kidneys HMANUFACTU«*O bt I • 1.00 BOTTLE Ca 1
QUEEN & CRESCENT ROUTE
To California, ‘‘The Ijind of Sunshine Fruit and Flower*.” The Midwinter Exposition, already much talked of. blds fair to rival the great fair that has just closed at Chicago. Not in size perhaps, out certainly so in originality, in richness, and in delighted visitors, who will unanimously agree that the Pacific Coast is worth many --4 hue and money spent to visit B. to its-return of deiLjhtfHL elirna-e. meHew sunlight, wondrous growth of vegetation, and the heretofore unheard of net-work of industries connected with fruit raising, and the shipping of the product. . ~ In order to give an opportunity for everybody to visit this wonder land during the Exposition, California rates via the Queen & Crescent Route have been reduced, and every one may find the cost of such a trip within his means. As for equipment. It is the only line by which you can travel from Cincinnati to San Francisco. absolutely without change. Tourist sleeping ears run every week through from Cincinnati to San Francisco. Solid vestibuled trains twice a day from Cincinnati to New Orleans, where connection is made with through trains and Pullman sleepers daily to California points. Through car service to either New Orleans or Shreveport making direct connection for Texas,' Mexico and California. From Louisville through trains make direct connection at Lexington with solid vestibuled service to New Orleans. Send to us for further particulars. Ask Agents for rates, schedules and other information, or address W. C, Rinearson, G. P. A., Cincinnati, O.
To the Mountains, Lakes and Seashore via Big Four Route.
The favorite tourist line to Put-in-Bay and all Lake Erie Islands via Sandusky. Lake Chautauqua, Niagara Falls, St. Lawrence River, Thousand Islands, Lake Champlain. Adlrondacks, Green and White Mountain, New England resorts. New York and Boston via Cleveland. Lake Shore. New York Central and Boston & Albany Railways. To the Lake regions of Wisconsin, lowa, and Minnesota via Chicago. To the cool resorts of Michigan via Benton Harbor. When you go on your summer vacation see that your ticket reads via the Big Four Route. E. O.McCormick, D. B. Martin, Pass. Traffic Man'g. ( Bass. & Tick. Agt.
CATARRH, HEADACHES, DISTRESS. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Brings Back an Appetite- ’ phi Mrs. Annie Egbert “For two years I have been in extreme misery with dizzy vomiting spells, catarrh and headaches, in constant pain. Distress after eating, cramps in the stomach, and serious female troubles added to my misery. Pains in my back and limbs affected me at times so I could hardly-walk. I had four doctors, but got Only Little Relief. I began with Hood's Sarsaparilla and the result has been wonderful. It has brought back an appetite and built up my system so that I can eat without distress. It has strengthened my Hood’s & Cures nerves, and together with Hood's Pills it has overcome my headache. In fact all my afflictions have been cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla and Hood s Pills." ANNIK EGB»RT. Wyaconda, Ma - Hood’s Pills assist digestion and curt headache. Sold by druggists. 22c. see how too do M 1 WIFE IT AND PAY FREIGHT. Boys our 2 drawer walnut or oak Iw IrflMV VrTprorM High Ana BfDforauwinf maehtM yT Andy tiuuhed, nickel plated,adapted tv light and henry work; guaranteed for 10 inn; with L Antonatie Bobbin Winder, flelf.Thnadlng CyU» rVTgjjbfl d *‘ r Heif-Setting Neodlo and » coinploto Q of Btoel A tUaJuMnU; shipped nay whero m T • SO Da/'a TtdaL No awnoy required La sdvsaoe. 15,000 aiwr !n nae. World’a Ff {r Medal awarded machine and attachments. Buy from factory and eave dealer’s and agent’* prolia. EDCE c nt Thio Oct and send to-day for machine or law free E nt t catalogue, teetlmonfale and Gllmnee* of the World’s Fair* OXFORD M F 6. CO. 34S Wtbuh Ars. CHICABOJLL INTERESTING TO MEN. Our medicine never fails to stop loss of vital ity effects,of youthful errors or excess. Renew, strength and courage. Invented by a specialist author and instructor on nervousness. Sent it plain package tor two dollars. S 8 AMICUS & CO., 17 Bond st,, New York city.
1J fa JfJcURED ~ ■ 3 B OR ■ NO PAY. KI-SOL-SE, An Infallible Cure for Epilepsy, Con ' vulsions and all falling diseases. Ths (A only remedy with a positive guarantee of no cure no pay. Call on or write IL KI-SOL-SEREMEDY CO , w 19 Virginia Ave.. Indianapolis. Ind Sendsl Kentucky Tobacco Co. OWENSBORO, KT. For Five Pounds Fine Kentucky Natural Leaf Tobacco. Traveling Salesman wanted in this Territory at once. —u ■as 8801/XMJOHN W.MORRIS, IICIVOIVIv Waalilngton, ».C. ■ 3yr a i a U»t war, 15 adj udlcaliug claim., atty sluee. mo Cni neo withMap.°t climate, *d«*nraj<X HJn I ULuLn old. and otuer roaourcey ft | Wash. addre«« E. s. GiIAHAM CO . Bi»otaac. . T.iyi (J 2 2-94 INDPLB CURES WHEltt ALL ELSE FAILS. „ Ed |£i Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use E 3 la time. Sold by druggists Z___®L
