Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 October 1894 — Page 7

TAKE STEPS in time, if you are a suf- * fererfrom that scourge y of humanity known as consumption, and you can be cured. There is ( the evidence of \ hundreds of liv- * ing witnesses to the fact that, in CffiS&ff all its early jMBJv w f stages, consump-—"L//7 tion is a curable </ f f disease. Not *— I every case, but a I Lz** large percentage of I f />, cases, and we believe, I L MH// Ur) fully 98 per cent, are <T cured by Dr. Pierce’s y Ut'r / '' / ' npr Golden Medical Discovery, even after the disease has progressed so far*as to induce repeated bleedings from the lungs, severe lingering cough with copious expectoration (including tubercular matter), great loss of flesh and extreme emaciation and weakness. Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases to us cured by “Golden Med- * ical Discovery ’ ’ were genuine cases of that dread and fatal disease ? You need not take our word for it. They have, in nearly every been so pronounced by the best s, who have no interest whatever in misrepresenting them, and who were often strongly prejudiced and advised against « trial of “Golden Medical Discovery,” but who have been forced to confess that it surpasses, in curative power over this fatal malady, all other medicines with which they are acquainted. Nasty codliver oil and its filthy “emulsions” and mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these oases and had either utterly failed to bene-, fit, or had only seemed to benefit a little for a short time. Extract of malt, whiskey, and various preparations of the hypophosphites had also been faithfully tned in vain. The photographs of a large number of those cured of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal catarrh and kindred maladies, have been . skillfully reproduced in a book of 160 pages which will be mailed to you, on receipt of address and six cents in stamps. You can then write to those who have been cured and profit by their experience. Address for book, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.

' ® Wn) Lydia 1/A E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compand CURES ALL Ailments of Women. It will entirety cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements of the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. Jt has cured more cases of Leucorrhcea, than any remedy the world has over known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus, in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. That * Bearing-down Feeling causing pain, weight, and backache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the laws that govern the female system, and is as harmless as water. All druggist, sell It. Address In confidence, Lidia E. Pinkham Mku. Co., Lynn, Mass! Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills, 25 cents.

W. L. Douclas IS THE BEST. V'u* WlllU& NO squeaking. CORDOVAN, ENCH&ENAMELLED CALF. 3.50 POLICE. 3 Soles. ? s,o>2. WORKINGMEN - EXTRA FINE. w ’* ’.V- 5 Boys’SchoolShqes. LADIES’ SEND FOR CATALOGUE W«L.*DOUGLAS, iROCKTON, MASS. t You can nave money by wenrinc the W. U. Douclas 83.00 Shoe. Been use, we are the largest manufacturers o| this gradoof shoes lathe world, and guarantee theli value by stamping the name and price on th« ■bottom, which protect you against high prices an j the middleman's promts. Our shoes equal custonj work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities We bars thorn sold everywhere at lower prices fo| the valuKgtven than any other make. Take no sub stltute. It your dealer cannot supply you, we con. WALTM BAKER & CO? '... The Largest Manufacturers of j GA pure, high grade ZACOCOAS AND CHOCOLATES ’EJtew f^URh 011 on^nent ’ h ave received JSgsP SPECIAL AND HIGHEST AWARDS Jffl OM al ? t^>eir at || CALIFORNIA I I VI midwinter exposition. fffl i B s3™' BREAKFAST COCOA, ■mS ‘ Which, unlike the Dutch Process. fifjM ' IMf • cl »‘ ind a without the u»eof Alkaliea or other Chemicals or Dyesjsabao* .pure Bad soluble, aad costs lass than one cent a cup. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER ftCtTDORCHESTER, MASS. Ely’s Cream * QUICKLY CUKES SOLD IN HEADOI I'prTmo'Tso'centßr ] Applyßalm Intoeach nostril. ELY BIWS.. WVVHrronßt..N.Y.BE«tt™«nD ß rfS ■Alcaic IiTMU JOHN W.SIOBKH, iBCLIUODVInII Washington, I».< . ■ Syr.lu hurt war, ISuyudlcatlugclaims, atty aluce. .fiiiis For for GENERAL BLACKING IS UNEQUALLED. Has An annual Sale of 3.000 tons. a»we also manufacture ths _ Morse BKiT®a Uht«,Mms.

FARMS AND FARMERS.

THE CARE OF COW 3. . “Milk fever,” said Ex-Gov. W. D. Hoard to a New Jersey audience, “is » nervous disease. lam satisfied of that from the fact that it follows nervous channels straight through. Around the great mammary gland, and encircling it, is that wonderful network of nerves called sympathetic plexus, passing thence,to the uterus and thence to the spine and the brain; mammary organs, the genital organs and the brain are tied together. Milk fever also ensues, if at all, within three or four days after calving. - I believe the disease starts from a chill, and whenever this chill ensues, from any cause whatsoever, this disease then follows, goes steadily on through this sympathetic plexus until it reaches the spinal marrow. The moment that, spinal marrow is reached paralysis ensues and the cow drops. The cow begins to show signs of mental distubance and insanity before this, and she beats her head and plunges about, and by and by swings her head to one side and dies the victim of her motherhood, perhaps, but in nine times out of ten the victim of stupidity. I have never seen the disease cured, but I have prevented hundreds of cases. I lost a fine cow from the fact that rules I had laid down were violated. I was at that time in the executive chair, and my son telegraphed me: ‘Bonny Beil has a beautiful calf.’ I dropped the State of Wisconsin at once and went home instantly and asked ‘Where is the cow?’ They told me she was down in the pasture, and my heart sank at once. It was in the latter part of May; she was out of doors when she calved, and had been allowed to stay out. We went to her and she was lying down with the calf by her side, and when I got within twenty rods of her I said: ‘She is a dead cow.’ My son laughed at me —boys think the old man don’t know anything, you know. He said: ‘Why, father, you have such notions!’ ‘I suppose I have,’ 1 said, ‘but they cost me something. Step off twenty feet from the cow, and I will show you whether she will have milk fever. Take up the calf and carry it twenty feet.’ I knew that the first effect of milk fever was a shortened range of vision. He took up the calf and stepped off twenty feet, and the cow commenced to turn around and look for her calf. T worked with her all the afternoon and all the night, and the next day she died. Had I been at home I would have seen that her bowels were relaxed, and about a week before she was due to calve I would have put her in a box stall and had her curried as regularly as possible. And right here I want to tell you the value of curry-combing. When you buy a strange cow and bring her home she will be homesick, and you will often lose a portion of her milk. Let the man who is to milk her curry her once or twice a day, and she will say, ‘I have made something by the swap.’ It is one of the best things in the world to relieve the cow of that sense of homesickness, of lonesomeness. I would commence to curry her at once, as by tlrat means she is more contented in the stall; thus I control her mental condition. I. would guard her against a chill, and see that she was not nervously excited. She is given plenty of water and a little food, but only as niubh as would have been easily digested. J. give her oat meal in warm water — all she wants. She is thirsty and feverish and needs moisture, and plenty of it. 1 handle a cow in that way, and I never had a single case of milk fever before. It is a terrible disease. It takers away our wives as well as our . cows, with equal violence, and brings sadness to many a household on account of disregard of the laws that govern maternity.”

MOISTKRE FOIL PLANTS. Plants use large amounts of water, but will not thrive if there is too much of it in the soil. If a plentiful supply of water can be provided, care must be exercised in securing thorough drainage, as an excess of moisture prevents the admission of air into the soil and keeps the ground cold. It is gradually becoming the system to store water and supply it as required, and when this method becomes well known the grower will have control of the necessary moisture and will double his crops. A soil should not contain over 70 per cent, of moisture. There are many ways of irrigating, depending on the kinds of soil. The usual method, on small farms, is Jo connect a hose with the tank and the water to the rows, allowing it> to flow along the rows until the ground is well saturated. On large plots the wafer is conducted to a large ditch, made with a one-horse plow, with smaller ditches leading thereupon down the rows. The details cannot be well described in a short article, but there are works on the subject which should be studied. It may be mentioned, however, that when tho soil is given large applications of fertilizer, agd the moisture applied judiciously, so as not to exceed 70 per cent, of saturation, enormous crops can be grown of all kinds, and the returns will largely exceed the outlay, as well as greatly increase the profits.

APPLES FOB WINTER. Apples should not be difficult to keep during winter. One is not sufficient care in harvesting

the crop. Be sure the apples have matured, and then pick them from the tree in a manner to avoid bruising them in the least. Apples that drop to the ground will rot. as they become injured by the fall. Handle them carefully; select only sound specimens, pack them in.barrels and store them in a cool place. USES OF WEEDS. Weeds are the crop of nature, and are intended to cover the soil and protect it from loss from the influence of the direct rays of the sun. Shading the soil increases fertility by preventing loss. The weeds also assist in reducing the inert matter of the soil to a soluble condition. If plowed under they return this mat- - ter to the soil in fine condition for the next crop. IT IS FAT THAT PAYS. The greatest gain in the weight of cattle is due to increase of fat only. It is when an animal is growing that it gains in weight rapidly. Young steers, from one to two years old, have been known to gain over two pounds a day for months. This is due to the fact that the bones, muscles and all other portions of the body add to the weight as well as does the fat. A large animal that is poor can weigh more than a smaller one that is fat, but it is fat that gives appearance and quality from the buyer’s point of view.

TERSELY PUT.

Apples are usually budded about September, the exact time depending on the state of the bark. It must lift easily, to admit the bud of the better kind, which is to be inserted. The pig that has been on clover in summer, and the hog that has roots and clover hay in the winter, makes larger profits than the grain-eating pig and hog. In the selection of the dairy cows an experienced dairyman advises to beware of small eaters, weakly built frames and fleshy animals, or a tendency to fatten readily, if well fed. The National Dairyman says great care is needed in keeping dairy salt. It absorbs and retains odors as readily as the milk or, cream, and should always be kept in a place free from all bad odors.

The Progressive Bee-Keeper contains the advice of getting all the white honey stored in the sections, and extracting all the dark fall honey, as the latter brings about as much in the market when extracted as it would in the comb. There is a vast difference in the manner of placing anything in the market. A beekeeper says: I have seen choice honey put up in such a slovenly manner as to sell for two cents less than the market price. Again, I have seen honey no better put up in a neat and tasty way so as to bring a cent more than the going price. Those who keep young stock alive through the winter on rough fodder for the sake of the growth they will make next summer should be able to see that the summer growth could be added just as well and much cheaper if the animals _ had been kept growing all winter. You cannot starve a young animal and make it up afterward, If you are supplying “fresh eggs” to customers and happen to find a new nest in the straw pile, or elsewhere, do not put the contents with the fggs you sell. Keep them for home Sse, and you can “try them’’ when breaking. People that buy fresh eggs of private parties do not expect to have to “try ’ them before using—that is why they pay the extra price.

THE WOMEN KILLED HIM.

Colonel Bain Anderson's Theory for the Defeat of Breckinridge. Inter Ocean. Colonel Bain Anderson, of Kentucky, who is now in the city on his way to New York, was asked last night what effect he thought the defeat of Breckinridge would have in his State. The old gentlemen looked about, found a cuspidor, spat in it, pulled his beard, and replied: “I gad, sah, it will teach an important lesson, that even in Kentucky it is becoming dangerous to get caught.” “Bid you oppose the colonel?” “Who, me? Well, I didn’t until a few weeks ago. Upto that time I was strong in favor of him.” “And some new proof changed your mind, eh?” “Well.! can’t say that it was a proof. I will say, though, that it was stronger than proof. It was a woman. You see, lam a widower, without children, without moral responsibilities of any sort, and I didn’t see why Bill shouldn’t go to Congress about as long as he wanted to; but I gad sah, a woman that lives near Paris changed my mind. For a long time I have been after her to marry me. and she has been putting me off. But a few weeks ago I met her and she told me that if I would work against the colonel she would marry me as soon as the election was over. And then I took off my coat and fit Billy about as hard as man was ever fit. I gad, sah, it was the women of my State that killed the colonel.”

The new two-cent internal revenue stamp, which under the new tariff law must be attached to every pack of playing cards is only for temporary use, until the regular stamp is ready for issue. It therefore promises to be exceedingly rare, and the stamp coHteetors are all buying packs of playing in order to get one.

An E?ormous Palace.

The huge winter palace at St Petersburg, with the exception of the Vatican and Versailles, is the largest palace in the world intended for a residence, and, though’ tasteless and rococo, has a certain grandeur from its immensity. Like all the Russian palaces, the Winter Palace is a mixture of splendor and shabbiness, luxury and discomfort. In going over it visitors see everything gorgeously adapted for state ceremonials, but wonder how and where the imperial family can live. The whole of the splendid interior was consumed by tire in 1837. but speedily restored. It is said that not less than 6.0C0 persons have fre quently had a habitation in the Winter Palace. Mi discussing lager beer a German critU Insists that there is in-the German vocabulary no such word as lager, which he believes to be purely a Viennese expression. There is also very little lager about a great deal of beer that is nut nut.

When Nature

Neetls assistance it may be best to render ; it promptly, but one should remember to use even the most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy is the Svrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company. The Inan who stays up all night must have his day dreams, if he is in any way clever as a dreamer.

$100. Reward. $100.

The renders of the this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure ia the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the. foundation of the disease, andgivingthepatent strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that ft fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo O tST"SoId by all druggists, 7oc,

“Will your daughter take Latin this year?” Mother—“No, there is no danger of that. We had her vaccinated.” , 8 _____ Mrs. Wnslow’s SOOTHING SYRUP for Chil Iren teething, softens the gum. reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle.

Excursions to the West, Northwest and Southwest via Pennsylvania Line.

On Sept. 25th and Oct. Oth excursion tickrts will be sold at ticket offices on the Pennsylvania Lines to points in Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Indian Territory, lowa, Kansas, Manitoba, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico. North Dakota. Oklahoma Territo y, South Dakota, Texas,Utah and Wyoming. T ckets will be good returning twenty-one days from date of sale. For details apply to nearest Pennsylvania Line Ticket Agent.

More Michigan Excursions via Pennsylvania Lines.

On October 17th and November 14th Homeseekers'Excursion Tickets to points in Michigan will be sold at reduced rates via Pennsylvania Lines, good returning twenty c’avs from late of sale. For details apply to nearest Pennsylvania Line Ticket Agent. Biiggins says he doesn ’t see how anything can run faster for having a rheumatic tire, lie can’t.

Everybody Is Going South Now-a-days.

The only section of the country where the farmershave made any money the past year is the South. If you wish to change you should go down now and see for yourself. The Louisville & Nashville Railroad and connections will sell tickets to all points South for all t rains of October 2, November 6, and Dec embers, at one fare for the round trip. Ask your ticket agent about it, and if he cannot sell you exeur Sion tickets write toC. F. Atmore, General Pasenger Agent, Louisville. Ky., or Geo. L. Cross,N. W. P. A., Chicago, 111.

Sure Cure for Sprain, Bruise or Kurt I . ST. JACOBS OIL You’ll Use it Always for a Like Mishap. z ZZZZZZZ z ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ< | Weather Forecast for October, 5 s * BY PERMISSION OF THE S s .» REV. IRL R. HICKS (The Storm Prophet). s S Copyrighted by tkc Word & Work: Pub. Co., St. Louis, Mo. S OCTOBER, 1894. — October begins bright and cool, growing warmer in west, with S secondary storms crossing from and to 4th. - Frosty nights will follow. Another warm s S storm wave will start from west about sth, bringing rain along its path to the east S S during 6th to xoth. Gold and frost will attend clearing conditions following. The * S 13th, 14th, are reactionary storm dates,with Full Moon 14th. Gold and frosty weather s S will follow storm flurries, about these dates. The 18th to 23rd is a storm period affected s S by both Venus and Mercury. Storms on lakes and seas will be dangerous. This is J S especially true of the reactionary storms on and touching the 25th, 26th. Venus on J S 31st, Mercury on 26th, New Moon 28th, and “Vulcan” 30th, compose a combination that ? S renders the closing days of the month precarious on land and sea. Rain, turning to 5 S leet and snow, attended by dangerous gales on the waters. Cold and freezing follow | The DR. J. H. McLEAN s Alrnanao for tlxe Year 1895, $ s The only one containing the wonderful predictions of the S | REV. IRL R. HICKS, (The Storm Prophet) s S IS NOW READY. S If your dealer has not got one, send a two cent stamp to \ ' TUxe X>x. T. SC. MEDICINE CO., of St. Z.c-<aio, S | and you will receive one by return maiL * Health Forecast for October. 5 N N S This is the season to clean np the system by using 5 Dr. J. H. McLEAN’S Liver and Kidney Balm. £ S No time should be lost in taking it. There are no diseases so insidious as kidney v S troubles. Keep warm. Now is the time to put on heavier clothing. Follow up the ? S good work on the liver and kidneys by a course of § Dr. J. H. McLEAN’S Strengthening Cordial and Blood Purifier. N z ZZZZZZZZZ/A z Z/ZZZ/ZZZZZ/Z/ZZZ z Z/ZZZZZZZ/ZZZZZZZZZZZ/ZZZ<Z z ZZZZZZZZZ/Z>Z/ZZ/ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZzi

For Twenty Years Scott’s Emulsion has been endorsed by physicians of the whole world. There is no secret about its ingredients. Physicians prescribe Scott’s Emulsion because they know what great nourishing and curative properties it contains. They know it is what it is represented to be ; namely, a perfect emulsion of the best Norway Codliver Oil with the hypophosphites of lime and soda. For Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consumption, Scrofula, Anaemia, Weak Babies, Thin Children, Buckets, Marasmus, Loss of Flesh, General Debility, and all conditions of Wasting. The only genuine Scott’s Emulsion is put in salmoncolored wrapper. Refuse inferior substitutes! » Send for pamphlet on Scot ft Emnltion. FREE. \ Scott A. Gowns, N. Y. All Drugglete. 50 cents and *l.

Highest of all in. Leaven mg Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Repo* Absolutely pure

DEATH OF THE LAST MAN.

Scientists Tell of the Ways in Which Human Life May Expire. The St. Louis Republic has collected the opinions of a number of scientists concernihg the probably fate of the last man. They say: “The surface of the earth is slowly but surely diminishing; all the landed portion will be drowned. “The ice is gradually accumlating at the north pole and slowly melting away at the south. Eventually the earth’s center of gravity will suddenly change, and the last man will be crushed by the rush of movables that will quickly glide over its surface. “There is a retarding medium in space causing a gradual loss of velocityfin all of the planets. The earth when her revolutions finally cease, will be drawn-nearer and hearer to the sun until the last man will be literally roasted off the face of the CBiT*tll “Begining with the year 3000 A. D. humanity will commence to retrogade, and by the end of the year 1000000 men swill be no longer and have no more intelligency than a plant louse. In that event there will be no ‘last man.’ “The sun’s fires will grad ally burn out and the temperature cool; in consequence the earth’s glacial zones will enlarge, driving shivering humanity towards the equator. At last the habitable space wiU lessen to nothing, and overcrowded human ity will be frozen in a heap.” Whun In the crowded thoroughfare* of city life you see young maidens with cheeks fair as country roses, give them credit for using Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. The hello girl at the telephone exchange has much to answer for.

Swelling in the Neck £ “Large knots of scrofula nature came on my wife's neck for four years. When she had taken two bottles of Hood's Sarsapariila, we could see the swelling was going down. Now the glands have assumed their natural appearance and she is Entirely Fre® from this trouble. Our children were afflicted with spells of malaria every fall but this season they have been taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and It has purified their blood, built them up. and they have been free from all illness this winter.” E. M. BLACKBURN, Oregon, Mo. Hood’s Pills are purely vegetable, and <lo not pain, purge or gripe. Sold by all druggists I.N.U 40—94 tNDPLS

Millions for Defense Against the inroads of that subtle, lurking foe to human health, malaria, had been expended uselessly when Hostetter's Stomach Bitters appeared upon the scene and demonstrated It* power as a preventive and curative of the dreaded scourge. When the “gold fever" raged in 1849 in California, malaria was contemporaneous with it at the “diggings,” and wrought dreadful havoc among the miners. Then and ' subsequently on the Isthmus of Panama, and wherever in the etropics matarial disease Is most virulent, the Bitters became the recognized safeguard. For the effects of exposure and fatigue, miasma-poisoned air and water, sea sickness, and all disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels, the Bitters affords prompt relief. Invalids of all sorts wiU find it fully adequate to their needs. It is rather a serious matter when ths sailor “throws his girl over.” To th* South at Low Rate* via PennsylvaLine*. The last of the series of eheap excursions over the Pennsylvania Lines to enable lan. I seekers and others to visit Alabama. Florida, Georgia. Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi. North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee have been fixed for Oct. 2, Nov. 6 and Dec. 4, also to points in the above States, except Kentucky, on October 9th. Tickets will be sold to all applicants at principal ticket offices of the Pennsylvania Lines, and will be good returning twenty days from date of sale. THE OWEN hd ELECTRIC RFIT SJ fa L I Dade Mark—Dr. A. Owen The only scientific and practical Electric Belt made, for general use, having batteries that generate a strong current of Electricity that 1* under perfect control and can be applied to any nart or the body for the cure of NERVOUS DISEASES Thousands of people suffer from a variety of Nervous Diseases, such as Seminal Weakness, Impotency, Lost Manhood, etc., that the old modes of treatment fall to euro. There is a loss of nerve force or power that cannot be restored by any medical treatment, and any doctor who would try to accomplish this by any kind of drugs is pursuing a dangerous practice. Properly treated, these diseases can be POSITIVELY CURED Electricity, as applied by the Owen Electric Belt and Suspensory, will most assuredly do so. It is the only known power that will supply what is lacking, namely, nerve force or power. Impart tone and vigor to the organs and arouse to healthy action the whole nervous system. It will most assuredly cure WITHOUT MEDICINE Varicocele, Nervous Prostration, Rheumatism, Sciatica, Kidney Disease, Lumbago, Lame Back and Dyspepsia. OUR LARGE ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE Contains fullest information, list of diseases, v '• ) 2£ At&tjJfeo.. cnt Belts and Appliances, prices, sworn testimonials portraits of people who h ave been cured. etc.,eto. “ Published in English, German, Swedish, and Norwegian languages. Thl* valuable catalogue will be sent to any address on receipt of six cents postage. The Owen Electric Belt and Appliance Co. main ornca and only factory, The Owen Electric Belt Bldg., 201 to 211 State Street, CHICAGO, ILL. The Largest Electric Belt Establishment in the World MENTION TMIB BABEB*

©vi^txtwywvwwvsv*************®, ;! WBSTjgW k ;! INTERNATIONAL ’ DICTIONARY ; Hiiccetworcfthe ' J _ ’’Unabridged.” [ ‘ A Dictionary of < o English, [ SLp.yWftl E Geography, ; > eSEmvrrMl i Biography, < > ; c fiction, Etc.' [ ” SfsndardoftlieV. S.S Tot'**/ J Gov’t Printing Office,the, > ' > UA.SupremeConrtand, > t of nearly oil the School-, ’ , books. i ; ! Hon. D. J. Brewer,': , > Justice of Hie V. fi., i , supreme Court, writes:, ' , I commend it to an as, 1 1 i tbfl one fi reat standard authority. <; < 'Send for free pamphlet containing specimen pages. < 1 1 G.& C. MEKRIA3I CO., Publishers,! > < fSpringSeld, Mass., V.S.A. 5 ar- Do not buy reprints of ancient editions. ; > n ops y « cured many thousand cases pronounced bopaeiw. From llrst dosa tydtptoms rayidy disappear, and in ten days fully two-thirds of all symptoms are removed. BOOK of testlmonlas of miraculous urea tent FBEK. Ten Days Treatment Fnrnisbtl Free by Mail DH. 11. U.OKIEN « HONS. HFKCIAI.ISTS, Atlanta. Ga. MYKStWIFF cABBOT BEI HOW YOB 00 IT AND PAY FREIGHT. fc€3p r<< MMßGSrSLfl- Botn 9 drawer wUmI or oak &» YrTprovod High Am Bl*;wMwln t Kaebtaw fiuubad, nickai glated, adapted te Uckß . J heavy work; wcaraotdod for 10 Toara) wkh LNr TrR a atoaatlc Bobbia Wiador, lklPTbrMdte« CyttoJwSSw** Opt t|i W g Noodlo aad a csAploae O of BU*I JUfbaealsj shipped aay where Mt • M IHy’e Trial. No bdoow required fas advanea. HpMOaOw tease. World’s Ft tar Medal awarded atachiae aad attach ■seats. Bey from factory sod sa«a dealert aad agent's profits. EDEC Thio Out aad Bead to-dar for ®arblae or large froa F ntt eauhffoo, teotimoabb aad G!;m twee es the World’s Fair. OXFORD Bf G. CO. 313 WsbuM An, CHICAGO,ILL. CALIFORNIA Weekly Overland Parties— Personally Oonducted—ln New Pullman UpholstcreilTourKt Sleeping Cars, without change, leave Chi. every Thursday for all points on the Paclnc i'oast For particulars address TODSOH a CO.. 195 South Clark St.. Chicles. INDIANAPOLIS BLSINKSS UNIVEUSITY Business. Short hand. Penmanship and Prepar atory School. Expenses low; graduates assisted to positions; 45th year begins Sept. 3. Ask for catalogue and specimens penmanship. Address 10 WhenJirk. E. J. HEEB, Sly ELECTRIC BELT sent an TRIAL TTT) TNTN Ln. Judd.r.Dctroit.Mich. WantM«nt» £ XLXx&U