Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 June 1896 — Page 3

Cost of Naval Vessels.

Possibly the following figures regarding the cost of some of the ships of the English navy tpay be surprising, and of Interest. Such a vessel as the Kamillas, a first class'battleship, costs about $4,350,000, excluding stores and guns. Of this amount the propelling and other machinery cost $510,000; hull and fittings, $2,827,000; gun mountings, torpedo carriages, gear, etc., $382,500; and armament, $375,000. The hull, etc., of one of their torpedo boat destroyers costs about $50,000, while the ehgihes cost $125,000. The disproportion between the cost of the hull and that of the engines is due to the enormous speed required of this type of vessel, and to the fact that they Incur no expense for armor, as in the case of battleships. To biilld the engines of a battleship, there are something like ten'or twelve different trades and professions employed, notably, draughtsmen, patternmakers, moulders, turners, titters; blacksmiths, erectors, machine hands, etc. Conduct will never be right while,convictions are wrong.

ANNA IVOR’S REQUEST.

Personal letters reach Mrs, Pinkham by thousands; some asking advice, and others,ilike the following, telling of what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has dope and will ever continue to do in eradicating those fearful

female complaints so little understood by physicians. All womb and ovarian troubles, irregularities, whites, bearing-down pains, displacements, tendency to cancer and tumor are crp-ed permanently “I feel as if I owed my life to your Vegetable Compound. After the birth ©f my babe I was very miserable. I had a drawing pjiin in the lowier part of my bowels, no strength, and a terrible backache. Every day I failed. My husband said if I would try a bottle of your Vegetable Compound, he would get it for me. The change was wonderful. After I had taken the first half bottle I began to liaVe great faith in it. When I had taken three bottles, I was well and growing stout. It is a pleasure for me to 'write this to you.’ I only ask women in any way afflicted with female troubles to try it.”—Mrs. Anna Ivor, Pittsford Mills, Rutland Co., Vt.

/^R a(|wa y’ 8 Jy p&J Ready Relief. \ t![ U JZong/WentZ. \ fir I It is the only PAINREMtJL aJ EDYthatln- ™ .top. V most .JC'&Z—A J excruciating pain., allays J •“'"J, * A (J Inflamma'r 1 3 (J I tlon, Bn<l I B jli - u(V/l)7 I cure, oon- • *-wXZJ I—ll '\\ ’ Internally a tea spoonful In water will in a few mlnutesoure Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn,Bick Headache, Diarrhoea, Summer Complaint, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency and all internal pains. There is not a remedial agent in the world that will cure fever and ague and all other malarious, bilious and other fevers, (aided by RADWAY’S PILLS), so quickly as RADWAY’S READY RELIEF. Price 50 cents per bottle. Sold by Druggists. BADWAY & CO., New York. Of course it’s imitated—anything good always is—that’s endorsement, not a pleasant kind, but still endorsement. HIRES Rootbeer is imitated. Made ealy by The Charier Kl Hires On., Philadelphia. ▲ 15c. package makes 6 gallon «. Bold everywhere. CHEAP FARMS south Where fertile soil, genial climate and flue transponatlon facilities have attracted large numbers of Northern people, can be had on favorable terms. If you are Interested write at once to Southern Homeaeek•rs* Land Co.. Somerville, Fayette County, Teon. PATENTS? TRADE-MARKS. Examination and advice as to Patentability of inventions. Send for INVKNTQna’ Uvinx. oa How to Gbt a Pat.nt. Patrick G’FarreU. Washington, D.C. ■araic 1 au John w.morbis. [ULIVOIUIi Wa.hlngtou, D.C? ■ ■ 3yrsln last war, IS adjudicating claims, atty since. KIDDER'B 9 Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use H tn time. Sold by drnggiita. |jH

2 Pill Clothes. • The good pill has a good coat. The pill coat (ti® serves two purposes; it protects the pill, enabling it to retain all its remedial value, and it disguises the taste for the palate. Some pill ' coats are too heavy; they will not dissolve in the stomach, and the pills they cover pass through the system as harmless as a bread (ol; pellet. Other coats are too light, and permit the speedy deterioration of the pill. After 30 years (O (A exposure, Ayer’s Sugar Coated Pills have been (JL found as effective as if just fresh from the laboratory. It's a good pill with a good coat. Ask (w druggist for © Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. ® xjy More pill particular* in Ayer's Curebook, I*o UH Bent free. J C. Ayer Co. Lowell. Man

Six Feet Loaves.

The largest loaves of bread baked In the world are thoste of France and Italy. The “plpe”i bread «f Italy is baked in loaves two and three feet long, while in France the loaves are made in the shape of very long rolls four or five feet in length, and In many cases even feet. The bread of Paris is distributed almost exclusively by women, who go to the various bake-

BREAD BY THE YARD.

houses at 5:30 a. in., amj spend about an hour polishing up the loaves. After the loaves are thoroughly cleaned of dust and grit the “breadporter” proceeds on the round of her customers. Those who live in apartments or flats find their loaves leaning against the door. Restauranteurs, and those having street entrances to their premises, find their supply of the staff of lite propped up against the front door. The wages earned by these bread carriers vary from a couple of shillings to half a crown a day, and their day’s work is completed by 10 o’clock in the morning.

Read These For a Change.

The Brooklyn bridge is 278 feet above the river. The porcelain tower at Nankin was 248 feet high. Garthage is the highest town in Kansas— 5,009 feet. Mt. Ophir, 13,500 feet high, is the tallest in Sumatra. The famous Mt. Hood, of Oregon, is 11,570 feet high. The Sea of Galilee, is 653 feet below TbeTffedfwmniean. Harvard Is the highest land in G010ard0—14,452 ard0—14,452 feet. • The Dead Sea, in Palestine, is 1,316 feet below sea level. Pine Knot is the highest place in Kentucky—l,42B feet. The Washington monument is 555 feet from base to tip. Vesuvius, the famous Italian volcano, is 3,392 feet high. The steeple of the Milan Cathedral is 355 feet in height. A part of New Orleans is below the level of the river. Alaska has four mountains, each over 10,000 feet in height. Alta is the highest town in lowa—--1,519 feet above sea level. Warren Is located on the highest land in Illinois—l,oos feet There is an oak tree in the State of Georgia that is twenty-seven feet in diameter. A blue gum tree in New South Wales, 482 feet high, is thought to be the tallest tree in the world. At Oroville, Cal., there is a cherry tree only 18 years old, which is six feet through the trunk. The magnolia tree was named after a French professor, Magnol, a naturalist, who died in 1715. One variety of the India rubber tree has bright green leaves that ate edged with flaming rod. The sacred bo-tree of Ceylon is said to have sprung from a slip of the tree under which Buddha was born. The estimated age of a dragon tree at Orotava is 5,000 years, but it is not authentic, like the record of the Lombardy cypress. The oldest known living tree is the soma cypress in Lombardy, which the records say was standing and of unknown age in 42 B. C. Two large white gum trees in Guatemala have grown in such a manner that the foundations of a church have been shifted seven inches.

AGRICULTURAL NEWS

THINGS PERTAINING TO THE FARMED HOME' •* I Potash Should Be a Heavy Ingredient in Fertilizers for} Strawberries— How a Farmer Can Establish Credit —A Cure for Hog Cholera. «■.. .itt. * • Fertilizers for Strawberries. A strawberry efop removes certain materials from the soil which must be replaced If we wish to keep it in good condition. According to chetnical analysis, given in the Massachusetts Ploughman,’ the fruit and strawberry plant both contain a large percentage of potash, and it is evident, and experience has proved, such to be a fact, that potash should be a heavy ingredient in all fertilizing compounds for the strawberry crop. A. good formula that has given excellent results is: , 300 to 500 pounds muriate of potash. 600 to 800 pounds dissolved bone. 200 to 500 pounds nitrate of soda. Half of this is applied broadcast before the crop is planted, half the remander in the fall and the balance early in the ,, The strawbery growers of Oswego County, New York. where berries are grown on a large scale for market, use from 800 to 1,200 pounds of commercial fertilizer of good quality, containing about 10 per cent, nitrogen and 8 per cent, phbsphoric acid. The time to apply such fertilizers is in the fall, as top dressing. Some care should be taken that the caustic properties of the fertilizer do not injure the plant., 1 It is good practices, also, to sprinkle a few handfuls of kainit.iu rows at planting, as this product destroys grubs and acts as a preventive of blight.

The Best Example. Did you ever stop to think that the farmer who grumbles most is usually the least successful? (Why is it that out of 100 farmers who have the same start in life, some are successful financially and every other way, some are successful in only one or two ways, and some don’t jfet along at all? They all have lived under the same circumstances; the same laws, politics, tariffs, : onetary standards, etc. The answer is found in the individual. The levelheaded, industious man is sure to get his fartn paid for, to acquire a bit of competence, to raise and enducate a happy family—that’s 'the example to follow, instead of emulating the glibtongued individual who rides around in a top buggy-ta harangue the people on their hard lot while his family are forsaken, his crops neglected and the interest on ids mortgage the only tiling that keeps constantly at work on his farm. Cure of Hog Cholera. Arsenic. one-half ponndj cape aloes, one-half pound; blue vitriol, one-fourth pound; black antimony, one ounce. Grind and mix the remedy well before using, advises the lowa Homestead. The following are the directions for using: Sick hogs in all cases to be separated from the well ones, and placed in dry pens, with only five large hogs or eight small ones in each pen. f eed nothing but dry food, but no water, only th§ slop containing the remedy, until cured. When the hogs refuse to eat. turij them on their Mcks, and then, with a long-handled spoon, put the dry medicine down their throats. Dose for large hog: One teaspoonful three times a day for three days: then miss one day, and repeat amount until cured. Shouts or pigs, one-half the amount. As a preventive, one teaspoonful once a week will keep your hogs in a healthy condition to take on fat. The Bewt -l seftf Brair — Bran is much more highly thought,of as feed than it used to be. But it has] its limitations, and should not be relied upon entirely when fed alone. It is an excellent feed to give to animals that have a surfeit of corn, and should always form a part of the ration of fattening sheep. It is not so good for hogs, as its course texture makes it unpalatable. But fine wheat middlings have all of the excellencies of bran, and will be eaten in greater quantities by fattening hogs. The bran and wheat middlings furnish a greater proportion of albuminoids than corn has, and therefore supplement its deficiencies. Wheat bran is an excellent alterative for horses fed on timothy hay in winter. It will keep their digestion good and will be all the better if a tablespoonful of old process oil meal is added to each mess. Wheat middlings are noteo laxative as bran, and are better therefore for horses that have to work hard, though both the bran and middlings contain much of the nutriment that builds up bone and muscle and increases strength. Barn Cisterns. One of the advantages of the basement barn is that it makes easy the construction of a cistern to take the water from its roof and place it convenient for stock stabled in it. It is never best to trust to wells for watering stock. A well near a stable or barn soon becomes foul by filtration of water through soil saturated with manure. A barn large enough to hold hay and other provender for a large stock will furnish water from tl)e rain that falls on its roof for all the stock that can be fed from it. There should always be a filter in the faucet to the cistern. Some precautions must also be taken to prevent the cistern from becoming dirty. Whenever threshing is done the barn roof and the eave troughs are apt to be filled with dust. The eave troughs should be cleaned at such times, and the water from the first raid after threshing allowed to run to the ground before being diverted to the cistern. With such precautions the barn cistern will keep pure water for a long time without need of being cleaned. If the basement is a deep one, the water in the cistern will never freeze over in winter, but will help to keep frost out of the basement. It is a great Convenience in very cold weather to water cows in the basement without exposing them to tfap cold air outside. Milkina Time, Cows, to make the most of their opportunities, need to be milked in quiet, says the Practical Farmer, and a larger part of the hot months some sort of a soiling crop nfcst be fed to obtain the best results, which means prolonging the milk flow, and nowhere can thia be ao well done and each cow re-

eefve her due proportion, as In the sttu ble. It-has been m njjatter of obsertotr tlon with us, that a cow soon comes to have a home in the stable, and to be tied thdrd' twice a .lay, and have some provender, grain or forage on her arrival, gives, her a matter to look forward to arid even long for, and in the afternoon the cows have a home longing and start for the “btirs." and getting up the cows with boy, horse and dog is an obsolete custom on such a farm. In this summer care of the cows’, their comfort should be looked after ini the' lot, seeing that there is plenty of good water and shade of some kind.

Subaoildkg for Corn. „ ' It Is generally agreed among farmers that shallow plowing is best for corn. This is all right so far as keeping the vegetable matter near the Surface, where it will make the most warmth for corn. But it, is l none the less, advisable in a dry time to Lave 1 the soil deeply pulverized, not for the corn roots to reach down for moisture, but that it may arise by capillary at--1 traction to the upper strata, where the roots are most abundant. Subsoiling will do this better than anything else. The best time to do subsoiling is in the fall. There is then time for the lower strata to fill with water during winter and spring. We can never know In advance when drouth will injure corn. Many fields would have yielded this year much larger crops of corn if the land had been the year before. Successful of Cows. How a comparatively poor herd of cows can be quickly brought up to a profitable production of milk and buttei is told by W. H. CL an lowa farmer, in Wallace’s Dairyman. He purchased a thoroughbred Jersey bull and two heifer calves and began breeding from them. The result is that he has raised every heifer that was more than halfblood Jersey, and the poorest one when 3 three years old made three-fourths of a pound of butter per day, and in after tests, from one pound to one-ahd threefourths pounds per day, when in full flow of milk. Some of the. best cows have made over two pouring *of butter per day, with ordinary care and feed. This is better than growing a generalpurpose cow, with the result of sending more than half of the heifers to the butcher after testing them as.cows and finding them unprofitable for dairy purposes. Variety of Food Necessary. In most of the discussions about what kinds of food are best, the fact is overlooked that no oiie food gives all the nutrltlVe elements in their proper combination for best results. A variety of food is needed, not merely to tempt appetite, but to keep animals in the best health. This ,1s especially important for animals that are being fattened and thus encourtfged to eat all they can. It is scarcely less so for animals that are growing, and which need in some kind of their feed the elements that make bone and muscle rather than fat.' Corn, which is the staple grain feed with most farmers, is least adapted of all for a single, ration. I Kerosene for the Clock. Those who have occasion to use the cheap, portable nickel-pjated clocks are often pothered by their failing to run well—or not running at all—after a year or so of service. Immost cases there is nothing the matter with the clock except an accumulation of dirt, and this can be easily remedied by a free application of kerosene— not dropped in, but poured into the interior and briskly shaken. In one case a clock which had been taken apart and put together again and did not run, and was thrown aside for several years, at once resumed service after being treated to a' kerosene bath. ~ Milk and Butter. The following advice is given by the Massachusetts Ploughman: Milk regularly. Keep the cows quiet and comfortable. Bitter butter is a result of over-ripe cream. .. It is the good cows that make money for their owner. The poor ones are kept for fun, evidently. The cow that holds out well ten or eleven months in the year is the kind to keep. Like a factory, a cow pays best when run to full capacity. That means high feeding. To make the best cow out of the growing heifer, it is important during growth that her feeding and care should be such as will secure the best development How to Train Honeysuckle. If a honeysuckle be entirely cut down it will make enormous growth in consequence, says the Philadelphia Ledger, but the flowering wood will be absent, and there will not bo near the quantity of flowers that there would have been. Odds and Endo. A filling for layer cake may be made from figs. Chop a cupful of figs fine and add to them a half cupful of sugar and the same of water, and cook until it thickens like jelly. When coljl plact between the layers of the cake. Lace curtains should never be ironed. Wash and starch them, using In the rinsing water a tablespoon of powdered borax. Spread a sheet on tht floor and fasten it; pin the curtains to it every two or three Inches and let them remain until dry. When the danton flannel or felt uni.ercloth for the table Is too long it can be put out of the way by fastening it up to the table by means of small loqps, one at each comer of the cloth, whfclt are caught onto hooks placed at proper distances on the underside of the table. There is no better way of cooking meat which is tough than by braising. The meat should be shut in a closely covered pot with a few pieces of salt pork laid under it. A mixture of vegetables cut into dice should be added; also a little soup stock and. a bouquet of herbs. Then it should all be cooked slowly in the confined steam. Everyone has been annoyed at some' time with bristles of the ordinary tooth-brush flailing out in the month while one is cleansing the teeth. This may be remedied if carets taken when purchasing a new brush. It should be at once set, brush end down, in a cup of water, and left there for an hour—not more time than that, but as much. After this there will be very little , bbther frdm this cause. I

MISHAP TO A SMUGGLER.

A Cab Runs Over Him and Betrays an Device. Near one of the gates leading into Paris an old man of stout was seen a day or two ago .winding hi« way, when a cab, driven gt great speed, approached, and, as the man paid no attention to the warning cry of the Jehu, he was knocked down, and the vehicle passed dyer his oody, to the consternation of the A crowd gathered around the venerable individual, who lay on the ground, not in a pool of blood, but in one of oA> The hero of this misadventure, who had only been slightly stunned by the shock, soon rose to with profuse thanks for all the* sympathy and compassion which his accident had elicited, and then, disregarding further offers of assistance, began to shutlle off as fast as his legs could carry him. ■ One of the eye witnesses of this curious scene went up to an employe of the octroi and gave an account of the episode, upon which the official, running after the victim of the accident extended to him a polite invitation to reslfln his office. “I assure you that I am not hurt.” exclaimed the old gentleman, win displayed great anxiety to take himself off. “So much the better,” replied the employe, “but I want to have a little talk with you all the same.” Some gentle force was required to Induce the corpulent one to enter the office, but once there he was mad? to undress, when be was foumit to lie almost a skeleton. He had between bls waistcoat and his shirt q skin receptacle which was capable of containing from six to seven liters of liquid. tin this particular occasion it had been filled with oil, and, while it had saved the bearer from severe injury; it had betraygd him, and he was removed to the depot at the prefecture of police amid the laughter of the people who bad witnessed the accident. 1 A quantity of receptacles of the kind described have been found at his dwelling, and another individual has already been arrested on suspicion of being an accompljce. It need scarcely be added that the oil was thus introduced into Paris with the object of evading the octroi dues. As a matter of fact, aL sorts of devices are employed by persons who make a specialty of this franc, but it is not often that a culprit is detected in these tragi-comic circumstances.—London Telegraph.

Mathematics and Love.

“I wish,” said the young man, as the twilight deepened, “I could believe you tovedme as nnicir azl love you.” “That,” replied the college maiden, “is simplicity Itself. Suppose I demonstrate It to you mathematically.” “Well,” he responded, somewhat doubtfully. “You and I,” continued Miss Axiom, “belong to a certain circle, do we not?” '‘Yes,” he assented. “Consequently,” said she, “we might call ourselves radii of that circle.” The young man nodded. “Two radii of a circle are equal to a third radius of the same •He did not contradict her. “It is established beyond all possible dispute that- things which are equal to the same thing are equal to one another.” , The young man was interested, but still puzzled. “Now,” she concluded, in triumph, “If you and I are both equal to an unknown quantity, which we will call X ” “What' is X?” he interrupted. “Our love for each other,” was the prompt reply. “Oh,” he said, satisfied. “If,” she repeated, “you and I are both equal to X, our mutual love, then, as things which are equal to the same thing are equal to one another, I must love you In the same ratio that you love me.” And he was so satisfied that, not needing any more light on the subject, the gas was not illuminated for fully two hours.—Tid-Blts.

In Public Places.

“When I was 10 years old,” a lady Is quoted In the New York Times as sayIng to some children, “I took a short railroad journey with my grandfather, a dignified judge, yet tender and affectionate, whom we were all most anxious to please. “I sat in the car seat just in front of him while he talked with a friend sitting beside him. Pretty soon, having nothing to do, I began to sing in rather a low voice, Indeed, but still loud enough to be heard two or. three seats away, and, as I was rather proud of my voice, I thought that my grandfather was probably thinking to himself that his friend must admire the singing of his little granddaughter. “By and by the friend got out at a station and I was called back to sit with my grandfather. He greeted me with a smile. “ ‘You’ve been lonesome, my dear, I’m afraid; I heard you singing. Now, you are a little girl, and it did not matter, but you will be a woman one of these days,-and then it will. Let me tell you just one thing to remember all your life.’ “ ‘Never do anything In a public place, like a car or steamboat or anywhere among strangers, that will attract attention to you.’ And, though I was deeply mortified at the time, for I saw at once that my grandfather had not liked my singing, I have always remembered his words and thanked him in my heart for them."

Ancient Swords.

In the early ages, before men knew anything about civilized ways, they lived in caves and had to protect themselves not only from the attacks of anibut from those of their human brothers as well. The first weapon their unaccustomed fingers shaped was a war club. Experience, however, soon taught them that a deadlier blow might be delivered with a weapon that would cut rather than crush, and they made a hatchet Then, one day, someone discovered a substance in the secret stores of the good brown earth on which he finally learned to put a keener edge than he had ever been able to chip on his stone hatchet, and the sword was made;

Philosophy of the Home.

A philosopher observes: “Six things are requisite to create a happy home One of these is a good cook and the other five are money.”

Purchasing a Monkey.

A dealer in stuffed animals, who also kept a few live creatures for sale, gave his shop boy, who was permitted to sell the stuffed specimens, orders to cal* him when anyone asked for any of the living animals, says the Youth's Companion. ... , | . Oqe day a gentleman called and demanded a monkeys “Anyone of these?” asked the boy, who was in charge. He pointed to the stuffed specimens. “No—l want a live monkey," answered the customer. The boy stepped to the door of the back shop and called to his master: “You’re wanted, sir.”

Rome Wasn’t Built in a Day,

Neither are the obstinate maladies, to the removal of which the great corrective, Hostetter’s Stomach Biters, is adapted curable in an hour. To persist In the use of this standard remedy is no more than Just. Biliousness, constipation, malaria, rheumatism, kidney complaints and nervousness are among the complaints which It eradicates. It is a mistake to suppose night air In towns is unhealthy. In most cases It is purer between 10 at night and 6 in the morning than any other part of the twentj’-four hours. It is beneficial to sleep with the window open four inches from the top, and the door tightly closed.

Homeseekers’ Excursions South.

On the loth and 18th of June, also July 6,7, 20 and 21, and several dates during August, September and October, the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad will sell first-class round-trip tickets, good 31 days from date- at sale, for one fare, plus $2.00, sos the round trip, to all points in Florida and the South. Tracks, trains, time all the best. For further information address C. W. Humphrey, N. P. A., St. Paul, Minn. City ticket office, 182 Clark street, or Q, L. Stone, G. P. & T. A.. Chicago. Dr. Chapman shows that the bobolinks which nest west of the Rocky Mountains da not migrate southward with the birds of that region, but retrace 'their' steps, and leave the United States by way of Florida, thus furnishing evidence of the gradual extension of range westward, and of the stability of the routes of migration.

Hall’s Catarrh Cure.

Is a constitutional cure. Price 76 cents. Prisoner (sentenced to seven days)— What would ye do if Oi said ye was an old fule? Magistrate—You would get seven days more for contempt. Prisoner—Thin, begorra, Oi’ll not say it. Oi’ll only think it.—Philadelphia Call. Piso's Cure for Consumption has saved me large doctor bills.—C. L. Baker. 4228 Regent Sq., Philadelphia, l Pa., Dec. 8, '95. Hazel—Say, haven’t you and Jack been engaged long enough to get married? Mabel—Ton long. He hasn't got a cent left.—Truth.

Pure Blood is essential to health. Now is the time to purify and enrich the blood, and thus give vigor and vitality, by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. AU druggists, fit. Hood** Fillo otire all Liver Ills, x cents.

I 8 I I i v I The Governor of North Carolina said * B to the Governor of South Carolina W BattieA&J H “BATTLE AX” is the most tobacco, fl S of the best quality, for the least money, I Large quantities reduce the cost of fl g manufacture, the result going to the con- Q g sumer in the shape of a larger piece, for 8 I less money, than was ever before possible. I “Brevity Is the Soul of Wit.” Good Wife, You ♦ Need SAPOLIO

Neglect of the hair often destroy* ftg vitality and natural hue, and causes it to fall out. ■ Before it is too late, apply HalFn Hair Renewer, a sure remedy. The truly generous is the truly wire; and he who loves not others lives ua» blest —a—*— Burst worth Doth™ Floating BoraiSean grocer, eend wrappers to Dobbins Soap Mfg. Co.. Phllr adelphla. Pa They will send you. tree of charge. po* paid, a Worcester Pocket Dictionary. 29S page*, bound; profusely Illustrated. Offer good till Aug. 1 oota FITS.—AII Fite stopped free by ttr. KI Ine’s Great Nerve Restorer. No Fl ta after first day’s nee. Marvelous cures. Treatise and g2J» triad bottle free ta Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 46t Arch St.. Hills, Fla. Mrs. Winslow’s soothing Svsvr for Cbiidrea teething; softens the gums, reaucesinflammation, allays pain, cures win doolie. •» cents a bottle

I - ‘ e _• . • Gladness Comes With a better understanding of the transient naturoof the many ical ills which vanish before proper efforts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts—rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge that so many forms of sickness are not due to any actual disease, but simply to a constipated condition of the system, which the pleasant family laxative, Syrup of Figs, promptly”removes. That is why it is the only remedy with millions of families, and is everywhere esteemed so highly by all who value good health. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact, that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without debilitating the organs on which it acts. It is therefore all important, in order to get its beneficial effects, to note when you purchase, that you have the genuine article, which is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all reputable druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, then laxatives or other remediesare not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, then one should have the best, and with the well-informed everywhere, Syrup of Figs stands highest and is most largely used and gives most general satisfaction. - a -rfdTOh. Remora* Tan, Pimples, Freek--8 IS jlbM stood the tert ot SS»®t=W * Sff M<J//Oyear., and to se tjSfS a V>/ I VJj harmlem we tarts to [■■•■So’ Xa >/ Kz to be sure It to propS® 1 fcff eriy made. Aecep* A no counterfeit of “ -Z ■ 8/ / similar name. Dr. / I 1 1 recommend ‘GooZx TWVjfS'/JSJJ I rand’, cream’aatton f />'■ d “Sta- I least harmful of all I 1 nt »•" ’ the Skin prewmt-.-j iV-J'X. tiona.” for aambr S* 4 V X “H Drutfglrta and Fancy-Goode Dealera In the United state*. Canadas and Europe. FERD. T. HOPKINS, Prop’r, 37 Great Jones Street, N. X. (h 4 n PAYS FOR sloogtinn It 3 TIMES In 1,450 conn- Us I U try papers for T SBUD FOB CB.T4I.OOUS. Chicago Newspaper Union, 63 south lelferson street. Chicago, nt nniliU Habit Cured. Kat. >u 1871. Thousands 11 r 111 M cured. Cheapest and best cure. Frsk TasUl lUlfl U- Slate case. Db. Maass.Quincy. Mtak. C. -N. U. No. ;H-M WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS please say you saw the advertisesnaM in this paper.