Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 45, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 May 1885 — Page 7

.1

A B«m«-Nad* Hnm Itek*.

body or lura.

Wlwiever the farmer can make Car himsslf "fc muob g*i« A workshep amd a box of good tools, aadiabore all a knowledge of tbe we of tham, will ear* him many hundred •tiollars in the ceorss at his agricultural career.

The home-made rake abeve is a revolving one. It

i*

cheap and strong. It can be used

for ooJlaoting cornstalks, ragweed, and all rubbish of vegetable growth. With the teeth lighter and cieeer together it also serree as a bay rake.

The body ot the rak* is shows abera Take .a beaan six laches square and aboofc six feet long. The teeth are tough, well-seasoned skits of wood four feet long and two inches square. Trim them off tapering at the ends, and also ia the middle, where Mtsy fit into tw»-iaoh augur holes in the beam. Set them

In one foot apart, and seears them with light txlta Thai is the first part of the rake. Wow for tbe seooad part, as seen below.

U2T E-BOBSB KAU OOMrUBTK.

Hound off the beam at fc, so that tbe ends -of the shafts can be fastened there. Soma old iron, scraps of which ought to be always saved, can be fitted by the blacksmith to

pass

over the rounded places in the beam, and 1 oKtencd in flat plates to the shafts,

as

shown

in the illustration. Attach the shafts and the rake will be ready for am, except two more teeth and the le»er that lifts and turns It. Kext we give attention to th^we: is the lever, hinged to one ot ths shafts by a bolt at i, It is movable, ot course, and is worked by polling tho handle. /. when the rake is in motion. Tbe lover, d, rests lightly upon the shafts, as shown. Upon it rests the two teeth by whloh the rake is turned. These teeth are strong and tough, and tha same length as the rake teeth. They are set in between the shafts, and at right angles to the oth«r toeth. When the handle, /, is polled the cheok is taken off the raio, it tun* ever and leaves behind the load in front ot the row ot teeth that are upon the ground. The next row pass to the ground to gather another load. By making tho team tea feet long, aad putting a tongue to it frr+T*"4 of shaft*, the rake can be made tor two horses, la that case the beam should have three rounded Journals, instead of two, for iron pi ems to fasten the tongue to it. The number of teeth must also bo oven, so that ths tongue can be directly in the middle. To strengthen the tongue, pot a orocrpieoe upon it and fasten two other pieces to that, -one at each end. These pass back and are attached to (he beam. This cheap and excellent rake was brought to the notice of the |)nlti« by t\ C. Ueorgoson, of Texas.

..

1/

Cera I'laaMif Tfoae.

Tbe thing that the American traveler will iilira is the landscape in l^urope more than anything else will be the cornfields. There fe almost no Indian corn raised in Europe.

"Many

an old world farmer does not even know what it is. What we

aall

wheat he

alls corn. Our corn is called Indian maize over there, when it is called anything. Horses live on oats aad various kinds of chopped feed.

In our country, however, next to the grasses, ths Indian maiza is the most imjportant crop. Ik grows all over both Americas, almost as far north or south as anything alee will grow. One feels sorry for the benighted people of Europe whan he remembers they know not the taste of sugar oorn boiled in the ear and buttered. Our illustration shows three ears of different varieties. They arc from Henderson's catalogue, and can bed from seedsmen.

qukkn ok aannuoaeos, ooldex YH* rKJUIUX BTOA&.

D«WDB0ft

TV flrt ami third are Held corn. Tha rnkhit.- one is a table corn. Tho grains are white and sweet, and rich. It is ten days earlier than tbe favorite Evergreen, awl promise* to be uncommonly vahaable for market and canning.

Tha Golden Dewtirop, on the right of the ttkeitratkm, fc» an eight-rowed field ntnt oorn, yellow. It is a prolific bearer, aad is suitable for culture In the north.

On tbe left is shows a dent field corn, tha Queen ct the Prairie. Dsot corn is a more prolific bearer than tha flint varieties. The Queen of the Prairie is abo a yellow corn. It comas to maturity very rapidly..

The richer the soil for oorn the better. The best aad heaviest is raised an lands that are overflowed yearly. On such soils, Allen's Farm Book says, one can literally "hear it grow.* The cracking of the leaf sheaths makes a popping noise that can be plainly heard In a field. After showers, aad under bright sun, oorn sometimes grows several turbos in a day.

Manors should he plowed thoroughly lata the ground and scattered over the whole ML Strika deep and spread wid& Soaking tha seed in a solution at saltpetre far to 48 konrs before planting hi highly recommended |l haetess fee growth at the plant aad keeps

off Mr* and insect enemies. If, after being treated with saltpetre, the corn is thialy coated with tar, the seed will be still more effectually protected. The coating is done by brisklj stirring half a pint of hot tar into a peck of seed. Add the tar very gradually. 'Way down south the oorn was planted long ago, and is np. Farther north fanners are beginning wily now to prepare for planting. Tbe old-time Indians used to say that when the oak leares were the size of a squirrel's ot it was the tame to plaat

1

Faras Kelp.

Hext to the city maid at all work, truth compels one to say that the most persistent "aggra water" in the United States is the farm h*nd He makes life too often a bur den to his employer. The creed of his gospel jg thrt as good as another—and a little hit better. This being a free country, he insists on being free to work when he pleases aad let it alone when he pleases. To prove his independence he will often whiff off in the busiest season and let things go to waste, and his employer cannot help himself. He insists on eating at table with the family, even though he eata like a pig. He calls the young ladies by their first names, and sot seldom tbe farmer and his wife themselves are to him only John and Nancy. Now, this would be all very well if the farm laborer really was as good as his employer. Work of any kind does not make or mar a gentleman. One who is such will always be it, without reference to what he dees for his living one way or tha other.

But quite too often the farm laborer is offensive in his personal habits and unfamiliar with the bath-tub. He regards it as beneath his dignity to aid in the slightest in anything that will make the work of woman folk lighter. In truth, the average farm laborer is the terror of tha women folk. All undisciplined mentally, untrained even to regular habits of physical labor, how should he ever know that among the first elements ot real gentlemanhood are keeping one's self clean in person and being respectful to one's employer. The rest is to give one's time regularly and faithfully, to be chivalrous and polite to women, and to be civil and oblijing to everybody. Such a m»T» gg that would have no difficulty in being recognized as an equal in any farmhouse in this republio, even though be dug ditches for his living.

But it will be along time, we fear, before our fanners will find such help as that, even here and there. We have heard of one of these fellows flaring up and leaving a good plaoe because the women of the house requested him to wash himself before breakfast when he came in from the stables. Wash himself, indeed I Wasn't this a free country 1

Worst of all, there are nasty country girls who are nearly as bad. A few we have heard of refuse to wash themselves before preparing the morning meal. There are others again who insist on leaving the family in the lurch from every Saturday night till Monday morning. Tho women of the family, who need their own rest, must spend Sunday baking and broiling so that my lady help may have her weekly holiday.

These are hard things to write, more especially as they are true. So true are they that agriculturists are beginning to find American born and reared help unbearable, and refuse to employ them where they can avoid it. The foreign laborer, who has been trained to habits of steady work and to doing what he is hired to do without impudenoe or argument, is coming to be

preferred.

The

American born farm hand will have nobody but himself to blame if he shortly finds himself crowded out of work by the German, the Irishman and Scotchman, or even the Italian/" -O'^Vi-'VV

Apple* In the Far North.

Tha State Agricultural college, at Iowa, Is doing a solid favor to the great northwest. Professor Budd, of the faculty, has for some years been experimenting on hardy fruits. He imported many varieties of fruit trees and bushes from Northern Europe, and grafted them on native stock* More than 180 fruit trees from tho froaan regions of Russia, Sweden and Norway are now in process of trial at the college farm. The young trees are planted in the open prairie, without windbreak or other protection. They are now two years old, and have stood the last terrible winter admirably. Success has been reached in apples, pears and plums. The professor has strong hopes, too, that' he can find peaches that will stand the trying northwest climate, though that is, to my the least, doubtful.

Tha experiment is of interest from tbe Rocky mountains to Maine. Tbe prospect is that in a few years more the whole splendid north .rest will be stocked with fine young orohards that will not winter-kilL So much the better. Those who eat largely of fruit have little need of drugs. People who live on apples do not have dyspepsia.

An Tatoxleated Sow. [Breeder's Gasette.]

Perhaps the best remedy when a sow is nervous and takes to killing her pigs is to make her dead drunk by giving her whisky in some warm slop. This is sure to quiet her for some hours and give the pigs time enough to fill themselves with warm milk, and snug up to tho warm belly of the cruel mother. While the stupor is ou the sow the pigs may bo spongod off with diluted carbolic acid, the smell of which does not invite an attack, and it has no odor of a young pig. The writer hasseen this tried and as the pigs were saved it was claimed to be beneficial. There is no mora exasperating trial to one's patience than to soe an old brute pounce upon and eat bar pigs. Thoy sometimes seem to do it from cuasedness. Yet the writer has never had a

Women

aa Planters.

There area number of female planters in this country, and if any woman is anxious to try bar hand at running a plantation, she might consult Mrs. M. A. Gibbs, who runs the Hecla plantation in Madison parish, La,, with great success, or Miss Du Lucas, at tha same place, who manage* a large estate and personally superintends a large force of laborers. She speeds most of her time in the saddle, and looks after ber plows, hoes, drains, levees, stock and milL Madame Ames is regarded as the best planter in the same parish, and she owns a tract of 1,000 acres, and has WO acres under cultivation.

Safcatltatee fbr Bay.

Tanners do not dread getting out at meadow grousdas they used toda If for any retMon meadow becomes weedy or unproductive it can be plowed up and winter feed grown by sowing corn, millet or Hungarian grass. A mixture of the two teat named prodaoee more and Is fees liable to fall down than either alone. An acre of millet will givs twtoeas mush feed as an acre at averag* meadow. It is very fattening for horses, sc its numerous seeds make the feed almost as rich as grain with common hay. It is on this account better to feed umill quaatitisa at it with other hay or straw. ,t

Seventy-Ave tons at bam manure to ths acre most be given if yon wonld snooasd as a market gardener. Is addition to UdSL 100 pounds of sulphate potash «od raw mn itar woald giva pnytafnnttL

Boys and Girls

Unhappy Children.

Young people, you in your comfortable homes, with clean, pretty clothes, and fathers and mothers who would leave their own wants and wishes ungratified any day to get something for you, do you know how same the New York children live?

There is a society for the prevention of .malty to children in the city. It watches .he police oourts and gathers up the outcast boys and girls and tries to find good homes for them. Tbe saddest scenes are witnessed sometimes. One would think a human being •could not find it in his heart to treat a dog or a cat as these helpless children are treated, Do you see the piciure pf poor little Daniel Ward?

A DRVNKXH MOTHER'S BOT.

When the society's agent found mm Daniel was in the attic of a tenement house. It was in the dead of winter, but there was not particle of food or fire in the room. The boy was almost starved to death. He was dad in the rag you see. and covered with dirt from head to foot. Oh, it was a horrible story! His mother was lying upon the floor. When the officer tried to rouse her she did not move. She never moved again. She was dead. She had been swallowing whisky till she became crazy drunk. Then she fell upon the floor, soaked and cooked in alcohol and never came to life any more. The in which she was found was a horrible place. Upon tbe floor, along with the corpse of Daniel's mother, lay two frightful old hags of women, dead drunk. And there, in ths filth, along with his dead mother and two senseless, drunken women, without clothes, food or fire, on a freezing day, tbe society found poor little Daniel. What if it had been you, children? Tbe judge himself almost cried when he heard the poor boy's story.

Another horribly abused child was baby Alice K^enan, 8 years old Her father was in Sing Sing penitentiary for stealing. Her mother was a drunkard. It is whisky, children, that causes the misery in all theee cases. Don't forget that.

Alice Keenan was brought into court starved to skin and bone. Her arms and legs seemed no larger than pipe stems. She was covered from head to foot with some sickening skin disease. She had been beaten and abused till her left eye was bulging out of her heed, swollen almost to the size of a goose-egg. This eye went blind aad made the other one diseased also, and the poor child will soon be quite sightless from cruel treatment. The babys mother was taken to the police station so intoxicated that she did not know her own child.

Then there were

,,, MART BOTLE AND HXB CHILDREN.

Mary Boyle was a drunkard, too, like all the rest. Her husband was no bettor than die was, for he ran away and left her and his four children without food or home. He was cruel wretch to desert the little ones so. Their mother cared much more for whisky than for her children. She would get hold of a few pennies somehow, and then, not caring whether the babies lived or died, she would go and spend them for rum, and drink till she knew nothing, any more than If she had been a dead woman. The children, having nowhere to go, followed this disgraceful mother through the streets day after day, cold, hungry and crying. They grew so thin from starvation that they looked like shadows.

Seventeenth street heard a baby wailing crying fearfully. He oould not tell when the sound came from at first, but still it kept on. Tbe cries pierced his heart, they were so full of suffering. He looked all about him. Finally he saw Mary Boyle and the four young ones huddled under tha stops ot a house near by. The youngest child was crying from cold and hunger. If it had been breathing its dying breath, however, its mother would not have oared. She was lying like a log, in a drunken sleep. AD four of her children might have tiuien to death for all she knew cr cared, She was that drunk. Tbe little ones, shivering, blue and starved, were huddled about the wretched creature. They pulled and plucked at bar, and tried to wake ber from tha stupor. It was heartrending to them cry "Mamma "Mamma They

& was wfafaky,

IKS

lis

boys

sni

feafackkC.

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATT.

How Gun-Cotton is Made.

It is not generally known that there is but one place in the United States

generally jlace in 1

where gun-cotton is manufactured, bat such is the case. This is at the torpedo station in Newport Harbor. In the manufacture of gun-cotton the best cotton waste and the strongest and purest nitric and sulphuric acids are used foi the explosive. The cotton waste, after it has been handpicked for the purpose of removing the dirt and grit, is placed in boiling tanks, where it is allowed to remain for four hours. It is afterward subjected to a thorough washing and is reboiled. This operation removes all oily matter and leaves the cotton harsh and stiff. It is then dried in the rooms heated with the waste air from a drying box.

After undergoing this treatment the ootton rolls up into snarls and bunches, and in order that the acid may have a freer access to it it is passed through a shredder and converted into a fiufly state. It is afterward exposed in an air-tight box for several hours to a temperature of 200 degrees, which practically deprives it of all moisture. From the air-tight box it is removed to the dipping room, where there are iron troughs filled with one part nitric acid and two parts of sulphuric acid. Into these troughs the cotton is placed, one bundle at a time, and allowed to remain about ten minutes, long enough for it to be thoroughly soaked. Tne acid is hand-pressea from the cotton, which is then placed in covered earthen jars, where it remains twenty-four hours undergoing chemical transformation.

In view of the fact that much heat is evolved during the chemical reaction, it is found necessary to place the jars in pots and surround them with flowing water, which serves to keep them cool. The cotton is now nitrated and is practically gun-cotton, but the acid, still mechanically held, must be wholly removed or it would be apt to quickly deteriorate and become extremely dangerous. The charges, therefore, are taken one by one and placed in an acid wringer and plunged into a large tub which is kept filled with running water, in which a large wheel is rapidly turned in order to subject the cotton to a thorough washing. This latter process is continued till no acid is perceptible to the taste. It is then subjected to a still further washing and boiling in an alkaline mixture, this being necessary to remove every trace of acid.

The cotton is now in long flhreds and balls, which can be used or stored without danger, the processes of conversion and cleansing being completed, but for military use it must be put into a more compact form. For tnis purpose the gun-cotton in charges of 800 pounds is thrown into a pulping tub, where, mixed with water, it is ground by steel cutters into a fine pulp. The grinding and breaking up of tne cellular tissue of the cotton has made it more or less dirty, and it is necessary, therefore, to expose it to frequent washings in the

fioaching

tubs, from which after treating

with lime water to make the moisture slightly alkaline, it is drawn up into a large iron tank, where it is fea to the molds, which under a moderate pressure, press the water from the pulp and trim out cylinders of cotton about eight inches high and three and a half inches in diameter. These cylinders are then placed under a hydraulic press and exposed to a pressure of about 1,700 pounds to the square inch or about eight tons on each. The cylinders are pressed into hard cakes or disks, some two inches high and three and a half inches in diameter, with' a specific gravity a little greater than water. They are then packed in boxes of fifty pounds each and'kept in magazines for general use. Gun-cotton is, from its great explosive power and the conditions of safety attached to its storage, superior to any other known explosive for naval warfare.—New Yortc Times., 1

"How

girls,

U-,

$

Can

thntdttafi

She Ever Lflve Him

is what you often hear said when the prospective groom is the victim of catarrh. "How can she bear such a breath?" "How resolve to link her destiny with that of one with a dieease, that unless arrested, will end in consumption, or perhaps in insanity?" Let the husband that is, or is to be, get Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and cure himself before it is too, iaUi,r By druggists.

rrjAcoBS oil

J*

.st

EBauuSSchf

f" Cuiei SbtaaatSio, MnoalgU, 111 llfl |B|0*riuwfc«, Bnluk, Taathacbc

rill ralii

8^2^s^iwr

Fifty Cents. At DraaMl «n1

THS

n«*!en.

CHARLn X.

TOCKUSS to- Sit,

r.

8.

i.

RED STAR

TRADE MARK.

MMMU JEmetlc

Treefrvmi

PROMPT.SAFE.SURE CmftrOtakt, C*l4**ad (tktr TWwrt

mmm Lnf

Affwflwfc

fimCBrm Borne. irDmnminSuim,

All Sorts of

harts and many sorts of ails, of man and beast

need

a cooling

lotion, Mustang Liniment,

Another $10,000.

My legs for seven years were one solid ulcer from my knees to my ankles. I had the best medical treatment that could be had in tbe state of Ohio, but this horrible disease resisted all the efforts made. Tbe pain and loathsome odors became almost intolerable. At last I was induced to try Swift's Specific. It has worked wonders. I commenced to take S. S. S. the first of January, 1884, and have taken 33 large size bottles. To-day my legs are sound and well as they ever were, and I am truly grateful for what it has done for me. In fact I woul4 not take f10,000 for what it has wrought in me, because I honestly be' lieve it grave,

haa saved me from an early

I ft

JoHH

Huntington, Tenn., January 3,188S.

S. S. S. as a Lotion.,

Mr. R. O. Bean, passenger agent on the Mobile and Ohio railroad, writing from Miss., says: "I have seen Swift's Specific used as a wash for ulcers and pimples with the most gratifying results. As a blood

{tuxifier

it drives the poison to the sur-

ace, and then used as a wash, it absorbs and drys up the sores. I have seen it used in cases of blood poison, and Bkin eruptions, and these diseases disappear in one-half tbe time that it ordinarily takes by the usual method

Mrs. Oliver Hard man, of Monroe, Ga., who has had a cancer cured on her face says: "I used Swift's Specific as a wash in the treatment of my cancer with re markable success. I spnnged the sore with the medicine diluted with a little water. It softened the scab, cooled the face and relieved the itching sensation."

We have received assurances from others of the excellent character of the medicine as a wash, in cases like those referred to above. We give this information as we received it, leaving every one to test the matter for themselves.

Send for book on Blood and Skin diseases. It is tnailed free. The Swift Spboiwo Co., .7'"1 Drawer 3,

Atlanta,

The great wonder healer has no equal for cuts, bruises, scalds, burns, wounds and all other sores will positively cure piles, frost bites, tetter and all skin eruptions. Satisfaction or money refucded. 26 cents. Get tbe best of Guliek&Co. tf.

nawirs

BITTERS

Combining IBOW Witt PtJBE TEGRABLf TOlflGS, qprickly aad completely CIJtilSB aad ENRICHES TH23 BfcOOD. Qakkeas the aettea of the Liver aad

«Mi|rnm»slesiaiwlwe

Da.

Ma. W*. Brans, BOter St, Hew Orleans, I*.,

IboMMMbc a pannr." The Ctaudns has Tirade Mack sad crossed nd Haa oo wrapper. Take ae other, ltadacafrb? BROWH CHUMIOU CO., BALTIMORE, MB.

Haxd Book—useful

LAMOH' ilatBguit

J?

KrAMKB.®

O., Jan. 12th, 188ft.

The Krrers of Tooth!

A young man aged 24, was affected with blood taint of three years standing. Be tried the best physicians in Tennessee, but to no avul, he gradually growing worse, losing the septum of the nose almost entirely with a cancerous ulceration. He haul given up in despair when he was persuaded by me to try S. 8. S. He used ten bottles which made a final and radical cure. He is well and has been for two years, and not the slightest symptoms of return has ever appeared. 0. P. Prik8T1jT, Druggist.

Ga.

Griggs' Glycerine Salve.

aad attractive, eon

FRANK PRATT":

DEALER IN

Italian Marble and ail kinds of Amerl can and Foreign Granite

1

MONUMENTS

OORNER FIFTH AND WALNU7 STREETS TERRE HAUTE,1ND.

MITBD STATICS MARSHAL'S 8AXJE.

By virtae of a writ of execution to me directed from the Circuit Court of tb« United States, for the District of Indiana, In a caw wliereJn First National Bank, Danville, 111! nois is Plaintiff and William Collett. et. al., are Defendants, will on Monday, the 18th day of May, 1885, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m., at the door of the Court House In the (Sty of Xerre Haate, VJgo County, Indiana, expose at public sate to the highest bidder, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described Real Ehtate in Vigo County, Indiana:—Lots No. four (4) and five (6) in Block ten (10) of Toell Usher's subvision of part of southeast qoarter of Sec-

Taken as the property of Oeorge Penn. If soch rents and profits will not sell for a sum sufficient to pay judgment, interests, and oosu,on said execution, I will at tbe same time and place, offer for sale in like manner the fee simple of said Real Estate, or so much thereof as may be neeewary. Said sale to be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws.

ROOT. Ck FOSTER, United Btatea M»r*ilal.

MeDonald, Batler Mason. Attorneys for Plaintiff.

GLENHAM HOTEL.

•FIFTH AVENUE. N*TW YORK, Bet. fist and ZM sta., near Madison Sqoarr, EUROPEAN FLAN.

'i-

Advertising Cheats!!!

"It has become common to begin an article, in an elegant, interesting style. "Then run it into some advertisement

that

we avoid all such, "And simply call attention to the mertte Hop Bitter^in„£» plain, honest terms as possible,

Vr"

"To induoe people "To give them one trial, which so proves their value that they will never use anything else. '•The Remedy so favorably notioed in aK the papers,

Re igious and peenlar, is "Having a large sale, and is supplanting all other medicines. "There is no denying the virtues of the Hey plant, and the proprietors of Hop Bittern have shown great shrewdness and ability "In compounding a medicine whose virtues are so palplable to every one's observa­

Bid She Die?

"No! '|She lingered and suffered along, pining away all the time for years, "The doctors doing her no good "And at last was cured by this Hop Bltteas the papers say so much about." "Indeed! Indeed! "How thankful we should be for that medicine.'

A Daughter' Misery.

"Eleven yeare our daughter suffered pa a bed of misery, "From a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble and Nervous debility, "Under the oare of the best physicians, "Who gave her disease various names, "But no relief, "And now she is restored to us in health by as simple a remedy as Hop Bittern that we had shunned for years before using it."—The Parents.

Father Is Getting Well.

"My daughters say: "How much better father is since he used Hop Bitters." "He is getting well after his lona suffering from a disease detlared incurable. "And we are so glad that he used your Bitter."—A Lady of Utica, N. Y. eWNone genuine withont a bunch of green Hops on the white label. 8hun all tne vilo, poisonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" In their name.

No. 415 OHIO STREET,

TERRE HAUTE, INDI^'

!EttahlUh*d 1S7£.)

all of the Jfye, JBar, Head,Wfi Throat, Lungs and all Chrtmi* IHteaim,

EniwKSlally

tbaa*

Kidneys.

CHROXIC pnSASVS af Womeaw

Children

TMnla, Plica,

tha 3#nlto-UrlfiarT

diaaaaea

fnrWlabad.

Clears Us

eoaplexioa, makes tfceskla naooth. Itdoesaot iajire the teeth, eaese headache, or predaeecoa•tlpatloa—ILL OTHER IRON MEDICI* DO.

iwiisiimsnil

It

ot llsHon, Mass.. Wi

iters 1b

DaLsau* bad Brown's uvu

Lopaa.Ouioara,

Opt*

Habit, Rheumattom, Kcaraljte, gxtn Pjaaaaw, W» BASX6

of

tha ATOM AOH, lTVER,

dlMaaa*

of

gTLBI*, HBAJBTi

tha Ktdnaya aad Bladder, aad an dtoar

Syatam. ALL

EASES: Paralyato,

HBBVOnS

Chorea ar St. Titaa DaoM,

icpay, Catalapay,

SCROFULA In

all Ita twrvaa, and

not tnoOMBfnllr

Phyatctan"

Iraated

by tha

aad DeformtUaa afall kteda, aad taatra

JBZBCTMICITTand JBItMCTMZC BA KB All eaaaa of Agaa, Powb Afua aad

V»tw,

Platala, Hlaa, Oleara aad

of tha Xactoaa, Lvpaa, bm* Oaaaara, aaaat raaaa, Pasi&la Pluaaaa gaaaralljr, Oraavlat Dlerra af tha Carta*, Watt aad Sara Ifaa, of tha Bya. Bar, Van, Throat a* Ikte /Kai Spormatarrtt'

aiNSClw A Myii vinsua navn) awww wvaanr|

VarvMKMl*, Herafa or Baetwa, Ifikm ar Uta. W Sara Lap. Old Borea

faajrwfcwre

«poa tha badri

Bfta»

mattaTAeata ar Chrcrta, •oaarrtoaa, SyphMto Cfeaaaraida.

•right's Msease and Ml Seas Cftlie, Kte.

OoasaltaHea

tree

aad iavftad.

Addraaa

Ho Hoxsx will die of

withstand

GRATEFUL—COMFORTING.

EPPS'S COCOA

V' BREAKFAST^. "By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfart tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many a heavy doctors' bills. It is by the judicious meof rach articles of diet that aconstltution may be gradually built up until strong enongh to resist every tendracy to disease. Hundreds of subtle meladiu are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by kee ourselves well fortified with pure blood ana a properly nourished frame."—[Civil Service Gazette.

Made simply with boiling water or milk. Hold only In half pound tftis by grocers, labeled thus: JAMK8 EPPS A CO.. Homcoopathle Chemists, London, Eng.

consumption

I htr*

ft potltlY*

rvmtfjr tot th« «bow

qm thotUMUidft of

umi011

itMdlDf

th# vorat kind and of joo*

Hits

bMii ndMtl, »oitrot»fliinjrr«il

lriti.Owcr thM I Wl utid TWO BOTTLES/KB*

l^rth

a

VAMJABT.BTREAnSSan thl.dlaaA

lout rafferar. Olra axpraaa and O. «4dr»«,

pa. T. A. 0LOCUM, Ml Pearl St., Haw Tort.

O S

HOR8E ANO CATTLE POWDERS

Colic, Bots

cnaagc of

320

K. B. BARRY, Proprietor.

or Lose Pa­

ri x, If Foots* Powd#m are naed in time. Foctrt Powder* win mm *nl prevent HoeCaoiJtaA* Foatc** Powder*

111

prevent

Pontz'«

Gap** i*

Powrtpra

rowut

wfll

lnrrea»e the tpmntlty

of

wtla

and cream twenty per cent, sad make tbe bettor sne and **•(•?t. FootzM Powder* will enreorprevent almost avaar Diskas* to which Hones and Cattle are aobject.

Tovrzt Powiwas w*u. eiva Satuvaotlow. Sold

everywhere. pavid B. rotTTZ, Proprietor# SALTIKOKS, KS.

LAST CHANCE

To obtain Governtaent Loads free that are twrsblw for general farming aad stock raising purpose*—before chaage of kwt as per bB3s now pending in Congrea*.

IN THE DEVIL8 LAKE,

TURTLE MOUNTAIN,

And Mouse River Country.

north

•fince ft'l""v.

AuKtu

DAKOTA

ffiie

Orer 2,000,000 Acre* of R. R. Lands in Miaaetota at tha low price ef 13.00 per acre and upwafU*. **parbcuUn mailed—"•

cTfLWAJUUtN,

Sectional Map aad fall particular* mailed

free toaayaodieaa by Gea'l Paaa. Agent, Sb Fad, Mian, and

free to any GWlPaat-^-, Msaimtiu R. &, Sr. Pan, Mm*. it'

i*. .Hi