St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 17, Number 48, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 18 June 1892 — Page 3

«>• Only On* Ever Printed-Can You Flnl the Word? .T, I ?®™ 13 a 8 “l“ ch d'sP’ay advertisement n? I*' 1 *' this week whlch has 110 two words alike except one word. The same Ls from°The aC Dr ne n T appear,n ? °ach week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This P1 b aCeS a “Crescent” on everythinShould Adopt Cremation. V hile some folks in New Jork would force us to take a step backward by endeavormg to get a law enacted which would prohibit cremation, the municipal of raris hav e recently decided that the bodies of those dying in hospitals unclaimed by friends shall disposed <>f by cremation. Ihe New lork authorities may yet be driven to adopt the same method. In the pauper burial ground on Hart’s Island, such bodies are buried three deep m close trenches with little earth between. It would seem as though in course of time this must so pollute the breezes of Long Island Sound as to make neighboring shores unfit for habitation. Kt s stopped free by Dr. Kline's Gro it “WD® Kest«> er. Xo Fits after first day's use. MarISi ' P}' 4 ^ 86 ?" d M trial bottle free to cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 031 Arch St.. Phila Pa

^4 COIYRKHT laooj. A DEAD SHOT right at the seat of difficulty, is accomplished by the sure and steady aim of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. Don’t fool, around with a pop-gun, nor a “ Flint-lock,” when this reliable “Winchester” is within reach! Dr. Sage's treatment of Catarrh in the Head is far superior to the ordinary, and when directions are reasonably well followed, results in a permanent cure. Dcm’t longer be indifferent to the verified claims of this unfailing Remedy. The worst forms of Catarrh disappear with the use of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. Its mild, soothing, cleansing and healing properties effect a perfect and permanent cure, no matter how bad the, case, or of how long standing. It's a remedy that succeeds where everything else has failed. Thousands of «uch cases can be pointed out. That's the reason its makers back their faith in it with money. They offer SSOO reward for a case of Catarrh which they cannot cure. It’s a medicine that allows them to take such a risk. Doesn’t common sense lead you to take such a medicine? “An advertising fake” you say. Funny, isn't it, how some people prefer sickness to health when the remedy is positive and the guarantee absolute. Wise men don’t put money back of fakes.” And “faking” doesn’t pay.

“I Hate to Oh, Woman! ' ' * « False modesty ASK and procrastination are responsibly Doctor.*’ ble £pr much of 1 J VOUT Stiff erln.-r 1

- x — ' We can excuse the delicacy of the young, but there is no excuse for a woman who neglects the freely offered assistance of a woman. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is' the product of a life’s practice of a woman among women, and an unfailing

cure for woman’s ills. It removes at once those pains, aches, and weaknesses, brightens the spirits, anu invigorates the entire system. An unexcelled remedy for Kidney Troubles. | All Druggists sell it, or sent f by mail, in form of Pills or 3 Lozenges, on receipt of S 1.00. Liver Pills, &SC. Correspondence freely answered. Address in confidence. Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn, Mass.

flit An Infallible Remedy. XII Bellville, 111., Nov. 18. lam 27 years of age no since I was 16 years old I was a sufferer of epuepsy. In Germany I was treated by one of the best physicians for five years, but no relief. I tllen came to Amerioa and here I tried many so-called cures for that terrible disease, but 1 was so disappointed that I gave up all hopes of ever getting rid of it, because I didn’t ever get relief. But after all I was soon convinced that there is a real remedy, which really cures epilepsy. In the month of April I commenced to take Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic, theeffc"* of which was so marvelous that only once since then the fits returned, but now five months have elapsed and not a symptom of the disease showed itself. I am, therefore, convinced that the Nerve Tonic is a real cure for epilepsy and shall always hold it in grateful remembrance. A MUCKENSTURM. ■ampsA Valuable Boob on Nervous LULL Diseases sent free to any address, FK F F and poor patients can also obtain i | 11 Lb Lb this medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind., since 18<o. and is now prepared underhis direcdoidby the KOENIG MEH. CO.. Chicago, I'.!. gold by Druggists at SI per Bottle. G for §5. Large Size, 51.~5. 6 Bottles for S 9. @@©@© 0 © ® ® © A torpid liver is the source of dyspep- • sia. sick headache, constipation, piles, bilious fever, chills and jaundice. •Tutt’s Tinij O have a specific effect on the liver, re storing it to healthy action. |BEST POLISH 6N THE WOSuB.'

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DO NOT BE OECEiVED'^^^^^ 3 with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints •which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn off. The Rising Sun StdVe Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and the consun er pays for no tin or glass package I riu every purchase. KAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,0G0 TONS. |

REAL RURAL READING WILL BE FOUND IN THIS DEPARTMENT. Tlio Season Should Regulate the Use of th< ^Cultivator—Good Roads—Farming is ai Independent Life-Machine for Milking Cows, Etc. Cultivation of Corn.

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- more frequent cultivation is advantageous in a dry season, and that in a wet season it is possible to give too much. During last season, which was a wet one, it was found that four times cultivation produced best results. As a rule, with a fairly dry season it is supposed that the occasional stirring of the soil whereby it is loosened and becomes aerated, it not ■ only takes moisture from the atmosphere, but also absorbs therefrom those gases that are ^thcr a direct source of fertilization or aid therein. But like many other points in farming operations, while theoretically correct, they cannot be practically carried out for want of time, and it is yet to be demonstrated whether the advantages are such as to warrant he additional expenditure that would be necessary. Better Than a Horse Fork. A handy home-made contrivance which will assist greatly at the unloading of hay during the busy afternoons of haying time, is nothing more nor less than two inch ropes each ten feet long. A strong ring must be spliced in each end of each rope. • Previous to putting on the load in the field, these ropes must be laid. ■ one across the forward end and the ■ other half-way between the middle । and back end of the rigging. The ■ ropes are allowed to hang loosely out- J side of the rigging. On driving the 1 load into the barn, the rings on the ’ side next the mow where the hay is : to be placed, are caught in two heavy ' hooks in the side of the hay. Ropes ■ and blocks hanging to the plate over i • —— — ■— ——— z ■ ■ SS

r ^ TW TWini ■bALa -T » tbnsenocl and carried over the load and attached by ( hooks to the rings on the other sfde of the load. Two strong men can readily roll the load off the rigging and into the mow if it be on a level with the

rigging or below it. If the load be especially heavy, a second block will be necessary to aid the men. Bank barns with deep bays can be tilled as quickly with this appliance as with the more expensive comn^erci.d horse fork.—ll. S. Spaulding in Farm and Home. The Hoad Question, The subject of improved roadways is apparently under serious consideration, for the public press, from one ; end of the country to the other, has . the same under continual discussion. This is well, for all kinds of reform | have been effected by continued atri- . tation, and there is n« greater ocI casion for agitation in any ordinary i matter of importance than is presented in this. Although the extent of roads throughout the country is great, those of the greatest importance should be so improved as to make them suitable for travel at any season of the year. What is wanted is a permanent, hard road bed. one

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13 <1 JKIUKIUIUU) imi VI t'/tvt* that will not be affected by rains in summer or frosts in winter. AN here, 1 as is the case in the country, the; roads are composed of earth, with enough stones to make them an abomination on a rainy day, they become simply tracks of mud. and the real cost to every one who is compelled to tiavel, in the wear and tear of vehicles and injury to animals, can hardly be estimated. So let the good work of agitation go on, and the result may be the working out of some system of .improvement that will be of a permanent character. ’Tlsan Independent I.tie. A corespondent of the American Farmer says: “1 often wonder why so many who live in the country seem to look only on the dark side of their home life. I lived in tbe country until I was about twenty-live, ami in tiie memory there is far more sunshine than shadow; in fact. I often look back upon those days with an indescribable longing, Many iarmcrs are so grasping and spend so little money on luxuries, or frequently even necessities, that to their families life is anything but bright. Or they may live on the frontier, far from church, schools or towns, and thus be deprived of manv privileges. But given a good farm out of debt, the produce of which more than makes a bare lit ing, schools, good neighborhood and a farmer with a soul above hoarding every dollar toward the purchase of more land, and you have the happiest, most independent life imaginable. Horses Should Wear Ught Shoes. Horses are commonly made to car- • ry too heavy shoes. The shoe is de-

x signed merely to protect thenoof,and the lighter it can lie made and still serve its purpose, the better for the - horse. Horses that are devoted to farm work, and on land where there are few or no stones, may dispense e with shoes, except while the ground n is frozen. This would be of great ad-; g vantage to the horse, to say nothing of the saving in the horseshoer’s bill. But most horses require shoeing, and the shoes worn are generally heavy f iron ones. Steel shoes can be made - lighter, will wear longer, and the i I first cost is not so much more that it a j need prevent their being used. Light , j horses and driving horses should al- / I ways wear them. For horses of 1,100 a pounds weight, and with well-shaped, - upright feet, the fore shoes should s weigh about one pound each, and the i hind ones twelve ounces. If four f ounces are added to each shoe, let us

kHE judgment of intelligent farmers, based upon their experience and observation, would satisfy them that the matter of cultivation depends somewhat upon । the condition of the season, and this is confirmed by results of experiments at the Kansas Station. The conclusion arrived at is that

I see what a difference it will make. I In plowing, cultivating, mowing, ■ reaping and many other farm opera- ; tions, a horse will walk from ten to twenty miles a day, and advance at

I about four feet at a step. At each step the horse lifts a half pound extra on its two feet or 600 pounds in every mile. In a day’s work of fifteen miles, the horse would lift 9,900 pounds extra or nearly five tons. If the force required to lift this five tons of iron could be expended in the work the horse is doing, much more could be accomplished. In the light of these facts, is it any wonder that when young horses begin to wear shoes, they soon grow leg-weary, have their step shortened and acquire a slower walking gait?—American Agriculturist. Will Milk Thirty Cows an Hour, There has been received at the | Chicago Custom House a machine ! which, it is claimed, will do away ! with that useful adjunct to every well l regulated farm, the farm hand who ! milks the cows. The apparatus was | imported from Glasgow, Scotland. ■ This machine, it is claimed, will milk j thirty cows in one hour, and do it so I easily and neatly that the cows will ; scarcely know it. The machine is' constructed on the vacum principle, and when adjusted to the cow the milk flows in a continuous stream, ‘ , and the machine does the work with- ' out assistance. The apparatus re-1 j ceived is said to be thv first one ever [ brought to this country, and its use : : will be in the nature of an experiment I at first The conti ivance is largely used hi Scotland, and its practical) ili-! ty has been long ago demonstrated. The great objection to the machine : by farmerswill probably be its price. ■ This one is valued at $55 in Scotland, । but the duties paid upon it added ■ $4 >, making the total cost SIOO. The appraisers had considerable difficulty i in finding a duty which would apply, no machines of the kind having ever . been received at that port Dairy Notes. ( Whitewash in the cow Stable ' makes things look cheerful and Is In , the direction of cleanliness.

the nu m bpr n f of milk increases. — Always be suspicious of a cow the progressive dairyman desires to sell. ■ Be knows the value of a good cow and never turns her off without a reason. The man that breeds and feeds farm animals nearly always makes money. It is when the animals breed ftr feed themselves, or both, that they are unprofitable. Look out for the creamery shark. I Don't let him bite you. Sign no pai per.;, make no contracts for building and equipment till you have estimates from two or more creamery supply houses. ‘•Will a cow lose 20 pounds in j weight by making too sudden a ' change to green grass'? Yes, sir. Would a fair share of this weight go to milk or butter if she were properly cared for? Yes, sir again.’’ It costs money to ill-treat a cow. Be regular in feeding, milking and watering, Keep everything quiet. Restlessness will shorten the milk tlow. It is the best plan to keep the cows in the stable from faH till spring, arranging the stables so tlwiA they can have access to water at all

times. A Movable Brooding Coop. A cheap poultry coop c;tn be made ; from an apple-barrel with the one end covered with lath ami a door to I admit of cleaning and placing feed for the brood and the old hen, says Farm and Home. At night ^nd on wet da\s a piece of oil cloth can be arranged to shelter the front and be thrown back when not in use. It can be easily removed from one place to another, admitting of fresh surroundings as often as deemed ne ‘essary. It is raised slightly from the, ground by means of blocks on either ' side to avoid the least dampness. ' The inside of the barrel should be covered with fresh straw in a moderate quantity. Wire netting in place i . of lath can also be used and is just as good for the front, possibly better. The entrance board can be made 1 ' about as shown by cutting the front j block under the barrel, slanting and placing cleats on it, to allow the chicks to get in and out easily. Poultry i'iekiug*. Provide shady runs for the chicks. ■ They cannot stand much sun. Do not crowd your flocks of youngl sters. Like in crowded docks of old > fowls, they become mischievous, t i sicken, and die. There is nothing gained by giving -a hen all the eggs she can cover. I Thirteen, fifteen at the most, are ! i enough for any hen. ’ Do not sprinkle the eggs in the incubator. Increase the moisture by adding hot water in the pans, or increasing the number of sponges. Keep a strict account of your feed

J bills, egg records, and sales of poul- । try, and at the end of the year sum up. It will prove that keeping hens pay. Never give soft feed to a sitting nen as it is liable to produce diarrhoea. • Corn and oats are best. Feed and water should be constantly before them. It is said that five drops each of turpentine and castor oil, thoroughly! mixed, and about one-half teaspoonful I given every morning, is an excellent roup cure. Before you set a hen be sure she means business. Test her by giving ier a nest egg. If she sits closely on H tor several days you can let her be 1 gin to incubate.

Locating an Apiary. beginning bee-keeping the location is one of the most important things to be considered. As bees ascend with difficulty when heavily laden, it would be better to have the apiary located in a valley, that after obtain-

' { n g a load of stores on the neighborlng hills, they may, as they return with their load, have a descending night. Low ground is also better protected from high winds. Learn which are the best honey-yielding plants and trees, and try if possible to locate within reach of reliable pasturage. While bees will go three or four miles if necessary, the best results are obtained, as a rule, by having an abundant pasturage within at least two miles. Look well to the immediate surroundings. A location near ponds or large bodies of water is not generallydesirable. Bees become fatigued while on the wing, especially when flying against the wind, and by • dropping into the water often become I chilled and drown. It is a great adI vantage to have a strip of timber on ! the windward side of the apiary, to l shelter hives from cold, heavy winds. |lf no natural protection is afforded, i a close high board fence should be i put up lor the purpose. When the I hives a:e not protected from the , wind, the bees when returning with । heavy loads are frequently unable to ; i strike the hive, are blown to the ! i ground, become chilled and die. If ■ one is located where there is little : natural pasturage for bees, much can ।be done to improve such locality by । furnishing artificial pasturage.—Field and Farm. Hints to Housekeepers. A wooden meat skewer is very convenient for cleaning the corners of saslt and other woodwork, and no material makes as nice cleaning cloths as old worn underwear. Wall paper may be cleaned and be made to look much fresher by rubbing with soft clothes dipped in oatmeal, if the cloths are changed often and never used when dusty. Otherwise it will look worse than at first. In washing table linen or any cloth stained with egg, avoid putting it in boiling water, which will set the A lll *t will LeiAiost permanent. col( l water Ql Jd -- - -Bfi

graham,.^ WT^JU-^b %^scrWiuAJaaKe p^^ility of graham bread used for’ dyspeptics, it is called gems or batter cakes. Brown bread is not made stiff enough to knead, but just a still batter that can Im? pm red into the pans. Test the heat of the oven with a piece of white paper. If toohot, the paper will blacken or lilaze up; if it becomes a light brown it is tit for pastry; if it turns dark yellow it is I tit for bread and the heavier kindsof cake; if light yellow the oven is ready for sponge cake and the lighter kinds of deserts. Miscellaneous Reel JU'S. Escalloped Egos.—Chop line cold | hard-boiled eggs; put in a r ppie al- , ternate layers of bread crumbs and ’ the minced eggs, seasoning each layer’ with pepper and salt: cover the top । i with crumbs. Pour over the whole a ! pint of hot milk seasoned with a spoonful of butter. Strawberry Jam. —Hull clean i berries and weigh them; simmer in lemon or orange juice, allowing one gill of the former or two of the latter to two large quarts of berries; then add sugar equal in weight to the ber-

cav&vi oo j-, •« * • i ««* *•* ■ • - ries, ami cook thirty minutes, stirring with a wooden spoon. Germantown Puffs. —One pint sifted flour, one pint milk, two eggs, a piece of iwitter the size of a walnut, one teaspoonful of salt. Beat the eggs very light, whites and yolks separately. Mix them and add the milk, and then stir in the flour. Beat well. Melt tiie butter ami stir in last. Butter some small baking cups, till them half full and baxe in a quick oven. Pull them open and eat with fresh butter. Strawberry Pudding. — Sift a pint of flour witli one-half teaspoonfuls of baking powder and add a pinch of salt. Stir othis into sweet milk until a stiff batter is produced, then pour into cups a spoonful of the batter, add a spoonful I of strawberries and cover them with a spoonful of batter. Steam twenty minutes. For a sauce, cream one teacupful of sugar and half a teacupj ful of butter, add two eggs previously I beaten, also a teacupful of boding 1 milk and one of strawberries. i Pie Pi<ant Fritters. —First pare I and cut into small pieces a dozer i stalks of pie plant. Then make a batter by beating to a smoott paste a pint of flour with halt E i pint of water, adding a pinch of salt, a pint of milk and two well beater j eggs. Stir the rhubarb into this bat 1 1 ter. Have the frying material boil ^ng hot in the fryingpan. and droj ■ | the batter in by spoonfuls. try the ’ same as other fritters, and when done ■ j brown on both sides, drain and serve I with butter and sugar with a ; ttb. I j grated nutmeg.

Give Us Laughing Philosophers. Nono of your snarling cynics for us. They laugh not. neither do they smile. They are lugubrious-dyspeptic. They are usually sour of visage, pale, slight, dry, quite gravyl e#s individuals in fact, who look as if they had been at loggerheads with roast beef all their Ures. The side-splitting, button-bursting guffaw that proceeds from the individual with a good diges ion is neve ■ heard from them. They magnify mole hills into mountains, “trifles light as air" into grievous annoyances. Show us, on the contrary, a man who faces trouble with a smile, repines not at small mishaps, and in whom th? fountains of merriment are easily set a-fiow, and we will show you a man with a good digestion. Use Hostetter's Stomach Bitters to secure this blessing, and banish the nervousness and querulous disposition to snarl and find fault which attends dysp psia. Rheumatism, constipation, malaria, kidney trouble and la grippe yield to the Bitters. Historic Names Descend to Women. It is noteworthy what a number of i men eminent in the era ’6l-65 are now 1 itpiesented only in the female iine of descent. Neither Abraham Lincoln nor Jefferson 1 avis has a living grandson. Neither has Andrew Johnson. Thurlow

tr hxnunow need, nor Horace Greeley. Gen. Hancock’s one son left behind him onlv a small daughter. There is no representative of Gen. Scott s name. A singular parallel runs betwixt two Confederate Generals, Stonewall Jackson and John Morgan prince of raiders. Each died before the war ended, leaving one fair daughter. Ihe two girls grew up, married haopily bore each a daughter, and died soon atter giving birth to a second child. Cultivated Taste. ~ The Hindoos are a conscientiously clean pe >ple, and yet they can eat asai fetida, and even get away with it in a pudding. A. M. PRIEST, Druggist, Shelbyville, Ind., 'ays: “Hall’s Catarrh Cure gives the best of satisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonials, as it cures every one who takes it.” Druggists sell it, 75c. “I wish you wouldn’t bite threads off with your teeth,” said Mr. Skinnphlint to his wife. “You’ll wear your teeth out, ami the set my first wife left wouldn’t fit yoa.” The Pubeic Awards the Pai.m to Hale’-^ i Hovey of Horehound and Tar as a cough remedy. ® PiKe.'s Toothache Drops Cure in one Minute ! A Steubenville (Ohio) woman a few ! | days ago chased a man three squares I I and pelted him with stones for spanking ' her boy. Every heart has a secret drawer, the i spring of which is only known to the owner. Who would be free from earthly ills must buy a box of Beecham’s Pills. 25 cents a box. Worth a guinea. Command your temper, lest it should ' command you.

Hood’s Sarsaparilla So promptly and effectually overcomes THAT TIREU FEELING as to conclusively prove this medicine 1 “makes the weak strong J. B. Emeiton, a well-known j merchant of Auburn, Maine.

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Mr. J. B. Liuerton. had Dyspepsia, complicated with Liver and Kidney troubA;. He took HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA and it gave relief and great comfort. He says : “It is a God-send to any one suffering as I did."

_ %w■siaMi - wvw enjoys Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers aud cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and SI bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N.Y. I

Fer Ladies and Cents. Six styles Pneumatic Cushion and S.oiid Tires. MgSgN \ Vl \ | Diamond Frame, Steel Drop Forgings, Steel > Tubing, Adjustable Ball Bearings to ail running parts, .jySB including Pedals. Suspension Saddle. OU'S/ Strictly HIGH GRADE in Every Particular. ''C j/ Send 6 cents in stamps for our 100-page illustrated cats- I LTL logce of Gaus, Hilles, Revolvers. Sporting Goods^ etc. VELL ARMS CO., Mfrs., 147 Washington St,BOSTON, \

Barlow’s Indigo Blue. The Family Wash Blue, tor sale by Grocers. HEMORDIA PILES. VISE OXLY SURE CURE. Price SI.OO by mail. HEMWRDIA CO., 110 Fulton St., New York Eetablinhel IS3O. Nature’s Herbal Remedies.

vt of each nook by dmjle and brook The healing biouxomr lean look." a DR. o.l' BROWN’S illrcat External Ucnierly | HERBAL OINTMENT reaches dis asp through the pores, arouses circulation. heals inti am mati« ii. bursbus pain: 25c. Druggists or by mail. 17 Grand st., Jcncy City. N. J.

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“German Syrup” My niece, Emeline Hawley, was, taken with spitting blood, and she became very much alarmed, fearing that dreaded disease, Consumption. She tried nearly all kinds of medicinebut nothing did her any good. Finally she took German Syrup and she told me it did her more good , than anything she ever tried. It stopped the blood, gave her strength . and ease, and a good appetite. I had it from her own lips. Mrs. Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn. Honor to German Syrup. q Kennedy’s Medical Discovery lakes hold in this order: Bowels. IRiver. Kidneys. Inside Skin, Outside Skin, j Driving everything before it that ought I to be out. You know whether you need it or not. Sold by every drugglst.*nd manufactured by DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBURY, MASS. PH B&■ ANAKESIS gives Instant g | □ £1 relief, and is an INFALLIa ’k BLE CUKE for PILES. SH Mi Price, $1; at druggists or ■ s 3 - M by mail. Samples free, S W— L? Address ‘•ANAKESIS,’’ H 3^l 23C1 MS' Eox24lu, New Xoek City. The Laxative Gam Drop. The Laxative Gum Drop is a new form of laxative that has just been placed upon the market. It resembles in form and taste the gum drop of the confectioners, but i' has no medicinal taste. It is, however, an effective but pleasant laxative, without griping or discomfort. These drops can be carried in the pocket or the valise without danger or injury. They can be given to the children without their suspecting that they contain medicine, for they will never find this out from the taste, although they will from the effect. In short, they contain the elements of a perfect laxative without any of the unpleasant accompaniments that usually surround this class of remedies. There is nd spoon, no liquid, no bottle, no unnieasant reminders that there-is^aJCfa-^bjng as medicine. They can be time. Ask yom -

o^^ TH E ONLY TRUE £9? IRON H’TONIC Ct Will purify BLOOD, regulate 'SEggSa KIDNEYS, remove LIVER TEggSS, disorder, build strength. renex appetite, restore health and vigorofyouth. Dyspepsia, -tsHgSik Indigestion, that tired feelingabsolutel y eradicated. Mind brightened, t rain b ■ ■ power Increased, I 1 ft 1 F A bones, nerve-, tuns. I1 IH L V cles, receive new force. I Raila n suffering from complaints peLIUJ I Lw culiar to tiieir sex. using it. find a safe, speedy cure. Returns rose bloom on cheeks, beautifies Complexion. Sold everywhere. All genuine goods bear “Crescent. ’’ Send us 2 cent stamp for 32-paga pamphlet. D&. HARTER MECICINE CO.. St. Louis, Ho. • RIFANS TABULES regulate, * the stomach, uver and bowels, pure-. * f f ’‘ ie blood, are sale and effectual; , • the best medicine known for bilious- * * JOS' ,c,/ness. constipation. dyspepsia, foul* « breath,headache jnental depression,* • painful digestion, bad comileaion.e * and all diseases caused bv failure of • the stomach, liver or bowels to per-* ♦ form their proper functions Persons given to over-’ • eating are Benefited bv taking one after each neal. T • Price. S 2; sample. 15c 'At Druggists. o» sent by mall. T • RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., 10 Spruce St. J«ew York. I • •••••••••••••••••••I ">••«*<¥•••»••« « TO CL 8!■ SLjB fng jewelry, vatches. tablewart, etc. Platea 'YStu-- finest <f jewelry as new. on a!’ kinds cf ; metal with golL'ilvtr or ni'kel. Noevperien-' .No capital. Every bouse ha^ eools n^dine platinz. FLC^D^s** s Co., Col am baa. O. r© FOLKS REDOCED / Mrs. Alice Maple. Oregon, Mo., writes \ u ( I J “My weight was 320 founds, now it is a reduction of 125 lbs.” For circulars address, with 6c^ Dr.O.W.F q N\'DEBL McVicker’s Theatre. Cnicaco. 111. [PENSION 3yrs ill last? war, 15adjUdieatiE!jc*aiiii5, aitj

C. N. U. No. 25 y * WHEN WHITING TO ADVERTISERS, jdea^r say you saw the advertisement hl th;< Di)Wr. Con»<ituptlves and people 83 Ie who have weak lungs or AsthB 8 ma. should use Piso’sCure for Consumption. It has cured gS thousands. It has not injur- SS MB e i one. It is not bad to take. |K It is the best cough syrup. ■ Sold everywhere. 35c. S