St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 37, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 1 April 1893 — Page 2
EASTER BELLS. Peal joyously, sweet Easter bells, Faith’s glorious victory o er the tomb; King in life's fullness and its bliss, To’j out the sorrow and the gloom. Chime Hope’s bright greeting to the world A glad and earnest prophecy — Tell of the dear deiights oi earth, King in the reign of charity.; Ring in a host of simple joys, Peal out the hours of doubts rnd fears; Chime in the days of sunny nuiles, King put the unavailing tears, Tell us the good that wo can do In pitying glance, in secret prayer, In tender touch, in word of hope That may relieve a soul’s despair. Ch. gentle teachings of the bells I Within our grateful souls abide, Through spring’s delights through falling leaves, When flowers'loom, when storms betide, Touch hearts responsive, till th"y beat 'J he rhythm of the happy swells Making our t houghts and words and deeds Sweet echoes of the Easter bells. —Good Housekeeping. AN EASTER CARD. “No. Jean,” said Hester Dalton, with some energy, “you need not read ‘Eternal Goodness’ to me; I am not in the spirit for it. When Whittier wrote that I supiose he meant what he said, but what does a man like that, whose life had always been placid and beautiful, know of a life like mine? What faith I used to have seems to have dropped from me like a cloaks and 1 am not quite sure sometimes t at 1 believe in anything, or anybody—but you,” she added, seeing the hurt look upon .lean’s lace. The speaker was a young girl. She was only 19. but her face was old and sad for her years. She came near being beautiful too, but there was a coldness about her face, as if she had repressed and held in check all softer and gentler emotions. Her sister Jean was as unlike her as possible. No one would think of calling her beautiful, and yet her face bad just what Hester’s lacked. Iler eyes were gentle, and of a soft hazel, while Hester's eyes were black. Jean’s hair, too, just suited the eyes; it was light brown, and broke into little rebellious curls about her face. Hester’s hair was 1 lack, and she was tall and full of dignity. Jean hardly knew what dignity meant, in regart to herself, so seldom did she practice it: she was too small, and so Hester, although the joungest by three years, always tooi< the lead.
They were quite alone, these two; without near relatives, and few friends. They had but little time for friends for life with them was a very earnest thing, in which there were no halfholidays. They had been in Chicago two years now, ever since the death of tlieir father. Hester had been induced to leave their home in a neighboring town, by seeing an advertisement in a Chicago paper for a lirst-class book-keeper. She had had a very complete education, and this wasoneof the branches she had mastered, more to plea-e her lather than for any thought that the knowledge would ever be of use to her.
She started that day for Chicago, to answer the advertisement in person. It was but a short journey, and in a few hours she stood in the private office of a iarge dry goods establish ment. She had but a short time to wait. Thesenior partnerof Metzon & Metzon vas sorry, but they had secured a book-keeper that morning. Did he know of any vacant position of the kind? He did not; he was sorry to disappoint her, etc., etc. She went out and telegraphed for Jean to come. They would have a better chance here to earn a living; she knew they could find something to do, and anyway, they must be together. Jean came full of hope, and together, they had tried to solve this difficult problem: How to live in a large city, without friends and very little money. I't was more difficult than either of them had expected, and when after the first week the money began to get low, and still there seemed to be no chance of getting employment, Hester looked into Jean’s face and wondered what they should do. But I the following day Jean got a position I as trimmer in a small millinery es- ; tablishment. How elated they were over this piece of good fortune! Hester, too, had better success, and secured the place of book-keeper in a book store, at a very modest salary it is true, for the firm was not a large one. '“’Ut together they earned enough u tbcm in the simple way in whmh they were contented to live. This was two years ago; they had been busy years, a constant struggle with no play-time. “I would give it up, Jean, and go away to the country, for somebody's I hired giri, only if we stop for a week ' we shall starve,” said Hester, bit- • terly. “Don’t get blue, dear,” answered! Jean. “I am head trimmer now. ! and my salary is to be raised next' month. ” It was this same evening, a dreary, ' drizzling night in January, that Hester had slipped, coming home i from work, and sprained her ankle so badly that Jean became alarmed, and I getting her lan 1-lady to go with her, i she had gone for a doctor, one whose ! name she bad found in the directory, i and who happened to live near. | Fortunately he was at home, and went back with them at once. Poor Hester, what hard lessons in patience she had to learn! What i sombre views of life she took. Life, with its straight unswerving paths, its selfish human nature, and its i weary, endless strife for the mighty ; dollar. She wondered sometimes i what would become of them, with < her hands idle. i But Jean always cheered and comforted her, reminding her of the extra 1
salary, and pretending not to dread the future in the least. To-night she had been reading Whittier aloud, to help make Hester forget her own thoughts and her own suffering. “Eternal Goodness” was one of Jean's favorites and she had just read:
“I know not where His islands lift Their trended palms in air; I only know. I cannot drift; beyond His love and care,” when Hester interrupted her so impatiently. “Don’t think I am cross, Jean dear,” she added. “It is only this । constant struggle; it is enough to undermine the sweetest nature, and the most orthodox Presbyterianism. Let me be, and 1 shall be better after a while.” So Jean had straightened the bandage about the poor foot, and given her i sister a book, and sat idle herself. She was thinking out a plan that had come to her as she was busy that morning, with hats and bonnets. Hester used, in the old careless, happy days, to be fond of painting, and her deft fingers and ready brush ‘ had accomplished some very gcod work. Here she had no opportunity: j there were too many real artists for ian amateur to succeed, when bread and butter depended on success. Hut now a plan to give Hester some work she would enjoy had come to Jean. She would get some paints the next day, and Hester should not have .any more such long, dreary days. Thon her thoughts went back to the old happy time when they had I on'y understood the art of spending money, and nothing of making it. Then she thought of David Lockwood. They had known David oyer since they were children, and Jean remembered sadly how glad she had been when she found that he and Hester were engaged. Then had come the quarrel with David, which was folic wed almost immediately bv his departure for Europe. Then their father's loss of fortune, his sickness and death, and ever since that this weary struggle. The next day she brought home the materials for painting. Hester had some water-colors, and so it was * not very expensive after all. ! “Oh, thank you,” cried Hester, as : soon as she saw what Jean bad in the package. “I shall enjoy it so much, and who knows, maybe I can paint ’ j sometning that will sell. Only, Jean, 1 cannot afford the Howers to paint from as 1 used to, and I do so hate to 1 use cards, the designs are sure to be • stiff.” “Why do you not paint two or three j from, the same design,” said Jean. “You remember that beautiful bunch of Easter lillies you painted from the ■ ones David sent you? I think you could do that again from memory, Hester: I am sure? vou could. - ’ Jean had hesitated all evening with this suggestion upon her lips, for fear ' of hurting her sister by this ahusien to old days, and to 1 avid. Hut । Anally she had said it, and Hester J । was not hurt, b:t onlv looked thoughtful for a while, and then answered: “That was admired, as much as anything I -ever did. Yes. Jean, I am sure I can paint that without the flowers.” So the next day she went to work, and when Jean came home at night there were three cards finished. I'he j largest and best, a bunch of Ea ter I lillies so perfect that they almost ; seemed fragrant. । Jean made a special trip before । dark to the city, and succeeded ingeti ting $5 for three cards at a boox store where such things were a specialty. rhe came back much elated to find that the doctor had extended his professional visit into a friendly call, and talking to Hester, who was laughing at some witty saying, and who looked almost like her old self. Jean came in rosy and fresh from her walk in the crisp air. The doctor took a look at he a with admiring eyes. “You do nob need ■ any of my medicine, Miss Jean,” he said, laughing. And Jean found herself blushing, j in the most ridiculous and unaccount-I able manner. Someway she had i grown conscious lately that the doc- । tor’s visits were kept up because he ' liked to come, more than because Hester needed the calls He had been coming for live weeks now, and Hester would soon be able to be out again. Jean found herself thinking of the time when the visits would cease with some sadness. She intended to be quite frank with him, this very night. And so when he rose to go, she fol- i
lowed him down the narrow stairs to the door, and said: “Dr. Barton, I fear we cannot pay you very soon, but I shall attend to it as promptly as ■ possible. ” ■ She felt angry with herself, that ; she had so dreaded saying this to the ! doctor. । “It is just, the same as making terms with the grocery-man or the butcher, and 1 do not flush up ami feel so foolish and embarrassed at that,” she thought angrily. But for . some reason it had not. seemed quite the same. Dr. Barton had bowed gravely, and said for her to use her own convenience in the matter. And then he had talon her hand, to say “Goodnight,” and looked with such a kind smile into her eyes, as he said: “You must not work too hard, even to pay my bill; lean wait. Your health is of far more importance than the money, to—to your sister.” Jean knew that he had not intended to finish that way. She went back to Hester, with a strange happiness and content in her heart. She felt that a new joy was coming to her. so supreme that it crowded out all lesser and baser feelings. The next night as they sat reading there was a step m the balk
“It is Doctor Barton,’' said “But lie has been here once towß’ ,ean Then there cams a knock. Wday. l “No, it is not the doctor’s q W said Hester, as Jean went'y^ep,’ door. ' Jo thf The upper hall had no light; ■ considered an unnecessary ] ft was Only a dim flicker came froi^Jhiury. lamp in the lower hall. th( A gentleman stood in theunc^J* light, silent for a moment, and tfrtain before Jean could speak,he had f [then her in his arms and kissed her. * Jtaken “Oh, Jean,” he cried, “ha $ really found you at last? I |ve 1 blessed, blessed Easter card. [That keep it as long as I live.” Jshall Jean drew him into the & bright room, and he did nc florin, for explanations or forgivencs j Wait just gathered Hester up in hit > He ■asif he had a right. And sb> I fpis, ' said: “Oh, David, ^hy word? | only j long coming?” as if she had bi so i pecting him all the time. e xi Then he told them how he ha / ! hunting for them two weeks T b ecn i since he returned to Amerh I 1 e ' er learned of their father's death, g; anf J ! “And I just, happened,” I ! ished, “to see that Easter cartig ,”n- --। window. 1 knew it at once, a ' just like the one you gave me® Is j years ago. I was sure no ogA ^ur 1 could have painted it,and thatf^V I 1 happened to find you. It 1 beautiful Easter for us, Hes telpher ' ail thoso 1 <>L
And Hester the peace that was in her he^Rßsnming from her eyes, as she ansvwgWd: “Yes, Daid, and I think MpJean will read ‘Eternal Goodness’ VKbs, it will do me good. I undcrstai|P It tonight.”—Ladies’World. fl Waylaid. W s Captain Bendire, a well-known lornitholo’ist, was riding along the 1 anks of Killitto Creek. Arizona, when he saw a big black hawk. /He followed the Hying bird andatlcnjgth came up with it, perched on a dead limb eta tall cotton-wood-tree.. A bulky nest was in a fork of the tree about forty feet from the ground. The mate of the hawk which the captain had been following was sitting on the nest. » Hoping to secure a trophy, Captain Bendire climbed up to the nest, in which he found a single pale-bine egg The parent birds circled around, manifesting their anger at the intrusion by shrill screams, but the captain took the egg. He put it in his mouth for safe-keeping, as he required both hands in his descent. Suddenly f:om his elevated perch he caught sight of several Apache Indians crouched in a small canon about eighty yards distant. They were evidently watching him. He was awake to his danger in an instant, but he manifested no sign of alaim, and descended to the ground in a leisurely manner. Had the Indians perceived that they were discovered, they would have been waiting for the egg-hunter at the Joj^Qf the tree. As it was, the captain reacWd the ground, mounted his horse, a’ld started on a gallop for the camp, five miles distant In a mcm nt the Apaches broke cover and pursued. They chased him nearly’ to the camp, but lie reached it in safety—the egg still in his mouth. 1' was unbroken. Owing to its large size, the captain had difficulty in re- j moving it from his m uth without I injuring it His jaws ached fur some time afterward. Punctual Indiim.
Matthirn Splitlog, chief of the yandottes, lives in Kansas, and according to a writer in Harper’s Young People, is known to be worth about a iI: illion dollars. He is supposed to be the richest Indian in America. He can neither read nor write, but by his native shrewdness has acquired large tracts of land in Kansas and I Missouri, as well as bouses and lots in Kansas City. Some white men were negotiating with him for the purchase of a ceri tain lot of land. The price was lin- | ally agreed upon, $140,000, and they I were to meet him at a certain bank in Kansas City at 10 o’clock. There J and then Cne money was to be paid ' and the pa; ers signed. On the appointed morning old । Matthias entered the bank a few minutes before the hour, and took a seat with his eye upon the clock. The minute hand reached twelve,and the clock began to strike. The Indian rose, and at the last stroke he walked out of the build jng. He had gone only a block or two before, ho met the capitalists hurrying to keep their ^appointment. They begged him to return, but he iciused. It they wished to deal with tom, he would meet them at the , bank the next day at 10 o’clock. I hat time the white men were on Imnd; but when they offered the Inllian the pripe agreed upon for the land, he declined to take it. The 5140,000 was yesterday’s price. Today they might have the property for 8100,000. Talking was useless, and they paid the additional $20,000. It was a dear les on in punctuality. In Favor or Um French. The increasing business over the telephone line between London and Paris has given rise to an interesting discussion. The toll is about $2 for three minutes, and conseauentlv the relative rapidity of the two languages enters as an important factor into the question now under consideration, whether it is more economical to carry on conversation over the line in English or in French. At present the Frenchmen are said to have the best of the controversy, as their language is regarded as peculiarly suited to telephonic transmission. A boy never looks in the glass to see if his face is clean, after he has washed it: he looks at the dirt on the towel.
• AGRICULTURAL topics, j A FEW SUGGESTIONS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. Advantages of Co - Operation Among 8 farmers -Management ot Worn-Out Laml-Oo Away With Fences—A Farmer I bhoum Be Educated in Agriculture. Co-Operation in Farming. The great, successes in modern manufacturing enterprises are secured by large combinations of capital con- I trolled by a single-mind and concen-1 10 secue thc cheapest i methods of production. In farm in" i such large comb nations of capital i mive not generally proven successful. ns is because in the business of farming a lar greater number of de- ; tails must be attended t?, so that! production goes on most cheap y on i farms small enough so that the owner j can give personal care to the details on which success chiefly depends. All the large bonanza farmers seemed to ! ne making money while land til ed I with the accumulated fertility of । ages was 1 eing exhau.-ted. In other I words, this kind of farming is dependent on the possibility "of constantly robbing the soil. But there I must be an end to this sooner or i “^cr, and when the large farmer fails, i his failure is likely «... 1.,- nope ' less than that of one who nas con- | ducted operations on a smaller scale. ' We ielievc, however,.that farming needs much larger capital than has j been employed in it, and that this! will be found rather in the co-opera-tion of large numbers of small farm-' ers to do certain S] eci 11c things than i by the aggregation of large tracts of j land under single management. lt| is much harder to keep a large farm I fertile than it is to keep a small farm hi the best poj.-Jble condition. Manure, labor, and crop must, main- 1 tain a due relation to each other. With only the amount of manure ' that most farmers can get, a large majority wi 1 make more money it their land were reduced to one-half ' or one-quarter the amount they now cultivate. It would be better still if i j they had the capital now invested in land ready to invest in co-operative ' j efforts with oilier farmers to make ; farming more profitable. ' ( It is in such enterprises as arc now being organiz d in the neigh! orhood of Rochester, N. V., for co-operative storage of farm products that will 1 come the means fur making the farm « pay better. The farmer has long s complained that hi produ ts have to i; pass through too many hands, leaving f a profit in each before the consumer j is reached. Danners can, if they I $ choose, lessen the number of these • c middlemen. After ten. twenty, or : t fifty storehouses are established in as : j many vi lag< s and railroad stations, i what is to hinder their being also' ] used as the centers for distributing < the more bulky articles, such as t
chemical fertilizers re juircu on farms. There are many places where Granges have already done this, and the saving of >2 io $5 per ton by Grange pur- i chasers of fertilizers in quantity Las ' in some localities given members of the Granges an important advantage over those outside this organization. The pur base and keeping of the I est ma e.s of ail the principal kinds of sto k by the co-operation of the farmers of ane ghl rho 11 is another example of a wav in which co-opera-
tion may • e u-cd to benefit farmers. The:e is b ire tny :.;rm rw'mdoes not emee le the im; ortance < f breeding to thorou.him Is so as to grade up his native stock. It is not every nemhb->rhe<•<! where one a: mer alone will dare take the rzk of baying pure-bicd animaL. Yet a dozen or twenty farm rs can well afford to unite in doing so, and each get enough improvement in his own land to pay for his individual outlay. Here. too. the Granges have proved their usefulness. They have done more than any other organization to break down prejudices among farmers, and help them to work together in ways whereby the advantage of all may be best promoted.—American Cultivator. Management of Worn-Out Land. There is a natural fascination about the attempts to take what is seemingly worthless and give it value, Either it is this, or the fact that poor land can always be bought cheaply and usually on the easiest terms makes poor land saleable when property that was certain not to pay in years of any other character could not find a purchaser on any terms, liut, n> most ca es, cheap as the poor farm may seem, mat in a state of cultivation will be really cheap'.. r , whatever the price asked for it. The cost of bringing up poor land to the point where it will begin to pay is always greater than is expected. The land that is now paying can generally be depended on to pay under good management as well as it has done. It has a recognized value that can be determined. If the poor land is bought it has to be exp?rimented with, and possibly money has to be sunk before it can be made to pay. The old saying, to him that hath shall be given, and from him that hath not shall be taken away what ; he seemeth t >, have, is quite as true i of land as it is of people. Fertility tends to make fertility even more . surely than does money make money. Raising Turkeys. There is but little expense attending the raising of turkeys, as they will pick up most of their living, and ■ when sold most of the price realized will be found clear profit. So far I have confined myself to the commercial bianch, which contributes directly to the need of humanity in supplying food. The “fancy” branch, though more fascinating, has not so firm a foundation as the commercial, : yet it is the draft on thoroughbred ;
that enables it to keep up the necessary vigor and productiveness. The one depends upon the other, and if you breed thoroughbreds breed only from the fittest, and if you succeed in raising good birds let it bo known r >y exhibiting and advertising them j for good, pure-bred stock commands ready sales at paying prices.—Ohio r armor. Drying Potatoes. A Drench genius has invented a new industry, which is said to bld fair । to develop into an important Indus- j (try. It is the drying of potatoes. I I hey are first crushed, and as much ; of the water squeezed out of them as i i possible. The compressed pulp is ticn separated into pieces and nut j into an oven at a moderate heat, . where it remains until it is thorough[lydry anatakesa light yellow tint, i The heat of the oven is great enough i to partially convert the starch of the । potato into dextrine, and thus im- : part a pleasant flavor to the product. | Ihe article thus treated can be preserved for an indefinite time. It can (be used raw for fattening domestic t animals, or by boiling water con- । \eited into a nourishing and palat- . aDie food for man. Ground into Hour and mixed with wheat flour, it j is said to make very superior bread. ; Ihe inventor thinks h.j devise will 1 lead to a largely increased production I in the cereal crops. — New York Trib- ' une. Truly S il l. The a vera^e expense in preparing a Tuan for the profesuon is, say about a thousand dollars. Whenever it comes I to pass that a farmer boy will put a I thousand dollars in himself to tit himself for his business as a farmer, the conditions of farm labor will have ; greatly changed. There is as mu h i special skill attainable in agriculture ; as in the professions, and it takes as I much brain to master this knowledge, j Agrr ulture ought to be the most de- i lightful of pursuits. It has in it the I greatest possibilities for the elevation and refinement of the human spirit. In the face of this fact, the rush of so much of the brain and energy of thc country to the city is one of the most discouraging features of the times. The rush ouirht to be the other wav.—Kansas Farmer. Ensilage vs. Dry Cut Fodder. In thc eighth annual report of thc Wisconsin Experiment Station, considerable space is devoted to the cons:deration of thc subject of ensilage, and from feeding experiments it is found that a daily ration ot four pounds of hay and seven pounds of grain feed, with corn silage or feed cured fodder corn, ad libitum, fed to twenty cows during sixteen weeks produced a total quantity ot 19.813 pounds of milk during the silage period, and 19,801 pounds of miik during the fodder corn period, a very trilling difference indeed.
Awav wltli Fouccs. On many farms the only excuse for । fences is that of making pasture part 'of the crop rotation. Happily, many of our best farmers are a anJoniug the practice of pa taring plow-lands and doing away with all internal fen ’es, and some are going so far as to remove roadside fences, too. — N. E. Farmer. Horticultural Notes. Hardy shrubs are valuable on the
lawn. Dark cherries arc best to ship to market G ou drainage adds to winter protection. Mun iiing helps to keep the soil at an tvea temperature. Ali ly the mulch needed whenever the ground freezes hard. Fall is a good time to set out trees if the location is a goo 1 one. Plant raspberries so that they can be cultivated the same as potatoes. A mound around the stem of a tree i is a good protection against mice in Winter. A double wall with an air space • between, if made tight, makes a good । fruit house. j Plant trees in the waste corners and in this way derive some benefit ! from such places. While Spring is the best time to plant out cuttings Fail is the bes< time to pi epare them. In going into fruit culture go at it | systematically but not on too large a scale at first. Plants grown in pots require a good soil, rich in all of the elements of vegetable nutrition. Never prune any more than seems necessary, as excessive pruning is often a cause of disea e. Miscellaneous Recipes. Pastry—Mixed with snow, after rubbing the shortening well into the flour, is a perfect success, possibly a shade more inflated than when mixed with ice water. Baker’s Ginger C\kea — One quart of good New Orleans molasses, one pint of lard: warm lard and molasses together. Into one pint of sour milk dissolve three tablespoonfuls of soda; stir in enough four, in which you have sprinkled as much ginger as you like, so the dough will not be sticky; roll one-fourth inch thick. Bake in mod.■lately hot oven. These are splendid if made right.
Lemon Flavoring.—When you use lemons grate the outside yellow rind all off carefully and mix it with twice its quantity of sugar, and put this in a tightly corked bottle ready to be used at some future time for flavoring. Use one teaspoanful of this instead of lemon extract. It should be kept perfectly drv, and in grating be very particular not to grate off any of the white part of the lemon, as that would give a bitter taste.
The Evolution Os medicinal agents is gradually relegatIng the old-time herbs, pills, draughts and vegetable extracts to the rear and bringing into general use the pleasant and effective liquid laxative, Syrup of ! tigs. To get the true remedy seo that । it is manufactured by the California Fia Syrup Co. only. For sale by all leading druggists. d Gloves. S l ?™ 3 are not all made of kid; In fact, few of them are. The cheas ones are not kid, and neither are the nearest ones. Ladies’ gloves that cost under H.oO or $2 a pair are all made ol for’at 6 ?^ - b Jt 18 Hkely that ves P a,d £ I e^ gher pnce than ,ha: be ol kid, but the very best and most expenot sti “ s »' Hood’s_Cures Catarrh in the Head Took Seven Bottles — Perfect’y Well
Air. Herman Bodtke Os Chicago. T have been a victim ,of catarrh a long while. My nose and head were so stuffed up that some- ; times I could not sleep at all during I the night. A friend advised me *o take | Hood's Sarsaparilla. One bottle tld me so much good I kept on; have now ta'm seven HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES bottles and I feel perfeetly well. Indeed, I feel almost like a now man. f am very thankful for what Hood's Sarsaparilla has done for me in relieving me of so troublesome a complaint.” Herman Bodthe, No. 2380 Bonaparte Street, Chicago, 111. Hood's Pills arc purely vegetable, carefully prepared from the best inured ents. 250. rabbits » PILLS, Purely vegetable, mild and re iable. Cause perfeoi pigo-tion complete absorption nd healthful regt* lanty F°r the cure of a l dixordjrs of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases LOSS Ot APPETITE,' SIOKIEADAOHE, »ESTIM DIZZY FEELiaSS, BILIOUSNESS, TORPID LIVER, DYSPEPSIA. properties thev stimulate the liver in the secretion of the bile and Its discharge through the biliary ducts, these pills in doses of fi-om two to four will quickly regulate the action of tae liver and free ths patient from these disord re. One or two of Radv. ay’s Pills, taken dail .-by those subject to bilious pains and torpidity ot the Uv r. will keep the system legular and secure heaitny dig-.-tion. Price, 25c per box. Sold by ail druggists. RADWAY & CO.. NEW YORK. Easily Taton Op
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Cod Liver Oil as it appears in Scott's Emulsion is easily taken up by the < system. In no other form can so much fat-food be « assimilated without injury to the organs of digestion.
Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites has come to be an article of every-day use, a prompt and infallible cure for Colds, Coughs, Throat troubles, and a positive builder of flesh. Prepared by Scott & Bowre, N. Y. AB droggists. <^97^s
K remcdgMte It need about tort xpes»un« the painful ordetl attendant upon CKild-birth, proves an infallible sped* I B? f ? r ’? ad °bT»tee t no tortures of con1 Hneraent, lessening tuedangersthereof 1 ° pothor and child. Sold ty all druggists. Sent by । express on receipt rL?^ 06 .! * l4w Ai bottle, charges pro-B
BRADFiELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlahta GA.T . „__ S*uck€Bsrul when al! rem-'iieifa I. HF. Hiscos.eaiß'wov. N.Y. Writ, f.ir book c f‘ pr>ofl FRE> <^OBES 2^ Cures Consumption, Congha Cronu Throat. Sold by all Dru ?E i sts on a Gua^^f For a Lams Sids, Back or Chest Shiloh’e Pcro*W Plaster will give great satisfaction.—
