Bloomington Telephone, Volume 15, Bloomington, Monroe County, 3 November 1893 — Page 3

ttS U0O

a ounoEon8 knife

you a man of horror and There la no longer neceastty for la man rtlaoaaca formerly re m lncurabto without cutting.

Tkt Triek tf feisinritira Sirgerj to well Uluatrated by the fact that RIIPTIIRF OT Breach, to now rodi. nwr I Unt cured without too knife and without pain. Clumsy, chafing truasea can bo thrown away I They never cure but often induce inflammation, atrangulatton and death. TtflinbC Ovarian, Fibroid (Uterine) i wmviiv and many others, are now removed without tho perito of cutting operation.

PILE TUMORS, jfKST. other disease of the lower bowel, are permanently cured without pain or resort to the knife. CTflNF a th Bladder, no matter Wl VWI bow large, to crushed, puh veriod, washed out and perfectly removed without cutting. STRICTURE .Xul eutting in hundreds of cusea. For pamphlet, references and all particulars, send 10 cents (in stamps) to

worw's .Dispensary Memcal A ttoa, 083 Main St Buffalo, N. Y.

DB. KILJIEK'S

SW0-ROOT CURED ME.

SUFFERED EIGHT YEARS! Couldn't Eat or Sleep. Dyspepsia and Heart Trouble. lr. Kilmer & Co:-'I had been troubled for eight years with stomach and heart difficulties.

I uvea mostly on miiK, as every-thinff I ate $ttrt me so. My kidneys and liver were in a terrible state. Could neither sleep or eat. I had been treated by the best Chicago doctors without any benefit whatever. As a last resort I tried your SWAMPROOT, and now I can eat anything, no matter what.

Nothing hurts me, and can go to bed and get a good night's sleep. Swamp-Root Cured Me. Any one doubting this statement can write, I wOl gladly answer." Mrs, German Miller, Dec 20th, 1892. Springport, Mich. At Dracslsta SO cent and $1.00 size, hwihtf Guide to Health " free Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., - Binghamton, X. Y. Dr. Kilmer's PARILU LIVER PtLLS Are the Best 4S Fills 25 eentan All Ifrrugcieta. Thm Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DCIALD KEKHEDT, OF BQX80RY, MASS., Has discovered. In one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every tand of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like .needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it Dose, one tablcspoonful in water at bedtime. Read the Label. Send for Book. Unlike the Dutch Process

No Alkalies OR Other Chemicals

are used in the preparation of

W. BAKER & COS

mm r tik a mimmmmr

reakMCocoa

ehich 4m absolutely pure and eoluble IthzsmorethnnJhreetlTneB the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or

Surar, sod Is far more eco

nomical, costing less than one cent a cup It is delicious, nourishing, and kasxlT WGSSTED. Sold ay Crocers everywhere. T BASSE &C0 Dorchester, Maia

a

Tiie Best Waterproof . Coat . in tho WORLD !

Vh TPISH KRAxn RT.TfTKTrR fci warranted water-

woof, and will keep yea dry la th hardest storm. The iMvKtimr.r, k i .It K f.K i& n. oerfec rid inir coat, and

awm the entire saddle. Beware of imitations. Don't

buy a coat if the wF1q UnMcT fa not on it. Jiimtrated Cataiotroe ft. A. J. TOWER. Boston, Maa.

CURES RISING . . BREAST . . rUOTHER'S FRIEND" tt&fSR offered child-bearing woman. I have been a mid-wile for many rears, and in each case where "Mother's Friend' hadbeencsed it has accomplished wonders and relieved much entering, it Is the best remedy- for rteinf? of 'iiewtast known, and worth the price for.lhat alow. lUss. AI. M. Brusteb, Montgomery, Ala. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt jf price, $1.50 per bottle. BR ADF1ELD REGULATOR CO., Bold by all druggists. Axlaxta, Ga.

(IE AC"" AMB HEAD NOISES CORES Soocafui wbi all rmedi fail. Soldrfirc SvF.Hacox,8MSway.M.Y. WrtMf book o proofs It lU

Coasnssstres and people who hire weak I nets or Asthma, should use iio'Caro for Consaroptlno. It has cnrd thousand ft bat not injured one. It it not bad to ta&e. It is the beat, cough tyrup. Sold efcrywhf re. 5.

0

The Milk Fever. In regard to milk fever, Robert McAdarn, of Rome, N. YM certainty an excellent authority, for be is a veteran dairvman, writes as follows to the American Dairyman: This very fatal disease was to rre a dreaded enemy as well as to others who had cows coming in during flush pastures, notwithstanding the preventive measures mentioned by Dr. Greenwood. Three vears ago an old friend of mine, Hugh Taylor, of Kaimshill, Kilmarnock, Scotland, told me that he had learned of an almost certain cure for milk fever, if taken in time, viz., half pound doses of carbonate of soda in tepid water, drenched every two hours, as 30on as milk secretion is seen to fail, and continued until ijfc is restored. I have the most implicit confidence in Mr. Taylor's statement. Ho supplies several thousand (laU calving) cows annually to cow-keepers in large cities, and these mostly come in upon his home premises; ,and what was Dnce a dread and heavy loss to him is bow only trifling from the use of aarbonate of soda. I hope this information may benefit some dairyman. Change Gradually. A correspondent of the Journal of Agriculture writes on tho reasons for making gradual changes in the food of stock: With all classes of stock any radi?al changes of feed, if made suddenly, upset the digestive organs and prove detrimental to the health and thrift of the animals. For this reason, while it is best to supply a ood variety, if radical changes are to be made they should be made gradually. This should always be done in changing from dry to green food in the spring, and from green to dry feed in the fall. Tho safest plan with all stock is to give a light ration of dry feed, and gradually increase until they are given a reasonably full ration, at least sufficient to maintain good health and thrift. At this season especially it never pays to allow stock to run down, in fact it will pay to give a little especial attention to keep thrifty. It is ojten the case that at this season the supply of feed in ,the pastures will get short, and unless care is taken the stock will begin to lose flesh, and this is a condition always to be avoided, as it costs double to make up a pound of lost gain. So far as is possible, the best results are secured by feeding so as to keep in a good, thrifty condition, especially those intended for market as soon as they are fully matured and fattened. At this time stock intended for market should be pushed along, as it is the most favorable season for securing a good growth at a low cost. As a imle, it will be best as regards health and thrift to allow stock to run in the pastures as long as the weather will permit, but

FARMS AND FARMERS Pharaoh's dreams of the seven lean kine which devoured the seven fat ones, and the seven thin ears of corn which devoured the seven large ones, may be given a modern inter

pretation, says tho Practical Farm-

er. About one-half of the crops that many farmers produce nowadays eat up the profits derived from the other half. About one-half of the cows kept in the country devour the profits from the other half. In other words, a large share of what the average farmer raises is produced at a loss. The money dtf rived from it does not cover expense and labor at curreut rates. This is sad but true. The problem, how to make the farm pay, now resolves itself really into the question, which crops to retain and which to abandon. The majority of farmers work at a disadvantage, simply because they do not know, and have given little thought to the question, which of the crops they grow are raised at a profit, and which are not. Often this can be easily determined without much difficulty, or without keeping full account of every item. A close estimated the expenses, including rent of land, plowing, harrowing, seed and seeding, harvesting, thrashing marketing and -of the value of the crop, will in most cases be sufficient to show whether a grain or potato crop is raised at a profit or loss. A ten bushel crop of wheat or a fiftybushel crop of potatoes cannot be expected to pay expenses. If the )robabilities point to such or simiar crops on a given piece of land its cultivation would better be abandoned until the time when, in consequence of an increase in soil, fertility, or otherwise, more satisfactory results are probable. Dairymen are in the same predicament. Some cows pay and some do not. The milk measure and the milk test will tell, at least approximately, which cow should be kept and which should be sacrificed. It is senseless to feed and care for a cow at a loss. So it is with poultry. Some hens are profitable, and others, on account of age or other infirmities, are not. .The usual excess of males always represents a loss. The unprofitable fowls should be sold or killed. In short, one of the first steps that the farmer who wishes to carry on his business with the most satisfactory results should take is

weeding out oi unprontaoie crops and unprofitable animals. It is not good sense to let the poor crops consume the profits of the good ones, or see the lean cows devour the fat ones without applying the proper remedy.

it will be an exceptionable case when it can be considered best to depend entirely upon the feed that can be secured in the pasture. By commencing to feed early they can be kept thrifty much easier. The amount of the ration must always be determined by the condition of the stock. Feed enough to keep thrifty should be the rule, and the quantity should be sufficient to do this. Commence with a small quantity and 'gradually increase until they are given what is necessary to secure the results desired. In this way the change to dry feed can be made without any ill effect.

Vftlue of Regularity. For fifteen years I have fed and

milked my own cows, and in that time I have tried all kinds of feed and nearly every kind of cow, writes a correspondent of the Jersey Bulletin. Regularity as to time and quantity of feed has nearly as much to do with the quantity of milk as does the qualitj' of feed. I try to feed my cows at the same time each morning and evening, and make the cow's appetite the gauge of the amount, always giving as near as possible just what she will eat up clean. I use as far as possible a mixed ration, composed of hay, grain and cottonseed meal, in the proportion of three parts of grain to one of cottonseed meal, with all the hay she will eat up clean. The best ration I ever used was composed of one part peas, two of corn, and four of oats, well mixed and ground together. Of this I give them eight to twelve quarts per day, according to the size of the cow, the hay, of course, included. I give in addition to the above about three times a week whtat bran, all they will eat, besides the parings of potatoes, turnips, etc., from the kitchen. But I would never allow if cow to drink slop from the kitchen. To make a good pure milk the cow must have pure water, Kindness and good shelter are also prime necessities in the management a cow. The finest Jer&y would prove a failure if curried with the milking stool and sheltered with a barbed wire fence, no matter what kind or how much feed she had.

SHOULD be used wher

ever yeast has served heretofore. Yeast acts by fermentation and the destruction of part of the gluten of

the flour to produce the leavening gas. Royal Baking Powder, through the action

of its ingredients upon each other in the loaf while baking, itself produces the necessary gas and leaves the wholesome properties of the flour unimpaired. It is not possible with any other leavening agent to make such wholesome and delicious bread, biscuit, rolls, cake, pastry, griddle-cakes, doughnuts, etc, ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.

Powder,

Absolutely

Pure.

"German

yrup

99

The Playful Types. A Hard .Job, Troy Times. Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. The proofreader in a newspaper of-1 uWhy s0 sad? your Kxcellenpy?" fice has much to answer for, but the usked v Thurbor, as the President Brooklyn Eagle is "piling it on" gaVe vent to a deep sigh, rather too heavily when it savs He! 'I was tninkinir about my forth -

is respnsible for making the harmless phrase 'demonstrative joy of Chicago" into the 1 'demonstrative jag of Chicago." The latter accurately describes the periodical possession of the World's Fair City, but

it was not kind to refer to her weak-

ness. He also was guilty of libel I An old gentleman stood before a when he made the Tribune in the J marble statue which wore only the

coming Thanksgiving day proclamation, Henry. I suppose I shall have to write one." And the President sighed twice more.

The Name of. It.

Two bottles of German Svntf cured me of Hemorrhage of tlx Lungs when other remedies failed. I am a married man and. thirty-sia

years of age, and live with my wift

and two little girls at Durham, Mo. I have stated this brief and plain tt that all may understand. My case svas a bad one, and I shall be glad to tell anyone about it who will write me. Philip L. Schenck, P. O. Box45, April 25, 1890. No man could ask a more honorable, business-like statement. m

I Paradoxical as it may aeera, it is always j to a man's credit to pay cash. I Sorrow in the Near Fa tar I Awaits those who disregard symptoms cf Urei 1 disorder. Ho on time if you feel distress it ! the region of the liver, if your risageis sallow eyeballs yellowish, tongue coated, or if jo ure troubled with constipation, sick headach unri oioa sionl i1i,.;tirss. HostAtter Stonrit'h Bittors will banish these unpleasant symp

10ms. una KnoTiia be used early and persistent

ly i he howt l are relax en without pain 01 jrrlpinfc and n- t weakene t by tt as they are by the action of a vio! nt purg-attve. Digestion grows more active v. hen it H used and tbe tyateni invigorated, becuune it insures as limitation of ihe iod constituents by the blood. Kirtiry complaints, malaria and rheumatism are overcome by this searching and thorough remedy. First Moth Are von coins fur? Second

1 Moth -I intend to spend the summer on I the cape. The human system needs continuous and ! careiul uttiwticn to rid itself of its impurities.

lieecham s Puis act like magic. 26 cts a box. Nothing makes a good man more cautious than tho conviction that his advice is going to be followed.

Fertilise the Orehnrl. We often hear complaints, says an exchange, that orchards do not bear as well as they used to, and we do not wonder at it. In early days orchards were- set in virgin soil stored with the cccumulated fertility of the centurie?, and th? trees grew and bore fruit profusely. Of late years the orchard is usually set out on a plot which has been under cultivation for years. The land is put in some crop each year until the trees come into bearing in order to cultivate them, which exhausts the soil to a greater or less extent. After the trees corns into bearing no more attention is paid to the orchard as a rule, as far as applying fertilizers is concerned, and in a few years it begins to fail. If proper attention was paid to this matter orchards would bear as well now as they did years ago. Thev should be regularly fer

tilized and the ground kept under j

cultivation if the crops taken off did not more than pay for the labor put on them. Apply potash in some form, and in those sections where wood is used as fuel, put all the ashes on the orchard, as this is the cheapest source of potash to the average farmer. Stable manure is good and the plowing under of clover will keep up the supply of plant food. To make the most profit out of an orchard care for it as carefully as any other part of the farm. Farm Notes. The Illinois potato crop will be very short, owing to drought. The same is true of Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska. Potatoes are not going to be as plentiful as expected. The accidental discovery at Charlottenberg, Germany, of a new compound which is said to prevent rust on bright iron and steel articles is reported by the London Journal of Industries. This compound, it is said, consists of a mixture of essential oils and grease, which, in the form of a thin fluid, may be applied by a brush. The oil evaporating, the grease remaining forms a coating which protects the metal against atmospheric .influences and sea water. It is claimed that there is no acid in the composition, that it does not turn rancid, and that it can be readily removed by rubbing with cotton waste saturated with terpentine. The compound, which is known as manocitin, has been made use of in several of the German government departments. Burn all dead hogs and sheep on the farm and avoid teaching dogs to stray about the farm for something to cat. Such carelessness is certaio to teach dogs to kill sheep and pigs to satisfy their appetites when they do not find something to eat at hand. More than this, animal parasites oi vurious kinds abound in hogs, and especially in' sheep, and when eater by dogs, hogs and carrion birds, arc scattered and perpetuated for miles in everjF direction. This will accounl for diseases in flocks where even precaution has been taken for tin health of the animals. It is a nrac

tico with yood farmers to burv al dead animals. It is certainly a hu mane way of disposing of dead animals, but it is not usually done s well that dogs and hogs do not react thorn. With an experience of manj years the plan of burying cannot b said to be successful. Burning though, never fails to destroy tin parasitic germs and can be done a" a small expense of time and coeana Make this a rule.

1 .

no cows,

no crown,

days of Horace Greelej say "Richard IN." when it meant "William H. Seward." And he has even made

Dr. Talmage irreverent by indorsing the work of the intelligent compositor who set up the first line of one of the famous preacher's sermons in this way, "My tall friend, our Lord," when it should have been, "My text finds our Lord." It is not necessary to mention any more instances of the proofreader's peculiar villainy we ire writing as an editor now, and not in the exalted and unprejudiced uood that becomes us when we discuss politics and religion with judicial impartiality. Every one has

leard of the proofreader who con

sented to the printing of

10 cream, "no cross,

md of "in the richness of sin" for Hhe interior of Asia." A Gruesoiuo Necklace. Sew York Sun. "It was decidedly a grim ornanent,,! said the society young man, 'that I saw recently at the house of 1 well-known civil engineer whose areer had some time been in the Rocky Mountains. It was a neckace composed of 'the finger nails of 1 young Sioux brave slain by a lite ivarrior, who, with the scalp of his t'ictim, had taken this trophy of his prowess. Strange to say, this neckace was intrinsically very handome. The characteristic shapeliness of the Indian's arm and hand, deally perfect even to the finger tips, was illustrated in this barbarus memento. The necklace of ten pieces av:is in color a vital brown, suggesting more than anvthing else string of acorns. So removed in anpearanee was it from any forbidding suggestions of the savage deed it recorded that the genuinely gentle and refined woman to whom it was hown landlad it longingly, and begged of the owner that if he ever gave it awav it should !e to her."

An lnlitwwU Da&gage-Magtor-New Y rlt Sun. "Do you know what I'd do with that if I was rich?' the baggage-master said with a snort, as he grabbed a trunk that had "just been thrown in at the door of the baggage car. "I'd go somewhere and buy a cave and fill it full of dynamite, and put that trunk right in the center of it." And all this agitation was caused by the sight of an inoffensive-looking trunk with a rope around it, and bearing a label upon which was marked in rathet timid characters: "Glass. Fragile. Put no weight on this. Handle with care. This side up. Keep dry. Use no hooks." HOOD'SSarsaparilla

Alri. Mary Siuakjuuu. A Running Sore On my ankle grow worst, finally spreading over both ftet, arms "ind hands. Honrs cume out of my toes and liucers. I lost Bleep and appeuto. 1 was in bed when I commenced to take Hood's Sarsaparilla

costume of the 4inude in art." He

slowly spelled the title "P-s-y-c-h-e" and with one sweeping1 glance he murmured: "Ah, yes I I see Physique."

See ''Colchester' other column.

Spading Hoot ad. In aa-

Vhat is a houst . without a baby?" asked a ladv writer, and an old bachelor

editor replied: "It is comparatively quiet.

In Olden Tiraa

People overlooked the importance of

permanently benehcial effects

were satisfied with transient action, but now that it is generally known that Syrup of Figs will permanently cure habitual constipation, well-informed people will not buy other

laxatives, which act for a time, but tr win not ornament.

fllU naviru.

"Sweet Chart tyi" In the ArVsts Exhibition of 13ft3 at the New York Academy of Denign, there was exhibited an oll-pftintinp by J. L. O. Ferris, entitled "Sweet Charity. " Its richness of coloring

and 1 commanded instant attention, while the lesson

it itti'gm was so impressive tdavodq naiurauy returned to It for a second view. Its subject ia a young lad'v of colonial times hoisonan orrn lof charity to one of the poorer families of the ton. hhe has a sensible, charminsc ts.ee. which expresses with remarkable fidelity the sentiment of her errand. There is not a homo that this ''arming pic-

It m.u. seen to be

flrfore I finished the Hist bottle I could e;it and Hleep well. I continued with tbo Suvsa

a-il a and now the soies are all healed.11

jus. Maky sfuakuan, )IV .LutJna St.. I'hil-

adelbhia. Fa. 1

Hood' 9 Fill cure constipation. &Qo

The Baly Bed. For a young baby's bed nothing is is prettier than the wicker bassinet, trimmed with muslin and lace and with a canopy to match, writos Elisabeth Robinson Scovil in a valuable article on ''Furnishing the Nursery" in the November Ladies' Home Journal. However, .the muslin adornments soon loose their crispness and it is better to purchase a rattan or iron crib which can be used until the child is no longer a baby. These can be obtained with a frame or rod from which to suspend curtains of China silk or some pretty washing material, held in place with bows of ribbon to match the color of the room. Iron cribs painted in white and gold, or white with brass knobs and finishings, are very effective. Deafness Cannot Be Cured. By local applications as they cannot reach tho diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that i by constitu

tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an intiamed condition of th mucous lining of the Kustaehian Tube. When the tube is inliamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearine. and when it 13 entirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can bo taken out and tnis tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever: nine c-tses out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an iuiiamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will tftvc One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hairs Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars; free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. 03T75C. Sold by Druggists, 75c. ' It is in keeping with tho fitness of things that a lawyer should be allowed to uso a groat many figures oi speech in sumpi 'n una case.

' Sweet Charity was purchased by the Pub

lishers of Tho Youth's Companion and hu been reproduced in colors in largo size, 14ftx2l. It will be sent to all new subscribers to The Companion who send $1.75 for a year's sub-

: scriptlon. and the paper will also be sent Free ! from the time the HUbscriptlon is received, to ? January. 18 !. and for a full year from that ! date, to January. IHU5. Thia offer Includes the : Double souvenir Number publishedat Thanks- ; giving. Christmas and New Years's. Address. THE VOUTH'S COMPANION, Boston, Mass.

Ely's Cream Balm IUICKLT CURES GOLD IN HEAD

Price 50 Cents. I

H

A EX-

r

Balm into each nostril. O8., 56 Warren St.N.Y

1,000,000

Company In Minnesou.

Urs. They will be sent to you

ACRES OF LAND for tale by the Sajj?t Paui. & DtTLUTK KAXLSOAD Send for Map and Circa

Adores HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner. BL Paul, Mina.

ITT w m W V

T fS. A A

MIPJLL

Hubbard nAcirfnPV&Fnrfimtav

Block, t I5DIAJAPSLIS,-

WOOP, ZINC AND HA LFTOFECUTft

il?8lCBflaIJ01HrN W.iaORRIS, ELra&lUlU Waitlilngton, o.c.

Successful ly Prosecutes Claims.

Late Principal Examiner U a. jrenaion oarwiu, Syninlast war, 15 audicalUig claim. attjatr-

Uf A MTCn MEN toTRAVHL. WepavSM if fm I CU to iI0i 1 a month k exponao. STONE & WKLLIMiTONi MAllSON, WI8.

INU 4403 INDPUS

BEST IN FIT. BEST IN WEARING QUALITY. The outer or tap sole extends jthe whole length down to the heel, protecting the boot i&digflag and in other hard work -. ask 10 UK DEALER for thkm, and don't he put off with Inferior iraod. COLCHESTER RUBBER CO.