Bloomington Telephone, Volume 15, Bloomington, Monroe County, 1 December 1893 — Page 3

jPSERCE-lr.GURE OR SETVRNED, i " 1 1 For oYr a quarter of a century Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has been effecting Wre of Bronchial, Throat and Lung affections The makers have such confidence in the " Disooverv " for owing Asthma, Bronchitis, and iucipieut Consumption, that they can afford to guarantee it Mia. Isaac Lotmas, of ThMrtou Dclowart Ox, i3 writes as fellows :

DR. B.V. rcftcx, BUIfain. N. Y-: " Dtat Sir 1 with to write you of my brother, Harry C. Troup, who tias oeen siek for ten ?arf with uthma. He bas been tivated by tail different piysielan4. who have saul Uo oouiU not be

cured Be hud to stt

i& L niffhL he sot so

sort of breath ; he fuf-

auhes and had a bad cough. After taking Doctor Pierce's Golden Mo&ca) Discovery and Pleasant Pellets, ne did

aotffetshortof breath. nnf'r.Wi ail night."

w

D. KILMER'S

WfiC3P-R00T

CURED ME. CHravet or Stone fc THE BLADDER LARee. AS 4 fiOOSE EGG. 0r. Kilmer Co., Binhamton, N. Y. Gotr Usaon:-"! was under the care of different physiciM f f';r neri two years; tried every doctor m our tottii; continued to suffer and decline until X wa a Physical wreck, rt'U. .

i ne uiuuL ie&rnea pnysicions proaounced my case GRAVEL or STONE in the Bladder, and said that I would never be any better until it was removed by a surgical operation. Oh! I thought what next? Every one felt sad ; I myself, gave up, as an operation

feemcd to us all certain death. I ghaJl never forget how timely the god news of your BlVA!IPROOT reached me. J send you by this same mxiil anide of the stone or gravel that was distsolved and expel jd by the use of f WAMP-ROOT. The ret Kidney & Bladder Cure, t must liavo tx&n as large as a jrood sized goose arg. I am feeling ai well to-day rm ever I did. I kept HghT on usinsr SUrA3IBOOT9 and ft suvfed my lift. If any one doubts my statosnent 1 wi;1 furnish proof." IdUtoasne Bou:h smith, Maryavil e, Ohio, At Irurs:lftls 50 reufa and $1.00 size. -InTftHds GuiJe to IkaUh" frea CozuRilCurluii tme. Jr. KUw.-r X Co., - Binghamtoh, . Y. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY, DQMALB KEKNEOY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovereJ in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind 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 humcr). 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 h'ngs 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 sq .imish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best u can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoon ful in water at bedtime. Read the .Lahri. Snrt for PnnV-

Of the

THE JUDGES

WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION Have made the HIGHEST AWARDS (Medals and Diplomas) to WALTER BAKER & CO. On each of the following named articles!

BREAKFAST COCOA, . . . .

Premium No. 1, Chocolate, .

Yaailla Chocolate,

German Sweat Chocolate,

Cocoa Batter.

"purity of material," "excellent flavor,"

mm "uniform even composition." fALTEB BAKER 4 CO., DORCHESTER, MASS.

fCs fhitnv

A remedy which.

If used by Wives about to experience the painful ordeal attendant upon Child-birth, proves an infallible specific for, and obviates the tortures of confinement, lesssnine the dan fers thereof to both mother and child, i: old by all drof gists. Sent by express on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle, charges pre paid.

It's Cream Balm

COLD IN HEAD rrtoe gQ Centa.1

lntoeeeh aoeftriL

MWassaaStN.Y.

FARMS ANDMRMERS. Poultry Pointers. Chicago Inter-Ocean. The trouble usually met with upon

large poultry farms is that the towls run together in too large Hocks. In this way oftentimes the food is monopolized by the stronger birds to, the exclusion of the weaker. Theoretically there is no reason why ; 1,000 hens should not yield the same proportional prolit as fifteen, yet in practice such has never been "the result so far, from the simple ; cause that the conditions which surround the 1,000 are not so favorable as those affecting the fifteen. : The care per individual is not equal when large numbers are kept. The hygienic influences are not so healthfuL Crowding and lack of cleanli-; ness are too frequently comcomitants of the large poultry farms. All that can be done, or is necessary to do, js to make conditions that prevail where large numbers of fowls are ; bred conform as closely as may be : to those that exist with small flocks, j Divide up the hens into colonies not exceeding twenty-five birds each. Then use each twenty-five lot of fowls as carefully and wisely as if iut that number were owned. i Abnormal Eggs Large, double-! )ro Iked or abnormal eggs are usually ! produced by hens that are too fat. Soft-shelled eggs are generally laid by hens in like obese condition. The remedy is to cut short the feed and force the fowls to take more exercise. Peed more wheat, bran and oats and iess corn; mix grain with litter and oblige the hens to scratch vigorously to obtain the coveted kernels. Ex-; ercise is a great boon to all animal ' life and to no species is it more ben- ; eficial than to domestic poultry. Wheat for Food Wheat is very cheap now, far cheaper for the nutrients contained than corn. Therefore let the poultry farmer put in a supply of wheat to feed now as well as for winter use. Prices are destined soon to rise, it seems probable, so perhaps it would be a better investment of funds to place them in wheat than to lock them up in banks or stocks. Change Drinking Water Often. The water in the drinking vessels should be frequently changed this weather, as it soon becomes foul. It must not be left in the sun, but placed under some sort of shade. Trees should be plentifully scattered through the poultry runs, and beneath their branches the drinking water may be placed, so as to rts main cool and fresh. Keep Cnicken-house Clean Decomposition is much more active in summer than in cooler weather. Therefore it is well to clean out the dropoinsrs quite often, and thus

keep the fowlhouse sw?et and wholesome for its occupants. Sprinkle

dry earth or land plaster freely about

to absorb moisture and poisonous rricoc

Separate Pullets and Cockerels.

Separate the pullets and cocker

els. The latter are continually worrying and annoying the former, and

by so doing run off their own nesh verv fast. The surplus cockerels

may as well be dressed and marketed

at once. Prices generally rulehigner now than later, so reckoning the expense of further keep, it is very

doubtful if anything is gained by

waiting.

Food for Moulting Season. The

fowls have begun to moult. This is

an exhaustive process, so extra feed and care are in order. Give an

abundance of oats, bran, and wheat, and a small amount of linseed meal

and sunflower seeds. The two last named are of an oily nature and assist the shedding and reproduction

of feathers. M. S. Perkins.

Danvers, Mass.

Syrel m last war. !Se4JuUceUiiolim. ettv sit

2

OmswmUt end yeDle

who save wees lungs or AttaB.tBOokIuM Piso's Cure for Consumption. It ass eured tfcrasstads It bee eot tnjured one. It Is ot bsd to te. It is the eest. court syrup. Sold everywhere. Me.

PI

In regard to roads Hon. Edward Burroughs, President of the New Jersey Board of Agriculture, says: ''Before the building oi uhe New Jersey turnpikes twenty-live baskets of potatoes were considered a fair load from the farm I now occupy tc market. After the turnpike was built, fifty to sixty baskets were considered no more of a load than were the twen 'y-five a few yers previous. And now, since the stone road has been built, our load Is eighty-live or one hundred baskets; and during the past winter our team has carted over ninety loads of manure from Philadelphia, several of which I weighed and found (,8Ui) and 7,300 pounds clear of the wagon, which weighed alone 2,200 pounds, a combined weight of 4$ tons. Many of these loads were drawn from tke city to the point of leaving the stone road with only two horses, and the result has been a saving of over $100 in my manure bill. Good Cows Essential. It is still customary ti place cream in the old-time dash churn and work on until the ''butter conies1 which may require a lonir or a short time, according to circumstances. It was well known to all farmers that the temperature must be just right." or there would be difficulty, and churning was more or less operated 'in the dark' until some enterprising person conceived the idea of using a thermometer in the churn in order to know the correct temperature required, and also to regulate the churning accordingly. The tests of dairy cows at Chicago show that there is no temperature for churning that may be relied upon as 'fixed' At the beginning the temperature of the cream from the milk of the Jersey cows varied from 44 to 52 degrees! that from the Guernseys varied from 4i to 46 degrees, and that from the Shorthorns from 40 to 44 degrees. At the end- ; ing of the week the cream 'from the ! Jersey herd varied from 51 to 58 degrees, that from the Guernseys from i 47 to 54 degrees, and that from the ; Shorthorns from 45 to 52 degrees. ' The average rise in temperature i during churning, of the Jersey ! cream, was 7.5 degrees, with an average of 6 degrees for the Guerni seys, and 4.5 degrees for the Short- ; horns. The shortest time in churn- ; ing Jersev cream was 00 minutes and the longest 120 minutes. The shortest time in churning the Guernsey cream was 50 minutes and the longest 130 minutes, wh'le the shortest for the Shorthorns was 40 minutes and the longest 05 minutes. It will t be noticedthat the temperature of ' the cream varied during churning, and that the time required for 1 'making the butter come" varied widely j The three breeds varied greatly in the amount of cream contained in i the milk, and the individual cows of the breeds differed also in quantity and qualitv of product. As no two cows are alike in any respect, and as the m:l!c and butter dilfer not only in quality, but also in the time required for churning, no fixed rules can be settled upon in the matter of churning. All depends on the cow herself, and the requirements in the herd. It is incumbent upon farmers, j in the face of these tests, to give ; greater attention to the kind of cows they use, for not only is the care and attention, as well as the feed, potent , factors with the breed, but the labor

of churning is also dependent on the cows more than on the kind of churn. Dairying is a science, and the more it is 'investigated the gretfter is it made apparent that the heaviest loss on the farm comes from the use of scrub cows.

F you wish the lightest, sweetest, finest cake, biscuit, bread

and rolls, R oyal Baking Powder is

Sy

rman

99

FUD

indispensable in their

making.

Napoleonic Protection. The manufacture of beet sugar in Europe was the work of Napoleon. He determined thit as little foreign sugar as possible should be used, and. by taxation, raised the price to $1.25 a pound, at the same time encouraging the French farmers to plant beets. They did so, and thus began the beet sugar industry on the continent of Europe. A Sad Disappointment. Texas Sittings. Rich Uncle So, my dear boy, you haven't forgott- n your uncle's birthday, have .you? You have Drought me this nice smoking cap. Thanks, little nephew! Here is half a dollar for you. Little Nephew Hoo-ooh-ooh. 'It cost seventy-five cents.

"When Iiegars Hung. During the reign of Henry VIII, 71 ,400 persons were legally executed in England, the larger portion of whom were guilty of no oliense worse than misdemeanor. In one year three hundn d starving bexr-

gars

were hung for

uokiuir alms.

Tria l and Appr ve;l by the Hilou. Fit over a third ol a century a preat specific has liceu on tr ul by a nttional jury of the i UiouH Alrhoutfh a verdict in its .avorwas r nth-red loav siiKe, it in Hill on tria Never wh n it has bfen "v.eitfhcd in the halan e." has it fete found wanting. The name of this vicdicine is Hostetter's Stomach Hitters, whu h more sm d ly than any other termindu8 th(he vi Han--us sensations which atu na disorder of th- liver. Itoxp 11h bile from tne hli od and 8 creti;.i,8, remedies t hronk' eostiveneps and reinforces the onan of digestion and i sim 1 ttlou. Mik eadache. yell wness of the sk:n un l eyeb&llK. furred toi gue, and other iinMeiUins tnat the I ver ban temporarly knocked off work and gone on the strike. iisaune;ir when it U use t. Jt is a most effl-

ci nt afe;ruard aglus: ma ari v. rUeumatiMH j ind kidney trouble, and fortidea a nervous and enfeebled inva id eriectually. You may think that the younR man who is deliver. titf the valedictory looks rather pleased and proud; but you ought to see his mother. A Constant Cough with Failing

Strength and Wivuiiur of Flesh, are symptoms uVuot ing Pulmonary organs more or less seriously alfected. You will lind a safe remedy for all Lung or Throat ails in Dr. D. Jay no's Expectorant. The whisky trust, wl. oh was supposed to be on the brink of death, turns out to be full of spirit If drowsy after a good night's sleep, there is indigestion and stomach disorder which Ueccham's Pills will cure. 25c a box. There is a man in this town who hates w hiskv so that he won't even go to see a tight-rope walk.

My acquaintance with Boschecrf German Syrup was made about four teen years ago. I contracted a cold which resulted inn hoarseness end cough which disabled tne from filling in y pulpit for a number of Sabbaths. Alter trying a physician, without obtaining relief I saw the advertisement of your remedy and obtained a bottle. I received quick and permanent help. I never hesitate to tell my experience. Rev. W. H. Haggerty, Martinsville, N.J.

Ours seems to he ahout the only nation of any consequence whose standing doesn't depend upon the maintenance of a war footing. A Child Enjoys the pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing effect of Syrup of t'ls, when in need of a laxative, and if the father or mother be costive or bilious, the most gratifying results follow its use; so that it is the best family remedy known, and every family should have a bottle. No Change. Ju2ge. Brings You say your doctor sends you a bill twice a year? Griggs Yes. "What does he do that for?" "It's the same bill.

FITS. All tits stoppeu free hy Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. No tits after drPtday-B use. Marvelous cures. Treat. ae and 42 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Ir. Kline, Arob St., Pliila , Pa.

A Choick Chkistmah Gift. In the selection of a choice Christmas gift, or an addition to one's own library, both elegance and usefulness will be found combined in Wkbsteu's International Dictionauy, which is the last of the various revisions and enlargements of the original 'Webster." 1 he International represents fifty times the amount of literary labor that was expended upon the earliest edition, and is without question, the most complete and reliable work of the kind ever published in a single volume. It is warmlv indorsed bv eminent scholars

I throughout the English speaking world, and is a most useful book for the library.

the school, the family, the student, and in fact for all who read or write the English language.

iff bwrtf i m yar

THE NEXT MORNING S FEEl BRIGHT AND MEW AND MY COMPLFXION IS BETTER My doctor sajs it acta gently un the tomeh, liver and kidntvs. and t k ploivant laxative. This drink in made rrorr hcrhs. and is prepared ft MS 68 easily oe tea. It is called LANE'S N2EDIGIHE

A II druetnntH sell it at 50c. ana 91 ft paccftge. 3 cannot gt it. Fnl your addres for a free ftftttli

A 11 drurtntR sell it at 50c. and i a package. If Ttm

(nl your addrewi tor a free Mmpia

I.nne Familr Medicsnr moved the bowew

each day. In order be henlthy thlAlsn

Addxeaa ORATiKF. avoopw r

fieC9ftftVT oy, N.Y.

"Colchester" Spading Boot-

'This butter,'' J-a:d Choi waiter severely. 4,tastes old

ly, eyeing and strong

the . It

must have been made from sour milk." Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Con taiu Mercury. as mercury wl 1 surely dstroy the Fene of emeU and c niplet y dermi.- the whule system when nterins it thr iuh the mucous nwrface, Such art cles hhtmld e wr be us.-d except as prescriptions from reputable ptiyBifi-iiis, hs the damnge thev will d ten-fula 10 ih pood you etui poKsIblv derive from them Hall's Ontario t'ure, m ntif lured by F. J. beney & Co o; Toie-to, O , e n'lti no mercury, and is taken in ernally Hnd acps directly upo.. in- bloo t and inuc-U8 eurf e-s of the bys em. In buyir;g Hail'eCntarrh Cure be sire you ire? the genuine It ifltakeu in hih-Iv, and made in Toledo, Ohio, bv F. J. henev & C . 'jWSold'by Ux UKKifitsPrHMi 75c per bottle. While the experienced bicycle rider escapes without any fails, the beginner, as a rule, doesn't jgi't olt so easily. Deserving Coplidenoe. There is no article which so richiv deserves the entire confidence cf the community as B town's Bros iiiAL l.orHES. Those suffer.' ne fram Antbmat c and Bronchial Diseases. Couf;us and Colds should try thi m. Price 6 oi-nis. As a householder the eiub-man can rarely be said to he "in it." Asthma Sutlorora Who have in vain tried every other means of relief should try "Sehifimann's Asthma Cure." No wailing for results. Its action is immediate, direct and certain, as a single trial proves. Send to Dr. R. SchiiTmann, St. Paul, Minn., for a free trial package, but ask your druggist tirst. Pee -'Colchester" Spading Boot ad, ha an other column.

The Best

Christmas Gift or the best addition to one's own library is WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY

The New 41 Unabridged." Ten years spent revlsinr,100 editors emploved, andover $300,000 expendedA Grand Educator Abreast of the Times A Library In Itself Invaluable in the household, and to the teacher, professional man, or self-educator.

.1-

or Farmers, Minois. H

ands and others. The outer or tap sole"extcnds he whole lenpth ol the Bole

down to the heel protecting the shank in dltck ing, digging and ether work. Best quality throughovU ASK VOlKDKAbliR.

Sold by All Booksellers, G. & C. Merriam Co.

Publishers, TcrPSTEffS

Springjield, Mass. , I iEKXOTONAL

t-Do TiAthttyohenn photo-V niCTIQMy

, gfSend f 01 free prospectus.

Good Roads The heavy part of the year's work

on the farm is nearly over, and the

farmers can now feel like looking!

about to see what are the fruits 01

his labors. While he is getting over

the hard service of the spring and summer, let him anticipate some things. The good road question is old and yet ever new. The time put

m the foundations for good roads 1; in the less busy season. If there is a quarry near by the road to be improved and stone is to be the foundation for the road, the time is coming when that stone can be hauled and placed ready for the gravel. Let road commissioners be on the lookout for these matters. In some communities where there are gravel pits public-spirited owners of the gravel are glad to furnish that material if the town will make the foundations, and the farmers along the road to be improved will invariably, when the subject is properly presented, furnish the teams to haul the stone or gravel and put it on the road.

Notes. Two "New York wom-CD have asked Governor Flower for permission to wear garments of the sterner sex while engaged in farm labors. The pasture is the foundation of the dairy business in America, and must continue to be so for generations yet to come. To his pasture the dairyman must give his first attention in preparing to succeed. They need to be a3 rich as the nature of his land and his means at command will allow. They should be seeded down to a large variety of grasses grasses of different habits of growth, time of ripening seed, of good flavor, and nutritious. To the man just beginning to lay down his land to pasture, the one thing essential above all things else is a thorough preparation of the land. But there are but few now in the business who are just preparing to seed down; their pastures are already set. To this class the one thins needful is regular top dressing with some well decomposed manures.

ON WHITE RIVER.

Two Things about Catarrh in the Head First It is a constitutional disease. Prof. Gross, a leading scien tist, says: "Catarrh is a constitution Uineaae which manifests itself by local symptoms." Dr. Dio Lewis says: Ca tarrb is not a disease of the man's nose: it is a disease of the m-n." Therefor be Fays snuffs and other local applications are useless.

Second It requires a consti

tutional remedy, like Hood's Sarsaparilla wblen reaches and cures Catarrh by pur

ify ng the blood and building up the sys-tr-m, so as to throw off the disease. Thousands who Jormerly suffered from Catarrh apree that HoodVP' Cures Hooo'b Rlus are carefully prepared apd are made of the best ingredients. Tr y a box. The Sun. The first of American Newspapers, Charles A. Dana, Editor. The American Constitution, the American Idea, the American Spirit. These first, last, and all the time, forever !

HOLIDAY EXCURSIONS.

LAKE ERIE & WESTERN R. R.

Ft Wayne, Cincinnati and Louisville R.H (NATURAL OAS ROUTE.) Will sell for the Christmas and Nfw Year Holidays, Excursion Tickets between ail stations on its line, at the very low rate of One and One -Third Fare For the Ronud Trip, Tickets will be sold on December 23, 24, 25. 30 and 31, 1893, and January 1, 1804, limited going to date of sal , and good returning up to and in luding Januarys, 18M, For ticket, rat s, time an general information. -a 1 on any Ucket gent of the bove route, or address C. F Daly, Gen 1 Pass, Agtfl H, C, Parker. Traffic Manager. Indianapolis, Ind.

GOLD ORE

trt'tn thft celb ruled Gold Mine of CVijip; Crk Col. A b ut if .1 4 ftiuabe sn-

SPECIMENS FOR SALE f pct.aiwwiu rid. to nv address on rectipt of Fitt-OuHo I t note. Address PKAVKY, McKMiiUf CO.. Cripj?e t reek. Colorado. Full information coticernin Gold luHDr Pbo pert IKS ftiito t aruihlicd.

B Indianapolis USINESS UNIVERSITY Lending CoUeffe of Boilnew A SbortluuML Bryant AStratton. Established 186C. Wha Block Elevator day and night. 10,000 former student hold ins pacing positions. W idely known. Onr endorsement pM port to beat situation. Great railroad, maiiafactriar and commercial center. Cheap boowltn. Larfawt ty. Individual instruction by experu. J-mt

logue and Papar free. Add row HEEB 4t OS BORN

1,000,000

Company in Htnnasota,

-aj. They ill be tent to 70a

Address

ACRES OFLANO for sale by the Saxst Paul A DT7LUTH RAXLVOAS Send or Maps tad Oft"

HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner. BU Paul, Miufc

DROPSY

DEAF

NESS

1 by Pcka lovtdbU tr Cnhk.n, WhUnan heard.

Hucccatrui wbio si i rmdica r

byF.Hucox.UtBw&y.4.Y. Write for book

Ul JL ajrrn MEN to TRAVEL. Wepav so ff API I CL to tftOD a month A: expenses.

TREATED FREE. Positively C or4 with V e fffltnbU ltni-dl ea. Have cured many iboucaad

oases pronounced hopeless. From first kes ' Bymptoms rayitily disappear, and in tcs days ' fully two-thirds of all symptoms are remorsA. : hook of testimonials of miraculous cores

sent FREE,

AND HEAD NOISES C0REB

a. SKfiS : Ten Days Treatment Furnished Free by Miil k of proof rltC . ' A..v i.eiwa oviii(tBM

1K, H.U. OHKEN St SONS, SPKCIALiSTR

Atlanta, Ga

INU.

"-S 93 INDPL&

HAVE YOU HEARD OF

N

TM A

L3TJKA.JLJJiD

9

DOLLABHIDE'8 FORD, A favorite camping ground seven miles below Indianapolis. Ford has been abandoned since the construction of a bridge a mile below.

The Sunday Sun Is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the world. Price 5c. a copy, By mail $2 a year Daily, by mail 16 a year Dr.ily and Sunday, by mail, $8 a year The weekly, tla year Address 1 HK SUN, New York. Good Chancel OdeJlHifiTyiowriterfortlS, if cash with order is received beron- Dec. 1st, i3. The famous Odell Typewriter Is used by Lawyers, Minist ib. DiKtois, Me.chiints, Kdit rt and Government otHcers, bt-c mse of Up c'ean print, simplicity and manifold copies. No encher required. It will do your work in one hour'H practice, t inely nic ded. Hupply limited. ( rdt r now and take advantage of this excep t.ouftlly Good Chance! W. H. Lekdy, Indianapolis, Ind.

If you have not you should lose no time in writing for full particulars concerning the newest, brightest and most successful natural gas manufacturing town ever established in the great INDIANA NATURAL CAS BELT. Last May a wheat field 1 To-day a busy, bustling town of over fifty buildings, with one new one started every twenty-four hour, and Fire Large Manufacturing Establishments which will employ la the aggregate over 300 people, absolutely assuring an almost i mediate population of 2,000 1 How Is This for Hard Times? Ingalte is twenty-three miles east of Indianapolis, on the mai line of the C. C. C. &St. L. R. R., has twelve passenger trains to and from Indianapolis daily, a low round trip rate, sp!eu;d supply of an tireless energy. People of brains and push are vrg4 to investigate. Address THE INGALLS LAND COMPANY, 13-14 Lombard Ridg. Indianapolis, Ind. Or Ingalls, Ind,