Flesherton Advance, 27 May 1897, p. 7

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AGRICULTURAL ABOUT FBEIttNG OALVES. Now ia the time when the average farmer has several calvea to teed. He wants to feed them so that they will bring him good returns Cor bis outlay. Some turn them into veal, or disyosn of them when a few days old. Under some conditions it might lie better to do so, says a writer in Couintry Gentleman, but I will now spealc of feeding the calves on the farm. It has come to be an accepted idea that the man who turns his crops into pork,, beef or milk, Is the one who makes the money. To do this ha muBt study rations and the character of the animal with as much care as he gives the cuirrency question. In stating a few simple rules for the guidance of others, I speak from long experience and a fair degree of success in preparing calvea for the market. As soon as the cow's milk is good, the calf may l)e weaned. For the good of the calf, as well as a saving of time, I be- lieve this to be belter than allowing the calf to stay longer with the cow. In teaching it to drink, one will have ample opportunity to exercise patience and self-control. But gentleness ia never lost oo a calf, and it will learn much quicker if kindly handled.* For this purpose there have been many devices put on the market, but, so far. I have seen nothing better than the old-fash- ioned wooden bun-ket. It is greatly su- perior to the trough, for where the lat- ter is used, the large ones crowd out the calves that need the feed most. If the calf ia strong and a good feeder, the first feed only need be entirely of new milk. A pint of skim milk may be add- «d to the second feed, and gradually in- creased till, when the calf ia two weeks old, it can be fed entirely on skim milk. As soon as aklm milk ia siibstittited for new, oil meal should be added. This ia Ijestwhen made in a porridge and boil- ed till it is the consistency of gruel. A small tablespoonful is all ttiat can be given at first, and great care must be taken in increasing it, or it will be apt to cause serious lx)wel trouble. A hearty calf should be able to eat half a pint when two months old. But I find a great difference in animals, and olten the best feeders will get out of order if given that quantity at six months. There can lie no set rule about it ; each one must use his owm judgment. .\s soon as the calf/ is two months old it can )>e fed a very small handful of corn and oats ground together. This also may l)e increased as the calf grows older. But great care should be observ- ed not to over feed. If an animal once gets "off its feed," it will lose more than can be made up ia a week. It would be imimssible to give any rule for apper- taining when a calf has all the feed it will assimilate. It is inslinct rather than reason, nnd nut even experience ca.n give it. Ab .soon as the calf will lick out the last speck- of meal and look for more, it is time to increase the quan- tity, li'or the time it is tikcn from the cow till it is pujt upon tbo market or plai.'ed in the dairy, it should be pul^hcd to its utmost cupocity. There IS no profit in letting ananiuial of any kind stand still ; if it is worth raising at all, it ia worth pushing. If a culf is daiinty when yuujiig, it hud Iwst be knocked in the bead, or sold, (or it will not impove with age. No amount of feeding and fuesing will ever make such a '-alf a first-cla.Ms cow or l*ef. Hut somutimcs Ih ' strunixcat an mil v.iU g,'t out of ordi'r. I'sunliy a redu ton ol'f ed will remedy thu trou> 'le, but, not always. If treatment is ueteosary, wuter turned oft from charcoal is at once .simple and easily obtained. Tliis remedy I found in a back nuuibcr of this paper, of what date (am usable to say. and it proved very effective in two cases this winter â€"the unl^ serious cases 1 have had in my experience. But prevention uf scours is lietter than any cure, and if proper- ly fed, the calf will never have it. When the calf is five or six months old, it may be foutnd more profitable to feed the skiin uiilk to youinger ^tock. If this lie the I ase, the change from milk and Krain to grain only should take place grad- ualTy. Some prefer wetting the meal Wihen no milk is given, but I have al- ways obtained better results liy feeding itdiyand providing pli-nty otfresh wa- ter. If milk can be bad without stinting younger calves or pigs, teea it by all means â€" the more the better. Une of the best feeders I ever owned drank (our buckets of milk per day, beside half a pint of oil meal und three quarts of meal, when six months old. This same steer dressed lOfi pounds when nine months old. This Is nothing' phenomen- al, but it is far above the average. '1 he corn and oats I believe an ideal food for cattle of all kinds. The corn furn- ishes the nccessaiy (at, and the oats give the lx>aeand muBi-le so much need- ed. Where bran is cheap, it would be advisable to mix a little with tbo mo4il. One l)ag of bran to tour of corn »nd oats would form a good ^1rop()rtion. [ think. Where no milk is given, I would not omit the oil mciil ; it ran be mix«d with the other teed and (ed dry. 1 always try to market my steers l)efore they reach the two year mark ; it seems to me a waste of feed to keep t'bem after that. A steer eighteen months old will relish from (our to five quiirts of the corn and oats. I have often tried to teed more, but so tar have failed. J. mufet not end without mentioning clover bay. I would not think of trying to raise a calt without it; it isas mu)[»h amrt of the ration as the meal. Give it all it will eat and watch yoilr steer grow. « POULTltY NOTES. A young ihi: k that is chl led Is pretty â- Dire to have diarrhoea and die. When the old ben 8tart.s out for the day she runs around and the chicks get wet and cold. If yoail let her alone stbo will loee the most of them. In selecting a .setting of eggs for a hen, it is well to rememlier that eggs of the same age, that are all laid as atArl; as posBible on the same day. will hatch out more nearly*, at the same time than will those of varying ages. Thoae who are intending to change from scri4> to pure bred stock will find it a good plan to purrJiase eggs from thoroughbred fowls, and keep some scruib hens to mother the young chicks, if they are to !» hatched in the natural way. Plenty of green food should be giv- en dutks ot all times. Do not feed mixed food sloppy, but sol that it sticks well together. The morning feed should be about one-half what is fed in the evening, so that they will ex- ercise themselves duj-ing the day. Any brooder home-made or manu- factured should l» large enough and divided into parts so that one portion will always be very warm, a connecting part moderate and a third only about the same as air outside. Then the <;hicks can get the degree of warmth they need. Thoroughbred fowls, that is, pure- blooded fowls which have been reared ulpon a farm, and not subjectod to the forcing process, but have oeen allowed to develop naturally and rationally, will prove hardier and less suficeptibla to disease. Buy these if you are go- ing to purchase stock for breeding up or to commence with. If you want to pak eggs for home use or for market you need not fear to pack all you can get, in salt, provided you use only fresh, clean, uncracked eggs. Keep in a dry cellar where the temperature will not go much alHtve sixty degrees, and do not shake the eggs ut> by turning the packages over "every second day." If your cellar ia a little inclined to dampness at times, set your packages up from the cellar bottom. i Hard Study in School BRINGS ON A SEVEBJE ATTACK OF ST. VITDS' DANCE. A Vanag CIrl's Ufa for a Time Maua Ml» eraMe-«;aBld Not Vm Her BaniU aad Foand It Dllllcait to WaUk â€" llealtk Bostorcd. From the Napanee Ejcpress. Nervousness is the frequent cause of muL-b misery and suffering. »One of the effects of this breaJiing wp of the nerves, particularly among young peo- ple, being chorea or St. Vitus dance. A correspondent tells of a young lady at Selby who was badly afflicted with this trouble. Hie says:â€" "I never saw anyone suffering so badly before from nervous disorder. She waa violently jerking and twitching all the time, and could not use her right hand at all. Anything she would try to pick up with it would instantly fall. When she would attempt to walk, her limbs u-ould twist and turn, the ankle often doubling down and throwing her. Lately I heard thatahe had lieen cured, but doubted the truth of the statement and went out to see her. The state- SHAEY mm AT SEA. THEY ARE THE SOURCE OF THE PARALYZING SICKNESS. ment proved quite true, nnd lielieving that a reiutal ot the tiicts of the case would be of advantage to some one who might be similarly suffering, I asked permission to make them known, which was readily granted. The young lody is Mass H'. M. Gonyou, a general favorite among her aciiuaint- ances, and it Is thought tli.it her trouble, as is not iiifrenuently the case, W!i3 brought on by hard study in school." Mi^s Uonyou gave the follow- ing statement:- ''All through the fall of 1894 I bad been feeling unwell. I did not speak to anyone aliout it, for I was goi'ng to .school and was afraid if I said anything aliout it to my parents they would keep me at home. I kept t;utting worse, and at last grew so nervous that t could not hold my pen- cil. My right side was affected most, though the trouble .seemed to go through my whole .system. In Janu- ary I was so bad that I had to dis- continue going to school, and t W.1S constantly growing worse. I could not use my bunds, because I would let everything drop, and fre- quently when I attempted to walk, I would fall. My brother bad been ail- i;ig tor a long time and was then using Dr. Willianto' Vinifc Pills and getting better, so I thought as they were help- ing him so much they would boa good medicine tor mo. lietore the first box was done I was feeling much better, and after iifiing the Pink Pills tor about a month, my health was fully restored. It is now more than a year since [ discontinued the use of the pills, and I have noi bad the slightest trac« ot the malady since. 1 am satis- fied Dr. Williams' PiiiJk Pills saved me from a life of misery, and I would strongly recommend them for nervous troubles. Ur. Williams' Pink Pills create new blood, build up the nerves, and thus drive diaea.se from the system. In hundreds ot cases they have cured aft- er all other medicines bad tailed, thus establishing tho'claini that they are a marvel among the triumphs of "modern modiciil jscience. The genuine Pink Pills are sold only in boxes tearing the full trade mark, "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills tor Palo Poophi." Protect yourself from imposition by refusing any pill that does not liear the regis- tered trade mark around the box. SteadT Them with dood .lloarlAbmeal. Open â€" AlrDlvt<riiiaui>,and«:ummoniieuiie.aud IfoH Will Have Uoue .llBch to Hake a Vojrase Without Paln-Acldii Are Bad. As soon as the season for ocean travel opens eaah spring there is great deal of talk about seaaioknesa. Somebody hobs up here with a sure oure; somel ody there with a preventive that never fails. Yet thousands of persona go on being seaaiok in spite of both. A sur- geon on one of the big ocean liners says that fully one-half of the persona who cross the seaa are in the state of mind the man who sin^s: Oh, Mr. Captain, please stop the ship I want to get off and walk. The other half he says, haven't en- ough life left in them even to thinjk of walking. Their one ambition is to die. This may be a slight exaggera- tion for many persons never suffer from this (he most disagreeable disease, while it lasts, known to man. The poet who wrote "The Sea Has No Terrors for Me" must have been one of them. He certainly oould not have belonged to the vast majority who fall victima. "Seasidkness," said a physician who has served as a ship surgeon several seasons, "is one of the oddest things that human flesh is heir to. It is really a reflex action of the pneumo-gastrio nerve. The pneumo-gastrlc nerve is one of the tenth pair of cranial nerves. The nervous system of the human anatomy becomes accustomed to the stability of objects around us, and, consequently, as soon aa most people get on the sea,, where the only thing in sight is ROLLING WAVES and fleeting clouds, the pneumo-gastrio nerve rebels. Seasickness might as well be called land siokness or sky sickness or mountain siokness as far aa the. name itself goes, because ar person who has never seen a body of water bigger than the spring branch on the farm where be was reared sometimes experiences vmttt is known as seasickness in riding on a pond or lake. Biding in a train, swinging, see-sawing, and riding in an elevator produce it, and persons look- ing at the pickets on a fence in driv- ing by rapidly have been known to be- come very ill. Nearly every one has seen children fall out of a swing or from a seesaw all in a heap and too prostrated, physically and mentally, to speak. That is the result of aeasickness. Of course, it is not so severe or lasting as a case which occurs, say, when one is a day out at sea, but it is just as I disagreeable for a few minutes. Be that as it may, it ia called seasickness, because most persons are reared on land, and when travelling on water the abrupt change from their usual sur- roundings gives rise to this reflex. "The severity of the disease varies among individuals according to the con- dition of the nervous system. Some persons are much more impressionable than others, and they are the ones who suffer most. A high-strung, nurvoua, hysterical person is the one most apt to suffer, and yet this is not invariably so. Often a great, strong man, brag- ging every tew minutes about being a tir.st-class sailor, is seized and brought .so low that all he can do is to want to die. "Hypnotism and seasickness are pret- ty close cousins. .\ person s mentality has a great deal to do with the degree -' his suffering and yet the condition ^ rqu3«d by namwa. There was no med' loine that could do bhu any good, and I soon saw that the only thing was to nourish the little fellow, I ordered the mother to give him beef tea and a few driqis of brandy at short intervals, but to my surprise he did not rally. I soon learned that it was a part of her creed not to eat any meat that had not been blessed by a rabbi, and so she was calmly throwing the beef tea overboard. We put the chUd in the hospital, the attendant fed blm every two hours, and before we landed he was better than he was before he sailed. 'IVenty-four hours more without nutrition would have killed him. "Never get in debt to your stomaoh, IS a very good rule to follow when sail- ing the seas. If well, a person should keep something in the stomac.h. and if ail<xk after each spell some food should be taken for two reasons. First, there should be something there to give up and then the system is bound to absorb some of it, and in this way the strength is kept up. There ia absolutely no med- icine on the face of the earth that will stave off a oase of seasickness or make it lighter. Any doctor will give reams of testimony concerning the trouble be has had in fighting the numerous concoc- tions recommended for this disease. Some people begin to dose for days be- fore starting on a voyage. The only thing that is advisable is to give the liver a thorough overhauling and then make up the mind that no such thing as seasickness can come to you. "It is wise to stay on dedk as much as possible. Usually, if a person who is sick can be persuaded to go on deck, and his interest can be aroused, be finds himself well before he knows it. It's a first class remedy to get a sick person RIGHT DOWN ANGRY. Again, if the sufferer can be engaged in a race around the declc he gets hia sea legs and forgets all about lieing Sick. If a person is too ill tor this, the best thing to do is to stretch out on deok with the feet higher than the bead and to ea tcracked ice, drink carbonated water or a little vichy and whiskey or champagne, and above everything, get out of sight of every one else who ia sick. "In oasea of extreme nausea morpb- me, hypodermioally injected, must sometimes be resorted to, but this should lie avoided as long as possible, since the secondary affect of morphine IS nauseating. Friction of the extrem- ities, general massage, very hot or very cold amilications to the stomach are tur more efficacious than medicino. A favor- ite remedy with women is the lemon or the orange. The least acid that one puts into the stomach at such a time the better it is tor that organ. It is well to eat plenty of fruit when on a voyage and a generous diet of cereals and nutritious soups should also be token. It is useless to tell people inclin- ed to nausea to beware of greasy foods. The very sight of grease makes them feel as it t heir stomachs were on sprin'ts. Sailors often take their seasick com- rades on deck, turn the hose on them, and that cures them in a hurry. The remedy may not be exactly elegant, but it is effectual." FACTS FULL OF SUNSHINE. FOR RHEUMATIC SUFFERERS.* Shakespeare says that "the miserable have no other medicine but only hope)" bul for those who are made miserableby Rbeu. inatiam, even hope haa -fled ta a great inoiority of cases. 'Twenty years is a long time to be the victim of a disease, and yet that is the tint* Thos. Stevenson, of 122 John St. South. Hamilton, makes oath that he was afflicted with Rheumatism. Twenty years' affliction is enough to banish any hope of care, and yet Ryckman's Kootenay Cure, after every* thing else failed, restorM Mr. Stevenson to liealth. Seven years one would think too long to suffer indescribable torture, and yet Mr. C. B. Hamilton, of 131 Sydenham Street, London, Ont., endured the agonies of Rheti> matism for that length of time. At times be could not use bis limba. Kootenay Cur* has cured him, and he's truly thankful for it. Hundreds of others, besides these, have sworn to being cured by Ryckman's Koote. nay Cure. Tiiere is no mistaking its wonderfid power. Thousands of Rheumatic SufTerera !iave had the sunshine of hope and health come back through its use. If y«a are atSicted with Rheumatism, Sciatica, N*«J .-al|^a, or any Blood Oi«ease,,lt wi|l pa^ yoa 'o mvestigate. Particulars sent free tft tddressing the Ryckman Medicine Co., Hamilton, Ont. One bottle lasts over a month. FOR TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS. DUNN'S BAKINC POWDER THECOOK'SBEST FRIEND Largest Sale in Canada. A DYING CONVICT. lo< en- buk BRIDAL WREATHS. ThiB bridal wreath is usually formed in Gertaany of myrtle branches, in France and Eng.and of orange blos- soms in Itaiy an 1 French Switzerland of while rosos, in Spain of red roses and pinks, in the islands of Greece of vine leaves, in Mohomiia of rosemary, in Germany-Swit^serland of a orown of artificial flowers. of itself when realized is MOSl' UORIUBLE. The depression is fearful and the phy- sical discomfort just as great. A pop- ular idea exists that if you have sea- sickness once it gives immunity from a second attack. The man who sets his hopes on this belief ia to be pitied. A person might cross the ocean twenty times a year and bo seusiuk every time. Again he mighi iro>s ninety-nine times without missing a meal and die of naus- ea on bis hundiedili voyage. Sea voy- iiges are like children â€" you never know how they are going to turn out as far as your pneumo-gastrio nerve is concern- ed. The condition ot seasickness is great- ly aggravated by surroundings, partic- ularly l)ad odors. .Steerage passengers are much more apt to suffer than are those in the first and second cabins, i'beir close confinement between decks, the narrow, stifling quarters and unap- petizing food are often such as would make <a seasoned sailor succumb. It is in this class that the ship's surgeon has his most aggravated und danger- ous oases of seasickness. The patients will not assist themselves, and their ?:eneral stupidity makes it very hard or a doctor to dv anything more than to hope tiiat kind nature ur a rapid voyage will do what he has failed to accomplish." "Do people often die ot seasiukness ?" asked the reporter. "I cjin't .say that there are many deaths from this disease," answered the authority "but those who .say "Well, I know 1 .shall be very sea^ck, but there Is a great deal ot consolation in know- ing that it can't kill nio," don't know what they are talking about. The great depression and the â- wearing, tearing strain on the nervous system, produced by the convulsive action ot the abdom- inal muscles and the inability ot the system to tiuke nourishment, ocotisionul- ly result In death. A ship's surgeon, if not extremely careful, is liable to have seasick patients tbroudlft their own ig- norance or religious prejudices, STARVE TO DEATH. What is meant by that; Just this. As a rule children do not get seasiok. But 1 remember, whan crossing the ocean one summer, being called to see two children in the steerage who wore very ill. They were Polish Jews, and the mo- ther and father were with them. They were all rather emaciated when they ume aboard, and in three days the boy I URALTH'A P.iRADMK Regained after twenty years' tor- ture from that dread disease. Catarrh â€" ilon. Geo. 'IVvylor of Scraalon, I'a., tells the world what Dr. Agnew'.s Ca,- tarrhal Poiwder has done for him. I was a martyr to catarrh for twientyt yoar'i â€" tried every known remedy, bub g<ii little or no relief. Was troubled with con'itant dropping in the tluwut, terrible {luins in my head, and my breatib was very uiffen.sive. 1 was in- duced to give Dr. ^Vgnew's Catarrhal Powder a trial, ami the result woa magical. 'Ithe first application cleared my head! Instantly. I {lersisted in its use, .•ind to-day I. am a cured man, and it affords me plea.suro to lend my lestimony. oold by W. E. Richardson. NAMING THR BABY. A Burmese baby, when a fort night old, is named. On the aiuspicious day,' which tbo astrologer has selected, I here is a feast to which relatives and friends have been invited. The baby's head is washed for the first time, and his name is chosen. An Knglisb lady, re- siding in Durma, describes the process ot selecting the name : The limits of the choice are determ- ined by the day ot the week upon which he was liorn. Burmese custom divides the letters ot the alphabet among the days of the week, and a child born oir Monday must receive a name initialled by one of the letters belonging to that day. Ka, kha, ga, gha, nga, Taninia Sa. nsa, za, zha, nya, Ainga, Ta, I ha, dha, na, Sanay. Is tho beginning ot a jingle which every Burmese child learns, as you and I learned "Thirty days hath Septeni- \x>T. April, -Tfine and November." A child born on Taninia, Monday, miust have a name beginning with k, g or n. And when he is old enough to go to the pngo<laa, the natairo of the offering he carries, or rather its shai>e, is determined by the day of hia birth. Each day of the week is under the protection, or subject to the fury, of some animal. The tiger rules Monday, and a Bdrman horn on Monday will offer to Gautama a candle shaped likn a tiger, and toHhionod ot .scarlet or of yellow wax. Tuesday t)elongs to tho king of beasts, Wednesday is the tusk- ed elephant's, Thursday is sacred to the rat, and Friday to the gniinea-pig. The dragon dominates Saturday and Sunday is dexli rated to another fabu- lous creature, half bird, half beast. HMgrave the Onre Famooj InnaniBee Swindler, Pawlac Away In Inillana'a Peallemtlary. Benjamin li. Musginwe, who was sent to thu Jeffenspn, Ind,, iMoitentiary toe toying to defraud insuranoe companicBk is dying. Ho was an Engllshinan by birth and a qjendthritt by natures Hkving squandered all of his inharib- ancQ, be reeorted bo various sohemosto raise money to maintain his extravik- gant mode of living. Aiter tmvedling extenBively he cated temirararijy at Chicago and gaged in the btrukorage businesei mode no money, and, becoming deep* ly involvedk determined to make s rajlae at the exjieuse of insuiranceiwax- tfonies. Havting become enamoured with Ka/t» Burtoni hp tDt>k her Into the acheime, and iui^irnd his life tor $3!ii,000 inaevw en diifforent ooiu|j|inled. ThTtee of tihe policriee werte payable Ho thto sedanotiv* Kate, amotanting bo 915,000. Thu otlien fouir inuliuletji, qalling for 920,000, vrtm made uut in favpr of b'ls mother. Another aci-omj>hoe was Clha4rle« Tirout, who aided Muagrav^ in procur- ijng a iikiileton of I'ai-MUna. & Co.,, of St. LoulEi correoiJlmd^ng in siize to bis own Btatutiti, and wibich lie CKutriied in a large vfiDsB troni CJna-a^o to an old (laseried cuhia in the vioinit<y of Terr* Hauler ImL, He then (telit fctr I'roiut to comeanxi bring a uuniher (*" lormeir aoquaint- ani'BS Iroiii I'erra Haiilto to v.iuit hiira iin his Telreali in uritiac bliat thecjl might be able tb .sulxse(i.uuntly .].u°o\» hiici presence at the cial>in uihen tho lUiTiher jJilaiis of the con-spiracy wouUt cullmuiuie. 'i'liut iiig,h.t the cailxin waa burncJl, and the uett datf Trouit caJ.l- 0.1 at lent ion to the oliatrrsul btoneis o£ the skeleton tjint harl lieim removed (from tho vlUiHe and plai.-«d on therudA l>ed to indicate that a| liuniun boiogl bad peri-slied in the my-storious Xiro. A K. ot Pk wailn.h rliiiriu. with tha ilotteis "B. Hi Musgirave^" was found on tlic breBst-honce oi the aoorclied Mkniutiin. J)ut a« no buttons otrtrniod of oloihing, aiul not iv voitige ot tlesb c^ould lie diacovored. tbo facts of the swindle wootb grimly .i.piMvrent. Mufigrave rclurnod to Chicago and sought to <linH;ui.^ hAina«lf by nuloiring hits luiir. riiiising a ble«vrd, and altariivC his appua^-aiiiv in e\x>ry wiay poseibl^ and ke}it in hilling. 11^ femoile lu-com- j>lltt) attempted to collect the polioias iiiailb to her. but the imsurance com- jianiles rcjrj'teil the cliuini!) luml put the mat tier in tho hands of dot«i'livo.s. who arne-iitBd tho wminn, aiad .surceiedBd in sfei.'uriing a ronAvaion fr»wii her. MuKgrav b, then fjod tM St. Paul, but, fooliRhly wroltj to the wonutn, aiidshi^ IJtolilah likiO. tUTiiftd tlio lettor oner to tilue officeTBi, (^uuJlling tiieni tu arrest him. Hte wan lyrontrht back bo Terre Uaut», ajid aflfcr a m<itst Hen.sationiul trial waa sent to the jienitentiars' for ten yeiuns. It he lives until N:oveml>er, ISi'S, be will ))o releawl on amount of ntvLuotion of time for good behavior. Tho proba- Wlitiee are, however, tlutt lib will .â- survive but a few months at furth- est. THIAT WAS EVIDENT. What are those two toads quarreling alwut, asked Mr. Frog of his wife. I don't know, replied Mrs. h'rog, but was in a comatose condition except when | Ihcy are hopping mad. Pil.Kt C'lIEKO IM :« TO « MVIITN. Dr. Agnow's Ointment will cure all cases ot itching piles in from three to six nights. One apiilication brings comfort. For blind and bleeding piles it is peerless. Also cures Tetter, f>alt> Rheum, Eczema, Barlier's Itch and all oruiptiuns of tho .skin. <3ri cents. Sold by W. E. Richardson. nii'rwKKK LivK .4^n iikatii For 25 years, says Mrs. J. D. .S<<k1- dard ot .VNbury Park, N.J., and Two bottles of Dr. .Vgnew's Cure for tlve Heart restored the Inst treasure. For twe.nty-five years I have been a great sufferer from heart disease, palpitation, dizzines,'*, and severe headaches. I saw Dr. Agnew'.s Cure for tho Heart ivd- v<\rlisod, and determined to try it. Two bottlc^i have done noiulers for mo. The dizziness and palpilalion are gone, the he.adachos have disappeared. I never cease telling my friends t ho wonderful Ixenotit thi.s great oure h:i^ been to me. T cheerfully recommend it .-xny and ei^. ervwhere. Sold liy W. E. Richardson. eATISPlED. I'd liklB to see a .succ^saful flying iu<v> Chine invented. Oh, the birycio is a gikml enough fly- ing maobine for mo.

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