Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Apr 1891, p. 7

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Those who believe that Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy will <^ure them are more liable to get well than *those who „Jon't. If you happen to be one of who don't believ6, there's li matter of $500 to help your ? faith. It's for you if the mak­ ers of Dr. Sage's remedy can't Cure you, no matter how bad * " tBr of how long standing your Catarrh in the head may lie. §j$?%} The makers are the World's ' "Dispensary Medical Associa- ion of Buffalo, N.Y. They're known to eveyy newspaper publisher and every druggist m the land, and you can eas- 3y ascertain that their word's as good as their bond. Begin right. The first stage to purify the system. You don't want to build on a wrong foundation, when you're build­ ing for health. And don't s|hock the stomach with harsh Ireatment Use the milder means. You wind your watch once a day. Your liver and bowels should act as regularly. If they do not, use a key. The key is -- Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a dose. CATGUT is made from the entrails of •lice p. BTATK OP OHIO, CITT OF TOLEDO, ? _ LUCAS COUNTY, FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he to the •enior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY A Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONK HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of CATABRH that cannot be cured by the use of HAXIL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my rsence, this 6th d»y of December, A. D. 1886. -- A. W. GLEASGN, j- Notary Public. arrh C PmvF. ( Hall's Catarrh Cttre is taken internally, and acts directly osPV 1 e blood and mucous surfaces of the system.B'SSnd for testimonials, free. 7. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. i9S"Sold by druggists, 75c. Thk amenities of life make the true beauty of living. KITS.--All Fits stopped free bv Dr.Kline's Great Kervc Restorer. No Fits after first day's use. Mar- wellouH cures. Treatise aud $.2/10 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, uai Arch tit., l'hila., Fa. m SHILOli'S CONSUMPTION CURE. . The success of this Great Cough Cure is jyithout a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos­ itive guarantee, a test that no other cure can sue- oessfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home m the United States and Canada. If you have ft Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for H will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief Is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH'S CURE, Price io cts., 50 cts. and §1.00. Ifryour Lungs are sore or Back lame* ttse Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts. Tutt's Hair Dye Cray hair or -whiskers changed to a glossy Wsoli by a single application of tliix l>ye« St imparts s.natural eolors acts inRtgtmtane-> utisly mirf contains nothing injurious to the Iisir. K«lctJ»y all alrtsg-gihts, or sent by <>x-> wre88 on receipt of price, SI.OO. Office, 39 Ji 411'ark Place, New York. DADWAY 11 READY RE •s RELIEF. THE CHEAPESTAND BEST MKDIC'INB FOB FAMILY I SK IN THE WORLD. NBVEB FAILS IO UELIKVK PAIN. Cures an«l rrcventu Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Inllaminatinii, Rheumatism, M«ural)(ia. Headache, Toothache, Asthma, Difficult lireiitlxlng> ri'RKS THE WOKST i'AINS in iroiu oui-to twenty minutes. Not one hour after reading tins advertlsfr-i •»ent need any one ST'FFKB WiTn 1'AiN. INTERNALLY, a Jialt to a teaspoonful in half ft tnmblcr ot water will in a few minutes cure Cramps, Spawns, Sour Stomach, Nausea. Vommnn, Heartburn, NervouHrieSH.iSleeiileshncBi., Sick Headache, Diarrhea. Colic. Flatulency, and all internal pain*. 50c. ]ier Dottle. Hold by Druggists. DADWAY'S n PILLS, An Excellent and Mild Cathart ie. Purely veg­ etable.* The safest and bobt medicine lu the "World for the cure of all disorders of the LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken according: to directions, they will restore health and renew vitality. , Price. 'i5c. a box. Sold by all drtutgiste, or mailed toy R.VDWAY & CO., SJ Warren Street. New York, on leoeipt ot prios. that Gleans . Most is Lenox. THE MILKING OF THE C$>W. ] than that of the Capitol at Washington, WZZZom. * ^ ! h.ftnS thoottnd. of in the > -- ! air between the door ana the mMCTn,,Wdt0 voraify a mild and meHow floor, scatter richly-carved pulpits about When 1 used to milk old Brindle in the yard. And the shining milk wee sweeter unto me and little I'ett r , Than orientd perfumes of myrrh, tots k to ccnse, itiiu <iar<T. * The sunset flung its banners from the gilded hills above us. And the < dors of the evening seemed' to di3p i from every bougn; There was peacG and glsd contentment, both within 11s nti«l vithosjt, as. At the sweet, mellifluous milking ot the cow. And, wondering like a memory from tho silent past's abysm, I smell the grateful odors of the fragrant evening breeze, / And I bend to catch the chrism of the twilight*! glad baptism. And the outstretched benediction of the trees. lite glorv of the summer night, the magic of the mountains. And the ticklings of the twilight on the farm are with me now ; But through nil the mingling music still I he«r those falling fountains, The sweet, mellifluous milking of the cow. Still I hear the jovful rhythm of that titillating tinkle, \ * And I smell tha grateful odors of the jdaeid, perfumed night-- Odors blown from glens a-fiprinkle with wild- rose and periwinkle, , " And from lakes where lazy lilies loll in languor for "the light. • Through the vul.ey of the long years that is glimmerir g behind me , 1 "peer down through the- vista that connects the then and now; With a youth's audacious uncotfcern a careless boy 1 find me. At the .sweet, mellifluous milking of the cow. --Yankee Blade. * THERE IS NO GOD BI'T GOD. IN A LAND OF PRAYEHS. FRANK CARPENTER'S OBSERVA­ TIONS IN CONSTANTINOPLE. A City of Mosques, Minarets, and Howling: Dervishes--The Kamaiaii Ceremonies-- All ••Good" Turks Read the Koran- Mohammedan Kellof*. ARRIVED in Con­ stantinople during the month of Rama­ zan, and I find the whole city observ­ ing the Mohamme­ dan lent. The cook- shops of Stamboui are closed during the day for lack of custom, and of the half-million Turk­ ish men, women aud children in this city not one eats anything from sun­ rise to sunset. They do not drink a drop of water, and- the mor^ devout will not even svallow their spittle. The Turks are the most inveterate smokers of the wOrld, and they like to titillate their nostrils with 6mokeand to gratifyJthem with perfumes. During Ramazan they do not smoke during the day time and they entirely abstain from snuff and the use of attar of roses. This is so not only in Constantinople, but also over the whole Mohammedan world. It is G o'clock p. m. as I write, and 100,000,000 Mohammedan stomachs scattered from the wilds of north China to the tropical regions of central Africa are howling with hunger. One hun­ dred million parched tongues are now scraping against the dry roofs of 100,- 000,000 mouths, and I doubt not that something like 200,000,000 eyes are anxiously watching the going down of the setting sun. The moment it drops behind the west these millions will grab for the food that has been pre- pared for them, and for the next hour or so the fasting will be turned into feasting. The nights of Constantinople are now nights of revelry. The koran does not prohibit the Turk from eating what he pleases after sunset, and the people gorge themselves to make up for the fast of the day. The city is lighted at nights, and crowds throng the streets. AH the cafes and eating houses are open, and the lemonade ped- ler and the sweet-meat man are out in all their glory. The Turku are very hospitable, and during Ramazan they give many dinner parties. Such as are wealthy enough to do without work stay up the whole night in order that they may the better sleep through the fast­ ing hours of the morrow. It is a time for religious observance as well as pleasure. There are services at all the mosques every evening and all the men go to prayers. The mosques are illu- THE MOSOFE. minated and the hundreds of minarets which rise high above the somber city of Stamboui are girdled with light and between them are stretched great fig­ ures of tire, made by stringing countless lamps upo*jt wires. Here is one com­ posed of gigantic letters forming the Turkish word for God or "Allah." There is one representing a cannon a hundred feet long, and between the towers of another mosque hangs a mam­ moth star and crescent of fire. There are between 200 and 300 mosques in Constantinople, and the Ra­ mazan ceremonies in these are most in­ teresting to the stranger. I witnessed them in the largest mosqne of the world. This was the mosque of Santa Sophia, which was built as a Christian church in the fourth century, and which was for ages the finest Christian church in the world. It took one hundred ar­ chitects to superintend its construction, and 10,000 masons worked upon it at the s^me time. It" had doors of ivory, amber, and cedar, and its altar was made of precious *stones imbedded in gold and silver. It was decorated with beautiful paintings, which the Turks destroyed when thev took possession of Constantinople, and its roof has still enough mosaic to carpet an acre field. The great temples of antiquity have been robbed to build tbis church. Within it there are four pillars of green granite, which were taken from the Temple of Diana at Ephesas, and there are other columns from tha tem­ ple of Thebes, Athens, Rome, and Alex­ andria. If you will take a two-acre field and plant within it a forest of columns, roofed with a dome bigger and grander various parts of the building, put im­ mense fountains here and hang gigantic Turkish inscriptions there, you may have a mazed idea of how the mosque of Santa Sophia looks when entering. You will wander for hours throng the corridors of its columns, finding new beauties at every step. You will note that the great walls are lined with precious marbies and that the cornices and the friezes of the arches are of gilded bronze. At night when the thousands of lamps are lighted, when great stars of flame float in Hie air be­ tween the dome and the floor, when every pillar and every aclove is ablaze, and when the various galleries are walled with flame, the wonder of the mosque takes on new grandeur, "which, added to the picturesqueness of tho wor­ shipers themselves, make a Ramazan night in Sauta Sophia one of the great­ est sights of the world. The Mohammedan prayers and method of praying is fixed by the koran and the*e 5,000 men all prayed in the same way. I noted their actions from the beginning to the end of each prayer. The person praying must first .remove his shoes and sandals and turn his feet toward Mecca. He must bathe his hands and feet and certain other parts of his person before entering the mosque, and in the court of this mosque of Santa Sophia there is a large and beautiful fountain. Entering the mosque and standing in the right position the worshipper begins by putting his hauds to the lobes of his ears and he then holds them a little below his girdle. He then goes through a num­ ber of prostrations*, reciting certain prayers from the koran as he does so. If he is a faith!ul Mohammedan he prays five times every day and he does not care for his surroundings. At the hours of prayer Mohammedans will be­ gin their devotions in the midst of a crowd. They will stop their business transactions, and whether in the store or in the field they will drop on their knees and pray. I remember entering a rug bazaar in Alexandria and calling upon a gray-bearded, turbaned Turk while he was engaged in his devotions. He was standing on a rag in the back of the store looking toward Mecca and mumbling the koran. He must have seen me as I entered with a party of Americans, and though he knew I in- DERVISHES AT PRAYER. tended to buy he paid no attention to me. He continued his kneeling down and rising up for fully fifteen minutes and I sat down , and waited until he was through. There were many other rug establishments near by and he must have known that he stood the ohance of the loss of a sale by not attending tome. This made no difference, however, to him. It would be a curious thing to see p merchant io New York or Chicago Btop his sales in the middle of the day and drop on his knees and pray in the presence of his customers. The Turks read the koran fully as much as we read the Bible. It is a com­ mon sight in going through the bazaars to see one man reading the koran to his friends, and nearly every merchant has a cApy of this Mohammedan bible be­ side him, and vet you will see dozens of merchants reading to themselves during the intervals of trade. They take pride in having good korans, and the korans used by the Sultati are bound in silver and beautifully illuminated. In the tombs of the Sultans where they lie ih marble sarcophagi, inside of fences of silver, their korans are preserved with them, and I looked over several volumes of the finest of these the other day. The guide in charge, whose hands are washed, will not permit a Christian to touch them, but he turns the pages and shows you their beauties. They are as fine as any of the wonderful manuscripts made by the monks of the middle ages, and they are paintsd by hand upou parchment. TheSultal probably knows the koran by heart. The khedive of Egypt can recite it from one end to the other, and the average Mohammedan ruler has a much better knowledge of his bible than have onr presidents or the kings of Europe of the scriptures. The churches of the Mohammedans, known as mosques, are the finest build­ ings of the East, and they rank among the great architectural structures, of the world. There is a mosque in Cairo which covers more than an acre which is made entirely of alabaster, most of which is as beautifully veined and as transparent as Mexican onyx. The floor of this mosque is carpeted with elegant Turkish rugs, and I attended it one night when the khedive was among its worshippers'. Ji is one of the most beautiful mosques in the world, and it is a fair representative of a great Mo­ hammedan place of worship. There are different sects among the Mohammedans, but they are more lib­ eral in their treatment of each other than are the Christians. In tbis ala­ baster mosque a half-dozen different sects were worshipping, and in one part of it the dancing dervishes were whirl­ ing through their religious gymnastics. These men and boys had dark yellow faces, worn thin by fasting. They were dressed in long white skirts, fastened in at the waist with black belts, and on their heads were high sugar-loaf hats. One of them played the flute, another the tambourine, and the others after kissing the hem of the robe of the chief, held out their arms and began to whirl slowly around to the music. As they continued to whirl one of them sang verses from the koran, and at intervals there were prayers by the chief. After -the pioyeia wure over the whirling be­ came more rapid until they at last went around at the rate of sixty revolutions fe minute. At this time their skirts fctood out like those of a ballet dancer, they became red in the face, and I noted that one ofrthe boys fell to the grouqd and was carried off in a fit The howl­ ing dervishes are even more horrible, and there is a great society of them at Constantinople. I cannot describe their religious gymnastics, but they work themselves into a frenzy, and in the in­ ferior of Turkey where they are away from the restraint of western tion they often take knives artfl cut themselves and each other ur their re­ ligious ecstacy. They often go into epi­ leptic fits aud foam at tlys mouth, and they are as dirty a sot of long-haired heathens as you will fitpd in the worlji. They are, however, the cranks of Mo­ hammedanism and are not a fair sample of the Mohammedan world. The Mohammedans believe in God and the prophets. They look npon Christ as a great prophet and believe that Mohammed and Christ will act to­ gether as the judges of all mankind at the last day. One of the minarets of the noted mosque at Damascus was built in memory of Christ, and Damas­ cus is one of the fanatical of Moham­ medan cities. They look upon Adam as a pattern of human perfection and they believe that the Garden of Eden was originally located in Heaven. When Eve seduced Adam in eating the apple our parents were cast out of the Garden of Eden and fell to the earth. Adam landed on a mountain in Ceylon and Eve dropped down near Mecca. Adam for his sin spent 200 years in looking for Eve, and at last he found her in Arabia, and the two lived in a mountain there together until they died. This mountain is still known as Adam's Mount, The Mohammedans consider Abraham a great profit. He is called iu the koran the friend of God. They call Moses tho speaker of God, and they have, all told, 124,000 proph­ ets. The greatest of these are Adam, Abraham, Jesus, and Mohammed. The koran includes charity and brotherly love. It prohibits lending* money at interest, and it lixes the general laws of the Mohammedan world. It ificulcate3 belief in a future state, in the heaven of which each devout believer shall have four beautiful and ever young maidens to wait upon him and to admiuister to his wants. It is in many of its chap ters so much like the Bible that it is believed that Mohammed got a large part of its teachings from the scriptues and from the Jews with whom he was acquainted. -- Frank G. Carpenter. Is Greenland An lulund? Engineer Robert E. Pearv, of the United States Navy, proposes to solve this question. He has secured leave of absence for eighteen months, with this object in view. Mr. Peary proposes to start on his expedition fromiSt. Johns, Newfoundland, about May 1. His idea is to go North as far as a whaling steam­ er will carry hitn and then strike for the North Pole on foot across Greenland. * I sail travel on foot," he said to an interviewer, "as I did four years ago, walking at night when the sun glares the least, and sleeping in the day. The Bleeping bags* in which one may rest comfortably, are big pouches of waterproof sealskin lined with reindeer skin and provided with t* flap to pull over the head. We shall take peuimican hard bread, baked beans, condensed milk, cranberry sauce, and compressed tea. A spirit lamp will boil them. My associates have not yet been picked out, but they will be selected with great care. I feel 1 am on the tiil^hold of success,, and though I know £herta is a sentimeut against far North explorations, because of the many disasters, I do not propose to be disappointed, for disappointment, not hardship, broke the hearts of many explorers. I prefer going on my own account, because under Goverment di­ rection Congress generally requires too many restrictions. Whether Greenland is an island or a vast continent wili be one of the things I hope to discover." The fact that Mr Peary'has the cour­ age and enterprise to launch out into such an uudertaking proves that heroism is not yet extinct. Military prowess and the success connected with war are by no means the only measures of true heroism. We are not disposed to decry such an expedition because the dollars and cents are not visible, or any great gain to commerce or business. If there shall result a gain in self-denials, en­ durance, Felf-command, hardihood, and all the qualities which go to make up the conqueror of natnral difficulties--true manhood--the cost of the expedition would doubtless be justified, even though no great attainment were reached either for science or commerce. Heroism is a good in itself.--Par??}, Field, and Stock­ man. ' No Operatic Aspirant* for HHn. There is a man with a family up town who has recently acquired an antipathy to aspirants for operatic honors. He has also learned what to him is an en­ tirely new system of vocal training. He learned it by accident. Next door to him lives a young woman who has put her voice in training on what he called the "feather balance plan." "What is the feather balance plan?" was asked. "Well," said the euemy of vocal cul­ ture, "I used to think thit the voice came from the lungs, but recently I learned that I was all wrong. It comes from the stomach. I had often heard my neighbor jjractice. and I really pitied her. because I thought she must get very tired standing up so many honrs reaching up alter her voice. Since I've seen her practice, though, I think that training for a prize fight is child's play to training for a contralto voice. "Yes, it's tlie-proper thing, I'm told. But when I first saw that young woman rolling on the floor with a pillow tied about her waist and she a letting her voice out like two Tom cats, on a back fence, 1 thought she had the cholera, but when 1 was indignantly told to mind my own business, and it was ex­ plained that that was the latest and most fashionable method of training a contralto voice, I withdrew from the discussion. But if I ever catch any of my daughters training for contraltos, I'll smash the piano."--Philadelphia Press. Deaf Mates. At the present time the number of deaf mutes in the world is estimated to be from 200,000 to 700,000, and of these some 63 per cent, were born deaf, the others losing their hearing from differ­ ent causes. In the care and education of this vast number, about 400 institu­ tions only are provided, containing less than 27,000 inmates of both sexes. THERE is a great deal of 'back talk in the phonograph. Spring Medicine important that great care should used to get THE BEST. Hood's Sarsapa- rilla has proven its superior merit by its many remarkable • dares, and the fact that U ,' Hood's Sarsaparilla Has a larger sale than any other sarsaparilla • or- blood purifier shows the great confidence the people have in it In fact The Standard Spring Medicine Is now generally admitted to be Hood's Sarsaparilla. It speedily cures all blood diseases and imparts such strength to the whole system that, as one lady puts it, "I seem to be made anew." Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla Flower Boldtor all draseUte. $1; six for 95. Prepared only j tar C. I. HOOD & CO- Lowell, Man. j 100 Doses One Dollar Sold by all druggists. $1; six tor $5. PreptivtMtT BY C, I. HOOD £ CO. Lowall, Mwa. IOO Doses One Dollar DREAMS are oftentimes the fulfillment of a prophecy within ourselves. > To Dispel Colds, Headaches and Fevers, to, oleanse the sys­ tem effectually, yet gently, when costive or bilttoas, or when the blood is impure or iluggish, to permanently cure habitual con­ stipation, to awaken the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity, without irritating Or weakening them, use Syrup of Figs^, /tioon breeding is like affection--one cannot have too much of it. Man the Life Boat! Ere your wave-battered, dismasted hulk' la dashed to pieces upon that cruel reef by the resistless waves. Save, too, a shattered phys­ ique, fast yielding to the attacks ot disease with that imperial renovator of health and strength, Bos tetter's Stomach Bitters. The range of its powers is wide, its aetion prompt and thorough, its use always safe. Chronic indigestion, debil­ ity and nervousness, malarial complaints, rheu­ matism, neuralgia, inactivity of the kidneys aud bladder, and that physical decay without apparent cause, which is often premature, are speedily checked and ultimately cured by this medicine of many uses and sure results. Bleep, appetite and vigor are Improved by this help­ ful tonic and regulator, the use of which like­ wise tends to remedy undue leanness. THE stipple faith of a little child is the world's truest homage. A Remedy for the Grippe. A remedy recommended for patients af- fllcted with tlio ftrlppe is Kemp's Balsam, which is especially adapted to diseases of the throat and lungs. I)o not wait for the tirjst symptoms of the disease, but net a bottle and keep it on hand for use the mo­ ment it is needed. If neRlooted the grippe has a tendency to bring on pueumonla. All druggists sell the Balsam. Line is a continual guise it assumes. routine whatever DOBBINS' ELECTRIC Soap is cheaper for you to use than any other soaps would be if fftt'en to you. for by its use clothes are saved. Clothes cost more than soap. Ask for Dobbins'. Take no other. THE tuberose is no rose, but a species of olyantlu THAT bright and lively boy used to ba sickly and delicate before his mother gave him Dr. Bull's Worm Destroyers. He oalla them "good candies*" By mail, 25 oenta. John D. Park, Cincinnati. Ohio. MoKifiNG-wnAPS were the Invention of a man who wakes up hotel guests for the the early train. FOR THROAT DISEASES, COUGH8, COLDS, etc., effectual relief is found in the "userof "Bfpwn's"'Bronchial Troches." Price 25 eta. Sold only in boxe#. "WHAT'S the matter with Parnell?" Reply by his friends, "O'Shea's all right!" B»CBAM*B PILLS aet like magio on a Weak Stomach. THE fashionable collars come high, but the dudes must have them. Wi take pleasure in calling the attention of our readers to the advertisement of the the Chesebrough Manufacturing Company, which appeara in another column. This company are the original discoverers and only manufacturers of Vaseline, which is known all over tho world as the best emollient, and the most valuable family remedy in use. Their goods are sold by druggists throughout the country, but we wish to caution our readers, when buying, to accept only goods in original packages, and labeled Chesebrough Manufacturing Compauy, as sometimes unscrupulous dealers try to substitute preparations which are of little value when compared with Vaseline, and some are injurious and unsafe to use. By sending the company a dollar by mail, the sender will receive free quite an assort­ ment of these beautiful and valuable goods without anytcharge for delivery. We know whereof we write wlien we say the "Vase­ line" Soap is a revelation. a „ "BLEMISHES are unseen Dy night." but, when daylight comes, every one will know whether you use 8APOLIO. Buy a cake and clean your house. I f o O p i u m In Piso's Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fail. 25c. FAT FOLKS REDUCED w-xu-iv^lbn, per monf h by harmless herha] g \ \if ( JromtulUv*. No sNirvinsr, noinconTeiuvnc* I .v. HI no bad effects. St-rictly confidential* NDn fe, ftr circulars and testimonial*. Ad drew Kw,i.r -- . 8NXDEK, 24S State ttrctt, Chicage. 111. For two years I suffered terribly with stomach trouble, and was mr all that time under treatment by a physician. He finally, after trying; everything, said stomach was about worn out, and that I would have to cease eating solid food for a time at least. I was so weak that I could, not work. Finally on the recom­ mendation of a friend who had used your preparation* A worn-out with beneficial re­ sults, I procured m S t o m a c h . b o t t l e o f A u g n s t Flower, and com­ menced using it. It seemed to do me good at once. I gained in. strength and flesh rapidly; my ap­ petite became good, and I suffered, no bad effects from what I ate. I feel now like a new man, and coa~ sider that August Flower has en­ tirely cured me of Dyspepsia in it» worst form. JAMES E. DEnaaiot^ Saugerties, New York. t W. ,B. Utsey, St. George's, S. CL. writes: I have used your Augna& Flower for Dyspepsia and find it aa excellent remedy. # i A. „ 1 • ' M H ir--3- . cough or cold is a spy which has stealthily come inside the lines of health and is there to dis­ cover some vulner­ able point in the fortification of the constitution which far guarding your well-being. That point discovered the spy reports it to the enemy on the outside. The enemy is the. changeable winter climate. If the cold gets in, look out for an attack at the weak point. To avoid this, shoot the spy, kill the cold, using SCOTT'S EMU LSI DM •'? of pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites; of Lime and Soda as th© weapon. It is an expert coldi slayer, and fortifies the system against Consumption* Scrofula, General Debility, and all Anamic and Wasting- Diseases (specially in Children). Especially helpful for J y children to prevent their taking cold. Palatclbl© »;• Milk. ! i SPECIAL.--Scott's Emulsion is non-secret, and i# prescribed by the Pi ON. V Cession all over the world, bccause its ingredients are scientifically combined in such wanner as to greatly increase their remedial value. CAUTION.--Scott's Emulsion is put up in salmon-colored wrappers. Be sure aaA* get the genuine. Prepared only by Scott ft Bowne. Manufacturing Chemists, Mew Yorlu. Sold by all Druggists. • \ $ T: Best Cough Medicine. Cures where all else fails. _ taste. Children take it without objection.^ By druggists. Recommended by Physicians. Pleasant and agreeable to the evERr WATERPROOF COLLAR OR CUFF BE UP TO THE MARK THAT CAN BE RELIED ON BBTot to Sr>llt t JXTOt to BEARS THIS MARK. t|" TRADE || celluloid ^ MARK . NEEDS NO LAUNDERINO. CAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT^ THB ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF „ _ COLLAR IN THE MARKET* GRATEFUL--COMFORTING. EPPSS COCOA - •• •fjI V| III n I I AVWIMHrSSSSSt •• • • fall to send Ilk'fur samples of spring patterns. I guarantee to nave you money. White blanks 4c to 6c per roll. Gilts 8c per boused Gi 11 s 10c pt r ro 11. The tlnest pnrlor paper.' with 18 lncl) frieze to latch 15c per roll and upward. ALFRED PEATS, 'nil Paper Merchaut, VV. Mudisuu-bt, CUlcaso. PAPER How Is Your Appetite. If it is not good you need a tonic. Hunger is a sauce that gives your food a flesh-making and strengthening pow­ er. S. S. S. is fa­ mous for its health giving and building up qualities. It is the best of all tonics. s. s. s. aids digestion makes you enjoy what you eat and cures you of dyspepsia. Gained 44 Pounds. Mr. James J. McCalley, of Monet, Mo., says he had dyspepsia for eight years, which made him a wreck, siok and suffering during the whole time. After try­ ing all the remedies, includ­ ing all the doctors in reacb, he discarded everything and took Swift's Specific. He increased from 114 to 158 pounds and was soon a sound and healthy man. TREATISE ON BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES MAILED FREE. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ca. BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge of the natural law •rhloh govern the operatl ns of digestion and mM- tl >n, and by a careful applic ation of the fine prop«^- tles of «el.-,«,'leet<?'l Cocoa, Mr. Epos has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured bev­ erage whloh may save as many heavy doctors' bill*. It U by the judicious use ot sucu articles of dtoft that acoastitutioa may be dually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to .itoeaeeu Hundreds ot subtle maladies are Uoatini; around a* ready to attaefc wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by icoeplng-oor- selves well fortified with pure blood a-'d a propag^r nourished frame."--"Civil Service Gasttte." Made simply with boiling water or milt. SoMl onlv in half-pound tins uy Oroo rs. labelled thus: JAMKA JfcCO.. HomuaopatiUa CkeaM^. LOMDON, EMOLAKD. C. N. U. NA 14-tl j)lcg*e any yua MW (he UicrtiM rHKN WRITING TO ADVEKTIS LY YOA MW tf in paper. COLD HEAD RELIEVES INSTANTLY. ELY BKOTHKRS, 66 Warren St, New York. Price 60 cts.1 SSGRUB^STUMPSS Works on either standing timber or stumps. Will p«!E an ordinary Grub In i ^ minutes. Makes a clean sweep of Two Acres at m sittlnc. A wan. a bey and a horse can operate it. No heavy chains or zod» to bundle. The crop on a few acres the ft rat year will pay for the Machine. 8e»d pottal card fee ZUaat'4 Catalogue, clvlac price, terms Mid testimonials. JAMES MILNE * BOH.Sole Hl'n. Scotch Orora.Uwa. MTARBV, WfaERf|, *-• . Drugciii with bl«e ribM* AU pfUa In puubotnl bore*, plak wnp|Mn. arc luufnu wtcrftiU. At DraggiM*. ar nljp 4*. In map* for partiaalwa. UMtaaalaka, u< "Belief (hr I m Itur, by retam HtS »•.-- T«d--l«H. CHKNNTtR 6MCMIC*t c "MOTHERS, I WARN YOU!* Watch carefully your dsupltt^r's the appetite fails/or there is a growing irritability, extreme lassitude, emaciatu>n, tw voice tremble.'?, the step is irreso-utt, eyeudft* droop, juiti expression thei* devote oaflfc' hour to si thorough investigation ot the cat)9ft. LYOIA E. PINKHAM'ScvX£| acts promptly in such case®. Ft a E oaitive and Legitimate Remedy for the peculiar weak-\ Besses and ailmente of womeiv or sent bv nuiii. in form ui l*uls w r.-ofipt of fl-iti. ' Mia K. Pinfcham Ljfns*." j -wi

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