Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 28 Dec 1892, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

let" id, jfwwtofi- . .-Ijl&lk €terwaoy,.this 3n- «tWn«d such prodigious I*the ax tensive mmamIMII TOWN OR vii AGE. *>peare from the pt»Wi fed statfs- oneoi »h»e plant*--that of the at •Hoectutoa-Nain. where «ww» workmen, 50 luivwco, • engineers, besides 86 clerics •W 47 cha*rtsts. The works cover an area, of 7&itronfi styiars jzrds, snd from «Se#nd of the works to the wher the dlstailfco Is 3,800 feet ' Besides & great of dyestatfg, the. acid* co­ in their yvotuction ara also man- ameunting in one year to ,000 Sciiograma of sulphuric acid. 12,800,000 of other acids, and 3,624,000 of coal tar products. HOW AKWVTU P»UX>EHCE of allowing a to 'on oa, tuplni the Pulmonary chlal organs, when that tpproved ®jr remedy, Dr. D. Jayue'a Ex| os- ^ c*n he obtained Jroiu any ApoJh Employer (to tardy clerk)--Young man. when I was a clerk I always found p paid to be punctual. Clerk--I suppose fhat wa? because your boss fined you trl My mi *£• Btfioml " SSiPR" right Into t^.J*A*e Taaght to pi#i iw* rhen yoo were late. T"'- - $ 'K'.< , , /J; : SumeShing is hm ttse Dr. Sage's Catarrh J. It's Catarrh. The worst iMMMS yield to its mild, soothing, cleansing, and healing properties. Ho matter liow bad your case, or of ^ iw4ong standing, you can be cured* curable oases are rare. It's worth to you, if von have one. The Vuurafacturers of Dr. Sago's Remedy tee looking for them. They'll pay y°» that Wftomt in cash, if they can't cure you, It's a plain s^uaro £ffer from a responsible business " louse, and they mean it. It seems rone-sided, to© much of a risk, would be--with any other medi­ cine behind it. It only goes to prove ."%hat's been said : incurable cases 'Jjre rare--with Dr. Sage's Catarrh ^Remedy. ^ Other so-called remedies mayjexzA Hate for a time; this cures for all time. By its mild, soothing, cleans­ ing arid healing properties, it con- 2uers tho worst cases. It removes (Fensivc breath, loss or impairment Of tho sc-nso of iwiwi, bwell or hear­ ing, watering or weak eves, when paused by tno violence or Catarrh, |js they all frequently are. [;•£ Remedy sold by druggists, only fO cents. •^veTOHJ^ Two Bottle* Cured He;. VI CABBOIX, la., July, 1889. I was Buffering 10 years from shocks in my fcead, eo much so that at times I didn't expect , if recover. I took medicines from many doo> tOra, but did not get any relief until I took Pastor BONUS'S Narva Tonio; the second DOBE relieved tan end 8 bottles eared met & W. PECK, STKNQ GBOVK, MaHsnry Co., 111., May, "90. Durin* the last two years 1 suffered for a tew 1 every month or two from fainting spells, of m took m more spells. OTTO MAN. V P. J. Shsrtoek, of Stewart, Lee County. 111., mud Pastor Koenig's N«rn Tonio to be a good noaedy. He says: Could not sleep after midnight to aevaral months, sleep now very well, have not taken any tor two months. Piipp-A, Valuable Book on Werrom L UL b DIMUM sent free to any address, I FILL SSr^"" KOSMICS KD. CO., Chicago, in. IqrDruKsistoet SI per Bottle. 6te9& SH, U.7& «BottlMfi>rt9. 8w Hmr THOXFSOW, the most noted physician of Eng. land, says that mot* thaa half of all rtlims--scoMsftop errors in diet Send for Free 8 ample of Gsrflcld Tea to *19 West 46th Street, Kew Tork City. Mrfieldtea^ NmI Mrtlancan* Sick HtadMhc ~ lnwai« ~-- * mtMMC«aipl« •e Its he» arwCoartipttiou. THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD I m TUTT'S • tinrr iitek ptrxs* ^b*v*alltlieYirtaesofthelarger ones;, 'equally effectives pure! Kxikct iiw shown in this border. PILES ANAKKSlSltiwin'rtsnt relief, and is an INMUJ- BLE CUBE for MLE8. Price, $i; st dranists or by mail. Samples free. Address "ANAKK8J9/* Bo* MIA- NKW YORK CM. OHLVW. snaeuunuii Jtrtantx- r. McCoKMtcK W* H djsablsd. «B lee piuŝ t̂ep PATBMTSirrem Common mt Ml I- 6^w*'- U>:'- 11: Rots Clothes and Chaps Handle DOES NOT! pnvn disobeyed me, Ibunisliyou, so walk closet!" The voice was cold and stern, and the manner was equally unyielding. Tommy, crying and struggling with all his might, was pushed and dragged into the closet, which was certainly dark enoug i for all practical purposes, and the key was tume I in the lock. ••Mamma, it's so dark! I'ui afraid. Tlease let me out!" pleaded the ab- jjeet Tommy. But be was not yet Svtlxlued. The mother, stealing nois- lesslv up to the door, groaned in a most horrible manner, and rattled a piece of chain. •'Oh, mamma," shrieked the frightened child, "please let me out! I'll never be bad any more!" Then the door was opened and the little prisoner came out, white^laiced an.I wild-eyed. Tiiis was Tommy's first lesson. "Ifere, Tommy, dear; take this nice medicine the doctor left for you. Come, now, open your mouth, pet, and take your good medicine." > "I thought you said it was good!" shrieked Tommy, when he had gulped &otyn the nauseous mixture. 4'So it is. dear--good for sick boys!" Hiras the calm reply, as the mother put jiWay the spoon and bottle. That was Tommy's second lesson. Tommy had been standing at the gate for more than an hour, watching for his mother. The day was cold and the. wind blew upon him mercilessly, but still he waited, his eager little face pressed against the bars of the gate. At last he saw her coming, away down the street, and then how he went rushing out to meet her, his cheeks glowing and his eyes shining. "Give it to me, mamma! Oh, give it to me," he cried, holding up both hands. "Give you what, Tommy?" asked the mother, pushing past him. "Why, my candy, mamma! The candy you promised to get me." "I forgot it, Tommy. You'll have to do without this evening." "But, mamma, you promised it," cried Tommy, in the miast of copious tears, as though that was reason enough. "But didn't you hear me say I for­ got it?" asked the mother, as though that, also, were reason enough. And then Tommy was f-ent to bed supper- less because he cried. There were several lessons for Tommy in this---I really can not tell how many. "Mary," said Tommy's father one day in a grieved voice, "how does it come that Tommy is growing to be such a coward? I wanted to send him up-stairs after my slippers last night, and nothing could induce him to go because it was dark. The idea of a boy being afraid of the dark! He's going to be a perfect milksop--and I was so anxious for him to be a fear­ less, manly boy. And then the mother said she couldn't account for it any way in the world. She was sure there had never been any cowardice in her family. She had never dreamed of such a thing as being afraid in the dark when she was a child, and it was a mystery to her how Tommy got such notions into his head. ' 'Mary," said Tommy's father again, a few days later, "twice lately I have caught Tommy in a deliberate lie, and I have suspected him of lying half a dozen times in as many days. Now, lying is one thing I can't positively stand. I have tried so hard to teach the boy to be perfectly frank and honest and to tell the truth at what­ ever risk." And Tommy's mother said that she really couldn't understand it, that Tommy's training had been of the most careful kind; but she thought Tommy must have learned to tell falsehoods from that last servant- girl. As for herself, she had never told a lie in her life. "Whereupon Tommy was called up and was lectured and talked to and talked at until his brain was in a whirl. He did not say anything in his own defense. He misrht have said a great deal, but he was no ora­ tor, and besides he did not understand the whole situation himself. Even if he did understand it all it would not have been very polite, would it, for Tommy to say that his first les­ sons in cowardice,,and meanness, and selfishness, and falsehood, and deceit, were taught him by his mother? The above ig. merely a little series of pictures, says a writer in the St. Louis Globe Democrat. They were not taken with a kodak, but the camera was a very good one and has taken a vast number of such pictures. Have you ever seen anythingllke t h e f c a l V • - * ' 1 • ; * TorrlWo Expert****.' ' Rev. D. J. Burrell, the pastor of THE FARMER. o • turtttr*) deliver a lioartfj. Not so. It ^ ggloriousoppttfiwllty for keep- in^ qutet. To cast a homily before them would be to east, pearls before swine. Could a more horrible doom be devised for these artists than to be suddenly transported to the midst of bright spirits singing Holy! Holy! Holy! Lord, God Almighty! Still, there are those who think there is but one place to which all will finally come. They would feel as much out pf place in Heaven as would the mem- U«ns i)i our presbytery drinking beer, playing poker and singing 'Girofle Girofla.' And is there any less dan­ ger of contamination by going to see those people on the stage? No, there is even more, for on the stage there is an opportunity for an even more shameless display of indelicacy. I do not mean to say that there are no good people on the stage. Far from it; for I know some of them myself whose lives are as pure as those of any member of this congregation. But these very people are the first to de­ nounce the widespread impurity of their professional brothers and sisters."--St. Paul Globe. Westminister Church, recently took a long railroad journey, and, as luck would have it, was the occupant of a sleeping car together with the mem­ bers of a comic opera company. One evening, as a preclude to his sermon, he told his congreation of the horrors of his trip in graphic language, which must have made the good sisters and brethren gasp for breath at the thought of their beloved pastor being all alone in a car in which the giddy ictors and actresses whiled away the time by singing the popular songs of the day, and gave neither him nor theirselves time for pious meditation. "Lord Bacon," said Mr. Burrell, "in his essay on 'Friendship,' says that a, crowd is not company.' This was most forcibly brought home to me a short time since, when I was forced to make a journey to San Francisco in company with a comic opera com­ pany. Closer quarters cannot well be imagined than those of a Pullman car, and I was only non-professional there. At first there was a little re­ straint evident, but that soon wore off and they were their own sweet sdlvfesl There are men who find ser­ mons i'n'stones, but I defy them to fihd any good in these. There were twelve men and as many alleged ladies. All night, when wakeful man should have been occupied with solemn meditation, the air resounded with the indelicate songs of 'Girofle Girofla,' still more indelicate stories told by bothsexes, the rattle of glasses and the popping of corks, and Irom the smoking-room was heard the rat­ tle of ivory chips and demands 4two' W WM5S.# m mirMu. te. „ Here, "Wfc speak of the ocean as "track­ less." It is so no longer. If two vessels sail from New York for Cal­ cutta, they will, if intellipently navi­ gated, follow so nearly the same course, that their paths, if plotted on 4% *»>*«»•»+ mill <3 : 1 c* VUU1V, mu liaiiuj UIH'IXC uj mty miles at any point. The same is true of every other route. Let us consider the case of a vessel bound to New York from Liverpool. Her captain might, if prepared for a constant bat- fin l . . i as .nuiimiti rtinpi w » !!«J5 asiu cur­ rents and winter gales, select a route not very different from that followed by ocean steamers between those ports. Otherwise he would follow the southern route laid down by the Sailing Directors: and after beating to the westward a few hundred miles to make sure of clearing the coast of Spain, would shape a course to the southward, passing as far west of Modeira, as the westerly wind of these latitudes will permit. Between Madeira and the Canaries, but a few hundred miles to the westward of both, he would fan his way across the baffling 4iCalms of Cancer," and pick up the northeast Trades. With these astern and freshening every mile, he would sweep down to the South and West, and when well over toward the West Indies, haul up to the north­ ward Bermuda. Here he would have to work again across the Calms of Cancer, and then, with the uncertain, but probably westerly winds of our Atlanta coast, and with the Gulf Stream in his favor, he would stand on and make his port, having ssii|o<i forty-five hundred miles between twtii ports, less than 3,000 miles apart, but with winds and current almost uniformly favorable,and with fine and bracing weather.--Goldthwaite's Geo­ graphical Magazine. : -J. •• __ >*- .---"4 _ • <: .*v:1 An Obulnate Ilrgr^'v ' V • J- A Massachusetts gentleman has a large dog, a cross between an English mastiff arid a St. Bernard, which is very fond of killing cats. Indeed, it is practically impossible to kefep a cat at the stable, so fond is Karl of de­ stroying them. He has been whipped and chained up, but though in gen­ eral he is well behaved, he cannot in this respect be brought to reason. Whenever Karl kills a cat, which happens every week or two, the groom is in the habit of digging a grave, and then making the dog bring the body of poor puss to the spot. Karl takes the body of his victim to the place, which has now become quite a popu­ lous cemetery, and while the grave is being dug he lies beside it, licking the cat all over as if preparing her for buriaL When the grave is ready, he invari- bly gives puss a vigorous nip on the spine, as if to make sure that she is really finished, and then taking her up by the back of the ueeiv, he grave­ ly drops her into the hole prepared for her. When all this is over,he follows the groom to the stable to be whipped. He knows what is coming, and evi­ dently accepts it as a necessary part of the process of killing a cat; but it does not in the least prevent him from disposing of the next pussy which is brought to the stables. ^ Driving on Muddy BoaHi A writer in the Providence Tele­ gram undertakes to show how a wagon may be kept comparatively clean when driving over a muddy road. Accord­ ing to him this result depends upon maintaining just the right speed, the golden mean, as it were. If the horse is driven at a walk, say about three miles an hour, the mud which adheres to the rim of the wheel will be carried up by it as it revolves. As- it gets to the top its weight will cause it to fall, spatter­ ing the spokes and the hub. If the horse is going six or seven miles an hour, the rapid revolution of the wheels will send the mud fly- itfg, and all parts of the vehicle will receive a copious plastering. But now, if a gjfit of four and a half or five miles an hour be taken, the mud carried up from the ground will neitner drop nor be thrown off, and the consequence will be that with the exception or the rim of the wheels the carriage will come to the end of the journey comparatively clean. Everything depends upon striking just the right gait and maintain- 'Injfiifc ... Coatinantal CorrciM)', Along in the latter part of the last century the Continental money issued to the extent of $240,000,000 had been sinking out of sight. Just before the final collapse a desperate effort was made to hold up the currency, but notwithstanding all that the govern­ ment, aided by the leading men of that period, could do, a dozen eggs sold for 85.000 in Continental paper money, and a silk hat of the period, which would be worth about $7, cost $140,000 in Continental currency. The word was burned into the lan­ guage, and then, as now, the utter worthlessness of a thing was conveyed by the expression, "It is not worth a continental." * THERE'S no disgrace in being poor. The thing is to keep quiet and not let your neighbors know anything (ibttlit' 1^ ^ JA, > <r , ef tfc* Matveton* Tiilnpi Bcrsslcd by the Teleseopet By the i ncreased power of telescopes, the number of stars within our ken has been increased from 2,000, the number which may be seen in both hemispheres by the naked eye, to probably about 80,000,000. The star nearest to the earth, a Ccntauri, Is about 275,000 times as far from us as the sun is, and Sirius is about twice as far away as that; if, however, we couid view these bodies at an equal distance, a Centauri would appsar nearly twice as bright as our sun, and Sirius forty times as bright. Star sixty-one, Oygni, has a velocity of not less than thirty miles a second, or 3,000,000 miles a day. So far,then, we find that the stars are at different distances; that they are of different sizes, and that, insteadof being fixed, they are all in movement. Such bodies are masses of glowing gas, the materials of which are, for the most part, precisely the same as those of which our earth is built up, the great difference between such stars and the earth at the present time being that ;thsxjtre hot while the earth Isrcold. / ?.. I:> ' The sun is so hot at present that its outer atmosphere, instead of being composed of cool oxygen and nitrogen and water vapor, as happens with our own, consists of brightly shining hy­ drogen gas and iron vapor chiefly. The iron is not anliw and it is not molten, but exists a»s iron steam it, perhaps, a distance oS 200,000 iuiie? above the shining orb that we see and call the sun. This, I think, may be taken as a fair indication that the sun Is a very hot body, 'especially when we remember that, as its center is approached, the temperature must always increase. I have said this much about the sun, because it is very natural to ask whether all stars are like the sun. It used to be thought that they were, but I,for one, do not think that this is 80= When we comc to examine die bodies which shine in the sky, those dim patches of gray light called nebu­ las, as well as many of the stars them­ selves, the prism tells us that the light which they send to us is very different from the light sent to us by the sun and by other stars, the light of which is exactly like sunlight. A great deal of work recently done shows that probably many stars, in­ stead of being like the sun, are built up, as the comets are, of enormous clouds or swarms of little bodies,some of them, perhaps, no bigger than grains of dust,the different quantities and qualities of heat given out de­ pending upon the motions of these littie particles and the average dis­ tance between them. So, when we nave a great many of these little masses closely packed to­ gether and moving rapidly, they will have an opportunity to strike one an other and thus produce light and heat in a greater degree than can happen in those other so-called "stars," where the dust is sparser and the motion less rapid. As soon as the supply of heat ceases, the mass begins to cool. Our sun is such a cooling mass. The cooling goes on until at last a body such asour own earth is formed. This is why it is that the chemical composition of the sun and earth are so similar. If this is what really happens, we can easily explain the colors of all the stars. Each stage of heat in a star has its own special color. It is true that sometimes very nearly the same color is produced at two different stages of heat: but aside from this, we know that very white stars are at the condition of their greatest heat, and that yellow stars are cooler, though some are old, some young; and that very red, but especially blood-red start are tottering on the verge of invisibil­ ity, having run* through all their changes.--Great Divide. (tenia Canons Bpongos. "Some of the most beautifitHMtigs that live in the ocean arc the sponges of the great depths, which have often very curious and interesting forms," said a naturalist to a Washington Star reporter. "Not least remarka ble are the so-called 4sea-nests,' which are in the form of spheres or some­ times egg-shaped. The outer coat of one of these specimens is a compli cated network over which a delicate membrane is spread. An ornamental frill adorns the upper part while the flower portion throws out a maze of glossy filaments like fine white hairs. These hairs penetrate the semi-fluid mud in every direction, thus holding the sponge in its place, while a con­ tinuous current of water is drawn bv waving 'cilia' through all parts of the mass, passing out by a hole at the top. In this manner the animal absorbs whatever food may be afloat. "Another singular sponge is the •glass rope,'which sends down Into the mud a coiled wisp of filaments as thick as a knitting needle. The lat­ ter opens out into a brush, fixing the creature In place after the manner of a screw pile. Still another remarka­ ble sponge Is found in deep water off the Loffodon Islands. It spreads out into a thin circular cake, surrounded by a fringe of what looks like a fringe of white floss silk. Yet another curi­ osity is the 'eupectella' sponge of the Phiilippines, which lives imbedded to its lid in the mud and supported by a lovely frill." . Mirrors ot Wood. In Germany wood with a mirror polish is comjng into use for orna­ mental purposes in place of metal. The wood is first submitted to a bath of caustic alkali for two or threes days at a temperature of about 175 degrees Fahrenheit, then dipped into hydro- sulphate of calcium for twenty-four to thirty-nine hours, after which a concentrated solution of sulphur is addea. After another dip in an acetate of lead solution at about 100 degrees, a shining metallic surface is given b£ polishing when dry with lead, tin or zinc. . r Havana Utcktaaa Havana has about four thousand conveyances, and the drivers are the most unscrupulous men in the busi­ ness. They could give the old-time hackmen at Niagara Falls points, and then beat them in getting fares. A traveler sums up the situation in three sentences: "Ride at the peril of your purse; walk at the peril of your life. If you irrae, they will rob you. If you attempt to walk, they -1 < y ' f V - ' ' < * Bow an OM Tenant Farmer Interviewed His Kobie I-antUord. They say that tho late Dakc of Bed­ ford's TuvistO'k agent, now deceased, was reputed to carry matters with a somewhat high and even tyrannical hand, .and, hav ng a desire to benetit a neighbor ng tenant, had giv n an old f%rmer uoticc to quit possession of a field which for several srenerat'ons had b en part ai;d rarcel of the far » which he and his ;a>h.rs before him had rented from ihe iUike. This interie «nco was givaiiy reseiiieu by the farmer, who, how.iver. could g t no satisfaction from tho a;ent. and final y left the latter with the threat that he would Ms e the Duke," a threat which tho ag«-tit heard with Ht- tiu concern, ki owing well that the old mau had never stray, d mo e than » few inile-^ from Tavistock, and judging ac­ cordingly that he was not likely to oar- ney sudden y to "Lunuon." He reckoned* however, without knowl­ edge, for the old fa me" went straight home, donned Ids "Sunday be-t "and, to the amazement of his folk, marched off to the ra! way statlo I and took his ticket for Padding ton. The scene chancres 1© the mansion in Easton s ua e. where about 7 p. ra. an old countryman, dressed in th" style of fifty years ago, knocks at the door aad. In ."voitod £2<d v/t-!! r.Jsh bre.tLK** ac­ cents asks the foo man who opens it if "Mr. TV.keof lJedfo.d" lived there. The f»o man guessed something of the state of the case and forthwith took wo d to his grace that one of his Tavistock ten­ ants wished to see hitn. and immedia ely tho o d man was ushered Into the pres­ ence of "Mr. l)uKe " Not til! then did ihe u'u farmers courage give way, but seated In a teg" her failed sum The Duke ordered up refreshments, but they were refused by the old man until ho had told his tale, which he did in broken accents, and tho Duke listened attentively, asking one or two simple but dlrcct questions, a d then told his old tenant that lie need not trouble any more, as he should give order* that his tenancy was not to be disturbed. But the Duke's kindness did not end there, fo". ascertaining that the old man had no notion as to a night s lodging, or. In­ deed of his next step, tho Duke ordered his carriage, had the old man driven to Puuuington and safely deposited in the night mail with a tir^t-class ticket to Tavistock lo h's pocket A Very Common Want. •Out of forts," "distrait," "the blues." thsss are familiar appellative* for uncomfortable, un- definabta eentations. acc mpanied with lassl- tn<l«, nervousness, indigestion. Poverty of the blood, to r medy which aa effective stomachic persistently used is the paramount need, Is con­ clusive evidence that the system is insufficient­ ly nonrifheu because--find for no other cans* «here ergatiio dis'aaedo*a net ssist--the food is not assimilated. Be enforce the flagging ener> pi's of the stomach, reform an irregular condi­ tion of the bowels, keep up a ha&KSifui tieoretiott of the bile M !> Hostetter's, Stomach Bitters. For over thirty years this popular medicine has supplied tlu< common want of the nervous in­ valid. the dye peptic aud of Mwsona deficient in vitality, an efficient tonic. To its power of im­ parling strength i; attributable its efficacy as a {•reventive of mala i \ and la grippe. Thorou^jh- V effective in it- tno for rbfrnrrnt-iam I complaint and neuralgia. Th« Car« or a Furnaee Five* The furna-e fire should be shaken down and raked perfectly clear in the morning. A few shovelfuls of coal should be put on and a 1 the draughts opened, writes Maria Parloa in her de­ partment In the l adies1 Home Journal. The ashes should then be taken up. As soon as the coal begins to burn well and the firo looks clear at the bottom, put, in enough coal to come almost to the top of the fiie-pot Keep the draughts open until all the gas has burned off; then close them, and later, If the fire be too hot, open the checks. Except iu ex­ tremely cold weather this Is all the at­ tention that ought to be necessary through the day. The fire must be raked down and fresh coal or cinders put on in the evening, but a small amount of coal will answer for the night, unless the draughts have been open the greater part of the day. On an extremely cold day it may be necessary to have the draughts open a tart of the time and some coal put on at noon. All the clinkers should be removed when the Are Is raked down In the morn­ ing. The water pan should be replen­ ished once a day. If the furnace fire be allowed to burn to a white heat it will be ruined for that day unless more coal be put on a little later. The cold-air boxes must admit enough air to drive the hot air through, the house. Heating stovjss and open grates are to be managed as far as possible the same as a furnace. With the stove there Is no trouble, there being plenty of checkai and draught: How the Moon Was Rorn. When the earth was young. sajs Br. I Ball, artroiiomer for royal Ireland, it j spun around at such a rate that the da* j was only three hours iong. Iheeartal i was liquid then, and as ft revolved at that fearfu- speed the sun caused evef Increasing tides upon it i surface until at last iu burst in two. The smaller ; part became the moon, which has been going abound the earth ever s'nee at an increasing distance. The influence of the moon now raises tides on the ear h, and while there was any )i nid to opera e on in the moon, the earth heaped , up much greater lunar t des. fedta*. Asthma. WEcontinue the use of remedies that only roliev e, when Ely's Cream Balm, pleasant of application and a sura cure for Catarrh and cold in head, can be had. 1 HAD a severe attack of catarrh and be­ came so deaf I could not hear common con­ versation. I suffered terribly from roaring In my head. I procured a bottle of Ely's Cream Balm, and in three weeks could hear as well as ever, and now I can say to all who are afflicted with the worst of disease?, catarrh, take Ely's Cream Baim and be cured. It is worth $1,000 to any man, wo­ man or child suffering from catarrh.--A. & Newman, Graylinar. Mich. Apply Balm Into each nostril. It Is Quick­ ly Absorbed. GIVKS RELIEF AT OSICE. l'rice 80 cents at Druggists or by malL EUT S&QTSuuo, *<?Attcu Si., NeW jTork. A Japanese One of the BaUot. Suffrage in Jaoan has been put to a : n o v e l u s e . A v i l l a g e w a s h a r r a s s e d l y j a midnight robber whom no one could de­ tect, s-> an ingenious inhabitant pro-1 posed that each villager should write | the name o? the man he suspected on a slip of paper and put it In a ballot box. ; the luxurious library, words i 2,1the,Votss be1ng ^en there were! »,«-- worua j fifteen for nna man and the rest -.vers blanks. The robber was so astonished at the proceedings that he actually con­ fessed his identity. THROAT DISEASES commence with a Cough, cold or Sore Throat. Bron­ chial Tnxhe*" give immediate relief. Sold otily in bore#. Price 25 cts. THE brightest blaze of intelligence te of fncalculab y less value than the smallest spark of charity.--Nevina PLEASANT, WBOLBBOMR, SPKXDT. Three ad­ jectives that apply to HAM'S Hoxn or Hoac- HOUND AND TAB. Pm*v» dbqpb Qggata one Minute. Goon nature, like a bee, co Ipcts honey from every herb. Ill nature, like a spider, sucks poison from the sweetest flower. "Ikavebeeaaj sufferer irom ma and severe every Winter, SSu friends as well as myaei£ because of my feeble > great distress from constants ing, and inability to raise any< accumulated matter from ray It that my time was dose a£/ When nearly worn out for • sleep and rest, a friend recottt ed me to tiy tl:y valuable medic Boschee's Geri Syrup. I am fident it saved my life. Almost the first, dose gave me great relief and a gentle «• such as I had not lfi^tj^ t orK J)M£U!^UAW ^ ately to loosen and pass away, and || I found myself rapidly gaining health and weight. I am pie to inform thee--unsolicited--that 3 am in excellent health aad do cer­ tainly attribute it to thy BosctMsr* German Syrup. C. B? SmcaanW^t Picton. Ontario." • Gentle, Refreshing Sleep. freshing sleep.! for Kwt «. My cough bcgmU in Special Care Should be taken in the winter not to allow the blood to become depleted or impure, as it itdoesatUeksst Rheumatism cr neuralgia are Ukelr to follow etposure to coll or wet weather. Hood's Sar.tapsrilla l-< aa excellent Preventive of jj,eM troubles, BS It makes the blood rich and pure, and keeps the kidneys and liver lr.>m congestion, so liable at this «e»« >n. If you are sub­ ject to rheumatic 1 roubles, take Hood's 8arsip»ril!a as a sa egrard. and we beiis*s|>o« wlU *• VwiMOr! satisOed with its effects. •For chronic rheumatism Hood's Sarsaparilla did me more good than anything else I have ever taken." F. MILI.EB, Limerick Centre, Pa. HOOD'S PILLS cure liver ill*, oomtipa- tton, biliousness, jauud ce, kick headache, indiges­ tion. Bold by all dnuslsta. Price » cents. Cures Colds, Concha. Sore tfluonaa, Wfaoopuiu Co " sthma. A certain cure for . s'ases, and a *ur« relief iu ml' _ atouae. You will nMtlMsn sll* ,t taking Mjs first <los*. Soid to uea.ers evuywftMk > Large bott.es, 5 < ceuta and si on. * " THE Qf ONLY TRUE iivw's T'bls? ' v> We offer One Hundred PoUars Howard for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking HRH'B Catarrh Care. F. J. < HKNF.Y A CO.. Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for Ihe laet fifteen years, and believo him jxsr- fectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. We«t& Tri ax. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. Waiding, Kiniian & Marvin, Wholesale Druc- ftis's, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrti Cure is taken internally, acting diiectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of th« systtui. Testimonials sent tree. FSJMI Sfo PUt bottle. Sold by all liruwists. Ice Cream and Klrelriclty. A new experience of the danger of electricity has to be recorded.- Dr. George S. Hull recently conducted some experiments with ice cream freezers, and he linds that pa!vanic action takes <e. which results in the introduction of poisonous sa!ts of copper and zinc into the cream. It appears that the free:er and the piddle are generally made of dissimilar metals, and the cream, especially if mixed with fruiU or other acid, or even saline substances, forms an electrolyte, which naturally comp etes the necessary conditions for galvanic action. \Mtli galvanic action there is, of course, chemical action, re­ sulting in the formation of salts of zinc and copper, which become mixed with the cream. Dr. Hull has probably dis­ covered the cause of many mysterious cases of poisoning which have followed the consumption of ice cream. The remedy, however, seems very simple; if the freezer and the mixer were made of the same metal no galvanic act on could take place.--Iron. The Only On* Em PrlsM-Css Yon Vtrnt the Wordf There Is a 3-inch display advertisement In this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a "Crescent" on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, and they will return you BOOK, BEAUTIFUL LITHOGRAPHS. Or BAMPLBS FREE. Lighting the Great Dome. It is proposed to light the dome Of St Paul's with electricity. ? LOOKTXO too closely at a dollar doesn't make It any biggor, but very often makes the soul a good deal smaller THE most terrible of all failures Is to sacceed in a bad undertaking. DON'T fool with indigestion nor with disordered liver, but take Bee Cham's Pills for Immediate relief. 25 cents a box. THK nobbiest bunion. • KlTit-M«s Stopped tree or ur, Xww Beatorer. No Fits afterSrat This GREAT COUGH CURE, this success- ful CONSUMPTION CURE is sold by drug- gists on a positive guarantee, a test that no other Cure can stand successfully. If yoa have a COUGH, HOARSENESS or LA GRIPPE, it will cure you promptly. If your child has the CROUP or WHOOPING COUGH, use it quickly and relief is sure. If you fear CON­ SUMPTION, don't wait until your case is hope­ less, but take this Cure at once aud receive im­ mediate help. Large bottles, 50c. and $1.00. Travelers convenient pocket size 25c. Ask jrour druggist for SHILOH'S CURE. If your lungs are sore or back Jame, use ShQoh's Por­ ous Plasters. Price, 25c. IRON TONIC disorder, bulhl atreBfrtiu renew appetite, restore health awl Vjcororyoath, Draiiniirtlli UMlhreMloB, that tiSdfeel- . power increased, bones, nerves. Bans, tics, receive new florce. Buffering from complaints p*. --liar to their sea, uaincit, find safe, speedy core. Ketnrns I collar to their sex, -- a safe, speedy cole, nctma (ose bloom on cheeks, beautifies Complexion* All genuine mods bear 12 cent stamp for T* pf , st Lnikja . 8old everywhere, "Crescent." Send pamphlet. M. HARTER ME0ICINI CO ILLINOIS Chi Are You BIUOUST SOME PEOPLE . - ALWAYS ARE --^ •is.* 1EABLY EVEKirSsMSY IS OCCASIONAL!,*, TAKE • • , . ra. WHITE'S > v DAMICLION ALTERATIVE. *« *• "•* fix HIIIMM nfiho Uver and Kldasya It parifls* the blood aad QTSWSMM thai ftallng mi wcariacw wbleh yea no «HM eipwi. •mec. It will care year hrallsiii. n. •tore yon* lost nppoUt*, aad make yoa feel rlforoa* casafh to take aaytkiag within year reaefc. Terjr Ut(t battle Iw lli aad every battle warranted. THE ANARCHISTS. The United States Supreme Court has postponed until the second Mon­ day in January the hearing of the cases of Fielding and Schwab, the Chi­ cago anarchists who are now in prison in Joliet for their participation in the Haymarket massacre. These men were filled with an unutterable longing. If they had taken HEID'S GERMAN COUGH AND KIDNEY CURE the mists that clouded their brains would have beeo dispersed. They would have found that the evils of which they complained were largely the result of ill-health. They would have gone to work to bet­ ter their own condition and those of others by encouraging habits of in­ dustry and thrift. This they could have done by taking REID'S GERMAN COUGH AND KIDNEY CURE, and thus banishing disease from their followers. This great remedy contains no poison, but it is the best thing for all lung and throat troubles on the market. It is a remedy that is the particular and special friend of the poor man, for it will cure his wife and children of half the troubles that afflict them without the aid of tho doctor. Get it of your druggist SYLVAN REMEDY CO., Peoria, III. SOLID VESTIBULE TRAIN ARE YOU A FARMERP If so you are one from choice an<l can tell whether farming as an in- vestment pays. Do you make it pay ? Have you first-class tools, fix­ tures, etc. ? "You say yes, but yot? are wroncr if you have no scale ea. ic _ You shoiud have one, and by send­ ing a postal card yon can get foil information from JONES OF BIH6MMT0N, BIN6HAMT0N. N.V. MJ TOCK own •ae. Meal, Cera, ia tits • irwiisoB's keeping ftaitri. AUol KEEO MILL*. Circa !o»Wi BppliC&ttM. WILSON RR FAT FOLK VBET PRIVATE TOTCMSMN* ISO Adams St., CHICAGO, ILL. Cures for Life all Chronic, Xervocs Diseases. Ol» panic WeakneFN. Ba-lm;kn->..~, Cnntit'ssto Marty. Joe Frequent Evacuations ot' the Bliddar. B,mo> "• xrtV -r ivr'u u*p)fL"i' piiB/iDO /-w.. •wy: nes«. Book -LIFE'S HECtUii' EKBOB& witu QM» tion List for 4-cent stamp. C. ,N. u Aa 1 OS WHEN WRITING TO AP7RKTi8£ML »' please ear jroa tho adi in lliiaansj la tab paper. oat crou* ovtor rait CHAS. a. W ca> ap< r now l they cref _ wil l te aeeia . •farm. Ue»crtt>rt*o X, Obborne, ZAH. v2£&:-' - Ahi V.!"-^.<. iik .'L'&'S,-1 Jtak Advice boots free to P a TCUTO Quickly ot>taia«d. ~M I CHI I Ofee until patent i Bor:free. CltK NTHTMCV Wash..D.C. So at y's is allowed. %• \v ' V- *r , yifte «sf|. i$j T'Z*'* IM- P I S O ' S C U R f - O P Oaaaaaapttweo and people I who have woak htaarsor Asth-1 ns.shoatdase Piso'aCore for | Consumption. It has ear thawanado, It has not injar-1 eel OB*. It ts not bad to take, f Ills the heateoeihsjTTwp. " owrwhera. Ma. ^ "Ht WOIK SHALL BE KRKTtttlED.** The perpetuation of Mrs. Pinkhaat'i work was guarded by her foresight from the start, tmf saferiag womaa applyiagte her receivedBeesoaat attention, and the oetalfs of tr«ry ease were re» eorded. These records are to-day the l> " ths world, eoataia tMets BO( mat «)nwhM% aow open to all wooiea. 5 LVOU E. PMmuressn is UM aly Lefitiaate a*d MMN liailrfti those peealhur weaknesses aad sila iali tadwM \RJA- •

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy