Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 28 Mar 1894, p. 7

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Jk Mrs. T, C. Wtodgt* Faith And It Will »nd Appetite Restored. t Hood Ac Co., IiOwell, Mm.: 'i "Gentlemen--When we moved here to Illi­ nois a lew years a^o, my wife and I werein :^ry poor health, all broken down and debfli- tetetL We felt a> thougft we could not live Song. My wife weighed but 96 pounds and I jjBly weighed 123. We gained In health an<f /•Strength. from the time we began to take Hood's '.(farBaparilla, and to-day ray wlfe weighs 145 and $ 179 pounds. We are both in good lleah and • As Healthy •• We Can Be. f 1||^-good appetites. sleep well at night, and waii «escra!ly. *Vc think •vrc c~c oar lives ft Hood's Sarsaparilla, and cheerfully recom­ mend it to anyone. We are never without this TOPICS OF INTEREST TO FARMER FS A*0 MBLMKWMPI? RPP . .. - ' f .,|v A«*eetalty Farmer Need Kot Gaallnfi II is •Sorts to One Branch or Agrlaal^sra- H»w Clover Seed In the Sa«Mr--<llaits for > r- HJ 1 ? Medicine In the house, as we think it in the best on earth. We say to others, have faith in food's and it will care yon." V. C. HEDGES, Igoopeston, Illinois. Get HOOD'S. " . I Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and Efficiently, on the liver and bowels* 2Bo. f e : / f'arm Renters May Become Farm ;;ip Owners iff they move to Nebraska before the price »0f land climbs out of sight. Write to J. P'rancis, G P. and T. A., Burlington Route, J|)inaha. Neb,, for free pamphlet It tella r #11 about everything you need to know. A Sarins of Cats. :: J • C There are about 100 cats around tin Santa Fe freight depot at Lawrence. "• -A few days ago Santa Fe Tom, an old- «at that had been a fixture at the depot V'lor several years, jumped into a car of l|orn and was hauled away. Agent fBailey sent a "tracer" after the cat, Snd the next day cata came from every irection. Nearly every agent be- f #ween Kansas City and Topeka sent a '? Cat cr two. When Conductor Hayes, the local freight train, pulled into •own Sunday he announced that he had #ome "goods" for the agent. He un­ laded two boxes and three barrels of .• eats. Bailey has sent out an "O. K." ' tea. hope of stopping the influx.^-Kansas pity Times. is' A LIAKE of boiling mud, two miles in Circumference, exists in the island of - Java, near Solo. Masses of soft, hot ijjaud continually rise and fall, and $uge mud bubbles explode like bal- 4pons, with reports like guns, at the ; slate of three a minute. %£ Prisoner in Bed, Mrs. Mary A. Tupper has been .released, at Wilton, Me., from the ustody of extreme female weak- ess and nervousness, which kept er a prisoner in bed, unable to walk. Lydia E. Pinkhatris Vege­ table Compound went to the root of her trouble, and gave her the liberty of health, so that after tak­ ing two bottles she was able to «o out of doors and surprise her usband and friends by her im- , |Drovement. :r 1 She says: "Women should be- |Hp|ware of dizziness, sudden faint- • f .mess, backache, extreme lassitude, ^y?|§and depression. They are danger |||?§signals of female weakness, or llgKjsome derangement of the uterus y l^or womb. Take Lydia E. Pink- ; Cham's Vegetable Compound and /"be thankful for your life as I am. * >4 it only costs a dollar to try it. ^ DRkYLMER*S <5&TA.tui>#£ / ' ^ >• , KIDNEY LIVER "IMgi.* DiiMlret Sravel •all stone, brick dust in urine, pain in urethra, •training after urination, pain in the back and iflips, sudden stoppage of water with pressure. Brlght's Disease ube casts In urine, scanty urine. Swamp-Roat pes urinary troubles and kidney difficulties. Liver Complaint; JPorpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, bilious- ' -Aess, bilious headache, poor digestion, gout. Catarrh of the Bladder ^inflammation, irritation, ulceration, dribbling, <: frequent calls, pasB blood, mucus or pus. '̂'AtDrakglsts 50 cents and fcl.OO SIM, r^InraHdrfQoUie to Health" free-Consaltation frea. 3S- DR. Kiunm & Co., BINGHAIITON, N. Y. AfiKXTS for s quick-afilling patented noveltv. wanted and nsed by everybody; lOO to • ISO per cent, profit: territory patent deed tor one county with first order; j fortune tor the hauler; particulars (or MUIUP: do f »t answer unless you UKAX BC«<KKMI. Address iLUBirAimuirc telcheltfcOltsci, «ollclt'r«of United tatee and Foreign Sooth Bend. Ind. ORTHERN PACIFIC omnAT» a*. an<i FREE °E!R3TI IlinC ACRES In Minnemta, I II IV II JV . North Dakota, Mon- kII11 || || .na. Idaho. Washington and Oregon. PUBLICA- IONS. with fop, rrastn* and timber landa_Malted FBEE. J».. B. GROAT, W hen writing mention this paper. No. 85. IPEGML MENTS WAITED! '!& For the gtudard Carpet Stretcher and Tacker. IT'S A 8ELLEKI No more getting down npon the hand* » more broken backs or xaaahed Ongen. __ dropped in position and driven without Sample, prepay v'i< a hammer. „ jfrrice.flJB. The on receipt of . Co^ )l uncle and kneea; . Thetacka 5, Ind. ' T"?' S.M.O. Ko. 18--04 If to be a specialty farmer means that a man must confine all his ef­ forts to one branch of agr.'culture, such as raising nothing bu» wheat, corn, oats, potatoes, hogs, horses, sheep, cattle, or any other particu­ lar tgiing, then the less specialty farming we have the better. Our brethren in the South tried specialty farming, the specialtr being cotton, and it proved a curse to tnem, npt only as individual farmers, bat as a people. But special farming don't mean anything of the kind; if it does £ have never seen a modern specialty farmer, nor have I ever read a line advocating such methods from the most enthusiastic specialist. I be­ lieve I voice the sentiments of all specialists when I construe it to mean a system, a special system, or, In other words, a spccial rotation or combination. Thus a man may have one or more crops. All his energies »nd efforts are centered on that crop, it is the primary object This crop may be notatoes. He may and does raise clorer, wheat, and corn, yet he raises them only that they may be the means of holding or increasing the fertilty of his soil and stimulat­ ing it to its best efforts to produce potatoes. While he ma? raise other crops, they are only the means through which tie expect* to gain certain ends in view. ; Our specialty is butter, yet we raise wheat because it is the best way to get our ground back to clover for hay and to increase the fertility of our land. We raise corn because it is the foundation of dairy feed We raise potatoes becaus? they brine the"money with which to buy bran and linseed meaL We keep a few 1 hogs and a good many chickens to j eat our skim milk; yet all our efforts are to make all the butter we can. Everything grown by this system of rotation, excepting hogs and I chickens, goes into the mouths of Jour cows They are our machines for converting our farm products 1 into cash. Butter is our money crop and our specialty. So a man mighty and 1 think every farmer should, make some branch of agriculture a specialty. I believe the man that will take up some spe­ cial system of farming or slock rais­ ing and study his business and fol­ low it intelligently, Is the man who will succeed. It is'an admitted fact that there is no money in general farming to-day, yet we see men and read statements daily of men who are making money by special farming, not by growing one thing, but some special system.--Mercantile Ex­ change. " Oats for Horses. f Experience has proven that as'- a jrain rood for horses few feeds are equal or superior to oats, says the American Agriculturist Many farm­ ers and teamsters, however, by ex­ perimenting, have decided Uion a combination of feeds that, in their Judgment, makes a ration superior to anything else obtainable. Some use a mixture of ground corn and wheat bran. Others feed the corn soaked with a sprinkling'of chopped stuff, while others get more value from cut hay dampened and sprink­ led with ground feed. For those who are satisfied with a standard food and one that careless teamsters and stable men will not be liable t J in­ jure horses with by overfeeding, oats will prove more satisfactory. When American corn is worth less than a cent a pound, and oats sell for over a cent and a quarter per pound, the feeding value is no doubt in favor of corn, but corn being very heating, great care must needs be exercised in dealing it out In fact come horses are made sick by a few rations of maize. Constant feeding for two or three months deranges the system, requiring a complete change of diet, iud often necessitates the calling in of. a veterinary surgeon. The thick hAl covering the oat kernel pre­ vents fast eating, consequently more saliva is formed; which aids digestion, yet some horses eat so vig­ orously that many of the kernels are swallowed whole. When this fact is discovered, either have the grain ground and fed dry or place several stones two inches in diameter in the feed box. These will prevent the grabbing of a full mouthful of grain it once, and thus cause twice the time to be spent in eating a given quantity. ^ Sowing Clover "Seed on Know. When the wind is still and snow lies evenly distributed over the Held is the best possible time to sow clover seed. Any inequalities in seeding can then be easily seen and guarded against There in no dan­ ger that the seed will be washed away as the snow melts, for long be­ fore that can occur the seed will have settled thropgh the snow to the ground. The darkness of the seed as compared with snow retains in it more of the sun's beat and if the seed be sown in the morning, with a clear sun shining through the day, not a clover seed can be seen on the snow at noon. As the seed settles below the surface it leaves a hole where it is below the sweep of cold winds, and the sunshine his even greater power in warming it than be­ fore. The melting of the snow washes a little soil over the seed, helpinir it to root better after it has germinated. • I MnleUac aad fratt Bipcala^. Prof. L. H. Bailey of the Cornell Experiment Station has made experi­ ments in delaying the blossoming and ripening of fruits by mulching the ground when frozen in winter. His conclusion are that nothing is gained by it except with plants like the strawberry, which can be entirely covered by the mulch. Trees and sbrubs which extended beyond the mulch covering budded, blossomed and rippened fruit as early as those not mulched at all. It is the condi­ tion of the outside air, not of the root that hastens or retards blossom­ ing in spring. A branch of a tree f WTM1 mrnnj • IffwrWfc - .3# bsfoi* What Farmer* Owe to Xatf'av. The American farmers wh6 first settled this country learned much from Indian cultivators of the sdii There was no corn arrown in Europe until it had been Introduced from America. The Indians had several varieties, including pop corn and sweet corn. They had also some ex­ cellent peas and beans, and our best modern varieties were improvements on the stock which the Indians sup­ plied. They had also pumpkins, squashes, and melons. Fish as a fer­ tilizer was an Indian discovery. The flsh too fat and oily for food were used as a manure, dropping a fish in a hole dug in the ground, covering it with a little earth, and planting the corn over it We make better fish fertilizer now than this, getting rid of the oil, which has little manurlal value, but the idea of using lish as a manure had never occurred to Eu­ ropean farmers until they found it practiced here. « Getting Rid of Rats. An Ohio farmer, writing to the American Agriculturist says: On the barn floor I placed a 31>-gallon kettle tilled half full of rye. A plank six feet long led from the floor to the top of the kettle. The rye was left in the kettle for about a fortnight until the rats had become thoroughly familiar with the kettle and were making it the headquarters for their nightly reyels, with seeming confi­ dence that no harm was intended, when, very treacherously, one even­ ing, water was substituted for the grain, and a half-inch of chaff from the barn floor concealed the water. The result was that twenty-one drowned rats were forked out the first morning and sixty-two within a week, and after that no rats were seen far a year. no Substitute for Royal Baking Powder, is Absolutely Pure. All others contain alum or ammonia. vt»«he to with Btaaacees, for. panted bgr * tire trip conducted or'Sia Tei"e*a the hast at sli wnw be In e*eh party secom- 1 i|Mt who goes the e*^ psr*onallr leave Chicago twice Motea. DON'T ;et traveled egga at once, but rest them until next day in a quiet cool, dark place. Or, if you mu't set them at once, don't con­ demn the seller if they don't turn out strong, healthy chicks. PLAN to raise a few potatoes the coming season. When the conditions are favorable for growing them in ferfection it is a fairly profitable side is ue--in any event the trii.iog trouble is more than off et by having a variety for one's own table. A WRITER savs the higliest record of butter fat in milk he has seen was 1?.54 per cent, and the lowest 2.70 per cent While one cow produces nearly five times as much butter a* the other, it is reasonable to suppose tbat the expense of keeping was about the same for each cow. No FARMER should be satisfied with less than one pound of butter per day from a cow. He should aim to secure cows that will exceed this amount but a pound should be the minimum product of a cow, and even then there will be but little profit, unless the whey and buttermilk are used for pigs. DOUBLE the value of straw by feed­ ing it in combination with oil meal. This greatly increases its nourishing properties. Fodoer aud hay may also be made to produce more bene­ ficial results by the addition of a little oil meal It will increase the appetite and improve the health and vigor of all classes of stock. THE following is a much-recom­ mended combination for poultry-food: One hundred pounds corn, cracked fine; 100 pounds shorts or middlings; £0 pounds rye: 50 pounds clover hay, cut fine; 10 pounds buckwheat; 1G pounds meat; 5 pounds linseed oil- meal: 10 pounds charcoal, and 25 pounds oyster shell. Total 360 pounds. ALFALFA is an excellent honey plant on which the bees will wotk, and it will rroduce several cuttiugs of hay auring the season. Experi­ ments show that it can be grown in this section, but it requires clean land and freedom from weeds for the first year. Once established, it re­ mains as a permanent crop, and en­ dures drouth well, owing to the great depth to which its roots penetrate into the soil. Turn About la Fair Play. "How are the farmers making out this year?" asked a New-Yorker, a for­ mer resident of Vermont, of a friend frcm the old home. "Poorly," replied the Gteen Moun­ tain man. "You recollect old Bill Thompson? Well, his case illustrates the condition of affairs. It came around the end of the year, and he hadn't made enough to pay his man, so he had to sell a yoke of oxen to get money. "When he turned the proceeds over to the fellow he said: 'Torn, times are hard, farming's played out, and I've got to let you go. "'But,' said Tom. 'you've got more cattle. I'll serve you and look for my wages in cattle.' " 'And when they're all gone what will you do?5 " 'What will I do?' queried Tom. •Why, then you'll work for me, don't you see, and get all your cattle back again.'" THE TRUST AFTER NO-TO-BAC. Estimated That Half a Million Tobacco Users Wilt Be Cured In "M by the Use or No-To-Bac, Causing a LOM of Many MUllons of Dollars to Tobacco Manu­ facturer*. SAVED BY DARKNESS. Dr. Talmage's First Attempt to Preach Without Notes, and What Happened. Several gentlemen were talking over the recent lecture of Dr. Tal- mageon "Russia and the Czar," In the Kiggs House last night, when Boniface De Witt told an interesting story of the famous preacher's first experience in trying to deliver a ser­ mon without notes. "It was years ago. of course," said Mr. De Witt "and occurred in my old home, Belleville, N. J. Dr. Tal- mage was preaching there, and one week he made up his mind to go into the pulpit tbc next Sunday without notes or memoranda of what he was going to say. He memorized his ser­ mon, and believed he had it com- j » pletely at his tongue's end. so Sun- and y°u ^ thLj M >'ou 866 fit" CHICAGO, March 24.--{Special. >--It was reported to-day that a large**um of money had been offered the proprietors of the cure for the tobacco habit called "no-to-bac," which is famous all over the country for its wonderful effect This offer, it was said, was made by parties who desire to take it off the market and stop its sale, because of its injury to the tobacco business. Mr. H. L. Kramer, general manager of the no-to-bac business, was interviewed at his office, 45 Randolph street, and when questioned, promptly said: "No, sir; no-to-bac is not for sale to the tobacco trust. We just refused a half million from other parties for our business; Certainly no-to- bac affects the tobacco business. It will cure over a half million people in 1894, at an average saving of $50 wnieh each would otherwise expend for to­ bacco, amounting in round figures to $25,000,000. Of course tobacco manu­ facturers and dealers' loss is the gain of the party taking no-to-bac. Does no- to-bac benefit physically? Yes, sir. The majority of our patients re-' port an immediate gain in flesh, and their nicotine saturated systems :aw) cleansed and made vigorous. How is no-to-bac sold? Principally through our traveling agents. We employ over a thousand. It is also sold by druggists, wholesale and retail, throughout the United States and Can­ ada. How are patients assured that no-to-bac will effect a cure in their ca-e? We absolutely guarantee three boxes, costing $2.50, to cure any case. Failure to cure means the money back, bf course there are failures, but they are few, and we can better afford to have the good will of an occasional failure than his money. We publish a little book called 'Don't Tobacco Spit ,,or Smoke Your Life Away,' that tells all about no-to-bac, which will be mailed free to any one desiring it by addressing the Sterling Remedy Co., 45r49 Randolph street, Chicago." BY the use of an electric door-mat, J'ust invonted, a storekeeper or house­keeper can leave the door open with safety. When a visitor steps upon the mat an electric bell rings. Crossing the Atlantic XJsnaUy Involves seasickness. When the waves play pitch and toss with you, strong indeed must be the stomach that can stand It without revolting. Tourists, commercial travelers, yachtsmen, mariners, sll testify that Hostet- ter'a Stomach Bitters Is the best remedy for the nansea experienced in rongh weather on the water. Nervous and weakly travelers by land often suffer from something akin to this, and find in the Bitters its surest remedy. No disorder of the stomach, liver or bowela Is so obstinate that It may not be overcome by the prompt and thorough remedy. Equally efficacious is it for chills and fever, kidney and rheumatic trouble aud nervousness. Emi­ grants to the frontier should provide them­ selves with this fine medicinal safeguard against the effects of vicissitudes of climate, hardship, exposure and fatigue. SAN FRANCISCO telephone girls will be required to wear a uniform drees of dark-blue or black. A House la a Fret. Let the mother become sick and helpless, and the hou e is all ia disor­ der. When both father and mother are down, you may as well close the shut­ ters. Order is brought out of chaos often very easily, and Mr^. John Malin. of South Butte, Mont., Feb. 17,1893, found an easy way out of her difficulties, as she writes thus: "My husband and I took very ba l rheumatism from severe colds, and my arms were so lame I could not rai&e tuem to help myself. I sent at once for a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil. and before the bottle was half empty I could go about my work. My husband became to lame he could nat. get out of bed. Two and a half bottles completely cured him. I will always praise St. Jacobs OH, day he went to the church pretty well fortified with coufidence. •'In those days in that section of Jersey churches and hotels and many private residences were equipped with private gas machine^ and the church where Talmage was to hold forth had one, toa When he got into the pulpit after conducting the preliminary service all rignt he gave out his text Then he was horrified to find that he couldn't think of a thing to say. He repeated the text a second time, and yet his ideas failed to come. He was in agony, aud began slowly and impressively to announce his text a third time. As he reached the last word and the A CIVIL, tongue is than a bowie knife. bette^ weapon •• The Brolatton Of medicinal agents is gradually relegat­ ing the old-time herbs, pills, draughts and vegetable extracts to the rear and bringiug into general use the ploasant and effective liquid laxative, Syrup of Figs. To get the true remedy see that it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale by ail leading druggists. WHAT you dislike in another take care to correct in yourself Abraham Lincoln's Stories. An illustrated book, unmarred by advertising, containing stories and an- perspiration of dread and shame was ] ecdotes told by Abraham Lincoln, many beginning to start the gas went out and plunged the place in utter dark­ ness. There was no other means of lighting the edifice, and when it was announced that the gas machine had broken down hopelessly Dr. Talmage pronounced the benediction, and I have heard him say that he never did so before or since with greater fervor or thankfulness of Washington Post ? ^ ^ -- • i • ..i ii !•••!• ii •••• ijaiii . • • Tbe Elephant. The elephant's S2n:e of smell is so delicate that when in a wild state it can sent an enemy at a distance of 1,000 yards, and the nerves of its trunk are so sensitive tbat the small- eft substance can be discovered and picked up bjr iu heretofore unpublished, will be sent free to every person sending his or her address to the Lincoln Tea Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. a week. Tuesday and Thursday. We have alto a daiijr tourist car service, via our Southern route, through the beau­ tiful Indian Territory and Fort Worth to Los Anstele* nnd Ran FranHseo, The tour­ ist car rate via this route, the same. Ap­ ply at Bock Island ticket ofllce, 104 Otark street. John Sebastian, 6. P. A., CL, &'i & P. By,, Chicaga IT lightens a .duty perform it cheerfully. to resolve to FOR THROAT DISEASES, COUGHS. COLDS, etc., effectual relief is found in tba use of "Brown's Bronchial Trochet.» Pric«» 85 ct& Sold only in Utxee. ALWAYS look they get by you. EHILOH'S COXSUKPIIOK Cuas is sold on a guarantee, it cares Incipient Consump­ tion. It Is the best Cough Care. 25 cents, 60 cents and $L0& things before FIT*. -A!! Pita It oj Nerve ttetstor veloug cures. ' Vit esses. Sen* DaatMsi Cannot Be Cured By local applications, as tbsy cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. Than ia onlv one way to euro dsafnMS, and that Is by constitu­ tional remedies. Deaft;ess is caused by an in­ flamed condition of the mucous lining ot the Eustachian Toix*. When this tube is In- flamed, you have a rumbling sound or impsr- feot hearing, and when it la entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the Innamma- tlon can be taken ont and this tub© restored to its normal condition hearing will be destroyed forever ; nine oases out of ten are caused by ca­ tarrh, which is nothing bat an inflamed condi­ tion of the mucous sur faoeti. We will givs One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (amcd by catarrh) that can­ not be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. * CO- Toledo, a SVSold by Druggists, 78c. •TWURKLK, twinkle, little star." you are Indeed beautiful, but not half so lovely as the bloom on the cheeks of all young ladles who use Glenn's Sulphur Baa*. . V* ' Work. No man should own a work horee un­ less he is willing and able to furnish it shelter against eold winds and rain. If nothing better than straw-covered sheds can be afforded, they are better than nothing, and reaily serviceable as long as they last ^ at** EIQWT*E:I DOIXAR I Aldress EGOIN SAFB .we pay freight. Eta is, Iu* Ith--lerel . I ~ I with Btareh* imawt er , . _ Sugar, sad is far aMe+«e»> Bomieai, costing leu thmn one cm# * It ia delicious, nenrishing, aa* atESt noatEn M Sold by 6 rarer* everywhere. cm "Colcheeter" other column. , BAKT.R & CO., Dorchester, I j md similar annoyance •c' caused by impure blood, \iMwhich will result in a ore dreaded disease. Unless l-emoved, slight impurities will develop into serious tnafctdres. SCROFULA, ECZEMA, SALT RHEUM Blood Government neaMwen JWoodcmj&Hn. Di»$a»mMBn»4/*Mtotm9 addiwn, SWIFT SPBGOTO OFE. AXLAMXA. Ga. \mv\t v SS'i \ ! SilSl ' i. e."" tt mtf ragnlwr gmbacilhf «£ tfels paper VMtknment No. 1, MMmks put. gaiBjretrQUr mteeribtr of (hi* pqpr snd 3 in this tmlm. Other hereafter. 1k» Aartnoto.- Co, i -?*» -t fV>. ,• < » - %* , ry ,̂ V- 1 f " ̂ 1) * r ̂ Via la $500 PI CASH, IB HBBg forth* bwt --jlwMetlylh »ll>, •» For condition* ot < nurotwn ot jpriaM the Aermotor Co., A branctMa, itRu Citv, Lincoln, Sioux City, U., •polis, Bnmlo, F«rk Plue, Wow bnji ant bo lish. » Corn* BRferndln teg or Goand, &H Gal naiad-AfUl After reading tbo following letters can any one longer doubt that a trustworthy remedy tor that terribly fatal malady, consumption, has at last been found f If theee letters had been written by your beet known and most esteemed neighbors they could be no more worthy of your confidence than they now are, coming, as they do, from well known, Intelligent and trustworthy citizens, who, In their several neighborhoods, enjoy the fullest confidence ana respect of all know them. iahed. medicines, aiz years When I commenced the oseof your rs ago, I weighed bat 120 pounds and was sinking rapidly. I who K. C. McLin, Esq., of Kemps villa, Princess Anne Co., Vo,, whose portrait heads this article, writes : " When I commenced tak­ ing Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery I was very low with a cough and at times spit up much blood. I was not able to do the least work, but most of the time was in bed. 1 was all ruo-down, very weak, my head was diszy and I was extremely despon­ dent. The first bottle I took did not seem to do me much good, but I had faith in it and continued using it until I had taken fifteen bottles and now I do not loot nor feel like the same man I was one year ago. People are astonished and say, well, last year this time I would not have thought that you would be living now.' I can thank­ fully say I am entirely cured of a disease which, but for your wonderful Discovery' would have resulted in my death." Even when the predisposition to consump­ tion i3 inherited, It may DO cured, as verified by the following; from a most truthful and much mnected Canadian lady, Mrs. Thomas Vansicklin, of Brighton, Ont She writes : " I have long felt it my duty to acknowledge to you what Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and his 'Pleasant Pellets' have done for me. They almost raised me from the grave. I had three brothers and one sister die of consumption and I was speedily following after them. I had severe cough, pain, copious expectoration and other olarmine symptoms and my friends all thought I had but a few months to live. At that time I was persuaded to try the 'Golden Medical Discovery* and the finst bottle acted Hi™ magic. Of course, I continued on with the medicine and as a result I gained rapidly in strength. My friends were as ton- weigh 185, and my health contlnnas perfect.'1 "Golden Medical Disoovery" earn con­ sumption (which is scrofula of the longs), by its wonderful blood-purifying, invigorat­ ing and nutritive properties For weak lungs, spitting of blood, shortneesof breath, nasal catarrh, bronchitis, severe coughs, asthma, wv* kindred affections, it is a sov­ ereign remedy. While it promptly cures the severest <S5««^UL it strengthens the system and porifies &e blood. "Golden Iciedicai Discovery" does not make Cat people more corpulent, but for thin, pale, puny children, as well as for adults reduced in flesh, from any cause, it is the greatest flesh-builder known medical science. Nasty cod liver oil and its " emulsions," are not to be compared with it in efficacy. It rapidly builds up the system, and increases the mid flnh and weight of those reduced below the usual standard of health by wasting disaases." 2b braee up the entire system after the grip, pneumonia, fevers, and other prostrat­ ing acute diseases ; to build up needed flesh mid strength, ana to restore health and vigor when you feel " run-down n and " used-up " the best thing in the world is Dr. Pierced Golden Medical Discovery. It promotes all avigbrates the enlir* system. A Treatise on Consumption, giving numer­ ous testimonials with phototype, or half-tone, portraits of those cured, numerous refer­ ences,also containing kiccessf ul Home Treat­ ment for chronic Daasaf catarrh, bronchitis, will be mailed edical Associa- ipt of six cents in stampfcl to pay postages Or The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser. 1,000 pages, 300 lllusfrattons, mailed fpr ILfiO. SMMVMtii y»ely Complexfon, | Pure, Soft, White Skin. Have yon freckles, moth, black-heads blotches, ugly or muddy skin, ccae», tetter, or any other cutaneous bteadsli ? Do you want a quick, permanent and ab­ solutely infallible cure.>K£JB 0FC09T to introduce it? Something new, pare • mild and so hsrmlees a child can use or drink it with perfect safety; If so, send your full Post-office address to HXSaKAttGCK K. 134 Wine Wwrt, Cbdaaatt, Mia. JMiBNTS WANTBO KVMYWHESS. i JVo. 9. Woman's Friend. Safe and ahrav* reli* bit*. Gentle in ONU ae Hon. W Contains no Poisonous Drugs, "Ct Purely Vegetable. The most effective ffeiiAM PILL on (he market. .Vo. 1. Restores Manhood. A POSITIVE Cuas for all Nervous Diseases or weaknesses in body or mind, the result of in­ discretions in youth or after years. OURB8 GUARANTEED. Mice si.oo BOX. e BOXIS *S*oo. W Sent securely sealed in plain wrapper. SAXA8 CHCMICAt CO.. _ CHIOA4BO* I1L* w.i.])oi7auui8iisi [equals custom work, rial lag f4 u> $6wb«t valnefot the s| in the world. Neae as stamped on the tilha. warranted. Takea*^ local pa*sa«w«» meaktftt te. beencalBayets descriptions* oeire Especially for Farmers, Miners, R. R. Hands and other®. Double Solo extending down to the heal. EXTfKA WEARING QUALITY* Thousands of Rubber Boot wearers testify this is the best they aver had. Ask your llllir fir tlMM, and don't be persuaded into an inferior article derby mail. Postageftee. bargains of dealers who pm GUROQIM Yoa CM gat thcbcat ELY'S CREAM BALM Cleanses the Kasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Restores the of Taste end Smell. I We wilj sell jrouourbeht I Wit wall pa-. peraadbor-1 > iler tot a tm*mt XOxlS for 91.25 12x14 for OIJJO If WALLPAPER: ' IOTI* foi- ai.M ICrlif, 01.QQ. 8old br K. U WAHL ] Kuren Street^ oorner Fifth Avenue, y bent by express on receipt o( price. 14x10 for 1.7ft 16x18 for rem £Sc Is 40c «xtra. Snd fbi! l>irmU)ai for lln|li| TAIA PAPER I 54 R. Clinton St.. CI a.oo to match ftmn Mc to 40c «tm. Sm4Sofcr! SCOVIIXE WAIX PAPER SSOtoSI ~ ~ (CwB. A Q. 8. K. t, which ia 1 Hallway man Ohhpse awlJjt-U to att points >«r«kwaat wees South waat. Sand a cental t o r a f n U d a c k s o K r ^ •tair SREWWHUS BBPO. CO.. -- Willil--Jres rtnSt --- ----neat: no anus; Son solicited. The moat •occeaafal Sash . StrMlnA Bum !§k: . v, , . '• K • * ire** vV i ' - : - ». .' f/: 'V iSSS-BJK dnaa Har.Or. Davenport RupturiG<|| Mimwr* Attite, Iowa. TET THE OUBE. A particle ts applied Into each NUtWoU'l IHI8A s.N. n. \\%* m >r ̂ « t

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