Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 21 Nov 1894, p. 7

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5 in the Back? i ^ ̂ been afflicted for several years with the" doctors called Diabetes, and sat- ||WttRlMy, The pain la my back was ago­ nizing In the ex- j •Sonic. Hood'a Barsaparilla and Hood's Pills cared i toe; .Now I can gc •, to church and at­ tend other meet­ ings with pleas- «. I always keep ! Hood'a Pilla by Jft». John Branston me- In my whole j I "w met anything that did me so much *• Hood's Sarsaparilla. 'Bxperienoe *4S®h«s a dear achool, tsnt fools will learn by no pthty,', I waa once foolish enough to listen to • druggist who claimed to have something su­ perior to Hood's, and took another medicine. If I had thrown my dollar in the street I would h»*e been a gainer." John Bbanston, care oj Jalra Greethatn, Wellington, Ohio. > V Vt":' ss> Cures Hood's Pills cure Constipation by restor­ ing th^jfreristaltic action of the alimentary canal. •\ The Hhah's Farewell. When the Shah came to England «st, he visited one of the large towns in the West Biding of Yorkshire. Wfeilft. chiving through the crowded that town he noticed some rho had taken up a very prom­ otion, and were saluting him it gusto by applying their the extremities of their the meaning of this ure, he was told by his It was looked upon" a esp; ct in this country. " "s visit came to an panied to the station ihe borough. When the train was about Shah immediately train was movine off, era of the assembled h rose, put his head out e window, grtfvely ap­ his nose, and spread the most approved ihed Mayor, to the titure and the great who were standing -I'M GLAD TO SEE YOU.* **^ta3w*t6n glad *° mMt <**« toil* yon Bnt they sometimes falter wh~n it comes to •aying so; Or they say "I'm glad V aee y',* O, to faint and low TOtt yon wonder juit bow far tbefr feelings go. Bay "I'm glad to aee yon," when yon mean It. Speak it out; Dont bite oil a piece of it and leave the rest In doubt: Let your lips know what yoar cool is thinking moat about. Doei it take an orator to say tha sentence right 'I Doaa it need much rhetorio to make you fed its might ? Has Id not a tbonsand tcnguea which tell ita , meaning quite 1 , Ton feel it when you're going home and aae tha window light. Ton see it in a sweetheart's amile, blushing warm and bright. In a mother s morning kisa and in the last at night, In the baby's reaching arms, which tall tha delight. he said, and then again fell to study- log her face- Two years and over since they b*d parted that Christmas Lay, and he had never seen her sioce. Two years had made a change Two years ago he had a cherished theory that it «oo!d be !impossible to Dring tears "Glad to see you I" O, yon friends of dead yester­ day, Could we only hear it from your dear lips far away: Could we tell it into ears which mingle now with clay, We might gain the meaning which tbt simple words oonvey, Bay "I'm RJad to see you" then to friends who still ure here; Say it with a meaning that is music to the ear. More than bimply say it; words are cheap, bnt deeds are dear: And men will tay it OMikto yMMtf malMthafir --New York Sun. : . W end, by tl tney to start took his Just as amid the crowd, the Sha of the car; plied his Out his style a gentle ehgh aroun Hs Suffer le causes which make Imen miserable. This se, what is your duty, mother? You know Igularity, suspension, or retention, se­ vere head­ aches, waxy complexion, depression, weakness, loss g of appetite and inter­ est means trouble. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege­ table Compound should be given at once. It is the most effective remedy for irregularity or suspended ac- tion known to medicine. Twenty years of unparalleled Success ana 20 thousand women confirm its power over all those dreaded diseases peculiar to wom­ en. All druggists have it for you. Accept the truth and be weU. " "" + WO RLD'S - FA IR " +""" I HIGHEST AWARD I j "SUPERIOR NUTRITION --THE LIFE-" . *HE< A\BD I CI Has justly acquired the reputation of being The Salvator for I N V A L I D S «^The-Aged. An Incomparable Aliment for the Growth and Protection of INFANTS and C H I L D R E N A superior nutritive in continued Fevers, And a reliable remedial agent ' in all gastric and enteric diseases; often in instances of consultation over patients whose digestive organs were re­ duced to such a low and sensitive condition that the IMPERIAL GRANUAi was the only nourishment the stomach : would tolerate when LIFE seemed . depending on its retention;-- " And as a FOOD it would be difficult to it conceive of arching more palatable. I' M4 by DRUGGISTS. Shipping Depot, JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. CAVANAGHS' ORCHARD. It is a gentle May day, and the apple blossoms are breaking whitely over the trees in the Cavanaehs' or­ chard. iihorie Island is never lux­ uriant, and in May is often grudging of her favors, but this spring she seems to have been seized by a kindly caprice, and adorns herself for the benefit of her children. One does not have to be of the soil, however, to be grateful for her loveliness, and those brilliant gray eyes. Somehow to-day that theory was destroyed. Two years ago she could laugh at you, lmslily you, allure aad deceive you, but love you never, so he belieVed. V- 'Tib aumaier, floe summer. ' l3pon thy cheeks divine; * * K'si - 'Tis wintt>r icy win er, 7 In tbnt little heart of But to-day--to-day! Suddenly a hope, a slight iiut exquisite hope, stirred within him. A siow tire of passion darkened bis searching eyes. Miss Dolmer, to whom he had in­ tended to propose in the course of the week--Miss Dolmer to whom he paid a number or business-like atten­ tions--sank swiftly out^of sight He remembered a dreanHSe had had the summer before, in which Dolly Humphreys had been walking by the sea and he had kissed her, and waked to spend a week of utter mis­ ery in blotting out every memory that crowded into view. "Where were you last sunbmer in August?" he asked. "I was at the seashore," she an­ swered, and colored a little, that same delicate pink that he remem­ bered with a vividness that was half jor, half pain. 'I spent hours liter­ ally on the beach. Nobody else had any liking for it. they preferred j gayer spots, out I became quite a j solitary last summer, aad used to j watch the waves through the long I afternoon. Mamma got rather nerv- ! ous, lor I refused any company, and ! she was divided between a fear that | I was meeting an ineligible suitor or ! getting a bit touched in my head. 1 | will sa\ that she might have had draws her breath quicker Detnrcca her parted lips. w ••And if 1 do?" she said. f "If you do," he returned, "1 shall ask ynuto gire «e the white han<§ that picked it" With a swift movement she took to I the iiower from Her dress, and held it toward him, and Aiken caught her hand in both of his, and raised it to his lips. -- Waverly. " '. MONEY OUT OF SKUNK& Miss Humphreys, though an alien, is f latter theory^ aware of her privileges. She is sit­ ting on a flat stone, resting, and talking over past times with her companion, a man whom one would describe as long rather than tall, and who is occupied in making excava­ tions on a small scale among the roots of the tiee under which he is sitting. "I never could understand why the Dennisons asked me to their party' at all," Miss Humphreys is saying. had I told her what queer fancies I had, for 1 got quite under the influ­ ence of the curling green waves." "A modern Lorelei," said Aiken. "1 was much more like a ship­ wrecked mariner," said Dolly, smil­ ing softly. "I bad one idea, 1 re­ member, that if 1 waited very pa­ tiently. the waves wouid wash up at my feet a treasure. What the treas­ ure was, I did not know, but some­ thing that would rejoice meforevet." "The jewels of some poor mermaid I was on excessively bad terms with j „h/ h,rn , f f ^ meriua'« Charles Dennison at the time"--her ' mislaid them, suggested companion looked up significantly-- -and Carrie and 1 quarrelled every day, and several times an evening. 1 went because I was utterly bored with life just then, and intended to be amused at any post--and I was." She met the young man's eyes for a moment, and then turned away and went on, -- ' "Do you remember our impromptu ball? You played tiddler--/ "And you danced with Charley," finished the other, "with whom you were on such excessively bad terms." Dolly laughed. "Yes, with all his faults he danced like a--" ~ "Dream," cut in the young man, sarcastically. "That is the correct expression." ^ , "i never knew you to haVe such an* envious and bitter turn of mind, l thought you were above it" "I find in the course of thirty odd years that I am above nothing but cheating at cards aud telling tales," was the answei. '•Dear me! What a gloomy out­ look for Miss , Dolmer." said Dolly; but the constraint in her manner took the lightness from her speech, and Aikens was as serious as he an­ swered: "Yes; but Miss Dolmer does not expect much." Dorothy Hushed. "The fool!" she said in her soil; outwardly she was silent. Aiken, watching her, with that hope growing in his heartj "I had a fancy, also," went on Miss Hutnphreys, rather shyly, "that some of my old friends might turn up; you among them. That you might suddenly appear walking along the smooth tawny Sand, and we would have a friendly talk to­ gether." "If I had only known, "said Aiken, between his teeth. "But" he added, smiling a little, "I wouldn't have come as an old friend. I never was one." Dorothy looked into his face with a hurt wonder, which changed as he added, "I was your lover, dear." "What Were you doing all last summer9" she said, hastily, leaning forward and setting six small stones in an even row, 'while her cheeks again colored pink. "I worked," was the brief answer. "All the time?" raising soft pity­ ing eyes to his "Most of it; but I did not mind the work; it took my thoughts from other things, and I had nothing pleasant to think of." a "What a melancholy yourtg man!" said Miss Humphreys, lightly. "You should have paid the sea a visit as I did, and found solace for your ills." "Did you need soiaqe, also?" asked Aiken, eagerly. "Were you unhappy too?" ' "What an impertinent question!" and Dolly laughed a little. "Why 'I remember," began the young i should I not be happy?" m" The Greatest Medical Discovery !„>!v of the Age. fe KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. s** DONALD KENNEDY, OF RQXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston, bend postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is war­ ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious It will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful jn water at bed* time. Sold by all Druggists. *.».«. NO. 41-94 tfVp}.-; Mrs. Window's Soothino strut for ChiUfana teetlilnx: soit»n» the iiims, rc-ancm inflammation* *U*ye cure* wind colic, aaoen "" m s. . *' Xt. f"' * •A eq^it man, slowly, trying to paint in words the picture that rose before his eyes, "tnat night in the big west room as though it was yesterday; the roaring tire snapping aud blazing on the wide hearth, the Christmas holly, green and dark everywhere. • its glistening floor, and theokl square piano pushed up in the corner, behind which it w^s my hard necessity to sit and play while you dan ed, Dolly." His dark eyes, in which the pupils seemed points of light, flashed into hers. Whose fault was that?" sheHrfe- turned, reproachfully. "Yours," came the answer, bitter­ ly--"yours--yours. It was all in your hands, and you chose to throw me away like--" Hush:" she interrupted, the beau­ tiful color mounting, to her cheek. •That is not true, and you must not say it" He was calm agatoj and went back to his reminiscences. "It was wet and cold, and bluster­ ing outside, and 1 spent ten pleasant minutes standing in the rain to cool off some of my superfluous spiiit" And he smiled sadly. He was what most people did not care to look at without being ugly. ISo one could he ugly with that straight flne-cut nose, and the eloquence and fire of his eyes, but the long, rather hag­ gard face was thought sinster, and the thin lips cold and hard. "Did you enjoy those dances, Dolly?" He leaned forward and looked into her eyes. "Yes," she answered, blushing. "I loved the movement and I knew all the time--" "That I was eating my heart out," he interrupted, scornfully, "and you liked that almost as well as making a fool of poor Charley Lejanison." I "Don't," said Dolly; "you hurt me, j and you have no riuht" | "No, I have no right to upbraid j you, poor girl! Youhad too many lov- J era and too light a heart uot to makft some of them unhappy. Onlr I wish I ; hadn't been one of the sufferers; that ! isali. Oh Dolly, I think i could have : withstood you, if it hadn't been for j that day on the river in the autumn, i when you tried your best to wile the ; heart out of me, and--" "Failed!" said Miss Humphreys, , steadily. "I have never had jour i heart Mr. Aiken; it has been in your 1 own undisturbed possession eversince 1 have known you. If you had cared you would never have pose away from the Dennisons' witheuta word." His eyes blazed, but he said noth- ing. ••This is all very unprintable" she went on, leaning back agafatt a tree; "let us change the subjeefc " Aiken's eyes ffMHUrad away throofehtheorctiarcL "Brail i I thought--1 hoped," went on the ! young man, earnestly, with intense pleading in his eyes, "that perhaps | you were lonely too. That, perhaps ; you had a little of the heartache that j was with me day and uight and has been these two long years and more I hoped that you perhaps regretted your cruelty to me at the last and would at least let me try again. "1 know I have no right" he continued, "to cherish any hopes--you certainly did your best to crush them out-- but we hud been so happy tiefore I grew quite mad about you, and you had seemed to like me then, and so it suddenly comes to me that now, after these years, you might give me another ehaoce. God know& 1 ask nothing better than to spend my heart and soul in trying to make you love ma . peak, Dolly, and give me some answe:. Am 1 gone mad again or--" 1 He did not try to touch her hand or make her look at him, but waited in a passionate silence that somehow made itself felt in the < uiet spring air. Slowly Miss Humphreys heaped her six little stones one on the other, and as they fell to the ground she turned and looked at him and smiled, a wistful deprecating smile that steadied his hot impulse to express his utter joy, and yet gave him full measure of it "Don't say anything now," she whispered. "I could not bear it," and her eyes asked for a merciful gentleness from him, and not in vain Controlling himself, he turned away from her and iooxed about the orchard with happy eyes that noted every beauty of color and form. "We have never been together any­ where in the spring, have we?" he said, sti 1 looking away to the flower­ ing trees. "In the summer, in the autumn, in the winter, but never in the spring. I see it with new eyes: I always have seen things differently when with you. Ti>day the apple blossoms are a shade more pink, the sky a deeper blue, than when I walked here yesterday? Will you go down to the lake with me? There is a boat and I could row yon in and out i the little islands that are still brown j with last summer's leaves. Will you come?" "Yes, 1 will come," she answers, smiling and springs lightly to her feet "Which way is it? I have never staid here before, you know." "That lUte path through the trees. But first I want you to give me something." i- he ralmd her frightened eyes to his. "Neither your money nor your life --don't be afraM--irafc that violet in your dress." Dorotfef leeks down at it, Mid A tMwrlnntiB Raising; the Llttla An I mtli tot The'.r Pelta. In Lawret.ce County, FennsyK •ania, is lo ated t^e only skunk farm in the world, it is owned by John Eckruan, who in April of last year killed a couple of the little creatures and sold their hides to furriers for $2 ! each. He concluded that it was a | profitable business and the idea of es- J taWishing a skunk industry suggested {itself, and the idea was no sooner j conceived than acted npon, says a j writer in the Ohio State Journal. He immediately set to work and captured between thirty and forty skunks and established his farm. From thirty last year his stock has increased to 330 this year and will continue to in- in • V\ r\ OA A year. sHe keeps ten females to one male and two litters of young ones a year is the a\erage of a female, with from seven to nine at each litter. So that it may be seen that the rate of increase is very raoid. A peculiarity of the skunk is that when the second litter is born the first Jitter is killed by the old oue, and this, it is said, is the reason they do not inciease sb rapidly in their wild condition. To prevent this killing off of the tirst lit­ ter Mr. Eckman separates the flrst litter from the old ones before the second litter is born. The flrst litter is placed in an addition to Unoriginal, and in this way the industry is ex­ tended. The skunks are fed offal frotfi slaughter-houses, worthless sheep aud milk, Tney are very hardy and seldom die of any disease. ISext year Mr. Eckman expects to have ;*,000 on his farm. In I:ecemDer of each year the killing occurs, ten males being killed to one female. The pelts are valuable, ranging from 50 cents to $2 apiece Black pelts are most in demand and bring the high­ est price. The proprietor of this farm expects to make a fortune out of the skunks, and from all indica­ tions is in a fair way of doing so. The inclosure in which the skunks are kept is about two acres in extent and is surrounded by a board fence about four feet high made out of iough timber. Just inside the fence and about three feet from it and ex­ tending entirely around the lot, was constructed a ditch or moat walled up with solid masonry, the object of the moat being to prevent the skunk from burrowing under the fence and escaping from the farm. Inside the moat, and en tendinis around the en­ closure, side by side, mounds of earth that present very much the appear­ ance of graves, making the entire in­ closure look very much like a ceme­ tery. Beneath these mounds of earth were wooden boxes of commodious size to which was an entrance at the end of the mound through a sort of souare opening constructed of boards. In these burrows live the'skunks. Across the inside angles of the feucf were nailed boards to prevent the skunks from climbing over and escap­ ing. Mr. Eckman, whi e conducting a party of visitors around the placj recently, picked up by the tails two of the blackest aud most ferocious looking skunks in the whole iot. The lady visitors uttered a scream and broke for the entrance to the enclos­ ure as fast as their feet could Carry them, and the gentlemen of theparty were not disposed to tarry on the ground until the fears of all were re­ lieved by Mr. Eckman's assuring them that there was no danger at all. Mr. Eckman explained that the fetid liquid, which makes the skunk so re­ pulsive, is secreted in a small gland near the pelvic extremity of the spinal column, and fthafc at certain times the skunk emits this liquid in a 3ne spray as a means of self de­ fense. Be said the skunks on his farm never emitted this disagreeable liquid except when killed or engaged in a light During this conversation the skuntcs congregated around them by the scores and resembled a * great number of cats waiting to be fed. The Ruling Passion. The ruling passion gets away with woman every time. At a theatre the other night a lady appeared siddenly at the box otiice and asked the man­ ager for an admission ticket "Don'tyou wish a seat?" the ticket seller asked. "We"have a few good seats in the balcony." "1 haven't time to sit down," said the lady. "My husband is waiting for me outside, and besides 1 have seen the play alroady." The ticket seller didn't know what to say to this. "I only want to go in for a few minutes," the fair visitor continued. "1 saw a lady pass in a moment ago, and she was so elegantly dressed that I want to have a good look at her and see exactly what she has on. That's all. The manager, to whom this ex­ planation was made, escorted the dress-fascinated woman into the auditorium, and she went around to a side aisle and made a thorough ob> servation of what the ultra-fashion­ able dame "had on." "O, it was perfectly lovely!" she exclaimed as she joined her husband at the door. The Waste nf Pood. Prof, W. O. Atwater has this- to say of the way we waste food: "We eat more than we need, and a great deal is simply thrown away. That which is rejected In kitchen and table refuse does no harm, but that which Leavening Powrr & G*vt Report Absolutely pure FORI ai JRAL BLACKING IS _ Has An Annual Sale of; WE ALSO MANUFACTURE THE PINK-EYED MINNESOTA TROUT. A Peculiar Finny Freak l*ropa«rat«<l at the State Hatchery. The Game and Fish Commissioners of Minnesota have succeeded in propa­ gating, at t .e Stale fish hatchery at St Paul, a breed of trout that cannot be duplicated anywhere in the known world, says the Minneapolis Journal. The albino trout is n thing more or less than a freak of Nature, and up to three years ago, when these fish be­ gan to make there appaarance at the Minnesota hatchery, none were known to exist. Three years a;jo Superin­ tendent S. S. Watkins secured thirty- nine specimen?, though where he got them is a secret Locked in" the breast of the gray-haired official, \^ho is by no means anxious to tell how his pets weep acquired. From these tish he \ r» 4 V. J ~ ~ -- •*. -> -- turity, but only three specimens win­ tered successfully. At tha spawning season there were found to be two fe­ males and one buck. From these were obtained eggs that turned out at the hatching 147 iish, but of this number only forty-nine arrived at maturity. The forty-nine have since multiplied, until now_ Mr. Watkins has TOO albino trout in the tanks. The Superintend­ ent is exceedingly caretul of these beauties, and well may care be taken of them, for, with their pure whi e bodies handsomely dotted with pink spots--with their pink tins and pink eyes --they are a curiosity not to be duplicated in America at least. The commission has obtained another very handsome species of trcut by crossing the native brook trout with the lake trout. vThe result i i a large and beau­ tiful fish, highly colored, and possessed oi rll the game fighting qualities of the brook trout, an exception to the ordinary results of crossing, which are to eliminate many of the geme quali­ ties of the fish. Within the last year a variety of experiments in fish eult- uie have been' made at the St. Paul hatchery. Mr. Watkins has superin­ tended all these experiments, and in a conversation with a representative of the Sunday Times he said that the next twelvemonths would, ho believed, add a good many valuable facts to the knowledge now possessed of fish oult* ure. Imperial Orannm, as a prepared food, has attained the Acme of being a Standard Preparation, one of the Safest and Best Kaown to the World, and It can-* bo truly said that no prepara­ tion offered for sale Is more carefully pre­ pared and thoroughly tested, or meets with a more welcome reception and universal approval, or affords more relief to Inva­ lids. to nursing mothers, infants and chil­ dren, and aged i crsons. This has been confirmed by thousands of testimonials from chemists, physicians, heads of fami­ lies, and the preis. At the trreat World's Pair, Chicago. 1893, Imperial Granuin was granted the highest honors. Medal and Diploma, and was rec­ ommended as a delicate and digestible nutriment, easily prepared and suitable for use under all circumstances, and es­ pecially adapted in its properties for the nourishment of invalids ?•"* (illiltiffin. New York Churchman. What Kills Us. ' Only 901 persons in 1,000,000 die from senility, while 1,^00 succumb to gout, 18.400 to measles 27,0JO to apo­ plexy, 7.100 to erysipelas, 7,500 to cpn- sumption, 48,000 to scarlet fever, 25,000 to whooping cough, 30,000 to typhoid and typhus, and i,000 t) rheumatism. The averages vary according to local­ ity, but these are deemed pretty ac­ curate as regards the population of the globe as a whole. Von Deserve a Good Shaking, And chills and fever will give it if yon don't take defensive measures to escape the periodle pcourge In a region where it is prevalent. The best safeguard and remedy is Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which Is free from any objec­ tions applioable to qnlnine, tand is Infinitely more effectual. Wherever on this continent and In the tropics malarial complaints are most virulent and general, the Bitters is the recognized specific and preventive. It does not mitigate, but eradicates chills and fever, bil­ ious remittent, dumb ague and ague cake. For rheumatism, inactivity of the kidneys and bladder, for constipation, bilioueneHH and ntrve inquietude It is of the greatest tfiBcacy, and the unsolicited testimony in its bcnalf of eminent medical men leaves no reasonable doubt that it is one of the most reliable fam­ ily medicines in existence. Use it continually, and not by fits and starts. "What One Woman Has Done. A woman in a little Ohio township asserted her right to be up and doing some twenty-eight years ago, when she decided ^he would build a sidewalk from her house to the village, two and .one-half miles awav. She headed a subscription list which was presented to women only, collected and disbursed $225 in money, besides soliciting and procuring many times that amount in work. She personally superintended the construction of bridges and cul­ verts, and assisted in the grading. The sidewalk is in good repair to-day, and for all these years has been a mon­ ument of what one small, unpretending woman can accomplish whoa liatiked by energy and perseverance, y • TOUCH UP SPOTS MAKES NO DUST. IN , the Only perfect .. Morse Bros-pRofs. on,Mass, >.' >\ -- { ' ]F |hi5 should . meet the as any line A Child Enjoys ' The pleasant flavor, gentle action and sootijiuK etiecte ot Syrup of J?'igs when in need of a laxative, and if the father or mother be costive or bilious the most gratifying results follow its use; so that it is the best faigily remedy known, and every family should have a .bottle on hand._ Bricks from Babel. Bricks from what is believed to be the remains o: the old Tower of Babal are still found in great profusion at Birs Nimrud, Babylonia. R The Lake Shore Limited taken rezu- larly on your Extern trips, will prevent that tired feeling so often experienced by travelers. Leave* Ohlcasto V:XXX p m.; arrives New i'ortc VI:XXX p. m. a K. Wliber, W. P. A. CtM bo taken without shaking. ' Of Conrse. The lines over which it is proposed to lay submarine telegraph cables are now as carefully surveyed of proposed railroad. Black Rings under the eyes and sallow complexion show biliiousoess. This is one of tho moBt-4js< agreeable of stomach disorders and if lowed to have Its own war will result great harm. Cure biliousness at once 1) usln'j Rlpans Tabulea One tabale sivi relict. ' Algeria, which has 2,500,000 acres' of cork forests, of wuicb 300,030 acres are made to yield regular crops, is o'aimed to be the greatest cork-pro­ ducing country in the world. Sbkd your full name and address to Dob­ bins' Boap Mfg. Co., Philadelphia. Pa., by return mail, and ge't, free of aU cost, a coupon worth several dollars, if used by you to Its full advantage^ Don't delay. This Is worthy attention. •• And It Won't "Ply. A Philadelphianhas invented a four* winged flying machine. livstxAD or Tairrana with A Bad Cold use Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant, which will loosen the phlegm, subdue Inflammation, and certainly save your Lungs and Throat much dangerous wear and tear. Was It Accurate? The first thermometer is said to have been invented in Alexandria B. C. 130. Only a trial of Piso's Cure for Consump­ tion is needed to convince you that It is a good remedy for Coughs, Asthma and Bronchitis. OP ANYONE. troubled with Dropsy, Bright's Disease, bemmal Weakness, Gravel, Reten- tion of Urine, Diseases of the Bladder, Liver or Kidneys. They are strongly advised to take a few ... doses of . . . Dr. J. H. fncLEAN'S LIVER AND KIDNEY BALM. Justly celebrated as the standard Hvmr and kidney remedy of America* II.OO A BOTTLE SI.OO WbE=7; And the Sunny South* BIG FOUR ROUTE The frosty moraine*, thf chilly Bisht", are the fit warning notes from Winter's trumpet, and w* i the Sun in his southward course, kmjfing to :* him to a land where it is summer always. Ar e you koiiik Miuth this winter? Where are \ou goinvr? c The "Bir Four Route" is the best line from CM »> go, JVona. St. ) oiiis. Cleveland, Coluiubm, Indiaa-ai>olis, lknti'ii Harbor, Sanduskr and ititeraaediat* points, with Solid Vestibnled Trains, Buffet Parlor Care, Wagner SliiepinK Cars and fUuinsr Oars to tin-•innati. whe " jolid tr»itis i \einnati. where (direct connections are made witii *oiid truitis with Pullman Sleeping Cars of ttlsftloa < aX'^ke & Ohio,, Queen & Crescent Koute, and LoilU*; The British Isles comprise bo fewer than one thousand island* and islets. "Mr dear fellow, she is an nn?oL How exquisitely lovely her complexion is. They say she uses Glenn's Sulphur Soaix " Continual Round of Tlpg. ^ An Englishman, at present at a con­ tinental watering place, i nds that at the termination of his sojourn there he is expected to tip first, the ohamber- maid female ; second, the assistant chambermaid male ; third, the bead waiter: fourth, the waiter who brings coffee to the bedroom in the morning; fifth, the waiter on duty at lie euner and dinner; sixth, the head porter, and seventh, the pa$re Who goes on errands. A Oood Investment for 1895. Every one appreciates good value The Youth's Companion for 1895 offers the largest amount of entertaining and in­ structive reading for fL 75, a year's sub* script ion. The prospectus for the next volume pre­ sents an Irresistible array of stories, arti­ cles on travel, health, science, anecdotes of famous people, and a great variety of Wholesome reading for till the family. To new subscribers The Companion will be sent free until January, 1895. and a year from thatdate, including the Thanks­ giving, Christmas and New Year's Double Honday Numbers. It comes every week, at a cost of 75 a year. Tbb Youth's Companion, Boston, Has*. Who Wants to Be Taller? Bosouit's late pamphlet, "Man of the Nineteenth Century," says that only one man out of each z03 attains & height of over six feet. Emergency War Ships. Twentjr-eigrht big ocean pa-t>enger steamships belong to the British aux­ iliary navy. Beware that we consume m excess of our needs worse than wasted, because of the in­ jury it' does to health. In some of the dietaries examined from one* ninth to one-twelfth of'the nutri­ tive material was simply thrown away, and what made the matter still worse from a pecuniary 6tand* point the portions thus rejected were mostly from the meats in which the nutritive ingredients are the most costly. Usually it is-the* poor man's money that is the most uneconomi­ cal^ spent in the market and the poor man's food that ieKworee cooked and served at home;--Bob ton cript. Some men work modesty too bara, and are generally disliked. OIntm-ata for Catarrh Contain Mercury, ' As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system •when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Buch articles should never be used except on :n prescriptions from reputable physicians, as tha la damage tney will do is tenfold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney <fc Co., To­ ledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken in­ ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the syatem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. J*"Bold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle. 98 % of all cases of consumption can, if taken in the earlier stages of the disease, be cured. This may seem like a bold assertion to those familiar only with the means gener­ ally in use for its treatment; as, nasty cod- liver oil and its filthy emulsions, extract of malt, whiskey, different preparations of hypophosphites and such like palliatives. Although by many believed to be incura­ ble, there is the evidence of hundreds of living- witnesses to the fact that, in all its earlier stages, consumption is a curable disease. Not every case, but a large per­ centage of cases, and we believe, fully 98, percent, are cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, even after the disease has progressed so far as to induce repeated bleedings from the lungs, severe lingering1 cough with copious expectoration (includ­ ing tubercular matter), great loss of flesh and extreme emaciation and weakness. Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases reported to us as cured by " Golden Med­ ical Discovery " were genuine cases of that dread and fatal disease ? You need not take our word for it. They have, in nearly every instance, been so pronounced by the best and most experienced home physicians, who have no interest whatever in mis­ representing them, and who were often strongly prejudiced and advised against a trial of ' Golden Medical Discovery," but who have been forced to confess that it surpasses, in curative power over this fatal malady, all other medicines with which they are acquainted. Nasty cod- liver oil and its filthy "emulsions" and mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these cases and had either utterly failed to bene­ fit, or had only seemed to benefit a little for a short time. Extract of malt, whiskey, and various preparations of the hypophos­ phites had also been faithfully tried in vain. The photographs of a large number of those cured of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal catarrh and kindred maladies, have been skillfully reproduced in a book of 160 pages which will be mailed to you, on re­ ceipt of address and six cents in stamps. Yon can then write those cored and learn their experience. Address for Book, World's Dispensary Mbdicai. Association, Buffalo, N. Y. It is the medicine above all others for catarrh, and is worth its weight in gold. I can use Ely's Cream Balm with safety and it does all that is claimed for it.--B. W. Sperry, Hartford, Conn. ELY'S CREAM BALM Opens sod e'eanses tbe Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. .Protects the Membrane in m Colds, Restores the Senses of Tasto aud MiielJ. The Balm Is quicJcly absoibed an^glves gner where Hi ins with 1 & Oliio/Qu ,. vifit; & Na-livilie I<ai l»ayn, to Hot Spmm-'.OM Mat' Comfort. Btid ail poinfs in Virginia hnd theCaxO-4 Unas; to .Jacksonville, St. Augustine, anil all voiatv in Florida: to New Orleans and all principal ctUea in the South. Through Wagner and Pullman Sleeping Cars dally between St. Louis ami Wagi ington vi» the *JSUt J our" and t he picturo(-<jne 0. & O. liailvray. Tourist rates wilt lie in effect. t Call 011 or address any Am nt ottheBig FbarBovhl or its connecting lines, or address E. 0. McCORMICK, 0. B. MARTIN. i Passenger Traffic Mgr., Gts'l Pass. A Tkt. Ag£«- Big Four Route, Cincinnati, Ohio. ' W. L..DOUGLAS CUOP ISTHt KST. S Oil dllVrb NOSQUCAKINOk #5. CORDOVAN* FRENCH& ENAMELLED CALT t $ 5.39P0UCEr3 $cm£4 -EXTRA FINE. *2.teBcff5Sc«ootSHaE* SEND FOR CATALOGUE W*L.*DOUGU • BROCKTON,, Yoa can save mosvy by mariag tkt . W. L, Domgias 83.00 Shoe* Bmum. w« ara tha largest mosfMUnn at th Is grade or shoes In t ho world, an;l guarantee thalt value by stamping the name and price on tha i§ «.>uiiuui, which protect you BRwnat high prima anti the middleman's profits. Our shoes equal custom ?i work in style, easy fitting and wearing qaalttte* .We have them sold everywhere atlower prieaafoa tha value given than any other make. Take oostife. institute. If your dealer cannot supply you, caq» .JJipN'T BE F001,l||,. Ton want some RFPANS TABULE& Your druggist's supply ia He has something " just as good,' Why does he say this ? He thinks you a simpleton. He has a right to his Bnt to express It 80 plainly Is brabh. His opinion may be rig&S» Bnt his statement Is not true. Tell him eo! Get what yon ask 1 Or nnt.hlnrt! Removes Tan, Pimples, Freek- lee. Moth Patche*. Rash aad SMln diseases, and evenr hlea* ish on beauty, and defies detection. It has stood tbe tvst of '43 years, and is so harmles we taste it to be sore it Is prop, erly made. AeceM no counterfeit ot similar Dr. L. A. Sayre said ton lady ot the haat-taS J recommend 'Goe- raQd*sCT««ma' least harmful t h e S k i n Hons." Po Sn^^S «»s la the U.S., C&aados and laropa. FER0. T. HOPKINS. ProD'r.37 Great Jonas St.. N.Y. Bis. X FREE! HAtfEVER Ruppert'a FACEBLEAH A pprKiatinsr lha fact 1 tfcmi--<i rflrtfci rfthe U.S. h*Teaotgiedey FaeaWeartkWk-account of prk*. whlrk ia S3 Mr irt I. eider ,W ,,, leiiet at once. A particle Is applied into each nostril and is agree­ able. Price SO cent3, at drugKixts or by mail. £LY BROTHEKS, 56 Warren Street. New York. 1 Sample B\>ult,aaftl}r peehMlCafii"C ckatcpeiwqMiii, on t m^lat MO* ,* I BLEACH renKivee and nm lUtMy freckles, pioi|!«. ttutli, Mullen* acw, WHM, wrfafciw. CT •kin, and tk» cotEj'aiio*. Ulna Mme. I RUPPERT. Oeot. E. 6 E. 14th St.. N.Y.Cit*. atiesir CLOTSIH Sold direct to consumers AT MWXVt »*»r*« ever beforw nlTanvt ever before offered. Porters ami maaa PATENTS. TBADE-IARKS. Examination and Advice as to Patentab: lity of In­ vention. Send for Inventors' Guide, or How to Get a Patent. I'athick OTahbkm.. Washington. D. C. A CHINESE doctor in setting a bone vraps a chicken head amontr the band- fcges to insure rapid healing. SSSnmiuE&HfS^: IXbari&stowo. Tracs- *' . / SiV',' i-v-'w-': ITH Fit! Vii.!K<;K Or BUMMHW." ot A tailo* * o • t K forKRfefc mammoth catalog* AddrMB OXFORD MFC.COi,(Mkhtli<Hr.it 344 Wabash Ave.. Chica«o,ltW CURE YOURSELF ipawaB"*' 1 Street, corner Fifth Avenue, v oaat by express on receipt of pnee. UcnajiitaSf a. N. V. Xet 47. *u writing to Advertisers, plt-ase tto n&t fall » mention tliis paptr. JMrertisera Ukw to low what inrdiuiuii |w/t)ifiu heat. .. . . . - «. V. ...aMu* .• t .. ....tot i.v ». . j;*!., .Hi.,.. ! mi E 'jam.

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