McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 Mar 1893, p. 7

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3le people that Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup is the best in the market. Why try new things when you know that yoo havo what ^ , you neol? It is infallible. MBS. C. CARLSON, of Renville, Mtna., , ^recently gave birth to twice, making the third pair within three and one-half 1 - years, • <r' * SfAGRICULTURAL TOPICS. then se Da rated into pieces and put W* THE WOMAN WHO WORKS, -- and is tired, will find a special help in Doctor Pierce's Favorite Fr»- Pcrf cf t!^ harmless in any condi­ tion "of the female sy»- tem. It promot«8all the aaturol 'unctions, aud builds en. strengthens, regulates, and cores. For women approach­ ing" confinement, nurs­ ing mothers, and every weak, run-down, deh- cat® women, it is an in- • vigorating, supporting tonic that's peculiarly adapted to their needs. But it's mors than tint, too. It's the only guaranteed remedy for all the functional disturbances, painful disorders, and chronic weatamua erf womanhood In "female complaints" of every kind, periodical pains, fceanng-down sensations, internal inflamma­ tion, and kindred ailments, if it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. ; V Something else that pays the dealer better, may be offered as " jusi as good." Perhaps , -it. is, for him, but it can't be, for you. KOTEG TEMPERANCE LEIOEi The Forcible and Brilliant . "David Frost N© Endorses Indian 8agwiu ' "fhe portrait of David Frost, the noted temperance lecturer, will he recognized far and wide. I DAVID FROST, BOSTON, MASS. In a recent conversation with Mr. Frost, that gentleman said, with the convincing earnestness •which characterizes his re­ marks: "One of the greatest evils with v.'hich the friends of temperance have to contend is the cheap •wlifskey decoctions and miserable rum mixtures by which the market is flooded under the guise of 'Bit­ ters/ 'Sarsaparillas,' ' Gingers,' and other patent medicines. "I do not mean to say," continued Mr. Frost, "that all proprietary medicines come under this head, and in "fact I know from personal experience of one which is not only a Great Medicine, a Splendid •: Tonic, and Unrivalled Blood Purifier, hut which is innocent of all deteriorating in­ gredients and Free from Harmful Effects, - no matter how much or how freely it may be used. It is not my wish to Rppear as the exponent of any public remedy, but in this case 1 deem it my duty to commend ; t*~at Grand Remedy of the Indian race, 'Kickapoo Inftlun Sagwa.' i "I speak from experience, for it has • stood me in (rood stead. When half sick, worn out, and my mos'/rebellious stomach refused to longer act in its normal capacity, " Kickapoo Indian Sagwa' has restored me to a . healthy condition when nothing else would. I have taken occasion also to learn some­ thing about this medicine and Its origin, and know that6 Sagwa' is not only an old and tried remedy among the Indians, but ; that its Vegetable Purity and Harmless ! Ourative Effects are still maintained, and that its manufacture is still earried on by modern methods exactly in accordance • "with the ways of the noble Red Man. " Simple Roots, Barks, Leaves and Flow- ; ers from the Forest are all that enter into i Its composition, and the Strength which is gained from its use is not the false strength - of the rum bottle but the Noble Exhilara* ' tion of Bounding Health, and the Purified i f*. Blood, cleansed of its poison, coursing . through every Vela and Artery of the Hu- S6v;. man System." Words toil to convey the earnest force of .his remarks as expressed to the writer and, ' the high regard he had for the remedy. Kickapoo Indian Sagwa. Sold by all Druggists. $1 per bottle. 6 for $5. ~ It CamColdt.Coughs.Son Tbroct.Sroup.Inflnm. ;T" ss,Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A oertain cure for Consumption in first etages, and a eure relief la advanced stages. Use at, once, isfer Ton will see tfaa excellent effest after taking the : - first dose. Sold by dealers rverywhsre. Large bottles 50 cents and $l.O0u r> A remedy which. If used by Wives about to experience the painful ordeal express on rseeipi - _ , of price, $1.60 pei Jm bottle, charges pro- - A P*id. feRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. ATLANTA. GA. attendant upon Child-birth, proves an infallible epeci- fic for.aadobviates the tortures of con- fineraent, lessening the danger* thereof to both mother and child. Sold by aU druggists. Sentbjr express on receipt of price, $1.60 per ;tlf Waterpef Goal In the WORLD! SUCKER The FISH BRAXD SLICKER Is warranted water proof, and.wfll keep you dry In tho hardest storm. The Dew POMMEL 8L1CKEK is a perfect riding coat, and covers the entire saddle. Beware of Imitations. Don't buy a coat if the " Fish Brand" is not on it. Ulustra- jed Catajognfftee. A. J. TOWER. Boston, Mass. irorrioir THIS »M S. N. U. No. 13-03 BE8T POLISH IN THE WORLD STOVE pQLISH OQNBr BE DECEIVED, with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril­ liant, Odorless, Durable, and the con­ sumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF3,000 TONS. A fBW SUGGESTIONS FOR OUR ' 1 RURAL READERS. ' AAranta^es of Co - Operation Among farmers -- Management of XVorn-Ont --Do Away With Fences--A Farmer Ue Educated In Agttoultylkva. Co-Operation In Farmiag. The great, successes in modern manufacturing on terpri -;es are secured by large combinations of capital con- into an oven at a moderate heat, where It remains until it is thorough­ ly dry ana takes a light yellow tint. The heat of the oven is great enough to partially convert the starch of the potato into dextrine, and thus Im­ part a pleasant flavor to the product. The article thus treated can be pre­ served for an indefinite time. It can be used raw for fattening domestic animals, or by boiling water con­ verted into a nourishing and palat­ able food for man. Ground into trolled by a single mind and concen-| flour and mixed with wheat flour, it trated so as to secure the cheapest i is said to make verv superior bread, methods of production. In farming, The inventor thinks his devise will such larjje combinations of capital i lead to a largely increased production h.ive not generally proven successful. J of potatoes, sufficient in the years of This is because in the business of • drought to make up for the deficiency farming a far greater number of de- j in the cereal crops. --New York Trib- tails must be attended tc, so that] production goes on most cheap y on I farms small enough so that t.he owner can give personal care to the details on which success chiefly depends. All the large bonanza farmers, seemed to; be making money while land tilled ; with the accumulated fertility of, ages was being exhausted. In other j words, this kind c.f farming is de- j pendent on the possibility of con statitly robbing the soil. • :*raly SaM. * ^ ( expense man for the profession is, say aboux a thousand dollars. Whenever it comes to pa*s that a farmer boy will put a thousand dollars in himself to fit himself for his business as a farmer, the conditions of farm labor will have greatly changed. There is as much But there I skill attainable in agriculture must be an end to this sooner or later, and when the large farmer fails, his failure is likely to be more hope­ less than that of one who nas conT ducted operations on a smaller scale. ,, We tclieve, however,»that farming heeds much larger capital than has been cmp'.oyed in it, and that this will be found rather in the co-opera­ tion of large numbers of small farm­ ers to do certain specific things than by the aggregation of large tracts of land under single management. It is much harder to keep a large farm fertile than it is to keep a small farm in the best possible condition. Manure. labor, and crop mi^st main­ tain a due relation to each other. With only the amount of manure that most farmers can get, a large majority will make more money it their land were reduced to one-half or one-quarter the amount they now cultivate. It would be better still if they had the capital now invested in land ready to invest in co-operative efforts with other farmers to make farming more profitable. •It is in such enterprises as are now being organized in the neighborhood of Rochester, N. Y., for to-operative storage of farm products that will come the means for making the farm pay better. The farmer has long complained that hi> products have to j pass through too many hands, leaving j a profit in each before the consumer I is reached. Farmers can, if they choose, lessen the number of these middle men. After ten. twenty, or fifty storehouses are established in as many vi.lages and railroad stations, what is to hinder their being also used as the centers for distributing the more bulky articles, such as chemical fertilizers required on farms. There are many places where Granges have already done this, and the sav­ ing of $2 to $5 per ton by Grange pur­ chasers of fertilizers in quantity has in some localities given members of the Granges an important, advantage over those outside this organisation. The purchase and keeping of the best ma cs of all the principal kinds of stogie by the co-operation of the farmers of a neighborho:>d is another example of a way in which co-opcra- tion may be used to benefit farmers. There is scarcely any farmer who does not concede the imnortance of breed­ ing to thoroughbreds so as to grade up his native stock. It is not every neighborhood where one larmer alone will dare take the risk of buying pure-bred animals. Yet a dozen or twenty farmers can well afford to unite in doing so, and each get enough improvement in his own land to Day for his individual outlay. Here, too, the Granges have proved their usefulness They have done more than any other organization to break down prejudices among farmers, and help them to work together in ways whereby the advantage of all may lie best promoted.--American Cultivator. as in the professions, and it takes as much brain to master this knowledge. Agriculture ought to be the most de­ lightful of pursuits. It has in it the greatest possibilities for the elevation and refinement of the human spirit. In the face of this fact, the rush of so much of the brain and energy of the country to the city is one of the most discouraging features of the times The rush ought to be the other way.--Kansas Farmer. management of Worn-Out Land. There is a natural fascination about the attempts to take what is seem­ ingly worthless and give it Either it is this, or the fact that poor land can always be bought cheaply and usually on the easiest terms makes poor land saleable when property that was certain not to pay in years of any other character could not find a purchaser on any terms. .Ensilage vs. Dry Cut Fodder. In the eighth annual report of the Wisconsin Experiment Station, con­ siderable space is devoted to the con­ sideration of the subject of ensilage, and from feeding experiments it is found that a daily ration of four pounds of hay and seven pounds of grain feed, with corn silage or feed cured fodder corn, ad libitum, fed to twenty cows during sixteen weeks produced a total quantity ot 19,813 pounds of milk during the silage period, and 19,801 pounds of milk during the fodder corn period, a very trifling difference indeed. Away with Fences. * On many farms the only excuse for fences is that of making pasture part of the crop rotation. Happily, many of our best farmers are abandoning the practice of pasturing plow-lands and doing away with all iuternal fences, and some are going so tar as to remove roadside fences, too, --- N. E. Farmer. Horticultural Noted. HARDY shrub® are valuable on the lawa DARK cherries are best to ship to market GOOD drainage adds to winter pro­ tection. MUTCHING helps to keep the soil at an even temperature. APPLY the mulch needed whenever the ground freezes hard. FALL, is a good time to set out trees if the location is a good one. PLANT raspberries so that they can be cultivated the same as potatoes A MOUND around the stem of a tree is a good protection against mice in Winter. A DOUBLE wall with an air space between, if made tight, makes a good fruit house. PLANT trees in the waste corners and in this way derive some benefit from such places WHILE Spring is the best time to plant out cuttings Fail is the best time to prepare them. IN going into ffuit culture go at it systematically but not on too large a scale at first. PLANTS grown in pots require A good soil, rich in all of the elements of vegetable nutrition. NEVER prune any more than seems necessary, as excessive pruning is often a cause of disease. miscellaneous Heclpes. PASTRY--Mixed with snow, after rubbing the shortening well into the value, flour, is a perfect success, possibly a shade more inflated than when mixed with ice water. BAKER'S GINGER CAKES. -- One quart of good New Orleans molasses, one pint of lard; warm lard and mo­ lasses together. Into one pint of sour milk dissolve three tablespoon- But in most ca.es, cheap as the poor j fuls of goda; 8tir ,n Pnough flour, ln farm may seem, that in a high state of cultivation will bo really cheaper, whatever the price asked for it. The cost of bringing up poor land to the point where it will begin to pay is al­ ways greater than is expected. The land that is now paying can generally be depended on to pay under goon management as well as it has done. It has a recognized value that can be determined. If the poor land is bought it has to be experimented withj and possibly money has to be sunk before it can be made to pay. The old saying, to him that hath shall be given, and from him that hath not shall be taken away what he seemeth to, have, is quite as true of land as it is of people. Fertility tends to make fertility even more surely than does money make money. itaisln* Turkeys. There is but little expense attend­ ing the raising of turkeys, as they will pick up most of their living, and when sold most of the price realized will be found clear profit. £o far I have confined myself to the com­ mercial branch, which contributes directly to the need of humanity in supplying food. The "fancy" branch, though more fascinating, has not so Ann a foundation as the commercial, yet it is the dra.'t on thoroughbred that enables it to keep up the neces­ sary vigor and productiveness. The one depends upon the other, and if you breed thoroughbreds breed only ifrom the fittest, and if you succeed in raising good birds let it be known by exhibiting and advertising them, for good, pure-bred stock commands ready sales at paying pricea--Ohio Farmer _____ Drying Potatoes. A French genius has invented a new industry, which is said to b d fair to develop into an important indus­ try. It is the drying of potatoes. They are first crushed, and as much • which you have sprinkled as much ginger as you like, so the dough will not be sticky; roll one-fourth inch thick. Bake in moderately hot oven. These are splendid if made right. LEMON FLAVORING. -- When you use lemons grate the outside yellow rind all off carefully and mix it with twice its quantity of sugar, and put this in a tightly corked bottle ready to be used at some future time for flavoring. Use one teaspoanful of this instead of lemon extract It should be kept perfectly dry, and in grating be very particular not to grate off any of the white part of the lemou, as that would give a bitter tast& ram •m m ELECTSICAl NOTES. THE latest inventions In electric heating devices include hand stamps; curling-irons, coiTee urns, branding- irons and various new applications to surgical instruments. The field of the electric heater is comparatively narrow owing to the high cosjof car- rent, but it seems to be almost infi­ nitely long. A MfNiATURE thunder factory has been constructed for the Science and Art Department, South Kensington, England, with plaVss seven feet in diameter which, it Is believed, would give sparks thirty inches long, but no Leyden jars have been found to stand its charge, all being pierced by the enormous tension. MILITARY projectors have been re­ cently experimented with at S\ Petersburg. The tests referred to the illumination of the ground sur­ face by means of electric projectors placed in a balloon floating at a height of nearly 2,000 feet More exhaustive tests will shortly be car­ ried out at some forthcoming siege operations at Ivangorod. ELECTRIC heaters are found to be excellent for use in conservatories on account of the abscnce of the un­ wholesome gas^s or vapors which might injure the plants, simplicity of construction in the parts conveying the energy, perfect safety as regards heat, which can be regulated at will, cleanliness and convenience and ra­ pidity in starting and extinction. ELECTRIC search lights are being adopted by custofn officers in England in order to avoid the possibility of explosion while rummaging for goods on board tank and other vessels car­ rying explosives. Ruby colored lights for the examination of imported cases of photographic negatives m a dark chamber are also to be supplied to obviate the risk of premature develop­ ment , Two NEW patents describe respec­ tively an electric cigar-lighter and an electric refrigerator. The cigar- lighter consists of a platinum strip heated to incandescence at will by passing a current through it, and the method of electrical refrigeration is described as consisting in lowering temperature in a portion of a conduc­ tor and passing an electric current through the conductor to increase the condition of the heat from the warmer to the cooled portion. REGARDING the new electric launch Vashti, built on the lines of the Alva, and which recently ran on the Hud­ son from Nvack to Sing Sing and back, the Scientific American says: "It is impossible to imagine anything more attractive. No engine, no fire, no smoke, no smell, and all the weight below the water-line. There probably never was a boat which combined more perfectly the desirable qualities of comfort, speed, and sta­ bility. The batteries hold a charge for a nine to ten hours' run, and the speed developed is eight to ten miles per hour. ARTICLES of incorporation have been filed for a trolley road to be known as the Elizabeth and Plain- field Street Railway Company, which proposes to start at Morris avenue, Elizabeth, and run through to Or­ chard street* to Westfield avenue, to Grove street to West Grand street to Jersey avenue, thence through Third avenue, in Linden Township, to Walnut street in Koselle, and be continued tnrough Cranford Town­ ship to the Central Railroad depot at Westfield. The capital stock is $100, 000, and applications are to be made at once to the authorities of the various municipalities which the xtfo- posed road is to traverse. An Odd Monopoly. One man makes all the Ink with which the United States Government prints its paper money. His father invented the ink, but he never told anybody how he did it until just be fore he died, when he let his sou into the secret. Had an untirnelv accl dent gathered the inventor to his fathers before he told his son about the ink the Government Printer would have been in a bad wav, for this is the only kind of ink that will print on the peculiar surface of the fiber of which Government note paper is made. The maker employs only six men in the manufacture of his ink, and none of them is in the secret, nor has any one yet seen the interesting act of mixing the in gredients of which the ink is com posed. The owner of the secret locks himself up in his own room two weeks in each year, and it is there and then that he mixes stuff enough to supply the Government *rith ink for the ensuing twelve months. The process of locking himself up sur rounds him with an air ot romance something like that of the man whom Balzac made to search for the alka hest, the only difference being that the alkahest fellow shut himself up for a lifetime and got nothing, be sides alienating the affections of his wife, while the other locks himself up for two weeks and gets 850,000 a year.--New York Home Journal, M: tef.: • 'V? Rbyal Baking powdef jg ;.fe. tfcere ate sfo tiiaiiy alum fcafcitig pow* tr, ders in the market, the use of which all y ; physicians decide render the food unwholesome^ |and liable to produce dyspepsia and other feilments, housekeepers should exercise the utljS knost care to prevent any powder but the Royal from being brought into their kitchens. In the use of Royal there is an ai)6olute certainty of pure and wholesome food. The official State Chemists report : Royal Baking^ Powder does not contain monia, alum, lime, nor any injurious in dients. It is absolutely pure and wholesome^ The Government reports show Ml othep baking powders to contain impurities. In the use of any baking powder but Royal there is uncertainty if not actual danger. It is unwise to take chances in matters of ; life and health. , - "• rv* --"7- An Historic Lemon. Whoever thinksof connecting such a commonplace article of diet as the leuon with the romantic history of ill-fated Anne Boleyn? Yet, indi­ rectly she was the cause of its first introduct on into England and so into popular notice. Henry the Eighth--who, if he rid himself of his wives like a brute, certainly won tbeni like a prince--gave such splen­ did feasts and pageants in honor of the coronation of A nne and of their previous nuptials as had seldom been accorded to queens of the blood royal. These kingly entertainments were in turn followed by the great Civic feasts of London, for which the whole world was searched for delica­ cies to add to the splendor. At one such banquet, graced by the presence of the royal pair, a lemon was intro­ duced as an elegant novelty. To an epicure such as Henry the acquisition of a castle in France would have proved less acceptable, and such was the importance attached to the clis- coyery--so says an old biographer-- that a special record was made of the fact that the cost of this precious lemon was six silver pennies!--Kate Field's Washington. Ancient %t onders in the Eftit Nineveh was fourteen miles long and eight miles wide, the whole city surrounded by a wall 100 feet high, so thick as to furnish ample room for three chariots to be driven abreast around th3 top. Babylon was fifty miles within the walls, which were seventy-five feet thick and of the same height as those ot Ninevah. This monster wall had twelve open- ings, or gate?, which were closed by enormous brass shutters every evening at sundown. The temple of Diana at Ephesus, which was about an even hundred years in building, was 450 feet to the first support of the roof. The largest of the pyramids was orig­ inally 481 feet high and 8o3 on the sides, the base covering eleven acres. The stones, which are in 208 layers, average sixty feet in length. One ac­ count says that 350.000 men worked for twenty years in fashioning the Titanic pile. The famous "Laby- rinth of Egypt" contained 300 rooms or chambers and twelve halls. Thebes, Egypt at the present time, presents ruius twenty-seven miles in circuui 'erence. The remains of many of the buildings, such as columns, arshes etc., are of such gigantic size thftt. according to the St. Louis Re­ public, no known modern mach'nery would be equal to the task of taking them dowi, to say nothing of put­ ting them in their present positions. His L.title Foster Mother. A bantam hen at Norwich has adopted a young peacock, newly hatched from an ordinary-looking egg, to the greatest disgust of another hen. who did the hatching, says the Hartford Courant. There were three pea chicks first, but the latter hen killed one and another died. The bantam soon manifested a warm interest in the peacock and the peacock became attached to his foster mother. Although the peacock is three times the size of the bantam hen he does not like to be left alone, and when his little mother gets out of his sight it is amusing to hear him set up his ear- piercing yawp for her to return to him. The little hen is veTy iaithful to Inns and devotes her whole time to the plumaged giant. * A Pretty Custom. There is a certain softness and sweet­ ness in Southern manners that appeal very strongly to less ^demonstrative Northerners. Perhaps no Southern custom is prettier than that of having the children of a housenold call a friend of the family or a favorite visitor aunt, uncle or cousin, as the case may be. Doubtless the custom had its origin in the numberless genuine relationships of Southern life, which led people to feel that there was a certain coldness in addressing a guest by a format title when everybody present was addressed familiarly or affectionately.--New York Sun. ' Blrda ot Puu|« Between this and the other Bide of the broad Atlantic, in the shape of tourists, commer­ cial travelers, and mariners, agents "on the road," steamboat captains, ship's surgeons, and "all sorts and conditions" of travelers, emigrant and new settlers ^appreciate and testify to the preventive and remedial prop­ erties of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters in sea sickness, nausea, malarial and rheumatic trouble, and all disorders of the stomach, liver, and bowels. A tint nut the prejudicial in­ fluences of climate, crudely cooked or unac­ customed diet, and impure water, it is a sovereign safeguard. Rnd has been so regarded by the traveling public for over a thir;i of a century. No form of malarial fever, from the calentiira of the Pacific, Rnd the broken bone fever of the Mississippi, to its milder types, can resist the curative action of this be­ nignant preserver and restorer of health, a veritable boon to persons in feeble health or liable to incur disease. Tufcercnlosfa In Monkeys. Director Smith, of the Central Park Zoo, Is trying by the use of disinfect­ ants to prevent the spread of tubercu­ losis among the hionkeys. The mon­ keys have been dying rapidly all winter from the disease, which is infectious. Just how the first case occurred no one can tell, but at all times of the year the little simians rapidly succumb to this disease. Some doctors believe that rats and mice take the disease, and in many cases contaminate food. That rodents die of tuberculosis has been established beyond a doubt.--New York "World. Ttewnre*of •01ntu»"nt» for CttLarrli Lh*t Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of •moll and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never bp used except OS prescript iens from reputable physicians, an tb) dam&gs they will do is tenfold io the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Chetiev & Co., To* Jedo, ©., contains no mercury, and is taken in­ ternally, and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, aud made in Toledo, Ohto, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. a0~Sold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle. N«me Other Genuine. The grave announcement is made by a spiritualistic periodical that it has secured the "exclusive" collaboration of William Shakspeare in, the spirit world, and that any alleged communica­ tions from the dramatist appearing;' elsewhere are spurious. The K rotation Of medicinal agents is gradually relegat­ ing the old-time herbs, pills, draughts and vegetable extracts to the rear and bringing into general use the pleasant and effective liquid laxative, Syrup of Figs. To get the true remedy see that it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup €o. only. I or sale by aii leading druggists. it-*---- Pointer for Oar Spring .The "Brotherhood of Minor Poets* is the latest Knglish organization of which the cable gives us any informa­ tion. The combination is announced to be for purposes of defense and pro­ tection. THB use of Ely's Cream Balm, a sure cure for Catarrh and Cold In head, is attended with no rain, inconvenience or dread, which can be said of no other remedy. I FEEL it my duty to say a few words in regard to Ely's Cream Balm, and I do n entirely without solicitation. I have used it half a year, and have found It to be most admirable. 1 havo suffered from catarrh cf tho worst kind ever since I was a little hoy and I never hoped for cure, but Cream Balm seems to do even that- Many of my acquaintances have used It with excellent results.--Oscar Oetrum, 45 Warren Avenue, Chicago, 111. Apply Balm Into each nostril. It Is Quickly Absorbed. GIVE* RELUCT AT OEICB. Price 50 aents at Druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St.. New York. The Slow Poke I'ritlsh. In the British patent office, where of all places in the world one would ex­ pect to find things ordinariy well "up to date," the steel pen is unknown, and the antediluvian goose-quill absolute and supreme. TESTED BY TIME. For Bronchial affec­ tions, Coughs, etc., BROWN'S BKONCHIAL TROCHES have proved their efficacy by a test of many years. Price 25 cts. A PHILADELPHIA oyster dealer is named Shellem, and a lawyer of the same city bears the' name of Honest- man. IF you are constipated, bilious or troubled with sick headache, Beecham's Pills afford immediate relief. Of druggists. 35 cents. THE very young are quite as anxious to be old as the very old are to be young. FITS.--All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kllne'nOreit Nerve Kestot er. No Fits alter Hint dtv's use. Msr-velous cures. Treatise and |2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 031 Arch St., Phils, P». William McKcekan7T)rugg5st st Y^'*^ Bloomingdale, Mich. "Ib ave bat ; . •' > ,.: ]§ the Asthma badly eversiace Icanae ' 4fV /hy out of the army and though I lute ^ been in the drug business for fifteen J i' h j years, and have tried nearly every- it1 * thing oa the market, nothing has K'r _ . iothing turn given me the slightest relief tmtiia ^ ^ few months ago, when I used Bo- l.s" sghee's German Syrup. I am ^ £iad to acknowledge the great \ it has done me. I am greatly y and at nij sleep without the least troul ed during the day and at night go to ible." • ALL ^OOL BLACK CHEVHWl srt.' to order. An imported (Uf| WoltSTED 8UIT to order. SE8ID FOR stood* and aln> spring special* J w » can save \o \ r»0 pf-r cent, or, yonr I tailor prices. W- make more BLACTKOC j than any two firms in country. [Mossier Bros. i2t E.tlome St.CMeagii by retnre aall. fMI i . scriptlve ctradm SAILOB StiTHU*0r°°DT'* ™ J!eviscd to date. Tb«w, only. genuine TAIUIS RIRIO IOTCBMI copyrighted by PROP. D.W. KOODT. I ware cl imitation*. Any lady of -- nary intelligence can easily and foMfc- r ly learn to cutand make anyjranM*^ >', - A* i n any style, to any measure, forltdak i ̂ t, < men and children. Garments • 'y c1* teed to fit perfectly aH h o atbnnBc oat x. Add.-«u Moovy a <ro. uucaunCC * MENTION THIS PAI'fcH IH> - V' 3: I TAKE BP MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT a WD » MIT COMPLEXION IS BETTER. Mr doctor says it sets gently on the stomach, Bwwfi na kidneys, and is R pleasant laxotlre. This "> "• * 'I Is made from herbs, and as tea. It Is called • prepared for use •• i LAKE'S MEDICIHE 4 « All drupjfUts sell it at 50e and $1 p#r packng*. tf jrm i tt, lend vonr adilrew for a free Mnij»>. Ijiirl li«Ur •edhfaftL ai«v*4 ih? tranetn <lar. In heaUb*. Mnr. AUdrua OliATOIi V. WOOittVAlUJ, URw, R. ^ IlKMTION THIS PAPER wiu VKITIM to ' • ' - Easily Taken Up Cod Liver Oil as it appears in Scott's Emulsion is easily taken up by the system. In no other form can so much fat-food be assimilated with­ out injury to th^ organs of digestion. Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosi phites has come to be an article * of every-day use, a prompt and ; infallible cure for Colds, Coughs* Throat troubles, and a positive builder of flesh. Prepared by Scott A Bonne, H. •. All tel»Wt c . n", m * ST. Lours center. rivals Boston as a shoe Hood's Cures Catarrh in the Head Took Seven Bottles -- Perfectly Well Mr. Herman BodUce Ot Chicago. "1 have been * victim of catarrh a lone while. My nose and head were so stuffed up that some­ times X could not sleep at all daring the night. A friend advised me to take Hood's Sar.saparilla. One bottle did me so much good I kept on; have now taken seven HOOD'S Sarsaparilla CURES bottle's and I fool perfectly well. Indeed, I feel almost like a new man. Iam very thankful for what Hood's Sarsaparilla has done for me in relieving me of so trouble­ some a complaint." HERMAN BODTKE, No. 2980 Bonaparte Street, Chicago, 111. JACOBS BHBXJMATISM, LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, SPRAIUS, BRUISES, BURNS, SWELLINGS, A copy of the "Official Portfolio of the World's Columbian Exposition, descriptive of Buildings and Grounds, beautifully illustrated, in water color effects, will be sent to any address upon^ receipt of ioc. "ir^j;ostage stamps by THE Baltimore, Md. 5D0KS25' HEGREAT SHILOhS CURE. g5c50t&,l^ M - KWin,, Cores Consumption, Coughs, Croup*! Throat. Sold by all Druggists oa a Gut For a Lute Side, Back or Chest Shiloh's I Plaster will give great satisfaction.- CHAHt.CS A. VOQCLCR GO., ,W, ^ •' /j fa. "•*< "V -ri THE COST IS THE SAME The Hartman Steel Picket Fence Costs no more than an ordinary clumsy wood picket affair that, obstructs tlio tl«» and will rot or fall apart in a short time. The Hartman Fence is artistic In ilntok protects the grounds without concealing them »u<l Is practically KVERLASXIWk Illustrated Catalogue with Prices and Testimoniuls Mailed *"ree. Branch*,; ^ HARTMAN MFG. COMPANY, BEAVER FALLS, '02 Chambers 8t« New Yorkj 502 State St., Chicago i 51 and 53 S. Forsyth St., Atlanta*6a. im*. STOr QUICK! HOW? Witb the Impe­ rial Bit the most vicious and unmanagea-tie horfe can b« controlled by a tody. It is a jxj'iiive iiir« Tongue Lolling, and wfil prevent Sid*> Pull inc'. Sample Bit »enl postpaid on receipt ot price. 2S, in fine nickri plati», $5; No. In tine X, Japan.fl. Satl#l:tct onffuaraatetd. !• periai Hit an/Snap («., W& ffU. *1, IU«Iae, £|fjFrom lbs month., Harm treatment (by prae» ^1^ ticfag physician). Nottarvtng., Thousands cure<i. Send f< In etampii _ _ «. W. F. SNVIIKit. M. 1>., Mail Dept. 3, HcVickcr'n Tlseater, Chicago, 111. Every man and wom­ an should have one, _ especially thoae ot marriageable Do noT aisle us t{\ seiul by mail; express only Price *1. Regisfti fitter or l'O order. SPECIALTY PCD. Co.. Room lli. Times i i ldK-lbicsxo. 95P;PAK eOOK! molts bad eat « u** eating. Saves Doctors* 3.,319 W. *SUl8t.,H.Y. Garf ieldToa Cures Cou8tipotion7Re»tore» Complexion. nnla Sample tree 8i*rau>IuCo.,JUW.«»«i».,».t. Cu res Sick Headache IFTIBNTION THIS PAPER «H8» W&IXIPG SI? AD¥GETI»AAFC "Hktacness HIA& mins OOREI •IBP Peck's lnrl*ibleEar Cushion*. \\ luspersheari Wwnl Successful when all remedies fail. Scld BTQCf? fy t<\ Hiscos* SSS S .¥• Wilts for bock of proof# r KICK MENTION THIS TAPER wiitx wbitinu to ADPtsxis&ak, PATENTS! PENSIONS! 8end for Inventor's Guide, or How to Obtain a Patent. Bend for liiKct-t of I'ension and ttouuty Laws. J>ATKK'K O'MKKKM.. Washington. »>. Cardboard fine Book ud Writing Papers, Cover Paj«v Liien and iinili Papers, Letter Note Heads, Bill Heads, State- Dents and Ruled Pipers . WBOZ.BBAZ.4f By the CASE or CAR LOABL For Sample* Hid Mce« addi«M CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNJOJI* 87.89. 91 & 93 S. Jefferson 8U I'tateaini Hood's Pills are pnrely vegetable, care­ fully prepared from the beet ingredients. 36c. rmaii. Btoweil&Qte anillU Moruhlno Habit Cured in IO BIKIIIH to au citir». pay till curcd* If • I VlMoRt J.STEPHENS; Lebanon,Ohio. Piso's Remedy foi Ostarrh Is the Best. Ka-sfest to Use. and Cheapest. CATAR R H Sold by druggists or Me, £. T. Hsrettln*. W f t - MA' • ^ . ,:.r , t by mail. "* A ' $40,000,000 kHMd by the Bell Telephone Patent it Invention maybe valuable. You siiouUi iwteft mm patent. Address for full and intelliKent ttdvicm jMt- of dkarg*. W. W. Ut'DLKl'« t O. tH'lu-itore of Patettfet. vacuo BUS, mr 8*.». w, w*S Mma6» UK p*i*r. m. N. m In writing to Advertisers, plraMil to naentioa thin i«tper. Aa»»rtur kaow what medium* pay *

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