McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 May 1893, p. 7

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m* w«Mplmi; Tilrrw M4wmNii> H»o«r BarsaparfUa pos--saes abaoluta lUttlT, sari Wist Hood's Cures Mr*. E. M. Butt Wnt Kendall, N. Y. Tlrae Great Enemies Neuralgia, Rheumatism and Dyspepsia ^ J t" knottier Victory for Hoo<f*. | •Forever twenty years I have suffered with Asnralgia, rheumatism and dyspepsia. Many ttmes I oould not turn in bed. Several physi­ cians have treated me and I have tried different nxtedies, but all failed to Rive me permanent relief. Five years ago I began to take Hood's Hood s p-- Cures Sarsa parilla Sarsaparilla, and It has done me a Vast amount of good. Since beginning to take it I have not had a sick day, I am 72 years old and enjoy good health, which I attribute to Hood's Sarsa- parllla." MRS. E. M. BUKT, W. Kendall, N. Y. flood's Pills cure all liver ills, biliousness, Jjlmdice, indigestion, sick headache. 35c. Onttttft* Boft ttoo _ P._ feER SONO. ma are calling. Tbosr, steep!" A>*dq*>sareia3tiic, ,. biaiafe'bo?. «laep. O hush to t&a Mm of the surf-tiella ringing, ' Where the whit* foam luapa they ate slowly Ringing i 'bleep, little i : and singing, lor hoy, ilMpI' Up on the hill the fairies are crooning, ' Crooning a lullaby tweet, , "bleep, little sailor lad, afeapt" i i Faint on the hearth a cricket i« droaing, j- ' * \ Droning his sweetheart to greet.; Sleep, little bonnie l»y, sleep 1 i,, Faint 01 the hearth a cricket is dronlnc. It singe thee a song while so drowsily barmlBg, Gleaming and beaming find dreaming; Sleep, little sailor lad, sle p. O'er the bine waves thy father is sailing, - bailing nay deaTie, to thee-- . . . -«, Sleep, little sailor ladL nleeftl • i Wlnle the fierce storm-king is {ratting ana'bail­ ing. , Wailing across the deep sea;' ' Sleep, in v tailor boy , (deep' - List to the sound of the s«d ^juris alguingk •» On misty wiugs they are softly Hying. « . „ Sighing and flying and crying-- I" - >1, "Sleep, little sailor lad, sleep! l* Then hushaby, hushaby, take tby rest. • My tiny, wakeful bairn. I.• : On thy mother's breast is thy snowy nest, So rocfeabv sweet, my biUrn J % For the dear Lord He will watch with O# ' And calm the trouble'! sea. _ £ Oh. 'He'll brim; thee back thy father, JacKf* And guard uud comfort tbeel _ • Sleep, little petrel, sl«ep. --WorthingtoL's Megaiitie; ': #• ABSOLUTELY FREE. •a.A Thrilling Book, To Any Reader Of This Paper. ; j Ylllt All About the Indians. JLatest Publication In Ita Line, Entitled "Uft and Scenes Among: the Kichapoo Indiana"--Contains Nearly Two Hun­ dred Pages--Sent Free to Everybody. In order to make the public familiar with the habits, manners, customs, and history of ono of the oldest tribes of American Indians extant, we have published atpreat expense a large edition of a work entitled "Life and Scenes kAmong the Kickapoo In* dian9." All their peculiarities traditions, habits, in fact, their whole life and cus­ toms are told in a manner which will interest the reader and hold attention to the end. The book also explains our connection with the tribe, how It came aboutand what has come from it. The book Is profusely Illustrated and contains nearly 800 p.p. While this edition lasts we will send a copy free to all wlft» apply, enclosing three 2-cent stamps to pay cost of postage. We will guarantee to fill all requests re­ ceived within the next two weeks follow­ ing the appearance of this advertisement, but may not be able to do so later. It la tor your interest, therefore to send at omoe. Address HEALY * BIGELOW, C21 flrand Avenue. New Haven, Conn. DO YOU DON T D E L A Y m BALSAM "KoMeV It (Tares Colds,Coughs. Sore Thro«t,Croap.Tiiftasa ga,Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Atthea* A sertala cure for Consumption in first stages, aai a son relief IN advanced stages. Use at OBCA, Ten will see the exoellent effect after taking the Ant dose. Bold by dealers everywhere. kettles 00 eeats and 01.001 flSH BB^ This Trade Mark is on the best WATERPROOF COAT In thp World I L. TOWE::. BOSTON. " ""V 's Cream Balm WILL CURE C A T A R R H Ulnatratetf Oat*loaus *ree. A Ely' Apply Balm into each nostril. ELY BBOS. M Warren St_ N. Y. C*tar*v ITHE LATEST SENSATION I World's Fair Souvenir Plmyln* Cards, consist Ins of a Deck of S3 Cards, viz.: Kins, Queen, Jack, and spot Cards. On (he face of **ren color*, one of the «•</ Stale Buildings of most beautiful auti uuiqu ever put on the market--the best-selling novelty <ret ptodu - . Specialty Publ'nx Co.. 181 S. Hakted St.. Cliicaao, llL Si •ggKisftnu. mail. 8towell AOo» wn,lUa» DOStS 25° SHILOHs CURE. jCnmCoDiiuaptiea, Coughs, Crorip, Sois Ehroat Sold by all Druggists on a Guarantee. For a Lame Side, Back or Chest Shiloh'e Perooa Plaster will gi»e great satisfaction.--sj centfc 8. N. IT. No. 20-93 BE8T POLI8M IN THE WORLD. DO NOT BE DECEiVEO with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which •tain the hands, injure the iron, and burn ted. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril­ liant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package Contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish. MS Mi AMUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOft. all night star«! y ttltifuaie rescue troubled me but little, for 1 knew it was but & question of a comparatively short time before my absence from the vil­ lage would he discovered and a search | party sent out Covering my hearl with my canvas coat as a protection against the myriad of mosquitoes which ap­ peared soon after dark, 1 prepared to make myself as comfortable as was possible under the existing circum­ stances. Now an J then a troop of baboons would crash through the forest and make night hideou> with their deep roars as they jumped from tree .to tree. Their cries would awake the rest of the slumbering animal and bird world, who would add their <jUota to the iufernal din, and it would be hours before the forest would be quiet again. Finally the nun rose, an l with the day came a strong sea breeze which swept my persecutors, the mosquitoes, far inland. Listlessly I glanced about me, and, as I d id so, my eyes fell upou what seemed to be a large green blanket that 1 had not noticed before, about forty feet away. 1 lazily speculated as to what it was, when presently a tremer ran through it, and it appeared to move. On it came toward me across the open, slowly draggipg over the un­ even ground as though propelled by some invisible force. Sucldenly the truth flashed across my mind--it was the advance guard of an army of warrior ants, and the tiny green leaves composing the mov­ ing mass were each carried by one of them. My heart sank within me as I re­ membered the fate of the snake and thought of my helpless condition. Fascinated, I watched their prepa­ rations for the onslaught. The green mass stopped. The ants had discovered the presence of an enemy in their path. Messengers hurried to the rear, and soon the main body appeared; they marked as I had seen them before --in a cumpact column about six feet wide and extending as far back as the eye could react. On they came, closer and closer. Suddenly I felt a shooting pain in my foot like the puflcture of a red- hot needle, then another, am\ in an instantjny body was covered with the ferocious insects. They penetrated my clothes and sank their pincers deep into my quivering flesh. They doubled them­ selves up and clung to me with bull­ dog tenacity. Hundreds I killed, but thousands remained to take their places. MaddenccL with pain, i shrieked and screamed like a hurt child. Thank Heaven! Answering cries wore heard, and a party of natives burst through the bush. They took in the situation at a glance, and, rushing in amongst the ants, picked me up and bore me rapidly away from my terrible as­ sailants. The next day, while lving in my hut with my injured leg in a splint and my swollen body daubed with moist clay, a young native entered, holding carefully between his fingers a large warrior ant. "Senor, you do not like these ants'*" he inquiringly asked. 1 confessed that my love for them did not seriously disturb my peace oI mind. "But we do," he laughed, "tbey clean our houses well, and then, too, they heal our wounds." I took the ant from his hand on a twig. He was about half an inch long and of a glossy let-black color. His head, which was of enormous comparative size, was armed with ex­ ceedingly sharp, branching forceps, or mandibles, which he kept high in the air, now and again bringing his jaws together with a sudden snap It was hard for me to believe that this lively little fellow was stone blina, yet such was the case; they have no eyes, but their sense of smell is very acute, and the absence of sight seems to trouble them very lit­ tle "Yes," I replied, handing the in­ sect back. "1 have seen them clean your houses--but as for wounds," rub­ bing myself, ruefully, "I thought they made them instead of healing them.^ "Look at this cut upon my hand," he answered. ••Sev!" Taking the ant in his sound hand, he held it just over the and WARRlOlt ANTS. It was at Honduras, near the Caribbean coast, while on a govern­ ment suryey, that I first - saw the warrior ants--those strange insects whicn march through the tropical forests in armies, attacking every living creatuie in their path. One intensely hot day, as I sat swinging idly in a hammock under the thatched roof of my bamboo hut, a native came running in, and with excited gestures, hade me follow him. I did so, wonderingly. and going opt into the open, looked in the direction he indicated. There on the rolling Eavauna stretched a wide black belt extend­ ing fai back into the deep shadows of the adjacent forest. It rose and fell with every format ion of the ground, and, like a Jiuge snake, slowly crcpt toward the village. "The warrior ants," explained the native in a strange patois of English and Spanish, which I shall not at­ tempt to imitate. "They will eoon be here," he continued: "you had bet­ ter untie your dogs or the ants will kill them." Acting upon his advScc i loosed my dogs, and retiring to a safe distance, watched the approach of the warriors. In countless multitudes they swarmed over the plain, marching in compact order like a well-drilled army. Before them scurried a hotcr- ogenhous mas-; of lizards, grasshop­ pers, frogs, beetles and all other man­ ner of insects and reptiles in a wild scammer to escape to >a place of safety. Presently the advance guard reached my hut, and disappeared within, then the tnuin column ap­ peared, and soon the roof, tloor, walls •and rafters were black With them. Like the soft rustle of dried grass stirred by a gentle breeze came the sound of their presence in the leaves of my thatched roof. The sound increased in loudness as the rats, mice, lizards, cockroaches, centipedes and others of their ilk, who had long made the roof their home, tried vainly to escape Some succeeded in getting away from the bouse, but ouly to fall victims to the surrounding hordes without. One large cockroach, I noticed, made a plucky tight, but overpow­ ered by numbers, he gradually re­ laxed his efforts and was soon dis­ membered, each ant carrying off a portion of his body as a trophy. The most exciting battle was with a snake about three feet long, that tried to slip away unseen. The ants quickly surrounded him, however, and fought with terpiflc ferocity. With every switch of his tail the snake killed a score of his torment­ ors, but their places were soon filled by the black swarm which swept un­ ceasingly on. Finally the writhings of t^ snake became fainter and faint-errand at last ceased entirely, and then, and ntituntil then, did the ants relin­ quish their attack. All day long they marched through the house, until at sundown the end ,of the column had passed and was lost to view in the thickness of the forest. I entered my house and prepared to survey ruefully my larder, but my anticipations of sorrow were prema­ ture, for there were all my provisions as 1 bad left them--untouched. There was but one exception--«j cut; the insect's pincers clashed poor turtle which I had tied to a stake that morning, intending to i keep him alive for a few days before ! making him into soup. He was stone i dead, but the rumpled earth about j him showed that he had made a hard fight for life. Not a dead ant was to he * seem 1 tbey had all been carried off by their j comrades. j I afterward learned that the war- • rior ants refuse to touch any food J that they themselves have not caught1 and slain, which accounted for my j provisions remaining unmolested. I was overjoyed at "the change in my house--not a cockroach, lizard or! any other insect or reptile was left; ! they had been completely extermin- j ated. | toy second experience with warrior cau&ht the edges of the flesh on either side of the cut and drew them tightly together. This done, the native twisted the head of the ant from its body and showed me his h^nd. "You see the cut is closed," he said; >(the pincers of the ant will hold the flesh together--it will soon heal now." This was the last 1 saw of these wonderful insects, which take the place, in the tropics, of housemaid and surgeon, for I soon after returned to the States.--Boston Globe A Dear Mate's Gopher Trap. * A'new and ingenious gopher trap has been invented by W. S. Smith, a deaf mute of this city, formerly a teacher in the mute school at Sodem. He is one of the prolific inventors of ants was not attended by such pleas*! the State, having already launched ant results. 1 00 tlie co1""11111^ a churn, oil-can 1 had been hunting all day in the vast forest with fairly good luck, but holders, etc., and has on the stocks a dishwasher. His gopher trap is in- as dusk approached 1 Fou~ndThat~7n I fenc'ed/0' lhe destruction of the my enthusiasm I was practically j 8°Phers' commonly lost Dreading the possibility oi having j to remain all night in the forest without my pablo (tnosrjuito net). I looked around for a point of vantage from which to survey- the surround­ ing country and get my bearings. Selecting a tall cabbage palm tree, whose top towered high above the called digger squirrels. He has spent much time in studying the manners and customs of these ani­ mals which may be defined as the old captain said of the cannibal islanders: "Manners, none: customs, very bad " The trap consists of a spiral spring with a long wire arm, barbed, which is to be run down the furrow of the gopher, and which, DUTY TO GOD AND MAN. An Athletic Prelate Who Deeltaed to Sfeel- ' ' ter Befcted th* Cloth. 13M late Biafcqp ftolwyB, of K«w.Zea» land and Melanesia, was well known during his university days at Oxford as a devotee of the noble art of self-de- tense, says the Washington Newa He incurred a great deal of animosity from a certain section in New Zealand, owing ; to his sympathy with the Maoris during ; the war. One day he was asked by a | rough in one of Ifhe back streets of ! Auckland if he was the "bishop who ! baebed up the Maoris." Receiving a i reply m the affirmative, the rough, with 1 a "Take that, then!" struck his lordship ! in the face. j "My lriend," ea'.d the Bishop, "my'! Bible teaches me that if a man smite , thee on one cljeek, turn him the other," j and he turned his head the other way. > His assailant, slightly bewildered, ' struck him again. j "Now." said his lordship, "having ' done my duty t:> God, I will do my duty to man," and, taking off his coat and ' hat, he gave the anti-Maori champion a , most scientific thrashing. On another occasion he was going down the river Walkato with a Maori, ' when the latter, who was very lazy, ! left off paddling the canoe, at the same j time muttering that if Selwyn were not! a bishop he would--well, "go lor him." j In a moment the Bishop told the man • to turn the canoe ashore, where, strip­ ping himself of everything episcopal, he said, pointing to his robes, etc,: j "Ihe Bishop lies there; the man is here. I am quite ready, come on." The Maori did not "come on," how- ; ever, but quietly resumed hi» work : without another murmur. The Government Chemists, after having analyzed all the principal brands of "baking powder in the market, in their reports placed the "Royal" at the. head of the list feft* strength, purity and wholesome^ and thousands of tests all over the country ness have further demonstrated the fact that its qualities * " in every respect, unrivaled. r;^ „ Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift dr * or at a lower price than the Royal, as they invariably > contain alum, lime or sulphuric fbcid, aiid ren^r the ' food unwholesome, Brightest Part of Sty Trip. A New York fashion correspondent of a Southern paper gives out the follow­ ing: A lady writet: "I have read your let­ ters lor a long time,' and have often envied you the opportunity you enioy of seeing the beautiful things you describe. I used to think when I read of those charming dresses and parasols and hats at i ord AT Taylor's, that theirs must be one of those stores where a timid, nerv­ ous woman like myself, having but la few dollars to spare for a season's out­ fit, would be of so little account that she would receive little attention; but when you said, In one of your letters a few months ago, that goods of the same quality were really cheaper there than elsewhere, because they sold more goods in their two stores than any other firm in New York, and that because they sold more they bought more, and con­ sequently bought cheaper, I determined, if I ever went to New Yorkt I would go to Lord & Taylor's. "That long-waited-for time came In the early autumn, and I found myself standing before that great entrance, with those wonderful windows at either side. I summoned my courage and en­ tered, atf'I suppose tens of thousands of just such timid women as I have done before. My fears were gone in an in­ stant. The agreeable attention put me at my ease at once, and I felt as much at home as though I were In the little country store where fiiy people have •traded' for nearly a quarter of a cen­ tury. "And now, as I wear the pretty things I purchased, or see them every day and find them all so satisfactory, I think of my visit to this great store as the brightest part of my trip to New York." , The Frafptigce of Flower*. And because the breath of flowere is far sweeter in the air (where it comes and goes, like the warbling of music4 than in the hand, therefore nothing is more fit for that delight than to know what be the flowers and plants that do best perfume the air. Roses, damask and red, do not give out their smells; so that you may walk by a whole row of them and find nothing of their sweet­ ness; yea, though it be in a morning's dew. Bays, likewise, yield no smell as they grow, rosemary little, nor sweet marjoram; that which above all others yields the sweetest smell in the air is the violet, specially the white double violet. Next to that is the musk rose; then the strawberry leaves dying, with a. most excellent cordial smell; then the flower of the vines; It is a little dust, like the dust of a bent, which grows up­ on the cluster in the first coming forth; then sweet briar; then wall Bowers, which are very delightful to be set un- j der a parlor or lower chamber window; j then pink, especially the matted pink, i and clove gilliflower; then the flowers of the lime tree; then the honeysuckles, so they be somewhat afar off. Of bean flowers 'I speak not, because they are tleldjlowers. But those which perfume the air most delightfully, not passed by as the rest, but being trodden upon and crushed, are three; that is, burnet, wild thyme, and water mints. Therefore, you are to set whole alleys of them to have the plemsure wiufcb...yoft. f*' tread.--Lord Bacon. v | A Souvenir from the Holy ' t Dr. Talma?o. to introduce THE CHRISTIAN | HERALD, sends It for twenty weeks, to* j geiher with a beautifnl. polished ^ecttoa I of Olive Woofl, grown on the sacred Mount ' Of Ollres. and purchased by him at Jerusa- | lem, all for 50 cents. His address is Bible House, New York City. { Music, of all the liberal arte, has the i greatest influence over the passions, : and is that to which the legislator ought to give the greatest encouragement.-- Napoleon. Prevent and cure Constipation and Elck- Ueadache, Small Bile Be&n& A §ul>8l<ll*e<l I n. The only subsidized inn, perhaps, 4s on the island of Capri. Mine host, grateful for the long-continued patron­ age of artists, who ace the chief loreisn residents of the island, and knowing that they are far from rich, left the inn to his heirs with these curious condi­ tions annexed: The charge per day, two bottles of red Capri wine included, is never to be more than ti francs; if any artist is too poor to pay so mui h he shall pay what he can and paint a pict­ ure upon some wall epace, receiving all the accommodations accorded to those paying the highest price; If any Ger­ man artist who has failed as a student of art in Italy shall come to the inn he shall be accommodated, and shall re­ ceive the amount of his fare to Ger­ many upon his promise never to return to Italy. The provisions of the will see/n to have been carried out faithful­ ly, for the prices are moderate, the red wine< is always obtainable, and the walls of the Inn are covered with paint­ ings, the work of impeeunious artists. --New York 8un. AK American who has long resided at Honolulu says that the ex-queen "has a fist like a stevedore." Marveloo* Traveling. To make a journey of nearly a thousand tulles in a little over a thousand minutes seem hardly within the range of possibili­ ty. The Lake Shore Boute. however, has j demonstrated its ability to accomplish this feat by placing In service a new fast train, to leave Chicago daily at 2 p. m. and ar­ riving in N«w York City the next morning at ll, making a trip of <980 miles in twenty hours' actual running time. The shortest time heretofore made by regular trains be­ tween these points fe twentv-flve hours. West-bound this train leaves New York via the N» Y. C. Ry. at S p. m., reaching Chi­ cago the next morning at 10, making it possible for one to accomplish a full day's work In either city and be at the other, nearly a thousand miles distant, the next morning in time foe* business, truly one of the most remarkable achievements in the history of railroading THEBE is no economy .'n saving 3 cents' worth of stale bread by adding five times its value in other materials and making a pudding that no one rel­ ishes when done. Better dry and roll the bread for crumbs, and keep on hand In a glass fruit jar. JUST A LITTLE pain neglected, may become RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, W: Forty Small Bile Beans in each bottle. EVERYTHING In this world depends upon will.--Disraeli. Danger: If yon have a feeling of oppression and un­ easiness a little above the diaphragm, and Just below the right ribs, aggravated by lying on the right side, look out! As sure as fate, your liver Is disordered. Perhaps not serlousiy as yet, but--fatal hepatic abscesses are not un­ common. Hostetter's Stomach Bittsrs is the precise remedy to regulate the liver, and pre­ vent its congestion and inflammation, and to disperse such minor indicia of its derangement as yellowness of the skin and ball of the eye, furred tongue, sourness of the breath, nausea on rising in the morning, dizziness, sick head­ ache and constipation. By relaxing the bowels painlessly, it opens a channel of exit for the superfluous bile, checks a tendency to conges­ tion and engorgement of the liver,'at the same time giving a gentle impetus to its secretive action, and affords relief to the stomach, which la usually inactive, out of order and oppressed with wind when the bowels are costive. Use the Bitters also in fever and ague, rheumatism and kidney troubles. KNOWLEDGE first MANSFIELD, Conn., made the sewing silk, about 1829. THE first water-pipes were bored logs, used in New York in 1776. BKBCHAV'S PILLS will cure wind and pain In the SLomacb, giddiness, fullness, diral- iiess, drowsiness, chills, and loss of appetite. IT never troubles the wolf how many tha sheep may be.--Virgil. Sample Package Stalled Free. Address Small Bile Be^us, New York. ONE of the largest Islands on the Aus­ tralian coast disappeared recently. in other* l removed my heavy hunting I wh ^ attcmpts comc oatl Loots and started on my upward jonr- lraM(tl<,s hlm. As lhcre isa bounty ney. The smooth surface of the tree rendered it difficult climbing; when ; ^p^ers, of 10 cents for the and the about half-way up I slipped and fell to the ground, a distance of about thirty feet Fortunately the earth l>eneath me w<.s soft and spongy and I escaped without being injured internally. I tried to rise, but the sharp thrill of exauisite agony which shot through my left leg made it impossi­ ble. I had broken my leg, and the unpleasant fact that I was, helpless! slot Idea. scalps scalos of these are very i numerous in places, tne trap is | boflnd to make the fortune of the i farmer boys.--Morning Oregonian. ENGLAND has decided to have her soldiers use nickel-Rlated bullets here- | after because the.v go straight through | a man, whiU the ordinary bullet | pauses en route. This is believed to I be an outgrowth of the nickel and ON THE OUTSIDE-- that is the best place to keep the huge,old- fashioned pill. Juat as soon as you get it inside, it begins to trouble you. Wbat% the use of suffering with it, when you can get more help from Doctor Pierces Pleasant Pellets ? These tiny, sugar- coated granules do you permanent good. They act mildly and natur­ ally, and there's no_ reaction afterward. Con­ stipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels are prevented, relieved, and perma­ nently cured. your money turned. You pay only for the good you get. Nothing else urged by the dealer, though they may be better for him to sell, can be " just as goodn for you to buy. 1 DflVQ WANTED. Homework. Sample It direct'ns 10c. DU 13 ('to. Gelwiclcs. 1313 Uilmor St..BaltimoreJtfd Illustrated Publications, W l ™ K A E . 1 - Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet­ ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the'needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure^ liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of FigB. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas­ ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax­ ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid­ neys, Liver and Bowels without weak­ ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drag^ gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is msn- nfactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every ~ package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed,jrou will not accept any substitute if offered. SCIATICA, LUMBAGO SPRAIN .; may make a cripple. , Just a little BRUI8K may make serious i Just a little ^ B U R N may make an ugly scar. Just a little COST will get a bottle of 8T. JACOBS OIL, A PROMPT AND PERMANENT CURE Years of Comfort against Years of Pain for JUST A LITTLE. A copy of the "Official Portfolio of the World's Columbian Exposition," descriptive of Buildings and grounds, beautifully illus­ trated in water color effects, wii! be sent to any address upon receipt of loc. in postage stamps by THB CHARLES A. VOGSLBK CO., BALTIMORE, MD. Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no good. I could not speak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stomrch distressed me. I could not sleep. I had taken all kinds of medicines. Through ft neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green" s Aug­ ust Flower and took it. I am to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower sa ved my life and gave tne my health. Mrs. Sarah J Cox, Ddfamce, O. » I EWIS' 8 8 % LYE I Powdered and PferfnimtdL Ip (PATXirani.) The strongest and purest Lye made Vnlike other Lye, It, beta? a fta* powder and packed in a out wfttl remo?a- le Hd, the contwflas ar* ..always ready for use. Will mate best perfumel Hard 8oap In SB oiiinuteg uHthm; Uiili'itf. It ts (ks ' lH"it Tor cleansing wasta-pipac, "disinfecting sinks, cloaeta, iraslft* iag bottles, paints, trees, ate. I'KNJiA. SALT M'rtl C" Geo. Agts., Phila., Pa. •f/S ,«! CURES MALARIAL POISON • 1> • • • Hfttar* sh«ali be assisted to tkrow offtnirart tieflofthehftoi. Ks&Mng dees it Mwell,wiafdr or so promptly as Swift's Specific* LIFE HAD NO CHARMS. Fo* thrre years I w« troubled with malaria) rtr-k rtmh caused tn - - 1 4 » ~ w t u i w a i a n a i y appetite to I gprratljrfe*' nd ):fe 1 oil all its charms. £ tried ntr-CURIALANCPOTA^H KYTO RO RJETT. tnts tiorclirf. It) wonderful medic . . fend permanent cure. S.S.-5. Afewbottlesofl made a c£tnple.» »_n<1 I now eighty bettet HEALTH thin em. J. ATTCE. Ottawa. Our book on Blood *r.d Skin Di»>n nailed freet " SWIFT Bpbcifio CO.. «ruwr.'. *•%" The Davis Hand Cream Separator aa* Feed Cooker Combined. Completest of outfits for a dairy farmer. This machine has an attachment which, when the bowl has been taken out, is dropped into the Separator so that a belt can run to the churn. Write for ftirtber particulars. Davis A Kttnkln Blrtgr. and Mflr. Co., «40 to 254 W. Lake St., Cltlcaco. 11L. Manufacture all kinds of Creamery Machtnerjraaa Dairy Supplies. (Agents wanted in every couaty^ CORE BIR6WIS! *8~Cheap< st plaoo on earth to bar UltoodK. Knee pants, IU-: nit>n't> iems jtantt; : flan­ nel (Hvi-hhirtti. l-ic; Riunk'R tobacco. 10c lb: boys' suits. HStc; w.iul tor price list. C. WIllllO Cft., Woucwor, Wis. U C A n i n U C BOOKLET aud 8 or *>r. HCBUAtaHll KaronV Headache Tablets fer mail for lo or 35 cntd Moaur tiied if tbey fail. J. • if. CO. HavvrtriU. <>am HOW U CURE Stkjk!* 8. N. U. nu. to-m In writing to Advertisers, rirasc do not IkB to mention this {taper. Advertisers I lire tS kaow what mediums pay theiu best. Agents Wanted for the BEST WHEEL ON EARTHS MODEL €. Weight 39HK THE DERBY FOR '99-Morgan A Wright Pnaumatle. PKTAIL.--Frame, Derby pattern, donblfi thronrhont from continuous ream less steel tubing; Head Wheel Ba«»\ 41 niches: WheeJs. SO inches; Tool Steel Bfiarimrs: Mfu>ue«mann'k Bplrsl Fiber steel lubirifj; Hearing,5T and tSi inches; ltonnd <'rs&kt).0}{ ami ' inch tlm»w. Hutuber Chain: OsrfordSaddles; Drop l'\>tvinif throughout. We have th» bent sod rootst ninjple ppolteh madp. They can be replaoed bv the w i t h i * ~ * * " - " . . . - . - . . . . . . . . . . j p i - . - . . rider without renioviny the tire, ant! are fully explained and illustrated in our catalogue, also tangeaft spokes. For beauty and simplicity there is no equal, tor service aone can be made better. FOR CATALOGUE. Aireuts Wanted In Every Town. miY orou oo.. i6i, i6! ad tea sent cwi st, cwcuGa THE COST IS THE SAME WOOD The Hartman Steel Picket Fence Costs no more than an ordinary clumpy wood picket aflkir that obatraeta the riMp' and will rot ar fall apart in a abort time. The Hartman Fence la artlstle in deaiagf rirotects the grounds without concealing them and is practically KVKKIiASTlXffc llustrated Catalogue with Prices and Testimonials Mailed Free. Brmnckes: ^ HARTMAN MFG. COMPANY, BCAVCft PALLS, P*» '02 Chambers St., New Yorki 508 State St, Chicagoi 51 and 53 3. Forsyth St, Atlanta*Gfc Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies -- OR -- Other Chemicals are tused in tha preparation of W. BAKER & OO.'S akfastCocoa tchich is oiisluMy pure and soluble. I Itbumorethanthreetlmm ythe»tren<jth of Cocoa mixed j with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and Is far more eco­ nomical, cotting lest than (me cent a cup. It 1s delicious, nourishing, aad ""ir-T MOOTED. Sold isj Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, KMB. IBI ^wjUCC**'»moaUt HafSi- I'l^C |ftTew treatment (by pne- _ Uclnn phMfctMi)- NotUJTlnf. 1 *• TVmaudt coral. 6«d 6c to >twnp4. Ojy. r. 8NVDKH. M. MsHDepl IcVlcker's Theater, Chles8r<« Jill. XSj#\iU'OBNV.n[oiBi% vlvPi Washington, D.Ck , jMasm'ftK&siffia I Syzstnlastirar, 16a4Ju<Uc*t1ngclaims, attysinosb MIXTION THIS MM ic< f© Minnuota. North DsloU, MonUn£ Idaho, Washington and Onsen, tht PRCS GOVERNMENT PBEE L PREk UUVCRNMINT A rmiANDS H 47*The b«st Africaltnnl.Ortsiag tnd Timber •I Landi n<nr open to Mttlen. Milled FREE. AMn« OUS. a. LUIBOas.LuS Cn,I. f.K. B., St. rut. aiaa, MnmowTtm ram H1IIIM Morphine Habit Cured in 10 u /Vti is . LUCAS cotottt, a a .FRANK J. CHENEY MAKES OATH THAT HE IS TOT.8HNIOR. .11 PARTNER OP THB FIRM OP F. J. CHENEY & CO., DOING > BUSINESS IN THE OITY OF TOLEDO, COUNTY AND STATE » AFORESAID, AMD THAT SAID FIRM WILL PAY THE SUM OI* / ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS FOR EACH AND EVERY OASB , ̂ OF CATARRH THAT CANNOT BE CURED BY THE USE OF * MALL'S CATARRH CURE. SWORN TO BEFORE-MB, AND SUBSCRIBED IN MY FEKH"-':'N ^ BNCB, THIS 6TH BAY OF DECEMBER, A. D. 1889. ^ _V AMory ANfe i:JOt SaWs Catarrh Cure to taken i«temaU% atod acts directly tqpon tit ami *»ueou* sutfacex E. B. WALTHALL A CO.. Druggists, Hone Csvej Ky., say: "Hall's Catarrh Cure cures every one that* takes it." J. A. JOHNSON, Medina, N. Y„ says; ' Ball's^ Catarrh Cure cured me." CONPCCTOR E. D LOOM®, Detroit. Mich., days: •The eftect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is woademL** arwflma CouanptWei and people who hare weak lun<rt> or Astb- m:. should use Fiso'sCare for ConsoiBptlon. It has cured (honaatidt. it ha? not injur­ ed one. It is not bad to take. II is the feeat cough syrup. Sold everywhere, tic. C O N S U M P T I O N . . Wrtie him about it. REV. H. P. CARSON. Scotland, Dak., Bays: I J. C. 8IMPSOS, Marqtlesa. W. Va., au«; "Two bottles of Hall's Catarrh Cure complete-1 '* Hall's Catarrh Cute cured me ol a Wtj bh}1 ly cured my little girl." | case of catarrh." HALL'S CATARRH CURE is sold by all Dealers In Patent Medietas Frio© T'B Cents a. Bottle. Tfce ealy ««iialne HAUL'S C1TABRH Cl'RE %m Mannflwlaie* F. J. CHENEY Sl CO., Toledo, O. L] ' BEWARE OP IMlTATIOJSa < Y 4 ifnf jhw on ftjy^inrtiwii </, j >: • -$4 'Jr: . 9 /-.a sfe/. * + 2 -

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