McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

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

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I* the mighty Wmt, the land that #^a«d wttt » ho* laoctu » harveetf the El I>orado of the miner; the poal of the agricultural While It tcc u<R tv 1th all the dc- ments of wealth and prosperity, some of the .tfcirest and most fruitful portions of It bear a harvest of malaria reaped in its fullness by those unprotected by a medicinal safeguard. No one seeking; or dwelling in a malarial locality is safe from the scourge without Hos- tetter's Btomach Bitters. Emigrants, bear tills In njtnfl" Commercial travelers sojouro- jit?'-} malcrlotis jlcas ^ho^ld carry a Dottle ft* t-.a iiitters in the traditional gripsack, Ag»5n«it the effects of exposure, mental or bodily overwork, damp and unwholesome food or water, R i* fin inlallible defense. Consti­ pation, rheumatism, biliousness, dyspepsia, leivotisness and loss of strength are aU tmed.ed bythlB genial restorative. HAVE always said that the greatest .. *ct m education is to accustom a young man gradually to be his own --Sydney Smith. ii jQ fh#MK LAKE}* Oshawa, Ont. Pains in the Joints Caused by Inflammatory Swelling; • . sai |k Per#ect Cure by Hood's iar- saparilla. "It affords me much pleasure to recommend Hood's SarsapariUa. My son was afflicted with great, pain in the joints, accompanied with •welling so bad that he could not get up stairs to bed without crawling on hands and knees. X was very anxious about him, and having Hood'ss,;> Cures read so much about Hood's SarsapariUa, I de­ termined to try it, and got a half-dozen bot­ tles, four of which entirely cured him." Mas. G. A. LAKE, Oshawa, Ontario. V. B. Be sure to get Hood's Sarsapadlla. IflOOd'S Pills act easily, yet promptly and efficiently, on the liver and bowels- 25a Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound CURES ALL Ailments of Women. It will entirely cure the worst forms of ' Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements of the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. It has cured more cases of Loucorrhoea fhayi any remedy the world baa ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dis­ solves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks K#y tendency to cancerous humors. That gearing-down Feeling Musing pain, weight, and backache, is in­ stantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in lony with the laws that govern the Je system, and is as harmless as water. 'N All drurelrts tell it AddreM In confidence, LYDIA E. PINXUAM MID. CO., LTNN, MASS. Lydla e. Pinkham's Llvsr Pilts, 20 cant*. WH£N QRAN-PAP UT HIS OOftN- COB PIPE. When maJn aStS^ftmr* °0rn00b pipa" to too •omStaoto, as aionna the hearth we draw Our rough, unpaint*d oaken chairs and waited for the tale that evorfoltowel that event! not oft did gran- To and yet again, the wan of long KNOWLEDGE ' "Brings comfort and improvement and fends to personal enjoyment when lightly 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'neeas of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs- r 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 «d permanently curing constipation, has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- Beys, Liver and Bowels without weak­ ening them and it is perfectly free from ipvery objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug­ gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man* Ufactured by the California Fig Syrup iOo. only, whose name is printed on every . package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, gnd being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. Ely's Cream Balm WILL CUBE CATARRH | Price 50 CenttJ , Apply Balm into each nostril. ttr BB08..66 Warren St.,N.Y. RENSION^htiiewn, B.A.' |^Bg»5l^Ul[„pulSW«SSS,Sifia P 3yrainl»«t war, 15 abjudicating claims, attysliua, 1IEH'MOW THIS PAFKK Mrr to the Poor. Astounding cures by the Christ KC.L method of healing. Divine(Ciiri(,tian) science ftibntut treatment: no drugs; hopeless chronic caies elicited. The most successful healer known. Ad- ress Rev. Dr. Strickland, Bentoti Harbor. Mich. *-«. Ji. l\ No. 1J-94 To tratftiio Indian; hunt the bear; there to the backlog's RIOW, Ho lived again his boyhood days. What mam- caries, rich and rip*, Wake at too mention of the hoar when ftu'ptB lit hie pipe. For gran'pap wu a pioneer; bit bene it, ready hand Had hewn the tree* that made bit homo within a new-touua land. Ho bad an endless stock of yama--a million, more or less-- The history of hie eitrly life within a wilderness. And When ne sometimes quite i or got, and told some stor v t wlce, jNo one objected; no nor when he'd chance to tell one thrice; For tales like bis ne'er lost their charm--those stories of the typo That gran'pap nse to tell as as be smoked bis corncob pipe. Oh, good old man. who long bath slept tbo sleep that bringeth rest-- A patriarch unto a tribe that e'er will call yon bleet-- * Could you come back and Join that group around the roaring blase And tell, as in the long ago, those legends of the days When strong with yi uth and hearty toll yon trailed the forest through. How would that group, though changed with years, do lionor unto you 1 And many a trembliug hand, gran'pap, away WRrm tears would wipe Aa you'o draw your at mohair to tha fire and light your corncob pipe. --Inter Ooean. . Send lue $..a SHIS choice dressed J, 823 2d St., Michigan Utty,l&4» AN ABTIST'S ••Unfortunately," said the eminent Royal Academician, leaning bis elbow on the mantelpiece and Kazia? down into the fire, "unfortunately I have made up my mind never to be Inter­ viewed. I am afraid I cannot make an exception even for you." Then, seeing the "S. S." man's face fall, he added kindly: ••However, if you promise to sup­ press my name, 1 will tell you the story of my tirst success, and even if you do not care to publish it, you will have something to take back to your editor. "I began life very low down on the ladder of prosperity. My attic-studio was in Goosegreen, Hammersmith, $Dd here 1 used to spend my time chiefly in enlarging photographs for a firm in Edge ware Road. "It was in the autumn of 18--(and then put a dash, don't you knew--)" and the eminent Academician crossed over to see that it was put down right. "Yes, that's it, go on. "At the time when my more for­ tunate brethren were returning from their summer holidays loaded with sketches to work up during the win­ ter I was sitting at the portrait of a city magnate. It seemed a hopeless task trying to put anyiexpression into that heavy, podgy, pudding face. I struggled on reproducing the photo­ graph, until I could smell the smell of a city dinner and see little scraps of turtle floating in the air. Then I threw down my pencil and gave it up in despair. "That was too much for my empty stomach. The whole air ot the room was impregnated with that bloated alderman, with his tiny pig-like eyes and dilated nostrils sniffing for feed. I lighted my pipe and threw myself back in a low wicker chair, sick of my inart'stic artist's life and dis­ gusted with my work. ••.Suddenly there come a gentle rap at the door. I started. It was very unusual with me to have visitors so late in the day. "The man who entered was the most remarkable man I have ever seen. He was tall and thin--so thin, that, to my overworked brain and tired eyes, it almost seemed as if I could see right through him. "His face was a deathly white^ and his eyes burned with a steady, con­ stant light that frightened me. Their sole expression seemed to me their intensity, and when the fire­ light sell on them they tamed a deep blood-red, like a dog's eyes in the Bun. "At first he entirely overlooked me, although 1 had sprung to my feet as he entered. He crossed over to the easel on which the portrait of that ghastly alderman was hanging, and he walked with a silent 6huftie, almost without lifting bis feet, that suggested to me that he might be mad--I know not why. "He tapped the wet canvas with his knuckle, and said, still without looking at me: •• 'You paint portraits, I believe? Ah, you paint them well; you must paint mine.' "He spoke in a quiet; determined way, as if he were used to command. Few words passed between us. He wanted me to begin at once, in spite Gf the fast fading lixht, and I Immediately placed a fresh canvas on the easel. "There he sat like maible, his death-like face immovable, his lips tightly closed. "1 worked away, inspired by the solemn beauty of his face. A terri­ ble fascination impelled me, and I never worked taster or better. t., "In two hours I had completely mastered his face, but the light of the eyes no brush could paint. " 'I'm afraid 1 can't^see any more to-night,' I said. «Can you spare me another sitting to-morrow?' "He rose silently, and glanced in a satisfied way a' the canvas. " 'Same time to-morrow,' he said, and then disappeared. " 'Well, to cut a long story short," went on the famous R.; A., "the mysterious stranger came and went in the same silent way for three or four days, until I had finished his picture. "When the last sitting was over, be held out his hand. Thank you,' he said; 'at last I have bad justice done. You might keep the picture until I bring the money,' and then he disappeared. "From that day every one who came into my studio admired the portrait of that wondrous face. My brother artists advised me to show It at the Academy, and as three months had passed ana 1 nad never heard a word from my silent patron, I thought there could be no harm in doing so. "It was hung on the line and, as you doubtless remember, attracted very considerable attention. In those days it was the custom to put a fancy background to portraits, and 1 had chosen from among my sketches a wild craggy ravine, sombre and pre­ cipitous, which seemed to harmonize with that striking figure. It was a memento of my last summer's trip to fount in. and, from that day to this I have never ceased to etlmb the slippery ladder of fame. "After the academy had been opened a few days, a city solicitor called upon me. " 'I believe,' he said, 'you are the painter of picture No 458, Jtfcthe Academy?' p ' 'I ack n owl edged I was. " 'May 1 ask,' went on my visitor, looking curiously round my studio, •may I ask,' he repealed, 'who was the original of that portrait, and how long it has been painted?' •••Hisname, unfortunately, I do not know. As for the date'--and I o. ened my dairy. «Yes, here it is-- August 3lst>' " Are you quite sure?' said the solicitor eagerly stretching out his hand for the book. "i showed him the entry, and he seemed almost stupefied. " •Bid he suggest that background?' " *001)' by his striking personality. I had a sketch of it in my portfolio and picked it cut when the idea was suggested that I ought to send it to the Academy.' 'Thank you,' he said. 4I am ex­ tremely obliged." And before I had time to ask any questions he had vanished. '•About three mornings afterwards I came across the following para­ graph in the Morning News: THK SCOTTISH MT8TEKT. "A most extraordinary trial is now attact- Ing attention in Scotland, It appears that last summer a certain Mr. Gilchrist was traveling in Aberdeen with his wife and friend. One morning Mr. Oilchrist left the hotel on a mountain expedition, from which he nevor returned. "The suspicions of his friends were aroused by the marriage of Mrs. Oilchrist a few weeks after the disaster with a certain Mr. Freeman, who had been their traveling companion. They could, however, find no traces ot foul play. "In this year's Academy there appeared a portrait of the deceased. Subsequent in­ vestigation showed it had been painted three or four months after his death. The artist, however, could throw no fresh light upon the mystery, of which the most extraordi­ nary feature was that tho background-- which he selected by chance--was a sketch of the very district in which Mr. Oilchrist had disappeared. "His relatives determined to sift the mat­ ter. and searching the exact spot in the picture, they have found the body, with a rusty dagger imbedded in his side. "The weapon was at once identified as the property of Mr. Freeman, who is now on trial for the murder of Mr. Gilchiist. "The prisoner confessed his guilt and wassentenced to death."--London Short Stories. SUPERIOR VITALITY OF INSECTS. • i. v*- Vkmc tu^r times con.;;, ! sumers cannot afford to ^xpertliient with inferior brands^tPf- .-p{baking powder. It is NOW ; |hat the great strength and purity ,:|)f the ROYAL make it indis- ^ |)ensable to those who desire to ictise economy in the kitchen, lach spoonful does its perfect work. Its increasing sale bears witness thatfc it is a'^ Necessity to the prudent-* it goes further. BAKING WiKi Egga Often Uninjured Even After Sub­ jected to Intense Gold. The eggs of insects have ° greater powers of vitality than any others. A case was published of an egg pro­ ducing an insect eighty years after it must have been laid, and the scien­ tist responsible for this statement thinks the power of vivification may endure in these eggs for an indefinite period. Many egi,s of insects are ex­ posed to the air without any covering, and many are sheltered too slightly to be secure from the frost This, however, the, are able to resist, re­ maining unfrozen, though exposed to the severest cold, or, still more sur­ prising, are uninjured by its intense action, recovering their vitality even after haying been frozen into lumps of ice. On expos ng several silk­ worm eggs for Ave hours to a freez­ ing mixture which made Fahrenheit's thermometer fall to 83 degrees below zero Mpollanzl found that they were not frozen nor their fertility in the sli&rhtest degree impaired. Others weren exposed to a degree of 36 degrees below zero without be­ ing injured. The quality of the eggs of snails is, perhaps, even more marvelous. These eggs, if des- sicated in a furnace until they are scarcely visible, will always regain their original bulk when damped,and the young will be brought forth as though the eggs had never been in any way interfered with. Neither heat nor cold seems to have any in­ jurious effect upon their vitality for they have been frozen into ice lor any length of time and when the i6e is melted will be found to be wholly uninjured.--Baltimore American. Rafndeer Meat as Food. A' clergyman, the Reverend Mr, Wallis,who has lived several years on the Porcupine river in the British northerly possession^ writes entertainingly of his manner of life in that frigid region. "Many times," he says, "1 have subsisted almost exclusively on rein­ deer meat. It is very good, and I may say it is about the onty kind of 1 meat you don't get t-red of. 1 think j it is better, alljthings considered,than , beef, and that you can eat it longer without its palling on you. It is a venison more than anything else. The Indians eat it almost exclusively, and they are very big and strong. Some of tbem are six feet high, and the average is about Ave feet, ten inches. They are genuine North American Indians, and not the Aleuts, Eskimos, or a mixture of the two. "1 keep an Indian hunter, and he supplies me with all the reindeer meat 1 want. He also brings me gouse, duck, bear, and other game as 1 need ItT I have learned to shoot pretty well myself, as the white men do in that region or anywhere con­ tiguous to it. The ducks and gouse, like the reindeer, are remarkably good eating." » "• Solicitude. * What it is to be a genuine, single- minded egotist is illustrated in a re­ cent Frtnch volume by a story of Mrue. du Deffand, a celebrity of the last century. Mme. du Deffand was a great invalid, and" spent much of her time in bed, but this fact did not prevent her from receiving a great deal of company. ° One day when she was thus in bed several guests arrived and were ad­ mitted. They ail began to shiver and pull the cloaks around them. "What,;' exclaimed the invalid, "is it cold here?" "It is simply freezing," answered a guest. "Thank you for telling me," said Mme. du Deffand. She rang a bell. The guests sup- posed she was sending for a maid to bu Id a tire; but when the servant came in Mme. du Deffand said: "Amelie, bring me in my down coverlet!" Having given this order, she began a conversation about other matters. A MAN anxious to succeed should select a business be can atiek to all his Ufa That Sinking Feeling. A. Detroit doctor is laying for a boy about 16 years old, who came into his office one day last week, and after get­ ting the doctor's advice, disappeared and has not since been seen, at least by him. "Doctor," said the boy, "Ihaveasink- ing feeling all over, a great many times a day." "Ever at night9" asked the doctor. "Hardly ever." "Let m^see your tongue." The bov showed his tongue; the doctor felt his pulse, sounded his chest, worked a stethoscope on hira, listened at his heartbeats, and then told him what was the matter with him and what to take for it. "Maybe my business has got some­ thing to do with it, doctor." suggested the boy, as the physician stepped into the adjoining room to get a phial. "Hardly that, I think," cheerily sung out the physician from the other room. "What is your business?" "I run an elevator," responded the lad, and before the doctor cOuld get to him he had disappeared, as above stated. A Sheriff's Posse. The full name of the Sheriff's posse is posse comitatus, or power of the county; the Sheriff being the chief executive officer of the county, he and his assistants embody the power of the entire county. All male persons ex­ cept physicians and (Clergy men are lia­ ble to be summoned to serve on the posse, and there is no forme 1 warning for duty, as there is for the jury. The Sheriff simply calls on the first suita­ ble men whom he meets to come with him, bringing arms, and the men are legally bound to obey the call. In cities the same power to a limited ex­ tent lies in policemen, and Constables in the country possess it. That is, they may call upon the bystanders to assist them; and persons so called upon are bound to answer the call, or be pun­ ished for refusing to do so. Tariff and Taxation. Tariff duties and internal revenue taxa­ tion on incomes and corporations are ex­ citing public interest, but of quite as much interest are those things which tax the system and require at once an external remedy. <"n this subject; with special recommendation, Mr; Pierce D. Brown, Bridge water, Mass., says: "In accidents from all kinds of athletic sports, to reduce 6prains and bruises, I have used St Jacobs Oil and always found it most reliable." Also, Ur. C R. Sands, Mar stum, Okla., writes: «I have used St. Jacobs Oil for sprains and rheumatism and would not be without it for anything." MB R Led hot­ ter, Denton, Texas, says: «1 have used 6t Jacobs Oil and it Is the only thing I ever saw that would cure toothache in ten min­ utes' time," and it is usually prompt and sure for frost-bites. Alf of these commu­ nications are of recent date, showing un- aDated Interest The Needle Not Tru ? to the Pole. Astronomers and physicists are be­ ginning to doubt the long-accepted conclusion that violent fluctuations of the magnetic needle are closely con­ nected with solar spots and solar ac­ tivity. They are approaching the be­ lief that fluctuations of the needle just at the time of eo'.ar outbursts were jiothing more than coincidences and had no casual connection. These doubts are calling forth counter-argu­ ments in the scientific world, and the subject is receiving widespread atten­ tion. which it is expected may result in the solution of the mystery.--San Francisco Call. Abraham Lincoln's Stories. An illustrated book, unmarred by advertising, containing stories and an­ ecdotes told by Abraham Lincoln, many heretofore unpublished, will be sent free to every person sending his or her address to the Lincoln Tea Co.t Ft. Wayne, Ind. Windfall. The origincf "windfall." in the eense of "good luck," dates from the time of William the Conqueror. It was then a criminal offensa to cut timber in the forests. Only such could be gathered as the wind had, blown down; hence a heavy wind-storm was hailed by the peasants as so much good luck; and hence the modern application of the expression. MEDICAL writers claim that the success­ ful remedy for nasal catarrh must be non- irriiating, easy of application, and <ne that will reach the remote sores and ulcer­ ated surfaces. The history of the efforts to treat catarrh is proof positive that only one remedy has completely met these con­ ditions, and that is Ely's Cream Balm. This ?afe and pleasant remedy has mas­ tered catarrh as nothing else has ever done, and both physicians and patients freely concede this fact EVERYBODY'S little yard-room opens into all out-doors.--Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney. «I HAVE BEEN AFFLICTED with an affection of the Throat from childhoxl, caused by diphtheria, and have used vari­ ous remedies, but have never found any­ thing equal to BROWN'S BBOXCHIAL TROCHES. »--Rev. O. M. F. Hampton, Pike- ton, Ky. Sold only in boxes. WHEREVER the speech is corrupted so also is the mind. £16 BUS S LBS. OATS FROM ONE BUS. SEED. This remarkable, almost unheard-of, yield was reported to the John A. Sal- zer Seed Co., LaCrosse, Wis., by Frank Winter, of Montana, who planted one bushel of Great Northern Oats, care­ fully tilled and irrigated same, and be­ lieves that in 1894 he can grow from one bus. of Great Northern Oats three hundred bushels. It's a wonderful oat. If You Will Cut ThW Out and Send It with 8c postage to the abtve firm you will receive sample package of above oats and their farm feed catalogue. C Bow's This! We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any ease of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfeetly honorable in ail business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WKST & TRCAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WALDINO, KISNAK & MABVIK, Wholesale Drug­ gists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Core is taken Internally, aot- lng directly upon the blood and mucous sur­ faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottla Sold by aU Druggists. Bound to Have His Fnn. Speaking of football brings to mind a time not many years ago when Yale's athletic conscience was not so tender as at present. On her team were grad­ uates galore. She even went outside of a candidate or two, though none of the imported "tons o' men" finally played at Springfield. Among the surreptitiously acquired material was one true-hearted son of old Erin, over six feet tall, and re­ nowned as a pugilist. His physique was excellent, but somehow he never seemed to get into the plays. Nor was he deficient in courage. The coachers could not understand it until one day he was given the ball to run with. Then some rusher tackled him hard, and in a minute the former pugilist had dropped the ball and was going at the taokler hammer and tongs. "Here, you!" shouted the coachers. "What are you doing there? Play football!" And between the cracks of the blows came back the answer: "Oh, go to the divil, an' lave me do me man!"--Boston Budget. "*-• br.ila, • - • This to onr slaeifoft cair rate am the Phil­ lips- Rock Mwt Tourist Excursloa* froat Chicago to Lorn Angles or San Francisco, via the scenic route and Ogden. Yon can go with Phillips, the feeat of all excursion managers, for he has each party accom­ panied by a special agent who goes the en* tire trip with patrons. These personally conducted excursions leave Chicago twice a week, Tuesday and Thursday. We have also a daily tourist car service. Via our Southern route, through the beau­ tiful Indian Territory and Fort Worth to I*» Angele-j and San Francisco. 1 he tour­ ist car rate via this route, the same. Ap­ ply at Rock Island ticket office, 104 Clark •tract John Sebastian, G. P. A., C, & L & P. Ry., Chlcaga Turkish Superstition*. Among other Turkish sup3rstiti0ns are these: If a pair of scissors are left on a table open, it is a sign of a quarrel. If they fall upon the floor and stick up, it means a visit: and if an apple or other fruit falls from the hand just as you are about to put it in your mouth, it is a sign some one en­ vies you. If a loaf or a piece of bread falls to the floor, it is a sign that some of your relatives are in want of bread in a strange place. To bite the tongue signifies that you are not telling the truth. The little white spots which come under the finger nails means vat- rious things, according to the finger. The right thumb nail means money earned: the left, finding money or a pre:ent. Thefir.-t finger means friends, the next enemies, the third journeys, and the little one fibs. When an eye­ lash falls Off and flies On the cheakj it means a present of a new gown or other article of wearing apparel. Which Will You Be ? A farm renter or a farm owner? It rests with your-elf. Stay where you are and you will be a renter all your life. Move to Nebraska, where Rood land is cheap and cheap land is good, and you can easily be­ come an owner. Write to J. Francis. O. P, and T. A.. Burlington Route. Omaha, Neb, for descriptive pamphlet It's free, and a postal will brlas It to yo#, • "77T AND though mine arms should con­ quer twenty worldB, there's a lean fel­ low beats all conquerors.--Thcmas Dekker. . No MOBI iX^Rnt charm can be found at beauty's shrine than an exquisitely lov°ly complexion such as Universally follows the use of Glenn's fculphur Soup. LOVE in marriairo s^uld be the ac­ complishment of a bemitiful dream, and not, as it too often proves, the end. FITS.--All Fits Stoppefl free tty'lJr. Kline's Ore it Nerve Bestorej-. No Fits after first day's use. Mar- velou» cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Sena to Dr. Kliue. u)l Arch St.. Phil*, l's. of IfMr Ase. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY, DOmil (HMEDY, OF ROHMT, I Has discovered in one of our comae* pasture weeds a remedy that cures evenr kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofuai down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundvoi cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificate* of its value, all within twenty mites «f Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced frdtk the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is wat* ranted when the fight quantity is taken. When the lungs ere affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passiag through them; the same with the Liver 4r Bowels. This is caused by the dqcts being stopped, and always disappears in a wctK after taking,it. Read the label. • If the)stom|ch is foul or bilious It will cause squeanush feelings at first. No change bf diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it* Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed> time. Sold by all Druggists. W": Fresh Air and Get all that's, possible of both," if In need of flesh s t r e n g t h a n d n e r v e force. There's need,too, of of fat-food. Scott's of Cod Liver Oil builds up fleHi and strength quicker than any other preparation known to* sci­ ence. ,a rfo .'4 Scotfs Emulsion is constontiy ef- ftcting Cure of Coluuit^iSot^l ̂ Bronchitis and kindred diteasesf *" ̂ where other methods FAIL. > Prepared by Scott A Bowne. N. Y. All < We Offer You a Remedy 'I^HVhich Insures Safety to Life of Mother and Child. Mothers--^ & "Mothers' Friend" / Robs Confinement of Its Pain, Horror and Ride. jj • " After using one bottle of 'MOTHERS' FRIEND,' I suffered b\it little pain, and did not experience that weakness afterward usual in such cases.--MRS. ANNIE GAGE, Baxter Springs, Kas. : • Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle. " Sold by all Druggists. Book to Mothers mailed free. BRADFIELO REGULATOR CO.. Mb*, U I SALZER'S NORTHERN GROWN SEEDS ARE THE BEST: J9HN A.5ALZER5EED(s• LACROSSE WIS another from liver or kidney disease, another from nervous exhaustion, or prostration, another with " " * this wa' andtheS . _ „ busy doctor,* separate and distract diseases, for which he prescribes his pills and potions, assuming them to be such, when, in reality, then are all only symptoms caused by soma womb disorder. Tne physician, ignorant Of the cause of suffering, encourages his practice until large bills are made. The suffering Satient gets no better, but probably worse j reason of the delay; wrong treatment and consequent complications. A proper medi­ cine, like Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, directed to the cause would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dispelling all those distressing symptoms and Instituti comfort instead of prolonged miser directed to the cause would have entirel; peli msl The lady whose portrait heads this article la Mrs. Ids Coventry, of Huntsville, Logan County, Ohio. She had an experience which wo will permit her to relate.jn her own language. It illustrates the foregoing. She writes: " I tpd ' female weakness* very bad--in bed most of the time, dragging down pains through my back and hips ; no Th -appetite; no ene ["he family physician F HILOH'S CONSUMPTION CUBE is sold on a L'uurantee. It cures Incipient Consump­ tion. It is the best Cough Cure: 25 cents, CO cents and SI. 00. Sn "Colchester" Spading Boot acL In other column. EIGHTEEN- DOLLAB SAFE: we nay freight Address BLOW BA»Co.. Ebai», Iuu «rgy. . . _ was treating me for 'liver complaint'. I did not get any better under that treatment so I thought I would try Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and his 4 Golden Medical Dis­ covery. I felt better before I used one bottle of each. I continued their use until I took six bottles of each. In three months' time I felt so well I did not think it necessary to take any more. In childbirth it does what Dr. Pierce recommends it to do-- lessens the pain and perils to both mother and child and shortens ' labor'. I would like to recommend Dr. Pierce's Extract of Smart- Weed to those who have never tried it; it surely is the best thing for cholera morbus, or pain in the stomach I ever used ; it works like a charm. I try never to be without it." The following is from Mrs. Harriet Hards, of Montpelier,Idaho : "I have enjoyed bet- ^ iiTtiBtHlflBS With Pleroafe Favorite Prescription, far leacor- rhea and uterine debility than I have for sixteen years. 1 am cured of my trouble, and now weigh one hundred and sixty-six pounds, whereas my weight for many years stood at one hundred and tweoty-five poonda With pleasure, I remain" Yours truly^ The following is from Mrs. M. A. M<fiU- llster? of Lim Sock, Jackson Co., Ala: "I was in bad health; age was working upon me, and I had ulceration of the womb ; could not get about. I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and it cured me ;*I felt ten years younger. I have not had any return of my trouble. I am the mother of thirteen children and I am fifty-three years old, have never seen a better woman's friend than your medicine.I have recommended it to my friends here, and it has never failed in any case, so let me thank yon for tbe good it did me." Yours truly, C/M Fbr " worn-out," " run-down," debilitated school teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seam* stresses, general housekeepers, and over­ worked and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the best of all restorative tonics. It is not a " cure-all," but admirably fulfills a singleness of pur­ pose, being a most potent specific for all those chronic weaknesses and diseases pecu­ liar to women. It is a powerful, general as well as uterine, tonic and nervine, and im­ parts vigor and strength to the whole system. It cures weakness of the stomach, indiges­ tion, bloating, nervous prostration, hysteria, The 2-ton Aennotor Steal Truck weighs 175 pounds, hn II iMfc wheels with 2-inch face. When three- of the uvoft tto floor, the other end one is about IW inches from th* goer, flkaB enabling it toswivei easily. The body is 28 imcfees wwl» fey ft* inches long. A bottom board is «&M!V PUT M to ntakt tb* bofc* tom hfkt II Stakes ARE required, narrow boardf canbeptikil puter rail and under the inner one, or, itviifr boards are used, thw will practically make iHl tMtfe making these atakes. long enough and putting in end oea the tame way bulky material may be handled. We are making this offer to show a sample of oar work, V# Want to show how nice a thing we can make, and how niiklt we are in the matter of pnees. This Steel Truck is furnished*1 RS0 cash (2 cents per pound), and 2 copies of aiivertisesMft • ** per conditions named in Ne. 4. This it adv. Ho, §» COLCHESTER" SPADIN6 ist in Mark< BEST IS FIT. _£>' BESi' IN WEAR&et QUALITY. ^ The outer or extends the whol* 1 d >wntotheheel.1 ing the boot in « . >na iu other hard ASK VOCR PKAIJHa FOB THEM, nnd don't putoff Interior iiO.>A Colchester Rubber Co« The Home Treatment FOR THE CURE OF DRUNKENNESS! Nash Afcohol Antidote. No hvpoionttio injection*: may be taken pri' AN IT--NICOTINE < ABI.Ei.-* lor the CUM ot t* habit. One box of IOU doe* the work. Bafs. certain. Pra-e a 1 -OO. t or iiifortDatiOB a< NASH INSTITUTE, - JOUST. ILL. debility and sleeplessness. A Treatise (168 pages, Illustrated), on "Woman and Her Diseases," sent sealed in plain envelope, on receipt of ten^ssiitsitaafflwetage. Address, World's Dispensarjr Medical Association, Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buf­ falo, N. "V*. It contains a vast number of testimonials with half tone, or phototype portraits of their authors »nrf givee the rail SPECIIl IfiENTS WUTEBl Far the Standard Carpet Stntrker ant. Tucker. IT'S A SELLER! No more KettiUK down upon tit* haads and koMi: no more broke a bai'ks or inched IMMI. HI® are ilroppt?d in position :;»!li driven WsttKHrt the MB Davenport ftuptureCure l'k>> only successful and humane core. HM limit tailed. \\ rite any ottlc« or W. R. MVKRfeL IM- Manafer, Anita. Iowa. A6ENTS HIKE SS l Dll Greatest U , ' *ai B1T I" tensi! invented. Ket.nls S5 cis. Jlo ti *os(t m a house. Sample poet paid.five cenU.FORSH.EE & MAKIN 1 m § FREE How I was tomnieteiy cured ot NV- Debility. Vital tfeakiiesx etc.. seut F O. WUXIAVS. Florist. ENGLJSWOO»? MEN or BUYS selling our Mar Specialties, 'lhe Automatic ( h_ 11 BO kCu.,1333 Masonic Tent pits Ch lra(u,Bt & S. It. ConiHmptlve* and paoptol [ who hnre weak lun*8or Astb- I m.*.. should uM#Piso'aCBf* for I [ Consumption. It has eared [ j thoaaaada, it has not injur-1 ed one. It is not bad to take. ' It is the be»i cviitfh sjrr-up. Sold everywhere. M*. C j

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