Symptoms of Paralysis. Douglas, Neb., May S, 1895. Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. Gentlemen : This is to certify that I am a resident of Douglas, Otoe County, Neb., and am eighty years of age. I have been an almost constant sufferer nearly all my life. Of late years I hare had severe pain in my back and limbs, -with numbness and prickling sensations in the extremities which some physicians pronounced symp toms of paralysis. Last fall, having heard through friends of the virtue of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, I purchased a half dozen boxes direct from ycu and began takiag them according to directions. At this time the action of my heart was givin? me great anxiety. Its pulsations were weak and uncertain, with palpitation and very alarming symptoms upon the lea?t excitement or over-exertion. Dizzi ness and headache were of frequent occur rence. In a very short time after beginning treat ment with the piils 1 began to feel their effect. The numbness became infrequent and lessserere,when locomotion was easier. Trouble from palpitation decreased and I experienced a better condition of gener al health so that I felt twenty years young er. I felt so much better when the fcix boxes were poae that I discontinued treat ment altogether. With the acheut of spring and warm weather, 1 began to feel a return of the old symptoms, to some extent, so purchased another 6ix boxes of your pills from Messrs. C. F. Clark & Co., of Syracuse, Neb., which, no doubt, will have the same good effect the first lot did. Respectfully, Mu3. R. M. Webb. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are now given to the public as an unfailing blood builder and nerve restorer, curing all forms of weakness arising from a watery condition of the blood or shattered nerves. The pills are sold by all dealers, or will be ient post paid on receipt of price 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, by addressing Dr. Williams' Med. Co., Schenectady, N. Y.. turn knd A m-ri-ati frontier Life. Corn has always been closely associ ated with the frontier life of this country, perhaps from the fact that no other cereal is available for use in so many ways. From the time that the kernels beprin to swell, full of their rich milky juice, it is edible, appetizing and nutritive: when fully ripened it may be preserved for years, transfer ring if necessary the prosperity of one abundant season to the relief of suffer ers from crop failure or other destruc tion of supplies in some subsequent year. To the New Engrland boy orgrirl of former generations, whose memory pees lack 16 childhood, how many no table associations are connected with the cornfields and their products! How the Lacks ached and the hands were blistered during- the process of cultiva tion! How frequently and carefully the husks were slightly opened to de termine when the most advanced ears fchould be ready for boiling perchance the only vegetable variation of the monotonous dinner which gave little temptation to the palate, however much of enduring strength it might give to the frame. Of the same class were the "roasting ears," often enjoy ed in the midst of some lonely vigil; and these by judicious selection, could be made available till the harvest. Good Housekeeping. Kate Held in Oenver. Df.xvek, Sept 10. My journey from Chicago was over the Chicago. Iiurling ton & Quincy railroad, one of the best managed systems in the country, I should say. juding by the civility of the employes, the comfort I experi enced, the excellence of its roadbed, and the punctuality of arrival. I ac tually reached Denver ahead of time. The Rurlington Koute is also the best to St. Paul, Minneapolis, Wmaha and Kansas City. LITERARY INDUSTRY. Liocfce is said to have spent over sii year3 in the preparation of h's essay on the "Human Understanding." Charles Lamb would write one of his essays In ar evening, after a day spent at his desk in the East India office. Byron spent the leisure hours of near ly four years in the preparation of the first two cantos of "Childe Harold " Grote is reported to have spent fif teen years in the work of preparing and writing his "History of Greece." Spensr, from first to last, consumed four years of tol tiy steady labcr in the preparation of the "Fairy Queen." Dryden worked irregularly, but con sidered that his daily task ought to comprise from 100 to 400 lines of verse. Douglas Jerrold is said to have de voted but a few houis to the prepa ration of each one of his Caudle lec tures. Mulhall, the great statistician, de voted nearly thirty years to the prep aration of his "Dictionary of Statis tics." Sir Frederick Pollock, who made an address to the law school at Harvard during the commencement, is accused of appearing on the lecture platform wearing a high white hat, a blue shirt, lavender cravat, black frock coat and light trousers. -AMONG THE 0ZAEKS." The Iand or Rig lied Apples, is an attractive and interesting book, handsomely illuetr ted with v.ews of South Missouri eenery, including the fmouaOden fruit farm of 3,000 seres in Howell county. It pertains to fruit raising in that great fruit belt of America, the southern slope of the Ozards, and will prove of great value, no only to fruit grower., but to every farmer ! nd bomeseeker looking for a farm and a home. Mailed free. Addreis, J. E. Lociwood, Kansas City, Mo. A detective who wishes to make a capture works secretly, but a merchant seeking to capture trade cannot work that way. He must let people know what he is after. There are always some things which you can serve a customer at a lower price or In better shape than your com petitors can. Those are the things you -want keep before the public. Versatility is the great desideratum in an advertisement writer. One style palls on us. We get tired of one dish, of one scene, of any one pleasure. Variety is the spice of life and the chie2 attraction In advertisements. CARLISLE'S AXIOMS. THOUGHT HE WOULD KILL THE SILVER CAUSE. Eut Like Roswell G. Horr He Ran Against a Snag Silver - Standard Countries the Most Prosperous From Other Avails. Mr. Carlisle in one of his speeches delivered- himself of five so-called axioms, which the gold press in the east is circulating as something pro found and unanswerable. They are ab follows: 1. There is not a free-coinage coun try in the world to-day that is not on a silver basis. 2. There is not a gold-standard coun try in the world, to-day that does not use silver money along with gold. 3. There is not a Bilver - standard country in the world to-day that uses any gold along with silver. 4. There is not a silver-standard country in the world today that has more than one-third the per capita cir culation that the United States has.. 5. There is not a silver-standard country in the world to-day where the laboring man receives fair pay for his day's work. We will offset these five with six others: 1. There is not one free-coinage country in the world to-day that is not enjoying unexampled prosperity, the only drawback being a foreign debt contracted on a gold basis. 2. There is not a gold-standard, country in the world to-day the prop erty of which has not shrunken in value from 35 to 60 per cent during the past twenty-one years; not one in which there is not unexampled de pression, distress and sorrow. 3. There is not a silver-standard country in the world to-day that has any need of gold money except to set tle foreign balances, and there is not a gold-standard country in all the world to-day that the bulk of all gold is not locked up in the treasury or banks, and the people are suffering from "sound money" asphyxia. 4. There is not a silver-standard country to-day where there are any Idle deposits lying in the banks, all the money being in active circulation, and drawing large interest, and the cir culation per capita of real money is just about what it is in Mexico, nearly all the money of ultimate redemption being hid away In the vaults of the treasury or national banks. 5. There Is not a silver-standard country in the world to-day where the laboring man is not receiving full pay and more work than he ever received before. And there is not a gold coun try in the world to-day where a vast proportion of the people are not idle, and where the wages are above the rates of 1849, except where they have been maintained by the stubborn per sistence of labor unions. 6. There is not a silver-standard country in the world today where the people are not doing better than ever before. And there is not a gold-standard country in the world to-day where the people are not in more distress and suffering more loss and apprehen sion than ever before. Salt Lake City Tribune, Rep. THAT BOYCOTT. Sovereign Xot the First to Taboo Bank Taper. "The American people do not want a 50-cent dollar" is a favorite assertion of the gold standard advocate. "I thank thee, Jew, for teaching me that word." The American people do not want a 50-cent dollar and the great struggle now going on between them and organized greed bears evidence of the fact. They are rapidly discovering, too, what a real "50-cent dollar" is and why they do not want it. In the re cent controversy between the water company in Denver and the citizens many of the latter attempted to tender the company payment for water ser vice, but everyone offering national bank bills was told that such currency was not legal tender. In every case the company refused it and the citizen was forced to exchange the bills for some other kinds of currency. When silver was offered it was not refused. In this way many people, for the first time, understood that national bank bills were not legal tender. Recently in Indianapolis a gentleman tendered the Capitol National bank of that city one of its own bills and asked that he be given gold in exchange. lie was informed that the bank did not give gold in exchange for its notes. Three other banks were tried and each re fused to make the exchange, either for the bank bill or for a hundred dollar greenback, and the man was informed by Mr. Jno. P. Frenzel, president of the Merchants' National bank, that not a bank in Indianapolis would pay out gold in. redemption of any kind of paper money Here then is the real, actual "50-cent dollar," of which we have heard so much. That dollar is the national bank note. That dollar is not legal tender. That dollar is repudiated by its own makers. That dollar will not pay debt unless the creditor chooses to receive it; while the poor, despised rnd much villified silver dollar is a legal tender, and will pay all debts (except those protected by that infam ous clause originated by its enemies, "unless otherwise stipulated in the con tract") owed by the people of the United States. For this reason the people desire it and demand that it shall be furnished them in ample quantity and also de mand that the infamous exception clause be abolished. The people not only "know a good thing when they see it," but they also know a poor thing, and are fast discovering how poor a thing the 50-cent dollar national bank note is, and how good a thing they have when they possess an un limited legal tender silver dollar. BIMETALLIC, EH? Ooeer ItimetaUiBta Are Those Eastern Gold Bugs. New York Special. Charles H. Jones, chairman of the resolution com mittee of the democratic national committee of 1892, sends the following concerning the resolution on gold and silver, about which a controversy has arisen: I was chairman of the com mittee on resolutions and also of the sub-committee that framed the demo cratic platform of 1892. Mr. Patterson's statement of the conflict in the com mittee room, as described in the news papers, is substantially correct. The money plank at first submitted was a straightout bimetallic plank declaring for the free coinage of gold and silver on equal terms. It was discussed seven hours, and repeatedly amended and re cast. Patterson and Senator Daniel of Virginia led the contest for the inser tion of the words "free coinage of sil ver.". Senators Vilas and MacPherson led the fight against the use of these words, but not on the ground that they were opposed to the use of silver. They declared, over and over again that they were just as good bimetallists and just a3 friendly to silver as Patterson and Daniel. They said their objection to the words "free coinage" was simply that they had a special meaning in cer tain parts of the country that would be misleading. Atkins of Tennessee in troduced the compromise resolution that was adopted after being modified. Patterson and Daniel fought it to the end and voted against it when it was put to a vote. I recall the fact made In the final discussion. Senator Vilas read the plank as it now stands to Pat terson, dwelling with strong emphasis on the first clause, and asked Patterson how it differed essentially from his de mand for free coinage. Every member of the sub-committee claimed to be in favor of genuine bimetallism. If Vilas or MacPherson or Bayard had admitted that the resolution could be interpreted to mean gold monometallism it could not have passed the sub-committee or the general committee of the conven tion. All three of these bodies sup posed real bimetallism was being in dorsed when this resolution was adopted. It Is Going Too Fast. Hon. J. C. Sibley was in Washington last Friday en route home from North Carolina. He indignantly denounced the statement that the sentiment for free coinage is dying out. "It is ridic ulous," he said. "Far from dying out, if there is anything the matter with it, it is growing too fast; it is growing faster than we can organize. The peo ple do not need education on the sub ject; they have been educated to make the country overwhelmingly for the free coinage of silver at 16 to 1; but what is needed is organization. I am satisfied that if we could get a vote di rectly on that question, without refer ence to anything else, we could carry both New York and Pennsylvania for free silver by a large majority." Mr. Sibley will make a few speeches in his own state and then go to Kentucky to take part in the gubernatorial fight there. National Watchman. Women's Faith in Mankind. Surely, woman's ingenuity is un equaled. Witness the way she takes care of her key at the summer hotel or boarding house. When a man takes up his abode at such a place he lugs his key around with him, or leaves it at the office, and in almost any event he as likely as not loses it. But woman has discovered a new and sure way of disposing of the article. She doesn't lumber up her pockets with it, neither does she leave it at the office, and rare ly, indeed, does she lose it. Her almost Invariable habit is to thrust it under the strip of matting or carpet covering the entry before her chamber door, where it is supposed to repose in peace and safety. This, too, notwithstanding the fact that the little hump It pro duces in the carpet is by no means in visible to the naked eye. Nor is it with out significance to the average under standing. What is more, there is a similar little hump before each neigh boring bed-room door, so that a glance down the entry reveals a whole double row of such humps. They speak volumes of no't only the ingenuity of woman, but of her sublime faith in hu man nature. An Unappreciated Story. A story, told by an English paper, and claiming the merit of absolute truth, evidences once more the inex orable purity and womanliness of Queen Victoria's character. At Wind sor a party of young princes and prin cesses were chattering with members of the royal household on various mat ters. The Queen was present, but was not noticing them especially, when a heartier laugh than the rest aroused her interest and she asked to be told the fun. Now the laugh had arisen from an anecdote, which was not really risky, but just a little bit so. There was a demur at repeating it to the Queen. Everybody felt slightly uncom fortable. The Queen said again that she and Princess Beatrice would Hke to hear the story. It was" told. The Queen listened, and then said with her in imitable dignity and simplicity: "We are not amused." It is not the example set by its royal head that has given to the English smart set its unenviable reputation in the matter of morals big and little. No matter what else he has done, the preacher has failed when he hasn't moved anybody toward Christ. TRAMP IN MAYOR'S CHAIR. Was Dispensing Them. j A tramp, the most miserable-looking i tramp that could be picked out in a day's travel, played Mayor of New York the other morning, says the New York Sun. His clothing was in tatters and was in danger of falling off. His face wras old, and he was three years away from a bath. Janitor Larkin went into the mayor's office at 6 o'clock in the morning and just missed having a fit when he spied the specimen sitting in the mayor's big chair. As the jani tor came in the tramp stood up and leaned against the desk. "What!" exclaimed Larkin. "Sir?" said the tramp. "What the blazes are you doing here?" demanded Larkin. "I only want a pair of pants," said the tramp with a tremulous voice. "Think this is Baxter street?" de manded Larkin. "Think we run a pants factory? Think this is the head quarters of the Hebrew Pants Makers' Amalgamated Reform Union? Well, it ain't, and how in blazes did you get here?" "I came in through the window," said the tramp softly. "The door was locked." He looked at Larkin and Larkin looked at him. For a moment neither spoke. Then the tramp said: "I un derstand the mayor distributes pants every morning, and that a great crowd gathers to receive them. I merely wanted to be on hand in time, and so I climbed up and came through the window." "Well you'll come out of the door," said Larkin. "Certainly," said the tramp. Larkin held him in the hall until a policeman came and took him to the Oak street station, where he said he was Andrew Bradley and had a home In Brooklyn. Later he was arraigned in the Tombs court and was sent to the workhouse. Nothing in the mayor's of fice had been disturbed. IT MAKES SOME MEN TIRED. Bnt Jennie's Brand New Husband De nied That He Was at All Fattened. They were from some locality up north and on their wedding tour. In taking in the sights of Detroit they boarded a Woodward avenue car for a ride to the terminus and back. As they sat beside each other, her hand in his hand and his straw hat fanning them both, a grumpy old codger on the next seat sneeringly observed: " 'Nother case of love's young dream, I see!" The newly wedded looked around at him, but made no reply, and pretty soon he said: "There ought to be a law against this spooning business! It just makes me tired!" "Oh, it does!" retorted the young man as his cheeks began to redden. "Meb be you never spooned when you was a young man?" "If I did it was not in such a public place!" "What's the place to do with it? Can't everybody tell right off the handle that me'n Jennie are just married?" "I should say they could." "And that we are on our bridle tower?" "Yes." "And that we are Just honey and peaches?" "That's what tires me." "It does, eh? Well, it don't tire us. She dotes on me and I'd die for her, and we are going to kiss and hug and squeeze hands and eat gum-drops as long as our $17 holds out, and you and all the rest of the old mossbacks in this town can lick your chops and go to grass!" And he sat down and put one arm around his turtle dove and hugged her till the grumpy old man came to his corner and dropped off with a grunt of disgust. , NEWSY MORSELS. England has decided to increase the pay of the native Indian soldiers by 64 cents a month. Basrelief memorial medallions of Oliver Wendell Holmes are being worn by Boston people. Saco, Me.., is bragging of a 2,005 pound cow that it declares is the largest one in the world. The Japanese grow dwarf oak and pine trees that are only eighteen inches high when 200 years old. A scholarship has been founded in memory of Jay Gould in the college of the University of New York. The maximum age assigned to the pine is 700 years; to the red beach, 245; to the oak, 410, and to the ash, 145 years. A car containing 5,000 chickens, val ued at $1,400, was shipped from Clay Center, Mo., billed to San Francisco, last week. It is said that more visitors to Mount Auburn cemetery, near Cambridge, tarry at the tomb of Edwin Booth than at any other. Erie will celebrate the one hundredth anniversary of its founding September 10 and 11. A century ago the place was called Presque Isle. A Hartford manufactory has just made a four-ply leather belt 118 feet long and 78 inches wide. The hides of 100 steers were used. Among every 1,000 inhabitants in the United States there is an average of 281 who are under 16; in France there are only 200 such to the 1,000. Rhode Island has some seventy large and small lakes of sufficient size or in terest as to appear by name on the map. Block island has over 300 peat ponds. Paris has given up the idea of in structing its school children in military drill. The municipal council has dis banded the battalions and ordered the guns and equipments to be sold at auction. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report Woman's Improvement Leiroe. An interesting and worthy experi ment has been tried in Minneapolis, during the past two or three years, by tM Woman's Improvement League, of interesting school children in the rais ing of flowerf. Several thousand chil dren every year, in certain school grades, are given flower seeds to plant in their home gardens and lawns, and are encouraged by prizes to enter into competition in flower production. Last week the president of the league visit ed the fifty city schools and awarded the prizes voted upon by a committee of inspectors and judges. The schools were gaily decorated with blossoms grown by the children. The seeds are contributed each year by prominent seed firms, members of congress and public-spirited citizens. The flower mission has awakened a widespread in terest among the children and encour aged in them a love for the beautiful and habits of industry which are likely to endure. How's ThUl We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Tatarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be lieve him perfectly honorable In all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WALDING, KIXNAN & MARVIN. Wholesale Druggists. Tol?3o. Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internal ly, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testi monials sent free. Price. 75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Hall's Family Pills. S5c Good Use for Cheap Oats. National Stockman: There is a great deal of complaint about the low prices for oats, which are now in some parts of the country as cheap as hay. Good prices for this cereal would mean much this year to many, as it is about the only cash crop to rely on in the absence of a wheat crop. But it may be that in the long run the cheapness of oats will prove something of a blessing in dis guise. There will be a great tempta tion this year to throw in the corn at a lively rate. Corn, while the best fat tening grain on earth, is not a well balanced feed, and the cheap oats may be used to great advantage in the way of a better balanced ration. This ap plies especially to young stock, which, as a rule, get more corn and less oats than is good for it. That Joyful Feeling With the exhilarating sense of renewed health and strength and internal clean liness which follows the use of Syrup of Fig's is unknown to the few who have not progressed beyond the old time medicines and the cheap substitutes sometimes offered but never accepted by the well Informed. Printing Names on Fruit. The rosy cheek of an apple is on the sunny side; the colorless apple grows in the leafy shade. Advantage may be taken of this to have a pleasant sur prise for children. A piece of stiff pa per placed around the apple in the full sun will shade it, and if the "Mary" or "Bobbie"' is cut in the paper so that the sun can color the apple through these stenciled spaces the little one can gather the apple for itself with the name printed on the fruit by nature it self. Median's Monthly. There Is pleasure and profit and no small sat ist notion in atati.'ft troublesome and fainiul ills by using factor's Uiuiter 'ionic. Self-jtossesslon is another name for self forgetf illness. That man is a stranger to himself who reads no books. A mote in the eye will put the whole world out of joint. It Is so easy to remove Corns with Hindeieorns tuat e win der so many will endure ihem. tie Hin.lercurus and sua bow nicoly it takes them off. "What makes lit dreary is want of motive. Hosts of people go to work in J the wrong way to cure a when St. Jacobs Oil STEtL WEB PICKET FENC. Also CAKLf.lt POIXTRV. UAKItKX ASU KAltUIT IKSfK. We manufacture a complete iine of Smooth Wire FeuoiiK and guarantee every articls to he a tented. If juu consider quality we can eare you money. Catslotue f r-e. De Kalb Fence EC ttthio " Catk BPRUfa, Ga May 21, 1894. My baby was a living: skeleton. The doctors said he was dying: of Maras mus, Indigestion, etc. The various foods I tried seemed to keep him alive, but did not strengthen or fatten him. At thirteen months old he weighed exactly what he did at birth seven pounds. I btgan using Scorr's Emulsion," some times putting a few drops in his bottle, then again feeding it with a spoon; then again by the absorption method of rubbinjij it into his body. The effect was mar velous. Baby began to stouten and fatten, and became a beautiful dimpled boy, a wonder to all. Scott's Emulsion supplied the one thing needful. Mrs. Kennom Wn.r.iAata.' Scott9s Emulsion is especially useful for sickly, delicate children when their other food fails to nourish them. It supplies in a concentrated, easily digestible form, just the .nourishment they need to build them up and give them health and strength. It is Cod-liver Oil made palatable and easy to assimilate, combined with the Hypophosphites, both of wliich are most remarkable nutrients. Don't be persuaded to accept a substitute Scott & Bowne, New York. AH Druggists. 50c. and SI. -j q no A Glow Worm Cavern. The greatest wonder of the antipodes is the celebrated glow-worm cavern, discovered in 18:1 in the heart of the Tasmanian wilderness. The cavern, or caverns (there seems to be a series of such caverns in the vicinity, each separate and distinct, are situated near the town of Southport, Tasmania, in a limestone bluff, about four miles from Idaj- bay. The appearance of the main cavern is that of an underground river, the entire floor of the subterranean passage being covered with water about a foot and a half in depth. These wonderful Tasmanian caves are similar to all caverns found in limestone form ation, with the exception that their roofs and sides literally shine with tl.e light emitted by the millions of glow worms which inhabit them. Coe'a Cough Balsam Is the oldest and best. It will break up a, Cold quick er tdan anything else. It Is always roiiaWe. Try it All love has something oZ Llindness in it. I dui i lib iove oi money e?eciajy. ! If the Baby is Cutting Teem. . B sure and use that old and -well-tried remedy, Ma. Wutslow's Boothiso Strvt for Childrea Teefahine- Ignorance is le:s removed irom the trutL j than j rejudiie. I'iso's Cure for Consumption has saved ; me many a doctor's bill. S. F. IJARin, I Hopkins Plat e, liaitiniore, Jld., All that is human niut retrograde if it do not advance ' FITS All Fits stopped frpphy Ir. Kline's Oret Uerve Kestorer. So i itsalt-r t ti iimi ,iy u I 1.arv-louures. Treatiseaml S2irial tiottlrr- t Uteres, beua toir. K.liae!ol How to IJeKtroy Household lVstn- i The most satisfactory way to tiel j with moths, bed burrs or other house hold pests is to fumigate with sulphur, the ordinary powder will Jo, but sul phur candles are better, an l can le procured from any druggist- Put the articles you wish to fumigate in a small, close room, taking care to re move all silver or growing plants, as it will tarnish the one and kill the other; place your lighted candle in a kettle, and have the room closed for several hours. All animal life will be des troyed. "Hanson's Magic Corn Salve." Warranted to cure or money refunded. Ak yen drBffit for it. 1'rlce 15 cent. God gave every bird its food, i-ut he cces not throw it into the nest Billiard taUe. hef-ond-hani, for a cheap. Apply to or address. H. C. Akiv, 11 tS. 1-th St., Omaha, Nei. This is the very perfection of a man, tc find out his own iniierleotioiis. The Greatest fled ical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDIGALJMSCOVERY DONALD KENNEDY, CF R0XBU3Y, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures even kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred tertificates of its value, all within twenty miles f Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are arTected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through thenv, the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it wi l cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Est the best you ca.i get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. ss? In. TT WW) as t CABLED FIELD AND HOG FENit. Co, 121 High Street. DE KALB, ILL.