Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1902)
Tb HirriMta Press-Jam:. O. a WBMMM, rBOTBIBTOB Aiftiaoir, NEBRASKA To ess la human and to lie about It ran tha pessimist is momentarily happy la Ma uahappiness. The string tlad around a man's finger m manly a forget me knot Oh-la should never flirt in public un Ul after tkt; btvt s, stf angi hold n art Ia matrimony one and one makes one, but In dlTorce one from one Waves two. Theee are great days for the rail roads. Tha ferruginous equine never carried great loads. If the beauty of the average man"s mind Isn't more lovely than his fate It is entitled to sympathy. There is no objection to a woman's having a great command of language if aha knows when not to use it Hlat! Hist! Has any Europeon power been talking about the Monroe doctrine behind Its back: lately? Tha pronouncement of a St Louis judge that the hatpin is a legitimate weapon of female defense is supererog atory. "Why do people persist in living so near the deadly Mont Pelee?" asks an exchange. They don't They die by the thousands. They Bay King Edward now has the look and bearing of an old num. This, however, is not remarkable. Edward cut his eye teeth quite a while ago. A girl in Oklahoma won a $50,000 prize in a land lottery, and at once re ceived an offer of marriage, which she accepted. Thus does one lottery beget another. Tha lady who started to clean her gloves with gasoline Is now pondering seriously whether the saving on a pair of 60-cent gloves can be set otT against the loss on a $10,000 building. A bald-headed scientist has figured out that the world will be froze solid in 1,000,000 years. Under Brother Baer's contract with Divine Providence there will still, however, be plenty of an thracite coal, so that the outlook is not ao bad after all. Russia has three different armies. In Europe her men are five years in the active army, thirteen in the reserve, and five years in the second reserve. In Aaia they are aeven years In active service and six in the reserve. In Caucasia they are only three years in the active army and fifteen in the re serve. Not aa eaay aa In thla coun try. The advertising given the Missouri mule In South Africa has brought him into ao great prominence that recently 500 of his brethren left their happy borne in Missouri for Bombay, British India, where they will educate the heathen Hindoo in the art of appearing to work w.hen the weather la not too hot. The true mule can hear the din ner bell fifteen minutes before it rings and It ia often a draw race between him and the colored "pusson" as to which one gets there first. The Hin doo la very quiet and simple In bis tastes, but after he has driven the American mule a few times, he will sigh for a few hours of quiet repose In Nirvana. There ia a vast amount of attltudiniz Ing in die world. The trouble Is that people are conventional in manners that la essential for any tort of ra tional society. But ther are conven tional In thought They seem to fear to lead their own mental life to be frank with themselves. Their ideas are always In evening clothes, with white cravat and patent leather Bhoes. Many persons, for Instance, profess to regard prize-fighting aa a tremendously demoralizing and brutal sport. Tet tbey read accounts of famous fights in de tail. The truth probably la that tbey really don't believe a quarter of what tbey say against pugilism. Tbey say It because they know It la expected of them. Long ago the sceptre passed over from King Cotton to King Corn. Every year the demand for the great Ameri can cereal is expanded by the discov ery of new naea to which it can be put. The New York World ha a com plied a Hat of producta extracted from corn, moat of them discoveries of the last forty years: Bicycle tires, rubber shoes, cornstarch, laundry starch, con fectioners' starch, mucilage, corn oil, "pure" olive oil, filler for oleomargar ine, lager beer, grape angar, glu cose, wall paper paste, gum drops, toilet soap, ink, salad dressing, fancy table syrup, table grits, health foods, popcorn, healing Mire, several patent medicines, British gum, pearl hominy, hulled eon, canned corn, canned soak ed earn, malssna samp, determinated samp, con meal, floor adulterant, pan cake flour, quick mart, brewers' grits, tasks for battleships, pepper adulter ant, aleefeoL bourbon whisky, browsr Mat, (Imw tan, flaked tiomtny, gum tX rnteainsd eon otl, gtataa food, crrr. rvfebor etn of sake. linoleum, albvaiaatds allM Oiler, envelope sticker, amy poncfeoa, robber heeas, hot water bags, eattM nod, gum arable, stamp atkksr. Thai 4a all data. In forty years mora th am will probably ba mora than jdoubled. Besides thla growing deneand taere and mora corn la being exported every yaar. Whan it ia remembered that the araa far earn growing ia lira ltad It la not difficult to aacanat for th unpraradantaa riae In tha price af eon laiida. Three Tittle children ware playing oi one of tha streets of a western city th other day, when along came a girl about their age who was dressed as 1 .n-'jui. i ( cu a party, i r.t rompers aaked her te join In theii sport. , "No," replied the newcomer. "1 might soil my new gown. (Tea, ah aid gown, and waa only 10 her last birthday.) I am dressed for the after noon." Thy three girls, who had been enjoying a game of pues in tht corner, ceased their play and crowded near, eager to examine the white fluffy fa bric, the lace that had been sewed oc by hand and the ribbons used in dec oration. "Mamma bought this at ia New York." and the child mentioned the name of a house famous the world over. "We buy all our dresses there. Mamma wouldn't have me wear any thing that came from any ether estab lishment." The others crowded nearei still and the flush on their cheeks told of envy. "This gown cost $50," Lb child continued, "and I must be very careful for I can't have another firsl best one until fall." Now It's dollar! to doughnuts that little Sally Ann, dressed In a 5-eent-a-yard calico, mix ing mud pie over In a back yard will make a better woman, a fonder ruothei and a more useful member of societj than this pert little miss who tblnki of nothing but her clothing. Sally Am Is learning domesticity even if her school be an Inverted wooden box, bet dishes cracked and discarded pieces oi crockery and the material she kneadi and bakes In the sun, black earth ani water. What ia Mis Socletv learn Ing? How to spend money and. worst than all, how to feel the need of money to satisfy inordinate desires. She learning the terrible lesson of think ing only of herself and how she wit look to others. Her Ideas of life an false and her ambition may prove t cer a curse. The wrecks alona life'i painway are not made from Sally Anns, nut one should not blame littli Miss Society for her thoughts and hei sayings. She is not responsible. It her parents who are at fault and somi day they will regret bitterly bavins sown such aeeds in her mind. Thei have taught their little one to think of herself as a peacock thinks; to strui ahout and call the world'e attentlen U her fine feathers. WARNS OF OVERFLOW. A Device for tee with Hefrigeratoi Gripping Pane. Nearly every housewife knows thi extra work and damage entailed by th overnow of the waste water pan which catcnes me drip from the melting Ici in the refrigerator, and as it Is ai easy matter to forget Co empty thi pan at regular Intervals, this accldenl Is apt to occur several times in a house hold in the course of a summer. It has occurred to two Massaehusetti inventors that it would be a good Idea to introduce a mechanism which would give an alarm. when the receptaclei was nearly full. Tbe device eonsisti of a spring motor, mounted on a bas adapted to clamp on the side of thi refrigerator pan, with a float at thi end of a rod extending out Into thi pan, and a gong to be sounded by tb motor. To put this device Into posltiot for use It is only necessary to clumj it on the side of tbe pan as shown with the float resting on the water. When the latter rises to tbe dangei point It lifts tbe float and trips tbi motor mechanism, which, of course rings the gong for a considers bl length of time, only ceasing Its clat ter when the spring has run down oi the pan Is emptied. The Inventors ari Philip Yon and Louis Laprise, of Nortl Adams, Mass. Food, Drink and a Penny. Not many tourists who have vlsltefi England, even among those who madi a point of visiting out-of-the-way cor Tiers, ever beard of a curious old monas tery that stands back of Twyford, a lit tie town near Southampton It Is a verj old place, with an old and thick stoni wall around It. In this wall there is I wicket gate, and by this gate a monl is always stationed. Tbe monk Is then to halt every traveler that goes by, and having halted him, he gives bim a cut, of ale, a crust of bread and a penny Centuries ago, It seems, some one died and In bis will left to the monastery at endowment that was to ease tbe way ol weary travelers by giving them this re fresbment and a small coin. As long therefore, as the monastery stands a monk will stand by its wicket gate, an rery traveler who passes will be cheer ed with a drink, a bit and a penny. Tha people arc becoming so advaneec that yon occasionally And a man ther days who knows what alls blm bsfon bs aaki tht doctor. "turn." Mid philosophic doctor to by. t fooor antaani" We're on i ALARM FOB HitrKlGF.fi ATOR PA!, It HOW NICKEL8 AND PENNIES GO. Bad Wtather Keeping Penny Sneadcrt Ia Affects the ftuntreaauriea. The United Slates treasury during .he fiscal year which has just ended manufactured 79,611,143 cents and 26V 480.213 nickels. Massachusetts took1 S.OOO.Ono cents, Pennsylvania 4,000,000, Illinois 7.000100 and New York Sfati nearly 10,000,000. These are the greal cent-using States, and stand in th same order as to consumption of nick els. Ten years ago pennies were little used In California and the South, and were unknown things in Nevada, Wyo ming and Arizona. Tp to date Tncli Sam has turned out 1. 100,000,000 cents 340,000.000 nickels, aOO,f0,000 dimes 200,000,000 quarters and l.TO.OOO.OOC half dollars. Somewhere in the world are 119.000.00n big copper peunies What has become of them is a mystery for, barring a few in the hands of col lectors, they have disappeared, no oui knows where. Many yearR ago the government is sued 4.5O0.OOO bronze 2 -cent pieces, anc of these over 3.0OO.O0O are still out standing. The same is true of the nick el 3-cenr pieces, of which nearly 2.OU0, are unaccounted for. Slot machine! have greatly Increased the demand foi cuppers, and so also have the pennj newspapers and the odd prices niad popular in dry goods shops. Cents anc nickels wear out pretty rapidly, be cause they are passing constantly fron hand to hand, and the Immense num bers of them that pour into the trees ury at Washington are carefully sorter" over for the purpose of sorting oui those which are too much damaged tc be fit for further use. The life of a cem is only four or five years. Cents are subject to more accident than any other coins. Being of suet small value little care Is taken of them and that is why the treasury has "to gc on turning out new ones at the rate of 00,000,000 to OO.ooo.ooo a year. At tht treasury they say that the cent Is t. barometer of business conditions. A heavy storm or a sudden coming oi cold weatheranything, in short, thai keeps the penny-spending part of tb population at home ig accurately re fleeted In the falling off of the centf coming to the suhtreasuries for ex change. During periods of dullness cents accumulate at subtreasuries, bul when trade revives they begin to circu late rapidly again. Anybody who wantf cents may get them by sending a check to the superintendent of the mint, whe will ship them at the expense of thf government. London alone reduces to ashes a mil lion cigars a week. Flying fish have been known to Jumj ten feet above the surface of the sea. Large quantities of American con. are called for In the region of Pales tine. Tbe native Indian tribes of Alaski number 29,S3'J, a gain of 4,182 In tei years. Manchester, England, lias more pub lie houses than any other city in tin kingdom. There are Iti.MMiO Britons living li tbe United Kingdom at present who were born in the colonies. An orange tree in full tearing has been known to produce 15,000 oranges; a lemon tree fi.000 fruit. ' Recent lnves:igationn inable New- York City to pulnt to her asphalt par ing as the costliest on earth. The census of 10DO shows that then are 33,107 negroes to every 300.000 whites, compared with 33,575 In 3MKJ. There are no less than 3.2(;2 different species of fish Inhabiting the waters ol America north of the Isthmus of Tan ama. The total value of the manufacture of bricks and tiles In the United Stated In 1900 was $7,3.'r;.871, and of pottery $! 0,708,070. Lieutenant de Clnlrniont, of the Fhil' Ipplue commission, reports the exist ence of an odd white race of people In the Island of Mlnoro. An olive tree yields six pounds of olives when It Is three years old. Al the age of fifty It yields from twenty- two to twenty-six pounds. A mile of wreck-strewn coast In southwestern Norway proves to bn filled with magnetic Iron ore, deflecting tbe compass a wholu degree. All tbe cork used In the world In a year weighs Just over one thousand tons. It comes from France, Ppnln, Portugal, Italy and North Africa. The diodon and the tetxodon, two allied families of tropical fish, popu larly known as globe fish, have the power to float and swim back down ward. Japanese cotton mills have no ad vantages over American mills, despite the fact that the average daily wages for men Is 16 cents and women D'J cents.- Fireflies are sold nightly by peddler In the crowded quarters of Tokio and other Japanese cities. The Injects se;i for three rln apiece, a r!n being equal n value to the twentieth part of a cent. In fasting feats the sect of Jains, In India, is far ahead of all rivals. Fasts of from thirty to forty days are very common, and once a year they are said to abstain from food for seventy -five days. Tbe posts! laws provide that post office boxes shall not be rented to tnln on or persons of unsound minds, and that mail shall not bo placed In boxes so rontsd If the pareata or fMrdlan a a iii in j -aa. r - VUGS? ftharlintx the 'tables. Where It is the custom to keep the lorses and cows in tbe stables at night. ind also for a portion of the day some scpvWlon.a.ui Me .jmaoejf;r snsaeas mtu as ror Keeping out nies. inepisn thown In the illustration has the merit , . , , . , )f being simple as well as effectual, l over ine oiieninz wnn nni wire nri- - tiujc, yiMniijc il en mm it wui not juier- fere with the management of the glass' window from the inside. Then make 1 frame with light strips of lumber of the form shown, and cover It with can vas, or with a strip of unbleached mus lin, bracing it at either comer as shown. This device is readily made ind will ndd greatly to the comfort nf the animals in tbe stable. The A STABLE PHOTECTIO same arrangement could te applied to ihe window spaces of the poultry house snd in such a position It would not be accessary to use the fine wire screen for tbe wire netting of ordinary mesh fould keep out Intruders. Illinois Apple Orchards. Emerson Babcock gives Green's Fruit Grower Information In regard to orcharding In Illinois as follows: An apple orchard syndicate In Clay and Uichlajid Counties has sold the apples jf Its orchards, which aggregate three hundred and twenty acres, for $11,500. This fruit is from young orchards Just ?oming Into bearing. There are one hundred and twenty acres planted with 3,300 Jonathan apple trees. Jonathan Is highly prized for Its hardiness, pro ductiveness and tbe fine quality of Ha fruit Tbe best apple orchards of Illi nois are on the southern border, em bracing seventy-five thousand acres of apple orchards, mostly planted during the past ten or twelve years. This is the first general crop from these orch ards. One thousand acres of apple orchards may be seen near Flora, 111., and tbe trees there are heavily laden with fine fruit this season. Ben Da vis is the variety most largely grown. Tbe problem now is to get enough la borers to harvest the fruit from such a vast acreage of apple orchards, and to secure apple barrels for such big orch ards. Three hundred and thirty car loads of empty apple barrels hare re cently been shipped Into this loculity. and nine large evaporators have been built near Flora, with a capacity for each of one hundred and flfly bush els of fruit per day. A cold storujee bouse, with a capacity of 15,000 bar rels 'of apples, has been bu!h at Flo'a thla year. For Brnshini Frnit. The fruit brusher is a comparative newcomer except In California. The necessity of clean, polished oranges and the expense of brushing by hand brought It Into being there. Now, brushing, which has already been a habit with some packers, Is becoming a rEfiT nm. tin a. tnore necessary on account of tbe wide spread of white fly and other Insects Causing smut It Is not only expensive, but difficult, to get at short notice the pumber of men necessary to hand brush a car of oranges. With a brush er, It Is claimed, one man can 1d the s-ork of several. Florida Agrlcultur t Value of 8mal1 Frnlla. Not all farmers seem to know the falue of email fruits to a family when grown In their own gardens. You com-Bieru-e with strawberries; they continue bout a month. You pick perhaps from tlx to twelve quarts a day. You have them on tbe table. If you ploiise, at breakfast, dinner and tea, and you wont little else except bread and but ter. In one way or another the family consumes about eight quarts a day, tnd while they last no medicines for rdlly ailments are required, as a quart If strawberries dally will generally dia kel all ordinary diseases not perr sa intly In the system. After strawber ries come raspberrlea, and they last Ibout three week. Then we have klackberrlea. the cultivated varieties. Kext currants ripen, and tbey remain intll oarly frapss mature, to, taktnc 1 Si! rHilfS ' half an acre ef land la a asrden can grew small fruits that make country it. j.u.k,f..i .-a . 4k. . piles. Home and Farm. Concentrated Fonda. The real value of a farm Is Its ra paelty te produce. It Is really a store house of raw materials which are man ufactured Into salable products, and may contain a mine of wealth requiring but the labor to bring It to the surface. Kvery pound of ulant food returned to the soil is an investment for the future.' In addition to the gain from the feed- ing stuffs purchased there are cropi' j rfD nitrogen . , , . . , bleb draw upon the, atmoapberav-brnt;b--th--ageney ol mlnnti nrMslIn M .nniiM .r ii 1 ,, ... fh. ... ,l lM roots, arter the crops art' harvested, enriching tbe soil .The nltro- '-"'"umnc puma ... ..,v..i.. h,.j are limited la number, but all nlanta hara the nnwei' . ,,...., -,rhn, .M frm ,v ... mosphere, and from this come, the fa. and starch. The corn plant contaitif large quantities of fat and starch, bul I. ri..i.n i n,i,....i .un. IllllllT, wnilt bran, linseed meal, cottonseed meal and 1 f,pnt applirstinn improVed the. patient, middlings abound Iargely in the min '"'"! in two dsvs he mi well and ant. eral elements. It will, therefore, pat1 wh'n ,h" ,,f"7or r"1'"1 few 4tJt ,,,, r' .1 . . . . . , .... I be indeed surprised. the farmer to feed his corn and foddei J In connection with the concentrated foods mentioned, as he Is sure to gain largely In the manure. Estimating nitro gen at 15 cents per pound, and 13C pounds In a ton of 2,000 pounds, the value of the nitrogen Is $19.50, and at the food also contains about $3.5C worth of potash and phosphoric acid, its real value as n fertilizer is $23. In addition, It also contains about IOC pounds of fat and 500 pounds of starch per ton. This the farmer saves by using it as food, although a portion of thi nitrogen and mineral matter Is appro priated by the animals and sold at a higher price In the forms of milk and meat Philadelphia Kecord. In Place of a Pi to. Not every farmer has a silo or 1 corn shredding machine. They cost too much for the man who has but two or three cows. But he can pick tlio ears from his corn stover and hava the grain ground, and the cob, too, il he so wishes, then have the stovet well cured In the field, and when h takes It to the barn have It cut Into pieces not more than a half Inch long and shorter If possible. Then molisten It with warm water If such Is conven ient to the cow stables and cover It up to steam for twenty four hours at least before feeding. Tut on each cow's ration as much and such grain as her condition calls for, and If xhi does not do as well as she would on ensilage she will do better than on dry corn stover. If obliged to wet It with cold water, It will be better for stand ing forty-eight hours, to germinate a little heat by fermentation. American Cultivator. A Hand Fodder Stack. How beat to stack corn fodder t'. keep and be handiest in getting at when feeding Is often a question given much thought by the farmer. Thi method possesses many advantages that will recommend It above others) Pet two posts twelve or sixteen feel apart where you wish the stack to be. Across from one to the other, four and a half or five feet from the ground, spike a 2 by 4. Bland the foddef against tills with the butts on tho is...,.uu . uif sMiimuT emm roiiiius'i coma nir live. Preparations were together at the top. There should biiinde, a room selected at tbe city hos a space of two or three feet at the bot-'Pllal and they even went so far as to torn. This will give the rat. doe and!f",vr ,nr carriage brought to the door rat an opportunity to keep the stack 10 r"rrj m lrr- know why, clear of mice. This stack will turn ' 'r,utv fn'n'r tft me not to go, and the rain and snow of winter, will keen 1 " ' ""'"'"J r"u""- w 1 -a7 . . . . ' K v readers to grasp every word of the dry and bright and when used will fftiinir,n-. ,V.. It . u. not ne openeo to me weather, as no stalks are left exposed by removing the top.-Farm Journal. Iowa Horse Pairs. At the big sale of range hordes gj Kloux City good prices were obtained The top figure was $00.50, which wan paid for a load of good, heavy, blocky geldings and mares of all colors. Th draft horses ranged from $50 to $fW, general purpose horses from $35 tfli $45.50. yearlings and 2-year-olds from' $12.50 to $20, and sucking colts from $0l to $11. National Stockman. Farm Notea. Kkimmilk for hogs and the big proflv in It is all the talk now. Ohio Is a clover growing State. It li also becoming an alfalfa growing Htate. The market for con use flax fiber li almost unlimited, according to a West ern grower. A receut circular of the United State Department of Agriculture defines tin laws regulating Interstate shipment ol birds and game. The attendant who enters the stabl to milk a cow with a pipe la his mouth' s n,t the proper man to perform that truly. Milking should be regarded a the clcnncrft and most Important work on a i:nlry farm, as milk noi only ab sorbs odors, but Is also quickly af fected by any firrelgn ultance. Hundreds of home are mlnrf .l year luse they are n. given w.,e, when Ihey require It. There may b) regular times for watering, but rulei! camM safely be made to govern the duty on warm days, when the horses perspire freely, they give off from their bodies large quaut t les of moist-' ure. and should bo watered often een If allowed but a small quantity at a time. I The young animal pay. more than the adult becauae It grow, and in- creases rapidly; the younger the anl- mat tbe lower the cost of production.! A pig farrow I In early spring and marketed late In rbe fall will give mi get iriuiu llinu will ODS Sepi through the winter. There is also s great demand, wttb batter prices, fot a small carcass, a weight net exceed lag 1M pounds being prafsirai la aa I A lirarlscd Phratalsav A dyiag patient resteers ttMsk the IBterammien oi sooiie Ch ieie( Nw- Rome waeke iwi Dr. fr a ve pntsbia sad widely kaewa ekrareian, h- lag on C street, was ealle te ten4 a vary rsmplteited ease af Baeanjam. L'pon arriving at tha amine he feaad a man about fnrty jeara ef if, tytag m a proetrated and aeriaaa eeadinea. wvtb hi whole frame daafereualy afeetrd with the painful diseane. He ameeriWtfi for the patient, ktit the man esotiaed to grow wnrse. and Biinday eveatag km wiis found tn be in a very alarming een ilitinn. The knees and elhews aad larger nts were greatly taaamen. aaa ream not he moved. It waa enly with eitreme riimcnlty that the patient eon Id he tarssd in bed. with the aid ef three er feui ner- I" 'II P. I nay wrint il 1 nw rininina w taa W' ainfnl that mesne had to he aeawd to -keep & rem t..peiieatXdy. The doctor taw that si a aeslstaoce -nuld he r ne avail, anrt lan taa saay. lh, memher of the family fellewiag aim to the door, weepinc. Ahaeet ieedV ' - 'TV""?' Zir V Z.iZ.Ym , .1 - j...-.;. ,l. ..!. . n.tMl ' , ... l;. reme'd'v. aad at l"r X U.Xr'-tfc r,.meAj. The first spnliratioa eased ts pntient very much: after few heura they used it nrain. and. wonder of wonders. ... ... - , . . .,:,.. r.,. ...).. Judicious diet and exercise wi'.l frequently Improve a man's oplniou of bis oeichbors. Years of suffering relieved in a night. Itching piles yield at once to the curative properties of Doan'g Ointment. Never fails. At any druu store, 50 cents. In the rural districts of Australia many of the horses wear cowhide shoes. No rhsnre ffr dlnpplntment !f yor iwre Mrs Austin funioui Tsnmkes. Ait frocrrs s-11 It. It Is said that onions eaten raw are ;t preventive of and sometimes a cure for malarial fever. It's enough to make a strong man trenib! to think of a poor sh;id with tlieumatlsni In all his bones. Almost a Miracle. Case No. 4f.7fi3. Mrs. M. Isted, ot J2U7 Strand Street, Galveston, Tex., who Is proprietor of a boarding house it that address, numbering among her (warders a dor.en medlral students, says: "I caught cold during the flood ot Peptetnber. 1000. and It settled In my kidneys. Ilesplte the fart that I tried all kinds of medicine and was under the rare of physicians, the ex rruciarlng twlnses snd dull aching across the small of my hark refused to leave, and trouble with the kidney se cretions began to set in. From then, irdlnary Anglo Saxon fails to describe the annoyance snd suffering I endured. The fearful pain through my body, loss 'if appetite, loss of sleep, consequent loss ef energy, and. finally, an Indica tion of complete dissolution compelled me, from sheer agony and pain, to either lie on the floor snd scream, or forced me into spasms. On such eeca lons my husband called In a physician, whose morphine treatment relieved me temporarily. I grew weaker and thin ner, and so run down physically that nothing was left but skin and bene. AH my friends, acquaintances and neighbors knew about my critical con dition, and on one occasion I was re ported dead and they came te see my corpse. At last the doctors attending me held a consultation and agreed that if I did not undergo an operation McGaund, knowing that my kidneys were the real cause of the entire trou ble, broiifht a box of Doan's Kidney Pills to the house, and requested me to give them a trial. I had taken so mtu h medicine that I was more than discouraged, and had little. If any, faith In any preparation. However, I reasoned If they did not do tne good they could not possibly make me worse, so I began the treatment After the "m nose, 1 reit something dart across "' ,"k" "l",0' "a"1'1,1"- "nrt fr"ra !?n TnZ .1 ""A I''i. JJ,'6 - - - j - , j disappeared, the kidney secretions be came free and natural. At present I rest and sleep well, my appetite Is good, my weight has increased from 11S to 355 pounds, and my flesh Is firm and solid. My friends actually ( marvel at the change In my appear- ancp. Words ;annot express nit own reelings. 1 am not putting It too strong- ly when I say I have been raised from tho dead. I am satisfied that bad It not lieen for Doan's Kidney Pills, taken when they were, I would have been either lying In the Lake View Cemetery, or an Invalid for the balance of my life. I will be only too pleased to give minuter particulars of my case ' , ?"T r,,"" 00 " D"1. ' course. Z V" , ' 'l','. 1 " know w.,.tVo ,r on .4 .t"; " lief." A FREE TRIAL of this great Kid ney medicine which cured Mrs. Isted will be mailed on application to any !'"" 01 ." Lnllea "" Address ailX lg ner box. In gome of the Prussian cemeteries there are open vaults connected with electrical appliances to prevent the , . . . , , b"W ot mVm9 W" maj on' ,0 t,anrc- , FITS SSTiZVuEZZZ KSJETiZn: mlI&u"? mffwl lei. n iy4i,um.i, i..ua , b. h4m, """' r( nrbiaMk,Hiiit JABta kll.LIMOa ft Wui Mai atnet, Tort Cilf j " tbretajk any lb)