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About Hemingford herald. (Hemingford, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1895-190? | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1895)
rw- WWWWMWUMIMII t &' TROLLEY OARS AND PILLS. From tho Evening Notts, Kcwarli, N. 3. lire. Anna Hums, of 833 Plane Street, ixewtirk, N.J, Is r de?ldedly pretty bru nette, twenty-sir years oM. tall, nnd r pleasant convoKMionaUst. On tUe ground tloor of hor residence sho conducts a vrcll ordered candy ntore. When our reporter vUlted her store, ftboin responge to n quet tlon told him n very Interesting story. "Until about two tuoatbs ago," she bo Kan. "I enjoyed tho very best ot health and wuld woik night and day It necessary. Suddenly, and without any apparent cause, 1 began to siffcr from intense pains In my head, lit my limbs and temples. Almost distracted with thta seemingly never ending jmm, i tried cure alter cure, prescription nftor prescription and almost n gallon of tnoiHcfno of all kinds. Nothlngdld me any Rood. In fact 1 became worse The 'knucklesofmy hands soonbecamo cramped and tho puln In my hips became moro and more distressing each day. Business iu tho storo hod to bt attended to, however, and M 1 was obliged, sutlcrlng ns I was, to kcop moro or less on my feet and occasionally I was forced to go out. This was tho ordeal 1 drendod. Kuch tituo I went out 1 trembled when J caino near the car tracks, for uiy p'aln int times was so sovore that I was obliged to stand perfectly 6tlll no matter whoro I was. On one occasion I was t.ciro 1 In this way while I was crossing tho tracks on Market (Street and thero 1 stood perfect ly rigid, unable to move hand or footwhile a trolioy cur caino thundering til otic. Fortunately it was stopped before lttrnok mo, but tho dread of it all lasted es long as my pain, for 1 novcr knew when "crossing 'the tracks, whether 1 would not drop to the (ground in my agony and be crut-hod to doath. My anxiety to get well grew apace 'Mid I had about irlven un ia despair whon 11 saw iu tho Evening Npwsone day. an ad vertisement of Dr. Williams' I'lnk I'ills. Hero was somothlng 1 hadn't tried beforo nnd I lost no time in getting to the nearest drugstore There I paid fifty cents for a box of these truly wonderful, health restor ing pills, liofore I had finished tnkln halt ot tho pills I began to feel relieved: the pains iu my hips gradually disappeared and for the first tltno in many days, I felt as it there was some hope. I continued to take the pills and tho more I took tho better I felt, 1 finished one box, got another, and now having takea only n few of the second fifty centH' worth, I amtroo from all pain and as happy as the day is long. Since I began to take Dr. Williams Pink Pills I have gained thirty poands and now when I cross tho car tracks I don't care if thero are a dozen vehicles near by. It is n great relief, I assure you, and suffering1 hunmntty has a never failing friend in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. I know what I nm talking about. I peak from exper ience." Dr. Williams1 Pink Pills contain, in n con densed form, nil theolements'tiecessary to give now life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. In men they er ect a radical cure in nil cases arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses of whatever nature. Pink Pills aro sold in boxes (never in loose -bulk) at GO cents n box or six boxes for 12,50, and may bo bad ot all druggists, or direct' by mail from Dr. Williams' Alod. Co..Sahnectady, N. Y. Skirts of Actresses. Maggie Mitchell onco told a ques tioning woman that she always wore divided skirts, although at tho time of this conversation tho bifurcated gar ment was scarcely known outside tho world of the stage. Miss Mitchell said that almost lt actresses vorb this pet ticoat because they found that it gave most f redotn -of gait nnd grnco to one's movements. She -ulso said that she had her skirls trimmed with laco and em broidery, put on -wrong sldo out, and that thh was another notion prevalent In "tho profession.'.' "Jlpcause, you bee," she explained, 'iu getting in or out of a carriago or a street car it is tho underside of iho edging that shows, nnd only that." WONDERFUL WHEAT YIELDS. Tho yield ot wnent and other grains In Manitoba nnd .the other western Ca nadian provinces .this year has been phenomenal. Thirty-five millions of bushels of wheat, thirty millions of bushels of oats, six millions of bushels of barley, besides largo quantities of flax, rye, peas, ietc... have been produced in Manitoba Ijy -only 25,000 farmers, some of whom settled on tho prairies a few years ago -withvyery little capital, and other almost totally Inexperienced in and unaccustomed to farm work. This enormous yidld seems almost in credible, but when ono reads of a farm er selling a part of his crop for $17,000 and having 4,000 liushels still on hand, it is easy of belief, and that another farmer, a Mr. Prayn, near Emerson, Manitoba, had 21,000 bushels, and many of his neighbors harvested 10,000 bush els and upwards. A iPortago Plains farmer averaged 53 3-3Ji bushels on, a 40 acro field, and near Necpawa nine acres yielded 600 bushels .an average of CG 2-3 bushels per acre. Another .Held of 1G acres oh ike samo farm yielded 800 bushels, while the 'entire crop of 105 acres turned out 40,000 bushels. A Carman settler was rewarded with 3G, 8G5 bushels off 985 acres an average, of 36 bushels to the aero. ,In oats,one farmer raised 75 bushels lo tho ncre'by measurement, but by weight there were 100 bushels, the grain weighing 48. lbs to the bushel. Of course every farmer has not theso phenomenal exops, but there are countless instances where the wheat yield was 30, 35, 40 nlid more bushels to tho acre. Hoots mnd vegeta bles, too, rivaled the cereals in their prolific yield. Stock is u'lso largely raised, thero being extenslreiranches in Manitoba and tho vast country to the west of it, apd the shipments iluls year have aggregated 45,000 head,o3heep be ing also raised In large numbers. Dairy ing Is being rapidly developed, nnd tho recent establishment of creameries has brought this now country prominently before tho markets of the world tin ac count of tho excellence of Its bntter.anU Cheese. But wheat raising is Manito ba's distinctive feature, the soil being .particularly adapted for tho produc tion of No. 1 hard, unsurpassed bjr amy other grade, and It Is safe to say that there Is not any part of the continent where the yield has been so uniformly largo.and the grndo so high as in ManJ rtoba. ThOibeadlights from the locomotive on the Maine ratlroadc attract the deer from tho forests, and numbers of the animals siro being killed by the en Utoea. Dlftlcnltlra of Authorship. StnuggUnp author "Eldora, can't you keep thai, baby out about two min uter! His yeUs are enough to driro ono wild." Wif e "Xo, I can't. I've pot to fin ish tho dishes nsd knead tho bread and mend Tommy's -clothes. " MrnL'L'lintr author "Well, anvhow. you could mako Johnny and his sis stop their raeket and clone tho windows so thero won't bo so many smells coming in from tho neighbors, and lock the "h"" b,LM"!f n article on 'How to Bo Happy, Though roor.'" Now York Weekly. DAIRY AND POULTRY. INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. Hotr Burossfnl Tanners Operate This Department of (lie FarmA Feir Hints as to the Caro or I.iv Stock and l'outtrj-. HAVE A, LITTLE three-quarter grado Jorsqy that Mr. HIntz offered mo $75 for that does not weigh but a fraction over 800 pounds, and alio gives mo thirty pounds of milk a day, at tho present time. Sho -will tnako on fair dairy teed twelve and three-fourths pounds of butter a week, and sho has raado 'five nnd a half pounds In three days. -As 1 novo Bald before, this Is a question of heredity. This cow comes from n. long lino ot ancestry that means Boradthlng. Let mo give you a little Il lustration of what the meaning of an cestry la. I was in tho veterinary ot- flco of Mr. Qulckfall, in Philadelphia, In 18G5. and ho showed mo a section of bono two inches long, taken from tho hind leg of a thoroughbred English, racing horse. Thefr breed, you know, n'.scends clear from tho Arabian, thou sands of years. Ho had also a 2-Inch scc sectlon between tho fetlock and tho gambril, taken from a. Couustoga draft horso. Tho horse had wolghed 1,900 pounds In his best days. Tho bono of the draft horso was nearly doublo in slzo that of tho racing horso, yet tho bono from tho racing horso weighed tho most. I thought to myself away back In tho days of Mohammed this llttlo bono started, and It had been held In a lino of purity nnd reinforced on either sldo, nnd upbullded and up bullded with tho intelligent Judgment of Intelligent breeders, pursuing a straight, specific line. Tho doctor told mo that that piece ot bono from tho leg of tho racing horso was stronger than tho finest steel that can bo found. Those two pieces In tho hind legs ot the race horno were sufficient to throw him twenty-flvo feet at a Jump, straight along, for a mile, t-7o miles or three miles; and ho says, "I tell you there oro no two pieces ot Btcel In God'a world could stand It." That was breed. Thero was tho hiding of inherited power. W. D. Hoard. A Cow's Feed From Ono Acre Mr. Bancroft of Delaware has demonstrat ed, says the Rural New Yorker, that 1 one aero of his light soli will furnish a year's supply ot food for one cow! A spring crop of crimson clover and winter oats Is put Into tho silo and the ground at onco plowed and pat In corn or cowpcas, which in tur so Into the silo when ripe. After this second crop Is harvested, another crop I crimson clover and oats is started. The ensilage from thH acre will feed one cow a year. During her heavy milk ing season,' two pounds per day ot cot tonseed meal might be profitably add ed, but tho cow could maintain good yield without it. Mr. Bancroft even says that ho doesn't care if one-third of tho crimson clover and oats are "down" so flat that they cannot be easily cut for tho silo, for it will all bo plowed in to make moro corn, This Is tho moBt "intensive" culture of cow feed wo havo yet heard of. Agricultural Prosperity la Iowa. Iowa's Indian summer of 189S is the most glorious of tho scries tor its bright . sunshine Is falling upon a state laden with tho grains, fruits and fata of a pro-1 line year. Prices aro low, very low, but thero Is a vast difference between hav ing prodigious crops to ecU at low prices nnd farmers having nothing t sell and being compelled to buy bay, corn and oata to feed their stock as the farmers of Iowa were compelled to do last year. Thero Is at least $200,000,000 difference In tho condition of Iowa farmers on this year's crops, as com pared with their last year products, and thnt 5200,000,000 will aid In restoring general prosperity, business and labor In Iowa, for the farmers will all bo sell ers instead of buyers, and their pro ducts will bring tho money Into Iowa this year, Instead of their bolng com pelled to send out millions of dollars to buy food for thelrstock, as thoy did last year. Iowa State Register. Waste of Corn Fodder Taking tho estimates of tho department of agri culture as to the area grown to corn and tho per cent of waste of the corn fffd .ler annually In tho United States, It appears that thl3 annual wasto on the rfarms of tho country amounts to over $$500,000,000, Just think of such an enormous waste of one of tho products of a staple crop. Suppose that tho farmers of tho United States wero re quired to put their hands In their pock ets and throw away over 5500,000,000 annually! And yet that Is tho equiv alent of what Is going on respecting noiof tho great staple products of tho farm. Save properly and feed tho corn fodder, and sell tho hay for cash, for It brlnsa .a good price. Indiana Farmer. Dirty Eggs Will Not Ktjep. In laying dewn .eggs for winter uso euro should be tnkon to sco that thoy are perfectly clean. "Vho shell Js porous and tho odors of .tny filth attached to It quickly penetrates to the Interior and begin tho process of tiecomposltton. It Is impos sible to koop eggs many nipntha and havo themractly llko fresh eggs. The evaporation from tho egg robs it of moisture, tnouga tnis is largely pre- ; vented by Immersing' tho egg In lime water. But all water, except thut which ' uas b00n jUBt boiled, contain some nlr, Pckfng egg8 Jn jt wUj heep Ibem for a uort time, and Is tho casfc.t and I .cbeapCBt way for keeping for home use. I l Our Hen Doom Boveral yonrs ago when I built our hen house, 1 thought from what I had read on the subject, together with what llttlo cxpcrlcnco I had hnd, that t house 10x20 feet would bo plenty large enough In which to successfully feed nnd house 100 chickens. Doing some what low financially, 1 did tho work myself, and what I Incited In sclcnco In the mason work, I made up In mortar. Tho outBldo of tho building la elded with pntent siding, tho Inside with Inch patent lath, thus making a doublo wall nnd a warm house. This fall I Intend to plaster it so that the wall can bo purl fled every spring nnd fall with a good coat of whitewash. This la ono ot tho many things that no ono hi tho poultry business can afford to neglect. It not only purifies tho building from con tagious dlsenscs, but It gives tho air a sweot smell which fowls as well as human bolngs enjoy. Tho building is oltunted lengthwlso cast and west for tho purpose of hav ing plenty of windows on tho sunny sldo. Yet, 1 find that there is not suf ficient light earlv In tho morning. It should nnd will havo a window In tho east end. Thero Is no danger ot get ting too much light In a hen house. In tho southwest corner ot the "west end Is a narrow door for cleaning pur poses, and ventilation In tho oxtromo hot weather. In tho middle ot tho north sldo Is tho door for tho fowls nnd tend er. Tho roosts aro suspended In tho west end from tho celling with four clnglo strands of No. 12 wire. This 1 bollove to bo ono of tho best and most economical roosts In use. When clean ing day comes (which Is not as often as It should be at our place) all I havo to do Is to swing them to tho east ond, fasten with a hook, nnd they are en tirely out of tho way. Now, if I had my hen houso to re build, I should make it 10x30 feet In stead of 10x20 feet. This additional 10 feet would mako It accommodato 100 hons tho number I wished to keep Instead of 50. In the cast end on top ot the sill Is a small door 18 inches high and 12 Inches wide, opening Into a Bmall park. This park was Intended to bo an en closure for tho entire flock when I had planted something which camo within range of their wonderful, harrowing toes. In tho spring I am going to build a small house In this park for breeding purposes. I believe It to bo superior to tho old plan ot Individual coops. I consider tho following to bo a suro remedy for hen lice: Arrange a place In tho hen houso where tho fowls must pass through a small opening In ordor to enter. On the threshold ot this opening, tack several thicknesses otold carpet and saturate It with coal oil. They will step on this beforo going to roost and drawing the feet through tho feathers will cxtermlnnto the lice. This may not be of much value to tho alder ones, but there are tho young people who aro settling around us whom 1 hope to keep from making the samo mlstako I did In trying to keep too many fowls for the room. E. P. Brown in Michigan Farmer. Talrylns in Rnmtn. As but few of our readers will 'ovoi havo occasion to indulgo In Russian butter, wo give tho following descrip tion ol tho methods of that country: Those who reside near cities produce some poor "butter and eomc milk for sale, but thoso living remote from mar ket produce no moro than they can consume. Tho oows are fed in winter on oaroo food euch as oat, Parley and rye straw. In summer thoy glvo but Bttlo milk, twelve or fourteen pounds per 'day at most. Tho milk Is dono by stripping with thumb and finger. Tho milk Is set in cellara in earthen crocks, wlilch are so porous that they are very liard to clean, and the milk sours very quickly. To avoid this dif ficulty some of the peasants "keep a number of small frogs in their collars for tie purpose of putting In their milk, their Idea being that theso cold creatures take the heat out of the milk, and they put them in to keep it swoet longer. Th cream 4s dipped oft with wood en spoons and churned iu an earthen pot by stirring with a stick and the butter is worked with tho hands. Gaw1 ChrHe. Dairying to be profitable in bara times must also pay strict attention to butter making, but cheeso making and especially the curing of cheese for the market must be mado a matter of systematic study, and Instead of filling the market with a dish of immature curd, Just entered upon Its first stages of curing, hold that cheeso until it pos sesses tho qualities of cheese and Is lit for human conaumpUQiu It our cheese makers cannot mako a cheese that will keep until It is cured, than let our dairymen pay surh a price for making that shall secure the best cheeso mak ers, and pay them bo well that they shall adopt cheese making as a profes sion, and who shall take prjdo In the fact that they aro skilled workmen, nnd not hold only to cheese making un til something better ofTers. Tho plan muBt be abandoned of employing the boy who drove a milk wagon this year to mako our cheeso next season, Wo must havo better curing houses and apparatus for cheese making, and when we mako n high average quality of cheese, It will be oaten. Ex, Dry Dirt and Leaves. The best work that can bo done for the fowls In tho ! fall is to lay in a supply of loaves and dry dirt under shelter. It Is scratching In tho winter that keeps the hens in best ' lm.lnv nnrwlltlnn nnrl wlinn Hi. Otis,.. I.. L ' ';; ;.nni a nilfl of dirt nnrti.nv ln tho poultry house will afford an op- portunlty for exercise, and jjroatly tend to make tho hens more contented in f confinement. Too many leares cannot bo put away. Thoy will be found very useful, and will also assist lu retaining warmth in the poultry houso by pre venting cold drafts of air Biouu the floor. Farm and J'Jreslde. TIDES SAVE MILLIONS. Bn Work for New York That Costs flat tt more Money. Now York Is blessed In a peculiar way twlco a day by tho rising rind fall ing of tho tide. By cleaning our docka and bHpb, tho tldo Bavcs tho city mil- 1 lions ot dollars every year. It carries away countless tonB of floating rotuso i nnd purifies tho sowago ot thousands ( of plpe3 whoso ojuIb, projecting bo- yond tho wharves, discharge Into tho rlvor and harbor. Low lying seaboard , cities, such na Baltimore, for Instance, are not so fortuunto In this respect na I New York, nnd when ono rcndB of tho j nover-endlng struggle agnlnst refuso In i tho harbors of other cities ho npprfc- I clRles lu a new dogrco ono moro advan tage of tho metropolis. To kcop clean tho water In tho docks requires a big force of men In Baltimore, where oarly overy morning fiquads of men In boats and scows sail around tho harbor, aklnimlng from tho surfneo of tho wa ter tho refuso that hna accumulated In tho twenty-four hours previous. Front five to fifteen carloads ot watermelon and cnntalbuno rinds, pieces ot wood nnd bits of cotton nro gathered dally Just now. Tho Bklmmlng forco goto to work Just boforo sunrlso and finishes Its work beforo tho real traffic along the shoro front begins. Tho men nro urmed with long-handled scoop-neta, with which they gathor every floating thing that Is out of place. It must bo that Baltlmoro Inhabitants make It a point of sitting on tho wharves when they cat watermelons, olso how could fifteen carloads of rinds accumulnto In twenty-four hours! Baltimore's skim ming gangs scoop up, too, considerable refuso that la thrown overboard by steamers and other boats that sail In the harbor. Around Now York's water front refuse Is dumped overboard from boats, ships nnd ocean liners In pro digious quantities. Tho "stuff floats around for n few hours, but after an ebb of tho tldo tho water is clear nnd pure. It Is freBh from tho ocean, for tho fall of tho tldo at New York from tour tq six feet Is bo great that tho wholo body ot water around tho city Is changed twice a day. New York Re corder. Xrnmp Slung?. Tramp slang is another npparont necessity In a jail. A goncral conversa tion -of prisoners would in many In stances bo quite unlntelllglblo to tho uninitiated listener. But it may bo de pended upon that tho boy is only too alort in gathering In ft new phraseolo gy, and It is not long after his en trance into tho Jail until ho Is fluent In his newly acquired lingo ns any pro fessional. Ho learns nil about "bum ming on tho roads," "battering for chewing." "hitting tho Galwny for ipunk," "rushing tho growler for his Jigger," "chewing tho rag," and other eccentricities of languago too numer ous to mention. After becoming pro ficient in this, It is but a step to lenrn the racks of tho trade. Ills tutors toll him about "playing tho light-fingered act," how to work tho "Jimmy"' when prying open a window or door, how to eBcnpe from the reform school If he flhould over bo sent there, how to steal clothes from clothes-lines, how to ploy the "three-card trick," etc. Vpry often he will attempt deceptions boforo ho re gains his freedom. "How Men Become Tramps," by Joslah Flynt, In tho Cen .tury. NOTES OF THE DAY. The Bun Is the only New York paper that does not uso typesetting machines. Nearly 10,000 tons ot tea wero landed in Tacoma from China in one day not long ago. Tho Berlin Academy of Sciences is preparing to Issue a complete edition ot the works of Kant. Tho negro raco has Increased its prop erty in tho state of Georgia 150 per cent in the past ten years. Thero Is in Michigan ono application for divorce to every ton marriages and one divorco to overy twelve. It is a curious fact that tho number of women physicians bus fallen oft tro- mendously within a year or two. A fisherman near Seattle says that lie hauled In 1,900 Balmon with ono cast ot his scino tho other day. It is estimated that some 4,000 dozen eggs wore smashed In a railroad wroclc that occurred at Canterbury, N, II., last wock. Reports from Germany Indicate that electric plows, hoes and potnto diggers will soon bo successfully at work In that country. Tho demand for coon cats in Belfast, Me,, has becomo so brisk thnt cat steal ing has become decidedly annoying to tlio reaidenta there, The British census report says that if all the houses in England wero placed aide by sido thoy would cover a spaco of 450 fiqunrn miles The neason'o apple crop is spt at 00, 25C.0OO barrelH, which is pretty close to a barrel for 'every man, woman and child in the oountry, Old Dan, a famous army mule that has worked for Uncle Sam upwards of thirty years, was shot and cremated at Wlllet'a Point last week. London has Imported torn America during the last fortnight 40.000 tubs of butter. It fetched from 21 to 28 cents a pound over there. A Malay opera troupe Is on Its way from Polynesia to London, where it will perform "Rishl Shn Hlrzan," de scrllwd as n national opera. On account of local opposition tho monument to John Brown, which it ! was ProPMQd to erect at Harper's Per- IT, will not ha built nt present, The cutom-house officers in Now York wero In a good deal of trouble last week appraising n monkey. Duty was finally fixed on a valuation of J7.C7. The headlights from the locomotives on tho Maine railroads tttract tho deer from the forests, and numbers of th? animals aro being killed by the en- i fines. PROTECTS USERS OF "ROYAL." Ilakltic Powder Company Wins Its Case In United Ktnlm Court, ho decision of .ludvro Showaltcr in a recent case thnt carao up beforo him Rusltiinn tho clalnm of the Koynl coin. pnny to tho exclusive uso of tho name "lloynl'' u a trndo mnrk for Its baking powder. Tho special Importance of this decision consists In tho protection which it assures to tho millions of con sumers of Koynl baking powder against inferior and unwholesome compounds. Tho oxccllcnco of this urtlulo has caused it to bo highly esteemed and largely used almost tho world over. ltHhkfh standard of quality having been always maintained, consumers havo cotno to rely Implicitly upon tho "Koyal" brand ns tho most "wholesome and oillclont of any in tho market. Tho cuplblty of other manufacturers Is ex cited by this high reputation and Inrgo demand. Very few ot tho hundreds of baking powders on tho market aro safe to use. If their makers could sell them under the name of iv well known, re putable brand incalculable tlnmngo would bo done to tho publtu health by tho deception. Tho determination of tho Koyal Unking Powder Company to protect tho usurs ot tho Koynl baking powder ngalust Imitators by n rigid prosecution of them makes such imita tions of its brnnd oxtrcmoly rare. Net (jiilto rlUlntr. "I Beo you havo a new organist," sntd the occasional attundnnL "Yes," answered tho medium, "tho other follow got entirely too fresh. Wo called up the spirit of ltrlgham Yonng Inst meeting, and what do yon supposo the Idiot played'.' 'Only Ono Uirl In tho World for Mol " Clnclnnntl Enquirer. A Corcm, Cold on Sons Tiiiioat requires immediate attentlou "brown's llroiichlnl Troches" will invariably give relief. Tho man who loves his neighbor as him self will to Blow about gohis to law. Tlie fpiHIuc iovrr offarKor'sOHiBiirTonln remier It lnnl,ii!fttilo In every liouio. rMoi3u& troubles, folds nnl I'rorjr form of ulstroM) lulil to I1. 'ilio dovil rces to it that a grumbler al ways has something to grumble about. Clft Illiiilvrrc-li ll ml nan It It you want to rcnlli J tlio rumfurt of being without coruj. U Ukqt tacui out lurtcoiljr. l&c, at druiurift . Oood or lad comrnuy Is tho greatest blcfHlntr or crcatest nlaaitu of lite. . FITS -All FlttorpMirrnIrl)r.niInenrnt ItcrTtt ltrstorur. No Pita niter lUu llrnuny'n u, e. lliirvrlouscure. TrratlonnilMrjn,lbotlU'frf tt iliuuu. liiDatoUr.Kliiif,WlAiiUbt.,l'lila.,rn. Oood fortune does not always travel iu a carrlngo. It the llnliy Is Cuttlnp Tcotb. Bemire ami um that old and well-tried remedy, Me. WixiLow'i BooTiiua Brntr fur Children Teethlus On tho day wo havo done no good we have douo much evil. 1 havo found 1'lso'n Curo lor Consump tion an unfailing medicine. K It Lotz, 11105 S,ott Ht., CovliKttou, Ky- Oct. J, 1$'J4. If nil our wishes wero grutlticd how poor wo would be. "Hanson' TXagio Corn Salvo." Warranted to iun or money refunded. Anfc your drufe'gl.t fur It. I'rlco IS cenu. Kill man with the pig pointfl. whisky and ho can glvo Cihi'i Cough. IlnUatn Ittiro,Wt umlbrst. It will break mm CoU iulcfc ertnannnthlnaelsa. Ittiulwaysralinblu, Irylt. Cf YES, TO HE SURE IS TO BE CERTAMf, AS WHEW Jacobs heumatism, VIl The cure la certain, anre. TO MAKE SHRE. HjmiT ATmSrrrT?vn. Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of tho houso of Walter Baker & Co. (established HnrOA. in 1780) has ted many misleading of their name, labels, and wrappers. Waiter Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are used in their manufactures. Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.'s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. Stop Naturally. You Don't Have to Swear 01 coats -ortll CHICAGO. - - a i m J RASftlRFT candy cnthartlo euro constipation. Purely vegetable, amootli nnd UflOWnS I v cusy, sold by druggists ovcrywhuro. guarautoeq to cnit).- OnlV tori. CONSUMPTION FOR Cures Whore All Else Falls. BEST COUCH SYRUP. TAvn-:s noon, usn in timis. hold by druggists. s cts. gltalt "Uoucan. Some say that the hypo phosphites alone are sufficient to prevent and cure consum-. tlon, If taken In time. With out doubt they exert, great good in the beginning stages; they Improve the appetite, pro mote digestion and tone up the nervous system. But they lack the peculiar medicinal properties, and the fat, found in cod-liver oil. The hypo phosphites are valuable and the cod-liver oil is valuable of Cod-liver Oil, with hypo phosphites, contains both of these in the most desirable form. The oil is thor6ighly emulsified ; that Is, partly di gested. Sensitive stomachs can bear an emulsion when the raw oil cannot be retained. As the hypophosphites, the medicinal agents in the oil, and the fat Itself are each good, vhy not have the benefit of all? This combination has stood the test of twenty years and ha3 never been .equalled. SCOTT'S EMULSION h been rndortedbythernedleil profcttion for twenty vein, (AtkyourdotlorJ) TM It beus it l alwys hthUtli -Aw iyt it (form ilwayi mnlhn tbt purttt Jiorwtrhn C&Uliwr Oil a Hpebbatpbittl. Insist on Scott's Emulsion yrtth uide-nurk of nun nd flh. , . Put tip in to tent nj $l.oo tm. Tha miluo mty U enough to cure your cough or help y aur baby WtllB AKItMOTOn CO. docs halt tho world wfudinlll buBinmiL becanso it has reduced lbs cost or wlnUjxnrarto 1 tlnhra Una, it but mtuu branch uouvh, ai)ciBiiptmcusBooiaanci repaint airuuruoor. itcnnanauoei luruisua . wuu? niiicio lor lees money man uttierrt. ll malifj I'uiuplns and Uoarcd, Steel, UMvanlied alter lOomnltttlflii WliHlmllU. TUlluir nnd Ftxnl Ktod TOwprtHteoliinuHaw l'"rame. steal ltorrt Outturn and Feed, Urlnitera. Oil application It will n.'imormo of theso nrilrlra Dial. It will InrtiUli until January Itt at 13 tun tuaal price. It aim make Tanks end Pumtuot alt klnaa. tsend tor cataloged. Factory! 1Kb, Eockwtll aoa miawre Stroll. Ch!ca EAftktft'i - HAIR BALSAM picanirt and btanmvi tha hair. i-ronioiM a . ituunani croain, Haver Folia to lleator uray Cure tealp dlK-uc hair lolling. fllc.nJUlt Orunrlrt OPIUM Mornlilno Habit Cnrod In 1(1 to 20 llT Odnr. Nopay tlllvureMl. DR.J. STEPHfUS, Lobxnon.Ohio. AQEHTS : (a 8.0 A Oi.iiYOO. work Wrltn HILL. &4 Vltlli Ar , Ktradjr Chicago, to tho placing on the market and unscrupulous imitations' malrno the norvfifl Sfcrnnrr. nnrt brlnCTFI hltnlr tho fooHnnra nf VOllth to thn nm. mnturnlw nlr mnV. It rOBtnrnn Inat- THrr-, IOU fflliv train nn pounds In ton dava. GUARANTEED TOBACCO HABIT CURE. Go buv nnrl ti-rr n v.-.. j t-. onlfti "" " w:."" ." , "" "w" UTUJTfflBC ;9kp9Q '- " owu u. uuro or "money ro- fimdod. Bnnlrlaf -nwlfnv. T" s " and sample froo. Addrosa nearest offlco. THE fiTrai lain Bruu MONTREAL CAN NE YORK. "I flrnily bollovo that Plso'a Curo kept me from 1uy.dc quick ConsumjitiiU," Jlra. H. D. DAltLIXO, Beaver Meadow, N. '., Juno 18, 189?, I