The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, April 15, 1896, Image 3
Profits Id TVhalin?.
A Dundee whaler, the Active, which
caught nine whales, yielding four and
a half tons of bone, on the Greenland
grounde, cleared $80,000 by the trip,
which gave 360 per cent, dividends,
[the largest profit made in the business '
! in Dundee in thirty years. "Whaleibone
is worth $10,000 a ton in England.
' There are no fewer than 521 foreign
doctors GRtablifched in Paris, more than
a sixth of all the practicing physiJ
cians.
Spring i
Medicine j
Your blood in Spring is almost certain to ,
be full of impurities?the accumulation
of the winter months. Bad venti.'ation 1
of sleeping rooms, impure air in dwell- ^
inf,s, factories and shops, overeating, f
heavy, improper foods, failure of the
kidneys and liver properly to do extra
work thus thrust upon them, are the *
prime causes of this condition. It is
0
of the utmost importance that you
Purify
YourBlood s
c
llow, as when warmer weather comes and
the tonio effect of cold bracing air is .
gone, your weak, thin, impure blood
will not furnish necessary strength.
That tired feeling, loss of appetite, will
open the way for serious disease, ruined ^
health, or breaking out of humors and
Impurities. To make pure, rich, red
/ blood Hood's Snrsaparilla stands un- v
?- ' equalled. Thousands testify to its ^
I merits. Millions take it as their
I cspnriK Jieaiciuo. uw xxuuu o, u?ouju
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
Is the OneTrae Blood Purifier. All druggists. SI
lYejMivl only by C. L Hood & Co., Lowell, Haas.
DSIIm are the only pills to take
iBIPOiy S rillS with Hood'8 Sarsaparilla.
A Large Tunnel.
' The largest tunnel ever bu\lt?the
nnderwater seotion of the Blackball
.tonnel, under the Thames?has just
been finished. It is twenty-seven feet
in diameter and one mile in length
and connects Poplar on the north side
jgf the river with Greenwich on the
Bonth. Nearly 4000 feet of this tun
eel had to be driven by compressed
?jx. The accuracy of the survey and
the danger of the work may be imagined
from the statement of the en^
gtneers that while driving under the river
bed, there were, at one time,but
five feet and two inches of earth be^twgen
the tcp of the tunnel and the
Vater. So great was the danger of the
jrater bursting through that largo
Quantities of clay were dumped into
ihg rjjer over the thinnest spots.?
Detroit rree rre6S.
v WHAT HEADACHE IS.
?
i THE DANGER-SIGNAL THAT NATURE
I GIYES TO WOMEN.
I \
F 1
' It Signifies That Serious Female Trouble
Is imminent.
Most female diseases manifest their
presence by a headache. t
When a dull heavy ache in the head i
Is accompanied by disordered stomach, J
bad taste in the mouth, dull (
eyes, pains i? back and 1
i gToins, IJ tude, nervous- 8
cess, despon dency and ir- (
fco locate thfc
dow that the s| ^?P
serious womb 11
trouble is imminent.
1 Don't let this fearful disease 'get \
you in its power. If jou are uncertain, 1
write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass.,
giving full symptoms. Your letter will
be read, act.. . upon and answered by
one of your own sex, and without
charge.
Note Mrs. Snyder's letter to Mrs.
Pinkham.
" Before taking your remedies, day
after day I would read the testimonials
ot jv men who had been cured by tha
us? . your Vegetable Compound.
" At last I decided to write and tell
you my condition.
"I had been examined by physicians
who told me that my womb was
very large and prolapsed, and also
said there was a growth on the
Inside of the womb that must be cut
out; menstruations were so painful
that I suffered for three days of every
month, and it was impossible
to tret any e&L*. rest. For two
months I used Lydia .
E. I'ink ham's Veg-?
etable /r Compound,
f/vi g^g^^BIoQd Puri?
f*er an(i
////fill1V Sana hive
Mf ////l| \x Wash, and
// ///ft now 1 arD
If \\IMV ^"??S5
V I M \ suffered nine
W \ \ ?-=^7 years, thinking
there was no ,
cure for me, and it only (
took five bottles of your remedies to ,
cure me."?Mrs. L. Ssvdeb. Trenton \
JUD^ -T. 1
N Y N U?14 3
*? 1
T*UURES WHERE ALL ELSE MILS- Ca I ;
|m Best Cough Sjrup. Tastes Oood. Use J
Lr io time. Sold by druggists. ,
' !
TRIM TOILETTES
THE LATEST DECREES FF
THE COURT OF FASHIO!
k Blending of the Norfolk "N
With the Ripple Basque Tha
is a Striking Design?
A Norfolk Basque.
?ORDORE brown and i
mixed tweed suiting
6howed a yellow vein i
weave is chosen for th<
oming waist matching the f
rhich is depicted in the first two
imn cut, a design by May Man
.'he waist in Norfolk stvle has gi
,ated box plaits applied in froit
>ack, the fashionable ripple bas
oined at the waist line being stifle
rith an interlining and faced i
mttercup tafleta. Small gilt but
n groups of three decorate the ce
>lait in front, the points of col
>elt and caff bandp, which are
aced with satin. Single bust da
inder-arm and 6ide-back gores
each to the shoulders, with a cm
entre seam, perform the glove fit
djustment. The box plaits are n
eparately, and can be applied 1
Dvisible stitches or machine stitc!
iear each edge, if bo preferred.
,eck is finished with a close fit
tanding collar, the right end of wi
3 pointed and laps over the left.
rnnninrr eleptrAQ am eharmprl with
~ n
;le seamB in leg-o'-mutton style,
re of fashionable, but not exagger
nllness. They are gathered at the
ver comfortable two-seamed lini
nd finished with pointed banci
latch the collar. A belt of the
erial pointed at the overlapping
ncircles the waist, which can
mitted in favor of a narrow gilt
?ith buckle, now the vogue to ^
rith these waists.
The quantity of material 44 im
(
/
LADIES' NORFOLK 1
vide required to make a 36-inch 1
neasure is 4 yards.
BELTS AND COLLARS.
There are one or two distinctive
ures in this season's fashions tha
lot to be passed over lightly. (
ess opservers 01 lueuew uuaniuite
>n exhibition say that there is
ittle change in styles since last y
tnd that with a ^*lle furbishm
>ld gowns will pas6 muster, but
ire sadly mistaken, iv} the verj
ails that they have not noticec
he ones that give hi chic and
shed look to the go\u/s this sprin
The belt and the collar are
;alient points to be noticed, ar
;eems as though France had run
n the colors and shapes. Not
natches, and it is hard to becom
sustomed to the violent contrast
ipite of the training we have been
hrough lately with the flowered
Persian patterned silks. A blue
vhite silk, dull turquoise blue, 1
jrass-green belt of broad ril
;wietcd around the waist, and also
hrough eyelet holes in the shirrin
he skirt. The same green ribb
un through shirring on the waist,
here is a band of it around the c
>ut there partly hidden by the ta
vhite lace which fall over it at
)ack.
The collars on ail the new gown
iut very high at the back; in
lave a ruche; outside, tabs of 1
md surrounding the neck, a rib
U1 these combined must needs i
ather too hot a fashion for mid
ner, but for the present, at all cvi
nust be worn.
Girdles of satin ribbon, pointed
md front, are greatly in l'avor, ai
lew fad is to have email rhine:
jutt^ns both in front ami back,
:o hold down the folds of the rib
girdle of green satin put on a
;red heliotrope s'.ik has bands of
ow white gros-g.-ain ribiion sewe
t, while a plain purple stock fin
;he waist at the neck.?Har
Bazar.
NORFOLK BASQUE, WITH VF.ST.
Gray covert suiting and f
checked vesting are stylishly ui
in this basque that matcnes mo s
ind is plainly completed with stit
;dges in tailor style. The sin
;ronts are shaped with double
forts, aud close in centre with s
rilt buttons and buttonholes,
standing collar finishes the neek.
jacket fronts and back hive yra.k
oox plaits laid on uniler deep ;
facings that are stiched on their 1
;tlges. A coat revers collar ext
an the front a little below the yo
shapely poinied outline. The ba
extends to fashionable length b
lip waist line, the stams beinir S!)
to ^ive the stylish rippled effect
oarrowbelt with pointed ends is'
it the waist line, large buttons 1
ing the ends at each jacket front,
stylish gigot sleeves are of the
ionable medium size, adjusted
?oatsTjaped linings, the fullness I
lrran ;e*d in plaits ut tus top, and
close-fitting wrists completed witb
stitching. To finish properly, press
all plaits, seams and free edges on the
i()M I wrong side, laying a damp cloth beS*.
tween the iron and material. Covert
and broadcloth, mohair, cheviot,
T - tweed, serge, homespun and all mixed
t cloths will develop stylishly by the
rved
ting NORFOLK BASQUE, WITH VEST.
iade "
with ^ode, the vest being of the same or
aing contrasting fabric.
The The quantity of material 44 inches
ting wide required to make this basque for
bich a lady having a 36-inch bust measure
The is 3* yards.
sin
and giels' dress.
ated Grass linen trimmed with white
top embroidery and insertion made this
ngs, attractive looking dress, that can be
s to finished withont sleeves and yoke, to
ma- wear with a guimpe, a3 shown in the
end back view. The 6tylieh arrangement
be is made over a plain short body lining
belt that closes in centre back. Tne full
vear skirt portions join in under-arm and
very short shoulder seams, being
? "? 1 - L iL . X , i. ~
eaes j 6napea ana gamereu iu iut> tup tu
SVAJST WITH RIPPLE BASQUE.
? I /> l 11. . 1 * _ lli * 0.1
jusn coniorm 10 me lower ouuino 01 mt>
pointed yoke, made from all-over embroidery.
A standing collar edged
with narrow lace finishes the neck.
, fea. Broad bretelles curved in pointed outt
ftre line- are handsomely edged with a frill
3are- embroidery headed with a band ol
now insertion. The full bishop sleeves are
very gathered at top and bottom into round
ear> cuff bands at the wrists, that are fing
Up ished with narrow lace edgingto match
they collar. A band of insertion tops the
j ,je. deep hem at the foot of the skirt.
1 are Stylish little frocks can be thus develfin_
oped from batiste, lawn, pique, dimity,
gt duck, gingham or other wash fabrics,
the daintily decorated with lace or ernid
it broidery beiug very fashionable,
riot Serge, challie, cashmere or other
hing woolen fabrics will unite with silk or
6M* ??? ? ?? ?
bon.
nake -.irln' dress.
sum
ente, velvet in this style, any preferred garniture
being used for decoration.
back The quantity of material 3G inches
ad a wide required to make this dress for a
itone child six years of age is 3i yards.
as if
bon.
How- A tendency toward bright colors.
nar- Everywhere in fashion's domain the
id on tendency is still towards bright coiors
ishes 1 and striking combinations, both in
per's I dress and millinery. Red, fawn,
, mahogany, green and gold, for example,
are blended iu one spring costume.
Vests und waistcoats are very
anc this season, and bright soft-texjited
ture^ cloth is very frequently used in
}jjrj their making inst.ad of velvet or
ched ! '?raca<7e, and when covered with braidooth
| P,ll'tly hidden by silk and bead
bust , "ppliques, or banned perpendicularly
small v,^h spangled gimp, it proves most
\ effective.
The
lated svn-riioN o? bea-ty.
yoke . A clever girl has fansformed a '
ower brown dress that was black and severe
;ends into a pretty afternoon dress by using
ke in I a little green velvet and lace. The
>sque velvet was cut into a large pointed
elow | collar and pointed cape. Two bands
rung I were put on the sides of a lining some
A I six inches wide and a bnnd of inserworn
j tion stitched with iace iiud two pieces
sold- of wide lace gathered under The capes
The ; to fall over tne velvet bands. The
fash- whole thing is adjustable, and can be
over : worn with any other dress. Of course,
jeing ! the necessary thing to begin with 7.3 u
the i good dress with fresh stifl sleeves.
. *. .. . :v. .1 ^ ivV
AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
FEEDING THE FIRST MILK TO A COW.
It is taking wholly unnecessary
trouble to give the first milking of a
newly calved cow to the cow. This
Bhould be given to the calf, for which
nature intended it, not only as the
needed food, but as needed medicine
to clear the bowels of the accumulated
matter at the time. It is depriving the
calf of its proper nourishment and
throwing it away on the cow, who has
no use whatever for it. Any decently
mannered cow will resent such a meal
as this. A good drink of nice sweetened
oatmeal gruel will be more deeirable
for her. ?New York Times.
MANURING FOR BOOTS.
Roots require a large amount of
available nitrogen, but it is never advisable
to plow under large quantities
of stable manure where they are to be
grown. This makea the soil too dry
for the best growth, and it also fur
nisnes most 01 tne nitrogen in tne nottest
weather when the roots need it
least. Turnips grow hollcw and pithy
when manured with Btable manure. It
is also likely to breed worms, which
will attack the roots and make them
worthless for marketing. Soluble
commercial manures that will stimulate
early growth will pay. Later in
the season the Boil, if fairly rich, will
develop enough fertility without manure.
?American Cultivator.
SPRING CARE OF LAWNS.
In many sections of the conntry it
is customary to cover the lawns which
surround the dwelling houses with
stable mnnure, with the view that the
6pring rains may wash the fertility
contained in it into the soil. While
this process tends to enrich the lawn,
ii at the same time makes it very un-i
-l.il-. *v> A r? r?
bi^UUJ itUU uujcunuuauio 1U mauj
ways, as the manure generally brings
many weed eeeds in the lawn, and unlesK
it is very fine,it madesthe growth
of the grass uneven. For small lawns,
especially, a high grade complete
chemical fertilizer prepared for lawns i
is far preferable, and produces an immediate
effect. If it is not obtainable,
put on ulfleached wood ashes and fine
bonemeaL?New England Homestead.
WHITE FOWLS POPULAR.
4
White fowls, especially those for
table use, are becoming more popular
than ever before. Those most desired
are White Plymouth Rocks and Wyandottes,
because they dress beautifully.
The skin is golden butter color, and :
to a particular buyer of table fowls i
Vilu -id r\rt a r\f 4"V?q rloai A nAlfltfl "in A. I
table fowl. In Massachusetts a breeder :
of poultry (especially these two varieties)
keeps 20U0 of each kind on two
separate farms with great success,
keeping them pure and breeding them .
to perfection either for the table or
exhibition points. If you want fowls
for table purposes you cannot select 1
better than White Plymouth Rocks
and Wyandottes. They will fill every i
requirement either for the town
breeder or for the farmer. They are
also considered good layers, but are
not bred so largely for egg production
as they are for general table use.
They are pretty fowls on a grassy
lawn; and with the crowing of the
males and singing of a lot of lively
pullets no better music could be desired
about a rural home.?New York
Independent.
SOWING GRAIN FOR GREEN MANURE.
It is sometimes the practice of
farmers when plowing a garden to seed
with spring grain, either oats or
barley, the purts that are needed for
planting three or four weeks later. By
this time the grain will make a growth
of four or five inches. It will not be
worth much as a fertilizer, but being
full of sap the leaves will decay in the
soil, making it warmer than it would i
if nothing were to be plowed under.
When this policy is tried peas should
be substituted for oats or barlev as ,
the green manure. The pea leaf is ^
broader and the pea being larger will
make a bigger growth than the smaller
grain. Besides, pea vines are richer
in nitrogen than either oats or barley,
and, therefore, add more to 6oil .
fertility. It is doubtful if oats or
barley return anything to the soil except
what they have taken from it.
Pea roots have the power of decomposing
air in the 6oil and using its
nitrogen, though this is not done un
til the pea vine and root are weiJ advanced
in growth. If grain is sown
for green manure some fertilizer
should go with it. It will produce a
better effect than if saved until the
later plowing, when quite likely there
will not be sufficient rains to dissolve
it.
60TTP. MILK A3 FEED.
It is well known that many people
with whom fresh milk disagree, because
it is too hard to digest, can take
sour milk or buttermilk which is 6our
and suffer no ill effect from it. The
alight sourins', if not carried too far,
is an aid to digestion rather than the
reverse. You observed that so soon as
you began feeding calves with sour
milk instead of new fresh milk thev
were attacked with scours, and often
so badly that it took months for them
to reco ;er. The trouble in this case
vas not that the milk was sour, but
that it bad become cold, and, beiug
4.1.y> in Inrrra niifin.
lUlvL'U ililU LUU ni/viimvu iu a..i0w
tities, nature took the only meaus poseihle
to get riil of it. The digestion
of calves is more often ruined the first
year of tlieir life by feeding cold rnillc
than in any other way. Herein is the
great ndvantugo in feeding some kind
of porridge mixed with the tour milk.
The 2>orridgo is always cooked, and,
being put in the milk while hot it
jv.akes the whole of tlie temperature |
of the blooil <>r of new milk. Calves
raised in this way keep their digestion
good and make excellent cows.
The value of a cow as a milk and butter
producer is more dependent on her
ability to digest a large amount of
food than on anything else. Not even
X'jod breeding will make a good cow
ii it has poor digestive organs.
xnr: worth of fertilizers.
In buying fertilizers you got about
\7iict you pay for. It" you think a $2'J
phosphate is goiiijj to yiehl as much
plant food, or proJuco as good results,
hs a high-grade fertilizer costing from
m
830 to $10 per ton, yen will be very
much mistaken. The higher the grade
the more concentrated is the fertilizer,
Ihe more actual plant food you get for
a dollar, and the less of other unimportant
elements you obtain. The
source of your supply, the time and
manner of buying and the quantity
you buy, are the main conditions influencing
the cost per pound of plant
lood in standard fertilizers or fertilizing
materials. If you buy only a 6mall
lot from a local agent, and expect him
to wait six or twelve months for his
pay, you can rest assured that you will
have to make good the expense of this
method of doing business in the price
you pay him. On the other hand, if
you should join with a lot of your
neighbors, put up the spot cash and
invite bids from different manufacturers
and dealers, you would get
your fertilizer at the lowest price consistent
with quality. The earlier you
buy the better terms you can make,
for manufacturers can afford to do better
by a purchaser this month than
At-?? ~ Vi A* /?V? 4 r\t ortn n am
lUtJJ Uttu ait mo uci^ui ui iuo ocacuui I
?New England Homestead.
MAKING BTJTTEB WITHOUT HAY.
The scarcity of hay complicates the
feeding problem, especially for those
engaged in dairying, writes William
West, of Illinois. I have eighteen cattle
and five horses. All the rough
feed I possessed last fall was straw
from ten acres of short oats, and tea
acres of shredded corn fodder. The
problem wts what to feed the cows so
as to get an average of one pound of
butter per day from each cow milked,
as I needed that 'amount to supply
customers. I began feeding corn fodder
as I would hay, adding a liberal
ration of corn, bran and corn-and-oob
meal. This method, however, consumed
the fodder too rapidly, much of
it being wasted, and the milk yield
was not satisfactory. I then changed
mvjmethod to the following, with much
better results: Six bushels of mixed
straw and fodder are slightly moistened
with salt water. To this is added
one bushel of bran, one-half bushel of
corn meal, six quarts of oil cake meal,
and the whole mixed with a fork. This
is fed to nine cows each morning, and
it x
liUC bULUH UU1UUUI lo |JiTCU on uigun j
The ration' gives better results than
any mixture of these feeds that I have j
ever tried. Bran is worth $11 per ton,
corn twenty-five cents per bnshel?to
which five cents is added to pay for
grinding?and oil cake 820 per ton,
thus making the daily cost of the grain
ration for nine cows about seventyfive
cents. Each horse is fed a basket
of straw and fodder night and morning,
and is also given six to eight ears
of corn three times a day. They are
in better condition than when given
all the hay they will eat. The cattle
are registered Jerseys.?American Agriculturist.
* FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
It never injures an orohard to manure
it.
Peach trees must be cultivated to
?^11
UU WC11.
2 Winter made plans make good
antnmn harvests.
Wood ashes are never wasted when
nsed as a fertilizer.
To get size nmong tree fruits, cultivate
often and thin.
The gooseberry flourishes best in a
heavy, low, but not wet soil.
Do not work a sick animal. Best is
better than medicine, especially where
the trouble results from lameness or
sprain.
Every farmer and stock raiser should
own a pair of piuohers, a rasp and
drawing kuife for cutting and shaping
colts' hoofs.
Poor seed never made a good crop,
and a dull plow point is never economical.
Only the best preparation produ?es
the prize package result.
Though experience is the best
teacher in poultry raising, yet many
useful hints may be learned from the
successes and failures of your neighbors.
The only way to be as good a farm9r
(is your father, is to try and be a better
one than he was. A good farmer
forty years ago would be a back number
in these progressive days.
The Michigan agricultural college
has been conducting extensive experiments
in sheep feeding the past winter
with a great variety of foods in
various combinations. Clover hay
with gram gave the best results.
Remove any diseaeed fowls from the
flock, that the rest may have no possible
chance for contagion. Scaly
leg is especially contagious, and a
single fowl affected by it, if left to ruu
with the rest, will soon contaminate
the whole lot; and it seldom pays to
attempt to cure a sick chicken.
Tobacco with best burning quality
is grown on carbonate of potash as a
fertilizer in Germany, next best on
sulphate of potash. In the Connecticut
valley, sulphate of potash gifes
better leaf than muriate, but cotton*
hull ashes best of all, evidently because
they furnish the potash in form
of carbonate.
Hy crossing we olten procure large,
well-developed chickens, which often
surpass in size and development either
of their pure-bred parents. Of coarse,
for breeding purposes these chickens
are worthless, but they were not bred
for that end; they develop meat aud
pggs, and if they do tais work they
answer ths emls of their being.
Leather as a fertilizer has no value,
whether untreated, steamed, roasted
or palverized. It contains from six
to eight per cent, of nitrogen bat is
insoluble, nnd it may be years before
it will decav in the soil sufficient lor
plants to ta'ce up its nitrogen. Hence,
in Connecticut and some other States,
the law forbids its use in any form as
**r\P mprnidl fprf.ili.
zers, without an explicit printed certificate
of tho fact conspicuously iixe.l
to every p.ickage.
Currant imd gooseberry bushes
should be pruned by cutting out all
the old and rotieth stems, and leaving
not more than five or six of the best of
the three-year-old ones. Two of the
best of jthe last | year shoots may bo
left, to come on to replace as many of
the old ones removed each spring.
The new s-hoots taken out may be
planted for new plants as they will
grow quite readily, and mako bearingbushes
the third year. Liberal manuring
and stirring of the soil about
the bushes greatly help to make larye
end abua'.laut fruit.
mMX
?***, . .
The ball-bearing now ro eigential to
the easy running of a bicyole wMvpattened
in 1791.
? 4
Driven From the Citadel.
The warmth of spring and summe. m?y
<lr>-*uoh to relax the muscular systepi and
make many feel much more comforf.Ve ^
but thnre is this about the old enemy rhm- &
matism. that when he once takes hold,
tries *o hold the citadel at all seasons ot th* '
year. But whether this arch enemy lurki In si*
the muscles, joints, bones or Jhe nerves, he th<
is such an enemy to human happiness that Ihei
he must be driven out of anv stronarhold. It
A I - 1 -
Mimuou iodk a?o to ao tnip, ana or.
Jaoob'p Oil as a knight in battle has scored
"Wonderful victories. At all times he is ready
to overcome and conquer tbis fiend of pain, *
and.drw* it a# rarely and certatnly as knights *1
of old extirpated the- Saracen. So no one
honld be deoeived by the mild weather of
spring to trifle with it either in ehronie or
transient form. TJee the great remedy for
pain and get rid of it once and for all. >
Si
In France all railroads carry bicycles gra- ^
tuitously. , 3
Dr. Kilmer's Bwamp-Root cures e
all Kidney and Bladder troubles. ft
Pamphlet and Consultation free. f?
Laboratory Bingljamton. N. Y. ?
a cur re w ordinance nas Deen passed in as- ?>
torla, Oregon. 2
If you have tried Dobbin*' Floating-Borax 8o?I '
you have decided to nM it til the time. If yot 0
haven't tried It you owe It to yourself to do ao. n
Tour grocer haa It, or will get It. Be ran thai Cl
wr?oper? are printed in red. ?
f
Sherman County, Oregon, gives a bounty
of $1 on coyote scalps.
V
"Brown's Bronchial Troches are unrivalled
for relieving Coughs, Hoarseness and 01
all Throat Troubles. Sold onlv In boxes. ^
The stampede of California minere for ^
Alaska is how in full crj. h
: si
A Good Dos 1* Worth Looking After. j
If you own a dog and think anything of hiro, ?
you should be able to treat him intelligently
when ill and understand blm sufficiently to
detect symptoms of illness. The dog doctor t
book -written by H. Clay Glover, D. v. S.. spe- j
ciallst in canine diseases to the principal ken- t
nel clubs, will furnish this information. It is
Knnni^ honflcnrnolr illnatroto/1
and will he sent postpaid by the Book Publish- t
ing House, 184 Leonard St.. N. Y. City, on t
receipt of 40 eta, in postage stamps.
IfaffllctedwithsoreeyesuseDr.IsaacThomp- e
son's Eye-water. DraetjriatsEeJl at 26c per bottle i
( ; > - ? *?- t k
"In the springtime o( the year I r
1 "always take your Sarsaparilla as J. L
' ' find the blood requires it, and as a [
I I blood purifier it is unequalled. Your ?
I I pills are the best in the world. I |
( I used to be annoyed with " * )
( I ]
(I A
season in the same way. '
(l poet breaks out in about
<' while more prosaic people \
. | of the body. It's natural. E
II season. It is the time whei
< > work to the surface. It i
| take the purest and most p
i Aver's Sar
A # This testimonial will be found i;
S' hundred others. Free. Address: J. C.
I Ju It's
fmk Walter I
i. !|| Cocoa is
affillgp Cocoa?i
chemicals, walter
D%Mk
II I III
Instantly stops the most excruciating pains, allays
Inflammation and cures congestions, wnether of the
Longs, Stomach, Bowels, or other glands or mucom
membranes.
RADWAY'S READY RELIEF
CURES AND I*REVENTS
Colds, Couehsj Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitis,
Pneumonia, Rheumatism,
Neuralgia, Headache,Toothache,
Asthma, Difficult
Breathing.
CURES THE WORST PAINS hi from one to twenty
minutes. Not one hour after reading this advertls.monf
nw?r1 anvone SUFFER WITH PAIN.
ACHES AND PAINS.
For headache (whether sick or nervous), toothache,
neuralgia, rheumatism, lumbago, yalns and weakness
In the bick. opine or kldners, pains around the
ll?er, pleurisy, sw elling of the Joint* and pains of
all kinds, the application of Ra i way's Ready Relief
wllf afford Immediate ease, and Its caatluued us;
lor a few days effect a permanent cure.
TAKEN INWARDLY?A naif to h teaspoonful In
half a tumbler of water for stomach trouble", Colic,
Wind In the bowels, Cold Chills, Fever and Ague,
Diarrhoea, Sick Headache, and ail Internal paln-i.
Frlce 50c- per Bottle. Sold by nil DrugglwH
WALL PAPER FREE* ,,
Would be dearer than ALABASTIXE, >
which does not require to be taken off to
renew, does not harbor germs, but destroy*
them, and any one can brush it on.
Sold by all paint dealers. Write for card |
with samples. 1
ALABASTIHE CO,, Grand Rapids, Mich, I
HiVfc, 1/ I I D DIXD PA.HERS, MAOAZ1SES,
Ktc. Content- ,
Ur Instantly leniovable. Sajipi.b Box, 1
iof encn of the ' s z s, and a pair of "
^Cyk kys, moiled free with price list, for 0
73c. LOVERS TO OliPhR. H. H. , '
HAIiLAKI), :m. PittsflelJ. Mas* |1
?????????? \
nDIIIM and WHISKY babitsenred. Book son- , t
UrlUm HtKF. Dr. B. 31. WOOIXP.V. iTUVTA. M. \
tftl m EiB Morphine tlablt Cnred In 10 V
Brlfli nfS to 20 ?f<? pay till .Mired. '
Ml BWflia DR. J.STEPHENS, Lebanon,Ohio.
" To Save Time is to Lengi
Life? Th
SAPC
ON'T YC
papers anil books which yoa doa'i
liko to iooi: up if you had some c
formation In a few lines??no:
encvcloouj ila costing f'23 or ?30. gw 0^
LISHINC HOUSE 134 Leon- BJ
iurnish you, postpaid, with just such
illustrated, with complete hanlylnlex. Do j
lived? Who built the Pyramids, and when? 'J
What is the lonpest river io the world? That i
and who Mnrco Polo was? Whnt the Gordian
mm 0^ ty of explanations of just such
f| about. Buy it at the
\J half a dollar and 1311
"Tlie Wooden Hen."
rne illustration shown herewith Is small la
55* ^a'^arsre when we consider that j
J wooden Hen" Is no larger than a llT* >\
B, y?t has double the capacity. It weighs |
for fifteen pounds, has a capaoity of (wenty
;ht eggs, and while not a toy, is just as ' A
iMla*.besides beini? instructive a3 well. j
V* suggest that every reader of this Trrita >j
Stahl, Quitoy, Ills., and ask for }
w>?rof his handsome little booklet "A,"
JflfMng the "Wooden Hen;" also his larga __ ^.aB
talons 0f fhe Model Excelsior Incubator.
1 frae. Mention this paper.
. 9mDmm Caastt b? Oartd ';|raH
T local h)plieatk)tn, as they cannot roach tha 'yJsHB
? (# PatiMatlhe ear. There is only ona
ay to cttr, Dufap, and that is by constitu- Q|
imalnaiMtf, Etemee la caused by an In- ;VwaHB
unad oondltfc, of tt*maocva lining of tha -aQB
ostachian Tu? Whoa this tuba gets in- -JfBV
lcTehea?7 imps* j|8B
lationcan be taken ost ;'iv'?IiSiS
-ored to its normal condition, YmiU&fliSm ' Tt?
estroyed' forever; nine cases wa.Mt.-t. r?
sused by catarrh, which is nothingDOfcMgl*atoed
condition of the mnooui >urf ace*.'
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
Me of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that canot
be oured by Ball's Catarrh Cure. Send for
Irculara, free, *
"... F. J. Chbwtt A Co., Toledo, 0. ' '--&M1
F-Sold by Druggliu, 78c. - * - r**M|
VThen Traveling, 3p8S
rhether on pleasure bent, or business, aka 'jaa
1 ever)* trip a bottle of Syrup of Fig*, as it
:ts most pleasantly and effectually on tha
Idneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevenv "JIB
e ad aches and other forms of sickness. For
Ue in 60 cent and 81 bottles by all leading
ruggists. Manufactured by the California
1g Syrup Company only.
FITS stopped free by Dr. Ki.ine'8 Great
Ierve Restorer. Ko fits after first day's use.
larvelous cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bot? amm
le free. Dr. Kline. 081 Arch St.. Phila.. Pa. j>*Bb
????-?: .... ' *
Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children
eething, softens the gums, reduces lnflammaion,
allayB pain, curee wind colic. 25c. a bottl? '' Je
I believe Plso's Care for Consumption saved
ay boy's life last summer.?Mr*. Alxxk DouO*
ab8, LeRoy, Mich., Oct. 20,1894.
Poets Break Out I j
in the springtime. And a ,
great many who are not I
poets, pay tribute to the ' [
rhe difference is that the X
the same spot annually, i ' \ .vftjs
jreak out in various parts t
Spring is ' "le breaking-out >
a impurities of the blood <i
9 the time, therefore, to < 1
lowerful blood purifien J [
saparilla. ;t
n full in Ayer's "Cureboofc," with a ||
Ayer & Co., Lowell. Mass. ^ I
; Pure I
3aker & Co.'s [
no filling?no |-1
UKER A CO., Ltd., Dorchester, Mm, |
Mr. P. T. Barry, who has general
charge of the advertising contracts of
. ? ? m. -"rSfct
tne umcago newspaper union, is
compelled to pa*a a large portion of 'i'sOo
bis time in journeying to and (to la
the interests he represents. Speaking
of Ripans Tabules, Mr. Barry '
says that he has carried them with
him In his satchel on all his trip?,
since he first became acquainted with
their excellent qualities. He uses '
four or Ave a week, being always
particular to take one after a hearty
or, more especially, after a hasty
meal. He never requires more than.
one. Mr. Barry does not remember
how he was first Induced to make
trial of Ripans Tabules, but no w he- .
buys them of the nearest druggist
whenevor his supply Is exhausted.
"They are specially convenient," Air.
Barry says, "and a migh:y nioe
thing?just what a man needs when
traveling, II he needs i medicine at
Hipans Tabules are sold by druggists, or b? mVI
f the prlcf (53 cents a box) Is gent to The nija
bemlcal Company, So. 10 Spruce St., New ioen.
ample vial, hi cents.
HN C?14
DON'T DRINK IT5 ,f;ST
uused by loul wnter thau by any oiher cause,
ur Well L> killing Machinery obviates the Uifflulty
and drilU wells below ?u. face contamination*uU
rtfeetuaUy shuts them out. Intro Is money la
r.lling wells wltn modern ana llrst-oass machinery . ,j
QOMIS A HYMAN Tiffin. Ohio..
illDDV Mr bend 10c. for samples of Wei.- -fj
7] H II n I IVI C diiiu luvitatious. We twrni.-U
00 Wi-ddiim invitation*, lt>0 \V eddluK tAi-i-iopett.
100 .'IuHiiik tn\ cl., 100 TiMtue Slipsr.r
$1.75. Finest quality, lates. style; also Anni rtary
Invitations. Balcn Hro*.& West, Utlta, N.5?. /(. %
JIBMONT MAPLE SYRUP SSSS *
eipt of SI. JAMES A. t'AULK.Nah. i.utlanii. Vt
v
'V??? I ?.? " tlrt L fvi
jscr biici MU i vu "'?<?
en Use ||
/LiU 1
III OFT try s'^'oui
W nncl references ia the news
: fully understand, and which you would
lompact book which wouli givi the inbe
obliged to han lit* a twuuty-poua I
in stamps sent to BOOK PUB*
Xjm ard Street. N. Y. City will
a book, containing 520 pages, well
"ou know who Croesus w:is. and where heChat
sound travels 112-3 feet per second?" ..:VInrco
Polo iaventoi the compass in 126!),.
Knot was/ The book contains thou;aadsmatters
as you wonder g-%
very low price of.
JJlOVL YOURSELt. \J -J
- '--*2