Lancaster enterprise. [volume] (Lancaster, S.C.) 1891-1905, April 21, 1897, Page 7, Image 7
Throat |
Coughs I
' Is there a tickling in the I
throat? Do you cough a great I
deal, especially when lying I
down? Are you hoarse at I
times? Does nearly every cold w
you take settle in your throat? vi
These 44 throat coughs" are
. very deceptive. Don't neglect
* them. Troches, or cough
syrups won't touch the spot. ?
You must take remedies that lwill
enrich the blood, tone up ?
the nerves; and heal the in- .
flamed membranes.
SCOTT'S EMULSION of
Cod-liver Oil with Hypcphos- $
nil
Itfhas wonderful nourishing i
and healing power. The cause ?
of the cough is removed; the J
whole system is given new life f
and vigor; and the danger ]
from threatening lung trouble
is swept away.
Dock about it free.
For sale by all druggists at 50c. and f
$1.00. C
SCOTT St BOWNE, New Yo?W. ^
CURE FOIl BLOAT.
Chewing Dry Straw is Claimed to
Afford Relief at Once.
1
f I hope my experience with
bloat will be of service. The point
I have learned is to let the cows
have free and easy access to dry
straw when feeding on clover and
alfalfa, and its immaterial whetliI
er it has been passed through a
cutter or not.
Last summer, prior to leaving
the Pacific coast,! gave my neighbor
the privilege of turning cows
on to a Held of pasture, and in the
corner was an unprotected straw
pile. The field was separated
from a rich meadow of clover and
alfalfa by tidal creek 8 or 10 feet
deep. Neighbor turned them into
the pasture. They saw the
straw pile. After pasturing a
short while one of the Ilolsteins
saw the luxuriant meadow beyond
the creek, and soon all were
swimming in single file and went
to the tops of their shoulders into
the meadow. I turned them out
in two hours, pretty full, with
their faces homeward. Next day
neighbor turned them into the
pasture, but they swam the creek
for the meadow. He came and
told me he was sorry. I answered,
"Let them alone; welcome." 1
| turned them out in three hours,
unknown to him. Next morning
he turned them in again, with the
same result, and he went to town,
and in three hours returned, and
while discussing politics we look.
ed for the cows, and a sight met
f- our gaze. The cows and calves
were swimming the creek in disbanded
order and came straight
to the straw pile?ate straw ravenously,
strewing it all over the
pasture?couldn't drive them off
until they went of their own
accord. They alternately crossed
and rocrossed three or four times.
\'i?ii?hhnrs rr'ithnrnrl nrrmrwt Snnw?
- - -- -r*-- r - ~ "
cursed the meadow?said it was
not worth a cent. Others thought
the cows were possessed of the
evil one, although apparently
nothing ailed them.
Voii see the pangs of bloat were
coming on, and they instinctively
sought dry fodder, as proved by
their repeatedly returning to it.
And, further, a bull was admitted
into the meadow the second day
by way of crossing a bridge and
through a gate. He didn't know
where the straw pile was, and
when the neighbor came for him
he found him nearly dead. Still,
the neighbor never thought of the
. straw pile as a cure. Neither did
I until thif winter. I asked Dr.
I I.awes, professor of animal dis
eases at the Wisconsin experi4
. ment station, Madison,?without
giving him a clue to what 1 was
driving at?and ho gave mo the
cures for bloat.
4'Jint,"" said tho professor, 4ka
remedy I have to prevent bloat is
this : I make a pen and take a lot
4 of hay or straw so that they ran
get to it in the field. As soon as
they begin to bloat they make for
that straw. I have noticed that
when on the farm, and I generally
build a pen and till it full with
hay >r straw. After eating clover
for awhile they ?t.op and go to
eating hay."?Thomas Dixon in
Hoard's Dairyman.
He Got His Dose.
The llama ol South America is
an expert marksman, though it
never uses its food, writes .Fames
Weir in Lippincott's. Only when
annoyed and angry does it give an
exhibition of its wonderful skill
in hitting the object aimed at.
The llama's weapon is its mouth;
its bullet is composed of saliva
i and chewed hay.
Several years ago at the fair
grounds in St. bonis. I witnessed
an exhibition of this creature's
powers of expectoration, in which
the victim was a country beau,
who came very near losing his
sweetheart thereby. This young
man was one of those self-sullicient
individuals who imagine t hat
....Wi. Olio CIIIIIIIMICU 111 II1H
temples of their own personal intellects;
"that what tliev <lo not
know is not worth knowing/' lie
was annoying the llama (the animal
stood in the center of its pen,
probably fifteen feet or more from
its tormentor) by throwing clods
of dirt at it and beating on the
pen with his cane.
I saw by the creature's actions
that it was angry; the rapid movements
of its jaws indicated that it
i was preparing to attack its persecutor.
1 warned the young man,
telling him what to expect; his
sweetheart begged him to desist
1 n <1 n mo IJ..A 1 A A. ?1
...... tvr VUMID Iinnr. 1)111 nt; ucaicn
my warning with derision, and
; told the girl that "he knew his
business." Suddenly there catne
a whizzing, whistling noise, followed
by a sharp spat; the young
wise-acre lay supine upon his
back with his eyes and forehead
plastered with a disgusting mixture
of saliva, hay and mucus.
"I hate a tool !" said the girl,
as she shouldered her parasol and
walked away.
I saw them again in the monkey
house some time afterward, but
the man was a changed being; he
had been taught modesty by the
' good marksmanship of the llama.
i Killed Themselves.
Kayettevil!<\ Ark., April 10.?
i Two young sons of Mr. Ilerson,
living at Greenland, five miles
| south of Fayetteville, aged !) and
I 15 years, committed suicide while
, their parents were at Fayetteville
trading. The boys were
angry because they were left at
i homo. Both dressed in their
best clothes, wrote notes to their
parents, pinned them on the door,
took strychnine and went to bed.
They died before the parents returned
home. The notes bade
their parents good bye and expressed
the hope 'hat they would
meet in heaven.
He Knew.
''Suppose,'1 suggested the teach
eiy't hat you take a piece of beef
steak and cut it into halves, then
cut the halves into quarters, the
'quarters into eights, and the
eights into sixteenths. Into what
could the sixteenths ho cut f1
"Hash," responded Tommy,
whose mother kept a boarding
' house.
And the class in fractions was
dismissed.
Lost a Friend.
Visitor?Hut why does the undertaker
grieve so much ?
Native?The decased was the
only doctor in town.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castoria.
)
' A PRAYER.
I've fought It all the day,
This discontent so grim.
It iieeps oat : una--Is In my way,
Justus It Is?my sin ;
"Get thee behind" 1 cry,
With weary heart and bruin. ,
"I'm almost overcome" I cry.
My struggle seems In vain.
No silver lining found.
To clouds so dark and low.
Hut faith and Christ are bound.
To banish e'en this woe.
Oh, (Jod forgive my doubt.
Pray hear me when X cry;
Show me that brightness now put out.
And make me to Thee liy:
Strengthen a faith too weak.
Give peace to troubled thoughts,
ilend down iny heart and make me meek.
For wotide r, Thou bast wrought.
U E. *
SPAIN WITHDRAWING MANY
TROOPS PROM CUBA.
The Rainy Season Given as Kxeuso
for What Bankrupt Treasury
Makes Necessary.
I
Washington, April 10.?Ac-j
i i- .: I
wmuiii^ <i> minrmjiiion received!
from trustworthy sources here the!
with <lrawal of at least a part o|
the great army that Spain has
maintained for several years past
in the island of 'Cuba will begin
when the rainy season sets in
within a few days. The initial
movement will be the departure:
of 10,000 Spanish troops from |
llnbana for Spain, and within a
short time after that 30,000
troops, it is understood, will follow.
Whether this movement is to
be construed in favor of or against
the insurgents it is impossible to
say. The Spanish insist positively
that it means only that little or
nothing remains of the insurrection;
that Gomez has only about
50 or 100 followers, and that to
watch these under the condition
in which the campaign has been
necessarily conducted, a few
thousand men are (juite as elective
as the army of 180,000 men
which has been maintained in
Cuba. The Cuban contingent, on
the other hand, insists that the
troops are to be withdrawn because
of lack of money to keep
infill in service.
how toTTndoutT
Fill a bottle or common water
glass with urine and let it stand
twenty-four hours; a sediment or
settling indicates a diseased condition
of the kidneys. When
urine stains linen it is positive
evidence of kidney trouble. Too
frequent desire to urinate or pain j
in the back, is also convincing!
proof that the kidneys and blad-!
tier are out of order.
WHAT TO DO.
There is comfort in the knowledge
so often expressed, that Dr.
1 Kilmer's Swamp-lioot, the kidney
! remedy fulfills every wish in relieving
pain in the back, kidneys,
! liver, bladder and every part of'
I the urinary passages. It corrects J
! inability to hold urine and scald-,
line pain in passing it, or bad j
! effects following nse of liquor,
! wine or beer, and overcomes that
unpleasant necessity of being1
'compelled to get up many times
during the night to urinate. '1 he
' mild and the extraordinary effect
( of Swamp-Uoot is soot; realized.
It standn the highest for its wonderful
cures of the most distressing
cases. If you need a medicine
; von should have the best. Sold
by druggists price fifty cents and
one dollar. For a sample bottle
atid pamphlet, both sent free by
mail, mention the Kntkri'HISF. and
send your full post-office address'
to Dr. Kilmer iV Co.^Binghamton,)
N. Y. The proprietors of this,
paper guarantee the genuineness'
of this offer.
. . . . ^ I, ^ .
^Cevcate, and Trade-Mark*obtained, end all I'at J 1
Sent bueinesec nductid (or momrati Fci. #
< Our 0?rice to p*ppc*itc U. S. patent Ornct '
J i ml we ( in set in c | d'"!)'. in less time tlif n those '
? rcr.mto from Washington. 4
J Send model, dri.wn.g or photo., with desrrlp 4
jtlon. We rdelee, it patentable or not, free of'
| {charge. Gar tee not >luc till patent is secured.
* A Pamphlet, "How to Oh'ain Patents," with f
| J cost <>( same in the U. S. a;.a foreign countries J {
, Stent tree. Address, 4
sC.A.SWOW&OOJ
' * Or?' Patint Orrcc, Washington. D ( /
t ?.* % > ?*4 e v v-. v ? '
V
Few Appreciate the
DANGER
to which the Expectant
Mother is
exposed and the
foreboding- withu Vt^Fj/rW
which she looks VI, * Y^gT J&
forward to the
! hour of woman's mSmP^
| severest trial. All HiflL
effort should be f
made to smooth n f Vflffirni
these rugged jI ijl F "Butt
places in life's/ (j j 'n' \\
pathway for her.
"Mother's Friend
allays Nervousness, and so assists j
Nature that the change goes for- j
ward in an easy manner, without
such violent protest in the way of
Nausea, Headache, Etc. Gloomy.
forebodings, yield to cheerful and |
hopeful anticipations?she passes!
through the ordeal quickly and
without pain?is left strong and
vigorous and enabled to joyously .
perform the high and holy duties 1
now devolved upon her. Safety
to lite ot both is assured by the' ,
use of "Mother's Friend," and ,
the time of recovery shortened. i
"I know ono lady, the mother of throo children,
who suffered greatly in tho birth of each, who '
obtained a bottlo of ' Mother's Friend * of me ,
before her fourth confinement, and was rcliovod '
({uickly. All agroo thnt their labor was shorter <
and less painful." John* G. Poluill, Macon,Ga.
Sent by Mail, on receipt of price, $1.00 PER '
BOTTLE. Rook "TO EXPECTANT MOTHERS" I
mailed freo, containing valuablo information
and voluntary testimonials. i
The bradfield regulator CO..Atlanta,Ga ,
sold by all druggists.
?When you want any thing 1
printed send it to the Enterprise's '
Job ollice.
i
i
t
>
When Baby waa sick, we gave her Castorla.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castorla.
When alio became Miss, she clung to Castorla.
When slie had Children, she gave them Castorla.
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THF, ^
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m fff Write fnr te*t siiioiiIhIa.
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* 4
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