Newspaper Page Text
AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OF1NTERKST RELATIVE
TO FARM AM) GARDEN.
Bitter Cream.
A correspondent writes to know wbai
makes his cream turn bitter. It issweel
when skimmed, is kept in a nice cellar,
where there are no vegetables, the cellai
has brick walls, and is declared well
ventilated; but in 24 hours after skim
ming, aetual the inspection cream turns bitter. the Without
of all surroundings
and conditions, it is difficult to give the
cause for a certainty. In this case, it is
probably the seeds a fungus the growth in the milk,
of fungus plant falling in
the cream while thcmilk is set., or possibly
the entering the systems of the cows through
(the water they drink, the food they eat or
the air they breathe. Possibly heating
milk In n hot-water bath from
1150 to 150 degrees before setting, might
ture remove of the the difficulty. If the tempera
cream, before or after skim
ming, is subject to sudden and extreme
changes, thin may cause the development
of a bitter principle, dr, if the souring
of the cream is carried too far—that is,
to the point of alcoholic fermentation—
this will give it a bitter taste, if the
bitterness comes from eating bitter food,
or from some of the cows giving bitter
milk—ns they sometimes do—it ought
to show in the milk when first drawn.
the-c Perhaps our correspondent can find in
lead suggestions the a hint that will
bitterness to discovery W of the cause of the
itli ail our knowledge and
the manifest progress in the art, of dairy
ing during the !a-t two decades, there is
sli 1 a wide unexplored region for inves
tigation, and it is to be hoped that some
of ourj recently established Agricultural
the Experiment Stations will soon take up
suit e t of milk in an intelligent man*
r and give u« St me itrlditioual on
it.—iVutVie F: Hi er.
About Harrowing.
It is laid down by a writer in the
American Calticator as good husbandry
that grain and corn should be often
harrowed, and the argument is used that
it disturbs the soil and takes out the
grass and weeds; again, that this can be
done with perfect .safety and without in
jury to the future crop.
Now let us take corn, for instance.
It is said that this should be often bur
rowed, and that it may be done without
injury until the corn is at least six
inches high. To stir the soil often is so
important doubt. Equally a matter as to admit of no
the important and is it to re
harrow move the grass implement weeds; but is a
with which to
perform If it be this said work?
that to harrow a field of
young find corn or grain will injure it some
benefit it more, and upon the w'holo
the benefit would outweigh the injury,
this would ben proposition which, while
open to controversy, would still be en
tirely different from the one laid down
ns though good husbandry. weeds It would seem as
grass or with their numer
ous roots must adhere to tho soil as firmly
as young corn with its one root,
r . Jit moat its very few roots.
If so, whencffromwifll ••+trid'-tU!ie. jjis
criininatiou on the part of the harrow
tooth to destroy the one and do no in
jury to the other? Will not a blow
from a harrow tooth do as much violence
to the tender blade ns would a blow from
a hoe or a club or a falling hail stone?
To be sure, it is said the teeth of the liar
row must ho slanting. On the other
hand, if the teeth ate sufficiently slant
ing useless. to disturb Again, nothing, if then the work is
the teeth are suffi
ciently in upright to affect tho grass and
weeds any manner, how can they run
over the field without affecting the corn
in like manner? When iu the parable
the servants of the household instinc
tively naked permission to go forlti and
gather up while the tares the answer was:
“Nay, lest ye gather up the tares ve
root tip also the wheat with them.” It
may he said that the Testament is not an
authority upon agriculture, yet it is a
book which we reverence and helive.atid
I submit that tin direction therein given
is much more sensible than that of the
late uninspired writers on this subject.
GunriUitK Against thoSwinc Plague
The Stale Veterinarian and Live-stock
Commissioners of Nebraska have issued
the following circular on preventing the
introduction and spread of the swine
cholera plague: Whether he prevented tho lavages of hog
can by iuoculat’on
is still very questionable. It lias never
been satisfactorily demonstrated that any
benefits can be derived from this method,
nor does it seem probable that inocula
tion can be made practicable. If, there
ore, farmers and swine breeders apply
such rules as are herein suggested, they
would be able to reduce their losses to a
minimum and cope successfully with the
disease. If an outbreak exists separate
all healthy from the diseased hogs at
soon as possible. Tho healthy hogs
should be removed to a new ana unin-
fected pasture or pen and carefully
watched by an attendant.- Should any
that have been thought to bo well be
come weak or appear to be sick, ailing,
or oil their feed, take them out and kill
them. All diseased hogs should be killed
and cremated as s >on as possible. Sec
tion 1, chapter 5, laws of 1885: “An
act makes to prevent it the duty the spread of of hog cholera
owners of swine
dying from hog cholera to either bury
or burn them within twenty-four hours
after death on his own premises.” If
neighbors would see to the enforcement
of this law they would in all probability
save losses, themselves and would frequently doing from public serious
be the a
groat advisable service, if your hogs allow arc healthy
it is never to new hogs
to til intermingle having with them in the herd un
after them subjected to a strict
quarantine of not less than seven weeks.
Neither is it advisable to allow anyone to
go into hogpens after returning from an
infected their boots. place without first changing
There should be but one
attendant to look after sick animals,
who. during snch service, should not be
allowed to leave the place. Hogs should
never be watered at a stream if it comes
running from where the disease is known
to exist. Dogs or other animals belong
ing to infected farms should not be al
lowed to roam about at will where hogs
are kept, as they may carry the infection
to them. If these rules are carefully ob
served there need be little fear of
cholera causing any serious loss
spreading to any alarming extent
QUAINT AMI CURIOUS.
The slate is unknown in Belgian bar
room,, the law prohibiting credit for
arinks.
In the year 1543 the royal head of
franco paid $8,600 to have a corn re
moved rnoven from frr.m hla ms inn toe.
A Milford fPenn.) correspondent Rays
tlmt thirty feet at a bound is no uneom*
won jump for a wildcat.
A a thread i has i „ been i produced from the
common nettle so fine that a length of
sixty miles weighs only two and a half
pounciB.
An elephant live, 400 yeate; a whale,
300; a tortoise, 100;acamol 40; ahorse,
20; a bear, 20; a lion, 20; an ox, 25; a
cat, 15; a dog, 14, a sheep, 10; a squirrel,
8; a guinea pig, 7.
At the mouth of the Congo there is a,
remarkable submarine valley J ust at
the mouth of the river it is 1,452 feet
deep, and it can be distinctly traced fora
hundred miles out. to sea.
i) Iv nr mg . her , twenty years of . married . .
life has Mrs. John Guest," of Wichita, Kan.,
presented her husband with twenty
two children, bhe has twice given birth
to twins and once to triplets.
The Merlin beer drinkers are the fast
est in Europe. In a certain saloon a me
( hunioai lion roars when a new cask is
tapped, and that incites every one to fin
isb hi. glass and order a new one.
The natives of Central Africa had
never before seen a woman who wore
skirts and long hair until Mrs. Hobub,
wife of the explorer, came among them,
and being. they regarded her as a supernatural
The oldest piece of carpentry in the
world is a wooden throne which be
longed to a queen of the eighteenth
Egyptian old, dynasty. and It is more than 4,000
Jesse years Haworth, was collector, recently presented by
a to the Hritish
museum.
A Hannibal (Mo.) man says that he
went into the woods a few days ago and
and painted when a black circle on the end of a log,
he went back to the spot an
hour later lie found 200 dead rabbits
there. They had mistaken the circle for
a hole in tee log and dashed themselves
to death against it.
A travelei on a Georgia railroad
wanted train did to get off at a station where the
anti when not the st,p. It was after dark,
so conductor would not
agree to stop for hint, the passenger
went to the front plat form of the rear
car, drew the coupling pin, set the
brakes, and when tin car stopped jumped
off.
A queer custom pievails among the
Indians of the Kuskcwim country. It
seems that if a native votnan is agree
able to a her change of husbands, the ques
tion of possession it decided by a
in wrestling which match the victor between the two rivals, the
caries off
womaa. The vanquished combatant
does not appear to entertain the slightest
his feeling of anger or rcsentmeut against
more successful opponent.
The die of the Goddess of Liberty used
on our coins was first cut by Mr. Spencer,
the inventor of the Spencer lathe. lie
cut a medallion of Mrs. Washington, wife
of first General issue of Washington, coins and some with of her the
were struck
portrait. When 'General Washington
lirst saw them he »«» much displeased,
and Mr. requested then that the placed figure be changed. the
head, Spencer altered the features a cap little, on and
a
called it the Goddess of Liberty. It has
been used ever since then without
material alteration.
“Home Sweet. Home.”
George Melvillo is known to fame
principally as one of the survivors of the
ill-fated Jeanette America Polar from expedition. that His
return to terrible
voyage was one of the inspiring causes
that led the rich Washington banker,
W. TV. Corcoran, to have brought back
to America the remains of the sweet
songwriter, John Howard Payne. It
happened this way:
When Lieutenant Melville ansi his
companions reached "Washington after
their rescue principal they citizens were given of a recept ion
by the t he Capital.
An escort met them at the depot on tHeir
arrival, and, headed by the famous
rine Band that furnishes the music at
the While House, the proceision started
up Pennsylvania and avenue. wide It was a bright,
sunny day the street was
crowded. When the band moved along
the avenue it played the heart-touching
tune of “Home, Sweet Home,” and ii
tilled the air with the old-timed music
that has found an echo in every heart foi
so many years.
In the first carriage rode Lieutenant
Melville, and with him the rich banker.
Mr. Corcoran had known and befriended
John Howard Payne in the struggling
days of the song maker, and the tune
awoke old memories in the rich man's
heart and suffused his eyes with tears.
Ho thought of tho man whose tender
lines and sweet music had brought joy
to so many breasts, and remembered that
his bones lay mouldering in a foreign
land, homeless even in death.
Then and there he resolved that all
that was mortal of John Howard Payne
should find and an abiding place here at
home That night he wrote to Secretary
Frclingliuysen about the matter, and
Government lent its aid through the
United States Consul at Tunis, near
which plaee the almost forgotten grave
sa^Sd remains of the dead arrived in
the poet
this country and were given a resting
place ill the land he loved SO well.
Mr. Corcoran bore all the expense at
tached to the transfer, and it was tht
old familiar tune ringing out along
avenue on that pleasant day when Mel
ville came home that first awaked in
heart the resolve to give a lasting
place to the poet’s remains .—Mte Tori
Gntp'iie,
Houses Without Windows.
There are in France 279,270 apart
meats, providing accommodations which foi
over 800.000 persons, rooms art
entirely destitute light and of any other means of
admitting alone the air than by the door
In 1‘aris number of families
thus lodged leaches a total of 27,481
There are in London over 60,000 fami
lies who live in cellars under the mos -
unfavorable conditions as regards salu
britv. Iu Ilerlin there are 89,000 fami
lies who occupy only portions of rooms
often a sort of shelf on which father
mother and children sleep, one over th
other.— Bo»h>n Transcript.
ffappy Holmes* :
has been written and said abou
to make home happy. The moralist at
Hut the iwkilosophers have gone far °hire1 out < f
^pl^anTunhappy looked the chief Most of the unld
cawiri.
ness of married life can be traced towhief dired
those funMtt , hal derangements
men eye saject, Ill nine eases out of M
:
trial of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
more domestic philosophical happiness than jp
ion sermons or treatise*.
all those peculiar weaknesses anduilmei
the maimfatmreVs, that it will give sai
g£ ^uaS^rlntedZ^app.!? Sjj
bottle.
Since the War, farm prr>r**rtj v in lliinu
fallen off $ 2 UO,onw,(#*\
To the VunMiimption Editor:—Please Surely inform Cured. si f ^
Ibatl have t'ortlnvj your
named disease. a positive By timely remedy thousi
its use
shall hopeless be cases have been permanently ci
glad to semi two bottles of my ha] i
fkke to any of your readers who
sumption and if they will send me their il
i\ O. addre?M Ke.spwtfuJly*
T\ A.SLOCUM, M.O., m mtl
NewmBt h>, cm., bnS a fig tree 8 1-4
circumference, covering 2,500 feet of so
~-- ;— —
w wan'i'tbat little , °*i _
Hiit strong.'
This is especially true of a purge.. 3»
for he it, as a rule, but wh*n (akon, wisrffo
prompt, sure effective. ®ft2# Dr. w»
or in totally disagreeable free, from after-effects, any unpleasant i'urelwflta- ny/miB,
We, perfectly harmless.
The Merced irrigating canal, in
has been opened. It is 'Si miles 1'ohg.j
meat Its thousands tor Dr, Cage’s or cures Catarrh are the Remedy! best fl| iise*
amounts The loss to in near the ^4,000,000; last Pennsylvania t lie mim rS^half. < jhdke
Mothers.Overworked Delicate Children, Nnmi 1
where Men, and aWafljSnthtj for tlMcascs
the tissues are wasting
inability work the to digest ordinary food, orllt over
of brain or hpdy.all such slid take
■Sc In.ophoMd'itr.s iTT’-s L.\tri,stosof Pure Cod I.ivOU with
“I used the threJSt Emion on a
lady who was delicate, and gnodXh with
Hranrhii is It put her in such and
Fntlirr!! losingftp 3
alter ° ur niLcht ]'^ or wear ed wife SsBuffering night,
from tliat night-fiend nursing the little
to parents, to childrei»d horror
Jay lor (Jierokee ckoup, should hav.a bottle of
Mullein, .s an undoubted Remedy of SwjfGum and
cure for coughs, colds croup incentive and
and consupltion.
“Countless thousands mourn’bfcauso they
have not sent for a free pninphUmn Taylor’s
Vorl' 1 ^ a * ^ Ur ° ^ or way, New
Best, easiest to use and che opBst. Piso’s
JtemeKly for < ’atarrh. By drug. tjjs. 80c.
S t JA.c®bs©|i
Tr; m |T fe C
— Rheumatism, % ~Vcur.Es
Lumbago, Back^ hei Head
ache, i ooth»%g t
c c it b « \
Sore Neuralgia, Throat,Swellingsffrost
bites, Sprains,
CUBES
Bruises, Sciatica, Burns,
Scads,
Promptly ftm\ Pcrnanently without
Rot urn if Pain.
For Stablemen Sto^men,
THE GREATEST RE5IEIY KNOWN FOt I10KSB
ANP CATTL5 WSEASB.
Sold by Druggists aniDealcrs Evnju'Iiere.
Ths Clmrles A. VoeSsr Co., Ildto., MA
ft » WELLS’
BAIR
BALSAM
,• ■ A restores ll.ir to ori«t- Cray
,
I I not color. An
m ( elegantdress
! 1 softens
: I and beautifies
m I Noifreasenor Tenia
m B oil. A
Jtestorative.
La . 1 ‘rt‘Tents hair
mm r I coming out J
I strengthens, and
cleanses
heals scalp.
COc. Druggist!
r "J E. S. WELLS,
ft! J.n.yCUy, R.J,
ROUGHonCATAIRH chronic Untsiiiaft for CjUarrnal SBBSSft throat
worst omn. ottemre throat,
a (Teething, foul breath, heoi «M3or», acre
dtpht iicno, cold in the Ask. for “ Rotjoh o*
Catauku ' Wc. Drug. K. S. Wxls, Jersey City, N. J.
100K YOUNG
is long tendency as yoa can. towrin* pre
vent
it m kies or ageing of the
-Nh A akin LEAURELLE by using OIL
$1 preserves plump, Kemoree Wrinkles, i t of fresh Flesh and a and condition youthful, prerenfel or rough* skin ;
I;' of the features; re
moves pirn piss, cl*ar»
the complexion, kn th®
only substance on D
that will »rr »t »nd prs
vent(cadca«'Ti« wrioblec
$1. Oruggtsts or Exp.
-Lf) K. S. WRIiLM, t hsaUI,
Jim; City, N. 4-
____ Rapidly!
Money Made Easly and
he »i> this a\i»tiii.m» itoveki
idUr- 'h«l»burbein* »<ht Mut Pun»U>yme* t all Bn* y* ar
no not ».u t>a t.>-m>«roi Wntoto ... Stamia.
ll- aa^ 1 utnn N .i**to,‘i’. ’atea
, LV’S^S 1 I,V'S CREAM IULM
Gives relief at once for
rj COLD in HEAD
hakfivirBs JL. CTRF.S i -
/ ATARRH.
A u Not a Liquid or Snuff.
CUREmiDEAF iCn«M»
-— Iw.’a 1 .,,m the
ea\ !»»»>»* Perfectly S.tenr» Restore »»■»«
H nr kklnn nc."h«ib.r I.
e3? 1 A or tojorie* «mt»»hi..
On. :„TliaMr.
L fir fa Mo,lo. urn wrnlioo.
^
Blair’s Pills.“SSf‘«rr x"«7r*.»U, li Tills-
March April May
fesTS z “ e t T
be popularity of Dodd’s Sarsaparilla, for It Is lust
nctu.at bis season. It Is the ideal
mbdfcwe. IT yem have never tried it, do so.
Hood’s
"For many months I Buff- rcA greatly. My whole
mtt"rU svstem seemed to be be entirely run do wo, myam
hao pains In my back, and a fee ing
'M lassitude which I could not throw off. I was
treated unsuccessfully for ottle kidney of Ho; trouble. d s Sarsaparilla °“ e *>>[
at by brother's I saw a ■ bottle
and determined to try It. Before the first was
taken I candidly s ylwas relieved. I have used the
medicine oil and on ever siace, and recommend n
for kidney or liver complaints.” Mas. IV. II. otrvs
937 Atlantic Avenue. Brooklyn, N Y.
Hood’s
Sold by all druggists. 81; six for <5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, toweii, Mass.
I OODosesOneDollar
------
jCVUlllCTCn EAllftUd I Ell VITHi 111 RH 1TV ■ ■
A Great Medical Work for Young
and Middle-Aged Mens
K~ tyfl .JCIENCn jgj
tSfunJ .
KNOW THYSELF.
PEABODY fimh MKIM
S’o. 4 llu tet.,
v!J^ludI^rt«e, E uf h tte BlMa'.*Mt , if’Uw 1 untoW
s^s£susfsss 8 s^sssss:
tam pie free If you send uovf
Xame this papcK *
SB .ew/s Tv H
— Vi
TO W (** / A.* H & 9
srWKSSORS M J P P l O WH,tE PURS CO *04*1 M H* ps (5 /
JPS Tn.u.i:^*» --- * ,inK ’ J“ P
JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS., _
WAUltANTEH PliltE
White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge. Oranqe
Mineral. Painters’ Colors and Unseed Oil.
fmtKF.SI’ONOKNCE *Q
LJJiBlifilJsvS
^ssswm«m- ggSHfeiSg 8 l
WW 8 l
$ 2301 ”“ aentsWantecl. SO best sell
the work!. 1 sample Free.
linox SDN, Detroit. Mich.
-tTis (“RE iJm
wW m ■/A I
|f / m mk- .
4 §
© B 5 S
tef
KpS-;--' l/k: -4^ §
- -S3 0
[CorviuGiiT, 1887.]
The only medlclffO for woman’s peculiar ailments, sold by druggists, nuclei This guarantee baa
that it will givo satisfaction in every case, or money will bo refunded, is Dr. Piei
been printed on the bottle-wrappers, aiid faithfully carried out for many years,
THE OUTGROWTH OF A IT AST
Tho treatment of manv thousands of eases of those chronic weaknesses and distressing ailments peculiar to fc-maleS, fif tto
Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y„ has afforded a vast experience iu nicely adapting and thoroughly testing
remedies for the cute oi woman’s peculiar maladies.
SSsrsSHsSI
A PnWFRFlil vigoratiuK teufe, it
A rUlYttlfUL imourts “^esysS.a“atotho stivuctli to the
Tonic. aniwadacm uterus, or womb in nurticu- and its
l,ir. For overworked,
“ worn - out,” •’run-down.” debilitated
teachers milliners, dressmakers, seam
stresses, mothers, "shop-girls," feeble housekeepers, generally, nure
ing Dr. Pierce's and Favorite Prescription women is the
greatest appetizing earthly cordial boon, ami being restorative unequalefi tonic. as
an
It promotes digestion anti assimilation of
food, cures nausea, weakness of stomach,
indigestion, bloating and eructations of gas.
TREATING THE WRONG DISEASE.
Many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heart disease)
another from liver or kidney disease, another from nervous exhaustion, or prostration, another with pain here or there, and in this way
they all present alike to themselves and their easy-going and indifferent, or over-busy doctor, separate and distinct diseases, for whlcw
he prescribes his pilis and potions, assuming them to lie such, when, in reaiitv, they are all only symptoms caused by some womb
disorder. The physician, ignorant of the cause of suffering, encourages ins’ practice prac e until until lurgc large bills are made. The suffering proper
patient gets no better, but probably worse by reasou of tho delav, wrong treatment and consequent complications. A
medicine, like Dtt. Pierce’s Favorite PHEscKtPTio.v, directed to the cause, would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dis
pelling all those distressing symptoms, and instituting comfort inntead of prolonged misery.
rft!L£U fIileo ’ saffssfts^‘a»«xt vians,! was completely discouraged and so
■ weak T could with difficulty cross the room
alone. I began taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Presorintion and
using tho local treatment recommended in his ‘Common Sense
Medical Adviser.’ I commenced to improve at once. In three
health had berm restored, and offering to send the full particulara
Tha?f ^ived over
men^ reeeivtffi tp°u^ second letters 'ff of thanks' a p,^'erie^ stJrin^ tli^TtLr 'sent hL "he ^ TS
-Kveorite
required treatment for fully the ’ and Medical Adviser,' and had applied the local
better already. so plainly laid down therein, and were much
nrtrnwH.s writTt' n-^ w«__ 0 mt I'T? ,, fr9 *VAK«num. Of Crab Orchard,
- Pi ’
P, 'g:’ , I ere< suffered -1 8 Lavonte from Prescription has the done me a
k T s°°u- retroversion of uterus,
. Prescription,’ and I
am
Doctors Failed.—Mrs. F. Cokwtn, of Post Creek, N. T.,
writi*g: I doctored with throe or four of the host doctors in
these parts, and I Arrow worse until I wrote to vou and bepran
using vour ‘Favorite Proscription.’ I used three bottles of it
and two of the •Golden Medical Discovery.’ also one and a half
DOtUes of the 4 Purgative Pellets.’ I cun do my work and sew and
walk all I care to, and am In better health than I ever expected to
be in this world again. I owe it all to roar wonderful mediotnes,”
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is prepared fro n Sarsaparilla and
Danilin Mandrake. vegetable Do.lt, remedies, Juniper. Insucll PerrteS, a peril
other n-oH K.KWW -Alldhat vMueof
Harmanfaer as to derive the HU
It will euro, when in the power Of medicine,
scrofula, salt Wieum, sores, bolls, pimples, all humors,
dyspepsia, biliousness, at* headache, indigestion,
general debility,catarrh,vheumatlsm,kldneyap4Uver tired feeling.
complaints. It overcomes that extreme
Purifies the Blood
“Seven years agwhile my little boy was playing
In the yard, he was bitten by a spider. The poison
1 his blood, and sores soon broke out about
entere 1 caused him intense
his body: they itehed terribly an
suff'-rin" Several times we succeeded lu healing the
but In spits of all we could do they would
sores up, Finally we tried Hood’s Sarsa
s,mu break out again. and one-th rd of an
pa.illa, and he took one bottle
other, when the sores disappeared. He lias not A sorb
* add 1 consider hint perfectly
ettred.’ «
®^YuoOD byt-.t. srija, Apothecaries, LoweU, Mass,
oo Doses One. Dollar__
m P ISO'S eURE FOR
H I
o
in>
r\j
I believe Piso’s Cure
for Consumption saved
mv life.—A. H. Doweix,
Editor Enquirer, Eden
ton, N. C., April 23, 1887,
PISO
Tlio best Cough Medi
cine Consumi-tion. is Piso’s Cuke Children fob |
take it without objection. 1
By all druggists. 25c. I
CURES WHERE ALE ELSE TAILS.
uso
WEL Sms ® 1 £
STEVENS & BR 0 .
Atlanta, Ga.
for Ca tit’oifiie. _______
piso,s. lamfc fq cohsumpujdn
" Waterprool&oat lsli®MJ
Ever lade.
Kcno genuine tbo tinlcBR above Don’t waste your money on atrjm. ibbercont ntBK FtoreUcererooef
tauijiud nitb mark. iA9k'(or I tha ? ’MsS‘Bf V’ALicitfcrt y lU 5 ur fc l.BomotI. Mass.
•* tradb * forilRtertpti ’OWE n
. have the "’‘fish
HfflW
eg:
tlon cai’cfuliv is Whipoundcd n fegjtiinate by medicine, experienced
skillful an
»«d physician, and adapted to
Woman’s delicate organization. It is
perfectly purely vegetable harmless in in its its composition effects in and
condition of tho any
system. pregnancy,"Pa
w ~ a aBwm MBap, In Prescription”
fi fiiOTHER S vorites is
a "mother’s cordial,”
flnaniM „ relieving nausea, stomach weak
UUnUIAL. ness of and
other distressing symp
toms common to that
condition. If its uso is kept up in the
latter months of gestation, it so
f30M rjy,; OiLIFOfiKiA. ;L,. k&wtei ren4“of^wre heidachefbuttlnee wwtat 1 bare
these^l\lm&Ja^omh lien nsino- vniir’F'nvnrite emuriTntnt Pros.-riPtlon 'hat ’ 1
‘t rftT.nf two^blocks P s?. 1 J'e t re°itnin mb’d but
r ^'L^nnr^ ? Fa«,rite^ without Pre«n^rion“ themort '
ial^all^The.e^fy'^hoWcS^eni^.^AU ani’j iow 1 fwl?marteT C tban°foryJSs two before.^My months. my
phvsidanstoffi me that I could not be Lured. amUhereforeyou
T atpr she writes: "It is now four years since 1 took your Fa
’ ’ “ tLe ^ a
° n<1 B ° rttUrn 01
troIlble 1 had thin.
Well as J Ever Was.—Mrs. John Stewart, of Chippewa well I
Fads, iris., writes: “I wish to inform you that I am as as
ever was, for which I thank vour medicines. I took four bottles
of the • Favorite Prescription ’ and one bottle of your ’Discovery
and disappeared. Pr four frien^teUmeT bottles I do of all the ‘Pellets.’ work: All of the able bad to be symptoms on my feet baya ail
mv own am
day. My never looked so wed."
Favorite Prescription is Sold by Druggists the World
Over’ T.arge Bottles $1.00, Six for $B.OO.
t&“ Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce’s large, illustrated
Treatise (la) pages, paper covers) on Diseases of Women.
Address, World’* Dispensary Jledical Association,
No, 863 Main Street, Buffalo, N\ T.
JB M
«V|
•y
-fi?.
}p. i'4«.
DOUGLAS
§3 SHOE. FOR
GENTLEMEN.
only fine calf «3 Sonmle«SU. eta the world
Tho
tacks or nalU '""c unf wtab e am! well-fitting as a
ivarratttM'” 6 - , , j
sSSSSiS SHOE -— 13 une *
W. I,. DOUGLAS »i.50
celled for heavy wear.
noi’t.’I, AS *J SHOE is worn by all
... , the wort’.
Bms, audls the best school shoe In
emmsssms
StfPERJORfg asKJ ogrj QOawty
css
FHMDE^HIA-’-Sehd sta mp f ob
&
SKHfiSIjSEffiaiS
improvement. Erei CO.. . and Fremont, Carru
£21 Lines Brewster not
aT 7(. ......' Irt >
|^ BST gi SES land
sion, lieatihg-(I'tltH lnflammatloili Utib&tlonb. hud nlcerullort
of congestion, the womb, inflammation, t>m and
tenderness in ovaries, accompanied Hr ittt
“internal heat.” Prcscrlp- ,
L .. «Favorite
lion,” when taken m con
rDB _ THE fh'dion With the tise or ur.
* u " piem-'sGoldetiMed calXjis
RinNFV^ RlUntlO, covery. aiid small laxwjvo ,Pur_
doses of Dr. PiCTCb s
j—* native Pellets (Little D*ver
Pillsl, cures Liver, Kidney and Bladder cus
eases. Their combined use also rernot es
blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and
scrofulous humors from the system.