Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, November 29, 1895, Image 3

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The Haw Side. The number class was reciting, and little Erma was sent to the blackboard to write the number ten in figures. She wrote it backwards, when a little claimed, boy, who was watching attentively, ex¬ “It’s not right, professor. The one wants to be on the haw side of the naught. ” False Witnesses. There arc knaves now and then met with who repre-enr certain local l itters and i o -on ous stimuli as identical wit a or posse-sing properties ach killer.-. akin These to those ot HostetterV Stom¬ foisting their trashy coinponnds’upon scamps only succeed in unacquainted the p ople with genuine article, which ^ U | h tS e ir n2 P S?hirt “e d S erani A.k e rt,e remedy rheumatism for malaria, dyspepsia, constipation, and kidney trouble. Thought is troublesome to him who lives without his own approbation. Dr. Ki rarr’s Swamp-Root cures aii Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet Laboratory and Consultation free. Binghamton. X. V. rimif/rca if Sted * b ? tter than a vo!um ° hur ‘ “: ~— -- -- " ' 11 l,ne * _ People overlooked the Importance of perma nently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient action, but now that it is gener ally known that Syrup of Figs will permanent ly cure habitual constipation, well-informed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but finally injure the system. Re-ponsibliity walks hand in hand wilh ca pacity and power. Ueware „f Oi,„ m ent7 forT,uarrh That Contain .Mercury, as mercurv will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange tlie whole sys tem when entenr,git through themucou* sur faces. Such articles slioul i never be used ex cept on prescriptions from reputable phvsi- d Clans, as the damage they will do is len o to the good you can pos-ibly derive irom them, Hall’s Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, O., contains no met. eury, and is taken internally, acting direct y Upon he bioo I and mue ms surfaces of the system. In buying Halt’s Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine. It is taken inter naily. yrtiold and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. & druggids!'priceItsiTperbottle. by Ho# Raisin'* Extraordinary# Two acres mulberries fatten 85 hogs. The. hogs were turned in th orchard in Mav and kept there till Sept-mber eating nothing but mulberries and were perfectly fat when taken out. They were Hr fed a little corn to bar len tl.e meat and n killed. Two acres of mulberry trees 6 oott. h h cost. ^30.00—what are 85 r’at hogs uorih? For best k nd - of inul berries write for new catalogue whicn is sent free. Address W. D. Beatie, Atlanta. Ga. Piso’s Cure cured me of a Throat and Lung trouble of three years' si a ding.—K. C.\i>Y, Huntington, Ind., Sov. 12, 1S04. Impaired Henltli is Not Busily Regained, yet Parker’s Ginger Tunic has attained it: in many cases, l-'cr every weakness and distress. ------------- -- Gastric Dyspepsia JlH And constipation troubled me for .••-J over a year. I grew worse and could aKf.; W' __ jv-i hardly perform my 'kWtlU- ffigM household duties. \ I I I hod severe pains in mv stomach, es racially at night I WMfoj&Sp' / treat physician « d with six our months without ft avail. I resorted to KWSlw Hood’s Sarsapa¬ rilla, and having taken six bottles I am freo from all distress in my stomach and am no longer troubled with dyspepsia.” Mas. Mxn o auex Fenner, Indian Falls, N. Y. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only » m j b «rji Brunner ./• I I’Ll© (P» iOOCi Pr ominently , m . the public ... e ye. $1 ; 6 for to. nOOU S ills easy to imv, easy to take l easy hi effect. 25c. The Greatest Hedica! Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF R0X3URY, MASS,. Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a rem«cyt a cures ever : He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certifi cates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them : tbe same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused hy the ducts being stopped,and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label Ii the stomach is foul or bilious it will Eat tho best vou can get. and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. f T k \/T VI frf* T3 r^ iyl/A.i-/- T AT \ ; Y X f ■ pi T j\J _____ T j Ivl K \ | Iviii v D L X 5 Always WINS HOSTS of; I FRIENDS wherever its — V 5 sknown. It is the Safest! I \ FOOD for Convalescents!) 5old by DRUGGISTS EVERY WHERE! , Leeeetf * Inhn Carte & 5ons, vew marlin repeater. wo ri . s^ede! i83W. 44-40 Ca'ihr^* suae in 85 -*. ' :-i • mailt", Only Sol’d Top or.a Slde-ejec «• jl: other Cs.ibres ready- The Mart n Fire free* New Haven. CULTURE OF CORK TREES. AJT INDUSTRY WTICK COULD FLOURISH IN THIS COUNTRY. The Department of Agriculture Ad vocates Planting Cork Forests— Uses to Which the Dark is Put. r r HE Department of Agriculture will issue a bulletin before long on the subject of cork, says the Washington Star. It will advocate the culture of cork trees in this country, urging that forests o: thi * s P^ les of'oak could be establishe l with great profit in the southern ytates Statistics show that 82,0 10, 000 worth of cork is imported into steadily the United States annually. It is increasing in value, fetching now eleven times the price that was paid for it in 1790. The soil of California is particularly well adapted to the cork oak, which grows there with a greater rapidity than in Europe. Already about 1000 of the trees have been planted in the Saa Gabriel valley. qu 10 University of California has dis tl’ibuted several bushels of the acorns, which, by the way, are very good to eat, tasting like chestnuts, The variety of uses to which cork is put is extraordinary. To the Alger¬ ians it is as great a necessity as the agave to the Mexican or the palm to the Arab. From it he makes boats, furniture, saddles, shoes, horseshoes and even clothing. Other employ meuis t f rui or the material in Southern Europe for rooting, pails, clothes, , are wiudow lights, " ’ plates, 1 tubs, drinking 7 vessels, , religious . . fences and images, . . cu ffi u s The waste cork from, the cuttiug , . of . . bottfe ,,, stoppers . is utilized , i j or fillin'^ ° cushions and mattresses, and . in . the .. manufacture ._____ ot . coin dust bricks, which are serviceable where great dryness is required. A very fine kind of pasteboard is made from cork, the «rouud f’ lbst »“ ce be ''“” miso,i with paper ptllp and pressed to squeeze out the water. Cork waste is also used , lor .. making . . lifeboats, ...... , buoys, linoleum, 9 inner soles for siloes, arti ticial . . lo^s . and , cork concrete, »i arms, and many / other articles la which ii„ htaes au a elasticity are required. Though of modern origin, tne cork industry has attained immense im portance. Tn the last half century j| le proi * ] uo ti 0 n has more than doubled. About . $8,000,000 du n in non worth of prepared nrumru i cor k representing 587,000 huudred weight, was sold last year. Portugal occupies the first place as a producer. while the United States, England and Germany are the principal consumers, Spain exports vast quantities of manu factured cork for bottles. In this in dustry, as well as in the quality of the product, she surpasses all other conn tries. The world consumes annually 7,000,000,000 cut corks. The sizes and forms of these are regulated ac¬ cording to 150 models. Nowadays bicycle handles, life pre servers aud hat linings are made of cork. Tbe material is^ burned for making “Spanish black.” The waste is utilized for lining ice houses, being an excellent non-conductor, and also for packing grapes. Notwithstanding all the uses for cork waste that have been mentioned, greit quantities of it have to be thrown away for lack of purposes to which to apply it. Cork dust is made to serve as a substitute for rice powder in the toilet. Tons of cork are manufactured every year in to nose-holders for eyeglasses. For these the very finest quality is re quired. The inventor of thisparticu lar use for cork has made a big for tune out of the idea. Hegets a royal ty oa eye , y pair of eyeglasses thus made that is srId. Cork trees are raised from seed us • ually, the large and sweet acorns pro ducing the biggest trees and the finest cork. Small and bitter acorns pro duce coarse and inferior trees. The bark product of a fullgrown tree is about eighteen pounds, worth five cents a pounds. The cork of com merce is not a natural product of the tree, but an abnormal development of tlie bark under certain treatment, Natural cork is useless for purposes of manufacture, being too coarse. Some times it is so woody aud densethat.it will not let Tlie wild cork ot enter layer of the natural bark is removed when the tree reaches a diameter of six inches or so, leaving the interior denser and softer cork layer. The ] atter j s called “lard,” or “mother cork,” aud from it the cork of com¬ merce develops. The bark is first placed in long, rec tangular vessels and boiled. The boiling closes the pores, increases its elasticity, and renders it more supple and compact. Its specific weight is reduced, while its volume is almost doubled. Next the slabs are scraped tQ r0move all the woo d fibre. After this th«J go to. workman who trims them to proper shape an 1 sorts them into grades suitable for different purposes. A Novel Incubator. The idea of hatching eggs by elec tricitv may appear somewhat far fetched, but electric incubation is not only being carried on in Germany, but i3 growing up into an important in r counted on out of every 100 egj?.«. An electric mother, a box in which the XZSS. Dan ( lnen j ; 0 f the incubator. ---—- A Humming Bird Plant. In Syria, near Damascus, there is said to grow a humming bird plant, the flower of which bears a close re¬ semblance to a humming bird. The is red, the wings a dar green, the back yellow, ti head tail a bluish black. SELECT SIFTINUS. The magnolia tree is named in honor of the French Professor, Mag noi. Gutta-percha is tho milky sap of the Isonandra gutta trees of the East. la¬ dies. Leather tires will in the future be employed on bicycles made for the French army. An old African chief who followed Livingstone lias just died. He leaves fortv-dve widows. A Sutter County (California) man has a “cat ranch,” upon which he an¬ nually raises thousands of Malteses pussies for the fur market. The oldest Michigander is Mrs. Nancy Sullivan, 112, of Arcadia; her face is a mass of wrinkles. Some cen¬ tenarians do not look ther ago. Six of the newspapers now pub¬ lished in Germany were established over 200 years ago, the oldest being the Frankfurter Journal estaolished in 1615. Louis Humphrey, of Osage County, Missouri, is just a plain farmer, but he pays a tax of $1900 on his personality, and it takes fifty men to do his har¬ vesting. While attempting to save tho life of a young doe, Henry Nelson, the keep¬ er of tho Forest Park “zoo,” at St. Louis, Mo., was gored to death by an infuriated elk. Mrs. Ellen Talley, who died recent¬ ly in Ellsworth, Minn., at 101, and Mrs. Mercer, 100, who is still living in Elom, Ini., are good examples of mi 1-Westera centenarians. Booths are to be erected in the squares of Copenhagen containing telephoes. conveniences for writiug and an office for receiving letters, bo Bidesnewspaper and boot black stands. In Lough Erie, near Carrick-on Shannon, Ireland, an ancient black oak canoe, without naii or rivet, was lately discovered in a strange way. A Mr. Mulligan dreamed that he saw a canoe at the bottom of the lake. The lake was dragged aud the canoe found. One of tho most splon lid of the New York City hotels lias several glass doors iu its main lobby, which are so clean that iu order to prevent unob¬ servant or short-sighted persons walk¬ ing into them they have the word “glass” on a card in tho center of each Pannel The cliff where more seabirds aro said to build their nests than any oth er place in tho world is oil the coast of Norway. It is 1000 feet high, and goes by the name of Svoerholtklub* ben. Kittiwakes have built, their nests of bent and seaweed for ages in innumerable quantities, The Katydid Orchestra. An article in a recent number of Science on the katydid orchestra is extremely interesting, Tho writer B tates that this is one instance in na tore of concerted and contiuuede torcs of harmony. ^j The katydids keep tiros, atl q are l0 only members of the in Bec ); kingdom that do this on any ex tended scale. He says: “$o soon as j.]j 0 8UU se t an j twilight is ad yancing, the katydids in the trees be gin to ‘tune up.’ The first notes aro scattered, awkward and without rhythm ; hut, if no wind is blowing, thousands soon join in, and from that time until daylight breaks there is no intermission. It is marvelous that the organs can withstand this con tiuual rubbing for eight hours. E y choosing out an insect close by and listening to it alone, I h ive convinced myself that the samo insect keeps at i caH t j or hours at a time. These raspings are seldom three at a time, as the popular name would imply, but ar0 the result of usually four or five, B0 , ne titnes six, distinct but closely joined movements.” When a large number of katydids are engaged in this musical exercise, there are those with louder tones who seem to occupy the position as leaders, or first violin i 8 t a They hold the time wind, measure which often in spite of tho Uf , U ally stops the performance of the m „„ dt „ t„„ i 03 t notes of the others once more in regular measure or beat. The Biter Bitten. A man in rustic attire shambled along the streets of Berlin, carrying in his hand a package which was scaled aud addressed, and with an inscrip¬ tion in the corner to the effect that it contained $100 in notes. A passerby, who was struck with the sheepish look of the man, asked him what he was looking for. By way o* reply tho countryman held the packet under his none and asked him to read the ad dress, as he had forgotten it, and was unable to read himself. In a tone of pleasurable surprise the other replied: “By Jove, the parcel is for me! I have been expecting it for ever so long.” appeared satisfied The messenger at having accomplished his mission, and added that he wanted half a crown for his trouble, which was pii I on tho spot. The new owner of the parcel at once retired to a dark corner to ex¬ amine his treasure. Ho found noth¬ ing but a couple of sheets of printed paper, ajpd in the middle a white label with the single word, “fiold!’’ Cream «t Human Kindness. A rnan with a paiinui expression of countenance sat on a dry goods Pox: “Are you ill?” some one asiced. “No.” “Have you lost anything?” “Never had any thing to lose.” “What’s the matter then?” “I’m sitting on a was.” “Why don’t vou get up?” “Well, that was my first impulse, out 1 _ot to thinkin’ that I was hurtm’ .e wasp as badly as he vas huruu’ ,e and conclu led to sit here a whue.” —Spare Moments. Hints for Housewives. Persons not having scales and weights at hand may readily measure the article wanted to form any recipe without the trouble of weighing, al¬ lowance to be made for an extraordi¬ nary dryness or moisture of the arti efe.h weighed or measured. Wheat flour, 1 pound is 1 quart; Indian meal, 1 pound 22 ounces are 1 quart, butter when soft, 1 pound is 1 quart; loaf sugar when broken, 1 pound is 1 quart; white sugar, powdered, 1 pound 1 ounce are 1 quart; best brown sugar, 1 pound 2 ounces are 1 quart; ten eggs are 1 pound; 16 large tablespoonfuls are J pint; 8 large tablespoonfuls are 1 gill; 4 large tablespoonfuls are J gill; 2 gills are ^ pint; 2 pints are 1 quart; 4 quarts are 1 gallon; a common sized tumbler holds J pint; a oommou sized wine glass holds J gill; ft teacup holds a gill; a large wine gloss holds a gili'; a large tabl. spoonful is J ounce, should Crusts and pieces of oread be kept in a granite bucket, closely covered, in a dry, cool place. vessel, Keep fresh lard in a granite Keep yeast in wood or granite iron wore. Keep preserves and jellies in glass, Keep salt in dry placer . Keep vinegar in wood, glass or gran¬ ite ironware. Lard for pastry should bo used hard ; it should bo cut through flour ; not rubbed. Forgot She Was a Chicago <»lrl. Boston Physician (called to the Yon dome)—Well, Miss Jackson-Parke, it may be that you are going to bo ill, but I think it is only a cold, and that we can drive it out by prompt nieas urea. (To the chambermaid)—Bring a pail of hot water right away, for Miss Jackson-Parke to soak her feet. Miss Jaekson-Parke—And, doctor, will you telegraph to my lather in Chicago and tell him how I am? Boston Physician—Certainly, Certainly. cer tainly. Iu Chicago. Hm! (L’o chambermaid)—Bring two pails of hot water, please.—Somerville Jour¬ nal. A St. Louis plumber has fallen heir , and title of the Earl of to the estate Antrim. 1 he estates are worth $80, 000 , 000 , but if he has been a plumber any length of time he doesn’t need them. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov’t Report 0 Baking Powder ABAOWimV PURE A Cheering Message. The Rtar boarder had quarrelled the landlady’s daughter, whoso steady company he had been. Three year-old was in the parlor wlion tho quarrel occurred. She was supposed not to bo old enough to understand such things. time The next day at luncheon Three-year-old looked across tho room a t the star boarder and piped out, during a lull in the general convcrsa tion : “Don’t you care, Clinrliel Slie loves you just the same.”—Buffalo Ex press. An Anglomaniac. “This is about the time of thc year,” Mrs. Watts to her neighbor, that the fishing fever strikes my husband, H ho can get out on the banks of some creek and catch two or three little mudeats in the course of an afternoon, hois perfectly happy.” “Ho he is fond of fishing, then?” “Fond of fish ing? Why, that man is a perfect au glomaniac.” Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780 ) has led to the placing on the market many misleading and unscrupulous imitations ~of K their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu f|(' |§ facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and ii /ki] |i|| Chocolates their on manufactures. this continent. No chemicals are |‘ Dm used in ! | Consumers should ask for, and be sure that -J?® fj. they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.’s goo Js. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. nothing lost Scott’s Emulsion makes cod-liver oil taking’ next thing to a pleasure. You hardly taste it. The stom¬ ach knows nothing about it—it does not trouble you there. You feel it first in the strength that it brings: it shows the in smoothing the color of the cheek, the rounding of the angles, of the wrinkles. It is cod-liver oil digested for you, slipping rain-drops as easily into the blood and losing itself there as lose themselves in the ocean. What a satisfactory thing this is—to hide the odious taste of cod-liver oil, evade the tax on the stomach, take health by surprise. of—the fish-fat There is no secret of what it is made taste is lost, hut nothing is lost but the taste. Perhaps your druggist has a substitute for Scott’s Emulsion. Isn’t tbe standard all others try to equal the best for, you to buy i 50 cents and $ 1.00 All Druggists SCOTT & BOWNE Chemiots New York A MARVEL. TOB1W4TVTCA:U.H AN I* ASTONISTTTNQ OilIt K OF AN KITRK1IK TASK OF ST. VITOS' DANCE. How § Young* L«df Refrained the Vit of Tier Arina, Umb* and Speech In Three WeeUi. rn)m thc standard-Vnlon, Ttronhlyn. JT. JT Too muob liar.I stndy at school brought on St. Vitus’ dnnon. Such was the common ex p« r ionee of Miss Olendora Rivei-g, daughter of Mrs Ame) j S Rivers, of 69 By en , on street, Brooklyn. The disease crew worB „ 0V ery month, until the young lady’s entire rlctht side became paralyzed^ hut, now thBt a mar velons and permanent cure has b p pn wrought, it will bn Interesting to real b er own version or tho emeaoy of Dr. WUl lams’Pink Pills, “For more than a year," said Miss Rivers, I'doetors attended me without effecting the slightest ehango In my condition. If anv thing. T grew worse under their troatment, IIn tn February of this year, when my oondl tlon became eriltcat. “I had lost tho cmnploto use of my arms n nd limbs and spoooh. I oouH only swallow liquids, and these only as they fed me with a spoon, when they could get my mouth open. j wanted tosleep all the time. The stupor I laid In was something like a trance, and no doubt I would havo died If tlioy had not waked me up at intervals. “The first week In March my mother, who Is a sick nurse, was advised by a neighbor to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills in my ease. Sh» got some of tho pills—a box from Nollson’s drug store, at tho corner of Mvrtlo avenue and Halt street. Before I hail taken one half the contents of tho box a retnarkubla change was noticed in my condition. “Gradually I regained the use of my arms and I inhs and speech, and by the time the pills were gone I was up and about the house almost well. But my mother thought It wise to gi-t another box of the pills, and this she did, and hare you see mo stand bn fore you with more strength and more am¬ bition than T ever had. “Some of our near neighbors attribute my regained body and health to some miracu¬ lous or supernatural agency; but my mother and most Inttmato friends know that tho <*uro was effected hy Dr. Williams’ Pink PI lip. “Three weeks from the day I swallowed tho first dose of the pills I was as well as you pee me tn-day ” Dr. WlVItams’ Pink Pills for Tale People arn a sped fie for troubles peculiar to fe¬ males such oh suppressions, Irregularities and all forms or weakness. They build up tho blood nnd restore the glow oi health to pa'o nnd sallow cheeks. In men they effect n radtenl euro in nil eases arising from men¬ tal worry, overwork or excesses of whatever nature. They are manufactured by tho Dr. WtH lams’ Me Heine Company, Bolianoetady, N. Y., and are sold by all druggists at 60 coats a box or six boxes for $2.50. Useful Garment. * A Clothier—Were you pleased with the overcoat which I sold you? Customer—Oh, yes; all my boys have worn it. Clothier—Well, think of that! Customer—Every time, lifter a rain, the next smaller one had to take it.— Fliegende Blatter. .Strength to Spare. The majority oi people do pot posnesn an adequate of power for the performance of 1 “riin-'iown” eir «irdinary ln>»or. 'They are fall alw&vn easily in into a condition, and w» oonsump'ion. Kiln, pneumonia. fev» rs and kidney diseave. To oh a n streiutth wall-di¬ look to the stomach. Htrenufth from vines don’t gested food alone. T<»n os and no ^ivo real permanent strength. Rut Tyn posi r’i ]>> n-p ia Reined\ does, its right use sale tlvcjy iiisiires perfect digestion. For everywhere. FITS-topped free by Die Kmnk’m UnKAi Nkhve Rrbtoiirk. Vo flhsafter first dav’s II c. Marvelous cures. 1’rcatise and $2.nOtrial ho tic free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Rhila.. I*;». Mrs. Winslow’s SoothIntc Syrup for children teethlmr, sof tens the gums, reducen inflam in < tion, allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. It Im More Tlmn VVondcrful how patiently people suffer with corns. fh*t comfort hy removing them with Jlindercorns. A. N. U...... ......Forty-ei ht,’95. An^MTA^posiTroK A List of Reliable Business Iloumt whore t o'ailora to the Great Shorn will be properly treated and OOrt purchase poods at lowest prices. ~ ‘ 1 ~ OTII AllLoUll Qnll <5t 0 OOI LULLIileJ 1 ItlO W W ,lp W^*l P Y CO 55 Whitehall St.. Atlanta. Cla. Everything In the ,Jewelry and Sliver l.ine at Factory Prices. C/t 78 Whi TEH all St. Atlanta. Ga. 0 0 TO TETTERINE AVOID THIS USB Se N " Th« only unintaHS ami harmle** 9 C OdtE for the w tsL tyi>e of Koz«ru». B | Totter, Ringworm, the face, ugly rough patoli- *o*lp. m »'H on oruHtea n * Ground i toll, chafes, chain, pun H I i>1hb PoiHon from ivy or pot on oa«. I P In abort all itch K8. Send ftUo. in ULI f| -tatupH vunnali, or cuHh Ja., t«> .J. T. Shaptrma, So ( tor one box, if your druggiMt don’t keep it. You will find it hi « 'has. (). 1'y.nkr’s, Atlanta. For Style. Wear and Comfort,_^ Visit 14, Wliitohnll St. Successful growers ot fruits, berries, and all kinds of vegetables, know that the largest yields and host quality arc produced by the liberal use of fertilizers containing at least 10% of Actual Potash. Without the liberal use of Pot¬ ash on sandy soils, it is impos¬ sible to grow fruits, berries and vegetables of a quality that will command the best prices. Our pamphlets ieriilizns, are not advertising circulars honni inK spe ml l>ut are pra< tic.il works, contain* ing latest researi hes on the sunje< i of fertilization, and are r<*.illy helpful to farmers. They nre sent free for the asking'. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. If in visiting.* ATLANTA you do not find in the Manilla* nre* Building that large portion of the EXPOSITION DEVOTED TO TfW •Piano. ..PtlL-LMINCNT IN ARTISTIC TONE QUALITY.. Or anyway, if you think of buying a piano, write to either Tun John Church Co. CHICAGO. NEW YORK. CINCINNATI. OR THE EVERETT PIANO CO. BOSTON, And you will get valuuble information. TUB A F. It MOTOR, CO. doc* half ttif, world* windmill business, because It haul reduced tbe cost of wind power to I « what It w;i». Jt manj branch notifies, ami supplies its goods and repair* x ill four door. Jt cun and does furnish • ^ others. better article It makes for loss Pumping money than and WmSg W (iemod. Hteel, Galvani»ed-after ^^'■"•uoiiipletloii Towers, Windmills, Steel limi Tilling Haw «hI 7 and Fixed Steel Feed Frames, Hteel F*ed (’utters and JB| ’HI (irlndoa. On application that will lr will furnish name until one of these articles It January 1 st at 1 /\\ the uaual prtce. U also make* jankH aud P urn pH of all kinds Mend for cataloffu*. Factory* 12th. Rockwell *od Fillmore Streets, chickg^ I] ASTHMA Y- POFHAM S ASTHMA SPECIFIC Glveiirfcliof In FIT* minutes. Bend slf 1 for a FKICK trial nackuge. Sold by umttvfr.f. Ono Rox Hint postpaid on rocelpt of *J.oo. Slxb«iM*S.OO. Add read Til OS. 1'OllfAH, HULA., I*A. Unheard of Offer! ) /MB fjbjJ 'f Li- ? 00 llt;o«y Foil Leather with #h»fts, Top, sent Genuln# jm ex*«ln»ii«a A»r m i-—— for on re '•■-ipt of $5 None Brewster Hpriogt retujiiitl ’filflrKil. l>elter it | 00. Absolute guarxnte* for one year. If exact! LX repr^neated, n«%re*t f63 the balance, | r i0. Pr c* 34 Cltii WITH < iRoaa Draft, letter or money order B ."^ r rpr,»u' dMje " American Boggy Co. t OSBORNE’S Miudmedd cueae a.vo School of SHorthandl aiu. lr \. <■ A. A- tu&i biMtnw from d*y of 1 coi u curr nov to »rn#» v i ltjst’-ar, *1 cit, v . ny s -.tw„ city, t\~ 2 work l *’‘ w tho ,r * ) and i.ity t'-ach whrre jou Irto li»Of . _ n you rJj Pb ftfT M' 1 “ualnv-aa 'iiy.fli fu:iv; ■ ilr-*. r»*mern .-in«l we wlL • xj> jpjar* alA Irt /m/s or w. atitefi*.-, ar rt r«Tyrr aj’« J 7 W rk; a - ulnt» ly ; wrll# at D. T. , SORLAN, K maeor, Hm Lr, DETROIT, «H Hl(nl * ■Ms. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM CfpaMi*'* 1“ninWiteB and beaut;fief the h*l». a luxuriant grrowth. H: Never Fai’s to Best ore Qray Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures efa-p d.«ea»e« & hair falling. _yc. and $1 wj_at Dnjggista__ I ce I- ama*ifcas.’i UUHfca WHtHE ALL ^ ELSE FAILS. to o cn Best ' uugh Syrup. Tastes Good. Use n ini ia time. s*>(d by druseists. 3 fiWi CM CONSUMPTION