The Georgia cracker. (Gainesville, GA.) 18??-1902, September 04, 1897, Image 4

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ITCHING PILES SWAYNE’S OINTMENT fiwnirvnn. efrufoc ana rarow rne ears, to one side and the remainder of the plant, ■talk, leaves, shucks and top is utilized, without the loss of a single part. If the crop is to be stored‘ Without shredding care shonld be taken to place each stalk in as. upright position; if laid -flat one on the other, there is danger of injury. If the ah redder is notarailable a good feed cutter, which will pay for itself in a short while, as they are not costly, will cut up the cured stalks as they are: needed into half inch lengths, and if this is sprinkled with a little salt or salt water it makes a splendid stock food. Analysis has shown it to be far superior tocotton seed hulls in feeding value. A southern farmer, who has had much experience in shocking and saying his corn crop, says it will faoili- tatethe work. if the following plan is adopted:'Takers pieoe of scantling 1x5 inches and « feet long. Sharpen at one em£s<rte»t'it ; can -be driven into the grenhfc; About 4 feet from the ground nail' oulfwo pieces about 2 feet long. PERSONAL ENCOUNTERS. tmmm lateratinr Notes About Duels and the Practice of Even in Germany the popularity of the duel is open to some loubt Its ex istence is due not so much to a desire for a combat as of fear what people will lay if there is no fight. JThere have been aoted duelists who were always ready for a fray, and when they entered a drawing room women quailed and hoped It would not be their husbands or lovers who would be so unlucky as to excite the ire of the men of blood. During the occupation of Paris by the- THE CONDITION OF Ladies Who Suffer c'.S'v;-" cotton. The outlook for an extraordinary eot* ton crop in this state was most excellent up to the middle of August, th6 plants as a rule growing well and fruiting finely. Since that date there has been a aeoided change for the worse, con tinued rains and cloudy weather caus ing serious injury. In South Georgia, where there was much open cotton, it bas been splashed with dirt and stained, and where the open cotton has been beaten to the ground by?tite; rain the seed have sprouted to the^hgtekl^injury of the lint.. In addition, rusthasidevoi- oped on much Of the gray .land, and the plant has ceased to grow and fruit , I* Middle and North Georgia the damage from these sources has' not been so great, but the continued:Wet weather has caused excessive growth, and, iu consequence the plants hive sheet •» great many forms and young bolls. & * Careful examination will cbuvince 8’ farmer of this fact. Picking is g on in southern and Middle Georgia, has been hutch retarded until, the ' few days by frequent showers, crop is quite two weeks late, as p pared with last year, but .unless have early frosts this wilT npt mai ally affect the finai yield. There some reports of caterpillars," but as nothin sufficient numbers to threi any serious injury. If the fari would destroy the first caterpillars' i appear, by using Paris green, tl would be no second or third crops to vour the cotton, but unfortunately j are usually unnbticed until vast a tors are hatched out, and of course L..,. are then more difficult to deal with.. On the whole the cotton crop of the state .promises to be only a fair oue. . CORV. jg I have traveled over much at the stete in the past month, and from observa tion and reports my impression, is that this crop U as goo i a- the land caii ABSOUtlTELT CURES: I ■PPP SYMPTOMS—UoiDtcre; inteniie itching and •tincinc; moiiitElfhtjnonebjrwratcUnf. If aUowea to continue t amors form an.d protrude, which often bleed and ulecrnte, becoming very - sore. SWAYNE’S OINTMENT stops Itchln* *nd bleeding, ebaorbs the tumor*. Sold by drngiijts or by auditor 50ct». Prepared by fcMBajtt Sow,Philadelphia. The simple application of Bradfield’s Femal< ^SWAYNE’S M OINTMENT; •.-.Jg) without any internal! medicine, cures tet-3 ^— 'ijjTr ter, eczema,- itch, allq eruptions on the face, 'BLV hands, nose, &o.'; leaving • akin clear, white and,ho* druggist*, or sent by mall for 90 ct bear the facsimile signature of wrapper. This is the original “ PITCHER’S CASTORIA/’ which has been used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFU LLY at the wrapper and see that it is the kind you have always bought on and has the signature of (&/&%/&&&$& wrap* per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. 3. Fletcher is President. * _ Mareh 8,1897. Do Not Be Deceived. Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in gredients of which even he does not know. “The Kind You Have Always Bought" BEARS THE FACSIMILE SIGNATURE OF alliOs there were duels every day, the Frenchmen usually being the challen gers and the victors, as they were very ■irillfril with the small sword. Some times, however, they made a mistake. as when they jeered at an English officer over losing his leg at Waterloo. The jeerer discovered that the loss of his leg did not interfere in the least with the Englishman’s aim. FETISH WORSHIP IS COMMON. Eduested and Refined People Often Be lieve in Charms and Talismans. “Fetish worship is not confined to. the ignorant as exclusively as most people imagine,” said ate. Atlanta man recently to a Washington Star reporter. “For several years I have made more These should be nailed on At right an gles to the. upright and to! each other. In making the shocks lay a dozen or sc xornstalka at: a time in the Alternate crotches formed by she nailed onboard*. / W^fivA 1 womao. It should fflifh/ I \\vV| bc takcp . by tbo fjf l \M| girl just budding. Wit! I jVsjl iQto womanhood wher) Megstrua- % tion is Scant, Sup* '■I ' ilrar - pressed. Irregular of PaiofUl, aod alI deIicate wonjei) should use it, xssits logic properties have a woo* vdcrful influence Ig toging-up and ^•treOflthoning the systerg by driv ing through tb© proper channels all Impurities. _ - “Ajleeghlor of one of my customers missed XBftMtrnntion from exposure and cold, and on -Aroyteg at puberty her health was completely T There have been exceptions to the mania for fighting at any price. An ©r less steady inquiry into the super stitions cherished by intelligent, cul tured people, and you can scarcely be lieve how widespread is*the belief in charms and talismans. At J-he’ Pqnoe de Leon in St. Augustine, last winter, I met a young woman from away up in' the frozen north. She. was" one of those superior girls who go to the roots of things, and her learning was some-: Kngiiwh captain, challenged by . a Frenchman, had the choice of weapon* Afid chose pistols. The Frenchman de cided lie would fight with nothing but the sword, and interested friends finally compromised on lances, on horseback. The combat naturally attracted, mneb attention. A great crowd witnessed the duel. One man received three ugly prods, bat finally killed his antagonist. No duelist could ever be made smile over, the famous story of the Englishman and Frenchman who were, to fight a duel in a pitch dark room. Not wishing to kill his man, the Englishman fired up the chimney when the word was given, and, to his surprise, brought down the Frenchman, who had bidden there. When tins stray is told in France, the* chimney. _ Fighting-Fitzgerald was successful iii 18 duels before it was discovered that hie always wore a coat of maiL Ffii /ears his fame insociety had rested on { pulKoP* the: stake nd tie the top* firmly together with a. piece of strong twirie. * By Jhi* plan the shocking i* muokeSfierto manage and the curing more certaiu - SAVING Or SBED COBN. .., Another feature of saving, onr. corn CR^' j^out WhlMi; ite Ate JwovwMaUr best time to attend to this As: corn uTstillUtaudiug in the fields. • Sin- gteterijltofiiiest earn, on ; the best de veloped and- most productive: stalks. Mark these-an d wheu they have come to full maturity store away in a well ventiliated place, where they [Will be.safe from rats and damp and ready fotteste Ffifin needed., If this plan was generally followed not only would the yidfi. ofirottu corn drop gradually and. quality also would be much improved. It ie tfie wllest pickings that, are us ually the cleanest and which bring the best pried It is a mistake to wait until the fields are Urbite to begin. An unex pected storm or au extended period,; of Wet.weatber may work incalculable in- jurjfcr ;The point to be aimed at la to get: our^ cotton to the markets in the: best pessibie. condltiou. ; ;The ciasaiftca- tion is heobaiug mote strict .each year, mid out catelesa methods of handling and^baUng this* onr, main dependence as a moneyterop. have given rise to a beory tare.-vrhich must come.out of the .pockets otrlhe farmers. ^ peisfdi^^^. The hig^price thisyeatv. owing to ' last year’e/ short crop, shows the* - ItBpttUBWt ^ of sowing Middle Georgia and good In the south ern portion of the state. In 'the latter protecting influence on her mother’s life, as it had on her own. That woman H waa. one of the : few really thoroughly ehteated women I have ever known, and yet she firmly believed in the su- pernatural properties of that pebble she wore in a locket around her neck. There are hundreds of men &11 over the country, college mes, too, who would as aoegnu leave their collars and section the crop being more advanced, suffered to a.considerable: Extent froes the dry weather in June, bat still sufficiency has been made there. TV© present crop will be far in excess of the* of last year, and if no* wasted will be ample to supply, the wants of-the state. Fodder pulling is about fiuiahsoL ie lower Georgia, and will very soon be completed all over *he state. SORGHUM, 8UOAB CANE. GBOITNDPJtAS AM* f - .[ ; . , 4 , :> ' POTATOES. These minor, though very valuable crops, are all doing well throughont the state, the rains of Jnly and AUguat hav ing brought -them out wonderfully; Peas also are growing finely, and proa- his invariable success as a duelist, and this discovery was his undoing. A cer tain major in -fighting him objected when his sword snapped on a heart thrust and demanded an investigation. He was afterward hanged in Ireland for murdering a neighbor. If The most tragic duel in England was between Lord Byron, granduncle of the poet, and a kinsman. It was fought in a tavern room by thelightaf one tallow candle. Lord Byron was tried far mur der, bat got off on manslaughter, from tee penalties of which he escaped be cause he was a peer of the realm. This safeguard of peers was done away with | only during the present ^ign. —Obicag* Crops Now Rapidly Advancing Towards Maturity. To Set Rid of Flies. To coax flies put of the house a fly trap dealer recommends: Near the tops of the screen doors and window screens punch seyeral holes from the inside with some instrument about the size of a lead pencil, thus leaving slightly ! funnel-shaped apertures, having-a rough jagged edge. on -tho outside. This renders it impossible for the flies to enter through these holes, while the flies which have strayed into the house the first time they light on one of the screens crawl to the upper part and, seeing these holes, imagine there is some place where they are not wanted on the other side and out they go. ( Tn this manner. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. cravats at home as to go Gut without a rabbit fopt in their pockets, or who will not talk ©yer a business proposition without touching their precious talis mans. And, speaking of rabbits'feet, I have been credibly informed that: the lasdi Id Good Condition to RecaiTs Gras*, Clover, Rye, Wheat, Oats, Etc.—Savin* U>» Cornstalk—Commissioner of dgrl. OOltnro Nesbitt’s Houthly Letter to TiU . tars o( the Soil In Geargts. Departmentjop Agriculture, Atlanta, Sept. 1, 1897. THE IMPORTANCE OF GETTING IN PALL CROPS EARLY. .. ' 'During the early part of August the l^j^her, as a rale, was most fa?or» Me » and' the boontifnl crops, reported from almost every section -of the south are bow rapidly advancing towards ma ths fruits yet unsathered, and .These favorable seasons also pat the lands in fine eonditiou for the prepara tory work of plowing, harrowing, eta, in order to be ready for the sowing of fafi crops of grass, clover, rye, wheat, vate, -eta The furrows will turn easily and be just at the most favorable angle fQvproper harrowing, and the seed bed, whan harrowed and made fine, will he j? at tho proper condition to promote the rapid germination and favorable ? said the fly trap dealer, **a house can be kept perfectly free from flies.” but i8n*t his word-painting weak?” **0h, well,* 6 , he’s young and hal^^t iiad much experience mix- -Detroit Jour- Dr, King’s New Discovery for. Ccnsump- **— . This is the best medicine-in the world for all forms of Coughs and Golds £vT I and for Consumption. Every bottle is « [ guaranteed. It will cure and not dis- “ appoint. It has no equal for Whoop- mg Cough, Asthma, Hay Feyer, Pneu- Lt. monia, Bronchitis, La Grippe, Cold in the Head mid for Consumption. It is “ ■ safe for all ages, pleasant to take, and, .*# i a sure cure. It is always well to take « | Dr. King’s New Life Pills in connec- “ j tion with; Dr. King’s New Discovery, as “ j they-r regulate and tone the stomach «* ] and ~4x>wels. We guarantee perfect “ j satisfaction or return money. Free ■*’< trial bottles at M. C. Brown & Co.. » ] Drug Store. ( ^*.- all df thAm have experiences as amus ing as those described ’in Cornhill Magazine. On one occasion the doctor fomad an old woman toiling to his door load, of potatoes. “Take Vote doctor, take ’em,” she said, mag nanimously. '' lam. the foundation for successful fall deep and thorough plowing ©f the land, and with them, at least, it sow only remains, to get the surface in finer smooth condition and then put in ihs eeed. The sooner this is done in -the present month the-better—the ten- dsrplants will thus have a chance to apt a- firm roothold before the early toptes come to check their growth.:} Of pouree if this work has not already been done U rffay still be undertaken, but eaoh day’e delay diminishes the chances ef success. In previous numbers we Jteve dealt very fully with the questions of preparation, fertilization, seeding, •to. '' .-rtf- ; : SAVING THE CORN* CROP. ■ -Wa nan not believe that farmers will The Shakers of Mount Lebanon, > community of simple, honest. God fearing men and women,, have, prepar ed the Shaker Digestive Cordial fdr many years, and it is always the same, simple, honest, curative medicine tbit has helped to pake the Shakers the' healthy,, long-lived- people .that - they are. .The Shakers never have: indiges tion. This is partly owing to their simple mode of IHe, partly to the won- : derful properties of Shaker Digestive Cordial. . Indigestion is caused by the stomach glands not supplying enough - digestiye jniee. Bhaker Digestive Cite*, dial supplies what’s, wanting. Shakes*- ; ; Digtetive Cordial invigorates, the stom ach and all its glands so that after , awhile they den^t need f help- . As eyir . deuce of the honesty of Shaker Diges- ing metaphors. “What saith the Scrip ture? Cast thy potatoes on £he doctor, ana than shalt find them after many day*—maybe about Christmas time,” she fidded slyly, and, with obvious glee at this ingenious method of insurance against the privations of ctee winter, old Peggy hobbled off. This same old lady, when on her dpgftoed teid Vshevdite.ga®eettp»? to Heaven, but wherever - she did go she’d put in a good word for the doo- mmft: Another. woman lost her; husband; The doctor found her tearful’ but-not inconsolable. “Ahl poor Jim!” she said. “My good manl Eh! . Pm very grateful to you, doctor, but it’s a mercy the Lord , took the esse kite *S : y GLUTTONY<g. PENALTY; Lives That Are Shorteaed by the flcMuei oV the Table. In apite^^C the rwarnhaga and bom- the mamr examples, of shartened lives peteikt in wasting such a large part of tfieir corn crop, as-has been the univer- eal practice in ^tho past» when onoe they are’ convinced that the alleged value of cornstalks is no “fake” or fan* e&te.Ptetnre of. impractical ‘.‘book fsprxn- but a sfmple. clear fact, which; has been abundantly proven. ‘’Seeing is WlieTiiif,” however, and each man loan prove for himself whether it be true or fliaa ’ Even at. the far south, where, the «dfiiw«fa» would teem a serious drawback, the plan of catting down and curing and lives of suffering, men will yield to thesteUctiveness of the pleasures of tee iable. The spectacle of the man who overeats' or who deliberately eats imprhte^ food- is common - enough, ; but. rarely do we, see as plain evidence of The Best Way. There are several ways of going to Klondike, hut the best way is to go slow.—Houston Post. tiye Cordial,. the formula Is, Printed on every bottle. Sold by druggists, price 10 cents to 81.00 per bottle. gether. The husband died, but the wife had more vitality. On the day following her husband’s death she was better, and the doctor wa3 congratulat ing himself on the success of his treat*,, ment; But the woman’s point pf view was different. She complahmd-' bitter? ly; for, as sbe forcibly pointed out: “E£ ee’d lat me alone, one funeral ’ud ’a’ done for us two; an* look what it ’U the admiration for the glutton which certain peopleposseBS as .tbatwhich tee daily pape^ teme.tinie. ago. afforded- A welh known boniface died: at an age when* he ought to have tote .enjoying robust and vigorous health. Some slight men tion" was made of bis business ven tures, of his daily life/ of his reason for living. But all this part of his exist ence was immateiral and uninteresting. *& whole stalk 1 as been tried most suo- rijft ifII11J Let each man at the south htei. experiment: in thto matter with a feVr rows of his corn crop and j the sod laborious job of “fodder Bailing” will to,forever banished from lehr fields. Chemical analysis has dem- xanstrated that even in ten bare corn; teeter nsnMly left standing in onr ^fields, is contained a very large part of the nutritive and fertilitiag values of the crop. Does it not seem a strange agricultural paradox, that we deliber ately throw away that which it has post so’ much to produce, and which Is Jkuowa to be highly valuable for stock sgaaffi' A 'few additional hints on the process-of cutting and curing the whole emje may nof be amiss. for although tench'has. been said- and. written: on this eabject, the directions, as a rule, apply -to onr northern and western neighbors, rather than to our own locality, where peculiarities of climate -and sea* *0n ^render certain.. variations and precautions^ in : the usual; process impetetiva When the corn in the; ear ie well glazed it is an infallible sign that the stalk has fiuished its work and Jiaa taken up from the soil all the nutri ment which it is capable of doing. When this stage is reached, the corn tops will wither and th'corop is said to be-fully ripe. It is at this stage that the ; stalks should be.cut off quite close to the ground- A man with a sharp -hoe. can soon learn to cot four or five acres in the morning. The stalks should not be allowed to lie on .the ground over sight, as the heavy dews nsnai at this season will prove injurious. What is ®ut in the morning should be gathered so aa d shocked in the afternoon. If She stalks are" very. large - ana neavjr, tewr should be put in a shock than where the growth is smaller. About ItO to 200, or even 300- stalks, according to size, may be safely put in each shock. The shocks Bhould be allowed to stand in-the field until perfectly cured—any where from three to six weeks. As soon as thoroughly cured they should to hanled to the barn and stored for fntnre use leav’ug the ear on if desired. Or, if preferred, the shredder may be called Into service at once, and as the crop is hanled from the field it may by this machine be converted into a finely «>»rt>dd«d and valuable forage. The ma- ;= ;’' AH Changed. “I don’t hear Jones prating.any more about his great love for little children.” J “Jones has moved into a kouse that has.^ vacant lot next door, where the boys of the neighbor hood play ball daily.”—Indian apolis journal. Better have a good medicine and not need it than to need it and not have it. See? Then, just befqre ytra get hurt, buy a bottle of Dr. Tichenor’s Anti septic. It is a record breaker for wounds, burns, bruises, scalds, etc., for man and beast. 50e. a bottle. At your druggist’s. ^ NEED FOR SLfcfcP, Hu Most'‘Important Compensation Fo. A]1 [Effects of Fatigue By far the most-important compensa tion for all effects of fatigue is sleep. his life seem to have been gastronomic feats and a general ability.to eat and drink enormously. He was landed .as the prince of bon vivants, the man wlip could eat a huge dinner, and shortly thereafter swallow a brace of broiled lobsters and a. cpuple of Welsh rabbits, washed down with copions libations of vintages Cr distillages or fermentegee. During his last illness, when his pby- sicians enjoined test in be|| and a sern* Everybody, even the mau mentally most inert, develops when awake a mass of mental effort- which he cannot afford sontinuonsly without suffering. We need, therefore, regularly recurring pe- The Madison Advertiser is of the opinion that a kick in time saves nine. marquis oi Wellington ne went to Bans the most of himse if. Whatever his from Toulouafe, where he had fought + ./. ' ... . „ . and won the last battle of the Penin- ca P acltie - s ma y be ’ he 18 sure to ^ nd qiinr war. -j, .y,. some place where he can be useful to jje went to the opera thaiufirst even- himself and toothers.^ But he cannot imr-and though he wore plain clothes reach his highest usefulness without and sat in the back of the box, he was g-ood health and he cannot have good almost immediately recopiizedbysome healtll without pure blood. The Sited one in the pit, who cried out, “Yelling- , . , , .. . ® circulates to every organ and tissue The name was taken up by others, and when is P ure * rich and healthy and at last the entire pit rose, turned it carries health to the entire system, to the box and called, “Vive Veiling- bur, if it is impure it scatters disease ton!” ’ * .... wherever it flows. Hood’s Sarsaparilla •i^i. 0r u V ^ j 6 P eo P^ e J 36 satisfied un- j s t | ie one true blood purifier. Itcures til he had stood up and bowed to them, ,, . , , , , . when he was cheered and applauded salt rheum, scrofula, catarrh, dyspepsia again. At the end of the performance and rheumatism because these diseases the passage froto the box was found to have their origin in the blood. riods in whioh the consumption of men tal, force shall be slower than the con tinuous replacement. The lower the de gree to which the activity of the brain sinks the' more rapid and more com pleted he recovery. The mental vigor of most men is usu ally maintained at -a certain height for pulously carefpl die*, wA.tekfi teat he was game enough to dress and go out on the hotel porch to ait, winding up his imprudence (and incidentally r his life) with a hearty .meal, ..in defiance of the medical directions. This last piece of bravado was apparently considered by certain newspape r reporters as an achievement fit to rank with a victory on: a battlefield, and the glutton was.ad miringly mentioned as though he were a brilliant and fearless hero, risking bis life in a.’wbrthy cause. .jT ^ The newspapers were not creating a sentiment, but merely catering to one already formed in thus aiding glnttony. The only conclusion we can draw is that the epicurean philosophy still has its cult,.and; that many a.man's motto is, “Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die. ” The case is left to the moral ist.—American Medical-Surgical Bul letin. ~~ ;. • • Xo DUfc« u Ojitor CooktaU. An oyster cocktail is made by putting into a glass half a dozen tiny little oys- The bladder was created for one pur pose, namely, a receptacle for the urine, and as such it is not liable to any form of disease except by one of two ways. The first way is from im perfect action; of the kidneys. The second way is from careless local treat ment of other diseases. CHIEF CAUSE! Unhealthy urine from unhealthy kidneys is the chief cause of bladder troubles. So the womb, like the blad der, was created for one purpose, and if not doctored too mnch is not liable to weakness or disease, except in rare cases. It is situated back of and very j close to the bladder, therefore any pain, disease or inconvenience mani-1 fested in the bladder or urinary pas-1 sage is often, by mistake, attributed to female weakness or womb trouble of some sort. The error is easily made I and may be easily avoided. To find j out correctly, set your urine aside for 1 twenty four hours; a sediment or set- tling indicates kidney or bladder tron- coont f ea »le. The mild and the extraordinary e effect of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the h ft w great kidney, and bladder remedy is J - soon realized. If you need a medicine j which t you shonld have the best. At drug?! please s> gists fifty cents and one dollar. Yon 1 ces, so t may have a sample bottle and paca-1 advertise phlet, both sent free by mail. Mention-! Northwa The Georgia Cracker n.T>d send Deseri dress to Dr. Kilmer Sc.^tCof. 'Bingham- apolic&ti ton, N. Y. The proprietors of this pa per guarantee the genuineness of this Land Ag ofler ' ' i conflt hi* companion: “But why are you applauding much? He has always beaten us!” This was very true, and the question No use losing sleep and walking the floor with baby at night because it has .colic. A dose of Dr. Tichenor’s Anti septic (diluted and sweetened) will re lieve it in a few minntes. Very pleas ant taste and odor, free from opiates and perfectly harmless. Worth a gold 8 but your druggist will sell you a bot tle for a silver half 8. four days. This observation was ail the ■sore surprising because the subject was not conscious of the Jong duration of the dietwhanoe and was first made aware of it incidentally by the results of coratin- sed measurements on tho causes of the manifestations of fatigsA- -Popular Sei- seemed a natural one; but the answer was charming: “Yes, but he has always beaten us like a gentleman!” tors, to which add a few drops of tabas co, a pinch of salt, a teaspoonful of Worcestershire sahoe, a teaspoonful of tomato ketohsp and a tabiepeoonful of lemon juioe.—Mrs. S. T. Boxer in La- Adultcrato the Weed. In England the temptation to adul terate tobacco is much stronger than with us on account of the higher price. Dock, rhubarb, colt’s foot, and other kinds of leaves have been occasionally employed, but their use Is not fre- auent, as a very heavy fine is inflieted Cor the offense. Ann V.S.JounaI of MetUtbu Pr<fW.K.p e te S ,who makes a speoialty of /Epilepsy, has without aoubt treated and cur-* «d more cases than any I hying Physician; hi r success-ia astonishing. We have heard of cases Of ao years’ standing <te| cured by — -M him. He publishes a K valuable B IB work on E I ■ this dis- b B fl ease, which VU-kTI . large hot- The Reason. “So you didn’t get along very well in the raining camp?” “Not very.” “Didn’t anybody there make money?” “Yes, some did?” “Why didn’t yon?” “It’s against my principles to keep a saloon.”—Washington Star. Y . CURECOHSTIPATIOH iBoiorar fiPiBHTEEP rtosne fceokletfree. Ad. STERLING REMEDY CO., Chicago. Moetossl, Cn.~wtTK*n^SST til’ '