Ry RE tert ———————————————————————— = Bemooralic alm Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 4, 1898. FARM NOTES. —If grapes are bagged they will be par- tially protected from rot, insects and birds, but the bagging should be done just as soon as the little bunches are formed. The earlier the work is done the better. —When making whitewash use lime and skim milk and the whitewash will last longer. If a red color is desired use fresh bullock’s blood, which will still further improve it. The mixture soon becomes almost insoluble. —Do not undertake the labor of raking over a field of dry crab grass to burn it, but wait for a few dry days and burn the dry grass over the field as it remains on the surface, and the ground will be cleaned oft better than by raking. —Spraying of fruit trees and vines should be done early, and it will be an advantage to do so during mild periods of winter. The trees may be affected with fungus on the trunks and limbs, and it is not nec- essary to wait until sap begins to flow or the buds to open. Spraying can be done at any time, as it is work that cannot be per- formed too frequently. —1It is a pretty good rule that the sooner a pig can be brought to 200 pounds and the sooner he can be gotten to market after reaching this weight, the greater will be: the per cent. of profit in feeding him. Aside from the risk of cholera, ete., it has been shown that the gain above 200 pounds costs more, and that even with pork bring- ing good prices, there is often an actual loss in feeding above 250 pounds. —1I#t is claimed that the ‘‘cowy’’ odor of milk results from particles of manure, dust, worn-out scales of the skin and other un- desirable substances. To prevent such the udder and teats and the hands of the milk- er must be washed before each milking, and the stable, stalls and milking vessels be kept clean. Unless these precautions are taken milk will not only possess dis- agreeable odors, but also be unit for use. —Mr. G. L. McKay, of the Iowa, State Dairy school, tells buttermakers if they wish to make unwashed butter use about one-half more salt than usual, work the butter, say, for two minutes and then let it stand for three or four hours. The extra salt assists in expelling the moisture and will pass off with the buttermilk. Then rework. He has frequently seen butter made like this, where the brine was as clear as if the butter had been washed a couple of times. —For bordeaux mixture. Dissolve in 16 gallons of water 6 pounds of sulphate of copper (bluestone). In another vessel slack 4 pounds of stone lime in 6 gallons of water. When the lime water is cool pour it slowly into the vessel having the copper solution, stirring briskly while so doing. Let it be prepared several days be- fore use. The mixture should be applied with a sprayer which throws a fine, misty spray, and every portion of the tree or vine should be treated. It is used mostly for fungus diseases. —The use of charcoal for pigs is general, and it proves beneficial, but to derive the best results from its use the charcoal should be freshly burned. It is an indi- gestible substance, its virture being:-he-: lieved to be due to its capacity for absorb- ing gases, which power is lost to a certain extent when the charcoal has been exposed to the air for a time. If the old charcoal is heated in a hot fire for a few minutes, however, it will be restored to its original fresh condition. —Rape is excellent green food for sheep, poultry and cattle, and as it isa hardy plant an early crop may be seeded at the same time that oats are sown. Successive crops of rape may be seeded every three weeks thereafter until August, as it grows very rapidly. Small patches of rape, if cut and fed to stock in the barnyard, will provide an enormous amount of green food. The Essex, a dwarf variety, is said to be the best by those who have experimented largely with rape. Sheep are very partial to it and it provides for them a cheap food. —=Sandy soils are always deficient in pot- ash. Even if they had this mineral they have usually so little vegetable matter that the potash forms an insoluble compound by uniting with the sand. The potash in caustic ashes dissolves the silicate of pot- ash, and also helps itself until its caustic properties are lost. But old leached ashes are often quite as beneficial to sandy soils as are unleached. They always contain some potash and some phosphate, which the water used for leaching would not dis- solve. —A calf dropped in the fall should bea good one to rear—that is, of course, pro- viding it has good blood and is of likely appearance. The fall calf begins life in a warm world, and one in which flies are not as troublesome as during the summer months, and the little animal has plenty of time to begin to grow, and becomes weaned and accustomed to hay and grass by the following spring, when it is in first-rate condition to go to pasture and profit fully by the pasture grasses. The fall calf has much to recommend it, and there is good reason to expect it to make a fine cow. —For San Jose scale spray the trees fre- quently with a solution made by dissolv- ing two pounds of whale oil soap in a gal- lon of water. The scale is dormant in winter, and March is an excellent time to apply remedies, once a week being suffi- cient, on dry days, continuing well into spring and summer. The first application should be a good rubbing of the limbs with a brush dipped in the solution. It is la- borious to do the work frequently, but it must be done if the trees are to be saved. The whale oil soap is excellent also asa remedy for plant lice, which are easily destroyed by its use. —1In all grain-growing districts straw is plentiful, and where it is used as feed it is reckoned, and rightly, as food of very in- ferior nutrition. The idea of using 'it to feed fattening stock is said to have origi- nated with Joseph J. Mechl, a London alderman, who a generation ago made his name famous by his writings on agricul- tural topics. He largely imported linseed meal for fattening beeves. Bnt he found that if cut hay was used to extend the ra- tion only a small amount of the linseed - meal could be eaten without cloying the animals. If clover was used stiil less of the oil meal could be eaten. But when he used cut straw, which has no proteids, a good deal of meal could be eaten with re- lish, and the animals fattened faster. But when he fed Indian corn meal with cut straw less of the corn meal would be eaten than when fed with cut hay. This vindi- cates the practice of American farmers, who feed much Indian corn and compara- tively little oil meal. Man and Some Animals. War Declared Against Many Species and Alliances Made With Others for Their Preservation. The human family is worse in its treat- ies of peace with the animals than the ever- changing alliance makers of the old world. One day we are encouraging the species of the animal kingdom, because a possible benefit is thought to be seen in its exist- ence. The next day war is declared upon some other animal unfortunate. Pennsyl- vania places the protection of law about the rabbit and declafes that to kill a cotton- tail at certain seasons of the year is a crime against the Jaw. Ohio, right over the line, is outlawing the . rabbit, on the pretence that it is a nuisance to growing crops and orchards, and the rabbit is to be shot on sight in Ohio. Pennsylvania levies a tax on dogs, and at proper times of the summer dog-catchers go about the cities picking up every stray dog that cannot establish the ownership of a master. In Constantinople to kill a dog is an offence against the law, and not only against the law, but against public health as well. Constantinople, a city three times as large as Pittsburg, and one of the most magnificent of the cities of the world, is without sewers or means of disposing of garbage and waste. The dogs do that. All over the great settlement are hordes of dogs, infesting the streets, sleep- ing in little bunches on the narrow side- walks, forcing pedestrians irto the road- ways and generally owning the town. But the service they give pays for all they ask. They eat the waste, and are happy and useful. In the Southern States of our own coun- try a similar service is rendered by the turkey buzzard, a most graceful bird in the air, but far from a pretty creature when on the ground. The buzzard is a scavenger, and is protected by law throughout all the South. Cattle and hogs are also encouraged to run at large in many Southern commu- nities for the same reason. Great quanti- ties of green stuff are thrown out in summer in the hot climate, and would breed disease if left to decay in the hot sun. The razor- back pig comes along and he cleans up the watermelon rinds, the discarded fruit, and the hundred and one things of that sort, and he is grateful to the householder, as the householder is grateful to him. Both are served. The buzzard is not the only bird that finds favor with human kind. In Constantinople, where the dog is made a sanitary agent, pigeons and gulls are pro- tected. The flocks of pigeons that sweep down over the old harem about the Seraglio point are so great at times as to almost re- semble acloud. They gather up little bits of rubbish that dogs cannot clear away, and constitute one of the prettiest sights in the picturesque scenery of the Golden Horn. With the pigeons are clouds of gulls. Ves- sels coming into the port dump their waste off the Seraglio point in the eddies ‘above the sea of Marmora, and there the gulls live and fatten. The gardener and the farmer have their especial friends in the animal creation. The gardener will esteem it a favor if you drop a toad down in his vegetable beds, for the toad is a wonderful destroyer of insects. A lazy, old, sleepy toad will sit under the plants, looking as indifferent as a lump of mud, But let a harmful insect come with- in any reasonable reach, and a long, slim tongue shoots out like a cattleman’s lariat, and Mr. Insect has taken part in a feast, albeit not a part that he feels any interest ‘im Some kings of snakes -are- enconraged by some farmers. The black snake is an enemy of mice and of things of that sort. He is also reputed to be jealous of the ven- omous serpents, and able to destroy them. On that account some farmers encourage the black snake and others of his variety, as the snakes of that family are harmless. It takes a naturalist to tell the kinds of | birds that find favor legitimately among men. Most of the song birds are destroy- ers of insects, yet some of them are killed relentlessly by the farmer. The bee mar- tin, a pretty thing, but with a fatal appe- tite for honey bees, has no friends. The sparrow is despised because it drives out other hirds that are more useful than it is. The sparrow is a pilferer, feeding on the things that the human race want for them- selves, while most of the song birds eat the harmful insects. The reason legislation protects the great majority of birds is not because they are able to delight with their songs, but because of the benefits derived from their appetites. They gather worms and bugs for themselves and families, and save the ruin of many crops. Then bugs themselves have their uses. Some kinds of bugs are propogated by the agricultural societies for the purpose of feeding on other bugs. The lady bird family is a great friend of agriculture, living on the eggs and on the individuals of other bug and insect families. Animals live because they can be made (useful to mankind. The sheep, cow, hog, horse, dog, hen, cat and others are raised on a large scale, and so exclusively by men that in their wild state these animals are rarely seen except those that have escaped from captivity and partially returned to the old life of degeneracy. Every animal that lives must pay tribute to man, or take the narrow chances of life that he offers. The cat must catch mice. The dog must work at innumerable things. The farm stock are merely so much merchandise, and have a cash value from the day they are born. Let a single created thing except man fail to show where he is of benefit to the lords of creation, and at once it becomes the sport for the boy with a gun. And for fear that he will not have sufficient sport, if it is a creature that can appeal to his savage instincts the wholesale slaughter of its kind will be prevented that it may rear its young to afford more of the savage amusement. Foxes are killed because they are pests. But they are made to work their passage to the gates of death, for the sportsman finds amusement in them. The wolf. whose hide is of little use and his companionship of none, finds a bounty on his head. Fur-bearing animals need no bounty. Great nations are now hovering on the brink of war as to the ownership of the skins on the back of the fur seals of the Pacific waters, overlooking entirely any right or claim that the seal may have in his skin himself. ‘ Occasionally man makes a serious mis- take in imposing upon a good animal. The buffalo was killed off too fast for the sake of the skins and the tongues. Now we see where a goose that laid a golden egg was slaughtered wantonly. Most of the harm- less fur-bearing animals of North America were worth extending a greater hospitality than they have received. In fact, most of the animal creation deserves better at the hands of man than it gets, for the wisdom of the Creator was such that little has been made in vain. But mankind figures only at what is at the point of the gun, and if the game laws do not prevent, pulls the trigger. Never Knew His Fortune. Ohrustich Died an Insane Pauper When $700,000 Was Waiting for Him in Hungary. A letter was received by chief detective Colleran of Chicago, requesting him to look for Edward Ohrustich, who had been bequeathed $400,000 by his father, a bank- er, who recently died in Budapest, Hun- gary. Colleran found that Ohrustich had died in the insane asylum at Dunning on November the 28th, the same day on which the death of his father occurred, and had been buried in a pauper’s grave in the pot- ter’s field. Ohrustich was driven insane by the infidelity of his wife who was considered one of the most beatiful women in Buda- pest when he married her. She is now liv- ing as the wife of a French nobleman, an officer in the French army. When young Ohrustich learned the state of affairs he parted from his wife and came to America, arriving'in New York, October, 1896. He secured employment with A. H. Hoerner, bond broker, and came to Chicago as the latter’s agent. Ohrustich’s peculiar actions attracted considerable attention at the Great Northern hotel, where he was stop- ping, and he was sent to the house of cor- rection, where he remained for 36 days. Shortly after Ohrustich was discharged he was again arrested and this time sent to the detention hospital. On May 20, 1897, he was declared insane. He rarely could be prevailed upon to eat. My NEIGHBOR ToLp ME.—About Hood’s Sarsaparilla and advised me to try it—This is the kind of advertising which gives Hood’s Sarsaparilla the'largest sales in the world. Friend tells friend that Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures ; that it gives strength, health, vitality and vigor, and whole neighborhoods use it as a family medicine. Hood’s Pills act easily and promptly on the liver and bowels. Cure sick headache. How the Pensions Go. In connection with the agitation for pen- sion reform the experience of Henry C. Bell, of Illinois, deputy commissioner of pensions during the last administration, is revived. Shortly after the inauguration and the appointment of Mr. Bell he ad- dressed a letter to the commissioner stating that after careful reflection he had conelud- ed that he could not any longer conscien- tiously accept a pension of $12 a month for ‘total disability,” therefore he returned his certificate and asked that his name be stricken from the roll. His request was complied with. Mr. Bell got a great deal of advertising in the newspapers for his honesty and patriotism, and for four years thereafter was able todraw a salary of $300 a month as deputy commissioner. Just be- fore the inauguration of President McKin- ley last spring Mr. Bell had a relapse and became again *‘totally disabled,” whereup- on he took steps not only to have his name restored to the pension rolls, but drew in a lump a back pension of $12 for every month of the four years that he was in of- fice—$576.— From the Chicago Record. How 10 LOOK GOOD.—Good looks are really more than skin deep, depending en- tirely on a healthy condition of all the vi- tal organs. If the liver be inactive, you have a bilious look ; if your stomach be disordered you have a dyspeptic look. If your kidneys be effected, you have a pinch- ed look. Secure good health, and you will surely have good looks. ‘‘Electric Bitters’ is a good Alternative and Tonic. Acts di- rectly on the stomach, liver and kidneys. Purifies the blood, cures pimples, blotches and boils and gives a good complexion. Every bottle guaranteed. Sold at F. Potts | Green’s drug store. 50 cent per bottle. California. Personally-Conducted Tour via Pennsylvania Railroad. The next personally conducted tour to California via the Pennsylvania railroad will leave New York, Philadelphia and Pittsburg by the ‘‘Golden Gate Special”’ on Wednesday, February 16, stopping at the great Mammoth cave and New Orleans during the Mardi Gras carnival. Four weeks will be allowed on the Pacific coast. Returning, stops will be made at Salt Lake City, Colorado Springs (Garden of the Gods), Denver. Chicago, &e. Ronnd-trip rate, including transportation, meals, car- riage drives, hotel accommodations, and Pullman accommodations en route, and Pullman berth Los Angeles to San Fran- cisco, and transportation in California, $335.00 from all stations east of Pittsburg; with hotel accommodations, meals, trans- fers, and carriage drives through California for four weeks, $125.00 additional. An experienced chaperon will accompany the party for the benefit of the lady tourists. For itineraries and full information, ap- ply to ticket agents; tourist agent, 1196 Broadway, New York; or address Geo. W. Boyd, assistant general passenger agent, Broad street station, Philadelphia. 43-5-2t —Elizabeth, N. J. Oct, 19th, 1896. ELY Bros., Dear Sirs :—Please accept my thanks for your favor in the gift of a bottle of Cream Balm. Let mesay I have used it for years and can thoroughly rec- ommend it for what it claims, if directions are followed. Yours truly, (Rev.) H. W. HATHAWAY. No. clergyman should be without it. Cream Balm is kept by all druggists. Full size 50c. Trial size 10 cents. We mail it. . ELY BROS., 56 Warren St. N. Y. City. —Thumas Knew.— ‘Now, Thomas, said a certain bishop, after taking his ser- vant to task one day, ‘‘who is it that sees all we do and hears all we say and knows all we think, and who regards even mein my hishop’s robes as but a vile worm of the dust ?”’ And Thomas replied, ‘The mis- sus, sir.— London Tid-bits. : Korean Girls. When a girl is born in Korea she is Bet even dignified by name. Several names are written on slips of paper and placed in an urn hefore some favorite deity, and when it is necessary her godfather selects one without seeing it and she is known by it until she reaches womanhood, among the members of her own family, strangers designate her as the wife, mother, sister or daughter of such or such a man. This is not merely the result of custom. The laws are strict in this matter and hold a woman of little more consequence than a domestic animal. In the higher classes of society the girls are ¢ >parated from the hoys of the family at the age of 7 years. They occupy the apartments of women and are forbidden to communicate with any one on the outside. BUCKLEN’S ARNICA SALVE.—The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chap- ped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or: money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by F. Potte Green. . Tp Florida. Personally-Conducted Tour via Pennsylvania Railroad The next Pennsylvania railroad tour to Jacksonville, allowing two weeks in Florida, will leave New York and Phila- delphia by special train of Pullman palace cars Tuesday, February 8. Excursion tick- ets, including railway transportation, Pull- man accommodations (one berth), and meals en route in both directions while traveling on the special train, will he sold at the following rates : New York, $50.00; Philadelphia, $48.00; Canandaigua, $52.85; Erie, $54.85; Wilkesbarre, $50.35; Pitts- burg. $53.00; and at proportionate rates from other points. For tickets, itineraries, and full informa- tion apply to ticket agents; tourist agent, 1196 Broadway, New York; or address Geo. W. Boyd, assistant general passenger agent, Broad street station, Philadelphia. CONSUMPTION POSTIVELY CURED. — Mr. R. B. Greeve, merchant of Chilhowie, Va., certifies that he had consumption, was given up to die, sought all medical treat- ment that money could procure, tried all cough remedies he could hear of but got no relief ; spent many nights sitting up in a chair; was induced to try Dr. King’s New Discovery, and was cured by use of two bottles. For past three years has been at- tending to business and says Dr. King’s New Discovery is the grandest remedy ever made, as it has done so much for him and also for others in his community. Dr. King’s New Discovery is guaranteed for Coughs, Colds and Consumption. It don’t fail. Trial bottles free at I. Potts Green’s drug store. —_——— Umbrella Was too Large. ‘Alex,’ said a fond mother to a little 4-year-old, ‘‘you must take the umbrella to school with you, or you will get wet. It rains hard.” “I want the little one,” he said, mean- ing the parasol. “No, my dear ; that is for dry weather. You must take this and go like a good boy.” Alex did ashe was bidden and got to school comfortably. After school hours it had stopped raining, and Alex trudged home with the remnants of the umbrella under his arm. “O Alex! what have you been doing with my umbrella?” said his mother, when she saw the state it was in. “You should have let me have the little one,” said he. ‘‘This was such a big one it took six of us to pull it through the school door.” ——Experience proves the merit of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It cures all forms of blood diseases, tones the stomach, builds up the nerves. Saddlery. $o.000 $5,000 $5,000 ———WORTH OF HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS, SADDLES, | BRIDLES, [yr PLAIN HARNESS, FINE HARNESS, BLANKETS, WHIPS, Etc. All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. To-day Prices have Dropped THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. JAMES SCHOFIELD, BELLEFONTE, PA. — Plumbing etc. rue CHANCES FOR CHEATING are probably greater and more frequent in the plumbing trade than in any other. The average man knows very little about plumbing, "and a plumber who is skilled in ‘‘scamping,” as such cheat- ing is sometimes called, will find ways of deceiving even those who have some knowledge of his trade. Your plumber should be a man you can trust, R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny St., BELLEFONTE, PA. 42-43-6t Roofing. N OW IS THE TIME TO EMAMINE YOUR ROOF. During the Rough Weather that will be experienced from now until Spring you will have a chance to Examine your Roof and see if it is in good condition. If you need a new one or an old one repaired I am equipped to give you the best at reasonable rices. The Celebrated Courtright in Shingles and all kinds of tin and iron roofing. W. H. MILLER, 42-38 Allegheny St. BELLEFONTE, PA. Fine Groceries Dr. Salm. O~ Oat-meal and flakes are always fresh and sound, you can depend on them. SECHLER & CO. Fie TABLE SYRUPS. NEW-ORLEANS MOLASSES. PURE MAPLE SYRUP, IN ONE GALLON CANS, AT $1.00 EACH. 42-1 . SECHLER & CO. eareselling a good grade of tea—green —black or mixed at 28cts per. Ib. Try it. SECHLER & CO. JNEST ORANGES, LEMONS, BA- NANAS, COCOANUTS, DATES AND FIGS AT SECHLER & CO. UBS, PAILS, WASH RUBBERS, BROOMS, BRUSHES, BASKETS. SECHLER & CO. re Jewelry. Tee AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE. Some Holiday goods have been left and must be sold. This season’s stock was LARGER than ever before and includes EVERYTHING that is new and choice in DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, WALKING STICKS and UMBRELLAS POCKET BOOKS and CARD CASES, SILVER IN ENDLESS VARIETIES. —[0] — We believe it would be to your interest to look over our as- sortment before making your holiday purcaases. —[0]— F. C. RICHARD’S SONS, 41-46 High St. BELLEFONTE, PA Insurance. A CCIDEN T —AND— HEALTH INSURANCE. THE FIDELITY MUTUAL AID ASSO- CIATION WILL PAY YOU If disabled by an accident $30 to $100 per month If you lose two limbs, $208 to $5,000, If you lose your eye sight, $208 to $5,000, 1f you lose one limb, $83 to $2,000, If In are ill $40 per month, If killed, will pay your heirs, $208 to $5,000, If you die from natural cause, $100. . IF INSURED, You cannot lose all your income when you are sick or disabled by accident. Absolute protection at a cost of $1.00 to $2.25 per month. The Fidelity Mutual Aid association is pre- eminently the largest and strongest accident and health association in the United States. It has $6,000.00 cash deposits with the States of California and Missouri, whieh, together, with an ample reserve fund and large assets, make its certificate an absolute guarantee of the solidity of protection to its members. For particulars address J. L. M. SHETTERLEY, A MATTER OF GREAT IMPORTANCE TO YOU N SUFFERING FROM LONG STANDI CHRONIC DISEASES, DISEASES OF THE BLOOD, SKIN AND NERVOUS SYSTEM, AS WELL AS THOSE SUFFERING FROM EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT TROUBLE. MORITZ SALM, M. D., Specialist, Von Grafe Infirmary, COLUMBUS, OHIO. —WILL BE IN— BELLEFONTE, PA., —ATT THE BROCKERHOFF HOUSE, ——THURSDAYS— Feb. 17, April 14, June 9, Aug. 4, Oct. 27, Dec. 22. ONE DAY ONLY. EXAMINATION AND CONSULTATION FREE TO EVERYBODY. UNSOLICITED TESTIMONIALS Lived off Bread and Milk for Years. 9 Home Doc- tors Failed to Cure me, Dr. Salm Succeeded in Curing. For more than four years I have had a bad case of catarrh, stomach and general trouble. Took cold continually. For one and a half years I could eat only bread and milk. Tried nine dif- ferent doctors, to get rid of my misery, but got worse and worse. So I went to Dr. Salm for treatment. and to-day I am as strong as ever, can eat anything, and don’ttake anv more cold, and consider myself cured of this terrible disease. Joun H. KAUFFMAN, Mattawanna Mifflin Co., Pa. Catarrh and Eye Trouble Cured by Dr. Sal. For more than five years I have had a very bad case of eye trouble and catarrh. The eyes continually got sore and gow weaker and weak- er. Ialways took cold. r. Salm cured me. CLEVELAND KIMBERLY, Witnessed by A. J. Kimberly. MeVeytown, Mifflin Co., Pa. People Think Dr. Salm Has Done Another Wonder- ful Piece of Work. I have had a very bad case of catarrh and sore eyes for more than eight years, and consequently it gave me a world of trouble. I was obliged to see Dr. Salm, under his treatment the change is wonderfully rapid. My friends are astonished, as well, and think with me that Dr. Salm has done another wonderful piece of work. \ Louis C. Suaxvox, Whitestown, Butler Co., Pa. A Case of Catarrh and Throat Trouble Cured by Dr. Salm. For more than three years our two children have been suffering from catarrh and throat trouble, also enlarged tonsils. They were con- tinually taking cold. Could hardly breathe at night Their constitutions became undermined, After a short course of treatment with Dr. Salm, they have almost entirely recovered from their miserable disease. J. F. HarR1soNn, Bellefonte, Centre Co., Pa. Couldn't Walk 15 Yards at a Time, Was no Earthly Use to Any One, Thought I Was Going to Die, but Dr. Salm Cured Me. For 2 years or more, I have had a fearful trouble, begun to get very weak, my limbs would not carry me any more, couldn’t walk a stretch of 15 yards, and my heart would beat a fearful rate, at the least exertion, It seemed my blood was turned to water, I gradually became pale as one dead. I was no earthly use to ang one, and all my neighbors and relatives thought I was going to die. Home doctors couldn’t help me, so went to Dr. Salm, and to-day, I am happy to state, that I am stronger than ever, can eat anything, do a full day’s work, and enjoy life as much as any one, and my color, any one may be proud of. 3 Mgs. Sapte Dosss, Attested by her father, Frank Richardson. Dunlo, Cambria Co., Pa. Suffered for 15 Years With Nervous, Inward and Ear Trouble, Tried a Half Dozen Doctors, and a Pile of Patent Medicines, but Had to go to Dr. Sali to be Cured For 15 years I have suffered very much with nervous, inward and ear trouble, and my condi- tion grew worse and worse. I tried a half dozen doctors, and piles of patent medicines, to no avail, I went to Dr. Salm, and, thanks to his knowledge as a physician, I consider myself en- tirely cured, Those pains, which came every month, and the fearful nervous prostration re- sulting therefrom, has entirely left me and I feel happy once more. Mrs, W: M. Jos, New Florence, Westmoreland Co., P. A Case of Ear Trouble Being Cured by Dr. Salm, Complicated also With Ringing Noises and Deafness. My treatment is for the ear and throat, I am rapidly improving, and I know 1 shall be cured, which I think will be soon. Mgs. Mary E. Davzenn, Lewisburg, Cameron Co., Pa, Address all communications to box 760, ~ Columbus, O. OUR ADVERTISEMENT WILL APPEAR TWICE BEFORE EACH VISIT. Secretary and General Manager, 42-19-1-y. San Francisco, Cal.