Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, September 20, 1900, Image 7

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    Corn and Onts for Work Hornet.
One of the Paris omnibus companies
which uses a large number of horses
concludes that a grain ration consist
ing of 0.6 pounds of coru and 12 pounds
of oats will prove more satisfactory
than any other. Another ration, fed
by the same-company, of 11 pounds of
oats with 0.0 pounds of corn and all
the hay and straw the animals will
eat was equally satisfactory.
Fodder Crop*.
At the experiment station at Still
water. Okla.. they tested several differ
ent fodder crops to find the yield per
acre, and in the winter ascertained
the dry matter and the amount diges
tible in each one. They found the digest
ible dry matter in corn per ncre was
fiOOO pounds, Kafiir corn 0110 pounds,
black rice corn "018 pounds, Milo
maize 10,010 pounds, small sorghum
11.102 pounds, large sorghum 11,359
pounds. The sorghum and Milo maize
gave higher yields than the corn and
Kaffir, but they were very low in pro
tein or growth-making materials, and
therefore not so valuable for feeding,
especially for growing animals.
Water for the Cowi,
The Geneva experiment station
claims to have ascertained that cows
in full milk need four and three-fifths
pounds of water for each pound of
milk they yield. As records have been
made by Holstein cows, or one at
least, of over 100 pounds per day, does
lhis mean that she took about 00 gal
lons of water a day. We can scarcely
credit it. although we know that green
grass or ensilage contain a large
amount of water, but we think not
enough to bring her daily allowance up
to 00 gallons a day, even though she
was fed 011 the most succulent food. If
our memory serves us rightly, when we
had a dairy herd the cows which gave
the most milk were not the ones that
drank most heartily at the trough.
When the water was very cold, or
when there was ice in the trough the
ones that drank the most freely were
the ones that shrank in their milk, and
the dry cows, but those which gave
milk continuously were not hearty
drinkers in fall or winter. Will they
not. see if they cannot revise those fig
ures a little or acknowledge excep
tions to the rule?
Turnipa Following Buckwheat.
That buckwheat Is a bad crop to
plant immediately, before turnips is an
opinion held very generally by farmers,
some even declaring that this crop acts
as a poison to the turnip and other
plnnts also. This opinion was com
bated and the following experiment
tried to prove the matter. A turnip
field was plowed and otherwise pre
pared for cropping, divided into two
equal plots, one being sown to buck
wheat, the other fallowed. After the
buckwheat had flowered and was com
mencing to ripen it was cut. chopped
in a fodder cutter, returned to the soil
upon which it grew and turned under.
Some of the seed had ripened and fall
en and there was soon a volunteer
crop of buckwheat, which was turned
under when a few inches tall. At the
same time the other plot was prepared
for turnips. In all respects save ths
growth of the buckwheat crop the plots
were treated alike. At harvest the
salable turnips from the buckwheat
plot weighed more than four times as
much as the salable ones upon the
other plot. They were also more nu
merous and smaller upon the bare plot
than where the buckwheat had grown.
Certainly in this case the poisoning
was not very severe.—New England
Homestead.
Providing I.ute Kail Pasture.
Corn undoubtedly takes the first
place on account of the large amount
of fodder it will yield. Plant late so
it will be tender and juicy when fed.
We prefer to plant it in drills about
three feet apart, dropping one corn
every two or three inches in the row, as
it will not grow so coarse as if planted
in hills. However, as the frost will
sometimes injure the corn quite early
in the fall, it is advisable to provide
for some other kind of green fodder
also that can be pastured until quite
late. The following method is one of
of the best when the necessary fence
can be provided:
Immediately 1) 'fore the corn is giv
en the last cultivation, sow by hand in
the corn field two and a half bushels
per acre of barley, oats and winter
rye. mixing together two parts each
of barley and oats to one of rye. If
only barley and oats are sown, use at
least three bushels per acre. Cultivate
liotli ways if possible. The sowing
should be delayed as late as possible,
so that it will not make too rank a
growth until after the corn is cut,
which should be done as soon as it is
ripe. When dry it should be hauled
from the field and put up into oblong
stacks, with some coarse hay 011 top
to keep off the rain until it can be
husked.
The barley, etc, will make a vigor
ous growth as soon as the corn Is cut,
and will be ready to turn the stock
upon as soon as the corn can be re
moved. It will supply abundant fall
pasture until the ground freezes up in
the fall. Besides the large amount
of pasture it will supply, it has the ad
ditional advantage of keeping the corn
field free from weeds.—Lewis O. Polio,
lu American Agriculturist.
Mot* in T*n»tnret.
Moss Is liable to assert Itself in all
kinds of old grass land, and Is perhaps
M.we detrimental to the productive ca
pabilities of pasture or meadow than
any other weed or circumstance. The
presence of moss may be due to vari
ous causes, but it is generally safe to
conclude that where moss abounds
there is some condition conducive to
the healthy development of the more
valuable plants wanting, or not proper
ly represented. Poverty in some form,
either of fertility or of good plants,
is, of course, a fruitful source of the
noxious growth, but often It is trace
able to over richness in the priceless
humus, and sometimes to solidity of
the surface soil, and in some cases
even to excessive looseness of the soil.
In short, the presence of moss is not
regulated so much by the conditions
favorable to its development, for it
seems capable of thriving under any
condition, as by those which tend to
promote the healthy growth of the
less tenacious grasses and clovers.
Accordingly, the best means of pre
venting the development of this worth
less growth, or of combating it after
it has attained a hold, is to encourage
the more useful plants by mechanical
and chemical means. What the effect
ual treatment may consist of can be
ascertained only by local experiment.
The trials which have been in progress
for a couple of seasons at tlie Wye col
lege, in Kent, show that for the light,
chalky soil obtaining there constant
rolling and harrowing, with the tread
ing of sheep, are the only means of
keeping the moss down. The loosen
ing of the soil by means of n fork was
actually harmful, though on heavy
land this method of aiding ventilation
might be useful. I.iine and basic slag,
though often beneficial, were unavail
ing. Superphosphate was productive
of some little effect.—London Tost.
Kemedy for tlie Chinch Bug.
The Ohio agricultural experiment
station has found out a new way to
light the chinch bug. which ravages
corn, wheat and meadow. This is by
utilizing the chinch bug fungus to kill
other bugs. With favorable meteoro
logical conditions the threadlike
branches of the chinch bug fungus take
possession of the interior of the bug.
When the bug dies, branches are
pushed out through the body and pro
duce clusters of minute capsules filled
with spores. Sometimes these clusters
an., so thick on the dead bugs as almost
to obscure the body, and only the legs
are visible, or 1 lie bugs may be clus
tered on a plant, dead and covered with
fungus.
As these capsules containing the
spores burst, tlx y release the spores
and these may .still further be diffused
by the wind, so that it is easy to see
how one diseased bug among a mass
of several hundred may affect the
whole of them, and if some of the in
fected ones, before becoming helpless,
stray to a distance, the infection is
carried from place to place and in this
way diffused from field to field. How
ever easily large masses of bugs may
be destroyed by this fungus enemy,
under favorable conditions, the pros
pect of its working is not encouraging
if either the bugs are scattered badly
or the weather is dry.
This fungus is sent out, cultivated
artificially, in a mixture of beef broth
and corn meal, which saves much time
and expense in securing and transport
ing the bugs to and fro from the sta
tion. The farmers who receive it are
instructed to cut the mass contained
111 each box into bits the size of an
ordinary pin head and drop these bits
among the bugs, where these ure
massed in great numbers, preferably
on low or damp ground.
Sliort nntl Iscfnl Pointer*.
Every neglect in poultry raising has
its cost.
Wash and scald the milk vessels
carefully.
Make it a practice to wash the udders
of the cows.
Feeding too frequently will cause
animals to glut.
A change of pasture is at times bene
ficial to the stock.
See that the animals have all that
they want to drink.
It is impossible to make a poorly
drained road a good one.
The healtlifulness of farm life Is one
of its many advantages.
The milk utensils should be aired
each time they are used.
When yon change the food of the
stock don't do it suddenly.
Every farm should contain an un
failing supply of pure water.
The fowls are better off when they
have to scratch for a living.
Plant the crops so that the farm will
lose as little fertility as possible.
A farmer enn use a lot of brains in
trying to regulate his barnyard prop
erly.
If the cows and stables are clean
there will be 110 trouble with tainted
milk.
If there is such a thing as good luck
in farming it is the result of good judg
ment.
The power of heredity in thorough
bled cows is stronger than in scrub
stock.
The hens that are kept in a damp
yard and house are not going to pay
a profit.
Better have a small farm well
worked than a large farm poorly
worked.
Ascertain what varieties are most
successful in your neighborhood and
theu plant them.
Close study and careful thought
bring the farmer about as near to
success as anything.
When the soil Is in good shape the
difference In atmosphere does not
have so much effect upon the git wing
croo.
THE GREAT DESTROYER.
SOME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT
THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE.
Drink is Kn(lind'a Curie, Says the Rev.
Charles M. Sheldon—Writes that He
Had to Get Off the Sidewalks to Glv*
the Inperi llooin.
Tin Rev. Charles M. Sheldon, who has
just returned from England, contributes
the following article to the Topeku (Kan.)
Daily Capital, which paper he last spring
edited for a week as he believed Jesus
would have done it:
"It may interest Kansas people to learn
that t.he.v are living ill paradise, so far as
the nurse of the liquor business is con
cerned, when they compare their condi
tion as a pri.ubitorv State with Scotland
and England. From the day of our landing
in Liverpool up to the present we have
seen the effects of the curse of drink al
most without a day's exception, anil in
terms of emphatic disgust we are ready
to declare our astonishment that English
people will endure the sights and results
that TO with the drink traffic.
"Mrs. Sheldon and I have been insulted
in the cars by drunken soldiers, one of
whom threatened to do us personal in
jury, and not a soul in the train offered
any remonstrance, such is the love of the
British for their military heroes; we have
had to get off the sidewalk and go in the
street to give the drunkards room: we
have been jostled 011 railway platforms by
drunken men and women; we have had
intoxicating drink offered us at the houses
of English people, with the exception of
a few families of Nonconformists in Scot
land and Ivondon; we have seen the evils
of the public house on almost every cor
ner. with barmaids behind the bar and
little children crowding every inch of
room in every public house in every town
and city we have visited, and it is the
wonder of bewilderment to us that such
conditions can be faced with indifference,
for it seems to me that the worst that can
be said about intemperance over here is
the light and way in which it is all
received.
"The sights that have made my blood
boil in the slums and in view of the big
saloons have not caused more than a shrug
ot the shoulders from Englishmen who
saw them with me.
"1 want to say to the people of Kansas,
you don't know what you have to be
thankful for in your prohibitory law.
Stand up for it and believe in it, and bless
Rod that your children don't see the
things thi t this drunken nation looks
upon every day. if England goes to de
struction in the next century it will not
be because of outside war or dangers from
other nations, but because she has drunk
herself into destruction. Men and women
of Kansas, as you believe in CJod and
home and the souls of your children, never
let the whisky power have dominion over
the State we all love!"
I>rinkinc 111 Great Britain.
Dr. Cunningham Geikie gives the fol
lowing saddening renort of the prevalence
of drinking habits in England:
"Temperance has done much in the last
generation to oppose this had passion,
but even in America victory is still far
ahead. Here 111 England the woes of in
temperance may be judge by its sad com
monness, for the consumption of strong
drink in the States is not much more than
half ner head of that with us. Were our
outlay in alcohol no higher than yours, it
would save us 110 less than $285,00(1,000 .1
year—and how many woes would that
heal ?
"Our drink bill for 18SS was nearly $772.-
500,000, which comes to nearly $33 for
every living creature old enough to crave
such drink. In my parish 1 found many
workmen who drank over $7 a week out
of a wage of Sill. Workinguien are three
fourths of our population, and it is be
lieved they spend $.'500,000,000 yearly on
worse than useless drink. An American
in my congregation told me he hail to
close a factory opened by him at Wolver
hampton, from his workmen never mak
ing a whole week, some coming to work
only 011 Wednesday, and even then they
would get boys to smuggle beer into the
factory.
"No wonder we have 120.000 public
houses in the United Kingdom, with a
capital of Jl.loO.lRlO.OOO!''- Missionary Re
view ol the World.
Wreckers.
(A Recitation for Small 15oy or (JirlV
There u ed to be a class of people who
lived on the coast of England, called
"Wreckers." In the dark, stormy nights
many richly laden ships were dashed to
pieces upon the rocks, and these wreckers
would seize as much of the goods as they
could for their own, and, selling them for
a large price, they often became quite
wealthy.
Now. it is u terrible thing to wreck
ships and destroy human lives, but it is
much more terrible to wreck human souls.
Are there any soul wreckers? Yes, an
infidel is one. I hope we shall not grow
up infidels. A rumseller is another wreck
er. By the poison he sells to many a hu
man being with brilliant talents he de
stroys both body and soul. Can we not
coax some of these wreckers to tuke up a
better business? Suppose we try what per
suasion can do.
Liquor Drinking; In France.
The extent to whicn the consumption
of liquor enters into "the problem of the
social life of France may be seen from the
statement that a member of the French
commission for the study of questions af
fecting the working classes declared a
short time ago that I if. and his colleagues,
in the conscientious discharge of their du
ties, took a number of meals at different
restaurants in Paris and other cities fre
quented by laboring men. and they noted
that fully two-thirds of the money paid
for meals by the customers of these es
tablishments was paid for liq.(or. Paris
lias now at least twice as many public
houses as before the war of 1870, and prob
ably the same proportionate increase
holds with reference to other sections of
France.—Christian Advocate.
Health and Wealth.
A gentleman, writing to us. says: "My
health has improved ft hundredfold, and
my purse, though scanty, has augmented
fifty per cent, from the day 1 forsook
wine and beer,"
Does not this show you that the man
who does not drink can have both health
and weall.l in larger measure than he who
is in the habit of using strong drink?
An Aatmindtng Assertion.
A prominent Rhode Island lawyer said a
short time ago that there could be no
wholesale conviction oF those rumsellera
who are breaking the State liquor laws,
because the State institutions are so crowd
ed with criminals, insane and paupers
whom the rumsellers have sent there, that
there is no room for them to follow.
Tile CriiMilß in Uriel*.
The best way to keep cool is to keep so
ber.
Uncle Saul will not have tipplers in his
employ if he knows it. A letter carrier in
Chelsea, Mass., was discharged jrecently
for intoxication.
One of the most striking things about
some of the papers published in Ireland is
the number of cases of drunkenness that
are reported in them.
A drink that is said to be, unfortunate
ly, spreading in popularity through Europe
is a mixture of etner and slightly diluted
alcohol, a concoction highly injurious tc
the nervous system. _ - • ■
Ornamental Skyscraper.
New York correspondence Pittsburg
Post: In an up-tewn side street a tall
building is approaching completion and
will be the first to exhibit a peculiarity
of construction which has often been
urged here as Uie best means of miti
gating the skyscraper's ugliness. This
new building towers above its neigh
bors, and under ordinary circum
stances yards of unadorned brick
would face the spectator. But the
owner and architects have adopted the
plan imposed by law in Paris and have
decorated the sides of the building.
This ornamentation, which is simple
and tasteful, conforms in style to the
principal facades of the building, al
though not nearly so elaborate. If all
the New York's towering biAldlngs had
been treated in the same fashion, ob
jection to the skyscraper would be less
pronounced than it is today.
Aged Scotch Golfer.
Mr. Tom Morris, the well-known
Scotch golfer, attained his 79th year
the other day, and, as usual on his
birthday, played a round of the St.
Andrews links. The veteran golfer,
notwithstanding his advanced age, is
hale and liearty, and almost daily en
joys his round of the links.
Do Your Feet Ache and Burn I
Shake Into your shoes Allen's Foot-Kase
a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New
Shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Ingrowing
Nails, Itching, Swollen, Hot, Callous, 80m
and Sweating Feet. All Druggists and
Shoe Stores sell It, 25c. Sample sent FREE.
Address, ALLEN 8. OLMSTED, Leßoy, N. Y.
Thunder can be heard at a distance of
fourteen miles.
The Best Prescript!** far Chills
and Fever Is a bottle of tinovi'a TASTELESS
Cl 11.1. TONIC. It Is simply iroa and quinine la
a tasteless form. No cure—a* pay. Frlce 60c.
Love is too often measured by a tape
line bearing dollar marks.
25c. by mail to E. & S. Frey, P. O. Rox 24*,
Baltimore, Md.. will get a bottle of Vermi
fuge. Vour little ouemay need it.
The mosquito is always ready io present
a bill for damages.
Indigestion Is u bad companion. Get
rid of It bv chewing a bnr of Adams' Tep
slD Tuttl Fruttl after each meal.
The demand for oatmeal throughout
England is increasing every year.
Mrs. Wluslow'sSootlnng syrup rorcblldrtn I
teething, softens the gums, re<l ucenl 11 flu muni
tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
On every shilling turned out the English
Mint makes a profit of nearly threepence.
3'^
If M UNION MADE
Tlie modern, easy. M. CI
fitting, economical ffi..— w4
•lioes for progressive BSH'SCk. Jaa
men are the W. L. F*f *3
Douglas $3 and S3 SO Ljfujk pjj
shoes. Perfect shoes AfIMU
that hold their shape I
and fit until worn out. iWk L
Over 1,000,000 satisfied
wearers.
KSjJct
lr In 1876.
Why do you pay $4 to
tbim \A $5 for shoes when you
i) buy W.L.Douglas
/LnKWiNrr A* 5V hoes for s 3
A 86 SHOE FOR $3.50.
A 84 BHOC FOR $3.
Tha real worth of our M and SH.SO
compared with other .Makes U *4
*• "l ire the largest makers and rotailrra «112
a#3and $1.60 ahora in the world. We make and
•ell mora $3 and $3.40 shoes an/ other two maau
fa'turera in the United Statee.
Having the largest $3 and f3 30 shoe bnsiness in the
world, and a perfect system ot manufacturing, enablee
ua to produce higher grade $3 and shoes than can
be had elsewhere.
THE REASON more W.L.Douglas $3 and f.'J.SO
than any other make is because Til KIT
■ARE JUK BKMT. Your dealer ehould keep
IS? * one dealer sxcluaive ssle in each town.
Take no substitute! Insist on having W. L.
Pouglaa shoes with name and price stamped on bottom.
If your dealer will not get them for you. arnd direct to
factory, enclosing price and 23c. extra tor carriage.
State kind of leather, size, and width, nlain or csp toe.
Our shoes will resch you anywhere. CataJomue Frre.
W. L DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brsokten. Mas?.
one. No alive whose
in warm, stuffy houses or offices or
|J| workshops. Many don't get as much
mwY exercise as they ought, and everybody
knows that people gain weight in
\ jßfowV winter. As a rule it is not sound
wei Bfct, ut mean s a lot of flabby fat
an d useless, rotting matter staying in
the body when it ought to have been
driven out. But the liver was over
burdened, deadened—stopped work. There
you are, with a dead liver, and spring is the
time for resurrection. Wake up the dead!
Get all the filth out of your system, and get
ready for the summer's trials with clean, clear blood, body, brain free from bile. Force
is dangerous and destructive unless used in a gentle persuasive way, and the right plan
is to give new strength to the muscular walls of the bowels, and stir up the liver to new I
life and work with CASCARETS, the great spring cleaner, disinfectant and bowel tonic.
Get a box to-day and see how quickly you will be
To any needy mortal suffering from bowel trouble* and too poor to buy CASCARETS we will tend * box free. Addict*
Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New Yeck, mentioning advertisement and paper. *s«
Characteristic of Ginseng.
Ginseng Is parsnip-shaped, and when
freshly dug is of a white, cream: - col
or. The root is bitter to the taste, but
not unpleasant, and is highly valued
In China for its supposed medicinal
properties in combating fatigue and
old age. In that country it can only
be gathered by permission of tlje
ruler.
Password to the Tower.
The Lord Mayor is the only person,
besides the Queen and the Chief Con
stable who knows the password to the
Tower of London. The password is
sent to the Mansion House quarterly,
signed by Her Majesty.
It requires no experience to dye with
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. Simply boiling
your goods in the dye is all that Is necessary.
The gross postal receipts at fifty
of the largest poetofflees for the month
of July aggregated $3,338,«53, a net
increase of $253,302 over July, 1809.
Te Cars a Cold In Oia Day.
Tske LAXATIVE BROHO QUININE TAHITI. All
JiueglMs refund the money If it falls to ours.
K. W. QUOTE'S signature Is on sack tiei. 25c.
It is often necessary to have a backer
to get to the front.
Beware of Ointment* for Catarrli
That Contain Mercury.
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smellandcompletely derange the whole system
when entering tt til rough the mucous surfaces.
Such articles should never be used except on
prescriptionsf rom reputable physicians, as the
damage they will do Is ten fold to the good you
can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh
Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken
Internally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. In buying
Hall's 1 atarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine.
It is taken internally, and Is made In Toledo,
Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
tar-Sold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
It's the hard rubs of the world that
make ,1 man bright.
I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consumption
lias an equal tor coughs and colds.—.lons F.
Bo YE 11, Trinity Springß, Ind.. Feb. 15,11)00.
California's trade with the Philippines
now amounts to $2,000,000 a month.
FITS permanently cured. No fltsor nervous
ness after tlrst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer.|2trial nottleand treatisefree.
Dr. K. H. KLINE, Ltd., 831 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Tn Kaffraria cattle constitute the chief
currency.
The Book for Youil
If you want the most complete and practical book of Its B
kind ever published, send us 25 cents in postage stamps K
i—■ for a copy of this 200-page He
illustrated book.
g Hp It is so plainly written H
■ ■■■■ as to be adapted to all
HOUSEHOLD ~ - «•» can
■■ w wWtallWl»«# not find in it many things
■ that will be of practical
AIIVmrR value to him.
nU V IVklll It gives the cause, symp
toms and best manner of
treatment of diseases, and contains a large number of the
very best prescriptions known to the medical profession,
written in plain language that any one can understand.
The farmer treating do
or stock A VAST TREASURE HOUSE mestlc anl- I
find m'aTi'y OF INFORMATION FOR "S when
valuable re- There are
CipeS forL... m—mmmLmmmumm —J household
recipes from the best professional cooks and house
keepers of experience and ability, every one of which has
be9n tested; also hints on the care of Infants, tollet
ittdpes, etc.
I 11 ~™ 1 1
ORDER A COPY TO-DAY. This book will be sect postpaid I
The information you will ,or I
obtain from it will be worth 25 K
many times the small sum in p 0 staee Stamps. I
paid for the book.
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,
KIDNEY TROUBLES OF WOMEIf
Bliw Frederick'* Letters Show Bow Sht
Relied en Mr*. Plnkliam and \Vu
Cured.
"DEAR MRS. PINK HAM:—I hare a
yellow, muddy complexion, feel tired
and have bearing down pains. Menses
have not appeared for three months;
sometimes am troubled with a white
discharge. Also have kidney and blad
der trouble.
I have been this way for a long time,
and feel so miserable I thought I would
write to you and see if you could do me
any good."—Miss EDNA. FREDERICK,
Troy, Ohio, Aug. 0, 1890.
" DEAR MRS. PINKHAM :—I hare us<d
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound according to directions, and can
say I have not felt so well for years aa
I do at present.- Before taking your
medicine a more miserable person you
never saw. I could not eat or sleep,
and did not care to talk with any one.
Now I feel so well I cannot be gratefu]
enough to you for what you have don*
for me. "—Miss EDNA FREDERICK, Troy,
Ohio, Sept. 10, 1899.
Backache Cured
" DEAR MRS. PINKHAM :—I write to
thank you for the good Lydia E. Pink
ham'sVegetable Compound hasdone me.
It is the only medicine I have found
that helped me. I doctored with ona
of the best physicians in the city of
New York, but received no benefit. I
had been ailing for about sixteen years,
was so weak and nervous that I could
hardly walk ; had continued pain in mjf
back and was troubled with leucorrh ce*.
Menses were irregMlar and painful*
Words cannot express the benefit 1 hav»
derived from the use of your medicine.
I heartily recommend it to all suffering
women." MRS. MARY BABSHINQEB,
Windsor, Pa.
r>D ADQY NEW DISCOVERY; r„.
I/I* Vr 1 I quick r.lie' nd ourai wont
casAa- Book of toetiotoniala and 10 day«' troatmoot
Vf. Br. B. M. A&LIM'S flOMtt. lax B. AVUaU, a*.
ADVERTisiM¥Yla;aa
■ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Cse
Lc in time. Sold by druggists. W
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