•smgaem. The Work of Broad Tires. Broad tires on wagons do not cut tip the roads, but serve to assit in packing them. There is some objec tion to low-down wagons, the diame ter of the wheels being smaller than thii ordinary, but there is certain work that can best be performed with low-down wagons. Narrow tires should be avoided whenever possible on roads that have not been improved in a manner to prevent cutting up by wagon wheels. An Iteiu In Feeding: Stock. The labor of cutting the food for stock by using a feed cutter is an item to be considered in the expense, but as machines now do such work very rapidly the cost is but little. As a result of 10 days' experiment it was found that steers fed on cut clover hay made more gain than those fed on uncut clover hay, the gain being as much as 50 percent. It was found, also, that some slight exercise was beneficial compared with close con finement. If the cutting of the hay gave such large gain it is apparent that the 'abor so bestowed afforded a profit. Feed the Slieep I)oc*. The sheep industry is greatly ham pered in some sections by dogs, which kill the sheep for food. A sheep breeder who made an investigation rode over a wide territory in order to visit all who kept dogs. In response to the inquiry, "How often do you feed your dog?" he found only one party who made it a point to feed his dog regularly. There arc thousands of farmers who expect their dogs to find their food, from somewhere, hence the dogs are forced to forage or hunt in order to exist. The breeder eon rinded that if those owning dogs would feed them the sheep would not be disturbed. Mngneala In Fertilizer*. At one time it was believed that a /ertilizer should contain magnesia, but that substance is no longer used as an ingredient in fertilizers. The government experiment station bulle tin states that in applying fertilizers containing magnesia (as it sometimes exi'sts in some forms of potash salt), liming should be carried on in con junction unless the soil is known to contain an excess of lime. Where the lime content ol' the soil is about equal lo or less than the magnesia content lime in a finely-divided form, as sul phate (piaster), should be supplied with the fertilizer in an amount in ex cess of the magnesia present in tae latter. In liming soils the amount of lime and magnesia should first be de termined in both the soil and the ma leriaLappJifd, if possible, as in that way only can the- ftt'OeeS3 be intelli gently carried out and the best ratio between the two bases for the promo tion of the growth of crops be main tained. Tlin HOIIIOUHB in AVlnt«r. Tle hothouse should always be built on the sunny, sheltered side of a hill or building or grove of trees. A very slight protection such as these makes a difference of several de grees in cold weather, especially when the wind is violent. If there is no such sheltered place, a windbreak should be constructed on the north and west side of the rpot. This can be built by driving posts in the ground, leaving the tops five or six feet above the surface. Any loose boards, pickets or 'sticks from the woods nailed crosswise on these posts, and thick brush and twigs at tached to them hold in position pack ing material like straw, cornstalks or even leaves will furnish a perfect windbreak, and keep the hothouse or cold frames sheltered all winter. The hothouse itself should be built with solid timber that will last. Posts iMght inches in diameter should be set Uor the foundation walls. They should fun up a.s high as the walls. Old lum ber can be utilized for boarding up rutside and inside, leaving a space between the two wall's for packing ma terial. This space should be packed late in autumn with good horse man ire. The excavation for the fioor of i he hothouse should be deep enough permit plenty of packing material. There should first be a foot of good warm manure, and over this three or more inches of rich soil for seed bed. The roof ol' the hothouse should be built with the greatest care. Double .'•ashes are better than single, for then the house is proof against all weath er. The edges and sides should be '•arefully constructed of matched lum icr so that water will be shed. In ddition to the glass sash doer there r'.cbould be a covering of heavy un bleached muslin. This should work up and down on a roller so that it nan be unrolled and rolled up accord ing to the weather.| On very cold -lays and nights this covering will greatly add to the protection. In ad dition to this a heavy canvas cover ing, or an old sail cloth, thrown over the whole structure in times of heavy storms will make the hothouse practically proof against the coldest weather. Without any further heat han what the manure supplies, the most delicate of seeds and plants will thrive there in midwinter. Value of EnnHajr. The feeding value of good ensilage never better appreciated than his winter, when corn Is soaring so ilgh that few feel that they can afford o feed it to cattle or hogs. Indeed, the nsilage is his year one of the crops hat will prove nutritious to the cat tle, prontabie to toe larmier, and sat isfactory to all. My own Biloes have seadily increased in the last five years, so that touay I can contemplate with satisfaction the outlook for the winter feeding. There is good clover and good corn ensilage which will keep the animals in thriving condition all through the winter. There are many who still look upon the silo through prejudiced eyes, and believe the en silage is no more fit to feed animals than so much sour molasses and in toxicating rum. The pity of it all is that their ignorance is merely mani fested in their statements. The very fact that they compare their ensilage with either sour molasses or rum con demns them. It shows that they do not understand the art of preserving the food. Ensilage that is soft, sticky and molas'ses-like is not fit to feed to cattle. It has been ruined in the mak ing. But there is no reason why one should not try again next year and see if better success cannot be at tained. The ensilage that is put away green or in a wet condition will always form too much moisture, and this becomes in time a thick, slimy mass that is nauseating. External moisture in particular putin the silo will cause trouble. Moreover, we cannot put away either corn or clover when it is so green that its natural moisture will form half the bulk of the mass. It is better to let the plants get riper and ifrier, and then less fermentation will start up and the whole mass will be sweeter and clearer for feeding. The fact, is about half the ensilage I have seen ts spoiled, fermented stuff, that must have been unwholesome food. Few, indeed, seem to be able to make good ensilage. The stuff spoils in the packing or curing, and this is held up as a proper food for the animal's. I think any farmer who sees well-pre served ensilage of corn or clover will agree with the writer that it is a most wholesome winter feed. There is no subject on the farm which is 'so little understood as preserving good ensil age. and meanwhile we have farmers feeding spoilt, rotten stuff to rellil lious animals, or refusing to attempt to make any at all. If they cannot make good, sweet, wholeson»e ensil age, it is better that they belong to the latter class. —Charles Loring. in American Cultivator. I'l-ofltable Way of Markotiuc a fhce««, Creat pains should be taken to give the cheese the best possible appear ance. Uniformity in size Should be cultivated. To secure this, perhaps the best way i's to weigh the curd before putting it into the press. Much care should be taken in bandaging the cheese. The bandages should be placed neatly and straight, and seams and pleats avoided. The cheese should be turned in the morning in the press to assure yourself that they are prop erly bandaged, always using hot wa ter. Care should be exercised at all times to avoid specks, spots and fin ger marks upon the cheese. They should be taken from the press and put on clean shelves, in a well ven tilated curing room. Adopt a uniform and handy marking system, noting date of make, and distinguishing the make of each vat where more than one vat is used. Always leave the date on the outside as you turn your cheese in the morning to avoid un necessary boring and a waste of time for the buyer. When boxing your cheese give good weight. If the Wisconsin cheesemak- ] ers would adopt the method which they have in Canada, where in all cases the factory selling green cheese or cheese only 10 to 15 days old is obliged to give a full half pound over ! the exact weight, a great deal of j trouble would be prevented in these j days of sharp competition among the i buyers. Buyers will not lose on the : weight, and cheese weighed when j only 10 or 15 days old will easily shrink a half pound before arriving | at their destination. Cheese should j not be boxed over 20 hours before | shipping. Care should be exercised also in de- j livering the cheese to the station, j Patrons will often complain of a cut, i when it was occasioned by nothing j else than their own negligence in hauling. The wagons should be bed- j ded well with clean dry f.traw. The j boxes should be loaded so as to set j flat and not on the edge. At all sea- j tons they should be covered with a | canvas to protect them from the heat, j rain, mud, and dust. The manner of paying for cheese is ! a question atracting considerable at- | tention just now. In my nind it is a j question deserving much thought and \ discushion. It does not reem to be j very well decided as yet, among j cheese men, as to which hs the best j mode of payment. Three modes pre- | sent, themselves: the bill of lading, I cash payment at the depot, and re mittance. Each of these has advan tages and disadvantages. The ques tion is which is the best? I find a great objection to paying at the depot is this: That the purchasers would be put to a great deal more expense and this expense would ultimately come out of the seller. They could not afford to pay as much if they were thus put to extra expense in handling. This argument is not sen timent, but appeals to the pocket-book and is, therefore, good. Furthermore it is subject to the same inconveni- | t nee of shortages in weight as is ex- | pr-rienced by the bill of lading meth- j cd. By all odds, the remittance meth od is the most satisfactory.—C. E. Knickerbocker, In American Agricul turist. A colony of the celebrated pigeon* of St. Mark's, transplanted from Ven ice to Vienna, have thriven and multi plied to such an extent as to have be come a public nuisance. BrrSiiikl Kobln »ml tlinrlle. Who bo mild and good ns Creeping Charlie, l'laying genily iu hie Wlien across th« hcdnu, in suil<l<m parley, Hugged ltobin thrusls his tousled head. "Hi, you house plant! Ain't you alius wisbln' You could join us other follows some? Here's Joe I'ye and I are goin' flsbin' Down to Spatterdock's. D'ye want to oomeV" If the yellow head wa« sagely shaken At the tousltid red ono, saw not I; But I kuow the course I would have taken, Hud ltob asked me, jogging staidly by. —Christian Register. Sayings of Little Folk*. "Why, Tommy, you are putting on your stockings wrong side out." "I know It, mamma. There's a hole on the other side." "Pa, what is a philosopher?" "A philosopher, Jimmie, is a man who thinks he has got through being a fool." Teacher—lf four boys have 20 peaches and 30 apples what will each have ? Bright Boy—Chol'rer morbus! Motherhood. A Forgotten Monument. One of the charms of life in the country is its moderation and free dom from hurry and excitement. It is possible, however, to have too much of a good thing, as an incident which happened recently in a New England farming district Indicates. Farmer Allen had gone up into his attic to get a spinning wheel for the tableaux which the summer boarders were to produce in the town hall. Like most country attics, it was packed with the relics of several gen erations. but the tiling which at once attracted the attention of the city girl who accompanied the farmer was a gravestone, tucked away under the eaves. "Why, there's a gravestone," she said. "Yos." The farmer dragged it out and turned its face to the light. The inscription on it read; Sacred to the memory of Henry F. Allen Born 1850 Died 1856 "Yes: that's Henry's stone —he was my youngest boy." 'But why-*-" began the young wom an. "Why ain't I ever sot it up?" There was a slight pause. Farmer Allen was returning the stone to its place under the eaves. "Well, I've always meant to."he continued, mildly, "but I ain't never got round to it." the Memory. Grandma Hollis pushed her specta cles far down on her nose, and looked over their tops with mild reproof. "Now Robert,' she said, convincing ly, to her grandson, "I don't like to hear you say you can't remember dates, because it's an easy thing to do if only you set about it the right way. Nov.- when anybody asks me about the date of anything I just use my simple method, and it never fails; and I'm sure nobody could have a worse memory than 1 have, dear child." "What's your method, grandma?" asked the boy, ready for any sug gestion which might help him in his weakest spot. "Why, it's like this." said Grandma Hollis, cheerfully. "There's the Dec laration of Independence. I should never be sure of the year that oc curred if it weren't for my method; but I think of your mother's marriage —that was in 1889. I remember that because the date is on the little ring your father gave me. and I lock at it two or three times a day. "Then I know she was 21 when she was married, because it was the same age that I was when I was married, so that carries her back to—2l from 89 leaves OS. And she was eight years old at the time of the Centennial in Philadelphia. I know that because I got her a twisted wire figure eight pin at the exposition—and she lost it. "Then you see eight added to IS makes 7G. That's 187G. Of course centennial means subtract a hun dred, and there you have 177G, with no trouble at all, Robert!" Grandma Hollis beamed with the joy of one who imparts rare wis.lom, but Robert, although respectful, seemed oppressed. Set Your Watoli by a Star, "Hitch your wagon to a star," said Emerson. Set your watch by a star, says W. S. Harwood in the St. Nichol as. You must set your watch by a star if you wish to be up with the times, these days. Out of the vast number of stars in the heavens, and visible to the eye at night and out of the much greater multitude that celestial pho tography is bringing forth on its nega tives, there are some 600 that may be depended upon, stars that have so long been watched by the astronomers that .they are known to be practically invariable. Any one of these you may set your watch by, but it would be rather a difficult thing for you to pick out the star you wanted yourself, ani even If you should select the right one, you would not be likely to know just how togo to work to regulate yur time-piece. For about two centuries most of tnese two stare nave been under tlx* critical eyes of the astronomers, who have measured their exact places in the skies again and again. It has thus come to be known that these stars cross the meridian of any plac« at certain times every night. Th< medidian of any place is the line th« sun crosses there at noon —an imagin ary line from pole to polo, directly overhead, dividing east and west. Th« times when the stars BO cross th? meridian are predicted by the astro& omer years in advance, and table« are made which are exact to a smal! fraction of a second. After the as tronomers, through long series oi years of testing, found this out, 11 occurred to somebody that here was a perfect test for timepieces. Perhapt we owe it mainly to the great rail road companies that the time of the country finally became regulated throughout the length and breadth ol the land. Railroad companies must have regularity in their schedules; they cannot run their trains accord ing to clocks and watches that dc not agree; priceless human life and property beyond valuation would pav the penalty of such policy. Hl» Firnt Speech. The story as told by the orato* himself, a business man prominent is every movement that brings togethei citizens lor the general good, pre sents him as one of four persons whe went to another city to "help start a charity." A clergyman was of the party, sc was a city official, and its third num ber was a woman of gifts and gra cious presence. The business man who had never made a speech, was summoned at the last moment as a substitute for a physician who found he could not go. The four philanthropists chatted merrily during the journey. When they reached their destination, thej were taken to a church, a large church filled with people, and welcomed by the mayor of the city. Before the business inan, who hac prepared no speech, who had nevei made a speech, the occasion began tc loom up in unexpected proportions Apparently these hundreds of persons had come to hear something and h« had nothing to say. Presently the mayor mounted the platform, laid his left hand upon the pulpit, and called on the visiting city official to address the meeting. The city official, magician-like, drew from his pocket a fine array of typewritten papers and calmly proceeded to read A nervous sweat broke out upoD the young business man's forehead He had no typewritten papers. Then the minister was called upon He laid his loft hand on the pulpit as had the mayor, and spokri in a rich persuasive voice, without a pause. An inspiration flashed' upon the business man, an opening sentence Beyond that his mind was a blank except for a hysterical recollection ol a German student whom he had once scorned and pitied—an orator, whose trembling, apologetic knees belied the thunder of his voice. "If ever I speak in public," the business man had said then, "I will keep my knees stiff. They shall not betray embarrassment, even though my tongue refuse to wag." But now the minister ended, an« 3 the mayor began a description ol some one whom the business man did not in the least recogniza—until he heard his own name. He found him self staggering toward the pulpit. As the others had .lone, he laid his left hand lightly upon it. At that critical moment a purring voice somewhere within him mur mured, "Perhaps, after all, it is as well to let one's knees wiggle-waggle a little." His knees, which he hac always expected to master, began tc imitate the German student's knee 3. "Ladies and gsntlemen," he gasped to this knee accompaniment —it sounded to him like the rhythmical rattle of castanets, "ladies and gentle men. this work which you are aboul to uuderatke is so important that, i) it is to ba undertaken at all, it must be undertaken seriously." That was his opening sentence, the one he had prepared, the only one he had rescued from the wreck of his in tellect. This spoken, he looked blankly out upon the sea of faces, vaguely wondering how soon the au dience would begin to laugh. "I might start the laugh myself,' he thought, fantastically. His knee* continued active. After a time his lips also moved. "Ladies and gentlemen," he shout ed again. "I feel so strongly what 1 have already said that I desire tore peat it." As he repeated his only prepared tcntence, it occurred to him that he might cover sufficient time by explod ing with this precious utterance, this which the world could not take from him, although all else was gone, at regular interval's of (>0 seconds. "We cannot feci too strongly that this work is serious!" he cried aloui yet again, and he thanked heaver that this was so, that he had thought of it betimes. And having thus shouted his be loved remark a third tome, he sat down. It was long before he was asked again to speak in public, although is his dreams he addressed many audi ences and vied with Daniel Webster Day by day he accepted such oppor tunlties for public activity as came in his way, and he wrote much, that he might develop ability to express his thoughts. Then, after many months, a day of possible reward pre sented itself; and this time, when h« was called upon, it was not his kneei that moved—lt wa9 his tongue.— Ya-'tVs Companion. Sweat and fruit acids will not disco lor goods dyed with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. bold by all druggists. Lots of fellows have extravagant ideas about everything except work. SIOI) Rnwnnl, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in all Its stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, theroby destroy ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer Ono Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for lijt of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. It's the running expenses that count up when a man owns an automobile. lie«t For tlie Bowels. No matter what ails you, headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. Cabcarets help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cas caiiets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. Convicts may not be aristocrats, but they are certainly exclusive. Man; School Children Are Rlckl.v. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children's Home, New York, break up Colds in 24hours, cure Fevorishness, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms. At all druggists', 25c. Sample mailed hike. Address Allen H. Olmsted, Le Hoy, N'. Y. Insomnia may be only another name for an accusing conscience. Illicit inatlam. If you sufTer from Rheumatism, Lumbago or Gout, send ten cents silver and I will send you Dr. Geo. Harvest's celebrated recipe for cure of same. Address F. Hargest, 602 Wil loughby Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Tea consumed in England is subject to a duty of twelve cents per pound. FlTSpermanently cured.No fits or nervous n><ss after llrat day's use of Dr. Kline'sGreat Nervoßestorer.s2trial bottle and treatise free Dr. B. H. Kline, Ltd., 931Arch St. Phila.,l'a. There are 20K life-saving stations along the coasts of this country. Mrs. Wlnslow'sSoothing Syrup forchlldron teething,soften thegums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Some people are too weak to turn over i new leaf. Plso's Cura cannot be too highly spoken of is u cough cure.- J. W. O'Bhibn, 822 Third Vvenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. ti, I'JOO. San Francisco's exports to China now ! iverage over $400,000 per month. MRS. HULM JAKEMAN Wife of President Jakeman of Elders of the Mormon Church, Salt Lake City, Utah, Recom mends Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound For Wo man's Feriodic rains. " Dbab Mbs. Ptskham : —Before I ;new of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegr- i Stable Compound I dreaded the approach of the timofor my menstrual period, as it would mean a ccruplfe of MBS. IIT7LDA JAKEMAN. days in bed with iiitou&c pain and suf fering-. I was under the physicians care for over a year without any relief, ■when my attention was called to Lvdia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound by several of our !>lormon women who had been cured through-its use. I bc;an its systematic use and im firovcd gradually in health, and after he use of u'x bottles mv health was completely restored, and for over two years I have had neither ache or pain. You havo a truly wonderful remedy for women. Very sincerely yours, >lrs. Uvi.ua Jakeman, SaltLakeCity.Utah." —ssooo forfeit if above testimonial is not gonulrst. j Just as surely as Mrs. Jake- j man was cured just so surely will Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cure every woman suffering from any form of fe male ills. Mrs. Pinkliam advises sick wo men free. Addrcsa, Lynn, Maws. inka3/%0 ®V NEW DISCOVERY: 1 w a ■ quick r«lie p .Mid cur«H wontt rjc*M.v Boo* or sand IO day*' treatment 1 tree. Dr. H. a. CrttEßN 8&OM0. Box B. Atlanta, Ga (io!d .llcriti! ut liitllulo Kxposilion. /HCILHENNV'S TABASCO Taj Uililts WHIRt All ELSE FAILS. ST fygi Beat f'ough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use A l '" f4c: that Balser*a Refds ar» grown Id more gardens, and iBEPy?SF!IBHHDPPdPI KJf P ° n inore '•f® l ln America thau anj other. There i« ream W'O.M SALZER'S SEEDS NEVER FAIL. BCTjTL^FT^n produc.;. » a are the largest growers or Vegetable and Farm S. eds. op. ■ffitfTvJPSfJMfkM X »' •rating over 6,0U) acres, and hence cau make the roll..wing uuj.recedent- [M " 150 Klnds ' or 16c » Postpaid. Eft/ I u fii 80 blndi of raruk laictoai SadlakM "v H IUB ja mtgnllcfnt rirll(«t Melon 1150 kindl 0 l/UM lrt 00.-t* alorloria Tonatoei I , ,UB r ÜBX 2ii pecrloaa Lettuce varletlaa / TOP Only 112 J m IBS IB splendid Beet aorta I IRF / BM6 jorgconily beaiitiftil FUwtr Soeda J 10 ®Onti. SSS rn abo TO ISO sorts, which will furnish jou bushel baskets fall af magniß -3D ■■ csnt flowers and lots and lots or rara Tegtubiti, together with our great catalog tailing all nbout the rarest kind of fruits and flowers, and best a; ■ !■ HjH tarUcat vegotabl— and farm seeds—all far h»t 10 cto. !■ at dm pa. BHfh/fe V -HW H Cv'We mail T Hardy lCYsrb'.oomlng Garden Roses, postpaid, B5«.; M Hn * Bardr Plums, t Cherries. 2 Crab- and 7 Apples—alt gf ICS Ironclad, hardy aa oak—the IS postpaid for f1.60. A Oir great catalogoe, positively worth |IOO to overy wide awak* gar- Pfv/UYRI dener and farmer. Is mailed to yo« apon receipt of 60. postage, or with BK-» Mlltl I 1 \ 1 111 • bo * u I Wsorta for but 16c. postage. §y Jar 1 i'Ul 1 )'/|| | iOHN A. SALZER SEED CONIMNY, U A. Cou " I have made a most thorough trial of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral and am prepared to say that for all dis eases of the lungs it never disap points." J. Early Finley, Ironton, O, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral wont cure rheumatism; we never said it would. It won't cure dyspepsia; we never claimed it. But it will cure coughs colds of all kinds. We first said this sixty years ago; we've been saying it ever since. Three sizes: 25c., 51c., sl. All tafgietf. Consult your doctor. If he says take It, then do as be says. If he tells you not to take it, then don't take it. He knows. Leave it with him. We are willing. J C. A.YER CO.. Lowell, Maes. If SALZER'S MAGIC CRUSHED SHELLS. B fl Beit on at 11.36 per lb. bag; B Sold by G3 Douglas ftores and the best shoe dealers everywhere. I'AI'TION! The genuine hare W. L. Douglas' name aud price stamped on bottom. Notice increase of sales in table below: 1899 = 898,182 Palre. mammmmmmmm 1901 = 1,566,720 Pairs. I^EffSZRfIMBMBMBBUBMBHHBBHB 0 isiness More Than Doubled *n four Years. THE REASONS: . U . L. Doufclits makes and sells more men's s3.onand $3.50 shoes t ban any other two man'f'rs In the world. W. I- Douglas fc.t.oo and S3.ro shoes placed Bid* by side with s&.(w ami fcft.oo shoes of other makes, are found to I* just as jroud. They will outwear two pairs of ordinary $3.00 anil SS.&o shoes. Made of the best leathers, including Patent Corona Kid, Corona Colt, and National Kangaroo. Fait Color Ktrlrti and Alniji Black Uooka used. W.L.lleugUt §4.00 "Mil £dfr* l.ine" caouot be oqu&lleu. l»y uinil ar»f. «*:Ura. Ciiialoi; t'rc**u W. I'. l>otiietii». ItriM'ktcin, Mhii. Capsicum Vaseline Put up in Collapsible Tubes. j A Substitute for an l Bi\perior to Mustard or any , other plaster, und will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain allaying and curative qua ities of i thisarti le are wonderful. It wUI stop the t otha h| i at once, and relieve headache and tMatiea. We recommend it as the best and safest counter-irritant known, lso as an external remedy for pains in the chest an I sto nach and al, rheumatic, neuralgic and gouty o mplaints. A trial will prove what we claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable in the household. Many people say "It is the best of all y ur preparations." Price, 15 cents, at all druggists, or other deal *rs, or by sending this a nount to us i.i j ostajje s.amps we will send you a tube by mail. N > article should be accep ed by the public unlesi the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not geuuine. CHEESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING CO.„ 17 Stite Street. New York City. ADVERTISING HS™ ffl SALZER'S MAGIC CRUSHED SHELLS. ■ fl Best on earth. Sell at |l.;>6 per '>© lb. bag; B
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers