Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, June 23, 1898, Image 3

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    What You Get
When You ?!uy Medicine Is a Mat
ter of C9eat Importance.
Do you get that which has tho power to
©rndlcuto from your blood all poisonous
taints and thus remove the cause of dis
ease? Do you buy HOOD'S Sarsaparilla
and only Hood's ? If you do, you may take
it with the utmost conlldonce that it will
do you good. Remember
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is America's Greatest Medicine: SI; six for $5.
Hood's Pills cure biliousness, indigestion.
W. J. Mercer, dry goods editor of
the New York Journal of Commerce
and Commercial Bulletin, recently de
livered. at the rooms of the Merchants'
Association, New York city, an address
on "Cotton Industry in the South." At
the present time there are 500,000 spin
dles in the South running on that class
of goods known more particularly as
Fall River goods. The South main
tains that its progress so far in the
direction of fine goods is only an earn
est of what it is able to do in the fu
ture. I found nowhere in the South
spinning finer than 60s. nor weaving
finer than 40s yarn. Taking the whole
South, which I visited, the average
week will not be less than 68 hours.
Beauty is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty
without it. Casearets, Candy Cathartic clean
your blood and koop it clean, by stirring up
the lazy liver and driving all impurities
from tho bedy. begin to day to banish
pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that
sickly bilious complexion by taking Cas
carets, beauty for 10 cents. All druggists,
satisfaction guaranteed. 10c, 2Uc, 25c, 50c.
This is an off-year with the sea ser
pent along the New England coast.
The competition of Spanish war ships
has driven him out of business.
To Cur© a Cold in Ono Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c.
There could not possibly be a whiter
city than Cadiz, unless it were built of
snow. As you near the coast you see
in front of you a white mass which ap
pears to be Moating upun the water.
The first thought for a foreigner is that
he is in sight of an Iceberg.
Educate Your Bowels With Cascarcts.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
In Florida a wine is made from to
matoes, which is superior to orange
wine.
A. M. Priest, Druggist, Shelbyville, Ind.,
says: "Hall's Catarrh Cure gives the best of
satisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonials,
as it cures every one who takes it." Drug
gists sell it, Toe.
ST. VITUS' DANCE. SPASMS and all nerv
ous diseases permanently cured by the use of
Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for
FREE 51.00 trial bottle nud treatise to Dr.
R. H. Kline, Ltd., 031 Arch Street, Phila., Pa.
Some Hindoos wear mustaches and
beards, but all wear whiskers, which
are shaved off at once when an adult
relation dies. The shaving off of
whiskers is thus a sign of mourning.
Clergyman's Experiment.
A laudable attempt on the part of a
Notting Hill clergyman to practically
Illustrate to the working class portion
©f his flock the combined benefits of
religion and a tankard of beer lias, we
regret to hear, proved unsuccessful.
The Rev. Prebendary Denison started,
for the social pleasure of his congrega
tion, a club, where the reverend gen
tleman or his curate went, after dis
pensing theological pabulum in the
church, and served the members with
beer and other corporeal refreshments.
The Idea was to keep them away from
public houses and to afford them hon
est recreation with a reasonable amount
of tipple. By the rules no man could
be served with Rquor more than three
times in the course of a night. But tlie
clergyman was unaware of the degree
If not of original sin at least of bibulous
ingenuity among the rougher classes of
Notting Hill. They evaded tho rule
by clubbing together their twoponces
and treating each other, so that in the
course of the evening a member was
able to obtain half a dozen, or even
more, drinks, Instead of three. The re
sult was sometimes unpleasant, and
the Prebendary has therefore reluct
antly determined to give up the experi
ment.—London Telegraph.
AN OPERATION AVOIDED
Mrs. Ro3a Gaum Writes to Mrs.
Pinkham About It. She Says :
DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM:—I take pleas
ure in writing you a few lines to in
form you of the good your Vegetable
Compound lias done me. I cannot
thank you enough for what your medi
cine has done for me; it has, indeed,
helped inc wonderfully.
For years I was trou
bled with an
ovarian tumor,
eachj*eargrow- jMpCPwfr v, \
be done for
me but to go under an operation."
In speaking with a friend of mine
about it, she recommended Lydia E.
Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound, say
ing she knew it would cure me. I then
sent for your medicine, and after tak
ing three bottles of it, the tumor dis
appeared. Oh! .you do not know how
much good your medicine has done
me. I shall recommend it to all suffer
ing women.—Mrs. ROSA GAUM, 720
Wall St., Los Angeles, Cal.
The great and unvarying success of
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound in relieving every derangement
of the female organs, demonstrates
it to be the modern safeguard of wo
man's happiness and bodily strength.
More than a million women have been
benefited by it.
Every .woman who needs a'dvice
about her health is invited to write to
Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass.
Write for Newspapers—Earn Money.
Review Pub.Co.. luo9Bluff st.. Pittsburg, Pa.
!
I.ocato the Underdrnlnti.
Wherever an underdrain has been
laid, either a map of the ground
should be drawn, or such other mem
orandum as will enable the owner of
the land to always know where it may
be found. There is nothing more
provoking to the buyer of a farm that
is only partly underdrained than his
inability to decide just where the old
drains aro located and what size con
duit they have. Of course, the drain,
if in working order, will show within
two or three rods where tile or stone
may be found. But to reach it then
requires much needless digging,
which could all have been avoided if
the man who laid the drain had been
careful to make a record of its location.
Keeping Barn Odors Out of Milk.
It is well known that milk remain
ing in the stable quickly absorbs
odors that injure butter flavor. It is
an inconvenience on many farms to
i j^ J|iril ' ||l ' ■ [
ijM
OUTSIDE VIEW.
carry away to the dairy room each
pail as soon as it is filled. The
sketches show a handy shelf built
outside the cattle quarters, but
reached from within. As each pail is
i
Jllr " ffi
INSIDE VIEW.
filled tlie slido Is pushed back and
the pail is set out on the shelf, where
it is protected by the top and the
grating from cots, etc., while it is
surrounded by pure air. The illus
trations show the inside and outside
arrangement of this ventilated barn
milk -closet. —American Agriculturist .
Mineral Manure* For Clover.
The clover is very exhaustive, both
of potash and lime, and also to some
extent of phosphate. All of these
have to be supplied if the soil does
not contain them or the clover will
not "catch." In many localities lime
is deficient. It nearly always is on
sandy soils, and these have always
been most benefited by sowing laud
plaster, which is made by crushing
gypsum, a natflral sulphate of lime
rock. A mixture of wood ashes with
finely ground land plaster makes a
"catch" of clover possible when it
could not be got without it. On laud
that lias no lime, large applications of
freshly slaked lime should be made.
It is better to purchase lime before
it is slaked, as iu slaking the lime
absorbs a great amount of water, and
enormously increases in bulk. Lime
can profitably be used where it is
abundant in the soil, as is shown by
numerous limestone rocks. It is a
common practice where limestone
abounds for farmers to mako large
kilns in which to burn it. After sub
jecting the stones to great heat for a
wholo day, and sometimes longer, the
stones will become white, ami if water
is thrown on them they will divide
into fine pieces, into powder if the
burning has been thorough enough.
Much carbonic acid gas is given in
slaking lime, and if liuic is put in the
soil, this gas helps to pulverize it and
make all its plant food available. The
clover roots uso up much lime. It is
because clover contains so much lime
that cut clover hay is such good feed
for hens in winter. Its lime makes I
the shell of the egg, while the nitro
genous port of clover furnishes the !
albumen of which eggs nre mostly
constituted.—American Cultivator.
New Weeds.
New weeds nre of continual occur
rence; that is to say, immigrants from
other localities, or ports of the world,
are oontiuually appearing in the cnlti- I
vator's domain that the cultivator does
not desire to grow there. This is the
definition of a weed. In recent years
government officials, and others in
national and State publications, have
been giving particular nttontiou to
these first appearances of unwelcome j
plants; and the lists are something re- j
markable. It would appear that the j
condition of unrest is as prevalent
among plants as among animated be
ings. A prominent horticultural serial
asserts, however, that scarcely one of j
the many introductions of the last de- j
cade can be termed pernicious. The 1
writer contends that the buttercups i
and daisies now permitted to grow by
the millions in our fields and pastures
without special remark, are more per- j
nicious to the agricultural interests
than anything is likely tn he
the new introductions of recent years,
I The worst agricultural weeds to-day,
| he contends, are old and well-known
I enemies—the horsenettle (Solanum
I Carolinense), the English lily(Convol-
I vnlns arvensis), the Canada thistle
j (Onious arvensis) and the yellow cress
(Nasturtium Sylvestre). These aro
pernicious because every broken piece
of root makes a new plant, and the
first breaking up of the hoe or culti
vator may add to, rather than decrease,
the number of these vegetable ene
mies. One has to keep hoeing the
livelong season to prevent these little
pieces from making leaves before they
will die a natural death. Of the new
comers, if one is smart enough to
keep the weed-destroying implements
going before the seeds mature, they
are easily destroyed. The axiom in
botanical science that plants cannot
live without one season of healthy
leaves, is useful to those who have to
battle for weed destruction.—New
York Independent.
Locating an Apiary.
The apiary ought to be some dis
tance from the highway, writes W. Z.
Hutchinson, of Michigan. What this
distance should be depends upon what
there is between the bees and the
street. If there are buildings, 01
trees, or even a high fence, the bees
may be quite near the road, as in their
llight the bees rise above these ob
structions, and thus fly over the heads
of passers-by. If there is nothing
between the bees and the highway,
the apiary ought to be not nearer the
street than ten rods, and fifteen or
twenty rods would be better. It is
possible with a small apiary to avoid
troublo even if it is located near the
street. If it becomes necessary to
handle the bees when no honey is
coming in, and such handling is likely
to irritate them, the work can be done
just before dark, when the bees will
not fly far from their hives, but in o
large apiary there is too much work
that must be done when bees may not
be in an amiable mood, to enable the
operator to perform it during the
twilight of evening. If necessary,
the beekeeper can protect himseli
with a veil, and armed with a smoker
he can go on with the work, even if
the bees are a little cross, but in such
cases the apiary must bo isolated.
Nearly level ground is preferable for
an apiary. If it slopes gently to the
south or east, so much the better. It
should never be in such a location
that tho water will stand upon the
ground.
I have tried placing the honey house
in the center of the apiary, and hav
ing the hives in long, double rows that
radiated from the honey house as
spokes in a wheel radiate from the
hub. In each double row is left a
space between the rows large enough
for a wheelbarrow, and tho entrances
are turned away from the path left for
the operator and his wheelbarrow. So
far as reducing the labor of going to
and from the hives is concerned, this
arrangement is excellent, but it has
the very serious objection that only
part of the apiary can be seen at one
glance. In watching for swarms it is
necessary to look in four different di
rections in order to ascertain if a
swarm is out. When the honey house
is at one side of the apiary, the whole
apiary can be taken in at a glance.
Other things being equal, the south
side of the apiary is preferable for the
honey house. In watching for swarms
tho beekeeper does not have to look
toward the sun, but has the clear
northern sky for a background, while
the shady side of the building, which
will naturally be sought by the tired
beekeeper as the best spot in which to
take a breathing spell, is toward the
apiary.
Most beekeepers are in favor of a
two-story building for a honey house,
using the upper room for storing hives
and fixtures, the lower story for work
shop and honey room, the latter being
partitioned off by itself, while the cel
lar under the building is used for win
tering the bees. The honey room
ought to be located in the southeast
corner, anil some even paint the out
side walls a dark color where they
come next to the honey room, in or
der that as much a3 possible of the
sun's heat may be absorbed. The
idea is that honey must be kept as
warm as possible. If there is any un
ripe or unsealed honey, this high tem
perature causes evaporation nud im
provement. By keopiug honey in a
warm room all winter it has actnnlly
improved by the keeping.—New Eng
land Homestead.
Farm and Garden Note*.
Badly-lighted stables are the cause
of eye troubles in animals, and badly
ventilated ones nre the cause of lung
and stomach troubles.
As a colt or calf will not make a
good horse or cow without plenty to
eat and good care, neither will n young
tree develop into a good-bearing ono
if it is neglected.
Trees, vines and hedges should al
be trimmed up, the brush and rubbish
cleaned up and burned up during the
fine days of early spring, so that when
plowing-time comes you will be ready
to plow.
A common fault in setting straw
berry plants is in placing them scf
close together that they grow up
slender, soon coming together and the
fruit is thus too much shaded to de
velop large size, good color or fine
flavor.
WORDS OF WISDOM.
We are wont to look forward to
troubles with fears of what they will
inflict, but back ou them with wonder
at what they have saved us from.—
Samuel Johnson.
It is wonderful to *-hink what the
presence of one human being can do
for another—chaugo everything in the
world.—The Story of William and
Lucy Smith, George* S. Merriam.
We do not shake off our yesterdays
and sustain no farther relation to them;
they follow us, they constitute our
life, and they give accent and force
and meaning to our present deeds.—
Joseph Parker.
Take time, and go apart for a sea-
Ron; withdraw into thyself, and dis
cover the evolutions of thine own
thought. Thou must take thy stand
on principles, as perceived within thee.
—Trinities and Sanctities.
It is to self government, the great
principle of popular representation and
administration—the system that lets
in all to participate in the counsels
that are to assign the good or evil to
all—tnat we owe what we are and what
we hope to be.—Daniel Webster.
Deep streams run still; and why?
Not because there are no obstructions,
but because they altogether overflow
those stones or rocks round which the
shallow stream has to make its noisy
way; it is the full life that saves us
from the little, noisy troubles of life.
—George S. Merriam.
God is the artist who recognizes the
possibilities that are hidden within us;
wo are the blocks of marble; and, il
we are conscious of wh._ \.e may be
come, we cannot cry, "Father, save
me from this hour," but must needs
pray, "Father, glorify thy name," and
then angels will come from the upper
air and minister to us.—Selected.
A Cooking-Class for Men.
The New York City Cooking-school
has this year had an innovation in the
way of men pupils. Heretofore tho
scholars have all been girls or women,
but this season has found a large class
made up of the other sex. The class
is recruited from a missionary train
ing-school, and is due to the kindly
interest of a certain philanthropic
woman. The young men are prepar
ing to go to China, and it is her idea
that they will be more practically
equipped for their work if they know
something about home cooking. No
class ever enrolled at the cooking
school has shown greater enthusiasm
in the work or made more rapid prog
ress. The young men have taken
hold with a zest, and bid fair to turn
out a set of cordon bleus in all but the
decoration. "It isn't that they show
greater natural talent for cooking tliau
women," said the head teacher, "but
they unquestionably take more iute:
est in the thing. Then, too, the fact
of their sheer physical superiority is
iu their favor. They can swing open
range doors aud lift pots and kettles
without so much as a long breath, per
form other heavy labors which to wo
men must be always more or less of a
strain." The instructor of this class
of young men is a young woman, but,
thanks to her good sense and tact, the
class has not yet developed into what
it might so easily do—an opportunity
for flirtation second only to the Chi
nese Sunday-school. The young men
acknowledge that iu learning to cook
they are laying up for themselves
every chance of matrimonial nnhap
piness. "When wo get married/*
they say, "it won't be 'the way moth
er used to cook,' but 'the way I used
to cook myself.'"—Harper's Bazar.
Glorious Time For One Small Boy.
A notable journey has just been ac
complished by a twelve-year-old boy
named Launoelot Lewis, son of a well
known grazier of Kooringa, South
Australia. The lad desired to visit
an uncle residing at Warrnambool,
Victoria, and for that purpose, and
with his father's sanction, left home on
January 10 last mounted on a pony and
leading another carrying a pack sad
dle. Striking in a southeasterly direc
tion, he made the seaboard in about a
week's time, aud, passing through
Mount Gambier and Beacliport, crossed
the border, and shortly afterward
safely negotiated the Gleuelg river by
swimming his ponies across. Skirting
the coast line, he shaped a course for
Portland, and thence, byway of Port
Fairy, to Warrnambool, which he
reached, having traversed 570 miles,
in twenty-one days, an average of abcut
twenty-eight miles daily. Despite the
long aud wearisome journey, his ponies
were in excellent condition on their
arrival, while the appearance of the
young overlander was that of a typi
cal biißhman, with the water bags slung
over the neck of the pack carrier and
the hobbles braced on to his own
mouut.—Melbourne Age.
How a Mountain Was Named.
There are two mountains in New
Hampshire bearing the name Kear
sarge. One of these is in Warner, in ,
Merrimac County; the other near North I
Conway. There is a fanciful tradition
that the Warner mountaiu got its name
from a hunter, Hezekiah Sargent, who
is said to have been the first man to
discover it. Sweetser doubts the ex
istence of any such hunter, and
traced the name back to 1725, a period j
preceding the alleged appearance of j
Mr. Sargent on the scene, (f. V. Fox,
Assistant Secretary of the Navy dur
ing the Civil War, and tho best possi
ble authority on tho subject, wrote
years ago: "When we selected the
name for tho Kearsarge, sloop-of-war,
in which the gallant Wiuslow sunk the
Alabama, we had no thought whatever
of the Kearsarge in Merrimac County."
—Boston Transcript.
Tin? Sumlli'tt Republic.
Gaust„the smallest republic in the
world, having an area of one mile, and
a population of 140; has existed since
1048, and is situated on tho flat top of
ft mountaiu in the Pyrenees.
"Your* Truly."
The habits of people In signing let
ters are receiving some attention, and
Interesting conclusions are drawn from
a study of the different ways writers
subscribe themselves. The curt
"Yours" and "Yours truly" are found
not only In business letters, but in per
sonal notes as well, for there are plenty
of correspondents who don't believe In
gush, and who think that "Y'ours truly"
or "sincerely" means about all they
wish to convey. Opposed to these sen
sible and essentially practical persons
is that class of writers made up usual
ly of young and enthusiastic individ
uals, as a rule of the gentle sex, who
throw words about as carelessly on pa
per as they do In conversation. The
use of the word love by such people
is a distressing sign of emotional weak
ness, or carelessness, or of insincerity,
and possibly arises from the same im
pulse that prompts women to kiss each
other Indiscriminately. One Boston
girl, who Is quoted by the Journal, has
taken her own stand In the matter, and
at the risk of being considered "cold"
and "thoroughly Boston" Bhe sticks to
it. In her childhood she was taught to
sign "affectionately yours" to her far
away greataunts and second cousins,
some of whom she had never seen, but
all of whom she tried to like, because
of the claims of kindred, and the word
"affectionately" came to mean to her
nothing at all except polite and neces
sary fiction. So she signs "affection
ately" to people she Is supposed to be
conventionally fond of, and when she
says anything more she means It. She
thoroughly approves of "Cordially
yours," and this, by the way, Is seen
more and more frequently now in
notes between acquaintances who are
on distinctly friendly or cordial terms.
After all, "Y'our friend," when it can be
used truthfully, is a simple and satis
factory way of ending friendly letters.
Some people have the habit of not pre
facing their names with any set form
of words at the end of letters. They
stop when they get through, and write
their signatures without any frills.—
Worcester (Mass.) Gazette.
Expensive Mirth.
"Cheery words cost nothing "
"That's where you are way off. 1
said two cheery words yesterday and
they cost me $17."
"How did that happen?"
"Well, I slapped a big man on the
back, and said, 'Hello, Fatty!' "
"That was all right."
"No. It wasn't; he turned out to be a
man I didn't know, so we knocked
each other down and got into court."—
Rostoo Journal
A New York paper says that "the ex
pectation that electricity would destroy
the demand for horses has not yet been
realized." Why, of course not; It is Im
possible tc eat an electric battery.
natome love is a sort of prologue to
the real thing.
How Relief Came.
From Cole Count;/ Democrat, Jefferson
Citxj, Mo.
When la grippe visited this section, nbont
seven years ago, Herman H. Eveler, of 811
W. Main St., Jefferson, Mo., was one of the
victims, and has since been troubled with
the aftor-effocts of tho diseaso. He is a
well-known contractor and builder, a busi
ness requiring much mental and physical
work. A year ago his health began to fail
alarmingly, and that he lives to-day Is al
most a miracle. He says:
"I was troubled with shortness of breath
palpitation of tho heart and a general de
bility. My back also pained me severely.
"I tried one doctor after another and
numerous remedies suggested by my
friends, but without apparent benefit, and
f?S | i i began to give
Ji M Then I°^
//) 1 -1 CJ Dr. Williams'
L Tink Pills for
extolled In a
"**""1 after invest!-
}— gntion, do-
J r elded to give
thorn a trial.
\ "After us
ing the first
A Contractor's Difficulty . box I felt
wonderfully relieved and was satisfied
that the pills wore putting mo on the road
to recovery. I bought two more boxes and
continued taking them.
"After taking four boxes of Dr. Williams'
Tink rills for Pale People I am restored to
good health and feel like a new man.
I am now capable of transacting my
business with increased ambition.
"Dr. Williams' Pink rills for Tale People
are a wonderful medicine and anyone that
is afflicted with shortness of breath, pal
pitation of the heart, nervous prostration
and general debility, will ilnd that those
pills are the specific. Hbuman H. Evelbb."
Subscribed and sworn to before me, a
Notary Public, this 24th day of May, 1897.
Adam Poutszono, Notary Public.
Mr. Eveler will rladly answer any In
quiry regarding this If stamp is enclosed.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure people
troubled with the after-effects of the
grippe because they act directly on the
impure blood. They are also a specific for
chronic erysipelas, catarrh, rheumatism
and all diseases duo to impure or impov
erished blood.
Most spiders have eight eyes, al
though some species have only six.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Case a rets Candy Cathartic. 10e or 25c.
If C. C. C. fail tocure, druggists refund money.
fie Tiptoes Now.
"What a quiet man your husband Is.
Mrs. Rlzley, and It's surprising, too.
Before he was married he was one of
the noisiest young men I ever knew.
How did you break him of it?"
"I didn't break kini of it. The baby
did it. It didn't take him long to learn
the value of silence after little Alfred
enjim "
Thrilling.
He—That must be a very Interesting
book you are reading.
She—Oh, It's awfully exciting! The
heroine changes her gown six times In
the tlrst chapter.
A Boston prisoner, arrested for drun
kennes, was summarily discharged
when he said that he was tho father of
twenty-four children. And he had been
gone an hour before the court remem
bered that the prisoner had testified
that he was 30 years old.
On rangeroaa Ground.
Dick—l am convinced now that the
funny men are right when they gay a
can't understand a Joke.
Tom—Why, what's happened?
Dipk—l called on Mrs. Dartleigh—
that sprightly little widow, j-ou know
last night and Just in a joking way pro
posed to her.
Tom—Yes?
Dick—Well, It looks now as if I will
have to furnish a very elaborate dia
gram to get her to see through it.—
Cleveland Leader.
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, t ike No-To-
Bao, the wonder-worker, that makes weak
men strong. All druggist". SOc or jjl. Cure
guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Add ress
Beinedy Co.. < 'hi' ago or New York.
Artificial legs and arms were in use
In Egypt as early as B. C. 700. They
were made by the priests, who were the
physicians of that early time.
I "
: r—, I, | *
i is I.
t? ... i!
<• Among people where the practice of economy is a •>
f. necessity, the buying of soap is an important yearly item. 5>
(• The grocer who has an eye to larger profits, may not .4
C suggest Ivory Soap. He will recommend nothing else ?
r. if he is conscientious. Ivory Soap is a pure soap, ail *
<% through. That makes it the most economical and best. 2
| A perfect soap for the toilet and laundry. •>
(5 IT FLOATS. 2
? •)
r* A WORD OF WARNING.—There are many white soaps, each represented to be " just
C as good as the ' Ivorythey ARE NOT. but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and
remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for" Ivory " Soap and insist upon getting it. •)
9 •)
& ft'>ft , ft , ft'ft*ft^ftft-ft-ft\ft'ft-ftft-ft-ft •S'ft-ftAftvft'ft'ft'ft'ft'ft^-5-5■ £• ••?-2 • ft-ft
No Need to Lose a Day of Delightful
Spring Riding.
We can fill all orders at once from stock. We are sure we
can please you in quality and price with a !
llartfsrd I
©r Vedette.
Machines and Prices Guaranteed. '
•| Pope EVSfg. Co., l3srtford 9 Ggsssb. I
■BWBOWPRWiVWCTPWHMSSBKSBISSHffiE.
M—| —a———MMBHBBMWi
1 CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS ' I
9 FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS ; : ' Calcimo H
fl and do your own kaisnmlning. This materiul is mud • .. u s.i'Midfie principle* l.y H
■ iug that cau possibly bo mado by Laud. To be mixed with Fold \V iuer. ' H
8S nr-SENII FOIt NA.IVI'FiK CO Ol? CARDS and if you canter purchase this material H
■ from your local dealers let us know ami we will put you in the way of ob.ainiug i . kl
I the MiKAij co.. m;\v i;i:h.hi<>\. s. r, \i:iv vork. H
What Brings Release From Dirt and Grease?
Why Don't You Know ?
SAPOLIO
Sour Stomach
*• After I was Induced to try C'ASCA-
ItRTSI, I will never bu without tlietn In the house.
My liver was In a very bad shape and my head
ached and 1 had stomach trouble. Now. since tak
ing Cascurcts. 1 feel hue My wlfo has also used
Nhem with bencflclul results for sour stomach."
Jus. Kkehlinu. l'j-Jl Congress tit., tit. Louis. Mo.
CATHARTIC
tawcGaao
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Dp L
3ood, Never tiickeu, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... 1 !
torllmr (trawly ( oßp.sy, Chicago. Moalreal. S*w York. 818 |
||H TA PAT Sold and guaranteed by all drug.
nu'lU'DAv gists to Cl T KE Tobacco liablt. |
A hunting-horn r.t a sale in London
fetched 6,300 guineas. It is an ordinary
cow's horn beautifully enameled, the
subjects depicted being hunting scenes-
It is about 350 years old.
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cent?.
Guaranteedtobao-ohabit onto makes west
men strong, blood pure. 5Uc, sl. All druggists.
The United Hebrew Charities of New
York spent last year §130,000 in benevo
lent work.
Fits permanently cured. N > lif-or nrrvorjs
ne-s alter first day'- u> of I?r. Gnat
Nerve i V-t.'-r. retrial bottle and treatl-o
free Dr.H.H.h'i.iNK Ltd..031 Audi St. Phi la.. Pa.
P'ont free, Klondike Itfnp
From Gold < ommission'e oit clal smver. Ad
dress Uurduer A Co., Colorado Springs! Culot
Mrs. Wlnslow's SoothingSyrupfnrchlldren
teething, softens the gums, rot!using in
flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.
a bottle.
For Whooping Cough, Pho'. Our 1? a rac
cessful remedy.- M.P. bit i KU,o7lhroop
Brooklyn, N. Y„ Nov. 14.1804.
! WHOOi •"
be nVo e ,W„t FnEIOHT "">■
r r. b s r ofle, ' e "- ep&a CO
LSK'r oh AL C 5
M^ntfcly
trss 64 pages. New Music. Bright I.l'eratnre 'Mm-tat
Woman s Department. Great Clubbing i m
yearly. Mimplr copy nod premium lint. Kite.
THE DO IIIN ANT. 41 \V. 21)0. st.VN. Y. <JS
P N U 22 '93.
, nENSIQN^K'fS^
Prosecutes Claim*.
' • hjrsiulaot war, 13aUudicatiugtlauud, utty mum*
. |f " CURES WhtRE ALI ELSE FAILS. TBT
U Best Cough Syrup. Ta*teG.>oS. UseM