Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, February 13, 1901, Image 3

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    (.if hirvesung tweoras if iho West.
The farmers of the San Joaquin val
ley, iu California, utilize the largest ma
chines in the world tor harvesting ami
threshing their wheat crops. These
machines are combine! harvesters, that
cut, thresh, clean, sack and dump the
grain on the ground ready to be stor
ed. The traction engines which oper
ate them are of 50-horse power. Last
season some great records for harvesting
were made. A twenty-foot sickle har
vester, with what is termed a four-toot
extension cut, threshecj, cleaned and
sacked 1,772 bags of i/heat, or over 3,-
000 bushels a day.
1 UPRIGHT I
m ft
Straight and strong is thr jm
to statue when the twists uud im
curvatures of
1 jfe i
I . -*#' Lumbago %
I M 1
S arr r,,ro^nn< * ft
to jjjll et: anUUeued
stf I s&s &
| Ml A Jacobs t
S MIL 0 I
to ft
iti ft
Marconi's Great T?.s'<.
In liis Dorsetshire laboratory, week m
and week out, works Marconi, the ma
gician cf wireless telegraphy. He only
visits London to attend meetings of the
board of directors, and, thrice happy, he
is spared the reading of all save the
most pressing business letters. His dis
covery has been natented in every civ
ilized county, yet Marconi is aware th-it
competitors are running him hard in the
race for improvements and consequent
ly he is never content with what has al
ready been done.
"We have proved the efficiency- of
Marconi's invention for a distance of
98 miles," said Major Flood Page, the
secretary of the Marconi Company, "and
I wish you could tell us how to cross
the Atlantic."
It is the solution of this distance dif
ficulty which is now taxing the ingeni
ous brain of the tireless Marconi. The
curvature of the earth over so many
miles of sea causes the trouble. To
speak to Ostend, over forty miles, of
water, necessitates the erection of a mast
of communication 40 fect high, which
is at the rate of a foot of mast per mile
of distance. By this calculation, wire
less telegraphy between Southampton
and New York would require 011 either
side a mast measuring about three thou
sand fect in height—nearlv as high as
Snowdon and 19 times the height of the
Nelson Column. But Marconi is san
guine of his ability to solve the mast
problem, though it will, of course, take
some high thinking and deep reflection.
—London Express.
Best For the Bowels,
No matter what alls you, headache to a
cancer, you will never got well until your
bowels are put right. Casoap.ii.th help
nature, cure you without a gripe or pain,
(troduce easy natural movements, cost you
ust 10 cents to start getting your health
tack. Cahcauets Candy Cathartic, the
genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tab
let has C.U.O. stumped out it. Bow axe of
Imitations.
In Baltimore they have eight school?
in the city jail. Attendance is compul
sory.
(■nrficlil Headache Powders Cure.
One woman writes: "Periodical headaches
from which I suffered lmve been ontlrely
cured. Am now soiling Powders to my
friends." Send to Garfield Tea Co., Brook
lyn, N. Y., for frea satnplos.
The public buildings of England
alone are valued at a sum approaching
£ 250,000,000.
Dr. Bull's Cough
Cures n cough or cold at once. £*>
Conquers croup, bronchitis | IB f9
grippe aud consumption. 75c. J U
ttfr JS—-4 UNION
Tlie real worth of W.
L. Douglas #3.00 anil M
tt.'i.r>o shoes compared f'
with other makes Is
84.00 to 85.00. f / v* Trji
Oiirttl Gilt Edge 1.1 tie L-&A 'fij
cannot bo equalled at r*
any price. Over 1.000,- y f
000 satisfied wearers,
5 s„\kr, Oro pjlr oMV. I, Doughs
IIFAST COLopF $3 or $3.50 shoos will
*5 crYnpTc Positively outwear
' S Y\V two pairs of ordinary
L fA-r • : V\ " ... $3 " 53.50
Wo are the largest makers of men's 83
and 83-50 shoes In the world. We make
ami sell more 83 and tt3.RO shoes than any
othev two manufacture I'M In the U. ftj.
The reputation of W. L.
BCPT Douglas SO.OO and $3.60 shoes for nrpr
BE ' ST EES '
$3.50 ssrftsr's.firiflE s3.oo
the standard h-n aluuv? been
SHOE. £32 "moWA TSS SHOE.
than they can (ret elsewhere.
TUF. *CHA!t<>.\ TTT7T7T W 1.. In.and f3.M>
ahc.es aro sold than any other make is became THEY
AHE THE. IStYl'. > our dealer should keep
them ; we givo ono dealer exclusive sale in each town.
Take no •uslMtifule! Jniitt on having W. L.
Douglas slioea with name end price stamped on bottom.
If vourdeolcr will not pet than for you. si nd dirict to
factory, enclosing pric-o and Wv extra for carriage.
State kind of leather, size, and width, plain or cap toe.
Our shoe J will reach you anywhere. Catalogue Ires.
U'. JL* itouglus Shoo Co. ISrocklwu, Alius.
(|ENSION^^fS.%
Symi'i eivii war. Jsu!ju<li<-ut in;;. i.uiua.atty aluce^
OUR BUDGET OF HUMOR
LAUGHTER-PROVOKING STORIES FOR
LOVERS OF FUN.
The llcuson, Yott Plainly Tan See His
Conjecture Their Plight Worse A
Happy Exit—Too High—Hurried—His
Preference—Doing His Best, Etc., Etc.
"There is plenty of room at the top,"
Said the poet, a trifle erratic;
And he chortled with glee
As he said: "Don't you see,
That's the reason I live in an attic."
—Philadelphia Record.
Ills Conjecture.
Myer—"l wonder what causes con
cussion of the brain?"
Gyer—"A collision between two
trains of thought, 1 suppose."—Chicago
News. "
Their Plight Worse.
"He's been talking golf so much late
ly he seems to be actually going crazy."
"Gracious! Then what must be the
condition of the people he's been talk
ing to!" r
A Happy Exit.
"Tubbs Is somewhat of a snob, Isn't
he?"
"Snob? Say, he'd die happy if he
could get run over by a millionaire's
automobile."
Too High.
"D'Auber doesn't shout so much
about 'high art' as he used to."
"No, the last thing lie exhibited was
skyed by the committee."—Philadel
phia Tress.
Hurried.
The Idler—"How would j-ou like
to live a hundred years?"
The Busy Man—"l'd like to, but I
nin afraid I couldn't fiud the time."—
Indianapolis Press.
His Preference.
"Do you boll your water before
drinking it?"
"Boil It? Well, I guess not. I'd
rather drink a menagerie then a ceme
tery any day."—Life.
Doing His I' est.
"Lester, dear," said Mrs. Gid (lings,
anxiously, to her husband, "I don't
like that cough of yours."
"I'm sorry," replied Giddings, "but
it is the best I have."—Tit-Bits.
Unready.
"Every avenue to success is now
open to you!" said Fate.
"And I haven't a decent street dress
to my name!" faltered Woman, tears
dimming her eyes.—Detroit Journal.
Quiet ProHiiie.
"Well, I wonder how this marriage
happened to be brought about?"
"They simply fell in love with each
other."
"How unromantlc!"—Denver News.
The Shadow.
"What profession does your friend
follow?"
"That of the liglit-flngered gentry."
"You don't mean it?"
"Yes; he's a detective."—Catholic
Standard and Times.
hot Arty For Him.
Cholly—"Die Chappie, why don't you
have a pair of these rubber heels put
on your shoes?"
Fweddy—"lt would he too much
trouble to keep them inflated, deah
boy."—Chicago Tribune.
Farther Proof of Hie Ability.
"Yapp has greatly misrepresented
his assets to the counsel for his credi
tors."
"Well, that's only additional proof
that his .lie-abilities are great."—Phila
delphia North American.
Sure to Object.
"If we could see ourselves as others
see us," began Miss Quotem, "we
should—"
"Very promptly inform them that
they were mistaken," interrupted Mr.
Flyppe.—Baltimore American.
Touching.
Here the fellow borrowed $lO of me.
"Your friendship is pure gold!" he
cried.
I wrung his lmnd.
"Don't mention It!" I protested.
"Your Midas-toucli would turn any
body's friendship to gold!"
Then I laughed boisterously.
Tile Hail That Failed.
"All hall!"
Everybody hiiled.
But he to whom their acclamations
were directed passed them with stern
ly averted face.
Bo It was the people walked home,
for he was none other than the motor
man of tne last car.—Detroit Journal.
Finding Fault Kaviy in tiie Game.
Bride—"You can't Imagine how hate
ful Jack is to me, he Is so selfish,
mother."
Mother (sympathetically)—" Why,
what does lie do?"
Bride—"He lways wants to go out
to the theatre, and things like that,
.iust the very time when 1 want to
stay home."—Collier's Weekly.
Quiet True.
"Y'oii disapprove of some of the con
ventional Actions?"
"I do," nuswered Miss Cayenne.
"And yet I have heard you exclatm
to a number of peopl„; 'I am delighted
to see you!'"
"The remark was perfectly true in
each case. I shouldn't enre to be
blind, you know."—Washington Star.
The Deluded Canine.
The dog Is one 01 the most intelligent
of animals," remarked Willie Wash
ington.
"So I have lizard," answered Miss
Cayenne.
"And he Is the most loyal admirer
a man can have."
"Yes. I never could quite reconcile
those two assertions."—Washington
Star.
WANT AN IDEAL PAPER.
Dr. Parkliurst Says Endonineut Fund
Will Bo Established.
Dr. Parkliurst makes the statement
that a syndicate of wealthy men has
under consideration the establishment
in New York City of an "ideal" news
paper. He declares that an endowed
theatre is also a possibility for New
York.
"There are those," he said, "who
are anxiously considering the matter
of establishing a journal for the pur
pose of telling the truth and suffi
ciently capitalizing it, so that it will
have no trouble in telling the truth.
There is also being considered the
matter of establishing an endowed
theatre. .
"It has come to be a fact in this
city that a theatre as a rule cannot
be made to pay unless there is more
or less of that in it which is objection
able. The only way a first-class thea
tre can be maintained Is by its being
endowed.
"The same applies to the average
newspaper.
"The paper now under consideration
would cover all the ground covered by
the New York papers. It would be
equal to any one of them in resources.
It would be foolish to undertake to
run a paper in any other way. It would
be dead before it was born.
"The papers now are run on a busi
ness plan. They are not leading the
public. Boiiie papers are run for po
litical ends, because with them poli
tics is going to put money in the till.
"The ideal paper would be a paper
with just as much enterprise as our
most enterprising papers at present
have.
"It must have the news. You take
market reports. In all papers they
have to be truthful. Now, when the
same truthfulness is observed with re
gard to other matters as is observed
with market reports, then people are
going to know what they are reading.
"Partisan papers will give you only
what is favorable to their side upon
every political question. They will not
give you the rest. Telling only a part
of the truth is often equivalent to tell
ing a whole lie. It may conceal that
which it is essential you should know
in order to get at the whole truth.
Telling half suppresses the rest.
"Partisan papers labor to tell you
only half the truth. When I say par
tisan papers, it may not be simply in
regard to matters of politics, it may
be in regard to other matters just as
well. Wherever a paper is run for the
promotion of an interest it will hold
baek just as much as will stand in.the
way of the promotion of that interest,
whether it be politics or whether it be
business.
"But let me tell you wlmt I mean.
The people lend the press, rather than
the press the people. The partisan pa
pers are taking the position that they
are with regard to a broad spirit and
a hroadminded candidate in the com
ing municipal campaign because the
people are going to demand it and the
papers know it.
"We have papers here in New York
that to-day are fighting l'latt with all
their might. Not a great while ago
they were standing up for him. Flatt
is the same now that he was then.
llow much influence have such papers
with the people?
"Such things show that the papers
are willing to shift their sails accord
ing to the wind that is blowing, and
indicate that they are not animated
by truthfulness and an irreversible
moral impulse.
"What we want is a newspaper with
a high moral purpose, which is un
shakable and unpurchasable, and then
it will be a power. What we want is
a newspaper with convictions—con
victions that are deep enough to run
down underneath below the stratum
of present circumstances a paper
whose tone will not be affected either
by its small or great patronage."—New
York World.
Children In German Factories.
In 1809 there were employed in the
factories of Prussia 420,704 women
and girls. Of these, 025 were under
fourteen years of uge; 40,831 between
fourteen and sixteen; 148,331 between
sixteen and twenty-one years, and
225.077 over twenty-one years of age;
105,891 of these women and girls were
employed in the Prussian cotton mills.
During the same year no less than
032,283 children between six and four
teen years were employed in Prussian
factories. The otlieial report states
that in some parts of Saxony little
boys and girls of four and five years
have been employed. The Prussian
Minister of the Interior lias taken the
most rigorous steps against the em
ployers of these little children, and a
number of manufacturers have been
arrested.
Autoenrtlc Patriotism,
The practice of nutocaring is becom
ing more aud more fashionable at the
Cape, says the Autocar. There was
an automobile race at some sports: held
at Neylands, a suburb of Capetown,
which created great excitement, and
Kir Alfred Mllner went round tie
ground twice in the winning car, while
the band played "God Save the Queen"
and "Itule, Hritahnia," and the whole
crowd cheered their heads off.
ft in Letter of Recommendation.
A young man from Bowling Green,
Mo., applied for work in a store lo
■cated some distance from his home.
He presented the following letter of
recommendation and was engaged on
the spot: "I have found him indus
trious, truthful, intelligent and sober.
have observed also that his services
about the house were satisfactory to
my wife, and anyone who can get
along with her Is a peach.'*
JfeHoUSEHoLD
:
A Good CleAnlng Fluid.
A cleaning fluid that is a useful ad
junct to the household supply closet Is
made as follows: Dissolve one-half
ounce of Castile soap in one quart of
soft water, and add to it one-half
ounce of glycerine, two ounces of aqua
j ammonia and one-half ounce of spirits
of wine. Applied with a soft sponge
the fluid will remove spots on furni
ture aud carpets as well as ou clothing.
About Damp Table Salt.
One or the petty annoyances of the
table is damp salt, aud housekeepers
who are solicitous and particular about
everything else seem to be singularly
btuse in this matter. Aside from the
dampness of the salt, little attention
is paid to the quality. It seems to he
taken for granted that salt is salt
without any degrees of excellence.
Nothing should be used but prepared
table salt, which can always be got,
and little trouble is now experienced
in getting salt so prepared that it will
shake out freely. In any case, tk
dilHculty can always be overcome by
beating the saltcellars before each
meal, or by mixing cornstarch wltli
the salt in the proportion of one part
of starch to ten of salt. The heating
of the salt vessels is the preferred
method. The same observations to
some extent apply to pepper. Keep
the boxes dry by heating before use.
School Luiichtoiiß.
A statement by a Government ex
pert concerning the food value of nuts
Is a boon to mothers who must provide
children with lunches to take to
school. According to this expert, one
pound of nut kernels is equal In food
value to one pound of wheat flour,
and, generally speaking, nuts are not
indigestible. If they appear so, It Is
because they are eaten either irregu
larly between meals or topping a
heavy meal when the stomach is not
In proper condition to handle any
hearty food. Used as a substitute for
other food they give no bad results un
der ordinary circumstances.
Furthermore, the housewife will re
flect. nuts as food are valuable from
the fact that they require no cooking.
Also, they nre easily carried and chil
dren like them—two points of impor
tance to the conscientious mother,
who, putting up school lunches, finds
commonly that her dietary theories
require something like a steam-boiler
and a horse and wagon to complete
the operation; then when this health
food is laboriously compounded and
duly conveyed to little Johnny, for
sooth! he loathes it aud slyly substi
tutes green cucumber pickles and
cream puffs purchased at the lunch
counter just around the corner from
school.
All healthy children will eat nuts,
especially peanuts, which the Govern
ment expert assures us are so nutri
tious that one quart is equal in food
value to a pound of rump steak. The
money cost is five cents. The tired
mother, therefore, -who endeavors
strenuously to keep up with duty as
defined by modern science for the
household, may start her boys and
girls off to school with n generous bag
01' peanuts each morning, and revel in
the unaccustomed joy of knowing that
thus in one particular has she fully
satisfied the desires of human nature
and the authority of expert opinion.—
Harper's Bazar.
Ho! UP l
Apple-Mint Jelly—Steep two hunches
of chopped mint in one pint of hot
water for ten minutes. Strain and
add six apples, peeled, cored and
chopped. Simmer until terder, strain
through a fine sieve, add the juice of
two lemons, one cupful of sugar and
one-half box of gelatin softened in
one cupful of colli water; strain again
through cheesecloth Into n platter and
when cold cut in cubes.
Cream of Pumpkin—Take one and a
half cupfuls of chopped peeled pump
kin and the green stalks of celery.
Fry a light brown in a tablespoonl'ul
of butter. Add three pints of water,
one teaspoonftil of salt and one salt
spoonful of pepper. Simmer until soft
enough to rub through a sieve. Thick
en with or.e tablespoonful of flour
rubbed into 'he same amount of but
ler, add one-half cupful of hot cream
and serve with croutons.
Heidelberg C'nboage Select two
small, linn ueads of red cabbage and
shave them in thin slices. Put two
heaping tahlespoonfuls of butter into
a sauce pan; when hot add the cab
bage, one teaspoonful ot salt, a very
little pepper and three tahlespoonfuls
of vinegar. Stick four cloves into one
onion, buiy it In the middle of the cab
bage and boil for two and one-half
hours. Should It become too dry, add
a very little water to prevent scorch
ing.
The tail of a cat is a wonderful piece
of mechanism, plain and simple as it
looks. There are more muscles in il
than In the human hand.
Jews and the Number Thirteen.
'The Jewish people are exempt from
any taint of superstition relative to
the number 13. They believe with the
cricntals that it has something divine
in its juxtaposition of figures, and they
derive their knowledge from their men
of biblical culture. Thirteen cities
were dedicated to their ancient priest
hood; 13 high priests descended from
Aaron; 13 kings sat in the council of
the ancients; on the 13th day of the
month Nisan, the sacred and impos
ing rites of Passover occur. ---
Edward Everett Hale gives the fol
lowing three good rules for life: First,
live as much as possible in the open air;
second, touch elbows with the rank and
file; third, talk every day with a man you
know to be your superior.
It is confidently asserted that the largo
decrease in infant mortality in this coun
try during tho past decade has been
brought about in 110 small niensure by the
universal use of Costoria—it being in
| almost every home.
New York city owes more by s6o.oo D
,- 000 than all the 45 States in the Union
together.
Carter's Ink lias a good deep color and it
does not btralu theeyea. (. arler'b doesn't latio.
Merchandise exports from France in
October increased $1,300,000 over 1899,
and imports increased $4,000,000.
Tlie Best Prescription for Chills
snd Fovor Is a bottle of GKOVE'B TASTBI.KH9
CHII.L TONIC. It LA simply iron and quinine In
a tasteless form. No euro— no pay. Trice BOc.
j It is estimated that it costs $550,000,-
1 000 every week to run the railways of
j the world.
Plso's Curo for Consumption Is an Infalli
ble medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W.
BAMUEL. Oeoan Grove, N. J„ Feb. 17, lUOO.
An estimate of the rice acreage in
Eastern Texas this year places it at 30,-
j 000 tons.
Drugs have tlioir use, but don't store
them in your stomach, l'.eeman'n Pepsir
Gum aid 9 natur# to perform its functions.
Dikes of Japan cost in the aggregate
I more money than those of the Nethcr
| lands.
Frey's Yormifngo, 2.1 ft*,
| Eradicates worms. Children mnde well and
j mothers happy. Druggists and country stores.
I Cincinnati is enjoying a street-car
-1 line boom. Eight lines are to be ex-
I tended.
To Curo a Cold In One Day.
Take LAXATIVE PROMO QUININE TABLETS. All
druggists refund tho money If it falls to cure.
E. W. UKOVE'S signature Is on each box. Sißo.
Thus far in 1900 England has import
ed 19 per -cent, less foreign grain than
in 1599.
Mrs.Wlnslow's Soothing Syr ip for children
teeth in.', softens theguim. reduces inflamrmv
tion. allays imin. cures wind oolic.~s<; a buttle.
A bill lias been prepared for introduc
tion in the Georgia Legislature provid
ing for the use of the Australian ballot
at all future elections.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not spot,streak
or givo your goods an unevenly dyed up
j pearaDce. Bold by all druggists.
i Handwriting Characteristic of a Person.
| The inexperienced ones are blissfully
unaware that handwriting is really a
physical characteristic of the human
body, which is innately peculiar to its
owner. You may, indeed, alter its gen
eral form, like the man who writes
anonymous notes, or cover it with
make-up, like the man who forges a sig
nature—the actor does both to his voice
and face on the stage—but this, after all,
is the most you can do. You cannot
destroy or even temporarily get rid of
the characteristics of your writing it
self. It is as much a part of the ex
pression of your being as your manner
of talking or your gait in walking, and
that it cannot be destroyed is the more
certain because no one. no matter how
much study he might give it, could ever
find out all of the unconscious charac
teristics of his handwriting.
4Q, FOP. GOUT, TORPID LIVER AMD CONSTIPATION.
life/ No medicine in the world can relieve you like the Natural
Mineral Laxative Water, provided by nater* herself and dis-
A covered more than 30 years ago and now used by every
Jfffi-M 1 A nation in the world.
limyadi Mms
vtfS&Bn / irv Recommended by over one thousand of the mcst famous
/ /|\\ physicians, from whom we hive testimonials, as the safest and
iSnil / f i best Natural Laxative Water known to medical science.
jSP*|B3 I * ' Its Action is Speedy, Sure andtjcntle. It never gripes.
| wjjj I Every Druggist and General Wholesale Grocer Sells It.
cWI/ ACSf f° r *-ho full name, I RI Ijr Label with
jf/ ttwll " Ilunyadi Janos." | ULvL Red Centre Panel.
® Sole Importer, Firm of Andreas Saxlehncr, 130 Fulton St., N. Y.
the Farmer's Wife. ) til ""air" |||
wv And every other man and woman who is desirous of benefit
"g from the experience of those brainy and patient souls
wll° have been experimenting au 1 practising tlio re-
P "l WP" I sll ' t9 °' thoso experiments, generation after generation,
B I 1 I I to °htain tbe best knowledge as to bow certain things
fill £Wnf| C' l " be accomplished, until all that valuable information
* 9 gathered together in this volume, to bo spread broad- (I*,?s
> east for the benefit <>f mankind at the popular pn
3® Cenln ia Collage Stumps. j.,
X'it The low price is only made pos- L' '-Y*y
(i.li) t ' le enoi| uous number of \ [Ft. \8 ij a" 1 |ri|t {
the books being printed and sold. [ aIW w
** treats ol almost everything la the way of Household matters, including
/*W\ FOR FA.II'I.V CMK. I I DISEASES OK Till! IKSItSE, 's®'
® aWSS2?Sf! Sffi S&.&K" <£*
(fit)
g ,tom wr ,h i ! n ss h
@ &a*cSr.;&!Si^i: euo,,eu 10 11 jaMtssr- IMobt 1 Mobt B * us,yiue
o*Too numerous to mention—a veritable Household Adviser. In an • •
(vjj) emergency such ils comes to every family not containing a doctor, this
book is worth many times its low price.
Sent Postpa d for 25 Conts In Stamps. JSk
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, Sf
V®' 13* LEONARD STREET. NEW YORK CITY O)
European Nations Carelul of Horses.
In France there is a rule by which*
horses and mules in excess of nee 1 J*C
handed over to be fed and cared at
a price, to farmers, who agree to repro
duce them in good condition or pay
for deterioration. In Germany, w eve:
horses are bought between three unci
six years of age, they are kept at re
mount depots till matured. Italy ha
two horse-training establishments
where new purchases are handled and
developed till tit for cavalry service, i &
In 24 hours nearly 700 trains pass ill
and out of New Street station, Binning-*
ham.
Ifloiv'ft Tills ?
We offer Ono Hundred Dollars Reward for
any ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F.CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che
ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out auy obliga
tion made by their firm.
WEST FC TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
WADDING, KINNAN MARVIN, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure 1* taVen internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Hall's Family Pills are tin- best.
For the first time since the opening
of Oklahoma farmers complain of too
much rain.
Garfield Headache Powders relieve men
tal exhaustion.
A single leaf of the orange tree,
fully planted, will often take root anq
grow. i
Q\iickly
C\ires Colds
Neglected colds always lead
to something serious. They
run into chronic bronchitis
1 which pulls down your general
! health; or they end in genuine
consumption with all its uncer
! tain results.
Don't wait, but take
Ayer 9 s
Cherry-
Pectoral
just as soon as you begin to
cough. A few doses will cure
you then. But it cures old
colds, too, only it takes a little
more time. We refer to such
diseases as bronchitis, asthma,
whooping-cough, consumption,
and hard winter coughs.
Three sizes: 25c., 50c., SI.OO. All drug
gists. J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.
DR. SHAFER
y Tho Urine ttpclalist (Water
\ Doctor) can detect tiuiloxplain
VA ■> the most compllcutcd chronio
V disease by the urine ;ifeurable,
H H successfully by mail.
Bend 4 cents for mailing case
v for urine. Consultation, anal-
T of urine; report ami book
on this new science, free.
TIPV 7- L CEAFEB, L £., 423 Ponn Ave,
L -—First Floor, Pittsburg, Pa.
PATENTS Hp
3111.0 11. STKVKNS A CO., I'-Htab. I***.
Div. HI:- HTLI Street, h Ami I NC.TON. I>. C.
ltranch offices: Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit.
J'. N. U. 62, 1900.
NEW DISCOVERY; ctw
ilk VkJJ I O I quick !••• Iv nnd cu'r-s woni|
caniß- Boon of tOßtimoniald and 1() days' treutiuout
Free. Dr. H. U. OUEEN'S SONB. Box B. Atlanta. U*.