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ao — Bheumatism and Weuralgia Cured? Two Days. The Indiana Chemi¢al Uo, have discov ered acompound which acts with truly marvelous rapidity in the cure of Kheu- matism and Neuralgia. We guarantee it to cure any and every Case of acute inflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralyia in 2 DAYS, and to give immediate r n chronic cases and effect a speedy Cc On receipt of 30 cents, in two stamps, we will send to any addres prescription tor this wondertul cc which can be filled by your home d at small cost. We take this means giving our discovery to the publicinste of putting it out as a patent medicine, being much less expensive. We gladly refund money if Satistaction is not given. The Inptam~a Cuemicar Co, 1O-1yF awtordsville Ind vas saeHU Oy , ott J ne BRADEIC ul Sold by ees ete 35) Recurator WALLS & HOLT. CAL IFORNIA. LAND OF DISCOVERIES iSEASES AAHPOAT: UNGS— Sod on Gaal I send ‘or circul $] per bett sae 1ABIE INE MED! co.oRovILLE, CAL.) “6 MOS. WREqTHENT + 1. © py WAIL. Sea PR CiRCULAL BIETINE MED! Co AT WLLE CAL} TA ABIF. AND CA" ARANTERD BY SOLD AND GL oj - = - Dee ICE. Sere try Saxra Apis Crewina Gun, A natural Calitornia Gur iy swallov ing the saliva produced in chewing wi materlally aid digestion. D, FANON &CO, EDISTRIBUTING AGENTS, Kansas City, Mo PVOODWAR ENTRAL FEMALE OLLECE, Lexington Mo. Twenty-| first Session® ‘Opens Sept Thorough Course in all departments, 14 edand Com: achers. Finest Musi t ; 1 Location. Beautiful dand home-like roon ni CLoup§ FLOATING + Soap- WRAPPERS (UaRGE SIZE) and receive a It has permanently cured THOUSANDS of cases pronounced by doctors hope- less. If you have premonitory symp- toms, such as Cough, Ditliculty of Breathing, &c.. don’t delay, but use PISO’S CURE ror CONSUMPTION immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents. | 200, 000, 090 , the Catsk HS -SNIVLUND: A. THE ADIRONDACKS. An Argument Why They Should Be Pree Served as a Public Park. Fhilosophical students of history a hundred years hence, searching our annals, would find no better indicas tion of a high civilization than the preservation of of beauty. Her they might say, tb the wildern ith inteo ' rug: gles tition, who d time enough and such love of ¢ y and consideration for distant generations ma as to save for other aves the wonder. ful scenes and curiosities nature has given to: w con supposed material its first Yosemite canyon th groves of the last foss the seqnoi:e of Mar averas for ail future ge ew t York had protected saved from vandalism its wonder falls, und the United States had set the greatest natura! curios continent—the Yellowstone and its marvelou~ date we are supposi apa forever , of the canyon At the ation of be thronging geysers Lpopt breathing fon and health natural beaut be throngs of people. especially in the seaboard States but feebly imagine the gratitude of that gener tion, if they should provision for thei as would be park in the It would be vision m: ple forever spot and place of and object of Visited by vast recrea One can find so generous a * comfort and health made the proposed Adirondack wilderness. by more than a princely pros le by the people for the peo- Such great and luxuri ous arrang common in Europe, desig and Kais- ers for the pleasure and enjoyment of their royal dese This would be r and pleasure and valle the ar te En'S ENGLUSH forest, pierced by innumerable & YAL PILLS. streams Jakelets filed with trout . amond Lrand. and other fish. given by the citizens , : of one State in the Ameriean Union to i their descendants and £ ns ES oie for all time. The air tion res oui le vi alone would ita sani- Has OF DE EMI : : tarium and j iveresort. Bateared 3 for by public the forest preserved by this grand hunting vould be a i nEelteles Restare) Gray place of sport a nent forever ¢ niity ethfal Color. for the masses of the ' t Pe nom Et es No imperial park would ever -N.Y Vir — oe A Group OF BREADS. How to Vake Sally Lana and the famous n ffouse Kolts Wheat Sread. —Seald four cups of & ra quart of milkor milk and { when cool add three cups of tlour, « and aw half t spoonfuls of sod. one cup of molasses, two teaspoontuis of salt. Steam three hours and bake Salty Lana pint of wart milk ter as as an ey t fuls of sait und four enough to as still as for muffins. apart at the tabl Mountain House Roll mous North River where these rolls we eo thin sponge wi rat about four o'¢ fo Stir into a quart of we flour enough to make a thick batter, adding a f cake of compressed yeast dissolved. Let this | sponge stand till nine o'clock and | then knead up thoroughly: add a piece of butter the size of a large egs Let | the rolls stand till morning, then roll them out as thiaas your han 's, handle the dough as little as possible, cut it into narrow strip nd lay ina panto | rise for three-quarters of an hour. Bake in a quick oven ten minutes. These rolls are delicious made of part graham or of whole wheat florr.— Y. Tribune. 2 += __ } Work for the Winter Months. Look over the tools, and get them into working order. See that missi jteeth are replaced by new ones in the ;wooden rakes, and that rivets in spades, shovels, and forks are not sprung; that the uxes have good handles; that the pieks are pointed, the grub-hoes sharpened, and the | ; Wheelbarrows are in good repair. If | you have not got a hand-barrow, make | lone, it is easily done. See that all the rungs are in all the ladders, and that the folding step-ladders are whole and secure. Have a ten foot measure- rod, properly painted and marked, a | garden line in good order, und every- \thing got into readiness for spring. And gather up ail the oid, broken, and ‘useless tools yeu have on or about the place and burn them. It is wonder- ful, the amount of rubbish that soon accumulates about a place. A pooror , broken too! is good for nothing. Time is money. and the time thus spent with useless tools wouid more than pay for new ones.—Country Gentle- man. —__ += —wNilsson remarks that the weight of the great Greenland or right whale equal is 100 tons. or ),000 pounds to that of eighty-three eleph 440 bear: Lhe whalebone in such a whale y be taken at 3,560 pounds and the o:lat from 140 to 170 tons. | —A fifty | Germantown. Pa., on a trunk which mea: s two feet and a half round. ne MY STORY 8 — faery BOOK AGENT: Trustee's Sale. Georg Ramp and Maga Whereas. HINDERCORNS Robie ure fo oF Corn, ———— = oe NSUMPTIVE PAR*OD'S CIMe TER Tonic, Septem! he north b twenty-nine rihand in rar MRODS CURE HI © pai with ain notes of eve i payable to tt ne uly let Aud whe ed by Physicians ard sold by Drug- eWorld, send for Free Sample. -0D MANUF'G CO. SOLE PROPRIETORS, HII2 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK GENERATION, M. BD. le to e YOUNC, uolteta ee or, Loss of Memory De eee rkness, | f the Kidne in wrapper, postp: venue, or P.O. Box h sources, free to all. «i is absolutely complete Js of disease. ith rous Agetabeals from hi ico Pit YSIOLOCY ever published, cred, a3 it reaches the very root and hed author, EN! 8 DISCOVERED THE = AND THE TRUE ES. SENC i may be consulted in Medic bus Av., Bos! !ZARD A VOICE; IT SAID, ‘*COME AND SEE.°"* THH AN GEHBUVS. Costliest Picture in the World. ad ‘This masterpiece by the great French painter. Jean Francois Millet, was purehased at auction in Paris iast summer by the American Art Association of New York. The cost, 8116 000 and duties, amounting in al! to about 81:0,000, was nearly 8400 a square inch, as the Picture is only 18x71 inches in size. This is the highest price ever paid for a single picture. A Beautiful Photo Etching, as represented above, the full size of the original, in which the greatest care and artistic ability have been employed to reproduce all the beauties of the Stinting, has been prepared specially to be sent as a frce premium to every annual sub- @eriber of the weekly edition of THE ST. LOUIS REPUBLIC. A copy of this etching on finc plate paper, 24x28 inches in size, will be sent free, postage prepaid, to every ann subscriber after November 1, 1889. A Spccial Missouri Edition, Containing ten to twelve pagex TY week, and one entire page of special Missouri news, goes to every Missouri subser.b The Weekly Republic, with Premium Picture, Sia Year. oe Sampie, copy and premium szest Usual commission allowed postmasters and other authorized sgezis sent free to any add: Addre: . THE REPUBLIC, ST. LOUIS, MO. ty juarter of If of th said ter of William | 1 one every “reas it is that iv ther of said ent're year, not only for w r. but spring and summer. Nothing will h | beat achatf hive for increasing bees. | They ¢ > built up faster in spring j when inachaT hive, and during sea heat of summer a chafl hive is a pro- tection from excessive heat | We advocate chal hive peels PROTECTION FOR BEES. The Kind of Uives They Should Be Housed in During Winter. careless- n in the yom © bred aa month tion to save the we must protec- greatest Vauniber pos- oy ACOBS Ol] CONQUERS PAIN. » > 23 = = gs nis & 3% 3 of s a) == D> = ° >= & = 33 - - zs . a: : eo Be ora ers nm s = 28 YO = = Zz 2) ° Ss Be K = 2 28 D> = SS St ot (os & a= so] = 85 aes s & bs ae <p & wo OQ =| =e ha sic sos a : 85 a2 2 Cas at ‘ e rusice’s Sale. Whereas, Harriett Adams and Lewis Ad- jams, herhusbaed, by their deed of trast dated sible. and we 1 no cheaper and more Mareh lst, » Hea and recorded int record e in and tor y. Mis- conver tn :anthe useof chaff iA page 45. conveyed to the u hives. W we areaboniin weed: the fullowiog Qescribed reat make cha hives that wil the bees the year round. to have a chill only of winter + ccommodate lt isa mistake hive that will sdmit Wederive greater benetits from the proper chaff hive the instead of the cellur or underground | for the reason that the sudden change | = which we must make with our bees by | 'removing them from the cellar in! early spring is very damaging to them, and the changes of weather from warm days to cold when b Smaps, ‘sare in| their unp otected hives during the spring months, will greatly prevent brood rear and the consequences | are they ne far behind the even | temperature of chaff hives. The sub- ject of ventilation in winter is another of great importance, and it seems that it has not been properly understood with a great many i ventila- |: tion only is necessa we | give lower ventilation re | entrance and leaving it open all win- | . ter we yo en-| part of cht venient, itis the proper method Ventilate from the top ouly — Cor. Ohio Parmer wee ROA The Etteet ot are use ma roadway has a influen ipon its endurance to the | beat of the wheels With the same | burden a two wheeled cart does far | more da o rond than one of } | four wheels this because of the | | suddenness e motion of the wheels | and the iment in faxtes are eis close | | together save the | } turnpike vs. is greatly increased. j i for the reason that there is no chance | {for the gro ‘ treadway of the | pears to have been recognized in some ; parts of the country. | | when it wraps around the felloes | spokes; but with this arrangement the {an inch in diameter, | lady’s dress again I'll thrash you—the | Other day that a woman went crazy— { } H i | | “Perhaps some other rubble, distri earr carriage and burden the vth of on the foot- Phis principle ap- the wheels and way of the horses. the the | am or tween the | wheels is generally about five and one- | half feet while in the sandy road ‘tof Cape Cod the length of the | axle usually half a foot greater. | The greatest defect of our American | ges is that for a given weight of tires of the wheels are extremely narrow. It is true that on ill conditioned and muddy roads a narrow wheel-tread ad- | vantageous for the reason that the | thick mud has a extended hold and Thus, ton, m: be in where of Bos neighborhood ways are made solid the distance is is less interests of the roadway are sacrificed to the convenience of the individual drives upon it These narrow with tires often not more than cut like knives into the road-bed and so deepen the ruts. If we could require that no vehiele should have a tire not less than an inch and a half in diameter, and that all springless carriages have tires at least two inches in diameter, increasing in width with the burden, we would secure our ways against a considerable part of the evils from which they suffer. —Prof. N. Shaler, | in Seribner. i ———$——_ +o —Fond mother (in passenger car with her children)—“It just scared me when I read—Johnny! Stop pull- ing flowers off the lady's bonnet— when I read in the papers—Richard! You just keep your head in—the pa- pers the other day that—George! If you put your sticky hands on that Richard! Dont you dare slap that little girl—when I read that a woman went crazy just from the comforts of the—Johnny! Stop punching that gentleman—of the journey in a rail road train. I wonder if she had chil- | aren with her Lady (quietly)— other woman had.” | between the hou | tras: jing and being sitnate in the ithe payment of said notes | to sell the above y seing situate in the Kates and state of Missouri to-wit Lot two (2) in the southwest quarter of seo- tion nineteen (19) ant lot two (2) in the north West guar er of section thirty (30) exeept tem acres out of the northwest corner ot the south of said lot two (2) and Che southeast quare ofthe northeast quater of section thirty township forty-two (42) Tange thirty-one eedoftrustte Mo ‘Trust Ge. onvevance Was made in trast ment of one promissory note in said deed of trust; and sult has been made in the pays juent of said note and acerued interest thereon, : S raid Now therefore, at holder o note and stot trast deseribed county of to the h ast fron 9, 1889, of nine o'clock in the fore- hoon and tiveo’clock in the afternoon of that . for the purposes ef satisfying said debt, interest and costs W. F. DUVALL, heat Trustee. Sale Whereas Thomas Hing we Wiineworth, his wife Deborah of trast lowing deserib- sitnate in the ari, to-wit: enst quar= vuship forty. containing conveyance Was payinent of one in said deed of s been made in than ene now past dae request of rsuant to Twill pro- Mi Th inte trust: and whe ear’s acerued it and unpa i ase in Dae suit state of x said debt, ©. DUKE tTrustee, Trustee's Sale. Whores Soeman and Molle Saleman Lis wife deed of trust dated September oy. Ss the recorder’s office Missouri, in book dito the undersigned - the following described real estate ly- uty of Bates and No >of Missouri to-wit of the southwest quarter of three (5) in township thirty. rn 1, containing ance Was y parmet of two described in said deed of . default ha- been made in now past due and fore. atthe request or the jotes and pursuant tothe of rant I will proceed stat he we sil Now t 1 bolder of said litions of said J; niece at publie | vende, to the hig cash. at the east front door of in the city of Butler, county of Bat tate of Mis- rion Thursday, December 12, 1889, between the hours of nine lock in the fore- noon and five o'clock in the afternoon of that day. for the sof satisfying eaid debt, M inte st and Wat Acute a-dehronic ri effectually anc the use of Hi and Plasters, 44cl-year crman ntly cured by bard's Rheumatic Syrup For s.e by all druggists. SAMUEL DUNLAP, o Atianta, Ga. who also manufacture Honnicutt’s Lang Ci ane, 2 sure care for Prvecss Coughs and Colds. Book of testi