Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, January 2, 1897, Page 3

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Patents Issued, List of patents issued last week te Northwestern inventors: H. Erickson, Minneapolis, Minn., artifi- cial limb; Thomas Hennessy, Grand Forks, N. D., gas generator; Victor Hodell and A. Olson, Minneapolis, Minn., lumber truck; Joseph -H. Smith and W. A. Landis, St. Cloud, Minn., egg-tester; Ira Van Tilburg, St. Paul, Minn., metallic barrel; Frederick T. and J. P. Vanstrum, Minneapolis, Minn., non-refillable bottle; Darius C. Berjamin, Alpha, Minn., (design) fence strand. T. D. Merwin, Patent Lawyer, 910, Pioneer Press Building, St. Paul. Prison Physiognomy. There are fifteen college graduates in prison stripes on Blackwell’s Island. This fact was learned by a clergyman of this city, who recently conducted a Sunday morning service at the peniten- tiary, and it was elicited by his remark- ing to one of the keepers that there were a great many intelligent faces in the group of prisoners confronting him. The clergyman made_ mental notes of some of the faces, and after the service he pointed them cut to the keeper, and asked if they were not col- lege graduates. Out of the five men indicated by him, only one was a col- lege graduate, and, to the clergyman’s dismay, the keeper designated as col- lege men three of the most repulsive and vicious-looking prisoners in the group. One of the most intelligent faces in the throng was described by the matter-of-fact keeper as belonging to “a tough ’un, who’s been cn the isl- and, off and on, ever since he was a kid.”—New York Times. The Smallest Thoroughfare. The smallest street in San Francis- co? It is Reed street, near the top of Telegraph Hill. Reed Place it is called on the adjacent lairp post, but in offi- cial parlance, all thoroughfares, wheth- er boulevards, avenues, places or al-J leys ,are streets. Everything that bears an official name on the official map of thoroughfares in the survey- or’s office is a street. This particular street, as shown on the map in the surveyor’s office, has a lenghth of 34 feet 4 inches and a width of 6 feet Sinches. Nevertheless, it might be argued by one disposed ‘to be captious that Reed Place bas a greater | depth than this, for,, when you have reached the official end of the street you come to a flight of wooden steps. Mounting these, you find yourself on what may be called the second story of Reed street. Traversing the second story a few paces, you reach another flight of stairs, and these lead up to still the third story of Reed place, at the end of which is a single green tree, hanging over the fence from a neigh- bor's yard—the only green thing to be seen on all Reed street.—San Francisco Call. In 1641 the first rope was manufactured at Boston. HELD UP, An Example of a Life Saved. Days of Pain and Nights of Agony Givo Way to Periect Health. How The Indian Accomplished This Wonderful Restoration. The Indian is again to be praised for happiness and freeness from in where misery formerly existed. If sufferers from that most dreaded of maladies, rheumatism, in its different forms, could but understand the cause of their pain and know the best way to get rid of it,,.rheumatism would become a thing of the past. In the first place this malady is due to a superabundance of uric acid in the blood, the kidneys and liver do not act properly and throw off this poison which settles in the different joints of the body and is the cause of the excruciatin; pains that attend rheumatism. This acic when it finally reaches the heart, as it eventually does, results in s death almost instantaneously, and fraught with the most dire agony. The remedy. Tone up the kidneys, the liver, the stomach, and above all purify the blood. Nothing in the world will do this so quickly and so effectually as Kickapoo Indian It is a remedy that has cured not only of rheumatism but from es arising from derangements of the life-creating organs. It will cure you. Do not wait until this awful suffering has broken you down physically and mentally, or perhaps has reached a point where it is about ready to attack the heart. Sufferers should remember that this medicine, while it is efficient, is absolutely harmless, containing no poisonous ingredients whatever, being made from roots, barks, herbs and gums. One of tho many who have benefit- ed by its use is Mr. Lyman E. Turner. We will quote his experience in his own words :— Kenyon, Minn. Krekaroo Inpran MepicinE Co.,New Haven, Conn, Gentlemen:—1I wish to say a few words for the benefit of suffering humane ity in regafd to what Kickapoo Indian Sagwa and Indian Oil have done for me. I was laid up for four months and a half with sciatic rheumatism, and toward the last my nerves were so weak I could hardly endure the pain. I had not been able to sit up for three weeks when ono of your companies came here. I was asked to try the Sagwa and Indian Oil, and did so, beginning on Saturday morning, and Mon- day I was up and dressed and out of doors several times during the day. , Tuesday was able to ride up town, and in sixteen days 26m the time I began taking the medicines I commenced work, and am working every day now, and feel'no pain. I feel that I can- not say enough in praise of the Kickapoo Indian Medicines. If anyone desires further information I will gladly give it-— Lyman E. Turner, P. O. Box 83. Sufferers from rheumatism, do not delay. Delays are dangerous. Yon have but ‘one life to live, and good health once iost is hard to restore. Anyone wishing special advice should write to us as we have a large corps of doctors who will consider all correspond- ence absolutely confidential. Kickapoo Indian Medicine Co., New Haven, Conn. All druggists sell the Ki-c2peo Remedies. THE SETTING OF MILK. tofe Useful Information From the Indiana Station, , A very large share of the milk skimmed for private buttermaking in [Indiana is set in cans or crocks, and ‘he cream skimmed from the surface. Milk may be set for cream in various kinds of vessels and under different conditions. The poorest method is to set in shallow tin pans or crocks, on pantry shelves or in a cellar. Milk thus sct is exposed to a greater air contact than when set otherwise, and so is more liable to be affected by in- jurious odors, by diseases transmitted through the atmosphere, and by heat and cold. Milk so set will oftentimes rapidly sour, or, in very cold weather, may freeze. If it sours badly in sum- mer, when skimmed, curds will be likely to get into the cream and remain more or less in the butter, after churn- ing, forming white spots, thereby seri- ously injuring the quality of the but- ter. Or, if the milk or cream freezes, an inferior grade of butter will be made from it. If cream is to be secured by setting milk, the best plan will be to set the milk in round tin caps, about eightecn inches deep and eight inches in diame- ter. If the can is placed in ice water or cold spring water, to the height of the milk in the can, the conditions for cream separation will be greatly im- proved, especially if inside a refriger- ator or creamer. This method helps keep the creain at a uniform tempera- ture and enables the cream to rise to best advantage. Such cans as these, open at the top, are colhmonly known as “shot gun” cans, and may be pur- chased of dairy supply houses, or can be made by any good tinner. ‘These deep cans are skimmed in one | of two ways—either by a conical skim- mer from the surface, or by means of a faucet or valve at the bottom of the can, where the skim milk is drawn off. In experiments at the Indiana station, in comparing these two methods of skimming, where the milk was skim- med from above there was an average loss about twice as great as in that skimmed by drawing off from below. During fifteen days in February the average loss from surface skimming was 0.34 per cent, while that skimmed from below showed a loss of but 0:17 per cent. it is impotent that milk should be set only in tin vessels and of good quality. The cheap tin sold on 5 and 10 cent counters is so thin a wash that ily corroded to the under met- rhich gives a rinous flavor to the milk if it sours in the vessel at all. Where used for holding milk, the tin should be of the XXX grade. 'This is more durable, stiffer and less affected by tlie acid in sour milk. In general, persons striving to make a fine quality of butter should have a cabinet creamer. In this the milk may be kept to best advantage and properly protected from objectionable odors and dirt.—Bulletin Indiana Experiment Station. Enlarging a Barn for Dairy Pur- poses, A common barn can be easily and cheaply changed into dairy barn of large capacity by employing such a2 plan as that shown in the perspective view—Fig. 1. Two wings with “shed” roofs, are extended out at right angles from each side of the old barn at one end. The interior arrangement is shown Fig. 1. Perspective View of En- larged Barn, In, the floor plan—Fig. 2. A feed car, with a track, is arranged for the feed floor and the feeding alley in front of the cows. A double silo, grain room and calf pens, with lofts over them, occupy one | side of the barn proper, while calf pens and a hay bay occupy the other side. Thus the main barn is used mainly for the storing of feed, while the addition is given up to the stalls. ” Cattle Steud | Fig. 2. Ground Plan. The expense of the plan will be very much less than would be entailed by the building of a new barn, or even a lengthening of the old one, while the plan shown herewith gives a much |} more convenient arrangement than could otherwise be had.—Orange Judd | Farmer. How to Dry Off a Cow, | Horace Greeley once said that “the , Way to resume was to resume,” and ‘now the director of dairying in Iowa says that the way to dry off a cow is to stop milking her, and so stop the se- jereting of milk, which must foliow when the cow is milked semi-occasion- ally. Tbe writer has noticed this in the practice of a man who is a large cow dealer. The cows, as bought up and in various stages of lactation, are turned into the big pasture and never milked. Some of these cows soon kave large udders, but they subside, and I | have never known one to become seri- ous. The English have a plan of dry- ing a cow by stoppiag the milking and covering the udder with a thin coat of tar. We have heard of putting on an application of sweet oil and laudanum. | Prof. Curtis, in his remarks, says: “At the Iowa station we have suc- tessfully dried cows in this manner in the early stages, midway, and at the close of the period of lactation, some of which were heavy milkers. I keep a registered Jersey cow for my own use. She is a very strong and persist- ent milker, and will easily make a pound and a half of butter per day on @ moderate ration, After she had been in milk nearly sixteen months, ana when within five weeks of her next calving time, she began to increase in her yield of milk. At this point the milking was discontinued abruptly, and not resumed until the cow calved. The milk yield was four to five quarts per day when the milking stopped. No application of any kind was used on the udder. The cow was a persistent milker, as is often in the Jersey breed, but she dried off without the slightest injury to her udder or any ill effects whatever.” Fresh Cows vs. Strippers. A bulletin of the lowa experiment station reports an experiment on the effect which the period of lactation has upon.butter flavor. It is often said, the bulletin states, that it is necessary to have a part of the milk from fresh cows in order to produce butter of good flavor. In the test the cows of the col- lege herd that had been in milk for more than six months were regarded as strippers, while those that had come in fresh within that time were in the “fresh” class. The average number of days since calving in the first class was 239 days and in the latter 107 days. The feeding and management of the cows as well as of, the milk was sim- ilar, and the butter made separately from the fresh and stripper milk, when scored by W. 8S. Moore, official scorer for the Elgin board of trade, scored alike at 95 points for each lot. The conclusion from the experiment is that the period of lactation has no effect on the flavor of butter made by the separator system. Under the gravity system there may be some difference, as many dairymen claim, and the pos- sible explanation is offered that as the fat globules become smaller lacta- tion advances, more time is required for the cream to rise by the gravity method in the case of strippers than with fresh cows, where the fat globules are larger. It has been found that when cream or milk is kept at a low temperature for some time a some- what bitter flavor is often developed, an dthe organism which produces this bitter flavor may be the reason why the butter made from the milk of strip- pers is generally considered inferior to that made from the milk of fresh cows. The time necessary for creaming, b. the gravity process is an essential e | ment in the development of the bitte flavor, and when the separator is used the milk does not have the time to be come bitter. Square Cheese. Those having the real interests of dairying at heart have by dint of a good deal of hard work at length suc- ceeded in renderiag it reasonably cer- tain that cheese shall be made “on the square; that is, that it shall be exactly what it pretends to be, and that skimmed and filled cheese shall no longer be sold as full cream. There is now a prospect that cheese will be made on the square in another way; that is, that it shall be put up in square packages. The American Creamery quotes a New York dealer’s comments on a shipment of cheese received by him put up in twenty-pound square packages. The package is an oblong box about 7x7x10 inches. It was made in New York and bears the state brand. The dealer says that an excellent de- mand for the cheese has been met with, particularly from up-town gro- cers who were able to obtain three- fourths of a cent per pound more for it than for round cheese of the same quality. One advantage claimed for it is that it cuts better than the or- dinary cheese, being cut in square in- stead of V-shaped slices, hence it does not dry out so quickly. The demand for this form of cheese is quite urgent, and dealers would be able to handle a good deal of it. Of course the square cheese is a familiar enough thing in certain fancy brands and _ special makes, Limberger, brick and other soft cheese, being commonly put up in that way, but the idea is new in what are ordinarily called the Chedders, and yet there are advantages in the form o7* package that are almost certain to make it popular. Increasing Flow of Milk, In reply to the inquiry as to how to keep a cow up to a good flow of milk, a correspondent of Breeders’ Gazette says: Let him begin giving the heifer a morning and evening feed of wheat bran at milking time. Watch the ef- fect. Add a little salt to the bran and make a mash of it and see if it has any effect to increase the flow of milk. Follow this up with roots if at hand, and when pasturage fails combine lin- seed meal with the bran and keep the bowels always loose, and while feed- ing well do not give enough at any time to clog the appetite. See to it that the cow gets salt enough to cause her to drink freely. A little extra effort from now until Christmas to keep up the flow of milk may determine whether you have a beef cow in a year or two or a noble milch cow, to go on improv- ing in flow and value for ten or twelve years, and which in fifteen or eighteen years may be giying more milk than this year, in addition to an annual calf, which by that time you will have learned to value. Dairy Notes, The lank, wedged-shaped cow is the cow for the dairy. Keep the cows warm, but furnish | plenty of pure air. The calf needs special care in win- ter. Feed it generously and keep it sheltered. If you cannot make butter as ‘cheap- ly as your neighbor can, learn his methods and practice them. Cool the milk as soon as possible af- | ter milking it to 60 degrees tempera- | ture, Fahrenheit. Many cows will withold their milk in whole or in part if the milker is not ready to take the milk when she Is ready to give it. Cows and calves can stand a great deal of dry cold, although it does not pay the owner to subject them to it, but wet and cold very quickly humps up their backs. No time on the farm is more profitably spent than in | providing dry straw beddng for the | cows and calves on cold nights. \Arctic Owls in the Northwest. Papers all over the Northwest are no- ticing the arrival of arctic, or snowy owls, which were mentioned in the Or- egonian a week ago. They have been seen dt many places all the way from the boundary line to the California line, and taxidermists are being kept busy mounting specimens of this visit- or from the arctic regions. One paper says: “his owl travels southward with the ducks, the companion it is generally found with.’ Owls and ducks do not travel together, unless the duck is inside the owl. The ducks come down from the North every win- ter, but the snowy owl dces not mi- grate unless the winter north is unusu- ally severe and his food supply is shut of. Fhe last time these birds were seen here in numbers was in the hard winter of 1881-2.—Portland Jregonian. True to His Failing. ‘Does Mr. Hicks take any interest in politics?” “Yes. Great.” “Which side?” “The wrong side.” “And which is that?” “{ don’t know—but I know Hicks.”— Harper's Bazar. To Pay a Penalty for Dining Is rather hard, isn’t it? Yet how many are compelled to do this after every meal, Dyspepsia, that inexorable persecutor, never ceases to torment of its own yoll- tion, and rarely yields to ordinary medica- tion. But tranquility of the stcmach is in store for those who pursue a course of Hostétter’s Stomach Bitters. This fine cor- rective also remedies malarial and kidney complaints, rheumatism, constipation, bil- jousness and nervousness, Diplomacy, “You don’t mean to say that that stingy old maid has given you ten shil- lings for telling her fortune?” “Indeed, I do. I told her she would meet with an accident before she was twenty-four years old.”—Answers. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease tnat 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 constitutional disease, re- quires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they of- fer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of tes- timonials. Address, *. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 7c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Weary's Definition, Hungry Higgius—Wot, you dunno what a miser is? A miser’s a man wot denies hisself the necessaries of life, wher. he has the money te buy ’em. Weary Watkins—O, I’ve met some of them fellers. But I thought they called themselves Prohi'itiouists.—Indianap- olis Journal. Especial attention is called to the engrav- ing of the big apple in our advertising col- umns. No other portion of the country is attracting as much attention from fruit growers as western Colorado, A compar- atively small area is as yet under cultivation, but the quality and quantity of the yield is sald to be remarkable. The company ad- vertising is thoroughly responsible and their representations can be relied on. Eh? Mrs. Ferry—What would you think of me if Ishould take a nction to be a bloomer girl? Mr. Fer nati Enquir Bloomer what?—Cinciu- Two bottles of Piso’s Cure for Consump- tion cured me of a bad lung trouble.—Mres. J. Nichols, Princeton, Ind., March 26, 1895. Witnessed the Altereation, Attorney—You say that you wit- nessed this altercation? O’Hara (on the stand)—No, sir; Oi didn’t see thot. Oi was busy lookin’ at th’ foight—Memphis Scimeter. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. ‘Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggisie refund the money if !t fails to cure. 25¢ Deceitful Appearances, “Miss Goldie has become quite a reg- ula r church-goer. What a _ peculiar case she carries her prayer-book in.” “That isn’t her prayer-bock. That's her bicycle kit.”—Cleveland Plain Deal- er. FITS stopped free and permanently cured. No ts j after first day's use of Dr. Kline’s Grer * Nerve storer, Free $2 trial bottle and treatise. Send to Dr. Kune, #31 Arche St., Philadephia, Pa. Modern Samson, “Brassy. I thought you was to be eaptain of the Cyclcne football team?” “I wuz, but me mother cut me hair when I wuz asleep.” The Fellow Feeling. “They give the soubrette a kindly re- ception, however.” “Oh, yes; they'll be old themselves some time.”—Detroit Journal. The first scientific periodical was issued in 1797. Tinware was first made in this country in 1770. Awarded Highest Honors—World’s Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. valces BAKING POWDER A Pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. 40 YEARS THE STANDARD, A Mystery of Arithmetic, It was interesting to read about the gentleman who, at a Sunday school meeting last Sunday, told the children that in’ the thirty-three years during which he had abstaired from tobacco, he had saved by that ineans $8,882.61. It would also be interesting to know | whether any bright boy in the room asked him if he had all that money in the bank. It is one of the curious things abcut economies of this sort that they never secm to make any dif- ference with one’s budget at the end of the year. Theoretically, arithmet- ically, they must, of course, but prac- tically they don’t. What lots of sav- ing, thrifty, get-ahead fellows there are who smoke, and what lots of total abstainers from tobacco who can’t lay | up a cent to save their lives! It really seems as if the matter of saving mon- | ey were presided over by unseen imps, who spirit away dimes and dollars from some people by night and put them in the pockets of other people. Cash accounts don’t altogether explain the mystery. A. man who doesn’t use tobacco may often wonder where he would get the money to.buy it if he did use it; but if he did use it, probab- ly his accounts would somehow come to the same thing.—Boston Transcript. Bicycle Law in Mexico, A bicycle in Mexico must be provid- ed with a bell, a metal plate showing its licenSe number, and at night, a lan- tern. The number of wheels in the capital is increasing rapidly. All makes | are represented, and the very latest patterns and improvements are de- manded. There are many splendid bi- cycle trips to be made in the valley. In every direction extend roads that have paths made smooth by the tread of the burro and barefoot native, and, while they would offer little induce- ment to a vehicle, furnish a good track for wheels.—Modern Mexican. Coe’s Cough Balsam Is the oldest and best. 1t will break up a Cold quicker than anything else. Itis always reliable. Try it. The Reason. “Yuu are the only doctor that advises me to stay at home. All the other say I ought to go to a winter resort.” “JT suppose they have all the patients they want.”—Fliegende Blaetter. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrap For chiltien testhing, softens thezums, reduces inflam- mation, allays pain, curee wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. Continuous Performance Style. “Was the conversation lively at the Beverly dinner?” “Oh, very. They have a music box that plays 1,000 tunes.”—Chicago Re- GD BLP TA a: ‘ One on the General, An amusing story comes from India. It concerns a distinguished officer, who was constantly embracing some new hobby, much to the disgust of his brother officers and to the annoyance of the soldiers, on whom the hobbies frequently involved extra duty. His latest fad was amateur gardening. One day he was strolling past the officers* quarters, when he saw a couple of sole diers busily raking a lot of grave stones over a patch of earth. “Ah, men, I’m glad to see you taking an interest in gardening. It’s a very nice occupation.” One of the men, not knowing him by sight, replied: “Umph! That's all you know. We wouldn't be hiding this earth with gravel if we didn’t have an old fool of a general that’s mad on gardening. Here we are, scraping these stones about in case he should pass this way and want to grow cabbages on the bit of earth underneath.”—Harp- er’s Round Table. A 50-Cent Calendar Free. Perhaps the most beautiful Calendar im sued for the year '97 is The Youth’s Com- panion Art Calendar, which is given to each subscriber to the paper for the year ‘97. It is made up of four charming pictures, beautifully reproduced in twelve harmon- fous colors. It is in form a four-page ! folder which, when extended, is 10x24 : Inches In size. The subjects are delightfully attractive. This calendar makes a desir able ornament for a mantel, center table or writing desk. It is offered for sale only by the publishers of The Youth’s Com- panion at 50 cents per copy. Only because of the enormous number published is it possible for the publishers of The Compan- jon to send it free to all Companion sub- seribers. New Mania, Two well dressed strangers in wider, ! different parts of the city were s‘ezed j With some absurd mania, and began ; throwing away money right and left, | to the delight of the small boy and the 1 rigid astonishment of the nearest po- |liceman. One proved to be an out-of- | town lawyer and the other a Sootch- ,; man who made big money laying golf ' links during the prevalent craze. How !a man can throw away money in New | York, where there are so many good {| places to spend it and get a return of | 106 cents on the dollar, is bard to con- | ceive.—New York Letter. 4 Diplomacy. | His Father—If you marry old Stubbs” daughter you shan’t have a cent of my money. The Son—But, father, if I don’t mar- ry her I can’t get a cent of old Stubbs’ ; money. | His Father (with a grudge to satisfy} |-—My own bo. arry her, and rendet that old skinflint penuiless!”—Pitt» purg Chronicle-Telegraph. “Mend it or End it,” has been the rallying cry of reform, directed against abuses municipal or social. For the man who lets him- self be abused by a cough the ery should be modified to: Mend it, or it’llend you. You can mend any cough with Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. et: $ I t i Sp innig cine yShmenne 7 nt tat dt dodt tt t A Thumbscrew Torture to the BIGGEST NERVE is ; SCIATICA. It turns back the screw. —It unwinds the twist.— IT SOOTHES.— IT CURES. t NO FURTHER PAIN. U: SE St. Jacobs Oil ¢ tt Get a move on without delay, or Cascarets Candy Cat ‘your bowels regular, your blood is running too slowly. LIVER IS LAZY BOWELS are languid BLOOD is sluggish ou’ll bea very sick hartic make your liver ¢,move your machinery. Buy a box to-dayany drug stor y Wi 10c., 25c., ‘rite for booklet and ees CANDY CATHARTIC CURE CHRONIC CONSTIPATION, price. avoress STERLING REMEDY COMPANY, CHICAGO; MONTREAL, CAN.; NEW YORK. 203 AMONG THE DEAD OF THE YEAR. These Prominent Men All Died of That Great Modern Gurse—Bright’s Disease. The year just closed has furnished an alarming array of prominent men who have died of Bright’s disease of the kid- neys. The number includes Professor Austin Abbott, the great jurist and author of law books; M. B. Brady, the famous photographer; Col. Thos. W. Knox, the author of the “Boy Travellers’; Mark M. Pomeroy, the well-known editor; Mr. Edwin Pardridge, the prominent Chicago merchant; and ex-Governor Greenhalge, of Massachusetts, If ‘death loves a shining mark,” it is also certain that Bright’s disease finds its victims among the prominent as well ‘as among the millions of people who are COL. T, W. KNOX, ‘M, M. POMEROY: suffering with it to-day, and yet do not realize this serious fact. There are men and women in every por- tion of America who feel out of sorts, and who do not realize what it is that affects them. They may have peculiar pains in various parts of the body, strange lassitude, a bad taste in the mouth, pains in the back and about the loins, and a general irregularity of the system. ‘These things mean Bright’s Disease in some one of its various stages, and no man or woman is safe who has them, This terrible disease was once consid- ered incurable. Eminent doctors se de- clared, but constant scientific and chem- ical experiments resulted in a discovery, which is an absolute cure for Bright's disease, even in its advanced stages. It is the one and only known remedy for this terrible complaint; its name is ‘Warner’s Safe Cure. It is simply marvelous how many peo= ple are to-day kept in perfect health an@ strength through its use. It has a pleas- ing, soothing and quieting effect upon the Kidneys, and all adjacent organs. It re- lieves promptly, puts the system in @ condition of health, and substitutes hap- piness for misery. Testimonials of its great power could be furnished by the thousands, but all intelligent men and well as the medical profession, great power and the grand work it is doing in the world.

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