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} | | { | | | it supplies the nourishment t' “When a girl at school, attack of brain fever. and I now have as heavy and Cruz, Cal. Whipped for Telling the Truth. Johrny’s face was smeared dirt and tears, and one knee projected through a d rent in his trousers leg. Johnny, Johnny!” exclaimed his mother, “have you been fighting again?” Yep,"’ he replied. “Me an’ that boy from a scrap. He looks wors'n I do, Chieage Tribune there was a lump on his ak my heart, ou fighting about? e jography of Chicago. I said it pluffs, an’ he said it was all bluff, 4 him!” you wilful boy! flow’s This: We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be e tarrh Cure. yY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersignea, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and finanelally able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, >, Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, ruggists, Toledo, O. rrh Cure is taken internally, ly upon the blood and mu- ces of the system. Testimo- ‘free. Price Toc per bottle. Sold lggists. mily Pills are the best. Tramps rarely visit Edmore, Mich., more than once. When they are caught in that town the marshal puts them in ! he jail reception room, builds a roaring | or their comfort and then sprinkles n the stove. It Keeps the Feet Dry and War And is the only cure for Chilblain: Frostbites, Damp, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's > , a powder to be shaken into | At_all Druggists and Shoe 25¢. Sample sent FREE, Ad- Allen S$. Olmstead, LeRoy, The smallest tree in Great Britain grows on the summit ef Ben Lomond, which Scotland. is mature when it attains the height of it is the dwarf willow, two inches. Beauty, Utility and Value A .ppily combined in Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla Coupon Calendar for 1898, The lovely child's head in an embossed gold frame, surrounded by sprays of flowers in mosaic, the harmonious pad in blue with clear fig: ures, and the Coupons by means of which many valuable books and other articles may be obtained, make up the most de- | mation.allays pain, cures wind cc! sirable Calender we have ever seen. The | first coupon article is Hood's Practical | Cook's Book, a handsome, useful volume 0 pages.’ Ask your druggist for Hood’s on Calendar, or send 6 cents in stamps one to C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell. Mass. | dp divuu 6 U0.) LOWeH, mass, A marriage performed by Judge W. P. at Sarrollton, Ga., brought him an happy benedict, in a ave the judge a quar- To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or . If Cc. C. fail to cure druggists refund mone; Twins in Glen Ellyn, near Chicago, lately celebrated the ninety~first anni- ry of their birth. Their names are Ackerman and Mrs. Christian. From many people we hear that Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is a prompt and nt cure for piles. This is not sur- ising, for whatever is good for diseased mucous membrane in one part of the body is, of course, good for it in other parts. or obvious reasons, we do not hke to adverti the Catarrh Remedy for piles, but think some may prefer to order such medicine by mail, therefore this opportunity is given. Send 2 amp for sample, or 50 cents for ll package, to The af Piso Company, Warren, Pa. The negroes in Virginia are becoming thrifty. ‘The: taxes on real estate valued at §! .685, and on ~ personal property worth Coe’s Cough Balsam Ys the oldest-and best. It will break up a cold quicker than anything cise. Its always reliable. Try it. Edneate Your Bowels With Cascarets Candy Cathartic, cure constipation fo . If C. C. C. fail druggists Sixty languages were known by Chris- tian Joachim Mohn, a Norwegian, who died recently in Naples, at the age of eighty-five. Star Tobacco is the leading brand of the world, because it is the best. Excavations were being made for the foundation of a hotel at Durango, Mexico, when the workmen came across an iron box containing old Spanish gold coins to the value of $100,000. rade Marik.] Swax on RHEUMATIC CURE Co.,Chicago. Gemtlemen:—I hawe been intending to write youin Jhe hair is like a plant. What makes the plant fade and wither? Usually lack of necessary nourishment. Ayer’s Hair Vigor restores gray or faded hair to its normal color, stops hair from falling, and makes it grow, is because On my recovery, I found myself perfectly bald and, for a long time, I feared I should be permanently so. Friends urged me to use Dr. Ayer’s Hair Vigor, and, on doing so, my hair immediately began to grow, wish for, being changed, however, from blonde to dark brown.” — Mrs. J. H. Horsnyper, 152 Pacific Ave., Santa Ryer’s Hair Vigor. HTTHHtHtHHTHtitHtttitttttttt tt tt H The reason why Dr. he hair needs. in Reading, Ohio, I had a severe fine a head of hair as one could WONDERS NEVER CEASE. Salzer’s great catalogue paints four vegetable wonders, a Fig, a Peach and a Strawberry Tomato, also an Orange Vine; genuine, splendid novelties. His Golden Rind Watermelon created a tremendous sensation in 1897 and took 1,000 first prizes, selling at $1.00 apiece. His Lightning Cabbage is 18 days ahead of other seedsmen’s earliest, while his Early Peas, Radishes, To- matoes, Melons, Beets, etc., ripen weeks before their relatives. If You Will Send this Notice and 35 cts. to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, | Wis., you will get free their big cata- logue (tells all about gardening) and : above four vegetable wonders. w.n.n. of Siamese noblemen wear d cut their hair so that it ght up from their heads. The average length of their hair is about an | inch and a half. | Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag- | netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- | Bae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. Alldruggists, 0c. or $1. Cure guaran- t Booklet and ‘sample free. Address ing Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. It is against the law for officers and men in the British army to shave the upper lip. Sometimes infraction of the rule is permitted, when it is necessary to encourage a backward mustache with the aid of a razor. 1 T Cuban Scare. Although the diplomatic entangle’ with Spain over Cuba is to some e! influencing the stock market, Wall no serious complications. Never- serious complication with other maladies may be expected to follow an attack of biliousness which is not checked at the outset. The most effectual means to this end is Hostetter’s Stomach Bit- ters, an admirable remedy, moreover, for | dyspepsia, malaria, kidney trouble, con- | stipation and nervousness. At a medical college in Pennsylvania the question was asked, “what are some of the causes of natural death?” A fresh and earnest young man answered, ““Hang- | ing, disease and old age. | Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup | For children teething,softens the gums.reduces inflam. 2% cents a bottle. An aching tooth caused so much pain to Mrs. Jane L. Fowle of Dedham, Mass., that she went to a dentist. He removed a sound tooth instead; she sued him, and recovered $450. ornervousnessafter | FITS PermanentlyCured. Nof ervousne eut Nerve Rest: be rst day's use of Dr. Kline Send tor FREE | pa. R.H. KLY Rend the Advertisements. You will enjoy this publication much better if you will get into the habit of reading the advertisements; they will afford a most interesting study and will put you in the way of getting some excellent bargains. Our adver- tisers are reliable; they send what they advertise. Ten Weeks for Ten Cents: | _ Strange as it may appear, that big fam- | ily paper, the [lustvated Weekly Sentinel, of Denver, Colorado, (founded 1810) will’ be sent ten weeks on trial for 10c; clubs of | six, 50c.; 12 for $1. Special offer solely to introduce the paper. Gold rings set with Rocky mountain gems are given free as premiums. Latest mining news-and illus- trations of grand scenery each week, also true stories of love and adventure. Ad- dress as above and mention this paper. Write today, postage stamps taken. A fortune was missed by Henry Mun- son, who died recently in New Haven, Conn. He invented the device by which gunbarrels are bored, but meglected to patent it. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. 25¢ The Cause of the Tronbte. Brooklyn Life: ‘My wife made an awful fuss last night because I was out so late.’ “Why, it wasn’t unusual, was .t?” “Oh, no; but she happened to be in when I got home."” No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c. $1. | All druggists | tt is estimated that American travelers annuaily spend $10,000,000 in Europe. CURES RHEUMATISM AND MANY OTHER DISEASES. If You or Friends Are Suffering All Can be Cured. The following jetter is a sample of many received: Johnstown, N. ¥., Jan. 3rd, 1898. gard to my cure by your wenderful medicine “5 DROPS.” In July 1888 | was taken sick with what is called compli- cation of diseases, being acute inflammation of all the jnonthe, havimz but one chance in a hundred of recovery, but the good Lord allowed me to liv Thad also indigestion, constipation, nervous dyspepsia, heart failure,ab- settling ia my kidneys and.vladder. organs of the body. 1 was very sick for about three the disease bees twice a week on the prostrate gland, hemorrhage of the bowels once a week, enlarged spleen, muscular matisaa in the palms of my hands extending to my shoulders, catarrh and chills and shakes, which no ‘st im the state could tell me what they were or the cause. .e shakes would begin and I would shake from one no strength deft; the after effects were more like gmore, all under the most intense pain. I wouid freeze to ice for fully five minutes, f hour to an hour and a half,and when they stopped. ‘aft. I would sleep very heavily for three hours or All the specialists in the state declared me incurable. The X-ray wes put.on by one of the city’s most eminent physicians, but he told me I was incurable, that must use plenty of asorphine or suffer. from the celebrated physica Swanson Rheumatie Cure C to begin on. Just before T nd received an answer ve $I hadakidney backache, a hot stinging pain that never left me for a moment. zouk et no relief until I began the “5 DROP: Sf May, 1897, at noon, and in less than en hour the backaebe left me and has not returned. could hear of, but could for tlece weeks and kept getting better; at the end of eft four weeks the rheumatism was no more, Shakes are gone; my heart failure and dyspepsia went my Ged daily for havin wiclnity and is still euring a tarrh, Sleeplessness, Nervousnes: CSthiache, Heart Weakness, Croup, Sw ell FOR THIRTY DAYS LONGER scntte Sette: nre Also, large bottles (300 doses) $1.00, nted in new te: P “a territory. Wy AMKOW RUEUMATIC CURE CO. 16 put me in the way of this ficted ones who take it steadily an‘ 5 DROPS” cures Rheumatism,Seiatica,Neuralgia,Dys Soon after [saw the ad im @ western paper of ‘5 DROPS,” the recipe Dr. Lloyd, whom I knew by reputation, I wrote and explained my case to the that Icould be cured, and sent me a small trial bott almost killed me. For nit I tried everything L The first dose I took the 5th. I used it steadily ubree weeks the pain in my side stopped; at the end , aud in six weeks all my pain left me. My chills and first week and I fee! strong and well, and I thank reat medicine. {t has cured many inthis want to be eure BUR E. WHITE. psia, Backache, Asthma, Hay Nervous and Neuraigic Headaches, Earache, g, LaGrippe, Malaria, Creeping Numbness. to give “5 DROPS” at les a trial. we will send a paid by mail, for 25 cents. A sample bottle will con- bottler for $2.60. Not sold by drugeists, only by us and Write us to-day. 7-169 Dearborr St., CHICAGO, ILL, DAIRY AND POULTRY. INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. How Successful Farmers Operate This Department of the Farm—A Few Hints as to the Care of Live Stock and Poultry. Watch for Roup. Much of the ill-success with poultry arises from lack of observation of the people having the care of them. They allow diseases to get into the flocks and spread, when, by proper observa- tion, the trouble would be stopped ere it had obtained a good start. A few days ago the writer of this had oc- casion to purchase a dozen laying hens from a farmer. The latter was asked if he had roup in his flock, He was at once very indignant and re- plied that when a fowl in his yards fell sick the axe was the remedy. None of his fowls had the roup or any otuer disease. So the would-be purchaser thought he would be safe in purchas ing a few fowls “unsight and unseen. But he will never do that again. The fowls were promptly delivered. At night the purchaser went out te take a look at his fowls for the first time. What a sound greeted his ad- vent in the poultry house. He recog- nized its cause at once. The fowls were all safely ranked on the roosts, but from their midst came mingled snorings, sneezings, coughings and half-crowings. Roup, roup, roup, spoke from every corner, He examined two of the worst ones. They were old hens, but mere skin and bones. They both had apparently had the roup for months and become emaciated by it, for the roup affects the digestive organs more often than the head. Not one of the fowls was worth keeping. aNot one of them would lay an egg all winter, and it is doubtful if they would ever lay. They were returned to the farm- er, who was duly indignant that his fowls were considered sick, but insist- ed that they were in perfect health. He evidently thought his fowls were not sick because they did not have the swelled head. The mere fact of their mouths being full of stringy mucus told him nothing. The fact that they ate but little should have convinced him that something was wrong. This is one of the worst features of fowls troubled with roup; they eat but lit- tle, as their digestion is slow, due to the inflamed condition of the mucous membrane. A healthy fowl will pack the crop full of grain. Feel of their crops when they have retired to rest after a full supper and it will be found distended by the food. But a fowl that is only slightly affected by roup is not so. If the crop be felt of at that time it will be found only a quar- ter or half full, and frequently the pressure of the hand induces the bird to stretch its neck and gasp as if for air. This probably is due to the in- flamed condition of the air tube. The farmer that had these fowls made a big show of producing eggs.for sale at fancy prices. It was supposed that he was getting many eggs, as he kept a large number of hens. Acci- dentally it was learned that he was getting about one egg ner dav The getting about one egg per day. The reason his flock did not lay was doubt- less the fact that roup was widely prevalent among them. He said that he had left the care of his fowls to the hired man, to whom he had given in- structions to notify him when any- thing was the matter with the hens. It is altogether probable that the hired man did not know. If he noticed them at all he merely said to himself that the birds had a slight cold, not worth reporting, of course. The roup will eat up the profits from the best flock of fowls that ever lived. It must be watched for and fought. When it ap- pears it must be eradicated. It is ex- tremely contagious and we do not be- lieve there is any cure for it. This year it seems to be more than usually prevalent. Probably it is more to be feared than any other disease. It may be considered more dangerous to the profits of the poultry raiser than even cholera. When the latter disease comes its makes its presence known by its work of death. The keeper at once takes measures to combat it. But it is not so with the roup. It creeps into the flock and develops very grad- ually. Most farmers do not suspect its presence. It does not swell the head except in some cases. The fowls run about and often their combs remain bright and healthy looking for months. We have seen fowls that had it so bad that canker sores formed in their mouths and yet they did not appear sick, their combs showing all the in- dications of health. So the farmer sus- pects nothing, while the disease is spreading from fowl to fowl till all are infected. After awhile one or two fall suddenly sick with diarrhea or their heads swell up. The farmer inquires and is told that the trouble is roup and that he can cure it by using such and such means. He goes to work and very likely reduces the swelled heads, and thinks he hag cured his bird. Very likely he writes to the farm paper telling of his success in curing roup. But he has not cured it. He may have separated the bird from the rest to prevent further infection, but he did not prevent further infection for the reason that the flock has been al- ready infected. His battle with roup will have only begun, as fowl after fowl will ultimately fall sick. It is probable that some fowls have enough vitality to resist the disease, but of this we are not certain. Closer obser- vation must be followed if the trouble is to be avoided. Warming Water for Stock. In these times it is necessary that the farmer should watch every item of expenditure and husband every re- source. There is an old saying that cause great losses and often result in financial ruin. There are on the farm many leaks through which go out the hard earnings of the farmer. More than any other, the loss from lost heat should be guarded against. Heat costs money. Every unit of heat costs some- thing, according to the food from which it is made. We may say then that heat is money. To save the loss of this heat is to save money, for it will save food. Some farmers feed the winds as well as their stock. Every loose board on a barn is a means by which the farmer feeds the wind. That is, the cold filches away the heat from the bodies of his animals. More farm- ers feed the waters. There are farmers that are very careful to keep from feeding the winds, and keep their barns tight. But they do not hesitate twice a day to give their cattle icecold water. It is not an uncommon sight to see a cow drink three pailfuls of water at a single time. When such water is at a temperature of about 32 degrees it means that the water so consumed must be raised to a temperature of over 90 degrees. In fact, we are told by doctors that the digestive process stops till the water has been raised to blood heat. Think of the heat necessary to raise water in a cow’s stomach to 60 degrees, Remember that that heat has been made by feeding the cow food that costs a great deal of money. It is certainly much cheaper to raise the temperature by nreans of the loose wood lying around the farm that costs nothing but the effort to gather it. To build a fire for the heating of water on a cold day is a pleasing operation. If the heat from the fire reaches the cows and other stock it will prove a pleas- ing operation to them as well as to the farmer. The only cost is therefore the first cost for a boiler. But these may be purchased at almost any price. The well-to-do farmer that can afford to purchase to suit his convenience and fancy can pay a high price if he wants to. If not, he can do as the humbler farmer will most likely do—purchase a good boiler at a moderate price. The saving in cost of feed will prove a big interest on the investment. Remem- ber this, that whereas a farmer may lose feed on account of cold winds, yet there are many warm, sunny days in winter, when he will lose little in this way. But the man that loses feed on account of icy water must expect that loss every day in the winter season, for the water supply does not change its temperature as often as the air, nor does it respond quickly to the change in temperature. It is hidden away in the ground, locked up with the frost, or waiting in ice caves. When the warm days in winter come the ice and snow melt and make still colder these waters. All of these are to be drank by the stock. If we were to figure on the matter, we would say that a full- sized cow would lose several cents per day if allowed to drink ice cold water. When we consider that many farmers have all the way from twenty to a hun- dred cows we can see what a great loss he must face during an entire winter season. Dairymen_ especially should see that their cows have, for drinking purposes, only water that has been raised to a suitable temperature. Improved Fraits. mee a ee The limit of improvements is not found in producing fruits of great size, beauty and sweetness. There are other desirable qualities that the horticul- turist is anxious to obtain, and toward this end he is devoting his energies, says a writer in Lippincott’s. One of the most noticeable trends of the sci- ence of fruit culture is toward the elim- ination of undersirable organs. The thorns of some of the citrus fruit trees, and the prickles of such small berry bushes as the gooseberry, black- berry and raspberry, are protuberances that have outlived their usefulness and are highly unpleasant. They not only puncture the ripening fruits, but they often make harvesting exceedingly in- convenient. Gardeners have long wished to do away with these thorns and prickles, but it is only within a few years that systematic efforts. have been made to eliminate them. The thorns are conspicuous organs of our cultivated plants that have ceased to be of any value, for their original pur- pose of protecting the plants from ani- mals has no force to-day in the gar- dens and fields. They should have been exterminated long ago. Through the careful selection of plants that happen to be thornless, stocks are ob- tained for a new race of thornless plants. Others are noted for a few thorns that grow on them, and by ju- dicious. selection of seeds and grafts from these the same work is continued. Already gardeners have cultivated raspberry and blackberry canes that are entirely thornless, and by grafting improved varieties on these the desir- ed end will soon be reached. The wild orange trees have many more thorns on them than the budded stock, and the wild Florida lemons are thickly studded with thorn, while the grafted La France have none. Teeth of Sheep.—There is a peculiar- ity in the mechanism of a sheep’s jaw and grinders that helps one to under- stand the reason why sheep are able to get so much nutriment from their food. In noticing a sheep chewing its cud it cannot be observed that the jaw has a peculiar motion from side to side. The branches of the lower jaw are closer together than the molars are in the upper. Then in the molars their edges have different slopes. In the upper row the face of the molar slopes very de- cidedly from the higher inner edge to the lower outer, while in molars of the lower jaw the faces slope from the out- er edge to the higher inner. These things, together with the rough sur- face of the molars, give a sheep the power to thoroughly grind its food. There is profit in poultry when raised on a farm, so that waste products can “the little foxes spoil the vines.” This‘ pe utilized, and all food supplied at means that little things if unnoticed | producer's cost. 4 GAINED FORTY-EIGHT POUNDS “I had a strong appetite for liquor which was the beginning of the breaking down of my health. I was alsoaslave to tea and coffee drinking. I took the gold cure but it did not help me.” This iis a portion of an interview clipped from the Daily Herald, of Clinton, lowa. it might well be taken for the subject of a temperance lecture but that is not orr ob- ject in publishing it. It is to show kow a system, run down by drink and disease, may be restored. We cannot do better than quote further from the same: “For years I was unable to do my work. I could not sleep nights or rest days on account of continuous pains in, | my stomach and back. 1 wat unable to digest my food. -| Headaches and painful tiination were frequent, and my heart’s action became increased. lleft my farm and retired to city lite, fer 1 was a confirm- ed invalid, and the doctor said I would never be well again. “Soon after I hap- pened to use four boxes of Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills for Pale People and I Retired to City Life. since then have been free from all pain, headache and dyspepsia. I eat heartily and have no appetite for strong drin! or tea or coffee, and feel twenty years younger. “My weight has increased 48 pounds. I cannot say too much for Dr. Williams’ Pink ; Pills and claim that they have cured me. Joun B. Cook.” Subscribed and sworn to before me this sixteenth day of February, 1897. A. P. Barxen, Notary Public. To people run down in health from what- ever cause—drink or disease—the above in- terview will be of interest. The truth of it is undoubted as the statement is sworn to, and we reproduce the oath here. For any further facts concerning this medicine wr.te to Dr. Widiams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. The name and address of the subject of above interview is John B. Cook, of 203 South dth Street, Lyon, Iowa. That Hump. Detroit Journal: Many years had passed; but the poet was still writing ju bilee odes. In the meantime, his beau- tiful wife washed the dishes. “You are making a good deal of noise,” he exclaimed, glowering soulfully out at her. She came over and kissed his brow. “How,” she asked, earnestly, “can I hump myself without more or less bus- tle?” And then, forsooth, she must weep, silently, as he beat her against the corner of the coal bin. needs head \\aN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS, We are asserting in the courts our right to the~ | exclusive'use of the word “CASTORIA,” and | “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” as our Trade Mark. ; I, Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannis, Massachu- | Setts, was the originator of “PITCHER’S CAS- | TORIA,” the same that has borne and does now | bear the fac-simile signature of CHAS. H | FLETCHER on every wrapper. This is the original “PITCHER’S CASTORIA” which has. been used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years. Look carefully at the wrapper and see that it is “the kind you have always bought,” and has the signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on the Wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas... Hi. Fletcher is President. March §, 1897, SAMUEL PITCHER, M. D., Each salmon, it is estimated, produces ‘| about 20,000,900 eggs. Do You Dance !To-Night? Shake into your Shoes Allen’s Foot Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Chilblains and Sweat- ing Feet. At all Druggi and Shoe Store, 25c. Samples sent FREE. Ad- Allen S. Olmsead, LeRoy, N. Y. A colored woman in Holly Springs, iss., has hair eight feet six inches in Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin, No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Ca- thartic cleans your blood and keeps it clean by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all impurities from the body. Be- gin to-day to banish pimples, boils, j blotches, blackheads, and that sickly } pilious complexion by taking Cascarets— | beauty for 10 cents. All druggists, satis- faction guaranteed, 10c, 250. 50c. A horseshoe which is likely to increase the speed of racers has been produced by E. C. Loyd, of Janesville, Wis. It is made of aluminum, and weighs only an ounce and a half. The Baltimore and Ohio railroad stands | third in the list of freight equipment ccording to the report of the Official | Railway Equipment Register in the pos- s ion of eight wheel freight cars for all purposes. The total number of cars is 34,674. Of this number almost 14,000 are box ears and 18,000 coal cars, the others being refrigerator, live stock, pas- senger and caboose cars. Even with this equipment there are many days that a shortage of cars is severely felt. I know that my life was saved by Piso’s Cure for Consumption.—John A. i Au Sable, Michigan, April 21, Nine young women recently engaged in a wood-sawing contest, for prizes, j at Beaver Dam, Wis. | Smoke Sledge Cigarettes, 20 for 5 cts.. OLD OR NEW RHEUMATIC Promptly cured by ST. JACOBS OIL. PAINS “i For maps, pamphlets, railway rates, ate , and full information concerning this cquntry. enjoying exceptionally pleasant climate and continuous good erops, apply to EEN DAVIES, Can. Gov't Agent, 154 F-et Third St.. St. Paul, Minn. NEURALGIA 74 Aili: Newcicidue \ Y At all druggists or sent post- y paid upon receipt of $1. ‘aN FRENCH CHEMICAL CO, WORTH OF PREMIUMS TOBE GIVEN AWAY wit SETH ARNOLD'S COUGH KILLER, DR. U. S. Capitol Souvenir Spoons, Scarf Pins, Sleeve Buttons and Watch Chains. Save the Maltese Cross on Outside Box. You will find a Premium certificate around each bot- tle. Send the certificate and crosses to the Dr. Seth Arnold Medical Corporation, Woonsocket, R. I POTATOE Largest Seed POT: “Rural New-Yorke $1.50 a Bbl America. T! $10, to get a start, for 10e. and this notice, JOHN A, SALZER SEED CO., La Crosse, Wis. WON BAA THE IOLA CANCE SANITARIUM Is an institution shoreneely: cquipped for the treat- ment of CANCER, TUMORS, andall muignant growth without the use of the knife. We never fail to effect a permanent cure where the circumstances are at all favorable for treatment. Keferences sent free on application. Address all letters to IOLA SANITARIUM, IOLA, WIS. AUTHOR '— We want your stories, peemsand stamp. Authorsand Writers Union,Chicago,Il. book MSS.; best prices; inclose $100 To Any Man, WILL PAY $100 FOR ANY CASE Of Weakness in Men They Treat and Fail to Cure. An Omaha Company places for the first time before the public a Macican TRreat- menT for the cure of Lost Vitality, Nervous and Sexual Weakness, and Restoration of Life Force in old and young men. No worn-out French rem ; contains no Phosphorous or other harmful drugs. It is a WONDERFUL TREATMENT—magical in its effects—positive in its cure. All readers, who are suffering from a weakness that blights their life, causing that mental and. prygicel suffering peculiar to Lost Man- 00d, should write to the STATE MEDICAL. COMPANY, Omaha, Neb., and they will send you absolutely FREE, a valuable paper on these diseases, and positive proofs of their truly MaGcicaL TREATMENT. ands of men, who have lost all hope of a cure, are being restored by them toa per- fect condition. This MacicaL TREATMENT may be taken at home under their directions, or they will. pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who preter to go there for treatment, if they ‘ail to cure. They are perfectly reliable; have no Free Prescriptions, Free Cure, Free Sample, or C. 0. D. fake. They have $250,000 capital, and guarantee to cure Bagot d case they treat or refund every dollar; or their charges may be deposited in a bank to be paid to them when a cure is: effected. Write them today. LODD Polson A SPECIALTY cnssrvornee tiary BLOOD POISON permane: cured in 15 to85 days. You can be treated: lhome for same price under same guarane ty. If you prefer to come here we Willcone. tractto pay railroad fareand hotel bills,and. if we fail to cure. If you have taken mer> Dochal eury; iodide potash, and still have aches and. ‘ins, Mucous Patches in mouth, Sore Throat, imples, Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers on ‘any part of the body, Hair or Eyebrows fallin; out, it is this Secondary BLOOD POISO) cure. We solicit the most obsti- ec the week fora $5 tional guaranty. Al lication. a 1490 Masonic Temple, CHICAGO, I) Sey) CURE YOURSELF? Use Big @ for unnatural” discharges, inflammations, irritations’ or ulcerations ‘Sold by Druggists, or sent in plain rep Pers, by ress, fiatworsvottion es lircular sent on requests 3 TRIAL i TILE ASTHMA: ‘DR. TAFT BROS., 4 ‘St, W YORK, JOHN W.MORRIS, NSIO) ‘Washington, D.C. Successtully Rroveutes Claims. judicating Lat 8. Pen: Syrein last war, Sad claims, atty since fF RH 4n the South. Cheap.. Free Cat. WiHLOrawford & Con i amicted ith} Thompson’s Eye Water. Southern Colonizers, Nashville, Team 83 rs 9 Hy 2 i] S e Hy i i? i & ‘hous-- = \ } oy i Bl | | 4 q i 4.