Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, April 7, 1900, Page 10

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\ \\o kave been relieved of { p& “ful menstruation by ,s Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veye- table Compound, are con=- tantly writing grateful ‘letters to Mrs. Pinkham, | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound | cured them. ft always relieves painful periods and no woman who suf- fers should be without is knowledges Yearly ali the fills of men result from some angement of the ferrale organism, Mirss ,Cinkiam’s great medi- tine makes women healthy: of this thera is overwhelming proof. Bon’t experiment, If you suffer get this medi« ) cine and get firs. Pinte ham’s free ativice, Her address is Lynn, Massa. A Sure Test. s gentle and 2 as she seems?” answered the who is in love. “But I’m nd out.” 1 going to get her to call some- »dy up over a long-distance telephone then watch her.”—Washington About It, That Is. worried That She Knew i q d ifully aid. about y mis- nearly half a day.’—Chicago g Post. S100 Reward $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to least one dreaded disease ble to cure in all its rh. Hall's Catarra ure now known to the rrh being a constitu- a constitutional treat- re is taken internally plood and mucous sure ills are the best. Discrepane I heard you were at t night. What a pity you But I da. r—They nrt Set. told me Are You Using Allen's Foot-Fase? the only cure for Swollen, Sweating Feet, Ask for Allen’s e, a powder to be shaken into At all Druggists and Shoe 7 mple sent FREE. Ad- msted, LeRoy, N. ¥. I saw him ¢ n around his typew Send for “Choice & Co. do they “beys will be They know well enough boys 1 be men. . x the things that endure but on We must count pepper NEURALGIA SCIATICA Sure as taxes is the cure of them by St. Jacobs Oil Gld as the Hills : i Ls are the pains and aches of RHEUHATISH you | | are thrown down together, the bird: Docking Less Fashionable. A New York man who is actively in- terested in all that pertains to light harness horses recently said that “when fashion decreed that it was cor- rect to drive horses with as short a tail as it was possible to make, every- body who wanted to be in the swim followed the foolish idea, and the un- fortunate horses suffered accordingiy, says National Stockman. Now that a large number of the dock-tailed horses have been worn out and broken dowa, they have become common in the ranks of hard working horses, and de- livery wagons, express wagons and even peddlers’ wagons are now pulled by dock-tailed horses so that diminished caudal appendage is no longer con- fined to the ranks of the high-toned brigade. Whenever any fad (and the dock-tailed horse was only a fad) be- comes common the leaders of society drop out and it then naturally goes out of fashion. It was so with the bicycle. As long as the price of bicycles was held up to a point that kept them out of reach of the common people they were popular among society folks, but when Mrs. Bon Ton found that on her | daily spin with her wheel she was liable’ to encounter her washwoman, the grocery boy, her own servants or any other of the working classes, she soon became disgusted with the wheel. Now that the short-tailed horse is com- mon, the exclusive set have gone back to the long-tail class, and many a fine pair are now to be seen in the fasi- lonable quarters. The shrewdest deal- ers quickly caught on, and while many horses are shown with their tails tied up, they are not docked except by or- der of the purchaser. Whatever the cause of the change true lovers of horses will be glad of it. Docking is inhuman in this country of flies and careless treatment of animals. We are glad to see that the president's borses wear long tails, and probably this has had some influence on the fashion. Banging the tail is less ob- jectionable. It was the former cus- tom, and may again prevail with coach horses. An Egg Record. To the Farmers’ Review: The re- lation of experiences sometimes does good, so I give my experience with poultry during 1899. I have 90 hens, and received eggs as follows: Jan- uary 415, February 338, March 859, April 1,156, May 1,004, June 838, July 799, August 649, September 617, Octo- ber 415, November 278, December 100. Some nests were stolen and therefore not all of the eggs were enumerated. The total number of eggs received was 468 eggs. We sold 5,860 eggs for $55.51. We hatched 425 chickens, of which we sold $12, ate some and have others on hand. I think that, includ- ing the bugs destroyed, my hens were worth $1 each. My fowls got their own living, except in bad, stormy, coid ther. There were but two days) before December when I did not get at least one egg per day. In December y hens were taken sick and many ad. E. 8S. PHELPS. Hamilton County, Nebraska, Intelligence Needed. These are not times when men can go along in a careless, haphazard way; they must think, plan and act, says the Kansas Dairy Farmer. From the selection of the dairy herd, the proper feeding and care of the cows, the de- livery of the milk to the creamery. working it up into butter, and so on up to the marketing of the article, the best judgment is needed; and when ail these points are looked after carefully and with the constant thought ol economy, it is surprising how much mi cheaply the goods can be pro- duced than they coulda few years ago. A contemporary says that hens are not fond of oats, as is evidenced by tn tuct that when wheat, oats and corn pick up the oats last. The experience ef the writer is that this depends on the habits of the hens. They seem ic like any food that they have become accustomed to, Probably the hens mentioned had been receiving mor: corn and wheat than vats. The write: fed oats for months to his hens and then took them off oats for a few days At the end of that time he gave tnex a mixture of oats and corn. The heu: picked out the oats before eating the corn. It might be added that during the time when the hens had not re- ceived Oats they had received corn. All-Year Dairying—Dairying ha: got to be a steady all-the-year-around iness, and I am acquainted with a. producers who claim to make as much out of it in winter as in sum- mer. And this change is all of recent rs. One has not got to go back y far in his memory to recall when people, at least in country districts went without milk for family use sey- eral months in the winter, or until! cows became new milch in the spring Cows were dried off soon after going into the stable in the fall, and remain- ed so until March or April. Now they are milked up to within a couple vo! months of calving time, besides.a por- tion of the dairy coming new milcb in the early winter.—Ex. m Utilizing the Motion of the Cow’s Yail— J. H. Monrad, writing in an aastern paper, says: “We have all heard of the “One Dollar Remedy” advertiseé where the deluded farmer in return fer his dollar got a slip of paper witb “Tie a brick to the tail” written on it. We also know that the Holland- ers have a string fixed-to the wall tc tie tail with, but the latest to me is to utilize the waste power of the tail motion by connecting the baby’s cradle with the tail by a string through a hole in the wall. ; house? Hampshire lambs are noted for early | development. | A Metaphorical Expulsion. Bill—You proposed for the hand of his daughter? Jill—Well, I suggested that I might make him a good son-in-law. Bill-And he put you out of tho JiN—In a hurry. Bill—What excuse did he offer? Jill—Only that he was merely throw- ing out a suggestion.—Yonkers States- man. PATENT: List of Patents Issued Last Week to Northwestern Inventors. Joseph C. Bissell, Sterling, Minn., bag holder for grain weighing machines; John J. Cook, Butte, Mont., elevator controlling apparatus; Nickolaus Eck- stein, Wylie, Minn., scraper attachment for gang plows; Axel N. Helstrom, Tower, Minn., scaffold; William H. Hormel, Austin, Mipn., system of heat- ing and ventilation; Thomas Hube deau, Larimore, N. D., breast st slide; Towle Syrup Co., St. Paul (trademark) syrups and molas: Merwin, Lothrop & Johnson, neys, 911 & 912 Pioneer Press tent Attor- dg., St. Paul A Plersant Outlook. Mrs. Newlywed (to cook, whom she has just engaged at r office)— You see, my husband is partic- ular about his food. k (sympathetically)—Ther’ all alike, mem. My old man was just the same. I never cooked nothink to please ’im in n life.—Punch. So V Do Your Feet Ache and Barn? Shake into your shoes Allen’s Foot- Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S.Olmsted, LeRoy, N. ¥. No More Chinese Pheasants. A Washington special says: Minister Conger writes from Peking that the Chinese government has prohibited, for a time, at least, the exportation of pheasant skins. The demand for their plumage has increased to such ah ex- tent that the extermination of these beautiful birds is feared. Read 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 amusing story, and will help you in the way of getting some excellent bargains. Our advertisers are reliable; they send what they adver- tise. 4 Saving Him Moncey. Mr. Wheatpit—My failure is the talk of the streets! cents on the dollar. Mrs. Wheatpit (after a moment's fig- aring)—Ob, Henry. isn’t that lovely? Then the $50 hat I had sent home to day will cost you only $5.—Life. My doctor said 1 would die, but Piso’s Cure for Consumption cured me.—Amos Kelner, Cherry Valley, Il!..N SRD Re LE A New View. “It jist struck me,” said Dismal Daw- son, as he felt about in the bottoms of his pockets for a few grains of tobacco, “that me an’ the distilleries is in active opposition.” “What!” shouted Everett Wrest, al- most with energy. “Ye see, the stuff they’re busy puttin’ up is the stuff I’d like to be busy put- tin’ down.”—Indianapolis Press. For Geometrical Relief. Bill—The nucleus of a new town in Texas is called Triangle. It is laid out In the form of a triangle, its lots are triangular and the twenty-three houses already built are all three-cornered. Jill—It is to be hoped there will be some square men in it,—Yonkers Statesman. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces fm Qammation, alleys pain, cures wind colic. '25c a bottle. Some one will be sure to take your advice if you have it engraved on the handle of a $10 umbrella. If you can’t practice what you preach don’t make a practice of preach- ing. To neglect the hair {s to lose youth and comeliness. Baye it with Parker's Ham BALsaw. Hixpexcorns, the best cure for corns. 15cts. Sentenced to be hanged—Christmas stockings. Ay the meeting of my | I attribute to your mediciae. creditors to-day I arranged to pay 10] had a stomach trouble which Peruna The Roberts Family, of Falls City, Neb., Are Healthy and Happy—A Say, ‘‘We Think Peruna Is The Greatest Medicine On Earth.” No man is better known in the State of Nebraska than Mr. Car! T. Roberts, contractor and mason, A typical Am- erican—active, shrewd and full of busi- ness sagacity. He is not only a pro- vider for his family, but a protector. In a recent letter to Dr. Hartman he writes among other things, as follows: “Our boy, James, had the membra- nous croup and repeated attacks of lung fever. Our boy, Charlie, was also subject to attacks of pneumonia and pleurisy. Our third boy, John, was subject to fever and ague (malarial) and liver trouble. Your remedy, Pe- runa, cured my boys entirely, and now I have three of the healthiest boys in the State of Nebraska, which My wife also cured. Altogether for my whole family we have used nineteen boitles of Peruna, and have thus saved $500 in doctors’ bills. I am a contractor and mason by trade, and am known all over Nebraska. I have had a stomach trouble, which has been greatly re- lieved by your remedy, Peruna, for which I am still taking it. We think it is the greatest medicine on earth.” —C, T. Roberts, Falls City, Nebraska. Hon, William Youngblood, Auditor for the Interior, writes from Washing- ton, D. C., to Dr. Hartman, Colum- bus, Ohio, as fol- lows: “I’ve often heard of your @ great medicine and have persuad- ed my wife, who has been much of | a sufferer from ca- tarrh, to try Peru- jf runa, and after } using one bottle she has wonder- fully improved. It has proved all you peat sera have claimed for fon. William it, and I take Mpunghiood- pleasure in recom- mending it to anyone who is afflicted with catarrh.” Peruna has become, in a multitude of households, absolutely indispensable. Mr. T. G. Walker, Carneiro, Kansas, writes: “It is with pleasure that I re- PERUNA PROTECTS OUR HOMES, Rare Sight in These Days. They port that I am better than I have been for many years. I believe Peruna is without a doubt the best medicine that ever was used in a family. It has cured my nervousness, with which I had been afflicted for a great number of years.” It is a fact of ever-increasing aston- ishment that so many otherwise scn- sible and provident people will, for the neglect of so simple a precau as to have a bottle of Peruna at h ‘ bring upon themselves the needless suffering and foolish expense that a practitioner of medicine is forced to witness every day. As soon as the value of Peruna is fully appreciated by every household, both as a preventive and cure of these affections, tens of thousands of lives will be saved, and hundreds of thou- sands of chronic, lingering cases of disease prevented. Peruna is the household safeguard. A complete work on chronic catarrh sent free to any address by The Peru- na Medicine Company, Columbus, Ohio. Keeps both rider and saddle per- foctly éry in the hardest storms. § # Substitutes will disappoint. Ask for ¥ 3807 Fish Brand Pommel Slicker— it is entirely new. If not for sale in A your town, write for catalogue to ti” A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass io Fire, Smo} TAUSCO’ ARTICHOKES! Mammoth White French. # A SURE PREVENIIVE of HOG CHOLERA. Enormous yielier, and the | greatest root fattener for hogs. sheep, colts and cattle known. Write for circular telling all about trem. This will not appesr aga'n. W. F. MANLEY, Richmond, Ind. id 5 stamps for Catal Absolutely Safe. Senc G.. ST. JOSEPH, MICH. fect. BOAT Marc. One of the finest agricultural ‘regions in the country ix now being operied up by the build- ing of the Bismarck, Washburn & Great Fails Railway. ‘The couatry referred to is the famous Mi souri Valley in Burleigh and McLean Cow ties, North Dakota. The soll isa rich. dirk loam, wiih clay subsoil: good water, a heslih- fulclimate and an abundance of cheap coal. Thousands of settlers are preparing to move into the country this spring. You can get choice lands at $4.00 to $6.00 per acre on easy payiments. If you are interested write for descriptive maps to D. W. CASSEDAY, 802 Guaranty Loan Building, | MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. AGrand Farming Country aoscoeesceceseso2ca72 FOR 14 CENTS age Wo wish to gain this y ear 200,00 new customers, and fence offer 1 Peg. City Garden Beot, Ito 1 Pkg Earl'xt Emerald Cucumberlic ei ‘La Orosse Market Lettuce, 150 1 i) Strawberry Melon, 150 1 1 “ ly Ripe Cath: 500 a ar! ye Cabbay 0 a Eany inner Onion 106 8“ Briiliant Flower Seeds, 150 Worth 61.00, fer 14 cen! Bie Sbovel9 PI worth $1.00, we will together with our i . LAR FOTA: | olthiswating eile \ ; fe invite your trade, | know when you once try Saiz. | i} never do wit W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & 3.50 SHOES hin Worth $410 $6 With ofpermeskoen The Faggocaed have W. TL. Douglas’ name and pric stamped on bottom. ‘lake no substitute claimed to be as good. Your dealer te Eig fete Pakiner cap toe. Cat. free. | PST va W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockion, Mass. MINNESOTA COLi ECE OF PHOTOCRAPHY, 316 Nicollet Av.. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Pupils can enter at any time Rates given on application. | Paul on March 26 and Apsil 4 for 3 |___ EXGURSION RATES P to Western Canada and particulars as to how to seoure 16) acres of the best wheat-growing land on the continent railway are quoted for excu | Assinibvia, Suska c.e - 7 > d Alber a } Davies, 154% KE, Third St. St. Paul. Minn. | Sse elon Meacaee Sab ys GROMER iesiae H =) NEW DisCOVEA:, wives { 8) RO Sy quick relicf aud cvres wo.st | cases. Book of testimoniais and 10 PAYS’ treatmsnt | UREK. DR. M. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box E, Atizata, Gn. ; When Answering Aavertisements Kindly Mention Thie Ponce Ae s oA ) & ‘f ASTATE STREET SCENE ON A STORMY DAY. NOTE —Laxative Bromo-Quinine which is advertised on the large banner over State Street, Chicago, as represented above, is the only exclusive cold prescription sold by every druggist in the United States, Canada and in England. This is the sig- nature CG 4 of the inventor and plainly appears on every box of the genuine article. It is sold for 25¢ a box, and all druggists refund the money if it fails to cure, Sata) ae a ; ™ _

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