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Show t CAUSED BY VACCINATION. FARM (From the Journal. Detroit.1' MfcSl - ffvery one In the vicinity of Meldrup a kind-heart- friend, a natural HE EARLIER IN life a weed is destroyed the easier, and the smaller the 'damage ft w flf have' done, This is almost A Veed is a thief in the cultivated ground, intent on making a vigorous growth and robbing -- self-evide- - Joke That Is Not Bslf Tree. man's wife is out of town he writes a mournful letter, and then goes around 'and has a high old time. There is not much in that joke. It does not begin to do duty with the mother-in-lajoke, and that Is puahed far beyond its deserts. The fact is that out o f a dozen men whose wives are out of the city for the summer there will be at least eleven who are really lonely, and, in fact, put in a very miserable- - time. They do not feel willing to acknowledge it at first, and few like to have sympathy thrust upon them, but there are mighty few who do not in their hearts pay the highest kind of tribute to their n tves and wish for their return. Washington Star. w Word Which fihjrm Not t The number of English words whicl have no rhyme in the language is very large, - Fivo or six thousand at least are without rhyme and consequently can be employed at the end of the verse only by transposing the accent, . coupling them with an imperfect consonance or constructing an artificial rhyme out of two words Among the other words to which there are no rhymes may be mentioned month, silver. liquid, spirit, chimney, warmth, gulf, sylph, music, breadth, width, depth, honor, iron, echo. - . THE NEBRASKA STATE FAIR. Kate Special and Trains via the Bar 11ns ion Boats. Round trip tickets to Omaha at the one way rate, plus 80 rents (for admission coupon to the Btste Fair), will le on sals Sep-teer 13th to 20th, at Burlington Route stations, in .Nebraska, in Kansas on the Con ordia, Oberlin and St. Francis lines and in Iona and Missouri within loO ml.es of Omaha. Nebraskans are assured that the T5 State Fair wlU be a vast improvement on its predecessors - Larger more brilliant better worth seeing. Every one who can do so shoti'd spend State Fair week, the who e of it. in Omaha. The outdoor ceebratlons will be partlcu-,-l- v attra'tive, surpassing auvthlngof the kind ver te'ore undertaken bv any western city. Every even in r, Omaha will le aflame with eetrie lights and glittering The propageants will parade the street. 1st gram lor the evening ceremonies Monday, Kept, ltth Grand fc icy de Carnival. Tuesday. Sept 17th Ne1 raskas parade Wednesday, Sejt. . ISth MiJtary and civic r ararle' of 1 htirndav, Bert. 19th Kni-Parade, to to foLosed by the 'ieost Of Mondamia1' Pa'L Round trip t. kets to Omaha at the reduced rates sieve mentioned, as well as full information at out the Rnr.ington Route train service at the timeof the State Fair, ran tw had on application to the nearest B. ft M. K. R. agent. - -- ht v ' e Hoaifisskun' Excanto. On Aug. 29th, Sept, loth and 24th, 1808, the Union Pacific System will sell ticket from Council Bluffs and Omaha to point south and west in Net rack a and Kansas aso to Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and Idaho, east of Weiser and south of Beaver Canon, at exceedingly low rates. For lu Information, as to rates and limit, a; ply 1 to ' City Ticket Agent, AC. Dixji, - Farnam Omaha, Neb. A vein of coal five ieet thick was found 60 feet deep near Louisville, Ills. Among the books announced by for publication in Harper & Brothers by hepteraber i A Study of Death, Hi in Ilenry M. Alden, author of God World. The extraordinary success of Mr. Alden previous book, which pronounced 'the most successful work of religious thought of the season, and the most noteworthy book of a religious kind (in stvle as well as In substance) published in England or in insures a America "for many years. Suitable reception Tor A Study of Death a book wbolty uncommon, spiritual, hopeful and important The largest cut stone in the world is in the lemp.e of the un at iaalt ec. 1302 the rightful plants of their nourishment, says Prof. B. D. Halstead, who has made a Btudy of weeds and their treatment This work does not begin until the yonng plant establishes its roots In the soil and has spread Its leaves in the air and sunshine. If the weed Is killed before this point is reached, a double work 1b done, the theft has been prevented, and the weed is killed. The germination of the seed has provided the condition for easy destruction that would not have obtained had .the planttet remained snugly enveloped by the One of the best methods of ridding a soil of weeds Is to. arrange for rapid wholesale germlnation of the-we- ed seeds, after which the young plants should be promptly killed. But all weeds are not annuals; and if the soil is filled with those that live from year to year, other methods of extermination must be followed. Weeds get their living In the same way as other plants they need to have room in the soil for their roots, and space in the air and sunlight for the 6tems and leaves.1 Cut them off from these sources of food, and the means of performing the vital functions, and death sooner or later must follow. It Is evident that repeated removals of the portion above ground will continually weaken the plant, and It to this is added an occasional upturning of the roots, the weeds must die. Some of them will stand a great deal of torture, but it Is the only general way. There is no panacea for weeds, nothing that can be put on a field to kill them, unless it be a full and proper application of that which, for the lack of a better and neater name, is called This will not only kill the weeds, but also improve the cultivated crops. It is beyond reasonable expectation that alt annual weeds wilt be either killed in the seed or soon after germination; some tdodge the hoe, while othera will be missed by the rake, The next best thing is to keep them from needing. The perfection of a crop of seeds is the end and aim of the a hole existence of a weed, If one, for ex e ample. removes the large flower cluster of the carrot, there will soon be a half dozen to take Its place and hurry matters, In seeming fear that they may share the same fate before the seeds are matured. If a weed gets a late start, it spends very little time on stem building, but blossoms almost from the soil, and puts all its energies into the perfection of its seeds and the continuation of its species. A "pttsley plant will, if, left to Itself for a few days, ripen a million seeds, and do It without ostentation. Much depends upon the destruction of the last weed. If 999 are killed and the thousandth one left to enjoy the su perlor advantages which the destruction of the othera has given, it may be worse than if all had lived and struggled with each other through an n imperfect growth.' One and heavily-seede- d weed will leave large legacy for.evil in a rich field. It Is the few weeds that are left in the cornfields that, having had the best opportunities, do the mischief and continue the pests. Weed seeds have a remarkable way of disseminating themselves. One farmer, by every mean in his power, roots out the cursed' Canada thistle, while an adjoining field may be largely devoted to the propagation of this prickly pest The thistle ' seeds are provided with miniature balloons, by means of which they Are carried by the lightest winds and will find a fa d vorable place to grow in the field of the thrifty farmer. Therefore, in the extermination of these pests there must be an earnest and concerted action.- seed-coat- It is a common joke that when a ' TO Some t Illate About Cultivation of the bod and Fields Thereof Hor'k-alture- , Viticulture and floriculture. nurse, and an Intelligent and reEntd lady. To a reporter she recently talked at some length about Dr. William1 Pink Pills, giving some very Interesting la her own Immediate-kno- w marvelous cures, and the universal beneficence of the remedy to those who had osedjt , " I have reason to know. said Mrs McDonald, "something of the worth of this medicine, or It lias been demonstrated in my own Immediate family. My daughter Kittle Is attending high school, and has never been very strong since she began. I suppose she studies hard, and ahe has quite a distance to go every day. When the small-p- o broke out all of the school children had to be vaccinated. I took her over to Dr. Jameson and be vaccinated her. I never saw such an arm in my life and the doctor aid he never did. She was broken out on her shoulders and back and was Just as sick as she could be. To add to it all neuralgia set In. and the poor child was In misery. Sheds of a nervous temperament andBaturally she suffered most awfully. Even after she recovered the neuralgia did not leave her. Stormy days or day that we-- e damp or preceded a storm, she could not go out- - at all. She was pale anfl thin and had no appetite. . I have forgotten Just who told me about the Pink PUls, but I got some for -- her and they eured her right up. She - has a nice color In her face, eats and aleepa well, goes to achool every day. and la well and strong In every particular. I have never heard of anything to build up the blood to compare with Pink Pills. I shall always keep them In the house rnd recommend them to my neighbors. Dr. Williams1 Pink Pills for Pale People are considered an unfailing-specif- ic In such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus1 dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous of la grippe, headache, the after-effec- ts pale and salpalpitation of the heart,tired low complexions, that feeling resulting from nervous prostration; all from vitiated humors diseases resulting In the blood, such as scrofula, chronic are etc. also a specific erysipelas, They for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities and all forms of weakness. In men they effect a radical cure In all cases arising from mental worry, overwork, or excesses of whatever nature. Dr. Williams1 Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price (50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50 they are never sold in bulk or by the 160) by addressing Dr. WlHlams1 Medicine Co., Schenectady, X. Y. A GARDEN. MATTERS Oh. INTEREST AGRICULTURISTS. venue end Champlain street. Detroit, Mra McDonald, and many neighbor bat reason to feel grateful to her for the kind and friendly Interest She has manifested In cates of Illness. knowe She la AND t. u s. w-grease. cup-lik- well-grow- well-tille- Pruning Flowering Shrub. One of tfie first requisites to successful pruning is to be able to correctly between ahrubs which distinguish to ' be pruned In winter ought and those which ought to be pruned In summer. If a mistake be made In this connection, effects diametrically the reverse of those we wish to bring about will be the inevitable result Another Important requisite to Insure complete success U that Che various kinds of shrubs be pruned in the proper season. Owing, no doubt, to the pressure of work in the summer time, the pruning of flowering shrubs is too often neglected, and when ultimately attended to it is, a stated above, generally left to persons who, from lack of knowledge or through carelessness, cut away a quantity of wood, which, if left to the following spring, would produce a profusion of lossom. Let us take, for Instance, such shrubs as forsythias, viburnums, exochorda grandiflora, prunuses, many spiraeas, weigelas, etc., which flower in the spring or early summer. The proper time to prune such shrubs Is mediately after they bare done flowering. If the plant to be operated upon be young nd expected to grow larger In order to fill its place In a bed or wtcie, all that will be found necessary will be to jut away part of the previous years growth. Special attention wall,e efTcourse. have ro"b"pa5d to ttnrbat-ancof tho plant, and tbe'operator must, as far as circumstances will permit, strive to give it a natural and graceful form. - If the plant Raa attained the desired size, the old shoots can be thinned out and cut back to suit the situation and taste of the parties Immediately conctrneJ, and it will be. found tbat young shoots will at once develop and be in the proper condition to j leld an abundance of flowtya the ensuing year, A specimen can thus be kept in good shape and form for any. apparent many years without ' change in Itk Vlze. in a mixed shrubbery this method Is of great advantage, as it limits each plant to its allotted space and prevents it from encroaching on its neighbor, or obscuring from view many of the finer but less robust growing shrubs. Many people are under the impression that such shrubs as hardy-azsrlea- e, rhododendrons, etc., cannot be successfully pruned, but such is by no means the case. I have myself found Requite practicable, by judicious and careful pruning, to transform, in a few years, tall, gaunt, unshapely plantsfthe kinds just named into beautiful and desirable specimens. The pruning of this class of. shrubs should also be executed immediately after they have done flowering, and it will be found, as stated above, that young shoots will at once develop, and be.ta the proper .oomlttiou to yield an abundance of flowers when ' the appropriate time arrives. Later flowering shrubs, such as hydrangeas. Roginki hispfda, clerodendron, serotlnura, etc., should be pruned in the winter time. Summer pruning would indeed be highly injurious in this case, for the simple reason Vy cultlnx o( U y, .( kltrlKMj, ef lo,,, Highest of allia Leavening Power. A JO. Tb I colonial klti hens lasted in many country houses until about flftyyears ago. There are men and women still living who vividly describe their glories. They were lowv-wit- h heavy winrafters, lighted by small-panc- d dows, for glass wag a luxury those days. am -- lgp The chairs tad narrow, high backs and rush seats. There was, betddes, & rudely shaped settee. The great wood fire burned Its prodigious back log In the chimney, and Was never allowed to entirely die out. Banked with ashes in the evening, there wag always supposed to be a spark to rekindle Into new flamea la the morning, No Wug ago' a woman died whose prtde it was to say that, in the forty year of her wedded life the hearth fire never once went out. If go dire a mischance arose a child was sent to the nearest neighbor with a shovel to borrow fire, and from the glowing pine knot relighting was again possible. Along the walls were festoons of dried fruits and vegetables. Hams and sides of bacon bung from the rafters. The spinning wheel stood in a warm corner. One utensil, utterly obsolete was a covered pan, which was thrust .deep Into the hot coals, and withdrawn when its savory contents were deemed ready for the table. No such Johnny eakes are put together now as were baked before an open fire; no such Jellied Indian puddings, no such creamy mush as that sung by JoeLBarlow, Absolutely pure Confined Sound. - - The Intensity of confined toand i finely illustrated at Causbrook castle, tvle of Wight, whera there is a well 200 Uft deep and lOfeetin diameter.; The well has 14 feet of water in it, and Ike entire Interior from top a water is lined with smooth niawinry. Thislinlng so completely confines the sound that a pin dropped from the top can be heard very uin!y..tn .trike the. water, at a distance of lsj feet below. Another instame is cited from India, where workmen at waterworks often talk with those at the reservoir, 18 miles way, their telephone being an 18 inch main that is no longer used for conveying water. St. 'Louis Republic water long-handl- y, L. THOMPSON A CO , DrugeUts. Coo. la.-MHaU ) Catarrh Cure t the and only aura rure tor ealarrh they ever told. Druggists sell tt, T5o. M dvr-por- t. lvi Thl la IntrresUnc. The arrival in New York recently of a steamer from the Argentine Republic with a cargo of 129, WO bushels of flaxseed hag brought to light some interesting facts. It seems that quite a trade has been going on In seed from IS le tea-cupf- ul only department of a paper that should be dosed to A woman writer is ttie tnedieal- - unless of cou rse. 'fch SU S medical man. Lie goes on to say that the medical columns of any London weekly. It is easy to perceive, are conducted by aocompliahed experts, but a case has recently come under his notice where a young woman who had failed ns an art critic was set to answer tbs medical inquiries of correspondents on to a decia country paper. mal.ulutt was the exact mortality of the district, ha continues, but the proprietor sqid if she remained much longer on the paper he should have had no subscribers left Ons of ber replies was something like this! To Daisy-Tha- nks so much for your kind letter. Yes. It The mistake was mine. should .have been a quarter grain of strychnine Instead of a quarter of a pound for your father's complaint llow unlucky! Better luck next time, but I was so very busy. Yes. There is no better shop for mourning than - two-childr- plenty of exercise in tha open air. Her form glow with health aedTher raca bl&oma with Its beauty."!! ber system' needs tha Cleansing action of a laxative remedy, ahe uaee the gentle and pleasant liquid laxative, Eyrup of Figs. Month 4 Nome' mouths look like peaches and cream and some like a hole chopped into a brick wall to admit a new door or window. The mouth- - is a hotbed of toothaches, the bunghole of oratory and a baby1 crowning glory. It la patriotisms fountain hrad and the tool cheat. for pie, itltout it the politusian-woul- d be a wanderer on the face of the earth, and the cornetist would go down to an unhonorhd grave. It is the grocer's friend, the orator's pride and the dentists hope. Mammoth Kpring Monitor. HtttbrHfrilaafW KeUrr F1TIAtl rvelnicur JJV" ua W Jjf. kuuatdl Pr. IT1ln tt Urwwiay flml lw (4 l'i ASCii Humility is a virtue all la preach, none content to hear and yet everybody After six years' suffering, I wa cured by Ibo's Cure Mart I uownos, !WJ Ohio praised. Ava , Alie.heny, Ia., March 10, Vi. CiMrlfitt ! Ttttw wnyieiiu It im Mf wre ana kikmI tiuiurt fur Tr weaiuMM. tu4. A Daughter Cruel Joka. A atory Is being told of a young lady Tie Urgeat mammoth tuk yetdiwr4 who found a package of love letters wat Kiiteeii feet in length. that had been written to her mother TkM remove tbw by her father before they were mar- Hurt m tbr an nxrn t. Cmt u4 jnmp M jtm Um. ried. The daughter saw that she U n jo ca vnU tu them read and could have a little sport, to her mother, substituting her own The Nickel Plate road has authorized name for that of ber mother, and a fine its agents to sell tickets at greatly rerate to Albany, N. Y., on occayoung man for thatof her father. The duced mother jumped up and down in her sion of the meeting of the German Societies of the United btstes chair, shifting her feet, and seemed Catholic in that city, Sept. 15th to 18th, For her forbade and disgusted, terribly particular addresa J. Y. Calahan, Genl daughter to have anything to do with the young mew who would wnte autli Agent, 111 Adams Nt, Chieaga sickening and nonsensical slniT to a Love boots sot itli tbs ey es, but with glrk Mhen the young lady handed tbs mind, the letter to her mother to read the house became eo still that one could hear the grata growing in the back The Greatest fled leal Discovery of the Age. yard, roo-tic- e. " -- long-sufferi- A ftotvttoa Feaiid. vThe Boston Traveller says that a few weeks ago a Maine young man bought a pair of sock eotainmg a note saying the writer was an employee of ths Kenosha (IV is.) knitting works and wanted a good husband. Khe gave her name and. requested the buyer, if an unmarried man, to write with a view to matrimony. The young man who found the pnje considered the matter in all its phases and decided to wnta to' ths girl. Lie did. th answer with considerable anxiety he was at last rewarded with-- a curt letter slating that the girl was now the mother of and had been married four years, and the letter ha had answered had been written ever so long ago It was a "sock dollager," and ths young man hunted for a solution. 11s found lb The merchant of whom ha bought tha socks doesn't The Won Medical Writer. Tb Modern Bonnty A London, writer, with due respect for women journalists, thinks that the Thrives on good food and sunshine, with be mutilating that part of the shrub on Another vessel with & cargo similar which the flowers are produced. Win- to the one soon ter pruning is a comparatively more' The flaxseed,received, is due there is although reportdirty, simple operation than summer pruning, ed to be of good quality, and the price from the fact that at this season plants is to $1.28 per bushel, duty paid, can be cut back to almost any part, and theequal latter amounting to 20 cents per In the spring young shoots will break , bushel. Crurhers get a rebate on oil away and produce a profusion of bios cake exported, which makes the net soma at the proper time. about $1.20 paid for the South For shrubs having an .effect from price article. It Is Interesting to their fruit or foliage, such ns berberry, American note that two years ago America exI eunonyrous, callicarpa, mahonia, etc., would recommend winter pruning. If ported large quantities of flaxseed-n- ow she is Importing, trimmed in the summer time it gives which a them stunted appearance, ' Hawaiian Soli. Recent lnvestlga marg the beauty of their foliage at tlons and experiments go to prove that time when it shows to the best advanthe soil and climate of the Hawaiian tage and is most appreciated. It will be observed that In the fore- Islands are equally as suitable for the going remarks the pruning of flowering production of coffee as they are of shrubs Is simply treated in a general sugar and it is predicted that within a Of course, it goes without few years much of the land now enmanner. it would be almost impossi- tirely devoted to sugar raising will be that saying ble, and especially In a short article like given over to the production of coffee. the present, to lay down a bard and fast rule that would apply in all cases, Corn Pudding to be Eaten as a Vege-tabfor the fact is that In order to obtain the best results, each species requires Ingredient. Oue quart of grated of milk, a lump of special treatment, A thorough knowl- com. one edge of w hieh ean only be acquired by butter the size of an egg, a teaspoonful practice and training. If, however, the of salt, three tableepoonfuls of flour, hints given above be attended to, blun- three eggs, pepper. Mix all the Indering In pruning, and the failure and gredients well together; put It In a butconsequent thereon, tered dish and bake an hour and a halt disappointment can, to a very great extent, be averted, In not .too hot an oven. .To be eaten as and many a shrubbery can be trans- a vegetable. Spread with butter, if deformed from a chaotic mass Into a sired. thing of beauty at once pleasing to the eye and an ornament In the landscape Sponge Cake. One cup of sugar, ono American Cardening. cup of flour, three eggs, one teaspoon-fu- l baking powder, three tablespoons water. Stir yolks of eggs' with sugar; Destroying the UwUa Fly. W. C. Latta of - Purdue University add the water, then the flour with the gives the following advice: Owing to baking powder sifted la It and white the prevalence and destructiveness of of eggs well beaten last. This makes a the Ilesslan fly this year, concerted ef- smalt loaf, it Is well to double or forts should be put forth to prevent a treble the recipe. recurrence of its ravages upon the next Cucumbers have an unpleasant repuwheat crop. In order to prevent a serious attack of the fly the following tation of causing Indigestion. Hers Is measures should be adopted: a recipe for preparing cucumber salad 1. Thoroughly burn all which refutes this idea: Select very wheat stubble in which there is not a young cucumbers; bury them In Jce stand of young clover or grass. lofg enough to chill them thoroughly 2. Prepare very early a border, one through, or if In a hurry put them in a of two rodwide, around each field of pan with ice and salt with their skins wheat, and sow the same to wheat in on. Leave them until the very latest moment beforo using, then peel, slice August 3. Turn this border under very late, them just JqBt js thin s possible, and using a Jointer, following with roll at the moment of serving add oil, vineand barrow, and then sow the entire gar, salt and cayenne. Do not let them field. stand In the dressing, but serve at By taking this course many of the once. insects which escape the fire will be burled whn the early-sow- n border Is Form Note, -turned under, and the late sowing of With sheep, as with other stock, the general crop will avoid the earlier no breed that possesses all or is thore of attacks any remaining fly, All have their good only qualities. If these precautions are carefully and generally observed by the farmers the defects. Hessian Dy wiH not seriously damage Good pasture makes flesh and growth the next wheat crop. United effort Is more rapidly than dry food does. Renecessary to be effective. member this, and when you are growing young animals. Few Suggestions. The Good sheep, fully as much 'ns good mother will find this llet of Inestimable benefit during the whole trying stock of other kinds, will alwajs sellet It lathe scrubs and runts season: To remove fresh fruit stains falrrR stretch the stained portion of the goods that are bard to get rid of. On many farms sneep should be over a bad a and pour boiling water through it until the nutrk disappears. looked upon ta auxiliaries In keeping To remove old fruit stains, wash tie up the fertility of the land rather than stained portion of the goods In oxalic as a direct means of large profit. acid until clear. Rinse thoroughly in Indiscriminate breeding is one of the clear rain water, wet with1 ammonia, causes of lessened profits with sheep Grass stains as It unquestionably lowers the qualrinse again and dry. should be rubbed in either molasses or ity. Breed as well as feed the best alcohol until they disappear, and should should be the rule. be washed as usual Pink stains should Tlmldty Is a characteristic of the be soaked In lemon Juice, covered with sheep that should not be tampered salt and bleached In ttib sun,' If They with.' A wise sheepkeeper will use are on colored material they should b every means to calm his sheep and treated with oxalic acid In the same keep them so. way as old fruit stains. A mixture of The true rule for the right quantity d of powdered alum to two-thir- to feed to animals of all kinds is to of tartar Is also good for obsti- give them Just what they will eat up nate ink stain and others. Ink stains clean no more. You can only find out on carpets are removed most easily how much that Is from trial. with lemon Juice or oxalic acid. Wagon Every rule that baa been tried during grease, tar or pitch stains should be the ages for breeding to get a particular rubbed well with lard and then washed sex la live stock has failed. The conin the usual way. Colors which have clusion Is that there Is no certain way faded under the Influence cf acid may further to determine beforehand or to be restored by treating them with am- produce a given sex. monia and chloroform. --Colors changed - Our consul at Bradford, Great Britby alkalies may be restored by acid ain, complains that the American treatment farmer does not put tip his products In as good shape as such products are The bicycle has destroyed the sale of put up in France and even in Canada, more horiks than even the electric road and that therefore they pell for less ' than those from other sources. trs dcre, , one-thir- Latest U, S. Gov't Report Hanson's Kogie Cora alve." M ci at owner latund4 Ak WtmnMd riMltula SnooMlorlS The Century for September will ' KENNEDY'S . ff MEDICALDISCOVERY. con- of fiction writers, repre- tain three complete sketches by popular American senting three different sections of the country. Mra Mary Hsllock Foote powerful story of will contribute mining life in the far west entitled Miss Burak The Cup of Trembling. Orna Jewett will contribute a humorous story of the New England roast entitled All My bad Captains, and illustrated by Fape. The third is a Edroaring sketch, by Harry btillwell wards, of negro life in the sooth. It is entitled The Uum Swamp Debate, and is full of humor, and Is a faithful reflection of the characteristic of the negro race. Ticket st Rcdacad Hat Will be sold via the Nickel Tlate road on occasion of the meeting of the German Catbolie Societies of tha United States at Albany, N. Y., hepb 15th to 18th. For further information addresa J, Y. Calahan, UenY Agent, 111 Adam bb, Chicago. Bmall and steady gain irlng the kind of rb be that do not take ings and fly away. Filliard tab, seoml-hanheap. Apply to or ail III Life bos no B. lr, like f rodent ltth KL, b! casing sae for H. C. A kit, Omaha, Nek. friend. The Onward March KENNEDY, CF ROXBUNY, MASS, DONALD Hal discovered In one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cure every kind of Humor, from tlie worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He ha tried it in over eleven hundred case, and never failed except In two case (both thunder humor). He has now in hi possession over two hundred certificate of its value, all within twenty mile of Boston. Send postal card for cook. A benefit i always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure U warranted when th right quantity is taken. When the lung are affected it causes shooting pains, ilk needle passing through them, the1 tame with the Liver duct used the Bowels. This or by being stopped, and always disappear in t week after taking it Read the kbeL If the stomach is foul or billou tt win cause squeamish feelings at first' No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you caj get and enough of tt Dose, one tabiespoonful in water if bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. a Metzl7 Whsslq for your W&goncil of Courtcnipliou is A BT itfr yo f topped vhort by Ir. want, t t It M 1 tokick Ilcrtes Golden Med- firm ft I If fbfl widlwical Diwovcry. waited to havent Mm yuu . beyond reason, re- Uictee complete covery and cure, Although by many believed to be incurable, there is the evHjence of hundred of living witnesses to the' fact that, in all its earlier stages, consumption is a curable Not every disease. 'y' care, but a large of cates, and fjOgv'C believe, iully B8 per cent, are cured Discovery, by Dr. Pierce Golden Medical even after the disease ha progressed so far as to tndnee repeated bleeding from the lungs, severe lingering cough expectoration (including tubercular matter), great loss of flesh and extreme emaciation aud weakness. -- !) ft? tfme in n Mb toa to Y low who to fit vourrn$roft f r It n It n$r tnUa,f&ddr, ttwft- hoe-- , mt. Wwttfnf Jr, f tfrnn Cti vrfft A4lrto ICmptr Jf )f ill. f O. feus tt, f. (tfutoef witir-copio- u Cab ed Field Hog Fence, . tun us cm H and1,,?; rt c D u-- ft Kjt JU turns ildl, atsaca ftll dfftfifbkCft. IlUid - 6irdi;n ard Patbit f cr.cs, 1 Cs fcnca Co. 1 nn LOW 121 fie CaUAtufcjy HijHSte. DK Qutel to ikJaJtL t b 4L |