HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1903-05-22, Page 6W IT FHB T E
SI-ALVIN°TO
(New York
Men Zino Piave actually been on the
pint• of et/en-talon, whether in the
reet$:of a big city, le tbe jungles
1 South Americus in an open beat at
ea„ or on the mealy deserts of Au-
I'alia, give divergent ,.accounts of
heir feelings.
Their ,s,e i fes go to prove that dif-
er'ent mein feel eltarvition in differ -
t way.. Seine suffer intensely; oi.h-
r bairtily at all. 'Some feel acute
hysacal piiu, while the sufferings of
!hers al.parr -to be purely mental.
A sailor whose schooner was
reeked on a voyage from the Cay-
man Islands to Jamaica a few years
ago, and spent .nearly two weeks in
opeusaboat without food, was ask-
ed hos, be felt during that time.
"1 hardly felt at all after the first
two days,' he said. "1 seemed to out-
grow the longing for food, and I do
mo remember suffering any particu-
larpain.
"1 drifted along in a dreamy sort
way, .no caring what happened.
eta when I saw the ship which
eked me up I was not wildly ex-
ted.:I was too faint to worry.
Theonly, craving I remember dist-
tiy was for a glass of rum and
oke of tobacco, and that was
strange, because I am practi-
• a teetotaller and do not
tly care for smoking."
man who is now receiving a big
ay in New York had a hard time
he first came to this city, and
r starved. For days and weeks
er he did not have a decant
and, by his own account, 'he
ed tortures.
"I could not keep still," lie said.
Often, when I was frightfully hun-
alnd Hadn't a cent to buy any-
i.Ehi g, I would go to one of the free
libraries and try to force myself to
sit down and rest.
"But it was no use. Some irresist-
ible impulse would drive me out into
e streets again, anct I would pace
';theme restlessly for hours, hungrily
:!watching the restaurants and won-
dering when I would get another
•square meal.
"The faces of the people in the
crowded streets got on my nerves.
Zrlaces, faces, nothing but faces ! They
streamed by me continually, day and
might—not one of them familiar ; not
one of them kindly.
"It seemed as if it was my fate to
ietazld- still and see that awful pro-
oeissioar offaces flit by forever. They
did net strike. me as belonging to
renal people; they seemed like the faces
of gfl.eets . ;When I dropped off to
sleep at night I used to see those
faces in my dreams, and for months
alter I •became prosperous they
haunted me day and night like a 4
nightmare.
My lruuger caused me the keenest f
phvele fe torture. Every bone in my
body ached my head throbbed vic-
iently I .had tc'rrib> t. peals in my
stoinauh, and half the tile.( I felt
as if I was just going to faint.
" :1s soon as hunger fairly got hold
of me host every ounce of energy.
I could not look for work, as I had
been doing; I could not even beg.
" Two or three times I asked men
for money in a timid, feeble way, but
when they turned aside I did not
persist. A poor, ill -dressed woman
gave me e. dime one night, although
I did not ask her. I got a good meal
with it, but afterward I felt hun-
grier than ever."
An orebel hunter who nearly per -
/shed in a 'Venezuelan jungle two
!years ago and lost five of his men
lby starvation would night after
;night when he went tel sleep fain-
t/cued and exhausted dream •of the
markets that he had seen in various
parts of the world. He would behold
I,esidenhall market in London piled
!high with .thousands of carcasses
and tons of meat ; and just as he put
.out his hand to grasp a leg of beef
'or a. sirloin steak, the vision would
fade, and in. its place would be the
gayly Colored market of Panama,
with bananas, pineapples and or-
anges, glistening brightly in the
tropical sunlight. Those, too, would
vanish when he tried to snatch them;
amid be would awake hungrier and
'store miserable than ever.
" I could have borne the real hor-
saIr
ors of the days a thousand times
better," he said, "if it had not been
for the tantalizing miseries of the
piglets."
This same ,explorer, during the
/Month of semi -starvation which he
experienced, Guttered constantly from
violent headaches, dull gnawing pains
In the stomach, and bad attacks of
alarial fever . And all the time he
oiuid think of nothing but food,
which increased his misery tenfold.
A graduate of Oxford University
11
EATH
gave iu all leis prospects in life some
Sears ago to become a social worker
among the poor of the east end of
London. In order to get an idea of
what it reit like to be really poor
lie lived for six dae s on 12 cents,
eating nothing more than one tiny
two -cent loaf each day. As a re-
sult, he nearly starved, and was ill
for a week afterward.
"It would iaot have been very
truing, he said, "if 1f 1 had not seen
food all round me—in the bakers'
shops, in the restaurants, lu the
butchers' and in the green -gropers'.
I would walk about the streets for
hours, watching the people go in-
to 'rhe restaurants for lunch and
wondering what they were going
to eat.
"By the end of the third day I
wads in a half comatose state. Prac-
tically, I had lost my identity and
my memory,
1 wa.s always thinking about food,
but in quite a detached sort of way,
as if it were nothing to do with
me. I thought of it as an untra-
velled man might think of India.
"My reason told me that in three
days I could eat as mueIL as 1 liked,
but my mind could not take hold of
that fact. It seemed as if I should
always be eating one tiny loaf a
day end watching other people go
into restaurants.
"On the fifth day I was utterly.
cowed. If a man .spoke to me I trem-
bled and could not answer, but
slunk away. Every hit of moral,
fibre and every ounce of physical
pluck was gone."
Three Stomachs on
a Week's Vacation.
Eat, drink and be merry while.
giving the digestive apparatus q•
healing, wholesome rest 1
It can be done by the use of
DR. YON STAN'S
PINEAPPLE TABLETS.
Pineapple will digest meat in a
dish at 103e. The rest cure is the
best cure, the only cure for dyspep.
ria. That's the whole story except
that tbe large tablets digest food, the
small ones tons up the digestive
apparatus,—Price 05 cents.
Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder;
opens a new tunnel in a choked up
nostril and lines it with a new mem-
brace. In ten minutes will relieve
cold or catarrh or cure the most
obstinate headache. A quick cure—
ts cafe cure—not a slow remedy. 17,
Ten Precepts.
Men precepts are set forth tor
young women in the girls' issue of
Northwestern, the students' publics -
After tins experience, the grade- tion of the Methodist University.
ate in the school of starvation took Miss Edna Bronson is the young
keen interest in discovering the woman who ftvimed them, and here
sensations of other men who had • they axe: "Thou, shalt not be thy
in the course of his philanthropic ' oven god. Thou sheet not make for
work and he discovered that in no; thyself gods of clothes, money, social
two eased were their emotions Position or high marks. Thou shalt
alike. not talk for the (sake of talking—
gone hungry, He met many of them l
"Starvation," he was fond of sav-
ing, "is a mental rather than a phy-
sical pain. its principal terrors are
connected with the mind and the Im.
agination.
"The educated and refined man, he
meaning nothing and saying .noth-
ing. Remember 'the training of thy
childhood. Be not ashamed of thy
father and mother when they come
to visit thee—tor of the girl from
thine own town who did not make a.
who has seen better days, Ls the . fiat. Thou shalt not kill time, Thou
man wlle suffers most when he goes t shalt not seek after 'the attentions
short of food. The sufferings of a I of the young men—let them do the
starving man are really a matter • seeking. Thou shalt not steal thy
of temperament. If he late not a neighbor's work. 7111ou shalt not lie
--unnecessarily. Thou shalt not covet
(nor borrow) thy nei,ghlsor's finery."
highly strung temperament, he
done not suffer much.
"The more animal a man is, the
more comfortably he can starve.
Some laborers who nearly died of ex-
posure and lack of fool have told and every form of itching,
m(a. Than they t,,,,.a,... !suffered at f'• bleeding and protruding piles,
Wrens have guaranteed ie See tea -
Pi@
To prove its you etbat Dr.
h Chase's Ointment is a certain
irltiD and absolute cure for each
all. They soon drifted into a semi- the mannfac
conscious state, which dulled their tlmonials in the daily press and ask your eagle
physical bore what they think o f it. You can use it and
pain, and they had not get7 our money back it not cured. 600 a box, at
sufficient intelligence to substitute all dealers or EDhMANs0N,BAAES & Co.,Toronto,
the, pangs of the imagination." Dr0'Ohase s Ointment
A direct negative to this theory is
given by a professor of an Austral-
ian university, who narrowly es- Bob's Appetite.
raped dying of starvation (luring an During the dinner hour at a certain
expedition into the desert country Largo works some of the men were
of, Central Australia, descusslets market -gardening as a
"1 ani sure," he said, "that I felt profitable hobby. Several of them had
the pangs of hunger meets less keenly allotments near at band, and each,
than my liiack trackers and Servants of course, considereu that his own
did. I had beard they could go for particular plot of ground was the
long 1eriods without food, hut the best kept. "I think myself," remarked
second day we put ourselves on short an imeartial bystander, en being ap-
commons they complained bitterly pealed to, "that old Jim K --es is the
and appeared to he in extreme pain. best 'bit." "What 19 shouted one of
"At the time I suffered nothing, nor the mem. "IT guarantee to eat all
did I suffer until some days after- Jim has in the place 1" At that mo-
ward. Inde! d, although two or three meat old Jim ]i-- Wessel; appeared,
of my men were almost dead from' and at one took up the challenge.
lack of food, by the time we reached ""'through," he added, "in doing so I
the nearest settlement I really sur- didna .hank ye wad turn cannibal,
fered very little. Bob!" "Cannibal!" ejaculated Bob.
"The only unpleasant sensations I "Wet d'yor mean ?" "%heel, y'know,"
CM recall were occasional bad head- said the other, dryly, "My owd don-
key's down yonder I"
aches, slight pains in the stomach,
and now and then a feeling of faint-
ness. At other times I reit exception-
ally strong, although I had eaten
hardly a scrap of food for days.
"Iii I
Were to judge of my own feel.
ings, I should say that the agonies
of starvation n are meets exaggerated.
But the sufferings of my men were
terrible enough. I asked one of them
how he felt when ho was lying on
the ground one evening, too weak to
move.
Boss," he replied, "me fall of
devils clawin' art me Inside."
"I gave the poor wretch a. little
brandy, but he declared it made him
feel worse.
"I did not find that hunger in any
way affected my mental powers. On
the contrary, it seemed to Improve
them. I was able to take the keen-
est interest in my scientific work.
"Possibly the factt, that I had some-
thing to occupy my mind saved me
from suffering as the others did.
They, poor wretches, had nothing to
debut to thank of foods I believe that
was! why they suffered so, keenly "
Skirts V ell Cat.
There is hardly anything so
octant. in dress as the out of the
kirts, and here are some hints which
Sal let you into the secret of the
ewe ones; In the first place, even
he soy-ea.liecl long gowns are short -
r both black and front, A four -inch
ape is the right thing, n.nd they
early all have the yoke piece,
,pleb requires the most careful fit-
ing. This wanders the skirt im-
ssible for the home dressrnaker,
ally of the skirts have a pointed
oke back and front, and :almost all
re infinitesinla.liy tucked and gath-
red, a, perfect maze of elaboration.
t is a necessity that they be per-
ectly plain about the hipe but from
hat point they flare in the saueie
st fashion, some measuring quite
ive and a half yards at the hem.
Wash. Star.
ook's Cotton Root Compound.
Lrttdiese Favosiee
•-'per.P so the only safe, reliable
�.
2i regulator on which woman
tan depend. "in the Hour,
and tune of teed."
Prepared it two degrees of
strength. No. 1 and No. 2.
No, 1.--F'or ordinary cases
Is by tar the' best dollar
Medicine known.
dicln
!To. .2---k1'or special eases 1d degrcos
lihrongeir—three dollars per box.
tadoes---eek your tlru';'gist for Ceols'e
flo toe Root ree'n 5YnuaitA. Take no othee
to all pills, sathstures awl imitations are
iangerous. No. 1 and No, 2 are sold and
ecominendod'b, all driesseete in the Deealltlion of Canada.. Mailed to an addreodl
el receipt of ries litrelour 2 -cent postage
ltainpo,; (fele Ceoia Company,
Wietaperi On .
ht
WALK AND RETAIN HEALTH
Judicious Pedestrianism is the Best
Exercise for All Classes.
Walking is the simplest, and most
natural and the most wholesome of
all exercises. No athlete ever trains
for a contest, no matter what tits
nature may be, without walking a
can&fderable distance in the open air
each day. Many keep in vigorous
health by this alone, and no matter
what other exercise you take . you
must walk. But, first of all, learn
how to waJk. A great many people
walk in an aimless, shuffling man-
ner and secure but little benefit from
the exercise. In walking for exercise
the effect IS better if the kind Is
directed .'toward same pleasurable
end. Walk with consciously directed
movement until you have ..brought
every muscle under perfect control'
of your will. eloping along in an
aimless, : lackadaisical manner does
little good ,'physically and harms one
mentally.
The necessity of maintaining a pro-
per, erect position of the body must,
says a wrier in the April Cosmopoli-
tan, be borne in mind. Bear the
'weight on the .balls of the feet, keep
the shoulders back and down, the
closet high, but do not hold the abdo-
men inward, as is tacl:,ht by many
athlete inetructorell Lot it be re-
laa;ed for this part of the body should
move in end out with each breath.
There should be perfect freedom to
breathe norinally.—New York World,
' teetre1 writer doesn't necessarily
ovp .•
Write
somethins b 1
Keep Minard's Liniment in the
house.
Touch of Style.
Every woman knows what an im
ortant finish to a
own i
a� g esu supplied
ed
by a pretty bit of neckwear. Never
Zva,s that luxury more easily attain-
able than now. '1b begin with there
never were so many dainty stock
callers obtainable for 25 or 50 cents.
Next the leftovers, of which every
woman has a box or drawerful
tucked away, the bits of ribbon and
laee and velvet, can all be utilized
in making up an attractive adorn-
ment for the throat. Insertion divid-
ing strips of gay colored velvet is
one pretty thought. Medallions of
embroidery or lace, appliqued upon
satin ribbon, form another pretty
stock. Frequently embroideries
]Sought by the yard can be separat-
ed into medallions, which are just
now se popular. By the way, those
top collars are terribly tricky things,
If you wear one, be sure to attach
It firmly where it belongs. Not in-
frequently one sees an unconscious
maiden whose top collar has wriggled
one end free in the back, and has,
therefore, ceased to ee ornamental.
—Philadelphia Ledger.
Wil should you gray
4'4Cec to 65s for your
woven fence when /vt;lan,
can weave it yourself
t a cont of 25o to 35c
per rod.
iSelkirk
tit enIpiswhuill a tfence taiat
you bay ready woven, Oar Steel Gates
are Strong, Dltrahle and Cheap. A1.
though improved for rata, they are no
clearer than inferit r gates.
Write fora catalogue.
$Eii.T lrlellt FENN= 6= CO,
a«r.k t °..C1'ee"t enema, ibxat.
DEARLY LOVE ThE.IR EASE.
Mexican. Peasants Have a Chronic
Aversiosi to Work of filly Solt.
The peen, or peasant, of Mexioo is
probably the laziest mortal under
the sun, He seldom leaves his home
1 and om1y; under the most extraordin-
ary circumstances can be be induc-
ed to performany labor. It is very
difficult to induce one to go to a part
of the republic where labor is scarce
and wages double that.. or his own
district. Large contractors ' have
therefore resorted to an expedient to
secure la,bor. They,y oftengo and en-
gage a whole village of peasantry)
from the interior and move them all,
men, women and ehildren`, to the
scene of their Labors. The welathyj
ranchman has 'often to resort to
this expedient to secure laborers to
work his land or attend 'to his cat-
tle. For this same reason every
ranch of large dimensions In Mexico
has several Small villages upon it
which consist wholly of people and
their families employed upon the
ranch.
As the Mexican peasant is careless
about money matters, so he is care-
less about everything he does. Very
rarely has he any, interest in bis
work, and so it is usually 'tnery, bad-
ly, done. He cannot understand whys
anyone should want to hurry or to
do more than he actu'a11y has to do.
If you leave him alone a,nd expect
him to work in your absence there
are ninety, -nine, chances out of 100
that you will be mistaken. In all
probability, he will sit down and pat-
iently wait for your return, and
smoke the Inevitable cigar to pass
away the time.
As the peasant is with his work,
so he is with his famil'yland bis
home. In most cases, though he loves
them In his own waxy, he takes no
thought of them. The wife has there-
fore to exert herself to make both
ends meet and she generally does.
Stratford, 4th Aug., 1893.
MESSRS. C. C. RICHARDS & CO.
Genttlemen,—My neighbor's boy, 4
years old, fell- into a tub of boiling
water and got scalded fearfully. .At
few days later his legs swelled tot
three times their natural size and,
broke out in running sores. His par-
ents could get nothing to help him+.
till I recommended MINA.RD'S LIN-.
A1l'1l`NT, which, after using two;
bottles, completely cured him, antis
P know of several other cases around
here almost as remarkable, cured)
by the time Linamen't and I
can truly say,. I never Jian-
died a medicine wailed.), has had as
good a sale or given such universal!
satisfactloly.
M. BZ!3 11tH,
General Merebant.
Alarming Figures.
N. Y. Weekly.
Old Lady—I feel awful nervous. Are
you sure we won't have any acci-
dents?
Conductor (fond of statistics) —
Every person who rides on a. rail-
way takes one chance in 1,491,910
chances of being killed.
Old Lady—La sakes! Willy didn't
that rascally agent tell me so he.
fore I bought my ticket ?
HOW'S THIS ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars' Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hail's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. HENEY & CO., Toledo, 0.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 10 years and believe him
perfectly honorable in all business trans-
actions and financially able to carry out any
obligations made by their firm.
WEST a TIauAx, Wholesale Druggists, To-
ledo, 0.
WALDING, $INNAN h MAnvIN, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, 0.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,act-
Ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur-
taxes of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price -76c per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
Hall's Family Pllls are the best.
Fond of Variety.
Elmira Telegram.
t'1'he Damsel—But this is such a
queer, unromantic way to propose to
a girl. Mr. Weilup. In the daytime,
and on the way, to a suburban train I
(The Widower --I know it, Miss de
Muir. I've ,generally .proposed whilst
taking a. moonlight ride With the
girl, but I thought I'd go at 1t dif-
ferent this time, just for variety.
Lever's Y -Z (Wise Head) Disinfectant Soap
Powder is a boon to any home. It disin-
feote and oleans at the same time,
ae
Looking tinder the Wrong Bed.
Philadelphia Ledger.
'Poor old Miss Maden came near
getting herself in trouple last night.
She started, awarding to her usual
habit, to look under the bed—"
"Yes, yes. Well ?"
"Well, her bed at the time hap-
pened to be an upper berth in a,
sleeping -car."
His own reflection shames' the man
whose face Is branded with Eczema. Let him
anoint his inflamed itchingskin with Weav-
er's Comte and purity his
rablood with Weav-
er's Syrup.
Just Fun.
Johnny --How old was Methuselah,
aura tie ?
Auntie—Nine hundred years old.
"And how old ase you, auntie?"
"Thirty, my child."
"Thee papa reckoned wrong by
eight lsundr'ed and seventy years. He
said you ware as old as Methuselah."
.1ss—Is she so 'very pl;ritn-looking ?
Teles—Well, I should think so. Why,
she girl:' who wont to sellodi with
her svouldln't even let her appear in
the photograph taken + of all the
pupils. —_—
"It sounds funny to hear you talk-
ing that way. When you were at
college you didn't believe in eternal
punishment at ail,"
know, bat I didn't( have any 000-
Mies them,". •
"Do you allow drunken people on
tire trail ?" asked a fussy clergyman
at a New York elevated station the
other day.
„•.
�olne:tirue,s, but not wisest., they are
too drunk,", replied the brakeman,
"just take a pat near the middle of
the car n keep quiet, and you'll
be all right," I
A. Man Who inelets upon occupying
two seats in a Iniliron,d train ought
to feel . like a, eannibu,l when he IS
eating pork.
" Pure soap I" You've heard
the words, In Sunlight
Soap you have the fact.
ZNISYZ
Ask for the Oefa,goniilar, 231
Behind the 1Footlights.=
Chicago News,
Jack—Miss Shapeleigh made her de-
but a,s a burlesque queen Last night.
Tom—Did she come out with boner?
Jack—Well, she didn't come out
with any too much on her.
A RECOGNIZED FACT,
It Is universally conceded that to
properly appreciate a trip to New
USE
ISSUE NO. 21, 19O
Mrs. Winslow's bombing Syrup should
always be used for Children Teething. I6.
soothes the child, softens; the game cures wind
colic and is the best .remedy for Diarnccsa.
LEARN PROFESSION
IN FIFTEEN DAYS
by mall so you can make from ham ro Tmx
n0LLnne A DAY. For particulars write
A. HANSEL, M. H., q„® North
Hamilton, Ont.
LADY AGENTS WANTED
yea
T1J Al.VWAYSRE
.4 ealn'r`•®ur. 'owr un 44.
a.sul aNADJtr SIrnR
Best Settler Skirt Supporter and Waist Adinster
ever Introduced. Sena at sight. Good profit.
Sand 25 cents for sample and terms to aCenta.
BRUSH' & CO., DEPT. ]3., TORONTO.
York or Boston, one must take the
hest road. That road is the New
York Central.
A Very Hard Substance.
Exchange.
Tommy—Pop, a diamond will out
glass, will it not ?
fI'ommy's Pop—Yes, my son ; and it
has even been known to make an
impression on a woman's heart.
Minard's Liniment Lumberman's
east ,
Used to Such. Treatment.
A German clergyman, who was tra-
velling, stopped at a hotel much
fequented by wags and jokers. The
host, not )being used to having a
clergyman at his table, looked at him
with surprise ; tbe guests used all
their raillery of wit upon him with-
ut eliciting a remark. The clergy-
man ate his dinner quietly, appar-
ently without observing the jibes and
seers of his neighbors. One of them,
at last, in despair at his forbear -
ace, said to him s
Well, I wonder at your patience.
Have you not heard all that bas
been said to you ?"
" Oh, yes, but I am used to it. Do
you know who I am 7"
"No, sir."
" WelI, I will Inform you. I am
chaplain of a lunatic asylum ; such
remarks have no effect upon me."
Ask far Minard's and take no other.
Could Have 'Waited.
;AI certain suburbanite was accus,
tomed to bring home some little re-
membrance for his little girl, who
always ran up to him and put Igen
hand in his pocket, expectantly..
Once, however, he was delayed,and
at the last moment found that he
could not catch the express train
that he always took if he stopped to
puroha,se anything. 'When upon Isis
arrival borne Isis little daughter
started to put her hand in his poc-
ket he shook Isis head.
"I bad to disappoint you to-uight,
dear," he said, and seeing her quiv-
ering lip he went on;
"It was this wady. At the just
moment a man come into my office
which kept me later than usual and
I only just had time to catch my
train. Now;, if I had stopped as
usual to get you something I would
haste had to wait an hour for an-
other train which would have made
me get home,;too late for dinner."
His daughter thought a. moment
a,nd said;
"Well, papa, I could have waited."
DEAD FLIES TICKLE NO NOSES
It le the little worries that both-
er us, and nothing is more annoying
than to have flies buzzing all around
you, settling first on your ear, then
on Wear nose or face, particularly)
waren you .wan.t to restTo brush)
them off is useless, they return at
once. The use of Wilson's• Fly Pads
is 'the only sure way to get rid of the(
litatle pests. Buy a packet and clear
you.re Krouse in a few hours.
President Roosevelt and his wife
mot each other for the first time in
the nursery, and played at "horses"
and trundled their hoops together.
By and by Miss Caron w,ent to Eu-
rope to finish her education, and
Roosevelt went to college, and when
he left it to begin his career he mar-
ried a Miss Lee, who died three
years later, leaving him a widow-
er with one little girl. Then he came
across Miss Caron again just by
chance. All these years she had
been faithful to her first pinafore
love. • Slo he married her, and they
in true story -book style have lived
happy ever after.
1,000 MILE AXLE GREASE
it Has No Equal
Manufactured only by
THE CAMP ELL MFC, CO.
of HAMILTON, ONTARIO.
For sale by all loadin es
May Excursions
Hamilton to Mont-
real, Single 07.00
itt. 012.00
Toronto toMontreal
Single $6,I1t. $11.60
Also to intermediate ?abate. Meals and berth
included. Steamed e leave Mondays and
Thursdays in May --Hamilton 3.p.m.,Toron-
to 7.30 p.m. Further information apply to
agents or H. FOSTER CHAFFEE, Western
Passenger Agent R. & 0., Toronto.
The Okl Reliable Remedy
for Spavins, Ringbones, Splints,
Curbs and all forms of Lameness. The
use of a single bottle may double the selling
price of your horse.
GOOD FOR EiVl;7RYTHING.
DR, 11. 3, KENDALL Co.,
Dear Sirs ealistoe, F.M.. June sI, rpo,
I have been using your Kendall's Spavin Cure for some
time. I use from twelve to fifteen bottles a week and find
it an excellent remedy forSpavins. Sweeney, tulle
and all Cubs and Swellings. I have two hundred
head ofherses in my Cr,,a
I eneloso a stamp !or your "Treatise on the Horse
and his Diseases."
Yours very truly. 1I, 'W LAIRD,
Thousands of been report equally good or su•
perior results from Its use. Price 51; six for ss.
As a liniment for family use it has no equal. Aek
your druggist for 1rendN1'a Spavin cure, also
' A Treatise on the Horse," the book free, or
address
QR. 6.1. KENDALL CO., ENOSOURG FALLS, VI.
wanwaslawocarsawasmarrearatatszna
Feminine `Wisdom.
Chicago Tribune.
" How did you ever manage to get
on the goaod side of that crusty old
uncle of yours 7" asked Fan.
"Fed him the things he liked when
he came to visit us," replied Nan..
"The good side of any man ie his
inside,"
Millard's 'Liniment is used by Phy-
sicians.
0troaleantidin is said to be the
most deadly poison on earth. It Is
made from an African plant by ether
and alcoihlol:
Jut what ft was 25 years, ago,
is now®
The prompt, sure cure for
1". E E S . 'r ST414 Ess
f?rrse' 255, and SOc.
i WY.IP.^tif•.1dN, ti :X,',!f✓(;; AMM VON ?,t r•. Jr.
F.61R*a4"flirltali'9Smron7 ;axRAv� mlyes•
ides Blood urjfjer
is the best Tonic for
arses and Cattle
It puts cows in perfect health, and increases
the now of milk.
DICTA'S gives horses a smooth glossy coat,
and puts life and spirit into them.
Try a package with any run-down animal
you may have and you will be convinced.
60 cerate tZ package.
Lin.MiNG, Wets & CO., nesters, EVIONT/In:AL
hist'fi;,',iitU+ lllp,it Pity s i' i"I'Ai r,.fY,;( . •rote. 7'iau f�"wr