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About Washington County hatchet. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1895-1896 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1896)
W A S H IN G T O N C O U N T Y FROM T H E CORN. Baking r t i 2 h e S t O < ta ^ l n ¿ o v e r n m , n t « - ^ J L a te s t A b s o lu te ly P u re H llliu c th e f o x . Vc had limited up und down the (idea [theKTeater part of uilay, aud finally, Jth the scent at its hottest, we seemed ■have lost the fox iii the ueigbborhood 1 a little cottage, with a pigsty tacked I to it. The hounds were giving tongue bund the pigsty, while its occupants bleated with no less noise. The liub- L WU 1 1 Mil mi linn I and tha tumult ill Used tenfold when the second wliip bnlml the sty palinge and hegau to ircli the tenement for the missing fox. i was no sign o f him. Still the mills kept giving tongue around the Idlin g as if the fox were there. The Hp, after drawing the pigsty blank, e ked at the cottage door and, receiv- j no answer, entered. The sole inmate Is a bedridden old woman, who pro- Ttedwith vehemence equal to the pigs’ Limit this invasion o f her privacy, king that no fox could possibly have lie 'll, fur tho door had not been open- |sinee her grandson had gone out to Irk in the morning, rhe man in pink was about to retire 111 apologies when a bold hound burst through the door, with u terrible jNt of melody. He stopped to ask no istinns of the poor old lady, but went ll-r the bed like a tiger. More hounds llied in; there was a «entile and a ■y under the bed, shrieks from the fcr old woman that lay on it, furious Ith notes of the hounds— and in a lniil or two all was over. It took a I] of silver und consolation to make ] lady realize that the hounds hail not si her as w ell as the fox. She still Itestod solemnly that tho fox eonld | have entered the cottage because the r bail beeu shut all the time, but it i obvious enough, from the soot in ess Ihe old fellow 's coat, that his way in been, not through the door, but Ini thochimuey. — Mucmiilau’s Maga- N ot to lie Done. t was in n Brixton tram car. Ho took a piece of paper on winch there v many fiRuren aud «aid : l l ’ve been trying to invent-a puzzle but on the market, but I can only ^et far with it. ” I What is it?” asked the other. iTIns represents a tram car. There 12 men on one side and 8 womeu on (other. ” f I see. You want to get 10 on a side. ” I No, I don’t. Another woman gets Jhe car, making 9 women to 12 men. ” ■Exactly. ” l^he must have a seat. She looks at 12 men, and” — (And one of them gets up and offers In seat, of course. ” ■ Yes, of course. Now what I want is Ilace her among the 8 women. ” p ly dear s ir,” said the other, as he *d away, ‘ ‘ yon had better tackle the ^leni of perpetual motion. It can’t one. If there were but 7 womeu it Idn ’t be done. Either make your 9 Jen get off and take cabs, or let one Ihe men go on the top and catch V ’— London Fnn. | A ll the V ow el In One W ord . ere are but six words in the Eng- Kangnage which contain all the vow - mu regular order— viz, abstemious, Jiious, anenious, facetious, materious It raged ions. There is but one word Jh contains them in regular reverse • aud that word is dooliteral. sides the above there are 149 Eug- | words which contain all the vowels Tegular order. Twelve o f these be- vith the letter a ; 7 with b, 23 with 1 with d, 14 with e, 4 w ith f, 7 with [with h, 6 with i, 2 with j, 2 with with u, 2 with o, 13 with p, 1 i q, 5 with r, 9 with s, 2 with t, 15 I n and 6 with v . — St. Louis Re- ■c. IT T K K THAN K R F IN R D GOLD pily comfort. This unspeakable boon Is 1 to m«nv unfortunates for whose ail* » Howtetter’s Stomach Bitters is a prompt* llpful remedy. The dyspeptic, the rheu- . the nervous, pprsons troubled with bill- ns or chills and fever, should lose no time Piling themselves o f this comprehensive p'nlal medicine. It promotes appetite aud ly slumber. Rauger, when is a woman in the prime ?” ' Well, Mrs. Badger, when she's 85.” I n m a n ? ’ “ Oh, anywhere fr o m ‘21 to 80.” I k NTS W A N T E D . Best cement on V new discovery ; everybody wants it. Is china, g lass; takes place o f mucilage ■me and office; sample 10c. Address S ta te M fg. Co., box 198. The Dalles, Or. a M ~ 'V J I ■ H ■ Si if a A I _ ■ ■ ■ a A k l FYom TT.S.Jmimal of Medirtn* Prof. W . H. Peeke, who makes a specialty of 1 Epilepsy, has without doubt treated and cur- ed more cases than any living Physician; his W success is astonishing. W e have heard of cases of ao years’ standing a t f c u r e d by hhakeapearb’a lirroiu«». The fact that boys acted his heroines may have impelled Shakespeare to pre sent hi« Rosalind, Imogen, Julia and Viola in doublet aud hone, because in male attire the boys must have looked and acted their best. It is more easy to conceive a male representative of Lady Macbeth than of Juliet, but we, with our advantages, can never be wholly reconciled to the idea of a woman played by a man. The greatest revolu tion in the history of the modern drama was the introduction of women upon the stage. This change was caused uot merely by art considerations, but arose in part from the laxity of morals aud of maimers at the restoration; but never theless what a mighty and beneficent, change it w as! What gifts and grace, what loveliness, purity, tenderness, genius, charm, have been shown to the delighted world since women have been played by women within the confines of the mugio wooden O ! How did, how could, the players of Shakespeare’s time procure boys of such intelligence, beau ty, delicacy of mind, that they could worthily personate pure, lovely, noble women? Could we now tolerate any youth in such parts ns Imogen, Desdemoua, Ju liet? Still it must be remembered that the boys who first acted such characters were probably trained, inspired, in structed by the master himself, and he may well have done wouders. It was a hard condition, and twin born with Shakespeare’s dramatic greatness, that he should see his women played by lads. Could he ever have beeu wholly satis fied with the result? — Gentleman's Magaziue. He Wan T oo Realistic. I I I «-■«'i.L’h large bot* p i s absolute cure, free to any sufferers ■ay send their P. O and Express address, vise any one wishing a care to address - H. P E t t l . F. D-. 4 Cedar St., lfew Vnr> FOR PEOPLE TH AT ARE SICK or ’ •Just D o n ’t F eoi W e ll," mn&vwUVER PILL8 aro th« One Thin* to a»e. O nly O n « for a Dose. “ “ 1 by dru**iata at 2 5 c . abo* iplea F ree. Addre«« th« Sossnko Med. C«.. Phila. Pa. PISO S C U R E « r a F OR i ’i i i r i n • <*ond. t * I ou*h Syrup. CONSUM PTION There are lovely flowers in this land o f ours, wherever tho foot may fail. The tongue and the ear ulike would tire should I try to tell them all, From tho arbutus on Atlantic shores to the golden poppy’s gleams. As bright as the metal which lies at its roots b y Californian streams, But never a flower sueb gifts lias gained from tho sun and dews o f morn, Or stands more fair in the summer air than tho blessed, golden corn! —Ninette M. Lowater. PEARLS FOUND IN SCOTIA. F rom A berd een sh ire Said t o One o f th e tju eeu ’» J e w e l». F orm One is so much accustomed to associ ate pearls with tlie eastern aud gold with the southwestern countries of the world that the discovery of pearls in Scotland und gold in Wales seems some what opposed to tlie order o f things. That gold exists in Wales is o f course quite a recent discovery, aud the small aud unprofitable quantities found have now resulted in the abandonment of the mining operations commenced by R ich ard Morgan. But tlie pearls of Scotland have quite a different history. For centuries pearls have been found in the river Ythau, in Aberdeenshire, aud only last year an Aberdeen man made some notable hauls, which he disposed of to jewelers of the northern towns. It was recently stated in u London paper that a pearl taken from tho river Ythau is believed to form one of the queen’s crown jewels. It is to be hoped that the belief is well founded, for in that case it may be reasonably claimed that the precious stone in question is the only one con tributed by the British islands, a thought calculated to gratify our na tional pride, for Scotland might be worse represented than by a pearl in the national regalia. A story is told of an Aberdeenshire farmer who found a very large and perfect pearl in the shell of a mussel taken from the Ythau. Happening to visit Loudon some time afterward, he displayed his tnVsure to a west end jeweler, who, struck with the size and beauty of the gem, asked the price. The farmer demanded what possibly he re garded as a big price— viz, £100. Now, this was in the days when Scotland had her own coinage, aud a pound (Scots) was equivalent to Is. 6d., so that the £T00 he asked would only have repre sented £8 6s. 8d. English money. His surprise and delight may be im agined, therefore, wheu he received for his pearl £100. It is doubtful, however, whether the English jeweler would have shared these feelings had he known the exact meaning of the ‘ ‘ huu- uer p u n ,” demanded by the owner of the pearl. However, he had no occasion to complain, for he is said to have sold the gem subsequently at a large profit — Scottish American. Last winter a number of literary peo ple indulged from time to time in ama teur theatricals. During February they produced a comedy. One of the actors played the part of a burglar, and had to clim b up the outside of the house in which the entertainment was given and enter through the window which was at the rear of tho improvised stage. He hurried roimd from the dressing rooms aud valiantly commenced to struggle up the wall, when a policeman grasped him by the neck, thinking him a veritable burglar. He started to explain, but the minion of the law would have none of it. The audience was wondering in the mean time why the play did not proceed, and the young actors and actresses on the stage were eagerly waiting for the bur glar to enter and give them tbeir cue, wheu they heard shrieks, yells, oaths and threats from the garden. Rushing out they found the master burglar A Pauper W h o O w ned Joh a n n esb u rg. thrashing w ildly about the grass, while Few people are aware o f the fact that a brawny policeman sat on his shoulders hammering his neck into the mud.— the site of Johannesburg and a large tract of the surrounding land were once Strand Magazine. bought for £350. But such was the case, and the purchaser now lies a confirmed invalid in the workhouse infirmary at C arlyle and Scott. “ To read of Scott, ” says Temple Bar, Guildford. The old man seems to have “ makes most others, even of the noblest had a most remarkable career, having aud best, appear small by comparison. ” been in the service of the old East India The writer illustrates bis meaning by company, fought in the Crimea, being pointing to (lie contrast between Carlyle seriously wounded at the siege of Sevas and Scott in the matter of sleep. Noth topol, aud afterward passed through the ing, he says, short of a “ treacle sleep,” Indian mutiny. He then went to South in which ho could lie "sound as a Africa, where he fought aguinst the stone” for hours, could satisfy Carlyle. Zulus and the Boers. Before the Trans His naps were serious things, and if vaal was made over to the Boers he pur any inroad from without or within were chased for £350 some 15,000 acres of made npon them, anathemas and “ wacs laud near the source of the Crocodile, m e’s” would be sure to follow , while better known as the Limpopo, where he constant nights o f waking and aching made up his mind ultim ately to settle. would be met by Scott with scarce a But war broke out, and ho took up arms against the Boers and formed one of the grumble or by a playful one. A (dog, whose yelping had disturbed party which held Pretoria. In 1880, his slumbers, moved Carlyle to the jo wheu the republic was declared, he re cosely savage wisli that ho had the ani fused to accept service under President mal by its bind legs within reach of a Kruger, the result being that his land, now estimated to be worth many m il stone wall. “ Bilious and headache this morn lions sterling, was forfeited.— West in g ,” notes Scott, under the influence minster Gazette. of a like infliction occurring in the very A p p re cia tio n . midst of his sea of troubles. “ A dog An anecdote, illustrating the urbanity howled all night aud left me little sleep. Poor cu r!” with an outgoing of of Dr. Max Nordan’s character, as well sympathy toward the unconscious trou- as his keen sense of humor, is told in bler of his repose. “ X dare say he had connection with a story of I. Zangwill. Dr. Nordan had never met Zangwill, his distresses, as I have mine. ” but was a great admirer of “ The Chil dren of the Ghetto” aud its author’s lit P o B i r d s U n d e r s t a n d M usic ? This question has recently been dis erary causeries. One day a friend, know cussed among naturalists, and Dr. O. ing this, came to him and said : “ Mr. Zangw ill has teeu w riting about M. Gould, of North Carolina, asserts not only that katydids keep time, but you in The Pall Mall. ” “ Indeed,” said Dr. Nordau, with an that they produce a kind o f music which may be described as orchestral. air of great intere. t. “ He gives a perfect appreciation of Both Dr. Gould and another observer have listened to two orchestras o f katy y o u ,” the friend continued. “ Do tell me what he sa id,” said the dids answering one another all night long. Sometimes Individual perform author, relaxing into an attitude of ers were noticed to drop out o f time, pleasurable anticipation. “ He says you ’re an id iot.” but upon the whole the strldnlatlon o f The fuuuy part of the story is that these Insect bands Is harmonious and In a regular key. Observers do not during a recent visit in England Dr. agree on the point whether or not there Nordau met Mr. Zangw ill and told him is a difference o f pitch between the the incident. notes o f tw o orchestras. i l l I I I p I K A song of tho corn, tho sturdy corn, which brightens this land o f ours! Its tender green, in the early spring, is fairer than blossoming flowers; Its amber silk, with its glossy sheen, is lit for a fa iry ’s loom, And dearer its dimpled, golden ears than the rose o r lily ’s bloom. For they beur the promise o f happy hours to the man who toils for bread. When he need not fear that his little ones must go to their sleep unfed. On« T a l l B u ild in g s . A year or tw o ago a lecturer describ ing the royal palace at Madrid, which Is 470 feet square and 100 feet high, Jokingly remarked that a modern New York architect would probably have made It 100 feet sqtmre and 470 feet high. This was not such / very great exaggeration, for the new building Just completed at the corner o f Pine street and Broadway is nearly four times aa high as it is broad. From the sidewalk to the coping it rises 314 feet, but It Is only about 85 feet square on the ground It* steel skeleton Is clothed with thick brick walls. From the roof one looks down to see the cross on Trinity steeple. H A T C H E T . N ext to Ic«. Mr. Hankerson— John, did yon ice tw o dozen bottles of champagne, as 1 told your The Bulter— No, sorr. The icebox wasn’ t big enough for more than 20. Hankerson— What have you done with the rest? The Batler— I set the cook and maids a-faumn ’em, sorr.— Illustrated Bits. It is my opinion that a man’s soul may be buried and perish under a dung heap or in a furrow of the field just as w ell as under a pile of money.— H aw thorne. The manufactures o f Brooklyn are annually valued at $228,000,000. GOAT TO C u n fK M in a n B O A T .] Even the festive goat in his vernal sea son has his field sport on the com m on with a tiu can or the butt of a log. From the sport ot the goat in the spring to the varied sports o f the early and late summer, what a world o f amusement and what a scene ot muscular activity. I d all these, ever so helptul, irom the bat in the ball field to the oar o f the boat and the clatter ol the turt. there comes in a large am ount o f penalty in the shape o f senops sprains and troublesome bruises, but no man is a good athlete, nor does he develop well from such exerc ises without his lull share o f both. It is a good thing, therefore, that there is provided som ething which, if al ways kept ready, is always ready to cure prom ptly these sudden and painful m is haps. 8fc. Jacobs Oil, without question, passes am ong all sportsmen as the thing to iiave, pa- excellence, in all kinds o f sports. It has gained its best reputation from its best cures o f this nature, and the man who would enjoy freely the summer sports would be almost loolish not to keep a bot tle about him. Phil A. Del—Ann was your friend's death un expected. Arizona Pete—No indeed. He had been a horsethief for years. Gloom O f ill health, despondency and despair, gives w ay to the sunshine of hope, happiness and health, upon taking H ood ’s .Sarsaparilla, because it gives renew ed life and vitality to the blood, ami through that imparts nerve stren J gth, v ig o r aud energy to tho whole b od y. Head W W this letter: “ H o o d ’ BSar aaparilla h e l p e d me wonderfully, changed elckness to health, gloom to sun- shine. No pen can describe what I »ut tered. I was deathly sick, bad aick head* aches every few days and those terrible tired, despondent feelings, with heart troubles bo that I could not go up and Sunshine down stairs without clasping my hand Over my heart and resting. In fact, it would almost take my breath away. I suf fered so I did not care to live,yet I had much to live for. There is no pleasure in life if deprived of health, for life becomes a burden. Hood’s Sersaparilla does far more than advertised. After taking one bottle, it is sufficient to recommend it s e lf.” M r s . J. E . S m i t h , Beloit, Iowa. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co.. Lowell. Mass. i > : .* cure all liver ills, bilious- I m np«<» hoofipph#» SURE CURE MAKES PEOPLE WELL Most Remarkable Rem edy in the World. Far Superior to Ordinary Sarsapa- ritlas, Nervines or Bitters. The True Medicine for Lost Nervous Strength. Without in Equal in Purifying and Enriching the Blood. What Scientific Research Has Accomplished. Else Has Failed. R a n k G ro w th . The fond Washington mother hai found a new simile for her developing youngster. She no longer likens him to a weed or a mushroom, but declares, with pardonable pride, that he is “ growing like a gas b ill.” — Washing ton Star. KEWARK TARRH OF O IN T M E N T S THAT C O N T A IN FOR CA M ERCURY, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the fiood you can nossibly derive from them. H all’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney <& Co., To ledo, O., contains no mercury, aud is taken in ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Iu buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold by druggists, price 75c per bottle. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. F I T S .—All Fits stopped free by L>r. K i l n « ’ » G reat N e rv e R e s t o r e r . No Fits after tbetirsi lay s use. Marvelous cure». Treatise aud |2.00 rial bottle free to Fit caseB. Bead to Dr. Kline, Arch Ht., Philadelphia. Pa Piso’s Cure for Consumption is the only cough m edicine used i* m y h ou se.—D. C. Albright, Miffiinburg, Pa., Dec. II, ’9y. T ry G brmra tor breakfast. Is the One True Blood Purifler. All druggists. FI. r io o n ^ H a ile y ’» lir e » » . Cougmisiuuu Bailey of Texas thus re plies to receut criticisms of his dress: “ I have always held that society had no right, by its dictum, to regulate the style of a m an’s clothes. Ever since I could afford it, I have dressed just as I do today. I have worn the same black broadcloth suit, cut in the same style; the same style of broad shirt front and a white tie; tne same kind of collar and broad black felt hat. I wear these clothes regardless of the day of the week or the hour or of society*« dicta tion because I believe they become me, aud they please my wife. There is a rule of society which prescribes that a dress suit shall uot be worn until after 6 o ’clock in the evening. If I chose to wear a dress suit, I would feel free to put it on in the morning or evening, or at noon, just as the fancy dictated. It seems to me that the society rule which attempts to regulate a man’s dress is autocratic. The rule prescribing dress originated in the old customs of the court nobility. We are simply imitating these old aristocrats when w e bar a per son out of society because he does not dress in the fashion. If men showed Great Cures Effected by Paine's more independence in the matter of Celery Compound. dress, they would soon be able to break over the society restraints, and after that anybody could wear whatever he chose to, so long as he conformed to the law o f the laud and wore something. So far as I am concerned, I shall con tinue to wear whatever suits me aud at the same time meets the approval of my wife. ” Proved by Success Where All ppntq FOR P I L E S lic tn u g out! Itllm l, hh-> ding or r r o ir u ilu ig Pile* Yield Ml once to -- --------------------------- ------------------[D Dr. B O -S A N -K --------------- O ’ S PILE REMEDI Y . S top* itch- fu ^.»bHorbs tu m or». A p ositiv e «iure. C ir c u la r » » ent frei- P rice 50c. D ru ggist« o r m a li . UK. l i O N A N k l l , 1‘ hllu.. P«. W H O CARRIES THE LARGEST Line of Cutlery, sporting Goods, Barber Suppliesand Bazaar Goods? Why, don’ t you kuow THE WILL & FINCK COMPANY? They w ill supply you with anything you want at lowest market prices. Hend lor General Cata logue or Catalogue o f Sporiing Goods or Barber Supplies. 820 Market street, S au FrancDeo, Cal. There ia one true specific for dieeasea arising from a debilitated nervone »ve- tem. and that ie the Paine’s celery com pound so generally preecribed by physi cian». It ie the most remarkable rem edy that the scientific tesearch of this country has pic-'nced. Professor F.dward E. Phelps, M. D ., LL. I)., of Dartmouth col- Vi lege, first prescribed I what is now know'v v'Jl/la/l 117 the world over as Paine’s celery com pound, a positive care for dyspepsia, bilious ness, liver com plaint, neuralgia, r h e u m a tism, aud kidney troubles. For the latter Paine’ e celory compound has succeeded again and again where everything else has failed. Sufferers from neuralgia, nenralgic headaches and rheumatism should stop short their morphine, quinine and each pain-killing drugs. No cure can be hoped for from these tern porizere. There ie one way of getting rid forever of the causes of all this suffering; that is by taking Paine’s celery com ponnd. In this great modern remedy the real means to health ie attended to ; eleep is made sound and refreshing, the appetite improves and the nerves stop complain- ing, because they get the nutriment that nature requires. This is the funda mental, rational way that Paine’s celery compound taken to be able to cope euc- censfully with diseases of the liver, kid neys and stomach, and to guarantee a com plete return of sound sleep, good di gestion and a quiet, well regulated nerv ous system. If T he G erm T heory. What the w orld owes to Louis Pastenr the w orld's great vocabulary is incom petent to express. Through his re searches, und those o f the students who have come after him, the light has been tnrned upon what has hitherto been to tal darkness. Donbt, experiments and uncertainty have given way to precision and accuracy in diagnosis. As the farm er knows that the chinch bug is the canse o f his withered crops, so the phy sician knows that the bacilln sof certain diseases brings abont certain symptoms. The microscope is the physician’s reli ance. A few drops o f blood, a bit of tissue, a little perspiration brought un der the eye of this magio assistant w ill tell him at once the cause aud progress of the disease. Aud it is not alone the physiciau who benefits by this know l edge. The farmer, the vineyardist, the dairyman, the stock raiser, tho cultiva The very remarkable and certain tor of the silkworm and the enthusiast relief given woman by M OORE’ 8 on bees are alike indebted to the dis K E VEALEI) R EM ED Y ban given uniform ly success coverer o f the germ origin of disease it the name o f W om an’ s Friend. It is J f —q r _ a n d w e a k n e s s for inevitable aids in tbeir business. A ful in relieving the backaches,headaches ^ r H f which burden and shorten a w om an’s life. Thoneands of necessity o f the near future is an im women testify for it. It will give health and strength provement in microscopes and tbeir and make life a pleasure. For sale by all druggists. cheapening, so that knowledge of germs BLU M AU ER-FK AN K D RU G CO., P o r t l a n d , Agents. may become more widespread. Every township should have its bacteriologist and its microscopic equipment. There is no stndy more interesting, and none that is so important to humanity.— ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ BY CORRESPONDING WITH New York Ledger. f M i I ^ N u I N R G V . W She Saw a S cow l Then. Minnie— I never noticed before that this mirror bad a wrinkle in it. Mamie— I thought you were able to see wrinkles in any mirror you looked into.— Indianapolis Journal. m a r i n e . . . W A R E -H O U S E M A C H IN E R Y lir THE WILUMETTE IRON WORKS . ♦ P O R TLA N D * AMERICAN TYPE FOUNDERS’ CO. • a Everything for the Printer. • • o r eco n P O R T L A N D , O R . .. . ‘Save M y C h i l d ! o r n e i or BLACKWCLL’a D u r h a m T o b a c c o C o m p a n y . D U R H A M , N . C. Dear £ l r : You are entitled to receiv e F R E E from y o u r w holesale dealer, W H I T E S T A R S O A P w ith all the B l a c k w e l l ’s G e n u i n e D u r h a m S m o k in g T o b a c c o y o u b u y . One bar o f soap Free w ith each pound, w hether 16 o x ., 8 o z ., 4 o z ., o r 3 o z ., packages. W e have notified e v e ry w h o le sale dealer In the United States that w e w ill supp’ y them w ith soap t o give y o u F R E E . O rder a g o o d su p ply o f OENulNE IMJRHAM a t o n ce , and Insist on g e ttin g y o u r soap. One bar o f Soap F R E E w ith each pound you b u y . Soap is offered fo r a lim ited tim e, so o rd e r to -d a y . Y ou rs v e ry tru ly , B LA C K W E LL’S DURHAM TO B A C C O COM PANY. H yom H a r t an r d ifflea lty In p ro en rtag your •oap. c at o u t th is notice and send It w ith your order to your wholesale dealer. is the cry of many an agonized mother whose little one writhes in croup or whoop ing cough. In such cases, Dr. Acker’s English Rem edy proves a blessing and a godsend. Mrs. M. A. Burke, of 309 E . 105th St., New York, writes: "D r . Acker’s English Remedy cured my baby of bronchitis, and also gave instant relief in a severe case of croup. I gratefully recommend it ” Tkr«eMz»e.aS€.;See.;*I. t U S n n f e a A r a m M a r.» i* a ( « . . ia » 1 - , h u n h .r . m T s T M - RS. W INSLOW S sos°vW r PO R C H IL D R E N T E E T H IM 0 raraaUkrsllDni » . I*. 4L U. Mo. 548,-HI. F. ■ . 0 . Ma T*6