Image provided by: Langlois Public Library; Langlois, OR
About Southwest Oregon recorder. (Denmark, Curry County, Or.) 188?-18?? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1884)
FAEH, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. Blight. through the tree once a week, by means of a fountain pump. The tree thus treated, bore a heavy crop of fruit with - i tictiicu, uuiu it ucavjr uiup ui iiuit tnu Professor T. J. Berrill, in the American not one wormy apple. .A tree twenty Ifaturalut, refers certain blights and dis- oaana rwf nlnntn AT e 1 i. Those organisms appear -to be an active cause of the blight in pear and apple trees. The cell of blighted pear trees are desti tute of the starch grains with which the healthy cells are filled, but traces of fer mentation have been discovered in them, and bacteria have been uniformly ob served in the juices of diseased pear and apple trees. The death of patches of bark on the trunk and larger limbs of apple trees is ascribed by Professor Bur rill to the same cause. The yellows of the peach tree have been shown by the discovery of bacteria under the micro scope to be caused by a similar organism. as are also the blights of the Lombardy poplar and the aspen. Farmers' Garden A' though every well-regulated farm can boast a garden where delicacies are raised for the home table, there are still many new farms on which this important spot has not yet .been set aside. Even half an acre may be made to produce enough small fruits and fine vegetables for a family whose table without these luxuries would be bare indeed. Start the garden early. Do not allow it to take the last chance. All new gardens for vegetables should be arranged for horse cultivation by extending the drills across it from end to end. This will greatly reduce the labor of keeping it clean, and the few minutes required to cultivate it once a week will be trifling compared with long and laborious hand labor. The crops will grow vigorously by keeping the soil constantly mellow and clean by the frequent passing of the narrow, one-horse harrow or cultivator. Coarse Food for Pigs A recent subscriber wants advice how to feed pigs of twenty-five to thirty-five pounds weight that are to be kept over winter and fitted for sale at about six months old whether coarse food will not help them as much iar winter as in summer; how roots and pumpkins will answer in lieu of grass, and what can .be fed when this green food is gone. He has had poor success, in growing young pigs on corn alone. He has a reasonably warm pen for winter. The question of food is constantly recurring, and this is one of the best evidences of the advance ment of the country in the feeder's art. "When people are making no inquiry as to improved methods in any di rection no progress can be made. There has been more progress made in the philosophy of feeding .during the last thirty years than in the century and a half previous. In pig feeding in the dairy districts young pigs generally grow up in a very healthy condition, owing to the refuse milk of the dairy, which furnishes the principal food of young pigs. Skim milk contains all the elements for growing the muscles and bones of young pigs. This gave them a good, rangy frame, and, when desired, could be fed. into 400 or 500 pounds weight. But the fault at tending this feeding was that it was too scanty to produce such rapid growth as is desired. It took too long to develop them for the best profit. It had not then been discovered by the farmer that it costs less to put the first 100 pounds on the pig than the second, and less for the second than the third, etc. ; that it was much cheaper to produce 200 pounds of . pork in six months than in nine and twelve months. When it became evident that profit required more rapid feeding, then they began to ply them continually with the most concen trated food corn meal or clear corn. If this was fed in summer, on pasture, no harm was observed, for the grass gave bulk in the stomach, and the pigs were healthy and made good progress. But if tho young pigs were fed in pen in winter upon gorn meal or clear corn the result was quite different. This concentrated food produced feverish symptoms, and the pigs would lose their appetite for a few days, drinking only water, which, after a while, would relieve the stomach, and the pigs would eat vigorously again. Now, had they been fed a few quarts of turnips, carrots, beets or pumpkins, to give bulk to the stomach, and separate the concentrated food, no harm would have come. This gives the gastric juice a free circulation through the contents of the stomach, the food is properly di gested and applied to the needs of the body, instead of causing fever by re maining in the stomach. Live Stock Journal. feet away, which had not been treated, bore less fruit, and three-fourths of it was wormy. Millemaine is the name of a new cereal which has been introduced into South Carolina from Columbia, South America. It is allied to sorghum and Guinea corn, and has' the merit of an almost unlimited capacity to endure drought. Cakes made from the meal have been described as better than corn cakes, and the grain has been pronounced by the chemists of the Savannah guano company superior in food qualities to wheat. English farmers keep three sheep on every four acres of their land. In this country we have one sheep for every thirty-four acres. The English wheat crop averages, in ordinary seasons, twenty-nine bushels per acre. Ours is a little less than twelve. There may be other causes for this great difference, but the greater attention given to sheep hus bandry by English farmers is undoubted ly one of the causes." American Culti vator. Cultivators are becoming more and more satisfied of the value of common manure for bearing orchards. Those which have been regularly top-dressed have borne much better the past scarce season than neglected orchards. The owner of an orchard of six acres, in a re gion where not one-tenth of a crop was raised the past season, sold over $H00 worth of fruit from it. He has regular ly top-dressed it for several years, and two sheep to each tree have picked up the fallen fruit infested with the codling worm." Country Gentleman. Farm and Garden Notes. The calves and lambs need extra care through the spring weather, with its sud den changes. Do not let them begin life on a losing basis. Guard them from exposure to sudden changes, cold winds and storms. It may cost much extra feed in the future to atone for a slight check in growth now. Watch your farm' hands and note their treatment of cattle. The brutal habit of kicking cows should not be allowed. A kick in the udder will very likely result in bloody milk. Although the conse quences of a blow or kick on the ribs may not be seen at once more or less damage will certainly follow. Professor Kedzie, of Michigan, states that yellowp in peaches can be cured by diggiag a shallow trench around the tree and filling it with boiling water. A heavy dose of potash will have the same effect. Filling Uhe trench with ashes and pouring on boiling water is said to work a cure, also. All these remedies are based upon the -supposition that a root fungus causes the disease. A pomologist experimented with soft soap on the codling moth. 1 he soap was diluted, but it had an unusually strong odor. It was sprayed thoroughly To Itemove Stains. - To remove wax stains from silk mix powdered French chalk with lavender water to the thickness of mustard. Put it on the stain, and rub it gently. Put a sheet of blotting paper over it and smooth it with a warm iron. When dry remove the chalk and dust the silk gently with a piece of white linen. If the wax stain has fallen thickly on the silk it should be removed first carefully with a penknife. To remove wax from cloth scrape off with a knife as much as you can without in jury to the fabric ; drop benzine on the spot, then with a sponge rub it gently ; repeat it till the spot disappears. To remove grease spots without injury to the color of the cloth is sometimes easy and sometimes quite difficult. Much may depend upon skillful "treatment, and alhough various agents are oftentimes valuable, yet good soap is the chief re-, liance. Grease spots may generally be re moved by the patient application of soap and soft water, but other means -are also used. Ox-gall is a good and delicate cleansing agent. It is said to fix and brighten colors, though it has a greenish tinge, which is bad for white articles. Ammonia is also good. Use it nearly pure, and then lay white blotting paper over the spot and iron" it lightly. The yolk of an egg is also excellent. Stretch the fabric on a board, and " with a soft clothes-brush dip into the yolk and rub the spot with it until the grease seems loosened. The yolk will not injure the most delicate colors, but the rubbing may, if too severe. Rinse with warm rain water, rub the edges with ti damp cloth and clap the whole between dry towels. If the stain is not gone, repeat the process. This is a good receipt for cleansing silk goods. To take grease out of velvet, pour a little turpentine over the spot, then rub briskly with a piece of dry flannel. Hang the article in the air to remove the smell. To remove oil stains from paper or leather, apply pipe-clay, powdered and mixed with waer to the thickness of cream; leave it on for four hours. This will not injure the best colors. To remove acid stains from linen tie up in the stained part some pearlash, then scrape some soap into a cold, soft lather and boil the linen till the stain disap pears. Fruit stam3 may be removed from linen by rubbing th spot on each side with soap, then- laying on a mixture of starch in cold water, very thick; rub it well in and expose the linen to the sun and air till the stain comes out. If not removed in three days renew the process. Oil marks and marks where people have rested their heads can be taken from wall paper by mixing pipe-clay with water to the consistency of cream, laying it on the spot and letting it remain till the following day, when it may be easily removed with a brush. To clean mirrors take part of a news paper, fold it small, dip it in a basin of clean cold water, and when it is thor oughly wet squeeze it out as a sponge, and then rub it hard over the face of the glass, taking care that it is not so wet as to run down in streams. After the glass has been well rubbed with the wet paper, let it rest a fdw minutes and then go over it with a dry paper till it looks clear and bright. Wash oil-cloth once a month in skim milk and water, equal quantities of each. Rub them once in three months with boiled linseed oil. Put on very little, rub it well in with a rag, and polish with a piece of oil silk. An oil-cloth should never be scrubbed with a brush, but, after being first swept, should be cleaned by washing with a soft flannel and luke warm water. On no account use soap or water that is hot. To clean painted woodwork provide a plate with some of the best whiting to be had, and have ready some clean warm water and a piece of flannel, which dip into'the water and squeeze nearly dry; then take as much whiting as will ad here to it, apply it to the painted sur face, when a little rubbing will instantly remove any dirt or grease. After which wash the part well with clean water, rub bing it dry with a soft chamois. SELECT SIFTINGS. ' The first tunnel was made by M. Rign at Bezieres, France, in the reign of Lou XIV. ' Gun cotton was invented by Profess Schenbein, in Basel, and first made know in 1846. "Dieu et mon droit," the royai mott of England, was the word given by Rich ard the Lion Hearted to his army a Gisors, in 1198. Henry VI. first used as a motto. By an act of parliament of George II., still in existence, a man can evade pay ment of his tavern score on the ground that the consumption of spirits is con trary to public policy, and ought to be discouraged. The old superstition as to mandrake was that it shrieked when pulled from the ground, and that he who heard its cry died within the year, and, therefore, those who would gather it stopped their ears, fastened a dog to the plant and whipped him until he pulled it from the earth. The ancient Egyptians of the Nile had floating bee houses, designed to take ad vantage of the honey harvest. They were warned when it was time to return home by the depth to which the boat sank in the water under the weight of the cargo of honey. That the Dees might not be lost, they were obliged to journey during the night-time. The famous Washington bowlder at Ponway Corner, N. II., has been ac curately measured and found to be thirty feet high, forty-six feet long and thirty five feet wide. It is solid, granite, and weighs 3,807 tons by calculation. This is probably the largest isolated piece ot granite in the world, and is apparently a vestige of ancient glacier action. According to tradition, the first In dian reached Martha's Vineyard on a cake of ice, and found there a giant named Moshup. He had five children. He used to catch Avhales and great fish, and pluck up trees to make a fire, and roast them. The coals and the' bones, relics of these gigantic feasts, are still to be seen there. To facilitate the catch ing of these fish he threw many large stones at proper distances into the sea, on which he might walk with ease. This is now called Devil's Bridge. Once on a time an offering was made to him ol all the tobacco on Martha's Vineyard, which, having smoked, he knocked the snuff out of his pipe, which formed Nantucket. The teeth of the snake are not always found in its mouth. There is a snake in Africa which lives upon the eggs of birds, which he purloins out of the nests. This snake has no teeth proper in his mouth, if he had, they would be much in hig way, for they would break the egg when he caught hold of it. Instead, then, ol teeth in his mouth, he has them in his stomach, and they are formed in a verj curious manner. Certain little, bits oi bone, parts of the vertebrae, ate made tc perform the function of teeth; they pro ject one from the center of each verte bra;. The ten next to the mouth poinl in a forward direction, the last ten back ward ; the ends of these bits of bone gc through the wall of the " stomach, and then become covered with enamel like real teeth; so that, on looking into the stomach, a row apparently of real teeth is seen at its back part. The egg, when swallowed by the snake goes down into the stomach, and there meeting with the teeth, is broken against them by the pressure of the walls of the stomach. The contents of the egg being thus broken, cannot escape, had there been teeth in the mouth the egg would . have broken there, and most of Jhe fluid con tents been lost. CMSOjs iff BEiianrIsvIEDi for jcnxr. . CURES. m , . Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache. Headache, Toothache, Sor Tli i-ot . S m e 1 1 i m . S p r nl , B ru'l Burn. Kralda. Front ltites, AKD ILL OTIIEU IIOUILT PAINS AKD ACHES. Said by Druggists Deaiera ever, where. Fifty Centaa bottle. - uiracuons in 11 languages. THE CHARLES A. VOGELEIt CO. 13 W A. VOUKLCRaCO.) Balliaaora, aU.,CS.A, NYNU-11 CATAR R H ELY'SCREAMBALM 5 when applied by the fin g-er into the nostrils will be absorbed, effect nally cleansing the head of catarrhal virus, caus ing healthy secretions. It allays inflammation, protects the faembrans of the nasa passages from additional colds, completely heals the sores and restores taste and smell. A few ap plications relieve. - A thorough treatment Kill MAY-FEVER-- 'sfot PBICE SO CENTS. BY MAIL, OR AT DRUGGISTS. ELY BItOTIIKitS, OVVKCiO, N. Y. five: TAt nW rer".- ?Mi ft TYISE WORDS. Drinking water neither makes a man sick, nor in debt, nor his wife a widow. In the adversity of our best friends we often find something that is not dis pleasing to us. If you would know one of the minor secrets of happiness, it is this : cultivate cheap pleasures. Perfect valor consists in doing without witnesses all we should be capable of do ing before the world. We are readier to pardon those who 1 augh at our gravity than those who do not laugh at our jokes. If you hit the mark you must aim a lit tle above it; every arrow that flies feels the attraction of the earth. A man need only correct himself with the same rigor that he apprehends others, and excuse others with the same indul gence that he shows to himself. "We cannot live on probabilities. Th faith in which we can live bravely and die in peace must be a certainty, so fai as it jprof esses to be a faith at all, or it is -- Tpricer in a juvenile magazine lately gathered a number of dictionary words as defined by certain small people, of which the following seem genuine: Dust: Mud with the juice squeezed out. Ice : Water that stayed out in the cold and went to sleep. Monkey: A very small boy with a tail. Pig: A hog'l little boy. Salt : What makes your po tatoes taste bad when you don't put any on. Snoring: Letting off sleep. Wake fulness: Eyes all the time rrettiner un buttoned. Cleveland, Ohio. The Daily Anzeiger says: "Chief Super intendent of police, J. W. Schmitt, of this city who has been in the service a quarter of a century, endorses St. Jacobs Oil as a pain-banisher. It cured him of rheumatism." They have counted 319 sorts of insects that eat the leaves or bore into the trunks of trees in Central park. New York city. The want of a re liable diuretio which, while acting as a stimulant of the kid neys, neither excite nor irritates them, was long since sup. plied by Huetetter Stomach Bitters. Tbil tine medicine exert the requisite decree of stimulation upon these organs, without producing irritation, and is, therefore, fai better adapted fui the purpose than on medicated excitants often resorted to. Dyspepsia, fever and ague, and kindred diseases, are a 11 cured by it. . For sale by all Druggists and Deal erg generally. XX. NOTICE. XX. AS BLUE FLANNEL GARMENTS Orinierlor Quality of Goods are sold at the "genuine Middlesex," which are not made by that mill. The Middlesex Company, in order to protect their customers and the public, give notice t hi thereafter all Clothing made from THE MIDDLE SEX STANDARD INDIGO BLUE FLANNELS AND YACHT CLOTHS, sold by all leading clothiers, must Dearine -oil. a. tunutKS," tunuaiiea Df lue beiung Agents to ill parties ordering the goods. WENDELL, FAY & CO., CVT T TV(1 inVVTQ IfTTvnTTTOUV rVAXT l 1 w 86 and 88 Worth St.' New York: 87 Franklin St, oonwn; x chestnut u, rmiaueipma, rrSExl INFORMATION IN REOARD TO CHEAP LAND xcursion Rates to Texas, Arkansas and California. Pamphlets, etc., describing lands for sale can be had by addressing J. J. FOWLER, East. Pass. Ag-'t. Utica, N. Y. ; J. D. McBEATH. N. E. Pass. Ag't. Boston; D. W JANOW1TZ. H. E. Pass. Ag't, Baltimore. Md. If. B. 3IK'li:r.IiAN. Gen. East.Pass.Ag'tMo.Pac.R.R .243 li'dway.N. Y. Walnut Leaf Hair Restorer. tt is entirely different from all others, and as its name indicates is a perfect Vegetable Hair Restorer. It will immediately fret the head from all dandruff, restore gray hair to its natural color, and produce a new growt h where it has fallen off. It does not affect the health, which sulphur.sugarof load and nitrate of silver prrpar ations have done. It will change light or faded hair in a few days to a beautiful glossy brown. Ask yonr druggist for it. Farn bottle is warranted. Wholesale Agent, (i. C. GOODWIN, Boston. Mass. TO SPECULATORS. N. G.MILLER & CO. 66 Broadway, JNew York. R. LINDBL0M & CO., 6 A 7 Chamber of -Commerce. Chicago. GRAIN & PROVISION BROKERS Members of all prominent Produce Exchanges in New York. Chicago. St. Louis and Milwaukee. We have exclusive private telegraph wire between Chi cago and New York. Will execute orders on our judg ment when requested. Send for circulars continuing particulars. KOBT. LINDBLOM A CO., Chicago. GOOD NEWS 12 LADIES! Greatest inducements ever of fered. Kow'i your time to get up orders for our celetr.ited Teas and Collees.and secure a beauti ful Gold Band or Moss Rose China Tea Set. or Handsome Dect r tied Gold Band Moss Rose Dinner Set. or Gold Band 1imm leo(r.ited Toilet set. r r tnll particulars addrvsa TIIK fJKKAT AM Kill CAN TEA CO., P. O. Box 29. El and 33 Vesey St.. New York. I have a positive remedy for the above disease; byite asm thousands of cases of the worst kind and of long tandlng have been cured. Indeed, so strong la my faitn lu its efficacy, that I will send TWO BOTTLES FREE, to gether with a VALUABLE TREATISE on this disease, to amy sufferer. Give Express and P. O. address. PB. T. A. BLOCUM, 181 Pearl St., New York. RUPTURE Pensions' CURED, eto Method. Send iorcirouiar. ua. j, a. HOUSE. 1Z f ifth Avenue. N. Y. City. to Soldiers & Heirs. Send stamD r Circulars. COL. L. BING HAM. Att'y. Washington. TV n . i-AMi-Hou milk is the best Liniment. Price 6 cents. A n.ts-yffnt,ed for th Best and Fastest-selling L Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices reduced 33 per lent. National Publishino Co.. Phiirtir.i,i. t. Phcenix Pkctobal will cure your coughPrice 25H Send stamp for onr New Book on Patents. L. BINGHAM, Pt ent Lawyer. Washington. D. O. PATENTS PIStfS rElvE0 F0r CMAH THE STARTLING Information Discovered In a Nevrspapei Paragraph and How It Saved a Life. No pain which man has to endure equals that ol gravel. "I would rather die," exclaims the patient, "than have such attacks very often." Gravel form! in the system because of the imparities of the blood, and prevails among all classes. It caused the death of Na poleon 111. Mr. E. Dewitt Parsons, of 271 Plymouth Ave., Rochester, N.Y., recently had a remarkable exps rienoe with tt. He is at well-knit, fine-looking, hearty, appearing gentleman. One day hs w&s prostrated with pain from the small of his back to the abdomen. Fol some time previous his appetite had been fiokle, bit bowels Inactive, and he had felt sore above his hips. After voiding water he had a severe pain and gnawing sensation. ' For some time my disorder mystified me," be said, "but one day I read of a case very like my own in a paper. I wrote the person whosi nama ap peared, and he confirmed it fully. From that little in cident I discover d I had stone in the bladder and gravel in the kidneys. I was greatly alarmsd then, bnt the disease has lost its terrors d ma now, for I an) fully recovered-cured by DR. DAVID KENNE. DY'S FAVORITE REMEDY, (of Rondout. K. Y.) which -I most cordially commend to all persona suffering irjm kidney disorders, pain in back, stone ol graveL My wife also regards it as especially excellent for women. Under the effects of this medicine man) cases of stone and gravel have been perfect'y cured and the tendency to its re-formation prevented. Dr. Kennedy has performed many surgical operations for the removal of stone by the knife when size prevented removal through the natural channel, and he hai never lost a case! and the canse is due to his using FAVORITE REMEDY in the after treatment. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND 13 A POSITIVE CCRE FOR All those painful Complaints and Weaknesses so common to our best FEMALE POPULATION. Fries tl tall quid, pillar lose bit form. Hi purpose tolelu for the legitimate healing of disrate and the relief of pain, and that it doe all at ctaims to do, thoueanas oj laaiea can gladly testify, It will enre entirely all Ovarian tronhlea. Tnflamma. tion and Ulceration, Falling and Iiisplact-nwnts, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is particulrly adapt ed to the Change of Life. It removes Faintness.Flatnlenry, dostroyMtll craving; for stimulants, and relieves Weakness of the Stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervoes Prostration, General Debility, Sieepleosness, Depression and Indl gestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, and backache, is always permanently cured by its use. Send stamp to Lvnn, Mas., for pamphlet. Letters of inqilrT confidentially answereii. For talent druggistt. m DOES WONDERFUL CURES OF 'IDNEY DISEASES AND CM LIVER COMPLAINTS, o Because It act on the LIVES, BOWELS tnd KIDNEYS at the same time. Because It oleansea toe system of the poison. OUS) humors that develone In Kldneir mnri nx. nary Diseases, Biliousness, Jaundice. Constnpa. Q uon, jrues, or in iineumausm, xieuraigla, Xier ous) Disorders and all Female Complaints. tWBOLW psoor OF IlUd. XT WILL SUBXIiT CTJS2 CONSTIPATION, PILES, and RHEUMATISM, By causing FRTTff ACTION of all the crg&na and functions, thereby CLEANSING the BLOOD restoring; the normal power to throxr off disease. THOUSANDS OF CASES of the worst forms of these terrible diseases have been quickly relieved, asd in a shsrt time PERFECTLY CURED. PEICK, $1. LIQUID OB DRY, BOLD liV DttDCCISTS. Dry can be sent by mail. WELLS, KICHAaDSON & Co., Burlington, Vt. oen a tump lor inary Almanac lor Its 04. 13 UWFAILINQ AND INFALLIBLE Epileptic Fits, Spasms, Falling Sickness, Convul sions, St. Vitus Dance, Alcoholism, Opium Eating, Seminal Weakness, Im potency, Syphilis, Scrofula, and all Nervous and Blood Diseases. tWo Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Men, Merchants, Bankers, Ladies and all whose sedentary employment causes Nervous Pros tration, Irregularities ol the blood, stomach, bowels or kidneys, or who require a nerve tonic, appetizeror stimulant, Samaritan Nent tne is mvaluaoie. "Thousands proclaim it the most wonderful In vigor ant that eversustain ed a sinking system, f 1.50 at Druggists. TheDR.S.A. RICHV0NO MEDICAL CO., Sole Pro prietors, St. Joseph. Mo. Chas? N. Crittenton, Agent, New York. (8j) m m CCOKQUEROn.) -H- HOP PLASTER Ibis porous plaster is famous for its quirk and hearty action i( curing Lame Back, Rheumatism, Sciatica, Crick in the Back, Side or Hip, Neuralgia, Stiff Joints ana Muscles, sore cnest, juuney xrouuics ana ou pniK or aches either local or deep-seated. It Soothes, UtroagHF ens and Stimulates the parts. The virtues of hops cossv bined with trums clean and ready to apply. Superiors, liniments, lotions and solves. Price 86 cents or 6 for $1.00. Sold by drug-1 m av m mm as aval f.1? nd.,fr"t A C ret. AT ceipt of price. Hop Platter Company, Pro prietors, Boston, Mass. SUCCESS 2nS OT The best family pUl made Haw ley's Stomach and Liver Pills. Kc Pleasant in action and easy to take. A PCUTC VS H UTCn EVERYWHERE to sell the AUtfllO li AN I LU best Family Knitting Mnrhine ever invented. Will knit a pair of stockings with II KKls and TO K complete in 20 minutes. It will also knit a great variety of fancy work, for which there is always a ready market. Bena fur ciroular and terms to the TWO .Hit I. Y KNITT1MJ MACIUXK CO- 1G3 Tbkmomt gTBKET. BOSTON. MASS. 4u samples large pretty chromo reward, excelsior, merit, credit, diploma, birthday, friendship, gift cards, school aids, Ac.loc. Price list free. I'iue Art Co., Warren, Pa. Easy to use. A certain cure. Not expensive. Three months' treatment in one package. Good for Cold in the Head, Headache, Dizziness, Hay Fever, &c Fifty cents. By all Druggists, or by mail. E. T. HAZELTINE. Warren. Pa. THE MINISTER WHO FAILS to interest his . congrega tion and build up his church is generally accused of being a'poor preacher, or of not studying hard enough. That is not always where the trouble comes from. Dyspepsia and liver disorders are responsible for many a dull sermon and many a vacant pulpit. When the Dominie's digestive apparatus is working wrong and his nerves are giving him pain, and his brain refuses to do its duty, it is almost impossible to make or to preach a good Sermon. Give your suffering minister a bottle of Brown's Iron Bit ters. You will see its effect on next Sunday's preaching. The Rev. Mr. Zehring, of Codorus, Pa., was paralyzed, and could not walk except with crutches, until Brown's Iron Bitters made a new man of him." The Rev. Mr. White, of Rock Hill, S. C, says: "It restored me to strength and vi gor." Brown's Iron Bitters is not ODly for the minister, but for all people.'