Southwest Oregon recorder. (Denmark, Curry County, Or.) 188?-18??, October 21, 1884, Image 3

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    FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD.
Burning' ol Barn.
It is noticeable that a larger number of
the burnings of barns is mentioned by
"the periodical press in the summer than
at any other time. Some of the fires are
undoubtedly caused by lightning, the
moist vapor from the uncured hay mak
ing a favorable conductor for the electric
fluid. But there are barn fires which
cannot be attributed to lightning, to
lighting of matches, to light from lan
terns, nor to the invasions of careless
tramps. It may be that the spontaneous
combustion of hay is as possible as the
spontaneous firing of cotton waste. All
fibrous material, when moist, and com
pressed, and defended from the cooling
influences of the outward air, is subjected
to a heating similar to that of fermenta
tion; and in some instances the degree of
heat is sufficient to cause actual, visible
combustion. In the case of recently
"cured" hay this danger is as great as, in
similar circumstances, other materials
may be. Frequently the grass is cut in
the early morning, while wet with dew;
is turned twice during the day, and gath
ered and packed in the "mow" or the
"bay" before nightfall, with perhaps a
flparee sprinkling of salt. Such a com
pressed mass of fibrous, moist matter will
heat. How far the heat will go toward
generating a combustion may be inferred
from a foolish trick which the writer wit
nessed several years ago.
A large mer.dow of hay had been cut,
cured, and cocked, previous to removal.
A shower threatening, the cocks were
covered with caps of canvas and left for
the night. While getting the hay in,
the next day, one of the working men
dropped an un lighted match from his
pocket into a cock of hay, and in a few
minutes it was ablaze. It afterward
was ascertained that he had spoken of
the warmth of the hay as he lifted it
on his fork, when a companion remarked
that it might be hot enough to light a
match, on which he put a match into a
rick, and before they had passed on five
minutes the rick was on fire.
Everybody conversant with farm life,
where hay is a permanent and important
crop, knows that for weeks after get
ting in the hay the barn is warm when
the doors are opened in the morning.
There is an amount of heat that is abso
lutely unpleasant when the thermometer
outside registers sixty degrees, but which
Is quite welcome with the outside tem
perature of forty degrees. This barn heat
is undoubtedly from the moist hay, com
pacted and enclosed. The cure for the
possible spontaneous barn burning would
seem to be a thorough curing drying
of the hay before it is housed. AVe dry
all our herbs and some of our vegetables
without injuring their peculiar and in
dividual qualities. There is no reason
why hay or other fodder material stored
in large masses should not be rendered
equally innoxious to the influences of
heat by thorough drying. Scientific
American.
Farm and Garden Notes.
Insure the farm buildings.
Turned-under strawberry beds suit fall
pinach.
Young orchards should always be kept
cultivated.
The value of manure depends chiefly
on the food.
Save the best patches of timothy
meadows for seed.
Turnips and radishes may follow early
potatoes and peas.
A common cold may be broken up in
a horse by giving six drops of aconite
every three hours.
One important result of tillage is that
the soil is beneficially exposed to the air
each time it is stirred.
Swine in pens will turn a vast quan
tity of weeds into manure if given the
chance, beside thriving.
After the bearing season is over cut
out the old canes of raspberries, and later
on thin the new shoots to four in number.
In packing apples for shipment not
one should be placed in the barrel that
has the slightest trace of unsoundness,
as such apples decay sooner than the
others and also affect all in the barrel.
Lambs can be safely weaned andsepa
rated from their mothers at four months,
and should not be allowed to subsist
upon the ewes longer than five months,
cs they cannot thrive best while raising
lambs.
It is said that the simplest remedy for
worms in cattle, sheep and hogs is" tur-
entine mixed with a little feed or given
n linseed oil or gruel; two ounces for a
cow, and one-fourth or less for smaller
animals.
The Ohio Agricultural Experimental
station calls attention to the fact that in
its experiments ' potatoes raised from
large, whole seeds, ripened nine days
earlier than those from seed cut to the
single eyes.
Close attention to all the wants of the
fowls, and also to the sanitary condition
of the house and yard, will do more to
ward preventing disease than all the
poultry pills, powders, tonics, etc., in
the universe.
Milk, cream and butter should all be
kept as low as sixty-two degrees, at or
"below which point, if ever, carbonic acid
develops. With pure food, cows rightly
treated, with clean vessels and pure air,
less difficulty will be experienced in
churning than without such precautions.
Market gardeners find the growing of
small cucumbers for pickles one of their
most profitable crops. In most farm
neighborhoods a batch of cucumbers for
pickles will find market among farmers
at better prices than the market gar
deners obtain at wholesale for their
crop.
There is so great difference in the feed
-ot cows in various milk tests that the re
sult is quite often as much a test of the
different kinds of feed and the skill oi
the feeder as of the capacity of the cow.
Tf all milV anA Vnftr teats were made on
grass as feed, their value to most cow
E.,,., ..a v..
The
great difficulty in applying stable
e to onions is thatis f all of
manure
seeds, making lanre extra expense in
wpedinrr. Tt also makes the soil too
light. Mineral fertilizers furnish no
weed seeds, and their effect is to slightly
harden the ground, causing a better set
tling and fewer scullions.
American farmers find that turnips or
ruta-bagas leave the land clean from
weeds, but much less fertile than before
thev were grown. English farmers say
the turnip is a renovating crop, but it is
so onlv bv feeding: the crop on the ground .
where grown, together with much grain
or oil meal. ,
One advantage in the soilings system is ;
the freedom from weeds in the feed,
which with cows at pasture in summer J
gives a bitter taste to milk and butter.
With corn fodder, millet or other culti
vated crops suitable for soiling purposes,
there is better quality and greater uni
formity in the milk product
It is a good plan in churning not to '
put in the two or three last messes oi j
cream. If churnincr has to be done every
day, it should be of the cream gathered
In small dairies the cream should be
stirred slightly every day, to prevent
danger of injury from mould.
To prevent grapes from mildewing,
the vines should be sprinkled with flour
of sulphur three or four times during the
season. The mildew is a fungus growth
which the sulphur destroys. If the
grapes have begun to mildew, all that
are affected should be picked ott and
burned, or buried where they cannot in
jure the remainder.
Some farmers only feed grain to horses
when hard at work, thinking hay or
grass sufficient at other times. This
practice is not 60 common as it used to
be, and deserves to be less so. Some
portion of grain in the feed i3 both
cheaper and better than all hay. When
horses are not at work, grain and straw
will take the place of grain and hay.
When grain fields are seeded with
clover it is not best to cut the stubble
very short, as it is more useful for hold
ing snow in winter as protection for the
clover than it can be anywhere else.
But if the field is to be plowed after
harvest cut as close as possible, as the
stubble is worse than useless as manure
for wheat, making the soil too light and j
porous.
Fungoid growths on the surface are
the chief and probably only cause of scab
in potatoes. If coarse manure is used,
its rapid decomposition in the soil is
liable to make the potatoes scabby and
unsalable. A better quality, and. in most
cases, a larger quantity, of potatoes can
be produced by liberal use of mineral
fertilizers, especially those containing
potash.
Houkeliold Hints and Recipes.
For damp closets or cellars, put shal
low dishes of slacked lime, and change
often.
Hold your broom upright; don't dig,
but push slightly. Carpet and broom
will last twice as long.
The best way to boil com is to boil it
with part of the husks on it. Remove
the silk and the tough outer covering,
leaving the white inner leaves. The
corn will be much sweeter if cooked in
this way. '
If the syrup in which plums are to be
preserved is very hot when they are
dropped into it, they will cook so quickly
that they will not lose their shape,
and if put into the cans with care, will
well repay one for taking the trouble.
Lemon fritters are speciallv delicious
after this receipt: Take one cup of flour,
one egg, half a tablespoonful of butter,
one tablespoonful of sugar, one cup of
owPAt. milk and th inWnnrl rrtA ruiln
of one lemon. The grated vellow rind
may De added to the sauce.
The night before a picnic, boil some
eggs until they are very hard ; then drop
them into a can or jar in which you have
some pickled beets. In the morning the
eggs will be pink and will be delicately
flavored. If possible carry them in a
can with the vinegar still on fhem.
Willow baskets which have become
soiled or discolored may be made very
ornamental again by bronzing or gilding
them. The powder may be purchased
at any drug store. It should be mixed
with a little white varnish and be applied
with a small and rather soft brush.
Tomato pie can be made by peeling
and slicing green tomatoes ; to this alio w
four tablespoonfuls of vinegar, one of
butter and three and a half of sugar;
flavor with nutmeg and bake very
slowly with two crusts. If the touatoes
are first stewed there is then no danger
of the pie being too juicy.
Whipped cream with gelatine is an ex
cellent dish. Take three pints of rich,
sweet cream, sweeten to taste and flavor
with three teaspoonfuls of vanilla; whip
to a perfectly stiff froth; dissolve three-
quarters of an ounce of gelatine in a small :
teacup of hot water, when cool stir it into j
the cream, put into moulds and set in the I
icebox.
Butter or string beans, if cooked and
and pickled according to these direc
tions, are delicious: Wash them and
steam them until they are tender, but
not soft; put them into a jar and pour ,
hot vinegar over them ; sweeten the vin
egar and season highly with cinnamon.
Another way equally excellent, but which
gives a different flavor to the pickles, is
to boil them in salted water until tender ;
then pour over them tho hot vinegar
which has been sweetened, and in addi
tion to the cinnamon has a liberal allow
ance of pepper; cayenne or black may
be used.
The Tear Without a Summer.
Thft war 1R1fi wm Irnnvn trtiiifyrtAnt
the United States and Europe as the
coldest ever experienced br anv nerson I
... -xt . - ' i
iw V T" .v.
M.JK
ana ice were common. Almost every
gren thing was killed, fruit nearly all
destroyed. Snow fell to the depth of
ten inches in Vermont, seven in Maine,
three in the interior of New York, and
also in Massachusetts. There ware a few
warm days. All classes looked for them
in that memorable cold summer sixty
eight years ago. It was called a dry
season. But little rain fell. The wind
blew steadily from the north cold and
fi
prrv "Mritripra Irnit py-fra nnoVa and mit
teng for theij. children ia the spring
woodpiles that usually disappeared during
the warm spell in front of the houses
-were speedily built up again. Planting
and shivering were done together, and
the farmers who worked out their taxes
on the country roads wore overcoats
and mittens. In a town in Vermont a
flock of sheep belonging to a farmer had
been sent, as usual, to their pasture. On
June 17 a heavy snow fell ; the cold was
intense, ana xne owner startea away at
noon to look for his sheep. "Better
start the neighbors soon, wife," he said
in jest before leaving; "being in the
middle of June I may get lost in the
snow." Night came, the storm increased,
and he did not return. The next morn
ing the family sent out for help and
started in search. One after another of
the neighbors turned out to look for the
missing man. The snow had covered
up all tracks, and not until the end of
the third day did they find him on the
side of a bill, with both feet frozen, un
able to move. A farmer who had a large
field of corn in Tewksbury built fires
around it to ward off the frost; many an
evening he and his men took turns
watching it. He was rewarded with the
only crop of corn in the neighborhood.
Considerable damage was done in New
Orleans in consequence of the rapid rise
of the Mississippi river; the suburbs
were covered with water and the roads
were passable only in boats. Fears that
the sun was cooling off abounded, and
throughout New England all picnics
were strictly prohibited.
July was accompanied with frost and
ice. "On the 5th ice was formed of the
thickness of window glass throughout
Kew England, New York, and some
part3 0f Pennsylvania. Indian corn was
TVfi -,StryedJ T? faYOf7l
field craned This waq tma . ml luc Iittw rxanuu-vuiucMj uuiiuuiij
of the ff fimslf Mac clearly shown the imperfect condi
ougust was more cheerless, if'1 of ,the Chinese forces, important
of some
possible, than the summer months which
preceeded it. Ice was formed half an
inch in thickness. Indian corn was so
frozen that the greater part was cut down
and dried for fodder. Almost every
green thing was destroyed in this coun
try and in Europe. On the 80th snow
fell at Barnet, forty miles from London.
Papers received from England stated
" that . it would be remembered by the
present generation that the year 1816
was a year in which there was no sum
mer." Very little corn ripened in New
England and the Middle States; farmers
supplied themselves from corn produced
in 1813 for seed in the spring of 1817. It
sold at from $4 to $5 per bushel.
September furnished about two weeks
of the mildest, weather of the season.
Soon after the middle, it became cold
and frosty; ice formed a quarter cf an
inch in thickness. October produced
more thau its share of cold weather;
frost and ice were common. The sum
nier and autumn of 1816, cold, rainy, I
and ungeuiai throughout Europe, were
1 peculiarly so in France. Constant rains
i fell during the mouths of July, August,
j and September. But for- an abundant
I potato crop, famine, with all its horror3,
would have been her lot. The minister
, ? theL interior established granaries
j throughout the kingdom, where corn
was sold to the destitute at a reduced
P"Ce. PriCCS TOSe, however, to lUOrfl
I than double, and hundreds perished of
I actual want. November was cold and
blustering; snow fell so as to make good
sleighing. December was mild and com
fortable. Boston Transcript.
Slaves in Timbnctoo.
This girl was being brought in by the
Morocco gate, on the road from the city
of Morocco. She was comely of face and
figure, with large, dreamy, lovely eyes,
and streaming long black hair. Her
color was of the Olivian type, which
shows the red blood coursing in the
veins. She was of medium height and
aged about sixteen years. Four old Arab
"dealers," garbed in all the glitter and
tinsel of the Orient, guarded this girl as
if she were an Amazon of strength and
prowess. One old Arab in a loud voice
cried out her merits and nationality as
the group passed on to the center of the
town. Halting, tho whole party were
suddenly surrounded by intending
buyers, both Christian and Pagan. They
came up to the crouching girl, pulling
her arms to and fro, opened her mouth
and looked at her teeth, made her stand
erect, and then haggled over the price.
" She worth $100," say the Arab dealers
in one simultaneous cry, " but will let
her go for $00 if you take her now." Our
dragoman translates and tells us how she
will go to Egypt and fetch $200 at a first
bid. Baltimore Sun.
Business Was DulL
A country merchant who doesnt ad
vertise caught a thief going through his
cash drawer.
Hello, there," he sung out, "what
do you want in that drawer?"
"Oh, nothing," said Jthe man, sheep
ishly backing off and trying to get away.
"Well, don't let me disturb you.
(Just go right ahead, you'll find exactly
what you say you want. I've found the
same thing here for the past six weeks."
Merchant- Traveler.
Changes Going: On in China.
The Chinaman Is clannish and conser
pj wligiougorpatriX e U1
f jL . rui-fl x ' tt'
vative. But he is remarkably free from
in maueis oi utus-iuic luieresi. xie lias a
natural objection to alter his clothes, un-
Uke the Japanese, for they suit him'bet-
ter than any other. But he has no ob
jection to purchasing the article which he
judges to be the cheapest and the best,
wherever it may come from. He is very
sensible in his economy, and if he prefers
the home-made article, it is because he
finds it cheaper and more enduring. Na
tive patterns of cloth, both woolen and
cotton, if scrupulously imitated, will find
buyers if laid down cheaper than the na
tive article. Though the Chinese are
conservative, foreign articles are creeping
into use. Clocks, watches, matches,
lamps, red blankets, are now seen not
only everywhere in the seaport towns and
near the coast, but far inland.
The Chinese, contrary to general
opinion.lnave been found to appreciato
in a wonderful degree the value of the
rapid transmission by wire. The tele
graph is being carried from north to
south, and from east to west, along the
Yangize and Canton rivers. A line is
working in Formosa. Begun with such
vigor, there is reason to believe that the
network will rapidly spread over the
land. The telephone and electric light
have made their way into China. Al
though the first railroad constructed in
China, from Shanghai to Woosung,
opened and closed in 1876, was not ap
proved by the government the line
being bought and removed to the shores
of Formosa, where it now lies the steam
engine is at work. This is on a line to
the Kaiping coal mines, a distance of six
miles and a half, constructed by Li-Hung-Chang.
Machinery has been in
troduced not only at the Kaiping mines,
but elsewhere. The superstitions re
garding shafts dug through the earth,
the " dragon's veins," are giving way.
Mines are being promoted by the Chinesf
in various parts, but with great rashness,
the fact that mines are utterly useles
without communication not having been
grasped. Gas has long been in us
at Shanghai. The flotilla of thirty
steamers, with a tonnage of some
30,000 tons, started by the China
Merchants' company, has not been a
pecuniary success as yet, mainly owing,
however, to maladministration during
the late speculative crisis. Insurance
j ntho? AriZ I
glf E?
companies are at work at Hong Kong
while thelate Franco-Chinese difficulty
; , . . , thfl -n(T . d-
of men with the breech-loader, the drill
ing of Li's force, the establishment of
dockyards, the introduction of torpedoes,
Krupp guns, transports, and gun-boats
on the European models. The fact that
the military organization is still wretched
and the administration corrupt does not
vitiate the fact of progress having been
made. The native press has made con
siderable strides. Commenced in 1863
with the Shun-Pao, there are now some
balf-dozen papers in China. Their influ
ence is considerable and is extending
rapidly.
As a proof of their enterprise
nf.nt.ionfA. that th Khun-Pa
it may be mentioned- that the Shun-Pao
Bent a "special correspondent" to Ton
quin to follow the operations, though he
very wisely thought discretion the better
part of valor and declined to land on his
arrival at Haiphong. London Times.
The Cost of Royalty.
As a sample of what royalty costs the
people of Great Britain alone, Whitaker
tnves the following annuities to the royal
family :
Her Majesty
Privy purse 60,000
Salaries of household 131.2i50
Expenses of household 172,500
Koyai bounty, etc 13,500
Unappropriated 8,540
S85,000
Prince of Wales 40,000
Princess of Wales 10 000
Crown Princess of Prussia 8,000
Duke of Edinburgh 25,000
rnncess ionstian oi ocmeswig
Holstein Princess Louise (Marchioness of
Lorne)
6,000
6,000
Duke of Connaught 25,000
Duke of Albany 25.000
Duke of Cambridge 6,000
Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz .... 8,000
Duke of Cambridge 12,000
Duchess of Teck 5,000
'
The Jumping Bean.
Mr. Fred. Frelinghuysen, son of Sec
retary Frelinghuysen, possesses a num -
ber of Mexican jumping beans, which he
procured from the United States aErri
cultural department. According to Sir.
Frelinghuysen these acrobatic beans are
very rare. They are certainly considered
a great currosity by all those who have
see them, and no one yet has explained
what they are. Each pod contains three
kernels. Each segment is rounded on
one side and A shaped on the other,
greenish yellow in color, and in circum
ference about the size of a silver three
cent piece. When placed on a table
they roll over and skip about, sometimes
jumping a couple of inches. When held
between the thumb and forefinger
they are felt to beat as strongly as the
throbbing of a strong man's pulse.
In Alabama is a China tree ten feet in
circumference. Its top was torn away
by a storm ; but six feet up the trunk
two more trees have taken root and
grown up as high as the old tree is.
Half way up the trunk of the original
tree a peach tree stands out.
An observer says most of the centena
rians in America are from Ireland,
though there are many among the col
bred people.
We have deposited in our savings
banks in round "numbers $1,000,000,000.
The amount of money invested in rail
road corporations in the United Sta tes i
upward of $7,000,000,000, and that does
not include the land granted by Con
gress. A letter started from any point in the
United States can be sent over the Sier
ras and the Rocky mountains to the most
distant point in the country for two
cents.
It Knocks the Spots,"
and everything in the nature of eruptions,
blotches, pimples, ulcers, scrofulous humors,
and incipient consumption, which is nothing
more nor less than scrofula of the lungs, com
pletely out of the system. It stimulates and
invigorates the liver, tones up the stomach,
regulates the bowels, purifies the blood, and
builds up ths weak places of tho body. It is a
purely vegetable compound, and wul do more
than is claimed for it. We refer to Dr. Pierce's
"Golden Medical Discovery."
Germany expends $30,000 annually for the
maintenance of experimental forest stations.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
is to be had at the nearest drug store for a dol
lar. It is not claimed that this remedy will
cure every disease under the sun, but that it
does all that it claims to do, thousands of
good women know and declare.
The New York horse cars last year killed
twoaty-four persons and injured eighty-nine.
'AiOnDdniNcnr."
are the words used by a lady, who was at one
time given up by tho most eminent physicians,
and left to die. Reduced to a mere skeleton,
pale and haggard, not able to leave her bed,
from all those distressiag diseases peculiar to
suffering females, such as displacements, lou
corrhcea, inflammation, eta, etc. She began
taking Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription,w
and also using the local treatments recom
mended by him, and is now, she says, "as
good as new." Price reduced to one "dollar.
By druggists.
Nitre beds are being found in Nevada
rivaling in productiveness those of Peru
Throw Away Trusses
when our new method is guaranteed to per
manently cure tho worst cases of rupture
without the use of knife. Send two letter
6tamps for pamphlet and references. World's
Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main
street, Buffalo, N. Y. .
The electric light on Washington monu
ment can be seen seventeen miles away.
An Undoubted Blessing-.
About thirty years ago, a prominent
physician by the name of Dr. William Hall,
discovered, or produced after long experi
mental research, a remedy for diseases of the
throat, chest and lungs, which was of such
wonderful efficacy that it soon gained a wide
reputation in this country. The name of the
medicine is Dr. Win. Hall's Balsam for tho
Lungs, and may be safely relied on as a
ipeedy an! positive cure for coughs, colds
lore throat; etc.
N Y N U-S8
"Roucb on Pain."
Cures colic, cramps, diarrhoea; externally
for aches, pains, sprains, headache, neuralgia,
rheumatism. For man or beast. 25 and 50a
Young- Men! Koad This.
The Voltaic Belt (Jo., of Marshall,
Mich., offer to send their celebrated Electro
Voltaic Belt and other Electric Appli
ances on trial for thirty days, to men (young
or old) afflicted with nervous debility, loss ol
vitality and manhood, and all kindred troubles.
Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and
many other diseases. . Complete restoration
to health, vigor and manhood guaranteed. Na
risk is incurred as thirty days trial is allowed.
Write them at once for illustrated pamphlet
free.
'Rouih on Pain" Ffaarftr.
1 . Porous and strengthening, improved, th
! best for backache, pains in i chest or side,rheu-
matism, neuralgia, rac. Druggists or mn.ii.
The Best Butter Color.
The great unanimity with which dairymen ol
high reputation have adopted, in preference
to anything else, tho Improved Butter Coloi
made by AY ells, Richardson & Co., of Burling
ton, Vt. , is remarkable. It shows that th
claims of imitative colors are baseless; wise
dairymen will use no other.
The Hope ofllio Nation.
Cliildren,slovv in development. puny,scrawny
and delicate, use ''Wells' Health Ilenewer."
Hay-Fever is a type of catarrh having pe
culiar symptoms. It is attended by an in
flamed condition of the lining membrane ol
the nostrils, tear-du?ts and throat, affecting
tho lungs. An acrid mucus is secreted, the
discharge is accompanied with a burning sen
sation. There are savere spasms of sneezing,
frequent attacks of headache, watery and in
flamed eyes. Ely's Cream Balm is a remedy
founded on a correct diagnosis of this disease,
and can be depended upon. 50 cts. at drug
gists; CO cts. by mail. Sample bottle by mail
60 cts. Ely Bros., Druggists, Owego, N. Y.
A baldheaded man, who has heard that the
hairs of a man's head are numbered, wants to
know if there is not some place where he can
obtain the back numbers. Carboline will
supply the demand.
Wgtat Sweats.
cured by "Wells' Health Renewer." $L
' S3 Cent
Will buy a Treatise on the Horse and His
l diseases .Book of 100 pages, valuable to
j every owner of horses. Postage stamps taken.
Rant rmenaiA TJr-ur VrTv ifnnau DAriL-
1 134 Leonard Street, NewJJTork city.
Beware of the incipient stages of consump
tion. Taka Piso's Cure in time.
Nebraska has nearly 2T0,000 acres of
planted forests in good condition.
100 Doses One Dollar
Can be applied truthfully to Hood'g Smrsaparlll only,
and it is an unanswerable and convincing argument a
to the strength and real economy of this great medicine.
Hood's Sarsaparilla is made of roots, herbs, barks, etc..
Ions and favorably known for their power in eradicating
disease from the system and purifying the blood-
Restored to Health
"During the summer months I hare been somewhat
debilitated or run down. I have taken Hood's Sirsa
panlla, whieh gave me new life and restored me to my
wonted health and strength." William H. Clouoh,
Tilton. N. H.
Given an Appetite
"Within a week after taking Hood's Sf.rsaparilla my
appetite began to improve, my headache left me, my
strength seemed to be renewed, and I felt better in
every part of my body. I rejoice when I think ot the
good Hood's Sarsaparilla has done me." CHASLXS L.
Babditt. Syracuse, N. Y.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Bold by all druggists. $1 ; six forfi. Prepared only bf
C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries. Lowell. Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar.
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