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FARM AND GARDEN.
To Make Deep Milkers.
The time when cows arc and
spoiled is when heifers are approaching
calving with their first calves, and for
eix months thereafter. A heifer should
be well fed on nutritious, growing food,
loots, bran and some strong meal, corn,
oats, cotton aged etc., besides hay and
stalks. She Should have daily exercise,
and when she comes to the stall should
|be handled, the udder kneaded, rubbed,
| and the milk veins traced their whole
r length. She will learn to like this, and
| it produces a pleasant excitement about
j the parts, a tendency of blood to the
1 milk glands, their growth, and an in
creased tendency to give milk. After
calving, when she settles down to milk
ing, she should, have strong-milking
food, in which wheat bran should be a
■ constant and an abundant constituent.
The aim should be rather to cause a
■ larger flow than much fat secretion. |
The heifer is herself growing rapidly.
Many of the constituents of the milk are
needed for her own increasing frame,
but the flow of milk must be kept up ami
«he should be milked almost up to her
uextcalving.— Colonel Weld, in Dairman.
When to Pick Fruit.
fruits are mature, they make
f>re< ,ion for falling, just as mature
eaves do. A distinct line is formed upon
the stem of the fruit, in preparation for
the separation. When the apple or pear
is mature, it will separate from the tree
without any pulling; mere lifting the
fruit from its hanging position to a hori
zontal one, will cause the separation from
f the tree to take place at once. A little
observation will teach when the fruit is
ready to be gathered. At this time, the
fruit having made its growth, derives
nothing more from the tree. After the
fruit is full-grown,its next step is toward
decay. Decay in early kinds comes in a ‘
few days or weeks. In the late sorts it
requires several months, but whether
early or late, there is a stage in this prog
ress from maturity to decay, when the
fruit best suits our purpose, and we say,
that is “ripe,” or “mellow,” or “in eat
ing.” This time in early kinds comes
very quickly, and other varieties do not
assume it before spring. Early kinds
come “into eating condition” so soon,
that they will bear but little transporta
tion, hence arc suited only to near mar
kets. But these vary greatly, and there
are from very early and autumn ripening 1
kinds, to the very latest. The fruit- I
grower should be a careful observer of !
these point?. The best fruit may be
spoiled or materially depreciated in value ;
by careless picking and handling. Prop- |
erly constructed cold storage houses will I
do much toward keeping fruit in good j
condition, but unless the fruit is picked
at the right time, it cannot be kept prof
itably even in the best fruit house. —
.American Agriculturist.
Care of Potatoe Fields.
Hoe potatoes early ami often. There
is no plant cultivated that will respond
more readily to or pay better for clean
culture, and frequent stirring of the soil
than this. Run the cultivator through
them often, and run it shallow. There
is no call for deep - working. What is
wanted now is to keep the surface clean.
The hilling may be done later or as the
plants get larger. There is no crop
..grown among us that is so frequently
as is the potato. It is no un
common thing in traveling across the !
in the fall of the year to see
tiields so infested with weeds that it re-
I quires careful attention to discover the
Tops of the potatoes among them. Every
one knows that it is not possible to se
cure a bountiful crop under such con
ditions.
# Just how much potatoes should be
lulled in the final hoe.ng depends some
what on the condition of the 1 The
tubers must have a mellow sail toexpand
in. If the soil has been well plowed,
■«. and deeply and thi roughly stirred before
Z planting, moderate lulling is al! that
.■-•is called for. It is far the Letter
s course to have M fhe land properly
a prepared before planting. When this is ,
done and the after culture is what it '
should be—clean and frequent—the po- ,
■ tato becomes a sure crop, and usually a
profitable one.
There is no room, however, for slack i
work and indifferent care where good i
crops are wanted, The old practice of !
“once hoeing” will not answer now.
The varieties now raised must be grown
quickly, and’to do this they must have
high culture, and must be kept clean.—
Maine- Farmer.
Farm and Garden Notes.
Never forget to salt and water your
stock regularly.
Better uproot old, played-out fruit gar
dens. The land is wasted.
Glycerine and sulphur mixed are good
for gapes in your chickens.
The red onion is said to hold its flavor
longer than any other variety.
Feed Indian corn sparingly to fowls at
this season, as it is too fattening.
Clover pasture increases the milk yield
, in cows and makes yellow butter.
The earth around potted plants should
not be allowed to get entirely dry.
Queen bees should always be raised
fronfthewery best stock in the apiary.
Raise some variety of popcorn with
very snjatl kernels for the young chicks.
A tew Evergreens planted here and
there add greatly to the beauty of a farm.
Impure air in the hennery causes
many of the finest fowls to sicken and
<dje.
Don’t grow fruit or vegetables too
thick; thinning out improves size and
quality.
k *. To stro . v i‘* iarß - elders, etc., cut
■ them dov.’n now, and us often as thev
r xrtmppear.
who warms hnnsclf up every
morning grooming his horses will be well
remunerated for his trouble.
A new, cheap and effective insect
killer is composed of one part nuiriate of
potash in 1,000 parts of water.
There is no one thing that is so much
required nowadays -on the average farm
as to thoroughly systematize labor.
Sluggish horses are generally made so
by the way they are handled. A lazy
man is pretty sure to have lazy horses.
Raw onions chopped fine and mixed
with food twice a week are recommended
as better than a dozen cures for chicken
cholera.
You will be likely to save trouble by
speaking kindly to your horses every
time you approach them in the stable or
elsewhere.
Pure linseed oil is claimed as the best
remedy for pear blight, though it cannot ;
be wholly relied upon when the trees are
well under way with the disease.
Fine hay or cut or well broken straw
makes good nests for hens. As good,
perhaps better, nests can be made of
shavings of soft wood from the carpen
ter’s bench.
Fowls should not be allowed around
barns, stables or carriage houses. They
are neither useful nor ornamental ad
juncts thereto; on the contrary, they are
highly detrimental.
Recent experiments seem to show that
eggs will keep in fair condition from
June to November packed in salt, and
that it is quite as good as the hmc and
salt pickle commonly used.
Never clean horses in the stable; the
dust fouls their crib, makes them dis
gusted with their food, and vitiates the
atmosphere, which should be kept health
ful by every means at command.
For gapes put-ten drops spirits turpen
tine in a pint of water, and give no other
liquid to the chicks to drink. Put a
teaspoonful of turpentine in a quart of
corn meal and feed. Turpentine instant
ly destroys the gape worm.
A mess of feed given to a cow while she is
being milked draws her attention and she
•will not hold up the milk as cows are apt
to do when the calf is taken from them.
The milking can be done more thoroughly
as well as quicker, when the cow is
quietly feeding. And if fed Cabbage or
turnips at this time the odor will not effect
the milk.
The foljowing is given as a good prep
aration for the destruction of the beetle
or potato bug: Take three pounds of
lime, slake, and aid six to eight gallons
of water, and a tablespoonful of concen
trated lye. Mix all together and apply
to the vines with a common sprinkler.
It will work like a charm, one or two
applications completely ridding the patch
of the beetles ami larva?.
Perhaps no family of insects is more
widely distributed or more generally de
structive and better known than plant
lice. These pests do not content them
selves with any single part of a plant.
Some work on the roots and sap the vital
ity of the herb or tree; others draw their
nourishment from the stems and twigs
and thus blight the plants; still others
suck the vitality from bud and foliage. A
few work on both roots and leaves.
Most cultivated vegetables, grains and
trees have their characteristic plant
house enemies.
All of our domestic fowls are useful,
but in varying degrees and different di
rections. No classification upon their
useful qualities can be made which will
be complete. The following, however,
by the Poultry W orld, will be of value to
many readers: Egg producers—Leg
horns, Hamburgs, Russians, Minorcas,
Black Spanish, Polish and Andalusian.
Table fowls—Dorking, Hondares, La
Flechc, Games. Crevecours, Brahmas,
Cochins, l.angshans. General utility
fowls—Plymouth Rocks, Wyandottes,
Javas, Dominiques. But all such classi
fications are far from complet.’, for some
of the table fowls are excellent layers
and some of the great egg producers are
fitted to satisfy the taste of an epicure.
The Seneca Lake grape growers recom
mend early plowing as a means of retain
ing moisture in the soil. An old vine
yard does not require manure close to
the vines, as the small roots are found
nearer the centre of the rows; but young
vineyards should be manured close to the
vine and plowed close. Plowing away
from the vines and then leveling with
the cultivator are advisable. Hand hoe
ing n ust be avoided. Vines should be
kept in good condition in dry weather by
stirring the soil frequently, which serves
also to gather, the ammonia from the
atmosphere. Vineyards on clay soil re
quire more cultivation. Cutting the
I vines in summer is thought to be injuri
; ous, although good fruit is grown in an
' old vineyard where it was necessary to
do this, as the trellises were not sufficient
to keep the fruit from the ground. One
grower said that his Isabella vineyard
had been in bearing twenty-five years
and still produced good fruit.
Some horses have a habit, when fright
■ ened by strange objects which they meet
' upon the road, of turning around so
j abruptly as to endanger the occupants of
the carriage, if a four wheeled vehicle.
' Colts, when first harnessed, if driven to
a certain point and turned around, often
' insist upon repeating the trick every time
1 they reach that particular spot. They
1 generally turn in the same direction
' every time. The simplest remedy that we
j have heard for breaking up this habit,
1 says the Pit It i tutor, is to take a light,
; strong bamboo fishpole, Listen the small
end to the ring of the bit upon the side
toward which the animal is accustomed
to turn. Bring the .other end of the
pole back into the carriage. When the
youngster attempts the turning feat push
upon the p >le w ith sufficient force to pre
vent his carrying out his purpose. This
may not work in a'l eases where the ani
mal is fully grown, and has been addicted
to the habit for a long time, but it will
break up the habit in a majority of cases
when taken in reason. . q.
Expensive Flags.
The flags to be presented to the New
York fire department are said to be the
finest ever made. Thw cost about
$1,700. One is a nationaTOag; the other
is a white silk department flag. They
are six feet six inches long by five feet
six inches wide, and made of the best
silk. The department flag is ornamented
with gold fringe and the insignia of the
department. These are the banners at
the presentation of which Mrs. Cleveland
has been asked to preside.
Bartholdi’s Statue of “Liberty Enlighten
ing tho World’*
Will be a reminder of personal liberty for ages
to come. On just as sure a foundation has Ur.
•Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery” been
placed, and it will stand through the cycles of
time as a monument to the physical emancipa
tion of thousands, who by its use have been re
lieved from consumption, consumptive night
sweats, bronchitis, coughs, spitting of blood,
weak lungs, and other throat and lung affec
tions.
Terrible forest fires in Michigan devour
fences a;.d crops, causing great loss to farmers.
Consumption, Wasting Diseases,
And General Debility. Doctors disagree as to
the relative value of Cod Liver Oil and Hypo
phosphites; the one supplying strength and
flesh, the other giving nerve power, and acting
as a tonic to the digestive and entire system.
But in Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with
Hypophosphites the two are combined, and the
effect is wonderful. Thousands who have de
rived no permanent benefit from other prepa.
rations have been cured by this. Scott’s Emul
sion is perfectly palatable and is easily digested
by those who canuot tolerate plain Cod Liver
Oil.
A big church organ made of paper is said to
be the latest discovery in the musical line.
“That Miss Jones is a nice looking girl, isnt,
she?”
“Yes, and she’d be the belle of the town if it
wasn’t for one thing ?”
“What’s that?”
“She has catarrh so bad it is unpleasant to be
near her. She has tried a dozen things and
nothing helps her. lam sorry, for I like her,
but that doesn’t make it any less disagreeable
for one to be around her.”
Now if she had used Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Rem
edy, there would have been nothing of the kind
said, for itjvill cure catarrh every time.
The Swiss Government purchased alcohol
to cover the consumption for 12 months.
* * * *. Nervous debility, premature decline
of power in either sex, speedily and permanent
ly cured. Large book, 10 cents in stamps.
World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 003
Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
Hand-painted coffins are the latest society
freak in Boston.
Those who are trying to break up the bane
ful habit of intemperance will experience
great benefit from the use of Prickly Ash Bit
ters. Liquors derange the system. Prickly
Asn Bitters will remedy the evil results and
restore the brain, stomach and liver to healthy
action, thereby strengthening the will power,
thoroughly cleansing and toning up the sys
tem and remove every taint of disease. It is
purely a medicine, and while pleasant to the
taste, it cannot be used as a beverage by reason
of its cathartic properties.
Father.
Loss of sleep sustained from anxiety spent
over the little one so slowly and pitifully wast
ing away from the effect of teething, unfit you
for business, why not try Dr. Biggers’ Huckle
berry Cordial.
Dn lighters. Wives and Ji others.
i Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free;
securely sealed. I >r. .1. B. .Mari liisi, Utica, N.Y.
Relief is immediate, and a curb sure. Piso’s
Remedy for Catarrh. 50 cents.
Nervous People
Who take Hood’s Sarsaparilla earnestly declare: “It
gives us complete and permanent control of our
nerves." By regulating the digestion it also over
comes dyspepsia and disagreeable feelings in the
stomach, cures headache and heartburn. By Its action
on the blood impurities are expelled and the whole
body Is benefited.
“I never can thank Hood's Sarsaparilla for helping
me so much, When I began taking it I was confined
to the bed nearly all the time Now lam up tho best
part of the day, have a better appetite than for five
years, and am not nearly so nervous as I have been.”
Mrs. Ann A. Hailer, Nicetown, Philadelphia.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1 ; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD ft CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
too Doses Ona Dollar
KIDDER’S
’ v V Ki
■ : 11) 1
T* U LU L 1
A SURE CUKE FOR
INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA.
Over 5,0 M Physicians have sent us their approval of
DIGESTYLIN, saying that it is the best preparation
for Indigestion that they have ever used.
We have never heard of a case of Dyspepsia where
DIGESTYLIN was taken that was not cured.
FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM.
IT WILL CURE THE MOST AGGRAVATED CASES.
IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN PREGNANCY.
IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION.
For Summer Complaiuts and Chronic Dfarrhcea.
which are the direct results of imperfect digestion,
DIGESTYLIN will effect an immediate cure.
Take DYGESTYLIN for all pains and disorders of
the stomach; they all come from Indigestion. Ask
your druggist for DIGESTYLIN (price $1 per large
bottle). If he does not have It send one dollar to us
and we win send a bottle to you, express prepaid.
Do not hesitate to send your money. Our house is
reliable. Established twenty-five years.
WIH. F. KIDDER A CO..
't n nnlhctn rinut CheniGt-. ,1 «hu St., N.Y.
Pl«ic<9ek Dißla Great English Gout and
Uiail S I 1115a Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box, 34; round, 14 Fills.
fl B^llß lUI Habit Cli rOCI .nlintaclorv before any par.
Ur IUIVI Prof. J. X. BIKTON. 2tlh Ward. ClneinnaU. O.
This represents a healthy life. Just snch a life as they eniov
Throughout its various scenes, Who use the Smith’s Bile Renns
Smith’s BILE BEANS purify the blood, by acting -
directly and prorupliy on ih e %,lver. Skin and Kid- The original Photograph I
noya. £ liey consist of a vegetable combination that P a >wl sue, of this picture'
has noeqiial in medical, science. They cure Constina- sent on receipt of lOc. in
tlon. malaria, and Hyspcpsiu, and are a safeauird BtoW^iTi rt nS s *lw« I
a P * orms ot fever*, chills aud fever, gall stones, I
aud Bright’s disease. Send 4 cents postage for » sam- Mo ‘ I
pie package and test the TRUTH of what wo say. Price. 25 cents uer hottla.
balled to any address, postpaid. BOSK ONE BfiAN? Sold by
«J. 2F- £33CX*Xr£X <A> CO.. PROPRIETORS, ST. LOUIS," 340
sOew
[ T IS AP U HCLY VEGETABLE PRCVARAIION
SENNA-MANQRAKE-BUCHU
fIgWWD OTHER EQJJAUYEFnCiEMT REMEDIES
B ®| It has stood the Test of Years,
jßaailin Curing all Diseases of the
BLOOD, LIVER, STOM
ACH, KIDNEYS,BOW
ELS, &c. It Purifies the
if B * ood > Invigorates and
Cleanses the System.
• DYSPEPSIA, CONSTI
j CURES PATION, JAUNDICE,
I ALLDISEASES OFTHF. SICKHEADACHE.BIL-
I TJVER lODS COMPLAINTS,&c
• vzirnii Ertrff* disappear at once under
! KIUNEtISr its beneficial influence.
STOMACH tis purely a Medicine I
ANO as its cathartic proper-
TSniAJCT C ea f° r bidb its use as a
Ibeverage. It is pleas-
i Xs 2aSzrr SZ I ant to the taste, and as
tJ chUd -
, AUDHUGGISIS i pmsklyash bi tiers co
PRICE! DOLLARS Sole Proprietors,
MIMIIIIIMI ST-houisand Kanba. City
WEJWTHe HOU W
Gone where the Woodbine Twine th.
Rats are smart, but “Rough on Rats" beats
them. Clears out Rats, Mice. Roaches, Water
Bugs, Flies, Beetles, Moths, Ants. Mosquitoes,
Bed-bugs. Insects, Potato Bugs, Sparrows,
Skunks. Weasel, Gophers, Chipmunks. Moles,
Musk Rats, Jack Rabbits. Squirrels. 15c. & 25c.
HEN LICE.
“Rough on Rats” is a complete preventive
and destroyer of Hen Lice. Mix a 25c. box o£
“ Rough on Rats ” to a pail of whitewash,
keep it well stirred up while applying. White
wash. the whole interlorof the Hennery; inside
and outside of the nests. The cure is radical
gygg
*Vctbi For P° tato 1 1150043 0Q
. .a, Vines, Shrubs, Trees, 1 pound
or half the contents of a SI.OO
/fim, box of “Rough on Rats” CAgri-
cultural Size) to be thoroughly
/ J mixed with cue to two barrels
I” of plaster, or what is better air
V. slacked lime. Much depends
lt * M upon thorough mixing, so aa
to completely distribute the pcison. Sprinkle
it on plants, trees or shrubs when damp or
wet, and is quite effective when mixed with
lime, dusted on without moisture. While in
its concentrated state it is the most active
and strongest of all Bug Poisons; when mixed
as above is comparatively harmless to ani
mals or persons, in any quantity they would
take. If preferred to use in liquid form.atable
spoonfui of the full strength “Rough on Rats”
Powder, well shaken, in a keg of water and
applied with a sprinkling pot, spray syringe
or whisk broom, will be found very effective.
Keep it well stirred up while using Sold by
all Druggists and Storekeepers. 15c., 25c. & sl.
E. S. Wslls, Chemist, Jersey City. N. J.
it is a Perfect Cure.
Was severely afflicted with
l Hrtz/ Ftver 25 l/ carg - 1
tried Ely's Cream Balm and
fe- *"* d perfect cure.—Wm. T. Carr,
Presbyterian Pastor, Eliza-
Apply Balm into each nostril.
J.P.STWENS&BROr
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
Send for
One Agent( Merchant only) wanted in every town for
I have retailed one hundred and three thousand
(103,000) oi your • Tansili’s Punch” .’-cent cigars dur
ing the past four months, and over 1,400,000 during
t. e past live years.
Wm. M. Dale, Dru.’gist, Chicago.
Address R. VV. TANSILLjk CO., Chicago.
BUSINESS
Education a specialty at JIOORE’S BUSINESS
UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, <»n. Ona of the best
schools in the Country. Send for Circulars.
MA! ® ct r ens *°ns. if 54 disa-
II ! 11 : Officers’ travel pay,
a ti W bounty collected: Deserters
’•w relieved; 22years’ practice success or no fee.
Laws sent free. A. W. McCormick & Son, Wn.blnglon, D.C;
A I?" to SS a day. Samples worth $1.50, FREE.
NN Lines not under the horse’s feet. Write
W Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co.. Holly, Mich.
SOLDIERSan < 1 their widows"
KwaLAlwHl. Tv Mil Pensions now foryouall. Ad
■•l '^£ e s s K- IL Gelstou A: Co., Washington, D.C.
FINE Blooded Cattle, Sheep, Hogs,
Poultry. Dogs for sale. Catalogues with 1.50
engravings free. N. P. Boyer ft < <>. Coatesville. Pa
Teachers wanted : septemueu session.
Address, with stamp, Soiitlieru Teachers’
Aiteue.y, P. O. Box 410. Birmingham, ala.
JajT.- Gl-ORGE’S HALL for Boys and Young
“’ ST- G d'°^ G, J S S M S - L "surpassed. 5230 to
S3OO a year. Prof. J. C. Linear, A. M., Principal.
PRrr By return mall. Full Description
I™ Sts F* U* New Tailor System of Dreu
w SCllwitaa Catting. MOODY & CO., Cincinnati, 0-
WHAT
AILS
YOU?
Do you feel dull, languid, low-spirited, life
less, and indescribably miserable, both physi
cally and mentally; experience a sense of
fullness or bloating after eating, or of “gone
ness,” or emptiness of stomach in the morn
ing, tongue coated, bitter or bad taste in
mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness, frequent
headaches, blurred eyesight, “floating specks”
before the eyes, nervous prostration or ex
haustion, irritability of temper, hot flushes,
alternating with chilly sensations, sharp,
biting, transient pains here and there, cold
feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or
disturbed and unrefreshing sleep, constant,
indescribable feeling of dread, or of impend
ing calamity?
If you have all, or any considerable number
of these symptoms, you are suffering from
that most common of American maladies—
Bilious Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated
with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The more
complicated your disease has become, the
greater the number and diversity of symp
toms. No matter what stage it has reached,
I>r. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
will subdue it, if taken according to direc
tions for a reasonable length of time. If not
cured, complications multiply and Consump
tion of the Lungs, Skin Diseases, Heart Disease,
Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, or other grave
maladies are quite liable to set in and, sooner
or later, induce a fatal termination.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis.
co very acts powerfully upon the Liver, and
through that great blood-purifying organ,
cleanses the system of all blood-taints and im
purities, from whatever cause arising. It is
equally efficacious in acting upon the Kid
neys, and other excretory organs, cleansing,
strengthening, and healing their diseases. As
an appetizing, restorative tonic, it promotes
digestion and nutrition, thereby building up
both flesh and strength. In malarial districts,
this wonderful medicine has gained great
celebrity in curing Fever and Ague, Chills and
Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diseases.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis.
covery
CURES ALL HUMORS,
from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to the
worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum, “Fever-sores,”
Scaly or Rough Skin, in short, all diseases
caused by bad blood are conquered by this
powerful, purifying, and invigorating medi
cine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under
its benign influence. Especially has it mani
fested its potency in curing Tetter, Eczema,
Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Scrof
ulous Sores and Swellings, Hip-joint Disease,
"White Swellings,” Goitre, or Thick Neck,
and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents in
stamps for a large Treatise, with colored
plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount
for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections.
“FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.”
Thoroughly cleanse it by using Br. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery, and good
digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, vital
strength and bodily health will be established.
CONSUMPTION,
which is Scrofula of the Langs, is arrested
and cured by this remedy, if taken in the
earlier stages of the disease. From its mar
velous power over this terribly fatal disease,
when first offering this now world-famed rem
edy to the public, Dr. Pierce thought seriously
of calling it his “Consumption Cure,” but
abandoned that name as too restrictive for
a medicine widen, from its wonderful com
bination of tonic, or strengthening, alterative,
or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, pectoral, ana
nutritive properties, is unequaled, not only
as a remedy for Consumption, but for all
Chronic Diseases of the
Liver, Blood, and Lungs.
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Short
ness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Bron
chitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred
affections, it is an efficient remedy.
Sold by Druggists, at SI.OO, or Six Bottles
for $5.00. ’
£3’“ Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce’S
book on Consumption. Address,
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,,
6G3 Main St., BUFFALO, N. Y.
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
A Great Radical Work for Young
and Middle-Aged Men.
KNOW THYSELF. JSSw
PUBLISHED by ibe PEABODY MEDI-
CAL INSTITUTE, No. 4 Bullfinch St.,
Boston, Mass. WJI. 11. PARKER, M.D.,
Consulting Physician. More than one million opies
sold. It treats upon Nervous and Physical Debility,
Premature Decline, Exhausted Vitality, Impaired
Vigor, and Impurities of the Blood, and the untold
miseries consequent thereon. Contains 300 pages,
substantial emboss d binding, full gilt. Warranted
the best popular medical treatise published in the
English language. Price oniy $1 by mall, postpaid,
and concealed In a plain wrapper. Illustrative
sample free if you send now. Address as above.
Name this paper. *
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE. 1
The only S 3 SEAMLESS
Shoe in the world. K
finest Calf, perfect fit, and
warranted. Congress, Button Q I— S
and Lace, all styles toe. As C? JRgg-Sf o' l a
stylish and durable as jPrFw ui tk
those costing $5 or .6. A. S&SS
W. 1.. DOUGLAS ST
82.50 SHOE excels Jr
the $3 Shoes ad ver- AF
Used by other
[Yow « ad
. Bovs ait wear the W. 1.. DOUGLAS 82 SHOE.
If your dealer does not keep them, send your nanie on
postal to W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mast.
JONES'-
Ej WPAYSthe FREIGHT
Ton Waoou Scaies#
’ ron Sivel Bearings.
Tore Beam aud Beam Box for
Brerr sixe Scale. For free price UM
« mention thia pnpor and aHdrosa
fF S, W JOJGS CF BIMGHAMTB.I. :
w * BINGHAMTON. N.
ft I ■■ H ■ ‘" J WHISKEY HABITS
SU fl 3 8S ® Scared at home without pain
? „ K psi filfl Book of particulars sent I'RillS.
U I I U iVI B M. Woolley. M. D,
Atlunin, (4a. office
Whitehall sf»»ntion this paiur. __
A ABB BAE Mornbine Habit Cured In 10
BKp’aHrKM “> ZU days. No P«V cured-
WmBVuVI Hr. J. blephena, Ohie»
ft ft||l|| Habit Cured. Treatment senton trial.
Ul lUHI Humane RemkpyCo.. LaFayette.l»
GX OLD is wortb SSOO per pound. Pettit's Eye Salva
X SI,OIXI. but ia sold at 25 cents a box by dealers.
■ Pioo’a Remedy for Catarrh is the ■,
Beet, Easiest to Use, and < heapesLffiffl
■ Bold by druggists or by mail. H
50c. E. T. Uaktdtuw. Warren, Pa. H
A. X. V 'Thirty