Newspaper Page Text
FARM AND GARDEN.
Roses in the Garden.
Like nertrly all other plants, roses de
light in a deep, rich, well drained land,
says Peter Henderson in the American \
Agriculturist. When a bed of Hybrid
Perpetual Roses is to be planted, the soil
should be dug to the depth of at least
-one foot, and well mixed with a coating |
of two or three inches of rotten cow
manure. In the absence of tiiat, sow
bone dust on the surface just enough to '
cover it, and mix- to the depth of a foot '
with the soil. If Hybrid Perpetual Roses
are to be set out in a permanent bed,
plant from eighteen to twenty inches !
| each way; if Hybrid Teas plant fourteen
to sixteen inches, and if Monthlies or j
Teas about twelve inches. The Hybrid I
Perpetual and Tea Roses require to lx*
pruned, like any other hardy shrub. Cut
the young wood any time after the leaves ■
have dropped, back to two or live eyes, '
regulating it according to the.strength of
the shoot, the weaker shoots beingcut to ■
two or three eyes, the stronger to four or
five, shaping the bush so as to get it in
good form. The Monthly or Tea Roses
require but little pruning, except to thin
out the “blind” or old wood, or topping
by pinching out the center of any shoot '
that is growing too luxuriantly, so as to
keep the plant in good shape.
Measuring Hay by Bulk.
Every season come inquiries as to the
most accurate mode of measuring hay i
in bulk, and every season come also, from ,
correspondents in different sections of
the country, rules for measurement, vary
ing in one or more particulars. Now,
the long ami short of the matter is just
this: So many things have to.be taken
into consideration in calculating the
weight of hay in bulk it makes it dillicult
to ascertain it precisely. For instance,
jfine new-mown hay, like red-top or herds
grass, would probably not require quite
500 cubic feet for the ton; timothy alone
requires about 550; clover, 650; coarse
meadow hay, 700 or more. After being,
stacked about a month the bulk would
be decreased from 5 to 10 per cent.
Again, hay will vary somewhat in
measurement according to the time it is ;
cut.
The Government standard for a ton of
hay is 7| feet; this gives 422 cubic feet.
To find the number of cubic feet in a
stack, multiply the area of the base by
one-third the perpendicular height. An !
estimate very generally accepted is that
25 cubic yards of common meadow hay ;
in the windrow compose a ton, and It)
cubic yards of baled or pressed hay the !
same weight. A truss c,f new hay, ac
cording to the same estimate, is 60
pounds; of old hay, 56 pounds; a load
of hay, 36 trusses; a bale, 300 pounds.
A truss of straw is 40 pounds,
A common rule for finding the number
of cubic feet in a mow consists in multi - i
plying the length, width and depth ,
together. Five hundred cubic fee! of
ordinary cloverand timothy hay, packed ■
•under ordinary circumstances, will make I
a ton. A’rvo EcA- Hbr/7.
Wide Tired Wagons.
Mr. W. A. Armstrong reports the El- ■
naira (N. Y.) Farmers’ dub as regarding :
wide tires for many purposes greatly s i- I
perior to thenarrow ones in common use.
“Mr. Hoffman changed the wheels of a
farm wagon from narrew to broad and i
found gain, especially in driving over
meadows or soft ground, as for instance
in drawing out manure. In this work he j
employed a wagon with narrow tires and i
found it necessary to seek a new place
after two or three passages, but in alter- .
Hating with two wagons, one h iving i
wide tires, he could continue in the
lame track a day or two with less harm 1
than would result from the narrow tires :
<lone in passing two or three times.
Similar commendation of wide tires was I
given by nearly all the farmers present, '
some of them having made practical
trial, others speaking from observation’
extended over considerable time and <
many uses. As to the question of in- |
creased draft claimed by some per ons, it I
was not in accord with opinions formed I
by these farmers, who reasoned that in I
many cases draft is considerably lessened
by wide tires; as, for instance, in draw
ing heavy loads over soft ground, if tires
ure narrow wheels cut in, making con
stant obstruction in front, whereas wide
tires go over without sinking, ami tiea**
sarily with less draft, it was plain that j
■wide tires for farm wagons were greatly I
preferred, and there was even earnest I
commendation of a propsed law consid- |
ered a few years ago imposing penalties j
•upon all users of wagons having narrow
tires on public highways.
Hints on Butter Making.
Mr. C. Moxley, of Vermont, recently
declared in the Homestead that to make j
good butt er the milk must be kept clean
as possible while milking, and a good j
strainer should be used, to take out what
little dirt may drop in. The cows should
be salted often and kept healthy an !
well fed. Set the milk in as cool a place
as can be had in hot weather, with fa
cilities to warm it in the cold season
when needed. It does not matter so
much what the milk is set in, so far as
good butter is concerned." if cleanliness
is observed and the right care is taken to
get the cream. He says:
“I have been brought up in the dairy
business and have followed it for over
forty years ami have aimed to make the
best butter I possibly could. Os course
I would not set in large pans, if pans
were to be used, to make less work and
with better results. My wife takes good
care to skim the milk as soon, or before,
it begins to change, and as soon as the
cream will stay on the skimmer she
takes it off. Then put the cream iirirne
■diately in a can that will hold a churning
and set it in a cool cellar.”
“A word about the < ream can. The
cover should have a cap. Experience
jtfiows that keeps better and
churns quicker tq let it have ventilation.
Cream should not be kept over three
or four days in warm weather, ordinarily,
even if kept in a cool cellar. Cream
should be cooled if necessary the night
before churning in a cold spring or in
ice water, to prevent it from becoming
too soft. Separate the buttermilk as soon
as may be after it comes, rinse with cold
water as cool as you need to keep the
butter cool, and if need be let it stand m
ice water a while before working. The
worker should be well scalded and soaked
in cold water. Then work all ol the
buttermilk out by working and washing,
for butter will not keep good if the but
termilk is left in. Take it out. Next
spread the butter over the worker ready
for salting, three-fourth of an ounce or
more to the pound, just to suit custom
ers, well worked in. If it is not well
worked in the butter will be streaked.
Then pack in heart spruce or adieu tubs,
rightly prepared.
“My way of preparing tubs is as fol
lows; First scald ’(with cover on) with
boiling water to take the taste out of
the tub. Then soak in the strong brine
to crystallize the tub ready for the butter.
In thus preparing the tub it does not
take the salt out of the butter around the
edge. Therefore it will keep in a cool,
damp cellar. In tilling the tub Ido not
til! within about three-fourths of an inch
of the top. Then-put on a clean white
cloth wet in cold water, tuck it down
around the edge of the tub, then spread
one-fourth or one-third of an inch thick
of clean white salt over the cloth on
top of the butter, taking care that the
cloth or the salt does not come to the
top of the staves of the tub. If it does
it will act like a siphon and draw the
brine over the top of the tub to the
outside, which of course does no good.”
Farm and Garden Notes.
Chickens should always, if possible, be !
cooped’ near grass.
Try boiled sweet milk for chickens as- j
fected with diarrhoea.
liens will sometimes lay several eggs
’ after beginning to sit.
Every farmer needs a roller. A plank
i drag and pulverizer is also a useful
implement.
Manure, pruning knives, attention and
sunshine are recommended as the best
, helps to rose culture.
The best remedy for the current borer
' is careful cutting away and burning of
. all infected branches.
Downy mildew causes a brown or gray
I rot. In Wisconsin the greatest loss from
j rot is due to this fungus.
Paper put on in May ami tarred with
’ tar gas or printer’s ink will keep out the
j apple-borer, and last three years.
The good results of tile drainage are
not ail manifest in wet weather. It is
i equally beneficial in time of drought.
Unslacked lime, scattered about sta
| bles and other places where fleas are
i likely to resort, has a tendency to re
j move the pests.
I An elevated tree near a building may
i save the latter from a disastrous stroke
of lightning. A good rod, paid for
when it is put up, is better, however.
Fowls do best when allowed to roam at
j large in field and orchard, but when it is
I obligatory to shut them up they should
j be supplied with meat scraps, butchers'
; etc.
The orchard, with its fruit and shade,
| is i good place for chicks as well as ma
j Lured fowls, all the better if the ground
i between the trees is even partially culti
vated.
Attention to little things helps along
■ with greater. It does not pay, for ex
ample, to use heavy, dull hoes, or
i scythes, cultivators or reapers out of
; order.
The cultivation of sunflowers is on the
I increase. The object is three-fold—or
’ (laments, sanitary effects and food for
■ poultry, to which is added in some local
! ities substitute for fuel.
Orchard grass i . especially valuable,
I says a contemporary, because it makes
I the earliest and latest pasture, and once
j well established and then well treated, it
will outlast the farmer’s lifetime.
Proper trimming is essential to success
in all fruit growing. An overburden of
limbs and foliage will exhaust nature’s
storehouse and cause the tree to be
come impaired in health and defective in
I fruit.
Dr. Vincent, of Deckerville, Mich.,
I says pear trees on light, sandy soil need
; a wagon-load of clay or heavy soil put un
’ der each tree at the time of setting. In
* this respect, he adds, pears differ from
j other fruit.
I A n excellent egg-producing food is one
! part corn meal, two parts bran, two parts
ground oats, one part ground meal, and
I one part middlings, to which may be
i added a small portion of bone meal and
I salt ; scald it and feed early in the morn
ing.
A California farmer cures cattle bloat,
, caused by eating wet clover, thus : Drop
six drops of colocynth on a tcaspoonful
of pulverized sugar for horse or cow,
place it well back on the t mgue, and it
uot relieved repeat the dose" in twenty
minutes. It never fails to cure, he says.
Speaking of fattening hogs, W. B. E.,
of Hutchinson, Kansas, says “I am
satisfied I can fatten hogs in two-thirds
the time where corn is soaked, and I
claim full twenty-five per cent, is saved
in feed, as the same amount will contrib
ute more to growth and fat than dry
corn. Soaked corn should be used from
February till dry corn comes in.
Practical and successful breeders claim
that a constant supply of salt for swine
is u safe preventive of diseases, one that
can be counted on with a degree of cer
tainty ; that by its constant use the sys
tem is made strong to ward off disease
that cholera does not start in herds re
ceiving this care ; that these herds often
escape when all others around them are
destroyed.
Business Principles.
The Dry Goods Chronicle says; A oloth- ;
ing dealer in an interior town had occa- (
sion to visit the city to purchase goods. i
While he was gone a young man en- i
tered his store to buy a coat. A sales- !
man waited upon the customer and ,
showed him a coat plainly marked. $7.
The customer tried it on and said in a
pleasant, confiding way: “I want a good
article, and I can afford to pay a little
more.” The salesman showed him many
coats, and, finally, having removed the
tag, again offered him the seven-dollar
coat which had fitted him at first, and |
said: “Here is a coat, a fine article, just
vour fit, which I can sell you for $12.”
The coat was again tried on, the young
man seemed pleased, paid his money,
and went away. On the merchant's re
turn the salesman, with a smile of tri
umph all over his countenance, rushed
up to him and boasted of what he had j
done. The merchant looked grave. He i
only said: “Does any one know who the
customer was?” A little boy had recog- .
nized him as a workman in a neighbor- j
ing factory and remembered his name. ’
The merchant sent for the young man, j
told him of his mortification, gave him j
back $5 and the privilege of returning '
the coat if he chose, and then said to I
the salesman: “Now, sir, I will pay you I
your week’s salary and I wish you to go. |
If you cheat my customers you have not '
principle enough not to cheat me. If I j
can’t have my people sell goods honestly
I will go out of business. Good day, !
sir,”
V- ♦ -
Painters in Paris.
Some interesting statistics relating to
painters have been lately compiled. Ac
cording to these there are in Paris about
8,000 artists of the brush, of whom be
tween 2,000 and 3,000 are women, and )
300 are foreigners of various nationalities. |
About seventy of these arc famous, while I
the others are made up of wealthy per- ■
sons who paint for pleasure, of people |
who are specially employed by the gov
ernment, and of the producers of “pot
boilers,” who paint portraits and land
scapes for cheap picture dealers or for
foreign exportation. The army of paint
ers’models in Paris is a large one, and
increases day by day. The models are
only employed between the ages 18 and
19 by painters of the nude, but some of
them find work until they are 25 or 26,
after which their forms completely lose
the grace and contour of early growth.
The women who “pose” in studios are
generally paid at the rate of lOf. to 25f.
per diem.
English Sham Battle.
The British autumn manceuvres at Al
bershot are considered the best that have
been known there. They were carried
on during six weeks, and the regimental
marching was especially good, suggest
' ing the advantage which manceuvering
has over simple route expeditions. The
principal sham contest was the “battle of
Kettlesbury Hill,” fought near Fren
sham, when Gen. Smith’s field column
had arrived within fifteen miles of Ai
dershot and was there attacked by troops
from the latter point.
I.ting Troubles and Wasting
Diseasescan be cured if properly treated in
time.asshown by the following statement from
D. C. Freeman, Sidney: “Having been a great
sufferer from pulmonary attacks, and gradu
ally wast ng away for the past two years.it
affords me pleasure t<> testify that Scott’s
Emui-SION of Cod Liver Oil with Lime and Soda
has given me great relief, and I cheerfully re
commend it to all suffering in a similar way to
myself, in addition, 1 would say that it is very
pleasant to take.”
Prince Charles, of Sweden, is the handsom
est man in Europe. He is an author.
A Wonderful Freak of Nature
sometimes exhibited in our public exhibi
tions. When we gaze upon some of the pecu
liar freaks Dame Nature occasionally indulges
in,our minds revert back to the creation of
man, "who is so fearfully and wonderfully
made.” The mysteries of his natu re have been
unraveled l>y Dr. H. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, and
through his knowledge of those mysteries he
has been able to prepare his “Golden Medical
Discovery,” which is a specific for all blood
taints, poisons and humors, such as scrofula,
pimples, blotches, eruptions, swellings, tumors,
ulcers and kindred affections. By druggists.
A well-known belle of New Orleans, La.,
has a passion for Brazilian bugs.
A Woman’s Dress
is an important matter as regards their health.
They are much more subjected to cold than
men, and should be careful t > protect them
selves, but it they contract a cough or co:d
they should take Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy
of Sweet Gum and Mullein.
Every person is interested in their own af
fairs, and if this meets the eye ot' any one who
is suffering from the effects of a torpid liver,
we will admit that he is interested in getting
well. Get a bottle of Prickly Ash Bitters,
use it as directed, and you will always be glad
you read this item.
Bishop Potter, of New York, will soon be
known as "Archbishop" Potter.
SSOO Net Called For,
It seems strange that it is necesssary to per
suade men that you can cure their diseases by
offering a premium to the man who tails to re
ceive beneat. And yet Dr. Sage undoubtedly
cured thou ands or cases of obstinate catarrh
with his “Catarrh Remedy,” who would never
have applied to him, if it had not been for his
offer ot the above sum for an incurable ca e.
Who is the next bidder for cure or cash?
A wax figure of Pranzini has been added
to the Toussard collection, in London.
* Bonanza Mine
of health is to lx? found in Dr. R. V. Pierce's
"Favorite Prescription,” to the merits of
which, as a remedy for female weakness and
kindred affections, thousands testify.
900,0iX) British temperance women have peti
tioned Queen Victoria to close bars on Sunday.
Safe, permanent and complete are the cures
of bilious and intermittent diseases, made by
Prickly Ash Bitters, Dyspepsia, general debil
ity, habitual constipation, liver and kidney
complaints are speedily eradicated from the
system. It di.sintects, cleanses and eliminates
all malaria. Health and vigor are obtained
more rapidly and permanently by the use of
this great natural antidote than by any other
remedy heretofore known. As a blood purifier
and tonic it brings health, renewed energy and
v itality to a worn and diseased body.
Daughters. Wives and .Bothers.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, fre«-
•enurely sealed. Dr. J. a. Marchisi, L’tica, N.Y.
The great success of many agents employed
by 13. fc. Johnson Co., of Richmond, is a pret
ty good ev de nee of the excellence and popular
ity of the books they offer to seR through their
agents. This is u reliable house, and any con
tract made with them you can depend on will
be faithfully carried out.
Make No Mistake
If you have made up your mind to buy Hood’s Sar
saparilla do not be induced to take any other. Hood's
Sarsaparilla is a peculiar medicine, possessing, by
virtue ot its peculiar combination, proportion and
preparation curative power superior to any other
article ot the kind before the people. Be sure to get
Hood’S.
“In one store the plerk tried to Induce me to buy
their own instead of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. But he
could not prevail upon me to change. I told him I
knew what Hood’s Sarsaparilla was, I had taken it,
was perfectly satisfied with it, and did not want any
other.”—Mrs. Ella A. Gorr, St Terrace St., Boston.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1: six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
100 Doses One DoSlar
The best and surest Remedy for Cure of
all diseases caused by any derangement of
the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels.
Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation,
Bilious Complaints and Malaria of all kinds
yield readily to the beneficent influence of
pjliw
It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the
system, restores and preserves health.
It is purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to
prove beneficial, both to old and young,
s a Blood Purifier it is superior to all
others. Sold everywhere at fil.oo a bottle.
KI ODER’S
DIGESTYLIN
A SURE CURE FOR
INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSI A.
Over 5,000 Physicians have sent us their approval of
DIGESTYLIN. saying that it is the best preparation
tor Indigestion tiiat 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 Complaints and Chronic Diarrhoea,
which ore the direct results ot 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 will send a bottle to you, express prepaid.
Do not hesitate to send your money. Our house is
reliable. Established twenty-five years.
VVM. F. KIDDER A CO.,
Manufacturing Chemi st S 3 John St., N. Y.
increase may be due. Ad -
dress Milo B. Stevens & Co..
5 Grover IM’g.Washlngfn.D.C
MEN AND BOYS!
Do you want to
learn all about Wfc,
a Horse f lion
to Pick Out a OmjKßlgjaßSi
<; <i od t) u e II ov.
lo Know I inner-
I eel ion h and so
Cunril uga i n M gr.-a jag
Fraud* 11 ow to
' Detect Discnsi'/
i and effect a cu re
when same is iTo'
possible l ! Ho v, Y,
Io Tell the Age
bv the Teeth* ■
Whnt to call the /
Different Parts
of the Animal! f J '
How to Shoe a Horse Properly? All this,
and other Valuable Information relating
to the Equine Species cun be obtained by
reading our IGO-PAGE ILLUSTRATED
MOUSE BOOK, which we will forward,
My 25 GTS. IN STAMPS.
HORSE BOOK CO., 134 Leonard St., N. Y.
SALT HAMMERLESS. I DALY THREE BARREL.
MANHATTAN HAMMERLESS. (PIEPER BREECHLOADERS.
Send for Catalogue of Specialties.
SCHOVEKEIIVG, I»AI.Y dk GALLS,
84 and 36 Chambers Street, New York.
Ely’s Cream Balm”
F-%1 COLD^ AD
t -?ICATARRH.
a Liquid or Snuff.
Apply Balm in’oeach nostril.
—USAJ Ely Bros., 230 Greenwich St., N.Y.
ABENTS WANTED ‘I, 1 ;'-
TE B NS i for ma ki“B Rugs,
i ldl ««. Hoods, Mittens, etc. Ma
chine se.nt by mail for sl. Send
j for late reduced price list..
E. Rossife Co., Toledo, O.
BUSINESS
•* MOORE’S BUSINESS
UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, <ia. One of the best
ecbools in the Oouotrv. Send for Circulars.
to Soldiers and Heirs. Send for dr-
■ J) culars. No fee unless successful.
■ E - H.GELSTON & CO., Washington. D. C.
D A T F NT 42 Obtained. Send stamp for
f*” .. "■ ■ • O inventors’ Guide. L. Bisg-
■ HAM - Patent Attorney, Washington, D. C.
Mto 88 a day. Samples worth t 1.50, FREE.
Lines not under the horse s feet. Write
Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co.. Holly, Mich.
( v ° wor V‘ P«r»>~ PetVt’TEye’Saiveis
VX wortb >BI,QUO, but is sold at 25c. ab xby dealers.
>ish VL IW H fin H Era Male.
f 1
«> r Aß«l reat i? len !' ot man y thousands of cases ’
of those chronic weaknesses and distressini--
ailments peculiar to females, at the
Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo. N. Y
imr a ex P er >ence in nicely adapt-
ing and thoroughly testing remedies for the
cure of woman s peculiar maladies.
• r " Fl ® rce ’s Favorite Prescription I
is the outgrowth, or result, of this great and
valuable experience. Thousands of testimo
nials, received from patients and from physi
cians who have tested it in the more krgre
yated and obstinate cases which had baffled
their skill, prove it to be the most wonderful'
remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of
suffering women. It is not recommended as *
cure-all, but as a most perfect Specific for
woman’s peculiar ailments.
Ab a powerful, invigorating tonic,
it imparts strength to the whole system
and to the womb and its appendages tn
particular. For overworked, d worn - out ”
run-down,” debilitated teachers, milliners
dressmakers, seamstresses, “shop-girls,” haua&l
keepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women
generally, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled
as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic
As a soothing and strengthening
nervine, “Favorite Prescription” is un£
qualed and is invaluable in allaying and sub
duing nervous excitability, irritability ex
haustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms’ and
other distressing, nervous symptoms com
monly attendant upon functional and organic
disease of the womb. It induces refreshing
sleep and relieves mental anxiety and de
spondency.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
is a legitimate medicine, carefully
compounded by an experienced and skillful
physician, and adapted to woman’s delicate
organization. It is purely vegetable in its
composition and perfectly harmless in its
effects in any condition of the system. For
morning sickness, or nausea, from whatever
cause arising, weak stomach, indigestion, dys
pepsia and kindred symptoms, its use, in small
doses, will prove very beneficial.
“Favorite Proscription ” Is a posi
tive cure for the most complicated and ob
stinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive Bowing
painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions,
prolapsus, or falling of the womb, weak back'
“ female weakness,” anteversion, retroversion,
bearing-down sensations, chronic
inflammation and ulceration of the womb, in
flammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries,
accompanied with “ internal heat,”
As a regulator and promoter of func
tional action, at that critical period of change
from girlhood to womanhood, “Favorite Pro
scription ” is a perfectly safe remedial igent.
and can produce only good results. It te
equally efficacious and valuable in its effects
when taken for those disorders and derange
ments incident to that later and most critical
period, known as “ The Change of Life."
“ Favorite Prescription,” when taken
in connection with the use of Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxative
doses of Dr. Pierce’s Purgative Pellets (Little
Liver Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and Bladder
diseases. Their combined use also removes*
blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and
scrofulous humors from the system.
“ Favorite Prescription ” is the only
medicine for women, sold by druggists, under
a positive guarantee, from the manu
facturers, that it will give satisfaction in every
case, or money will be refunded. This guaran
tee lias been printed on the bottle-wrapper,
and faithfully carried out for many years.
Large bottles GOO doses) SI.OO, or six
bottles for $5.00.
For large, illustrated Treatise on Diseases of
women (160 pages, paper-covered), send tea
cents in stamps. Address,
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
663 Main St., BITFALO. N. Y
H w^ b s ’
balsam
restores Graf
Hair to origi-.
nal color. An
elegant dress
ing, softens
and beautifies
No grease nor
oil. A Tonic
Restorative.
Prevents hair
coming out;
strengthens,
cleanses and
heals scalp.
50c. Druggists
E. S. WELLS,
jehsex city,
n.r.
If you are losing your grip on hfe
kjrtjtKfojenM
Remarkable Cures of Catarrh of’
der, Inflammation, Imtation K
Bladder, Stone or Gravel Diseases of toe
tate Gland, Dropsical Swellings, Incontnie
,orover Continence, peases of the&toejg
[and allied Organs in eitoer sex. sl. Druggs
tor Ex. 6bots., $5. E. S. Wells, Jersey Lit v, a.*
IP. STEVENS & BRO?
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
Send lor Catalogue. - -
GOLDSMITH SUI_I_IVAN’S
Fitten Building, Atlanta. G 11 or c
South Best course
m ■ a n*ll. Great English Gout and
Blair S rlllS. Rheumatic H.medy.
Oral Box. 34 > 1 ‘
- to Soldiers A Heirs. Send stamp
OeaMAlAMfr ’°r circulars. COL L BlNG
rensions HAM, atfy. waehmgtor., P.O.
—'—Morphine Habit Cured In 10
OMI BIBS <« 2OUays. Xo pay till cured,
U| lUln Ur - J * felepbene, Lebanon,Ohio,
A. \'.~iLT7TL.. ■ I ..lOv-'-nc, ’NT.