Newspaper Page Text
farm ajfd homa,
Fktrtn RaJciHQ*.
Txa San Francisco Mural Press tells
of a large farmer in Mercer county
California, who is “ a mechanical genius
ns well. Among his recent construc
tions m his own shops, are a gra n
lieadrer that cuts a swath thirty feet wide,
a canvas-sided dining-room wagon
thrashers, and a horse-feed car for thirty
horses, with boxes around the outside
for feeding grain, and a riok for feeding
hay. 8
In nearly all soils ashes are beneficial
'Hieir action is manifold; they supply to
plants inorganic elements, which they
require ; they neutralize acids; they act
chemically as solvents upon other salts
m 80l] - Th ey are more beneficial on
andy and gravelly soils than on clay.
*or plants that contain a large amount
of potash and phosphoric acid, as can ots
turnips, potatoes and cabbage, ashes are
-an essential manure,
Ilow Dairying Inhausts the Soil.
Prof. J. F. W. Johnston says : “Every
forty gallons of milk contains one
jpound of bone earth beside other phos
phates. Estimating your cow to yield
*<so gallons of milk per year, it will re
quire nineteen pounds of phosphate
equivalent to thirty pounds of dust. If
the calf is sold off, we may assume there
is a 1 oss of twenty pounds of bone, and
the waste of phosphates in the urine*
equals four pounds. And thus for every
cow a dairy farm maintains it will lose of
earthly phosphates as much as it con
tained in fifty-six pounds of bone dust.”
I Ins shows what must be returned to
the soil, where milk is sold, if complete
impoverishment of the land would be
guarded against.
Ewes for Breeding Early Lambs.—
Ihe production of such as are suitable
for this purpose is unquestionably one
- the most profitable things in -which
Western farmers can engage, as they are
•ought for in large numbers in the East
ern Stages during the months of August
and September to raise early lambi for
the following spring market. The ewes
are cheaply and easily bred from grade
Abirino or any common stock if put to a
i /otewold ram, as on account of his
■greater size and fatness he imparts these
qualities in a superior degree, even to
his half-bred offspring. These, when
taken to the Eastern States and crossed
there by Southdown rams, produce an
excellent sort of early lamb, which, if
well fed with its dam, is ready for market
in May and June, and then brings an
Fxtra high price. Lambs which weigh
from thirty to forty pounds at 3 to°4
months of age usually fetch from $7 to
no each. At this price it m very profit
able raising them, as the mother’s fleece,
shorn in the spring, m.ore than pays for
the expense of wintering her and the
service of the rair^— Rural NewYorker.
Sorgo buo.*^—The Secretary of the
Cane-Growers and Sugar-Makers of Illi
nois that it is an established fact
that sugar can be made from sorgo in
paying quantities just as certainly as flour
can be made from wheat, but the meth
ods of obtaining the best results are as
yet imperfectly understood by the great
majority of workers. It therefore be
hooves all such to meet and consult with
those who have been more fortunate.
All the light possible is needed that can
be thrown on the subject from any
source whatever. Many a point now
more or less obscure may be elucidated
by the experience of some shrewd and
observant worker, who has hitherto kept
himself in the background. There are
numbers of such men at work, and we
expect interesting results from them.
Illinois can make sugar enough to sup
ply the United States, when her capacity
in that direction shall have been fully
developed. Even now she leads the van
in the area of cane cultivated and the im
proved machinery and processes em
ployed in the manufacture. Let us
then keep the ball not only rolling, but
give it fresh impetus. We cannot afford
to let it lag, while the State annually
imports $10,000,000 worth of an article
which we can produce at home.
Lambs. —A writer* ia an exchange
says lie has discovered that acorns are a
positive injury to lambs. He turns his
flock into a turnip field and they eat off
the tops so closely that much trouble is
-aved in harvesting. One thing is cer
tain, says this writer, lambs must be
grained liberally, or else they must have
a very choice reserve of green feed to
wind up the graining season on, or they
will lose ground, and go into winter
quarters on a down grade. I feed my
lambs more grain in November than in
January. In January they are well es
tablished in their winter habits and have
an abundance of the sweetest hay;
whereas, in November they are in a
transitory condition, gathering up under
protest the leavings of the Summer grass
which the frost has w eakened. At pres
ent I am mixing one part oats to two of
bran, and of this I give about one and a
half bushels a day to 100 head. I have
not within my recollection had a flock
which stood up to the troughs and ate
freely without a single exception as
these do. Whether it is the reground
bran which is so tempting to them, or
whether it is the constant access to salt
that sharpens their appetites I do not
know.
Keeping Egos.—A lady writing to an
exchange says: " I havo found !ittle or
no tiouble in keeping eggs so fresh that
when used they &r 0 as good as the day
ary Were taken from the nest. The
'vlmie secret lies jttst hefs-viz., where
Uey are contain the evenings they
P: fa d “ “ u P riht Position,
tile small end downward On shelves with
holes made on purpose to deceive them
lecause in this position (and a very im
portant one to success) the yelk does not
come in contact with the shell, the
yelk, as it were, being suspended in the
center of albumen ; if otherwise placed
—that is, on their sides—the yelk would
then come in contact with the shell and
naturally spoil, every egg being porous.
Iho common method of keeping eggs
among farmers is either to pack them in
straw, sawdust, chaff, oats or bran, none
of which ways will keep the eggs fresh
for any length of time. As they will
perspire you must find some method
that will entirely close the pores of the
egg and keep them closed. My plan
was simple and not at all expensive. I
melted together tallow and mutton fat,
then took wing feathers of the fowl and
greased every egg, being careful to re
place them in the same position as at
first, and kept them in a dry and dark
place. By this method you can at any
time sell to the grocer or private family
fresh eggs, as they do not lose their fla
vor or weight,”
J Domestic Economy,
Whipped Potatoes. Whip boiled
potatoes to creamy lightness with a
fork; beat in butter, milk, pepper and
salt rat last the frothed white of an egg;
toss irregularly upon a dish, set in the
oven two minutes to reheat, but do not
let it color.
Bean Salad. —Put some Lima beans,
potatoes and beets (all boiled tender) on
ice, and, a short time before serving,
cut the patatoes and beets into rather
thin slices, add the beans and dress with
oil, pepper, salt and vinegar. - Garnish
with a few watercresses.
Orra Soup. —To two pounds of lean
beef, boiled in two gallons of water for
two hours, add tomatoes and okra each
two quarts; boil these three hours lfiod
erately, then add three table-spoonfuls
of browned flour, twenty whole cloves,
popper, salt and three onions (first fried
and then added to the soup), boil an
other hour, strain and serve.
Coffee Care.— This is one of the
best plain cakes and is very easily made.
Take one cup of strong coffee infusion,
one cup of sugar, one-half cup of but
ter, one egg and one teaspoonful of sal
eratus. Add spice and raisins to suit
the taste, and enough flour to make a
reasonably-thick batter. Bake rather
slowly in tin pans lined with buttered
paper.
How to Make a Drugget.— We hear
of an ingenious person who has convert
ed an old thick shawl into a drugget by
cu tting out the leaves and flowers from
a worn-out piece of printed druggeting
and grouping them on the shawl. When
a satisfactory pattern has been thus ar
ranged these flowers were pasted on and
pressed with an iron and the edges
worked over with the commonest coarse
gray yarn, the edge of the shawl being
bound with red carpet binding. It was
put down in a furnished house, over a
shabby carpet, and was a complete suc
cess.—Art Amateur.
Quaker Omelette.— A Quaker ome
lette is a handsome and sure dish when
care is taken in the preparation. Three
eggs, half a cup of milk, one and a half
table-spoonfuls of corn starch, one tea
spoonful of salt, one table-spoonful of
butter. Put the omelette pan and a
cover that will fit close on to heat. B#at
the yelks of the eggs, the com starch and
the salt very well together. Beatthe whites
to a stiff froth, add to the well-beaten
yelks and corn starch. Stir all well to
gether very thoroughly, then add the
milk. Now put the butter in the hot
pan and when melted pour in the mixt
ure, cover and plaae on the stove where
it will brown bnt not bum. Cook
about seven minutes, fold, turn on a
hot dish and serve with the cream
sauce.
A gentleman named his dog Penny,
because he was one sent to him.
m “I don’t want that Stuff,"
is what a lady of Boston said to her
husband when* ke brought home some
medicine to cUre her of sick headache
and neuralgia which had made her mis
erable for fourteen years. At the first
attack thereafter, it was administered to
her with such good results, that she con
tinued its use until cured, artd made so
enthusiastic in its praise, that she in
duced twenty-two of the best families
in her circle to adopt it as their regular
family medicine. That “stuff is Hop
Ritters —Standard.
The owner and originator of Puck,
the illustrated comic journal, is a Ger
man named Keppler. Apprenticed to a
baker in Vienna, ha mad© his first artist
ic designs in dough. His first venture
in this country was with a little paper
in St. Louis, which was widely noticed
but not profitable. His present paper
has a circulation of 60,000.
Trar Mind Will row Strong
ud great, not by what you reject, but by what
you cordially accept and believe. Your health
will improve, just in proportion as you obey
Nature’s lawt. If your mind it diseased, re
fresh it with suitable relaxation. If the two
great organs of your body, the kidney and hver,
are out of order, restore them by using War
uer’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. The mmo
Ban be kept clear by care and the kidneys and
Uver by the areat remedy above mentioned.
WAR MATERIAL IN IRE BRAIN.
The death of a soldier whohad carried
ft bullet in his brain for sixty-five years
was reported recently. The wound was
receiyed at. the battle of Waterloo, The
bullet entered at the right eye* destroy
ing it, of course, and, traversing the brain,
lodged in the back of the head. After
the outer w T qund was closed he suffered
no special inconvenience from the plea
ence of the bullet* although always,
when ttiriling himself in bed, he could
feel that the ball dropped into a different
position. lie was unusually heal thy and
he died of old age.
Another remarkable coincidence is
cited. A young military officer was
carelessly manipulating a musket, when
the barrel burst in his hand. The
pieces fractured his skull so frightfully
that fragments of the skull had to be re
moved, and even a part of the begrimed
brain substance was amputated, but the
“terrible wound soon ceased to trouble
him, and he lived for several years. Dy
mg at last of a fever, an examination of
the bruin was made, and it was discov
ered that almost the entire lock of the
gun had been imbedded for years in the 1
base of the skull. It is said that no im
pairment whatever of the mental - facul
ties had been observed.
How queerly some things are done
in Europe ! The German postoffice has
published a list of newspapers which
can be ordered through its agency. It
may be safely assumed’tliat newspapers
subscribed to through this official medi
um will be carefully handled and in
sured of delivery at their destination.
Paternal governments will, in time, take
the whole handling and disposition of all
kinds of trade under their control, By
and-by people who live under them will
look to them only for the right of living
and dying.
If all the readers who communicate
with advertisers would mention the
name of the paper in which they saw
the advertisements, they would do the
publishers a service vastly out of pro
portion to the small trouble to them
selves.—St. Louis Republican .
“Women Never Think*”
If the crabbed old bachelor who ut
tered this sentiment could but witness
the intense thought, deep study and
thorough investigation of women in de
termining the best medicines to keep
their families well, and would note their
sagacity and wisdom in selecting ilop
Bitters as the best, and demonstrating
it by keeping their families in perpetual
health, at a mere nominal expense, he
would be forced to acknowledge that
such sentiments are baseless and false. —
Picayune.
When two gusnmg young women
make a great display of bidding each
other good-by, it may be called “much
adieu about nothing. ”
The increased demand for that inval
uable preparation, Tabler’s Buckeye
Pile Ointment, constrained the manu
facturers to advertise for ten thousand
bushels of Buckeyes, which are largely
used in the manufacture of that excellent
compound, Tabler’s Buckeye Pile Oint
ment. Price 50c. For sale by all drag
fists. ’
“Who was first into the breach?’
asked Prof. Stearns, when the class in
history was up. “ The patch,” said the
new smart boy. But the professor
, marked him one minus and said no; the
hole was in before the patch.— Hawk-
Eye. •
There is but one way to cure baldness,
and that is by using Cakboline,a deodorized
extract of petroleum, the natural hair grow
er. As recently improved,it is ttie onlydress
ingfor the hair.that cultured people will use.
BESeCBD FROM DEATH.
William J. Coughlin, of Somerville, Mas*., says: “In
the fall of 1876 I was taken with buexoino or trk i.uijos,
followed by a severe cough. I lost my appetite and
flesh, aud was confined to my bed. In 1 §77 I was ad
mitted to the hospital. The doctors said I had a hole in
my lung af big as a half dollar. Atone time a report
went around that I was dead. I gave up hope, but a
friend told me of DR. WILLIAM HALL’S BALSAM
FOR THE LUNGS. I got a bottle, when, to my surprise,
I commenced to feel better, and to-day 1 feel better than
for three years past. I write this hoping every one af
flicted with Lungs will take I>K. WILLIAM
HALL’S BALAAM, and be convinced CONSUMP
TION CAN BE CURED. I can positively say it has done
more good than all the other inedicih'es I have taken
since my sickness.’’
indiokmtioh, oygptfMML ftarvenu proatration
and all forms of general debility relieved by
taking Manmak’ Feptonizkd Beef Tonic, the
only preparation of beef containing its entire
nutritious properties. It oontaina blood-mak
ing, force-generating and life-sustaining prop
erties; is invaluable in all enfeebled conditions,
whether the result of exhaustion, nervous pros
tration, overwork, or acute disease, particularly
if resulting from pulmonary complaints, Cas
well, Hasard * Cos., proprietors. New York.
vmiTti le mishtt. n. 4
TRUTH 1," Pt*f. MARTIHK th. omm /
Bp,ni.h Stf U 1 Wiw4 will frr 30 W wllfc M, \
fciitht, otinr f #JI. tnd Itt* *T ktir. md t tot tin 1
pictdei •? your future husbnud • wife, peyeboi^ieElly; r^.: . lli SL?*m i
SrtOicted. with aunt, Um. tad pltet tf nutting tnd
tt. of mtrritft. M.n., r.tyrm.n u> til tol ttutktd.
Aadrtti. ML Mirtn.i, 19Mant’j S. lottn, I*
“The Only”“?E
PiMCiJOfATi ABTista, a flrt-cl* paper, fab raluabU
IcUntific and Mechanical naw.
Send I* mate for aaiapU eopiee, ehrt and premium
rate*. , 3
AddTMB W. F. THOHPSOI, Hnn*er.
OrcnrATi, O.
qpO tjL/plafr—■ JAY BROKSOM, Detroit, Micb.
C_ __ _ pi .t OMI Macaulay’* History a!
tig" It QIPT| England, 5 large 12m*
HtArto I stef*- A “‘’
Chambers’ Encyclop*.
dia, lO large o vol-
U M|f (I nmes, cloth, 8.33#
DuUKS sr w
I 530.00. for aolyflfe
Bhakspeare's Complete Works _ y MFIt p
handsomely bound in cloth, ■
black and gold, only 50 cents. Ilf I IIBw
fame’s History of English Lit- ■
erature, 1 handsome I2iwoto.l- _ _
ame, cloth, only 50 cents. ■ B£| __ —.
Other books equally low. m ug&m fin In
I If UKLII
t. O. Box i 6SO. 10 West lth it., Mew Terh.
BRUT s#d; dcscripttTe eirculars free.
hTT. ELASTIC TRUSS CO., £ Broadway, N. T
PERRY DAI7W
JSlSig®
|| jjjj Rheumatism,
I j jjf 111 Toothache
for SALEBYiaLL druggists.
... Telegraphy I Ear® *<o to 3100 a j
• ‘ u mouth. Graduate* guaranteed pariaa
• Address VALENTINE BROS., JaaesvMle, Wi
/M ftliila BicS
A permanent practica. road vehicle,
with which a person can ride thres
Hr miles as easy as he could walk one.
K-Vy/ -“’end 3-cent stamp for 24-pago cola-
POPE M’F’O CO.,
■eebi—l64 Washington St., Boston, Maae. -
week In yenr own town. Term* and *5 oulfi,
tIP AO Ar free. Address H. Haustt k Cos.. Portland. M,*
GENTLEMEN: I was suffering from general debility to such an extent that my labor was ftiooecTlrigly bur
densome to me. A vacation or ft month did not give me much relief, but on the contrary, wi*s followed by
increased prostration and sinking chills. At this time I began the use of your Leon ToNid, from which I re
alized almost immediate and wonderful, results, Theold energy returned and 1 found thJit mf mtt;riil roree
was not permanently abated. I have used three bottles of the Tonic. Since using it I have denedwice toe la
bor that I everdid in the same time during my illness, and with double the ease. Wi th the it ivib'tail nan s
and vigor of body, has come also u clearness of thought never before, ehjoyed. If the Tonic hue. not done ths
work, 1 know not what. I give it
A CYCLOPAEDIA WAR
An honored publishing bouse whose history is reputed to extend back into the last eentury, and whose wealth
has been estimated at *8,00(1. *O9, Is that of J. B. Lippincott k Cos., Philadelphia. The largest and most important
J. B. Lippincott & Co,S£S
laud’ that of Chambers’s Xnc-clop*edia, which many years ago they puhliahed at the (so called) low price of
m3 Chambers’s Encyclopaedia, ifyirpi
house, in consequence (it war said) of the Lippincotts mftlng ohsn?os rn the American edition contrary to theYspirit
while still using the name of Chambers, the A/\ same Encyclopedia was brought down to the
still lower price of $23. New, in the Morions JSObvO, J WIT , ,°f 1881 ’ mov f d ’, of cours . p ’ ® ot f l *> e
•Dirit of rivalry, but by ine generous and Vf V m laudable purpose ot placing useful knowledge
within reach of the people. without regard to the question of profit'or of loss to themselves, they are issumg an edi-
Uon of Ihissanm great work. Chambers’s Encyclopedia, which is said to be revised to date-edltlpn r£lß-sixfyp-me
tWng with censor figured altered?), which a they are offering at the: wonderfully lovj price
of *?5 for the work complete, in 10 great octa- J? 0* MM ™ volumes. Even at this aMoundmfloty price
they allow the large discount of 40 per cent. SSjT when purchases are made m large uufit.ty.
The army of the. Literary Revolution always W at the multiplication# good bopks at
low prices, and the AMaaicAK Book Exchakof. is delighted with.the opportunity.of tenting
with the great publishing house of Lippincott in furthering the sale of this work ; and to demonstrate the earnest
ness of their good-will, they propdse, so long as the Lippincotts choose to continue the manufacture at this nonmia
mfw to furnish the public with the Lippincott edition at the low price af $9.50 per set, (the 50 cents for £ost ol
Free Advertisement.
Bolts’ terms it has seemed a great pitv that their modesty should prevent them from advertising more widely, ana ws
therefore supplement their generosity by scattering thiaWtiieme.it broadcast for them at our expense. .JT
The Literary Revolution
Has not the honor of a centurv’S history, and its present cash capital is only about *175,000. It was started only so
Chambers’s Encyclopaedia
Revolution had accumulated sufficient strength to print one small vofume, which was increased to a product m 1880
of overont million volumes. Its business offices and retail store now occupy entire a magnificent six-Story building on
®* iCi several other build- a lugs elsewhere in the city, and it gives emplov-
Broadway, and ‘ , t fu r re , ent large list of standard publications is an edi
eniv6W h.One item ot m \J\J m beauti &l eloth-bound volumes, which it is sell
in°ff n at f the*™w price of §6 reduced from *7.50. This edition is a verbatim .reprint of the London edi-
Ifon of ISSO. ffistead of tWof 18-sixty something, as in the case of the Lippincotts, with the Woa of a few;cen.u.
foreign Universal Knowledge published for’“a" foreign
teen iarire octevo role me., large tvpe, in which alarge force of American editor, and writer, hare added about 15,000
fopiC, coeoring atojttSjjlW oet.ro. page., the. iboronghl, Am.ric,n, u n g the wort,m,dlm.k.n^U
Triumphant css,sslSsifa.’saars
nmpß it interrals of a few days thereafter. Price per volume in cloth, SI; in half Russia, gilt top, 51.50.
First eome first an old motto, which we have supplemented by “Lowest prices to earliest purchas
ers "'and accordingly, on this edition we are Jor afew days offering the 10 volumes now pubUshedat the low price of ~
1 0? Ss^heaud°S e pag of new matter added in this edition are not to be found eitherdn the L.p
nlnLtt norin om ownVeditioiu Both of them, however, are excellent works, remarkably cheap, andW.
M purpose fTthose w°ho carnot afford the new and Enlarged edition. .Specimen pages,,
quest. Throughout Five Thousand Booksellers pared to either
free on request. _ _ _ „
AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE,
JOHN B. ALDEN, Manager. 764: Broadway, New Tork.
. _ . Boston, H. L. Hastings, 47 Cqrnhill; Philadelphia, Leary A Cos.;
General Aarents: * cfii.
feu ; Grand'
rno Nervous Weakness, Deafness, Loss of
rUn Voice, Sense of Taste and Smell, Neural-
ing Odors, Weak Sight, Sore
J Throat, Coughs, Bronchitis, 1
AND ALL DISEASES OP
BjCr respiratory organs.
Eureka Catarrh Cure, -
A SURE RELIEF and A SPEEDY CURE.
Send for Circulars, Terms, etc. to ... ,
J. W. GURLEY, M. D. Atlanta, Ga.
Bookwalter Engine.
-*1 r •>-ii . Effective, Simple, Durable and Cheap.
Compact, Substantial, Economical end Easily Managed
fMJfM T|||M) / Guaranteed, to work well and give full power claimed.
EYERY PLANTER
SHSII '' * * Who runs a Cotton Gin or Com Mill should have one.
Bteam power is much better and cheaper than horse power.
£ H SEE OUR LOW PRICES:
Horse Power Engine,
Address Manufactorers for descriptive pamphlet.
f laRGS LKI’I'FL A and .
~ ~ r ~'. --* " ’ KprluKCcld, Chi*-
Kd STETTEftV
H'l'B*' CELEBRATES kjjJA
wtffgßl
Why Suiter Needlessly
With the convulcing, spasmodic tortures of
fever and ague and billions remittent, when
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, acknowledged
to be a real'cutative of malarial fevers, will
eradicate the cause of So much suffering.
No less effective is- thin benignant .altera
tive •in cases of constipation, dyspepsia,
liver complaint, rheumatism, and in gener
al debility and nervous weakness. For sale
by all Druggists and Dealers generally.
OELLOI9ID
EYE-CLASSES.
Representing tho choicest selected Tortois*
Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomest
and strongest %nowu. Sold bv Opticians anc
Jewelers. Made by the SPENCER OPTICAL
M’F'O CO.. 13 Maiden Lane. New Yn?>
mil & FACTORY SUPPLY
OF ALL KINDS. BELTING, HOSE
and PACKING. OILS, PUMPS ALL
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BRASS GOODS, STEAM GAUGES,
ENGINE GOVERNORS, &c. Send for
Price-list. W. H. DILLINGHAM & CC.
143 Main Street, LOUISVILLE, KY.
C c 4 fl SJ9O P- r ** homa. Sam ,1m worth MkM
v w i J Addr. Btio* M Cos., Portland, iUia*
■ V. * 5 r.s WA Vld> to; tho Ban-, and Sail
. V icg Pictorial Book and Bibik*. PriOM rodueodlt M
cut. ftationM PakliahUf Oa., AOaaM, •*.
. , t *t*. Sl2 • day at homo aaatty mada. Coatl
oilrt*i TitaAO* Augusta. v.
If yon are
Interested
In the inquiry—Which is the
best Liniment for Han and
Beast?—this is the answer, at
tested by two generations: the
MEXICAN MUSTANG LINI
MENT. The reason is sim
ple. It penetrates every sore,
wound, or lameness, to the
very bone, and drives out all
inflammatory and morbid mat
ter. It “ goes to the root” of
the trouble, and never fails to
cure in doable quick time*
Payne’s Automatic Engine*!
Mi ft
Reliable, Durable and Economical, J
kOrse power with % lees fuel and water than any MR#;
Engine built, not Qtted with an Automatic OuUftfb
bond for Illustrated Catalogue "J,” for Information#
Prices. B. W. Payne & Sons, Box 860, Corking, HIP
!flßi%Biess#wghj. TY
St/yti FOR CATALOG UE S A
ntioniro for Dealers’ Medium Work : J.ow
Hi Iftll Ir X IJrices - UJJION CARRIAGE UTQCjL,
(i JU wIMJ Cincinnati. O. Catulogua I*
CAN BE CURED 1
MALL'S
IwBALSAM
Cures Consumption, Colds, Pneumonia, In■
flaenza, Bronchial Difficulties, Bronchitis.
Hoarseness, Asthma, Croup, Whooping
Cough, and all Diseases of the Breathing
Organs. It soothes and heals the Membrane
of the Lungs, inflamed and poisoned by the
disease, and prevents tine night swents nnd
tightness across the chest which accompany
it. Consumpt ion is not an incurable malady.
HALL’S BALSAM will cure you, even
though professional aid fails.
m&fWj.yt ---**■ -y •mw* • ■ i wih.ipwpwwpiw^ __
■ Elegant new song and chorus, “TKtrt’t
L3QI6S i Green Gras* ’Neath the Snow," by Jk
sepli Sksllv : price 35c; but to introduce will send upon
receipt of 15c. post paid. Geo.W. Peek, 213 W. 36 Bt.,J.T.
TTTnni 1 R y ‘ending 35C. money or toe. postag*
iJuiJuLl stamps, with age, you will receive by
wnD return mail a correct picture of your
I'OK future husband or wife, with name and
ynifDOPT L* date of marriage. Address
I UUnCIILI. W. FOX. Box 50, Fultonvillo, XT.
I"7M?tOYMEBaT iSKSSE
I Also SALARY per month. Ail EXPENSES
I ndvauoeii. WAttES promptly paid. SLOAN
1 A Cos. ItOO Voorge St. Cincinnati. O.
'i'he % Purest and Best 3ledicine ever Made.
Acolmbination ot Hops, Buchu, Wan*
drakweand Dandelion,^- 11 a* l kb® 811(1
most cm ura tive properties of all other Bitters,
makes tithe greatest Blood Purifier, Liver
Res U iVator, 4111(1 *Af® 4111(1 Restoring
AgSt
No disease cVan possibly long exist where Hop
Bitters are usVed,so varied and perfect are tneir
nii iii ii in |j i ijt
Thß7 givs sot; li Ve and vigor to th*age4 and laflra.
To all whose e V 1 P loytnentßCaUSe irre^!“ larI *
tyofthebowelsorV urlnai7 or s an ?,’,° c L ? T
quire an ApPetiaeXjonic and mUd* Stimulant,
Hop lirttc rs are without HtOX“
icating,. HMbW
No master what your few s l ln fc s , OP symptoms
are what the disease or ailW ll ® ll ® i** u Pe Hop Bit
ters. Don’t wait unto youaM re sick but if you
only feel bad or miserable,® 1130 them at once-
It may save your life.lt has® B av ®d hundreds.
SSOO w ill be paid for a ca® 9 ® they will not
cure or help. Do not suffer ® O4 let your friends
suffer.b-it use anand urge
Remember, Hep Bitters is drugged
drunken nostrum, but the u “ best
Medicine ever made ; the
and HOPE” and no person Or
shotilu he without th nn
r* ( C O an absolute and irresistible curefcJH
f ororuuketuiess,use of opium, tobacco
narcotics. AU sold by druggists. Send
for Circular. Hop Bitter* *f*. Cos., M ■
Rochester. V.'V_an<i_TTontfK£)liL—_^^_
For Clilllw and Fev
AND ALL DISEASES
Caused by Malarlnl Poisoning of tks Slsst
A WARRANTED CUBS.
Price, SI •00. y#r sals by all Druggist*.
PONDS EXTRACT.
Subduct JnJUimmatim. Omtrtit all flmerUfS,
Acute ana Gkrmi*. Venom and Mutmm.
LNVALUABLB VOX
Pond’s Extraot the
A_ I only spe*HU tor this disease, Celd
Ualarmi>>‘ i '*i4 i *-OMCatarrh
Cure (T*ae*U).eetally pro
pared to meet serious easts, contain* all Dm turaiiva
preparties f Pond’s Extract; i Nasal
Svrlnae f* eenta), Invaluable for ae La eaterrhal
Sietions, is simple and eSbotive.
Sore Throat Lungs, Chappad
Hands “A Faoo are greatly boneltedhy the Ex*
traot. Frosted Limbs ** Chilblains
are promptly relieved, and ultimately cured by Pond •
Extraot.
*MTTt i a unsafe te use other articles with our directions.
Insist on having POND’S EXTRACT, Refuse all Imi**-
tions and aubstitutee.
RUPTURE
Relieved and cured without the injutw trusses inflict, by
Dr J A. BHERMAN’B system. Office 251 Broadway,
New York. His book, with photographic likenesses of
had cases before and after cure, mailed for 10c. Beware
4 fraudulent Imitator*.
DIVORCES, in any State, without publicity. Send
stamp for the law. Q. R- Bim, Chicago.
Publishers" Union, Atlanta, 0a.,,... I Twenty-twe, ■ 41.
AGENTS WAITED FOR
Bible revision
The beet and cheapest illustrated edition of the Revised
New Testament . Millions of people are waiting fOT lV
Do not be deceived by Ue Cheap John of U
fcrior editions. See that the copy you buy eentalns ISS
fine engravings on steel and wood. Agent* are coinin'
money selling this edition. Bend for circulars.
Admass Nsticsai. frsusaus o*.. Atlanta, •**