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'The following T*8 VhQT&T*} naif
coiiir the rouruh o: the fees*
M. ±j€ Bee I FYenoi. suvar savs
khat *".he nr is gradually
power to d*char cp i‘> trad
lion in the ca^e of the
wLer. the sense of smol os
gpkiftr, as wi.. infa’.lib be iho case
ore day. the organ tS{V will >w
its ex air. sooner or 1st, nature
nfwer cr.ft! r.iess organs. and the
nose e ■ft The olfactory sense
keener ia the M-vagr thaa it ihe civil¬
ized mss.
A X;w Trrk specialist on the nose, to
whoa this w-ts shawa, said :
‘•Well, Frenchmeo seta to delight in
making such extravagant statements.
There are aen and women of todav who
"have the moss ptwerfui sense of smeii.
The trouble is that it is not always edu¬
cated Lise that of the savage. Savages
have good eyes, and good ears, and
good noses, and because they educate
their eves and their ears and their noses
they can hear, see and smell better
than a man who does not educate those
senses. As far as the olfactory
sense dying out is concerned, that is
not true. I think the reason this French
savant thought so is because so many
people nowadays have colds and ca
tarrh, due to the civilization that we are
struggling under. Imperfectly heated
rooms, improper ventilation, a thousand
and one conditions that are not all sani
tary, produce colds and catarrh; and
when a man has catarrh his olfactory
sense of course, is intorforod with. A
healthy civilized man who has no catarrh
can smell just as well as a savage can
smell, and can see just as well as a sav¬
age. A modern Anglo-Saxon, born and
brought up in civilization, if taken out
into the woods and subjected to tho
same education in woodcraft that a
savage has, will leave tho savage far be¬
hind in his senso of smell and the other
senses. You know it usod to be said
that an Indian could run all day and
run all night, and onduro much more
than a white man; but in those six-day
go-as-you-please races an Indian has no
show whatever.
“All tho senses are very intimately
connected with each other. That there
is a close relation between tho eye and
the nose is shown when a person has
what is popularly known as a cold in
the head. Tho eyes will wator and feci
weak. Snuff peppor or irritants of any
kind up the nose, and it makes the eyes
water. Very often there aro polipii, or
little growths in tho nose that irritate
unconsciously oltentimos, A great
many specialists have found that far¬
sightedness is affectod by the nose, and
that the removal of obstructions in tho
hose will improve the eyes, so that
patients will not have to wear glasses.
And near-sighted patients, it is claimed,
have also been cured of their near
sightedness by treating the nose.
Where a person’s eyesight is affected by
growths in the nose, temporary relief
has been obtainod by treating tlie parts
with cocoaino. What is thus tempo¬
rarily accomplished by tho use of co
cosine, it is declared, can be perma¬
nently accomplished by removing tho
obstructions.
“Persons having such obstructions
also have nose colds which come from a
curious irritable susceptibility of tho
nose, caused by the pollen of different
plants. Among tho various ill effects
which aro produced by growths in the
nose are noises in tho ear, deafness,
chronic catarrh of the throat, failure of
the voice, asthma, heart troubles,
Btomach troubles, even troubles with
the skin. To illustrate: Many opera
singers, when their voices fail, will con¬
sult a nose specialist, who will restore
their voices frequently by some simple
nasal treatment. Not only asthma lias
been cured by such treatment, but many
other chest troubles, chronic bronchitis
notably. Bo skin diseases of tho most
obstinate forms, acme especially, whoro
red pimples come out all over the faco,
have been cured by nasal treatment. It
seems hard to believe, but tho man who
had been troubled for years by what
was supposed to bo rheumatism ia his
knee was entirely cured by the removal
of certain growths in the nose.
What Time Is It!
Before you answer deduct a quarter
of a second or add a quarter. Every
watch or clock that is supposed to bo
correct, that is warranted, that runs by
a chronometer, is out of the way at least
a quarter of a second in every twenty
four hours. There is no such thing as
correct timo on tho face of the earth.
Yes, that is so. If you want tho cor
rectest of correct time dig a hole in the
ground, take your watch or clock along,
get some one to stand on the edgo ol
the hole, call out “Greenwich time!’’
and then pull the hole in after you.
There is no vibration in the hole, and
it is the vibration or oscillation of the
earth that makes tho chronometer 8 °
wrong. — [Chicago Times.
.. Xothing But Leaves.”
A certain Kansas college professor
who enjoys a joke on himself just as
hearti.y as he does on anybody else,
once upon a time delivered a lecture in
a ansas tonn. As h the custom on
sucii occasions, the p. incisal cuoir of
the place furnished muuc. Before the
delivery of the lecture the choir melo
diou.ly inquired W hat Shall the liar
vest Be and after listening to the lec
“Nothin® Bu7wel’ ,m ° 7 ““ S
FOR FARM AN'I> GARDEN.
Knw to llatcli Illicit*’ *■««■*
"Ducks are poor sitters and poorer
mothf ...in feet the Pckins are almost
"
non-si 8 .t your ducks’ eggs un
-• - h-n N or in an incubator. Slake the
hot the nest of earth, and cove,
■with hay or cut straw, After the fi st '
few days sprinkle the eggs daily with
teni water when the hen is off for
.
fo. Take the same precautions
a’ans t lice as you would when sitting
era are on lions’ eggs, Ducks’ eggs
rc generally fertile and hatch well. If
th sitting hens or the incubators, at
tend strictly to business, you may count
or. from 90 to 100 ducklings for every
100 eggs sot and they will “hold out,”
when you count them after they are
hatched. Ducks’ eggs in an incubator
require the same degree of heat as hens’
eggs. — [Prairie Farmer.
Potatrea Affected with llof*
A few year< ago the rot struck pota¬
toes hero the first week in September,
and nearly all the farmers dug their
crops at one*. The result was they had
to keep picking over all winter, for
many were so slightly specked with rot
when dug that they were overlooked.
I did not dig mv potatoes until some
time during the first half of October.
When I did dig them nearly half were
so rotten as to be seen at a glance. I
put the sound ones ia the cellar and did
EOt have to pick them over. I have
practised this plan successfully for
years, Potatoes intended to winter
should remain in the ground as long as
possible without danger of freezing,
Heat, I think, is what rots potatoes, and
they will keep cooler in tho ground
than in the cellar,
When rot strikes potatoes, if they are
dug at once mauy of tho affectod ones
will be overlooked and put in the cel¬
lar with tho good ones, causing them
to rot also, but leave them in the
ground until cool weather comes and all
the rotten ones cm bo seen and avoided.
—[New E igland Farmer.
flight Transplanting-.
It is claimed by seme that trees, if
transplanted at night, will do better
than if reset in the daytime. We know
that the sun has an influence upon cer¬
tain plants and flowers, but to what ex¬
tent it affects trees is not definitely
known.
A party who desired to ascertain
whether or not thero is any difference
between daylight and night planting,
transferred ten cherry trees while the
same were in bloom, commencing at 4
o’clock ia the afternoon, and planting a
tree every hour until 1 o’clock in the
morning, and tho result would indicate
that tho dark hours are better for the
work than tho light, Tlioso trans
planted during the day shod their blos¬
soms, producing littlo or no fruit, whilo
tlioso planted in the dark maintained
their condition fully.
Ho did thesamo with ten dwarf trees
after tho fruit was one-third grown.
Those transplanted during the day shed
tlieir fruit; those transplanted during
iho night perfected their crop, and
showed no injury from having been re
moved. With each of those trees he
removed some earth with tho roots.—
[American Farmer.
Vertigo in ll<ir4es.
norse vertigo or staggers is some¬
times due to brain disorders, congestion,
or the checking of circulation from com¬
pression of the jugular vein by a badly
fitting collar. But the most common
cause of vertigo is plethora. The fa¬
vored or petted horse is overfed, and
then a little violent exercise on a warm
day and in tho strong glare of sunshine
produces vertigo, the animal throws up
his head, shakos it rapidly, or rears and
falls backward, as you have described.
If the horse is fat his diet should bo re¬
stricted, and a rather laxative food
should bo given for a time. Avoid tight
collars, and shelter the top of tho head
from tho direct rays of the sun by a sun¬
shade. When taken out for a drive in
hot weather place a wet spongo between
tho ears and make fast to the headstall
or place under the band on the top of
his head. Should tho horso be attacked
while driving, stop at the first sign of
dizziness and throw a handkerchief or
blauket over his eyes to shut out the
light. Then if cold water is obtain¬
able, apply it freely to the head and
neck. A few minutos’ rest will bring
the animal around all right. But tho
sunshade and wet spongo should not be
dispensed with during hot weather if
the animal is subject to vertigo.—[New
York Sun.
*nttiy llanyly Cure*.
The Secretary of the Connecticut
Farmers’ Association gives the follow¬
ing for publication, saying it comes
from ono of the best farmers in the
state:
I have seen ones in a while in the
papers how to kill ticks on sheep, to
kill lice on cattle, to cure the gapes
in chickens, etc. To kill ticks on
sheep I buy a ball of snuff, three or four
pounds, or enough to go over all the
sheep at once; I cut the snuff and pul¬
verize it on the table on a newspaper,
put the snuff in a glass jar; I take tho
jar, a large pepper box and a table
spooD, anl dip tho snuff from the jar
int0 ,he pepper box half or two-thirds
full, then I take the sheep gently, lay
h cr on her side, open the wool and
shako the snuff on the skin jn place6
| three or four inches apart and close the
t^ool. I put more of the snuff aTound
! the neck, and in
about three days, if it
k done well> thc[e won . t b , tick3 nor
nits to send a telegraph despatch. The
8auff is a 6ure cur<1 _ ;
j Iwo To tablespoonfuls cure the colicin of * h «cP. I dissolve j ]
epsom salts in
about a half pint of warm water and
add one teaspoonful of essence of pep¬
permint. I take hold of tho sheep and
back her to some corner in the barn,
‘hen open the sheep s mouth with my
left hand press the left thumb againat
P ut a in her
moutn; the boy pour, the salt, while I
hold th ° shee P- Ia ab °ut two hours the
sheep will be all right; if she don’t get
well in two hours I repeat tho dose.
To kill lice on cattle I take about a
pint of kerosene and rub it all over tho
cow with a woolen cloth then card
against the grain and with tho grain.
Sure cure.
To cure warts on cows I wash the
teats before milking and rub on castor
oil. I rub it on before milking, It
won’t drop into the pail like water. It
limbers the teats. I had a bad case this
summer, the cow’s teats were covered
with large warts so that they bled. I
bought a gallon of castor oil, usod the
most of it on her all summer. The warts
all gone; the castor oil did it.
Tho cure gapes in chickens prevention
better than cure. The first year we
to this place, ten years ago, we
out seventy-five chickens; they
out doors and at tho sink spout a
good part of tho time. That year the
had any quantity of gapes.
year when wo set the hong wo
put air slacked lime and sulphur in tho
nests, took tho sink spout away, carried
slops and poured them under tho
tree and kept clean water before
the chickens. From that year to this
we haven’t had a gap or a gape; as soon
the chickens camo out wo give them
cornmeal mixed with water. Our
neighbors have lots of gapes. I think
dirty water is at the bottom of tho
trouble.
When to Cut Oran,
The practiso of most good farmers is
to cut grass early, Las soon as it is in
bloom. Tho quality of the hay is not
only better, but by starting early there
is more time for cutting, curing aid se¬
curing. In summing up the results of
analyses of nearly all tho cultivated
grasses, tho analytical chemist of the
Agricultural Bureau says it is apparent
that in most cases the time of bloom or
thereabouts is tho fittest for cutting
in order to obtain the most nouriih
ment and largest relatively profitable
crops, and for the following reasons:
The amount of water has diminished
and the shrinkage will, therefore, bo
less. The weight of the crop will bo
largest in proportion to tho nutritive
value of its constituents. The amount
of nitrogen not present as albuminoids,
will bo at its lowest point; fibre will not
be excessive as to prevent digestion,
and the nutritive ratio will be more ad
vantageous. If cut earlier the shrink¬
age is larger, altho’ the fibre i3 less and
the albumen a little larger. Tho pal
atability may be increased, but the total
nutriments to the acre will not bo so
largo and tho nutritive ratio will bo
more abnormal The disadvantages of
late cutting are evident in the increase
of fibre, destroying the digestibility of
the nutriments and the falling off of the
albumen by conversion into amides.
This is not made up by the largest crop
cut.
To our hay-making readers, says tho
New York Independent, we would also
commend this bit of timely and sensible
advice from the New England Home¬
stead: Cut tho hay early when the crop
is very light, plow, harrow well, broad¬
cast on what manure you can scrape up
(or any good fertilizer will pay) and
plant to fodder corn or millet Both
crops will be off in season for fall seed¬
ing, when the manure made through tho
summer will come into good use. This
is tho best way to treat fields that aro
nearly ruinod by the drouth of f ormer
seasons, unless you have manure and
timo enough to grow a hoed crop.
Farm kind harden IVotoa.
Blackberries do best in a moist, shady
location, no matter how dirty from
weeds.
A retentive soil is best for strawber¬
ries. It should be well drained and
kept in a porous condition, if necessary
by subsoiling.
An excellent method of protecting
the iron of farm tools from rust is to
paint them with white lead and tallow.
This will not dry and may be easily
washed off with a little spirits of tur¬
pentine.
The garden should be near the house
and free from shade, The secret of
success in gardenia - accor ding to a
New Hampshire man, as in courtship,
lies in small attentions, frequently and
steadily bestowed.
When tho farmer shall begin to esti¬
mate the value of sheep from the stand¬
points of meat fertility, and general ad¬
vantage to tho farm, he will not allow
the market price of wool to determine |
whether or not lie will raise them. i
To have abundant bloom, rosos re
quire close pruning, rich fertilizing with
decayed cow-pen manure, at:d some
piwdered charcoal; a mulch of black
soil from the woods or c^w-pon manure,
and the flowers mu3t not be permitted
to expand and fade on the Luih, but cut
in tho lul.
Diagnosed by Telephone.
Great are tho wonders of the tele
phone. A physician reports to Gaillard’s
Medical Journal that he wat saved
a two-milo rife through a driving
storm the other night by having the
patient> a child, brought to the instru
meat, and held there until it coughod.
He diagnosed false croup, prescribed
two grain, of iurpeth mineral, and
turncd ia for an undi , turbod slee dur He' . j
ing the remainder of th. ni"ht
fouad the p#tieat ^ th(J mornj doi
nicel,-under the care of another doc
tor.
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
A North Carolina colored man has a
head which measures 32 inches in cir¬
cumference.
An Englishman has written a pam¬
phlet to provo the pedigree of the devil.
Ho dates the old chap back 11,000
years.
Among the list of delegates to the
Pennsylvania State Prohibition Conven¬
tion appear the names of the Revs.
Lusher and Booz.
The skeletons of six mon who must
have been giants were unearthed the
other day, along with much pottery in
a big mound near Kankakee, 11L
Immense numbers of stoats and wea¬
sels are being imported into New Zea¬
land, in order that they may destroy
the rabbits which are a pest in that
country.
The appearance of women upon the
Btage appears to have been unknown to
to the ancients, and Charles II. is said
to have first encouraged such a thing in
England, in 1002.
Joe McKee, of Watkinsville, Gx, has
a rather peculiar form of neuralgia. He
can walk, talk, ride, read or stand in
comfort, but tho miauto he attempts to
swallow anything, even water, he suffers
most violent pain.
General Seabein Starke of Jefferson,
Ga., born in 1800, and just now a shoe¬
maker, has beaten the snare drum in
four wars, beginning under Jackson at
New Orleans, and going through the
Seminole war, tho Mexican and the war
between tho states.
James Goudie who i3 living in
Evanston, III, claims the honor of hav¬
ing built the first ocean steamer, the
Royal William, a vessel of 1G00 tons
burden, which was constructed at Que¬
bec in 1832 and made atrip from Pictou
to London the next year.
One of tho largest plantations in the
South is that of Major B. W. Bellamy,
in Jefferson County, Fia. It comprises
8000 acres and nearly all of it is in cul¬
tivation. More than 1500 colored peo¬
ple are employed on tho plantation and
the Major knows them all by name.
Mack Hamilton has rocently per¬
formed soma wonderful feats of eating
and drinking at Helena, Ark. Besides
chewing and swallowing large quanti¬
ties of porcelain and glass without
harmful effects, no drank a gallon of
boiling water at a time as if he enjoyed
it.
Eddie Williams of Franklin, Me.,
went hunting and the gun he earned
“kicked” very hard when ho fired it. A
Jew days afterward ha was taken ill and
died. The recoil of the gun had caused
concussion of the base of tho brain, pro¬
ducing partial paralysis of the spine
and digestive organs.
Tho smallest baby in Chicago, was
bom a few days ago to Mrs. Danske,
the wife of a teamster. The diminu
tivo infant weighs sixteen ounces—-ono
pound avoirdupois---and Mrs. Danske
rocks it to sleep in the palm of her
hand. The baby is perfectly formed
and has a healthy pair of lungs.
Daring the timo of the Emperor Ner¬
ve of Romo there were nine aqueducts
which emptied thomselves through 13, -
694 pipes of an inch diameter. That
constructed by Louis X1Y. of France
for carrying tho Bucq to Versailles is
7000 fathomi long with 256 fathoms of
elevation, and contains 242 arcades.
The violet was the chosen flower of
the Napoicous, and tho scarlet carna¬
tion of the English House of Stuarts.
To this day mysterious hands yearly
deposit at Frascati, and in St. Peter’s
in Rome, where lio the remains of tho
Cardinal of York and other members of
the House of Stuart, wreaths of scarlet
carnations.
Routing Great Speakers.
Some of the most expei ienced orators
have been disconcerted by very trivial
circumstances. Daniel Webster, rising
to speak at a poultry show, was unable
to continue in rivalry with a giant
Shanghai which began to air its lungs
at tho samo moment, and had to resume
his seat in confusion. Enkine was al¬
ways extremely sensitive to a lack of in¬
terest by his audience, (i Who can get
on with that wet blanket of a faco of
yours before him? ’ hs said once to Gar
row, who was engaged with him in a
cause. His first speech in the House of
Lords was a humiliating failure, owing
to the action of Chatham, who, as a
speaker began, took up a pen and made
8 * ew notes as if witli the intention
of replying; but after li.tening
a few moments, ho dashod pen
and paper upon tho floor with a con¬
temptuous smile. This indifference’,
real or pretendeJ, completely upset
Erskine, whose “voice faltered; ho
struggled through the remainder of his
speech, and sank into his seat dis
pirited, and shorn of his fame, Burko
was a ^ so cxtreme ly sensitive. Selwyn
relates that he rose of one occasion to
speak, holding a bundle of papers in his
hand, when a rough-hewn country mem¬
ber started up and said: “Mr. Speaker,
^ bo P° honorable gentleman does
not mean to read that large bundlo of
papers, and to bore us with a long
speech into tho bargain.” Burke was
so suffocated with rage as to ho incapa
speech, and rushed out of the
house. “Never before,’’ says Selwyn,
^ sce fable realized of a lion
put to flight by tho braying of an ass. M
— [Gentleman’s Magazine.
An Agreeable Climate.
Montreal Lady (to American finan- !
cier)—Da you not find our Canadian
climate rather cold. Mr. Boodler? I
Amcrlc aa Fmancier-Oh, not at all;
wit >» me. I left New York be
CaU,e lt Wa ’ 100 warm for mo there ’~
flexes Siitingt.
The Clay Pipe.
ft The olsy used in making pipes, is
obtained chiefly from pits located m
New Jersey, although there is a large bed
of clay being worked at Glen Cove, L. I.
The clay costs §3 a ton at the mines,
but, with freight charges, Ac., it amounts
to about §5 per ton before it is landed at
the factory. As soon as it arrives the
clay is spread out and seasoned by being
exposed to the heat of the sun, which
generally occupies several days. It is
then mixed with water and passed throu¬
gh a mill, which crushes it and removes
the stones and grift which cling to the
crude clay. It is then kneaded with the
hands in the same manner in which
bread is kneaded, and carofully freed
from all foreign substances.
“After the clay has been brought to
the proper consistency it is carried to a
workman called a ‘roller,’ who sits before
a bench, on the top of which lies a
a smooth, square board. In making a
pipe the ‘roller’ takes in each hand a
small lump of the fresh clay and deftly
rollsit out to the desired length and
thickness leaving a knob-like lump at the
end of each piece, which latter is form*
ed into the bowl of the pipe. the
“At this stage of its manufacture
half-made pipe is laid upon a measure,
which marks tho regulation length of
the stem. If the latter has been made
too long it is then clipped off. When a
dozen pipes have been thus formed they
arc passed to another workman, who sits
at a complicated machine, in which the
pipes are further manipulated. The man
at the machine first oils the clay, after
which he places the rudely-shaped pipes
in a mould and inserts an oiled and
polished wire through the steins, mak¬
ing the aperture through which the
smoke is drawn in using. The mould is
then placed in the machine and the su¬
perfluous clay is forced out.
i. The pipes have now taken on their
final shape and are laid in tho sun to
dry, after which they are polished and
put in a large earthen receptacle called
a ‘sagger,’ which is covered and arrang¬
ed with a dozen other saggers in the kiln.
The door of the kiln is then securely
fastened, and the fire, which is fed with
charcoal and coke, is started and kept at
a white heat for fifteen or twenty hours.
The fire is then allowed to die outslowly
and when quite extinguished the doors
are opened, the saggers allowed to cool
and their contents examined. The pipes,
which before were of a dull blue color
and very limp and soft have become per¬
fectly white and hard. The finished
pipes that have been examined and
found perfect are oarefuliy packed for in
barrels and boxes, and are then ready
shipment.
Valuable Find.
Hitherto all the lithographic stones used
in this country have come from Bavaria,
where the mines have long been worked
and are fast becoming exhausted. Now a
perfect lithographic stone, in large sheets,
has been discovered within a hundfed
miles of Au-tin, Tex. This will add
another important industry, and aid in
the prosperity and development of the
South.
Miss Frances Williard’s suggestion for
all Prohibitionists to wear the white rose
in the campaign, caused a Hudson, Mass.,
military company to adopt the name
“White Rose Guard, V Their colors are
the stars and stripes, and a white flag
with the red cross of the Crusade and
the motto, “For God and Home and Na¬
tive Land.”
“How doth the little busy bee improve
ea"h shining hour?” queries that ven¬
erable chestnut, Princij ally because
the bee is not human and can’t run for
office, drink whiskey, and chew tobacco.
From the Ex-President of the New York
State Senate.
Stats of New York, Senate Chamber, I
Alabny, March 11, lts«6. (
I have used Allcock’s Porous Plasters in
my family for the past five years, and can
truthfully say they are a valuable remedy and
effect great cures. I would not be without
them. I have inseveral instances given xome
to friends suffering with we ik and lame backs,
and they have invariably afforded certain and
spet dy relief. They cannot be t oo highly com¬
mended. Edmund L. Pitts.
Bowdoin College, Me., eonferred the degree
of LL. D. on M. W. Fuller and Gen. Howard.
A Pill In Time, Saves Nine !
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pel ets are
preventive as well s curative. A few ot these
Little Giants,” taken at the i ight time, with
little expe. se and no incouve ience, will ac¬
complish wha> will many dollars and much sacri¬
fice of time fail to do after Disease ones
ho ds yon with his iron grasp. Constipation
relieved, the liver regulated, tho Blood puri¬
fied, will fortify against fevers and ail con¬
tagious diseases. diet, Persons intending traveling,
changing valuable, Pierce’s water and climate, will find in¬
Dr. Pleasant Purgative Pel¬
lets. In vials convenient to carry.
A walnut grove planted now would make a
good twenty year endowment.
If all so-called remedies have failed. Dr.
Sage’s Catarrh Remtdy cures.
Absinthe drinking is said to be the latest
alarming “fad” in New York.
Use Long’s Pearl Tooth Soap for cleansing
your teeth. 25 cents at Druggists._
KV
■MANILLA o a
! 6,
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X
* *
* i' VS
'ST-S.Y K’g>Vy5,\\N_'SA VfeSfrx S
Is CHEAP, STKOX'O, easy to apply, docs
not met or rattle. Is also A SUBSTITUTE
FOIt PLASTER, at CAlt Half PETS the AND Ccsti BUGS ou'
lasta the buildittB. Catalogue and
of name double the w«r of oil clotha.
* — w.n.FAY* CA).jTimadiai.N-J.
r’aynss’ Automatic Enyinss and Saw-MIH
OCR II. P. LEADER. mounted Enjtfn* wttfc
offtr »n $ to If complete
W-io operation, »o>id Saw. 60 ft. b*1tin*, cant-hooka, rif skids, fit*
for on circular c*rs, t . 10U. Fugine on
leu. S mi for {BT. II. SV. PAYNE A
SONS, Manufact; r*‘ra of all style* Automatic ftp*
wlnr** "difUi# from JCtaur^ °-*»3 i H. Y P. Box • jls- Pulley* ‘langert
Ls^ik.
Th. H*p.y Hour
\ UH\II( HA MIMOUH
\\ The mo«t delightful Hum
\\ ting mock ever reclining, Invented, Iu for fane; *i;
or
eolors and ornamental. Ou>
customer* them. are Sent raptumu ad
over to any
(free* for W.dO. For
Frr<|ht we will *end tt to air E. R. HAtipn eaj i of th** Rockier
Prepaid, and guarantee safe arrival. S n<
tor circular. Special term* to I.nrge
•AT C ARNOLD dL NON. iiauwov*. v
WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE
2&JLG OlsT, CtJl.
oldest Bogins 51st Annual Session October 3d, JS88. The I \
and the leading college for girls in the
south. All modem improvements looking to I
health, safety, comfort and advancement of pu¬
mild pils in climate, Literature. Science and Art. Pure water,
Apply early for generous catalogue table, thorough teaching. I
to
KE \. \\. C, BASS, J). J)., president.
Send for a CataJom*' f th«
PHYSICIAN' i <)M e<;e or
AND SURGEONS,
ba i.TnmitE, mii,
which oner* the Student of Medicine aui'erior
advantages. THOMAS
I)R. OPIF. (Dean). C00 N Howard St.
COLD I Llvffat at anvthlnjr home and v in make the more world money Fither work s-x in; Coatl (braittaa outa*
VKlkK. Terms E KE.H. Address, I Kl K & u o Augusta, . Maiue.
PISOS CURE FORCONSUMPTION
The Reason.
The city is constantly drawing upon
the country for young blood, strong
muscles and active brains, to recruit tho
anks of earnest, effective workers in the
various channels of human industry. It
is fouud that boys from the country can
be depended upon, where close, persist¬ good
ent work is required, and there is a
teason for it The average country boys
lire brought up under conditions that af¬
ford a good appreciation of the value ot
persistent work. A good crop cannot be
except at the expense of con¬
stant, unremitting toil. From the ear¬
liest streak of dawn to the last ray of the
setting sun, there is something that Much can
be doue. It is not all drudgery. that
of it is pleasant labor, but it is work
must be*done, and done thoroughly made at
the right time, or it will not be a
success. Habit frequently makes a man.
Rev. John W. Boswell, of Morrill
tou, Ark., has been elected assistant edi¬
tor of the Nashville, Tcnn., Christian
Advocate, the central organ of the Sou¬
thern Methodist Church. He is the s n
of the Rev. Dr. Boswell, of the Mem¬
phis Conference, is about forty-nine years
old and has been in the ministry twenty
five years.
Are Yon Sick and Discouraged t
If so you are tlie ease we want the address of.
We charge you nothing for a trial bottle. We
cure nine cases out of ten of chronic constipa¬
tion, diseases of the urinary organs, liver and
kidney troubles, malaria and all brain and
nerve troubles. Agents wanted in every town
The postage, on one bottle is 25 cts. We leave
it with you to send it or not. We shall cure
you if you will give it a trial. It contains no
Hart Medicine Co., Cnion- .
poison. Address the
ville, Ct.
______
Anil now it is said, Jay Gould is laid up with
a cancer.
A tt Oman's Confession.
‘Do you know. Mary, I once actually con¬
templated suicide? ’ "You horrify me, Mrs.
K. Tell me about tt.” “1 was suffering from
chronic, we kness. I believed myself the
most unhappy woman in the world. I. looked
ten years older than I really was, and i feit
twenty. Lite seemed to nave experienced nothing in it
worth living lor." "I have all
those symptoms myself. Well?” “Well. I
was save l at the eleventh hour from the com¬
mission of a deed which 1 shudder to think of.
A frien i advised me to take Dr. Pit roe’s Fa¬
vorite Prescription. ididso. In an incredibly
short time 1 lelt like a newb ing. The Pre¬
scription’ cured m and 1 owe Dr. Pierce a
debt ot gratitude which i can never repay.”
The farmer who belittles his calling belit¬
tles himself, if such a thing is possible.
If afflicted with - ore eyes use Dr. 25c. Isaac Tlionip- bottle.
s in’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at per
m
%
•;5
v
'4 t
r
-X.
5>V" I If: i
W”, 7 ’ V. f Vi
\
MRS. DARTS TRIPLETS.
President Cleveland's Prize for the three best
babies at the Aurora County Mollie, Fair, in 1S87, was
given to these triplets, Ida and Ray,
children of Mrs. A. K. Dart, Utile Hamburgh, became N. Y.
Bhe writesLast August the ones
very sick, and os I could get no other food that
would agree with them, I commenced the use
of Lactated Food. It helped them immediately, and
and they were soon as well as ever, I con
sider it very largely due to the Food that they
are now eo well.”
Cabinet photo, of these triplets sent free to the mother
of ana baby born this year
_
—- Lactated , . i y-x Food «
Is the best Food for bottle-fed babies. It keeps
them well, and is better than medicine
when they arc sick.
THE MOST PALATABLE,
NUTRITIOUS, and
DICESTIBLE FOOD.
EASILY PREPARED.
At Druggists, 25c., 50c., SI.OO.
The Best and Most Economical Food.
ISO Meals for an Infant for SI.OO.
Og~ A valuable pamphlet on “The Nutrition
of Infants and Invalids,” free on application.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., BURLINGTON, VT
^ JONES
HB
PAYSthe FREIGHT
5 Ton >Ya«on Scales,
Iron Lever*, Steel Kc&riugi, Bru«
T&r« Benin and Ream Box for
$ 60 .
■▼•rv gii* Rc*ie. For fre« price lift
■entio» thi« paper and addresa
I0MS OF BINGHAMTON. V
BINGHAM TON. N.
$160 SAW FARMERS MILL. at AMUSES, Wood Honor..
Circuit! Here's Imaroveil Milljll t
r Haw
Log With Universal jtffijE IlL,
Ream Recti
linear Blmulta- Y-r - ,.W
neons and Double Ret WorkflB&gr^reg. Ee-vgggjj
centric Friction -’’th-*'*' [KS
Feed. Manufau- o
tured by the
S ALE II IRON WORKS, S ALEM, N, C.
WE BELL ALL AMERICAN
BICYCLES.
\ 1 And guarantee LOWEST I'RICF.H
A. W. (JUMP & CO.. Dayton, O.
Bin
ts IS: :: :: So™’,::
«‘n. “ " •• «:<£: “ ::
lr -y^i«’° r-Tc.o, j;
BLOOD ^ POISONIIIO rU,0U "lnUf '’sneers, ulaandall Tumors. Disease N,‘ro of™ c -
medicine Urmary Organa ,, posit,rely cured or no , l.arge Aj, e
is a pre.ent.ve of Malaria and Yell.m Fever
Tull size sample bottle tent tree on receipt of
WAUYlAddress ->s
.MEDICINE t»„ Box aoi. Unionviili.. THE UAItv iu*
rLltS! j 0|F& B L?"'" Styner "re"' Sticky “live will, Fly
s
gists of * or Kroct-ra, T. or maifwL *p!wUge jSid!''ou racelpi
ernt.. K. DAU LEY, Mnnufitc
layer. 37 Bcfknmn r>t eet. New \ ork.
ro introduce.will send a pair of splendid (52x?M inch) 8-folore<)
CieveTand-TburmancrHarrison-Morton ID CRAYON-LIT HO. PORT R AITS
with Iiq.OaK Fraawtwwfr Campaign fqr (jpc. G«o.?.Ha(;«TOK,C-tauinn*tl.Q
"I for List of requisites. 0T7*AQknts Wanted
PC 1.tnea not " Bmler dnT ’ the horses worth feet, fl.flO, FREE
«» Brewster Safety Rein Hold writ* 1
er Holly, Mtcb
Cincinnati JULY 27$ 4 th tj
OCT.
r h.
> r ,
*//> s* r/
^ f Ij - ®m
*
I mORP FflUfl
□RAND JUBiLEE celebrating the Settlement of the Northwestern Territory.
unsurpa ssed display.
EXCURSION RATES FROM ALL POINTS.
DR. SCHENCKj
MANDRAKE PI LLS
CLEANSE the mucous
branes of the stomach and bowels m
of '
and foreign matter, start the all i
digestion and assimilation, secretions if ssist
They relieve the nutrify
liver of congestion
a chance to extract bile poisons from fJ 1
blood, to make them into good bile aa
secrete just what is needed. They'dn *°
tear tives, their but they way and treat irritate all the like most n?„ P n Ea >t
surfaces '
gans, so that the entire an i or.
system responds.
They are based on scientific principles
They are entirely rational and natural"
They always do what is claimed for them
They work on the system in the way claimed
They work together for the greatest eood.
They are not like new and untried medici lies.
They need no praise, but only simple men.
tion of merit.
jMTDr. Schenck’s purely vegetable
wholly reliable family medicines are for Sa i
by alt Druggists. Every package has neatlv
printed directions for use. If y ou wo ,\
understand yourself send for Dr. Schenck !
new Book on Diseases of the Lungs, jj ve
and Stomach. Sent free. Address In, i
H. Schenck & Son. Philadelphia, p*.
WOO
PIM 0 -F 9 MB.
ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS. SEMI¬
NARIANS, AND THE PRESS, AS THE
BEST PIANOS MADE.
Prices as rensonnble and terms as easy as congtsteu,
with thorough workmanship.
CATALOGUES MAILED FREE.
Correspondence Solicited.
WAHEROOMS,
, cor. 16tli St., NT
every
FARMER’S
/ WIFE
Sees some of her Poultry
11/S die each year without
It knowing how w hat the matter
was or to effect a
remedy if she does recog¬
m i. ■ nize the Disease. This is
afflU'JiR u not penie stamps) right, of she ‘25 as at cents an ex (in
can pro ure
of practical a 1WO-luge Poultry BOOK
giving the experience but a working for dollars Kaiser
(not an amateur, a man aud
cents) during a period of 25 years. 1 1 teaches you
howto Detect and Cure Dhounes; howto
Feed for- Eggs and also lor Putteniiig;
which Fowls everything* to Save indeed, for Breeding Pur*
poses; and yon * lion Id
know on this subject. BOOK I'UH. Kent pottpa.d urn **E, for '45c,
134 Leonard Mreet, N. \ . City.
marv£i.wjs
DISCOVERY.
Wholly unlike artificial Mysteim
i me ol mind wonder in*.
Any book D nrin d tu one reading.
ClaBfes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit,
151)0 at Philadelphia, 1113 at Washington, Law students, I’illi
at Boh ton, large «• asses of Columbia nt
Yale, Wellesley, Oberlin, University of Penn., Mull¬
igan University, Chautauqua, Ac., Ac. h horsed by
Richard Proctor, the Scientist, lions. W W. As tor,
.Judah P. Benjamin, Judge Gibson, Dr. Brown, h.
H. Cook, Principal N. Y. State Normal College, Ac.
Taught by correspondence. Prosptv tns post N. kr-.k Y.
tron> PROF. JjOISFT l’E« 237 Fifth Ave..
_ RSI _ __ IP 9 _ fij _ S R H _ _ Rjj - IIA f ,
»&*§ siS PH Sfl S 3 mi 11 . M v- I
'
Ififalg (Mrwv 1 V I
you wun t to
| Pa rn nil ahum .r- mz
a Horse < Iloiv ■
lo Pick Out a -
toK iJ-V'i[ uowViilVer^ oils' nnW" ‘
Guard aaainsi Ifn
Fraud? w Idfy, ^ 1
Deter) Disease
possible ? How m 1 ■A -•
to Tell the Age
by iVlint Che Teeth? call the • VgA; i
to
Diflcreiit Part*
of ill© Animal? f , m. ------ All ,, li*"»
i How to Shoe a Horse Properly v •
and other Valuable Species Information be ©bliiinen relalitu M
j fo the Equine JOO-PAHK ran ILL! STIIATE •
i reading our will forward.
I IIORSK BOOK, whirli we stamps.
?xrir’ HOUSE BOOK. 'a’n’ly <’(».. 25 134 cts. Leonard in St.» N. Y.
Butciwr’s-:-Lipiiig
V-* FLY KILLER
\ Is quick death; ctsily pr .-pared ani
us- d ; nodangpr ; files don't live ioiu
f enough freely rid to get the house away. of U*e th* 1 ™ It nft ' “fif I ci
; anything "j’i t
at pence. Don’t take ptiMp
as arood.” There Is nothing ike the genuine aus,Vi.
r s. FRED* K IH'TUIKK, si. 1
Plantation Engines
With Belf-Contalneci
RETURN FLUE BOILERS,
I FOR DRIVING)
J COTTON GINS and MILLS.
» : I Hunt P»rnpfclct Free. Addrrsi
rated
.James leffel & Co.
\ \,r SPKINKFIEl.D, New OHIO, York
1 TO Liberty Kt-,
z -i Rovolvor*
55 ?«*wRiflos, EtOt
CD < 1 Addrrtt
L.H sfrtrwp Tt %% Tfettarr*
for Prict List. OuaVoi it*.Pittsburgh.FiT
Seines, Tents. Breeeh-lofuljag doubl; Shotsruq $9.00:
finale Uarrt‘1 Breech loaders at $4 to , loader* Breech- $•'
Hides $ ’.SO to $15; Double-barrel Muzzle at **
to . iiepe.iMng' Rides, lil-shooter, $1* t > i-30 : Itefolv'jy, D.
Rl to ; Flob *: t Rifles, $2.50 to $s. Guns sent O. O. w
exnmioe Revolvers by mail to anv P. O. Address JUJU*
I TOWS HRIAT WINTER* fltlS WORKS, PUUborf, Penna.
~
PUBLISHERS OF NEWSPAPERS,
1 OR those who intend to be,
would find it profitable to
CORRESPOND WITH THE
ATLANTA NEWSPAPER UNION,
ATLANTA, GA.
ASTHMA Asthma Cure CUBSB
German nerer/otutogive t«v
modtatt rtlitfm the worst entyon.Insure* comfort¬
able sleep; effects c tires where ail others i»u *
81 trial .OQyOl convince* the mo it ikepttcal. m*li. Samri«FR Price «*>Qc* I E
SEgtP-BJlff-l PrqjfrrisMor SCIRFFH-YN, by BkL- ani
B!air'sPilis. Great English Gout and
Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Bnx« .‘14; round, I I Fill>« ________
G O la I) i* worth 8500 per lb. Pettier Ey*Sal« dealer’- '•
Wo rt4'$ l , 000 . but >* sold at Ho. a b ,1 by
a. n. u.................... .....Thirty,