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FOR FARM AND GARDEN.
Use Blankets.
Men often deceive themselves by thi ik¬
ing they cannot afford to buy a horse
blanket. When horses are not blanketed
in cold weather, if they keep in good
condition they must eat more than a
horse blanket would cost. When spring
comes a horse that has been blanketed
all winter is usually worth $50 to $100
more than one which has not been. It
is money in the farmer’s pocket to blanket
his horse .—New York Herald.
Food Instincts of Swine.
The reason why hogs devour indi¬
gestible material is believed to be that
there is a lack of certain constituent
elements in the food furnished them,
such as various salts, sulphur, lime,
etc. Thus indigestion, mal-nutrition,
intestinal parasites, etc., are the result,
which causes the animals instinctively to
consume a variety of substances in a
manner to satisfy their craving for some¬
thing that is 1 eking in their lood-mate
rial and which is necessary to maintain
a normal condition of the body. To
supply this want, the food-material
should be changed or improved, and
among the food may bo mixed small
quantities of flowers of sulphur and bone
meal. In separate boxes or troughs may
also bo placed some soft coal and some
charcoal .—Prairie Farmer.
Depth to Set Posts.
Correspondents in different parts of
the country differ widely as to the depth
of hole needed for fence posts. Somo
say that two feet is ample depth, while
others insist on three feet. Both may
be and probably are right. The
must vary with the probable freezing
the soil. The bottom of the post
to be at least six inches below tho
able depth of freezing. That amount
soil will remain packed about the foot
the post and hold it down.
also depends on the material of which
the fence is made. Boards offer
much resistance to winds, and at the
of the fence act on the post as on
lever, twisting it out of tho ground.
Fence rails attached to posts have the
ditional objection that their weight
the post so soon as the wind causes it
lean. Careful farmers now make
and rail fences with one or two
of barbed wire at the top. After
little experience with this fence by
ing stock up to it they generally learn
give it a wide berth. Such a fence
not blow down nor easily sag if the
are sunk below frost depth .—Boston
tivator.
Feeding Valne of Buttermilk
While calves should never bo given
sour food, and should be fed only
sweet skimme I -milk warmed to
degrees, tho sour milk aud
will be very useful to the pigs.
useful experiments have been made
feeding pigs upon these kinds of
with corn meal, which together
the most profitable feediug in every
for these animals, furnishing a meat
mixed with lean aud having hard
fat. It has been supposed that
milk is not so nutritious as sweet
but experience and experiment do
confirm this belief. On tho
buttermilk has made slightly
po:k than the sweet skimmed-milk.
tainly the pigs seem to favor the
food rather than the sweet. It may
that the lactic acid of the milk
an aid to digestion ; it forms part of
gastiic fluid and may be reasonably
posed to help tliis process of
tion; at all events, the acid
nutriment and is not a waste, as some
sons seem to think, When fed
corn meal, which was valued at the
ket price of one cent per pound, the
termilk hns been found worth one
per gallon. Of courso this depends
the value of the pork which, in this
was five cents per pound, a very
price for dairy-fed pork, At seven
one-half cents the buttermilk would
worth one and onc-lialf cents per
In the use of this waste product,
skimmed-milk as well, it is an
to feed it as soon as possible,
the corn meal or bran with it when it
fed. Over-sour food is not healthful,
and this is in nearly every case the
of that unhealthful condition of
which is marked by corroded or
teeth; and which is supposed to be
disease in itself, instead of,more
ly, a product of disordered
American Agriculturist,
Cream for Churning.
There happens just now to be trouble¬
some ‘Uncertainty as to the keeping and
churning of cream, due to eager desire
to make clear what is at present inexpli¬
cable, and to the seeming strife among
certain dairy writers to be sensational.
Hence the term “ripening” of cream and
consequent confusion, Cream is “ripe
when ready for churning a: d making the
best quality of butter. This condition
is a moderate degree of acidity or sour¬
ness, and the practical butter-maker mav
be sure there is nothing more than this
needed with cream free from all unclean¬
liness to make the best and most butter.
Some time ago these “experts’ —at pres¬
ent loudest on “ripening” were equally
vociferous in praise of churning sweet
But now it is alleged that sweet
will not yield so much butter by
. 15 per cent, as ripened or sour
latter statement is as wide of the
i it was to say that sweet cream
icst-flavored butter. Some per
;fer their butter to be Insipid*—
free from that aroma which is It* moat
desirable quality to ordinary consumer*.
Ripened cream, which makes finely fla¬
vored butLr, has just entered the first
stage of decomposition known as acidity.
If this decomposition goes too far the
flavor becomes gradually stronger until
it ends in rancidity. At this season
there is danger of the cream, by too
long keeping, becoming too sour or
overripe, and consequently making in¬
ferior butter. This is to be avoided
with every care, but especially by keep¬
ing the milk at a temperature below 60
degrees and the cream still cooler when
a churning is only made once a week.—
New York Tribune.
Chicken Houses.
One of the difficulties in chicken rais¬
ing is that but few hen houses have been
built which answer for both winter and
summer, says a correspondent of the
American Rural Home. For a flock
twenty fowls I prefer a house 12x12 feet,
7 feet high at the rear and 9 feet at the
front, the roof to be of tarred paper,
the floor of close boards. Board
are preferred as they can be swept
with a broom if kept well dusted
dry earth and as they are always dry,
there will be leas liability to dampness.
The floor should be raised about
feet from the ground the front
open to the yard. The object in
it up three feet is to guard against
boring rats. It alao affords an
shelter in winter, as the three
sides protect the fowls against the
and afford shade in the summer.
other words it is a covered run for
fowls and really gives double space,
the birds can lay and roost above,
being provided for them to go up
down to the space above the floor.
small window on the south side
give all necessary light, as too
glass causes loss of heat by radiation
night.
The roost should be about six
above a two-foot wide board, at the
of the hou c e and the nests
which saves space. Of course two
three steps will be necessary In order
enfer the door to the upper part,
should be on the west end of the
near the front. The floor under
board floor should be of earth,
above the surrounding ground, or if
inch wire mesh be underlaid the floor
keep the rats out, it may be of
The interior may be lined with any
of cheap building paper. There
be two ventilators at the two
corners of the house to be kept
during the day only. Such a house
excellent for winter. In summer
windows may be taken out, and a
wire netting put in place and the
ing in the floor where the fowls
may then be covered with a screen
This plan will if the ventilators are
open give plenty of fresh air in
mer.
Farm and Garden Notes.
Give variety to the bill of fare of
cows.
The selection of tho best will give
survival of the fittest.
Keep every young animal on the
continually gaining.
Abundant pedigree will never
up for lack of abundant food and
eral good care.
Do not let the milk, cream or
freeze; it spoils tho flavor and
quality of the butter.
Put butter into such packages as
market demands. Thirty to sixty
Welsh tubs are best for the general
ket.
Dairymen to have good cows
raise the calves from their best
bred to thoroughbred bulls of
breeds.
There is a timo when it is safe
prune most varieties of deciduous
trees, and that timu is when the wood
ripo and while the tree is in a
condition.
The short cut stubs of cornstalks
often injurious to cattle and
especially if given while hungry
eating rapidly. It is better to cut
some machine that crushes the stalk
it cuts it; but to do this
run the machine with some other
than your own right arm.
Educated Horses.
Doubtless most of you think when
see the performance of trained horses
the circuses of today that a great
vance has been made in educating
animals over what was done in ancient
times. But you are mistaken, for
the most wonderful exploits of
present day are repetitions of what
done with them several hundred years
ago. In those days horses not
danced upon their hind legs, but
mock battles, striking at their
with the.r fore feet, and showing
appeared to be remarkable intelligence.
Perhaps the most surpri ing feat
performed by a horse was in the olden
time. A large three-sided braided rope
was stretched several feet from the
ground, and upon this the horse walked,
preserving his balance perfectly, In an
old print a picture of the act is ahown,
while another cut represents a horse
striking the shield of a soldier with his
hoofs. Even the elephant, generally con
sidered the most ungainly of animals,
was trained in those days to walk the
tight rope, not only near the ground,
but, if we may believe the old writers, it
traversed ropes swung above the heads
of the audience, and not onlv preserved
its balance, but bore a tnsn upon its
back.
quaint and curious.
Ladies’ dresses are now made of
paper.
Japan legally recognizes the Christian
Babbath.
Harvey inferred the general circulation
of the blood in 1616.
Greyhound cour»ing is likely to be¬
come quite fashionable in America.
Heavy machinery is now run by ar¬
tesian-well power in many parts of
France.
A Wichita (Kan.) clergyman has been
asked to resign because his sermons are
too long.
A boy at Greensburg, Penn., commit¬
ted suicide because he was determine'
not to go to school.
It is said that when he is busy ia
round up” a single cowboy will tire
out six or eight horses in a day.
More than 200,000 bird skins are
contained in the National History Mu¬
seum at South Kensington, London.
A stone crab has bean exhibited
Charlotto Harbor, Fla., whose
measured 6j inches in circumference.
Major Willis of Charlestown, 8. 0.,
has made a collection of the teeth
240 different species of the shark fami
ly
George Scott of Dubuque, Iowa,
wasted his substance and brought
self to poverty and crime by giving
freely to charities.
The skeleton of a mastodon has been
unearthed in California. It is 30
long and has tusks between six and
seven feet in length.
An English naval officer
that there are $200,000,000 in gold
silver under the sea, which could
reached by good luck.
Paul Lafferty, an American, who
[nto an English prison for five years,
says the fare beat any
a-day American hotel, and he was
to leave.
Holland has a population of four
a quarter millions of whom two and
half millions are Protestant, one and
half millions Catholic and the remainder
of several denominations.
An elephant lately died at
India, in the 300th year of his age,
naturalists figure from this that any
phant of regular habits will have
trouble in pulling along for at least
years.
A curious crop is a harvest of
sponges. It was obtained by an
trian savant as the result of an
ment of literally sowing small parts
living sponges in a soil favorable
their production.
A colored boy near Camden, S. C.,
lost a dollar that belonged to his mother.
He felt so badly about it that he
crying bitterly, and did not stop
twenty-four hours, and then he
from exhaustion.
A curious character named Dr.
Garelson has recently died in Cincinnati.
For fifty years he had eaten no meat,
neither coffee or tea ha 1 passed his lips
in sixty yean. He never ate salt, and
when traveling always carried his
with him. He was in his
year at the time of his death.
Consider (he Cobweb.
The other day I was sitting in
room, writes u bachelor in the Picayune,
and the landlady entered the open
with a long-han lied broom in her hand
and business in her eye. “Excuse me,
sir,” she said, “but I'm going to
‘them’cobwebs down.” “Well,
you arc not going to knock ‘them’
webs down if I have any say in
matter," I replied; “and please to
iu mind that as long n> I keep this
the cobwebs arc not to be
“Just as you like," she said, and beat
retreat; but an expression of dumb
wilderment had fixed itself upon
face.
I did not take the trouble to
the situation to her because I knew
well that she could neither
nor appreciate it. It was only a
days before this event that 1 had
up, examined, and for the first time
my life fully appreciated the
creation of a spider’s web. There
were, with their delicate
stretched across the two walls
formed the comer of the room;
nterlaced in such exquisite and
tracery that I doubt if the
cope could reveal where they began
where they ended.
How many a dollar has been spent
brie-a-brie and peach-blow vases for
ornamentation of a room? Here was
poor little spider that had come and
an ornament for my chamber, in
more marvelous, more delicate,
beautiful, than anything that m-m,
all his intellect, ail his ingenuity, all
machinery, has ever created. And
1 going to allow this triumph of
manship to be ruthlessly destroyed? Ah,
no, build on, spider, and while I
this room your home will be respected.
No Coffin Big Enough for Him.
No casket in Spokane Falls was larg*
enough to hold the remains of Robert S.
Turner, who died recently, and one had
to be made. He was the biggest man in
the territory, weighing 3-0 pounds.
The heane was not large enough to hold
the coffin aad a spring wagon had to be
used instead. He was 22 years old, and
numbered among a host of friends some
of the most prominent men of the terri¬
tory .—Portland Oregonian.
OTBR THE CATARACT
When the breve Stanley end his tireless fol¬
lowers were pushing their way into Central Afri
river. they Footsore oame one and day to the they bank quickly of a mighty lannch
their boats, and find weary, and change in floating
rest
upon the smooth surface of the stream.
Soon, however, the watchful '-ye of the great
explorer sees unmistakable signs of the near
presence of a eataraot. The current grows swift,
tiny bubbles float by. The signal is given to
land, and the party seek safety on the low,
shelving bank. pushes his little
One daring spirit, however,
oanoe into the middle of tho stream and goes
resolutely forward, with the seeming intention
of finding whether the river is navigable. gesticulate,
In vain his comrades shout and
rushing wildly along the river bank in puisuit.
Not until the loud thunder of falling watt!
breaks Alas, upon his ear does he attempt to turn.
it is too late.
The oars are wrenched from his hands, the
boat is tossed wildly about, a mere atom in the
seething waters, and in a brief moment, winch
Beems an ago to the lookers on, i . is dashid to
pieces against a huge boulder on the very br.uk
of afrigtittulprecip.ee.
In vain our comrades are kindly warning us
of our danger. Our columns have often por¬
trayed the fearful scourge that surrounds us.
Often we hear tho expression “Is this fearful
scourge more prevalent than in olden times?”
We say “No.”
Iu Brutus and Julius Caesar’s time, in the
dark ages, we read of powerful men being
stricken down. The same obstacles are met.
The victim succumbs to the disease. the re
cent discoveries of the microscope have devel¬
oped the real cause of so many terrible fatali¬
ties and brought out tho tact, that many of tho
symptoms which are cried diseases are but
symptoms of kidney disoi dor.
People do not uie bee-use of tho kidneys ul¬
cerating an 1 destroying their spinal column,
but because the poisonous waste matter is not
extracted from the blood as it pa.-s s through
ibekidneys, the only blood purifying through the organs,
nut te remains, forcing the its w.ty sys¬
la The attacking weal.est organ. when in rsal
doctors call this ad.sense,
ity Understanding it iB but a symptom. why Warner’s
this, the reason
Safe Cure cur. s so many common disca-cs is
plain. It removes the causes of disease by enables put¬
ting the kidneys in a healthy condition ;
hem to perform their functions anil reuiovo
the poisonous acids from the blood ; purities the
blood and p events the poisonous matter cours¬
ing through the sys tm and atiacking the weak¬
er organs and producing a malady which the
unsuspecting victim fears is, and the heartless
p act tinner pronounc s, a d sease, because of
nis inability to remove the cause,
lie avoids the leal cause and keeps his patient
in ignorance because of his mab lity to cope
with Any an honest advanced practitioner ki ney difficulty. will admit that there
i- nothing laid down in he old or in the modem
im dical works that is a specific lor advanced
kidney from disorder. His bigotry and code parstion prevent
him publicly adop ing and any recommend¬ pr
not di covert d by his kin i, not
ed by hi- instructors k5 or oO year- b fore. He
forgets that this is a progressive world, anil that
most of the great sc.entitic mid medical discov¬
er i (-8 of ti.e present day have been made outside
o. the muli -al p ofession'.
The public, kno mg iheso facts, should heed
the warning and seek safety from the great dan¬
ger that surrounds them, and look for help self- out¬
side the profession too bigoted and too
reliant, 10 learn or concede that -eienoe is out
s ripping their mat. ria medica and leaving thorn
and th.ir ebso etu methods far behind.
Zanzibar.
The destiny of the Island of Zanzibar,
off the East Coast of Africa, and com¬
manding maritime access to the Lake
District of the interior of the Dark Con¬
tinent, is at tliis time a consideration of
high p. litieal importance, with regard
to the division of German and British
colonizing enterprise on the main-laud,
the combined naval blockade for the
suppression of the slave trade, and tho
insurrection of the Suite i coast tribes
against the German settlements. Zan¬
zibar is an island forty-eight miles long
and eighteen milea with broad, hills formed above by a
reef of madrepore, high, not luxur¬
400 feet and covered with
iant vegetation, tho soil being in most
parts extremely numbering fertile. The 300,000, popula¬
tion, altogether in¬
cludes about 14,000 Banyans of the Hin¬
doo trading class from India, many of
whom are British subjects; Arabs, chief,
ly from Oman or and from slave Muscat; Parsee
merchants; free blacks from
different parts of Africa, from the Com¬
oro Islands and Madagascar; anti the
native raoe, who live in huts of wattle
and olay. The part of Zanzibar where
the late Saltan Said-Burghash resided,
is a fine bay or harbor on tho west coast,
fronting Africa, and the town lias at
least 60,000 inhabitants. The connec¬
tion between Southern Arabia and Zan¬
zibar is of a very ancient date, but was
dominion, long interrupted which by this the Portuguese the
on part of East
African coast has been abandoned,
though it is still a reality in the Mozam¬
bique Channel and far to the south. Zan¬
zibar, however, did not exercise any
functions of actual government on tlia
main-land, while claiming a titular sov¬
ereignty along its sea-coast .—Frank
Leslie’s.
Athletic Sports of the Samoans.
The men of Samoa are a fine athletic
race, and it did not take them long to
find interest in many of the sports in¬
learned dulged in by their visitors. They soon
to wrestle and to box, and a
number of the natives will not only put
on lively the tussle gloves with you, but give you a
afterwards. They were
apt pupils in cricket also, and can make
glish a very residents interesting game officers with the En¬
or the and sailors
from the British nten-of-war and mer¬
chantmen that sometimes visit their
shores. but They little soon learn athletic sports
take interest in manual labur
of any kind. In fact until about ten or
twelve years ago they used to import
laborers from the Solomon Islands, who
were held to sen ice for a term of years,
as were the Chiuese coolies at one time
in other parts of the world. There are
yet in the Samoa and in the Fiji
Islands many of these imported labor¬
ers, though the traffic has been 6 Up
pressed The for several years.
Samoattg are religious, but while
professing the duties Christianity imposed and attending to
upon them by the
faith taught th-m by the missionaries,
still, when in dire ne ed of more than
human aid, they also appeal to the
wooden images * which,
doubt, have brought their they do not
through forefathers
so leave many dangers. They pro¬
pose to no stone unturned, or
no bring prayer unsaid, benefit that might possibly
them in their hour of
trouble .—New York Journal.
An Old Dynasty.
Just ona hnndred years before Colum¬
bus discovered America, generations be¬
fore Shakespeare was born, more than
two hundre d years before Luther stirred
dred np Germany with his preaching, a hun
years before the first Bible was
printed, when all England was sleeping
on straw, and when pins had yet to be
known, the present dynasty of Corea sat
upon its imperial throne and governed
its ore am-faced, almond-eyed subjects.
The blood that flows in the veins of
Li Hi, the present King of Corea, is the
same continuous royal stream which has
flowed over the Corean throne since
1392. During that time tw. nty-nine
kin gs have reigned and the power of each
has been more despotic than that of the
Czar of Russia. The royal biood hns
not weakened in its flowing, and his
of Majesty nis anoestors of to-day and has is the oue best of qualities the most
progressive of Asiatic rulers,— Partlvul
Oregonian,
The Favorable Side.
It is a strange fact that the ugly girl
is rather a favorite than otherwise.
When we look at her, we lament the
shape of her nose, we sigh over the cast
in her eye, we deplore the dullness of
her complexion, we can find nothing to
praise; but perhaps she smiles, or she has
a witching manner. She knows the spell she
which puts every one at his ease;
owns the charm which makes others
pleased with themselves; and then we
are wont to say that there is no such
person as the ugly girl. The plain face
which is ative with intelligence, which
beams with un expression of refinement
and good nature, which culture and
bigh-mindedness animate, becomes
sometimes finer and more effective than
me: e prettiness, mere pink and white
loveliness, mere shapeliness and symme¬
try of feature. The ugly girl has the
advantage over her pretty sister; she
does not fade so early, or at least her
fading is not so palpable, and she is
usually a better looking matron than a
gui.
We Are Ahead.
The success of the warships Vesuvius
and Yorktown in achieving more than
the contract requirements as to speed and
horse power, is made more conspicuous the
by the failure of the British gunboat, expected
Spider, to do either. She was
to show a speed of 20 knots per hour,
but did not quite reach it. But this is
not so important as the failure of her en¬
gines to develop the r quired exceeded horse-pow- the
er. Onr Yorktown hns
horse-power guaranteed, and will earn a
premium for her contractors. The Ve¬
suvius has greatly exceeded the speed
stipulated, and has become famous
ihr ughout the world.
The Ericsson Coast Defense Co., has
been incorporated in New York, The
company devotes its attention to interest¬
ing the government of the United States
in the practical results of the studies and
experiments of the late Capt. John Erics¬
son, who devoted many years and much
labor to the subject of our coast defences.
The most remarkable of his inventions
is the Destroyer.
To protect ourselves against the
storms of passion, marriage with a good
woman is a harbor in the tempest; but
with a bad woman it is a tempest in the
htrbor.
Perfect health depends upon a perfect con¬
dition of the blood. Pure blood conquers every
disease at.d gives'new lifeioevery and decayed di¬ or
affected part. Strong nerves perfect shock
gest! n enables the system to stand the
of sudden climatic changes. An occasional
use of Brown’s Iron Bitters will keep you in a
perfect state of health. Dtn’t be deceived by
other iron pre: arations aid to be just Chemical as good.
The genuine is made only by Brown
Company, Baltimore, Ma. Sold by all dealers
In medicines.
Calvin’s o'A church, the Cathedral of St.
Bierre in Geneva, Switz., is to be restored.
It Makes
You Hungry
I have used Paine’s Celery Compound and It
has had a salutary
effect. It Invigorat¬
ed the system and I
teel like A new
man. It Improves
the appetite and
facilitates diges¬
tion.” J. T. COPE
itm, Primus, 8. C.
Bpring medicine means more now-a-dayB than It
did ten years ago. The winter of 1888 -s# has left
the nerves all fagged out. The nerves most.be
Strengthened, the blood purified, liver and
bowels regulated. Paine’s Celery Compound—
the Spring medicine of to-day —does all this,
as nothing else can. Prescribe by Physician*,
Recommended by Druggists, Endorsed by Ministert,
Guaranteed by the llar.vfaeturer> to be
The Best
Spring Medicine.
“ In the spring ot 1S8TI was all run down. I
would get up In the morning with so tired a
feeling, and was so weak that I could it ajdiy get
around. I bought a hottle ol Paine’s Celery Com¬
pound, and before I had taken It a week X felt
very much better. I can cbeefully recommend
it to all who need a building up and strengthen¬
ing medicine.” Mrs. ii. A. Dow, Burlington. Vt.
Paine’s
Celery Compound
la a unique tonic and appetizer. Pleasant to
the Injurious taste, quick in its action, and without any
effect, It gives that rugged health
which makes everything taste good. It cures
dyspepsia and kindred disorders. Physicians
prescribe It. $1.00. Six Mr $5,00. DniggifitS.
Wells, Richardson A Co., Burlington, Vt.
DIAMOND DYES Color anything any color.
Never Fail! Always sure!
L ACT A TED FOOOflj
'e£ fT\
MANILLA)! o
o, JJ £
*
Is CHEAP, STRONfi, easy to apply, does
not rust or rattle. Is also A SUBSTITUTE
FOR PLASTER, at Half rho Ccst? out¬
lasts the building. CARPETS AND RUGS
of same, double the wear of oil clothe. vJatalcuue and
WMiles/ree. W. H. FAYd CO..C11 uiden* N.,I.
patent Foot BARNES’ Power Machinery. Completb
O utfits for actual workshop business.
With them Builders, Cabinet
Makers, Metal end Woodwork «tk
ers Machines compete wi .b steam power. j
on t ria.1 if desired.
Proof of value, prices, full
detail, illustr d catalogue, free.
IV.F.A Johii Hariu s( «.
No. Rockford, 39fi Ruby III.
St
' I ELEGRAPriY ASU ^nuAnuNa
A CHUR Th* Happy HAMMOCK Hour
9 The moot delightful Kara
jur ■lock over invented, for sit
ting eolorn or reclining, infancy
and ornamental. Our
euBtomera are rapturous
over them. Sent to any ad
■•will drew for ft. 00. For $3.01
met tt to MJ R. R. rtation ea«t of the Rockie.
p re>pht I rep«Id, and goaraotee safe arrival. Send
lor oireuter. Bwtel Urau to Large Dealers
Ur. C. ARNOLD 4k SON* IIouootl. Y
DIAMOND VtRA-CURA
FOR DYSPEPSIA.
iPOSm^ btomach CUREFiiR Ir oubleg Arlain INDIGESTION g Therefrom. AND ALL
OT e tn * r a l Dta’rr win yet Vera
. •'ready , , In stork, or it will he
” , atl on receipts/ a sts. (5 boxes * 1 00 ) in
stamp*. Sample Be nt o > recei pt 0/2-cent stamv. .
Tte Charles A. Vogsltr Co., Baltimore. Md.
^ suffered from catarrh 13
mm B ^ooto! ^ m * dr( >PPinas into
roa vtre nauseating.
AYffVERSl Since nose the bled first almost daily
Ely's day's use of
Cream Balm have Iiad
55 no bleeding, the soreness ig
1 ^entirely gone. D. Q. David
U SA son, with the Boston Budget.
peerless dies Soldrt Daro-iLsT*
So famous have the South Carolim
cotton planters beoime all over th
world that they are now in demand n
foreign countrh s where cotton is plant
ed. "Home ti ne ago n New of York Charle tiri
WI ote to A. J. Salinas & Hon,
ton on behalf of a linn in Russia, askiu
Mr’ Halinas to engage a capable and ii
telligent planter at a liberal salary Satina to g
to Russia to plant cotton. Mr.
made arrangements with John S. Sooti
of jfavs Bluff, Marion County, one o
the most successful planters in th
State, who will sail from New York fo
Moscow. Thence lie will go to th
Caucasus where his special business wi
be to superintend the natives in th
cultivation of cotton which is plante
there in large quantities. He will als.
be sent to Central Asia to confer wit!
planters and de alers in t hat section.
•nrn'ftO?.* ih-iom eq cq plus sum puu uopuu
raniupXwAi oj umouh durajs Amao asoul
!U P0ouaqiu9 ai -ucpiquixo nu SaiAuq ussq
9AUU Voi Aeqi puu’sdunqs eibqsod jo sjoioapoD
JJB Ul 9[<i09d (IXVSnOHi AA.'Ilj.
Best, easiest to use and cheapest, 50c. I’lso’s
Remedy for Catarrh. By Druggist,
tf afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c.per bottle
Spring Sickness
May b« avoided by taking the aopular spring madi- Hood’s Sarsaparilla is prepared from Sarsaparilla,
dne. Hood’s Sarsaparilla, i* saa«on. If luva Pandelioa, Mandrake, Dock, Juniper Herrin, aid
not felt well during the winter. If yon have been other well known vage<ftble remedies, in such a
overworked, or oioeeiy confined In badly ventilated peculiar manner as to derive the full midldDal
or shops, you nest a good tonio and blood value of each. It will cure, wl.en in the power of
rooms and medicine, scrofula, salt rheum, sores, boil\ plm.
purifier liks Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Take It early
you will ward off attache of dls ase or escapa the pies, all humors, dyspepsia, biliousness, sick h ad*
effects of impure blood and that tired feeling so ache, Indigestion, general debility, catarrh, rheuma*
common in the spring. Do not delay. Take Hood’e tism. kidney and liver complaints. It overcomes
Sarsaparilla now. that extreme tired feeling caused by change of cli¬
“I wish to state the bmefltl derived from Hood’s mate, season, or life, and imparts life and strength
Sar.-aparilla. I have u»d It In he spring for three to the whole system.
years for debility and dn say that I gained in flesh " For five years I was sick every spring, but last
and strenrth after u.in one bottle. It alao cured year b'gan In February to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
me of sick headache.”— 1 ts F. H. Aironnws, South I used five bottles and have not seen s siok day
Woodstock, Conn since.”—O. W. Sloah, Milton, Mas *.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists, *1; aix for *5. Prepared only Said by »11. druggists. *1: si x for *S. Prapsred only
by C. L HOOD St 00. Apothecaries, Lowell, Maas by 0.1. HOOD k CO.. Apothecaries, Lowell, Msss.
,
IOO Doses One Dollar IOO D-sos One Dollar
4 u ft pirn ?.
si \fcba IrA-v GOLDEN
b pd CM & MEDICAL. COVERT] 3
h DBS
w t -NT R.
] Dp .1 mP
i / m
c r. NS,*/ O' VS Or-J
I o/ •> t 4L 'll
,o ,0 t. I 0 .V I III to/nit#v*£
Ct
s>tir •scsSi! m
I H i
I 1
\\
A
L
r
AN HONEST DRUGGIST ,
when asked hr the best blooci-puriflef, always recommends Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Disecvery, because he knows it lias by far the largest sale and gives tho
best satisfaction to his customers. Golden Medical Discovery cures all humors,
from a comnicn Blotch, or Eruption to the worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum, Scaly this or
Rough Skill, ; n short, and all invigorating diseases caused medicine. by bad blood Great are Eating conquered Ulcers by rapidjy
heal powerful, under purifying, benign influence. Especially has it manifested its potency in
its Scrofulous
curing Tetter, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles. Sore Eyes,
Sores and Swellings, Hip-joint Disease, “While Swellings,” “Fever Sores,”
Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands. and cured by this
Corisurr.atlcm, which Is Scrofula of the Lungs, is arrested
remedy, if taken in the earlier stages of the disease.
WTEJB. I I Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
is the only medicine of its class that is
i... ii.—. ...........in ■ * guaranteed to benefit or cure, in all
cases of diseases for which it is recommended, or the money paid for it
will be proni;tly refunded.
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shortness of Breath, Bronchitis,
Asthma, Seveie Ccnghg, and kindred affections, it is an efficient remedy.
Sold by Druggists, at $1.00, or six Bottles for $5.00.
Copyright, 1888, by Wobld’s Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietor*.
C"^ /\ nr 8 TT X3XT THE irEAD
is conquered by tho cleansing, anti¬
septic, soothing and healing properties of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. 60 cents, by druggists.
JONES I HEVOIiVER F YOU <;ooi> WISH A SHiTHi wesson
a f 11 n purchase oUe of the WESSON cele- XS.
PAYS THE FREIGHT. brated SMITH A
H 4 *> ef r r n u Wacom aeon jseni Scale*, arms. The finest small a. ram 85*
9m , bon Levers, Steel Bearings, Braa ever manufactured all and
Tare Beam and Beam Box for _ first choica of experts. and 44-iCO. Sin- _—
ssoo. Manufactured in calibres 32,88 Hammerlesi and
SR V E. ht*v Beale. F« >r fre# price 1 is* J le 'afget or double models. action. Constructed Safety entirely ot b eft '—‘■7
m JOiMEj Gmnc.Onihis pap< f and address if #r«»t Kir aterri, carefully in-peoted for wo.*
HINGHAMTO.N, OF BINGHAMTON I mansh p and stock, they are unrivaled for deceived flnl'u* d»
n. y. durability and aocnmoy. Do not b« left
c&eat) ma lieu hie cast-iron I mi t n 11 • n e 'v n noi
a anV eofteii Bold for the genuine article The and SMHH are «
unreliable, but aanfercu*. stamped the oar
WE8SON Revolvers arc all and upon of vt ?’*
All kinds of Silk, Cotton relawiihfirm’s name, address date* P* *
handsome or vVooicu Goods and arc laarauteed perfect article, ifl every detail, if in ur
y djed or cleaned. •iriupon liavincr the genuine au- '<
:V' - Stills dealer cannot sup ly you an order * nttoa attention.
express n Specialty.^! below Descriptive will catalo^nie rsceivs prompt i prices and f careful rnished up. “ air
paid one way. a '
24 Walton St„ ATLANTA, GA. plication. SMITH & WESSON,
(^Mention this PftP r Sprinjr field. !Ws«*e
CONSUMPTION I nave a positive rem<-d- \ hbob’s mraoTBD SAW riarvuR €/» CD
thousands of for the above disense. by tt* use MILLS,
ca^ee of tb» worst kind and of lomr standing
law been cured. So xtionR is my faith In its emcacy that
lwill -<end two bottle free, together with a valuable
neirtlse on this disease t-, any sufferer. Give Exprees and
P. O. address. T. A. SPcuM. M. C.. 181 Pearl St., N. Y 4 J
• . o FAHNIcR®' MILL,
ASTHMA . SAW
With Univoraa! I. >g Baain anil Simultaneous S«*
German AathmaCnre Work-, alao Engines, W >od Planers. Manulaoturan 9/
[mediate relief in the worst cago«,insur*e never_/a«ittogive comft fSAIrii.U IRON WO’tliS, Hll.KM.
I al ;le aleep; effect! cores where * 1 others fail Road Carts!Su
jfrial 91.00*olBrngriir«orbVxnalL conrvneea the m il $k«pt\ccil. Sample pric©fit”’
forstamp. DbTk. SCHIFFMAN. St, Pan
| 10 cent, cheaper Buggies!
FLORIDA! Fra* Information. per
For map. State Florida bul.etin, Progress, p»mj»blet ud 0c. aad postafe. Sample than anybody.
^FlorfdmF^ot*” l«Wo *• i«tli.5l.
| valuable. O. M. UR >SBY, i ,50c|24#p.. 09 Framklln at. N. Im- Y. UF*Don’t buv b« p ttmg our ? rice* and
lOjfUtt. ore g S*TIIj KKLLJ
MM hanae THE GEO. W. NASilViLLEt
| j ITIifJl l i MAWC IlMVk luck AT ONCE. Sample Saeh- th b paper.
! Immense. IJoriVa’ed. t r Only e by good mail for 2 . invent¬ at imp, ^CIVFN AWAY.FJJJ
ed, B*ats weights. Bales unparalelled. one 1?12 ever H CLVX£ SeXDQ Mixed Flower S. eds 60»
White i^rohanl & Co. Clarksburg, W. • Va. *y. end 10c. Certificate for
quick, OUTDT- THUlfro«
BEST ON EARTH for Farm and Household. |See<ls. uour Chairs, all VS aI
Words of Praise and Terms appear****"
to Agents free. Guaranteed to please. .1 YV. liil- Hf“j>end at once. This notice will not
liiigton, 46834 Dryades St., New Orleans, 1,a.
S fRS who have used Plw >*8
l H G say Sold Cure it everywhere. is for BEST Consumption OF ALL. 26c.
I prescribe and folly en- m_*1_ DSIlaa Gr«*t Enyllsh Goulan*
__ a^Camle dorse specific Big for G the a» certain the only cure wlalf oJ.I S rilISs Rheumatic Pill.- Remedy.
VI TO 6 DATS.^ f this disease, Baa, a4i ro.nd 14
guaranteed teH 0 O.H.IKUBAHAM.M. D.,
sot worth $LW FREE.
Vrisely **** *atrti by sr*. tte » We y have y Amsterdam, t*rbes? sold Big d .l'»u N. G for Y. a .' $5 Brewst.r logo Lines not » Safety «ls>y. under R S.rnp ’he in k'rsn Holder as 8 feet. Co., Hollj. . V 1 ” Mien. w .\.
h ‘“_^^rv en Cl rAnmOW.C.OAULDINO,Att'y,a!7H»inSt.Cin DUO I want to buys Farm In this locality. n.O^
Ohio. D. B. DYCHE Chicago, A CO.. 111.
91.00. Bold by Druggists. A. N. U...... ........Fourteen, ’A
Ini. Bark ■
WW' WEST
Waterproof
Coat,
SSSSSSSSSraiggagS ”r.»d" irwl.wwk. lllMtrrt.a C.l.lefe. tr.,. A. J- T.w.r, toll,
Children Starving to Death
On account of their inability to digest food
will find a most marvellous food and remedy
in Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil
with Hypophosphites, Very palatable and
easily digested. Ur. 8. W. Cohen, Emulsion of Waoo,
Texas, says: “I have used your In
Infantile wasting with good but results. gives It not
only restores wasted tissues, strength
an d increases the appetite. I am glad to use
such a reliable article. ♦ 1
A corporation at Buffalo, N. Y.,areconvert
ing Niagara Falls into a giant motor.
A Radical Care for Epileptic Fits.
Ib the Edltm —Please Inform vour i readers
that I hove a positive - remedy for the above
aamed disease which I warrant to cure the
worst cases. Bo Bo strong strong is is my my faith lanu in in its us vir- vir¬
tue* that I will send D ee a sample bott e and
valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give
me „hii P o. and Express address. Reap New y,
H.G. ROOT. M. C, 183 l’earl St.. York.
Advices from Zanzibar say, that Stanley is
rapidly marching toward east coast of Africa.
A Pleasing Laxative.
Whoeverhas taken Hamburg medicine. Figs will never They
take any other kind of laxative in their
are pleasant to the taste, and are sure
action, a few doses curing the most obstinate
esse of constipation or torpidity of the liver. 23
cents. DoseoneFig. Mack Drug Co., N. Y.
All disorders peculiar to woman are cor
rented and much suffering avoided by use of
Bradfleld’s Female Regulator. By druggists,