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FOR FARM AND GARDEN.
DISPENSING WITH SAWDUST.
There is not so much sawdust as
used to be the case, and there are
every year more now ice houses creat¬
ing a demand for it ns filling be¬
tween the walls to exclude passage of
heat. But sawdust does this mainly
by excluding passage of air. A space
filled with air and closed on either
side against draughts answers every
purpose. This is easily made by a
jointed layer of building paper, The
same thing is now used on houses
where thorough protection from cold
is desired. It is cheap enough to be
used for every purpose, lining the
inside of stables, hogpens and hon
houses. — [Boston Cultivator.
POINTS AS TO TIGS.
I have found'boiled small potntoes
excellent food for young pigs, in con¬
nection with skimmilk and house
slops, says L. F. Fierce. We cook
them iu two iron kettles on the back
of the range, being at no extra ex¬
pense for fuel. Unsaleable or scabby
potatoes are used, and when cooked
are mashed and mixed with the swill.
If skimmilk form the greater part of
the liquid, the pigs will thrive as well
as on any other feed that can bo given
them. I consider them worth two
thirds as much as wheat-middlings.
In very cold weather I feed a
little corn or cornmeal in addition,
as the pigs crave carbonaceous food at
snob times.
Growing pigs should not bo fed to
repletion; the quantity should be
guaged so that they will always come
to the trough with good appetite. If
they get hungry a little before feeding
and squeal a little in anticipation, it is
better than to havo them lie stupid in
their beds until stirred up. Growth
is to be aimed at, ratheiHhan fat, which
is to be put on in the last few weeks
of their existence. Pigs will not be
idle all the time; I give them a sheaf
of oats three or four times a week;
they keop busy for hours eating off
tho seed and then make a bod of the
straw. Borne give them a separate
room with coal-ashes to root iu.—
[New York Tribune.
away with parasites 1
Farasites of all kinds, both those
that afflict human beings and those
that worry the life out of animals,
deserve to be exterminated, and wo
are glad to record that in this work of
extermination the Department of Agri¬
culture at Washington is making sat¬
isfactory progress. Trichinosis is due
to animal parasites, and the sooner
triohinie are w-iped out of existence
the happier and healthier will many
kinds of quadrupeds be. For, accord¬
ing to Dr. Lenckhert of Leipsic, forty
out of every hundred rats are infected
with trichime, and as pigs eat rats,
and human beings eat pigs, it natu¬
rally follows that the destruction
caused by the insidious parasites is
very extensive. Indeed, wo aro as
sured that the diseuse is the most
deadly known, and that among tho
animals attacked by it besides rats,
pigs and human beings, are cats, dogs,
horses, bears and rabbits. Among
other mischievous parasites are the heel
fly, the liver fluke and gad fly.
former lays its eggs on the backs
cattle, and an inspection of slaugh¬
tered in Chicago shows that the damage
done by it each year amounts to $3,-
300,000. Hides in which tho parasites
have bored more than five holes are
rated as of second quality and
meat of such animals sells for one cent
less a pound in gross. The gad fly
tacks horses, hatching its eggs iu the
stomach and frequently boring
tho stomach and killing tho horse.
The liver fluke attaches itself in youth
to tho livers and lungs of cattle,
groat damage, and is eventually trans¬
formed into a species of snail.
That these parasites can be success¬
fully combated and exterminated
seems certain, if infected pigs
systematically condemned
cannot flourish and to destroy
flies and gad flies all that is necessary
is to spread tar ointment over
bodies of the animals attacked. 'The
Department of Agriculture is at
ent trying to find ouf'at what stage
Us existence the enemy can be attacked
to the be6t advantag.i’ and as
ments will soon satisfy them on
point, it is safe to hope that they
soon be innocuous.—[National Frovis
ioner.
PRUNE THE FRUIT TREES.
It is true that if a treo lias proper
attention, from the time it is set out
until it is 15 or more years old, it
will, during that time, not have been
found necessary to have used a saw or
an axe for pruning, for the reason
that if proper attention bad been
given the treo, all suckers or useless
iimbs wou'd have been rubbed off
with the thumb and finger when they
were final or but a few inches in
length, at which time they are easily
got rid of. However, the plan gen
erallj followed by ihe farmer (and
some fruit growers also) is to let tlie
trees have a free-and-easy growth for
two or three years, when the suckers are
getting so plentiful as to give the tree?
an appearance of Bhiftlessn^ss; then
the owner himself goes to work, or
the hired man is told to trito up the
prcliard, aud they usually start iu
frith a saw and axe, cutting and slash-
ing to the heart's content, and by th'.i
time the job is completed the trees
look as though they would not require
pruning again in a dozen years, But
where large limbs are taken of! it
checks the How of sap in that direc¬
tion and causes suckers to appear in
large numbers below where the wound
was made; these are easily rubbed off
when small, but arc usually neglected
until they are several feet in length.
During (lie winter or early spring
is considered a good time to prune
trees, and furthermore if you do not
feel competent to do tho work proper¬
ly .then employ some one of your neigh¬
bors who is posted as to which limb
or portions of the tree should receive
the heaviest pruning or bo entirely
neglected. A competent man can
trim and prune an orchard so tho
fruit will ripen evenly, also leave the
top open so that a man can easily and
readily move about among the
branches, while a green .person would
in a day's time cut off hundreds of
small limbs that will prove a posiiivo
injury to tho tree. If you have fruit
trees to trim and not feel able to have
them trimmed, then, when somo ex¬
perienced man is at work at the busi¬
ness, carefully observe how he works,
ask him why he cuts away this
branch and leaves that one, and my
word for it you will thereafter prune
more intelligently, and you will mar¬
vel how any tree ever outlived your
previous mutilations.
All largo wounds should be pro
tected . , with a coating of . shellac , ,, var
nish applied witli a brash, or use var
nisli of any kind or even paint can be
used to prevent checking and decay.
Should Ihe wound be a large one atid
not entirely heal or grow over the
first year, another coating of varnish
should be applied in tho fall. It will
prevent the stub from absorbing an
undue amount of moisture, which
materially affects the vitality of the
tree.
If you aro necessitated to cut away
a branch two or more inches in diam¬
eter, make it as closo to the body of
tree as possible, thus insuring
greater rapidity in healing, always
making tho surface of wound smooth
as possible by trimming ofi'the ragged
edges with a knife after the use of a
saw. — [Metropolitan and Rural Home.
farm and garden notes.
Keop the stock -thrifty.
Every day the stock is kept adds to
the cost.
Stock never stands still, It either
gets bettor or worse.
Keep the hogs in the pasture as long
as they can secure a fair supply of
grass.
It should not be forgotton ia feed¬
ing hogs that it is very important to
see that they havo a full supply
of water.
A horse that is a fast walker is all
right iu tho limbs, as no horse can
walk fast unless his legs are put on
his body right.
It is poor economy to feed stock
after they arc ready for the market,
It is only adding to tho cost without 1
a corresponding benefit.
Even with a poor corn crop a suf¬
ficient amount of pork should be fat¬
tened to furnish meat, at least for
family, throughout tho year.
Milk to which fifty per cent,
water has been added will raise more
cream when set at fifty-live degrees
than the eatno to which no water has
been added.
Those who think they have good
seed laid away need only put a sack of
through a good fanning mill to learn
that it contains a largo percentage
foul stuff that should nevor be sown.
A. I,. Crosby says that when duo
feeding a dairy cow ho should
not only her head end but the “udder”
end. Correct. The udder is tho
that points the cow to profit or to
l08S.
The fact is becoming recognized
j tHut equal executive ability on tho
farm will, on the average, produce as
much wealth and more comfort than
it can in average busiuesaiid commer¬
cial enterprise.
. Tito most suitable temperature for
what are known as greenhouse plants,
such as geraniums, carnations, camel¬
lias, arbutilons, etc., is abqut forty
five degrees at night. Hothouse plants
better have fifteen more.
Can't you and your neighbors start
a mail delivery association? Tho his¬
tory of the mail service shows that
private enterprise started mail delivey
in this country. Undo Sam followed
and took (he work out of the handt of
tho people. . •
There is m ti ne wasted in making
beds in Ihe farmer’s garden. Plant
everything in straight, level rows, the
longer they are the better. This
will save time when preparing the
ground and makes culivation much
easire. The-small, raised beds may do
f or the village gardner, who has time
j to be fussy, but not the farmer who
means basiness.
j
He Had It,
Burnley—Say, old fellow, have you
a five that you could lend me?
Notmnch—Oh, yes.
| Burnley— Ob, thank you, old f e i
low, thank you very much!
Notmnch—Yes, I have it, and I’m
going to keep it-
Iron Pipes and Rusting.
A simple and economical way of tar¬
ring sheet iron pipes, tokeep them from
ruBting, is as follows: Tho sections as
made should be coated with a coal tar and
then filled with light wood shavings, and
tho lutter set on fire. It is declared that
the effect of this treatment will bo to
render the iron practically proof against
rust for an indefinite period, rendering
of future this pain;ing unnecessary. the In proof j
assertion, writer cites the ex- j
ample of a chimney of sheet iron erected
in 186(5, and which, through being treat¬
ed as ho describes, is ns bright and sound
to-day nevcf ns when brushful erected, of though it has
had a paint applied to
it since. It is suggested tho thut by strongly | j
heating tho iron after tar is laid on
the outside, niefal, the closing latter is the literally and burned j
info the pores ren¬
dering it rust proof in a far more com- I
plete manner than if the tar itself was
first made hot and applied to cold iron,
according to tho usual practice. it is :
important, of course, that the ifon should 1
not bo made too hot. or kept too hot for
too long a time, lest tho tar should be
burned off. lienee ihe direction for the !
use of light shavings instead of any other
means oi heating.—[Scientific American. ,
-
A Man In a Thousand.
S'-arger—“Are you ti e gentleman who
caught a bi jr, burly burglar, and held on j
with bull dog tenacity until he ceased to I
struggle, and you wi re able to bind and
gag him?”
Gentleman—’Yes. What is it you
wish?”
Stranger—“I called, sir, to ask if you
would not accept an agency for some of
the long-felt wants which we manufac¬
ture and which no family should be
without.”—New Y T ork Weekly.
The Reasons Why.
j i We call it Alabastine, as it is manufac
tured from alabaster rock,
| Tho people use it because it is durable and
beautiful.
The sanitarians endorse it because it is of
a sanitary nature, and contains no poison¬
ous material.
We advertise it as we want all to havo an
opportunity to be benefited by its advan¬
tages.
Wall paper firms fight it, as it displaces
their poisonous products.
Some dealers talk against it, as they can
buy cheap kalsomines, and wiiere the people
are thus not making posted, sell at Alabastine prices,
Kalsomines more profit.
must go, as they are only
temporary Alabastine and spoil the walls.
has come to stay, as it posses¬
ses merit, and lias the unqualified endorse¬
ment of those who have used it for years.
Alabastine lias stood the test of time, an 1
now stands higher in public favor than ever
before.
ITot. Kedzie, the eminent sanitarian of
Michigan, says: "Have carefu ly tested for
arsenic or copper; none coul l be found.
Find no traces of poisonous or injurious ma¬
terial
Dr. DeWolfe.the health officer of Guicago,
Says: “The perfect wail for domestic habita¬
tion is the material which resists decomposi¬
tion in every form. It seemes to rae that
Aia’.astine is admirably adapted to the pur
po>e.” The Good
Health Publishing Co., of Battle
Creek, Mich., writes: “We will, probabiy,
use Alabastine as long as it is in existence."
We are locate.! at Grand Rapid-, Mich.,
and will cheerfully answer any commuaica
tiona in relation to our good.-.
An Easy May to Break Up a Cold.
A brisk walk is recommended for
breaki ig up a cold. The person threat
ened should put on ri'ra c othing, and
walk hard and fast until he is in a free
perspiration. Then, while slill heated
up, he should go home, quickly undress
and get into a warm bed and take a glass
of hot water or hot lemonade. Where
this course is pursued the chances are
many that all the threatening signs will
have disappeared the following morning,
—Hall’s Journal of Ilea th.
V
( C^.N /
M W '
V 3
ft
v
m
Mr. Warren I). Wentz
Is of Genera, N. Y.,
given the highest endorsement for honesty
and integrity by all who know him. Foi
years he has worked for Mr. D. P. Wilson,
the harness maker and member of the Gen¬
eva Board of Health. Read the following
statement of his terrible sufferings from
Dyspepsia
And his cure by Hood’s Barstpariila.
“I was takrn sick last October with gastric fever,
ami my recovery was considered almost hopeless
After 7 weeks the fever slowly loft me, but I could
not eat the simplest food without
Terrible Distress
It .cemed that I had recovered from the fever to dlt
of starvation. I took pepsin compound*, bis
muth, charcoal, cod liver oil and malt until mj
physician confessed that he did not know what ela
to try. Everything I took seemed
I e Pouring . Melted Lead
Into-my stomach. I happened to think I had uartol
sboMleof Hood’s Sarsaparilla that had been in the
house for two or three year.,that ifound had uc&e
IHed me previously for dyspepsia. I began taking
It and soon Legau to feel belter, I have now takcu
s little over two bottles and can truthfully gay I
fed well ngnin and can cat any thing ‘wlthdut
distressing me, even to
Pie and Cheese
which 1 have been unable to touc’j for yeart. The
English language does apt contain words enough to
permit me to express the prni.e I would like to 1
give to Hood’s Sar^apanllA.” w. d. Wistz,
Castle Street, Geneva, N. Y.
A Coot! Voucher 1
“I have known Mr. Warren l>. Went* for
/•ar* and ch for many
can v him as a tmiii of veracity
«nd < J0 . w.-ll known sbout h*re I have sold him
ss*«r»l bottlns of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
I dor!tie m'm ’’ M If PAKTRliyJK,
j Ztmtrffirt, (j ***, If. T
Hood's Pills ir* Liver Ills
J DR. 8. C PARSONS,
j FEMALE REGULATING PILLS, I
j Mode for women sod the
d:s. a e, peoliar tuber ee*.
They regulate the m?n
liable, Btinsl flow, are sate and re¬
bay' been sold for
year.-,andcurealldischarges and iufLmmations !
of the
womb.
5 Sold by druggists and
sect by mail.
Price 8100,
NT” Dr. S. C. Parsons, “i'anith
Physician” te Is how to get well and keep well*;
400 pages, profusely illustrated. For pam
if phlets.quest char rddresswith .Mi lists,«.r private information free
Dlt. e, si-.mp.
S. £. rAltSOyS, Mnvnuuali, Its. « :
QUAINT AM) CURIOUS.
Australia had 233 free libraries in
1888.
At Kinegan, Alaska, they receive
ouly one mail a year.
A hive of 5000 bees will produce
about 50 pounds of honey annually,
Of the 32 ducal and princely fami
lies established by Napoleon I. 14 aro
extinct.
Danville, Ind., has a cat which rings
the bell whenever she wants to be ad
lnilted t0 tlie bouse,
The transvaal Government in Africa
intends to utilize convict labor by
hiring the long sentence white men
^ or wo, ’k in the gold mines,
The speaker of tho British House of
Commons receives a salary of $25,000
a year, and when ho retires he is
raised to the peerage with an annual
pension of $20,000.
In California tho coyote has found
a friend. The horticulturist there
wishes them protected because they
catch tho hares and squirrels which
depredate on their crops,
A little girl in Parkersburg, W. Va.,
recently kept a four-and-a-half-foot
catamount in a tree for over an hour
by vigorously beating the bushes be¬
neath, while her two big brothers ran
home for help.
In Birmingham, England, there re.
ccntly died a detective named Black,
who had in his life discovered over
3009 criminals, and at a race near
Itugby lie once arrested eight pick¬
pockets in 35 minutes.
A big owl tried to carry away a dog
at a lumber camp on the Machias
river, Maine, but was captured by one
of The the owl logg wd * ’arrior, ew after its a lively head being fight,
full of porcupine quills, indicating a
recent battle.
If tlio groves were God’s first
temples, they were likewise, iu one
instance, the original temple of
American justice. Andrew Jackson,
when judge of the Supreme Court,
held the first court ever convened in
Tennessee uuder an old sycamore
tree at Elizabethtown, and a photo¬
graph of that historic tree is ono of
the prized possessions of a Tennes
SCCail. lt was within a few miles of
I -— Elizabethtown, also, that ex-Presi
dent Johnson died in an old farm
house.
Barrels Direct From the Tree.
Barrels and casks are now success
fully turned out direct from the tree—
that is,without the wood having to bo
cut up into numerous staves. By this
I method, which is know ns the Oncken
system, the „ tree , stem , is . first „ sawn into
lengths to suit that of the casks to be
made, and these lengths are boiled for
ftbout . , thrco , hours lu . 8 closed , , ves9el , >
which renders tho wood soft, a current
of electricity being also passed through
the water during the boiling process.
Tho log is taken from tho boiler to
the cutiing machine—in which it is
fixed as in a lathe, and brought up
against a long, broad cutting blade—
! tho log is revolved, the knife auto¬
matically approaches it and tho sheet
of wood passes out to the rear of the
machine through an opening in the
frame just at the edge of the blade,
as in a plane. The sheet of wood is
drawn from the machine on to a table,
where it is cut into lengths suitable
for the diameter of the barrel; the
leiigtlifl are taken to a grooving ma¬
chine and grooved near the edges for
receiving the head and bottom of the
cask; the wood is now put into an
other machine, which cuts long, nar
row, V-pieces, or gussets, out of the
edges at intervals, which give the
necessary double taper to the cask.
The sheets of wood are Anally formed
tip into a cylinder and the first two
hoops driven on by the machine, there
1 being thus only one stave in the cask,
1 ind consequently, Olllv joint.
0110 1
"
^ SllCetS _ .
OI WOOu Ctlll reCCIVG UUJT
degree of thinness.
Utilizing the Soap Plant.
An original and important industry
is carried Oil at Kansas City, Mo., in
the manufacture of soap from the wild
and prickly plant of the prairies
i ^ nown as ., Mexican Af 80ap weeJ, , and
as described its treatment affords a
notable illustration of the modern
utilization of waste products, Since
the Kansas prairie was an inland sea,
this weed has thrust its roots deep
. ^° *116 SOll of the unsheltered
,,l plains,
and lO gather these a sharp stake is
driven down deeply by the side of ihe
plant,the earth is broken and the thick,
brown root secured, the top, with its
long spines, being thrown aside. The
root has been known to extend as far
as twenty feet into the soil, but
only from two to three feet of the
up; or portion, which is about two
inches thick, is of practical use in the
production of soup. In the manufac¬
ture of tiie latter, the roots are first
washed, then cut up and boiled in a
big vat. where other ingredients are
also placed, and, when (his Is dried
out to such a degree that it will solidi¬
fy, it is moulded into semi-transparent
cakes, which possess all the desirable
qualities of toilet soap. A peculiar
characteristic said to pertain to this
weed is that, no: withstanding it grows
in a region where alkali roots dot the
ground, and where tiie soil is white , i
with the Chemical, none of it is found !
In the root.—iNew York Telegram.
Got Up He&d.
Mother ,r li. (proudly)— , , u m An^o j you got to
the head of the spelling class to-daj?
Little Son-, Tea m. The whole class
missed on spellm a 1 word cept me.
( I Andyoudidnti kJod
* to “ spell N ° , m U it. —Street A & Cth’7 Smith s G
New8,
_
No Hope for Statesmen.
American Boy—“Pop, we’re taking up
political economy in our school now.”
Pop (a local statesman)—“That's all
right, my boy, but it’s no use. All the
book learniu’ in th’ country will nevet
git votfs down to less’n two dollars.”—
Street & Smith’s Good News.
People Know n Good Thine.
THAT’S WHT REMINGTON TYPEWRITERS ARB
IN DEMAND.
Some Idea of the present wonderful
growth of the typewriter business may be
gained from the fact that the sales of Kem
fugton 1803, typewriters exceeded for those January of the and correspond¬ Febru¬
ary of 1891 by $160,000.
ing months constantly gaining popular
The great and
itv of the Remington is clearly shown by
the fact that the business has more than
doubled within three years. The Remington
factory at llion, N. Y., employs sales 700 agents, men to
flll the demand created by the
Wyckoff, Seamans & Benedict, who dispose
of machines at the astonishihg rate of one
every five minutes.
Hoit’a This t
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward fc*
•ny case of catarrh that cannot be cured by
taking F. Hall's Catarrh Curd. Props., Toledo. O.
J. Cheney & Co.,
We, the undersigned, have known !’• J.
perfectly Cheney for the last 15 years, business and believe him
honorable in all transac¬
tions, and financially able to carry out any ob¬
ligations \\ ist& Thuax, made by Wholesale their firm. Druggists, Toledo,
Waldino, Druggists. Rinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Hall’s arrh Toledo, O. Internally, act¬
Cat Cure is taken
ing directly upon the biood and mucous sur¬
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all dru ggists.
Friends are like melons. Shall I tell you why?
To Find one good, you must a hundred try.
Bnown’s Iron Bitters cures Dyspepsia,Mala¬ Gives
ria. Biliousness and General Debility.
Strength, aids Digestion, tones the nerves—
creates appetite. The best tonic for Nursing
Mothers, weak women and children.
---
Men are usually tempted by the devil, but
an idle man positively tempts the devil.
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $:! trial
bottle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa
Sufferers from Coughs, Sore Throat,
etc., should try “Brown’s Bronchial Troches,'
a simple but sure remedy. Sold only in boxes.
Price 25 cts.
The worst cases of female weakness readily
yield to I)r. Swan’s Pastiles. Wis. Samples free.
Dr. Swan. Beaver Dam,
•s*
■/!
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; the it is and pleasant
gently to taste, Kidneys, acta
Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the the
effectually, dispels colds, head- sys¬
tem
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. only remedy of Svrup its kind of Figs is the
duced, pleasing the ever and pro¬
to taste ac¬
ceptable its to the stomach, beneficial prompt fa i in
action and truly ita
effects, healthy prepared only from the most
ana agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy of Figs known. is for sale in 50c
and yrup $ 1 bottles all leading drug
gists. Any reliable by druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP COL
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK.
Consumption carries off
many of its victims need¬
lessly. It can be stopped
sometimes ; sometimes it
cannot.
It is as cruel to raise false
hopes as it is weak to yield
to false fears.
There is a way to help
within the reach of most who
are threatened— -careful liv
ing and Scott’s Emulsion of
cod-liver oil.
Let us send you a book
on the subject; free.
Scott & Bowne, Chemists, 13 a South 5 th Avenue.
New York.
Your druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver
oil—all druggists everywhere do. $ 1 .
1*
‘August Flower”
(( I have been afflicted with bilious- j
ness and constipation for fifteen years
and first one and then another prep¬
aration was suggested to me and i
tried, but to no purpose. A friend
recommended August Flower and
words cannot describe the admira¬
tion in which I hold it. It has given
me a new’ lease of life, which before j
was and wonderful a burden. merits Its good qualities j
should bemade
known to everyone suffering with
dyspepsia Barker, and biliousness.” Jessb
Printer, Humboldt, Kas.@
9999909999 It Is for tho of
• attendants, cure sick-headache, dyspepsia and its
tion and piles, that const!pa-A
w
* „ Tuff ’s Tiny Pills
w have brrome so -------They famons. act
- -
r-tiy^vithmrt gri P ra g
Kerosene for Dandruff.
The best thing * to dear dandruff from
^ ^ ker0 ne> 0£ sour8e , if it is
j ought to be scented, and that
^ ^ donf , ( ° x mad e what little I own
on that discovery, sfiop It wsb when I was
running a little in one of the inte
rior towns. By mistake I put some on a
man i g hair ^ day) an( j came back to
tell me that it worked like a charm. He
did not know what it was’, and I did not
tell him. He said he wanted some more
of it. and I gave it to him. Then I
bought several gallons of it, scented it,
p U t j n bottles, gave it some high sound
mg name, and people bought it by the
do2en bottles. The demand was so great
; ^hat I was afraid the grocer in the town
j wou i<j get on to me, and I sent to Chicago
and bought a barrel of it. I sold every
drop of it for the hair. I got my start
in that way, and that is why I am now
in business in the city.—Interview in
Chicago Tribune.
_
Tie Only One Ever Printed.
CAN YOD FIND THE WORD?
There is a 3 inch display advertisement in
this paper, this week, which has no two words
alike except one word. The same is true o.
each new one appearing each week, from ihe
Dr. Harter .Medicine Co. This house and places pub¬ a
“Crescent” on everything they make
lish. Look for It, send them the name of the
word and they will return you book, beauti¬
ful LITHOGRAPHS Or SAMPLES FREE.
There is a past which is gone forever. But
there is a future which is still our own.
Malabta cured and eradicated from the
pvptom by Brown’s Iron Bitter*, which in
riche* t he blood, tones the nerves..a ids dikcs
tion. Acts like a charm on persons in general
Ill health, giving Dew energy and strength
But one upon earth is more beautiful and
better than the wife—that is the mother.
Is it sensible ? Is it reasonable? Is it economy
to Buffer yourself and worry others with a head
lacbe when Bradycrotine will relieve you in
[fifteen minutes? It costs only fifty cents a
bottle, at drug stores. —.
The pleasant coating of Beec iam s PtUls
complexly disguises the :a->te without impair¬
ing their effloienev. 25 cents a box.
1 EVERY MAN
| | | HIS OWN DOCTOR
, By J. HAMILTON AYE11S, M. D.
k 600-page Illustrated Book, contain¬
ing valuable information pertaining showing to
disease of the human system, simplest of
: how to treat, and cure with
medicines. The book contains analysis
of courtship and marriage; rearing and
management of children, besides valu¬
able prescriptions, recipes, etc., with a
and a full complement of facts in mate¬
ria medica that everyone should know.
This most indispensable adjunct be to
every well-regnlated household will
mailed, post-paid, to any address on
receipt of price, SIXTY CENTS. Address
ATLANTA PUBLISHING HOUSE.
116 Loyd St., ATLANTA, GA.
W. L DOUGLAS S3." SHOE
For gentlemen la a line Call Shoe, made Beamless, ol
the best leather produced In this country There are no
, tacks or »er threads to hurt the leet, and Is made ea
smooth Inside ss a hand-sewed shoe. It Is as stylish, easy
fitting and durable as custom-made shoes oostlng from
$4.00 to $5.00, and acknowledged to be the
Best in the Worid for the price.
’ 1
For GENTLEMEN. For LADIES.
SC 00 Genuine •3.00 Hand
Hand-Sewed, i- Sewed.
*4.00 Hand-Sewed •2.50 Beat
Welt Shoe. Dongola.
gM Police • 2.00 Calf and
5i3v pa and : ; A;' Dongola.
Parmer. •1.75 Por
9U _- Extra Value MISSE8.
4 i Cal! Shoe. For BOYS’ A YOUTH'S.
”2,25 Working¬ •2 * *1.75
man’s Shoe.
*2.00 Goodwear SHOES.
Shoe. SCHOOL
m
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES.
IT IS A DUTY you owe to yourself and your family, during these hard
times, to get the most value for your money. You can economize in your foot
i wear if you purchase W. L. Douglas’ Shoes, which, without question, represent
a greater value for the money than any other makes.
CAUTION a W. on L. the DOUGLAS’ bottom of name each and shoe, the which price protects Is stamped the
who consumer against high prices and inferior shoes. Beware of dealers
ing acknowledge substitute the superiority of W. L. Douglas' Shoes by attempt¬
to other makes for them. Such substitutions aro fraud¬
ulent, and subject to prosecution by taw, for obtaining money under
false pretences. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
If pot for sale In yonr place .end direct to Factorr, .ratine bind, .ir.e and width
wanted. Po.msre tree. AGENTS WANTED. Will sire exclu.ire sale to shoe dealer,
whe re 1 nave n o agent nnd advertise them free in local paper.
qmu h !M u
FOR THE MOST
Artistic Job Printing
— CaI.I AT I’HIE OFi'KIE
n& LITTLE
A LIVER
< PILLS
ac
i-
1»0 NOT GRIPE NOR SICKEN.
FUra for SICK HEAD
ALHK, irrpaimi digestion,consti^
pat ion, torpid gin min. They arouse
20 ^ vital sines*. organs, Magical remove effect nausea, Kid- diz
neysandbladder. on
■s-atei SpP&K Conquer
ioo bilious nervous dis
orders. Establish nat
ural Daily Action.
blood. Benutify Purely complexion by purifying ” s
The Vkgit.sle.
dose is nirely adjusted to suitcase, as carrie/in one pill esu “t
Each vial contains <2.
pocket like lead pencil. Business "su” man’s s3d«re£i ercat
where. All TU:>n easier th. r. 77
genuine goods bear “Crescent’’
Send 2-cent stamp. You get 32 page book with sample.
OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO St. Louis. Ma.
,
* CATARR 50c. Best. Soid Piao’s K. Easiest by T R em&Sy druggists Hazeliina, to Ese. tor or Catarrh and Warren, sent Cheapest. by Is mail. Pa H the r ?
PAT^JVIT^ rM I CIU I O w. \\ 40-imgt* USllllIgtOil. T. Fitzgerald. r Look . 11. , *' , 1
trv
Wv\ M \
COPYRIOK* Ii9[
Bather risky
— the offer that’s made by the pro¬
prietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Rem¬
edy. Risky for them. For you, if
you have Catarrh, it’s a certainty.
You’re certain to be cured of it, or
to be paid $500. That’s what they
offer, and in good faith — they how oure
you, or pay you, no matter bad
your case, or of how long standing.
But — is it so much of a risk?
They have a medicine that cures
Catarrh, not for a time, hut for all
time. They’ve watched it for years,
curing the most hopeless cases.
They know that in your case there’s
every chance of success, almost no
chance of failure.
Wouldn’t any one take such a
risk with such a medicine?
The only question is — are if you
willing to make the test, the
makers are willing to take the
nsk (
jf s0) the rest is easy. You pay
your druggist fifty cents and the
trial begins.
r
ji
I
I DO NOT BE DECEIVED
with Pistes, Enamels, and Paints which stain
the hands, injure the iron, and burn off.
The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor¬
less, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin
or glass package with every purchase.
the RIPANS stomach, TARULES liver and regnlatej bowels,!
• _ _ f®ctual. {Birtfy the The blood, are safe and family* ef-2
medicine best general
• known for Biliousness.*
• Constipation, Dyspepsia. Foul©
: of Breath, Anpetite, Headache, Mental fleartDurn, Depression,® Loss®
« Painful Digestion. Pimples, Sallow®
• 1 ! _ symptom . or Completion. disease resulting Tired from Feeling, impnrej and®
ku dickkL oraradnre by the stomach, liver intestinesf
® 10 Perform their functions. or to?
* ° ver -eating benented proner Persons given after ?
§ • ^ b Brice, are by mail. by 1 gross?2; taking a TAB bottle EL 1.5c. L Ad
i dress THE RIPANSCTTEMICAI. CO.,10SpruceSt.,N.Y.« 1 a
• Agents Wanted! EIGHTY ___per cent profit, ®
$50.00 Toman that A bright, is agency needed wanted energetic for to in an take frwer7 nan the el
A home and indispensa¬
ble in every ofBcc.
ia
town 90 days or country. 8^00 intoine in
WEEK afterward. and a steady
for A “Bonanra^ fiood
the right person
Job* arc scarce and
**• , ... W. JONEs*, lnv _., Manager. __ soontakrti. Obi®.
-------- Springrield,
A. N. U. Sixteen ’4.
.....