Newspaper Page Text
THE FARM AM) GARDEN.
FATTENING TURKEYS.
if Turkeys need to lie confined and fed
/all they can be made to eat, if thev are
to be fattened rapidly. Left to roam
about they will run off flesh as fast as it
canbeputon. them It is better to confine
in a dark place, only letting in
enough light for them to see at feeding
times. After twelve days or two weeks
of such treatment they will be fat. If
kept much longer thus their digestion
gives way, possibly from lack of gravel,
and thev grow poor again, however
(heavily fed.—American Cultivator.
SELECTIKG DAIRY COWS.
-P, Farmers are apt , to . use too i• little i,i care in .
selecting , cows for f ^ the dairy. • Some v . seem
to . think a cow is a cow, whether she
willmake •i, . one i hundred j i or two . t hundred y i
pounds -j ot butter m . a year, but i, , it . costs ,
-
lust . , much ■* to . . keep that , will . n make ,
J as 1 a cow
only one hundred , j pounds , as one that .. , will
make f twice . . as much. \ I -r would i -i say to . mv
, brother tanners, writer the
savs a m
~
Amencan . . Agricultural a • -.a invest • 4 in • good i
cows, give them plenty to cat, with good
care, and they wrll doubly repay for the
labor ot selecting ° and keeping. is
THE PLOW EXPENSE.
It is a common mistake to suppose that
the chief reason for digging or plowing
of the land is to separate its particles.
On the contrary, we are obliged to add to
the labor of loosening up the soil that of
recompacting it with harrows, rollers,
trampling, or other means, before we can
safely entrust seeds or plants to it for a
summer's growth. It is a saying by
posthole diggers that all tlie firm soil
taken out can be packed in again, with
room to spare. .1 „„ his . is . accounted -ii lor i by
the wormholes, rootmoulds ete ., com
mon m virgin ground No doubt the
plowing and crushing iacilitate
si on of roots and lic-lp to protect them
from open airspaces and from lack of
moisture during dry weather, but no
healthier, handsomer growth is obtained
by it than we often see on surface never
worked at all, if the natural mulch keeps
all competing growth far enough away,
nnd at the same time prevents the land
from drying out .—Nrw York Tribune.
WHY THE HENS DON T DAY.
, The Farm and Carden says the time is
■not far distant when farmers and poultry
breeders will wonder why hens don’t
lay. If they have one breed, then that
particular breed will be blamed and
another one tried, only to find the same
existing Howis’the conditions of management,
time to make such arrange
meats as will go far toward insuring a
liberal supply of fresh eggs during the
winter, when eggs are scarce and high,
The first step toward this is to see that
ivour poultry house is not only clean and
free from dampness, but that it is made
tight—wind and rain proof—and that
proper precautions are observed loi leu
tilation. One of the very best things to
make the house storm-tight is tarred
ing, which is also obnoxious to lice and
mites, though i. more substantial outside
covering can be made by fiist painting
f* building thoroughly, and then be
fore the paint dries, putting coarse, close
'Sim Z “° Tlf ^
can be treated to two or three coats of
good rubber paint and the tiling is done.
A warm, comfortable house goes far
toward insuring winter eggs, and when
to this be added, in the start, good,
early hatched and vigorous birds and
plenty of suitable food, there need bc no
reason for asking why the liens don’t
lay. They naturally will not furnish
as liberal a supply in winter as in sum
mer, but they will furnish none at all il
left to shift for themselves.
SAWDUST AS BEDDING FOE COW S.
Mileh cows require warm stabling
through the winter and complete protec
tion from storms and cold winds to pro
vent them from rapidly shrinking in
their milk. After a cow has eaten her
feed either in the morning or at night,
she feels comfortable and wants to lie
down. As milch cows should be kept up
in this way while the weather is cold, it
is very important that they should have
plenty of bedding to cover the stable
floor and keep them'clean. For this pur
pose, says a writer in the New York
World, “I don’t know of anything better
than sawdust, wherever it can be had
for the hauling from the mill or at a cheap
price per load. A good thick coating oi
it in a cow’s stall will last a good many
days if the manure dropped on it is re
pioved early in the morning or before it
has been tracked around much. Dry
sawdust not only makes a soft bed for
the cow, but is also an excellent absorb
ant of liquids. By removing the small
portions defiled every day and supplying
their place with new, a load of sawdust
may be made to last quite a lon ?
It does not become f ou am S01 e< ‘ ”
easily as straw, and where it is used .
udder does not need washing sj fre
quently, but can he kept clean with a
coarse brush, The sawdust that is
thrown out on the manure heap soon lie
fertilizer, and , it ., will ... Ic so „
comes a good hard clay-soil. II „ a 1
help to loosen up a
lomSTnto manure’ ! r ndgJf iJiTfor
the cow stable instead of sawdust, but I
think the animals can be kept eieaner
and with less work on the latter.”
TAKING CARE OF SEEDS.
excessive moisture of , the , cummer
The
did considerable mischief m connection
with seed production. A great deal ot
the seed will prove infertile if eo ecur .
and ff one should lie very careful in select
either for home use or for the market,
the” seeds of flowers, fruits or the grains,
Excessive wet or drought are two
chief difficulties to be encountered
seed growiug; but fortunately for the
ordinwv farmer and gardener he does not
av to mke his own collection of seeds,
Rel able seedsmen can be found now,
where the best seeds can be procured,
Till even- cultivator of the soil saves a
few ’seeds' of some choice variety of
their own
u&J\ c*1 c 7C -c 7T! =3 7*1 S4 O H — 2- •—♦ \m.
should lie remembered by those that it
tal-res a long summer to enable most plants
to perfect their seed crop, and a short
summer of inclement weather will often
make all the labor involved abortive. A
week or t"° o1 ' very wet weather will
' !ol> IU0Sf -“eeds of their fertility and make
I then ‘ ' lntit for planting. Iu gathering
die seeds this year a close examination
1 the seeds and pods should be made,
; Nil pods that have become uudmy en
j larged by the wet should be rejected,
* hose that have damp moulds or black,
| decaying spots on their under side should
likewise be pulled off and destroyed,
j the Shriveled pod pods all are right also outside unsuitable. the seed It
j appears
inside is generally good; but after :» long
i wet spell 1 of weather the seeds in perfect
i peas . are sometimes .. worthless. So much ,
1
. has , absorbed by the pods ,
moisture oeen
^ that the ,, seeds , become , bloated , , . and ni
fertile. , ... ,, \\ rl hen the . water , evaporates tney
will ...... either shrivel . . , up or begin , • to , decay, q
Mich , this pod should ; d
a season as every
... lie burst open on one end , and i the .i seeds t
1
inside .... inspected. , T It .. they . are soaked , , witn
. ’..
■
water, a little . mouldy, , , or lull , ,, ol r Uny ■
■ if js Hsel ^ to savc
I A J t only ksuafiv those that are perlcctiv
lt takes two or three
to , lrom ,r ,, the effects R . . ot . one
, years recover
bad season for seed production, for a
good deal of poor seed will be put ou
j j dle market the followiug this direction spring. Too
much care f u i ness } u cannot
■ j J(J y a [ ien • jiot simply by the gardeners,
but by tbe seed o T gwers as well, Seed
; may be scarce ;md dear next spring; but
that is a]1 the nlore rea son whv only the
| ] best sbould bc purchased .—Farm and
Q ar <l en .
\
; PA KM AND GARDEN NOTES.
There would bc much better satisfac
; . farmers if they would make
, the minor instead of the principal
ratjon for theil . bl . eeding swine .
| The farmer who thinks cattle can piCK
j their own living from late autumn glass
! is not wholly wrong, tor they can get a
living, but the 1 armor must not expect
profit from such feeding,
Ir is not necessary to claim that co
! silage is more nutritious and palatable
I when it comes out of the silo than when
it went in, lor it is enough to know that
its propert ies arc fairly well preserved.
When a large amount of grass roots,
I ‘«nd also land grain will stubble be benefited is plowed proportion- under,
j the
ately, and by plowing under vegetable
I *»*«« the ground will gam in nitrogen,
Wvandottes make excellent market
. fowls. White Wyaudottes are being
j sought after for this purpose, they look
so tempting when ready for the table
1 and the upper price is obtained for them,
it may cost less to buy cows than to
raise them on the farm; nevertheless, it
; s better to raise them, for then one may
j know what they are, and they will do
j better, as a rule, than cows shifted from
pi ace to place.
(>ood country roads may be regarded
ag one 0 f the highest, evidences of eiviliza
but there are many places where
^ tbig ev i dence ; s n „t found in such
;lbuudai2C e as to become tiresome to
dwe ji erg along them.
'
^ boilcd corn meal and oat
mixed v , ith hopped suet and a
I ““*« —y eighteen days.
will fatten turkeys in
They should be kept iu a partially dark¬
ened shed or stable while being fat¬
tened.
If your poultry house is built with
double walls you are pretty sure ot pro¬
! lection to the fowls against tlie coldest
weather. They will be laying all winter
while your neighbor has very few eggs,
I Providing they are supplied with proper
, food,
j
S ’ No succulent food is more greedily
eaten by pigs at nny age than beets. They
may be fed any time from the first thin
nings during the growing season to the
j fully grown roots m yinter. They are
i especially valuable as a part of the wintei
j food for breeding sows, and some beets
should always be saved for that purpose,
/ The object of caponizing fowls is tc
j improve the quality and increase the
quantity of the flesh. Poultrymen, and
i especially farmers, have the impression
that it is a very difficult operation to
caponize a fowl, fraught with all sorts
! 0 f danger to the life of the bird, and can
only be performed by a skillful expert.
This is a wrong impression
-p bc ‘ ‘why” for not disturbing milk
wb jj e i | K » cream is rising, is a very sim
01le The cooling of the milk causes
( ur ,. en t s in the fluid, the end of which
- s t() cleposit fats at the surface. When
: dlese are disturbed by dipping or other
/ w j SC) t bese currents are broken and the
; j, ar j ides of fat go floating aimlessly
uboll t, and some of them never reach the
j t
J)o nQt waste wood as]ies . They arc
of Rufficient value to pay f or saving and
1 |yi tolhesoi ). When applied to
t fi e soil they aid greatly in reducing the
’ its mineral
or<maic ffiat ter 5a the soil t0
I , . V and in setting also.” free abundant
nitrogerl roln it Thus, being a
valuable plant food, it is also an effectivt
/1 provider of other food substances, with
whi , h vege tation could not attain its
vi „ 01 .
There is little difficulty in retaining
potatoes in nearly as good a condition as
; those freshly dug, provided the temper¬
ature is kept so low that they will not
sprout or grow, the skin being nearly
.in pervious to moisture, so that they will
i not wilt. Beets, turnips, and especially
, tm - become withered and dry in a
, eom p arativelv short time.and it is essential
imbpd tbe m in a suitable packing sub
| _ !:anre to p reven t the escape of moisture,
i thresh,ng turned .
Sometimes . after cows
into the barnyard at night, with acceas to
! a fresh straw stock, will pick at the ehafi
and cat enough to diminish their milk
| flow. It is this often, rather than le
diminished pasture, that lessens the milk
yield at th„ season. M e have known
j farmers to put a.fence around the stack,
so as to keep them cows from injuring
themselves at it. as a simple-minded per
son is said once to have put a fence
around a very poor lot U> Keep liis stack
»»II.
,‘CIKNTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
A Japanese has discovered s process
for making artificial tortoise shell with
the white of eggs.
A recent death from hydrophobia is
supposed to have resulted from allowing
a doo- to lick a razor cut on the face.
“
On Malden Island, T1 , in . the ,, Pacific, ,,
guano is conveyed to the coas o 1 a
tramway about five miles in leng b, on
which the loaded trucks aie driven by
sail power.
The Unter den Linden of Berlin, with
three fines of arc lamps separated by illu- two
rows of trees, is said to be the best
minuted thoroughfare in th$ world. The
wires are underground.
A “fossil forest” lias been discovered in
„ Scotland. . , Thirty . or forty - l fossil f •• trunks j ....
have already been laid bare, most of
which are gray free-stone. One ot the
trunks is ;it least two leet since in the diametei.. Trappist
It is fifteen years
monks began to plant eucalyptus trees in
the Roman Campagna, Italy. Now sev
oral hundred acres are covered with them,
and there has been a large decrease in the
malarial fevers once so common in the
district
A vegetabte cartridge shell, which is eii
“! novelty. co ““““ With 1 this " shell, the * cartridge f'v
lias scarcely half the weight of a metal
cartridge, the cost is considerably less,
and the inconvenience of removing the
shell after each shot is avoided.
As a general rule, it is said to be a
very difficult .^.The matter to gauge the speed
of fishes fast fishes are trim and
pointed in shape, with their fins close to
their bodies. The dolphin and bonito are
thought to be the fastest, and, although
their speed is not. known, they are fully
capable of twenty miles an hour.
A curious mishap to a submarine
cable is reported from South America,
The cable failed to work, and on going
out to repair it the body of an immense
whale was found entangled in the cable
to such an extent that it was unable to
extricate itself, and, being unable to get
fresh air, the huge leviathan had been
suffocated.
As a remedy against “electrical sun¬
stroke,” as the affection is called that
attacks men exposed to the intense rays
of the electric arc by means of which
metals are fused and welded, is a veil or
mask of glazed taffeta, supported by a
wicker head piece, and provided with
goggles of gray glass.
ill. Pasteur delivered an address the
other day in Paris to tlie members of the
Society of Practical Medicine, and in it
declared with much emphasis that rabies
is never spontaneous. The microbe pro¬
ducing it, lie said, was invariably trans¬
mitted. This means, of course, that no
dog ever goes mad unless he has been bit¬
ten by another mad dog, a fact at once
important and reassuring.
An emigrant cartographer declares that
the map of Africa is changed by every
mail. Fresh geographical news from the
dark continent twice made necessary
changes of parts of the great globe of
the Paris Exhibition during its construc¬
tion ; and two years ago some Belgian
map-makers were five times compelled to
take from the press a large map of the
Congo State for additions and correc¬
tions.
Saccharin deceives the human palate,
but not that of cats, dogs, and wasps.
Liebreich has demonstrated that bees and
dogs can distinguish unerringly between
food containing saccharin and 1hac which
is free from it. Some cats also declined
to touch their food when it was sweet¬
ened with saccharin; when a new supply,
tree from the obnoxious sweetening, was
substituted, they smelled it carefully, but
finally ate it.
A Dutch physician has recently de¬
clared that a close connection exists be¬
tween the exercise of our mental facul¬
ties and disorders of the nose. The opin¬
ion is expressed that if it were generally
known how many cases of chronic head¬
ache, of inability to learn or to perform
mental work were due to chronic disease
of the nose, many of these cases would
he easily cured, and tlie number of child
victims of the so-called overpressure in
education would be notably reduced.
Tlie First Fireplaces.
Chimneys did not become general until
late in the reign of Elizabeth, so, prac¬
tically speaking, a review of fireplaces
must be confined to the last four eentu
ries. Before that time suffocating wood
smoke filled the hall in which there was
indeed, our ancestors used to live m tem
peratures that would now be regarded as
the depth of misery. We are told that
in the time of Henry VIII. no fire was
allowed in the whole of the University of
Oxford, and that after supper at 8 o’clock
the students studied until 9, and then
ran about for half an hour to warm them
selves before going to bed. The general
absence of fires from all but the principal
rooms of a house does not appear to have
arisen from a spirit of economy, but
»<h« *1 want <”■- of tiiat H»«:«tiieir««.ho*e<i JiarQlhoOCl on Mllicll ill*
classes prided themselves.
Timbnetoo.
Timbuctoo has now been seen again by
a European—and, so far as known, only
for the fifth time. Dr. Oscar Lentz has
just returned from a successful explora
tion. The population of Timbuctoo is a
congeries of motley and diverse elements,
the better and most effective constituent
being formed by the Morocco Arabs, who,
however, in consequence of marriage,
generation on generation with negresses,
are gown to be mostly of dark com¬
plexion. Another element consists of the
numerous descendants of the old Sonrhay
negroes and the negro slaves drawn from
the remotest parts of the Soudan. Other
elements are the wild, warlike Tuariks,
of Berber stock, harsh in speech and in¬
solent in demeanor, their faces hidden
under a htham (hue cloth),through which
only the eyes peer, their bodies jingling
with armor, sword, sabre and lance.—
Domett i’• Monthly.
hovel Insurance Scheme.
A novel system is reported from London
whereby the question of the insurance of
passengers by boat or rail may be solved.
The scheme is such that every person tak
ing a ticket is insured without any cost
t0 himself. Instead of the pasteboard
card ticket now in use, ’ the inventor pro- *
a uew kiad> , vhic u ia siz , and ap .
p PliraucC) a ; so in weight, is like the
p rescut ticket. It is, however, really a
miniature wallet, inside of which is found
a ries policy according of insurance for a sum which va
to the class a person trav
els, and covers fatal and other accidents
arising under ordinary during the journey. Tliis could is what
ciseumstances be
obtained bv paving a small sum on every
J^ney but by this system it is given
lice, llio new system J provides every
raU 0J . Bteamb at cam \ 3any with the
tic] . ets m)d polif . ks free 0 C ost, provid
without - on] tllat they are beyond issued to the ordinary public
fares, any charge tlie find
so that every passenger will
inside liis or her ticket the policy of in
surance. It may be asked how this is
done, and the answer is very simple. The
sheet enclosed in every ticket is a large
one, and contains, besides the policy of
insurance, an index map of the route, a
Om balance of space 1 is filled with advoi
t ; scmenta _
Hindoo Marriages.
Among (ho Hindoos marriage Courtship is man¬
aged entirely by the parents.
is literally unknown iu India, and the
persons who are united iu wedlock remain
perfect strangers to each other until their
nuptial day, and often for settled a long time suit
afterward. Everything is to
the fancies or caprices of tlie parents. To
the parties chiefly concerned marriage is
a lottery. But fortunately Hindoo con¬
nubial life is not generally a miserable lot,
and as tlie devotion wife is unsurpassed husband. in faithfulness The bride¬
to her
groom is iu his teens, and the bride has
hardly seen ten summers when they Hin¬ are
united for life. The boy inmate of a
doo house finds himself betrothed by his
father’s or grandfather’s command topsome
girl—perhaps an infant of five or six’years
old—whom he has not seen; nor does he
see her until at tlie age of fifteen or there¬
about. While he is yet studying home at
school, he is sent out to fetch her to
his mother’s or grandmother’s zenana.
There the .child wife takes the lowest
plaee, and becomes at once the toy and,
slave of all the women. She has to learn
all her domestic duties under the strict
eye of her mother-in-law, and drudges on,
unless, indeed—as is generally the case,
there is a widow in the family to have all
the work heaped upon her; for a Hindoo
widow is the cursed of gods and men. the
However, even if this be the case,
child-wife must learn to do her work, and
absolutely obey her mother-in-law.
The Minister’s Mistake.
I heard a story the other day about a
mistake made by a prominent divine,
whose name is as well known iu Brooklyn
as that of Doctor Talmage. The rever¬
end gentleman had occasion to spend the a
few days in a suburban town on line
of the Long Island road. He went to the
depot to take the train for this city, and
there met a member of his congregation, a
Jady well known in social circles here.
The lady had a valise and a small pack¬ wait
age, which rested on the floor of the
| ing-room. Beside them were several
small crocks of preserves. As the train
came in the gallant divine took the valise
and package and preserves and placed lady,
them in the seat he found for the
and then occupied the seat in front. At
one of the stations an agent came in and
displayed a dispatch notifying him that
the preserves had been stolen, and tlie
thief was on board the train. The rev¬
erend gentlemen was naturally much con¬
fused. lie explained that he thought
they belonged to the lady, while she in
turn thought they belonged to liim. There
was considerable facts laughing on board 'Hie tlie
train when the became known.
reverend gentleman paid which tlie expressage hud unin¬
back on the preserves he
tentionally stolen.
Faith in God, faith in man, faith in
work—this is the short formula in which
we may sum up England, the teaching creed of the found¬
j ers of New a ample
enougli for tills life and the next. If their
. municipal regulations smack somewhat
I of Judaism, yet there can be no nobler
aim or more practical wisdom than theirs;
for it was to make the law- of man a liv
ing counterpart of the law of God, in
their highest conception of it.
,
A Cure for Catarrh
ery, or metney paid tor it will be promptly le
j turl,>:d ' -
—
i A more pleasant physio And
j You never will
Than Pierce’s small “Pellets,”
j The Purgative kind.
! God makes the glow worm as well as the
| ,-ta r; the light >» i>»ih Wilivine.
'
j Last Winter
' Pauiy with i-u&um.uun
I „ trcuui«d &c in mj
right shoulder and joints of my leg as not to be able
IO 1 took Hood ’“ swaaparuu, and now.
j XZJSTZZrCTZSfZ
Joints, but makta I) 1 « feel &8 lively as a t#a-/sar
old boy. J sell newspapers right iu
THE MIDDLE OF THE STREET
srery day in the year, ami have been doing go for
five years, and standing on the cold stones ain’t no
picnic, I can tell you. lean be seen every day In
the year at corner Tompkins and l>e Kalb Avenues
—W. W. Howard, Brooklyn, N\ Y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six tor $3. Prepared oal
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Maes
IOO Doses One Dollar
BUSINESS
COLLEGE,
NASHVILLE, TENN.
This College, though yet in its infancy,
has more than «00 former student. occu¬
pying sto-ul position., many ol them re¬
ceiving salaries ranging from Shop to *1.*
300 ner annum, l or circular., address
It. W. JE.VMXOS, Pim.
SURE GRIP^rf kS?' Mich.
Euiton Iron Sc tniUfl Horkt, Detroit.
C'HE APHOM E S tSu’tSii
is Aikaiisas; 3J par cem. guarant^cKl on lnve«ux*wiu A**,
In lusw low tut. i-aJUt UvMUUM&MMM, HUltgTt,
The Albatross.
Of all birds the albatross has perhaps
has the most extended powers of flight.
It several lias beenjknowu successive to days follow without a vessel for
on re
touching the water except to pick out
food, and even then it did not settle. In
personal describing observation, tlie flight of this admirer bird from
a great, of
the albatross writes: The 1 flight of this
bird is truly majestic, as, with out¬
stretched, surface motionless wings, he sails over
the air, of the sea—-now rising high in
the now with a bold sweep and wings
inclined at an angle with the horizon,
descending almost until the tlie tip of the lower big one
touches crests of the waves
as he skints over them. 1 have sometimes
watched narrowly one of these birds sail¬
ing and wheeling about in all seeing directions tlie
for more than an hour without
slightest motion of wings, and have never an’d
witnessed anything to equal the case
grace of the bird as be sweeps past, often
within a few yards, every part of liis body
perfectly motionless except the head and
eye, which turn slowly and seem to lake
notice of everything in the sea and sky.
How’s This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for
any case of catarr.i that cannot bo cured by
taking Y. J. Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
Chknkv & Co., Props.. Toledo, O.
Cheney We, (be undersigned, have known i\ J.
for the last 15 years, and believe him
perfectly tions, honorable in all business transac¬
and financially able to carry out uny ob¬
ligations made by their firm.
\\ cst & Truax, W liolesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Waldlng, Kinnan .Sr Marvin, Wholesale Drug¬
E. 11. gists, Van Toledo, Oldo.
Bank, Hoesen, Toledo, Cashier Toledo National
Hall’s Ohio.
Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act¬
faces ing directly upon tiio blood and mucous sur¬
of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price 75c. jer bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Ore««it, ilie PimidUn of l’lirni >'r*.
Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant
- I crops, Be8t fruit, grain, grass and stock conn -
try in the world. Full information free. Ad¬
dress Dreg, lm’lgra'tuBoard, Portland, Ore.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-Water. Druggists sell at%c per bottle
“Tansill’s A Chicago Punch” druggist 6c. Cigars retailed over 100,000
in four months.
^MOTHERS * RlEHD"
•i
SSWteJS* 5 ^"MOTHERS r>
c. BRADFIELD MAILED FflLE REGULATOR CO. CHILD ATLANTA^
SOLO BY ALL QRUGG/Srs.
Ely’s Cream Balm
WILL CIUHK
QATA RRfj wtm$m F f /ii
i: Price 50 (Vnlw. Hi
Apply iialiii into each noHtril.
FLY BU08..M Warren Nl., N. Y.
SOUTHERN PRINTERS’ SUPPLY CO.
w WE CABRT IN STOCK
Type, Cases, Stands, Presses,
Paper Outtors
AND EVERYTHING USED IN A PRINTING OR
PUBLISHING HOUSE.
ISr-Unll mi n« nnd HAVE MONUYI.iHl
34 West Alabama Street, ATLANTA, GA.
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
J m RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND.
Hnie ana alwayn reliable. I,u<1U-m,
1st for Diamond Brand, in <
G\red, metallic boxes, Healed with blue JR
‘hv ribbon. 'I'm ke no other. All pills v
‘ I Vi'lin panteboard boxes, pink wrappers are
rtr (langeroui counterfeit*. Send 4e.
.if "Kellerfor stamps) for partiouiarn, testimonial* and
l if 93J mall. Name. I,adieu,” Paper. in letter, by return
" Chichetter Chew’l
Co., Madiaon 8 q„. X’faiia.. I’fc
JONES
II E
( PAYS THE Wrkoii FREIGHT.
y f .> Ten Seale**,
Iron Tare Levers. Iieum Steel ami Beam lienriiufs, Box If run*
J N K lor
it SGO.
K-jl. y» Every n\ze Scale* For tree price Hat
I JT mention thm paper and uridrctiM
JONES HINHHAIVITON, OF BINGHAMTON, n. y. ’
for Double Breech-Loader
^ DrtFtli.Lttdeni fl lo ISO.
WlarbMl. r lb^hot Itlftea, $11 1o $19.
Brte«h-l<ja4t*v 16 lo fdS.OO.
Prlf-eockl ate IUnlf«ri, Nl«k«l-pl»l»4, $2.00.
p*n \ 7c.. stamp for SO*page Catalogue and *»»• 2ft per eeat.
CBIFflTH k SEMPLE, 612 W. Maln/Lotiitrllle, K t .
OPIUM HABIT.
A Valuable Treatixe vlng
full information of an LttHy ami Speedy cure free to
the afflicted. I)H. J. C. HqyFftiA.t.Jefferson, Wlacousin.
/-\ 4 (iLNTS, now iayour chapeeon our Dr, 4’roiiin
hook. Also rflftdy outfit for ‘'Htanlry’u JixpJcra
tionH in Africa.” I iwidv Go., to work, with hiypmjtt
a»l dress Thompson Pub. 126 H. Gtii Kt., Pbilu., Pa
■ ■thoroughly taught i»y MAIL. <>liculsra free.
liryaui'K College, 457 Main St., Buffalo,N. Y.
OPIUM 5mskHJSLS
DOUBLE* ACTION REVOLVER.
DON'T BUY UNTIL YOU HAE SEEN—
THE swwr. ASK ANY DEALER.
BRYANT & STRATTON Business Coltege
LOUISVILLE. KY.
ffia m PISO’S REMEDY FOR CATARRH.—Best. Easiest
I to use. Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A . cure is
tjj&im certain. For Cold in the Head it has no equal.
A ▲
It Is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied
to by tlie mall. nostrils. Address, Prise, a 50c. T. HaM Sold by dru ggi Warrea, sts or Pa. sent
ci/rms,
7
0
fig ft
Cl
§ 11 |
fcgv: V' fJyi
4 fWm m
m
tv 2svh
OKU ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
to the taste, and acts
gently Liver yet promptly on the Kidneys,
and Bowels, cleanses the sys¬
tem effectually, dispels colds, head¬
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrii of Figs is the
only remedy of its ind ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
ceptable its action to and the truly stomach, beneficial prompt ifa in
in
effects, healthy prepared and only from the most
agreeable substances,
its many excellent qualities com¬
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy ki lown.
d Syrup |l bottles or Figs is for sale in 50o
an by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable hand druggist will who
may not have it on pro¬
cure wishes it promptly it for Do any one who
substitute. to try not accept
any
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
tOUISYILLE, KY. HE IN YORK. N.Y.
MANY MEN FIND THAT
Xt BstK^xOf /? W.=tTN
\
\vU'‘ A ■
\ m riA
\ tc. no;
s \
\ \
Storms, snows, of the regular drenching; routine rains, of and life. furious,winds Two-Thirds
arc a part
of the. sickness through life is caused by colds’,Vyovi
cannot be too well protected in stormy weather to
avoid them A man having a “ Fish^lirand Slick*
er” may be exposed to a atorm for twenty-four
hours at a stretch, and still he protected from every
drop of rain, Besides being shielded from the
biting if winds. liable No matter caught what in your rain occupation,
you are to be a or snow
storm, you should have on hand a “ Fish Brand
Slicker. It will surely save your health, and
perhaps your life. Beware of worthless imitations,
every garment stamped with the /“ Fish Brand
Trade Mark. Don’t accent nny inferior coat when
you can have the “-Fish Brand Slicker *’ delivered
without extra cost. Particulars and illustrated
catalogue free.
A. J. TOWER. - Boston. Mas3*
I E YOU WISH A
anon
REVOLVER -.*T^ S wfe‘JK» Jsk
brat piirobas« SM on« ITH of & Hi* WESSON 1 '‘Snrr'-riifisk
ml Hinali
ili um. Th<- fluent arms
ever manufacturt (1 and Urn VV // ))
flrnt. choice of all • xportH.
Manufactured in calibres :W, no and 44-100, Kin
«T«ordouble action, Safety IlanmicrlcHB anti
Tn rffet iikmJcIh. FViiiHtmctcd mi tin f.v y of of bent l>«Mt oonf
It y wrinmln and Btocb, Hied. they e.arefuUy mirivul inspected I meted ed for fo: for finish, work"
maiinlni* are
«lu ru hit iiijillonl»le it y >i twl awn iiriiev. n Do do not not l>e no deceived » iw ed hich i by
cheap ciiAl-icon si-icoil fitiif imifuti 11 1Joiim w
a r o oftciilKold unreliable, for the >rr danyeroug. ntiino stiino article iu ti The and SMITH are uofc Ac
tmlv but
WKHSON I'evolverH are all Htarnncd upon the bar
re 1 b with flnn’H name, addreHH and dates of pateUta
and are u;ii(inuiieeil perfect in • very detail. In¬
sist upon havinw tim Renuino article, arid toaddreM if your
dealer came»t Hiijiply you an order H'-nt
below will receive prompt and careful attention.
LmucrptiVBcatttlo'rue m l orices furnished upon ap
plieaton. tyMention SMITH & WESSON, ii«:•*I
thi- pap r Spr
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT
OR. LOBB
iiW* North Fifteentli l*bila»lelphln, Pa./fot
tbo trcatinnnt of Blood Folaons, Skin Kruptiou*,
Nervous Complaints, lirl^h t’s UlgetUH?, Strlcturea,
1 inpotency and kindred dlaeaHcs, no matter of how
Iouk Htanfling or from what oauHO oilulnatlng.
If, •“ren <iaya ino.ilclnes furulshod by mail---- FREE
id for Book on SPEC 1A I a DUriiNOM. .
N T J t ONI« f CM T VIOLIN III
In the World* HOWE’S Cel*
cbrate.4 No. Hi. ST JUNG
*7 FOR Si.GO.
Full M’t 4 String'. B,*kl H&iiau Kirin‘20o,
of'clt. I.iL’io Old V’n iiirt nnd varied mi* VioiniH,
Bows, Vioiah, Nmkfl, i m!I os To ami Baxea, Hatkn, 7fcc. VarnibiiKHiifl ijj*(i. Violin Ctutmtt,
pH, aiK flttiugB.
Music lionkM lot all lnetrumentH. Bn
lowewt pricoH in / rnorioa-. Kend.fi r ca Jtio«ue.
ELIAS HOW};, )8 Court Street, Bonton, Mabh.
•nil WHISKEY HAB¬
ITS cured at home wlih
u— B m MR H9I IfS otit P aiD - Book'of par
tlcnlara sent FREE,
ATLANTArGar B. M. WOOLLEY. M. D..
Office &l>X WBitebAU HU
itfMRfefcw iS 1 prescribe and folly en.
dorne specific Hi); ii the M c®rtaincur$ theVonly
r Cure* DATB.^I In for
|earoat*«4 l TO 6 of thisdff tease.
not u> G. H. IN< iltAHAM.M. D.,
Oko»o Stricture. Amsterdam, N, 1 Y.
yrdonly by th® Wo Lave sold Big G for
Itui Chtml^lOo. many years, and It has
Ciziolzmrd, pi von the best 1 of ^ satis¬
a faction. .
Ohio. I>. It. DYOHE rhiFago, & CO..
WF V < III.
I Trs<U flark«Sl*00. Bold bv Druggist Si
a. s. v ........ ................Fifty-two,*-^
UNEQUALLED 6 * Safety Barrel Catch',
For Symme- Impossible to throw the
try, Beauty, barrel open when
Material and Workmanship. Sg- discharged.
AS PERFECT A PISTOL AS S> 38 Cal..
CAN If your POS3IBLY dealer does not BE hare MADE. it, ice wiU send it 0 ‘Tggi-p ^4. Using^. Cartridges iW.
postpaid on receipt of price. ya a ,
Send trail'd 6c. Catalogue in stamps of for Guns, our lOO-page ItiflcsTltcvol- ill as- \v Xjss ^ Price. $10 For Sale”
rent, Police Goods, Sporting: Goods o/all kinds, etc. v by at!
Y7ltJ Cataluffuc,\s so targe the postage on it alone costs
JOHNIP.LOVELL ARMS CO., Manufacturers, Boston, Mass. “ Dealers.
NEW PATENT. THE ONLY PFPr^CTLV SAFF PISTOL MADE.