Newspaper Page Text
tfeud (he Newspaper*;
iso Father “My son, if youWotild
tucceed in life, you must form two
good habits First, you must always
attend strictly to your business; and,
second, you must subscribe fur a news¬
paper, and ad it every day.”
Ho ii v should l take a news¬
paper?’’
Wise Father ‘Bee an if you are
not kno = as a n paper render, you
will be ? n.stantly called away from
your I usi iu H t serve >n juries.”—
.W II! } k Weekly.
Mr. T n linear—“By the way, did
you ever kn v that long ears are a
sign of gene r< «ity?”
Miss Beiuiti — “Of course Mr. Long
car. hr, They are a sign that nature has
n generous.”
A Singu'iir Form of Monomtiiiln.
There i f i>f<ip e, rational enough In
er re p< ho are certain!/ rnononia-
1 hem el vc -. They are con
nt la upon their stora
eh I heir r n vers an i their ki;l
trnin-. When these
orj r. i f they would
11 r Ho letter •h Hilter'C they
ority. 1 tsan •, perceive Its
Mfper
Kvrn in dull tine the teamster doc* a
driving business.
pMa, Indigestion Hitters—tho and Stomach Best
r«, it ■ Hrmvn’ft Iron
Ton It r< ibuihl■< the Blood and strengthens
A splendid medicine for weak
* it'! field ted jh* rsons.
Spring t- here. TiT.e hold, but don’t take
Dr. Kilmer * Swamp-Root cures
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
i.- he ilfe be t legacy yon can give your children
r they can emulate.
• Ml Bu*. H l.lij. Oitln From One Him. Seed.
Tills remarkao'e, ■, almost unheard-of, yield
vva- reported to i h (•John A. Salzer 8oed Co.,
La Cro o-e, WK. l,y l rank Winter, of Mon
tuna. \ vlio pin riteil one lunhel of (Ireat North
un ful (>ut Vh’Udvph \ t an that •fully tilled he and irrigated same,
in IS;i-l ean grow front one
mi 1 11 ■ 1 of (ireat Northern Outs three hundred
h;;- liel J . 1 a wonderful oat. Is you wii.j.
' i ITUS OUT AMI HUM) IT with Si ►ostage to
iihoM- flrmyoti will r eidve*ample package
out,-, and tln ir inamuiotli fjirrn see l
at iilngm A
Fob Tiiiio at Disi-.a as, ('ouqhs, Conns, etc.,
•IT i i tual relief is found in the use of “ Brown's
UrtincJiuil 'troche t " Price 25 cents. Sold only in
Hum.
.InItnni'Mc Tooili I’otvdrr* Genuine.
V large in mailed for 10 cent Lapp Drug
i., I ’hi lie l ill ill in, Pa,
t! i,tV.i<with -nv« I'vt's use Dr- IsiiacTliomp
mnV Ki e-water - Dr,nrgists t ell at 25c per Iiottle.
\ won ler I tonuich corrector —BeecUam’s
Dills. Ii.'imi’h no i «t burs 25 cents a box.
m
A ‘ 0 li
1 i
1 / a
Mr. Thomas C. Barret
Mobile, Alfttinma.
A New Being
That Tired Feeling
Full Strength and Appetite Given by
• Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
The fo lowing is from Mr. Thomas C. Par¬
rel t, of Mobile, Ala., a well known member of
tbo city liro department, attached to Hook
*ttd Ladder Co., No. 4.:
1- Hand A Co., Lowell, Mass.:
I have been taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla as
n 8 l' r:n fi> me Heine and blood purifier. It is the
best bloo l medicine 1 ever used and for an ap
ivtizer it is excellent. I havo taken several
different kinds of medicine for the blood but
Hood’s Sa saparilla lias proved to be the best.
Hood's 5 ^ 13 Cures
1 was troubled w th indigestion and that tired
fooling. After taking four bottles of Hood’s
Barsapartlla 1 felt like a new man. 1 cannot
recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla toi highly.”
I Ho m as C. Bakhett, Mobile, Alabima.
Monti s 1*111* are prompt and effletent, yet ***y
In action ‘old by nil druggist*. 35 cents
McELREES’
OF
, .V
& S 3
fp' U i^
is
w m
** A TP
a
■
For Female Diseases.
«S’»3 w. l. DorotAS *a shoe from
m work, costi n S
QtHUiKU $A in to p', host value lor tli e lr nancy
ATHT. W. the w rice
I: SlScakie^fe.rs^Ki^i^ii w»« a^Sft?£teSJ 52
wTrw^e^'i- 5 5 A .cod for 11- !
- \\-LD0W01j or
k U ----- ‘ r '\/i,.ar.UeJ Catalcgnt
b
~ar ^ St n AJS
LATUT STOV how to or.
derby mail. Pt><tasre free. You cm get the best
btrjfiUiib ci clc...c 1 i who push our shoes.
In Ih«' Sprirg,
It is irapor'ant to purify the blood and
«P t 'tty. -vs tun. promptly Nothing does this
a so and - o cer
a-ha* a- RovU.G kkmetter. it istrulv
been - od of it. ‘ Tne fitinia Thule
1 ouI t be kept in every
IiOUm'. Kii'g’ - Roy.t jolu by Germstuer all druggist*. Co., AtUnts. Ga
A (iuarantced Cure
The Opium Habit.
We nar&utet to cure the opium disease iu
any form in flft ea days, or no pay for board.
treatment or Mention. Saoit. r um at Salt
t'Pri.-i fideo ly.ttfiir Austell.tin. (' imsiioiideiigs eon
Gal. Address, Dhs. Nki.m>' Gcahantee
< r t'M the Co., or L<»ck Box 3, Austelu Ga!
HAL MS xErl^arriy nhfiwingRum
*.•••••••••••••••••••• t ores 1 rTevetiu KUruuistGai,
, au ludbtesttoti, ,,
\ C ‘si In Malaria H.artbura, and t'.ttur!i and A-ttun*.
Teeth aud Promote* Fevers, Cleanse* the
m Rreatli, the Ap] petite, sweeteus A
v the Cures t he fobaro •o Habit. Endorsed w
A — by the Meotccl Sihgr.’Stampt Paouity c„_. for 10,15 or 25 ••
cent pa, t xgr\ 1 or Postal A'ofe. ♦
W GEO. K. BALM, If" West h m Nr-iv York, w
THE MONROE ADVERTISER, FORSYTH, GA., TUESDAY, APRIL :: 1894 . -EIGHT PAGES.
,
AGRICULTURAL
TOPIC S OP INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN'.
FEEDING TURNIPS TO COWS.
Turnips have a strong and^ flavor due o5 It ta
the oil thev contain, the
the food finds its way to the milk verv
quickly, this kind of root is objection
able for feeding cows. But bv taking
precaution to give the turnips only at
feeding time, or just before it, there
is not time for the milk to be affected,
and the odor of the turnips is all spent
before the next milking. But there
re other roots that are far preferable
to turm | ns mangels and sugar
beets, and either of these will easily
yield twice as ranch as the common
turnip. But they are not quite so
easilv grown, as thev take up the
whole s-ason and require thorough
cultivation. But this being G f „cat
idvantage to the land, these roots are
preferred by the best farmers _New
York Times.
HOW T< BUT A HORSE.
No sensible mnn will buy a horse of
any value or >ue which he expects to
do good service without first submit¬
ting it t a qualified veterinary sur
geon, says the London Live-Stock
Journal. Manv an unprofessional
man lias a good eve for a horse but
lie knows little or nothing of its struc
litre or anatomy compared with the
trained veterinarian. Moreover, the
amateur judge of a horse is apt t'o flv
to certain points where lie thinks he
may detect something and overlook
others. The veterinary surgeon, who
only is examining brings his horses every °dav,' not
scientific knowledge
to bear, but conducts his examination
in a scientific manner, going over all
tho horse before he has done with him.
Iftlc.v lie manifest unsonndness, it
will W discovered and pointed out,
but it is in the discovery and indica
tion of incipient unsoundness that the
training and practice of the veterin
ariaii are of supreme value.
'ARVING FEED WITH THE weatheb.
livery experienced feeder knows
that the appetites of highly fed fat
S:r' 'S ,n,i
ooW „ir fattening »t„,k e„t b est
,
! hearty f0 ° d
tie' 80 8 °on anawarm ;
d.v comes R ^
hestomaeh r'uu aml W t c° °
'rel VO H ier !l er \
'e„, ‘
t ti v | •t c +
is a icsseifml^ Vim, 1 whn C p n thc^HLTi^ lDflf 0 i ^ a ^ “ 5e C ° ti^ m e ’.
naiTitivelv tv 1 ' injury is
(lone ilunt.ln Ill .summer snntmVf ttme tin, on grass there
°f ,U 7 extra
imlutThlc rtn j becaus^it
lil-pi’t w tir.st not onl v is i° " e H
‘
Iitl^ f 1 i 1 ft 16 -
Sv- tim'd" in bulk in * * ?' 1 ; f !"? f
. ii 'T P ‘ r
men! ment lather rather than than digest. Uo-md In winter, ,
however, it is the foods that are rieh- !
e»t in oHtboi, ivliivli are most apt to
injure .lige.tion. Tho cold voathor
calls for carbon to sustain animal heat.
It also supplies a greater proportion
of oxygen in the air. When the
weather grows warmer the oxygen
proportion is smaller, ami not so
mnch carbon is required. —American
Cultivator.
wu,r, have to lea it n for yourself. j
There is no “royal road” to success i
in poultry breeding, so far as our ex- '
penence teaches. Mo have given many |
years of close attention to this in-j
teresting work ; we have indulged in a j
wide field of practical experiments |
with domestic fowls of all kinds, and t
wo have learned what we know about j
pouitrv study of alter their habits, long trial needs and and careful j
cuharitics. Among pe- i
the scores and Iran
drcvls of letters that reach us from
wet- v to week throughout the year, we
frequently meet with requests for in
formation as to the “most expeditious
mode to be adopted in chicken rais
ing ’—whereby the ambitious novice
mtu arrive in the least possible time
at prime success. We can only say in
reply to such queries that we know of
no royal road in the business. It re
quires some skill in the right diroc- j
tion, application, a love of this work,
a share oi good common sense, a kind
ly disposition, and a due modicum of
patience to rear and breed fowls satis
bietorih and successfully. There are j
no secrets m this work, and there is !
nothing excessively difficult to learn
in the process of raising good birds,
.
either for show, for sale or for the !
market. But it takes time to produce
and reproduce live stock; and if we '
would excel iu this matter of chicken
raising, we must begin the undertak
ing considerately, and by following it
ui> with due attention to details, study, j
persex erance and . devotedness, , , there , -.
11,1 olu ’ lm success v ill at last is |
Yar'] 11 ° lU v ° l1 mellean Poultry
'' ’
fruit rotation.
Crop rotation has become quite es- j
sential to agriculture in order to keen
up the fertility of the soil, but ver Y
few seem to consider it necessary to
; Xt . ;: K l+i- h ; S ®J m e \ >lau 1 th ® f rmt I
tiees, vines , and shrubs. , Nevertheless, 1
1 !* 1 ' " ^ known now tuat the
Mn’in Sr °?' mg f ^ Ue cro P of
frnD ! r/n® tends to concen
be b lgbt8 ’ diseases and
tae , g onlx ‘ 5 at wax injure to destroy our plants. these diseases Oiten
is to kill off'all of the plants and trees
and to burn root and branch. By
transferring the orchard to another
part of the farm we can oiten obtain
better results than if we devoted all
our time to spr.iying an! picking off
infected leaves.
’ We generally select the best soil for
potatoes and wish to grow them theie
continually, but in time blight aud rot
make it impossible and we have to
move the potato field. The same is
true with onions, sweet potatoes, cab
bages and other vegetables. Now the
-ame holds exactly true with raspber
ryes, eunanta and other plants. Me
diseases wLee S «,°w by mg ? naeS k6ep d ° WU
continuous spraying, but
n tune the diseases become so general
thaZU* 7™ to |
make 'Om the 'nt. funet ^berrViia.' ?
shoula 't«
changed every few years, and placet!
in new locations where diseases will
not make their life precarious. Rasp
berry vines, currants and gooseberry
bushes cannot be moved so eaa lr, but
new orchards have to be planted every
year or so, and those new ones should
be Pouted as far from the old as pos
Even in the apple and pear or
chard something in this line can be
dono - Old orchards as a rule suffer
more from blight than young ones.
and grubs and other insects increase
ra pi'i 1 J in numbers. If the new or
c ^ fir< ls are planted right alongside of
tbem tbe T are infested with the insects
ft ? d diseases early in their life. Grape
vinos require a change probably more
tlian Ru y otber frnits > aa >* every new
.
v,ne y ar d planted should be separated
* rom tbo °nes. If the land is
pl ante <l with other crops for a couple
MasoD8 ff erras of tho diseases
will get out of the soil prettv well.
We can ward off diseases fairly well
w * tb spraying, and it is right that this
8 ^ 10 uld be kept up persistently, but
with the present increase of insects
and diseases in old orchards the futnre
must bring about such changes that it
will be absolutely necessary to adopt a
system of rotation in our fruits the
same as now- practiced with other
crops.—Nebraska Farmer.
-
SOWSO ° ATS ’
M . bile . it . is . of no advantage to sow
OA * H the spring until the soil is dry
enon 8 b to work, all reasonable care
8 bould be taken to have everything iu
rea( bness so that advantage can be
ta ' ieu °f the first opportunity to sow.
* K the early-sown oats that nearly
Mways gives the best growth and yield.
^ats will stand considerable frost
"'^h less injury than they will stand
bo * sc<,r(, hing sun in July. But
no *bing is gained by sowing when the
K ? d cannot be worked into a good
*! bb - One of the best ways is to sow
tll08eed broadcast, by hand or with a
8e<5 ‘ler, and then work it with a culti
v,ltor > harrowing in order to fine the
801 '• The disc harrow can be used to
work in, but from the tendency to
leave the seed in row’s many object to
lt * al "ays pays to harrow thor
° U f/ y ’ eavm -f t lc 8UrfftCe hue and
mell °^’ eVCn 11 ^ • . 18 . ne ^ 8sa ry to go
stl in . S "in Stl,
Another item having a good
Htand is to tlse plenty of seed and to
distribute as evenly as possible. While
two bushels of seed per acre is enough
it the seed is clean, yet in most cases
bettert ° " 6 ° m0K ’ rather
With.tUj.- with nearly all apring
*<* sowing, the implements in good
or(ler - so that at the first opportunity
i n the spring ^ * the work may J be pushed 1
along r piai
Oats are a quick crop. They oc#
CU PY the ground a short time and the
outlay for seed and work is compara
tively small. They serve a goodpui
pose in a system of rotation, while for
feeding to stock on the farm, they are
one of the best and cheapest crops 1 that
can be n
'Z.U } Tf f cU,r i “ ‘ e °, " gr * ,'T ss 18 *? , b * so S -' "'“ CW *>«• ... "
f9‘*“ n 13 to u h* >* » » good
1“*° *° 8 ° w tho cultivate and
h T,' V 77,“’ . «*«
" Ughly “ d * im S0W 7 9 f °7f, 01
»•«! cover with a light har
r ° W °* r ” Sl1 '
in a system of rotation oats should
follow corn, seeding to clover, the first
crop of this to be cut for liay, and the
growth turned under and wheat sown
during the winter. Grass may be sown
with the wheat, and after two crops of
hay have been cut, plow uj> and plant
to corn and then to oats and cover
again. The wheat is marketed and tho
balance is fed out to stock on the
farm .
J |In an ordinary season oats may be
cut, cured and mowed away the same
as hay. They make one of the best
feeds for growing stock of all kinds,
sheep, cattle and horses, and in this way
supply both grain and roughness at a
low cost.—St. Louis Republic.
-
farm and garden notes.
Never prune grapeswlien the ground
i a frozen. .7 ^
rr, “V “”\ tipi<ltlOQ .. glVethecows ,,
* *
Butter cows should possess quiet, .
gentle dispositions.
Good butter will always be iu de- '
maud at profitable prices. '
Too much coarse food has made
thousands of horses unsound.
The peach tree is a very rapid grow¬
er if planted in a very rich soil.
Manure from the hog pen is one ol
the best tliat can be used on peach
Dees.
For the man who sets his standard
high and works up to it in a practical
way there is money in horse breeding.
H is a losing investment to try to
convince the world that your appetite ’
or ideas are a guide that all should j |
follow.
Trotting through sandy or muddy I [
places and on rising grades exhausts
a horse rapidly. In such places go
slowly, j
It does verv well to raise anythin** '
liked best for familv needs, but for
m arket raise the kind the public de
mands regardless of your own dis
Horses were never so cheap as now, |
quality considered, and vet the best .
autho rities allege that with proper
care and discrimination there is still
good monev % in the blls iness. j !
~ ] , high . , grade , and
f oot mares
breed to tb ^ >est draught or coacb
sires and before the coitsare:ready foi •
market the price for good horses wii
not onl f. be hl S her > but the demftnd
more active. ,
When a tree first leans it is easily
righted up, and may be held in its
by a Make or a prop, or, if j
small, by earth or sods weighted with j
stones. A surer way of keeping it ]
straight is to carefully stake and tie
when it is set out. j
It is more profitable to grow mules
than horses for draught purposes, be
cause, as a writer truly says, they can
be grown to salable *ge quicker ft»d
cheaper and will bring more. They
are more profitable for labor service,
because they are stronger, will wear
^ *“
POPULAR SCIENCE,
Liverpool, England, has an electric
elevated railroad,
A 6iikworm ’ s thread is one-thou
gandth t of ftn iccb thick,
. , V ar ut , tb ,,
1 re ar m ° ®
- ‘
ho ^ ° f . eftch , twenty-four * , is , 5
clock tho .
° 111 mormn S
A prehistoric human skull found at
Anniston, Ala., in 1890, measured
thirty-four inches in circumference
just abov&Jhe ears,
A large number of flowers are bored
by bumble bees. They collect the nec
tar in this way instead of entering by
the mouth of the flower,
London has only one death per year
where it used to have four. The great
falling off in mortality is due to the
better drainage recently introduced.
The largest passenger engine, in the
United States belongs to the Cieve
l R ud, Columbus, Cincinnati and Indi¬
anapolis Railroad. A\ eight sixty-five
toms.
It has heretofore been almost im
possible to make large castings of
aluminum, but the difficulty has been
80 far overcome that pure aluminum
bathtubs are now made in a single
piece.
The archaeological collection of
(England) University ha;
been increasing at such a rapid rate of
bite that the antiquarian committee
have been compelled to ask for more
accommodation and fittings to cost
ft hout §1500.
A new kind of fuel made from solid
ified petroleum and other materials is
now being extensively manufactured
in France. It is stated that its heat
producing properties are very great
and that experiments to use it in en
gine furnaces have been of a most sat
isfactory nature.
Professor Edward Orton, the geolo
gist> in a speec]l before the Ohio In
Btitute of Mining Engineers, stated
that were the demand for coal 25,000 -
000 tons a year it would take 100C
years to exhaust Ohio’s known coal
field. This is 14,000,000 tons inex
ceS s of last year’s output and there
are coal lands in the State as vet not
pr0Bpected .
„ew“g L ZeTLeZ LTisfactory
"red, ,nd has proved
that when subjected to a severe strain
m te f tm f the ^ ed \ olut P ro ™ d of
greater strength than the pure metal,
8 -^e °l de welding B though, preparation properly speaking, is called it a
temperature of trees show that it is
practically the same as that of the sm
rounding air, on an annual average,
the monthly means differ
sll gUtly. In general it takes a day for
the outside temperature to penetrate
to a tree’s heart, so occasionally there
about twenty degrees difference,
Generally speaking, a largo tree is a
little warmer than the air in cold
months and a little colder than the air
in warm months.
Common Sense Eye Treatment.
Dr. F. C. Heath, in a plea for a lit¬
tle common sense in the treatment of
the eyes, says that in treating diseased
or strained eyes rest—rest of eyes,
body and mind—is imperative, and
wund, dust and smoke must be avoid¬
ed. In all eye trouble, the first atten¬
tion must be paid to the general
health. Among the abuses of the eye
to be religiously abstained from Dr.
Heath cites : Reading with a poor
light—requiring the ciliary muscles
to do extra work to sharpen the vision.
This applies to dim light, twilight,
sitting too far from the light, etc. ; the
error of joosture—stooping or lying
down congests the eye, besides requir
ing unnatural work of the eye mus
cles; reading on trains. This is a
cruel strain, as the motion of the car
causes such frequent changes of focus
and position as to tax different sets of
muscles. Another fertile cause of eve
disease is reading without glasses or
with badly fitting ones. Aside from
the well known reflex effects of eye
straiu the danger to the eye is that ex
cessive eye strain is a factor in produc¬
ing disease of almost every part of the
eye, its most serious results being
choroiditis, glaucoma and cataract,
Dr. Heath urges every one to find out
j llS £ how to take the greatest care of
his eyes and so preserve his sitrht
many" years beyond the period thev
would otherwise serve him. Old age
is the time of retribution of eye sin¬
ners; but little can then be done in a
special hygienic way beyond occasion¬
al stimulating washes and the careful
husbanding of what sight remains.—
Chicago Record.
She Packed Shingles.
A few months ago a comely, well
dressed voung lady appeared at a
shingle mill at Getchell, Wash., and
modestly asked for the “boss.” He
was soon found and asked her what he
could do for her. She said that she
wanted a “job” at packing shingles,
The boss was very much surprised, but
after talking with the applicant for
work for a few minutes gave her the
^ es i re ^ i°U, and the next day she was
a t her work, and she made the shingles
There were few of the old hands
^, ho coltld P? ck 8hin £ le ®. w lth ^er.
She was steady and methodical, , having
b Gle to say to any of her male associ
fttes besides what was necessary for
Uer work, and she was liked and re
speeted accordingly. A few days ago
there was genuine regret at the mill
when it was found that she had quit,
j t gOQn transpired that she had been
ap ^ p 0 i nt ed school teacher at a school
fw a , vaT> she wa6 a weI1 edu .
voun g wom an, and not in ne
cessitous circumstances, but she P pre- re
ferred to spend her vacation making
fo“tmebody.-New«C^leaiipi > wy^nl!
-^
George W. Child ? s Way.
George D W Childs made it a rule of
big b f e never to S peak ill of anv one.
Smith went to him and told him
that Brown was his deadliest enemy
he sent for Brown and intimated that
Smith was the dearest friend they
both had on earth, and owing to the
kind things Smith had said Brown had
said about him he wanted to thank
him and find out if there was any
k™/” him — !ieW 0r '
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
It is said that fewer men shave them¬
selves iu America than in any other
country.
A Lawrence, Ivan., lady has a Bible
175 years old that has been in the fam¬
ily ever since it was printed.
A gray, nnsized blotting paper was
sold in England, according to Ruges
in his liistoi v of price, as far back as
1465.
There were in the Confederate ser¬
vice one commander-in-chief, seven
generals, 19 lieutenant generals, 84
major generals, 313 brigadier gener¬
als.
Morsseau, the French chemist, has
succeeded in making diamonds out of
ordinary carbon, but they are so small
as to be visible only through the micro¬
scope.
The 20,000,000 men of the United
States are wearing an average of 20
buttons each, making 400,000,000 but¬
tons for all, estimated to weigh 23,000,
000 pounds.
A “theological” souvenir spoon is the
latest Boston fad. The bowl contains
a mold of Trinity church and on the
handle is the head of the late Bishop
Brooks.
There are 11 professors in the school
of pedagogy opened by the Philadel¬
phia board of education in 1891, and
only one student, who stands at the
head of his class and takes first honors
in everything.
A young man iu Wrentham, Mass.,
has been finding amusement in mail¬
ing postage stamps and sending greet¬
ings to European potentates. He is
delighted beyond measure at having
already received acknowledgements
from the Czar of Russia, the King of
Greece and a few others.
On March, 4,^1889, when Benjamin
Harrison was being inaugurated, the
w ife of Robert H. Young, of Hwana
noa, N. C., presented him with a
daughter. About the hour Cleveland
was delivering his inaugural address
Mrs. Young gave birth to another ba¬
by, a boy, who has been named Gro¬
ver Cleveland Young.
chief Hungary, as is well known, is the
home of the gypsies. According
to the published results of tho recent
census undertaken by the government
there were on Jan. 31, 185,000 gypsies
in that country. Two-thirds of the
members of the various tribes were
nameless. Only about 8,000 could
read or write.
Milk as a Drink.
Milk is an important food and should
not be taken as a drink simply. If
eaten as the Persians use it, holding it
in the mouth until it is throughly
combined with the saliva to aid in its
digestion, as a part of the meal it is
all right, taking the place of Other
food. It requires digestion as neces
sarily as any other food, but, that it
may digest, it is first formed into a
solid mass—“curd,” and then acted
upon as other solids. Unlike water,
w hich requires no digestion, as a drink,
it cannot take the place of our special
drink between meals without much
taxing the organs of digestion. This
principle is well illustrated by the
fact that the nursing infant cannot
take its food rapidly, as it must pass
through many small orifices, sieve- '
like, the drawing process exciting the
flow- of saliva, aiding in the digestion
of the milk and the nourishment of
the babe. I repeat, emphatically, that
it is food, and not a proper drink.—
Ex.
How’s This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured bi
lia l’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
** e, tlie undersigne i, have known F. J. Che¬
ney lor tlie last 15 years, and believe him per¬
fectly and honorable in all business transactions
financially able to catry out any obliga¬
tion made by their firm.
West & Tkuax, 'Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Walihng, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Hall’s Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Catarrh Curs is taken internally, act¬
faces ing directly of_the upon the Mood and mucous sur¬
1 system. Testimonials sent free.
r.ce, 75c. per bottle. .Sold by all druggists.
Trust in the Lord through the powers of
your own mind aud muscle.
Malaria cured and eradicated from the sys¬
tem blood, by Brown’s Iron Bitters, which enriches
the tones the nerves, aid., digestion.
Acts like a charm on persons in gene rail ill
health, giving new energy and strength.
Those who lice only for money 1 ave only
tuat money to live after the m.
Your wife can buy several articles for SI;
you need S3 worth of mailable articles in the
drug line; you S. mail the order to E. A. Hull,
Charleston, C., and save $1. Your wife is
happy, your are, and so will Hall be. Free
catalogue.
Shiloh’s Cure
Isso’d on a guarantee. It cures incinient. C 011 -
sumption; it is the Best Cough Cure;25c.,50c.,?l.
^ r
1
*
g§PfK3
i
Ik
KNOWLEDGE
tends Brings comfort personal and improvement and
rightly to used. The enjoyment when
many, who live bet¬
ter on an others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the needs the of physical world’s best products to
the value health of being, the will attest
laxative principles to embraced pure in liquid the
remedy Svrup^of Figs-f ^ |
in S e l° r f acceptable and plea
ant to the taste, the refreshing and trill v !
beneficial properties'of a perfect lax
dialling rjf| 6 cMd^’headaches ^nd^fevers
a It has permanently curing constipation
given satisfaction to millions and
met approval of the medical
profession, Liver because it acts on the Kid
ne ^ 3 ’ and Bowels without weak- j
ening them and it is perfectly free from
tmnaq.e^ub^tance. fKipf
Satturfd^bTtbe wW 1 C A Uoraia Fit “ran ev™? !
package’ Co onlv TlTtS name isprinhd P on i
Sbeingwell name Svrup t-f Fiw: mi \
in formed,'vou xvili
“T eateUtuto :f oflerel.
Take no Substitute for
Royal Baking Powder.
It is Absolutely Pure.
All others contain alum or ammonia.
A Technicality.
“How did Mistah Jackson come out
wif "s trouble wif de deacons?”
“Hoes you hab ref’rcnce to de trial
dat de hen house ’currence gave rise
to?”
“Da’s wlrat I means.”
“He’s reinstated in membership, he
is.”
“Golly! I thought hit were a elah
ease.”
“Xo’n deedy. What dey charged
’im wid wiis chickens, and dey couldn’t
prove nullin’ but tuh’keys,”— JFitwA
inqton /Star.
The business injunction to secure an
article when it is cheapest is not heeded
by the lover, for he gets a wife w hen
she is dearest,
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lil
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/Ik •<;. In y
W////M iiiMm \ Mi l
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After reading the following letters can any¬
one for that longer doubt that a trustworthy remedy
has at last terribly been fatal malady, If consumption,
found ? these letters had
been written by your best known and most
esteemed neighbor* they could be no more
worthy of your confidence than they now
intelligent are, coming, as they do, from well known,
and trustworthy citizens, who,
in their several neighborhoods, enjoy the
fullest confidence and respect of all who
know them.
K. C. Me Lin, Esq., of Kemp3ville, Princess
Anno Co., Va., whoso portrait heads this
article, ing Dr. writes Pierce’s : “ When I commenced tak¬
Golden Medical Discovery I
was very low with a cough anrl at times
spit up much Wood. I was not able to do
the least work, but most of the time was in
bed. I was all run-down, very weak, my
head was dizzy and I was extremely despon¬
dent. Tho first bottle I took did not seem
to do me much good, but I had faith in it
and continued using it until I had taken
fifteen bottles and now I do not look nor
feel like tho same man I was one year ago.
People are astonishod and say, ‘well, last
year this time I would not havo thought
that you would be living now.’ I can thank¬
fully'say I ain entirely cured of ‘Discovery’ a disease
which, but for your wonderful
would have resulted in my death.”
Even when tho predisposition to consump¬
tion is inherited, it may be cured, as verified
by the following from a most truthful Mrs. Thomas and
much respected Canadian lady,
Vansieklin, “ I have of Brighton, Ont. acknowledge She writes :
to what long felt it Pierce’s my duty Golden to Medical
you Dr.
Discovery and his ‘Pleasant Pellets’ have
done for me. They almost raised me from
the grave. I had three brothers and one
sister die of consumption and I wa3
speedily following after them. I had severe
cough, pain, copious expectoration and other
alarming symptoms and mv friends all
thought I had but a few months to live. At
that time I was persuaded to try the ‘Golden
Medical Discovery’ and the first bottle
acted like magic. Of course, I continued
with tho medicine and as a result I gained
riD'dlv jn siren-<h. Mv friends were aston-
Lessens Pain *
m/iA 7* Insures Safety
. to Life of
d. f 'M Mother and Child •
“My wile, after using ‘ Mother’s Friend,’ passed throu -.Tq 3*
orc ^ ea ^ little pain, was stronger in one hour than 3
a week after the birth of her former child.
—J. J. McGoldrick, Bean Station, Tenn.
“Mothers’ Friend” robbed pain of its terror and shortened labor, 1
I nave the healthiest child I ever saw, —Mrs. L. M. Ahern, Cochran, Ga.
Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle.
Book “To Mothers ” mailed free. '
by au Druggists. BRAOFIELO REGULATOR CO., A(l?n'n, 6a.
m mmMpmmmmmssm _______
f l-i-J .
The person plantinjrSalrer’eSeeds never imov ? r r timer,
M 1 becaure they double all yields! Try it for Mi oi-.d l- happy, gj*
j I Vegetable eeeda for the million. 35pkgs. Earliest Vegeta bier- <•
'sample JtoOj xxii pkaf. paid. “Get Larare«tgrowei-g of Farm Seed? in tho war i. ERtE.
Th^re Eli” Radish tit for uze in 1* do vs and cat
i- ■< ialogue for 7c postage. Catalogue alone, 6c. for postage. ,
mfsalA 51G wm
^CLiPjj CLIP, |SATEJ SAVE ^A5SJ r^^J!^,^K AND
The 2 .to V , ra ,tors ; « :
yhe*ts w.th 2-icch vatn thr« ot th«wh«i« weon u>*
V
*Z.
^* r ;: av-L. Oier will pra«VaJl y make rid# beards. By
me i„rae way bu!#y e ; one# in
material may be har.dled.
* 31 G‘-» t-Str « #l«k,w 1 a.mple cf our work w.
„ -ittos.i .w Low r.ice a ih.iii make, and how less
.^ * r * hotter <tf m can re ckles"
c ****** prices POttadt, ITitaStett Truck iafnrms bed at
*9 , I. ■ ar.i ii espiet of adv VST*
i. m rtf esr.dsisos r*»ea ,« }f-j 4 fjjjj !, #*».
Rapid Growth of California Trees#
We have evidence in California that
redwood trees cut down sixty years
ago have made sprouts which are new
trees from 3 to 5 feet in diameter, and
from 100 to 150 feet high. It is tho
rapid growth of some of these trees
which lends people to doubt their great
age, but there seems to be no reason
for doubting that the method of cal¬
culating by annual rings of wood is
sound, and that the great age imputed
to some of these trees lias solid ground
work to build on.— }[<c!uin'x Monthly.
He—“Are you good at conun¬
drums?”
Hho—“Yes. ”
He—Well, here is one: “If I were
to propose to you, what would you
say?”
ished. When I commenced tho use of youT
medicines, six years ago, I weighed but 120
pounds and was sinking rapidly. 1 now
weigh 135, and my health continues pet feet.”
t//iv-a , O
“Golden Medical scrofula Discovery” of the cures lungs), con¬
sumption (which is
by its wonderful blood-purifying, invigorat¬ For weak
ing and nutritivo properties.
lungs, spitting of blood, shortness of breath,
nasal catarrh, bronchitis, severe inn coughs,
asthma, and kindred affections, it sov¬
ereign remedy. While it promptly cures the
sevei-est coughs, it strengthens tho system
and purifies the blood.
“Golden Medical Discovery” does not make?
fat people more corpulent, but for thin, reduced pule,
puny children, a3 well os for adults
m flesh, from any cause, it is the greatest
flesh-builder known to medical science.
Nasty cod liver oil and its “emulsions,” are
not to bo compared with it in efficacy. It
rapidly build3 up tho system, and increases
the solid flesh and weight of those reduced
bolow the usual standard of health by
“ wasting diseases.”
7’o brace up the entiro system after the
grip, pneumonia, fevers, and other prostrat¬
ing acute diseases ; to build up needed flesh
and strength, and to restore health and vigor
when you feel “ run-down ” and “ used-up ”
the best thing in the world is Dr. Fierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery. It promotes nil
the bodily functions, rouses every organ into
healthful action, purifies and enriches tho
blood, and through it cleanses, repairs, and
invigorates the entire system.
A Treatise on Consumption, phototype, giving half-tone, nuiner
ous testimonials with or
portraits of those cured, numerous refer¬
ences, also containing successful Homo Treat¬
ment for chronic nasal catarrh, bronchitis,
asthma, and kindred diseases, will be mailed
by the World’s Dispensary Medical Associa¬
tion of Buffalo, N. Y., on receipt The of six People’* cents
in stamps, to pay postage. Or
Common Sense Medical Adviser, $1.50, 1,000 pages,
300 illustrations, mailed for
Jn "“* rjr 5’ • • * c^ per ent *
Fcbruary^i,’ i ' ' ,»
. . 11 • t
‘
... W^have . pa.d .. total, , h■> percent,
t„ c «r c« stB m Pr * ,« 75 day*. 9.
twice caca moat.a rnj aev cai b» 09
to |!OJ0 exa be iu vested;
., Bunker 9 aud Brokers,
Dan d ■■Si) Broad way. New York.
'
Bookkeeping, Business Practice, s'lorl
liand, Jke. Send lor catalogue.
XfAC-LEAN. C'l itTts & WALKER, M’nar..
lg. EHE'S~_ —. I
i:
a, N, v Thirteen,
i
Best CURES WHERE Syrup. All. ELSE FAtLR.
Cough Tastes Good. Use
In time. S> »id by druggists.
s
25% ,: gay??? #5“
51.;