Newspaper Page Text
A few years ago, flaring the discua
sion of the clause# of a bill before
the house of commons, a member mov¬
ed to omit all the words in a clause af¬
ter the word “which," and this was
carried w i tlx ut any one having moved
an addition, ’l l* result was that one
clause of f bill ended with the word
“which." ft ad the discovery of its
m ing naturally pa.mod the wit of
mam — London <Ju*cn.
The Nkill nnd Ii tiosriedsrn
FfwnlJoi to < iie ; todutlion of the most perfect
and popular dive remedy known have en
• the C»Hf» i a rig Syrup Co.to achieve a
%T >at in e reputation of fta remedy
Jurup f l'lgs, *» It la conceded to be the uni
>er«al iajntjve. For wile by all druggkt*.
m re a ma !l r o,
t i !ji*»n t
BEYOND DESCRIPTION
y ho Misory Before Taking
AM#
The Happiness AftorTaking
HOOD’3.
/ ft i%h,i ■Mikm
YY
X m
m -I —arj u m
'‘O. I. not, ! Sc <'c., ijoweli. Mas#.:
“Dear Hlr«: 1 have been in poor health for30
or year#, and have been taking doctors’
mrdi'-mrM morn or In will the (fine. I did not
H«t much n Hof. My bln id was in a bail shapo
• rid nt v t tom w.'M all run down. 1 thought i
must die. bat noth in.! several testimonials in
tho paper# in behalf of 11 owl’s Sarsaparilla l
bought lbran bottles an l foilnd that it did ma
mo much K-iod Ihm I continued taking It. I wan
WmLw-Ix without sloth py,nnd had a
a!) tho tiiii'i. In fact I cannot
*!•* .crlbo my f After uainjf ouo iHittio. of
Tin.) 1'n :i upnrilla 1 fininil It was doin^ me
Hood’s**#* Cures
innrh rdO'I nil ! now I cannot pr.ai#e tho rnodl
> U)C tc»i much for what it has done for mo. I
tiui a di 'ihliHl Koldior (VJ yon-sold and was nf
illc.vd nit’i tmuiy uilmoTits, including kidney,
bronchi! i# and cntarrii. Slnou usinfi ft botthn
•ft In Jfo.i.l's I n i | ihi-ik Sarsaparilla Hood’s I Sarsaparilla am like unothor saved man.
i,fr " H. Bis WO, Hammonton,N,J. my
iop, i'.nx
11 nod'# I*. l|s pi-nnju and ofllclont, ye* uttuy
In net Ion. Sold by all ilrUK^Utt. 35 cent*.
lisiikB tlia Dutch Process
rja No Alkalies
YjYj —on —
Other Chemicals
V'n t' A frvpfo >*'-y—y nr0 preparation ' W <1 in of tho
\ W. BAKER & CO.’S
ffl if A , iBreakfastCocoa
' I V |1 U ivhlch jmi-e and is absolutely soluble.
-i.i *
ktd i : ’ , |'||Ii tli.- h-.x !rt more mjlh than of Cocoa three mixed times
• ; :
LJ Ui. vL u l Iw v<it 1 1 Starch, Arrowroot or
rotnlcol, Sugar, less nnd Is far inoro cco
Ii 1< ibdiclous, a rling uourishing, than one cent a cup.
and easily
i-iuEsvim.
Sold 1-yOrorcrs everywhere.
v7, BAILER & 00., Dorchester, Mass.
the Driving !!ie Brain
at expense /~ D ~x
of the Body, y./,
While we drive tY&gjj *
the brain we
must the body. build up ■ Myj
Ex- ^
crcisc, pure air
—foods that
make healthy flesh—refreshing
sleep—such loss arc methods. When
of flesh, strength and nerve
become apparent your physician
will doubtless tell you that the
quickest builder of all three is
Scott's Emulsion
cf Cod Liver Oil, which not only
creates flesh of and in itself, but
stimulates the appetite for other
foods.
Pro pa ml by Scott Rowno. N V. All druggirt*
We sell new and
second-hand Bi
cycles than cheaper
any house
in the country.
J-f^Get our cat¬
IMoycl alog and prices.
HKP.Mi’.KD V')' skilled workmen.
LOWRY HAROWARS CO, Atiaula, Ga.
A Guaranteed Cure
roii
The Opium Habit.
•r.israntLV to cur© the opium disease in
r.irm in tlfteeii days, nr no pay for boar 1,
^BFatra Springs,near nt or An-tell tteuti Ga- >ti. C Sa It r um at Salt
fluentia). Aditr.'-, Das. rrospondenceeon
N-im- Gvauastkk
O riuu Cults t'o., or Lock Box a, Austkll, G a.
■
liooUUt t'liiuK. Business Fracticc, shtirt
buuti, vV. r. !»en«l for rataloM>>«'.
M M l.LVN.t l BTlw \ \LlvKU. M’narra.
Hoau 6000 LOOK I, 2 S 5 »WiH 2 «S ;Z
n muuihty u No-h l!e« >rV. Sts- X A.
tug, etc., I os 11 aid iruhans’s. 16 IW. 4ti. St..N
A8ENTS 'w a hZ e, V° P. ?r’l O. t felt U!, Sou nt, 5’#,k York.
pATENTST.. n .,“:V >
a
■ uu:II 1st. L ot iiut rd.\\ 1 .tr tor liw <>t)to] s Gul>>
Skin
Eruptions
and similar annoyances are caused by impure blood,
which will result in a more dreaded disease. Unless
removed, slight impurities will develop into serious
maladies. SCROFULA, ECZEMA, SALT RHEUM
l Ns re f-r tome time been a rofferer from a severe ARE THE RESULTS OF
blood trouk.e, for which I took many remedies that Bad
did me no pood. X have now taken four bottles of
BBH wish the most wonderful results. Am
enjoytep ha»e tbe best hcatthleTer knew,
friends gained twenty pounds *2d my
I feeling say they never saw me as -velL Blood
am quite like a new msn.
Government „ JOHN A ED2UN,
Printing Office, Washington, D. C.
Treatise on Blood and SLin pt-eases mailtd free to ar.y address.
SWIFT SPF.CIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.
FOR-SYTII, GA., TUESDAY. APRIL 10 . 1894 .---EIGHT
UEUEHBKR THlT
Too small a figure in wall paper d©
■troys the effect.
A bread cloth should always be
8WO< t and clean, and never used for
any other purpose.
Hponging the face and hands with a
weak extract of pennyroyal will keep
away moequitoes, and will allay pain
from their bites.
Spots and dirt may be removed from
painting and chromos by using a cnp
of warm water to which a few drops
of ammonia have been added.
A good broom holder may be made
by putting two large n< tews—nailswill
answer—-into the wall about two inches
aj art. Drop the broom between them,
handle downward.
Any woman doing her own
may so systematize it that it will be
the easiest possible for her. She need
not follow any other person’s methods,
unless they aro the very best for her
own conditions.
It pays well to do mending before
the article goes into the wash, sine©
the process to w hich it is there sub
jeeted materially enlarges the holes,
and it is better and more agreeable to
wear if the w ashing follow's the mend
ing.
1 here is a false economy, which
costs more than it returns, such ns
saving old medicine bottles, partially
used prescriptions, the tack# from tho
carpet, or workiug days to save or
make that which can be bought for a
few cents.
1 here is nothing which the average
husband better appreciates than a
tidy, well-ordered home, with a place
for everything and everything in its
plnoe. On the other hand, there is no
more potent source of domestic un
happiness than disorder in living
apartments. — flood Housekeeping.
Ducks WLIiout Water.
ft is a mistaken idea that ducks can
not be raised without sumo body of
water for them to sport in. Ducks
have a natural fou lness for water, of
j course, and will take to it whenever
tiic opportunity is presented, but they
can lie successfully raised with no
more water than is required to drink.
1 his is evidenced by the fact that
thousands upon thousands are thus
raised every year. It lias been proved
that young ducks are much less liable
to din case when raised in dry, warm
quarters than when allowed to run at
large and spend much timo in tho wa¬
ter. A good way to add ducks to your
poultry flock is to procure the eggs
and hatch them under hens.— Western
Plowman.
White Blood in Her.
A foreign diplomat, conversing with
the Hawaiian queen on the subject of
the mixed races in Hawaii, said: “But
your majesty surely has no white blood
in your veins?” “Indeed I have white
blood in my veins,” said the queen;
“my grandfather ate Captain Cook.”—
Exchange.
Frightful I’hnntoins
Ilnnnt the dnarns of tho suffer r from in¬
digestion. What shou t! the nightmare rid
do;i dyspeptic do when waking with a fta’-t,
the - we-it ii zing from the pore-*, sleep for the
r maimler of the night, sums unattainab c?
Swnlhiw a wine iassfnl of llostett r's Stom¬
ach llilters, « hi< h, ^»taken 1 efore going to
bed, won I h ve insured ivpose. Use the llit
tc-i-s for nvrvou-nesp, dy.-pep ia, rheumatism,
ma! aria.
V\ e low much of the “tquare, honest dol¬
lar," but when will it ever get ‘‘round.’’
I)r. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root cures
nil Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and. Consultation N. free. Y.
Laboratory Binghamton,
i Morey rationally is not a pood thing to have unless it
- used and enjoyed.
Denfnes# Cannot be Cured
by local application >, as they cannot reach th«
diseased portion of the ear. T hero is only one
tional way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitu¬
remedies. Deatne-s is caused by ail in¬
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in
flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper¬
fect hearing, and when It is entirely closed
Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam¬
mation can be taken out and this tube re¬
stored to i s normal condition, hearing will bo
destroyed forever; nine eases out ten are
caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in¬
flamed condition ef the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred I) dlars for any
case of 1) afneSs (caused by catarrh) that can¬
not bo cured by Hall's Catarrh Care. Send for
circulars, free. F. .T.
f 'HENKT <fe Co., Toledo, O.
l'f? r “Sold by Druggists, 75c.
The Great Builder.
If you uir.t appebte, if you want restfn il 1 ,
resting-h op, f your tu rves are unstrung,
you reel ail ru t do vn au<l worn out, i r. Kind’s
Bov i! Germctu r wi. I prove to yon a l oon and
n 'He.-simr. It nets with singular power upon
th ■ blood, restores nervous energy, and builds
u;> the whole system with hu « aie and power
that i hvo never been equ led. For delie .te
Isdi sand for chiMrenit is the great favor te,
pi a nnte.-t, safest, best. $1, six for $o. For
ale by ail druggists. King’s Royal Germetuer
Co., Atlanta. Ga.
TUe Best Men Wanted.
first-ciaos “ Ve". sir: character we want some ability good men, men of
and to represent us.
Among our representatives are many of the
noblest and bcM men in America, and parties
of that stamp tan always find a splendid bust
Johnson & Co.. Richmond, Va.. $?.
stated tho caso
iu reference to their advertisement in this pa
ucr.
842.50 for n Farm Wagon.
Th boo w iron in the w •> Id can be had for
e-t.’.'iO: a barrel c.r: for $.'• .V* Tf you will
■V’sJ* A | N c.Uu; Croiic.'u K.you^vih
r eeive tlu ir mammoth catalogue, where you
ea 1 rea l abo ut this wagon. A
_
“I save i $1 ’ is sweet music t > the husband.
priew'sTU- m.s'il 1 'for 0 '?i from
E- A. Hall, Charleston, 5. C.” l'reeca aloxue.
TrstedbyTimk. For Bronchial affections,
Coughs, etc., "Hnu.ni's ifautchUil Tr>»hi\<" have
vrovtd their efficacy by a test of many years.
Drice Co cents.
S*l>i)oli*s Purr
I< -o il on a guara tee. It 1 arcs neinieM Con¬
sumption; ;t i-i t he Best Cou .li Cure:25c-.,50e.,$l.
j Early to beer makes early to bier.
AGRICULTURAL.
topics OF IXTF.RKsf R K l. \TiVK
TO FARM AM) GARDEN.
I j
CF.MBST FLOORS FOR HF.N HOrtSKS.
It is important that the floor of the
hen house should be without cracks,
These are almost inevitable where
boards are used, and the moist drop
pings w ill also cause board doors to
rot quickly. A cement floor, ii prop
erly made, will last a lifetime, and is
vefy easily cleaned. To prevent the
excrement from adhering to it, keep
a little dry earth in one corner, and
sprinkle it over the floor when eu- j
tirelv cleaned, and again occasionally
as the droppings accumulate under the
roosting places.—Boston Cultivator. !
-
raising coots for salc,
There are altogether too m my geld- J
mgs on many farms. Mares ar •, in
everv respect, as good for work, and
will lose hardlv a month in the year
producing a colt that will make som -
thing above the cost of raising it, if
fairly well treated. The amount of
profit from selling the colt will depend
much upon the judgment and economy
with which he is raised, and this does
ing not mean ration in starving adapted him, to his but growth, infeed- j
a
The main point, however, in making
a profit out of the colt, is to put him
m the market with a sleek coat on
him. He must be fairly cut" fat, with all ■
the loose, long hairs off, and the
sunburn brown removed by stabling,
blanketing and rubbing. A little ex
fra rubbing before selling will put
dollars into your pocket.—American
Vgriculturist.
ASPARAGUS CULTURE.
T can grow asparagus, , but can , t tell
how I do it in flowery style, writes a
correspondent. I have rich soil
pist as rich as rotten barnyard manure j
will make it. It is tile drained. I
plant in rows live feet apart and three
feet apart in the rows, I furrow out
ns deep as possible with the plow, put j
well-rotted manure in the bottom,
cover it with two or three inches of
rich soil and put the plants on this.
Get strong plants a year old. The
crowns should be about six inches be
low the outside surface of the soil.
Cover two inches deep with rich soil, ;
with a little rich manure c I n to})>
Cultivate ... the plants , well ,, and . fill up Cut the ,, the furrows tops off |
as grow. i
in the a., before the seed drops, ami
take them away. Fet the stalks grow ,
the clean second mellow, season and the keep third the ground j
ami year you j
5 ill get a good crop and the next year
9 > full one. Out sparingly the third
year. Apply manure every spring and |
cultivate it in. I had good results
from applying superphosphate, six i
hundred pounds per acre. Cut the
crop every morning, put into bunches,
with a buncher, two or three pounds
to the bunch, and secure with rubber
bands. Square the butt ends nicely
with a clean cut and market at once.
I have a very rich clay loam for my
bed, and I snap off the plants instead
of cutting them.—Ohio Farmer.
HOW TO MAKE A HOTBED.
If possible select a location pro¬
tected on the nt>rth and west and open
to the sun’s rays on the south. Make
a tight frame with one side six inches
higher than the other; the lower side
should be a foot or so high. Fit this i
with old window sashes if they are
handy, if not make cheap sashes for j
the glass. See that the sashes can be
easily removed, yet that no cracks are
left between them and the hotbed
frame for cold air to creep in.
While the frame is being made (or
better, , a little previous to that) begin . !
to get your heating materials, that is, !
the manure; throw fresh horse manure j
into a heap, add to this half its bulk
1 of forest leaves if they are obtainable;
let this lie for a week or so until it
begins side to and smoke, leave then turn the pile in- |
out for two or three j
days until it smokes again. Now the
material is ready for the hotbed. Pile
up your manure about four feet high
(pressing it down firmly) and make the j !
pile long and wide enough to extend a
foot beyond the hotbed frame on both
sides. Put the frame on top of the
heap, lower side south, and let it
“sweat” - After iei a a few tu davs uax s it it will mu be- oe
! gin to cool off ; when the temperature
is down to ninety degrees fill in the
tiame , tt ith six me.ies oi soil one part
well rotted manure to two of rich loam.
After the soil has become thoroughly
warm the hotbed is ready for plant¬
ing.
Be sure to keep the ground moist;
lf the ,, . , bright . , , water . other ,,
snu ls every
day, but don't soak it down too much.
t ' 'Vl lne p hotbed nul:uetl should snouiu b« oe envered coteieu mi up <it at
night during earlv spring ; old t ieces
i *IU days .Ml. On
warn), bright ; care must be taken
not to let the pl ntg get too hot; when
the temperature rises above seventy
five degrees raise the sash a little,
using your judgment as* to how much
air to let iu > according to the air and
: outside temperature. If this is not
j eare f u ily looked after the plants will
] grow too rapidly ^ they and become be weak and hot
i too
will be scorched to aeath.
! ,. If ft ^ uole P erma irom ^nt two hotbed Riiu is desired, to three
a naif
feet deep k and board un the four sides
, boards .......... rise a foot " above "
the ground in front and eighteen
inches behind, and fit this with sash.
Fill up level with the ground with
manure, taking care to tread it down
well; and treat the same as in tbe fore
goin^ lfl
large hotbed is built use sash
six feet long and three feet wide,
glazed especially for the purpose,
Then build the bed or beds six feet
wide, any desired length, having the
width of bed the length of a single
sash.—Farm, Field and Fireside.
Qi%LiTr IN STRAWBESRT PLANTS.
In in nlantinrr p anting a a vtrawbevrv strawbeiry bed bed large larae
or small, it is well to give cureiul con
aiderstion to the fact that an amount
of work necessary to its are will be
just as great a on pour soil *| as on rich * i
,
jnet as great, or even greater, it tne
plants set out are inferior as though
of the best stock. But the yield will
be widely different under these varying
condition. c , hence it is the poorest kind
of policy to plant ou poor soil, or to
YL ^ r
kuuu pi plfclitjj ei\
ipffe.t, ,vhich are ready unfit to be placed
in ft strawberry bed. There is no ’
doubt that the use of these annually
reduces the crop considerably.
"When an old bed has Outlived it:
usefulness there are thousands appar
ently good plauts to be plowed under.
Some persons c.inuot bear to see these
go to waste. So they either use them
for starting new beds, offer them for j
sale, or give them to their neighbors
and friends. Whoever tries to save
something by the use of such plants is
likely toloseintheeml ten times as much
as he seeks to save. Another practice
not uncommon among fruit growers if
t > take plants from the edges of the
matted rows of the bed that is to beat
fruit, Ak they wish to disturb the
r bed as little as possible they take the
plants that have run farthest into the
central spaces between the rows. They
claim that such plants must be all right
since they come from beds of last
year’s setting, aud which were not al
lowed to bear fruit, But they are as
unfit for use as the old plants taken
from the wornout bed, as they grew
from sets at the ends of the runners,
too far from the parent plants. When
a runner has grown for a short distance
it forms a set. Whether this takes
root or not, the runner continues foi
another short space and then form*
another set, and so on until the third,
fourth or even fifth set is formed, an
more or less dependent on the parent
plant for their support and growth,
Those nearest the parent plant have
the best chance. They make more
rapid grow th and become stronger and
better plants than those farther re
moved, while those at the very ends of
the runners, the last feeble effort, are
oi }o ' v vitality and feeble growth. Be
shies they are formed so late in the j
season that they do not have time to
get properly rooted before winter sets
in. To fill a bed with such plants is
to make a verv ~f poor beginning, and
8poil all hope anything better than
R ]i ht or medium c ro p.
The proper kind of plants to use in
htrtrt , in g a strawberry bed are those
gro , vn the previo , ls year expressly for
transplanting. In growing plants for
such purpose, extra pains are taken in
training and pruning the runners so
that only the best plants are preserved,
and so few of these that no two shall
stand closer than five or six inches
apart. The late forming sets and run¬
ners are cut off, so that when winter
sets in the bed is composed wholly of
strong, well manured, well rooted
plants. When wanted in the spring.
the entire row _ not the edges of it—
ig taken up> and a choice grade of
p l an ts is thus secured. Better pay an
extra ice for such plants than to
tftke inferior ones as a gift.-American
Agriculturist.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Whitewash is always good for fruit
trees.
Trim trees and vines now, before
*’- ie “ Sft P starts.”
Ii you have some extra plants left
over give them to your neighbors,
In transplanting trees take up
polenty of roots and trim the tops well.
The cherry crop is a profitable one,
and can be turned into ready money.
Tannery ashes when used as a fer¬
tilizer are considered of about half the
value of leached ashes.
Beets are very easily grown in the
greenhouse. A favorite variety for
forcing is Early Bound Dark Bed.
Get the children interested in the
garden. It will be a benefit to them
and to the garden if you let them help.
Let there be a regular distance be
tween your trees when planting, and
allow for the spreading qualities of the
variety planted,
Cabbage leaves, coarse celery stalks,
bruised lettuce and other waste from
° , eu „ m not be , waste „
thrown to the chickens.
Look especially after the small
* rni ^ 8 com ’ n 8' season, and give
J 0151 ’ attention also to the best canning
vegetables. There is profit in both,
With quite a number of plants
mulching is necessary, not only to
hold moisture near the surface, but as
an aid m retaining moisture in the soil,
It is a question for Western farmers
to solve if it is not best to soil stock
and not cover the farm with fences,
The fence causes a great outlay of
money. /
Potash , . valuable . , . for , fruits, , ., and ,
is
sandy and limestone soils nearly al
ways need it. Clay soils sometimes
contain sufficient potash, and often
they do not.
Careless fruit growers are gradually
being weeded out of the business, for
the reason that the only kind of fruit
they grow is poor and there is no
profit in such.
The great value of grafting and bud
ding . that , when , choice , . Iruit ,. ., . ob- .
is a is
Wied il may steadily be eontinued ta
R “ ot its excellence, the same as from
the original tree.
If you have no time to prune the
apple orchard you can at least cut
away sprouts that grow around the
trunk near the ground. As long a?
these remain they rob the fruit anc
top branches.
People are continually having
trouble from the feeding of millet tc
their stock. It is quite uncalled for it
t lie millet were but cut at the proper
stage, when it is just headed, and then
i u SilOUM R hrmtd npver neTer be Le fed lea to T ° excess exce86 ‘
Tliere is one advantage m the poul
trv business; it is not likely to
*
overdone, . for , each , year 4 -
take more kindly well to poultry as food,
It would be if more poaltrv ‘farm and
lv.es e " S iGcrs were ~ eaten in our a
‘
bo “ eS ’
AN hen oees are unusually „ cross it .. is
well to put a tew dry leaves ot
grown tobacco mto the smoker along
j with the other material. Persons ac
pnctninu customed l to to handling handling bees Dees can can readilv rea Lii j
determine when they are in good
humor or otherwise.
, | Enner _ . ann. 100 \ breeding a ■ ducks a v or 20C noe
; , earlv . hatched pullets, i properly kept,
j ‘ a { thg
ant ^ raised . for market <■ -he . latter ,
kept for eggs m fall *’ ' iter, would
*^>on remove the mort y from the
ar -°» says a pou ^tryra' \ y
-
A practical berry grower says that £
quarter-acre garden well arranged, set
to best varieties and properly cared for,
sljpnld yield at least twenty five busheit
of berries. Iu no other way can i
* 7 % p n ducesom,,ch 1 r l T > ”i l
^ • iK.it; i&oor, id a g&iA’. „ U ot Q MUftl
| fruits.
Atlanta City Board of Health.
Royal, the Superior
Baking Powder.
66 Old Capitol Building,
Atlanta, Ga., March i, 1893.
I have purchased samples of the Royal and other
principal baking powders sold in this city in the
open market, and analyzed the same. 1 find the
Royal to contain leavening gas in greater quantity
than 1 have found in any other baking powder 1
have examined. This powder is composed ot
wholesome and unobjectionable ingredients and is
free from adulteration.
JNO. M. McCANDLESS,
Chemist Atlanta Board of Health.
©sam ii In the every Royal. receipt It will calling make for the baking food powder, lighter,
use
I HU sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and
I wholesome.
w “We recommend the Royal Baking Powder
as superior to all others."— United Cooks and
Pastry Cooks Association of the United States.
Cold Missionary on Toast.
First Clergyman—Any news from
Brother Whoopemup since he lauded
on the coast of Africa?
Second Clergyman—Oh, yes, and it
is very important news, too.
“Has he succeeded ia penetrating
into the interior of Africa?”
“He has, most decidedly.”
“Has he converted ac-hief?”
“Not precisely. The chief has con¬
verted him,beyond a doubt.”
“How so?”
‘ ‘Converted him into a square meal—
ate him up alive ! Yes, I guess he must
have succeeded in getting into the in¬
terior of Africa .”—Texas Siftings,
Special Notice.
Don’t fail to read “ad” in another
column of Lowry Hardware Co., At¬
lanta, Ga. They are headquarters for
bicycles and you will find them per¬
fectly reliable.
Don’t eat more than you can chew,
don’t plant more than you can culti¬
vate; don’t profess more than you can
practice.
Ma :
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is Mrs. lady whose F. portrait Covell, head Scotland, 3 this article Bon |
Mary of
Homme Co., S. Dak. She writes to Dr. R.
V. Pierce, Chief Consulting Physician to the
Invalids’ Hotel Surgical * Institute,
and at
Buffalo, N. Y., as follows: “ I was sick two
years with ‘ falling of the womb ’ and leucor
rhoea previous to taking your medicines. I
took six bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- \
scription. and was entirely cured of both in
months ; it is four years this month,
since 1 was entirely well of both those dis
eases and have never had any signs of their ap
pearance since and I am satisfied the ‘ Favor
Re Prescription ’ saved my life for I could
( hardly walk around when I commenced
taking that medicine and 1 think it is a God’s
blessing to me that I took it. best
1 ^as pronounced incurable»by the
doctors here in the West. I gave up all
hopes and made ud my mind that I was to
_ couW not eat'anything at aP In one week,
after beginning the use of the ‘ Favorite Pre
Kription’ my stomach was so much better
that I could eat anything ; I could see that i
waa g a mmg ail oyer, and my husband then
went and got , ae ax bottles ; I took three of
, them and my stomach did not bother me any
I m 2L e -
i We sent to you and got the . People’s Com
mon Sense Medical Adviser, and found
my case described just as I was: we did
what the book told us, in every way : in one
month’s time I could see I was much better
than I had been ; w© still kept on just as tbe
book told ns, and in three months I stopped
taking I medicine, and to-day, I can proudly
say am a well women, yes, am well, strong
j and When healthy. I began to take medicine
your my
' n ck Jj ^the' time. T cmdd hlrdly^do ray
house-work, but now I do that and tend a
bi K garden, help my husband and take in
-«
feeble women generally. o ad especially so to
j Hiose about tcbecogitj'w o th*r«,' Mrs. Dcr»
.
Banquet of Baris Undertakers.
Tho traditional annual banquet of
tho “sour herring,” so called, came off
on All i-aint’s day. It was numerous¬
ly attended by tho fraternity of the
undertaker assistants, and derives its
name from the fact that when the cus¬
tom was first established and these as¬
sistants were only called “porters”
they assembled once a year for a so¬
cial entertainment, the time coincid¬
ing with arrival of tho sour herrings
in the Paris markets. The festival
was succeeded by a ball, at which, ns a
matter of course, the fair partners
were treated to “bier” and offered
floral tributes in the shape of bouquets
and wreaths .—American Register.
__•
A tow boat started from Louisville
for New Orleans recently with a fleet
of forty boats of coal, or nearly
4 . 0,000 tons, The Courier-Journal
claims that this is the largest tow any
boat has over attempted to handle on
any river, The coal would have
loaded a train of cars eleven and one
half miles in length.
A. Guthrie, of
writes : “I never can thank you enough for
what your treatment has done for me ; I am
stronger now than I have been for six years.
IV hen I began your treatment I was not able
to do anything. I could not stand on my feet
long enough to wash my dishes I do all without suf
fering almost death ; now my house
work, washing, cooking, sewing and every¬
thing for my family of eight. Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription is the best medicine to
take before confinement that can be found ;
or at least it proved so with me. I never
suffered so little with any of my children as
I did with my last and she is the healthiest
we have. I recommend your medicines to all
of ray neighbors and especially ‘Favorite
Prescription ’ to all women who are suffering, has
Have induced several to try it, and it
proved good for them.” Yours truly,
Jll&Acu & 4 ~, Jbj/t&iU
itivo* Dr Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a pos
cure for the most complicated and
obgtiEate leucorrhea, unnatural excessive flowing,
painful menstruation, suppres- falling
sions and irregularities, prniapsus, weakness," or
of tbe womb, weak back, “ female
anteversion, retroversion, bearing-down sen
satiocs, chronic congestion, inflammation and
ulceration-of the womb, inflammation, accompanied pain
and teniernesa of the ovaries,
with ‘ “internal heat.”
Pr . Pi erce ’ 8 Favorite carefully Prescription compounded is by a
cr-ientifi'- medicine,
an experienced and skillful physician, and
adapted to woman’s delicate organization. It
jg pe/fectiv pxjrelv vegetable in its composition and
harmless in its effects tnanycondi
tion of the system. For morning sickness or
nausea, due to pregnancy, weak stomach, in
digestion dyspepsia and kindred symptoms,
Woman and Her Dis
* eases,” (1GS pages, illustrated), giving suc- bad
cessfnl means of heme treatment, can be
the Doctor, at his address. $3 fpvcu st
beginning of this
«
WEBSTER'S
INTERN A TIONA T,
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^ Successor of
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translation of foreign quotations. office, etudy, It is and in¬
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The One Great Standard Au thority.
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FOR $15 CASH
to «njr refular subscriW of thii paper . See conditL>u* in wlc
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m $15 CASH
utit regular subwribtr of this pap^r p-r adv-rVseTn-tii*
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or doug fhter r of t u*er of a wind-mill, a? * - ci nir the question,
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ftpolix,
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tute. Sec p.-ipers complete
®«lTllMWATEP.P&A. ttnTl description of ladies our and
'i- li-v s for gen- //
K Ucr-.r n or rend for
V/ L'hOUCLj^p^—gf V lostralcd Catalogue
J *' L ---------- ^trections
to cr
dcr hv ma il. postage free. You can g et the best
bargains of dealers who push our shoes,
I ---
' January *J, ] '2 per cent.
. . • 0
j j’ * * . .10 “
.. e 11 “
: ’ * .
j March .. j 5 l, # . . •. • H V.
j “ 15. • 8
J s TOTAL, Hiper day*. cent.
'Vc^Tc^aid r« onr customers 1 in in 75 vs.
twice ea m n ut), 1/1 i:ify ca 1 tM u*
I withdrawn an y tim-; f'SJ toflUAJcan be iu res tel;
write for Information.
JrltsliElt <3k CO.. io Banker# and New Brokers,
IS aud Broadway. York.
inn HftLlYl HP Anti-Rheumatic rnST~b|jrj??iljQ fik.iul.wPiiiw ullill
» a
) ,,M„,,c,«M..(«eo.o««eo 3 9 es s• e•«
•* turt, aua yrevcuw m.en.n .tis u, lu ik >u<ju, ..
i KeJuieS Heartuuro, Catarra ^* an i vt >ma. P A
i \ 18
f kccoHabir sweetens A
the Breath, Cures the Tot . Endorsed y
: “ by tbe Medical Faculty. Lend lor 1(1, li or 2i ••
' A pR, Yf,y Sll ’ e (i. sl a m pe or To bstal Note. t A
W U ' K ' HAIM li ” w e:*»t 2y SJttl St., N w York.
2S£332Clli25i
Constunpilves and peoples
who have weak lungs or Asth¬
ma, should use Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. It has <t arc «l
thousands. It has not injur¬
ed one. It is not bad to tike.
It Is the best cough sy rup.
Sold everywhere. Sac.
glj]
, A: Ut is .., Foartet a,