Newspaper Page Text
THE FAUH AND GARDES.
Stheeo Improve tta* UnJ.
Sheep effect very m irked improve¬
ment in pastur s. Pastures which have
become so thoroughly run out and Over¬
run by briers and bushes as not to be
worth ft ncing for cattle pasture, by be¬
ing given over to the sheep for a few
years, will be brought into a productive
condition. Any pasture used for cattle
and horses may profitably have as many*'
sheep added to the stock as there are
acres in the pasture, and the pasture will
be benefitted thereby. Sheep eat so
many kinds of plants which cattle and
horses refuse, that the addition of a few
aheep, by keeping down those plants
which other stock refuse, really increases
the product of grasses for other stock.
—[Northeastern Parmer.
Raising Young Turkey*.
The hardest task the farmer’s wife is
called upon to perform is to raise the
young turkeys. It is not difficult to
hatch them, as tho turkey hen is a per¬
sistent si.ter and docs her duty faith¬
fully, while the eggs are nearly always
fertile. A single union of the gobbler
and hen will fertilize all tho eggs the
hen may lay during the season. Like
tho human being, the turkey is very
feeble and tender when young, but
hardy when matured. The most impor¬
tant matter is to never allow them to
get wet. They must not even be allowed
on damp ground, especially at night.
Keep them, with the hen, in a roomy run,
dry, and sheltered from winds for a
week. Then lot them out on clear days
after the dew is off in the morning,
ami get them up early at night. Feed
on ground oats anu milk, cooked to¬
gether as bread, with chopped onion in
it, and give finely chopped meat and
bone meal at least once a day. Feed
often, and vary the food to anything
they will cat after they are a week old,
but always feed meat. Always look out
for lice, as that is often tho cause of
young turkeys dying off. Give chopped
eggs the first two days, in addition to
the other food, but give nothing tho first
thirty-six hours. Do not let the hen
ramble too far, or tiro the young ones.
Watch them closely till they are past
danger.
Beat Way to Applr Poultry Manure.
If every farmer ami every keeper of
fowls, even on a city lot, only knew how
valuable poultry droppings really are
not a handful of them would ever be
allowed to go to waste. A singlo table
spoonful whero needed will mako a
thrifty lull of corn, where, without it,
there might bo only a sickly growth of
puny stalks. Prof. Voelckcr, of tho
R yal Agricultural Sicietv of England,
ndvi-es as the least expense and the best
way of using poullry manure to mix it
wi h dry earth, an ! the like into a com¬
post. M xed with about twicothe quan¬
tity of dry, lurtliy matters of this kind,
it will soon be reduce 1 into a fairly dry
and powdery state, in which it may be
r; tidily sown brondc ist or with tho drill,
and found useful in growing any kind of
garden vegetal les. For root crops, such
as turnips, carrots and mangels, it is ad
v.scd that poultry manure is mixed, after
reducing to a powdery state, with an
equal weight of superphosphate, and the
m.xturc drilled in at the rate of 500
pounds to the acre. In making poultry
manure into compost with earth, Prof.
Voelckcr warns against mixing quicklime
with it, as the effect would be to liberate
the ammonia, the most of which would
escape and be lost. On the other hand,
he recommends as a positive advantage
mixing soot with this compost. In the
nbsencj of soot, the next best thing, in
his opiniou, is to mix in burnt plaster to
which a small quantity of superphos¬
phate is added, tho free acid of’which
will eventually prevent the escape of
ammonia. A mixture of two parts burnt
plaster and one part superphosphate may
be kept in readiness to mix with the
fresh chicken droppings lor tho purpose
of absorbing the excess of moisture and
thus facilitate its being reduced to dry
and friable nature. Three parts of fresh
chicken manure and one part of tho pre¬
ceding mixture of burnt plaster and
superphosphate if kept under cover for a
few days and turned ouce or twice dur
lng tho time, and then pissed through a
screen or scive, will he found to be more
efficacious when applied at the rate of
from COJ to 800 pounds to tho acre.—
[Practical Farmer.
Farm and Garden Notes.
Horses fed oil early cut hay will keep
in good condition ou loss gram than if
fed on late cut hay.
Don’t compel your horses to cat musty
hay. It will produce fatal lung trouble,
and, in any event, heaves.
No oil penetrates wood so well as
crude petroleum, none is so cheap, and
none so effective as a preservative.
Prof. Cook of Lansing, Mich., has
kilted cabbage worms with a mixture of
one pound of bubach with 200 gallons
of water.
One uso for okl tin cans is to cut them
up into stripi two or three inches wide
and tack them over tnouso holes in tho
house or barn.
A Connecticut farmer is credited with
shoounir hogs in tiie forehead with a
sma.lr.fl-, which iie considers ths most
humane method of slaughter.
It has been shown by experience that
a pig digests a larger percentage of
grain, converting it into animal increase,
than a steer, cow or sheep.
Clover hay is one of the best of^foods
for sheep. Sheep that are old and out
of condition will improve surprisingly
on clover hay, and sometimes become
quite fleshy.
It seems to bo admitted that one can
breed for eggs just as one can breed for
milk or butter. An egg from a good
layer will be more likely to produce a
good layer than an egg from a poor
layer.
An excellent mixture of hay for all
classes 'of stock is one-third clover hay
with timothy and redtop, which is much
better than either one alone, as the mix¬
ture is more complete in food elements.
It should be fed with an allowance of
ground grain also.
Some of the large mutton breeds of
sheep, such as Oxfords, ofteu shear from
twelve to twenty pounds of wool, and
this fact, with their ability to attain very
heavy weights, should be a strong in¬
ducement '
to farmers to use rams of mut¬
ton breeds for crossing on the native
ewes.
Several correspondents state that dis¬
ease among swine is checked by a change
of pasture and food. One in Davis
county, la., says: “Hogs are fed on
blue grass until ready for fattening,
when they are corn-fed, which probably
is the reason for their exemption from
disease.
Turkeys are capable of rapid diges¬
tion, and are always apparently hungry.
If allowed to forage they can be kept at
a very small expense, but when kept in
confinement they consume more than
hens. When young and growing they
produce a carcass equivalent to the food
consumed.
In trimming a hedge something else
should be considered as well as the mat
ter of cutting off the extra growth. A
proper shape should be given it. There
is nothing bo attractive or ornamental ns
a shapely, well kept hedge, and it adds |
value to the farm. !
The Ohio agricultural college states as
the results of experiments there in soil¬
ing cattle that half the number of
acres will feed tho same amount of
stock and keep them in better condition
if tho product be cut and placed before
them. Nevertheless soiling is not every¬
where profitable. |
A Western New York farmer who buys j
sheep from the West to fatten in the fall, j
says he last year made a profit wIicd his
neighbors made none, by buying split
and colored beans, which lie fed with !
corn, instead , of &o all ,, corn rntion. lie
says two-fifths beans with corn, make a
sheep thrive and fatten fuster than full
rations of corn. |
rf,i lliero is no necessity for expensive • or
;
elaborately built poultry houses. All the
ornameut that ... can , be applied , will ...
,
amount to nothing unless hens are kept 1
A poultry-house , , that , . :
warm. is low at
tho rear, and is so constructed as to ad- j
mit of as little loss of heat ns possible, I
with plenty of light, will give better re¬
sults than any other.
Save all tho bones. They are valua¬
ble for fertilizers in any form. Even
when placed whole in tho soil the roots !
of plants will be sure to find them. If
, brolcen , in small ii pieces • they ,, will n afford .
more dissolved food to in plants, moistened and if wood finely ashes ground j
or or
sulphuric acid are rendered still more
available for the use of plants.
A Western farmer advises stringing
seed corn by tying the cars together with
husks . place where the grain
in some can
be odor, saturated he with coal smoke. The | |
says, repels squirrels ami
worms from eating the seed. The seed ;
quicker, . . the .. plants . !
comes vigorously up and ripen grow moro j
several days j
earlier than from the seed not so treated, i
Where corn is left out in the stock |
through the winter the greater part of
tho value is lost. Rains and melting
snows soak and drain the stalks of their
nutriment, while inside the stook mice
pursue their ravages without fear of
their numerous enemies. A family of j
mice will easily destroy one-quarter of
the value of the corn in a stook through j
tho winter. This is a pretty heavy tax
to pay for delaying work that costs fully
as much to do in the spring as it would
to do in its proper time in the fall.
One of the arguments in favor of
threshing ° corn is that it also shells it at
the same time. But it docs this very im
perfectly, f .. the .% usually damp ,
as com is
when husked, audit is not possible for
even the best shelters to take off all the
grain. But a worse objection ° than this
lies , , the fact that where is
in corn
thre shed , j and j shelled i i, j well ii as husked , * ,
as
it doe. not keep as well as when it P
putin the crib on tho ear. There is
much dampness in the grain or new corn.
and ... it needs j the circulation , . of . which
air
it gets in the crib when on the cob t<?
dry it out.
An Apt (jue tion.
“Do you know why a girl is called a
belief” asked a Harlem girl of her bash¬
ful lover.
“No; can’t imagine,” was the reply.
“Because it is proper to ring her.”
Invitations will be out next week. -
[Tid-Bits.
— —
Ihe London Lxhibi ion.
•
Th t Journalist saya that the American
Exhibition which it to begin in London
on the 2nd of May next, will be like a
monument in the memory of every visi¬
tor. With reference to its success, there
seems to be no doubt. From the in¬
ception of the undertaking, practical
business men have been at the helm, and
have notwithstanding the difficulties they
ceeds encountered, the progress made ex¬
the most sanguine of early expec¬
tations. Observe what has been ac¬
complished, influence and this too without Gov¬
ernment or aid!
1. Twenty three acres of the most ac¬
cessible space have been secured in the
heart of London
2 Three of its great railways pene¬
trate ride the bring grounds, the and with an hour’s
can to spot from ten to
twelve millions of people.
3. The arrangements for the display
of everything connected with the exhi¬
bition will be complete and convenient,
the experience of other great affairs of
the kind in this country and in Europe,
enabling the managers to make them
perfect.
4. The collection of art treasures,
models of architecture, specimens of ag¬
ricultural implements, electrical and all
other kinds of machinery. Our methods
of farming, household utensils and de¬
corations, our vegitable, mineral, and
annual products—all these and thou¬
sands of other objects will pass in review,
and be not less instructive than remark¬
able. In brief, the growth of the
country will be illustrated in its differ
ent phases from the log cabins of the
pioneers to the palaces of our American
princes. And when Buffalo Bill at the
head of his Indians and cowboys make
his entree before the assembled thou¬
sands, the romance and reality of North
American civilization will be written
do.vn among the marvels of the age.
Who can doubt that each an Exhibition
will be of surpassing interest 1 •
The Merchant and the Printer.
A printer stood at the desk noticed of a busi¬
ness man the other dny, and him
using letter and bill heads bought, of an
eastern house. Said the printer, who
was a customer, “what would you think
of me if 1 were to go cast aud buy your
line of goods for myself and family?”
The mer. bant replied: “I would think
you a fool when I know you can get the
same goods as cheap from me and called aid a
fellow citizen.” When the printer
his attention to the imported letter and
hill heads the merchant coughed and
went behind the counter to wait on a
customer. And tho same merchant only
a give few him days before asked the printer big stock to
a free puff about his
of new goods.—Greenville (Tex.) Her
aid.
Doubtful. —A man in Middleton told
his wife he “loved her better than his
own soul.” The man has not been to
church in five years, and his wife does
not know ll0 ' v to take the compliment,
July, 18P1, wrote Thos. P. Glostor, Ho’joke,
Mass.: "In three da; s cuved an abscess on my
-rm-i it St. Jacobs Oil.” October -9, 18S6, b.
says: "Was entirely cured of he terrible snf
leringbytfc.” lricetiity cents.
Miss Helen Lenoir acts as American bnsi
ness mans; gcress for Mr. Carle, of tire Savoy
tf’Rndiligore” Theater, London. Sho brought over his
company, who are Riving the
first representations in this country of Gil
i„ rt * Sullivan’s latest creation.
A. C. White, Agent, D. & T. R. R., Zenla,
Ohio, writes: Red Star Congh Cure is a m i t
citiclent remedy for brouch tis; th first doss
relieved me." Price twenty-five cents,
With all Mias Kate Field’s experience she
is very nervous before appearing in public,
»»nd conducts herself for an hour beforehand
as whimsically and irrationally as would a
school girl on the occasion of her graduating
essay.
A Bargain In Corner Lot©
Is whet most men desire, but to keep from fill¬
ing a grave in a cemetery iot ere half your
days l)r. P are erce’s numbered, “(iolden alwa>s Medical keep Discovery’’ ft supply by of
you. When the first symptoms of consump
non appear lose no time in invaluable putting youis&if medi
under tne treatn ent of this
cine. It e ires when no hingelse will. Posses*
£§’,T V ^ Tu ^not WyU:Jcnca 6 °eU
l>l'iches, inmplei, eruptions and other humors.
I*y druggistR
There is a machine out for making flnKer
nails almond shaped,
Young deb and middle-aged n on old suffering loss from of
nervous lity, premature age,
Mr. ,, Fish ,—~— and Mr. Pike -: are members of the
California fish commission.
chronic Co,h. and Cold.,
And all diseases of the Throat and Lungs, c»n
he cured by the use of Scott’s Emulsion, as It
conta ns the healing viriuesof Cod Liver Oil
nud Hypophosphitesin i heir fullest form. Isa
beautiful creamy Em’dsion, palatable as milk,
easily digested, and can he taken by the most
delicate. Please read: “1 consider Scott’s
Emulsion the remedy par excellence in Tu¬
berculous and Strumous Affections, to say
nothing of ordinary colds and throat troubles.”
—W. R. S. Connell, M. D., Manchester. O.
Tin y print, the bill of tare at some Florida
iiou-ls with the type-writer.
M ARK T’,VAIN AND PRO F. L0ISETTE
Tho Fa mous Humorist 'Pells How Profea
sor Loisette Taught Him to Im
ory^cK^o'^^imf^.^'is Fromthe xlwY^K^tJrld.
SS£
«o
jnfiqr.-omeut lToiessor’8 methods given by o? nn prominent prov ng the men memory to the
&»'© ft guarantee that these advantages wiu
soon bt come known lar and wide. Professor
1 .oUette is doing a noble work for the metrop
*"u‘tc£n°s Tn° Q r
classes, both professional and business men,
a o pupils deuce, m tne and sci .ocl or are learning by cor
respo they have are before quickly discovering how what
tentive the never maybe understood, One re
memory made. :©a
Luisettsdid notjereate u memory for me; no,
nothin,-of the kind. A'id yet hedtd/or tm ‘ihat
amounted to the same tiling—he proved lo me
that I already had a memory, a thing which I
was not aware of till then. I had before been
able, like most people, cellar to store up and lose
things in th - dark of my memory, but, he
showed me how to /(pht up the cellar. Itisthedlf
ference, where to change the flcrnre, bet and ween Kcwitw having
money j on can’t < o’.lect it, it
in your pocket. The infonnatioi cost me but
litue, yet I value it at a prodigious figure.”
No lady should live in perpetual fear, and
snffer from the more serious troubles that so
often appear, when Dr. Kilmer’s Complete
Female Uembl. is c aln to prevent and onro
Tumor and Cancer there.
Remedy Best, easiest for Catarrh. to ns* By and druggist*. cheapest. 60c. Piso’s
The Stomarh Dlat.iis Acid*. ■
J.hr«e, if existent in* natural quantity, »nd j
:
sustenance, ie the producer of flatulence *nd :
heart bum, which are the moat harraasing I
sxsssssfe&TCsns
tive IS it than carbonate of soda, magnesia or
other alkttline salts. These invariably weaken
the stomach ssssgssgss&ss without producing permanent
ss the allowed by
sion of full measure of rigor
nature. Therefore, invigorate and regulate the
system, and by so doing protect it from ma
laria, rheumatism and other Herron* maladies,
Judge Blodgett decides that calling a man a
crank It not libelous.
“Work, Work. Work!”
in How many women there are working to-day noth¬
various branches of industry—to say
ing of the thousands SSTSMSi of patient housewives whfcl
wh^are martyrs*"?) to
the weaker sex is liable. Their tasks ar* ren¬
dered doubly hard and irksome and their lives :
shortened, keep yet To hard such necessity Dr. Pierce's compels •‘Favorite them
to on.
Prescription” offers a sure means of relief.
Fur all female weaknesses it is a certain cure.
All druggists. !
_
“Sitting on ice’* is a theatrioal phrase for ;
a house that does notappiand.
‘ Gold Mines
Aft-veiw uncertain property; do for everypayin* But
min© a hundred exist tnat not oat. M a» ii ;
ES ft? le p P aKrs how have
th#r new business, and trn some Yon
made over $t0 in a sing’* day at it- can
live at home and earn from $5 to $25 and up- j
wards per day wherever you are located. :
Both sexes; all ages. Capital not address, required; and j
vou a re started free. Fend your ;
all will be proved to yon.
Farmer*,
Send 10 cents to the Prickly Asn Bitters »
Co., St. Louis, Mo., and get a copy of “The I
Horse Trainer.” A complete system, teach¬
ing how to break and train horaee in a mild
and gentle way, requiring no elaborate appar¬
atus, nothing more than can be found in any !
stable in the country—a rope and a strap.
Every one handling horses should have a
eopy.
_
The Public are Cannoned
Against the many worthless Imitationsof Ben¬
son’s Capcine Plasters offered by UnscrUpu'otls
druggists. The word “ Capcine ” is our exclus¬
ive trade-mark, and any one selling a for plaster Ben¬
with a similar name ia a fraud. Ask
son’s, and examine carefully to make sure it
Is genuine. Seabury & Johnson, New York. Pharmaceu¬
tical Chemists, proprietors.
He Thank* HI* Paper.
Mr. Editor: I wa* induced by reading your I
good paper to try Dr. Harter’s Iron Tonic tot 1
debility, bottle- liver disorder aud scrofula, and thanks, three
have cured me. Acoept my
Jos. C. Boggs.— Ex.
Daughters. Wive* and Mother*.
Bend for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free,
securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Utica, N.Y
Spring Medicine
fa a necessity with nearly every on©. This Is th©
best time of year In which to purify th© blood, to
restore the lost appetite, and to bnlld up the entire
system, as the body Is now peculiarly susceptible to
benefit from medicine. The peculiar medicinal
merit of and the wonderful cures by
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Have made it the most popular medicine to take la
the spring. It cures scrofula, salt rheum and all
humors, biliousness, dyspepsia, headache, kidney
and liver complaints, catarrh, and all affections
caused or promoted by low state of the system or
impure blood. Don*t put it off, but take Hood’s Sar¬
saparilla now. It will do you good.
Builds Up the System
”1 gladly attest tho Decullar building-up power of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. For some time I have been un.
able to attend to business, but finally at the request
of a friend I used part of a bottle of Hood's Sarsa¬
parilla, which gave tone and strength to my system
and mado me feel young os when a boy.”— Gran¬
ville T. Woods, 64 and 66 Lodge Street, Cincinnati,
Ohio.
N. B.— If you have made up your mind to get
Hood’s Sarsaparilla do not take any other.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared
by C. L HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Hass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
A Great Medical Work for Young
and Middle-Aged Men.
r *emiacfi
life
m
KNOW THYSELF.
P Boiwom'MaitsT ’cal INSTIT? 1 ^WBlfil. T e” $» "‘ARKEIhM.a!; J 4 t $£uAuehtit m
Consulting Physician. More than one million • oplea
■old. It treat* upon Nervous and Physical Impaired Debility.
Premature Decline, Exhausted Vitality, and
Vigor, aud Impurities of the Blood, the untold
miseries consequent thereon. Contains Warranted 900 pages,
substantial popular emboss medical d binding, full published gilt. the
the best treatise In
English language. Price plain only $1 by mall, postpaid,
and concealed in a wrapper. Illustrative
sample free If you send now. Address as above.
Name this paper. *
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 The best SHOE. 83 Shoe in the P. i GENTLEMEN. FOE
perfect world. fit Best iCongress, material,stylish, Button C*, £
or Lace ;all styles $6 toe.Enuals /C/O Ay
any So or Shoe. Coats ——
nothing to examine them MrMiA K S -
at information vour dealer’s. free I semi *^/N* W- M 1 *8' ^
how to obtain these cVav Ay
celebrated $3 Shoes doesy^ / %
1 f your dealer ^
no
them. kc EIMJA
ik-j
W. L. SEWED.'
DOUGLAS’ 82.50
Shoe equals $3 Shoes advertised by other
firms. Boys all wear W. L. Douglas’ 82 Shoe. Tie
ware of fraud. None genuine unleu name and price
are stamped W. L. on bottom DOUGLAS. of each Shoe. Brockton. Mat*.
<rj AT jfo tired Ladles looks t and Those feelings dull
* W r speak volumes I This
Remedy oorrects all con
I dltions, and vitality restores and brings; vigor |
-
r .er back youthful bloom
— VV e and beauty. DrugaMeA
N FaA x> H Letters of Health lnauliy (Sent answered. Free). |
'ly V # Guide to
One Agent (Merchant only) wanted in every town for
v 51 II
Your cigar "TansH’s^unch^on cases itre^just the tnLig, an end^'th pennjt me
•h® ^ U
1st of
eac h month. They are the best goods for the money
on this coast G. B. Corwin ft Co., San Franelsco, Cat
A ddress R. W. TAN8ILL dc CO.* Chicago,
EASY SHHSUfiUmK TERMS! MAPS AND CIRCULARS FRBB.
T HOS. E-SKX, «ni ComT, Little Rock, Ark.
I TT I IK KS’IMPROVED ROOT BEER PACK
trkllng AGES, Mac. Make* 5 gallons of a Uellelou*.
purifies H the temperance blood. Its beverage, strength ens end
(ommend it to all. Sold purity everywhere. and deilcaev TRY of flavor IT.
Porsie
tmisasssssssm
nDIIIU^m^u.-.d. UriUM RumaneRemedyCo„L TrestmentsentontrliL aFayette,tad.
The Salted Truth Revealed.
s’KEgSM*? “Many a dealer who places a $100 ad
vertisement in hia village papef be-1
«> hi® double what he pays for it. Ad- i I
vertiaing would astonish rates of the business city newspaper ]
each men. One
“g advertiser -y $28,000 g; k; per annum. sS.« The hew
York Herald receives for its lowest price
$36,568, f and jf for its highest price $62,'
8 g 0 he ew York Tribune for its
lowest $20,954, and for the stated, highest $84,-
648, and these papers, it is their never
lack for advertisements to fill col¬
umns, and still there are lots of people
who wonder why a country newspaper :
cannot be furnished to subscribers as low
as the great dailies are sold for,
George Growing Great.
“I saw an article in the paper yester
day,” remarked Mrs. Gabble to Mrs.
Vain, her next-door neighbor, “stating
that nearly all great men were bald. ”
“Yesj it is a shamej too. Now, my
poor dear George’s hair is coming out so
fast, I scarcely think he will have any left
soon.” scored Mrs. Vain.
1
B ©(CapcinE)© 3
POM sm
nifbwt Awiria »f M«Ula la larop* ui A«eri«u
The neatest, quickest, safest ini most powerful
remedy known for Rheumatism, Pleurisy, Neuralgia.
and Lumbago, all aches Backache. Weakness, cold k the chest
cians and Druggists and pains. of the Endorsed highest by 5,000 Benson’s Physi¬
Plasters promptly relieve and repute. other
plasters and cure where
absolutely greasy useless? salves, 8 liniments limitations and lotions,
o Beware of under
apslcum, tterly worthless * uap-*
and WKB Intended to deceit?, All Ask roe •A BESSOft’S AMD
*' SEA§URY NO OTHERS. *j'OH.VS()X (1*ll*srlst9. ,<<tr,
roorleter«.New Torfc
o^.e.
The Great Nursery of
PERCHERON H0RSES<
200 Imported Brood Mares
. Of Choicest Famiiios.
LARGE NUMBERS,
Alt Ages, both Boxes,
IN STOCK.
-siiss fi
a — — ::.: :
Jj 1
■-ia
300 to 400 IMPOHTI5D ANNUALLY
from France, all recorded with extended pedigrees in the
Percheron Stud Books. The Pc re heron is the only draft
breed ot France possessing a stud book that has the
rapport and endorsement of the French f4overnment.
fcoaw. Jend for 120-page Catalogue, illustrations by Komi
M. W. DUNHAM,
Wayne, DuPase Co., Illinois.
JONES
Iron L«v«ra, Su*l Bctrlngi, At km
Tat* *•»■ an4 Beam Box nt
^ Itm-t 800 .
Seal*. For fre# pn*t lial
■fe,’ V mention JONIS tbt* 8F paper BlNQHAMTINa and addrtM i |
1 BINGHAMTON. N Y- j
.
DROPSY ■^TREATED FREE. ■
DR. H. H. GRICKN <5c SONS,
Specialists for Thirteen Year* Pa» t ;
Hat* treated Dropsy and its complications witn tns
most wonderful snccssa; n»« vegetable of Dropsy in
tirely harmless. Remove all symptoms
sight Onre tot p&tien wen nts pronounced hopeless by the best of
Pl Kom*the first do,o ths symptoms rapidly
end in ten days »t least two-thirds of *11 symptoms era
pone, the strength increased and appetite made gooa.
We are constant jr curing cases of long standing, cases
that have been tapped a number of times, ana the pa¬
tient declared unable to live a v»»ek. Give full history
of swollen csss. and Name where, sex. bowels Hour long costive, afflicted, have ] ‘»>gs 10VT . burst- /
are pamphlet,
ed and dripped water? Send for free coa
raining testimonials, questions, furnished etc. free by mail.
Ten If days’ order treatment trial send lOcta in stamps to pay postage*
you Positively Cured.
Epilepsy (Fits) HI. Be.,
H. H. GREEN & SONS*
250)4 Marietta Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Don’t Buy Until you
lift £ .find out the new
lf|J|pj| i m prove
ment8
Save the
middleman’s ™
PROFITS. maSD FIR CATALOGUES
I J. ' P. Stevens &6ro
q7 Whitehall Atlanta, Ga-
1 Street,
n A6ENTSJ*!™a«ff _ “Marvelous WondersthoWhole World”
Being sn Aooount of Thrilling Adventures, Famous
Bights, Celebrated Voyages and Wonderful Discover¬
ies in all parts of the globe. The latest and by far the
best and ana most m oomplete book of wonders ever published.
Agents who have sold similar books are doubli their
sales with this. No experience ____________________ or capital needed. 'Splen¬
did terms and ohoice ot territory to those who will work.
Addr’a Hudgins A Talty, 26 6. Broad St., Atlanta,Ga.
BUSINESS
Education a specialty at AIOORK’S B U8INE8S
schools UNIVERSITY, in the Oountnr. Atlanta* Send for Ga. Circulars. One of tbe beat
Can get the rnoet Practical Business Eda
* tor cScSara A Speon nen of Penmanship .
TAPEWORM* Illustrated Address Book
sent FREE.
i A. M. BOOK, P. O.
466, Atlanta, Ga.
I ■ HU ADY I AGENTS sense Bustle WANTED and Combination to sell oar Skirt Oommon- Bustle
band Supporter. Send$1.00for samples and agency.
Address , with stamp, H. A. French ft Co., Atlanta, Ga,
SI5s2Sai5SkSS55SSSS
PATENTS 8TSJK2;. SSL 'TtiV-
8 uAii, Patent lawyer. Washington. D. C.
I p isn 1 Waterproolcoat Enrlaie.
JJWjjgairryB a gum or rubber coat Th; j^ln FISH the BRAND hardest SLICKS* Worm
l oth-r.’p t’H ,% f i <ii bwand 7 *, send foi lewrlptiverttaloga»to a! jItO’S’ErHo f per doe:
IWWiiil '
‘
ky enyfl umg—t of
Dm Liver, Kidneys, Stomach sad Bawds.
Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Conittpatfaa,
Batons Complaints and Halariaofall kinds
yield readily to the influence of
msm
It is (SmsoI to tho taste, tones tp the
system, restore* and preserves health.
It is purely V e geta bl e, and cannot foil to
prove beneficial, both to old and young.
■ ■ Blood Purifier it Is superior to all
other*. Sold everywhere at fLSO a bottle.
V f—* PISO’S CURES WHERE CURE ALL ELSE FAILS. FOR »
in Beat Cough in time. Syrup. Sold b Tastes druggists. good. Use GTS
I CM M<aSli?lsjhifci5Mita»igaH y t
Haute SWILL*, N. J., t
October 15, 1886.
E. T. Hazeltine,
Sir Warren, Pa.
Dear :
I was taken with a very
severe and tried cold last Spring,
every cure we
had in the store, and could
get no had help. village doctor
I our
prescribe getting for me, but kept
worse. I saw an¬
other physician from Port
Jervis, N. Y., and he told
me he used Piso’s Cure
for Consumption in his
practice.
before I bought had a bottle, aud
I taken all of
it there was a change for
the better. Then I got my
employer the to order a quan¬ and
tity of medicine
keep it in stock. I took
one more bpttle, and my
| Cough Respectfully, was cured.
Frank McKeebt.
25‘CTS’.
A
THE OHM TRUE
’IRON'
< TONIC
R 'iouTH. Djswpsm.Want
' OSlof
solutel? cured: Bouefl, mue
. k
0l “orS. d
usayISS Hinent—ffet'tli* 1 OBiatsIn srFHest/
not expe
1 mailed on rece’pt of two cents |n postages J
the DR.HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY-.
•t. Louie. Mo
Ask your retailer for tho James Heims' 83 Shoe.
CiLutioti ! Sonic dealers recommend inferior
goods In order to make a larger profit. This is tne
oriiri n n i $3 Shoe. Beware of imitations which ac¬
knowledge their own inferiority original. by attempting to
build upon the reputation of the Stamp,
None Genuine unless bearing this
JAMES MEANS’
,Tor Ocatlsmea, S3 SHOE.
Made in Button, Congress and
Sr VLace. Best Calf Onex
\ sa ceiled In Durability , Comfort &
A*# Appearance. ApOfoWjlcard briiig’jvuin
tr m sent iou.s will this
formation shoe howto gef
in any Stattf or
Territory.
J.Means&Co
41 Lincoln St,
Boston,Mass.
a-.'.j £sh§1
of Our Shoes celebrated of this grade factory than produces other a larger factory quantity In tho
world. Thousands who any them will tell the
wear NS’ you
reason if you ask them. JAMES ME A
SHOE for Boys is unapproached In Durability.
S H OW CASES. WALL CASES.
DESKS, OFFICE FURNITURE AND FIXTURES.
Auk for Illustrated Pamphlet.
TERRY SHOW CASE CO., yashvllle. Tem>
T.FSEITZINCER
S3 W. Ml tab oil St., nsab Broad. ATLANTA, OA,
Manufacturer Gutta-Percha Roller Composition.
Rollers Boiler* cast every day. Printers and Publishers will
find find it it to to their advantage to send their orders direct
to to me. m*. Send Send for far Circulars Circular* end a Price-List.
MEXICAN WAR PENSIONS.
del Apply ph tc Pa. F. REGISTER, 21 Att’y. SSt 8. Fifth St , PMa
i a, years experience. Copied of la w free*
OPIUM
Pensions K5J3S!?
J| bSlbJm” wVse r ,SifcbtepSlf ■
CATARRH
Also good for Cold in Ibe Heed.
Headacnc, Hay Fever, Ac. 60 cents.
M
CURES WHERE AIL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cottgfot Syrup. Taste© good, . Uso
in timrt. Sold by druttttisfe.
CONSUMPTION
1.254213: