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AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
\
i Cleaning Pig Stys.
In an admonitory article the Stockman
declares there is no excuse or decency in
having a filthy pig sty—that it should
and can be as clean and neat as the
abode of any other farm animal, and
when found otherwise there must be
something wrong with the fanner. The
editor says that he and has seen a that pig sty so
scrupulously neat clean a per¬
son could go into it and he down, with¬
out injury to his clothes or discomfort,
and others that were an abomination to
olfactories when several rods away, let
alone is coming near enough to seethe filth.
This certainly poor policy—poor for
the hog cater.
The Pear to Plant.
The pear is perhaps the most useful of
all fruits to the one who has but a small
garden, as well as a valuable one to him
who has his acres of trees. It takes but
little room, bears early, and in succession
from July until November, and it is a
fruit that most persons like. While
t are sorts which ripen in July, but
fe# persons plant them, as raspberries
ana blackberries are in season then, and
varieties to be ripe to eat in early August
are considered eurly enough. There are
sorts better peculiar [them to than certain localities, doing
in any others, and but
little known elsewhere. The Jones, for
instance, so justly valued in West Phila¬
delphia it, and hero by those who have
grown is unknown iu some parts of
New York, an order recently sent to a
firm in that State bringing back the re¬
ply that it was the first inquiry they had
ever received for the pear. A Philadel¬
phian, well acquainted with the subject,
says if the popularity of kinds can be
about judged of follows, by what are planted it runs
as for they are bought, in
about the order named: Bartlett, Seckel,
Sheldon, Howell,Clapps, Anjou, Flemish,
Boussock, Lucrative, Lawrence, Kieffer
and Superfine. After these there is not
much choice, sorts being ordered to come
in between others without regard to what
they are. — Germantown Independent.
Profits in Prepared Food.
reducing Cutting the fodder has the effect of
the muscular work of the cow.
Every movement of the cow’s muscles,
every motion of the lungs as the animal
breathes, consumes some of the muscu¬
lar tissue and requires some food to re¬
pair also the carried waste. Every at digestive cost function of sub¬
is on, some
stance required. for the repair of which food is
The proper preparation of the
food, then, is a saving of labor for tho
cow, and a saving of food for the owner.
Thus, the grain food should be ground
as mixed finely as possible, and after being
with the cut and moistened fod¬
der, is eaten with less exertion, and is
digested of with the greatest case. More
it, too, is digested, because of (he fine
condition of it, by which it is more com¬
pletely subjected to the action of the
solvent fluids of the mouth (tho saliva),
stomach, and intestines. As the fat and
oil of the food exists in exceedingly fine
particles distributed in the cellular tis¬
sue, the thorough grinding and the pe r*
feet mastication of it tend to its most
economical disposition in the body of the
animal.
The results of feeding vary with cir¬
cumstances. The character and quality
of the herbage vary, and necessarily, as
grass is the basis of a cow's feed, any va¬
riation in this will affect the result of
the grain feeding and make some modi¬
fication necessary. To observe the ef¬
fect of faeding, some tests will be found
useful. A dairyman should be very in¬
quisitive and observant, for his profit
depends upon it. He should count,
measure quantity or of weigh everything; and the
food given, its cost and its
results, should all be carefully noted.—
.1 merican Agriculturist.
Farm and Garden Notes.
Feed raw meat to sickly and weak
fowls.
Care should be exercised in choosing
dairy salt.
Milk for young pigs and calves should
be fed warm.
Professor Storer thinks that a ration of
thirty will pounds of pumpkins per cow daily
increase the flow and improve the
quality of the milk. More than this
quantity should not bo given. He adds
that pumpkins are very cheap food,
as a couple of tons can be grown to the
acre with the corn crop. The seeds of
the pumpkins ought to be removed be¬
fore feeding.
Contrary to the natural impression, the
very hard stone pavements in cities is not
so hard on horses’ feet as the smoother
surface of equally hard asphalt. In the
latter the horses’ shoes strike squarely
upon ing the break unyielding the force surface, with noth¬
to of the blow. On
rouble stones every few steps the small
uneven surface hits the frog of -the foot,
slightly ing expanding it and thus diminish¬
the tendency to contracted hoof.
It is printed that a favorite method
among bage Boston gardeners them of storing cab¬
is to pack away in a broad,
shallow pit, cover with straw or hay, and
then with dirt, and then with seaweed.
The object in alt these different ways is
to so cover them as to keep them warm
enough ing not to freeze much a little freez¬
does no barm--and keep them cool
enough, not to beat and decay.
with Ensilage seems to be growing in favor
dairymen. Mr. T. I). Curtis, good
erly authority, says nourishing, that good silage, prop¬
fed, is reliable, and pro¬
duces good results. The milk from it is
sweet and rich, and it improves the
churning does injure, quality of the crtftim, while it
not if it does not actually
improve, the quality of the milk. It
may also be justly claimed to increase
'the production of both milk and butter.
There is certainly strong testimony in
favor of silage for dairy cows.
Mr. A. S. Fuller, in a discussion on
fertilizers at the American Homological
Society, laid from stress feldspar on the important fact
that potash is compara¬
tively worthless, in fact, he don’t be¬
lieve it is worth anything as a fertilizer,
while that from wood ashes, having been
once through the plants, is valuable.
Analysis shows that both are potash, but
plants know better than to accept them
alike, ll is a point worth the attention of
all cultivators who employ artificial
DlCR-^UrCS.
The old-fashioned bars seen on farms
as the openings to fields and lots are now
seldom used. They have given away to
order -
g;ite3, which if kept in . , are every
way superior. The gate may cost a lit
tle more to make at first, though it uses
little more lumber than a pair of bars.
The «... exp..,, i. hinges, and i.
far more than repaid by saving of time,
Many of the old-fashioned farm methods
were fearfully wasteful of the farmer's
time time ana and strength strength it It scemea reemed to to he he
thought it made little difference how
hard or how long he worked, provided
a money saving was thereby effected.
t>I isioning _„ :„„ ip millets.
Moorish traders in camels seem to be
no more honest than traders in horses
!>»» «•" of beleg. Tl.o
author of ‘‘Among the Arabs ’ describes
one of their tricks, which, according to
his account, ’Theater, only an wi expert is likely ,1,'e
t„ detect told to
author of ar renchmau who had traveled
for some time in .Algiers.
On one occasion, while in an Arab
village, he declared his intention of buy
mg a young camel. No sooner had his
desire become known than at least
twenty camels were brought for his in
spection. They were all fine-looking
animals, _ excellent condition,
m appar
ently. Frenchman In fact, perceive the only fault our
could was that they
were too fat. After a proper ining amount of
deliberation and barga he selected
the one winch appeared to be the leanest
and paid the price agreed upon.
The next morning when he went to
look at his fat camel he found a living
skeleton, on whose almost lifeless bones
the flesh liung in large folds, and whose
best development was about the joints,
Th. MM hr «M. the «M.«
suddenly fattened for the market is
thus described:
An incision about an inch in length is
made in each ear between tlio skin and
the .. flesh. „ , , Into , this ... a small _ ,, tube , is •
htted anil secured by a silk cord. 1 nere
it remains, hidden from the observation
of all but the initiated, and ready for use
at any moment. When a merchant who
is trick not acquainted with the blowing dealer up
conies to buy a camel, the
takes two tubes, each a yard long, and,
inserting nserung one one end enu of o each cacn in m tne the small sn ail
tubes, just described, through the other
ends two Arabs blow with all their
might until the animal lias attained the
requisite i. degree a of d plumpness. 1 The in
dating tubes , , arc then withdrawn, ... i and ,
the air of is prevented smeared from escaping with pitch, by
means a cork
The poor ‘ camel now becomes, apparently,
quite • lively .. , and , lnsky, . , trying . • , to thiow
itself on the ground, or to press against
tlie wall or a tree, or whatever object
may be at hand, so as to get rid of the
wind. It. is generally too well watched
by the rascally Arab to succeed iu
accomplishing its purpose. elude Sometimes, his vigil¬
however, it manages to
ance ; and then, if the cork is not very
securely fastened, tlio wind escapes with
a whistle like that of a steam engine,and
the fine-looking beast suddenly collapses
into the miserable object it really is.—
Youth's L'mil/ an ion.
Milking a .Million in Ten Years.
Speaking about brain . troubles, Dr.
William A. Hammond said to a New
1 ork Mail and Krprees reporter: “I
have in mind the case of a man who,
after several years of hard work in a
small country town, had accumulated
about $100,000. With this amount of
money lie might have been content, for
it made him tho richest man in his town,
but, actuated by an ambition to make a
greater mutate figure in wealth, the world he determined and to aeon
more to
move to Now York and make $'1,000,000
in ten years, intending then to retire
from business and live a life of elegant
leisure. lie spent his days in Wall
street, his evenings in tho corridors of
hotels, carrying on there the work of the
day, and going home near midnight to
got only an hour or two of unrefresliing
sleep. At the end of ten years lie had
accumulated his million of dollars, not,
however, with ease and comfort to him
seif, but suffering from insomnia, pains
in his back, neuralgia in various parts of
his vatod body, form, dyspepsia in evidences its most aggra- tho
and other that
process of disintegration was recuperation. going on
at a greater rate than was
lie made his arrangements for retiring
from business, and gave a dinner party to
celebrate the event. That night he ex
hibiteil most unequivocal symptoms of
mental derangement. pronounced Insanity in one of
its most types was (level
oped, and before the week was out he
was an inmate of a lunatic asylum. He
had made his million dollars for other
people, for all lie got out of it was his
board and clothes in an asylum for the
insane. Cases similar to this are of con
stant occurrence, but they seem to pass
almost unheeded bv those who ought to
take warning from them.
__________
The Pope’s Annual Revenue.
Pope _ Leo MIL V . TT1 derives , . , his . revenue
from three sources. One is the interest
of the vast sum left by I ius IA. in the
Pontifical treasury, invested chiefly in
English consuls. This interest amounts
to about $(125,000 a year. Another source
is the Peter’s ponce contribution, which
averages about $415,000 annually. The
third source is the Apostolic Chancery,
receipts of which include sums received
for titles and decorations, privileges of
the altar, private chapels, etc., and ag
gregate about $520, COO a year. The cn
tire annual income of Leo XIII., there
fore, is about $1,500,000.
-^-----
Said to Cure Dandruff.
Many The people are troubled with dan
druff. following preparation is said
to be very reliable as a curative agent
for this trouble: Add one ounce of flower
of sulphur to one quart of water. Stir
frequently for a short time for several
hours; then pour and off the pure with liquid and
saturate the hair scalp it every
morning. In a few weeks every trace of
dandruff is reported become soft to (lisajip and glassy.— oar, and
the hair to
lie raid of Health.
„„ l he Pitcairn • .slanders, • , , the descend- , ,
ants happily .of the nnd British mutineers, A still ship- live
are prosperous.
wrecked man from the United States
has married one of the natives. The
i slanders still keep the old Bounty
names, Young, Mcf'.voy and Christian,
and want little except nails and fish¬
hooks.
i “EDITOR’S BACK STAIRS.”
W||a Tfitavaarlnn w/a —---- _ .■ —_ v — vi w w
G. Holland,
The columns of the newspapers appear to
“> flooded with proprietary medicine advep
tisemenw. As we cast oureveoverthem.it
j brings by to mind an article that wdh published 1
the late Dr. Holland in Scribner * Month
<:</• He says: “Nevertheless, it is a fact that
! many of the best proprietary medicines of the
membered, * SST
were practice. at fttst discovered or used in
actual medical When, however,
1 “S' shrewd person, knowing their virtue,and
' l0reseein g ““lr popularity, secures and ad
vortjges thorn, then in the opinion of the
bigoted, Is this all virtue absurd! went out of them.”
j i Th not >s great man appreciated the real merits
of those popular that remedies, derided them and the because absurdity public of
attention was called to the article and the
! evidence of should their cures, If the most noted
physician *,ffi announce that he had made
^. size, though r he I SKS3E^'£ra.1£ have practised medicine
may in medical
and been a leader all counsels,
; notwithstanding all this if he should presume
, quack and a humbug, although lie may have
! spent his entire life and his available funds
j in ^XrTfounSn perfecting his investigations,
one's arm, and is
outside cured by of some the dear it soul of bo a grandmother,
code, will pronounced by
the medical profession an ulcer of little im
[“g slee^to treatment, nigto viz., toa^onth! plasters, witMhe washes,
dosing with morphine, arsenic and other vile
substances, given to pevent blood poisoning
or deaden pain, and yet the ulcer becomes
the “isms” of the, medical code, this is much
j and moue adds gratifying dignity to the to medical that distinguished profession,
! more
°l e r *^L^ aral by the de ^ °‘ d grand ‘
h
This appears like a severe arraignment,
yet we believe that it expresses the true
standing gSS’^SWSfiSSSXSSg of the medical (profession in regard
of the day is the popularity of certain reme
dies, especially Warner’s safe euro, which we
find for sale everywhere. ready The physician concede of
the highest standing is to its
and sustain the theories the proprie
tors i, ave made—that is, that it benefits in
mo st of the ailments of the human system
because it assists in putting the kidneys throwing in
P£>Por condition, thereby aiding in
’^KtyIn°d willing their patient die scientific
are to see
ally, and according to the code, rather than
have him cured by this great remedy. of the
Yet wo notice that the popularity
msdicino contimies to grow year b 7 year.
The discoverer comes boldly before the peo
pie door with to door its merits, in opinion and proclaims much them moro from lion
our
orably than the physician who, perchance,
may secure a patient from some-catastrophe,
and is permitted to set a bone of an arm ora
finger, which he does with liberty great dignity, climb yet the
very soon after takes the to
editors back stairs at 2 o'clock in the morning
to have it announced m the morning paper
that “Dr. So-and-so was in attendance,” thus
securing for his benefit a beautiful and free
advertisement,
We shall leave it to our readers to say which
is the wiser anil nioro honorable. /
JOHN JACOB ASTOR IY.
The Heir to Millions Who is About
to Make His Debut in Society.
[New York Letter to Chicago Tribune.]
A new John Jacob Astor is about to
make his debut. He is to appear at an
Astor ball before the end of the year.
Ho is the fourth John Jacob Astor. To
all appearances his scholastic life was
conducted becomingly, for he has his
name inscribed on an honored Harvard
Rheepskin to testify to the right to place
tho letters A. B. after his Iimne. He is
not the son of John Jacob ARtor the
third, but a son of that Jolm Jacob’s
brother William. In spite of his famous
name and of tho incredible millions that
will bo all his own when his father
shuffles off, the new John Jacob is not
regarded ns the hope of tho family,
His people got through anticipating
great things for him when he attained was a
young boy, and now is that that he lias loftiest
to man’s estate it said the
ambition that they have regarding him
is that he will continue to do nothing
except strength some of day to marry a girl whose effect
character may prove
ive in re enlivening tho family 'blood,
Young John Jacob is a tall, loose-jointed
fellow, who would pass for a typical
raw-boned rustic if it were nqt for his
clothes. His forehead is of the retreat
ing kind; his nose is his one redeeming
feature, in that it is very large, but its
shape is not suggestive of tho strength
that is said to go with big nasal organs,
It the is rather snubby wofully and pronounoed, His whole at
same time ugly.
bearing is negative, and it is safe to say
that, although lie may never do any
thing to honor the name of Astor, lie
will never do anything to violently dis¬
credit it. He has had every advantage
ln opportunities for education that
^ealth hlis could bee made buy, and royal his road possible, to learn
”'R n as as
He was early , sent to St. Pauls, a well
Known academy at Concord, N. H.,
? her ® «* guilty is made of preparing
bo y® for college. He avrived at Har
a Httle more than four years ago.
Those who have been through Harvard
declare that it would take a very, very
dull man to fail of obtaining the bacoa
laureate decree. Honors, or even hon
0 rable mention, require special ability
an( q bard work, but the sheepskin needs
onlv jq, faithfulness to tho general orders
0 f e institution to capture. Never
theless, young John Jacob has the au¬
tliority for claiming all the glory there
nlay y )0 j n a Harvard diploma, and, bet
tcr yet) ] 10 ] lns rpa i estate in fact and in
prospect, for he is an onlv son and heir
prospective He will to half this the winter’s entire Astor es- of
tate. bo centre
interest in society, and all the gills will
delight to hover round his presence,
He has no conversational powers, but
does not commit himself to rank absur
dities, for he oan say in a conventional
way that it is a pieasant evening, or
nasty weather, you know, and he can
swing his feet through the mazes of a
waltz or german m a moderately elegant
sfyh’. But, better than brilliant rheto
; nc an 1 dancing, he has money, barrels
and barrels of rt, and lots more where
that came from The glitter of of his tailor gold
» unalloyed and the taste his is
recognized as unexceptionable,
: Although the appointment of
master General Vilas to the
.
; of the interior is considered a promotion,
it causes Mrs. Vilas to move down
, ace jn the line of Cabinet ladies at
House receptions, 1
Exloheh Ghkf.lt, the head of the
irilTe^he' 5 1
by balloon.
She Got the Cloak.
When Mr. Montgomery cam* home
the other night he found Mr. Mont¬
gomery crying. Great, salty tears chased
one another down her fair cheeks.
“What is the matter, dear?” he ask¬
ed, as he placed a new olove in his
month and prepared to kiss her.
“Oh, everything is the matter, ” she
sobbed as she placed one arm about his
neck and laid her head down on his
shoulder. ‘ ‘I want to die.”
“Oh, no you don’t, dear, ” he remon
strated. “Tell me what is the matter.
Now do."
“Fergy,” much she questioned, did when “do you
love me as as you you
married me?”
“Why, o! course I do. What put
such a question in your head ?”
“Are you sure that you do ?”
“What do you mean, Ellen f Ton
know that I love you as much as I ever
did, and more silly, if anything.” Fergy. How I
“Don’t be am
to know it ? The minister was heTe to
day and said that a loving husband was
continually showing his devotion for his
wife. He always bought her everything she
that she wanted and did everything
asked him to do.”
“Yes. What are you driving at I”
“It pained me when I heard that, and
I have been crying all day.”
“Have I been unkind to you ?”
“No o-o, but then the minister went
from here over to that hateful Mrs.
Brown’s, and I know that he said the
same thing to her.”
“Well, what of it?”
“Nothing; only Mrs. Brown is going
to have a new sealskin cloak, ana she
will go around and tell what the minis¬
ter said. Then sho will tell how muoh
her husband loves her and hint thatyou
and I are going to separate." ordered
Mr. Montgomery the new
cloak the next morning, and incidental¬
ly put out a story about the minister
having lost a great many friends, and
that he had better look for a different
field .—Minneapolis Journal.
A Bright Woman.
Miss Alice Freeman, cx-president of
Wellesley College, Mass., who was mar¬
ried to Prof. Palmer, of Harvard College,
is thirty years old. She is a Western
girl by birth, and was graduated at Ann
Arbor. She is a brilliant conversation¬
alist, has large dark eyes, dark brown
hair, is of medium height, and has a
plump, well-rounded figure. She dresses
simply, but in excellent taste. She be¬
came president of Wellesley College been seven
years there ago, having previously resigned a tutor
three or four years. She
at the commencement last June, when it
was announced that she was engaged to
marry Prof. Palmer.
, There are 89 hands, cotton in mills, India. employing A
nearly 75,000 note¬
worthy thing about those mills is that
when trade is dull their owners are uni¬
formly animated by an intense desire to
avoid Sunday labor, but as soon as trade
becomes brisk they would keep running
eight days if there were that many days
in the week.
Come to the bridal chamber. ehe Death!
Como to the mother, when feels
For the first time, her lirst-born’s breath.
And thou art, terrible!
The untimely death which annually carries
off thousands of human beings in the priineot
youth, is indeed terrible. 'I ho first approach
of consumption is insidious, and the sufferer
himself is the most unconscious of its ap¬
proach. One of the most alarming symptoms
of this dread disease is, in fact, the ineradica
able hope, which lurks in the heart of the vic¬
tim, preventing him from Inking timely steps
to in arrest its tho malady. is That it can bo arrested
earlier stages beyond question,
there are hundreds of well-authentmatedcases
where Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
has effected a complete cure.
A writer supqeats that. John L. Sullivan be
called “Mars.” Tlio application ts self-evident.
Rrenkina n Window.
If a tree were to break Tremendous a window, what
might the window sav? (tree
mend-us). Taylor’s and Mullein Cherokee has Remedy tremend of
Sweet Gum a Oils
sale, for it mends all forms of coughs, colds
and lung troubles.
No man that lives will he straight until he
roaches his coffin, whore all men are straight.
A Trial by Jury.
That great American jury, the people, hare
rendered a unanimous verdict in favor of Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets, the stan¬
dard remedy for bowel and stomach disorders,
biliousness, sick headache, dizziness,constipa¬
tion and sluggish liver.
A granddaughter of Charles Dickens does &
flourishing business with a type-writer.
We would be pleased to know of a man or wo¬
man who has never had headache or been sub¬
ject to constipation. As these seem to be uni¬
versal troubles a little advice may be in order.
Why should persons cram their*stomachs
with nauseating debilitate, purgative when pills, such etc., pleasant which
sicken and a
and sterling remedy as Prickly Ash Bitters
will act mildly and effectively and on the liver,
kidney, stomach and bowels, at the same
time tone headache, up and strengthen constipation, the whole and all system, such
causing evils quickly disappear.
distressing to
Consumption fSurely Cured.
To the Editor*.—Please inform voi ur readers
that I have a positive remedy for the above
named disease. By its timely use thousands of
hopeless cases have been permanently bottles of cured. remedy I
__all sh be glad to send two my
free to any of your readers who have con¬
sumption if they will send me their Express
: I Q d P. T. O. A. address. SLOCUM. Respectfully, M.C.. 181 Pearl St* N. Y.
When Catarrh has taken a strong hold on
the system York, Taylor's reaches, Hospital Cure, of the 264 B’way,
New by means Nebulizer,
the very seat of the trouble.
A New York house has received an order for
2,000,0005-ccnt postage stamps for use in Chili.
tarrh Walking Remedy advertisements the thousands for Dr. it has Sage’q Ca¬
are cured.
Three thousand women in Toronto, Canada,
vote at municipal elections.
Scarlet After fever pneumonia, Diphtheria the patient recovers
or
strength alowly, as the system Is weak and deblli
lated, and the blood poisoned by the ravages of . the
disease. What is needed Is a good reliable tonic and
blood purifier like Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which has
just the elemeuts of strength for the body, and vital¬
ity and richness for the blood which soon brings
back robust health.
“After recovering from a prolonged sickness with
diphtheria, and needing something to build me up
I took two bottles of Hood’s J 8 rsaparlllo. *<l I felt good
results from the first dose. t se ■» •> to go from the
ton of my head to the ends or ly too*. I know
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is a good tiling.”— O. B. Strat
TON, Druggist, Westfield, Mass.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for |5. Prepared only
by c. I. HOOD A GO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Maas.
IOO Poses One Do llar
LY’S ELY’S CREAM BALM
* >est ' remedy for
***! suffering from
ay-fever Jj Cold 1,1 Head,
or
catarrh
Balm into each nostril.
usaJkw Bros..286 Greenwich St., N. Y.
HIS PHOTO.
The venerable bene
—His familiar face and
have become a trade mark, and the
he has done is illustrated in the follow¬
marvelous instance: Jan. 17, 1883,
C. Osgood & Co., druggists, Lowell,
wrote: “Mr. Lewis Dennis, No. 138
st., desires to recommend 8t. Jacobs
to any afflicted with rheumatism, and
especially to say that Orrin Robinson,
Grantville, Mass., a boy of. 12 years, came
his house in the summer of 1881 walking
crutches, his left leg having been bent
the knee for over two months and could
not be bent back. He could not walk upon
it. Mr. Dennis had some St. Jacobs Oil in
the house and gave it to him to rub on his
knee. In six days he had no use for his
and went home sinceSt. well Jacobs without Oil them, cured
and he has been well
him.” In July, 1887, inquiry was made of the
Messrs. Osgood to ascertain the condition of
the little cripple, which brought the follow¬
ing response: “Lowell, crutches, Mass., July 9,1887.— Robin¬
The poor cripple on Orrin
son, cured by St. Jacobs Oil in 1881, has re¬
mained cured. The young man has been
and is now at work every day at manual
labor. Dr. George C. Osgood, M. D.” No
other can make the same showing.
*
A
a ■
m
IT IS A PUHEIY VEGETABLE PREPARATION
PHI
| ■ MID SENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU OTHER EgUAUy EFFICIENT REMEDIES.
It Jin It has stood the Test of Years,
iggt^BLOOD, Curing all Diseases of the
LIVER, STOM¬
ACH, KIDNEYS, BOW¬
^ash£^ ELS, &c. It Purifies the
Blood, Invigorates and
BITTERS Cleanses the System.
DYSPEPSIA,CONSTI¬
CURBS PATION, JAUNDICE,
ALLDISEASES OFTHE SICKHEADACHE,BIL¬
LIVER IOUS disappear COMPLAINTS,&c atonce under
KIDNEYS its be neficial infl uence,
STOMACH It its is purely cathartic a Medicine
AND ties as forbids its proper
BOWELS. j | beverage. It is use pleas- as a
1 wiw 1 ant to the taste, and as
J easily taken by child
A LLDRUGGIST S Jren | as adults.
r I PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO
PRICElQCLlAR 1 St.Louis Solo and Proprietor*. Kansa. OlTY
KIDDER’S
DIM tp ”
A SURE CURE FOR
INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA.
Over 6.000 Physicians have sent 11s their preparation approval of
DIQE8TYLIN, Indigestion Raying they that have It Is the best used.
for ges that ever whnre
Wo have ne ver heard of a case of Dyspepsia
DIGK8TYLIN was taken that was not cured.
FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM.
IT WILL CURE THR MOST AOOftAVATED CASM.
IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN CONSTIPATION. PREGNANCY.
IT WILL RELIEVE Dlarrhawv
For Sommer Complaints and Chronic
which are the direct results of Imperfect digestion,
DIGESTYIJN wlU effect an immediate euro. of
Take DYOESTYLIN for all pains and disorders
the stomach ; they all come from Indigestion. Ask
vour druggist for DIGESTYLIN (prioe $1 per lar R®
bottle). If he does not bottle havo it send one dollar prepaid. to us
and we will send a to you, express house is
Do not hesitate to send your money. Our
reliable. Established twenty-five years.
MARVELOUS
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
Wholly unlike artificial systems*
Any book learned in one reading*
Reoommended by Mark Twain, Richard P. Proctob, Benja
the Scientist, Hons. W. W. Astor, Judah
■nf, Dr. Minor. Ac. Class of 100 Columbia Law stu¬
dent* ; 100 at Meriden ; 250 at Norwich; 360 at Oberilii
College; two classes of 200 each at Yale; 400 at Uni¬
versity of Penn, Phila.; 400 at Wellesley University College , And
three large classes at Ohetauqua
Prosp PBoV P LOIS*I?TTR. 2!7 Pifth Ave„ New York.
J.P. STEVENS&BR 0 i
JEWELERS. Atlanta, Ga.
Send for Catalogue.
iss
:no
Ynn i
CURE^eDEAF Patknt Improvkd Cushion**
Pick's
Ea* Dbums Perfectly Restore the
H eari ng,whether the desfnees ii earned
by cold*, fever* or Injurlee to the natural
drum*. Invillble, comfortable, *lw»ys
in portion. Music, conversation, whis¬
m pers heard dUtlnctly. We refer to tho*#
mine them. Write to F. HI’-sCOX, 8 51
Broadway, cor. 14th St., FREE. New York# for
liluitrete'd book of proof*,
QU!J Diair S a DSIlaa rlllSi 6reat Rheumatic English Remedy. Gout and
Oval Box, .14; round* 14 Pilla.
hu JYO free TO guide FLORIDASS°,£' books, maps or truth about land.
Nbm write O. M. CROSBY, 99 Franklin St, N. Y
A LIPriNCOTT‘8 NEW MEL HSSJ-IHjS MAGAZINE, Philadelphia.
£piiEiiSIO$i§ * E. H. t(, ^ old,e ^ ai y* Heirs. XYaahlngtunf Send for D.'c. cir
(1ELNTON <k
MOME BHYANTL'ft^’LLKai^^fi^ k6 th P,ntf,P hi nT te^ n8 ht P b Antl ir i C' r ’
’illarsft^ h 'iuHh.X. Y.
NERBRAND FIFTH WHEEL. iff&SSS
improvement. H lilt U HAND CO.. Fremont, O.
PIS0 S CURE FOR CONSU MPTI0 N
FUNNIEST READ BOOK the “SAMANTHA B SARATOGA’’
yet. BV JOSIAH ALLEN’S WIFE. AGENTS WANTED.
m/i slreves, Ar.”—Extract from book. ” I find in this the same delieiou* humor that has made
Vi' her works a joy forever Will Carleton. “ Full of genuine wit, with a wholesome moral
,m flavor.”—Art), o. H. Tiffany D.D. “ Homely and jubilant humor—opulent and brilliant.”—
•W Hot., s. S. Cot Jif c. ,r lt is , an evangel of the keenest,wittiest and drollest sarcasm on the
. book.”— Ro** Ehsabeth
. Wfolliea of fashion.”— Lut h. Observer. “An exceedingly amusing sit back and laugh
Vj Wrtill Cleveland. “ There are parts so excruciatingly funny we have had to Free Press.
I the tears came."— Wee/dy Witness. “ XJnauestionably her best.”— Detroit
*9-NEARLY 30,000 SOLDH! “)«*«
m ir AflSKIB »r. tftklns THOUSANDS of OBDEB8 Tha (100) meturr* by “Oprer” are It.
f | tor HOLIDAY QIPTB. WHnff.” People rrnzy to get
i * Profit., 800 to SIOO PER WEEK. PuMUh.r*. PFJOB PHILADELPHIA, (brm*U or A«.*t>.. PA.
Apply to HUSBAND BROS.,
rH8l
1 is eb "
m MUSTANG
LINIMENT
DR. KILMER’S
A GREAT BLESSING TO WOMEN. W
Dnnti ItCaU Symptom* and Condition* till*
Specific will Relieve and Cure.
II II Vein IOU have nervous or sick headache, gtoro
achache, backache, spineacbe, urine, bloating,
internal heat or scalding
If Vnii have chronic weakness, bearing down
II IU U or perversions incident to life-chongc.
If II Vein lull h a ve uterine catarrh, ovarian suppressed or
painful periods, or dropsy,
If Vnii have suspicious growths, disposed to
ll IUU humor or cancer, or hemorrhage.
It Dnilrlo up quickly a run-down constitu-
11 DUilUb tion and brings refreshing steep. fecl
It II Will Hill dispel those dull tired looks and
and inf?, and bring back youthful system. Mown
beauty—restores the nervous
Blnthorc mutllcid 01-e It Not to yonr -vestige weak of and tmpuro dellata Blood wn
ens. ft purifying influcnco.
escapeiuneftUngr and health, and hope fo long
If II Vaii IOU value life, good “Female Remedy.” r
use
066 Calk Symptoms In "duide to continued Health." with tree. certmcate. Also ftdnce or free car. -
Dr. Kilmer* Co. Binghamton, N.Y. Druggist
F f'i* I L\ {ft WELLS’
HAIR
BALSAM
Eg) jlft- restore* Gray
JSI.fi llair to orifo
Hill aal color. An
flaw elegantdreHS
yin softens
RIBS anilbeautifleS
[ MSB RoxreasenoT Tonic
I oil. A
| A Restorative. Prevents hair
coming out;
m cleanses heals strengthens, scalp. and
•21 60c. Druggist*
L S. WELLS,
Dm; City, If. i*
ROUGH chronic on CATARRH Uneqnaled for Catarrhal r^S'ri; throat
worst cases.
Catarrh. 60c. Drug. E. 8. WkUJ, Jersey City, V . J.
LOOK YOUNG
as long as yon can, pr^
vent tendency to wrin¬
kles or ageing of the
leaSrelle prevent* oil
Removes and
Wrinkles, and rough¬
m m ness of Flesh or skin t
preserves fresh a conditio* youthful#
plump, of the features; re¬
m m moves pimples, clears
the complexion, tho
only substance known
that will arreat a««i pew
: ventteBdenf.T to wrinkle#
$1. Druggists or Kxp.
*. S. WILLS, CkeaUi#
Jfnej t’lly, if. J.
anti world# w. only L. equals nor liand>sew las custom e , d 4 £ made e W)S.°e hand»sewe< r, i e n i ?h m j
shoes that cost from 80 to 89.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE. gentlehcm, ro*
Tho only S3 SKAMXE8S
Shoe in the world, with-8
Finest out tacks Calf, or perfect nails. / m
Congre®«,>^r :
And Button warranted, and Lace, ^ i
all §
and styles durable toe. As stylish those A0 A*
as
costing All $6 the or $6.Boys/^ YV. JF 'O
wear
Is. •8 DOUGLAS. Shoe. OtS
[IfMM eoofe Uf
•Ump*4 M bottom of
W. Is. DOUGLAS 83.50 SHOE la nnes
eelled for heavy wear. If not Brockton* sold by your Mai#* dealer
write W. L. DOUGLAS,
gliPEflgR^^^QljAIflTY
PH1MDEIiPHIA*Seno stamp for Catalogue.
I CURE FITS! them
Whet I say cure I do not mean merely to atop I a
for a tune and then have them return again. mean
BArrant my remedy to cure the worst cues. Because
others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a
cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle
of my infallible remedy. Give Express and Post YurU. Office.
H. G. ROOT.M.C.. 183 Pearlbt. New
Sdnd fO^ofuew book* includ¬
ing MOTHER, HOME,
and HEAVEN, p. ■
I nnd poetry ; by 4m b**t
author* 146.000void- El¬
egantly ill., $ ’.75. Semi
i i ii, ii mimii I '* 1 for outfit. Aleo
I, i i i rl omI i of tho
<11 I
Biblc,$2.0O.Dy.YliUL L..ii.TU2SAT, Bruudwaj.N. Y.
OPIUM Morphine Habit Cured In 1©
to 20 day** fbo pay till cured.
Dr. J. fctepheu#, Lebanon. Ohio.
S230"S?S g SSB
A f 9 8 a day. Samples worth * il.50, FREE. J
191© 1% Lines not 8afety under tha Rein horse F.olde s: r Co.. Write Hollv. Mich.
Brewster
O I* D is worth $500 per lb. Pettit’s Eye Salve is
\JT worth $1,000. but is sold at 25c. a bux by dealers.
A. N. U............. .......Ou»*. ’88.