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About North Georgia times. (Spring Place, Ga.) 1879-1891 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1889)
FOB FARM AND GARDEN. a GOOD WAT TO TEST SEEDS. Take a vessel proportioned to the size at the seed; fill it nearly full of earth; level it, placing the seed on top. Spread a cloth somewhat larger than the vessel over the seed, and on the cloth put a thin layer of earth; moisten and keep in a warm place. When it is desired to examine the results lift the cloth and they are exposed to view. One hundred is a good number to plant, and if ninety five germinate you should be satisfied.— American Agriculturist. OXEN AS SUPPLEMENTARY TEAKS. A writer in the Prairie Farmer says that he used to follow the plan of break¬ ing a yoke of atecra yearly, and profita¬ bly. A yoke of three-year-old steers were annually broken to the yoke, and made manageable the first year, using them with the pair of steers broken in the previous year for harrowing, break¬ ing and other heavy work. Then the slccrs may be pastured during the sea¬ son of light work, and again be made available for hauling and stacking hay and grain. In this way you may have a yoke of four-year-old oxen to sell each autumn, when they generally bring good prices for lumbering. As to gear, all things considered, the yoke and bows are preferable. The collar and harness arc perhaps most suitable for the wagon, but, when sold for lumbering, the cattlo broken to the yoke will bring most monoy. animals’ FUL8E8. In horses tho pulse at rest beats forty times, in an ox from forty to forty-five, and in sheep and pigs about seventy to eighty heats per minute. It may be felt tvherever a big artery crosses a bone. For instance, it is generally examined in the horse on the cord which crosses over tho bone of the lower jaw in front of ita curved position, or in tho bony ridgo above tho eye, and in cattle over the middlo of the first rib, and in sheep by placing tho hind on the left side, where the beating of tho heart may bo felt. Any mate]ini variations ia tho pulse from tho figures given above may be considered ns n sign of disease. If rapid, hard and full it is an indication of high fever or inflammation; if rapid, small and weak, low fever, loss of blood or weakness. If slow, the possibilities point to brain disease, and if irregular to heart trouble. This is one of the principal nnd sure tests of the health of an animal.— New York Herald. RAW BONE FOR POULTRY. Burned bones have been often recom¬ mended for fowls. But if the nitro¬ genous or flesh-forming matter which makes up a third of tho bone can be assimilated, it is wasteful to burn them, even if «1) the phosphate of lime is left behind. My experience indicates, says a correspondent of the New York Tribune, that such assimilation is possi¬ ble. I have given hundreds of pounds of cracked bonce—fresh, old and hard_ to my chickens, rnd have yet todiscover any pieces in their excrement. It does not matter how coarsely the bono is broken, if the lien can only get it down her threat, it is all she asks. The secrc tions in tho crop will act upon and pre¬ pare it for the finishing process of grind¬ ing by (lie gizzard, which reduces it to a condition to be absorbed and appro printed by the system. My fowls (some as fine-looking Leghorns ns ever strutted) are moro fond of fresh bones than of any other kind of food I can give them. VALUE OF A GOOD BU00D-80W. A. II. Sheldon says in the American Agriculturist: The beginner, in raising improved hogs, is inclined to think that he must purchase a good sized herd to commence with, in order to compete with some of his friends who are already in tho business. Ho does not realize that a good sow v ill soon give him all tho stock he wants, or that ho must work into the business by degrees. Wo have in mind a young man who pur¬ chased a sow and eight pigs for a high price. The b irrows and sow sold for enough the next autumn to pay the first cost, nnd the stock increased the next summer to nineteen brood-sows. In another instanco a pure-bred bow was put chased, and the second year two hundred dollars’ worth of pigs were sold and eleven young sows reserved for the future. Quality is far more im¬ portant than numbers at the start. With care and skill a good herd can soon be secured, while without proper attention the beat stock will soon deteriorate. A new breeder must secure the confidence of the public before purchasers will trust him with orders. When a sow has proved herself valuable and her pigs sell readily for good prices, she is worth saving from year to year as long as she pre duces good litters. One litter in ear¬ ly spring, then a res. on gntt during the season, will keep her health good and improve her constitution with age. Some breeder*, anxious for a double profit, secure two litters in • single eon, bat this plan is not approved by those who want large, fine pigs. The tax on the system is too severe for per¬ fect health, and the stock soon shows the elfect of this double strain. One hundred dollars ia not too high a value to place on a recorded pure-bred sow of any leading improved breed, and many breeders have stock which could not be purchased at that price. THE CLOVER CHOP. Some mistaken ideas are current in re¬ gard to the clover crop. Many farmers have been led to believe that it will grow upon exhausted soil and restore it to fertility. But clover is not that kind of a crop, nor is there any other of that kind. This belief leads to much disap¬ pointment and loss, and many a farmer bewails his misleading by those who aver that a clover crop leaves the land richer than before it was sown. If this were so, land might very soon be brought to a higher degree of fertility than it ever possessed simply by growing a few crops of clover. This belief is clear, ly unreasonable and futile, and those writers who thus deceive farmers do a great mischief. Clover isreally an ex¬ acting crop upon the soil; it takes as much plant food from the soil as is con¬ tained in twenty tons of the best yard manuro per acre, consequently it cannot be expected to make a good crop on poor land. It certainly has the ability to get its food more easily than a grain crop does, because of its long and deeply penetrating roots. But a farmer who takes two tons of clover hay from his land has reduced its stock of fertility so much that twenty tons of manure per acre will be required to restore the draft upon it. An average crop of clover hay, 1 1-2 tons per acre let us say, takes from the soil 102 pounds of nitrogen, 871-2 pounds of potash, 86 pounds of lime, and 25 pounds of phosphoric acid; 30 bushels of wheat, with 3000 pounds of straw, take from the soil only 45 pounds of nitrogen, 28 pounds of potash, 10 pounds of lime, and 22 pounds of phos¬ phoric acid. These figures tell a great¬ ly d.fferent story from that misleading one—to the effect that clover leaves the soil richer than it was before the crop was grown. The fallacy lies in the fact that the roots of the clover do really contain a large quantity of these ele¬ ments of fertility which they have brought up from the subsoil to the sur¬ face, and that the surface is enriched by depletion of the subsoil. If this can be distorted into any actual improvement of the land, a man could as easily get rich by spending the money he laid by in a savings bank .—New York Tima. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Are your hive3 all ready for swarming time? If not, why not? Think how much you are dependent upon your horse nnd farm animals now, and uso them well. The colony in best condition when the honey season opens, will ordinarily give the best results. Be sure you have all things ready to get the bees out of the cellar as soon as the weather permits. If cattle have their hair rubbed off, showing bare patches of skin, rub on a little sulphur and lard. To be sure of thrifty chicks, it is best to use for hatching only eggs that are less than fifteen day3 old. Keep a cloth for each milker hanging in tho barn to wipe tho dust and dirt from the udders before milking. The fact that systematic men do so much work with so little effort, is large¬ ly due to their keeping their implements of labor in order. If the supply of coops loft over from last season is not sufficient for the num¬ ber of broods you expect this season, make moro while you have Ume. Have the hatching room contain all that is necessary for the comfort and health of the sifter*. Water, corn, gravel, green food and dust bath. Peach trees that have been annually and heavily banked with wood ashes to keep out tho borers, have been more free from yellows than those not so pro¬ tected. When setting out trees never put manure of any kind in the hole made to receive the roots of the tree. Lay the top soil aside, and when the tree is in position throw the top soil on the roots and pack closely, then filling in with the soil taken lower down. The only fertilizer necessary the first year ia ashes. The-food is .first converted into blood before diatribnted to the several parts of the body, and the formation of milk ia subject to the same natural law. The composition of milk and blood,however, is not the same, thus showing that an important change occurs in the passage of the liquid through the mamillary glands. QUAINT AND CURIOUS, —.......... . A bear live* twenty years. Opera was first introduced in Fiance. Kerosene was first used for lighting purposes in 1826. Coney Island, N. Y., is fast being washed away by the sea. The first sawmaker’s anvil was brought to America in 1818. A man in Carson, 8. C., has taught his cat to play on the piano. The first Roman who wore a crown was Tarquin the elder, 616 B. 0. Printing in raised or embossed letters was begun at Paris by Hauy in 1786. It costs $7 to protest a note in Lcs Angeles, Cal., against fl.33 in the East. The Kansas Prohibition laws have been mode to apply to Jamaica ginger. In the Imperial Jewel Office at Vienna is the largest emerald yet discovered. Ii weighs 2980 carats. . , In one of Daniel Webster’s speeches were 8822 words, and 6371 of them were monosyllables. Mitamura Toshiyuki, a Tokio physi¬ cian, has been engaged by the Hawaiian King, and will shortly leave Japan for Honolulu. Hong Ten Chang, the only Chinese lawyer in New York state, pleaded hi first case in a Brooklyn court the othei day and won it. Some popular entertainments in the West are “Rainbow Teas,” “Batchelors' Meets," ‘‘Toast and Cheese,” and th< “Eclipse Surprise Party.” Madame Do Qenlia composed several charming volumes while waiting in the school-room for the tardy princes to whom she gave daily lessons. The regulation step in European ar¬ mies is longest in the Qerman army and shortest in the Russian. The Belgian march is the slowest—110 steps to the minute. The regulation professional garb of the English physicians and surgeons is the high hat—black in winter, drab or white in summer—-and always a dark frock or morning ooat. William Shockey is a young Waver lcy, Ohio, workman who only perspires on the right half of his body. The line of demarcation is as exactly drawn as 1 hough he had been surveyed by an ex¬ pert. There was a yellow dog that used to follow General Garfield wherevor he went, out of gratitude for a bone that the President once threw him when ho was on the verge of starvation in the street. Among some old papers in London, recently, a genuine likeness of John Bunyan as he appeared in his prison cell at Bedford has just been discovered, for which the owner demands 1000 guineas. A dozen tramps were observed shav¬ ing each other at the Summit, near Mid¬ dletown, N. Y., one day recently. A table knife with the end broken off was used for a razor. The shaving cup was a tomato can nnd a bunch cf horse hair tied together served for a brush. A “historical peasant" died a short while ago in a small Russian village at the age of ninety-eight. In the disas¬ trous campaign of 1812 he drove Napo¬ leon I. in a sledge all the way from Mos¬ cow to the German frontier. To the day of his death he had carefully preserved a few pieces of gold which he received from the Emperor on his flight. Little Ones in Spectacles. Tho number of children who wear spectacles has become a serious subject of remark. That a radical wrong exists somewhere, when children only four yea's of age are thus hamperei for life, is only too palpable, but who’s to blame,and what’s the remedy for this evi¬ dently increasing affliction? Are future generations to be sans eyes as well as sans teeth? The defects in vision ne¬ cessitating spectacles are inherited, or infanta scarcely able to read would not be hurried to opticians and fitted to glasses that must bother them while they live. Oculists give many sensible rea¬ sons for this weakness of the optic nerves. But no one impresses the neces¬ sity of care in the management of eyes until the damage is done, and then it ic too late. Young mothers who cover the baby’s face with a veil, or who wear spotted Uee h-s* a* .v. low their children to read by insufficient light, are laying up trouble for them rr« <k 7y“£‘. r 1 ™” be better off for their criminal ignor ance. As to the schoolrooms, where children spend so many iours of the dav. 4 T£r"?* , ‘~ are lighted, or whether xhe scholars face windows, and whether they are obliged to strain their eyes by blackboard exer¬ cises in half lights. A little precaution in the me of the eyes, and some knowl¬ edge on the subject of improper lighting would be a pound of cure in tils matter of spectacles, —Boston Herald. A COMNON SENSE LETTER. — —— to not Editos -_i gee that arti ZsttttgaffsfS&s well as to the means whereby disease may remold and good health preserved. I am time thereby to time, reminded that publication* I have received Issued from by the well-known pamphlet him of H. H. Warner A Co., which dwell upon the history and growth of kidney diseases j showing how such is the cause of consumption, heart, brain and nervous dis¬ orders, which can only be successfully treated by removing the the primary disease taken from the kid¬ neys. At same time care is to remind the reader that Warner’s Safe Cure ia the only means thereby the physician cr the individual can successfully prevent and core this class of Whilst I have personal cause to feel grateful to Warner’s Safe Cure, fear the benefit winch I derived from it when suff. ring horn kidney (roubles last Spring, I cmnot see, since that remedy hold, why is already the so well known in evei y house¬ should paries interested in ita manu ac ture consume to expend money in calling attention to what the publ-a already Editor, that knows the so members well. I am aware, M*t of the medicKS profession credit are a ldom medicines, disposed to pul give dr* fidence to proprietary likely be but lblic com is to even more shaken in thois learned gentlemen since the startling disclosure* in the Robinson poisoning cases were made <*» Somerville, Hoi Mass. discovered, e it was through the eflorta of an insurance company, that eight cases of death from arsenical poisoning had occurred—seven of them in one family, and wr bin five years and the other that of a relative—wherein the true cause of death had not been tven suspected by prominent but physicians who were in attendance, who treated the oases for other causes, ana finally, for such when death occurred, issued typhoid certificates meningit causes as pneumonia, f.Yir, s, etc. Af cr such aii evidi ncc of the utter incompe tency of those physicians who were regarded as experts in tbeir profession, I cannot conceive why it will be longer uoo ssary for further ad¬ verting Cuie, to be dt ne in bei.all of Warner’s Safe since I deem the Someiville disclosure to be the beet possible endorsement of the good a use manifested by those who take matters of health in their owu bands and use a remedy w hich experience has shown to be fully adapted for the purposes intended, instead of trusting themselves in experimental hands. ExPEIIIENOK. Beals the Snake Story. J. L. McCloud, of Omaha, Neb., tells how a servaut girl in hts employ was surprist d at finding no eggs in his barn. He says: “1 did not think much of it at first, but when the complaint was repeat¬ ed almost tvety day I began to think it was rather strange that no more than 'hree or four eggs could be obtained from at least five dozen hens. I there¬ fore determined to look into the matter, which I finally solved by accident. 1 was standing in the barn one Sunday morning, when a hen came cackling from her nest in the manger, and a few moments later I noticed a big rat come from its hole, which ran across the floor nnd climbed into Ibe manger. The rat made a bee line for the nest, and I was not a little surprised to see the rodent begin to roll the egg toward tfio edge of the manger. The rat finally succeeded, paused for breath, and, gathering the eng between its feet, rolled itself around, the egg, presenting the appearance of a, hedgehog. The rat then deliberately rolled over ihe edge, and dropped squarely on its back on the floor, 2 feet below, thus saving the egg whole. It began to squeal with till ita might, and, thiiiking it was badly hurt from the fall, I started to put it out of its misety, when, lol two mort rats appeared first ou the scene. They ran up to the one, where it lay holding the epg. and, each and siezing a hind leg. began to drag it hole, the egg across the bain to the rat into which they pushed the egg and disappeared. ” Place for Americans. Edmund W. P. Smith, for eight years Re¬ United States contul at Caithagena, public of Colombia, but for the past two years engaged in business there, is home again. He says that there is a great fi< id for American enterprise in the Republic of Colombia. Electric lights, machines water works, railroads and ice are particularly wanted. The government Concessions is disposed to be liberal. will be given to bona fide capitalists for twenty-five years, and in the case of the water woiks the government will guar¬ antee 7 per cent, on the capital invested for tweniy-five years. Most of the trade of the country is controlled by the Ger¬ mans and English, whose representatives traveler for are met everywhere, while a an American firm ia rarely m<it with. A Failure. Mr. Scerctan, tho French organizer of the big copper pool, was attempted a powerful man levy a few weeks ago. He to blackmail all over tho world on those who chose or were and compelled for to use cop¬ per in any way, a year or more met with a fair amount of success. Now the copper corner is broken, his im¬ mense fortune is swept away, and he is being pro-ecuted in France for attempt¬ ing fo forestall the market, with the probability that he will pass part of his decUulng years in prison. In the South the situation is belter than in the West, the ctops well-sustained being of a kind for which there ia a demand at all ti., ts, and iiicre are other well-known causes for the railroads growing of pros¬ the perity of the people and South, but in the extreme West there is said to be little prospect of decided improvement, even if the next crop should be good. Railroad rates ore sure to be low. Mortgages on fauns are often good investment's, but there are said to be large areas not worth foreclosing the mortgages on. ......... traveler lias discovered the A German* 'X seems to belong incontettably to the in¬ dependent hamlet of Foust. This pretty sssii^^iXissSd belongs neither Lower Pyrenees, It has somewhat to France nor Spa : n. have over jKaaaitJWEn? 100 citizens. They no mayor ss or own, but attend at a neighboring vtl lage. The Supreme Court of the United States has recognized the seizure of property in We t Virginia by Ge.s. Fitz tu<*h Lee, under the aufhorit of the Confederate States, as “an act o i legiti¬ mate warfure.” Laat Sunday, Richmond, Va., was al¬ most without an adult inhabitant. The entire population had gone to the banka of the James River to witness the great <st baptism ever known among the col¬ ored churches. About 800 were put un¬ der the water and many more are to fol¬ low. This is the first result of the un¬ precedented revival going on for three weeks. In many instances fifteen minutes’ time are hand consumed in shaking their one person by the and relating vision. By daylight the entire negro popu¬ lation was up preparing to attend this baptism, which was to begin at 10:30. The crowd in attendance was estimated et 80,000. The converts marched in procession through the streets, many of the women wearing white robes, some of the more opulent attired in directoire gowns. Rev. John Ja«per, the invinci bhi anti-Satan slugger, who has regularly once a month buried the moving sun among his missiles at the arch enemy, towered 6 feet 1 above the vast con coutse, and though several years older, his voice is the strongest and his roll of convene me largest. The three minis¬ ters stood in the river, three lines of penitents moving to them at a time, and the groans and thouts, the ecstatic emotions .hat rolled over this vast mul¬ titude surpassed anything of the kind ever heard in Richmond before. The police in order to prevent disasters, had to scatter the crowds from the in bridge. sight Hundreds were not able to get of the water.— Exchange. Control the Market. The New England mills have practi¬ of low cally surrendered the manufacture grade goods to the Southern mills, and now devote themselves exclusively to finer and more profitable work. The Southern mills have fairly eaptured they (he “brown goods” market, and as are crowding each other in that market some of them should enter upon the manufac¬ ture of higher grades of good*, and so make profitable business for themselves and room for the new mills at the same time. Enterprise is better than “combi¬ nation,” both for our mills and tho peo¬ ple who support therm Having entered the South field should of cottoig not rest manufacture, halt uutil the it or dominates every part of it. There is room and opportunity on the higher lev¬ els, aud upward; and the next not backward. step must bo It forward will be a great event for the Cotton States when a Southern cotton factory sends its first bale of calico to market.— Charlaton, 8. C. Newt Courier. These are hints from Berlin and Lon¬ don that there is a sort of understanding between Prince Bismarck and Lord Sal¬ isbury on the Samoan question. It is certain, however, that the people colo¬ of England, as w ell as of her Pacific nies, are decidedly opposed this to issue any frtti auce with Germany in or on any issue. tion, Why suffer of aprotit longer from loss of dyspepsia, strength, indiges¬ lack of want •, Brown’s energy, Iron malaria!, Bitters intermittent fevers, these etc.? neve fail to cure diseases. They act like a charm on the diges¬ tive such organs, belching, amoving heartburn, all dyspeptlo biliousness, symptoms, aa etc. Remember it is tiio only iron preparation that will not blacken the teeth or give headache. Michigan of capital papers are agitating for the res toration punishment. Catarrh Cared. A clergyman, after years of suffering from that' loathsome disease. remedy, Catarrh, at last and found vainly trying every known completely cured and saved a prescription which this dread¬ him from death. Any sufferer from ful disease sending J. a solf-addreeSed Lawrence. 88 stamped Warren envelope to Prof. A. recipe freed charge. 6L. N. Y., will receive the Dangerous Trifling. It is constipation, not only foolish, indigestion, but dangerous, pilesor lirerde- to trifle with Take the remedy rangement proper as soon as possible, and avoid all specific danger for incident these affections. to delay. Hamburg Figs are a Fig. Mack Drug Co.. N. Y. S 5 cents. Dose one Orrcon, tlio Bnrndlae of Farmers. Mild, equable fruit, c’imate, certain and nbunrlnnt crop*. in Pest the world grain, Full information grass and stock country Address Oreg. Im’igi Vn Board, Portland, free. Ore. the Nothing pain and so completely suffering intending robs confinement the of it as use of The Mother’s Friend. Sold by druggists. I Tho Chief Reason for tbe marvellous suc¬ res, of Hood’s Sarsaparilla is found in tho fact that this medlciuo actually accomplishes all that ts claimed for It. Ita real merit has won Merit Wins for Hood’s Sarsaparilla a popularity and sale greater than that of any other blood purifier. It cures Scrofula, all Humors, Dyspepsia, ate. Prepared only by C. I. Hood ft Co., Lowell, Mass. S3 SHOE Or any of ray tthoes *df*Hi v «<l from time to time ?n will addiees dir ct t,.e Factory, this paper, that canao? he procured fr- m D ‘filer . be »*nt t‘ ftvy rom ou receipt of pr ce. Fraudulent when nvoe an I price *re not s eraped on bottom. XT. Ia. XSQ'CTG-IjA.IS, SHLOCgTOKT, MASS. IiB s a _ B. B. B. V*' writes: Mrs. “I M^ldTwc^^n^L. bad catarrh Tenn., six years and a distress¬ ing P.va coujeh, and my eyas were much awollea. bottles of B. B.B., thank God l cured me.” A KCDVm TOKIO. T. O. Callahan, Char.otte, N. C., writes : “B, B. B. is a fine tome, and has done iny kidneys great good." 10-xmuss’ old BHeewAnsir. W. J. Morehcad, Newton, N. C., writes: “I used three bottles of B. B. B., and I now feel a wealthy rheumatism. man, ’ after suffering ten long years from PILES SIXCS 18S8—BHECMATISM AND SOILS. B, J. M. Barfield, Mberion, piles 1 Ga., writes: *13. B. cured me or had since s laoS. It also cured my nephew of rheums t sm. It al»0 • cured Mrs. M. A. Elrod of carbuncles, bolls and swollen feet that had troubled her a long Umfe” under 1,500 drinking the high-license places dosed In BosiwUdass., system. SODEN MINERAL PASTILLES FOR CATARRH Sold by oil Druggist*. 50c. o box. SOQEN MINERAL SPRINGS CO. (UmltoS), Sole Agents, 15 CEDAR ST., NEW YORK. _ <c SSS no name. The nails came off his fing¬ ers, and the fingers came off to the middle Joint. For 3 years he suffered dreadfully; aftsfled is Swift’s now getting Speclfis well, Is and the I am e chief cause ct his Improvement, ; -’l- - . ' Jonx Deist,, Jaa. K, 1683. Peru, Ind. S 8 SF nicer*, the result of tho saliva of a calf coining in con¬ tal tact and with showed a cut linger. inclination The ulcers were heal. deep I and pain- him no to gave Swift’s Specific, and ho Is now well. Fob. 15, ’83. Joiix P. Heaed , Auburn, Ala. S end for books on Blood Poisons & Skin Discuses, free. Swirr Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS 222 C20S3 SXAXOKD BBAX0. fc&HA reliable Orlfina), pill boat, for mile. only rtaulme Never Fat!. and A . TOw) A»k for Chitherter’a English Diamond Brand, red iae KAMi “Me bosw. eeitied with blue rib a bon. At Drinliti. Accept f ffj no bo*rd other. pink All pills Id pute- dmiwer*' box », wrappers, are a •e* our counterfeit. ‘Kellef Send IVr 4c. Ladles,” (ttampi) tor * F« ticulkra *nd An er, by return moll. 10,000 tc*U motiluilR from . LADIES who b»re used them. Name Paper. duplicator Chemical Co., Madison Sq.,F!iilft..Pa» MOTHERS’ FRIENIl makes CHILD BIRTHS IN USED B EFORE CON FINEMENT. • Book to ‘‘Mothiius'’ MailxdcFkes. nRABXTELD HEO' LATOU CO., ATLANTAJSA. SOLD fir ALL Dll OBOISTS. Road Carts !BB "EXT Buggies! ^ thTis* 0 - 075 t° S MO.VeUcau be m*do woikta:; a horse and give thelr whole time to the business. Spare few vacancies moments max h* profitably cities. emplm-ed JOHN¬ atso. A In towns and B. F. SON ft CO., 100» Main St., Richmond, V*. N. B. PleaM stole op, and biuinett experience. Kever mind n bout tend ing etamp/nr reply. Ii. F. J, et Or . DETECTIVES Wanted In every Service. County. Shrewd men to eet under Pertreulere Inetruetiotm free In our Secret Experience not neressery. Graonan Detective Bureau Co.ti At6ide.0iutimU.flu WASHINGTOH “ INFORMATION BUREAU, COLE* DKElllsE, Proprietor*, 93* I Street N. W*. Wauhlnston. D. C. General information furnished. Correspondence soUsited. who have used Plso’s Cure for Consumption esy it Is BEST OF ALL. Sold everywhere, 35a Blair’s Oval Rax, Pins.*K!!?RS£* U4« rewad 14 Pitta. IS YOUR FARM FOR SALES If *o address Curtis ft Wbiqut, SSS Broadway, N. Y. AP <o88h d»jr. Sump!©* worth $2.15 Free, Lines not under horse’s foot. Write VVetterMnlrtvIlelu tio ilerCo.,Holly,Mich. wanted* $1 anhmir^SO new art to es. OatMaroe PEERLESS DYES Arc tbs BENT. Sold st Dsuuainx I BTSurtbe and fully only an r6mit,'w specific dor,« Rig for (J the as ctrtain th# cure Wutaiw l TO 6 DATS. Y JlInGRAH »’ G. AM. NUIL, Amsterdam, N. Y. Mrsaaiytytka We have sold Big G tor KuiCksabSlOt many years, best and It baa _ given tbe of satia Ohio. d.’b.'dyche & CO.. 111* Chicago, Trade 131,00. Sold by Druggists, 8KmB BP» A. N. U......... .....Twenty -one, ’89 SSS