Newspaper Page Text
17-
m id & SIMPSOOT 9
CO A, CEORCIA
m saiutmi
faiory Supplies, Also, KepaiPs All Xinds of Machinery.
pBLEss Engines,
IPORTABLE & TRACTI0
Senarators & ShiiHe Mill
lOfTOEY Bs and others in want of either Engines or separators, wij
by using the above machines. 1 am also prepare!
ve Lowest Prices and Best Terms on the celebrated
ESTEY ORGANS.^
lard well Hydraulic Cotton Presses, Corn and Saw Mills, Syru
ind Evaporators. Will have in by early Spring a f ull Stock c
|hite Sewing Machine
McCormick Reapers, Mowers and Self-Binders
Which need only a trial their Superiority. Call and see me bel
ore you buy. Duplicate parts of machineiy constantly on hand. |
m
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/ p JO? U] mm
SflMS
■
iwli gasoil
sa *■ mm
m m®
5gpl jail ns
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I Again Offer to the Trade the
BefcbraUd “ BPrnU” J t/d,
FEEDERS AND CONDENSERS.
Also the 'Jirool s and ‘laytor 'Press: also other
makes of Presses and G*ns, and at so Pet tin//.
Send /or Prices a?id f/ive roar orders early.
$ A COTTON STRIKE
“Ho, Boss—I’ll work no more., ’less
: y. yon weigh yonr Cotton on aJONES
h Vv 5=Ton Cotton Scale( 1
% ll NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST. t 1
ill Beam Box,
i Tare Beam,
Freight Paid/*
A' For terms address,
OF BINGHAMTON,
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
OHS. STARKEY & PALESS
TREATMENT BY INHALATION.
TWAOC .STfU#^//°fAu MARIf REGISTERED*
’D BS d
n Bwar-p
1620 A roll Street. F’tiilacl’a, Pa
rorcnmiimiulon, Asthma. TtronchiUa,Dys¬
pepsia, A'afarrh, Hay Fryer, Headache,
Debility, Uheumatium, Neuralgia and all
('-hrouic and Narvous Disorders.
**The original and onlv genu ne compound
oxygen U'ou using treatment," the Dr*. Starkey A Palon have
for last twenty years, is a scien-
till ■ adjustment of the elements of oxygen and
nitrogen magnetized, an 1 the compound is so
Zr d tb^ *r'il“ UJ * *“
u
Drs. Starkly A Ps’en have the liberty to re¬
fer to the following named well known persons
who have tried tueir treatment:
Hon. Wm. D. K lley, member of Congress,
rhil.sdi lpna.
li v. Victor L. Conrad, Ed. Luth’n Observer,
Piiiiadelpha. B.
v. CnailesW. Cushing, D. D., Rc'chester.
New York.
lion Win. Penn Nixon, El. Inter-Ocean,Chi-
eago, III.
W. H. Worthington, Editor New South, New
^
Judge H. F. Yro man, Qu- nemo, Kan.
•Mrs, Mary A. Livei more, Melrose, Msssachu-
setts.
Mr. E. C. Knight, Philadelphia.
Mr. Frank Suidail, mere ant, Phi la.
Hon. W. W. Schuvier, Easton, Pa.
E. L. Wilson, 833 Broadwav, N. Y.,Ed.Phila.
Thoto.
Fidelia M. Lyon, Waimea, Hawa i. Sandwich
lalinds.
Alexander K tchie, Invern sa, Scotland.
Mr*. Manuel V. Ortega, Fresnilio, Zacat.cas.
Mtxioa
Mrs. Emma Cooper, Utilla, Spanish Hondu¬
ras, C. A.
J. Cobb, ex-Tice Consul, Casablanoa, Mo¬
rocco
M. V. Ashbrook, Red Bluff, Cal.
shire J. Moore, Eng. Sup’t Police, Blandford, Dorset¬
Jacob Ward, Bowral, New South Wales.
And thousands of others in every par: of the
Uuited States.
‘•Compound the Oxygen-—Its title Modo brochure of Action and
Results, is of a new of 20C
pages, published by Dr.-. B a;key A Palen,
which *;ive* to all inquirers fail info uiatiou as
to ibis reniaikaide cuiative agent and a record
of several hundred surprising of cm es iu a wide
range of chrome cases—many them af:er be-
mg abandoned to die by outer physicians. Will
be nuuie l five to any address on application.
LUiaU the brocuare!
DRS. STARKEY & PALEN,
PiUl&dfilpnlftj Pl.i _
1529 Arcii St.,
order Coin- i
m-nt on this paper when JOU ;
Oxyjren.
$ 20 FavoriteSi ^ er
higeTarmSoo. leaf,
Each Machine has a drop
fancy cover, two large drawers,
with nickel rings, and a full set
of Attachments, equal to any Sin¬
ger Machine sold from $40 to
$60 by Canvassers. A trial in your home be¬
fore payment is asked. Buy direct of the Manu¬
facturers and save agents’ profits besides getting
certificates ot warrantee for five yggrs. Send for
testimonials to Co-operative Sew big Machine
Co., 269 S. nth St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Ai VV E PAT FREIGHT.'it*
I ■ ■ I pa Mb IbI
I m m m m m M MB mm ■
I _ I SSSSZHS3IIIS5SS^SIIILMi»*«
We have a remedy that will CURE CATARRH,
••BRONCHITIS and ASTHMA. Our faith is so
m iS&Sm&St
fhe Hall Chemical Co., 3360 Falrmount Av., Pbila., P>
«Fallii Sites
CAN be CURED.
™ We will TRIAL SEND BOTTLE FREE by
mail a large ;
also, a treatise on Epilepsy. DON’T
SUFFER ANY LONGER! Give Post Of-
fi-ze, State and County, and Age plainly.
Aduicss, THE HALL CHEMICAL CO.,
3860 Fairmount Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa.
® LA files'"'
i
r. - -
THE The
(So WOODWOPK^VSyef 3 AfTAetiMENfS
NfW HOMf SCWIN6 MACHINf C? 0RAHGE-MA6S
CH lC* tv. UiNiUNbUUAKtNY X'sy
—a. HTUNTA.E^^ 1 *-
ST.L.SUIS M 2 . COR SALE BY QALLAS.TEX
I. A. MASm.
LEWIS DAVIS,
AT TOPNEY 4.T 1 < A W
T0CC0A CITY, GA.,
Will practice in the counties of H iber
i'lam and Ribun of the N^rthwes ert*
2; Western rcuit - 8nd Circuit. F ™ uk Prompt 1 RQ i BanKs attenti of wii xii -
on
*eg vt-ntoaU busb.esa entrusted to him.
Hie collection of debts will have spec
1& 1 attention.
re-
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joe-
ffiis
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the
lple
. —
un( j
ilti-
:ds.
ost
but.
the
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hen
fast
be
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irv
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to
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pn
Ir-
to
:w
it-
:e.
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er
lis-
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- ‘ ' Hr
butter
made from milk which has become
affected with odor from a feverish con¬
dition of the cows, or from carrying in
closely covered cans before the animal
odor has escaped—takes on an unnatural,
strong and unpleasant taste, and a
greasy appearance, unless the odor is re¬
moved before the cream is raised.—
American Dairyman.
FEEDING GROUND GRAIN.
Ground grain will give just as good
results with poultry when it is mixed
with bulky food as it will when it is
mixed with water and fed. In fact, it
is claimed that by adding it to some food
(Such as clover hay cut fine, aud then
scalded) better results will be obtained
f rom the use of ground grain, as the
mixture of the whole is not so concen¬
trated. It is true, also, that hens can be
as profitably fed on cut food and grain
as can cows, only that the food for the
hens should be cut exceedingly fine—not
exceeding half an inch in length. Any
kind of hay is accepted by poultry, but
clover seems most suitable. Poultry will
also eat ensilage if it is cut fine enough.
There is nothing superior for laying hens
than cooked turnijis or potatoes, to which
ground grain is added. When grain is
to be fed it will save time and labor to
feed it unground, but there arc also times
when it is advantageous to allow ground
grain, but it should always be given as
an addition to cut food. If all the cut
feed is scalded before adding the grain,
the entire mess will be improved aud all
classes of fowls will eat it readily. -Farm
aud Fireside.
GOOD WORDS FOR THE COW PEA.
The cow pea seems especially adapted
to the wants of Southern farmers. Its
extensive and deep root system enables
it to withstand the long dry spells com¬
mon to the climate and also to gather
nourishment from soils on which shal-
low growing crops would starve. It
responds readily to fertilizers, and on
fair soils will produce as large a yield
of nutritive matter as almost any forage
crop that can be grown. In the South
two crops can be grown in a season, aud
the growth is so luxuriant that all nox¬
ious weeds are choked out.
As the result of analyses made at the
South Carolina Experiment Station, the
following favorable conclusions were
drawn in regard to the cow pea.: 1. For
the production of a nitrogenous food in
the shape of a forage crop the cow pea
vines are almost without a rival. 2.
Although no digestion experiments have
as yet been made with it, there is every
reason to believe that this crop is equal-
ly as digestible as leguminous plants in
general. 3. On an acre of ordinary
land this crcp will probably produce
more digestible food than either oats or
corn. 4. The manure resulting from
feeding this crop is of the highest value
and should be carefully preserved and
reiurned to the land.
As the cow pea obtains a part of its
nitrogen from the atmosphere aud a
part, together with some of its phos-
phoric acid aud potash from the sub-
soils the large amount of these constit¬
uents left iu its roots and stubble
and dead leaves dropped by the
plant Lend to enrich instead of impover-
ish the soil. In other words, its power
of collecting and storing fertilizing ma-
tenals from sources beyond the reach of
the cereals makes the cow pea a valuable
remedial crop. In addition to all this it
is thought more than probable that the
shade pioduced by the luxuriant growth
of this crop during the summer months,
when nitrification is most active, greatly
promotes the formation and storage ol
nitrates in the soil.
C.VKE OF CALVES IN WINTER.
It is tbe common experience on many
farms that young stock do not much
more than hold their owl- from fall to
spring. What growth they get is ob-
tained on pasture, and, too commonly.
this becomes appreciable only when they
have entered upon their second summer,
Calves should be kept growing during
their first winter, for more than one rea-
son. In the first place it is foolish to
throw away the feed of a whole winter,
and get no return for it. In addition to
this, it is unquestionably true that calves
raised for the dairy are dwarfed in their
productive powers, and their future use¬
fulness crippled, by the lack of care and
proper food for growth in their younger
days. If it is profitable to raise calves at
all, it is most profitable to keep them
growing thriftily from the day of their
birth until they reach maturity.
There are three points that should be
kept in mind during a call’s first winter,
It should have dry, clean, and warm quar-
ters to sleep in. It should not have to
drink large quantities of ice cold water,
It should" have an abundance q£ such
food as will promote the growth of bone
and muscle. Pens are much better for
calves during their first winter than stan¬
chions. They can be kept warmer in this
wav, can have a better bed to sleep upon,
and they will grow better if given a
chance to move about without the fret-
ting caused by restraint. When calves
are watered but once a day, and then
with very cold water, the whole system
receives such a shock that grow this out of
the question. This must be realized by
every one who has seen these little things
shivering over a trough of ice water,
from which their thirst has compelled
them to drink greedily. If older stock
must drink this, at least let a sufficient
< l uantit 7 f° r the calves be tempered by a
kettle of hot water from the kitchen
stove *
Fine hay, of which a part should be
clover, if possible, with a little bran
and crushed oats, and an occasional feed
°f pulped roots will prove a desirable
feed for calves at this time. They need
no housed fattening foods, provided they are
warmly, but plenty of the ele-
meuts that give growth, If skim milk
can k e spared for them, it will give good
returDS * u increased size and in the de-
velopment of the heifers. It pays to
keep the ycuug things growing, for
when groAvth ceases, not only is there
no interest on the investment, but the
time spent in caring for them is lost
also .—American Agriculturist.
FAIVM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Now hunt up the horse blankets.
Protect the water pipes from frost.
Push the fattening pigs and poultry.
It is poor policy to winter poor stock.
Better see to covering the grape vines.
Harvest and safely' store or market all
tender vegetables.
Don’t miss any meetings of Farmers’
Clubs or Institutes.
Don’t wait too long before gettiug the
raspberries and blackberries covered.
Fresh set trees will be as well mulched
as left exposed to all the rigors of a se¬
vere winter.
It is not necessary to cover the straw-
berry bed till the ground is frozen hard,
then you can drive on it with the wagon;
that will save time and work.
If one potato would produce, when
planted, but ten potatoes, in ten vears
the total product would be 10,000,000,.
000, which w r ould stock the whole world
wltii
'
Do not leave the cabbages and turnips
out too long. They will stand a moder¬
ate frost, but continual freezing and
thawing will not improve their . keeping .
qualities.
Don’t forget putting the beets, car-
rots and parsnips (if you dig some in the
fall) into soil in the cellar. If you have
never tried it you cannot realize how
how much better they keep.
Some market gardeners say that il
does not pay to stake tomato plants, but
if fiae > clean fruit P a js, then staking
should be adopted. Some of the finest
fruit is to be seen from plants so treated.
Cultivation and manuring of fruit
trees, this Etc in the season, would in-
duce a late growth which would not
ripen well before freezing weather, and
next winter would hardly fail to produce
serious injury.
“One of the best ways to make money
]S t o keep down the expenses.” But
don’t keep the exnenses down so low
that there is no return; that is feeding
Tor a t a loss Feed for orowth or e '»3 nit
mere existence
In successful gardening one of the
most important operations is frequent
stirring of the surface. After every rain,
just as soon as the ground is dry enough,
the hoe or the steel garden rake should
be brought into use. •
From 400 to 600 bushels of onions
may be grown to the acre, but when vou
are figuring up the profits, a New York
ouion grower suggests that you do not
forget to take out the cost of about fifty
loads of manure to the acre,
Keep ort culling; do not winter a
siugle bird that you have no use for.
The profits are all the greater when the
expenses are low. Therefore keep them
down, by not feeding stock that you do
not need or cannot make profitable,
AVhy not have a flower show in your
t , neighborhood? Take the school
owu ® r
1 as ‘ Q .® bounds for instance, and
’
}' old .l be ^hibff m the school house.
fl 7 f a nd / ee '?■ F ^ pay 1U
neighborly , friendliness, if nothing more.
Pear blight is less abundant in orchards
where but fair growth is made than
among trees forced along by strong-
manures. Moderate growth well ripened
1S the best for pears. For this reason in
districts where blight abounds the trees
are often grown in sod.
Buckwheat is a staple article of food
for poultry in France, Germany and in-
sular provinces in the peninsula. It is
heating aud stimulates the egg functions
to greater activity. In winter it pro¬
motes early laying and fowls soon ac-
custom themselves to it.
Use every means to tame your birds;
some breeds are rnora easily tamed than
others, but if vou keep your poultry as
tame (as a hous'e dog they will lay more
eggs and will also lay on more flesh than
jf y OU have to chase them about every
t i me y 0U waat to i 00 k t h e m over.
A Pirate Bird.
Ex-Governor William G. sterett, ot
Dallas, Texas, says: Y/hile on a fishing
and hunting expedition on the Atlantic
coast in North Carolina a few days
since my attention was attracted by a
shrill and frantic cries of the sea gull.
As I looked upward I saw a bird resem¬
bling a hawk strike the gull under its
claws, when down came the fish and the
P lrate . bir d aft ® r f The fish had not
ten feet f before the pirate 4 . bird . , . had ,
gone
it in its stomach. Th^n he soared up-
ward L wlth ^^tmng rapidity, and de- ,
scen J li: ^S equally as quic.^, stiuc ^ c
screaming gull on its back with such
force were forced , that out co of ^ ents its mouth, of sto and °‘ a the f
pirate caught it in the air as it fell, At
this moment I took aim at the pirate with
my shutgun and brought him down.—
St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
A Whale’s Jaw.
Some men who had lost &u anchor
uear Linekin, in the town of Boothbay,
Me., grappled for it the other day and
thought they had it. Twenty men
dragged it ashore and up on the beach,
when their prize proved to be not the
anchor, but the upper jaw of a whale.
it was thirteen feet long from the bow
j a front to either end joint, and seven
an d a half feet across from end to end.
—Chicaoo Time*.
All Sorts.
Thi name of Wayne is the title or part
of the title of more places in the United
States than aav other.
Dai.la.3, Texas, has an Artesian well
one thousand feet deep. Its flow is
about one million ga Ions a day.
Experience in electrically welding
projectiles thows that the metal is
strengthened at the point of welding.
The public baths presented to the city
of San Francisco, by the late James
Lick, are completed. They cost $250,000.
A luminous cat, made of tin, and
painted with phosphorus, has been pat¬
ented. It is intended to frighten away
rats and mice.
It is estimated that in Paris 1 in IS of
the population of 150,000 live on charity,
with a tendency toward crime; in Loudon
this class is 1 in 30.
Take in your hand a crystal of quartz,
a stick of deal, a daisy, au acorn, and
you will not find in them a single element
of matter that is not also found in your
physical frame.
Official statistics show that the yearly
income from fowls in France is 337,100,-
000 francs, of which 153,000,000 francs
represent the value of the flesh, and
183,600,000 francs that of the eggs.
When men arrogate to themselves a
sublimated type of political virtue and
honor; and ho.d up superior standards
for the measurement of others; t e ques¬
tion rises unbidden—have these men
never violated any of the ordinary stand¬
ards of public or private obligation?—
Cotton Plant.
Denmark is dotted all over with but-
ter factories, all turning out butter of the
finest and most uniform quality. Highly
educated experts act as teachers and con-
various suiting dairymen, being employed by the
factories to correct any faults and
keep duced. up the quality of the butter pro-
Japan is about to enter the field as a
producer of indigo. The soil and cli¬
mate of the island arc stated to be favor¬
able to the cultivation of the shrub, aud
the Japanese government is inaugurating
experimental measures for its cultivation.
A supply of Bengal iudigo seed lias been
sent to the island, and it is to be tried in
certain parts of the country.
If this Union was worth a million valu¬
able lives and six thousand millions of
dollars in 1861; how much more is it
worth the lesser sacrafice of time to vote
sav ? a g am to thc common p o-
P e 1 \ 18 as against . the conscienceless
vampire corporations who are sucking its
lifeblood? — Kansas Commoner.
If G; d in the beginning had given
Adam a salary of $25,000 a year, and had
continued his life and salary until the
present time, and Adam had hoarded
every cent of his salary, he would yet be
V $50,000,000 anderbilt. poorer than William H.
000,000 Vanderbilt’s $25,000x6,005 is $150,-
Exchange. ; wealth, $200,000,-
Monopoly-Cursed.
The United •* joh stales to-day , is . the ,, worst
Jith j Thev blw ; mdo ,; raoJ mil
liona5res n tw eafy ears t an all Europe
and Englaud have made in 500 years.
Everyth mg in the country is controlled*
by a syndicate, pool, combination, trust,
patent or corner. If a boy, now grown
to manhood, desired to go into business,
he must buy himself in. If he wishes to
e ntt r commc rce, he must buy a seat on
.5 , Board of 1'rade; if he wishes to
*° mnnufa- tunng, buy go
! n lie must himself
/ re l irese nts
^ ^ aS DemocraL that business. - JSew A Or-
The Boy of the Period.
A boy of the period, who understoad
his own value and knew what -was ex¬
pected of him, when asked what was his
duty to his father and mothe r , answeicd
smartly,—
“ l'o take them r ut for a walk on Sun¬
days, and not let them know how much
more I know than they do.”— Chambers'
Journal.
8100 Uewarcl, SILO.
i he readers of this paper will bo pleased to
learn that there is at lean one dreaded disease
that science has been able to ture in all its
stage*, and that is Catarrh, lia.i’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con¬
stitutional di-ease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall’s aiarrh Cure is taiten in¬
ternally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous suriaves of tne system, thereby de¬
stroying giving ihe toundation or the disease, an 1
tbe patient strength by building up t h;
constitution and assisting the nature in doir
its work. The propi ietors have so much fuitn
in its curative powers that they o/fer One
liundred Do tars for any case . hat it f ,i L to
cure, bend for list of testimonials. Address
F.«J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
,_™- S^ld _ .. , by Druggists,
me
Tbe submarine telegraph system of the
world consists of 13D,070 nautical miles of ca¬
ble.
The climate here did not agree with me and
I was sick with malaria most all the time.
The least exposure Rave] me a severe cold and
my health was miserable. I ft ew weaker un-
til I began a use of Dr. Bull’s Sarsaparilla,
when 1 gained liealth and strength. I reconi-
D.e ndit as the very best strengthening medi¬
cine.— Sarah Walton, Wabash, Iud.
There are over 7,033,000 pores in the human
body.
_
and Mamma, thin your little girl grows more pale
each day. It needs Dr. Ball’s Worm
Destroyers. Get hertsome before it is too late.
There are 3,064 languages and over 1,000 re¬
ligions.
________
Mart persons are broken down from over¬
work or household cares. Brown’s Iron Bit-
ters rebuilds tuo system, ai is digestion, re¬
moves excess of bile, aril cures malaria. A
splendid tonic for women and children.
One-third of the land surface of the earth is
covered with forests.
Wo You Ever .Speculate ?
Any person sending us their name and ad-
tress' will receive information that will lead
10 a fortune, lieu j. Lewis & Co., Security
Building, Kansas City, Mo.
_
Lee Wa’s Chinese Headache Cure. Harm-
ss in < ffect, quick rtceipt and positive of $1 in action. hot lie
Fent Adeler&Co..522'Wyandotte prepaid m st.,KansasCity,Mo per
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great
eiive Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
i sc. Marvelous cures. Treatise and S'-’ trial
Itttle Iree. Dr. Kline. 031 Arch St., Phiia., Pa.
Timber, Mineral, Farm Lands and Ranches
in iought Missouri. Kansas, Texas and Arkansas,
and sold. Tyler& Co., Kansas Gtty.Mo.
Oklahoma Guide Book and Map -ent any where
on receipt ot 5u cts*Tyier & Co., Kansa s City, Mo,
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp-
sen’s Eye-w-<ter.Druggists sell atZ’jc per bottle,
Beechham's Pills cure Sick-Headache.
Rheumatism
I* of two kinds, acute and chronic. The former Is
accompanied by high fever, and in the swollen joints
there is intense pain, which often suddenly change?
from one part of the body to another. Chronic
rheumatism is without fever and not so severe, but
more continuous, and liable to come on at every
storm or after slight exposure, Rheumatism is
known to be a disease of the blood and Hood's Sar¬
saparilla has had great success In curing it TbD
medicine possesses qualities which neutralize acidity
and purify, enrich and vitalize the blood.
Hood’s Sarssp-rill 3
Sold by all druggists. 13,-six for |S. Prepared only
by C. L HOOD t CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Hass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
Castle Garden Changes Hands.
At noon last Wednesday Comptroller
Meyers, acting under instructions from
the sinking fund commission represent¬
ing the city of New York, received from
the state board of emigration the keys of
Castle Garden, and that historic pile of
bricks and masonry, with its many an¬
nexes, became city property, The old
garden will not wholly lapse into obscu¬
rity. The property w ill be turned over
to the park commission. It was built for
a fortress in 1S07. It was intended to
guard the outlets of both North and
East rivers, but it was never equipped
as a place of defence.
About the year 1850 it was fitted up
with scats and converted into a concert
hall. Ia ’53, when P. T. Barnum
brought Jenny Lind to this country, he
secured Castle Garden in which to intro¬
duce her to the American public, because
of its proximity to the elite quarters of
the metropolis.
In the year '47 the legislature of New
York, established May 5th, the state
board of emigration. It was in '54 that
Castle Garden was secured as a general
the landing place for emigrants. During
time the Garden was used as a land¬
ing bureau the names of 9,720,067 im¬
migrants were recorded upon its books.
Of these people 3,000,000 were Irish,
3,0i;0,000 Germans and the remainder
divided among all other nationalities.
Making Amends.
Never be ashamed to apologize when
you liave donc wror g in domestic affairs,
bet that be a law of your life. 1 he best
thing I ever In ard of my graudfather,
whom I nevir saw, was this: Toat once
children, haying unrighteously he himself having rebuked lost one his of his
pa-
tience and perhaps having been misin-
formed of the child’s doings, found out
his mistake, and in the evening of the
same day gathered all his family together
and said: “Now I have one explanation
to make, aud one tldug to say. Thomas,
this morning I rebuked you in the pres¬
ence of the lamilv, and now I ask your
forgiveness in their presence.” It must
have taken some courage to do that. It
was right. Never be ashamed to apolo¬
gize.— Talmage ,
Platinum can now be drawn into wire
strands so fine that 27 twisted together
can be inserted into the hollow of a hair.
Stanley proves the Nile to Le 4,100 mile
long.
The Battle of Life.
The true hero will endeavor to make the
most of life, and to this end the first consid¬
eration is a robust constitution. Like a good
general on the battle plain, who, when expect¬
ing an attack from the enemy, will entrench
himself in fortifications, so he, when disease
is in the atmosphere or hovering in ambush
amid climatic changes, will fortifj his system
against every encroachment the grim monster
may seek to make. Many a grand life has the
ended for want of timely precaution in
hour of need. When fever and influenza are
abroad, when the damp chilly days touch the
marrow bones, when effuvia and malaria,
walk hand in hand, then it is that the system
should be fortified by a use of that superb
strengthening tonic alterative of Dr. John
Bull's Sarsaparilla, which keeps the blood
pure and tbe functions regulated, so that dis¬
ease cannot cuter the citadel of life.
'Hicre are now 7,000 millionaires in the
Uuited States, where, in 1800, there were only
two.
I,ADI ies needing a tonic, or children who
want building up, should take Brown's Iron
Bitters, IndigestiorijBiliousness it is pleasant to ta ;c, cures Complaints, Malaria,
and Liver
makes the Siood rich and pure.
The railroad capital of the world is esti¬
mated at $20,0-,0,000,000
0
Wi **mm
m m
\
■m e
*4!
ONB ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
and Syrup of Figs is tak en; it is pleasant
gently refreshing promptly to the taste, and acts
Liver and yet Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys, the
tem effectually, dispels colds, head¬ sys¬
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup bind of Figs is the
only duced, remedy pleasing of its ever pro¬
to the taste and ac-
cep table to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
its healthy and agreeable substances,
many excellent qualities com-
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy known.
and Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c
$1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE, KY. N£W YORK, N.Y.
mm
RELIEVES INSTANTLV.
ELY BROTHERS. 66 Warren SL, New York. Price GO eta.!
V' SEVENTECM m gevEHTf PORE Biliousness*
4 k Sick Headache,
Va Malaria.
This Picture, Panel size, mailed for 4 cents.
J. F. S5VHTH & CO ■1 BILE BEANS.
^ Makers of “ Bile Beans,”
255 &- 257 Greenwich St., N. Y. City.
d TDISOS Jr REMEDY FOR CATARRii.-Br-r. tad ost to u-e. lor
cheapest.. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain.
Cold in the Head it has no equal.
▲ A
It is an Ointment, or which a small particle by is mail. applied to the
nostrils. Price, E6e. Sold by druggists E. T. Hazelti.ne. or sent Warren. Pa.
Address.
Chichester'S English. Red Cross
^
(F box.i ie*le<l wiia L'.jerisben. Take no ether kind. Ktfutz ttndlmxlaticnt.
& IRON STYLES FENCE
SIXTY FOR
CEMETERY & LAWN
CATALOGUE FREE
J.W. RICE.ATLANTA, GA.
(/ J
<7 gran
M \
&
YOUR M0XET, OB YOUR LIFE l
This question Is a “pert” one, but we
mean it. Will vou sacrifice a few paltry
dollars, and save your life? or will you
allow your blood to become tainted, and
your system run-down, until, finally, you be
are laid away in the grave ? Better
in time , and “hold up” your hands for
Dr. Pierce’s Gokleu Medical Discovery,
a guaranteed remedy for all scrofulous
and other blood-taints, from whatever
cause arising. It cures ell Skin ami
Scalp Diseases, Ulcers, Sores, Swellings
and kindred ailments. It is power¬
fully tonic as well as alterative, or
blood-cleansing, in its effects, hence it
strengthens the system and restores
vitality, thereby dispelling all those
languid, “tired feelings” experienced
by' the debilitated. Especially has it
manifested its potency in curing Tetter,.
Salt-rheum, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils,.
Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Goitre, or Thick
Neck, and Enlarged Glands. World’s
Dispensary' Medical Association, Mak¬
ers, No. 6G3 Slain Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
VASIL
FOR A ON E-DOLLA It Bl U, sent tn by m»B
we will deliv-T, free o all chargee, to tiny person to
the Unit i d States, ail of the foilovrlug articles, car**
fully : packe.:
One two-ounce bottle of Pn re Vaseline, - - 10ct^
One two-ource bottle of Vaw solice Pomade, - 18
One Jar of Vas. line Cold Cream, - - - 15 “
One < . ke of Vuseli -.e Cam, hor Ice, - - - - 10 •*
One Cake or Vaseline Soap, unacent"', - - 10“'
One Cake of Vaseline Soap, exquisitely seen ted, 28 “■
One two-ounce bott.e of White Vasellue, - - 25 “■
• 1.10
Or for postage stamps any single article at the pricer
named. On no account be persuaded to accetit from
your druggist any with Vaseline or preparation therefrom trill
unless labelled our name, beoa-nse you cer¬
tainly receive an imitation which has little or no value
CkuciifBiigli tlfg. C*.. Jl -State s*t., N. V.
PURELY VEGETABLE. •% 25 Cents per Box.
THOROUGHLY RELIABLE. f J Boxes for £5 cts.
ABSOLUTELY } f Sen.' t>7 oaii^eintot !*•»;
SAFE. price. s;re tree,
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
DR. i. H. SCHEMCX & SON, PHILADELPHIA, PA
KING "COTTON
Buy or sell your Cotton
5-Ton Cotton Seals*
MOT CHEAPEST BUT B£$T.
For terms address
JONES OF BINGHAMTON,
BINGHAMTON. N v
Howe’s celebrated 1 2 3 3 I | Strongest
No. 7 for 1 {> 81.00. Strings. w ■ ■■ Z / *“*■ q g g ■ f.J “ Strings In?
the World.
l ull set 4 Graded Strings (Kl eta. Rest Italian Strings
30c. each. 15SW Rare Old Vioiins and 600 kinds of stew-
Violins, Violas, Cellos and Bases, 75c. to
Violi n Cases, Bows, Necks, Tops, Backs, Varnish arsl
all fittin gs. 31 usle Book* for ail instruments. Besf-
assortment, lowest priees In America. Send for cata¬
logue. ELIAS MOW K, SH Court St., Boston, Mass.
mamamjmnmm PENSIONS*-. Great The and Fathers PENSION fi6 \Tldows,S«tH-' f Jiers 9 IbrJir Bill
.«> >w«»nnaaBgxKB Ors a 1*0 PIV-
titled to $12 a mo. Fee $10 when you Ret your moot'/#
Biankii free. JOfcXPM iL litlTLii, it**, tan, 11. i
TELEGRAPHY I AMD SHORTHAND E
I,LADING SCHOOL SOUTH. Catal««no-
free. COUCH A I.UGENKEEI., Senoia, (in*
BMEME5 Gwely PantSS
Colleges, Adopted by studontH »t Harvard, Amherst and ot-bar
also by professional and busineis menj*r-ry-
whore. If not f«»r gum in your town send 25c. t?
B. J. GRKELY. 715 Waslii ngton Street B >stoa.
SHORTHAND IP YOU WIN”
Short! and, -.-end ...---------- Crichton** O. TO LEARN
to Shorthand Sciioe*,. ^et
hi catn ovae an read it—it exists yon nothing. A4di*»
1’ C.Crichton,, Pri n . 4W4 Whitcha 1 St., Atlanta,. Cqt-
K0NE thorongniy SJSSS^ffir^iSlKWR taught by >liiU Circuiars
Drvitnt's i;ol ewe. <157 31ain bt., Burfalo. N. 5f«
ip® Ag *K gag ^ K Qb&M ”.ua ''ured WhiskeyKab4t» at home with--
S U M .‘rS? ei ^ out liciilars pain. Bookofprtr- I KFK.
H b sent
Mrhkmhu 1LM. WOOLLEY,M.D.
Aiiatiln.Oa. offii-e 101^4 Whitehall St
How to Learn Modern Languages
Without cost. Address Linguist, I Iartw la le.fi. Y
20e.; wi be.-.t, fAsMiass 25a. Lehjiris’s JJttle K.J.
Silk it ill, terry
i AG33A k i oot
ie«t tn. TACO SU i.ML»rjtX.Vf t<t.. IAVOMA. IriSM.
T prescribe and fully only an-
dor*e Big as the
F Caret io nkjI soeciflc for jbe certain cure
l TCi 6 days. of this dise Si7..N D
g^^Jo*r*a .VMd n<« w OH -“ , U v:
—A eaoas Strietarn. A
lird oily by ths We have EOld 31g CJ fo*
Ciethtl C?. tnanv years, or.y jt baa
eiven the heat t. ha.l.3-
Sd&S CLiC'r.rs’.i.S J faction dyche&co..
CLIO. L>. R. UL
Chicago,
a—V <6i.on. F<--iabvliruegiita.
..... ......Two. IKfi.
NEW LAW CLAIMS.
, t? , lloBiterats&(h
Atiurncyn, 1419 F St., WMhlaaton, D. C.
Braweb Qicet, Clevklaai, DetrcltjCkic***,