Newspaper Page Text
Cause and Effect.
Jones— Whisky, I notice, has differ
ent effects in different parts of the
metropolis. Brown—How is that?
Jones—In the borough it alcohol¬ causes
drunkenness; in Fleet street
ism; Piccadilly, heart failure.— Pear¬
son’s Weekly.
_
The Heathen Chinee
>s n ot a bean y, No more are 1 on wh^n yonr
f 0 mp!exlon has an orange 1 nt. That means
that you ar.- i.Uiou , a tact turther evinced by
discomfort on ibe n lit side, sick headache,
vertigo, 1 an sea and furred tongue. Hostet
ter’s Htoni& h B tters will t ke t e ■ ile out of
vour blood, *n regulate good working your bowels, order-in et your two
stomach U and to yel
words, cure you. e it cea e oe
malaria ’ rhenmalc and kld -
H Olio V cat ron bri ks ars used” for house
boil iding in Germany.
Dr. Ki mer ’8 S w amp- Root cares
ail Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Labo ratory Binghamton. X . V.
There are 8.000,000 Americans who own their
own homes.
_
gin or bmo, Crrr or Tolkdo, l_ f
Lucas uountt. i jys.'ssr£ . _
jssiswsss! doing business tn. the ,r City of Toledo,
Oo H oW
4 HUSDSEDDO™
LABS tor each and every casoof c < 1 arrh that
& nnot be cured by the vminUfi'eGiagWM
? worn to v efore me and subscribed in my
prince, this0th day of ^Mcemb .r. A.^D . 1886.
IsaAbi \ ’
„, .
HalPsTafarrh Curelstekeh internally knd acta
directly on tii« blood and mucous surfaces or
the system. &°Co* Tollldt a
er*Sold bj Druggists, 73c.
Bn-incs. Hen In n Horry
entinregtanra 'tsftFdo'tenfood inxnfUciently acd
cooked. R p ns Tabules cur • dy.pep relievo ia head
sonrstomaoh and immed.ateiy
Tired, Weik, Nervojs
“I was troubled with that tired and all
gone feeling, bad no appetite, bad a cough
u and asthmatic symp
■ toms. I have been
troubled thus some
thirteen years and
had to
CiveUp All Work
three years ago. La«t
^ spring I commenced
taking Hood's Sar-a
parUktani felt better
from the first. My
W appetite returned
Mr. Frank Charon ami my cough left
me. I have used half a dozen bottles and
am a Well man. I should have wr t en this
statement before but wanted to wait until
after cold weather had settled with us and
see if any symptoms of my trouble returnjil.
But not so, lor I am now iu the best of
health. I am 64 years of a;e, and doin? a
full day’s work at biacksm thing. Hood’s
Hood’s 5 ^ 1 -Cures
Barsaparilla cared my complaint and gave
me renewed nealtb.” Fbakx Chabon, Glare
mont, N. H. Gel only Rood a
Hood s Pills cure nausea,sick heidache,
indigestion, biliousness. Sold by a j druggists,
* *
Your Poor • I
» Tired »
Husband.
* He has worked hard *
all week. 1
» Let him sleep late j
, Sunday then treat morning, him to | \
a
i breakfast of
\ Buckwheat; Cakes.
> •
J
vAKIflAvi a js BQi A CO BO
Buggies & Harness.
R7 Two Fair (or hi*h**t 5S! award, y5rTm*o“e at world’s
, *bu
-a*
,1 discarded us Dealer and 6e*»»
S* 1 c °R«”?- r *
. pp
a^'rb?u££j d JS? S^ b
L"^lSni n r5, (res : catalogue » < S£
U A m page uiostrat.
ALLIANCE CARRIAGE co., ct wcmwATi, O .
,.,, „ m,.,
WO R L D ’ S - F AIR ★
tHIGHEST AWARD!
imperial
TTTr
THE GREAT
A\EDIOINAI>
BSS justly acquired the reputation of being
The Salvntor for
^ The-Aged. AUJUJCT the
M tXCXHXMl, for
Gtorra and ^ ________ Protection of INFANTS Jutf ,
H I E2-ISL
A wp^or BatF.hr, la toattoM d faw
*** I eatsHc dUeases:
in of comufabos over
is to Whose such a low dig^ttve sod sensitive orixm eomfaboa were re
the IMPERIAL GRANUM
ths
LIFE
its * —
ts a FOOD it would be difficult to
naive of anything more
kv DRUGGISTS. York.
-
MONEY IN NUTS.
A NEGLECTED BRANCH OF
6 CULTURE.
Government Information About
Cultivation of Almond, Walnut
and Other Nut-Bearing Trees
—Grafting Chestnuts.
T HE the culture of the long-expected Public Department is nearly Printer, nut ready of bulletin though Agri¬ for
no copies of it will be distributed for
'St least a year. It is a remarkably
interesting publication, throwing
agriculture hitherto neglected. f ^ Of
the plants which are destined to be
brought under systematic cnltivation
in tbiB country during the twentieth
century nuts are among the most
promising. They have a higher
nutritive worth than is possessed by
tbe apple, peach and pear. They are
<*«>•<* wm* „i
and approach the grains in food
v * I ’ le - Moreover, they are not perish
able, and are easily handled, with
i ittle we j ght and risk Thia conntry
is largely supplied with nuts from
abroad> although nearly all of them
might as well be produced in the
^ ® tate8,
lhe almond has been ft source of
F* eat disappointment to planters in
the Atlantic States. It has been said
*{»** thrive. wi ( That H is where true enough, the peach but Will in
f rn it production it fails in most of the
^
peflch district8 . Few attempta
are now made by growers east of the
Rocky Mountains to produce almonds.
Forty years ago a large importation
of 6oft-shelled almonds was made by
the Commissioner of Patents for dis¬
tribution among fruit growers. Both
nuts and trees were widely distributed
in the Southern and Middle States,
Efforts at cultivation resulted in
failure, however, except with the
worthless hard-shelled variety, owisg,
perhaps, to the destruction of the
blossoms by spring fronts. The early
blooming of the tree is a fatal weak¬
ness of the almond from a point of
view of Eastern planters. But varie¬
ties recently originated and intro¬
duced in California have proved rea*
sonably legular in fruiting, and have
made almond growing very profitable
in some small areas. Almond plant¬
ing is now being tried with sucoess in
portions of Utah and Arizona.
Persian walnuts and butternuts are
picked for pickling and catsup when
they are about half ripe. The Divis
ion of Pomology has adopted the name
“Persian walnut” for the nnt com
monly known as “English walnut,” or
*.Maderia nut,” because it seems to
have been bronght origiulllJy from
Persia to Europe. Three species of
walnut are of commercial importance
in the United States. Of these tbe
black walnut and the butternut are
native, while the Persian walnut has
been introduced from the Old World.
The black walnut and butternut have
been planted to a considerable extent
in the Mississippi Valley and Atlantic
coast States, but have not proved prof¬
itable for their fruit alone. Their
timber, however, is valuable. The
Persian walnut came from the original
home of tbe peaoh and apricot. The
Greeks introduced it into Europe.
The ancient Romans called it “Jupi¬
ter’s acorn. ”
It is only in Southern California
that the Persian walnut has been
grown with suooess on a commercial
scale. The largest grove of the trees
in the world is in that State, contain¬
ing 700 acres. A food crop will fetch
$200 per acre; but the trees do not
yield profitably until eight or ten
years old. Onoe in bearing a walnut
plantation is one of the safest and
best-paying pieoea of property under
the san.
Perhaps the best of all nnts is that
species of hickory, United known States, as the pecan.
14 “ native totbe grow
ing wild in tbe Mississippi Valley and
TeXMB -,_ Th ? la fe<*‘ *“ d flne8t nnta
oome from Louisiana, some specimens .
attaining a length of two inches and a
diameter of three-quarters of an inch,
Comparatively few from that State
reach the North, however. In Bee
Coun ^> T ® x “’ are £ own 7*5
very thin shells that may be crashed
t he finger A
In Texas the pecan industry has ob¬
tained great importance. Thousands
of people wild make a living by gathering
the nnts, while many plantations
of the trees have been set oat, and are
already in bearing. So long ago aa
1880 1,250,000 pounds of the nuts
were marketed in San Antonio. Of
ail tbe hijkorv family the pecan seems
most susceptible of improvement in
the size and qnality of the fruit, and
much has been accomplished in this
direction by planters exercising judg¬
ment in tbe selection pf varieties.
The hazel, or filbert, is of all nut
bearing trees the one best suited to
garden culture. Five species produce
valuable nuts, and of tneee bnt one
oms tunes the height and dimensions of
a forest tree, tne others being only
bushes or shrubs. Of the h're. only
two sre native# of the United Btates.
Attempts st cnltivation in tbia coun¬
try have been chiefly confined to the
i European varieties, and have been ia
! the main nusnecessfnL It u believed
that plantations cf the hazel might be
made rerr prut iUb)e in tbe State of
Washington, where climatic oondi
snd Jajmu are three distinct species.
T*-e of Europe -ere onginally m
trodsecd into Greece from Asia Mi
Tbe somber of chestnut
ander eaitivstion is tbe United
In Oalifor
ads are several orchards of 200 to
■sostiy *o4||* the
There an
sh-o, in Delaware, Illiaom,
PeoasylTaaia,
1) has already been demonstrated
that chestnuts may be cultivated as
profitably as apples or pears. By
selecting varieties fruit and grafting the
size of the is graatly increased.
Chestnuts of Japanese and European
varieties as big as the imported are
now being grown in this country,
Tbe markets of the twentieth centnry
will not depend npon tbe wild crop
for supplies of these note. Crosses
with Japanese and European n its
have produced improved strains. The
soil of Pennsylvania, especially, is
well adapted for chestnut plantations.
The Mexican Boundary.
The survey of the boundary line be
tween the United States and Mexico
having been completed and the reqnis
ite monuments put in place, there will
be no further occasions for disputes
as to whether particular tracts of laud
are in Mexico or in the United States.
The survey was made by Colonel Bar
low, of the United States, in connec¬
tion with a colonel of the Mexioan
army, and it is creditable to both
countries that in running the line
there was no friction or irritation be¬
tween the representatives of the two
Governments. It appears that the
United States will lbse a small strip of
land about a mile wide and extending
a distance of some hundred miles, but
the loss will not be very great unless
it affects the town of Nogales, which is
on the border. Tne line rnns through
an arid region where very little of the
land is worth ten cents an acre, and it
is, furthermore, a very sparsely settled
country. Owing to the thinly settled
condition of the frontier the private
rights of very tew persons will be af¬
fected by the change in the line from
what it was supposed to be. A few
Americans find that their property
lies in Mexico, and vice versa. But
will not affect their citizenship,
even in cases where their homes are
shown to be ou the opposite side of
the line from what they Supposed. Iu
all such cases, these peo le supposed
they wereliving in their own country,
and all they will have to do is to move
a short distance ose way or the other
to place themselvca under the old
jurisdiction. The pleasant character
of the relations between Mexico and
the United States is shown by tbe way
in which this boundary line has been
determined. The two countries are
fast friends, and there is every reason
to believe they will continue so. There
is very little confiiot of interest be¬
tween them, and nothiug is liable to
arise to disturb their good will.—
Denver Bepnblioan.
Future* 01 Wheat.
The wheat market for countries out¬
side of Europe having a surplus for
export is confined principally to Great
Britain and Belgium—two countries
whose population does not aggregate
40,000,u00—because ordinarily the
surplus product of the Eastern coun¬
tries of Enrope is amply sufficient to
supplement the deficiency of the West¬
ern countries of that continent, Great
Brita n and Belgium excepted. But
this year these European countries
have harvested 90,000,000 bushels
more than the average, fnd the de¬
mand for imported wheat for thoEog*
lish and Belgium markets will be cor¬
respondingly diminished.
Bat this is not alL While India has
not increased her exports, Australia
has become a wheat producer of im¬
portance, and Argentina, wbioh a few
years ago did not produce wheat
enough for home consumption, ex
ported over fifty million bushels in
the eight months ending September
1st. It is reported that the acreage of
her crop to be harvested this fall is
twenty per cent, larger, 'with the
probaoility that the production will
go ou inoreas.ng.
Over-production in wheat would ap¬
pear to be upon us. European esti
ti mates of the wheat crop of tbe world
for 1894 show a surplus of supply over
demand of abont ten per oenL, and so
far as the estimated surplus of the
United States is concerned, that
seems to bs underestimated. The
American wheat grower would be in a
very bad way were it not for the
knowledge that he oan feed his grain
to his stock, whioh will give him bet¬
ter prices per bushel, bmide* the sav¬
ing in transportation rates.—New
York World.
Whose Blag U Itf
Who is the legal owner of an en¬
gagement ring ? Tbe conventional
supposition is that all men are too
obivalrouf and all woman too unmef
eenary to think of the intrinsic value
of this symbol of affection, and that
the question of ownership eon Id never
be smioosly—let Sometimes, alone acrimoniously
—discussed. however,
masculine chivalry and feminine die*
interestedness fail to make connection,
as in the particularly complicated He
of two Brooklyn lovers. bought
the ring on the install t plan, tths
wore it proudly aotd wails the engagement
lasted, bnt it upon tbe appear*
ance of that “little rift within the'
late,” whicn shortly broke np their
happiness. How lour people vent
that ring—tbe original seller of it, the
yonng , his faithless fiancee and
tbe final purc ha s er . Lore/ who has
so keen a sense of humor the! he
laughs at locksmiths, occasionally
plsvs a practical Field’s joke en Washington. confiding
jewelers — Kate
wmifi Cat
Wild Oat asoowy
to Oepreciated Civil War. hot psrtienlarly before
the ,
to the sea of the banks at the Bute
of
ths It •r
lose by takiag
It
to
w*U
Jnst the Thing. a
“What shall I do?” she moaned. “I
have broken my bicycle.”
“Let me see the wreck,” said her
mother. “Why, these wheels are very
light, indeed.”
“Yes, the lightest manufactured.”
“Well, there is no need of wasting
them. l’ii take them clown town and
have some trimming put on them,
They will make lovely hats for yon and
yom sister to wear to the theater. ”—
Washington Star.
Good Men Proambiy Employed.
, haVB n a "“ n mb thcy J^msSfaS
money, too, doinrbei ter for Diem elve than
{{£*«»“ ■ R /. Johnson^ V»„ t he‘firm stated B.°F* the
j Ldsud & o>„ Rioi moud,
^ l 8 n P ^^“? 0 devotean^r'p iheir nTAhe”
time in the iutere t of business.
Karl> Clover Ro >t, the great b 00 1 complex¬ purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to the
ion and cures constipaiiou, 23 c:s., 30 cts‘., Jl.
Mr*. Win«IowV Soothing Syrup for children
teething, -oftens the gums, redu e- in flam na¬
tion, a lay* pain, cures wind colic 25 •. a 1 ottls
-9
M
HP
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many, who live bet
tei *nan others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, world’s by best more products promptly
adapting the to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of embraced the pure in liquid the
laxative remedy, Syrup principles of Figs.
in Its excellence is acceptable due to its presenting and pleas¬
the form most
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax¬
ative; effectually cleansing the syptem,
disneliing colds, headaches and fevers
and permanently curing constipation. millions and
It hasgi ven satisfaction to
met with the approval of tbe medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid¬
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every Syrup objectionable of figs is for substance. sale by all drug¬
gists in 60c ana $1 bottles, but it is man¬
ufactured by the California printed Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is on every
package, also the name, Syrup of will Figs,
and being well informed, offered. you not
t'-cept any substitute i£
I < ► McELREES
< ::WINE > OF CARDULf o
_ a _
* ►
< > A
ft V; *- !?V
pi • ll • aas!:
r K < >
i >
< >
s
> * r * l >
I >
|| For Female biseases.il
Viim-IOTIM
In each county for a tew days’
work withtheBaloons;will pay
from $10 to $60, according to
location. 0. K. HITCHCOCK,
Evansville, Ind.
AGENTS WANTED
TO SELL THR
Standard Dictionary
IN EVERY COUNTY IN THE SOUTH.
Apply to N. D. MCDONALD,
P. O. Box 249 Atlanta Ga.
THR ELA-TIC
ARTIFICIAL LIMBS.
vith be I-bosrliw kue» Joint*.
F»e Ix f»r test dee improved rip tire catalogue ana bs-r.
Send
J and pr.oe faC
T. C. HILLS,
^ 0 pc*«<or to A. .vicusattorr,
516 A518 (o d No. 114; St.Chor.o,
Bifcsu, auk orleui'. La.
H»lllSM»f:Cliewlne6uni
,i M***s» »* »» »*«*—»»**♦’ s ssse ssee *
« X, OarsatneTotecoo Prxno***________ n, Vi arts ess, Ml r^rsr«. Cilsrri C >sh. OtsM«< ul _ Zwtorss# Ssts is cum s. I
-far A _ (Ss _ JMM -ji Ease-tr. •finmns a*4 for 4 effn* S, par ke/A SI A •
— -*---. rwr
RAMONS UVER
JU^iTONICP P1LIS
-AND
b^Tonic Pellets.
JWm*mrn
m
si
FWI 1 1-*
- -
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U.SL Go
< Rpyaj ^ . !;>■ *
Absolutely pure M
CULINARY CURIOSITIES.
Plates for table use are among the
articles dug from the soil of Borne.
Several dozens of wooden and metal
spoons , have been , found , . in • t> Roman
§£1^®®* Mlies * of bread charred to a mass
of black coal have been taken from the
Pompeiian ovens.
Earthen dishes are large enough'to
hold the carcass of a lamb were found
i, Ib. Pompeii. 0 kitchens.
Several knives, evidently intended
for table use, have been found in the
catacombs near Memphis.
Many Persian drinking caps have
been found in £he rains of Persepolis.
They are shaped almost exactly like
oar saucers.
One street in Pompeii was called
“Street of Dried Fruits,” and in the
shopB considerable quantities of figs,
raisins, plams and oth&r fruits were
found.
A frying pan with legs abont six
inches long is among the cariosities
recovered at Herculaneum, it be
longed to Docills,yybo had scratched
her name on the handle.
Seeking a Separation.
“Do you give gas here?” asked
wild looking man, who rushed into
dentist’s office on Glark street, yester¬
day morning. dentist.”
“We do,” replied the
“Does it put a fellow to sleep?”
“It does.”
“Sound asleep, so you can’t wake
him up?”
“Yes.”
“Yon could break his jaw or gouge
out bis eye and he wouldn’t feel it ?”
“He weald know nothing of it.”
“How long does it make him stay
asleep?” produced
“I he physical insensibility
by inhaling tbe gas lasts a minute or
probably a little less. ”
“I guess that’s long enough. Got
all ready fur a fellow to take?”
“Yes. Take a seat in the chair
show me your tooth.”
“Tooth nothing)” said the excited
caller, beginning rapidly to remove null
coat and vest. “I want yon to
porous plaster off my baok
Tribune.
Careful Voter,
• Young Mrs. Giddy (putting on
hat)—Well, I’m all ready to go
vote, dear.
Mr. Yonng Giddy—All Giddy—Yes, ready? all
Mrs.
putting on my gloves and making
my mind whioh way to vote .—Chicago
Record.
What will cure
1 your Headaohet
or your Dyspepsia f
or your Biliousness 1
These Tabules 8T8 sure
top relieve. Tell your Drug¬
gist you Ripans
want the
Ohemioal Co.'s remedy} put
up iu con¬ Tabules
venient
Or Send 50 Cents for one Box,
Ripmt Chemical Co. f
IO Sprues St., Nsw York.
The Key A to fe In
" L
in
G (J o o Weekly easy rubbing*, U work; v wadi it open* can with in*. stway be die with By m i a*
-
0 weakly woman. It
c y possible thing* washed harm and with danger; Ptan j
7 last longer than if washed ■
i
^ \ soap. Everything is
with it. These form
part of tbe \ —Why women use millions upon
id packages ’ of Pearlins every year. Let Pet
its best and there is no fear of “ dirt doing itf fa
Turn ** XT Key Oa “dm
the
A Cotton Fertilizer. m
IWcbase only such fertilizers far when
least 3 to 4 % actual potash. . sri &
For Corn, Fertilizer* should contain 6* Pi
Poor results are doe entirely to deficiency of Potaal
f" * .
Milk Precaution*. sill
At Herr Belle's famous &
Berlin tbe milk is strained thr
wire sieve with a cloth, over w
fine gravel is sprinkled. After
milk is strained the gravel Is pot
& hofc oveDi that aDy germ, that
have been possibly strained from
may be destroyed,
Prayer and ProfauRy
are all right ja their p roper
* yon have Tetter or
J by matt
a box irng at ores Savannah, or Ga.
j T- shnptrine, •*
The Cairo museum has seven broom*
used by ancient Egyptian and women. closely
They are made of straw
resemble the same artioles in use
day, save th.it the handles sre sot
long enough for purposes of domestio
'
discipline.
of Hall cases -of consumption the disease, can, if be taken cured. fa*
the earlier stages of
This may seem like a_ bold assertion to
those familiar only with the means gi
ally in use for its treatment; emulsions, as, nasty e^l -
liver oil and its different filthy prepatsLotw
of hypophosphites malt, whiakey, and such like palliatives.
Although by many believed to be incurs.
ble, there is the evidence of hundreds of
living witnesses to the feet that, in
earlier stages, consumption is a curable
disease. Not every esse, but a tar f t ,f er *.
cenlage of cases, and we believe, Golden
percent, are cured by Dr. Pierce’s
Medical Discovery, even after tbe disease
has progressed so far as to induce repealed
bleedings from the lungs, expectoration severe (includ¬
cough tubercular with copious matter), great loss of flew
ing emaciation and weakness.
and extreme
Do you doubt that hundreds of such case*
reported to us as cured by *' Golden Med¬
ical Discovery ” were genuine cases of HMt
dread and fatal disease ? You need not tako
our word for it. They have, in neany evwY
instance, been experienced so pronounced home by physicians, the Dem
and most whatever in mi*
who have no interest »
representing them, and who were
Strongly prejudiced and advised Discovery,’*
a trial of ‘ ‘ Golden Medical
but who have been forced to confess tnst
it surpasses, in curative power medjcine# over with
fatal malady, all other cod
which they are its acquainted. filtby ‘;emuWon#’’ Nasty *«»
liver oil and tried in nesriy all then*
mixtures, and had been failed bew
cases had either seemed utterty benefit ltitle to fa*
fit, or had only to a whiskey,
a short time. Extract of malt,
and various preparations of the hypaphos.
phltes had also oeen faithfully triad la vain.
The photographs of a large number of
those cured of consumption, brouchitfau
lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal
catarrh and kindred maladies, have of bee* ito
skillfully reproduced in a book
pages which will be mailed to 1 *r
ceipt of address and six cents
You can then write those cured
their experience. J
Address for Book, WoiU’lB
Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
'm
♦2A»I
- r. a,
•I
Yss fcr
W. L. Doagtaa VS.C
thiigrwW Bscaas*. srs At i ts* * *
laths
TSlos hr stsaiptny tbs si
bottom, whick promo * yw
tbs mlddlom—*■ ptoflU. I
work la stria, saw tttia*
Wshsvsthsm soM srsr
ths mine rtrsn Hum sar
Mints. Ifrmsrassists*
OUlSSftai
A. ». O