The Fayetteville news. (Fayetteville, Ga.) 18??-????, November 02, 1888, Image 4
RELATIVE
UN.
inks of Trees.
* tells of a farmer who
' twenty yean has painted the
l his apple trees to protect them
inst the borer with lead and oil paint
Its paint is applied from a little below
the soil to a foot above. He finds this
entirely effective, while the body of the
tree is notin tfre least injured. He has
tried other preventives, such as tar
paper, removing and crushing them with
a wire, lime-wash, etc., but prefers the
saint simply because it is entirely effec
live and easily applied.
K 'nted as a rule evei
y.
The trees are
every year in early
Sow the Best and Cleanest Seed.
Wheat, rye and grass eeed are the
principal orops sown in the fall, and
with these, two items are important:
One is to use clean seed, and the other
Is to havo seed of the very best quality.
It is true that trashy seed can be sown
either broadcast or with a drill, but at
the same time when trash is being sown,
good seed is not, and it is more difficult
Co secure a good wheat stand with trashy,
Uncjean seed. It is very important to
secure a good stand, both in grass and
grain, if the best yield is to be obtained,
and it is important that grass seed be
sown early to obtain this. In a majority
bf cases in sowing unclean seed, more
or lesB weed seed is sown, and this is
something always to be avoided.
A strong, vigorous plant is an import
ant item in securing the best yield, and
good seed is necessary to obtain this. It
is not only necessary that the seed
should contain sufficient vitality to ger
minate, but the plant it sends forth
should be strong and vigorous, and be
able to make a good start to grow. If
this is done, the seed must be of the
best quality. Good soil, well prepared,
properly sown, and thorough cultivation
?n good season, are what may be termed
the true essentials of a good crop, and
generally in proportion as these are
given, will be the results secured. Each
u important in itself, and a failure to
give either will affect the result. The
difference in the cost between good seed
and that of a poor quality, is a small
item in comparison with the risk in the
result to be secured. In addition to
this, the use of poor seed aids very ma
terially to lower the quality of the prod
uct, and to cause the seed to run out,
while on the other hand, a very careful
selection, and using of the very best will
aid very materially to gradually improve
ii,—^Prairie Farmer.
1
Club rootln cabbages is prevented by
making the seed bed on new' ground or
ground not used for cabbage for several
years.
It is said that land infested with cut
worms may be relieved of these pests
nay | _______ _
by ploughibg under a crop of buck
wheat
The elements of the fundamental
principles of farming are: Soil, heat^
moisture, muscle and brain power. The
commingling of these five elements pro
duce the key to successful farming.
The great preponderance of testimony
shows that soft food is better for cattle
than is dry feed, and that in the dairy it
is no trouble, with plenty of ensilage, to
keep up a summer flow of milk all the
year.
Shade is necessary for the currant A
good crop cannot be successfully grown
on au open space, unless the ground is
deeply worked and then mulched. The
gooseberry seems to do best in partial
shade.
Quicklime is as indispensable in a
dairy as ice. It is exceedingly absorb-
tive of moisture, taking up one-third oi
its weight and falling slowly to a fine,
dry powder, without any appearance oi
moisture.
A Horse's Keen Sense of Smell.
A horse, says the New York Sun, will
not drink of water objectionable to his
questioning sniffs, ot from a bucket
which some odor makes offensive, how
ever thirsty. His intelligent nostril will
widen, quiver, and query over the
daintiest bit, offered by the fairest oi
hands, with coaxings that would make a
mortal shut his eyes and swallow a
nauseous mouthful at a gulp.
A mare is never satisfied by either
sight or whinney that her colt is really
her own until she has a certified nasal
certificate to the fact.
A blind horse, now living, will not
allow the approach of any stranger with
out showing signs of anger hot safely to
be disregarded. The distinction is evi
dently made by his sense of smell, and
at a considerable distanco. Blind
horses, as a rule, will gallop wildly about
a pasture without striking the surround
ing fence. The sense of smell informs
them of its proximity. Others will,
when loosened from the stable, go
directly to the gate or bars opened to
their accustomed feeding grounds, and
when desiring to return, after hours of
careless wandering, will distinguish the
one outlet and patiently await its open
ing. The odor of that particular part of
the fence is their pilot to it.
The horse in browsing or while gather
ing herbage with his lips is guided in its
choice of proper food entirely by its
nostrils. Blind horses do not make m s-
takes in their diet. In the temple of
Olympus a bronze horse was exhibited,at
the sight of which six real horses ex
perienced the most violent emotions.
^Elian judiciously observed that the most
perfect art could not imitate nature suf
ficiently well to produce so strong an
illusion. Like Pliny and Pausanius, he
subsequently affirms that “in casting the
statue a magician had thrown Hippo-
manes upon it,” whic^by the odor of
the plant deceived Ime horses, and
therein we have the secret of the miracle.
The scent alone of a buffalo robe will
cause many horses to evince lively terror,
and the floating scent of a railroad train
will frighten some long after the loco
motive is out of sight and hearing.
Care of Cows and Calves.
There is nothing more important in
the way of perfecting the dairy herd
than that of getting the cows into good
habits. Just as good habits are the
governing principle of the growing
child, sc it is with the coming cow. 6he
is the pure creature of habit, and this
trait should be cultivated and trained.
The character of the cow seems to par
take strongly of her surroundings, and
this is governed by the nature of the
tnan who directs the farm. If he is
careless and ignorant, the cow is certain
to equally careless and ignorant, and if
he is pushing, energetic and go ahead in
his style of business the cow will respond
to these sentiments. By simply looking
at the farm you can usually tell the style
of animal you will find on the farm.
From this we learn that the man’s
mind is the starting point from which
all good or evil flows throughout the
whole working of the farm and the
animals on it. Just as he wills it, so it
will be, and there is no escaping this
conclusion no matter how much he may
lay the responsibility to luck, the weather
or the moon. 1 ay the blame for what
goes wrong to your own head, and nine
times out of ten you will have reached
the origin of all your troubles. Teach
your cows that they have certain duties
to perform at certain hours of the day,
and it is wonderful how promptly they
will respond to your reasonable require
ments. But this must be done witn re
ligious regularity, not only in matters
of importance, but particularly in those
points of auparent small necessity.
Cows should not only be fed and milked
at regular tours, but they should be
made to always occupy the same stalls,
and be milked in the same order. These
little things go a great way in fixing
her character, and often settle the point
of profit or loss in the year’s work.
Teaching calves to drink is an art that
some men have great trouble in learn
ing. At the same time it is easy enough
If you only go about it in the right way.
There is a great differsuce in the capac
ity of calves for learning to take their
food in this way, just as it is with chil
dren, but a little patience and persis
tence will cure the most obstinate cases.
In the first place the calf must be made
actually hungry, so as to sharpen its wits
and make it know just what it wants.
Now back it into a corner and hold it
firm with one arm around- tbs neck.
Pus^t^head into "arm milk
Sffi!nMS&igerj£^ s: Home
say the Huger snov k r$< over the un
der lip. If the ealf has not been unduly
excited it will begin to suck the finger,
which should be gradually withdrawn,
but held ready to enter the mouth again
when the calf stops drinking.
Two or three lessons will cure the most
stupid calf, and right here let us give
warning that calves must not be fed
skim-milk when too young, or cold
milk at any time, if you do not want to
kill them. Even though they survive
for a few weeks, you are laying the
foundation for future disease if you do
not respect this warning. The young
stomach cannot handle cold milk, while
skim-milk does not contain sufficient
fat and especially heating quality enough
to meet the absolute requirements of
the young animal. If you have taken
the natural oil out of the milk you must
then replace it with an artificial substi
tute in the shape of cotton seed or lin
seed oil, in proper proportions, accord
ing to the age and size of the calf. The
farmer who is not willing to take this
trouble with the calves had far better
leave them to suck the dams at a loss of
milk, for otherwise he will lose the
calves.—American Dairyman.
Farm and Garden Notea
Overfeeding is injurious.
Every sheep raiser makes his own luck,
according to the care and attention he
gives his flock.
! Clean up the farm. Neglected feaoe
CURIOUS PEOPLE AT A CURIOUS
PLACE IN CONNECTICUT.
The Colony of People Who Live at
Dantown—Homes of the Ban
ket Makers—How Bas
kets are Made.
An Inanimate Fire Uetective.
An ingenious method of detecting s
fire in its inactive stage, whereby better
protection is insured against fire in tex
tile mills, warehouses, large public build
ings, ships, etc., has been advanced by
the fire brigade master at Paisley,
England. His system departs from the
heat alarm method and consists of an ar
rangement of perforated pipes which are
led through the interior of buildings oi
the lower decks of seagoing vessels.
These are connected with an ordinary
suetion and force pump or pumps, eithei
rotary or reciprocating, which, when sel
in motion, will inhale smoke arising and
discharge it at a couveuient point avail-
ble at all times for observation. As
smoke cousists of minute particles of
carbon separated from the material af
fected, but not consumed, it at once
ascends to the ceiling, expands and au
apartment may become full to suffocation
by these floating particles before any heat
is developed sufficient to melt the fusible
alloys ordinarily used in the construction
of automatic extinguishers. It is, there
fore, clear that an earlier indication of
the existence of mischief may be ob
tained in this manner than has hitherto
been possible. The advantages claimed
for it are its extreme sensitiveness in giv
ing a distinct alarm before smoke is
visible; no water damage possible unless
fire occurs; giving alarm long before
heat would give it; great security against
fire; and placing proprietors in a good
position to secure reduction of pre
miums. It is aLo claimed that with a
combination of appropriate water ap
paratus and automatic sprinklers this
svstem'may be utilized as a fire ex
tinguisher.—Hartford Times.
Writing by Wire.
“Mercy on usl That looks like the
bookkeeper’s writing on the telegram.
I hope nothing’s happened to your
father. ”
Such a remark made a few months ago
would have subjected the speaker to not
a little ridicule, but the onward march
of science is robbing us of our jokes at
the same time that it adds to our con
veniences.
On July 31st a patent was granted to
an Illinois professor for a telautograph,
by means of which messages may be sent
over the wire in the handwriting of the
sender himself, without the assistance of
an operator. It is possible, therefore,
that the poets and Presidents of the
next generation may be asked for their
autographs by “return current.”—
Golden argosy,
llig Winnie, the Freak.
Baltimore has lost her champion freak,
a colored woman, Winnie Johnson, who
weighed 849 pounds. Her coffin was
nearly four feet wide and three and a
half feet deep. She was born in Henry
county, Ky., in the year 1849. As
child she was as other children are, and.
gave no signs of attaining any unusual'
size. When she was about twenty years
of age she began to grow large. Every
year added to her size. She was the
mother of ten children. —Neio York Telo-
grmm.
You may look on the map and study
the Postoffice guide, and you will not
find Dantown; but thgje is a Dantown*
and it is about as exclusive a town as
was ever populated. Dantown is eighty-
five miles from New York; and is
reached by the New York, Now Haven
and Hartford Railroad, via Stamford and
New Canaan, Conn. A colony of basket
makers there inhabit a district beginning
about four miles north of New Canaan,
running in length about eight miles, and
in width about threo miles. In this bali-
wick is included another settlement
called Jumptown, but the whole district
is known as Dantown. Tho settlement
derives its name from the first settlers,
whoso name was Dan. and ninety-nine-
hundreths of the people who live there
now are also Dans.
Tho homes of the basket makers are
old, tumble-down, ramshackle affairs,
unpainted, built of oak shingles, one-
half of them fallen off, and the balance in
a state of irretrievable decay, fences
falling down, gates with no hinges, the
whole settlement looking as if a cyclone
had struck it away back in Revolution
ary war times, and not a stroke of re
pairs being put to it since. For furni
ture of these houses there is nothing but
the plainest straight-backed chairs, with
basket-woven seats, some of them banded
down from great-grandfather's time, and
some of late domestic manufacture, but
all presenting the same stylo and discom
fort. The old fashioned fireplaces arc
built of wood and plastered inside and
out. The Dantowners are not high
livers. They eat because it sustains life.
They do not sit long at table, and they
dispense with all of the conventionalities
of table etiquette. The writer sat down
to dine, or, as the host expressed it, “to
take pot luck,” and was told to “pitch
in and help verself,” which he did. The
bill of fare was pork and beans, potatoes,
bread and molasses, and apple sauce, the
young girl of the family remarking:
“Say, maar, ef it’s dark t’niglit I’ll git
nuther bag o’ them there apples.”
Whereupon maar replied: “Dry up yei
yawp.”
The people live frugally, because they
are compelled. A basket maker must
work early and late to make $5 ti week,
and as there are generally a dozen “young
’uns” about the house, this does not go
far, though the “young ’uus” were all in
a semi-state of nudity.
Yet these people are content with their
lot. There is always a market for their
baskets, and they manage to squeeze
along on the commonest food so that
they can indulge in tobacco and get the
little brown jug filled. The latter is of
more absolute necessity to the majority
of the Dantowners than the sack of flour
or the flitch of bacon. Years ago they
were famous for their store of Medford
rum, but it is never seen now. In its
place is rye whiskey, and not the best,
either, and now that Now Canaan is a
prohibition town, they are sometimes
put to desperate stiaits for the where
withal to wet their whistleb. There are
no organized workshops, and the busi
ness of setting up baskets is carried on
in the kitchen, dining-room and parlor,
which is generally all in one room. They
are very particular about tlioii timber.
They use hickory, white and black ash,
and black oak. They use the first cut of
the log and no other. The bark is peeled
off, and the log, which is never over ten
inches through, is split into sections,
making it easier to handle. They take
a section and pound it over a log or rock
until it slivers. It is then segregated by
peeling the slivers off, which are used
for what is called - “filling” for the
baskets. The “standards” arc peeled
much thicker and have the appearance
of a flour barrel hoop. They are ti; d in
bundles, and, if not used when
green, are soaked in water over
night, which makes them pliable
and easy to weave. If they do not cut
this wood themselves they are compelled
to pay $10 a cord for it; hut it is said
that a great many cut their ow»n wood,
and are not particular whose land they
cut it from. Times have changed with
the basket makers, and competition has
cheapened their product from $16 a
dozen twenty years ago to $8.60 now.
And then wood was only $0 a cord.
The mode of basket making is simple.
First the thick strips arc cut to the re
quired length, and laid on the ground,
looking like a gigantic starfish. At the
point of contact they are fastened, and
then comes the work of weaving tho
light or side strips in and out:. One
strip is woven in several times around
the basket before it gives out, when an
other one is lapped on. As the weaving
continues the standards arc raised and
bent, or “shaped,” until it has reached
the required height. Then two thicker
strips, flat on one side, rounded with a
draw shave on the other, are clapped on.
The standards, which project above this
band, are twisted around it and securely
fastened. The handles are put on be
fore the band is. These are made of a
thick strip trimmed down smooth, with
a notch cut in them, which abuts against
the band. Then the basket is turned
upside down, and another star-shaped set
are pushed up through the woof of tho
basket. This is done so that the basket
can sit on its own bottom. A basket
maker has to bustle to make two dozen
baskets in a week. They make all
kinds, the corn, the market and the
oyster basket, but the latter takes pre
cedence over the two former, as the de
mand along the Hound is never filled.
—New York Sun.
If tms a young man haa a need of all
hia fibbing rescuroea it is when he ia try
ing to make a cold, cruel and inconsider
ate girl believe that the rear row of seats
in the baloony are just as good, if not
really a little more desirable, than the
*1.65 orchestra seats. As they taka
their seats he says, oheerily:
“I never like to sit too near the stage,
do you?”
“Well, I don't know,” she says in a
discouraging way. “Of oourse I don’t
like to be too near.”
"No; I don’t either,” says the young
man a trifle gloomily. “One is more apt
to see all the sham and pretense of the
thing; don’t you think so?”
“Well, I—I—suppose so," she says in
a tone that no girl of any feeling would
ever use after she has had 76 cents
squandered on her.
“I rather prefer the baloony to any
part of the house,” says the young man
cheerily and falsely,
“The front seats are very desirable,"
she says.
“Yes, I like them; and yet, do you
know, it always makes me feel a little
dizzy to sit and look over the baloony
railing?”
“Does it?” she asks in a kind of I-
know - you - are - fibbing tone. “How
strange! I like the front row best of
all.”
“I tried to get seats there,” he says,
“and I had a messenger boy stand in
line threo hours”—this is a big one—
“but there wasn’t an orohestra or front
baloony seat to be had when he got to
the window. All sold four days ago.”
“How strange!” she says, “they must
have told the boy a story, for brother
Fred got three splendid orohestra seats
this afternoon.”
“Got them from speculators, didn’t
he?” says the desperate young man.
“No; he got them right at the box
office, and ha said there wore lots left;
lo if I were vou I’d complain about it.”
“I certainly will,” be BayB earnestly,
while he makes a solemn vow that he
certainly will not take that girl to the
theatre again as long as he lives.
“Holds Up” a Car.
The Louisville Post tells this story:—
Louis Nevin, recently returned from Hot
springs, Ark., brought a tarantula as
big as a tea saucer to Dr. Vanderespt as
k present. Mr. Nevin was at a great
deal of trouble ki catching theinseotand
in bringing him to Louisville. It was
bagged in the wilds of the hilly country
about Hot Springs. While Mr. Nevin
bnd it in his possession he was quaran
tined from his boarding-house and had
to leave his pet in the woods to eat his
meals. He had'a highly exciting time
in getting the bug to Louisville, He
carried it in a glass bottle with a stopper
with air holes in it. While riding on
the narrow gauge road between Hot
Springs and Little Rook the stopper fell
out of the bottle, and following closely
after it came tho tarantula. The coach
was full of passengers at the time, with
a largo number of women and children
among them. Before Nevin had an
inkling of the spider’s escape he saw it
in the middle of the oar aisle. He tried
to recapture it without oreating any
furor, but the tarantula was bent on a
little fun, ar.d refused to be captured.
With masculine good taste he made
straight for the petticoats of a pretty
girl. The girl discovered him, jumped
upon tho seat and gave the alarm. All
the women went promptly into hysterics
and the men wore thrown into a state of
equal excitement, 'fhe tarantula had
tho car at his mercy for half an hour,
but was finally nan into a corner by his
owner and captured.
Novel Regulations.
The weather in the Alps has been so
bad this season that the hotel-keepers
look in vain with dismal faces for the
usual stream of foreign guests. A con
tinuous rain has been a calamity to tho
region.
Will Martin, a young boy, son of Will
iam Martin, who was chastised by bis
teacher, set fire to the Mount Freedom
school house, near Nicholasville, Ky.,
and destroyed it. The boy is about nine
years old.
Queen 'Victoria has sold a number of
Shorthorn and Hereford cattle for ex
portation to the United States and
ilanada.
The Seventh-day Adventists of Minne
sota havo organized a school in Minnea
polis, the rules and regulations are
Nobody who uses profane or uubecoming
language, who rises tobacco or intoxica
ting liquors or is in any way immoral
will be admitted. Manual training is to
be one of the features, and tent-making
is mentioned as a very pleasant as well
as useful employment to be taught. It
is also the plan to have the general do
mestic work of the school done by the
students and the work embraces dining
room, kitchen and laundry work, saw
ing and splitting wood, etc. Aside
from the ordinary branches, physiology,
civil government and algebra are named
in connection with missionary and Sab
bath-school work, as a part of tho course.
A novel feature is that the young men
are required to provide themselves with
flannel or colored shirts and with cellu
loid collars and cuffs, ns linen shirts,
cuffs, etc., will not be laundered at the
school.
Interviewer : “To whut do you at
tribute the falling off in your passenger
traffic?” Railway manager: “To the
fact, sir, that w-e spent $1,000,000 in
blasting the roof of a half mile tunnel
and making an open cut of it. (Bitter
ly.) Our chief competitor, with a quarter
mile tunnel, calls itself the Great Lovers'
Route now, sir.”
A Valuable Remedy.
Bbandheth’s Pills purify the Blood, stim
ulate the Liver, strengthen tho Kidneys, regu
late the Bowels. They were Introduced in the
United States in 183-5. Since that time over fifty
millions of boxes of Buandhetii’8 Pills have
been consumed.
This, together with thousands of convincing
testimonials from nil parts of the world, is pos
itive evidence of their value.
Bhandmmh’s Pills are purely vegetable, ab
solutely harmless, and Bafe to take at any
time.
Sold In every drug and medlolne store, either
plain or augur coated.
There nro -403 mountain peaks in tho United
States more than 10,000 feet in height.
A Itladman at Large!
He is a well-known citizen, and his nearest
and dearest f i lends do not suspect his insanity.
How do wo happen to know about it? Listen:
his appetite is gone, ho is low-sp rited, hedon I
it ur...,, utvnntu In* n nnnvfid
single pattern. nonsense? Not
at all! They are all given away to the pur
chasers ana subscribers to that Wonderful
Family Magazine, Demorest’s Monthly. Booh
Magazine contains an order entitling the
holder to any pattern they manufacture. We
do not see how they can afford it, for .their
editions aro Immense, and it seems incredible
that each Magazine (Price, 80 cents), oontains,
an order for a pattern worth from 80 to 80
cents. This will certainly hurt the pattern
trade, for ladies will soon learn that they can
get their patterns free by simply buying or
subscribing for Demorest’s Monthly Magazine.
Published at 15 East 14th Street, New York
City. . , ,
Send 10 cents for a sample copy containing
‘Order” for pattern worth 80 cents.
The bustle is not wholly discarded, .hut it
has certainly gone tq the rear.
Wonderftal Popularity.
The fact that the sale of Dr. Pierce’s Pleas
ant Purgative Pellets exceeds that of any other
pill in the market, be it great or small, is on
account of the fact that they are tiny, little,
sugar-coated griuiulea. and that In most cases
one little ‘‘Pellet’’ is sufficient for a dose: that
they are purely vegetable and perfectly harm
less; and for constipation, biliousness, siok
headache, and all diseases arising from de
rangement of the liver, stomach or bowels,
they are absolutely a specific. A gentle laxa
tive or active catbartlo, according to size oi
dose. ,
Franco has over 8,600,000 tree- 1 growing along
the high roads; mostly nut-hearing trees.
A Wonderful Pood uud medicine,
Known and used by Physicians all over the
world. Scott’s Emulsion not only gives flesh
and strength by virtue of Its own nutritons
iropertles, but creates an appetite for food
tint builds up the wasted body. “I have been
using Scott’s Emulsion for several years, and
am pleased with its action. My patients say it
is pleasant and palatable, and all Brow
stronger and gain flesh from the use of it. I
use it in all cases of Wasting Diseases, and it
is specially useful for chilhren when nutrient
medication is needed, as In Marasmus. —l,
W. Pieros, M. D.. Knoxville, Ala.
The original spirit-rappers, the Fox sisters
are lecturing and laying bare the cheat.
Dungeroue Negligence.
It is as unwise to neglect a
tion or indigestion as a case of fever or other
more serious disease, for, if allowed ie pregress
as great danger to Ilf e may result. A few Ham
burg Figs will put the bowels in a healthy con
dition,in which they may be keptby oocaslqnal
use of this medicine. 85 cents. Dose one Fig.
Mack Drug Co., N. Y.
Diseases Peculiar to Women, especially
monthly disorders, are cured by the timely
se of Brndfleld’s Female Regulator.
New Yo;k City 1 as ten reformatories for the
rescue and ho p of fallen women.
Use the great specific for “cold in the head”
and catarrh—Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.
Mm, Biliousness, Blood Humors, Kidney
Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever and Ague,
Bleeplessnem, Partial Paralysis, or Nervous Pros
tration, use Paine’s Celery Compound and ha
cured. In each of these the cause Is mental ot
physical overwork, anxiety, exposure ot malaria,
the effect of whioh 4 to weaken the nervous sys
tem, resulting in one of these diseases. Remove
the oausz with that great Nerve Tonic, and the
BisuLT will dlaanpear.
Paine’s Celery Compound
Jas. I- Bowen, Springfield, Mass., writes:—
“ Paine’s Celery Compound cannot be excelled as
a Nerve Tonlo. In my case a single bottle
wrought a great change. My nervousness entirely
disappeared, and with it the resulting affectum
of the stomach, heart and liver, and the whole
tone of the system was wonderfully invigorated.
I tell my Mends, if sick as I have been, Paine •
Celery Compound
Will Cure You!
v Sold by druggists. II; six for 15. Prepared only
by Wells, Richardson & Co., Burlington, Vt
For the Aged, Nervous. Debilitated.
Short a. counts make Ion-.' friends. Use not
credit toe often without oiling with currency.
The best cough medicine Is Plso’s Cure for
Consumption. Sold everywhere. 25c.
The true American has
a warm place ip his heart
for the old Loo OABiN.It’s
not “English you know,”
but from the Log Cabins
of America have sprung
men in every respect
greater than any from the grand castles
of Europe. Warner’s Log Cabin Sarsa-
parillais the best in the world.
Ely’s Cream Balm,
Is Sore to Core
COLD IN HEAD
QUICKLY,
Apply Balm into each nostril.
ELY BROS., M Warren St., N.Y.
Learn Telegraphy
AT THE GEORGIA TELEGRAPH SCHOOL.'
FISTULA
and all Baotal Disease"
treated by a painless pro’
oesa. No loss of time from
business. No knife, ligature
or OaUBtiO. ▲ RADICAL OHR*
guaranteed in every oase
treated. Reference' given.
Dn. R. O. JACKSON, 42*
Whitehall 8L, Atlanta, Ga.
W ANTED—A MAN!
tlnn Earn n Salary from 8100 to
§200 a month ! We want a Live,
Energetic man, who ie not afraid of work, in every
county in the Southern States. Such a man oan make
the above nmount, handling oar goods. No capital
renuired. Work the year round. II. V. HUDGINS
dc CO., 1’iiblieboi-H, ATLANTA, GA.
JONES
Iron Levers, Steal Bearing*, Brass
Tara Beam and Beam Boa M
it OF BlNQNAIITilla
HHAttTON. N. Ve
""’SHOTGUN
lOO.Pfc.f'cal.lwriieof Gun-, Itifl*-, H.TOlT.r., Pellce Goods
1 JOUI l-VifoTILI. ARMS CO., RuePr., Bo-ton, Uua.
FOR
IO
A Dress Dyed
A Coat Colored
Garments Renewed j cents.
A Child can use them!
Unequalled tor all Fanoy and Art Work,
At druggists and Merchants. Dye Book ftee.
WELLS, RICHARDSON A C0„ Propt., Burlington, Vt
■ CURES WHERE ALL ELSI
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes
in time. Soldbydrut
I believe Fiao’a Cure
for Consumption saved
my life.—A. H. Dowell,
Editor Enquirer, Eden-
ton, N. C., April 23,1887.
0
i dlllU UZDIT Painlessly cured la 10 to ®
PIUM HABIT Days. Sanitarium or Home
Treatment. Trial Free. No Cure? No Pay. The
Humane Remedy Co., La Payette, Ind,
Ml it Ur. ,t homo on J au*. mor. money working for a, ih.n
UUkUl ,t anything .1,. In th. world Either MX. Coitly outflt
T.nnirazz. Addr.u, T*0* <■ CO., Augtut., Mein*.
Shot Guns Breeoh Loaders $6.50
Catalogue free. Pttncxx’B GUN House. Oshkosh, Wis
kOLOHADO lor Conauinptlveaand Asthmat-
yics. Send 2c. for it. Do. Uaiitlett, boulder, Ool.
PEERLESS DYES SoiS BY*DKUUouni
The best Cough Medi
cine is Piso’s Cube fob
Consumption. Children
take it without objection.
By all druggists. 25c.
PISO’5 CURE FOR
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE MILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good, l
' 1 time. Sold by druggists.
rfgfctliaiairag
MEN AND BOYS!
R o you went to
larn all about
a Horep V How
to Pick Out a
Good One V How
to K now Imper
fection* and so
Guard against
FraudV Howto
Detect Disease
and effect a cure
when mine is
possible V How
to Tell the Age
by the Teeth V
What to call the
Different Parts
zxrtt "tkify 25 CTS. IN STAMPS.
HORSE BOOK CO.. 134 Leonard St.rN. Y,
EVERY
FARMER’S
WIFE
Sees some of her Poultry
die each year without
knowing what the matter
was or now to effect a
remedy If she does recog
nize the Disease. This Is
not right, as at sn ex
pense of 33 cents (la
,ta T8tp 9 agTiooff
giving the experience of a practical Poultry Raiser
(not an amateur, but a man working for dollars ana
cente) during a period of 25 years. It teaches yow
howto Detect and Cure Diseases! how to
Feed for Eggs and also for Fattening}
which Fowls to Bare lor Broedlna Par-
poses | and everyth ing, Indeed, jmm unu/jim
Knowou this suhjgcL Sent pg&ald for 35c.
134 Leonard Htreet.N.Y. City.,
$160
kXUUES, Wood PUeoro.
Hege’s Improved.
Circular Saw Mill J
With Uni vocal
Log Beam Recti
linear Simulta
neous Set Work (I
and Double Kc-^
centrio Friction
Feed. Manufa
tured by the
SALEiH IH(
lASTfll
I able sleep; effects ca
ARE YOU MARRIED? ^
this society, which pays its monitors alia
.nt marriage. Circulars free. ^ N. W. I
DO WMKNT8QC1ETY, Box 846, MlnneapoN|
Blair
Oval
Dills Great Englisht
I lll$a Rheumatlo Rtl
lox, 341 ruund. 14 Pills
■ (flue STUDY. Book-keeping,Business!
UlMIk Penmanship, Arithmetic, Short-D--
Kl thoroughly taught by MAJL. Clrou-
Bryant’s College, 457 Main St, Buna
M to SS a day. Samples worth ,1.601,
Lines not under the horBo's feot. WrlUj
Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co.. Holley.
UlAUTCn TO HUY A RAIMI In this lo,
IVAN I CU Curtis A Wright, 233 Broadway, 1
N. U For y-fonr,
forerunners of consumption a— -.
he neglects thorn. Is it any womtur that we
call bun n mailman? If you aro his frienn.tofi
him to get a bottle of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med-
ioal Discovery w ithout delay. It will cure Ida
if ho takes it in time. It will not miraculously
create new lungs when the old ottos are nearly
g one, but it will restore diseased ones to a
ealthy condition. Tell him about it, and worn
him that in his case do] ay means death.
The Prlncoof Wales Is said to bo a first-class
banjo player.
If afflicted with .‘ ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Tbomp-
ZOn’sEye' water. Druggists sell atSoc. por bottle.
New and Second-Hand Machinery
H e are Headquarters for Engines, Boilers, Snw AfiMa,
Mill Outfits, Portable Com and Wheat Mill>, Millstones, Bolting Clotty
i niton, *eed Mullers and. Grinders, Belting, Saws, Piping, Ate.
In addition to New Machinery, we have a large atook of Seoond-Hand Engines, Boiler., hhingle .Machined
Pluueis, etc., etc., all sizes, at Astonishingly Luw Prices. Termsensy. We oan Save You Money I Write uj
.l.UKl.N- .WAtHINliYlY CO., 67 a! Broad and 68 8. Forsyth fitrete, ATLANTA, GA. ■
r *1' ►!< -I* *i< ►!* -I- -f-
Tho mun who has invested trom three
to live dollars, in a ltubbcr Coat, and
at his first half hour's experience in
a storm finds to his sorrow that It If
hardly n better protection than a mos
quito netting, not only feels chagrined
at being so badly taken in, but alto
fools if he docs not look exactly like
Aik tor the “ FISH Bit AND ” Buena
dor, not hnvi> tho FIBH_BRA«p, send for tf
WET
HEN
we offer the man who want, aeirvlce
(not stylo) a garment that will Aeeif
him dry (n the harde.t itorm. .It u
called TOWER’S FISH BRAND
“ SLICKER," a name familiar to.
Cow-boy all over the land. WI>J^
the only perfect Wind and Wc
Coat Is "Tower'e Fl.h Brand.
A. J. Towr.it, 20 Simmon, St., BoetJ
-J- - J, -J- >i> -J-