The Fayetteville news. (Fayetteville, Ga.) 18??-????, December 14, 1888, Image 8

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ST 1 RELATIVE IlBDEN. Boas. — la swine com* ia duo to overfeed- •0. Gorging h«gs with sufficient water Is a it. A useful and often is to giro half a dram •per dissolved in some ce in one day, and repeat fd day for two or three times. '* taao ia contageous and if not the hog for future use, it is as ' the sick ones and bury them lace. ■ Breaking a Colt to the Saddle. A colt may bo easily broken to the •addle in this way: First use her to a halter, leading her about until she will go readily. Then nut on a bridle and lead her, teaching her to hack." Then strap a folded blanket on her back and let a small boy ride. After n few times put on a saddle and let the boy mount. Gradually increa c the weight by using a bag with corn in it for a saddle. By gradually famiari ing the colt with what is 'Wanted, and with kind, gentle persua- tion, but firm handling, tho young horse will como to work - quite easily in a month. Great care should be taken not to have a halter break, but to tise very strong ones. A young horse which has once broken a halter or tie strap will do it again upon every occasion.—New York Times, The Touch of Cattle. The skin of cattle affords a criterion second to none in judging of the feeding properties of a beat. The touch may be hard or mellow. A thick, firm skin, which is generally covered with a thick set, bard, short hair, always indicates a bad feeder. A thin, papery skin, covered with thin, silken ha r, be ng the opposite of the one just described, does not, how ever, afford a good touch. Such skin is Judicative of a weakness of constitution, though of good feeding properties. A perfect touch will bo found with thick, oose skin, floating ns it were on a layer of soft fat, yielding to the least pressure, and springing back to the finger like a piece of thick velvet, and covered with thick, glossy, soft hair. A knowledge of touch can only be acquired by long practice, but after one ha9 acquired it, it is a sufficient means of judging of the feeding qualities of an ox.— Western Agriculturist. P Jc E The Value of Saif, Now that there is a prospect of salt being admitted duty free, I wish to make a few remarks to tb.e farmer readers of the New York World, says a correspond ent, on what 1 believe to be its incom- •arable value. I have used it many years n the garden and on the farm in various ways, and believe it to be profitable to all who cultivate tho soil. It is needless to speak of its many uses in the house hold or domestic economy, nor shall I urge the gi eat advantage of supplying it tostock—cattle, sheep, hogs and horses. It is well known to be beneficial to these fcsepi ng.up goad owditioil, and In the three fast named help* .keep do 1 ’ Salt, in moderate quantities, is goo l iot th* lied—-improve* grnss tnrd /.frain and' tSJfWdfor nearly all vegetable crops. I have found it. particularly good for onions, carrots and (ab.ages. Some seem to think St is only a stimulant; the 6ome is said of lime. Be that as it will, both improve tho crops, bait, in some respects seems to have opposite proper ties—to be in some measure paradoxical —for, while it preserves animal fibre, it hastens the decay of many vegetable sub stances, insomuch that, sprinkled through leaves or weeds, it helps to de- compo e them; and, while heavy doses kill weeds and grass, duly distributed and mixed with the soil, it is an excel lent fertilizer. Th s is why many people have an aversion to salting* their land. But what I chiefly wish to show is its property in destroying insects of almost every kind. Either alone or mixed with other substances it is an insecticide. Before the crop is committed to the ground it should bo sown in its purity over the laud wherein your insects generate in myriads, j his done, one or two weeks before so wing the seed and thoroughly harrowed in through the soil, it will be absorbed thcroby and will not evaporate, but remain in the ground to perform a twofold operation. When ap- It, and in tht spring it will ha found vary light, niallovp and woll pulverized. It will bo found profitable to milk the heifer as long as possible the first year of her dairy life, giving her generous feeding to make rich blood. This will lay the foundation for a profitable dairy cow. Find e farmer who leaves his horses hitched, hour after hour, to a post to shiver in storms while he saunters about town, and he may be marked as a poor subject for credit, no matter how much land ho has. Hero is a mode of curing gapes in chickens by the use of slacked lime. Put the chickens in a box, tie a piece of coarse sacking or cheese cloth over the top, spread some fine air-slaeked lime on the cloth, and then jar it so that the fine lime will sift down among the chicks. The wastes of the garden will be high ly enjoyed by the porkers. Cabbage leaves and stalks, with the small pota toes and other things not valuable foi family use, and that can not bo stored for the pigs in cold weather, had beitei be fed to them now rather than allowed to decay. In the selection of products for exhi bition the farmer should remember that perfection of form should be preferred tosi e. Many make a mistake in the selection of fruit by the selection of the very largest, though the form may not be good, or it may be wormy. Better so. lect a fair size, if it be perfect in form, than a very large size that is imperfect. A farmer may keep a hundred fowls in his bam, may sutler them to trample upon and destroy his mows of grain, and still have fewer eggs than his ncighboi who keeps a single dozen, who provides secret nests, chalk eggs, pounded brick, plenty of Indian corn, lime, water and gravel for them, and who takes care that his hens are not disturbed about theii nests. English shepherds purchase butter re jected by tho market inspectors and rendered unsalable by beingstirred with a tarred stick, for tho purpose of smear ing their sheep after shearing, as a pro tection against the torments of flies and other insects, and the effect of heat upon their tender skins. It is a practice that might be adopted with benefit in this country. * If you have a valuable hen afflicted with cholera, and wish to save her at the cost of much labor, give a teaspoonful of the following mixture every hour until relieved: Maudrake root, red pep per and pulverized rhubarb, one part each; boracic acid, two parts; hypo-sul phite of soda, four parts, and extract logwood, two parts. Your success will be doubtful eveu then, but if the disease has not made too much headway, it is worth a trial. The Battle of the Bees. A gentleman writing to the London New 1 from Carlton, Worksop, Notts, sends the following interesting account of a fight between bees: ‘ ‘Those of your readers who are bee-keepers will nat urally understand and appreciate the many incidents of surpa'sing interest appertaining to bees and bce-kccp ng. But doubtless there are many thousands of your ordinary readers who would bo keenly interested in watching the pro gress of a real bee-battle—an attack by some, or all, the bees of one hive on tho occupants of another hive, with the wicked intention of pilfering the honey which the industry of the hive attacked has gathered. Such an attack actually took place yesterday in my garden, and for the space of quite an hour I had an opportunity of observing the savageness and determination with which these in tensely interesting creatures tight. The first intimation I had of the di.-turbance was a very loud buzzing and humming in the neighborhood of my smallest and wenkest h.ve. On going near the hive I at once saw what was the real state of affairs. A detachment of. bees from a neighbor’s hive were storming my own with very great determination. Some were fighting in tho air, and others were' endeavoring to effect an entrance into the hive itself, but, so far as I could judge, were being gal'antly repulsed. Mean while, I had thought of a plan to rendet the position of the defenders more secure. At the entrance to the hive I placed a piece of perforated zinc with holes sufficiently to admit of only one bee at a time to pass through. This doubtless relieved them, and those that had effected an entrance would have the warmest possible time of it. But rein forcements were continually arriving for plied to the growing grain it should be ! the attacking army, and the position of incorporated with lime and distributed j my bres outside tho hive was becoming evenly over the crop. Worms, maggots, ■ more and more desperate. Eventually grubs or other insects cannot breed or , they were all killed or driven away, but live in salted earth, and if the gardener very many were dead or dying on the or flo'i t, when making up his pile of I ground. .Many of the enemy of course compost _ in the spring, would add a , were among the number, and the re good sprinkling of salt all through it he ! maindcr took to their wings and dis- would have little to complain of. in the j appeared. Ongoing to the hive this way of grubs or other insects eating the ! morning I counted twenty-four dead roots of his roses or carnations. There • bees carried out by the survivors. These are other things exceptionally, good for | were either my own bees who had died this purpose, but salt will e ect the end j of their wounds, or, which is very prob- desired. Asan instnuco of its immediate j able, they wore those of tho enemy who power on some insects, take any number I had ■ gained an entrance. Some time of either earthworms or snails, make a j must elapse before they will settle down pile of them ami put a ling of salt around | to work again, for they are greatly ox- thern. They will never cro-s the fence j cited, and do not leave the immediate till they die; or sprinkle a little fait over the pile uud see how. many minutes they will live. Many people i« mowing their lawns are gieatly annoyed by the earth worm casts sticking fast to the roller, whereas a very slight sprinkling of salt would prevent this, keep <3pwn t’uo worms and be good for tlw-gra-s. vicinity ot tho hive. Doubtless these splendid creatures are apprehensive of another attack on their storehouse, and act accordingly.” Expressions in a Dog’s Bark. Byron had an acute appreciation ot tho friendship of tho dog when he wrote: ’ l'is sweet to hear the watch-dog’s honest ! Bay deep-mouthed welcome as we draw near home. Now, it must be remembered that the Kami qmd Garden Notes. Dark slgbles are injurious to horses. ^-Thtr'euterprising fanner will warm the water for his stock. Good farming consists more in the care of little things than ia the ability I tone and quality of the bark is always to manage great ones. modified by tho occasion, writes Anti- A covering of manure from the stables, and a light ploughing in the spring will give you a splendid soil for a garden. Late sot strawberries will require u good match through the winter ih order to start them successfully in the spring. Pullets will begin laying earlier in life where nests and eggs are plen y and where other hens are cackling around them. The average estimate of the intelligence of swine is altogether too low. They are seldom made pets cf, but those who have sought to train them find that they learn as readily as other domestie animals. Gardens should be dug or plowed, leavitg the earth during the winter in ridges, so that the frost can operate on WOHDS OF WISDOM. LazTness grows on people. Let us ever glory in something. Experience keeps a dear school. To all mortals is given a tongue. Contraction animates conversation. Let us beware of losing our enthusiasm. He who eats the meat let him pick the bone. Don't give advice, unless you wish to be hurt. Man’s honor wears armor, and carries a mace. Man is an enigma from his birth to his death. Only when society is established can wrong exist. , Dogs wag their tails not so much at you as at their bread. It is the duty of every person to do some good in the world. Well doing, however rough and thorny Bt first, surely leads to pleasant places. Wrong doing is a road that may open fair, but it leads to trouble and danger. Brood not upon misfortunes. If you must take the bitter pills do not chew them. The willow which bends to the tempest often escapes better than the oak which resists. The more business a man has to do tho more he is able to accomplish, for ho lenrns to economize hi9 time. The darkness of death is like the even ing twilight; it makes all objects ap pear more lovely to tho dying. Flattery corrupts both the receiver and the giver; and adulation is not of more service to tho people than to the king. Ense must be impracticable to the envious; thoy lie under a double mis fortune ; common calamities aud common blessings fall heavily upon them. Misunderstanding and Corralled by Sharks. A dinghy with grass from Dwsrka foundered not very far from Bate, a port on the Gutoh coast, while she was on her way to Earaohi, when the crew, con sisting of sevon, took to the mast, which had unshipped. At the time aha foun dered tho vessel was very close to the shore, and the crew were gradually working their way toward the beach, when one of their number was neard to shriek, and immediately disappeared, and the others, to their horror, realized that they were surrounded by sharks, with no means of escaping, as the mast not only gave with their weight, but could not be kept steady on eooount of the rough state of the sea. Tim men were in a state of anxiety and fear, not knowing whose turn would oome next. One by one the men suddenly disap peared until only one remained, and by this time the storm having subsided, he mnuaged to balance himself steadily on the mast, which drifted toward the beach on tho following day. He was thus tossed about on the sea, expecting every moment to be his last, for two days' and a night.—Sind Times. Taxes. The occupation taxes of Texas are among (ho cuiiosities of state taxation. The repeal of the drummers’ tax law, which will necessarily follow the recent deci sion of the Supreme Court, has suggested tho wisdom of revising the whole list. No less than sixty-two occupations are especially taxed, and the revenue from some of these, it is said, will not repay the state for the printing aud the work done in reporting collections. Accord ing to the last report of tho controller, the clairvoyants paid $45 into the stale treasury, the bill-posters contributed $ 12, the pool-sellers $20; there wa3 received oil the licenses of ship merchants $7, aud • "n *: 1 among the other sources of revenue were tfl xes on cock fights, g a8 companies, create more uneasiness m the world than , . . , , b ,’ & r deception and artifice, or, at least, their h(icks > tc,e P honc8 and ™S on ? ards - consequences are more universal. Fighting Fire in North Texas. Who first invented this novel method of extinguishing a grass fire on the plains fame has not heralded. Old Texans de clare that when Indians killed buffalo in quantity and feasted their fires some times spread, and a freshly skinnbd buf falo hide was used by the squaws to smother the flames. Cow-boys (the Texan ones) claim the patent for this novel method of extinguishing fires. Tho At last wo are treated to a novelty in the way of almanac-making- Dr. J. O. Ayer & Co., the Lowell chemists, send us tholr Almanac for 1889, in the shape of a good-sized book, embrac ing editions in English, calculated for various sections of the United States, the Dominion of Canada, India, South Alfrica, and Australia; also, editions in nine other languages. The volume contains also specimen pages of pam phlets issued by the company In eleven lan guages not ropresc-n: ed by tho almanacs—twen ty-one languages in all. From tho preface we learn that no fewer than fourteen millions of these almanacs aro printed yearly.thus placing the work as far ahead of any other of the kind covered literature” which no family should be without.—Goad Fellowship. buffalo bunch or mssquit grass in certain seasons rather smolders than blazes, but. In circulation and value aa Ayer’s Sarsaparilla when the dry spell is continuous tho ! Is ahead of all others in merit and popularity, herbage becomes as inflammable as Be sure to secure a copy of this favorite alma- timber. To lose the naturally cured at your druggist’s. It is a species of “yellow- grass is to weaken the cattle, and lank stock does not winter well. The firs starts, and the cow-boy, ever on the alert, sees it. A cigarette has been dropped or a spark from a fire has done the business. It is not a section of country abounding with water, hoso or steam tire engines. The apparatus for extinguishing the tiro is peculiar and near at hand. Crack 1 goes a cow-boy’s revolver, and knowi Dg exactly how to shoot, a steer falls, with scarce a struggle, and is dead. Instantly a half - dozen cow-boys gather around the dead animal, and they proceeded to flay tho steer in the most expeditious manner. It is not a skin for the tun-yard, to be nice ly taken off, but there is left adhering to the hide fully four inches of the meat. It is a very heavy hide. F ow two cow boys tie their “ropes” to the pendulous shanks of the hide, take a twist of the ropes around the horns of their saddles, spring on their ponies, and plunging Bpurs into their mounts, off they start at a mad galop, dragging the hide over the fire and putting it out. Oth<yr cow boys trail along aud extinguish what lit tle fire is left. It is severe work for the wiry little horses that «cour the plain, just as soon as the horses show signs of tire, the riders jump off and mount fresh animals. At breakneck speed many miles of fire are followed. The plucky little beasts are not spared, and what they may want in bottom is made up in gamencss. A civilized” American Eastern horse could not do such work, for never could he be made to face tho burning prairie. —Harper's Weekly. Dog in the bomerviue journal, i no bark of recognition i3 a good-natured, friendly bark, and justifies the poet’s compliment; but when a dog is i.l-tem- pered, and fiercely growls and snarls at every passer-by, great y intimidating old and young, or when a neighbor, return ing to his home at a seasonable hour at night, is confronted by a canine bully of the sidewalk, whose eyes glare with fierceness, his deep, vicious growl clearly indicating an attack, while his scarlet mouth and powerful jaws are set in de fiant sternness, exposing a double row of serrated Ivory—well,‘well! that is not the dog Byron had in view when ba pennea the above couplet, but it is the class of qanincs which I had in view while penning this article. A Monument Without an inscription. The monument to be erected in a Chi cago cemetery by the Hon. John Went worth, better known as “Long John” Wentworth, has been finished by the Hallowell Granite t ompany, and nil the stones shipped with the exception of the main shaft, which now lie3 in the yard near the railroad station. The material is entirely of white TInliowell granite, and the monument is plain in design. The base is eighteen feet square and two feet thick, and Superintendent Hunt, of tho granite works says it is the largest stone ever shipped in one piece. It could not be transported by rail, but it was necessary to ship it by vessel to Now York and thence by barge through the canal to Chicago. The second base is eleven feet five inches square by ono foot Bix inches in thickness. The shaft is four feet six inches square at tho base, fifty-five feet high aud pyramidal in shape. Its weight is seventy tons, and two special cars are being constructed at the Portland car works to carry it, being the largest stone ever shipped by rail in this country. It will cost $;i0,000. In speaking of his majestic monumenl recently, the old gentleman was asked what inscription he intended to hav» upon it. “No inscription at ail,” he answered. “It’s going to tie just like me. a plain, unsophisticated monument. Then man’ll come along and say- ‘Who’i monument is thatf’ Then the man will Bay: ‘Wentworth’s.’ ‘Who’s Went worth?’ Then ho’U go and buy a biogra phy aud find out. If my name ii on it he'll simply say; ‘Oh, Wentworth,’ and walk off and forget all about it,”—New York Sun. A Vigorous Old Man. Joseph Field is an extensive and wealthy old farmer in Middletown town ship, N. J., and is !)7 years of age. He did not marry until be was 70 years old. lie is a widower and has three children, the youngest an accomplished young lady of IL His barn was destroyed by lire several months ago, and now ho is re- { lacing it with a very large atruotnre. t fs built by day’s work, aDdMr. Field, besides attending to every detail ns the building progresses, works hard ever; day.—New York Son. . Tho first of a fleet, of electrical power boats was launched on the river Tnames, London. Your Frlcud Cominltleil Sulc’de. You never suspected it, none of hie friends dreamed of It, he did not know It himself, but it is exactly what he did, nevertheless. Do you remember his sallow complexion? Do you recol ect how he used to complain of head aches and constipation? “I m getting quite bilious,” he said to you one day, “but I gu ss ll’il pass off. I haven’t done anything for it, because 1 don’t believo In ‘dosing.’ ” Boon af ter that you heard of bis death. It wasyery sudden, and evory one wrs greatly surprised. If ho had taken Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purga tive Pellets he would be alive and well to-day. Don’i follow his example. Tho “Pellets are easy to take, mild In tlieir action, and alwaj s sure. to In one year the United States sent Bremen 817,703 barrels of petroleum. Conventional " lUonon ” Resolutions, Whereas, The M non Route (L. N. A. & O. Ry Co.) • 68 res to mako It known to the world at lnrco that It forms the double connecting link or Pullman tourist travel between the winter cities of Florida a d the summer re sorts of the Northwest; and Whereas, Its “rapid transit” system Is un- Burpa sed, Its cleg int Pullman Buffet Sleeper ? nd Chair car service betweon Chicago and .oulsvllle, Indianapolis and Cincinnati un equalled; and Whereas, Its rates are as low as ths lowest; then be it Resolved, That in the event of starting on a trip it is good pollen to con uIt with E. O. Mc Cormick, Oen’l Pass. Agent Mcnon Route, 189 Dearborn St., Chicago, for full particulars. (In any event send for a Tourist Guide, enclose 4c. postage.' Torpid Diver. It Is hardly possible to prepare a medicine which is pleasant to tho palate as are Ham burg Figs, or which is so efficacious incases of constipation, piles, torpid liver or eick-head- acbo. ~f> cents. Dose one big. Mack Drug Co., N. Y. The ticUeel Question. One of tho liveliest discussions that the Georgia Senate has ever had, took place over the public school hill. The bill provided for the use of text books throughout the state, with au amend ment to the effect that, all things being equal, tho preference should first be Yen Georgia’s authors, and then to itthern authors. Senator Gibbs want- to strike out the clause “all things being equal,” and leave it compulsory with the State achooLcommission to use nothing but text books by Southern nuthors without regard to the difference In price and merit of such books and those offered by Northern authors. He said in the course of his speech that there was not a book published north of Mason and Dixon’s line that was not full of sectionalism. After considerable dis cussion, Senator Harris offered a substi tutc providing that a preference should be given Southern books, and that, if L was found necossary to purchase any Northern books, the school commission shall see to it that they contain nothing of a sectional nature. The amendment prevailed. Edwin Fnrrevt’a Secret. everything I have undertaken I have done thoroughly. I never neglected trifles.” That s the point—don’t neglect trifles, Don’t neglect that hacking cough, those night-sweats, that feeble and capricious appetite, and the other symptoms, trifling in themselves, but awful In their significance. They hniald the ap proach of consumption. You are in danger, but you can be saved. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will restore you to health and vigor, as it has thousands of others. For all scrofu ous diseases, and consumption is one of them, it is a sovereign remedy. The French quota of the Russian loan ha8 been subscribed several times over. For Rickets, Marasmus, nnri Wasting Dis orders of Children, . Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypopho»phltes is uncqualed. The rapidity with which children gain flesh and strength upon it is very wonderful. Read tho follow ing: “I Uavo used sr'cott’s Emulsion in cases of Rickets and Marasmus of long standing, and have been more than pleased with the re sults, as in every cafe the improvement was marked.”—J. M. Main, M. D., New York. An air ship that can be propelled in any di rection, has been tried and 1b a success. We accidently overhea'd the following dia logue on the street yesterday: ..... Jones. Smith, why don’t you stop that dis- gustii g nawking and spitting? Smith, How can I? You know I am amartjT kj^Do as"l did. I had the disease in its worst form but I am well now. S. What did you do for it? . _ ■ J. I used Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. It cured me and it will cure you. , ,S. I’ve heard of it, and by Jove I’ll try it. J. Do so. You’ll find it at all the drug stores in town. ’I he London and Northwestern railway sys tem of England, has a capital of $522,(WO,000. A Rad’cal Core for Epileptic Vita. To Hie Editor—Please Inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease which I warrant to cure the worst cases. So strong is my faith in its vir lues that I will send flee a eamplebottle and valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give one his P O. and Express address. Respy, H.G. ROOT, M. C.. 188 Pearl fat.. New York. Catarrh Cared. A clergyman, after years of suffering from .net loathsome disease, Catarrh, and vainly trying every known remedy, at last found a prescription which completely cured and saved jim from death. Any sufferer from thisdread- ful disease sending a aelf-addresaed stamped envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawrence. 88 Wan en St.. N. Y.. will receive the recipe freeof charge. Catarrh Is a complaint which affects nearly everybody mors or leas. It originates in a cold, or auooeaalon of oolda, combined with Impure blood. Dl a agreeable flow from the nose, tickling in the throat, offensive breath, pain over and between the eyes, ringing and bursting noises In the ears, are the more common symptoms. Catarrh is cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which Btrikes directly at Its cause by removing all Impurities from the blood, building up the diseased tissues and giving healthy tone to the whole system. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all drngg iete. *1: six for gl Prepared only by O. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar HE-NO. Tlio Tea that has gained such a rcputat : ou at Expositions. Tho proprie tors of HE-NO Tea are Martin Gillet & Co., a lsouso established at Baltimore In 11811. Mention this paper and send your address for a 25 cent book, free by mail, charmingly illustrated, en titled “Tea Gossip,” which tells all about Ten, how it is made in China, and exposing its humbug. t end in silver or stamps, ten cents for an eighth of a pound sample'; package of HE-NO Tea. Address Martin Gillet & Go., Lombard street, Baltimore, Md. Great English Gout an j ... _. _0 Hheiinutio Bemetfc Oval IJuxiJij teuDil. 14 Fills. Tho mother of a member of our firm has been cured of a cancerous sore on her face of twenty pars’ standing by S. 8. 8.—Psndliton, Yxary M ilty. Druggists, rarmersvilte, Tex. Swift’s Specific cuivd our babe of an angry crap ;iou called Eczema after the doctor’s prescriptions i ia(l fulled, aud she is now hale and hearty. 11. T. Snoax, Rich Hill, Bio. IWBend for our books on Blood and Skin Disease! and Advice to Ruffcrori, mailed free. THEBWIFT 8PUU1F10 CO.. Drawer 3. Atlanta. Qa. AiNES I CELERY COMPOUND ACTS AT THE SAME TIME ON THE NERVE9, THE LIVER, THE BOWELS, and the KIDNEYS This combined action gives it won derful power to cure all diseases. Why Are We Sick? Because wo allow the nerves to remain weakened and irritated, and these great organs tohecome clogged or torpid, and poisonous humors are therefore forced into the blood that should be expelled naturally. PAtNE’S J celery ' ■ * \ COMPOUND Will cure biliousness, piles, CONSTIPATION, KIDNEY COM PLAINTS, URINARY DISEASES, FEMALE WEAKNESS.RHEUMA- TISM. NEURALGIA, AND ALL NERVOUS DISORDERS, By quieting and strengthening the nerves, anrl causing free action of the liver, bowels, and kidneys, and restor ing their power to throw off disease. Why suffer Bilious Pains and Aoheo! Why tormented with Pilea, Constipation! Whj frightened over Disordered Kidneys! Why endure nervous or aiek headaches I Why have sleepless nights I Use Paine’s Cfi.kry Compound and rejoice in health. It Is an entirely vegeta ble remedy, harmless in all cases. Sold ly all Druggists. Pries $ 1.00. Six -for $5.00. WELLS. RICHARDSON &CO.,Proprieton« BURLINGTON, VT. ely-s catarrh CREAM BALK' Cleanses th< Nasal Passnges Allays Pain am Inflammation Heals the Sores Restores tli Senses of Tastt and Smell. TEY the CURE A particle in applied into eaca nostril and is tiffreeablo. Price 50 t ents *t drumisto; by mail, reads ered, 6u otfi. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St., New York. -FEVER TRADE JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS., WAR RANTED PURE White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange Mineral, Painters’ Colors and LlnsbSd On. CORRESPONDENCE ftOLIiITED. SENT FREE. Every reader of this paper who expects to buy anything in tho lino of Diamonds, fine Jewelry, Silver and Clocks—or who thinks of buying A WATCH Should send for our new illustrated catalogue for 1889, which we send free. J. P. Stevens & Bro„ Jewelers, n Whitehall St., ITLAHTA, GA. FOUR BOOKS LEARNED IN ON £ READING. A Year’s Work Dane in Ten Days. From the Chaplain of Exeter College, and Houghton Syriac Prizeman, Oxford, Co 1. Erorj, Oron., Sept, IBS*. Dear Sir: In April, 1885, while thinking of taking orders in September, I suddenly received notice that my or.iination examination would be held in a fort night. I had only to. (10) daya in which to p eparo for tho Exam. I should recommend a i/ear's prepar ation in the case of anvono so utterly unprepared ae I was; but you- System had so strenythened mu not- oral memory that I was able to remember and give the gist of any book after reading it ones. I there fore read Llghtfoot, Proctor, Harold Browne. Unshelm, fcc , &c„ once, and was suerrssful in every one of the «t ne papers. The present Bishop of Eden- burg knows the facts. Faithfully yours, [Rev.) James Minr.r.ETON BIaidonatj) [M, A.). To Prof. A. l.OISETTE, ti»7 Fifth Ave., N. T. (WTnis System is taug.it personally or by cor respondence. 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AXLE GREASE I EVER GU.H8, Never or McltM.Evyr, CONSUMPTION 1 ha vc a positive remedy for the above dieciwe; hr Its uw thouKinds of casoi of tho worst kind and of lonar eUndiUT have boon cured. So utronar l« my faith in lie efllcnov that l will wmd two bottle* free, together with a valuable treatlw* on this discoau to any sufferer, (live Lxpreas and l>, o. address. T. A. SLOCUM. M. C.. 181 i'earl St., N. Y El ■■ fo 9S a day. Bunrplee worth Si.BO FREE. Ik Line* not tinner the horse a feet, writo 0 W Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co.. Holley. MJbb> Ant 1) »* home and make more money working for ni than UUkIpI et anythin* ehe In the world Either (.'only outfit rttXK. Tarsi* runic. Address, THUS * Co., Augusta, Maine. A costs wanted. $1 an hour. ftOnewertioie-', OatMcue andb&mpiestree. U. K. Marshall, Lockport, N. r. A. N. U. .Ffty-one,