Newspaper Page Text
THE FARM AND GARDEN.
STABLE FLOORS.
Itorse stable floors should bo made
tight and level. Absorbent beddings
and thorough clcauing will remove any
objection to odor from urine which cau-
aot be got rid of in slated floors. Sand,
eawdust and ground plaster aro excellent
cleansom of the stables. A horse with
tender feet or ankles suffers from stand
ing on sloping floors. A horse from a
sprained stifle or hock, or bruised knee,
is kept in perpetual torment by sloping
floors. Knuckled horses owe much of
their ailment to sloping floors.—Ameri-
tan Agriculturist.
CUT AND OltOUND FOOD.
The farmer who has never used a
fodder cutter and who feeds whole grain
Would do well to make an experiment in
the use of cut aud ground food. If lie
does not find that one-third of the fodder
and grain is saved, and that the animals
do better when thus fed, it will be be
cause he wastes food by giving more
than the animals cun consume. Cut feed
and clean troughs, with just appetite
sufficient to take a little more, is the best
for the stock and for the owner, and
where only ten or twelve head are fed,
the saving in the first year will pay for
the cutter and a mill to grind the grain.
^~New York Times.
seedling varieties of fruit.
The dependence on nurseries rather
than on home-grown fruits diminishes
the chanco for finding new and valuable
beedling varieties. Occasionally n graft
or bud fails, and the natural sprout tak
ing its place is supposed to be the im
proved variety until it gets into bearing.
■Unless these instances aro wrongly re
ported, a larger proportion of seedling
fruit has considerable more value than is
often thought. The proportion would
Jbe still larger if seeds from only the best
of fruit grown in years favorable for its
highest excellence were used for raising
nursery stock. The plan of many nur
serymen is, however, to get apple seeds
from the refuse of cider pomace, in which
.only small and inferior fruit is used for
grinding. In this way they claim to get
more vigorous stocks, but it is at the ex
pense of fruit. It is likely also that these
Btocks when grafted are longer in com
ing into beating than stocks raised from
'cultivated fruit of the highest quality
would be.—Boston Cultivator.
DURABILITY OF FENCE TOSTS.
Locust posts are generally considered
.the most durable; they have been known
ito be sound after sixty years of service.
|8plit chestnut posts, from which the sap-
jwood has been hewn off, have remained
'sound in a post and rail fence for over
forty years. Sassafras timber is con
sidered as the next durable to locust, and
jred cedar about the same. All timber is
improved in durability by seasoning, and
is better still if saturated with hot slack
ing lime. Posts are limed in this mau-
taer: A pit three feet deep is dug and six
Inches of fresh lime is spread in the bot
tom; the posts are set on end close to
gether and small lime is filled in between
them for one foot. Water is then poured
in to fill the pit. This slakes the lime,
Which swells and fills the space between
the posts. The heat engendered drives
out the moisture from the timber, and as
the lime cools the posts absorb it. Thus
the albumen of the wood, which is the
part which causes decay, is hardened aud
made much less perishable. After steep
ing two or three weeks they are ready
for use. The bark should be peeled be
fore the posts are limed. If posts ore
set with broken stone and the lime from
the pit and the filling is well rammed in
the hole, they are made still more dur
able, or the stone may quite as well be
left without any filling, but should be
well rammed.—New York Times.
, HOW TO MAKE FIGS PAY.
Swine may be made tho most profit
able of farm stock. Their productive
ness is amazing if counted up for a few
years. A sow well cared for will pro
duce two litters of from seven to ten
pigs each every year, and what the total
number would be at the end of five years,
allowing one-half of the pigs to be sows,
we leave for some of our young friends
•who have mathematical faculties to cal
culate and inform us for the be aefit of
other readers. These pigs—say, sixteen
for the two litters—may easily lie made
to weigh 200 pounds each when a year
old, so that one sow will yield her owner
■ 3200 pounds of pork every year for five
or six years, equal to from 10,000 to 20,-
000 pounds of pork for her contribution
during her useful life. But it is very
rarely that the pigs are ever looked upon
as worthy of much careful regard. They
are more commonly treated as the weeds
of the farm stock, prolific, growing
without care and in spite of neglect. It
would not be advisable to increase their
number, but it is advisable to increase
their value, by lessening the number and
improving the keeping of them. Ten
pigs of 100 pounds each nrc much less
profitable than five of 200 pounds each,
and one W'ell kept sow is worth more
than twice as much as two ill kept ones
which produce each one litter in the
year. To reduce the store stock one-
half and treat these twice as well would
treble the profit from the year’s
creases.
existenco, If it is not driven to the wall.
Is it any wonder, thon, that intelligent
factorymen have come to the conclusion
that milk must bo paid for on merit only?
—Breeders' Oazelte.
NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN.
A VALUABLE TREE WASH.
About two years ago, writes a Missouri
subscriber, I cut a receipt for a tree
wash from your valuable paper, and it
has kept my trees clean of bugs and
worms; in fact, I could not do without
it, as the borers do not trouble the trees,
and I think you ought to publish it again
for the benefit of those of your readers
who have not tried it. I copy it ver
batim :
“Take stone lime, slack and prepare
it ns for an ordinary whitewash, in an
old barrel or box. Take enough at a
time to mako a bucket two-thirds full of
the proper consistency for ordinary
whitewashing. Now add one pint of
gas tar, one pound of whale-oil soap dis
solved in hot water, or one pound of
potash, or strong lye from wood ashes,
then add clay or loam enough to make
the bucket lull of the wash of proper
thickness to be applied with a whitewash
brush. If the trees have had the earth
ridged up around them, take the earth
away from around the collar and apply
the wash to the root of the trees from the
limbs to the ground or down to the
roots.
‘Its advantages are, first, it will de
stroy the bark louse, and give the trees a
bright, clear and healthy appearance.
Second, this wash will drive all borers
that may be in the trees and the moth
will not deposit eggs on or about the
trees tho same season the wash is used.
All who grow apple, peach, dwarf
pear, quince and ash trees, should use
this wash; don’t fail to use it because not
patented and sold at a high price. I
have known cases where peach trees have
been badly affected by the borer; they
have all left and tho trees become healthy
and vigorous with one application of this
wash.
Again, mice and rabbits will not
girdle trees where this wash is" used.
Apply in May for borers and general
benefit to the trees, and in late autumn
as a preventive against mice and rabbits.
Use this wash annually. Gas tar applied
pure will kill trees.”—Farm, Field and
Stockman.
I RICH AND FOOR MILK.
; Anyone who has attended a dairy con
vention, or who carefully follows the
dairy literature of the day, must have
come to realize that milk testing is the
leading question before our dairymen
Tho rank injustice of paying for milk or
dividing money between patrons on the
pounds delivered basis has been tolerated
only because it could not be avoided.
AVlien the system of paying for milk
upon weight is new in a community, it
works fairly well for a shore time, but
soon patrons learn to take advantage,
and tho result is that as time goes ou
moro and more milk is required to make
•i pound of butter or cheese. Of course,
there nrc always a few who wnter or
skim; these are occasionally caught and
fined or expelled, but the difficulty docs
not end here, for there are other ways of
getting nliead. Tho greatest trouble has
been through buying and breeding cows
which produce the greatest number of
pounds of milk without any regard what
ever to tho quality. Between the cows
giving thin milk and the patrons who
Bkim or wnter, dairymen producing good
milk and factorymen have a hard time
of it. Factorymen have come to realize
that their best friends among tho patrons
have been the poorest paid. Going from
bad to worse, matters have como to a
point where, unless some more equitablo
system is adopted, we must expect the
(actory system to drag out a miserable
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Be sure and keep your finger-nails
short, always. J
Scales save a good deal of friction in
neighborhoods. |
Bar hives are hives with bars across 1
the top to which the combs are at- j
tached. j
Milk as rapidly as you can and as clean |
as you can; if you do not your cow will '
dry up. I
Be gentle with your cows. Remember I
you are a man and they are brutes; be
thou not a brute.
Have no conversation while milking, !
nor stop at a “what did you say!” from
your fellow milker.
The better way to start in the bee ■
business is to begin in a small way and j
gradually grow into it. I
Give your cow a name and call her by '
her name; she will learn"to know it
sooner than you think.
In cold weather wash your hands in '
warm water before your milk; a cow’s ,
teats are very sensative.
Farmers who know how to produce at !
a relatively low cost are always at the
the head of the procession.
If you have more than one cow always ■
milk them in the same order; a boss cow
does not like to be slighted. j
Clean your stable before you milk. I
know of no substance that will take up j
bad odors sooner than milk.
Strain your milk from a strainer pail
into an independent strainer, and in this
have besides a strainer cloth.
A good strong milker ought to milk
ten cows in an hour, but he has not time
to carry the milk to the dairy.
Give your cows a tablespoonful of salt
once a day in their mess of mill-feed; it
will keep them in good health.
Clean your cow with brush or cloth
before you milk; perfect cleanliness is
most essential to perfect dairying.
Never feed your cow while milking;
one thing at a time. Mako her pay at
tention to you and not to her feed.
Farmers cannot afford to manage their
business by guess work. The maigin of
profit ou their products is too small to
admit of it.
He who starts a good reading club in
a country neighborhood and puts enough
of interest into it to keep it going is a
public benefactor.
In the experimaats now in progress at
the Ohio Experiment Station, potash
seems to have no effect on wheat, whether
used alone or in auy combination.
Have all your milking apparatus
scrupulously clean; milk being n fatty
substance you may need pure soap in the
cleaning; use scalding hot water after
wards.
Professor Wrighton says agriculture is
a born science. It is full of botany, zoo
logy, geology and entomology. It is
full of chemistry, from the soil to the
growing plant, the ripening seed and the
animal life which is tho outcome.
There i3 a positive advantage in get
ting gypsum fer spring sowing during
the winter, aud keeping it where it can
absorb the odor from the manuro piles
around stables. If a few handfuls are
sprinkled daily over the manure heaps,
the gypsum will do moro good when
drawn out in tho manure than it could
possibly do if applied alone.
There are two reasons why clover hay
enuses heaves in horses. One is that it
often heats, aud when it dries out be
comes dusty'. Wetting the hay re
moves the difficulty. The second reason
is that horses like clover bay so much
that they overload their stomachs, and
cannot travel. Give them only a small
amount of clover, and add oats to make
up the fuli ration, just as would be done
in feeding timothy hay.
Wild Strawberry Loaves for Tea.
A new industry has sprung up in Ger
many. Tho young leaves or the wild
strawberry are picked, carefully dried
and used instead of Chinese tea, which
they are said to approach very closely in
flavor. An addition of young bramble
and woodruff leaves is said to add to tho
excellent flavor of this inexpensive tea.
.—American Agriculturist.
Of twouty-six children comprised in a
Missouri family, no less than twenty-two
wore born in couples. Not one of the
twouty-six has yet married. —
Boft colon prevail.
Metal belts qro a novelty.
Prune is one of the favorite colors.
Decorated china is having its innings.
Orange spoons are made quite small.
Tho turquoise is again becoming popu
lar.
The new woolens look very spring
like.
A Turkish fez in very dark red is
worn.
The bell-shaped sleeve is restricted to
coats.
Cravats have suddenly become popular
again.
Plaid cheviots vie with plain or striped
patterns.
Necklaces are growing in popularity
and size.
It’s a French fad for a belle to have an
assortment of fans.
The success of a hostess is mainly de
pendent upon her tact.
The principal dentists in Australia
have women assistants.
This is the season for replenishing the
supplies of house linen.
The pointed bang is disappearing from
the forehead of fashion.
Bracelets are appearing formed of gold
beads of successive size.
Beaded chatelaine bags and purses still
appeal to teminine favor.
Velvet sleeves in silk or wool gowns
are still very fashionable.
Colored lingerie is not so fashionable
as it was a little while ago.
Very few Spanish women ever even
dream of speaking in public.
“Aunt Fanny” Barrow has written
forty-five books for children.
All tho “coming out” fans are made
of white gauze or ostrich plumes.
A simple manner is tho distinguishing
trait of a well born man or woman.
Trained skirts for the street is a fash
ion that can never be made popular.
The prettiest and newest tailor-madt
suits are in somewhat glaring colors.
Boas and neck ruchings of partridge
feathers are light and graceful in effect.
Parlor carpets como in light and
medium grounds with scroll in horal
patterns.
A pair of ornamental letter scales is an
appropriate gift for any woman who pos
sesses a desk.
Fur is used as borders even upon even
ing dresses—around the low bodice and
short sleeves.
The sealskin is now made so soft and
pliable that it is ruffled and plaited like
a dress fabric.
A woman may be attired most stylishly
without wearing a single fashionably
made garment.
The smallest French bonnets—and
they are all little more than medium sized
pancakes—are crownless.
Mrs. Hetty Green, who had $18,000,-
000 left her some time ago, has increased
her inheritance to $30,000,000.
The New York Presbytery, a majority
of that body at least, is opposed to insti
tuting the Order of the Deaconesses.
Dress skirts for street wear are length
ening in spite of all protests. But ex
tremely tidy women do not adopt them.
Very youthful “rosebuds” band their
locks with velvet ribbon, which is tied
on the top of the head in a saucy littlo
bow.
Sleeves are made with deep gauntlet
cuffs opening on tho outside of the arm,
and paniers are very surely making their
way.
Many women are employed in the tea
trade. They do all the packing and
weighing for the different tea com
panies.
Mrs. Alexander, the novelist, has for
her pet an enormous Persian tabby cat
which lies by the side of her when she
writes.
Very beautiful and stylish are the new
Paris challies just introduced. The pat
terns run to the buds and blossoms of all
the flowers.
The china most in use for luncheon
parties is pure white. With this any
ornamental and floral decorations may
be employed.
The complaint from London is that
dresses are growing longer and moro
inconvenient and the dress suspender is
coming into use.
Young ladies with oval faces may part
their tresses in the middle and comb
them in well-defined cuives on cither
side of the brorv.
A Gotham bride stood in the vestibule
of church the other day before she
entered to be married and had her “pic
ture takeu” by a friend.
Ladies who are blessed with an ade
quate supply of hair arrange it iu loose,
simple style with a view to effecting
purely classical contour.
The careful manner with which Queen
Victoria compiles and corrects the Court
Circular entitles her to be termed the
leading editor in all her realms.
Mrs. Mary Mapcs Dodge says that she
refuses enough clever and charming
matter every month to fill a magaziuc
very nearly the equal of St. Nicholas.
Mrs. M. E. B. Thompson, Superin
tendent of the New York Bureau ot
Deafness, is one of the few women iu
tho world who has made a reputation as
an artist.
The “Needle Work Guild” is one of
the most useful organizations iu London,
Englaud. By its means thousands of gar
ments are distributed to deserving per
sons during the year.
The old-fashioned lacc bortlic of our
grandmothers is being revived and shows
on several drosses straight from Paris. It
is a graceful decoration and beautifully
accentuates a pair of sloping shoulders.
Corselet bodices, over bodices proper,
nrc very much in vogue, aud they can bo
adapted to almost nny figure by cuttiug
tho corselet higher or lower. By vary
ing the shape the most opposito types
may be suited.
After the young ladies of Wellseloy
College had given Mrs. Henry M. Stan
ley a reception she returned the compli-
mont by inviting them to her husband’s
lecture," paying $750 for them with her
personal chock.
A traveler in tho Orient says that tho
hollos of tho East are usually old women
at twenty. They marry, as a rule, at
tlrirteen. The girl whose suitors nrc tho
most numerous, granting that her dowry
is sufficiont, is tho girl of fat and
“dumpy" figure, moon face, brown eyes
and fair hair. —. .
Carriage Nomenclature.
The popular lisnsom derives its distin
guishing title from a certain Mr. Han
som.
The brougham, which was first ueed
by the famous Lord Brougham, took its
title from that nobleman.
Landau, a city in Germany, was the
locality in which was first made the style
of vehicle b aring that name.
Hacks originally wire termed hackney
coaches, because they were drawn by
hackney—a name applied to easy-going,
safe pacing horses.
William IV., who, prior to becoming
king of England, had been the Duke of
Clarence, gave the latter name to his fa
vorite mode of conveyance.
The old fashioned gig was given that
name from its peculiar jumping and
rocking motion, the word being taken
from the French giguc, signifying a jig,
or a lively dance.
The term coach is derived from the
French coclie, a diminutive form of the
Latin conchula, a shell, in which form
the body of such conveyances was origi
nally fashioned.
Coupe is French iu origin, being de
rived from the verb couper (coopay), to
cut. This was considered an appropri
ate designation because it greatly resem
bled a coach with the front part cut off.
The particular form of carriage known
as the tilbury—at one time very fash
ionable, but now seldom seen—was so
called from a sporting gentleman of Lon
don who rejoiced iu the cognomen of
Tilbury.
Seldom, if ever, is the full term omni
bus applied to those lumbering vehicles.
With the characteristic brevity of Eng
lish speaking races the title lias been
changed to bus. Tilt se were first seen
in Paris in 1827, the original name being
nothing more than the Latin word signi
fying “for all.
The word sulky, as applied to a wheeled
conveyance, had its origin in the fact-
that when it first appeared the person
who saw it considered that none but a
sulky, selfish man would ride in such an
affair, which afforded accommodation to
but one individil. The strange title
was never changed.
Cab is an nbreviation of the Italian
caprioln, which i3 changed to cabriolet
(cabriolay) in French. Both words have
a common derivative—cabriole—signify
ing a goat’s leap. The exact reason for
giving it this strange appellation is un
known, unless because of lhe lightness
and springiness of the vehicle in its
original form.—Detroit Free Press.
A Bundle of Facta.
An English astronomer states that the
oldest historical record of a solar eclipse
is in lion er’s Iliad (xvii. i#7.)
The organs of smell in the turkey vul
ture and carrion crow are so delicate that
they ran scent their food for a distance
of forty miles.
The period of “a generation” has been
lengthened; it used to bo thirty years and
was later increased lo thirty-four; now, a
scientists siys the average term of human
life has increased in the last fifty years
from thirty-four to forty-two years.
In the photograph of tho heavens, in
course of preparation in the Paris observ
atory, it is calculated that 04,000,000 of
stars will he represented. In the nebulie
of the Lyre, M. Bailland took a photo
graph, 4 by inches, which rcvenlcd to
the naked eye 4,8'JO stars.
The sun gives 000,000 times as much
light as the full moon ; seven billion times
ns much as the brightest star in the sky,
and thirty-six mi lion times as much ns
ail tho stars in the heavens combined; in
size the sun equals 1,300,000 eartli3, but
owing to its smaller density its weight
equals only 500,000 earths.
Mart persons are broken down from over
work or household cares. Brown’s Iron Bit
ters rebuilds tlie system, aids digestion, re
moves excess of bile, ant cures malaria. ▲
splendid tonic for women and children.
Canned and potted meats and game increase
in variety year by year.
How’s This f
IVe offer One Hundred Dollars reward for
any case of catarrn that cannot be cured by
taking Hall’s Catarrh i ure.
F. J. Cheney & to., 1'ropa., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last Is years, and believe him
perfectly honorable in all (justness transac
tions, and financially able to carry out any ob
ligations made by their firm.
West Ac '1’kuax, Wholesale Druggists, Tole
do, O.
Waldino, Finnsn & Maiivin, Wholesale
Di uggisi s, Toledo, O.
Hat’s L’atHrrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price 75c. per bottle, bold by ail druggists.
Let’s reason together.
Here’s a firm, one of the
largest the country over, the
world over; it has grown, step
by step, through the years to
greatness—and it sells patent
medicines !—ugh !
“ That’s enough ! ”—
Wait a little—
This firm pays the news
papers good money (expen
sive work, this advertising !)
to tell the people that they
have faith in what they sell,
so much faith that if they can’t
benefit or cure they don’t want
your money. Their guarantee
is not indefinite and relative,
but definite and absolute—if
the medicine doesn’t help,
your money is “on call."
Suppose every sick man
and every feeble woman tried
these medicines and found
them worthless, who would be
the loser, you or they ?
The medicines are Doctor
Pierce’s “Golden Medical Dis
covery,” for blood diseases,
and his “ Favorite Prescrip
tion,” for woman’s peculiar ills.
If they help toward health,
they cost $i.oo a bottle
each! If they don’t, they
cost nothing /
“German
Syrup”
J. C. Davis, Rector of St. James’
Episcopal Church, Eufaula, Ala.:
‘ ‘ My son has been badly afflicted
with a fearful and threatening cough
for several months, and after trying
several prescriptions from physicians
which failed to relieve him, he has
been perfectly restored by the use oi
two bottles of Bo-
An Episcopal schec’s German Syr
up. I can reeom-
Rector. mend it without
hesitation.” Chronic
severe, deep-seated coughs like this
are as severe tests as a remedy can
be subjected to. It is for these long
standing cases that Boschee’s Ger
man Syrup is made a specialty.
Many others afflicted as this lad
was, will do well to make a note oi
this.
J. F. Arnold, Montevideo, Minn.,
writes: I always use German Syrup
for a Cold on the Lungs. I have
never found an equal to it—far less
a superior. ®
G. G. GREEN, Sole Man’fr,Woodbury,N.J-
DOCTOR 2
ACKERS
ENGLISH
u idc. LHJiiu.. oom u> ail aruggi8is. '*~*"“*"■ j ■■ IV”
HOW TO GETWELL llEIHED 11
To Tell the Age of Horses.
The agricultural editor of The Tmc-s-
Democrat says: The other day we nut a
gentleman from Alabama, who gave us a
piece of information as to ascertaining the
age of a horse after it has passed the
ninth year which was quite new to us,
and will be, we are sure, to most of i ur
readers. It is this: After a horse is nine
years old a wrinkle comes in the eyelid,
at the upper corner of the lower lid, and
every year thereafter he has one well-
defined wrinkle for each year of his age
over nine. If, for instance, a horse has
three wrinkles, he is twelve: if four,
thirteen. Add the number of wrinkles
to nine and you will always get at it. .So
says the gentleman, aud he is confident it
will never fail.
is a question of vital importance,
but it is equally important that you
use some harmless remedy;
many people completely wreck their health
by taking mercury and potash mixtures,
for pimples and blotches, or some othel
trivial disease. S. S. S. is purely
vegetable containing no mercury
or poison of any kind. And is at the
same time an infallible cure for skin diseases.
Treatise on Blood and Skin diseases free.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.
\m
i
Progress.
It is very important iu this age of vast ma
terial progress that a remedy ho pleasing to
the taste and to the eye, easily taken, accept
able to tho stomach and healthy in its nature
and effects. Possessing these qualities, Syrup
of Figs is the one perfe-t^-i.' jc«t tve and most,
gentle diuretic known.
If it wasn’t for its light nobody would ever
find out thut the sun has spots on it.
Ladies needing a tonto, or children who
want building up, should take Brown’s Iron
Bitters. It is pleasant to ta’se, cures Malaria,
Indigestlon-Biliousness anti Liver Complaints,
makes the Blood rich and pure.
A good many people would say more if thc-y
didn’t talk so much.
Big Inducement for Druggists.
The druggists throughout tho country are
making a specialty of handling Uawkes’ Crys
tallized Lenses. They write that they make
more money, in proportion, out of this line
than anything else they carry in stock. The«e
fine glasses ltavo been advertised extensively
for many years, and have received the en
dorsement and approval of thousands of tHo
best citizens of the United States. They are
eagerly sought after by spectacle-wearers
everywhere, and it will pay druggists and gen
eral merchants to put in a stock of these goods.
Exclusive sale is given toone firm in each town.
The trade can be built up, and the entire
spectacle business of a large section can be
monopolized with the e goods. Factory, De
catur St., and salesroom, Whitehall St., At
lanta, Ga. For terms and prices address A.
K. Hawkcs, 13 Whitehall St., Atlanta.
A Girl Worth Having.
After having Mr. Gray's experience in tho
plating business, t sent $3 to tho Lake Eiee-
trio Co., Englewood, III., for a plater, anl
olearsil *21 in a week. Isn’t this pretty goo 1
for a girl? There is tableware and jewelry 11
plate at every house; then, wliv should an .•
person be poor or out of employment with such
an opportunity at hand. ASubscriber.
This Picture, Panel size, mailed for 4 cents.
J. F. SMITH & CO.,
Makers of “ Bile Beans,’’
255 & 257 Greenwich St., N. Y. City.
CURE Biliousness,)
Sick Headache,
Malaria.
BILE BEANS.
• for Cought, Colds and Consumption, Is beyond S
• question the greatest of all modern remedies.*
• it will stop a Cough In one night. It will check!
• aColdlnaday. It will prevent Croup, relieve*
• Asthma, and CURE Consumption it taken In*
■ time. IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE ;
I WHOOPING COOGH |
OR
GROUPj
Use It Promptly.;
IT WILL CURE:
WHEN EVERT-*
THING ELSE.
FAILS. “You:
can’t afford to*
. , be without It.”*
• A 2 5c. bottle may save $ 100 In Doctor’s bills ■
5—may save their lives. ASK YOUR DRU6-2
J GIST FOR IT. IT TASTES GOOD.;
ksiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiuiiffum* __
PROF. LOiSETTE’S NEW
MEMORY BOOKS.
Criticism!* on two recent Memory System)*.
about April 1st. Fnll Tables of Contents forwarded
olIt to those who send etamped directed envelope.
Also Prospectus POST FRFTE of the Lotsetttan A*1
Ct Never Forgetting. Address
Prof. LOISKTTE, 237 Fifth A re., Sew Tor*.
DEMOIfttlO PENSION Bill
rtNOlUNo Is Passed.
» rr» and Fathers are ea*
i. Fee IIP when yen get your money.
Wuktertoa. D. L
Vi'AVfll 1 ]FI 60 Mat d beautiful Silk A Kalin
encuah to cover 5$0 sq. Ina
20c.. beet, 25c. Lrvah.ee'j Sil* Ufa Little Ferry N. J.
TEN POUNDS |
IN ;
TWO weeks!
THINK OF IT 1!
As a Flesh Producer there cun be
no question but that
SCOTT’S
LSION
j Of Pure Cod Liver Oi! and Hypophosphites
Of Lima and Soda
j is without a rival. Many have
grained a pound a day by the use
j of it. It cures
CONSUMPTION,
i SCROFULA. BRONCHITIS, COUGHS AND
) COLDS, AND ALL FORMS OF WASTING DIS-
J EASES. AS PALATABLE AS MILK.
j Be. sure yon get the genuine as there at'e
• poor imitations.
~ EI.Y’S CREA 11 n\LM
Applied Into Nostrils Is Qulcklv
Absorbed, Cleanses the Head,
Heals the Sores and Cures
headache. DOc*. at Druggists.
SLY buos., w Warren sl, N. Y.
Have You a Cough?
Have You a Cold?
Or Consumption?
Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of
Sweet Cum and Mullein
WILL CURE YOU!
Ask your Druggist or Merchant for it. Take nothing else.
pis o:sC SJ^R E F O R
Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians.
Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the
taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists.
A=f- is*
C ON S Utyi'PT I O N
Chichester s English, Red Cross Diamond Brac
VfcHHNROYMi * r\\i\iS
^ « . ... ....... .UK eru.MUP TV. BaCa Snn. ..f hIi’.D. PI’I 'itr n
l?o You Ever Speculate f
Any person sending us their name an 1 ad- I
frees will receive information that will leal
lo a fortune, ltenj. Lewis & Co., Security .
Building, Kansas City, Mo.
Lee TVn’s Chinese Headache Cure. Ilnrm-
hfsin tffect, quick and positive in notion.
Ft lit prepaid on rtrcip.t of $1 per bottle
Ade’t r&Co.,62STVyandotte st.,KansasCity,Mo
Entiles,
If troubled with nny Female Complaint,
write me, describing case. Home treatment.
Cure c> rtnin and quick at small expense.
Particulars by mail sealed. 100 pago book on
Female Diseases ten cents. Mrs. Dr. Mary A.
Brannon, 15 Washington St., Atlanta, Ga.
FITS stopped free by Du. Ki.ine’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits nfter first day’s
v.so. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
l( tilt tree. I)r. Kline. Ell Arch St., Pbfla., Pa.
Timber, Mineral, Farm bands ami Ranches
in Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arkansas,
l ought and sold. Tyler A- Co., Kansas City,Mo.
Oklahoma Guido Hook and Map sent any where
on receipt of 5Ucts.Tyler .fc Co.,Kansas City.Mo.
Prepare
For Spririj
By Building up
Your System
So as to Prevent
That Tired Feeling
Or Other Illness.
Now Take
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
NO!
ACT LIKE MAGIC
ON A WEAK STOMACH.
25 Cents a Box.
OF ALL DRUCCI8TS.
Every Farmerhis own Roofer
CHEAPER than Shingles, Tin or Slate.
Reduces Your INSURANCE, and Perfectly
Fire, Water and Wind Proof.
->STEEL ROOFING,
’ CORRUGATED
ran Ou» rftv/
yiyc Mnirit'/.iiu* makes home happy a
nnnlK whole year for $1.00. Always
bright, freak «utl interesting. Articles ae*
■ eepted on their merits from subscribers
onljr. Sample copy, lOo. No free copies.
AMERICAN PRESS CO„ Baltimore, Md.
Book-keeping, Business Formic
nVIWC Peuiuuushlp, Arithmetic, short-hanJ, etc.. ■
■ I thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars fre*
Bryant’s College. 447 Mala bL, Buffalo, N, Y.
OARDIIOCC Scud for catalogue and mention !
unnnmaCOs particular style wanted. |
. II. Git A Y, ’il) A Wooster St., N. Y. City,
Anot’T engagement rings wo desire to
make an announcement.
We keep a large assortment of these indis
pensable articles in stock, either with or with
out precious stones. We can furnish you just
the correct tiling and at prices that will make
engagements a comparatively Inexpensive
luxury, (’ail and , onsult us. J. P. Stevens *
Pro., t7 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga. Send for
eata ogue.
r T KEWON OERFUL I/* \03v f
l.U BU RG\C HAIR
:Y •'TI com b | N | ng5articics';2 xC
A ,-Aof FURNITURE. rilQ^
f i n v a l i bws>yV
•SVD ? VVVLS>%Tfl
...._.
FREE
nUXKM-HilEs
TO HIKE.
togas. .V..:c-v oh,t,i.roi.
luisuiiu sin;, t o., 115 n. stb st, ruuK.e*.
ni nnu |/urpc> positively ukmedikd
bftbbY KNbbb oreely Pant Stretcher
Adopted by ftudent* at Harvard. Amherst and otlnr
I'tdlegi .H, also by professional and bu.siusss men every
where. If not f'»r sat* in your town send
B. .J. GRICKI.Y. 7l?> Washington Street Bostou.
uid Whiskey Habits
cured at home with
out nain. Moot of par
ticulars seut I'RKi:.
B.M.WOOMvKY.M.D.
Office X(M>$ Whitehall S*
Oar Roofing is ready formed for the Building,
and can be Applied by unv one. Do not buy
Any Roofing till you write to us for our Descrip
tive Catalogue. Scries
1 B. AGENT* WASTED,
The universal furor ac
corded Tilijnohast’s Puost
Sound C'nbbuire Seeds leads
me to offer a I* S. Grown
Onlon.fAefinest Yellow OL be
fn ejristence. To Introduce It
and show its capabilities I
will pay $100 for the best
vtekt obtained from 1 ounce
of seed which I will mall foe
tfO cts. Catalogue free.
Isaac F. Tilling hast,
La Flume. Fa.
itod sd4 Gold uiptftliic
kind. Refute Substitutions and Imiiationt.
danjrcrouft counter Mia. At DrofgUtt. or »<thS n«
’‘KelTef tor Ladles,** in letter, br return Mail*
Chester Chemical Co., MsdUon Square*
PH l LA PKLPUIA. PA.
-VASELINE-
FOR A ONE-DOliLAR BILL sent us by man
the Unit d States, i
fully packs::
One two-ounce bottle of Pure Vaseline, -
One two-ounce bottle of Vaseline Pomade,
One Jar of Vaseline Cold Cream, - - - -
One C; ke of VAsellne Camphor Ice, - - -
One Cake of Vaseline Soap, an scented, -
One Cake of Vast *' * ** *
One two-ounce 1
*1.1
: the
10
Orftr pr-stogc stamps any single article at the price
nam'd. On no account be persuaded to accept from
[four druagist any Vaseline or preparation therefrom
unless labelled uHth our name, beeii 'Lee you trill err*
tainly receive an imitation which has Hitle or no value
Cheeekrough Ufg. Co., 5*cuto sit., N. V.
jUAKH
ing ]
:nt
Our Well Machines are the
UKL1ARLS. DURABLE. Sl‘«'C as:
They do MORE WORK and
r ike 4* K K ATF.it PROFIT./gf
1 hov FINISH Wo 11k where (A
others FAIL! Any siv»\ 2 kfSL
Inches to 44 inches diameter- Ly
LOOMIS & NYMAN, J
YiFFIN. - OMiO.<afe*
GET WELL SsiS. free
Llll 1 It Ll LI LI j. it. I, Y [■:, Editor,buffalo's, y!
• |t COt) Care fully liTN(eiih*r*
t.V\l ALLY fro a
tWKNTt u loot
riCOXA. WASH.
Eleven, 1891,
ONE AGENT SOLD
225 IN 15 DAYS
in February. I.nilii'* ilo as well a* mfn- r\o> al
Edition of the l’.-,-rie, s Atlat of the \' orld. hns lareo
in i-olors. A orurste location of town,. eitie«.r»il-
roa,ls etc t’en»u« of Everybody wnnwil bell, on
iiiht..4eent,<’lcnr 100 per ft. Forterm«.i.hiie„
MIST CROilU 4 liaiPITkia, 9S7 Chatnai SuPLUdelpIni, P»-
ADVICE TO Wi
For PAINFUL, PROFUSE, SCANTY, SUPPRESSED
or IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION, you must use
We retail at the /•
tr.*i demlefa tory />> i«
and ship ginnls to be 1
paid for on delivery. U-i i
Semi stAiup for Cat*- vv.14
loguo. XnTueyoovfr Uetirnt.
QPIUM
WAIlantu.Ca. Olti
QRADFIELD’S
pEMALE
REGULATOR
Henderson, Ala., March 8, 1885.
For three years my wife has been under the treatment of the leading
physicians for menstrual troubles, without benefit, most of the time con
fined to her bed. After taking three bottles of BRADFIELD'S FEMALE
REGULATOR, she can do her cooking, milking and washing. N. L. BRTAN.
BOOK TO “WOMAN*' MAILED FREE, WHICH CONTAINS VALUABLE INFORMATION ON ALL FEMALE DISEASES.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, GA.
For Ssle by all Drssslita.