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AGRICULTURAL NOTES.
There is as much nourishment in one
bushel of beans as in five bushels of
potatoes.
The fodder from an acre of com which
yields fifty bushels is equal in value to a
ton of hay.
Paraffixe oil on whetstones is superior
to any other liquid, and will keep the
stone in better order.
Harness oil made of one gallon oi
neat’s-foot oil, with four ounces of lamp
black, well mixed, is simple and effective.
The draining of land promotes warmth
because it diminishes evaporation, and
thus less heat is abstracted from the
earth.
Mr. Moore, DeKalb County, Ind.,
says that he finds that equal parts ol
air-slacked lime and salt will cure foot
rot in sheep, one or two applications be
ing sufficient.
A Mlssissipi farmer dashes cold water
into the ears of choking cattle. This
causes the animal to shake its head vio
lently, and the muscular action dislodges
the obstruction.
A lady says that to kill insects she
uses one teaspoonful of kerosene to a
gallon of water, and sprinkles it on the
plants with a hand broom. It destroys
erreen flies and other pests.
Wild Vines on Uld Buildings.—Out
buildings of all kinds, that have become
dilapidated through time or by exposnre
to storms, may become objects of beauty
by training wild vines, such as woodbine,
wild grape or forest ivy upon them.
These vines spread very rapidly from
their lateral branches, or will increase to
an astonishing extent by cutting or layer
ing. The picturesque beauty of many
of the rural villages in Europe is almost
entirely owing to the vines that over
spread the dwellings. Some of the more
hardy grapes may be grown with profit
over low buildings; and at the same time
they will give a pleasant appearance to
that which before disfigured the premises.
ijhkstek whites. — inis Dreed ot swine
which at one time was very popular in
Minnesota originated iu Chester County,
Pennsylvania. It seems that from their
great size, and the extra quantity of food
required to make them fat that the far
mers are not raising so many of them as
formerly. An animal of this breed, when
old and well-fattened, frequently weighs
from 500 to 800 pounds dressed, and it
is claimed that the flesh from the mam
moth creatures is not as sweet when
cooked as that of the Berkshire or Suf
folk. Where a farmer lias plenty of feed
for his hogs, the Chester White is more
than an average good breed, but they
should never lie suffered to become low
in flesh as it costs too much to recuperate
them.
Wearing Out Tools. —Farm tools will
rust out sooner than they will wear out.
Many farmers injure their farm imple
ments more by exposure to the weather
than by the use on the farm. An imple
ment which with good care would last
twenty years, will, when exposed to the
weather, become useless in five years or
even less. A farm cart tvhicli, with good
usage, would last almost a lifetime, will
only a few years, when exposed to the
weather. The explanation of the reason
why farming does not pay with money is
found in this neglect to take care of the
farm tools. All farm implements are
costly, and the farmer who lias to buy
three or four times as many as his
neighbors because he does not take care
of them, of course will not find much
profit in farming. The same carelessness
iu any other kind of business, would in
sure equally as disastrous results.
Changing Beeps.— The practice of
frequently changing seed is now recog
nized in many sections as essentially
necessary to the production of a first
rate crop. We all know that the prac
tice of procuring seed potatoes from a
distanoe, say twenty or thirty miles, and
from a different kind of soil," has a most
marked influence upon the product.
While the rationale of this is not quite
obvious, the fact is indisputable. The
same result follows also in the manage
ment of corn and all other varieties of
grain, as well as garden seeds and vege
tables; in short with the whole vegetable
kingdom. Even where exchanges are
made between farmers in the same
neighborhood, and where there is no
very marked difference in the geological
or mineral characteristics of the soil in
the respective localities, the practice is
conducive to improvement. Let those
who have never tried the experiment do
so. If they are at all skeptical, they can
do so on a small scale at first and mark
the results, both as regards quantity and
quality of crop.
Farms Better Than Bonds. —A von nor
farmer of Montgomery County, Indiana,
named J. A. Mount, makes an itemized
showing for the year 1880. His sales
from a two hundred-acre farm foot up
$8,213.85, his outlay $1,408.90, giving
him a net profit of $1,804.95, which on
the capital invested in lands, stock and
implements, shows a gain of fourteen
per cent. An inspection of items shows
that he has been liberal toward his
preacher and to his family. He paid
toward the support of the "church $75,
books, and papers and periodicals $23.70,
Christmas presents $34. He began thir
teen years ago a poor man, renting a
farm, where the landlord had to stock it
for him. He now owns two hundred
acres, is out ot cieDt, and proposes to tell
readers of the Indiana Fanner how he
did it. His outlay for books and soul
expanders al>out Christmas ha\> widened
out the man. It will be very useful for
farmers to read, who claim that they can
not afford to take a paper, and for those
who take only one, and that the weakest
and cheapest they can find. Mr. Mount
has read and thought more than the
ordinary farmer, or he could not make so
good a showing for 1880.— Indiana
Farmer.
Potash in Corn Cobs.— The willow
contains a larger per cent, of potash than
any other wood, but coni cobs contain
twice as much as the willow. Since po
tash is one of the articles the farmer pays
much iu labor or cash to get back into
his soil, it is poor economy to leave cobs
by the million scattered about over the
farm where, instead of doing good, they
kill out the grass and make an unsightly
spot. Neatness and strict economy alike
appeal to the farmer to see to the sav
ing of the corn cobs and their return to
the soil. This may be done bv burning
them on the soil, and it is to be recom
mended where farmers feed hogs in their
blue grass lots. The cobs should then
be raked up and burned, and the ashes
spread on wheat or grass lands will be
found to repay well the labor. Then,
too, the scattering corn cobs allows the
grass to grow, and gives an air of neat
ness that is commendable and profitable.
When a feeding floor can be so arranged
as that the cobs work off into pile and
catch the droppings of the pigs, they
become good absorbents, and when
hauled to the com lands will be found
most valuable. We in the West have
not yet learned the art of saving even
tiie corn cobs, 'l'liey are a few of the
many wastes on our Western farms.
It pays also to rake the com cobs into
winnows iu the feed lots and bum them
there. The pigs enjoy the ashes, es
pecially if a sprinkling of salt be added.
Time to Bow Clover. —There can be
no iron-clad rule for sowing clover seed.
We have sown in February, March,
April and May, and in July, when laying
by. com, and we have good success in all
these months, except in July. Unless
the fall is more than ordinarily damp,
clover will not do well sown then. Clover
sown as soon as hard freezing is past is
sown at the right time, be it February,
March or April. We can not know cer
tainly when that time is. We have to go
by our judgment. Clover is easily killed
by a freeze just after it has germinated.
Hence there is danger from early sowing.
On the other hand, if one always waits
until after the 10th of April, when freezes
are generally past, he may have his
clover burnt up in August, especially if
he has sown among wheat or oats, which
come oft' the ground later, exposing the
tender clover suddenly to an intense
heat. Our experience is that clover seed
sown as early in the spring as the ground
will pulverize nicely under the harrow r ,
will be the most certain crop. We usually
harrow the grain in early April, and sow
clover and timothy and orchard grass on
a fresh seed bed, and have a choice stand
that was never yet burned out. We have
sown in March and February, on the
snow, and seen it go off with a heavy
rain, and the seed was washed away, or
into low places, and the clover stand was
irregular and most unsatisfactory. We
depend so largely on clover for pasture
and change of crop and recuperation,
that we can illy afford to make a failure.
We have thought it would be a more sure
way to sow r one way lightly in February
on a snow. Then about the first week
in April, if the spring seems advanced,
cross sow it. In this case we would use
about two quarts to the acre at each
sowing. There is not much danger of
seeding it too heavily. If one sowing
hits we have a crop, if both hit we have
an extra crop. —Cincinnati Commercial.
HOUSEHOLD HELPS.
Cookies. —One cup of sugar, one of
syrup, one of shortening, half cup of hot
water, pinch of salt, half teaspoonful of
soda; bake quickly.
Chocolatate Kisses.— One ounce of
sugar, two ounces of chocolate pounded
together and finely sifted; mix whites of
eggs well beaten to a froth; drop on but
tered paper and bake slowly.
Gold Cake. —The yolks of eight eggs,
two cups of brown sugar, one cup of
butter, half cup of sweet milk, three
cups of flour, one teaspoonful of baking
powder; flavor with orange extracts.
Toffee. —Quarter pound of butter;
when melted put in one pound of brown
sugar; boil and stir fifteen minutes; put
in a spoonful of ground ginger, boil and
stir again. Pour into buttered tins.
Silver Cake. —The whites of eight
eggs, two cup3 of white sugar, half cup
of butter, half cup of sweet milk, three
cups of flour, one teaspoonful of baking
powder; flavor with extract of almond.
Old-fashioned Molasses Candy.—
One quart of the best New Orleans
molasses, and a piece of butter half the
size of a hen’s egg. When it will snap
in w ater it is sufficiently done; stir in a
little soda to whiten it; pour into but
tered dishes, and when cool enough pull
until "white.
Cocoanut Cake.— One pound of white
sugar, half pound of butter, the yolks of
five eggs beaten up together; beat the
whites to a stiff froth; mix three-fourths
of a pound of flour, two teaspoonfuls of
baking-powder, and grate one good-sized
cocoanut; mix together with one cup of
milk. Add the cocoanut just before
baking.
Citron Cake. —One cup of butter, two
of sugar, three of flour, four eggs, one
cup of milk, one teaspoonful of soda, two
of cream tartar, and a pinch of salt.
Make the cake as above, put in the pan,
cut the citron thin and put in the cake
endways; this will prevent the citron
from falling to the bottom of the pan.
Snow Cream.— Allow two tablespoon
fuls of fine white sugar and two of rich,
sweet cream to each person for whom
you are making the desert. Then get a
quantity of fine, dry snow and stir in;
after waiting a minute stir in more—
adding enough to make it of sufficient
stiffness. Flavor to suit the taste. It
does not require more than two minutes
to make, and should not be made until
needed, as it soon melts.
Devotees Enjoying Exquisite Pain.
In one of the bazaars, says a lettei
from India, we saw some fakirs and dev
otees. One of these remarkable fellows
had vowed to lie upon a bed of upright
nails for twenty-six years, and of these
he had accomplished sixteen when we
saw him. His body was attenuated and
full of sores resembling leprous spots.
We asked him for one of the nails which
pierced his miserable body. He took
one from the foot of the bed, refusing in
every instance to part with any of those
which gave him the -most exquisite pain.
Another miserable devotee was holding
a flower-pot at arm’s length. Judge of
my surprise when he told me he had
held it there for five years. Another
stood with arm uplifted, and no power to
lower it or move a muscle, the member
being dried, stiff, and dead, while the
long finger-nails, like bird’s claws, pen
etrated the flesh on his wrist. Au of
these fellows looked mouldy and sad.
A Warning Against Dancing.
A warning against dancing comes from
the Piedmont Road in North Carolina,
where a man attempted to dance a jig
and almost immediately fell dead. It
should be said that the poor fellow at
tempted his jig on the top of a moving
freight car, and a covered bridge killed
him.
Qcautt and efficacy considered. Dr. Bull’s
Cough Syrup is without exception the best
Cough preparation in the market. Price 25
cents a bottle.
Comedian and Highwayman.
Shuter, the comedian, in the prime of
his powers, was not to be excelled in his
delineation of the characters he was wont
to assume. Even in his evening dress, at a
gentleman’s dinner-table, he could in
stantly appear, for entertaining purposes,
tiro veriest clodhopper, with transforma
tion of the whole man so complete that
the garb of the gentleman seemed to dis
appear from view entirely.
Bhuter was once engaged to appear in
several of the principal places in the
north of England, in the days before the
advent of railways, and, while passing
through Nottinghamshire, on the road
between Newark and Doncaster, only
one other passenger beside himself oc
cupied the stage-coach, the said passen
ger being a gruff, red-faced, gouty old
man, from whom Shuter could not get a
word of cheerful conversation. It was
verging toward evening, the sun had
gone, and the shadows were deepening,
and they were very near to the confines
of Yorkshire, when the stage-coach was
suddenly stopped, and the voice of a
man was heard as though threatening
the driver. Instantly the gouty old
Yorkshireman stowed himself away in a
corner, pulled the cape of his cloak up
about his face, and pretended to be fast
asleep. He knew very well what was
coming,, and hoped, perhaps, that, if liis
traveling companion were first robbed,
help might come before the highwayman
could get around to him. Ay, it was a
highwayman! The knight of the road
threw open the door and presented a
pistol at Shuter’s head, with the signi
ficant hint that a speedy handing over of
his valuables would save his life.
“Money! Watches! Me, zur!” drawled
out the comedian, in a manner so exces
sively stupid and clownish that a Drury
Lane audience would have howled with
delight thereat. “Oh, lud, zur! Ooncle
doan’t let me carry nothink worthsome.
There he be to gab for hisself!”
Upon this the highwayman turned to
the man in the corner and gave him a
tremendous slap in the face.
“Come, old seventy-five, wake up and
pass over your purse! Come out here!
Let’s have a clean sweep while we’re
about it. ”
Suffice it to say that the old Yorksliire
man was robbed of over a hundred
pounds in money, besides his watch and
seals and a few other trinkets, while
Shuter got off with a simple cursing for
his stupidity.
An Empress Who Makes Her Toilet in
a Stable.
A recent letter has this about the
Austrian Empress: “One day the
Countess, hearing that their Majesties
had ridden into the stables, hurried to
the stalls to receive them. Alas! Eliza
beth was changing her habit in the stali
beside her horse, and Franz Yoself had
to act as screen to this impromptu toilet
scene. The Countess never told exactly
what they did and said, but her maid
gathered enough next day to describe it
to me as being very disagreeable. The
grooms told me that the Empress often
changed her dress in this way in prefer
ence to going into the house. ‘Less
danger of taking cold,’ she says, and no
body dared dispute the imperial will.
She refuses all refreshment except a glass
of water during her visit, and one of
the grooms carries a little square pack
age tissue paper, for the imperial lady
never uses any other substance to wipe
the perspiration from her pretty face.
Heavenly Bliss.
“Angels, my dear children,” said a
Galveston Sunday-school teacher, medi
tatively, “are disembodied spirits.”
“ Does that mean they don’t have any
bodies ? ” asked Johnny.
“Angels have no bodies,” replied the
teacher, emphatically.
“And will pa and ma be there, too ? ”
“Certainly.”
‘ ‘ Then they won’t have no use for me
there if I haven’t got a body for them to
spank,” and he took to munching an
apple he had picked up on a fruit stand
when the proprietor was looking the
other way.— Galveston Neivs .
[Attleboro Chronicle.]
Carry the News.
Mr. John Etzensperger, manufactur
ing Jeweler of North Attleboro, Mass,
lately communicated to us the follow
ing: I suffered so much with pains in
iny arm, that at times I was completely
helpless. I used that incomparable rem
edy, St. Jacobs Oil and was completely
cured as if by magic.
Two young men of Adair, Missouri,
wanted to be photographed with pistols
drawn on each other. They were posed
before the camera and the artist was
counting the seconds when one of the
pistols went off. The negative and one
arm were spoiled.
[Detroit Post and Tribune.]
I have a little girl, said Mr. Henry
Dole, of this city, in a conversation, who
was troubled with a severe lameness in
her legs, pronounced by some Erysipelas,
by others Rheumatism. I had tried
several remedies without effect, when I
was induced to apply St. Jacobs Oil, and
I am happy to say that the use of but
one bottle cured her, and she is now able
to go to school again.
The Story of a Bean.
A boy in Troy, N. Y., had a bean be
tween his thumb and forefinger. Not
thinking of doing harm he snapped or
shot the bean out of a window into the
street. The bean struck a man on the
nose. Tlie man jumped because it strung
him a little, and tripped a lady who was
walking by. The lady fell and broke
an arm. Her scream frightened a horse,
which ran away, smashed two carriages,
and, falling on the icy stones, killed it
self. And yet a bean is a very small
thine:.
A Good Housewife.
The good housewife, when she is giving
her house its spring renovating, should
bear in mind that the dear inmates of her
house are more precious than many
houses, and that their systems need
cleansing by purifying the blood, regu
lating the stomach and bowels to prevent
and cure the diseases arising from spring
malaria and miasma, and she must know
that there is nothing that will do it so
perfectly and surely as Hop Bitters, the
purest and best of medicines.—Concord
N. H. Patriot.
Komrtliing Almost Narvelons
is the steadily increasing power and popularity
of Warner’s Bafe Kidney and Liver Cure.
A New Jnry System.
We would suggest that twelve jurors
be appointed by the Governor for each
circuit, and paid a reasonable salary for
a fixed and definite term. This jury
would travel about the circuit in the
same manner as the Circuit Judge; they
would generally be totally disinterested,
and, holding office by appointment,
would never decide for political pur
poses. By experience, such a jury could
learn to sift the true from the false testi
mony in almost every instance ; by prac
tice they would become expert in weigh
ing testimony and judging of the credi
bility of -witnesses. Their verdicts would
be sooner rendered, and more often in
the right; for their judgment would be
the result of the deliberations of twelve
men whose every-day business and study
was such as to make their judgment pe
culiarly quick and accurate in such mat
ters.—Kentucky Law Reporter.
Workingmen.
Before you begin your heavy spring
work after a winter of relaxation, your
system needs cleansing and strengthening
to prevent an attack of Ague, Bilious or
Spring Fever, or some ether spring sick
ness that will unfit you for a season’s
work. You will save time, much sick
ness and great expense if you will use
one bottle of Hop Bitters in your family
this month. Don’t wait.—Burlington
Hawkeye.
The glass manufacturing interest of
Ohio forms in itself no inconsiderable
element in the prosperity of the State.
The following comities are officially
recognized as the glass sections : Bel
mont, Franklin, Jefferson, Licking,
Muskingum and Portage. In this sec
tion there are thirty-two furnaces, Bel
mont county having fifteen and Portage
six. The value of glass manufactured
yearly aggregates over $3,000,000.
We see among our exchanges a notice
of a very important matter to the public,
and give it to our readers, believing they
will appreciate the item. Coussens’
Lightning Liniment, the world-renowned
cure for rheumatism, lame back, sprains
and bruises, can be bought in sample bot
tles for 25c., but it is cheaper bought in
me. bottles, as they contain nearly three
times as much as 25c. size. Lightning
Liniment deserves a trial. For sale by
all druggists.
Only Words.
It is an unfortunate fact that with
many authors words are almost the only
care; they make it a study not so much
to produce new sentiments as to recom
mend those already known in fairer
decorations. Thus the reader searches
for information in vain ; he finds noth
ing but words.
Indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration
and all forma of general debility relieved by
taking Mensman's Peptonized Beef Tonic, the
only preparation of beef containing its entire
nutritious properties. It contains blood-mak
ing, force-generating and life-sustaining prop
erties; is invaluable in all enfeebled conditions,
whether the res wit of exhaustion, nervous pros
tration, overwork, or acute disease, particularly
if resulting from pulmonary complaints, Gas
well, Hazard A Cos., proprietors, New York.
POM
FOB
RHEUMATISM,
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, Genera! Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Bar and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.
No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacots On.
aa a safe, sure, simple and cheap External
Remedy A trial entails but the comparatively
trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering
with pain can have cheap and positive proof of its
claims.
Directions In Eleven Languages.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGI3TS AHD DEALERS
TN MEBIOINE.
A. VOGEXJER & CO.,
Baltimore. JiTd.. U. S. Am
HffiltJElft
Bitters
Invalids who have lost but are recovering
vital stamina, declare in grateful terms their
appreciation of the merits as ft tonic of Hos
tetler's Stomach Bitters. Not only does it
impart strength to the weak, it corrects an
irregular acid state of the stomach, makes
the bowels act at proper intervals, gives ease
to those who suffer from rheumatic and kid
ney troubles, and conquors as well as pre
vents fever and ague.
For sale by all Druggists and Dealers
generally.
Comfort Ahead.
A Detroit lawyer was waited upon by
a woman about 45 years of age, who an
nounced that the time had come when
she would no longer put up with the
conduct of her husband, and she had de
cided to secure a divorce. Some in
quiries were made and questions an
swered, and she promised -to return at
certain time and pay a fee and set forth
her petition. She appeared before the
attorney on the appointed day, and an
nounced her intention of withdrawing all
proceedings for divorce.
“Has your husband promised to do
better ? ” inquired the lawyer.
“ Oli, yes. I think he’ll lead a very
different life hereafter.”
“ Well, I’m glad of it. What has he
promised to do ? ”
“ Well, I told you I was earning $4
a week at the wash-tub, and he was us
ing up every cent of it in cards and
drinks?”
“Yes.”
“ I had stood it as long as I could, sir,
and so I came to you. When he found
what I had been up to, he was willing
to make promises.”
“ And how did you fix it ? ”
“Well, sir, I keep right on washing
and earning $4 a week, but, instead of
taking all my money away, he has
promised to get along on $2.50 a week
and leave me 12 sliillings to run the
house and buy clothes! So, sir, you
will stop the divorce, and I think I see
happiness and comfort ahead. ”
The pebbles in our path weary us and
make us foot-sore more than the rocks
which require only a bold effort to sur
mount.
pr BULL’S
COUGH
SYRUP
RAZORINE !!
A matter of real importance to every man
who shaves himself. Stfety, comfort and
economy combined. Any good Razor kept in
perfect order for a lifetime at a cost of Scents
a year and no necessity for honing or setting.
Price SI.OO per box, sent free on receipt.
Send for Circular—exclusive Sale *o Agents.
DR. A. BYRON CLARKE,
Sole Importer, Atlanta, Ga.
ayne’s Automatic Engines
Reliable, Durable and Economical, will furnish a
horse power with k't less fuel and water than any other
Engine built, not fitted with an Automatic Cut-off.
Beud for Illustrated Catalogue “J,” for Information h
Prices. B. W. Payne & Sons, Box BGO, Corning, N.Y,
SQQQ n year to Agents, and expenses. $6 Outfit
tjsJ _/ free. Address F. Swain & Co.,Augusta,Me.
P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
H!STORYpthewAR
This is the cheapest and only complete and reliable his
tory oftlie Great Civil War published ; it abounds in nara
tives of personal adventure, thrilling incidents, daring
exploits, heroic deeds, wonderful escapes, etc.; and con
tains lite-like portraits of 100 leading Generals. Bend for
specimen pages and extra terms to Agents. Address
National Publishing Cos., Atlanta, Ga.
Lay the Axe
to the Root
If yon would destroy the can
kering worm. For any exter
nal pain, sore, wound or lame
ness of man or beast, use only
MEXICAN MUSTANG LINI
MENT. It penetrates all mus
cle and flesh to the very bone,
expelling all inflammation,
soreness and pain, and healing
the diseased part as no other
Liniment ever did or can. So
saith the experience of two
generations of sufferers, and
so will you say when you have
tried the “ Mustang.”
CELLULOID si*?*
EYE-CLASSES. S !
•?^ re6 ® n^n ? choicest selected TortoUe
iESll and Amt-ar. The lightest, handsomest,
and strongest known. Sold Sy Opticians tnd
Jewelers. by SPENCER OPTICAL
j Q OQ., 13 Midden .Lane. New York.
H A Aceete Wasted. $5 a Ray made
Kw n# ' " r ‘ family
Ifilf Wf>AT W- W.igh.nntn2alh. Retail
WyWpriae. 51.60. Terra* aorprie. Agent*,
vs* V Domestic Scjllk Cos., Cincinnati, O.
DA\A# PR Pence * Clawson,
KM r %J F€C* *4 Spring St., New
York, pay highest cash prices f;u Beaver, Ottei, P.accoon,
D*er fkin* and orhr Fare. Shipments solicited.
PETROLEUM JELLY
I "Used and approved by the leading
I CIANS of EUROPE and 1
I The most Valuableß
! Iknown, H ToCe *
| p3H Article* from pur*
IpS Nm ***s Yelin~<raeh u
! M M A Tr> _. Vaseline Cold Cream,
Atm WOUIYDS, BUSH? yJ^To^So^^
A ■ BORES, CDTB, CEILBLADfS l!£^u°^j2!K.*.
M BXUT DISEASES, EHEUXATISIL n mn'^h-13
lATAR.KH, HEKOKEHGIDB, Etc. Also for TiSELINS CONFECTION.
■ _ Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Croup and Diphtheria, ete An agreeable form oft***
i AfirTry them. 25 and 60 cent sizes of all our goods. ' ing Vaseline internally.
BMiOTiWCTin iTTß*fln i Wg wTi rTA*fT7 25 CENTS A BoX_^
- *mrm nu AT nTASH UTMITiM, CeWAXSSCO.aX
A GOOD FAMILT
x
[Tfeli Mfixtla* represent* the Lung* is * h*i!Ury *Ule. j
What The Doctors Say!
DR. FLBTCHEB, ef Lexington, Mo,. eay* < *1
pend your ‘Balaam’ ia nreforenae any olhor *<L
(tine for tough* end cold*.”
DX. A. C. JOHNSON, ef Mt. Vernon, PL, write* ef *oj
wonderful cure* of Cousismptlon in place hgr the
!• of ‘‘Allen’* Lung Balsam.”
SB. J. S. TURNER, BlounUville, Ala., Jt
ahyeieian ef twenty-fir* yeare, write*! • B l* the bet)
preparation for Consumption to the werld.'
For all Diseases mt the Threat. Lunge u 4
Pulmonary Orjraus. 11 will *• ■■
ament excellent fiemedy.
AS AN SXPECIORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL
IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM lli ANT FOR*.
J. H. HARRIS jTcb., Proprietor#,
cmrciMHATi, o.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
A OIiKTS WANTED for the Best and fastest SeU
t\ ing Pictorial Book and Bibles. Price* r *duced33 per
cent. National Publishing 00., Atlanta, Ga.
$“• ' m t A TEAR and expen ee* D
Iff Agents. Outfit Free. Address P.
B ff 10. VICKERY, Augusta, Mvue.
e flair Dyei* the SAFES - ?
aid BEST; It acts install t*-
uooualjr. producing t he mos-
It is a standard preparation
and a favorite on every well
appointed toilet o,
*C.™’. OP.ITTF.NTON, Af t,
diO AWONTH. AgentoWanled,
-C I 175 best selling articles in the world ; a
ej \J pie free. JAY BRONSON, Detroit, Mick.
YflllWP MCW Learn Telegraphy I Earn *4O to SIOO o
I UUIiU lflE.ll month. Graduates guaranteed pavin,
offices. Address VALENTINE BROS., Janesville, Wi*.
EM PLOYM ENT—fikSf ?“r2!S2
Alec SALARY per month. All EXPENSES
advanced. WAGES promptly pnliL SLOAN
A Cos. SO6 George St. ilnclnnsil.
P] Q n 1 Q P TI P P i° r Consumption i* also
luUu U U II ii the beat cough medicine,
CA HTT PItKUH’MX —Sample and term*
X V tv Ii free Monthly Nation, Warren. Pa,
Established 1840.
A permanent practical road vehicle,
with which a person can ride three
/U miles as easy as he could walk one.
Send 3-cent 'stamp for 2 page cata
-1 \Vy ° 'THE POPE M’F’G CO.,
J 5g4 Washington 6t., Boston, Mass.
TDIITU 18 MIGHTY. Th. “ orir l3d
I rtu In only” Prof. MARTINEZ th. Orest / \
Bpanivh Seer and Wizard will for 30 cent* with age, / \
heijrhi, color of ejec, and lock of hair. aen*i g conuurr/ __ _ *
Y iCTOR a of your future huaband or wife, paToheiogicaflj' l
predicted with name, time aud place of meeting, and Ww
date of narnage. Money retamed u> all not taiiftfied.
Addreee Pref. L. Martinet. 10 Mopt’r FI. Bcttoa, Mut. HBSaE*
Sure relief. orpryw
PONDS EXTRACT.
Subduet Inflammation. Controls all Hemorrhage/,
Aeute and Ghconie. Venom and JHueoui.
INVALUABLE FOR
Pond’s Extract u the
|*/.A|. Mmli 01117 pacific for this disease, Cold
W Cl Id 111 lin the Head, Ac. Oar Catarrh
Cure f7seeots). *pecially pre
pared to meet serious case*, contain* all the curative
propert ie* of Pond’s Extract: our Nasal
Syringe 125 cents), invaluable for ae In catarrhal
affection*, is simple and etractive.
Sore Throat nd Lungs, Chapped
Hands Bd Face AregreatlybenefltedbytheEX"
tract. Frosted Limbs *nd Chilblains
are promptly rUevd, andaiUmataly cared byPond’B
Extract.
l* unsafe to nee other articles with oar direction*.
Insist on haring POND’S EXTRACT, Refuse all imita
tion* and substitutes.
TfIOTU APUE Sure cure, sent postpaid f°r 2D
■ vll I nMUII L, cents. D. BOYD, Wirt, Ind.
Publishers’ Union, Atlanta, Ga Fourteen.—M.
% YVSfC’I Have frotu 2-r tc 50 per c nt. by u 4
ill D’Huy’s French Fteel Strings, violin, per set ef 4,
A r >c., guitar set (6’, Ms.; banjo set i .I), 40c. Bends. Her
C'lin or 1 and 3-ceut stamps to F. N. D’HUY, Impoit .
173 Wall at . Cloverport, Kj., and Hardinahv.rg, Ky.
St/vp r?o ft oUrA Bpgucs j
| HOP BITTERS."
(A Dledicine, not a Drink.)
CONTAINS
l HOPS, BUCIIU, MANDRAKE,
DANDELION,
I And the Purest and Best MkimcalQua: >
TIES OK ALL OTDEIi BITTEKS.
THEY CURE
I All Diseases of the Stomach. Bowels. Blot
‘ Liver. Kidneys, and Urinary Organs, Ner ■
i vouscess, Sleeplessness ami especially
- Female Complaints.
SIOOO IN COLD.
I Will be paid for a case they will not cure or
! help, or for anything impure or Injurious
’ found in them.
I Ask your druggist for llop Bitters and fry
I them before you sleep. Ttike no oilier.
I D I. C. is an absolute and irresistible cure for
I Drunkenness, use of opium, tobacco and
- narcotics.
|£B9K2SSES Send fot. Cl' cvlau.
r All above obt by •Hi'"- -D.
I Hop Ritters Mfjr* Cos., N. V., *v: Toronto, Out.