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•topic* u if**'” ’ .'»■*■ " — *» r
OP INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
Low of Appetite la Pi**.
tite - Fattening by pigs easily overfeeding, lose their and - appe¬ this
reason of
checks their growth and is a waste qf
lead. To avoid this result it ia well to
change two the and feed then. occasionally When for ia a day the
or now corn
regular food bran makes a wholesome
and nntricious change, and it may be
given with boiled potatoes without any
cessation of tho l^ening. Pigs will
can fatten be more induced quickU^Munore toflHfKudige food and they
variety of food teSTto thUiresuU, t, a
njletltfi both
gestion. encouraging To the restorlthe appetite ab&helping di
with wouW •jlqjfest, cloyed
corn, we a lew
days’ feeding with potatoes and corn
boiled together until the potatoe* are
mushed, dlings and then eomo bran or mid¬
stirred in. If when cold it is too
thick warm water should ne added uutil
it can b# eaten easily. Add a little salt,
not more than a teaspoonful to a feed for
each pig .—New York Times.
“1st. A Why f he Butter Doesn’t Gome.
Because of some disorganized or
unhealthy condition of the cow.
2d. On account of the unwholesome
food and water supplied.
3d. Want of proper cleanliness in
milking and setting the milk.
‘“X The"' cr.«m not raised and
.kirnmed ia due time.
“ thc *"*«
jured J.dV.i still r inoio o n f„ m z:t thawing. to frcozo - in -
Z: CrlZ^ZT WhCn C “
lub S ” ,° th0 Ch ", rn - ® so on Yi
. 3 J „ " ,2 :7, T" J b11
arrain ifsoabox f'aimnt m.lr..' nnn beg“
or barrel chura;
^ nana wiVhnut , f*i °'. Hll 1 ?t t ,a butti.T good
’ in
comes Whan When th the cream is perfect ami
th« temperature i. right, about sixty-five I*
fiffTmo. «, rt,. ^ ° t f \ i er
atnsrs twentv nr SwenrL fiv mi y . lvc J )0U ra . ij < *»f’
tZSSL u Tr. J.mmZ 1 iu"Jhe"
ItoNvf rouon' g’vl' - " above bo 6 in “ d ^o. f}‘°
*' 110 " l ( rm 1 '
v
“
u» j. s r , , lea ! thfl . 11
1 ^? ? !S^ ^ ’
h U 1 , i C t, l byaUlwrk u T‘ ,
. ' r ° n C >3 ar ° K ° 0(1 1 for
A rsew ho gland experimenter t finds
that feeding apples to milch cows has
the invariable effect of lessening tho How
of milk.
A The Farm Journal says careless driv
ing never is a safe way, for tho oldest
Md safest horse will sometimes get
#»red.
nnd Keep well-!sheltered your milch cows in well bedded
stables. These should
be daily thoroughly renewed. cleaned and tho bedding
back Early-blooming fruit buds arc kept
der the by scattering manure or straw un
trees to prevent tho snow from
blowing away.
Hoots Ju- are not so suitable " U for stock 8 10CK
t~r.A food i in this country i as in • England, , . on
account of our cold winters. There arc
”7 *°" d ; 1
muT t ou b S« r :™e „^:: ; „ 8 .labK’.l:d , - at
S3 S'* witn cnoice c J, h ; e mutton. “ re •“!>•
Wo are opposed to salting butter by
the use of brine in washing, as fine, good
salt is better and more convenient, says
toe Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette.
Farmers are getting out of the notion
of is fattening on nothing but corn. Corn
other good, but when intermixed with some
tor. grain, bran, etc., the ration is bet
Farm profits vested in permanent im
provements when deposited return in larger banks dividends than
or invested in
other directions. A farm cannot be too
highly improved.
With fattening cattle a very small ra
tion of water onco a day will be su tieimt;
tnileh cows should be induced to drink
twiceadav wenth! The r" water ftter8 should l ° Ul be * >0 Wftrme< warmed *
bcWllv
v-p.*: Irnnl shells . .. and „ - fresh- . ,
orouml d J ri f'° U ry 1<)U S °’
'
and and * a waim »rm W«L breakfast f of ground | com
crcoae wcMe'thci their ? power im wer to to hiv lay 'in in wintor° winter.
1 ho eoniumption of food by dairy
stock is pud buck m a three-fold way—
milk, growth of stock, and the value of
the manuro, which last often balances
the first cost of tho food. It is in that
respect that stock-raising is superior to
exclusive grain growing.
The milk " supply ! * of brooding K s >ws
i . »r,:..?’q - h t ah .
° ,U rV ? ,lC r k of <b S r . ink. It
flret time to note how niucl^lnorc^vaVer
ROW* will drink needcoT which othcrs° have suckling
pigs tho than is field by fattening b
on
_ , , ,
<jut n fTd ,iVe ’ l“n d ‘"'ll
force water . o conwdornblo °. f , m ’l7' <1,Stance. l l ' '° 11 -t
A■ f 0r 1 1 <l C O /!!!°?P t ; O “ .°- f
«miiv can „ ,. bt . smoked . - . by suspending , the
Hama from oars laid across a largo barrel,
open at both end*, set over a smoulder
ing fire. Cornc obs make a good smoke,
and bay leaves and unq>cr berries burned
with them give the meat a slightly aro¬
matic flavor. Cover tho barrel while the
smoking is g ing on. So says the Town
Jieffister.
The iiae of brine among the butter
makers is bocoining more popular than it
used to be, and is now used by some in
washing the butter, and in some cases
the salting of tne butter is confined to
tha use of brine in wa*hing. It is found
that if butter is washed with brine, and
no fresh water is subsequently employed,
tbe butter will be made as salt as many
people be. like it, and as salt as it ought
to
There is no such thing as luck in the
poultry business. The person who waits
for Mr. Luck to raise his chicks will be
badly left at the end of the season. The
luck that awaits anyone depends entirely
on and his labor judgment, well experience, the the time in
spent, as be as achieved money by the
vested. Success can
industrious, hut don’t trust to luck, or
you wilt got tooted every time. He is a
mighty treacherous old man.
Many fail with camellias in the house
only beeaus* They of not understanding naturally in damp,
needs. grow
the conditions found
but i §SpMs--®i Aft
| should tho ditiugo in ths pdts be
defective it must be remedied by using,
plentyof of driensge material in the bot¬
tom each. ‘An excellent way to grow
the camslira is to set the pot inside of u
second one, that is enough larger than
the one the plant Is in, to allow of an
Inch of sand between the two. Th’s se
cures also should agreeable moisture. Thu leaves
be moistened on alternate
days with a light spray of water or by
sponging degrees of the surface. Fifty to fifty-five
heat suits the plants at this
season, r • ■ -
Making Groat Gnns.
England’s big guns are made of bars
coiled spirally and welded into a solid
mass by the hammer, says a correspond¬
ent of the Boston Herald. These red-hot
furnaces contain a straight bar; at a word
the door is slightly raised, and with
hoge nippers its head is seized by loops
made for the purpose. A steam winch
draws out the glowiug mass and brings
it to a horizontal capstan fixed before
the door. A water hose is turned upon
chill, the loop, and while it blackens Under the
a stalwart fellow, wielding a heavy
sledge, fixes the loop on a nut projecting
from tho capstan wheel. Then tho ma¬
chine revolves with resistless force,
curling drum the hot metal round and round on
its neatly and smoothly, and as
easily tho as gills would wind ribbon. So
coil is formed, whether for the
breech piece or tho body of tho gun or
for its jacket. This again is cooled, and
^r i8refi ° r welding under
You ought to s« tU. Woolwich ham.
mer It weighs forty tone sheer weigh,
“ d
.
hammer is suspended; a solid block,
which,drive, from ahovo bj steam and
workmeu has charge of this massive
tom* hammer. Of his lie thumb starts and and finger. drops it 1 by /aw a
an open-face t‘0 dropped watcli the laid hammer on the and block; he
n
last opera ion of the furnace the “great
) lca t >,and about every monarch there is
1 . 1 |{ lr r onchas °* )e ^ seen een U it JU iust t a as 5 1 I aia did y ves- e8
’
tcrdsy. a While I T am wondering what , 4 .
they thought about, the furnace to be
emptied is flaring with impatience,
ont/ A huge crane awrugs roun d a pair
Britons’ctus'ter. TliVdoifrriKs'a little! the
whjto light blinds us, and, although 1
heat am at least twenty yards away, the
burns my face uncomfortably,
Water is thrown into the awful gap, aud
then the men perceive their e!o*e. prey. The
huge arms part and firmly the door
rises to its fullest extent, a clash of the
crane gear, a shout from the men. and
out it comes, easily and softly, a mon
strous coil. The crane swings about aud
th places it upon end upon the anvil. Then
e hammer falls, shaking tho solid floor
beneath us, crushing the red-hot mass
inches down at a blow, welding its coils
together so that they can never part.
But the inside hollow has b cn knocked
ou the ^ ° tube , *hupe has by this reduced process; so, when
been to its proper
length, a solid mandril is def ly sli; ped
between tho hammer and the iron. for
^ w0 of three blows the contracted coil . at
tempts resistance, but it gives way, and
^ lC ni m! (lu to > ftsc ’ asinto lmt ;
^ t great . used
cr *. “ c jiincers are
ft where -' ain * again Rn(1 . ^.^rops It IS battered the mass and on Struck its side, al
round The irregularities caused bv all
this hammering are afterward removed 1
17 by ‘I'f 0ther I' 1 -".,«» ^2-22: the gun i, male
| | Admiral Ingleside.a Iceberg.,, well-known Eng
Hsh explorer in the Arctic seas, has been
interviewed by a New York Mail and
Kx/>res* reporter, who put the following
! question among others:
“Vou must have seen some big ice
bergs?” have,”
“I was the response “but tho
' ice I speak of is not such as makes ice
. 1 bergs, though it it appears to be a com
mon *^ea that is. It is floe ice, made
by the sea freezing over, while icebergs
ar0 f° rrac< ^ by fresh water. In oue
8eason tho sea will freeze over to a
depth of eight to ten feet, aud
each year it will increase liiorc
\V* th,lt y Jo t h forty ' ck , ne ! feet 9 - },. thick. havc I ® (!< have r n this often
8Cn time. icebergs The glac.crs floating push away themselves at the
same
8 »y two miles out into the sea, get over
weighted the and of break off, having no longer
support the bottom. 1 have seen
them three miles long and 120 feet out
of 7 atc /’ ? Ild tUut W °“ ld b ° 0nl y ° nC
tenth of them. One of my narrow es
capes was on my third expedition, when
the false keel of my vessel was cat off
from stem to the stern. Luckily we were
pushed up on land and so were saved
.lust bfcfore that I had relieved I)e Belch
cr and his crews, who had deserted tlieii
four ships in tho icc and were coming
home nil crowded into one vessel. That
uiwin tsti "
- -—---
Producing a Beautiful Flame.
A vessel’s old sheathing, which has
been covered with yellow metal or cop
I-, makes a most beautiful flame of dif
lercnt colors when burned in an open
crate Years hco this wood was con
^Z.mp^nt t !L'h^Sata\S^CpZ wbilli
<lu Tram (lmerent co!o™, shoot
forth tho copper nail holes. l>cr
jonnwh. visited New Bcdfo:d and saw
the beautiful effects produced by burn
iug this wood carried some to their homes,
; nn d now the demand for old sheathing
is greater than the supply .—New Be,{font
iy a ss.) Standard.
The Height of Fashion.
Lo! the
poor woman
whose unbalanced
mind makes her wear
bats like this to tease
mankind who tries to
view the play, but
faze* at this pyramid,
which fashion calls a
hat A woman's “head¬
strong,” yet this hat’s
crush great her weight must surely
soft and “light” yiel i
headed, ing pate. aud She is
is why she too, extinguished maybe t hat
by gets Perhaps
this hat. she
wears this funnel we abhor to
make tbe men look up to her
the more; but, if her head was
“level” she would know that
hats as high as this are very
“low.” We pity her who needs a
lofty bat is to “flat.” lilt her Without head which
otherwise this
hat we can t see through heruu .te,
but with it she’s more puzzling—
and a “fright.” Alas! alas! we men
who foot the bills, know women’s hats
they're come high “high” like other ills, but when
as this we’ve got to strike, until
they “shoot the hat”
ire so dislike.
—H. C. Dodge, to Detroit Free Press.
A. Slight
“H«rki Listen to will you!
The panther the end nc 1”
man at oars stopped, rowing
and all bent forwaid, eagerly listening
heard ” l>etition of ^ 017 ***** *****
Presently it came again, a yell half hu¬
man, half demoniacal, that made the
forest ring with wild echoes.
“Correct l” cried Buck Lindaley, an
old guide and hunter who accompanied
the party of sportsmen. “Nothing but
a hunted painter could make that noise. I’ve
’em off an’ on for thirty years, an’ I
know their voice as well as I do my
own l”
“Shall we land and give chase?” asked
Ellsmore, the youngest man and best shot
in the party.
“Yes, yes!” cried his companion in
chorus.
“What would you advise?” asked Ells¬
more, turning to the guide.
“Why is mighty gentlemen, you know tho pain¬
but_” ter a tough animal to tackle
“There it is again!” cried one of the
men, as the hideous yell pealed over
woods and water. “Come on, Mr. Lind
sley, and show us the sport. We’re not
afraid of tho danger 1”
toward Accordingly the boat was headed
shore. The moment it grated on
the sand the men sprang out.
“This way!” exclaimed|BuckLindsley.
And, guided by the cries that floated at
intervals through the forest, the men
darted forward.
“The animal, be it panther or other¬
wise, seems to stay in nearly one spot,”
said “Ellsmore, as they drew nearer to
the source of the outcries.
Cautiously they advanced until only a
thicket of oaks separated them from their
prey. into Piercing through this they step¬
ped the opening beyond, their rifles
ready for instant use.
Before them was a small log shanty,
and on a stump beside the door sat a
young horn. man, holding in his hands a French
curdling Placing it to his lips he blew a blood¬
blast, the fiendish cry they had
attriouted to tho panther!
“Great Scott!” gasped Ellsmore.
“Gewhillikens!” cried Smith.
“Bless my soul!” exclaimed Brown.
“Well, I’ll be darned!” growled Lind
slcy.
“Is thcro anything . I T can do , for - you,
< !m ' n i aslv0<1 the stianger, as he
" ,,,w!ird t,,c form ‘ d " b, ° ° rray ° f
^hataro you doing here!" blurted
learn “Camping play out the for a few cheerfully weeks white I
to horn!” an
swexed the young man, pulling his mous
tache over a capital imitation of a smile.
Four shame laced hunters filed away
toward the boat. Three sportsmen, sad
der but wiser, took the next train for
town. And while relat ng tlieir hunting
experiences to circles of admiring friends
they somehow forgot to tell their exciting
chase after a panther,
On the Far Pacific.
The development of tho resources of
our Pacific coast is quite as remarkable
i n i t8 way; but the actual figures of the
census will not be so sensational. Cali
fornia was a mining region originally,
Its first coatributio to the wealth of
tjm world was in the millions of gold it
poured into all the channels of trade
throughout tho world. But raining is
cow one of tho least of the industries of
the region beyond the Sierra Nevada
Mountains. hreedinff Grain growing, fruit raising,
atork ,t0 cK breeding an* arc now now the the main mum cnnrrva sources
.
duced^n^holesomeTociafdistur^ances” ZZ Zth uS^.
Paeific coa.t now depend are more
Xu^V be“ co^ry, and
fullness of time will develop a race equal
■ to the very choicest people of the East,
It is probably the most wholesome
country in the world. As a sanitarium,
there is nothing equal to Southern Cali
fornia to be found anywhere. It is des
tined to support a dense agricultural
and population, for small produce farms of fifteen
twenty acres will as much
wealth in the way of iruits, nuts, grapes,
olives, and other valuable articles, as
will hundreds of acres devoted to grain
in other parts of the country. Then,
some timo or other, a mighty commerce
■ will be developed on the Pacific Ocean.
Japan and Hindostan fairly
swarm with human beings whose com
mercial wants have not yet been devcl
oped. Then there is growing up in the
British colonies on the Pacific lens of
millions ot Anglo Saxons whoso instinct
it i 3 to “go down to the sea in ship*.”
The vast trade of the Atlantic Ocean
w "ripped jn $ n the bythe^^mighticr^^ next centurv be far out
of
the Pacific, which of course will enrich
our descendants on the American Pacific
coast._ Lemorest's Monthly.
i in kn nvumnit
A . Vienna tailor ... wagered \ , recently * that , ,
-°°k mo o than 40,0 )i stitches to make
J. winter overcoat. I o decide the ques
i tion, a coat was ordered, and a comimt
th0 of “veto to superintend tho
work, as well as to sec that no unneces
sary stitches were made. The result
j was announced as follow*. Body of the
mg collar on, buttonhole*, ’ 2, “j >-.0,
sleeves , tvith lining, 0S0; liocket*. 924;
Everybody‘s companion is nobody’s friend,
but Red Star Coi ga Cure is everylo y>
friend. Prof. Giothe, of liie Brooitryn Board
of Ueallh, endors s it as prompt, safe and
sure. Price, twenty-live cents a bottle.
An a^d woman, with a fatnOj- of torty-s.von
cats, has been discovered in New York. When
asked as to the orisrin of her fondness for tin*
££3225211? mt^Ind ie'niv^-TL^aSn^
, ' when fl«i,t old 3 o much that they remind mn
ot my man was alive.”
Men, such as U. S. Senator Voorhees, of In¬
ti: ana, are loud in their praise of bt. Jacobi
Oil usaninstmtaneouiciuc for rbe matism.
*euralgia, sciat caand other bodily p iins.
An ingenious roque has put himself in the
clutches of the police by advertising h sure
preventive of seasickness at a dollar. To those
who forwarded the fee he replied, “Stay
ashore.” He in not likely to suffer from sea¬
sickness for some years to come.
Thera Shall be no Alps.
When Napoleon talked of invading Italy one
of his officers said: “But, sire, remember the
Alps.” To an ordinary man th -se would have
seem d si • ply insurmountab.e, but Na oleon
responded eagerly; “There shill be no Alps.”
So the famous Simplon |&i was made. Dis¬
ease, like a mountain. Mauds in the way of
fame, fortune and h >n< r ‘o many who by Dr.
Pierce’s “Golden Mr Lc:t| Discovery” might
be healed and so tbe mountain would disap*
pear. liver It is specific for all blood, chronic lung
and aDeasrs, snch as consumption
(which blatohee. is scrofula of the lungs), pimples,
eru t o s. turn >rs, swellings, fever
sores and kindred complaints.
They who have for the least to risk are the
most clamorous novelties.
Dr. Pierce.« “Favorite Prescription” is ev¬
erywhere acknow edged to be the standard
remedy It for U female told druggists. complaint* and weak
usnsea. by
The passion of vanity rales in forests as
well as In cities.
W0B8E THAN SM ALLPOX.
A Tbs •~^aa!3rMttgr*“ Brampton Hospital for Oonsumpltrag,
"tesaasastfe* in London, reports that orw iSSy; ^ psc»ls
of
Consumption b one of our national die
"ESS* what has often been said »Port in our gow columns to prove dur¬
ing the last only eight the years, that kidney trebles
are not cause of more than half the
cases of consumption, but of ninety out of
every hundred other common diseases. They
who hare taken this position, made their
claims after an elaborate investigation, and
their proof that they hare discovered a spe¬
cific for the terrible end stealthy kidney dis¬
ease*, which have become so prevalent
among us, is wise and convincing.
We have recently received from them a
freah supply of their wonderful advertising.
and They have challenged the medical profession
science to investigate. They have in¬
admitted vestigated, the and those who are frank have
truth of their statements.
They claim that ninety per cent of diseases
come these inactive originally kidneys from inactive allow the kidneys; bicod to that be¬
come filled with uric acid poison: that t.hia
uric acid poison in the blood carries disease
through There is every organ.
enough uric acid developed in the
system dozen within twenty-four hours to kill half
a men.
This being a scientific fact, it requires only
kidneys ordinary wisdom to see the effect inactive
must have upon the system.
If this poison is not removed, it ruins every
organ. If the bowels, stomach or liver be¬
come inactive, we know it at once, but other
organs help and them dormant, out. If the kidneys become
constipated later often the warning comes
on, and when it is too late, be¬
cause the effects are remote from the kidneys
and those organs are notjfesuspeeted to be out
of order.
able Organs that ere weak and diseased are un
to resist the attacks of this poison, and
the disease often takes the form of and is
treated as a lo.-al affliction, when in reality
the real cause of the trouble was inactive
kidueys. Too
many me lical men of the present day
hold what was a fa it twenty yoars ago, that
kidney disease is incurable, a cording to the
medicines authorised by tlieir code. Hence,
they ignore the original cause of disease it¬
self, and give their attention to useless treat¬
ing They of local dose effects. the patient with quinine,
phine, mor¬
or with salts and other physics, hop¬
ing that thus nature may cure the disease,
while the kidueys continue to waste away
with inflammation, ulceration and decay, and
the victim eventually perishes.
The same quantity of blood that passes
through If tho heart,passes through the kidneys.
the kidneys are diseased, the blood soaks up
this disease aud takes it ail tL-ough the sys¬
tem. Hen e it is, that the clair. is made that
Warner’s safe cure, the only known spe¬
cific for kidney diseases, cures DO per cent,
of human ailments, because it, and it alone,
is able to maintain the natural activity of tha
kidueys, aud to neut; alize and remove the
uric acid, or kidney poison, as fast as it is
formed.
If this acid Is not removed, there is inactiv¬
ity of the tbe kidueys, and there will be produced
in system paralysis, apoplexy, dyspep¬
sia, consumption, heart disease, headache*,
rheumatism, the pneumonia, impotency and all
nameless diseases of delicate women. If
the blood, poisonous matter is separated from the
as fast as it is formed, these diseases,
in a majority of cases, would not exist.
It only requires a {article of small-pox
virus to produce that’ vile disease, and the
poisonous all through mat er from the kidueys, passing
the system aud becoming lodged
at different weak points, is equally destruc¬
tive, If it although more disguised.
kidneys, were possible lor us to see into the
and how quickly the blood passing
through them goes to the heart aud lungs and
other parts of the system, carrying this
deadly hesitation virus with it. all would believe with¬
out what has so often been stated
in advertisements in these columns, that the
kidneys body. are the most important organs m the
They may regard this article as an adver¬
tisement and refuse to believe it, but* that is
r matter over which wo have no control.
Careful investigation and science itself are
proving beyond a doubt that this organ is,
in fact, more important than any oth-^r in
the r«.stem as a health regulator, and as such
should be closely wat hed for the least sign
of disordered action.
Tall Bonnets.
“Arthur is handsome, I’ll admit, but
then he’s so small. When I wear my new
bonnet, I look taller than lie,” said Miss
Mattie to lier own particular girl friend
Grace, after the latter had given her “a
good shoulder talking to” for giving the cold
to a former lover.
“It's just too bad those high hats have
come in now,” returned Miss Grace, “for
Arty is just gone on you. He’s not to
blame for being short.”
“That’s so, Gracie, and he isn’t short
in pocket, you know, but
“It seems to me one oughtn’t to judge
a lover by his stature, but by how much
lie thinks of one. You ought to pity
poor Arty, for he is as solemn as an owl
since you sacked him, and does nothing
but sigh.”
‘ ‘I agree with you there, and that is
how I do judge him—by his size.”
The Ituling Passion.
“Well, old boy, you seem in good spir¬
its,” said Jones to his friend Jollyboy,
who was in the last stages of consump¬
tion. “You arc determined to keep up
your heart, live or die, I take it. ”
“You bet! I’m bound to prove one of
those confounded old sayings false, any¬
how.”
“Which one?’’
“Laugh and grow fat. I laugh enough
to weigh a ton.”
California “How’s your appetite? digest Here’s some
grapes. Can you them?”
“I’ll try it once for luck. Just hand
over that pepsin bottle.”
“What’s that for?”
“Like all that blasted bad tasting
’potheenry stuff there, merely to help a
poor chap to die-jest. ”
Despise Not the Day of Small Things.
Little thing* may he’p a man to rise—a bent
pin in an easy chair, lor instance. Dr. Pierce’s
•’Pleasant Purgative Pellets” are small things,
ache.*, plca-aut to take, torpid and livers they cure sick hea l
re ieve and do wonder*.
Being All purely vegetable they cannot harm any
one. druggists.
Where tbe mind is left free religion can
never have dangerous enemies.
War Abend.
There Is great danger of war with Mexico in
the near fnture, but at present we can purs' e
the .arts of happiness, prosperity and wealth.
Wherever jo.ilive, you should writ ? to Hal
let! & Co., Portland, Maine; and receive free,
full information at* ut uork that, you can do
and live at home, earning thereby from Jo to
S25 and upwards daily. Some have earned
over $C0 in a day. Capital not required; you
are started free. Ail is new. Both sexes.
Al ages. Pay, as above guaranteed, from fli st
start.
A Deceived Woman
Ist’ elady who uses c smotion, face lot o*s.
white lea 1,bismuth powders, arsenic, etc., in
the Lei ef ef enriching and beautifying ulti¬ the
comp e.don- It is b it temporary, and
mately destroys the skin beyond the power of
nature to restore. f*top it! Stop it now. and
use onlv Dr. Harter’s Iron Tonic, which im¬
parts the rigor and loveliness of youth.
Treachery snd falsehood are the yices of
coward ice,__
Odd pill boxes are spread over the land bv
the thousaud af;«?r having been emptied by
Buffe ing humaxlty. What a mass of sicken¬
ing, disgustingmedioine the poor stomach has
to contend with. T« o much strong medicine.
Prickly ing the place Ash Bitters of ail this i r.ip dlv and drugs, sure and y ink¬
c ass ot is
curing ail th3 ill* arising from a dfiordir i
condition of the liver, kidneys, stomach a ;d
bov e a
If you feel os though (heart-dropsy) water was have gathering heart
around the heart or
rheumatism.palpitationof the heart with suffo
cation,svmpathetic heart trouble—Dr. Kiimer’i
OCKAN-Wked regulates, corrects and cures.
Daughters, Wives and Mothers.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free,
securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Utica, N.Y
Piso’g Remedy for Catarrh is agree able U
use. It is not a liquid or a snuff- 5(fc,
A CO-OPERATIVE COLONY. l
nm Knights ef UWrStarta New SatoN
Within tho last few weeks over 80
families whose heads are Knight * of
Labor have left Chicago for a new Co¬
operative town established fifty miles
from Memphis, City. Tenet, and called Ten¬
nessee The city, of which glow¬
ing business stories are told, waa founded by a
house of this city which deals
Knights largely in Tenner e« Borne local
of Labor thought it would be a
good idea to move down there and run
stores and factories on a co operative
plan. A committee was sent a month
ago to examine the soil, water, iron and
timber resources and upon its return re¬
ported everything exceedingly favor¬
able. The climate was good, and the
natural attractions of the place excellent,
and the committee bought some ground
and took immediate steps looking
toward the establishment of a colony.
Those interested in the new city are very
enthusiastic in their statements concern¬
ing it. They say that the War¬
ner furnace near by, which is now
out of repair will be put in order at
once and in about 30 days will be in
operation. The Knights will manufac¬
ture uails and employ 300 men in the
nail iactorv. Brick machines having a
capacity of 30,000 per day have been
bought and shipped, and as soon as the
colony is in running order the capacity
will be increased to 60,000. Charles
Lange, of Chicago, has been in Tennes¬
see City and bought up ground for a
sash, door and blind factory. Other
factories and stores will bo started as
soon The as practicable.
ground that is to be occupied by
tho colony consists, it hsaid, of 120.000
acres, divided into 40-acre tracts. The
town itself coovers 2,200 acre*, and is
situated on a tableland 2,000 feet above
ihe level of the sea. Timber, iron ore
aud limestone abound. The city will
be incorporated inside of two weeks,
and a City Hall, public school and
in engine days house will be built at once, and
20 200 houses will be built The
Englewood College is four or five miles
from the city. Property is selling at $7
to $10 an acre, and a stock company is
formed, the first Board of Directors of
which will consist of seven men, six of
them Knights of Labor. Last week
about 20 Knighls of Labor left for the
new city, and to night about 30 families
departed. The projectors of the scheme
expect to get 1,000 families settled
down there inside of the next 12
months. Eight hours with fair wages
will bo the rule.
Useftii and Hurtful medicines.
There is a certain c*a s of remedies for oon
fctipation absolutely useless. These are boluses
and pot ons made in great part of podophyl
lin, aloes, rhubarb, gumb )ge aud other worth¬
less ingredients. The damage they do to the
sto nachs of those who u<e them is incalcula¬
ble. They evacuate the bowels, it fs true, but
always do so violently and profusely, and be¬
side. gripe the bowels. Their effect is to
weaken both them and the stomach. Bettor
far to use tho agre able and salutary aperien*,
Hoatetter’s Stomach Bitters, the laxative effect
of which is never preced d by pain, or accom¬
panied by a convula ve. violent action of the
bowels. On the contrary, it invigorates those
organs, tho stomach and the o tiro system
A* a means of curing and preventing malaria
fevers, no medicine can compare with it, and
it ney remedies and bladder ne vons inactivity, debility,frho:imatisni, and other Inor¬ kid¬
ganic ailments.
The fears of one cla** of men aro not the
measure of the rights of another.
How to Gain Flesh and Strength.
Use after each meal HcOrx’s Emulsion with
Ilyp.'phosphites. It is as palatable as milk,
and easily digested. Ths rapidity with which
delicate people improve with its use is wonder¬
ful. Use it and try yo :r weight- As a remedy
for Consumption, Throat affections and Bron¬
chitis, it is unequa’oJ, I’leasa read; “I used
Scott's Emulsion in a child eight months old
with gool results, lie gained four pounds in a
very short time.”—T ho. Prim, M. D„ Ala¬
bama.
Habits of thought and action fix their stamp
du the public code.
‘ lfafllicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomn-
1 ion s ® ye *' va,er * Druggistssel 1 at 2oc per bottJe.
i
a ■
9
IT IS A PURELYVEGETABLE PREPARATION
sa«Etfg@? y
5 ENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU
| JAND It has OTHER stood EqUAllYEfFICIENT tho Test of REMEDIES Years,
UltowKLOOD, Lin Curing all Diseases of the
LIVER, STOM¬
ACH, KIDNEYS, BOW¬
ELS, &c. It Purifies the
Blood, Invigorates and
BITTERS Clean ses the Sys tem.
DYSFEPSIA.CONSTI
CURES PATION, JAUNDICE,
ALLDISEASES DFTHE BICKHEADACHE, BIL¬
LIVER IOUS disappear COMPLAINTS, at once under Ac
KIDNEYS its be neficial infl uence.
STOMACH It its is purely cathartic a Medicine
AND as forbids its proper¬
BOWELS ties use as a
^T1 ant beverage. to the taste, It is and pleas¬ as
! easily taken by child¬
ALLDRUEGISTSi ren as adults.
i PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO
j PRlCEjDOLLARlt ST.Louisand Sole Proprietors. Kansas Oitt
■MiBMBgS
; CREAM „ ELY'S BALM!-- CATARRH
I
j
I was so troubled ||I
with ously catarrh affected it sen- .vP5j. rvrD®lm ^ Hf/^J
» , vrc
voice. One bottle of AT ’ r Lv c K 91/£ SA\
Cream Halm did the W. i
work. My voice is i /
fully restored. B.fJ
Liepsner, A.M. , Pas¬ ■‘TO
tor Olivet Baptist 6sc
Church, Philadel- HAY-EEVER
phia, Pa.
A particle is applied into each nostril and ia agreeable.
Circulars Price 50 ce free. ts at ELY Druggist*; BROS., by Druggist*, mail, registered, Owego, 60 N.Y. eta.
OPIUMS^® v BW " $1.00 Per Bottle. 8 ®
11 AND For Circulars and information ad
nilfinnuiRirui drees TANNER O PIUM
mORPHINE?a&:o re co .,101 white.
p aBo1
A
m c~> V
sir Widows. New Pension Law. Apply
______for blanks and fall information. Twenty
years’ experience. Best references. Success nr no fee.
1-*. MoAllifliter. Jr.,
Attorney-at-Law. P. O. Box 483, Washington, D. O.
DO WANT A DOG ■
I DOC BUYERS CUIDE k
Colored plates, IOO engravings M
iv< [worth, of different breeds, where prices bay they them are ■
and to
Ttl ASSOCIATED Mailed for 15 FANCIERS, Cents. U l
-
^ 1H S37 B. Eighth 8L Philadelphia, Pa. §
m SI! AirtBto Officers’ psy, bounty pro.
V IIB II A cured; deserters relieved.
WSw w | 21 years practice. Success o
►3 fee. Write for circulars and new jaw*.
W. McCormick «fc 8en,Washington.D.C
DUSJo Dill* Great E "? li,k GoutM<
5 =bs S*
;/ 5JP-© ^flU?jHHVHHHhff9fi Mil
■k :ik&Ll? ”!; ,■%-*->
■ - '.; V..; /',
v*'
T ■ff
ail
Ip7
p
fog 1
V \ •I
J m
* A
5?
\
'S* 4 & % A
-
WE
02- ' 7 ^ y
' • ' ^ ’
>■: m i 'r:eo
p ■ v | ■ ,. '-m ■NV?
SR HOOD S SARSAPARm
TAKE
' :
:.r
1 tvuxkil rwSPsi
1 VWV
March April
▲re the months In which to purify your; blood, and
for this purpose there Is no medicine equal to
Hood’s ISarsaparllla- It purities, vitalizes, and en¬
riches theiblood, removing all traces of scrofula or
ether dtseass. It creates an appetite and Imparts
new strength and vigor to the whole body. It Is tho
ideal spring medicine. Try It.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
“Last spring my whole family took Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla. Tho result is that all have been cured of
scrofula, my little boy being entirely free from
sores, and all four of my children look bright and
healthy as possibly can be. I have found Hood’s
Sarsaparilla also good for catarrh, with which I havs
been troubled slnco the war. Nothing did me so
much good as Hood’s Sarsaparilla.”—W m. B. Ather¬
ton, Passaic City, N. J.
N. B.—Be sure to get tho Peculiar Medicine,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Bold by all druggist*.? [$1; six for $5. Prepared I Bold by all druggists, gl; six for $3. Proparad
by C. I. HOOD & Co., A pothecarles, Lowell, Mass. | by C ,L HOOD k CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
fOO Dos es On e Dollar
B ©(CapcinE)© *
FOROUP ER
Highest Awards ef dedal. In Europe and America.
and all aches and pains. Endorsed l.y 5,'JUO Phvsi
Piaster* Druggists of the highest repute. Benson’s
promptly relieve tmd cure where other
ab-olut greasy salves, lininunts and lotions,
are ‘ly Useless. Beware of Imitatious under
S :.\BURY& JOHNSON roprletor*. New York
DR. KILMER’S One of every fivo we
meet has some form of
licartl)iscase,andisinfcon- of
™ stunt danprer Apoplexy,
a V Shock Tins or Sudden Death I
W Remedy regulates, re
Ffijw lieves, corrects ana Dr. cures. Kilmer’s
tWPrepnred Binghamton, nt N. Y.
Prices Sr 6 for. msFENRAUV, Letter* of inquiry auBwered.
$ 1.00 »5.°° Ouldo to HcalthfSent Frecju
Sold by Druggists.
SOLID FACTS!
‘* Seven strengthen Sprints ” Iron-Alum Miihf, will give you an
appetite, ell Headaches, purify you up. cure blood, Dyspepsia, Diarrhoea Kid¬
i-nu tlio act on the
neys, relieve Catarrh and ward off malaria. Price, otic,
d $1.00 per bottle.
Dickey’s Painless Eyewater ZH&iTt
once. No cure.no postpaid. pay. A«k for it. Sold by Druggists
n' sent by mail Price2?c. DM KEY &
\MlKKHON, Manufacturers, Bristol, Tknn.
Marvellons DISCOVERY. Memory
Wholly unllko Artificial Systems—Cure of Mind Wan¬
dering—Any book learned lu one reading. Heavy re¬
ductions for postal classes. Prospectus, Hons. wlthopin- W. W.
ions of Mr. Proctor, the Astronomer, Wood and
Astor, Judah P. Benjamin, Drs. Minor,
others, sent PROF. post fri’-b, by______ 1/OISETTE
3117 Fifth Avenue,____^ New York.
_
CRAPES Jkfb fl n!*A 100 Kinds! 30th
State and 1 Niagara for SSI post paid. Brigti
H ton, Delaware, Ives, Klvlra, l,adv, Catawba,
Martha, Moore’s Early, Worden, rockliugton,
Diamond, Vergennes, Ac., at lowest rates. Raspber¬
ries, Gooseberries, Jessie Strawberry, Lucretla Dew¬
berry, Ac. CEO. W. CAMPBELL. Delaware, Ohio.
ATLANTA
SAW WORKS.
Manufactarers of and Dealors in
Saws Repairing and Saw-Mill Specialty. Supplies.
a
Agents for L. PowiB A OoicrART’S
Wood Working .Machinery.
Large and oomplete stock. Write
for catalogue. Atlanta. Ga.
BTJSI3ST ESS
Education a specialty at 3IOORF.’S One BUSINESS
UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, Lin. of the best
Hchools in the Country. Send for Circulars.
J.P. STEVENS &BR 0 .
JEWELERS. Atlanta. Ga.
Send for Catalogue.
WHETHER VOU WANT A
PI AN P® ORGAN
It will pay yon to write to
PHILLIPS & CREW,
ATLANTA, €JA.,
For Catalogue (free) and Prices. Mention this paper.
FILES ■ ■■■■BlV ! ■ Indian will core Pile any case o'intinenll of Itch
lug. Piles. Bleeding, CURE GUARANTEED. Ulcerated or Protruding Prepare!!
for n»-.ld, Piles S‘J.30.] only. [Physicians’ Price box. Jars 50c. by and express, fil. Sold pre
b/ druggists mailed per
LA MAR, RANKIN or A LAMAR, on receipt of price by
Agents, Atlanta. C.t.
OPIUM and WHISKEY without IIABIT8
cured at home pain.
Book of particulars sent FREE.
_B. ■nmM Atlanta, M. Woolley, Ga. Onric* M.D 66
Whitehall Street. Mention this paper.
I APEWOBMK . 1 * A. c,| Illastrated M. « FttEE. ROCK, Address Rook P. O.
4Atlanta, Ga.
QATCMTC I twin I 9 Obtained. Inventors’ Golds. Bead stamp L. Biso- for
a .,t. Patent Lawyer. Washington, D. O.
S5S!2ka , *l» , «?fS5i^3.rS;
Hood’s Sarsaparilla'll prepared from Sarsaparilla,
Dandelion, Mandrake, Dock, Pipslssewa, and| other
well known and raluable vegetable remedies. The
combination, proportion and preparation are 'pe¬
culiar to Hood’s Sarsaparilla, giving It.* curative
power not possessed bv other medicines. It affects
remarkable cures where others fall.
Best Spring Medicine.
“I was troubled with bolls, having several of them
at a time. After suffering about all 1 could ^ear, I
took Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which entirely cured me,
I cheerfully recommend Hood’s flarsap -rllla to all
like afflicted, being sure they will find relief.”—
E, N. Niobtinoalx, Quincy, Mass.
“My wife thinks there is nothing llko Hood’s Sar
saparllla, and we are never without It In the house.”
—F. H. Latimer, Syracuse, N. Y.
Do not be Induced to take any other, (let
*
THE ONLY TRUE
riRON
-• JSI ■ • __ — TONIC
-x Will the Restore OH of YOUTH. the HEALTH DjapepaU.WanJ andVIG
of Appetite, In digest ion, Lack of
Strength and Tirad Feeling ab*
eolutely cured: Bonea, receive mua.
. k. clea and new
to nerves the mind
Hto force. Enlivens Brain Power.
LADIES’S"»®^™% and supplies
uot experiment—get ths ORiorNAL AND BE!
Blok
Book
ago.
rHE DR.HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY/
fit.Louis. Mo.
Ask Caution vour retailer for tli« James recommend Means’ 83 Inferior Shoe.
t Somo dealers This tho
goods original tn order #3 8hoe. to make Deware a larger Imitations profit. which Is
knowledge or ao>
their own Inferiority hy attempting to
build None upon Genuine the reputation unices of bearing the original. this Stamp*
JAMES MEANS’
.Tor Gentlemen, S3 SHOE.
Made In Button, Ca(f Congress and
La co. But Shin. U nex
^ficelle *BL Apycarancr. I in Durability, A postal ComfortS card
^ ^ sent tous will tiring !n
\ Ml formation how to you
^ m get this
■vots- Shoe in any State or
Territory.
MEsaE J. Means 4 1 Lincoln & Co St,
Boston,M am.
9HSHK3III....... L^shoE
r t
* Onr celebrated factory produces larger quantity
than a
of Shoes of this grads auy other factory In tho
world. Thousands who wear them will tell you the
reason If you ask them. JAM EH ill KA N H’ $9
U«*OE for Boys Is unapproachort In Durability.
FOB THE
UHONEST!
*^In amounts of
i @50 to @500, on
I I l IJbvour I One To Ten years time.
I^P^all, new plan—available Btate to
burdensome to none.
amount you can safely use, also
age and occupation. The System In
Foil, with Forms, etc., Free, on re¬
ceipt of stamp. Ho postals answered.
I. BUTLER, Sec’f, A vine.
Bradford Block, Cor.Sixt h
■MMCxxcutbaxi, obiojHMHR
S H OW C »8E8. WALl CASES.
DESKS, OFFICE FURNITURE AND FIXTURES.
Ask for Illustrated Pamphlet.
TERRY SHOW CASE CO., Nashville, Temv
CME HASEOW, PULVERIZING
•ora, Sole Ma cotton nuffr. sad *» West other Ma grouad. D. H. NASH, Kx.
in St., Loulsvlle.
MP iLUBfl A MONTH can be amde
working for us. Agents fur*
give preferred their whole who can 13 ms to
__ be profitably em¬
the busineaaH Bpars moments may towns and cities.
ployed also. A few vai mice In at.,Richmond, Ya.
B. F. JOHNSON * CO., 1013 Main
WE WW WANT YOU! 52TM3
profitable employment to repiesent us in every
county. Salary $7S per month and expenses, or a
large commission en sales if preferred. Goods stapla
Every one buy*. Outfit and particulars Free. MAB&
STANDARD SILVKKWAP.E CO.» BOSTON,
THURSTON’SSITaOTfl POWDER
Keeping Teeth Perfect aafi Game Healthy^
ta%Je BRgwsTKR’sSarsrr R us H otosa. Roll y.Mlea
PensionsM^Si™ D.a
OPIUM Cured. Treatir entsenton trt ^ .
—===- Hpm anb COpLaFayeM^ to^
1
i COMS WHIRS All IlSfTAl
I , Best In Cough time. By Sold m pH . Tastes eoc Use Pi j
msasBEimm by tlmcl
'
Al N* U. eeeaeeseeoeeeeieees • S seeefffiefaeo* e Nine, >jrl
■ V 0.0
.